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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-12-18, Page 6
1a e `h t vefrtiser. nasi ° , '. ' Witb a t8 b, iC%ann� llaraoaP " t e � i r hal. e * ° vt A.ttdr B has' ><'q� • ttha i ',,,otyou h,ee' Btorwot >�>; . ]al. t� '�,lpt.ttikh41# ; ,Ennchetn . �- b-nth,.that •t46ai i .. Ti 'DAV` Girl taunts- w kers at andi:thr ' C `.brie H 1s1eOP away. ` ' 1 “D WJt ten s coat$•" all 4undQ W , . a1utve " ithp h ` t'< ti @4yp natb`sva7 gieatfl 0! 4,4 4 ted:« H Helen Wa$ e' it vdufd _i ei , d i him8elf on t t.sefe4 A ► ettracUve, ii d}.•. d y IW did 54 0� Wha to �- f t. ed '4'1-4.. 4.W . ., stat �o , a. SSL �Pbiners : '1•1'4W' .�4r� tp Iltze'r � .• t vOncie>�f>�11�r.';-'iAterestr;Gl�tE^, ea �► Yjp�,ttera t,Ql a ., �q :r • Cw d'P. } F -#7k' . iitr� .4%3tlib. na vthat men e art w4r isan0e w aprecl. fox It a elf etc kio" aeu� N iia theref Or. to Mark M. , Ilagelc. fie r t',61QQ�+�� :. � Ig ; iidit;<g In8t• ruo ave • lix?g e �Itr, kin .406§' ighti and A., oe r" ne 'Clark explained that Roberts Mathematical master of a. school at acelous suggestion against Earl wao involved in his alleged relations Herts, His wife could not feel other - outraged and distressed by those When the Countess objected to rte presence in the house the Earl told to gge,peo,hie Satanic majesty. Sir Ed- - - aaid.,t IU Earl r` aZ much upset by the t of the Countess not having a child. 4 *bused, her in vulgar terms for this. in May the Earl and Countess pro - to attend' a levee. The Countess „k o'ndon and stayed at the Albe Hotel. She laid out the. clothes which ,was to wear, When the Earl he refaced=.to allow a servant n to and• insisted.' that the Countess e;.the dinner table and come to to a1,Ct as his valet: When they m the..levee;"he also compelled as to attend to him. TheCountess :4141hti.t her husband should force perform such services, and told hum wawa$ sorry she had ever married him. ri at once rang the bell and told the summon Lady Scott, the Count- inotifer.'' When Lady Scott entered the u the Earl' said, : " Here is your sacred hter take her away as soon as you Andyou Gan go to, the devil." llil;reply to a question by Sir Edward, the Voilnteas said that when she left the Earl allie ask�ed him H to kiss her. e refused with j �,' Dosing the: recital of the incidents of her o,'Earl. Russell, who was sitting equently buried his face in his hide his laughter. His actions that' he -felt no compunction for his it of his wife ; in fact. he seemed to e whole affair was a fine subject for Many of the spectators looked upon earl with diagust ,11Pontinuing,her evidence against her hus- sd the` countess' testified that when she Up 'earl summoned her to his study illed'her vile names and threw her to icor* there was a general tittering in Remit ronin when the countess, in describ- ".;.A (parrel; that had occurred between ,slid the earl, stated that i '`Etter' had 'rushed -about the room •s and Striking the walls with his fists. .,CNARLVS 'MOSS -EXAMINES. Y'• ii 44 at IA it art vi Col 'tness Was erose=examined by Sir upret>sie 1L He opened by asking the dsv ich has' a ver ;A7tr> make any impute 1 coy .oration�a. +Roberts. The ,�"'aA,..,,, .p s.siiX�e."This ehemand•� Colitness Il Eh' e a 'lust her ; , ''' -' either" the earl or teas admitted' that she tter to'r Harry Marriellier, st i man . at her wedding, t she, brought no charge YS, adding that she was in the er; men and would bring no t the earl unless she was fully t%em. asked the countess if the state h had 'not been given as the reeking `off an engagement to ad entered iilto before her be- an Russell.: ad had a as broken ealth. her she 1888 for replied en en her ry f admitted that she gement, and that it the condition of her li -,asked witness wh des by two doctors i plaint. The coantes ;ors mentioned had gi time to time. h 'owned before the 46 . finished. 'est ‘ 45 h t NTESS LOOI{E/. Ped o eek 'red i ' an elegant expensive e 'hat, which Natage. She ryas greatly iestions put aquiries she MICE t •inaudible fee's mother, evero add to her osition in the" so elegantly er r t • y. Llmagnificent any tinaneisii'i3g: q7 o Pio 1.0) ith a ony hile con l$ad pre; g r e offers f ette. The kind of a acli.hf Tt w� .. nt. She eat give $2 for $1, an >.xE'i�s>tpiising"hoaspped from many persons will step up to subscribA�he warmth :apparently sensible men who wouldel her' to :feel hurt if:anyone intimated that they were in any way gullible. There is ni is a great ;ylish young system of finance ever conceived whicgish looking will give something for nothing, ; 'tinge, and a enormous returns on a small inv. went, for there are monetary hilae follows the sf Earl Russell which 'usage in these mattertlaunrl the Countess conform, and wherever • they Ater room, was then Wed disaster must follow. :at on this occasion • /ti pleading with the tness•found. her mis- -The work of tunneling ie floor. *through the main range of ted she had received fy v.r cross, qe"ooh ; P togs d. -t by .'bode e.st 7441044(1•34 . Z'o So o sty; ad . 4+ q poet o of the ad {►l to toOft,t$4d he u h °he hofie alh+o �fto h S �� f t IT � ►. qs' 1...e°11414+fe b"+B jo h 080.4 tie. r d if" h Ne oe44,el:e w$�y/0 8ivlog pied he ro Q I at to , 1 ,are d knave q9' 'which apps l� oP see e t ca t o.d culax attacked by into pleurisy, and er"ietn ti''.��'� twice daily until she wentkir.1 When she returned he again atten She then complainedof the manner her husband had treated her. She v weak, and her nervous system w pletely upset. The evidence for the -Countess hen.. closed. ;ry m- Sir Charles Russell presented the c Earl Russell. He said he would lief self to the broad issue of the case. as the separation'of the Countess and Russell was concerned, all he would aa' that the lady was at liberty to lea` husband when she liked. The sole obi the present suit was to force the paym, alimony by the Earl. Sir Charles, i fere ing to the Roberts incident, declare the Countess, through veiled and o desired o innuendo, simply drd to war her husband. She was afraid to strike openly. Why had the other side not made that seri- ous allegation honestly, straightforwardly, and directly ? Unless the suggestion in connection with Roberts was meant to be. treated as a grave charge, to be gravely considered and dealt with, a greater act of cruelty could not have been performed than in bringing it forward. Sir Charles then rebutted the charges of cruelty. He asked the jury not to be carried away by a clever and engaging woman telling them a story that was untrue in all its essential details— a woman so perverted as to put forward the Roberts incident in order to support a hopeless case by odious imputations. These imputations were made not only against the Earl but against another man, whose name and reputation might have been blasted by them if he had not stood high in the opinion of his colleagues. The court then adjourned. A. mob surrounded the Law Courts at the close of the day's proceedings, and as the Earl' left he was hooted at, and attempts were,made'to strike hitn. 'The- 'police en- deavored to protect him, but the crowd overpowered them, and the Earl was obliged to reek refuge in the Temple. Being' still followed, however, he jumped into a cab, and succeeded in getting . away amid the jeers and hisses of the mob. Sir Charles Russell resumed his argument for the defendant. He attempted to refute the statements . of violence at the hands of the Earl. Sir Charles then turned to the charges againat Prof. Roberts. Sir Charles classed them as false and decidedly malicious. He declared that they were trumped up in order to give strength to an otherwise weak case, and that though the darkest insinuations had . been made, no one was willing to como forward and make a direct charge of the nature hinted at against either the earl or the professor. ' A London cable says': The firstwitness for the defence was Prof. Roberts. The professor testified' that he was friendly with the earl at college. He afterwards be- came acquainted with the Scott family. After the marriage of the earl and Lady Mabel he visited at their home. He had 'sung with the countess and had thought her a charming hostess., The witness made a very emphatic denial of the actions im- puted to him by the countess in relation to Earl Russell. Mr. Inderwick, of counsel for the coun- tess, ask.ed to be allowed to put in evidence letters that had passed between the earl and Pi of. Roberts to show the relations which existed between them. Sir Edward Clarke said he could not see any issue re- quiting the lettere to be produced, but he nevertheless consented to their being ad- mitted. THE EARL'S TESTIMONY. se for / Mai- o far Earl was her et of nt of re - that scure 4tatementn; made. by the. ,' t he' left her and went to fie . om were 00.91149,1y..false, ae no the slightest reason to..sugs impropriety • between himself `and Onto *boa bis wife wan hyeteri- jad belabor •wriats.ato 'prevent Beer paring her dressing jacket to iecee. p from 1 Hotel AurA>ing to the Albemar e �. OAN• IAN BIGAMIST. HE GETS THREE Y TARS IR BTATE'B PBIBON• A Covington, Kyt , despatch says : The veA"fie liar scoldeo'r-the- -Countess—bee evidence -in -the case; of the --Commonwealth pe she had lunched with a divorcee who against Albert Fenster for bigamy was ma- y well deserved to be divorced. The eluded at dark last night and was generally art admitted he had once used the word of a vert damaging nature to the defendant. " barren" in conversation with his wife, but he had only used it in fun. The - Earl stated he did not think his wife's health or nerves suffered daring her married life. Her ailments were caused by i-..:wr„a .. .. .• U.uc._1 51 "t5�`MJ+wrm•-,..t+µ;."..a.+ascR Sir Edward Clarke asked witness to give an instance of unaccustomed restraint. SHE SMOKED CIGARETTES. The earl replied that one instance was his limiting his wife to six cigarettes a day. Witness declared he was not unduly anxious, have a son. He denied that he ever had sworn -at-this wife or called her a brute ora beast* He wes`much annoyed shortly after his marriage by learning that many of the countess' debts were unpaid. Once a milliner came to the house and created a bother. The countess came to witness and asked hhn to "Get her out for God'S sake," adding, "she's screaming in the hall and I cannot get rid of her." The earl stated he had never kept his wife up in the night to make up his accounts. Once the countess told him she was "d ----d sorry" she had married him. When the countess fainted in the bedroom he bathed her face with water and eau de Cologne and tried every means to restore her to consciousness ; she was perfectly rigid. He was frightened When she recovered she went into a violent hysterical fit and exclaimed. " D you.`" THE EARL'S. CHARACTER. Sir Edward Clark cross-examined the Earl. He referred to the Earl's conduct before marriage, and the latter admitted that before he married her he seduced a servant, but he had told Lady Mabel Scott,. his fiancee, all the circumstances, and she found that no reason to discard him. The Earl admitted that he had been inti- mate with a girl named Williams. He had seduced her. This intimacy continued until within a short time of his engagement to Lady Mabel Scott. The girl brought an action against him for breach of promise of marriage. He paid £50.0 down and was to pay her £1 a week. He is still paying her this latter sum. The Countess objected to his re-engaging a man servant named Moyse,' but he persisted in his determination to take him back into his employ, saying that he was a good servant and was in no.way connected with the Wil-; liams girl - A NEW 'TACK. Earl Russell now took the stand. Ho testified he had never heard the slightest objection made to the presence • of Prof. Roberts in the house. The witness had ob- jected to his wife going to a certain lady's house, and based his 'objection on the fact that the lady was divorced. Countess Mus- sell was very much put out by his objecting to her visiting the lady's hotiie, and in the quarrel that followed with him he said to her, "If you say such things you will soon be sorry you married me." The countess replied, " So I am sorry." The earl de- clared he had never insisted that the coun- tess should dress him. If she had requested him to allow her to dress him, he would not have let her do so. He was very much at- tached to her and had tried to make things pleasant for her. He objected to her going to Ascot for the reason that they were several persons there whom he did, not wish her to meet. He positively denied that he had gone to the cabinet in search 9f a pistol. At the time alluded to his pistols were in a warehouse and there was not a single weapon of that description in the house. With reference to the charge that when the Countess on one occasion asked him after a row for £5 he threw her a half sovereign, the Earl said it was not true. He was about to give her the money she had asked for when she said, " I don't want your dirty money." The Earl denied the various other charges. He admitted that on one occasion that the Countess had boxed his ears. CALLED HER. " -DARLING." Sir Chas. Russell then drew from the Earl his version of the bedroom incident, when the Countess was found nude and in a taint *art's solicitor advisin on the floor. Tho Earl said that after he :Mountains 'for railway �'�� g Dr. thecomplaintIsuppose.ordetails. seven months. I suppose the circumstances con- nected with' my leaving collegewere known to my relations. HE LEFT Sir Edward annou a was through with the witness, and Sir Charles then. proceeded to r In reply to the questions by his counsel Earl Russell st Jowett was master of Balloil he was there. Having deman refused an examination int made against him in conne alleged improper letter, the w ken his name off the books Since leaving Balloil, Dr. Jo ted him to visit him there, ancame to his marriage his wedding. Before he told' his fiancees mother " sent. down " from Oxford.and the nature of the charge against him. tell Ms future wife, because had re- quested .him not to do so. • Court then adjourne HER DIVORCE 885. mplaint of wh ew any of the Ileft Eng o America 1500 from an insurance and his wife had retired he declared he ;gold and silver mining purpose of settling her would not go to Lord Salisbury's owing to sen day and night, ttti heel whether the state of the refusal of the'Conntess togoto Amberley . 19tato or government ai anything to do with her Cottage, the Earl's residence in Berkshire. 4000 feet of the dist'er h tsband, the Countess The Countess got out of bed and.fainted on ' doctor told her she was the floor. hen she came , to he said, given and twontyfiv rem worry, and she would " How are you, darling? " ' She replied, �lnd sit v r ore alr�oady�epartited from the Earl for " Don't you dare call me darling," •and then Denver, Apex & Weate It was then agreed that thro•v a soap dish at' him and tna'de for him Cc�aneot env©r w�91 d then she would see how herself out of a window if he remained in ltd treat her. During this the room with- her. The Earl declared 1 Bishop Brooks interfered to secure to the Salvation Army the right to give a street parade in Boston. ' The Republicans of 1860 carried seven- teen States out of thirty-three ; in 1864 they carried twenty-two out of the twenty-five that voted ; in 1868 they carried twenty• twenty-nine six out of thirty-eight ; in 1872t y of thirty-eight ; in 1876 twent-ono out of thirty-eight ; in 1880 nineteen out of thirty- eight ; in 1884 eighteen out of thirty-eight ; in 1888 twenty out of thirty-eight. Next yah 1 ah'nnld part for at least with the poker. She threatened to throw year there will be forty-four States to vote. How many of them will the Republicans carry ? s r he 'visiting'weresomethingwaseverandthebrazenlyalsocouplethe PERISHED IN THE FLAMES. Ilya of a Family of Sven Bpx, tte4i to Death at Detroit. , BURNED AT TIRE DOCK. A steam Barge Fire in Which Two Men Lose Their Lives. A Cleveland despatch says : The steam barge James S. Pease, which came into port from Lake Superior on Tuesday, caught fire abo"t noon, and was nearly destroyed before the fire department extinguished theflames. There were two men and the cook in the after cabin, which was burning, and only one of the three, the cook, Anna L. Bennen, was saved. The latter was in the kitchen when the fire was discovered. She endeav- ored to rescue her personal belongings, but was unsuccessful. She was compelled to drop everything except the captain's over- coat and one or two garments of her own, which she hastily picked up, 'and, groping her way through the smoke and flames, managed to reach the Siete of the boat and jumped to the dock. The first engineer, Philip Stedman, whose home is in Delaware place, Buffalo, was seen by several witnesses to emerge from the burning cabin,'his cloth- ing on' firo, and jump into the river, where he floated for several minutes. Several attempts were made to rescue him, but ho sank before aid could reach him. He was about 70 years of age, and leaves a wife and family in Buffalo. 'The other, who was at work in the hold in the after part of' the boat, was the fireman, and he has not been seen since. It is thought ho perished. The barge Planet, which was lying at the dock close to the Pease, caught fire,and wassaved only by'dint of desperate exertion. -Tho loss on the Pease is about $10,000. A. New Name for It. Harper's Young People : " Qh, mamma l cried Willie, on seeing a zebra for the first time, " do como here and see this poor little convict pony. ' Lady Somerset has been slumming in New Votk and speaking of the dives of the Bowery said : "What struck me most was that there were so few women in them coni - pared with ours at home. But you will soon have as many women 'drunkards as we have unless this terrible traffic is prohibited. It will be impossible for you to escape the fearful effects of hereditary craving for drink." TWO 'BO AND BpVAI!IT .GIRL EBOAP A- Detroit —:despatch--says—i—_ ....,8.-fraghf;fuli.._ fatality moccurred shortly after 2 o uck Chia morning, lohen, in the partial burning of the two-st'y brick Store and residence ot George J. li+ela, corner of Orleans and Cath- arine atharine streets, five persons lost their lives. The list of the dead includes five members of Mr. Reis' family of seven, viz., Mr. Reis himself, his wife and three sons. Eight 19 Stna,,esp ni , i A 4, ., apartments, above the store, but three of them—the ser €iib gird' ` " and two sons, Moxy and Tony—escape& It was within a few moments of 2 o'clock a. m. that Patrolman Frank Derkies noticed the blaze two blocks away. The firo was ilk .. the front „part. of the store and spreading / rapidly. He at once sounded the alarm, and although the department arrived on the scene promptly the flames bad spread through the entire store. Immediately after giving the alarm Officer Dorkies ran to the burning building, and saw the servant girl ony Reis climbing out of the front i to the cornice. Another boy, Moine,. wag on a roof back of the buiidipg....h,. imbed down the lightning rod, and windo. aged: The 1 and e6caped uninjured, as did also Tony and the servant girl, who jumped to the sidewalk. When the door leading to the rear stairway of the house was broken open a frightful sight met the view. Lying in a heap at the foot of the stairway were the bodies of Mr. Reis and his wife, burned to a crisp. The firemen at once made their way to the upp' r floor, and there found, first the body.. of Charles Reis, 'aged 20, stretched on the floor near a side window, and in one of the front rooms were found the bodies of the two boys, recognized as Eddie Reis, aged 8, and Josie, aged 12. All three had been suffocated by the smoke. The bodies were taken from the burning building. The dead are : George J. Reis, aged 50 ; Mrs. Reis, his wife, aged 45 ; Charles Reis, son, aged 20 ; Josie. Reis, son, aged 12 ; Eddie Bela. son, aged 8. k 5 Geor Jj Jois was an -old and respected tib aw u death for more than twenty years. There is no clue as to the origin of the fire. The damage to the building and contents will amount to about $2,000. g lived in the vicinity of his A SIIILLE1 AH FIGIIT. Parneliltes Lay for I arthyitee. but Find Them Beady. . A London cable says : A disgraceful scene occurred -to-day. at the railway station in Limerick, growing out of the antipathir entertained by the two factions of the Irish f party for each other. The McCarthyitee f had been holding a convention at Limerick, and among the prominent speakers present were Mr. Win. O'Brien and Mr. John Dillon. After the business had been con- cluded, a large 'number of those present escorted Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien to the station. A large crowd of Parnell ites had gathered at the station with the evident intention of insulting the IblcCarXhyite leaders. When Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien arrived at the station they were greeted with hoots and yells, and many opprobrious epithets were hurled at them. The McCarthyites . who had accompanied Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien were highly indignant at the treatment accorded them. Most of them carried ` heavy walking -sticks, and before the Parnellites: realized their intentions they swoopeddown in a body upon'the insulters of their h-aders. The latter resisted as best they could,and for a time the scrimmage was a mighty lively , one. ' Many of the Parnellites were hurt, . and several wore so badly injured that it was found necessary to remove them to the hospital. The McCarthyite section of the Irish Par- liamentary party, have decided to take de- cisive steps to secure the Irish funds at present in the hands of Mr. Munro, the Paris banker. `Mr. Parnell was one of the trustees of these funds, and upon his death, acting upon instructions from Mrs. Parnell, Mr. Munroe refused to let anyone draw the money. Mr. Justin McCarthy and Mr. Timothy Healy have .now . commenced an action against Mr. Munroe to decide the ownership of the funds, and to compel him to restore the money to those who are en- titled to the possession of it. Brazil's A Paris DOM PEDRO DEAD. Old Itul• r Wlll Never A gain Set- She Land.11etov.•d. cable est Dom Pedro, ex-• Emperor of Brazil, die to -day. Pedro II. (de Alcantara) was born in 1825 at Rio Janeiro. On the abdication of Dem Pedro I., his father, in 1831, he succeeded to the throne of Brazil, but, being a mirror, the country was ruled by a Council of Regency' - 1840. He was a man of a very high order of intelligence, and well known in Europe and the United States. He did great deal to develop tho material resources • of the country, which prospered under his rule. In 1871 he issued an imperial decree for the gradual abolition of slavery. The total emancipation of the shaves in his dominion was effected in 1888. ' On Novem- ber,1 6, 1889, a revolution broke out which was supported by the army. The Ministry resigned, and a provisional government was formed under the tesidency of General de. ieional government 011 1 the Monarchy abol- ho 17th, the ex -Emperor and his family were compelled -to leave for Europe. The ex -Emperor has since resided in Portugal. and rapidly failed in health. His wife, Princess Theresa Christina Maria, sister of Francis I. King of Naples, whom he married to 1$43, died shortly alter the revolution. Dorn Pedro was a ''lineal descendant of the houses of Bragauza, Bour- bon and Hapsburg. Fonseca. The p the same' day dei ished, and, ort John Howard Parnell`, as head of the Parnell family, Bailed for Ireland and it is said that he will try and unite the factions. The latest fad out West, says the St Joseph News, Is a shoe party. They , stretch a sheet across the room and the ladies stand behind it and stick their feet ander it so you can see only their shoes,s , Then you go. along and pick out a pair of r shoes and the lady who is in them you take ar.xo .tuinres^s.-� ,