Two Lost, Two Saves Sad Double Drowning in the Monongahela River Half the occupants of a capsized boat sink--the others make miraculous escape. About 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon a drowning of an extremely sad nature occurred at the foot of South Tenth street by which two boys named Willie WILLIAMS, aged fifteen years, and Eddie ROBERTS, aged fifteen years, were lost. The lads, in company with two others named Tommy MURRAY and Mike GALLAGHER, all of whom are employed as "pull up" boys in OLIVER's Fifteenth street mill, went down to the river to play, the bill being idle. They found a skiff, into which the quartet climbed. The had gotten only a short distance from the shore when the boat capsized, spilling the occupants into the water. WILLIAMS and ROBERTS sank and were not seen again. Young ROBERTS (sic) grasped a rope attached to some barges and was rescued by a man named CLOUD. GALLAGHER went under the barges and floated down the river as far as the Pan Handle Railroad bridge. He managed in some unaccountable way, as he could not swim, to keep his dead above water, and was finally rescued by a man named JAMES, who went out after him in a skiff. WILLIAMS lived with his parents at South Sixteenth and Carson streets, and ROBERTS' parents lived in Rhey's row on South Seventeenth street. At 10 o'clock last night neither of the bodies had been found. *From the research of Ruth Sprowls