SRT m—— ep oe i ai a — Tg RR | ' | TE the CHINA MAKES DEMANDS EXPLOSION ON GUNBONT |, cima maxes oemenee — trol of Flowery Kingdom. Boilers of The Bennington Blow | China’s official notification to the inS Di H | powers that she will not recognize BD In an go arbor. jany arrangement regarding Manchuria | fn reached Washington and will be ith forwarded to the President ster Bay. OVER ONE HUNDRED INJURED. Mangled Victims Were Biown High | China is averse to being forced into | the negotiations. - China’s motive in | addressing to Russia and Japan such | a notification was to remind them that | she had never acquiesced in the alien- A careful compilation of casualties {ation of the province of Manchuria was Sunday and is as follows: | from Chinese sovereignty, and that Buried in military cemetery at Fort |she expected as the first result of the Rosecrans 47; dead now in morgue, war the full restoration to Chinese 10; dead in fire rcom of Bennington | control of that province. still unrecovered, 2. Total dead, 60.| That this position might receive the Injured at various hospitals, 49; mis- | continued support of the neutral pow- sing, 16; grand total, 125. | ers copies were forwarded to each na- Of the injured at hospitals, seven | tion. China, by advice of her minis- or eight are expected to die. Forty- |ters abroad, is contemplating opening i jes were taken to the cemetery | further Manchurian ports to foreiga were brought back upon tele- | trade, and if the nations abandon ex- orders for shipment. Ens tra territorial rights, to open the body has been embalmed and | whole province. in Air—Water Strewn With Scalded and Burnea. graph Perry's will be sent to Annapolis. China's insistence that she be con- There sre more than 250 men [sulted in a arrangements concern- r— aboard the war y when the acci-!ing Manchuria will, if respected by the dent cccured, and many men were heligere . it 1s believed, necessitate hurled or forced to jump into the sea indirect participation n the nego- by the terrific explosion, which Ilift- tations by China. ed part of the deck and compelled the Russia, it is said, will come to the beaching of the ship. The Bennington at ‘the time of the of influence in Manchuria only on con- accident was lying in the stream just dition that China give to Japan no off the commercial wharf at H street. | privileges that are not accorded to all the warship had received orders from the powers. the navy department at Washington to sail that morning for Port Hartford | were coming to an agreement about to meet the monitor Wyoming and | Manchuria which did not provide for convoy the monitor to navy yard, San Francisco. tration of the province would proba- Steam was up and everything was bly result in a direct appeal to the in readiness for the departure of the Washington Government by China for Bennington, when the starboard for- assistance in defending the Hay doc- ward boiler exploded with a deafen- |trine of the preservation of the terrl- ing 1 The explosion was terrific. | torial and administrative entity ot People standing on shore saw a huge China, to which all the powers, under cloud of steam rise above the Ben- | the leadership of the late secretary of nington. Columns of water were state, were committed since the pres- forced high into the air. A dozen Or lent war begun. 15 men were blown overboard by the me force of the terrific explosion. ELECTION FRAUD Cavnt. Wentworth, who was looking er at the Bennington when the disaster Ward Leader and Election Board Held occurred, says he saw human bodies z 2 hurled over 100 feet upward. The for Ballot Box Stuffing, air was clouded with smoke, which enveloped the ship. When the haze | and Republican leader of the Twelfth cleared away, only a few men could | district of the Fourteeth ward, Phila- | be seen on the decks, while a number dephia, was held in $2,000 bail; Otto were floundering in the water. A T. Kurz, judge of elecitons; boat was lowered irom the vessels side and most of the men in the water | Judge, inspector; Benjamin Williams, | were picked up and taken on board. clerk, of the same division, were each On beard the Bennington were pre- | held in $1,500, and E. M. Cunkel, also sented scenes. The force of a clerk, was held in $500 bail, on the the explo had torn a great hole charge of ballot box stuffing and con- | in the d de of the ship and | spiracy. The men were given a hear- was produced s ing that out of a total of 374 votes in the division 201 were fraudulent. t of the election officers about by the City party, wization. A watcher for list. A :iicn of the upper deck was carr ) stem to stern. Blood and wreckage was distributed over the entire p, the after cabin The ar and that part of the ship adjacent to was brou the exploded boiler resembling a char- ja reform o nel house. The shock of the explo- | this party testified ‘that within half sion penetrated every section of the an hour after the polls had opened | ship, blcod and ashes being found as | and before 20 persons had voted he | far as stem of the captain's cab- had seen one of the defendants take in. 2 a stick and push a large bunch of T he ‘boat Ramon, which was ballots into the box. Reform organiza- he bay at the time of the ac- tions are making a systematic invest- wanged its course and hur- igation of the last election and whole- ried to the aid of the stricken war- sale arrests for ballot frauds are pro- ship. The government launch, Gen- | mised. : eral De Russey, and a large number | —_— of other launches and water craft BOILERS WERE DEFECTIVE. which were near the scene at the time, also rushed to the assistance of the Bennington. { ton to His Sister-in-Law. STATE WILL INVESTIGATE To Mrs. F. O. Young, of lexing- Life Insurance Ccmpanies of New York Willi Be Probed. In response to a n age from Gov- ernor Higgins, the New York Legis- lature voted to investigate life insur- ance companies doing business in that | State. Both Houses adopted a res:- lution intrcduced by Senator W. W. Armstrong, providing for a committee of three senators and five assembly- men to make the investigation. The resolution refers in the pream- ble to Superintednet Hendrick’s report er l.ucien Young, of the ill-fated United States gunboat Bennington, wrote some time ago that the ma- chinery and boilers of the Bennington were not deemed safe. The Bennington had been placed in Commander Young's charge after the Montgomery, which he had previ- ously commanded, was laid up for re- pairs, and he wrote to Mrs. Young that its equipment was old and dam- an the Equitable, as making the in- aged by wear. The boilers, he vestigation advisable, but the com- Wrote, were not being worked to their Jnittee is directed to investigate in- | full capacity because of the knowl- surance companies doing business in | dge that they were weak. Though the State, none being named specific- they were of 165 pounds capacity, the ally. The resolution appropriates Steam pressure had been held down $50,000 for the expenses of the investi- © 155 pounds pressure on the last zation. trip from Honolulu. This investigation will be made by Er a special joint committee with ample MURDERED ALL NIGHT powers, of which the Chairman will : — be Senator W. W. Armstrong of Roc- Bugarian Band Attacked Two Turkish Bester, Republican, The Sher Sa Villages. ors on the committee wi ye William : ; ae : : r A Bulgaria ack J. Tulley of Corning, Republican, and i ar n attached Daniel J. Riordan of New York, Dem- the patriarchist village of Baltina sombly ‘members of | and Gradeshuitza, in the Morinovo will be named by: district, murdering the entire popu- {lation indiscriminately, and that the carnage did not end until next morn- large band WIDOW DISPUTES WILL. The number of victims is not Ziegler Left Her $30,000 a Year and Millions to Adopted Son. i An action to have the validity of the will of William 1 y known. Troops proceeded to another vil » jn the district and finding that lation had fled, burned the inhabitants of which f having murdered Ziegler determined the Supreme cou e same of the Mr. Zie the Doi ESCAPES ASSASSIN Explosive Bursts in Court Yard Close to His Majesty. I A telecram from Constantinople principal until he reaches the age of s : “During the selamlik here a 40. he residuary estate amounts toc bomb was exploded in the court yard many millions of dollars. of the mosque, close to the sultan. His majesty was not injured, but sev- 1 members of his suite were killed injured. Several arrests have en made. left in 1irust old adopted son, who into possession of the Minister of Marine Thompson has decided to send a squadron to visit the United States at the end of October. » Chicf of Police Assassinated. Serious Disorders in Spain. _ Colonel RE te of re Serious disorders have occurred at lice oi Heist Finland, was shot ville and Salamanca arising from man named Procope, >d. The assassin has as an accomplice of recently attempted to -mer Governor Misso- Four hundred aded Seville, looted shops and commit- predations. A mob hall at Salamanca, and sacked it. m ipal council low and was killed. been 3 retown, Ind., was almost wash- wed away by a cloudburst. The water ye main street of the town was feet great da yt je A er has been conference ready to forfeit her sphere | Indications that Russia and Japan |anq the telephone wires in the dis- | Of the squadron. Mare island a real! and effective Chinese adminis- | Thomas H. Hartman a city employe Charles | dy commencing to | ing before a magistrate and evidence | Letter from Commander of Benning- ton Ky., his sister-in-law, Command- | MADE JAP VICTORY EASY DESTRUCTION BY GYGLONE Storm in Wisconsin Kills Two and Deroys Much Property. Rojestvensky’s Report Shows Bad Condition of His Fleet. According to the St. Petersburg correspondent of “La Liberte,” Ad- miral Rojestvensky, in his report on the battle of Tsushlma straits, which resulted in the practical annihilation FOUR MEN WERE DROWNED. |of pis fleet, De his finder bad. They had been not only hasti- ly but dishonestly built. The thick- ness of their armor did not agree with the official figures in the case Farmer and Three of His Helpers Perish by Overturning of Naptha Launch. of any of the vessels. Moreover, it was of inferior quality. The shells were bad. Two-thirds With a roar that was heard five of them did not explode. None of the ships were able to carry the ne- cessary coal. None of them attain- ed the guaranteed speed. The en- gines and boilers were poor and al- ways required repairs. Two-thirds of the crews, including those of Vice Admiral Nebogatoff’s squadron, were incapable. The gun- ners were ignorant of the elemen- being scattered 200 feet. Trees were tary laws of firing. A mutiny oc- uprooted and fences blown away, the curred while that fleet was at Ma- damage on this farm alone amounting | dagascar, and 14 men were executed. to $5,000. In every quarter grain is | Admiral Rojestvensky had to train ined. For miles trees can be seen | Buns on two of his ships, the Ad uprooted and fences down. | miral Seniavin and Admiral Aprax- At a farm ip Thompsonville a work- | ine to restore order. The crews had | { | miles a cyclone struck the northern rim of Racine county, Wisconsin, kill- ing two men and damaging property and crops $100,000. The cyclone came from the south- west, and its first dip struck a large barn, which was torn to pieces, the debris, with grain and farm machinery man whose name was not known, was decided secretly to surrender to the | struck and killed. Near Union Grove, This was | Adam Hunter, an old farmer, was | picked up by the cyclone and his neck | | broken. At the Haumerson brick yard | lightning struck a shed and six men | were stunned. At least a dozen cattle were killed enemy. discovered too late. There was another mutiny in Vice Admiral Nebogatoff’s squadron near | Formosa and Admiral Rojestvensky | had difficulty in preventing the mu- | tineers from seizing the greater part | Admiral Rojestvensky saw from the | John Hess, a farmer, and three of | outset of the battle that the Admiral his colored farm hands, were drown- | a Admire) Apraxine were ed Saturday evening while on the way | il 18 ne ne on kind ol to thie Hess farm, near Ponds Creek, | 2 oy ona red when le se Md. Hess and five men left here in torpedo boats to them and threaten asmall naptha launch, to ‘which an | ed to sink them unless they obeyed. accident happened, whereupon one | ak; i Ry ha Xo of the wcolored men took to the water ! Battle ihe result SB (ns been xT Q i 3 rad oY 5 and swam ashore. Shortly afterward | different. Almost simultaneously the launch overturned and before It] With iis removal to a torpedo: boat, could be righted the four men sank. | Admiral Enquist disappeared, Admir- ; = | al Foelkersahm was killed and Ad- DEATH OF COL. LAMONT. | miral Nebogatoff, who was unpopular et | with the sailors, was obliged to take | Former Secretary of War Passes command. Away from Heart Failure. | Then the rout began. Admiral | Colonel Daniel S. Lamont, Senna: Lo ir we ore tary of W ar quring the RAMINISLIS- |, ows of some of the ships threaten- tion of President Cleveland, died sud-| ¢q to kill their officers unless they denly at his home at Millbrook, | surrendered. Duchess county, New York, at 9:25 Admiral ~~ Rojestvensky confirms | o'clock Heart failure was the cause what is generally known of the shat-| | ” Belg | tering and scattering -of his fleet. of death. | Colonel and Mrs. Lamont were out driving Sunday afternoon and Colonel | \ l.amont appeared to be enjoying the | Aeroplane Fails to Work and Plunges best of health. After dinner he com- | Downward. | plained of feeling ill and Dr. Stewart, | papiel Maloney, who had made’ | of New York, who is a guest at the | numerous successful ascensions with | house, immediately went to his aid. | professor Montgomery’s aeroplane, fell | The physician diagnosed the case as | 4,000 feet to his death at Santa Clara, | k of heat failure, and in spite | Cal. | trict were blown down. OPERATOR KILLED Sgr | of the heroic treatment Colonel La-| Maloney made an ascension from | sivas al i | = : | mont passed away within half an|the grounds at Santa Clara college. | hour. At his deathbed were Mrs. | About 2,000 persons watched with in- Lamont and two daughters, Frances | terest the machine, as it shot upward | and Elizabeth. Several guests at the | from the college garden, attached to Lamont home were also present when | a huge balloon. . the end came. | ‘At a height of 4,000 feet, Maloney | | Daniel Scott Lamont was born at| cut loose from the balloon and began MeGr lle, Cortland county, N. Y.,| maneuvering the aeroplane. He sailed | February 9, 1851. He came of Scotch- | gracefully about, then essayed a deep Irish ancestry, Young Lamont’s fa-|dip. Suddenly the machine swerved, ther was a well-to-do farmer, and the | hesitated, and then turned over. It boy, after having studied in the Cort-| righted itself sank down a considera- | ]and Normal college, was sent to | ble distance and turned over again. | Union college, Schenectady, N. Y., but | Maloney was clinging desperately to did not graduate. | his seat and evidently endeavoring to | Colonel Lamont’s close relations | Tegain control of the aeroplane, but | with President Cleveland began at | all his efforts were in vain. Again the | | Albany when Mr. Cleveland was Gov- | aeroplane turned in the air, the wings | ernor of New York, and Mr. Lamont | came together, and the man and the | | was a political reporter. Mr. Lamont | machine plunged straight downwards accepted Cleveland’s proffer of office an horrified spectators gaze | as private secretary and military sec- | . : i ah : A number of cadets carried him to | retary at that time, and the friend- | 4p college hospital. shi SMG His skull was | Sain then Toman grew stronger as | fractured and blood was flowing from | Ro years pane oF | his ears and mouth. He died within | Colonel Lamont was of Scotch de-|, ghort time. The aeroplane was de- scent. While engaged in the news-| ilished. | paper profession he filled the place of legislative reporter and managing Congressman Is Elected. editor of the Albany “Argus,” of} : i | Hs es At a special election for Congress- | ¥ hier Ioper he yas ne of the pro-| .n held in the First Congressional | pristors for Sone yours. | district of Nebraska, Ernest M. Pol-| | lard, Republican of Nehawka, was | A plan for the wholesale delivery successful over his Democratic oppo- | of military prisoners confined on GOV- pent. Francis W. Brown, carrying | ernors island, New York, was frustrat- | the district by a plurality of 2,500. ed by a sentry, who shot Frederick Mr Pollard will succeed E. J. Burkett, | R. Snyder, who, with half dozen others | who resigned to become United | attempted to escape. States Senator =————— | PRINCE TIRED OF RUSSIA LL SIX DEAD IN HOTEL FIRE Alleged Son of Admiral Potemkine Gas Tank Explodes and Victims Are | Will Settle Here. Burned in Their Rooms. A young Russian claiming the title Six persons were burned to death in | of Prince Potemkine and said to be the a fire which destroyed the depot | son of Admiral Potemkine, of the | hotel at Wabasha, Minn. The dead | | Russian navy, a descendant of the are Mrs. A. Hoffman and baby, Rob-| house of Potemkine, from which the | ert Johnson, expressman; Gertrude mutinous battleship, Kniaz Potem- Stentsher, Rebecca Herman and | kine, derived its name, is in New York James Hunt city, having arrived on the French The fire was caused by the explo-| La Bretagne. It was found in | sion of a gas tank used for the hotel Island that he had nearly $25,- | illuminating plant. Mrs. Hoffman | was the owner of the hotel. She and | He said after a short sojourn in the her baby and the other victims were | he would go West and buy a burned to death in their rooms. { 3 He declaimed against existing | —_— | onditions in Russia, declared he had | Sixteen Lives Lost. scld his estates an said he did not de-| The roof of the chapel of the Wo- . sire to live longer in that country. | men’s hospital at Fermo, Italy, fell| opm sme r— |in during the celebraticn of mass, | Pays for Violating Anti-Trust Law. killing 16 women and injuring 32 | The Hartford Fire Insuraice Com- | others. i pany will pay the state of Arkansas | - $10,400 penalties f ing in vio- | United States Senator William A. lation of the a law. Under | Clark continues to improve from the | the maximum p the company effects of his recent operation. would have forfeited $500,000, but an At Cambridge, Mass, the grand | agreement had been reached to con- | jury returned an indictment for mur- fess judgment at $200 a day from May | der in the first degree against John 23 to the time the opinion of the court | Schlidofski, charged with having kill- | was handed down. | ed his wife. | arte p—————— Prominent Mormcn Arrested. Mutiny in Black Sea Fleet. John Q. Cannon, former secretary of A report has reached Odessa from the Utah world’s fair commission at Sebastopol to the effect that a mutin- St. Louis, was arrested at Lethbridge, | ous conspiracy has been discovered | Alberta, Canada, charged with forgery | MODE the crews of the vessels of and embezzlement. Extradition papers the Black sea fleet, in consequence of : : | which the summer maneuvers have are now being prepared. Cannon is a | peen cancelled. General Ignatieft, son of the late President George Q. | president of the special conference broth- | for the revision of exceptional laws Can- | designed for safeguarding public or- ng the | ders, arrived at Odessa for the pur- | pire. | of damage to the led. It has been known that the Rus- | sians applied | vital | strangely unhurt. | been taken in tow and the Peresveit is INJURIES ARE NOT SERIOUS Engineer Sees Danger in Time to Apply Airbrakes and Reduce the Speed. A head-on collision at Hallston sta- tion, on the Bessemer & Lake Erie railroad resulted in injuries to nine passengers of the express train and to the fireman and engineer. None of the injured were able to continue traveling. A freight train was standing on a siding near the station waiting for the express to pass. The latter was going 30 miles an hour and at the curve at the switch jumped from the main track to the switch, and plinged into the freight engine. Both engines were practically demolished, and the baggage car of the express was splintered at the front end. Engineer S. B. Brown and Fire- man J C. Lang jumped a moment be- fore the collision occurred, and were struck by splinters from the baggage car, The passengers were hurled from their seats at the impact, and landed in heaps on the floor of the cars. After nearly two hours’ waiting an engine reached Hallston from Butler, and started with the train toward Pittsburg. Another wreck was | probably averted at Oneida station. | it was found that a trestle bridge | over Connoquennessing creek was ablaze, and upon examination it was decided to run the train over before the fire gained further headway, as there was no fire fighting appara- tus about. This was done, and two hours late the train reached Butler. IRE ORDERED TO DISPERSE Russian Police Sent to Prevent Zemstvo Congress. CREATES CLASS DISTINCTIONS Scheme Thoroughly Discussed and Pronounced Inadequate to Meet All Wants of the People. The zemstvo congress opened at mid- day July 19 in the residence of Prince Dolgorukoff, in Moscow. The congress | was attended by 225 delegates. Count Heyden, leader of the deputation re- presenting the congress recently re- ceived by the emperor, presided. M. Golovine, president of the organi- | zing committee, had barely started a statement dealing with the obstacles placed in the way of the congress, an- nouncing that Gov. Kozloff had pro- mised there would be no recourse to extreme measures, when the chief of police, with numerous commissaries and officials, entered the room. The chief announced that the perfect had prohibited the meeting of the con- gress and ordered the seizure of the documents. Count Heyden protestediagainst the proceedings, but the chief of police began taking the names of the dele- gates. Then came cries of “Write down the whole of Russia.” Many per- sons present who were not delegates to He oganvng hat there | That many were not killed in the : : : . | collision is charged to the coolness The police then departed in order | "o" B Ba h intained to draw up summonses and the sit- | Of Engineer Zrown, yy, e fain ting was resumed. The scheme of a | 0S, place in the engine cab and ap; national assembly on the basis out- | plied the emergency brakes until the lined by the commission presided over engines were almost touching. by M. Bouligin, minister of the inter- = ior, was minutely and critically dis- A NEW COMBINE cussed and denounced as totally inad- equate to remove Russia's internal grievances, because, including a prop- erty qualification and an electoral sys- tem by classes, it prevented the as- sembly from truly interpreting the independent Tin and Sheet Plate Works May Unite. Independent manufacturers of tin and sheet plate are contemplating 2 4 4 . . an organization for. the purpose of will of the nation, while the exclusion working to obtain a large portion of of numerous categorie of citiszens| yo qomestic tin and sheet business. from the franchise was a contradic President Theodore J. Shaffer of the tion of the principles of equity and Amalgamated Association of Iron, a Teascnable state policy. : Steel and Tin Workers will probably Namerous resolutions embodying the by Secretary of the new concern foregoing criticisms were adopted Un-| phe position has been tendered him animously, as were also resolutions ak a salary of about $3,000 per an- complaining of excessive administra- am The organization is to. in: tive and political control of elections tude practically every independent and insisting that publicity be given | qt steel and tinplate manaufactur- to the proceedings of the proposed as- = outside thie Anerican Sheet & sembly, which should be in direct re- Tiplate Compan in (the United lations with the emperor without 1n- States. any terference from the council of the em- 3 : DRAGGED INTO RIVER SHIPS NOT MUCH HURT Steamer Entangles With Line—Pas- Russian Vessels Sunk by Japs Still senger Drowns, Five Hurt. Valuable. The steamer Shamrock, plying : al r Vie 2 3 z An officer who has returned from hou valley View on the Rentnehty : : : > river, while carrying a party of 50 Port Arthur, reports that i.e extent) iit ot : . Cs excursionists up the river three sunken Russian miles from Valley View, ran into a ships was slighte ras jcipat-| > Biter TN hips was slighter than was anticipat rope stretched from log boom. The rope swept Miss Nancy Car- penter into. the river. drowned. The smokestack was thrown down on George W. Hutchin- son, superintendent of the Kentucky River Poplar Company, probably fa- tally injuring him. Five others were badly hurt. explosives inside the vessels before they were abandoned and the resulting damages were ex- pected to be serious. It has been found, however, that the portions of the ships were The Bayan, which sustained the most severe damage, has navigable with her own engines. For Double Tracks in Siberia. Both of these vessels will soon be Prince Hilkoff, the Russian railway brought to Tokyo to complete the minister now in Hamburg, Germany necessary repairs. Even the Palladia, has contracted for five towing steam- which sustained the heaviest damage, | ers and nine barges to transport ma- is expected to be refloated by the mid- terial {for double-tracking the Siberian dle of August and before tius the Ret- | railway. The flotilla will go to the vizan and Pobieda will be afloat. mouth of the Yenisel river, East Sibe- —_— ria, and thence up the river until the BATTLE WITH MOONSHINERS railway is reached at Krasnoyarsk, pr capital of the government of Yeniei- Bloody Encounters Fought With | sek. Makers of Mountain Dew. A posse of revenue men led by C. N. haan gesared oy te A railroad passenger rate war has re + Y | pegun on lines between Chicago and a gang of moonshiners led by Ben New Nork Brown. A desperate encounter took or 2 place, Brown being shot and wound- Neilson Brown, a well-known soci- ed. Bloody trails lead into the ety man of Philadelphia, was found mountains and it is thought more dead in bed at a hotel in Atlantic than one moonshiner was hurt. City. Granville Wallen, a noted moonshin-| Hazel Offered, 14-year-old daughter er, was captured. of Frank Offered, of near McConnells- This was the second battle in |ville, O., was instantly killed by light- Letcher county in a week. Two | ning while riding a horse, which was moonshiners were killed last week. |also killed. Et The British government was de- Boston Wool Market. feated in the house of commons by a Although the wool market is still | majority of three on the motion to re- quiet, it is believed that an active |duce the membership of the Irish period is about to open. In prices |land commission. the market was notably strong. The John N. Dwell, aged 70 years, a re- range of prices Is about as follows: |tired wholesale grocery merchant, of Ohio and Pennsylvania—XX and above Norfolk Va., committed suicide by 36@37c; X, 33@34c; No. 1, 41@42c¢; | shooting. No. 2, 42@43c; fine unwashed, 28@30c; 14 blood, unwashed 35@36¢c; 3% blood, 36¢; 1% blood, 35c; unwashed delaine, CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. FIVE MINERS KILLED a@20c: unmerchantable, 32@33¢; fine | Heads, Arms and. Legs | unwashed delaine, 39@40c. Michigan ? Fam : Sos. Scattered —Fine unwashed, 27@28c; 4 blood, : aplag, »Y Exp osion. unwashed, 33@34c; 3% blood, 34@35c; Five miners were literally blown 15, blood, 32@33c; unwashed delaine, | to pieces by the explosion of dyna- 28. mite in a storage powder house to May Settle Their Differences. he A Tie Boar Both houses of the Swedish riksdag | Charles Brown, Luke Miller Harry have concluded their secret meetings | Belknap, Dell Vance and George Ar- and a joint committee is preparing a | rowood. different factions for a settlement of | The Yictims Sting In Joos the differences between Sweden and | ing a new shaft ond ee sought Norway. { shelter in the powder house. Light: John Tie of Ww. | I ok, nen he Duane i ant Yo, I Jets nde 20 during in , the i beg a storm. was struck by lightning | of rile 7 Ne and Efaw had his clothes a sd a Ploce ot ¥ood will recover. ihe vailding, bo} long Temuine of | | General Wood Is Convelescent. | Equitable Officers Removed. General Leonard Wood, who rec ’ 5 | Thomas i ently underwent an operation at a 2: D, Jordan, sompuiolier of private. hospital Jn Botton loft the the Equitable Life Assurancé society, institution. Accompanied by Mrs.| Was summarily removed from office, Wood, a trained nurse and a physi- | by Chairman Paul Morton because he cian, he has gone to the country for | ref i 4 =e J { refused to furnish i i gard- a few days. He expects to sail early : Sirinforiaton tegand next month for Manila. ing that $685,000 blind loan standing ainst the Equitable society on the the Mercantile Trust Com- ¥. Chai n Morton a in stead William A. Day, a The Villa Marie convent at Bedford, Pa., was damaged about by lightning Several sis H. M. Wells of investigating the recent dis- stunned, but none jured. « attorney general of t Tes. She was ’ — A TRE a ficr oth his on ope whi and cha tair opi cha stit glas