Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 14, 1895, Page 1

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PAGES 1 TO 8. £00CCOCECOCOEeeeeeet L1 THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871. SINGLE COPY FIVE COENTS. IN JEOPARDY MORNING, JULY 14, 1895— WENTY PAGES THE BEE BULLETIN. t Cloudy; Warmer; South Winds. LN 1 :' ? 1 T IVhr\ nglish te grant Ireland her just and N ‘wnuw on ace \|; of the Bartlett scandal ln‘w \ N N\ stons himselt will not say. His appeal Is known in New York and Chicago tociety, the too vagne to be effective. The Irish nation- Weather For hat, tix m 2 P ’ compation of Lady Henry Somerset and her Resame of Earopoin Affairs. i Uenditions of | altes Wemacives are quarreling. They are | Gorell's Unbappy Fato at Henley Subjeots | sons turing thie visit 1at year, and of ex- | Rosobery's Great Rival Liboral Leador De- e eaeiinmens. | Bvssin Determined to Foros the Island Eme A Tavorable to tho Tnlonists, AT AT B T e This Country to Abuss, Secretary Whitney's son on_ his recent trip feated for Par'i: ment in Derby, Russin 18 Pressing Jupan Closely pire to Texm, vention in Londonderry this week with great .0 l"‘l‘”' ‘“""H" "‘“" ““;"m:;““‘-‘ """ ""'”; 2. Omaha Loses n Game in Missourk sermkil BITERPRRIL, . ik Ve TIETIE OREYL Lk seat candidate in the Walthamstow division Gt Closing Events at Asbury Fack. LIBERALS SEEM BADLY DISORGANIZED [p\fierness, whey huve little monew. A KIeat |y NASTY RCMARKS MADE PUBLICLY | Bscex. the second largest constituency in| TREMENDOUS GAINS BY THE UNION'STS| Matinee oaduter Kinees n Success. | WEAKER MUST YIELD IN SOME POINTS ' 1o 1o | fOr the legal expenses, amounting in each B + SANDERSON'S STORY. ) Lealers Lack Authority and the Partyfs ..o 0 WU 000 500 | 01d Glory Torn from House Boats on the | Syvil Sa derton s given o formal fnter- | §ir Williom's Majority of 4000 Wired| | S ae Czar's Powor Will Not Be Felt if His Ina . it has ) D707 600, THAL. INeY Wil tFeh HorADS. €6 view for publicatior ply to ors con- ek in Local Socloty. : With-ut a Policy. P O A b Mot Thames by College Men. KiHg: VEHEOL AT, R b aarey oF | Out by More Than 1,700, Matiars Suvieat B Sttienls taresta Ave Ocnpldseed, New York. She said in explanation of her . 5. Preachers Chase the Lin N i 5 N ey 5. ot CHEmiaIves TSir. Gron i 4 i ecent {liness and the sult.of the Paris Opera | & Naval Experis on & War ¥ 4 . SALISBURY HAS HIS FORCE3S IN HAND : ‘IVL\»}A'K «'u‘:i I yl ‘km\l:::(n.'\:n‘.rl; *- | HOODLUMS WARMING UP THE CAMPAIGY ;“r ‘“mw.\.y . I"llh(}-‘u I."vnm:' x :::\.::.l ‘.1 LB:RALS LOSE EIGHT SEATS CLEARLY | o n":m L |‘AI .I u"u-m Wekieeh X NOWAER. BENErSUES America, whence funds uged to flow freely and to set ease In my own country. The | Centervilie's Keception to Gen. Drake. Knows Where He is Going and What He | flow no longer. Mr. Healy’s charges that the 7 o L., | 7 Work of the County Commissioncrs. anti-Parnellites sold four seats outright to Tories Gein More Thin One-TLird in| Lessons for Local Tennis Me they will have little left houses and rallway cars are kept too hot in | America, I fell a victim to the system, and Pelting of Rir William and Lady Harcourt China's Conqueror May Extend Her Cone 3 Expects to Do There, f i Christian Endeavorers Kained On, 1 n o ) the liberals may or may not be true, But Only an Incident, caugiit a fearful cold. If 1 could have stayed Twenty-Two Eleotions, Valentine Nock Commits Suiclde. quest, but in Presoribed Limits, the fact that such charges are made and FESaat quietly at home to take care of myself I 10; Cola at Nohinol 16 Finanos are met rather by explanations than by de could have got well, but going about f f it y IRISH SITUATION ALL BUT HOPELESS | ™, A . ki o ald have got well, but going about from 4 £ Hardships of Border Wartare. . " nials shows to what point the demoralization [ SINGSTRZSS SYBIL SANDERSON'S STORY | town to town, exposed to heat ana coid, and | OVERWHELM:NG V CTORY FOR SALISBURY [ 11. wuren of the Mows Hags® BEAR WILL TOLERATE NO COMFROMISE :‘ v ¢ hv-"l ,{:u-‘«;‘.‘lrnm ; ‘u‘ Irish y;w to the draughts of the theater, I fell, and at Headed for the Stab e for Good, — arreling of the Nutlons Has Undone | 18 t0 win in English boroughs, by the help ordered to leave my companions | 2 § . Qoarreling of the Nutlonallsts Mas Undone | 0 B i 8 o AN Win only by en- | Denles that She Hid Herselt from the Di- | Boston was ordered to leave my companions |y ;. ¢iong Ave tint te Will Have Enongn | 19. Kditorial and Comment, Assures Her Vietim of Lusting Friendshlp All that Farnell Ever Accomplished k i end return to Europe. At London I consulted 13, Hurncssing the Lightning, 4 thusiasm, d work, confidence in their rectors of the rls Opera, that She several physicians, who forbade me to sing Votes to Ignore the Irish in the ¢ In the Event—Extensions of Terrie and Leuves Home Rule an Uns English allies, from whom, nevertheless, LEMIPLLL L, u B Echoes from the Aute Room. (tainuble Thing. they must hold aloof. All these conditions EHIGUILVEIIOE R FARIR TS before T was completely resto I hoped, Next House—Eulat Hops Play Grounds for Public Schools, tory in Coren Are - S S e 47" aBRoTiL . e TR RERAAIT ARG to te Secn. however, thanks to the regimen I was fol for Rosebers. 14, Miue dackets in Demand tistitiy AvAuio GAck: (hitd: Ldt/AEAL 6L GRRUIBUAY BomWHItIEn b ity T UL LGy LRSI ik 15, Commerctal u ' srants 1 s e i % | work at Paris in opera in J I ought to 16. Meoting n Wildeat at Ho. W YOR ily 13.—(Spec o among themselves and of political dependence | . g & Wideat at Home, Séneral election in Englend, which 1s to do. | livered them. Thelr desertion of him was a | o LONDON, July 13—(New Xork World | T was not in a fit state to sing. Immediately | LONDON, July 13.—(New York World Ca- | 17, ohn Sherman on Publlc Watters, OKI10, Japan, June 20.—(Via San Frane 2 el U] s R disaster and his disgrace and death are likely | CADIegram—Special Telegram)—The news- | [ wrote Directors Gayhard and Bertrand, ex- | blegram—Special Telegram.)—There were Drinking for the Liver's Sake. cisco, July 13.)—(New York World Corresponde cile within a fortnight who shall govern @ ECE T CC L Lo A the main causes | Pavers, daily and sporting, have commented | pressing my regret and sending them certifi- | twenty-two contested elections in England Women's Clubs and « ultare, ence—Special Telegram.)—Immediately after that country for probably six years to come | and what her foreign policy is to be. All Buropean eyes are turned thither, and the contest is so important I wlil venture to gth. The point of the general election in England is a clear one, but has not, so far as I hear, been stated in this country. The point Is SE R e BE LA R in the most ungenerous manner upon the | cates of seve | As for Mr. Gerald Balfour, the ne secretary and ruer of Irland, he is a brilliant potentiality 1 doctor Irish | eXplanatory letter of Cornell's captain. | deemed the certificat They acknowledge that not only did the | reque These gentlemen | wsufficient proof, and me to come to Paris to be exam- | proportion of more than one-third, T he Russian envoy in Toklo began to mani- crew have every technical right to the heat, | jned by ir doctors. The request reached | dicates an overwhelming unionist majority in ‘rwt an extremely conciliatory disposition, He but that the umpire's act in following the | e very late, because they wrote to me first | the next house. The most astounding fact is || Bave the strongest personal assurances that crew over the course e Cornell every |t my old address, which I left two vears | the defeat of Sir Willlam Harcourt in Derby, [ Rosefleld, liberal. At the last election the | his government had acted with no fe:ling ot not only were acting | ago, The y wrote to the Avenue Male- | regarded as the very heart of liberal Eng- [ liberal majority was 224. animosity; that under certain conditions the strictly within the rules and that they might | koft, but my hotel is shut, for my mother and [ land. He had over 4,000 majority in 18 In Perth, Scotland, Mr. R. Wallace, liberal, f 1<}and empire could reckon on the permanent elected by a mafority of 374 over Mr. W.|good w 8. Base Ball and Other Goss'p. the announcem:nt that Jap 0. With the Whirling Wheels. to the superior force of the Womn Her Ways and Her World had ylelded ropean league he unionists have gained cight seats, or a | and the returns at miduight show that | | is in- { state my own view at some LVER CUTS NO FIGURE. Bimetallism forms no part of the program | of this ccuntry and will form none. Mr. Bal- four and Mr. Chaplin re son to suppose they re bimetallists, two that the unionists know what they are fight- | gu¢ of nineteen cabinet ministers. Mr. Bal. | [Ofelt the heat and therefore be disbarred | gisters are away. M urs Bertrand and | and his re-election was never doubted, but | of its northern n:ighbor. The rep- ing abcut and the liber do not. | four's elcction address contained no | [TOM the finals by turning back. Neverthe | Gayhard knew my London adiress, however. | he is now defeated by 1,700 votes, There cin | Whitelaw, conservative, Last fon the | resentative was at some pains to demonstrate 4 Take the liberals first, They have thred|gjjugion to that subject. Mr. Chap- | '¢*% these journals uniformly add the nasty |y pever hid myself while I was there, any | be no doubt that this is due to Sir Willlam's conservative plurality wae 28 that his government's attitude toward Japan i leaders at least, Lord Rosebery, Sir William | in's address has mot been fesued. | SOMMent that no English crew would more than In Paris. Now, we have got as | local veto bill. The keepers of public houses, | 1N Barrow-in-Furness, Mr. C. W. Causer, | is precis:ly what it has been for a quarter Harcourt and Mr. John Mol Lord Rose- | 1t would be dust as reasonable to infer that | 2160 (0 turn back. ‘I put the question o | far as writs and summons. 1 am sorry, for I | otherwise our barkeepers, united with all [ OV vative, was re-clected by a vote of 3,192 | of a century and could In no respect be bery, under a necessity not of his choosing, | bocause Mr. Balfour plays golf or Mr, Chaplin | MaRY Towing graduates of Oxford and Cam- | nover had to complain of my directors. The | their following with the torles, church party | 1° 2135 for W. C. Bonnerfe, radical, and 414 | changed by the sudden development of wants to make the House of Lords the lead- | {s fond of the turf that the ministry was | TI08® 8t Henley on Thursday, and with- | medical examination took place this morning. [ and anti-Irish people. LORRERICUEH RIS A B e Ly S Ul R DR AT ADEOWONR ing fssue. Sir Wiliam Harcourt, with his|committed to what the former cals the scot- | Ut eXception they frankly acknowledged Mesurs, Bertrand ‘andGayhard will no/| As. explained in my dispatch of May 11|°Ver Bonnerje. At the last election the| His argument in eff:ct was this: Russis awashiog blow ready to be dellvored, desired | Ification of Bngland or that horse o et | that with strangers, and uader the present | jgnger doubt my good will and faith.” last, every government has been wrecked | conservative plurality was 43 has watchad with satisfaction the consolidas | 8 S F o IRNEATIORs OB enall 300 SRy 3 3 s In Darlington, Mr. A. Pease, conservative, | tion of Japan's f and does not hesit 10 £9 (0 the country on the temperance ques- | to become a cabinet measure. No doubt ti 4, IS e EE RISl LT ol b e T which antagonizes this liquor interest, It| 0 lect |L|v.'. fority of 657 over Sir o \\‘.”1.(”{ ; iieraats 1ith attire tion, as if England were to be carried on a ‘\ Himetsillo ledgasiin: Boglind lagactive. ;u“fl u:mmm- than g0 on, 15 ATRIIIE B 4| a1 Benderion %as: ukked aBoUb! s 7es | will; Ghviously tINMER Rb.Lhla sinction, st the Tu m’u‘\( .! ! ,; l(. ly[.;« ',” 31‘«»( w; i L (; ’\\’:] i Hu\: v»n\\'n in ‘);s‘u in a measuro ery of local option. Mr. John Morley, obey- | doubt there has been a movement of opinion [ (MITAtlon Whatever from the umpire Uh) ported attempt at sulcide. She answered: fcost of the defeat of many measures in behalf | ;' g i sttt B L L L e i L 10 an impulse of academic enthusiasm, would | toWard a larger use of silver. Mr. Whitney | (" ‘[‘"' ;‘flj ""; _"‘x’| ‘l'l‘ v fair, One mem- |%rhat is infamous. How can people have | of the great mass of the people to which the f * LIt Koo i 0 & vilnerably _eatabiished eata Hfmnx ;X-; ds AN s f saw that when he passed through England on | 27 ©f the Trinity Hall crew, in fact, told | ¢vop pinted so abominable a thing? That day | 1iberal party is pledged, but which the tories OELLY, O 02 AN SEAN gy CamIn DR take down home rule from the shelf, where it Hi6-that e Wik : i varty is pledged, In C N avis, conserva- | rightfully belongs to her has been the ste Wik o) ? p ne that he was at the starting post and saw - , 3 : : ; n Chatham, Mr. H. D. Davis, conser ightfully belongs to her has been the steads S ¢, 1893 S eal| M8 Way home, and he was a little misled |1 had been to Covent Garden. I was in ex- | will construe as the result of the present has laln ever since August, 1893, and appeal the umpire wave Cornell to go on, althoug ive, was elected by a majority of 683 over | fast desire of the ruler at St Petersbury S | by it. If he had talked with some of the | L ke > B0 on, although | waent spirits and never thought of dying, | election as the verdict of the nation. i e pd ) L) X to England to do Justice to Ireland. this is denfed by others present at the : R. H. Cox, liberal. Last election conserva- [ Japan reduced to feebleness, incapable of res } 3 leading English financiers they would have 3 Lottt i at thefyep they came and aroused my sister to ask LORDS MAY LAST LONGER. - . al. Lag o How is a battle to be fought when you tart. On this point on others, Cornell | ¢ t % o fo 7 e T tive majority 377, sisting aggression from any quarter, would : told him just w it meant. They are of |~ >’ 4 e 'l for information. The calumnies that have The crusade against the House of Lords is| 4 3 ¢ do not kuow under what leader or under : 2 men are perhaps commendably reticent. So o In Derby, Mr. H. Begrose, conservative, | for obvious reasons be an object of constant e the same mind now that they wers when Mr. J S0 | heen spread abroad lately are beyond belief. | also rclegated to the dim future. That v LI 4 h what flag you fight? intenee i the feeling against them 80 S . and Mr. G. Drage, conservative, defeated |anxiety; sclf-reliant and resolute, she would SHRIRY ey N WA TN Alfred Rothschild made his provosal to the 2 b e y They have even gone so far as to say that I | wise politician, Benjamin Disraell, said thirty 3 Ik th ROSEEERY ADMITS HIS WEAKNE Brussels conference, that silver should be a | 6211 unfortunate is their position, that they | 45 cq not come to Parls bébause I could not | years ago that even the most strenuous na- | the two sitting members, Rt. Hon, Sir W supply a guarantee of surcty against many ¥t i 0 4 upable aalnibisr, ton, o | Brilsl e should bo a | P K O eent upon points. 1 | dared not come to Paris bets years ago tha enuous na- | S liberal, and Sir T, Rose, liberal, | Influences on the continent of Asia. If Japan : legal tender to the value of £5. That was ) show myself for reasons too delicate for me | tional Issues would not in this century per ' ) i RIS UTE S s TR Ly Stie Ui adht AN a: token ot gosd) wiILE Heland hia]|naoD chere IS0 REriousioo trovarays t6 Btats, Well, T am hese® Dible oan wes | Buade the peopla of Great.Britatn to aboitsh | FOUOWINAEIRESNG vele: - H. Bigrose, 7,007 W1l accept Russin'a triendahip . with jts ENGRABGL he himsslf has'admitted sidee i LA ' Lot T TO THE FLAG state. Well, I a 3 L R i, - L ks S AR Ty v understanding that no erencs wit . AR o) NSRS dmlited IS | friends thought then and think now that the IN e ) ishe) JlerXey el T il show myselt‘on the Place 4| the hereditary house, Mr. Gladistone and Lord | DFeRe) T/708fC Btr Wliliam V. Haroourt, | Understanding that no dlifterencs with the overthrow that he could not enforce h I can add to their letter, however, the 3 6,785; Sir T. Rose, 6,7 Begrose received | latter's continental plans can be tolerated, & ; demonetization of silver 1 a certain : g I'Opera it they like, but what in the world [ Roscbery made this the main issue of the | 6783 Sir T. . c kALl ek ke SR authority. Who then s to decide? Or 18 | poine fs fnjurlous to Engla use it In- | {3Ct Which has not been published here, | .o’ gona to make people talk o much of | present contest. Today's result shows that | @ plurality of 1,123 over Harcourt and D el andy latingralienostmay e el | BiBhody to decide?. There are: othar fsstex. | Ay ! that when the umpire on Tuesday evening 3 p it it 5 \ i .. | received a plurality of 601 over Rose. At [lished Y creases the difficulty of maintaining her gold 4 me, and above all, with so much malevolence, | they were mere school bo: thelr ignoranc ! RUSS IORRITY. There Is Welsh disestablishment and a host | reserve. The more silver can be made to do | Cered the 100 guineas up for a match race, | \o ! "|N,:,"‘ ‘f: at Baden very ill, when on | of popular sentiment the last election Rt. Hon. W. V. Harcourt QUESTION RUSSIA'S SINCERITY. of miscellancous ltems, known as the New- | duty for gold the less the drain of gold. That | LC4nder positively refused to contest again | oo iy paper she saw the announcement | A8 to home rule for Ireland, a coalition [ Who was the former liberal chancellor of ““ 1ssla has f‘|l“"""‘.'" her platform with castle program. There is the financlal policy [ s about all thore s In English bimetallism, | "N4eT any clrcumstances, while Cornelt as | ¢6< I8 & S U b i ™AL the | Bovernment can do what it likes, because the | the exchequer, reccived a plurality of 1961 | [ S msiatior & “"ln‘l:mv:“-r'vl“lflml sl of Sir William Harcourt, with his increased | except in o far as it s theoretical and acado. | PFOmPUY expressed eagernes to aceept the | o W SEUSCR RS Rt L v | verdiot of the country agamat It can be con- | over the leading candidates of the conserva- | (o8 PRCR T RO N by AL income tax, his flagrant partiality to the | matic. But that may ultimately have a con- | MAlch. I may aleo add a fact to which no | oS nginer and camplet. my convales- | strued as overwhelming. It looks as If the | tives, and Bir T. Rose recelved & plurality | opqrg Ruagls"is" slncerd.” Wiils the Wi working classes, his flagrant unfalrness to | siderable cffcct upon the silver industry and | QlUsion has been made here, that after mid- | /0 5 oSG T DG (anish my en- | unionists will have a majority sufficent to | of 2,026, oo 42 m(}'-‘;r-“", Ll i kil ¥ fadle Fo . SPoess 9 d t of Thursday a band of young men | “"¢® by end Vi ¥y YA o B DEHEL LA the middie classes, his soclalistic progressive (on the market value and monetary use of the [ "EMt of Thursday e oo Mer | gagement here, for I trust that the difficulty make them independent of the Irish vote, €0 ypqyy FUKNISHES THE SENSATION [ their big neighbor would stand by them, death dutles and that whole scheme of legal- | white metal. tippadithellnllen s ates] dareitrom weveralili ey (e o nara willine quitkiy arFAn Eta Tanaljicoay Ko SOARE AEnall FasHORKE AbDRtrdoLIEH — Hbtmatter ew tar they might a0 WL » tzed brigandism embodied in his last two| OF INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION. launches and house boats occupled by Ameri- | " 0 E L E G ople will dn fu- | Will be of no avail in the next house. They [ Atoarthyltes Demy that Tiero 18 Ans | ¢ iijusion da disp 0. ey vaat (b utmost e A s g ol ataRiK 1on) 62 ol lea!|n Orenteilh ens | S8R wialioreiit} Henley, handBthit thevoceusi| | RS it SRS KRG may give a sop to Irish demands in the shape Foundation for the Charges, e e A LR L B e p et o Tty o e e oo (P21 | panthiof one. of the coliege :boat Houses— UL L of an extension to Treland of the present | (Copyrighted, 185, by the Aoclated Prose. | CUTCES of dlstrust. The real statesumen, hows SR o T = g o A for their own sake I will not mention which Lis: 8 2 English system of county and parish local| LONDON, July 13.—The general elections ’ § ! K opgLix be L ingmen. I belleve the workingmen in Eng- | apt to be a roaring torrent. What has inter. & Mrs, Mary Anderson-Navaro has written an | r&18 SYSUHS of con O D e e ett ot the | sense. Their conviction I that their country, land, as in America, take higher views than | ested Americans most thig week is the vote [;-M21¢ the whole night hideous by a con- |, iopioeraphy, which is now in press. LGl L e Set b R el S s R R that, and that the best appeal that can be | Of the French Chamber in favor of a perma- | {/NUCUS paraphrase of the Cornell colleg Du Maurier's new novel deals with artist isreiinta bara Ciance; thatatadayin.yesults |[TL1LAN a0k D S0RCHO LIRS, P BNORICOLED, 1At thay tankiimolit : i ! . be L. (O] R oM E AT 18 e Tl thio | - AUEISHR N WA e may not be conclusive as to the final issue, | head have been uppermost in the public |4Md they assume that Rusisa would not go made is for Justice and cqual rights, and not | hent arbitration treaty with the United s 18 in the | i o0 London and Belgium, as well as in | %Y A T N e 10 s0 wild an undertaking as absoluts cone : iRt e i ! ol it i 1 it is not | Sharpest contradiction, however, to the very | p. i = Trilby. | Since in 1502 the first day's elections did not | mind during the past week. The elections ! ! for (he plllage of property owners. At any | States. We have no detalls, and it fs not | iove "t ol S o Sy SO | Paris, and will be more ourlous than TribY. {001 o jiberal majority. The elections | practically commenced yesterday with the re- | Quest, since it 1s clearer to Russla'a advan, rate they do not scem likely to rally in great [ known whether the French government will [ {HF0IHC HC BORPIEONE CORC e Vic- | A new, cheap, Illustrated edition of the latter | (U (LT S o sieh disastrous | turn of thirty-six unopposed caniidates, in | (8¢ to maintain peaceful relations with 1 force for a party which has three contend- | take any action. It is not bound to. Resolu- f ‘*} has not met with success, hardly more than [ R GURREE B Tl spent the | cluding (b1 ty conservatives, (h ee Liber 18 and | Japan as a powerful, Indepcndent state as ornell competes at the next Metro | aia the former expens politan, on July 25, she will probably meet | irqted. there the Thames, London, Molesby and | Hall Caine, author of *“The Manxman,’ IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. Commons has declared for arbitration, but ‘I"f""‘l“;‘ gihap v"”“l;“‘f‘ clubs, but neither | will make, with his wife, a pleasure visit to different s the state of things on the | this declaration, like 5o many others, remains | LGFITET T Y CUEDKE MTEns | the United States next autumn E unlonist side. True, there has been a coali- | ® Pious opinion. The truth is that the foreign | . ';_ l“ :"'"r'l "('“-l "M“ q" ]"!‘*‘ of Inter- | The genfal and deserving Marshall Wilder tion between liberal unionists and conserva. | °Mices of France and England, like our own | "210R80 BPOVL ASL e mAOWE ROt have | has been giving entertainment at Mrs. tives, but the coalition s complete, and the | St3te department, know the enormous aim- | S BVER FRECY | TERTEEIATR AReriean | Ranalday andi cliier, London gifkion; ano s = unlon of the two parties under the name of | CUltles in giving practical effect to these ami- 1:':'(' St Qoilal Croker ara o B ROY, JRURE At AL SRR 1 Biiiis i conciits, The sanitin o | bie asplrations. place of Gould, Croker and now a crew of | ° Lale Fuller gave a miduight representation | R Lt woek e s corliaa oo, AR | g iptan ta' Lo (establish & ipermanent triy [ Y2URE men Who, However timable, were | of her dances in “Salome' at Manchester, at : o longer. not sufficlently acquainted with racing cus- | the invitation of Sa Bernhardt, The True, alio, Lt there are four men in the toms to avoid this last serious contretemps. | American danseuse writes: *I cannot de doed,” writes a conservative English friend, | 0% Would be bad for another. What con- | gt BPSTONE B bie €0 OO L e st have Imbued me with some of “with four prime miniaters in tho house” | TOVErsies are to be submitted to arbitration. | SEERRE ST TR, (BEAL PRI SR L e power for the moment, for 1 Balfour Is a man of unylelaing firmness, but | The resolution says all controversies. Does | o0 00 o FE o :r T‘“}ml e kil st . Lord Salisbury is none the less leader, an | 1Y American suppose we shall submit to any s 8 gland:uLast CLOSED THE BOND DEAL. T Y J tribunal whatever a question involving our | BNt at the Derby the carriage that Sir 5 o & . cognized and obeyed as leader. The | Bt TAECEE B G O RO D8 (08 | william and Lady Harcourt, the daughter of | Assistant Sccretary Curtls sailed today by duke of Devonshire, whom 1 should call the | av 0 SHERRCE BF WEOEE (OROTE R | ihe American historian, Motley, were driving | the New York. He completed yesterday the fncarnation of common sense, has twice re- ; detalls of the transfer of bonds, entirely sat- . T b Loy was attacked by a large gan : fused the premlership. Mr. Balfour's time | 3/PUtes as are capable of being referred to v 8¢ gang of rufflans, and | | ¢, 0oy and adds that in all his conversa- edition not illus ing heads and no leader who can lead and [ tions of that sort, asking governments to do no clear knowledge of what it wants its |Oon€ thing or another, are often passed and e o Tor 4 come to nothing. The English House of [t day on his yacht, the Santa Cecelia, which |three Parnellites. Among the unopposed & as the ambitious purposes of the twa he has started on a cruise to the west coast | members elected are Hon. George Goschen, | Matlons do not clash. They are disposed to of Scotland. He at least has a safe seat to | representing St. George's, Hanover square, | 'égard the communication of the past six continue in the leadership. His chief rival | London; Sir Ellis Ashmead-Bartleit, membe: [ Weeks as presented in good faith seems to have received a deadly body blow. | for the Ecclescal district of Sheffield, con The outlook, therefore, shapes itself thuss There will, however, be a lively controversy | servative; Mr. John Heniker Heaton, pro- |If Japan will forswear aggrandizement in in the party as to which of the two fs re- | gressive conservative, who represents Canter- | the regions coveted by Russia her aspiras sponsible for the defeat. bury, and Rt. Hon. A. J. Mundella, advanced [ tions in other directions will meet with no BALLARD SMITH. |liberal, the representative of the Brightsile | remonstrances. More than this, in certain division of Sheffield. Mr. Goschen Is the | contingencies —her progress may be ene 184 ELECTIONS | new first lord of the admiralty; Sir Ellis [ couraged. With this problem awaiting solu= Ashmead-Bartlett is a native of Brooklyn an tion it is not surprising that the diplomatie Conservativa Vote Shows a Heavy Increase | was formerly civil lord of the admiralty in [ machinery of Japan moves slowly. and\Thery:Unin Numeray Bentn Lord Salisbury’s administration in 1885 and | The step she is invited to take demands LONDON, July 13.—At present fifty-four |again from 1886 to 1890; Mr. Heaton is‘autho: | profound consideration. It would cost hep censervatives and unionists, four liberals and | of the fmperial ocean penny postage scheme, | many immediate sacrifices, to say nothing of three Parnellites have been elected to Parlia- [ and Mr. Mundella was formerly president of [ complications in the future. The abandons ment without opposition. the Board of Trade with a seat in the cabi- | ment of Corea would be looked upon as am In northwest Manchester Sir W. H. Houlds- | net of the late liberal government and re- | acknowledgement of fallure and add enore worth, conservative, was re-elected by a vote | signed on May 14, 1894, as a result of being | mously to the government's domestic embara of 4,997 to 4,726 votes cast for Mr. T. F.|summoned to appear in court for examina- | rassment. Yet Russia will not be satisfied Byrne, radical, a majority of 1,471 At the | tion as to the affairs of the defunct New |to leave Corea under Japanese control. RESULTS OF ENG bunal before which all international disputes are to be taken. How Is such a tribunal to 18 ot yet come, but Mr. Balfour Is plainly | "PArtial Judges is an excellent thing. Com- C“‘l :‘,"‘i"h‘d”f‘ B‘;“:‘:’{:":‘(Nrf ”:f l,‘xflm"mr‘, tions with English and French financiers ho [ 125t f:l‘c“‘“: Sir W, 'lll-h"""l'h““"lh was re- | Zealand company, of Which he was one of the |y p oz AGTT OF A4 BURGLAR. k the Tenaer of the futtre yge tour 1a PIINY | pulsory arbitration, such as has been pro- ady , were struck with pleces | qung a great increase of confidenge fn | turned Wwithout opposition. directors. Mr. Mundella states that he re- i appointment, of which Indeed there never | POSed: 18 Impossible, and a treaty for com- | Of turf and pebbles. Lady Harcourt, in par- | American securities and the general financial | In east Manchester Rt. Hon. A. J. Balfour, |} signed from the board of directors when he | sortally Injured One Person Serlously i o e jindeed there BEVEr | blgory arbitration would be only one more | ticular, was literally covered with dirt, and | ag well as the currency outlook with us. The | the new first lord of the treasury, was re- | was appointed to the presidency of the Board Wounded Another, ) R /s1l knows s revolt among ,',", “,,,:w‘”..: treaty to be broken. the filth clung to her garments, and even [ London Statist, which up to today's issue has [ elected b \n vf\‘n- ":, l\., to 4,461 rr rl rof. | of Trade. ! ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 13.—A bure I 1. 1s or et {h1is ahieat n o MR. EUSTIS SHOULD SWIM OUT. went down her neck. Mr. Astor's Pall Mall | constantly advised against American invest- [ J: E Monroe, liberal, a majority of In regard to the Henley regatta already £o | glar was discovered early this morning in the t election the conservative major- [ much has be I notice Mr. Eustls and his indiscretions in | Gazette denies the story, but the liberal after. | ments, now calls attention approvingly to the | At the 1 n cabled that not much remains | residence of Isase Davis, a cottager at 113 Parls mainly to say that they are not his first | 1°0n papers repeat it, effect that certain American railroad securi- [ 1t¥ Was g = | to b mm‘. Thai st alghtforward statement | goyh Carolina avenue, by Miss Louisa G. and ought to be his last. His first, in his| Mr. Astor, by the way, has been one of the | ties were sold in London this week at such | In southwest Manchester W. J. Galloway, [ made by Captain Freeborn in behalf of the | ays, o sister, who was visiting the house. capacity as ambassador, was his speech at | prince of Wales' house party this week, with | an appreciated price that .the investor was | conservative, was elected by & vote of 3,994 Cornell crew should set at rest the rumors | \wyen Migs Davis attempted to give an alarm the least conciliatory of English politicians, Lord Salisbury is in the saddle with a grip of iron. He has good hands a ¢+ head and the ste d a good 1 knows its master. +Nor is eicncl 3 to 3,496 for J. M. Astebury, liberal, a major- | circulated by the friends o canders o B o the st doubt where ba meine o oo | the American ainner i London, when he | Colone th as a fellow guest. The latter | content to accept so low an income as 3ig | 10 ‘[‘ “f’_‘” ’“‘_I_ R el me et "'“' ‘!‘ 1“: ’”r":h (\‘:m» m“"’ ’“ ”' she was murderously assaulted with an fron or by what road he will travei, He and his ried the forelgn policy of other natlons | continues his amusing and ungrammatical | Per cent . BABIARD RMITE majority was 148 Tthaca, As Fresbora siated, the umpire:had | LaF:SHesSskull Swastcrushed Sin "a™ (Griula Bt ans Tar. 1o nuraroai i .mul |-\‘I‘ lled ours at thelr expense. In that .,‘.-'; ches |:v“. s contest with Mr. Herbert | « RULLEY CARS COLLIDE ON A GRADI In northeast Manchester Rt. Hon. Sir J.|entire control of the race after It was|™inner. Miss Davis was awakened by & 3 s attacks on Spain and other powers | Gladstone. He concluded last night's address - B : wise in her room, and seeing the burglap —are there first of all to defend the union | > " " A Ferguson, conservative, was re-elected | startel and to disregard his command was q & & S P, g {8 cholaapits several Persons 1 1, Some of Whom g P artel 4 L S i 4 il thataxisting (natititions of (the country: | B hla |.\r tnterview, the question is not | with this choice bit 9 “'Ll;";;‘l by a vote of 891 to 8720 for|sufficlent reason to disqualify a crew. The |Screamed. He then struck her three awful They are all agreed on that, and in England | Whether Mr. Eustis' views are sound, but 1t you return me I am not golng there to| 4 oponmo Ont., July 15.—A terrible acel- | B. Holt. liberal, a majority of | umpire i not in any way indicate his desire | blows and turned to fee from the room. Af whether he, an ambassador, Is the right man | make a show in the house. Iam no useat it. 1 AN d on o |10 express them. He clearly is not. The | have not been bred to it. Iam a man, and policy of what Mr. Chamberlain cal con? usage of all civilized nations requires an am- | a patriotic man like yourselves, Herbert Etructive social reform, That, of cours, nas | D1888d0r to be discreet, silent in matters | Gladstcne had been there thirteen years, and 1o relation to sociallem. It means practial | MECtInNE the government to which he is ac- | has not done nothing for you." (Cries measures for the improvement of the condi crediied, orvsflecting say (risndly = powers, ) Ho s v you can hardly have a better program. In 41. At the last election the conservative ma- | to have the Cornell crew urn, but fol- | the door he was met by Mr. Davis, and Jority was 610. Rt. Hon. Sir James Ferguson [ jowed them to the finish and awarded them | ralsing his iron bludgeon he dealt him & persons were injur three of whom n was postmaster general from 1891 to August, | the | No one regrets the outcome of | crushing blow. In spite of this, Mr. Davis die, and one was Killed. A trolley car belong- | 1892. He has sat for northeast Manchester | the affair more than the members of the | grappled with the murderous intruder, and of | ing to the Toranto line and ané of the Scar- | since 1585. Cornell crew, who afterward frankly | after a flerce struggle succeeded in throwing 3 3 borough cars came Into collisiori‘on the steep | In north Manchester F. B. Sch wledged their defeat by the Trinity | him bodily down stalrs. He was too weak tion of the people, better houses, more land, | "¢ drove Lord Sackville out of the country [ Another contest of interest to Americans | grade near East Thornton®and one car was | eral, was re-elected by a majority Hells in a hard rowed race, saying they had [ to follow up his adversiry and the burglan ccurity for life in dangerous employments | {07 @ 168 offense than Mr. Eustis’. France|is that in Wapping, where Mr. Henry |completely telescoped. The tan was filled with | over A. H. Morton, conservative. no excuses to offer and that they were fairly | escaped. The police are scouring the country and the like. And the workingmen kuow | WOUI be justified in handing him his pass- | Marks, formerly a reporter on the New York | children on their way to Vigtdtia, and over | last election the liberal majority was 312 beaten for clews, Mr that the unionists can pass such measures, | PO England, had she cared anything | World, is the tory candidate, He was elected | a score were badly injured.® James Stuart, 11 In south Manchester Rt. Hon. Marquis of LIONIZING THE ITALIAN: while the liberals, even if they carry them | 2P0Ut It. would have been justified in com- | to the county council last autumn, and will | years old, was killed. Frauk Townsend, 18, [ Lorne, unionist, was elected by a majority [ The Italian fleet arrived off Spithead on the through the House of Commons, have to face | P//BINE of his speech in London, a speech | ikely win the seat in Parliament, unless|had his left leg broken dnd Hght leg cut|of 78 ovér Sir H. E. Roscoe, radical. Last [morning of the th and later the admirals | I'rom ne the House of Lords. Lord Sallsbury's meas. | Mad¢, I was told at the time, in circum- [ peaten by an accident that happened last |and his condition fs serfbus. * Mrs. Lettie [ clection Sir H Roscoe, radical, receiyed | were received on board H. M. 8. Victoria by | LEAV! ures will be such that the House of Lords wil) | $1a0ces of excitement, such as sometimes | night. Mr. Benn, his cpponent, was charged | amble is suffering from:interndl injuries and | 5 majority of 181. John Douglass past. It is a mistake to think that body op- | Prévall after dinner. However that may be, | by Mr, Marks' local organ with raking up | It I8 feared that she canmbt recover. —The | cumpbell, marquis of Lorne, was formerly [ CCvmanding the channcl squadron, the ad | young woman of this city, shot herselt In dent occurred on the Scarborough electric road just outside the city, in which several y are all agre Davis will probably recover, but the young lady will die t Soelety Woman Commits Suleide NWORTH, Kan, July 13.—This ‘Sutherland. | the commander-in-chief, the vice admiral | evening Miss Auna Schwagler, a well known \ posed to soclal reforms. It 1s In fayor of | M- Bustis has now twice brought reproach | o suit between Mr. Marks and his mother. | MOtorman, W. J. Grabam, has both 1gs | governor general of Canada, and married | Miral's superintendent, the rear admiral of | the left breast, it is supposed with sulcidal d them, and Lord Sallsbury bases his defense of | UPOD his country, and it is felt by Americans | yn.law, which created much comment here s | FOKeD below the knee. Conddbtor W. E:|priness Loulse, the fourth daughter of her | the channel squadron 4nd oiher offeers of | intent. The wound s a fatal one aud eho A that house on lts' readiness o execute the | 20708 that it is time he came home few years ago. In reply the newspaper said: | NOFtham had bad injuried ‘about the head | ool ouoen Vietorla., the British flect. The flag officers afterward | will die before morning. Miss Schwagler clearly declired will of the people, : CORNBLE I8 PAINFUL, ““This cowardly conduct 18 more reprehensible | 73 B; F: Durn, akcountaht df;the Toronto | ™ry'Gryinam, Hyde Lopes, conservative, was [ Feturned their vislt on board the fagship. | had been engaged to marry M. D. Donovan, & MAKE YOUR OWN BSTIMATE. Cornell at Henley Is so painful a subject | pacayse it 1s well known that Mr. Benn e Type foundry, is suffering froi' Internal in- e eli~ a0k 40 fovanta D Quite a dramatic scene occurred on board | prominent young business man, and after & 1 I avold predictions, though experts on | (At I touch it briefly. The best thing Cor- | \"gork passage in his own Nfe.” Benn ex- | " o —_— Waddy, Q. C., liberal. At the last election | [h¢ Victoria. where the Guke of G“": on | lovers' quarrel foday . s went lo Danovsa's both sides asoert or admit the probability :l',': :l\: d(‘f\'::l,-‘h;‘fl“,u\x\l‘:x.::m\l.l.:)l ‘I‘x)nm:::uvllt.‘: plained, amid great excitement at a big Inherited an kmieded ¥driuae. the conservative majority was 33, ;"I']“f“‘ "'h“ :)f“’h :‘[‘;:“"‘“:‘ “";I_m: Clao1 | house, and, securing a revolver, shot herselt, of a unionist victory. All I care to do is to A to offer. There is the true ring in that, If CITY OF MEXICO, July #13--Archblshop | ™y, "pyoior gir H, 8. Northeate, conserva- state the general conditions under which she had won it would have been, for her and Guillion of Oaxaca has fnherited from an | ° e - | ot Genoa gazed upon it for a moment and English relative the sam of $13,000,000 in | tive, Wwas re-elected by a majority of 494 On account of the prominence of the parties the tragedy caused much comment. meeting, that this referred to the murder of his father by an insane brother, and Mr. ectio <o 4. K ose, Sidney ; St 210/ then stretched ot his hand and the two = ::" *,lw;;_‘ :ln“;ud‘l::.“::r’,m,:_"“;'\'\"lfiv;"b:h' the art of rowing, a calamity, no matter how ::“"““v’h']’“fi:‘\":;fi"‘[‘:n":";“K'hye for the colonies, | gold, which at the present rate of exchange | OV°F Adu “Abesse Hogs, radical, At the | gmirals, Admiral Salmon and the duke of [ Deliberately Drowaed Herselt, f B e o win. gratifying to us as Americans. Her stroke gl “,O\w:v"h;"“”'- would be equivalent to nearly $25,000,000 in [ last election the conservative majority Wwas [ Genoa, shook hands across the plate with-| WICHITA, Kan., July 13.—Miss Lizzle k No doubt there 1s somé' slgnjficance in the | M® 8!l the faulls. As to the race with o 'm:rm ik B 0““1 b~' T 3 Mexican money. Archbishop Guillion was | 561 : - S S A out gpeaking and surrounded by the officers | Thomas deliberately walked down to the fact that ut the very beginning ffty-four | L€ander, Corneil was within her strict rightt. | Herbert Na ‘]m‘l ALY “d iwoen Cap- | already very wealthy and there is on foot a | In _.\um. Sanford Mr. Platt Higgins, con- | ¢ poth fleets Maple street bridge In this city today and unionists and only four liberals have been | CMIValry aud the credit of the country passed Ny “"‘; N ’l'}" and and Mr. Geozge | movement to bestow upon him the mitre | servative, was elected by a majority of 6| The Itallan officers and men are being | threw herself into the flood of the Arkansas elected unoppased. Slgnificant, also, s it | Out Of her recollection for the moment, 1| Cureon at Southport. Leland's relations there ( by the church authorities at Rome. over Mr. W. H. Holland, liberal, the sitting | very warmly received and are being feted, | river. She was picked up dead two blocks tiat tn the ether constituencles there are | 40Nt care to blame individuals. The effect on | 2re denouncing him for abandoning the tory Will Establish Mized Posts in Brasil, member. Last election the liberal majority | dired and lunched several times every day. | below, ten minutes afterward. She had been Bt o rtean L whi e ot conteats | English and Ameriean feeling was for a time | PAFtY and Mr. Curaon and his brother fexstat | pARIs, July 18.—The Politique Collonatse | a8 257 This reception is intended to be and is in- [ employed here as a domestic, but was out of the seat and about ninety which liberals do | distressing. That has worn of, and the best | the house of his uncle, Sir Herbert. Both have | ynngunces that with the view of avoiding a | 10 West Sanford Mr. Lees Knowles, con- | terpreted as an offset to the Franco-Rus- | work and committed suicide, haviug run down Dot think it worth whlle to fight, No such | tHINE We can do now 1s to forget an adven. | American wives, who are engaged in the cons | repetition of the recent. ‘donfiict between | Servative, was re-elected by a majority of [slan demonstration upon the occaslon of | to her last penny. Her people live In Mers proportion is likely to be maintained fn the | tura of which the gallantry was a little Quix- | est, Which is oftensively personal. Mr. Cur- | French and Brazilian settlers in the dis- | 100 over B. K. Armitage, liberal. Last elec- | the opening of the Kaiser Wilhelm canal | cer county, O. Bnal results. The value of these figures fs | 0llc in the beginning. and the result melan- | 200 and Captain Leland were formerly close | puted territory of Amapa, the governments | tion the conservative majority was 40. between the Baltic and North seas, The | o.p ' =m0 moral. They polnt to discouragement among | choly. As a rowing man, it seems to me | friends, and the former made speeches in | of France and Brazil haye decided to estab- | In South Sanford Sir H. H. Howerth, con- [ duke of Genoa has gained the good will of [ givms™ pp N M., July 13 ,‘,‘.,,,h:r' 1 the liberals and confidence among the union- | that Corne!l was smply overtrained and out- | behalf of Leland. He now publicly charges | lish mixed posts in that region. servative, was re-clected with a plurality of | everybody by his cordial grectings of the | oo o peon named a8 the date on which tsts. * rowed. ORGE W. SMALLEY. that he then also wrote Captain Leland's — -— — 74 over Mr. A. Forrest, liberal. H. W. Ho- | Brtish officers. Archbishop Chappelle will be formally ine If you ask where Ireland comes iu, the speeches. Harriron Siarts £ .0 the Monarelns bart, soclalist, recelved 813 votes. At the| The duke of York and the first lord of the | voieq with the pallium at the cathedral in answer s dificult. Whatever Mr. John!| Movements of Ocoun Steamers, July 18, Henry M. Stanley and friends are mak- S—‘\"_:T"‘"\, July 13.—Ex-President Harrl- | .. election the conservative's plurality was | admiralty, Rt. Hon. George Goschen, ac-| i oiiy by Cardinal Gibbons. Mgr. Batolls, Morley may say or wish, home rule is not| At New York—Arrived—Standard, from | ing great efforts for him in North Lambeth, | 3™ ‘\“ has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs companied by all the lords of the admiralty | fecon or twenty archbirhops and bishops and the leading issue. Mr. Gladstone has put | Humburg; Northern Light, from Rotterdam;|and his wife, formerly Dorothy Tenant, fs | 1o MCKee at the United States hotel, left | "0 (0 o (g and a number of distinguished officials, went r n today for Ca 08 - als, wentt neny priests from all over the country will orth » iaglc lantern mauifesto lmploring | Biruria, from Liverpool. also an active canvasser, but he is very un-|the ‘Adirondacks, Dosfswer O Rocgp, v (Coutinued on Third Page.). atiend the ceremony, Seeley, conservative, was elected by a majority of 218 over W. C

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