COUNSEL HEEDED. Thr Thousand Angry Striken on March Ar Turned Buck by Organizer Armod Deputiet Rody to Repel Them. John Mitchell, president of the Unit ed Mine Workers of America, gave the keynote ol the strike situation in West side Park nt Wilkebarrc. Pa.. Tuesday before the largest crowd that ever gath ered in the anthracite regions. In substance he told the men that they had already won a great victory. ns the Mr coal and transportation companies had made concessions to them. They must not expect to have nil their wrongs righted at this time, but if they main tain their organization they will even tually obtain all they have demanded. lie implored them not to return to work until the offers made by the oper ators hive been accepted by n confer ence. He was greeted with wild enthus iasm and the multitude punctuated his remarks with cheers. An uprising of striking miners in the Shamokin region seemed imminent for several hours lute Thursday, and there were forebodings of a serious clash be tween armed denudes and a large body of striker. Prompt action of some of the cool-headed nt'licials of the miners organization finally succeeded in avert iniT the threatened ronllict. Some j.onn excited strikers assembled .it Mount Carinel anil, headed by a fir.nd of music, started a march to Trev orton. 16 miles hwav, with the avowed nnrnnsc of forcing those at work at the North Franklin colliery to quit and join in the strike. This was the only mine in operation in the region, and the strikers had become angered at the refusal of the men there to stop work. The marchers were in a wrathful fame of mind. When they bad covered three miles of their march they were met by officials of their organization, who. after much persuasion, induced the men to abandon their proposed trip. The strikers then turned back, though many did so reluctantly. Later it was announced that the offi cials of the North Franklin colliery, to prevent trouble, would not operate the mine until the strike is settled. (ien. (inbin. as a result of this new disturbing element, has rescinded his order for Battery C of the national guard to return home. CU3A IS COING VifZLL. A Season 01 ITark'd Prosperity Thousand! cf Immigrant Workmen Landing. Marked and substantial agricultural prosperity is reported throughout the region lying between Havana and Cicn fuegos. The reconstruction of the cane and sugar centrals is actively progress ing, and the restoration of commercial confidence in agricultural ventures is gradually made evident by the large importation of American refining and agricultural machinery which has been recorded in both the sugar and tobacco industries, which are settling down to a large and permanent production. earnings arc estimated at over $6,000, 000. New sugar machinery is at pres ent in the course of erection in variom parts of the island. During last week t.fVio immigrants from the Canary islands and Barcelona have arrived at Havana nnd have hit for the country, where employment is readily obtained. This continued in flux partially solves the labor question, many of the plantations having been idle owing to lack of labor to cultivate them, YAQUI WAR CONTINUES. Mexican and Indian Pcaco CommlrJonsrs Failed to Agree May Try Again. Negotiations between the five Ynq-.ti Tndian emissaries and President Diaz for the settlement of hostilities now existing between the Yaquis and the Mexican government, have failed to ac complish anything, and the peace envoys have arrived at Hcrmosillo on their way home from the City of Mexico. They report that President Diaz refused to consider their proposal for peace, as he looked upon it as granting too many concessions to the Indians. These emissaries belong to the peace (action of the tribe, and they hope to secure a modification of the original proposal that will be acceptable to the Mexican authorities and bring about a termination of the disastrous war. Fight ing still continues, and the government troops seem to be making slow but steady advances into the Indian country. WANT THE TROOPS KEPT. American C tlzens at Tien Tain Announco Their Foars to be Left Alono. At a recent meeting of American citi zens at Tien Tsin the following resolu tion was adopted: "We, citizens of the United States, deplore the contemplat ed withdrawal of a large part of the United States troops in North China. We feel the work of the allied armies is far from accomplished, and that the refusal of the American Government to take its part therein is sure to be re garde d by the allies as an unworthy net, and by the Chinese as a sign of indifference. We urge our Govern incnt to carry to an end the work it has so honorably and efficiently begun, and to maintain a sufficient force here to secure the protection of American mer cantile and missionary interests until a settlement of the present trouble is ac complished." All One Way In Georgia. , Renorts from all parts of Georgia in dicate that the Democratic majority in Wednesday's election for members of Congress, State officers, members of the General Assembly and county officers will be about 50,000. Will Suppress Marlnduqut Rebels. Gen. MacArthur announces that an expedition is to be sent to Marinduquc to avenge the capture by insurgents of Capt. Shields and his company, of the Twenty-ninth infantry. In a cablegram to the war department he says: "The First infantry started to Marin duquc Friday on the Sumner. Gen. Hare, is to command the island, with orders to push operations until the in eurrection is stamped out absolutely. He will have 12 full companies of in fantry lor the purpose." LATEST NEWS NOTES. Scores of hogs in Washington coun ty, Md., arc dying of cholera. Owing to the drought, dairymen of Washington, Pa., have raised the price ot milk. The West Virginia State asylum for the insane nt Spencer is suffering a wat er famine. Owing to seven enscs of diphtheria, seven schools nt Conncaut, O., have been closed. The New Masontown gang of negro footpad have extended their operations to Uniontown, Pa. At Arcadia, Fla.. two negro women arc dead, having killed each other in a duel wall razors. The plant of the Atlantic Tube Works at Heaver Falls. Pa., has been put on double turn. Five arrests have been made at Brus sels as the result of an alleged plot to kill the Prince of Wales. A Mind woman at Bromley, Ky., was the first to detect a fire, which destroyed $40,000 worth of property. The census returns give New Castle, Pa., 28,.i.?o population, an increase of I.I.1.30 per cent, since 1P00. The Chinese emperor has selected a new capital and is not likely to re-establish his court nt Pekin. The foreclosure sale of the Penn plate glass works nt Irwin, Pa., has been postponed until October if). Farmers near Massillon. O., have or ganized a vigilance committee to pro tect their crops from thieves. An experiment in the making of cheap fuel gas to lake the place of nat ural gas is well under wav at Irwin. Pa. A recent letter from Conger shows that Secretary Hay's diplomacy saved the legations at Peking from massacre. Frank Pope, a hunter, was instantly killed at Harvey's lake, near Wilkes barre, Pa., by a big tree falling upon him. The American Tin Plate Company has ordered the Lnughlin and La Belle plants at Wheeling to be put in full op eration. Several head of cattle near Madison, Westmoreland county. Pa., were bitten by a rabid dog, which succeeded in es caping. George Von I.aer Meyer, of Hamil ton. Ma-s is to be appointed ambassa dor to Italy to succeed General Draper, resigned. A British syndicate has declared the intention of securing control of all im portant industrial concerns in the Unit ed States. The American Steel Hoop Company's eight-inch mill at Greenville, Pa., has been closed on account of inability to get billets. Charles O'Neal, a veteran of the Civil war. was drowned in a roseroir near Uniontown, Pa., while on his way home irotu town. The abandoned Carnegie library site at Conncllsvillc, Ta., which was recently a graveyard, may be converted into a playground. The commissioners have hxed a boundary line between Nicaragua and Honduras that is satisfactory to both governments. There has been an appreciable dc crease in yellow fever at Havana since October 1. F.ighty-four cases of fever were reported. A government report says that the Cape Nome gold beach has been prac tically worked out, after yielding about $300,000 tins year. Dr. and Mrs. Ycatman Wardlow, of Columbus, O., were robbed of $2,000 worth of jewelry and $246 in cash at a hotel in New tork. Miss I.ayola Plague, a school teacher, was attacked by a negro on a Union- town (Pa.) street, the negro got ner pocketbook and lieu. The Red Boy mine, near Baker City, Ore., has been sold to an English syn dicate. It is said the purchase price is in excess of $.1,000,000. The steamer Santa Ana, with 207 passengers and from $500,000 to $600, 000 Klondike and Nome gold, has ar rived at Seattle, Wash. The finishing department of the American Tinulate Company, at Niles, O., employing 300 men. has resumed work under the new scale. The bishop of Jerusalem laid the cor nerstone of the church on Mount Zion on the site presented bv the sultan of Turkey to Emperor William. Eddie McBridc, aged 10, of Trenton, N. J., was playing "Indian with com panions and was tied to a stake and burned so badly that he died. Captain Frank West. Sixth cavalry. superintendent of Scquaia Park, Cal- nornia. reports that saw mills are men acing the great scquaia trees of the park. The British have purchased at New Orleans, La., since August, 1890, 15,000 horses, 42,000 mules and other armv supplies aggregating a value of $10,000. Hip Luck, the highbinder accused of the murder of Chief of Police Main, of Stevenson, B. C, has pleaded guilty and implicated two other Chinese in the crime. Private letters received from Havana indicate apprehension exists among the Americans there regarding yellow fever, as conditions grow worse instead of im- nrovine. Lieut. Andrtip's Greenland expedition has returned to Copenhagen alter ex ploring a previously unknown stretch of land between cape town and Agas- s'z land. Provincial Mineralogist Robertson whn hn iust returned to Victoria ft C., from Porcupine, reports rich finds of gold in that district and predicts a big rush there. An accredited representative ot an English syndicate has contracted for 750.000 tons of Alabama coal to be de livered at some point on the Gulf of Mexico. The deliveries arc to extend over two years. Eighty-seven per cent, of the boys and many of the girls at the Fort Wayne, Ind., public schools are addicted to the cigarette habit. Anti-cigarette clubs arc being formed. Michael Moynahan, of Lexington, Ky., who killed R. C. O. Benjamin, the negro lawyer, at the registration poll last Tuesday, has been acquitted on the ground of self-defense. At Columbia, 6. C, a young negro's ears were cut in slits for having insulted a woman Wednesday. This was a sec ond offense, the first having been pun ished by 300 lashei with a whip. GERMANS GOMPEUEO 10 RElll! LEADERS DEGRADED. The Chines Emperor's Edict Name tht Prince Selected tor Punishment An Earnest Effort Being Mad. A dispatch from Tien Tsin, dnted Fri day, says: "A German force came into collision with 8,000 Chinese, described as Boxers, a few miles south of Tien Tsin this morning. The Germans were checked and compelled to retire on Tien Tsin. There is reason to believe that the Chinese in this case were not Boxers, but were Li Hung Chang s eterans, who had been ordered to wait ear here in view of the possibility that the foreigners would bar his progress o the capital." On Saturday 7.000 rebels attacked the market town of Sai Wan, eight miles northeast of San Chun, but were de feated. The people of San Chun closed heir shops, expecting to be attacked ilso. The troops at Hong Kong arc held in readiness for any emergency. All foreign troops at Shanghai nre held in readiness against a possible at- ick by 8,000 Chinese troops advancing along the (..rand canal. A disnaleh from Pekin confirms for mer reports that the emperor has issued a decree in which he denounces the Boxer movement, nnd designates for punishment nine ringleaders. He ac knowledges his own fault nnd rebukes himself, hut he places the chief blame upon the princes and nobles wdio partici pated in the movement and protracted it. Trincc Tuan. Prince Chung. Prince Tsai Lien, Prince Tsai Yinff, San Kang, mg Men, president ot the censorate, and Chao Shu Chiao, president of the board of punishment, nre deprived of their titles, removed from ottice and urned over to various trial boards for further penalties. NOT YET SELF-SUPPORTING. United Stales Postal Service Almost Five Million Dollars Short Last Year. Auditor Castle, for the postofficc de partment, has received the trial balance showing receipts ami expenditures of the postal service for the fiscal year ended June 30, iono. This statement taken in connection with that of the money order statement, which was com pleted a week ago, shows the entire financial results of the postal service for the fiscal year. The financial statement of the postal service proper for the year I'm) 15 as ioiiows: r.xpcnciiiurcs, ?io7, 240.21)8.13; revenue, $l02,.i54.570.2o. Kx cess of expenditures over revenue. $4.- X04, 718.84. The excess of expenditures over receipts or net deficit of the postal service is about $1,500,000 less than the deficit for the preceding fiscal year. The principal item ot revenue is the sale of tar ;s and stamped nancr. That item for the year under review amounted to $1)4.01 ikx).6.i, an increase of $6.7.11.- 045.62 over the preceding year. The total financial transactions of the postal service, including the money order statement, were $714,394,101.22. FLOODS DROWN AND DESTROY. Mexican Rivers Overflow Their Band -Tho Tames 50 Miles Wide. The Tanuco and Tames rivers, which enter into the Gulf at Tampico, Mex., are on one of the biggest rises in their history, and great damage has been wrought by the Hoods in the populated and cultivated valleys above Tampico. At one point, near Clula station, on the line of the Mexican Central railroad, the Tames river is over 50 miles wide and has swept to destruction hundreds of houses occupied by Mexican farmers and laborers. Many cases of drowning arc reported. All the tributaries of these rivers in the south and eastern parts of the state of San Luis Potosi arc out of their banks, and have .washed away villages and ruined thousands of acres of growing crops. Philippine Revenues. The war department has made public a statement showing the revenues in the Philippine islands for the first seven months of igoo to have been $4,782,080, an increase over the corresponding pe riod of 1800. of $2.0Q.-m. -The custom receipts tor the period named in 1000 were .l.,y2,245, and the internal reve nue receipts $1.10,101. The nostal re ceipts beginning July I were deposited in tne treasury nnd tor that month amounted to $110,845. Prisoner Number 16,000. A dispatch from Lord Roberts says The number of prisoners captured or surrendered is daily increasing nnd must now aggregate nearly 16,000 men. Com mandant Mullcr has surrendered to Clery and Commandant Dirkscn and ethers are on their way to Pretoria to surrcniler. A detachment of the London Irish endeavored to surprise a party of Boers near Bulfonstein. but had to retire after three hours fighting, with six men wounded. The Boers suffered heavily. Robbed the Vatican. Thieves entered the Vatican at Rome. forced a safe and carried off securities worth "7,000 lires and 3,000 hres in silver. The safe, situated on the second floor, belongs to the management of the apostolic palace which looks after the horses and carriages and the decorations of St. Peter s cathedral. Suicided In Hi Church. Rev. B. L. Pirtle. pastor of the Cum berland Presbvtenan Church at Tasner. Tcnn., hanged himself on the bell rope of his church Saturday morning. He was discouraged by the falling away of his congregation during his pastorate 01 less tnan a year. Tornado Kill Nln Ptopl. A fierce tornado Saturday afternoon visited parts of Northern Minnesota and Wisconsin. At Biwabik, on the Mesaba range, Minnesota, nine were killed and many others were hurt. The funnel-shaped cloud passed over Biwa bik with a power that was irresistible, It tipped locomotives over, lifted can off the track and carried them from 100 to 300 feet. Houses in the path of the tornado were blown to atoms and the INSURGENTS CONCENTRATING. Mom Fighting to b Don In Luton Fill plno Tactic Modeled Upon th American Example. Four troops of cavary and two com panies of infantry have recently rein forced Gen. Young in Northern Luzon, where the insurgents nre concentrating in the mountains of North and South 1 locos provinces, under the leadership of Aglipay, the excommunicated priest and renegade. Gen. Tino and Gen. Vil laneuve, who had been quiet for some time, nre now showing signs of becom ing active, as the end of the rainy sea son approaches. Of late there has been considerable scouting nnd skirmishing in the prov inces of Abra nnd North Iloeos, though without decisive results. It is obvious, however, that the maneuvers of the Fili pinos are more skilful than formerly, and that the field tactics of the Ameri cans are being followed by them. This week the commission will begin the work of revising the tariff, making use of the results of the investigation of the army board in this direction. It is the intention of the commission to give American trade a better chance than it has hitherto enjoyed, owing to the high duties. The transports Sumner nnd Venus have sailed for the island of Marin- luquc, of! the west coast of Luzon, car ving two battalions. The former has ilreadv arrived there. The trnnsnort Logan will reinforce the Twenty-ninth infantry, now in Marinduquc. DAVIS BUNCOED THE DOERS. Induced Them to Believe That He Could So cur Intervention ol the United State. Douglas Story, correspondent of the ondon Daily Mail with the Boers in South Africa, publishes over his own signature in that paper a remarkable narrative concerning Webster Davis, ex assistant secretary of the interior of the united Mates, and his dealings with Kruger. It is said that Story makes the matter public at the desire of Kruger. le charges that Davis permitted him self to be introduced to the Boers as the American secretary of state and recciv- 1 Irom them $125,000 because he im pressed upon them his ability, by his oratory, to arouse the people of the United States to intervention in the South African war. Mr. Story says: "The theory advanced by Davis, and on which the Boers founded their faith, was that in the United States there was a large, bitter anti-English public, com posed of Germans and Irishmen. All of these were, by assumption, pro-Boer. If Davis could arouse them by false en thusiasm, Bryan's election, he declared, would be a certainty, and his interven tion in behalf of the Boers an assured corrollnry. To-dav such Boers as arc still fighting remain in the field to await the announcement of the result of the polls on November ft next, nnd the ful fillment of ebster Davis promises. AT LEAST 200 HURT. Vast Quantity ol Dynamito Explode at Mine With Terrible Effect. Seven thousand five hundred pounds ol dvnamite 111 the powder magazine at the Spruce mine, about half a mile from F.veletli, Minn., blew up Sunday afternoon. A hole 100 feet square nnd 25 feet deep marks the spot where the magazine stood. The force of the ex plosion was so great that there is not a piece of glass over a foot square within a radius ol two miles ot the mine. Prac tically every window and mirror in eleth was broken. The loss in the own is estimated at $10,000. The dam age done to the Spruce mine was about $.1.ooo, the nunc laboratory and ware houses being totally wrecked. At least 200 people were more or less seriously hurt from being thrown down by the shock or hit by shattered glass, The explosion was plainly felt at Biwa bik, 12 miles distant. Its cause has so far not been ascertained. Will Go at Public Sal. The secretary of the interior has dc cided to dispose of nt public sale the ceded lands of the Chippewa Indians, adjoining the White Farth and Red Lake reservations in Minnesota. These lands comprise 33,310 acres of agricul tural land, near the White Earth reser vation, and 30.022 acres of nine land containing 76,34,000 feet of pine. The value ol this pine land is S2.t1.4nQ. the Ked Lake land is 8.17 acres of pine containing 488,000 feet, valued nt $1,45. 1 lie aggregate area of land to uc (usposcu 01 is 74,125 acres. Lived Mlsorly; Left $100,000. lames Howie, a Scotchman 70 years old, who was employed for 50 years as gardener for Dr. Bolton, the clergy man and historian, at the old Ho ton Friory in Pclliam, N. Y.. died Fridav Irom old age and exhaustion. Howie lived on 10 cents a day, and paid only $1 a week for his room. When his trunk was broken open after his death, bonds and mortgages on property in Iew Kochclle, remain and IScw York city and shares in the New Haven Kailroad Company were found amount ing to nearly $100,000. Germans Battle With Boxer. The Chinese report that 2.000 Boxers attacked two battalions of Germans at Kau Ku Men. near Pekin. The Box ers lost 400 men and the Germans five, The latter are now said to be burning the Hoxers villages around t ekin. The Japanese expedition has return ed to Pekin. It met with slight resist ance at the village of aifa. Such ex peditions have small effect on the Box ers, who recongregatc in the villages as soon as the allied torees leave. TERSE TELEGRAMS. New coke works are starting up in tne vicinity ol Masontown, Pa. Youncstown. O.. will vote on a $400, 000 water works proposition in Novcm oer. W. J. Cotts, the forger just convicted at Wheeling, W. Va., has applied for a pardon. The Uniontown (Pa.) flint glass works closed down because the tayette Oas company raised its price. At Charleston, W. Va., Mrs. Harry Ulaisel and her child were fatally burn ea by an oil can explosion. Women of Hartford, Conn., will not join the W. C. T. U. because the use of cider in nunc pie is interdicted, RIOTERS INDICTED ill UNO JURY CITY OFFICIALS SCORED. Grand Jury Sayi th Akron Trouble Could Hav Easily Been Averted Slxly rlv Tru Bill Returned. The special grand Jury, which for five weeks has been investigating the Akron (O.) riot of August 22, in which the city building was burned and two children killed, has filed report. The responsibility for the riot is laid on the police department and the assertion is made that the character, number, ag anil physique of the rioters was such that nt any time they could have been dispersed by a dozen courageous men. It is stated that the saloons are to blame, for except for them and the liquor sold to the turbulent element the rioters would not have been nerved to commit their violent deeds. After Columbia hall was burned and dynamite fired in the entrance of the city building, "There was no one," the report savs. "to stand tin for Akron. Her responsible and legal guardians had I. fine lay prostrate before a band of hoodlum. Hit fair name was smirched for the want of moral and mysiral courage." It is found that Columbia hall was fired by a man who deliberately used oil waste. I he city building was tired by three boys who brought the dynamite used in an earlier attempt to destroy the building. It is shown that Chief of 'oliee Harrison fired the first shot nnd used both shotgun ami revolver. It is stated that Mayor Young left the city uilding by a rear basement door, and went home before midnight, steeping at the house of a neighbor. It is stated that boys from 16 to 21 were the chief rioters: that of the crowds standing near not one in loo was guilty of wrong- lnl nets, nnd nmong the rioters was not one prominent citizen or church mein- cr. 1 he police nre especially sco'rd or attempting 10 neieno. ine city ouiiu ng from the interior. Councilman Georec Broilt and An- rlrcw Halter, a Democratic politician are the only well-known persons indict- d. i-or the most part the others arc it the criminal element and mere bo vs. The grand jury examined 350 witnesses and indicted 45 persons. GAINS FOR THE GOVERNMENT. The Ministerial Parly Increasing Its Majority In Brlllih House ol Common. The "Khaki" boom has swept th country. Thursday s pollings are a tale of increased Ministerialist and dimin ished Liberal majorities. The Con servatives gained 12 seats, against three Rained by the Liberals. The working men have replied in a decided voice in favor of the war nnd of the annexation of the republics. Even Liberal Scot land is feeling the full force ol the hock, the Glasgow lories being ns much astonished as the Liberals at their success in winning two seats. The Lib eral representation from London will not amount to more than seven or eight out of 62 members. Chamberlain sc.it the following message to Birmingham : "This has been a great day for the Em pire. At midnight returns showed the total number of elected to be 307 ns follows: Ministerialists, 2H0; Liberals, including l.aborites, 72; Nationalists. 45. Dr. A Conan Doyle was defeated in Edin burgh. REBEL FLAQ OBJECTIONABLE. Its Display is Sharply Condemned by tr Union Veteran Union. The Union Veteran Union, at Wash ington, D. C, after sonic debate, have adopted resolutions which read in part as follows: That the blending of these emble matical colors, the entwining of the Union flag with the Confederate flag, must of necessity be futile nnd empty, a mere mockery, an unseemly effort to harmonize adverse principles. "In the capacity of personal friends and blood relations, we extend to those who fought against us the full measure of natural affection, and when they act in the capacity of lawabiding citizens of the Kepublic we cheerfully give to them our recognition, but when they act 111 the capacity of Confederates, making unpatriotic display of the Confederate colors, we unhesitatingly decline to ac cord to them the slightest recognition or affiliation. TROOPS AID HARVECTTRS. French Government Sends He'p to Farmers Whoso Crops Have Been Damagel Heavy storms throughout France have done much damage to property and live stock. Many of the rivers are overflowing, devastating wide tracts. 1 he vine-growing districts arc the greatest sufferers. Over a large area the vineyards have been terribly injured. 1 he vines have been beaten down and in many cases the crops arc almost ruined. The damage done in the Haute Pyre nees amounts to a disaster. The situa tion is so critical in Burgundy, Au vergne, the Rhone and the Saune vine yards that in response to the urgent re quests oi the growers the minister of war, Cien. Andre, is sending troops to aid in the harvesting. Insane Mothers' Crime. Mrs. Lillian Smith, of Inwood, a sub urb of New York, while insane, shot her two children, Ethel, aged 12 years, and Theodore, nged 8 years, and then committed suicide. Before shooting the children Mrs. Smith tried to force them to drink carbolic acid, but sucecded only in forcing it down the throat of Mabel, the youngest. Long brooding over the prospect of death is said to luvc been the cause of the woman's insanity. Tin Wag Seal Settled. The American Tin' Plate Company and the tin workers' union reached an agreement Wednesday on wages for the ensuing year. The rate paid will be practically the same as last year, with the exception that the catchers on all tin pots and tinners and tinners and catchers on all Thomas White pots will be given a slight advance on the roll trimming machines and eight roll stanl ard pots. CAPTURED BY ALLIES. British Demanded Surrender ol Shan Htl Kuan Russian Hav Another Balll With Chinoie Hopeful Oul'ook. The allies have occupied Shan ITil Kunn, which was surrendered on tho demand of the English warship. Tho Russian general staff has rercived a dis patch dealing with the operations north 01 ciiu wiu Miwang, which say thnt Gen. Fleischer' division of 6,000 men, with artillery, engaged the Chinese on n vast plain covered with high grass. The Russians lost two officers killed and 18 men wounded. Col. Artamanoff, while rcconnoiicrinur with two snuad- rons of cavalry, rnnic into touch with M.wjo disciplined Chinese. Ihcse Fleischer is expected to engage. Gen. Grodekoff. the Russian com mander in Amur, has word that Prince Ching, with a view of facilitating peace negotiations, has ordered the governor of Tstoiknr to cease hostilities. Fifteen Hundred Chinese surrendered, nnd no further fighting in Manchuria is ex pected. Gen. Chaffee ami the commander o the Russian forces have notified Field Marshal von Wnldersee of the with drawal of the American nnd Russian forces from Pekin. The Americans took up part in the expedition against Shan . iiai rvuan. It is the conviction in trovrrnmrnt circles at Washington that an agree-. inriH nmong the powers in Chinese r.f fairs is close nt hand. Germanv nnl he United States are workinir in har mony, nnd while there is no doubt that r ranee has proposed a general plan of dealing with the subject, it is believed that it will be acceptable to this gov ernment. Plans arc under consideration by which the powers will see that the Chinese government carries out it promise of punishing the persons guilty 01 uic outrages. ALL E0ERS NOT SUBDUED. Their Guerrilla Warfare Catches Brlllih Wagon Convoy and Railway Train. Lord Roberts telegraphs ns follow from Pretoria, under date of Tuesday: A convoy of 22 wagons, escorted b 60 mounted men, was attacked by 140 nocrs, near ue jagers drilt, while on the way to Vryheid. Twelve of the men escaped. The fate of the others i not known. The Boers derailed a train near Pan Monday evening. Five Cold stream guards were killed and 19 'n iured. Commandant Dirksen, who ha been opposing Paget, has surrendered, after a personal visit to Komati Poo.-t to assure himself that Kruger had gon into Portuguese territory." Hall Million Coal Deal. For a consideration amounting to more than $500,000 a syndicate of east ern capitalists became the owners of 12,000 acres of Pittsburg coal land lying west of Morgantown, W. Va. The title is in James Millholland. trustee, until a company is formed. The work of per fecting titles has been going on for sis months. W. S. Gufley, of Pittsburg, one of the men intefYstcd, states that the contemplated Cheat river railroad lias virtually been abandoned because of (he refusal of the Baltimore & Ohio or Pennsylvania systems to co-operate with the Chi at River Company. Cotorcd Men In Control. Wednesday for the first time since they were given the right to vote the negroes took entire control of the Re publican organization in the 5tatc. K. H. Deas (negro) displaced R. R. Tol bert (white) ns chairman of the State executive committee, nnd Robert Small (negro) was re-elected vice chairman over J. H. Wheeler (white). Nine presidential electors were chos cn, four whites and five negroes. Adams Express Robbery. The Adams Express Company' main office at Marietta. O., was robbed Wednesday while the agent was at lunch and a delivery man, wdio was left in charge, was sitting outside. The sum taken is said to be between $20,000 ami $30,000, but the officials of the com pany say the amount was only $219. They say the robbery was committed by some one who knew the combination of the safe. CABLE FLASHES. At Caracas, Venezuela all war taxet on importations from foreign countrie have been abrogated. ; Hamburg firms have bought 50,000 ! S'lringfield muzzle-loaders from the Unite'' St.ifs government. Another case of bubonic olasue ha been discovered in a part of Glasgow, iiiuicrto iree trom tne disease. President Castro has issued a procla mation convening the congress of Venezuela for February 20 next. Marshal Leonhard von Blumcnthaf. the last surviving prominent general of the Franco-Prusaian war, is dangerous ly 111. It is estimated that the speculation of the former Spanish minister, Salva dor Lopez y Guijarro, amount to over $100,000. Representatives of Germany, Austria and France will meet in Paris in a fev days to reconsider the sugar bounty question. Mark Twain sailed Saturday for the United States, thus terminating a nine years' residence in England and on the continent. The government arms factories at Spandau, Dantzic, Erfurt and Aniberg are manufacturing a new rifle for the German army. Prince Albert, of Belgium, heir-presumptive to the throne of that country, was married Tuesday to the Duchess cuzaoctn ot cavaria. Fire caused $125,000 damage at Wet. M 1 , l- a PrtrtltnH , n Vnlt!Hl...L: T7 A II . I. - ... saved. The agricultural section of the committee of Berlin has agreed tliA 111, ... fin Am.rian il-han per metric ion. ine Vatican autnorities itKom with the recent burglary an ie sreurities valued at H7.ori x- more than a fifth of the ti came from America. furniture scattered for miles. V V J