BOERS H TAKE THE OFfEKSIVE. RECAPTURE A RIDGE. Gen. Joubort Attempting Flank Movement Has Crossed to South ol the Tugela Butler to Make Anoiner Dash. The most important news from South 'Africa Sunday morning is conveyed in a dispatch from Uuoban, which says that Gen. Jonl)ert is marching with 6.000 men to otttllank Gen. Buller. An ntann was Riven in the Boer camp on Friday night that lien. White was try ing to cut his way out of Lailysmith, but nothing seems to have come of the attempt, it' it' was made. "The Boers have occupicil Bloys farm, south of the Tugela, which is under an hour's ride from Chieveley and have turned the homestead into a hospital, t )n the farm arc hills com manding both bridges over the Tugela, as well as Torts Wylic and Molyncux, and from wbjch a view of Bulwana and l.adysmith is obtainable. There is much apprehension here regarding the Boer movements and the authorities are on the alert." A dispatch from Frere Camp, dated Sunday, said all was- quiet there. The British troops were resting and the lloers were inactive. The latest reports from the front, showing that Buller nbandoned Vaal Krantz and retired across the Tugela because the Boer puns could shell him out of his position, and that he intends to make another dash for l.adysmiih, destroy the comforting and ingenious theory that the movement was an elabo rate feint to facilitate the main advance of lien. Roberts. The dating oi mes sages from Frere camp may indicate that Buller has withdrawn all his forces there. Kvcn the most sanguine persons be gin to sec it almost hopeless to expect the relict o( l.adysmiih, while it is clear that if it be impossible for Buller to reach l.adysmith it is equally impossi ble for the garrison, exhausted by sick ness and privations, to cut a way out. The fact that Gen. Roberts arrived at Modeler river Friday seems to show that he has been on a round of inspec tion of the chief commands and that the main advance is not so near as has been supposed. London was astonished and disheart encd Friday afternoon by the publica tion of the following dispatches, dated on Thursday at the Boer head laager, Ladysmith: "The British who were in possession of the kopje at Molens drift abandoned it after a bombardment by Boer cannon Thursday morning and retired across the lugcla river to their former post tion. A desultory cannonade is pro cecding at the Tugela, but otherwise everything is quiet. As tending to confirm the above this dispatch from the same source, dated .Wednesday, was posted: "An armored train Tuesday made a sortie from Chieveley towards Colcnso and landed 3.000 British troops on the right of the Boer position. The Boers immediately crossed the river and made at attack with rifles and artillery, forc ing the withdrawal of both the train and the troops to Chieveley. The lighting on the Upper lugcla river lasted until 8:30 Tuesday evening. Firing at both Colenso and along the Upper Tugela 4 lias been proceeding since 5 o clock .Wednesday morning. While Buller has been forced back in Natal an unpleasant story comes from ' the western border that Methuen lias ordered a retreat from an advanced position. Col Plumer's force attacked the Boer position near Ranionsta and after heavy fighting, including an endeavor to take the place by storm, the British were re pulsed. Their loss is unknown. No Boers were injured. Ex-Secretary of the Navy Richard V. Thompson, 91 years old, is very near death at his home in Tcrrc Haute. CONVICTS ESCAPE AT LOUISVILLE. Fie Desperate Criminal Gain Their Liberty In Kentucky. There was a jail delivery at Louis ville, Ky., Saturday evening. Red Flanncry, Thomas Kelly, Henry Card ner, George Gorman and George Mc- r.lroy, live notorious criminals, made their escape from what is known as sec tion No. s, which was heretofore thought to have been the safest part of the structure. By the use of files they cut a sufficient portion of the roof of their cell away and effected an exit. When they reached the wall of the building they dug their way out by re moving the bricks. By a daring climb along a narrow cornice they reached the roof. Then they leaped across a 10-foot alley space to an engine house beyond. From this they made their wayto the ground and disappeared. Their escape was discovered only a few minutes alter tliey iclt tlic jail. Ballot Be Stutters Sentenoed. Samuel R. Marklcy, Joseph S. Hogan and Frank Taylor, alias Pierce, of Phil adelphia, "have been sentenced to im prisonment for two years in the Eastern penitentiary, and to pay a fine of $500 eacli lor frauds perpetrated at the No vember election. The men were election officers in the Twelfth division of the Fifth ward and were recently convicted of stuffing the ballot box and making fraudulent re turns ol the votes cast. Shot Nil Wile's Murderer. At Cherry station, Ky., Saturday, Jim Gordon, a negro (arm hand, enraged because Mrs. George Rollins, a white farmer's wife, refused to give him some money, cut her throat with a butcher knife. Her screams were heard by her husband, who shot the negro twice and beat out his brains with the gun butt. Mrs. Kollms died in a lew minutes. Will Institute a Tariff Law. France refuses to lower the duties on Brazilian coffee, and the negotiations on the subject are broken off. A cable message lust received from Paris af firms that the French Government will retaliate against- the Brazilian law doubling duties on French goods. The .7 f.i.. c 1 i negouuuons wun naiy, opuin auu ucr many are progressing favorably. Dr. Leyds, diplomatic agent of the Transvaal, had another interview with Count von Buelowv the German foreign minister, LATEST NEWS NOTES. A society has been formed in Berlin to promote emigration to Southern Brazil. Tampico. Mexico, had the most dis astrous fire in its history, the loss being about $1,000,000, At Black Hawk. Col. W. M. Allen shot and killed his wife and daughter and committed suicide. The Alsonchc cement works of Gcf- many are now seeking n suitable place in the United Mates to erect a branch. United States Judge Seaman, at Chi cago, decides that saloon license bonds arc not exempt under the war revenue act. Governor Tanner, of Illinois, is con fined to his bed with a serious attack of stomach trouble, and all visitors arc de nied. At Corry. Ta., Thomas J. Berney, ;f Tidiotite. committed suicide, nearly sev ering his head from the body with a razor. Robert P. Porter and Director Ran ger, of the Cuban census, arrived at Havana from the United States Wed nesday. A combination of the manufacturers of whips in the country, with a capital ot $20,000,000, is soon to be consum mated. The American Bicycle Company, of Jersey City, N. J., was incorporated at Springfield, 111., with a capital ol fo,- 000,000. riltsburc was fifth among the cities of the country in building last year, and there were 3.547 operations, at a cost of $8,291,20.1. The Diamond Match Company has declared a quarterly dividend of J1 j ner cent., the net profits of the pa-t year being fl.5M.7f17. Rev. William Hudson, pastor of the Carmichaels (Pa.) Presbyterian church, lias started to Egypt, Palestine and the 1 ans exposition. Fifty skaters on the Kiskiminctas river, at Bagdad station, narrowly es caped drowning Monday night by the ice breaking up. Eighteen hundred nuarts of glycerin exploded at Ftilmer Valley, near Brad ford. Pa. 1 he shock was felt 50 miles. No lives were lost. The citizens of Bellefontc. Ta.. have already raised $N,ooo for the erection of the soldiers' and sailors' Curtin monu ment at that place. It is now conceded in England that the Salisbury ministry is firmly in pow er and will be backed by the country in continuing the war. Henry A. Holcomb. a New Bedford, Mass., yarn manufacturer, has gone in to bankruptcy, with liabilities of fi, 35 '.438, and no assets. An American student at McGill Uni versity, Montreal, was ducked in a dis section bath for criticising the British troops in South Africa. Promoters of the electric railway to connect Sharpsvillc, Pa., Sharon, Pa., Hubbard, O., and Voungstown, O., are securing the right of way. High water and floating ice in Buf falo creek, N. Y., Friday caused dam age estimated at $100,000 to shipping and docks along the stream. While James H. Finnegan, at Cleveland, ()., was blowing his nose his eye popped out. The cleverness of a physician has saved it for him. Major General Otis will be detached from duty and will return to this coun try after the arrival of the new Philip pine Commission at his own request. A inob of 1.200 miners in Martinique have been preventing the harvesting of sugi'.r cane, and in a fight with the mil itary nine men were killed or wounded. Four thousand men and boys employ ed in the collieries of the Mineral and Union Coal Company, at Shamokin, Pa., arc idle on account of a car famine. William Stiles, aged 70, was arrested at South Bend, Ind., charged with em bezzling $40,000 from the estate of the late Samuel Halstcad, of New York City. Youngstown (O.) council voted down a resolution expressing sympa thy with Boers, on the ground that the British are in the greatest need of sym pathy. A joint resolution was passed by the House in Iowa calling for an amend ment to the -Constitution authorizing the selection of Senators by popular vote. The hospital ship Missouri, which started from Manila with 272 sick and wounded soldiers, is reported from Honolulu as having lost 16 of her pas sengers by death. Rear Admiral McNair has been re lieved of the superintendency of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, owing to illness, and Commander Kichard Wain wright succeeded him. Seven members of the MeTarish fam ily were murdered by Indians at Cap per Lard, British Columbia, the Indians imagining that they had caused an cpt demic of scurvy by witchcraft. The courts of Berlin have decided to refuse Herr Sternberg's offer of bail to the amount of 1,000,000 marks, and the iH-fold millionaire, now charged with financial irregularities, went to jail. Agonrillo, the Filipino representative now in Paris, declared that the propos ed plan of civil government for the Philippines would never be accepted, as it gives the natives little say in the gov ernment The benefit performance in New York Friday for the English soldiers in South Africa and the widows and chil dren of the - American soldiers who fought in the Philippines netted about $6,000. Pittsburg engineers, workmen and materials are to be used in the erection of the mammoth blast furnaces on the site of the old Cleveland rolling mill to be used by the American Steel and Wire Company. "Bill" Cook, sentenced in 1895 to four years imprisonment in the Albany Pen itentiary, and who died there Wednes dav from consumption, was once one of the most noted desperadoes of the Indian Icrritory. Two switch engines on the Wiscon sin Central Railroad collided in a fog at Franklin Park, III., Wednesday, two men being killed, another sustaining what is thought arc fatal injuries and a fourth severe injuries. Dr. Barth, the Freisinnige fcader in Germany, is warmly in (avor of passing the Kiuer 1 naval uui. CITIES BIG BURNED BY REBELS. GEN. SCHURMAN ATTACKED. Filipinos Try to Ambush the American Expe ditions Now Use Flaming Arrows to Aid In Destruction. Of late the insurgents in Albay prov ince, Luzon, have adopted harrassing tactics against the towns which the Americans have garrisoned. They camp in the bills anil maintain a con stant fire upon the American outposts. When the troops sally against .them they scatter, returning when the Ameri cans retire. They shoot burning ar rows and have thus burned a large part of the town of Albay. Most of the larger towns in that province are prac tically deserted except by the garri sons. Scarcely any of the inhabitants return to their homes. They arc camp ing in the interior, and it is supposed armed insurgents prevent them going back. It is reported that there is much suffering among them, owing to lack of food. As a result of these condi tions, the hemp business in that section is seriously hindered and ships going for cargoes are compelled to take gangs of coolies to do their loading. Hemp held in the interior is quite inaccessi ble. Guerilla warfare continues south of Manila. Two attemnts have been made to ambush the Americans, lien. Schwn, while retiming to Manila with his staff and escort of too cavalry from lialangas. was attacked by the insur gents. The latter were dispersed, but the Americans have live men wounded. I.ieut. Col. Beaeom, with six com panies of the Forty-second infantry, leld a two hour's fiiiht with lien. P10 Del Pilar's command, which attempted to ambush the Americans along the trail through Morong province, near the lake. Here also the insurgents were dispersed, but the Americans had several wounded, among them a cap tain. lien. Bell is operating through Zam- bales province with a small force. An other expedition is proceeding north ward from Subig. It is reported that the insurgents general Alejandro has recovered from his wound and has as sembled a large force in that district. The plague continues. Eight cases were reported last week among the na tives and business and social life are undisturbed. Smallpox is prevalent among the natives along the railroad and in the towns on the northern coast. Two officers of the Thirty-sixth in fantry have died of the disease and an other officer and several soldiers have been stricken. CUBA IS PROSPERING. The Growing Demand tor Laborers Cannot Be Suppled. The demand for labor in Cuba is greater now than at any time in the his tory of the island. From the sugar dis tricts comes the information that it is impossible to get sufficient laborers, and tobacco growers of Pinar del Rio arc offering them $3 per day, or three times as much, as ever before, and even at this price arc short many hundred. This condition tells the story of Cuba's agricultural prosperity more eloquently than it could otherwise be told. In response to the demand there arc ar riving in Havana now from the Canary Islands from 3.000 to 4,000 men and boys each month. The immigration statistics for 1899 show about 45.000 passengers landed at this port, of whom 25,000 were immigrants. An American syndicate has secured control of the asphalt deposits in the rcginn of Puerto Padre and have begun dcvclonmcpt. Five fold mines have been discovered in the vicinity of Hol guin, in eastern Cuba, on property owned by a British syndicate. Engi neers arc now at work preparatory to operating the mines. The same syndi cate has purchased several other claims where gold has been discovered. The automobile has been introduced in Cuba and the company already es tablished in Havana is seeking con tracts to carry the mails to all points of the interior which have no railway com munication. The roads throughout eastern Cuba arc good, and it is believ ed that the automobile has solved a puzzling question. An offensive and defensive alliance has been made between Portugal and Great Britain whereby the former is to give to the latter the Portuguese ports in South Africa by which the Boers are importings arms and men, while Eng land is arming wholesale to keep the powers from interfering. Murdered by Natives. News has been received that the na tives of the Solomon Islands group are murdering the white settlers, and that a gunboat from the German Solomons has gone to punish the culprits. Many murders have taken place, and in one instance the Captain and mate and four of the crew of a trading schooner were killed while trying to protect a settler from the natives. In. most cases rob bery seems to be the incentive. Exports lor January. The monthly statements of exports issued by the Bureau of Statistics of the Treasury Department shows that there were exported in January breadstuffs to the value of $17,541,249; provisions, $11,508,340; cotton, $.7,104,391; miqcral oil, $6,339,185. The total exports for the month were $04,3.10.593, as compar ed with $74729 763 'r January, 1899. Klondikt's Output Because of the mildness of the winter into the latter part of December the Klondike, according to official report, will be unable to attain the estimated $25,000,000 output for the year. How ever, the temperature in the last week was below 40 and down to 50, and that will help production. Mexicans Deltat the Indians. A dispatch from Oaiaca.Mox..savs that General Bravo is making good progress in his campaign against the Maya In dians, in Yucatan. The Maya losses are reported to nave been heavy. Sev eral small villages have been destroyed by the gunboat crews. It is chanted by Mexican officers that the Mayas are receiving aid from the residents of British Honduras. For the first time in months Havana is clear of yellow fever. No cat has been omciaily reported lor some days. MA J. LOGAN'S FUNERAL, Youngstown, Ohio, Pays Tribute to the Dead Hero Business Suspended. After lying in state in St. John's Epis copal church, Youngstown, l) the re mains of Maj. John A. Logan were Wednesday afternoon carried to their last resting place in the magnificent An drews mausoleum at Oak Hill cemetery. The services were held in the church and the Episcopal burial service was used without eulogy. The funeral cort ege was the largest ever witnessed in Youngstown, and business was practic ally suspended. The funeral cortege included Compa ny H, Seventh United States infantry, with regimental band as escort; Com pany H, I). N. G., guard of honor; G. A. R., nosts, battalion I'ith regiment, O. N. G.. detail of U. S. Grant post, Chicago, G. A. R.; a detail. of the socie ty of the Army of the Tennessee, sol diers and sailors of the Spanish-American war, civic societies, city officials, and friends in carriages. At the cemetery a prayer by Bishop Leonard, benediction by Rev. Mr. Fra zier, a volley fired, the notes of the bugle sounding taps, and all the earthly honor had been shown the fearless sol dier who so heroically died upon the field of San Jacinto in his country's cause. ANXIOUS FOR AN EDUCATION. Cubans Tzk) Advantage ol the Publio Schools Instituted b; Uncle Sam. Mr. Alexis Frye, superintendent of Cu ban schools, in his report to the govern or general upon the development of the school system since the work of reor ganization began six weeks ago, says that the whole country seems on tire with enthusiasm for education. The popular feeling exceeds all he had ven tured to hope for. Six weeks ago there existed in the island less than 200 schools, all based on the old Spanish foundations, with the exception of a few that had been established more than a year before in Santiago by Gen. Wood. There are now 2,058 schools in the island, of which 201 arc in Havana city, 152 in Matanzas City, and 170 in Puerto Principe City. ' Thus far reports have been received from 97 municipalities and there are 34 others to be heard from, which will probably increase the number of schools hy 400. the schools that have already reported show an aggregate attendance of more than 100.000 pupils, and Mr. rrye believes this attendance will have increased to 150,000 before June I. German Navy Increasing, An American naval officer now in Berlin, who enjoys exceptional advant age for gathering information regard ing the German navy, asserts that the German Government has made all the preparations necessary to finish the con struction ot the new worships hy toon, Mislead of 1010, as the naval augmenta tion bill seemingly provides. In 1908 the German navy, according to this officer, will have 37 battleships, varying from ll.ooo to 13,000 tons, and 30 large and 40 small armored cruisers, thus exceeding in fighting power the navy of France. Before the end of 1905, still according to the same informant, Germany will be mistress of the North Sea and her fleet w ill beat the American over twofold. Coal Fleet Met Disaster. Word has been received by C. Juttc & Co., of Pittsburg, Pa., who operate the big 'owboat Joseph B. W illiams that their boat bad met with a serious accident at Point Pleasant, Mo., result ing in the sinking of 16 coal boats be sides grounding 10 and badly damaging several others of her licet. She had 40 coal boats and three barges of steel rails in her tow. Fog and rapidly falling water arc said to have been the cause of the disaster. The entire fleet was shov cd onto a bar at Point Pleasant and the tow went to pieces. The coal boats which were sunk ami damaged contain ed about 670,000 bushels of coal, The loss is estimated at $50,000. Dying ol lnflu;nia. The inffuenza which has spread throughout Germany now numbers 60, 000 victims in Munich. In Berlin every tied m every hospital was occupied, and the hospital physicians, hundreds of whom have been stricken with the mal ady, arc scarcely able to care for their patients. Among those believed to be dying is Dr. Licbcr, leader of the Centrists, or Clerical party in the Reichstag, who re ccived the sacraments. Governor General Wood will estab lish a board of health in Havana. Famous Gold Mints Soli Dr. J. B. Hamilton, of Pittsburg. Pa., who represents a syndicate of Pittsburg ahd Washington capitalists, has just purchased the famous Cherokee Flat hydraulic gold mines, situated near Oroville, Cal. The price paid is in the neighborhood of $250,000. The mines have been worked continuously for 40 years and have already provided $13, 000,000. CABLE FLASHES. " Sir Thomas Grainger Stewart, the noted Scotch physician, died in Edin- burg bunday morning, aged 63 years. Diplomats in Europe expect Russia to make an aggressive move in Persia to secure a route to the open sea at at most any time. Count Ferdinand Esterhazy protests against amnesty being granted to Cap tain Alfred Dreyfus, and he even invites prosecution lor himself. In Munich there are 60.000 victims of grip, while in Berlin all hospitals are lull, and Dr. l.ieber, leader ot the Cen trist party, is thought to be dying. The mortality in Bombay Tuesday was unprecedented. There was a total of 408 deaths. The situation is aggra vated by the aavent 01 lamine rciugees. The German direct cable from Emden to New York, by way of the Azores, will be laid by a London company. It will cost 985,000. The cable will be 4,336 miles long. Lord Roberts. British commander- in-chief in South Africa, ban sent a note to Presidents Steyn and Kruger com plaining against the wanton destruction ol property in jsatai uy tne uoers. BUSINESS OUTLOOK flit! BRIGHT. REVIEW OF TRADE. Industrial Concerns All Busy, Produc Ion Sur passed That ol Any Previous Year. R. G. Dim & Co.'s "U'cektv Review of Trade" reports the following: The industries arc still surpassing in actual output the work of any previous year. 1 neir new business is not correspond ingly large, nor could such orders be accepted by most industries if offered. but enough are coming to prevent stop page 01 works or much decline in pri ces. The weekly output of pig iron February I was 21)8.014 tons, but stocks unsold rose 20,300 tons in January, in dicating a consumption slightly smaller than the output when the month began. As the consuming works were naturally stopped about the holidays more than the furnaces, the figures prove little, but Dcssemer and grey forge at Pittsburg have not changed in price during the past week, and slightly lower offers of pig by southern and other new furnaces at Chicago and eastern markets have had little effect. It is more significant that the decline of prices for some weeks in bars, plates and sheets has been checked. Large orders have been taken for these and other products, in dicating that the works in need of busi ness may have obtained enough for a time. Failures for the week were 245 in the United Slates, against 217 last year, and 33 in Canada, against 33 last year. Itradstreets says of the grain move ment: Wheat, including flour ship ments for the week, aggregate 2.902.357 bushels, against 2.724.937 bushels last week, 5.5S0.500 bushels in the corres ponding week of 1X119, 3,419504 bush els in i8)8, 2.051.345 bushels in 1897, and 2.718.391 bushels in ii. Since July 1, this season, the exports of wheat aggregate t23.ot2.322 bushels, against t50.599.t50 buhels last year, and 153.- 649.537 bushels in 1897-98. Corn ex ports for the week aggregate 3.450.009 bushels, against 3.589.962 bushels last week, 3.865.622 bushels in this week a year ago, 4.508,012 biidicls in 1898, 4.- 169.274 bushels 111 1807 and 3.143.344 bushels in 1806. Since July I, this sea son, corn exports aggregate 132,606,774 bushels, against 103,279,350 bushels dur ing the same period a year ago, and 105.506,671 bushels in 1897-98. MORMONS MILL LEAVE UTAH. Owing to Gentih " Persecution " They Will Settle in Wyoming. Arrangements for one of the biggest colonization schemes ever engineered in ttie west, have been completed at Cheync, W'yo., where .1 portion of the Uig Horn basin 111 Northern Wyoming will be settled by Mormons. For sever al years a majority of the Mormons in Utah have left that they could not stand the "persecutions" ot the Gentiles and with the idea of getting away and into a new country where they might build their homes, new arrangements were made with the Wyoming authorities for the selection of 200,000 acres of land in the Big Horn basin under the Carey act. A committee of prominent Mor mons is now selecting this land along the Stinking water river. The Eric canal and irrigation sys tem will be utilized and several new canals and reservoirs constructed. Hun dreds of .Mormon families are now dis posing of their property in Utah, pack ing tip their personal belongings and during the larlv spring they will start for the big Horn basin. The Mormon leaders say there will be upwards of 30,' 000 people emigrate to the colony dur ing the present year. Crazed by Kentucky News, Since the shooting of Senator Gocbcl Henry ,M inula v. a well-to-do farmer and woodsman living 30 miles south of Kcnova, W. v a., near Big handy river. has manifested the greatest interest and walked miles daily to the railroad sta tion for a newspaper. Tuesday he would talk to his family of nothing else but the trouble at the Kentucky capital, and to ward evening he became wild with ex citemcnt, declaring that he knew the slaver of Gocbcl. Before he could be stopped he seized a Winchester rifle and started for the station to take the train for Frankfort. where he intended to shoot down the guilty ones. The demented man was disarmed with difiiculty, as he threaten ed to use the weapon on his friends. It took six men to hold In 111. Wealthy Brothers Killed. William and John Newton, wealthy bachelor brothers, were burned to death in the home of the former one mile west of Portland, Ind., on Monday morning. The fire was discovered by a neighbor, but when he reached the burning house he was too late to render any assistance. In the rear of the ruins were a number of chairs and a bundle of papers which had evidently been carried out. AH of them were covered with blood. No actual evidence ol loul play lias been discovered. William Newton was 75 years old. and one of the wealthiest men in the State, his estate beinrr estimated at $1,500,000. Both men-were eccentric and lived in the most frugal manner. ' Militia Standing. Secretary Root has sent to Congress his annual report on the organized and unorganized militia. It shows that the country has 10,343,153 men capable of bearing arms. Of this number 106,319 are in the National Guard, an increase of about 3,000. Pennsylvania has 10, 016 men in the National Guard, and ' , l, I 913.904 available ior limitary service. Ohio has less than half as many Na tional Guardsmen, the total being only 4.481, and 650.000 men available for ser vice. West Virginia's Guard has 985 men, and 125.000 available. Bomb for De Casssgnsc. Some considerable excitement was caused in Paris by the announcement that a bomb had been found in the win dow ledge r.i the residence of Paul de Cassacnac. on the boulevard Malcshcr- bes, with the fuse lighted. The latter was extinguished by a policeman. The chief of the municipal labatory said that the engine would have done much dam age if it had exploded, Oporto. Portugal, has been declared tree Irom the nunomr. uiaguu. RELINQUISHED BY BRITAIN. She Will Mike No Objection to Our Entire Con Ircl ot Nicaragua Canal. The United States nmt Great Britain have reached an amicable agreement re specting the operations of the Claytoil Ilulwer treaty as affecting the right of construction and control by the United .iiaics 01 tne (Nicaragua cnnni. 1 nc re sult marks the termination of confer ences between the officials of the State department and Lord Pauncefotc of ful ly a year s ciurntion. Great Britain agrees to a modification of the Clayton lltilwer treaty by which she practically relinquishes any claims respecting a du al control of the Nicaragua canal after it shall have been constructed. The re sult is to eliminate that feature of the treaty bearing on the snbiect of dual control and to leave the United States free to construct and thereafter control this inter-oceanic waterway. In all the discussions over the proposed canal the question of England's rights under the Uayton-JIuIwer treaty has for.mcd prominent feature, and on more than one occasion has given rise to the query Whether or not the United Mates gov ernment had the moral right to pro vide tor the construction of thp canal without n modification of the treaty. England has made no demands for a quid pro 9110 for her abandonment of whatever rights she may have had un der the treaty and which she promises to relinquish. MAY BE GOEBEL'S ASSASSIN. Peoria, III., Police Think They Have Clue to tho Right Parly. The t'olice of Peoria, III., think they re on the trail of the assassin of Sena or Gocbcl. of Kentucky. A mysterious well-dressed stranger is co-oncratiiig with the local force, and sensational de velopments arc expected. A young man arrived in the city last fall, who claim ed his father was a member of a firm on East Front street, Cincinnati. He claimed Kentucky as his home and said repeatedly that it was his evidence that acquitted Gocbcl of the charge of mur der, lie was very bitter 111 his denun ciation oT Gocbcl, and offered to bet large sums of money that Gocbcl would be assassinated bclorc he reached the gubernatorial chair. lie said a near relative of Gocbers victini was pledged to kill the governor, but in case he failed to keep his word, others would not fail, and that he him self would, with his own hand shoot Gocbcl before he got a chance to dis grace his native State by becoming its governor. This was said several times in the presence of reputable witnesses. Sujiie think lus talk the ravings ol fanatic but most of his hearers believe he was desperately in earnest. He had left 1 eona some tune belorc the Ken tucky tragedy and his present where abouts is not known. JOHN D. ROCKFELLER RETIRES. Some Motive for His Giving up Presidency cl Standard Oil Company. John D. Rockefeller has resigned the presidency of the Standard Oil Com pany of Ohio to avoid being drawn in to future investigation of its affairs. He will be succeeded by A. M. McGregor, vice-president of the New Jersey Stand ard Oil Company. It is believed that tins move is mere ly one of expediency, as the State Su preme Court has decided the Anti-Trust law of Ohio constitutional and a fur ther investigation of the Standard is likely by Attorney General Monnett of that State. This action by Mr. Rock efeller will probably avoid the necessity of his testifying at such a hearing. Mr. Rockefeller will, it is generally believed, continue to direct the affairs of the Standard as he has in the past. Frank Rockefeller has also retired as vice-president, and F. H. Squire, o( Cleveland, has been chosen for that po sition. The Ohio corporation in which these changes arc made is really the controlling organization of the Stand ard Oil Company. No Lova lor England. It is officially announced in London that Sir Edmund J. Monson, the Brit ish ambassador to France, left Paris for the south on leave of absence. The an nouncement is gencially regarded as important. Coining on top of the known anti-British feeling in France, it is thought the departure of the ambas sador from his post at the present junc ture indicates more than appears on the surface or than is contained in the of ficial explanation. A survey for an electric railroad is be ing made from Tiffin, O., to Toledo, by way of Sandusky. New Philippine Commission. The President has appointed Judge William H. Taft, of Cincinnati, United States judge of the Sixth judicial cir cuit, to be president of the new Philip pine commission. Judge Taft's place on the bench was filled by the appointment ..I 1 . . I . . 11 1 l.tttru I, Suvnr.n. a! Rapids, Mich. On leaving the White House Judge Taft stated that the com mission of which he had been appointed president would sail for the Philippines soon after March 15, and its special mission would be the establishment of a civil government for the island. There will be five members on the commis sion, all civilians. War Cost 9365,000,0000. From the beginning of the war with Spain to the present time the total ex penditures of the government on ac count of the hostilities in the Philip pines anyiunt to about $355,000,000 as follows: On account of the war depart ment, $255,000,000. On account of the navy department. $69,000,000. Paid to Spain for Philippines, $20,000,000. In terest on war loan to date, $9,000 00. Increased expenses in departmental ser vice in Washington, $2,000,000. Total war expenditures, $355,000,000. Not Mceh Yellcw Fever. A report of the vital .statistics of Ha vana for the year 1899, compiled by Mayor Davis, chief sanitary officer, shows that in an estimated population of 220,000 there were 8,153 deaths from all causes. Of these 1,163 were from enteritis and 1.307 from tuberculosis. Yellow fever occupies a relatively small position on the list, 103 deaths having resulted from this cause. Eleven deaths were due to leprosy. At Buenos Ayres there were 167 sun- 'v strokes on Monday and 187 on Tuesday i 1 I