Newspaper Page Text
£\VOY A FAILURE Hoxc Court Ball Squabbles Have Affected His Career. ajaatgat. HN, by the ii«a<aa»ai Company.) Barcn Tschirschky. the German Ainbas- FRdcr at Vienna, is once more in hot water 1- connection with injury to his feelings at * court bar. and his relations with «*• Aus trian Chancellor and Minister of Fore Affairs. Count d'Acbrenthal, arc sufficiently strained to reader thf maintenance of cor. f.fiential leimw— between them difficult «nd cordiality out of the question. M the> court of VJenna. a.« also at Madrid and Lisbon, and formerly in Franc. th« Papal Nuncio is, rx offlclo. the Aaaa of tbm diplomatic corps. At Vienna, next in rank by virtue of his seniority at appoint nwaU ceases Baron Tschirschky. Usually «t court bulls and similar state functions. rouni d'Aehrenthal has taken the Bar— eai -<:- n-echar In to supper. At the last court l^sll. which iras fruitful In all sorts of in r!c>r.t*. he took in the new English Am busaflnss, 1-e.dy Oattantgbt, by birth a daughter of the great patrician baoae of OJgi a"<3 lett to the Nuncio, as dean of the diplomatic corps, the honor of acting ns •sccrt to the German Ambassadress, who is rf Austrian boureeois birth. Count d'Aeh- T*r.thal happened to be talking to Lady rtwrfg when the procession in to na> j-t took place, and offered her his arm. probably in order to be able to have an «^p rotfstilty of continuing his conversation irtth her st supper. Bztcz Tschirschky. however, chose to re ztzS. the matter as a deliberate affront not Gzly to bis wife bat also to the German Embassy, and immediate': after supper apostrophized d'Aehrenthal with sufficient warmth £^d vigor to attract Kb* attention rf a nurrber of people, fo that within twen ty-fc-r hours all Vienna was talking of tha jifjair. Happening to come at a time when Court fi'Aehrenthal is endeavoring to pro pStlatfi Russia and to place Austria's rela- Ton? with her on the- friendly footing: which existed prior to the Herzegovina-Bosnia an -'xation. the incident has been endowed •with more political importance than It de • <■-'- being interpreted as a disapproval rr the part o* the German -■■-.-• of h e r tljy's advances to Russia. FORCED TO LEAVE ST. PETERSBURG. Tr.i* is the prrond time that Tschirschky has made s mountain out a molehill at b court ball. Th*> former occasion was at c * Petersbur». at an entertsir.rnent st which, by-the-bye. Count .• ...... was rre«*r.t in the role of Austrian Ambassador. It took place st a ball -•■--■' Grand Duchess Vladimir for h«»r daughter Helen, ntnc the wife of Nicholas of Greene. Tschirschky. who was then councillor and first Fecr?tary of tne German Embassy, had engaged himself to take a lady in to •■■jrper. when Grand Duke Vjadimir came up ?rA offered her Li? arm. Etiquette- at European court* requires that a lady pho-jld 'rzs.z an invitation of this kind on the part of a member of the reignir.g house in the Jlrht cf a mand and the grand duke. •"•uhi-g to turn the eye of his prerogative. =tr s prlr.re of the Mood Into i joke, rx '■iaim^d laughingly a= Tschirschky retired *Htfa s vrry disappointed look on his ?ace: "Oh, re r er mind those Tiresome German <-?:r>]orr.ats : th r y are the most dreary people in Txirt^-ce !" Yon Tscblrschkr. wha j s «xtretnety eerl ntJE minded, without m. vestige of humor, tr.rfrad cf accepting this remark of his irnperia! host in the same laughing and merry ;ok;r.g way in which it was uttered, took grave offence, and then and ■ ier« nace formal complaint to his ambassador. Prince Radolm, insisting that the German r.rnbassy. and not only the. embassy but th c entire diplomatic service of the Kaiser. had been flighted in his angular person. Radolin. who ;? - thorough man of the "■ crld. endeavored in vain to pacify the haron, pointing out to him that of all the members, of the. reigning house, of Russia there vr^re none who were more G?rman in their Fympathies and so closely ailied with • .<■ HcheuzolKirn'- as- the Grand Duke and '--and Duchess Vladimir. In. fact, the lat ter. a princess of the. house of Mecklen l -irg-Schwerin. used formerly to ac regard <■■-: a c the particular champion of Germany at Et. T'ctcrshurt and as -■-.--■ nf the policy of Princ^ Bismarck. Yon T"?"r,:rFchky. however, declined to listen to Radolin's are-um^nt? or to look upon the ■:Tiat:rr in the light of a mer«- friendly joke, ■ :A animated his intention of tendering his resignation and returning tc Berlin to re port Hie occurrence unless he received re dress. Radolin, who is now German Ana i-a'-Fador at Paris, anxious to avoid at all cost* making an affair of state and a full Sedged diplomatic controversy of such a rilly incident, at once vent to the grand duchess. £^ a German princess, asking her :.' either t-he cr her husband would say a kind word to TschlTEchky in order to re i.<-.^ h;m (Radolin) of a. most embarrass ::.r pr-'dicamer.t. The gran duchess, in .•<-.-!.< of complying with Radolin's request. lost her tempe r complotely, rounded upon the ambassador for h!F impertinence In complaining about her husband at the In p:an,->' cf a mere secretary of the embassy . j bade h:m to remember once and for all vrr.e that, although ehe was a German by rirth. she v.a.s n>v,- a princess of the :• ,-: Ing house of Russia. In fact, the grand duchess was to angry that Radolin i.ad no alternative but to leave the ball, ting viih him the members of his staff- The 'at v/as in the fire. The court of St- Frujrsbxrrs ar.d EOdety took sides with the Urai <•■ Duchess v:aain-iir, who is extremely "■r'-rable. arid denounced not only Yon Ttchirschky. but also Prince Radoiin. for • - absence of any sense of humor. 7.. • position became irtclerable, and Radolin • u.h v ansfenred to Paris, while Yon T^cliir r-'.hk^.-. after remaining on the retired list lor a snort time, w»f appointed minister resident *t Hamburg. hence he -was pro moied »-O the Secretan'ship of State for Foreign Affairs The Kaiser, whose cense of humor is ve-y strongly developed, soon pot tired of having a man so utterly devoid thereof appearing before h:-m daily for the purpose of makirig reports of foreign afTays and ■ in his stead Herr yon Schoen. I; t.*-carce necessary to find a place for Ttcfalrschky. and. to the amazement of «very one. be w3s cent to take the place ■' Genera] Count Wedel at Vienna. At *:■<; Ti:ae I called attention in these letters M the contrast between the two men; Count YVede'i, tho grand seigneur in every >< .-. •■: the word, his manner marked by geniality, soidierly riearing and gxaeiou* r«v to rich ' and l>o<-T alik*. whereas, Tschirschky convoys the Impression of a ( :.,.;^. l Ki;,p strait-lac-1 bu-raucrat. 'x :;<-::;':v stiff in hib ntanner a.nd apj^aring t« i' alwajTß apprenensive lest he should : n- *'~<j\\f what he considered his duo i» tf;' way of iltenilonJ -■ M E . ■ title of 1 . ■ pi• ■ • • ■ ■ • ■ I - ■ i ■ ■ ■ . ... i .' i* «a-d that Baron Tschirschky. n n ' :!T:ine th« Secretaryship of State tar Tw-^n Affairs. ha<s th? choice of the «rn >Asfy as Rome at\<i of that at Vienna, aij f trat h* h:ms*if *-h<ss* th* lsn^r It Is nn- Gen-tc-od tfcat he accepted tiiis . ■■■■«■ instance of his wif*. who hoped that as O*rman Ambassadress s=hc would be able lo penetrate- into ctrcJes of her native land to which under no other circumstances cnuM ate hav^ socure d admission- Of course. as German Ambassadress ■»«• ha " baen Included In all court functions and askrd to the state banquets and to the state balls, the atitei regulations resrardins the possession of sixteen quartcrings (that is to ray. eight generations of exclusively noble descent on the father's side and eight on that of the mother, free from any bour geoiee strain, which is exacted : of all Austro-Huncarian women) beinK waived in her case. But naturally she has never be come part and parcel of court society at Vienna, and of the Austrian pot world. Bar has she been able to fill the influential rale therein that was played by her prede cessor. Countess Wedel. a daughter of the Swedish branch of the Scottish ducal houf«» of Hamilton, and a grande dame in every serifs of tho word. In one word. Baroness Tschirschky's h->tjrseo!se origin, coupled •with the tact thnt th«» bourgeoisie to which she belongs by birth is Viennese, has ham pered The success of her husband's mission at Vienna, already handicapped by his own mariner and character. It If probable that TBChirschky will re ceive another transfer, probably to Con stantinople, this being th*» second diplo matic post that he has lo«1 on account of a ballroom squabble. LADY LAKBDOWNET6 CORRECTION. A funny story is current in London con cerning an encounter between Lady Lans downe and one of the Japanese chamber lains of Prince Fushimi. who has lately been visiting England. The chamberlain spoke English delightfully, and Lady Lans fa ma found his conversation very inter esting. When be took his leave he ex pressed the hope That he had not "cock roached too much on your ladyship 3 tsmr." Lady Lansdowne mentioned the slip to her husband, and it was decided that when she next met the chamberlain it would be kind to call his • attention to this lapsus linguae. This she did, very delicate ly, but he d'd r^* seem at first to grasp the error. At last he beamed, thanked h»r profusely for setting him right, and then. with a foreigner's idea of gender, ob served 'I quire understand. When I speak to your ladyship I must Bay sroach.' and when I speak to r^or Lansdowne I mvint say 'ct'-k-rcach.' " MARQCTSE PK POXTEXOT ROOSEVELT A FLO AT. A Week's Shooting Trip on Xilc — Kermit > Braver?/. Gondokoro. Feb. IS.— Colonel Roosevelt, Kermit Roosevelt and Edmund Heller, the zoologist, left on the steamer Redjaf to-day (or ■ final week of shooting along the river. Before they were out of the view of the. cheering crowd on the wharf both the Red jaf and the Belgian launch which accom panied her ran into a sand bank- The Red jaf was backed off. but the launch, which was loaded with baggage, remained fast In the mud Mr. H " ■ ' ' -- ■ • ere on February 26. He said t •--•• ■ ■ ' - ■ -_ - _ -r .- . extended t : bat he would endeavoi on his retui New York to arrange 1 fore the - . - - . so *o ad dress the Milwaukee I Definite - • occasions fixed when ■ IK< w York Kerni t 1 ' ring guishc II - ' V. native : -_ • the t te steamer oc and was ■ .-- - ■ :■ Loring learned ■ -. and In efforts to n the bod:' b : ter, 1 eedlesa md the i The foremor of MongalJa. the Belgian :- T idßT]t at Lado and other officials . BooGevell In Lhe torenocm. K. J Cuningbame, Major Bdgar . A . j. Aider Loi ■ remain ; ■ : : .-s the ; tails md lent to ... With the the • ■ . ■ nded After ~ 111 B = '"' - ' will d*" msc eparation of the lect ires ■« ' lite arrival ■ DR. HILLIS NOT GOING AWAY. The Rev. Dr. Newell wight Hillis, pas ter of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, yester day cast doubt on the report from Pasa dena, OiL. that be was to be called by the Presbyterian Church there to succeed the Rev. Dr. Malcolm James McL^-od. Dr. Mc 3>od ham accepted a call to the Collegiate Church, in St. Nicholas avenue. It is known That Dr. Hillis has no intention of leaving Plymouth Church. He said yesterday that he had not been approached and that he had no i<i^a how the rumor of his call to Pasadena started. M. BOUTROUX'S VISIT HERE. Paris. Feb. 18.— Etienne Emile Marie Boutroux. the French philosopher, accom panied by his wife, will sail tor the United States on the steamer Adriatic on February 23 to deliver a course of lectures at Har vard University. He will also make four public addresses at Cambridge, under The auepioes of the Cercle Francis, on •The Essence of Religion 1 ' and "The Movement of Contemporaneous Philosophy.*' M. Bou troux and his wife will be. the guests of William James. formerly professor of phi losophy at Harvard University. HOPE CHURCH CALLS PASTOR. Th" congregation of the Hop.- Baptist Church at m street and Broadway. voted unanimously last night to extend a call to the b«v. Edwin B. Holloway. of the «outh Baptist Church. Hartford, Conn. WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY. ■ - ■ • V- e ll~W Club luncheon. Hofil Astor. 1 p. m. A.__....A .__.... . of the Normal College Alumn.. Hot-1 Astor, 1 p. '!■• j . i-« to the Metropolitan Museum of - lorY ar,<J the Zoological < J ar-3en. kLrZ," of the Republican Cub. "^: !^ve." C 4«b &*£l P- X .-Diiji«rion lunch«m" of th* City sob No BB v.vnt «4th street. 1 p. m. L-unrhpon of the Cornell Woman. Club. V.tl "%ni Hotel Astor. ey«ln*. lark I'lace. t-.ei.ing. niiner of Uw John HBb Alumni Ae.oclation, /. - . ■ r i : n^ner of tbe W«f.hlnrton University Alumni. Hotel Manhattan. 7 p. ni. - 1 i, f Ma Slim* fraternity. Hotf l A ?^rn/r'r'!l'» BrookHn Eoclety or Ver ABn^f,'rT^K Av,nu, Hotel, 7 p. m. Irtrm . r of tlf euffO'" ?y«» A—elati,,. Ilctel Manhattan. ■ P- m. * . <rB « o< thP Alumni A»soHa»mp. o? th<» >nr 'vrw York Nauti.-al School. Hotel Marl rTS'i^^Voman-E Prw» Club. WaMorf 1 iVtUa -P- '»■ m o* rht lio»r<i of Edacation. h p. m.: ■•■■■ J- Hrnr >' ani < "* lhai ? r ' f"^»f- P " • .iV» Woiv" on Bnom-shoe«,V James A. -■ :• iTuJksna--"- v , nll , --gociat IJfe and Curtonw t .-ar FIX ", Mlr7ah p. >-. Raff,*: Muf-Jm of In P€r 7rj,totora 1 ""' h «r*et „■ Columbo" •'«"*'« profeetor John C o:s?n; Cooper aiarter.- > . r^ aye . n , lf . a n 4 *th street, • Th» Mighty *ye."121 Fa« f -"> s th et'et, Llrrarv. -»^-, Peace %• i» r . Frank J. Warn*; of i TT * a * t JK« T So. 503 Wot I4sth Jtree'. '••^tb«n«^SrtJioiomeV« F.t'l N* 9)5 Murr "v : M st-*-» ■ • a ' V««vinirjna His r: * ft n'-fl- 1 ■ Of- CUrl« McDowell. . . . -• NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBI/XE. SATCWBttIT. FEBRUARY 10, 1010. DJL\\\Eft FOII UCHIDA GREETED BY MAYOR. Gaynor Chaffs Griscom and Business Men's League. Mayor Gaynor was the principal speaker at the dinner of the Japan Sociey at the Hotel Astor last night. His honor stuck pretty closely to the theme of the even ing, which was "Hands Across the Pa cific.' 1 paying his share of tribute to Ja pan and welcoming: Baron Tasuya TJchlda. Japanese Ambassador, and Baroness Uchida, who were, the guests of honor. B ut the feature of his speech was the. way he paid his respects to the local political "--a" murai." and In which he Indulged in pome repartee in a good humored way at the ex pense of Lloyd C. GrJpcom. former Minister to Japan, who presided. Mr Griscom. introducing Mayor Gay nor. referred to his own connection with the Business Men's League which was or ganized in the last campaign to further the candidacy of Otto T. Bapnard. He men tioned that while the organization praised Mr Bannard in its advertisements they never criticised the enemy- After all his efforts, Mr. Griscom. now president of the Republican County Committee, said that when he met the Mayor recently he learned the latter had never even heard of him. The two hundred diners pave- Mayor Gaynor a generous reception as he arose to speak. After apologizing for arriving late because the automobile that somebody promised to send for him didn't arrive in time and .he had to start out without it, the Mayor harked back to the strenuous few weeks preceding the mayoralty elec tion. He said he was glad to learn that there was more than one political organiza tion that treated him with ordinary de cency in the campaign, but that he saw no evidence of it. He intimated that the organization of Mr. Griscom could not have been strong and probably was small, for it* Influence was hardly felt. The Mayors little Joke created much, laughter. Continuing, he said: "For more than thirty years I have been doing, or trying to do, in this community over in Brooklyn what I am trying to do now in the office of Mayor. I have tried continuously, in and out of season, talked and worked to lift the government up and make it decent in this community." When he was nominated for Mayor, said Mr. Gaynor. he "was surprised to learn that only a few of his neighbors knew anything about him. Returning to Mr. Griscom's Business Men's League, Mayor Gaynor said that the toastmaster had "lugged in his little political organization by th«» ears," but that he forgave him. In fact, he for gave everybody, he said. "I have no unpleasant recollections of the recent campaign," said the Mayor. This was. Hp said, on account of his ab solute confidence that in his past life he had done the very best for the government. "But during the campaign." went on the Mayer, "it seemed as if nobody but my immediate neighbors could believe that I was not tangled up with somebody. I never was tangled up \rith anybody in my life." Mayor Gaynor added: "Nothing can be done in any community, much less in a great city like this, unless the intelligent sentiment of the community is behind it " Mayor Gaynor then turned from local affairs to the relationship between the United States and Japan, telling of th« early civilization of the Asiatic race. "Japan is a great country.'' he said, "and this is a great country. These two great countries. living side by side in peace, can do much for humanity. Japan may let a great flood of light upon us. and we may throw a little ray of light to them. There has been a notion in Europe that Japan and the other Eastern nations are not civ ilized. "Why, the people of Japan were civ ilized when pur ancestors were running naked in the woods and literally borrowing in holes for habitation. Japan is civilized. Her gunpowder is just as good and her cannon are just as powerful as our?; there fore, she ■- fully civilized." When the Mayor had finished his speech Mr. Grl3com explained that be had merely referred to is political organization' to Il lustrate a story, and although they were at first disappointed he congratulated Mayor Gaynor on the great wave of en thusiasm that carried him Into office and wished him a successful administration. Baron Uchida said that August Belmont told him if he were to make a successful after-dinner speech in the United States he would have to start out with a few jokes. He went on to Bay that he was sanguine that nothing could come to mar the traditional friendship between the United States and Japan. "Our relations," said the ambassador, "which have been so friendly, have been becoming more and more complicated within the last few years. Formerly it was simply praise and miration on both Fides. It la not always so now. That is but natural. It is too much to expect they would always remain in that un changed pleasant vein. but. however they may be or whatever slight change may oc cur, J am convinced that there is no rea son why this pleasant relation should not continue. I believe no question can arise but which by calm, judicious and friendly means can be brought to a satisfactory solution. The same sense of Justice and the sam" sense of sincerity of purpose which are at the bottom of our friendship, and which make it traditional, will remain long as the cardinal principles in the in tercourse between the two countries." Jacob H. Schiff said: It was the beaker who Initi . nganlzed the substantial Ameri ; to the Japanese people in the time <s their stress, amounting to something like two hundred millions in less than eighteen months, it Is the banker who ;s now being i by the Japanese press with having instigated the recent propositions of our nment, being in effect that nothing be d Che Asiatic continent which mignt . the 'open door* from a fact to a and thus bring about international difficulties which v Is the earnest wish of American people to see eliminated. -ing is further from the true state of affairs than this charge against the made In the Japanese press. The . rnment Is influenced by no : the expression of the ex on of the American people that jus , . [* done not only to their own imer ■ the gr«-at Chinese Emp« - ■ ggling to re-establish itself lines ■ modern civilization." speakers were liamn Dairoku lent of the University of • p. Porter, of -The Lon don Time* " FIREMEN IN THEATRES Must Pay Greater Attention to Details for Safety of Audiences. pire Commissioner Waldo, in a general nrdf-r issued yesterday, will require a more rigid inspection of theatres by Bremen de tailed to theatre duty and greater precau- Uonp against fir.- than *■■■■>■.■> been required previously. On arrival at the theatre the fireman will «t once determine whether all eilta are open, marked by numbered and lighted eigns and that all outside Ore es rapes. roints and approaches are free from obstruction and properly lighted. ptrcnie!lp trcnie!l on theatre duty will end two rounds of test signals on the Morse key of tn« special building fire alarm box at Intervals of five minutss, and Will enter en reports whether replies were received from , n< . telegraph bureau Private telephones will not be used except In rapes of emer gene? Where explosives, colored firr nr material" of a hazardous nature are used. firein'n will lust pails of water to be placed near by. HUMOR UP TO DATE LAUGHING BY NOTE, Professor Klciser and His Cfoss on Exhibition. The entertainment took a promising turn as soon as the humorists took their seats on the platform. They had volunteered to tell humorous stones, tersely, to an audi ence at the West Side branch of the Young Men's Christian Association last night They had come with the deliberate inten tion of being funny, and even before a word was spoken all doubt that they would be much funnier than they had expected was dissipated. l*rofessor Grenville Kleiser, in charge of the development of their latent powers to amuse, was no small success himself. But his sad-eyed students of the humorous anecdote had everything in their favor. Their appear ance aided them. To see them was to lie placed in a receptive mood. It was a little difficult at the outset to understand the professor's reasons for ask ing the public speaking class to arise and go through the laughing exercises on page 30 of Kleiser's handbook. This was done in a methodical manner, care being taken to exercise all of the muscles that a properly conducted laugh was said to influence. It was done by note and sounded like 9 groan on a sliding scale, but the professor pro nounced It a good laugh and very encour aging to him indeed. The amateur comedi ans took the place of the printed exercises a little later on and the handbook was for gotten. There was still at times a remi niscence of the groaning feature, but for the most part the laughter of the audience was entirely natural, the stories were so bad. Twenty-two long and short story tell ers recited their offerings. Accident might have been expected to be the means. of one crisp now incident being related. Not an accident crept in last night, however. The- men went to the stage in relays. If any one of them were to go on the profes sional stage and would give an imitation of himself he would suit metropolitan theatre goers. The funniest thing about them was their unconsciousness of the fact that they had no sense of humor. After the first seven speakers had again taken their seats among the audience Professor Kleiser said: "I would avoid, as a usual thing, gentle men telling to a mixed audience stories having for their sole points the presence of flies in coffee or hair in butter; they are very disagreeable subjects to most per sons. And, also, please omit barroom stories: several of them have been inflicted on us to-night. This is a temperance audi ence. The next man will now speak, please. I hope yours is not pertaining to a board ing house.'" The next man told about a drunken nun who got into an argument with a police man. Before he finished the bell rang— the tell rang at the end of a minute. "How many would like to hear the *nd of Thar story?" asked the professor. There being no takers, the man retired "Wouldn't it b« wise to have some one appointed to have a hook handy?" asked a red-faced man in the front row. The audi ence was sympathetic with regard to the proposition, but the professor grew stern. Professor Kleiser regretted the vintage of the anecdotes and the thorough way that the points in the world's most popular stories were obscured. He promised to talk to the class about the advisability of the point of any story, whether funny or otherwise, being shown to the audience if only for a brief time. That is what bad made the anecdotes they had mauled re spectable all these years, he said. They should h<= tender in their handling of the points, of course, because of their vener able age, but it was certainly much easier to laugh at a joke if the thing that made the joke funny wasn't entirely mislaid. The class knows all about laughing, and the professor said that he was going to make them able to produce a laugh by some means other than their m^re a] ance on a platform, if U took all summer. PEGASUS IN MODERN GUISE. Soaring Free m Air, He Draws a Broadway Crowd That — Guys. On the road to OH Broadway. Where the flying horses play — Thus hummed a man yesterday at the corner of Broadway and 52d street, as he gazed, absorbed, at a large black horse which had just hurdled a four-foot iron rail fence opposite No. 296 West 62d street. Attached to the horse's harness was a. black delivery wagon, the horse being sus pended in air on one side of the fence, while the wagon was clear of the ground on the other. As the. lone man watched and sympa thized, the sight attracted others, until the roadway was blocked, people were hangl"g out of windows on the two eid^s of the street, and suggestions for help vrere flying through the air as thick a;? mosquitoes at a seaside resort. The driver, "lack' Diniond. was bent double under the wagon, trying to lift horse and cart into the street. Somebody finally telephoned to the Society rr>r the Prevention ot Cruelty to Animals, and a horse ambulance answered. Then the up lift work began in earnest. From a second story window a block and tackle was rigged up. ar; end of a rope adjusted about the horse's middle, and. •with much shouting and tugging, the ani mal and his burden were lifted c!«=ar of the fence and deposited in the street. ASTOR DIVOECE DECREE WAITS Wife's Failure to Ask for It Revives Reconciliation Rumor. Tt was expected that the applica;.-ir of the attorneys for Mrs. Ava Aster for a final decree of divorce from her husband. Colo nel John Jacob Astor, would come up yesterday before Supreme Court* Justice Mills, in Special Term, at White Plains, but none of the attorneys appeared. The time limit within which Mrs. Astor may apply for the final judgment following the granting of the interlocutory decree three months ago expires on the last day of this month. Judge Mills, when asked if be had heard from the attorneys for Mrs. Astor, said that none of them had been • him and that he had not received any word when they would apply to him for the decrei. The failure tr. secure the final juaxmen^ l»-ads many to believe that there may yet hi a reconciliation b"tve*n the couple. HIS TWENTY-EIGHTH CHILD Amityville Father Can't See Why Pub lic Is Interested. Oscar Darling, on architect and civil en gineer, of Amityville. Long Island, with office* in the Park Row Building, does not believe in race suicide. His twenty-eighth child was born m his home Thursday night. To intimate that Mr. Darling is Incensed because of the Interest the public take in the number of children he has had is put ting it more mildly than the farts warrant. When Mr. Darling in ISBS married his present wife, who i- the second Mrs. Dai ling, h** was forty-one and nhe was nine teen. She was Miss Catherine Hamilton, of Flushing?. Her husband had I ■■! fifteen children when he married her, and she baa lust presented him with her thirteenth child, making the total number twenty eight. The majority of them are living. Th" mother and baby arc said to be doing wet DR. CARL LUEGER DYING. Vienna, Feb i £ — r>r. Carl Lu«gei rati Semite ! c Hd»>- and bur«*omast«t of Vienna, is in*. -•%'* OBITVAEY. HENRY L'LKE. Washington. F->v l 1^ — Henry Ulke, ■who?e portraits of Presidents and Cabinet officers gamed for him the title of "painter of FTesidents," dicj at the Emergency Hos pital here lant night. He was 89 years old. Ulke was a personal triend of Abraham Lincoln and at the time of the assassina tion was boarding in the house into which Mr. Unroln was carried after he was shot. One of his best portraits was of President Grant, which hangs in the long gallery of the W hite House. Among his other por traits are those of Secretaries Chase and Stanton, Charles Sumner, James G. Biaine, John G. Carlisle and John Sherman. Five Secretaries of War sat for him and their portraits are. now in the War Department buildir't'. He was a native of Germany. and came to this country in 1849. BENJAMIN R. SHIBLEY. Benjamin Romaine Shibley. a former Commissioner of Charities of the old city of Brooklyn and a well known figure In the Democratic organization there, died on Thursday at his home, No. 204 Pulaski street, Williamsburg. as the result of an operation performed four weeks ago. Mr. Shibley waa born on November 6, IS3O. in Alottmoutta County. N. J., where his par ents, who lived in Brooklyn, were visiting. At an early age he entered the cigar man ufacturing business which he conducted for many years and retired in 1595. H« ■was a leader among the volunteer fire men and for thirteen years was foreman of Washington Engine Company 1. He was married in 1852 to Miss Deborah Irwin, of Manhattan. He leaves a wife, a daughter and two son«= The funeral will be hold at his home This afternoon. SETH BARTON FRENCH. Seth Barton French, of No. 15 West 54th street, a well known clubman and former broker, filed on Thursday at the Royal Polnciana Hotel. Faim Beaf-h. F'.a. He went South about a month ago on account of his health and had seemed to be improv ing. Mr. French was a broker, with offices at No. 1 Nassau street, for a number of years and was a member of the Stock Ex change. He was active in financial circles until be retired from business several years ago. He. had a country home. Barton Lodge, at Hot Springs, Va. Mr. French was married in 1593 to Miss Mary "Walker Feam. of Washington, a daughter of the former United States Minister to Greece. OBITUARY NOTES. JOHN BRADLEY, for nearly thirty years a restaurateur, died on "Wednesday at his home. No. 1040 Park Place. Brooklyn. His restaurant in West street, Manhattan, -was never closed. It was patronized largely by downtown business men. The old story is told that upon opening his place there h<* threw the key into the North River. H. P. STARK, a mining engineer and a captain of British engineers In the Boer War, died from diabetes in Denver yester day. He was graduated from the Univer sity of California just before h«» went to South Africa. He leaves a family in Cleve land. DR. WILLIAM EVERETT'S FUNERAL. Quincy. Mass., Feb. 18.— Many of the for mer pupils and neighbors of "the Qulnry schoolmaster" attended the funeral of Dr. William Everett, the eminent scholar and former Congressman, at the First Unitarian Church To-day. The service, which was conducted by the pastor, the Rev. Ellery Charming Butler, consisted merely of Scripture reading an.i prayers. Later the body was taken to Mount Auburn Ceme tery, ' ambridge, where the Rev. Paul Re vere Frothingham. of Boston, conducted the final service. Many prominent col legians and friends of Dr. Everett w»re present. MISS ELKINS DIES FROM WOUND. Kansas City, Mo.. Feb IS.— Miss Agnes Leslie Eik'ns. niece of United States Sena tor gtephen P. Elkins. of West Virginia, died here to-night from a bullet wound she inflicted on herself last Wednesday in at - ig suicide. DIVORCE FROM W. D. CARLTON. New Haven. Feb. IS— On the ground of desertion Ethel Thompson Carlton obtained a divorce h e re to-day from William Dean Carlton, of New Tork. Carlton was a stu dent at the Fox Tutoring School at the time of his marriage, preparing to enter Tale. The couple were married on Septem ber 22. 1996, er.cn being eighteen years old at that time. On the day of the wedding Carlton's father came to New Haven and took his son home with him. ana eince that time Mrs. Carlton ha.? not se»n her boa band. TAFT'S SON TO BE GIRL !N PLAY. Watertown, Conn., Feb. 18.— Tn the play "The Amazons," to be presented here after F.aster by the dramatic association of Taft School, on? of the leading female parts will be taken by Charles Taft, son of President Taft. Rehearsals are being h^ld daily. KAISER'S HEALTH BETTER rtin, Feb. 18.— Emperor William, who yesterday cancelled all audiences and visits arranged for the next two days, owing: to a cold, had sufficiently recovered to-day to pro out in an automobile with the Empress. "DER BETTELSTUDENT" SEEN. Millocker's operetta "Der Bettclstudent" ('The Beggar Student") was presented at the German Theatre, Irving Place, last night to an audience that filled the house. Miss Susie Engelke. in the title role, sang sweetly and acted well. She was effectively supported by the comic opera stock com pany. The fourth act caused a demonstra tion such as has not been seen in this play house for some time. The play will be given every night next we«»k. THEATRICAL NOTES. John Mason will discontinue his engage ment In "None So Blind" at the Hackctt Theatre next Tuesday evening In order to appear at The New Theatre on Monday, February 28, in "A Son of the People," a play of the French Revolution by Sophus Mlchaells. During his absence Constance Crawley will appear under the direction of William F. Muenster in Oscar Wilde's last play, entitled "Mr. and Mrs. Daventry." The Messrs. Shubert have secured control of the new Masonic Theatre In Indian apolis, which will be opened next week. when James r Powers will appear in "Havana." George Fawcett will appear next season in a play which he will write in collabora tion with Sophus Michaelis, the Danish playwright. Forbes-Robertson will celebrate his 500 th performance Of "The Passing of the Third Floor Back" at afaxine Elliott's Theatre on March 7. He will give to every one in the audience a cloth bound volume of Jerome K. Jerome's stories containing the tale from which "The Passing of the Third Floor Back" was taken. On the outside cover will be a likeness of the actor-man ager in the costume of "The Passer By" H. B. Warner, who Is playing the title role in "Alias Jimmy Valentine" at Wai lacks Theatre, will have charge of the re hearaals of children who are to ive a reproduction of his play on Friday after noon, March 18. Ml - Mary Perry King will give a special matinee of American poetic dancing at Mendelssohn Hall at I p. m. to-day. Phe will be assisted by Mis? Eleanor T. Fllnn. Miss Alice M. Tripple, Mrs. Flortta Everts and Ulna] Cneelir Edward Colt Havens will be at the piano. Mis.« Porothy Movie •■ ill play the violin. "Just a Wife luggeated by Eugene Walter's play of the saoM name, will r>* the subject of a .«»rmor> which th« R» v Henry Frank will deliver to-morrow morning before th» Independent Ltb-ral Congregation at the Berkeley Lyceum. MUSIC Notes on Yesterdaifs Concerts and Operas. Notes only; time does not allow for more, nor do the occasions, interesting as Utf9 may have seemed to some, demand raw* "With the Philharmonic series of concerts aprroaching its end. it was interesting t.j ulniaiMi a purpose on the part of Mr. Mahler to extend his list of works. H extended it so radically, indeed, as to in clude the- three nocturnes by Debussy. Is popularize which several efforts ha', made of recent years. Mr. Mahler's at tempt was just about as futile as fhOM of Mr. Damrosch and M. d'lndy. Th-re M no denying the subtle charm wMct this music has for-it is very unpleasant to ua*» the term, but it seems necessary m this case— musical gourmets, but neither is i worth while, or honorable, to deny that if there Is a superior merit in this naiafc :' is still "caviare to the general. "' Ther^ was dead silence after the first number. "Clouds." yesterday. Perhaps this ought to be interpreted as a s srn of ex quisite sensibility, but. the ■****■ wayfaring recorder of musicai occurrences might also have been jusrined in hi? fancy that when idealized Japanese music —**** such favor as it does in "Madama Butter fly" at the Opera House, a musical trans lation of clouds into Japanese would be en titled to at least a modicum of tribute But it faiied to receive it. The last of the three pieces, called "Sirens.' received ■ demonstration of approval. In it the Ma<- Dowell chorus, a choir of women, took part. The singers sang "Ah:" with many shade? o£ expression and through many ekaaamai of harmony. >To doubt some hard headed, prosaically minded listeners thought, as th old Scotch lady thought when she read the dictionary, that the stories, though inter esting, were "unco short,' but there was at least a more or less definite musical idea to wonder at. and it was applauded Eut to some listeners the novelty of the idea of employing voices as musical in struments pure and simple was not neces sarily impressive. Unhappily the opera programmes do not mention the fact, or the public would long ago have known that Verdi makes a striking effect by intro ducing humming voices to help along his delineation of a storm in "Rigoietto " They do not sing "Ah:" but "I'm," with closed lips. In a far more exciting episode— in his "Trojans in Carthage'-Beriioz makes dryads and sylvans sing "O-a-o-a-o-a" while brandishing burning branches and rushing through a forest -torn by a storm, but this is musical "atmosphere" of a dit ferent kind than Debussy was after. Per haps French dryads and sylvans are no more capable of articulate language than French sirens, but the ocean nymphs which came to condole with Prometheus in JEachylns*s tragedy sang beautiful things in Greek, and we wish that M Debussy had permitted his sirens to sing beautif'U things in French. "Ah: 1 ' is not particularly edifying arren when turned in'o his fasci nating idiom. There was musical sanity and strength in the rest of Mr. Mahler's programme, for it consisted of Tschaikowsky's "Romeo and Juliet," Wagner*! "Eine Faust Ouvertur**" and "Siegfried" Idyl and Berlioz's over ture- "Carnaval Romain"— music of a kind that Mr. Mahler interprets most moving:. At the Manhattan Opera House last night Mme. Mazarin again disclosed that she is a lyric tragedienne of splendid rang and force by singing and acting Santuzza in "Cavalleria Rusticana" in a way that kept interest almost breathless. Also, after this sensation was over. Mr. Orville Har rold, a novice, tried his "prentice hand" in "Pagliacci," and wen critical as well as popular approval— not always the same thing, as everybody knows, supposedly la the humiliation of the critics. The young man was conventional as could be. but ha pang with a beautiful voice— Mr. M- Cormack had done before him; with a much more beautiful voice from a purely lyric point of view— and disclosed unques tioned talents and instincts for the pro fession Into which Mr. Hammerstein has ushered him. H..E. K. CARUSO IN "RIGOLETTO" The Metropolitan Op^ra Douse was crowded last night to hear Caruso sing the part of the Duke in "Rigoietto." me tenor eang the part for the first tine v\ several years in New York and was com pelled to repeat "La donna c mobile," the famous song of the third att of the opera. lie was well received, as was Pasqoale Axnato. who sang the title part. Before the performance began it was announced tnar Mme. Lydia Llpkowska. who was to sing the role of Gilda. was slightly indisposed, but would appear for the rirst time in tne part in this city. She received hearty ap plause and sang well, under the circum stances. Anna Bfettschik sang Maddaler.a. Adamo Dldur appeared as Sparafueifa a: i Helen Btaptesaa as the Countesi COOK ADMIT 3 IDENTITY. Visits Former Companion Whom He Refused at First to Recognize. Santiago de Chili. Feb. 18.— Dr. Frederick A. Cook admitted his identity to-day. He visited his old comrade. . the Belgian en etneer, Rysselberghe, and the two were to srether for some hours. They were mem bers of the Belgian Antarctic expedition of iscr 'OS. and the engineer reeoenized Cook when they were fellow passengers on the .•earner from Valdivia. Until now. how ever. Cook had refused to recosrnize his form*" companion. Cook told RysselberglK, it is said, that he is preparing a complete account of his nolar explorations, which, he maintains, will prove mat he reached the North Pole. ESQUIMAUS FOE SOXTTH POLE McMillan and Bartlett Going to Etah for Them Next Summer. Biddeford. Me.. Feb. -Esquimau driv ers, with their wives, children and dog teams, are to accompany the American South' Polar expedition, according to Pro fessor Donald B. McMillan, who was one of Ccmmander Peary's chief assistants in the Arctic In a lecture here Professor McMillan said that during the coming summer he and Captain Robert Bartleti will so to Etah to secure Esquimau* and dogs for the South Pole dash. NEW CUBAN MINISTER HERE. Havana, Feb. lv— Changes in Cuba's diplomatic service were ordered to-day as follows : Carrara Justiz. former Minister to Spain, to go to Washington. General Carlos Garcia y Velez. former Minister to Washington, to go to Argen tlna. Juste Garcia y Velez. former Secretary of State, to Madrid. Don Gonzalo de Quesada, former Minister to the United States, to Berlin. General Enrique Lcynex del Castillo, •■ Mexico. TKE WEATHER REPORT Official Record and Forecast. — WaahlnKton. #t) jg -The storm that was ov»r the Middle Atlantic Stata» Trur»dav nljht moved rapMly northeastwardly ani it is now disappearing over the Canadian maritime provinces. It has kM followed by fair and colder weather over all rtl» trtct» cant of the Mississippi River. TrecUlta tion however was general Thursday night throughout the Atlantic States, the Baa) Gttlt LvateP T-nnVis-e. th« Ohio Valley and Urn Mm region' Another disturbance I* forming ov-r ih« Rocky Mountain reel-". x»h-re there bar* km ta^l mow* In other districts west of the MlVsi^lrri River, except the Pacific sratej. wh-r ;'.^ r . ,ir« and snow. the. weath»r was gen erally fair durOM the. tact twenty-four hours. Temp-rstureji are b-low the norms I In practically all r*rt« or the country east of •-__• Rocny Moon tataa and »»r» below freeslne Frid«' mornins alonr in* Gulf Coa*t and In Northwestern Florida. Unusually l'""" temperature, coottßoa in the s*orthT»*t«Ti •'•'•». th» lowest recorded fine S« de*re»« b»lo«- wm •» TTOlla, N' D. . Tb« weather will i* i«n«ri fair Saturday and Pan-lav in the M!«J>isv!c:l Valley ■■••*• district* east thereof. exc»pt that th»r» »«! f« i«K?a! snows In 081 upper Mississippi VallT ami th- upp*r !ah» r«Bion Wrnt of the >Il«»t"lPP* Valley the weather will b*> unsettled, with unor* !n MM plateau and Koricy Mountain resiona «■« ur<laT. an..! a th^«» r^Kfons aril th* north plair« utates rSunday. Tfc« •»mp^ratur» will mo«W»># (lom^what In •!■"• Gulf states, •— Onio yaaa anfl DM >or hw^«t»rn states Saturday and ««•" - Aral:- (r the Interior fllssrlct* east oi the Rocky Mountains Sunday. TIM winds along th« New En«!anr! ' »•« wt.l b» llsht to moderate west: mMdle Atlantic roa»T. lfcht to moderate northwest and north; South At lantJr -i»-. moderate northeast; East Gft? Coast, light to moderate north to east; West Outf Coast, moderate south; I^ake Mirhija.n» model slid vj«riabl»f. Steamers departing Saturday fir European ..rt!i will have moderate w»st wlnda and lair weather to the Grand Banic*. Foreravt for SjH^-Jal lor.liti^ for East ern Pennsj-lvanla and New Jersey, Mr to~da7 ard Sunday: light northwest winds. b*cor variable. For New Kn«lan.l and Eastern New Tork. fair to-i!ay and Sunday: gat to moderate w»«t winds. For Western Pennsylvania, partly cloudy, with slowly rising IcaaaMtal to-day and Sunday; njo<lerate variable winds. For Western New York. «»neraily fair to-day an»i Sunday; moderate west winds. OfTictai observations taken »- tTnlt—l I -*•• v»a'her bureaus at * V- *"■ follow:: fity. Tensperator*. Wea.ther. Albany 14 ... Clear Atlantic City 2-* Clear ; Boston 22 ........Clear Buffalo » Oar Lo«-al Official Record. — Th« followln* offldaS record from the Weather Bureau shows th« changes In the tetnperatur- '■- - -» last twenty four hours, in comparison with the ct -•^•■BJaW tne date of laat year: 3 a m. . . H M; Bp. m 42 25 la. a,., SI #♦ » p. m. . . . 4O 21 » a. tn 33 24 !i p. m . 4O 20 12 m 3* 25i12p-rc 40 — 4 p. m m 27 . Highest temperature y-sterday. 3* d»sre*»: lowest. 20; avera<e. 2S: average for roTespond ln< date last year. 33; av«raa» for correspondln* date lar: thirty-three, years. 31- Laaea forecast: Fair to— and Sunday; *-• to moderate west winds. MARRIED. CCMMINGS— -WATSON— On Thursday. Febro an- 17. 1910. at St. Matthew's Protestant Epis copal Church. by th» R«v. Arthur H. Judite. Ella Wol*er»tan. dauarht»r of Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Altken Watson, ■- V- " ■■\-*-n Harrison Cummlnn. >*otice« of marriage* and death* m-nmt b* ••- companied by full name and addresn. DIED. Ben-pot:. Etlza H. "<-i r«- Joha French. Bata B. Scully. Alexander P. Gall. James. -- thtbley, Benjamin B. , Howe. Edward T. Smith. J. Warrea. i Jones. Robert O. ?mith. . 1 L.--n--h. Sarah. Van Pyke. Hwrj-8. M'Olaed. D>J«»n- B. Welles. »ra» J. Paschke. William. BENNETT— On Friday. February 1?. l^l^. ■» W late residence. No. 315 Rldgewood ay» . Glen Ridse. N. .r . Ellra Hearh. wtta of th- IBM Daniel Hover Bennett. In her eijhty-fourta rear. Funeral private. FRENCH — On Thursday. February IT. 1310. at Palm Beach. Fla.. seth Barton French. In •anaaaji at Fred"rlck3bur?. Va. New. Orleani papers please copy. GALL— In Pat'rson. N. J.. on February 1.. 1319. Jan.«a fall. Jr.. «on of the »■■» James Gall and ■.c« .. Grant Frazer Gall. Funeral services on Monday er«rtn«. February 21. from his ->» residence. No. 69 Paterson aye.. F»r*r^n. N. J-. at * o'clock. Washinfttoa. V. C. Chattanoo*-*.. T»nr... and A?hevilJ». N. C. papers please coal HOWE-At T»rr- Haute Ind.. February IT. al pneumonia, Edward Thorndike Howe, of Glen Rlds«, N. J.. In Ma thirty-ninth y»ar. Nottc» of funeral hereafter. Hartford (Conn.) pap-r» pleas* copj-. JONES — On February IT. Robert OM " M a**"! To years. Funeral from his la.f* -•• fi*ri'-« No. 194 ?-;-rn.i a- • . Mount Venien. N. Y. Sunday. February 20. MM (Private.* LYNCH.— On Friday. February 13. U*IO. Saraa. widow of William Lynch, in the 85th year of her as*, at th* residenc* of her daughter. Mr* Jam»>s J. Coosran. N I '•»» Fifth aye. Funeral services Morday mornfn? at M M a. m.. at the Ladles* Cha?<?l of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Fifth aye. and i«Jth 6t. Interment private. M'CLELAND — At Syracuse. X. T.. Februarr 1 7 . 1910 Hue---- B. McClelard. aged 53 years. Funeral services at his home. No .VS Mcßrtd* St.. Sjracuse. on Sunday afternoon at 2:30. Friend's invited. PA&CHKE.— WBHaai Pa«<-r*<- «a February IT. 191f>. beloved son of John and Lillian Paschk»-. depart**! from this V." after a short Illness. at TIM P.aunt. on Jamaica Say. N. T. RAINEY— On February II MM John Ratn->". at his residence. No. 109 Non] Elliott Flac». Brooklyn. SfUL.LT— On February IT. 1910. Alexander P.. ~b«!ov«d husband of Ok '■*•• Eliza. Scully, at his residence. No. -*" Eastern. ParVwar. Brook:yn. SHIBLET— On Thursday. February IT. i?l»\ Benjamin Rornaine -••■■»• beloved husband of Deborah Irwin. la his M* year; born tn atom ■ County. N. J. . a resident of Brook lyn for eighty years. SMITH- Daytona. F* . February M !?'•>. J. Warren Smith, in his 62d year. Funeral 111 I 111 a will b« held at the residence of Mr. Llewellyn B. Kilbum. No. 13 Snyd»r st.. Orange. X. J-. Saturday. February IS. at • a m. SMlTH— lnfant son ■■■'-■-.' and Mary V. Smith, on Friday. February 1«. 1910. »• Llewellyn Park. Orange. N. 3. V\N DYKE — Suddenly, on February 18. 1910. Henry K. Van Dyke, in his 74th year. Fu neral services at th« residence of his Bister. Mrs. Henry Buffett. --.--.-. sTth st > and M:.: Lan». Brooklyn. Sunday. February ■_••. 1?1 ( \ at 2:.">'> p. m - WELLES — Suddenly. February IT, Sarah Jewett Welles, widow of Leonard R. Write*. Funeral Sunday, . p. m.. from her lat« residenes. No. HB Riverside. Drive. CEMETERIES. THE WOODUWS CEMETERY. Is readily accessible by Harl*m train from Gran i Central Station. Webster and Jaw— a avenue trolleys and by carriage. Lots $150 up. Telephone 4V* Gramercy for Booi al View* or representative. orSc°. 20 East 23d Ml. N»w Tor* City. ODERTAKEKS. FRANK E. CAMPBELL. 241-3 W.s» 2Sd 91. Chapels. ••..-» Rooms. Private Ambu'ancaa. fe: . 13-4 Cbalaaa. \ MOMMF.NT!« TOMBS Send for |!1». booilwt- MOVI'MENT*. rre»brey-Coykradan <*•.. MAVM)IKPI« t 9S Broadway, X- T. SPECIAL NOTICE^ To th« Employer. Do you want desirable help QUICKLY? SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE by con sulting the file of applications of selected aspirants for positions of various kind* which has just been Installed at lh» Uptown Office of THE NEW-YORK TRIBUTE. No. 1354 Broadway, Between 36th and 37th Street*. Office hours: 9a. in. to 6p. tn. VTW-YORK TRIBOTE SUBSCRIPTION KATES. Daily Edition. 0.-» Cent In City of >•• ; York. Jer«rr City and Hobokeo. ! Elsewhere Two C«it». ' «undar Edition. inrlndlu* Sunday Ma»» xln^, live tent». m \r« York « Hr mall »üb«rrlb<T"i will iw. ,-har««Hl 1 rent per copy extra posta**. K.ITION- BY MAIL POSTTAIP. afcggg Ti h :::IZ TiallT and >iin.ln*. p<t month .• lorriKn I'o^tas© Extra. OFFICES'. ;ViiV OFFICE— No 1M Nassau street. wau/sTREEI OFFICE— No. 15 William ataa* 1 1 \'ro\VN OFFXCEr— XjO ia«4 Broadway or an? American District Te.e«ra P h Office. IIAPLEMOFI-ICE--.No 1". East 125 th str-r. No 263 "West liith stre«t and No. 219 a rat WASHINGTON BUREAU-NO. 122= V street. VF\v" UK BRANCH OFFlCE— Fredtric*. N. turner No ?!»♦ Broad .tree: AMERICANS ABROAD will tnl THE TRIBUNE ..nT-ccELS— N?. (C Montague d- la Co-jr. i ONDON— Orhc*" or THE 'I'RIBVNE at : m-« lan House. No. 265 strand. American Express Caaaaaaß, !fai 5 -%nd -i llaymarVtet. Thoma* Coot & ?<"*• Tourist Oi3ce. Lu<i£*t» Brown.* sSlpl*T * Co.. No. 123 Pall MalL M>eyer Brother*. No. 1 U->'.!i&ury. The London offlr* of THE TRIBUNE Is a -■>- venlent place to leave atlve.rtlserae.nta an<i sub scriptions. I> l rIS Jshti Munroe A Co.. Nf>. 7 Ru«» S«1N». !John Wanauiaker. No. 4* Raa de» Petttes rtaa Eafl Bureau. No. 53 Roe Cambon. Morgan. Ba»jM A. Co.. No. M Bouljvarl ■maun rrMit Lyonnais Bureau &** Ktrang-era. rontlnental n '•'. Newsstand. Th- V'i«:*ro <>«■-• Baarta * News Exchange. Ko>. • Ku« St. ■ rge American Express Company. No. |J Ra# BkH ■ Rr»ntan *. V- 37 Ar«nn« d« l'Oy^ra NlCE— Credit Lyoaniis. GENEVA— Lombard. OdW < Co. a*i Cabi BAlit v * FLORENCE— French. L*!tjen A Cc . SCcit' :: i" and 4 Via Tornahu?n!. MaaaM * Co.. Bankers! 3llLAN— ?aarbaeh'» > "' «**-* vi* «• HAMBrRO — Am*ric»n Exrrus Ccccaa-r v-» 2 rtn>naadstr»w«. v-cany, "*• V