THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. January 24,1001 Zt)t tlebraska Independent mSSC ZWCL. CCRMR DTtt AND N STS Euiiptm Ye Prsusjuca Evssr THtrasoar .eo pj year lit advance: MM7 wit tm yotUfttrs, ., to hm forwrt by tfcm. TWf fr2Mt!y for v rwtlt a 4I5r tk wm If viU ttm, tfc nbrili fail to o A4ra all cMaiatiu, i mi all rmfU.aMr -. prU to tie Bebrssks ImdtytaAtnt, Lincoln, Neb, JLoerot cewatairaUoa will w hm tkL aci4 KMUcri?u will e I M The republican oce-holdrs who Lure recently "redeemed" the ttate from populltt canlrrl are not in a hap py fraxi cf mind. They Lad been lei fcy the wrftlcss of the Cheerful Idiot to b!iere that the pop had done a let cf stealing and that wren they rase isto powtr, there would be plen ty cf chas.ee to reimburse themselves lor being out of cS.ce for four year. When they cose to lock uj matter they doat se much pro pect for reim fccrsements. They realixe that with all the Importation cf voters, a thine that they can't court oa at the next election, their majorities are to small that if they do not keep up the fusion record cf economy and e21cieacy they will all be ia the soup again. There will b bo chance for "pickings" and that makes them fetl very sorrowful. Everything that they strike ha the tame fusion mark cf economy brand ed upon It. New here is the oil in- rpectorship. Under the old republi can rule there were several thousand dollars cf rich pickings la the oEce. There. never wa a cent turned orer to the slate by any republican oil inspec tor. Edmixtes held that oil iarpector ihtp for four year and four months and tcrned Into the state treasury dur !cr that time Then GaCn was appointed ana ia two year tarnel orer to the state treasurer $2,000 with sv reported balance cn hand of 1250. When the new republican oil ia rpectcr takes cfSce he will hate that record to face. If he follows the former republican pre7i.aaoft tens over arythif. it will be apt to occasion ofriezdly remarks and la- SEe-til 'prospect for the re-election "of the republican ticket. If he turns Is leas lhaa Ga2n hat doce. there will be aa opportunity for invidious comparison. So the republican oil In spector will be cp aralnst a fusion record that will leave him no chance for "picking. That will cause hia to come to th conclusion that most of the new republican offlce-holdera cave reached: There Is nothing In politics aay mere. Soar of the new oSce-holder don't feel kindly toward the P Street Edlot who edits the Flamboyant FlimiUm rser. They say if fee had only kept hi mouth shut and bad not always been excusing the fusion office-holder cf extravagance, they might not have been so very economical. In that, these disgruntled republican office holder are mistaken. The f union ists never paid any attention to the Chatter of the P Street Edlot. IPs prattle sever effected them one wsy or the other. They had teen elected or eppolnted to office oa the promise to tor duct the state government In aa economical and efficient manner and , premise. This Gaffia record makes , -. them tired. At any rate the whole outfit Is tip lxInst this fusion record. As they tick npon it, they grow scrrowful and raJErmur over and over: There Is moving la politics any more." or they ayr "Tlf we had only 25.0'jQ or 30.000 majonir like we once had. the future would ret look so barren. One of them ab.to the editor of The Inde pendent th ether dry: I wish I ha s?er tad ad itythlag to do with politic. I eold make twice a much money sticking to my own business. lie didn't aay sv but It was evidently hi cplaloa that the fool fuslonlsts had rained the bvcess and there wssat aayttiag la t any more. There lsat any bSLrity around the state house. There Is net a man In m - m. v a a a f m op ir.rm vcdm citTuoa cua not cost him a much, if not more, than hi salary will amount to. And the fasionlst have- spoiled the easiness! rlo "plckifiga la sight without tie dread punishment staring them la tte fact of betog kicked out at the end of their term. No wonder they all Xook like a let cf funeral director. The Independent long since ceased to complain about the universal steal ing that wa done from its columns, but when the editor went to work and dllbtratcly stole it god, without word of credit, !t felt that it had a Htht to protect- The wonder 1 that ca rzzzy cosstry office tad dollar rrrris cri t4 maka the Image. THE BBTAN DEMOCRATS The Bryan democrat of this and ether states have a harder fight before them than they ever had before if they hold their party to the principles that Bryan represents. That the Cleveland-Hill crowds are making in roads upon the party can no longer be doubted. That is manifested by sev eral things that have happened lately. The democrats in the Massachusetts legislature instead of casting their vote for senator for some men like George Fred Williams. , voted solidly for Olney, a member of Clevek-id'3 cabinet and who stands for everything that Cleveland stands for, - There was a lively debate In the Texa house over the concurrent resH oiutlon adoptsd by the senate Inviting the Hon. David B. Hill to visit Austin and address the legislature. 'Wlien the resolution was called up la tha house It was amended by Inserting the name of Hon. William J. Bryan with that of Mr. Hill. There was a stxoug opposition to the insertion of Bryan's name and the amended rcsoluiiou was adopted by a close vote. Joe Bailey is a candidate for sena tor from Texas and If he is elected, the democrats will have in the senate from Texas a counterpart of Caffrey and Lindsay, both gold bugs and imperial ists, and who always vote with the re publicans upon every proposition touching the differences between re publicans and democrats as defined in the Kansas City platform. They voted the other day to Increase the stand ing army to 100.000. Joe Bailey at one time declared that if Bryan were nomi nated he would not run on the same ticket with him. It was he who was at the bottom cf the proposition to In vite Dave Hill to address the Texas legislature. Hill was the most bitter opponent in the senate to the income tax as well as being aa out and out gold standard advocate. The invita tion from the Texas legislature .was equivalent to abandoning the income tax and every other proposition for which Bryan stands. In other states the same sort of work is being done. There are many things that lead thinking men to be lieve that the money power has made promises to the leaders of the Clre landlte that if they will get control of the democratic party, the man that they nominated shall be elected an-1 installed in. the White hrpiir. 4 Vhat gives point to -declarations con tntlr.rde' by these men that If the democratic party will come back to what Cleveland calls "true democratic doctrines" It can succeed. The next day after Quay was elected senator from Pennsylvania he ap peared in the senate and was given an ovation, business being suspended for some time that the senators might gather around this prince of political scoundrels and congratulate him. That shows the animus of the repub 1 1 ...... . . . . wruawra woo preiena to oe re spectable. Their congratulations are bestowed upon the man who has suc ceeded by the vilest methods ever em ployed in politics and against the ac tire opposition of all the respectable elements of the republican party in his state. Quay has a machine that tor viieness far outstrips anything that Tammany has ever done. The city of Philadelphia has the most rotten city government on the face of the earth. Voting in that city is a farce, None of the godly republican journals la the United States, except one in the city Itself, ever has a word of con demnation for the methods employed there, but for Tammany there is un limited columns of denunciation. When tne niest scoundrel and the worst political boss in the United States ib elected, the senators suspend business to crowd around him and tell how glad they are that he downed all the decent men in his state and has come back to the senate with the Indorse ment of every vile den In the whole commonwealth that he represents. Those cadets at West Point put on a great deal of style for a lot of char ity students whose education is paid for by taxation. If they had to pay their own way they would not indulge la so many aristocratic airs. It is only another demonstration that char ity, when bestowed upon persons able to make their own way. has a degrad ing influence. Thes West Point pau pers are no exception. They and their friends had the impudence to hiss the committee of congress that was Investigating their cowardly hazing practices. - THEBEEU ISDONE. The army bill has passed the senate substantially as It passed the house, including the adoption of the amend ment abolishing the army canteen. We have now started on a new career. There will never be less than 100,000 taea la the regular army unless some thing like a revolution occurs. The o"5crs of this great army will be ap pointed by William McKlaley and they wW il be imperialists. One of the saddest things in this whole ';slness wa to see thousands cf womtd, gathered at Washington, pleading. C gging and expostulating with members of congress, not that their sons should not be drafted into a regular army, to perish in the fatal climate of the tropics or while their lives away amid the vile surroundings of barrack life, but that the selling of beer might be dispensed with In .he army canteens. They did net have a word to say against the organization of a great standing army, the with drawal of 100,000 young men from home life and the placing of them un der the slavery of army discipline. All they asked was that when they were thus gathered into barracks they should not be allowed to buy beer at the canteen. The amendment to allow the organi zation of an army for two years atter which it should be reduced, was voted down with the same majority that the bill was enacted into law. That was a distinct declaration that the repub licans wanted a great standing army to be a permanent feature of this gov ernment for all time to come atd that to1 demand wns rot for an increase to settle the difficulties in the Philip pines. In fact, this demand for an army of 100,000 men was made by. the president before the war with Spain was thought of at all. " There is no legitimate use to which an army of 100,000 men can be put in time of peace. Do we need any reg ular soldiers in Nebraska? Are not the people of this state capable of maintaining law and order without federal soldiers to aid them? What is true of this state is true of all the states. Recruiting will now begin. We hope the mullet heads who voted for this sort of thing will bring forward their sons and offer them for sacrifice on the altar of imperialism In the Philippines without hesitation. THE P 8TTEET IDIOT The republican party supports a daily paper in Lincoln and it prints stuff like the following: "The tendency of fusion v statesmen and writers 'to mix Agulnaldo up with everybody on earth is seen In the raw heads and bloody bone tirades that they are now making against the boys at West Point in connection with hazing. They are ranting now for the Immediate closing up of the military academy and the extinction of the reg ular army, because some of the fourth class men have been made to obey sundry whimsical orders and go through some absurd motions and have their feet inspected and take a little tobasco sauce at dinner, or fight." The Cheerful Idiot no doubt after writing that, rubbed his head and con gratulated himself upon being an adept in sarcasm. He seems to be totally Ignorant of the fact that it was Mc Klnley who said that if hazing at West Point could not be suppressed then the academy Ehould be abolished. The Dally State Weakling has been asserting for months that there would be large deficiencies for this leglsla ture to meet for the support of the state Institutions. Lieutenant Gov ernor Savage in a speech before the Charity organization society said that the management of those institutions for the past two years had been so ef ficient and economical that large sums of money would be covered bak into the state treasury that had been ap propriated, but not expended by the superintendents. Although the repub lican lieutenant governor was honest enough to make this statement, that is no indication that the P Street Ediot will not be chattering away In the old style again every few days. Stanford university will have almost an entirely new set of professors pret ty soon. As a protest to the forced resignation of Prof. George E. How ard, head of the department of history in Leland-Stanford, Jr., university, the resignation of Prof. W. H. Hudson of the English department, and Prof. C. N. Little of the mathematics depart ment, were tendered last week. But there will be no shortage of profes sors. Two were Immediately imported from Harvard. They will never say anything Irritating about the impor tation of Chinese coolies. The old State Pultogouge has one unvarying Instinct. It is as true "to that instinct as the needle to the pole. It always flies to the defense of plu tocracy upon any and all occasions. It was only following its instincts when it backed up the Stanford university in demanding the resignation of its most distinguished professors. It could not help it any more than a coyote could help howling as the shades of night approach. The coyote is not to blame for that is its nature. Neither is the State Mullet Head Organ. - When the guarantee company that for $3,000 agreed to stand between the state and a republican treasurer want ed the affairs of the transfer of funds from the populist state treasurer to the republican incumbent attended to, it employed Meserve, the old populist treasurer, to check himself out and the republican treasurer in, which is a compliment to the honesty and re-j liability of the populist treasurer never' before paid to any man. i BURNING AT THE STAKE The burning of a negro at Leaven worth, Kas., soon after the same hor rible crime was committed in Colo rado, It seems to The Independent, must cause some serious thinking by the people of the United States, that is. If all power to think has not disap peared in the common degeneracy. More men have been burned at the stako in the last ten years than were burned in any decade of the. dark ages, when it was done under the forms of law. The Incidents attendant upon these burnings are more horrible and show more savage instincts. In the dark ages men did not hunt in the ashes for bits of charred human flesh to store away as keepsakes. That is done alone by the modern savage. Some sixteen years ago, we believe, the first burning occurred. After the victim was tied to the stake, although his crime was most hcirible, and the fuel had been piled around him, no one could be found to apply the match until a degenerate negro was hired to do it. Now men fight for the privil ege, women ana cniiarcn iook on ana add their shouts to those of the men. By rapid stages do we go back to a condition worse than the original sav agery from which we emerged some centuries ago. For years The Independent has been warning the people of the coming of such a state of public morals. Nothing else could result from the teachings and practice of those whose business it was to conserve the public morals. When these teachers will advocate the slaughter of human beings by the thousand for the sake of a monetary profit, when they will accept of the contributions of wholesale robbers, when they will admit men to the best teats in the churches who make their living by gambling, when the praise of men who have bought high public oihees are constantly , on their tongues, when men who starve their employes ana force them to work in sweat-shops that they may accumulate money and give a cicle to the churches, are con sidered good citizens, nothing less than a slow and constant lowering of the moral standing of the Whole" com munity can follow. A different punishment for this par ticular crime will not stop the progress1' towards savagery. The remedy must come entirely from another source. Immorality, murder , and robbery on tl-rt wholesale plan must not be con doned and nourished. As long as it is so condoned the demoralization of the mass of the people will continue. There can never be two standards of morals tn ary community one for the rich and powerful and one for the poor. If the major ty of the, people will insist on the maider of thousands of Fili pinos and Dutch burghers for the sake of empire ttd commercial profit, the common people will take note of it. The very worst passions in man will be constantly encouraged. " If oar troops continue to rob and ravish the people of foreign lands, robbing anl ravishing will increase at home. Even the chl'Uren will become so familiar with such horrors that they will con sider it a part of ordinary occurrences of life. The Independent is unalterably op posed to lynch law under any and all cinumstances. It would advise the seve-tst punishment of all those who engage in it or encourage it Taking a human life by a mob is worse than murdei. Its degrading effects curse the w hole community. When crim inals see a whole community violating the law, it stimulates them to more violations. It never checks crime. The history of the last ten years Is abun dant proof of that statement. The more negroes who are burned at the stake for the crime of rape, the mora they commit that crime. The more witches that were hung in New Eng land, Che more they multiplied until the community was forced to stop hanging to prevent the multiplication of witches. There are causes which every psychologist thoroughly under stands that account for it. , All any of us can do under the pres ent circumstances is to hang our heads in shame while we work with might and main for the restoration of the oid ethical standards under which there were not two sets of rules, one for men and one for women, or one for the rich and another for the poor. The Independent has often remarked that some day a limit to the enduranca of slanderous epithets would be reached. For years tnose who differed )th the republicans have been called by every vile name that the ingenuity of vile and vicious human beings could invent. It is really surprising with what patience this sort of conduct has been endured. One of these wretches got his just deserts. A foul villain who edits a republican paper in Minnesota called Governor Lind traitor. The governor wrote him note saying that sort of language was hardly permissible even in a political campaign, and asked him to correct it. Instead of doing so, that degenerate re peated his offense. Governor Lind said nothing, but within thirty minutes af ter he turned over his office as gov ernor to his successor, although he has but one arm, he went over to the office of the miscreant, and with the one good fusion fist that he has, he knocked that wretch down three timei in succession. By way of apology he explained to this republican editor that he had deprived himself of that uxury owing to the dignity of the office that he held until he was a pri vate citizen again. The skill with which the plutocrats handle the news grows more efficient each day. When the cases concerning Porto Rico and the constitution came up in the supreme court, they attracted he attention of every intelligent citi zen in the whole country. Every man, woman and child was eager to read what the lawyers had to say. Nothing could have been printed in the daily papers that would have been as gen erally read as copious extracts from those written briefs and oral argu ments. What did the news-gatherers at Washington send? A few meagre extracts. They had columns of their papers filled with detailed accounts of prize fights, divorce cases and mur der trials, but a few lines only con cerning this most important matter. It is enough to make any honest man cry out: "A curse upon the; modern dailies. They are an insult to the in telligence of the people." A distinguished lawyer the other day began a conversation with these words: "Since I Quit being a republi can and got so I could think." That sentence is full of meaning. It seems to be a fact that republicans cannot tninK. Take those who live here ia Lincoln. Do they really want to pay twice as much taxes as the citizens of that horibly Tammany-governed city of New, York? When they denounce Tammany is it possible for them to do enough thinking to realize that the republican governed city of Lincoln is taxed twice as much as Tammany taxes the citizens of New York? The lawyer suggested a very great truth in those -words. Republicans have never arriveu at the point of intelli gence that enables them to think, if they had, there would be no repub licans. It appears that the Kansas republi can legislators are following the pre cedent set by those of the same breed in South Dakota. They are sand-bagging the railroads for all that there is in it. The railroad managers are ia a worse state of worry than they have been for ten. years. All sorts of bills that have a tendency to annoy the rail roads are being introduced. All those chaps will be for giving relief to the people from overcharges by the road3 until the managers put up enough money to get the bills withdrawn. Whooping it up for the republican party has not turned out to be such a nice thing as the railroad managers thought it was going to be. Kruger's visit to Europe reminds one, of Motley's description of the re turn of the Prince of Orange in 1570. "The great ones of the earth, those on whom the Prince had relied; those to whom he had given his heart; dukes, princes and electors, in this fatal change of his fortunes fell away like water. Still his spirit was unbroken." Kruger and the Dutch in Africa be long to the sane breed of men, and the outcome between them and the English may resemble the outcome of the contest between the Duko of Alva and the Prince of Orange. Any business based on a national debt and which would of necessity dis appear if the national debt were paid, is an immoral business and against good public policy. Such is the busi ness of the national banks. If it were not for this business which realizes such large profits there would be no talk about selling the silver dollars for bullion and issuing $300,000,000 of bond- to do it. The bankers want thj bonds and that is the only way to get them. E. O. Wolcott got eight votes for United States senator in the Colorado legislature. He is divorced from his wife, his. magnificent home with a British name is abandoned and that is the end cf Wolcott. He proved a trai tor to the principles that he had advo cated and now he must disappear from the public view. Good-by, Wolcott. The Independent wishes you well, but you must repent of your sins before you can be saved. 5 It is constitutional to vote subsidies to rich men, but it is unconstitutional to vote a tax .on the income of those subsidies. Every cent that is got out of subsidies must stay in the pockets of those who receive them. It would make it unconstitutional to take any of it for government expenses, even the expenses incurred in salaries by those whose time was given to putting the measure through. No university, no matter how high up in the millions its endowment may run, in which thought Is not free can maintain its standing in the educa tional worldt for they cannot get the Winter Wearing App arel at Here's the final price reducing the limit to which the remaining winter wares are to be cut. They can't stay here long at this rate, and at such figures it will pay you to consider future needs. Any and all Jackets in the house, women's or M 1 1 misses' sizes, on sale now at ............. . . nHLI A I f flff on all the Furs, Capes, Jackets, Scarfs, and nHLr Urr larettes during this sale. 1 All the Suits worth $15.00 or on sale now at New Walking Skirts An advance Spring Showing is here nowa vast collection of the various correct things for the coming session many novelties. You ought to see them. Lincoln, services of professors who value their own self-respect. There is one law . that congress should pass without fall. It should enact that courts should not convict and send to the penitentiary a national banker or anyone connected with a national bank. It is a useless expense. Courts and juries no sooner get these chaps behind prison bars than Mc- Klnley pardons them and sets them free. Seventeen "applications for par don came before him last week, three of whom were connected with national banks. He set the bankers all free. Their names were George H. Shifler, teller of the First National of Leba non, Pa. Cashier Hotter escaped a pardon for he was only sentenced for six months for stealing $100,000 and the papers did not get around to Mc Kinley quick enough. William B. Hock was sentenced for six years and six months for embezzling $5,000 from the South Bethlehem National. . Mc- Kinley also set him free. That is the way it is every week. It costs hun dreds of thousands of dollars to con vict these national bankers and their cashiers and it is all spent for no use ful end. Therefore as long as McKIn ley is president the practice of sen tencing national bankers to the peni tentiary should be suspended. The attempts of ignorant and pig headed millionaires to dictate what shall be taught in the universities is having a thorough overhauling these days. Mrs. Stanford evidently thought that the professors in her university were of the same grade of men as the Chinese coolies that she employs else where that all she had to do was to issue an order to them and it would be obeyed without question. Men who have spent years in universities in this country and Europe preparing them selves to teach, do not look upon themselves as quite on the level of coolies. Mrs. Stanford is an unedu cated, almost Illiterate woman. She has about as correct an idea of what modern science is as one of her Chi nese servants. Yet she undertakes to dictate to doctors of philosophy men whose scholarship is known to the whole world what they shall teach! That is the culmination of the wor ship of money that American people have "been indulging in for the last quarter of a century. Money talks, but it talks Ignorance and arrogance. Current Comment Most of the space in the newspapers during the week has been devoted to historical sketches and personal reminiscences of Queen Victoria oc casioned by her illness and expected death. A short time since she went to the Isle of Wight where she owns a large estate and residence called Os borne. The cause of her sudden fail ure is attributed to the Boer war. It is well known that she has not been in sympathy with the Sallsbury-Cham-berlain-Rhodes clique who brought on the . war, and the great slaughter of English troops which . has resulted, among whom were some of her near relatives, has been a source of grief. The final collapse was brought on by the report made to her in person by Lord Roberts Whom she sent for to get the truth from his own Hps. She had been deceived by the ministers into believing that the war was about end ed, but when Lord Roberts related to her the real facts and the prospect that many months would ensue before the matter could possible be settled, she took it so hard that she retired to her room, and grieved until she com pletely broke down. The result was a stroke of paralysis. : . Victoria Is,.reanected the world over as a woman feuu as a ruler. By her Ha OFF Col- OFF more . . . . . . ... HALF . Nebraska, dignity and purity of character she has greatly strengthened the system of monarchy In the world. At her ac cession in 1837 monarchy was at a low ebb. The royal families of Europe were degenerates In both mind, and bodies. There was hardly an average man or woman among them. Some were feeble-minded, some were insane, some were deformd. There were only one or two who were persons of force. All this came from purely natural causes close Intermarriages of blood rela tions and the vile moral life of the courts. Monarchy is contrary to na ture. The forced mating of pairs for state reasons without any regard to the affections, the rule that if a mem ber marries outside of the royal fam ilies he must formally renounce all claim to royal succession for himself and hi3 children, the system of poly gamy that has grown up under these restrictions called morganatic mar riages, the social vice which it en genders, and many other things of like nature of very necessity forces a deterioration of the race of monarchs. While Queen Victoria came of such a race, she, in her moral character and as well as in body, was an exception to the rule of degeneracy. In zoology an animal that suddenly assumes a form differing from the 6pecles is called in popular language an abnor mal variety, and by the scientists a "sport." In the race of monarchs, Vic toria is of that character. Her happy marriage to the man of her choice, her wedded life, her large family of chil dren she tenderly cared for all placed her in the abnormal among monarchs. But the laws of nature still hold. Her children revert back to the old race from which she sprang. Ascending the throne in 1837, she has had the longest reign of any Eng lish monarch. She has always been a lover of peace, but her reign has been one of almost continuous wars, it began with a war in Canada from 1837 to 1838. Then followed the Crimean war, from '54 to '56. There were con tinuous wars in India from 1848 to 1878. There was war in China from. 1840 to 1850, the Ashantee war from 1863 to 1864, Abyslnian war from 1867 to 1868, a war in South Africa which has continued almost without Inter ruption from 1845 to the present time when it is waged more fiercely than ever before. There were wars in Egypt from 1882 to 1885. Besides these, there were wars in the Soudan and with sav age tribes in almost every part of the world. Victoria of the united kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the colonies and dependencies thereof in Europe, Asia, Africa, America and Australia; queen, defender of the faith; empress of India, was born at Kensington palace May 24, 1819, bap tized on June 24 following by the name of Alexandrlna-Victoria and ascended the throne of England on the death of King William IV., her paternal unci. June 20, 1837. She was the only child of Prince Edward, duke of Kent, fourth son of King r George III., and of Princess Victoria-Mary-Louisa, fourth daughter of Francis-Frederick-Anthony (duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saal-feld), sister of King Leopold I. of Bel gium and widow of Emich-Charles, prince of Leiningen. The young queen was crowned at Westminster abbey June 28, 1838, and proclaimed empress of India at Delhi January 1, 1877. On February 10, 1840, at the royal chapel of St. James pal ace the only love affair of her life happily culminated in her marriage with Prince Francis-Albert-Augustus-Charles-Emanuel, ( duke of Saxony,, prince of Coburg and Gotha, second son of Ernest-Frederick-Anthony-Charles-Louis, sometime reigning duko of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Of this, union, even happier than that of most, less-eminent mortals, nine children, were born, viz.: Victoria-Adelaide-Mary-Louisa, born November 21, 1840; married January 23, 1858, Frederick-William-Nicholas-Charles, imperial prince of Germany; now the dowager empress of Germany. Albert-Edward, prince of Wales and duke of Cornwall, November 9, 1841. Princess Alice-Maud-Mary, bom April 25, 1843; died in 1878, sixteen, years after her marriage to Prlnct? Frederick of Hesse. " Prince Alfred-Ernest-Albert, duko of Edinburgh, prince of the united i