TIDAL WAVE DROWNS MANY An Earthquake Cause Ocean to Sweeps Villages Away. WHOLE FAMILIES WERE LOST 8ailing Vessels Along the Coast Re- port Finding Hundreds of Float- ing Corpses and Dead Fish. A message from Beuna Ventura, Colombia, dated February 25, says: An earthquake occurred at 10:31 on the morning of I'ebruary 21, lasting about seven minutes, the movement being from the north to the south. The town was considerably shaken. The damage, however, was small, but the people were thrown into a panic, kneeling, weeping and praying in the streets. All the clocks in the town were stopped. while the cables were broken in many places. Following the earthquake there was a tidal wave, which was of no con- sequence here, but the reports from the coast, including an area of 50 leagues to the south, state that 2,000 were killed by falling houses or drowned by the wave, whole fami- lies having been lost. Sailing vessels report having en- countered hundreds of corpses and | three lieutenants i als, 245 brigadier generals, quantities of dead fish, and many small settlements were completely swept away. The damage by the earthquake and | tidal wave at Tumaco was greater | than here, and a few lives were lost. The shock was felt in the interior, | and five people were killed at | Tuquerresin. At Popayan the people resorted to tents, and thanksgiving services were held on February 21 and 22. Twelve distinct shocks were felt, but it is believed that all danger is now. over | CADETS BURNED TO DEATH i all of whom ! Youngs. SHOULD EARN |. PROMOTION Congressman Finds Fault With Treat- ment of Officers in Army. The house of representatives refus- ed to adjourn in celebration of Wash- ington’s birthday, and its members participated in a general field day of debate on the army appropriation bill. The speeches took wide range. First the system of promoting and retiring army officers was attacked by Mr. Prince of Illinois, who elicited many interjected comments from members in disapproval of the methods for which he said the President and sen- ate werc resposible, and which, he pointed out, has resulted in a retired list costing yearly $2,700,000 consist- ing of officers who, he said, were hold- ing the flag with one hand while the other was in the treasury for money that had never been earned. Referring to the question of the re- tirement of officers and the abolition of the grade of lieutenant general, Mr. Prince criticised the system by which it was possible to have such a large number tired list. With an army he said, there were now 903, officers on the retired list drawing an aver- age of $3,000 a year, or a total of $2,- 700,000. Asked as to the rank of these officers, Mr. Prince said there were generals, 21 gener- 76 colonels 70 lieutenant colonels, 226 majors, 169 captains, 65 first lieutenants, 11 sec- ond lieutenants, 16 chaplain majors {and 11 chaplain captains. There hd been 62 als who served for one day in that rank and were then retired, from Jan- uary 1, Mi to a2nuary. 1, 1306. “And,” he continued, “I am inclined brigadier gener- i to think the moving picture is going ! ! on today at the same Prince said, rate.” Up to 1895, Mr. there had been i but four lieutenant generals, Washing- Sheridan, generals. and became full ton, Grant, Sherman | Since 1895 there had been five lieu- | tenant generals, Schofield, Miles, Chaffee and Bates. He fav- | ored the provision of the bill abolish- Fire Destroys Buildings of Military School at Gambier, O. Fire destroyed three buildings of Kenyon College at Gambier, O., caus- ing the death of three students, and injury of others. The charred bodies of Cadets Win- | fleld Scott Kunkle of Ashtabula, O., J. B. Henderson of Ridge Farm, Inn, | and James J. Fuller of Warren, O., were found in the ruins of Delano hall. The bodies of Fuller and Hender- son lay ciose together. They had been room-mates. It is believed that they were suffocated to death in bed. . The lifeless forms were also close to the beds they had occupied and lay in the basement almost directly be- neath their room. Xunkle’s body had been carried to the west with the fall- ing floors. Trouble was experienced in finding it. The fathers of the cadets hur- ried te Gambier Saturday night and were present when the finding of the hodies removed the last doubt as to their fate. Cadets Harry , Baker,. both, were moved Cleveland. Cadet J. R. Stearn, whose feet were burned, and who sustained injuries by jumping from the burning build- ing, went to his home in Cincinnati. Cadets Alexander W. Walton, of Cin- cinnati, and Milan L. Bartlett, each of whom was burned about the arms, also left. There is no satisfactory explanation ag to what caused the fire. Some are of opinion that oily rags may have ! cauged spontaneous combustion. The | floors of the buildings were oiled and ; this, in part at least, accounts for the rapidity with which the building burned. Barnes and Lenox residents of Cleveland, on cots to hospitals in Says Miners Will Not Strike. In a statement issued at Indianap- olis, Vice President T. 1. Lewis, of the United Mine Workers of America, declares that there will be no strike on April 1, saying the operators will | restore the reduction accepted by the ! miners two vears ago, and perhaps more. APPALLING TALE oF CRIME Governor Gooding of Idaho Says Or- chard Confessed to 26 Murders, implicating Miners. Gov. Gooding of Idaho issued the following statement with respect to the assassination of former Gov. Frank Steuneburg: “I want to state officially that Harry ‘Orchard has made a full confession. The assassination was the, third at- tempt that Orchard made. This con- fession was made to James McPar- land. “In that confession Orchard impli- cated all those now under arrest, and others, including J. I.. Simpkins. He told the story of 26 murders, ‘the re- | sult of conspiracies in which all the | accused parties were interested. When this story is given to the public, I believe it will be the greatest narra- tive of crime which the world knows." Privy Councilor Ivanoif, who was active in suppressing the recent rail- | road strike in Russia, was assassi- | nated by an unknown .man in War- Saw. FANATIC BAND RUNS AMUCK Destroys French Post and Over- whelms British Detachment. | A force of religious fanatics is re- | ported to have invaded and overrun | a portion of Sokoto, West Africa, from the north, to have destroyed a French post near the frontier, killing five French officers and capturing two, and to have overwhelmed a British | detachment, whose casualties are not | given. | of the New | tire . of Cook | big fortunes recently ! Jegacies must bear lv observed ing this rank. RUSSIAN AGRESSION Posts in China Taken Before Treaty Was Concluded. Advices from Peking are impasse has been that an reached in he negotiations between the Russian and | Chinese government in regard to con- ssions demanded by Russia in Man- iy and Mongolia. It has been expected that pressure would be brought on China to block the advance of Russia into Mongolia | | and Chinese Turkestan because of the added menace such an extension of Russian lines would be to England's | Indian which possessions, the security of Japan is bound by the new treaty to guard in every possible way. | It is said, however, on fairly reli- able authority, that Russia has not waited for the formality of the treaty negotiations, bui has already estab- lished a military post at -Urga and laid plans for a still further exten- sion of her lines southward. INSUR RANCE REFORMS Report of New York Committee Sug- gests Many Improvements. The rcport of the Armstrong com- mittee inquiring into the institution of life insurance as carried on br the companies doing business - in the State, was presented in both houses York Legislature. Ac- companying the report were eight bills embodying the recommendations of the committee, with the exception of the proposed standard forms of poli- cies. . The remedial legislation recom- mended provides for the safeguard- i ing of the rights of policyholders in | mutual companies, in the election of directors; recommends that stock companies he given authority to re- their stock and become mutual companies, but that such mutualiza- tion shail not be compulsory: various regulations are urged to prevent un- wise investments and improper syn- . dicate operations. MUST PAY INHERITANCE TAX Ruling in Wlinois Will Increase the Sum in Cook County Treasury. A ruling in Springfield by the su- preme court of 1llinois has ordered a radical change in the vsual practice in collecting inheritance taxes that will put at once into the treasury county about $750,000 from Marshall Field's estate and large amounts from the Yerkes and other probated that residuary their share of in- heritance tax immediately after the death of the testator and not at the end of the period of trust. that the tax on the huge sum left in trust for 40 years to the grandchil- dren of Marshal Field must be paid The ruling provides I TOW. In Honor of Washington. Vashington’s Birthday was general- at the national capital. Celebrations were held by various ; local patriotic societies in commmemor- ation of the anniversary. All Federal | offices and municipal offices as well | as most of the i closed. business houses were Field Will Probated. The wiil of Marshall Fiald was ad- mitted to probate at Chicago by Cutting, of the sued letters | thur B. the Merchants Loan & Trust pany as executors. The | signed a personal bond for 000. of administration to Ar- Com- executors $100,000,- The pure food bill passed the Sen- ate after 15 years consideration, by the surprising vote of 63 to 4. of officers on the re- | of 60,000 ! It means | Judge probate court, who is- | Jones, Chauncey B. Keep and | HOGH HANGED AT CHICAGO . Attorneys. Appeal to the Federa Court to Stay the Execution. HOCH MET HIS FATE BRAVELY insisted Upon Living to the Last Mo- ment Allowed by Law—Prayed for Executioners. Johann Hoch, convicted uxorcide, confessed bigamist, and who, if a frac- tion of the stories of crime that are told of him are true, was one of the greatest criminals this country has ever known, was hanged at Chicago for poisoning his wife, Marie Welcker Hoch. He faced death with a pray- er on his lips for the officers of the law who took his life; and save for the words ¢‘‘goodby,”” his last utter- ance was an assertion that he was in- nocent of the crime. The last scene in his career {at 1 still making desperate efforts for a little more time on earth for him. death, the lawyers say, has not ended the appeal that was made in his be- half, and although the man himself is dead, they promise to carry the case to the supreme court of the United | States. The time set for the hanging was came | :34 P. M. while his attorneys were | His | Titters. between 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. Shortly | | after 9 Hoch’s attorneys appeared in the office of the clerk of the United | States circuit court, where they filed | an application for a writ of habeas corpus on the broad ground that Hoch | was held in peril of death in direct | violation of the Fourteenth ment to the amend- | constitution, which de- | | | clares hat no state shall deprive any! person of life, liberty, or without due process of law. Delayed to Last Minute. As soon as the application was filed, | Attorneys Mayber and Comerford hastened to the jail where they in- formed Jailer Whitman and Deputy Sheriff Peters that the application had | been made. The jailer and the deputy sheriff agreed to wait. The attorneys then appeared before Judge K. M. L.andis. asked that the writ issue] forthwith “It is requisite,” said Judge Landis, ‘that proper cause be shown.” should be court was issued because the state not a court of competent | jurisdiction, that the sentence was in | violation of the Fourteenth | ment, that Hoch was compelled to give and did give, evidence against him- self: that he was arrested in New York, and extradited on a charge Of | { bigamy, and on being brought to | Chicago was charged with murder. After some consideration, Judge Lan- dis replied: “The apvlication for the writ is de- nied. The proper remedy for counsel was a writ of error from the decision of the state supreme court to the su- prenme court of the United States. The writ is fatally defective.” JEWS RUTHLESSLY KILLED Fifty Dead in Massacre After Procla- mation of Anti-Semite Leader. Fifty persons were killed and 300 injured in an attack upon the Jewish residents of Wjetka, near Gomel, fol- lowing the proclamation issued by Kieshoif. the leader of the anti-Semite movement in that part of the empire, calling for a general and ruthless massacre of the Jews. Mobs of armed men marched sud- denly upon the Jewish quarter. Their coming had been anticipated and all of the Jews had either fled or bari- caded themselves as best they could | in their homes and places of business. The houses were broken into. The attack was at first concentrated npon the more prosperous Jews. The ircops an: the police made no effort to stay the assassins, who struck down men, women and children, mu- tilated their bodies and pillaged the | houses and shops. In several cases thie bodies of victims were collected in houses which were then fired. Dynamite was used to blow un two . srnagogues. AWARDED BIG CONTRACT The attorneys argued that the writ | amend- | property | | the success of the { | | | | { by J.. Whittaker BIG RUSSIAN CONTRACT Westinghouse Company Will Equip St. Petersburg Traction Lines. American interests are to build an extensive modern electric traction system in St. Petersburg which be- fore completion will ¢ost about $10,- 000,000. The contract is being under- taken by the Russian Waestington- house company, controlled by the American Westingtonhouse people. St. Petersburg is the only capital of any country in Europe which has not hitherto employed electricity as a mode of transportation. The contract for the first portion of the new lines calls for the con- version of the present horse car lines in the Nevsky prospect—the broad- way of St. Petersburg—and other im- portant streets in the center of the city. About 20 miles will be recon- structed in the first instance, entail- ing an expenditure of almost $6,000,- 000. ater on about 30 miles will be built at an additional cost of nearly $4,000,000. Thirteen Miners Killed. An expiosion in the Vietor Fuel Company's Maitland mine near Wal- senburg, Col., caused the death of at least 13 miners and perhaps 16. The dead so far recovered: Archie Miller, fire boss; Billy : Moran, James W. Battista Robera, Corona Costa Sopris, Joe Costa and Nicholas Company's Maitland mine caused the Yockibetz. Morrocan Gunboats Still Bombard. A dispatch confirms the report that the Moroccan gunboat Sidi el Turki resumed the bombardment of the French filibustering parties at various points along the Moroccan coast. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS Mrs. Silvia Langdon Dinham, the second oldest person in Connecticut, died, aged 105 years. Gov. Pennypacker uniform divorce | congress recently held in Washington. The body of Johan Hoch, the wiue- beard who was executed Friday in Chicago, was buried in the potters’ field. Rear Admiral Chadwick, | manded Admiral who com- Sampson’s flagship | of being ready to Nght for was pleased with | | martial for SHOULD PREPARE FOR WAR Congressman Says We Should Be Ready for Emergency. CHINA MAY GIVE US TROUBLE Says Japan is Not Inciting China to Make Disturbance, but will Pre- serve Peace. Chairman TT. A. Hull, of the Mili- tary Affairs committee, in presenting the army appropriation bill to the House urged the necessity of complete preparedness as to our army and navy for trouble in the Orient. He declared that any nation not prepar- ed to defend its position in China might as well haul down its flag and quit the Pacific. Mr. Hull scouted the idea that Japan was interested in stirring up trouble in China to injure the United States. Japan's interests in China, he said, was identical with those of the United States, and of peace there was the only manner in which they could be maintained. Mr. Hull made an interesting di- gression to the situation in China to emphasize his position that the fight- ing arms of the government, the army and navy, should be kept in efficient condition {to meet all emergencies. He hoped no trouble would come, “but there exist to-day conditions in the Orient that make it necessary for us to preserve our prestige, our pow- er and our rights, even to the extent them.” Senate Passes Hazing Bill. The hazing bill was passed in the Senate. The bill gives authority to | the Secretary of the Navy to dismiss at any time a midshipman whose presence he considers for any cause | contrary to the service, but the accused has the right to demand a court-martial. It repeals the existing law requiring the hazing; gives authority for hazing under certain con- i ditions and authorizes gradation sen- | 1874, and of March 3, in the Spanish-American war, will be | retired February 28. » 4,000 persons in buildings to be re- | big New York terminal of | pleced by the Pennsylvania. sets of less than $13,000,000 of debts. The senate committee on interstate $1,000,000 | | commerce selected Senator Tillman as | spokesman for the epburn rate bill | Beaver Falls Company to Erect Shops | for Atlantic Coast Line. It was announced from the Coast Line headquarters that the bids for the erection of the shops for the Atlantic | tion of a trolley Second ‘division had been -vpened and | the contract awarded. There were 17 bidders The contract was to the Pennsylvania Bridge Co of Beaver Falls, Pa. While the officials refuse to 1e cost of the shops it is known that we amount will exceed $400,000. It is stipulated that the work is to be leted by January 1, 1907. Way- ., which on the lines between Montgemery and Savannah, will be onmipany tl 1 1 i awarded | state i the point at which the new shops are | to be built. When completed men will be regniarly employed, News of the safety of the dry Dewey, by the tug Potomac, was with great relief at the Navy partment. The dock is believed now 2,000 | dock | brought {o the Canary Islands i received | De- | to be about 900 miles from Gibraltar, | and should pass into the strait inside a fortnight. Mont Pelee Again Active. Mont Pelee, active, land are in terror of a recurrence of the greyt eruptions of four ago. Five persons are in the hospital in Fort de France, by falling rocks thrown up by the volcano, and most of the residents have fled to shelter behind the moun- tains to the southward. have been demolished, and the walls | of many others are tottering. i who were struck | | peace | eign conditions was in a which the committee agreed to report to the senate without amendments. acts of 1903; requires officers at the tences under the all instructors and | Naval Academy to report .offences to Railroad served eviction notices on the superintendent and defines hazing as “the unauthorized - assumption of | authority by one midshipman over an- | other.” Liquidation of companies promoted | Wright showed as- | to pay | Boston Wool Market. Continued heavy trading in all | classes of wovols has brought the sup- | ply down te limited proportions and | hardened prices to correspond. The house of represenatives unani- | mously passed the resolution for an | investigation of the alleged of the Pennsylvania roads. R. J. Hynicka, treasurer of Hamil- ton county, O., told senate investiga- tion committee that he received $20.- 000 in gratuities for deposit of pub- lic funds from various’ banks so far this term. National President John Mitchell of the mine workers declared a bitu- minous coal strike inevitable and ap- pointed a committee to assume duties of local President Patrick Dolan. An unconfirmed dispatch reached the Government that five British pany of native troops have heen kill- ed by fanatics near Sokoto, ern Nigeria. Conditions on the Indian tions in the State of New and other reserva- York are merger | rail- | has | reporting | officers and a com- ! in North- | The finer” in fine demand. The grades are be- | ing constantly broken in the usual way at 60 to 62c. Ohio and Pennsyl- vania, XX and above, 3414 to 35140; X, 33 to 34c;i No. 1, 38 to 3%¢: No. 2, 38 to 40c; fine . unwashed, . 26 to! 26% c; quarterblood, unwashed, 32 to | 32%5c: three-eighth blood, 83 to 34c; halfblood, 23 to 3314Lec; unwashed and delaine, 28 to 29c; fine washed de- | laine, 37 to 37%ec. Freight Rates Too High, The sion decided the case of TF. against the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad company, holding that the carrier's rates om potatoes, from Mankatoa and Good Thunder. Minn., to Washington, Scranton and other eastern destinations are unreas- | onable and unjust. The company is recommended its tariff and the J. Hoerr to adjust | awarded the reparation he asked. pronounced a discredit and a disgrace | in the report of a special committee of investigation presented in the As- sembly. The Bell Telephone Company, of Philadelphia, has authorized an in- crease in its capital stock of $14,000,- 000 to $30,000,000. Directors of the Calumet declared a dividend of $15. the same as declared three and a year ago. The Consolidated Mercur mines Company declared a quarterly dividend of 21, share, payable March 26. Indiana (Pg raised $35,000 This is months Gold regular cents a business toward the men have construc- line from Indiana to Ernest. The French foreign France has offered to concede .the control of the Moroccan poliee to the sultan if the latter will select French officers. Many miners are positions in the copper® mines near Houghton, Mich.. owing to the con- tinued ‘‘earthquakes,” or air blasts. which have now become so frequent and dangerous that the miners fear for their lives. Gounterfeitens Crught, The Secret Service has been ad- vised of the arrest at Spokane, Wash., of R. 8S. Jewell, Patrick Jennings, Thomas Sheehan and John G. Fores- ter, alias Webber, charged with coun- terfeiting. The men are said to have operated on the Pacific coast. Six- teen hundred dollars in counterfeit gold coins and a complete set of molds | were captured. in Martinique, is again and the inhabitants of the is- | years | Many houses | Fallieres is Conservative, President Fallieres, his inaugural message Parliament, pays a tribute to the strength of the Republic army as not being a menace, but an assurance of the maintenance of The only allusion to for- statement firmness shows that France’s moderation, and fidelity to her alliance | what a price she puts upon preserving cordial relations with all the foreign Powers. CAPITAL NEWS NOTES. The House Committee on Mines and Mining agreed to make a favorable | report on the Mondell bill, providing for the endowment of schools or de- | ; partments of mining in connection with State colleges for the benefit of , agriculture and mechanic arts. and Hecla office confirms | | an Algeciras report that The following appointments of | fourth-class Pennsylvania postmast- | ers were announced: Helixville, Bed- ford, Irvin A. Miller; Shippingport, Beaver, John R. Haward. Mississippi Gets the Sewage. The famous case of the Missouri vs. the State of 0linois, in- volving the right of the city of Chicago to divert its sewage ‘into the Missis- sippi river through the Chicago sani- tary canal and the Illinois river was decided by the Supreme Justice Holmes delivered the opinion of the court, which was that Missouri did mot prove its case. There was i no dissent. resigning their | the most voluminous contains the ! | names of 8,000 voters, and Mr. Gall- inger said that it was 264 feet, long. . One of the Petition 264 Feet Long. in the Senate Mr. Gallinger sented four petitions from of Oklahoma praying for pre- residents prohibition in the proposed State of Oklahoma, | others . names oI 6,000 women and another those of 6,000 children. The fourth was signed by Indians only. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas I.ongworth | started on their honeymoon from Alex- ! | andria, Va. They will go to Tampa, | | Hav: ana, of France, in| presented to | 1 and to the! | for conventions, | round trip rates Fla., and from there take a boat for | Cuba. Roads Retaliate on Ohio. All forms of transportation except the regular two-cent-a-mile rate piro- vided by law will be cut off by the railroads in Ohio, according to a de- cision reached at a conference of pas- senger representatives in Chicago. It was agreed that the roads could thus | recompense themselves for caused. The action will Ohioians of all reduced transportation | charity business, the loss rates. preservation | best interest of the | dis- | misczal of midshipmen found guilty of | courts- | June 23,1 grades of pulled wool continue | interstate commerce commis- | railroad | complainant is .| sentative in State of | court of ; containing the | deprive | and clergymen'’s | | GROSVENOR DEFEATED Sage of Athens Fails of Renomination to Congress. After a service of over 20 years in Congress, Gen. Charles H. Grosvenor, the “Sage of Athens,” was defeated for renomination gn the first ballot by Albert Douglas, of Chillicothe, Ross county, the vote being 78 to 20. The man who defeated General Grosvenor is 53 years old and a law- ver at Chillicothe. He was a presi- dential elector at large and president of the Ohio electoral college in 1896, and was defeated for the Republican nomination for governor in 1899. Ha is a fine orator and has dominated the politics of Ross county for years. The ballot resulted as follows: Athens, 21 for Douglas; Fairfield, 12 for Grosvenor, and .2 for Douglas; Hocking, 10 for Douglas; Meigs, 13 for Dougias; Perry, 8 for Douglas and 8 for Grosvenor; Ross, 8 for Douglas; Vincton, 6 for Douglas. The defeat of Grosvenor was rend- ered the more bitter from the fact that his own county, Athens, did not give him a single vote, and he did not get a solid delegation from any couniy in the district. THREW CHILDREN INTO SEA Mother Then Plunged from Steamer Ending Her Own Life. The open door of a stateroom which had been occupied by a woman and three young children on the trip of the Fall river line steamer Plymouth from New York to Fall River, Mass., led to the discovery that Mrs. John | Watters, of Brooklyn. had taken the | lives of her three little ones by | throwing them overboard, then drowned herself. . The woman left two notes addressed to her husband. In one she begged forgiveness; in the other she said that she ‘had worried until she feared insanity and | could not bear to leave the children.” Mrs. Watters was about 30 years {of age. Her children were: Helen, | aged 4; Dorothy, 2 years of age; and an infant son. $50,000,000 HIDDEN Trustess of the Yerkes Estate Dis- cover a Large Sum of Money. { Another amazing development in | counection with the series of sensa- | tional developments .associated with ‘the late Charles T. Yerkes's millions | came to light when it was discovered | that the value of the estate of the | traction magnate amounted to nearly $70,000,000 at the time of his death, instead of $20,000,000, at which sum it was estimated by the lawyérs and executors at the time the will was read in this city. The trustees, it is | said, have discovered $50,000,000 which Mr. Yerkes had hidden away, | and of which he made no mention weeks ago. GARFIELD MAKES DENIAL insists That: Stories Told by ‘Packers on the Stand Have No Basis. ! Commissioner Garfield, on the wit- ! ness stand in the packers’ case made ositive denials of assertions made on the stand: by witnesses for the pack- | E ers District Attorney Morrison question- i ed Mr. Garfield regarding his con- | versations with Edward Swift, Ed- i ward Morris and various other repre- | sentatives of the packers, and the | commissioner asseverated that he had | never told any of them that informa- tion would be regarded as confident- ial, or that they would be compelled to give up the information. Congressman Indicted. : Two indictments were returned by | the Federal grand jury against E. ! Spencer Blackburn, Republican repre- Congress from the Eighth North Carolina. district, charg- {ing him with practicing before the i treasury department and commission- fer of internal revenue, and with ac- cepting fees for the service after his | election to the House of Representa- tive. He is accused of accepting fees of $100 and $500 from A. Dinkins and P. A. Davis, charged with violat- ing the internal revenue laws Mr. | Blackburn denies the charges. ! Mother of 25 Children Dies. Mrs. Elizabeth Conway, the mother of 25 children—19 boys and 6 girls— of whom there were six pairs of twins died at Denver Col., at the age of 59 I from heart disease. Mrs. Conway | was the youngest of a family of 27 children. She was married at the [age of 14, and her hushand was the | youngest of a family of 30. ‘She was | the grandmother. | | | i i | i Imprisonment for Mutineers. A courtmartial at Sebastopol, haa sentenced 42 of the mutineers of the “Russian battleship Kniaz Potemkine : to imprisonment, one of them to 15 vears. Twenty-five men were acquit- ted. The mild sentences imposed are explained by ‘the fact that the ac- cused were mainly sailors who volun- tarily surrendered at Kustenji, Rou- mania. Sr s Pittsburg Elects Mayor. The municipal election in Pitts- | burg resulted in the election of | George W. Guthrie candidate of the | Citizens-Democratic party for Mayor. In the city of Allegheny ‘Charles F. { Kirschler, Republican was chosen | Mayor. English Barracks Blown Up. The London Evening News publish- es a dispatch from Cairo, Egypt, an- nouncing that a great explosion has {occurred at the British barracks in | Khartoum. Considerable loss of life and much damage are reported. The Senate confirmed the following Ohio postmasters: RE. F. Ellis, Belle | Center; C. Borroughs, Collinwood: S. C. Stewart, Columbiana; A. Haworth, Crestline. sen Cor act fail rai nea the fee tion had fee low Pro Dri