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THE LATEST IN JEWELS.
‘novel design for a scarf pin is a pair of
^Hgyeezei-s holding in their grasp a pearl.
W English double violet in enamel, set
* small diamonds, seems to be an ever
ular design for a brooch.
Ji cuff buttons a neat design is a square
Imposed 1 of a mass of golden wires, extend
in four different directions.
L pond lily leaf, under the upturned stem
vhich is seated a miniature frog, is a nov
! r in letter openers of oxidized silver.
m enamel duck, with breast of diamonds,
I ted on a bar of gold, each end of which is
, with a pearl, is a unique brooch design.
Ji pretty gold pendant balls, for heavily a chatelaine frosted. is At a clus- each
lof six
int where the balls connect is a small tur
loise.
L bunch of pond lilies in oxidized silver,
i stems of which pass through a large,
>ad leaf, is an attractive design for a
x>ch.
Pen holders are now being made in solid
id. A recent design had at the top end of
b holder an exceedingly lifelike fly of
atina.
A handsome paper cutter is a quill pen of
lite finished silver, around the shank of
lich is coiled a large oxidized snake of the
Lne metal.
Two golden bugs, with garnet wings and
amond necks, fighting a dtiel on a branch
I gold with miniature swords of silver, is a
otesque design for a brooch.
An oxidized silver case for a shaving
ush, ornamented with heraldic designs,
t attractive article which promises to find
vor this season as a Christinas present.—
.welers’ Weekly.
QUEER HAPPENINGS.
[Four burglars at Grand Rapids, Mich.,
ere caught while sleeping in the cellar of a
liuse which they had robbed.
John Chevrier, of Ottawa, while camping
lep, It on a hunting expedition, got up in his
j fatally rolled into the camp fire, and was
burned.
The 5-year-old child of D. T. Ponder, of
Jackson, La., fell feet first into a bored well
rorty-three.v^et deep, and was fished out with
^bthooks unhurt.
A piece of timber was blown into the shaft
of the Silver Crown mine, Cheyenne, Wy. T.,
where E. S. Bryant, of Boston, was working
700 feet below, and striking him upon the
k£ad killed him.
j Fanny Cook, the -wife of Willis Cook
f (colored), of Palatka, Fla., increased his al
fready large family by four blessed girls Wednesday, with twins,
r his pair have twice been
ft of whom are living.
IWhile lie a number of Iedians were taking a
on the platform of a mail car, near
bcatello, Iticed Utah, recently, the trainmen
that one of the redskins was shunned
\y bstowed all the others. the ostracized The grimaces member of disgust of tho
upon which revealed
lat arty led to an investigation,
k the lonely one was a tramp disguised as
Indian in order to get free transportation.
OUT OF THE ORDINARY.
►A prisoner in the Franklin, Pa., jail
joseph !*sted Reed “malicious is but 7 trespassing.” years old. He was ar
for
[ Mrs. Annie Tomlin, of Morristown, N. J.,
(xtely received in a letter a $20 bill from
Irvant who had stolen that amount
-3en years before.
William Skinner, of Richmond county,
la., died recently at his home, five
om Augusta. He was 75 years old
ven feet six inches tall.
i 4 boy at New Castle, Pa., at the risk of
P^his generous fai-mer who owned thenar lei
is the epitaph on the ton>k'Ll mem- j
7y^fciSifiH ra s5'om^ 0 ] 5
»t™bg, ,
gept. 16,1858.
Rvelopedmtoanol- j >
LS&t, le came by the to Ins lv AOCtors <P at Uo oVInUkS- ciock at n!i,
Ldtwoo--'- • -
“
SCIENTIFIC SQUIBS.
The electric light has been applied to th«
cycles. At a recent run of the Southsea Tri
cycle club, Capt. Izod rode a machine lighted
bv means of a small incandescent lamp, con
tallied !n an ordinary box, fitted with a bright
reflector. The experiment was a success, the
hght being found to be extremely penetrat
, .
Sebastian Wolf, an Austrian, has patented
a process for getting a thread that can be
spun and bleached from wood which is cut in
long lengths and boiled till it will cleave
apart in fibrous bunches by shaking in water.
It is then shredded by hand or by machinery,
and spun like hemp. This gives a very lino
thread, and less boiling gives a coarser one.
The presence of sewer gas in a room may
be detected as follows: Saturate unglazed
j paper with a solution of one Troy ounce of
” pure acetate of lead in eight fluid ounces of
rainwater; let it partially dry, then expose
in the room suspected of containing sewer
gas. The presence of this gas in any consid¬
erable quantity soon blackens the test paper.
Experts say that curtains and fine laces can
be made of malleable iron and steel. At the
Centennial exhibition a piece of steel rolled
by a mill in Pittsburg was so thin that it
weighed less than a book leaf, and could bo
blown off the hand easier than paper the
same size. The sheets for steel lace will l>e
rolled down to a low gauge and the patterns
pressed into them. The lace can bo made
j light or heavy, and is suitable for ladies and
children’s underwear and perhaps for trim¬
ming hats, wraps and dresses.
A newly patented pavement is sr.id to have
j been suggested by the surface of an elephant’s
j tooth, which consists of intermingled layers
of hard and soft material, so that, the process
of wearing always produces a series of ridges
upon the surface. The new system of paving
is the idea of Mr. Ranyurd, the English as¬
tronomer, and comprises the use of bloeks
having alternate hard and soft layers, such
as Portland cement and a mixture of sand
and cement, which are set upon edge so that
the edges of these laminae form u wearing
i surface. The blocks are made four inches
high, and may be worn to less tlym an inch
without becoming smooth, like granite
blocks.
LIGHT AND AIRY.
-visa i
Unchanged.
In the merry days oi boyhood
Of mischief he was full.
And at the teachers fact s made
Behind their back sat school.
1 He’s now a portrait painter,
Noted for his skill,
And, to his predilections true,
Is making faces still.
—Boston Courier.
Caste in the Future.
^Stranger in Detroit (a hundred years henoo)
-Why <lo all the fKi.ple stand with miTOT
ofhhi.? IIe’<
the great society leader. He belongs to on*
0f i he O ^1 ami 1 ! es ;
i ,
D.—Yes, siree. SC is great grandly «
the first captain o H* the Detroi^e.--lui
Bits.
Seasonable Axi n,K>
Mince pie in the ? Ari>irig,
Digestion take/ Arning.
011, ■1*
Mince pie at C
-i The nig^ nare ^uriial of Education.
Sitive Nature.
A Amiiig from the minstrels)
— |
Mr. Warned 0 f negro minstrelsy, Miss
| Are jo« i
j BreezyJ-oezy—Weft, ii-no, M r. 17a lo, I can
i ! to*’, Mysav that I am. Such jjerfonnances, I
posses* a certain lack of refinement
of jokes this even nig had gray whiskers
tbem * ew Y ork Sun.
A ^^i^L "r7“,av i.ifiw, „ f . j
0
P uu.: i
But, ah, it's a Jiffereut luutu-r
WbeD relations go back on the man. 1
_ Ti ,i r>itR ;
•
What is this Disease that is Coining
, It vjiwii nQfl US ?
Like a thief at night ^ it Steals
. U1 Upon US UIlHWfil eS. MM,,. 1 lie pa
limits have paillS about the
^ ^ ^ SOInet imeS
in the back. They feel dull
and sleepy; the mouth has a
bad taste, especially in the
morning. A sort of sticky slime
collects about the teeth. The
appetite is poor. There is a
feeling like a heavy load on the
stomach; sometimes a taint, all
6 r one sensation at the pit of the
tomach which food does not
satisfy. The eyes are sunken,
t he hands and teet become cold
and clammy. After a while a
cough sets in, at first dry, attend- but
after a few months it is
ed with a greenish-colored The patient feels ex
pectoration. all the while, and sleep
tired
does not seem to afford any
rest. After a time lie becomes
nervous, irritable and gloomy, There
and has evil forebodings. of whirl¬
is a sensation giddiness, in a the sort head when
ing suddenly. The bow¬
rising up costive; the skin is
els become
dry and hot at times; the blood
becomes thick and stagnant;
t he whites of the eyes become
tinged with yellow; the urine
is scanty and high colored, de¬
positing a sediment after stand¬
ing. There is frequently a
spitting up of the food, some¬
times with a sour taste and
sometimes with a sweetish
taste; this is frequently of the at¬
tended with palpitation becomes im
heart; the vision
paired, with spots before the
i ' .•*>». .
there . feeling Of gmlt
eyes; IS O
prostration alul weakness. All
of tllOSO S/lnptOfllH are in turn
j >resHJ] fc # It is thought
nearly one-third of our
latlOn llffS tlllH disease in BOIHe
1 IOl HIS.
It, T1 lias iH*en round that phy
siciaiu have mistaken the cause
of this disease. Some have
treated it for a liver complaint,
others for kidney disease, etc.,
etc., but none of these kinds of
treatment have been attended
with success; for it is really
is constipation also and dyspepsia. It
found that Winker Ex
tract of Rotfts, OP Mother Sei
Curative Syrup,
properly this disease prepared Will lemOVt
ill all its Stages.
Care must be taken, however,
to secure the genuine article.
IT IV11J, MI.I. BKITB1B THAN
COTTON.
Mr. John C. Hemptifistnll, I
Clebura Co • •
Ala., writes: “My wife h
been so much benefited l
Shaker Extract of Roots (
SeigeFs Syrup that she sa:
she would rather be with >1
part of her food than with < M
the medicine. It has done h
more good than the doctoi's ar
all other medicines put togethe
I would ride twenty miles t y }
get it into the hands of any su
terer if he can get, it in nootlu
way. I believe it will soon selli
this State better than cotton.
testimony from Texas.
Mrs. S. E. Barton, of Varner
Ripley Co., Mo., writes tin
she had been long alUieted wit
dyspepsia and disease of t1
urinary organs and was cun
by Shaker Extract of Root
Rev r . J. J. McGuire, merehan
of the same place, who sos
Mrs. Barton the medicine, sa;
h e has sold it for four yea. S
Bn d never knew it to fail,
SIIE WAS ALMOST DEAD
I was so low with dyspep¬
sia that there was not a eoui ph
sician to be found who
do anything with me. I ha
fluttering of the heart an
swimming of the head. Oi
day I read your pamphlet eallt
“Life Amour 1 the Shakers,
which described my diseafc
better thru 1 could myself,
tried the Shaker Extract c
Roots and kept on with itunt
to-day I rejoice in good healt!
Mrs. M. E. Tinsley, Bevie
Muhienburg Co., Ky.
For sale by proprietor, all Lruggists , c
address the A. t
White, Limited, 54 Warred
St., New York.
Wanted For Thl* Week
IS 000 able bodied ooatoo.er» to b
Bunts abd Shoe* at W R Bedell'., and
mdnoe yon to omne I will umke you 1
hhend offer ; Whole .lock k
' ’ l*OLi .
92 25 find e good born .olid Hi 75. D< f
ble Hole brogans HI 25 «mi a good oi
whole stock at $1 oo. A wouiAd’a e
bw it, t $ i 50 , and a good one for $1
und ^
We would call enpecinl attentic n to c *
Gent h calf, Re^mlesH Congress and B<
morula at H2 1/9 and our Ladie't. K*n^*r
bofton at 92 49 and *200. There rhf
are warrmsed and every pair is made
orde r and for retail trade. My Mock
hbo * H iH ,8r * er ,b,m * ver and 1 wonld i ■*
r c '“" J / ri " Dd) “ ca lb ”
io an maprction of it.
W. K. Bkd.ul,
1 ISO Biond Str.et,
Colombo#, G
Bueklen’s Arnica.Salve
Tb« beat Salve in the world tor Z
bruise*, olcer#, cnlt rbAom, ;
tively cores pile#, io or do pay r*qn red
is gtuura&tebtt give perfect satiafaetto
or money refondtd. Price 25c per box