Evening Star Newspaper, January 4, 1882, Page 6

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HE A PrED AN AUSTRALIAN HUNTER’S BAG. ANCIAL, REAL ESTATE IN NEWPORT. BEALISM ON THE STAGE. STOCK PRIVILEG? A New Year's Sketch. A Millionzire Who in Neither a Crsar seatias} : =p A Farm Bough: Now Worth | An 01d Actor Tells © Things which Walia Watiaroos, % Es = in Person ner a Cicero at an Ora= 1.300% he Thinks Should Not be Known. “Dingoes and banaicosts by Thou-| aRk NOW MATTERS OF GENERAL INTEREST. — ONLY SAFE WAY Po oprrary prices ages — sands. WM. HL PEIRCE & 00 ndyine From the Newport (R.I.) Mercury, Dec. 24. From the N. ¥. Sun. ae spacey ier wine be PE . ue Seay, Sani The following is from an 613 nga We the fifi Sophronia Si seletiin e slowly | FFom the Providence Journal. The late Gov. William Beach Lawrence, In| “That is the kind of an article I don't like to Colonies and Inala: | | ent hat Deenounogiet Dro. senna ot Tat | ou ~aea wd n us 8 rer, ‘Sack ahd Sotth haters her plate fase, gilt-fra <j |, Imagine a mite of a man, listless and shaken | 1850, purchased of George Armstrong andj read. That is to say, it's the sort of informa- Australia is not natarally “a sportsmans Soe an — ae nal Band : mirror. in the elegant drawing-room of her |! ®Ppearance, weighing but little over one hun- | others the magnificent Ochre Point property, | tion that I hate to feel has gone out to thou- country” in the usual acceptation of the term. | | 4 combination of the extract. ore ey op ge : sumptuous home on Harrisonian avenue. So-| Wed pounds, with no particularly Intelligent | comprising sixty acres,for $12,000. On the estate | sands of readers this morning.” for itis not a country of big game, nor does It | feion and the public by wsvelf, bar tmetuoad emch | SAC end fonds dew an phronia Susczs, like the year, was dying—dying | CSPTeson, and, in fact, with hardly a manifes- | there was the old farm house, which is still| The speaker was an old actor, and the end ot | omer exceptional advantages in the way of ordi- | Sty Sets Dis "Nervous ana Alck Mendachon, Newrwicin’ | Clsuyce om dhe roo" fayarsb tr,» to know who and how many of her admirers | ‘ton of any kind of power or force in his | standing near the greenhouse on the Lawrence | his forefinger rested on a paragraph of comment | nary snooting. A stalk after “turkeys,” howl- | Dysvepsia and Siocpiewmess, that it has exc WMH Gl would call in te ened as it was by a ntion r om ents, and ther 1 on her loveliness, height- | Whole showing. Physically, indeed, he is weak, | homestead property. Gov. Lawrence set about | in yesterday's Sun on the fact that the “Lezion ever, is by no means a sport to be despised, and | SRCUHOT Ind. newspaper oi ely toaveid answer” | vet a | at her papa’s wealth could | and it ts said of himself and another distin- improving his estate, and erected the present | of Honor” company was disturbed by 80gTY | there are indications that before many years / ag ude of ttre chute dee care of Head: | al ef whom are we! and all t costumer's, the hair- | “™/Shed New York capitalist that they have but | Lawrence mansion. which was a fine residence charges of dishonor. there will be a fair sprinkling of American quail, | sche, Nerv omrenices andl D: are Id vader ‘ aaalte gut coubbaice: one Jung, between them. Mr. Gould came into | for the Newport of that day. He came hereto | “what I want to get into your mind,” hecon- | ifnot of grouse and partridge. In the meantime | mE swverytiom anu are ita Sg no ; ie New peed eae eh eae and | live, and resided there for some years. He at | tinued, “Is the idea that the illusions of the ok his se ma front settee, near the plat- sed Seabee |form. Hesiouched down uponthe bench sothat | °B¢ time not very long after acquiring the | staze ought to be preserved, I can rem yw | when an act f mysterious to the : s n to pall | his head rested upon the rail of the settee back, | Property, was hard pressed for ready money, Zeneral publics Whar whew on ihe staze was'a {and plumaze binds, and the lover of bush iife | 12 Mee aticart | 8a. & stunted. farmers Cece etines very much | or 914.000, Six months later he offered | fiero off the singe: in, the cetimation of hie ad- | and the uaturalist alike appreciate a few weeks OUNtTy CHU te Tae ag itt, £0 20 1M) if aw second time, this time raising the price | mirers. The members of the ‘Lesion of Honor’ | of sport in tt ck country” of New South @ country chu , 80 far as position and ap- ines y ci , ept as the Wales or Qacensiand. The one animal parent interest in the exercises are concerned, |? €20.000, Mr. ‘Smith declined to Invest, | company shouldn't be known excey ¢ Hark! Whatisthat? It isthebell. It is the Ting of Henry Hawkesworthy. Sophronia knew It well Henry Hawkesworthy tho only ter vulzariy calle Sophronia Suggs heart there is an almost infinite variety of the smaller | of the bran or ech indiger peds and of game | 1c OF obstins species of indigenous quadruy hiromic or obetisate tlw ean un rience in their use in ade alter y cular practice of LVEKTON GREY BAGILY Wi : >} ren whe The Silverton ‘ +i and Gov. Lawrence retained the estate, which | high-toned personages tl represent in the | inse connected with an En: "! | . | During the atine he was ai pestially hidden | continued to Increase rapidly in value, with | drama. The newspapers—don't you see? is the kang seen | ree Sake crmuhn enter Gan ing anxiously in his direction, his Mewtloee ty |the general and wonderful advance in New- | giving away our business. That ien't_ judi i rt real estate that came with its devel-| of the newspapers, do yon think? g and outbulking him. | errant into a cottage summer resort for the | illustration fe hy argument right in here | regan: G sn yeee hes | cultured and wealthy class In our country. The | he jerked his thumbtoward the Union Square of ~Gould! Gould!” ‘filled | frst sale of this property made by Gov. Law- | Theater. “You've seen the Lights 0 Loui? | a 5 little creat man worked rence was in 1862, when R. M. Staigg bought at | Well, when you saw Charley Thorne as the p ion the a standing po Fe iad Pee @ | auction, for $2.308 84. a fine building lot. This | secuted hero Jeap from the bride, into t" ts the 4 Pirin Hecaey tae test Sheech in! ® | ve ochation ton the tanious Lawrence) against | water to resets the tere rineime eee helped | conzeniai home on Austral iscaum he must have been lauzied at | Sroi7 case, which was not settled on the death |torain him, you yelied with delight. Maybe struction of any of these phe stood there. His face was wreattied In| Cricth parties this year. The same year Mr. | you didnt tus wor certain you heard tie rest ely of sport, but sapere, and his whole manner was an €XagBe- | Tawrenes cold to Marshall Woods for $9,825.63 | the audit ¢ yell, and clap, and stamp. uted simper. he, at last. did speak, his | tie tract of land which not long ago was Tesold | were carri d away with excitement. They c © Mas labored aud hesitating and still | ¢ Walter H. Lewis, and on which hehaserected | Thorne out tee three times, and would hay absorbed in the thrilling pagesof | cither hand | When the f long Henry | Ps at the | Ss of his pres- wd that Henry, who was | sneezed esworthy might have stuc Sophronia, all i < of rabbits, and in some | of hares. iat have found a aes fh soil, The de- DR. BENSON'S NEW REMEDY AND PAVORTTE animals is a mat- PRESCRIPTION. solute neces- ii = DR. C. W. BENSON'S sof Ps SKIN CURE A up ana smiled. Henry had | he came i Hed | onally raised. in spake the fair damsel, “why eom- ring, his and with no talking | q nandsome villa. ‘In September, 1874, Alfred | hung laurel wreaths around hlemeck It thera t the Queensland Mar- 18 WARRANTED TO CORE | MEE Ro. 4 Gee on et Papi gentleman? pfipbleets and there was not a sympathetic oF | Smith sold for Mr. Lawrence to Prof. Pairman | had any. What was it made the scene go with 1 ject of which is not the p 2CZEMA, TETTERS, HUMORS, INFLAMMATION, = si Nan aet too lavish oF ‘compa was but cae feature about him. Involuntarily his >) 574 a i ae ue _ aI is i * im now for the first time—sald Rogers, of Philadelphia, for $35, a‘tract of | such arush? The bridge was well painted, the | tection t is not the mighty Gould of | three acres, on which Mr. Rogers’ villa stands. | acting was spirited, and the stream looked | kanz: om. uction of the swarm me, that thou wert in nehed animals whi rtinent.” to thems | i MILK CRUST, ALL ROUGH, SCALY EI Iwew yors, Three years later Mr. Smith sold for Mr. Law- | natural, but those things didn’t get the people. | some parts of the c. ony have threatened to eat 23 OF HATR AND a ‘ ry. Interrupting — | the stock Sie dictatar, stincte S080 | rerive An additional acre to Mr. Rogers for | Til ten you what it was, sit. it was the real | huadreds of ard-working colonists ont of house | eee LACK AWANNA t is indeed as thousayest. But | lute, ree Se Fut-built | £11400. In October, 1876, Mrs. Georze H. water that splashed up when Thorne jumped in. | and home. It las beea proved by statisties in the FULA ULCERS, wr thereof. 1am in love. this was, indeed, the very et 45 years’ continu, | Pendleton purchased,’ throygh Mr. Smith, for | Eh?” Queensiand assembly that a run which used to-| Cea exGnia eareeAt : Hae ee ee Mele calls of the nascmbines | $10,950, an acre of the farm Where was built her | “That ts true,” the listener assented. carry 50,060 sheep bad heen eo devastated ax to : FIRST MORTGAr was, eo far alive words were concerned: “Twit | Villa. ‘The following Augurt Gov. Lawrence, | “To seo geuuine water snare up eave the | sachet barely a tithe of that num- and PIMPLES on all other parts of the boty. me be cone ayauee 5 OO er nee : {hrough Mr. ‘smith, sold the valuable tract of | realistic touch. It was the perfect illusion that | ber. So war to the kuife was declared against | 5, 55 teeaktn white, soft and enocth: remvees tan BONDS OF y ten acres to Pierre Lorillard, of New York, for { carried ’em away. So?” these dest fures, and $96,147. Here Mr. Lorillard has erected one of | “Yes.” “vermin At this Henry knelt himseif at the feet of the damsel, iirst taking the preeaution to nid Other and freckles, and is the BEST toilet dressing IN THE | TRE riney DARE Or gee a UY aN es of sport. | WorLD. Elexant!y put up, TWO bottles in ove pack- 7 re Henry t will T, and at once,” replied Sophronia. rken. sir; this is the death-day of the spent year. How wilt thou make thyself, Werthy of one. whose papa holds a seat in the comm pancil?” ‘on drink no more!" “Hi: care, sir!” . bat T swear it!” senough! Begone! Thouhast pronounced thine own missail” And Sophronia was gone! gone! gone! “Ry my halidam!” cried Henry, ris Bhi the dust from his handkerchief, ae Then he walked hastily out of the room, out of the haliway, out of the front door, out into the night! Then Sophronia came back into the room again, and was acain immersed in Huxley.when another ring at the doorbell aroased her in time to see James Shortjohn by her side. “Thou art come to tell me thou lovest me!” she said, anticipating him. “Thou sayest truly,” James replied. “How mayst I know thou speakest from thine heart?” queried Sophronia. “By this,” answered James. “It is the last day of the year. To-morrow's morn finds me a slave to tobaceo no more. I chew no more forever. 1 have sworn it!” ‘ ha!” laughed Sophronia. “Thou double- pated knave. Thou comest to mock me; but hence! Let Harrisenian avenue be forever freed from thy polluting presence!” James took this as a hint to go, and he went. Next came Theodere Battlebig. Theodore got on famously till he spoke of love. Prove it, sirrah!” exclaimed the unrepressi- ble Sophronia. ‘Thou knowest.” he bezan, “‘that—” T know it, all,” said Sophronia, interrupting m. ‘Thou wouldst say that thou emokest.” I wouldst.” ‘That thou smokest no more.” T have sworn it.” “Put ‘me but to the proof, if thou | = oo : A*parliamentary Menagerie. he was in some zoological establishment. It w mn the 17th of July, 1835; an account of the sitting of the House may be found in either of the morning papers for the next day. yames Grant was there, and he has described it; but The Morning Post gives a graphic description of the sounds issuing from the benches—imitations of hand-organs and bagpipes, the yelping of hounds, the crowing of the cock, “so adinir- . Grant, “that you coulda’t have distinguished it from the real chanticleer,” the bleating of sheep, the braying of asses. Upon another oceasion we haye an account of an honorable member who rose amid tremen- dous uproar and confusion. He said: ‘I rise. | sir—(iromical cheers, mingled with all sorts of zoological sonnds)—I rise, sir, for the purpose of stating that { have—(Oh! oh! ‘Bab!’ and sounds resembling the bleating ofa sheep, min- gled with loud Jaughter.) Honorable sentie- men may endeavor to put me down by their an- mannerly interruptions, but I lave a duty to perform to my con—(ironical cheers, loud cough- ing, sneezing and yawning extended to an in- credible length, followed by loud bursts of laughter.) Isay, sir, have constituents who, on this occasion, expect that I—(Cries of ‘Should sit down’ and shouts of laughter.) They expect, sir, that on a question of such im- | ape ((0-0-a-u," and loud laughter, followed y cries of ‘Order! order!’ from the speaker.) I teil honorable gentlemen who chocse to con duct themsetves in such a way that I am not to, be put down by—(Groans, coughs, sneezings, | hems and various animal sounds, some of which closely imitated the yelping of a dog and the squeaking of a pig, interspersed with peals of laughter.) I appeal—(‘Cock a-leerie-o- oo! The imitation in this case of the crowing of a cock was so remarkably good that not even the most staid and orderly members in the House could preserve their gravity. The laugh- ter which followed drowned the Speaker's cries of “Order! order!’) I say, sir, this is most unbe— coming conduct on the part of an assembly call- ing Ifre—(‘Bow, wow, wow,’ and bursts of ter.) Sir, may I ask any honorable gen- amounting in the aggregate to several hundred thousand dollars. The first of these were a lot on Ochre Point and Shepard avenues, measur- ing 151 by 270 feet. to Mra. M. C. Acosta, of Baltimore. for $10.140; another lot of the same size on Ochre Point and Victoria avenues to Mrs. H. C. O'Donnell, of Maryland, for $10,140, and athird lot, measuring 271 by 193 feet, on Kuggles and Lawrence avenues, to Prof. Chas. W. Shields, of Princeton College, for $13,000. On the two first named sites handsome resi- dences are in process of building for the pur- chasers. A few weeks since Mr. E. A. Crocker effected the sale of the Lawrence homestead and thir- teen acres of land to Miss Catherine 1.. Wolfe, of New York, for 192,000. Mr. Crocker followed this with another important transfer. This was the sale of a fine tract of ten acreson Lawrence, Ochre Point, Le Roy, and Shepard avenues, to Gen. H. J. Van Alen, of New York, for $98,942.50. The long list ends with the pur- chase by Miss Julia Rhinelander, of New York, of four acres of land on the Cliffs between the Kernochan and Fairman Rogers estates. The ie eo for this tract is said to have been In the last seven years on the Lawrence “farm” there have been erected the fine villas of Prof. Fairman Rogers, Mrs. George H. Pendle- ton, Mr. Pierre Lorillard and Mr. W. H. Lewis, and to these will soon be added the cottages of Mrs. Acosta and Mrs. O'Donnell. The amount realized by Goy. Lawrence from his $12,000 farm was $176,426.47, and since his death the sales aggregate $384,222.50, making the total sum $560.648.97. This is a pretty fair profit to make in thirty years on an investment of $12,000. When the farm-was sold some fifty years or more ago for $465, little did seller or juyer imagine that its value would be counted in millions, Taking into consideration the im- provements and valuing the land on the basis of recent sales, it is not extravagant to estimate the present value of the sixty acres and the villas on it at not much less than $1,500,000. Verily, Newport has made some progress, actor continued: ‘Another destroyer of stag: illusion is the dissemination of knowledge about the personal relations of the performers. The audiences over at Booth's Theater will enjoy the Two Orphans all the better if they don't know that Miss Kate Claxton, the pursued blind girl, is the wife of Charley Stevenson, who acts the pursuer; or that the ‘Marquis de Presies’ is at this minute being sued by his wife for di- vorce. And over at the Windsor, isn’t ita help to the acting of John A. Stevens as the insane hero, and Miss Lottie Church as the heroine, that ‘the sympathetic crowd doesn't know they have for years been comfortably married? Mis Kdmuna Price, the manager of her company, and you ought not to have that fact in your mind when you see her dying as ‘Camille’ at the Fifth Avenue. Her sister May, who plays ‘Nanine,’ is to marry Willie Seymour in a few weeks. George Clarke, who is the ‘ Armand’ of the piece, by the way, isn’t either the brother or husband of Miss Lillian Cleves-Clarke, who played with him at Niblo’s some time ago. She has just been married to Richard F. Foote. who was her lover in The Farmer's Daughter in Brooklyn last week. To return to Camille, good old Charles Fisher, the MM. Duval, is the husband of the young Nichelle. The pretty Miss Lillian Russell, the Snake Charmer of the Bijou, is the wife of Tony Pastor's orchestra leader. Mme. Janauschek is Mrs. Frederick Fillot. Miss Rose Temple, one of the Patiences. has just got a divorce from Mr. Jones. Miss Clara Morris is Mrs. Harrlott. Louis James and Miss Marie Wainwright, who were the lovers of Barrett’s recent season at the Fifth Avenue. are married. Miss Victoria Vokes is Mrs- Wright. The much photographed Miss Brancombe is Mrs. Stuart. Miss Agnes Booth of the Madison Square is Mrs. J. B. Booth, formerly Mrs. Perry. Mrs. Chanfrau bravely bills herself as married at the Fourteenth Street. Effie Ellsler, the sweet- est of the Hazel Kirkes, 1s Mrs. Frank Weston. Miss Fanny Morant of Daly’s is Mra. Charles Smith. Mlle. Marie Roze of the opera is Mrs. Henry Mapleson, and Mile. Cavallazzi, the chief | labies and wild_horses, would conte Fanny Davenport is the well and hearty wife of | the finest summer residences in Newport. In| + Weil, now, what's the use of telling the pub- | even when « re properly so called, 18 ing of both internal aud external treatment | whe oad forme with the Ty te» en Pocket handkerchief on the carpet, |. A?Parliamen 1870 Mr. Lorillard added three-quarters of an |e that’ fe wasnt real’ water. at all Itees | Gur te he abt ets properly so cal cao ptersaigr ary Lerd Brougham once likened the House of | 8¢f¢ to his estate, paying for it $10,000. This | nothing but a handful of rock salt, mixed with | abundance and vari y of game and vermin in| All first-class droggists have it, eae te © + cuipemag Commons at certain seasons toa meuagerie, and | *#¢ was also made by Mr. Smith. little bits of mica. When the spectator knows | the vast cou | ‘Petes, 61 per packers. v said of a certain night, had a blind person been | No more sales of this valuable tract were | this, it half spoils the pleasure for him.” | quote the st | ————— =. lovest me not,” said Sophronia. ducted into the House, and not told what | ™2de until the present year, when, beginning | After a dramatic pause, for the rock salt and | of the best sh @8-1m tewt, New Ye, kBy uy Geet tis: lady, Oe 1 deat argacd| the place was, he would certainly have supposed | With September, several sales are recorded | mica revelation to have its full effect, the old | striving his ut p down the fauna of the country which are inimical to the interests of the squatters. Mr. Hawthorne's baz con- | sisted of wallara 2 kanzaroc 1,418 wall HW i and rats, 204 eagle hawks, and 167 snakes. The | length of the time over which his campai extended i not stated. Many moneyed youu . tired of stalkinz and cover-shootin nt do much worse than take a sporting trip to our Australian colonies and follow Mr. Hawthorne's example. They | would be welcome suests at an tion, and by thinning the kangaroos and . the wal- no small benefit upon a distant community. +s. Mrs. Jame Grey § Effort. From the Boston Herald. Thave protested so long and with so little re- . 2 3 | sult against false standards of taste, writes Mrs. i Swisshelm, that it occurred to me. years ago, to try to do something toward furnishing a true one; so, last spring, when I learned that my, only child would want a wedding dress, the time had come. I went back to Swi took rooms with our tenant, a German farmer, knowing that there I could live with nature. free froin suggestions or dictations of mal- formed tastes; and there I evolved that wed- ding dress amid the giant trees I had planted and the lullaby of waters to whose music [I had slept every night for years. I worked the dress skirt in two separate pieces in a quilting frame, joining them and uniting the desizn after tak_ ing it out. It is of cream-white silk ona lining of Lawnsdale muslin with wool wadding, and combines the effects of quilting and embroidery. T had no settled desizn or pattern when I began, but graduaily thought out and put in such things as occurred to me. Around the bottom are five water lilies on their | - pads or green leaves, and of such size that each | kK of lily, with its leaves, covers a breadth of s about twelve inches. This part of the de: mn I CABINET OAK, Every thickness, INDIANA ASH, INDIANA WALNUT, ¥, > | INDIANA WALNUT, 1 inch to 8x8 inch. INDIANA WALNUT, Counter Top, 20 inch to 36 inch to the extent of $50 to $1,000 or 6) wor Winshelm’s Last | INDIANA CHERRY, Every thickness. INDIANA CHEERY, Counter Top, 15 inch to 2t inch MAPLE, Every thickness. SOWT YELLOW POPLAR, Every thickness, garry stocks on three to five per cat le alone and | HARD WOOD YARD, SPRAGUE'S SQUARE. Srxte STaeer asp New Yore Avenue’ Spracur Square. YARDS. | Nokruras Lusexty Marker Sovane. ELECTRO GOLD STRING PIANOS, TE sac ‘ORD.G1 BROADWay ME BAMPLE COPIES PREP, ING AND STOCK DEPARTMENT, @ MINING STOChS Bought and Sold at lowest rates of ¢ York and Sav t Advanoes made and divid DIF wis BAN lesion tn New ppeesons WISHING TO O11 Boch s STOCKS RY L. KAYMYS and comple erations mailed PERATIONS IN STOCKS. 4OBN, A. DODGE & CO. Bankers and Brokers, No. 12 Wail -towt, N.Y. buvand 3 fF 1 whe lexired will advise when and = STOCK PRIVILEGES at reason e W can be iuvested. Full fuformation on application wad Pin. Revert ory pRvate STOCK TELEGRAPH WIRES BETWEEN WASHINGTON AND NEW YORE H.-H. DODGE, Bonds, Stocks and Investment Securities Bours twill Sold on Commission, No. 639 15rH STREET, (CORCORAN BUTLDING) ‘ . K Fre * niet 7s wall.” hr An absolutely perfect instrument. Increased purity, 4 , , enewed | despite the venerable pessinists who look back | dancer at the Acad Mrs. Charles Maple- | took from a * picture on memory’s wail,” hung | ,,A™3 ssonanes of tone: oA “ - ee oe S as ne a CMe, Me asl enawe| eee ee eatel aoe Se ee as there in °57, during a visit to Eaile-Nest Lakes, | Sunonitic acon, inctawed radius cad ciasanes of a a, -) Sir, 1 z Q Sherburne County, Minn. Tuan old Harper's | appearance ai Veodore i - | chair. (The Speaker here ag se and calle ‘Hold on. Won't you leave an unmarried ac- | 12 Ys 4 pers | apycarance. Chavet = Soe st Nabag Coa et eget et ae ‘The Cost of Vanderbilt's Eight. tress on the New York staze?” wena, 3 founds among the illustrations of |: cubicaat Secmeond eae yet a fourth time did the doorbell jangle. | Which the uproar in some measure subsided.) | ‘“Gath” in tho Cincinnati Enquirer. «Gh, there are pleaty—the Misses Jewett and | SPrine ’ Ofewamn raallgy, aun ue or tee Suauel Swansdown entered KR. 1” E. to] If honorable gentlemen will ovly allow me to| ‘The figures from the Vanderbilt railroads for Harrison at the DUS ond Ae Te Han | catiwillowe” Thad neve seen citer gevaie Sop < faston thelr attention, Gut ot dane cy cree | the past year will bear turning over a moment. | Bomifuee at V maidens at the Standard, acd, | Uta friend had told me of their size ar (This ful y'the most treme: The main stem, New York, to Buffalo, took | next week, Mary Anderson at Booti’s, thoneh | Pearauce. Above the lilies, and as if growing was followed by the most tremendous y up from behind them, I made stalks of theee nz in earnest.) I only beg to say, sir, | nearly 7,000,000 for carrying passengers for | report has her enzaged to a Baltimore ‘man: | oF ro priate plants, running them quite up to asked. at Tthink this is@most danzerous and un-| the year ending September 30th. At two | But (wasn’t making a matrimonial directory. I the want fepeanuneruse calivoe ie ah samuel. senna pontymeasure. and will therefore vote | cents a mile, which 1s the limit that can Be | W#* Simply arzuing that, to preserve the illu- | the waist, willow heads by satin. sti = it.” The honorable gentleman then re- <4 i sion of the drama, the actors shouldn't be Stalke by tho Tate ¥ SAUD seat amidst deafening applause. charged on this road, that represents a great | known personally, except as the din, mysteri- | ®t I Eee ee a population hauled. It showed an increas@¥n | ous, superior being that they used to be takea | up Ld nonty praduating in Lona Speculation Craze in Paris. money of about £850,000 from passengers over | for. Do you cateh my idea? Srorii wate Vestas’ Gling Game ee Edward King in Boston Journal. the previous year. The road earned from SRR en Oars ies, i iful ‘things gn Hast not swera it 7 really to be pierced by a canal. Gen. Turr has 000. The total earnings of this property for | Ff! the Philadelphia Times, dit put it ina zood light, and alae You win SOG GR ce it it, and no one has yet presumed to doubt | the year are nearly. 83,000,000, Jas as | An interesting suit is pending between Rufus | portrait with needle and tiread, sorry to have | [© YOU WANT A HEATING OR COOKING it. The general has come back from Greece in | been'sometimes sald, thouzh 1 think extra Hatch, the well known Wall street operator, and | broken my model from its stem, and wishing I STOVE, = “Thou wilt find the door open, sirrah! | tle (4 Broapway, New Yous. Sa a = Every clase of Securities bout snd sold on corn M ficken fo terme sircetenmee see oes eines | son nen Sranctoes, Eaitimors, Phiiedapai Se stillin the catering business at No. | York, Boston and Washington. Orders exeented unte fe Receitione ker Hating "iad os | New Kork Giock Euchange at cne-clghith of ean per ant nee in the F mirsion, Private and direct telegraph wies w Would respecttully | Baltimore, Philade!yhia, New York and Boston, tterwa ' pipet jee pain $2 furnishing | wich oners are executed the Stock Exchange in those cities and reparted back promutly. @: of Stocks and Bonds and information reear | Markets received through our wires INSTANDLY a+ | met fr about to declare his love. Indeed, | then filed 3. P. CRUTCHFT, 1804 H Stuer Noni uwe riders left at Mime. Demonet's will be prom) py Mr. Cratehet, 7 ‘4 v. 3 il y _ w, o igh e} ej ” 1 ”) - . = TOUNG Wligts aif accepte Thon needest not | e of Blory and is a lion at dinner parties ene. that See owls boule che Ne WY | the Brewsters, carriage builders, of New York, aoe eae as oe as Donot fait teal! and examine our ergo aseortment of Y He pou have felled to reerive . cnn He will not thwart my dearest | and receptions. Next we shall have a vast Com | te ea em ets. emit, f Madinte | im which about $600 was claimed for repairs on ery can be done In any color, or in many colors, |” RADIANT HOME HEATING STOVES AND | Bes, tus ue Detiity, Ting te pany formed and all the concierzes and cham- | cities, SHEret rat id be Mr. Hatch’s carriages. He at first disputed the | and the doing educates and develops both bra x SURNACES, Siete ature Dec: Weaknens, Dy a Nr ee . over: Hnanene a ain Sabeeribes Hiern tesra:earent | CON Tie seen eat apres, could te 20ld (rll ae excessive and claiiied thats seschieae| cones power. In this Initial dress the work | The test of thir Beene teecountry.. Aton | Sclf-anomientiog ad oe eee oe Se These stars indicate where they talked it over. | moneys toa scheme from which they can hope | * EUrOnta et Wheroed wen under $8,000,000, | had been systematically bribed by the plaintiffs | js all in. the e shade of the material, and | LATROBES, SLAT. E ** Tas Laws or Live ann Heat As Samuel was about to depart, Sophronia said, | ee pores eens years. There i Lae inte of #10, 500,000, as the year before, show. | t order extensive and unnecessary repairs. The tly done with “Cutters knitting silk” BRICK SI getdrees becredary, My ical et Sura! io Me looking into his happy face— j thing pathetic in the eager. way in which |/ i eae satel ey if 0 and tradesmen admitted the payment of a regular | bh ce the gi ii or tha ie id- ne @ 2 P. nirect, New hem . Thode weoking, 1 bate chewing, I | the Tarisian serving class snap at every | is that the road 1s worth $60,000,000 and about ban ee eg Eloss is finer than that of emoroid-} Please call and exams > 4 vA > THE AUTHOR! ut there is one thing I hate | foreign investment recommended by French EDAL AWARDED THE AUTHOR! 14 per cent in spite of the railroad war. As we | Gouceur to the coachman, but claimed tat it | ering silk, and on a dress to be worn but a few Henry has sworn never to | people. Of the stranger Jean and Mary are | #l know, the stock has been watered up so 2 OLD M was merely a custom of the trade. tch’s | times it will not pay. ‘Che great difficulty to a | ol ni 8 G — t 2 3 lawyers finally decided to fizht the ent land | beginner working on white material is tracinz, | 3p — A new and great Medical Work, worrs: drink more, and 1 have discarded, him. James | a Uit more, shy, although, they are frequently | tat, It pass about 8 per, cent. You can see | Jude McAdam, in granting them leave toamend | oatanen wy people would require but apne JOHN MORAN, cheapest, indispenmible to every man, evtted swearest_nevermore to chew. and he has zone | takeo in by exotic gentlemen who happen | What is cost 0 their answer, sald that the enbeldizi markwilleul the thread. Cavol mite e SCI PE OKSELY hence diszruntied. Theodore has plighted his | to speak French correctly. You see the cab- | Tailtoad war when you observe. that he : ze eNva Srmker NouTHwest. CE vi ‘a ‘yall i fo 2126 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE aNp 428 97H NoRrTHwest, JON" bo e e ss vay a surplus after paying his | Yants by tradesmen with a view to gaining an| or chalk dulls it, and gives a cottony appe: > ogre cone i enarnt ae pomioes t Fe cara te reel ue Tividend this near only £750,000instead of about undue advantage over their customers is illegal, | ance to the wo I draw my design in stitches | bason handa large assortment of the best makes of tains beautiful Ste “Why is ‘t, deare: softly whispered Sam- uel. “Because T hate lying,” hissed Sophronia. And then the two fond creatures kissed each other a “Happy New Year” kiss. oe —" A Boston Horse-Car Incident. From: the Boston Traveller. On a recent day the passengersin a South End horse-car were startled from their propriety by the voice of a young woman indignantly com: plaining to the conductor as he by: “Your fare is paid.” “4 don't pay iny fare.” The innocent ‘= ire was @ young man, bh y had been engrossed with a nd had passed the conductor two tickets, e of which he had returned, and the ence was attributed to the man | the hewers of wood and the drawers of water. |The Auvernaut, as he drags his cart over the {his gratuity of six or eight cents, nourishes nded her a| door of the fashionable club, all reading the Journal and poring with rapt attention over the financial article. M. Bontoux and his Union | generale, with his wonderful statements as to What fabulous sums the stockholders have made, with the eloquent language in which he describes the approaching increase of capital from one hundred to one hundred and fifty millions of franes, is fast turning the heads of reets; the message-man, as he receives visions of sudden riches, acquired by adroit investment of small sums. There is a fever of speculation in the air, which has spread through- | out the city. People talk millions as they used to talk itimes. In the once tranquil man— sions ofthe Place du Marais, inthe spleadid homes inthe onceau and the Rue de Lisbonne, and inthet $5,500,000 last year. Yet the road bought dur- ing the year about 500 cars, 44 locomotives and 9,000 tons of stect. It appears that a passenger train makes 47 cents a mile and a treight train the same. Let us compute this a little further. The average train to Albany, carrying freight or passengers, makes only about #75 clear of ex- penses, The average train to Poughkeepsie makes only about $37. The average train from Talo to New York may make $200. Next comes the Lake Shore Railroad, which reaches to Chicago. This road collected from all sources about $18,000,000 last year, a loss of about $750,000 over the previous year. The sur- plus, after paying dividends this year is under $17,000, whereas it was a hundred times as much last year. ‘the Lake Shore bought about 11,000 tons of steel rails. The Michigan Central Rail- road, which William Vanderbilt acquired after his father’s death, earned in gross under €9,000,- and contracts made with servants, in which dou- ceurs or gratuities are part of the conditio1 cannot be enforced against the employers. This is a rule which will apply equally well to a great many tradesmen besides carriage builders. ES eat Ng SS ea John Hrown and Frederick Douglass. From the Philadelyhia Press. There is no more interesting part of Doug- las’s book than that which describes his con- nection with Joho Brown. When they first met in Rochester Brown was a respectable and prosperous merchant, who owned a large brick store on one of the principal streets. After see- ing the store Douglass expected that the house would be proportionately fine. On the contrary it was a small wooden building on aback street, and the inside was plainer than the outside. Its —ordinary quilting stitches—and utilize these a: afoundativn for surface work. I used nearly eleven ounce spools of the heavy silk and two of sewing silk, with which T made fuzz on mal- low and timothy heads, and beard on wheat. A woman need not degenerate intellectually while engaged in this kind of work; for, while I worked in my thirteen spools. of bread by thread, and watched my lilies grow under my hand, I worked out the problem of the marriaze of Judaism and Christianity by that haughty old dogmatist, Saul of Tarsus; composed a lecture on the subject, wrote it at intervals, delivered it, and stirred up that old hornet’s nest of orth- odoxy to send out its host of buzzers and sting- ers; defended my position in. weekly letters un til they stopped buzzing and stinging, and had plenty ofsense to make my own coffee and knit a pair of long silk stockings, besides writinz to the surgeons about letting President Garfield | scriptions, price oniy | LATROBES, Cox, Whiteman & Cox’s Celebrated Splen- | sunple six dents, "Sen | did and Ruby and other RANGES snd HEATING | ‘OVES, Novelty FURNACES, &e. PLUMBING, TIN-ROOFING, JOBBING, STOVE RE- Pairs, | cal rs Prices and terms reasonable. _E27 Connected to Televhone Exchange. | S* ATORS, MEMBERS OF CONGRESS, AND OTHERS, | FOR THE FINEST MADE GARMENTS IN WASH- Pace Your Orpeas Wira GEO. T. KEEN, dl row. Astresss institute, or Du. WM. H. PALAL Bosto DD) ZOBR TREES BLOOD P cure for Syphilis, Serofuls, ( hey Diseares sud sll” Biood rea euaranteed in either etace. Send two pian Vhlet, Kevere House, Boston. seld-codly DoBPOTaeRs, IS THY LoxGr lished Specialist in Wael E Fence, over 30 years at 06 B street southw thea, Syphilis and loss of sexual power cured © icines furnished or no pay. DDE BROTHERS IS THE OLDEST E Ladies Physician ; over 3) yer street soutnwes:. — Femole [tree ia ana Leucorrhe speedily cured. No PSSORS OF MID- suf iy apartmentsof the working class inthe | 000, a ling off of but u few thousand doilars, | furniture “would have satisfied a Spartan,” and | di¢ while they were attitudinizing before the Heys leading out of the Faubourg Saint | Rotwithetanding it cost $1,000,000 more to run | there was an “air of plainness about it that al- | Public. Moreover, [had time to hope for the Mencuanr Taror, opposite, who in turn became incensed and 7] % * 414 Ninth street northwest. : “Wha 6 os oetiats * i : : i > day when the world will no longe1 © — =e edema! PT ste dew in a fone of thunder, “What do you | Antoine, the talk is of swift gains. The once so | the road this year. The road paid 8 per cent | most suggested destitution.” ‘The first seal i : ser Tob the | Wyainvs, OLLS, WINDOW AN: < ee ae take me for?” ¥ eA sorry apol nd prudent Frenehinan iow craves and | dividends in 1880, amounting to about $1,500,- | Douglass ate there was called “tea,” but it con- hose ey eas patch, and ‘cornfield of | P” OW AND PLATE GLASS. DB EEBEETSON, THE Mose ret 7. vir any ers aud the conductor. iard and Italian find in their lotteries; | Jess than £500,000. ) loos: thon tact pa | The table was “innocent of paint, vencering | mands for mat Ee sass JOHNSTONE’S KALS the Urinary Orcans, Nervous eae : PAS: F dreams are like those of Balzae’s Ven- | Toad earned about $833,000 less than last year, | varnish or table-cloth,” and the fnother and | dressmaking tats = T did not do; could not PAINTS. ready foe ee a ORE RL IQUID | Nocturnal Fouimtons, ni Tae Maxxen or Lecturtxe is tolerably uni unsubstantial as ‘¢ imagnificent, | 4 falling off of 9 per cent, while the expenses of daughters cooked the meals and did the waiting. Worth Oe “ ee orien of our American Pest aryiaed to Builders. A full stock of AR- $F som a od Syub ut the German universi: h the pestilen- | Operating were higher. . The master of this household ‘fulfilled St. | Worth, Mrs. Moore, of Pittsburg, whose photos ways on band. 1 poomsultations +t se and bare, sed seat at one end. one he variably every student is in his p before the | of the s © hour strikes. Punctually at | intern: the stroke of the quarter the professor enters, and almost before he is in his seat one hears the | 7 er is Ki ooneuli Wednesdays and Everywhere | These statements, candidly charged up to the | Paut’s idea ofthe head of the family. His wife | T@ constantly mistaken for those of that em. GEORGE RYX at las office, 456 Contrret critical reviews | Tailroad war, are|_made without an extenuation | yesieved in him, and his children observed him | PTess of taste, Eugene, and who should have mal, my eading physicians of alta . u the Exchange, | OF apoloxy by Vanderbilt, showing that he does | with reverence.” a nee eerie bo chicaee many years ago. |_™0___ __418 Tem Steer Nonruwesr, | Eutawstrect, Buitimore, Md. _ = dof, as of old— | Not propose to imitate anybody else’s game o Douglass describes Brown as his face is known iw : 88 she added a court 7 N, z ADAME DE FOREST HAS KiMEDY POR publi ations. Ad brag, but to admit that in the prize fight he is | to us through the illustrated papers of those { ‘Tain, and sleeves of heavy plain satin of the J Pues STATE LOTTERY. Mie ‘Allfemale complaitit: a: Aly cured. Canke 3, with the strany having his head punched some, as a proof that | stormy days: “In person he was lean, strong | Shade o1 the cree, and ininus trimming, save PARTICULAR NOTICE, ot, Bt Main ofhes, 19 vepturers arise on all han consulted daily at 924 7th strvet uorciwort. © t s ‘ poaplie 2 fle ‘ int lace around the neck and wrists. Fi seq | Pom tov o'clock pan. » introduction. me Herren.” If a | propositions. One day an unknown found his | he is keeping up the fight. and sinewy, of the best New England mould, built | Plt lace ar and wrists. For the | _ AM the drawings will hereafter be under th student is kite he receives hls reproof—not | way into my study. “£ dhe, “I have been o_o _____ for times of trouble and fitted to grapple ‘with | bair there was one small water lily with birds erygyison ead control Of Generals Ge - BEAURES | J )R-MOTT'SPRENCH POWDERS _CHt froos the a the scraping boots | Tecommended to you because you have acquaint- Built on a New Model. the flintiest hardships, clad in plain American | 804 a white ostrich plume. We gave the con- ee . lor Kidney Diseases. Gravel and all | 4 VC] ere - —— ervous Debility, Seminal Weakiess. | -students. The common pla of ance in the American world. My desire is to | From the Providence Journal. Woollen, shod in boots of cowhide leather, and | }cutional orange blossom a vacation to visit Jeff | A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN AF TUNE, | Scrofula, Syphilis and all Bicol ion y rapid discussion of the subject, and enterprises. There is a million to be made | puilt for M. H. Sanford by John Stoddard, boat | Tial; under six feet high, less than 150 pounds love. ‘Better adopt thee nviem of wedded TUESDAY. JANUARY 10, 1889, FReetand Pennsylvania avenue. Prion $3 yer bos a eines quarter {n deliberate dictation | eine 20/000 Trance, ea needed for that year | yujider on Long Wharf, Newport, R. 1. It is at SHE Rat Sores brccented & Te | Oe, tine sate smutanen eee ites NONSHLE DRAWING. Sern et meh ai shantipear pga secs voo| pe Opt adbor unt reagh aa I “the dontig aut | variance with the established rules of boat | t"* fhewiis Sas singularly impressive. | Iie | beneath floods of misfortune, extracts. Iie ‘and LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY, rake sore LoTiey 9 | open; will you kindly close it behind you?” building, and constructed according to a special | head was not large, but compact and high. His loveliness fram poisonous Iiasmas, and sitting | isture for Educational aud Chacieile eae aes | WY his words to be taken down, tie e Same Dear Hand. embody the principle of the catamaran, as Aen sl gorilovaly Soul a S an overwhelming popular vote ite franchise was nearly as possible, in one boat. It is after the | His face was smoothly shaved, and revealed a | Sef. lovely cacy Satly surroundings. An 4 student feels that it would have been a From the Denver Tribune. & part of the it adopted ; a a Frome Tri ay ostrich plume speaks vhich | December sd, A. De Tprget sete Constitution great saving of time if the Ieeture | The bells ing out a happy sound, pattern of cat boat, but very wide and very | Prominent ania We yee ee Oy broad. | Seeks to hide the PORN! or ane Which | DS GaNO SiNGLe Cinesen pRawmce waa, had been printed. If, ou the other hand the | Tels he aera gntled oer with white, shallow for its length, with parallel sides and | Promuvent ein. Hi full of light and Are | Coming catastrophe it can no logens Pee SuACE MONTHLY. lectarina israpidthronhontthestudent’snotes | 4 ¥,te metry Cheatin git, © pecfortiy Mat bation. Jt may be briety | Wuen cu tie, Mage Eo re ee Oneer Conceal) ro af a annie ALES, Olf PUSTEONES are disorcerly and comparatively useless, and if} AM@ love and mirth and joy abo described by stating that it is made on a model qi The Aesth r 0 os vedi it isa dificult subject the lecture has probably Tshould be happtest in tse land, exactly opposite to that employed in the con- | Springing, racehorse step, absorbed by his arenes Br drarine iat snd 3 done him little good. As it a student’s notes: For, oh, I hold the same dear hand Rot From Punch. EACH. the above resolution t! struction of the Scottish yacht Mudge, that at- | OW" reflections, nelther seeking nor shunning had’ on Sf is drawing taust and toney distributed 2 i " : Thave decked my dim-lit bower She day fixed, or do not represent all that he acquired, but, I’ve held for many a year gone byt tracted much attention tiree montis’ ago, ang | °PSetvation.” With th ticket fixed, aye Rb — - 5 After tea Brown cautiously approached the 12 Peacock’s plumes I love, sold, before date ve 80 ee babacos Soros we ve ty Cag) = It fs not withered up with care; beside which it now lies. The dimensions are y app u And the dado's dark below, ce of wanue will best If enongh tickets are subject that was nearest cart ores» $30,000 will be had, ‘and It is as fresh and far ta sox as follows: Length, 24 feet; width, 121; feet, Hint wie ts his “heart—the freeing “abd the frieze is faint above; 10-000 | Sirourk the paper s, tut in small packets of ; i 2 of the slaves—and he laid his plan before Doug Ihave deck $.000 ‘LIST OF PRIZES: toast whieh cos be added | pelle ing fonset: es when with chines aon th air oo ny ry Paes of eee oes ‘ ight | lass. It was a bold one, and one that would Sweetie iat vee hin hed ‘The Willard Hotel, with all its Fixtures 30 0 008 id th script notes (or “Heft,” as they n Christina ee OF Pigeyo1 ect; Penerh of Boom eet; gaff, | send him down the pages of history either as ‘With pale plants ina row— 20:00 | Furniture... = 15 SAE ieee manuserty es (or * Heft,” as they On Chrtstinas nights of years ago. 16 feet; hoist of sail, 24 feet. ‘The boat is con. murderer oF @ Im: ‘He ry fi Thave made my chamber 10,000 ne are called) are available, not only for the stu- J Bele tne cause doar tite thing structed of oak, pine and cedar, copper | his life In hie preche aa Te ready to tae capac! 20,000 108 dent himself but for any one studying the sub-| Ald felt tts sot caresses bring fastened, and has @ measurement of six tons. | caved by living in the most ceca ey ee naa | ‘The slender tables stand ies is Ject. One continually sees notices posted in a ing brow. The sail will be large and fitted with an extra | Was to be devoted to te cease oe oe manner On waxed and matted floor; B univer Wanted, notes of Prof. —'s lec-} an, we were born to never part! reef, which will be let out only when racing, a8 | Jilted,” he soa Bre eee oe bane |e Se eerey ENE poe 2,700 6s ture for such and such a semester.” 1 have in ‘This Ute hand hold to-night, the boom would swing too low for comfort on y ! ‘iwas Botticalts hase: oe COR ioe 1g my possession a considerable batch of notes of And I, 90 With a strange delight pleasure excursions, ‘The ballast is in the shape BESS b aa ainere sae Deer ees hand 3 18 Pre 's Jeetures copied in this way from T press It to my beating heart, of an iron keel, 5x2 inches. The vessel, when Knew How it was Himself, Teiasina cream? Sweet erred FA the of a fellow-student. and they area] Antin the midnight’ solemm hush viewed from above, presents the appearance of | An inebriate somellittle while back got into a Close huddied at her tect. - eoien be, ‘at al potiita, perfect reproduction of the parts of his lectures In broken whtspers be fetaka, an elongated saucer. horse-car in Glasgow,’ Scotland, and became ‘or full ad- " Gonna ‘aes Would havea) cach certs HES OES hone Aas Q a APRN 2 very troublesome and annoying to the other aipiasyd rena tie, Sed et BS s note L e — -—— adies Who Want Sdll Larger : Value.— Frazer's Magazine. ‘The Sort of Conductor they have in . ag is bets mote Fins Ie d gonial aoa ming tearten so sheet ‘nny nec a tome is ‘The Man for his Money, Poses the Boat seareent There are 1.435 students at Oberin, Throg | docter. wha was Alen @ paasonger, interposed | MJ pli. intense immense, : From the Kanaae City Journal. “Here, hold on,” exelaimed @ gentleman to | classes are going to don the Oxford hat next | {" him, and soothed him Dr. Carver advertises in the London Times | the couduetor of a Back Bay car; “here's the | term. This has a flat top, one foot in diameter, HOM UTE he Ee as ti peedl lg that he “will shoot any man in the world for | hotel where Lam stopping.” The car was stopped, | and rim turned up at three angles. The cor-|of the ‘bus, and muttered some words of| A druggist-of Bellows Fall Vt., has any sum of money from $190 to $1,000." Wej and as the gentleman left it the conductor responding classes in the ladiea department contempt, but shook hands warmly with the | sent to prison for days for offer Gulteau as the man, ad the money will be | smiled, and said, “He intended to say that there | have voted to wear the same, but the faculty | doctor, and sald, "Good day, my friend; I eee | as bad bees ready. | Is the hotel where he is staying.” protests. you know what it is to be 5, lars, giving tui ot with ay. satay waste tee 1422 Panos ee ee

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