;g - ”`* - 5---*' ' Q . -_ . ¢ ._ ,V IT' ¢._.-< F-‘<_ 29. FE :E-E urlnnlsn DA: n lam wlil-1KI'¢Y_ (NOW R- ig," _- _. JUDGE ANDRE CONSIDERS MME.>s'rElNHE1L GUILTY or DOUBLE MURDER tm... I ' cHARLoT'rE'l‘oWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, CANADA, THURSDAY, APRIL 8., 1909. l . , . ,,,, Ss 5; .<0 Ei EK EE 25 és THE CHARL TTEIOW UARDI N U5* _.. *f , ~ -v 1 - _.-..._ -__.. mei 11 1 ---- - - - -- _ _ Lengthy Preliminary Trial be Committed--Trial in May or June, Ended And Prisoner Will Paris, April ll-The long-dmwmout inquiry of the examining lnaglstralte in- to the question of the guilt or inno- oentte of Mme. ilteinhell has at length some to an end, alfter the fruitless ln- véstiga/tions out IM. Leydet, which last. ed six months. have .been supplemented by the minute and conscientious in- quiry of M. Andre. It is almost certain that as a result Mme. SvteI.u~hell will be committed for trlsll. M. Amgen report to the Parquet is a volum ous document, covening 8,000 sheets, and only the first Dart has as yet been communicated tc the Parquet. In tihis M. Andre sums up the case against Mlrne. Steinheil. "III mb' Opinion," says M. Andre, “there exist' agolinst M-me. Stelnhell suliitlclent presumptlone that, on the night ot' 30-31 May, she assassinated M. .Adolphe Stelnhell, her husband, und Mme. Japy, her mother, and I maintain the charge of voluntary homi- cide with premeditatlon, and o'f par- rlclde, which was mode tl-galinet her at tlhe time of her arrest." The public prosecutor ,or ratlher his deputy, M. Granlljeml, wlll devote a. week or tf-n lluys to t-he study of the report, and will then communicate his decision to the judge d’lnstruotion. IM. Grarldjenll has been carefully fol- fnvlng the proceedings and it is su'D- poseil that his View \\'lll be that of M. Andre, in \v.hioh case the latter, after receiving back the dossier, will formal- ly commit .\I~me. Stein-hell for trial- as the-prillclprll author of two crimes. The case can hlirdly come before 'the Court of Asslze -before the end of 'Mlay or the beginning of June! WIIHIIIIAWAL III PIIEIEHINEI IIIIIS NIINM Ill IHAIII Bo Declares Resolution Adopted by London Chamber of Commsros. EMPIRE CONGRESS PROGRAMME. London, 'April i..-At a. meeting of the Oouncl-1 of the London Chamber of Commerce a resoiluftlon was adopted nlffinming that preferential treatment accorded by vlarlous of the self-govern- ing colonies had 'been off distinct ad- vantage to British manufacturers, and that the withdrawal of the preference would be most detrimental to trade be- tween the vlarlo/us parts of the Empire. A nulmlbor of resolutions were IUP- proved for inclusion, in Lhe name of the London chamlber, in bho progmlmlme of the Conxross olf Chambers oi' Com- merce of the Empire at Sydney, relo- tlive t otlhe following sulbJects:-Tele- graxphic oofmlmunlowtlion, certificates of orlglin and declarations of origin of goods shipped to the colonies, colonial dutliels on catalogllee, commercial rela- tions 'between the Mother Country, her colofndm and dependencies, emigration, merchandise marks, paxroel post rates, British simlidard tulhes and threads, lelbor oonlcil-iatllon, validity of English Jud-gunents in tlhepolonies, and v\a.lid»l»ty of English arbitration awards. _*Eli 25,000 HOMELESS IN LONDON. London, April 4.-in January by order of the London County Council, the med- ical officer took a. census of homeless persons. There were on that night 2,088` territory without exposing the-m to the IIIIIAI IXCIIIMLNI IN BELGIUM IINIII AIIMI IIIIIIIIM _ _. _ U, Sick Members Taken to Chamber in Automobiles to Vote. . ARMY TO BE INVESTIGATED. Brussels. Aprllf L_-Amid extraor- dinary excitement, as the fall of the Caibnet was expected by lna.ny peoiple to take place, the Cheunlber passed a. second vote over the question of lnill- tary reform. Last week the proposal for an inquiry was voted with a. ma- jority of two, and, ns several members were absent at tholt time, it was ex- pected that the proposal would be re- jected nt the second vote, thus involv- ing perhaps the rf-sllgnatlon of the Calh- inet. Some members who were ill were fetlched from their homes and brought to their seats in motor-cars, and the House was very nearly complete. Neverbheless, the proposal was once more adrvptcd, by eighty-t.\vo votes t0 seventy.eigilt, und one wbstcntlon. Thus on inquiry into the condition of the army will take place, and a report will have to be luld before the Chamber by May 1, with proposals tending towards drastic reforms in the army. It has now been decided that a new railway is to belbuilt between Malmedy (Germany) and Stavelot (Belgium). 'Mlnny military writers in France and Belgium had previously attacked this scheme on the ground th-nt the intend- ed rall~wa_y would eventually allow Ger- many to concentrate troops on Belgian I' I I Ing an adequate land army. Ths_ country is _swaksnln at last to the danger of Invasion and th t' In t f th N I ' ‘ the peril of depending entirsTy upon our Navy for the defence’ of ths.E‘::\‘;I|~oI_'f-°'l'l‘1rdy :lt:I::;tl\,;o? wI1l’o¢I\ .Ira-tzolsxlnzlziilv' o|;"itncl::::idr\'ghIr:\pd'|!IgIN:::zNf the maintenance _of a _thoroughly adequate Army for_the _protection of our ghgru, M,-_ Hgldan, bn 9|- -ning | T",-|¢,,,.i-| .elmmsl whigh hu mu, ?§ndi:;’t'p£';ig’:ffl° °"*°"'°|¥ _lt|’_\l °§\§l\:hi0dI‘\';7e! the I_il§;Il\loh_ owing .to its voluntary nature. It ia only %y a ayltam of compulsory training, with C °" °V FY °l Inn In 0 U ll 0 ml I lry Ilfo, that we can fulfil our duty, not only to oursalvla, but to the Empire, of maintain- WEEK IN ENGLAND Secretary Haldane Gives Hia Views on Possibility of an Invasion. THE TERRIITORIAL ARMY. _ London, April Q.-On the invitation of the Lord Mayor of Manchester, Mr. Haldane, Minister of War, visited Man- chester alld addressed a meeting of employers of laibor and others interest. ed in the Territorial Army scheme. A PRFIZY of Suffraglsts attempted to lnlef- vlew the Secretary for War, but they were outmanoeuvred by t'he police. Mr. Haldane expressed pleasure .at the .fact that the latest returns show- ed that the East Lancashire force had attained 76 per cent, of its estalbllsh- ment. They would not have diilficulty in dealing wltlh other people when they had an army wi-th such recruiting ser- geants as willing and convinced Terri- torlalists would possibly turn oult to be. That was t/ho foundation of his hope for the future of 'this force. He had never said that he could rely upon the navy alone; he did not think that would be safe. Even the best ordered naval tactics might let a smull force escape through, and we had -to protect ourselves s,-gainst t-halt. This was the function of the Territorial Army. Whilst nothing was impossible, we had to realize that we lived by probability, and the probabilities were about as high as we could make them. that, ln- time or pence any surprise invasion of 70,000 or 100,000 -men, even if they could get past the f-leet-which he did n_ot ilhlnk they ‘could-would, in these days of wireless telegrmphy, not survive I1 KING PETER-OF SERVIA 1 I _ ”\°I>IllNLQIon purposes. ik 122%-.~ _ ._ _ A i by the lnndlord, who declined even to allow them in have their xvillter cloth- ing. l~‘lnnlly un English boarding- house-keeper compassionately took turned up. There they met by acci- .ient n German lawyer. who declared _ that the children were not responsible for the payment of the lodgings taken week. They would be overwhelmed by t_'ho superior numbers of sufperior tmln- ed men and extinguished, and that evefn without the aid ol' the Terrlt-orlals_ But suppose the force did slip DB9! me home defence fleet? His answer was that that would not happen for some montlhs, and in the mefvnltime the Ter- nitorials would have been embodied for I six months, and have _becocmo a highly erflolent force, lnmrllsa by <~ffiv~Ient 01'- ficens,and enormously superior in num- bers to the invaders. The udofptlon of conscrlptlon .for the mdslnig of a h0me defence army would, he feared. FGSUU simply ln checkling the stream of re- cruits to that oversee al'mY WhI0h Was so superior to those of other nations. -1-_#Ol-li ENGLISH DANCING GIRLS STRANDED IN BERLIN. German Lawver to Rescue and They Came Through All Right. Berlin, April _.-six ltngllsl. girls w'hose ages range from seven to tlllr- teen, have had an unpleasant adven- ture in Berlin, which, thanks to the admirable system of German law. end- ed wlthout disastrous results. The girls were brought out as don- cers for a Berlin thcntre ln Jnnuury_ Being too young for filo since, ac<~ol~l.000 compared with The oonaaarativs figures sro: lm an. Women. Children. T'ti. l'.' nr f.. IGB IM 50 1.7Yl Q--I'-. ... Lula in so 1.'/91 1"'-\4 ns no LK 31| .. 2,181 W--1 -4. ... 1.80 lox 4 3,404 N-~l --- ... LIS 170 B 2.088 he: lower than 2l.$i persons occupied Mu en January 15 in lcsnssd lodgings MF” “I 1.18 in casual wards. Lon- “_l lilnoisas army vas, t.hsrsforof'2i.- , '-_i,;___ I'*TAl»oAnousA|. AT ruNsnAl_. EEN" K - A funeml c\.rouss_ ng so , s gmgghratanqfrlzsfmhruhzqitgg Uggfmk NIM L\|dW`\'_l‘o1_h tha mourn- v'I~'in'u'»'a3'°?i$'°X..°ll.'."‘.'...I'l'°..T5'§ 9° Nl in a serious condition. (ire of the .Mouse fortifications. How- evcr, the Belgian and German Govern- ments have come to an atreefment. The railway will run over .five miles in Germany and three miles in Belgium. __.__...____ TROUBLE FOR GERMANY _ REPORTED FROM CAMOA. Berlin, April ”.--An ofilcial cable- gram from Samoa reports demonstrations by the Chief Lsuakl and bis numerous adherents against ths German Govern- ment. Up lo the present ssrious conflicts have not occurred, but the Governor consider- ed its judicious. ln casa of emergency to ask for wnrships to be sent. The rs- quost has been complied with. and the commander of the cruiser squadron in East Asia, Admiral Coerper, has been ordered to proceed to Samoa with three hi . STN; cruiser Leipzig, with tha command- gr, arrived yesterday at Apla, and the Jaguar and Adkona are expected in A few days. _ lt in believed that the presence of these shi s will be sufficient to quell the dil- gupgsncg, “accidental or the work of erimlaa.I7hs.nd|. of the landlord was illegal. on every German lawyer taking a cer- gratln, and this good man undertook the cause of the English girls, got him- It I Nportod that Kin Peter will leave for Hinterland never to rs- f:gf|e,;f‘p‘,£°‘?|'::°2n.,ith`f|‘f;mtgfg, fu‘;';;ig‘e'Ii’ “"" ll »l°¢vr¢ shown ins P°°°f l1"¢l>“'f'9 fl" '”'P °f 'll' °°“"*'¥ ‘°" in ootalnln the six tl-units which the by the impressnrio, and that the action The German Government insists up- tnin number of cascs for the poor I . landlord had pawned, with their con- tents. The case. which lasted n. long time, did not cont the young foreigners a Denny. oAsTA`noLv ATTEMPT 'ro stow up |=nsNc|-l aAnnAcks. Parts. April \-A dastardly attempt was made at Limoges to wreck the bar- racks of the gendermerle. At about two o‘olock ln the morning a bomb exploded on the steps of the offices of the chief of the 12th Legion. Eleven gendarmes, with their families, are lodted on the first floor of these premises. Fortunately, thers were no vic- tims, though a good dell of damage was dons. The steps were blown to pieces. the doors torn from their hinges, railings thrown down. and walls crack- ed. All the houses in the neighborhood had their window~panes smashed. An explosion occurred in the Chartreux Quarter at Marseilles. The walls of several sheds wsre wrecked. but no one appears lo have been injured. ft _Ia not yet known whether the explos n was 1907-8 ._ . . 31,250,000 1908-9 ._ , _ 32.319500 1900-10 ._ 35,142,700 trate at Calcutta-C hemicals Lost Effect. Calcutta. April .ll-Proof has lately 'been forthcoming of the determined manner in wihlch the Anarchists have attempted to revenge themselves upon Mr. Kll-n-gsflord. which he was Chief Presidency Magistrate at Cayenne, some mont-hs before he was transferred to Mozuilferpore as e. judge, It alppears that when he was residing at Garden Realoh, Oelcutta, more than a year algo, a -book, neatly packed, was delivered by hand at his house. It was taken in 'by lhls servant and duly placed on his table. Mr. Kingsford thou-girl; it was a lalw book which he had lent to a fnlend, and which had been returned wllthout any covering note, and he did not therefore 'take the trou-ble to see what the volume was. It lay neglected in -his room, and was duly .packed wp among other books and taken to Mo- zufferpore on his transfer from Cal- cutto. There it remained, still with its cov- erlng, just it it had originally been re- ceived at Garden Reach, and to all appearances it was nothing more than a Ibook of rather large size. 'Some little time ago it was found that -this innocent-looking tome wins really nothing less than an infernal msélllne, conltrived by someone with expert .knowledge of edcploslves Ex- amination disclosed that 11 large book lhad been filled with plcric acid, to portion of the leaves cut out. In the space thus made was placed a bomlb. A tin which had once contained cocw. had .been fllle dwtill plcric acid, to which .had been added chlorate of pot- aeh, thus forming a highly explosive mixture. This tin had been fitted into the spa/ce fornloli by cutting out the eaves, and as the covem otthe bwk were intact they could be closed over the bomb and keep lr. securely in posi- tion. - The contriver of this novel form of infernal machine had arranged that e. detonator should act lf the parcel were opened, and he thus hoped to bring albout a violent explosion, calcula/ting, no doubt ,that Mr. Kin-gsford himself would in all probability be the persvh who would handle the book. Moet for- tunately, tlhls plan miscarrled, for, as already stated, the book remained un- noticed in its original packing, and the incident of its delivery was completely forgotten by Mr, Klnglsford_ When the explosive mixture was examined if was found that the plcric acid had gone bod after so long a lapse of time. and fthut, consequently, the bomb had become harmless. This lbook-bomb ls now in`the hands ol' the -police. 'Dhe voluime deals \vlth law, and contains 1,200 pages, of which half had been cut out. Springs, which would have acted if .the string of the parcel had been cut, were found clever- ly concealed in the cover. The detona- , tor was of fulmlnate of mercury. WHAI IIHIIISH NAVY ISIIINAIIS INIAN III CIINNINY Enormous Increase in Expenditure for Wsr Vssaall. BUILD MORE DREADN-AUGHTS. London, April". -- The anxloufly- awaited British Navy Estimfltes fol the _vcur 1909-li), shows ull entirely new principle is introduved. 1. All increase ot' 22,823,000 on the esti- mates of 1908-9. 2, On new construction t-here is an advance of £l,340,000. 3. Included in the total sum oi’ £8,885.- 200 for ncw construction is the ltenl oi' £2.885,T70, provided for beginning work on: Fourlbnttleshlps (Dreadnought type). Six protected crlllsers. Twenty destroyers. and u nulmiler oil submarine boats for 4. P;lrlltllnc|ltai'y powers are asked in addition, to lnsur the nl-1-l-.~.-ull-_\ ex- penditure for preparing for till- :mild tonsurlclon of fourunore large n,-ulilrod ships be/g'innlng on thc lst April, l9l0. An the following Ln.ble shows the total naval expenditure is higher than in any year since 1004-5. while the ex- penditure on new construction is the highest since 1906-6. _.__._.ble_w Constructior; £i1,260,000 9,690,000 8.860.000 7,830,000 Year. Total Cost. 1904-5 ._ . _ _..£38_800,000 1905-6.. _ .__ .$43,150,000 1906-'I .__ 3l.600,000 which £500,000 is allowed. ' INAGIII IIIAIH III NIIINII LINIIIII IN ltllcuiiuslllss Skull Was Beaten in With Some Weapon, Probably a Hammer. LITTLE FINGER WAS MISSING. London, April .l_-Mr. Herman Co- Ihen, a money len-der, of Sunderland, was murdered ill mysterious circunl- stances ill ills office, recently. Some relatives visited the house shortly after seven o'clock and getting no response to their knocking forced open the door. They found Mr. Cohen lying on bhe floor of his office in a pool of blood, with ills skull battered in and the littlc finger oi’ the left hand miss- ing. He was still alive and a doctor was fetched, but Mr. Cullen d.lcd In less than R quarter of an hour.,_H__ 'l\lle police searched the neighborhood but without result. Mr. Cdhen was thirty years of 656. ` and though a native of Germany had _-:pant most of his life in Sunderland. -belonging to it family which had con- ducted n successful money-lendln§ business ln various towns In the north of England. A medical examination showed at 'least six fractures of the skull. The room showed evidences of a severe struggle, but no weapon with whldh the injuries could have been inflicted was found. The police theory is that the wounds were inflicted with a weapon In the na- ture of a haimlmer, and also with some sharp instrument. This loads to the 'l,646.‘.l00` 8,885,194 supposition that there was more than one assailant. CANNIBALISTIC HORROR IN GERMAN EAST AFRICA Orgi Strange Appetite For Human Flesh Led to Gruesome C8. Berlin. April '}»-A grisly story of cannibalism comes from German East Africa., A magician named Mal-ukanol, his wife, and two adult sons, had ac- customed themselves' to the taste of fllsh, but naturally he/d some difficulty in obtaining it. They managed, how- ever. gradually to dnsw into allocla- tlon wit-h themselves eight women, whom Mulukensi promised to ¢es¢l1 his magic arts on condition that they Sh°\l\d NWI? human bodies for the gratification of his hideous appetite. Thus a secret cunnlbalistlc society of twelve persons was formed. According to the evidence given at the trial o these vampires an the stwtion It-lnga,, it appeared that the victims consumed M their loadroome rapists wen ia all cuss relations, and frequomly chlldronl of rho eight womsn whom Mmlukansl had I0! into his tolls. The doomed pemons were disposed of by poison, and the body was then bmumt to a spot previously agreed upon, where the gruesome fraternity wo.; alum-bled. Here it wtrtorn to pieces and devour- ed relw_ 'Hhs head fell to the share of the murdersss. in order that alle mlgiht use one skull for the prepamtlon of poisons for fresh victims. ” Every woman of the baud used to take puff in these foul o . oven uhough i_ was her own child at was being eaten. All twelve a_ _tied to having indulged in cannibal . and some of the women exlvlbslbl Oh* DN- iferenco for the flesh of children. which they mid was "beautifully Undef." Tén of these ogre: were condemned to doaoh and have slnoo bun executed. .Geographical Society. The audience, IIIHIIIIN INNAIJIIIS REMARKAB’-E ATTEMPT T0 BIESEANIIAL BLOW UP INDIAN OFFICIAL WIIIILII NIII LAST ..._._.__..._..__., ......... ._ B... ._A .._.......... IIIIINII IN IINNEN _ NAVAL EIIIIILIS 000 Coats Franco 2,000,000 More. COSTLY TABLE FLOWE RS. Paris. Aprll` ‘_-While the Govern- ment is anxiously considering how much money it can give to M. Picard to strengthen the navy, statistical in- formation is forthcoming abundantly proving waste and extravagance in the Government arsenals and dockyards. The figures in question, as furnished in a long detailed report prepared by M. Emanuel Brousse, on behalf of the Accounts Committee of the Chamber, show leakages and excessive BXDEIHII- ture in all departments. For example, armor-plates, gum. munitions, and other supplies of identi- cal patterns have been procured from different contractors at widely varyilng prices. According to M. Brousee’s sta. tistles, an 18,000-ton battleship costs the British Admiralty £l,520.000, and Germany £1,82i,000, while the same ship ‘costs France £2,080,000. I-low the waste occurs is examined and exposed with great mlnuteness. Among the items questioned by the Accounts Committee ls it sum of £80 debited to the Admir- alty by the late Minister of Marine for floral table decorations at his dinner parties. General Plcqua.rt has ordered an in- quiry into the statements alleged to have been made by General de Ferron, Warship That Costs England £1,500,- “ENGLAND EXPECT S EVERY MAN T0 D0 HIS DUTY.” BIIIIISN NIINIBLII. AAIIIIITIIII III I SIIIIIIUS IINANIII Horatio Bottomley, M.P., Goal FND . After a Longthy Trial. , 1 ' HIB ABLE DEFENCE. London, April ,t-After a hearing which has spread itself over betilveelz three and four months, and has 00011- pled nearly thirty sittings of the Guilllda- hall Court, the case in which Mr. Ho- ratio Bottomley, M.P., Mr. GQUPID Francis Fewlllgs, Mr. \Vlllia/m Abel# Stevenson, and Mr. Dalton Easurn 'w6l'l charged with conspiracy to defraud I connection with certain transactions J the Joint Stock Trust and Finance (Torporntion (Dtd.) and the Selects# Gold Mines oi’ Australia (Ltd_), cami . lo at conclusion in the dismissal of th! sunlimonses by Alderman Sir Jamm Ritchie before whom the prosecution has lattcrly come. This decision th( aldermun intimated after ten minutes' retirement from court at the close of Mr. Bottomley's eloquent speech £01' Ubi defence, and without calling upon tho counsel who represented the other de- Ii’enda.nts_ Mr. Bottomley's addre$, which occupied the whole of the da)/‘I sitting, was u powerful piece of OHL- tory, which could scarcely full to lm- press nil who hoard it-searching, un- lmpussloned, und lucid wihere it deal! with the intricate details of the trans- actions ln dispute, full of bitter scorn for the manner in which the prosecu- tion had been conducted, and of a no less bitter contempt for the kind and quantity of the evidence on which If was sought to secure the cornmlttal of his co-defendants and himself, and charged also with not a little fsrvld eloquence as the speaker drew B. DIC' ture of the obloquy and strain Wlhldl the whole proceedings had cast u‘l>0l\ them. \Vhen he sat dowll. Effie? hav' ing been speaking between three and fc-ur hours, there was loud applause ll the public part of the court room; but ihie' display was nothing compared with the prolonged cheering which greeted the mnglstrato's announcement of his decision to dismiss the sum- monses. For some time the demon- stration lasted, and then, after the mil- glstrate had left the bench, Mr. Bol- |‘iomley and his co-defendants wen overwhelmed with the consrltuli-¢l°hl of their friends. ____,.l_ GOOD LUCK DROVE MAN TO MURDER FAMILY. Tsrrlbls Tragedy Is Reported in I Family at Christpna. ‘ Copenhagen, April ._-A terrible llrnlnn is reported from Christiana. In lilo I- ~l“\' hours of the morning a. tram- unr dl~.\'t-l' named Johansen killed his wife and three children by stabbing ‘mem with A long knife while they were sleeping in their beds. He the! set fire to the house and when the fire brigade arrived Johansen tried to kill the firemen and policemen. Final- . -F ENGLAND`S TERRITORIAL ARMY Making a Gun-Pit. Mounted infantry at Mandouvldu Tralnllp Romounil. ; _ - _ _.W eormmanding the 4th Colonial Division, ln Toulon, when reprlmnnding his offl- _cers for the lack of di»=<~l1>iIno in the division. The "mpc de Psrls' 'lt-p..l»;s that the battleship Oaulois has gone ashore off I-lyeres, and that the battleship .laure- gulberry has also been dllifbled- .____Z.,__._- Honone ron pn; even Hsom. Berlin. ADF" °- - D"~ 9"," Heal" " continuing his German trlurflvhl. Which began with s liurturr before the Goo- graphlcal Society, ut the close of which lbs Kaiser, with flattering acknowiedl- mania, presented him .with the gold medal for science. Previously the society had begged the explorers acceptance of the Humboldt modal. Dr. Hedin lectured before the Dresden which crowdsd the hall, was no less en- thusiastic than in Berlin. ln ‘the absonos gf the King, who la in Italy, t e gruthfui rown Prince and Prince and rlnoels John Gor s racslved the doo or in t e Il, hswasove werodandtahgba lillson, where mole guarded ll: men. It seems that the poor. _I bmln was turned by the Mwl 1 had won about $2.000 in a lottery. nmous sPlm'ruAl.|s‘r io IMD. Berlin. April \-A- will-knkrf m personality died to-day-Dr. Egbert A lsr, a splrltuaillt of renown-at ilu* an of 72. it’ Lately the doctor hu not been tam seriously, but at one time ho polallaail the confidence of tboumndl of adhlautl who regarded him as a aesr of the lrlt water, and consulted him over every pol- alble difficulty. Dr. Mueller was an oalcm-'a soil. and was connected with A noble family 0! Hchwerln. Hs wal res nlbls I fsble of the Kaiser cargyolng a hang: °f I lnlrlfl snrment about with aim. doctor was wont to declare that qi were particularly fond of royal pe sires. and that many crowned heads-hid s' t ti goyallaggh and expressed their warm ap- enioyed the clone friendship of aatsll bv Inga. _ ~ M- _:_-143, , ,,_, N13. _-\_ sam.. -...“..__ ._ .'5- .~.»-_ , - .-.~ ye..." -EQ?" ¢-._ .fn-.-_. --~..-.- N-»,»-in-.»¢--». ---\ xxzr-.-~\..~ _o»_\aa=. 5* . ._-,~_. ~” '-\'-,*_» __ av-qs-»_,, W-,.:. ___,,_,.. _-es.. -... .9 \~_ ~ -- -ses-