Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 9

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WITH JRT SDPPLEMEHT. PART TWO. Pages 9 to 16. lie I 5 JULY 1, 1894-FORTY ART SUPPLEMENT. (LOT OFTHE BEDS.

Murder of Carnot Duo to a Dark Conspiracy. PEACE FROMA TOMB Carnot's Death Promotes Europe's Tranquillity. EXPRESSIONS OF GRIEF. ANARCHISTS IN CONCERT jhey Act Together in Fiendish Efforts to KilL They Woo France to the Approval of Concord. CASIMIR-PERIER IS STRONG.

5EAET OF FRANCE TOUCHED Plain People of the Bepublic Grieve at Their Loss. Possesses Fine Equipment as President of the Republic. the remains lying in state the vast proportion of women telling their beads. There can be no doubt that the reaction in France toward religions observance, which these dispatches have been commenting on for a couple of years back, has been given a fresh and powerful Impetus by Sunday's tragedy. Tomorrow's funeral la to be by far the most distinctively religious ceremonial which any prominent, advanced Republican dignitary has had since 1871.

The last time the somber, splendid basilica of Notre Dame was used for obsequies on a grand scale was in 1886, on the occasion of the death of Cardinal Guibert, and then I personally saw a crowd of thousands of working people about the quays and Pont Neuf who as the cortege passed obeyed some ruffians' shout not to take oft their hats, and sullenly stood covered in the presence of the coffin of the venerable prelate who had spent his whole life in works of charity. Things have changed in Paris since then, and it is safe to say that tomorrow this salutation of the dead and observance of Catholic funeral customs will be universal along the route of the procession. Catlmlr-Perler Blan of Mark. Of Casimir-Perier nobody will say that he is the kind of man which France or any other country produces by the thousand. He is a man of high mettle and distinction and a marked individuality.

His enemies concede all that his friends claim in this respect. The coincidence that he was born the same year as Rosebery suggests a further parallel. LiKe the British Premier, he is a millionaire, enjoys the favor of multitudinous aristocratic moneyed connections, and has known how to combine the studious, grave pursuits of an ambitious' statesman with the lighter diversions of clubland and genteel bohemia. He has none of Rosebery's effervescent will, but has a much readier command of sentiment and discourse. Although his family has only been out of the shopkeeping class for three generations they rose to affluence and political eminence in time to get the imprimatur of the Orleans monarchy, and hence are able to look down on the favorites of the latter empire as parvenus.

When the Comte de Paris came to the Bourbon headship the ancient legitimist nobility had to accept, along with him, a lot of families associated with his grandfather's reign, and so the Casimir-Peners came into relations with the Faubourg Saint Germain. The new President has been on good terms with this monarchical clique since his youth and his professions of devotion to the democracy no more interfered OSlHlK-PEltfEiU MAN OP MARK. WITHDRAWAL OF GLADSTONE. Grimston, who had taken advantage of his parents absence to forsake the study of law for the theater. The upshot was that young Grimston declined to give up his adopted profession, and was consequently cut off." He has therefore to be content with $10 a week that he gets for walking on at a LondoBiheater The Kendals may possibly have another serpent's tooth in the second of their three daughters who is also, it is understood, anxious to make a name in the dramatic world.

When George Grossmith left America after his recent tour it was arranged that he would return to the United States if possible in the spring of next year. It is now most unlikely that he wiil be able to carry out this intention, and the visit will probably be deferred until the beginning of 1896. Mr. Grossmith has accepted a brilliant engagement with Mr. George Edwards to appear in the new comic opera by W.

S. Gilbert and probably Dr. Osmond Carr, which is to be produced in October. He received an offer of some $200 a week to go back to the Savoy, the scene of his former successes, but, like Oliver Twist, he asked for "more," and d'Oyley Carte demurred. Arrangements are being made by Messrs.

Abud and Harris for sending King Kodak," which has been considerably altered and revised, on a provincial tour. The play will possibly also go to America, together with "Morocco Bound," the libretto of which is by the same author, Mr. A. Branscomb. Mrs.

Hugh Bell, who is the wife of the Mayor of one of the large manufacturing towns in the north, is so well and favorably known for her drawing-room comediettas and has shown such distinct merit in her more ambitious efforts that great disappointment has been caused by the postponement "The Masked Crusaders," a parody The Masqueraders which she was to have produced last, week At an Avenue matinee. The little rift within the lute.is to have been painfully evident during their rehearsals and more than one of the performers threw up their parts. Theatrical Gossip. During his forthcoming tour in the provin-, ces with Miss Kate Rorke, Mr. Forbes Robertson will produce a new three-act play entitled Dr.

and Mrs. Neil," by Miss Clo Graves, one of the most prominent women journalists in London. Miss Graves has gained a certain notoriety, owing to her eccentric style of dress which is exactly like that of a man, the only concession she makes to conventionality being in the matter of skirts. In the afternoon she wears a soft bat which 6 he tucks under her arm when entering the theater at matinges. Miss Fannie.

Brough made an excellent Chairwoman at the annual meeting of the Ladies' Theatrical Guild, which was held last Friday at the Lyceum. She is a fluent and practical speaker, and is often heard at the Sunday evening debates at the Playgoers' club. The gigantic wheel at the Earl's Court Exhibition, which will be thirty feet higher than the Ferris wheel at the Chicago Exhibition, is expected to be completed some time next week. The tower, when finished, will be 170 feet high and the wheel itself 280 feet in di- Loitdow, June 1894, by lhKew York Times. Solid things are beginning to lift their beads again above the flood of confusion and consternation which over Europe Monday.

That which looms high and compels most attention is the fact tbatCarnot's murder was no mere stupid, motiveless accident of tha sort which individual cranks have been precipitating Bince the aawn of time. There is already abundant troof that the assassination was arranged and concerted. In their sweeping drag net of arrests the French police seem to have ot hold of at least half a dozen people who had previous knowledge of Santo's intention. It is also clear that the attempt on Criepi's life in Rome and this only too successful blow at Lyons were part and parcel of thsiameplot 3 Enough more has been disclosed by or Inferred from the results of these arrests and ex-tminations to suggest' that the conspiracy was by no means confined in its time to Italy and France. Guards hjm been doubled and precautions multiplied about every palace and Jiigb official residence on the continent.

Two tnsn us said to have been arrested inside the ISPECIAI. CABLE. Lojfnox, June 30. Copyright, 1894. by th? New York Tribune Association.

President Carnot had done some useful service to France during his life. In death his service is of a higher kind. I do not mean merelv that he died in the discharge of a public duty, or as the German Emperor said, like a soldier on the battlefield. Nq doubt is felt, that his assassination was an act of Anarchist revenge for his refusal to pardon Ravachol, Henry, 'and other braves of anarchy. He well knew what risks he acceptectT But the of its President-has brought France nearer to Europe, and---Europe nearer to France than either has- been to the other for many a long day, The spirit of jealousy and resentment on one side and of too well-founded apprehension and of the French foreign policy on theother has abated.

France has seen, and probably seen with surprise, how genuine and universal is the feeling of sympathy with it in the hour which the act of an assassin has made so gloomy. There is no stint in the testimonies of good will which have poured in from every quarter. The last to arrive was oddly enough the telegram from the Emperor of Russia, and the delay set France to wondering whether, as one French statesman thought proper to express it, France could have offended Russia. The fact that the murderer was an Italian seems likely to embitter still further the already dangerously strained relations between Italy and France. One of the most infamous papers in the world, the Paris Cocarde, deliberately attempted to.

provoke a catastrophe by inventing and publishing a story that the French Am bassador at Rome had been murdered. The paper was seized and its fiction gained no belief. That act of wholesome vigor atoned in part for the singular M. CASIMIR-PERIER, THE NEW PRESIDENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC. New York Herald.

at its zenith. The leading theaters are doing remarkably well there are countless concerts and extra matinees, and, consequently, entertainment managers are as a rule making money. Sarah Bernhardt, with her Theatre de Renaissance company, continues to fill Daly's Theater with fine performances of "La Tosca and La Dame Aux Camelias." In the latter, apparently spurred by Mme. Duse's recent interpretation, the great French actress has quite surpassed herself. Mme.

Rejane, at the Gaiety Theater, in i in Mil hMtefaa mm 1 -iiPrt Bay paternal ancestry has some kinks in it, which, however interesting they may be, do not belong on a throne. Prince of Wales Bad Eye, Those who had the foremost places at Tuesday's big agricultural society ceremony at Cambridge compared notes about the strange discoloration around one of the Prince of Wales' eyes. Within twenty-four hours, or perhaps sooner, all sorts of Btories were buzzing about the politer parts of London to account for this phenomenon, and I have my choice of four distinct and equally authentic versions, all different save in this: each mentions the Duke of Portland's name. Even if the actual facts were obtainable, it would scarcely be" of 'valtreave as enforcing again the conviction which England, after years of persistent optimism, is reluctantly coming round to that age brings no wisdom to the Prince, nor gray hairs dignity. It was noticeable Thursday, when Keir Hardie spoke of their knowing nothing of the Prince save as one caught an occasional glimpse of him, sometimes at the gambling table, sometimes on the race course, there was less noise and fewer shouts of dissent than during any other portion of his speech.

At today's opening of the Tower Bridge many reporters had it in mind to observe the Prince close at hand and see what there was CARNOT'S FAVORITE WALK AT FONTAINEBLEATJ. CARNOT'S STUDY AT FONTAIKEBLEAU. ameter. There are to be forty cars, thirty ordinary and ten special, the former to accommodate forty and the latter thirty people in each car. Collision in the North Sea.

Gbatesevd, England, June 30. The steamer Nautilus of Hamburg and a Dutch sailing warship were in collision yesterday morning in the North Sea during a dense fog. The steamer's port side was badly stove in, the bridge was carried away, and it sustained other damages. Daring the excitement ten of the steamer's crew jumped aboard the warship. Iceberg Crashes Into a Steamer.

Glasgow, June 30. The Allen line steamer Capt Gunsen, which arrived at Greenock today from Boston, reports having been in collision with an iceberg in midocean. A large hole was knocked in the steamer four feet above the water line, and its bowsprit and figuiehead were carried away. DECIDE TO WORK IK STRICT SECRECY. apathy of the Lyons police.

In Che" presence of persistent attacks on Italians and "all Italian houses and shops in Lyons, the Prefect of that great city seemed to think he had done his duty when he kept tde mob at arm's length from the threatened Italian Consulate, after advising the Italian flag to bo lowered; and lowered it was. But the Italian Government have shown forbearance, and it is probably from motives of high policy and patience that they caused it to be announced that no diplomatic claim would be made on account of life or property destroyed at Lyons. II a in be rt and Crlspi Appease France. King Humbert and Sig. Crispi alike contributed to appease French anger.

It is not 'forgotten, even in France that Sig. Crispi has just escaped assassination. The King adroitly observed that the day the anniversary of Solf erino hitherto sacred to the two nations by a common glory, now unites them a common grief. Sig. Crispi, no less adroitly and he was probably the author of both messages in telegraphing to the Italian Ambassador at Paris the profound grief and horror of the Italian Government and nation, added Assassins have no fatherland." Lord Rose be ry and Lord Salisbury expressed a similar sentiment In moving and Inclosure of the Hofburg Thursday night, and a Viennea public report insists that six bombs were found near them, though the Austrian officials deny it.

Rumors from Moscow of fresh discoveries of dynamite plots against the Czar have been coming almost every day this week. Even here in England the universal scare has penetrated, and today's pageant to open the Tower Bridge moved under the weight of a police protection such as London streets never saw before. It does not escape the notice of scientists that almost all these leading spirits among the Anarchists, notably Ravachol, Yaillant, Henry, Lega, and Santo, are young men torn either during the Franco-German war or just after it, and while the domestic tragedies and social and political convulsions it involved were still swaying the Latin peoples. One is still able to distinguish in Ireland the men born in the famine years of the later 40s. In much the same way there seems to be a specially malevolent mark set on the offspring of those years of upheaval in Italy una trance.

People of France Deeply Touched. Carnot's cruel, sad taking off has evoked a tremendous and most touchmg demonstration of affection for him among the poorer classes oi Jj ranee, but the classes who regard themselves as cultivated reveal only a cool esteem for the murdered President. An English talesman of Cabinet rank, who heard the with his popularity among duchesses and dowagers fthere than Rosebery's radicalism has prevented his being the pet of the gilded coroneted circles here. In each of these exclusive quarters one may discern the slow downward movement of eyelid, which is half-brother to a wink, whenever the determined Republican principle's of the yousg man in question are mentioned. May Unite tbe Whole Nation.

Casimir-Perier is not only regarded as a safe man by all except ultra-bigots among these reactionaries, but he is openly friendly to the traditions which speak of France as the oldest son of the church. His tastes and means will help him to make a good deal more of the court at the Elysee than his predecessors have done, at least since Mac-Mahon, and at this court will be seen noblemen and prelates who, hitherto, have held the republic at arm's length. The sterner sort of French radicals declare that these twin reactionary influences will make short work of the young man's intellectual adhesion to democratic ideals. On the other side extremists predict that he will bring over all these disaffected elements to the republic and unite the whole French nation as it has not been before in this century. Disinterested observers will watch with curiosity the contest between the new President's ideals for a sort of pull-devil, pull-baker contest, in which either side may win.

But conditions are totally changed now. Bin Impulsiveness May Be Embarrassing-. To have a President who threatens to resien whenever he cannot have his own way will add enormously to the complex difficulties of the government at Paris. Two incidents of the new regime seem significant. There is a protocol as old as the republic explicitly ordaining that the head of the State shall on no occasion attend any funeral.

Casimir-Perier calmly brushes this aside and announces that he with his ministry, will be present at Carnot's obsequies. In the circumstances no doubt this act will be very popular but, all the same, it shows a readiness to set his own desires and judgments above the written law which may bear les3 acceptable fruit later on. Equally typical is another thing. Casimir-Perier and his friends were very savage with Dupuy for daring to be a candidate at the Versailles convention, and they filled their papers for the next two days with bitter attacks on his character and declarations that, of course, his continuing to be Premier was out of the Question. Dupuy of course resigned at once, and his resignation was accepted, but then the new President and his advisers tardily began analyzing the vote by which he was elected, and discovered to their chagrin that, subtracting the monarchists, his supporters in the chamber were nowhere near a majority of that body, and that it was absolutely necessary to make friends again with DuDuy and secure the support of his followers.

So, on the very day after Dupuy had been hooted out of office by the new Elysee crowd, they all had to doff hats, with Casimir-Perier at their head, and beg him to remain as Premier. This he has promised to do; but with what hidden thoughts and feelings may well be imagined. This incident, too, irresistibly recalls Rosebery's brash pronouncements about the Irish and his subsequent humble pie. Extraordinary Mass of Condolences. The French have been recipients of such an extraordinary mass of condolences, with those of William, Victoria, and Humbert, each more fervent and expansive than the message sent by the Czar, that it is not surprising that some of the more ill-conditioned brains in the lower order of Paris journalism should have misconstrued the experience.

Some of these fellows are clearly moved by the fear that their own foolish prominence as patrons and mouthpieces of the anti-English boom should be jeopardized. Others follow suit from sheer ignorance in saying that these universal expressions of sympathy-and proffers of condolence show not the kindliness of the heart, but a craven fear of France and a mean desire to dissuade it from further colonial expansion. It would not be worth mentioning if it were not that it gives a clew to the mental breadth and international knowledge of the one class in Paris most responsible and influential in shaping the French policy during these last two years. How much longer the France-Italian relations will stand the strain of that grand, 'dago hunt which the roughs all over the south of France have embarked upon it is difficult to say. The grievance of Italian competition has been seriously felt in all the lines of industry along the Rhone and Provincial Littoral for years past latterly it has come to be the burning issue in the eastern districts as well.

Assassin Santo's nationality merely put the spark to the magazine long since charged, with the result of general turbulence, violence, and wrecking of property, and the panic-stricken flight of Italians from the country. From various reports it seems that fully 10,000 Italians must have crossed the frontier into Italy and Switzerland and Alsace during the week. Today's News shows augmented reasons tor a further exodus. Naturally the mobs in Italian cities are resenting this, and a demonstration against an embassy or a consulate in either country may easily prove more backward. Kewi of the Royal Heir Swamped.

Princess May undoubtedly is entitled to complaint at the evil fortune which swamped her little special news event under a cataclysm of international horror. At any other time the birth of a third male heir to the throne in the direct line would have engrossed British attention. As it is, the incident is principally remembered on account of Keir Hardie's ugly attack on all concerned. Vile in taste and temper as the harangue was, still it has served a purpose in getting on record in Parliamentary debates an allusion to the Duke of York's earlier morganatic marriage. The Radicals of the House of Commons, though publicly they cried out at Keir Hardie as lustily as the Tories, admit in private that this is a very useful thing for future anti-monarchical campaigns.

In upper tendom the birth of the Prince has been hailed with exceptional satisfaction, for the reason that it removes from the line of succession little Lady Alexandra Duff, whose Operations of the Colonial Conference at Ottawa to Be Absolutely Private. Ottawa, June 30. (Special. Sir Adolphe Caron, Postmaster-General of the Dominion, presided at today's session of the colonial conference. It was decided that what is done at the meetings shall be kept abso- success.

She has attracted the Prince and Princess of Wales and ether members of the royal familyfd "The "Gaiety and has been much praised by the critics. Coquelin is coming to London next week, but he is to appear only in drawing-rooms and in a selection of monologues. At an aristocratic concert at St. James' Hall Thursday last the Countess of Yarbor-ough (Baroness Conyers in her own right) and seven other titled ladies played Mosa-kowski's Spanish dances, as an octet, on four pianos. Lady Edward Spencer Churchill sang.

Henry Irving has secured the English rights of Madame' Sans-Gene and Ellen Terry will play La Marechale Lefebvre, the character in which Mme. Rejane has made so brilliant a success. Irving himself has a somewhat small part, that of Napoleon. Green Room Club Entertains TVillard. The Green Room club supper to E.

S. Wil-lard Thursday last was an exceptional affair. The 120 guests included the three Irvings, J. L. Toole, Beerbohm Tree, and all the leading actors, managers, and dramatists of London.

Henry Irving, who presided, toasted Baby York," the infan heir of the Duke of York, heir presumptive to the throne, saying he hoped Thespis, as a fairy godmother, was hovering over the little one's cradle and instilling in him a taste for the drama which would make Baby York in the future "as good a playgoer as his illustrious father." In a capital speech Mr. Irving then proposed the health of the guest of the evening, saying they were all glad to see him back in England. Mr. Irving then dilated upon America's unstinted appreciation of English players and upon the unlimited capacity for playgoers of the people of the United States. Mr.

Willard responded briefly. H. H. Kohlsaat of Chicago, who came from Paris to attend the supper, occupied the seat of honor between Mr. Irving and Mr.

Willard. J. M. Barrie is soon to be married to Mary Ansell, a clever and preiiy actress who appeared in his "Walker-Lcndon." It would be a graceful act on the part of the Anti-Gambling League to grant Mr. Robert Buchanan, in his present parlous state, a substantial annuity for having so thoroughly exemplified their contentions.

His bankruptcy, to the tune of some $75,000, was mainly the result of turf transactions. He caught the gambling fever, it appears, at the time he was writing a melodrama in collaboration with George R. Sims, and after heavy losses became more and more deeply involved. Buchanan to Sue Mrs. Eangtry.

In a short time Mr. Buchanan will be rev. eling in the law courts. Besides his cross action with Clement Scott and the libel action he is bringing against the SIcetch on account of a criticism of A Society Butterfly," it is said that he intends to institute proceedings against Mrs. Langtry for breach of contract.

The season at the Opera Comique has, in fact, been most eventful from the outset. Some unpleasantness was caused at the very beginning by Mrs. Langtry's refusal to perform a certain dance which she considered unsuitable. Matters ultimately reached a climax, and Mrs. Langtry is now no longer in the cast.

She recently wrote to the management, informing them that if a certain matter were not remedied by 4 o'clock on the following day she would not appear at the theater in the evening. Her protest was disregarded, and she fulfilled her threat. Before the play commenced the manager came before the curtain and announced without further explanation that he had just heard from Mrs. Langtry that she declined to fulfill her engagement. This is one account of the affair il remains to be seen what Mr.

Buchanan's version of the circumstances will be. Meanwhile Mrs. Langtry has placed herself in the hands of Sir George Lewis. It has been repeatedly announced that she proposes to visit America in the autumn. This is not the case, but she may possibly enter into management at a London theater.

Kendal Cast Off a Son. Whatever the reason, actors and actresses are notoriously averse to their children going on the stage. Mr. and Kendal are not exceptions to the rule, and on their return from America they had a short and unequivocal interview with their eldest son, Dorrington 4- i-1 i POBTEAIT OT THE IaAXB PEESIDKST CAHWOT. Taken when he was a pupil at the Ecole Poly- technique.

in this story of an eye but the press seats, adroitly or accidentally, had been put sixty yards away from the dais, so they saw nothing. Decorations for the occasion are sparse and poor along the route through the city, and the expectation that the return of the royal party by the river would provide a spectacle was grievously disappointed. The notion of how to utilize the noble Thames for waer pageants seems quite to have died out of Londoners, and today the Prince and his family would hardly have told from their barge that anybody on the riverside thought it a gala day. Big Libraries in a Revolt. The revolt of the two chief circulating libraries, Mudie's and Smith's, against the existing prices and conditions of three-volume novels greatly excites book making and literary circles.

They demand from the beginning of 1895 a reduction of 20 per cent in price from publishers and guarantee a cheap one-volume edition, not to be issued for a year. This at once will drive out of the field a swarm of amateur novelists whose work is taken now only because the price-paid by the libraries more or less secures the publisher against initial expenses, even if the books are failures. Further effects of the change on fiction in general cannot be easily foreseen; nor have publishers yet had time to consult about an answer. But at least it seems clear that the grotesque and injurious institution of three-volume editions is on its last legs. July Macmillan's has a hitherto unknown letter from Chatham to Lord Shelburne, dated Dec.

18, 1777, containing comments on Burgoyne's surrender. While praising the nobleness and humanity of the revolted colonists, the letter declared that the writer would as soon subscribe to the transubstantiation as to admit sovereignty by right in the colonies. Habouj Feedebio. FRENCH ACTRESSES CAPTCRK LONDON, THE GRAND THEATER AT LIONS. On his way to which President Carnot was assassinated.

't "ME3 DEUCES," CAEN OT'S SUMMER HOME. seconding the address voted by the House Lords. The language of both was remarkable, and may be regarded as an indication that the minds of men in this country are slowly moving to a point of agreement that the right cf asylum is no right for assassin or for Anarchists, who are assassins under another name. Anarchy," said Lord it lutely secret, that the delegates shall not even communicate to their governments the proceedings until a decision has been arrived at upon each of the questions discussed. The whole of today's sitting was taken up in the discussion of a resolution regarding intercolonial reciprocity of trade.

Tonight all the delegates were the guests of the Earl of Aberdeen, the Governor-General, at Rideau Hall. VERMONT WOMAN HANGS HER CHILDREN Ends Four JDives and Kscspe After Separation from Her Ilnsband. Richfobo, Vt. June 30. Mrs.

Merrill Baker of Montgomery hanged her four children this morning. Mrs. Baker and her husband had trouble and they separated this morning, after which she hanged the children. Mrs Baker has escaped. Wws while driving with his secretary late bunday night, expressed precisely this emo-non when he said to his companion in the brougham: "Fortunately France produces jnen like Carnot by the thousand." This Jone of respectful reservation has run through all that the press and the pub-o speakers of France have said durmg we week; since Wednesday this has been so rked as to suggest that both editors and foliticians are instinctively thinking of how touch stronger and more notable a figure his accessor will make in the Elys6e.

But the heart of the real French people, Wiks in Paris and the provinces, has been Profoundly stirred. Observers agree in not-g the most characteristic and impressive ature of the great silent throngs Ihsred to pass through and view More threatening, perhaps, than any possible conflict over large matters of policy is Casimir-Perier's impatient, querulous temperament. To get along with that strangely-childish and uncertain chamber a French President needs all of Talleyrand's oily suppleness" and, more than ali, capacity for, peaceful endurance. It is Casimir-Perier's most obvious practical weakness that he carries his amour propre spread out about him like a lobster's antennae, for all people to tread on. Whenever any of these over exposed susceptibilities get hurt, he flares up and threatens to take his tin dishes and go home.

This almost infantile eagerness suspect affront was continually displayed during his Premiership, and it was passed over only because It was to the interest of all the other Presidential candidates to keep him in office. Koseoery, spurns unmiouu oi men into nations, and considers itself above the pride of patriotism;" and he well described the Anarchist Santo as an Ishmaelite whose hand was against every man. Lord Salisbury went further. He expressed his pleasure at hearing Lord Rosebery suggest that the assassin, though an Italian, could not cast upon Italy the slightest share of disgrace attaching to his deed. Then he added; Qui sympathy is due to Bernhardt and Rejane 'Received with the Warmest Approbation.

Copyright, Xt94, by the Associated Press. Los dos, June 30. The theatrical season is.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Chicago Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
7,805,807
Years Available:
1849-2024