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NO HOPE THAT { re of Harwick Mine in| Admit ’]'hnti Are Dead | Manag Pennsylvania Entombed Miners e adias i MANY BODIES RECOVERED | —— | It Is Known That at Least| 174 Men Perished in the| Recent Disastrons Explosion | BEUr Ca b PIT RG, Jan. 27.—Three days| b in he terrible catas ¥ H e of the Al- . Coal Com and at mid s have been re. o the surface ¥ been identified me of hor age. but even lies wera being f the shaft and ¢ sled L house on hem, qu IRELAND’S FUTURE DEPENDS ON REVIVAL OF NATIVE TONGUE William Butler Yeats, Leader of the Celtic Movement, Says That a Nation Can Never Attain to Greatness Without a Language . | | | | W - { Jammed together under the | glass fell upon them. | crushed, | Joseph Zermy, slight; {of front car, perhaps fatally | Schner, | favre. |a crash, MANY INJURED I COLLISION Two Streetears Crash on Broad- way in St. Louis and Twenty Passengers Are Hurt SEVERAL VICTIMS MAY DIE VR While Conduetor Quarrels Over | a Fare a Motor Running at High Speed Strikes From Rear e ST. LOUIS, Jan. 27.—More than | twenty persons were injured, some of | them fatally, when two cars upon the | Broadway line collided to-day. The fnjured: - John Barrington, badly internal injuries, probably fatal; Walter Sieverntritt, internal in- | pany, collapsed in court Jjuries, serious; Frank Gill, employe of the city Water Department, scalp cut, nose broken; J. H. Hobelman, serious; Willlam Miller, serious; Thoms Me- Govern, ankles broken, serious; George Decker, feet and chest crushed; Frank | Alter, slight; Alfred Koepfer, slight; Feorge Baker, | slight; Christopher Juergin, motorman Walter slight ; Clown, Birdie | Knause, Miss Julia Jensen, slight; William Merry Clara Bock, slight; George slight; Cassie Gafner, slight; slight; Miss Ida slight; Lizzie Clifton, slight; C. Doerner, slight, Both cars were northbound and trav- eling in a dense fog. The accident oc- curred while the front car was sta- tionary, owing to a quarrel between the conductor and a passenger over a The second car was coming at | high speed. When within 100 feet away | the front car loomed up through the fog, but it was useless to try to aveid | None of the 100 passengers | on the second car knew that the acei- | dent was impending until the cradh | came. The second car crushed its way ! through the rear of the front car until it reached almost the middle of it. The dozen or more passengers on the | rear platform of the front car were rear car. The second for half its distance was crushed and the passengers inside were | thrown about, while showers of broken A panic ensued. The less seriously hurt began to fight | to escape. Children and women were frampled upon and the weaker ones were beaten against the wreckage, t e R Prisoners in France are permitted to pay one visit to dving parents. - | was necessary 1 charge. | above this city, say the danger from FAINTS WHEN SECRET IS 01T Kansas City Woman on Trial for Murder of Her Husband Breaks Down in Courtroom M A FROM THE ROOM | IR | Mother Testifies That Dnuzhter! Married Second Time Though Freedom Was Not Assured e KANSAS CITY, Jan —Mrs. TJJI“:: Prince Kennedy, on trial a second | time for the murder in January, 1901, of her husband, Philip H. Kennedy, local contracting agent of the Mer- chants’ Dispatch Transportation Com- to-day. Mrs. Kennedy had been in tears all morn- ing and when her mother assumed the stand and admitted that the de- fendant had been secretly married since her conviction for the murder of her hushand she fainted and it to carry her from the CARRIED 9 room. A few days before he was killed by his wife, Kennedy brought suit to have | their marriage set aside, alleging that Miss Prince's father and her two brothers had forced him to marry her. She was convicted and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary. The Supreme Court recently reversed the decision on a technicality. It devel- 4 to-day that she married John <ramer, local lawyer, several months after her conviction. She is said to have killed Kennedy because he refused to live with her. Will Prince was convicted and ! served a sentence in the penitentiary on a charge of conspiring with his sister in the murder of Kennedy, and | Albert K. Prince. another brother, who was drowned in the recent wreck of the steamer Clallam off Vie- | toria, B. C., was indicted on a similar | e e Ice Jam JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., The men in charge of the big fleet of Jan. coal barges at the Pumpkin Patch, | the heavy ice now running out is prac-{ tically over. One barge, containing 26,000 bushels of coal, the property of | the Monongahela River Consolidated Coal and Coke Company, was sunk. | Sixty barges were forced aground for | a short time, but were again floated without damage. form, the observer finds a good, strong | they receive the support of the critic | Two of Baltimore’s Most < CDGE TUTHILL FREES MAYOR Chicago Jurist Says Cit) ecutive Should Not Be Held i to Blame for Theater Disaster PR AN CORONER'S JURY CENSURED Harrison Declares He Was Faultless and That Criticism Is Little Less Than Infamy PR D PR CHICAGO, Jan. 2 Mayor Carter H Harrison was to-day ordered by Judge Richard S. Tuthill be discharged from custody for any responsibility for the wholesale loss of life in the Iroquois Theater fire. The Judge declared that the Mayor was in no way guilty or lia- to ble, and that the Coroner's jury in or- | dering Mayor Harrison held to the Grand Jury had put an unjust stigma upon the Mayor, who had failed in no particular, either in omission or com- mission. Said the court: 1 have gone over the testimony of Fire In- | spector Musham and Buflding Inspector Wil- liams and the Mayor particularly, and I can say without qualification or hesitation that I find not cne word in the evidence which tends even remotely in my judgment that the Maycr had any knowledge of this matter or that he was in any respect negligent of any du posed upon him by the laws or by the rules that commonly apoly sponsible for the safety of others. [ find that thers were gross vielations not only of the « ordinances, but of common rules of safet body with any expert know saia ceen Th be responsible subordinate’s office. for any misconduct in h Following his release Mayor Harrison | made the following statement: The only possible feature which the ju were able to find conmecting me with the Iro- quois fire disaster was the a ligence apd incompetency of my appol Musham and Buflding Inspector Willlams. I wan: to call attention to the fact that Chief Mueham has been connected with the Chicage fire department for fort beginning at the bottom of the ladder » the position of Assistan t and herole conduct of a lifetime. the retirement of Chief Sweenie I Musham Chief. The appointment was on its and met with unanimous approval the position of Bullding Commissioner vacant last pmer 1 invited B Club, the Assoclation of Architects and v professional organizations best av an for the vacancy named M a Repubiican, and gave me the testimony as to his character and efficiency. I appointed him and he entered most earnestly upon his duties. Both of these men were ideal appointments The imputation of guflt two men is unjustifiable. but to strike at me over thei shoulders is little short of infamy —_—————— CUPID OUTGENERALS ATE PARENTS upon these Prominent Young Persons Elope to Neigh- boring City and Are Married. Ex-| to persons who are re- | ADVERTISEMENTS. | SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these \ Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsta, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drow ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Ton. Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. T Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price. ey | UTFLEERY EVERYELADE WARRANTFD | OCEAN TRAVEL. coma. Evers Feb. 5 P. Ry . For Bureka (Humboldt Bay)—F 1:30 p. m. Jav. 23 29, Feb. 4; Core Jan. 26, Feb. e via Port Los Angeles a Rennday Sen ‘Diego and Santa Barbara s = Santa Rosa 9 a ey R Thursdays. 9 a_m. aro State_of California For Los Anseles | San_Pedro) terey, San Sim Luis Obispo) Coos Bay Ea a San Santa Barbara, n, 3. t v Guaymas Ofex.). 10 3. ™ Donth For further informa Right s reserved to n obtain fol hange stea 19 and Elder sails J people to learn to speak Irish that Ire- | man with a purnose. i “In order to bring the play back to its| PHILADELPHIA, Jah. 27.—Mon- VEAIS | %n[d,”vpr_\- !:;ud." 4 Mr. \'r‘n\\s' opin- | former simple and honorable place it|cyre Robinson and Sarah Sisson Abell, ; i lion of the modern drama. “When one | must be brought back to penury,” he < Balt : h- | | thinks seriously of the Greek theater |said. “The imagination is too often sold | "7 0e™™ Of W % o f;lr"""‘:: S | |and the modern theater, he says im- | for a price. The theater must be shorn | °St 2nd most influential Tamlies, have —— —_— B e 3 ! pulsively, ‘What an abyss. It is im- | of its accessories, its blazonry and its] ®lored to Chester, Pa., where they 47 | | possible to thinl cf the modern thea- | tinsel. Worst of its crimes is the scene | Were married by Mayor Howard H. MERICAN LINE. WILLIAM, BUTLER Y MOUS ON TWOQ CONTIN | |ter as otherwise than bad. In Ireland | painti Houston. They came to Chester, A L IS, FAMOUS | r 2 and | painting. The stage must be made E —Cherbourg—S: ton. CELTIC REVIVAL, WHO ADDRESSED LARGE its putrid state had long ago been rec- | smaller. The words of the actors will | Where Robinson's brother-in-law has = FArmegth— S T THE ALHAMBRA THEATER LAST NIGHT. {ognized and a little coterie of intel- | fll the mind of the spectators with |2 country home, and the wedding had St Louis Feb. aise Pwal ... Fen 20 B TS LN T i LRI it 5 4 | lectual men there had determined that | pictures been arranged to ‘“‘g' ‘P"“" In = | A C TRANSPORT LINE. % PN bt o i roc P Foa % shurch of which the bride is a mem- w York—London Direct. 3 g 4 it must be dug out, roots and all, and ‘Speech, after all, is what matters church @ § = s New ¥ e A o Willlam Butler Yeats, artiet, author, ance we find that as soon as a little | re-created, if anything were to come RSP 6 A ot e ol ber when a telegram from righer | 31 2 4% famous on two con- | village nd takes up the old|of it. (e 2L essence of the whole| .. esjastics in Baltimore put a stop to | . x mgs the English shoddy goes| “No one believes the average play | thID8. What makes poetry great is|(he cermenoy. The police also ap- - 3 nd the 10ld Irish frieze comes ; of to-day is anything but contempti- | MUsic, and if an actor loses the music | peared with telegrams commanding DOMINION LINE. n. 1 am happy to say that Gaelic | ble,” said the poet. “And why is it? | Be loses everything. In the Greek days|ihem to stop the wedding. But the | Portlana—ZLiverpool “Short sea pagsass, 3 N T T ar is being more and more | Why is it, though, that the modern play. | WOrds of the manuscript were marked | party appeared before the Mayor and | JETacl Feb. 27/Vancouver Mar. 28 Bosat Sots 3 f Mr. Yeats had preced . aught and that children coming home | is so liberally patronized? It is be- | With notes by the players, and the pitch | satisfied him that the license was reg- | HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE INE. hs vere turned away from the ! school ask their mothers if Irish | cause the theater is the only popular | Was given from the notes of a pipe. In| ylar. After the bride had sworn she | Sew SORSRR CRln 9 gonom e ¥ the thes be! is not the language spoken in heaven.” | art. A play that doesn’t run more than | Ireland they are doing that, too. All|was of age he made them husband and Safling Tuesday - Jortunity to { aker then read what he said | a hundred nights in London'is consid- | the arts have gone through the same|wife. The bride's mother appeared a | Rotterdom eb 16/°A s — h nsidered the bitterest invective he | ered a fai'ure. One of Moliere’s plays | Process—a calling toward the heart. | few minutes too late. “eStgerage only eight onl N ] ¢ g 1 he neld had ever heard against England. It was considered a success when it ran | First it was the speech, then the scen-| Differences in religion are said to . BID FTAN LINE > N e s to hold | attention of his audience from the I refers to England as having a cold twenty nights. | ery. and so.on. Now it is for us to be- | have caused the attempt to stop the | . Wew York—Antwerp—Pars. . ocae gy e Pty ot ; rance onsthe heart and having broken the hearts of The decadence is largely the legacy | 8in inward—warm the heart again and | ejopement. Vad''d,Feb. 13, 10:30am Zeel'd. Fb27. 10:30 am - a4 o the whit~ man and black man alike. It | of overriches and the desire for money. | renovate outward. { et s T s, b ', n ente Lord, let there fall | The theater is wedded to the mob. In| “I am an incurable romanticist. I L PORTLAND. : Sl e e Wolhctiinrs aad Pattn e bur An R fir trotfom |® her head the curse England the plays are sented by | am a lover of poetry, and I do not want | i 2 eomparatively empty swimming tank at m of the Irish race, | | . e curse of the good, 'the people of wealth, who pander to |any limitations in the loftiness of | the Multnomah Club, sustain trightful in 176 and of the patriotism of . | the curse of ‘the sick and the o R P b juries about the head, is dead. Boultree came e 2 . Sig yminating his talk with trite anec- ol the sick and the curse of | the mob. But the shame of it is. that | speech. from Tor « a few months ago, P Imu-—ounn"‘\'?—\hrvm. that institu- dotes and quotations from the earlier s : ¢ ‘ e Gretic. b 4 Ma ~ t s concluded his address by BOSTON MEDITEERANEAN %0 childrer Irleh poets ; ‘ the well dressed | The speaker was introduced by the |* at he hoped for a day of uni- | ADVERTISENRNTS. i | OIEIT in ihe mine this 3tev. Philip O'Ryan, who spo in | Ve ce. but for the present there ( | ROMANTC 2 | ot g el | is nothing for people like himself to do | CANOPIC. surmised | part as follows: ot e | $ | €D TAYLOR, Pas witting cause The Irish race has always been| """ € he platform and urge [he; 21 Post st as been cleared up. 3 tified those the volunteer who was overcon t while searching for the explosion ‘ » roof three the world,” times as large is a as DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. G0od Boys Are the bad boys very often. The boy that's good for anything is genemally P cious. He's a bealthy animal, ang the healthy amimal will slways fight for his rights. When a boy shuns the rough sports of his companions he is apt to be a weakling, and to be conscious of the fact. A great many mothers have testi- fied to the wonderful curing and strength- ening power of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med- cal Discovery. All stre: comes from food after it has been perféctly digested ’ | and assimilated. By | ring diseases of the stomach f.nd§ other organs o gestion and sutrition, * Gold- en Medical Discov- ery” ensbles the per- fect nourishment of the body, which is hus built up in the ouly way a y can be built u y food. There is no alcohol in "Discovery,” and it entirely free from opium, cocaine, and all other narcotics. “Dr. Pierce's medicine has done wonders for my two sons,” writes Mrs. M. Hartrick, of Dem- ster, Os: Co., N. ¥. “Both had scrofula. My eldest som was ¢ two of three years ago with_be: troubled morrbage the 1 It bim for overa year. Tie took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and has not had one in over ayear. My son had lous sores on his neck; had two lanced. but has not had any since be commenced to take your medicine.” | end was greeted with a storm of ap- | Ireland of tragedy. obliged to fight for its existence, and have no that it is little wonder we poets. There is one man who gathe: up the folk lofe and put it into song. the man whom 1 have the honor to i troduce this evening, the poet of the | century, William Butler Yeats.” | Mr. Yeats stepped upon the platform | plause. The whole tenor of his address was in favor of a revival of the Gaelic, | his argument being that a people with- | out a language will not stand together as will the people who have not only | the ties of blood but also a common tongue. As he summed it up finally, “Gaelic Ireland is the Ireland of the centuries; English Ireland is the Ire- land of the decades Mr. Yeats' address follows THEY LOVE “America is was in part as AMERICA. very. near to Irelandy- | nearer than England—and influ- res Treland jn a thousand ways. American newspapers are being read in Irish communities where English papers are unheard of, and Dublin publications are a rarity. This means that the people are following closely the political history of the United States and they are not interested in that of Khgland. The literature of | modern Ircland began by being close | to ite political history, and the only | way to preserve the history and tradi- | | tions of Ireland is by perpetuating first ‘k its lanzuage. * .ae _reland of to-day is ot the| Irelz:d of yore. Before the famine you had the happy Ireland of Jjokes and | music; after the famine you have the | The sound of the | fiddle has been stilled and in its place | ship. Literature practically died out, | and how could it live in the shadow of the convict ship and the emigrant | ship? England continually taunts us with dissension, as though she herself | were united, but how can a nation torn | by dizsension be united? MANY BOOKS WRITTEN. “The Irish Literary Society finally decided to reorganize Ireland, and dur- ing the first four years of our existence the. : were more books written on Ire- land than in the eighty years before. Expcrience showed us, however, that the best way to get the people was by speaking to them in their own lan- guage—to revive it in the memories of those who had forgotten it, and teach it to those who never knew it. As an | land may { 1een Mavourneen’ | versity this afternoon, once more be a free and in- dependent nation, Prior to the le gramme was Buc! of Mr. manner. ture a Drief pro- rendered. Miss Hazel y recited “Father Giliigan,” one eats’ poems, in an entertaining Caro Roma rendered “Kath- d other Irish bal- lads, and the Elks' Quartet followed with “Eibhlin a Ruin.” Mr. Yeats' closing lecture will be given Saturday night, when he will| speak on the revival of the Irish thea- ter. —_—— YEATS BEFORE STUDENTS. Greek Theater Furnishes Theme for Address at University. BERKELEY, Jan. 27.—A visit to the Greek Theater furnished William Butler Yeats with a theme for his ad- dress before the students of the uni- a The peer of Irish poets caught his inspiration from a glimpse of that monument of West- €rn enterprise and spent most of his hour comparing the stage of to-day with the stage of yesterday, a century 8go, twenty centuries ago. new painted a scrry picture of the decad- ent, worm eaten drama that refined pecple refuse to entertain, and then, as a sort of relief from that present day tragedy, glossed it over with a new one of the histrionic revival that is | going on in Ireland, the fruit of the work of a little band of intellectual patriots, Mr. Yeats came from that visit to the Greek Theater intc the neighbor- hood of some 2000 people crowded to- | came the emigrant ship and the prison | S¢ther in Harmon Gymnasium. Flank- ed by ex-Mayor Phelan, his patron, and his valise on one side and President ‘Wheeler on the other, he was escorted to the platform. A close observation of Mr. Yeats re- | vealed that he affects few of the stage properties of the poet. His hair is cropped short and he does not spend any time brushing it back on his fore- head. His clothes might have been cut by an American tailor and he would not be suspected of poesy but for a flowing black tie that covers up his shirt front. Still, Mr. Yeats would be picked out in a crowd as some kind of a genius.. His features, eyeglasses, actions, all exhibit the man of refine- ment. Indeed, when the history of Mr. Yeats' achievements in Ireland is heard and he is listened to on the lecture plat- With the | brush of his poetic temperament he! | “iss Sarah MacComb, whose hair rouches the floor when she stands erect, says: ‘‘My hair would not reach below my waist when I commepced using Danderine, and it is now over five feet in length.” (Look at her beautiful hair and judgz for yourself whether or rot she got the worth of her money.) will be gives to anyoae PROOF OF MERIT ! Dandert GREW THIS HAIR. The above photograph of Miss Frances Marie Knowlton shows what care, persistence and a good hair invig tonic will de in the way of pro- ducing Halr, | This little gil has had Danderine :ehedhhhir-il:llv ly ever was three months of age, with the result that she now has the longest and most beautiful head of hair ever by a child of her age. Frances Marie is the daughter of Dr. E. W. Knowl- ton, the discoverer of Danderine, o8 Garfickd boul , IS IT NOT? nc WHITE STAR LINE CANOPIC ... REPUBLIC (new) ROMANIC... Feb. 27, is (Send for rates and illustrated .book! These steamers are the largest in Mediterranean service. First class. $65 upward. via Boston to Liverpool queensiows CRETIC..... Feb. 4 Mar 3, Mar. CYMRIC Feb. 18, Mar 17, First clase, $60 and $63 upward, ng to steamer. For plans, etc.. WHITE STAR LIM (ORIENTAL STE St-umers will leave wha. | Brannan streets, at 1 p. and Hongkong. calling at saki and Shanghal, and connectin kong with steamers for Indla. received on board on d Via Hovolulu. Round-trip & For freight and passas office, 421 Market strest. W. H. AVERY. General Agent ZEAAND ww SYONET, E.@_.u DIRSCT MM o0 AN T 8. 5. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, Jan S. MARIPOSA, for Ta b 8. VENTURA tand and Sydney, Thur: &3 SPRECKELS & 3303.5., Agts.., Tkt dffiee, 543 lartut R Fraighttfica, 329 Markat SL Perle. 7, Pacit §1. COMPAGNIE GENERALS TRANSATLA DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS rate: | pany's WAL AN, | Miss May Densmore, now the longest- haired lady in the world, says: “I have nsed 13T your Danderine two years, and Wy hair has grown over an inch in length every month | sazorias. ‘e 10 4 Fi from Fioe <3 since I commenced its | Nerth Rive: t of Mort ince 1 we. Itsarelycom | NoIn RO o Havre, $30 amd wpward. Sec- tains most I!ll.l'hhly lfl'w‘fln qfih— to S0 upward GEN- re. $45 ard " FOR UNITED STATES AND . 32 Broadway (i | New Yerk. J. F. FUGAZI & C ents. 5 Montgomery avenue ties. (Miss Densmore writes us under re- a Tickets sold by all Railroad Ticket Agents. Mare Island and Vallejo Steam Steamer GEN. FRISEBIE or MONTICELLO— 9:45 a. m., 3:13 and 8:30 p. m.. except Sunday. Sunday, 943 a m. 8§30 p. m. Leave V T 12:30