New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1905-02-19 [p 3] · NEW-YORK DAILY TRIRTWE.SUNDAY. FEBBUABY 10....

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-• -- NEW- YORK DAILY TRIRTWE. SUNDAY. FEBBUABY 10. 190 S. Statue of Aphrodite on Exhibition at the National Arts Civ 1 In the centre of the galleries of the National Arts Club, in 'West 34th-st.. stands an Aphrodite carved from the ancient marble of Faros. Tt is said that, just as the Venus of Melos was found hidden in a BEUEVED TO BE A PEAXITELES. RcKim<=T)t. of New-York, Captain U. L. Foster, to attend the inauguration of President Roosevelt In Washington on March 4. in the place of the bat- talion of the "•! Regiment of Engineers, of New- York. The 23d decidi l not to make the trip, o*-'- ini? t<> a failure to secure quarters for the stay in Washineton. ANCIENT GREEK STATUE OP APHRODITE. BY PRAXITELES. . Carved in Parian marble. The property of Fred- erick Linton. (Copyright by' Frederick Ltnton.) In the Quiet of tKe Winter Evening the Library proves us right to the important Room In the production of pieces where comfort, meaning and personality »re stfongly gathered, we point to out reproductions of some me Colonial furaittire Sofia. Tables. Chairs and Settles bearing thit mdes^ibable charm of reincment xad quiet purpose. Grand Rapids Furniture Company (Incorporated) 34th Street, West, Nos. 155-157 ••MINUTE rrOM BROADWAY.* 1 I Fifth A, Auction I I Avenue <OO Rooms ! \u2666 23S \S " ¥/ mi. B. <4> 4. FIFTH .WE.. xiy NORMAN". \u2666 4. Near *sih St. >sr Auctlonerr. > l announcement| \u25a0J OF TUE : IMPORTANT PUBLIC SALE. | t COLLECTION OF J MR.S.YCSHIDA 4. OF KIOTO. JAPAN- •\u2666\u25a0 \u2666 coiirpasiNa \u25a0*\u25a0 Japanese Pottery. I \u2666 Chinese Porcelains, * \tood Carvings* > 2 Bronzes, Lacquers, •\u2666• \u2666 Japanese Prints, Screens, etc., etc £ i ON FREE VIEW. : \u2666 Mod. Jt Tues.. Feb. 2T & 2^. _^. £a!« takes placa \u2666 I WED., THUKS., FRI. AND SAT^ X X Mar-:-! 1. :. .- sad 4. v * \u25a04- AT I P. M.EACH DAT. 1 4- *** ++++*•** »\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u2666 \u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»»»» \u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666•y»^-»»» \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0»-»\u25a0\u2666\u2666»\u25a0*-»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666-\u2666• The reports of the exhaustion of the empire fey the. war ar« not confirmed by Russian mer-. chants visiting London. One of these, coming from the Odessa district, describes Southern J;i:?f:s as unusually prosperous, with .big: crops, \u25a0nillmlnislji <l trade and no lack of labor for. «.gricuiture or manufacturing. Two requisitions have been made for reservists at Dum. The number of men sent to Manchuria 4s invariably Insignificant in proportion -to the entire popular lion. This well informed merchant laughs at the idva that the empire is emptied of fighting- men or reduced to financial extremity. He as- serti that scow inn'- have felt the burdens oft war In tin loss of,trade, but that Kharr J<ov. Ki<?\". Odessa and other southern towns are thriving with good tunes and Jiot showing the f c test sig of exhaustion. Optimism like this offer*! a striking, contrast, to the pessimism with which the press "cdrresporidents 'describe the revolt of all tssea in Poland against executions" en ma?^, the renewed outbreak of the strike; in ?t. Prtersburg on a larg^s<?>^e an<s. the con- o>j< t ot the Moscow crowd 3,1.-1be F c^ne of fhe sssafflnatlcn. v lierjp (\u0084-j-( \u0084-j-a i e 7nen flipped' ttheirr r 3i3n<J~ in ihe blood of the prand duke and rrotsaj thernVelves. Th* English papers are less <-ijTsi. i j^.ff;i than th**;;French in denouncing the criminal folly of the governing classes, yet the v'zarV manifesto is printed -day ivith the Ji*»adline. "The Imperial Coward AakSL^for *svm-» pathy." English opinion, viith ill Its traditional «-on?crvatirin .-md horror of assassina.tion. is nlrTt-iy as (sympathetic with the cause of po- lijical rrvolutioii as it was with Italian unity v.h-si ..7^7zlni .f.r-, here and Garibaldi was TiV-icom^ i:i London as a hero. ' '•; imifHii \u25a0 - K,'Mnong Irie'frtllowert of tile <;<>\u25a0 ernnient. Mr. Balfour'may be weary of the t>tirden? of )<=>^<iorship, but he has never been Jn better fighting form. Sum 1 has he been nwc adroit and plausible than in the opening «!^;.st<-«: <>f the new session, and In spite of the visor of Mi As^uith's attack and the re- <i'i.-".j majority in the division on the fiscal qvstSAn •.;,:.,, isi<= have, ti^eh "braced up a- ar« confident that the Government will sur- vi- ijir- session. Pride may go before a fall and: the Unionists be the victims of overconfl- deuce. but they are talking boastfully of playing the game straight along, til .August, and await- ing tho report of the royal commission on the redistribution of seals, possibly a year hence, before ordering a general election. Their calcu- lations may I"" upset by :i coalition of the Lib- erals and Nationalists on the Irish question next week cr by the subsequent defection of the tariff reformers, but they are more sanguine of Fijrc?fs than they were last year. Mr. Cham- berlain and Mr. Balfour apparently are working tog-ether In a spirit of loyally; and. dissensions on the fiscal question are less serious than for- merly. Th<~ Opposition is not confident that the Goi-ernment- <'«»--»«>— *»yt*et--<3uring" 1 the: -•sisricftir a id strife between the factions may be followed by a renewal of j»alous>. L<ord Hugh Cecil has made ihe most brilliant speech of the week. Vie 1f Mr. Chamb»rlain'« ni<»st-.j(3arigeroTj-B opponent, He has shown that the Unionist free traders rsn render effectlvij Bfx^ST to th cause byrkfep- ire '.he. present Goverifnieht in power. This Iro- r-lies fighting" against tiroi »at*4 attacking Mr. Chamberlain in the most vulnerable point.. London has been brJshtehHJ up by tile re"-" "penlnc of Tarliament and the first Court.* -The lat'tr function was mainlyrdiplomatic and offl' <!sl. t ith rmall \u25a0-•\u25a0,',; eipeles and not .many brid<-s and ••->tfs 4. The rri4C»SS. Eva of P.attenberg; Lady " Eileen WeU&icv.'- ' ajid th» «se'jghU-r of Lord Algernon Oordon- Lerrpx- were prominent vat .tho .weekend parties whirh -fol- lowed tlie Court^ sn6 Jenkins. i-oncludes that the The Bngiish press comments upon ti\e as . —ssjusltiiii of <lrand Duke- Strgius sjbs cool rrrfunctory, •it ij, -i»«srribr,i as a deplorable crime, but not ii a surprising incident, since those •wh'o'shodf «3o\vn unarmed crow ds of work- ire people in the streets must be prepared for I sudden t of retaliation.... White there Is no sympatli tlie MwaSins. there ?/a m^rk^d. contrast v*;^fr. I TH<»!pfeFent r eixprespion'of Eng. Ush opinion and those called out vh*>n Presi- dent Carnot. President McKinley, the Italian King and th<? Empress of Austria ere \u25a0 mur- c.r-e-Sj foully The doom of Grand Duke Sergius if quietly discuss a.= the natural sequel to the barren police rtpi'tJsian which has 'been sub- Ktltut*d for political refer— >. The risk of £»']- <3«?n death by bomb or dagger, is the price autocracy no* pays for the privilege of reign- in^ by \u25a0riolcnco.' ' ! NEWS OF TWO, CAPITALS. AFFAIRS IX . LONDON. fc-j 8— Manchuria Safer for Grand Dukes . than V r Stronger. l <Fr»^i«» to \u25a0 be N-v-Tork Trihun« by Frcnrh ,- ah > , (Copyright, isos v- Th, rribwM Assoelai ) London. Feb. IS.-Th« startling report .that th* Japanese have thrown a Ftrons? force of raiders considerably to the north of Moukden is not yet cot»«rme<; While the open weather has set in rcmarkablj rarls:. it is highly improbable that a turning operation so Jiajardoys! has b»en un<jcrt3k»n.>c that) .«v4.!ry 'hiv> 'been' t-'nt fo fr»r nortii. IHeia Marsha f-ftyama'-fs massing guns against in* Russian ceqtre and slowly rreparice, for a final assault upon the Fhaho Intrench^! line, but the campaign will r-«""omp aefrnsiv* \u25a0\u25a0' f v !- aen^rai ' Kampatlrhi is driven f*v»m l sVsXllsfpA Th-ro 77 f a rutnulativ*" rviderro that the camarilla «f grand dukes is plotting acaiast g<insgal IfurnsjaHilii an.i 6 rek- Ing to displace, him \u25a0with on* of their o\« n num- ber. Majicnuri* crtainly is a F«fpr retreat for Srand d'JkeF than Moscow or Warsaw. HORNER'S FURNITURE The Standard in quality and style. Fa mad for its High Character, Distinctive Individuality and Price Attractiveness. Factors which apply to all lines, whether for the Drawing Room, Parlor, Bedroom, Dining Room, Library or Hall. A stock without equal in its com- pleteness as to variety of designs, woods and finishes. Also UNEQUALLED IX THE VALUES IT OFFERS IN HIGH CLASS FURNITURE. R. J. HORNER (El CO.. Furniture Maker* nd Importers 61, 63. 65 West 23d Street. fcrlnir of men's long overcoats and music at Ist- ter.-::nR prices. ?AKS & CO.. Broadway, snj t.» *«h «<t.. will of- fer to-nii>rrow some re<!iietii>r.* In itbjhmls suits and in rain font*! Thry a 1? \u25a0> offer women* fur» ar«l f'.ir garments at r«*i!ni *"d price.'', and call attention to spring outei garments for women. They will. pla»>- on sal" tr>-m>r«>* some watsts in white Japan*** silk .md Jn white In-vn and lin^n. JOURNEAY* BURNHAM. Flatbush-ave.. Brook lyn, 3ar.or.ncc a sal**, nt moiicmtr rricrj. of n*.a»- tresses, c>nif»^rt3b!^i« b^d.-ipread.-'. pillows, tlanktt* pillowcases, sheets. Oriental cou.:. 1 ! covers and tron telescope coucb-s.- ««'!<• \»J)at you w%at«i la*» Sunday ytv <SM art rt-J la the Xittu> Ad». at the PevpW. iTy •gate u> »la.-. It say b? t&exc An Agent of the Massachusetts S. P. C. A. Shoots Himself. Lemuel B. Burrell, of No. NO Cedar-st.. New- Bedford, Mass., committed suicide in his state- room on the Sound steamer Chester W. Chapin. on the trip of the boat to this city Friday night. When the steamer tied up at the pier. No. 43 North River, yesterday morning, the body was found. A revolver lay near it. He was an agent for the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animal?. Th- man boarded the steamer at. New-London. Conn' Captain McDonald of the steamboat de- clared yesterday that Burrell was one of the jolll- e«<t men aboard the steamer on the tni>, buying many drinks and tipping the waiters liberally, but that he drank little himself. New-Bedford, Mas.- reb. lv-Mr.Borreu was an agent for the Society for the Prevention of I to Animals. He had prosecut* »«• m Southeastern Massachusi tts and was a famlliav figure in the court?. OFFERINGS AT THE STOKES. HEARN, West 14th-st. and West ISth-st.. offers reductions in Irish point curtains, bed sets, women's cloaks, tailored suits and waists, new embroideries, blankets, silk comfortables, women's nightdresses skirts and chemises, and carvers, meat sheer? and shears Offered also are Smyrna run at one-third off and upholstery fringes and eiderdown garments at interesting prices. Attention is called to the value? to-morrow in wash dress fabrics. EHRICH BROTHERS. 6tii-ave. and 23d-st., call attention to their lace robe?. Irish crochet collars, collar and cuff sets, laces and Insertions, Valen- ciennes laces and lace alloven. Renaissance lace sctrfs centrepieces, squares and tidies, and some lunch cloths trimmed with hand made Cluny laces, with Irish linen centres. They are offering printed foulard silks and nrcvhe silk gauze at interesting prices, and some values in pongees and in colored messalhie lisine. STERN BROTHBKsv West Sd-St., will .-b...v im- portations In the cloak departments to-morrow; also sosac - for ''arly spring wear. They also announce foi and call att< n ion to offpri tation of sum. l< ments \u25a0 - suits 'special val and a. - . ABRAHAM A STRAUS. Brooklyn call att#n!icn to a sale vf •carfpuvs and brooches, and to an vi- LORD & TAYLOR. Broadway. 20th-st.. Sth-ave.. lDth-st.. offer at Interesting prices embroidered l!ncn waist patterns, tablecloths, napkins, towels, decorative linens, tilled comfortables ana ÜB.^3.U 8.^3. LATIMER & SONS' COMPANY. Fulton- ?t. and Flatbush-ave.; Brooklyn, is exhibiting bureaus, white, ehainel beds, women's mahogany desks, bookcases. library tables, rockera and Ho- rn.'in chairs-, quartered oak ch!n:i closets. .-Uik-- boards. <linii-K chairs, extension, library toilet tables; also some ciuftonijsris arvl brats teds. SIMPSON-CKAWPORL' COMPANY. 6th-aveC; lEth-st. to 20th-Bt., c.i"s attention to :t sa!e of lace robes for to-niorrow, v.!.c:i some women's slJk shirtwaist suits will also be on sale. Announce- ment la a'.^o made of a sale of rues :»t very inter- esting pi '.<\u25a0• and of a new shipment >>f furniture. R. H. MA< v .v CO.. Broadway, at Gth-.iv.-.. 2Uh- st. to 3T.th-st.. offer trimmtd millinery, muslin un- derwear, sllk.-t, lares, embroideries, children's, misses and Infants' w<:•:•. rew suits, skirts r-ul dresses for women, wash «!r>v»«i fabric*, furniture, womtn'H handbag*, framed picture*. United Stairs flairs, curtains ami whit-- goo»ls Kor Tuesday they offer fancy me*h vetUngK, women's waist.- and Jack- eta, bo> - : Russian blouse uultn. "N<>. 'S' tooth powder, tapestry couch cover*, table covers, fo!d- iiiß iron ta!>lr* and othvr article*. HUGH GORDON XIACWILLIAM. N< w-i;.>.-h«>Ur\ annauiiffs that first class stores are ordering a largo supply of the "MacMlHaro"! .«u.-Tcr.«ter3. BONWIT. TELL.EH A.- CO . West Sfcl-st.. have f>n sale a collection of tailored and sctnl-talloreU suits for spring wear: also ?on:«" chiffon t.iff^ta tailorfd «uit». nnw pure Unen suits, l^oac or closely ntt«Hi topcontp. f till lensrth rnin coats, tailored nvlklni; <«kirti< and Mine eiik and llns«ri» waist* Vn adranc* spring styles. standing around here for? Why don't you help these people to s^er on the cars?" Something will have to be done very soon to re- lieve this state of affairs, as it seems to be intoler- able. Iam going to "put it up" to the railway people. SUICIDE ON A SOUND STEAMER. Nearly twenty thousand good Republicans will take part in the parade on March 4. Considerable excitement was furnished a few days ago by the announcement that the inau- gural committee had received a letter from the chief of Tammany Hall requesting a place in line for about a thousand stalwart Tammany braves. All Washington was in a furor over the prospect of Tammany marching in honor of the President, and one sage official suggested that a corps of insanity experts should be sent to the metropolis immediately to conduct a wholesale examination of the members of New- York's . leading Democratic organization. It turned out. however, , that, one overenthusiastic. Democrat up- in New- York had written to the committee ."suggesting" that a Tammany dele- gation in the parade would add to the general attractiveness of the show. The "suggestion" was laughed to scorn even by the inaugural offi- cials, who are looking for novel features. Tam- many marching in a Republican, procession would be too extraordinary even for this parade. Pennsylvania takes the lead in sending politi- cal clubs to take part in the festivities, having representation of twelve distinct organizations. New-York is second, with eight, and Ohio comes third, with seven. Maryland "will send five clubs for " the. parade, . and New-Jersey four, while Massachusetts, Delaware, West Virginia. Indi- ana and Illinois will send one organization each. It is probable that a dozen mora will be added, bringing the approximate total up to sixty. Besides these regularly organized political club", there will be several independent bodies, not strictly political, whose members .want to march just, for-the fun of the thing and to do wHat they can to add to the success of* the day. Firs* among this class may mentioned the mem- bers of the Tennesse -legislature, who have char- tered a special train and will swoop down on Washington en masse on the evening of. March 3. Governor. McMillin was- invited to join, but respectfully declined.- This will be the first time in the history of the country that aA'Sta.'te legis- lature has attended an inauguration. Tennes- see will hlso be represented by 'six long, lean and angular" musicians, as they describe them- selves, who will march down PennsylVania-ave., keeping step with their own music, played on Fix violins each over three 'hundred years of age. The musicians are over six feet two inches tail, but just what particular difference this will make to the inauguration no "one seems to' know. However, it will add to the vaudeville. From New-York the largest organization wiil be the New-York City Republican- Club, com- posed of 1,000 marchers. There will be the Conkling Unconditional from I'tica, who were to have, had the right of line In the civic divis- ion, but relinquished that honor to the New- York City Republicans. The iJncbndittonals will be the escort of honor, nevertheless, and as such will lead the civic parade. Two Italian clubs are coming the Italian American Republicans and the Central Italian Republicans. They will be followed by Hungarian Hussars in Kossmh hats from New-York City, and the Burgesses, from Albany. The Ulster County and Hamilton Republicans also will be in line. Of Pennsylvania's twelve political organiza- tions which will be in Washington on. the event- ful day perhaps the most renowned is the Amer- Icus Club, from Pittsburg. The members arc all supposed to be wealthy, and <'<* they have leased the entire floor in one of the leading hotels for inauguration week the suspicion may be well founded. . They will come down -<x> strong with a band, \u25a0\u25a0md will be in charge of Major H W. Melntosh. With their red. white and blue umbrellas and white high hats, they are sure to attract great attention. Other Pennsylvania organizations will be the Young Men's Republican Tariff Club, also of Pittsburg. and the Union Republican Club of Philadelphia. , _ \u0084 New-Jersey will have in line the i< rellng- huysen Lancers, of Newark, With a band of thirty-five nieces; the Union County Republicans and the Phelps Guards, from Pateraon, with a band of twenty pieces. The Garret A. Hobart Republican Club, of Newark, also has signified its intention to attend. Maryland will lea,d off with the Union League of Baltimore. The other Maryland organiza- tions '.. mi <>° cadets from St. .John's anil Mary- ana Agricultural colleges, the Montgomery County Marching Club and the National Junior Republic Army, of Annapolis Junction. Thi young >.'\u25a0 iTs Republican Club of Wil- mington Will be the only organization from Del- aware. The students from Harvard will be ill" civic representation of Massachusetts, and a delegation or Spanish War Veterans will com? from Indian i the .home State of the Vice-Presi- dent-elect, it is o strange fact that not until a few days ago had any application been received from either civic or military organizations in Indiana: The newspapers took up the cry. and within a w<»ek two- applications-were tiled, on.- by the Spanish War Veteran« an<l on* by the 3d Indiana Infantry. Illinois will bfi represented by the De^atur Cadets, and West Virginia by the cadettF from Sli<»plicrd Colleff. at Shepherda- DESIGNATED FOR INAUGURATION. Albany, F-b.IS.-AdJ'itant General Henry, to-rtay isEued a *:*:al order ACiifAatlßf Company E. mil Corps of cadets, V. S. A. Brigade midshipman. U B. N. Cadets l T nlted States Elevenu« Marine Service. Second Battalion Engineers, V S. A. Company B. Signal Corpu. I*. 8. A. One regiment Infantry, consisting of two bat- talions of th* :.th Infantry find ono battalion of thf sth Infant!-- One provisional regimer.t of T'nit^.i States < oast Artillery. >>:• battalion Porto r:ico Provisional RegimenC One battalion PhHlppin* Scouts. One battalion United States Marines. One brigade l"nit*o States seamen. Third Battalion, Field Artillery. 17. 8. A. Flrsl Sauadron, Tth T.'nit. <] States Cavalry. Brigade of National Guard of tlv District of Co- lumbia, consisting <-t Engineer Corps company. Signal Corps <\u25a0 mpany. 2d Regiment Infantry. Ist Regiment Infantry. Ist Separate Battalion Infan- try,' Ist Field Battery, Naval Battalion. Alabama— Con.pany X, 3d Regiment. Connecticut— Company A. .'d Infantry- Delaware— lst Infantry. Illinois—First Company, 2d Rattali' n. Indiana 3d Regiment. Maine—Company M. Ist Infantry. Maryland—Troop A, eecort f<>r Governor, 4th Regiment, sth Regiment. Massachusetts— Company K. 2d Infantry: < oni- pany •'. fith Infantr--: «'V.mranics C aiv] I^. Bth In- fantry; Boston Heavy Artillery, Fifth Division Naval Brigade. Battery F. New-Jersey— Companies X and 1-. 3d Regiment; Ist Troop, Cavalry. New-York— Company H. 2d Regiment (46th Sepa- r.-,t. Company); i/ompanj I, -•! Begimenl <:2<i Separate i ompany); cnmpanv X (Wth Separate Company); 2"d Regiment. Stli P^ginient. 13th Regi- ment. Squadron .A Brooklyn Sa\*al Bngaiif- North Carolina— Wilmington Light Infantry. Ohio—Company X sth Infantry: Company K. r a Infantry: Tro.ip a. Cavalry; battalion <•'. engineers. Pennsylvania One provisional brigade, consisting of Ist Regiment of Inf.mtry. from First Brigade: Ist Regiment of Infantry, from Second Hrigade; lst Regiment of infantry, from Third Brigailf. Rhod" Island—Troop \ Ist Squadron, Cava.ry. Virginia -Mecklenburg Guard rulpep^r Minute Men, Richmond Blues, Petersburg Grays. Com- panies A. B. C *nd E. 70th Regiment; 71st Regi- ment. Company I. 70th Regimeni Governors of tli«- following named States and r»r- rttories, Hccompanied by staff officers, have also announced their intention to participate i:i ti In /mgiiral ceremonies: Connecticut. lowa, Louisiana, Main". Maryland. Michisnu. Nebraska. New Mex- ico, New-York Ohio, Pennsylvania Rhode Island, Y^rmonf and Virginia. Brigade of cadets. Arrange Practically Completed Features of the Big Parade. [FHOM THE TRIBfNT BCREAU.I Washington, Feb. IS.— With two we?ks inter- vening before inauguration day. the arrange- ments for the celebration are practically com- pleted, with the exception, of course, of the thousand and one details which come up at the last moment to the perplexity and discomfort of the committee having the programme in charge. The plans for the inaugural ceremonies are now 50 far advanced as to give satisfaction to those directing the work, and they give prom- ise of a far more elaborate display on March 4 than has been undertaken in any similar event in the nation's history. Arrangements for the ceremony at the Capitol, the parade and the inaugural ball have all been completed, and there will be a rehearsal of important parts of the ceremonies on Washington's Birthday, with a view to putting on the finishing touches. The chairman of th-» Committee on Military Organization has submitted 'he following order of marching for the different bodies which will take part: \u25a0 INAUGURATION PLANS. "it r»nliv diPßra^eful. The .row ding ;m<i rush- inc HP- Dartieularly hsr.l on women and frail n»ople \\> have thirteen polio'n^n ther- trying J n reeulate matters, and they have an awful job. It )s»k< «« three strong policeman in in^ri and unload a en \u25a0 to that '!i n people trylnc to get off arid on will not tear themselves to piece*. Every now an.l then tome latryer will apr^ir and order the notiremen to ke«P " th*ir hands off the pe Opl».O Pl». -Voii ar« purlie servants/ these lawvprs will say. •and yon are not paid to «o th«i work of the rall- ro-d corapan--." If the pollcem-n follow these *uirßestian*. seme oth»r brand of cittsen will com* Mff and exclaim; "What •*• you big, husky inea Calls ' Conditions at the Manhattan End of Williamsburg Bridge Intolerable. Commissioner MeAdoo spent an hour on Friday watching the crowds Btnigglini to board cars at the Manhattan .nd of »hi VVllllanisburg Bridge. in ,-. ii i \u25a0• HI hi said yesterday: DISGRACEFUL. SAYS MR. M'ADOO. I am gratified to know Brown has adopted the hone: system regarding her athletics. \u25a0 - No college should adopt rules rejected by other colleges, for that would place the college so doing in a class by itself. Dr. Faiince said. In ; ari : As to athletics. I am Inclined to the view that play in college is becoming a business, rather than' a recreation from study. There is a tendency to professionalism In colleges which provoke* rivalry, and a spirit of commercialism at once enters Into the test. President Kaunce spoke of th« Rood results of the tiding at fraternity nouses for colleges, but naid he would like to have the two lower classes remain in dormitories, rather than k<> to the fra- ternity houses. President Kaunce said he noticed a demand for technical education, to the abuse of wide educa- tion. He said proper preparation In many cases was omitted Play in Colleges Becoming a Business. Says Fresident Faunce. Xhi •\u25a0 ftual dinner ol th B own Alumni Associa- tion of New-York City waa held last night at the University Club. 1 wen :\u25a0\u25a0 guests and in^m- i.^:-.-- present. » .uun-l Norman S. Dike, president lation, occupied the chair. The other Colonel Dike, wen l Fauno "i" the university, Cora Keating o f ri. Department of W H M EUroy, Jausen Wendell and Colonel H. Anthony Said ' !olon< l Dike: BROWN ALUMNI HAVE DINNER. Washington Feb. 18.—Members of the North Carolina delegation hi Congress to-day conferred with -i number of members of the delegation from South iYnkota as to a controversy between tho two States regarding recovery on North Carolina bonds. Senators Simmon arid rman were Informed by Senators Ga.mble and icittredga that South Dakota has. npVintention of purchasing any additional North Carolina bonds»*as Governor Glenn rf that State cmod to apprehend in his letter to mem- bers «>£ the delegation. In explanation of th*- at- tituu< of South Dakota toward .•? sister Stair, in becoming a. r cfedltor through the purchase of North Carolina's repudiated bonds, it was said to-day that the action In b'ij Ing "'•'' boi . was taken by T -, 10 South Dakota L'-?i?laturc several yens ago. The South Dakot 1 Sena to declared that their Btateiwould not use th*> proceeds of the. sale _ of the bonds it now holds in order to purchase andi- tion.'il bonds This assurance ha: b'«n tfrlegrapheu by Senator Simmons to Governor Glenn. Assurance-; Given by South Dakota to North Carolina. WILL NOT BUY MORE BONDS Tube to South Ferry and Perhaps Under Hudson Open by That Time. It was reported yesterday thai the Broadway e\- of the subwaj to the South Ferry would be open bj June 1. it will be open to tlie R St. station fwobablj within sis weeks. The trains through the Hudson River tunnel will protmbly begin t'> ran about th>-- sun.- time that the Broadway extension is thrown opon t.> the public Experimental trains are iow \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0• ng run through th* submarii I ib< to t> st the road. BROADWAY SUBWAY BY JUNE I. grotto and the -Hermes by Praxiteles was found s.mon? bricks, as If it had been concealed in a wall which finally fell in ruins, so this statue was discovered bricked up in a niche— according to some In Asia .Minor and to others in Greece or Sicily. The statue is believed to be Greek, of the period following Phidias; in fact, a Venus Geuitrix. by Praxiteles, and the woman after whom it was modelled the celebrated Phryne. Sl»?nor E/ttor] Pain, for thirty-five yes curator of the Naples Museum, visited the National Arts Club yesterday, and spent more than four hours examining tV statue. After examining the sworn statements of many famous sculptors who have pronounced the statue to be a genuine Praxiteles, he gave it as his opinion that the marble wits in- disputably genuine ancient Greek marble, and that the work was undeniably that of Praxiteles. In his opinion, the statue, which has -been labelled Aphrodite, is m.- of Phryne, mentioned in sundry ancient chronicles. Mr. Lincoln, the owner of the statue, said last night that he wished the Venus or Phryne to be placed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.- He said that ,T. Pierpont Morgan had some time ago asked that th" >t:itu-> be placed on exhibition there, but that General dl Cesnola had objected, as that would have given the statue so great a value as to make It Impossible for the Museum to buy it. The statue has been In storage for over twelve years la a Trh-ave. storage warehouse, " The Prussian Uhlan uniforms which ma a sensation on the Parisian stage some years ago at The Theatre Libre, in Guy de Maupassant's play, "Mademoiselle Fifi. ' and which were seen again last November in the drama entitled ••Discipline" at the Theatre Antoin<\ have once nvare scored a success in the French adaptation of ' Franz Beyeriein's dramatic comedy "Der letpfenstreich," "La. Ret rake, "'"which was pro- duced by Manager Pore! at the Vaudeville Theatre on Wednesday night. It is the most effectively 'staged play brought, out this season: the court martial scene alone is sufficient to insure a" lojsg: run. Parisian*' women protest a<r.iinst -the brutal denouement wherein the .vet- eran Volkhardt. like a modern Virginlus,. slays his dishonored daughter. Parisian women, un- like tiT ir Mew-York sisters, do not demand that Volkhardt should kill his daughter's Ffdueery th' young lieutenant, but demand that the two lovers should marry each other. Thus rive: -Aon.r. .of ( ;<"] ni.my. Arix'rica-and France each have their own -characteristic and different Ideas if the proper denouement. The play Is the most decided popular success In Paris and obtains renewed Inter owing to the analogous flraina.'ln 1 real life'v.-hloh Just' ocv*ur.red. # a,« the garrison 'town of V'enion, where a nou-T'-oinmls- stoned ofllff r >•-!.\u25a0 id r<y shopped hin lieutenant's head open with a sabre m the street in front of \u0084 public •..••'• for having seduced his young wife. ' Masßeiiet's new opera. "Cherubin." brought i,u» on Monday.at -M*>» tf ' '•'!''•\u25a0'. ' •\u25a0'iit:iir,f a .jium- ,, r |. of rt ttrioiw, catrihhig aJrn,.and.4n-tbo judg- ment !oT!! oT! ihusica! , -i it,, \u25a0>• in' Ihc most- fascinating and sprightly of that (.oniposers lighter works. The American soprano, Miss Man Garden; who "creAted" the part t>f Chjprubla, scored a most striking Buccipsa a**'s Blngfr'anil actress and haH once more'Rivcn 'j-iwf of herrenia rka hie ;< rt Ist Ie tpinn/ryrnent. >•••\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 _ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*",' '' '\u25a0' THEATRE , PLOT TURCHASE REPORTED. (UcoViiVlVC to a r<-p"rt. :> th*atrsJ nwy be built on a clot xt Wth-«ii ar.-i Proidwa;\ , parrel \jib*M4 4i ,-»mo-- V. sKni. It. ''-'»/• \u25a0- frontage, r>f about. IS >•/\u25a0/ "n t** cast side of Broadway. j-.iFt eou h of :l.i :/) a»3 '\u25a0«««<•« Widi another Bnofparce! ICAii let*. V U.iwi4.U>:i» the deal to carry out the th'/at re" prof? ct is nearly perfected. GOOD 6AWBSMAN.: # slnoy. a-AflK.- ai"l read) for bu*in«*». » Utt!«> A«J. ol tlu» I'ecpl*." E2Jr!«T M '> . M. d^ F.iieiiietc?. s^n nf ih«» ]?,te French Con- trolfer General in Egypt, and brother of Mme. Bompant, wife of ;he French Ambassador to B;issia. if head of th<" r;1:^1 :^- Chartreuse organiza- tion, hut nearly all the shares ar« held by the monks themselves. Amateurs fond of the Chartreuse liqueurs will rejoice to learn that by the assistance of, M. Rouvier, Minister of Finance, the Carthusian monks will shortly return to Chartreux to re- occupy their former 'haunts and devote them- selves to their old Industry, which caused such prosperity to themselves and to the neighbor- hood. This miracle will be accomplished by the monks .transforming themselves into an indus- fr.ia] company and conforming to the rcrjuirc- .mVnts of "the French association laws. They return purely in a lay capacity, and •will make tiwmfij Oi:irireu<-r Trqu^uY/wTireTiTrTTas now bf-en proved cannot be made either at their newly acquired property In Spain, near Tarra- gona, nor by the French -government chemists at Chartreux. of the same quality, flavor and t^ouquei as before th^ir expulsion from .Daupjjinc. •• -* Asspssinatioji Misfortune for Russian •ra<.bW Liberalism. (.=r*c«al to The N<-x-York Tribune by PVenrh Cable.) . (Copyright, 1808, by Th» Tribune Asso-lation.> Paris, Feb. IS.— The assassination of the Grand Duke Sergius is regarded in France, especially by the «xti«me Radicals and Socialists, as a ;.sr.eat..,niisfartune\ t"r Russian Liberalism by alienating public sympathy at home and abroad, and a*; likely to provoke still more rigorous re- actionary measures. MM. Jaures, Gerault, Richard Clemenceau and other Radicals, while ( d«j>leEing t'io. report to dynamite, say the day, \u25a0nevertheless;- is' sure to rome when the Czar, like other European sovereigns, must make conces- sions to democracy. M. Clemenceau declares the f^nly remedy for the Russian malady i? a fen- grains of^i'b'priy.''' 1 "' To-morrow ends the sixth of the seven years of,. Emile Loubet's tenure of office as President ofthe F'retich Republic On Wednesday a group of- parliamentary friends called at the Elysee Palace and expressed a wish that. Emile Loubet should present his candidacy for a second term as President. L'nhesitatjingly and in the most categorical and emphatic language he declared that under no circumstances would he accept ,suich candidacy, and signified his intention to retire to private life at the expiration of his sev<»n years, on February 18. 1906. It is possible that when the President retires he may be induced to enter the Senate and enjoy dignified repose at the Luxembourg Palace. A personage who has been a lifelong friend and confidant of.M. Loubet assures the. Tribune cor- respondent that the President longs for the quiet, privacy and culture, of family life. His eldest son, Paul Loubet, is already looking for a suita- ble apartment for his father and the family on the left bank of the Seine, intending to remain a portion of each year m Pnris until the education of his youngest son. Emile Loubet. jr., now a bright, intelligent la.l of ten, shall be completed. President Loubet ta in excellent health, gets up early every morning and takes walks entirely unattended in the streets of Paris. He did this even during the Nationalist excitement, when there were frequent threads of personal injury preferred. TOPICS IX PARIS. gaycty of th# capital Is a tradition of the past, when there, were no motor cars. The town shows remain, j»re . un|^|}ially brilliant. Among them is Duveen'ai fxli{i.|tion of Chinese porcelain for the benefit of the Artists 1 Fund collection. , It is valued at $B*|ooo, and is ri- valled only by Mr Morgan's in New-York and Mr. Salting's in England. The groups of enam- •MlPd vai;( -^S lf t!)«-. peve;;^cntb -,-and eighteenth centurießi. represent" the h*Kh«*st -development rf the art of Chines: potters and painters. Five tall black jars, with floral and butterfly decora- tion. lik«v the famous* set in the Metropolitan Museum/ New- York, are the choicest treasure, but the Hawthorn jar. an exquisite set of egg- Fhell plates, numerous examples of powder blue, peach blossom, rose^^green an ,j re«j glare rival the splendor of the blacks, It is an altogether \u25a0'tniqiK display *^f rthfnese .craftsmanship and decorative art ThereSs also a renUr^able show of water colors at the Agnfw Galleries, with five examples of old masters of the English school and good drawings by living' painters. Hi? thTitiv..^ ar«-v.-Mhnut <«her novelty than Sutrcs farciyal comedy. "Mollentrave on Women." at the at. James's. This is virtually a one part play, which enables Eric Lewis to delight his audiences with the most artistic ex- ample of comedy acting witnessed in a long period. Butro's technique is French and the Underplot intricate, bur the comedy is clear, highly original and Intensely amusing. Dr. Torrey and Mr. Alexander continue to fill the six circles at the Albert Hall at every re- vival service. The critics insist that there is no revival fervor, but there are always ten spectator*. Dr. Torrc-y his ronvinced many that his views are harrow by condemning rh<-ai reding:, dancing, eardplaying and smoki- ng.v Even the Nonconformists are chilled since they recall Mr. Bpurgeon's pipe. Dr. Torrey pre>ach«»s unequally, but always with solemn earnestness. Tlia American revivalists arc sat- !Ffi- i with the results of their work as shown In the after meetings and conversions. I. N. F. WHY WASH . CUT THE : . : : STOMACH? When MANA CEA. the MAX-GA-NESK; ICataral Spring, Water; Simple, Tasteless, Abso- lutely Harmless (Not a purgative water >, Dis- lodges. Dissipates and Carrie? the Mucus through the N'aurra! •- Channel?;" cleart?iiis the \u25a0".vails of the -to'uarhMn-d- •..-.-. ts "of" *!ii- dime or mucus which planters ovcrthe Mucou?-Mem-. branc, separating tho-Gasrtric 1 Duett air! Ab>o: 1.- rnt vessels -ironi lhe- foo4 wliwh -prevent f.the/n from carrying on the proems of digestion. Then, MAN'-A-CEA is the only water which contains MA:X G.V-NF.SK in solution, which combined, by the Subtle Hand of Nature, with ... simple sa!t?;p£dja£&d (o a . «>•, artiiicially inroossiblc, >*r«is Singularly perfect Corrective; Digestive ai:<l!<-»nir; «Ti ombttu <i in on* . which accomplishes «diat Soda, TVp<-in. To!iM* v StiinH- lants and Opiate, separately «.f in combination, faii to do:— Restores norrnaj healthy conditions and Immediately Kc-KMabli^hes Good Diges- tion, and, - - \u25a0 -• --_-_.. Cures When AUU.hr Falls. ( latarrb of Yhc! S&maeliy 3*i3trifi?,^ '"wilvrr J-'exiiv>niatit#:v Acidity. *iav?s Pains that r-nll- Jies?. Lump. Distress*- After Rating, -Nausea, Can not Dijjcit or. Ketauj Food. You (on Sti>pj¥Sur Suffering Jo-day. Do not think iliat all |he jwoi>!«\ :irr always, a!! the tini<\ trying *9 fooJ you. ' »'• that tytry-'.. tiling advertised i»^a|oii«»»ided inipoejtip'i. I' you %ish lo know -m..re- about tins, seemingly "lirarulous - uat/r j <f.u<l faf , IJsiMs*, SJffit 31 !" 0 * farther particular* \vitt» ieMiijionui- fr^ni f& n }*_ if th»; belt in the kind. " mended »n«l /or Mir by , r,. »,«>,.„.«. ' Ffcrk * Tilf^a. N. T. C X Ft**ewon *'. ». T. *\u0084"5' ' "','\u25a0'* rrank C H»r.ry. TV«»hinc""n. Oeo. B . E r ;*id*'lV£ '\u25a0• A'-kw, Merra!! & Oon<ilt F.*.r*» «-. .TT-* *£« SfiJiS? *^ il £*<-V*t -t Brof. Or*«e«i.i:-^>E»»«» 4.Cojn"roi». iaaaa S7UUUB* * ra*oa Buffalo C. "<v. s™**'- £ ?C?.« C E. K*el*r. Atlantic rit:-. Uoltt Oru« Co; ._ P«n ' r •ad all Flr»» riiM <>r«-er* and Dnirsl*t». - BEX. K. CUftl'lfi. General Agtfcf. 12 Stos* St.. *• DANGERS A^gfn IN FEBRUARY. Severe Weather! February is a month of severe ' storms and Intense cold Even in the South, v.hese the- 'prevailing tem- perature la v much above wintry latitudes. Fob ruary brings sadden changes of tompt-rature. Mercury sometimes drops '-'" degrees in a single nieht. Therefore, the following health hints in ap- plicable to the whole at North America: Ventilation. The sleeping rooms should be well ventilated, but so as to avoid direct currents of air. Bathing. Those In vigorous health should take a cold water towel bath every morning before- brenk- fast. Those in feeble health should ike a brisk dry-towel-rub every morning. Diet. -The diet should bo a generous one. including meat, and occasionally fresh vegetables. Sunshine. The nights being long and th« days short, as much sunshine as possible should be let into the house during the day. Clothing. The head should be kept cool at all times. The feet should be kept warm and dry. day and night. re-ru-na. When unavoidably exposed to cold or wet a few doses of Peruna will avert bad conse- quences. I'tecantion. When seized with a chill, or oven slight chilli- ness, a dose of Peruna should be taken at once. Rest A- much -.---- .-\u25a0--\u25a0;\u25a0 chould be obtains*! m the forepart of the night. Catarrh ot Head. Mr. Frank Cobb. ITo Summit. Street. De-rlns;. He., writes: "I was troubled with catarrh in my bead. I to Dr. H-irtman for advice and he pre- 'cribed Peruna. "I took it and am happy to scy it helped ms> «it once. 1 feel better tnan I have for years." Brotzcbial Trouble. Mr.. .T. Ea. O'Brien. Fr-rs. American Pilot Aps'h. PensaccJ: 1 !. Fla.. writes: "I heartily give my endorsement to Peruna aa an effective cure for catarrh and bronchial Throat and Lungs. Frank Battle, Jr. 11l N. Market St.. Nash- ville. Tern., writes: "Peruna has eur-?d me of chronic bronchitis. "It is the grandest discovery of the age for the throat ami lun£s." Pneumonia. 21r. A. C. Diinforth. St Joseph. Mich., writes: "Icontracted a seve-.e cold, which settled on my lungs. I was threatened with pneumonia. •\u25a0 Peruna gave xr.e relief within i couple of •Jays. Three bottles s^ved me a large doctor bill and a great deal of suffering." I bonsaeds of Testimonials. We have on f.le thousands of testimonials life* the above. We can give o'ir readers only a ~iight glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited, endorsements Dr. Hartman is constantly re- ceiving. Address r>r. S. B. Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. O. 3

Transcript of New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1905-02-19 [p 3] · NEW-YORK DAILY TRIRTWE.SUNDAY. FEBBUABY 10....

Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1905-02-19 [p 3] · NEW-YORK DAILY TRIRTWE.SUNDAY. FEBBUABY 10. 190S. Statue of Aphrodite on Exhibition at the National Arts Civ1 Inthe centre of the

-• - -

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIRTWE. SUNDAY. FEBBUABY 10. 190S.

Statue of Aphrodite on Exhibition at theNational Arts Civ1

In the centre of the galleries of the National ArtsClub, in 'West 34th-st.. stands an Aphrodite carvedfrom the ancient marble of Faros. Tt is said that,just as the Venus of Melos was found hidden in a

BEUEVED TO BE A PEAXITELES.

RcKim<=T)t. of New-York, Captain U. L. Foster, toattend the inauguration of President Roosevelt InWashington on March 4. in the place of the bat-talion of the "•! Regiment of Engineers, of New-York. The 23d decidi l not to make the trip, o*-'-ini? t<> a failure to secure quarters for the stay inWashineton.

ANCIENT GREEK STATUE OP APHRODITE.BY PRAXITELES. .

Carved in Parian marble. The property of Fred-erick Linton.

(Copyright by' Frederick Ltnton.) In the Quiet oftKe Winter Eveningthe Library proves us right to the important Room

In the production of pieces where comfort, meaning and personality »re stfongly

gathered, we point to out reproductions of some me Colonial furaittire—

Sofia.

Tables. Chairs and Settles bearing thit mdes^ibable charm of reincment xad

quiet purpose.

Grand Rapids FurnitureCompany

(Incorporated)

34th Street, West, Nos. 155-157••MINUTE rrOM BROADWAY.*1

IFifth A, Auction II Avenue <OO Rooms !

\u2666 23S \S"¥/ mi.B. <4>

4. FIFTH .WE.. xiy NORMAN". \u2666

4. Near *sih St. >sr Auctlonerr. >

lannouncement|\u25a0J OF TUE

:IMPORTANT PUBLIC SALE. |t COLLECTION OF JMR.S.YCSHIDA

4. OF KIOTO.JAPAN- •\u2666\u25a0\u2666 coiirpasiNa

\u25a0*\u25a0 Japanese Pottery. I\u2666 Chinese Porcelains,

*\tood Carvings* >

2 Bronzes, Lacquers, •\u2666•\u2666 Japanese Prints, Screens, etc., etc £i ON FREE VIEW. :

\u2666 Mod. Jt Tues.. Feb. 2T & 2^.

_^. £a!« takes placa \u2666

IWED., THUKS., FRI. AND SAT^ XX Mar-:-! 1. :. .- sad 4. v

*\u25a04- ATIP. M.EACH DAT. 14- ***++++*•**»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u2666 \u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»»»»\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666•y»^-»»» \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0»-»\u25a0\u2666\u2666»\u25a0*-»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666-\u2666•

The reports of the exhaustion of the empirefey the. war ar« not confirmed by Russian mer-.chants visiting London. One of these, comingfrom the Odessa district, describes SouthernJ;i:?f:s as unusually prosperous, with .big: crops,\u25a0nillmlnislji<l trade and no lack of labor for.«.gricuiture or manufacturing. Two requisitionshave been made for reservists at Dum. Thenumber of men sent to Manchuria 4s invariablyInsignificant in proportion -to the entire popularlion. This well informed merchant laughs atthe idva that the empire is emptied of fighting-

men or reduced to financial extremity. He as-serti that scow inn'- have felt the burdensoft war In tin loss of,trade, but that KharrJ<ov. Ki<?\". Odessa and other southern towns arethriving with good tunes and Jiot showing thef c test sig of exhaustion. Optimism like thisoffer*! a striking, contrast, to the pessimism withwhich the press "cdrresporidents 'describe therevolt of all tssea in Poland against executions"en ma?^, the renewed outbreak of the strike;

in ?t. Prtersburg on a larg^s<?>^e an<s. the con-o>j< t ot the Moscow crowd 3,1.-1be Fc^ne of fhe

sssafflnatlcn. v lierjp (\u0084-j-( \u0084-j-aie 7nen flipped' ttheirr r

3i3n<J~ in ihe blood of the prand duke andrrotsaj thernVelves. Th* English papers areless <-ijTsi.ij^.ff;i than th**;;French in denouncingthe criminal folly of the governing classes, yetthe v'zarV manifesto is printed -day ivith theJi*»adline. "The Imperial Coward AakSL^for *svm-»pathy." English opinion, viith illIts traditional«-on?crvatirin .-md horror of assassina.tion. isnlrTt-iy as (sympathetic with the cause of po-lijical rrvolutioii as it was with Italian unity

v.h-si ..7^7zlni • .f.r-, here and Garibaldi wasTiV-icom^ i:iLondon as a hero.

'

'•; imifHii \u25a0

-K,'Mnong Irie'frtllowert of tile

<;<>\u25a0 ernnient. Mr. Balfour'may be weary of thet>tirden? of )<=>^<iorship, but he has never been

Jn better fighting form. Sum 1 has he beennwc adroit and plausible than in the opening«!^;.st<-«: <>f the new session, and In spite of thevisor of Mi As^uith's attack and the re-<i'i.-".j majority in the division on the fiscalqvstSAn •.;,:.,, isi<= have, ti^eh "braced upa- ar« confident that the Government will sur-vi- ijir- session. Pride may go before a falland: the Unionists be the victims of overconfl-deuce. but they are talking boastfully of playingthe game straight along, til.August, and await-ing tho report of the royal commission on the

redistribution of seals, possibly a year hence,

before ordering a general election. Their calcu-

lations may I"" upset by :i coalition of the Lib-erals and Nationalists on the Irish question nextweek cr by the subsequent defection of thetariff reformers, but they are more sanguine ofFijrc?fs than they were last year. Mr. Cham-

berlain and Mr. Balfour apparently are working

tog-ether In a spirit of loyally; and. dissensions

on the fiscal question are less serious than for-merly. Th<~ Opposition is not confident that the

Goi-ernment- <'«»--»«>— *»yt*et--<3uring"1the: -•sisricftira id strife between the factions may be followedby a renewal of j»alous>. L<ord Hugh Cecil has

made ihe most brilliant speech of the week. Vie1f Mr. Chamb»rlain'« ni<»st-.j(3arigeroTj-B opponent,

He has shown that the Unionist free tradersrsn render effectlvij Bfx^ST to th cause byrkfep-

ire '.he. present Goverifnieht in power. This Iro-r-lies fighting" against tiroi »at*4 attacking Mr.

Chamberlain in the most vulnerable point..

London has been brJshtehHJ up by tile re"-""penlnc of Tarliament and the first Court.* -Thelat'tr function was mainlyrdiplomatic and offl'<!sl. t ith rmall \u25a0-•\u25a0,',; eipeles and not .manybrid<-s and ••->tfs4.The rri4C»SS. Eva ofP.attenberg; Lady

"Eileen WeU&icv.'-

'ajid th»

«se'jghU-r of Lord Algernon Oordon- Lerrpx- were

prominent vat .tho .weekend parties whirh -fol-lowed tlie Court^ sn6 Jenkins. i-oncludes that the

The Bngiish press comments upon ti\e as.—ssjusltiiii of <lrand Duke- Strgius sjbs coolrrrfunctory, •it ij, -i»«srribr,i as a deplorablecrime, but not ii a surprising incident, sincethose •wh'o'shodf «3o\vn unarmed crow ds of work-ire people in the streets must be prepared forIsudden a« t of retaliation.... White there Is nosympatli tlie MwaSins. there ?/a m^rk^d.contrast v*;^fr. ITH<»!pfeFent reixprespion'of Eng.Ush opinion and those called out vh*>n Presi-dent Carnot. President McKinley, the ItalianKing and th<? Empress of Austria ere \u25a0 mur-c.r-e-Sj foully The doom of Grand Duke Sergiusifquietly discuss a.= the natural sequel to thebarren police rtpi'tJsian which has 'been sub-Ktltut*d for political refer— >. The risk of £»']-

<3«?n death by bomb or dagger, is the priceautocracy no* pays for the privilege of reign-in^ by \u25a0riolcnco.'

'!

NEWS OF TWO, CAPITALS.AFFAIRS IX.LONDON.

fc-j—8—

Manchuria Safer for Grand Dukes.than V r Stronger. l

<Fr»^i«» to \u25a0

be N-v-Tork Trihun« by Frcnrh ,-ah> ,(Copyright, isos v- Th, rribwM Assoelai )

London. Feb. IS.-Th« startling report .thatth* Japanese have thrown a Ftrons? force ofraiders considerably to the north of Moukden isnot yet cot»«rme<; While the open weather hasset in rcmarkablj rarls:. it is highly improbablethat a turning operation so Jiajardoys! hasb»en un<jcrt3k»n.>c that) .«v4.!ry 'hiv> 'been't-'nt fo fr»r nortii. IHeia Marsha f-ftyama'-fsmassing guns against in* Russian ceqtre andslowly rreparice, for a final assault upon theFhaho Intrench^! line, but the campaign willr-«""omp aefrnsiv* \u25a0\u25a0'f v!- aen^rai

'Kampatlrhi isdriven f*v»m lsVsXllsfpA Th-ro

77fa rutnulativ*"

rviderro that the camarilla «f grand dukes isplotting acaiast g<insgal IfurnsjaHilii an.i 6rek-Ing to displace, him \u25a0with on* of their o\« n num-ber. Majicnuri*crtainly is a F«fpr retreat forSrand d'JkeF than Moscow or Warsaw.

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R. J. HORNER (El CO..Furniture Maker* nd Importers

61, 63. 65 West 23d Street.

fcrlnir of men's long overcoats and music at Ist-ter.-::nR prices.

?AKS & CO.. Broadway, snj t.» *«h «<t.. willof-fer to-nii>rrow some re<!iietii>r.* In itbjhmls suitsand in rain font*! Thry a1? \u25a0> offer women* fur»ar«l f'.ir garments at r«*i!ni*"d price.'', and callattention to spring outei garments for women.They will. pla»>- on sal" tr>-m>r«>* some watsts inwhite Japan*** silk .md Jn white In-vn and lin^n.

JOURNEAY* BURNHAM. Flatbush-ave.. Brooklyn, 3ar.or.ncc a sal**, nt moiicmtr rricrj. of n*.a»-tresses, c>nif»^rt3b!^i« b^d.-ipread.-'. pillows, tlanktt*pillowcases, sheets. Oriental cou.:.1!covers and trontelescope coucb-s.-

««'!<• \»J)at you w%at«i la*» Sunday ytv <SM artrt-J la the Xittu> Ad». at the PevpW. iTy •gate u>»la.-. Itsay b? t&exc

An Agent of the Massachusetts S. P. C. A.Shoots Himself.

Lemuel B. Burrell, of No. NO Cedar-st.. New-Bedford, Mass., committed suicide in his state-room on the Sound steamer Chester W. Chapin. onthe trip of the boat to this city Friday night.

When the steamer tied up at the pier. No. 43

North River, yesterday morning, the body wasfound. A revolver lay near it. He was an agent

for the Massachusetts Society for the Preventionof Cruelty to Animal?.

Th- man boarded the steamer at. New-London.Conn' Captain McDonald of the steamboat de-clared yesterday that Burrell was one of the jolll-e«<t men aboard the steamer on the tni>, buyingmany drinks and tipping the waiters liberally, butthat he drank little himself.

New-Bedford, Mas.- reb. lv-Mr.Borreu was anagent for the Society for the Prevention of I

to Animals. He had prosecut* »«• mSoutheastern Massachusi tts and was a famlliavfigure in the court?.

OFFERINGS AT THE STOKES.HEARN, West 14th-st. and West ISth-st.. offers

reductions in Irish point curtains, bed sets, women'scloaks, tailored suits and waists, new embroideries,blankets, silk comfortables, women's nightdressesskirts and chemises, and carvers, meat sheer? andshears Offered also are Smyrna run at one-thirdoff and upholstery fringes and eiderdown garments

at interesting prices. Attention is called to thevalue? to-morrow in wash dress fabrics.

EHRICH BROTHERS. 6tii-ave. and 23d-st., callattention to their lace robe?. Irish crochet collars,

collar and cuff sets, laces and Insertions, Valen-

ciennes laces and lace alloven. Renaissance lacesctrfs centrepieces, squares and tidies, and somelunch cloths trimmed with hand made Cluny laces,

with Irish linen centres. They are offering printed

foulard silks and nrcvhe silk gauze at interesting

prices, and some values in pongees and in coloredmessalhie lisine.

STERN BROTHBKsv West Sd-St., will .-b...v im-

portations In the cloak departments to-morrow;

also sosac-

for ''arly spring wear.They also announce foiand call att< n ion to offpri

tation of sum. l< •ments \u25a0

-suits 'special valand a.

- .

ABRAHAM A STRAUS. Brooklyn call att#n!icnto a sale vf •carfpuvs and brooches, and to an vi-

LORD & TAYLOR. Broadway. 20th-st.. Sth-ave..lDth-st.. offer at Interesting prices embroidered

l!ncn waist patterns, tablecloths, napkins, towels,

decorative linens, tilled comfortables anaÜB.^3.U8.^3. LATIMER & SONS' COMPANY. Fulton-?t. and Flatbush-ave.; Brooklyn, is exhibiting

bureaus, white, ehainel beds, women's mahoganydesks, bookcases. library tables, rockera and Ho-rn.'in chairs-, quartered oak ch!n:i closets. .-Uik--boards. <linii-K chairs, extension, library toilettables; also some ciuftonijsris arvl brats teds.

SIMPSON-CKAWPORL' COMPANY. 6th-aveC;lEth-st. to 20th-Bt., c.i"s attention to :t sa!e of lacerobes for to-niorrow, v.!.c:i some women's slJk

shirtwaist suits will also be on sale. Announce-ment la a'.^o made of a sale of rues :»t very inter-esting pi '.<\u25a0• and of a new shipment >>f furniture.

R. H. MA< v .v CO.. Broadway, at Gth-.iv.-.. 2Uh-st. to 3T.th-st.. offer trimmtd millinery,muslin un-derwear, sllk.-t, lares, embroideries, children's,misses and Infants' w<:•:•. rew suits, skirts r-uldresses for women, wash «!r>v»«i fabric*, furniture,womtn'H handbag*, framed picture*. United Stairsflairs, curtains ami whit-- goo»ls Kor Tuesday theyoffer fancy me*h vetUngK, women's waist.- and Jack-eta, bo>

-:Russian blouse uultn. "N<>. 'S' tooth

powder, tapestry couch cover*, table covers, fo!d-iiiß iron ta!>lr* and othvr article*.

HUGH GORDON XIACWILLIAM.N< w-i;.>.-h«>Ur\

annauiiffs that first class stores are ordering alargo supply of the "MacMlHaro"! .«u.-Tcr.«ter3.

BONWIT. TELL.EH A.- CO . West Sfcl-st.. have f>n

sale a collection of tailored and sctnl-talloreU suitsfor spring wear: also ?on:«" chiffon t.iff^ta tailorfd«uit». nnw pure Unen suits, l^oac or closely ntt«Hitopcontp. f till lensrth rnin coats, tailored nvlklni;<«kirti< and Mine eiik and llns«ri» waist* Vn adranc*spring styles.

standing around here for? Why don't you helpthese people to s^er on the cars?"

Something will have to be done very soon to re-lieve this state of affairs, as it seems to be intoler-able. Iam going to "put it up" to the railwaypeople.

SUICIDE ON A SOUND STEAMER.

Nearly twenty thousand good Republicans willtake part in the parade on March 4.

Considerable excitement was furnished a fewdays ago by the announcement that the inau-gural committee had received a letter from thechief of Tammany Hall requesting a place in

line for about a thousand stalwart Tammany

braves. All Washington was in a furor overthe prospect of Tammany marching in honor of

the President, and one sage official suggestedthat a corps of insanity experts should be sentto the metropolis immediately to conduct awholesale examination of the members of New-York's . leading Democratic organization. Itturned out. however, , that, one overenthusiastic.Democrat • up- in New-York had written to the

committee ."suggesting" that a Tammany dele-gation in the parade would add to the general

attractiveness of the show. The "suggestion"was laughed to scorn even by the inaugural offi-cials, who are looking for novel features. Tam-many marching in a Republican, procession

would be too extraordinary even for this parade.Pennsylvania takes the lead in sending politi-

cal clubs to take part in the festivities, havingrepresentation of twelve distinct organizations.

New-York is second, with eight, and Ohio comesthird, with seven. Maryland "will send fiveclubsfor

"the. parade, . and New-Jersey four, while

Massachusetts, Delaware, West Virginia. Indi-ana and Illinois willsend one organization each.It is probable that a dozen mora will be added,bringing the approximate total up to sixty.

Besides these regularly organized politicalclub",there will be several independent bodies, notstrictly political, whose members .want to marchjust, for-the fun of the thing and todo wHat theycan to add to the success of*the day. Firs*among this class may mentioned the mem-bers of the Tennesse -legislature, who have char-tered a special train and will swoop down onWashington en masse on the evening of. March3. Governor. McMillin was- invited to join, butrespectfully declined.- This willbe the first timein the history of the country that aA'Sta.'te legis-lature has attended an inauguration. Tennes-see will hlso be represented by 'six long, leanand angular" musicians, as they describe them-selves, who will march down PennsylVania-ave.,keeping step with their own music, played onFix violins each over three 'hundred years of age.

The musicians are over six feet two inches tail,

but just what particular difference this willmake to the inauguration no "one seems to' know.However, it will add to the vaudeville.

From New-York the largest organization wiilbe the New-York City Republican- Club, com-posed of 1,000 marchers. There will be theConkling Unconditional from I'tica, who wereto have, had the right of line In the civic divis-ion, but relinquished that honor to the New-York City Republicans. The iJncbndittonals willbe the escort of honor, nevertheless, and as suchwill lead the civic parade. Two Italian clubsare coming

—the Italian American Republicans

and the Central Italian Republicans. They willbe followed by Hungarian Hussars in Kossmhhats from New-York City, and the Burgesses,from Albany. The Ulster County and HamiltonRepublicans also will be in line.

Of Pennsylvania's twelve political organiza-tions which will be in Washington on. the event-fulday perhaps the most renowned is the Amer-Icus Club, from Pittsburg. The members arcall supposed to be wealthy, and <'<* they have

leased the entire floor in one of the leading

hotels for inauguration week the suspicion may

be well founded. . They will come down -<x>strong with a band, \u25a0\u25a0md will be in charge ofMajor H W. Melntosh. With their red. whiteand blue umbrellas and white high hats, they

are sure to attract great attention.Other Pennsylvania organizations will be the

Young Men's Republican Tariff Club, also ofPittsburg. and the Union Republican Club ofPhiladelphia. ,

_\u0084

New-Jersey will have in line the i< rellng-huysen Lancers, of Newark, With a band ofthirty-five nieces; the Union County Republicansand the Phelps Guards, from Pateraon, with aband of twenty pieces. The Garret A. HobartRepublican Club, of Newark, also has signified

its intention to attend.Maryland will lea,d off with the Union League

of Baltimore. The other Maryland organiza-

tions '.. mi <>° cadets from St. .John's anil Mary-

ana Agricultural colleges, the MontgomeryCounty Marching Club and the National JuniorRepublic Army, of Annapolis Junction.

Thi young >.'\u25a0 iTs Republican Club of Wil-mington Will be the only organization from Del-aware. The students from Harvard will be ill"

civic representation of Massachusetts, and adelegation or Spanish War Veterans will com?

from Indian i the .home State of the Vice-Presi-dent-elect, it is o strange fact that not until a

few days ago had any application been receivedfrom either civic or military organizations inIndiana: The newspapers took up the cry. andwithin a w<»ek two- applications-were tiled, on.-by the Spanish War Veteran« an<l on* by the3d Indiana Infantry. Illinois willbfi representedby the De^atur Cadets, and West Virginia by

the cadettF from Sli<»plicrd Colleff. at Shepherda-

DESIGNATED FOR INAUGURATION.Albany, F-b.IS.-AdJ'itant General Henry, to-rtay

isEued a *:*:alorder ACiifAatlßf Company E. mil

Corps of cadets, V. S. A.Brigade midshipman. U B. N.Cadets lTnlted States Elevenu« Marine Service.Second Battalion Engineers, V S. A.Company B. Signal Corpu. I*. 8. A.One regiment Infantry, consisting of two bat-

talions of th* :.th Infantry find ono battalion ofthf sth Infant!--

One provisional regimer.t of T'nit^.i States < oastArtillery.

>>:• battalion Porto r:ico Provisional RegimenCOne battalion PhHlppin* Scouts.One battalion United States Marines.One brigade l"nit*o States seamen.Third Battalion, Field Artillery. 17. 8. A.Flrsl Sauadron, Tth T.'nit. <] States Cavalry.Brigade of National Guard of tlv District of Co-

lumbia, consisting <-t Engineer Corps company.Signal Corps <\u25a0 mpany. 2d Regiment Infantry. IstRegiment Infantry. Ist Separate Battalion Infan-try,' Ist Field Battery, Naval Battalion.

Alabama— Con.pany X, 3d Regiment.Connecticut— Company A. .'d Infantry-Delaware— lst Infantry.Illinois—First Company, 2d Rattali' n.Indiana 3d Regiment.Maine—Company M. Ist Infantry.

Maryland—Troop A, eecort f<>r Governor, 4thRegiment, sth Regiment.

Massachusetts— Company K. 2d Infantry: < oni-pany •'. fith Infantr--: «'V.mranics C aiv] I^. Bth In-fantry; Boston Heavy Artillery, Fifth DivisionNaval Brigade. Battery F.

New-Jersey— Companies X and 1-. 3d Regiment;Ist Troop, Cavalry.

New-York—Company H. 2d Regiment (46th Sepa-r.-,t. Company); i/ompanj I, -•! Begimenl <:2<iSeparate i ompany); cnmpanv X (Wth SeparateCompany); 2"d Regiment. Stli P^ginient. 13th Regi-ment. Squadron .A Brooklyn Sa\*al Bngaiif-

North Carolina— Wilmington Light Infantry.

Ohio—Company X sth Infantry: Company K. raInfantry: Tro.ip a. Cavalry; battalion <•'. engineers.

Pennsylvania One provisional brigade, consistingof Ist Regiment of Inf.mtry. from First Brigade:Ist Regiment of Infantry, from Second Hrigade;

lst Regiment of infantry, from Third Brigailf.Rhod" Island—Troop \ Ist Squadron, Cava.ry.Virginia -Mecklenburg Guard rulpep^r Minute

Men, Richmond Blues, Petersburg Grays. Com-panies A. B. C *nd E. 70th Regiment; 71st Regi-ment. Company I. 70th Regimeni

Governors of tli«- following named States and r»r-rttories, Hccompanied by staff officers, have alsoannounced their intention to participate i:i ti In/mgiiral ceremonies: Connecticut. lowa, Louisiana,Main". Maryland. Michisnu. Nebraska. New Mex-ico, New-York Ohio, Pennsylvania Rhode Island,Y^rmonf and Virginia.

Brigade of cadets.

Arrange Practically Completed—Features of the BigParade.

[FHOM THE TRIBfNT BCREAU.IWashington, Feb. IS.— With two we?ks inter-

vening before inauguration day. the arrange-

ments for the celebration are practically com-pleted, with the exception, of course, of thethousand and one details which come up at thelast moment to the perplexity and discomfortof the committee having the programme incharge. The plans for the inaugural ceremoniesare now 50 far advanced as to give satisfactionto those directing the work, and they give prom-ise of a far more elaborate display on March 4than has been undertaken in any similar event

in the nation's history. Arrangements for theceremony at the Capitol, the parade and theinaugural ball have all been completed, andthere will be a rehearsal of important parts ofthe ceremonies on Washington's Birthday, witha view to putting on the finishing touches.

The chairman of th-» Committee on Military

Organization has submitted 'he following orderof marching for the different bodies which willtake part: \u25a0

INAUGURATION PLANS.

"it r»nliv diPßra^eful. The .row ding ;m<i rush-inc HP- Dartieularly hsr.l on women and frailn»ople \\> have thirteen polio'n^n ther- tryingJn reeulate matters, and they have an awful job.It )s»k< «« three strong policeman in in^ri and unloada en \u25a0 to that '!in people trylnc to get off arid onwill not tear themselves to piece*. Every nowan.l then tome latryer will apr^ir and order thenotiremen to ke«P

"th*ir hands off the pe Opl».OPl».

-Voii ar« purlie servants/ these lawvprs will say.

•and yon are not paid to «o th«i work of the rall-ro-d corapan--." If the pollcem-n follow these*uirßestian*. seme oth»r brand of cittsen will com*

Mff and exclaim; "What •*• you big, husky inea

Calls'

Conditions at the Manhattan End ofWilliamsburg Bridge Intolerable.

Commissioner MeAdoo spent an hour on Fridaywatching the crowds Btnigglini to board cars at

the Manhattan .nd of »hi VVllllanisburg Bridge.in ,-. iii \u25a0• HI hi said yesterday:

DISGRACEFUL. SAYS MR. M'ADOO.

Iam gratified to know Brown has adopted thehone: system regarding her athletics. \u25a0

-No college should adopt rules rejected by other

colleges, for that would place the college so doingin a class by itself.

Dr. Faiince said. In ;ari:As to athletics. Iam Inclined to the view that

play in college is becoming a business, rather than'a recreation from study. There is a tendency toprofessionalism In colleges which provoke* rivalry,and a spirit of commercialism at once enters Intothe test.

President Kaunce spoke of th« Rood results ofthe tiding at fraternity nouses for colleges, butnaid he would like to have the two lower classesremain in dormitories, rather than k<> to the fra-ternity houses.

President Kaunce said he noticed a demand fortechnical education, to the abuse of wide educa-tion. He said proper preparation In many caseswas omitted

Play in Colleges Becoming a Business. SaysFresident Faunce.

Xhi •\u25a0 ftual dinner ol th B own Alumni Associa-tion of New-York City waa held last night at theUniversity Club. 1 • wen :\u25a0\u25a0 guests and in^m-

i.^:-.-- present. » .uun-l Norman S. Dike, presidentlation, occupied the chair. The other

Colonel Dike, wen l

Fauno "i" the university, Cora Keating

of ri. Department of W H M EUroy,

Jausen Wendell and Colonel H. Anthony

Said ' !olon< lDike:

BROWN ALUMNI HAVE DINNER.

Washington Feb. 18.—Members of the NorthCarolina delegation hi Congress to-day conferredwith -i number of members of the delegation fromSouth iYnkota as to a controversy between tho twoStates regarding recovery on North Carolina bonds.Senators Simmon arid • rman were Informed by

Senators Ga.mble and icittredga that South Dakota

has. npVintention of purchasing any additional

North Carolina bonds»*as Governor Glenn rf that

State cmod to apprehend in his letter to mem-bers «>£ the delegation. In explanation of th*- at-tituu< of South Dakota toward .•? sister Stair, inbecoming a.rcfedltor through the purchase of North

Carolina's repudiated bonds, it was said to-day

that the action In b'ijIng "'•'' boi . was taken by

T-,10 South Dakota L'-?i?laturc several yens ago.

The South Dakot 1 Sena to declared that theirBtateiwould not use th*> proceeds of the. sale _ ofthe bonds it now holds in order to purchase andi-tion.'il bonds This assurance ha: b'«n tfrlegrapheuby Senator Simmons to Governor Glenn.

Assurance-; Given by South Dakota to NorthCarolina.

WILL NOT BUY MORE BONDS

Tube to South Ferry and Perhaps UnderHudson Open by That Time.

It was reported yesterday thai the Broadway e\-

of the subwaj to the South Ferry wouldbe open bj June 1. it will be open to tlie RSt. station fwobablj within sis weeks.

The trains through the Hudson River tunnel willprotmbly begin t'> ran about th>-- sun.- time that theBroadway extension is thrown opon t.> the publicExperimental trains are iow \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0• ng run through th*submarii Iib< to t> st the road.

BROADWAY SUBWAY BY JUNE I.

grotto and the -Hermes by Praxiteles was founds.mon? bricks, as Ifit had been concealed in awall which finally fell in ruins, so this statue wasdiscovered bricked up in a niche— according to someIn Asia .Minor and to others in Greece or Sicily.

The statue is believed to be Greek, of the periodfollowing Phidias; in fact, a Venus Geuitrix. byPraxiteles, and the woman after whom it wasmodelled the celebrated Phryne.

Sl»?nor E/ttor] Pain, for thirty-five yes curatorof the Naples Museum, visited the National ArtsClub yesterday, and spent more than four hoursexamining tV statue. After examining the swornstatements of many famous sculptors who havepronounced the statue to be a genuine Praxiteles,he gave it as his opinion that the marble wits in-disputably genuine ancient Greek marble, and thatthe work was undeniably that of Praxiteles. Inhis opinion, the statue, which has -been labelledAphrodite, is m.- of Phryne, mentioned in sundryancient chronicles.

Mr. Lincoln, the owner of the statue, said lastnight that he wished the Venus or Phryne to beplaced in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.- He saidthat ,T. Pierpont Morgan had some time ago askedthat th" >t:itu-> be placed on exhibition there, butthat General dl Cesnola had objected, as thatwould have given the statue so great a value as tomake It Impossible for the Museum to buy it. Thestatue has been In storage for over twelve years laa Trh-ave. storage warehouse, "

The Prussian Uhlan uniforms which ma asensation on the Parisian stage some years ago

at The Theatre Libre, in Guy de Maupassant'splay, "Mademoiselle Fifi.

'and which were seen

again last November in the drama entitled••Discipline" at the Theatre Antoin<\ have oncenvare scored a success in the French adaptation

of'

Franz Beyeriein's dramatic comedy "Derletpfenstreich," "La. Retrake,"'"which was pro-

duced by Manager Pore! at the VaudevilleTheatre on Wednesday night. It is the mosteffectively 'staged play brought, out this season:the court martial scene alone is sufficient toinsure a" lojsg: run. Parisian*' women protest

a<r.iinst -the brutal denouement wherein the .vet-eran Volkhardt. like a modern Virginlus,. slays

his dishonored daughter. Parisian women, un-like tiT ir Mew-York sisters, do not demandthat Volkhardt should kill his daughter'sFfdueery th' young lieutenant, but demand thatthe two lovers should marry each other. Thusrive: -Aon.r. .of ( ;<"]ni.my. Arix'rica-and Franceeach have their own -characteristic and differentIdeas if the proper denouement. The play Is

the most decided popular success In Paris andobtains renewed Inter owing to the analogous

flraina.'ln1 real life'v.-hloh Just' ocv*ur.red.#

a,« thegarrison 'town of V'enion, where a nou-T'-oinmls-stoned ofllffr >•-!.\u25a0 idr<y shopped hin lieutenant'shead open with a sabre m the street in front of

\u0084 public •..••'• for having seduced his young wife.'

Masßeiiet's new opera. "Cherubin." brought

i,u» on Monday.at -M*>»tf' '•'!''•\u25a0'. '•\u25a0'iit:iir,f a .jium-,,r |. of rt ttrioiw, catrihhig aJrn,.and.4n-tbo judg-

ment!oT!!oT! ihusica! , -iit,,\u25a0>• in' Ihc most- fascinating

and sprightly of that (.oniposers lighter works.

The American soprano, Miss Man Garden; who

"creAted" the part t>f Chjprubla, scored a most

striking Buccipsa a**'s Blngfr'anil actress and haH

once more'Rivcn 'j-iwfof herrenia rka hie ;<rtIst Ie

tpinn/ryrnent. >•••\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 _ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*",'''

'\u25a0'

THEATRE, PLOT TURCHASE REPORTED.(UcoViiVlVC to a r<-p"rt. :> th*atrsJ nwy be built on a

clot xt Wth-«ii ar.-i Proidwa;\ ,parrel \jib*M44i,-»mo-- V.sKni. It. ''-'»/• \u25a0- frontage, r>f about. IS>•/\u25a0/ "n t**cast side of Broadway. j-.iFt eou h of

:l.i:/) a»3 '\u25a0«««<•« Widi another Bnofparce! ICAiii« let*. V U.iwi4.U>:i» the deal to carry out the

th'/at re" prof?ct is nearly perfected.

GOOD 6AWBSMAN.:#

slnoy. a-AflK.- ai"l read) for bu*in«*». i» » Utt!«> A«J.

ol tlu» I'ecpl*." E2Jr!«T M'>

. M. d^ F.iieiiietc?. s^n nf ih«» ]?,te French Con-trolfer General in Egypt, and brother of Mme.Bompant, wife of ;he French Ambassador toB;issia. ifhead of th<" r;1:^1:^- Chartreuse organiza-tion, hut nearly all the shares ar« held by the

monks themselves.

Amateurs fond of the Chartreuse liqueurs willrejoice to learn that by the assistance of, M.Rouvier, Minister of Finance, the Carthusianmonks will shortly return to Chartreux to re-occupy their former 'haunts and devote them-selves to their old Industry, which caused suchprosperity to themselves and to the neighbor-

hood. This miracle willbe accomplished by themonks .transforming themselves into an indus-fr.ia] company and conforming to the rcrjuirc-

.mVnts of "the French association laws. Theyreturn purely in a lay capacity, and •willmake

tiwmfijOi:irireu<-r Trqu^uY/wTireTiTrTTas nowbf-en proved cannot be made either at theirnewly acquired property In Spain, near Tarra-gona, nor by the French -government chemistsat Chartreux. of the same quality, flavor andt^ouquei as before th^ir expulsion from

.Daupjjinc. •• -*

Asspssinatioji Misfortune for Russian•ra<.bW Liberalism.

(.=r*c«al to The N<-x-York Tribune by PVenrh Cable.). (Copyright, 1808, by Th» Tribune Asso-lation.>Paris, Feb. IS.—The assassination of the Grand

Duke Sergius is regarded in France, especiallyby the «xti«me Radicals and Socialists, as a;.sr.eat..,niisfartune\ t"r Russian Liberalism byalienating public sympathy at home and abroad,and a*; likely to provoke still more rigorous re-actionary measures. MM. Jaures, Gerault,Richard Clemenceau and other Radicals, while

(d«j>leEing t'io. report to dynamite, say the day,\u25a0nevertheless;- is'sure to rome when the Czar, likeother European sovereigns, must make conces-sions to democracy. M. Clemenceau declaresthe f^nly remedy for the Russian malady i? a fen-grains of^i'b'priy.'''1"'

To-morrow ends the sixth of the seven yearsof,. Emile Loubet's tenure of office as Presidentofthe F'retich Republic On Wednesday a groupof- parliamentary friends called at the ElyseePalace and expressed a wish that. Emile Loubetshould present his candidacy for a second termas President. L'nhesitatjingly and in the mostcategorical and emphatic language he declaredthat under no circumstances would he accept

,suich candidacy, and signified his intention toretire to private life at the expiration of his

sev<»n years, on February 18. 1906.Itis possible that when the President retires

he may be induced to enter the Senate and enjoydignified repose at the Luxembourg Palace. Apersonage who has been a lifelong friend andconfidant of.M. Loubet assures the. Tribune cor-respondent that the President longs for the quiet,privacy and culture, of family life. His eldestson, Paul Loubet, is already looking for a suita-ble apartment for his father and the family onthe left bank of the Seine, intending to remain aportion of each year m Pnris until the educationof his youngest son. Emile Loubet. jr., now abright, intelligent la.l of ten, shall be completed.President Loubet ta in excellent health, gets upearly every morning and takes walks entirely

unattended in the streets of Paris. He did thiseven during the Nationalist excitement, whenthere were frequent threads of personal injurypreferred.

TOPICS IX PARIS.

gaycty of th# capital Is a tradition of the past,when there, were no motor cars. The townshows remain, j»re . un|^|}ially brilliant.Among them is Duveen'ai fxli{i.|tionof Chineseporcelain for the benefit of the Artists1 Fundcollection. , It is valued at $B*|ooo, and is ri-valled only by Mr Morgan's in New-York andMr. Salting's in England. The groups of enam-•MlPd vai;(-^Slf t!)«-. peve;;^cntb -,-and eighteenthcenturießi. represent" the h*Kh«*st -development rfthe art of Chines: potters and painters. Fivetall black jars, with floral and butterfly decora-tion. lik«v the famous* set in the Metropolitan

Museum/ New-York, are the choicest treasure,but the Hawthorn jar. an exquisite set of egg-Fhell plates, numerous examples of powder blue,peach blossom, rose^^green an ,j re«j glare rivalthe splendor of the blacks, It is an altogether

\u25a0'tniqiK display *^f rthfnese .craftsmanship anddecorative art ThereSs also a renUr^able showof water colors at the Agnfw Galleries, with fiveexamples of old masters of the English schooland good drawings by living' painters.

Hi? thTitiv..^ ar«-v.-Mhnut <«her novelty thanSutrcs farciyal comedy. "Mollentrave onWomen." at the at. James's. This is virtuallya one part play, which enables Eric Lewis todelight his audiences with the most artistic ex-ample of comedy acting witnessed in a longperiod. Butro's technique is French and theUnderplot intricate, bur the comedy is clear,highly original and Intensely amusing.

Dr. Torrey and Mr. Alexander continue to fillthe six circles at the Albert Hall at every re-vival service. The critics insist that there isno revival fervor, but there are always ten

spectator*. Dr. Torrc-y his ronvincedmany that his views are harrow by condemningrh<-ai reding:, dancing, eardplaying and smoki-ng.v Even the Nonconformists are chilled sincethey recall Mr. Bpurgeon's pipe. Dr. Torreypre>ach«»s unequally, but always with solemnearnestness. Tlia American revivalists arc sat-!Ffi-iwith the results of their work as shownIn the after meetings and conversions.

I. N. F.

WHY WASH. CUT THE :.::

STOMACH?When MANA CEA. the MAX-GA-NESK;

ICataral Spring, Water; Simple, Tasteless, Abso-lutely Harmless (Not a purgative water >, Dis-lodges. Dissipates and Carrie? the Mucusthrough the N'aurra! •-Channel?;" cleart?iiis the\u25a0".vails of the -to'uarhMn-d- •..-.-. ts "of" *!ii- dimeor mucus which planters ovcrthe Mucou?-Mem-.branc, separating tho-Gasrtric 1Duett air! Ab>o:1.-rnt vessels -ironi lhe- foo4 wliwh-prevent f.the/nfrom carrying on the proems of digestion.

Then, MAN'-A-CEA is the only water which

contains MA:XG.V-NF.SK in solution, whichcombined, by the Subtle Hand of Nature, with... simple sa!t?;p£dja£&d (o a . «>•, artiiicially

inroossiblc, >*r«is i£Singularly perfect Corrective;Digestive ai:<l!<-»nir; «Tiombttu <i in on* . whichaccomplishes «diat Soda, TVp<-in. To!iM*vStiinH-lants and Opiate, separately «.f in combination,

faii to do:— Restores norrnaj healthy conditionsand Immediately Kc-KMabli^hes Good Diges-

tion, and,- -

\u25a0 -• --_-_..Cures When AUU.hr Falls.

( latarrb of Yhc!S&maeliy 3*i3trifi?,^ '"wilvrrJ-'exiiv>niatit#:v Acidity. *iav?s Pains that r-nll-Jies?. Lump. Distress*- After Rating, -Nausea, Cannot Dijjcitor.Ketauj Food.

You (on Sti>pj¥Sur Suffering Jo-day.Do not think iliat all |he jwoi>!«\ :irr always,

a!! the tini<\ trying *9 fooJ you.'»'• that tytry-'..

tiling advertised i»^a|oii«»»ided inipoejtip'i. I'you %ish lo know -m..re- about tins, seemingly"lirarulous

-uat/r j<f.u<l faf,IJsiMs*, SJffit31!"0*

farther particular* \vitt» ieMiijionui- fr^ni f&n}*_if th»; belt in the kind. •

"

mended »n«l /or Mir by—

, r,.»,«>,.„.«.'

Ffcrk *Tilf^a. N. T. C X Ft**ewon *'.». T. *\u0084"5'' "','\u25a0'*

rrank C H»r.ry. TV«»hinc""n. Oeo. B.Ei»r;*id*'lV£'\u25a0•A'-kw,Merra!! &Oon<ilt F.*.r*» «-. .TT-**£«• SfiJiS?*^il £*<-V*t -t Brof.Or*«e«i.i:-^>E»»«» 4.Cojn"roi».

iaaaa S7UUUB* *ra*oa Buffalo C. "<v. s™**'-£ ?C?.«C E. K*el*r.Atlantic rit:-. Uoltt Oru« Co;._ P«n 'r

•ad all Flr»» riiM<>r«-er* and Dnirsl*t».-

BEX. K. CUftl'lfi. General Agtfcf. 12 Stos* St.. *•

DANGERS A^gfn IN FEBRUARY.

Severe Weather!February is a month of severe

'storms and

Intense coldEven in the South, v.hese the-'prevailing tem-

perature la vmuch above wintry latitudes. Fobruary brings sadden changes of tompt-rature.

Mercury sometimes drops '-'" degrees in asingle nieht.

Therefore, the following health hints in ap-plicable to the whole at North America:Ventilation.

The sleeping rooms should be well ventilated,but so as to avoid direct currents of air.Bathing.

Those In vigorous health should take a coldwater towel bath every morning before- brenk-fast. Those in feeble health should

•ike a

brisk dry-towel-rub every morning.

Diet.-The diet should bo a generous one. including

meat, and occasionally fresh vegetables.

Sunshine.The nights being long and th« days short, as

much sunshine as possible should be let into thehouse during the day.Clothing.

The head should be kept cool at all times.The feet should be kept warm and dry. day andnight.re-ru-na.

When unavoidably exposed to cold or weta few doses of Peruna will avert bad conse-quences.I'tecantion.

When seized with a chill, or oven slight chilli-ness, a dose of Peruna should be taken at once.

RestA- much -.---- .-\u25a0--\u25a0;\u25a0 chould be obtains*!

m the forepart of the night.

Catarrh ot Head.Mr. Frank Cobb. ITo Summit. Street. De-rlns;.

He., writes:"Iwas troubled with catarrh in my bead. I

to Dr. H-irtman for advice and he pre-'cribed Peruna."Itook it and am happy to scy it helped ms>

«it once. 1feel better tnan Ihave for years."Brotzcbial Trouble.

Mr.. .T. Ea. O'Brien. Fr-rs. American PilotAps'h. PensaccJ: 1!. Fla.. writes:"I heartily give my endorsement to Peruna

aa an effective cure for catarrh and bronchial

Throat and Lungs.Frank Battle, Jr. 11l N. Market St.. Nash-

ville. Tern., writes:"Peruna has eur-?d me of chronic bronchitis."It is the grandest discovery of the age for

the throat ami lun£s."Pneumonia.

21r. A. C. Diinforth. St Joseph. Mich., writes:"Icontracted a seve-.e cold, which settled on

my lungs. Iwas threatened with pneumonia.•\u25a0 Peruna gave xr.e relief within icouple of

•Jays. Three bottles s^ved me a large doctorbill and a great deal of suffering."Ibonsaeds of Testimonials.

We have on f.le thousands of testimonials life*the above. We can give o'ir readers only a~iight glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited,endorsements Dr. Hartman is constantly re-ceiving.

Address r>r. S. B. Hartman. President of TheHartman Sanitarium, Columbus. O.

3