Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, May 12, 1889, Image 1

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    -1E
TRIPLE NUMBER. . ."":. I
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iFORTY-iFOTJBTH TEAR
T
The British Cabinet Prevents
What Might HavVBeen
a Revolution.
T FEARED THE LIBERALS,
And Consequently Would firm Uo
Bisks of a PronaWe Defeat
A GENERAL ELECTION IS KOT COURTED.
Some Scati Would be Lost to tho Govcrn-
meat In Sack a Case The Successful
Combine Against Evicted Tenants Only
One Way to Retaliate Prominent Amer
ican! One Meets on Piccadilly Two Opin
ions ot Bonlanser Ex-Mayor Hewitt
Causes a Sensation Queen Victoria Dis
appoints 20,000 of Her Faithful Subjects
IIow Mr. Depew's Speech Is Met la
London and London Society.
The British Cabinet lias been compelled
to forego forcing a bill to its passage by
fighting the Tories and Liberal-Unionists
by threats of a dissolution of Parliament
and the consequent elections 'with their at
tendant worry and expense. English poli
tics afford quilt a study jnst now. The
other gossip from Europe is interesting.
SPOILED
M
FU
rBY CABLE TO TILE DISPATCH.!
London, Hay 1L Copyright Minis
ters of the Government are in anxious coun
cil to-day to consider whether or no they
shall make the passage of the bill ratifying
the anti-sugar bounty convention a question
of confidence. Some of the bolder spirits,
including Balfour, were in favor of com
pelling the Commons to accept, rightly ar
guing that Tory and Liberal-Unionist mal
contents would swallow their principles, if
confronted with the alternative of a dissolu
tion of Parliament, and the worries and
expenses of a general election, in which
many would certainly lose their seats.
Moderate-minded ministers, however, dread
jed subjecting the Unionist alliance to a
strain even more trying than that to which
it was subjected during the Birmingham
election squabble.
A Sacrifice Had to Be Made.
The Moderates being strengthened by a
letter from Hartington, warning the Cabi
net he could not answer for any action his
followers might take, and as the faithful
' Times this morning solemnly warned the
X Government of the danger they were ran
sssvuing, it was mournfully decided to sacrifice
theailf, together with its Ancle-Austrian
father, Baron De "Worms.
The Liberal leaders, more than any one
else, will regret the Government's decision,
for it has deprived them of what promised
to be far and away the best and liveliest
fight of the session. '
It is probable that the ministerial de
cision will not be immediately announced,
the idea in some influential quarters being
that if the Government were to climb down
jnst now it would look like an undignified
surrender to popular clamor.
A Cabinet Without Dignity.
This idea is somewhat funny. There is
sot enough dignity left among the entire
Cabinet to fight out an organ grinder. Dur
ing the past fortnight, Salisbury has been
approaching, cap in hand, nearly every
leading Liberal-Unionist and some Tory
peers, in the vain hope of obtaining a suit
able successor to Lord Londonderry as Lord
Lieutenant of Ireland. It is currently re
ported that he has received over a dozen re
fusals. No peer worth his salt will play
second fiddle to Balfour and the viceregal
throne in the stormy time coming will be as
uncomfortable as a bed of prickly pears.
In these melancholy circumstances the old
project is revived of a residential prince of
the blood in Dublin with an allowance suf
ficienty liberal to enable him to maintain a
court, the brilliancy of which shall dazzle
Irish eyes and turn the wicked nationalists
from the error of their way.
Too Great to be Killed.
The Prince of Wales is to great a man to
be exiled to Erin. Prince Albert Victor, it
is feared, is to useful to his father in shar
ing the social duties of opening bazaars,
laying foundation stones and the like, to be
spared.
The only prince remaining who has noth
ing to do, and who is in other ways consid
ered eligible, is Prince George of Wales, s
pleasant young fellow, not .troubled with
an overplus of brains, who holds a lieuten
ant's commission in the royal navy. He is
24 years of age, and as his only income at
present is his lieutenant's pay and scanty
pocket money jointly provided, by his parsi
monious grandmother and his father, the
Irish Viceroyalty would suit him very welL
It is rumored that the matter was consid
ered at to-day's cabinet council, but the de
cision, if any were arrived at, is for the
present a secret
lhe Freeman's Journal receives the sug
gestion that the Prince of Wales himself
should reside in Dublin not unkindly, on
the ground that he would be
Preferable to Peers
like the Tory Orangeman who is about to
leave, but It adds presumably for the bene
fit of Princes Albert and George that a boy
kinglet and a bread-and-butter court would
cap with a head-dress of ridicule the hoary
and sinister history of a viceregal institu
tion linked with 10,000 crimes.
The Irish bureaucrats and their British
ailies, alarmed at the successful arbitration
in the dispute on the Vandeleur estate, are
plotting to thwart a general movement in
favor ot a peaceful settlement of agrarian
troubles in other districts, and their meth
ods are so simple thatit is too probable they
will succeed. Large sums of money have
been raised at the Tory clubs in London and
amontheTory aristocracy, and this is de
voted to the support of the cvictinglandlord
upon whose estates In Donegal ihere has re-
jj- cently been such terrible work. He has
been paid from the landlord pool a sum Gazette, which remarks, after a seris of a"i
eaual to three years xeatpon the sole con-1 tated aad uaeoKplimentary rwaarfe "aWt
dition that he makes no terms .with his mis
erable tenants .save upon the basis of
Unconditional Surrender.
Other landlords will be helped"upon simi
lar easy conditions, so that there will be
practically a premium placed upon evic
tions. If the movement should attain the
proportions its promoters intend, it will be
necessary for tenants to form, with English
assistance, a pool of their own. The Irish
leaders are anxiously considering the mat
ter, and may be trusted to do the best for
their poor people.
The week in the Parnell commission court
has not been altogether satisfactory. Mr.
Parnell's examination and cross-examination
resulted in a veritable triumph for the
Irish leader, whose political record has
stood the minutest apd most malignant
scrutiny of his detractors and enemies. But
the attempt to prove-the true causes of the
agrarian troubles by the evidence of Irish
bishops was stopped by the extraordinary
ruling of the commissioners. On behalf of
the Times, witness alter witness, mostly
police officers aud magistrates, were
Permitted to Give Opinions,
draw inferences, and suggest causes for out
rages and other excrescences on the Na
tional movement, but the Irish leaders are
not to be allowed equal license. Their wit
nesses mnst. be rigidly confined to facts
within their personal knowledge. In view
of what has been going on for months past,
the ruling is scandalously unfair. But it
will have to be submitted to. Its immedi
ate effect will be to quadruple the number
of witnesses necessary to call frtrthe defense,
and it may defer for several months the
final triumph of the Irish leaders. i
A MARITAL MISTATE.
Evidence That the English Often Marry the
Wrong Sister First Continued At
tempts to Pass the Deceased Wife's
Sister Marriage Bill.
rBT CABLE TOTES DISPATCH. J
London, May 11. The bill which seeks
to legalize marriage with a deceased wife's
sister made its annual appearance in the
House of Lords On Thursday, and was duly
rejected, this time by a majority of 27, the
bishops, as usual, assembling in full force
and voting en masse against it The Prince
of Wales also, as usual, did his best to in
duce the peers to support the bill, and re
corded his own vote in its favor.
The history of the bill is curious. Years
ago some wealthy men who had contracted
illegal unions with their sisters-in-law met
and agreed to subsidize agitation in favor of
an alteration of the marriage laws, by means
of this bill. The agitation has been since
kept going entirely by the money of rich
Jteople personally interested in seeing the
aw changed. There is little popular inter
est in the question.
The Prince of Wales originally cham
pioned the bill for 'family reasons, the
Queen being desirous that the Princess
Beatrice should marry her brother-in-law,
the Grandduke of Hesse. Ultimately she
got tired of waiting and married young
Battenburg, but the Prince of Wales has
remained faithlul to the cause. The House
of Commons has frequently passed the bill,
and one year the promoters caught the
bishops napping and rushed it to a second
reading, by a small majority, but at a later
stage the lords' spiritual mustered in over
whelming force and threw out the bill.
It is probable the bill would pass if the
promoters would drop the clause making its
operation retrospective, but this would not
suit the noble and wealthy patrons who.
want their irregular unions legalized and
their S2iprlng legitimized, arthc' jssme timeV
nor the few hundred humbler couples who
every day defy the law and'TBarry'within.
the prohibited degree.
The discussion recalls the remark-of an
American that Englishmen xecm always to
marry lhe wrong sister first
HEWITT CAUSES A SENSATION.
The Ex-Mayor Says the South Will Some
time be the Hardware Center.
HIT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH
London, May 11. It was announced
that ex-Mayor Hewitt, of New York, would
attend a Unionist meeting addressed by
Balfour in London, this week, but whether
he intended to go or not, he was not there.
On the evening of the Unionist meeting he
was a guest at a banquet of the Iron and
Steel Institute, and addressed the members.
He caused considerable sensation among
them by prophesying that the Southern
States ot America would become the center
of the world's hardware trade. This theory
is quite new to Englishmen, and startling.
I saw Abram S. Hewitt at the Bristol
Hotel this morning. He was suffering from
severe cold in the head, which added no
charm to his usual crustiness of manner.
He was somewhat irritated by the report
spread by English newspapers that he had
been staying with the Dnke and Duchess of
Marlborough. The report, he said, was
quite untrue, and he also thought it very
improper to ask him questions about the
health of the Duchess. He remarked that
he wanted to secuie quiet in London; that
he had come away from New York to for-
fet the city for a -time, and that the less he
eard about it the better it would be.
QUEEN YIC NOT VEET AMIABLE.
The Old Lady Disappoints Many Thousands
of Her Loyal Subjects.
rBT CABLE TO TBE DISPATCH.
London. May 11. Queen Victoria gave
her subjects a chance of looking at her for
an hour or two this week in Hyde Park.
She looked very red, very small, profusely
wrinkled, and not very amiable. She gave
another exhibition of her extraordinary lack
of consideration for the public by driving
out of a side gate in the park, about a mile
above the main entrance, while 15,000 or
20,000 Britons waited patiently and hope-'
fully to see her and bow her back to the
palace. Everybody thought she would re
turn by way of Hyde Park gate, as all the
Eolicemen were drawn up in line there,
olding the public vigorously back so that
the Qneen should have a free way with her
carriage. But the old lady apparently
changed her mind at the last moment, for
she went by a labyrinth of small streets to
the lower entrance of the palace, while the
public waited expectantly and without its
dinner till about 9 o'clock at night
The Princess of Wales, who wonld never
disappoint people, now drives out regularly
at G.30 in Hyde Park, and the-public is np-'
peased. Though the Queen, the Princess of
Wales and the Lord Mayor always drive
about with more or less ceremony, the5
Prince of Wales is the most democratic of
all the dignitaries when driving. I havfe
seen him on several occasions recently driv
ing in ne of the ordinary hansoms. i
NOT MUCH DANGEE IN IT.
Small Ground to Fenr Tbat Canada Cr(nld
Whip the United States. .
IBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.1
London. May 11 Mr. Depew's oration,
in which he announced that the Dominion
of Canada was a ripe plum which Would
very soon -fell into the Yankee hat, is Irfoked
upon here with considerable irritatioii. Tho
solution of the question of the annexation of
Canada to the United States is notsocisyas
.uaj. jiit.. j vivjiiuuiiuG huuiu inaicue.
ThpT'nri'Kniriti ATnmccA1 Tw Yt .CJ r -.
the United States, that the Canadian militia
by itself could give an awful lesson to the
armed mobs of the United States independ
ent of the help which would be given by
Great Britain.
The danger of45,000 men, which, if my
memory serves, is the outside limit ot the
forces of the Dominion, walloping 65,000,000
of people would undoubtedly strike a Can
adian statesman as a remote one. I do not
believe there is much alarm over the pros
pect in the United States.
DISSIPATION OP FRENCH WOMEN.
The Opium Habit Causing a Great Amount
of Talk Just Now.
rBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. 1
XONDON, May XL The morphlne'habit,
which is causing such an amount of talk in
Prance, is receiving attention from English
reviewers and medical men. It would ap
pear, according to some of the commentators
on the vices of dissipated folk, that all sorts
of ghastly dissipations have been adopted
by women who have nerves and other
idiosyncrasies. On this side of the water
tea cigarettes have been superseded by
cigarettes filled with various herbs, in
cluding opium, which are smoked by the
women of London who ran to that sort of
thing, while the number of ingenious drugs
which have been introduced among the
women of Paris is too long to enumerate.
There is little serious doubt about the ex
tent to which this particular torm of dissi
pation has taken in Paris, but nfost of the
talk in London apparently emanates from
professional alarmists who are forever
writing to the editors of the daily papers.
Speaking of France reminds me that the
oracles of fashion there have rung the death
knell of what was once a comfort to long and
thin-necked women, .Halt the smart women
have given up collars altogether, and war
their gowns cut loosely around the neck.
The effect at first is very odd. after the tall
I collars and rather showy neckwear which
nave oeen worn wuu sauor-maue gowns
daring the past three or four years. But
when the wearer has a pretty neck the -effect
is taking. Owners of scrawny or unlovely
necks would never adopt the fashion in
America. ,
TWO OPINIONS OP BOULAN&ER,
One Is That He's No Soldier, the Other That
There's Something In Him.
IBT CABLE TO TBI SISFATCB.I
London, May 11. An Englishman who
claims to have had exceptional opportuni
ties for studying Bou!anger writes to the
newspapers that the General has nothing of
the soldier or military dictator about him,
but is more like a half-bred, cunning Welsh
shopkeeper with his Sunday clothes on. A
distinguished company who met the Gen
eral at dinner at Baroness Burdett-Coutts'
house last evening formed a very different
opinion of him. The men in the company,
among whom were the Duke of St Albans,
Sir Alexander Gait and Sir Francis de
Winton, agreed that Boulanger had some
thing in him, and the ladies voted him very
taking. .
Goschen, Chanceller of the Exchequer,
was invited by the Baroness to grace the
banquet with his presence. Being a Cabi
net Minister, he prudently declined, but
sent his wife and daughter, to show there
was: no ill feeling.
PROMENADING ON PICCADILLY
Many Prominent Americans to be Met Daily
In London.
tBT CABLE TO TUX DISPATCH.: .
LONDON,May 11. I passed on Piccadilly,
Senator Sherman, ex-Secretary Whitney,
Henry E. Abbey, Consul General New.
James B. Osgood, -Minister "Washburne, J
and a dozen lesser lights, to-day, all in the
course of a half-mile walk.
The hotels are filled to overflowing and
the steamers are loaded up to the decks with
visitors.
Joseph Chamberlain entertained his
father-in-law Endicott to dinner, this
evening, at his house in Prince's Gardens.
A considerable number of titled and well
known guests of Unionist complexion at
tended. NOT A NOTELTT HERE.
The English Pleased With a Slot Machine
for Opera Glasses.
rBT CABLE TO TOE DISPATCH.
London, May 11. It is rather amusing
to read in the English papers of an extra
ordinary innovation in theatrical life whieh
was accomplished last night at the Criterion
Theater. All London is talking to-day
about the enterprise and ingenuity of Mr.
Wyndham in supplying his patrons with
opera glass boxes which may be opened by
dropping a shilling into the' inevitable slot
The whole idea ot the innovation is gen
erally credited to Mr. Wyndham, and the
newspapers are ignorant of the fact that the
innovation has been in use in America a
long while. The tariff here, by the way, is
more than double that in New York.,
THE MIN0RITI WILL BOLT.
Anti-Secret Society Advocates Defeated In
the Disciple Conference.
JSrXCTAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.1
York, Pa., May IL At to-day's session
of the World's Quadrennial Conference of
the United Brethren Church, memorials
aud petitions from the different conferences
were received from the committee to whom
was referred the new constitution and con
fession of faith. The committee reported
affirmatively. Bev. Titus, of Michigan,
vigorously opposed the acceptance of the
report, and presented 1,200 signatures to a
petition praying lor its non -adoption. Bev.
Floyd, of Indiana, presented the petitions
of 5,375 persons in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois,
Eastern Nebraska and other points praying
for no change in the constitution.
Bev. Wood, of North Michigan, presented
petitions signed by over 1,700 persons pray
ing for the same. The question, after thor
ough discussion from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.(
was put to a vote and the new constitution
iidonted bv a vote of 110 to 20. The minor
ity will probably bolt on Monday and con
vene in a conference of their own.
I
THEQUGH WITH THEIE W0EK.
The Scotch-Irish Congress Effects a Per
manent Orcanization and Adjourns.
Columbia, Tenn., .May H. The last
day of the Scotch-Irish Congress was opened
by a stirring extempore speech by "Hon.
Benton McMlllin, who said that not a single
member of the Scotch-Irish race, so iar as
he knew, had ever been an Anarchist or
Socialist He then referred to the desola
tion in the South 20 yeara ago, when there
was scarcely a farm left fenced from Ken
tucky to the Gulf, out of which the Scotch
Irish had produced its present flourishing
condition.
It was announced that a permanent organ
ization having now been formed, those. wish
ing to become members of the society should
address A. 0. Floyd, Secretary, Columbia,
Tenn., and the first Scotch-Irish congress
closed appropriately with I'Auld Lang
Syne," sung by the large audience, the band
leading.
Struck by the Limited.
, (SPECIAL TELEORAM TO THBDISrATCH.I
Mansfield, 0 May 1L The west
bound limited on the Pittsburg, Fort "Wnynbl
and Ciucago, slrucu and instantly killed a
man eight miles t east of this cltyHhis alter
poon. Letters in the man's pocket were
addressed to George S. WieriBan, Herdler-
PITTSBURG, SUNDAY,
CAT,. ( A CT? AT?. GTTT TTQ
Oil! LU-Ei V-D D UlilLlJ.
Colored Voters in the South Claim to
do msgusieu mm roiititxs.
THEY XJAN SEE tfOTHING IN IT.
The White Republican Movement Haying
Quite a Serious Effect.
THE! ALSO THINE HAEEISON CHILLI.
As, a Eetnlt They Keep Away from the Foils and Hazy
. of Them Emigrate,
Anew phase of. the Southern question ap
pears. It is claimed, that President Harri
son's rebuffs of all visiting negro delega
tions from the South, added to the "White
Bepnblican" movement,has alien iated many
of the race, at least temporarily, and they
no longer imagine they own the earth.be
cause their party has returned to power,
They are taking no part in politics at pres
ent and seem very much disgusted.
i
fSPECIAL TELZOKAil TO TITS DISFATCU.
Washington, May 11. ThePresident's
rebuff of several negro delegations from the
South, notably his stinsing advice to the
Alabamans to refrain from aspiring to lead
the Bepnblican party, has produced in lhe
minds of the colored people a state of mind
very different from that observed shortly
after the Presidental election. Then the
election of victory after four years of Demo
cratic administration made the negroes in
solent The relations between the races
-were anything but amicable.
The present fceljpg is one of general irri
tation. The North Carolina negroes, so
visitors state, are not only migrating to the
Southwest, but those who remain refuse to
take any part in politics. Some are actu
ated by a desire to cast Suspicion on the
Democrats, as if to charge that the latter
prevent the colored voters from 'going to the
polls, as in Lafayette parish, Louisiana, but
the greater number appear to be thoroughly
disgusted with politics.
A 8TBAW XN irSELT.
This was notably the case in municipal
elections a day or two ago. The negroes at
Baleigh said tfiat they much regretted ever
having gone solidly with the Bepnblican
party. They declared that they had accom
plished nothing for themselves and nothing
for public interests. v
The negroes are just now restive because
they are not recognized by President Har
rison as they expected to be, while "white
Bepnblican" movements are everywhere
smiled upon. There are also industrial
reasons for their discontent Farming in
terests in the South have not prospered at
equal pace with manufactures. The new
factories and additional lines of transporta
tion havo not improved the general mass,
but only the special interests served. The
villages in the tobacco manufacturing re
gion nave grown into cities in the last 10 or
15 years. Further down the Piedmont
country iron and coal have worked marvels,
but the planting class, except in the imme
diate localities where the mines are or the
bright tobacco is produced, has not been
prosperous. ,
WET PZ.ANXEBS DON'T QUIT.
Wages" are comparatively low because th
nlanter is notable to make iheai.hI.slVv
Heis-hiMselfTlfssaUsued, but in most it f
stances owning tneoii and. not Derag anje
to sell it tit remunerative prices he holds on
hoping for better things. His labor has
not so many ties, and is breaking. This
seems part of the negro nature to assert in
dependence at least 6ince the days of slav
ery and very slight regard is paid to ways
and means. Already goodly numbers of
the blacks who migrated earlier in the year
to Kansas and Louisana have returned to
Virginia and the Carolinas.
Tne improvidence or the race is every
bit as great now as It was in the days when
the master supplied the larder. The negro
question proper is the question of what will
he do with himself, and among thoughtful
Southerners is deemed one of more impor
tance than the other as a political question,
of what shall be done for him.
PBOGBAMME FOB THE TUTUBE.
In the next Congress beyond doubt we are
going to see the Chandler role played by
the whole Bepnblican party. The policy of
taking control of Southern elections is just
now very popular in that party, although
signs ate not wanting that a revolt from it
mar be expected sooner or later. This
policy will have for its chief objects the re
duction of Democratic members in Con
gress, and in some degree the reconciliation
of the negroes to the Bepnblican party. It
is not expected that the measure will settle
what is called the Southern question, but it
is the only thing short of broad politics too
magnanimous for the men in power to con
ceive and set on foot, which will meet the
case at all.
Thus we shall have, in the opinion of all
Democrats and some clear-sighted Bepnb
licans, a policy Inaugurated which obscures
the true issue of negro self-help and keeps
open indefinitely the sectional sore with
which the better part of the country has
long since become disgusted.
SETEEEST ST0EM FOE IEAES.
Thousands of Dollars Won't Cover tho
Damage Near Carlisle.
ISFECIAL TELEQBAM TO THE DISPATCH.1
Cablisle, May 11. The wind storm
which passed over this valley yesterday
evening did very little damage in this city,
but in the surrounding country the loss, as
leported to-day, will foot up many thousands
of dollars. The dwelling owned by the Mc
Cunes and occupied by William Leman,
near Shippensbnrg, was destroyed by fire.
Several roofs on barns were blown off and
carried some distance. The passenger trains
on the Harrisbnrg and Gettysburg Bailroad
were delayed on account of trees and tele
graph poles' blown across the track.
Tne dwelling house of Peter Bean, in
Dickinitown, was struck by lightning, and
the entire family were knocked down and
lay for some time insensible. It is thought
Mrs. Bean will die from the shock received.
The house was somewhat shattered. The
storm was the severest one for years in this
section.
WILL GO 10 EUB0PE.
Chief Clerk of the Senate Errctt and Sena
tor Kutan Soon to Sail.
rSPECTAL TELEOBAW TO THE DISPATCH.1 ,
Habrisbubo, May 1L Chief Clerk
Errett, of the Senate, who left for Pittsburg
to-day, will sail for Europe on the 25th
instant, accompanied by Mrs. Errett. They
will visit England. Paris, Vienna, Berlin,
mnd many other points of interest, and will
return in abont four months.
Senator Kutan and wife will leave for
Europe in June, for an indefinite time. The
Senator has been in the old country several
times, and the contemplated trip is alto
gether in the interest of .his health.
Mexicans Observed the Centennial.
Washington, May 1L United States
Consul Willard ut Guayamos, Mexico, re
ports to the Department of State that the
flags on the lorcign.consulntes and the Mex
ican: publio buildings there were unfurled
Anril 30. in heaer ,f the eeattnlilal of
J,WahiBgtea'B inugwtie.V .r . &, . A
MAT 12, 1889.
HOT ENOUGH EOB ALL
Tho Governor Will Have to Teto Some of
the Appropriation Bills RevenB.es
Insufficient No Fancy Clothes
Tor the Militia Bills Signed.
ISPECIAL TELEQBAMrO TBI DISPATCH.!
Barrisburq, May 1L The 51,000,000
which the Legislature added to the appro
priation for the support of the common
schools for the next two, years will likely
result in the disapproval of a consider
able number of appropriation bills' and
the cutting down of the amounts
allowed in others. The House Committee
on Appropriations was asked to give the
schools $4,000,000, but it would not allow
more than $3,000,000 because, in its opinion,
the revenues did not justify the larger
amount. The House though't otherwise, and
increased the amount a round $1,000,000,
and the Senate ratified its work. The Gov
ernor finds that if the schools are to have
52,000,000 a year annually there must be a
material curtailment of the aggregate de
manded by other appropriation Dills.
The item in the general appropriation bill
providing for the expenditure of 75,000 for
the purchase of dress uniforms for the Na
tional Guard will probably be vetoed in con
sequence of the large amount voted the
schools. The Governor is understood to be
kindly disposed toward the proposed im
provement in the appearance of the militia,
but the finances of the State are not thought
by him to warrant the outlay required.
General Hastings is strongly, in favor ot the
appropriation, tut he does not talk like one
who believes the Governor will approve it
The appropriation of $50,000 to the Phila
delphia Veterinary Hospital is also saicL to
be in danger of a veto because of the in
sufficiency of the revenues to meet the ex-
Lpenses that would be involved in the ap-
vroval of the arjoroDriation bills.
Among the last bills signed by the Gov
ernor are the following: Authorizing the
extension of the charters of State provident
institutions, savings institutions and sav
ings banks for 20 years and providing the
methods and restrictions under which such
extension can be made; authorizing Or
phans' Courts to approve private sales of
property of decedents if a better price may
thus be obtained; prohibiting managers of
limited partnerships from paying to their
officers, after five years existence, compensa
tion exceeding in the aggregate the amount
of net earnings actually earned during 'the
year precedipg; restpring pilot fees of 1881
and providing that American vessels laden
with coal mined in the United States shall
pay no pilotage fees.
i
AMBUSHED BI HIGHWAIHEN.
Bold Bobbers Attack aa Army Paymaster
aud Escort, Capturing 820,000.
Tucson, Abiz., May 11. Major J. W.
Wham, paymaster of the United States
army, with Clerk Gibbon and an escort of
11 soldiers, were on the way this afternoon
from Wilcox to pay the post at Fort
r Thomas, and when in a narrow gorge a few
miles north of Cedar Springs they were at
tacked by a party of ambushed men. A
constant fire was kept np for nearly half an
hour, when eight of the escort were wounded,
five dangerously. The robbers succeeded
in securing $29,000, and escaped into the
mountains.
Major Wham was uninjured, but Gib
bon's clothing was badly torn by shot. A
troop of cavalry has been sent out from Ft
Grant to watch the mountain passes so that
the highwaymen may not escape. The
number of the latter is not known but it is
believed to be seven or eight
OLD FBIENDS ILL TOGETHER,
General Cameron and Colonel Shocb Salter
Ins; at tho Same Time.'
IEPECIAL TELXQBAM TO TUX DISPATCH.1
Habrisbubo, May 11. Dr. Dunatt,
General Cameron's Harrisbnrg physician,
received a telegram to-night stating that
the General was improving, although still
confined to his bed. It is a singular coinci
dence that General Simon Cameron and
Colonel Samuel Shocb, of Columbia, who
were bosom friends when young and still
hold the same relations to each other, are ill
at the same time. 4
Colonel Shoch is three years older than
General Cameron, and a short time prior to
the ninetieth anniversary of the latter's
birth wrote an amusing poem, which he ded
icated to his old friend, portraving the char
acteristics and dress of the General in his
youth.
FISH A FEEE MAN.
The Ex-Banker Proceeds to the Home of
His Daughter la Mew York City.
NewYoek, May 11. .Tames D. Fish
reached this city at 8:50 to-night at the
Grand Central depot He was accompanied
by his daughter, an elderly gentleman and
little girl. The party studiously avoided
a number of newspaper men-who were on
hand, and made their way to a carriage in
waiting at Forty-second street. Having
seated themselves in the conveyance, the
driver lashed the horses and drove down
Fourth avenue.
Fish had been expected on an earlier
train. In explanation of his late arrivalJt
was stated that he had stopped off at Al
bany. Mr. Fish 'looked haggard and care
worn. The party were driven to Brooklyn
and alighted at the home of the ex-convict's
daughter.
A FAST-FIRING GUN.
Tho Successful Test of a Newly Invented
Machine at Annnpolis.
Annapolis, May 11. A trial of the
Driggs-Schreider rapid fire six-pounder gun
took place to-day at the naval ordnance
proving grounds near here, under Lieuten
ant Commander James H. Dayton, Lieuten
ant Driggs, the inventor, and the naval at
taches of the German and Japanese Lega
tion at Washington. The gun fires the
same ammunition as the Hotchkiss six
pounder, and the inventor claims several
points of superiority over that gun.
The test to-day was for rapidity of firing,
non-heating qualities, security against pre
mature explosions and smoothness of ma
chinery. The gun was fired 19 times in 1
minute, and 60 times in 4 minutes and 20
seconds, everything working satisfactory.
TWO CHILDREN QUAEEEL,
And One of Them Murders His Playmate
''' With a Shotgnn.
Bklvtdebe, N. J., May 11. At Moun
tain Home, Monroe county, Pennsylvania,
on Friday, Jeffrey Harrison, aged 11 years,
shot and killed Sophia Everett, aged 10.
While the two were playing together at
Harrison's homeUhey quarreled, and the
boy ran upstairs and got a shotgun.
xne little girl, became frightened, and ran
into another room. The boy forced his way
in, and aiming the gun, fired. The girl fell
badly mangled and soon died. The youth
ful murderer is in custody.
DELAWARE JUSTICE.
A Dozen White and Colored Criminals Taste
the Lash and Pillory.
Wilmington, Del., May 11. Five ne
groes and seven whites were whipped at
Newcastle this afternoon for larceny, high
way robbery and horse stealing. Three of
the whites, for burglary, were given forty
lashes and 'one hour in the pillory each.
And one of the negroes- iook.20lashes and
oae hour ia the pillory for horse stealing.
AheatlSO Bpootatorn -ware Kweafc- . .
EDISON IS KICKING;
His Share of the Profits-in the Phono
graph Business He Thinks
I0T AS BIG AS THE! SHOULD BE.
He .Wants the Contract With Gilliland and
Tomlinson Annulled.
A SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS DEMANDED.
Mr. Edison Claims Tbat He Was Qalded Blindfolded
Into a Trap.! '
Thomas A. Edison has.brought suit against
Gilliland and Tomlinson, of the Phonograph
Company, for an accounting to him and pay
ment of all sums due him as inventor of the
phonograph, and which he claims they have
obtained by treachery and breach of faith.
He thinks he is not receiving anything like
what he should for the work of his brain.
rSPECIAL TELIQBA1I TO THE DISPATCH.1
New YobK, May 11. The news of a de
cided breach in the friendly relations between
Thomas A. Edison ou the one side and on
the other Ezra T. Gilliland, the manager of
the Edison Phonograph Company, and
John C. Tomlinson, long Mr. Edison's
confidant and personal counsel, was
confirmed to-day. Mr. Edison through
his solicitors, Eaton & Lewis
and Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll, of counsel,
filed a bill in equity in the United States
Circuit Court, charging Mr. Gilliland and
Mr. Tomlinson with treachery and breach
of faith toward him, and demanding that
they make account to him for money re
ceived as his agents, and pay to him such
moneys as the court may deem equitable.
In his bill Mr. Edison declares tbat he is
an inventor who has gathered about him
many employes, attached to him by ties of
friendship as well as of interest, who have
giyen him their faithful devotion aud have
received his confidence and favor in return.
FOOLED BY HIS FBIENDS.
Mr. Edison says that it has been his
practice to reward these -persons by giving
them stock in his inventions, and that in
particular he induced Mr. Gilliland to leave
the American Bell Telephone Company,
giving him a much larger sum
annually, than Gilliland previously re
ceived; that he found John C. Tomlinson, a
lawyer, "having an inconsiderable business
and earning but a very small income," and
made him wealthy by retainers, and placed
him upon the list of personal associates and
friends whom he was in the habit of reward
ing for services in the manner described.
Mr. Edison recites the formation of the
Phonograph Company, of whose 12,000
shares of stock he owned all but 40. The
Phonograph Company was to sell none of
its machines itself, but all this; was to be
done through Gilliland as general agent
Gilliland had a contract to do this, which
amounted to a monopoly of the sale of the
phonograph.
The bill declares" that no consideration
was paid by Gilliland; that no sales of
phonographs were ever made by him under
the contract, and -that in consideration of
receivfag'i&e contract-he- agratd ty holdjt
subject to Edison's 'pleasure and absolute
control, and. always to make add hold, his
contracts of like nature subject to the same
control. t
COAXED INTO THE CONTRACT.
Mr. Edison then states that in May,of
last year Gilliland and Tomlinson agreed
to negotiate the sale of Edison's stock in
the phonograph company; that he (Edison)
was reluctant to sell his stock, but was
urged to do this by the defendants; but
that finally all the stock was sold to Jesse
H, Lippincott for $500,000. Then comes
the pith of Mr. Edison's charges. JHe de
clares that:
Daring the progress of the negotiation for
tbe sale of the said stock, and as a cart there
of, tne said OUliland and Tomlinson also ne
gotiated with tbe said Lippincott a sale of the
said Gilliland agency contract, and Included a
sale of said stock: that the said negotiations
for the sale of your orator's stock and said
Gilliland' contract were carried by defendants
ax the same time and the sale of both stock and
contract consummated on the same day; that
pending the said negotiations the defendants
Informed your orator of their intention to sell
the said Gilliland agency contract for the sum
of (250,000 in stock in a company intended to be
organized by the Bald Lippincott for the pur
pose of acquiring the phonograph patent rights
for tbe united States of America; but these
defendants at the same time represented to
your orator that the stock aforesaid, to be re
ceived by them under agreement for the said
contract, was
OF UNCERTAIN VALUE
and would not exceed, under the most favora
ble circumstances, a cash value of 575,000,
whereas the fact Is that at the time of such
representation the defendants knew the same
to be untrue, and knew that they then held an
additional agreement cotemporaneous with the
agreement between your orator and the said
Lippincott; that if the sale of
both said Edison phonograph stocks and
Gilliland contract should be successfully
accomplished he would repurchase from them,
at their option, the said $250,000 of stock at par;
tbat the defendants concealed from your
orator such additional agreement with said
Lippincott and your orator was not aware at
tho time of his signing and executing- the said
agreement with Lippincott that, as a part of
the same transaction, the defendants were to
receive the said 8250,000 of stock with an option
to sell the same to said Lippincott for cash,
dollar for dollar.
That your orator, if be had known the fact3
- T-s ".. . I
aforesaid, would not have executed the agree-J
ment aforesaid, and the defendants well knewl
that he would not have done so; and your ora
tor cnarges tnat tne aeienuaats conceaiea tne
facts In the premises from your orator, well
knowing that if jonr orator knew the facts
aforesaid he would have demanded a larger
sum for his stock in the Edison Phonograph
Company, and would thus have Imperiled the
sale of said Gilliland Agency contract, which
was of the Edison Phonograph Company.
THE BATES OF PROFIT FIXED.
Appended to the bill is a copy of the con
tract of Gilliland as general agent, whereby
Gilliland is appointed sole agent. The re
spectivejrates of profit are fixed. Op each
phonogfaph the Edison Company is to have,
20 percent of tbe cost as royalty, andon the
total sum thus obtained the company is to
have 35 per cent profit The difference be
tween tbat and the price charged the
public is to be allowed to Gilliland
for -expenses, and 15 per cent of the
cost of the phonographs to Gilliland is to be
allowed to him as personal compensation,
The selling price to the publio is to be mu
tually agreed upon by Gilliland and the
company; and Gilliland promises to buy
from the company, and to sell each year a
certain number of the phonographs, this
number to be agreed upon by arbitration if
necessary. Anyway, every year for five
years -from the beginning of Gilliland's
agency.the number of phonographs he must
sell must be increased 10 per cent
A Student Drowned la the Shenango.
(SPECIAL TELEOBAU TO TBE DISPATCH. U
Greenville, May lL-J, HAlken
brecher, of Utica, N, Y a member of tjie
senior academic department of Thiel Col
lege, aged about 19 years, was drowned in
the Shenango here tomight He was swim7
ining in a deep hole with two companions
aad suddenly disappeared.- His body was
tdiaeovafttJwehBM'Mjeh. s
THE CRONINMYSTERY.
His Friends Refuse to Believe That He,
Was Seen In Toronto Still Tbl&
Ho Was Murdered The Police
Have Confidence in Wood
ruff's Story.
ISFECIAL TELXOBAX TO TirEDISPATCH.l
Chicago, May 1L There were no new
developments to-day in the Cronin case on
the mystery surrounding the bloody trunk
found in Lake View just one week ago.
The police continued their search of
the big pond at the foot of
Webster avenue In Lincoln' Park, but
found no trace of the body of the young
woman which Frank Woodruff; the horse
thief, says was hurled into the water bjtwo
mysterious men who accompanied him in
the wagon which he stole. The officers still
believe the prisoner is telling the truth and
will to-morrow drag the other ponds in the
park.
Members of all of the secret societies to
which Cronin belonged met at the Grand
Pacific Hotel to-day and pledged themselves
to defray all the expenses incurred in mak
ing a vigorous search for the man.
They believe he has been murdered,
and place no reliance in the Toronto
story that Cronin had been seen there. Per-
c?Ttn TrFtirt bnnrif T.a( wrTv nTim neva
Lmet Cronin inthe Canadian city, declare
tnat tne lormer cannot be mistaken in nis
man, as both were members of the same
societies and were at one time waging a bit
ter war on certain Irishmen.
Woodruff is held in custody. His mys
terious companions have not yet been ar
rested', although Chief Detective Horace
Elliott says he had located the men King
and Fairburn, and that he can put his
hands on them whenever he wants them.
BROKE THE FATHER'S HEART.
A Man Robbed of Wife andThree Little Ones
by the Storm.
rSFXCIAL TELEOBAIITO TBS DISPATCH.1
Jamestown, N. Y., May 11. At Bidg
way, over the line in Pennsylvania, last
night, a wind and rain storm of extraordi
nary severity was experienced, small build
ings, trees, fences and telegraph lines being
leveled. Frightened by the tempest, Mrs.
William McNall and her four children
took refuge in the cellar, expecting that if
the house was blown away that they would'
suffer no harm, bnt a bolt of lightning
which struck the chimney of the buildinz
and passed down into the fireplace and
thence into the cellar, searched out the
little party and took the lives of the mother
and her three oldest children. The father
was away from home at the time of the
storm.
After the stress of the hurricane had
moderated, neighbors were attracted to the
cellar of the McNall house by the wails of
the 4-weeks-old infant, which lay upon the'
breast of its dead mother, the only living
member of the little family left to the
father, who was summoned as soon as the
casualty was known. He is distracted with
grief and almost inconsolable at his loss.
Strange to say, the building suffered little
harm from the electricity. The faces of the
four dead persons were badly blackened.
MURDER IN OPEN COURT,
A Burglar Makes a Desperate Attack Upon
a Detective.
Kansas Citt, May 11. The proceed
ings in the office of Justice of the Peace
Lewis, in this city, this afternoon, was
brought to a sudden and tragic end during
the trial of James Smith and Thomas
L'avin for the burglary of the Ar
mourdale office J)f the Badger Lumber
Company, three weeks ago. Smith suddenly
rose 'from his -seat, drew a knife, and rnsh
ing. upon Detective John W. Gilley, tut
his throat, inflicting a gash seven inches
long. The wonnded officer immediately
drew his revolver and fired four shots at the
fleeing prisoner. Policeman Maloney and
Constable Woodruff also fired two shots
each and the criminal fell dead with five
bullets in his bodv.
A 'stray shot struck Charles Dukes, a
witness, inflicting a slight flesh wound in
the leg. Detective Gilley is in a critical
condition, with but small chances for re
covery. During tne contusion .bavin
escaped. Smith was wanted in this city for
burglary. Chief Speers says he was one of
the most desperate men he ever met
C0HTEKTS OP THIS ISSUE.
A Guide for BapTd Readers Important
Changes in Make-Up Noted.
Once again The Dispatch offers an appre
ciative public a Three-Fart 20-page number,
full of the news of the day and specially pre
pared articles by well-known writers and popu
lar contributors. The publication of mammoth
Issues of this sort necessitates changes in the
arrangement of matter and advertisements.
The most important Is the transfer of the
classified advertisements wants, for sales, to
lets, business chances, auction sales, real estate
cards, etc. from the Third Page of the First
Part of The Dispatch to the Eleventh
Page of the Second Part The Sporting Bo
view and the League and Association ball games
will be found on the Fourteenth Page, the
miscellaneous ball games, racing news, eta,
still occupying their accustomed place on the
Sixth Page of this issue. The usual make-up
of telegraphic and local news is preserved,
the miscellaneous matter being distributed as
follows:
Part II Pages 9 to 1G.
Page 9
Women of Barmah...... ..FBASKG. CABPExteb
"Why do Men Drink? r Z. M. E.
Jye and M'Alltater Bret Nte
A Great blient Army...i...E. A. Hodgson et al
Page lb
Origin of an Art .....Alexander L. Pach
xasutona auu ijvva.s..tt .Luiiaioi .aasuus
st -. Tcr . olive wmtov
Sweet Ellen Terry ulivewestox
rage u - .
The Music "World C.E.SCOVIL
Classified Advertisements.
Page H
Etiquette,
Society Gossip,
Military Notes,
Page 13
Theatrical,
G. A. B. Hews,
Art Gossip.
Bob White in Force..
..T. E. MALOSE
Secret Society News.
Financial and Commercial.
Page U
Sportinsr Review PniMOLE
Yesterday's Baseball News...
Special Coeeespondents
Men We Talt About , Frank A. Bcbb
Business Cards.
Pageli
Chlni's Great Wall HINM NouxAH
Loye Is Not Enough Bessie Bramble
Little Aristocrats Mart Gat Hcufhbets
Business Cards.
Page IS
The Silent Scholar !..... E. W. BABTLSTT
Educational.
Amusement Notices.
Fart III Pages 17 to SO.
Pages-'
Tbe Spanish Main ,.w... Beveblt Cbuxp
No Time for Pietr Lillian; Spencer
Metamorphosis (second installment)
SIDNET LCSKA
Pagt 13
New York Gossip...., CLARA BELLI
Moral Amusements REV. Geoeoe Hodoes
Spearing Buffaloes .IL A. yr
Page 13-
The Ebony Prince E. H. Heinrichs
The Irish Fisher. EL L, -Wakemas-
In Beantlfuf Venice. Mart J. H0L3IE3
The, Fireside Sphinx.
Page SO
Pictures or Samoa ?.... Charles O. Sticknet
Career of s Singer Emma Nevada
BTerrdsyiBctesee.'. j...i.STAn"'WraTEB
BaBday.Sbeagfits 5 A Clsmwajt
CENTS.
Threaten to BecomePainfuIIy Fra
quentin Western Churches.
THE COHYERTSTO A HEW PAlTHj
Which Accepts George' Jacob Sdnreinfurtk
as the JS&v Messiah, '"
BEING HAULED UP IN THEIR CHURCHES,"
k Female Detcrtlra Bent to 5ab the Bew Deity f
Herself CoaTerted.
A number of Western churches are suf
fering with a bad attack of heresy id tha
ranks of their members. The man named
Schweinfurt, who is holding forth at Eock- (
ford, HL, has converted so many orthodox
people to the belief that he is the new Mes
siah, that the churches have been forced Int
self-defense to arraign their wanderingr"
sheep for trial on charges oi heresy, apostacy, ';
and blasphemy. " Cc 5
rSPECIAZ, TELEGBAX TO THE DISPATCH.1
Kansas City, May 11. A new heresy
is beginning to make trouble in some of ther
evangelical churches hereabouts, and to-day,
one of the most prominent congregations ia? .,
town took notice of the new departure by.'"i
disciplining one of its members. For soma.
months the number of Kansas City follow-
era of the "New Messiah," the Bev. George- .
Jacob Schweinfurth, of Bockford, HL, hav' '
been rapidly increasing. Several hays ,'
made pilgrimages to his "heaven and hosaj
at iiocslord, and all such have returned
fanatically enthusiastic in the new faith.
A few women have been particularly zeal
ous in the new gospel, and they have been,
active leaders in the "Sardis," as the Kan
sas City congregation of the church tri
umphant is called. Foremost among theso
women is Mrs. L. A. Ward, who is stilt a
member of the Cumberland Presbyterian.
Church. She is a delicate woman of
STRONG RELIGIOUS TENDENCIES
who has all her life been prominent ia
church work here; More than a year ago l
she became interested in the Beekmanites,-,
and in January last she made a pilgrimage;
with about 25 others, to the- Bockford'',',
Mecca.
She was completely-won by the new plartr
of salvation there unfolded to her, and' sha
returned some weeks later, pledged to de- -vote
herself to the spread of the new gospel.-'
She has kept her pledge most zealously.
She and others have gone from hquse to
house, pleading the new faith. Then she
went a step further, and attempted to pro
claim her ideas in the prayer meetings of
her own and other churches.
Of course all her theories are rank blas
phemy in the estimation of the orthodox
mind, but she was not deterred in her efforts)
by expostulation or rebuke. Besort to
harsh measures was delayed as longa3possi-i
ble by the church authorities and Mrs&.
Ward's friends. There was no doubt of her
honesty, and the methods she adopted,
while persistent, were gentle and refined.
THE CHURCHES ?OECEI TO ACT.
But the crusade grew and the heretical.;
ideas were accepted to such an alarming.'
extent that the churches found that some
thine must be done. Last week, at the
session of the Cumberland. PfeSbyieiigJi s2 j
Mrs. Ward, and she was ordered to appear
to-day, to show cause why she should not be
expelled for blasphemy, apostacy andr
heresy.
Information at hand indicates that Kan-' .
sas City is not the only community which is
being agitated by the new faith. Last week "
Mrs. Medora Kinnehan, of Bockford, was
expelled from the Westmister Presbyterian .
Church of that place for blasphemy in ex- j(t
pounaing ins new tueoiogy, ana n is not aau ;
peace in the "heaven" of the new city. A
recent disturbing: element has been the aUi
tempt of a Chicazo phvsician. J. S, Wil- "
kins, to secure satisfaction from the Bev. v
George Jacob on account of his allegiotr
alienation ot the doctor's wife. Mrs. Wi.
kins, it is said, made a pilgrimage to Bock
ford and became so infatuated with the'
.king of the new heaven that her husband
was obliged to take her abroad in order to
restore her mental balance.
A CASE 07 BITER BIT.
On his return tbe doctor learned that the '
Bev. Mr. Schweinfurth was nossessed of.
considerable property, bestowed upon him .-j
thereupon sought for evidence on which' to
base a suit for damages. He sent a smart'
female detective to the "Home"in the role,
of a seeker after truth. Ther not only
welcomed her as sucb, but they speedily ac.'ti
complisned her conversion, and she is now..
among tbe most earnest ot ochweiniurtn a
defenders. , '
The new Messiah became aware by divinei
intuition, he. says, that a suit for $25,000 ',
damages was to be sprung upon him, and
he speedily covered all his property with,
mortgages. It is believed in Bockford that -he
proposes soon to change his celestial -abode
to another terrestrial location.
SULHTAN IN SEARCH OP REST,
Ha Burs a Hat From a Man Who Takea
Him-for a Crook.
rSPICIAI, TXLEGltAM TO TUX DISPATCH.1
Bochester, N. Y., May 11. John L.
Sullivan arrived here this morning ia
company with William Mnldoon, thai
wrestler. They were going to Muldoon's
farm in Belfast, Allegany county, where
Sullivan said he meant to to get a bit of'
rest The champion was looking welLr
His cheeks were ruddy and bis eyes clear.,
Very few sporting men knew that he was
in town. . A -
Before he went away Mr. Sullivan visited
a hat store, bought a $5 tile, and astonished
the dealer by offering a $100 bill in pay
ment The hatter took him- at first for a
confidence man, but breathed easier when. S,
he learned who his customer was. f j
THE CHILDS-DEEXEL PUND.
Printers East of the Mississippi Work Oacj
Their Tribute of Love.
Philadelphia, May 11. To-morrowJ
will be George W. Child's birthday, and a3l
the event falls on the Sabbath the
(printers east of the Mississippi
river to-day set np their "thousand"
ems." On each anniversary of Mr.I
Child's birth everv nrinter east of the.il
sissinni river donates the proceeds from tho
setting up of LOOO of type to the ChiId.T
urexei tuna, anose west o me juusisuppAj
do the same On the anniversary of -oH.
J. Drexel's birth. -3$f
The fund will some time in- the futurejba
used in the establishment of some lasting
mnnnmpnt in the two irentlemen named."
probably in the erection of a home for Jadfe
gent ana sgeu-pruiwua.
Kesult of the Republican Prfasary.'r'
rsMCIAL TXXXGBAIC TO THE DtSrATCH.il
Greensbueg, May IL A heayy'voii
was polled at I he Bepnblican primary eleo
linn in this; mnntv to-daV. The fndieationV?
are that A. D. MeCoanell will bq nominated
lor .President juage. xairty-nve or. tne j
districts give him -a majority of 450 overs
Judce Hunter. Jbfc& S. Carsler will nroh
ably be nominate for Sfcetisf; aad JtM
toXWMB ft ltWWAWIsi ay.
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