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Show the INC DESERET EVENING- bct. sunir the BOMO. muc m THEIR 1 IIBEKTT IHl-T- H suction two SATURDAY r rvB' t I ,1, - VW t TEN PAGES sAI.T LAKE CITY UTAH 13 JANUARY Sdi!ipaky Mews Spsd&l iPreiigi Tfe r - 3Jp. 77jaC70f7aC30-77a3C- & ?WWaW' Gothic Rcccp nor Room In Hmc. Louis Hun non t t Rn ' 'xUal Orrepoit3'rsc federal- oyrrelirnty of the twDt-)1rraan states. Hut Prunsia and other G ttn.tn statVnal hou 0f KM hao thur The Jru'ooan house of ha h H ielTy itc!y h 11 up n h model to England, ujr aJimUtd by tho ConaenajLlve h'ttonun Treitarlika to he a bht upon the o'iut tuti'm tin lourr house Itsolf tore up s llor ion Hethmaun-llollwei- r rifnrineil law As a rule the ITaiMiin houses sirree The poerr la.i of tne as a hh k to iannot be shown until a llh- r.il loAir house comes Into tains ami conns, th.it far off. hnwillItrisk l i iss.a s the upit ebaniber f it of VliiKiand's house of lords. ir m 1l my ft Bulphtg ht TncRacHRRT n jrlv all hlsii diaitt i . It1 retired minlKtir and buda-hiul the rlrht to conairtr amt all lejfiniativ prM .! lit ,t !ei ilou on wore often nwrruled l th czar When the eonatiiutioi! v. bv ttie reolutintiHrio m eti th Lrl "un.il fft anotner 00 ip mlw r not on tlie ITuaaian prin ipl a. by elf td. govt rnit.c i oriHiration, town, jnivr. Prussias Sti heretlltary piers aittea and baud ra f cutnrTMfero. The .t o'er rmjnoil rrmalned n'action.iry hr ;ot elisifd The hrrenluius, a it n al!d, con- and tin ir mild lepislntite fumtions. What killed aven tiia very timdrate r forma 9S hereditary a tain only ever peer. if maa of r tiling. and the it third girdsay, say they they duma; anj id i thit i ne 8Mtem A ed bv Ituaainn iefimra a an inajrafnt 207 high official, rurcMi.ta Is Ignored hy the nwk or other triguing and worth U staUilty and motl ration - i.M of t,orjHritinnf town umvr,l tieri nre no i.irunts,nonspter piles apMliiige 'f G n it a n't ra fldh n, I tun sum- - tr.trpmifs to latch jt nl tho nnswor the court. Itut fir i h t a rv iM-, but it' ft indiae.t tar.vtr i n to, i i many a that ptoisible .i.uuMjtv eitt K ' il nfttn than int ip tlMt ? pwr lgtiatie in ehon in the fait that the Ausi..uji xs-tei s i n ms I' t kn v of th' .r do ur x id ill'll, in. .ifr Imuscs of hrdt house of niaff- - pi in e S e ITZ .i ml n i.U-- . am! other vomJ t Kirahor other rhtn and K u an nt t r Champions Popular Liberties Trouble Grows From 1'irlue 1. . It U n m on ai to. rati f tr hun ju ratio ip 1i?43 and Nnv Hu flinty . are at .U' olisUto an I in- - Tico Prussian Houses j rf li ujse n a tin loimt il h nduiKerd not the frtu Agree fY n ueu. Pilule at wrst d nt are i ct i n i.Mn, though fnr !!i f Hi Mipid i o hut from thy m 'I h tin iiu tipper hut f tm irowrnio'nf itM If IiPrrfiihau" Is in si d rrt" n Iln n oun li in tho hands of n actionary jr-- i hut it is Jh rr loumil tiiut dwri Mitn nf nn "jr mi iart m nnui soviet tl nut d nmr thrw ti li irmli-sIn thoory thi bodv ti of tho mu Mi i i !r mi. r Stnl j In h rnk.f, .ind nnt tliat of of tl pire t onable m r than either Kn? Mtutumurv N At proMi t Grinin is bun- with thl a '.null? iWbnii'hpp It ri .. no in t .ih-- t rn iviih-The .r !Tu-kiTht Ioiv r I i ! uppr houH. f r pr mif r Ijrmu d t h min il .uni r ason that Ml It iloi's nnt mini t suhjert, anl for the n m nato it h.a no her nk th- it lioii 01 diirt nt, i i or Ini.sian ill- ti ahip hi lar th iw .nn my ha no urpr houe The is it- if intirply umlpr tin- ctiiiii of f i the exception jinn!) ujth r ii htas? i G.nnans ony lRiativo 1.1 inl.'.I notjlpj,, ami It ti.i-- v i ' .v l .!! luk j, s Ini- - for th in i rTii.uii ' l t s ihtrnbiT. Tae btindosral, whioli t r j Wl lit II o pr .1 H x but hv it d t .1 rt of houo of :n I'it r itotar--or r Jii t regard ?s a i n to the path f Pru.la !i i liii n torn 'tr ir !'rd is not a KffKHtive cr amber at in tailii hv j.ait 14 uKitation for a . tu i ii tfot iir a. I, but only a e ium ll r pr t t on th n i" numb red ah ut Wi ntmg tho franohii-- to the Imtr Iiouj-- i , L it ) 4 Jan. 2 Bunp's vn VlhXNV, fnllLj; tho tffoct of f England upper h'tu1', and profits six folk Us Austria and oth r Fian, u, tr pr'litH tho collapse of (.-- ! En- iu.imWr ifuvorununt overyuhn r QUisawqf braU. ! are tutklni? whether the urh nml bi.ike thor that i, the! member-- t 'liati 1 - t ' . ! 1 pr-er- Kinr .!'! s sh-c- p en-m- fr ! . i ii I . . , i n- l 1 - la-- t s i - v 1. m nt, ! -, , . fr not tlHMufum attatked the oun'il lairnf .i npr aentath e rhatuber Thla math- I'.mij.Io frmiU At prenent the oiun tl la not at all in danger of being aholtahed. Itut It la ex)XK'ted thiit on Jan I all tin independent member uni U- g,.t rid nf, end replaced by cr at urea of the exaf Kueaitt giand dukia otul plaed a lonaidt-rabi- e rule In the deliberations of thia strange upper house. They do an tm nmre when the proceedAfter ings of the louncil could no kmger be kept aesret, Xh'holaa It ordered ht Stand du hI relatives no longer to rlt r te T'he grand dukes er5 bv no meaiiH aiwtiv- the evil geniuses of the find. Hide four of them voted SJ its ago f r tarls Mdlknff coi'.Sti-tun.- !. 1 m ltdu. h ttutmnal "III., ll til iii o r uer in li h ri nhtin- ti.n ..nntogous iiutit hi aici in sad di- -i n u K.r ar istimruta v of Austria, and ition in Hungitv, pule. The chainnr .onslsta of 'fii.r an hdnk eon- - us, a Imuae of PrN vo th doubtful merit m I ItusMian lilv rnlif'd the rug nf (ld men whrt , anv iinh has not of tiling man th h ff. M l s of Mouse Hi- - f Aus-ii- tlie llabs. i Sn and rir il i , at tn ir Ii)v Cotpr in Uanifbhiit Hurely, M irv ooj, r, an vou know, vv 'i nth, niiw of ' 'hiudg,, Smith, an-nf Silent Smith, ai.l it was w wj vi-np Scot Ianl with mule t m ho h r htwband i'lrtin b nrp that wan h r h in the ipi- 4jop wnrklnK sou of a aoh 't r ti Kip n .n! c hr it used to orcb r special ht busm-vt fhik dinner gowns to dine there so ns to intarteit f ith i i. t .t .' h harmonize with the decoration. A 'with M r j simtn nd 'n.i few years ago the panelling was sold hr r i it wa-oft r tt not uni end Ih non in America. There Is a rte;itii at'of her !e tint tlirv v uu ,ir has picturesque ballroom, too, with a splen- idea f the Herheit Naylor-Lejlar.- il onortnmn fottune vJu li he been ceUbrating his coining of age. did marble staJrrae and some fine had .settled on his niece. on tApestry the walls Is It Altogether His mother was Jeajuo Chamberlain, one of the most perfect private jgil-- a Becomes a Baronet daughter of William KelaJi Cliamher-lal- n os" In London. j Soon after Mrs Uooprr inherited her of Cleveland, Ohio; she married uncle s millions. he and her hutni the present baronets father in lkS9 and Barely Escaped Kidnaping came to Ixmdon, tok a house m i nd and young Navlor h;ul the misfortune to lose her hus- IhhWhen becan.e n it d brother were nt Eaton a few year vc nor Square, and 10 beautiful was She band splendid concerts they jp.ivc years later. ago an attempt was made to kidnap In tho Mr became a bonnet Uoopcr when she married 33 years ago, and them and hold them for ransom. ,and in the same ear Iia pur nnd sho la beautiful still, In her tail, stat- Nothing very dreadful happened, and !Hurslvr from Joseph Bnxendale, jav-ir- c were not actually kidnaped, the $1,5oomo for it It is a wondtrf il uesque and refined way; moreover sho but boys was the to there aicording polue oM v ai standmR in a of Duo j if not the first, at any rate, one a plot to do so, and they only cs ap'd tures an!f, containirif a Ion park f aenie of the first American girls to be re- by the skin of their teeth walnut trcs, all of them ovr 20 ceived in English court circles and Sir Albert Edward Nav ld vear Thero Is also a fine herd sho h Id her own well. htta the distinction of had two f der in tne park IDrhard Urom-vol- l. After the sad death of her hurtband, roval godfathers, one wshaving the late King Of son the pretender, is .said to v ho bad I il member of parliament who was then Innoc of avo hv d there, and Edward, in Huniey churrh for Southport, she remained in retire- Wales, and the othir w is the i , t be wn memorials of ral ment f r in tnv years, but was general- Duke of Cambric! ge Old Umbrella as may r mwejlH The pe John Keble. the ly known as the best looking and rlch-- t be V'ns called d hi ha- - ir.uo il" -- i ai ,vell known hvrnn writer, was irnr of widow In Iamdoii Slje might have a couple of magnificent s . cr ir Geortre jthis churh f r many var and at least twico had ing how N. su.tabiy "in a w h.id the almost entirely t ip cbaii'P of b mg a countess, but Just lately his moth.- -, whose por- jt'oof.er when it he and bourht d the ad'd he tcmptaCon Cf It wore trait lias been mere often painted by jrebudt o thwt It - i.ow one laipe ump-cch bratc d artists than any either wom- two one) and devoted herself to the educaof the finest ir.ar.Hions In the kingdom t Ik n hildren r d te an In London, has been entTertain'ng (As it has an American woman for its Her eldest son 1ms been In town fur elite n large country house shooting chatelaine, it is hardly necessary to tell .me d.ivs m oinnoction with the legal party at d In Wales, among you that the interior is Ndh artistic t on his taking possesnffalrs he guests of Princess Iamlse of at d thoroughly in all its sion of tl c properties Hyde Park and her daughter, the Princess comforts Lady Cooper has a passion d Hou.e and Hall. Ruthin. Louise, the earl and countess of Lei- fur U-tapestries, and some magnificent a bright, ales Me cester. Viscount Ioseedas the cele- specimens of this sort of work are to VP1 set up lad, tilkative, brated amusing, traveler Sr.rah Lady Wison be en at Hurlov She Is an adept i I taste for mlrn-- i' a"d a lot more. pos, mg v gnat with -- v she Is patroness of the the peedle ard ,nnt ui a t rg We all like Are for most Erfc?.ih needlework associa-toid dly one nf the h.m rd . s Coming to America is and last year lent her beautiful gnatec t it'his" n s yiety he is "ount anl fountes.3 IntzTv are huso in Grosvenor Square for its an- n.itur.Jl. i g iod dtal feted and run to Armrira this month Thr-exhibition ro nun! a His In 'jp in town at Albert rom.irkahlp c handiom4., Her eldst son, George Cooper, came s one of three built by Hudson, artistic and couple. (let- on of the beat of ajfo this ear, and iAdy Cooper lvo the erstwhile great railway rontractor, vomon om He is an author, keenly a moKTiiflcent ball to celebrate this tie other two being occupied by the Interoated in literature and art. He and the dbut of her only daughter. n has written a brrnth ambassador and Arthur numljer of books, and is Maisle Cooper. This house haa one of The tm of hou'i-as fluent In English stid empty ns he is in n ,the finest ballrooms In Inlon, and in t frr so Pm- other yens ago) they ianruaae Both are (the drawing room is a magnificent hob-b"ere km mi .is 'Cd m not in tho current "because v of miniatures. Sir Georsre's at ail ' r iid i e . r In but nationally-an- d J f Brvrr.Hv out on a Ka h artiet's work is Hvl. Ho'i-'- i nt th.it An interesting and fsein-U- i different tbie, Cnsways on one. ' iop ms formerly me lv ib. . dc e ,! p. note k ff pair I hop they w m have a r s on another, and so on. In this bv J.irn- - M- Nell Whis- - eo.l time in th Atstes room also is a set o? French furniture r e Som most successful Phootin par- of well nttfh priceless value ,rt th- - mos gorgeously beautiful ciir..i.g-rooin London ties have been given this autumn by UDT MABYe ipeelal Correspondence ) NIXN', Jan. 3 There hate been great doings recently at Nant-clwjnli re Sir Altirt Edward ( L J In fact worn-- ;jfr -- j l ! d, I i fr 15 1 "'-- 1 n-r- j, hf-- ins-r.h- ed r-- Nant-clwy- Nant-clwy- good-lookin- -- I.- - !. n, xn-Iri- n'ti dr3d i Pas-soo- s half-a-doe- un-in- y tu-i- n: 1 s' 1 I'tk "(''lort.il i.i - ki st Italy's upper houaa, her MoatR ta probably tha safest fnatttuUou at th sort iu any European great country. Its safety lie la th fact that it ha no hereditary mem bars, with th of a few relatival of th erclgn. Its 00 members are electd or nominated for life; a they are mad, not born, there la some guaraata of Elks th British houa of thilr lords, and tho Russian council of tha empire, the Italian upper hooa has judicial funrUons. But it play a real rolo in the kingdom's politics; and It la rcspci ted all the uore for that reason. This reasoning confirms the theory that Europe's upper house system la pin ywl out, and that a second chamber. whether hereditary, nominated, or elected upon a high property franchise, Is popular only as long a It reoog-nlz- 's Its hsolctcness, and does nothing to Justify Its existence. That was th secret of tlia lone duration and aJ of the fin.il overthrow of England's In, use of lords, and It seem to apply eara An Aristocratic House In Ilumiury Uk contrast between th two li'Si.lMHo organa la not so great, bi'i uuo Hungari, ilesplto a pionilse given e'glit wirs Him. hss not yet got for lnr lower house. iini'crsiil suffr-tgHungary's upper i hambtr la called tlia IVItli the "house c,f magnates of Eiigland'a. It I" the most ar-- i latoeratu- in Europe; and Its rlasalfit'a-tlo- n of nieiiilx rs Is even more medlicxal. in the list am 1U "Iwitiii rets of the two gunnli.iiia of the kingdom, crown." a "president of tile royal 'table," numerous royaltns, prluees and iirUibiehops. lx hereilltarv lourits and tl hereditary li irons, and tiH other hv the memlers, y'lei are coopted '1 hmte of magnates th inm mnphati a pom ses no litoral author-llt- y whatever in Miingaiv and has no in I l,e pnptilir imagination, hut hold lit is Upporteil hy the consery att e liarai ti r of the I, iv i r house, and it Is to hi In ntui h mIi r p"H!ii n than Is the e li" I -- i Events of the Week Among Society Folk No Hereditary Members , l J -- t 16 Austrian upper house. Th Austrian house, tika tha PruMlan. ha a vara! members who are foreign subjects: and who vota on puraly Austria affairs though owning no aileglaiio 4 th Austrian kaiser. conservatives admit that the radical reform, or abolition of the upper few chamber, it a question of but - p Ignor-.rnD- but alien elation to tha kraer cliamber man reformed on ttia hnata nf universal herrenhaus,M as ufpraga Austria a an effective Institution, a as m mashed. The contrast between the two chatn-tier- s la tf great ; and even Austrian everywhere. it houses OSWALD BARBERTON. I I I Madame Louis Stems Famous Salon ( PA s il S. J tn. K M i in t auhor lr.ilh . Louis IT i. es .in i v lb" fate of 11 r- -, f iu ra r pienLd f i i K t t m' iut at kmu s ri'd ha w hen t k s. t r - irKi .j! II more. rn w i u. i ic u . l in hn the s f the off.c.a lders w m ait, Mina, : this m s. i he Fa ih un? r do scope . Ti i l , f I .1 - of Ka.hj.ii 4hoM are so .vunKht) Tiiurs'la1 after lv MKiety f .iv with lit rarv f Jc minus hf n tn- nrnl)o?adrs v Hr t to have a qnp t .iriji3 c j n ti me their witnuut talk ting har,e heralded abroad. iv arrange to see oth'-- r t ach at Ma- me bten s And ren of rt ir t c.ru nianv been decided pervatuc partv It' vnsuors al h r find at 'ire up'in a: fr i fhridl duties long time t r h dine in tne tap to m of her hung-dir h"T e Fen t io late K.rg Edof fruests, whom ward, most x she met at Mirenbaul, was her frequent vis. tor PUMmI is - np 1 te . i -- rlh c,f appt a vni'Vf oiiete a mount to M ai i ,,f hri her sdlon m n suoplit.i th n the IritereiH and a' V tr an l ii re th u of h r Kr she has the I) j LeAfttMe of In It are dwarf Two laige salons had ff fiotn tills sunny smith land aimn that overtop of Japan and all the wealth af 'I he walls nf one ar: tree ments and that immense hall Koliert hung with paintings of the eighteenth exotic flower and plant that delights x genius It is Imp- f her ent ui y Krmih s bool among tlum ,t the western traveler In that far off Ishens ttn-de t know Vi i lame S. Til w it milt ireuze and a Fr.igonanl anil the other land country. It is more extensive In mic and variety than the banker mf t on tne g.frnini? piston oi Is devoted to sp i.iuii, of the eigh. t In !n r h, t.i? J..C teenth entuiy English masters Uiit 'Kahns show place near Paris Che f i.f uni no in tin pu t e of of the finest Is a pm trait of a young only other Japanese garden In Fraao. Mamrue if nt xhe is , KATHERINE DOUQLAS. ievie man the fourth marquis of Anglesea i i an nth i st in a oa ie hy Raeburn. there are several Then breeder canvases by Oplo, one by Romney, and f (onsolaUuii, at is full GENIUS hope inspirer of hih ideals and one by Fir Joshua Reynolds In the FAKE CHILD iesitmns The mine of life and of honor is the of of place Queen VIENNA portrait LITERARY STIRS w Gd m i bo f ill o' dust, hu In Ictorla v. hen sho was about six years r jrobi let in d !t th re Ih the dut b Sir Thomas Iwwrence Rumor hinHfil ti) tnos, nho raise It 3 old bus it that the national gallery In I,n-do- n Jan J The atlegad li t iFnl it us has made several overt arts to discovery of a child M.idime Stem for its purchase but Taste Ec.dcnt Everywhere js causing a controversy she has l.ot wished to part with it hero Herr Hupfer who writes How did I come across If she reMl Ium" Mprn home is n eloquent "I was in Mumcn oi po.,11 s recently brought bock from peated my query. jiruo' of h r highly dcveloiwd tioaata tho most magnificent recep- years ago and picked it up from a n ar I! ,zen ,n the South Tyrol a "child A11 he could tell in' neater there tion hall in Pans Tula "as an ( Sand The child, Anna Soha. to the house itself an eigh- was that he had bought It from a Or- fiieorge r , only 9 years old, but could write teenth renturv mLsaton which the lato man lady. It had been presented either vere In both German and Iouis Stern tsmg it v ee.ru ago as a to her or to one of the members of jmirv-i-iouI i eserit for his young bride her family by the queen herself. Itul.an Italian, It was explained, she In this hall the dothle style predom"I was the first In Paris to start a ha h arnel owing to Bozen being near The (lothic has berome so collection of the eighteenth inate renturv c he Herinan-ltaha- n language fron-- I uely aDcmid vv,th religious an school. Madame Ftmn not In r " h r" "Italia Irredenta" begins. that it is a trlfie hard to think English be 23 on i Th' "I gan about years ago brought the child to Innsbruck H,if'r of t ps suitatde for tho modern house tt was I re to ure e, goo ,, illy iiid later t, Venna where she easy Ye Yt Madame Stern has made silih of the m.tstirs from hewn to men, who examined skillful use of It that It gives a sitlsfv-in- Parisian deal' rsEoghh bewilderment They wire not in her hideously Impression of homeliness Its high and so were sold for mm h scrawled but wonderfully mature and arched roof. Its monumental ehimnev demand, less than they would have heen in Lun-- i finished verse Newspejierg published piece taken from a chateau in Angou-lemFlnre don that time oll.x.tions of her My and My Heaven with Its massive, carved stone doors of notes exclamation A ladv Maece- -' century Enghh portraits also transferred from other Drench eighteenth have become very mu li the vogue n ih name, got Interested In Its carved wood galraslhs, exquisite llit'le Ann is future, and promised ta here " h"--r lery with Its winding stairway copied a good educaUon. gle Horn the one In the chureh of Ft BcautijuUy Set Gardens when separated from Herr Hup-f- c Rut Ll nine Du Mont In Paris all are pure r. un i lari d mi a farm near Preax-IniBut Madame Stern has not ' Ftepplng out from th" long French (P thii the i hi.d'u g, n us snemd to evap-or- iI euTio hersi If slavisnly to any one windows of thee v, n, the v iitor no fresh poems; Fh" pro'uc-the one in gcr-de,i herein and finds the h.mself is lm than ordinary largest style, highest pranf in! owe I rath'r St int ll.genve of n connoisseur in the cngi t She knows how tn H r d bgusted Faubourg patron tvles combine without committing Honore, where P vv can afford th- luxnt her hick to Bozen, where her The i.n'q'i" Seventeenth ury- of open spaces gross errors of tast. is a rnd'ers assistant. father Is now fill in spaces beture of this garden, which is lal I out Tne fill J r of the genius century tar "trie tween Ootl rn columns: near Italian In formal French style, Is a large fonn-- I charged w.tn Iv'irg conoocted a liter-- 1 In dull gold frames tain whose basin Is mad" of blue tiles sry hoax in to revenge himself stand mas'lve carved Venetian basins At a distance this gms the effc t of on one of tho learned moil with whom for holy water and hidden disi reetlv a bit of the Mediterranean transplant-- j he had had a quarrel He denies this In one corner Is a telephone And perhaps Madame stern had charge; and pleads that someone else Unlike ed Anna has been unable tile usual French Interior with Its glare this fountain built as a reminder of hoax-- d hirn of unshaded Illumination, the lighting the azure skle9 and seas of the Riviera to throw any light on the mystery; an 1 or tl hall Madame Stem was the where s,he spends so muili of her tune when asked whether she wrote the woman in Paris to use electricity At Capp Martin, her refuge for the poems answered "yes. but refuses a firt w concealed n long liars winter months, she has another garden j explain whether this refers to the orlg- of enetlan glass that cast a sub which Is perhaps the most wonderful Inal composing of them, or only to bar of all the marvelous gardens of that scrawled copies. dued glow. i i natM.s tmjf trembling m never nu-tAnd t fh; lornois In.s ! I -t ' than "f rr uf n in Mu in baiam tn n "n i i u.e Writes in Two Tongues Maria Star, whi-- is Madame 55tema pen name, has not made her reputation In France pn'rarlly a a novelist z. oi e would eAtab- eithoufrh her woman By wnt-I- n ln?n a 1'vh vereaM tmth Emrisn and French he has lately loired tne frw- a jthors who attemrit the 11ffcilt task of wniini? in anoCher Ung iaxq a well as in th'ir own But wiiMr r is onlv a phase in the wide ranre of her artistic activ.Uo Her sk pv',,js of most of the is Parisanv of th last forty years f r NLalame Sern lKan to draw portraits a? the .qe f,f 14 have attradrd wjdo attention Hhe is a ekille-- 1 musiBut cian and a writer of librettos lessen a hiifhlv culabov all she tivated sense of appreciation of art and bsauiy in all of Us manifestations VIENNA, 1 s 1 vv ' -- ,ih e, j i G.u-p.it- d ' 1 T. - . I - or-ie- I varl-color- |