TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY. Aa EpHoiio of the - Principal Events Now Attracting Pablic Interest Mile. Aimee, the linger, died from the effects of a surgical operation in Talis. Tlio great Union Pacific railway bridge lit Omaha, costing -12,000,000, will be finished this month. The schooner City of Green Bay has been lost on Lake Michigan with all on board except one sailor. She car ried seven persons. Ex-Gov. Wm. B. Waehbiirne, of Greenfield, dropped dead at the morn ing session of the board of foreign mis sions at Springfield, Mass. A work train, in backing near Glad stone, Wis., struck a car and was de railed. The conductor and a brake man were killed and several others in jured. F. A. Hawkins has been arrested in New York for the murder of his mother because she refused to allow him to marry a servant girl. He has con- fessed. A boiler in a flouring mill at St. Louis exploded, killing four people outright and injuring many more. All the houses in the neighborhood were damaged. Two laborers on a farm near New Tortage, Ohio, cut down a hollow tree in which was concealed several thou sands of dollars, hid there by a miser fifteen years ago. Three children while playing on the island ut Quebec, where the artillery competition was recently held, found a shell and lit the fuse. The bomb ex ploded and killed them till. Workmen in a cotton mill and kiln raised a riot at Moscow, and set fire to the factory, which was destroyed. Many persons were killed. Troops have been sent to restore order. George Choate, son of the renowned New York lawyer, is lying at the point of death from the effects of '' hazing," received at the hands of the sopho mores of Williams College, Pittstield, Mam. General John B. Finch, the well known temperance orator, died sud denly at Lynn, Mass. Since the death of Gough, ho has been the most prom inent temperance orator in tho United States. The miners in the Springfield and Fetorsburg districts, iu Illinois, are out on a strike for an advance of wages to i)7 cents per ton. They have boon getting about 55 cents. Over 1500 men are idle. The propellor California was sunk in Lake Michigan. Sixteen lives were lost. She was bound for Montreal, laden with 20,000 bushels of corn and 700 barrels of pork, and carried a crew of twenty-two persons and three pas sengers. Two mon named James Delanoy and Dennis O'Shca wore struck by a train on the Union Pacific oad near Omaha and instantly killed. They woro each in a buggy and were running a race, on their return from the funeral of P. O'Shca, who died in Joilet peniten tiary. Five men were killed nt different points along tho Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe road in ono day. One at Argentine, and ono each at Syracuse, Strong, Lajunta and Las Vegas. It appears that all met theirdeaths while walking along the track, through their carelessness. From London, England, is officially announced that the Imperial Govern jiient has granted a subsidy of $225,000 per annum to the Canadian Pacific Railway, which, with tho Canadian Government's subsidy of $75,000, amounts to $300,000 for a monthly service between China, Japan and Vancouver, B. C. Tho famous diamonds of Charles L. Davis, better known as Alvin Joslyn, were eeized by tho assessor for $990 taxes, at Butte, Montana. Davis ad mitted to tho assessor that ho never paid taxes anywhere on them. The feeling there is" strongly against the as sessor as the seizure is likely to injure tho show business and prevent troupes from going there. Advices from Melbourne, Australia, Btate that an immense nugget, weigh ing about fifty-one pounds, of pure Sold, has just been unearthed in the now famous Midas mine. The find lias created intense excitement. Tho nugget is fiat and has something of tho contour of a colossal hand, held open, with tho thumb and finger close together. Its greatest length is twelve and one-half inches, and breadth eight and one-half inches. It varies in thickness up to two and one-half inches. The value ia estimated at iflO.OOO. A cast of it will bo taken before it is broken up. At Cincinnati a strand came loose on tho cable of the Walnut Hill cable road, and wrapped around the grip of a car coming west on Sixth street. The car, whioh was full of passengers, could not bo freed, and rushing on overtook .another car which had stopped at a crossing. This car it pushed along. The brakes were set hard on both, but without effect. Tho cars rushed on in the darkness, sparks grinding from the wheels, the passengers screaming and hundreds of excited people following the cars and ehouting. Dashing on ward tho runaway cars soon struck a I horse car at tho crossing of Fifth and , Sycamore, throwing it into a deep ditch. At the same time the runaway cars were also ditched, giving such a violent wrench to tho cablo that four other cablo care, on the way up A al nut hill, wore derailed. When the re sult of the affair was summed up it wdl found that thirty or forty people were badly bruised. Lewii Kolb wan fatally hurt. AGRICULTURAL. Devoted to the Interests of Farmers and Stockmen. Curing For Jlorwe. When a horse refuses to drink, and coughs after swallowing a little, it in dicates sore throat or swelling of tho glands of the neck. It is one of the symptoms of distemper, which is prev alent at this season. Give the horse a warm bran mash, with one drachm of chlorate of potash in it daily for a week or ten days. Thero ia nothing serious to bo apprehended. For a horse which ia weak in tho knees, rub the limbs briskly with a woolen cloth, then bathe with salt and water, wipe dry and apply a mixture of ono pint of alcohol and one drachm of tincture of Spanish ily, rubbing in a tablcBpoonful twice a day with tho hand. Let the horse run in a loose stall, deeply littered with sawdust or dry swamp muck, or on an earth floor Skunk's oil, beef brine and other trash of tho kind aro useless. A horse can be fed on grain and bran if he is not overfed. These foods are concentrated and need to be given with caution. Cotton-seed meal is not a safe food, but tho whole seed if quite free from lint may be given in modera tion. Some coarse fodder is desirable if it can be procured, and a supply should be grown either of millet, corn fodder or pea vines, and cut when in blossom and cured for hay. If a little rough ness is given, six pounds of bran and tho same of somo kind of grain, and two pounds of whole, clean cotton-seed, would make sufficient food for a thousand-pound horse. Five pounds of hay daily given with this grain would be quite sufficient. Green food in tho summer is often the cause of serious indigestion with its common results colic and rupture of the stomach, which is inevitably fatal. Such foot! should never be given wet or heated by fermentation after cutting, or in excessive quantity, nor when a horse is weary. Clover or rye should be cut after the dew is off and before the heat of the day and spread in the shade to wilt, or in the afternoon and left to wilt until the next day. A sprinkling of Halt will tend to avoid trouble with such food, as it prevents fermentation. Water should always be given boforo feeding, and never immediately after ward. Colic is often produced by co pious watering soon after eating, and also by watering when the animal is hot and weary from woik. The stomach being chilled is for the time incapable of digesting any food. Light feeding is to bo given during hard or rapid work, and the full feed is only given after sufficient rest. Overfeeding is to be specially avoided, and regularity is very important. Ono twelve-quart pailful of cut hay and four pounds of meal to a full feed for a thousand pound horse, given twice a day, with an equivalent feeding between of oats or corn and long hry. Orchard grass hay, cut just at tho blossoming, is ex cellent for horses. Ripe timothy is the next best, and corn blades, pulled green and well cured, make as good feed as any. Dusty or moldy food is to bo specially avoided, not only for its effect on tho digestive organs, but for its evil results on the respiratory functions. Idleness is conductive to indigestion, and during tho present season particularly, horses should be turned out several hours for exorcise every day. The shrinkage of the muscles of the shoulder, and which is commonly called "sweeny," is due to some lame ness of tho foot or limb, which induces the horse to favor tho shoulder and throw the muscles out of use. The in action causes the muscles to decrease in substance, anddhe shoulder flatten or becomes hollowed. Tho remedy for this disfigurement is to relieve tho lameness and rcstoro the shoulder to proper activity. Tho seat of the trouble may bo in tho shoulder, which may have been sprained. If this is the case pressures with tho knuckles on tho shoulder will show it ; if not, it will most probably bo found in the foot or the pastern joint. Navicular disease is tho most frequent cause of this shrinking of tho shoulder muscles. This dieeaso is indicated by tho animal pointing the Ue of tho foot forward, and by going lamo at starting and soon recovering. Driving fast down hill is the usual cause of trouble with the slioulder by injury to the joint or to tho feet. Thero were 30,000 acres of wheat harvested on the Glenn ranch in Co lusa county, Cal., this year, which yielded 350,500 sacks or 787,500 bushels. I This is 49,550,000 pounds, 2-1,785 tons, 2,177 ten-ton carloads and 150 train loads of sixteen cars each. Cranberry culture in the vicinity of Ilwaco, W. T., promises to boa profita ble and important business. Mr. Che hot raised 100 barrels from his beds last year, and this year's crop will bo still larger. Tho National Farmers' Alliance held its seventh annual convention at Min neapolis. Tho secretary reported 1000 alliances added since tho laBt session, and that there are 000,000 members in all. It is said one buck goat among a flock of pheop will protect a hundred from tho dogs. And this will prove that this almost evident mistako of nature is good for something. Weaning time is the colt's most critical time of life. They should bo treated most kindly and curefully. Shelter and well propared food should bo furnished. If you want to please your liens almost out of their wits, roast grain and feed it to them. If you want eggs that's the way to got them. COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Principally to "Washington Territory and California. A corset factory has been established at Tacoma, W. T. Michael Dolan was crushed to death on tho railroad at Turlock, Cal. Dayton, W. T., is to havo a now opera house and an iron foundry. There aro now 227 Indians on the Skokoniish (W. T.,) Indian agency. The Crow Indians aro causing trouble on their reservation in Mon tana. A young man named Frederick Litchgold was run over and killed by a train near Merced, Cal. The safe of tho O. R. & N. Com pany's freight office was blown into at Colfax, W. T., and over $2000 stolen. Tho Port Townsend Argus is to be made a morning paper, with late dis patches, to bo issued every morning at 9 o'clock except Monday morning. The little eight-year old daughter of Mr. Thomas, an employe of tho O. S. L. at Poatello, Idaho, was run over by a freight train and mangled to death. During the past month tho United States branch mint at San Francisco coined the sum of $2,200,000, the bulk of which, or $1,GSO,000, was in eagles. About $S,000 has been subscribod to date for tlio erection in Golden Gate park, San Francisco, of a monument to the memory of Rev. Thomas Starr King. Gertrude, a 13-year old daughter of Wm. Moritt, while picking walnuts at Napa, Cal., fell from a tree and died in two hours from concussion of the brain. There aro now in tho Pacific North west twe'nty-ono Young Men's Chris tian Associations, including eight col lege associations, an increase of eleven in one year. The schooner H. II. Knapp, while lying at her dock at Wcstport, Cal.. parted her cable in a heavy wind and beat against tho rocks until she was a total wreck. During the month of September Nelson Bennett drove the big Cascade tunnel 430 feet. Mr. Bennett claims that this beats all previous records in tunnel boring. II. T. Townsend, postmaster at Town send, Cal., was instantly killed while coming down the mountain grade with a load of pickets. Tho wagon over turned, crushing him. j Fernando Conde, a Moxican, stabbed his wife at Fresno, Cal., and then cutj his own throat from car to ear. lie i knocked his wife down and stabbed her twice in the left breast over tho heart. John Garrigan, 18 years of age, while working on the roof of a San Francisco hotel, lost his balance and fell to the sidewalk below. He was re moved to the hospital, where ho died soon aftor. The Canadian Pacific ha a prison car with four separate cells and a guard room, all stoutly ironed and capable of standing a siego from without or a munity from within. The car is used to transport prisoners from the Pacific Coast to the Kingston penitentiary. The Dayton Inlander relates a case wherein an Indian acted tho eavago. of old, frightened nil tho women folks out of their house and declared him self' chief, until Rev. J. B. Chamber lain appeared upon tho sceno and horeowhipped the scoundrel, who then fled. A Yakima paper says : Information has been received that saltpeter has been scattered ovor tho range on tho Wenas, as is supposed, for tho purpose of killing tlio sheep that rango thero against the wishes of thecattlo rangers. Some twenty horses ate of it and died from tho effects. After ten years search, Capt. Geo has discovered tlio wreck of the steamer Brother Jonathan, lost twenty-two years ago. Tho wreck lies two miles south of Northwest Seal Rock, eigh teen miles northwest from Crescont City, Cal. She struck on a rock not down on the chart. B. F. Wade, an Englishman about 49 years of age, living near Fairplay, Cal., met with a horrible death. Ho had evidently been killed by a tree, which ho had cut down, falling upon him. Tho body had been eaten by hogs, and nothing but tho bones and portions of clothing could be found a week later. Tho excitement continues over the rich placer diggings discovered in tho Blue Mountains, south of Nogals, A. T. Ono nugget is valued at if 1200. A Moxican. came in with a sack of nug gets ranging in value from $1000 to $800. Many prospectors have gono to the scene on foot and other parties aro going in vehicles. The jury in tho case of Mr. Mary Von, charged with tho murder of Geo. Wedoy Biahop, on tho steamer Ala meda, July 1, returned a verdict of murder m the first degree, and fixed tho penalty at imprisonment for life. For a long time eleven of tho jurors favored hanging, but they yielded to one who held out for imprisonment for lifo. A car load of livo lobsters havo been sent from New Brunswick to bo farmed out in the waters of Puget Sound and tho Straits of Fuca. A Victoria paper pays : Somo uncertainty is felt about tlio fresh water affecting the lobsters in tho three former places, but it is thought that in Esquimau harbor they will havo the best chance for existence. If the experiment is successful, and tho fish lako kindly to the waters of tho Pacific, other consignments will bo rant out, and by caro it is thought that the nucleus of a profitable industry will bo formed. OREGON NEWS. Everything of General Interest in a Condensed Form. Brownsville is to havo a bank. A Methodist Church is to bo built at Burns, to cost about $1200. Baker City has voted to issuo $30, 000 in bonds to build a new school house. The postotlico and store at Mottir taindale, Wellington county, was burned. R. E. Davis, a commercial traveler from San Francisco, committed suicide at Lakeview. The new jail building at Princville is nearly completed, and will soon re ceive the cells. John McDonough, of Lakeview, had a leg badly crushed by getting caught under a wagon. The La Grando postoflico will bo conic a salaried office at the end of the present quarter. A largo wharf is to bo built by the O. R. it N. Company at Albany for use in freight traffic. A new postoflico has boen established at Langlois, Curry county, with Alex. H. Thrift as postmaster. George Wilgerter, a Baker county man, has been adjudged insane and eont to the asylum at Salem. Hide hunters havo about cleaned out the-forests about Grant's Pass and thero is no venison in the market. I. W. Bainl offers to erect a $50,000 theater in Portland if citizens will sub scribe a sufficient sum to buy a site for the same. The total value of taxable property in Washington county is aiocst-cd at $2,954,320, being an increase of $352, 640 over last year. Elisha Sperry, son of J. B. Spcrry, of Heppner, committed suicide near that place. The cause of tho action was a family trouble. C. H. Caldwell, tho slayer of Charles Keen at Siskiyou mountain, has been found guilty of murder at Jacksonville, and sentenced for lifo. It cost a farmer near Harrisbnrg $205 to raise 32 watermolons. Ho had to shoot seven boys in order to give tho melons a fair shako. Jack Thompson killed Herbert Sherry at Antelopo in a drunken row. Thompson is the man who killed mur derer Harvey last spring. Hugo Friedorich was killed iu a saw mill at Yaqiiima. His foot was caught in tho belting and ho was thrown with great force against a pile of lumber. Twenty car loads of grain woro shipped from Spofford Station a few days ago to Denver, Colorado, and will bo used in the local mills at that place. The Fort Klamath and Linkvillo wagon road company has been re strained from collecting toll until tho road complies with tho law regulating it. Tho government has a band of ovor 100 cayut-e ponies on tho Yakima res ervation, but the Indians refuse to take caro of them, and tho ponies arc thereforo a sort of nuisance. In North Salem, J. W. Murrow, a teamster at tho asylum, whilo on his way home was assaulted and choked until senseless, and robbed of $48.50 by two persons to him unknown. The Stockmen's Association, of Gil liam and Morrow counties, havo n per manent organization, composed of tho following officers: Presidont, II. C. Willis; vice-president, N. Cecil; secre tarv, L. O. Ralston ; treasurer, N. Balrd. The following aro tho officers of tho Willamette Valley Beekeepors Associ ation : President, Cyrus Hoskins.Now berg; vice-president, D. Kauffnian, Needy ; secretary, Mrs. Dr. Young, McMinvillo; treasurer, S. F. Harding, McMinville. Somo of tho farmers in this section report having cut three crops of alfalfa this year, says an Ococho paper. This grass seems to be well adapted to tho soil and climate of this country, and will eventually bo raised to a consider able extent. J. H. Weaver, of Weston, has quito a curiosity in his garden in tho shape of a pear tree. It is of the Bartlett variety, and has borno three crops of pears this year. It bloomed in April, Juno and August, anu tlio last crop is fast ripening. From Warnor valley come speci mens of the fine, white salt found in largo quantities in somo of tho old lake bods there. It is said to bo purer than tho finest Liverpool salt. Large deposits of borax aro also found in that valloy. Tlio salt beds havo been worked for many years. Mcdford has shipped 217 tons of fruit to Portland this season, says an Ashland paper. When the wholo sea son's shipment from Roguo River val ley comes to bo figured up it will bo seen that tho fruit exporting biiHinos is already of consequence to the rail road, as well as to tho exporter. A shooting affair occurred botween George Maddox and Geoge Boworlino, at Corvalli8, wherein the formor re ceived a llesh wound in his right arm and tho latter a wound in tho head which may bo fatal. Tho two mon had been having troublo for months. Boworlino had threatened to kill Mad dox on sight. Henry Rinohnrt, register of tho La Grando land district gives notico that all lands in that district, horotoforo withdrawn for indemnity purposes under the grant to tho Stata of Ore gon for Tho Dillee military road com pany, has been rovoked and the lands thereby will bo opened to settlement aftor October 15, 1887. This throws open to settlement in Baker and Mal heur counties a strip of land sixty miles long and fourteen miles wide. RATION A'. EXERCISE. fCttlm anil l'rlnrilr fur the (ittrrrinnrnt of TIumc liulitlclni; 111 It. There l an important fart concern ing exercise which is familiar to tlio physician, but not understood aa it ought to be by the non-professional folk. It is a popular error, that tho aim of exercise is solely or mainly to work the muscles or the organ that ia put in action. Tliisia. indeed, important in itself for obvious reasons; but there Is another purpose in exercise, and that is to stimulate the "faculty of recupera tion," aa it has been called. Whether it is a faculty in the strict sense of the term, as those who believe that nutri tion is uuiler the control of a special system of nerves would call it, does not matter. No ono will misunderstand tho meaning of tho expression aa we use it here. Unaccustomed feats of strength, whether of muscle or of mind, are "ex hausting," wo say: ami this is due to deficiency or want of vigor in this faculty. The work has been performed, but the recuperative nutrition does not promptly follow. The part which has been exceptionally exercised has suf fered loss which is not immediately made good. It has been equal to the demand inado upon it; but. if the demand is soon repeated, there is not the same ability to meet it. There is a great difference in person in this re spect, as every one knows; but it is not r I ways a difference in absolute strength. Of two men of equal muscular power, one may be able to "hold out" in a given exercise or kind of work much longer than the other. The one, for example, can perhaps walk ten miles without exhaustion, whilo the other get.s completely tired out with two miles; or the one, aftei walking ten miles and then resting an hour, can statt oil' and walk another live miles or more without fatigue: while the other can not renew the etfort for the rot of tho day. In this lattei case we sometimes say that ono man has more "elasticity" of strength than tho other and the metaphor is an apt one. lie lias suffered a certain strain, but, like a highly elastic substance, re turns readily to the normal condition when the strain lias ceased. Now. the difference botween being accustomed to work "without feeling it." and being "used up" by it, and tho difference between the prompt and the slow rallying from fatigue, is the difference between the power of rapid repair by nutrition, and tho absence or deficiency of that power; and the aim of exercise is to develop or strengthen the power. What amount or degree of exer cise w ill bivt accomplish this result? It is a common mistake to do too much. People suppose that the more they can do before getting exhausted the better, and so they persist in tho exercise until they are thoroughly exhausted. But exercise with a view to gaining the power of recuperation should never be, carried so far as to exhaust the nervous J energy. No marked feeling of fatigue should be produced. If exhaustion isl o-cperieneetl, the exercise has been ex cessive, and defeats its purpose. In athletic "training" this prineiplo U invariably reeogni.ed. The ambi tious youth who is eager to exercise overmuch, from his impatient desire to gain strength and outdo others, is ad monished to limit himself to the pre cise amount of exercise directed; and this amount is gradually increased as he. becomes able to go through it with out extreme fatigue. And tho man who is his own "trainer" should bo governed by tho siiine principle. lie should be gin with a moderate amount of work continued for a brief period, and be guided iu tho inereaso of exercise by the readiness with which ho recovers from tho fatigue, and regains the power of comfortably renewing tho effort. Tho common mistake is iu seeing how much one can do before getting ex hausted; the aim should rather be to see how much one can do and yot rally from it after a brief interval. And this recuperative power must bo tho genuino recovery duo to rust, and plain, nutri tious foo l, not the delusive renewal of vigor which follows tlm use of stimu lants. If a man finds it necessary to resort to stimulant after work or exor cise, that very fact shows that ho ha kept up tho exertion too long. If the principle wo havo attempted to explain were kept iu mind and followed in practieo by those who desire to gain strength by exercise, there would bo fewer failure than generally attend tno unintelligent endeavor iu thai direction. 1'opulur Science, News. A Pet Dog's Obedience A gentleman residing at tho West End own a dog whoso wonderful intel ligence is the pride and boast of hi master. "You give thqUlognny thingho can carry," said the gentleman the other day to a friend who was strolling with him and the dog through West Roxbury Park, and tell him to take it homo di rectly, and he will immediately obey." Just then a gust of wind lifted the speaker' hat and sent it spinning across the grass. "Take that home, Cio.-mr," shouted tho friend in a spirit of mischief. Sure enough, tho dog seized the white felt and started. Con trary order, mingled with profanity, were of no avail, and tho unhappy ownerof that well-trained dog followed iu a lierdie, with a handkerchief over liis bald head. Norton Jludtet. m m Siiico they reduced fares to flvo cent the Philadelphia street railroad have been able to declare increased dividend. They aro just now finding out how much they lost by keeping fare at six cent. The olovaled road in New York aro having a similar ex pcrionco and tho talk of abolishing live-cent fare U declared to bu without foundation. PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. Emotion sways a far larger mul titude than can bo influenced by cold. logic. A wise man will ncvor shut his eves before ho opens his mouth. Whitvhnll Times. Never want any thing you can't get and you will nlwaya get all you want. nlcnwood, .Winn.. Cactus. Cheek is the tiht rope upon which craft men often cross tho chasm of ignorance to success. Washinqlon llaU-hct. A book lias beon written "for middle-aged women." It will havo no readers. Women aro cither young or very old. It takes the first thirty year of a young man's life to find out that it isn't the man with the shiniest hat who draws the biggest cheek. He that would undormino tho foundations of our hopo for eternity seeks to beat down tho column which supports tho feebleness of humanity. Xevins. A woak man sinks under prosperity as well as under adversity. A strong mind has two highost tides when tho, moon is at the full and whvsii there iano moon. A man will do almost any thing to . increase the happiness of the woman ho loves except to leave her when sho wants to get rid of him. SomcrvilU Journal. "Resolved, That tho common schools of this country havo done mora for its prosperity than the circus," was the question before a Dakota debating society last week. Decided iu tho negative. Dakota licit. While three Ohio doctors woro wrangling iu a medical journal over how to suppress a felon iu its incipient state, one of them had one come on hi linger and had to sutler amputation on account of it. A New Hampshire woman tried to climb ii) a steep roof to catch a hen, but lost her grip and fell into tho water barrel. It makes her hopping mad to be called an eaves-dropper. Burlimj lon Free Press. Tho young womon who read tho essay at graduation upon "Tho stern duties of lifo upon which we aro about entering," was last seen in tho ham mock reading a seaside novel, whilo her mother was washing the dinner dishes in the hot kitchen. Boston Tran scrijit. Mrs. Grundy says that milliner are responsible for tho now and extra ordinary kind of flowers soon on bon nets. "1'is well. Now will somebody inform us who is responsible for tha bonnets themselves? That is tho vil lain iu whose blood wo long to inibruo our hands. Wo don't blame the womon who wear theso accursed things; they can't get any others to .wear; perhaps they they don't know any better than to wear them. Rut tho villain who I originated thein, ho should receive no I mercy from a long-sufforing public. ' Boston Transcript. NOVELTIES IN JEWELRY. Somo Now Thlticx DmlRiiiMl by America,'! Alitiiiiriiuttirlni; Jom'oIoi-h. Flower designs are now used in bolt buckles. Initial flngor rings of fino twisted wires find a ready sale. Toilet articles of oxidized silvor in heraldic designs aro in demand. A penciled tiger-eye owl of dull finish make a neat watch-charm. Silvor bead necklaces of one. two, three and four strands aro becoming' popular. A silver anchor, entwined with col ored enamel flowers, . makes a pretty lace pin. Match-boxes of silvor, with llshing llies in colored enamel on tho side, aro seasonable. A novel laco pin is In tho shape of a shepherd's crook, iu tlio coutor of which is a Pan pipe. Tea caddies of Minton chinawaro have a prominent plaeo on fashionably sot, dinner table. A novel and suggest ivo pin for tho hair or bonnet is in the form of a silver interrogation mark. Cologne bottles of cameo glass, with matted surface and enamel decoration, aro being used to a great extent. Iu silver and gold pon-holdors tho most fashionable aro plain, with tho exception of a twist about an inch from tho point. A pencil can bo pushed from the bottom. A now hair ornament is a largo oxidixod silver ball set on an amber pin. In tho ball i concealed a glovo buttonor, which can bo produced and used at- pleasure Globo-shaped flower baskets, of Daisy Hank waro, ornamented with chrysan themums and topped with a deep band of golden hue, are tho latest in this lino of goods. Silvor business pencils aro being made about four inches long ami in a number of designs, including oxidized hammered, tinted twist, hexagon twist uud thread finish. A diamond spider, centred in a web of gold and in the position of drawing into hi don a Ily of emeralds, with which it Is connected by a gold chain about three or four inches in length, is an attractive ornament for the hair. Ono of tho latetNdoIgns in flower baskets 1 made of a now mothor-of-poarl glassware It Is bag-shaped, tlio top being shirred in imitation of thosu onco popular shopping bag. Tho color ing is either crushed strawberry or a delicate sky-blue. Jewelers' Weekly. Photographs of tho Interior of tlia living eye woro exhibited recently at a meeting of the Canadian Institute by Dr. Itosobough, of Toronto. Ono ot them showed upon tho rotina tho in verted picture of the objects at whlca tho eye was looking.