" " il" " * w M p fl * < a Mi > n i ! „ t * > * * * * , i _ ni " ' „ * " * " f ' "WITH THE MLITASY. \AFFAIJ18 IN XI1JS OF THE PACIFIC. Major General Mile * Makes His Aii- xiual Report Ills Reference to Oar Coant Defenses Indications That Congress Will be Called Together In Extra Session What Adams Says of the Union Pacific Doycott. Our Coast Defenses. WASHINGTON , Oct. 30. Major Gen eral Miles , in his annual report on military affairs , division of the Pacific , while reporting the tone and charac ter of the service most excellent , says that any system is defective which leaves with little advancement and slight hope of recognition a class of citizens who devote themselves entire ly to military service. The artillery branch should bo increased by at least two regiments , and the same organiza tion be given the infantry that exists tin the best armies of the world namely , three battalion organizations. 'General Miles says the various meth ods resorted to to diminish desertion rhavo not , to any considerable extent , 'done so. He believes , however , that iwo are approaching a solution of the 'problem ' and that the measures recent ly adopted are a step in the right di- \ , rection. The army has hailed with 'delight the adoption of his suggestions touching the length of enlistment and the improvement of army rations. He believes that great benefit would re sult from the adoption of other sug- < Wt. . jjs heretofore made by him. ( ho holding of discontented Indian Youths on the San Carlos reservation , jUially [ : along the Gila river , which .suited to them and often un- ! hy , will always be a source of : br and disturbance , as several Tary posts and reservations in the department of Arizona have beenaban- doneu * . He recommends that they be at once occupied by Indians or con verted into industrial schoola and the Mojave Tonto and Yuma Indians be removed there at once from the sickly Gila valley. The general devotes much space to the subject of coast defenses , speaking of the mistaken belief that in case of threatened hostilities ample time will always be given to prepare for war. History shows the reverse. At the rate of progress we are now making it would require from fifteen to twenty .years to put our coasts in proper con dition for defense , and in the mean time much of the wealth of the country is in jeopardy and at the mercy of any fourth or fifth rate naval power. He . recommends that sites for coast de- 0 enses be secured without delay , that a fjin foundry be established on the Pa- j.fic coast and that one-fourth of the ier appropriations required for coast de fenses be made every year for the'next .four years. That Extra Session. WASHINGTON , Oct 30. After all i is quite probable that there will be an extra session of congress. In fact there .re a number of little things about the departments to-day which indicate that at the cabinet meeting yesterday it was determined that congress shall be called together immediately after election. There was a sudden scurrying about of the chiefs of the various divisions in the departments this morning and a great show of activity in every branch of each of them whore the estimates are usually prepared. In the postoffice department Postmaster General Wana- maker sent vord to the chiefs of every division that he wonted the estimate for the appropriations' for the coming fiscal year by " 5 o'clock this evening , 'but it was a physical impossibility to get the figures together at that hour and the consequence is that the depart ment is lighted up to-night and nearly half the force of clerks is busy at work getting the estimates to submit to the treasury department. The postoffice department , having the greatest amount of work of this character to do , is pushed closer than any of the others. The interior department also shows signs of greater activity than usual , and the various chiefs of bureaus in the treasury are all at their posts to night working upon their figures. It is the evident intention of the secre tary of the treasury to have these esti mates ready by the end of next week , and unless the signs are misleading the president intends to convene congress one week from next Monday. The Union Paclflc Boycott. BOSTON , Mass. , Oct. 30. The vice president of the Union Pacific was seen with regard to the stories with which the "street" of late has teemed derog atory to the Union Pacific , its manage ment. , etc. In regard to the "boy- cot" and effect thereof , Lane said : "The west bound through business is really all that is affected , and even this can suffer but little. " He also said that the Union" Pacific- iNorthwestern alliance really concerns nobody but the two roads in interest -and what they do is their own busi ness. The Union Pacific people are jiot at all disturbed by the so-called "boycotte , and they find in the causes leading to it and in the ill feeling of their competitors an inspiratipn for all the recent wild reports concerning the road. road.The stories of accidents. Lane sajjs , have been greatly exaggerated. Their system.is getting an enormous traffic at the present time , more , indeed than ! it can comfortably handle , and its equipment is necessarily getting severe usage. A few accidents have natural ly occurred tinder these circumstances , but none of these have involved any serious damage. As regards the latest story from Chicago published today to the effect that the management was .L. - MEyt" f& # [ working tacitly to wreck the road' with a view to ultimately turning it over to the Vanderbilts , Lane says that yarn is too absurd to deny , and its animus is clearly apparent to any one who un derstands the present condition of af fairs. Recalcitrant .Reds. STANDING ROCK AGENCY , N D. , Oct. 29 , For the pasffour weeks Sit ting Bull has been inciting the Sioux Indians in this vicinity to itn uprising. Ho has excited -sympathies of a largo number of young bucks by tell ing them the story of his great bravery in the field of Custer , and several hun- dren of them had agreed to go on the war path at his bidding. The old chiefs , however , several of whom were in the famous campaign of the Little Big Horn , offered strenuous objections to the foolhardy propositions of Taurus Recumbens , and one of them gave up the plans of the recalitrant reds to Major McLaughlin , the agent. Sitting Bull has just recovered from a long illness and is very ugly , but any move on the part of the _ aged chief and his 300 or 400 followers would be quickly checked. Companies G and A , Twelfth infantry , and troops F and G , Eighth cavalry , are at Fort Yates and could probably quell a disturbance without other assistance ; but if affairs should assume a serious phase through a gen eral uprising of the Sioux along the Missouri , the regulars at Forts Tatten and Sully could bo brought into service in a few hours. "Waked Up the Germans. BERLIN , Oct. 28. Several official movements point to the possibility of the tariff questions engaging the at tention of the reichstag , rendering necessary a careful nursing of the min isterial majority. A commission has been appointed to inquire into the Austro-German commercial * relations with a view to a reciprocal diminu tions of the tariffs. Communications have been sent to leading firms in Hamburg , Bremen and other trade centers asking them to report on the effects of the McKinley bill in their lines of trade. They also asked what the prospects are for finding new chan nels for merchandise affected by the McKinley bill. The commission on foreign tariffs further has to consider the new Russian protective measure. A Russian commission will begin work next week upon the details of the new tariff , which , the Novoe Vre'mya de clares , -will be the highest in Europe. Official circles continue to doubt that any important alteration will be made in the existing treaty with Austria , and are equally skeptical as to any German reprisals upon American trade. Reports thus far received tend to dis sipate the feeling of alarm created by the augmented American tariff. Lead ing export houses appear to be doing a normal trade , and American orders in leading commercial centers do not appreciably diminish. However the future may affect exports , the govern ment wlfl not be driven into concerted reprisals with Austria bv the sudden Collapse in American trade , Extra Session Gossip. WASHINGTON , Oct 29. Again it is asserted with the utmost positivenesa that the president intends to call con gress together in extra session imme diately after the election. In fact , those who profess to know all about it assert that the president refrained from taking his contemplated ducking trip because of his desire to prepare a mes sage having this object in view , but absolutely nothing can be learned from the white house or from any member of the cabinet which gives any reason to suppose that the statement is true. The president is busy with his cabinet officers day after day , and the natural supposition is that he is preparing his annual message to congress. Of course there is the possibility that an extra session may be held , but the probabil ities for this are by no means apparent on the surface , although the president is exceedingly anxious to secure the prompt passage of the federal elections bill. Their Relations Were Cordial. "WASHINGTON , Oct. 31. Secretary Elaine desired the statementmade that he did not request the recall of Senor Muruaga as minister of Spain to the United States. He says it is not true that the relations between himself and the late minister became strained. On the contrary their relations were friendly. The minister's recall , Blaine says , was due solely to a change of ad ministration in the Spanish govern ment. T7io Federal Building at Omaha. WASHINGTON , Oct. 29. At the treas ury department the supervising archi- itect said that nothing will be done to wards preparing plans for the proposed new federal building in Omaha this season owing to the fact that there is a bill pending in each house to extend the limit of the cost of the new struc ture. The office does not feel war ranted in going ahead and incurring the expense of preparing a full set of plans for a building which may never be built. The whole matter will be delayed until the close of the present congress when , if no further expendi ture is authorized , plans will be pre pared with the idea of erecting a building , to cost about $800,000 , which is the amount available for this pur pose at the preajjnt tune. At the state meeting of the farmers' alliance of Illlinois resolutions' were adopted favoring a uniform series of text-books for public schools , to be adopted and furnished by the state at cost ; the Australian ballot system elec tion of railroad and warehouse com missioners by a direct vote of the pee ple. ple.Fire Fire in George Wiedman's brewery , Newport , Ky. , destroyed a large ware house , causing § 100,000 loss. „ .L - -wS * * / - , THE M'KINLEY BILL. GLADSTONE DISCUSSES THE MATTER OF TARIFF. The Zmtvs of Other Countries Cannot Seriously Interfere with the Pros perity of Great Hrltaln Report of the Governor of Idaho No Vote la the Sioux Reservation A Non-Partisan Woman's Christian Temperance Union Convention. A. Gladstonlan Opinion of the McKIn- Jey Tariff BUI. LONDON , Oct. 31. Gladstone ar rived at Dundee and was presented with the freedom of the city. He made an address in which he referred to the commerce of the city which , it was said , was threatened by the adoption of the new tariff bill by the American congress. He would not , however , ho eaid , bring railing accusation against the people of the United States. Protection , although it might inflict Incidental collateral blows on other countries , did far greater mischief to the country which adopted such a pol icy. Gladstone then proceeded to con trast the decrease in the tariff in Eng land with the increase in the tariff in the United States , and said he found comfort for England in the fact that it was not true that any tariff adopted by any government on earth could inter fere seriously with the prosperity of Great Britain. The first effect of the McKinley bill would be to raise the standard of prices in the United States. This meant diminished power of expor tation. This again meant that while we were damaged in one of our twenty markets , we derived benefit in the other nineteen from diminished power of the merchants of the United States to com pete with British markets in any one of them , this being due to augmenta tion of prices in the United States , and increased restraints under which mer chants of the latter country have to work. He advised manufacturers to allow" America to find out for herself the evil effects that will follow the adoption of a high tariff. Gladstone deprecated the idea of a Eollverein of the whole British empire , including colonies and dependencies , against all foreign countries. He doubted much whether the whole em pire would consent. Furthermore , although it would to some extent en large the commerce of the colonies , it would contract it with the rest of the world. The imperial commerce was now 18 ? > 000,000 yearly and the for eign commerce 55,654,000. One ef fect of the McKinley tariff would be to direct the attention of the British manufacturer toward the production of finer classes of goods because these bore the least intolerable protective duties. The result would be to elevate and improve the trade of the British manufacturers , spur them on and stimulate their ingenuity. The probable - able | gndency among democrats would be towaf5 the manufacture of coarser goods , thus degrading their produc tions. In spite of protection the com merce between America and Great Britain had greatly increased. The word protection was a misnomer. It ought to be oppression. It is a delusion and a fraud. America wjis a country that could best afford to try this strange and astonishing experiment. Her natural wealth , soil , minerals and immense territory made her a world in herself. The possession of these enormous advantages helped to dis guise the truth from Americans , but the McKinley law would involve a fearful waste of resources by which her people ought to be made strong and happy. Report of Idaho's Governor. WASHINGTON , Oct. 31. The annual report of Governor Shoup of Idaho esti- mantes the value of the taxable proper ty in the territory at § 25,581,805 , while fhree-fifths of the agricultural la nds of Idaho are arid and must be irrigated to be productive. Owing to the sever ity of last winter heavy losses were in flicted on the live stock industry. A satisfactory increase is shown in the production of mines , the output last year being nearly double that of any former season. As to the Mormons , the governor says that to all appear ances they have resolved to abandon polygamous practices. No Vote In the Reservation. PIERRE , S. D. , Oct. 31. The su preme court of South Dakota handed down an important decision in the noted certiorari case instituted by Hu ron. The court set aside the act of the Hughes county commissioners in establishing voting precincts on the re cently ceded Sioux reservation. The commissioners proceeded under advice from the governor and attorney gener al of the state , but the decision prac tically nulrfles it , though still accord ing to the settlers the right to vote when instituted in a different manner. Had not Pierre and Huron been rivals for the state capital and these votes fa vorable to Pierre , the case would not have been instituted and no wholesale disfranchisement like this would have occurred. Non-Partisan "W. C. T. D. CLEVELAND , O. , Oct. 80. A call has been issued for a national convention of the Non-Partisan National Women's Christian Temperance union to be held in Allegheny City. Pa. , November 19 , 20 and 21. The basis of representa tion is one delegate for every one hun dred paying members of auxiliary state unions , and in unorganized states or territories one delegate for one hun dred members or fraction over fifty. The call is a sti-ong one and invites all women in earnest sympathy with us if they cannot nonstitutionally be , _ i. L.J' members of the convention because lacking1 the required constituency. " The call further says : "The reasons which led to this separate organization still exist , although this movement has led the parent society and many of its auxiliaries tb repudiate partisanship by official utterances , but otherwise the facts remain the same and the necessi ty of a new rallying center for nonpartisan - partisan temperance women of the na tion has been farther emphasized in the experiences of the year. " Reference is made "to the triumphant vindi cation of the movement in Iowa by the state union serving its auxiliarship to the partisan national ; to the remarkable growth of the movement in other states , " and the documents add : "The principles no partisanship in temperance work , but the fullest liberty outside of the organization for the exercise of indi vidual political preferences and rights commends itself to fair-minded men and women in the country at large. " Delegates and visitors should send their names as soon as possible to Mrs. H. C. Campbell , No. 187 Sandusky street , Allegheny City , Pa. General Grlcrson's Zteport. ASHINGTON , Oct. 80. In his an nual report upon the operations of the army in the department of Arizona , Brigadier General Grierson command ing , says : "Now that , as forts Mc Dowell and Verde have been aban doned with a view to their early trans fer to the interior department for In dian school purposes , the authorities should consider the advisability of re ducing , .with the least possible delay , the number of Indians in the vicinity of the San Carlos agency by the re moval of the Yuma and Majava Indi ans , numbering about 1,000 , to those reservations. The keeping of so many Indians at'San Carlos is detrimental to their advancement and tends to re newals of old feuds with white men , and that trouble is likely to arise at any time. " He said the proposition made by In dian inspectors to organize a regiment of Indians would prove a very danger ous experiment. To place the worst elements to be found among savage Indians in regular army organizations under white officers , would be unsafe and would be placing too much faith in such Indians. Posts at Torts owell , Grant and Bayard , says the general , can be aban doned without detriment to the service and tne post at Fort Union could be abandoned at once. General Grierson renews his recommendation that pres ent military reservation at San Pedro , Cala. , be enlarged , as it is the most available place for harbor adjacent to' Los Angeles. The small fort situated near the place of San Diego , Cal. , should be disposed of and a more suit able place obtained without delay. The general says railroads obviate the necessity for keeping so many troops in territories where hardships and pri vations have to be endured , and they should be concentrated on the sea coast where they can be made comfortable , instructed and disciplined. In view of the recent unwarranted attempt to grasp Lower California from Mexico , ; he time is auspicious for the estab- ishment of these permanent posts. Lost In the "Woods. ESCANABA , Mich. , Oct 29. A hunt ing party composed of A Rogy of Princeton , 111. , and Martin Myers and Thomas McKinney of this city have aad a tragical experience in the wilds of the northwest near the little Ham let known as Metropolitan. The trio enjoyed themselves hugely in the picturesque - > turesque intricacies of the region until Friday , when Myers and Rogy left Mc Kinney alone in camp , where he waste to prepare a quantity of game for the next meal. McKinney became lonety before his comrades returned , and to while away the time started , as he supposed , on a short exploring expe dition into the brush. He neglected to keep his bearings , and on attempt ing to return found himself bewildered and at a loss to proceed. The lost hunt er was was without weapons or food , and the bitter cold night added to his wretchedness. Meyers and Kogy in the meantime reached the de serted camp , and in an effectual search for their missing companion set out for Metropolitan. The two hunters prompt ly joined with the village authorities in offering a large reward for the dis covery of the lost man. The villagers turned out almost to a man , but for a time their combined efforts were fruit less. Last evening , however , the party was almost ready to abandon the quest , when they stumbled upon McKinney , who exhausted and dazed by exposure and hunger , was still feebly keeping up the struggle for existence , pulling weeds and brush with the dim hope of being able to build a signal fire , or failing in that to preserve for a time the slight remaining warmth in his body. The unfortunate man was con veyed to Metropolitan , where today he was in an unconscious condition the greater part of the time. It is hardly possible that he will survive until morning. Claim itho Tariff Bill 1 * Illegal. NEW YORK , Oct. 29. Upon the ap plication of Messrs. Ballin , Joseph & Co. , importers , Judge Lacey to-day granted an order requiring the customs appraisers of a certain consign ment of cloths on which the firm claims that too high duties were assessed. The firm alleges that the goods in question were man ufactured of worsted. An interesting point of the suit is that the firm con , tends that the act of May 9 , providing for the classification of worsted clothg as woolens , does not apply because the act was not passed according to law. They assert that there was no quorum in the house when the bill was certi-J fied to having been passed , and that i6 was not legally enacted , though de clared passed by the speaker. THE NEBRASKA LINE. IT IS EXTEXTtED 31Y FltESIDEXTIAZ Tiie Ponca Reservation Thrown Open to Settlement The Nauco County Murderer Not Found Indian Trou bles at Standing Rode Agency Di rector I eecU of the Mint Makes lilts Annual Report What ho Says of Treasury Purchases of Silver. The Ponca Indian ASHINGTON , Oct. 29. On the 24th fust , the president signed the procla mation throwing the Ponca Indian re servation open to settlement. This proclamation extends the northern limit of the state of Nebraska for a short distance so as to pmbrace all that portion of the Sioux Indian reservation which really belongs to the state of Nebraska , but which has heretofore been included within the state of South Dakota. The proclamation will add a great many thousand acres to Nebraska territory and besides serves to bring within the state as residents thereof a number of old soldiers who have been living in that country and who have not been regarded as citizens of the state. As soon as the proclamation was prepared by the interior depart ment and signed by the president it was sent to the state department , where all such proclamations are usually given out , but for some unexplained reason the state department is not yet ready to issue it , nor would they fur nish a copy of the proclamation for publication. It Is Not Furnlval. ELLISVILLE , Miss. , Oct. 2'j. Fred Davage , the Englishman who was ar rested at this place bv Detective O'Flynn as George F. Furnival , charged with the murder of five per sons in Nance county , Nebraska , in September , 1884 , was tried before Chancellor Evans on a writ of habeas corpus this afternoon , and , it being clearly proven by some of the oldest citizens of the town that Davage was living here in September , 1884 , the prisoner was discharged. This is one of the most remarkable cases of mis taken identity which has ever been tried in the courts of southeast Mis sissippi. Nationality , personalities , peculiarities , scars and tattooing were almost identically the same as de scribed as being on the man wanted. Messrs. Goddard and Mawhiney of Ne braska , who came for the prisoner , will leave Ellisville on their way homo to-night. Davage and his many friends are rejoicing over the result of the trial The Mint Director's Report. WASHINGTON , Oct. 29. Director Leech of the mint makes a lengthy statement * in regar'd to the treasury purchases of silver bullion and the recent decline in the market price of silver. He says : The treasury method of purchasing silver has been criticised in these par ticulars : First That the Targe purchases by the department do not include all the silver bought. Second That the London price is used as a basis of the government pur chase. Third That bids to the goverment are on the decimal system and tend to favoritism. In regard to the first criticism , he says the government purchases silver as it does bonds and indeed any article required in considerable quantities , by public competition , the lowest offers being always accepted provided they do not exceed the highest market prices. For the benefit of small pro ducers , however , the superintendents of the mints are authorized to purchase small lots at the price fixed from day to day by the director , corresponding to the market price. These purchases average possibly half a million each month. Second It is not true that London prices are used as a basis of the silver purchases under the new law. During the last administration not only was the London price the only price used , but the department did not pay an equivalent of the London price , but made counter offers to bidders on the day that silver was worth less in New York than in London by the cost of transportation and insurance across the water. The present administra tion has been governed in its purchase by the New York price. At no time since the passage of the new silver law , or indeed for some months before , has the treasury felt itself limited in its acceptance of London prices. Third In regard to the government qnotations being on the decimal basis , one of the critics says : "The suspicious and significant fac $ in regard to the government's purchase of late is that houses offering large lots have been underbid by the hundredth part of a cent. The government quotations are on a decimal basis , which is a great advantage to these who may have advanced information in regard to the price the government is willing to pay on a given date. " The government has no scale of ifci own , and bidders use whatever scalq suits them best. If one house happens to bid a decimal lower than another , L the government to decline the lower bid because of the decimal ? The idea of any seller having "ad , vanced information" ' as to the price thq government will pay , is ridiculous am ] impossible. If there can be any fairer method devised for purchasing silvei than by public competition , it woulij be difficult to conceive or such : j method. It is the method which ha been pursued by the treasury under aU administrations since 1S78. O'ltrlen ami Dillon Arrive. New Yoiuc , Nov. 3. Mr. William O'Brion , M. P. , and his wife , Mr. John Dillon , M. P. , T. D. Sullivan and hla wife and Timothy Harrington arrived yesterday morning on the steamer La Champagne.- reception committee representing the united Irish societies of Now York , accompanied by several hundred members of the national league and the various Irish societies , mot them at quarantine. Upon the arrival of the steamer at her dock a reception was hold on her deck , and at 11:80 the visitors were driven to the Hoffman house. The party had scarcely reached the hotel when Gov. Hill called upon them. The governor warmly welcomed them to the city and state , expressed his hearty sympathy with the cause they represented and signed his miino to the address of welcome that had been prepared by the Irish societies. Mayor Grant also called and expressed sentiments similar to these of the gov ernor and also appended his name to the address of welcome. To the rep resentatives of the press Mr. O'Brien related the details of his escape from Ireland as follows : "We delayed our trip as long as there was any chance of our being able to visit America in the interval be tween the sentence and appeal. We saw that the government was deliber ately eating away that interval and aa soon as that became evident wo came away. The plan was simplicity itself. Wo went out of the front door of a conspicuous house in Dublin without any disguise at all. Wo drove in a friend's carriage to Dalkoy , supped at the house of Mr. Ilcaley and that night at midnight we wore rowed aboard the yacht St. Patrick , which set sail in a gale from Kingstown at once. While we were being provisioned , just before the start , the coast guard came along1 side and questioned Captain Murphy. Sheriff Clancy of Dublin was with us. We escaped and sailed for the Welch coast , where wo lay three days be calmed within a pistol shot of the shore and in full view of the coast guards. Then we were becalmed three days more right in the course of the Eng lish shipping in the channel and if half the scrutiny had been given to us that is exercised in searching outbound ves- I j sels we would have been delayed sure. We reached the French coast on the evening of the seventh day and went to Paris. " Mr. O'Brien then read a statement of the objects of the visit of himself and Mr , Dillon , which is made at the desire and upon the authority of Mr. Parnell , and predicted that a general election would occur in Great Britain MI less than two years. After remaining here until after the election the visitors will hold meetings in Philadelphia , Boston , Newark and Jersey City. They will then hold a series of meetings here , and afterward divide into two or three parties and make a tour of the country. In the prepared statement given to the press by Messrs. O'Brien and Dil lon , as to their objects in visiting this country they say : We are coming to America at the desire and with the authority of Mr. Parnell and the Irish parliamentary party. I had a most cordial interview with Mr. Paruell before our departure , at which we were commissioned to pro ceed to America as the representatives. There is the most absolute unity in the counsels of the party. We are more firmly united than ever , both as to our confidence in Mr. Parnell and as to our programme for the future. All ru mors to the contrary are the inven tions of disappointed inquiries. I doubt whether any equal number of men in any country ever acted together so long , so heartily or with so little personal friction of any kind. As it is with the representatives , so it is with the Irish people. They believe in Mr. Parnell's policy and they are prepared to undergo any sacrifice in pursuing that policy steadfastly. The old reproach preach of instability and quarrelsomeness - ness is completely exploded as an argu- inent against the capacity of the Irish people for self government. Men's differences of opionion are inseparable from all human affairs , but no nation in the world could better stand the test of unanimity as to all broad patriotic issues than the Irish during the last ten years. It is not necessary to say that we did not quit Tipperary to evade the sentence of removal. We should be only permanently banishing ourselves - selves from the country and disgracing1 our cnn e before the English people , who lo the cowardice of all things. It is a dtightful proof of the straits to which our escape drove the enemy that even the'most frantic of them should grasp at so ludicrous a story. IfBalfour dreamed we were going for such a purpose - pose he would have joyfully placed a royal yacht at our disposal. Instead of that he had us shadowed night and day in a manner that would have been \ intolerable if it were not comical. V They kept a police car ready horsed all through the night outside our hotel in Tipperary every night. Police spies were also stationed in the rear to prevent - ' vent our escape in that way. Whenever - ever myself and wife went out to walk our steps were dogged by policemen in plain clothes. Sometimes they pursued - sued us on bicycles. On the day of the meeting of our party in Dublin , we had a special train waiting at Limerick * junction to bring us up in time to the meeting after the adjournment - ment of the court. Will it be believed - lieved that the government actually had another train waiting beside ours all day at the Limerick station for the / > purpose of shadowing our train ? The ' thing seems too ludicrous for anything but burlesque , but it was not too ludicrous - crous for Mr. Balfour in his wild anxiety - [ iety to keep us from reaching Amer- , ' ica. I confess it added considerably [ to the satisfaction of coming away to show how ineffectual all these idiotic precautions were the moment we desired - sired to evade them. Our strength in these matters , of course , is that we ( have the whole population on our side. , Ji