GROVER TALKS BACK. REPLIES TO ATTACKS MADE IN THE SENATE. Op Has Mad* No Bond Deals—No Banker or Financier Has Been Invited to Washington to Confer With ' the Ad ministration, and No Arrangements Made With the Syndicate—A mated at flic Action of Senators. The President Indignant. Washington, Jan. 11.—The debate on the Elkins resolution in the Senate last Friday when the administration was accused by several Senators of having entered into an agreement with a syndicate to float the expected issue of bonds, is the subject of a letter written by President Cleveland to Sen ator Caffery, of Louisiana. The knowledge that such a letter had been addressed to Mr. Caffery was obtained last night, and the letter was made public by the latter. It is in the hand writing of the President and covers six pages of closely written note paper. It is in full as follows: Executive Mansion, Washington, D. C., Jan. 5, 189(5. My Dear Senator:—I have read to-day in the Congressional llecord' the debate in the Senate on Friday, concerning the financial situa tion and bond issues. X am amazed at the intolerance that leads even excited partisanship to adopt, as a basis of attack, the un founded'accusations and assertions of a maliciously mendacious and sensa tional newspaper. No banker or financier, nor any other human being, has been invited to visit Washington for the purpose of arranging in any way or manner for the disposition of bonds to meet the present or future needs of the gold reserve. No arrangement of any kind has been made foi; the disposition of such bonds to any syndicate or through the agency of any syndicate. No assurance of such a disposal of bonds has bqen, directly or indh-ectly, given to any person. In point of fact, a decided leaning towards a popular loan and advertising for bids has been plainly exhibited on the part of the administration at all times Nvhen the subject was under discussion. Those charged with the responsi bility of maintaining our gold reserve, so fur as legislation renders it Dossi hie, have anxiously conferred with each other and as occasion permitted with'those having knowledge of finan cial affairs and present monetary conditions as to the best aud most favorable means of selling bonds for gold. The unusual importance of a suc cessful result if the attempt is again maefe, ought to bo apparent to every American citizen who bestows upon the subject a moment's patriotic thought. The secretary of the treasury from the first moment that the necessity of another sale of bonds seemed to.be ap proaching, desired to offer them if is sued to the people by public adver tisement if they could thus be success fully disposed of. After full consider ation he came to the conclusion, to which I fully agree, that the amount of gold in the reserve, being now $-0, 000,000 mere than it was in February Tast, w"hen a sale of bonds was made to a syndicate, and other conditions differing from those then existing, justify us in offering the bonds now about to be issued for sale by popular subscription. This is the entire matter and all those particulars could have been easj ily"obtained by any member of the •senate by simple inquiry. If Mr. Morgan or unvene else, reas oning from his own standpoint, brought himself to the belief that the government would at length be con strained to again sell bonds to a syn dicate, 1 suppose he would have a per fect right, if he chose, to take such steps as seemed to him prudent, to put himself in condition to nego tiate. I expect an issue of bonds will be advertised for sale to-morrow and that bids will be invited not only for those now allowed by law, but for snch other and different bonds as congress may. authorize during the pendency of the-advertisement. Not having had an opportunity to confer with yon in person since the present session of Congress began and noticing your participation in the de bate of last Friday, 1 have thought it not amiss to put you in possession of the facts and information herein con tained. Yours very truly, (iROVKB IT.KVEI.A-ND. PLEA SFOR ST AT EH O O D. Arizona, Oklahoma and Jfow Mexico Want Admission. Wasihxgtojt, Jan. 11.—The three territorial delegates, Messrs. Flynn of Oklahoma,- Murphy of Arizona anil Catron of New Mexico, are making; a vigorous campaign in eongress to se cure favorable action upon their bills for the admission of their respective territories to statehood. Each dele gate. considers statehood the chief mission of his congressional career. They are anxious to have the bills be fore the territories committee re ported' to the house and disposed of soon in some way. They have made a canvass of the committee and believe that more than two-thirds of \ts mem bers will vote for favorable reDorts. Ilioomers and Sweaters. Wauiif.nshuug, Mo., .Ian. 11.—Forty young lady students of the State Nor mal school have organized an athletic association and have openly de clared their intention 6f wearing bloomers and sweaters. The oflicers are Miss Edmund A. Nickerson, presi dent; Miss ttrace Utley, vice-president: Miss Seina Achenbach, secretary; Miss Maud Hendricks, treasurer. THIEVES GET $9,000. Bank at Vernon, Mo., Lootod by Eight Masked Men. Monett, Mo., Jan. 11.—Eight masked men blew open the safe of the Farmers bank at Vernon, eight miles cast of this city, with dynamite at 4 o'clock this morningand secured §0,000 in cash. The thieves entered the city on horseback, captured Night Watch man Hoover and bound him to a tree across the street. Then they forced the front doors of the bank and in a short time blew the vault and safe to pieces. NATIONAL LEGISLATION. Proceeding* In Both Brancbe* of Con* ... gress. ’ WASinsaTdX Jan. 1J.—During the morning hour in tho Senate to-day, i on motion of Mr. Voorhees of Indiana, ! n resolution was adopted appropriat ing $250 for the purchase of a portrait of the late Allen G. Thurman. Mr. Prichard (Republican) of North Carolina called up the amendments he I offered to the revenue bill to increase the duties on certain kinds of clb.vs, marble, iron ore, timber, live stock, cereals, fruits, wool and coal for the purpose of addressing the Senate thereon. He favored the enactmeut of tho McKinley law and the free coin age of silver. lie denounced tho Southern Democrats for their recrean cy to their own section. The tariff I law had brought unexampled pros- ! perity to the Now England menu- I facturers and bankruptcy and ruin to j the farmers and producers of the i South. When Mr. Pritchard had finished, Mr. Hill chided him for the inconsist ency of his State. North Carolina, he said, occupied a peculiar situation in Congress, and he did not see how her people could be gratified. Some time i ago the same legislature in North Car olina had elected two Senators by the j same combination. A few days ago j one of them (Mr. Butler) had de- j nonneed the Democratic party for being false to its pledges of tariff re form. To-day the other end of the i combination told the Senate that he favored the re-enactment of the Mc Kinley law. The Senate, on Mr. Hale’s motion, agreed to adjourn until Monday when adjournment was taken to-duy. Mr. White (Democrat) of California consumed the remainder of the time before the expiration of the morning hour with a speech in favor of some practical modifications in tho Senate rules. The great evil which ho espec ially inveighed against was that which permitted interminable debate on any question and placed it in the power of a single senator to hold the Senate at his mercy so long. At the conclusion of Mr. White’s speech, Mr. Morgan of Alabama, ex chairman of the committee on foreign relations, introduced a joint resolu tion congratulating the republic of i Transvaal in Africa for the stand for I liberty which it had taken and direct- j ing the President of the United States ! to transmit the action to the republic i of Transvaal. The resolution was re ferred. Mr. Jones of Arkansas then took the floor and made a speech on the free coinage substitute for the House bond bill. PAY DURING ABSENCE. Tbs Home Quashes a Motion to Deduct Salary for Non-Attendance. Washington, Jan. 11.—In the House to-day Mr. Tawaey, Republican, of Minnesota, offered a resolution relat in'' to pension claims. It recited that it was frequently charged by pension ers and applicants that the medical di vision of the pension bureau fails to properly regard the reports and find ings in pension clifiins made by various boards of the United States examining surgeons and declared that it was due to the ofiicials of the department, to pensioners and to the public that the truth, or falsity of the charges be made known. It called upon the Sec retary of the Interior to furnish copies of the reports and findings by boards of examining surgeons, irre spective of locality .in the first fifty claims for original invalid pensions re jected on medical grounds after No vember t. 181*!, after September i, 1893, and October i, 1893. An objection to its consideration was made by Mr. McClellan (Democrat) of New York. Mr. Odell (Republican) of New York offered a resolution to direct the com mittee on banking and currency to report an amendment to the general banking laws, giving power to bank ing associations to invest not to ex ceed fifty per cent of their lawful reserves in bonds of the United States, to be hereafter issued under the acts of June 14, 18?u, and May 31, 1878. Objection was made to Mr. Odell’s resolution and it was referred to the committee. The changes in the House rales recommended by the committee on rules were reported by Mr. Henderson and were debated section by section. Mr. Dearmond, Democrat of Missouri, offered an amendment providing for deduction from members’ pay for ab sences not due to sickness, or sickness in the family. Mr. Stone assured him that the only effect of the enforcement of the rule in the last House hud been to increase the sick list. Although Mr. Dearmond tried to obtain the yeas and nays, his request was refused—3'■> to 182—and the amendment was lost by about the same vote, several Democrats voting against it. It Will Effect Permanent Organisation and Get Down to Business. Washington, Jan. 11.—The' Vene zuela boundary commission will meet in the diplomatic room of the State department at 10 o’clock to-morrow to perfect its organization for business, so far as possible at this time. The office of secretary is regarded as the most important one to be filled, as the secretary will act as the chief admin istrative officer of the commission and will be expected to relieve that body of all business of a purely routine and perfunctory character. Among those mentioned for the of fice of secretary are Mr. William 12. Curtis, formerly director of the bureau of American republics, and Mr. Part ridge of Vermont, formerly solicitor of the State department and minister to Venezuela under President llarri SO' Blanco Mot Concerned In a Revolution. Paris, Jan. 11.—The Gaulois pub lishes an interview with ex-President Guzman Blanco of Venezuela, in which he denies any connection with the in surrection in Venezuela, and adds: “In the struggle to maintain the in tegrity of our rights, all parties are amalgamated into a national party, which supports President Crespo.’’ NEWS NOTES. Bartley. Johnson & Co., and the Belle of Nelson Distilling Company of Louisville, Ivy., assigned. WANT ALL OR NONE. THE SYNDICATE THAT IS AFTER OUR BONDS. They Have fanned Their Ultimatum—A Financial Expert for the Government Talks About Wall Street Methods In Dealing With the Treasury—The Com bine Llkeljr to Get All the.Bonds. Washington, Jan. 8.— Morgan, who has formed, or is forming, a bond syn dicate, has issued an ultimatum, it is said, that he will take all the bonds offered by this government or hone. One of the government financial ex perts says, under cover of confidence: “The syndicate will get the bonds, be cause speculation is a cold blooded game. There is no sentiment in Wall street. It is well enongb to speak of patriotism and brotherly love among the citizens of a nation, but those sentiments do not spring from the hearts of men who corner gold. Just as sure as those bonds are sold, just so sure will Wall street buy them. A bank in Stuben ville, Ohio, the national Exchange bank, telegraphed to-day offering to take 930,000 of the bonds at 1.13. Other banks, I am told, have sent sim ilar messages to Mr. Carlisle. A dozen or more of them were re ceived this forenoon. But there j were no messages from New York J or Philadelphia or from Boston. Those cities harbor the men who control the gold of this country. ! They may not have it themselves, but they have a way of getting it. When you have learned the intricacies of finance yon will learn that the bank ers and brokers of New York, with their affiliations and connections reaching across the sea, can band themselves together under the present laws and manipulate the gold reserve of this government as nicely as an en gineer manipulates his throttle.” There is a belief that, in the end, the syndicate will control this bond issue just as it did the last. It is thought that while the public may subscribe to some extent the great financiers, the men who would have formed the syndicate, will get to gether and make a price for practical ly the whole issue which would be higher than the average individual would care to give, and which would compel the Secretary of the Treasury to award the bonds to the combina tion. FOR CUBAN RECOGNITION. Member* of the House Seem to Favor the Idea. Washington, Jan. 8.—One of the mem bers of the foreign affairs committee ot the House, when asked whether the reported snccesses of the insurgents in Cuba would hasten recognition by this government of their right as belliger ents, said: “Recognition of this government would have only a moral effect, whereas it now looks as if the insur gents were working out their own sal vation without assistance from the outside world. “If they continue their successful guerilla warfare until next April, when yellow fever takes the field, it will bo impossible to subdue them by any force which Spain can command. The civil leaders of the revolution, un fortunate for us, do not aim at inde pendence. They say they do not care to go through thirty or forty years similar to the early experiences of Mexico, and hence they are all for an nexation to the United States. I doubt much whether our people are prepared at the present time to assume the gov ernment of Cuba, with its mixed popu lation fresh from Spanish rule and generally unfitted for American citi zenship. “However that may be, it is evident that affairs on the island are approach ing a crisis and we must be prepared to protect American interests, what ever our attitude may be towards the insurgents.” Several members of the house con sulted leaders to-day regarding the introduction of resolutions for the recognition of the insurgents of Cuba as belligerents. Chairman Hitt of the committee on foreign affairs said that he had no objection. Speaker Reed counseled thorough consideration in comm?**--•__ THE TARIFF MEASURE UP. Hr. Bakar of Kuim Enters a Strong Protest. WABniNGTOS, Jan. 8.—Republican Senators went into caucus at 10:30 to day, but adjourned at 13 to meet again after the conclusion of the day’s ses sion of the senate. The entire time of tne caucus was consumed in discussing the proposed amendments to the tariff bill, but no formal expression was se cured upon any of them. The prevail ing sentiment appeared to be against all amendments aDd the tendency favorable to reporting the bill as it came from the House. Mr. Raker, the new senator from Kansas, made a vigorous speech in op position to the house bill if it came before the senate unamended. He said that if any tariff legislation was to be enacted he thought it should be done on Republican and protection lines and added *that he did not regard the house bill as a Republican meas ure. ' He also advised against any tar iff tinkering, saying he favored a course of non-action in that respect in view of the declaration of the ad ministration that the tariff would af ford all the revenue needed. He thought, however, that if any legis lation should be attempted at this time the changes should be made in a few schedules only, such as those cov ering wool and sugar, which should be reformed upon purely protection lines. Stabbed by a School Principal. Sesalia, Mo., Jan. 8.—Professor J. L. Green, principal of the Broadway school, and Deputy Constable R. W. Barnett had a personal encounter in the school building yesterday fore noon, in which a knife and a revolver played a prominent part. The consta ble was wounded in the abdomen by a knife which the professor used, and the officer was compelled to draw his j gun and threaten to use it in order to i save his life. The trouble grew out of Principal Green suspending Bar nett’s son for alleged cigarette smok ing. Professor Green was arrested, and gave bonds to answer for assault. PLENTY OF LAND LEFT. Thonianda of Atm Roadjr for Batr getle Workers. Nobth Platt b, Neb., Jan. ft— At this time when ao much ia being done ia western Nebraska in the way of irri gating arid lands, It is well to know some facts pertaining to government land. At the United States land office in this city final proofs wore made dur ing the year just past for 68,800 acres of government land. The records show 765.000 acres in this land district that are vacant, subject to homestead entry and in this (Lincoln)' county there are 260.000 acres of vacant government land, or 1,025 farms of 100 acres each to be given by the government upon pay ment of from $14 to 918 per quarter section and residence on tho land for five years Much of this is better and more productive, if irrigated, than the valley lands along the rivers. It raises sweeter and better keeping vegetables of all kinds, finer fruit and is cleaner and easier to farm than any of the val ley lands No person should think of trying to make a living for a family upon these lands, however," unless he has a suffi cient amount of push, perseverance and money to construct a small irrigation plant as soon as be establishes resi dence upon his farm. Many of these tracts present a surface just right for conducting water over them, and there is scarcely a quarter section upon which there cannot bo found several good sites for reservoirs The capital required for a good well, windmill and reservoir sufficient to water from five to forty acres is from $200 to $400, and ten acres of such land, properly water ed, planted and cultivated, will produce more in money value than niue-tenths of the farmers in any southern state raise upon a hundred acres. Wind mills keep pumping away night and day. They are a sort of a perpetual motion machine and if proper facilities are provided for storing the water that a windmill can pump and for prevent ing waste, a very large lake can be made during the months of winter and spring for use when needed in the sum mer. liy such method and careful con struction of reservoirs, so as to save all of the storm water possible, forty acres and perhaps more can bo Irrigated with one good wind pump The foolish fellows who are wander ing southward to the land of microbes and miasma had much better settle upon a quarter section of government land in Nebraska where by expending the same amount of money ana muscle they could have healthy, happy homes and enjoy the pleasures of good society and the prosperity of progressive poo ROTHSCHILDS TALKS. > c - #»y» No Bondi Con Ba Sold In En|l>nd on Account of the Taneinela Hatter.. Nbw York, Jan. 8.—In response to the World’s telegram for their views on the bond issue, the Rothschilds re* plied as follows: “Last year when these was a finan cial crisis in the United States, we made an offer for a 3 per cent gold loan, and failing. Congress giving the treasury no pow ir to enable such an issue to be made, we undertook with others to place a certain amount ot 4 per cent coin bonds. As you now have done us the honor of asking our opin ion, we must tell you very frankly that in our judgment the severe finan cial situation at present is chiefly caused by the political crisis, and as soon as the American and English governments have satisfactorily settled the questions at issue the financial strain will be considerably relaxed, if it does not altogether disappear. Until this boundary question is ar ranged we do not believe either the European public or capitalists will take many American bonds for invest ment, if any, and we believe that al though a certain number of people on this side of the Atlantic have signified their intention of taking a share in a syndicate to be formed in New York, they have only done so in the belief that at the present moment they would obtain terms, which would en able them at once to resell the bonds in America. When the political horizon is quite clear and it is finally established in the minds of all men that the good feeling and understanding which exists in the hearts of the people of England and America is beyond doubt, and is ac knowledged and ratified by the two governments, then will be the time and opportunity for America to apply to the British capitalists. We offer no suggestions how this is to be accom plished. It is for the governments to decide between themselves. All we can say is the good feeling exists among our people on our side, and you, sir, have proved by your patriotic efforts, that it exists on the other side of the Atlantic. N. M. Rothschilds & Son.” Oklahoma Wilt Not Give Up Born. Guthrie, Okla., Jan. 8.— Officers here from Goodland, Kan., with a requisition for Frank Royse for issu ing spurious drafts on New York from the imaginary bauk of Jamaica, Iowa, which were cashed by various banks, have made a hard fight to get their man, but the government has refused to grant the requisition, as Koyse has just been convicted in Enid, Okla., for embezzlement in connection with the failure of his bank there, and sen tenced to three yenrs in the pen. Graduated Inheritance Tax. Washington, Jan. 8.—Among the bills and resolutions introduced in the House yesterday was one by Ms. Tracey of Missouri, giving Congress power to levy, a graduated inheritance tax on all inheritances and estates whose value exceeds >100.000..-, NEWS IN BRIEF. General O. M. Leggett, who was commissioner of patents under Grant, is dead. Jeff and Constantine Walker Were acquitted of the charge of having mur dered Jim McGirl at Nowata, Ind. Ter. The school directors of Robinson, 111., have been arrested on complaint that they failed to place a Hag over the school building. Alabama has decided to. join the Lumber Manufacturers’ Association, which already includes Mississippi, Missouri, ykausas, Texas and Louis ana. WILL BE UNFRIENDLY THE MONROE DOCTRINE MUST ’ ' BE OBSERVED. ——— Senator Baker of Kansas Offer* * Bno* lotion—The law of a*lf-Pr***rvnttou —Mr. Call of Florida Plead* for Beeoir* nhlon of the Cnbao Insurgent*—Mr. Elkin*' Bond BIU—Other Matter* to the 1*001*. . ' V Tho Monroe Doctrine Washington, Jan. 10.—In present ing petitions in the Senato to-day from Norfolk, Va., in favor of liberal appropriations for sea coast defenses, Mr. Daniels of Virginia called atten tion to the alarm which manifestly existed in the minds of the people along the sea coast in view of tho ru mors of war. He thought their appre hensions of bombardment were exag gerated, but expressed the belief that our sea coast cities should be ade quately fortified to moot any emerg ency. / § a resolution by Mr. Chandler ox Now Hampshire, lie publican, was adopted instructing' the committee on immigration to inquire whether any legislation was necessary to prevent the introduction into the United States of aliens imprisoned by foreign coun tries in their American colonies. Mr. Baker of Kansas offered the fol lowing resolution, enunciating an ex pansion of the Monroe doctrine: ••lie solved, That the United States will regard it as an unfriendly act for any foreign power, without our consent by wnr, treaty, purchase or otherwise, to extend its territorial limits in the Western hemisphere on either of the American continents, or to any of the Islands adjacent thereto, which this country deems necessary for its pre servation. And tho United States re serves the right to bo tho sole judge of the necessity for the maintenance of their national entities. “That the principle herein enunciated is founded on the law of self-preserva tion, which necessity adheres in and belongs to every civilized nation as a sovereign and inalienable right, and this principle Is attested by Washing ton's farewell address and President Monroe's ever-mcmorablo message of December 2, 1623.” Mr. Baker made a brief speech in advocacy of the resolution. In con clusion he sahl that while the coun tries of Europe were arranging their policies and doctrine, it was right and proper that we should declare to the world the policy which we advanced and proposed to maintain for tHe fu ture peace and preservation in invio late on the Western hemisphere. Mr. Call of Florida took occasion, before the resolution was referred to the foreign committee, to call atten tion to the war which the Cubans were so gallantly aud successfully waging for independence and ex pressed the hone that the committee on foreign relations would report a resolution for the recognition of the Cuban belligerents. When the morning business had been disposed of there was a clash as to the order of procedure. Mr, Stew art of Nevada insisted on addressing the Senate in favor of the Elkins res olution prohibiting the sale of bonds, except after advertisement to the highest bidder, and won his point. ANTI-SILVER DEMOCRATS. They Are Working for Defeat of Free Coinage In the Senate. Washington, Jan. 10 —The anti-sil ver Democrats of the Senate held a meeting or conference yesterday while the Republican senators were in cau cus. The object of the conference was to count how maay men could be mustered against the free coinage amendment of the Senate finance uom mittee to the bond bilL It was found that there were fourteen sure votes on the Democratic side against the silver proposition, and the Democrats wore assured there were twenty-six Repub licans who could be counted against the Jones amendment This would make forty in all. Four more votes would be necessary to a majority of the Senate. Both Democratic and Re publican anti-silver men are now making an effort to see if these fonr votes can be obtained. Cherokee# See the President. Washington, Jan. 10.—The Chero kee delegation, beaded by chiefs Mayes and Harris, went to the White house to-day to call on the President They were granted an audience, and made a formal demand for the removal of all intruders from the Cherokee Nation. The President assured the Cherokees that he was most anxious to see perfect justice done in their case, and he was therefore glad to be put in possession of full information. Kansu* Farmers. Topeka, Kan,, Jon. la—The quarter centennial convention of the Kansas State Hoard of Agriculture was called to order at 4 o’clock* yesterday after noon in Representative hall by Presi dent T. M. Potter of Peabody. In cluding the officers and members of the board there were about 100 dele f'ates present, each Farmers’ Institute n the state being entitled to a repre sentative. The address of welcome was delivered by Governor MorrilL Money for Pension*. Washington,Jan. 10.—The sab-eom mittce of the Rouse appropriations committee, having charge of the pen sion bill, has decided to increase the amount tor the next fiscal year from $138,000,000 to $140,000,000. The last amount was that asked for by Com missioner Lochren m his estimates, A Mutiny on a Kanina CruUett St. Petebsbubo, Jan. la — Thera was a mutiny among the crew of the first class Russian steel cruiser, Rurik, 10,023 tons, recently while that vessel was in the harbor of Algiers. The mutiny was suppressed by the French authorities ana thirty of the leaders of the outbreak are said to be on their way to Cronstadt under sentence of death. __ Offers to Bet on Maher. New Yobk, Jan. 10.—Warren Lewis has offered to bet $1,000 to $S,00othat Maher will knock out Fitzsimmons in | the first round. V f: ENGLAND A BLUFFER. y Her Wsr Preparation* At* for Fotltleat . Kflcet Loxoox, Jan. 10.—Outwardly, r | leatt, there Is little, If any, change la the political crisis between Great Bri- ; tain and Germany. A dispatch from Berlin to the Times says: It is ex* plained that Germany only desired to, protect German residents and its eon* ’ sulate at Pretoria by dispatching an armed force from Dulagoa bay, and that no arrangement had previously ^ been made with Portugal. This has ■ tended to produce a better feeling, > But this slight change of sentiment j :• has been counteracted by the receipt of a special dispatch to-day from Pre* toria, saying that the Boers demand "'y the surrender of all British rights and 5 suzerainty over the Transvaal and the { ; pre-emption of Delagoa bay and the ■; canceling of the charter of the British South Africa Company. It is farther | ctated that the Boers have arrested, on the charge of treason, eight leaders of the recent movement among the Uitlanders of Johannesburg. Tho heavy demands of the Boera " will not be granted by theBritish government without a severe straggle. The opposition to the demands of tho Boers, however, will mainly rest on the fact that it is generally admitted yi that they are instigated on the whole by Emperor William, and that they form a part of a studied opposition upon His Majesty's part to the colonial ' policy of Great Britain in Africa. - It is admitted in some quarters that ' y the South African republic would be justified in demanding an indemnity from Great Britain for the invasion ot Boer territory, and there is a general sentiment in favor of dealing severely ; ? with the British chartered company. Tho Berlin and Vienna newspapers ‘ ! regard tlie warlike preparations of ^ Great Britain as of little importance, and as being more of a political move than a military undertaking, so faran’ ,“*? Germany is concerned; but they take a more serious view of tho proposed , strengthening of the British forces itt y ? South Africa, which is regarded as in-’" y dicaling a possible aggressive’ action y-’ toward the South African .republic, y' The chances for war between Great Britain and Germany are looked upon yl as being remote and there is a decided tone of backdown in the utterances of i the German press towards Great Brit- " atn- ' 'M There wns nn outburst of prolonged cheering at a meeting of the London Radical federation to-day alwq a re- ■ port was received that the officers of '1 the First Dragoons, in garrison at : y Dublin, of which regiment the sin- y peror was made honorary colonel by Queen Victoria, had’ burned his . majesty in effigy. The colonel of tho First Dragoons telegraphed that there was no truth in the story. It is said, however, that before the receipt of this official denial the German ambaa* 1 sador, Count von Hatsfeldt-Wilden- f burg, made representations on the ■ subject to the Marquis of Salisbury, asking to be informed as to tho truth of the report. FILLEY FOR M’KINLEY *««• do Koasoo to Change W» Choice for the Presidency. VVashikoton, Jan. 10.— Cbauncey I. , Filley is in Washington. He said to- . . day: "St. Louis doesn’t want tha earth, but sha does want both the Na tional conventions, and, having ae> ?' cured one, she will make a big fight for the other. I think she will get it 8 too.” '• “It has been charged that.you favor Major McKinley.” ‘ I’ll have to plead guilty to that I j have had no reason to modify my re* gard for MoKInley. He is us everr S way a fit man for the presidency. The people think so, for he ingrowing /> stronger with the masses every day.” “Who will the Democrats be likely to nominate?” “Von ean’t predict about them, but a were I allowed to guess, I say they’d take my old friend and neighbor, William R. Morrison. Morrison is one , of the best men in theiy party—abso> lutely honest, and though 1 differ with iS him radically, if a Democratic Pres ident had to afflict the country, I’d. sooner have him than any other one.” MUST BE REORGANIZED; Osnsrat Walk** Dedans MavSl ■sgtaosv Seeps Changes Mast B» Made . WiinnsTos, Jan. 10.— General Francss A. Walker, president of the’ ’ Massachusetts School of Technology, has written an earnest letter in sop. port of Senator Squire’s naval engin eering and educational measure Ha declares that anyone- must be im- ;/** pressed with the fact that the Squire bill deeply concerns the defense of the country. He maintains that the com- . ’ dition of the corps of naval engineers, is distressing and affects the honor. of the nation. He appeals to Congress to give immediate consideration to the reorganization of the corps of naval en gineers. As to the qualification of the scientific and technical schools of the land to train officers for the engineer ' corps. General Walker believes that such iastUntlona can show work and results on an equality with the gov ernment schools at West Point and Annapolis. KifCf a ipwMi tabhpf ' Washington, D. CL, Jan. UX—The npreMotatim of the Cuban innic ents in Washington vers naeh excited to-day over a report of a definite char acter which reached them, to the ef fect that a powerful Spanish lobby > had been formed to prevent notion bv Congress on the Cuban situation, ft . is declared that the Spanish govern ment has devoted a large amount of money to this purpose, and that many powerful corporate interests have joined in subscribing to the fund. Want Rhodes and Jameson Ms wished London, Jan. 10. —A dispatch received from Cape Town, dated January 7, says it is reported at Pretoria thattha Transvaal government demands the banishment of Mr. Cecil Rhodes, ex premier of Cape Colony, and Dr. Jamo- 1 >■ son from Africa, andtbatanenormons fine is also demanded from the British Chartered Company. A Noted Correspondent Dead. \ Washington, Jau. la—E. B. Wngbt, Washington correspondent of the Coicago Inter Ocean, and for many '»■; years a promioent newspaper man here, died to-day of heart failure