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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1905-9-7, Page 311 al to ;s 10 40 •o I, 10 r - le he in tt c - id le (0 ss .l1 8, s, it r0 ,lc Df tr u• :o n• c. rt n - i td le :f - s; -s; is J1 re B is n• ;h Df .o td u- s, a is co :o is to .y le to n• re :1f fs ly '.Y le as s, It to is d .`i rte( 4s y' lv �,•o.w.•�.vp•my'•+•�• u.;. o P•m•;.m•�.m d,�a.�i +o•m•isro•:.o.:. t.:1•s.4+•4roy.ee�.•c•�«m. rDti ; Epoch -Making Treaties s .a• ww�•s..�.m•;.•Of:•6.:•4.:Pi��•�4•W�•9•'9Y•:!•:•d•:.Cs,�'0.I:WfW.:.a4M.:•$•:.'6 Y0•wo and Rus- It was in November, 1814, that lin i connection whit. Hanover, Rus - femme; Conttuittee of the Eight Pow- sin, by her Influence with tits petty en's—Austria, T;uglaud, France, Prue- Uet•nran princes, took a prominent 1oa, IsiraFia, Spain, Portugal 40111 rt. hweden—met at Vienna under' the BERLIN T'ItG)A'lY OF ]-878, `cusideney of Prince Metternich to draw up a treaty which was to be 'rho Treaty of Berlin was conchal - henceforth, the written law of Europe. ed in 1878, between Great llritabl. The necessity for such was pressing, Germany, Austria, France, Italy, The moment seemed propitious. In Russia and Turkey for Lhe settlement !who lawless grasp of Napoleon Bona -:of at1nlre In the hush after the war parte 'Europe had itcecene a conglont- I between Russia and Turkey, Ila oration of stales without fixed born- chief provisions were that Bulgaria caries or acknowledged rights to }sol -'should be an autonomous and tribu- itical existence. Tho old landmarks tary princlpaltty under Lbe suzerain - had been swept away, the balance ty of the Sultan, to be ruled by a of power destroyed, a strong store Christian government, and that leas- hed become weak, weak states had . tarn Roumania should rCmaiu under became strong. The armies of Rus -'the direct military and political au- sia won in occupation of Poland. Dimity of the Tsar. Bosala and Austrian troops held all of Italy ex- Tlerrogovinia wel•s to be occupied rind P CepL Naples, English and Swedish administered by Austria-Ilungary. troops held Holland and Belgium. The independeneo of Servia, 11omn0n- English and Portuguese troops hold is and Montenegro were recognized, a large portion of Spain, the Prus-:anci portions of Armenia were ceded sign troops held Saxony, the troops to Russia. of Wurttemberg and linden held the The Oongresa that proceeded the Rhine provinces. At length the hand treaty was held in the Hotel Radzi- tvhich had wrought all this confusion will, which had been recently pur- was believed to have leen 0Fi1'CLual]Y chased by the German government paralyzed. Tho 0000411' the normal and assigned to Prince ]3ismttrrk as 1eThe most infamous informer of state of things could be restored the his official residence,Prince Bis - butter. Such was the train of ideas mat•elc was unanimously chosen presi- modern times that a court of justice dent. To the proceedings that fol- lowed" ho, representing Germany; Lord Beaconsfield, represetblg Eng- land, and Prince Cortchalcol'f, repro - smiting Russia, were the star per - .m. •u How the Powers Arranged Europe's State System After the Napoleonic Wars. 1 t1 hatred d 'V bo laughing to himself at airy a Dragoon !eh° Woe about to NGS OFINFORMERS DOINGS ]° n 1111 c [horn a , i 015 f I re- r, i Ii he ! ara o soldier, ilio eon so a •• seize Mtn. "White , n it scl 'u1 as O II a ��� Johann having �ucccssP ly, a g Inspired in his l'ictint was u hien uav ng 5o snot. I E;clunirlt, otherwise Davis, otherwise ad, diverted all suspicion from lira^ plied, "touch n'i Major Martel. TEST TRIALS, IN Grey, oforge se ,tuBank n, 1e l n - so v MANY EAlYIOTIS TRIALS. f 1 Bank f England trnyecl laiuiselale found that M. ed him with every possible consldsr- treat - i 1 ' 1 11 1 v if t others,at hest completely bo- to your cb ef• 1 11YI notes erect forger o an o notes in modern years, and the noel- Macs was quite a d1JTerent man 30,10 at.lon• Getewayo was deported to . , ,• , was eventually re - Their Statements Aro Always it coma to the point of being ably two lata to save bra hand •' " the stored to the subjugated y Carefully Weighed by the to 1114110 1110re by 'putting theta guillotine, carder milliary reserves. Court, away" than by sticking Lo them. The In the 0x00 of Woodstock, rho font- A creno of another WWI was that ' deta.ils of the Vint when Philip Horn- oils coiner, his dog played the part welch followed Majuba. Sir Evelyn A barrister encs remnrkad, in the SLebt, S01(11(4011 liarnn4Sh and Iiia of an uneuttsci11us infuriner, and incl 11'uo(1 assumed command soon after e da s course of some proceedings at II"' son, William Barraasir, were placed to his capture. All el'fnrls to Ms - thieves death ut Colley, anti a P w Y central 0111111 nal Court, to Mr. Bar-: in the dock at the Central Criminal cover the fatuous eriniinul had fail- baler !ro was arranging the terms of on firnn1wa11: ''whore is loan' am10131 Court, charged with uttering forged ed. Woodstock was in L0nd011, firer iraacu which aduiulvledgod float' 3n- thievls, my I mrd•" autos, will ba within any renders' re- , where no one could tell. Living vu- d pendence. i k lest expn5cl' of his confederates, when what he had Iuagtued, when ,t was Cape luwl, butate count( HEALTH FOOD -POISONING. There are many ways 1n which foodstuffs may give rise to more or less serious disturbances of health, and it is particularly during the summer weather that auch accidents are likely to happen. Official ' exam - The Baron looked at him severely, 'They will remeber how dor an assumed mime, he only wv0L lha sighing of the conveniton .rro Mations aro constantly revealing is gold in sea WuLar,' 1 1e. Solomon liarinush, :,flet eimt...nee of out at night, and then b1 disguise. I.11nce In a ruoilt in the C ovornmenl now widespread is the practice of said; "Uut it cannot be extracted lel mum, years' la nal servitude had been But it. came to the Iquwlvledge uP the llou5u, On Gm one side, hviniliat+d, adding 10(101vatives or adulterants profitable quantities, G0 011, 111," 'parsed up011 11111, 1' ((L himself with pe1ier; that he had a retriever do' were Hit 111euhs Rubinson and fair g I "I have never myself found honor revolver in 11:1 cell. flora he carne numer3 Nrro. If \aro could 1e fungi? Evelyn 14ogd; on the oiler, vi13,001 to viands of all worts, and though of . thieves in slrfi3oient quantity a,revolver ui;.,:rsscd of such n a•eupou— he nnilnct. idvu iufr,rmultun as to his ae. fern •er Loubort, and 3 retort- it must be admitted that in many am tg o t r be I v b iustartre5 these substances are mY to prevent thrix victimizing their, was n Ynyxfvey. it was p1oli 11y m1111 1 I ding pierce' I nus, After the signatures had been their rlaluro 0r the smallness of the associates when the slightest advan-! pnsso11 in to him, 1Yre(1'1�4 1 in a fee- i A detective olid one day diseovc1' a 1 010x0•(1, the min who batt leen etre- uantitias used comparatively harin- Lege was to be Failed," said 31> . terpruoF, in a beefsteak pudding, stip- !retriever wandering' about in Cain_ reties shook hands, and the deed was q tl less, still in the majority of cases the conditions are such as to render their presence extremely undesirable. But entirely apart from these, se- vere illness not. infrequently follows M0113.0gu Williams; nmol the 1' 0001' d5, pltc41 frim from outside, for not yet. 1,er10111 that responde11 1. 1u aepti. ir,•d. Later, the British u1 aC Scotland Yard afford startling c.vn- 101031 convicted, Baru40111 could have strange mime. Ile kept the dog iu1 ut suhrurnly turned out to dig (11.0 meals scut in. 1vicw till it came Mose to a 6utihor'a' l' 1co01ut1 rave ie full vires of the window dance to the fact, says London An - swags, 1 With the revolver in his pocket liar- shop, and then the 0fliee4' eutpliieda , g'i r o • later tho crimtnnts who • 1e dock, It is believed . the tradesmnrt by buying a big Where the convention was signed. Sooner 1mash sat in the Isla Union ,lack was placed hu a work together are betrayed by ona ' that he desired the weapon to re- chunk of beef and throwing it -to the the use of certain common foods. In the ran+•. Peace, the burglar ami , r e himself 011 Schmidt, the man � dog. A clog's first instinct under I cellist, unci carried to the grave ona animal feeds, extremely poisonous o[ delated that he aselhedltie7g' murderer,u 0,410,himsolt the wicked brains 0[ tho'such circmnstances Is to get Uri' draped in Hack, and a principles called.ptomaine easily ap- his long immunity from capture to !whole iniquitous conspiracy, had, as i treasure safely home, and Nero' is 1ubst0mc was placed at the head of pear as the result of bacteria] so- iho fact IlioL he never had a partnersoon as he scented clanger and money trotted oft. TIe led the way to his! it, bearing this inscription; tivity, and may 101150 wholesale isl- and never confided in any ona. masters 6 b. to he gained. hastened to URN INFORMER, •1'b 1111t1109a. Pos- sibly he had had practice before. He lod 'in . and the next clay Woodstock .was nthe hands q e pursuers who hadtracked um so long in vain. nese. "No one. could Inform against me, i h 1 f the In Loving Memory of the British Flag in the Transvaal, who departed this i e un August 2, 18:1 ., in his fifth year., "111 other climes 110110 knew thee but to love thee." "IteSu1'gant Dairy produuts are espcaially prone ho explained, I took aero know k d 1' to such changes, and if nut properly to give any ane the ehemes I know SchmulL was a supe 1 cared for may develop tyrotoxlcon, or too well how a man sones off who life cheese poison, a substame that is frhas a rope around the hisn neck and a 00 glibly dreamed, 010 00 he told Ms slaty 1 not rare in See -cream, while }intuit - pulls ells at the ether and of it. He so ancalmly, and in such ox ism is a serious form of ptomain - pulls ra some 'clay." Parent safety,tgra rant the witness box poisoning following the eating of ptomain - Thera have boon innunneeainf ie that e do gray that quivering elan tainted meat or sausage, stances of the fact. The informer in the dock had that weapon,wasnearly Fish and shell -fish yield similar has 't the par- 4 ;� t; ENEMIES TURN FRIENDS NOTABLE MEETINGS OF OLD- TIME RIVALS, played a remarkable puri in al his hent: Perhaps r was to products, a specially vicious poison as trials. alytsc seizure that had attacked liar NVl1lCll 10(1 up t0 'the 110ng Vienna, PARTITION OF POLAND, 31 was Poland that formed the first stumbling block in the way of con- formers, The sessions were held at 1882, when Lord Frederick Cav- cord among the Powers. That un- irregular intervals, generally allow- innrush and 1111'• Bunko fell beneath the fortunate country had bosh torn into ing ono ot• two days between the daggers of a band of assassins—the three fragments Austria, in 1772 and divided sessions for interviews between the "Invincibles," ol'ganired by Carey between Avstr3a, Germany and Rus- different plenopotentiaries. As the himself, sia, the latter having the lion's sessions were held behind closed Though the murder took place in share. Russia Wes now i martial doors, no official account of the work broad day light in a public park, 34058ethe of the entire -wintry. 1t done lsas published until after its and at a spot even within. sight of was the chivalric dream of the Itus- e d the vice -regal lodge the murderers sign Emperor Alexander I. to repair Rlsmtirck 111 bus ronunis succeeded 111 escaping unols(•t has listened to giving evidence against his associates was the no- torious Jtwnos Carey, the planter of the 1?Tf.OEN'LY PARK MURDERS mash during the trial, or perhaps Roberts„ was the a:crtnoes of the prisoner's laced from mussels, and canned watchers in the dock that prevented when things are also often offenders in Schmidt meeting with a very dis- o this way. agreeable surprise. The informer re- Iiitc c t The symptoms produced by these ceivecl a substantial reward. Ile event to the United States, and then was very soon in trouble again. It is not an absolute rule of law that an informer's evidence is of no value without corroboration, but in practice it is regarded with such sus- picion that no Judge allows It to go Lo a jury as worth consideration without confirmation. A police offi- cer or agent who becomes in the per- formance of his duty a passive spec- tator of illegal acts for the purpose r en Pretoria had fallen to Lord s and the Union •lack, resur- rected, floated from that same Gov- ernmentHouse once again, Kitchener was puttingthe finishing strokes to the war, the Boer ii 'When lead - mytilotoxln having been iso - named The Victorious General Does Not Exult Over His Defeated Enemy. War is the great game of soldiers, and the mets who play it seldom hear personal enmity towards one anoth- er. When the fight has been fought, the victorious general does not exult over his defeated enemy, but 'treats him will, respect, consideration, and magnmrimity. This, iickred1, is out Of the rules of honor in the game. Alter the defeat and destruction of r the -Russian Armada in the Japan Prince- 1 -'rv:1 in a Sea, and the capture of the wounded u some peeps into that was wailing for filum, v,rin • guilty persons is out Admiral RojclesLvenalcy, the Japan- ,, has given s p trap tl a o[ disco t f3 6 the inside history of the, famous (,all driven by a trusty confederate lcnown an informer when be gives evidence ase bore him gently to the hospital (entice. Explaining Why Russia'avcn as "Skin the Goat." SU.1n0 months against them. Some of the biggest at Sasebo, After t10 lapse of a few the partition and to replace the Poles in their condition as a free and con- stitutional kingdom under 1i.ussian. suzerainty. But all the other Powers objected to tho proposal. Their com- bined weight won. Alexander broke into a passionate protest, "I have before the Congress had agreed wcth later the perpetrators were arrested Austria to allow the latter's occupa- and lodged in prison ou suspicion of Von of Bosnia, Bismarck suggests various offences, and Carey found that"the y had ret SL Pet- himself it T i Rut tl conspiracies, especially political ogles, have been foiled by means of the sec- ret agent. Ile is not to be con - leaned in o - 1110041 with them. t1 the days he was visited by Admiral To- go, who expressed his sympathy for his defeated enemy, and praised the desperately .courageous fight which founded with the informer, the informer's evideace with suspi- crsburg on Bulgaria, when it was so" evidence to bring tho murder home That the law does right to regard Roj1estvcusky had natio Ion his perated from Turkey, remaining We to the guilty men was weak, and the saw," he cried, "drive me out of it country. Admiral Ifojdastvensky 200,000 men In the Duchy of War - who can. You are always talking to manently in dependence on Russl•n." police adopted a little rasa to in- clan has been shown over and over mo of principles. Your law' of ma- When they found this calculatioe duce Carey to turn Informer. Me again, The hope of gain has need tions is nothing to one. For at proved false they sought to exoncr-, Was led to believe that in the cell 1110 witness box with Wretches ready, there;is one thing above all, and that ate themselves With the 11155100 pee-� next to him One of the'most active without compunction, to swear away is my Word." But this was only a pee by laying the Ulama a1 the Ger- of the gang was confined, and u? Lhu lives and liberty of innocent per - transient outburst, Prince Metre- marl policy—on the disloyalty of the Carey sat solitary and brooding 50(15• The expoliceman Mullins is nick slyly retorted that Austria, German friend. his cell ho heard one day a large it specimen of the worst type of in- which n- shar1 was in possession of a largo It Was a dishonest fiction. We number of visitor's to his neighb° farmer, Having murdered an old sharp of Polish territory would b- never let them ex ect anythin hut'lady named Mosley, at Stepney, and the generosity of his enemy. as readyas Russia to elteaL a no- p g There seemed to be a vast (.mount of a benevolent neutrality, and the hon-: bustle and excitement next door, stolen money' and jewelry he, for thel WIIEN POUT Ali'P].ILTR FELL, tett of. our l and Carey d that sale of 'General Noel a B was deeply moved, as well he might be, for the Japanese are a chival- rous enemy. Ills adanowlecigmenls of the bravery and patriotism of the Japanese troops were nn doubt heartfelt. He said it dulled tin keen edge of his sorrow in defeat to know storation which could 0001 so little a intentions is manifeste0 i are could only conclude a - a reward offered for informs- , - was not less generous to the Power that achiever] it, Alex- by the feet the,: NC dirt not let OUT- It 1V}L5 01005lgned by 0110 thing. IHs 11011 leading to the conviction of rho ander was 'deeply offended at this et- selves bo disturbed by the demand neighbor must be giving information. g to ....When, el. Alex - mark, and d011010d that Prince Mot- g e perpetratoraeo of the crime, hid part Mir , after the battle of Tel -el - 1 onlyAustrian who °f Russia that rho Ito3chstadt agree-� The idea goaded Carey to a frenzy of his Uoot;y in the outhouse of aiKeb it Arabi Pasha was .run to ternkih was themeat (with Austria) of fear. IIs resolved mei neighbor and then n would have dared to address 143111 in secret hem us, but e y knew himself, nn s earth t Gu to General Lo1cr, da such a tone. Finally a compromise of its salmi t t b 1 that the Governor should was arrived at. It was agreed that a portion of the Duchy of Warsaw should be divided between r nit should be kept • to tell all be i i formed the Potice Cal , readily conced001 d •o turned inform- ha his noi'•hlee e`u `t a Bellevue the capitulation was slgu- 1nlandec uN t it ed. At 2 p.m, Napoleon and the Prussian monarch met—the ono downcast, for the shadow of his fall and exile was before him; the other 1l'ieldly anci as sympathetic as he could be, 4 substances may be extremely severe, ers requested permission to come in- and comprise intense gastric pain, to Pretoria to discuss terms of vomiting, intestinal disturbances, peace. Subsequently they assembled burning thirst, constriction of the delegates at Vereeniging, where tbo throat, and oftentimes disturbance lelold-Cornets sometimes forgot war and polities to play football with Tommy Atkins. 33y -and -by Lord Kit-chener and Lord Milner were sit- ting, pen 111 Hand, in a room with Botha and the other Boer generals, with Whom not so long before they had been at death -grips, friendly and mutually complimentary. One after another signed the peace; then, with cordial handshaking, they parted. VON MOLTKE'S SYMPATFIY. Tho meeting between Bismarck and Napoleon III, atter the disaster of Sedan, in the Franco-Prussian War, is a memorable one, for widely dif- fering reasons, to every German and every Frenchman. Moltke had sur- rounded the town. His formidable artillery 1e111 all the heights. Sedan and all the people in It was at his mercy, for only 2,000 French troops were in a position to fight, All was of sight, such as hazy and double vision. In marked cases there is great prostration and weakness of the heart, which may last for weeks. The practical lesson to be drawn from a consideration of these possi- bilities is the necessity for scrupu- lous care in the handling of all things intended for table use. A11 perishable foods must be consumed as quickly as possible, and must never be left out of the ice -chest longer than is absolutely necessary. Canned foods should be entirely re- moved from the tin as soon as opened, and nothing that is intended to be eaten should ever be allowed to stand unprotected from the dust. The air is constantly swarming with bacteria. and mold spores, which find admirable conditions for growth in the dishes prepared for the human stomach, and often give rise to the over, and the French Emperor knew production of the poisons in ques- it. "My Brother," he wrote to the tion. Lastly, every article of food, ' King OR Prussia,—"Not being able tinned or otherwise, that is at all to die at the head of my troops, 1 abnormal in appearanee, taste or lay my sword at the feet of your odor should be discarded. Majesty." This letter promptly brought in HEALTH HINTS', Von Moltke, and at the Chateau of For Round Shoulders—If you ars round shouldered try sleeping with- out a pillow for a while, or at Ieast use a flat one. For a Sick Headache—The juice of half a lemon in a teacup of strong black coffee, without sugar, is an excellent cure. To Prevent a Cold—Warm baths abould be taken just before retiring, If taken during the day, exercise for a few moments vigorously. Take the cold bath it the moraing, as it is an invigorator for the entire day. For Burns—Nothing is better for burns than the white of an egg. It ex0111de% all air, thus easing t1s pal, and prevents inflammation. A fete drops of laudanum, heated slightly, with the smile quantity of sweet oil, is also an almost sure cure for earache, It should be dropped into the ear, carefully, and plugged in with cotton. Camphor' is very useful to freshen the air of a sick room. Put a piece on an old saucer, and on It lay the point of a red-hot poker, when its fumes will quickly till the room. Phystelails are advocating the use of pinna olive oil for weak lungs. It bids fan' to take the place of cod- liver oil, and is thought by many pleasanter to take. Olives, as a food, are considered very strengthen- ing for those with lung troubles, Don't think of the complexion only and fear tan and freckles; they can be removed. The, sun is one of the most efficient of all surgical methods in treatment of morbid growths, as. - warts, moles, and all narasitical skirl disease. Don't bo afraid of sunshine, °mative powers are in the chemical rays of the sun, and they rejuvenate. A CAUTIOUS CRITIC. "Don't you tingle that Miss Spriggs plays the piano beautifully?" "Well," answered the musician who is both conscientious and polite, "let us rather say that Miss Spriggs is beautiful when she plays the piano." ' "My dear wife spent her early years in a milliner's shop," said wealthy self-made man the , other. day, 'Mine spends most of her time there nota," growled his friend: "Sire's pretty 'dear, tool" Mr. Wallee0 (ilnprosstvely)—"Ah, hero is another story of a man Who killed himself bccanee his home ryas unhappy." Mrs, Wallace (sweetly).— "And sweetly)— - "And dict that malcci his home hap- py, or dots rho paper not say?" "I wonder," tensed the family cat, after carefully inspecting the note mvuse-trap, cif that is intended as a labor-saving device for my benefit, or if I'm in danger of losing my situa- tion.' see pussy Washing her Judge—"Yon were alone when yeti y) fatal'* Little :Kate ('with verso— ronmruttCd.t,hn robbery?" Delinquent "She's not washing Me fate; ,511(1'5 '—"Vela your. wersllip, '1'1111 see, washingher feet and wiping them on when y011 110 got a mato you novae ler faaol" know Whether Ire's honest u1' no4.., to the desire communicated to rile n .cr. The only person 311 the next ce had committed the murder and con- 1lydedrichsruh by Count Shitvelot' to to him was a Police officer, and the reelect the spoil in the building. The' deliver hhim a prisons• of war, Some summon a congress at Berlin. The visitors to him, who, In Carey's police acting m1 his information, i (lemur was made at first. blot at searchers the building and found the ten o'clock at night the Governor missing jewelry; but Mullins had act- mot General Lowe again, and cd his part so badly during the brought Arabia with him. In sm•ren- 5enreh and hail betrayed so much daring. Arabi declared that he had anxiety while it was proceeding that at first no intention of fighting the the detective ar'r'ested him as the real !British troops, for whom he had al - murderer. Ibis guilt was clearly ways entertained the greatest - re- proved later on, and MULLINS WAS HANGED. 'd d 1 t Austria desire of the Russian government to and Prussia, the remaining portion affrighted'ighted oars, seemed 14Iag'rstrnT.es (save .Cracow, which was to be a means of a congress Proved that they detectives arrive at peace with Turkey fly antl'Government officials, were really free city) receiving a constitution, and being united to the Russian crown as the kingdom of Poland. Thus the sanction of a great Euro- pean treaty was given to a great European wrong. SAXONY AND HOLLAND. Saxony proved another bone of contention. In the great rising of Germany against Napoleon the King of Saxony had sided against the lat- ter cold teas consequently a pr•ison0r at Berlin. lits territory, having meanwhile been occupied by the Prus- sians, leas claimed as a conquest lay the latter, England, I1 the person cussed, a of Lord C stlerragli; France, in that th t P t 1820, Wltolno the two inthe diels,doc - of Taiol), fid; Austro, through, lo.dy ruin 1 expected from mo, as a son' add 1,3310 the murder of Mx. Metternich, protested, Again a lady from her admirer, that I should chaSmith at Muswell 13111, will aver for - compromise was reached, Prussia ob guess at and represent the Russian ~ et, the cede that occurred when. tainecl n• small .part of Saxony. '.l'ho latches without Russia laving herself Z Fowler tried to strangle 1,111sonl, on discovering that he had sought 1.0 Savo his own nock by giving the police information. respecting 1115 companion's part in the crime. When the L\V0 mon were placed in the dock, a suspicion of what lead occurred seethed to penetrate the brain of the great, hulking brute Fowler, as he observed hots Milson, White faced and trembling, shrank away from hint and sought refuge in 1 n Belgium with their aim and in degree wo had hot rro the furthest cornerllof fl h clock, w'Po strongly a po in may marked,us national ( clT oreligions, the expectations oP our Russian tregardLerner to the result of the 'trial was co, ld not long' Customs ancifoed friends."odg r 'remain in a forced Le•cl Beaconsfield made his groat- now adctocl the .awful dread ie that could not for g union under the sovereignty of the est 100.diplomatic.hat at r BerlinseCone Fowler him anisktillLhim before the House of Orange, and, in fact, it faience, Me always addressed Lha p r to an end in 18110, when, with congress en English, and the colnhin- warders or police could inttrere. e came the consent of the Powers, to lland king- marked n of his dignity est andpower in lspeaking begged hipersnito put more 111111 betweell (10d Belgium became separate b dams. scans to have made a profound hlr- them. They did not know what POW - 1110 Italian question rol911 d1(,is- pression the group of Contitental 11, was largely clue e1) his'1cr was Milsom'sobe information slid him no mission the sot' o prolongs a mission but for a hostile Movement Influence that the Congress slilply good, and,shaking thol(dockwsoomingly half. he c made by Murat, than King of the tore rip the preliminary :treaty of crouched Sicili05. This simplified matters. San Stefano extorted' by Russia from senseless. .411 a moment antepolice the which would virtually have attention a Naples,.3'twith the Sicily, was delivered T'urlcey, I 1 Europe. Rath- were disarm Prowls o over to the house of Bourbon, Aus- tria retained all her possessions fn Italy but Piedmont and Genoa,, which, With Sardinia, were given over to the house of Savoy, while Tuscany and other northern pro- vinces were distributed among petty princes, dependent, some upon Aus- tria, some upon the house of Austria commonly known. Ito bellev0(1 that It took '181110.1860 and the combined not to throW back the Russian ad - efforts of Na9oleoe IIT., Charles .011- 1'+anC0 then was to oo England's d's b0•t and Garibaldi to begin t113 last c11ance of postponing righting of this third wrong, ' future the predominance of a great With Switzerland the conference rival 1"ower' in the East. It was was more secccssful. An agreement largely due to Beaconsfield that between the Swiss deputies and the Russia Was 0001p0110cl to Content her - plenipotentiaries at V1011100 osta3- self with a moderate acquisition of plcnll liahad a confederation of twenty-two territory in Asian with the extension cantons, and their relative 5teength of her frgl1Lle'8 to the tnontll of tho anci influence Were so constituted as Bantam and with the f0rmatisil of lo e,ectn'e the preponderance to the two Bulgarian vassal -t]tes. - (1 did not feel themselves strong enough PLAYING APART. on the military side to let the Chat- ter come to a war with Euglnnd and Carey sent S five o fro isassoc Ates to Austria, after they had once let slip the gallows, penal de the opportunity of occupying Con- for life, and others to various terms stantinople." RUSSIA'S A1.I'JTUDE TOWARD GERMANY. Bismarck insists that the demand which at first 110 had only indicated, but afterward unequivocally expresses that Russia should inform Germany confidentially but plainly of her wish- la tral Criminal Court o11 May 21, of 1nprisonment, Carey, having clone his work, was smuggled out of the c001>11y by the police, and fled for safety abroad. Me was tracked and shot by O'Don- nell, as hp Was seated 111 a cabin of the Melrose steamer at Port Eloza- beth, South Africa, foul' mouths ts', Feta people who were in the Con- es, so that they might have boon dis- 1 was evaded. "1 bad the impression a Primo fico remainder was restored to its former sovereignty. As regards Saxony, whore the race cases where . wo could, assume that question played only a small part, we were completely certain of "tee- the work of the Congress :vas on the sign interests and intentions, and whalo successful. But when the where 1ve believed ourselves able to • Netherlands came under consiclera- give a voluntary proof of our 'friend - tion the principle which the plenipo- ship toward tho Russian policy with- tertiaries had adopted of wilfully out injuring Out• Own interests, in - ignoring n- ignoring the dispositions of the pee- stead of the expected acknowlelg plo led them into a grave error, which moat wo received a grumbling dieap fortunately righted itself of itself. proval because, as it w0 s alleged, in cl 011 1 c glum, w to utter L1'femn, and thereby to under- take any responsibility. Even in speet, He raid he had been forced into war by Tuw'lik, the Iehedivu, The fate of 331111ins recalls that of t'honl he blamed for all the blood - the man Voirbo, the informer also- shod; but, being a soldier, wheal Mated with the triumph of M. Mace, fighting had begun he went. on fight - the late Parisian. Chef do Smote. Mg, hoping to win. Drawing him - Mace, while a young detective and se11 up, and speaking with great to distinguish himself, had feeling, he said the British and burning g the solving of a mysterious rnurdai• . Egyptians were now brothers again, laced in his lands. IIe was, after end he trusted 11inlself to British, p contain that it, had honor as a soldier whose army had long inquiry, been perpetrated by a man earned been (1°10a -tech Voirbo. 13ut how bring it home to CoLuwuyo escaped to a small kraal 11310? Every effort of the detective after his chiefs had tendered their failed, and at last he adopted a des- submtssiou at Ulundi. Ile was p0rate course. Me went to Voirbo tracked Iowa by 0 native 00ntin- and told him he was coy Lain that he gent anis Dragoons through dif1eult annihilated Turkey n S . ' or than 001100116 to this Beaconsfield opportunity, and dashing away those would have fought Russia 111 alliance' who stood between he 'threw himself, with Turkey, and Freclericic Green- with a cry like that of wedcl, the journalist, assures us from A WiLT) BTCASP "poraouas knowledge'' that 110 had oil his accomplice, t:he informer. gone much further in maturing a IL tools half a dozen officers to tear scheme of attack and defence than IS r s izad his palely which adhered to the old cos- ()Beaconsfield hiisettirlas festal rig vah•11.11 ova- emits anci inti n g'on the subject 01 ton 'Immediately on landing at, The negotiations were equ ll L J •lana wee equally n1r11cnU1e, All slaver ho carat up one of his most tint Y of speech. "We the fireman Sl.011, were ca into hulloes rockets bacWith ifs iea00 with e a ronfrdcraLion, talose capital, lou {, L 1 the ehrese tFennicfort, wits ie arrangemeutilLRnglancl by ben became exclaimed, e itnmediatelyail household hint away and to handcuff him, The dock side WINS 5111as11011 t0 splinters, When the jury brought in their ver- dict of "Guilty" and the Judge pees- ed the sentence of death, Milsom was yet almost beeathleas, So in- tense was the hatred for Milsom in- spired in Fowler by what he had done that even when. they met on the scaffold officers had to interpose to chock another desperate attempt to wreak veugeanee on him, Another informer who ran a very 1e1e1V a good deal about the crimp• and dangerous country, The native Voirbo's confusion was almost a con- contingent, rushing to the Kraal, shouters to the startled followers of Cetewayo: "The white men are here! You are all taken!" BURIED TILE FLAG. fossion of guilt, but he pulled 11In- self together and told Mace that he believed he knew the murderer and that ho felt confident that he could stet }lin to run him down. Now Mace was apparently ono of the most Major Marter rode up on the in- credulous and generous of 111011. Ile 5t0»t, and called upon Ceteway° to declared that if Voirbo helped him yield, "hlntorI" cried Cetawnyo, to lay hands on the assassin he aa am your prisoner!" Major Mar - would ever remember him, and, thus ter feared the a trap alight be set encouraged, Viorbo commenced to in the madness of eav0g0 dospera- ttnn energetic informer respecting t110 tion, and declined to go in. Phan suspicious conduct of some people he ()alewayo, weak, weary, footsore, ]cnew. Mace appeared completely deceived, word, Disraeli continued his triune - hal progress to London, where ho Was geoetecl at Charing Cross station by the Mayor in his robes of elites and cheered along his way Prom the dation to Deeming street by crowds of enthusiastic workIng1aon1- and looking sick at heart, carne out of the kraal. IIe repelled with dig - (RI to tio `�tor, � •-;` , re- TIIhl TEMPTRESS, ARGUING WITH TEE TIME. A Traveller's Experiences in Mace- donia, After the last Macedonian upris- ing widen SaralTov had been put clown, reliefexpeditions were sent by England into the Balkans, carrying provisions for the inhabitants of the burned villages and medical supplies and clothing for those in direst need. In "Tho Burden of the Bal- kans," Miss Durham, 0110 of t110 re- lief agents, describes her experiences With the warring factions. '"11115 unhappy land," explained ono Moslem official, "is given over to the devil. You see him work ovsw\vher0, The Moslems are break- ing the commandments of the Pro- phet. and the wrath of God is upon them. They are drunken; they kill one (mother as well as Christians. Whoa a Christian is killed I speak to t11%m like this: " 'Why do you strike this man? lie (lid nothing to you.' " 'I struck him because he is an unbeliever.' 'Why do you strike an unbeliev- er?' " 'Because I wish to kits them all.' 'Po you wish the land to be all Moslem?' 'Of course I, do.' " 'But du ,you not understand that what you do is contrary to thewill of Clod? Ifo you think you are more powerful than Ho? If every Chris- tian were killed the land 100111(1 bo almost Without people. Who are you, w'ho thin}: you can arrange the wvorlrl?' "Then I give slim a handful of slay, and say, 'Take that and make it into a Moslem. Make it into a Maslen, I say, at ortc01' "Ile is astonished and says he can- not do it, 'The Lord created all the peo- ples of the world thus with Olay by a miracle,' I say to hint, 'and you, you cant of even make of it ono Moslem; yet ,vou would destroy the Lord's work.' "Then 11e is ashamed. 16 is thus one Hurst speak to such sten. The clay and the words—that they under- stand," Inclivitlual argument of that (met may -seem to be a slow way of bring- ing peace 11110 the Ilalkans—Int iP the words and the clay hold out it may be done. Precise Aunt, (trying to arouse lit- tle Hatc who hos come. to spend the