MEE LATEST 3 from his recent illness. Senator Quay is not yet quite well enough to beat his seat In the | Senate chamber, although he is rapidly gaining strength. The House committee on agriculture au. thorized a favorable report to be made on the Paddock pure food bill which passed the Senate some weeks ago. ‘When the House convened at Washington Tuesday evening the hall was filled with X iid smoke, occasioned by a fire in the folding Capital, Labor and Industrial, The strike of the conductors and trainmen « ‘on the Canadian Pacific Railroad has been settled sooner than most of the sanguine have anticipated. Arbitration will be the means resorted to, and pending a decision of arbitrators the men will” return to their Guties, the company having agreed to rein- state them. The switchmen on the Memphis and Charleston yard struck at Memphis because Superintendent Pegram refused to reinstate two of their number, who had been dis- charged without cause by the yardmaster. The strike may become general and involve the nine yards of that city, Philadelphia bosses have conceded car- penters their demand for a nine-hour day at $2 a day. A strike of cabinet makers has begun at 8t. Louis by the employes of four of the largest firms in the city. Three hundred and fifty-five men are already out, and the trouble is spreading. One hundred and fifty cigar makers are on a strike at Peori, Ill., for an increase of I from $1 to $4 a thousand for making cigars. Tuesday night a dozen of the strikers badly beat the foreman of one of the factories. A printers’ strike is impending at Wil- liamsport, Pa. The men want more wages, which the newspapers decline to grant. A contract for one year was signed at Du- quoin, by the mine operators and miners, and work is resumed. Thirty-five cents a ton gross will be paid for the first six months, and 87} cents for the second period. Drivers will receive $1.60 and $1.75 per day of nine and one-half hours. Full time shall “be worked Saturday, and the miners paid « weekly. Notices were posted at the Spearman, Mable, Alice, ‘Claire and Sharpsville (Pa.) furnaces. and also at the Shenango and Ma- honing Valley furnaces, notifying the em- ployes of a reduction in wages of 10 and 15 cents, to take effects April 10, The strike of printers employed by the big 8t. Paul firm, the West Publishing Com- pany, has ended by 2 compromise. The Reading Railroad Company has shut down the Jersey Central shops at Ashley Plains, Pa., until further notice. Over 700 shop men are made idle and 200 outside hands. Great excitement prevailed in Minersyille, Pa., when notice was, given that miners’ wages would be reduced 20 per cent. This will go into effect April 1. The boys employed in the Phenix Glass Works, at Phillipsburg, Pa., went on a strike, and work was suspended. The dis- charge of a boy led to the strike. Sixty-eight carrying-in boys at Reed & Co.'s glass works, Massillon, Ohio; have struck for an advance in wages, and have put the blowers out of work. Disasters Accidents and Fatalities, Sarah Brice, a colored woman living near Arsadia, La., locked her three children in her house and left them for a few hours. The honse caught fire and the children were burned to death. Frank Radell, employed in Lambert's barbed wire mill at Joliet, Ill, fell into a vat of vitriol and was horribly burned. His injuries are fatal. An Ohio and Mississippi passenger train was run into at the crossing at Odip, Ili, by an Illinois Central freight train. The coach struck, which contained 22 passengers, was demolished. Seventeen persons were slightly injured. John Everett, farmer, aged 96, Port De- posit, Md., drowned himself in a watering trough. Worth $60,000 and feared blind- | mess, A train jumped the rails and was over- turned while going around a sharp curve near Park City, Utah. in the cars, most of whom were injured, several, it is believed, fatally, The accident was caused by the outer rail being too much elevated. ‘William Leppert, Elwood Elliott, John Cassell and Della Points, were killed ina boiler explosion at Fredericks, 12 miles from Dayton, O. While Mrs. Henry Lards, of Adrain, Mich., was cleaning a carpet in one of her rooms with gasoline, a stove burning that fluid in an adjoining room exploded. Her 4wo children were burned, one dying soon’ after, and the other is not likely to recover. Mrs. Lards was also fatally burned. At Dubuque, Iowa, Michael Smith, his wife and eight children were poisoned by , eating beef affected with lumpy jaw. The mother and one boy are still very sick, and may die, but the others are out of danger. An explosion at Fredericksburg, in a mill, killed four men and injured several others. Patrick Doyle, a desperado, who has kill- ed seven men.in 10 years, was shot and kill- ed by his 9-year-old son at his ranche near Big Muddy, Mont. The boy deliberately shot the father while the latter was chop- ping wood. The cause is not given. By the falling of a number of arch pieces and timber in the Belt Line tunnel near Baltimore two men were fatally and several seriously injured. : As a heat was being blown in the convert- ing mill at Carnegie, Phipps & Co.'s Home- stead, Pa., Steel works, a crust which had accumulated upon the converter, fell off. In dropping it broke the hydraulic pressure pipe by which the vessel is controlled and it turned over, scattering molten steel in every | direction. ' Nine workmen were injured | __andone of them, Antony Scuffel, ciel Sat ~~ urday night. Albert Williams, the foreman : and Arthur McGuirk will probably not re lwo Ypover, The others seriously hurt are: Peter ‘Woods, John Gwinn, Frank Able, James Baird, John Shields and Thomas Hardy. Thirty people were | room, caused by a lighted cigar being thrown among the documents. Thisis the third occurrence of fire this session and the fifth fire that has occurred in this portion of the building within recent years. Several hundred books were destroyed and a few engravings. The damage will probably reach about $10,000. President Harrison sentto the Senate the following nominations to be United States District Judges: William XK. Townsend, of Connecticut, for the District of Connecticut: John B. Rector, of Texas, for the Northern District of Texas; John H. Baker, of Indi- ana, for the District of Indiana. The sundry civil appropriation bill of last year carried an aggregate appropriation of about $38,000,000, while the bill of this year amounts to only a little more than $25,000, 000, being in the neighborhood of $13,000, 000 less than the act for the current fiscal year. ‘thelargest cut made is the items making appropriations for public buildings. With reference to the world’s fair the com- mittee makes available the balance remain- ing of the appropriation of $1,500,800 here- tofore made by Congress. A sub-committee is going to Chicago to visit the fair and in- vestigate expenditures, and until its report is received nothing further will be done in the matter of world’s fair expenditures. 7 Crime and Penalties. Frank McKeen. a Chicago laborer, was arrested for pounding his wife to death with his fists. The cause was drunkenness and jealousy. John Corley, a gambler, was ejected from a restaurant at Coulee City, Wash. He was intoxicated, and began firing at the proprie- tor and waiters. Charles Pascoe was killed and Pat Egan seriously wounded. Mrs. Bessie Howard, aged 26, was killed by her husband, William, during a fight at their residence in New York City. Joseph L. Tice, the wife murderer, was resentenced at Rochester, N. Y., to surren- der his life in the electric chair at Auburn prison during the week of May 16. A stabbing affray took place in the East- ern penitentiary at Philadelphia. Keeper James Bloomer was seriously cut by an in- mate and is likely to die. Two other keep- ers were also cut but not dangerously. At Molina, Ga., Lee Blount, one ‘of Pike county’s prominent farmers, shot to death John L. Barks,a wealthy neighboring plant- er. The tromble was over an old trade. August Arndt, targetkeeper on the Tole- do, Ann Arbor & North Michigan road, set fire to the house of E. Hammer, where his wife and babe were stopping. The inmates escaped. Mrs. Arndt had left home to es- cape from her brutal husband. Later in the day Arndt met his wife, and shot her in the shoulder. He attempted to kill his child but did not succeed, and he then shot and killed himself. Burt T. Arnold, a guard at the Simonds Manufacturing Company's stove works at Long Island City, N. Y., was murdered Sat- urday night by the men who are on a strike at the establishment. Financial and Commercial. Seventeen more judgments against James R. Keene, the Wall street operator, aggre gating $53,000, were satisfied of record. Executions for $135,000 were entered against the Lehigh Iron Company at Allen town, Pa. Stagnation in trade is the cause. I: 0. Grothe & Co., Montreal cigar manu- facturers, have assigned. Liabilities, $80,- The American National Bank of Birm- ingham, Ala., has gone into liquidation. The Cumberland (Md.) Steel and Tin Plste Company, a reorganized steel concern, will build two mills, with a capacity of 1,000 boxes weekly. E. C. Buchanan & Co., grain dealers and brokers, at Memphis, Tenn., made an as- signment. The assets are $81,000, and the liabilities $160,000. The Balckaw-Vaughn Steel Company, of Yorkshire, England, has failed. Liabilities, $1,000,000. The American Bobbin Spool and Shuttle company, of Woonsocket, R. I., assigned for the benefit of its creditors. Railroad News. There are named 470 railroads which pro- pose the construction in 44 States and Terri- tories of no less than 28259 miles. This includes only such enterprises as have lines under survey or construction. All the States and Territories are represented in the list except Rhode Island, Kansas and Nevada. The traffic managers of the several rail- roads in Mexico have united in an effort to secure the adoption of a national standard time. The Lehigh Valley officers now under the control of the Reading are to be removed within a week from Bethlehem, Pa., to Phil- adelphia. Clerks are notified they may hold their places if they move, too. The Sioux City, Chicago and Baltimore Railroad company was incorporated at the first named city. The proposed new lines will give the Baltimore and Ohio, the Missouri Pacific, the Santa Fe and other lines valuable Iowa connections. Scalpers are selling tickets from Los An- geles to New York for from $18 to $25. All the railroads are conniving at the ‘reduc- tions. . Mortuary. Arthur Goring Thomas, the well-known writer of operas, was killed at London by being run down by a train on the Metropol itan railway. At Philadelphia, Prof. D. Hayes Agnew died, passing quietly away. Dr. Agnew was born ‘in Lancaster county in 1818. He ranked among the most eminent surgeons of his time, and in the pursuit of his great ealling, and as a contributor to modern medical literature, he had won a name tha HE 4 will adorn the pages of history. He came Washington News, in closer touch with the American people Senator Cameron’ (of Pa.) has recovered |in the autumn of his career asthe consult i ing surgeon of the late lamented President Garfield. H. E, Clark, senior member of the Ontario legislature for the city of Toronto, while ad- dressing the house, suddenly sank in his chair stricken with heart disease and died shortly after the attack. Ario Pardee, one of Pennsylvania's great- est coal operators, died in Florida. The im- mediate cause of his death is thought to have been heart failure. Fires The business section of Gainesville, Ark., was destroyed. The fire originated in the postoffice from a defective flue. = Total loss, $35,000; insurance, $11,000. > Fire swept Dunlap's island, Mian., burn- ing Patrick Flaherty to death and destroy- ing seven buildings valued at $25,000; insurance, $6,000. At Alto, Tex., 28 buildings in the business portion of the town were burned. Loss on stock, $75,000; buildings, $30,000; insurance, $40,000. The Braddock, Pa., Glass Works, at Ran- kin Station, were destroyed by fire with $25,000 to $30,000 worth of goods waiting shipment. The total loss is $70,000. At Akron O.,the knob and wood works of Baker McMillen & Co., were burned. Loss, $50,000, insurance $35,000. At Omaha, the five-story building occupied by the Omaha Hardware Company at 920 and 922 Jones street. Loss, $200,000. At Philadelphia, Bromley’s mills. Loss fully $400,000; insurance about $325,000. Also H. O. Wilbur & Son's chocolate factory. Loss, about $200,000; well insured. 5 Legislative. The New York Senate passed the World's Fair bill, appropriating $300,000 for the New York exhibit with assembly amend- ments providing for closing the exhibit on Sunday. The vote was 22 ayes to 4 nays. The Towa House defeated the Gatch High License bill this morning, the vote being 52 to 46 for indefinite postponement of action. New York Legislature is considering a bill for the abolishment of imprisonment for costs of civil actions or other debts. A bill was introduced in the British Columbia Legislature to increase the per captia tax on Chinese immigrants from $50 to $100. The Missouri Legislature adjourned sine die. One of the last acts of the house was to pass a resolution indorsing “The Man of Destiny, Grover Cleveland,” for the Demo- cratic Presidential nomination. Political, Roger Q. Mills was unanimously chosen United States Senator by the Texas Legis- lature. The white primary elections at New Orleans to select a: Democratic State ticket show that Murphy Foster has beaten McEnery for Governor by from 3,000 to 7,000. Colored men have been chosen judges of election in Hiawatha, Xan. g Secretary Worman has called © upon the Democratic societies of Pennsylvania, to hereafter celebrate April 13th as Jefferson Day, that being the date of the Democratic patron saint's birth. Judicial. - The Wisconsin Supreme Court ‘declared :he Assembly, Senatorial and Congressional apportionment made by the last Legislature to be unconstitutional. . : The Circuit Court at Cincinnati has decid- ed thatthe wages of all necessary employes of an insolvent firm are preferred claims. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court at Phil- adelphia made an order fixing April 18 on which to hear arguments on the constitu- tionality of the ballot law, which is laid before them on the appeal of Herman de Walt and others from the decision of Com- mon Pleas Court. 4 Turf News. The once famous race horse Dick Ed- wards, claimed to have been one of the first horses to trot a mile in 2:40, dizc at the Eclipse stock farm. at Roslyn, L. I. The horse was 43 years old. Before he was re- tired from the turf he lowered his record to 2:22. Mr. Dureyea, owner of the farm, will erect a monument over his grave on the farm. A New York horse breeder, just home from California, says that Senator Stanford refused $125,000 for his four-year-old colt. Advertiser, 2.16. Convention News The Virginia State Republican Committee has fixed upon Roanake as the place and May 5 as the date for holding the State Con- vention. The Republican State Convention will be held at Cleveland on April 27 and 28, and the temporary Chairman will be Hon Charles P. Griffin. Personal. Daniel 8. Lamont, ex-private secretary of Grover Cleveland, is lying dangerously ill at New York. The Rev. Joh Jasper, the celebrated col: ared preacher, was married in Richmond, Va,, for the fourth time. Jasper is 80 years of age and his bride 59. The Weather. Blizzards prevailed the past few days throughout Northern Illinois, Minnesots and the Dakotas. A cyclone swept over Illinois and did much damage. Religious. The Wyoming Conference of the Metho dist Episcopal church in session at Wilkes- barre, Pa., voted against woman representa- tion by a majority of 51. Saturday Miscellaneous, The body of the woman found in the Passic river at Newark, N. J. has been idon- tified as Miss Libbie Bteckle, aged 385, of Reckaway, N. J. It is supposed that she was robbed and murdered. John Sously, a farmer near South Bend, Ia., was troubled with a sore eye. An oculist found that a grain of wheat had lodged there, sprouted, and forced its growth between the scalp and skull. The wheat was removed and t@ansplanted in a hotbed. . The body of Mather B. Dawson, who was drowned in Hutton: Lake, mear Laramie, Wy., was found and identified by the cloth: 08. Dawson's life was ingared for $120,00C and $15,000 was expended in the search for the body. ; Twenty ex-convicts from Italy were de tained at New York, They admitted that they were liberated felons, and will be promptly returned. The steamer Touraine from Havre to New York beat the record, makingthe tripin € days, 23 hours and 30 minutes, While pallbearers were carrying the re- mains of the late David C. Austin, of Water- ford, Conn., from the hearse to the grave the bottom dropped out and the body fell to the ground. Several women fainted and a little girl went into convulsions. - Two colored women on a farm in Georgia fought recently, and one was bitten slightly on the finger. Her arm has become go badly swollen that she must lose it to save her life, a blue-gummed negro is as poisonous as that of the most deadly rattlesnake. "BEYOND OUR BORDERS, The Belgian Government has introduced a bill to punish dynamiters. ; More bodies were recovered from the An. derleus pit at Brussels, including the remains of several female miners. The fire in the mine is extinct and overations to clear it of the debris of the recent calamity are rapidly proceeding. > The Marquis of Coraselice, a well-known Spanish nobleman, has been murdered in his room at Granada, Spain. He had been shot dead with a pistol. . The assassination is surrounded with mystery. The little town of Immenhausen, in Hess Nassau, about nine miles from Cassel, has been devastated by fire, and a great part of he town laid in ashes. The fire destroyed no less than 100 houses, and of the popula- tion, little more than 1,000, several hundred are homeless. The explosion of a barrel of benzinein a drug warehouse at Amsterdam killed six persons and injured 27, some of them fatally. Four hotises were destroyed. The Berlin Tajeblatt states that Emperor William is suffering from inflation of the cellular tissues with air. Whether pulmo- nary or not is not stated. The Australian Deposit and Mortgage Bank, at Melbourne, has suspended. The first vessel of the Newfoundland seal- ing fleet has returned with 18,500 skins. In a non-political row between Columbian soldiers and civilians at Palpa, five persons were killed and 14 wounded. Striking miners in Durham, England, stoned the engineers, who refused to quit work. : Six train wreckers were caught by the Rurales tearing up spikes this side of Leon of Central, Mexico. They were immediately shot. and the United States was signed at Paris by M, Ribol, the foreign minister, and Mr. Whitelaw Reid, the American minister. The Committee of the Chambers of Depu- ties having the matter in charge has added a clause to the dynamite bill imposing the death penaity ‘on persons . convicted of depositing explosives in the streets. Portugal and Holland have ratified the Brussels treaty to suppress slavery. One thousand cabmen in the employ of six Paris companies are on strike. Owing tothe German Government's orde: refusing to permit Russian Hebrews to past through the Fatherland. the frontier town: are swarming with sick and starving emi grants, ihcreasing the tpyhus. : HE WAS JACK THE RIPPER. Deemirg, the Melbourne Murderer, Con. fesses the Crimes. MELBOURNE, March .28.— The murderer Deeming confessed he killed his wife and four children at Rain Hill, near Liverpool, and murdered and mutilated ‘the last two unfortunate women whose dead bodic¢s were found in Whitechapel. The Argus, which prints the confession, says Deeming doesnot admit his connec- tion with any others of the Whitechapel atrocities, but it is believed very generaily that those crimes were his and he will event- ually confess them. Descriptions of the Whitechapel murderer correspond. nearly « enough with Deem- ing’s appearance to lend additional force to the common belief here concerning the latter. The police investigation into Deeming’s career in Australia leads to the revelation of other murders with which there is strong reason to believe he was connected. THE TREASURY'S CONDITION. Foster Says There Is $64,000,000 in Excess of Gold Reserves. Secretary of the Treasury Foster said, in discussing the condition of the treasury,that there was nearly always $24,000,000 in dis- bursing officer's hands, and that was practi- cally current funds,for while the treasurer's balance might show only a net balance of $30,000,000, the subsidiary silver and money in national banks actually took the place of the money in the hands of dis- bursing officers, leaving at all times $31,000, 000 in available funds over and above the $100,000,000 gold reserve. Counting the $23, 000,000 in subsidiary silver, and the govern- went money in ‘national banks, the total available assets, exclusive of the $100,000,000 gold reserve, would be $64,000,000, rather a comfortable sum for a rainy day. Big Consignment of Flour for Starving Russians. : MinyeAPoLIs, MINN., March 26.—One hundred and seventy-five cars of flour, con- taining 22,000 barrels, were sent out in eight sections by the Washburn Crosby Company mills, to the Russian Relief. Association of Philadelphia. The Association bought this flour for Russia. The trains were gaily decorated with flags, bunting and mottoes. They will run into Philadelphia in one sec tion if possible, pulled by eight engines. A great reception willbe given it when it arrives at its destination, = The steamer Conemaugh will carry it to Russia. Raiiroad Disaster Near San Salvador. Sax Francisco, March 23.—A train was ierailed yesterday at Sonsonato, 50 ¢miles southwest of this city, on the Acajutla Rail- tond. Thirteen persons were killed and 3! wounded. Itisthe most terrible railroad disaster that has ever happened in Central Ameriea. ; : {| derson, President pro. tem. of the attending physician says that the bite of. | disposed of, the Arm The new extradition treaty between France FIFTY SECOND CONGRESS. Morton the chair was occupied by Mr, Man- 0 r pi y Among the papers presented and referred yas a fmemori from. the Stjsens « of Phiia- elphia in mass meeting asking 1 refuse all Ans for the Colombian exposition, ess coupled with the restric- tion that the gates thereto be absolutely closed on Sunday. A memorial to the same effect from the State of Mississippi was pre- seuted by Mr. George. Mr. Morgan offered a resolution, which was agreed to, request- ing the President to communicate to the Senate the items of taxation. imposed by the law of the Republic of Colombia on products of the United States imported into Colombia, and which the President has found and proclaimed to be reciprocity un- just to the United States, and also to send copies of the correspondence on the subject. Senate bill to amend the statutes so as to prohibit the introduction and sale of intox- icating liquors into the Indian country was taken up, amended and passed. 'A number of minor bills were also introduced, when she ate adjourned. 3 a n the House, after routine business was appropriation bill and the Free Wool bill were discussed until adjournment. UESDAY—In the Senate the bill for the relief : of set- tlers on public lands, which had been discussed and voted on yesterday, was again taken up and it was d. The bill to improve the navigation and to afford ease and safety to the t and commerce of the Mississippi river and to prevent destructive s was then taken up as a special order and passed. It appropriates $18,750,000 for the improvement of the Mississippi river. Adjourned. i In the House the great silver debate oc- zupied the entire session. Mr. Bland opened the debate. Williams of Mass:, and Harter of Ohio, argued in favor of the minority report on the Bland bill for the anti-silver Demo- crats; and Mr. Taylor, of Tllinois, followed mn opposition to the Bland bill. ynoz, of Maryland; Hopkins, of Illinois; Deforest, of Connecticut; O'Donnell, of Michigan; and Covert of New York, opposed the bill; while Eps, of Virginia; Crawford, of North Caro- lina; cock, of Michigan; Bowers, of California; Wynn, of Georgia; and Lewis, of Mississippi, spoke in favor of it. ‘WepNEspaY—In the Senate to-day, the Vice President presented a ° pe- :dtion from Benjamin C. Harris, of Maryland, on behalf of him- self and other citizens of that State, asking Congress to secure compensation for the slaves taken by the general government or smancipated by a State Convention at the nstance and desire of the general govern- ment. The army [puropHation bill was presented and refer! the Committee on Appropriations. The Indian appropriation was taken up for action. Without action on the question the Senate adjourned. < In the House the debate on the Silver bill filled out the day, and was continued at 1 night session, although only a corporal’s ruard.of members attended. e speeches were in the main a reiteration of the argu- anents of yesterday. The principal speaker >f the morning session was C. W. Stone of Warren, Pa., who opposed the bill; and the main Speech ‘of tha &vening pession was ielivered by Henry Cabot Lodge. a TaurspAY.—In the Senate a resoultion inquiring into the number of leased build- mgs occupied by the Government was dis- sussed and referred. At 1: o'clock, oh notion of Mr. Sherman, the Senate again went into secret session on the Bering Sea matter. wl : In the House probably no mors memora- ble scenes will be enacted in the Fifty- second Congress than those which formed part of to-day’s record. The tug of war was reached at 5 o'clock when Mr. Bland moved that the previous question be ordered on she Silver bill. The battle then began and ’ :he vote was 80 very close that both factions: were afraid to'push to a final = issue.’ The motion to table the bill was defeated by a tie vote, and from that on until 12:35 Fri- day morning it was one filibustering motion ifter another. “At 35 minutes after mid- night the House adjourned, thus conclud- ing the special order and setting the bill back to the place it held when it first came from the committee.” This kills it, for the present at least, and probably for this session. Fripay—There was a much larger attend- ance of Senators than usual at the opening of the session. The morning business was hu=jed through in a perfunctory way, and® mess than half an bour after the journal had been read, the Senate, on motion of Mr. Sherman, went into secret session?’ The calm in the House to-day after the storm last night, was most refreshing. There were thany corrections to be made in she journal an zcord. Representative ageary of California introduced in the house 1 bill to prevent the use of substitutes for fops or pure extract of hops in. the manu- facture of ale or beer. The House then went into Committee of the Whole on the private calendar. : ; SATurpAY—The Senate was not in session. [n the House funeral orations in memory of the late General Spinola, of New York, were delivered, after which the House ad- journed as a further mark of respect. REBELS BURNED ALIVE. Eight Hundred Put to the Sword and Six Hundred Tortured to Death b¥ Fire. Sax Fraxcisco, March 28.—Advices from Shanghai give details of a recent terrible slaughter of rebels by the imperial Chinese troops. After numerous engagements with the rebels, troops to the number of 2,000 charged a rebel encampment in the Chin Chang district. Christian churches were used as outposts for the rebel army. After a bloody engagement lasting two hours, 800 out of 2,400 rebels were put to the sword. Upwards of 600 others of the rebels were captured and burned alive in a huge fire started by the troops.: All of the rebel leaders were beheaded in the presence of the prisoners. The total loss to the government troops is only 5 killed and 40 wounded. More than half of the rebel leaders have been slain, and their ranks have been broken up and dispersed. WALT WHITMAN DEAD. The Aged Poet Passes Paacefully Away at His Home in Camden, N.J. CaMpeN, N. J., March 28. —Walt Whit- man, the aged poet, died here Saturday morning. ‘Walt Whitman followed the unconven- tional in poetry. Whatever music there is in his verse arises not from the jingling of rhymes, bot from the simple language of nature. Inearly life he was a street car driver and his soul was touched by the daily scenes he witnessed. The ay of a helpless wife or the despairing sob of a helpless woman were themes for his first efforts. Old line poets declared he was not of them and that poetry was not in him. Edmund Clarence Stedman, ‘the banker poet, says he was ‘too anatomical.”’ 'Whit- man was not born to fortune nor cared for money, for in his old age he was nearly destitute. Sir Edward Arnold, upon visiting ‘Whitman, paid his work a high tribute by saying that future generations will recog- nize him as the greatest poet of the age. — i, A WOMAN CHIEF Chosen “0 Command the Six Indian i Nations. Syracuse, N. Y., March 28.—Harriet Max- well Converse was installed as chief of fhe Bix Nations, New York State Indians, at Onondaga reservation. This is the first time in the history of North American ‘honor, ~. it Indians that a woman has received such an Moxpay—In the absence of Vice President | [THE WIE GES UP 7S DEAD ress to hJ RECOVERY OF BO! Hill Farm Mine at Have Been Found s Water in Flat No.® Only Two Which Can Be Identified. oh DuxBAR, PA., March 25.—The Hill Farm: mine is yielding up its secrets at last. After months of searching, of fighting fire, water and death damp, the almost superhuman exerlions of the rescuers have brought to the light of day all that is mortal of the miners who perished on that fateful June 15 day two years ago. ” Shove Wednesday the first bodies were found. They were a mass of putrefaction. For: nearly two years the dead men lay in the water and debris, while close at hand rag great fires that shriveled the flesh on th bones of some before it had time to decay. It is doubtful whether the 2)‘ men who went: into the Hill Farm mine on the day of the explosion and never came out alive will ever’ be positively identified. Sodan The disaster at the Hill Farm mine at Dunbar, Pa., occurred on the morning of: lives by an explosion of fire damp. The mine had been condemued by Mine tor Keighley three weeks before; . Hie For days and days the comrades of those svho were intombed did all. that was in human labor and intelligence to liberate: those sup to be alive. Relatives and friends crowded around the pit's mouth. Men from surrounding mines” gathered by: undreds to assist in the work of rescue, but. it availed not. Not one of the entombed miners were taken out alive. Yesterday the air current was turned into fat No. 9, and in the afternoon Buperinten- dent Hill and his men, taking-their lives in their hands, entered i and found 23 of the 29 entombed bodies, and this completed the remarable search began almost two years 3g0. At 4:30 o'clock they stumbled over the first body. Mine Depecter Duncan: told the rest of the story as he received it from Superintendedt Hill. It is as fol- ows: It was exactly 4:30 o'clock when we found the first body. = We had to do quick work as the air was Forint. In a few minutes we: found all the bodies. They were all lying within a few fect of each other. They were pretty well preserved but, of course, un- recognizable. We knew the body of the ittle trapper boy John Devaney, when we ound it, on account of its size. He been working in No, 8 flab but had run dowme nto No. 9 slong wih the 15 other men who: were Rorking there. We spent but a few minutes in the fat, only long enough to count the bodies. i The chamber of death is 4,200. feet below, the mouth of the mine. Itisa long narrow place, and part of the walls and roof have caved in. Not a ripple disturbed the black: in which the dead men were resting. sannot be laid to their long resting place too Soon. ha 3 da $i Fete A tees ts THE NAMES OF THE VICTIMS, : tomed miners; Daniel McCashion, Robert McGuill, Richard Bigley. Elmer Dewey, James Sheargn, John Devaney, Patrick Delvin; John A. Joy, Martin Cavanaugh, Daniel McCune, John Cope (father), Andrew Cope, Jr., Peter Egan, Patrick ‘Cahill, Wils {iam Cahill, David Davis, 8r., Thomas Da- ris son), Joseph Bigley, Thomas McCleary, = William Hayes (the boy whose lamp fired: the gas) Patrick Courtney, John Oourtney, John Mitchell, Daniel Smith, John McClea- 1y, Charles B. Maust, John B vid Hay and Milton Turney: + Duxsag, Pa. March 26—The remains of the 23 victims of the Hill Farm mine were ned Thursday 4,200 feet under the su ace. Karly Fri ay mowing before the ajght had fled the bodies were brought out. of the mine for the first time in two! years;. They were buried before noon in the Cath~ slic graveyard. . a IN ASHES, THOUGH NOT BURNED. : . The fires in the mine did not burn the podies of the 23 miners... Yet they have hirned to ashes. The water and slime. in he depths have done the work. On not a tingle DY are the lower arm left. ‘A few. re without feet. When the bodies were pulled from the mud by the undertakers the temains collapsed. A stream of water was pumped up from the flooded dip to wash the bodies. As the air and water touched! ihe bodies thev fellin likea punctured oy balloon. One body crumbled to a pulpy mass. In this case the words ‘‘dust shou art, to dust thou shall return.” have been literally fulfilled. This body has com- pletely collapsed and the sname is not: nown. Most of the so-called identification. has been largely guess work. s GATHERING OF THE WIDOWS. Thursday a solemn gathering took place: at the residence of Father Maladey, the Datholic priest. It was composed of the widows made so by the disaster. It was the wdvice of the priest that the women wait un- il to-morrow beforing trying to see their bushands, as it could do no good to wait ab ‘he mine. The priest, who is a young man, made an affecting address and every woman. “here wept. Then they went to their homes» earfully waiting the morrow. : THE JURY IN THE MINE. ; Thursday J.F.Holberte,the Fayette county Joroner arrived, and after much . trouble tecured a jury. The Coroner and the jury ‘hen went into the mine to view the 23 bodies from which the water had been lift id. The descent caused great suffering to. ‘he party, as they were unused to the intense seat such as still pervades the mine. ' It is- 40 degrees down there, caused by hot steam pipes and the after-effects of the great fire: which raged for months. ' The party de- scended to the flat where the bodies lay. first they found three together, .one being: 1 boy. A little farther on lay seven men ali m a heap,. Three of them grasped tools ind dinner buckets in a he clasp. Beyond this group but a few feet lay an- ther group of seven and near by six more men. One man held in his skeleton fingers i knife aimed at his heart. Another lay with a big stone under his back, The latter vas broken. He had evidently fallen and broken his back on the stone. Two boys were clasped in each others arms, the faces: of each buried on the breast of the other. The jury viewed the scene by the flickermg dght of mine lamps and, after inquiring tbout the finding of the men from the com- pany officials present, ascended. The jury madean investigation and a verdict” of leath by suffocation was rendered. \ The bodies found are supposed to be ‘hose of John Mitchell, Daniel Smith. John: cCleery, James McCleary, Peter Delvin, John Cope, Andrew Cope, James Shearin,, Elmer Devoy, John Devanny, Richard Bigs ley, Daniel McCastinon, John Kiernan, artin Kavanaugh, Patrick Cahill, John courtney, Patrick Courtney, John Devanny. Ir., Jamies X. Ivy, Thomas Davis, Daniel Davis. James McCune and William Cahill, Bix bodies are still to be found, those of William Hay, Peter Eagan, Joseph Bigley, Milton Turner and Barney Naust. They. Are SuUpposé to bein the dip about 200 feet from the edge of the water. The latter is eing slowly reduced. Some argue that. bodies were burn Ta wit Kearnan, Da~ NoShort Hours For Englishmen. Loxpox, March 26—In the house of com- mons to-day a Liberal member moved the second reading of the miners’ eight-hour- bill. He said the measure would affect 581,- bn men. The bill was'rejected by a vote of 212 to 160. : py IT is only those who. do not. know God who boast of their own 200d ness. 5 3 . hd : | Tune'15, 1890. Twenty-nine miners lost their 1 : Fhe bodies are in such a condition that they * The following are the names of the 29 ens = 5 ard mes ed np ji bo we 2) Ra iis petal pile EG bre. NES be # To ER Tk ey al CL Be a¥ chaos t ap a SE, APT I SRR