i\ OHIO GOVERNOR DIES. PATTISON EXPIRES AFTER ILLNESS - NESS OF MANY MONTHS. g of Democratic Official and Sit caring ; In o Lieutenant Gover- jior Ilnrri * Turns Over Control of to ItcnnMlcn.n.s. Governor John M. Pattison , of Ohio , , died at his country home at Milford , a short distance from Cincinnati , Monday afternoon from an illness which set in shortly after his election last Novem ber. With the administration of the oath of ofiice.as acting governor to Lieutenant Governor Andrew L. Har iris , the politics of the State underwent ia revolution as great as that of last fall , when Mr. Pattison was placed in the executive chair by a large majori ty , although the only Democrat on the ticket to win an office. Governor Patti- son's death puts the Republicans as fully in control of Ohio as if they gain I ed a complete victory at the polls last November. Governor Pattison's illness raised many complications in State af fairs. End irnsleneil by Cumpnigrn. The death of Governor Pattison was due to a complication of chronic inter stitial nephritis , familiarly known as Bright's dibease , and uremia , according to the statement given out by his physi cian. It is said that the nature of the malady made his death only a matter of time , but the excitement of the cam paign and the duties of his position -are believed to have hastened the end. At the deathbed were gathered Mrs. .Pattison , two daughters , Aletha and JOIIX M. PATTISO . Ernestine ; O. C. Williams , of Wye uiing. a brother of Mrs. Pattison , an ( Prancis Paiti ou , a nephew. Gradual ly the sick man became unconscious , and he expired . without recognizing those about him. On a beautiful hillside in Greeulawn. cemetery , near his home , the Govern- or's body was laid to rest at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon. Mr. Pattisou , boy soldier , lawyer , State legislator , member of Congress and Governor of Ohio , was a native of Clermont County , Ohio , where he re M tained his home during his entire life. Born June 13 , 1847. he enlisted as a volunteer in the United States army when only 1C years old , in 1SG1 , and entered college immediately after be ing mustered out , graduating at the Ohio Wesleyan Universty in 1SG9. He was admitted to the bar in 1S72 and elected to the lower house of the Ohio legislature in 1S73. From 1874 to 1S7G lie was the attorney for the committee of safety at Cincinnati. He became a member of the Ohio Senate in 1S90 , and was elected to the Fifty-second Con gress. Andrew Linlner Harris , now acting governor , was born in Butler County , Ohio. Nov. 17 , 1835. Although he took up the study and practice of law after an enviable war record , he has prefer red the quiet of the farm and classes himself as a farmer. He was graduat- -cd at Miami University , Oxford , Ohio , with the class of 1SGO. and the follow ing year entered the Union army , his first enlistment being in April , ' 1SG1. He was promoted through all the grades to and including brigadier gen eral by brevet He was admitted to the bar in 1SG5 , and continued active practice until 1875 , when he became jprobate judge of Preble County , serv ing until 1SS2. He served in both Louses of the General Assembly. He was elected Lieutenant Governor both times that William McKinley was cho sen Governor , and enjoyed the close friendship and confidence of that chief. Notes of Current Events , , By the capsizing of an overloaded excursion - cursion - steamer at Riga , Russia , sixty- five persons were drowned. A Russian resident of Tokio has re ceived a letter from Maxim Gorky stating Gorky will shortly visit Japan. Judge Eason at Coshoeton , Ohio , over ruled the motion for a new trial for Ben Dickerson , sentenced to be e'cctrocuted for murdering Mrs. Catherine Hughes. Garrett A. Ilobart , only son of the late Vice President , and Miss Caroline Frye Briggs , granddaughter of Senator Wil liam H. Frye , were married at Auburn , "Maine. It is semi-ofScially announced that M. k JTegnault , who was one of the French dele- . .gates at the Algeciras conference , will succeed St. Rene Taillandier as French minister to Morocco and that M. Taillan- .dier will be promoted to one of the Euro pean legations. Justice Gould at Washington granted the motion of District Attorney Baker for postponement of the trial of Congressman Binger Hermann of Oregon , indicted for destroying public records while commissioner - -sioner of tihe general office , on til after 'tie trial of the Hyde , Diamond and Boa- f -sop cases. Michael Davltt , the 1'rish patriot , died in Dublin of blood poisoning , fol lowing two operations for necrosis of the jawbone , due to an attack of influ enza. Mr. Davitt was one of the most prominent fig ures in Irish poli tics for over a third of a century. He was born in 184.G , but it was not until 1SG3 that he attained prominence MICHAEL DAVITT. by his connection < vith the Fenian brotherhood. In 1870 he was convicted of treason and fel ony and sentenced to fifteen years' im prisonment. He was released , however , on ticket-of-leave in 1877. Two years later , with Charles Stewart Parnell , Davitt founded the Irish Land League He began an extremely vigorous cam paign for Irish independence , and in that same year was arrested for sedi tion. The case against him was not pushed to trial and Davitt came to the United States to organize the auxiliary land league of the United States. On his return he was again arrested , and in 1881 was sentenced back to penal servitude , from which he was not re leased till May , 1882. His work for the Irish Land League brought him into trouble again , and in 1883 he was again imprisoned for seditious language. Da vitt was first elected to Parliament in 1882 while a prisoner in the Portland convict prison , but was disqualified by special vote of the House of Commons for non-expiration of sentence for trea son-felony , lie was again ejected and , unseated in 1892. He was returned the same year , but resigned in 1893 , owing to bankruptcy proceedings. In 1895 he again took seat in the house. After the outbreak of the Transvaal war in 1899 Davitt made a climax to the fruitless opposition of the Irish members by again tendering his resignation as a protest against the government's policy. Frank D. Millet , the well known war correspondent and mural painter , is now said to be designing a series of war med als for the federal government. Senator Joseph Ralph Burton , in whose case the United States Supreme Court rendered a decision upholding the ruling of the United States Cir cuit Court at St. Louis sentencing Burton to fine and imprisonment f o r illegally represent ing a St. Louis concern before the government depart ments , has been the senior senator from SEXATOB BURTON. Kansas the last four years , and since the campaign of 1S7G had been one of the orators of the Republican party. He is an Indianian by birth , 55 years of age , and for three terms was a mem ber of the Kansas legislature. Burton made an aggressive fight against con viction , the indictments having been found faulty twice , and on technicali ties a new trial was granted by the Supreme Court after he Avas first con victed in 1904. At that time , besides the jail penalty , he was sentenced to pay a fine of $2,500 , precisely the amount he is said to have received from the St. Louis concern involved in his downfall. J. Willie Pope , prominently connected with the commercial growth of Atlanta , Ga. , is slated for the presidency of the proposed exposition of 1910. * Mrs. Mary H. Hunt , who was known throughout the civilized world as the originator of instruction in the public schools on the evil effects of stimulants and narcotics on the human system , died recently at Boston. Mrs. Hunt had been ince 1880 world su perintendent of sci on t i fi c temperance instruction for the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. MRS. HUXT. She was a native of Canaan , Conn. , and first became con spicuous in temperance work in 1879. As chairman of the W. C. T. U. com mittee to put in practice her plan for compulsory scientific temperance educa tion , she carried the fight into every state and territory , and achieved a not able victory. Her work having attract ed the attention of European investi gators , Mrs. Hunt was , in 1903 , called to the anti-alcoholic congress at Bre men , and subsequently her course of study -was introduced into the army and navy schools of Great Britain by the English war department She was the widow of Leander B. Hunt , who had been a prominent manufacturer at East Douglas , Mass. * " * Of all the modern -writers , Sir Walter Scott has the largest place in that gigan * tic -work , the British museum catalogue Scott has a larger number of entries un der his name than any other author save Shawspeare , who has two volumes de voted exclusively to him. * * It is told of Herbert Spencer that when out for a drive from time to time he would have his carriage stopped , no matter if in a crowded London street , till he had felt his pulse. If it was regular the drive continued ; if not , he went directly home. LOCK CANAL WINS. PRESIDENT IS UPHELD BY THE SENATE'S VOTE. Long ; Fij Iit on Type of Wutertvtiy KmlN in Fjivor of Quickest Plan "Work Xotv to IJe Ru.slied with 3n- creu.seil Force. Washington conespondence : Every resource of the nation is now to be directed toward making the dirt fly on the Panama canal as a result of the Senate's action in declaring for the lock type , favored by the President and the House of Representatives. The vote was 3G to . ' { 1 , giving the lock type the majority of five claimed for it by Pres ident Roosevelt some time ago. The action of the Sen ate sets at rest all uncertainty , and the force in Panama is expected to be dou bled in a short time. The entire Panama commis sion will soon leave for the /one , and Chief Engineer Ste vens will accom- TIIOS. r. SIXOXTS. pany them. "Cut loose now and build the canal. The American people want results on the isthmus as soon as they can be ob tained , and I.want them. Dig. dig. Congress and the people are behind us 'ji our elforts. " ' Within forty-eight hours after the completion of the Panaman canal legis lation President Roosevelt issued in ef fect the above order to Chairman Shouts and Chief Engineer Stevens. The President expressed his great grat ification at the action of the Senate in supporting his plan , and it is announced DAM TO CO4TROL F1OOOS- UPMlSH LIGHTANO > CWtTl AND PA CIFIC OCZAN ROUTE OF THE GREAT PANAMA WATERWAY LINKING9 THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC OCEANS. that before the summer is far ad vanced as many men and as much ma chinery as profitably can be employed will be engaged in making the dirt fiy on the canal rotue. Promptly upon being advised of the result of the vote in the Senate Mr. Shouts called on Secretary Taft at the War Department and began to discuss the plans of the commission for the prosecution of the great work of the canal construction. It was decided that the commission a-s a whole should start for the isthmus at the earliest possible moment and Chief Engineer Stevens will accompany the members of the commission. It is the purpose to make a thorough inspection of the canal work , which has reached a point where experts must determine the lines on which it is to be continued , and Mr. Stevens desires that joux r. STE\JXS. full approval shall be had of his own plan before the work shall progress further. The majority of the Senators appear to have thought that where the weight of the opinion of government experts and of the men who must bear the re sponsibility for the success of the en- erprise , including President Roosevelt , vas so decidedly in favor of a lock FACTS ABOUT THE CANAL. Estimated cost of the Panama canal , $200,000,000. Amount paid French company for title , $40t)00,000. Amount paid Panama government for perpetual lease of canal lands , $10,000- 000. Length of canal , forty-six miles. Canal width varies from 2oO to " 00 feet at the top , the bottom width being 130 feet. There will be five twin locks of con crete masonry , each 738 feet long and eighty-two feet wide , with a lifting ca pacity of thirty tb thirty-two feet. Lake Bohio ( artificial ) covers thirty- one square miles. Alhajuela lake ( artificial ) covers .1,900 acres , about nine square miles , and will furnish motive po\ver for operating the locks and lighting the canal from ocean to ocean. Distance from New York to San Fran cisco by old route , 13,71-1 miles ; by the route through the canal , o,299 miles. Distance from New York to Manila by present route via San Francisco and Yokohama , 195 : > 0 miles. Distance from New York to Manila by Panama canal via San Francisco and Yokohama , 11- 385 miles. Distance saved in a sailing trip around the world by the ne\v route through the Panama canal , 2,708 miles. The Panama canal was practically be gun in 1S > 3 by the French company. They had completed about two-fifths of the length , when because of fraudulent management the company failed , .iiid the ' work ceased in 1889. Woman's Home Companion. action toward the actual com pletion of the canal. The claims made in favor of a canal with locks are strong. A waterway of this pattern can be constructed in kss time than would be required fooae at sea level. Sec retary Taft estimates that it can be made ready for operation by 1914. A lock canal will be cheaper to construct than one at sea level , while as re gards safety and permanence it is as serted that the danger ot landslides in the great Culebra cut will be much les.- in a canal of the lock pattern than in one wherein the excavations would have to be made much deeper. Now that thi& imortant question has been settled the administration will be free to go ahead as rapidly as possi ble with the actual digging operations. It can proceed immediately with the preparation of plans for the outlay of the $20.000.000 whic'h the civil appro priation bill provides to defray canal expenditures. The time and occasion for discussion have passed. The time for the full elaboration of details' and for actual work has come. If Secre tary Taft's optimistic forecast is cor rect , ten years hence the commerce of the world will be parsing between the Atlantic and the Pacific through the canal. Outline of the IVorlc. The Isthmus of Panama is in shape much like an elongated letter S laid on its bide. Its general direction is east and west. At the canal zone the isth mus is forty wile * wide in a direct line : but the canal can not be built on a straight line , having several curves to accommodate itself to mountain spurs. A popular error is that one ocean has a higher level than the other. This is wrong , but there is a difference of PIER OF THE PANAMA RAILWAY. canal , their opinion should be accepted as conclusive. The public generallj , while recogniz ing the force of the arguments on ix > th sides , has been content to leave the question of the canal's type to the judg ment of Congress. Now that that body fi&3 spoken , its chief desire will bs for eighteen feet in the height to which the tides rise on the two sides of the isthmus. Hence , even if the canal were made at sea level , guard lodes would have to be built at each end. It has been proposed that there be five twin leeks of concrete masonry along the co.sal route. Beginning at Colon har bor , the canal will be excavate , for twenty-four miles through the anrshy lowlands of the Chagres River to Bo hio. So far it will be at sea level. At Bohio a might } * dam will back cp the waters of the river for twenty miles , forming a huge artificial lake , through which vessels will pass as part of the canal for thirteen miles. Vessels will tf f * jv ' > , f f . , , i * " * " + * -f \ & ' ' , * " - t ' ' A ' * ' ' * ' 'V/4 * ' vP/ * ? < --/y f X ft v ' * ' / - * 4& y' * ' > * # " ' - ' " rt ' ' + < ; < , „ > ; . r yj. / ' 4 r/ i ' , v ' , yi * M „ " 4i : " , - - \ - * ' f v tiF : . Mf3 0-f ; LX'&J ? ' > 11J : ' * . \ . " * lso f > T. x % ; ' C - s.K' \3fc < v v \ _ ja r . " * - -v ; : Emperndor and Culebra cuts is esti mated -13.000,000 cubic yards. These cuts terminate at the south eastern end of the summit level creat ed by the Bohio dam , at Pedro Miguel , thirty-eight miles from Colon. At this point , it is thought , there will be two double locks , which will bring the level of the canal down to about twenty- eight feet above mean &ea level. A mile and a half further on toward the Pacific is Mirafiores , where there will perhaps be another double lock , which will lot vessels down to the level of the Pacific. Commercial Event of tlie Aje. By dividing a hemisphere , man will create a new commerce of the world , and bring ttye countries of both sides of the globe into closer relationship. Next to girdling the globe with submarine cables , therefore , this work of cutting through the Isthmus of Panama will prove , it is hardly too much to say , the most important commercial event ot the age. The annual cost of operation will be -ibou" $2,000.000 , but it is expected to yield a revenue in tolls of nearly $10. 000.000. The revenue producing func tions of the canal will be minor as com pared with iti services in promoting the industrial and commercial prog ress and general welfare of the Unitw. States. But while we speak of its com mercial and political advantage to the United States , we must also remember its worth to the world and to the prog ress of civilization. Survived Awful Disaster. W. X. Goodrich of Menominee. Mi h. , Is one of the few survivors of the great disaster of April 27. 18G5 , when more than 1.400 exchanged prisoners returning to the North on board the steamer Sultana were killed by the explosion of the vessel's boil ers in the Mississippi river near Memphis , Tenn. A bomb , it is supposed , had been placed in the coal. When the explosion came. Goodrich was thrown into the rhx-r. lie clung to a piece of wreckage and float- < H ! for some miles , finally drifting into an eddy which carried him beneath an over hanging tree. Seizing the drooping branches he was enabled to draw himself- to safety. Although it is nearly half a century since the explosion took place , Goodrich has never been able to forget the awful horror of those fatal momenta. iJOOO Telephones in Store. Within the new Wanamaker store at Philadelphia , which is only one-fourth completed , 2.000 Bell telephones have al ready been installed , and 1,000 more are soon to follow. It will be , when com pleted , the largest store phone system in the world. Twelve operators will'operate a switchboard , from which will radiate within the store 10,000 miles of wire. Ev ery instrument has an automatic coin box attached , so as to minimize the custom er's trouble. It is estimated that 0,000- ' 000messages will pass between Wana- maker's and the Bell central ofikes In one year. IVENS IS HANGED. CoiifcKseil Slayer of Mr.i. HollJlMer Executed in Chicago. Hlichard G. Ivens was hanged Friday in Chicago. His life paid the law's pen alty for the thrice-confessed murder of Mrs. Bessie M. Ilollister , Jan. 12. Trem bling in every limb , the youth marched WEST END OF CULEBRA CUT. pass through two great locks each lift ing a ship aboui" forty-five feet. From Obispo the canal route runs through the mountainous backbone of the isth mus , and for nearly seven miles a vast cut has to be made through this back bone of rock. For the first five miles this is called the "Emperador" cut. Then comes a mile and a half of the "Culebra" cut. The greatest depth of this cut , from the hill summit to the bottom of the canal , is about250 feet. The amount of rock and earth to be removed in the seven miles of excavation through the to the gallows. The rope was adjust ed , the trap sprung , and his n'iclc was , broken by the fall. There were few- witnesses to the execution. Physicians , necessary officials and newspaper re porters were the only spectators in the jail gallery. The parents and imme diate friends of the youth were even , denied the privilege of speaking to him tfefore he walked to his fate. Mrs. Bessie M. Ilollister was mur dered on the evening of Jan. 12 near the carpenter shop owned by William Ivens , father of the murderer , 3GS Bel- den avenue. The body was found next on a refuse pile outside : i stable adjoining the shop. Richard Ivens was arrested a few hours after and under cross-examination by Assist ant Chief of Police Schuettler and Inspector specter Lavin he broke down and con- fes'-cd , giving all the details of the crime. Mrs. Ilollister was the fourth woman murdered within a period of five months , the first having been Mrs. Eliz- RICIIARD G. IVEXS. abeth Mize , who was killed near Del Prado Hotel. Aug. 22 , 1903. and whose murderer is still at large. The details of the crime committed by Ivens were so revolting that the whole city was aroused to action. Mass meetings were called in every section , anti-crime associations were formed and a campaign for an increased police force started. In order to make the increased police force possible a cra- sade to raise saloon licenses to . $1,000 was started and after a bitter struggle was carried. Loss to Meat I'aekers 915OOOOOC. Reports from various meat-packing cen ters indicate this industry has suffered a loss of $150,000.000 on account of the crusade against doctored meats. Chicago packers have had a full-page advertise ment in the lofal papers inviting the people ple of the United States to inspect their plants. Nevertheless , improvements or dered by the city authorities will cost the packers $1,000,000. Shli > Trust Slioiv.s a Profit. The report of the International Mer cantile Marine Company shows an in crease in gross'and net earnings , leaving a surplus of $2,02JOS9. ( The company carried one-quarter of all the passengers between this country and Europe an < J half of the first-class passengers. Patronize those who adverttee.