i11sDONNERS DISAGREE.ay lr-Mrs. Will H. 1 0111101* Packs Up and Leaves Her Millionaire Husband.?rs11 £ TFrom Columbus. Ind.. comes a special telling of the separation of xvy \ Air. and Mrs. Will IT. Donner, the latter being a brother of Air. J. F. Don-ner 01 this city.L'lThe special says:is*11 ITrill• lossipers were set talking Tues-Iday when it became current that .Mr. and Airs. Will H. Donner of Pius-eo-lhurg had been separated. The report was circulated here by a traveling salesman, who was recently in Pittsburg.oftierforingIrs.leir•iw-He:elvwn * inter,ira-rn-sheex-Strength was given the report when Airs. Donner, in company with a strange, well dressed man, arrived here Alondav morning. They transferred and went south on the Madison branch and were met at the station at Elizabethtown and driven to the home of her father, Joel Newson of Azalia.The report is that Mrs. Donner receives $100,000 in cash and $5,000 a year alimony, while Donner has been given possession of the two sons and the daughter, who is about S years old.When asked this afternon if there was any foundation for the report Airs. Donner denied that there had been divorce proceedings and added that “there is nothing in it.” Fred Donner of this city, father of Will H. Donner, the millionaire steel prince, to j was seen and said that the separation ac- had taken place, but that he knew no particulars of the case.sis-Airs. Donner, who was formerly Delia Newsom, is a menfber of a fine lav. ! Quaker family of Azalia. She is a al | beautiful and exceptionally attractive woman, who has been a great ted solt;-iai favorite in Pittsburg and iad- t-MXiusbout the East. She lias trav mid C:ed extensively and spent a year in Europe with her family, returningtliecl» C, last fall. Under the tutelage of the ! best masters Mrs. Donner has become tlie ! a singer of ability.o (IpDonner is known all over theworld as the “Steel Prince.” In less than fourteen years he has amassed a fortune of more than $5,000,000. He j\vas first connected with the tinplate at | mills at Anderson, and after selling lierjbis interests there he went to Mon-| essen, Pa., where he made his fortune. The little factory city of Don-ora, near Anderson, was named for him. He soid to the trusts a year ago, and it was then that it was learned that from them he secured $5w 000,000.ntvf tO :le.lithOt-ms,Irs.net