© A union between China aud Japan at this time would force the whole world to put gn the thinking cap. It is only in France that the French population does not increase. Tn Can- ada, Algeria and Tunis its incresses rapidly. Nidola Tesla tells the New ork Sunday World that he has ‘‘harnessed the rays of the sun” and will compel them to operate machinery and give light and heat. The invention is still in the experimental stage, but he de- clares theres is not a possibility of its failure. He has discovered a method of producing steam.from the rays of the sun. The steam runs a steam en- gine which generates electricity. The growing plea for technical schools as an important factor in the advancement of industrial art in the United States has received unequivo: cal recognition the State of Georgia, pioneer in the Southern pro- gress of post-bellum years, notes the New York Mail and Express. On the eve of the Legislature’s adjournment an appropriation of $10,000 was made for the establishment of a textile school, on condition that this sum be dupli- cated by popular subscription. This condition, we understand, has been promptly met; and Georgia thereby promises not only to give a new im, pulse to her own textile industry, but to furnish one more example of manu- facturing foresight provocative of emu- lation by her sister States in Dixie. from In science the year 1897 has given no one discovery equalling in brilliant impressiveness that of the X-ray or of argon, thinks Harper's Weekly, but for the first time in history a steam: aeroplane of any considerable size has lifted itself and flown a considerable distance without the aid of hydrogen or other gas; the third-rail system of using electric power has been applied successfully in the suburban passen- ger trafic of steam railroads; all rec- have been broken and what ords on the ocean by improved steamships; seem to be really substantial advances have been made. in telegraphing with- out wires. This is only part of along record of attempt and achievement in physical and mechanical science, but if there were nothing else it would call for admiration. A whipping-post for the correction of bad boys has been set up in Evans- ville, Ind. The judge of the local po- lice court is responsible for the inno- vation, He was puzzled what to do with boys indifferent to parental con- trol, and hesitated to inflict the pen- alty of a fine, which was really a pun- ishment on the parent. He discov- ered that an old statute permitting the flogging of lawbreakers had not been repealed, and at once set up the whip- ping-post. Now, when a boy is found guilty of misdemeanor, his father is sent for and given his choice of paying a fine, seeing his boy go to jail, or giv- ing him a sound flogging with a strap in the presence of an officer, whose duty it is to sce that theré is no sham about this punishment. There is sel- dom need of the mentor’s interference, the angry parent wielding the strap to good purpose. The Humane So- ciety felt impelled to interfere, but the judge stood upon the law, and there has been a marked decrease in the number of boys brought before the | court, ——————— Without taking into account the le- gitimate losses occasioned by the war in Cuba, it is estimated’ that the dep- redations committed by General Wey- ler upon the property of the insur- gents will closely approximate in value the sum of $77,000,000. The bill of charges against the Spanish butcher is itemized as follows: One hundred thousand country houses and 50,000 dwellings in villages and ham- lets destroyed, $16,000,000; 800,000 cocoa trees cut down, -$5,000,000; 1,000,000 palm trees destroyed, $10,- 000,000; 2,000,000 “fruit trees de- stroyed, $1,000,000; 5,000,000 banana plants destroyed, $125,000; 1000 tracts of boniatas and yuccas de- stroyed, $2,500,000; 4,000,000 coffee plants destroyed, $480,000; 3,000,000 small cocoa plants destroyed, $1,500,- 000; 2,000,000 horned cattle killed outright, $30,000,000; 2000 horses killed, $200,000; 500,000 cordels of fencing. burned, $3,000,000; 300,000 hives of domestic bees destroyed, $1,450,000; 650,000 head of sheep and swine destroyed, $2,3000,000; 500,000 tierces of tobacco appropriated, $5,- 000,000. = To this inventory of out- rages inflicted upon property must be added the wholesale murders perpe- trated by General Weyler upon de- fense'ess' women, children and gnva. lids. ‘‘In the annals of civilized war- fare,” concludes the Atlanta Consti- tution, “there is nothing to compare with the brutal record of the Spanish ish: THE MAINE HORROR ‘United States Battleship Blown Up in Havana Harbor. 'DISASTER'S CAUSE A MYSTERY. with men, but the fourthjboak was swamped before it could be utilized. “When the ex- plosion occurred {Lieutenant Blandin ‘had charge of the deck. It is'said that the men who ecarried.out the order fo flood the gun cotton failed to .peturn, and the brave men undoubtedly lost their lives in the performance of their hazardous duty. ? Several of the officers were down below together when the explosion occurred, and mediately lowered and I were filled plosive from the outside. If, as is expecte ed, the plates are bent outward, they -declare it will be proof that the explosion was in the interior. ) Laymen, realizing the folly of unwise talk, as arule decline to discuss the explosion, and follow the sagacious lead of former President Cleveland, who believes the ex-! losion was due to an accident, and asks is fellow citizens to suspend judgment un-' til an official investigation fastens the re- sponsibility where it properly belongs. Over Two Hundred and Fifty Gal- lant Men Lost With the Ship. Two Great Explosions — Undetermined Mass Was Seen to Shoot High Into the Air-—Captain Sigsbee Reports the Number of Dead as 258 and Survivors as 96-—Most of the Rescued Men Have Been Sent to Key West—The Administration Desires the People to Suspend Judgment Until the Facts Are Ascertained—The Country in Mourning ~Board of Inquiry Ordered—Gloom in Washington—tWhite House Receptions Abandoned—Xxpressions of Sympathy. HAvANA, Cuba (By Cable).—The destruc- tion of the battleship Maine by an explo- slon in the harbor here on Tuesday night proves to be the worst disaster in the na- val history of the United States. The splendid warship was destroyed, and latest reports put the loss of life at 258. The cause of the explosion remajns a mystery, although naval officers generally believe that in some unexplained way one of the qhip’s magazines exploded. Up to the mo- ment of that mysterious explosion, which destroyed a first-class battleship, valued at “$4,000,000, Spain and the United States had each seven: vessels like the Maine—- great ships, built to fight and destroy.. Now Spain has seven and the United States has six. Witnesses of the explgsion that destroyed the Maine say that at t moment of con- cussion a vast mass was seen to rise to a great height. In the sudden and blinding light no one seems to have been able to dis- cern the nature of this mass or whether it rose from beside the battleship or inside it. From the nature of the disaster and the testimony of the survivors it appears that the line of greatest force of the explosion was a little forward of amidships. It is there that the ‘worst damage was done. The chief officers were either well aft or ashore. Thus they escaped unhurt. The seamen and marines by their position jwere forced to bear the brunt of the dis- laster, and the frightful mortality was almost wholly conflned to them. One of the junior officers should havebeen on duty jon the forward deck, and it may have been thus that Lieutenant Jenkins, who is miss- jing, lost his life. It is also probable that ‘Engineer Merritt. another missing man, 'was below on duty and went down withthe ship. Lieutenant-Commander Richard | Wainwright, who was at first reported lost, is safe. - Five of the crew immediately after the explosion ran to the main ammunition storage room with the idea that they might save that from explosion. None of them ‘has since been heard of. It is almost cer- tain that they:went to the bottom, ready "at their posts for duty. - +—When the roar of the explosion an- nounced to the people of Havana that the iwarship was blown up the city firemen ‘were at once ordered to the ship, but it was ‘found that it was impossible for them to render any assistance there. Twenty-six ‘of the wounded were transferred to the steamship City of Washington, where they were properly attended to. Many of the Havana physicians volunteered their ser- vices!” o-. ; Thirty-five other wounded sailors re- ceived medical attendance at the *Milltary Hospital. The Spanish theory of the cause of the accident is that a boiler exploded. ‘Many towboats and other vessels were busy all night trying to render all possible as- sistance. The wounded were taken to the hospital by the firemen. The wreck took*flre and sank, and soon the harbor was lit up by the fflames, fed chiefly by the inflammable cellulose con- “tained in the forward and after ends. The wreck burned the long night through, and when broke the dawn, dark wreaths of ‘smoke were still curling upward from the shapeless mass. At sunrise all flags in the harbor were at half mast. of | pict a - Lt f : : they thought at at once that the ship was doomed. By the time they reached the deck they saw at once that the Maine was sinking. : ‘A large part of the crew were in their quarters, and they were not able to get out, but went down with the ship, which sank bow first about 2000 feet from Fort Atares. Captain Sigsbee, in all his comments has been very careful not. to accuse any one of causing the explosion. All he will say is ‘that a'careful investigation will be made, and it will probably determine whether in- terior or exterior causes produced the dis- agter. GCLOOM IN WASHINGTON. The Awful Disaster to the Maine Puts the Nation in Mourning. WasHINGTON, D. C. (Special).—Washing- ton is in a state of painful excitement. The city has been all day a hotbed of start- ling reports and sensational rumors. Pub- lic business in Congress and in the Execu- tive Departments was almost at a stand- still because of the awful disaster in the harbor of Havana. ’ President McKinley and the members of the Cabinetrepudiate the theory that the disaster was due to treachery or foul play of any description. The news caused a tremendous sensation and the loss of the bat- tleship is regarded as inflicting an almost crippling blow on the naval efficiency. of the United States. Prompt and energetic measures were taken by Secretary Long to send relief to the wounded. A telegram of condolence was sent by President McKin- ley to Captain Sigsbee. According to a'special correspondent in Havana, of the Maine’s crew of 354 there were 96 men saved. Of the 258 lost, two were officers. Despatches from Captain Sigsbee, the commander of the ill-fated vessel, put two officers and 256 men in the dead and miss- -ing-Hst. It isofficially reported that twen- ty-four officers and seventy men are saved. While the cause of the explosion that de- stroyed the Maine is as yet undetermined, naval experts are inclined to the belief that its Origin was within and not from without. Theidea that the Spanish Gov- ernment or Spanish officers had anything to do with it is scouted in most quarters as preposterous. . Among {the members of both Houses of Congress conservative opinions prevail, and the inclination is to follow [Captain Sigsbee’s request and suspend judgment until an official report of the catastrophe and its causes has peen received." Resolutions expressing the sorrow and sympathy of Congress were introduced in the House of Representatives. Prominent members of both houses express suspicions that the Maine was destroyed by foul play, but say they will await evidence. The meagre accounts gathered from curt official dispatches and censored press mes- sages indicate that the officers and men who were left alive behaved themselves like American sailors, stuck by their.ship and comrades, and were brave, cool and HAVANA HARBOR—SCENE OF THE MAINE DISASTER. Captain Sigsbee was up nearly all the night looking out for the comfort of his men. He took a short rest before early daylight, and soon afterward he stood on the deck of the City of Washington, peer- ing into the falling mist which was screen- ing the wreck of his gallant ship. Captain Sigsbee did not leave his sinking ship till every man haa peen taken off, and -he remained in a'boat in the neighborhood as long as there was any hope of sav- ing any of the men who were in the water. He says he has not the slight- est idea what caused the accident. He was thrown from his bed by the explo- sion and his head was slightly bruised, but otherwise he received no injury. The first thing he did was to go on deck and order the flooding of the large quantity of gun cotton on hoard. The order was promptly (carried out, and it is certain that no dam- age was done by this explosive, Lieutenant-Commander Wainwright was ‘also in his room when the explosion oc- ‘curred. He speaks in the highest terms of ithe coolness with which Sigsbee and the :iother officers faced the terrible situation. .| No sooner had two or three of the officers jappeared on deck than an order was given ito lower the boats. Four of them were im- efficient in the presence of dreadful and sudden disaster. Of the survivors of the Maine, fifty-nine have been sent to Key West, twelve remain- ing to look after the bodies of the dead, and twenty-five being hurt so badly that they cannot he removed. As to how the explosion may have oc- curred, a host of opinions are expressed both in naval and civilian circles. Some navy officers believe spontaneous combus- tion ignited the coal in one of the Maine's bunkers, and that the burning fuel heated the metal partition between the bunker and a magazine, causing an explosion of the ammunition. Others think some ex- plosive substance in the coal caused the disaster when the fuel was shovelled into the furnaces. ; Secretary of the Navy Long has directed tlie commander of the North Atlantic | squadron to organize a court of inquiry at once to make a thorough investigation of the affair. Members of the court will go to Havana, and divers will help them in reaching a positive conclusion. Naval,officers say that if the divers find the armor plates of the Maine are bent in- ward it will be conclusive evidence that she was sunk by a torpedo or some other ex- DISPATCH FROM GCENERALY%LEE. He Reports the Number of Dead Aboug Two Hundred and Sixty. WasrixaToN (Special).—The following cable dispatch was received by the State Department from Consul-General Lee. ‘““HAvANA, February 16, 1898. . “Profound sorrow expressed by Govern- ment and municipal authorities, Consuls of foreign nations, organized bodies of all sorts and citizens generally. Flags at half mast on Governor-General’s palace, on shipping in harbor and in city. Business suspended; theatres closed. ‘Dead number about two hundred and sixty. Officers’ quarters being in rear and scamen’s forward when explosion took [lace accounts for greater proportional oss of sailors, Funeral to-morrow at 3 p. m. Officers Merritt missing. : “Suppose you ask that naval court of in- quiry be held to ascertain the cause of ex- plosion, Hope our people will repress ex- citement and calmly await decision. LEE.” Consul General Lee also reported that all the officers and sailors who are now alive greatly extol the conduct of the Com- mander and sailors of the Spanish warship Alfonso XII., who from the very first gave all the help they could to the crew of the Maine and placed a special guard all night around the sunken battleship to rescue the bodies of the American sailors. The municipality of Havana also re- solved to participate in the funeral and te call on General Lee and inform him that the city desired to pay the expenses of the funeral and the entire cost of treating the wounded, The military newspaper Diario del Ejer- cito is published in. mourning. All publie spectacles have been suspended. General Blanco will assist at the funeral cere monies, and Jenkins still White House Receptions Abandoned. WasmiNgroN, D. C. (Special).—On ac- count of the disaster to the battleship Maine the President announced that the State reception to Congress planned for Wednesday night would be aban- doned. The reception -to the public, which was to take place Thursday night, was also’ declared} off. These were the "last official social events of the year, and the season, which was postponed in De- cember on account of the President’s mourning, has been curtailed by this later misfortune, TO DISMANTLE THE MAINE, The Merritt Wrecking Company Directed to Send Vessels to Havana. New York City (S8pecial).—The Merritt Wrecking Company was directed to send vessels to Havana for the purpose of per- forming the preliminary work of saving Property pertaining to the Maine. If is elieved generally by naval officers that the. propesition to raise the Mainéis quite feasi- ble. The battleship islying only in about six fathoms of water. Probably no vessel of the weight of the Maine was ever raised. It is possible, however, tolighten the ship ma- terially by removing her heavy guns and appurtenances of the deck and hold. If it should be found impossible to raise’the ship, she fecould still be thoroughly dis- mantled of materials worth several hun- dred thousand dollars. Expressions of Sympathy. WasHINGTON, D. C. (Special).—The Spar- ish authorities 1n Havana and Madrid bhava . | profusely expressed regret and sympathy, have tendered kindly offices, and have bestowed them whenever possible. The newspapers of Madrid reflect in their utterances the course ofthe Government. Expresgions of regret and sympathy were officially made in London to the United States representatives. The Government of Spain hastened to express to General Woodford, the United States Minister, re- gret for the calamity that had befallen the American battleship. Description of the Maine. The Maine is a battleship of the second class, and is regarded as one of the best ships in the new navy. She was built at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and is 318 feet long, 57 feet broad, 21.3 feet mean draught and 65682 tons displacement. She has two ten-inch vertical turrets and two military masts, and her motive power is furnished by twin screw vertical-expansion engines, having a minimum horse-power of 9293, capable of making a spead of 17.45 knots. She carries four ten-inch and six six-inch: breech-loading guns in her main battery, and seven six-pounders and eight one- pound rapid-fire guns and four gatlings in her secondary battery, and four White- head torpedoes. [Kansas Pacific Sale. The Government lien on tho Union Pa- ciflc was wiped out at Topeka, Ean. when the Kansas Pacific road was bought in by Alvin W. Krech, representing the Re- organization Committee, for $6,803,000. There was no competition at the sala. Mr. Krech was the only bidder. Forty-Five Dead Taken Out. An explosion of firedamp has occurredin the Vereinigte Carolinemgluck colliery in Westphalia, Germany. Forty-five dead and thirty wounded have been taken out, and it is estimated that from eighty to one hun- dred others are still ar "Wheat May Reach $1.50. Armour sald Léiter, the Chicago grain speculator, éould “Send wheat ap to $1.50 a bushel if he desired.” Leiter took .advant- ‘age of the high price of wheat and sold Soo bushels, making a profit of $600,- }« An Ambiguous Query. . Judge John F. Philips of the Federal! bench has a peculiar dignity and sever- ity of mien, but for all that he is a great wag. In the Southern Hotel ro- tunda the other day, relates the . St. Louis Post-Dispateh; he met an old Kansas City friend, Colonel John RicH- ards. and said to him: AG “Hullo, John! What are you doing down here?” “Well; Judge,” replied the Colonel, “1 am annaintad on this commission to represent Missouri . at Omaha. I am Serving as a patriot ‘just naw.” ‘“Humph,” said the Judge.’ “How does it agree with wn" — United States Zinc Production. The Geological Survey has prepared a tabulated statement showing the steady increase in the production of spelter (or zine) in the United States from 33,763 short tons in 1882 to 99,980 tons in 1897. Novel Exhibit For Paris. A Southern husking bee, with slaves: clave drivers and all, is to be one of the ex: : hibits at the Paris Exposition in 1900. Mh, me Chinatown is in an uproar because off fae ‘ introduction of a compelling la - men to make out wash checks in English. {latter showed a profit. THE TRAGEDY ATHAVANA Stories of Eyewitnesses of the Loss of the Maine. JOURT OF INQUIRY NAMED. The Officer Who Was on Watch on the Maine Makes a Statement — A Roar Came From Beneath — Followed by Other Explosions and a Rain of Debris =—The Ship Settled Fast—Officers Cool. the “war alarms” throughout the country, the views of President McKinley: “Based upon information now in possession, the President believes that the Maine was blown up as the result of an ac-: cident, and he hopes the Court of Inquiry will develop that fact. Ifit is found that the disaster was not an accident, prompt! and decisive steps will be taken in the premises. * The finding of the Naval Court will de- velop the cause, and until that is submit- ted nothing will be done.” A board of navai officers has been ap- pointed to learn the truth, if possible, and it now seem probable that the public will be compelled to wait until their report is received to know the facts. The Presi- dent still hopes that the American public will be equally forbearing, so that the in- vestigation of the direful calamity may be pursued without prejudice, and controlled only by a desire to learn the truth. Spain has officially disclaimed in posi- tive manner the reflections contained in the de Lome letter, and, as officially an- cident is satisfactorily closed. Lieutenant Blandin’s Succinet Description of the Catastrophe. Key West, Fla. Maine's survivors, who is at the Key West | Hotel, gave a succinct account of the | disaster, saying that not until now has he | hig' | ‘| the Maine with a few officers and men who {- were rescuing their shipmates, | STORY OF AN EYEWITNESS. Sceries in Havana Bay and Along the City Water Front. Havana (By Cable).—An American cor- | respondent was in cable office when the explosion occurred. Hesaw from the win dow of that office a great column of fire: shooting upward, like a big blaze of lire-| | works, and he hurried to the wharf. that time the correspondent oould fiames extending over the whole ship, and a few moments later the Maine sank. i Mingling with the echoes of the wails of | the wounded and drowning sailors were heard the shouts of “Viva Espana!’~“Death to the Americans!” “Manana tendremous buena pesca en la bahia!” (“We shall have, good fishing ‘in the bay to-morrow’) and" such remarks coming from the Spanish | rabble, who were congregating in great | numbers around the wharves and seemed i greatly delighted at the misfortune which J i had be } ori Wasitvoros. D.C. Gipeoial= tn view of | d befallen the Americans, It was then that for the first time the i suspicion of foul play came to the report- the newspapers were authorized to make | the Tollowits 7 | take nim to the side of the burning vessel owing statement, which represents el er’'s mind, Having induced a boatman to the reportor saw a sight most horrible and’ | not possible to describe. Near the ship were already two hoats of The Al- i fonso XII., not far distant, had also sent some of her boats, which were assisting. | It is marvellous how some of them could swim, as they were nearly all very severe- | ly hurt. One mnn had both legs fractured: another had an ankle shattered, and near- | ly all were severly burned. One horror was saved. Havana Bayusu- ally swarms with sharks. At the sound of: the explosion they were frightened away. Cannon were discharged all day to keep i | them from returning. | Spanish officers, all wish. Later, as the reporter was going up the steps of the Palace he passed a group of One of them said: or guess this will bring the war that we BURIAL OF THE MAINE'S DEAD. | Final Honors Paid in Havana to 27 of the nounced by the State Department, the in- | Victims of the Battleship. Havana, Cuba (By Cable).—The burial of twenty-seven of the martyrs of the battle- { +hip Maine took place Thursday afternoon been able to recollect the sequence of events | | in the awful ten the explosion | Blandin was on the Trenton at the time of the terrible disaster off Samoa, in March, 1889, when American and German vessels lost 244 men all told. Licutenant Biandin says: “I was on watch, and when the men had beon piped below I looked down the main hatches and over the side of the ship, | Everything was absolutely normal. i “Iwas feeling a bit glum and. in fact, wae | so quiet that Lieutenant J. Hood came up and asked laughingly if I was asleep. I said, ‘No, I am on wateh.’ * *‘Scarcely had I spoken when there eame a dull, sullen roar. * Would to God that J could blot out the sound and the seen ss that followed! losion; some say numerous détonations. remember only one, “It seemed to me that the sound came | from the port side forward. Then came a { perfect main of missiles of all descriptions, ! from huge pieces of cement to blocks of i wood, steel railings, fragments of gratings | and all the debris that would be detachable | in an explosion. : “I was struck on the head by a piece of | cement and knocked down, but I was not | hurt, and got to my feet in a moment. | Lieutenant Hood had run to the poop. | When I got there, though scarce a minute | could have elapsed, I had to wade in water i | | minutes following to my knees, and almost instantly the quarterdeck was awash, “On the poop I found Captain Sigsbee as cool as if at a ball, and soon all the officers { except Jenkins and Merritt joined us. The | poop was above Water after the Maine set- | tled to the hottom. Captain Sigsbee or- | dered the gig and launch lowered, and the | officers and men, who by this time had as- | sembled, got the boats out and rescued a | number in the water. z i “Captain Sigsbee ordered Lieutenant | Commander Wainwright forward to see the extent of the damage and'if anything could { be done to rescue those forward or to ex- | tinguish the flames. ‘Lieutenant Commander Wainwright on Tuesday evening. Lieutenant | | ish-Army and Navy. : : : {.ing. ] (Special).—Lieutenant | John J. Blandin, of Baltimore, one of the ! at 3 o'clock. Shortly before the hour all Havana was in movement, The flags on: the public buildings were at half-mast amd many of the houses were draped in mourn- z. All clasgds were represented in the funeral procession. The bodies of the poor American sailors rested in state in the Palace of the Spanish Government in Cuba. The hall was filled with wreaths and flowers sent by private corporations,” banking and mercantile houses, and Cuban and American ladies. There wers also wreaths sent by the Span- Tho public was: al- lowed to pass through the hatl and see the bodies of the victims. The utmost order and decorum was o ve The funeral procession started from the principal entrance of the City Hall, then turned to the right on Mercadores s then up O'Reilly street, along the righ of Central Park, and finally to the right along San Rafael street to the cemetery. The funeral music was furnished hy the rved. | bands of the Ysabel la Catolica and Porto | Rico Rattalions which accompuapinad the ! bodies Then came a sharp ex- | MISS FRANCES E. WILLARD DEAD. She Expires at the Hotel Empire in New York City, Miss Frances E. Willard, the President op the World’s and National Woman's Christ- ian Temperance Union, who had been suf¥ fering from an attack of influenza with | ‘gastric complications, died early Friday i City. morning at the Hotel Empire, New York At the bedside of Miss Willard at the time of her death were her niece, Mrs. W. \W. Baldwin, Mrs. Li. M. M. Stevens, Vice- | President of the Woman’s Christian Tem- | perance Union; Miss Anna M. Gordon, wha | was Miss Willard’s Secretary, and Dr. Al- | his return reported the total and awful | | character of the calamity, and Captain | Sigsbee gave the last sad order, ‘Abandon ship,” to men overwhelmed with grief, in- | deed, but ealm ang apparently unexcited. Meantime four ats from the Spanish cruiser Alfonso XII. arrived, followed soon by two from the Ward Line steamer City of | Washington. “The two boats first lowered from the City of Washington were found to be rid- dled with flying debris from the Maine and {unfit for use. Captain Sigshee was the last man to leave the vessel and left in his own gig. “I have no theories as tc the | cause of the explosion. I cannot form { any. An examination by divers may teil something to a court af inanirv *’ A PRISON ROMANCE. | Married the Life-Convict Whose Pardon She Had Secared. arly in the eighties a young Mexican | who gave his name Camillo Lopez stabbed a man to death at Kansas City, Kan., and although the deed was done in ! self-defense, tho Mexican, who had no money to gel an attorney and no knowl: | edge of English to assist him in making a i defense, was convicted and sentenced ta thirty years’ imprisonment. At the peni- tentiary Lopez learned to talk English i fluently. He worked at tho tailor trade | but was sent into the library frequently | and there met and became acquainted with | the matron, Mrs. Mattie U. Peebles, 1'he | matron beeame interested in the good: { looking Mexican, aud as they alter worked | together she drew from him his story Feeling positive that Lopez was innocent ! Mra. Peebles- set about te prove so to the , Governor, She visited Wichita and gathered i facts to show that the killing of Dodson ( was done in self-defense. Then she ob- | tained the signatures of prominent men to | a petition for his release. It was three | years ago this month that Mrs. Peobles be- | gan to interest herself in [.opez’s behall and on January 19 of this year he was par- doned by Governor Leedv. Inthe mean- while Mrs. Peebles had left the penitentiary and was living with a grown som and daughter near Dispateh, Kan. Both of her children have recently married and for a time she has been living alone. When Lopez was freed he wrote her along letter, as gas City Sunday morning, and on Tuesday the two were married at a hotel in that city. Then it came out that Lopez's real name is Corpio, and that his father was a millionaire and ex-postmaster-general of Mexico. . The young man had not told these facts at the time of his trial because of his desire not to let his family know ol his disgrace The annual meetings of the Massachu- were held in Boston. The reports showed that the former were doing well, while the It was voted to ip- “crease business in Georgia. Among the Phoenicians the, wearing or earrings was a badge of servitude, the same custom obtaining with the Hebrews. The latter people said when Eve was expelled from Paradise he ears were bored asa sign of slavery. It resulted in bringing Mrs. Peebles io Kan- i Yo fred K. Hill, NN S, NN a RN MISS FRANCES E, WILLARD, Miss Willard was born in Churchville, N. on September 28, 1839, and her early She af- vouth was spent in Oberlin, Ohio. In 1868 terward moved to Iivanston, Ill. i she became President of the Evanston Col= lege for Women, and from that position i shestarted on her crusade against intem- |- Secretary i President. { same year. ! the Executive Committes . tion party. i In 1824 Miss Willard and some Miss Willard was Corresponding for the union until 1879, which time she had beon its Sha became editor of Chicago . Evening Post in the Since 1832 she has served on of the Prohibi- Jesides many pamphlets and magazine articles she published several books on woman's work and temperance, of her 2o- perance, since the | workers made an extensive journey around ! the world, preaching temperance and ask- { ing aid from the heads of many Govern- | ments. END OF THE ' GREATER REPUBLIC. setts cotton mills in Lowell and in Georgia ! The Union of Three’ Central American States Is at an End. Nows from Salvador is to the effect that i the Greater Republic of Central America has ceased to exist, the republie of Sal- vador, the packbone of the union, baving withdrawn. Tho eonsolidated republics included the three States of Salvador, Hon- duras and Nicaragua, and expected ‘the other two two republies of Guatemala and Costa Rica to join in time: but Salvador has quarreled with her two neighbors, is witnessing a rebellion in Niearagua and opposing Honduras, and has therefore secedod from the union. Wyoming Republicans and Silver. The Republican Central Committee of Wyoming met at Cheyenne and discussed a plan of campaign for this year, when a "State Legislature and judicial ticket will be elected upon the financial question. It was decided that Wyoming Republicans will abandon the free silver platforms adopted atthe past three State Conventions and indorse without qualification the plat- form of the National Republican party as adopted at St. Louis. India's wW neat Crop. Tho London Statist says the wheat erop of India promises splendidly. Mexico's Gold Product. os Mexico produced twelvo per cent. mores gold last year than she did in 1896.