ssssssssssssssssssHsHssssssssssssBss'sssSslissHsfllsHs - : I v- 5 , x-- : . : , ; . :. -X? ZZZZ ...-. ". I IfORTY-FOTJBTH YEAR And the United States Senate Politely But Emphatically Informs Him IT'S A GOOD PLACE FOR HIM. Six Republicans Join the Democrats in His Rejection. SENATOB QUAX IS ONE OF THE SIX, The Field Marshal's Friends Think Mr. Pome Should Ask lor a Vindication in the Form of a He-Election Halstead May be HI Opponent The Cincinnati Organ of the Rejected Gentleman Makes Some More Acrimonious Charges Quay's Tote Meant a a Slap at the Ad ministration on Account of the Philadel phia Postoffice Wrangle Kraru Elo quence Converts Dawes Henri Watter on Again to the Defense of Bii Journal Istlc Colleague. The Tote on the reconsideration of the re jection of Murat Halstead's nomination to the German Mission was a surprise. Two Democrats voted for Halstead, and beside the Republicans already arrayed against the editor, Messrs. Quay and Dawes de clared that they preferred the Field Marshal shouldn't go to Berlin. Quay's vote Is supposed to bo against the administration, on account of the Philadelphia postoffice matter, and Dawes was won OTer by Evarts' eloquence. rSFXCIJU. TELXGBAX 0 THE DISPATCtt.1 Washington, March 30. The silver hair and classic features of Field Marshal Halstead disappeared beneath the surface of the soup at precisely 235 o'clock to-day. Nineteen Senators two of them Democrats, Messrs. Blackburn and Call desired his confirmation. Twenty-fire Senators, all of them Democrats, except Messrs. Quay, Tel ler, Ingalls, Plumb, Evarts and Dawes, voted for his rejection. Mr. Cullom was paired for the rejection of Mr. Halstead, and Stanford, Stewart and Jones did not vote. There were 11 Republicans in all who would have voted to reject the nomina tion had their votes been needed. The Senate met an hour earlier than usual, realizing that ii had a long job of work to-day, and at 125 o'clock the doors were closed, on the secret session. The friends of Mr. Halstead who thronged the corridors were unable to keep up with the proceedings inside by the information dropped from the lips of Senators who came out of the chamber to the lunch room and other parts of the capital.- -. , Sherman Preserves Hts EeaHttrrtcm. - - At 1 o'clock Mr. Sherman came down for a cup of tea. He took a slice of apple pie and a moderate chunk of cheese, and drank his tea clear, without milk or sugar. Then takine a cracker in his hand, he started back to the Senate chamber. "Sherman looks pretty well for a man who has just been through a thrashing mill," said a Senator from the "West, as the tall Ohio statesman left the cafe. Then he proceeded to explain that when Mr. Sher-1 man arose to open the debate, he took the dignity of the Senate for bis text, and at tempted to argue that it was not impaired by such attacks as Mr. Halstead had made upon it, or disfigured by such mud as Mr. Halstead had thrown. Mr. Evarts, Mr. Teller and Mr. Ingalls put some questions at Mr. Sherman which rather diverted him from his line of thought and compelled him to admit that he had not thought it was not respectable journal ism or eren common politeness to call a Senator a thief and a boodler, and liken him to a barrel ot Standard oil. Forced From the Main Track. Mr. Sherman explained that he meant that the license of the press had become so well understood that such attacks as Mr. Halstead had made did not degrade the Senate in the eyes ot the people, but the constant interruption and expression of dis sent that came from all parts of the cham ber soon convinced him that he had started on the wrong track, so he changed his tac tics and made another personal appeal not to disgrace a great and good man because he had gone wrong. Mr. Teller, in reply to Mr. Sherman, said that certain members of the Senate had feelings as well as Mr. Halstead. He com pared .Mr. Sherman's logic to the story or the boy who stoned the frog. It was fun to the boy, but death to the frog. He told Mr. Sherman that he did not recollect that the Senator from Ohio or anybody else appealed to Mr. Halstead not to disgrace the Senate of the United States by bespattering Senators withlanguagethatneitherHalsteadnor Sher man would use in their drawing room, nor did he understand that Mr. Halstead had ever made an apology for the expression he had used. Time lor the Senate to Assert Itself. If Mr. Halstead believed an honorable man would rest under snch assaults as he had made upon the Senate he was a very poor judge of human nature, and he thought it was about time lor the Senate to assert its dignity and establish a precedent by refus ing to advise or consent to the appointment of such reckless editors to office. General Hawley, who is usually a peace maker and-Mr Blair, both, spoke in favor of Halstead, and took the ground that the senate was oeinuiuK "' j lamug no tice of such attacks. This called out Mr Evarts, who made another long speech, in which he reviewed the case and spoke at length regarding the liberty that was taken by newspapers nowadays with private lives and characters of public men. Mr. Payne, too, made another appeal to the Senate of a somewhat personal nature, and said very plainl j that he should con sider the confirmation of Mr. Halstead as an . expression of its approval of the attacks j$ met nad been made upon him. As Fair for One SIdo.n the Other. Mr. Evarts then called attention to the precedents in the case, and .said that a Democratic nominee for Postmaster in Vir- ,. ijrinia (meaning Mr. Button, of Lynchburg) had been rejected by the Senate on the same charges that they now propose to reject Mr. Halstead, and he appealed to the Repub licans to be" consistent and administer the same punishment to a member of their party who had been guilty , of the same of fense. Then a vote was taken, with the result as given above. Mr. Quay's vote against Halstead caused a decided sensation, because, of his relations with the administration and his position at. the head of ihe Republican party. "While he made so explanation, It Is inferred that his action is the first expression of resent ment toward Mr. Wanamaker for his selec tion of a man for the Philadelphia postoffice who Is personally offensive to him. Both Mr. Teller and Mr. Cullom are at odds with the administration because of its failure to recognise them in the distribution of patronage. Both have urged personal friends for appointment to office, and both hate been refused favors at the "White House. No man that Cullom recommended has so far been appointed, and no man that has been recommended by Mr. Teller. This doubtless gave them, immense satisfaction at the opportunity of rejecting one of the Pres ident's favorite nominees. Mr. Dawes was captured by the eloquence of Evarts. AH ISSUE FOBOED. UnUtcad's Paper, In It Chiefs Absence, Dares Payne to Seek Re-Electlon as a Vindication Murat May be His Opponent. Cincinnati, March 30. The Commer cial Gazette will publish the following ed itorial to-morrow: It is proper to say right here that Mr. Hal stead is not on deck, and has not been consult ed in regard to this matter. He is, therefore, in no way responsible for these remarks. His appointment is Minister to Germany was re jected, not because of his unfitness for the place, for that question never was and never could be raised. He was rejected because, as aneditor.be honestly criticised the methods by which men were elected to theTJnlted States Senate. The origin of this matter was the election of Henry B. Payne. That was not a Republican contest, but a Democratic light. George H. Pendleton was the known Democratic candl. date in Ohio. The Legislature was chosen with reference to his election. When the .Legislature had been chosen Payne, with his money backing, ap peared in the field. He bought Pendleton's men and was elected. Everybody knew that then, and everybody knows It now. .There Is not an intelligent man in Ohio who does not believe and does not know that Payne was elected by fraud. How It Became a Party Measure. The subsequent Legislature was Republican; through the defeat of the most gigantic frauds ever undertaken in any State upon the elective franchise. An indictment was framed, and the United States Senate' was asked to inquire into the methods of Payne's election. This became a party measure. It was sustained by the Re publican press. Itt&d the sympathy of the best part of the Democrats of Ohio. It went to the United States Senate. There it encountered the opposition of Republicans who were In the same boat with Payne-rof men who disgraced their seats then, as they do now and the In vestigation was defeated. Had Payne been conscious of innocence had he felt that he was honestly elected he would have quickly demanded an investigation. This be took care not to do. He knew perfectly well he could not afford that. He appealed in stead to that thing called Senatorial courtesy, and be found Republicans who had been elected as' he. vqObr fraudl. These lolned with-him. They jcoald not fcelpAt? They were" tflamlythreatenethit1ttyaVlhould BeTnT "Testtgated the, matter would' not stop there ruHcam are natural co warns. j.ueoenatorswuo are there by fraud are cowards.- -They joined hands with Payne, "and there was no investiga tion. The very thing that an honest man would have demanded was defeated by the votes of men who owe their seats in the Senate to the use of money. ' What the Commercial Gazette said In the whole controversy was the truth. It was the truth when it was written. It is the truth now. -Perhaps it was roughly expressed, but it was the truth all the same. For this Mr. Halstead was defeated, and. for no other rea son. There was no pretense of objection to him on the ground of fitness. He was Rejected by Senatorial Frnnds because he had the courage of his convictions, and was not afraid to tell' the truth. The re sult, therefore, cannot hurt him, but it is bound to hurt guilty Senators. Perhaps, too, it may lead to a line of thought, or increase the force of a line of thonght that will abolish the United States Senate altogether, with its star chamber proceedings, tfr compel a change in the methods of election that will bring that body closer to the people and force its mem bers outside of the money influence. People would be startled to know how many seats in the United States Senate were bought with money and how many seats are therefore disgraced. This is a business that cannot last. The people will not tolerate it. This kind of corruption must be wiped out. Payne thinks the defeat of Halstead has vin dicated him. This is bosh. To do that would require the defeat of nearly all the editors in Ohio and of such Democrats as Allen G. Thur man. But he is not satisfied with this, and he proposes, in order to a farther vindication, to be a candidate for re-election to the United States Senate. He has a right to do that We decidedly favor it. We dare him to make that test. Appeal to the people of Ohio and investigations will not be stifled. The truth will be brought to the front and the people, who cannot be bought, will settle the corrup tionlsts. The issue for next fall has been made in Ohio by Mr. Payne. It cannottoe avoided. The defeat of Halstead was the result of revenge. Now let the people of Ohio demonstrate the folly of revenge. COALSJF FIRE. Henri Watterson Returns Good for Evil to a Political Enemy He Thinks For- aker Will Next be Appointed Minister to Germany. Louisville, March 30. Of Mr. Hal stead's rejection, Mr. Watterson, in to morrow's Courier Journal, will write as follows: Tne rejection of Mr. Halstead carries with it, primarily, a warning from the Senate of the United States to the press of the country to look to its utterances when dealing with that body or any of its members. Mr. Halstead's offense to the Republicans who voted against his confirmation, or who did not vote at all, lay in his criticism of certain Republican Senators who had refused to enter upon an investigation, asked by the Repub lican Legislatnre of Ohio, into the election of Senator Payne. The election of Senator Payne wa¬oriously open to question. With the light now before ns, no Intelligent Democrat doubts that .it -was, from first to last, a most corrupt affair.' That party spirit and sympathy with an old man. whose knowledge of, and complicity with, the means to which be owed his seat in the Senate, was believed by no one at all familiar with his character, shonld lead Democratic Senators to stand between him and an impending scandal was natnral.but 1 vh v the investigation demanded bv the Rennh. tllcans of Ohio should be denied by any Repub- JlCaU OCUftlVl MUUU. OT MMUIW, C1CU A, M119 late honr. A Brave nnd Honest Journalist. In Ohio the controversy was one of equal im portance and acrimony, and Mr. Halstead threw all the combative elements of his essen tially combative character into the fight, and especially against the obdurate Republican Senators. From his party standpoint be was entirely in the right. He did what .any other brave and honest journalist would have done and should have done under the circumstances. That he may have been too rough in his meth ods ot attack a beside the question. He had PITTSBUEG, SUNDAY, MABOH 31, . 1889. - , - ,.'-,, ik -biV-b U-1-?-., J ' r - : ' ! ! r. : ! ' . . . 1 the truth of it In his nr-mtapa; was sin cere and upright in his purposes, and a does not materially affect the case. He is pun ished, therefore, by those of his own party whom ho dared to call to account for doing bis duty as a partisan journalist. The Democrats of the Senate have assisted these Republicans of the Senate to punish him, and thus a dual notice is served by both parties in the 'Senate upon the journalists of America, to the effect that whenever a Senator Is publicly criticised' he will bide his time to get his revenge by stab bing his critic in the back and in the dark. A Bad Political Move. Without doubt the Democrats of the Senate, and particularly the Democratic Senators from the Southern States, .think that they are get ting even with Mr. Halstead for his abuse of the South. But, even if this were so, their position would be at once inconsist ent and injudicious. With the fight over the confirmation ot Lamar, and ready confirmation of many Confederates to foreign posts of honor, in our mind, it lies not in our mouths to talk about sectional re venges. Such talk cannot fall to do mora execution at the breach than at the muzzle, and, in the long run, must recoil upon our selves. It puts a stop to oar protests agah.st proscription, and places a powerful weapon in the bands of onr enemies. We do not question any Southern Senator's sincerity or right to vote against Mr. Hal stead; nor do we set no any claim of Mr. Hal stead upon our forbearance. We are not aware that he or any of his friends have made the slightest appeal to us In this regard. Bat we thought, and we think, that it would nave been far better publie policy, and at the same time a far nobler revenge, if A Jr. Halstead had owed his rescue in the house of his friends to those whom he has so incessantly and so' un justly, but so openly assailed as the incarna tion of all that is intolerant and irreconcil able. , Healing Dp Sectional Breaches. Every forgiving action done, and every kind and generous word spoken, on occasions of trouble and trial by sectional and political an tagonists, one to another, tends to heal up breaches between the people and to bind up the wounds of war, and to make the Union once more a union ot countrymen and broth ers. When Horace Greeley went to Rich mond to sign the bail bond of Jefferson Davis; when Lamar laid a wreath of flowers upon the coffin ot Charles Sumner: when the South accepted Greeley for its Moses; when Johnston and Leo and Buckner i olio wed the bier of Grant to the tomb, steps Were taken out of the morass of mistrust and strife and toward the high and Sold ground of national punlflcatidn and the end of sectionalism. We had hoped that, in the case of Mr. Halstead, which afforded a striking opportunity for the display of a large and liberal pnrty spirit, there would have been fonnd in the Senate enough Senators from the South, big' enough in brain and heart to see tins and brave enough to act upon it, and we can only regret that in this hope we have been disappointed. We are the more so, because Mr. Halstead is singularly fitted for the position for which he was named, and is. personally, as honorable and clean a .man as he is, politically, a stub born and Implacable fighter, making his rejec tion turn, as far as we are concerned, upon partisan objections, which should have had. no weight. We bave it from very high authority that, if the name of Governor Foraker is not sent to the Senate before its adjournment, the Gov ernor will be dispatched as Minister to Ger many very soon thereafter. If this be so, the Democrats of .the Senate will have helped the malignant Republicans of that body to wreak their private revenge on Mr. Halstead only to saddle a man like Gov ernor Foraker, who, in hatred of the South doubtlessly double discounts any other Repub lican in the country on our diplomatic service. If that is so, we bare an impression that gentle men will find it as little easy to satisfy their own consciences as to explain' themselves to public opinion, which, in the end, is tolerably just In these matters, and will not give its ap- Sroval to the conversion of the Senate into a en of assassins. PURELY A CASE OP EEYENGE. Richard Smith, Halstead's Partner, Wants the Senate Abolished. Toledo, March 30. The Commercial, Richard Smith's paper, will say editorially to-morrow morning, regarding Mr. Hal' stead's rejection: The opposition of Republican Senators to the confirmation of Murat Halstead as Minister to Germany is purely a case ..of revenge, and will not be approved by the American people, and -will be sure to bring disgrace npon those con cerned, and will largely bring the Senate, as a body, into disgrace. It will serve, too, to in crease that public opinion which is growing steadily in favor of abolishing the Senate as too far from the people, and as the representa tive of wealth rather than the public, and the creature of corrupt methods rather than of popular favor. This occurrence will serve to stir up dis cussion and produce results that will abolish the Senate "as a body or make a radical change in the method of election; that is to say, have the Senators elected by the people at large in each State, precisely as Governors are chosen, instead of by State Legislatures. If this method were in practice instead of the corrupt and corrupting we have, does any mrrtal be lieve that Evarts and Ingalls and Teller and Pavne would occupy seats in the United States Senate? And these are not the only one's who owe their seats to money. A SCQTODEEISWOBK. The Dudley Blocks-ol-FIve Letter Bitterly Denounced by n Republican Judge Its Author Should be Punished. rSPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE niSFATCH.l lNDlANAPOLls,March30. JudgeWoods, in an interview regarding the Dudley letter and the election bribery indictments, quashed recently, says: The only possibility in .the world of everin dlctincDudley exists under my second instruc tions, and yet these fellows are howling around that it was through my instrumentality that Dudley has escaped. Under my first instruc tions Dudley never could have been indicted. As far as that letter is concerned, it Is not for me .to decide whether it is a technical violation of the law, though morally it is infamous, and the letter of a scoundrel. The man who wrote it shonld be severely punished, but he must be punished under the laws of the Government, and not by outraged public sentiment. The Federal laws are explicit on the point that a Congressional election must be involved in an act of bribery. This letter refers only to the election of a President and Governors. Of course we may presume that a Congressman would be voted for npon the same ticket containing the names of a Governor and President. Judge Woods spoke very bitterly of the criticisms to which his last ruling in Dud ley's case have been subjected, and declared that his last decision was in every way more conducive to bringing Dudley to justice than his first .decision. A BIG EXFMSE FOE PI1T8BURG. A Proposed Lien Law That Would Impose a Burden on tho Cltv. IFROM A STAFF COBBESPOXOElrr. Hakrisburg, March 30. Senate bill No. 4 was introduced by Newrayer. It has progressed, past second reading in the House, but will not come up for third read ing this week. It is as follows: Be It enacted, etc, that hereafter ho county, city, borough, township or school tax, levied or assessed, shall remain a lien on real estate for aJonger period than two years from the time of such levy or assessment, unless- the same be enteredpn record in the Prothonotary's office ot the proper county in which such real estate is situated, and no lien so entered therefor, or for any municipal improvement claim, shall re main a lien thereon for a longer period than five years from the date of snch entry, unless the same be revived and continued by writ of scire facias within said period and duly prose cuted to judgment as in the case of judgment liens. A letter from Controller Morrow to Dr. McCullough says the bill is likely to entail a big expense on Pittsburg, which has an agreement with the Penn avenue, property owners givinglthem ten years to pay for the Penn avenue improvements. Under the bill, he believes, the city will be put to an expense of $200.000. The President's Sntnrdav Reception. "Washington, March 30. The Presi dent held a public reception in the East room this afternoon, and shook hands with nearly 700 persons most of whom were ladies. " A BOIL OK HIS-MCE Gen. Boulanger .Denies That He is a Victim of the,iforpiiine Habit ta"" " " ' t GIVEN THE'JMHJG BY DOCTORS. ' r, Young Kaiser Wilhelm Confounds All of His Caustic Critics. v' POOR SHOW FOE A TIN MiATE 5BUST, . "7. ? k"'. Drunkenness Increasing in Wales Under Strtct Sua-day-Closing Lawt, ; t. General - Boalanger, it Is claimaa, bas & boil, on his neck. It annoys him, ofjCourse, and to obtain relief, he has ieeh siren morphine. His enemies said ha was A.vic tim of the morphine habit, Otherj stories .about bim ie-also turns to his own; credit. Young Emperor "William, of Germany, ias confounded all hia critics with his enthusi asm. The Welsh Tlnplate TrustMsn't'likely to pan out. Sunday liquor laws are not much of a success in Wales. Boodler Ma loney has. a toy who is a chip of the old block. BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. 3 V IiQNDON, March 30, Copyright j The French Eepublicans at last begin !( show signs of an intention to grapple witti Boulanger's Ministers and are debating tfie possibility of carrying out theadyiceof those who say the proper thing to do is to boldly seine tho enemy of the KepnbMwjfl cut off his head. "Wiat the Eepublfoana at present propose to do is to proseeate Boulanger for treason. It is very doBul whether this will not do the General, are good' than harm, like certain other aHaeis. At any rate, several of the Ministers, through their press organ, have practically declared in favor of the scheme. Atpmseot the Government, faute tie mieuz, is VBier stood to be in favor Of it, and the 8ite; which is, with a single exoeptlonVStl? Boulangist, has significantly paused ablll defining its judicial powers, so ai to qualify it to conduct this trial. DEAWBACKS TO A XBIAL. - ' The trial of the League of Patriots cosies on before the Senate Tuesday, and if the Ministers make np their mind to.takojhe bold step of prosecuting Boulanger, be will be charged with a treasonable conspiracy in conjunction with." the League. Tirard'a Ministry, however, counts for certain sup port on no section of the Chamber, and ;.is scarcely the one to carry out such a schemi, which, in the hands of Thiers or Gambettji; might have succeeded. The Moderate depS uties are likely to desert the Government at a critical moment, and these are the only .ones who have any real sympathy with It. -If the Senate, which is so bitterly anti Boulangist, were to acquit the General, his gain would be tremendous.' If it convicts . him, it is scarcely .to be expected that it will have the power or the courage to orderhim to be shot, the only effectual thing. So the trial, if attempted under the present cir cumstances, -will probably haver no better result than did his arrest forinsubordina tldri the 3Tloo.net duel, and 89 on; . ALWAYS XJOHia ON Xldjlfcggw -; The General's genius for turning personal One of Boulanger's adversaries' discovered that he was suflcring from the effects of morphine, and made an elaborate attack upon him in connection with ihe morphine habit, which is gnawing like an army oi canker-worms at the" hearts of France. Boulanger, as becomes such an apostle of French degeneration,- declares his disgust with drugs of this kind, but says that he had reluctantly taken morphine by a physi cian's orders, and, that it made him very bad. His illness, his friends say, is a boil on his neck, but others declare that the wonnd received in the Floquet duel has re opened. , The stormy controversy which rages around this slight trouble in the General's neck is at any rate a proof of his import ance. A. boil on any other men's neck in Prance would be of no consequence, but it makes a great difference when the neck chances to be that of Boulanger. CAN'T MAKE A GO OP IT. The Proposed Tin Plate Trnst Not Likely to Pan Ont. BY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 30, The secret respect ing the proposed tin plate trust has at length been discovered. The whole busi ness is being managed by the astute specu lators who successfully formed the great salt syndicate and made thousands of ponnds out of it. A conference of manufacturers is to be held Tuesday next at Swanza, and the circular convening it is signed by Messrs. "Fowler, solicitors, to the salt trnst, and one Compton, who acts in such transactions as the honest broker on-Bismarckian lines. T7p to the present it seems the manufac-. turers have been approached in general terms under the seal of the strictest confi dence a condition which there will be an attempt to enforce npon all who attend the conference. Compton and Fowler say their scheme is one of the most symmetrical beauty, and that their figures cannot fail to convince even the most atheistical "Welsh-, man. , Your correspondent has ascertained that Compton has converted two or three Swanza -men, but not one of them is in the first rank in the trade, and they have been bought over, body and soul, by promises of fat fees as directors and managers, f It is hard to make a man relinquish a scheme bj which he sees a possibility of putting ay a hundred thousand pounds into his pockets and then beating a safe and graceful retreat. That is the lovely vision ever before the eyes of Compton and Fowler, but they will certainly not succeed in this enterprise; and 'it will be a satisfaction to the American users of tin plates to know that it is to their well-known determination to stand no nonsense that the failure will be primarily due. EOTALTI EEALLI DOIKG WELL. A Kins Crazy and a Queen With a Cold, but Nothing More Serious. fBT CABLE TO TOE DIsrATCH.j London, March 30. King Milan, after a wild revel in Vienna by way of a prelim inary canter, has gone off to Constantinople, to investigate Oriental pleasures. Since he has been out of Servia he has, to some ex tent, overcome his dread of assassination, but he still wears a flexible steel undershirt in case of misunderstandings, and always smells his wine before drinking it a habit of which it Will take him years to rid him self. It is rumored that he has grown tired of Mdam ChriBtios, and thinks of setting up a harem on the Goiden Horn. The King of the Netherlands is undenia bly demented, and a regency cannot much longer be delayed. - The Queen "of England has a cold, and the yoang King of Spain has fallen out of his chair and barKed his Imperial nose. In other respects, royalty is doing quite well, - ' "" AN ACTIVESO TOEIGN. The Yonng Emperor of Germany Makes a Featore of Affability Dl Critics Changing Their Opinion of . , Him His EnthusI asm Unabated. mi' CABLE T? THJS.DISrATCH. -London, March 30. Kaiser WHhelm continues his extraordinary activity. This week he has made a great feature of affabil ity. On Wednesday he attended Prince Bismarck's dinner to the members of the JReichstag, and ate, among other things, oysters, oxtail soup, sucking pig, trout, young boar, roast beef, field-tare pie with trufHes, lobsters, French fowl, and ducks, withtjuails all of which indicates a strong digestion, as he still lives.- He was not afraid to mix his drinks, but. took mostly old Burgundy and sweet Cvprns. After this the Kaiser was able to than the deputies and converse with them od every non-partisan question ill Germany. He insisted on .the Chancellor whom he addressed familiarly as Bismarck smoking his long pipe, but smoked cigars himself and invited others to do so. On the follow ing evening,, in company with the Empress; he attended' a dinner at the .British Em bassy, where he ate a good but more, inter national and less thoroughly solid and teu tonic dinner than atBIsmarck's.. He made extremely merry with SirEdward and Lady Malet, whose path in the German capital has often been a thorny one. The- Kaiser left this dinner at 9 o'clock and went to a concert for the benefit of the German Evangelical Mission in German East Africa. He never misses an oppor tunity of showing how thoroughly German he is in every square inch of his body, and bis enthusiasm in the performance' of the. duties attending his station is unabated. It is worth noting that a change has come over the attitude of the entice European -press concerning. "William II. He is no longer rebuked for- the crime of being young, and the talk about the hot-headed-aess of youth hai all disappeared. 'A large and well-founded, suspicion has enveloped this portiori.of the globe to the effect that the people 'who- .are waiting for the Em peror's enthusiasm in government to work off will haye plenty of time for reflection. He has taken up his work in earneat, and he is not laboring nnder the stimulus of any momentary excitement. Most of his efforts are still directed toward the improvement of Germany's great army. He leaves diplomacy in the hands of that blundering and radiant fledgeling, Bismarck. LIKE FATHEB, LIKE SON ililly Moloney Raising the Bod That May Punish Him. TBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.l London, March 30. Billy Maloneyis becoming a familiar figure on show occas ions in London. No one would recognize -in him the Maloney ot old. His full gray beard grows rather long, his cheeks are sunken and he has a restless manner. He moves absently from one hotel smoking room to another. Whenever an old friend arrives from New York, Maldney seems to feel that he must talk the whole matter over with.him'.' His plea is that he cannot go to New-York and testify without going back . on, his friends. He has abundant means; apparently. The story goes here that whenever he needs any money he draws on New York. A short, time aeo. Sims and. Petltt. the dramatists, wrote a highly moral piece' '4i11a1 "RtlwA,. TalTe ' Tt l.ofe Af tttAfl triumph of virtue and the -punishment of -sin. Maloney drew on New York and houeht the' plav. It was produced and is doing au enormous business. Maloney re h'arked the other dav that he had sold the fkmericanirlgnts for $4,000 more than he had paid tor tne drama. At has proved a gold mine to him. Thus does virtue make its own reward) but perhaps, after all, the punishment of Billy Maloney will come in another way. His son, 19 years of age, and English in accent and manner, called on a iriend of mine this morning and announced that he had come for a little advice. 'What about?" .was the query. "I did some heavy betting on the Lin colnshire handicap," was the answer, "backing Callinule for a shade more than $10,000. I" was badly scorched, and I owe that amount to the bookmaker." "What do von want my advice for if you've already lost the money?" asked the man on whom young Maloney had called. "Oh, I was just going 'to ask yon, yon know," was the reply, "if I ought to pay it or not." i From this it would appear that the busi ness and personal methods of the father have not been lost upon the son. SUNDAY LAWS NOT A SUCCESS. Drunkenness in Wales More Common With Saloons Closod on the Sabbath. ,'BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. 1 Xondon, March 30. The most import ant event in Parliament this week has been the second reading of the bill which pro poses to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors on Sundays. This prohibitionist victory was due to the connivance of the Government and its supporters. The keep ers of saloons and public houses are already vowing vengeance. It transpired in the course of the debate that in Wales, where Sunday closing has been in force. for two years, and has tailed to reduce, much less to abolish drunkenness on Sunday,, men and women are in the habit of wearing a can made of tin under 'neath their clothing. In the border districts the .bibulous ones cross the frontier and load up to the full four-quart capacity of their cans. Others get in their quota on Saturday niehts, a la Pittsburg. No self respecting Welshman or woman can long endure the, mute reproach of a full can, and the imperative necessity of unloading promptly has disastrous individual conse quences. Men and women with abnormal abdom inal development are now commonjidjuncts to a Welsh landscape, and the boom in the can industry may account for the improve ment in the tin elate trade. Who savs Parliament is useless, when.it unearths such, momentous tacts as these BURIAL OP JOHN .BRIGHT. In His Grnvo Lies Burled Home Rule's Most Formidable Opponent. IBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, -March 30. John Bright was buried to-day in a dismal quarter of the cemetery at Rochdale with befitting sim plicity in regard to the ceremony, but amid manifestations of popular grief and respect which monarchs cannot command. To the vast, majority of Englishmen the funeral oration Of the dead tribune was preached last evening in the Souse .of Commons in a snperb speech in which Mr. Gladstone set forth the virtues of his lifelong friend. To the cynical observer the most curious feature connected with John Bright'B death and burial has been the fulsome eulogies passed, npon him by the Tory newspapers, who', from the Ximes upward, only a few yCarsflgo could never find adjectives strong enough to express their hatred of the great Liberal orator. In the days before John Bright's failing, mental and physical powers caused him to take sides against Gladstone and home rule, the Tories used to teach their babies -to lisp "bad bogey Bright," and it is recorded that one Con servative editor trained his dog to howl whenever John Bright's name was men tioned in his presence. 'There will soon'be howling inother direc tions now, for wiih honest John Bright dis appears the most formidable of all the op ponents of home rule. "' " G02FE WILD, OF 6AS : STEAMERaopiSgapKEATS OF EEYOLJL, J 'ThVCMef ( of, Kentucky " fieti & Pipe line, Bringing to it A SUPPLY OP KATURALL FUEL. The Old Town. Wakes Up and Everybody is 'Suddenly Seized -With. A MANIA FOR STOCK SPECULATION, While Fanners Owning Land In the Gas Belt Are tepidly Urowinj Elch, Louisville speculators are going wild over natural gas stocks. A pipe line has brought the .fuel to the pity.and companies representing $18,000,000 have been formed for the sale of stock. Everybody is invest ing. In the vicinity ot Brandenburg, Ky where the gas territory lies land is appreci ating enormously in value. One farmer, worth but 55,000 a short time ago, now has 5000,000 worth of property, isfecial tkleobam'to'the dispatcb.i LoTJisviiiii:, March 30. This city has a great deal of wealth accumulated in the usual channels of trade, and it never knew until a few days since what it was to go mad over speculation. Just now its people are in the middle of the greatest excitement known here since the days 6t '61, when the hostile armies were maneuvering around Louisville. Meade county lies 30 miles west of this City. It is a high and hilly region. Neat the little county seat of Brandenburg some natural gas wells have been flowing for 40 years. The wells were made by nature and the gas spurts up in great streams. One enterprising farmer in the vicinity long ago heated and lighted his house with the gas, and also ran a small salt factory by that agency, but no one ever thought that the wells would be valuable. Recently some companies were formed here for the purpose of sinking many more wells in Meade coun ty and piping the gas to this city. Almost all the. wells proved successful, and a few days ago the pipe line reached Louisville. Until then the inhabitants, who are not fond of innovations, made sport of the natural gas people, bnt when the pipe line entered town and several factories were run by means of the gas, they all made A BTJSH FOB NATURAL GAS STOCK. The excitement here has become tre mendous. Little else is thought of or talked of except natural gas. It exceeds the rush caused by the reported gold discoveries in Lower California. The brokers offices have been so densely crowded all the week with persons wishing to buy natural gas stocks that the agents can hardly wall on their customers. The Board ot Trade has estab lished a regular call board for the exchange of natural gas stocks. A number of new brokers offices have been opened, whose owners do nothing bnt deal "for their cus tomers in natural gas stocks. Some of the rises in valuation have been startling. The company which built the pipe line is capitalized at 52,000,000, and its stock has risen in ten days from 20 cents to 70 cents on the dollar. A half dozen others have run UDlfrota 10 to 40 cents. There are know about 15 companies in the field, their touti capiuiu$Kfciuu tuuDuuuoK uj a utue over818,00$oeO; -The"Btocks or theurall are eagerly bdnghb by persons who are in such a rushtolnvest is natural gas that they do not stop- 'to4,iBquire where the company's property is located, or whether it has any at all. Most' other kinds of business have suf fered a temporary cessation and natural gas has become king of Louisville". SEIZED ,BT SPECULATIVE MANIA. . Last night a number of men about town were sitting-in the lobby of a hotel talking about natural:gas. One of them remarked that he had some, land in the gas region. Well,. whK don't you, get up a natural gas company and' sell stock?". asked oner of his friends. , "I had not thought of it," he replied, "bnt I'll do it rightaway.". He went out, got a lawyer, drew up his articles of incorporation, named his com pany and wrote a prospectus. He placed the capital at $1,000,000, in shares of $100 each, which he announced he would sell for five cents on the dollar. In an hour he was back at the hotel receiving subscrip tions for stock. The most eager buyers were the friends who had been talking natural gas with him. He went to bed at 11 o'clock, but before that time he had sold $200,000 of the capital stock, taking in for it $10,000. The buyers include -numerous ladles and boys. As the shares in many companies sell for from $5 to $10, almost everybody can invest. The ladies buy small lots only, but they all take something. Chambermaids and laun dresses invest, and out of the 200,000 inhab itants it is thought that at least half own natural gas stock. FARHEBS BECOME MILLIONAIBE3. But the most remarkable scenes are to be witnessed at Brandenburg, the little town lying in the center of the gas bearing re gion. The Dispatch correspondent vis ited the place and found it crowded with people. Most of the land has been owned by a poor class of farmers, whose heads have been .turned b the extraordinary rise in value's. A big man of middle age, dressed in rough jeans, walked into the little hotel and remarked to a crowd: "Some of them Louisville fellers wanted to give me $100,000 this morning for my farm, but I told them my price was just double-that," "Are there any gas wells on your farm?" "No; but there are, sure, acouple of miles away." This man would have gladly taken $5,000 for his farm a month ago. One old gentle man named Bichardson, living near Bran densburg, has made nearly $509,000. The man who developed the gas" country was Prof. William J. Davis, who has for many years been Secretary of the School Board, and was before that a poorly-paid teacher in the public schools. He has an offer of $150,000 for his interest in the wells, and in a few weeks has jnmped from very modest circumstances into wealth. A PATAL LEAP. A New- Yorker Kills Himself by Jompiae From a Fifth Story Window. tSPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCB.I New Yobk, March 20. James Mulli gan, 46 years of age, formerly employed by the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Bail road nnd discharged in . the. recent strike, committed suioide today by throwing him self from the window in his apartments on the fifth floor to the sidewalk. At the time of the car strike Mulligan had been for 18 vearsa night watchman at the stable of the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Bailroad. After the strike Mulligan was restored Jo his place, but he remained only two days, when he was discharged. He became despondent, and while sitting in the front room of his home to-day with his wife he said he wanted to die. A knock at the door caused his wife to turn to answer the call, and when Mrs. Mulligan returned her .husband had disappeared. At this moment two young men, who lived on the floor below, ran upstairs and told her that some ono in falling had put his boot through their window; Mulligan was found dead on the sidewalk". iSP A French Mail Don't Cats, Another V of the Same Tine Klaht In ' Elshteen tires Lost Prises Jerome Napoleon HavedU. IDT CABLE TO TBI DtSFATCB.1 Londonv March 30.-4"Cbpyiightl Your Brussels correspondent; -who wenttpOstend to investigate theJctrcums'tancesof the terri ble steamer collision, telegraphs that he found the town this morning in a fearful state of excitement and the local officials in a condition almost of panic Both the Com tesse do Fiandres and'tHe Princesse Hen riette were Belgian Government steamers, carrying the mails. 'The service has not been. established many years, and it has had to fight against active and able competitors. The fact thSt the steamers were under the same management will ruin the popularity of the line, and that is what seemed to up Bet the officials more than the loss of life. Prince Jerome Napoleon, who was aboard the Comtesse de Fiandres, did not distin guish himself in any striking fashion be yond screaming that he was lost He went down with his valet, Theodore Castel, and the wonder is that ha ever came up again, for he was handicapped by a big heavy overcoat, bnt the'Prince was dragged into a boat, very corpselike in appearance.but liv ing, while poor Castel was picked np crushed and dead.. The circumstances of the collision, as told your correspondent by Judge Weil, of the Madras civil service, one of the 'survivors, were remarkable. All went well, althoaeh the weather was thick, until the Comtesse de Fiandres was off Dun kirk, when, without the slightest warn ing, the Princess Henrietta ran into her amidships and cut her clean in two. Simultaneously the Fiandres' boilers ex exploded, killing every engineer and fire man below at the time. The forepart of the Fiandres, which sustained the chief shook of the explosion, sank within a couple of minutes, bnt the afterpart, thanks' to the water-tight compartments, kept afloat and and was towed by the Henriette as far as Ostend. At the entrance to the harbor the queer-looking wreck was handed over to a steam tug, which bungled the business and let her founder. v Judge Weil had his jaw fractured, bnt wasquite chipper after he had eased his feelings by denouncing the heartless apathy of the Ostend officials, who left the sur vivors to their own resources; and did not even offer or provide either refreshment or shelter. The latest information puts the loss of life at 14 sailors and 4 passengers. COSTS MORE THAN ITS W0ETH. Unkind- Objections Raised to Pajlne ior Hoynltj Comfort. IBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 30. On Thursday even ing the House of Commons discussed the civil service estimates, and the growing spirit of irreverence toward the crown was manifested and emphasized by the fiendish glee with which the Badicals, headed by Labouchere and -vigorously seconded by Bradlaugh, attacked the votes for royal palaces and pleasure grounds. Labouchere was so disloyal and ttngallanl as to suggest that if the Queen wanted to retain possession of the half dozen or so palaces in which she never resides she ought to pay for the re pairs and not ask Parliament to give her $170,000 for that pnrpose. Unkind objection's were also raised to the payment of the Prince of Wales' water rate, and to the payment by the nation of a little bill for altering his: stables. One hon orable gentleman, announced that most of the proposed expenditure would simply benefit princely German -visitors and aristo cratic syncophants, and on being rebnked by the horrified Deputy Speaker, flopped inter hia Seat, remarking that his feelings .were. too deep .for Parliamentary utterance. The Government could do nothing but quote precedents, and as precedents are sacred to the Tory mind, the votes were passed with the assistance of a mechanical majority. HOME EULE CONTINUES TO GAIN. A Unionist Wins In Enfield, bnt bj a Re duced Majority. IBY CABLE TO TOE DISPATCH. J London? March 30. The result of the Enfield election, just to hand, is far from unsatisfactory to the friends Of home rule. The most sanguine of the Liberals did not hope for more than a substantial reduction of the Tory majority, and their faith has been amply justified. The majority has been pulled down by over 500, despite the long-sustained and frantic efforts of the Conservatives and their mugwump Unionist allies. The constituency has been flooded for a fortnight past with lords and ladies galore, industriously canvassing for the Conserva tive candidate with the pelebian name of Bowles. To-day some of the aristocrats sent their carriages by the score to help convey voters to the polls, and their disgust at the humiliating resu It is profound. Cap tain Bowles, the Unionist candidate, re ceive 5,124 votes against 3,612 cast for Mr. Tairbairns.the nominee oi the Gladstonians. At the last election Lord Folkestone, the Conservative candidate, received 3,287 votes, and Mr. Edgecomb, the Gladstonian candidate, 1,067. The moral of Kennington and Enfield is that the Tories will be able to bold scarcely any London seat where their present ma jority does not run into four figures. ." AKEESTED FOR ARSON. Two Merchants Locked Up Charged With Burning: Their Own Store. ISPZCIAL TELIOBAU TO TOE DISPATCH.l New York, March 30. Simon Sando witz and Philip Coplan kept a drygoods store at 2908 Third avenue. It caught fire on the night of February 16, and the eight families living above it had a lively time getting .out. The store was insured for $2,500 in two companies. The merchants offered to settle for $750. After an investigation- Fire Marshal Mitchell ordered the arrest of Sandowitz and Coplan. They w,ere locked up in the Tombs to-day in default of $10,000 bail. -NOT MUCH OP A PARTI. The Food Cold, Attendance Bad nnd the Wine Indifferent. rSY CABLE TO TOE DISPATOEX.J London, March 30. The Duke of Cam bridge, a.cousin to Queen Victoria and coi mander in chief of the British army, wi good enough to celebrate his seventieth birthday Tuesday last, and a loyal scri5e, in recording the fact, notes with thankfulness that his Boyal Highness hask not fallen asleep over the dinner table for a long time. The food is said to have been halt cold, the attendance bad and the wiues indif ferent. ' GOT HIS OLD PLACE AGAIN. Alonzo Bart Reappointed ns a Division Railway Mall Superintendent. Washington; March 30. The Post master General, upon the 'recommendation of General Superintendent! Bell, has ap pointed Alonzo Burt Superintendent of the Fifth Division of the railway mail service, with headquarters' at Cincinnati. Mr. Burt was removed iromlthe same po sition in 1886. He ranks as one of the ablest men in the postal servictj, and his re appointment,?it is said, will strengthen the department .in restoring it to a high degree of efficiency:' -No -further chandes will be made In this grade of the service sfe49Ed. ogant' Attacks on the Liber f the German Pres3 TOSSBfco I .Vk POTffi GOVERNMENT IN PERIL. 1 William's Pet Hobby May let be Defeate in the Eeichstaj. ' LABOR TROUBLES 'A SERIOUS MENACSi m A Succession of Onranlsefl Strikes Occur All Orsjr the Empire. - ; y. The Government measure to restrict tho liberties of the press is exciting trreat oppo sition in Germany. It is Emperor William' pet hobby, bnt, notwithstanding, it may b defeated in the Beichstag. Organized strikes are in progress all over the empire. Serious trouble is feared. The news of tho Samoan disaster caused great consternation; at Berlin. COPYRIGHT, 1883, BY NEW YOSK ASSOCIATED PKESS.3 , Berlin, March 30. A rupture in tha Government groups, arising from their dis agreement on the press penal law, is certain unless the bill is materially modified. Tha National Liberals declare against tho bilL The Conservatives and Free Conservatives are ready to submit to any repression, though there are symptoms of reaction even among them. The semi-official press the Cologne Ga zette, ibe Magdebnrg Gazette, and others who venture to criticise admit that under the law there can be no freedom of discus sion, and say that the Liberals are justified in coalescing to restrict the bill. These comments have given rise to reports that a commission of the Bundesrath has 'greatly modified the bill. ' It is unlikely, however, as the proposals are being inspired by the Emperor, with whom the absolute regulation of the press is a pet project. His departure from the usual etiquette of the court to attend the Parliamentary dinner at Prince Bismarck's was due to a desire to conciliate the depu ties. A FIGHT IN SIOHT. He had A. long conversation with Herren .Bennigsen, Miquel and Frankenstein, and was graciously familiar. Even if the lead ers are seduced, the bulk of the- National ists would not assent . to the bill. It is probable that the Government will rely'on the center party, thus causing an evolution in partv grouping. The Vossuche Zeltung predicts a clerico Conservative coalition, a majority 6t the Nationalists joining the Progressists, and thus forming a liberal opposition strong enough to imperil the passage of the bill. The first heard here of the Samoa disaster was a telegram from London early this morning; at which hour neither the Ad miralty nor the Foreign Office received any direct cable advices, and were loth .to be lieve the report was true. Inquiry at Lon don appeared to confirm the story and there was general consternation. It was not un til this afternoon that official telegrams reached the Admiralty. Count Herbert Bismarck returns from-his English mission on Monday, his, father's birthday. He says that he has made ar rangements for grand public demonstrations on the occasion of Emperor T7illiant 's crisit to England. WILLIAM TO BE WELCOMED. An English squadron will meet the Ger man squadron accompanying the Emperor and festive receptions will be given at' Lon- . don and Windsor. The doubts as to En gland's popular feeling toward the Emperor inspire semi-official declarations to the effect that the Emperor's dislike of England Is an entire mistake. After Germany he loves England most. His visit is definitely fixed for July. Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria, will visit Berlin about the middle of Au gust, alter six months' mourning for tha Crown Prince Budolf. The strike outbreak is so general that it would appear to be an organized co-operation of the trade centers. In Hamburg the masons, plumbers and carpenters are out on the refusal of their employers to increase their wages. The workmen's syndicate approve of the strike, and men accepting the employers terms will be excluded from the privileges of their unions. At Fiberfeld and Barwen the manufacturing works are closed and the .men are ont. At Crefeld the workmen will strike on Monday unless their demands are granted. At "Nuremburg the carvers and toymakers are out. LABOB TBOUBLES. The Berlin masons, at a meeting on Wednesday, decided to inaugurate a gen eral strike In the bnilding trades. The German Socialists have bad a disagree ment with the French Socialists over the programmed" the Paris congress. The French committee insisted npon having the exclu sive right to control the order of the pro ceedings and to fix the subjects for discus sion. The Germans decline to attend, un less the arranging of the order ot business be left to the congress. A commission of the Beichstag has de cided to prosecute Herr Grillenberger for offensive press comments concerning mem bers of the Beichstag. Admiral Hensner ha? been appointed Secretary of the Im perial Naval Office. , A special Japanese mission, headed by General Yamagata, Minister of the Interior, has arrived here. The party will remain here about a month and will return home via Amend. A PKIEST INDICTED FOE JIUEDEB. Frlma Facie Case pinde Ont Asaiast Father HIcFadden by the Government- Dublin, March 30. A: prima facie casa has been found against Father McFadden for participation in the murder of Police Inspector Msrtin at Gwedore. Police In spector Martin, with a party of policemen, attempted to arrest Father McFadden for offenses under the crimes act. The time osen to make the arrest was immediately filter the priest had celebrated mass in his chapel. -"" Members of the congregation rescued Father McFadden from the police, and he had nearly reached the door of his' house when Inspector Martin seized him. At that moment a stone was fired, which struck the inspector on the head, inflicting injuries which caused his death a short time alter. TEIED IT TWO WAIS. A. Man Who Wanted to Commit Snleldo Very Badly, Indeed. ISPIC1AL TELXOSAlt TO THE DISr ATCTC1 Paekebsbtjro, March 30. John Cockerel!, a well-known machinist in the employ of the Baltimore and Ohio Bail road, attempted to commit suicide this morning by cutting his throat with a razor. He inflicted a ghastly, bnt not fatal wound, and then went to the Kanawha river, and threw himself in. He -was rescued alive by persons standing near and placed in the hands ot the authorities. Cockerell gives as the reason for his rash act that he had been down-hearted and loomy several days and concluded to kill imself. J . J