LADIES' DEPARTMENT. H rRAIMXO MILITARY NTflSM. In the icliuol for ilio training of military nnracs established by tlio l'l-inces Ilolicnlolie, tn Slrassburjr, tlio princess ahnrcs nllko with nil mnmbeis of llio class In everything (hoy mo calloil to do, from binding a broken Ifg to answering- tho teit question of t lio examining corps of physicians. The princess is a woman of sixty, of strong mures and oplen lid health, mi excellent shot, being especially fond of a boar hunt, nnd a Una horso woman. Boston Cultiva tor. A fixe. En's vack nocTOH. rnltl has a f.co doctor, a woman whose duty it to keep Pattl's fuco smooth and frco from wrinkles. Tlio face doctor linn a littlo curtained boudoir to which Puttl repairs, nnd wiih the full glnro of noonday upon lior tlio fnco docior looks for every ln Ciptont lino nnd possible blemish. This u immediately removed by mas ago, Rlcaml nf. or unguents n tlio occasion require. This woman studies Clio peculiarities of Paul's skin as n physician would study his patiout's constitution. For it in a mysterious laboratory at tlio tho back of her rooms the prepares lotion, powders and soaps especially for tho singer's use. Slio has re- ponded to summonses to Craig-y-nos, nnd it is said that this year Puttl will lako her face doctor with her to her C:istlo In Wales. Xcw York Sun. ri.ovisu SIIOCUIKItS is stvi.r. Sloping shoulders, one of a woman's good points, havo of lalo been but littlo regarded, but they nro again coming to tlio fore, inasmuch as fash ionable mantles (not paletots) aro nude to fall plainly on tho shoulders, nnd entirely without any puff. Tho lino of beauty is scarcely thus at tained, ns the fullness of tlio dress lcevo mnkes nn impress on tho tnautlo. Tho fnshlouablo Idoa broad lion dors Is attempted in every pos sible way, nnd to attain it even the slimnoss of tho waist is a' andoned. Tho capo is tlio best holp in tills rc poct, and tho nnmo includes every variety of iiyuillc, exclusive of tho paletot. The capo proper is a round polorino cnt In one piece and touching to tlio knees; tho top can have several graduated collars, a short pelerine, fuellings cr a hood. Tho more or less cccontric deviations show two, three or more rows of large collars. St. Louis Republic. PI5KSS OF ITALIAN FtSIIKKWOMEV. Tho chlof foaturo of tho dress ot tlio womou of tlio Italian coast fishors Is a double skirt, the lower portion of which hangs rather scantily about their foot. Tho upper skirt is often booked up at tho front and sldos, forming a sort of bag. In this they sorry seaweed, fuel, fish or shell-fish from the sands; and when not in such ase it is drawn tip over tho shouldors and back of the head as a sort of wrap. ' Mothers also wrap this skirt about tholr babios when noeding to carry them for any distance. Tho material is usually tho coarsost white cotton, but If tlio women can possess ny sort of holiday attiro, the upper skirt may be of scarlot, yellow or greou, loopod most gracofully above the lower skirt and surmounted by a black cloth, or, in rare instances, a coarso volvot bodlco. They rarely woar any foot covering, and only such boa I oovorlng as is supplied by the folds of the uppor skirt. Nut Orlonua Picayune. YOU MUST BE SMARTLT SnOD. To bo smartly gowned avails us nothing, if at the same tiuio we aro uot smartly shod ; mid as shoos vary so littlo in their stylo, almost- every thing depends upon their shape. Of two sorts to bo especially recom neudod, one is black cloth with fiuest French kid foxings, and the other is tlio Louis XVI. shoo. These last are made in undressed or glace kid, aud huvo small buckles in jot or cut steel. Goorge JIL stock buckles in Quo mar quisates are wad ou slippers and low shoos to be worn with handsome tea gowns or at garden parties, when poo plo are expected to be elab orately attired. A carriage boot ' of finest kid with patout loalhor foxings is smartly brogued, and lias the high beols to undesirable in a wulkiiig-boot. Drouze shoos havo their placet, which is, however, limited one. It it affirmed that the gray and pale-fawn undreaied kid hoot will be worn again lull summer with drosiy promenade coatumet, the glove niatohing these thoet in kind aud color. Five o'clock tea-shoe are mad to order, to match the tea-frock, which diffen from tho prlnoatt tea- gown in being short all around (that Is, It lint no train), and in being quite tight fitting, and worn with an Em pire waist that li niudo to look short wnistcd to absurdity by itt wide sash, whose top folds reach to tho armpits. --Xew York Post. TUB fl'lHXa (11IIL. Every right-minded woman can regulato her temperature in accor dance with her Ideas of what tlio weather ought to be, and when it is time for spring things she puts them on regardless of the mercury. The spring girl is tall, superbly tall. Slio has to be to wear the striped skirt she affects with itt Unci cigzagglng around her on tho cross. The tkirt it dark rather than light in color, to con trast happily with the palest tnn, and is just long enough to make carrying It in tlio hand imperative, for beneath the skirt It tlio bright bit of color in the petticoat that comploto tho cos. tumo ns high lights finish a picture. Tho coat has rough, ragged edges, very smart mnnnUh reveres, und two rows of white pearl buttons as big as plates. Tlio hat is of straw In four-In-hnnd shape, with a sparkling paste bucklo iu front and a pert, independ ent sort of bow in tho back. That Is dnik, too, for tlio thing the girl really wants yon to notico about tho dress it tlio smartness of tho coat nnd tho bright' ess of tho gay r utiles boneath tlio edges of tho train. A spring girl without a tightly rolled bluo or red club-handled umbrella, a pair of Rus sian red gloves and a bunch of vlolots or one American roso on her breast, would bo as much of n falluro as tho Star-Spangled Ilauner with the stars left out ot the blus Cold. Detroit Free Press. FASHION KOTF.S. Capotes aud toques grow smaller Is size. The Waitcan pleat, according to Parisian edict, must bo won' only on tea gowns and evening dresses. A modification Is in ado In favor of dust and driving clouks of silk. Jewels of color, gold embroidery, spangles and pearls, that were used last season on gowns and bonnets, are to bo worn ugnin this year. A Russian belt of silver with a Kremlin bucklo is among tho girdios of fashion. Trout silks is the suggestive namo given to tlio new changoablo shot silks, bluo witli yellow, green with bluo, pink with gray, bluo with yollow brown. Silk blouses of surah and Chinese silks are woru with wool skirts aud underneath wool coats. Narrow ribbons aro wonnd around tho crowns of Tyrolouu hats. Rosettes of narrow ribbon are placed under tho low flat btltus of shade hats. Cloth of gold gauze for cmbroldorcd bonnet crowns. Les bngnes is tho pootical name for a now crimped chiffon. Tho Incroyablo only is wanting in the group of fashionable stylet Wat tcau, Rococo, Empire. llorcules braid bordered by tabular braid is suitable trimming for cloth gowns. The tourist's parasol unscrews, to that it can be put iu the trauk. Ecru linen batistes havo returned and will bo uted for blousei durlug the summer. Flowors for the hat aro arranged at aigrettes. Point do Gene is tho laco for French batlstos. Among the revivals aro the old-time rings in hoop shape let with dia monds. The diamonds are placed iu a row with just gold enough to form a tcttiag. An attractive and novel design for a pin it a ttilotto in Roman gold, to which it attached a sheath and chain. Tim dagger which forms the pin it stuck through the lace and then flipped into the theath, tho chain connecting the two. The hilt, which it lu the form of a crost, it tet with sapphires. Busy womou aro preparing summer waists of black India silk; comfort waists thoy call thorn. Those are made with shirred yoke, or with narrow tuckt, and have full-topped tloveet and a ruffle below the belt, or they may bo drawn lu at the walst-lliio with the skirt portion to be woru un der the dress-iklrL For evening wear, glovos in dark hades are do longer worn ; they must be of finely glazed kid, in pearl, cream or lemon shade. Glovot for outdoot wear are geuerally made of antelopt kin, at it it to toft aud pliable; the tame akin it used largely iu the manu facture of pur, pocketbookt, etc. RICE IN JAPAN. ; ruisixo tiir nnK tnsruFF or THE FAIl KASX. Great Carn nnd Labor Necessary to Produce a crop Quner Jnpau . cse Plows ThreshluK and Hulling lllce. ICE, tays Frank O. Carpenter in the Am erican Farmer, it the bread of the Far East, and ot all the poople in the world ore-third grow up, work, and die on little olso than a rice diet. The Chinese, tho Japanese, and the East Indians know nothing of baker's bread, and wheaten flour is hardly used outside of Christendom. V are our selves the chief mrat-caters of the world, nnd wo have tho Idea that a man can not do good work without treat. The farmer of China and Japan works twelve hours evety day nn a rice diet, and I have been pulled all day in jlnrikshas by bare-lcsgcd men who ran at the rate of five miles an hour, and who ate nothing but rice and pickles to keep them going. Borne of the strongest men in the world aro the Jnpaneio wrestlers, whoio fat nnd mu'clc are made entirely from rice; nnd in Slnm they take a baby of a few months old and it begins tho rice food, which it takes to the day of its death. Tho Japanese look upon rice as we do upon wheat. Our expression "as good as wheat'' is with them "as good as rice," ami for a long time nil tho taxes of the country wero paid in rice, and rico was practically the money of Japan. Now the Emperor collects bis taxes in the same way that wo do. He has in stituted a hanking system much like that of our Natioi.ni banks, but tho money received by the Government is largely the result of the taxes ou rico, hnd eighty per cent. of all the revenues of japanf.sb r-LOW. Japan are gotten from tho farmers and larm industries. Tho Japateso are among the best farmers of tho world. Thoy understand how to U50 manures and fertilizers, and they have brought irrigation down to a science. For more than 2000 years they bavo tilled tho same soil over and over again, and to-dav tho land blossoms liko the rose, and its Holds are greener than those of the Valley of the Nilo. The whole country looks liko a garden, and Japaucte farming is more like market gardening than bonanza agriculture. The country is divided up into small holdings, and a few acres suffice to sup port a family. The people do not in many cases live upon their farms. You find little villages of one and two story cottages thatched with straw along the roads, and from these people go out to the fields, and men, women and children work together in them. A surprising thing about the farm lands to us is tho absence of barns. The Japanese would look upon tho big barns of New Tork, Pennsylvania, and Ohio as so many Bud dhist temples, and they would get down on their knees and bump thoir beads against the -ground as they past them. The crops are generally taken from the fields to the markets, and such grain as is kept is stored about the house. Tho Japanese do not require barns as we do. They keep but little stock, and in four fifths of Japan you will not see a cow A JArANBSB SCAUKCBOW. from one year's end to the other. They have but few horses, and the most.of the labor is done by hand. The fields are sometimes plowed with bullocks, but they are more often spaded or dug over with a great mattock, and in the cultiva tion ot rice nearly everything is don by baud. The work begins about the 1st of April, wheo the ground it broken up with the hoe or the plow. If the plow is used it is drawn by a bullock, and the plow Itself is for all the world ilk that used in Egypt in tht time of Pharaohs. It is ot wood, and is mora llk forked tick than t good Awsrioan plow. It has nn iron point for a plowshare, but there Is no loam-board, nor any arrange, ments for turning furrows or for plow ing deep or shallow at will. The farmer carries his plow with him on his shoulder to the field, walking behind his bullock, and he does not hope to do anything more than break tho surface with it. Tho chlof part of the work is done with the spade or with the mattocit. This last has a short handle, and you tee all over Japan during the springtime men and Women standing tin tn thalr Imam In water and digging up the ground with moe great noes. The first thing in rice-planting is the nurscrv. This is usual It mucin In tha corner of the Held and the seed Is sown In it. The bed has been first covered with manure nnd ft Is altrara tho rti-ha.t Dart of tho farm. As imn ttia rrmifA has been prepared the seed U scattered oyer ns suriaco Dy hand, and the water is then let out from the Irrigation omnia so that It rovers the bed for a depth of a lew inches. There is great care in the selection of the seed, nnd it is sometimes kent under Water several ilnra tiafnra. hand. Four or the days after the seed has beeo sown It begins to sprout, and lnnRsnrNO men. about five weeks later the young rice plant! have grown up and are readyfor transplanting. During tho planting scarecrows are put up in the field, aud the Japancso scarecrow always has a bow and arrow, which it is supposed frighten the birds away. In the meautime tho farmer has put his rice lands in order. His beds are made at different levels, ami he has seen that littlo earth walls have been thrown up around the divisions of his fields and has arranged his canats so that ho can let the water from one place to another as be pleases. He has been manuring the ground throughout the winter, and he has mado it ns levol as the floor. He has flooded it with water, and it is as soft as mush when be is ready to plant. He now takes his shoots from the nursery, ties them into bunches of a sizo that you can easily take iu your band, and then wading through the field, scatters them singly tight and left over the water wbero they are needed. He has a number of men and women to help bim plant, aud these take the bunches and set them out in rows ol from four to six plants in a buncb, and so that there are from 1500 to 3000 bunches in an acre. This planting is dooo about the first of June. The plants begin to grow at once, and within a few weeks the land ot Japan, from being rough and brown, has become a most beautiful green. The country has a climate which is extremely favorable to agriculture. It is so moist and warm in the summer that the rice fields aro like so many hot beds, and after planting the only thing that is necessary to do is to to sot thst they are kept free from weeds and are well watered. The farmers watch them at carefully as an old maid does her pet flower bed. You may at any time tee men trotting along under big hatt watching closely every plant, and if one is out of shape, too deep in the water, or not deep enough, they will push them down or pull the mud up to them in such a way that every plant produces itt best product. The labor of planting a rice field is very great. It you will take all the blades or sprouts in a field of oats or grain and put them down in the ground again with a dibble or your hands, you may get tone 1 idea of the labor raising rice. " It it the same with the htrvestlng. It it alio done by band. The rice bios. soms in September, and about the end of September or the first of October, and in some parts of Japan still later, tuu harvest Is ripe. The sickle is used and the rice is cut off close to the ground and tied near the roots in small bunches, which are hung over poles to dry. The rice Is about as high as our oats when it is still in the field, and it has to be pulled from the straw and busked be fore it can be used. If you will take a bundle of oats and pull them through a cross-cut saw, fastened to a piece ot wood about the bight of a table, so that all the grains of oats are pulled off, you will get a fair idea of how the Japanese sot their rice from the straw. It is still in the shell, however, aud this busk or shell has to be taken off before It cau be used. One of the most common arrange ment for getting this oft is an immense mortar, in which tht rice grains are put and pounded with a wooded pestle uutil tb bulls and kernels are separated. Then the mlxtuisi is put into a winnowing machine, aod this it turned by band to separate tb rlc from tb ohaff. Many of tht) farmers bar little riot mills which ""iST' J A." t -fi nur.T.TNO nics. :?v work by water, but nearly 'everything It on the smallest scale, and ther are no great rice-husking and polishing ma chines such as you wilt find In India, Burmati and the other great rlc coun tries of the world. . . A- good rice field ought to produce about forty bushols to the acre, and some of these Japanese fields produce more. The country of Japan produces nearly a hundred and fifty million bushels of rice a yew, and their rice it the finest in the world. It may surprise some to know that there sre different kinds of rice, but Japan alone has over 300 kinds, nnd there is as much differ ence In the quality as thoro is in tii quality of. moat and potatoes. Th Japanese understand the possibilities ot irrigation. These rice beds are on dif. ferent levels, nnd during the time I was In Japan the land made me think ot a gigantic patch-work or one of nature crazr-quilts. Each little spot of green rico bad flowers planted upon the little walls of eatth which surrounded It, and between the patches of lice were cardens of beautiful flowers and many colored crops of other kinds. The water which washed tho roots of the sreen rice nlanta spnrklod like diamonds under the sun, and the bara-le?sed farmara under their big bats with thoir mahogany les shin ing out over the green seemed a natural part of the scene. A great deal of the irrigation of Japan is done by human labor. Tho water is raised from one level to another In buckets or in jnrs fastened to great wheels upon which men stand and step up from one rung of the wheel to the other with much the same motion a dog in a dog churn. In the western nnrt of Janan a irrent riant ot the water is drawn from wells by means of a long haudled polo hung on a pivot,' by which a man puinns the water out of the ground and spreads It over the fields. Labor In Japan is very cheap. You can get n good man in the Interior from ten to fifteen cents a day, and he will board himself. Women can be gotten at still lower wages, and the result is that the farming of Japan is far more intensive than ours, and a much greater percentage is gotten from the acre. Some of tiie fields produce two and three crops a year, and one crop is scarcely harvested before the next is put in. This, however, it not the case with rice. It seems to ex haust the laud and rice lands are usually allowed to lie fallow in the winter. During tbo past ten Tears Janan has changed agriculturally as well as politi cally, and since tho revolution it has be come a different country. It has a popu lation of about 38,000,000, aud It is es timated that only ten per cent, ot the country Is given up to. farming; but this area will be rapidly increased from now ou. There is a bli agricultural college near Tokio, nnd agricultural schools havt been established in different parts of the Empire. Experiments are being made in the iutroductior. of stock, and the whole physical as woll as the intellectual life ot the pcoplo is changing. The fact that tho Japanejo were Buddhists has greatly f rcjudiced them against the me ot meat, u Buddhism, a man's soul nfter death is liable to go into tbo body ot an animal, ami the Japaueso have a prejudice against serving up for breakfast sllcct of their unce3tors, and in the killing of a cow or sheen thev miilit be cutting off tho life of a grandfather or a grcat-granduiothor. Buddhism is, I think, declining. The contact with Western civilizitinu has caused the peo ple to giro up many of their old preju dices, uud while thoy havo largely bo come iufidels iustead of Christians, after leaving tho religion ot their fathers they aro ready to look at things in a practical light, aud they will in the future proba bly bo meat-eaters as woll as rice-eaters. Tho Peculiar Mexicans. "Thcro is one peculiarity about the Moxicaus in their social and family re lations which I doubt to exist among any other people on tbo ciobe," said P. L. Hell, of Chihuahua, Mexico. "While It is true that a majority ot those occupy ing the highest social nnd political posi tions in tho country are descendants of the proud old aristocratic Spaniards, yet It la equally true tbat a good many others of wealth and acknowledged leadership have come up from the lower ranks by some sudden turn of the wheel ot fortune or eruption of evolution. Unlike th American, the Mexican who acquire fame and fortuno novor forgets or neg lects hit poor kin. And, unlike the American again, be treats his more im pecunious relatives in a queer way. He takes tbem into bis household as servants, giving to them the most menial service, but never denying the relationship or attempting to conceal it. I kuow of many instances where a rich Mexican's mother is his cook, his sister bis house girl and bis father or brother his butler. The American would either disown tbem altogether or put them on equal footing with himself. In this regard, you must admit, the democracy ot Mexico is purer tbar, tbat so louldiy boasted of in thU country," St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Tho Ouly Way. Kind Party 'What ar you crying tbat way for, little boyl" Little Boy "Cause it' thtouly way I know how to cry," Ufa, SEVEN PERSONS SUFFOCATED. Thy Wars Aslsap When a Fits Broks Out In the Houas, BnnLis, May It So von persons have been suffocated by the burning of a house at Krefeld, Rhenish, Prussia. They were asleepst the time the flames broke out, and were smothered by th smoke while . en deavoring to make their escape. C0NOBE9SI0MAL WOMlWATIOWtV The Democratic convention of the Fourth Ohio Congressional district renomliiatud. Hon. V. C. I-ayton by acclamation. L. A. Tucker was nominated for congress by the People's part of Crawford Co., Pa. The Republicans of the Fourth congres sional district of Kansas, nominated Charles R.Curtis for Congress. The Pemorratic congressional convention of tho Fifth Missouri district renominated John C. Tarsney by acclamation. The Democrats of the Bocond Indians' DNtrlct have renominated Congressman Drcts. THE NATIONAL GAME. TVntTiWASRis are frequent enoujh this sH"on , Tnt Bnstnns expect to win the pennant without trouble. Kj'M Is doing most of th catching for t ha Boatin tram. PtTcnEROALVtw, of Tittsburg, is In his tlHrty-aightli year. Jorcx, of Brooklyn, batted safely In every one of his first eleven games. Tna Boston team so far leads all the Lengue teams In bsM-runnlng. Rva!, ef Chicago, is probably the best throwing ourfielilni in the profession . Anson, of Chleig., has finally rmtlnl th value of bunt hitting, ani is practicing his nieu ntlt dally. McAi.ikr, of Cleveland. cor! against th Hew York In recent game, from second base, on a hit to tbe pitcher. HCTrtimgow, of Chicago, ani Rusle, of New York, the two crack pitchers of the country last season, ar still out of form. Manaokr Powkrs attributes th recent poor showing of th New York's to "Rule' lam arm and back and lack ot team work." The flnt baseball fntility of th teaaon M rurred at Dover, N. H , when Jone Rickar (tied from injurie received while sliding to th bom plate. HBNATOIM HlGOtNS, WOLOOTT ANO DO Boia, who ar Irtqu-ntly among tb spec tators at Washington, used to piay ball with their college nines. Tna allegation is mad tbat when a game of bawball is in progrew at Washington, it i altii'Mt p mibl to fin I a quorum of tb House of Representative siuoni tbe spec tator Tnitsite, ton and enthusiasm of tha at tendance everywhere atfor.l no practical demonstration of tb repeated winter as aertion that bawball "is dying out" aid that '"eonaolidatiou would ruin th game." O'BReix, of Brooklyn, had a funny ex perienu at Louisville. Ha made tb oireu.it of the bnies on a ba on bails, a steal and a paniod ball. It was then discovered that h hail batted nut (if his turn, and b was de darwl out by Umpire Lyncu. Din lap, one tb greatest ot second base man, is ulle In Philadelphia. He is still looking for a call from noma major league) club. He la waiting patiently for the ex-. ploaion of "pheiiomvnuiif,"but th magnate eem to have forgotten hlcu totally. Says Manager Bancroft: "Why should a panieot ball that is stopped by rain ay In tbe third or fourth inning be played aU over againr My idea is that tb olub in tb lead should retain its advautags and th next day take up th game at th point at which it waa abandon ). When a trot la interrupted by ilarsnrsi th borsas ar not compelled to run all the beats ouce mor. I hold that th same principle applies to bats boll." The Leata Racer. Tho following table shows the standing of the various base ball clubs : i w. L. PCT, w. t.. rrr. Chicago 12 11 .61 1'hila 10 12 AV New York 9 U .4) VVathingt'n!) 12 AJ Ht. Louis 7 H :J1 Baltimore... 13 .200 Boston IS ft .72 Brooklyn.. .14 7 Cleveland, li 0 Louisville.. 14 10 Pittsburgh 14 It Cincinnati. 13 11 .(IV) .571 .5Ki .542 Mi THE LABOR WORLD. Thim ar .,. laborers in Detroit Ulcb. '1 H k at ar n arly 3 W0 stitches in a pair of banu-jewu bootr. In Ohio law have been ensoted prohibit lug shaviug ou unlay. Farm laborer In Italy get but twenty cents a day on an average. Th Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen baa a ineraberabipof aoouc 23,uuu. Thu convention of tb Brotherhood ot Locomotive Engineers met this yar in Atlanta, Ua. 3 In Philadelphia th cabinet makers have succeeded In reauclng thsir daily workinz hour to niue. In th rie fields of northern Italy woman wail to thair knev twelve tuam at antretcb lor ten ceuta. Qvkr on million children ar at preeent employ! in th mills and factories of tn L tilted Htatea. An Influx of English potters Is looked for in irentou (X. J.i tbia summer on account of th Htetforasbire atrik iu England, where l!5,oou men ar out. Cvkr JOOO granite cutters working a num ber of ew England quarries wr locked oat for denian.iing tbat tueir yearly agreement should be signed by their bosses at th reiru iar tune. At the dictation of th man put In power by th tuioiiMt in Australasia all immigra tion into th colony u prohibito.1. ao tbat tiis tbousau Is of ptop, now uuenplored tbsr may have an opportunity to flul wjrk, lie th telegraph service of th Unit State, it it utiniat 1 that 41,00 men and women are at prawntamployeJ. To leoitn of wlr in uw ia over 'JJO.UW miles, aud the capital iuvested Is statsd to be at least L00,- Captain Mitchell, of Chicago, known fsiuitiar.y aa "Old Alitoh," ia said to b th oldest sleepiugar porter in tarrle on tbo road. He is nixty-eight year old and ha Iwen employed by the Puflman Compauy tor aeveuteen vears. Pkfsidkk? Clark, of th Union PaoiBj KaiiroaJ, began lit as a brakeraan ua gravel tralu. Hs I particularly popular with all tbe labor organisations, and no trouble ha. aver arisen from tow souroe aiuc be became mauagar. Last year e'AU people, moat ot whom war railway employes, were killed in this coun try lu railroad acoldeuta, and i),0M were wounded Tb number of killed iu Eugland werel07.laudS7-.il wouuded; in Krauce SJtf wers killed aud 7UU wounded, aud iu fruaiia tb number ot kuled waa 4.U wall liXJT were wounded. Ross Winaks, tb Amerloso muMlonalr sportsman, ia being sued by th Trust of Bir Jams Slacken!, (rout whom be reus an imineos dear forest in lnvraa, Boot land, for allowing ni keeper to drive 900 rdarc4f th ground taaa uasportaaiasy iiks fashion. Wuwtis oou tends ha did it beeaus his estate Is ovsratooAsd with dear.