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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUN APRIL 1, 1888-~SIXTEEN PAGES. A. R. LOGIE, - THE NEW YORK DRY GOODS STORE Zogie Having lately purchased the stock and good will of the New York Dry Goods Store, at 1310 and 1312 Farnam street, of Messrs. John H. F. Lehman & Co., I shall, on Monday, offer for sale a large portion of the old stock, at prices that will insure a quick sale and certain profit to all customers. Every department will have special bargains. Among other items notice Muslin Underwear, at exactly one half the price it has heen marked in stock. Hamburg Edgings, mostly new goods at exactly one half price marked by Messrs Lehman & Co. The T-hook Foster Kid Glove, formerly sold at $2.25; at $1.25 to close. The $2 grade at $i. The $1.50 and $1 Embroidered Back Kid Glove, at 50¢, closing price. I have a fine stock ofnew goods, bought from the best sources of eastern supply and will sell them cheap. All goods will be exactly as represented and no varia- tion from given prices will be allowed. You will receive polite and intelligent service and any errors made will be cheerfully corrected. Please notice also that having put in an entirely new stock of boots and shoes, of best makes and quali- ties, special bargains will be offered to induce you to give me your patronage in this line of goods. Respectfully, A. R. LOGIE. P. S. Seit 20 jahren bin ich bekannt und befreundet mit meinemn Vorgaenger Herrn John H. F. Lehmann. In Folge dessen hat er mich auf seine Freunde und Goenner besonders hingewiesen und gebe denselben hiermit die Versicherung dass ich das Geschaeft in der alten Weise fortfuehiren werde,und bemueht sein, durch gute, reelle Bedienung und feste Preise mir auch Ihre Zuneigung zu erringen. A. R. LOGIE. Zogie THE NEW YORK DRY GOODS STORE 1310 and 1312 Farnam Street, he had not known of Cushing’s record, that | who was watching my agony. ho had Coffered them ~a man sound in | don’t you put the stocling on the other foot A Williams, but that he was not a good enough | and then the little toe will be in the ho he Inside History of His Confirmation | uwycr for them, but now b had given them | 1 tried this pian and found it a success, and | not so much attention to the technicalitios of | WAere L] Y superor, bous by the Senat a good lawyer dnd they were not satisfied | with this began wmy admiration for Judge | the law as to the equity of the cases. Itis | Drsident Cleveland will 1ay the corner. v the Senate. T Ao o) Waite, which steadily inoreased as I knew le that during his long judicial | Stone of the m“\l\' library building at Cornell avor of Caleb Cushing, he two ha r. Edgor raks in the highest terms | honesty or partisanst s o] s, and | T lass, epartmen i8 to be inaug would support him. When the matter came | had,” said he, “a fine memory and he wi ;l a :‘,:\”':( B80T ';‘(;‘J&L}ul :;A"II;LTI]‘:»“X;;‘L\\«‘;II;'ul} '[‘.]m 'll he H" c o l:n::n: sixi i worthily carried out. ) in the catcus Re enators | mi road reading and culture, Mr, nd possess ) rers of the Towa state university up in the catcus of the Republican_senat man of broad reading ar e oy and oo Manngers of the Town state university dignified ofticial body in the country, and in has been laid for Judge Edgerton Tells an Incident of York, tells me that Waite seemed to be con- : : s now a strong republican, and r ; e sentative Hill Talks of Him LR ases while he was The question of a woman's annex to |, A petrified snake ten feet Prosbyterian churchos and | Princeton eoege i aon besiorineX 40 | hig been dug up ab Granads, 24,713 communicants. E saiid that President Patton is | $¢UL to the Smithsonian institution at V in accord with the amendments. as a Young Lawyer. P ol Cushing, and accused him of being a political ington. prostitute. He had been approached by a gton sa0k and look up a Out of 40,0.0 Sioux Indians there i vor heme Feank Carpenter in New York World. | PERVHERS, FE A0 o0 tre othor senniors | r ! ct, Chict Justice Waite | 000 of them still in heathenism, AL S Thie o s Gracie Arlie, a beautiful white g “The inside history of the executive sessions | and had been assured that Cushing was a | has been one of the hardest worked mem- [ Ny M, A. Crocker, of San Francisco, ha : s 44 are 1o hidityiholditevor fandiyhonaliove: covered her Slin was s of the senate which made the confirmation of | strong republican. He had replied that he | bers of the supreme court. The supreme | sivan P et e in other occuputions, and | £V Morrison R. Waite possible by the rejection had no doubt t uld promise to be a ‘l"'l'k“ l‘:l ‘\‘\‘ '; '“ " ‘rh;’t“"';"‘tl tion of that city £10,000. are not engaged in remunerative work. O8T0, of the two former nomimees, Landuulet Wil- | Tepublican in the futire to gev the position 8 oehind, and Mr. Waltc tind folt what | Bishop-clect Courtney, of Nova Sectis, - Eliza & Wheaton has given the town | 5, Phey 3 ! 5 Rl {ibag for him (Brownlow) h 1ld burden of w I will resizn the rostorship of St. Paul's orion, Ms new public library build lams and Caleb Cushing, hus never been | thousand times rather vote to coplirm | reduced. ~As chicf justice, he had more to | WL Fesn, fhe Fe forslip e liap ! told. It was given to me tonight by the pri- | as chief ~justico such democrats as | do than the other members of the court, and | el Bostom, op AprEEL L R vate secretary and confidential friend of one | Allan G, Thurman, of Obio, or | he considered every Monday the lot of mo- Ic number of churches and preach- of the senators who took part in the confirma- tion, When Chief Justice Chase died Presi- dent Grant first tendered the nomination to | Cushing’s future, the senate felt inclmed to | authorities. He comes of a long-lived tamily, R T Roscoe Conkling, who was then forty-one | confirm him, and'he would kave been con- | and had bis system not been run down with he contributions of the English Preshy- ) : Evnd) jonthsold, X years of age., Conkling declined to accept | firmed had it not been for Senator Sargent | overwork, he' w r bly have thrown hurch to the sustentation fund in the ‘A proj is on foot in New York for a A "'".'.)1".“,"“ Iul Sayra, th it 1 when asked why. repliea | ©f California, who rose just as the vote wus sed his death, ar ending December 31, mounts to | 8¢hool to be 1 for training servant girls aperfect dog's hes EREROs 0N, ARG WA 85 (6f WhY, FORHOS | about to'be taken and threw abombshell into | &, senreseniative W, D, HIll, or morth $ hth?ldhulmefu'nv‘dI!{nm- ther way Ufl beiug | the senate in the shape of a lettor taken from | 4 e hars S uried than by tuking a seat upon the su- [ the archives of Richmond. It was a copy of [ (1% Wit8 Sobihis ‘tisi preme bench.’” Grant then sent i the nomi- | & letter tuken from the papers which Pickett, | Wit doing somo of Ris fivst practisig. e | oo chureh ntly conscerat pation of his attorney general, George H, | Who had been connected with the state de Williams, of Oregon, who liad been chicf jus. | Diriment av U’l‘l‘i“':fi',““:f‘;("f;‘“u‘.‘.‘\‘,""‘.'_‘l“’;}“‘ffl'l 304 | Jo did not make eases, and in he $ice of Oregon territory, and who was noted | 0,000, 1t was a lotter from Culeb Cushing, | thought a compromise would be to the ad- | T % IR as Rev. Sherman Coolidge, 50 slender that it is said 88 lawyer, but who, from his extravagant: | dated Washington, 1561, und it was ad- | Vi AR Slion AR T s L i e L ) 4 AIAG | nglo i S o | eharged sma ces, and cas A few 20 the mo: oted revivalist 8quipage, which he drove about Washington | dressed to Jeflorson Davis, president of the | i ™ v e i cited, for the writing | in'the United Stites was Flaviug. Littlejohn. Confederato States of America. 1t was a b the cxponse of the government, was | COnfo Sta ng 1t of a brief for an jmportant case Hedied the_other day in the poorhouse at dubbed “Landaulet” Williams, lottor of introduction, and read somewhat a8 | Yaping to Defiance county, he charged only | Paw Paw, Mich. Littlojohn was, in his 50 where other law would h g vrime, one of the most effective of orators, us boncst men. Nevértheless, after Hout- | justice pussed upon these motions alone, and | Lob With the Welch, Troshyt Methodists, | teaching of youne girls. These cl long and_weighs one 5,200 pupils, six months old. In Winnipeg, Manitoba, an Teelandic Luth- | Put up the money, o ko vlg, 1. The | _An Arapahoe Indian of full blood, now tak- | An infant, one weck dent for nearly two years, he students are seriously considering the step r by the students of Union college in forcing jection lay in the extraordinary beauty of | President of the Confederate States of Sy Awe Waita: T wi Bk wito, “bire. Ritormoy-Canera Wilkums | Ansamion-yty ooy s (oaorate, Biates of | iboting with Judgo Waite: 1w o was by all odds the greatest beau to you Mr.'Archichibald Roone, who has | mnida g reputation. ' Thad @ case o tr 215 communicants; in 1867, tho. Washington ludica of that day long been a clerk in the department of jus- | \wiieh ho was counsel A1 anoRite in 1587, over 1,900 There are 120 preaching only rival was Madame Catacazy, the wife of | tico at Washington and who is anxious to | and 1 went into th N e h places, and the congregations emb and the bodies uni the Russian minister, who is considercd ono | ik his fortuncs with yours, Ho has ro- | {rambling - We took. the: testimony i o Bf the most beautiful women in the world, | cently patented a valuable gun, which I have T T T AT R TR P T Mrs. Williams was tall, well-formed a no doubt you can use to advautage, and I | mitted it to the judge. Then Mr. Waite | 8568 ful. She had o beautiful, rosy fuce, | commend him to you. CALEBCUSHING. 1 ggked me to goand take lunch with him. Thirty-four people wero confirmed by k-brown hair and blue eyes, She wa After the reading of this letter a silence " Bishop Paret at the Protestant Episcopil #ccomplished conversutionalist, and her so- | fell upon the caucus, which was only broken | accepted the invitation, ~ During the lunch [ Fgeoh bret at b aslant Episcopal 'bégomrt\\'r‘m such “‘f" she \\;l?)\'u\‘ll'tl at the instance of Parson Brownlow, who, \\;:;'f"ll"ldl me ‘:'”l ht"“tlulnlwm LHn-“m:x.rl ] and hated by the wives of many of the sen- [ then il and unable to talk, got Senator | could just as well gettle the case as the | A mg their or was o single | culture at the Massachusetts agriculty ) i Lo ators. Sho had somewhat the same record | Lewis to make a motion for him, and this | judee, and asked me if I was willing that he | o il GHARR. hely ,,“"f‘:!"",“’“‘,“l:j“;:\’\‘vf(‘,. college, has resigned his position there, ang l‘;“'!m.\”(“m‘_’;‘ therefor of Prof.’ Agassiz, has for eight years sup A. Jackson, The former is fifty-three years s o old and the father of the latter, who is twen Ry A0 I 4 A ty-three years old, and both expect to grad uate in dun the wife of Andrew Jackson, in that her | motion was: *“That this caucus of repubti- | Should fix the terms of settlement. T re EEDrlat s Ghvrah n ek netan: will probably accept the presidency of the [ genoF S VO, 0L, BIE t husband was a brute, and in that her | can senators now adjourn, and that the sen- | that that was rather a str > method of Maryluna cultural college and experi divorce was se d by the aid of Williams, | ate be convened n open session that it may who afterward married her. The wives of | remove the political disabilities of Cal know the te the senators could not bear to think of the | Cushing, of Massachusetts. That's all.” | plain statement of the justice of the case, | funcrals and in the church on Easter da Prof. Pense, instructor of in at Bow- | prisoncd in a snow drift uated, @s it would if her husband became | caucus adjourned. Grant, on hearing of the the same as mine. Idon't be- | undoubtedly been overdone. ~But it is hard f justico of the United States for life. | action, made no further movement in hey “quictly talked the matter over to- | of Cushing, and wheu Waite's name was | dishonest client, and eldom charged or, and it was their mfluence with their | proposed some time later he received every | large fees AN ANEN W Nod 8 X ushands that brought about the adverse | vote cast and was unanimously confirmed. | and a son, who is a lawyer there. much as a green grocer; ul enough to warrant beginning the work at | efforts to free himself. Wote which secured Williams’ rejection. His nomination was discussed only an hour, | The chief justice does not leave a large | A Jittle time ago, says the Toronto Globe, | “"C% President Graut became very angry at the | and during this time speeches were made by | estate. Representative Hill estimates that | we gave under tho heading *A Busy Clergy. n of the senute and he asked a number | Sumner, Thurman, Edmunds and Sherman. | he may have been worth £200,000, and his | man the name of the ey, Dr, Maor the senators whom he knew had voted Chief-Justice Waite was a man of strong | house here is worth at least £0,000. He paid | had made between 950 and 1,000 visits nst Williams as to their reason, They | friendships, and Judge Edgerton, of the | £4,000 for it, but it has doubled in value, and | 1ig congregation in one year, Now we loarn led that Williams was not a great enough | civil service commission, was the friend of | the ground upon which it is built is worth be- | hiat the Itov. 4. W. Totton. of the Methodist wyer. Grant said nothing, but he aston- | his lifetime. He dined with him regularly | tween three and four dollars a square foot ShE ITanidmt Ao G the republican wembers of the senate | every Sunday since taking his place ‘on the [ The chief justice has not been an extrava- | Drosont charge beaten that record by about mhflny by sending in the name of Caleb | civil service commission, ~He met Chief- | gant man iu his living,though of recent years | %50 Waking nearly 1,300: visits in the one has been organized as a branch of . Harlan Hallard of Lenox, Mass, i stout picce ol tyine itional amendments relating to negro suf- | a young lawyer at Maumee City, a little | of social traits, and he was punctilious in his e, and the radical republican members of | town just out of Toledo, and Edgerton was | sociul observances. He appeared regularly senate considered it very important thut | in charge of the interests of the Hicks land | at the White House receptions, and, though The five Methodist churches giving the highost Contribution to theamiilions fog mis, | Juniors, 24; sophomores, 40: freshmcen, 7 bed and did not leave it would be in accord with the most pronounced Ve n_ Ohio. Edgerton then received a riendly smile for those he talked to. He was 3 P D rapid progress. Prof, J. R. Smith is making | One day he fell asleep We of tha republican party as to these, | salary of 81,000 a yoar, and Waite's facs were ssuming and approachable, and he was a i : . Ne ' R Cllant it ADlclaniatasste i T8 BBEOR | 4100 Qiy 40 SEL, ARARI A were opposed to the selection of any | small and not nwwnerous. Judge Edgerton | man who attracted the attention of strangers , 2 3 #l, 8 illustrative of ancient life and maunners, | out of it since. He slecps soundly all day ow York, #1051, This ning sits op : gain gocs 10 sleep. zht is the name of a very young 1,200,000, American counsul at Birmingham, after four arrived which will result in the department of arch- | and about 9:30 1n the e whose party fidelity wus | describes the trip the two took together in | wherever he appeared. Straight, broad- wology being added to the curriculum. a little nourishment and tionable, and they were astonished | 1841, and he says: I had just been | shouldered and stout, with a big the presentation ~ of the name of | married, and my wife was at Hicks- | chest, he was rather under than over b Cushing. Cushing had been a whig | ville, town twenty-eight miles from | mediim height. His big, dark, iron- [ Y ber of congress iu_1841, and he had, as | Defiance. I met Waite at Deflance, and I | gray head was fastened firmly to his Brownlow said at this time, gone | proposed to him that we come over to Hicks- | shoulders by a rather short neck, and his to Tyler and been paid for doing 8o by | vile and spend Sunday with me and call | dark complexioned, grave face had a thick nother musical prodigy has been made commissioner to China, and he | upon the bride. We started on horseback, | growth of wiry dark beard, mixed with | covered in pe. Heisa German named 1 thank, the first treaty botween | but a cold rain storm came up and we wero | gray, about its lower part. His eyes were | Otto Hegner, and is about eleven years of ; on e gotabry aud the United States. He had | drenched to the skin. We stopped at i cabin | large, black and full of feeling and thought. | age. London musicians say that Hegneris in | competition was onen to boys under nineteen, | {adiaus, who in President Picrce's cabinot as attor- | to remain over night. 1t was o little affair [ His forehead was broad und its eyebrows | some wayvs surperior to Joseph Hofman. | of all mations. The examination of young | Bill con al when Jefterson Davis was secre- | of oue room and an attic. The pioneer’s | well marked. He dressed plainly in conven- | Hans Hubar, the composer, has charge of the of war, and he had introduced Williaw | wife hung up a blanket before the fireplace, | tional black clothes, wore ‘a double-breasted | musical education of the prodig: ‘ancey, of Alabama, at a meetiug at | and behind this the future. chief justice and | frock coat and a tall hat. He sometimes | cent recital in London Hoguer played a , #nd, had indorsed a’state rights | myself stripped and dried our clothes. We | rode to and from the capitol in a street car, | sonata by Beethoven, @ fugue by Bach which Yancey had made there iu | slept in the attic, and in the morning, upon | and nevertheless he fully appreciated the On this ground mapy of the repub- | pulling on my stockigs, 1 found a hole | honor of his position and the respect that [ tion from Chapiu and Tausig’s **Arabesques. represents the average per member for each of the seven collections during tk The entire amount raised was over Gordon Taylor Hughes, of Ohio, son of the Mornin —— days of severe competitive examination in a ducted while he was confined to bed by ill- | subject deewed his nomination and appoint- | through which my big toe thrust itself. I | should be accorded the bench. Whispering | It is evident that Heguer Otto' make a sue- The University of Califoruia. celebrated | bristivs or lml'g :l-l:-‘:l‘t:‘\‘dn)l;‘-:’l‘xn':!uljlwul t inadvisable, and no oue supposed he ! pulled off the stocking and turned it wrong | in the court room among the visitors always:| cess as a nine days’ wonder, ome-tifth of a centenpial,” This is the twen- | appedrance. NN N . Some of the senators | side out and put it on the same foot. Again , and he would not, permit it to ATIONAL. % i F > THE LATE CHIE}"JUSTICE remonstrated with Urn;:ll H‘u replied that | the toe came through the hole, and Waite, | go on long without notice. With him at its L hzhlv(‘(‘lr:fuu‘l[:[::-:—”"ml"lm"' " | he 5 said: “Why | head the subreme court, has been the most | mue council of the University of Cam- | Whic! founded n the s; ignifie d t in | bridge has reported against giving degre government helped Cornell I | his trying of cascs. lawyers tell me he paid | wites e mously superior bounty. accomplished at Berkeley e Sumner made an ardent specch in his favor, | Peixotto, who painted the r rtrait tho e - Barly Oarece: 2x-Reépros E % % & Rl S PRI R e ERiat New > purpose of purchasing a base ball ground A LARITIES, His Early Carcer, and Ex-Reépr and Ben Butler assured the senators that | Judge Waite for the Ohio Society RELIGIOUS, S B0t B groun black as that of a They et that and ively, of Cise have utly become thedarents of a fine boy. vard, of Delawi 3 e | o ourt, Thoe chief | ine stations in England and Wales in connee- | Mlle. Elsie Sequin has orgamizod in Lyons | n'The smallest dog in Cloucester Bayard, of Delaware, Whom he regirded | tions then submitted to the court. The chief | Ik stations in Enland and Wales i e S O e AR well, Conkling and Sumner had vouched for | many of them required much looking up ommal with groat. succoss: having had alvondyfover | Ounces. Ho isan Italiun groyhound and i a8 a pig that s hair el ST for the | They want £0,000 for the purpose. Al are cring the head and n Excepting this in favor of th cheme, but no one wants to | and a short and bushy tail the rest of the an- iy me Wante was honest in size of the building is 42'by 65 feet, and cost | ing a post-graduate course at Hobart college, | only two and a half pounds, ' is the practice and in his dealing with his £1,000, and l,,“,j_"m,. is Rey. John Bjarna- | i8a regularly ordained clergyr attraction at Carrollton, son. There are said to be 2,000 Icelanders | Protestant Episcopal chureh. He is known | healthy and perfecily formed. = Its arms are uveraged sized Troy Polytechnic has been without a presi- | Ying will casily encirele them. d four thieir trustees to elect one miles and captured them all Willlams was vojected, and theseorct of | wasiNarox, 1861.—Hon. Jefforson Davis, | §1,000. Mr. Hill doscriben to mo. his fitst | hnd was & warm friend of John 15, Gone Mrs. Quiney A, Shaw of Boston, daughter | jieer could hardly stand on the iceand - soon ] ] olin B. ccame thoroughly exhauste In the Nestorian Mission in 187 e N e A A small trout with two heads ha quarters of Boston and Cambridge at a per vered recently in the fish hatche sonal expense of as much as §50,000 a year, | Mich, The heads are cach p souls. There are 40 ordaine ) 5 Two of the members of the nor class at | jivtie fellow is escribec 00] 5 theological students, 77 elder Hillsdale, Mich., are C.* H. Jackson and G, | Die felk k‘)““”‘.{w ‘.'M".;“,,L,k;‘“v‘f B Thhe oldest man in - Germ: bly in the world, is named 4 Y i lives in the village of Hutta, near Gne Sunday last v walked up to the Major Henry E. Alvord, professor the Province of Posen, still shows no procedure, and that I wi like first to Bishop Whitehead (Episcopar) of Pitts- | yient station, to which he bas been elected, The following canine story comes from the ms. Judge Waite then made a | burg, Penn., deprecates the use of flowers at east: At Brooklyn a do, t had been im- hree days was leaning againsy A crushung him favor ve that he ever advocated the cause of a v as bad in this country as it is in the Eng. 8, 0 § the aid of all the professors | and also afforded him a small space in which lish churches on harvest: home festivals, in Latin in p paring a series of text books on | to move around. The animal He has some property in Toledo, | when many churches resemble nothing so | that language. His visits have been success- | his paws a tunnel ten fee s, Willig ving perpet- | There is motion and the | and T found that his idea as to a settlement | The use of flowers in church on Easter has | doin college, hus recently made a tour of wll | dug out, still alive. A boal Social relgn of Mrs. Williams being perpet- | There was a laughat this motion and the | and TR v Xhe o g Coverdons. But it s hard. | the colleges'of Sugland and the Middle | a post had kept the snow from had dug with 0 Jucksonville, Fla. He had evide ussiz association, which was founded tired of life and had tied around his neck a 3 to other end of S0ImMe Vears ago. The society meets once in which a picee of coal was seeure two weeks, and is in a flourishing condition. | ye squirrel then climbed @ tel Such_student organizutions deserve 10 be | 4ud getting the piece of coal on one side of @ heartily encouraged, telegraph wire, threw itself over on th ing as chief justice of the United States. | Justice Waite when he went to Ohio as aland | he has spent considerable in traveling, both | vedr." Mr. Totton has nade 760 visits in six The catalogue of Ohio state university | side. When discovered the animal was dead. fPhis was just after the passage of the consti- | agent, about fifty ) ago. Waite was then | for himself and his family. He was a man | mon(us. gives the number of students in attend In 1877 Herman Harne: as follows: Post graduate, 1; scniors, 203 | Winona, Mian., became ve reparatory students, 192; total, soundly most of the time. # chief justice should be appointed who | company, which owned a great part of Novth. rified, he was not pompous, and he had o i P departments of the college have made | and worked on his farm four or fiv dis ass of fifty-two, was awarded a Cambridge n bora on the voyage across from scholarship, valued at $2,000, one of the | France on the steamer Burgogne. greatest prizes in English school life. The | ents are full-blooded Spirlt mbe 2 was born under who is only . was con: | Fregeh flag, France -may ness, and he was compelled to dictate his | A curious creatyre was auswers to a stenographer, T'his is thie first | Pragcisco by a ship which Webber's *“Invitation to the Waltz,’ sle instance of au Awerican winuing an English | other day. It has some .chi scholarship. crocodile; but is covered with a coat of short ived there the acteristics. of a The | cortain extent and will permit the captai ar, but the | their caresses with evident. plesuro, but if & With an_euor- | stranger approaches it distends its big jows o California has and shows fight, “The erow call it *woolly The foundution | forty pounds, ¢ MM welhs abous splendid educs S structure, and under the new preside od soon, there 501 L0 expect the promise of the pri Some wood cutters in the forest of Dromm ling made a strange discover ¢ beg tofell a venerable ouk, which they soon found to be quite hollow. Being half de- ayed, it soon came to the ground with a crash, .h* skeleton in excellent pres- ervation;'®en the boots, which came abovo the knces, were perfect.” By his side were @ long with horns | Powder horn, a porcelain pipe bowl and a Tt will be | 8ilver watch. The tecth w fect, 1t n- would secm to be the skele: tween thirty and forty yo 1 of | conjectured that while éngaged in' bunting he climbed the tree for somo purpose and slipped into the hollow trunk, from which there was no release, and he probably died of starvation. JEWELY. still boing called for in largo quantities, Floral designs will be the correct thing in jewelry during the summer months, Attractive u wment is a blazing sun of half pearls with a diamond center. In Paris the snowibell design has been in- woduced in jewelry With marked favor, Silver hair-pins and combs, with various fancy designs applicd, are very fashionable at present. A pretty brooch is iy the shape of a golden Cupid, perched on u jeweled branch of pearls and diamonds. A pretty scarf-pin is in the form of a tiny gold cow, With o bell set with rubies suse pended from her neck. cw riding erops and whips have embossed. silver handles in high relief, with arabesqua and floral figurcs, by latest garter-buckles have as orna- ments four tiny enameled pansics, set with sapphires und rub Butterfly brooches, made of transparent enumel, and having the body and head studded with diamonds, are still popular. Odd lace-pins have antiquo silver heads, and are so arranged that the front can be re- versed und the back used in its place, Silver mutch boxes, made flat enough to ba carried in the vest pocket, are in great des mand, because of their convenience, Populur bracelets in Paris at present are of the cable-twist pattern, bright silver alters nuting with black enamel in the twisting. A double English violet, set in_a crescent of diwwonds, und baving o small diamond pendant, simulating a dew-drop, 18 an oddity in lace pins, A cluster of three pea flowers, set on @ long stem of entwined green gold, which s tied on the end with a gold thread, makes & handsome brooch. A fashionable bracelet is composed of fiva silver wire strands, held together by a band, upon which is mounted & fuucy coin mono= eram, An 0dd, but pretty idea for a brooch is & reproduction of a medixval gurgoyle, in the form of a lion's head, from which issues & stream of diamonds, avom Fuads 40y muradoadde ud Q0u[ B S0} Jua| 40A0[D PO ¥ PRI O5[8 S| YDA 0} ‘L1038 PloA B U0 405 PUE POIOIUA PUOIEID UIOSKOIq 40AO[D DPO[OUIBUD Do V7 The lutest cuchre indicator is made of 0xie dized silver, in the shape of 4 card, with tha design of a” bird house etched upon it. In the center are three narrow bands of silie ribbon, two of them having tiny silver fig= urcs attached, and the other the suits. Tha tirst two indicate the number of poiuts and the latter shows the trumps e Itis stated that Adam Forepaugh is to crect a building in Philadelphia to be fashs ioned after the Paris hppodrome, on Broad and Daupnin streets, and 1o cosf 0, 1t is said that several prominent “New York Bulls and Hears” will be included in the curiosities. e D. R. Woodall, Pisgah, Ala., wr My wife suffered from Bronchitis for. over thre earsbefore she commenc using Dr H, McLean’s Tar Lung Balm, which hus, 1am happy 0 say, effceted a complete coreg