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: ills f : THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, DEC 23, 1881-DOUBLE SHEET. Written for Tux Stas. BovishH ADVENTURES, for some of Mother Merri jolly-boys and doughnuts. Then they began to search for eggs. and whenever they heard a hen give the police officers, but they came not. At last the men, after the greatest di SULLIVAN AND BYAN. Dangers trom Comets. Such a comet as that of 1811, which, though ———= : got up stairs and placed the body in a coffin, - | 27 FAME SY sien LEON: en coakle they reahed 16 Geran yy ae oo ae pe ‘cutside, | TBC Bestom Roy's rae reek it never approached the sun within 90,000,000 ait Penney vanis ave. orth | Ss Parr — it afalse alarm; whatever was the reason, the | and asked them to withdraw, because they were | Ofleams—No Imterference by the miles, yet displayed greater splendor and greater ‘opened {| porosac NI ‘a follows hn Did yon ever know a boy who was not Zasci- 2 ,, : asked thent to withdraw, becuse laenee, | ‘horitiesHow the Fight May be etic d ich bat ee : | favs for Nowini. on Thursdays tor Brick House Late Pune an fowis were not kind, and they soon abandoned | in the greatest danger from'the awful disease. ae e. of Traine | CO™tic development than comets wh! ve NCH LESS Ww TERM IN JA — | Ine (Machodock Creek) and Mattox Oreck: ot Subaaye Aaied with adventures by land or sea? It] that forlorn hope. But they were like wild people, and only yelled | S*®PP®@—Sullivan: inte all but grazed the solar surtace, would be a jorming, Afternoon and Evening Clases of all | 2 yp Matton Cragin: returaine om delights them to read of a terrible fight between | They could see Craiz cottage across the waste | the more and made arush at him. He got up| &s+ very dangerous visitor if its conrse chanced | ¥tales. The syaicm of teachin is pleasant, thormuti, | 2 uring at intornediise given landless & man anda lien or some other ferocious and | of waters, and they felt it must be dinner time. | stairs, and the three picked up the coffin’ ant to be so directed as to carry it straight | modmrate “Galt. ot cant ee sem ae | one Coe plete They could imazine their sisters, Dollie, Pinkie, powerful especially when the man 3 G hy 5 yi escapes by the startli Gracie, Gretchen, and the guests, enjoying the wc and ingenious strata- commenced to carry it down stairs. They met with another difficulty; the stairway was 60 Gor. N. ¥. Herald. New OriRans, December 17, 1881. toward the sun. And there may well be erate. Call. or send name V. PRUDHOMME, 1415 [ street and northwest. ackdress. MILI nae, aleo stops ab = ap. =! G. T. JONES, Agent. nt comets as far exceeding that of 1811 as IKE SISTERS OF THE VISITA - | Wore. aap « puddings, blue berry pies and milk, and that | small that the coffin would not go down. They The int in great prize fight to come | this exceed S43, wi ington, are now prepared to receive a ? N ——— gems that such an encounter would develop, for | added to their hunger. Suddenly Franz | then turned it sideways andon its end. The off ene aie Te aes boy, | cottree of ny cone sey police ty test ge of Dupri board st hr Nae ia Por te resrttcinte anehpe nner as the Bible says: “What will not a man give in| thought of the fish-hooks and worms in his | body was so decomposed that portions of it Tan aD tikn a take ‘place within org | directed as to carry it’ straight toward. the | sem a. apply te tite Directrees of the Acsaen On ana after NOVEMDER an, 1881, the steame auliaaag he Wau pocket. and soon the poor boys were flat on | out on the floor. At last they got it down stairs | 2 sia arate (ake Place within one | very center of the sun instead of passing | the Vistatoa, Wasingtos DC 3 ARRGOWSMITH wil leave tee wbunrt fork Of ith eae 1 was much amused with the story ina late st. | {He Tecks. leaning over angling for cunners—a | and rushed it to the wagon, and while almost | hundred miles of New Orleans, still continues | srazingly by his orb as did the comet of 1843. RF. MU at every MONDAY, TRURSDAY and SATURS ca my h "y nt, | little fish that the Gloucester boys are expert | fighting the way, jumped into the wagon and | unabated. Indeed, no event that has occurred | Of course the chance of a very large comet visit. | .¥E vatay ana a a a eget Hichoins of the man with the pot of green paint, | incatching. Very soon they hada pretty good sup- | drove away. It is believed that a number of | here within a good while seems to have awak- | ing the solar system on just such a course is ex- ie ee ee tina, On SATURDAY, Currionian and Leonardtown, who was besieged by the elephant, and who | ply, and as they had watched the skippers clean new cases of sinallpox will follow from this. ened so much interest not only among the | ceedingly minute. Still the event is aitogether | n> ie drwes, tor | : JOHN K, WOOD, Avent. Maile such an original use of the paint, that he | tle flsh in the fish-houses, they felt that they +90. ~ possible. There can scarcely be a donbt that if PSSABUS, 1212 L street northwest. | 0 NORFOLK. PORTSMOUTH, FORTRESS escaper.—the elephant being unable to distin- | Were equal to that task: but Franz had lost his ‘The Nun of Kenmare at Knock. sporting people in our city, but in all classes of | PX event occurred the result would be disas- E MONKOK, PINEY POL ‘ND nish him from the foliage of the ferns and | ‘Bile overboard the day before. Then they had| The following very remarkable letter appears | our citizens. The champion hitter of the world | trous for the present inhabitants of the solar ¥ BOSTON, TEACHER wit ce acd. guish hi s ho matches to light a fire, so they concluded to | in one of the last numbers of the London Morn- | is here to-day the observed of all observers, and | svstem. The downfall of millions of millions of Addrees 944 | CONNE re UH THE BOSTON AND PROVI- forest trees. trust to father Merrili's kind forgiveness, and He ‘id imagination of a child would Make him long to be the hero in such a stirring drama! He would delight to tell the story of bis vil, his fear, hope palr and weariness, and be the various enter the house through a window in the shed. They had heard how hunters and savages mai aged to produce fire by the friction of sticks or rocks, but their efforts were not a success; so, {ter another consultation, hunger proved such 7 RIS RAPIDLY AC- | Piret-clane fare to Norfc Such reports, from whatever source they em- | their laudations of a truly magnificent phy- | mous, though short-lasting, accession of ir qvured. Prof. Larroque, A.M.,Parisian teacher; <) el : all doubt o! i “ : = a ‘nal Secuud claws tare t Sra acceding was tung to the vive eres | anate, do incalenlable harm, as they throw die-| slque. splendor and of solar heat, a change which | xraduste of, In in they went, and emerged with some matches fo have such an exper- | and an old lebster knife ing Post: Sir: Asa paragraph has got into many papers with an incorrect account of my visit to Knock, I beg your kind insertion of the following. credit on real miracles. The facts are simply as follows: 1 obtained permission to visit Knock, whether on the street, taking a quiet stroll, or chatting pleasantly with a select company of friends--he is still the admiration of all eyes. and tongues appear never to tire in expressing It may be positively asserted that Sullivan never looked better in his life. And this may masses, each weighing many tons (a fair suppo- sition as tothe average weight of the meteoric attendants on so large a comet as we are consid- ering), at the rate of 350 or 360 miles per second. upon the sun's orb, could not fail to be an en could not but prove destructive to every form of life existing on the earth or any other inhabited | translated. 9 QcHOOL oF ELOCUTION AND. ‘ E AMATIC ART. RS. ADELINE DUAL MACK ‘(of New York), ma 729 13th street north wet. ON PARLE A PA! als CE STEAMERS IN NORPOLK. Steanyer FNCELSIOR on TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS. | avd SATURDAYS at 9 pun, FALL AND WINTER NING OCT Point and Pout Lookout. Potnt aud Point Lookout. 0 a lanet. ae | Tickets and staterooms tor ane and information tur- Feat gaa tud gels can only taney what | | Jimmie prepared the fish, and Franz gathered | ay Archdeacon Cavanagh was anxious that {| &éiven on the authorty ie die trejner in the |)? The chance of such’ catastrophe la maall’ Tt | rnon lan tes. LOGIEN F. 6 BrE'U. Neko then 1951 Bota vane eae eae eadis eel fostio’ Bie Sue marine ae fey cooeen at Pan for | should found a convent there If possible. | freme.ck manly, Vigor, he, stan 207 pounds, and | 889 small that not one sun in millions mi | wn Bese, eae ed cece ° Stare tt Chea Mal a ya > 7 ? i By eta : abc) went there, accompanied by the chaplain of the ament. tay expected to suffer in this way during thousands Pete L STREET NO! . wext to City . Fie OF oar eter conflicts with the griz: | had never had & lesion in culinary arts they did | Kenmare Convent’ I neliier saked' iy ished | oait te’ Ta eee eee ane DNEWY | orvears. (For womust remember that ourenn | Fuca he papi “th street wharf. zlies of our western wild We all recall | not know that It was necessary to put butter or | (or nor expected a miracilods ene, Ta fant | VistP Hodiinert of a trelees Teoce Since | #8 One ofza very large family of suns, and that B.C. COLLIER. Ad | cE MATTINGLY, Genoral Sarg, with horror the thriliing and blood-curdling | lard into the pan. They were so long cooking | may say truly the idea netoe Coen Cree tna | Yery embodiment. of a perfect Hercules. Since whatever danger he is exposed to threatens pre- Professor of the Preuch ia = : Massacre of Wyon aud the terrible conilicts | their meal—for no sooner would the fish begin | ™Y Say truly 7 bet wee and our fore-fathers—the | to sizzle than puff would come a blast of wind, ese now peaceful regions; and | and down would go the pan, while the burning iN ize that on the sheres of this | sticks would fly clear over the cliffs into the beautiful Potomac, the Indians chased the bear | ocean. Patiently they would build another fire, and panther, aud that any little boy or girl who | and finally, after several similar experi had strayed away from home an es, the cunners were pronounced teady eu the dark forests that lined its ban! to be eaten. They said, “they tasted h few moments I found I was perfectly cured of | and so decided by the prince of orators namely, | 20d lustre, that sun would that time be visible | Bice cheme Bare to Pnaacoss Manrooand Sasa been made into mince meat by the erue! and ra-/ very funn; They were so hungry they this long-standin; 5 id’ so decided by the prince of orators—namely, | © % aud Nortolk. 2 sn- | ver) Ty as wz malady. Both Archdeacon | “‘action”—and must unquestionably be to-day | Without telescopic aid. Probably even the em pus wolves that roamed through those wild | were glad to eat something, but they missed - 4 R Nell- us q 0} y lay i | the seasoning appropriate to such a dish, and Cavanagh and my contessor, the Rey. M. Nell: faintest star whi pus, rhe boys of our day have nothing more thrill- | said that, hereafter they would have more re- Ing to relate than their escape from the visi- | spect for the cook, and whether she was white Tant potlicem or black, would consider her the most important the bean-she help to a family. 7 They felt a little better after eating the cun- father remark: ar » i did not unde d| ners, and then they chanced to see the cow, the signiticane ententious phrase, now. | when immediately they feltan aching void, which grown-up women with a little fleck | they thought a good drink of milk would sat of children twittering about my knee, and note | so, having washed their old frying-pan as the pranks of my tweive-year-old Jainie, Tap- | as they could, they walked boldly up to Bossy. preciate its meaning: that after we have admon- | City boys don’t Kaow anything ‘about milking | ished and advised boys to refrain from this, and and it looks so easy, but I would advise | to do that, they are sure to take their own way, when he goes to the country, to try and tumble into all sorts of mischief and trouble, he doesn't sueceed speedily, to take a and thouzh we cannot exactly shut our eyes to | few lessons from the milk-maid, for if any boy ir faults, we do not feet that it is wise to ob- | should be as hungry as our heroes, 1 think it serve too closely every s would be very tantalizing to be treated as they while deploring their frequent lapses were. we inciine to be lenient, because “Boys Be “Boys dear old grand- stood quietly chewing her cud, and boys. looking across the water, perhaps, wondering How it went to my heart, the other day. to | how soon Father Merrill would come to milk come across Jamie and a little sroup of boys ac- | and feed her ladyship. The boys approached | tively enzazed in the crnel but exciting sport of | with considerable trepidation, you may be sur flinging stones at the pigeons of a poor old col- | for Jimmie said he had never seen her look so | ored man. whose clean and white-washed shanty | cross and glum before! At any rate, they made | is not far from our home. Every time a pizeon | the attempt to milk her. Franz held the pan, | popped its head out of its house,whiz wentastone | and Jimmie—well, he had no sooner touched straight at its beautiful sleek neck, and by the | be n whisk went her tail, aud she flung her time another ventured a furtiveand hasty peep, | seif sideways and back, and over fell Jimmi Whack. went another missile. I am happy to | Franz and the tin pan. The boys scrambled u Say that the glossy and pretty creatures w » | and hastily retreated, but when they looked at guick and adroit in their movements that when | Bossy she stood us calmly as ever, switching her stopped the exciting sport not one had fallen | tail, munching as usual, and in her eyes was a @ victim to the intent and fell pury of the | far away look, as thouzh she was meditating young marksmen. (Of course I tried to make | upon something that happened a hundred years Reet *_ | NORTH GERMAN LLOYD— i ¥ say: * set ve Bee . ATIN, MATHEMATICS, NATURAL SCI- | STEAMSHIP Link Ker x New Royance they were causing Uncle Han in—but always with the same result; ae se) y trainer. Of course the trainer is enthusiastic in | : Ne ened ahh Add Aunt Chive, and they promised that they would | and at last they concluded that the cow was a ain in that direction no more. It was weil that animal, and respected only the rights of Lappeared on the spot at that precise moment | her owner. i | or our young friends would have been crest-| Just imagime our intrepid_young heroes van- | mind. For ‘the last four years I have been unable to kneel down for one instant, even to receive the Holy Communion, from inability to bend my knees, the consequence of acute rheumatism. On approaching the place where the blessed Mother of God is said to have ap- peared [ knelt instinctively, and on rising in a gan, C.C., of Kenmare, were present. How far this may be termed a miraculous cure, I leave it to ecclesiastical authority to decide. Probably, however, it is only one of those cures for which the recipient must thank God, but which could not be accepted by ecclesiastical authority for the confirmation of a devo- tion. Tam very ignorant of theology. but 1 | believe a number of such cures would carry | weight if several perfect miracles are proved. Archdeacon Cavanagh has already several medi- | cal certificates testifying to miraculous cures, but we must wait the wise and patient ways of the church. I can only say that so far from ex- pecting a cure myself, when I found myself on knees, and knew that I should rise in 4 few minutes, I thought first how was I to get up withont assistance, and was amazed on making the effort to do so to find_myself perfectly able. My confessor, the Rev. M. Neligan, C.C., can testify to the years during which he has given me ho'y communion sitting, thongh I tried again and again, and even quite lately was quite unable to kneel. It was incorrectly stated that I was carried into church. This is not true, but I believe the marvellous restoration of my health which has been granted to me through tite infinite mercy of God is quite as remarkable, if not far more so, than the grant of this favor of being able to kneel. I have been for nine years entirely unable forthe least physi- cal exertion, except for a few hours in the day but since my visit to Knock I seem scarce! feel fatigue of any kind. The church has not yet spoken in the inatter : till it speaks we may hope and pray; and, surely,there can scarcely be a subject more worthy of our prayers. In the meantime I would beg of those who report sup- posed miraculous favors to be most careful, for he has been here he has certainly not acquired any great amount of glory asa talker. Indeed, it is evident that he has gone to the other extreme. Whether this is habitual or assumed as necessary for the time and occa- sion is a question not yet decided by our publi Still it is conceded that he possesses the most important qualification that an orator can have, the hardest hitter of the age. In the toss for the selection of the battle ground, and Ryan having won and selected New Orleans, it is a matter of some surprise among the knowing ones here that he should have settled upon Far Rockaway as the place to train at. The steps taken by Maddenon the contrary in bringing his man down here at once, is everywhere commended by all who know anything at all about the peculiar failings of aclimate in both winter and summer, as bearing evidence of admirable foresight and sound judgment. No climate in the world, possibly, is more subject to sudden transitions than that of New Orleans. Added to this, the water used here invariably disagrees with a stranger on his first arrival. It is a standing peculiarity with that fluid that Is never known to fail. One or two weeks only before the fight —at which time, it is stated, Ryan will make his advent here—will not be able to secure a pee immunity from its ill effects. It is only y a continued residence of several weeks at least that this great advantage can be secured, and Madden, on this one point alone, has estab- lished for himself in our community the repu- tation of a tiptop trainer in setting out to se- cure the acclimating of his principal before the training begins. If Sullivan had no other ex- cellence in the world he will certainly have this to start with, and so must hold a double ad- vantage in not losing his identity as*The Yankee” while being made a creole. The party consists of J. L. Sullivan, Billy Mad- den, Pete McCoy, and Robert Farrell. The last two are here fo assist in the sparring. Bill regard to his principal. He does not believe he whatever. Sullivan told your correspondent that he was never better in his life, and had can be whipped by Ryan by any possible means | sumably each member of that family.) May we not in this way test at once the reality and the | extent ofthe danger? If any sun among the millions, the tens, nay, the hundreds of millions, irect impact of a very large comet. and should | thereby for a short time increase greatly in heat the most powerful telescope can just show us would beceme visible to the | Bakes eye during such an outburst of light and | leat. Turning to the stars to see what evidence they have given, we find that there have been occa- | stonally Just such changes among thestars as we | should be led to expect from what the comets | have taught us. We find that on the one hand | some stars have suddenly increased in lustre so | greatly as to pass from absolute invistbility to | great brightness (in one or two cases even to a | brightness exceeding that of a first magnitnde | | star) while on the other hand these cases have been so few when the enormous number of stars is taken into account.as to show that the danger | in the case of any given star is exceedingly small. | Among all the hundreds of millions of suns working steadily at their task of ruling and nourishing the worlds that circle around them, not one ina million has during the last three thonsand years met with an accident of the kind considered, even if we assume that every ap- | pearance of a so-called “new star” is to be re- garded as in reality a case of solar outburst. and | has been in reality brought about by cometic or | meteoric downfall. Considering that of two | such cases submitted to spectroscopic investiga- tion (the so-called new star seen in Cygnus in | November, 1876,) one proved to be no new star | at all, while in the other (the new star seen in Corona in May, 1869,) though it was undoubt- | edly a case in which asun blazed for a time with several hundred times its normal splendor, | the change may possibly have resulted fromsome other cause of danger fo which our sun mi may be ruined by a solar ontburst of some is exceedingly small. The only kind of dang to which, so far as we can jude, our sun is ex- | pased, that from cometic downfall ort | visible in the telescope, should sustain the | * Vermont uve ches northwest, Wash: School for Young Lad: n26-lin We. mar. Lam pre System, the sin brn fan: expericnce im best schools in the city. dress Prof. C. GINEST, P.O. Bix 6 9. DHREINER, MES many x. § PE: BUSI and Evening Ses) and dauenters ceived throug! Buccees," by Jauuex A. gouverning the Coli ion by iy cr or nu N ~ SPENCER, SPENCER, Vice Principal. *erVHERE 15 NOTH asthe mind, soul FRIE: FROM ARTS, ench, WILL ¢ rench School for Young Ladies and re-opened on Sept U26-w H Boarding and Day LIPSCOMB, Principal. ns for Ladies and Genter: c real life. year. A pam an eloquent address to the students on “*Fi, eld; wo Tull intorns fe, Will be sent free upon apy EARTH SO aracter of a Sai oat . Ad: mn TEACHER OF ELOCUTION, No. 12 L street northwest. E NESS COLLEGE, CORNER +9 Ninth and D streets northweet, occupies’ its new and | attractive hail in the hands mwedifioe the United States ss LINCOLN HALL BU! rp throughout DING, Day 5 Nica ‘be obtained at the Collece oflice, Principal. MRS. SAR. AA. om PRECIOUS child. DS’ SEMINARY, I Street, Berwexn 18TH AND 19TH Nontuwesr, Affords to Girl: education; pro have no expen 06-3m, MS on ite for bool circular.” Cr JPSICAL AcapEMy, 1534 nei Studies A Boys the best faci Calle J. 8. WE 8. L. CADY'S BOARDING un Ladies. West Eud Institute, New Haven, | . Kieventh year. Superior facilities. Sen ities for a liberal pupils to enter College. Patrons Call eu or addreas, LSON, Principal. SCHOOL FOR for 0 5 A. JANUS, ALM. Columbian Coileze, Washington, D.C. [534 I street northwest. pal, J. P. CAULFIELD. Mus. Doc, VE nu ber STREET | NORPOLK AND NEW YORK STEAMERS———— | rEAMER LADY OF THE LARE hart, fo cS f AY, p.m... touch’ Point Lookout and Fortress Monroe, be inated as folle NG AT NORFOLK WITR AND PROVIDENCE STPAM nw THE BOSTON Las ational fth street wharf, STEAME HE IN GIBSO! New ¥ Jow | Riv 3 and Georgetow cs m., Ser A v Weds. 18 Jai ND EVERY WEDNES! cin od * do not carry stesrage. i very Jow fates. Stecrage tickets from Live ‘erpool and Queeustown and al viher parts of Europe at lowest rates: ih bills of iaden eiven for Belfast, Glaagow, Antwerp and other portson the Coutiuent and for Mediterranean Horta a aan OF frei lit and passage apply at the Company's No.4 Bowe Green, of boul stecrace aud ‘cabin tO | vend BIGELOW & 6O., 605 Tth street, Washington, a te 00. 605 Fb street, Washing’ Upon cts} résumed September 26th. 220-4" , i + 7 y 2 — ‘ling Green, METZE! as ; ste : ; ¢ but harm can come of exaggeration ; at dowi hereto Heit and wouldltont i globe, has not yet been proved to be serious in : pace = aA niioe Geen, os fallen and their parents much annoyed, as I | quished in every effort! While battling with the | 2othing ahs . iny | Come down here to fight, and would fight if the | § hi : ware Sable NHE ARCHER INSTITUT IRS. ARCHER HAS | $0.4 925 Penusy-vania avenue northwest, Ageuts for learned from the old couple that they had gath- | cow they had lost their hats, and, to their dis | te same time it is a supreme uty na have any | match was not broken up by the Fox-Harding es anc JUS (suing Ena eat a Cansei tas Teinened fron) her wostery jour. Her school will | Washinstox. —-} ered all ti® pebbles the boys had thrown on their | may, they could s | cures which appear miraculous fully and truth- | party. preaus the wind and waves carry- | | ing them out to sea. They had no hooks—no | | nothing to do bat bewail Tommy Hub- | bard's non-appearance, and wonder if the day Were to cry out as testimony against the young | would never end. and Pather Merrill come to . A few words of sincere sympathy | look after the cowand the great lamp in the top yy word that I would dissuade the boys | of the light house. from any future attacks upon th feathered | It was a long, hot, tiresome, summer day. The pets, prevented their arrest and much annoyance eful sloops and stately spips went gliding | to their parents. and, now and then, an excursion steamer [like boys to have a good time, they have so | from Boston putfed itself along, but noneseemed premises for the past six moriths, and as they made « considerable pile they were about to apply to the police for protection. The stones fully reported. Yours faithfully, Sister Mary FRaNcts CLare. Presentation Convent, Tuam. The Mfllionaire. From the London Spectator. . The wonder about millionairesis, not that they should be sometimes eccentric, but that they are usually so ordinary. Power turns all heads more or less, and the absence of resistance develops The only apprehension lies in that dire tion. Itis stated onthe highest possible au- thority that the oficials here will not interfere. So it is not believed that anything can be done that way by thoge who may be interested in putting a stop to it. Ryan, it is known, is came to the backbone, and no one entertains the slightest supposition that there will be any hitch on hi rt. He enjoyed the reputation of being a fai juare man by all the parties on the other side, and no apprehension is entertained about hi & great increase of solar light and heat | for a while, we learn from the stars that the actual cases of such change among all the stars from all causes are very few in nuinber, consid- | ering the enormous number of the stars. The | chances are certainly not one ina million that | our sun will undergo any change of the kind | considered during the next thousand years, even | if the stfn be supposed to beantecedentlyas much | exposed to such changeas those other suns which appear to have undergone it. But the constaney | ARCH) Mrs. o1 an. Circulars may Pnncipal. TE, 903 16TH STREET be HTH, Principal. A sele ical School, with superior f ‘The Principal will give the care @ pleasant home to six younw girls, obtained at the Bookstores or Le Lod | 026-5 | um on THURSDAY. SEPTEMBLE 20th, circulars urther particulars address or call upon MN. z . 1401 Massach: y For usetts avenui on ORTH- net Bing for GIATE INSTITUTE.—A | hool for Young Ladies wud | NEW YoRK ROTTERDAM. ‘The fire? “AMSTERDAM, “*SCHIEDA: | ying the U. S. Mails to the Brook ey recularl; 70, 2d Os in, Steeraze, 27 South Wiliam “e6. to W. G. MP TeEROLE venue, Washinton, or F & Co. is IN, Agent, Natioual Safe Deposit Saliding, corner New York avenue aud 15th street northwest. bs MEDICAL, &. Mueh responsibility and such grave duties as | to think of the lonely boys,—and they becan to men, let them enjoy their youth. I mean let | realize that they were really exiled and forzot- them ream the woods, swim, row and sail a|ten. By and by they fell asleep, and Franz boat, fish, play ball and ail merry dreamed that a mermaid was calling him to come of the solar light and heat during the past fi | thousand years, and even (judging from the | #1 geologic record) during hundreds of thousands | wilfulness, till, as we often see in the east, it becomes monstrous caprice. Now, there is no | power in modern times which is so like execu- to Mrs. . BUTCHER a M. C. DU! Principals, 1023 and 1027 12th street northwest. a6 pryarTey _ OR IN CLASS.—MATHEMATICS, Latin, Greek, French, German and Enxl ens September 19, 1881. For-circulacs i - i D. ‘Mise M. C. DOUG- | Billy Madden informed your correspondent | that the match was taken upon a bluff. He is | very sure Fox had not the slightest ideahe would y games, when | school is over, there is so much life and fun in | down to the caves in the depths of the sea, and | tive volition as that of the millionaire—of the be “called” at the time he made it. Now that of years, affords in reality strong evidence that } | he is less exposed than some at any rate among ‘Special “attention to preparation for ish. Collece, West Dn: BROTHERS IS THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED 30 located at 906 B Ladier’ Phymieian ; over 30 years: local | b se | the suns to dangers of this kind. Indeed. it is | Point, Annapolis and ‘all competitive examinations. | sircet muutuwees Penile Lrrweuincition « them that it is wrong to restrict them or dis- | play with the young sea lions; and Jamie dreamed : the game is made up he must-abide by it, or else | t ae 2 ‘Terms in ad SW. FLYNN: ALM Leucorrhe: speedily cured. No charge f - fine them too much! Very dear to me are | that a whale was inviting ki ‘ man, we mean. with a really great fortune to | raver forfeit all claim to common honesty or | Worthy of notice that alinost all the so-called a6 8. W. comer 8th and K strovia, Norihwest. | Sc. * " aue-ime cipti 00 Ty e are at a whale was inviting him to jump on his use outside his usual wants. He has only to y er my recollections of my brothers’ early | back, and he wouid take him to a lovely island | : y £0 | decency. sports of bandy, leap-frog, base ball, ete. and | in the south seas where the cocoanut and orange wken boy comes in dirty, | will strongly enough to draw his check, and all 'y. Harding’s actionin the White-Hoiden case at Cincinnati, Ohio, has naturally a tendency new stars, that is, if our views are correct, al- | most all the suns that have undergone a change = SCHOOL OF. F MUSIC. fished 1877,] EST ESTABLISHED AND R. EST: am LADIES’ PHYSICIAN in the city, can LEON, THE 1 ont y - 4 = destructive to life on their dependent worlds, Piano, Organ, Voice, Violin, ‘consulted. y at 455 Massachusetts irom 2 my trees grew, and ie could have as many monkeys | mankind is eager to carry out his wishes. Ar-| to give him a bad reputation, but as the same | ¢ x = se Sm” | 2 i Female Complaints aud, Irrewulact. tired, hair thrown about in all direct gd parrots for pets as he desired. All at once | chitects, builders, eardeners in hundreds, work- | Kame played there cannot, weil be plased here, ; occupy a certain definite region of the heavens | eee ———————— | ten cotdiy outed: Frames oakener Racasteans and carments that show that he is fond of jthey were awakened by something cold | men in tribes, are only too glad that he has | 't 18 now very plain to see how the fight can be this into account, it may be sald, in fits, thet tits SAFE DEPOSIT CO for ladies. peat mother Earth,” I have mild reproaches. though | touching them in the face, and they | been graciously pleased to will. Ifhe is aBuro- | 2048¢4. | Their surest trick would be of course, | anger of our earth’s destruction by fire, the ele- | ————~ = - JK. AND MME. SELDEN, PROFESSORS OF MID- I conte~s to a feeling of despair. as 1 think of up bewildered, to find Bossy smelling them, pean there ls hacaly anything he cannot obtain, | (© PUt Sullivan in for that, by a failure in coming ig OF a | bgt) ECURITY I coomed al practi the ordeal before me in the preparation of those | aud, perhaps, wondering, as they had appeared | ¢lothes for to-morrow’s duty. Mothers with | so young and verdant, whether the’ short purses and crowing boys do not heep very | fit to eat. 5 afterward remi extensive wardrobes on hand. that the Bible says: When I began this talk to-day I meant to | perhaps, they made convey that, though we live in a time and | arouse ld be | ded them | “All flesh is grass,” and, | narrow escape. Bossy them just in time to catch the sound of and even the time may, with adequate expendi- ture, be made to give way. It is supposed that the one thing unattainable isa park if there are no trees; but Louis XIV. created a park in abare plain, with old trees and verdure and silent up to time, and that, it is believed, they can by no possible means accomplish, except by killing him outright, and that it is not likely they can do. The match, it may therefore be taken for granted, must take place on the 7th of February Next, as agreed upon. ments dissolving under the fervent heat of the comet-struck sun, is so small that it may to all intents be valued at “almost naked nothin R. A. Proctor, in Cornhill Magazine. see See A Child’s Christmas Precaution. FROM Li BY BURGLARY, ROBBERY, FIRE OR ACCIDENT. THE NATIONAL SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY, wehiueton, of Ws In its own Building, CorNER 15TH Street axp New Yorx Ave. ry: overs) years. wt praction treatme if; slewant scocmmodetions: gms ey with Patients only. ington avescy waae Slet ew Vork City. Patients visited at ay place Si te ee Correspondence by telegraph only. Abe {OBERTSON, THE MOST Donec cctatiinbeeh wpecialist inthis catye with I Country where there is little opportunity for | a boat being rowed slowly along, and, looking | 8des, in a few weeks, {hough at acost which, | itis Sullivan's intention to remain at the St. | Some little folks in Bangor, Me., who had seen Ponta Aret Act of Congress January 234, 1667. | yap exyericucs, will guarantee acti i all distance Of boyish exploits, yet bors of active brains and | over the cliif they saw Mrs. K. in the boat, and | It is sald. daunted even him. he very rich matt | James Hotel until the 27th of this month, when | pictures of Santa Claus standing on the balcony ‘The Company rents Safes, inside it Fire and Burglar neciOn, Tmpotemey (lone Pt invagination will take @ deal of trouble | their “Boat ahoy!” brought her to a stop, and | [ust Know thisquite well, must be aware that | he and his;party will go over to the Bay of St. | of his North Pole residence, keeping a lookout | Pate Coumpany, rete Safes, invide ite Fire and Bangla | hoes snd Syphilis positively cured 1a 385 to place themselves in a position apparently sur- | they were not lon, I assure you, in scrambling | tere isin him a potentiality of patronage | Jouis, where Sullivan will be put in training, Rooms and + Teun, I think their sail rounded by difficuities; they to enjoy a feel- | in. homeward was not | ing of self-retiance: to think and ‘act for | triumphant, for they were too tired and hungry | themscives, and, accustomed as they may be to | to talk much, aad. yon may be sure, that the | elders, they naturally put forth the | worried mother seolded and admonished them greater than that of most ministers, must recog- uize his own capacity for sudden and unex- plained acquisition; yet millionaires very rarely do anything which at all interests the world, or This place has the advantage of being a fine. healthy situation, where the training can be car- ried on without let or hindrance. The manner in which Sullivan will be trained has hitherto with a big spy-glass for good and naughty chil- | ren, had been growing somewhat anxious on the subject at the near approach of Christmas, when, says the Whig, a day or two ago a bright- according to'rize and location, Joining Vaults, provided for Safe-Renters, VAULT DOORS GUARDED BY THE SARGENT TIME-LOCK. days. i consulted Wednesdays and Saturdays, from 2 009 p.m, at his office, 456 C street worth Eefors to Ge 03] went. Jeadine phi is of Baltunore. Main office, 19 Eutaw strost, Baltizuor, Bd. Seudcis cfadventure aud the intro! to enioy | rat come anxiety they had caused, | Touses its horror of the wnusual. They are a| heen incorrectly stated. The revised and cor- | eyed midget of four years, who had been gently | ¢ SECURITIES AND VALUABLES “ovate Dineun cont at a jen ad jou ahall be that fasciaating experience, which we remeni- | the toss of their hats, and their fortorn appear. | little obstinate, sometimes, abont “making” | rected statement is herewith given forthe rst | chided. for some fault. was observed tugwing | FLY) DEEDS, fe, taken for SAFF-RETPD BROTHERS, Soe Bathect routhwent "Ban. gmm ber in the fairy tales. as “the time when Jack | ance in general, and when they at last went to | Places. They will spend unheard-of-sums in | time, as received by your correspondent directly | away to remove the screen that closed a disused | SPECIAL GUAMANTEE, st the Lowest Rates. : Went forth to seek his fortune.” | ay resol pues perfecting an interior, which would be far more ; bed, they resolved to endeavor to be ship- | wrecked next time on a more hospitable island and with plenty of provisions, knives and bait. | It was some such } as this that induced jdual, my son er equally daring boy from B perfect were much less money wasted. They will collect, at great cost, something which, when collected, interests no one but themselves. from the lipsof Madden himself: Every morning at half-past six g’clock Sulli- rise and walk a mile out and return. | fire-place in the sitting-room. Just as she had | | succeeded and stepped upon the hearth, her | mother asked her what she was doing, when she ‘BENJAMIN CHARL! SNYDER, President. . IVER, of Ries & Co., View President. GOED MEDAL AWARDED THE AUTHOR! Anew and great Medical Work, warranted the best and 4 T, Secretary. i es. | This is administered simply for the purpose of | Naively replie am. going to climb up chim- ."E. Nyman, Aset. Secy. plan by whieh they could, in = a col arabe apenas bee | But they very rarely doanything that ls striking | setting an appetite and Aoeuing Tore ‘Any- | ey atid take a anta’s spy-glass. I try to be Dmecrons ze that they were cut off from home | Tommy next day told them how his brother had jor eta ficent, or even exceptionally ae ks thing like a sweat at this time would be en- | 290d, but I can’t all the time, and I don’t want Benjents P. Snyder, —, ct Glover, js, and were dependent upon their | zone to town and left him to take care of the | Loe a Hons aye feeds horas ue ay pons tirely out of place. After his return from this | him spying around so. ie Le Stirtevant, chosen Meones > scriptions, price only $1 vurces for comfort and enjoyment. baby all day, and seemed to be very sorry that | Neto did; though one man da set of | little walk he will breakfast on mutton chops or eae = John G. Parke. It was im summer, and we were staying at Craig Cottage, East Gloucester! What a Para- dixe for beys! They could bathe, row, sail, | fish, clamber over the ciiffs, or wade into the | clear pools, between the rocks, to gather the brilliant varieties of sea-weeds! How we north- erm and seuthern mothers used to ei ing of their tan, perils and successes, and when he could not resene them, they concluded to let | aiter he had promised to row them over | eck to gather shells, and to tie up| in sight until they gave command to take all hands on board. “They returned home in good season, and have had many funny ad- ventures since, and, perhaps, in the future, may eucounter hardship and danger, but Iam’ sure | pigsties of polished mahogany—and kept them polished, too. There is, we believe, one noble in Europe, whose daily ner is served in Spain as it he were present, though he is absent in Russia; but that, though it seems so bizarre, is not really ex- ceptional. Scores of men keep up places in such a condition that if they arrived without notice beefsteak, which must be very lean. This, with stale bread and tea, is all that will be taken in the morning. A road exercise of ten miles and return will then be taken, in which he willcover the distance as quickly as possible. He will be wet down with good strong whisky until he is well dry, and then atterward treated to a good cold bath of salt water. He will then lie down, the dear. tired, sun-barned little fellows were snugly tucked In bed, how happy we were to think of the joyous, innocent life they were leading. Then the boys were so glad and proud | of their treasures of sea-weed. which mama and h that the recollection of their weary exile on | that suitry day, will always be as amusing as the reality was doleful. so See oS Exciting Scenes at the Funeral of a Smali-pex Victim. COLORED PEOPLE EXPOSED TO THE PLAG! sisters ot. met. used to. press in their albums! wed from 17th street wi = " v3 " Best Spruce Pine, rtant. too, they felt, when supper was an- and then the spenders are pronounced half- | and on his return will exercise ona small foot- | Water. The brave girls will not be in want of | wharf. Ot Js22 14th street. ruce Pine. mead to hear the tests ask furrsome of the | From the Haltimore American to-day. cracked. Some of our readers know what it | pall covered with leather, suspended from the | beaux in the future. Eeted ant Split bok st: Pe ee ee fish or lobsters whicit the boys had caught, and, | _ There were no new cases of small-pox yester- | CO8t to keep a steam yacht in harbor in such @ | cejjing, which he will strike fast and hard for a ——- as the supply was soon exhausted, the boys would sy ly with grav that they expected | “to bave better Inek to-morro' Opposite Craig cottaze, in Gloucester harbor, there is a smail rocky island called “Ten Pound Island,” because that was the sum our govern-| The boy had gotten almost well, when he was foxes or = bao aoe eee the Lote ae | taken with paralysis, from the disease. He was en Pout ight. The proprietor of our a] “i 4 cottaze was keeper of the light. and a more | attacked first in the right leg, and then it ex- faithful and diligent guardian of this beacon to | tended to the arm and retarned to the left leg, | light the pathway of the sea never existed than and then went to the heart and killed him. Father Merrill. The only habitation on the | The other case was that of Isaac Goldsborough, | island was his little house and the only living | colored. aged 35 years, who died at No. 190} thing his cow. Yes, I believe there were a few | Chestnut alley. The man had refused ‘to go | chickens straying about, but I often thought | to the hospital. because the societies he belonged | day, but two of the patients died late Wednes- | day night. One was Eddie Saunders, a colored boy, at the quarantine hospital, who was re- moved from the house No. 192 Chestnut alley. all would be ready, though they know, as well as they know anything, that they are not going there. The readiness gratifiessome internal de- sire to be free upon the ‘subject of going or not, and the money is not regarded. Such freaks pass unnoticed, unlessthe whim costs something which men with ordinary incomes think great, condition that on ear of a telegram steam can be got up, yet that is done in more than one or two cases. Tt is or may be atrocious waste, but it no more indicates mental aberration than the boat of the retired tradesman, which is al- ways painted, and washed, and ready, though nothing would induce its proprietor to enter it. The pressure of the Usual 1s felt by the million— aires as mnch as by everybody else, perhaps more go, because they have in our modern so- ciety such a dislike to be conspicuous, and such a self-distrust of their own capability = inal. be from America. where fortunes are viduality respected, that we shall betore long import millionaires with genuinely vast and in well covered up, for half an hour at least. Five hours after breakfast he gets his dinner. This will consist principally of roast beef, very well done. The quantity of this is not absolutely limited, only no vegetables of any kind will be allowed. An hour or more after dinner Sulli- van will be allowed a quiet row on the water, quarter of an hour and not. longer. Then he will be permitted to walk about quietly. The object of this is to keep him on his feet so that his limbs will not get stiff or his power of free movement become in any way impeded. Supper, as arule, will be exactly the counterpart of his breakfast. A quiet chat rollows uptoten o'clock, when to bed he is ordet Billy Madden assures your correspondent that he never trained any one with half the satistac- tion that he has enjoyed in the management of Sullivan. Sullivan, he says, isa good subject every way, and he as every reason to take an honest pride in not ony the progress, but in the ‘Two Brave Girls Save Seven Lives. On Tuesday evening last seven young men living on the Ottawa river, in Canada, started on skates to attend a religions meeting at Gate- man Point. When opposite Kettle Island they came toa bad piece of ice. Several of them fell through, and in attempting to save their comrades the whole party were in danger of drowning. At this critical moment two young daughters of Superintendent O'Neal, of the Dominion police, pushed their father’s boat over the ice to the broken ice, and succeeded in res- cuing the young men. One of them was utterly exhausted and senseless when taken out of the 2 —— A FemaLe SWINDLER anpD Her ACcoMPLIcE. A warrant has been taken out for the arrest of Mrs. Marion L. Dow, the female stock-broker of Philadelphia. Failing to get bail, Mrs. Dow was taken to jail. Subsequently a constable ap- | peared at Mrs. Dow’s office with a warrant for the arrest of Royal La Touche, her assistant, The warrant, which was sworn out by the book- keeper for the Zecord, charges La Touche with “obtaining divers sums of money from. persons advertising in the Public Record, upon false and fraudulent Tepresentations.” was yesterday, in the court of general sessions, New York, in- Cou. J. Howard WEL nig MITED CO-PARTN name or firm ot WASHIS ICE COMPANY. No _CO-PARTNERSHIPS. | HIP. ‘The undersicned do hereby certify that they have formed a co-partuership for the sale of Ice, under the GTON AND GEORGETOWN | Phi bills nts will b id | ‘oF accom Aiea pon a ete ae eee JOHN LEETC reasurer, No, usd Water street pee S0nN LEETCH, EF. (COLUMBIA FIRE ID JOHN A. BAKER, THOS. J. FISHER, BT I. FLEMING, . GLO HENRY A. RANCE COMPANY, 1324 F STREET. “FRED K B. McGUIRE, BRAT H. WARNER, aL WHITE, WILLARD, ‘WILLARD, President. FREDERICK B. MoGUIRE, Vice President. H. K. WILLARD, Insurance against rates. all Lous by Fire at reasonable jy9-6n iE TRADES. } fame, since acquired by his very able pupil. | gicted for writing and ding = Tr a me i core i : ' | savage wills, whose caprices in brick and mortar a ae me: 10.06 | cect tether ny ene annoving and —— how poor Bossy, the cow. must have looked | to were caring for him. Late on Wednesday | S4v8¢e will Sullivan’s weight at the present time is hreatening letters to Jay Gor ve x i A Tauniogts acroaythe dark. waves to tha prea | clgvt word was bent, tothe healit department | ¥!!! make those of the Duke of Portland seem | pounds. By the training in the course of which tpeent ib fat AO ee Dvir Sia Biter Bindingecd evry descr fields that lined the opposite shore. that Goldsborough was dying, and word was | ¥¢ry tame. is above given, this he will be able to reduce to epee ong ro sy ca ocean to. Our brave boys dixappeared one morning as | sent to Sanitary Inspector Brown, who went to | AsTotsu dward C. Weir, | 75 Pounds, at which it Is expected he willfight. | | Wigs an Austin schoolmaster entered his | Te <ox iRoOTHERS usual, and we did not feel alarmed. for they had | the house early yesterday morning. He found | “of the y of Music, had | It is stated here by the public press that Sulll- | temple of learning a few mornings ago. he read | G-TBSON BROTHERS, |) rena. solemnly promised they would keep out of dan- | the man had died, and that he had been laid out. | his pocket picked while he was walking in Ful- | Y80's hopes are based on his ability to outwind | on the blackboard the touching legend: “Our 1012 Pennsylvania avenue, Washington, D. C. ger,and we felt that their word could be de- | He asked the old woman who had done it, and | ton" street from the Commercial Bark to the | RY@M, but this fs scouted at by the latter’s| teacher is a donkey.” The pupils expected | _s"Hine Printing 3 jant9 pended on. But when dinner time came, and | she replied that aman had come late the night : friends. They declare unhesitatingly that Sulli = we knew they had no Inncheon, and the sun was | before and dressed Isaac and laid him out for going down, we began to worry and wonder, and | burial, and left again. She did not know the the Boston mother hired a boy to row her round | man. Mr. Brown went up stairs and found that the harbor, hoping she would meet the young | the body was in a frightful state of decomposi- mariners paddling about. But her effort was Vain. and she was returning in sorrow when, while passing Ten Pound light, she heard faint ouns Voices erying, “boat ahoy!” and, turning, the truants, bardly recognizable for sun- ye and dirt. They were wiad enough to Hie in bottom of the boat and be rowed home, for they were so hungry, worn-out, and thirsty; and it was not until they had eaten a Lage supper that they felt able to recount the history of their ishment to the island. tion, and that the old woman’s story could not | have been true, for had the body been dressed | after death it would have fallen to pieces. He | asked when the body was going to be buried, and she said she did not know, | that the societies to which he belonged | (Hod Carriers, No. 1, and Manassas Lodge of Odd Fellows) were going to do that. Mr. Brown reported to Dr. Steuart, health | commissioner, and he ordered Sanitary Inspec- Tt seems | tors Brown and Fitzpatrick, to take the city un- that they had engaced a little boy to row | dertaker and go at onee and bury the body. As them to ten pound light, and leave them there, | they left the health department Mr. Brown saw aa though they were shipwrecked upon an island | Captain Earhardt, asked him to send a a@way out atsea. He was to come for them at | police officer to the house to keep order, as he @isner ti me, for they thought that would be long | feared trouble. Soon after the officials left an enough to piay Robinson Crusoe, and he was to | undertaker entered the health office and asked make believe that he had discovered them by | for a permit to bury the dead man. Mr. Carter Jans, | asked him if he had laid out the man, and he replied, **No; that he had been told by those in the house that Goldsborough, Just before he died on Wednesday, had gotten up out of bed and dressed himself in his best clothes, and then laid. down and died.” The was not given eee ee rocks. Presently they began to gather | and made known their business, peo) = and bunches of seaweed, and tried to | in the upper portion of the house declared ti themselves a fort, pretending they would ; the body should not be moved. In an incredibl: themselves against Indians, crowd of | been called back gave the janitor a one hundred Nassau Bank, in Brooklyn, yesterday. Feeling a pull at his overcoat pocket he put his hand into his pocket and drew out his bank book, into which he bad just put $400. The money had disappeared. While he stood wondering what step to take to recover his money in the crowded thoroughfare a stranger picked up from the side- walk and gave him $150, and another man, who was unknown to Mr. Weir, pointed out an in- dividual who was crossing the street and said, “That man has your money.” The man having dollar greenback, which, he said, he had found on the side-walk. A policeman now aj on the scene and arrested the man who had given Mr. Weir the one hundred doltar green- back, but in the Washington street police sta- tion nothing belonging to Mr. Weir was found In the prisoner's possession, and he was released. ‘The man who had given Mr. Weir $150 had dis- |, probably with $150 of Mr. Weir’s money. Vhen the janitor put the money into his pocket- book the ends of the greenbacks were exposed to view.— New York Herald 22d. —— Cut-prex Buryep To DeaTa. — Mrs. John Evans, of Shi Me county, Mich., on Tuesday locked her house and went to a neighbor's, leaving her two children, one three years and the otlier eight months, in house, Shortly after her leaving the house was discovered to ‘be on fire. An attempt on the van will finish his adversary by sheer power of muscle, and that in the shortest possible time. The universal expectation is a hard fight and a short one. An opportunity to see the combina- tion will be given the boys next week, and then the public will be better able to form a fair idea of the champions. It seems yery certain that this exhibition will be largely attended by all who take an interest in the rmg. $e Liect. Carr's Fatuer’s Dagam.—aA telegram from Kingston, N. Y., December 21, says:—The lutelligence from the Arctic ship Jeannette, pub- lished this morning, was read'with great inter- est by the peopie of thiscity. Lieut. CharlesW. Chipp, the executive officer, who was second in command ofthe vessel, wasborn here and is well known by most every one. His father, Warren Chipp, is an old resklent of the place and a leading citizen. A Jimes correspondent found him eagerly reading the Ce ior from the ill-fated expedition agg: had never that bis son given up his son as lost, and # yet hoy boat No. 2 will be found all it safe in it. Nothing has F heard from the young officer since Septembar{ 1879, and it Is now over four years since fie left home. Mr. Chipp recalls a st e dreamvwhich to there would be a combined cyclone and earth- quake, but the philosophic pedagogue con- tented himself with adding the word “driver” to the legend, and opened the school with prayer as usual.— Texas Siftings. ———__<-_____. THE Archbishop of Canterbury has written a letter to the clergy anxiously directing attention from a Christian point ts — ae re ments of le wi for eae from 3 pe to the British colonies, es- pecially between England and America. He says an endeavor Is about to be made to estab- lish more direct communication between the chureh at home and the Colonial church with a view to the spiritual welfare of the emigrants. The archbishop says the proposal has obtained the hearty consent of many Anglican bishops in America. 2 A WeatTHy Man Missinc.—A letter from Postmaster Dillard, of Cameron, Texas, states that Robert M. Wiley, tormerly of n,Va., but a resident of Texas for sixteen or eighteen about play, unless he has wandered away while de- ranged in his mind. He has Jeft behind him occurred him in June last. was ‘that the Jeannette was being crushed in the iee.i He is not quite part of their father to rescne the children him back teeth, sure as to the | agcrepergine Sh tpt ain med the time when ship ts reported been se if ee Satins Sees fectly vivid before his ey he has thought much about it sinoe. ati Soh aba Some years azo Miss Libbie Rochelle, Hil, loat both arms by dn of a reaper. T she is lay AT A Ts of good her Cam Te: valued and np che there Lnows The Staunton Virgi jr BITTERS. i Read now. Addie Peabo: Steal " a ow: 2 Peabody Mode Sal fusGtute, OF Dae Wal. HL PALER, Not bulhine street, Boston. apl ‘, R. JOBN TRIPP'S BLOOD PURIFIER is a certas cure for Syphilis, Serofula, Ovarium Tumors, Kid- ey Diseakex ana all’ Blood Poison. Care of Syphilis | €uaranteed in either stare. Send two taupe for pem- let, Jels-eodly Da. JOHN TRIPP. AME DE FOREST HAS REMEDY FOR LA_ ies. All fema'e complaints quickly cured. Can be Consulted daily st #24 7th etrect northwest. ut from 1 to9 o'clock p.m. mm se10-Tan" EK. MOTT'S FRENCH POWDERS CERTAIN CURE DE: ie Riduey Diseases Gravel andall Orinary Diseasen, Se ay Syphilis eee scrotal JHE SUPREME COURT OF THE OF COLUMBIA. complainant, vs, the heirs of ue |, defendants. In Eq N The object of this suit is to quiet the sale of real estate herein G i if & fi fiait ile : a] at |