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Show STAM.EY IX MW TURK. He Talk About the Troubles or Hie Itrar Utinrd. Xew Yor.ir, 2fov. 0. II. M. Stanley arrived on the steamer Teutonic tbl morning and was met by his manager, Major Pond, with party. Stanley was aked to say something about the rear guard troubles and the stand which London Lon-don inters have taken on it since Mr. Stanley's departure from Hug land, he sal J: "I do no wUh to tay much about it yet and I have not read tho London papers carefully enough to express an opinion. I oljett to stirring the matter up, unless un-less 1 am forced to do so. Logbooks cf tho rear guard were slgntd day by day by tho cfllcer of Bartlclot, Barre, or Kingston, whiloln camp, together with the ollicial reports of the officers. I am justified by all in my censure of thu rear guard which was the cau of the attack made upon me in the book." Willi Stauley were his wife, Dorothy Doro-thy Tenuant, an Knglish artist, and her mother, Mrs. Tenuant, Hamilton Hamil-ton Aide, a dramatist, who will act as the historian of the tour, aud Lieutenant J. Mounteney Jcrron, a favorite of Stanley's. |