Evening Star Newspaper, November 6, 1880, Page 7

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ay a ‘ - i od A Pats Hgystitcnep Pocket pores Qan be ornamented prettily by putting a row feather stitc! ih white or colo Working Cotton just above the hem. This ts a good way to mark handkerchiefs for the wash, providing, ‘Of course, that the washing ts done at home. THE SUBCUTANEOTS INJECTION OF SULPHURIC Erukg, tn three-drop doses, at intervals of 12 and he also atic a; er for erzo- lng with Uc-doolvvreux would give ‘good results. ‘Wire Cou» Weatse come the spicy sausages, to add one more to the attractions of the break- delicious “when you knows the 1 meat and scramble It throagh with eggs. It makes au aduilrable morning, or very late even- Bzroxk THE CHILDREN’S STOCK! thin at the piece of clot 30 that they of old stockings Ww! worth using are better than By taking the troubie to do this, stoekings may e made to last twice as long as without it. VaRIOUS ARTICLES and instruments made of with, time, to become dry, to @ and lose their elasticity. nds the foll mmonia, one begin to be VE Manyt nd re = S In cases of States that more than four-ti from that have usutapiton. of the suff a onions. They prefer them ravr, ca"en with salt but they them cooked too. fe, therefore | isof opinion that onions suould torm parto the diet of phthistcal patients. Coat ASHES FOR WALKS —Coal ashes are o! very little value as a fertilize Worth applying to the soll ux it lighter as r chaniealiy. says he finds | ashes, The bot- is easily kept tree trom w compact. How To MAKE Graw4 Bazap.—Almost everybody would Ike Graham were properly and the children ougat to have tat least twice a wee The way (9 make it ts to e brea sponge, add a scc3 and enough 3 worn W ake It, a Ltule the 2 a little sti 's fanctiog. s t sa wledge of Medea, and of Ciree, and of Calypso, and of Relen, and of Rebel of the Queen of Sheba. It means ku all beibs, and fruits, a and groves, and savory in meal: 2 fulness and inventiveness, and fulness, and Willingaess, and readiness of appliances. It means tie economy of your grandmoth: and tlre science ns V RA see, yet more imo: teverybody has seméthine Lice to Ovug Récrirr FoR MAKING Savez-Kear The best weever ate we made oursely for maby years, and fora consideradle time with our oWn hands, and always from it was manufactured in th's wise piace let your “stand,” holding rel toa barrel. be thorouxaly utter, the tub and the stampe: ed. Take off all the halve them, remove th abbaze. In the first from a half bar- ed out; the 3 of the cabbage, heart and proceed with e Lay some cleaa ivaves at the ‘bottom of the stand, sprinkie with a handtul of salt, fillim half a bushel of eur cal sently unti! the juice just m: anhee, then add another han On until the stand {3 full. Cov bage leaves, place on top a ei fittiag the space pretty well, au: aston "nds. S nd when hard fr ing com It wilt be ready for weighing tunate thing in house the opinion of Mr. KR. W seeking after some nov: or other hangings. E the everlasiin rs, curtains wants to hav- 1bor. Dc sora on, not from aby we should not Nk should hot be the gran decoration — ctreumst. is ¢ a ve hand decoration in paint or from the de that sugges sign, there is no good reas’ ton should ve adopted there mi real art d-coration instea of the and everlasting interchang? of t colors. a critical writer ou it the papers oa our W: hang tnour rooms but the recy: 1 the graceful instead ¢ As 3 Of artists of ‘abered with 3 to be ar- tstle, it wi preseat talserable st 0 have what your ne 2 bane or Canpacs Ata Moog.—Provid? on abbage, one-quarter poi of cold pc bh Pps br. Comezys for the | Gent of the United States, between 1823 and ours, is recommended by Dr. 3 | and a half, and although it is certain that races | our forefathers, there is Httle reason to be- ‘Sam Weller's mutton ples, | Fecord to show than that of Sir Charles Ba Like iady a3 | Dury’s famous black colt by Sorcenen waeme = " A word to the wWise—take sausage | | Columbus, Collector, Ld: | SIX Superlative trotters are | thoroughbred than any man th American Trotters. (From the London Field It is not a little provoking to find that while no advance in has been made by the gal- | loplog Engltsh thoroughbred during the preseat | century, the American trotver has imoroved simultaneously to the extent o: being able t> | trave! a mfle in considerably less time than wa3 | required for bis preaccessors to accomplish a like distance, when Andrew Jackson was Presi- 1536. Tradition says that In 1Si3 Smolensko won the two thousand guinea3 m a minute Were ineccurately timcd oy the stop watcnes of Hteve that any subsequent winner over the Rowiey Mile at Newmarket bas a better time mira! Kous always pronounced to have been on? Of the best three-year-olds that he ever siw stripped. Turning, however, to the trottiaz records in which our American kinsmen take such just pride we shall find that Topgallant, Jackson and the best trotters of whom Hiram Woodruff makes me! Uon as having flourished about 1830, could not “knock off” thelr mtle in less than 2:50. All, however, who take an Interest in the American trot'ing turf are aware that at present there are six animals in the United States watch hat done a mile fn 2:15 and less. The nain3 of the: t. Julien, Maud S., Rarus, Goldsmith Maid, Hopeful and Luiu. Aad another secord to the record and there are a host of other trotters, such a3 Sinngzler, can Girl, Darby,Occident and many more which have travelled over a mile course in tess than Thus it will be seen that in the Iasi hal/ century there has been an advance of hati a minute and more per mile in the speed of Ami lean trotters. So steady and susia'ned, indec i, has this im beon,Uhat last montil 3 est of her prede uchieved at Chicago the wond of covering a mile at the trot in 2:10 We have lately been told in a contribmion t> the Nineteenth Century trom the pen of Mr. W. Seawen Blunt, that “betwean them the Dari and Godolphin Arabians may be sald toh ccreated the Eugitsh thoroughbred.” and fa ther, he alleges that every horse mow runnin deduces his origin from these two sires. Mr. Blunt seems, however, to have forgotten tuat many other sires, bred on both sides from easi- ern importations, were foeled 1a England lon¢ before tne Darley and Godviphia Arabians had been heard of. For tnstance, the blood of a host of Turkish and Arabian'sires anterior to tie two “giants” named by Mr. Blunt, may be traced in ‘the pedigree of our best horses, and it is but justice to confess that the Helmsley Turk, imported by the famous Henry Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, 1a the reign of James 1.. and the Leedes Arablau, who took his name from his importer, Mr. Leedes, have done quite as much tor our thoroughbred stoct as the pair of sires quoted by Mr. Blunt. The Awerican trotting turf, on the other hand, wes its present proud position mainly to a strain of blood derived from Engiaad, in re- gard to whi Mr. Charles J. Fuster, of New York, remarks that “the alghest type of Ataei- feon descends from the Eagitsi thorouchbred horse Messenger, imported 1t3 {bis country toward the end of the Last ceatary He proceeds to say that “when the old gray, Messenger, came Charging down the gaagplank of the ship which brought itm over, the value Of HOt less than $10,000,000 ste our soil.” ‘The estimate appears at first sight to be extr: agent, Dut when It fs found, upon lavestigation, that the Messenger blood crops up fa almosi all the best Ameiican trotters of the present cen- tury It 13 to be regretted, for his own sake. that Mr. Bullock, better Known In b's day a3 “Tom Bullock,” was not aware what a treasure he Was parting with when he sold the gray son of Maimbrino to a Yankee speculator nearly a e2ntury since. Tom Bullock had the reputation of being the astutest, warlest and most know- | ing turiite of hls time.’ According to the sa'Irical author of “The Jockey Club; or, A Sketch of the Manners of the Age,” publ'shed in 1792, it appears that Tom Bullock was “an wu: nda Greek,” and in the Quarterly ley, or “Nimrod,” adds that ‘ Was often heard to declare that he should wisi: no better start in life than to be taken for a fuo at Newmarket.” Messenger was the best ra horse that he ever had, and won every mateh thar bis wily owner made with him, inclu oue (upon which the betting was very agaist the Prince of Wales’ Ulysses. Like his son. Mambrino was also gray, and was bred in by Mr. Atkinson, or Leeds, from whose executors he was bowvht by Lord Grosvenor. Mumbrino stood as a Stallion at Lord Gros- venor's stud farm near Newmarket, and, in additiondo string some good race horses, wos the father Of many excellent hunters aad’ use- ful road horses. “It is 5.id.” remarks Mr. Jas. Christian Whyte, “that trom his blood the breed of horse3 for the coach was brought to Its present state of perfection.” Hivain Woodraff tells us that nearly every American trotter of superior excellence Messenger blood in bis veins. ‘The tfrst Ken. tucky sire which seems to have done great good to the trotting stock of that sportiay state was Abdallah, who Was a grandson of Messenger. From Abdallah’s loins spraag by 1gr the best trotting sire that the Unitad States heWe hitherto produced, whose name was Rysdyk’s Hambleto- lan, and in the “List of Trotters with Rezords of 2:25 or Better,” given Jn our contemporary. the National Live wk Journal, published at Chicago, It appears that Hevabletontan Ig to tae 5 ht trotting turf what Touchstone 13 to our own. Hiram Woodruff, moreover, belteves that the Messenger blood existed i the most historica: er = ever bred tn Hilndoosian, whose name was y and who was the favorite of Runjcer “the Lion of the Punjab.” It 13 kaowu Runjeet spent enormous sum3 upoa his stud; that bis bridles and saddles were inlata witb gold and studded with precions sto. Dt that the Maharajah htmselt was a desjerately hard rider. In order to get possession of hi incomparably gray stallion Lyice, Kunjeet Slay used to Doast That he had Spent 600,000 a the lives of 12,000 map. When the fame of Lylee ilrst reached Runjeet’s ears the hors? was the property of Yan Mohammed Khan, one of tae Punjabee princes, who had his capital at Pesiaw- ur. Runjeet opened negotiations to get hold of Lylee, end, having falled, went to war for that parpose. After a long contest the arms of the M: harajah prevailed, and the first coadtilon upon ‘4 he offered peace was that Lyles should be ceded to bim by his vanquisaed foe Atter an inti nite number of evasions and subterfuges resorted to by Mohammed Khan the horse became the property of Runjeet, but he had to fight another War in order to retain him. Lylee, who was be Ueved to be the son of an Eaglish thorough- bred, was seen Iu 1839 by some Engilsh officers, fea-bitten gray, very old, s sixteen hands high,” and wih all ty teristics of the Messen, i Grosvenor died, In is ad done more to improve th it at bi er lived. He had been on the turf tor my centtiy, had spent enormous sums upon tt, jthough noted a3 a mateh-n and as race-horses, {t he wasmore than £300,009 OWL Of pocket by his favorite pursuit. it is satisfactory to know that this vast sum take the upon a plat cooling pi finely eken and poi also and tix it with the tm: Pepper and salt; wash well the with the pork, fowl, and onious; leaves of the cabbage gen‘ly, and | >t | mixture between them, 0: round with « piece of twine, melting I" bau the butier, fry tae eaboage In tt { uulii thorcughiy brown. "Mix the flour with a iittle of the stock in bowl and when the re all beaten out add the rematide Stock. Pour this over the brown c: let all stew very slowly for after. When done serve in a vegetab! jp with the housed around —Pie ar! ur | Cooking — | How I Mave My Wixpow Box.— may a5 we'l tell you about Window box. I had it mat greatly pleased with it. ard iong, fourteen broad, ‘en th tt '3 framed have tals of a. You can or you Wish or ter 1s Croton On one side of It a fine Eranthe- mum pictum, its — leaves look as though they were patuted with white streaks; on the other side Acalypi2. “3 eeana. ‘Taese we the largest plants in my box, and they do not exceed ten inches in height. “There are ixty plants in my box, mostly averagiag six inches ! height, but a few ar? quite small ‘They consist of very choice geraniums, some ot them handsome leaved, variegated abutions, lemon verbena, two bright achyranthes,six very | beautiful ccleuses and four fine begonias. There eveothers I cannot stop to specify. You will see that I have filled my box with what are an themselves beautiful without the ald of flowers, though I expect to have a few of these by end by. f am perfectly satisfied with tt, stasitis, I had a large Get.aan fut Of doors, which consisted of vines. This I planted in one i purposes | “The English had the stock all alon. io | Uvation and perseverance | twenty seconds, Was Lol spent in vain. The natural trotttag: qualities discernible in the descendapts of } T come from his sire Mambrino, who, al- L bred by another, was one ot Lord Gro= Yvenor’s favorite horses. From Messenger are descended Abdallah, Hambletonian, Voluutecr, Mambrino Chiet, Edward Everett, ‘alexander’s sabelia McCullough. The death is announced at New York on Monday of Isabella McUullouga, the soprano singer, some time the wife of Brignoil. She was a native of South Carolina, of Scoich extraction and was gifted with a singularly fine voice. The war wrecked her father’s fortane, aud to earn ber own living she decided to go upon the | operati3 stage, She studted musi. “"nder Tor- Tlant, and tn the season of 1587-5 made wer debut in New York in “Un Bailo in Maschero.” In the !ollowing season she made the tour of the country with Adelaide Phillips; subzequeatly she sang with La Grange, and at different times Was engaged In companies organized by the brethers Strakosch. When the opera of “Lur- line” was produced she sang the title role, with excellent effect: her favorite role, however, Was , Marta. Brignol! met her ten years or $) ago, and after a long courtslp succeeded in winning her. She retired from the stage, they were | married and livea ee for six years. _ nolt finally deseited her, and she subsequently obtained an absolute divorce from him. Since her divorce she has supported herself as a cho r singer, being at the time of her death chtef : >- (a in the Roman Catholic Cathedral New fork. AS an actress her success never was very marked, but the natural quality of ber Voice and her excellent“use of it entitled her to an honorable place among sin: Present Garden Hints. At this season of the year no time should be lost In tidying up. The leaves have fallen irom Uhe trees and should be raked together and car- Tied to the compost heap or used for coverlaug tender things. There are some perennial plants that are hardy, if covered with a few I that often get killed without such co This is especially the case with the cin mum and with others when there {3 0 sno’ A thick mass of leaves is, however, an Injar, It encourases dampness. Th2 thinuest sori of @ layer 1s enough, ana on this a litle earth should be sprinkled to keep the leaves froin tly- ae away. rhen there are always some few unfortunate flowers lett out to die becauce we have no use for them. We do not pull them up, but iet them remain as long as they willii!l the frost. blackens them. Now they may be gathered toyz: with the tops of dallas, gladiolus, tuberose and-so-forth, and taken away. Tender roses, such: as Saffrano and other teas, require some protection. It is much better td aig up ali these tender roses, and 1n soine high Spot, where the water will’not lie, set thein thickly together 2s if we were planilng them, ‘ow earch just enoagh to cover then Those who have tried It speak ng. a i a May tifngs that are hardy when large are a little tender when young, and hence” peapte protect them with stra But the thinnest layer of straw 18 better tian athick one. A thick mass of straw retains water, and the leaves and branches rot before spring. sttaw Is not so much to keep out the 103t— does little of that—but to keep off the wind an the direct rays of the sun, and a thin la! does as well a3 a whol2 bundie will do. Cedar branches are eften used, a5 well as the vouzhs of other evergreens, and are very good, hot enly because they are quite a3 effecitve, bat also because their color ts in their faver. In all protective matters avold fresh strawy froma the barnyard. It 13 full of sait, an 4s destructive to the leaves anu brane plants. Itis espectatiy bad for evergreer large number OF 91 When spri ret ‘a out (in the ground with ther tops above the ground. Way it. that they should do better when cut off how than tf le). on the plants and cut off In the spring, we ean. nol see, but it appears to be the fact.—Ger itn town Telegr raw it on requires « knack Gnite ensy to attain, Buit what a business 'f is, good lack, ‘Lo cet it off acain! London Truth. ee The Tenor’s Wife. (Trantlated from the Frencli.] Yes, Jenny, we have 150,000 frances a year; the Praises of my husband are sounded every day in the newspapers; he is applauded every night he sings, and 13 a very King in his art. But you "t w what it is to be the wife of a tenor. Those who flatter my husband, and they are humerous, are incessantly telling him, Mon- sieur Michael, you have a rotne of dlamonds fn your throat. That may be trae; I don’tsay it 1s not; but if you could understand what con- Sequences it entails—a mine of diamonds In a man’s throat. Michael ts always as cros3 as a bear because of the state of the temperature. A barometer is less variable, He is continually Opening and shutting the winuows; when they are open he wants them shut; when they are shut he says he stifles, You haye no idea of the trouble we have at hotcis to prevent his taking cold, “veh the style of carpet becomes astudy. And the cartloads of furs we carry about with us. And the G'ficulties we ‘have with the fires, There is aiso a long chapter as | to what he may and may not ea is too strong, aud that 1s too weak.’ And the night he sings, there 13 a syrap which he | must drink five Umes during an act, anda hy of brandy and catophor with which wo rab ais !| From morking till night a tenor thiaks | turcat, fug Dut bimsvif; he vistens to hg; he studtes poses before a looking-giass; he US after the servants, “Jean, inufife tue door , Its nolse affects my nerves. Brigit ;, don't pass before me again, you make a draught.” | He jnteirogates his throes 3 y ten menut la, la, ta, N Lways la, 17, (4; at the table he does not taik for fear of de: stroylng his Ju, la, (a. If L ask him to take me out on 4 fine day, he runs to the plano and ex- ercises his /a, fa, lr. “Chief of the E chs.” Acorrespondent of the Allganeine Zeitung, walting from Pera,deseribes at length a remark. able ceremony, which seems to be curiously out of place in Europe—the tostailation of tue new chief of the Eunuchs over the harem of the Sultan. It was a genuine piece of old Tark- ! ‘sh conservatism. ‘The name or the new “Ki3- | jar Agassi,” or Head Eunuch, 1s Stasis Behram | Aga. The Turkish journals give long descrip- | Uons of the function, and pubiish odes aid | cbhronograms in honor of the hero and of the greatevent. The poets expect to gain some Thing ia return for thelr amazing adulation. ‘The new digritary holds a very loity and to: ential position In the system of the Porta; ouly ipree persous stand higher than the Head Eanuch—namely, the Sultan himselt, Vizier tae Shetk-ul-islam; —b: frequently exercises gence upon the Sultan, dso upon Turkish polities, than eltaer of the other two ¢1 3 The now Agassi” ed at the perial Palace of Dolmabagdsché with Most gorgeous pomp. All te sentinels of th imperial harem, armed with helicbards, formed aspaler god “His Exccilency Bebrain ‘et of the Eunuchs,” rode past on a mas cent charger, the orders 07 the Osmant Medschidje glitte: mg on his breast, followed by. Ahmed Bey and a number of the adjutants of Sultan. When he arrived at the gate of the i | tie Abdaliah, Conklin’s Abdallah, Dexter and a famous trottag mares. But richly insmen are indebted to ugh our American ihe Messenger blood, e D would be Injustice to deny that the SUL more to the’ s&ill, pa- fence and pr y lavished upon tratnlug and bringing the tretter to perfection by ws @ Hiram Woodruff and Dan Maze. sy ster trotting horse of the United States 1s aa liar to the country which has ullen, Maud S, Itarus and Goldsmith ese horses are superior by at least forty seconds in the mile to any trotters that Europe can boast, and {t is a Teproach to us {hat we should be’ left so far in the lurch in developing the same useful galt at which for t of the road a horse can travel. says on ae a cul- at has made the difference between their fast trot ter of amile in Ubree minutes and God in two minutes and or less.” ‘The season of the year Is again at hind when thousands of our bunting men will have to go to tae covert side Upon horseback or upon wheels. As man ad. Vanee tn life they natarally find the fatigue of a long day in the Saddie upon their hunter's back sufficiently onerous, w.thout tmposi! upoa themselves the additional labor of ri ing to the covert side. For these reasons most hunting men who have passed forty Fep.tr to tne scene of action on wheels; and it often been a matter of surprise to Englishmen who are familiar with the United States that the Amer- Mtbetoinaid so Wiles caer apes tie Gene hitherto found so favor 2 Ot the Atlantic. Instead of the drag: mail pbwtons, dog victorias and brough- ams employed to drag thelr occu vert. an maunete ane < ae vo eeaheier Ms the light buggy em| et kinsmen were ‘adopted with a pair of Hamble- tonian dred trotters attached to it. Fourteen or Dfteen miles an hour might be accomplished with ease and comfort in one of these light o Phe A Of training, teaching, driving and riding ® Hiram Woodruff, “out tt “tne ‘Dox, and then droped aad ‘The change to {n- leaves to fall off I corner of twined {t on the Regge used ie mente ones fave put forth, and Yhe vines are dly growing. Everythiag repared so that there else had been previously ‘afver belng put a it addivion to the beauty to have Sines of pretty foliage drape ‘This autumn I have had the box ‘asmall, low table wath castors, so 1 the plants every week and thus murning toward the window which assume if = one position. I drainage, and then fill the box with earth, in which was 4 mixture of one-third sand. T'have been thus rin Res A £ Fr | i E ts 6 sige Bg 3 i Vebicies, to which a head Is affixed for use tn | case of rain. The harness of the horses ought also to be purchased in the United States, which | joins themselves upon the superiority of their | leather, and upon the sktll with which it 1s | handled by their saddiers. If the American | buggy should ever be tried In “the shires” we | have no doubt that its use would soon become token of welcome. He was received wiih the greatest awe by the religious and domestic servants of the tmperial household, Including the Most reverend the Imaum of the palace aud several distinguished mollahs—perhaps chaplains tn ordinary to his Ottoman Majesty. ‘The Suitan seat across to his new oficial wwo Syrabols of office, a written document and a | miagnilizent silver pastoral staff worked in re- | lief, which ts never handled by any but the Agas of the imperial harem. The new Head Eunich solemnly kissed the parchment and the staff. ‘The imperial “hatt? was read, some prayers for the blessing of Islam upon ‘the new pastor cf the Sultan's women were said by the clerzy, and then the new “Aga of th ibiime House or as the Sultan's “hatt” calls Lim was allowed to enter the harem and inspect his future dominton. Where Banging Originated. i It has often been a subject of wonderment to | tus where our pretty g.rls got the notion irom ot combing thelr front hair down over thelr fore heads and cutting off uhe ends so a3 to make the meh and a half of hair which they Keep | hanging down nearly to their eyebrows, and which is irresisiibly associated in our minds with an imperfectly sheared mule’s tail. The mystery we solved to our own satisfaction last night as we drop} lato Dr. Jackson’s. The doctor recelved from New Zealand yesterday. among quite a number of ferns and mosses and other curiosities from that sem|-barbarous land, the pictures of two Maori, natives of that coun- | try, @ boy and a girl, and the latter had her back hair all looped upon the top of her head and stuck through with white Upped turkey feathers, and the front hair was hauled dowa ja i palace, lambs were slaughtered before lim as a | | front, the ends ae with the eyebrows. So it ls from the New Z ind savages, and not from the North Ame! Indian squaws, ladic rican ws, ladies, that we copy the fashion.—dolumbia’(S. C.) Register, Gather the Leaves. Forest leaves are excellent it to SU} the stable is saree, ats the cow | almost universal among our huatiag men. | phihienncirtinstin eee S THE Paris Figaro tells a story which Sora | Bernhardt tells on herself. When pl: once | In““Ruy Bias,” at the-Odeon Theater, a fellow ery e remark that Siva cat it and a little fatter. The stoey now circulating her is that an em| cal Grove up to the stage door cf Booth’s and Sara Bernhardt got out. Saas The ton Leader 13 preparing police ft save:—“The reason men sacoeed their own business.13 because ther. poittie in that line.” fae A | wished for. Every one 1s | sions are as truly reli Next-Door Neighbors. ADVICE TO PEOPLE LIVING IN CITIES—DO AS YOU'D BE DONE BY, {London Queen. } Among the many advantages of a Load life nay be counted the perfect freedom of < household to make its own friends, and not enter into any acqusiniaices that are not free, and it is novia the slighiest degree necessary to know the uext-door neighbor on elther side; tadeed, possible to live in a house for many yea not even know them by sight. Bat, without either acquaintance or the Wish for it, there a masy littie civilities which next-door neighd can show to each other, and which, if more thought of, would add very greatly to the pieas- ure of life. It is a melancholy fact that the walls Gividlug the houses from each other ara no longer built of the strength and thickness which Was formerly the case, and a great many sounds ass very readily from one house to the other. he plece of thoughtlessness which greatly in- creases the annoyange of a plano next door fs the act of placing it, if a cottage piano, against the wall of the nefgubor’s drawing-room. It should be placed against the wall of the raom that divides the @piwing-room from the statr- case, oF Hf that fs for auiy reason inconvenient it should be placed away from the wall; the pack can be easily Weautified with embroidery or painting. Ii is not very considerate to begia to play t night, when st. The school t 19: g the plano a’ has possibie by placi irom the wall and not allowing the prac 19 begin til a reasonable hour—ceriafaly noi hefore hail-ps . Nolsy toys shoutd be Q ren, though they lke notse happy without them ictlon to the hapless ni um, trumpet or w We walk tis reallag a orment to pers in the summer moca- atosing as soon as it 1s lzht, pos:t- nm heurafter the neigubor may have In view of the many pleasures antages of London it could not surely be a great hardship to anyone to re- nounce noisy peis to increase the comfort of his neighbor. But the polmtin which neighbors can do tmost to annoy or assist each other's comfort is in the matter of street music. There &re, we should imagine, very few people in- deed who really ike a’ grinding organ; bat, even If they do, ft can surely be hardly sq. In: tepsea pleasure that for tts enjoyment they should inflict the terrisle annoyance on thelr suffering nelghbors. Any one troubled with deiteate het 7€8, or any one Who has any species 1 oC bran work to do, suffers under the infliction of an organ a torture of ‘“ulch thelr duiler neighbors can have no idea, and It Is very uard that such pain should ' be wantonly In ilicted. Those who feel for suffori whieh they do not comprehend, should’ ma'e the heroie sacr.tice of the cherished Instri ment, and absolutely forbid any member of iielr “households to give anything to organ- erinders. They very soon discover the localfti Where they aré not paid and trouble the fabab tants ne ‘more. If fora month two or three houses in astreet will agr organ the moment it begins to bebo futher trouble for a cons Bands are somewhat diffe maetinnes they are good and endurabie; but if It noticed Uial one Inbabitant stops the baud It 13 very in- considerate of a neighbor to encourage 1. 1 Jact. while clerishing the tact that bis “hou: is his castle,” a London resident should consid r ihe comfort of others, and remember that h+ should not condact himself quite as it residing a the country, with no one within a mile of Lim, “To resort” means to go once or more. In stale ageinst Ah Sam the Nevada Supreme Court, urder a statute forbidding any one “ resort” to any place to smoke opliim, said: “7 appellant also contends that the distriet Jud; erred In instructing the jury to the effect that going once to a place kept for opluin smoking for the purpose of smoking 1s an futraction of ihe law. hat the statute forbids all persons ) do Is to ‘resort’ to such places, and it argued that resort means not to go mo once, but to go and go agatn; in other word: make a practice of going.’ The etymolozy ot the word ‘resort’ lends some si i argument, but the definitions g u cons show that whatever may ve been its original meaning 1t nolopger mean3 anything more in the connection In wWhteh it ts empioyed in the statute than to go once.” “Eggs” are not “meat” nor “poultry” within astatute prohibiting the sale of such articles when unsound. Boring through a floor with an auger constitutes burilar) the Alabama supreme court, in Walker 3) State, ‘Ths was where the prisoner bored a hole throuza the floor of a corn erib, stopped it up with a cob, and afterward, on a separate occasion, drew the Shelled corn through the hole into a sack under- heath the crib, “Brass Kkeucks” is used ln the statute as the name of a weapon, without refer- ence to the metal of whtch 11s made. Theze- fore & conviction of unlawfully carcying “brass knucks” will not be set astde because it was proved that the weapon was lead or pewcer. “Terms cash” i3 not equivalent to “recetved payment.” “Terms cash,” on an unrecelpted bill of goods sent by a wholesale t3-a retail dealer, Cannot be held as matter of law to imply eee oo goods were pald tor before they were sbipped. A iarm overseer 1s not a “laborer,” withm the Hen law. Notes, biils, ete., represen’ loaned on interest by ‘2 corporation, are “prop- erty” Hable to taxation. A rallnoad @cpot is a “warehouse,” within the statute or bur ciary. A Sunday-school is not “Diyine worship;” bat a building for the ions of anday ‘choo! and religious 1c tures 13 fora “religious pur- pore,” although occasionally used for fairs and other benevolent purposes. The court sald (in @ Pennsylvania case): “The Sunday-3cho0l rsom + and tbe lecture room of a modern churen are o> essentially used for religious purposes as the body of the church bullding itself. ‘The Saubith schools are an important auxiliary of every Chiisuan Church, and Indispensable to its life audgrowth. That the services £ ich 8: Well known to be seriously disputed. lecture room. It 15 ust ing lectures and other tendance js not large, The expen ing and heating the main church thus avoided. But the lous in their character as the sermon upon the Sabbath.” A supervising architect is a person “labor” although not a “laborer,” wi ineaning of the mechantes’ leu law. A widow keeping a bearding house with a female f residing with her, and female servants, be: the boarders, 15 the “head of a family.” Bat a ngle man, who keeps house and us no other persons living with him than servants and em- ployees, is not the “head of a family” or a “bouseholder.” And an 5 Bi Gen. Garfi (Mr, T. L. Nichol’s Sketch. j Mrs, Gariield Is a very pleasant but not a demonstrative woman. She ts well educated and appreciates the good things in literature and art She reads “solid” books, and the ma7- azines; looks well after the house and teaches her own cbildren; she ts a “help-meezt” and an entertaining companion for her husband, and abundantly able to entertain his most Intellec- tual frlends and visitors. I should thin! most marked characteristic 1s that of perzect attention to her own business, and no meddling With other people's. Sue 1s unostentatious. She reiused to allow hier photograph to be sold or her picture to be engraved, though earnestly pressed to do so by photographers, engravers und by many friends. I suspect she don’t care to be written about much elther, and I don’ wish to do violence to her desire in this respect by extended ¢ mments, The children ere two boys, one girl, and two more boys. Their first child was a girl, which died when a few months old. ‘Their las} Was a boy that died when abont two ye. Harry, the oldest living, is sixteen; A youngest, is elght; “dim” ts fourteen; twelve: and Irvin, ten years old, iu a quiet, steady boy, very obedient and dutiful, particularly respectful toward h's pareats and grandmother. The writer had an opportunity ofseelng a characteristic letter whieh he wrote vo his mother sho uy after the Chicago conven- tion. he and “Jim” being in school at Concorl, N. 1, at the time. He spoke of the fact tha! some of hts schoolmates haa mantfest2d a great deal more Interest in himself and “Jin” sine+ thelr “pa” was nominated for President. H> evidentiy phous Ay this a littie snobby, and salt he didn’t consider that they were a bit’ bigger better than they were before, and that he wou!t respect his father just as tauch “even if he wee nothing but a Congressman all his life.” le dicn’t seem to think ita very big Utlag to be 4 Congressman. dim is what is called a roliicklag boy, never known to bestiil unics3 usle. physically nd intellectually he is very stron; and very quick. Te masters his stud'¢s almos’ without effort and in inered'biy short tim>. School he lMkes the gymnastim; he excal the trapeze and the springboard. At home ly. Stands on bis head, walks on bis hands wich ni heels up, turns handsprings and somersaul-s and jumps the tence In'preference > operias the gate. He 1s good-nature |, Kiud-hearred aid accommodating, and famou. for boy.30 de a rather qiilet girl, with rc markable good sense for her years; she keeps () her lessons prety, close ani plays the plano very weil. Irvin is the queerest geotus of the family, though I don’t know how to deser.be him. “Abe” is an artist. He Is always making and seems to prefer drawings of ma- A train of cars is one of bis favorite and he will have the engin, bag- pat care coaches and sleeper. that it would take ‘an expert 13 He ty Bota pictures, ehinery. drawin; ROOM AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS. per's Bazar } ib Harpe It is generany'etppo Pd Plants that the characier of the seil is th Prinelpal requisite to tucir Uon; it is, however, of compared with ligt. heat matteis not how suitable the soil ma, nears, Proportions, be not given 9 ihe supply of these three not thrive.’ If lg! Sec: hi be not te plant makes a long, feeble growth, the leaves are greatly elougal 14° eur ZTOWSTS Of 16.@3 fal Cul Iva- nd mm ‘3b2 ia the! plant ‘y given, the the Steins Oo. the leaves became soft and flabby, and do not have their It heat be fajudieiously prover, green color. app! lied without a suficieut amou tbe €vsl becomes greatly tuerea: OF Meh especia when it is given at night. Hence plants in rcoms or greenhouses suould be kept ata much lower temperature at aay, difference, espocially in cht than during the Nature does this for hatural state, ¢for there is alway them in their a marked temperate or semi- tropical countries, between the day and nigat therevore, who kee] temperatures. Those, their plants at nearly the same temperat gay end night ran counter to the laws of bature, and to do thls in all cases tuvolves in- Jury, if not ultimate destruction, to the subj ed to the contravention ‘of those laws ‘There shouid always be a differeuce of from exp ten to twenty degrees boiweea tue day ani night temperatures in which plants are reference Of course being temperature requisite for the that if the plant shou! tehipcrature of elghty degrees, perature should not e: and may for a short five degrees without tuju only requires a day degrees, sufi sleep Well Ina tempe require tn the dayt!m Leal consistent with & sae rule to go by. The amount amount of moisture fn the grca house, and this point 13 oue of the most jal requisites been <sicnal and amaveur soreuppiyins ie ali Mostly Gepeudent upon eva ure from the ghg Of the plan 1S Comp: hold when at iollowing table giv water which a cuble foot of alr when saturated ae mm wii rs night th tw th cent previo held; and outside at zer and filly per cent., times as much, in drying the atm in tS, With but few excepit freally overio cul v remarkable dr: l quantity of mo! outs! nty-live degrees, which e laps Of glass and the crev.c: Tk, will, When heated to forty-five degre -s iu the greenhouse, take up one handr or double the qnautity of wat wi i. it will take up four hundred or had Of moisture or water to be given to the roots 1s largely alr of the room or the eultivation of ide cold 1 ofthe wood- d per or it th the thermom four and a ha't We also see the effects of cold Phere 10 the formation of hoar-trost on the glass of a green Window Of a rovin, the hoar-tros moisture abstracted trom the warm Ini use or the be air by the external cold atr, Ordinury gree low saturation at the u thelr growth. temperature of the perature than ina high on: up artiiicial rapidly evaporated from the Ybis evaporation the abstraction of he:t from the il, So to speak, and consequent must be made reat Injury. e plants requ! mosphere the moisture more than twenty-five or tl in 1 ‘This point of have shown above, varies ay bet which er cent. yp De- mperatuire reqaired for urction, as we roag ‘to the 38 In alow vemn- D, ly i leaves: turn yellow, or are dried up or spotted with brown dead spots. When a ately damp by Mn the alr wi condensation talatng 5,000 cuble feet of space that thermometer at zero outside, and us moderate—the house bein: grees—it required the a cuble foot oF we tw dance of moisture. sreenhouse 18 kept only yringing or ¥ be abstractet for qua gallons, or sixty-two aud a half pounds) e: enty-four hours, cr at the rar seven and a halt grains to every cu space; and tis did not furnish’ a In this houc2 large plant of Camelia japonica for i moder- atelan, nhou ad kept at nity de- tal evaporation of en anda hait 119 se arly three months wi.hout supplying any water to the roots. It did not green color ot From what lea’ imity to a stove. mas auy g.owch, but y lost ne and retainel We fali deep es. e heve sald, fects of allowing cold drad. plants, especially in rooms, ar ‘The cold alr from the lower window rushing into the room will di up and do them more harm by its ey. power than ff they were placed in ne Where plants are ke room, the windows in which they are the injurious et- $3 of afr upon y parent. Gf au open 7 poratiog: r prox- t ina placed ver e halt should always be lowered at the top wen the room fs aired, or the plants removed from the draught raised, the combustion of ga iighting. itis of cold air if the lower sash must ue We may also aid that the product? of when used rooms where plants are kept, is In fact, there are very few’ | grow or thrive in a room wher When used, the Pp! qoved to ancther room where it js not 11 se. 4 popular fallacy that heated tron or in lighting very fojurious. plants hat will gas ts used for nisshou:d be re- other metals, or brick fines, absorb the mois- ture from the air, and so dry it. On the con- tary, they only conde: ture, of the air when the: as may be scen by the cond: on them w. thaa thi n they are furnish, tnere: moisture, 15 ti at surrounding atr— technically called, itis utterly hem to do this when the heat through them, or the be: is greaier than that of the. surr The rarefaction of the a‘ by the ing the capacity of the alr for 2 reason of ifs Te causes It to absorb water froin comes fu Contact with. 1 they produce injurious effects by the volatili, zauon Ot the impurities contained tn the metal, and the carboulzation ot ie dust aad other ma.ters floating in the atmosphere, producin; the smell of burning 50 oft Castiron 18 much worse 1 sheet iron. Sheet iron st brick produce but litte coutaminatt wir, and It a sunicient given, produce a heat as plauts as can be furnished by means other than open pipes of a hot-water apparatus By expensment tt beat. Vapor or water will s : wuder & pressure of 1,100 pounds to the s the pipes of & hot-water apparatus, it 1s self- i an not give out aby molsiur arismg from heating by hot water is in the power of water to retain its heet for a long time, and so giving out tts ,heat gradually, avd keeping an equable tempera- evident that they lure in the greenhouse. ‘The heaith of plants in a room, so far as it is deyendent upon the moisture and putty of the alr, is @ good ciiterion of the healthtalness of the room for human be! authorities state the area of Lhe humsn longs exposed to the action of the air we breathe to uare feet. or iore than be fourteen hundred half the area of a city bundred fect. body, He or destroys the eggs. Give your plants ‘plenty of 1 heat, pure air with a mn it, and cordance thrive, “Disturbance!”—Country banker to shaky customer—*Are you a 80} lot ‘This enormous area of surtace exposed to the evaporating action of dry, cold, or impure air reust cause an tmmens? aosoip— ton of heat and moisture trom the humaa and if not counteracted by pure air arct- y heated and charged with moisture, must have a very injurious eff and seriously lmpatr the health, An important resuit of keeping moist the airot aroom orgreenhonse tn which plants are kept is their comparative fre- lom from the attacks of imsects, especially the red spider and the mealy- bug, neither or which thrive; well in a moist atmosphere. The continually condensed mol: - ture on the leaves aud stems of the plants, and in the crevices of the wood-work, probab! stifles the young as soon a3 they are aveacd, a supply of water at the roots In ac- With tnese, and they will b2 sure to your account is overdraw: Soolivan—‘ am, Me about such thriflest or absorb the mols- are colder than it is ly im Ss passing At which they give out nding et heat’ th y dry, and erythtng theate 1 tO rednes n complained of his res] 3 lined iy olstare iz fly healthtal for any artificial y 13 ings. Payslological Uwenty-five by one upon the body, ht, moderate supply of moisture . Vs that na hundred or so?” Don’t |___ STEAMERS, &e. ,TKAMEM MATTA s FOR PUTON AC having sharf, v.. A SATURDAY Maitox Creek, p | a FDNDAI, SIDE PLUSH asp BEAVER HATS, LONG OSTRICH PLITMES, F and ret FANCY FEATHERS, Ero, Parle aswluct.s Wea Jouth of Rew Sark. ing, Tbcrsday abd Sunday Nsspigacd aieblitetatdon tuac Creek Monday wotne, MS. J. FP. PALMER'S, No. 1107 F st. n w. MONOGRAM KID GLOVES, 2, 3, 4 and 6 Button, oct6-Sm T5e., $1, $1.25 and 81.50 Por Pair. ectls MLSE, §, 2 BESSN, Darsopaara ig comes STEAMER THOMPSON, jon wilh Avency for a s — = ZERNS, SISTEM OF OUTTING, ke., 1903 Fat. | fyPt, coun Boog, built expreeay orth. t ery MON leaves 6th strect wharf ev DAY, THURSDAY and 7 inci cee ee PARISIAN MODES, O. 8. LOVELL, President, 2243 Lath street northwest. ——— to so th er Aieeet Aho pages ELEGANT WALKING, EVENING AND RECEP- | q) m.. every LATEST NOVELTIES IN DRESS TRIMMINGS, SUNDAY, TUESDAY ARD THURSDAY, Sten EE Sryah oe roromea mires canprnen ly WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY. Lepsignnent of JERSEY WAISTS and PLUSH SASHR! os) ee Fare end Freight at lowest rates SWEEPS THE DECK,” His-ay F. J. STONE, Purser. Beantited eS a ot ! EEOLK AND FORTRESS MONROR Beautiful styles ri prices. see UNDERWEAR, STEAMER JANE MOSELBY, In great variety for Ladies’ and Children at lowest | pirgt.ciace fare: ly Rad te nd-class fare, 76, Hound, ake EDNESPAYS ane FRIDAYR, at 8 o'clock 1 7, Ve : NESDAYS and F' o'el ope ere ee Norfolk alternate days at 4p.m.,stop- 3 Casi “ pins st Alexandria, Piney Point, Point Leokout Eid, Dog, Castor, = Cashmere for ladies and | gud Fort Monroe, Va., going aud returning. G = AMERS FOR NEW YORK. Best Gossamens. Steamshiye JOHN GIBSON and E. C. KNIGHT, CORSETS, River, N-¥., SATURDAYS, at 4 p.m. 7 a.m. An endless variety, 50c. up. LACE FICHUS, And ready mae Laces in BcaRPs, TIES, &0. 82" Low Puices IN ALL DerantTMENTs. DOUGLASS, oct? Oth street. ME. WASHINGTON, FASHIONA BLE DRESSMAKING AN. MMING STORE, Bt nue, % DAMB. For freieht apply t A. DENHAM, Ast., 63 Water t.. Georgetown. “Hiekets, Staterooms, Ke , <9 to General OMoa, 1416 F st. n.w., pear Wiliard's Hotel. = 2.5 Es, Se VOR NORFOLK, PORTSMOUTH, FStoxtor avo THE SOUTH STEAMER GEORGE L¥ARY, Ga -rying U.§. Mail. Joskrn Wain, 1 Commander. Pennsylvania ave ral . Drei wits, C 5 Wasnixeron, Nonroux, Sureriot sijie at short Hotices Pedic’ Con tale | Prom Toot of Seventh wt | From Cay zpbel's wharf, Dresses Cut aud Basted, and a perfect ft BAER” | -sowpay Waprias. TUESDAY”? THORS. DAY and FLIDAY, pay AkD SATOR- LL THE LATE 3 P.M. at 8 Aas = ‘TEST NOVELTIES Sioye at Piney Point ana Put Lookout Going PALTERN BONNETS snd HATS, fine MIT. $ = ‘ Trp, RELY GOODS, DRESA TRIMMINGS abe B ere: ft eens Pg TONS, three styles of FRENCH CORSETS, UN- | 00d until used. Tickets and staterooms for ale DERGAEMENTS, La Bae NEGHWEAR, | 808. W. Reed's Sops, 12164 et. nw. i. B. Polke EID GLOVER, ‘SUITS, LADIES’ OLOAKS, | !thorn's stationery stone, 62 Ua, ext to Post BISSEp" CLOATS, CAgUMERE WRAPPERS, ,| Ofice: Purcy G. Suuth's, 1°9. Fenn’. “se. nw, and all @ m0 ni velt le 4a a a DI. WILLIAN. 1 Cite Trevise, Paris: 907 Pa.ave ith st hart Wastunztou, D. 0. cathers Dyed, Curled ond Cleaned equal fore@ | gen2t-cm Cmts seat etm, RTH GERMAN LLOVI>—Sreausarr Lry Between New Yorx, Navn, LONDON, SOUTHAMPTON AND BREMEN. The stesiners of this company will sail every Bat- urday from Bremen Pier, foot of $d street, Hoboken. Hates of rassage:—From New York to Havre, Lon- don, Scutbampton and Bremen, frat cabin, S100; second cabin, 960; steerage, #30: prepaid BOOTS AND SHOES. Vurchisse a pair of eur LADIES EXTRA FINE CUBACOA KID BUTTON £OOTS at 83 a. stees pur, worth 4. Large lot Just reoeived. certificates, #28. For fretwht or passage argv We are aso efering at’ the lowest priceal GELEICHS & 00., 2 Bowling Green, New York. the BEST HAND-MADE BOOTS ana SHOES W. G. METZENOTY & OO., 925 Pa. ave., Aventa FOR GENTS' that can be found in the market. for Washington. maT Au exumination of these gooas wll coavince you tliat I aia not boasting. W. H. RICH, ‘717 Market Space. oe Repairipg neatly executed. GBanp OPENING nov HET hanegten eon BATLING DAYS, OF THE From Washipgten—Mondays, at § p.m. BRANCH prolsht fecelved aullp wail & p.m. Gerrmetown Seas a aoe received aud delivered at Wastinetou. meen a0 Penns Avenue, BY | peedtenece ee ee oR aay i zRout b a So Eee Avene £00. Agents, 1ith-st. Ww 41202 F at. n.w. Sovrmesst, Oarrron Hrz, ashibgton Will be Opened from BATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, For the Entire Week, for the Benefit of the Public of Capitol Hill, Navy Yard, and the Surrounding Country, Witha STOCK OF GOODS THAT Has NEVER BEEN EQUALED IN THIS SECLION OF THE OITY. LEOPOLD BICHOLD, Proprietor. DON’T FORGET 491 Penn, Avenue. IS TO BE CONTINUED SAME AS BEFORE. octz3: _7=are Link. LANE ROUTE. THE CUNARD STEAMSaIe COMPANY LIM- a LA - Between dag ator cane i en Call. FROM PIER. pe rates. ES = meenstown, ‘hrotgh buls of lagen given for Beifast, Glargow, Havre, Antwerp and other porta on the outinent, and for Mediterranean Btceraze tickets fi And al other parts Meat , vi UE. For {1 it and passave app!y st the Company's Araneae ras oft Bort Brae Gta? Se earn — gabin’ to OTIB Bi W & OO., 605 7th street, Opps axp Eps oF au27 VERNON H. BROWN & 00., N.Y. GENT’S FINE BOOTS AND GAITERS LADIES’ GOAT AND KID BUTTON. MISSES AND BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES. GUM BOUTS AND SHOES. LL. HEILBRUN, No, 202 7th st. Jas wteamne’ . Scholten, ‘Schiedam” and f this Hine. Re K. For passa apply to . ME &00., $25 Pennsylvania enue, Washington; or F. Hf.” JOHNSON, Age National Safe Deposit Building, coruer New York avenue and Lith street northwest. ang ten of * 1a We Window.” Sign of “The Old Woman in yw." oct oz ‘—_ Sihene NEW YORK sHoE sTORE, TRANSPORTATION OOMPARY. ennsylvania Avenue. OUTSIDE LINE OF STEAMERS S02 Eten ne BALTIMORE and NEW YORK. RELIABLE BOOTS AND SHOES. Bailing days from Baltimore—Every WEDNES- EVERY IHING AS” REPRESENTED. RS ON a IES rou Money Paid Back for Goods Returned. Youn ort ROM EHDAY ana BAT- ce List: New Bead this at OP. ih, Bast Biver, (esr Ladies’ Fine Kid cr Goat Button. SEpar. St 8 pm. from Pier 68, Ladies’ Beet Cur. Kid Button. rer scoommodations. Lowest Ladies’ Best French Kid Boots Ey Ladies’ Solid Goat Button. ‘Kates of passaco—Firet-ciass, 85, inclnding meals ee jie er Partin and stateroom berth. Bteersxe, meals, if de- ifses’ Best Ki ie aes % Pret Ciild’s Rawhide Tips, (Heel seek Ue Pere HUGGING Agty Child's best makes, Bpring Heels. (Boston Wharf.) BALTIMO) . Men's Bolfd Coupréss Ga:ters GEo, H, GLOVE, Axt, Men's Congress or B yeas-ay ter 49, BA BP eblote Baya t TNE Job let of pare LA & TON BOOTS fo $2 0, las e3- a COAL AND WOOD. ONE PRICE. z moved Dl tol) LE rena CO. McOARTHE. Goa. woe, a SI (Formerly with W. H. Marlow) Bas on hand and constantly receiving the best qual- SPORTING G OODS. == fo ities of Coal and Wood. Particular attention given i delivery Of Oosl free frora slate or dust. Or- © corm: sosesrr: | "gixoteteienenee pare om ! in Office—; n. We the tiger taronen ene nen inton energy | cia FOC OUM Ree OTK AY, By. the way wfa Double Barrel Brooch loading Shot tent le canna inert dere tra fine Damascus Steel Barrels, wit os, sret bolted Beicanon Wigt Ton Buen ketion Be fatal em ny d Retail Desler in Eesoundinw bar Locks! Pistol Grip-and Bateit COAL AND WOOD. ap Forend ! Double Bolts and Solid Firing Pius! | grain Omoe, Daoteand 008 ‘he whole gun is richly engraved and clewant in | ang Virginia avenues. yard 143 B st. desicn and fnish. rial given and warranted to gid as low ar any Tincs ia te ci shect aril aud sive perfect satisfaction or money | pin KINDLING WOOD ub.00 per cord. refunded SLY 855, FORMER PRIGE 8100. A Load of RINDLING Wood daivered tm an OEAIA’ patt of the city for 81.25. porting Bazare, cor. 15th and F, opp. U.8.Troas., } ELEPHONIG OONNEOTION. snd'sal tub, ove. U8. Post Oitice. Orders “promptly Bled, and satisfaction Catalogues fre to all. octié | artced. ea EAIB ASSOCIATIi®O) F PREMIU’ FOR BEST RBRVS Gas cae competitors. iM. BUPPEHT, Nos. £03 and 405 7th st. n. w. HEADQUARTERS FOR THE WHPTNEY ONILDREN OARRIAGES, AROH ERY AND FISHING TACKLES; ORO- QUET AND LAWN TENNIS; BIOx- * OLES, VELOCIPEDES AND WAGORS. jy%- Az Priors TO Burr ree Times. OOAL us over all STEPHENSON & BRO., Depot and Mill, 7th-street whart. Office: 12th and Penn. avenues anu L. SHERIFF, Dmaixa G. OAL AD WOUD, fasacal attcutlon given to every oxter. ELAG nad $26 Pa. Ave, (oLcns1a POTTEBY. ‘Telephonic connection. 313 Georgia avenue, foot of Sd st. east. | Depot aud ‘Mills, Waierand N street, Potomas Fine STONE and EARTHENWARE of every de- — = *<Fitud aud machine-made FLOWER POTS OAL N Brornens. 00) oTSARDIEN Vat DATRY and OOOKING PC Weight. pest | egg roeae cy ioweet orice nile without delay. | Main ‘office, wi A ill and depot connected ‘With unequaled facilities and sdvautawes for eco- EDUCE un AL, BILLS a cwniwy f conducting ‘wood coal R ° = a wharves frctory, a yard inp ob AND HAVE ONE OF to stock up. ‘when ooal is lowest; offices throughout the elty, and all in ‘commu- NORCROSS’ REGULATORS nication, ineuring ‘prompt ‘to orers, we attached to your furnace. It is AUTOMATIO and | Wa "yhira, ‘o.che.wjour hatrous the best varie- will eave one-third of your coal. ‘We insure Gl LO Fiixxors sing £0 DENTIMEDER, scare cure for toothache, local orneuralsie wclest HLOCZEWSEL'S Pharmacy, 423 Oth st. n.w. ‘CASES FOB SALE. ‘A LOT OF PLATE GLASS METAL FRAMED COUNTER CASES IN GOOD CONDITION. M. W. GALT, BRO. & CO., JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS. 1107 Penna. Avenue,

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