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OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, 1903—FORTY PAGE CRISIS IS PECULIAR Unusual Tima Required in Filling Three Places in the Oabinet. KING INSISTS UPON SOUND TIIBER! Plan Was to Patch Up the Ministry with Beveral Weaklings. | SUGGESTS A MAN FOR THE WAR OFFICE ESTABLISHED JUNE GIBBONS IS IN FAVOR| 19, 1871, 27, SEPTEMBER CASTLE AT ABARGAIN| Duke of Manchester Geois u Mags Estate at Fraction of Its Cost. | KYLEMORE CASTLE IS A WONDERFUL PLACE BALLOONISTS" ARE CONFIDENT. ] Talk of Tran Practically Certain WASHWOMAN NOT A DRUDGE Those of Paris Are Gaye and a Clas Themslves. THE BEE BULLETIN. f COTTON'S SHIPS STAY | American Will Not—lrmo" 8quadron from 1 Turkish Wears st Prosent. 1rufi:s TRANQUILLITY Believed to Be jlu_ponlihh for Peace Prevailing at Beyroot. | Problem. | | LEISHMAN FEARS TO LET VESSELS GO | Intimates that the Kiois Might Be Resumed in Their Absenoe BULGARIAN ARMY IS VERY - ACTIVE Iantic Trip as Being ot of the G All by Forecast Sunday r Nebraska Monday Fair Fair and Warmer Suce Page 1 Gibbhons in in Fay Manchester Geta Bargain fn Castle. a Pecullar One. ay at Beyroot. ||T§ PRESENCE Tronble Among Iron Workers. | thewson Quits Indian Service, Woman Shot by Persistent S News from Nebraska Towns. Methodist Conference ni Fremoat. Inspector Tells of Machen Deal. Negroes Discuss Race in Tight V¥ se Dynnmite, Police tnable to Solve Mystery. Past Week in Omnaha Soclety. (Copyright, 198, by Press Publishing C PARIS, Sept. % —(New York World New Pops Makes a Significant Remark Re- AY HAVE INFLUENCE ON CHURCH MERE | biegram--special Telegram.)—"1 expect accompany Rechus and Capazza in thelr garding the Amer’oan Oardinal. | balloon trip across the Atlantic ocean,” Power of Bato'li aud Martinelli Likely t0 | uaia Baron Alphonse Berget to the World Be Oonsiderably Lessoned. correspondent today. “The expedition will cost at least $1,000,000. Nothing but fal'ure | ! to raise that sum of money will prevent us | CHANGES BEING MADE ABOUT VATICAN | from essaying to carry out the enterprise -‘_nu(; SAID TO HAVE HAD AN EYE ONIT — | | (Copyright, 1928, by Press Publishing Co.) PARIS, Sept. 2EqNew York World Cablegram—Special Teélegram.)—Among the working classes of PEHS there is no m re coquettish member thAn the jaanty Mttle washerwoman, the “Blanchisseuz Parisi- enne.”” She carries her basket on her arm or her bundles swung over her shoulder In the airigst way as she tri along, and to see her one would newer g “aiate her with soap and suds. She 18 )0 4V, bareheaded, | but with her halr & L and befrizzled Grounds the Most Beautiful of Any in the [in the most bewite modest fashion, Emerald Isl and nearly always) "Siccars a “smart, . cheap little costy & good taste and S— very becoming, 7 & £ ribbon or a bit of RARE TREES AND SHRUBS ABOUND llvln'nlur'k sor’ «¢ as a finishing at- traction. : 8he may 7 Mitchell Henry, the Ootton King, Spent Milliens to Oreate It. nce. The baron is the professor on physical . , | geography at the Sorbonne, and it was one | Everywhere Aro Evidences of a New Regime ’ of his lectures on the trade winds that put | § \ the Idea of this transatlantic airship voyage 8 the Fapa! Talaoe into the head of the eminent geographer, Hliss Réchus, who enilated the aeronaut, | OLD OFFICIALS ARE BEING REPLACED | Louls Capasza and Baron Berget in the project e, “1 believe the trip 18 perfectly feasible,” | Acting Secretary of State jn Unpleas- | the baronl went on. ““The course has been ant Position, as Italian Infl determined by a careful research Into the Are Opposed to Him as a Forelgner. Alro Desires Itlnt Lord Milner Take the Qolonial Beoretaryship. BALFOUR TO POSTPONE DISSOLUTION Woman in Club and Charity. Blufts and Jown News. Country Club Playe Attack St. Louis Rridge C Great Rec I Carelessness Rew Crelghton Wins Amusements and W . Weekly Review of Sports. Masic in the Regular Army. Speeches ut the Marmony Meeting. Editoria (o What the Wife Adds to Life. | adrone Chasing in Luzon. Slickest of All the Sleuths Stgn s of Human Character. Commercial and Financial Takes Gas Route to Eternity. sut or burn one's clothes In a trice she is the airlest, most obliging fie. person M. her talk imagi- rable. She khows how to explain away all missing articles or to atcount in the most | plausible, polite fashion to ong not l\l\'lllli received clothes on the day asked for, ... 1 In the ironing room she looks as fresh as (Copyrighted, 1003, by Press Publishing Co.) [\ “rooe® gye vl o MiCe “ine troning board DUBLIN, Bept. ¥.—(New York “'"'l:“ with a little song on her lips, and keeps | Cablegram—Special Telegram.)-The Auke | ;.10 4y eye on the street door for a pass- of Manchester succeeds “The Cotton Lord | (¥ S0 S80 B S 8 e W there 18 | of Manchester” in the possession of K¥le- |, qayy o bouquet of flowers and frequently { more castle; tho young nobleman who WAt | o yluok cat curled up. On the wall hangs | rled Miss Helena Zimmerman of Cinelnnath, | oot "0 o fiiustrated calendar. Some- { U. 8. A., has bought the beautiful residence | oo "2 "D giar of @ punchinello sits upon | route exactly similar to that taken by |and estate which Mitchell Henry reared and | yn, ghclr, very often a canary hangs in Columbus. The trip could be made from | created on the edge of lovely Lough Kyle- | i oo “ 00" oo and chirps while the Lisbon with three chances of success in | more, Connemara, County Galway The | little washerwoman sings to a brisk moves seven. From Madrid the chances of suc- | duke is to be congratulated on securing one | n....¢ o¢ hor iron, = by cess would be five in seven, From the | of the most desirable country places fn | 1"y " oo ooicy oo asmoctate the Pari- Canarfes the proportion is twenty-eight In Great Britain—and none the less because he stan washerwoman with & romance. There thirty.” paid only $315,000 for all that cost the for- |y, 5 hint of soapy, red elbows about her. “But Aeronaut Fondvielle suggests start- | mer owner millions. he’ washing all atpédih:to Bk dene ‘sud {ng from the Azores,’ remarked the corre- | Mitchell Henry was a power in the cotton | Lous ang she looks as if she wera always spondent. market forty years ago. Ife bought cotton | o, gress parade. In fact, thers is no end fondvielle 18 a fine aeronaut,” repl lih) the crop; he had business houses in of small Parts amourets in which the wash- Borget, “but his statement shows that he | Belfast and Manchester; he was called | oo, " e o B0 e ine rinctpal parts. never studied meteorological conditions, { “The Cotton Lord of Manchester;” his in- |y "oy b arter 1t frequently happens There is practically no wind at the Azores, | fluence reached out to New Orleans and |y " o lnggerby in the street sees a that being the point of highest atmospheric | Calcutta. Born of an aristocratic family | yuaere o the Sorbonne filrting over his pressure, the alr currents always being ir- | of the Tsle of Wight, Mitchell Henry made | ;" iy the washor of it In the little regular. Starting from the Canarles we|a great fortune. laundrien that abouty’ (6 the Sliaiter.. As know what to expect. And for the dura- | To rear his castle, to create his estate, he | "/ Ty Byl 00 not envy the tion of the voyage, I wowd predict four | sought the wildest section of Conmemara |, cr”ouo™y oo ™ gy By By p i re Aa¢s as the shortest and twelve the long- | then; the lovely seclusion of the “Twelve| oop B W8 0 (g pag o greater est. The balloon would have a capacity of | Pins,” or Beno, one long mountain with | il SONR N Ton 00t the street, about 530,000 cuble feet, which 18 not ex- | twelve peaks rising from it at regulay Inter- \y o yee” on arm, Mnging bright, maliclous traordinary as to dimension, for during the | vals, of which the highest, Ben Baun, 18| jonooe'or bon mots at her male acquaint- exposition at Parls in 1§78 asconts were | 2400 feet above the sca level. There he . . *."0 "trpy along tn her mn‘hmm‘ made with a balloon of 800,000 cublc feet, | bought 1,460 acres of land. shosa. Thi . Parisial WAARTWRES. 3§ ove taking up more than 100 persons at a time. | One purpose was to glve him a politieal | (e 4, 0 Cem P lioe e "oty under- | We shall take @ skipper and two sallors to | foothold, and 1 consequence he beeame & | o nor o0 e BN B 40 Tee wehten | man the boat which we shall take along in | member of Parllament and held the seat | Lot S BEFECCE, T case of accidents. six years. But Mitchell Henry had another i I vatl hich will be possible | purpose—to bulld @ country home, and he b Shng dramirribeg o at 1 nor nas otten | JEALOUS OF THE AMERICANS during the trip will be of the greatest in-| builded so well that lately rumor has often Paris Strong Force Held in Reserve to Pro- tect Pass Which Tarkey Threat. ens to Slere in Case Hos- tilities Bew! Tenantry, Which Had Been Evicted, | Gathered Together Agaim by the Late Owner of the Edward Buys Out the Browa Family in Order Get Them Of the Royal Estate at Balmoral. to meteorological conditions.”" Here Baron | Berget showed the correspondents a pilot chart of the Atlantlc ocean with arrows in- dicating the direction of the winds in varl- ous months of the year, g arrows showed winds of steady duration, short ones showed the direction, but indicated | intermittent currents “In this continued line of 1ong arrows eading from the Canarfes direct to the 3ult of Mexico,” the baron exp'ained, ““we know in advance for a certainty that winds blow constantly from the Canarfes along a ht, 1003, by Press Publishing Co.) ROME, Sept. 20.—(New York World Cable- am, fpestal Telagram.)—~Timely with the | arrivel of Cardingl Gibbons In New York is the expresaion recently d by Pope Plus X regarding his conference with the American cardinal. I have learned more,” he said, *“about the church In America by several conversations with Cardinal Gibbons than 1 ever 4 from all the reports of the propa- ganda.” Such an expresslon from Pius X is not without significance, and every one in Rome fn firmly convinced that, regarding the ehurch in the United States, the new pope #8 thoroughly in sympathy with the lberal views of the American cardinal and the party which he reprosents in the Catholle hierarchy of his country. There is no denying that the American bishops, no matter how much united in matters of dogma, sre divided -into two aistinct classes regarding church politics. (11.- so-called “liberal” party, whose fore- mokt representatives are Cardinal Gibbons wid Archbishop Ireland, favors a lberal polley in the conduct of church affairs in | America that will be more in keeping with the surroundings and the enlightened in- telligenca of the American people. The other party, which was responsible for Leo XIII's condemnation of so-called Americanisin, 12 represented by those who wish to see introduced in America all the customs gf the church as they obtain in atholic eountries, netwithstanding the fact that the surroundings and the condition of {he people are totally d!fferent WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—~Withdrawal of American warships from , Beyroot | seems unlikely for the present, in view of & blegram recelved at the State depart- it from Minister Lelshman, at nstantinople, stating that, although his advices from Beyroot indicate that the sit- uation is quiet just now, nothing like per- manent order has been established. Mr. Leishman says that the state of af- irs there may yet be regarded as uncer Tt Is indlcated in Mr gram that fhe (Copyright, 193, by Press Publishing Co.) LONDON, Sept. -(New York World Cablegram—8pecial Telegram.)—The British cabinet crisis has been a most mysterious affair. Never before has it taken so long to fill three places in any cabinet. The de- lay Is accounted for solely by King Edward refusing to accept offhand, and, as a matter of course, Prime Minister Balfour's recon- struction scheme, which was prearranged with Mr. Chamberlain. The _war commission report made a pro- | found impression on the king, who shares the public distrust of the present ministry, and he insisted on an attempt to introduce new blood Instead of the mere dummy placemen Mr. Balfour proposed. If thers were o strong united liberal opposition un- der an undisputed leader, the king would have gone to the extreme length of revis~ ing the long disused constitutional pre- rogative of dismissing the ministry alto- gether. But, there being no alternative, he is trying to make the best of a bad busi- ness. The irony of the situation Is that when Lord Salisbury resigned as a protest against the king's interference In minis terlal affairs Mr. Balfour refused to sup- port his uncle. The kings principal adviser s Lord Esher, formerly Bailol Brett, M. P., the son of the late master of the rolls, and at one time private secretary to the duke of Devonshire. He has attained within the last few years extraordinary influence over the king, chiefly by reason, it is sald, of his taste for court ceremonial and page- antry, and his stage management of the coronation. But he is also a man of talent. toduy FOOT BALL RESULTS, | rand Island 0. maha High School 0. 15, Council Dlufts 6, 11, Omaha Com. Col. 0. | * City 6, Eagle Grove 0. iversity of lowa 6, Cornell 0, Doane 28, Crete High School 0. Harvard 17, Wilila Pardue 32, Englewood 0. Wabash 6, Indiana University DePauw Alumnl 5, 'Varsity 0. Pennsylvania 22, Dickinson 0, Nebraska 64, Crelghton 1. Harian ‘1 Leishman's cable- departure of the warships might be the o ston for a renewa! of the This confirms the opinfon held here state department officlals that the qulet at Beyroot is due directly to the presence of Ameriean warships off that port, Minlster Lelshman adds that the new governor of Beyroot is actively Inaugurat- innesotn 22, Carl on G, ing reforms there, but that it s not yet IMinois 48, Lombard 0, | certain he will be able to handle the sit- Columbia 10, Wesleyan 0. | uation. . Yale 5. Trinity 0. | s N L By 4 i E‘I!I(:l‘llrm;}(l:\lyul Cotton, commanding 10, Tutta 0. | o quadron, cables the Nawy de- gnte 0. partment, under date of Heyroot, Septem- Chicago University 28, Lawrence 0, | ber 2, that Beyroot is.quiet and.that the Northwéstern S8, NAPeevills '8, case of the American vice consul is still pending. i riots {v o, the Temperature at Omaha Yesterday: Ho: Deg. Hour. Deg. 57 1 p. 52 56 2 p. . B3 56 4 p. . 5 56 4 p. B 55 5 p. B8 54 6 p. 57 54 7 e 55 Bulgarian Active, HILIPPOPOLIS, Bulgarla, Sept. The rumors current yesterday that Bul- garla would send an ultimatum to Turkey setting forth that unless satisfactory as- surances were recelved that the Ottoman troups would be withdrawn {mmediately from the Bulgarian frontler, Bulgaria would forthwith mobilize her whole army, were caused by the mobilization of a regi- ment of engineers. The divisional head- quarters here are inclined to regard the situation as being more serious and prepa- rations are being made for a moblie force to take the fi There is little excitement, though the streets present an animated spectacle 08 the reservists march off to join their regiments. The mobilization can ‘be completed In six days. The Bulgarian war office has recelved information in the event of hostilities the Turks will make a dagl and endeavor to selze the Bhipka 4, \8ainst which con- tingency strong Bulghewuin forces are now held in reserve: Amuesty Granted on Surrender, USKUB, Macedonla, Friday, Sept, 2%.—It is reported that a proclamation s to be issued anuouncing the granting of amnesty to surrendering Bulgarians and the adop- tion of more stringent measures as to re- crulsants. The Greek village of Manastir have been forbldden to recelve in future Bul- garlan women and children refugees unless Army 2. 10 1 12 Contest Over Archbishop. terest to the meteorological world, and if | polnted to romantic Kylemore castle as a our theorles are borne out there is no rea- | son why such trips could not be made regu- | no resience in Ireland and wants one. larly at favorable seasons of the year.” | Mitchell Henry selected a site in a valley, j but the valley was not wide enough. e TESTIMONY_FAVURS LAMBTON | emploved an army of laborers, workmen and masons, He cut away half of Diamond Ni 1 Man Fas Better of Squabble mountain (so named because, tradition has aval with General Hunter Over it, dlamonds of a pecullar lustre were found Artillery. Papers Object the New World's Invasion of Aby probable royal residence, for the king has to Esher an Unwilling Vietim, Unable to repay him adequately for his services, the king got Sir Ernest Cassel to take him into his financlal firm. In- spired largely by Cassel, Esher drow up a memorandum in his capacity of a member of the war commission, suggesting a re- organization of the War office on a busi- ness basis. This attracted considerable attention as the only practical outcome of that inquiry and when Mr. Balfour proposed that . & ._medlocre . party back, Arnold Forster, the present financial secretary to the admirajty, be promoted to be war secretary, the king suggested Esher as an alternative. Mr. Balfour kicked against this proposal all this week, while Esher himself did not feel inclined to give up his lucrative position in Cassel's firm to join a moribund administration and face the all but impossible task of reforming the War office. The king sent for Cassel to go to Balmoral and got him to promise that Esher’s position should be kept open. Esher then hesitated to face the ordeal of being | forced' on the cabinet. The king also insisted that Mr. Balfour should press Lord Milner, to take the colo- | nial secretaryship, instead of the deadhead, | Lord Selborne, who never would have been trusted with any post but for being Lord | Salisbury’s sop-in-law. Lord Milner de- clined positively on the ground that he de- | sired to return to South Africa to finish his | wdrk there. The sallent feature of the crisis has been the leading part the king is playing and his wdoption almost of the autocratic attitude of his nephew, Kaiser Wilhelm. | “There has been a collusive divorce be- | tween Balfour and Chamberlain, and Bal- four has/got the custody of the child,” Is veteran publicist Frederick Greenwood's The silent war continually going on be- tween tHe (wo parties finds a permanent flald of contention in the influence which 18 brought to bear in Rome regarding the selection of candidates for promotion and appointment. Just at present the bone of contention is the appointment of a new archbishop of Milwaukee, for which place several candidates have been named. The liberal party among the hicrarehy favors the appointment of Bishop Spalding of fa, whose Hheral views are well known Al vver the, worlll RN especially-in Rome, Whero some of the cardinals of the propa- ganda consider him in great part responsi- Ble for the origin of Americanism in the church, OF the group of cardinals opposed to him, Satolll and Martinelll, both former npostolic delegates to the United States, are the most prominent. 1t fs well known in this connection that both the former apostolic delegates are looked upon by many in Rome and in the Tnfted Hates as really detrimental to the Dbest Interests of the ocurles In America. | Under the preceding pope they held much influence, for Leo XIIT when at sea re- garding the solution of many of the difficul- tles of the American church, relled entirely on the advice and experfence of his former representatives at Washington, who were the only ones he could consult and who therefore had things thelr own way. | Cardinal Gibbons selaom went to Rome, and even then local Influence made his ad vice and opinion of little value in the coun- tls of the Vatican. Now that Pius X has shown @ partiality for the American car- dinal's point of view, It Is freely predicted that @ more liberal policy In the conduet of the ecclesiastical affairs of America will begin, and that the Influence of Satolll and Martinel!t will be much curtalled. Changes at the Vaties REGIMENTS FOR MANEUVERS Troops that Go to Fort Riley Detailed in General Orders Just Insued, nin. (Copyright, 1903, by Press Publishing Co.) PARIS, Sept. 2%.—(New York World Ca- blegram-Special Telegram.)—The French newspapers are much annoyed becduse United States Consul Skinner. who is sta- tioned at Marseilies, is going 10/ Abyssinia’ capital to confer with Negus (®mperor) Menelek about poeus] 8 meriean i pthe coun- try. The papers point out that William H. Fliis, with enormous capital behind him, left last week for Abyssinia, taking many presents for Menelek, and with the avowed intentlon of entering into business relations with him and securing the right to open big bank, furnishing Menelek with money at low rates and on easy terms. Mr. Elis claimed no .official connection, but the papers, taking Mr. Skinner's trip in con- | { junction with Mr. Ellis' move, regard the incident as of international importance. They cngrily ask why these Americans | should mix up with things so far from | home, and note that Menelek, having he tated over distributing favors to France [ or England, probably will now take an- other course and cast his lot with Americans. SAINT TAKEN TO A NEW ABODE Crzar and Csarina Take Part in Cere. mony in Honor of Saint Seraphim. General orders No. 3 have just been fssued from Headquarters Departments of the Missourd relative to the army maneuv- i to be held at Fort Riley, Kas., October 16 to 27, Inclusive. The order states that tha following regular acmy organizations will be ussembled n camp at Fort Riley, Kas., on the dates hereinafter specified: From Fort Leavenworth: First bat- talion of engincers, Second squadrom, Fourth cavalry, Twenty-eighth battery, fleld artillery, headquarters band and eleven companies Bixth infantry. From _ ‘ort Niobrara, Neb.: Headquarters band, First and Third battallons Twenty- fifth infantry. | Fort Reno, 0. T.: Battalion commander, | staft and three companies Twenty-fifth in- tantry. | they are accompanied by their men folk Fort Robinson, Neb.: Headquarters band, | bringing rifles, First and Third squadron, Tenth cavalry. Fort 8111, O. T.: Lieutenant colonel, -qu.d-} ron, staff and First squadron, Eighth cav. alry and Twenty-ninth battery fleld ar- tillery. All troops will be provided with uniforms to represent the Brown and Blue forces. The troops from Fort Niobrara will march to Norfolk, Neb., and make the balance of the journey by rail. Those from Fort Rob. inson will march to Sidney, Neb., and thence to Fort Riley by rail. The troops | from Fort Reno will proceed by rafl to! Wichita, Kas.,, and march thence to Fort Rliley. The troops from Fort §il will pro- | ceed by rail all the way to Fort Riley. In | additon to the troops named here, which there long ago). He bought steamers which carried bullding materials from Galway across Galway bay. And in the verdant valley, on the edge of the lough, he reared the patls. . s Gardens are ertal. He erected fine stables and also conserva- torles whose orchids and tropical plants were famous. He preserved the salmon and trout in the lake and river and there is no better fishing in Ireland now. His shel- tered gardens ware and are wonderful, for the molst heat of the gulf stream matures the soll and the sheltered situation protects its products. In these gardens trees flourish, shrubs and flowers of bursting vigor and splendid the town from a decisive assault. The | ,uin piime and rare ferns grow there milttary, however, grew jealous of the .. . woor round, for they need no shelter in praise showered on the, then CADLMN| (s mild climate. The roads have double Lambton and his Landy men from the| e, ... eqges, twelve feet high, which crulser Powerful and Lambton adys that o 14 pe worth a fortune anywhere but in as the siege proceeded the military gradu-| . o lly began to deny that the Haval UDS| “ypeope) Henry collected rare tpees and had been of any value whatever. planted the mountain side with them as Hunter sald in his evidence before the |y )y yo'\yiiey around his buildings. One commissipn that he told Lambton he would | wp ) yveq ‘through the finely wooded de- get school gir's to alm his "m“l‘“'\_::'::"mm mesne passes vast banks of rhododendrons When this-evidence Was yeas. o - | and hydrangeas in bloom. The castle s fit Lambton said ho had to deal with many | #1d hydrangess in bloom, The castl nvmbskulls in Ladysmith and Hunter was | ‘@ BAWi; the Dlaoe. ts one. When the evidence wae Pubied| Sy, of the peasantry had been evicted | rmi :;:"':;:.:I"e':“'“:xn;‘; i superior in | from the neighborhood, but Mitchell Henry e hannel fleet, to send | gathered a tenantry and the duke of Man- fi:xfifc.‘i&.fihm the press stating that |chester will find a village ready made at (Copyright, 1903, by Press Publishihg Co.) TLONMDON," Bapt. 268 (New: Cablegram—Special Telegram.)—The ‘who'e weight of the testimony was against Gen eral Hunter, who asserted before the war commission that the handling of the naval | guns at Ladysmith was bad. The squabble between him and Admiral Lambton is merely an echo of the feud that raged be- tween the naval and the military men at Ladysmith. The arrival of the naval guns on that| mournful Monday, the day of the Nichol- son's nek surrender, undoubtedly saved i opentr Snow in Mountain Rang MONASTIR, Macedonia, Sept. 2.—(Via Bofla, Bulgaris, Sept. 2.)—8now has fallen on the higher mountain ranges and the refugees must elther leave their hiding | places or suffer the greatest hardships. The Turkish troops continue to slaughter refugees who return to thelr former homes at the invitation of the government, which romises them protection. Near the village f Zlatan, fn the nelghborhood of Resna, roops found fifteen returned refugees working in a fleld. They bound thelr hands, drove them into a ditch and masea- cred fourteen of the peasants. One of them survived his wounds. (Copyright, 1903, by Press Publishing Co.) ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 2. —(New York | his hand. ‘World Cablegram—Special Telegram.)—In | Gradually but surely Plus X s getting ¥id of the numerous employes of the Vat- | can who found favor ynder his predecessor. Cardinal Rampolla has practically disap- peared from Rome, it is sald, and is at Ppresent in & monastery, recuperating from the worries undergone since the time when Yo XIII was first taken {ll. Count Pecol, the nephew of Pope Leo, has given up his place as commander of the Noble Guards aud has been succeed\ ‘| by Prince Ros- plgitosl. . Mgr. Marsolinl, the factotum of the Vati- can palace under Pope Leo, s returning to Perugia, and Mgrs. Angell and Bislet! will soon follow suit, as Plus X has two brand new secretaries from Venice, one his former conclavist and the other Mgr. Pes- einl. Plo Centra, Pope Leo's faithful valet, has also been replaced by Gornati, the Mllanese valet of Cardinal Sarto in Venice and now the secret scaloo, or private head | butler of the Vatican, Commendatore Stor- nin, bas been called upon to resign. Plus X was informed that by right this place belonged to his lay master of cere- wmonies, named Cavazzi, who had been with ' him for years, and therefore he appointed him to the place, reducing, however, the usual salary of the butler from #60 to 320 a month, as it 1s his intention to economise | in all departments. By his order the.mas- ter cf the house Commendatore Puccinelli, whose office is to be abolished as unneces- sary, 1s tumning over to the new brother all the silver and pantry furnishings, together with the contents of the cellar. It has just been discovered that a large number of bottles of Bordeaux of the vintage of 1810, which had been stored in a room adjoining the Clementine hall and whose existence was well known, have dis- he had demanded an apology from Hunter. This was o breach' of regulations, both on the part of Berestord and.of Lambton, for Which both were severely hauled over the | coals by the admiralty, while the king himself intervened, ordering both Lambton and Hunter to keep sfience. ‘There is always jealous rivalry between the army and the navy, which is intensified | by the fact that the people have a much higher opinfon of the latter than of the former. AUTHOR MOORE IS PARTICULAR Abandons Catholie Church Because Archbishop Walsh Called on King. i (Copyright, 1908, by Press Publishing Co.) LONDON, Sept. %.—(New York World | Gablegram — Special Telegram.) — George | | Moore, the author of “Eather Waters" and | | other successful realistic novels, has an- nounced that he has embraced the Protest- ant faith because Archbishop Walsh of | Dublin attended King Edward's levee dur- ing the lgtter's recent visit to the Irish | capital | | This Inconsistent proceeding has caused | great amusement among Mr. Moore's | never knew before that prided himself on being a Cathollo Pien of any other religion. After an ab- wence of many years and the authorship of the book, “Parnell and His Treland.” | which some of his countrymen deem atro- | Slous, Mr. Moore returned and rediscovered his native country some three years ago and doveloped into an implacable national- | ist for the time. he or friends, who Mrs, Henry was a good, liglious woman, Vaughn, Psq., of Quilly Hous von. chapel near the castle. than two or three months in the market since then. Here the young duke can offer a more princely hospitality than at his ancestral castle, Fanderagee, County Armagh. Lucky | the guest, American or English, whom the duke invites to Castle Kylemore. Not the least of his diversions will be in i¢ the famous echo. For to one who stands on the edge of the lake and eries out comes back an echo from the moun- tains, multiple, reverberating that dins his ears. VANDERBILTS ARE Only On Attract Theater Attent charitable re- the daughter of George County De- At her request her husband built a To this delightful spot Mitchell Henry repaired for not more year. | Bometimes he dtd not visit Castle Kyle- more in three or four years. He died a few years ago and the estate has been in the IN PARIS Able ton in the Tartar city of Sarov, the remains of a most popular saint called Seraphim have reposed In & glass sarcophagus for seventy years. It was recently decided to transport them to a mountain hermitage and henceforth the Russians will make pilgrimages to this lofty helght to be cured of their allments, just the the French go to Lourdes. The czar, the czarina and their children alded in the impressive ceremonies of the transportation of St. Seraphim to his new abode. The peasanis belleve St. Seraphim pre- served the czar from the attack of the fanatical Japanese who tried to kill him years ago. The peasants bathe themselves | in the river where St. Seraphim used to | bathe, in order to be cured of all sorts of maladies. NAPOLEONIC FAMILIES MOURN Two Deaths Among Those Who Rose to Greatness Under to Emperor. by Press Publishing Co.) 2%.—(New York World Ca-' (Copyright, 1905 PARIS, Bept (Copyright, 19, by Press Publishing Co.) | Dlesram—8pecial Telegram.)—Great families PARIS, Sept. 28.—( W last Tuesday night, ing very young and voted more attention band than to the stage, Mlle. Dutrieu, known as Arrow,” sty to her *“The Yew, York World Ci blegram—Special Telegram.)—Mr. and Mrs. K. Vanderblit and Mr. and Mrs. Geory ‘Munroe occupled & box at the Olympia ha Mrs. Vanderbilt, look- de- hus- except when Woman | swept at lightning speed down ish, i of Napoleonic ereation have been plunged into mourning by the death of the princess of Essling, following closely upon that of | the princess of Wagram. . The princess of Essiing died at Bellaglo, | Lake Como, of congestion of the lungs. She | was. the adopted daughter of Charles Heines. The Princess Wagram, who was Bertha Rothschild, was buried today, The found- the province of Nitnd Noxfyorod, in Russia, | epigramatic summing up of the ministerial | situation and Austen Chamberlain's reten- | lurm in the cabinet. Postpones Dissolution. Mr. Balfour does not intend to dissolve | for another year unless some unexpected development arises. | “It will take me twelve months to work | up the constituencles and government, and | twelve months to Hve down the War | | commission report,” is the summing up | of the prospect attributed to Mr. Chamberlain. The only doubtful element | in Parliament is the action of the free| trade unlonists. Mr. Balfour intends to| secure himself against thelr possible de- fection by introducing a couple of Irish re- formss, which the Irish party cannot afford to refuse and will support the government in all emergencies to secure. Besides, if the Irish party assisted the liberals to force a dissolution in the present state of pyblic feeling, the latter might get a majority so large as to render them independent of the Irish party in the next Parliament. Alarming rumors concerning the king were fiylug about Thursday night, based |upon the departure of Sir Frederick Treves | | for Balmoral. But the’ famous surgeon's | presence was subséquently explained by | the statement that the king desired to { consult him respecting some suggested re- | forms in the army medical department.* The king is in excellent health, but great | trouble is experienced in preventing him | from eating too much. He has been especlally warned against the flavored deli- cacles his particular friend, the marquis of Soveral, has /a talent for preparing. The king comes of a family of heavy eat ers. Queen Victoria had an astounding | comprise the regular forces in the Depart- | ment of the Missouri, that will participate | in the maneuvers, regular troops alse will | be ment by rail from Forts Loghn, Colo., | D. A. Russell, Wyo., Snelling, Minn., th-i coln, N. D., Keogh, Mont., Douglas, Utah, and Myer, Va. These troops all will pro- ceed by rail. The militla organizations participating in the maneuvers will be one | regiment of infantry from Arkansas, two | of infantry and two batterles of artillery ' from Kansas, one regiment of infantr~ each from Missour!, Towa and Texas, one from | Nebraska, and ona company of the signel | corps, and one battalion of infantry from | Oklahoma. The militla organizations will be gulded by the same restrictions that govern the regular army, and will be under the com- mand of the regulal oficers during the en- tire maneuvers. Amatear Deicetive is Killed, LOUISVILLE, Sept 2.—Charles Mar- shall of Rego, Ind., died today from the effects of injurles sustained in an assault alleged to have been committed by H. C. | Hite, who, according to Marshall's story, was ‘a_counterfeiter. Marshall claimed to be an amateur detective and was attempt- | ing to arrest Hite, | Movements of Ocean Vos At New York—Arrived: Bt. Lou Southampton; Arable, from Liverpod Queenstowi, Safled Umbria, for fool: Minneapolis, " for London; and, for Antwerp: Lahn, for Naples; Bremen, for Bremen; Glasgow. At Delaware Breakwater—Passed: iand, from Liverpool At’ Philadelphia—Satled Liverpool. At Plymonth—Arrived turst, from New York Sept. 20, from | and | Liver- Kroon- enoa “and Astorla, for Fries- Noordland, Kur- for Grosser The refugee women subsequently dis- covered the bodles and carrled the sur- vivor before the lleutenant governor of Resna, who refused to hear their story. One hundred and twenty Bulgarlans, in- cluding four priests, who had been exiled by the Turkish suthorities, left Monastir erday. Sees Evidence of Dupliclty. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Sept. 25.—The, personnel of the sultan’s new Macedonian commis- sion is alleged here (o be an indication of the Insincerity of the porte's intention. The Bulgarian representative, Nicol Reboff, a member of the court of justice at Monas- | tir, 15 80 years old, and has been for many years an officlal of the Turkish govern- ment. With the exception of Hilm! Pasha, the inspector general, who is president of the commisssion, none of the others has any prominence or influence. The fact that the Bulgarian population of Macedonia s given ouly one representative is held here to show that the porte has not mccepted the demands made by the Sofia govern- ment. Negotlations between the porte and Sofiy are reported to bo still proceeding, but the situation appears to remain unchanged, In view of the fact that the powers de- cided to answer the Bulgarian note, it is doubtful If next week's meeting betwcen the czar and Emperor Francis Joseph will cause any material change of policy. The report that Captain Tchernoppeff, the captor of Miss Ellen M. Stone, the American missionary, had been kilied 1s untrue, The Macedonian committees have planned n imposing demonstration for tomorrow, here will be a requiem mass at the ca- At 'Liverpool—Sailed York At Queenstown. York At | ers of both families took parf in the mem- | orable battle of Wagram | an inclined plank on & bicycle; then, dart- Sy ing into the alr, made a leap of elghteen | yards, landing on & mettress on the stage. This act Mrs. Vanderbiit watched breath- for New appeared. Some of them, however, have | been discovered in the private cellar of one | of the old lay employes, who was forced (o | make restitution. thredral, followed by & procession through | the streets, carrying black banners and portraits of the Macedonlan leaders who have heen killed during the insugrection. appetite. When she fancled a dish she would have two or three helpings, without | interfering with the éxecution she did on the remainder of the repast. Salled: Cedric, for, New BRINGS RICH PAPA TO TIME outhampton—8alled tor ! New York Pope Is Displeased. Notwithstanding the pope's express ‘wishes regurding the granting of audiences, afforts are still belng made in the Vatican «ntourage 1o prevent many of those seek- ing admission from seeing the pope. Among the unfortunates & few days ago was a party of Franciscan nuns, who, with their | superioress general, were (o sall for Tripoll to establish a new house of their order, never expecting to return to ltaly. They met with & refusal, and it was only after their departure thut Plux X was lnformed of the matter by the nleces of the late Cardinal Paroechi, whom he has lately be- friended. The pope W (Continued o Fitth Fage) plied for an audience, but were much displeased at of Obtaining Paremtal | Consent. { (Copyright, 193, by Press Publishing Co. | PARIS, Sept. %.—(New York World Ca: | blegram — Spectal Telegram.) — A wealthy | manufacturer, arraigned in a police court | on & charge of running an automobile at | | ilegal speed, blamed his chauffeur. Ho ! | )| | daughter's raud, but he refused consent | | and that whiie out riding (be ohbi JF put | on full speed sud threatened 1o wreck the automobile, kiiliug the entire party, unless the father would consent bad seen the number of the fying auto- moblle and fled & complaint. moment. Mr. PLACE A Great R r Wi Stay in Moscow. —->— MOSCOW, Bept blegram - Special M—(N ¢ Telegram.)— s stol 10 say part of the tim: poljaha, in Berchteagudes. | French Chsulfenr Takes Novel Method | lessly, giving & lttle gasp at the eritical Vanderbilt s looking better | and younger than he has lopked in years. BAN UPON TOLSTOI! Not sald the chauffeur was & suitor for his (Copyright. 1¥8, by Press Publishing Co.) York World Rus- government bas forbidden Count Tol- in Moscow, where he has a The unhappy | house in which he usually lives for u few tather gave in, but not before u policeman | weeks every year. He spends the greater |the sisters of the Catholic schools alw on his property, Yasnaja- The {FAVOR THE OLD COSTUME Congress in Briitany Deplores Tendency to A don It. BREST, France, Sept. %.—(New York | World Cablegram—Spec ial Telegram.)—At ! the Celtic congress lately held in Lesneven, | Brittany, one of the subjects talked of was the Breton costume. Some yearsago the | Breton peasan’s began to abandon thelr pic- turesque costume, much to the disappoint- ment of American tourists, for instance. | The congress voted in favor of keeping {up the costume. An abbe who spoke sald encouraged their scholars to wear thelr costumes. ' One of the first things the king aid on his first visit to Balmoral after his acces- slon was to have the marble statue of John Brown, erected by Queen Vietorla, carted away to the pretty eottage pre- {sented by the queen to her favorite serv- |ant's family. The king has now gone a step further by buying out the Brown family and getting them off the royal estate altogether. John- Brown and his kin are interisely disliked by all the royal family, who re- cented the influence the unlettered old boor exercised over Queen Victoria, Because the queen backed him up in his insulting pretensions the late Empress Fredetick never visited her mother for thirty years, while the late duke of Edinburgh never went to Balmoral for eighteen years be- fore his death. . via Cherbourg lasgow—Arrived 'phia. via St. Johns, from Montreal, At London: York. At Cherbourg—8nsiled New York. Arrived: Bluecher, from York, via Plymouth, for Hamburg, proceeded. At Antwerp—Sailed: Finland, for New York. 1 At _Rotterdam—Sailed: Potsdam, for New York At Havre—Salled: York At Hong Kong-Arrived Amerfea - Maru, from Ba Honoluly; Empress of China, couver. via Yokohama At Yokohama-—Arrived, @ravelli, from Portland, Ore., for Hos Korea, from San Francisco, via ulu. for Hone Kong; Rio Maru, from Seattle. for Hong Kong. At Shimonseki—Arrived Port Gamble, via Shanghal. Siberian, from Bicilian, Bailea tor Masabia, New New York, and La Touraine, for New previously: rancisco, via from Ven- previousiy: In- Tvydene, from LEAVES PRIZES FOR HEROES Legacy (Copyright, 1903, by Press Publishing Co.) PARIS, Bept. %i.—(New York World Ca- blegram—Special Telegram.)—Albert Laysz has just died, leaviug $5,00 to the French academies for the benefit of the heroes of Lorraine. He called that region the cradle of his family, and regerded it as one of the most beautiful and patriotic provinces of France. The money, in the form of prizes, will be awarded to men and women of Lorraine who perform scts of herolsm. The prizes will bear the name of the donor )