Iff WFtlf THE 1.1 ESSE H GER ro DVEnmzn$: i g pablinbed In Three Edi tion, The DAI MESSENGER CKEILY MKSHKXOKIt, And the GOLDSKOBO Xrncrlpt-Mesenffer. ill three are Attractlre Kight Page Paper. TUB XXEXSCXQEIX fea A Xjurxr CtrrslAtlevi tfcan Way other &ewpp la Slate. J - . ESTABLISHED 18G7. WIOHNGTON, N. C SUN DAY. NOVEMBER lO, 1889. PRICEY FC PISTOL-GRAPHS. "Necessity the tyrant's plea." Mil-ton' Xbe new ballot law secret ballot j worked excellently in Massachusetts on j firt trial. , "There is therefore now no condem nation to them which are in Chri3t Jer-us.' Romans 8:1 The New York Presbytery has de cided in favor of revising the West mi n?ter Confession of Faith. Give us North Carolina all the year. Think of the awful snow in Colorado and then thank- God that you are in this good State. (Way's candidate for Vice President in Ih'.rl, was Mahone, provided he was elected. That gourd vine has withered at the very root. John Sherman says his Presidential prospects were blasted by his patron a e as a Senator. Bad character had something to do with it also John. Talk about your big sales but old historic Granville still beats the world in fine tobacco. Mr. W. T. Hunt has just sold the product of three acres on the Oxford market for $1,650 an a ve r;i"e of $-'0 per acre. Even those high figures have been often surpassed by Granville farmers in the past. Read the fine sales of several counties we give in our State news taken from the Oxford Jjd'f r. The N. Y. Times thinks it is useless argument Sir Henry James is making before the Parnell Commission. It says '"the more he talks the clearer it is that the Timen has no case at all. It could have saved money, jand lost noth ing else, by withdrawing its counsel and cii -charging its witnesses as soon as the cns-examination of Pigott was iimsiici. We are reallv nleased to know that a the gallant Fitzhugh Lee, nephew of the great Robert E. Lee, and a soldier of merit as well as Governor of Vir ginia, will attend the Sampson county Fair that begins on the 4th Dec, and continues for four days. Ho will deliver an agricultural address, .Our Sampson friends are to be congratulated. We hope it will be a prosperous and satis factory exhibit. North Carolina will always be ready to greet warmly Gov. We have received a handsome illus trated pamphlet entitled "Sketches of Charlotte, the Queen City of the Old North State and Mecklenburg the Banner County, 18S8. There is also a wood-cut of the excellent Mayor, F. B. McDowell, once a capital newspaper , man. The pamphlet is well done capitally illustrated. The whole thing is a credit to the little wide awake "citv." Lieut. Zaiinski, an American officer now in Paris, says he is fully convinced that an European war is inevitable, but not. immediately. He says : "Hut. postpone it as they may,the cri sis must come. When war does come, it will be terrible. I have just witness ed the German manoeuvres at Hano ver, and i assure you that had those two army corps done in earnest what they made pretence of doing, of the Ukki men who went into that ten dnys" action there would not be 10,000 ready for service to day, The rest would have been placed horsde combat, dead or wounded. To such a degree have modern improvements in life des tt ''.vin,r maehinery added to the honors of war. One of the new features of coming wars will be smokeless powder, about which so much ado has been iiiade, but I am not altogether certain as to the future of this invention." At the Charlotte banquet Gov. Fowle and Senator Vance spoke. Vance, among other thiugs, as reported in the Chronicle, said: k'lle said that ho had long known niea subject to women, but Mr. Os borne's case was a surprise to him ; it ' whs his first experience of a woman Mng the subject of a man, (laughter). It was not so at his house, (laughter). Then the Senator concluded with the assurance of the Irishman at a eampmeeting that though not a Meth odist ho was a 'dimmycrat .V The Charlotte Democrats celebrated the late victories in Independence square. Gov. Fowle led off and was followed by Mr. C, W. Tillett, Col. Jones, Mr. Christian and others. Gen. Barrinirer was Imullv nnllArl fnr. He is or was loudlv railed for. reported thus in the lively 'phronkle: "The General said,strictly speaking, he had never ben a Dftmnnrnt,. though ho fought with Democrats during the war. After the war he tried to recon cile differences, so that whito and col re.l would have received their riffhts ne iaiieu. 'Hut a man arose, Gro ver Cleveland, and I believe, so help vjuu, mat ne maue the best Presi dent wo have ever had since the days i eorge Washington, and he had been impartial to white and colored Pjen, and brought peace and prosper ity to all our homes.' General Bar- r'nger got the greatest applause of the eveninjy " . .. O " - , KALEIGH RIPPLES. NEWS ITEMS FROM THE CAPITAL- STATE lUptd Growth of Odd Fellow-! be Kali. way SolU Student at the Agricultural College The Gorernnr Golac to Fayetto Tllle The Old Sassafras Tree The Chry Rtntbemam Show. Messenger Bureau, I Raleigh, N. C. Nov. 9. f Your correspondent had an interview with Charles M. Busbee. Esq.. to-day. Mr. Busbee, who is the Deputy Grand Jaire or tne bupreme Grand .Lodge of Uaa Jbellows, says the increase of that order is remarkable. The vow branch of it, the Patriarchs Militant, is devel oping great strength. Mr. Busbee ex pects to see it introduced in this'State next Spring. Mr. Woodward, of New York, a prominent Patriarch, will soon be here on a visit. Mr. Busbee expects to see the I. O. O. F. soon have a strength of a million. He will go to Trenton, New Jersey, week after next, to attend a banquet to be given by the Grand Lodge of that State. In North Carolina, and particularly here at Ra leigh, the growth is very rapid. The military company at Wilson will be admitted into the State Guard, it is understood, upon compliance with the proper formalities. It will be in the Second Regiment, which will thus have seven companies. The weather is again unseasonable, and is very trying to delicate people. So far the autumn has been exception ably warm. The railway penalty cases were ar gued in the Superior court last evening until 8 o'clock. They will come up regularly at the February term of court. The judge ruled that the argu ment of counsel for the railways, that Hodge had no right to sue in the name of trie State,was not "frivolous." . Two students arrived at the Agri cultural and Mechanical College yes terday and three more are on the road, it was learned to-day. The interesting revival at Edenton Street M. E. church continues. The attendance at the district con vention of the Y. M. C. A. at Durham is gratifyingly large. The University as well as Trinity and Wake Forest colleges, are represented. The Governor will prbably so to Fayetteville on the evening of the 19th and remain until the 22d. Several members of the general and personal staff will attend the celebration. Some bricklayers have been sent for, from points on the Raleigh and Gaston railway, to work on the cotton factory. The events here next week are the coming of Fred. Warde and of Au- dress' circus. Warde's popularity here is great, and he generally draws large audiences. Despite the shortness of money, the people are paying their taxes as rapid ly as usual. The Raleigh male academy is enjoy ing marked prosperity, and has nearly a hundred pupils. Capt. Roberts, the Keeper of the capitoi, yesterday had a younsr sassa fras tree set out in the square. It is a shoot of the250 year old sassafras (one of the largest in the State) which stands near the south gate, and which a century and more ago was a famous ucci-Dtauui Tents will be shipped to Fayetteville next Saturday, for use at the centen nial. The Quartermaster General has applied for the use ot two rifled cannon for firing the salutes. The guns will be manned by ex-members of Starr s bat tery, at Fayetteville. The joining: of forces, at St. Louis December 4th, by "the four great or ganizations of farmers will give the united body over 2,000,000 members. The National Agricultural Wheel, the National Farmers7 Alliance, the Far mers' Mutual Association and tne Northwestern Alliance rank in the matter of present strength as above placed. The entire South and nearly all the Northwest will now be together in a homogeneous and immensely strong organization, which has almost infinite posibilities before it, with twenty-one States represented. - The executive committee of the Con federate Veterans Association met here to-day, and appointed a State canvasser. This course was agreed on at Wednesday's session. One execution is fixed for this month. It is that of a negro at Elizabeth City. Application will be made for a commu tation to life imprisonment, on the ground that the man's mind is not sound. The ladies are working earnestly to make the chrysanthemum show a suc cess The date is Tuesday, day and evening. The varieties of chrysanthe mums shown will be numerous, and some will be rare. There are now 289 patients at the in sane asylum here. The cotton oil mills have succeeded in securing a more liberal supply of oil and are now in full operation. Owing to the great press of business, Col. L. L. Polk has been forced, most reluctantly, to decline the very kind invitation to attend the Southern Ex position at Montgomery, Ala., on Alli ance day, and deliver an address. Lee Denson, son of Capt. Claude B. Denson, of this city, has been promoted in the United States Signal Service and placed in charge of the station at Savannah, Ga. An Aged Couple Murdered. - Valdosta, Ga., Nov. 9. A double murder has just come to light in ,Chinch county. The victims were a man named Page, 78 years old and his aged wife. The murderers are suppos ed to be' negroes. The bodies of the murdered couple- were found horribly mutilated in their house, by neighbors last night. Robbery is supposed to have been the motive for the crime. Officers are searching for the murderers. BALTIUOEE'S CELEBRATION. A Great Occasion for tho Catholic A Lars Assembly of Church Dignitaries. Baltimore, Nov. 9. Preparations were in full blast to-day for a great Catholic celebration to begin here to morrow. The hundredth birthday of the Catholic Hierachy will be the first event, and, according to arrangements confirmed at a meeting ol the prelimi nary committee this morning, it will to-morrow be inaugurated with a mag nificent street procession of clergy and lay societies. The arrivals of delegates and others are already well up In the thousands, and to-day It was with diffi culty that rooms could be secured at the hotels, while carnages at the de pots were at a premium. Archbishops, Bishops, Priests and laymen seemed to be fairly flocking into the city, and clean shaven clerical looking faces were to be seen everywhere. The Cathedral, where the pontificial mass, tne chief ceremonial ol tne day. will take place to-morrow has been decorated with evergreen and in geniously arranged electric lights. A seminary choir of forty male voices has been provided for the Gregorian or "proper" mass. The "Ordinary" is to be sung by the cathedral special choir of sixty mixed voices. Over six hundred priests are expected to walk in the procession, before mass, the weather permitting, Fears to-day are that the steady downpour of rain, now prevailing, will continue, and will stop all outdoor pageantry. If everything is propitious, however, the long line of priests will be joined in front of Cardinal Gibbons' residence by several scores of prelates Bishops coming; first. Archbishops next and, in the place of Honor at the last, the American Cardinal Gibbons, accompanied by his Canadian con frere Tascherau. In the line will be the Pope's special delegate, the Archbishop of Lepanto, Monsignor O'Connell. rector of the American Col lege at Rome and Monsignor Gadd, representative of Cardinal Manning of England, Monsignor Gadd is famous Aeic who performed the last omces in 1868 for the Manchester martyrs Allen, Larkin and O'Brien. The celebrat of mass has been select ed in the person of Arbishop Williams, of Boston. Archbishop Ryan of Phila delphia, will be the orator. Among the distinguished arrivals is Viscomt De Meaux and daughter, of Paris, M. Do Meaux bears an address from the University of Lyons. He is son-in-law of the famous Montelembert. Ti e (r jnln Trial. Chicago, Nov. 9. George Hart Wardel, a gardener, was the first wit ness in the Cronin trial this morning. He testified that on the night -of the murder at about half past 10 o'clock he saw two men on the corner of Ashland avenue and Alto street, which is near the Carlson cottage. They were going North; one of them was about five feet and eleven inches in height; the other was rather chunky and about five feet and seven or eight inches in height. They were unknown to the witness. They walked on and entered tne Carlson cottage. A slat was broken on one of tne Diinds, and tnrougn tne opening tne witness could see tnat mere was a light inside. The witness then went home and on the following morning the day being Sunday, accompanied by his wife, he went to 8 o clock mass, passing the Carlson cottage on the way to church. He saw spots of blood on the sidewalk in front of the cottagre door. A large part of the day's session was occupied by medical expert testi mony. The Goodloe-Swope Affair. Cincinnati, Nov. 9. A special from Lexington, Ky., says: Colonel Goodloe rested well last night and this morning nis pnysicians think he has a good chance for recovery. The people are still greatly excited. Assistant Post master Swift was talking to Swope few seconds before the altercation be gan, and says he did not hear any words pass between the men, although they were only a few feet away. He thinks there was a tacit understanding between them that the first time they met alone, they should right. A man very close to Goodloe said to your cor respondent this morning that he knew the fight would come about sooner or later, but that it was not expected quite so soon. It would be hard to say who has the public sympathy, as there seems to be heartfelt sorrow for both families. Suicide in a Court Boom. Franklin, Nov. 9. Elmer Labodi, a Frenchman, about 45 years of age, while on trial for a criminal assault upon his daughter, before Justice Wig gin to-day, killed himself by cutting his throat with a jack knife. The ' tes timony nhad been concluded and the justice said: This matter is b3yond my jurisdiction. Mine too, exclaimed Labodi, as he drew a knife from under his clothing and slashed his throat be fore the officers could interfere, sever ing a jugular vein, and died before as sistance could be rendered. His three daughters witnessed the tragedy, one fainting away. Labodi was a wood chopper. mmm MMaaaa.40aBkjaaaMM Montana's state Officers Sworn In. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 9. A Pioneer Press special from Helena gives the particulars of the receipt ol the news of Montana's admission as a state and says Judge Sanders, Helena's police magistrate started the machinery of the State by administering the oath of office to Chief Justice Blake, who then swore in the other jndges. Governor Toole was sworn in, his In auguration being very informal and the oath was administered by the Gov ernor's nephew, X, K. Stout, a notary fmblic. A proclamation convening the egislature for not later than November 20th to elect United States Senators will be issued to-day. WISHmGTOX CITY. TELEGRAMS FROM THE NATIONAL CAPITAL- ! Bond OCTerlnr OpetHj,- of llld for Ma. chlnery for the Vw Ci alcr- Xefieleey of Fanda fr the a Maria Crp Consolidation of 'arml Depart mmta t Newport. Washington, Nov. 9. Fourth Auditor Lynch, in hU annual report to the Secretary of the- Treasury, says that there is a deficiency of t253,464 In the appropriations for the pay of the navy and marine corns for the last fis cal year, caused partially by the pay ment, out oi that fund, of claims for longevity and for service on board re ceiving ships, under recent decisions by Supreme court. The Auditor makes an earnest recommendation for an in crease in the cherical forces of his office. WASHINGTON, Nov. 9. The pro posals received a few days ago at the Naval Department, for material for vise-in the construction of thei machin ery of the two 3,000 ton cruisers to be built at the New York and Norfolk Navy Yards, have ben referred to the chief of the bureau of steam engineer ing for examination, report and recom mendations. The bureau officers, be fore the bids were opened, estimated that the total would be about 1200,000, but the lowest ;bid offered aggregated nearly 5oUU,uuu. Washington, D. C. Nov. 9 This afternoon Capt. R. S. Phythian, presi- j a. u i j - S . . .1 ueDttJi iud uua.ru recenviy appoinieu to consider and report upon the ques tion of consolidating the several naval establishments at New Port, R. I., submitted .the report of himself and colleagues to Secretary Tracy. It is sigrned by Capt. Phvthian, Com mander W. P. Bridceman, Lieutenant Commrnders A. S. Snow and B. F. Lily, and Lieutenant J. M. Meigs. The report says: The board heard the statement of Captain Mahau, first Commandant of the torpedo station; of commanders Higrgrinson and Good rich, at present in command of the training station and of ihe torpedo station and war college: and of other officers at Newport; Jand vof admiral Luce. The report then savs: The board believes that the grreatest grood to naval service at largre will be reached by consolidating the naval torpedo station, the war college, and the naval training school into one establishment. to be call the naval school of applica tion, and to be under the command of an officer of high rank, whose head quarters shall be on Goat Island, the present site of the torpedo station and war college. At this school of applica tion the use, care, and tactics of naval weapons and all other equipments should be studied and practically illus trated. A Female Wit n ens La the Cronin Case . : ' Clubbed. Chicago, Nov. 9. Mrs. Mandle Morgan, who is said to be an impor tant witness for the prosecution in the Cronin case, was sand bagged last night by an unknown person, and a3 the result of the blow is now in a dan gerous condition. Mrs. Morgan was returning from a visit about 9:30 last night. To shorten the distance, she walked through an alley in the rear of her house. ' She had just entered the alley when a person closely wrapped m a heavy shawl stepped from the shadow of a building and dealt her a severe blow on the head. Had it not been for her roll of hair the blow would proba bly have killed her. For nearly an hour Mrs. Morgan was unconcious. Upon recovering she described her as sailant as a man disguised as a woman Collision by a Runaway Train. Kansas City, Nov. 9. The brakes on the Fifth street cable train refused to work as the train was descending the hill between Deleware and Main streets this afternoon. At the foot of the hill, the runaway train collided with an Eighteenth street train on the loop. Both trains were wrecked and the Fifth street gripman, James John son, was seriously and perhaps, fatally injured. The conductor of the Eigh teenth street train was struck on the head and knocked unconscious. He was removed to the hospital and is in a precarious condition: Four passen gers were slightly injured. One More Death. Added to the Lint. Lexington, Va. Nov. 9. Dr. S. J Walker, who was wounded in the Brownburg affair Friday evening, has died from his wounds. Dave. Miller is mortally wounded, and his brothers, George, James, and William, impli cated in the shooting of Dr. Walker and his wife, are in jail. Lynching is feared Rev. James Henderson Smith, an other, late pastor of the Harrisburg, Va., Presbyterian Church, son of Gen. F. H. Smith, Superintendant of the Virginia Military Institute, died this morning. Snow Storm In Texas. Clarendon, Nov. 9.Tbe deepest snow that has fallen here in twelve years, is on the ground now; it is six inches deep. All trains on the Fort Worth and Denver are blockaded north of here, and there are eight engipes in the snow drifts seventy-five miles north west of this place. The drifts are nine feet deep. This is the worst snow storm that has ever visited the Pan Handle. The Storm In Kansas. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 0. Dis patches from southern and west Kansas give details of the fierce snow storm thatjraged there yesterday. Snow,, hail and sleet fell thick, and was driven so fiercely by the wind that in many places people did not even dare to ven ture out of doors. Trains are somewhat delayed though none have heed abandoned. THE CL iii2iIAL. Iatereet In the rarettovUto CeatenaUI I acre lag nfly Taenaad feopio Cx. pected to Attend It. Favettkvillk. N. C. Nor. 9. Sieoal As the term for the irreat Constitutional Centennial approaches, the activity among our people and the enthusiasm abroad Increase, and in teresting and new attractions are belnr addt-d almost dally, and thce who visit Fayette v ill o on November Dtb, 21 t and 2nd will witness a eight, the - a a . a . UK oi wnicn tne nineteenth century scarcely lurnunes a parallel. The toar of cannon, the tramp of soldiers, the burning eloquence of pa triots and statesmen, with Cags and canvas ana hunting nying irom every nook and corner, stlred by4.be inspiring strains of the martial music from the united State s Marine liana of thirty-eight pieces will bo present a scene only to be witnessed once in a lifetime, and kindle anew in the hearts of hundreds and thousand of Carolinians that un dying patriotism of ye olden time. From present indications the crowd will number fifty thousand, and the citizens of Fayetteville have reoived, individually and eoliecuveiv, to shelter and feed every one who attends this great celebrations, aLd to throw their doors wide open to the world. v 1 be mayors of the different towns in the State will be furnished a handsome badges and assigned post of honor in the procession, while the Odd tellows, Knights of Pythias, Masons and other orders of like character will be assigned po;ts of honor; The sham battle and prize drills between the - twenty-one military com panics to be present on the United States arsnal ground will be a big attraction, while the band contest will be lively and full of interest to everybody. In order to add to tho fun, foot races, Jbag races, wheel barrow races and potato grabs, with appropriate prizes will be held during the occasion. r Nw Orleans Cotton Exchange Htateraeot New Orleans, Nov. 9. Tho New Orleans Cotton Exchange statement issued to-day makes the cotton move ment over the Ohio and Mississippi and Potomac rivers to Northern American and Canadian mills for the week end ing November 8th, 4S,837 bales against 48,779 bales last year and the total since September 1st, 1.8SS.078 bales against 239,471 bales last year. Total American mill takings North and South for the first ten weeks of tho season 517,883 bales arrainst 074,802 bales of which, by Northern 431,430 bales against 5S7.1o2 bales. The amount of American crop in sight 2,670,580 bales against 2.650,990 bales. The statement shows a par tial halt in heavy foreign exports and an excess which last week was 410,575 bales is now 309,575 bales over the total to this time last year. It also indicates that Northern mills are still pursuing a hand to mouth policy, tho deficiency in their takings for the ton weeks compared with last year having been increased to 155,716 bales. Stocks at seaports and leading interior towns havo increased 189,374 bales during the week, reducing the deficiency compar ed with close of the corresponding week last year to 30,542 bales. Potmater at Mel ma Arreatd. Raleigh, N. C, Fov. 9. Special. Josiah Stancill, postmaster and Jesse Creech, assistant postmaster at Selma, were arrested there this afternoon by Deputy Marshal Upchurch, on a war rant sworn out by Postoffice Inspector Carraway, charging them with open ing a registered letter and taking money therefrom. Both men have been under surveillance Some days. They were brought here this afternoon and United States Commissioner Pur nell held each in $300. Creech gave bail late to-night. A telegram to night announces the death from heart disease, at. Wash in gf ton. of Emmitt Nichols, son of ex Congressma John Nichols. The body will be brought here to-morrow. Horrible Double Munlf-r in Johnston County. Raleigh, Nov. 9. News of a horri ble double murder comes from John ston county. An aged and respectable lady named Mrs. Ceiia Brown resided in this county about four miles from Selma with her little grand son eight years of age. This morning both were found murdered about 200 yards from the house, where they had been drag ged for concealment. They had been killed with a gun.. No clue has been obtained to the murder and no cause can be assigned. Flouring Mill soa Klerator Burned. ST. Paul, Minn., Nov. .9. About a quarter before 10 o'clock last night fire broke out in the flour mill of the St. Paul roller mill, on ThirtTStreet near St. Peters, and spread rapidly. Close by is a big elevator of the same com pany, which also caught fire. A loss of $150,000, with an insurance $100,000, is involved in the mill and contents. The building was closed at six o'clock, and the fire is supposed to have been caused by the explosion of a lamp in the shipping department. i aaaaajaaar saajay--- - " A Rallrad Manager Appointed. Charleston. S. C, Nov. 9.J. M. Ward was to-day appointed general manager of the South Carolina Rail way by Receiver Chamberlain, in place of Col. John B. Peck, who has been connected with the road for the past tin or fifteen years. Ward has been superintendant of the Pittsburg junc tion division of the Baltimore and Ohio system and has a high reputation. Weekly Unk ttmeat. New York, Nov. 9. Reserve de crease, S,SSl,32-5;loans increase, $1,618, 200, specie increase, $572,100; legal ten ders decrease $2,471,600; deposits de crease, $472,700; circulation increase, $5,100. The banks now hold $7C0,8o0 less than the 25 per cent rule. FOREIGN NEWS. ITEMS OF INTEREST TELECRAPHEO FROM EUROPE. Tno tttaactttaao a ! Mraitoej In rart-.Ler ftajfetmty 11 " Uu TWwaMelt ef the tlMnutrt. Katoaky CaftrvoeAtttna Check tatud. l'AKls rov. 9. BoulajUl onrst announce that a demon straliun of Lkm langbu will In made in the placo Do La Concord on Tuesday next. The participants In the deraoe! ration will proceed In a body to the Chamber of Deputies and ester a protest aint allowing M. JoSn, who imi General Boulanger's opponent in Montmartr district, to take his aeat. Ther will call the attention of the Chamber, tho paper to the fact that M. Joffrin, who was declared elects, received only 5,500 vote of 1 t,M c.vU Thn BoulangifU delegates will aiM viit President Carnot and make a similar protest. It U reported to-day that the Government will suppress any demon stration whatever. London, Nov. 9. -At a mooting In Guild Hall to-day Lord SalUbury de livered an address in which ho con gratulated thfe country upon the tplen did expansion of Ita trade D;put beween labor and capital, he gald, were regretful, and ho warned the la bor agitators that thoy 'undertook a be able to affirm that Irvlamt gressinff, prosrily ai increalng, disorder was mulshing, and there wm every protpect of- a permanent Mule ment of the burning millions between i.w v vuuu. i- . o ineminrr of the Government irdulgrd In wild Uxwrie of home rule, but were ready uiith a practical policy which woufd tajfy the country. ICefering to 'Etrvnt. Lord .FntUlmrv said that the itoiL'v f th i...v..rr-. mcnt remained unchantriHl. nm it would enable that country to tiroUvt UnwnU ..,..,; .11''.... . ., . m-iwjji ut"iun uu uuucKt. wmen at present she was unable to do, without" British assistance. The dlRkultlmt in Europe, ho declared, anrwnr! t tending toward a peaceful edutlon. all great, powers twing uesirous of avoid ing a eon met. j BEItUK. Nov. 9. fCOPYHmirrrn L. First among the present result of the uismareK-ivoinoKy conference and the Kajser-Sultan interview 1 the iii-jKn-sion of tho Austrian project frorn oH! eial recognition of the Bulgarian Gov ernment. -Semi-official rtjort of tho meeting of Count Herbert UUmarck and tho Grand Vizcr btuto that the latter declined to advise the SulUtn to recognize Prince .Ferdinand without material guarantees of the upport.of the Dreibund if Russia attacked Tur key on tho Armenian frontier or at any other point. Tho Grand Vizer further declared that Turkey ha as much to fear from Austria a from Russia, and she could not forward tho Kolonky policyjun less she obtained an equivalent. The attltudeof the Porte position to tho inPjrvenjtioa in favor of Prince Ferdinand. "" Signor Cuspl, Italian Prime Mlnla ter, approved the Kolnoky project, but the insistance of the Chancellor ha overborne both. Official circles In Vienna are sore over this check to Austrian diplomacy, and attribute Bismarck's action to promises which he gave the Czar while tho latter was in Berlin. The official belief here ! that the Chancellor resisted Kolnoky because he was averse to the measure which was ilkelv to produce acute agi tation in tho Balkans. The recogni tion of Prince Ferdinand is therefore indefinitely postponed. Just before leaving- Contanfnople, Emperor William had his .longest, con ference with the Sultan. Said Paha and Couut Herbert Bismarck- were present. After tho conference Count' Herbert visited tho Kngliah embny, meeting Sir W. A. White, BritUh Minister and Sir Kdgar Vincent, with reference to the- Anglo-Turkbh nego tiations over the conversion of the cupation of Egypt. Emperor William cultivate an alliance with England, ai linking Turkey to the Dreibund. Ex Exchange of views by the monarch la certain to strongly influence tho policy of the Porte, though no hard and fat agreement ensues. The Imperial Itin era ny homeward includes a stoppage at Corfu and a viait to the Empreaa of Austria, who is sojourning then', and thence to Veince, where the muni cipal authorities are preparing a gor geous sea fete, comprising a fleet of steamers, adorned gondolas and an Il lumination of St. Mark's and the grand canal. It will be a thorough old time Doge celebration. King Humbert U expected at Venice and both monarch will go to Mousa after meeting the Emperor of Austria at Jnntishruck. The Imperial party is timed to reach here Saturday. Emperor William will thus conclude bis notable series of visits to the sovereigns of Europe, with two additional vbits to allied monarchs as a demonstration. His interviews with other monarchs had for their sole ob ject a solidification of the Dreibund. Tna Ntm, Rioters I a die ted. BALTraonry Nov. 9. The United States grand jury to-day indicted eighteen of the 12 1 Navassa rioters for murder and for being accessories before the fact, the penalty for which is death. Seven are charged as principals and eleven as having abetted the murder ers.. '""'"'M",w'''SSsV'BBJ'Mfcawaw i win'. B tat ua of the Virginia Lefts Utare. Richmond, Va., Nov. 9. The latect estimate of the complexion of the next Legislature Is; Senate, twenty-nine Democrats nine Republicans, and two districts in doubt; House of Delegates,eIghty-four DemocratMhreo Republicans and five counties in doubt. Scott county elected a Republican to the House by one majority.