I ood EN ot dalene river, Son " in a decisive i CERTE BR It is reported th many hundreds a ea. on tories b utmost importance have been ar. roc. ed Ordered to Move North—Em. | Dowager issues Instructions to General Feng- Tse- Tsai. ube or Ching has suffered a relapse, Ri because of the serious effects of this his great age, it is feared that he pes: be unable to act as plenipotentiary in arranging a settlement of the trou- bles in China, and that the difficulty and delay in securing a successor may caus the postponement for a time of negotia- tions. It is reported from Sian-Fu that empress Sowagss has orderer General Feng sai, commanding in the Broce #7 Yun-Nan, to proceed with is army to the Yangtse valley, anil from that section to move northward. His force is said to consist of 15000 men, armed with modern weapons. Count von Waldersee, it is asserted has arranged with Prince Ching and Li Hung Chang that the allied troops are not to operate in the prefect es of Shun-Te, Haung-Ping and Ta-Ming, in the province of Chi-Li. the Chang-Chih-Tung, the Wu-Cl viceroy, wired the Chincse envoy strenuously urging them to delay tl signing of the note until several clauses had been amended and that the- Preamble had been expunged which charges the imperial court with the sponsibility for the attacks upon 1 tions. He further urged the imp personages not to return to Peki: the ground that the joint note permits the powers to maintain 10,000 troops be- tween Peking and the sea. An open decree was issued to del the signatures; but the potentiaries replied that ble to recall the assent a T6 TRY AMERICAN COAL. x cady given. Russla Buys Six Thousand Tons for the Navy. May Order More. Fersen of the Rus- Through siem“navy the Russian government has | Baron England Has Decided to Build Two Monster | Battleships. portion of Four miners were aspl damp near W Eight men lost Minneapolis, Min ig r lives in a fire at I Ire, A meteor t in diameter feil into Senex New York state. According to a reliable Fili- pino sources, Agt 21do died six weeks ago : Millions of doll involved in a huge Minnesota deal just con- cluded. The transport Meade, with a large amount of specie on d, has reached the rate of $135 A big gold st m Tanana, on to the pan, 117 is rep the Yukon The Molokanen, a Russian sect nuia- bering 40.000, contemplate emigrating to Americ John exander Dowie, of “Zion” notoriety, has sailed from England for the United State The Senate confirmed Frederick Rittr of y, to be auditor for the war der "Boers continue to march southward i columns plindering farms of they United States si Haas, of the department, committed Michael I 1 Catholic J., is dead. rts received a returned to Le campaign. lland and Harvard buildings, Wigger, diocese of n enthusiastic ndon from . were damaged to the E xtent of »,000 by fire. | The Boers now threaten the gold mines, and Kitchener has called ior 5,000 men to guard them. hers and school children cf k raised $27,007 for the school children of Galveston, Tex. Philip D. Armour, the meat packer and grain dealer, his home in Chicago Sunday. Five trainmen were killed and one vadly injured in a collision between two freight trains at Melton, Mass. millionaire died at doned. | | | - ; : 1 | » Colorado Legislature is contem- purchased 6,000 tons of American coal | the passage of bill Tos the : : ct § 1 assage of [ for trial by fie vessels comprising be storation of capital punishment. J Ss + ; “ o siatic quadron. . 1] Forty cars of hay in the Boston & yrder is important, as, if the coal | Male vor RY oR atisfactory, it may lead to other | aine yards were ruined by firer and S 1 v water, entailing a loss of $113,000. ts being placed in the Unit A 3 Eh The only thing that will prob- | " har ss Westervelt, cashier Ne hed ably militate against the exclusive use [Lime Savings inst itution, of Newark, | of American coal by the Russian gov- |‘ pleaded guilty to forgery. _ ernment is the enormous freight rat nk Cashier Edward C. Remme, of that it has to pay to transport the coal ort, , has been arrested at th to Bort Arthur. The coal purchased | instance « 1k Examiner Tucker. by Baron Fersen costs only $2.75 per| Noaks, a Goebel witness, who c ton, but the cost of its transportation | vieted Caleb Powers, has disappear to Port Arthur is $11.50 per ton, mak- | iiter admitting that he swore falsely § al] Tot ae § ) Ing the con PS 14.25. ne got] F'om Wilson, colored, who stabbed a aa les a n 1€ Riek an hid De { white man at Wilsonville, Ala., was tak se si 9 lish and Japanese, but it | { en from the sheriff by a mob and hang- not entirely ry led : | ed, | Great Britain is willing ake LARGEST KNOWN. { reat Britain i wiliing now to make ee Jernusteinns to the Boers, and the ““un- conditional surrender” attitude is aban- | The British admiralty has decided to build two battleships which are intend- ed to be the largest in the world. The distinction of having the largest war ships has hitherto been held by Italy, with the Lepanto and her sister ship the Italia. Great Britain's two pro jected large warships, to be respective- ly named the Queen and the Prince of Wales, will be 2,000 tons heavier than the Italian ships mentioned, reaching the enormous displacement of 18000 tons, which is 3,500 heavier than Amer- ica’s biggest armor-clad vessel. These enon British vessels will carry nothing larger than 12-inch guns. Their batteries will chiefly be composed of these guns and of 7.5-inch and 6-inch guns. A Large Increase Assured. As the result of the recent combina- tions engineered by J. Pierpont Morgan, culminating in his purchase of the Cen- tral Railroad of New Jersey for the Reading Company, the stockholders in the corporations engaged in the anthra- cite coal trade will pocket $25,000,000 : year in addition to their former profits. The lion’s share of this vast sum will go to Me Morgan and his associates, John D. Rockefeller and the Van bilts, who together control lines which handle 82 per cent. of the total output of 50,000,000 tons. Without any advance to the consumer they will reap an ad- ditional profit of 50 cents a ton. New Plow Combine. The combination of plow companies, of which there have been rumors for some time, will soon be launched with a capitalization of $65.000,000. Thirty- one firms are said to have agreed to enter the new concern, which will prob- ablybe called the American Plow Com- pany. The promise is that the combine will be able not only to reduce the price of plows. to the farmer, but also will turn into its own treasury a profit great- er by $5,000.000 or more. Farmers Had Dun’s review-2: Tummary review- ot the year just closed, closing year of the century “F¢markably satisfactory one for y and planters, notwithstanding the* fact that some sections harvested smaller crops than in preceding years. While the south produced less cotton than in the two previous record-break- ing seasons, prices were the highest in 10 years, and the net profits made on plantations were enormous. Spring wheat States lost much grain, but Kansas a ndother large winter wheat growers made big crops, and the aver- age price was high. In fact, the cereais were all abnormally advanced until there occurred a natural loss in exports, so that Russian ports were able to secure much foreign trade that had belonged to American producers. up to within a fraction of and speculative Chicago price still higher. These oper- ations had a naturally deleterious effect on exports ation and foreign surplus countries reaped much of the benefit from excessively inflated domestic mar- (ets. Lynched Two Negroes. Two colored men were night from the county Fla., by persons unknown, taken Friday jail at Madisca, led into the woods about a mile from town, and hanged. The bodies were riddled with bullets. The negroes were charged with farmer. fled to Georgia, were arrested and From the num- the | killing Frederick Redding, a They taken back to Florida. ber of empty cartridges found at place of lynching it is estimated that number of lynchers was 100 or more. Found a Diamond Eed. The discovery of diamonds in the vol canic hills near Capitan, Otreo county, N. M., has created intense excitement among mining men. The discovery was made by J. J. Blow, general man- ager of the Linderman Coal Company, who picked up four gems in an ant heap. He took them to 4 jeweler, who “nounced them genuine diamonds. Pie dug into the ant heap, and, of 12 feet, uncovered a bed sernor Seated. andhoes., was Tuesday $2 \and Boe Foren “HOT of he lage, rid Corn was put! 50 cents here, | reanipulation forced the | D. White, at of the United States has been elected Berlin Academy of Andrew { ambassador imnember Berlin, the killed and nine China, through with a defective Germans wounded at Lei the firing of a cartridge. The trustees of the fund will develop the ibine, N. T,, the | sian Jews | John Mitche ed Mine been the bor were Tung, salute Baron de Hirsch town of Wood- benefit of the Rus- | | { | i for president of the Unit- Workers, says that 1900 has best year in the history of la- unions Seven miners were killed and wounded in an affray of Altgebirg, Hungary, between riotous miners anc gendarmes. rantining a smallpox infested camp near Sparta, Minn., was shot and killed by a lumberman. Ambassador from France, taken by the exposition. At Yreka, Cal, snow fell within 48 hours and many week buildings have collapsed under the great weight. Cambon just returned is delighted with the part Thursday Charles H. Dietrich was in augurated governor of Nebraska. He recommended the passage of a strong anti-kidnaping law. The steamer Tunisian, sailed from Liverpool for Portland, Me., has on board 50 lacemakers bound for Dowie’s Zion city. The divisions the Cuban tion to draw up a ported one ed on that of the United States. of the salt, has been purchased in Lisbon, Portugal by the pany, of Kansas City, Eight Italians aed Unites States “treastiry secret servic agents in New York on the charge running a big counterfeiting plant. Tuesday the United States transport Mo. WEeIA: Aran 1 by Ignatius Donnelly, of Minneapolis, Minn., who for 35 years had ese prom- inent in local and national politics and in literature, is dead. At Pueblo, Colo., Walter C. Casley, a druggis t. was shot through the head and instantly killed in his store by a burglar. The murderer escaped. is the pen: 1lty the State of Nebraska will inflict if the members of the State Legis- | lature remain in their present temper. Officials of all the great railroads will vis it the principal shipping points 10 vise a way to discontinue ‘fast freight” lines and local freight agencies. | A monument in honor of Baron ar Baroness de Hirsh and to commemor: radication of racial prejudice fs to be erected in Central Park, New York | city. | Four attempt 1 Louisville (Ky.) to defraud men indicted insurance com- | panies, one of them being the intended victim, who failed to drink himself to death or suicide. The report of the American board of foreign missions says that $317,013 in do- nations was received during the year, and complains of the treatment of mis- sionaries in Spain. Thomas Cunningham, president of the bank of Joplin, Mo., received a let- ter threatening him with death unless he deposited $1,000 in gold in a sack in a certain designated spot Cashier John W. Shotwell, County bank at Richmond. missing, and the directors scribed $21,000 to cover deficiency in his accounts. of the Ray Mo., is have sub- any possible The order of Railway Telegraphers 1s threatened with internal dissention be- cause all the members employed on the Santa Fe railway system did not obey the recent order to strike. The Guatamalean National Assembly has ratified the contract with the Cen- tral American Improvement Company o build the Northern railway from Port Barrios to Guatemala city. The secretary of war has submitted to Congress an additional deficiency es- timate of $3,000,000 for army subsistence, caused chiefly by the heavy demands made by the forces in China and the Philippines, The Indiana State authorities have been notified that 500 persons in Spen- kio’ ORgLL d the government forces L ANTacks having been ordered to leave eale yo cer county have organized a vigilance committee and are secretly trying roes for alleged offenses, many of ne- the the is)unty. 40 One of the guards employed in quar- | United States in the Paris | which recently conven- constitution have re- lines of Twenty-five thousand tons of common Armour Packing Com- the of Thyra sailed for Manila with 530 horses and a cargo for the army in the Philippines. Hanging for the crime of kidnaping seventy-two inches of | cl land guns of Fraserburg of the colony as quite at Spionberg and BOER INVASION OF CAPE COLONY COLONISTS ALARMED. The Burghers Very Active Along the Western Border of the Transvaal—More Mounted Infantry from England. Such is the fear of the Boer invaders that the British battleship Monarch wiil as a precautionary measure. The situation is undoubtedly serious. The latest reports show it to be gener- ally as follows: Kuruman, if still uninvested, probab ly soon will be. Griqualand west is filled with small parties of Boers who are working south toward Prieska for the purpose of co-operating w h or sup- porting Commandant Hertzog, whose advance parties are in the neighborhood The Boers are close to G Retoer where, of late, the Dutch have given many demonstrations ol ¢x- treme sympathy. In the eastern part advance guard of the Boers is close to Maraisburg, about 23 miles northeast of Cradock The general opinion in Cape the Town is that the position is not properly appre- ciated in Many old residents Dutch “England regard a general uprising of the likely. commanded Wessels, Pretorius and are continuing their march on Fraser- burg. reported they have arrived i.ooting continues. Com- munication with Frase rbury is suspend- ed. Col. Thorneycroft and Col. De Lisle are continuing the chase, but their horses and mules are tired. by Hertzog, Nieuwenhaut ) A Joers 1¢ It is REWARD FOR PAT CROW. The City of Omaha Has Offered $13.000 for His Arrest. rd of $13,000 is now oi- Pat Crowe, and is 1 in the offer about con- viction. The police of Omaha, Neb, are sending out 5,000 circulars bearing a picture and minute description of Crowe. They will be sent broadcast, will also bear the lescription of two other men and a woman, supposed to be c: h the Cudahy ab- A specific rew: fered for the arrest of nothing nnected with | duction. I'he offer for Crowe is made uncondi- tionally, the arrest and delivery to the authorities being the only requisite for securing the reward This will no excuse for anyone refusing to turn him over on the score that he cannot be convicted, and the police expect this will greatly in securing his ar- rest. assist CHECKMATED h STRIKE. A Scranton Compahy Oders the Affected Col- liery Closed Down. The 800 employes of the Mt. Pleasant colliery of the Elk Hill Coal and Iron Company at Scranton, Pa., are again on strike, for the third time in a ye: They decided to strike Satur because the superintendent r give a driver boy the rate of wages the boy claimed he was entitled to. The company anticipated the strike by post night fused to of the Elk Hill Company out is persisted in at the mine. the Pleasant if Mt. Explosion Killed Three. Three men were blown to pieces and half a dozen others bruised and cut by | flying debris as the result of an explo- sion of dynamite the works of the Repauno Chemi Company, at Thompsons Point, N. J., a thinly set tled spot on the Delaware river. The men had been punching dynamite into eight-inch paper shells for use in blast- ing. It is probable that Jae machine, 1sed in packing the d created 1 spark and set off the Offi- ials of the say the loss will company not be over $5,000. Another Boxer Rehieatiod, Advices from Sian-Fu confirm the re- ports of the execution of Yu-Hsien, the former governor of Shansi, guilty of massacring about 50 missionaries, whom he had invited to accept his protection, by order of the Dowager Empress. Prince Tuan is still at Ninghai. There are 30,000 Chinese regulars at Sian-Fu. The court has made no preparations to return, Captured by Insurgents. Private George H. Ray, of the engi- neer copps; his assistant, Private Lyons, of Company K, Fifth infantry; five scouts and two native policemen have been captured, while on their way to Batac, by insurgents. On the receipt of the ne in American column was dis- patched against. the Filipinos but failed to overtake the party, PROVED A WINNER. Refunding Operations Dlose with an Gain of $10,700,000. Refunding operations under the finan- cial act of March 14 closed Monday, the books of the treasury department hav- ing been open to the exchange of bonds Annual of the old bonds, 3s, 4s and 5s of 1908, 1907 and 1904, respectively, tarily offered for exchange into 2s, proximately $430,000,000 out of 000,000, leaving outstanding of this part of the interest-bearing public debt less than one-half the amount subject to the law. The net saving to the governme nt | | of interest is substantially “$10,700,000, | jacc lished by the payment now of | | 9 which is really an anticipa | tion of 2,000,000 interest which would have had to be paid within the next] eight years, in case the old bonds we per cents of 1004, $70.500,000. Prony March 14 to date, 395 new banks have been organized, of which 280 er with a capital stock less than $50,000. and 115 with capital sto: over that umount. The aggregate cap- ital cf the Jormer class was $7.372,000, and of the latter $12,650,000, a total ad- dition 10 banking capital of $20,022.000. Bank note circulation in the meantime Venezuela’s War Cloud. In consequence of disquieting reports of conditions in Venezuela the navy ed- partment has ordered the Scorpion, now at San Juan, Laguyra and relieve the Hartford on duty at that. port for protection to American lives and property. It is sai 1 that ernandez, the dreadful “Fi Mocho,” once a candidate for pres ident of Venezuela, has escaped from prison and is expected to lead an outbreak against the government. gunboat to sail far Want Canadian Independence. The Independence club, of Montreal, Can., has published its platform and constitution. The clauses call for the dissolution of the colonial relation with Britain and a declaration of independ- ence, the new federation to be known as the United States of Canada; provinces to become states with sovereign power, and universal suffrage to be granted, The list of officers is kept secret. allow | ing a notice that the colliery from this | date would be shut down. This will save the officials from any dealings wit h| the union. The company will keep tl colliery closed until the men rescind | their strike order. The men threaten to call out all of the 7,000 employes of the 12 i for nine and one-half months. Assist ant Secretary Vanderlip says: The re- funding has been successful. Holders | have volun- | permitted to run to maturity. The 4! per cents of 1907 have been exchanged mn greater amounts than any other ¢ | their total up to December 29 being | 3o84000,000, Of the three per cents of | $06,000,000 were exchanged, and of MORE GOLD AND SILVER. Production in the United States Greatly Increased Last Year. Mint Director Roberts estimates the production of gold in the United States during 1900 at 3,837,213 ounces, valtied at $79.322,281, and of silver at 50,610,543 ounces, valued, at the average price of 61 cents per ounce for the year, at $36,- 362,461. During 189g the gold produc- tion was $71,053,400, afid the silver pro- duction 354.764,500 ounces. The Nome gold and silver production for 1900 given as $5,100,000 and that of the LH dike, which includes both the American any Canadian fields, $22,287.556. Colo- ado produced $29,500,000 in gold and i, 206 ounces of silver; California $14.377,200 in gold and 912,800 ounces of silver; Alaska, $7.771,100 in gold and 318,400 ounces of silver; Arizona, $3.- 500,000 in gold and 4,250,000 ounces of silver; Idaho, $2,067,183 in gold and 4,- 500,000 ounces of silver; Montana, $5,- ,015 in gold and 16,750,000 ounces of silver; Nevada. $2,350,000 in gold and 1, 229,736 ounces of silver; Utah, $4,237, 726 in gold and 9,500,000 ounces of silver; Washington, $826,873 in gold and 300,- 000 ounces of silver; South Dakota, $6,- 617,604 in gold and 280,000 ounces of silver; Oregon, $1,715.762 in gold and 150,000 ounces of silver. is MONEY FoR Tue EAST. A Forty-five Cent Coin Aeconms nded for Use in the Philippines. Telegrams from Washington say: The President will ask Congress to pro- vide a Philippine currency to consist of a silver piece about the size of the American dollar. It will contain 45 cents worth of bullion, and will be fur- nished in unlimited quantities to anyone who is willing to pay 50 cents for it. It is to be redeemable in gold at its face value. The coin will be a little lighter in weight than the Mexican dollar, which at the present price of silver bullion is worth 52 cents in American gold. The primary purpose is to furnish a circulating medium showing that the United States is exercising all the func- tions of a sovereign. The immediate necessity is ed by the great scarcity of the Mexican dollars, the recognized medium xchange in the Orient The American troops in the Philippins and the 80,000 foreign soldiers in China have produced such a call for-the Mex ican currency that the shrewd Orient have taken to hoarding it in hope making a profit. of Mexico has also taken i steps to prevent the depletion of her stock of money, so the trade situation on acccunt of the scarcity of dollars is becoming very bad. It is the purpose, if Congress grants the authority, to pay the soldiers in the Philippines with the 50-cent dollars, giv- ing them two for one. All other gov- ernment obligations in that part of the world will also be discharged with Lhe new coinage, so there will be no trou- ble in getting it into circulation. It is expected there will be a demand for }2:000.000 or $3,000,000 worth per month for quite a while, FATAL BULL FIGHT. One Man Gored to Death and Many Severly Injured. { The bull fight arena at San Luis Pos- Mexico, was the scene of another ric exhibition of brutal sport Sunday. While the fight was in progress one of | the vicious bulls jumped the stone bar- rier that separates the fighting ring from {the spectators. The animal landed in | the midst of the crowd and instantly i charged upon the men, women and chil- dren, who fled in every direction vainly seeking the exits. One man was gored to death by the animal and a score or more were injur- ed, being knocked down and trampled under the feet of their panic- stricken friends and neighbors. The bull was finally killed by a rural guard. tosi Sentenced a Street Car Striker, Frederick Northway, one of the three men arrested on a charge of blowing up a cable conduit with dynamite durin the progress of the great street c: strike at St. Louis; Mo., last summer, has been found guilty by a jury and sentenced to serve eight years in the penitentiary. Maurice Brennan was sentenced to 10 years in November last, and James Schwartz, the last of the trio, will be tried this month on the same charge. Earthquake in Missouri. Telegrams from Nevada, El Dorado Springs and Appleton City, Mo., say a distinct earthquake shock was felt at those points at 9:12 p. m. Friday. Ar [El Dorado Springs window panes were broken and other slight damages os curred, Native Rising in West Africa. The colonial office at London is in receipt of news of a native rising in the Gambia river region of West Africa. The dispatch conveying this information adds that a punitive expedition is being organized. Chicago Pays Indian Claims. The Pokagon Pottawattomie Indians of Michigan, have been notified that the $45,000 promised them for a quit-claim deed to certain Chicago lands on the lake front is ready for payment. Tt will be divided equally among. about 300 men, women and children of the once famous tribe Crazy Moose Invades a Town. One man probably {fatally injured, three dogs and two cows killed and sev- | eral hundred dollars’ worth of property destroyed is the result of the visit of a 7 moose to the town of Farris, CABLE FLASHES. U nprefedented cold prevails all over Europe and snow has fallen in Rome. Snow is falling heavily over Central | Germany severely interrupting railway | traffic. The German another attempt will make canal governme nt to have its Baku. Russia, springs and three ware- The Duke of York has been promoted from captain to rear admiral in ®*the | English navy. | he czar of Russia has recovered his health and is able to take long walks and drives da Empress of “hina delays progress of negotiations bv insisting on changes in provisions of joint note. Archbishop Favier, vicar apostolic of Pekin, declares that the Pope is not ill- disposed toward France. Russia had made an agreement with China for the practical acquisition of Manchuria two years ago. Charles Alexander, grand duke of Saxe-Weimar, is dead at Berlin. He was born at Weimar in 1818. Cape Colonists call loudly for more troops, fearing that the Boers have been strongly reinforced by oer sympa- thizers. Five bags of registered letters have been stolen .on the railroad between Turin and Rome. The loss is estimated at 200,000 lire. The chief engineer of the Spanish steamer Oleta was killed by the explo- sion of one of her steam pipes between Genoa and Las Palmas. Von David, a rich land-owner in Ger- many, killed himself on his wife’s grave. He had lost his wife and two sons by sickness within a fortnight. During December the Paris police made 12,970 arrests, including 6 Pde ers, 025 thieves, 2,879 tramps, 2,4; drunken people and 3,983 other arrests, CIR 1S TRYING CONCILIATION An Agreement Whereby St. Petersburg Will Hav: a Protectorate of a Manchurian Province—Concessions Made- In a dispatch from Pekin Dr. Morri- son gives the text of the Russo-Chinese agreement for the Russian protection of the Manchurian province of Fen Ting. Russia consents that China shall resume the civil government on certain conditions which aim at aid being se- cured in railroad construction and is feeding Russian troops. Following his announcement that the Chinese emperor has decreed the ac- ister Conger cabled the State department that the ministers had been notified for- mally, not only that the agreement was accepted by the Chinese government, but that the government felt able to guarantee a performance of the condi- tions imposed. It is believed in Wash- ington that the result of an endeavor to have equable commercial treaties will be the framing of a general convention to be signed collectively by the powers which will insure uniform treatment to all. The arrest and punishment of the Boxer leaders is expected next. In an interview Li Hung Chang says that the emperor is desirous of comply- ing in all particulars with the demands of the powers, On the other hand, he thinks the powers should order a cessa- tion of the frequent irritating expedi- tions, which he looks upon as unneces- sary and as doing a deal of harm. The emperor, Li Hung Chang as- serts, is willing to punish all those nam- ed by the powers by banishment to the furthest part of the Chinese dominions, on the northwestern frontier; and their raturn, he declares will be prohibited under penalty of decapitation. FLOODS IN ENGLAND. Many Vilages Isolated by Water—Railroads Suspend Operations. Telegrams from London say: While the gales continue on the coasts, floods are causing havoc on the railway lines The midlands are entirely inundated. Railways are submerged to the level of the station platiorm, .en- gine fires being extinguished. Bridges have been carried off and the overflow: ing streams have inundated miles of country. At Coventry the devastation is greater thap at any time during 30 years. A number of factories have been flooded, and hundreds of the inhabitants imprisoned in their homes. The town of Bath is endangered by the rise of the Avon, which is 10 feet above the normal. Immense tracts of land in several coun- ties have been transformed into inland seas, the inhabitants seeking refuge in the upper rooms of their dwellings. and farms. Shoe Combine Planned Shoe manufacturers are planning the establishment of a national shoe com- pany to dominate the distribution of shoes to the retailers and eliminate the middlemen’s profits, The company is to consist of not more than 12 houses manufacturing dissimilar lines of shoes, with a total capital stock of $3,500,000. Depots will be established in every lead- ing city in the United States. Suicide by D by Dynamite. H. E. Webber, a well-to-do farmer cf Lisbon village, Maine, blew himself to pieces. Parts of his lower limbs were scattered about the premises. The head and arms and upper part of the trunk were found on top of the barn. Notes left by Webber said that the writer had decided to kill himself by exploding dy- namite cartridges. He had been acting strangely for several weeks. Boxers to Invade Korea. Copies of the “North China Daily News” received at Victoria, B. C, b the steamship Tacoma have a long ar- ticle on the plot by Korean Boxers to massacre foreigners and follow the re- cent Boxer program in China in Korea. The Seoul correspondent of that paper says that without question there have been orders sent to every prefect to this end. _ To Treat Separately with China. A special dispatch from Peking says: “According to an official Chinese source Russia has arranged to make a treaty with China at St. Petersburg. The Chinese Minister there has been appointed to act for China. Library for Seattle. Andrew Carnegie has promised Se- attle, Wash., a giit of $200,000 to be expended in the construction of a new public library. He requires a yearly guarantee of $50,000 for maintenance and improvement. Colorado Nearl; Bankrupt. Governor Thomas, of Colorado, who retired frm office Thursday, says in his final message to the Legislature, that the floating debt of Colorado is $2,073,- 077, and that the State is face to fare with relief or bankruptcy. NEW YEAR FESTIVITIES Led to the Belief That the City Had Been Attacked—Assassin of Baron von Kettler was Beheaded. The advent of the New Year and the new century was celebrated in Pekin on an elaborate scale. The discharge of numerous guns at midnight created a scare and many troops were sent to dis- cover whether the city had been attack- ed or whether it was a oxer rising. Gen. Chaffee held his reception in the morning and Mr. Conger received in the afternoon. A feature which caused considerable comment was a review of the British troops in honor of Queen Victoria and of Australian federation, i send representatives. | conspicuous by their absence, bill | has destroyed | to which all the nations were invited to The French were not a sin- gle Frenchman bei Lie teler, June of : name g present. man who killed Baron von Ket- the German minister to China, in last, was beheaded in the presence number of spectators. His Su Hai and the execution on the scene of his crime at cember 31. Mongolians are Earred. The provincial government of British C olumbia has proclaimed the new regu- g was took place 3p. m De lations for carrying out the immigra- tion act which v passed at the last session, prescribing the educational “test A big fight will be made by the com- panies engaged in bringing in Japanese and Chinese as the act is an effective bar to their entry. Famine on the Amur. A dispatch received from Vladivos- tock, Russia, reports that famine threatens the Amur and maritime prov- inces. The crops are bad and the rail- . being almost wholly engaged for var purposes, cannot be used for the transportation of food to the inhabitants. In addition the prohibition of foreign coastwise trade has prevented importa- tions into the threatened provinces. Firm Against Cigarettes. Governor Bliss, who has succeeded Hazen S. Pingree as chief executive of the State of Michigan,.in his inaugural address declared himself most strongly against cigarettes. e said on this sub- ject: “I advise the most stringent legis- lation possible, in order that the sale of cigarettes may be discouraged, if not prohibitied.” District Attorney Baird, of Hawaii, has received orders to proceed against the alleged trusts in Honolulu. — OR. TALAAGES SUNDRY SERMON AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. Subject: The Outlook Inspiring — A Far Look Into the Future-—Marvelous Ad- vances Predicted — Religion and Sei- ence in the Next Hundred Years. [Copyright 1961.] WASHINGTON, D. €.—In this discourse Dr. Talmage tells something of what he expects the next hundred years will achieve, and declares that the outlook is most inspiring: text, 11 Samuel xxiii. 4, “A morning without clouds.” “What do you expect of this new cen- tury?’ is the question often asked of me, and many others have been plied with the same inquiry. In the realm of inv ention I expect something as startling as the tele- graph and the telephone and the X-ray. In the realm of poetry I expect as great poets as Longfellow and Tennyson. In the realm of religion T expect more than one Pentecost like that of 1857, when 500, 200 souls professed to have been con- verted. I expect that universal peace will gn, and that before the arrival of the two thousandth year gunpowder will be out of use except for glasting rocks or py- rotechnic entertainment. I expect that before this new century has expired the millennium will be fully icaugurated. The twentieth century will be as much an im- provement on the nineteenth century as the nineteenth century was an improve- ment on the eighteenth. But the conven- tional length of sermonic discourse ill al- low us only time for one hopeful consider- ation, and that will be the redemption of the cities. Pulpit and printing press for the most part in ou re busy discussing the condition of the cities at this time, but would it not be healthfully encouraging to all Christian workers and to all who are toiling to make the world better if we should this morning, for a little while, look forward to the time when our cities shall be revolutionized by the gospel of the Son of God, and all the darkness of sin yand trouble ard crime and suffering shall be gon= from the » ar 1d it shall be a morning without clouds?’ ry man has pride in the city of his nativity or residence if it be a city distin- guished for any dignity or prowe J a boasted of his native Rome, Mantua, Lycurgus of Sparta, Demosthe- nes of Athens, Archimedes of Syracuse and Paul of Tarsus. 1 should have suspi- cion of nse Leartedness in a man who had no -peizl interest in the city of his birth or oe exhilaration at the evidence of its prosperity, or : artistic embellishments, or its scientific advance- ment. I have noticed that a man never likes a city where he has not behaved well! Peo- B e who have a free ride in the prison van like the city that furnishes the ve- re When I find Argos and Rhodes and Smyrna trying to prove themselves the birthplace of Homer, 1 conclude right away that Homer behaved well. He liked them, and they liked him. We must not war on laudable city pride or with the idca of building ourselves up at any time to try to pull others down. Boston must continue to point to its Faneuil Hall and to its superior educational advantages; Philadelphia must continue to point to its Independence Hall, and its mint and its Girard College; New York must continue to exult in its matchless harbor, and its vast population, and its institutions of 7, and its ever wiglening commerce; hington must continue to rejoice in the fact nay it is the most beautiful city under the su Il ey ind a man coming from any city, having no pride in that city, that city having been the place of nativity or now being the place of his residence, would feel like asking him right away: ‘What mean thing have you been doing there? What outrageous thing have you been Lh of that you do not like the place Every city is influenced by the character of the men who founded it. Romulus im- pressed his life upon Rome. The pilgrim fathers will never relax their grasp from New England. William Penn left a leg- acy of fair dealing and integrity to Phila delphia, and you can now, any day, on the streets of that city, see his customs, his manners, his morals, his hat, his wife's bonnet and his meeting house. So the Hollanders, founding New York, left their impression on all the following generations. So this capital of the nation is a perpetual eulogy upon the Washington who founded it I thank God for the place of our resi- dence, and, while there are a thousand things that ought to be corrected and many wrongs that ought to be overthrown, while 1 thank God for the past, I look for- ward this morning to a glorious future. I think we ought—and I take it for granted that you are interested in this great work of evangelizing the cities and saving the world—we ought to toil with the sunlight in our faces. ‘e are not fighting in a miserable Bull Run of defeat. We are on the way to final victory. We are not fol- lowing the rider on the black horse, lead ing us down to death and darkness and doom, but the rider on the white horse, with the moon under His feet and the stars of heaven for His tiara. Hail, conqueror, hail! I know there are sorrows and ti®re are sins and there are sufferings all around about us, but as in some bitter cold win- ter day when we are thrashing our arms around us to keep our thumbs trom freez- ing we think of the warm spring day that will after awhile come, or in the dark win- ter night we look up and see the northern lights, the windows of heaven illumined by some great victory, just so we look up from the night of suffering and sorrow and wretchedness in our cities, and we see a light streaming through from the other side, and we know we are on the way to morning—more than that, on the way to ‘‘a morning without clouds.” I want you to understand, all you who are toiling for Christ, that the ce sin are all going to be captured. tory for Christ in these great going to be so complete that not rth, or an angel in heaven, or hell will dispute it. know it just as certainly as ( that this is holy truth. is a man on a devil in How do I know? 1 towns rod lives and The old Bible is full of it. The nation is to be saved; of course all the cities are to be saved. It makes a great difference with you and with me whether we are toiling on toward a defeat or toiling on toward a victory. Now, in this municipal elevation of which I speak 1 have to remark there will be greater financial prosperity than our cities have ever seen. Some people seem to have a morbid idea of the millennium, and they think when the better time comes to our cities and the world people will give their time up to psaln singing and the reiating oi their religious expe- rience, and ‘as all social life will be puri- fied thece will be no hilarity, and as all business will be purified there will be no enterprise. There is no ground for such an absurd anticipation. In the time of ich I speak, where now one fortune is made there will be a hundred fortunes made. We all know business prosperity depends upon confidence between man and man. Now, when that time comes of which I speak, and all double dealing, all dishonesty and all fraud are gone cut of commercial circles, thorough confidence will be established, and there will be bet- ter business done and larger fortunes gathered and mightier successes achieved. e great busimess disasters of this country have come from the work of god- less speculators and infamous stock gamb- lers. The great foe to business is crime. When the right shall have hurled back the wrong, and shall have purified the commercial code, and shall have thun- dered down frandulent establishments, and shall have put into the hands of hon- est men the keys of Dhusiness. blessed time for the araoin . akers. I am not talking an abstraction; I am not making a guess; I am telling you God's eternal truth. In that day of which I speak taxes will be a mere nothing. Now our business men are taxed for everything; city ta coun- ty taxes, State taxes, United State 5 taxes, license taxes, manufacturing stamp taxes, taxes—taxes, taxes, taxes! Our busine men have to make a small fortune every year to pay their taxes. What fastens on our great industries this awful load? Crime, individual and official. We have to pay the board of the villains who are incarcerated in our prisons; we have to take care of the orphans of who plunged into their graves through ey indulgence; we have to support the muni- cipal governments, which are expensive just in proportion as the criminal proclivis ties are vast and tremendous. Who sup- ports the almshouses and police stations and all the machinery of municipal gov- ernment? The taxpz of a 5 But in the glorious time speak grievous xation will have ceased. There will be no need of support- ing criminals; there will be no criminals. Virtue will have taken the place of vice. which 1 1 = EE pretest emp Kies will be no orphan asylums. for pa- rents will be able to leave a ¢ eteney to their children; there will be no voting of large sums of moneys for some munici- pal improvement. which moneys. before they get to the improvement, drop into the pockets of those w ho voted them: oyer and terminer kept up at vast exp to the people, no impaneiing of jur t try theft and n and murder and slam tunes; richer opulence A Thing with- out clouds.” In that better time also coming to these cities the churches of Christ will be more numerous, and they will be larger, and they will be more devoted to th ice of Jesus Christ, and they rill accomplish greater influen d. Now it 1s often the case that Cehurches are envious of each other, and denominations collide with each other, and even ministers of sometimes forget the bond of Jut in the time of which 1 while there will be just as many ai differences of opinion as there are now, there will be no acerbity, no hypercriti- cism, no exclusiveness In our great cities the churches are not to-day large enough to hold mcre than a fourth of the pe spulation. The “churches that are built—comparatively few of them are fully occupied. The average attend- ance in the churches of the United States to-day is not 400. Now, in the glorious time of which I speak there ar: going to be vast churches, and they are going to be all thronged with worshipers. Oh, what rousing songs they will sing! Oh, what earnest sermons they will preach! Oh. what fervent prayers they will offer! Now, in our time what is called a fashionable church is a place where a few people, hav- ing attended very carefully to their toilet, come and sit down—they do not want to be crowded, they like a whole seat to themselves—and then, if they have any time left from thinking of their store, and from examining the Style of the hat in front of them, they sit and listen to the sermon warranted to hit no man’s sins, and listen to music which is rendered by a choir warranted to sing tunes that no- body knows! And then, after an hour and a half of indolent yawning, they go home refreshed. Every man feels better after he has had a sleep! But all these wrongs are going to be righted. 1 expect to live to see the day. I think I hear in the distance the rum- bling of the King’s chariot. Not gays in the minority is the church of God going to be, or are good men going to be. The streets are going to be filled with re- generated populations. What will you do with those who fleece that young man, getting him to purloin large sums of money from his employer— the young man who came to an officer of my church and told the story and franti- cally asked what he might do? Nothing. God’s love will yet bring back this ruined world to holinesssand happiness. An infinite Father bends over it in sym- pathy. And to the orphan He will be a Father, and to the widow He will be a husband, and to the outcast He will be a home, and to the poorest wretch that to- day crawls out of the ditch of his abom- ination, crying for mercy, He will be an all pardoning Redeemer. The rocks will turn gray with age, the forests will be unmoored in the hurricane, the sun will shut its fiex relid, the stars will drop like blasted fi the sea will heave its last groan and lash itself in ex- piring agony, the continents will drop like anchors in the deep, the world will wrap itself in sheet of flame and leap on the funeral pyre of the judgment day, but God’s love will never die. It shall kindle its suns after all other lights have gone out. It will be a billowing sea after other oceans have wept themselves away. It will warm itself by the blaze of a con- suming world. It will while the archangel’s trumpet peals andthe air is filled with the crash of bre king sepul- chers and the rush of the wings of the sing rising dead. Oh, commend that love to all the cities and the morning without shits will come! I krow pat sometimes it seems a hope- less task. You toil on in different sphere sometimes with great ragement. People have no faith and say: “It does not amount to anything. You might as well quit that. Why, when Moses stretched his hand over the Red Sea it did not seem to mean anything especially. People came out, I suppose, and said. “Aha!” Some of them found out what he wanted to do. He wanted the sea parted. It did not amount to any thing, thi stretching out of his. hand over the sea! But after awhile the wind blew all night trom the east, and the waters were gath- ered into a glittering palisade on either side, and the billows roared as God pulled back on their crystal bits. Wheel into line, O Israel! ~ March, march! Pearls crashed under feet, flying spi gathe into rainbow arch of victory querors to march under, shout of hosts on the beach answering the shout of hosts amid sea, and when the line of the Israelites reach the ach the cymbals clap, and the shields clang, and the wate: rush over the pursuers, and the swift fingered winds on the white keys of the foam play the grand march of Israel deliv- ered and the awful dirge of Egyptian over- throw. So you and I go forth, and all the peo- ple of God go forth, and they stretch their hand over the sea, the boiling sea of crime and sin and wretchedness. “It doesn’t amount to any thing,” people say. Danan’t it? God’s winds of help will after awhile begin to blow. A path will be cleared for the army of Christian philanthropists. The path will be lined with the treasure, of Christian beneficence, and we will be greeted to the other beach by the clap- ping of all heaven's ¢ mihals, while those who pursued us and ¢ led us and tried to destroy us will go eo n under the sea, and all that will be left of them will be cast high and dry upon the beach, the splintereu wheel of a chariot or thrust out from the foam, the breathless nostril of a riderless charger. or the con- NEWSY GLEANINGS. The anti-foreign movement in Korea ® spreading. Sweden proposes to establish direct steamship lines to the United States. Further discoveries of rich quartz nines have been made in the Klon- like. The Peruvian Government has ranted to two Americans about 300,- 300 india rubber trees. The present debt of Chicago is $28.- 332,157. In 1892, before the Chicago Fair, the debt of the city was $12,476. 200. Farmers in Western Kansas are de- pleting the county treasuries by the capture of coyotes. Zach coyote scalp is worth $3. The French War Department has appropriated $80,000 for secret experi ments in wireless telegraphy, with a view to perfecting its application in war. The Colorado Supreme Court has de- clared unconstitutional the State law permitting verdicts in civil cases by three-fourths of the members of the jury. The Chamber of Commerce of Ber- lin has presented a petition to Count von Buelow asking for the mainte- nance of the present tariff policy of the Empire. Great Britain is pressing the Otto: man Government for payment of the British Armenian indemnity claims, (nspired by the success of the United States in securing its indemnity. Arrangements have been made for the settlement of 450 Russian families near the new town of Ladysmith Chippewa County, Wis. The immi- grants will come from the vicinity of Odessa, in Southern Russia. Since the loan of $L,130,000 and the sale ment by Russia, the Persian army is being reorganized under Russian in- structors, who are now urging a con- siderable increase to its numbers. Mexico sold the United States $700,000 worth of sisal grass in September, an the sales for the first nine months of this year amounted to over nine million dollars. Tas shows an increase of over fifty per cent. over the same period of 1800. Last year the price ot unbound French books was raised from 50 cents to 55. Recently another 5 cents was added, in consequence of the increased price of paper. all | of guns to the Persian Govern-, lowing persons: chiki $12; John Gilliland, E ford, Wilk ansburg, iston, $8; by eight school ery ; Barnett and Superintendent @f Instruction Schaeffer, an end by the State authorities agreeing to pay the full amount due the distri prior to the reduction made by the gov- ernor in the school appropriation. day. | incendiary origin, 000 | sex township, (EYSTONE i HENS CONDENSED PENSIONS GRANTED. Locomotive Burtts and Kiled Two Men. New Oil Field Opened Near S ry Rock—Another Coal Deal. Pensions have been granted the fol- Silas A. Bennett, New st Water- Goodman, Por Mina, $8; zrtha Park, Simon. Lew- Titus- $i George F. oyal, $8; Dewitt C. Hens ring, Holt, $12; $12; in “sg; Mary J. Myers. Johnson, Monroeton, F rederick C. ville, $6. The mandamus proc eedings instituted districts of Montgom- State Treasurer Public were brought to county, against J. H. McCullough, receiver in Al- toona of county and State taxes, is re- ported to be a from ery that he was short in was made last week. defaulter to the extent of to $50,000. The discov- his accounts When coniront- ed with the charge McCullough broke $30,000 down, and admitted that he had embez- zled $10,000. The Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsbu Coal and Iron Company has purchase about 4.000 acres of coal land in White and Center townships, Indiana county. The price paid to the land owners was $113,563.56. Operations are to be stari- ed at once to develop mines on the ter- ri tory. The discovery of a marriage certificate in a compartment of an old valise is likely to bring to an end the contest over the will of the late Chauncey CC. Ackley, who died at Wellsboro three years ago, leaving an estate valued at 40,000 A heavy explosion of gas occurred in the Hollenbach mine of the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Company Mon- Five hundred men were at work at the time. All succeeded in getting out safely, with the exception of, two, who were probably fatally burned. At Greensburg options have heen se- cured with a view of having same ac- cepted by the county commissioners for the new conrt house. The land is one square south of the present court house and can be secured for the present site and $50,000. Much excitement prevails at Slippers Rock over the discovery of oil in a we.l which was being drilled for gas by the Fort Pitt Gas Company on the T farm, two miles south of town. The was tapped in the 100-foot sand and the well started to flow. B. E. Masters, an engineer; of New- tonburg, and John Milier, of Dubois, were instantly killed and a fireman nam- ed Henry Patrick was probably fatally injured by the explosion of a locomo- tive boiler near McGees Miils. The bondsmen of Tax Receiver John H. McCullough, of Altoona, who con- fessed to being short in his accounts, have agreed to pay $25.000, and Judge Bell has approved the compromise: The reported shortage was $30,000 to $40,000. The will of Mrs. Caroline Hays. late oi Canonsburg, leaves $1.200 to tae Pres- byterian board of relief for disabled ministers and their families, and $1.000 to the Central Presbyterian church, of Canonsburg. The Sharon Boiler Works Company has taken a contract from a Leeds, Eng- land, firm for the erection of a mammoth stand pipe near Buenos Ayres, Argen- tina. The material will be shipped from Sharon. A burglar near New Haven, after poisoning the watchdog of James Wil- son,-an aged inhabitant, overpowered Wilson and his granddaughter and rob- bed the house of silverware and heir- looms. Charles Karchenir, aged 13, of Bethle- hem, has returned home, saying he was kianaped and chloroformed by two men, who let him go on learning that he was a poor boy. : The brick knitting mill of William Davis. in Downingtown, Chester ceun- ty, was entirely destroyed by a fire of The loss is abot $9,~ Albert Umstead, a farmer of Middle- Butler county, went vio- lently insane and was temporarily lodg- ed in Butler jail, where he tore off every shred of his clothing. The Rev. E. A. Garvey, 1g stor of St. John’s Catholic church, Pittston, has beén named by the Pope as a domestic prelate with the title of monsignor and was invested with the title Sunday. The decomposed body of a man sup- posed to be George Kelly, a cigarmai- er of Philadelphia, has been found in a mill race at Union Furnace, Hunting- don county. Miss Mary Broderick, aged 20 yea:s, a sister of Thomas D. Broderick, pro- prietor of the Queen City hotel of Johnstown, dropped dead while at a dance. . Ida Smith, aged 17, living near Char- leroi, burned to death, her clothing tak- ing fire at a grate. She ran about the house until her clothing was burned off and lingered in agony two hours. The Greensburg, Jeannette and Pitts- burg Street railway celebrated the open- ing day of the twentieth century by run- ning the first car into Irwin. Jacob L. Caiter, engineer at Bucher’s planing mill, Altoona, was found dead where he had crawled into a manhole to repair a leaking pipe. William Shinabrook, a farm hand, has been arrested, charged with the murder of William D. Rebok at Newburg, near Carlisle. A lot of black Southern. snakes, rarely seen in the been captured on Davidson island, in the Youghiogheny, near Connellsville. Gov. Stone has appointed George Walker, of Emporium, of Cameron county, resigned. Workmen wt Donora, in lifting a large stone, discovered a skeleton believed to be that of Mrs. Ellen Bell, who mys- teriously disappeared 25 years ago. It is reported the Baltimore and Ohis railroad will buy Mud island, in the Youghiougheny river at Connellsville and srect shops thereon. ’ Warren A. Wilbur, of South Bethle- hem, has given $5,000 to Lehigh Uni versity for the equipment of a Seiten ical laboratory. The National Malleable Casting Com- pany, of Sharon, will build an addition to their plant which will give employ- ment to 100 additional hands. Ambrose Hawk. a voung bookkeeper, was found dead near Wilkesbarre with a bullet hole in his head and a revolver by his side. Dr. F. B. Smith, of Philadelphia, left by his will $20,000 to Margaret Coyne, of North Scranton, a trained nurse wno nursed him six years ago. J = sl : « moccasin North, hava A. associate judge vice J. C. Bonham, The 112 cotton mills’ of Mexico can- sumed last year 57.000.000 pounds of cotten and produced nearly ten million pieces of woven and printed goods. These mills give employment to 22,000 operatives, and the sales for the year amounted to more than twenty-eight million dollars. The French torpedo bout Audacieux, which has gone to L’Orient for her trials, is the smallest ironclad in the world. She carries an armor belt over her machinery an inch or so in f{i.iek- ness, ptoof probably against anything smaller than a six-pound projectile, 3 - os pial ne be po