Omaha FART T-O EDITORIAL SECTION FACES ONE TO TEN UNDAY Jd.EE. PART TWO WANT AD SECTION PAGES ONE TO TEN VOL XjV: (.). OMAHA, SUNDAY MOIiXIXd. .IAXIWKV 2! 1011. sinoi.e corv five cents. Political and Social News by Cable and Correspondence from the Old World . . . , t .. . i . mm The LLOYD GEORGE'S STATE INSURANCE Proposed Irian win Cover Sickness ana invalidity in a J-are Class. DRAFT READY FOR PARLIAMENT Any Person Receiving; Less Than Tax able Income is Eligible. MINIMUM FIVE SHILLINGS A WEEK Insurance Will Cover the Working Years of Life. FUNDS FROM THREE SOURCES Lard Roarhrrr In the Hole of Ion firmed Calamity llomlrr Who Bees Militant Kni'lulUm Hr nlnd nntlcrt. BY PAIL LAMBETH. LONDON, Jan. is. (Special to The Bee.) The scheme, of state Insurance for sickness and Invalidity, which tins been drafted by the chancellor of the exchequer, may be launched this session. . The main outlines of the scheme as drafted are as follows: . Compulsory Insurance for sickness and Invalidity for the . whole of the worklns population of the country whose Incomes are below the Income tax level of 160 a year. The minimum Insurance Is to be Ds a week, this to be the limit of the state com pulsory scheme; an Inaufanre beyond the fixed minimum of T ' per week being purely voluntary insurance by the member with the friendly society. The minimum Insurance of 6a a week will be guaranteed by the state. The period which the state Insurance will covar will be the working years of II to be tween 18 and 70. Tha contribution needed to provide a sick ness Insurance of 5s a week will be calcu lated by the government actuaries, and the cost will be met one-half by the workmen Insurer and the remaining half in equal proportions by the employer and the statu. Tha proposed scheme of insurance, being compulsory and universal In Us application so far as the whole of the working popu lation Is concerned, will accept the risks of all lives, good and bad. The scheme makes provision for the es tablishment of a central administrative council composed of representatives of the 'government, the friendly societies and em ployers of labor to deal with all questions which arise under tha Working of the enema. draft In InklU. (-,The Inquiry mad by the privy council on appeal from the supreme court of Burmah baa developed the fact that graft tn the shape of padded payrolls' in ins Khedhah , department (elep)jant hunting) is rampant. In fact, aa bad as It Is In the British (In dian) army. Three' of the principal officers who were convicted appealed. The govern, ment alleged that ttiere" wmre only fc'j hunt art Qa certain expedition: 'The defendants, t was "alleged, had' cooked -up the accounts id ii to make it appear 340 men had taken ". part. -i Tha defendants appealed to tlx privy council, which has .decided . against , tha grafters. The government has ban advised that .then Is a' crooked upes on a large scale In other Indian bureaus and departments and It Is tntlmsted that . investigators are at work In them to carn the extent of the stealing. Abyssinia Gets Anus. England Is much concerned over tha re port that 00.000 stand of arms and some (.000,000 of cartridges, part of Japan's spoils of war taken uf Tort Arthur, have been sold to Abyssinia.- Tho price paid -Is not stated, but the seller states that ha has al ready been paid. It Is not Improbable that a good deal more .will be. heard of this mati ter. as the British government has been making anxious Inquiry with a view of finding out why the arms and ammunition were bought, i Putroltng Persia a Galf. British warships have been patrolling the waters at the entrance of the Persian gulf for more than a year to prevent illicit trade in rifles on the northwest frontier of India. Captures have been made, some. times after severe conflicts. An encounter at Pibal, near IJngah, resulted in the loss of four British seamen killed and nine wounded. Hwvsnr Calamity Howler. Ixrd , Rosebery haa become a confirmed "calamity howler." With bloodshot eyes, haggard face and screaming voice, he pre dicts the ruin of the empire as tha result of the budget, lie sees behind Lloyd George the forces of socialism, the wreck ers of tha home, the destruction of Chris tianity, In a word the end of all things. And, like Burke, Lord . Rosebery standi alone. Ills monomania has cost him not only his party, but his friends. Thosa who clung to htm to tha last ar now disgusted at his attempt . to pose as an Impartial statesman, while In reality he Is In sym pathy with the Tories, and would prefer that he would play the man and go straight over. "What a humiliating position for the brilliant Lord Ruecbery. once the darling of liberalism, llw uncrowned king of Scot land, to be reduced te the role of a politi cal Cinderella, whose chosen tak it Is to do and dirty scullery work of the Tory party." is the comment concerning him made by one of his former staunchest sup porters. Roman t karri ! ( vsirrti Five Kptscoallan clergymen and fifty members of their churches at Brighton re cently Joined the Roman Catholic church and were confirmed publicly by the bishop of Southwark. The Rev. David Rhys-Morgan, a prominent Welsh parson, was re cently' received in the Roman Catholic church at Franciscan college, Oxford, Eng land. The clergymen are In Rome studying for the priesthood. In connection with the recent sale of what is known as the Peddler's Acre In I.am beth. and the payment of the proceeds to a body of trustees, there la stated to be a probability of litigation over the question of whether the money received rightly be long to the local authority or to the churcn authorities. The sum at stake is about Hoo.ouo. The estate, one acre only, when be queathed by a man said to have been a iwuivr in inv liiimuii iTiiiuif wu uv of any great value. The land had a front age on the Thames, and was acquired by tha county council. The generally accepted theory that the poor peddler bequeathed tha land to the church in recognition of the kindness he had received and also upon the condition that ha was permitted to hues' gaiiMul do ia tha churchyard. PLAGUE IS NOW STAMPED OUT! Travelers Again Taking to' Sightsee ing in Italy. POPE OBLIGES O.J PARISHIONERS Tnlrnlrd Painter ho l ook I n the l.llr of a Monk l llevollnti Ills life to Wnrk la DM Chorche. nOMK, Jan. Special lo The Ree. i - Tlie plHRiie which recentlv swept over the country Ik now well under control : In fuel Ik has been all hut stamped nut. There Is an Isolated case of choleri here and there. Trm rlers who have bcrn glvltiK the coun try a wide berth are coming here. rope Kln.l to W.l Folks. Kor the first time since his election. Tope Tills exercised the office of confessor re cently. Three old people from his native town of Klese were the penitents. Ktnn On let tanln. The eruption of Mount Ktna Is now con sidered over. A slight cloud of smoke ris ing from the central cruter Is the only sign of the volcano's ac tivity. Neverthe less Prnfs. Rnco and Mercnlll, are of the opinion that a further and exceedingly vio lent eruption may be expected shortly. Mnrilerra I Insane. Py order of the president of the Venice court, three mental experts have examined the Counters Tarnownkn and they have pronounce 'I per V holly insane. It Is un derstood that h Vi III he removed to mc private asylum of Prof. Rossi. Ths gov. ernment recently (rinsed to pardon the murderess. Teat of St. Jerome. Father Antonio Staerk. a Renedictlne monk, has nearly completed his reproduc tion of the original texts of St. Jerome, the manuscripts of which are in the Russian imperial library. Mafia mill Active. Another crime has been perpetrated bv members of the Mafia ' rganizatlon. l'as qtiale Vita, the manager of the sulphur mine at Farara. was acused of having betrayed the association. The supreme trib unal of the Mafia condemned him to death. Vila, whilst proceeding to the mine, was attacked and killed by six masked men. who fired fourteen shots at their victim at point-blank range. Pisa Chi men Hlaa. The order which prohibited the ringing of the chimes In tlis.lranW. lower at Pisa has been revoked, there being no risk in the ringing. Father Alfanl. the noted seismologist, has concluded experiments at the tower, with trepldometer Instruments of his own invention which measured the vibrations caused by the ringing of the bells In the tower. Father . Alfanl ascer tained that the oscillations were Insignifi cant, even when tha bells were runs; con tinuously, and that there was no danger to the tower. ... , -- Maaslnl Works far Love. Brother Paolo ' Musslnl, . a talented painter, who soma years ago suddenly dis appeared from his studio, waa next heard of as a Francisctn friar painting in fresco the walls of a poor old church. Every now and again the Illustrated ' papers gave re productions of his pictures or a likeness of himself In the habit of his order. He has written a letter to the newspapers asking for contributions to help him in his work of decoration of an abandoned church. "On the footprints of St. Francis I go about restoring poor and abandoned churches." he says. The church which Fra Paolo is decorating Is the parish church of Qulntodeclmo, the place being a picturesque village on the banks of the Tronto. .He says tn his appeal: "A beau tiful, house of God is a very good school for the people." ( morn Trial Deferred.' '.The .trial of Chief Enrico Alfano and his thirty-two comrades in the Camorra, charged with the murder of James Cuo colo and his wife, has been postponed to the first week of March. Gold Excitement Aroused in Scotland by Good Prospects Abandoned Fields on Property of the Duke of Sutherland Axe to Be Worked 'Again. EDINBURGH. Jan. 28. -(Special to The Bee.) Scotland is having another attack of the gold fever. The duke of Southland's gold fields at KUdonan. In Sutherlandshlre, are likely to be re-opened after an Interval of some forty years. There was a great rush during the years 1870-71 to this out lying part of Scotland, when an Australian digger, named Gilchrist, returning to his native country, made the discovery of a nice little three to four ounce nugget in one of the upland streams running Into, the Brora river, and thereafter set to work wllh considerable success washing out gold from the neighboring "burns" and tribu taries. But the present duke's father closed the workings, owing, It Is said, to the shooting tenants complaining about "undesirables" roaming over their pre serves. Some twenty years later another effort was mads, but on this occasion the work was stopped by the advice of geologists, who said that gold was not there in pay ing quantities; that It waa not to be found in the matrix, but only In the washings i from the deposits of running streams, and that the origin of even this came from the glaciers of prehistoric times. That opinion was not convincing to many practical diggers wltli experience, and now that a Perfectly fair trial is likely to be given. It will soon be ascertained if gold deposits In payable quantities He tn the KUdonan district. MOHAMMEDAN CONGRESS FOR LIBERAL EDUCATION Salable Drpartnre front Politic Dleraaaluas Marks Sessions at Nasser. CAIiCCTTA. Jan. M -(Special to The llee ) Tbe dominant note In the Moham snedan congresses concluded at N'agpur has been the attention paid to education and communal Improvement rather than to strictly political matters. The resolutions passed favored women's education, Im proved scientific and technical Instruction, universal, free and compulsory primary educaton, and tha creation of a Mohsni medan educational fund- nmiT V(U AinVP.V i A I U 1 1 1 A V7 1 t J.I l J 1 A J A FULL OF COMEDY Chauffeur ia Berlin Claims Fortune that He Found in His Vehicle. OWNER OF THE CAB WANTS IT Two Cities Also Claim a Share in the "Pickup." KAISER AGAIN SCORES DIPLOMATS Made Presentation of a Crucifix to a Catholic Prior. SHOCKING STORY OF DEGENERACY Accidental Hrenkina of a Parkaar In the Malls Drought to l.laht an Amaslng Disregard of Life In a Family. RY MALCOMH CLARK. BERLIN. Jan. 2S.-(Speclal to The Fee.) Two municipalities. Including this city, a chauffeur and n taxlcab owner, nre in volved In a struggle for small fortune which belonRS to none of them. The strug gle haa comic opera features about It and the story may in time find expression on the stage. Paul Kuglemsnn. a taxlean man who errns bis living here, ia wondering whether he is destined to be a capitalist or chauf feur. A year ago he found In his car 4 0X1 In cash and bnnk notes and lewels worth .1.400. left by a grateful "fare." Kugelmann handed over the valuables to the police administration. Lost property reverts to the finder If not claimed within a year. The chauffeur was Just about to take possession when the owner of the tnxicab Intervened wllh the contention that the valuables belonged to him and not to the chauffeur. Then the city put Ir a demand for 4V. as the d'scovery took , place within Its boundaries. The neighboring munlei-'the pallty of Charlottcnburg protested that It. too. was entitled to a portion of the pro ceeds, as the finder lives In Charlotten burg. Both 'municipalities base their cli.lms on the ground that Kugelmann has "Inherited" a taxable fortune. More Thrills from Kaiser. The remarkable utterances of the kaiser In the course of a recent visit to a Bene dictine abbey and his gift of a huge, solid silver crucifix to the prior, have exercised foreign ministers everywhere. . He ! clever, his culture is high, but he haa a side to his nature that- sometimes pussies. I do not see why his pronouncement In favor of Catholicism should astonish any one.' "Ti tie not the head of the Catholic church, .ia Pxuaa!? When Prince Max of Saxony tried for the see of Strflsburg WU Ham took pleasure lit preferring his tutor, The hurluberlu that lurks In the bottom, of the. emperor's mind toe often drawls at tention from hts shrewdly mfcUer-tf-faet disposition. The speech to the prior' It appearif not ;t miich meant for him as for the Catholic court of Venna, and to help the management of the countess 'of Hohenberg In preparing for a match be tween a Prussian princess and the arch duke Charles Francis, second presumptive heir to the Imperial throne. Amaslng Story of Degeneracy. A postal packet which came undone on its way to Hamburg revealed an appalling tory of family degeneracy and misery. Apparently, the domestic discords of the Kottbus gymnasium professor, Herr Kothe, and his wife. Were tha primary cause of the evil. Absence of harmony In the household resulted in four sons being neglected, left to their own re sources and allowed to grow Up without education In character. One of them, who had distinguished himself by his reckless ways, was sent Into the navy, in the hope that discipline would act as a corrective. But before the now Influences had time to assert their sway, he was detected in peculations and dismissed. While he was still over whelmed with this disgrace, one of his brothers, who had . taken a divinity de gree and had a position as tutor In Bllesla, presented himself before him at W1I- helmshaven. and, proffering a loaded re volver, proposed that he should commit suicide ,at the same time stating that it was his parents' wish that he should do so. The wretched youth agreed, and made an attempt to blow out his brains, but only succeeded in completely destroying the sight of both eyes. In the misery of his blindness he was found by a third of the brothers at Hamburg. Together they talked over his hopeless plight, and he expressed a wish to put an end to his ex istence. The apprentice therefore wrote the fourth of the brothers, who Is a chem ist, asking him to provide a suitable poison. Eventually a mortal dose of cyanide of potassium was sent off, snd with it letters which had been received about the af fair. This was the packet which burst from its wrapper in the post and so led to the arrest of the two broth era. The court sentenced them to five months' Imprisonment. Kropps Reaching Oat. The ministry of marine Is lending Its countenance to a scheme initiated by Krupps to take over the Ironworks at Mariupol snd equip them with an armour plant. Tha money which la presumably to be borrowed In London and Paris fur the needs of a Russian navy would thus find its way Into German pockets. The Novo Vremya asks if the Germans are encour aged to open a rival establishment in Southern Russia, and Inquires whether It la politic thus to give the Germane a foot Ing In the Ulack Sea UtAi arda. which may sooner or later have tn eompete against Turco-Gormun constructions. Statistics published Illustrating the great progress of Krupp's works for the last year show that on July 1 the firm era ployed 48.T2C officials, clerks and work men, who with their families made up the population of a large town. Of these, 37,711 were employed In the steel foundry and the gun-testing grounds alone. The coal and coke consumption for the year amounted to 2.S1.40S tons. The number of steam engines was U9, developing SM3e horsepower. The firm has its own enor mous electricity works and gasworks. There are eighty-seven miles of railway, fifty two locomotives and I.X4 wagons. It la announced that tbe third volume of Bismarck's memoirs wiU not be published during the lifetime of tha present emperor. ORANGEMEN STILL RAMPANT Nationalists Brutally Assaulted and One is Killed. VIEWS OF A PROTESTANT BISHOP Her. Dr. Rllott Asserts the K.strenie lats Opposing Home Hale Are I'uttlna Themselves la an Absurd Position. M RY THOMAS EMMKTT. WBIJ.V. Jan. 2. (Special to The Bee.) The Orangemen and their tory allies are as violent and rampart -as ever. They recently assassinated Thomas McClorey In South Down.. McClorey and two fellow nationalists wvre assaulted on the night before election, on the road at Rathfalland. He died from his Injuries. The respectable Protestants of that section who are op posed to violence hsve denounced the crime. No arrests have been made. The Right Rev. Ir. Elliott. Episcopal bishop of Kllmore. who Is a Tory and opposed to home rule, has denounced the Orange men and unionists who have been advising a revolt In case England grants Ireland the right to govern Itself. in a public letter he said: "It seems to me as if we unionists are cursed with nn excess of sentiment and a dearth of common sense. If home rule comes, to talk of resisting It by force of i arms is not only wicked, but absurd, and If we are. by a sense of England's ingrati tude, to become assimilated to the na tionalists in disloyalty and hatred of every thing British, the prospect is most re pulsive." Orangemen Drilling. The Relfast Newsletter announces that. In view of home rule, drilling operations are in full swing among Orangemen throughout I'lfter. Borne 60,000 men have expressed their willingness to take up arms and arrangements are being made to raise brigades of cavalry. Mixed Marriages (ante Strife. Over 6,000 persons attended In Belfast a demonstration of the various Protestant denominations in l ister to, protest against the papal decree on mixed marriages. On motion of the bishop of Down, a reso lutlon was passed declaring that the ap plication of the decree in Ireland would In crease the cleavage between Protestants and" Catholics and engender sectarian hate. Orange Chaplain Ilecontes Catholic. Rev. John Haughton Steele, minister of the Episcopal church at Crom, Cavan, for twenty-two years, chaplain to the earl of Erne, grand master of the Orangemen, has been received Into the Catholic church, and has gone to Rome to study for the priest hood. By his action he sacrifices a tlpehd bf 250 " and a residence provided by the earl of Erne. , Hate riagne. Wexford. ' A visitation of rata in some' districts in South Wexford haa caused a great deal of damage to farmers. The vicious rodents, not content with visiting the homes, have betaken, themselves to the gardens and tillage lands, Vfhere' they , have injured potatoes ana grain.) it-ui . ueneveo inai ships pie? Ihg between England' and this country have brought ' them here. ' There ia a rat plague In England. Eleetloa foot, Nothing. With the exception of the returning of ficer's fee, J. MacVeagh'a election as na tlonalist M. P. for South Down cost him nothing. At a meeting to celebrate his success he said ' he had ' won a victory without expending a copper on the pay ment of agents, literature, postage, print ing, or even on the lesue of polling cards. Severe Seismic Shock. A violent earthquake Was recorded on the seismograph apparatus of Mungret college. Limerick. So violent was It that all the Instruments were dismounted Kingdom of Greece is Waking Up to Modern Methods Army, Nary and Police Force to Be Reorganized by Offioert from Other Nations. ATHENS, Jan. 18. -(Special to The Bee.) Greece proposes to reorganise her army. navy and police on the moat modern European lines. General Eydoox of the French army la coming shortly to reor ganise the army. An English rear admiral la coming shortly to reorganise the navy. Another officer of the same high rank in the engineering department Is also coming to take charge of the arsenal. Two other officers of lower rank will follow, and In time It will be decided, if there Is need, for other British officers to come to com pletely place the- Greek navy upon an ef ficient foundation. The Italian government has been ap proached by the Greek minister In Rome to ask its aid In reorganizing the police and the gendarmerie, but so far nothing has been definitely arranged. Germany has not been forgotten, for the Greek government has begged her to send one of her best professors from Saxony to help the new ministry of agriculture to draw up some schemes regarding land and properties throughout the kingdom. AUSTRALIANS DRAWING THE COLOR LINE ON SHIPS Strong Movement to Stop Employment of Colored Crews on Trad-i lag Ships. SYDNEY", Jan. 28. 4 Special to The Bee.) The Australian, movement against the employment af colored crews on vessels trading to Commonwealth and New Zea land ports is extending, and the dominion premier has Intimated the Intention of his government to deal with the matter this session. It being proposed to extend the New Zealand coastal law to Australia and the Pacific Islands. It is also Intended to deal with Asiatic crews coming on ocean going vessels -and Interfering with ships manned by white seamen. SPANISH WOMEN LOSE RIGHTS Minister of Interior Issnee F-dlct Her ring Them from Participation la Hall Fleets. MADRID, Jan. 2 Speclal to The Bee.) The Spanish minister of the Interior has Issued an edict prohibiting women from taking part In bull fights, a practice which was inaugurated some time ago by a young woman named Reverts, who had great success in the arena. PARIS POLICEMEN TO BE INCREASED Municipal Council is Urging the Need of a Much Larger Number of Men. CITIZENS MUST KEEP INDOORS Achille Says Streets Are Given Over to Thugs. DUEL BEFORE LARGE AUDIENCE Announced as Private Fight, Became a Comedy. TWO THOUSAND TO SEE THE FUN Headstrong t;lrl Attempts to Mnrder Her Father In a Government Office Itrcanse He Cn Her tdrlft. RY PAI'Ij VILLI ETtR PARIS, Jan. 28. (Special to The Kee.l Monsieur .Achllle of the municipal council has urKed the authorities to Increase the police force of this city, which he says is not large enough to cope with crime. In a budget report on the subject M. Achille says: "It Is humiliating to admit that in the twentieth century the security of our people here Is scarcely better assured than It was In the days when the watch was given a drubbing every night. Respectable Itixens shut themselves up In their houses. leaving the purse-snatchers and brigands masters of the streets. I hope I will not be accused of exaggerating. Read over the columns In the paper devoted to the numerous robberies committed dally In the heart of this city, the hurglarles of un-j heard of audacity, and the frequent mur dersmany of them unpunished as well as to the Innumerable strikes, the mysterious sabotages, everywhere." Dnel Ilefore l.arae Andlenre. One of the most amusing and interesting duels In the history grew out of a letter which M. de Jouvenal received front" Marcel Hutin. It took place right In the heart of the city In the presence of 2.000 men, women and boys, with reporters, a moving picture operator and lunchmen on the side and also nn official photographer. An announcement that nobody would be allowed to see the duel naturally made everybody anxious to be present, and when the encounter began there waa a crowd of the ordinary public, photographers, and even an operator present. The principals were not export swords men. What advantage in sklH there was rested with Jouvenal, . who touched M. Hutln on the chest, and for a moment everybody : wss afraid that he had really been hurt. The seconds tore open his shirt, and found that he was not scratched. M. &e jouvenal apologized. At the fourth go Jouvenal succeeded tn scratchln M. Ifutln'a - forearm, . and the battle was. $ver; 'The. two men were re conciled. They shook lianas, embraced each other, showered compliments on the sec onds, thanked the spectators for their presence. Then they rode in an automo bile to a oafe, where they and their seconds dined together. On the way to the restaurant the party was met by a policeman, who announced that he had been sent out to inquire into the facts. He was reassured, however, that no one had been injured. The policeman hurried back to the station and reported accordingly. Girl Trlea to Kill Father. One of the government offices was the scene of an excited attempt on the part of a young woman to shoot her father, an attendant at the foreign ministry. The eldest of hts four children Is a daughter 28 years of age, who appears to have given him a good deal of trouble. The young woman has such a temper that she could not obtain work anywhere. She was conse quently a burden on her father and con stantly importuned him for money. The father had paid for a room for her apart, but as his ' Income diminished he could no longer afford It and he gave notice that he would cease to pay for the room. Tha daughter thereupon rushed to the office where he was employed and. made a scene. The father had to put her out. The young woman went to a gun smith and purchased a revolver with which she returned to the office. Making her way to her father she asked him again if he refused to support her. On his reply that he did. she aimed at him with her revolver and attempted to fire. But the weapon did not go off and she waa slezed by other employes. The father probably owes his Ufa to the prudence of the gun smith, who, seeing the young woman fn such a state of excitement, so arranged the revolver that It would not go off. The woman waa arrested and examined by the police commissioner, who sent her to the police depot on the charge of attempted patricide, which In French law Is punish able with death. Dnea Held for Trial. Ferdinand Dues, former liquidator for the Catholic church property of tba con gregations dissolved by the government, who confessed to the embexlement of 12,000,- 000. has been held for trial on charges of breach of trust and forgery. Plenty of Sensations. Victor Regnard, a comlo actor, and the best of fellows was a few days ago fa tally shot In a restaurant by a man on whom he had never set eyes and with whom he had not the slightest quarrel. Public opinion here Is clamoring for se vere legislation against the carrying of firearms. Francous Medvtlle, the artist, who killed his wife for refusing to let him see his only living child, Jeanne, a 16-year-old girl, escaped with a sentence of one month for "carrying a revolver." He was al lowed to go home at once, the court hold ing that Inasmuch as he had been In Jail awaiting trial for four months, he had served the sentence. Weill a Winner. Joseph Weill has raised successfully a new point of French Jurisprudence. On July a, ItSC, on account of his alleged ex travagance, his family applied to the courts to place his estate under the care of a trustee. Mr. Weill, then In America, did not oppose the motion. Eighteen months later he took out naturalisation papers aa an American citizen. He lately returned to this city and applied to the civil chamber to have the trusteeship re moved. The court adopted Mr. Weill's point of view, and ordered the trusteeship to be re moved on the graund of his Aamrk-an clt- I zeaahlp. ANXIETY FOR AGED EMPEROR Condition So Grave Other Rulers Are Watching Closely. HEIR APPARENT CAUSES WORRY Antagonism Aroused In Hnngary by Ills Recent t tteranrea Ulve Rise to Fears of tirave Troahle Ahead. HT EMIL ANDRASSY. VIENNA. Jan. 29-Iesplte the efforts to make it sppear that the Emperor Francis Joseph Is suffering only from a severe cold. It Is no secret that his majesty's condition is considered really grave, as I have already pointed out In these letters. It Is known that both the German em peror and the Russian crar have given very explicit orders to their representatives here that they are to he kept constantly Informed as to the condition of the aged emperor. It Is regarded as unfortunate that the heir apparent should have stirred up Hun gary at this time, as there Is reason to fear that when the emperor Is taken there will be troilble enough to keep the empire from flying apart. In official quarters It is declared that the emperor's health has so far Improved that the catarrh from which he has suf fered is abating. The doctors state with satisfaction that his majesty Is free from fever and that he even works as usual. A personage In the entourage of the em peror says that the chill was contracted through driving in an open carriage. Thl official expressed regret that the emperor refuses to take that personal care of his health which is so essential to a man of his advanced age. For example, he was present recently at the consecration of a new churcli at Leubau, and heard mass with his head uncovered. Tills church, a week before opening, had no windows and the building was not yet dry. it seems possible that his majesty caught a chill on that occasion. Wlasstlsrh Sentenced. The Relgrade Court of Justice has sen tenced Wlasstlsch to five years' Imprison. ment for forRlng the document produced In the course of the well known case of the Serbo-Croatian coalition against Dr. Frledjung. This sentence was pronounced on the ground that the accused's state ments as to his relations with the Austrian ambassador had been .substantiated, Wlasstlsch made a detailed deposition on his relations with the ambassador, Count Forgach, and the embassy official, M, Swleutochowakt. On the other hand, ' an official at the Vienna telegraph office pub llKhes a statement to the effect that the depositions mad by Wlasstlsch are fan. tastlc and absurd. Saperstltloa Still Hlfe. In many country districts in Hungary superstition Is still rife. Evidence of this I comes from. Groaswardeln. . In the oom- munlties tr Vaakoh and Baresd severe earthquake shocks were experienced, and ia the formef plfcce.the churoh '.bell wrers started ringing. A ''tritch'' living 1n the neighborhood persuaded the peasants that! the devil: Waa angry and was shaking the earth In. his anger. Thereupon they col- lected a number of calves and goats and drove them into a cave, where the devil was supposed to be dwelling. After this they aet f Ira to the forest In two places to drive out tha devil living there. Mirtu Mystery Unsolved. i The police are still at work seeking to unravel the mystery of the death of Louise Welsee, tha unfortunate sewing woman whose dismembered body was found ctrle telescope apparatus whlou will en In a basket. They are confident that the able h owner to see anything and any man and woman they have under arrest on chooses. There are plenty of de- know mora about the crime than they have told, but they have not been Induced to talk as yet. Gruesome Exhibits in Turkish Parliament Instruments of Torture Produced by a Member to Back Serious Charges. CONSTANTINOPLE, Jan. S.-(Hpeclal to The Bee.) The ohamber has negatived Lutfl Flkri Bey's motion for an Inquiry Into the arrest of Dr. Rlia Nur and the 111 treatment of political prisoners, but Judging from the comments of the press. the debate has left a disagreeable Impres sion behind t. Lutfl Flkri Bey In his speech alleged that Dr. Rlxa Nur has been subjected to tor- ture to make Mm confess and give a mln- ute and circumstantial descriutlon of tha tortures to which he averred members of the "secret association" had been sub- Jected. He produced a scourge, a blood stained bastinado and a fingernail said to have been torn from one of the prisoners In support of his contention. AN IRISH DESERTERi KEEPS POLICE AT WORK Hiding on the lodge of the Bog of Allen, He Leads the Constabu lary a Merry ( base. DI'BLIN, Jan. 28 CSpeclal to The Be.) An Irish soldier who months ago deserted from the Royal Horse artillery and who for some time past is believed to have been harbored in a laborer's cottage In the Bog of Alien district, occasioned considerable excitement In Newbridge last Saturday. Two constables made a surprise visit to the house, but the soldier, who was wide awake, bolted through a back door and sprinted across the bog. follomed by one constable. The latter, encumbered by his uniform, after a determined chase of three miles, gave up the pursuit, his quarry dis appearing. Since the man deserted, a few months since, he has been in the bog dia trict, and has been supplied with food wlille he has slept evidently In the heather, as the police have paid several surprise visits at night without finding him. ROYAL PRODIGYjS DISCOVERED Servian Prince Astonishes ftneetators at a Play hy His latclll grat Acting. EWiHADK, Jan. J. (Special to The Bee ) At a -sol res given by M. Hartwlg, the Russian ambassador to Bervla. Rostand's plsy, "Les Deux Pier rots," was performed. The role of one of the Pierrots was taken by Prince Paul, a nephew of King Peter, who surprised the audience by Ms extraordinary sifts. BATTLE IN LONDON PLEASES RUSSIA Government of the Czar Smiles ia Glee Over Trouble Caused by Anarchists. ENGLAND LONG A SAFE HARBOR Russian Bureaucrats Now Expect ft Change of Sentiment. WORLD-WIDE COMBINE POSSIBLE t Muscovite Ministers Would Lead in ft Campaign to Suppress. -. BLACK HUNDRED ORGAN QUIT9 Kdltor Koand No Sapport for Hie We. artlonary Views and Asserts that People Are Hemming Too Tame. RY GKORGE ERASER. ST. PKTERSRV'RG. Jan. IS. (Special to The nee.) Russian officials have followed with the keenest Interest the spectacular fights between the London police and the anarchists, which have aroused all Eng land. It may be said that there is a strong spice of satisfaction that England, which has . long been a haven of refue for Russian tourists, has at last had an swakcnlng as to. the character of the men, who are enemies not alone of the Russian government, but 6f all govern ment. It is believed In official circles here that England will now be willing to loin with the continental powers In a campaign Of extermination on these men, who are not. so much patriotic revolutionaries as crlih Inal enemies of all law and orr. England's policy of granting asylum' to these outlaws as purely political offenders has been the main stumbling block in the way of stamping out anarchy on the con tinent, according to the Russian officii! viewpoint, and the change In policy which It Is believed will be forced by the recent occurrences In Iondon will be welcomed by every police department In continental Europe. It Is pointed out that even the United State has set Its face, against anarchy and will not permit a known anarchist to land on Ita shores. If England adopts this policy. It Is believed here that continental Europe will be able to deal with the problem effectively.. Police Dog Killed aa Stray. The famous police dog Treff af Moscow Is dead. He disappeared some" weeks ago and was thought to have been raptured. by criminals. But It Is now learned ha has fallen a victim to the misplaced sent of ths authorities. Every night dog catch ers parade the streets of Moscow tn collect stray dogs,' and It has now been discovered I hat nv .made i j '"stray." away with Treff as a Dlaek Hnndred Organ Units. The Kuaskoe Znamya, the organ of tha I Society of the Black Hundred, haa ceased I publication, owing to lack of support. Dr. Dubrovin. the. editor of the Journal, has re- signed the presidency of the Union of tha I Russian People, which, he says, haa be- come a flook obedient to tha constitutional bureaucracy. - -Allege Wonder fal Taleorope. A a tart ling Invention la claimed by a Russian professor. After fifteen years of labor he has constructed. It Is said, an ta.H as to what the instrument will do, but none . as to how tho feats of vision are to be accomplished. Warlike Spirit of Zulus Still Untamed Fierce Battles a Common Occurrence in the Rand Mines and Many Are Killed. CAPETOWN, Jan. IS. (8pecial to Tha Bee.) Hard work in the mines does not subdue the warlike nation of the Zulus. A battle with hammers has just been fought In the workings of tha Cason mine between Zulus and other native employes. A tall, muscular Zulu led his countrymen, fighting with terrible fury. He waa surrounded, but continued his onslaught until he was finally felled, and his body waa battered by Ma assailants until It was unrecognizable. There have been several native faction n the East tfhd West Rand ra I cently. Six natives were killed at tha Ing- laagte B. mine, while the police at the New Klelnfonteln mine were attacked by natives with assegais. The police fired and killed three natives. At the City Deep the fighting was more desperate In character, lasting for hours. Three were killed and many Injured. At Ben oni, on the East Rand, a Farrar group mine. the Amaxosas, Pondos and Hhamgaans fought for six hous with sticks, assegais and stones. The white police, who numbered less than twenty, had a tough struggle, which would have ended seriously had It not been for the arrival of a contingent ot the garrison from Oermlston. INSURGENTS CAPTURE Y0R0 Concerted Attack on Capital Ks pec ted Fnneral of General Guerrero Attended by Christmas. CEIBA. Honduras, Jan. 27. The Insur gents, who are active In the Interior today, caputured Yoro, a city of 3,000 inhabitants and the most important place between this olty and Tegugalcalpa. A concerted attack upon the capital from three sides Is expected within the next few days. General Francisco Guerrero, the govern ment leader who was killed In Wednesday's battle here, was burled today with military honors. General I.ee Christmas, the vic torious Insurgent leader, rode at the head of the Insurgents. Thirty American blue Jackets from the cruiser Marietta, marched in the procession. The three score of Injured are at tha emergency hospital where Burgeon Irvine of the Marietta la In charge. Nearly all of tha former members of tha government garrison here are now en rolled under the Ronllla banners and sym pathizers are coming in every few hours to Join the Insurgent ranks. An attack upon Puerto Cortes Is danced and the in surgents expect the city to fall before