| Show Cardinal Newmans Letters SpecIal to TIE HERALD Examiner Dispatch LONDON Sept 14By cable to the New York Herald Arrangements are to be made for the publication of selections from the correspondence of the late Cardinal Newman The Rev W P Neville of the oratory Birmingham invites all who have such letters t their possession to send them to him at the oratory that he may have all available material The cardinals violin was given a month berore his death I to the daughter of a friend whom he had Lever L-ever regarded with particular affection Lady Dunlo looked very lovely as she sat in the dingy court room on Friday asa I as-a witness against her former lover Alden I Carter Weston charged with forgery to I the prejudice of Wertheimer former co respondent in Dunlos divorce suit against I hia wife Lady Dunlo wore a handsome tailormade Scotch plaid and over her trim shoulders hung a stylish fur cape Beside her sat Lord Dunlo who bore Lan L-an awkward attempt at indifference the gaze of the scores of curious eyes Ho spent most of his time in gazing vacantly into space and chewing the finger tips of his lavender kid gloves Lady Dunlo on the contrary was all smiles and grace and let her big blue eves al wander mischievously over the army of squarejawed barristers solemn magis trates and vicious looking prisoners a mix ture of tenderness and triumph upon her erring but repentant better half An occasional pittying glance was all she al vouchsafed to the prisoner But exert her will as she might her ladyship was once or twice betrayed into signs of emotion Mme Nordicia arrived in London last Sunday and has brought with her her niece Miss Grace Walker who is studying under her aunts tuition for the musical profession Miss Geraldine Ulmar will undertake wi the leading part in La Uigale n which is being energetically rehearsed at the Lyric theatre and ERie Clements will play an important role in the new opera The heroine in the French piece is pursued by three suitors a chevalier a countryman and a beau Andrew Carnegie the Pittsburg millionaire million-aire must have passed several manuals qnartcs J hcures if ne has read tho English Englsh papers attentively since his rccont wild and offensive diatribe against the country to which he is indebted for much generous hospitslity Says the Spectator We should not think it right to make a speech at Boa ton declaring a republic to be the most costly and most venal form of government denouncing democracies in general being composed of rags and tatters personally ridiculing the President of the United States and exhorting Americans to kick out their disreputable republic and establish a respc table republc Should any Englishman make such a speech and were he lynched in consequence we should be the first to deplore his folly and confess he had provoked his fate But wo hope no Englishman could get people to listen to him who would be capable of such a want of prudence and good taste That however is pretty much the tone of hat speech made at Dundee by the Scotch American millionaire Mr Carnegie by I name So the writer goes on for a column or more and many others handle the canny monopolist with not more tender touches It is a melancholy fact that as a rule Englands real enemies in America are Britishers who have changed their nationality nation-ality The Queen and royal family are held in thC highest respect and esteem ar i H i J j throughout the United States When the 1 English public read Carnegies attacks as the work of an American the English people peo-ple will remember that Mr Carnegie is not an American at all any more than Dalton tbe swimmer is One is a Scotchman and the other a German |