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Lucknow Sentinel, 1893-01-20, Page 2.;4•-•••. • . . . • 4,•• • • • - • 1- - - . -t •• • • • • • , . - . - . E. , • • •• • • • • _ - .- • ., . .. . . . .. . - .• . '. . -,.. .I . . • ... ' - . , • . . . •'. ... ' IINPRECEDEIITED vote Oald Destroying the Wild * Aiiimals•in Austria, •- RAVAGES OF :VVOLVES - . A:Vienna cable says• The. annihilation et game during the excessive cold of ' the three list days lits.been :beyond all prece- - cents • On one estate near Stir1n,- in 39tiemia, 30 deer, 700tabbits, and Vetviteet 11,000 and 3,0001 birds have been.: frozen *thin a few hundred' yards- ofthe castle., • - In the Bohemian formate it 18 believed that tvico-thitdia of the gimewill die &mid the -present weather continue two --days more. -On the.preserves of Hungary the situation ip utill • more deplorable. • Attar •Algeo * thousands Of _head of small game-, have perished_ around the . castle of Margrave e:Pallvaneee •The peor people -of the village, -despite- -the ,extreme bitterness ofthe. • weather, hevr gathered -already no fewer than.3,000 rabbits and. foxes and.ebirds. • Yive deer were -found froiert death.in-the street yesterday -morning. • Oundreds of deer are reported to linger roundthe castle on the :outskirts of the village of -Nide. Becres,,-undoubtedly lie- uteler - the mew drifts, which are piledup fifteefl or twenty feet high all over the fields and thrinigli..the 'forest es. As soon as the -Weather moderates, the peasants will go out in bands to get the Meat, 'which the •Margrave.bas, t'alteaOy laced at their diapssal. -From all parts of northern and extern Hungary with which' • -communicatien is still open similat reports • , . . • ..• • • HAMILTON'S APPE4L She Writes Extraordinary Letter to • 1dr. Gladstone. . ' INSINUATES ANTI-AILERIOANISII: -1.1.1131tan despatch•says :' Dodge {Gail . Hamilton) has reopened . her batteries in the Maybrick case, and to- night publishes a , long sensational :letter, eddre• sse4 ta Glacletone„ She: says in ninny of your Tbirtlidey Oopgratula,tions- 110te of discord, - but iminanity is a more sacred thing than harmony .; iemore, .exaCting .than congeatulatimi. I therefore, in the insane of God, arraign you, the sbead of the British: Goverament, for the minder of Florinee.Elizabeth Maybrick, note- dying in the coniict- Prison at Wokivg.- The Home Seceetery of..the late Government, who began the. -torture ;.- the late Prime Minister, who sustained =him' in ; the present• Heine- :Secretary, who. continues it -these are all as ginity as you, but I • not: : know whether_ they believe. insa , GodL-eron believe in-. God. "It's therefore because you believe in God that I invoke the witness of Almighty Gad while I charge You with the murder Of the innocent Woman -who is petishing lathe :VrakiagiOson. • x We have , been asking jostles:, in tile 'pule of mercy, I ask it no_more.. I ask for justice .a.iid.for juitice onlY, and 1 -ask .it her own- steely and eacrecl-name... " You have been personally -appealed to and you have pasised by -on- the other side, You said it was ,the basinesti of the Home Office, which.would of course do itsdaty: It is the old, old. pretext -of Cain, Am I my- istother's. keeper ?' - The pretext availed nothing to Cain with- the.. God whom you profess to worship. If God is the .same -yes- terday, to -day and` 'forever : It wilt avail nothing to you. _ • What ground :liave:-yau for aseuming thetthe Home: Office does, its'iluty ?: -We appeal to the Home Office and the HOMO Office asketfor newevidence. It is deliberate murder: : , - 66 Ranitirs are rife that resentinent of' American intervention which keeps her prison . doors *locked, . There- are rumors .that., it is a tone of menace in American intervention which acts .againeit her. The only Menace is the voice.of eternal justice speaking through the Biitish conscience; and that still small voice Will speak louder and leader till the Jidgmeht day, pert.: *"I.regs et to :-.contribute to the ..hea- see. received. Sportinitii this- city be- • lieve that owners of preserved -Will he Obliged 'to abstain from hunting for two years at •least, so that game -may suffi-. clently to replace the enormetiesloeces now: !Offered... - - From several trillagesesf •Galicie and Hun- , gary .depredations Wsilteet have been reported. In a • blinding .atievietorre this • afternoon apack of wolves ran theough, the •.. street of a suburb of BadaPestle. Oneseized and detrotired a 4yeat-Old '. TWO -wolves attacked a maii at his door, but he. - kept them off -with aclub while. he opeaed. the door and eedaped. inside.Jitney. neer Leinberg wolf- -entered I - the kit:lien of a peattest woman while- she: was in the stable, .cria tore ahclpartially • • deioured her ten-montlisold baby. se - Thiscity is rife -rine severelY ai far - its. _ iiess usually foIloivingthe holiOayS tinniest - . Mispende. .. The thatres are dOingspettc- • - nothink _ " As all belle and recep•s ;titts, to have taken place' this week. 'have • - been- . postponed: indefinitly, the shop- keepers have lost 30 per cent. of.thit most .profitable custten. The dearease oftinsinesit .1has- caused an -*crease. ,the uninber of • unetaployed•despite: the efforts of the.city cleaning -the 1 S GERMANY. tlituaed Riots:its Striking1pm% A PRIEST TIRED -A. Berlin Cable -save: Thiel has beenat day Ofteen anxiety in the Saar district, where striking miners and their Anarchist- leaders have Ingle a desperate attempt to save their came by itareading terror and threatening. open doeflict:s iIn • Puttingen this morning- & nub_ of 200 strikers raided the ttomies. of the men who . had refused to join them, - dragged out and beat several and -smashed •the windows. • Forbach a inobe starting. Mit :with a • sinidat,purpose, was stopped: for a moment by. :a . priest,. -.who begged. the men to be reasonable, . and not.- to --make inno- cent workingmen suffer for : trying to sutipertr.-lheir The doctrineli .9f anarchy which they were trying to 7 realize were disgraceful to Germans and Christians. Apistol was fired at thetpriest as he spoke againetanatchitint, -and then a shower- of stones fellaround him. . The Mob . made a rush for hintebut he saved himself by run- ning aviay, The mob broke a few windowei, beat two _min' ers who refused_ to - stop work and dispersed.• • At the pit mouths the .men still Working aid Mine officials ha.ve. been° in :constant • danger -of beteg- killed.. Many:of the strikers- were-arrned with reVolvertt and a few with 'rifles, and they have been firing: recklessly: in the neighborhood of the pits. • A meeting of 3,000 strikers:wata held to- day neat Saatlonise and _fear leaders were. elected to act in the'roomof the two anready arrested. Five men and three Women deIi- d - violent -berets' goes: • They demanded highet Wages aid shorter- ;shifts. The Gov - eminent; they said, was trying -tie frighten the strikers' into sabmission, *it'll the Moe would hold ant they would be able to rally .the 'German masses to their aid, inaugurate a genetal• strike of Getman veorkinen and perelyze Perinea industry. The men became intensely excited daring theseepeeehis and frequently cheered. the speakers. After the •meeting hrokeapthenienmarched offinthree bodies, revolvers, siaging theMerseils lake and shooting at all respectably dressed men sight. Other Meetingsen the distriat 'were hardly leis uptearious. - All 'speakers announced wititepecialVirulencethe clergy, .whis. have incurred the hatred of anarchists. by• counselling moderation, At Ensdorf ehe_.-strikere have. reqaeetecl the Mayer to propose a eompeoinise for them to the mine officials. .• . ReportsfromSaatlouisito night are to the effectthat despite the binnbast of the leadets and the apparerkresponsiveness of the inen,,the strike is weakening. The striking -miners- ere sufferingkeenly feone the severity of thetweather, and the. expected contribu- tians fro*: England; France and Belgium have not come -in. the -men were entire- - s busi- budineiss interests are .cencerned.. The • AS;COSTUM • • S in Cute &labia's ons . Of Shaded. Yelieti, •• - -• " ' . • Ho:VT TO WEAR WIDE. SASHES - . 1- • . • • 77- • 4: • ; 43, helps them.tO halitegm with ea0t Other: Style! of 684ms Fancied by /Leading Euro. peau.. QUeens--Big Jewels ° in the Small , of the Eao4 New the Correct Thing- -, litosat Purple Tries Ward to Spy: into ' "FaVer -Froas eta French Actress. " Gofon year path of blood. We lovers of juitice shall continue to the end every effort for her releaseibutsdo not expect to release her. . -We expect the fragile creature to die -in your cruel cltch. - "G� - on in your cruel way because you can. - She is alone and poor and wak, and • - She can lose you nci votes in ONDO, Januaey. J' --TheLondonstores tr. (and for the matter of that,storesevery where)at 'Christmas :time sparkle • and glitter. and attract .and seclude the un- wary cuetamer into • investing * nick- , ncks, vebicli at the , moment -teem very desirable, 1?nt which not infrequently hang afterwards heavily on the handsof pur- chaser or recipient. . There are very few Feel "novelties ' • among the Christnias presents of the -season semen in the London Stores; a day's shopping establishes tau& a conviction beyond a doubt. -. • - Hosts of gide and warnen start oit a; day'd shopping expedition at this time of the year with a vague notion that they need not plan out _ beforehand what they .mean to buy,. " We'll 100k about," they say, "and no dotibt we shall find what we want." This plan is, a 'ry bad one, and hardly. weer answer, You buy what you dont really want; and- what rarely proves. the right present for the 'pereon for Wham it is intended: And it is much. better not to give any 'presenteat all then to give care- less; thoughtless, 'foolish ones. It is not the- cost or appearance of a gift, especially a Christmas gift, which constitutes its trae value. Far from, i6 the thought, theere, or the work bestowed on jt --in• short its suitahility-id what -inakes a present agree - be. - - - • , ...IN:•.*::-. ylgi'SIBBOI5 SASJIES. • • white - satin, coveredeveith a. single veil -of white 'tulle; actress -which _run diagonally square!' of -pink and green, carried out in slender lines of eat* .-wovn in with the tulle: The equates are as largess those of a chess board,Perheps -4 littl larger. A - 4 * lare bow of blatk velvet place at One side of the waist , coacealekthe point where- . ; draperies of the tt4le crosse4 each other, . • and a wide sash of pink ribbon fell over the skirt at -the hack. • :These sashes are all, in again-, both for afternoon and evening dresis. - For the fornier they are usually in blitclt • satin ribbon, -thick and rich at it, is pcssible • to wear them, The ends reaslidown t� the: - - edge of the Orem, and are ocasionally°:ins, :conveniently given to gettiriin the way. • When one id stepping out of a. carriage or - going demi the steps, they linger and trail, and catch up disagreeable additiona of dust -' or mud, which • are by no means:an embel lishment -to sah- or wearer. . etveeeen.eti else small, Off THE EMIL.- .• 1100ketS have been at the miercy of thieves for many a year, inaecessibleito the .ovenerts;.: but very aCceesible to everyone else. Now 'he fiat has gene forth. that, .11 11EirlaSOMO Jewelled_ ornament is to be worn in the oentre of the hack of the eyening bodices. At anevening -party 4tel.yi a lady wore a . most lovely floral. ettiray of- rubies and diamonds it the back of he bodice. - . She ' lay, where ehe vecl of her arms certainly five itch more now.- at she win, never e ipsome way o rent, ao that - omelvoitthtohuet fmheiet or caution is. ex-; . cusable. The ornament dews look well at • (Nig of the „prettiest evening 4ress' es is in government to fin w , a or ign . streets, for the poor. Niimerotis deaths England, for she has no friends no- famil• y. from exposure and lack of nourielunent are Make the sacrifice complete., friends, if there reported. To -night it is rumored that a be a God, who marks end notes the ways of family have been found frozen to - this world, who hears the voice ofinnocent • • death in Wiener Neustadt.. blood crying unto Him froin the ground, it is better to be the young wife and mother A "TEI) BANDIT perishing -in Woking Prison than the Prime evertakensual shot while .cartong off Minister. of the. Government which works - - • A Rome cable says- desptCh from VICTORY•CHANGED TO DEFEAT SassaFri says that Crisculazzi the ncitoricius .. ' -- ---'-• : • •- . bandit, Was killed byfive militiamen. For The nervisbea Almost ' Anibila ted au ears he has been the.chieftain of the worst , - •.Faetptiali centingent. . .. .... --. d ot highwaymen., and murderers' in A London cable says: . : The !reports re. northern .80.-rdinia. . He and.- his • followers ceived here from Cairo to the effct that :a hid headqiiarters in the forest recesses. neat. body of 'Egyptian cavalry had recently Aggins- and Templio No .fewer than ten defeated a force of dervishes • near Ainbig61 *larders. twenty-nine highway robbeitiele are generally discredited at the armyclubs. , .. • --and'some forty-seven burglaries have been Officers: who are -thoroughly Conversant • -1- * tracedto-their instruinentality- within the with -the conditien of affairs in the Soadan lait two years. .Formerly;-Circelazzi was do not hesitate - to. declare that ,the de- . ' Feeen occasionally in.the streets of Sasearri *etches in regard: to the battle ooncealect •etehere he would appear suddenly of an even- the truth. Soree of the officers who -.have - - - mg, terrify a few' reputable Citizens, mai- taken pert in Soudan -canipaigne • say they treat a policeman,- and then. drop out of believethat instead of the Egyptian troops ' -before the police could gather A winning a -victory they Were comPlebely ' • annihilated . by . the dervishes. .: The Egyptian forme consisted of. fifty .men and twoeffidere. • Farther news; from . Cairo is anitionsly awaited. • Details of the recent ffightingebetween dervishes and the Egyptian troops near Atabigol. have jit'been• received at Cairo - The Egyptian camelry - numbered -120, in- cluding a body of Shaggiyen irregularss: The dervishes were surprised by the eameity et daylight. and retreated to the hills, keeping tip eninceseent firing.. A squad of camelry which followed there soonfound itself cut off fromthe meiabody by Ainbuslied dervieh cavalry, supported by speatnien.. A hand to bend fight ensued, in whiCh the EgYp- tiandmade a gallant defenceebut unstiecess fullY, as -they were geeatly-outnumbered.. similar fate befel - mother- detaehrnent of caeneIty that folloteed_the. dervishes. The: fighting continued nntil Capt. _Peine and a native Officer fell. The Egyptians then re- treated. : Besides the:losses mentioned- 28. of the carneltY and Shaggiyene were:klled and 15 wounded. , - - . • onne. Woman.. - ier totture and her slaughtet."- • was, at supper after t e might easily have been reli ment, which • was wort hundred :dollars, ,possibly A smart woman declares adopt the fashion -until the securing the ornament in cannot be , abstracte knowledge: As she has emeralds- in England, pared fer.the strike they must either return to ifork -soon at starve. Wei _the Victoria Cross. -• - SanceCorporaL James Gordon . • . - • hal the place of honai in the LonOon Gazette.- The Queen intends to -confer upon him the decoration of the Victoria Cross fer the eonspicaotis bravery he 'displayed dating the attack on the :stockaded town of Toniataba, Gambia river,- on the 13th March last yer. During this - attack 66 Major G. Madden; West India Regi- ment, who was in -coil:inland. of the troops, was superintending •a' . party of twelve Men -who .-wete endeavoring with raheavy beton to break down the south gate of the town, • when _suddenly a - numberof nuisket muzzles were projected through a, dcnible row of loopholes. which had -been niasked.e. Some of - these were within two or three yards of Ahab 1officers back, and before he realized What - had„ happened, Lance -Corp.- Gordon threw. himself between Major -Madden and:the Muskets, - pushing that officer out of the: way, and exclatming; 4Look out, sir!' At.. the sante moment. LanceCorp. ?Gordon as shot through the lunges By his bravery and selfdevotion On this 5cOasion the lanee-cotporal, probably' saved -the life .of his Commanding -officer. .SO runs the official account Of the .ect of courage for which Lance Corp Gordon is to get his Victoria Cross.' Some ofGeorge Tbougliti. Woman's hopes are woven of zunbesins :A. shadove anihilates thent.-- _ • IITEPLIB TRIES TO • ROOM, Whilisthe shops are liveliest, thefeshicins ate al their dullest. It is all settled what is to be the Winter'el Wear, -morning, noon and night, and. before with -the first snow- drop and crocus, the first_ flutter of sprirg fashions begins anew there iS a lull, a Very welcome lull. Nothing looks-• strange, nothingnewwhets dresei is concerned. but one fact. Which is _Perhaps quite realized • begins now to be very evident. It is this that- "royal purple" in velvets, silks, brocades and other rich Materials it.preis- ingtei the fore in -a somewhat aggressive *ay, whioh is a pty,- for " royal " though the olcl-fashi8ned purple may be; it is not a color which 66 works in" with thelovely artistic shades and -tints of fo- day. As a pall it is right -enotigh, but pot as a dres, or -even as_pait of a Oxen. • the backofthe bodice, al is unable to derive any costly and imposing appe • •. . nedficient number - of men to capture -him. . - mg • eltec4,ntly he carried off- a handsomeyoug ,.. . . girl from the putkix- ts of Sissarri. . Hewas - - , hotly parsued, but could have escaped had. hegiven herup, His followers abandoned - him one by one .8.13 they began to realize that be fate was sealed unless he would .free himself from the girl. -- When -hard pressed. • 1- a'bout ten miles from. Aggins, lee placed her , _ . m—a cave and shat his pursners from the, bush outside. He wounded -two men before -_ - . • . he was kilie The girl was taken back to • 13stasarri. • • . ' - - . -- • _ . • - s • NO PAILItICIDE Tam jgtnawMUrdeT case orowine Senses ttonalfThe Wido-w Charge: 1 - At the loqueit tire. Foote told the- story hilts in her bed roOrtie. and ran into Or kitchen in time to, witness Shethe third dia- charge Of the: pitol. id she had - . tha.t she knew he had another name: - She of the shooting, saying she heard two shots never written to George Foate, and denied • always eapposed the murderer and her bus . . bend to be brothers; and heard them ' talk ' -- of their perents - both having been born in - e - LondoShe as born ' iti •Green : Island, , - . below Quebec. Tier titothethvlaw is here .. _ -- . fromBay City, but, :noewithetanOng his . - presence, she had feequent. attacks of hys: terics.. An officerhasbeen detailed to stay . • at her honie pending further *vestgation. - The. Coroneee =jurytendered at verdict ..t,liat Geotge Foote. willelly and milicioulity phot Frederick Foote, thereby causing his death At the *quest Mrs;Foote •presented a phi -. ablegriefsteicken appee.iance. She listened ... atteditively to the reading of her testimony . - by the, ceeonr, and signed her name to . it - as Oeitifying to its Correctness. When :she pointed Out the etecesed as the one who Shoe. a ' • ' her taistaicl, he stood unflinchingly,-•- al- . _. -.. theigh entre were upon him, hitt* -his HISTORY OF THE •. The male *lenient in ing up Ito the fact that shionabl." Being they are new deeply , in portant question as to fahiov. - ° " TbeY come; from oracle; "all educate moustaches" I Not inother, "the home history of, its real - . . . N2SEEAED VELVETS ALI, THE G-0 The fashioreof wearing & velvet bodice With eiening gowns -Of silkor light material is a very useful'one. Black velvet is par- ticularly becoming VI bath figure and coin: plexion. The other evening a dress was seen that Might lieve been worn with the strictest -orthodoxy twenty-fiveyears ago. . The skirt wad in -White poplin with a deep •flounce of :lovely old ' Limerick lace round the edge,elheaded with- small rosettes of baby ribbon, a twist sof the latter being carried along from. rosette to_rosette. The . bodice wasenade of black velvet and was cu eat in squsretabs just below the waist, theie tabs faiiingover a. ihort frill of the lice not plat on So fell as to make any thickness, but aimplY " eased," as the -dressmakers termit.: llound the Shoulders 'as a bertha of Limerick lace, and the sleeves were entirely composed of this,: a great quantity being. used .in each to forra the necessary puffs, which ° were caught up in the' centre with rosettes of baby ribbon. Shaded velvet ie often...used for bodices and the now fashionable flounces, and' sometimes very good effects Of color are prodnced'in this way, so beautiful are the shaded velvets in some instances. Violet and _yellow may possiblY tiounO -rather -Vilent and crude as placed in such close . propinquity. but in reality they form a quite exquisite harmony, so gradually and soitly are the hues of each tint merged into each other. A dress of the possible heliotrope silk,: se Pali as to be scarcely warmer than gray, is trimmed -with a flounce of, shaded velvet, the up ear part of which exactly • matches the sitg; the heliotrope then shad • ing down tothe deepest pansy- purple. The sleeves are in the velvet,- as well as the bcild revers, which Are now so prom* ent a feature of the eveningbodice. HARMONY IN BLACK hough the wearer pleasure from its ranee. 1017STACHE. niece is just wak- the mousteche iB f enquiring minds,. erested in the im- lo introduced this- oeland," says one Englishmen wear as 'replies of •the moustache is. Spain, and here is t orgin: kfter the .Moor country, the Christian tit* became SO mixe to say which were Mo first -invaded the - and Moslem populae that it was cifficult. es and which SPatis iards. -1 The -Spaniar meems by•which- t tin guieh .their beet shave their upper- li alloweds. tuft of .hai under lips, so that th rude outline of a cros became _a symbol cif 1 betty and fraternity, Tilts sounds somewt t far-fetched, but it is, a- popolar legend just now in Paris. .... • then 'hit upon *et could at once dis ten, -They did not stylonger, and they to grow below their ir beards formed the . Thus the mouatache • 4teeeleur A noted specialist conneCted with one fo the largest English hospitals Oceoted tothe treatment of throat dieeseed renews -Wen- tion to the rieks attendant tipteit the practice pi breathing through the Mouth. :That the natural -method of _respiration. bi through the nasal organ e is a fact whichmanv•PeOpl' stiidiouSly ignore,:aed this to . their great, detriment, as Dr. Sniith conclusieely shos. To breathe -through the month (which, dtirisig ;Sleep, is the cauee of .snoring)., to pave the wey -fot the entrance ofau alniost endless Series of ilia,andAnyone who has Contracted- the bad habit ahead endeavor to fallow the • healthier sand niore natural method: This physician eispecielly : warns parents t� se that their little ones do .not tioquire thehabit of inolith breathing. He emphasizes the factthat when a child hegins to breathe Otherwise than through nature's channele, itkin danger.- The Honest Buffalo:speculator. Beet. woman•createe in her own likeness ^ • . - the lovetekens that -are offered her. She is grace itself. That is what a -woman -ought to be. She ought to produce the effect of exquisite music. - We can only have the ,highest happiness by having wide thoughts and 'mach -feeling for the restef the world as well as our- selIvte't good to live only a monient At a time: Ib isn't for you and me to lay plans ; we've nothing to --do but to obe and trust.•• - Half the sorrows of women would, averted if they could..repress the speech they know to be useless, ntesert,.. the„ii.rech •have resolved not to ut -A FRENCH A In the first an Systeme Ribadier ed a,t the Paris Wfdered y - The frontof the ski lace - insertions, a runs round the nee sleeves are -vlvet orchides. In the third act she wears a tea - gown of creamy satn, with s lace frontmade lathe Empire style and a blt_ of. yellow' satin. ESS3 COSTUMES. second act Of " Le which is new. being alas Royal' Theo.& Mdme. Magnier wears a shiny robe of silk.e and 'gold in color.. t is in pink imam and row 01 preciOus. stones ot the bodice and the, f the shade known as - . . . . 4 _ - _ . - - • • lips, bat ap oaring nothing daunted by the dieect actuisation. She Never Tried It. He -Miss Kitty, I've heard it said that a dea Without a moustache is like an egg vitiltsut NBA le dm't know -J- caiit telor in_ all my e Bhee-Well, really,' Mr. _Smoothie°, I He -Now, now, Miele Kitty ! - - She ---Never ate an eg4 without silt. .1 'Accordin tolife insurance statistics the • average ef.Diall'ES life . hes increataed. 5 per . cent. during the last twenty-five years. -- ininators and eirerK week theres A sale Of Parid gardeners nee tOadS aS insect :ft _ . • A Se tat, Tenor. $ Durward Lily, t e tenor who is -to accom- • pant, the Patti co pany through this coun try, and is likely te be heard here in English opera before beg ilining that enagement, says the New York Times, is regarded as one otthe foremoit professionel ;vocalists 0 the British operatic stage -or concert . plat- . Wm.. • - e is d. ii ti-ve of Blairgowrie, Scot- land, ere he is name, James Du more -euphonic several years he the law- office o his Dative villag, but he ,soo-ie . Marked vocal abilitiee, anct-, I -was spent in • the study to, the neglec - , of - legal tocik part in a veral local 40 created such an repression that local -gentry, trick Allan Fraser, sent him to Italy to et the beztat of tuition in the best aehee ls. The young vocalist studied under Lataperti for three years, and then settled * London and began the usual battle of all n w singers for recognition. This -quickly came, and he soon found him self very popular with all claeees of concert' goers. In Italian and English opera Mr. '. Lely has been iga successful as 011 the cencert- platforni; but.t is saidby those who are. • •• toads t.he Frenc capita. • r ;,, Oil on the -TronbledWaters. • A.ftela.tievnttder passage from Grethen- btitg barqueMoutteal anchored the other tus day( in New York -Bey, a durvivor of one of the fiercest and meat protracted stormsthat has visited the Atlantic Ocean for many years. Her captain atteibutes the escape otitis veseel to the liberal use of oil from • her bows. - ThiS additional testimony to the efficacy of oil in preventing waves from b king over a vessel was ecarcely re- -1 th To buy tt lot in a residence block, frighten the residents with threats of a stable and sell oat to them at an advance of 50 tIo-100 per cet, is a game that has been played many times in Buffalo. It appears to be a sure card in the hands of an -unscrupulous seculator. --Bald° Courier. gaited ; Yet it is !soehat strange process should be regarded. as unuual. - !twinmendd that whenever pbssible real Shipbuilders are pioverbially conservative;- violets Ishould be substituted for the arti- buleat late day it would seem as though ficial. - • no sailing vessel could be regarded tia cam- TINIE. AND Peet= COMBINE: • better known by his real ward Lyedl, than by his tage appellation. ' For as employed -ear a elgic in Anderson & Ch prain in elope& • is time music el and e of the A very curious dress is composed of black satin, with a deep ifounce of shaded velvet yeloW and -revers of the pane from the waist in :front, crossing *the' shoulders and meeting again at the waist bhind, the intarteal beig filled in- with yellove crepe embroidered with jet daisies. The' sleeves are in blackeatin and yellow crepe,- with a band of shaded velvet round the arm,, the huge satin. puff being gathered inte this. A lovely ornament of yellow butter, flies, hovering over a spray of autumn leaves, was sent home to' be worn in the hair - with- this drese, a bunch • of eutumn leaves being. also fastenecron one side of the bodice, and a_ little knot of violets -1n the centre. • As yellow was the dominant color in the leaves, thee violets looked loely. Inc dressmaer, being of the artistic oider, -tricatentuetate ferences are fo singing, In this respect he .des res to, imits e 3, country man, Templeton, who, after h eig operatic honors with such artists as libran and • other fa -mous singers of a -t ow long: ads and with him that his own pre pletely equipped -unless there sheillit be on favorite - board an adequate . oildripping, pant.-- bination for evening dress -this winter. At Pink and peach colors are a 40in PhiladelPhi a -Record— - . . One time the union would have been consid- ered highly heterodoirsbut sOmuch improve-. The speed of the fastest railway train- is inent has taken place of late in dyes that it not much more than half that of the golden is now not only possible but admirable. den eagle's flight. The bird often COMB 140 Pink and peach color combined are wonder - miles an hour: • - I - • . - • past, made a specialty o te a ergs of his Dative Sotland. -and sang them t� delighted audiences au over Great Etitalif with ia degree of aithstic success, whit& - no one has ever since attained . Mr. Lely is at present giving a series of ballad' concerts throughout $cotland and - EllguAci. - . - . 'Starch That Will Not Stick. . . Moisten the desired quantity of starch Illg •a bowl,. adding sufficient water to -make it, liquid, thin pour over the boiling water until -you have a' clear starch. This Must • • not be too thiok or it will invariably stick to the lions. See that all artkiles are starched on the wrong aide and the starch well tubbed in. Just bow one can make lumpy starch I cannot tell. If, after you' have added the last boiling water, itbe comes jelly-like when"- cold, add each timet. to thin it, boiling water and. not old. Gilgal-If you want anything well done, tiny becoming to the young who are gifted do it yourself, is the rule. M llins I••knovr.' ., • with good. completions. The soft 'pallor -of li better one: If yea want anything welt i the tintii seems tii set ciff the dainty hueof done, tell the waiter to bring it raee. .. - lovely- Spitalfields brocade is Woven in use of electricity for,. any purpose. Jai theise twO Unto, the ground. being or 2,1116" ' Chenungo Conty, 11. Y, teem -4 a fire • delicate 'Pink • and Atho`bilmonlo in peach I was ea -used by the crossieg. of an dor- with leaves of that dull green which light wire and a tlephone,evire _thirty miles, / . -- . -- • WOmen tostlay are two inchestaller,- on an average then they were twenty-five years ego. The eauee is found .iii the Change d: the einbroidety needle for the tennis racket, oar, and tbe gynulaitie apparatus the school and college - - : - . - . , .. • George -4113Y SaSr the fish bite-- now • • through the ice. litaine-Horors! And I had looked 'forward .to each •jolly times skatng. • . A telegraphic ° signs passes from end to end of the Atlantic cable, a distance of 2,700 miles, in leas than one-third of a second. ^ • - • a Creamy skin to great .advantage. Too.inuoh, eve cannot be -exercised* the admirably as ;off brighter Ames, and» Way. - • - • • „