FOUNDERED IN LAKE ERIE. Barge Charles Foster Carries Her Whole Crew to the Bottom. TOWLINE BROKE BY HEAVY SEAS. The Captain of the Steamer That Was Tow. ing the Barge Saysthe Boat Was Over | whelmed So Quick That Not a Cry Could Pe Heard From the Sinking Men--Impossi- bie to Have Saved Them. of Erie, Pa. (Special).~~In the midst one of the most bitter gales that ever swept Lake Erie the iron 8. H. Foster, in tow of the steamer | Iron Duke, went to the bottom, 10 miles off Erie, and eight persons were drowned i The 8. H. Foster was one of the fleet of James Corrigan, of Cleveland, and for two months has been running from Duluth to Erie with iron ore. Her cargo consisted of 1500 tons of ore. | Captain Ashley, of the Iron Duke, | made Erie in safety. In an interview | he said: “The Foster w in tow, about 600] feet astern. I was up all night, and | there were three men on watch with me. The seas were rolling tremen- dously fromm the northwest and the gale carried with it a blinding snow- | storm. We made the harbor light all right. When we turned for the har-| bor a sea much heavier than any other | experienced struck us. I ran to the | stern. Just as I got there the Fos- ter plunged in an awful sea and dove down nose first “There was not a cry from a soul of the crew of eight she carried. Just as she pitched down I saw a man on her | fore-castle with a lantern, The tow line parted when she went down. The storm was so heavy that I could not put about to hunt for any one. There would not have been a particle of use | anyhow, because in those tremendous | geas no one could have lived a minute, even if the water had not been icy | cold. Had there been a cry for help I | would have turned and risked any ves- sel, but # was no use. I had all I could do to make port in safety my-| self.” When asks cause of sinking Captain Ashley said tell, “Apparently everything ] } her until she There had of dist £4: ore barge | of that not ress from Burling Martin a sity, attemptied ware River d they reach swamped Martin Lippencott was rescu struggle in the le 23 years of age, The you warned agains eross the laughed at REBELS No Serious Opposition fo American Advance in Luzon--Death Sentences Approved. Ww * Wy child. ng n t making the ugh water, bu & suggestion of danger. ABANDON TOWNS, Manila (By Cable) tures f i of those "omy gurgen Ti¢ Hew ind © southeast coast o an attempt anchoring upon by short engagement, thor chain and sailed for Catanduanes, with two killed and two wounded. The games have not yet been received here, | Capt. Richard T. Ellis, of the Thirty- third Volunteer Infantry, captured in the mountains near Barbar a large quantity of Krag, Mauser and Reming- ton ammunition, together i nal outfit, a printing press, and ot squipment. All of this was destroyed Thirty rifles and several hundred sartridges were secured at Victoria A detachment of the Fourth Iafantry saptured Maj. Garion and three officers of lower rank in the town of Pasay Another detachment destroved Gen Ug.iad's camp. The enemy had fled but the Americans subsequently round- *d up twenty-five insurgents General MacArthur has feath sentences passed upon additional persons convicted of mur- fer, arson and pillage. In a few other instances he has commuted death sen- #nces to Imprisonment. BiG BLAZE IN BALTIMORE. the sixty Americs riflemen, they the cut an- #3 “ aio With a 2ig- approved several $350,000 Worth of Property Was Destroyed + | Blazed for Many Hours. Baltimore, Md. (Special).-~Pouring forth volumes of dense black smoke | :hat blinded firemen and hindered them in their work, one of the largest firea that has occurred in Baltimore for years consumed the entire interior of | Nos. 212 and 214 West Baltimore | street, occupled by the Baltimore Bar- | gain House, It is estimated that the damage will amount to nearly $3560. 300, which 18 covered almost entirely | by insurance. The heaviest loss will | fall upon the firm of ¥rank & Adler, | which owned the building, valued at! $60,000. It was Insured for only $25. 000. All other losses were fully cov-| sred by insurance, \ In addition Grotjan, Tobe & Co. | wholesale auctioneers, who occupy the | adjoining building, 210 West Balti-| more street, suffered a loss of about $560,000, due principally to smoke and | water in thelr stock. : i Sissi ——‘— The Alleged Hazing of Booz. Washington (Special).—~The House Dommittee on Military Affairs re-! ferred the resolution in regard to the | tase of ex-Cadet Booz to the Secretary | of War for such action as he deemed proper. Secretary Root replied to the sommittee that he had just received a report from Colonel Mills, superinten- dent of the Military Academy giving! the result of an investigation of the | ruse personally conducted by himself, | and that he would forward & copy of | the report to the committee for its in- | formation as soon as it could be pre. pared for transmission. NEWS IN BRIEF, preacher of Wyoming, Pa., who was accused of camming the death of his wite by administering carbolic acid, was released in Wilkesbarre, Pa., no case having been made against him. The demurrer of Oberlin M. Carter now serving in the Leavenworth Peni- tentiary for defrauding the govern ment, has been refused by the federal courts, and he must serve out the re- mainder of his sentence. The ern elected officers in Clnecinnatl, prac tically completing the plan of consoli- laltimore and Ohio. Rev. D. M. Hench, a United minister of Shippensburg, Brethren was de rotten to the Prosecution the Scranton councilmen for bribery was d was Core (Pa.) ropped on of BSeAls There was an uprising of cade at the University of Alabama and all mil- itary duties were disregarded. Mary Deborah Biddle, many benefactions, died in Edgewood, Pa. Former Congressman son, of West Virginia, died at Clifton Forge Hospital. Major Henry Sweeny, U. died at his home in who founded at her home Hastace 8S. A. re- San Diego, The State Department has received by cable from Pekin the text of the entered into by the repre- sentatives of the powers, and it is be- lieved in Washington that all the gov- ernments interested will ratify it The Presbyterian which examined the pres- that some revision of the creed is demanded, as well as a committee returns from the The heard army The Senate arguments canteen, Naval for 101 Military Committee for and aguinst the Appropriatio two battieshi cruisers Officers ‘tod by RL mane, OD ed having } Mra. James Jo | Mrs. Annie Connell an ounce of landanum in Ya. with i cidal intent, gaved Mr. Frank Roane was found dead in his bed in Lynchburg, Va.. from heart disease, ips 4 £v es od Richmond, but was Typhoid fever has broken out among the inmates at Sing Sing, New York A movement is on foot in Richmond » redistrict the city. One ward con- ins one-fourth of entire popula- tion, but its representation and its ap- priations are basis of the other wards, which contain only half as people. It is thus hoped in this manner to diminish ward politics, Count Pietro Alesso, a young Italian nobleman, through his representatives in New York, asked the United States authorities to hunt up wife, who ran away, and his missing bonds Drunken negroes caused consider- able excitement by long-continued and indiscriminate discharge of firearms in Greenlawn Cemetery, Newport News. the pr on the many is The United States Circuit Court in Newark, N. J., appointed a temporary Mr. Addicks is believed to be behind the plaintiffs, Bretange and spoke hopefully of the Boer Cause. who is 65 years old, was sued Lynch. They had been engaged for 21 years. pointed Congressman Charles Towne United States Senator to tem- Car at Gray's Ferry. Peculiar Accident Occurs on ihe Pennsylvania delphia~-Passenger Coach Telescoped--Side Torn Away of Several Others. Pa. and women jured, two perhaps wreck on the Penns just south of Gray's t freleght car of one just the Wa express Philadelphia, teen men (Special). were badly in- mortally, in a vivania Rallroad Ferry, caused by train jumping hington and train was and badly damaging seven of man and pass The train struc with consid two minutes elapsed had occurred bef patrol the track ax York fast pass the CH EC] Cars we 1 dashing The 11 Wagons were sireets to the scene, left Washington CXPress o'clock, lead which at rmoker Benger was the coaches, The train left and was near the tunnel Ferry, about a mile and a the city proper, and w firet of the pas Chester at 1.56 p. at Gray's half from as § slightly reduc rain zoing wheel on freight diverted Across right i 188 : } 5% wt anreast south jumped the track. a the rear box car having broken. The car, from the rails, ran slanting the roadbed and struck hand side the meer train of the rear of of box of the of The gide of the Bo away the solid were much of the ps 80 ENRer coal ving on the seats * rent broken smoker STILL CHASING DE WET. The Foxey Boer Leader Keeps the Brit ish Going Right Along. War Offtes following dis- from General Kitchner, from “Have just recelved news from Knox, at Rouxville, that De Wet's foree, having failed to fore Commassie Bridge, which we held, has northeast, abandoning 50( and many carts. His attemp! London (By Cable). The received the patch Aliwal, North Cape Colony most and 1 all dangerous position his Aris Vith strategy gltrong and two front, the to be four British column gwollen British com $id Lila on three barring his glides begin hopeful £reat chase by column: which f ih as | y 14 { of the will result io Definite was firel receive War, Wet, abouis of d De news ners The arted next General Knox ana morning n hot pursuit, columns to making a turning movement, three hours’ march General doubled back past the dritish Carmel farm, the site of the laager, which had evidently and hurriedly moved. General Knox started again at day crossing Karrepoort Drift, but he ar too late The British enced very great difficulty owing to the rise 4 n the river From Boers Lhe €h- beast of logs of a man or a time on the pursuit taken up without being supplied by foragers, 1g them to make mor and ke Pp in touch Cans REVIEW OF TRADE. the baggage rapid move. with the SECRETARY HAY'S VICTORY. Proposcd--Demands Are Now Modified. ~ £5 meeting formuils with st coraance and Germany, which China a ex id AiG structed the SLIT to sign th adopted by Ministers PRESIDENT HAS THE AGREEMENT. Will Net Be Made Public Until All the Powers Have Accepted IL Washington (Special). The next important step in the Chinese situa tion will be the formal presentation to the Chinese plenipotentiaries of the agreement arrived at between the rep- resentatives of the powers at Pekin for reparation for the Boxer outages. In partment, although the probability ls the document will be handed to the Chinese by the dean of the diplo- As has been stated already, the agreement is simply a statement of the upon which the powers will negotiate with China for final settle- as a matter of form. The fiegotiations for final settlement will come later, after the Chinese have been given a reasonable opportunity for the consideration of the conditions laid down by the powers, The complete agreement diciphered from the code is now in the hands of the President. Officials decline to make its text public in advance of successor. Rev. I. E. Stuart, of Wilkeabarre, Pa., was released on the charge of com- mitting a criminal operation on his Former Train Dispatcher W.8. Grove was acquitted in Philadelphia of the charge of causing the fatal wreck at Hatfield by his criminal negligence, Frank Lantell, a Baltimore and Ohlo towerman, was acquitted in Philadel phia of the charge of causing a fatal wreck by his negligence, Charles W. Morgan and Claude Tur. ner, brokers, were released on ball In New York on the charge of securing money fraudulently. Harry 8. Bollenbergér and Ezra Sheets were sentenced in Philadelphia to three months in prison for killing by faith. cure. : - been formally accepted by the powers, although the advices which have here tofore come from Mr. Conger leave: no doubt that thiz will be the ease. The essential features of the agree. ment already have been outlined in the press dispatches. A I OARS 26 Miners Killed Mexico City (8pecial). ~An explosion of dynamite at the mines at San Andres de la Sierra killed or wounded many miners, At the latest advices 26 dead bodies had been recovered, Fifteen injured persons, some of whom will die, were taken from the wreckage, and the ruins are thought to contain other victims, it is not known as yet how the ox. on ocourred, but nine eases of ynamite blew ap at the powder house with an appalling roar, shaking the and Holiday Trade Brisk at All Points. {8necial) 8 ' Yori iow Of ctwear has qui “Failures for WeeK against 22 twenty-five in Ci last three year. Bradstreeots says "Wheat, including flour, shipments the week aggregate 3.432.158 ba- Is. against 2.487.880 alst week, and in the corresponding week of Corn, exports the week ag- 6.371.377 bushels, against 4.- 801,030 last week, and 3.815.608 in this Ar ARO." for Panic Caused By Explosion. Richmond, Va. (Special}.— accompanied by very exciting A panic, and dis- the Vir- inia Hospital by the explosion of a can of olls and turpentine which were being heated on the Kitchen range, In the basement. The interior of the room was immediately a mass of flames and dense, badly smelling smoke filled the entire bullding It was impossible to know at once what had happened, and it seemed that the splendid buildings just remodeled and completed were doomed. Patents screamed and filled the hallways in a helpless state, and as many as possibic were taken from the building. FIELD OF LABOR 1owell is to have a textile school. fllinois has 449.317 factory opera- tives. New York has a Hebrew bakers’ union, Inman, Ga., is to have a $200,000 cot- ton mill New York's Store Clerks’ Union de mands a ten-hour day. The ‘Frisco Linemen's Union des mands a working day of eight hours, with a wage of $3. Australians hold a world’s record in tea consumption, drinking nearly eight pounds a head yearly. A course of lectures for journeymen electrical workers has been arranged to be given at the New York Trade School, The San Francisco stablemen broke the record for initiations last week, conferring the oath of membership upon more than 175 applicants, Labor men in Vancouver, B. C., arc urging the imposition of a heavy tax on male domestic servants, the object being to diminish the employment of Japanese and Chinese. “Phe 8. Louls Whiteners’ Unlon har asked the co-operation of the Central Trades and Labor Uniom in Hs fight against a new machine, a sort of sprinkler, which, to a considerable ex. ent, 1e taking fhe plate of Jen wha ve The Government Report Starts a Ra- pid Fluctuation. PRICES RANGE OVER FIFTY POINTS. Rumors of a Leak In the Statistical Bureau At Washington Responsible For the Flurry The Acreage, After Eliminating All Land From Which No Crop Will Be Gathered, Is Estimates at 25,034,734. has been ions on New York (Special) —H# many months sines fluctu; New York Cotto Exchange reached 50 points ws gpecul 3 the have alion has equaled that From the ning gegsion was one of great market opened peaceably enough prices 3 points higher 10 6 and easy as tone ings and 1 Opi intere point 10 en a drop of # red under § gelling, preci ly large receipt i market news. Then cam action, which carried rush 14 to 17 points Government i was “leak” and was strongls Shorts lost falth in their a number of room ir: ciently impressed risk the long side The close of the first market decidedly steady half hour unimportant curred and business became quite gish, But as midday drew factions became nervous and f that they had oversh mark scamper for safer g id resulted in feverish trading and ment in values. The Government the wire promptly present crop at an acreage 25.01 same as estimate Liverpool Cotton while be CeEl Occur on raul repor hour saw the For the next Variations nea wie erratic move report i ang esi 100 GOD 10.1 of Pryor ng « 08s 1 o of local expect 600.000 bales larger Neill : and prices Lf hBere 20 pag ns LEAP RESULTS IN DEATH Joseph Stark Miscalculates His Distance and Kills Himself. Farrell, Stark's matinee was given in and a large crowd assem ness the various feats 8 moun ted pariner the afternoon f 10 wit- iy before hicvelo CYC ble Ort § o'clock Stark his and peddled it rapidly Just before reaching the end of the In- cline, nt the proper place he jumped from the gent and then jumped to- wards the tank, bievcie, in the meantime, falling into the pet In- stead of falling directly into the cen- ter of the tank Stark struck the far- ther edge of it head-first, and then fell into the tank, apparently lifeless. Members of the regiment jumped in and quickly bad Btark out of the water, but death had already taken place. His head had been crushed in. Crushed in Their Bunks. Sulsun, Cal. (Special) During a very heavy fog a west-bound freight train collided with a work train of five cars and an engine going east in a deep cut about 600 yards beyond Van- den Station, causing the death of nine workmen and injuries of a more of less serious character to about twenty others. The victims of the disaster were asleep in thelr bunks in one of the cars of the work train when the trains came together. up the incline the Young Churchman in Jail. Baltimore (Special). Thomas James Pritchett, a young lawyer and promi- nent in church circles, was arrested here charged with obtaining money under false pretenses through his “Commercial Savings Bank.” Many poor people became depositors. Priteh- ett, when arraigned, made no defense and was committed for trial in default of bail. He taught Sunday School in Grace Methodiet Church. Bud Refus Lyached. Rome, Ga. (Special).—Bud Rufus, the negro who assaulted and fatally wounded Mrs. Joseph White, wife of a farmer living twelve miles from Rome, was caught and lynched here. Rufus was taken from the county officers at midnight by a mob. RA Promotion for Cripples. Washington (Special) ~The Attor- pey General in an opinion in the case of Lieutenant George Mallison, U. B. N.. says “there is no reason why an officer, wounded in the service, should not be promoted as well as his fortu- nate brother, if there are duties in the higher grade which he can satisfac torily perform.” When an 1895 Mallison was struck by a break. Ing anchor chain and lost a leg. AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL. Chalrman Ray, of the House Judl- siary Committee, suggests a constitu donal amendment authorizing Con gress 10 pass laws regulating marriage and divorcee, The minority of the House Way ind Means Committee submitied a re ort urging a reduction of seventy mil. Yon dollars in the war taxes Mr. Charles A 38 senator from Minneso the late Benator Davis. The remains was killed in Ington, The Benate *uilve & ci Towne was sworn in ta, fo succeed of Color China spent fiv gion ocongid ’auncefote treaty The 14 ial giglative Appropriz after less than ish the cant ditional surgeons tal and a vete The Ways the House 4 the Hao presented flect jm: on its The House reported fay adoption of the metric passage Committees on orably ry A number of amendmen gested by Senator Fry 3511 The House margarine Bill, whi oleomargarine and passed the rout Oleo- ch tax that on the butter The Deep Waterw ry Commission ported favor y th 3 #1 10 connect Great lakes with th At by re [3 i Lhe antic Lean, and Admiral The Kentucky Ordered to Manila. Washington Long bled Chester, with his ship, Smyrna on Manila to replace Asiatic Station. (Spe ini to proceed from voyage to Oregon the annot be learned officially that the mission debts have been discharged, but it is said that the Kentucky's mission, which was one of courtesy, has been discharged. freer boy UCEY, ia wn # anpveers nt mad nis ! pied on The Father of the House. Washington (Special). — Under a gpecial order adopted at the last sion the House devoted Baturday to paying tribute to the memory of the late Representative Alfred C. Harmer, of Pennsylvania fulogies were pro- nounced by Messrs Bingham (Pa) Cummings (N. Y.). Grosvenor (Oho) Adams (Pa). McCleary (Minn.), White N. CC). McAleer (Pa), DeArmond {(Mo.), Otey (Va.), DeMorrell (Pa) Bf. United States a World Power, Berlin (By Cable}.—-The National Zeitung devoted its first page to a carefully prepared editorial dealing with the United States as a world power, After pointing out the enor mous progress, cconomically and poli- tically, of America in the world's af- fairs, the editorial declares that in both respects the United States are ar rayed agains: Europe. American Horses for the Emperor. Berlin (By cable). — Emperor Wil. liam will send a special envoy shortly to make a tour of the notable Ameri. can stock farms, with the view of purchasing saddle and carriage horses for the imperial stables. Hitherto the court has purchased exclusively im Hungary and England. FOREIGN AFFAIRS, A a A blige book issmed by the British povernment on the Colony rebels he in wad 30 wiih sgtt to up he willingness the border Dutch to join the invaders. ford Kitchener reports that the under General Delarey, ate ked a British convoy, killing 15 men and wounding 28. The Bosrs also suf