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a TOPEKA STATE JOURNAL, THURSDAY EVENING. AUGUST 8, 1901. liflFh r. : . iff lli'.IMITATLD; An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, Kybup of Figs, manufactured by the Vaiat oim i A lia Syrvp Co., illustrate the value of obtaining' the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting1 theminthe form most refreshing' to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing-the system effectually, dispelling' colds, headaches and fevers (rently yet promptly and enabling' one io overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting- on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating- them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing j?s are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the California Fia Stkcp Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, CiL. X.OTTISVTI.I.E. IT. BIW YCE1I, IT. T. Forxale by all Druggists. Price 60c. per botila Wabash For luffalo If you are going to the Buffalo Exposition you must know that the Wabash Railroad i3 The Only Line Running Through Trains from Kansas City to Buffalo and Sleeping Cars to New York, and making the fastest time. And don't forget about New York and Boston, that the Wa bash saves you a day. The Wabash trains pass about two-thirds of the way around the Exposition grounds, giving through passengers who do not wish to stop at Buffalo a grand view of the Electric Display and grounds. TIisBestRoutIb EIEVYOEK vie.Tiy FANAMEECAN EXFQMK V- f THE I SCENIC feiwf LINE ! SDXIILYESTIiiULED TRAINS 3UPER3.BP)PiGCARJ5JCRVTCE Enquire of LoceJ RJ? Ajent or write JO 1 GEO A CL'LLEN G.WPA. 10 3 ADANS ST CHICAGO fal in inula pm iimi a CAPITAL I XViL is l These Hami are the product 1 i- f carefully selected, healthy, I f corn fed Kansas Hogs. Cared and prepared by the I I C:.:s. Tf clff Psckis Co. i i Ask your Grocer or Butcher foi '"CAPITAL" HAMS no ethers "just as good". iff PERFECT ELEGAHT TOILET LUXURY: Used by people of refinement far. over a quarter of a century It tucW IT1! r" POLICE JOTTINGS. 0. Kempton is Again Before Judge Lindsay. Escapes in All the Cases But One. GIVEN A HEAVY FINE. "Cat's Paw"Bradshaw Is Again In Court. "The Royal" Gets Back Best of Confiscated Goods. Three more of the numerous O. Kempton cases were passed upon by the police court Wednesday. On counts dated June 8 and 11 Mr. Kempton was let go for want of conclusive evidence. On the count of July 24 he was taxed $300 and 90 days of grace. Mr. Kemp ton made great haste to prepare an $300 appeal bond, for the grated door of the Jail grinned at iiirn invitingly. Jack Bradshaw, of the firm of Heit man & Bradshaw, was fined once more, $300 and 90 days being the latest as sessment. In ruling upon this case "hizzoner" freely expressed his opinion that Bradshaw was but a chestnut raker for Chas. Heitman, who handled the spoils, but he has said so before. Many tines have been charged to Bradshaw, and if Heitman and the dis trict court fail him at the critical time he is liable to spend the remainder of his life in jail. Another consignment of the Royal joint and gambling hall property which was captured May 10 was returned to Attorney Dave Gregg Wednesday night. This case, which was against Mike Thompson and Robert Shelby, came up for trial about a month ago, and Attorney Gregg for the defense re quested the production of the original complaint. The prosecution. Chief Stahl and everybody else concerned In Attorney Gregg Departs with the TSe- maimng .tAiuipmeiit oi iae Kuyai. the case made diligent search but failed to locate the missing document. The defense triumphantly declared the prosecution a failure, and proceeded to replevin the gambling paraphernalia. consisting of roulette, poner ana crap tables, which are alleged to be win ning great gobs of greenbacks for the owners In Oklahoma at present Pro ceedings were then commenced which resulted In the surrender of the wet goods Wednesday night. One keg of whisky, one jug of blackberry brandy, one jug of gin, two cases of bottled whisky and two beer pumps were re deemed and removed from their dusty resting place, to the great disgust of the chief, who will gather them in again at the first opportunity, and lock the complaint in a safety vault. There Is no end of wonderful doings in Topeka. The institution known as VeraKnowles resort was visited by the e-rlm chieftain and a choice selection of officers Wednesday evening wltile "go ings on were in order. The Knowies woman was escorted to the holdover by no less a person than Chief Stahl himself, preceded by Ada Overman, Abe Council, and last but by no means least, came the affable Mr. J. W. Haggar of Chicago, a traveling salesman, who gracefully abstracted $2a from an im mense roll and gravely shook hands with everyone before he returned to his hotel, promising to make everybody look like 30 cents in small change at some vague future date. Upon his de parture, he requested a bouquet of the chieftain's whiskers as a momento of of the occasion, but his request was heartlessly refused. It Is a very un usual thing for this well known disor derly house to be disturbed by the po lice, and It was popularly supposed to be under police protection, and exetlipt from all danger but its protector as apparently off duty. Only a few of the many "Injuns" taken in out of the cold on circus day are still In jail. They have been re moved by friends who cheerfully put up the required amount of ransom money. Several plain drunks were added to the list of star boarders, but compared with the elaborate display of circus day revelers, police business is growing quite tame. TRUTH ABOUT COAL TRUST Told in a Report by the British Com mercial Agent London, Aug. 8. Seymour Bell, the British commercial agent in the United States, in the course of a report on the coal and coke trade of America, says: "It is more than doubtful If there will ever be the enormous export of coal from the United States looked4 for. "Morgan and Vanderbilt and the Pennsylvania coal interests appear to be trying to coerce other coal interests not owning railways, particularly those of the Ohio coal fields, and prevent them from selling at a lower price than the railways working coal mines, by denying them transportation facilities except upon their own terms. Federal laws forbid discrimination In rates, but it is an accepted fact that rebates are allowed to the large trusts and coal op erators friendly to the roads con cerned." Names For Legion of Honor. Paris, Aug. 8. The list of promotions and appointments to the legion of hon or includes the names of Mr. Julius L. Stewart, promote in the office and .Mr. Arthur Edward Valois, advocate, and Mr. Lewis S. Ware, engineer, appoint ed knights. . Mr. Stewart is a portrait fainter. THE KING'S NEW FAVORITE London Society Aghast at Edward's Partiality For the Famous Parisian Beauty. I v fl I London's social "exclusives are shocked at King Edward VIFs growing partiality for Liane de Pougy, the notorious Parisian beauty, who at different times has been the favorite of the King of Belgians, Prince Napoleon Bona parte, General Boulanger, Prince Henry of Orleans, and many other men of eminence. Edward has lunched and supped with her many times, and shows her many attentions. ONE MORE STEP Taken Toward Bringing Bucket Shop Cases to a Conclusion. Kansas City, Aug. 8. Judge Hook of the federal court of Kansas, sitting In Kansas City for Judge Philips, made an order In the case of the board of trade of Chicago against the C. C. Christie Grain and "Stock company of Kansas City and telegraph companies that fur nished market reports to the firm. The court sustains several objections made by the board of trade to the an swer filed by the Christie company's lawyers. The first part of the answer excepted to Is an allegation to the effect that the Christie company, which is called a bucket shop by the board of trade, transacts Its business practically ond substantially as do the members of the board of trade. In other words, the local commission company claims that It is no more of a bucket shop than is the big institution in Chicago from which market reports come and whose members carry on their business by dealing in options on grain and other stocks for those who want to invest. This claim is called "impertinent" by the attorneys for the board of trade in their bill of exceptions. Another exception is to that part of the commission company's answer which says that the so-called bucket shop Is a place not unlike a board of trade. The other exceptions which are sustained by Judge Hook are those wherein it is alleged in any way that the complaint, or board of trade, in ad dition to its legitimate business, con ducts or affords facilities for the con duct of a bucket shop and for transac tions, violative of the laws of the states of Missouri and Illinois. The court's order is.in brief, to the ef fect that the board of trade does not deserve to be called a bucket shop, and that the statements in the formal an swer, where a line of comparison is drawn touching the business of the complainant and the business of the de fendant, are not proper parts of the pleadings. The style of this noted case, which has attracted attention all over the country, is "Board of Trade of Chicago against the Christie Grain and Stock Company, C. C. Christie, the Western Union Telegraph Company, the Postal Telegraph and Cable Company and the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company." The telegraph companies were pro ceeded against several months ago, when the board or trade sought to pre vent them from furnishing daily re ports to the alleged bucket shops. The result was a counter suit, the purpose of which was to compel the board of trade to furnish its daily reports. The litigation has become quite com Can Keep Cool II You Know How to FEED YOURSELF. (Seasons Below.) Try GRAPE-NUTS. HOT WEATHER FOOD. The selection of food for hot weather is an important question. We should avoid an excess of fats, cut down the butter ration and indulge more freely In fruits and food of easy digestion. One meat meal per day is sufficient dur ing hot weather. An ideal breakfast" is Grape-Nuts, treated with a little cream (which, by the way, supplies the necessary fat in a very digestible form) a cup of Pos tum Cereal Food Coffee, hot, or if cold, it should have a little lemon juice squeezed in: then some fruit, either cooked or raw; also perhaps two slices of entire wheat bread with a very thin spread of butter. A breakfast of ti'is sort is so perfectly adapted to the wants of the system that on goes through the heat of the day in comfort as compared with the sweaty, disa greeable condition of one improperly fed. Once put in practice, the plan will never be abandoned during the hot days, for the difference in one's per sonal comfort is too great to be easily I forgotten, plex and the legal phases of the case are diverse and involve various points of law whose solution is awaited with great Interest. From a commercial standpoint the ultimate result of the case will be im portant, involving, as it does, the re lations of commission firms engaged in this line of business to the great as sociations that form the central ma chinery of the speculative world, as well as the rights and duties of tele graph companies in determining whom they shall furnish daily reports to and who shall be denied. Judge Hook announced yesterday that he would come to Kansas City next Friday for the purpose of making a more complete order in this case. KING IS WARY. Edward Til Has a Wholesome Fear of Anarchists. New York, Aug. 8. Says the London correspondent of the Tribune: Rumors are current that the reason why the departure from London for Germany of King Edward and other royal mourners has been delayed was that the German police authorities had received information of a plot which the anarchists had intended to put in to execution at Friedrichshof. It is certainly somewhat significant that even now the exact hour of the king's departure has not been made known. However, It is- known that repara tions for his departure are complete. Accompanied by Queen Alexandra and Princess Victoria, he will leave Lon don tomorrow evening and reach Cron berg in time to be present at the me morial service which is to be held there Sunday. A SHOWER OF EGGS. Two Dowie Faith Healers Roughly Treated. Chicago, Aug. 8. Bespattered with decayed eggs and pursued by a shout ing, angry crowd, two followers of Dowie, the faith healer, fled through the streets of South Chicago last night and only by the aid of a friendly motorman of the Calumet electric line were they able to escape. The supposed recognition by the crowd of one of the men as Henry Christensen caused the hostile move ment on the part of the surrounding throng. It was Christensen's wife who died without medical attendance a few weeks ago of Injuries received in a fire, the prayers of the faith healers failing to save her. The throng remembered the published accounts of her deathbed sufferings as depicted at the official in vestigation, and they were in no humor to give the faith healers a cordial re ception when they attempted to preach their doctrine on the street corner. A Coincidence. New York, Aug. 8. A special to the Herald from Homburg says: While the service is taking place on Sunday at Cronberg church Canon Teignmouth Shore will preach at the memorial serv ice at Homberg. It is a curious coin cidence that on the same day of the same month a year ago the same preacher conducted the memorial serv ice for Duke Alfred of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, at which the Empress Frederick was present. ' Marriage of Miss Pickens. New York, Aug. 8. Miss Mary Pick ens, granddaughter of the famous war governor of South Carolina and daugh ter of the late James W. Pickens of Corinth, Miss., has just married at her home in thi3 city, Arthur Shirley, of Camden house, Falleshire , Coventry, England. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley have gone to California and will return to New York, in the autumn. Returning "With a Hawaiian Wife. Atchison, Kan., Aug. 8. John E. M. McLuth of Honolulu, member of the Hawaiian legislature, will arrive at his old home in Atchison with his Ha waiian wife in a few days. It is un derstood that he will buy machinery with which to equip fruit canning plants in Hawaii with a view of plac ing Hawaiian canned goods on the American market. " - SNAP SHOTS AT HOME NEWS E.P. Gates was in Kansas City Wednes day. George Sharitt haa returned from St. josepn. Dick Cooley Is now playing center field wun soston. James S. Coe is getting up a street tait at rumourg. Open cars to Oakland are still popular In the evenings. E. C. Fox of Topeka was in Kansas uity vv eonesaay. John F. Switzer has returned from a trip to iiusseu county. K. D. McKeever and Milton Brown hav returned from Leavenworth. T. F. Doran's summer widower's club nas received several new accessions. Roy Crawford is going west with hie moving picture advertising machine. So far no bookings have been made at the Grand opera house for the coming season. Mrs. E. R. Taylor and children and Miss Jane Rodgers have gone to Colorado fo a montn s outing. Miss Jennie Calp has returned to hei home in Osage City after a visit of sev era! weeks in Topeka, H. B. Howard and Charles H. Trapp nave macie application lor memoersnip in the Commercial club. Belle Coleman has asked for a divorce in the district court from Ed Coleman on the ground of non-support. B. T. George and George Conway are here to begin work at the new woolen mill now building in North Topeka. Rev. C. F. Parham who, together with a number of his followers have been hold ing meetings in Lawrence, have returned to Topeka, The T. A. A. team will play Grant villa on the Washburn grounds Saturday anci play at Manhattan Friday and Saturday of next week. Weeds have grown rapidly since the re cent rains. For the looks of the thing it would be a good plan to mow the weeds off the vacant lots. Senator Burton has gone on from Washington to a New England sea shore resort for a week's rest. He is having much trouble for a new senator. A. petition is being circulated among th friends of S. M. Hall, the policeman who killed George Head, asking that Hall bft reinstated at once on the police force. Gov. Stanley declined an invitation to speak at the Missouri jubilee, the state'a birthday celebration, which is to foe held August 10. The promoters deny that r5 is to be a Democratic affair. A good many people Etopped at the Au. ditorium yesterday to see the "insides' of the pipe organ which was being taken down and moved. The tubes inside or the organ are made of aluminum. State Superintendent of Insurance W. V. Church is in attendance at the annual convention of mutual insurance com. panics of Kansas at McPherson. Tfe made a speech last night on the subject of a state fire marshal. The rumor that Topeka policemen carry alarm clocks to wake them up on their beats before morning, is said to have originated in one of the finest being ob. served taking a. battered time-piece to th jeweler's shop for repairs. The council committee on electric lights of which W. F. Weber is chairman will meet tonight to discuss the claim ot Mrs. Drucilia Woodall , for . $5,000 damages for the death of her husband, DaviA Woodail. The mayor, city attorney and superintendent of the electric light plant will meet with the committee. Wesley Morris, a familiar character at Leavenworth known as "Old Plum o Plum creek," has been adjudged insane and is to be brought to the insane asylum here. Morris has been acting strangely for many months and has been making dailv trips from his home on Plum creek to the city in search of fabulous sums of money which he imagines is due him. The following is from a Chicago paper; Depositions for the companies in the To peka cases are being taken in the office of Bates & Harding. Galen Nichol. county attorney, is present, as is also At torney Mulvane of Topeka. retained by the companies. Nearly all the manager will be examined, that their evidence may be used In the defense of the cases if deemed necessary. N. H. Loomis has been appointed by Judge Hook of the United States circuit court as special master to investigate the equity of the motion made by the- Kansas Mutual Life Insurance company to hav D. R. Hite barred from participation in the trial of the suit of E. T. Phillips o Kansas City against the Kansas Mutual company. Further hearing of the case will come up Saturday. The city engineer's attention has been called to the condition in which the wa ter company has left the pavement on Fifteenth street and College avenue, where it hast been laying water mains. The bricks project an inch above the level of the pavement where the water com pany has raised them after putting in tho mains. It is likely that the water com. pany will be compelled to relay th bricks to grade. WHITMAN'S PROMOTION. Friends of the Kansas Soldier Pleased "With His Advance. Frank H. Whitman, whose promotion to captain of infantry was announced yesterday, was a field officer In the Twentieth Kansas regiment. Captain Whitman was graduated from West Point, and at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war was a second lieutenant. Governor Leedy gave him a commission as major in the Twen tieth Kansas. He was promoted to first lieutenant during the campaign In the Philippines, and at the muster of the volunteers went to Fort Thomas, Ky., with his company. While with the Kansas regiment Major Whitman was in command of the regiment at the battle of Bacalor, where by a clever tactical movement he surprised the na tives In their trenches, winning one of the best managed battles in which the reginent participated. Major Whit man was the only field or line officer who was remembered by the enlisted men with any sort of present. He was given a gold watch at San Francisco just previous to the muster out of the regiment. STRIKE AT FRISCO. Will Hamper Steamship Traffic Be tween There and Portland. Portland, -Ore., Aug. 8. President Mohler of the Oregon Railway and Navigation company, when asked re garding the strike at San Francisco on the company's line of steamships ply ing between Portland and the bay city, stated that In view of the present re lations between the various railroad companies of the Harriman system, the matter would be left to Jake its own course, and in the meantime steamship traffic between the two ports will re main closed. No attempt will be made to commence operation of the steam ships Columbia and G. W. Elder while the trouble in San Francisco is on. APPENDICITIS. Sane Pacts Reg-.rdlsg; Its R.pid Increase. Appendicitis amon Americans is certainly increas ing and while, this is probably du to ths excitement and worry of American business life, it Is more often directly traceable to constipation. Appendicitis is caused by extraneous matter enterinc the rermiform appendix and not by the swallowing of seeds. If the digestive organs are kept in perfect condition so the food is duly assimuiated and the bowels move gently, at least once a day, appendicitis will never develop. Don't take chances. Regular doses of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin before meals will strengthem the organs of digestion, your appetite wiU be good, constipation disappears and you feel better in every way. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin does not relax -.e boweis by irritation but by curing indigestion, ths cause of con stipation. Your druggist sells it If not, send us his name and we will send a trial bottle free and some ot the strongest endorsements of a medicine you ever read. Pepsin Syrup Co., ManuceUs. His., U, & A. "PMU-NA A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY," SAYS PROF. TALFOURD SMITH, OF GEORGIA. fF V I. j qj PROF. TALFOURD SMITH. Professor Talfourd Smith, Principal Siloam High School, Siloam, Ga.,write3: "With much pleasure I recommend Peruna to all who may be suffering with any trouble of the respiratory organs. I have been using it in my family for the past five or six years and find it to be almost a household necessity. Peruna is truly a grand catarrh rem edy and general tonic and will do all that Is claimed for it by the manufac turers." Prof. Talfourd Smith. Catarrh is inflammation of the mucous membrane. It may be In the mucous membrane lining the eyes or the pelvic organs, throat, stomach, liver, bowels or kidneys. Catarrh is catarrh wherever located. Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. Peruna is an internal remedy; not a local application. THE TRAVELER FROM S Pan-American Exposition S Should remember that there Eight Trains Daily FROM o o o o CHICAGO VIA JLaiie and Michigan Southern Railway. The Onlv Double Track Line All tickets OTer this route afford use of and Buffalo, also stop at Chautauqua on a. Book of Trains and Pan-American Folder on applicatioa X F. M. BYRON, G. W. A., Chicago. Books That Increase in Value One does not buy books pleasant to feel that what Those who buy publications bearing the imprint of George Barrie & Son are certain of this ; and in numerous cases -have realized unearned increment. A case in point : at a recent London sale a portfolio of illustrations which ac companied a set of their edition of Hugo brought 40 ; more than the original subscriber paid for the entire set and the portfolio. Agents wanted. For Catalogue of such Books address 1313 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. AN AMERICAN GIRL To Marry a Distinguished Italian in Rome. New York, Aug. 8. The World says: An international romance will reach its climax shortly by the marriage in Rome of Slg Carrado Menicenti, a dis tinguished Italian and Miss Rising, an American girl. Miss Rising, who Is the daughter of Professor W. B. Rising of the Univer sity of California, has been traveling abroad for some time, spending last winter as a member of the American colony in Rome. A 1,000 ACRE PARK. Splendid Present For Colorado Springs by W. J. Palmer. Colorado Springs, Colo., Aug. 8. Gen. William J. Palmer has purchased a thousand acres of land northeast of Colorado Springs, Including the famous Austin Bluff ranches, his intention be ing to present the city of Colorado Springs with the purchase rights of the ground for use as a public pork. HER SKULL CRUSHED. Body of a Murdered Woman Found Near Pottsville, Pa. Pottsville, Pa., Aug. 8. The finding of the body of Mrs. Seth Davis, aged 49, with her skull crushed in near here is regarded as indicating that her hus band, who hanged himself last Satur day, had murdered her. The couple were last seen together by their daugh ter last Friday, when they were sup posed to be on the way to Pottsville. Only the man reached Pottsville, and there waa strons suspicion that be tiaa Catarrh Is a systemic disease, not a local disease. If Peruna will cure ca tarrh in one place it will cure It in any other place, because Peruna is a sys temic remedy. It reaches the disease through the circulation in each organ. It eradicates the disease by eradicating it from the system. Peruna eradicates catarrh from the system In the same way that the prac tical farmer eradicates weeds from his fields. The sensible farmer does not think of cutting off the top of the weeds to kill them. He pulis them up by the root3. Dr. Hartman, the originator of Pe runa, has used this remedy for the last forty years with great success aa a specific for catarrh. A free book written by him will be sent to any address. It contains the results of his forty . years' experience with Peruna, and will be found of great interest to those afflicted with catarrh of any organ of the body. Mr. F. E. Brackett. Medfoid, Mass., writes: "I have a bottle of Peruna and Man alln in use in my house two-thirds of the time. If I take it when feeling a little indisposed It braces me right up. and keeps me In such .fine condition that I don't oatch cold, and that is life and happiness to one of my business. I am a teamster, and when the mem brane of my nose is swollen ut night after driving in our east winds and fogs, I take a dose of Peruna on going to bed at night and get up all right in the morning. It also makes the blood circulate, and is sure death to rheuma tism." Mr. F. E. Bracken. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Pe runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. THE WEST TO THE O o o o o are to BUFFALO o THE o o o o o steamers either way between Cleveland o the return trip within limit of ticket. o o as an investment, but it is one does buy holds its yalue. made away with his wife. The sus picion was strengthened when the wo man did not put in an appearance at the funeral of her husband. CRESCEUS TO 00. Noted Trotter Out for a Record This Afternoon. New Tork, Aug. 8. Interviewed at Poughkeepsie, N". Y., concerning Cres ceus and his chances, George H. Ket eham, of Toledo, O., owner and idriver of the horse, said: "Some people have a notion that I do not care to have him make fast time, but I am as anxious to have him break the record now as I have been hereto fore. "I do not think Cresceus has reached his limit, and if the conditions of the) weather and track are wnat they bid fair to be, I believe you will see a new trotting record made here. "The Hudson river track Is fast, and the rain has put it in excellent condi tion. It is a little soft near the pole, but that is to be all planed off before the race this 'Thursday) afternoon. "I weighed 174 pounds at Columbus last Friday; now I weigh 178. but I ex pect to have reduced to 175 when I drive Cresceus. The horse Is in perfect physicial condition and fit to do his ut most. I want a good, warm afternoon and an entire absence of wind." Mr. Ketcham will receive tl.OuO for. this exhibition by Cresceus. The horsa will be shipped from here at once to Brighton Beach, where he will meet The Abbot in a fcpecial race oa August 15. Prince Henry Lands in Prance. Brest, France, Aug. 8. The Gtman cruiser Hela, Prince Henry of Prussia, on board, arrived here today from Cadiz. The customary salutes were ex changed. Later the prince landed on French soil, being the first German prince to so land since the war o 1870-'71. Prince Henry was oiclaliy re ceived by the prefecW