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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1895)
: ) ; ) onoCXtaOOO ; ; ; ) ' IOlot PAnT t. 332j Oce8 'IITIJ1F ; ccccceccOOOCCCC03000 'O'U . ESTABLIShED JUNE 19 , 1871. WAR OF WORDS \ ONLY I Controversy Over Venezuela Not Likely to Bring on Powder Burning , , MAY BE SETTLED BY CORRESPONDENCE - roreig Office and Btt Department Capable - pablo of Dealing with the Matter , CANADIAN CLAIMS MAY BE SCALED Grievances of the Oolony Not of n Kind t Menace Good reeling , TURK lAS 11E BETTER HAND [ AGAIN Outbreak ot ArJu'JIIIH II CoIIMuiItI- Jp1I ' 0)1'1'1 ( " to Check 1)1 IpI- ' 11te i'rigreNs and Hctlrll11 - . JIHhl.lt ot the 1)IIlIcIIIIes. - Nnw YORK , Ocl 5.-pecaI ( Telegram- ) A diplomatIc controversy wIth Great Britain abeut Venezuela appears : to be inirlbble. There Is evidence tending to show that the State department has sent , or Is about to send ( , to London a dispatch on this vexed and vexing question. Sunday newspapers meko haste to cal It an ultimatum. One thing certain about It Is that It h l not an ultimatum , and that Mr. Oney has not not- fed Lord Salisbury that ho must sent an answer wIthin ninety days. The later would be a gratuItous discourtesy. The former .ouM mean war , I the ultimatum were re- jccteL We have not gal to that stage yet , nor Is there the slightest reason to suppose that the Venezuela difficulty will prove unmanageable - manageable by diplomacy , or , In the last re- l , sort , by arbitration. I doubt whether there J : Is anything really new In the present state of the controversy , except a new secretary ot tnte. When Mr. Gresham laId his views be- fore the Drltslj government they were of course the views ot the administration , In other words , ot the preshlent , for the presl- clent Is tim allmlnlstraton , Mr. Cleveland was the presIdent then , and Is president now. There have , however , been rumors that In the seclusion ot Duzzard's Day Mr. Clevehnd was developing a new Interest In foreign , : 1101 tcs. Till lately he hall rather neglected _ , ,7 favor at domestic mattera. I foreign affairs Ina vor domestc maters : r. Oney , moreOVer , has strong vIews , and the two between them may be supposed to have taken , not a new stand on Venezuela , but a straighter argumentative p0310n than that which Mr. Gresham assume In his , orIginal dIspatches. Lord Rosebery was at that time foreign minister , a man whose frlerdshlp to the United States Is warm. FrIend as ho Is , he replied In terms which appeared to leave Mr. Oresham little firm geound to stand on , and the subject dropped 1I0\nll ! . . . Mr. Orcs1hun bad : aSlt'I' ' ' . - , - - - Britain of territory at Issue between Great terriory to ar- should be submitted and Venezuela Ihouhl submlted ' was threo- answer Lord bitrattOfl. , RoseberY'1 . bitraton. a ape- fold. First , lie bad already proposed Venezuela anti she bad cifle arbitration t clfc arbiraton , ot the territory made no reply ; second , part terrlory to whIch Venezuela for diplomatic reasons i , and apparently In order to have something to surrender apparenty If i It came to n bargain , laid claim was unquestionablY British territory at arbitra- made a subject anti could not be arblra- Great between tlon ; third , In a dIspute Britain and Venezuela the Unlcd States gov- lrlaln . not having assumed a protectorate over Venezuela , has no atanding. APPLY DOCTlt1NF pOlS Tim MONROE DOCTlNE This third contenton Is wel enough definite form , adapted to raise In a tolerably delnle adrpted : doctrine whether the Monroe the ! juestion Is applicable IUeston to this Venezuela dispute. Some at applcable the publshell accounts represent Mr. 0- ! as asserting that I Is , and that [ he nay assertng that doc- to rest UPOn United states means Unied right of Interference In trIne anti to lalm ! n controversy whIch England regards ns concernIng n onlY herself and that rather republic. It would be feeble South AmerIcan republc. I prudent to consIder the published accounts ot the spirit. The sources skeptical In a slteptcal lntormattOfl thus given are not Indicated , and Informaton the papers whIch published It admit that . . - nlnpv "fusrs to say a word on the BuheCt , and ; lthe officials ot the State department are equally reserved. The first from Interested . reports on this subject came capitalists with Venezuelan concessions which they desire to exploit. Mr. la'ard , our ambassador - bassador In London , Ie saIl to deny all knowledge ot the alleged dIspatch. Sir Julian I'LluflcCfOtO , British ambassador In Washington - ton , now In Ottawa , says , or Is said to say , that he has no omclal knowledge ot the mutter , and Jhat no acton has been taken In the PrOl1tSCE. lie rests , so far as he ex- Presses any opinion at all , on the ground taken by Lord ROsebery. , In these circumstances : at doubt antI In the absence ot any clear evidence or nny single poInt the American PUblIC w\ probably preserve for the present Is attitude or unconcern , The English pub- , lic . I Is safe to say , neither knows nor cares anything about Venezuela , but cues a great deal about friendly relations with the United States. I know ot'no reason why both there and hero the subject may not be left to the foreign office and the State department. MAY ' COCIL1ATI CANADA. Sir Julian Pauncefotc's pusence In Ottawa may possibly tend to bring the Canadians to n more reasonable frame or mind on their two present subjects ot dispute with the United States , Bering sea and the copyright questioI3. 'Che CanatLln Iloachers % , who are now piling up ol ! claims agllnst lS , cannot be expected to be moderate , but Sir Julan , being on the spot , wU set a better notion ot theIr ; unre3onablencs. than he could at Washington. I I not known Ihat he Is Ilntrlctcd to open the copyright question , whIch Is 'In the hands at the colonial omce. 1 4 Mr. Chamberlain , the colonial secretary , how- ever has hall experience before now at the Canadians anti their ways. lie has sent back their piratcal law to be revised , and he Is hadly thL man to embroil England and Amer- lea , or risk the repeal ot our internatIonal - copyrIght law to please lislE 1 dozen Canadian - dian prInter who want to invade the AmerIcan - - . lean book market and rob the English author ot"hls rOYII ) . . I he were , the nelhh author Is l callable at making himself heard , and Is I present In America In the person of Mr. hail l llne , who Is going to CanJda to coFifer with the Canadian authcrltie , . enD At the risk of having to confront Sir Charles Tupper. AIUmNIANS M\D A MISTAKE. The Armenians In Constantinople have done their olllersed brothers In Armenia itself the worst possible lervlce. I II quite clear that the riot In the Turkish capital were orcan- bell by Armenian revolutionists. They bad not a chance ot success , nor could those who fomented them have supposed that they could o'erpwel the police and soldiers. Their object was very like that ot the crank who fires a pistol at somebody In order to cal , attention to his grievances This method metho I seldom anslers In prlvale life . and stl nlre seldom In state matters. The efect has been to paralyze European diplomacy for the moment - men ! and leave the sultan temporary mater ot the situation . nland has nothing to say In defense of the indefensible outburst of her clients , and the Turk hugs himself more closely than ever In his favorite attitude of masterly Inactivity . European diplomacy has connned itself since these deplorable events occurred to protests against police seventies and the atrocities oC the Mussulman mob In Constantinople itself . The American min- later thinks American missionaries In danger. They are always In danger. The Britsh ambassador - bassador , SIr Philip CurrIe , a very resolute man , did much to Quiet the disturbances by sending Officials from the embassy to the scene ot ( hirortier. Under their eyes It was difficult for the Armenians to renew their at- tacks and difficult for the police to maltreat or murder spectators and prisoners. The gleam of hope In the Turkish situation Is the al'polntment bC Tlaml Pacha as grarder. . lie Is , for a Turk , liberal and even humane , and Is supposed to bg under the Inluence ot the I nglsh , IC not their nominee. The real atiaorlty tan. remaIns . , unhappily , with the sul- JUST REIMBER TillS. South Carolina's constitutional convention con\enton I Is i not , or ought not to be , a foreign or even an Internatonal topic. There Is , however , a London radIcal journal , the Daily News , whIch tries to bring one of the states at this republic under English jurisdiction , adopting " a favorite . phras ot ! lr. Gladstone , "Under that' ot the civilized " clvll ed worhl. It I blows a biat on its ot blat Is penny trumpet spurious - Qua humanitarianIsm , just as It dId last year about lynchings ant other outrages In the south. Now It Invoices a strong declaration or public opinion to prevent the monstrous injustice of disfranchising the South Caro- lna blaclts. I thInk It I monstrous Injustc and I do not question the sincerity ant Queston sinceriy or good intentions ot the Daily News , but It I ! unlucky - lucky that this paper should ba edited with so little sense or discretion , I Is the mis- sionary spirit which prevails In Its office , coupled with zeal not according to knowledge I treats U9 as If we were so many Chinese , to be converted by the emissaries at Exeter bali. There ought to be somebody on its star with knowledge enough ot America to warn its editor that we do not care to be preached at by foreIgners , and that his ser- mons about South Carolina wilt have no other effect than to harden the hearts of the northerners , who would naturally ba dls- Iio'3l to provide a public opInion of their own In opposition to Senator Tiiiman opposIton Timan and hIs conventon , STILL ROASTING ROSE. _ The sincerity of Ir. Rose's challenge for the AmerIca's cup Is still In sti dispute In Eng- land. This Sporting Weekly , which has been throughout most biter against us , treats Mr. Hose at an AmerIcan and plainly Intimates - mates that hIs challenge was conceived In American Interests , as It to assure the worM that a fair match could not be sailed In American waters" Now comes Mr. Rose hIm- self " , offering to withdraw I either Lord Dun- raven or any other member of the Royal Yacht squadron would like to challenge In - - - was never heard ofas a yachtrnon l last year , and the builder whom ho has chosen has no reputation for the Production ot large yachts. Satanlt , hIs one wel known big boat , Is good for little except reaching In a strong wind. The prince of Wales , through his private secretary , Sir Francis hnohly' , has thought It worth while to contradict the ridiculous story set afloat here that he Is ! : lr. Iloac's backer. A London paper announces that Lord Sals- bury Is about to fill the I0t laureateship , which has remained vacant plnce Tennson's death , all that the new poet laureatC will bo a journaiist. I Is suggested here that Sir Edwin Arnold Is meant , but I Imagine not. Sir Edwin Arnold's poetical reputation In England Is about on a level with that of Sir Lewis Morris , and neither at them Is thought a poet. The reference Is probably to Mr. Alfred Austn , who Is a poet though not ot the first order , n journaik't ot dis- tncton , who writes leading articles for the conservative organ , the Standard , and a per- sonal frIend of Lord Salisbtry . The critical opinion ot England will disapprove this choice for one simple reason : I has long been agreed that the laureateship should eiher bo len vacant or be ofer d to Mr. Swin- burne. As It Is upposed that Mr. Swln- burno would not accept I , the preference Is that the place shoull remain unfilled . GEORGE W. SIALLEY. ptJPIt.tI , Ol Lotus I'AS'I'IiUIt. HellinH 1' st'ortt'dto Nore 111. by I 1.11'1l COUlOUI'Hl or l'eople. PARIS Oct. 5.-Tue funeral cortege conveying - 'e'lng the remains or the hate l'ref. Louis Pasteur to Notre Dame cathedral , left the Pasteur institute at 10:30 : a. m. General ' SauEsler , the military governor oC Paris , I' headed h the escort at troops. An almost Innumerable i number oC wreaths were borne ' before the coffin , which was followed by the' ' ' family of the deceased , the ministers , sena- tons , deputies and numerous delegations from different scientific and other bodies tram all parts ot France , and from many foreign couutrles. An Immense concourse of people lred the streets throJgh which the funeral procession passed , although the sky was heavily overcast and a downpour of rain was threatened. The procession arrived at Notre Dame cathedral at noon and shortly afterward - ward be funeral service was commenced The prvlces were very Imposing and were attended by PresIdent Faure , the members 01 the diplomatic corps , Prlnco Nicholas ot Greece , the Grand Duke Constantine of Hus- sla , all In full cress uniforms. After absolu- ton had been pronounced by Cardinal Richard - ard , the archbIshop at ParIs , the casket was carried to a catnnlquo In the center at the l"uaN In front or the cathedral There : I. Poincarre . the minister or education , made a speech eulogizing the life work of the deceusct , and afterwards the troops and different - ferent deputations defiled before the c3ta- falque. At the conelu310n of the ceremonies the coffin was pro"lslonaly deposited In the vaults at Notre Dame CIIIIUr. 1"In'orH : llll Measures : . LONDON , Oct. 5.-A telegram to the TImes from Clenfugos , Cuba , details an Interview here with Marshal de Campos , In which he says he believes It "t bo the best coure to contnuo , the present methods toward the rebels , granting pardon to all who present themselves voluntarily. Ho would not , he said , adopt the harsh measures advocated by many le will remain at Santa Clara and wilt not take personal command ot the tlOOPS on the field unless the rebel concentrate - trato In great Itrenglh. _ . SnulJlllell the operator. TORONTO , Ont. , Oct. 5.-At Myrtle . I small town a few miles tram here . 1 bold robbery was today committed In the Cana- dian Paclfo railroad station . An unknown robber sandbagged the night operator ren- dering him insensible . The safe was then blown open and $ : ,50 ot the DomInion Ex- press company's funds stolen The operator was 10 badly Injured that he was unabie to give an Account at the aair . I j . ' OMAHA 8UNDAY j 4 , " l ' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - OlIAlA , SUNDAY MORNING , OCIOBER G , 189 -T'VENTY PAGES. TIRED OF TERRELL - Armenians Indignant at the Oonre of the American Minister , < . - DISPUTE IllS ChARGE OF FANATICISM President of the Patriotic Association in London Oriticises the Report SAY lIE IS DOMINATED BY TiE SULTAN - . Influence of the Oriental Court Too Much , for the Ma from Texas , . - i MISSIONARIES MAKE MANY COMPLAINTS I SII'elll ChnrKlH or Xl'AI.et 1111 Indif- f.reuel t. ( lie lmittm'ets of u.tl AI.rlelIH 1111 "rmeul\IH , \rl I.iiiJCii Against the OliltiNter. - ( Co'tlhte < , 189 : by Press Publishing Company ) ' , ) LONDON , Oct. 6.-New I-New ( York World Cable -Special Telegram.-Ministcr ) , ' lnlsttr Terrels Ils- patch to Secretary Qlney designating , the Constantinople Armenians as fanatics , has been telegraphed back here , and has created Profound regret In missionary and other circles - des In sympathy with the distressed Christ- Ian sUbjects of the TUlc , Mr. 1agoplan , president at the Armenian Patriotc nero- aES- elation , and through whom the first Intell- genco or the massacre was given to the world , said today : . "I have noticed from the beginning that Minister Terr.1 has Invariably taken skies ! with the porte against his persecuted fellow Christians ot Armenia , alone of the leading foreign reprc.aentative3 to Turley. Where he has not been able to directly pervert the facts In favor at the Turks , ho has remained . Inactive. Ills entire telegram to Washington breathes a spirit of hostility to us Ills atI- tude does us Incredltable harm. I gives the porte the impressIon ! that he speaks for the American people , and that their sympathy I Is really not with the Armonians. This dispatch - patch has damaged the cause of Armenia before the civilized world In a way It will be dlmcult to repair. I will encourage the sultan to resist the demand of the English I ambassador. DENIES THE CHARGE OF FANATICISM. " : Ir. Terreih's statement ot the origin of the riots cannot be true. 10w absurd to sa ) that an armed Armenian mob In Stamboul precipitated the disturbances. There I a population at 64.000 Turks against 14,000 Armenians , and there Is In addition about 60,000 floating Armenian population who come and co between the provinces at Constant- nople. These latter Armenians latlr Armenins are fresh from our country whore , while the great powers are threatening the porte , the hideous 1 .WtSrt. ' 6T 'f . Je".Jp..flb I sultan or the grand vijier , under condi- ! tons whIch would attract the notice of Europe. It Is their constitutional rIght to present petitions , which Is the only mode. ot obtaining a redress of grIevances , there be - Ing no frel press , and no right ot public ' mEetIng - Ing In Turkey. To say they went there to got themselves murdered In order to draw attention to theIr wrongs h against reason. But the Turkish authorities are well versed In the method ot transforming b peaceful constitutional proceeding like this Into what appears te be n riot. "Wo ArmenIans read with Indignation the gross charge at your minIster that Armenians are actuated by fanatIcism. Our people are groaning under oppression almost unequaled In history. The brothers and sisters at those who have bon outraged and murdered by the Turkish soldiers , to be charged with be- Ing impelled by faatchm , when they merely attempt to present a petition to the Turkish goVernment , beseeching the fulfillment at reforms - forms promised twenty-five years ago to say their acton Is fanatical Is cruel wrong on the part of the minister ot a friendly people " "Is I true thIs attempted demonsraton : was arranged by the revolutionary body ? " NOT AN ORGANIZED EFI ORT. "I have no information to that effect. As tar as I know It was arranged by the pro- vlnclal Armenians , who have come to Stam- boul , fresh from the latest horrors of Turkish misrule In Armenia , full of the despair now beginning to prevai among my unhappy countrymen , owing to the fear that the powers - I ers wi be outwitted by the dilatory tactics of the porte. I do not sympathIze with any revolutionary movement. Your minister has done us great wrong at the crucIal moment of our struggle for relief from the unspeakable - able abominations at Turkish ml rule. " Americans and Englishmen recently returned - turned from Constantinople and letters from AmerIcans and other mlsslo arles In Turkey express like unfavorable opinion ot the mln- IstH ot the United States. The Constantinople - nople correspondent of one ot the great London - don dailies said to me a few days ago that the subservience at our minister to the sul- tan I a mater at comment In all diplomatic circles at Constantinople. Mr. Terel Is an elderly gentleman from Texas , who came to I . Turkey with probably little experience t [ great cities , and none whatever ot European courts. The sultan , already on hal concealed terms ot hostility with ali the representatives of the great European powers , at once made much ot the minister from the great western republic , from which he thought he had nUI- into to fear , and thIs attention from the sov- erelen Quite turned the new minister's head. SOME SPECIFIC CHAROES. Your correspondent Cram Armenia , Mr. " ' . " ' . 1owud , gIves similar testimony and has fcrnlshed mo with specific complaints from Armenian missionarIes In Turkey , and par- tcularly In Armenia , ot Minister Terrehl's indifference to their Interests , Ir not his direct hostility to the sufferings of Armenian Chris- tians. Americans In Armenia deplore his suc- cession to Mr. Straun who , although of an- other religion and bIrth , always vigorously exerted himself In behalf of the Christian missionarIes of all creeds The American Missionary college at Mar- sovan secured from the sultan an Irade , pro- tectng It and its Inmates from spoliation. I was Minister Terreil's duty simply to , transmit the Irao without comment , but ho sent with It a special letter pointing out the generosity ot the sultan and asking the missionarIes to suspend their judgment on the Armenian atrocities until the report of the Turkish commission ot InquIry had been receh'ed. Al this Inquiry was sure to be , and has since proved to have been , a intro farce and as time missionaries were only to familiar wIth the nature at the horrIble I atrocities In ArmenIa , they greatly resented L time AmerIcan minister's counsel. One a Mr. Deknovjan an Armenian trom I Boston and an AmerIcan citizen . apple ] I vainly to the minister for assistance to se m hIs dying mother on "the hIlatlc l sea couto " Ila Ills papers were straight and ho offered 10 give a bond 10 relurn' In eleven days. Dr. Grace W. Ilmbal , an American mis- sionary tram Van , w2i0 bl'l an American diploma anll desIred to practice medlclno' ' among the Armenians wrele twice to the minister , asking him ; to secure permission from the authorities l do so : lie paid no attention to either heter. l Then Dr. Hey- nols , head at the AmerIcan mission at Van . wrote to : lr. Terrel In jlRS Kimball's be- halt. but our mInIster paid no more mitten- nten- ton to this letter than t6e others. Finally DI' ' ' Flnaly Reynolds wrote to 'friend In Heynols Constant- nople , alklng him to t dl on the minister Ills frIend saw Mr. T rrel , but the only satisfaction he got was the remark : "Tell Miss Kimball the old rna rrom' Texas 1'el let her go home without a diploma . " Up to tw months ag Miss Kimball agQ Kimbal was vainly trying antI waiting 10 enter on her mission at Christian charity and love , while the Turkish governor blrt daily rends a soldier to see that shqdoea not give out medicIne or medical advice to the helpless Armenians. Permission ! joul be instantly granted her I I were Turks instead at Ar- m.nlanl Ihe wished 10 t Uccor , or If Minister Terel cared to Interven ? ADHORtED DY ARMENIANS. American mIssionariEs Jb Persia find _ ' their n _ packages ot bibles and : other books seize by the Turkish omclalslat Treblzonde and mutilated or rifled. Thlslls contrary to the law at nations , but protests have been vainly made to our minister at tmnstantinopie. Ho wi do nothing As for IIp Ann nlans them- selves , who have been rlured by the missionaries - sionaries of American syiipathy , they abhor : nople. the name ot our repre&ntUve : : at Constant- I Mr. IowtrI In his sta'flent to me says : " "Accordlag ; to my advlc ! ! meanwhile , 'tho old man from Texas' h ready admittance to the sultan's presence' lnd to his table. I Is a scandal at which not only Americans but Englishmen In Turl" ) are ashamed , and ( lOtibtieSs explains why hrrefers to the murdered - tiered Armenians In CQp\lantnoplo as 'fa- natcs , ' " lj'LAHD SMITH. I'O"'BUS IVI S'lIUAU - , ' ' 'UE ICIOTS i ) IIIHh'rH ' \ 'Ill Mml. Comimplete : IIIHh'rH11 lie- \11 :111. COIIII.te I.- ' ' ' hurts to 'lhl'lr Govt'rnmIlematN. CONSTANTiNOPLE , Oct. ' 5.-Vla ( Sofa , Dulgarla.-The ) street oCthls / city are still patrolled by troops and pOllc. and the later continue making nrrests. " 1 There have benne no fresh disturbances , 1\lwever \ , although there Is much exclementih many quarters In view ot the persistent f mors clrculatell to the effect that the Armenians , . " Ire deter- mInEd to make I furl her efmonstraton ! , wHh the vIew ot calling atent to their I griev- ances . The representatl , oC the powers have been making carefalimquiry Into the crlgln ot the rioting . as "el as Into the fighting , and they will mnlb full reports on the sUbject to their respetve $ governments. I was noticed during , /ceremony / of the Selamlk today that the ' miUItan's bodyguard hall been Increased In nunq" , and that extraordinary - ordinary Ilrecutons were taken by the miii- I tary and police authorlt to protect him from possible aitacks. A1 atacks. lAI. the Armenian servants employed at timcldIz . ' kiosk have , I10ln . . dismissed . , . as . a ! ' : . ff - reCa\IIon ' , . Ir. , 1. \ \ , ' ' ) ' h I.lm6\\.n.tjtJ ' rY'W T &lq ; ANO'FlildR ' 1'ltOUIlLli 1"OI 'rVC ? I Ih.'HllrutH ot th ( ' INie or Or.te , , Apenl to time Fmiroieziat l'ow'rH. ATHENS , Oct. 5.-Dispateh received here from the leland or Cretq show that the situa- ton oC affairs there Is very unsettled . Many ' murders have recently bee'ni committed and robbery and other acts at lawlessness are of frequent occurrence. As a result. the governor - ernor of Crete has offered to resign his position - ton and the mater IS now understood to bo undEr consideration. The Cretars have been deeply Impressed wills the Armenian troubles at Const3Itnopl . The later natuloly have ' been greatly magni- fed and the inhabitants of the Island have presented a long memorandmni to the representatives - sentatves of the power lu.tlnst the Turkish " ' ' administration ot Crete. - , ' admlnlstrat , - , . ' COXSVS DEIANJ ' : lt OTECTIN. . . - - - , * . - Ulillomnte AA"UtH , . , Fun Chow Sl'lll for nnll IteceiveViirnlaipK. . ( Copyright 159 : by Pre.s PublishIng Camllny , ) FOO CHOW , China , Oc. " , 6-New ( York , World Cable -Spclal Telegram"-Tho ) con- buls have telegraphed to' 5le admirals for war shIps. Two British 'wm' ships have ar- nived _ , { - SIUln 'VII Sl'nd ' JOre TroollH. MADRID , Oct. 5.-GenerIAzcarraga , the minIster ot war , states , that twenty-five battalions will shortly be diEpatched ! to Cuba oC ' the Insurrec- for the purpose l'lppreulng - tlon. I Is reported here .tLat Pacoreclo , the Insurgent leader. Is dead Iomllll-Snll'rH flnm Floomis. ( Copyright , ItSO , by I'ress l'blehlng Company. ) KINGSTON , JamaIca , 0ct. ' 5.-New ( York World Cable-Special Tolegram.-DisastroUs ) foods have devastated the ' orthern distrIcts at Dominica the center oC the Islana's ro sources. The Indm.trlal . forks have been rUiflel. There has been ( { ccaslonal seismic acton at the sourc of thiq 'Ivrs , probably volcanIc. ' Dominica Is a British West India island a colony ot this Leeward Islars. I III twenty- nine miles long , sixteen mies wide and has an area at 2,09 square mlfes. The popula- ton Ie 30,000. Volcanic ' , rock9 and' hot springs abound and thor are largs deposit at sulphur. The ilandfs'ell timbered and watered and the arable PS ti . mere very fertile. ' Sugar , molasses , rm and Cfee and copper' or3 arc exported. ; . lellrlltH ' ViIi lie .hut Omit OTTAWA , Ont. , Oct. i-'Fhe recent decl- alon that the. author's royalty ot 12Y per cent on foreign reprints pI : nrtsh copyright works cannot longer legally be collected , leaves Canada open to reprisal from English publishers. I I now held ' ( hat the abolition at Ulele collections lies purnada back to the Position where she wa in 1842 , when foreign reprints ot Drltlsl copyright works could not be 'evrlnted In asmda. V"hethur the home government will inist upon the law being carried out In this regard remains to be seen but Ii such werka are prohibited I wi bo serious to Canadian readers who rely upon reprints frol thn Unied States of aU new works _ _ _ _ _ _ l'ermnttteii tb Search for Il' I I. LONDON Oct. 5-The Armenian correspondent - spoOlent ot the Daily News says , that the pasha who has been appointed by the sultan .to carry out projected ' reom1s In Armenia has granted permission to Wllam A. Saeh- tiebon . the St. LouIs bicycltst , to accompany him to Dayazld and has promised to aid him In clearIng up the matter .ot the murder of Frank Lenz , the Amenirma bicyclist , for which purpose Mr. SachtleJn went to Tur- key. I British 'Vllt Some jsmfirsimatios * , LONDON , Oct. 5.-The Urltsb $ mInIster at Peking , Mr O'Connor , ball been instructed to ascertain whether the 4fgrdton ot the vIceroy of Szechuan was decided upon prIor I 10 the ultimatum of Great Britain , s stated by Sir 1aldy McCatney , the counselor ot the Chlneee mInistry In this city - EXPECT A COLLAPSE - General Opinion that the Boom in Kfr Oanot Lt , FRENCH INVESTORS BECOME ALARMED I Liquidation by Them Onuses n Slight De- dine in Their Price . - I ; ' STRONG BULLS COME TO THE RESCUE _ _ , I Can Be No Big Slump While Big Opertors Support the Mnrket BAR PRIVILEGE WAS VERY PROFITABLE l'ruimrietnr or the 1 11.lr. : luHle hull , . Asserts the . 1'uHurl' to Secure I LieemmMh.mist YI'ur COst I hl 31oOIOO. ) - ( Copyrighted , 18'3 , by the Aesoclate Pre. ) LONDON , Oct. 6.-Tim feature of the financial world during the past week Is the prolonging ot the eraze' here for Kalr ( South Afrlcnn mining shares ) amt the post- I ' panement of the expected crash In these securities - curies which has been predicted fer some tme past. The main point oC interest In the world of poltcs was the rioting at CO- I stantnoplo and the subsequent decline In the sympathy hitherto felt for the apparently badly oppressed and mich massacred Ar- menians. There was quie a slump , followed by a rally In { alrs on Friday , and today there was another and heavier fal In the price of South American minIng slocks. The decline appears to bo duo to tIme alarm at l'rench investors - vostors , whose hands have been forced by the cOllslmers ( small stock brokers ) , who insisted that at the pending setcmln t , clients who have bought shares must take them or close their accounts The weak bulls thereupon close their accounts ThIs caused n bad impression , and It spread to London and caused heavy sales and a decline II prIces. However , as the leaders at time market did not show any dispositon to sell , the market stiffened and value Improved. It Is recognized that many ot time , iCafiirs' shares are standing too high for their IntrinsIc - trinsIc merits , but I Is not believed that there wi bl I big prmanent colapse so long as the big operators support that mar- I kot. I kot.In In the world of amusement , the acton en Wednesday lat ot the licensing committee of the county council In granting an uncon- dItonal Iccose to the Empire theater was the moat interesting feature ot the weelt. There was a large crowd ot Interested ppec- tatore ! t' the meeting , but Mrs Orhton Chant : < who 'made , , so _ much "trquble for the , Empire last roar Inoppusing the granting tcenseand who w s then 8uccesgfui , iJps " , . " - thensuccessul practically nopjgOS"mtich.surLaj1. - . license asked tor. COLLAPSE OF PURITANISM. George Edwards , manager of the Empire , test el } that the restrIctons which the com- mlteo ot the county council placed upon his establishment last year , affecting chiefly the "drinking auditorium" and the free circula- ton In nil parts at the house ot the demImondaines - mondaines , hall involved a boa ot $100,000 In the profits durIng the past year , and that the divIdend declared this year was only 40 per cent , as against 70 per cent In previous years. The "victory" at the EmpIre theater , It Is now claImed , shows how cheaply London has repudiated the so-called "puritan pol- I Icy , " which pre\let last year The Empire hasp not only regained the right to reopen the famous promenade and to sell drinks In the auditorium , but the applications for full II- censes from all the other mucic halls were agreed to without conditions. Several metropolitan newspapers naturally commented upon the fact that Mrs. Ormiston Chant "has not even found the cause worthy oC postponing her lecturing tour In Amer- Ica. " The Pal Mal Gazette , referring to the subject , salt a day or two ago : "Now , having become a person of some name , alma has left her weaker sisters and younger brothers for whom she pleaded so eloquently a year ago , and has gone to America In order to transmute her name Into dollars. " The Pal Mal Oazette's comments are hardly fair She was "a person of some name" long be- fore her crusade against the Empire theater , being one of the representatives of woman- hoe who went to the World's Fair at Chicago - cage to take part In the special enterprIses held thereby women , and she was one ot the delegates to the 'oman's parlament held at Washington In 1893. This Is under- stood to bo Mrs. Chant's fourth visit to AmerIca , and not her first , as the Pal Mal Oaze'te beems to suppose. REGISTERED IS RACING COLORS. The duke of Marlborough's racllg colors , II olive green with light blue sleeves and cap , ' have been regIstered under both the Jockey club and Na- tonal hunt rul s whIch naturally' has given color to the report that the duke contemplates - templates the establshment of 1 large stable and that Lady Randolph Churchill has be- come 1 racIng horse owner , her Ilartnerhip In the promIsing 2-year-old having been reg- istered The friends at the late Lord Randolph Churchl are abont to cal a 1.1eellng for the purpose of raising a statue to his memory In the central lobby at lbs House of Common , Lady Jeune's article In : popular periodical on cyclng hal attracted considerable mitten- ton , because the writer Is the wife of the well known judge at the probate , divorce and admiralty courts and also because she I popular In the highest socIety and nn authority - Iy on socIal questions. She says she thinks bloomers have no advantage whatever over short , well-cut skirts , whlo the former , In her opInIon , are less comfortable and lees graceful which would seem to show that the wrier has tried them. Lady Jeuno further asserts , that woman Is not made to wear tigimtflttimig'apparel , and that when she does tightfting'apparel she becomes "ugly and misshapen " Sister Mary Regis , who baa done so much to establish the lace Industry of Youghal , Ireland , I dead She designed seine really magnificent pIeces ot lace work , Incuding i the splendId lace fan which was presented by' ' Earl Crewe to the duchess at York upon thb occasion of her marriage two year sgo. In Lady Coln Campbell's Realm thIs welt Gertrude Atherlon his al article In which Ihe makes a vIgorous defense ot Americans , especially American girls , a an answer to recent attacks In the paper She says that , the paper judge Americans by the "vuIKnr thousands who rush to Europe to spend theIr ( newly maLe dollars , and by the 'poIlper girls , ' who cross their leglets and cat candy In the readIng roms at the Grander Meiropoie " The funeral or MackenzIe 1 the famous . -i ii.1 ; ) 03 . , i-i. ' : : ' E PAGFS O3 t TO 0030.1 . : . Q3 ccOCcc o . , - SINGLE COL'YFflrE . . OENl'S. THE BEE flULLETINS Weather Forecast for NebrR.ka- l'nge. l'lr : Warmer IiiS'cat . : WClt Wln < s 1. "tIIEIl111 Mutter Not Serious . Nlt ; lltlr 8trloIM. Armirmlmmims \rl"nl.ll" Tire ot T'rrll , JSlwtt : the Jllr Ilml II 111"1 , ( h'rljUInnIIUM , hope tl \ , 2. nrlenll : lnl'l1 Suffers Ulfrll , J11Jlr Arl" . ' CI"O Tlkl'l1" . Emiglaumi ' : ( h'18 1110 Vii riahmiti \'l1I hl'l l'utrlh111 1111\11 Ilul ) ' Cut , 3. UelHtnlh I ndlno thin Cit lu'o8' Ticket . UC'IIUhlh'lll Jllrhll Nmm Sit I mmmi I iomms , l'IIilIIStti r'ouiuinstt' , ' 'IIHIIHI8 NOltnlh' I : IIYul 111H811hu.etl lc'I'lhll"11 ' 1lket . , I.I. \ 'i'i'cit II Soc'i't- . . , 111'1) \ , , \mU811lnt Niti' mimiti GossIp n , Auiierl.'amuui ' ' \IH'rl'1111 1'IJht Iii Culm' Army meld 1':1dlllllt : UI time Jlhimt' . am'thmOIIst r.I'IC'1 " 'llt Eqtuitllty . 'lllllly. ' ' , " 1"1 tl ! 1'cdlnHIII CUl \'l'l tl I Hommi' . O.Cumilt "l IUI" , Local Mlt"I"H , Iowa ; lelhldI8t. Iii Polities . ' , " 110 , , . tlOI Cmumiiiuni.igt' . Cit'i'iuiiiut , : iuiii' I "hrl'u Straight , UI" " Crhk"t Cllh " 'lCttirhu5 / . N. Tmixiayers After time City Agumimu. 10. ' , Vomimsn : Her " " ' ' "UIII 1'r "I ) " 1111 Ilr " 'trid 11. "I.lto air Tluimimhleiumgcr , ( . " I 2. 1'llllrllllld Co mmmiii cmi t. 13 : , " ihi until 1'i immimi / fur 's' ' . , Ilicli. J'rlul I.ahlr " ) ' .I'm ut n'urll. I 1,1. Iehmot's : frona time . . . ehul'l rrul thl Auto 11111. , . 1.s . CU111re111 and 1 lllnrlll ahuitters. 10.lthIIY Ilf" 'rolls ur hllmnse'if , 1iOmii'miitt hy II tlo 'm'ct. 1 7. cld Sil 1111 Sonic or IIH AtrlhlteH. Story of n"ICrnl Stmntome's ( itide 18 "A ' " , " "llltl Ilh'r\'c'II' . . " NC\ York'H threat , 'Iui'ymirtls. 10.Vcckly Grist of Sporting 008.111. 20. " 'hl"\11 Throuh tIme Autmitumi . I "whip" ot Colchester , took Iace during the wee It. lIe was prominent In the coaching world , and wi bo remembered by many people In the United States as having a batch of English coaches at the Worlls fair. GLADSTONE FOIl mon L1I NSE , At the temperance congress on Friday at Chester a letter from fit. lion. W. E. Gallstone - stone was read , and I cause quite a flutter In the temperanc& world . Mr. Gladstone wrote that he does not believe beleve In local op- ton , of which , he adds , ho has only a poor opinion. lie spokE favorably of the Gothen- burg system , hinted that the plan ot free trade with high licenses deserves a trial , and was emphatic In asserting that the holder at a license Is time only person In regard to whom a word re/1rdI0 comnensaton nlphl _ no nnnm " " nD" - - . ever to be mento ed. Paderewsld sailed for New York October 1 , In order to give twenty-nine piano recita- tons there anti In the states He will also aPpear at Chicago In January and at San , Francisco and Sal Lake In March. The Daily News today announces that It Is aSEured upon good authority that the mar- quis at Salisbury has definitely resolved to appoint I new poet laureate , and that he will be found In the ranks of journalism . This Is SUPPOSEII to mean ' Sir EdwIn Arnold , anther - thor of "The LIght 'ot Asia , " etc. Adelna PalL has contracted to sing lt the : Monte Carlo casIno during the cojiimg wln- ' tem' , . ' ' A number ot naval attache' , iiichmitling l C - - manderM' , . , , Cowles at the Ummited States : - , ' . _ . Unied board the torp io- ( ( > U"l---Llrln Yarrow Shipbuilding company , built for Hus- sla. The Soltel , which Is saId to bs the fastest vessel afloat , at a previous trial made thirty Quarter knots per hour Under hal pre Eure today she reached a speed of twen- t-slx and three-rourths knots. No attempt was made to drive her at full speed. Princess Kalulanla ot Hawaii , acclpanled by Mr. Clegholn , her guardian , arrived here from time continent todsy. For Slnl.lu th" ilihie. ( Cop'rlghtCl , IS9 : , hy the Associated PresH ) BERLIN , Oct. I-A dispatch received here from Rotterdam sayl that time acton at time North German Lloyd Steamship company against the ownrrs of the BrItish steamship Cratimie , which sank the Elbe In a collision , was commenced here today The plaintiffs contended that no watch was kept on board the Crathle , and had the later altered her course the collision would have been avoided. Counsel for the owners oC the Crthle claIm there was no proof niat she collided with the Elbe , and that moreover the watch kept on board the last named steamship was Inadequate Finally the owners at the Crathle claimed counter damages aglnst the North German Lloyd steamship company for limb delay and damage at the British steamship ' at Rotter- dam , after Iho put In there et3'tho time after the collision. Judgment wi .bo delivered on November 6. ' Lieutenant Cleveland , the naval atache of the United States embassy In thIs city , has gone to The Hague on a special mIssion. Emperor I Willianm , this afernoon arrived at his shooting box at Inbersteck , where the empress Is stayIng. Culls I ii 'mhommst rolls iimjnstiL'e. LONDON , Oct. 6-Time Daily News this morning , commenting on the South Carolina convention , says : "Notimimig but I strong declaration of public opinion throughout time United States and the elvlzell world can Ilrevent this monstrous injustice of depriving time black man of his rights as a citizen be- I cause he Is blaclt. There Is , In fact an ef- fort to subjugate the blacks. I this plot be frustrated by the pressure ot Ilublc opinIon - Ion , wo shall probably never again her of nn organized attempt to defeat time purpose of time fifteenth amendment. But If It succeeds In practce , It will undoubtedly be followed up , Race hatred I perhaps as strong as over In some of t'IO southern states. " COllloll" Against Irnz\ . BUENOS AYRES , Oct. 5.-A dispatch to EI Dlaro says that ngland France and Italy have decided upon collective acton with a view to securing satisfaction of their re- spectve claims upon Brazil. The claIms of France grew out of the ( disputed jurisdiction of this territory ot Amapa , lying between Brazil amid French Guiana. Italy's claims are for reparation on account ot damages suferel b ) Italian ships during the revolution. The British IlnlHer withdrew from Rio last I aumnmrer lea\lng the logaton In charge of an I alacbl to mark the strained relations between - ' tween the countries. England' claims probably - ably relate to the Island of TrInIdad , which she seeks to obtaIn l I cable station , : olhhl" New In the "lU.zll'lnD Case , ' LOWO . Oct. 6.-N. Oeach Durch , time , . Venczuelan consul here , In In interview to' day uld there bad been absolutely no new IIvelol1ments In the hounllary question In dlrule between Great Britain and Veneuela sin eo Dr. Puld ( the Venezuelan mlnlUor for foreIgn affairs , received Great Britain's de- clslol In the matter some time aKa. lie thought . however , hint Dr , Puhidos' arrival In New York wu possibly connecteJ wih I minion entrusted tQ hIm by the Venezuelan Ilvernment to make further represeutatloos to the United States government . HOPING FOR RELIEF - garlans Form Alliances to Carry Thou Bills Through the Roichstng - EMPERORS MAY GO IIUNTINGTOGETIIER , ' Wiinm's ' Letter to the Czar SIt to nnvo Been nn Invitation , - FRENCH SECURE VALUABLE INFORMATION - Spies Furnish Them Plans of GullS anti Many Frntier Fortifctons , VINEYARDS AUACK'tD - BY flYLLOXERA 1'.IHHII iLes'mmies a Commeessimmum ( I COll'l'HHlul Grlllte" ni All'rll'll Life lmmsimrmilmCu 1.ltl IIHlrlllO j , . . _ . Comiiimuimy.Ci51.15 ' , . COIIHI'-Clt..n or tile .1 Vnll'll Stntl' 1'IIlI. ' - ] ( Cop'rl/htcl. 18 ) : , by time Associated I'rcsL ) , lEHLIN , Oct. 5-gmperr Wilam being away from the capital , ioiltieai c3\ltal \olUcal tltIiimmema reIgned during the Ilast week In Berlin. Time Bundesrath , however , meet ! next week and the agrarian depression will bo one at limo fIrst subjects diactissetl by that body. The agrarians lmavo been very actIve thrommghmotmt limo simnumner. In a specim thu % 'eek Count von l-Canitz , their leader , ileciared that lila grain mnonoimol ) ' bill would comimo before limo lteichmstmmg dtmrimig tIme' comnimmg eussiomi , ho ambled that he exImecteti solimething helpful would be done. TIme aranians have been alliances anti have understmmnthimmgs with time whole of thio right and part of time cemmtes party and they thminlc they will have a mmma- jority this tIme , Time chief subject of speculatloim rccenti has been time contents of Eniperor Wliiiamn'a letter to time czar , as to whether it was political or not , Count von Moitle : , tIme ' em- peror's aide-do-camp , who tonic time niir'aivo to the czar has , started on his rottmrmi to Berlin ' with aim autograpim letter frormi lttm. sla's ruler , Time count was everywhere re- ceiveel in the kindest manner , In aim audience - enco which ho hind with the C71i' tIn i.t. . . , spoke In the most flattering terniofth emliperor of Germany , According to an account - count pubhishe today time omimperor's letter to the czar was mmotimimmg more than an limvitation for imiin to be prceant at simnoting varty to be held at ' Tam'kenami , on time Rusai frontier , amid Emperor Nicholas is said to have replied that imla decision would depend on thmo _ health of time emmmpr , wimo is on the eve of her accolleliment , In any Case , it is ambled , the meeting will bo entirely imrivato. In time mnoaimwhmile Emperor \Villiamn hiss been having good eport in East Prussia and on lila return Is going ileer stalkimug on Prince , Hotzfeidt' estate in Siiesma , A quito o rooms in the castle of Traehmcnbcrg is now , being specially furnished for the use of 1imi rnajooy , . ' - - FEW VALUABLE PLANS DISCLOSED. ei d"Cm1rd' Fiifli"O1tqii i . , ( France , Major von lCaeik , f time mninistry and Captain von Timeumenal of time genera ! staff arrived at Coiegno to Investigate limo matter. A number of further arrests have been mmmado and in addItion a woman named Richter has been arrested itt Magmleburg on time charge of having ac'tcml a' time imaitl nme- ilium of communication between a French armny officer amid an employe of the Gruzers steel works , wile furnished the French on- cer through lion with drawings and mmmodels of ironclad vessels , guns , etc. , to be used in iheso forts and Invaluable plans of the Ocr- man defense , Time arrest of this couple Is said to have been brought about tlmrotmgb the fact that time woman anti tht emnployo of the Gruzen works had been noticed spending quite a large amount of Frenclm gold , This aroumsed suspicions anti their arrest followed , The preliminary Inquiry into thu case Is now said to be nearly complete and the whole matter will scams be t'tmbrnltted to time core. tral military autimorities in Berlin , Some new arrests have also been made imi Berlin , inciuding thmat of Mme. Suwanin time widow of a emmajor in time Itussian army. Time evidence thus far obtained seems to imow beyond any doubt that time mnoilels and parti of guns and rifles of time Krupp works at. Essen , as well as from time Gruzomi works at Magdebumrg , besides drawings of different fortifications of time frontier cities , have passed thmrougim time hands of time accused to France during time past year. Time case will be tried In the immiperial conrts at Lelpsi within a voek , GRANTED CONCESSIONS BY ChINA. Time North German Gazette announces that an agreement was signed at liankow yesterday - day by time German consul there , granting to Germammy time concessions now enjoyed b Great Britain , Time socialist port' convention will be imeli ) uluring time coming week at Bresinim , An mm. portant Issue is time question whether the society. Idatform will lie mmiodlfled to as to cater to time agricultural population. This mnc'amms a light for tIme supremacy between Herr fiche ) , Liebknecimt arid Singer and ifor , Voimnar , Griiienherger arid Auor. A miii owner of Zarnitz , near Oppliin , hai immvented a new military rule , wimiclm is uo beIng tested by the War department , It fires twommty alicIa a imilnuto without reloading , It lmmms otimer advantages and time rifle exper % commission pronounced in favor of lImo Ia. vention , Time vineyards of Saussenimeirn , district ot Bavaria , are infested with time phmyioxera. Thu authorities of Munich are doing every. tbimmg possible to ioalizo time evil , as its spread would endanger time whole vine cut. lure of limo PaiatIna , Air , Frank Ijwyer , an American newspapez man , hmas been entertained at a iubll meet. ing at Rotherburg , Bavaria , amid imaa boon offered a decoratlomm by time autImorliles o Bavaria , Time concession granted to time New Yorli Life Insurance commipany In 1872 , to mb busi' . ness iii Prussia , has been m'evoked , This re. yoking order goes into c.ffcct on November 1 Time New York Life Immeurance is time third conmpanmy to tie treated in this manner , and nil time steps taken by the cormmpanic'mm to hays limo order reech deul have beers futile , VE'I'EiIANS START FOlt hOME. Time bulk of thme German'Anmenicsr 'vcteranl salted for home today by time stcmn.r Ems , 'rho authorities of hirernen ammil iii 'merhave yesterday fovmnaiiy bade thenm ( .mrrwehl , h.oule Goldstein , a naturai'zud ' American cit ! ' . Zen of New York , a natlvv of Imm'tio ) , ar. niveil ths're in August with time rmt of thu $ veterans from tie Ummiied States. Ho wa arresteul while visiting his hqmne , a'id was flmmeI 11.0 mmmarks tom' evasion of mutiny dut lu 15511 after lila immmnlgratiou : , 'rime iiitiflid was pJi umitb'r pmotest.