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M s e, _mw__ THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE RITSR—— M N A "OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 21, SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871 CHRISTHAS IN BERLIN | mavecseier e weiraienia | STANDS AS A DRA | ot s st amm s [TS MO00D IS PLACID!, ™E sez suiems. 1 pio NOT YET TAKEN of students belong- | the most shocking misconduct to Mrs. Cor- e e 4 ing 10 the unper classes were connected with bett, but not adducing then or thereafter X R W Wi N —— the socialist party and in correspondence S the slightest proot to sustain vhe imputa- 1. Cheistmas Time in Berlin, tanta MU 8L Orowds Throng the Strests Preparing for | with its leaders, | Result of the First Match at the Polls | tion. ‘The judge, despite tho protest of | France's Parlinment Has Quite Recoversd Mastes Against Classes in England, | Peixoto 8till Strong Enwmgh to Kos, Melle Tho emperor has forbidden any further " Mrs, Corbett's counsel,endmitted the ques. 3 i 1 Paristans fecoming Composed Again £ the Can! — on account of the author refusing to expunge quitted Mrs, Corbett. The relations of the — Roeetvers Named for tho Atehisor —_ he phrase re @ to the celebration of the woved misconduct vefore marriage ¢ e " Jatin Benwe ' it e Ha ' 3 8 " y TO BE CELE3RATED BY ALL THE CLASSES | 1l ot Gotian: wirieh ahosned o omoerar, | ACCRINGTON SHOWED NOTHING DECISIVE | i) Pioscd misconduct oefore marriage on | oNLy THE SCARS REMAIN AS REMINDERS | yihn.tuwet Wol ot te HManeed | ONE OF THEHARBOR ISLANDS RECAPTURED of a judge, and of the de ' A committee has been organized, with Ksonvill nd o Have the Ml ondant since ma . Ty ) Princo Arenburg as chairman, for the un s BosPlantl . ve | Miage. And in the course of the trial Jud smoval of ok el Remalr of the U6 Tie Sy ATCOAREARE H SN We Government Troops Driva th o Eviry One Seems to Have Cauglit the Con- | o 00 participation in the exhibition at Vote at the Bye-Election Failed to Prove | ot /00 e the defondant had the | Removal of the Wreok and Repair of the :.4.(‘;, iy Med '\;I‘V‘:un:h‘v;:n|:\l;:\. Troops Diiva Nf‘.lh argants tagious Jollity of the Reason. Antwerp. What the Leaders Sought. right to refuse to give the name of a cortain Damage to the Galleries, 't "‘“ ik l‘ M from an Intrenched Position, = 41 Major Niever of the general staff has been married woman with whom he had been in st Weelk in W Socloty. ey 3 3 wppointed commander of the balloon depart S timate, thus settling the point in common . L3 [’l':“;::::_‘_::::""'”' :')::..“t:‘\\l.‘;:"i.-wn. FRESH TR ONBOAR fl CELLOR CAPRIVI AND THE AGRARIANS | ment of the Prussian army, which indicates | CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE LORDS FLATTENS | law, which has been much mooted in Eng- | QUEER DEFENSE SET UP FOR VAILLANT | Snunders county Earmer RESH TROUBLE ON BOARD THE NICTHERDY A the extension of that service laud.and also in a recent famous divorce case 6. Nows from Councll HufTe, s Reports were circulated in Burope today in Now York, in which the male co-respond. ; Tt Julae At Blodx Oity o s TR e Liberal ard Radical Papers Aunoyed at | that Hand Richter, the celebrated conductor, ( Sentiment of the Politicians Has Not Taken 1 eut clected to take the opvosite view of nis | His Oounsel Proposss to Quots Fremoh | |‘m-:.-. il Rty Jealonsy Between Amorican and Brasitian His Course il S SR LR L AL Deep Root Among the People. edsibiliny Authors to Justify thy Deod, 1w the Sohools Celebrated, Membars of the Orow Grows Serlons. 80 rumor to be unfounded. ; Will 1o Used Agal st the Classes. —_ - P e Al these seandals have boen given almost . Mothe Good Chels sto CLEVELANG'S REFERENGE TO GEAMANY HES A BARON AS WELL NRING THE FOIBLES OF THE CLASSES | as much spce in the most conservative of | TYPICAL TALE OF A PAOVINIAL TOWN [ b fme oot uheistmss stortes, MINISTER MENDONCA KNOWS BUT LITTLE Nihilist Stackleburg of Parly 18 Ono of the London jonrnals this woek as has been Russin'a Most Wenithy Nobles, given to matters of the highest political con- 11 Womnn: Qer Wi ys and Hor Worlds Procoedings o Court Develop | 12 Editorial nad Comment. e 1ias ta iR " Its Tone Disliked by the Press of that | [Copyrighte 1893 by Press Publishing Company.] | Moral Obliquities of Privileged FPersol cern. And thoy may have more real effecy | Froveedings in the Assize Court Develop A FTLRE A (K WS © 1as Mad No Dispatehes from His Home New York World C: y : St ory of © alte Outds A SUIEE N SEWRYS « eported _The aburgs 5 Lkt “‘,[i b A LR A Brought Out In Court Cases Are on public opinion agatnsy tho “privileged | & Storr of Crimo that Qulte Vutines NeHIABIN AALEE UOREAOG t ¢ ing the Keported ~ ) plie e al AL U LML L Belng Used aw Thunder in the classes™ than the action of the House of Emil Zol's Reoltals of Flouitious S1, FAES SLhtE o CRWHINE: Engngement — Some Corresponds Gotha—News from the as Friederich Stackleburg, who was much Lords on current political moasures fieRMa oF Mkn T enco Concerning the Blookade , " i * Efforts for Reform. ot Man. 15, Omihas Trado Reviewed. « . Fatheriand, spoken about in Paris lately, is none other A Qlsfatoh peintad) Hore {LhAL the WM bor than the baron von Stackleburg from the Russiun government province of Esthonia {Copyy Lited 1893 by the Axsoclated Press.\ His family is one of the oldest and most re- Beniy, Dee. ‘The approach of Christ- | spectable in the Baltic provin He isan mas has influenced public life in Germany. | only son and was eplendidly educated and During the past week the genoral vacations | showed unusual capabilitic have set in, the theaters have been closed When he came to Berlin he was already a partly in preparation for new pieces for the | goeialist. What drove him into the arms of holidays, and wholesale trade has stopped | the socil democracy is mot known. Tt is as usual, entirely. The schools were | known that he was engaged in o case of closed yeste Live Stock and Other MarRets. 16, Swode Settiomenta in Saunders Connty. of unemployed in New York almost equals that in London has aroused much com 1Copyrighted 1893 by Press Padlishing Company.] Loxpoy, Dec. 23.—|New York World Cable | Ment. A pitiful instance of the destitution |~ Pauts, Dec. 23, —[New York World Cable— [ = _Sperial to Tk Bee] —The Acerington | Nere Was given in the inquest yosterday | Special to Tue Bee|—Bofore the Chamber | but when tho troops arrived election left the political situation abso- | O¥CF the body of a coachmaker, with a wife | of Deputics adjourned it had quite recovered [ failed. The reason for this, b lutely ia statu quo, although the party or- | 411 six children, who had committed suicido | its wonted choerfulacss. No ereat pre- | thathe realized that if he threw a bomb [ have captured Fort Meneangue on the island gans on cither side are claiming substantial | Ater a vain scarch for work for eight weeks. | cautions against further bomb throwing had | amid the vasterowd that surrounded Gon- | of that name, near the Nichtheroy shove, advantages from the result. There are suf- | 4 Witness testified that the day before the | been taken. The correspondent walked, | eral Campos ho would have killed or wounded | after sovere fighting. fiient reasons for the hulving of | Man walked twenty-five miles, and being ap- | without having a ticket, from the strectinto | hundreas of persons. He had tho bo Prisavnrco, Dee. LCopurighted 1893 by Press Publishing Company.] 1Copyrighted 1597 by Press Publish'ng Company.y BUiNos Avies, Dec. 23— (New York World his court Cable—Special to Tue Bre] —Telegrams says, was | from Rio say that the government troops 2. [New York World i Less2's majority of a year and a | Proached by a beggar for the gift of a penny, | the Sfle de la Paix, whero the deputics go | ready to throw, but the thoughtof the many | Cable—Special to T 6 Bre | —1t is said hera i \..-':L\rm,dmr.u-"‘:-l\l.(-’;“'nu».EJm’il 2::: -lrrxl"::‘JHAn.lN;;\:“.';;:‘ .;:.1‘,»;‘”»‘1‘« h\l\'uul O Ty oy ORE L SLMER L HA AL LS :\“\.:l;:i‘x \:1le‘:“‘ll.l:mm;:wm;’zfix;:tu::;;n |ly‘|"|“nl-‘- "\l;l‘lllr”l{lu.':i‘ll:x‘ll:‘luh their legs during and ::;....‘x‘:l [:Yr?uu\lht\ll would suffer restrained ::::nvl\lvl‘\“]|-:‘-‘.nv:|\ v-’m:.m‘-. s tnd men on l»m\ffl_ | i ; | TRTIve R TS (TRGreaaE]L PHEI1IVEVIE VOto \ : a sitting m from throwi Nictheroy may quit the vessel and ro: going home for Christmas. The streets have | where he became a nihilist. He possesses 15w SoRcIiBIvAI ehBUBNITHAD penny out of his own ragged pocket. M. Dupuy, the prosident of the Chamber, Pallas, as the time set for the assasina- | turn home. It isstated that a serious dis- the appearance of a forest; there is hardly | enormous wealth. He owns the island of L e 1o BRE bty Here's & Praposition, gaius sympathy on all sides by his courage- | tion drew near, urged Cedina to throw the | agrcement has arisen betwoen them and the | ,."1,1..<-|‘< '“ lhnlul )1:1;\\1('1'!\[5(,)]{ ;;m- e illll':w? \\'nr!:\s. o |:m \\'l'nll:;n:n}: of ll.':‘\””i‘lmk ulu: wxatait tHaHouss o“, Lords und the tory | Thespecial correspondentof the TLondon |ous conduct, yet jokes have boen freely | bomb. Seeing that Codina hesitated, Pallas | Brazilians that joined the L aftor 1ts ar- | offered for sale. ver a quarter of a million | may be the financial backer of Vaillant and b < S : Christmas trees have ar during the month from Sy party. In the present great political chess [ Chronicle, who has been sending a notable | made on the subject. A raaical deput, game, therefore, this first real match test | series of letters on the Chicago faiv and | the president's remavk immed between Gladstone and Salisbury since June, | American institutions, writes that in a [ the explosion wi ved in this city | other French eden and Norway, and from the Black Forest. The streets are says | grew angry and snatehed bomb from | rivai here. Newsis momontarily ¢ Iy after | him saying: “Youre no good.” Puallus’ | of the arvival of Mello anarchists, Negotiations between the Russian govern- ment and the nihilist baron are now pend- xpectod ships off the port. s, “The Chamber dies, but | nerves were evidently unstrung by the - - hundreds. It is calculated that nearly 40,000 farmers, or at most, a third of the whole membership, have already seceded. “Tho underground work continues againsy the Russian treaty, and for a moment the deliberavions rest. 1he Russiun delegates will remain nere until they are resumed after the new year. In spite of the poor progress made, 1t is expected an under- standing will bo reashed Willlam's New Yeurs Reception. al, unite all of tho German . when he is ac- New Years day will, as us the commanding office army around the empe customed to address them, The emperor's speech is looked forward toas a prediction of the coming political situztion “This year Prince Leopold of Bavaria, in- spector of the Fourth army corps, will be presented. His arrival is just announced The prince was absent last year on account of some disagreement between the govern- ments, It has been remavked hero that in his last message to congress President Cleveland, speaking of the foreign relations, has, it is claimed, discriminated in his expressions be- tween France und Germany, while the former are aunounced as being “excellent, the latter are regarded ns only “satisfac- tory.” 'Phis ereates considerable surprise in cles, a8 nothing has oceurred on this side to mar the excellent rolations. “The publication of Count Von Eulenberg's cireular has created a sensation hardly in- ferior to that produced by the original pub- lication of the decree itself, which led to the great Reichstag debate on January 24, 1882, In which Prince Bismarck, in a masterly spoech, expounded its importance and de- claved 1t was unot aimed at creating u new prerogative. ‘Then it was only extremo radicals who disapproved of the de now, on the contrary, 1t is only the extreme right agravians who attack Count Von Eulenberg's vircular, Followed the Ttalin Crisls, The German press followed the 1talian erisis with keeu interest, but its comments worereserved. ‘The North German Gazette, however, praises Premicr Crispi's declay viou for 1ts lofty patriotic sentiments and absolute sincerity, “and expresses the be- lief that he is emisently the right man in the right place. “Phe debate o the English Parliament on the duke of Saxe-Coburg-Giotha's position seems likely to create dissatisfaction here. The Hamburger Nachrichten says that the position of the duke was discussed in & manner which cannot be passed over without ootice on the part of the Germans. The duke, the paper aads, became & sovereign vman prio. over whose rights and duties no foreign parliament is entitled to deliver an opinion. The Hamburger Nachrichten concludes with the remark that the incompatibility of such an occurrence with the dignity and respect due to the German ecwpive and its federal princes should formi the subject of discussion atan early sitting of the Reichstag ~ ‘The conservative KReichsbole regrets that the Reichstag has not yet dealt with the questionand the Berliner Tageblatt suys that nobody will take it amiss that the duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha should desire to keep up relatious with the royal fawmily of Eungiand, but that he should wish to spend a part of the year regularly in England is most likely tocauso displeasure in Saxe Coburg-Gotha, and, especially, as 1t was not clearly stated In the British Parliament whether he was 10 be regarded as a British subject or uot. Oppostng the Epread of Sockulism. Severe measures are heing taken to stop he socialist propuganda in the schools und Major Forbes Compelled to Retreat Before the Natives—His Hoavy Losses, Care Towx, Dee. 23.—Major Forbes, ac- cording to advices received here today, haa justarrived at Inyati when the me left there for this town. The advices con- firm previous accounts of Captain Wilson' battle. At daybreak, while Major Forbes was preparing to join Wilson, firing was heard in the direction of Captain Wilson's position. 'This continued until Major Forbes humself was attacked. Forbes was | compelled to retreat to his old position and veform. He had fourtcen horses killed and six men wounded in theretreat. Forves arrived Inyati after a mareh through heavy rains, his force being harassed for miles by the Matabe The Maxim wuns and carriages were abandoned. The men were obliged during the aarch to subsist on norseflesh, T'he column marched on foot by y and vight and such horses as were wvailable were used for the wounded and for the baggage. UNPRO FRANC VED COAST! ey Would Be Easy of Access to an Eney Pamis, Dee. 23.—Tho the Indpendence Belge of Brussels that France meditates fixing a camp at Govel on the Belgian frontier, In aiscussing the probabilities of a Ger- man camp at Malmedy, the Temps says if 1t is created it will then be ume to consider France's means for defense in the direction of Ardennes and Huinault, M. Lockroy, ta the Eclair, makes a serious indictment against the condition of the French navy and the coast defenses of France. He says the coast is all but unde- feuded from Dunkirk to Cherbourg und that 16,000,000 franes will ve requived to place Cherbourg in a state of real defense, The same statement, he adds, holds good in the case of Corsica, and he maintains that the British could casily geta footing av cither place. lemps contradicts Wandering in the Frozen North, CruistiaNa, Dac. 23 —The minister of the interior announces that the latest news re- ceived from Dr, Nunzen, the exvlorer, who is attempLing to cross the Arctic oceun, was o letter dated from the Jugor straits on the 3d of August. In this letter he said i the dogs he had on board were service heshall not efll at Olenks in May. The winister saysthat it may be concluded that the condition of the dogs was favorable and that Dr. Nunzen found it unnecossaty to proveed to the New Siberian islands, A theutic news of the expadition is not looked for until next year, when Dr. Nanzen will call at Dickinson's harbor. English 1a K Carno, Dec, 23. —The revly of the Fgyptian government to financial proposals expresses the hope that the decreaso!'in the British army of oceupation will continue until Eng. land can inally withdraw bertroops, accord- g to the assurance given. T'he reply also expressos the hope that the sment of the powers will ailow the application of the money resuiting from debt conversions to be applied to local improvements, such as the coustruction of water reservoirs in upper Egypt. Servian Cabluet Will Kes! Brranane, Dec. 23,1t is roported that the cabinet witl resign after passing the budget and a dissolution of the S| ina is prob- able. lofluenze Ravaging Denmark, Loxpoy, Dee. 23.—A dispateh to the Standard from Copenhagen says the intiu- ensa is fncreasiog ut au alavming rate. wholesome conditions prevailing in what is called “the better society.” Alfred J. Mon- son is certainly connected with people hold- ing the highest social rank, being first cousin, throvgh-his father, of Lord Oxcn- bridge and, through his mother,of Lord Galway. Yet it has been quite conclusively proven that if he did not murd the poor lad committed to his care as tutor he was prepared to take every financial advantage of the boy's inno- cence and inexperience, and charges of out- rageous forgeries on the part of Moason were proven. Tottenham, whose shady money transactions came out in the trial, is an ex-army ofticer, as is also the elder Him- brough, who, although tenant for life of a great estate, lives only a precarious exist- ence on borrawed half-sovereigns. Monson's mother seems to have borne all the ex- penses of the defonse, which amount to 20,000, Counsel Thomson's fee being 1000 gumeas. There is some doubt wiiether the verdict “nov proven” operates to prevent Monson, in case of the discovery of newly discovered evidence, being again put on trial for his life, but the general opinion is that it has the same effect s a verdict of acquittal in England and other countrics, Nothing came out in the trial or elsewhere to make it clear whether the two policies of 00,000 each in the Mutual Insurance company of New York must now bo paid to Monson's hews, They were certainlg invalid in respect to Monsou or his wife. He Kept the Love Letters, Another law case of tne week is the suit of Lady Mabel Seiver against Licutenant Jumes Dayrolles Crosbie, an officer in her majesty's army and a first cousin of Sir John Lister Kaye, who married Miss Yzna of New York. [I'he plaintiff, wuen Lady Mabel Brudenell Bruce, was cngaged to marry Licutenant Crosbie, but .cloped with Robert Moore Seiver, a racing bookmaker from Aurtralia, just before the time set for her marriage. he suit was to compel Crosbie to surrender. rtain love letters he had received from her. His defense for refusal was that IZ7idy Mabel, after her ma had communicatod to society papers in London paragraphs reflect- ing on Lieutenent Crosbie’s honor, and he kept her letters because they proved his - nocence of the charge. Judge Hawkins gave judgment for Crosbie with costs against Lady Mabel, holding thatthe defendant was entirely justitied in law und honor, Sequel of a Double Satcide, On the same day the will of the late Cap- tain Hon. Prederick Charles Howard, brother of the earl of EMogham, was iiled, making his wife, daughter of the carl of Wineilsea, exocutrix. Butitappears that his estate was nothing. He recently committed sui- cide. it will ba remembered, und | thut act was immediately followed by the suicide of Mrs. Lynch Blosse of whose relations with the captain there was no doubt. She, however, left a large estate. Ou the same day also the unsavory divorce case of Mrs. Ricnardson, sister of Janette Steer, the well known london actress, against her husband, described us *'au independent gentleman of means,” came t0 an end with a devalopment which T be- lieve would be impossible in New York courts, but apparenily not unusual here. ¥ ow Examination Is Conducied. The vlaintiff had named a Mrs. Corbott as co-respondent with her husband. M. Cor- bett had afirned on the witness stand entire faith in bis wife's lnnocence, and during the tial the times and places of alleged mis conduct were conclusively disproved. Yet ou the lust day counsel for plaiutift, sue of After the Trial is Over He Sneaks Away am Leaves No Address. -Alfred J. Monson, who was recently on trial charged with the ant Hambrough verdict of *‘non proven” his lodgings EpiNsunan, esterday, left morning and all 10 interview them were absolutc Last night the Mor and refused to receive any kfast this morning they proceeded on's remained her husbaud’s face was p mufiler which Mrs. Monson seemed to bo it good spirits and teforo leaving they%ent away seve large parcels by post. future move- Verdicr Me Loxboey, Des ts with Approbation, . 23.—The Daily nment on the Monson trial, sa) dict has the full effect of the English verdict of not guilty in precluding all possi- bility of trying the prisouer on.the same charge. News, in its a sccond time It was the verdict, the ienco should have been the strongest to secure conviction ft wi The Chrouicle says #hat it conceivable low a Jury could havearrived at any other conclusion, Other papers throughout the country ex- press sumilar sentiments. is wholly in- Temporarily Insane, inquest hold over Wentworth Francis Dean Paul, son of e Edward Pauland the well known *whip, morning at a in Piceadilly, his tostified that the deceased liad indep: pood deal of depressea in spirits, brother alive at the Raleizh clubon Wentworth and excited, no other reason for the suicide lust saw his Aubrey said than money Tne jury returned a verdict that Mr. Paul suffering from a attack of fusanity @ Ltatian Losses. Massowa, tained heavy lossas in the rec Agorda, in addition the tribesmen have offered thei The Itakans 1ost 20t bawtle near a number of leaders and missioned officer killed and two European Italians also sty-eizht nati 23 native soldiers wera swounde | 1 Armondi is in command in the ab. neral Buratieri, Colonel Armondi who is expected Fouud Murd, HissLodglogs, Miva hus been found murdored ings in_this city., tioned in th ia bis lodg Ho was frequently u Roichsiath during the debate agent of the chief of polic He bs Swiss, Roxe, Nee. 28.—The Italian anarchist who gave the name of Rinaldi, and who is under t o the oharge of being an lina, the Spanish bomb thrower. beew identified as o Swiss, wnose real nawe ['a position from whick: it wo is Rugereri, “Yes, ho teaches that 1t is right to do- stroy a political system which one honestly believes to be wrong, but it would be uufair to Vaillant to give you my pleadings. He is already at a great disadvantage. From what I have said you can construct a de- fense of him yourself,” It is probable that in the intercst of llant himself the court will relieve De- of the task. Built on Real Life, The new bl e Duchess de Monte- lina,” by Albin Valabregue, produced at the Gymnese this week, was evidently inspived by the history of an American woman be- @ shayes longing to a fumily who made fortune in sewing machines and is established m Paris. In the play an honest French bourgeois of large fortune has an ambitious wife who buys an Italian duchy without con- sulting him. He is worried nearly to death through several acts and at last violently renounces being called “duke.” The American woman re- ferred to married an humble Belgian violin- ist, and purchased an Italian dukedom for him and herself. One day Wolff, thie violin- ist was asked to their new house. The first person he met was the new duke, whom he had only known as an inferior brother artist. “Hello!" he exclaimed, **What are you oing in this swell houso?” “Hush,” replied the other, *you must not know me here. T am the duke,” Outdoes Zola in Reallsm, Crimes are committed from time to time in the irench provinces which show that Zoln's “La Terreis” is a truthful work, The assize court of Charente has just tried such a case, Jean Heriand, a peasant of 70 years, lived with his son and the latter's wife, Eliza, at Burbesieu, Nacel, the son, sang in the choiv of the chureh, of which his wife's father, Felix Vilateau, was the sucristan. Heriand de. manded shortly after the son's marriage that Vilateau give to his daughter certain furniture. He refused ana Heriand told his son and daughter-in-law to got out of his house. They, reinforced by Vilateau, pro cceded to remonstrate with the old man, who again told them to all leave his houso. Vilateau thereupon seized him and plac iiim on 4 bench, sitting on him for security He tnen ordered his daughte band to bringz him some raz did. acel Heriand he then ordered to siton his fathe Eliza then held a candle while Vilateau procceded to draw a razor across the old man’s throat. Thae fivst razor was not sharp enough, and he ordered his daughter to hund him another, With this he nearly severed Heriand's head acel Heriand savon tis father's througn the murder, Afterward the three threw the body into a pond, where it wus discovered. Vilatesu was condemncd to death. Naocel Heriand was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment and his wife to eight years i and her hus- which they s CHOSEN AS THE MU Jose Ceding, a Spanish Auarchist, Mikes a IERER, BanceLoxa, Dec. 2 lina, the an- archist who has already confessed that ho threw the bomb that caused upwards of thirty deaths n the Lyceo theater, has made a further confession, giving detu the crime. He says that b from an anarchist group to assassina'e Gen- eral Martinez Campos in September last He, in company with two or three comrades, facluding Pallas, went to vis the march past of the troops, it beiug his iuten s of cted was tionto then assassinate General Campos, who was the 1eviewing ofticer. Ile took | easy sk 1o v curried out bis project, An anarchist named arrested at Huerc Juich for trespass, is reported to have con- fessed his complicity In the Liceo theator IN BISCAY, ¥ Ships Caught in Bay and Badly vible storm is ing in the Bay of Biscay vesscls are revorted or seriously damaged by wind and sea. ports received so far do not indicate any ma- tevial loss of life, but 1t is feared the begianing of the tale is yet told. to have been I the Gale, QUEENSTOWN, I'ne British shp Resolution, a twin serew battle ship of the first cluss, carrying fourteen / tons, 2.500-horse pow, cane in the Bay of Biscay mg which the Gleaner was lost sizht of Resowution has returned damaged and having lost a lifeboat and rc- one man missing. was almost submer tons of water below and several of her crew wero injured and much damage was done Lo the w r, encountered a hurri- on Tuesday, dur- nere much experience The torpedo eatehe rived sufely at a Spanish port. Gleaner has since ar- WAR ON THE SHIP CANAL, Kalirouds Manipulating Kates to Manches: ter's Disaava LoxnoN, Dec, suys that inci Pall Mall « vharves and the nters will shortly be levi railroads, w with the object ansportation from Manchest ¥ trafiic back to Liverpool 1dds that it is more thau probai and conseq e days is the canal and the charge is about 6 shillings u 1o Liverpoo re has been u great rush to secure Lh cargoes of 1 ton and New Orleans only experit VALLLANIS WOUNDED LEG, It Doesn'c fieal Fas Laveationer Bombthrower Vaillant has stawps from vorted to huve bomb if he takes part in Vaill sdded that th atiouer bas i ws of Nanusen island, in the S ‘ | LR Hiebilme 6L ile v Gl 3 ks 1802, has ended ina draw. The death of | recent interview with a New York editor x|1'-\:~|\«;ls\|\|l up,” a travesty of a historics wrangle, and for a time he hesitated to LACKS CONFIRMATION, ] thronged as at noother timo of the year. At | ing for the acquisition of this istand. The | 1#4% ho: Stanhope, the tory member from | that “a person informed me quite seriously | saying. The button of an electric bell is | throw the bomb that he had seized T | some hours of the afternoon motion in | curious fact may appear that the Russian Lincolnshire nccessitates another election | that if he had the power he would limiv the | now placed at the prosident's right hand, by | Had he thrown it as ho originally Vet REWARIRGLSN: | the center of the business portion | government will be providing funds next month, and promises to be more de- | Suffrago entirely to the capitalist class, | which he can instantly cause all the exits to | intenaea ho would have killed General (Copyrighted 1593 by the Axsosiated Press,] i of Merlin pocomes almost impossi- | whereby to nssist the nibilists, because the | "OY gl thus formally and definitoly converting the | be closed. Campos, but the delay which aliowed the | Prgxasmico, Dec. 3. —Tho report that | ble. As Christmas approaches ghu baron certainly mnplmq_uuor his income in A Salisbury and Silver. republic into the plutoeracy that it is fast The public gallery has been closed auring | crowd surging about the reviewing | Rio de Junciro had been captured by the haste and hurry wncreascs, and nothing | the interest of the nihilist- hisveause. | her political ovent of tho week, cer- | Practically becominz.” 1 have vamly toduy | repairs. It willbe screcned by wire work | stand to grow thicker saved the hfe of the | rebels has not boen confirmed, but the mos else is thought of but Christmas gifts and o = tainly of intorest in the United States, was | S0ught to learn the name of the editor or of | to prevent bomb throwing. Vaillant was | geueral. Pallas when arrested and until bis | sgartling ports are still in civculation, It (ehal il Bl G G 1A OB GHILITN ARG RERTING) B IR 8 F ARl AHIANTOR BTG Sunbesleg.] HIEDEDGE not in that gallery, by the way. Journalists | exccution msisted that he alone wus respon- |-is announced here in a 1tio dispateh that daily visiting the various shops, in order to Sulisbury’s L L a¥i%ea to ) o 1B 7aNE o T tre T nasia o St el daily visiting tho vario LT e ared | (5ina GhadeoUra TEEYorus feoie the A ped | e HEI e (RS RS T F G BT reTEe T by T (e Y E e TS, will not be treated ns suspicious porsons, [ sible for the attempted assassinauon and | Admiral da Gama and the iusurgont war buy gifts, and all the members of the court Hewd of the Cathelle Chureh : s o oy nor enclosed by wire worlk. despite the closest fnquiry he never said | yvessels ave off Cobras isiand and that thoy ] follow the example sot by the old Fmperor GG LTG0 .| letter cabled last Saturday 1 pointed out the | A curious libel smt jg's1id by the maga- R R TR B PO BT Ray thia s 1o @bAVitn iife 5 t thes Vil S Wt Rox, Dee. 23 —Tho pope today gave audi- | g0t thay a very strong movement had sud- | zine and book men to be threatened against Vaillant Urged on by Writors. hat anyone elso had anything have succeeded in stopping the collection of i William. The Kreuz Zeitung, partly, alono | o 5t o relates and bi S 1ot e et crime. It was this fact that ma him the | revenues from the custom house which haye, | makes an exception to the rule and continues | onC¢ 10 the cardinals, prelates and bishons | genty developed in Bogland 1w favor of this | the British musoum. This iustitution, ac- [ M Deshayes, the advocate who has un. LT bmad ol hiny o ik 1 2 WHISII TS | its fight against Chancellor yon Caprivi and | 0 UiC thron room of the Vatican. The | siap, Iv has obviously grown in the interval. | cording o the story, ‘s among its thou- | qertakcen the. dafenss ot Valllans, wae vio. Bory in the eys of tho Aanrehists who knew | up to the present, been paid o Presidens | { the government; its orzan declares that the | Lol Christmas greetings were exchanged. | Al) the weekly papers, financially, out today | sands of other pamphlets, ono printed in the | ged by your correspondent. who found him Sho e Hiy aniciint o it gitan, | polsoto: : i ; ! tablo cloth between the conservatives and | Darin# the course of bis remarks the nopo | seem to accept the conferenco as | United States contaming an atleged ibel on | to be 4 poor young man, a creole from Mar | L0 e I A S e fore seoms o be soine sorlonsii ol Ao SR LD eibth hatroon 7o consorsitivosand o I"Inlmrn(m-mln_\ wlth your v ishes, We | offoring the only solution of the prob- | awell known Amerloan lady, who has taken | tiuy. - He proposes an excocdingly. orieinal b IS (O dimmb Bl nected with lh.-‘ldv..hl.u-uu"ny n(m|.n LD | s ridas Lol ks be. | Ardently desire to be, as many of our prede- | 1o s v in S e Th A Trom M Ten GLInaTH | a i i e E e T | Byt 3 G e offe allas e S | John J. Conway, third watch ofticer ha | thero is no longer any common cause be- | Shconoly (08! em of saving India from practical | a ¥ promi v volitical | 1ine of defense. Mot b OO Ch e LY . i A ! tween them and it isa caseof “war to the | Seosors Were minister and messenger of | panjruptey, with all that would imply to | matters and in soclal reform. The | wDo you intend to blead insanity?” askea e, s 1' T iy || TR U, L0 D (Lt | Rl f 8 k peace to Burope and the world, home interests. Salisbury prossed on the | pumphlet was ccessible 1o the | yhe ceryetpondent, allas was stot at Mount Juich Cedina | crew, who are thoroughly posted upon tha 1 s 4 ich “Weare its authorized zeulous defender, 4 i 4 S hi0 odtd 5 eadi ; 5 began his preparations to avenge, his com- | movements of Peixoto’s new cruisers, and it Annoyed at Caprivi's Course, | rovernment the vital necessity of “resuming | public, which uses the muscum reading | wCertainly not,” responded the advocate. ; . ) because peuce among individuals and among i 5 i Ral p The p i e thi doing 5 i raae’s death. and the explosion at the Lyceo | was certain that the Aquidaban and her T LRl s P n ot lea i n aratnte ans I { ¥ | the negotiations, so rashiy put aside, of try- | room. Tho plaintiff consiaors that in doing | «Vallant is an unusually intelligont man, | hoo e it 4 ; O ALBcoh s noyed at the concialiatory attitude adopted | 0¢Iety is the duughter of justice, which, | jng 10 find out whether the other nations of | so the authorities have made themselves { who has fgllowed out tho teachings of mod. Sl et consorts are expected here at almost any by the chancllor and foraign scorctary | {OM4Ing Lo holy writ, lives by fuith, and | puropo cannot agree with us from time to | liablo for uttoring or ciroulating tho alloged | orm writers and thinkers, whom he has | . Auether 00 TLCE mopatl T e BRI i towara the agrarians and-bope the day | thesupreme pricsthood of Christianity, being | tine on some stable relation on the value be- | libel and it js on these grounds that she is | gpudied. 1 shall quote Victor Hugo. The rescarches of Prefect Larroct have WA e Do Ay e, TR is near at hand when Caprivi will take up | U1 gudrdian of fuith and the defender of | 4 oon the two metals. “1do not know?. he | bringing hev action. Renna, Proudhon, and & groat many others | Fesultad in she aiscovery of another anar- | WIsHIRGToN, Boc. “-Miny S T IV RO RH justice, 1s tnvesied with upostleship for | eonyinued, “whetherat is possible to so agree, | Thelate Sic Andrew Clark, Mr. Glad- | prominent in modern literaturo, philosophy | Chist laboratory and the setzure of forty SHRERTEEY. oF oLnRr RN R | The National Zeitung suggosts that the | UMW and peace. Whis anostloate must bo | by [ awm told all other natjons say that the | stone’s famous physician, left an estate in | und journalism, Jhey hove urged Vaillany bombs, each weighing tivo kilos. e o i e AR S | conservatives could casily bo maudo to feel | EIVOD freetom of action and fts words must | guly obstacle to such an agrocment is tho | personalivy ulone of over&] 00,0, ull mudo | o his. act. wad- jwerity e 1 el beiny | The authoritics havo also soized a quan- tureer allo titagie, CHlbwo riARbATY their folly if Caprivi would fil the vacancies | P° 8cecbted without suspicion and cartied | ghsinacy of England, and if thatis so, it is | in his practice. He alsofeftto his son the | Plato and Soorates to iis aid, but that winy | U8 Of nitro-glycorine and olbarioxnloslycaites e e 1 oxisting In tho higher offices by liborals, | NOMe to tho hearts of privato citizens and | varc muoh regrottod.” succession to. the batonetey ranted by Mr. | not be necossary in addition o stock of fulminatiug caps | communicntion b Lo The extreme methods of the agrarians | BOyernments. © LH Lignt on High Life. Gladstone, BALLAWD Sy §DIyBuliiicanishuy HukoJjustifies thio(usol || 810 ibecke oF shomstry, notherin boracd |y b SRMUCE e RIER (IS A appear, however, o bo doteating their own | Then tranquility will fourlsh again.” o= of dynamite s a means of social reform?® | 10Ny Of the anarchists has been discovered | Senor Mendonea is_ serenely confident, At Yok M S S Several legal cases of the current week MONSON EVADES INTERVIEWERS. T T s at Montague Vallvidrea, a village near this | ever, that the reports of Mello's triumphare ends, and the small farmers are deserting NN e TR0 T G Pt b sked the corresy ; the recently formed agrarian league by the unfounded. 1f Mello had actually triumphed there would be an end to Peixoto's consor- ship of the press dispatchies, ana Mglla would be the first to desire the news of his tory sent to the world, The State and Navy departments are both very positive in expressing their discredit of the reports that Mello has captured Rio. Word is belicved to have been ree ceived since yesterday in one departe ment or the other contradicting yesterday’s rumors. Nothing explicit as to this can bo sccured. 1t is the very general impression, however, that though the report of the downfall of Pr nt Peixoto Is premature, it will prove correct in time, Asling tor Orders, Following1s a dispateh received by the State dopartment tod Ri0, Dee. 22, —American mastors, each ot them, hold Brazilian Pacific dock permits The docks specificd aro contizuous points Protection from shore fire promisod by gov- er ity Tustruct Pieking to anchor off that point for convenience until quostion hly settled, Insurzents make lines of five any place to sult thelr purpose, therehy indeii= nitely blocking neuteal commerco withous vrevious notic POWNE My, W. T Townes is the United States consul general to Brazil. His dispateh is mstrued o indicate that the regular gove ernment of Brazil nas granted a permit to shipping, to land und receive cargoes at ce tain wharves lying near each other and that the consul general wants our naval forces 1o see that Mollo and Do Gama respect these permits, and do not fire along these lines, It is not regarded as likely that the instruce tions asked will bo granted. ‘I'he point which the consul general argues is the same as that contained in the petivion of American vessel musters in Rio received several days ago. “T'he eabl AW Was transs. mitted to the Nuavy department by the State department without any vequest to comply with the instructions. The Navy departe ment is awafling advices from Captain Pick- inz, With diseretion invest in Captain Pickiog and with o United States mins ister on the ground, no action will representations of the wsul gencral unul other represcutatives ave heard from. It will be scen that the dispateh is a complaint against the insur- ents ard u request to interveve nst them in hehalf of neutral commerce, Thae government's five is from the shove, and it has promised protection for the contigusus line of docks from their five. But Mollo's are firing witho® regard to the se- curity of the docks, 1v scems to be consid- ved doubtful in the itate -department whether the government would be ware be taken on th ranted in iotorvening to preveut the insurs ¢ from fixing their line of fire, It is questional ther the right of neutral it Lo have & land ing vlace kept safe In o besieged city, Watching American (nterests. New Youk, Dec, & In response to a teles gram from President Atwood of the Marie tiine association to the secretary of state ab Washington asking that proper steps be taken by the United States government tu protect American commercial interests in Brazil the following has been received Euwann 8. ATwoon, PRresibest Mamrivg ASSOCIATION: Answerlug your tolegraw of 2151, this government Is taking steps 1o ascers tain the exact military and commercial situus ton at Rio and other Brazilian polots in order 1o Instruct nuval cotmanders to protect leglte lwate American Interests W, Q. Gresuan, Socretary of State, Will Strengthen the Forces, CONSTANTINOFLE, Dee. 23 -The Porte has decided to reinforce the Turkish troops as Yusg in Asiatic “l'urkey, where serious 1iots huve recesbly occurred,