'- " v'P"'?:9taf'V ru v - tVk'!?,W3F FWy T" g-s : ''S-'i.T'fl ., - .. -- t - jrn at. jii-i" -w;h - ,r ,w & - fftftattg Btatift W FORTY SEVENTH TEAR THE CLIMAX IS AT HAND IN TRANCE Ten More Tictims of the Bad Panama Scandal Thrown in the Hopper. A DRAMATIC SCENE IN THE CHAMBER When the List of the Fire Xcwly Ac cused Deputies Is Read Out Loud in the Lobby. CLEMENCEAU DENOUNCED BOLDLY BY DEROULEDE, 'And the World's Champion Pnelist Has Ttvo Affairs of Honor on Band to fet tle This Morning. Eouvler's Kage When He Discovers Eis Name Among: the Accused In His Anger He Threatens to Uncover Cabinet Secrets That Will Incite the People to Revolt Arene, of Corsica, Has a Unique Explanation of the Way His Name Is Connected With the Big Steal Clemenceau Calls Deroulede a Liar Millevoye Defends Boulanger's Name and Must Also ileet the Duelist To-Day The Two Encounters Expected to Ee Deadly Great Events for France Portending The Third Bepubllc in Its Last Days, Say Many. tET CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.! Paris, Dec. 20. Copyright. Ten more Tictims of the Panama Canal scandal were to-day thrown into the hopper of the Trench mill of justice. All are men of great prominence in the public affairs of France, and excitement throughout Paris and the country is again at fever heat The official list includes five Senators, two of them former Cabinet Ministers, and five Deputies. The official announcement was made simultaneously in the Senate and the Chamber this afternoon. French law forbids criminal prosecution of a member of Parliament without the consent of a special committee of each House. The President of each body an nounced that he had been notified by the Minister of Justice that the Government desired to begin proceedings against Eve members. Bath branches voted to refer the matter to the committees instantly and adjourned with that purpose. Names of the Senators Given. In the Senate the names of those impli plicated were publicly announced. This is contrary to precedent, but the President said so many names were in current rumor that he read the list in order to prevent mistake. He named Senators Dives, late Minister of Agriculture; Berale, the inti xate friend of Gambetta: Thevenet, late Minister of Justice; Leon Renault, late Prefect of Police, and Albert Grevy, brother ot the late President and former Governor General of Algeria. In the Chamber the names were- not read, but there was a rush to the lobby, where the list was made known amid indis cribable excitement. Bouvier, the other day Minister of Finance, headed the lot Then followed Arene of Corsica, Dngue dela Fauconerie, Jules Boche and Antonin Proust. All oi the ten save Fauconerie arc members of the Left. The special com mittee of the Chamber was formed by each of the 11 divisions into which the House is divided naming one member. Koavier's Anger Hursts Its Bounds. Bouvier attended the meeting oi his di vision, and learning that he was one of the accused he ' rose to his feet in a desperate passion and exclaimed: "I thought till now that I was a respon sible custodian of State secrets. The time has come when such secrets are no longer sacred. I shall go into the Tribune when the Chamber resumes its sitting, and make an explicit statement .of my conduct ot the Department of Finance during my tenure of office." This threat carried consternation through out the Chamber and Government offices. It meant that Bouvier, in desperate anger, would uncover in his record of almost ten years in the Cabinet events which might easily incite the already exasperated people to revolt Both committees voted to author ize prosecutions, and then everybody waited to see what would happen. The lobby of the Chamber wai in a great uproar for two hours. Arene, of Corsica, trolled in and learned lor the first time that be was to be prosecuted. He professed indifference, and remained for nearly an hour indifferently chatting with friends. He said to The Dispatch correspondent: Arene Will Not Fight Andrieux. "I am much surprised by the action of the Government I presume they have made a big list, intending to sift oat the guilty from the innocent afterward. I am prepared to justify my conduct I know now that Z must meet a magistrate and the Public Prosecutor. I shall not fight a duel with Andrieux. I can't attend to everybody." When the Chamber reassembled the mem bers were treated not to tbe terrific on lau"ht which Bouvier had threatened, but to a sensation of another nature. Bouvier and.Arene defended themselves with great vigor, but tbe ex-Minister of Finance con fined bis revelations to the assertion that the only suspicious evidence against him was due to the fact that the Government had accepted a loan from individuals to the Eeeret lund for tbe defense of tbe Republic, And entries of reimbursement of these ad vances had not been understood. Then came one of the most sensational scenes in the history of this Bepublic M., Derouledeentered the Tribune and declared j that the most guilty individual in the whole Panama scandal was the man who had es caped accusation because he held ail France in terror of his sword, his pistol and his pen. Clcinenccau Denounced liy Deroulede. He declared his intention 'to name him, and amid breathless excitement he pointed to tbe great Radical, M. Clemenceau, and called him by name. He proceeded to de nounce him in scathing terms, and the House and galleries listened almost breathlessly, expecting on the spot the tragedy which tbe words portended. Clemenceau sat silent till the accused finished his terrific denuaciatian, then walked slowly to the Tribune and began in measured, passionless words, a response. He made a quiet denial of tbe charges, elo quent and simple in its tonus. He paid little attention to his accusier individually until his very last sentence. Then, in placid but deadly tones, without any dis play of feeling, he applied the epithet "liar" to Deroulede. Everybody knew what that meant but Clemenceau was not to escape with one duel. He had made a slurring allusion to Boulanger, and Deputy MiMevoye replied, defending tbe memory of Xe Brave Gen eral. He resented the imputation of Bou langer's corrupt connection with Dr. Herz, now hiding in England, and said the dead General's only knowledge of Herz was caused by Clemenceau bringing them to gether, implying a corrupt purpose on the latter's part Two Duels Tor Clemencenn ToJay. Clemenceau, it is understood, will meet both his accusers on the field of honor to morrow mottling. Everybody expects the encounters to be deadly, for they result from no ordinary provocation. Clemen ceau has the reputation of being the most skillful with the fous, the best pistol shot in France. It is on everybody's lips that he will be at the head of the next list of Deputies to be prosecuted which the Govern ment will send in. He is everywhere ac cused. The implication of the great Badical Deputy will do something to scatter popu lar search for a leader of tbe moral revolt The exasperated populace may well feel at a loss when it looks for a combined probity and brains among the public men of France to-day. The conviction is becoming widespread, after to-day's excitement, that great events are impending for France. It will be idle to prophesy, guesses and opinions are with out end. Revolution has become a common word with one or two. "The Third Bepublic is in'its last days," said a prominent Deputy to me in tbe lobby to-night Carnot will resign, say many. There will be a military revolution, the army will revolt in the face of all this cor ruption, say others. A Government Overthrow Predicted. A prominent journalist not connected with any caper in the venal list of Panama beneficiaries said confidently that the Gov ernment overthrow in some form would take place early next week, after the ad journment of the Chamber, I indorse none of these opinions. The expected never hap pens in France. A report reached the newspaper offices at midnight that ex-Minister Bouvier had shot himselC None of his friends in town had seen him after tbe adjournment of the Chamber, and the rumor was generally credited. The Dispatch reporter reached the house of Bouvier, in a distant part of the suburb of Neuilly, at 2 o'clock to-night An agent of the secret police stationed there, and a servant both said that Bouvier, after being out all the evening, bad re turned at midnight and retired. The names on the list presented to Par liament for prosecution which caused the greatest surprise are Senators Beral and Thevenet The basis of the charge against them is the allegation that each received about 510,000 of the Panama corruption fund. Other Names Once on the XJst There were two other names on the list as first prepared and handed in by the Govern ment to-day, it is reported. These were Senator Hebrard, editor of Le Tempt, and Deputy Henri Maret, editor of The Radical. Everybody expects another and longer list before the end of the week. Several of the accused were seen by a Dispatch reporter to-night Senator Beral denies any connection with Panama, and said he was ready to prove that the money he received was merely the return of funds he had advanced to Baron Beinach for the latter's private use. Senator Thevenet pronounced the accusa tions infamous and based on groundless suspicions. Jules Roche, late Minister of Commerce, strangely enough had not heard of the day's events in the Chamber until The DIS PATCH reporter called to-night He was affected even to tear by the news. He could not see, he declared, on what ground any prosecution or investigation could be brought against him, for he had'nothing to do with the Panama loan, lottery, or press bribery. Necessary to Purge the Bepublic Minister Loubet said to me to-night that the prosecutions announced and to come were absolutely necessary to purge tbe re public. Some of the accused might clear themselves, but the others must be expelled from the Parliament they have dishonored. Those who criticised the Government for severity should await developments. Arrangements for the duels growing out of to-day's events in the Chamber were completed to-night Deputies Thompson and Menard Dorian will second Clemenceau in both encounters. DuMentiel and Baries will represent Deroulede, and Jourde and Coussod will take care of Millevoye's interests. As all concerned are Deputies the duel can take place anywhere, as they are exempt from prosecution. THE DAY IN DETAIL. WXLD SCENES OF EXCITEMENT IN THE LOTVEK HOUSE. Dramatic Denouement of the Day in the Chamber Clemenceau Bearded by Two Colleagues Who Forget for the Time at Least That He Is the Champion Duelist Causes of the Coming;, En counters, UT ASSOCIATED PBXSS.3 Paris, Dec. 20. M. Fioquet, President of the Chamber of Deputies, to-day an nounced to the House that he had received an application lor authority 'to prosecute M. Bouvier, ex-Minister of Finance; M. Jules Roche, ex-Minister of Commerce; Emmanuel Arene, Member for Corsica; Antonin Proust, Member for Deux Sevres; Baron Jean de Soubeyran, Member for Louden, and Joseph Dugue de 'la Faucon erie, Member for Orne. This letter, Mr. Fioquet said, was from the Procureur General. It is stated that the applicfttionVas && on "the ground1 that the examining magistrate of the Pan ama Canal cases had "received many check stubs in which appeared the initials -of Deputies, and that compromising evidence against the individuals in question had been laid before the Parliamentary Investi gating Commission, and especially t to the part. they took in the lottery issue. The application, could -not be granted without the consent of the Hpuse, as tbe Deputies under law were exempt from cer tain legal proceedings. The Chamber de cided that tne standing committees should rneet and consider the application. The sitting was then adjourned. The Senators Who Are Suspected. In the Senate M. Le Bover. the Presi dent, stated that he had received a demand for the prosecution of Senators Renault, Albert Grevy, Beral, Thevenot and Deves for the part they had taken in the affairs of the canal company. The matter was re ferred, as in the Lower Chamber, to the standing -committees. In the Senate and the Lower Chamber snecial committees were elected to consider the application ot the Procureur General, and both were under stood to favor the prosecution of ex-Minister Bouvier. M. Bouvier appeared before the standing committee, of which he is a member, in his own defense. He was triad, be said, of an opportunity to explain his position. There was nothing in the documents seized to prove that he had ever received a check from anybody in the interest of the Panama Canal Company. He had served the State in high office forseveral years, and he had always deemed it his duty to preserve si lence as regards certain facts. The accusa tions made against his honor and integrity had relieved him of such obligation, and he would now speak out in the Chamber with out reserve. Intense Excitement In the Lobbies. Before the Chamber resumed business, the statement had gone abroad and caused intense excitement in tne ioodics. su Bouvier was expected to refute in detail M. Clemenceau charges as to the call at Baron de Beinach s bouse dh the evening before the latter's death, and the statement ot La Libre Parole that his name was on the stub of M. Thirres check. The galleries were packed. Deputies who had intended to absent themselves from the sitting hurried back to the Chamber. Not a dozen seats in the whole auditorium were vacant The report of the special commit tee, read by Chairman Alexandre Millerand, fatosed the granting of the application for authority to prosecute, but in the intense anxiety of the moment it was hardly noticed. All waited impatiently for the explanations of the accused members. Deputy Arene, charged by M. Andrenx, late Prefect of Police, with corruption , in connection with the loan of 1888, was the first one to protest bis innocence. He made merely a general denial. As M. Bouvier ascended tbe speaker's tribune, every Deputy leaned forward in an attitude of close attention, and the- first words of his defense were delivered amid oppressive stillness. An Emphatic and General Denial. After reminding the Chamber of his long public service, his hitherto unexceptional record, and the obligations to official secrecy which had previously closed his mouth, he made an omphatie general denial that be had accepted checks from the Pan ama Canal Company or its agents, or had any discreditable connection of any sort with the company's enterprise. Present circumstances had relievedjus tongue of the gag upon it by Ministerial duty, and he was ready to tell the whole truth. "When he came into power he found that the secret service fund was entirely inadequate for the defense of the Republic. As, in order to govern wen, ne ana his colleagues must have the money which this secret serviee fund lacked, he had recourse to his per sonal friends for sufficient money to tide over the temporary difficulty. The confusion grew steadily in the Cham ber as the Deputies became convinced that M. Bouvier was evading the issue. Loud murmurs ot protest greeted his first state ment as to the secret service fund, and when he suggested that the suspicious checks were contributions of his personal friends to the support of the Government there was an outbreak of howls and de risive laughter. Baising bis voice so as to be heard above the uproar M. Bouvier shouted: "What I did, all public men have done. Had I not adopted that course the men now interrupt ing me would not be seated on these benches." Bedlam Breaks Loose in Earnest. Bedlam broke loose the moment the words were uttered. Deputies rose and shouted back to the Speaker, and others shouted for the names of the friends. M. Bouvier made three attempts to be heard, but his voice was inaudible. After the demonstration had spent itself he con tinued: "I am perfectly ready to go before any tribunal. I have nothing to fear. I never derived the slightest benefit from the Panama Canal Company. I never defended I its interests. I challenge investigation." This peroration provoked another hostile demonstration. "When order had been re stored tbe report of the special committee in favor of the prosecution was adopted. M. Paul Deroulede then asked what action the Disciplinary Council of the Legion of Honor had decided to take against DrT Cornelius Herz. "This man," Derou lede said, "is not to be left with the insigna of the Legion in his possession, although I grant he is a most important man to tbe State, for he truly holds the reins of gov ernment." A Violent Attack on Clemenceau. M. Deroulede paused for several minutes. while the Bight cheered and theXeft tried to drown the cheers with shouted protests. Then he proceeded, with perfect coolness, to make a most violent personal attack upon M. Clemenceau, "whose relations to M. Herz," he said, "are too well known to need detailed description. " Amid renewed cheers from the Bight and jeers from the Left he declared that M. Herz tried to buy the Boulaugists with Panama Canal money, but they had refused to touch it. Despite M. Floquet's disputed protests, cries of "dissolution" and a general tumult which extended to the topmost gallery, made Deroulede again addressed himself to M. Clemenceau. "Why did this Herz give 200,000 francs to La JnstiaT" he Bhouted. M. Clemenceau, white with rage, sprang to his feet, and shaking both fists toward M. Deroulede, shouted back an answer which nobody could hear in the general confusion. M. Deroulede closed with an attack on the Mutual Benefit Association, not of Social ists and revolutionaries, but of rich men and rich men's pamperers, Deroulede Is Called a XJar. M. Clemenceau replied that M. Derou lede! attacks were pernicious,shameless and without foundation. Although he, had no written proofs'ofjhis innocence he defied M. Deroulede to substantiate the charges just made. He would not answer these brazen slanders in the Chamber, but would de mand personal satisfaction immediately after adjournment. The attacks of the last speaker upon M. Herz were based on false hood and imagination. Dr. Herz had served "Frannn fftithfullv as soldier And nhmaif.ian Boulanger himself had noE a'more devoted,! menu than vr. utm -u. clemenceau ac knowledged that La Justice had supported capitalists occasionally, bat denied that it had ever promoted business enterprises iu tbe interest of Dr. Herz. In conclusion M. Clemenceau cried out: "Deroulede has accused me of betraying my country by introducing foreign influ ence. Deroulede lies." After another scene of wild disorder Lucien Millevoye, Boulangist Deputy for Somme, rose to defend, as he said, the memory of General Boulanger against the aspersion cast on it by M. Clemenceau'a statement concerning the friendship be tween Herz and this great man. He then let loose a torrent qf, abuse ou M. Clemen ceau, accusing him of accepting millions' PITTSBURG, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 21, 1892-TWELVE PAGES. in bribes and of advising the abandonment of Egypt by the French Government M. Floquot Gets It In the Neck. In the consequent tumult M. Millevoye turned upon Id. Fioquet, who way trying to restore order, and shouted at him an insult ing name. Millevoye closed bis speech with the assertion that Herz was the paid emissary of a foreign power. M. Bourgeois, Minister of Justice, an nounced, amid applause, that he would arraign Dr. Herz before tbe Disciplinary Council of the Legion of Honor. M, Deroulede declared himself satisfied, and he withdrew his interpellation. The Cham ber than adjourned. , The meeting of the Canal Company to-day was devoted to the consideration and adop tion of resolutions relating to administra tion of the company's affairs, in order, to insure the proper conduct of business in the absence of Charles De Lesteps and other officials of the company. De Lesseps Not a Briber. Victor de Lesseps testified before tho Parliamentary Investigating Committee to day that he was not concerned in the lot tery loan issue, and that he was ignorant of any attempt made to bribe anybody iu the interest of the company. An anonymous letter received by a com mitteeman yestefday led to a search this morning among the proofs and negatives of a photographer. Proofs and negatives of all tbe Thierree checks were iound. when confronted with them Thierree revealed the hiding place of the stubs, and these have been seized by the committee. Baron de Beinach'a papers were also ex amined to-day by the committee. It was found that many original documents had been abstracted and replaced with copies. SATOLLI'S REPORT TO ROME. The rope Represented to Be Pleased With the Results of the Conference. Rome, Dec. 2a Mgr. Satolli sent to cardinal Bampolla a letter containing the I decisions and reports of the proceedings of the American Archbishops' Conference. Bampolla has replied without delay, ex pressing the Pope's satisfaction with the communication and giving further instruc tions regarding Satolli's mission to the United States. A high church authority sayB the "Vatican is well pleased with the decisions of the conference on the scholastio question considering them at once moder ate and tending to union and peace. This satisfaction is all the more lively, teeing that the resolutions are in harmony with the precise instructions given by the Pope to Mgr. Satolli. The Pope would have op posed absolutely any result of the confer ence tending to hamper his policy of pacification, or to encourage dissension be tween American sentiment and, the episco pate between religion and the State. The high authority says: I read in the American papers a state ment that Mitt. Satolli has received rrom Borne power to decide without appeal ques tions pending between the bishops and the priests. This secret has been opportunely divulged, and I am able to add without in discretion that Satolli before leaving Borne was furnished with this power and invested with other powers held by tbe Prerect of the Propaganda. The Holy Father, in thus acting, had desired that the Satolli mission eliall contribute to the normal development of the Church and to the peace and prosper ity of tbe American young democracy. TAMMANY SATISFIED. It "Will Stand by Cleveland and Get AD the Good Things In New York State. Washington, Dec. 20. Special "When Colonel John U. Fellows walked into the House of Bepresentatives this morning, several of his associates asked him what he thought about Mr. Crokcr's declaration that he does not intend to sees Federal patronage at the hands of the next administration. "Mr. Croker is correct," promptly replied the Colonel. "Tammany, " he continued, "has never been a supplicant for Federal patronage. The patronage of New York City is of far more importance and value than all the Federal patronage in the State of New York. Federal patron age is a source of weakness to any party that has the distribusion of it, as demon strated in '88 and also last month. "Tammany is not going to enter into any scramble for the places in the postoffices and the Custom House which are not pro tected by the civil service law. "We have the city patronage at our disposal and also a large portion oi that of the State, so there is no fear of any conflict, so far as Tam many is concerned, over the few crumbs which seem to look as large as full-sized loaves to certain gentlemen. Tammany will go right ahead and do as it did in the recent campaign give Mr. Cleveland loyal and able support in the interest of the Democratic party." GEN. BOOTH A VICTOR. The Earl of Onshtw'a Investigation a Vindi cation of His Projects. London, -Dec. 20. The report of the committee, ot which the Earl of Onslaw is Chairman, appointed to investigate the financial affairs of the Salvation Army as con ducted by General Booth, was made public to-day. The report speaks favorably of General Booth's enterprise for the redemp tion of "Darkest England," but qualifies the general verdict ot approval with critic ism, that too much cash has been sunk in building operations at the beginning of the enterprise. The report is a great victory for General Booth. As to the social wing of the Salvation Army work, the report is almost entirely favorable. The committee states that it is evident that neither General Booth nor the members of his family derive any benefit from the funds of tbe Salvation Army on either side of the Salvation Army work, and that General Booth has adequately ex plained the sources of his personal income. The committee consider that the property maintained and acquired for Salvation Army uses is safe in the control ot General Booth and his associates. Nevertheless, they recommend the appointment of 'inde pendent trustees to hold tbe real estate and stock investments of tbe Salvation Army iu trust as an additional safeguard against fraud. HARRISON GETS A JOB. He "Will Become a Professor and Lecture on Law at the Stanford "University. San FRANCISCO, Dec 2a The state ment published this morning that President Harrison, at the expiration of his term of office will become a member of the faculty of the Stanford University, having accepted a proposition to deliver a aeries ot lectures on law as a non-resident professor. This would necessiate occasional visits to California from Indianapolis, where, It is understood, President Harrison will make his home, spending the winter of each year, however, in California, THE SAME OLD FIGHT. Bouvenlr Coins Used to Coerce tho Chl- cago Directory. Chicago, III., Deo. 20. The flow of souvenir coins to Chicago, whioh began yes terday, is likely to be suddenly checked. Director Davis controls this flow. Every time he puts his Indorsement io a voucher the sub-treasurer at Philadelphia responds with a shipment of coins. The Director General has been given to understand by the Board of Control that he need not sign any more vouchers. This quiet intimation to Colonel Davis is the result of the refusal of the local di rectors . to approve ' rule 'for the 'Fair J as: adopted" by the jKatleaal Cwombtioa. RUINED BY HIS SON St. Louis' City Treasurer Re moved and His Successor ' Is in Charge. THE CITY CAN'T BE LOSER, As tbe Late Official's Bond Is a Good One for- Half a Million. BACKIHG THE LOSING HORSES And Letting His Sweetheart Handle Uoner at the Track CAUSED TilE DEAD MAS'3 DOWNFALL i rsnciALTELEaRiu to the pisrvrcn.j 8t. Lotfis, Dec. 20. Acting Mayor C P. "Walleridge has suspended City Treas urer Michael Foerstel and appointed Hon. Charles Parsons, President of the National Association of Bankers, to 11 the office temporarily. Mr. Parsons at once gave a bond worth $10,000,000, and early this morning commenced a thorough and sys tematic examination of the accounts of the looted citv treasury. Marshal F. McDonald, the lawyer, proba bly Knows as much about the affairs of ex Treasurer Foerstel and hii aon Ed as anyone in the city. He said to-day: "Dur ing ufy investigation of Tow's case I found out a great deal. .1 learned that Foerstel was using 'the public funas to "build up Foerstelville, and that in the past 12 months the treasury had paid out $15,000 in interest, at the rate of 5 per cent a month, to the money lenders of the town. The Father Very Much to Blame, "Foerstel had a habit of signing five or six or a dozen blank notes and leaving them with his son Ed. There was a shortage in the cash of the office then, and whenever it became necessary to have money Ed filled out the check for $5,000 or $10,000 which ever was needed. "Yow was then sent for, and through him J. B. Yett or J. Brooks Johnson discounted the note, Yow was on the police force then, and at times his wife or daughter would do the negotiating. Then Foerstel became frightened, and put a mortgage on his property for $75,000. He thought this would cover the amount he was short, but he did not know exactly how much he "was short "Tlje dead boy had been doing the -heavy work and was way in,himsel He had been playing the races recklessly and was run ning around with women and speculating in real estate. His father knew this, but did not know how much he was short. The office was run so loose that I know of one department in the Court House where every clerk in the place has drawn his salary in advance for nearly a year. Foerstel was used as a duck to pluck by members of the Republican hoodlum push. Men went to bis office and borrowed thousands of dol lars, .which tvere given from the city funds." Charges Ignored ly;rthe Grand Jury. At the recent meetine of the srand inrr Mr. McDonald laid the charges before that ooay, ne says, Duv tne jury ignored them. The "woman in the case" is supposed to be Miss Fannie iLewis, who lives where young Foerstel roomed. She is a daughter of the landlady, Mrs. Lizzie Lewis, and is not pretty, but is plump, vivacious and shrewd. Her self-possession was shown tolay when Chief ot Detectives "William Desmond tried to find out from her. havintr brought her to his office, how Foerstel had spent the money he bad taken. She pleaded illness, and he learned nothing of value. "Miss Lewis" is really Mrs. John Bry ant. Her mother used to keep a lodging house in St. Louis. She tried to-bring her daughter up in ignorance of her mother's mode of life, and had her for vears in the convent schools of tbe city. The daughter discovered her mother's character, left the convent and married Bryant. They went to Kansas City, and Bryant lost his hold on his business very soon and began drinking. Presently be disappeared, and Mrs. Bryant, returning to St. Louis, took her maiden name and was understood to be an unmar ried woman. Gossip Kept Up by Big Betting. Nearly two vears aeoshe met vouneFoer- stel, and since that time the relations of the couple have been a matter of common re port Last spring she and Eddie Foerstel went to the races at the fair grounds. They went in an open carriage, and both bet so openly, Eddie carrying the money she staked, that gossip was again aroused about them. Eddie told his friends that he had won about $5,000 on the races, and that he had bribed a negro stable keeper to give him successful tips. Police Captain John Campbell, who was on duty at the race track and had opportu nity to watch Foerstel's bettirjr, says the young man lost probably the amount he said he had won. It is said with an air of knowledge by the men with .whom Foerstel used to talk of Miss Lewis that he gave her at different times many valuable presents and taw that she was always dressed handsomely. Michael Foerstel, the ex-Treasurer,is worth a quarter of a million in real estate and his bond of $500,000 is good for the amount . Attorney Burns S. Delano, who acted as Eddie Foerstel's legal ndvistr, was asked to-day whether he was prepared to name the man who exacted blackmail from young Foerstel. The Blackmailer Still Is Feared. "No," answered the attorney. "I can not afford to tell his name, on account of my peculiar position as Eddie Foerstel's confidential legal adviser. I believe he was pursued by a gang of blood-suckers, who drove him to despair by their slan ders. I always thought Eddie was labor ing under the weight of grief which tbe blackmailer's threats had imposed npon him. Suppose some one whom you reck oned as a friend should come to you and tell you that he had behind your back ex tracted documents from your desk with which he now threatened to expose yon, unless you paid him so many thousand dol lars; how would you feel?" Mr. Delano ascribed the blackmailer's in fluence over Foerstel to what he called the young man's boyish way of leaving import ant papers in exposed places and in confid ing too much in others. "How long is it since Foerstel's black mailer demanded hush money?" "About three Weeks, We wanted to get him to put his demand in writing and then prosecute him, but he would not do it I don't care to divnlge the blackmailer's name. If the matter becomes public by frocess of law, all well and good, but what know, I know. But these men might make an attack on me If I told what lam positive of, and it is only prudence for me to keep clear of the whole business." The Alleged Husband Poisoner Held. Geeensbubg, Dec 20. Mrs. Kate Fainter was held for court to-day on the charge of poisoning' her husband. Mr. Handy, the Pittsburv enemitt testified to .faadlnft&tnMM of arwaio.in the vietia's siomacn. ' i I WO . FOR MAYOR Jfck J PLATFORM ' ' 1 HsdBflfi ' -- - mv Wiiiiiik ... k - IIW OT 1 ------" flfTTl NOW FILL BLAINE IS NO WORSE But He Sleeps, and the Doctors Fear No.Danger of Death WITHOUT A DEFINITE WARNING. fomethlnj Beside Fright's Piseass Is ping His Life Away. fap- THB FAMILY WOFT TELL WHAT IT IS "Washington, Dee. 21, 1a. m. Blaine was sleeping and no worse at midnight The doctor says there is no danger of his dying to-night According to the report that came out from the Blaine mansion in the morning the ex-Secretary's condition showed signs ot a slight but still noticeable improve ment Dr. Johnston, after his early morn ing call, hardly went as far as thtf. He told the reporters that Mr. Blaine was no worse than he was the day before. Mr. Blaine passed a fairly comfortable night and managed to get a considerable amount of sleep. During the day he felt a trifle stronger for his rest and seemed to be quite bright and cheerful. Later in the day, when the sun came out from behind the' clouds, his spirits revived accordingly, for he has a room facing toward the South find enjoys the genial sunlight, of which there haJ'Deen so little for the past few days. Xittle Hope of a Xasting; .Bally. Even the physicians and the members of the family who are about tbe bedside do not regard the improvement in the great states man's condition as of such a nature as to give croueds for hope of any lasting rally. Another such ease of heart failure as tbe patient suffered on Sunday, it is admitted, would probably be more than he could sur vive. It is said that the members of the Blaine family have still a hope that he may re cover sufficiently to be removed from the citv to tome point in the South, where a warmer temperature would be beneficial to the sick man. Intimate friends of the fam ily fear that any such hopes on their part are baseless, and they are prepared for the worst at any time. Newspaper men again asked of the physi cians what was the real nature of the dis ease from which Mr. Blaine is suffering. They were given to understand that it was by the wish of the family that this is kept from the public They think that it it were made public it would open a large field for discussion that would be intensely dis agreeable to bis family and friends. The opinion has been gaining ground steadily that there is something more the matter than-Bright's disease; that if Mr. Blaine is a sufferer from that malady, at any rate it s not the only trousle. The Thread of Faith Is Slight. Whatever it may be, it is admitted that the disease has made such inroads upon his constitution that there can be but the very slightest thread from which to hang any hope of his living for even a short space of time. The statement that he is no worse than be was Monday carries with it but little hope ot improvement It is feared that there may be another sinking spell at any time, and the question at once presents it self whether the sick man has strength enough to last it through. A telegram from New York says: Dr. Alfred L. Loomis, the specialist on cardiac and pulmonary diseases, who was called in consultation with Dn. Hyatt and John ston, Mr. Blaine's physicians, said to-day: I armnt several hours at Mr. Blaine's bed- fslae.and after examining thoroughly in to bis condition, incline to tne opinion tnat ne is not in any immediate danger, although ho is a very sick man. His condition is criti cal in the extreme, yet be may live for weeks. I found Drs. Hatt and Johnston's diagnosis of his trouble was quite correet, and while I do not care to specify aS to Just what the nature of bis coflHnlalnt Is, I will lay that his pbslciaus nm Hnlnc fnr him &11 that la nnsaible tn tin done. Farther than this 1 am not RtliD-'j erty to say anything about tbe case. I went to "Washington at the vequoat of tho family that a specialist on the disease from which the ex-Secretary Is suffering should he called in. Previous to nir going to Washington I had never before seen Mr. Blaine. X consider his condition slightlr improved. HU mind was clear when I left, and I did not look upon blm us being in nny immediate danger. NO RECONCILIATION. Illarle Kevins Elaine Denies Father Dusrj's Alircred Mission. New YORK, Dec. 2a Marie Kevins,wLo recently secured a divorce from Jun:ci G. Blaine, Jr., declared to a reporter tn-day that Eev. Father Ducey did not go to Wash ington to eaect a reconciliation between her and young Blaine. HACKED WITH A HATCH ST. A Wealthy Wooster Man Ferluips Mort ally Wounded by a Carpenter. "WoOStEE, O., Dee. 20. i'riaZ. John C Talcott, manager of the Quiniby estate, bad an altercation with a carpenter in his employ here to-night, and was probably fatally injured by blows irom a hatchet in the hands of the workman, Andrew Trunk. Arteries were cut in his neck and his spina was injured. Trunk gave himself up to the police. Portugal's Turn Now. ' .Lisbon. POStOOAU 'Dec.4 20. A'CabU ff a i AlH4a ( v A4ri!w BmAMA r " I ViiMiM U UUVUUUJj UWG IN THE LINES. SEVEN MEN SHOT DEAD. A Straggle Between Two Officers and Five Cattle Thieves Ends Like the Famous Kilkenny Cat Fight Not One Left Alive According to the Story. Cheyenne, Wro, Dec. 20. Me3ger particulars have reached here by rail of the killing of seven persons in tbe Big Horn basin a few days ago. The basin is near the Yellowstone park and almost inaccessible from the south during the winter. Hyatt- ville, the scene of the trouble, is 12 miles from the r.iilroad. ' Bill Kutcher and Jim Huff went into the basin to arrest some cattle thieves. Kutcher is himself now under bonds on charee of horse stealing in Fremont county, while HuS is said to be a Deputy United States Marshal. It is said these men came across three alleged cattle thieves. The encoun ter was desperate from the very start, being maintained with "Winchesters and six shooters. Upon its conclusion not only the cattle thieves, but tbe officers lay dead on the open prairie, everybody completely rid dled with bullets. The names ot the cattle thieves have not been received here. According to the same story Ira "Walker and Asa Shuck were found at the head of Norwood, in the same section, with 60 head of stolen cattle in their possession. Both men were subsequently found shot in the back, but by whom is not known, although it is believed they met their fate atthe hands of some officers of the law. Both men were notorious characters. "Walker is credited with having killed Hank Love ttou Shell creek last summer. Lovett was a Texan and operated at horse stealing in the Black Hills until the country got too hot for him.. MUST BURY WIRES. The City Government of Cincinnati Settles Its Bight to Order Them There. Cincinnati, Dec. 20. Corporation Counsel Horstmann rendered an opinion to-day that the citv has the right to order all electric light wires underground. Ex Governor Foraker, counsel for the Edison Company, says that company is ready to put its wires underground whenever the Board of Public Affairs so orders, but he thinks other companies should be ordered to do so at the same time. The City's Engineer's Department is drafting an ordinance for a subway, to be finished early in 1893. The Cincinnati Bell Telepone Company has for several months had conduits not only for its own wires, but enough for all possible demands for all other electric wires for years to come, laid all over the lower part of the city. It will not be many months till the wires in the main body of the city will be underground. CUT UP BY A BALL PLAYER. Abram Blowry, of Erie, Fatally Stabbed In a saloon Brawl. Ebie, Dec. 20. Special Abram Mowry, who was stabbed in a fight here last night by William Morrison, a man well known in Western Pennsylvania as a ball player of some repute, will not live through the night The men quarreled iu Strieker's saloon, and went outside to settle the dispute. "Witnesses of the affray sav that Morrison drew a knife and attacked Mowry savagely, cutting him three times in the neck and giving him a fatal stab in the side. The wounded man was tacen to the hospital and Morrison to jail. ROTHSCHILD'S BEER TRUST. The Great Family Will Aim to Control the Trade of This Continent New Haven, Dee. 20. The Boths childs are said to be the leaders in an en terprise to establish an immense beer trust, with headquarters in New York and with branch business offices and warehouses in at least a dozen New England cities and as many Western towns. Many millions of capital will back tbe scheme. Sites are said to be already assured in this city, in Bridgeport, Hartford, Water bury, Chicago, Columbus, San Francisco and several other cities. THE DAYS OF '49 RETURN. Immense Excitement Over the Gold Strike in Southern Colorado. DEXVEB, Coi., Dec. 20. Special Beports received here from Southern Colo rado and New Mexico sav that those sec tions have gone crazy over the reported dis covery of rich placer diggings located 90 miles from Durango. General Harper, County Surveyor, who returned to-night from the vicinity of the digginzs, says that the excitement is un paralled since the days of 1849, towns along the Denver and Bio Grande, in the south west, being almost depopulated. BITTER AGAINST QUAY. Two Members-Elect From Chester County Won't Support the Senator. West Chester, Dec! 20. Colonel Daniel Moor, of Fhocnixville, member elect of the Legislature tor the Northern dis trict, in an interview says he win do all in his power to defeat Senator Quay, and has the promise of support from another mem ber of tbe Chester county delegation. Machinists Wages Cnt Down. Wilmington, Del. Dee. 2a The Betts Machine Company, employing about 90 men, announced a reduction of wages tc-day of from 16 to 17 per cent, owinc io unusual l. dullness oi traae. i... -..- e - . THREE CENTS. SEEKING POISON WB Wk. r: "c"' & ' Coroner McDowell Will Ex hume All Bodies of Homestead Suspects. ANALYSES TO BE MADE. Important Evidence Being Secured by Pinkerton Detectives. Painful Experiences of Men Wlio Worked la the Mill Remedies That Increased the Pain Dozens of Em ployes Seized by Sadden Slckse3S at a Time Terrible Death Agonies of a Victim What a Physician Found In the Works Many Mysterious Cases to Be Investigated The Szlnyer In questA Speedy Trial for the Accused Men. Coroner McDowell proposes to carry his investigation of the Homestead poisoning beyond the grave. He intends to exhume the bodirt of all the men who worked in the mill and who have since died under cir cumstances to which the slightest suspicion is attached. In each case the stomach will be subjected to the most searching chem ical test to discover if possible the real cause of death, and whether any active poison contributed to it. The Coroner consulted with the Court yesterday regarding this important step. It was agreed among them that the most rigid investigation possible should be made. Hi l 5Sg?sspT Coroner MclfvaeU ihwJffjafiitj the Szinyer Mystery. The county will bear the expense. It is not known jast how many of the millmen have died, possibly 23 or 30. Around the death of a number of them there were peculiar, circumstances which at the time attracted attention, but not suspicion. Found Dead in Bis Koom. One of these was the death of one hi?, strong fellow about a month ago. He was a boarder at the Carnegie Hotel. One day he was found dead in his room. He had been drinking, but not enough to have caused death. When found he was sitting next to the stove, with his feet so close to the fire that they were burned as black as coal and his legs roasted to the knees. A post mortem examination Bhowed that death had resulted lrom heart failure. The in vestigation was pushed no further. It is now thought a critical examination of the stomach would have brougnt to light something important in connection with1 the alleged poisoning. The dead man had symptoms similar to those of others said to have been poisoned at Homestead for a few days prior to his death. The First Body to Be Exhumed. The body of Camus Gemisky lies in St Peter's Cemetery on the Southside. Ge misky was a non-union workman in the Homestead mills. He died under what are now recognized to be suspicious circum stances at the Southside Hospital last Au gust Coroner McDowell thinks Gemisky mav have been poisoned, and his body will be the first exhumed. It was buried August 24, but traces of poison might still be dis covered by chemical analysis. The exami nation will be made at once. Camus Gemisky came down from Home stead where he had been working as a laborer on August 10, and was discovered lying on the street by the police of the Southside. They thought he was drunk and sent him in the patrbl wagon to the Twenty-eighth ward police station. Ex amination there proved Gemisky to be sick instead of intoxicated, and so seriously that he was immediately conveyed to the Southside Hospital. The doctors there found that Gemisky, who was in a state df total collapse, was suffering from acute and chronic diarrhcex His symptoms were the same as those reported in the case of Louis Szinyer,which the Coroner is investi gating He could retain nothing in his stomach and rapidly wasted away in spite of all the efforts of the hospital doctors to stay the course of the dysentery. On August 23 Gemisky died. The doctors attributed his death to chronic dlarrhcea and he was buried without notice to the Coroner the next day. Hospital Authorities Iteport the Case. Yesterday the hospital authorities, in the light of the alleged revelations of whole sale poisoning last summer at Homestead, notified Coroner McDowell of tbe facts above narrated. He let no grass grow; un der his feet in preparing to hold an inquest upon Gemisky. The body will be dug up ana the essential organs will be turned over to Messrs. Hunt and Clapp for analysis. Coroner McDowell said to a Dispatch reporter yesterday: "I think these cases demand rigid investigation, and they shall have it In the first place I think that an inquest should have been held upon Gemisky's body when he died. Here wa have a man who was found in a state 6t collapse on the streets and carried, as soon as sickness and not drink is found to be the cause, to the hospital; there food and medU cine are louna to pass mroogn mm almost instantlv and he dies after a few days with out explaining how he 'came by- his mortal. ' ailment Such cases as this are meet sub jects for the Coroner, I think. It may gjt have been that this man was not pollened, .- bus li jooks as u someuuag exiranuBijrj 3 2..