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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 9

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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9
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Iff If 0 Shxnbzm Wtxhwoc PART 2 Editorial Commercial PART 2 Special Foreign News Section THE WORLD'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER JULY if). 1914. A SAY FAREWELL TO MR. HERRICK WILL DEDICATE THE ACRE CO EUR Aspires to the America's Cup; Shamrock IV in Front of a Channel Wind. B3MMBBgSS8F 7TTT mmi wr 'RED ROSA' WARS ON GERMAN ARMY RULE SHIP 111 SIGHT OF LAND O'Connor Hopes to See It Docked This Week, but Has Fears of Delay.

Americans in Paris Speed the Retiring Ambassador to France. Great Church on Mootmartre Hearing Consecration After Many Years. Socialist Firebrand Attacks Service for Brutality of Of.icers to Soldiers. DILEMMA OF A DUKE. BY CAROLYN WILSON.

ISTAFF CORRESPONDENT OP THE TRlBfXE. WATCHES OVER PARIS SIPS FOR SIR EDWARD PARIS. 0, The week has been filled with farewell parties and dinners and speeches and presentations of life memberships In this and that society for Myron T. Herrick, the outgoing ambassa- dor to France from the United Stf.tes. I You would almost think that the Amer- WINS HER FIRST BATTLE T5 TirTT a rmn lean institutions here would get dizzy welcoming and godspeeding the diplomatic force, so regularly and monotonously does it change.

France isn't the most comfortable berth PARIS. July 9. After thirty-nine In Europetoadip'omat. It Is difficult not years the churc of the Sacre Cieur on only from the Ttolitical BY T. P.

O'CONNOR. SPECIAL TABLE TO THE 1914: HyTbe Tribune Ooiupany.l LOXPON. July IS. We are in the tom-'a the passenger when, after a long agf. he expects to land the next becomes more restless than at iay other moment i th voyage.

We now have carried toe home rule um to within sight of land and next elt we may sec itt safely docked, but are more nervous and anxious than at trj othtr moment during the whole His week lias passed in continuous afcuet meetings and everyday consultation letween the Irish leaders and the ha ministers. It is understood that "i oi is to De oniciaiiy side but also from the social and financial i -but then, what post isn't difficult from Ct 17 that last viewpoint? 8 a sueclal significance in the history There is no one reigning house as in the 1 of the 'huroh. for it is the fHe day of case of a monarchy, upon which the. aiarie Marguerite, who. like Joan of American family, pere et tils, make an Are.

heard voices and saw visions which assault for popularity. The pleasing for-! commanded her. not. however, to save maiuy ana re a tape and ermine and knee the country l.m i i breeches are picturesquely lacking in toi of return diplomacy. i ne preiuueisi aione I is stahlo far ahnn i Willi Ills own a wwaa K.

s- v. UUb i ISTAFF CORRESPONPENTOKTIIK BERLIN, July 8. Hosa Luxemburg, a Polish Jewess, is the man of the hour so to speak in Germany. Red Rosa she is popularly called, for she is the tigress of German Socialism, a wild, relentless firebrand whose tactira almost make those of her sister fury in England. Mrs.

Pankhurst, dovelike fcy comparison. The leader of the women's wing of the great Social Democratic army in Germany, Frau Luxemburg, lias been in the public eye for many years. At the an-nual conventions of the party her strl dent voice is always raised on behalf of uncompromising radicalism. To suppreea her, when she starts on an oratorical rampage, is neatly as herculean a task for the party management as the ovcr-throwal of the existing order in the state, it-lf. She ia nevertheless an asset of great worth to the cause, and the con.

troversy in which the Is now the central figure exposure of brutalities in German barracks has made her for the moment the darling of the Socialistic world. Sentence'd to Year's Imprisonment. Last winter Red Rosa was f-en- ministers change like the seasons, ambitions, disregarded an invitation to undertake the work, and Louis XVI. perished on the scaffold be- addition there have been frequent com- mutations betme-n Asuuith. and the Tory leaders.

Carson Complicates the Situation. fore he was able to carry out the pious intentions he had formed while In prison. The future is mine," said Napoleon, ana wished to build the temple upon the None of our ambassadors has liked it here the Bacons or the Whites or the. Mr. Herrick is a big.

hearty man with a good laugh and a convincing voice. He was trained for a manufacturer and a banker, and prt fers the study of economics and agricultural problems; but oratory was left out of his courses of wnere eacn successive peace i might be proclaimed, but in his case there Cp to this moment here seems no outlet from the deadlock. Carson has con-eiderably complicated the situation by jledins himself to the alternative of getting the exclusion ail I'lster or civil "Z-jr jJtr ff -t i t- was no peace only successive wars. study. He has never learned how make a speech.

Ict-towa that Ca.rson fond of war, ouv ncmever, Americans are very However, Americans are very Project Eevived After Commune, The events of '70-71 directed the Cath- -j ollc mind again to the project. Pious isi Hysterical auu jiere and tnere i3 great deal of t-oiuors wished to invoke the protection of God by erecting a temple fenced at Frankfort-on-the-Main to a i year's Imprisonment for anti-militaristic agitation. She was convicted of Inciting i German soldiers to refuse to fight Incase of war with France. Before she had been I called upon to serve her sentence prla- simulation about the incoming William Graves Sharp of Elyria. manufacturer of pig iron and chemicals where he wilt live and how he will enttrtain.

The residence in the Rue Francois Premier, which has served the ambassadors for several years pat, has bi-en sold and Mr. Sharp will have to tind a new house. The last reception the Herrick gavr to His worship in Momentarily allowed to. the idea as taken up by the Catholics In Paris. The difficulty was to establish communication with the outside world, for the city was in- veted.

Balloons were tried, the pigeon- oners convicted of such offenses in Ger many have several months of grace post, and even the bribery of secret jometimea coniraaicis ninwu fame ipeech and rarely makes two speeches, even on the same day. without uttering different opinions. This exclusion of all lster. then, is not taken se-liosslv. and is regarded as the result of the swelled head produced by his idola-trtffls reception during the orange cele-tratioM in Ulster.

But Carson's second demand is equally impossible, for claims not merely four but six counties that is to say. not only Antrim. Down, Perry, and Armagh, but Tyrone and Fermanagh. This demand the Nationalists will refuse to the end, vea though they should lose the home rule liil and have to go into the for another few years. Cabinet Anxious for Settlement.

The cabinet, meantime, naturally is fs's- jsx y-j3: agents, but ail failed, and it as not until the commune had added its horrors war that the enterprise practical shape. The Spiritual Fort. The war ministe, uatited the site for a fort, but, better inspired, Mgr. tSu'tbert. the cardinal archbishop of Paris, cried: was the annual Fourth of July affair oj'-.

to all the Americans in Paris. The tour-ists were out in force. Baedekers under each arm, vril swathed hats and severe i tailored suits contrasting strongly with the exquisite toilettes of the members i-f the permanent American colony. The house has never Ic oked ttter than i it did that last Saturday of the ilerricks' I Red Rosa broke out at another point of her explosive system. At Freiburg, in Baden, she delivered a 1 fresh tirade against the army, culmlt.at- Ing in the charge that a certain case of 1 maltreatment of soldiers, which had come to light in Meti, was one of those dramas which are played in German bar-: racks duy in and day out, and from wl.ieh the wails and moans of the victims only rarely reach our ears." Army Clears for Action.

This sweeping allegation caused Gen. von Falkenhayn, the new war minister, a particularly forceful character, to clear Your fort will do no good and may be turned against you. Better bulid my anxious for a settlement, pressed by the ria beautiful ballroom, where an American orchestra played tantalizing "rag." were exquisitely decorated with roses and long tall vases of larkspur to carry out the scheme of the national colors. It will be very hard for Mr. Sharp lo lind a place equally attractive.

for action against Red Rosa. Indicted for criminal slander of the army admin-j istration, she has just been brought to trial. After four days of proceed'nga before the Civil court, consisting for the citadel than yours." Whether or not he as moved by the argument, the minister I renounced his project, and on July 23, the national assembly authorized the p'urchase of land for the church and even permitted the cardinal to proceed by expropriation-. The large majority in support of the bill shows how feeling ia parliament has changed on questions of church and state. Two years later the first stone was laid with impressive pomp and In the presence of l.tKNi persons gathered from all parts or France.

Almost inevitably the plan of which prescribed a chinch, was severely criti- but it ultimately triumphed. The ling on one side and by threats of civil ar on the other. They have been an outlet. This has developed a situation, it is generally felt by liberals that the cabinet made a pro-fjssd mistake in not following the advice of the Irish leaders and refusing all offers the Orangemen until the Orangemen making offers themselves. It is recognized that every forecast that Redmond ami his colleagues put forth Sea they to restrain the cabinet fron making the offer of a county plebis-r te last March has realized and' now refuses concessions tieh.

if they had lieen postponed until now, he would have gladly accepted. Mistake of Minority. Ttusa certain alarm was created in the Liberal ranks lest the ministry repeat its mistake by a (rain inaking new concessions to Careen which again would have had Vs4 VA "SHAMROCK ET MAKING HER IftST TRIALS I oiitsaiim Tliomus 1 the old MKiiuioiiv in recent tli ioiegroiind. The bay was swarm of craft and cn the hills overlooking is a boa r.l the challenger, the course there were thousands of spectators. Shautrocit 1 light wind trials 4 "seen ttiune Torbay.

Sir contentedly facing the camera, the operator of which is astrble the bowsprit in most part of recriminations between the crown prosecutors and counsel for the defense, the state suddenly came forward with a motion for adjournment. The public prosecutor declared that the mass of alleged evidence submitted by "Red Rosa "she had ready a list of 1,013 witnesses, mostly former soldiers-was so overwhelming that the war ofllce had not been able in so short a time prepare its own versions of the various cases. The war minister. Gen. von Falkenhayn, therefore, proposed to hilt.

ate court martial proceedings in the military courts in all cases which had not already come before those tribunals. Triumph for ''Reel Rosa." Red Rosa," of course, bitterly oppese adjournment. She had been indicted. The Fourth of July always linds tins Americans right up and doing from arly morning with a seech at Lafayette's grave to the big banquet in the evenirg, at whioh every one whose name has ever appeared ih a Paris newspaper a speech. Among the thousands lor, at least, that is what it seemed iike was Chauucey Pepew, who has tieen visiting his nephew, C.

Mitchell IVpew. before going on a cruise with him in the Baltic. Mr. Depew used to be called the most tactful after dinner speaker America had ever produced. But of course he is now over SO and you can't expect a reputation to be immortal.

Whether Mr. Depew realizes it or not, I don't know, but lie made a serious break by telling a story rather directed against the Christian Scientists, and they hold the fort of religion in the American colony. sVvcral of the guests at the banquet commented on what they called Mr. Depew's extremely bad taste." public saw the folly of attempting to rival the Oothic glories of the thirteenth ctn- t'iry by adding Montmuitre to the splen- did series of Chartres. of Amiens, cf i Kouen, and Notre Dame.

The Miracle of St. Denis. Slowly the domes and campanile and the cluster of side chapels jijjose on the Mount of Martyrs, near, indeed," to the ASTOR IS AWEARY sailor prince tt t- v. mr LONDON "400' IN BUSY WEEK. YANKEE VICTORY WELL DESERVED TAITTJAT IT Tf IT Hia fUilAil spot where, according to the legend St.

Denis was decapitated and carried his head under his aim as if it had been a 1 uf I Oil crown. In revolution times, centuries I ul Adalbert, Kaiser's Sailor Son, Sulks ISeeause Imperial Sir Frowns on Lovo Affair. Lady Beatty Is Hostess at Hanover Lodge of the Season's Most Brilliant Harden Party. after temples to Mercury and Mars had inducing t'arson to raise his terms and 'iemand more concessions. Oarson's poi-ywas finally to reach the point when he osld have concessions which if sraited by the cab.net wouid have rent and the lrisis asur Jer and brought the ministry, the Liberal party, and 'I Irishmen in the same ignominious rsr.

These alarms vote probably quite un- jaded, as As.iu:th sense ami unimpeachable loyalty fild never land him in such folly, but English Sporting "World Accepts Gracefully the Ite-sult at Henley. dun Newspapers Chill His disappeared, a deaf and almost blfnd ab- i bess, with the ladies of her order, was Literary Ardor. 1 placed in the dock, and was ready for trial. Defiantly she accused the war ofllce jf subterfuge and of retreating in the face of humiliating defeat Ir cas it i dared to press its charge. The court.

nevertheless, granted the adjournment, and the case came abruptly to an end never again, in the opinion of unprejudiced observers, to be revived. Even non-i Socialist commentators exclaim that i There was dancing after the banquet, and many of the hotels had special dancing parties for their American guests that night. The American tJirls club INT EIJ EST IS INCREASED SON MAY (SET PEERAGE. (SPKCIAU CABLE TO THE TRIBUNE. LONDON.

July IS. Lady New borough, who was Alias Grace Carr of Kentucky IB? TO THBl'tll'-ACOTRlBrSB. Urciri.l.V. July is. Prince Adalbert.

Emperor William's sailor son, has not been seen in public for some time, nor hurried to the guillotine, on the tumbrils I of the convention. Mount of Martyrs it was also for two generals shot by com- I milliards, while M. Clemenceau was mayor of Moiitmbartre. The people had dragged guns, for the second time in the history of Paris, up the eep slopes of the hill the first was on the morrow of the bastile, when the a.arm exist. 1 and became acute also had a masquerade ball, which Red Rosa" and her vindictive cohorts "5 to r.r.at rtaie of hiuli nervousness brought forth a great deal of fancy danc 7 I hav.

scored an unprecedented triumph, most beautiful women In the British nw the wxt tlme votf r8 are COullt. peerage, was the belle of the most bril- mnr dHniud iias he attended recent family gatherings. I His absence from K.el during regatta! IBV CAHl.R TO Tlll CHI-A TRI Bl'NB. LONDON. July is.

William Waldorf BY A STAFF tXRRKSPOXrNT.l LONDON, July For several reasons the English sporting world is not unduly fhich I have mentioned. The result was outburst of tmited and passion- te loyalty to Ireland the Liberal and 1 ranks. da snvv hm was much commented on In viw I Astor's oroooss-d sale of the I'all Mall Democrats into the reichstag. ing, mere are ai present at ine cnio in-teen or twenty young women who made a part of a fortune last year, teaching dancing in America at prices which were a half hearted imitation of those of the Castles. They have come to Paris for the summer to study under the best C.azette and Sunday Observer means only navai ran: anu court society is, mob feared vengeance from the royalists and the army at Saint Denis and the two officers had gone to parley In the name I of the government.

Kxcited by events, the Montmartois slew the emissaries; exercised over his romance. ous unwi in romns men ai nt nicy or that he is tired of his newspapers, esiw He has been stavir.K at Carlsbad as ths the wiping out of English tennis players Duke of Hohenstein and it is asserted in the nnaU at Wimbledon. French teachers, Duke and Carlos Mlna, but their mayor should not be blamed Henley's two principal International cially as they don't pay. Hia decision has nothing to do with his supposed rase at not getting a peerage. He realizes, or he ought to.

friends say. that he never could get a peerage that his retirement is due to his love' affair. lie became engaged two years ago to a Hungarian count's daughter, but the i and to pick up anything new In the way for an episode, which rose suddenly from of new dances, such as the balaneello and tne passion of the moment; nor, indeed, the rouli-rouli. They have every hope dij distinguished statesman, then and expectation of going back for th- oniy 30 years of age, arrive on the scene to Face with a "Block." Element reprr-M-ntations were made to K'binet by almost every -beral, and the iLor party took similar flntil In t(. r.l Asquith knew, if wild not kt.ow tlrat his mir.ls--? was race fil(' with what French oloek and tha.tthis block "osisttdof u.

Ibor, and Irish JWie. Its i-idanwntal principle was no whatever should be vei to Carsun which- Irishmen were When Social Democracy in 'Germany takes up a crusade for humanity In the army, it is inspired far less by unselfish desires for reform than by the spirit of revenge against militarism and the lust for more parliamentary power. Barracks brutality is a tine political catchword In a country where every able-bodied man is a soldier. The Socialist party managers know that and exploit the misdeeds of martinet to the full for agitation It Is undeniable that maltreatment of recruits is terribly common In the kaiser's army. Red Rosa," giving characteristic Instances at last week's trial, told of a noncommissioned officer it Is that if he owned every paper in Great Britain I V.

1 9. I winter and making the other nair 01 that untU the cruel deed was done. liant garden party of the season, the charity fete giver, this week by Lady Beatty Miss Ethel Field of Chicago) at her town residence, Hanover Lodge, Hanover Gate, Regent's Park. Lady Newborough as in wild rose pink silk and lace, with wild roses in a lace hat. There are those who think her hanJsomer than her sister, Mrs.

Cecil Bingham S. S. Chauncey of New York, but although (she is noted for her dresses she has Mrs. Bingham's distinction or animation. Her husband is a perfect cipher and a hypochondriac Lady Beatty Sells Pewter.

Hanover Lodge gardtns were full of summer flowers and the pretty old fashioned reception rooms were decorated with roses and lilies. Lady Beatty sold about worth of pewter before the By a law passed in the time of King Wil- 00. niucipeuisiag trophies have gone abroad the 'iamond sculls for the second year In succession. There is. of course, a good deal of heart searching as to whether the classical British styl Is the best for speed and endurance, and some of the usual talk about racial deterioration, but, on the whole, the press refuses to be downhearted.

The victory of the American crews is The Church Today. when that monarcn was cuu'ioi. r.er sir.ee men ins liam fortune. Whether America will be as fruitful a swamping the house of lords with ids On pillars within the sanctuary appear Ueia lor mose vcrwu Kiel, ha cannot be is. sj sO-0 i 1 1 prince has been nursing his grief, frequently approaching his father, but in vain.

Matters reached a crisis when Adalbert nine is a Question. Here dancing is siding, duo partly, of course, to the gen- oral oxnrius from the city. But the In contrinutta 10 me nuuuing mna. acn (conferred on a natural. zeu cugiisuiiwu.

stone may be said to bear the name of King Edward VII: movel heaven and some community a town or village or to get around this statute for of an individual Catholic. Altars to St. friend Sir Ernest e'asscl. but he failed. mrormed -ii not approve, and anys i.

hiUu happened the Lib- and l.ai,o:tt.- would follow Red-i tfiand the Bond of the Liberals, i astounding spectacle was made remarks, I ri.t that ture i i'atnek ana to est. jonn tne isaptist mark learned that a morganatic marriage had recognized to have been well won. by i been sanctioned in the his brother 1 thorough sportsmen, and it is welcomed I Oscar. It is even suggested that. e.

as likely to lead to keener comp etition at tcrm.ned not to be dictated to any longer, Henley in future. For there is no doubt A.iaihert that this year the English crews paid the i grade which Is chiefly guilty of brutal acts who compelled a soldier to climb on to the top of a wardrobe and sing, i for the merriment of his comrades, by way of punishment, the well known hymn. From High, I Cohw to Thee." i Hazing the Soldiers. ceremony at Budapest a short time a8o. -verconiirtenc As the Times i remarked a week before the regatta, they Warns the Manager.

Three months ago Mr. Astor notitled the manager of the Pall Mall Gazette and the Observer that if those papers were not made self-supporting within six months he would sell thein. The man-eer has accordingly been looking around sale had been open an hour. Mrs. Leggett, who wore a black and white striped silk, took away in a motor twelve dozen yards of tweeds for her poor.

Mrs. Robert Grosvenor (Miss Florence Padelfod of Savannah), who had a were remarkable chiefly for their lack of polish, the college coaches having appar EUGENIE REPRIMANDED BY FONTAINBLEAU GARDENER. ently uevoieu intrir mierntoii 10 worn, i On another occasion he was ordered to for a purchaser, knowing that Mr. Astor IsPEi'tAi. cabuh to the TRiBrNE.

steady sliding. remarkable gown of yellow and black crawl under a bed and chant a l.ymn called PARIS. is. Eugenie is again in Henley Regarded as a "Picnic" i with waterlilics nl amber beads, helped Out of Deepest Need I Cry to Thee." the city where she sw'ay seventeen in the world of sport Henley re- Lady Ro8Mnry L-eveson Gower. "Red Rosas" H'13 witnesses were, ot venrs as the empress of onr.

1 Other Americans there were the Count- omirae. nreuared with evidence of a far was quite capable of stopping tne pa- pers if he couldn't dispose them other- wise. A syndicate formed by L. S. A.nery.

51- formerly of the Times, Mr. Astor has de- i I of the most dutiful women of her a than etrnuous athletics, and ff9 Beatrice Mills of more damning nature; they were ready I siia'u'9i KS veura nirl iti unit li.o a of New orkl. in whita mtialln with htn raxrnlta driven to suicide by llutue i ws. 'flirted. presentment that this is her last visit.

th b'8t 1V forget-me-nots and pink roses embrot- brutalities of non-coms of physiques Leander. had not been long enough The suspension of the Pall Mall Gazette would be a loss to the I'nionist She always stops at the Hotel Contln- i iCtred around and a lovely necklace of ruined for life by the kicking? and cumngs year, pink amber crystals; Lady Randolph i and lashings of sergeants and corporals: terest has died out and you see little that is entertaining or original at Magic City or the Jardiu de I'aris. It doesn't seem possible that the enthusiasm can stay at such a fever heat during another season. BAVARIAN DUKE AGED 38, DIVORCED FROM EX-DANCER. The Duke of Bavaria, head of the house of Wiltelsbach, has just been granted his divorce after twenty years of what seemed to be rery happy married life.

The duke has always had a decided affection for the stage, to the horror of the aristocratic heads of Europe He married first the Baroness Wat-lersee, whose-success at the Iarmstadt theater was then making a great deal or talk. And a year after her death he married for the second time a young ballet dancer who went by the nam- of Antonie von Bartolf. She was 20 and he was The emperor vw known to object and all the duke's subjects lavshed at him and predicted a speedy ending to this December and May romance. But it lasted for over twenty years, and now the duke, who is 83 years old. has sued for a divorce on the grounds that his wife, who is now 43.

has presented him with a son which cannot possibly be his. The duchess contested the suit hotly, but. failing to AU ba has consoled herself witn 1 lieutenant of the VTJIlJ regiment ot vbksh the duke is the head. is an evening paper in aaii nartT. for it cntal in a suite facing the Tuillcries gardens, the scene of her most spectacular diffT--tiees of opinion among liberals on many other things that object to new taxes tome to I.i rinanctal ods and some, above all.

to Church-" aaval extravagance, and that these hi the ministerial lute led to such ie expression as the large Liberal wtention last week and the reduction Liberal majority to twenty-three. Inelari'i. strangely enough, is now Bonbond that unit's every section of Liberal party in tireat Britain and liberals swallow scores of things in order to carry home rule: "ery man of them, outside of three four cranks, joined In a representa-j? the ministry that it must count aond and them as one and indissolu-this fight. Jon Up Against Stone Wall. the point to which things at this have reached, -and Carson is up stone wall.

There is. too. a cer- in Carson's own ranks, for oat sober Knglish Tories are with his violence and with jkrilfnc and disastrous strain on alt J'al enterprise, owing to the terror Churchill, Jennie Jerome of New 0f humiliations which burned as deeply in accordance with their the offerings or IneianU and Canada. Deputies, working men. students, and even schoolboys have their part in the erection of this striking and majestic monument to the catholic spirit of France.

Only now. after all these years, is the fair fabric dominating the panorama of Paris in a state of sufficient completion for conseeration. The great bronze doors are a recent installation; the paving scarcely finished, and some of the altars bespeaking the devotion of different parts of France, are still unerected. In its present state the huge white building, under its imposing dome, has cost This was precisely the sum which Napoleon proposed to spend on his Temple of Peace. It has been the aim of those who have founded the church to address themselves to all classes of society, and the same spirit prevails today in the great Sunday services, a which from 1,000 to 2.000 men are present in the nave.

A Place of Pilgrimage. These adorators are drawn from every section of the community academicians and officers of the army and navy sit side by side with artisans, small shopkeepers, and the very poor. The Church of the Sacred Heart has no parish attached to it; it is a place of pilgrimage and scarcely a day passes without some band of pilgrims climbing the sides of the 111, which is being wrested from Bohemia to become a fashonable resort. Yoik), in a metallic blue pannier gown Into the souls of soldiers as tne welts of The Globe, another evening Tn- displays white sho was empress. 1 together to settle down into a first class crew.

The American and German eights. finely trained oarsmen of no mean cal.ber, were bonud to win against anything in the nature of muddle through tra.n-I ing and tactics, and the result has been a complete but temporary waterslide. Her lady in waiting expressed wonder ionist paper, has changed hands twice that Eugenie should care to look on the iihin a vear. anu is now i nlace. but she rerdied i- ura iioim? MliU uruv tdemarAsi.

Do not be surprised. The woman who opening over embroidered' muslin, and her sister, Mrs. John Leslie (Miss Leonls Jerome), in pale blue silk and white lace. Lady Naylor-Leyland's Romance. Society is interes ed in the rumors of a romance about Lady Naylor-Leyland (Miss Jennie Chamberlain of Cleveland.

that M. 't. liearei I am a different For tne nrst unie in me neventy-six years there is dead. ilved it is reported that last year Mr. Astor Henley regatta was instituted the son.

king to the Fontainbleau palace, upon Challenge cup finals and the restoration of hich her husband, nnla na" uul oeiween lit i weas none of which was British. ii nun, is i i )i iiririsn riding whips had cut Into their bodies. There is nothing particularly new about these things. They have been going on for years. When 1 first came to Germany, ten years ago, Maltreatment of Soldier In 063 Cases," or words to that effect, was the commonest of headlines in the newspapers.

Much has been done meantime to abolish barracks misery, thanks mainly to the energetic initiative of the kaiser. Yet it would be hoping almost for the superhuman to Imagine that in an organization of 800,000 men, with TS.OOO non-commissioned officers, brutality will ever be entirely wiped out. nnp. fnntAiia ia Th American lost $250,000 on the Pall Mall Gazette and the Observer, the biggest annual loss he has made on tlie properties. Waldorf May Get a Peerage.

The senior Waldorf Astor. having been OIIC i T. 1 In Veill. BUII12, sne r.u in America 1183 llltCU IHC and was checked by a gardener, ho e- lenge cup and England has recovered the she has received nearly seventy offers manded to know her name. I nolo cup-so that on both sides there is of marriage front Pminnt men.

and i.omethina to fight for another day and an -it Is true that the beautiful chatelaine That's not your name." the eardener incentive to tne Kina or Keen, clean nvai- naturalized before his sorrwas -i. youns man Is eligible for the peerage and is quite likely to get one ultimately for political services plus Ms contribu- tiona to the party funds. 1 of Hyde Park House has been beset with offers of marriage from a member of a distinguished Roman family. said. You are an old lady who ought to ry which makes for good fellowship and 1 war.

The same pressure cornea en from Belfast, where fatlurea eiuien trade are becoming painfully a good understanding. J. Q. P. Bland.

know better. Don't do it again..

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