- : . , ' ' ' ' - rHgl. . : ) :3o : : ) n8 . . \ 2K > > : tO > > 3go : OOQO . . . , . . C PAnT : cce ONE. O m u THE OMAHA SUNDAY . : , B BE. DEIEEJ . . . . _ . - - - - - - - - = : : - - - - - - - - . - 1 J S'l'Anr.ISlED 3UE 1H : i , 1871 : OJlAIIA , SUNDAY MOUNINGsErTJtr1Ell 20 , 18U-"VEN''Y PAGES. . SNGrd OOpy } 'IYf (1EY'LS. . - - - DEFENDS THE LORDS Smaley Point Out Reasons for the Hered- V itr Honse's Retention. ? , RUMORS OF ITS MODIFICATION RIFE I Talk in England of Making It Member- ship Elective Hereafter. SALISBURY MUST DECIDE ITS FATE ns' Faith in the Present Body Founded on Experience. ON TiE .SINGUlAR COURSE . OF FRANCE - ( z Ilnrhnrl ) ' Iu ) r"I" " ' .nr Set SIuk . h ) ' SII. 'Ith IN 1.'nn'ul.1 . . UIHHI" -1'ru1nbIIIt . I.'tir Stilt -I'r.hlhll ) .r 'lr Stl Hcmu" ' . . $ S t.Lcv YOHK , sept. 28.-Spclal ( Tell- ram-Lord LonlolHlerry Is quoted as say- ing on I.'r1ay . In the course of an ater-dln- ner speech at Hrpon that he thInks the House of Lorls could I.Improyed. . That Is ' ' a very moderate opinion. Ho added Lat : he .OpC(1 tim unionists would grapple with the " . .opel . ' . qiestion. % That Is a much more 10uhUul matter. Lon Hosebery tel Lord Salisbury In the House itself In 1888 , while the 101' servatves were In power that the Jra\1 i . charge against him was his failure to do anything toward reorm ot the uP.Ir cham- ber. But now comes the Ohronlcle , . radlc,1 London paPer with a poaltvo st \'mcnt that . ) J the conservative leaders Intend ' 0 make th ? t/o / conservatve House or Lords nn elective bo1y. There could % . trot be a worse authority , The cont'rvatlves have not hitherto been In til hiot l of con I Mlng their Illans to their radical cppenents. I know of no reason why hey should do " 0 now. Who are the cons : ; tve leaders who announce their Intentions to the wIril ( . through this radical medL'lm ' 7 They might le dlOcul to Identy ; LorI Londonlerry was viceroy or Ireland In the last conservatve government. When Lord Salisbury formed his present cabinet ho Invited his ex-viceroy to enter I ae lord of the rrlvy seal. Lord Londondprry de- . dined , much to the regret of his Dart ) i . friends who thlnl he has In him the stuff of a capable and Judicious minister. lie has slnco been mentioned as a probable ambas- .Mor to Paris on the retirement or Lord flufferin. In such a post as that he would have. rs he had In the Irlsl vlero'aly , the advantage of Lady Lontonderry's social gifts And prestige . and the alvartage Is very great. Ilgh as Is Lord Londonderry's posi- ton , howeer. . he Is I hardly the man who would be chosen to announce a new departure on a political tsaue which Is perhlpa the most momentous that can now be raised lu the ) nglsh political world. BALISBUn" TiE SUpIEE ORACLE. r" The subject Is one on whIch one man can speak with authority and one only The prime minister Is the only possible mouth- piece or the ministry on this question. Net only because he Is prIme minister , but be- ' "uso he Is Lord Salisbury. We never do JustC1 Lord Salisbury In America. We ' call him a tory and so dismiss him. lIe Is kown In En/land. even to his or.onents. as . of the a man of strong convictons. One r .longut of his convlctDna Is ,3 beUet In the hereditary principle. The her.dlary prIn- ciple Is . for many purposes , cut of date but not In his view , as the basis or the consttu- ton or the house of I.ords. lie clings to that. He may very probably do a great Injury to hIs order and the chamber which be rightly regards as a bulwark against revolu- tonary legislatIon. I would be easy 10 give way I he considered expediency merely. Looked at as a maier of prInciple his po- : ! lon ; 1 pcrrlth' intelligible. The House ' or Lords Is to him and Is . In fact , the one con- stutonal safeguard against the reckleas In- novatons of a radical majority when ther havpei1 . to be a radIcal majority In the House of Commons. Were I not for the house of Lords . the majority or the moment might . oertun the constitutIon or break up the emplra during : single sittIng. There 1 : ne supreme court witli , power to Intervene no w.t referenc ! to 'tatos ) for there are no sttites no veto no reference to the peopl\ no means' of becurlng 1 refo : ' , : e to the people Eave by ' the rejection of a \II , I by'th ' House of Lords. I It be 1 great mehsure all \h ! s.nse or the people be clearly lleclah1d at 1 general elec- ' " Uon the Lords accept the decisIon of the 1110- pIe and Ilass the bill. That Is their ath.iltted constitutional positon and . duty . That SI'S Lord Salslury. they have per- formed as a hereditary body. Who knows what they would 110 I the : were elpctn Who has ever suggested a workable system of electIon or any practc"l or pi"lctcable schema for abolIshing the heredItary char- Icter or this body and substtnthll some other There Is 1\ pretense that any su'Ii schema has been brought forwar.l. Till I ' 4 has says Lord SalIsbury . 1 stand by thl19S AS they are. The present bchemo Is not per- feet , but It works vell. I you add and the general conservative conviction that It works wel , Lord Salisbury's personal partialIty : or the heredItary prInciple aa a 11rnclpll you begin to get some measure of the dIfficultIes whhh : stand In. the way or reforming the House or Lords , anti of abolIshIng seriously modifying Its llere.1ar basis. FHErlH VICT0tmS IN IAIMGASCAR. The Ilench In laagofcar have won two "victories" over the Ilovas or ehe announced one victory twice over. They defeated , I we may believe Ihe telegranu. 6.000 novas with A French los of no kIlled ami three wounded. 1 docs not hound very glorious but we may put I In the other scale , .000 l.'rench soldIers - dIers dead ur In the hospll,1 from fever Even , then the cause of republkonlsm In Europe t _ does not gaIn 111\\h \ \ from the spectacl ! of Madagascar . or from the freebotng prae- tlceil Oi that Ilhnll under the republican hag. 1 Ifl.ly bl a question whfthfr It gains much more from the subserviency of Frdnce utitl nns Ii , or whether the coinIng visit of PresIdent F.turc to the czar will adll much to the dignIty or prestige or France through- out Europe. Prebileut 1aulo is I 1 Ke1-h\let guest . lie \ Ill be r cel\C ) with splendor no doubt ROd with every klnr or ceremonlul observances which flatter French . may naier vaniy. lint the ( positIon of tcpentl\ce which Prance oceuplls toward Iusd1 will remain the saiiie Oddly enough I Is Iro:1 : Clermiany that the , joke CCIel that 11) 110 ! ' , Jmrtlll'll ' 10 scathe ' , l'ench slccplllll 1 on tl subject. The " _ ) Zeltln 01 Derl.l hJ' been JJ llhlng an slsrmls : artIcle nn th hlmlneu' ' 3 "r'l f turol1ea" WiU . unl sayIng that the trumpet note wlle1 ! \ Ill Ilnmo : , the "Jlt armll's to the field \ 1 C.Hll. not ( rom Rt t. Peter.b'arg . llt from Pul ; In other word _ . tb' Ilecltl\ & voice II hOblltes I to b3 } 'nnch , sod not Russian . The French in't have red that with delight . but i cannot :0 true I con- 1lclctl &Ul7tllo & , that II known and luch . more that Js believed of .In true natlN Cf the relations between France and Rusla. Moreover , there Is no occasion to bel3\e In Immediate wsr. We are In full autumn winter - ter Is near and no ruler In hIs sense or with any knol ledge or what modern war really mean wi precipitate a winter cani palgn The Irelz Zeltung I a sober sort of paper but these epidemics or war alarms break out In the most unexpected ) quarters. ' TWEEN 1'011 AND l'ItEMIEIL. The frIends or the pope and the friends of Signor Crlspl have each been making a demonstration In favor or their hero or sup- plyIng each as It were , with a testImonIal A mIllion of messages , rays a papal organ publshrl In home have been tent to uk hclt- ness arid expressions or sympathy with him and of protest against the recent festivals In ctrmemoraton or italian unity. Some of them were telegraphic , and the majority came probably by post. There are 8,000.000 of faithful Catholics In the United States alone , but cable rates are hIgh and even postage Is sometimes proht'itlve. mIllion of ines- sometmes pro'lllve. ( \ miion 11S- sages from all over the s'orltl Is . nevertliekss , a remarkable number. Hemarkable In a less degree arc the 40.000 signatures In Signor Crleill's album In response to the peronul attacks on him Neither his enemies nor his friends believe ln : the personal attacks. The Italian prl.ne minister Is an honor- able man as well as a statesman or genuine genius. The same may be said of the pope , , and the pity or It all Is that between two tch I men , each repreeentng vast political Interests - I terests and genuine convIctIons , no modus v'vr11 ' can be arrangel ) The real obstacles are not polItical . but ecclesIastical. I I the 'shadow or Sl Peter's that darkens the path from the Vatcan to the Quirinal. DUNI1AVEN STILL . WILI.ING. The new English challenges for the Amer- Ica's cup number three or perhaps more , not counting the possIbility or a fresh one from Lord Dunr.ven. Ilk' decision to leave Val- kyrie behInd him Is i explained by hImself In an unpublished letter , as follows : "I leave her because I am clinging to a last chance of a fair trial of her and some such chance may arise , and because I .there Is really an- other challenge rho may be useful here. " The date of that h. September 24. Lord Dunraven still thinks he had no alternative but to withdraw from a contest for which a fair course could not be obtained. Our le gItmate mortIficatIon over the failure of the committee to provide one mcd not ex- press Itself In ungenerous c"vls at Lord Dunraven's motIves. He stIll thInks the commIttee nil wrong and believes Valkyrie the falter boat GEORGE W. SMALLEY. ' 1I1 J 01" " CllXgSg 1)Ul'LICI'I't' . liueh'I GUIlt IfliMsiflht .e Ilitili try ' . . H"III , I. ilet Ir ( ' In IIH IHI. ( CopyrIghted iE9 ] 5 , by I'rt'ss Publishing ComIJn ) ' . ) 1.00 CHOW7 ChIna , Sept 28.-New ( York I World Cable-Speelal Telegrain.-The ) whole Kuchen commission of Inquiry Into the Hwalsang massacre Is disgusted with ChInese olcial duplicIty. All the members feel that unless they arc more strongly supported tan now they had better return to Fee Chow. Drltsh Consul Mansteld has been grossly Insulted The Chinese officials are openly ! urlcus toward Christians for giving to the foreign ! consuls the names of the murdeers. The prefect , I Is reported , threatens venge- ance after the departure of the commlsson. : The magIstrate IEsled three wPks ago an offensIve proclanititlon. On the demand of the consuls another procamaton was Issued publicly . but the offensive one was reissued privately to all heads of villages. The result Is that disorder Is spreading. The commis- sion's posItIon Is perIlous. The total desruc- ton of the Christians' work Is probable. Prompter and stronger acton Is needed. JAS 'OWI'1'O1i ) 'l'If 'i'it IiA'I'Y. . \I'J.'ntn. I ' C. ii grtss s.t H"n.l y ' tu I' " . flit Her , r""I.'nt. ( CopyrIghted . 189. by IIPss luL1.hlng Companr ) CO.ON. ColombIa Sept. 28.-New ( York Worh1 Cable-SpecIal Telegram.-A ) dispatch from Duenos Ayres says that consideration of the propoed treaty with the Untied States definIng the time for deliverIng uI deserters from warships has been postponed. Senator : lro opposes the measure , asserting that the offense should be tried In the cIvIl courts. Valparaiso Ie raising $2,000.000 by a lottery for municIpal purposes. Congrebs Is oxpccted to authorize a loan t $16,000,000 for I new raIlway and for Improvements at the ports or TJlcahera and onstltuclon. The Chlan press says that when the Jrllsh hoisted their tag over Trinidad Bra- ( .1 sent a warship to Investigate. liar cap- tain retulned urer cruising about for ten days' and reportcd he could not find the isiarid. n. . ' , i'nrtIul to Aiii-rloiiis. { Copnlhl < . 182 ; . Lv lreMs ( uLI.hln ! Compan ) LONDON Sept , 28.New'ork ( World Culle-.Epeclal Telegranr-Gus ) Harris sailed on the I.lcanla this morln . At a farewell brcakrast gWen to the staff or Drury Lane theater he saId to your correspondent : "I antlcpata the greatest pleosl'e again from a visit to Ne\ York I am sure 'Hansel und , OretI' - will stilt them . but I consider I my \ 'atytn : critical . Americans to personally su- perntem ) the first performance at Daly's. I bhal only sty a week In America and pay a t.rrJed visit to Boston and Philadelphia. In view or the enormous Lnlmc of Americans to London I Intend IntroducIng special fea- tures for their Intuest lly next drama will recetvo the most liberal patronage of Amer- Leans. and I have two lu tire "Cheer. Boys Cheer" company Hi&s Calhoun and Miss Cheen of Philadelphia. - - - Cltlttit's 1'ilIt' , . ue Oh.trnctul. HONG KONG. Stpt. 2S.-Obstruction or the Inquiry by foreign consuls Into the Ku Clung nranlcrt or August Is still being kept up by . Chilesoleals. ! . Forty men suspec'ed or com- plciy In the riots have b'en Iber.ted by the local authorities without the consent or the consuls. Mr. Mansfield . the British consul at Iu Cheiig has been insulted by Chinese sol- 1)lers. The consuls are considering the at\la- Witty or l'ctur'ng ! to Foe Chow anti referring the mater to their respective goveruments. 1'.11. . for nn Anh\'ct 1xpe.lltioii . LONDON Swt. 2S.--'rhe Times publIshes a dIspatch from Melbourne which says that Hon. Houston Reed premier of the colony or New South Wales Is securing the cooperation - operation of the other colonies In the rlls- lag of funds for an A"tarte expeditIon . Stcnm.r.hurt hl the Uehrhh' , LONDON , Sept. 28.--Thl steamer Dalton , from New York Is ashore on the , \es coat of ibhay one of the huge hlallds or Inner HebrIdes , anti It Ie feared that she will be a total loss. Tie CN\ have been taken off lu safety _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . \'nr Sh\I' GoIng tip ' "Ru"-T.e-llnn . LONDON Scpt. :8.-\ allpatch from ShanghaI says thL the BrItIsh cruiser eohl Is ouTputs te Wu Chang , In the I'rovlncs of itoope ilth four more war sblps , and wIll enter te : Yang-tac-Klang today - - - - - - Germnl \ Shll' . :0 : I. Cilntr BERLIN . Sept : S.-'ire Nerd Deutsche AI- gemelne Zeiunc says that German men of- war In far western waters have been ordered to Swat ow and Chee Fee to protect foreigners a those lace . , ' ROAST FOR MR. ROSE Latest Ohalenger for America's Cup Openly Orticised in London. Ills LETTER BRINGS OUT PROTESTS Construed as I Refection on the Course of Lord Dunraven. ITS ' WITHDRAWAL MAY BE FORCE Adverse Utterances _ of Press and People Powerful in the Premises. CAUSTI COMMENT OF TiE STANDARD i'resiiii1tluii , ue Air yotre tu Dur" to Chll"u ! ' Uti ill Cou.l It ittits Stilt ( reit IirIttIit's l'teiiIliir s. tlonN I IIHcl'I I , P It ( 'Ii ii k eu. ( Col'rlghINI. iso ; ; . by l'ress Iuhl'hlng COmp3n ) LONDON Sept. 2S.-New ( York W'orld Cable-Special Telegram.-The ) leading Eng- hair yachtsmen express the curious conviction that Mr. Hose's challenge for the America's cup wIll eventually come to nothing. I have heard this said many times during the pst week hy men of authority In the yachtIng world , but being pressed for reasons none Is given. Perhaps It has its only basIs In the very wldespreallng feelIng here that Mr. H03e's challenge "wIthout condItIons" Is a re flection on Lord Dunraven and therefore on tim Hoyal Yacht sqldron , which organiza- ton Is held In nhnost superstitious veneration hy a nation which worships what Is the most exciusiv . next to the Jockey club assoca- ton of the country , admittance to which Is valued by rich and even noble of England u an honor hardly to be understood by demo- cratc America. MembershIp ( In the Hoyal Yacht squadron Is the fondest hope of ever ) ' aspiring rich commoner , and even or noble- men who are not In the really haut ton or their own rank. The Royal Victoria Yacht club. to which : lr _ Hose seems to have gained admission only very recently . as I do not tnd his name In the last club list , Is a very respectable organIzation and disputes with the Thamea thC second rank after the Royal Yacht squadron . but In the estimation or the British In general , as well as the yachting world. It Is a very Inferior one to It In social or technical poaltion. I Is at prcscnt . at loat considered quite Impossible that . Mr. Hose can be electell to membership thls.year er before next September. I Is , In fact tire habit of tire squadron to "pIll" even an avaIlable - able candidate at several elections before final success possibly as an exhIbition of Its ex- clusiveness. As already noted In this corre- I . sroiidcnce Mr. Clarke , the owner of Satan Ia , and Mr. Walker , owner or Aisa , were unsuccessful - successful candidates even whIle their respective - spectve yachts were l3rltannia's foremost competItors. STILL RANKLES IN LONDON. Since the manly confession of high EnglIsh authorItIes on yachtIng or Lord Dunraven's unportsmanlko conduct which I cabled last week , there his been a recrudescence or bit- ter comment In the newsI llers. helped along by the London Times' New York correspondence - once , whIch has lately been very h03tle to the Defender syndicate. The Daily Standard which Is more tory oven than the Times , has a paragraph undolbte.ly . Ilutratng the gen- eral sentiment anent Mr. Hose's challenge , and note especially "Mr. Roso" as referring to one of the first London bankers , whose father wa made baronet for conspIcuous service to the empire : "The announcement that a Mr. C. D. 'tose sent over a challenge chalenge I for AMerica's cup will create none of the sat- Isracton In thlp country that It Is said to produce In New York. There was every rea- , Eon to hOle that afer the recent fiasco no ; BritIsh yachtsman would take a vessel across I the Atlantic to challenge for the cup until i conditons had been placed on a fair footIng . I the new and illegal deed of gIft canceled ' equitable riles and conditions laid down and , above all . arrangements made for races to be saied over a course far removed from any large town and admIttIng or a fair trial or speed uninterrupted and undisturbed. On this point It seemed that British yachtsmen were unanImous , and to say the least It Is extraordinary that a challenge should have bEen thus hastIly dispatched by a genteman whoso name Is little known In yachtIng cir- des . even before Lord Dunraven has heft , thre states. Given In such a way a chalenge would seem a reflection on the course pursued by Lord Duniraven . a thorough sportsman and one of the keenest and most enthusIastic yachtsmon. There Is probably no cheaper way to obtalr notoriety than to build a large racing yachrt and so long as yachts simply race In British waters as It promotes sport no one grldge the notoriety 50 gained When , however , I comes to a vessel claiming to represent British yachtIng In an International - tional contest and a challenge Is given under such crculstances as those now existIng. the verdict or EnglIsh yachtsmen on the at- I . fair will be all but unanimously hostile . " This feelIng may possibly end In the wIth- drawal of Mr. Hose's challenge. STARTLFD STAID LONDON The most notable Innovation In Englsh journa'lsm withIn my knol ledge was the p b- Icaton by tire Morning Chronicle today . or a two.column lustratel Interve.v : with Jane Cakebnad , a notorious poreo.a . . who ha ben con\'lcte 283 tImes In L1ncon plce e nts for trunkennest. Such an Ufldgalfled ! pubhi- caton In a leading London newspap would ! have cost It the respect . , Ir not the sub.cl"p- tlons . or hair Its readers fi'e years t go. To- dar's interview . however , Is eviently written by a member of the editorIal stat and Is I : lustrated by Phi May or the Porch staff . Jane has lately enlisted the sympathy t Lady Henry Somerset who provided tel wi h a cottage In the country and I email Inc : me , but Jane refused both , and was last night arrested again at her old home In HErlord- shire from which she came to London forty years ago a a smart pulor ma'd. All the papers contInue to discuss the proposal . posl for the rn.om of Rome but , as was to be expected from Great BritaIn's relatIons to the Triple alliance . In a hos lie fp'rl. The continental newspapers have also g'ven the project much attentIon , but with a very vary. log yle' according to the roiltIcul sympatbles involved CardInal ! Icharls ! u'd to your Pars : correspondent yesterday that he had no personal knowledge of the proposal and re gretted he could not 'upress an opt Ion bout the nratter . except that at frt sight he feared slch an atempt would encounter sen. oUP oppoition In Fra ' cp , S\'MIATU\ WILDE EXISTS Various rumors come from Wadsworth pnlsco . where Oscar WI de Is servIng his In- tence. A publlhell report that hIt mind was ( ailing was recently denied to your corre Ipondent by a plee officIal . who Inspet the prison but the abaouLe : reticence abut hm ! I now maIntained In theiace of the allegation - legation by the ChronIcle tht"Io : has lost twenty pounds In weight and . \11 \ condItIon presents one among many lutraUcns of the ways In which the En2lsh prison system tie- stroys the mnd ! ant enfeeble tie body of Its , 'lclms. In view of the abrotu e pro-r or Wilde's gti'lt ' or an Irexproull y d1gus Ing character his nuni.rois offecas . cf hIs hear lass treatment or hIs Wal and c' I cn Y hle lavishing thouund on young lb ' , grooms and boys , I Is Inexplicable , to decent n.lnds that there Is growIng up q'Jle gore al ym. pithy for h'l. partIcularly' in ! Ilr.y Rd artsle : cicle ) . The f.e that I toes exist leenu to gIve gro 111 for iiorrlh'e yes 'h' dr his long ' ito In London : a ' 0 the extent of cer- tan ! unlenton3bE : viets. Whie the czar's corcnathn I ' 011' d flni'ely set for ne'ct spring , the European press 'I frill or storls of his ulxllal'd and d's- < uelng ! ' absence f om pubic I ( tat ' s . and . In fact his constant eelusl n at vllous country palaces. T.le 10war ellrr l. one or the kIng or Denmark's ' aiighterg Is a- parenty the leading Ip'rl tn ! It'Js Ian pol - tIcs. The czarovt&u ! , the cmpnor's bnthe" , Is evidently In the last stages cf cn ump'.on and Is hardly expeclld to all Y ye his say In the south of Frunce this ivntor. The car- Ina's condton ! promises. however an he'r or heiress 10 the throne withina reA' mon his ON JUDE FOWI.S CONDUCr. The. allegatIon 11\"ng ble I' ' P' b"ey ina'le this week that the editors or Ihroe 's : la ' - azure had offensively emsculltel Thomas hardy's aerial story "hearts Insurgent , " as they loft out ! - . . . ) let nn mpo-tant ehnpter In "Test . I also on moral grciinds . Mr. Hardy writes i that " 1119 or nothng : hal bn omit cd or 1011t01 wihout my ImolveJge ! , though I ried to se , th 1 = essly for fore : of the alerlons. t for al ) . . . Mr. Hardy recently explained to me that the roost se-Ious al era- t'on Insisted on by the edlon was coo makIng - Ing his hero marry an unworthy woman nrereiy for jalouy , beauas she told him of a rival while his real molve. ! as orlglraly written , was that the grl : faliely pCrua'lel him she wai en the verge of dsgrace : from their intImacy. As the hero Is throughout represented as a lan who ' h the s'rlc cst shave to duty and generally of an elevated nature the. motive as so far Ilublthed Iaa rlllcuously ! Inconlstent Mr. lsr.y te.ls : me he will nstore the orlg'nal "hap'er In tire pUbishrd book. The ntont ! to the novel as a whole Is to SIIW how the unIversIties or 0 ( - ford and Clmbrldg' , founded for pc or scholars , have ben pervrt'd from tha pur- . paces or thor : founders and how ) hope era w re the efforts or a worthy mechanic without In- tuenco to 0111' adm's1on ! within the nails at anyone ( f their collegs1 I CHUnCII.LS CAPTURE CASH. The engagement of the duke of Marlborough to Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt promInently dl. Val1erblt prominenty Il- rect attention to the fact that he Is maintaining - tamIng the record or the hurchl frrrnliy . unique even In the British , aristocracy for marrying money The first marriage or the late duke was the only excepUoh In two gen- eratons , but he atoned for thus divergency from the rule by his seco11 union with Lily hlammershey. Lord Hanllolph Churchill got a fortune wIth Miss , JeromF . and - all his six sisters , aunt or the preentaduke . made . wealthy matches. The eld-j' ma.rlGl the duke or Roxburgh an opulrc landlow"t second Sir I\or Guest ii S Lord Wlmborne , a mIllionaire Iron master ; the hlrdIr. . Fcl- iowes now Lord de Ramsey . , walthty . bankers - ' I w/alhy for generations : the fourth Edward MajOrl- banks now Lord Tweedmouth , n mIllion- air : tlE fifth Lord Curzorr " eldest son and I heir or the earl of Howel , one of London's greatest real estate owirers and the sixth Captain Wilson or the Lie Guards , eldest son of Sir William Wilson . the Australian miion- alre created a baronet for his big donations to the tory party funds. Jt should be added that In every case these unions havE proved happy , and no leading tithed family has given less material for society gossip. The prince of Wales I to _ be the guest from Saturday tIll Monday . pf the first week In October of Sir Wilam and Lady Deres- toni at Deepdene. The ex-duchee expresses great satisfaction at the ellggement or her stepson The relations between them have always been most cordial and he was the chief wItness at her last weddl\lg. \ BALLARD SMITH. ONLY ' ' \ UP -I 'I'IIH nE.\D 'uViIt'FES. 1'Iisiu'iiimisStIII Clhn that tlo iiuue'iisu' IN Not Ciioi'rii. ' SAN FRANCISCO , Sept. 28 , -The bark- - cntno S. G. Wider arrIved . \ today and brought the first authento advices ' from Honolulu received for two' weelcs. The Wider mled on September 11. The Associated press correspondent says : Sev- enly-two people have bCen ' ' attacked wIth cholera since the plague brokl out. Of that number fifty-two have ( Iletit . aill but two white people were among the victims. Dur- lug the last forty-eight hours but one new , case has developed. I Is believed that the dll' ase Is \ In check and that It Is only a maier of a few weeks when It wIll be totally eradicated. The cItizens' sanitary movement already shows good results. A house to house inspsctiou Is made twIce a day and all suspIcious cases , re sent to the hospital. The natves will not report cases of sickness. They appear to be afraId of whie doctors who they clamor wi kIll them. As a result of almost [ 'spenlled business. many HawaIans arc out of , work and there appears to bo real distress dmong them. A relief staten has ben opene at which all I natvell may secure supplIes or rood and . raiment. There Is still some doubt a to the real nature of the scourge : The ' majority of medical men agree that It Is , AsiatIc cholera . but these are some who 'malntln that I Is a purely local disease ! any or the cases' have been traced and with , few exceptions the practice of eating raw f has been responsible - sponsible for tire . sickness 1fbV sale or nsh from the harbor has been prhibited. A quarantine by other Islapds , is stIll main- blne,1 , agaln Honolulu. Provisions are growing short outsidE oi this city and It Is t leve that steamers Jim ba chartered at San Francisco to load for HuG on HawaiI and Kalhulal on MauL Chh'nJ" Inn \rrc"te,1 nt Livt'rpool LIVERPOOL Sept. 28.-Luke Crmen , who gave his residence as TlllrtylUth street near Indiana avenue Chicago , was arcsted here on Thursday a lrt was about to take passage on board the slamer Cepbalonla , for Boston. In the police court today bo was charged with abducting Kate Mclnrey of Manor hamilton . county of I\rlm. Ireland. The girl was charged "vltl larceny Thy were remanded to the Manor Hamilton ccurt. . - "lc'rnIS 01 TIE STORM FOUND ' 'wo ChllJren In - ' \oml.A 'Vbo l'er. .h..t Bur"l" Sntur.lura hI1zrird. RAWLINS . WyO. . Sept. % -Specll ( Tele ' ram.-I ' rank Nevin' : wo little boys . aged 1 and 13 , who were lost I last Saturda , ' , storm while loking for the cows , wee found today by a party of .lareher nearly ' tWo miles from the ranch and Iyng : toether . under a shelving rock. T oodiewere 1m. mediately brought to town and several hun- drd people viewed the remains IENJING ) THE LORDS Unionist Admit the Necessity of Curtailing - ing Their Power. SIMPLY hEADING OFF TiE RADICALS Latter Not Inclined to Accept Anything Short of Their Aboltion , ARMY SIMPLY AN ASYUMn TiE RICH Its Value as I Fighting Force Deterorting Under ExistingOonditions , IS TOO EXPENSIVE FOR ' 7 \ POOR MAN itike' uf 11'1. tu lie Prulu" ' " t. * lie Fitter ltjii.l . In .Jniiiiur' ) -l'roiiiI- II.'Ut J""H OIIInH" ( u. ' .r the I'IIUH . nf.th. . . . . U.thH"hl.IN. ( Copyrtgliteth . 18J . Ly the A.Boclal.1 Prep..1 ) LONION Sellt. 2R.-Reform of the house or Lords has , In the last two lays hecome a tOJlc of principal dlscnsslon. Whie noth- I log may come of I Immediately or In tire near future the vigor with which the subject Is being handled In the press and publo a.l- . dresses Indicates that tire leaven Is working which will ultimately give the house of Lords a semblance of a representative cham- her. Tire speech or the marquis of London- derry at a banquet at Ipon last nlg'rrt , In which he admited that the House or Lords Is susceptible of iuirprovenrent and expressed the hope that the unionists vouh1 grapple wih the < uoslon , was heartily welcomed by tire unionIst preSs and appears to confirm the statement published In the DaIly ChronIcle - Iclo yesterday morning that thin conservative leaders contcnlllate Introducing a measure In favor of the reform of t'o House of Lords. J Is euiggsted however , that there Is a possIbIlity Chat this Is another scheme ema- matIng from Ht. Hon. Jeseph Chamberlain - lain , with a view to further "dishing" the I radicals. The latter . irowover would consent to no reform whIch would leave the House of Lords In ( exIstence witr the power of reject- lug or modifying measures adopted by the House of Commons. I Is thought po.slble. however , that the radicals might be In- ducell to accept as an alernat\'e or abolition some reform measure which would leave the Lords the mere power of referendum to tine people regardIng any bill which they might decline to accept. MONTAGUE AGAINST ROTIISCIIILDS. . There Is trouble In the Jewish colony over Lord Rothschild's scirine to bull a colossal I. synagogue clergy house and Jewish settlement - ment Whltechapel at a cost of $200,000. Sir Samuel Ipntague declares that lie wIll oppose the scheme to the utmost. willt - - chapel Is already congested with Jews and rent there are as hIgh as In Mayfair. IL would be unnecessary , says Sir Samuel , whuls the government meditatng ! antI-alien legis- 'I ltIdn to - attrsct still more .Jews to' London. ' stl 1 I would e far better , he thinks to try to i I Induce tire Jews to leave England for some of the colonies b yonl tile OCOSO. The Court Journal draws the attentIon or ParlIament to a 'candal ' which has already been dealt with by Emperor William . as the I expenses of regimental life In England render 1 I Impossible for any but the wealthy to put . their sons In the army. The cavalry It Is : asserted . Is going to pIeces because its or- . dears are drawn from the Idle rich and the Infantry.III ' In a fair way to follow unless the regulations are modIfied sO as to enable the sons or poor gentlemen . who are willing to work irard to enter the sen'lce. The duke of York who Is now a captain In the navy , will be promoted to the flag rank In January. The prince Is due In I.on- don from abroad tonight. He wIll attend the Lees festival Tuesday and " 'ClneEda ) ' . goes to Ieepdene Saturday and to Newmarket durIng the second October meetIng . and from thence to Scotland to visit irk' daughter the duchess of Fife at Mar lodge. I'AS'i'EUit'S LIP'ld " ' ( ltK 1.'IXISII.n. : Noted Scientist l'uHH",1 1..1..111) . A'uvmry lt Ills lule Xt'ur l'itrls. PARIS , Sept. 28.-Pror. LouIs Pasteur , the eminent bacteriologist died hero this even- log at 5 o'clock. M. Pasteur died at Garchas near St. Cloud , In the environs of thIs city. Prof. Louis Pasteur had suffered from paralysis for a considerable period or time. About eIght days ago he sustained a violent par- alytc stroke and yesterday suffered stIll another severe aUaclt. He grew worse rap- Idly and remained In a comatose conditon during his last hours. At o'clock this afternoon - noon he expired. The death was absolutely wihout pain His wife devotedly watched at his bedside. Ills sour . his physicIan his daughter and his son-In.law. M. Valery HadoU , and two grandchildren . as well as Dr. faux and Dr. Chtairtmosse were present when he passed away I Is believed that the funeral or M. Pasteur will be national In Its character. . Pror. Louis Pasteur has been gradual ) failIng In healh for lome nrontiie and re- centy the French papers announced the beginning - ginning of the end This report was em- phatcaly denied by his famiy and frlemitls. They acknowledgell the feeble condition or the dIstInguished bacteriologist , but at- trubnted It to local rather than to general causes. Louis Pasteur was born at Dole Jura December - cember 27 , 1822 ; entered the UnIversity In 1840 : became a luperumerary master of studies at the College of Denancon : was received - ceived as a pupil In the gcole Nrmale In 1843 , takIng time decree or doctor In 1847. and was apPolnte,1 professor of physIcs at the Faculty of the Sciences Strasllurg. In 1848. At the end or 185 he was Intrusted as dean with the organizatIon of the newly created Faculty or Sciences at I.lle , antI ) In 1857 returned - turned to Paris and undertook the "sclen- tite dIrection" of the Ecole Normale. In December . 1863. he was appointed professor or geology physIcs and chemistry at the I cole des Beaux-Arts and was elected a member of the Institute. The Ho'al society or London . In 1856 awarded rut . Pasteur the Hurford medal for his researches relatIve to the polarization of lIght , ete. lie was decorated with the Legion of Honor August 12. 1853. was promoted to be an officer of that order In 1863 , and a commander In 1868. In 1869 he was elected one of the fifty foreign . elgn members of the Royal society of Lon- ' don. don.M. . Pasteur has written numerous works le- hatIng t chemistry and bacteriology for which In 1861 he obtained the Jeker prize . Ills contributIons have appeared In Hecuel dC1 Savants Etrnger and the Annales de dumb ot de Physque : . and be publ.hed In 1863 In a separate form 1 work entitled "Neuvel Exemple do Feremcltaton Deter- THE BEE BULLETIN. \'eathcr Forecast tlr NeIrrtskmr- Ornerl ) ' ' : lr ; Slightly Cooler : NorthtlyInll. . l'age. ) 'aI , Siiiiihiu'y 1..t".II I . I ire I I otl'i e nr r.urI. 1:1I.h : l'ru''u loti.t4 )1 r. In , . ! II.rurmtll I lie l.nr.1 tl I " "hlo U.h"te. : luh..ntlhu I I. Irnl' the ! "Itrl.t. . 2. 1"1 Ilrrl.ul I I. Nut I Ctu ii .1 Ida t e. ll''rll Sd'hl , . itr'tlreul for ' \1' " . iulrrruiit l'C'itau , limit 1.1 tlu 110111' , Ilrralt 1..r'I. In Inl" . . . . . . , . . Three S..w n..h..I. . .11"111.1. : . n"I"hl"I" ( :1111) : t ' C'I\'t'llln' I " 'nrk. 1)eit'grrteu Qalkt ) ' Citouu'i . luw I SI..rl nuhl.\ , t ii . CI t ) ' . .1 , I.a.t , 'I'lt II I th I , ' 1'lal " ' , * rld . Hr. 1"lt"I" : ' :11.h'al L'tt'r. Amll ! &IH' I S- ret " let Ii's . I. . A \ ills ( : lllt t ) . n"llhll'IUI I i a I itt rI3' . 0' 1 Irk'mi ( 'al. I . " the OUH'rlnr. 0 , CIII.1 Bluff-u I.'a airutters. 7 , Balhllrn I " ' Iii . I" . ) " 'llllt. 1.r.l. 11"1 , " at 'ra " , 'r. 1.lall. S'wa"halm ( Jil n"lah. I . ni 'rids She. ml. St reel Oa"l . 'Iat" I Sun It ' . ' , 1'1 ' 1 0 . " 'ulali JIt'r . 1.u : ) a 111 lice % Vo : h\ \ . 11. UWI'I I. . " t. ) . t" t.migre'ia . . l'rogres'i ur 1'h.'trtOt : ) . I : . 1\1..1,1 .1.1 C.ml""I. l : : i . I rrlgiut Ion I. Success liii. . . t Ill liMt'iIl ( 'ii t SII' . mu "d 0..1. . . ( ; Ion cM ur Idahl : lllllall. t . 1 4. UI t hn Art . of Ola..llalh , ! HI. l Cupiti mu r'ru-Irui ald 1"I"a.taN'wA. \ . I Ii. Urtltl IIHI I : ' I " I .r 'Era 1' Shlnl I , g. 17. Car..r lit , llh. P , I. J I iigiulla. mlii . lid logs Or.al\ . \la.ta. ta V't'liy Orl1t "r SIurll ! 01..11" . II. .1'1,1 t. % 'i'uiI ii . . 'uVI. t'ela . : 0. "II o I.IIW I .r I it e Ilt I ' . " 't thtu' hattie Ir N.m' trhu'.tiia . mln : Par des Animalules Infusores Pouvant Vine Sasexygm Llbre. " In 187 the National Assembly accorded to M . Pasteur as a reward chiefly for his Investigations - vestgatons on fernrentatlon . : life annuity' of 12.QOO francs. lie was ral'ej to the rank of grand officer of the Legion of Honor Octob 24. 1878. Ills fepton to the French academy tool place April 27. 1882. when ho delivered a paneg'rle on M. I.ltre , to whose chair he had succeeded In the saro year the coun- ci of the Society or Arts awardl the Albert modal or the society to : I. Pasteur for his researches In connecton with fermentaton , time preservation of wines and the prOpaglton of zymotc disease In silkworms and domestic - mestc animals. or hate years M. Pasteur has devotell him- self to the study or inoculation for disease other than sumrahlpox . and has achieved sonic very remarkable results In the preventIon of imydropiuobIa patents from all parts of Eu- rope and even from America travelng to Paris to 11t themselves under his care. Large subscriptions were raised In Fraiica to form an "hmrstItute Pasteur " where the methods of the great discoverer could be practiced and taught. On July 1. 1889. a meeting was convened al the Mansion house In London for the purpose of hearing statemelts by Sir Jamls Paget and others In favor of estnblshlng a Pasteur institute In Englamid. The "rlnce or Wales ccntrlmtm ) 100 guineas toward that object Pasteur Institute was also etablsh ! ! . , In . America under thd dlrcctfbn or the pupIls of d.rct I'asteur for the purpose of afforlln , relief to Americans who could spare neiher the time lar money to make the trip to Europe for tire Ilrposo or placing themselves directly under tire care of the great chemist. The choler epidemic In 189 led M. Pateur to Institute experiments In anti-cholera 'accina- tians . which proved successful In the case 'of anlurralt. On December 27. 1892 . M. Pasteur's 70th birthday was emrthruslasticaliy celebrated before a representative official assembly at the Sorbonne. April 21 , 1 mural tablet was unveied In his honor at the Echoic Normale. Last May consldorable comment was caused by 1. Pasteur refusing a decoration tendered him by tt German enrperor. The declna- ton was generally applauded by the French paper but was eondemne by the German press and some of the medical and scientific iriagazines the ground being taken that the drawing or natonal lles In this manner would have a tendency to retard the advancement - mont of science. sa''N ) hI.S A hIO'L' SI'glI . ' 100. " % "I ru " " 'II.'r .r the r.IHt . 'Vc'lo n ltt't'ord Ir""I'r for ) I.er , ' . ( Cop'rlgIIN. 189 . Lr tire Asi.oclated Prep ) LONDON , Sept 2S-The oxtraqrdlnarly hot weather has .ecilpsod all other topics In England this week. On Tuesday the thermometer - mometer indicated 86 degrecs In the shalle In London , and 135 In the sun. 'rhe record Is 20 degree above the. average anti 4 degrees higher than en any provlous day or tbI' summer. The weather since Tuesday has shown little Improvement , the mercury on each day rising to 84 degrees or higher There have been numerous cases of sun- stroke during the week and several fatalities - ties have resulted In varIous parts of the countr ) At rewmarket , where the fn.t . October race meetIng opened on Tuesday the heat has been terrible ! O degrees In the shade having ben recorded. This has had a disastrous effect upon the horses and has greatly affected the atendanco at the races Only a handful of people wlnesd tie big race of the meeting on Thursday the big Jockey Club stakes In whlcn last 'ear's anti this year's derby winners ran. The majority of men on the grounds followed the example which was set by Lord Rosebery and wore whIte flannel sult and carried white um- breilas. Throughout tire country the softer- 1 log from heat has been extreme. In ninny ' large factories It was found necessary to snspend wor11. In London tier ; has hlen a gEneral abandonment or frock coats and tall hats and straw bat and suits of the thlnest ; material mayo been adopted In their stead. The great rush homeward of tourists from the United States seems to ho over. None or the steamers which sallll this , week was I quIte full . The Llhn tool Mrr' . WillIam ' Walter 1helpI of New Jersey ; Mr. Brander' Mathews or New York ; ; Mr. Norman Wi- lams and family of Chicago , and Mr. cm- ford Johnson or Chicago , The latter Is returning - turning after an absence or eighteen months , which he hiss spent In making a tour around the world. Mr. : . H. De Young , proprietor or tIre San FrancIsco ChronIcle , and Mrs. Do Young and Dr. Trpworth ) ' of Los Angeles - lea l.altd hy the Auranta. Mr. II Young has secured many additional treasures for the California museum Ilong Ibem being the throne chair of Napoleon the Great I Is rumored that Mrs. Ltlgtrj' contemplates - templates marriage wil Sir Robert Peel In the event of her securing a divorce In the courts . of California. ' I II openly hlrled In socIety Papers that Sir Hubert whose visit to New York lat year Was the occasion of a great deal of gossip on both Rides of the water . hu little beyond hnis title . hut Mrs. Lngtry I stIll rich , Sir Hubert Is 23 years of age , while llr. Lsngtry Is In her IUh . year. 'fhe Daly News lay that the ( engagement uf the duke or Marlborough and tire nih. lior'aire MIss VanderbIlt give additional support . port to the theory that time principle of equalIty I doomed In America ITAIjNG { A NE'V ' \ TACK . Ohancelor lohenlolle Will Abandon the Alliance with the Ceutnist , FORMING A NEW LEGISLATIVE MAJORITY Good Prospect of Securing the Passage of Government Measures. - PRINCE IIOUENLOIIE IN ILL-FAVOR AGAIN Result ofilis Late Visit to SL Petersburg Given as the Oauo , RELATIONS OF TIlE COURTS STRAINED .tcl huts itmiul Siieeehies mit tIre French A riuy tii neil ers Airgereul thu l iilsei-hliuld Ic Cii mitil Not l'rovlnsr l'oniulnr , ( Copyrigirteit. hUn. by the Associated i'ress. ) IhiiltLlN , Sept. 28.-Prince von lloiremuhohme , the termnan imrrperial chancellor , Inns aban- ulontoti tire attemmmpt to secure a majority In the lcichstag { tirrotmgir the aId of tIre centrim.t votes , Tire centrist p.irty furnished ample proof last winter of holing bothi Irrecourcll- able and tuuireliable , anti Priuree lIisnrarck's advice on this point is said to hrruve ciramigeti tire opinion that i'riurce von llohuciulohe formerly - erly ireld. Negotiations are now on foot be- twecur time fnctiolms of tire courservative party amid time national liberals and rrraderates to secure courcerted actIon tirroniglmunrt tire next session of time hteichatag on time muiost vital of tue govermmumnent mumeasutres. Tire niovemirent , which is mritmrost certain to smmcceeul , will give tire' govc'rnhrrcmrt a moore stable nrajorlty than ever Cliuiicehior von Caprlvi irad. Amrrong the priumeipal goverimmireurt mneasurei winch will be imutrothucerl at tIme coinIng sea- shin of tire Relclrstag are For reform of thmo bourse ; for time protection of rrrcchraurical trades against disimomneat competition ; for time relief of agrIculture , and for time fetlerritlour of husbantiunemr. In preparatloo for tue two latter meastires facts are being collected througimont tire em- plro bearing on time subject of tire agrictil- tural depression , whrlchr will. ho haiti before the fletchsmng. Tire governnremrt does nat Intend - tend to imrtrotluco airy now taxation bills at the approaching seSsion. FOUND TItAITOItS AT hOME. Anrong thozo who mayo been arresteti in connectloum with time discovery tumat secrets regarding tire irational defeirse were being sold to tire French is a fanner Bavarian arurry oflicer , Ludwig I'feitfer , In vlrose rooms in hlerlin were found niotleis and demrwlngru of German defensive. works and letters from tire Frentir mnllitary bureaum. Altogether - together some fiftecur arrests have been made. Tire persona accumserl will ho tried at LeiisIe. Time drawings and motleis seized are for the muost pati' ' descriptive of tire new heavy ordnance and Plans of fotlflcatlons , but three letters found are reported to have contained inrstructiomrs from tire War department - mont at Paris itself. Two companIes of'oidIers acconrpanied Eurperor William to Romimrton when lie want tbltirer tipon iris shooting expedition. Tiroso soldiers servo as an imperial body guard , tic- nylurg everybody access or near approach to the wrrperor. This Innov4tion Is duo to the fact tirat both at Potstiamn anti Stettln Emit- peror WillIam received miraury threatening letters - ters , apparently eurranating ftOutt socialists and mrmrarehriats , anti that ire was approached on several occasions by suslrlclous appearing persons , Emperor William has beau having his usual sporting luck at flominton. lie killed twenty-three stags with iris own hand on Thursday. lie has ordered that St. Rirpert's birthday , which orerurs on November 3 , simmrli be kept by a great chase iii Grrnnewahd , near Berlin , to whmicir King Albert of Saxony Is invIted. Mr. H. Knille , reprosenthuig H. G. Dun & Co. of New York , has just comphetel a tour timraimglr Germany. Ho reports timat exports train tire United States into Germany are constantly iircreasing , especially in the lines of furniture and fruits. Aliout 800 commirer- cial travoherms fromn tire United States are now in this empire , propariumg to open rip fresh chtairneis of trrle for Arrrerlcmrnr nude goods , and are meeting with a reasonable measure of success. 1IOIIENLOIIE IN ILL-FAVOR. Tile relations between Enrperor Wlhhlrmnr and Prince iIoiuenloh are so straimrerl that it would not be suirprising if tirere should ire a new In- ctmmbent of the iimrporial ciramrcehlorshrip before tii expiration of a year from the date the prince sr-as appointed to tire 0111cc , October 29 , 1894 , Tire visit of Prince hiolrenimihro to St. Pc- torsburg , the early prt of tins nrouithi , had proved an unfortunate omme for irimn officially , however it nray have resuitd pecuniaul'y It wait alleged nit time time that tire ciran- cellor's errand , ivimilo primarily of an official - ficial nature , bail also a peraomral object , I'rlnco von hiohierriohe desiring to obtain permission - mission from time czar that iris wife mirlght hold the estates in Russia of her deceased brother , Prince Savn-Wittgensteimi , winch are said to Ire worth 0,0Il0,00G mar'ks. TIme advances - vances whicit tire German Imperial chancellor made on this occasloir to the htunamitan government - ment were no mmrorc favorably receIved titan others which had iireceriemh tirm , and tire fact that under sucir circuunmatamicea Prince lioimcmrloiro r'irotiirl horse asked a personal frevor of the czar has , accordIng to crirrent report , greatly angered Emperor Wiillanr , In this connection it may be rrtldetl thrat tire eftntslvc'ness of the excimaurge of comapll. merits between Prince I.oiranoff , time Russian moluminuter of foreign affairs anti General lrag- omrriroff cmi the one side and President Farire and tire French ministers and army officers on tire other. at the reeeimt array niraneuvrs on the Vobges have not softened tIre feelings of Emperor William towards tire htuastarms , There Is , iirdeeul , a decidely strained feeling at present existing between tire two courts and two nations , Tue trathlc of time BaltIc canal imas trot tic- veicipetl in a way to rireet time expeditions of its prtrnrotera , OwIng to mrunmerous tic- cldenta , airl tire high toll chargeti , emily 700 vessels passed through tire errnral during Ihis month of August , Tue fact that a still higher scale of clmdrgea Is goiimg litter effect on Tuesday.October I , is likely to fnmrtimer reduce - duce ( lie traffic tirrorighr the camutri , Time gov- emnmnexmt , hrowever , appears to be confident of the ultinrate success of tIre canal , for it has refumsed to accede to the appeals of the Stettln amid Kid Cimmrimrbt'rs of Contnierce for a reduction hr tire scimetirtie of rates , Thie government baa decided to appoimmt a naval comr.miuiour to inquire into the conditions of transit through the camral , especially iromri a military point ( if view , Ptint'e henry t I'rrnuia imas been appointed a rear ittimirat 0 ! the Austrian ngvy.