THE INDEPENDENT ' HAS THE FIN EOT JOB OFFICII ; IS DOUGLAS COUNTY. CARDS, BILLHEADS, LEGAL BLANKS And other printing, Including, Urge and He.vy Posters and Showy Hand-Bills. Neatly and expeditiously executed AT PORTLAND PRICES. .-""JB n VI On Tear. 9 so .. so ,. 1 00 Nix Mnnth..... Thrwt JHoailw. ' Tbee tre the terms for those paying In advance. The Isdvpkndent oTer floe inducements to ad vertisers, : Terms reasonable. VOL.7. ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY JANUARY 20, 1883. NO. 41. THE INDEPENDENT IS ISSUED aturctny Mornings, BY THE ' v DOUGLAS COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. m irTATTnTniTr'frn'mr U u Mly i V rn . n v ",.'H JU J' l! Mr! i I l. sSSb J . J A S EC U L E K I PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER, JEWELER, AND OPTICIAN. ALL WORKWARRANTED. Dealer lu WMctacw, Clelta, Jewelry, Sfretselt-a mtd KrKiawM, And a Fall Line of Cigars, Tobaccos and Fancy Goods. The only reliable Optometer in town for the proper adjustment cf fptxitaclea ; always on hand. Depot of the Genuine Brazilian Pebble Spec tacles and Eyeglasses; OFFICE First door aonih of poet office. Rose bnnr, Oregon. DR. Um W. DAVIS," DENTIST . . ROSEBURG, OREGON. ( OFFICE-OS JACK-OS STREET, 0PF08ITI THE POSTOFFICE. XIAHOfJEY'S SALOON Nearest to the Railroad Depot, Oakland Just. AXii honey, Prop'r. The finest of wines, liquors and cigars in Dowj las county, and the beat HI LLI A.lil TA.I3 IjB In theBUU kept ia proper repair: v f artiee trareiinsr on the railroad win find Utia place Tery handy to Tiait during the stop - ping of the train at the Oak land. Depot. GiTe me aoalL !&. MAfiVli1JiI JOHff F RASE It i Home Made Pxiitiire, AVI LB UK, OREGON. Upholstery, Spring .Mattresses, Etc. , Constantly on hand. triimilTflDCr I hare the beat atocli'o rUflllllUnCi. mrniture south of Portland And all of my own manufacture. No two Prices to Customers Residents auglas county are requested to give me a call bel purchasing elsewhere. UST ALL WOJtK WAKRANTED.- DEPOT HOTEL- OAKLAND, ORKUON. Hi chard Thomas, Prop'r. THIS HOTEL HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED for a number ot years, and has beoouievery popoJarwitn the traveling public, t irst-ciasa SLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS. And the table suppliod with the best the market affords. Hotel at the depot of the Kailroad. AVINQ ON AND A LARGE LOT OF FINE Spanish- Merino -WUGEKi I offer the ame for aale. Cheap for Cash, at my farm in Douglas county, six miles from Roseburg; HENRY CONN, Sr. H. C. STANTON, . Dealer in , : , Staple Dry Goods ! Keeps constantly pn hand a general assort-. ' . " tnent of extra fine: groceries, WOOD, WILLOW AM) ULASSWAKE, ; ALSO Crockeixand Cordage A full stock of HCHOOL BOO Such as required by the J?ub!ic County Schools All kind of STATIONERY. TOYS and FAJJCY ARTICLES To suit both Young and Old. IUYS AND SELLS LEGAL TENDERS - furnishes Checks on Portland, and procures Drafts on San Francisco. DEEDS ssrSEEDS ! ALL Kin I)S ; 0 F BtfST QllALIl Y A H. OR DISKS ..... i . . TrompUy attended toand Goods shipped with care, Address. Hacheney & Bono. Portland. O report Notice, ' Notice is herei-r riven, to whom it aiV concern, that Ch uittletwned haa been awxrSed tins contract for Ireninir tha Douubut county Fanner J for the period of two tara. All persons in need of a&it inc. Irom aid nMintr must first nrocure a certificate to that effect from anr memlr of the Counry Board, and prewit it to nni of the following named Dersona. who are author ized to, and will care for those presenting such certificate W. L. Butten, Boseburg ; L. L Kellogg, Oakland ; Mrs irown. Lookinz Oiass. Dr. Sctocks is authorized to burnish medical aid to all parsons in need of the rho have been declared paupers of Douglas county. WM. B. CLARKfe, Supt. of Poor. Hoasavmq, Or.. Feb. lf, 1830 Fbtjtit Pobk Cake. A pound of pork chopped fine, a cttpfol of molasses, "four eggs, a teaspoonfnl each of cloves, cinna mon, allspice, cream tartar and soda; a "pound of flour and a pound of fruir. Bake ia one large or two small loaves. If kept in a jar, in a cool place, this wflI-4 keep for years. Sare the sltim milk until curded and then fe?d it to the hens. v - - -- UTEST NEWS SUMMARY. UT TFXKeBJLPH TO DATE. A competitive exhibition of the Brush and U. S. electric lights will be held in LtoTjisvjlle, Jiy., the defeated party to pay $1000 expenses and donate $4000 to the Polytechnic institute. v v German citizens of San Francisco have started a subscription list for the relief of sufferers by the recent flood. , some $500 have been collected so far, and ar rangements are in progress for an enter tainment, the proceeds of whicn will be sent forward at once. The superior court at Indianapolis gave a decision on the 11th which, if the prin cipel announced therein is carried out, will cost the state $uuo,uuu. it is mat the state must return the money paid by counties to the state treasury, by mistake or otherwise, m excess of balance due. Paddy Byan, who i3 spending a week in Omaha, says that he proposes to chal lenge the winner of the fight letween Sullivan and Slade, as soon as the match is made. He savs he is in better condi tion now than he ever was in his life, and he is anxious to meet Sullivan in the ring again some time this. year. He says Mace's judgment as to Slade's ability as a pugilist ib worth something and the probability is that Sullivan will find Slade a bard man to whip. Considerable excitement was caused in San Francisco on the 11th by a large crowd which collected in front of a prom inent bank on Montgomery street and the impression was created that an exten sive run had been inaugurated. Bumors to the effect that the bank had collapsed were circulated but an investigation re vealed a man with a placard on his hat bearing the inscription, 'I want work This method of cheap advertising was successful, 1 or the man was soon ,Krven employment by a gentleman who saw. the conspicuous placard. Some years ago an old childless couple near Ulysses, Neb., adopted a boy and girl from different families. When the children grew to maturity they indulged in undue intimacy. "When the exposure was made it was suggested they should marrv. The old lady grew excited about the unfortunate matter, and finally be came insane. On Jan. 7th she prepared the tea and put poison in it. All partook except the girl. The old man was taken sick and the girl was sent to a neighbor for assistance. When she returned all three were dead. A Milwaukee, Wis., dispatch of Jan 10th says: The Newhall house, a six-story brick hotel was burned to the ground this mornin g. The fire was discovered at i. a. m. In less than half an hour the entire building was one sheet of flames. The first alarm came at 3:47, followed quickly by a general alarm. By this time almost the entire south front o the Newhall house was one sea of flames In a moment every window in the large J six-story structure was niieci with strug gling guests, frantically and piteousiy beseeching the few below lor aid, which it was impossible to render. But few of . - i l 1 r i the uniortunate inmates gameu me irout entrance on Michigan street, although more might have been saved if some im mediate attempt at systematic rescue had been maderlo-the halls was a scene of the wildest confusion. Men, women and children rushed up and down the halls in the dense and sunocating smoke, avoiding the blinding flimes aud roaring blaze, and in their frantic efforts rushing by stairways and windows leading to fire escapes, stumbling over bodies lying un conscious on the carpeted walks. The- scenes during the conflagration were ter rific in the emtreme. The hotel register was burned so that ' it is impossible to state definitely the number of guests at the time of the disaster, but all accounts agree that the dead will reach 100. The scene at' the morgue a few hours after the fire was sickening. Thirty -two bodies of men and women lay jnpon the floor. many burned to an undistinguishable mass, while the enorts of a strong police force were required to keep back . the agonized crowd who were frantically searching for missing friends. The cold was intense and many wounded suffered from both the extreme of heat and cold. The hotel wa3 built in 1857 and has long been regard ed as a " dea th trap." The elevator and passage ways were almost at the first alarm enveloped in flames cut ting off all retreat to the frenzied guests arid employes. Telegrams from all parts of the country are pov.ring iu asking for missing friends. Inquiry has been made by at least a dozen wholesale houses in the east regarding their traveling men, who were due here Tuesday. Not one of those inquired for can be found, and it is safeUo assume there were a great many more transient guests in the house than at first reported. The finding of the two bodies so near the edge, that had not be fore been seen, has given rise to the idea that there are at least 100 bodies in the ruins. It will take several -days to re move the debris, with as large a force as can be worked, and as the register is pre served in the safe, it will be impossible for a long time after the bodies have been recovered, before it will be known who all the victims are. A further dispatch on the 11th says: At daylight this morn ing a large gang of laborers resumed the awful work of hunting for the dead in the ruins of the Newhall house. The streets in the vicinity of th ruins are packed black with people. The greatest excitement prevails. The fire department is engaged in pulling down the remnants of the wall?, and with each succeeding crash, the excitement increases. The police and firemen are confident that fully w people are Dnneu in me rams, inciuu incr a number of guests not mentioned in the published list.; Crowds of people are arriving on every train. The hotels are filled with tearful and anxious people seeking friends or relations supposed to have been in the fire. The telegraph wires inclosing the bulldicgon the south and east sides played sad havoc with those who mide the frightful leap' from the windows for life. ; Several bodies were fwrly cut in two by the wiie3, and the torn and bleeding forms would drop to the ground. Others would hit the wires crossways, rebound and be hurled to the ground with a dreadful crash. To the unfortunate waiter girls, all lodged in the sixth story and att'es, the saddest lot Ras fallen. Of the sixty young girls only eleven were heard from alive as late as yesterday evening. r The Union League club elected Wm. M. Evarts president. The house elections committee declared no election in the second Mississippi dis trict. The census shows Cleveland's popula tion to be 198,000 a gain in one year of 8000. An association for the preservation of Niagara Falls has been formed in New York. The finest block in Pes Moines. Iowa. was burned on the night of the 12th; loss The ways and means committee re duced the rate on fence wire from one cent to three-fourths of a cent per pound. President Boice, of the wrecked Citv bank of Jersey City, was locked in a cell on the Htn, being unable to secure bail. At a meeting of pig iron representatives held in Pittsburg, the organization of the Western Fis Iron association was com pleted. ;. o;; Dispatches from the southern part of Illinois say an earthquake shockwasielt over the state on the 11th . It extended into Kentucky. J udge Graham in the superior court of New York, adjourned hearing the case of the Passion play to the seventeenth by consent of the counsel. The grand jury is investigating the star route jury bribery cases. Frank H. Hall. charged with bribing the colored juror Brown, is under examination. E. B. Washburne, ex-minister to France, was painfully though not seri ously injured by being thrown from a horse near San Antonio recently. The tobacco manufacturers have ap pointed a committee to remain in Wash ington to make surh representations per sonally to the committee and congress as the business requires. The maritime exchange of New York protests against the passage of the pend ing bill in congress to transfer the ad ministration of the revenue cutter service to the navy department. ine court pi claims decides that re tired officers of the army were not ex empt from the provisions of that section of the revised statutes prohibiting an officer of the government from prosecut ing claims against the United States. r 'l hos. woodman, general passenger agent of the Central Pacific railroad, an nounces his company prepared to furnish orders for transportation to . San Fran cisco from Havre, France, steerage by steamer to mew urieans. and then via Southern Pacific to San Francisco, third class, at $6o. The vvaDasn uannon mil tram was ditched at Kansas City on the 11th. It was derailed by the spreading of the track near Miami Junction. A sleeper, two coaches and a baggage car rolled down the embankment, and the sleeper caught fire and burned. No one killed, and injuries are generally slight; one or two broken limbs. A Boston dispatch tell of a conference neid at (jen. uuuer s omce, m which an effort was made to organize a scheme to put Butler in the place of Hoar, in the United States senate. Butler men claim ninety-nine democrats in the joint con vention, and argue that a great many who won t vote for Hoar under anv circum stances, will vote for Butler. A severe electric storm, accompanied by high wind, which reached a velocity of sixty miles per hour, prevailed at JJen ver on the 12th. An electric light tower, 185 feet high, was blown over, wreoking a small frame house which stood in it its course. The inmates escaped uninjured Several buildings were unroofed, and the walls of a number of buildings in course of erection were blown down. The dam age is quite heavy throughout the city. No loss of life is leported. Uriucal examination oi Chicago, in duced by the Milwaukee fire, shows that most excellent provisions have generally been made and are enforced to prevent the spread of fire, and that from the manner of construction and the thorough precautions adopted, the better class of hotels are as nearly as possible fire-proof . it is believed that no such disaster as that in Milwaukee could occur in Chi cago, if the present restrictions are ob served. Insurance agents report that risks in uhicago hotel property are ex ceadingly low. . The Anchor line steamer City of Green ville, from New Orleans for St. Louis, with 700 hogsheads of sugar and other cargo, came in collision on he 12th near bayou Goula, ninely-six miles above the city, with tb&Crrande Eco're packet Laura Liee. The City of Greenville sank, leav' ing only a portion of her texas and pilot house above the water. ' The Laura Lee took off the passengers and crew of the sunken steamer and brought them to this city. It is believed the boat andcargo will prove a total Joss. No cause is as signed for the collision. No lives lost, A Syracuse dispatch of Jan. 12th says A little group of operators have victim ized tne bucket shops out of $12,000 to $15,000 by anticipating delivery of tele grams and buying grain by using fraud ulent prices in dispatches from Chicago Several telegraph piracies have lately oc curred in the city, and it is probable tha investigation under progress will bring to light many scandalous transactions among them the theft of the dispatch sent to this city by Frederick Gebhard to Mrs. ijangtry at Uhicago, which was published in St. Louis, and the tenor o which was exceedingly sickish. A Jioston dispatch of Jan. rzth says a . m . . as an enect or tne prolonged drouth, in M nchester, New Hampshire, 2000 opera tives are idle, and ; mills are shutting down. The product of the Maine saw mills is reduced 20,000 feet. The rivers are lower than for half a century. Mills on the Penobscott will lose over $100,000. Establishments on -the Kennebec, An droscoggin and Sico is likewise crippled. In southeast Maine hundreds of persons were compelled to resort to snow for wafer, and cattle were driven miles to ponds and bro ks. The Merrimac river is lower than ever. The great mills at Nashua and Great Falls, besides those at Manchenter, are ruuning on half to twq- thirds time, and the losses to the employ- era and employes are enormous. It is a few months with the owner of one of impossible to estimate the aggregate these villas! The people are by no losses. The rainfall for 1882 throughout means reticent in displaying their ob the region was barely half the average. jects "de luxe" mostly wax flowers or There was no January thaw. j French vases. Gilt-edged books bound 011 Tecr.mseh. The Cincinnati Enquirer prints the olio wing: The other day, as 1 was turning the corner of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, I en countered General :Tecumseh Sherman. 'Why,' said he, "do you live over here? Come m and see my room." He took me into the same room Zach and Billy Chandler had used for conducting Hayes' Presidential campaign a parlor in front, dark passageway and bath beneath and bedroom back, on a small, dim court. "General, said I, "you are in good ooks and spirits for the hard knocks you have received." "Oh, yes," said Sherman, "I am just as tough as a pine knot. Never felt bet ter in all my life. ;. You know I am going to have a rest.;'-Yes, I am going out of the military service. I look forward to it with great joy. My wife wants me to go. I am tired of the incessant changes in men and events at Washington City. No stability, social life all cut up change, change, change. We are going o bt. Louis. Some of the family live here. I have my own house there. I always liked the St, Louis people. They are warm, affectionate and spirited people. I tell you, I have got a good hou&e there. "Do they retire you with full pay.Gen- eral?" "Yes, full pay. Even my horses I keep them-, too. Congress has been very liberal and square with me." "What does the pay of the General amount to?J ; ' "About $15,000. I can live in St. Louis, I guess, on $1000 a month, and that will leave me $3000 a year to spend on my children. I think I can do that. I am not a rich man, you know. "Well, General, St. Louis is a rather smoky, dingy citv hot in the summer, tod." ' i..""; V . "Well, that may be true, but T shall light out in hot weather. The Rocky Mountains will be my camp up , there about Helena, Montana, where it is high and lovely. I can drop down to FJorida in the spring, or to Texas. St. Louis is very central. I think I may live ten years . in comparatively : active life. I will be with my people, can see my old companions and friends, and breathe the breath of some freedom.' "Your son-in-law, Commodore Fitch, out there, is very well spoken of," Yes, he s a hard-working man, smart and very successful. . He has built up a large and safe business. I expect he may be a rich man. All this tame the General was giving some instructions about visits to his daughter. Bachel and putting his name in autograph copies of his memoirs. oaid 1: "General Sherman, a friend called at my house last night and thought you were sure to be the next Republican candidate for President. i "Now, about that," said. General Sher man, "you see I cannot be fool enough to decline what is not offered to me; but what do I want to turn from the pros pect of rest and peace at last for a period of years to the delusion of four years in an office that is just hell. That's what it is," continued the General emphatic ally. "It is hell- What did General Harrison get out of it? Nothing but b month of misery. What did General Taylor get out of it? Twelve months of misery. What did Grant get out of it? Do I want to resign this competence Congress has bestowed upon me for four years of hell? What did Hayes get out of the presidency? What did Garfield get? Take them all within your memory. Nothing but worry, trouble misunder standing." "Well, General Sherman, people will talk. They don't care anything about your comfort if they can elect you." "That'sjBO. They will talk," said the General. I continued by saying that Gen eral Hancock stood no worse for having run for President two years ago. told Hancock," Sherman said, "that he got out of the mess just in time to sa ve himself." "Are you sixtv-four yet, General Sher man?" "I was born in February, 1820, I am nearly sixty-tnree. me law retiring us all at sixty -four I uppoved of. I think it is a good law.' - xid you pass any or your youth in Ohio?" "Why, yes; I stayert around Lancaster till I was sixteen years old. My father died when I was about nine, and my wife's father brought me up and put me into the army. General Grant is two years younger, or of the age of my brother, John Sherman. The General then went on to speak of the Hoyt family, which he had : met on his first visit to New York City when a boy, and had become nearer them by family ties. I believe the General was disposed to talk with full freedom to me, but other persons coming in led me to postpone the matter for the present. He does look magnificent, and for his age he is as fighting-like a man as I ever found. He talks quick, quaint, and I should judge is not looking as far away from the Fresidency.as his speech lm plies, though not one word did he say to me further than 1 have printed. Uaarleui Architecture. Although Holland abounds with the most delightful specimens of domestic architecture of the sixteenth and seven teenth centuries, they seldom care to re vive it when they build a new house. There seems to be but one approved style now, and that the very worst style of French villa, with its dull dark ' 'Man sard" roof; There is also an almost uni vers il run on a certain gardenstatute in plaster, the most ill-modeled child, with a snort tunic, holding a basket of chalk fruit on its simpering, idiotic head. No garden is complete without that, and if the means of the owner permit, a large globe of shining quicksilvered glass, in which is reflected the most awful dis tortions of every surrounding object. Those who f$a tired of hearing of "high art" and "atethetics." of harmonies and symphonies'of coljr, of dadoes and old bric-a-brac, should come here to rest the troubled brain. If one could only stay in good old-fashioned positive colors, a "magenta" tint now and then that seemed to have been distilled from long pent-up and suffering canal water; these massed in brass-bound book -slides, and tended by a Muse or two in plaster of Paris, are on the veneered table between the parted curtains of every one of these new abodes. Wandering along one of the canals, we stopped to admire a crow-stepped gabled house of time toned brick. We read on a tablet high up the name of Ph. Wouvermans. Yes, that must have been his studio-: window that large one. A pleasant house, and. a substantial well-to-do air all about it. A pleasant spot, too, by the tree-shaded canal. Wonder if it is still a. studio? It looks like it. It almost tempts one to ring the bell and ask if the Wouvermans is at home. v i There are still in Haarlem a goodly number of charming old houses of the seventeenth century. Some of their gables lean rather forward toward the street or sideways toward their next door neighbor in a way suggestive of fundamental debility. At first sight it seems safer to walk in the middle of the road, and look out for falling bricks. But one soon gets over the tottery char acter; in fact, some one told us that they were built originally at that angle for ward. : When they lean sideways they admit the mouldering pile beneath, and own to the sinkage. The fine old city walls and ramparts that withstood the famous siege have been pulled down, all but one fine old gateway, a splendid specimen of its kind, picturesque to the last degree. That is all there is left "to illustrate one ofthe greatest chapters in the history of Haarlem. The boulevard and the tram car have risen over the dust of all the rest. I should like to say something more worthy of this mem orable siege, there is such . a splendid opportunity; but on second thought perhaps it is as well to refer the reader to Motley, and not seek to supersede that admirable history. J George H. B rough ton, in Harper's Magazine for January. - . kj- An Enormous Locomotive. We have hete at Sumner, making daily tris to the summit of Tehachipa Pass, the largest locomotive engine in the United States, and perhaps in the world. It was designed by A. J. Stevens, gen eral master mechanic of the Central Pa cific, for the purpose of running over steep grades. It was considered a doubt ful experiment, but it has now been making daily trips to the summit for a long time; and W. H. Worwick, en gineer and machinist in charge of the re pair shops and engineering department at Sumner, informs us that it has proved a complete success. He gives us the following faot's in regard to this ponder ous machine: It has twelve wheels and weighs, when in working order, includ ing two men, 123,000 pounds; total wheel base 24 feet 11 V. inches. The tender has eight wheels and weights, in working order, 63,000 pounds. The total wheel base of the en gine and tender is 53 feet 1 inches, and the total length of engine and tender over all is 64 feet. The grade of the Tehachipa pass is 116 feet to the mile. with ten degree curves, one right after the other as closely as they can be laid. The engine has hauled up this grade, twenty-five miles in length, a tram of fourteen freight cars loaded with twenty tons (of 2000 pounds) to the car. This is a heavy load for two of the largest ten wheeled engines with 18 by 24-inch cyl inders, and weighing forty tons, and, as a regular thing, it actually does the work of two of the heaviest engines with a greatly reduced expense for coal, at tendance, wear and tear, etc. It has a reversing gear operated by water taken from the Doner, which can oe used or not, at the option of the engineer. It also has a brake on the driving-wheels which is operated, by steam. This en gine has given such satisfaction that twenty-five more of the same kind will probably be built. Mr. Worwick, who is a mechanic and engineer of great ex perience, inclines to the belief that still larger engines might ibe used to ad vantage on steep grades; but for ordi nary arxAtches of road, srich as that be- j w , tween this point and San Francisco, the locomotive in ordinary use is large enough. J Bakersfield Courier. The Rind of Boys Philadelphia fro ducev ; A bright-eyed boy of eight year, nicely dr eased, and having the appearance of being a child of well-to do -parents, was called yesterday as a witness m J udge Fierce s court of the Quarter Sessions. "Do you know what you do when you k'ss the Bible?", asked the prosecuting ofiicer. . "No, sir." MDo you go to school?" "Yes, sir." "How long?" "Two years." "Is it right or wrong to tell a lie?" "Right." -"Rightto tell a lie'" "It's wrong." "Do you know where you will go when you die, it you tell a lie? "No, sir." "Have you ever been to church?" "Once." "Do you go to Sunday school?" "My sisters won't take me." "Have you ever beard of hell? . . "Mv sir." Or of hell?" "No, sir." "Did you ever hear of God?' "Never." He was not allowed to testify. Phil adelphia Times. v "That man is a phrenologist, Pat." "A phat?" asked Pat puzzled. "A phrenologist." 'That's that?" "Why, a man that can tell by feeling of the bumps of your head, what kind of a man you are. "Bumps on me head, is it? exclaimed Pat. "Begorra, then, I "should think it would give him more of an oidea phat kind of a woman my wife is!" Citbok Cake. Stir together three cups of brown sugar; four and a half cups of flour, seven eggs, two cups of citron cut in smaii pieces, two ana one half teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cup of butter, one and a half cups of sweet milk. Home Goislp. Ladies scarcely realize' the possibilities of chamois leather. It is an excellent material for decorative purposes. It ! takes color well, and is besides so " soft and pliable that it can be very readily embroidered; in addition to this it an swers well for deaigns in dry color. . Several - years ago paper curtains were in great demand in England. They were usually in imitation of .eastern designs, and were, also, lined with paper r? and linings being differently decorated. An attempt has been made to introduce them here, but hitherto not very successfully. They are, of course, much cheaper than hangings of worste t materials, and, as they have a glazed surface, they can be readily shaken" or wiped free from dust. A novelty in , laca curtains is an- nounced,' which consists in the peculiar ity of the design rather than in anything special in the fabric itself. It represents, within a border of floral design, a4 win dow with drapery and a view in prospective beyond. The idea may be new, but is certainly not artistic. The fashionable table lamp to-day is mounted upon a beautifully painted vase of spheroid form, and is often of very" great, value, choice porcelain being selected for this purpose. : Some of the most beautiful carving by ladies is carried out in cedar wood. They are specially adapted for glove boxes and other small articles. The table d'oyleys are now often em- i broidered in the center only. An initial letter is frequently selected, and within a fanciful or grotesque figure is car tied out in raised dotted embroidery. A novelty is about to be introduced for bed-rooms in the shape of a draped toi let table. The foundation is of ordinary wood, and above the table an upper frame is supplied with a ' swinging mir ror. The drapery is arranged upon a projecting shelf above the frame and fes tooned around the glass, which is also decorated wih a double ruching of the material. Usually ' paper muslin of light color is selected. as a background, and spotted Swiss supplies the material of the drapery itself. Crystal is growing in favor. Most beautiful center-pieces for the lunsh table are in vogue, deeply cut in this material, and a new shape has super seded the globular. It is not unlike a crescent. ! - Iridescent mother-of-pearl is much used now for bouquet-holders, fan -handles, &c. It is often richly carved, but still more frequently inlaid with gold and silver,,., :. vj -- ;J , Braiding is to become popular again. Rounded soutache will be used, as the designs can be examined in raised work by its use. It is easy to give 'Eastern effects by carrying out a free design upon muslin, scrum, or thin materials of any kind. - The effect of applique work, which is given to the popular jute and linen plushes so much in use now is gained by the great attention that is paid to the ef fect of light and shade. Even without the outline embroidery in .gold thread, which gives them their handsome finish, the same result is largely effected. Cushions for deep cane chairs are made of tufted plush or-satih, and as an accompaniment a btrip of the same ma terial and color is embroidered as a scarf for the back and finished : off with deep fringe, which is often of rich quality. A handsome ornament for the parlor wall consists of a small cabinet in .carved wood, the doors of which open down ward and by means of movable supports form a writing desk. Frquently the panels are either painted or pieces of embroidery are mounted upon them. Oddly shaped tables are much in de mand.' Some of them ; are round and just low enough to reach a lady's elbows as she sits at work, and are rotatary. Others are round in front and straight at the back, and are supported uponjhalf recumbent figures. Tables of every shape are to be had for decoration at home, and are covered with jute plush embroidered in raised figures or simply nnisned on Dy a deep inn ge. Ornamental figures in terra cotta are seen everywhere. By the introduction of color an immense variety in effect is gained, and where only moderately used it is as beautiful as effective. Menu cards can be beautifully deco rated at home. They should be m three folds, like miniature screens, and each fold should bear a . different floral or emblematic device. The outer one, if possible, should have as decoration -the monogram of the guest by whose plate it Vegetables may be aesthetically beau tiful, but the attempt to introduce them as appropriate decoration for table mats and doylies has not proved successful; fruits, blossoms or fancy figures are far more suitable. Gems irith a History. The New York Sun is responsible for the following: "These are $100,000 twins brought together by ohance after more than a quarter of.a century of separation, and never to leave this country, now we've got them." The speaker was a German gentleman, the head of a wholesale diamond import ing house in Maiden lane. ; As he spoke he took a packet of silken tissue from a big safe behind and dropped it upon a counter covered with green haize, at which the reporter seated himself. A wire gate slammed to and locked the visitor in without seeming to have im prisoned him, and the German gentle man began to open the tissue paper packet. Two lustrous gems,- which blaze with a pure bluish white fire, gleamed side by side, j Each ; was about as big around as a three-cent piece, but, what was more striking than their sizes was their identity of appearance and beauty. They are cut alike, weigh alike gtt and one-half carats each, and are verit able mineral twins. "I conldYcreate a sensation and make a fortune with them in Paris' said the diamond mearchant. "They! are old Indian mine diamonds, and have a his to ry that put them in the catalogue of the famous gems of the world. I have proofs that establish their " identity. They must have been in the possession of Warren Hastings when he was governor-general i India. Previously they had been the jewels of a rajah, and after they had left Hastings' jewel casket they were secured by a Russian nobleman during a mutiny in India. He took them to Amsterdam, where a skilled Dutch lapidary recut them, thereby greatly enhancing their beauty while only slightly decreasing their weight ; The nobleman lest possession of one of them at the celebrated gaming table of M. Blanc, at Monaco. At least it is sup posed he lost it gaming, for it was only recovered at the auction sale of the effects of Mms. Blanc, widow of the famous gambler in Paris, a year ago. I secured it through an agent at the sale. "Its mate," continued the . jeweller, "had a no less eventful career. It found its way to a French jeweller, who sold it to the duke of Brunswick, who with eccentric prodigality, lavished nianey on precious stones, which he left to the city of Geneva. The history of the first bine diamond was published in Paris when I bought it, but search made afterward for the mate, which the duke of Brunswick had bought, revealed the. fact that it had disappeared. ; We found it two months ago and how, do you think? Why, my. partner saw it sparkling in the shirt front of a Chicago merchant. He could hardly be lieve it. But by a stratagem he secured the means of comparing the gems, and broved their identity to his satisfaction. The merchant said he had bought the stone in England from a Jewish diamond merchant of London. He was induced to part with it at a handsome figure. "Thus they eame together, said the owner, as he re-wrapped the sparks of mineral fire with care, "and thus they stay." They'll never be separated again." Stppnen airariMi Valet. The cream of Philadelphia colored society gathered at the house of Mr. John Meyers. No. 1817 Addison street. last evening, to witness the nuptials of Mr. Charles Simpson and Mrs. Mary L. Harris, a dusky widow from Alexandria, Va. Colored circles have been greatly interested in the marriage, for, while the blushing bride is but twenty-eight years of age, eighty-two summers; and a like number of winters have relied into his tory: since the bridegroom's birth. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. C. T. Shifter, pastor of Allen's chapel, Lombard sheet, above Nine teenth, the groom being accompanied by an old friend from Baltimore, who acted as his best man. The bride was dressed in white silk, with orange blossoms in her hair, and looked even younger than she was, while the radiant bridegroom seemed his own junior by a score of years at least. , - ; i Later in the evening the happy pair held a reception at the residence . of the bridegroom, on North Tenth . street, where they received the congratulations of their mafiyTriendsr This is Mr. Simpson's third matrimo nial venture. He is a pleasant-faced, jolly old gentleman, full of spirits (ani mal, not alcoholic), with Burnside whis kers as white as snow, and eyes that twinkle with fun. He was born a free man, in Queen Anne county, Maryland, in 1800, and at the age . of twenty-five came' to Philadelphia,. where he went into the service of Stephen Girard in the capacity of body, servant, which position he filled until the time of Mr. 6irard's deaJh, in 1830. He is bright and enter taining in his conversation, and relates many interesting anecdotes of his millionaire employer. Philadelphia Record. Beware of the Cloak. A A scientist, in the interest oi married men and the oppressed of all nations,) has advanced a new idea that will fill a want long felt, and afford all. men who take advantage of it immediate ; relief in this hour of their affliction. He says these new fur-lined circulars are un healthy and should be abolished. It ap- pears tac me jur-imea cioaK nas tne same effect on a woman as a diamond pin on a man's shirt bosom has on the man who wears it. A man with a diamond pin on cannot have hi3 coat buttoned up, for fear the pin will not show, and in nine cases out of ten unless he is careful to wear a sheepskin protector, he catches an awful cold and is liable to die. More has been written by scientists and medi cal men upon the folly of wearing dia mond pins on the shirt front than upon any other of : the modern fashions to which mortal man is addicted. And it seems the fur-lined cloak is also a worm 11 i m 1 , m t that is gnawing at the bud cf our beau tiful types of womanhood, aud making consumptives out of them. The trouble is a woman is bound to have about five or TBix buttons of her fur-lined cloak un buttoned at the bottom so the cloak will blow back and expose the fur. But women seem determined, in the face of all this testimony, to stick to the fur lined cloak and embrace death in one of its most horrid forms. :.They have either got to button up ' the fur-lined cloik ,or wear a sheepskin chest pro tector. . - - Thurlow- Weed was a good man to name babies for. . Out of his large estate he bequeaths only $2900 to charitable institutions and $100 to each of 18 name sakes whom he specifies in his wilL The bulk of his property he leaves to his daughters and grandchildren, having no sons living. Theraare a few bequests of little intrinsic yaltieto personal friends. He gives to Hamilton Fish "the massive link of the iron chain which his father aided in stretching across the Hudson river near West Point during the war of the revolution;" to Frederick WSeward, "in affectionate "remembrance of a warm ftiendshiD which c.iminfitic.p nwr half n. century ago with the late William H. Seward . lasting uninterruptedly to his death," he bequeiths acana, Harriet A. Weed, his unmarried' daughter, is nam ed executrix. A German peasait comes to a broker to exchange a handred-raark note for silver. The broker give- hira-a htriidred jaark roll, .which the peasant opens to see if it is all right. He counts r up to seventy -one and pots it all in his pocket. "It was all right so far, so I suppose tits rest is right, too." A miniature boalding-house, with the guests seated, arour. d a long table, ia a Christmas toy novelty. It is as nattiral as life. Tha table ia full of dishes' and there is nothing to speak of in thera...