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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1894-06-01, Page 54 1 DWI.: AWI;1.. AND. DINNA is the road :veiv ,drisitry ? Itationoo 14tett.•- - fleet %Val t41‘vetAt. thou art ii -weary, And lifter Clo ai,011.,'Voirit•th the morning cheery : Then bide it •Wee and dillies fret. The clouds lin ve (4il ver 11)ortlt forAe.t, An' though he's hidden, still the sun is •shining.% 'Courage insterol of tears uklI vain ropin; lug. • Just bide 11. wee and (Ilium fret. 'Whet; with to 1! a nil etiit Usipiajlng • '1'114.42'it beset, • :Bethink_ tlese /fatal' the-ntuziana.1,:_ x•or - - Sn'ap the stiff oak, but spare the willow bend i ng, , • And bide .a wee and, Maria' fret. 4i1et "AIM rper sting (loth borrow . Front • r4;,rrist '. But yester•day it- gone, and shall its sor- row • • • Unfit UN- /4)r the present and the morrow?_. a weic, Arial dinna fret. An over fluviims hrooding ' • -A host of cirs and -fantasies deluding : 'Ellen, brother, les.t., these torments be in - trio! ng, -7---"JliStslodil-n, wee; and (liana fret, ItOY' JI.Mr• • • 1 -le was the "devil." that boy, Jim : . Coulde't do itnyth-Ing good him ; Rough and •rni;ged, 14 '4 m Ls li i 1 ripe; 'Bunning errands', ilistrilniting type .1 -Netting the neighbors on their livade :With' bran -new "fui•niture," "slugs" and "leads," , From ea rly morn' ng to 've11 i lig dim : • lie was the "ilevir'--thitt boy, Jim 1" 'Editor whaled -in) good I Head as hard as a.stick of 3.v00d:••• Just burst Ina in a loud. "lloOray I" , And went.right ou Ids don't-:cii.re 'Rut olice--when the train was passing by, Azi he editor's. child ,.on the track --411., my • • 31n -7 -he rushed with. his .sanie don't care ght in front of tite..engine -there 1 . • • C lid was saved, but whe,re w8 Jiin ? kth flaming lanterus..they looked for • •1i. While the pe.ople trembled and held their breath- ••linder the engine, crushed to death!" There,./n the dust aTilT grime, . •Jim•I • • .• lie had given his life away! .111ot-touch ,need of their tears. for him 1• ••11,e was an angel-tbut boy, Jim 1"1- • • -,-Fraulg L. Stanton , TUE •oLu-syyi..r. WOMAN. They' jnevet sitriektd on a platform : they never-destred-t-o-vote-:-- They sat iu a row and liked things slow, ...While_ they knitt...:d or patched a_goat. -Smother They lived wItl, nothing, of Latin -anti a filmiest Jolly Sight -Tess ot Greek, • succee 'And inade up their hooks and changed resulto • , _ . -4111n aa average one i.vieek.- •••`* •-- fleas' ham They. never ventured in •hansoms , .nor • -climbed to the topmost 'bus,: •••.' '-Nor-talked-w-ith _a ..3Warkg„..ia-the latest. - slang :: • They left, these fashions ,to us. . • Dalt ah f: she ' wits ,sweet and pleasant, though possibly not well read, ". That excellentwife who cheered your life ' • And vanished at 10 to bed. " • 'And it's oh 1 the; .pity, the pity, that time should ever annul • , • .. 'The wearers of skirts who mended shirts And never "thought nurseries dull, • , • • IFor everything's topsY-ttfevy' noW the ' • • .men are bedded. at 10, • • While the women sit ,up. and amoke and the Club of the Chickless • , ; • a, .1• • THE DAY'S FASHIONS. . deep, collar ,,or drapery. of. tioulo sainittlietritig-a--cape"r ar"-itgaiii;- with "ire. vet , peaked tlevere, givitig the idea° of an • open jat-ktit ; it. also' general ly • has sonic Handebnie and fiewitehing Mid- -.sort of basnue, either inti•row mid fluted, • Or tirePed long • bats' • wings peuin*,' suninler Tea Gowns. rosno tiic wnist. Although the -1;11114)1re drese has but - little ow:cost:1- uniees. for a ten, ,gown; a good many .thing's in present fashionit .re - cull the Napoleonic period. •We have • already described .11.at " lierthier" jacket and the ",Pretaier Consul " Scarf ; now we.. .," lirieune" reclingote, long •mantle.of light • colored, dlot•li, with white revers told inilitaryjnatims,,.....x.e.ty.- 0kmip***--4nr-Irdkrirt711-47%-tecrii, Or for • travelling.... •• • oAleATA,IsLti,.1:46ui.i.s. 1 r NOVEL ANT) OR ANAING FAERI(n • The Brionne Atichilima to l4lt'M 1Loog Sipeylps Ltnigir.r111118 fpr lihttog IT1shortvr'capt...s. • • 'Mere is great variety of tea.,gowns. A peach /material Such . as crepon pita° pretty. loose dresses, with 'collider collars, a hand roUnd bt ; the sleer(.8 formed aof three 0 a fem., 131 tie and brown u re,°-hrown epau: intrcklueed on a blue' _1110, d Pre t..ty Pc spring'souP, ,a6 'aft the vegetables. t the skirt with bias' band 'of that go to make up the French mites-. terial Caiight down at intervals. • • doine or .vegetahles are in perfection at dice is trimmed. with .braces• this season of the- year. Carrots) become aitiLikiden,.:.O.Onsiderably over the • rank and coarse with age and have none r,, and heroine narrow in front. , tha sweet eticculence Qf the young root. 11, made both in crepon and 'rho same ha truo .of the young •turnip, it as basque jaekets, elaborately wh p2titcssee a nutty flaVor 'unknown made u large hi the wa puffs al a...fay-or lettes ground, • • edged .a the ma The bo liteet WI •shoulde Matinee pea sil trimmed with Ince, and the serpentine to the full-grown root,Of autumn. Green gauze i peas, witieh are really a vegetable of an s .f req tic y in troduced •With silk tritioniugs on the bodice and sleeves. hour,. growing hard in -less than a day's ' A Most exquisite tea gowu is of time after they arrive at perfectiou,make •softest tvhite-spotted satin, striped .noiar ten' delicious puree, which le not very ell known, lines of insertion, with lace falling Take for this a piat of fresh, tender, softly about the (shoulders and7 on the green peas. Moisten tbem With a quart' hip.; the mast aggressively masculine of nice white stoek. Add a young onion woniam could not fail to be. inficieneed %and .entall -sprig of carrot, both cat in by its daintiness. Bands. of the in. . half a bay leaf, a sprig of thyme sertion, alternating with gores „of and a spray 6t parisley, with one branch silk, appear froin: the Waist to the hem; of •soup" celery, If convenient. Let: the • • eoup_eirrimer-slowly.for half an _no,air_ar... arit-pery-suggestrIHr -till-the peas may • be 'easily plashed. of the panier, and the sleeves are loosp* "Strain the soup through a puree sieve, and full, allowing a peep at d'ronnded .season it with salt and pepper • and re- arm, the rounded arm of course being turn It to the fire, stirring It continually taken for granted.•• till it begins to boil again. Let it cook This ie eminently •adapted for the - five minutes. •Then add a'cup of .ereani, a tablespoonful O1. butter and a Cup: of slim figure, but there is also a style _hicely_hrowned eroutons and serve it at madein4'-a-blue moire -(5-1- a •mice, novel kind, cloSely 'striped in lines, with •Another soring'soup which even less a quaint bib -like • collar round the familiar. is in a patronizing man - shoulders, outlined with lace, the. sleeves ner "Soup la bonne femme." 'rim founda. full to the elbow, ruched tightly to the.: tion for- the sOup is sorrel, the peculiar waist appear bands of magentaacid of which is undoubtedly wholeectme striped.velvet ribbon. at. thiii. Season_cd the year, if used • in • moderation. Take a scant quart of sor-' The summer tea gown can be_made_ol...:...rel_washLit--welledd -a-tablespoodflirOf :any of the delightful foulards, crepes and butter and ,stir it Inas bright poteelain- grenadines, which abound 'to -day. •lined Saucepan for about ten minutes, -the:,gown Witli..thenofteitt -whnn it shoUld be thoroughly nioittetied: draperies of lace And you will and soft, so' that it may be rubbed thraugh a puree sleye. Add a quart of ia obtaining the mibst becoming nico..white stock and let the soup cook • 'It. you ory2r-ofitituff icient-atiartfO-W43--- for :25. urinates:, longer',:-Beatthe e our tati'grown cut in a-siigtit -3ro/k of one or two eggs, as you lhay degree decollet at the throat, 'trimming • prefer. into a half -cup of cream, and stir it there:with adeep lace- collar- ora witaa little,of,thetot:soup.- Then,beat -deep :frill o'f ittee;, airOiding "the it into the remainder of the soup. Do not high Collar band on a gown whose. pri. LeAtsheervseouipt baciilt;naefetevittaattiAlnidtheeiesggi mary cause for existence is • stas.' In- toast. • An agreeable, addition itt) this finitesimally spotted foulards are -very soup is half ,a cup 61 asparagus tips, pretty made with a full frill falling added when the sorrel is Put in the stock and cooked with • . r L 0 .11, • ter • A.:etv flints About Sovera,1 by a Well- . known Cuisiiiiere. There tire very .few soups more 41e11- -0 -04114 -Orin - t twee 'Made troll] the tender young vegetables -that come at this sea- son of' the vear. A' vegetable. seanshettld. — .„CREAlit-r-QP, -THE Notes of what is Going on all Over the World. IPLE I'ASCINATION Or PRECIPICES. Chevreurs well-known ' experiments , with the exPloratory penduldm and the divining rod alio*, says -Mired -Fouilli-e; that, if we represent to ourselves a mitatiOn in any direction, the hand will ianconsciously realize and eominunicate it , to the pendulum. The tipping table realizes a movemen-t-we- are „anticipat- ing, through the iuterventioe -.of:a real movement of .the hands of Which we are :mot - conscious. Mind-reading, by • thecae, who divine by taking your hand where you have hidden anything, is a . reading of. imperceptible 'notions by ,•••• which year thought is translated w.itbz, s year _being icanseloos- o1 them, 4: In case of faseination,and• vertigo, • lartich are more_ visible. among .zhildren •orate in round the neck and down the front as far • as the .Nvaist, the gathered • laodice ° Cream of asparagus soup is too fawn - being united to the gathered skirt by a, tar to -day to require' a recipe. but it is to be commendect as. one, of the most ex - beading of lace. The full sleeves termi- cellent soups of this season. One of the_ nate above the elbow with a deep frill mistakes .that housekeepers sometimes of 'the silk put en with beading •and make is not `to season it sufficiently. It :edged with the; fine lace. •should be seam:rued with whole peppers. A lovely •gown hail. heliotrope china as evert white pepper is likely to show in so delleete a soupThe silk front; shirred lull at ne4,-and ,-, iklinle petipers ing hill length of skirt. Serpent green ' of course, are strained out when the soup , for back and sides` of toilet. • Wat- iamseervfeldr.e may be let out in the after - team plait in the centre of back. Sash of noon -and the ;tea' may be 'served from a deep pink satin ribbon, tieitin front with kerosene, gasolene or some other of the long_ loops -and- ends,:-..Sleeire --ebuiposed : Summer steNeff..--which- tadY be • OnteklY of tWo'flomices cif green silk, with deep which lighteddo notandas reed ilyh:x Miegirtimahlte atu laee e4e, and two, rows' of pink silk beat up t coal range., feathers above. , Cape epaulette simi- . . " larly trinimed. ' Lace collar. • '". But the most eminently desirable pos.; - The specifieations for Mr. iluddart's sessions for those,who have to be eco- new ships, which the Canadian Govern- nomical is a blacksatin tee gown, which meat proposes to subsidize to the extent of $7,600,000 in ten years, have been can (be filled in at, various times with completed and sent to several firing of Various fronts -of any 'ealor you der mire. shipbuilderii. The dintepsibin; of the a,i• - ' ' four .Atlantic vessels are 572 feet • in The tea jciet ought to share; aneas- length; 62 feet beam, and depth of hold ure ofall r regard;--itis-more ficult tention with the tea gown, al- 42 feet; with -a -draught of 80 feet, mak- p- dif- - ithough si Ais...Ntint mrorthy of ea "canal ' big, them_ thet4einiest Tassels. afloat They lace in lb- are 2 _feet debper than. the Cunard liner to adjust, and has need to be More ela , L ' Th.- great depth is ndered i ,detail, facts which induce seine possible by the fact that the Canadian of its misguided wearers to magine that it ie suitable for theatre wear. , is and Englishhharbors have deeper waters It only the invalid Who Should grant unto . than the harbor ef New YorkThe . - herself the license of appearing in pub- greater depth of the heir -steamers allows lie in a dress with the least suggestion of a stronger hull and will give better , of, the negligee, -, The „theatre jacket_is results in a sea way, and aleo assist ie a • ilern days Which -the development- -of speed.—The -freight- n iniention of mo phould . be at once cast into the , limbo carrying capacity is fixed at 8,500 of oblivion. • It fills no want, and it tons each in addition to a coal bunker Foipplies a ' pretext for the tactless and capacity of 3,900 tone. Each vessel ni will accommodate 800 oaaloon, 200 ° sec the tasteless to commit a social eolecis- • while they write themselves dove in the • ond cabin add 1,000 steerage paesengers. lateirt fashion.. The comfort of the steerage passengers Tha, most exquisite brocades are to- • is especially provided for. °Tho engines are adopted with en - day used to make the tea jacket, while will are of 21,000 horse -power, and theY old lace plays • its deeorhti-ve part, and drive the vessels at a speed of 20 pasts Jitickleir knots per hour in ordinary weather. The thusiaktf., ,- "for port of arrival and, departere for the new line haa not been finally de - FASHION NOTES, „ ' eided, upon, but Mr. James E. Hiuldart, •A pretty drew; of Nile green and beige ' ,& the promoter of the line, announced on crepon has the bodice trimmed with -a . Saturday that it would be •Southainp- fluted berthe, forming a sort of fiche, ton, Milford Haven or Liverpool. Vessels, f that draft cannot get to Montreal, erossed in front, and edged with narrow o green ivelvet. A fluted basque opens in Mrs. Dupoet„a deaf woman, was killed front, and is edged with the same. Full on the C. P. R. track at Montreal to- . 0 Sleeves, trimmed at the.top ,with flutings LINT - than among adults, a movement • is begun. the suspension of which, isa pret vented by a paralysis of the will, and it carries ns on to sufferingand death. • , ;Wheat, a child; I was nivagating a plank en the river without a thought that 1 might falL . •-All at once the' . idea •Jaime like a diverging force, peojecting • itself Reran; the rettilinear 'thought whieh,bad alone previously directed my action. lt . was as if an invisible arm seized me and draw me down. I cried • out, and continued staggering over the ,whitling waters, till help came to me. The mere thought,of vertigo pro- voked it. - •The board lying on the ground suggests no ;thought of a fall °when you walk over it ; but when it is ever _a Precipice and the eye takes the measure of the to the bottom, -- the representation of a falling Motion becomes intense, and the • impulse to , /all coerespondingly so. Even if you ere safe, there may Still be what is called the attraction pf the abyss.. The -trieion of the gulf as a fixed idea, hav- ing produced an," inhibition ' on all your ideas and •forces, nothing is left Nit the figtira of theg.reat hole, with the Iiitiiiireifition Of the rit,p41 moiement . that begins in your brdin and tends to turn the scales of the mental balance. • rremptittion,' which is continual in chi!. Aran because everything is neve to them, lanothing else than the force of .an idea (lad the motive impulse that ae- . RAILROAD SAFETT. ' It. appeara froni-statisties. collected by; Aff.. L. Bogota,. and :'ckm, imicated....; to '‘ the .F.sektr-deav.Ifilies;,,in,-a en,:;.to,...etitalw; lisilt.' Atte doeffieleat., of.;' Mai -• ',enfioyett thyr- trav,ellern in England, France, and the United States; that in Englape•-t,only enc passenger is killed in. 20,000;000'1-4a Prance, One in 20;000,000; and in the-- , United, States, one pabsenger ler every 1i000,000 ,trav.elling......Tbe .naithor cenr ielndee tiritt ,,considering the area . of ... .„, „Franco is three Vines greater than that of England,' go that the railway mileage ong.to.v.rdaOreater,cowstutt 6that.- dthaleuridergrotunt zy.zzwz-46,==.4.ittii1tkry13. 'ti/o•flaconflisa•-• tatery*Jorlarge.,minn:". leer of 'pasSengeria with .very Alight risk, Prete!' railways afford • the 'greateet 'attiOnnt of ' Safety, .• - . • _ . • • • • &iced La iiia, et Green Efty,° has taken the preliMifittiy legal step' to have hirnatne Cha ged to Jared Lar He is a shoe aker, and he Galli bia resine interefee With his bfisiness...., • , .. to attach. The plain Skirt , is trinimed ,A Jame aerolite fell in ,Sumter Connty, with live rows ol green velvet round the _last week. The people of ,the neighbor - fief. ' '"•-••--- ' - hood in which it fell at !kat thoaght For ;IOWn toilets 'the short bolero it was the much -talked -of coml0t, but in, iacket'is still ingreat favor, being, in vestigation showed it to be Merely a fact, very practical. Skirts; quite"cling- shooting, sten-Savannah News: . ing about the hips, are more than ever cut in the; shape of a la,mp-shade; forth- Full many a bard bas,pralsed ithOse feast's iff-g-7.totind the foot, a number of hollow "Where the Mantling wine flowed red -r. , _Dut never a one of the rhymingbeafite!-- gOdet pleata.=---They-arer-often-trinnneu • sayea word Of the, next -day's bead: with one high flounce, 24 inches doer', . Coylat that hare been steeped in vase - put on with a heading and cut of the line are an excellent tinhstitute for same shape as the skirt, very fellat the glass stoppers. They are t -in the foot. If the dreiti 16 01 tilFk, the flounce. least affected by acids,' the fumes of "no is of '"e0°t1' 611.> Oent"litte1;4' II It" ifj!' °1 ' 1 chelleeatiode notl-decayLtheinr3,,knont.%• de All .' ' ' '-- - --- - 't -If t'-' : they beconxe, fixed fin, the bottles, from fhney-wootlen:,zna,te:rinfpl'ho Morena f f --. . , long disuse. Collets, becoming shorter and shorter, and often double or treble, are as .rich Hoyt shall you maire man now that and elegant as ,possible, very full in the God loves hie'"? Most of all by loving ower part. They are put on quite wain the Man. with a • great lore yourself, of roiind the neck, and trimmed .-with a which we shall know. that, et2tning deeppeaked collarette of white guipure, through you, it comes from Deyona you. or embibidered tulle. Sometimes a ruche ,._._ Phillips Brooks. , is put. On ilnund the neck, and the fronts It is a time of progress I' • , Suenehatiges vast are ulnae :I - are caiiely Alp II, with .guipure. o,t, zr,ziEntutyoarmarre. erryy.-,vmatelr1-4.4xerininifleil- '-'-'--7-"-rilieheell4"3'°42'be4i'litthitgaimhn8 the glace poplititt o last '. sumnaer, al -'cite" ithitrua e' though the changeful effect' is produced ° 'rhe smallest bird is an 'East India by• quite a different process, the inter- humming bird which is hardly' larger mingling Of threads of chilled woe's Of : than an ordinary horsefly! • different dolor. t / - ' if there be one thing upon earth that The strict] plain tailor-nacide cos- Mankind love and admire better than tulne salon in favor' is now quite out ; another, it is a brave tean-It ie it Man Of fashion "n Paris. Walking costumea who dare look the devil in the We and ' are made With plain skirts, but the tell him he is a devil.a.famet 'A. Gar - bodice.' trimmed tviti,h either a bertk, field, - ' *. OF INTEREST TO. ALL READERS. Mr. 'James Smith, 'deputy registrar of Lainbton„ is dead, aged 61. Sham OctOber Australia has sent to xea t. The Pope has expressed his regget at the fall of M. Casintir-Perier's Ministry. The Viking ship has been donated ..to the Field ingseuin, Jackson Park, Chicago. • . • 'Cholera is raging in the districts ,of • Plod..., Radon, and Petrokoff, in. Mee" .-Politruh '114.0 Christiaa Endeavor Convention of Manitoba. will be held at Portage la 77' ----- Mr.. Gladstone's condition is excellent, and the doctors expect the most eatis- factory results from' the operation on his oY•e„ .• . The Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gliteers has deeided upon Ottawa,' Ont.; as the place lot the convention next year. . . • It. G. Dun & CO. report 28 business failures in Canada the past week, against 14 the corresponding week last year. Fishery inspector Boismier, of ,Wind- sor, has Jun& a number of •Teitures of boats, nets and, set lines near Pelee Wand. , •, . , • The Dublin Freeman's Journal says that Getil, Lord Roberts will succeed Gen. Lord Wolseley in the autumn as com- mander of the forces in Ireland. ' sued. --the Chicago Worlalia Fair ,direetore, • fer, $100,000'for damage to the French ex- hibit by the fire, in °tile manufacturers' building., Geo. 'Holland, a farmer, living about -four- -We ploughing.Thursday evening was killed by lightning, a,s were also his t.eam of -horses and -a colt. • - Word has been received at Coiling - wood of the seizure at the Bustards of two boats and 32 trap nets by the Gov- ernment-- cruiserz4Ther-nets- were--burtted- and the fisherinee fined. ' " By a vote of 106 to 39,the British Cononons knit aiming 'adoifed a reso- lution affirming the principle that offi- cial charges in connection' with Parlia- mentary•kgelectionneiirshouldi,:sherdefrayed from 'public funds. -- • ° The Dominion line mail steamer _Leh- „reder,_which_arrived_at_Riniouski -at- 8.25 on Thuesday morning, made the • fastest trip/ to the St. Lawrence • via. Cape Rice on record. She left Liverpool on the 1.7th and Morino On the. -18th inst. •. The special committee appointed in Washington to investigate the @barges of attempted Senatorial bribery on the part Of Charles W. Butts, found yester- day that Butts made the attempt at bribery, and Senators' Minton and ,Kyle are exonerated from all blame. 4 book written by P. J, TYttan, the famous No. 1. Si the Phoenix Park assas- sinations, Will shortly be published. it will give„ a complete history of the Irish revolationary and Parliamentary parties since •18614 -inclUding-the- etories- ot the Cavendish murders. - The trial of Emmaus Wiman, charged with forgery °fa the second degree, set down for hearing hi New York for next Monday, May be, postponed until the next term of the court on applieation of his counsel, Mr. Tracey, who says that Mr. Niman is not ready, to proceed. , Felix Morin, a hOtel-keeper in the township Of Malden, near Amherstburg, hanged himself yeeterday morning' in his -barn. He wan about 70 .,years of -age; ° Ilerleaa nif"tild b*V`th'Se• section, and has- left a :number ° of daughtera and -sons in different parts of the country. • The Rev. George S. V. Howard was ar- rested at Chicago yesterday eharged with Working a .confidence gime. Ho- ward was ordained a; Methodist minis- ter in 'New Yea.- He was indicted in --April„ for- passing.-troithleee released on bail, and jumped his bail, evading recapture •until yeaterday. • Three,, weeks' ago, while Mr. Thomas., Barrett, a respected farmer of Vienna, was driving into St. Thomas, his rig , Was run into by twa drunken young men Net outside the city' limits, and. he was thrown- out His leg was broken and his head injured. was unable to return home, and, Yesterday died of his injuries in the hospital. • Advices from West Africa state •that the Arab slave trader Makanjira with 2;000 Men recently made an attack up- on Fort Magnire, a British stronghold near Lake ,Yassa.. The fort was gar- risoned with 200 men,. who Opened fire at the Arabs, and after a sharp battle repulsedi them with a less di 110 killed. Malianiirawas pursued and comPelied to stirrender ' , Mr. Hugh -Ward, of St; .Thianas, was , found yesterday morning lying on the Aide of Fingal road, West of the city, - in an unconsciodi condition with. • his skull • fractured. was brought to the ;hospital, and last evening he. ' re- gained consciousness. 'He says he was a ttacked--by--two---tuiknowir-men-ta _eleven delock on Thursday night, and brataliy beaten. Prof. Edmund W. Gosse'writes tO the Times. announcing a proposed 'English • memorial to, the, _poet Keittii*,.. says, phat-am.-^Amerieam-noalmittea.:has.',-been engaged diving the past fiyo Tears,' Trre- paring it. The work is now accom- plished. Mr. T. Holland Day, of Not - woes; Mass, has arrived in England With a marble blast of Keats, which will shortly be unveiled in the parish church at Hampstead. , . The jubilee breakfast of the Young Men's Christian Association nati held„at 6 o'clock yesterday Morning .at flees'of the ,eSsociation in Aldersgatie street, London. ,Sir George President .of the association, and the .chief mover in the organilation in 1844, delivered an.. addreas,__in _widely_ he said. • that' the itetibn of Lordtosebotyin knighting him was a compliment to the itifitience of the 'Young Metes 'Christian Assobiation Ifrftll lande: -Congratuiatory • speeches were made by other proinilient members of the Mosociatiorr. LAST. filIAUTE England and Belgium have coneluded treaty at to the Comp 'Free State. Frencn ilialeters will not couelder the withdrawal of their restgnatleas. t000,oqo of gqld will tip shipped from New Xtork to Europe on the steamer Columbia•to-morrow. Harrington says the Parnellftes continue to vote against the Goverumeet for the rest of tike bestflon. August aLthe Pai,ah.aaph,a=„.„ ieal Faculty of qtreniversity of Berlin, ie dead. • •• • • • BY a vote of 38 to 28 the Li. &Senate refused to.lei the tariff bill on the tahle. It wee a. test vote. • The Italian Chamber has approved the • ariny estimates by a vote of to 99. The London papers speak' Very% cordially of _the banquet to the officers of the U. S. Warship Chicago, • • Tlie•Prines"ol AVOes add -her daughter are to return this week to Marlborough House from Sandringham. The Graphic says that an operation - •will be Orformed on 31r. ciladittone's oyes wObln tbe next ten days. The Khedive is to be the guest of the ‘Ineen at Buckingham Palace during his stay In London, which will eot exceed a week. The Duke and Duchess of Ycirk e to leave St.. James galace at the end of next week for White Lodge, RichmOnd ' PU:rk, where they will, be the guests of the peke and ,Duchess of Teck for abol., two niontlas. The Escanaba is ashore hear. Port Austin, Mich; • Ocean racing, will. discuesed -the--British-.--Coramons Monday.-:-'---- • The Westminister Gazette won in the hreught• againit it by ..Mr. H. Seymour Foster, M.P. The members of the Royal society 'were , entertained to luncheon at Rideau Hall The jary in the cited against the Cleve- land Anarchist, Thomas Moore, who was -arrested-ior-,-participating in -the --m- • eant riots,. disagreed yesterday. A 'Berlin special says there Was a . • great explosion in the military baloon _depariment-at-TempelhOffer-field-atli- - 'Ex -Premier Whiteway did not -appear -at St Johua_last-night-and-a-procession -- .organized to receirc him was maph dis- • appciinted. The, Countess: of,AbsrdeeeQeavealta--, New TOrk, earonte for Englansf... Her excellency will return tet:Canada Jay when she will join Lord -Aberdeen, - • ' ° • Mr. ,Gladstone passed a quiet night. His health, is excellent. and the dition of his eye is most faVorable. The , healing of the incision is progressing rapidly. ••:• ar'ir• PEOpl.r. It Items Concerning People. ,;„ Cy -Pisan Clay, a nephew of Clay, Makes a precarious living I., .. dling rifles in San Diego, Cal., s„ Lord Wolseley is said to have k, ten most of his memoirsof the Duk.. • Marlborougli-ate-liding ,-it-ii :leek beft, • breakfast i Mme. Severine, the only woman .ibui _ aalist of any Prominence in,France,liveis in Paris, and is able to eara by her writ- ings $12,000 to $15,000 a year. , Miss Consaelo Vanderbilt, daughter . of W. K. Vanderbilt, who will bo one of the belies of -neleit- season; US been edu- cated more like a foreigner' . than An, • American: --7 • Little King Alfonso,- or.Antin,' is -9, , ye11va:40.1d,,,:. Bin ninth, birthday ,amiliren-, • sary, was eelebratedat-Madeid on Thum-, day last by a reception at Vitrifies, .:•.. • a military reviewk . and 4a ale • inner,.., ali on a grand scale. ' ',, . • Lieutenant Waethe, of the • Gerniela army, whojntends .to found a vege- tarian, anti -clothing colony on the South 'Pacific Wand, has not eaten meat . in ;0,114:ears. .-.--lie -neither -driiike--alcoholl liquor nor emokes.. ' -- • '. • "'-,'• Mrs. Joseph MacDonald,who, was said by Matthew Arnold to be the most , beautiful woman in America, has been living living ia retirement shre the contest : over the will Of her husaand, the ' Rite.. United States Senator - 1 kora Indiaini. . Mrs'. Humphrey. Ward Was, it seems, berm in the Antipodes, like Thackeray .and Kipling, the land of her nativid Tasniania-being„ more -zitipodeal even t •* -th-tin ' Calcutta Or Hindu tan, where these • other wielders Of Stro English pens; respectively, saw the light. . THE EVER POPULAR WIDOW. Mete is no gainsaying the fact that the widow is the most popular woman , .who flits across the maelstrom of imolai. ' life. But the law of compensation sets the price on all the fevers, Of fate, and ' the sxVidoWy: liewever gloomr-or--Shining 1 'her environments, is no elettption,to the ritIS: Are you a loved and loving wife; with the strong ° right arm Of the ,best . .of men to &fold and protect yoa front the world and its talumhy?;Theh ich&r, - that the reMoval, 'of thataim ineanS ' V.:Onit -0wii-transformation.-4tta14-0est^',, Of the world to a person aneweriiig to an entirely different deSeriptidn. The '. world -step§ lip higher in order to ob... - tain a -better Point of view, and it fer- rets. out Malta for action to-bere no . mOttire tirist*,andi.-.it.regardsi.lycanNiettir,X. .!„,*uspleicia-where-thereqe.-Aia'constW. „TRW:. world has an evil eye, and the .4 long through which it ohserVela distorts the , olijects passitig before it. The *orld- keeps an „eye On widows, and their over `Uction Is fraught With interest. 'the 'environment of widowhood .trOgitt.0 treat' needs PAY 'tip' price. George Washington and- Napoleon Bonaparte both married tridOtrak each . -,Of.-1WhOni Ind *WO itildttno tt, boy and a girl, and it is also a coincidente:in . . history that neitinir Of thein liOffi lellii, *•,. dren to their illustrious lords., Early in June Prince -Albert of. ,Bet, glum will set out on a tiVii,inotithe Witt. to most of the European CaPitalit. Prince Atbett, though not 18, la already over /six, feet in height,tvetts,glittisea'an bearsa most extraordinary rtsmabla Oar - kith in fate and figure, to the *int: ,