ma?er' ill cr ,-,.---" -iF j 1 - truAtt iim fiwsrynw-y 5L rfV v- w msre" xr norm state the in for niinu I.T'" I 'The Rj?' Before yon leave the city, and 'consider the great opportunity now offered at i iiih dti limfi run tin a rt ffg RED CLOTJB, NEBRASKA, Where Goods are Being Sold at Hard-pan Prices. That old adage, "Time is Money" will not do at this stage of the world, as MARSH will and can sell you More Goods for a Dollar SPOT CASH ! Than, any Store in Red Cloud, or elsewhere, can POSSIBLY DO when selling on space Recollect That these are not Mere Idle Words BTJTS TANCH FOTS I ioms Everybody, , crowd that daily Store In pursvit cf Bargains I Vjc- - - - y lleSeilBS, BfcD OLOilO, NEB.; . -. si& A. IT. BROWjY, ritoi'imrroic. W1JI be Opened for Business on or about RSaya9 1834 "Will te ilrst-class in every particular. OFFICE AND YAKD.0oposite Watson's livery stable. Reel Cloud N-3b. Lock box, 3 22 L V' . .'1 - ' a.css i forjnfant:G "CastovJa-ssow.:indaptf2tochnJrcnlh:,t Irtvor:i:!KT:.i;tassiijoriurton::j-iiri;v.TJHtioa known to i-:c.' U. a. Ascnsii. ?:. D.I 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, 2f. Y. rc-svy,,;--;- rj An nl-nlnff firm 4V... T??.,n...v.n.:,.. o t. MS ri v. . i,uui4iiit.inii(, oitr.iin.s, a tm m m- i l-J .1.1 "T"fc 1- - . wie J3acK, Aiurns, Ualls, relieving and Healing Remedy. JWMTi ''Acme"FuSvariz8r John Boesch, V.4 T ! jTv 'J -CS fJ &C-0;:Si:::5:- fin ff " iff auji Itiua -:o: Come cri'lh tlii thrcngSIflarsIi's D. C. MEYER, roKK.MAX. - and Children, Castorln euros Colic. ContfipMion. I Soi:r Sioinai-h. Iiarrhun, KniLtuhmi, I ,I''! w"n"s K- slcvp, and promotes dJ- Wiihout'iujurious medication. &c. An Instantaneous Pain- &.i.T!nCrJ-.ArZJnWJ9m- 'S5T 7- llll 111 I" II 'I JIMJI. Hhw nirt-ly Totvs :oc :i -jtnnrr coiiit'itip.'ate :i iH-wly linmmiMl Jielil uiin .i:Nf:u'tiiiu.' Hi ualkNuwi it ami iv.s hi'i ai:tl tlvrv st-(.( u: -i"mTfl; here a furniw xlict- iiiitniii Jicil ln-cau- c tlioair.ux' was not miilc Iicl, ami lliure :i liiiiiihof htublili- (Irann into a heap Iiatin ilniL'pMl tin -oil anil vrd before it for -;iriN ll' Mi.ikt-s hi hwnl v.uily ami wislu-s there i, : jiarnm- tli.it wo-ilil uo tlie work iK-rfntlv- leu-' Ui-A tin- ronli jdai ; invakins tip tin- tfoils. an. not only imlti'riziii!; tin- soil. Imt tunilng it ot-tliose;-ilsci.ilsot;Uf this is all iiitcml to ar lui-n iloptlj ami without waslr. Jtut the f:im ci V'.,,,'M;tV'.''i"AV"";" nl-,ri'lS Harrow, cin rni.horam! Il-vWit li.xs none or tlm.sailiicss am .lisapiM.nti:il-nt. for his tit-hls an- I-i" ,.! .rl. 1. i!l Plow c.l Kronii(I.M Hviallyni-eilst hf- '" "'" :"11 S!.-...r ,v,., -Is , w . pmhI piiltnatorm.til the roni Is alwc twelve Amboy, Neb. Diamonds for Drill;. i siit. The "Diamnnfis aro co!i)):ir.iivp!y olioap nowadays,"' a rook ih'll luaHufactiiror au. "and the !i:unosid bit scth utd in tlic diamond drills do not cost as much as they did." "Are genuim1 diamonds u.-cd in those drills, or are the clnttlttl diamond drills because the tet 1 has an pt;vnielv hard temper?" the reporter asked. Diamonds are used in the drills. They arc chiolly one and two caret stones. At present they cost about j twenty dollars a caret. They are in tho rough". The diamond-.set bit is hollow, j It is n steel thimble, htivimj three rows of diamonds embedded in it, mi that the " edges of those in one row project from its face, while the edges of tho-e in the , other two rows project from the inner periphery respectively. The diamonds of the first mentioned row cut the path of the drill in its forward progress, while tliosn of the outer aud inner periphery of tho tool enlarge the cavity." "liow are the diamonds set In the bit?" "The bit is of soft steel, in which holes aro drilled. After the diamonds are fitted the- metal is hammered airainst them so that they remain lirm." "Do the diamonds wear out," "Their edges which come in contact with tho rock get a little smooth, and they are taken out and reset, so that a fresh edge is presented." "Have all tho hollow drills three rows of diamonds?" "No. Some have only one row, but these are not very large. The diamond .stand out from the slcel ,.;,; jir. so that the tcel docs not come- in contact with the rook." "How are the diamond drills worked?" . "IJy a rapid rotation varying any where from four hundred to otic thous and revolutions a minute. There are different machines iw-1 for ihitVrcnt kinds of drilling. For deep boring a a machine with a double oscillating cyl inder engine i used, nvunted on an up- i right or horizontal tubular boiler The j machine has a- .screw sha.'t made t heavy hydraulic tubing from live to secn feet in length, with a deep screw ' cut in the outside. The sh- ft :i;s. car rion a spline, by which it is feat! e:vd to the lower sleeve gear. Tin's gear is double, and connects by il upper teeth with a beveled driving gear, and by its lower teeth with :v release ':tr, which i is a Inetion jrear. anil is and is fitted to the lower end of tho shaft, to the ton of which a "var is feathered, tittin- i . to the upper gear on the screw shaft, which has one or more teetti less that the upper gear on the feed shaft, whore by a differential feed is produced. Tlii. friction gear is attached to the button of the feed shaft by a friction nut. pro- ducinir a comomeil uiilerenlial ami mc tionaffeed. which renders tho drill nor- fcctlvsensitivoto the character of tho i worK throng:. wMc'i it i tms-insr. and maintaining a imifonn pr. -.,.:. Tho1 drill rod. made of heavv hm-wohl tn'.i- ! r . .1 i. .i ..." i...r. ii lllr Illlsses llllllll.rii i ii.. M-n-iv .11:111 Illlll I is held linn by the .screw shaft chuck at the bottom of end of thistu! nlarboiiiiirroiltheb:: i- screwed. and to the upper end is a w.iteh swivel. to which connection is made with a steam pump. You can -e !;, this that the machine is ven simple and not likely to get out of order." The reporter fell into a chair. When he came to, the drill man was aii:ir: "The setvw shaft, l.o:n:r rotated and fed forward, rotates the d ill rod and bit. cutting an annular clumncl - " "Where do you get the d.auiowN for the bits?" the reporter a-ked in desper ation. "They como yrinci pally from Iira.tl. Some come from Siberia and some from the South of Africa: the latter, how ever, are more glassy and are not so touojli as the l?ra.ilian diamonds, and nro much more pressti re. " X. The Exriuthm likrlv to V. Sim. crujh under of the office. Kairlish lV.st- James I established th" lifst post olliec in England, but only for foreign mails. His son. Charles, however, ex tended the systef.! and started the lirt domestic line, but his object was not mi much to accommodate his subjects as to inaugurate a profitable monopoly, against which, by the way. tin House of Commons, fought most lustily, nicy were, however, a few years sulvquont ly the foremost in putting do n an at tempted opposition post started by the municipal authorities of Loudon. In the latter part of tins century (about 1690) a district post was estab lished in London as a .separate depart ment, and put under the control of one Dockwra. who seems to have hail an eye to the main chance, for wo find in a few years a memorial prosenled:ig..inst him. which ulmrges that he willfuilv "dot., what in him lies to lessen Use revenue of the district post-ofiice that he ma farm it or get it into his own hands," for which purpose it was alleged that he had removed the post-ollicc to an ineonvieni place. Fancy tho postmaster of (.:h:c.T. which is about the size London wa- tbei removing the post-oflice to some out o the way corner, and, as the nieinoria goes on to say, "forbidding the taking it of any band boes(ecept cr sal!)and all parcels above a pound, and -toppin" . undorspceious pretences most parce.s t' at are taken in. which i great dainag to tradesmen by losing their customer or spoiling their goods, and many time' hazard the life of the patient whe: phvsic is sent by the doctor or apothe can." It is gratifying to know t:iat further danger to the uul.iippi patient whose physic was thus delay- I was re moved b'the summary dismissal oi the ambitious post m..ster. At the time of Mr. Dnckwra's esca pades the Post-oflice Department was it. the hands of two Postmasters General. Sir Robert Cotton and SirTmi Frank land, whose practical wisdom and eue.-g. is manifest in all their doings. We find them at one moment petition ing the lords of the treasury to reduce the postage, on the ground that "where we have made the correspondence more easier and eheape, the number of letters has thereby been much in creased;" at another we see them or dering their packets to beware of the numerous privateers, and urging them to nm while they can, light when they cau no longer run, ai.'d throw the mails overboard when tli cm no luis-a pture by a French pnvatoor of aMiailboat in the very bay ot D.iiil u jndci'd our I'otniastor (J ?: ":A tv i!ri "boats of force to uiii.stand ilift fiioinv." after which uiii.stand ihiji riieiny," tluiy were n.' at case, flitlin'rsuiruMfiu- at oasc one of them e to iudulire in an occasional Kh f the gout, as appears from fivquenjiiotices in the Agent's Letter Book to this effect: "Your business canift( be settled until Sir Thomas Fraulftc nl. who hath a litte of tliejrout. shall fcc 'oraewkat recovered." 'i'Jicir 5iirve-ir T special acnt iuado r ' a early i?it tn ich postmaster in the Kingdom. AtM jterstiold ho "found the postmasteiw---unhappy in his cir uiinistances thalrj cannot appear but on Sundays." ijg vhich he means that the worthy olliagr was liable to arrest for debt if he cdftt out of doors on a I week dav At Iwhcstcr he "found the deputy very unlfcv in his mind. Ho charged the clarke with being frequent ly out anil kcepiv company thought to be m.ire xpensiyt than the wages al lowed him." Ifcl complains that tho jrentrv "doe irlve mucu money to the riders, whoreSr to get in liquor;! male.,." All th3 .prove him to havcSd hey be very subject winch stopes the surveyor's letters sen as zealous for principals, whoso the .service as his deputies, especia in the foreign sometime very packet service, 1 curious coiiftignm nts to test their imciiiv ami inren r. It is not to be supposed, for inM ?, that they wero aoie to put into fct .i teen couple of& c mail bap: tii- hounds sroinj: to the Kinir ia the Romans " csjecially as that s:iM mail took "two servant maids goingJM laundresses to my Lord Ambassador Mcthnen;'- nor is it likely that "Docjbl Crichton, carrj--ing with him acowastl divers other nec essaries" (even thouifc1. ic and his cow were post-olliee consiaa nent), was com pelled to goalonr wioK'adeal case con taining four flitches oft&tcon." Hut the most myteflc is item of all contained in these nldWst-ollicc records is "two bales of stocking for the use of the Ambassador of thitfl rown of Tor tugal." What mysterg 3 here? For, suppose the worthy dipto natc, with all his family, to have ch.lli ed their hoso thrice daily, the two Itifes would have still lasteda half a scntsfci ion. It is not to be supposed that he liM imbibed East ern habits and custom!i and had in augurated a seraglio in tr.en is the solution? 1 idon. What r it is des- lined to be an historic:' pared to which the iden fnystery, com- of Junius or M'f the man in the iron in arc clear as translucent crwtal. I Up to the car 178-1 thK privilege of franking was allowed to all members of t Rirliamont and to oi'.ieialiTd.'partnients, i and it had by that time gfw'n to be a . great ai)r.s. Members wib in the habit I of distrihuiiii"; ast quauiMe3of f ranks aiiMair their friends, ami fol nrovidinsr ' their servants wit.'i them ikttuch nura- bers that these latter drov flourishing trade in them. But in thiyaar severe restrictions were imposed apt continued till the abolition of Irankinr'L" 1840. lTn In lS, i,.ui- 17s! 1 t!i..I?i oar 1781 t'leTiails were -!' " i carneil on horsehaclc. I .sr; were now Iratiafcricd to tin- uiueh fasflr otissenger coaches, whose time eontinte to mi jrove with the improvement of roads and appliances till the nwiziniim of about ten miles an hour, iuojading stop pages. y;u reached carh injth-: present century. I5ut even this wotild not do, so in 18:0 the first mail wascarried on t!ie railway from Liverpool to Man chester. " 0 In 17HJ the first money nrcfor business was dono.but the business neVerr-ttained great proportion t:I! lsio.wfcen thcGov ernmental charge, were veryjnt.ch di minished. The saving laulc vas es tablished in ISlil. Tlie te!ep,.h sys tem of the country was takeJiT 'cr by tlse (loverninent in 1870,Tjh'lo tho " .. -" "parcj'N i)ost, strange to say, uid not Lid come into being until AugusCVlv of tho prescn t year. Cor. Xittional RepiZpcz,. Triimniiig an Klcphant's Fct, ' Yesterday Prof. George Arstingstall and four assistants were occupied all da in trimming tiie feet of two elephants-. The operation is performed t!tle times a ear once on the road, once in the fall and again in the spring. The sole of an elephant's foot is heavily covered with a thick horny substance of material similar to the three toe-nails upon each loot, anu as it grows thicker and thicker it tends to contract and crack, oftee laming the animal. When the work of trimming is undertaken, the elephant stands upon three legs and places the foot to be operated upon across a big tub. Two men hold the leg down and one stands at the animal's head to prevent him from turning. Then Trof. Arstingstnll. with a two-foot draw ing knife, proceeds to shave ofT great pieces of bono from the sole of the foot. Shavings of bone si inches by four and a quarter of an inch thick arc rapidly cut. the edges of the foot being care fully trimmed. Olten pieces of glass, wire, nails, etc.. arc found imbedded in the foot, which have been picked up during street parades. Sometimes these irritating mor-els work into tho leg and produce a festering sore. A large nail was found yesterday in Pal las'1 foot imbedded over three inches from the bottom. Prof. Arstingstall extracted it uilhasmall pair of pin cers, then syringed the wound with warm water, and subsequently covered it with tar. Tho Professor, when hur ried on the road, sometimes draws out !i n- i . : i V P1 a rently stifierod great pain, but teemed to know that the operation would P iit.-tl3- died relief. He held the foot high and on of his- own accord until nil was finished. then flourished his trunk, trumpeted, and expressed almost in words his sin cere thanks. After-paring the foot, each toe-nail is cut between and then tiled down, giving each foot a white, clean look with its settings of polished nails. It takes about six hours to finish dressing an ele phant's feet, and it is said to be one of tho hardest bit, of work that the men have to do. While busy making the chips Jly, Prof. Arstingstall said: "'Did you know that three times around np elephant's front hoof is his c.a height?" "No. Is that so?" "Y and to prove it, look here." Then53' proceeded to measure the front fo?l,e the brute, and three times its circuit ot" ence was fonnd. bymountino- a lanfcr" to be the exact height of theanirojlacr' Bridgeport (Conn.) Cor. X 2ih UcrjiHir, JmlaKcn fixht. .r i "ladr." Our old English Hlaford, as cxprcss- mir a rank or relation rather tlian strictly an office, has, unlike the King , -i and the Earl, a feminine. Without raisin": anv minute philological oucs- tions, Hlwfdidge is practically the femi- inine of Hlaford. And it abides so still; the softened form of lady is still, in grammar at least if not in usage, the feminine of Lord and of Lord onTv. Rut the practical use of the name has been very shifting. In early times the Lady had rather a tendency to soar higher than the Lord; in later times she has rather had a tendency to sink beneath him. When queen-ship, so to speak, was abolished among the West Saxons, the King's wife became the lady. Tho title was therefore lower than that of Queen, but it was so high that, with the single exception of JEthel'laal Lady of the Mercians, it was never given to any but the wives of Kings. The wife of the reijrnniir King w "the Ladv;" she' whom we should now call a Queen Dowager was then known by the home lier style of "the Old Lady." Sos has been already noticed," ladv WjU down into the eighteenth century true. Kurdish stvlo for the daughters and the nieces of a King. InN the peerage Lord and Laity exactly an swer to one a nother. If in ono case they do not seem to do if the daugh ters of an Earl aro called Lady while their younger brothers rc not called Lord, it is because, all daughters rank with their elder brother and not with their younger. Lady, like Lord, is used agilely for all ranks, of tbe peerage under Duke, and in a t-peciflfway for its lower rank. It is when wo get below the peerage that the laxcr uso of tho word begins. As Dominus parted oft into English Ird and French Sir, so Doniiua parted off into English Ladv anil French Dame. Lord and Lady, Sir and Dame, should in strictness go together. And so in formal style they do: the wife of Sir John is properly Dame Mary. It is doubtless by a bit of man's homage to woman that she is in common speech raised to the style of Lady, while her husband is never raised to the style of Lord. And those who report court ceromonies, who surely ought to "know their own fool ish business," jumWe together under the common head of "Ladies." the wives of Knights, the wives of Uaron. and the daughters of Dukes. Marquesses, and Earls. Dame Mury has no placo in such exalted company, and the other two classes of Ladies mav teach ns a losson in the difference between mcro Erecedence and substantial privilege, ady Mary A., the Duke or Earl's daughter, "goe before Lady B., tho Baron's wife. But let them be charged with treason or felony, and the Baron's wife can claim to be tried by the House of Lords, while the Earl's daughter must bo tried by a jury like any other woman. Lady, then, even as a title, has come down, in common uso at least, a step lower than Lord. And, when not used strictly as a title, it mourning garment, vwhi has sunk lower again. It has, perhaps, tho royal ermine u r not sunk quite so low as some words j whole squirrel linings (wit.. . r which in strictness translate it, certainly ( on gray grounds) ariowery not so low as Italian donna, perhaps-, sive. andare found i&T-sinipie e&i not unite o low as French dame. Still, I as low as taiitv-live dldars. unk-Jf to most minds Lady is tho feminine, not oi ljorti, oui in uuiuiuiuiiu. xu fii tleman's rightful companion, the gentle woman, seems to havo vanished alto gether. And some people seem, even on very formal occasions, to forget that 1 the Ladv is the rightful companion only of the lxird. When men were debating ns to the proposal to confer tho titlo of Emnress on our present sovereign a public meeting was hold in a great i .... English citv foe tho discussion of the question. Some proposed "Sover eign Lady of India" as a more becom ing title. " To this one speaker objected, lie was a, barrister, Joy calliigrJ' in cccl"ijT5r matters a aoalous churchman. Ho might therefore be ex pected to know botlf his law-books and his praver-book. Yet he opposed tho tvle of""Sovercign Lady" on the ground that, when there was a'King ho "would have to lie called "Sovereign Genth--man." Ilishearers. wiser than himself, shouted "Sovereign Lord." But the man of law remained unconvinced; "Sovereign Gentleman was the one masculine of "Sovereign Lady." and Sowreign Gentleman of India" was a title that would never do. K. A. Frcc m, in Longman's Magazine. A UniTcrsity Itomance. In tho great Swedish University at j Upsiila lived a young student, a line- looking fellow possessing great antittule and love for learning, but without the ' means of living while he wooed Dame Science. In ether words he was poor, and consequently had no influential friends ready to assist him. Neverthe less he studied hard, keeping up a light heart through alibis difficulties, and try . ing not to look too keenly into the future, which certainly did not "offer him a smil ing prospect. His gay humor and his good qualities had always made him a "favorite with his young companions. One day he was talking and joking with a few of them in the great Mpiarc of Upsiila. passing in this pleasant inter course a part of an unexpeeteu holiday. when the attention of the group was at- iniciou ny a young anu graceuu go i, who by the side ol an elderly lady was walking across the square. She was tho daughter of the Governor penerallv known as the possessor of a f";n,i nn( eltc disposition, which to- gethcr w th her boauty.JU. kf, 'In '", made her the oK ' t1 . smco "I i I - ". "j1 of especial mention and adniirntir jject ., in amonj the students 's ' ...- iVi'Jiicn stared at her passing ,.;',;i L. a beautiful vision, one of them j cried on. ..,..: ? i-:oa ...,. t.,,.i. t mouth : -u) jmciiMw iiwiuni.i,..-. would be worth a month in . ' . j pris-oi, On poor stnr- I . tudent. the nero oi tins ."-' .1.. ....I.,.. I ;n !. ..iintmiiiilnf ion of : "."pure and angelic face, answered im-' 'Vtuously, asif "by inspiration; "Well!, x think I can obtain one!" .ill ...! n...v..1?. o... n,-iunx.niil im-' " liati excianneti an jus uiumn m 'a breath. "Are you crazj-? Do you , know her?" ; "Not in the least," he replied; "but I j think she would kiss me on the spot ii I asked her!" Willingly?" 'Willingly." "Well! if she kisses you 33 you say. I will present you with a moiiaanu ; dollars." cried one. 'l "Audi." "And I, continued three or hrs. for uya iortwuiv wiaw several of tbc ncuest muuchw 'tkeiiartr, and. the betting soon i. ;... cn'ttimrolnblc an event .Jfcngc was proposed ami ac- .n less time than hkvc iu id t Otirtl.erb, although not anriroi iniUiRe,liacl rccotvctl fromhw; cprcnicli fl?lTll? r..;n-flL zr f n. most (listinen.f.i"'t; v-.s'oia j... - - . ,. . aiinvaiiPMS. and nor approaclwl liJII Mt ?'J4- V& fcV --. . .1 3outi"5alv saving. whtle he bor. ilccpKi -Mtin Frauleiu. my fortune , in vo hamLs." She looked f bm ire iiiti. -i.t. ..,:,), ...f hut slotPvi:. lit then wtb. on to tell' his ntme. his cou- Au;.m We muu;n mui knaliv cou- r...w... """'...---,....:. ?, fessctl win the 'unpliciiy oi uuw had pa4k between his companions himself. Theeli.,o. ladv listened attenti and wlicl ,c had ceased speaking. said wit!r-e:it jrcntlcness m the m of her Iil.:,.w -If liv- s small a fa! so much Itr.Hul ran - - w ..v.- -- - rcMiIt. it w- ' silly to nju-c a our rctpicst. m LismiI thrA ktiti- in-in nubhoK V- - r uih'ii siu:i Ihc next lay thestuuent v.a hv unler til lu tlovertuir. He w 'I o stv tht ., ...i.,. 1....1 wwtm-iv 'I l.tiovernor.- i. t-;.- 12 .n til ll'IIUI, 4" ISIS.". 'Y 1 I :m the man u ho ' lC . ivav. as we consented . : ; - ..ii ii . MS-". liv 7 i ir ii.. ...... . .! - h thestv afreran hi iness of an iiiv" , i niniiis:it liili C " iTiarmed wili him that tlic-'HrtiB1, '1 ifivitctl to l.li- l,i mcali ' "I lon?r jw he i in iine.1 at UpsUla. w .1.- 1 .,i- enllttlltud III jui ioiiii9nen(i "" f eUidiesj'withli MilorwhicbMHin -m" i.r . i i..iJi ., ,... ..t the m -- linn in mi ri'i'fim ii - fii. ' brilliant scln: ifrsif the unr.ei-sii. i lie hecame 0) t"wjr::n ncientist.s of Swii lor ins mgn uuvl-i " t . ins worK win live i -i u iuosi iircciou gi is or c.c t his happy uuiosl' sprang a Known in ?wctiin at p- wealth and positKn m tin cles are juitly ovisidercd their mental ami noral iw Fmkricka Bret Far-LIaed and v Fnr-lincd ganifc, its are uu'Il,, shapes, such a.s t' short , casaques, redingi s and t' I. mnn cloaks, and :ljf o in larg. i which remain thos'tandard X carriage andgenew! wear u and comfort are cojHidered novelty. The prcfVenc e in is'for those of solidjeolors, s brown-shailctl imiill Itmegs hanging at intervals, or y lining made of the-"jacl eouirrels, or of ta dow ileeco, or perhaps it golden brown sit I skins, or black Astral ha pelisses trimm'cd witltgiir-atse$f"j or eighty dollars, thoarh 7 inT'. stances the prices : arofc9a..ir just quoted. Firr. Led. Kin- OSflv -Jrv garment for the stl W 5 ? and bnc:i jaded satif in unique ilesigns y- stnall ligures. andj .A in cioaics wiin pit . i linings that hac inerelv ffinim:u"-s i f fur. For the earriago.f ir .reception and tor evening wear the e are .sit of magnilicentgold brociC ison groum of ottoman, or of ulu3hjfu.ori plush r - . we lueKeaitStja orown anaucs: some tfieso are "semveh Ing.-r than sta" mat nang low in ironi ami merei i ac the waist behind; t-ie are lined wj' t i i i. i -..r.i. .. i ,, jiu. ;iiiu 1H.UUI itu iii-iii ii in:i.t-(i. ri mourning are mam cauitTs-haii- i-lot and armure silk cloaks trimmed uitL tho line lersian lamo-skm. ami ither lined with it or with the hul Tav lining made of squirrel backs; M-jyk fox borders are aNo on similar cloaks. Tho high full eff'ct on tho shoulder s -Jk en, to new circulars by row of shin'ng 'ie- tween the neck and shoulders. Si'I ienne. treiuerlaino. me.ssine. and ot e repped silks and satin fabrics of various. names are used for circulars for general; wear.- IlarjHT's Hazar. s - A ew Biscincry. Ono of the mg-t valuable iscotnr;, recently made by practical miTi of ?-ei-enee is a mvans of lighting up the hu man body with electricity in .such a man ner that "the physician or surgeon can clearly see the field in which M is to operate. The advantage of such a dis covery cannot be overestimated, as it is a fact, admitted by the professiom gentlemen themselves, that they oft fail to reliee pain becauseof beingV polled to work in the dar;.: ami" treating an internal ailment the koly to injure as to benefit the with experimental prescriptions, the new apparatus, howeer. t'w longer nc.-d to grope in the da' 'f troubles of the ear. nose, mouti nn,i other organs can bes. ilh , that the operator can clearly minute jiatts". The adaptability! i electric light that is of the ineam . order is so nnramnt Ji.-.t ; ; a .. not ti,e discoverer of its valuab!.rv ertios -u? iV.-ui!SH' prop- ,. 7" '"- ,, " ' the. hmunn body various ways. It m ma- "-lie lustrumencwhen used upon may be inserted pn contains at one md an objective which forms an imaire of tho part examined. It permits of the il- lumination of the walls of the stomach i ...... .- .. .. .i. aim me eoiisequeni cxammaiiou oi ui same hv the aid of lenses. The light is very dear, said to be in no wa injuri- ous an:l shows the nart m then- orcijer ..l..,, c-f I. ...... l.i. t .. Swal near To How-Tail Point light-house. ronto. Out., was named in a unique wav. At a bimiiuct given by some citizens, during its, erection, to Mr. Kent, who was to be its keeper, no JDne but the latter appoared in full dress. Thereafter he was called "Sv.allow-Tail Kent," and when he took up his r -dencc in the tower the name went with him. 4 - H Senator Plumb, of Kansas, sut scribes for two-hundred nuwnaoe: Chicago Herald. four: denea wcrcw The ccptoa ii. ScarceV. .ears had pa-, i" the day ot tWl'tnjt kUi''ffl.'WEi student wasMTiiittcd to mi,. f,,rl'" r' mil from thoj 'Jovemor's ,., ', Sl'' his betrothed. -"r-'-ti-ra . f. piiiomr mid f if. w7 W. s r Hr-Trii::::i V Hfc ! j Hi hi 1 i m t .i