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> ~ arene, cron jo and deeharging | Mn LOW REE NESCENCES. THE SUMMIT oF THE EARTH. AUCTION SALES. ___ AUCTION SALES. at the m« pe SSS ee = — jouth ofthe B street sewer, relieves the |The Peet as a lumorist—Eighteen | IN THE LETTLE CHURCH YARD OF THE OLD HOME-| Am Explorer’s Account of the Table- aon THR REMEDIES PROPOSED. groands below it of a large amount of storm Years a Professor. reap. ae ean sae: water. Other intercepting sewers along the From the Sanitary Engineer. slopes of Capitol Hiil and on the Slash Run area ‘From the New York Herald, The project suggested by Col. Waring wil | are pro | _I called this evening at the residence of Mr. next enzage our attention, and we shall follow | Onacloser examination of the alignment of Land, Which He Calis the Roof of the ‘From the Jacksonville Gazette. v- ad ; eee ES aren _ Tis = JAPANESE ART TREASURES, * Iphus Sch! itweit, the imm | Thos. G. Appleton, the poet's brother-in-law, Ado! lagint jortal though the different branches of the subject in the same | the ower when considering the grave, Impor- | «oa found out that the old clock on the stalre, Er sine enna Cen rnunceable explorer of Central Asta, calle é San get AND rao Aragenals ay pie order as before. The first one, that ofthe recti- | the Tiber creek valley, it appears to us not to be Celebrated in one of Longfellow’s poems, is not, Whar de ole folks res’ tm dere inet dong’ sleep the highland of Pamir “die Welt-Zinne”—the rs 2 fication of the river, is solved in a way that is é : : % AT) OLD HIZEN, BATZMA, KIOTO, KAGA, IDEMO, - sufficiently thorot A large quantity of | as generally believed, in the Cambridgeresidence, | ,,, Nea! de wile rose bushes an’ de LE Toof of the world. On the road from Punjaub to unusual with us, but very common in Holland. | water is permitted to reach them to be Hit’s de only place lef’ fer de ole man Yarkand f KISA, OWARI, NINSHEL, BANKO, but at the Appleton mansion, No. 10 Common-| Ter when de sun goes four passes have to be crossed that are fron of advocating the filling up of the fiats | Wards removed under the most dificult oircum- 6s “ An’ think ob de ffen's dat all gone ter peace higher than’ 17,500 feet. and for a distance of : ey and many other Wares, marvelously decorated. Instead of ad ng ing up wealth avenue, Boston. This poem refers iter’ ¢ " hi he mends | “tances. The grades become extremely light > In de buzzum ob de cole, cole groun’! two hundred and eighty miles the halting- toalevel above high water, he recom and the sizes are therefore increased, besides ex- | Wholly to incidents in the history of the Apple- ground ts not below the height of Pike's Peas, | . Magnificent Geisonne Roamels, | Klegant Cabinets, that the river be confined to its channel by | posing the section more to tidal Influences. ton family, and was written by Mr. fellow ‘ iL On the eastern plateau of the Beloor-Dach there : Lacquers, Aptstic Bron Gaba with sold asd strong embankments, bulkheads, or otherwise, | The New York avenue sewer, after reaching | while he was spending a summer in Pittsfield. Hit seerna ter mo es I wanders a ign beeie pas is a shelter-house near a cliff from whose sum- the wins, Siectmens of Rare J the flats to be kept near their present level- — pont a Fog ee reared reem on ae ws = him ny bagi er ay palin td an cca ane mit the main chain of the Himalayas, with all | premises, . i het Le a ‘Their subsoil is to be artificially drained to a _*< hga Lomo Epes — acti Sone bocce bj nd next a ‘An’ de Tussle ob aere gyarmints in de win’! its giant peaks and immeasurable ice-tields, is TTR: : ered Silks, ete, Micient depth to secure the same result as to | ying B street — feet famous verses. ones “ewean Gryness that would be obtained by the filling | {Tm the proposed shore line » drawin’ ter an en’ in full view from the highlands of Lassa to the be i dat Ma fade lookin’ my way, | sources of the Indus, while in the west the head- emai ‘ ich be commended by others. seems to us, from the nature of the to} 'y, | and called attention to one of the incidents de- | p; fer to go—Pse lonesome down heal | waters of the Oxus and Jaxartes can be traced tee ‘practicable, it 1 added, ail upland | that it could have been continued on New York | scribed as follows:—His father, Mr. Nathan | A-watchinvan Weiter decor D. y! 4 VALUABLE AND CHOICE COLLECTION to the borders of Cabool, w peak: Water should be made to fow to the channel | S¥¢8Ue, Sry ewe White House to the foot of peel a Pa oaeaill Ree begged 1 Hindoo-Koosh Tift thelt creste: of sonnets EVER BROUGHT TO THIS COUNTRY, a r bservatory hill, with better effect, discharging | in Switzerland. Teact ‘urich, wi PP ‘ ‘The whole will be sold without reserve Teep drainace of the reclaimed tervitortshoua | at the river front and at high water. the landiord. charged yery exorbitant prices | Some night when ae cv is hootin’ inde tree | S20W. In spring the echo of the avalanches - x resembles the boom of continuous thunder, and 2 WEDNESDAY, URSDAY AND FRIDAY MORN+ The B street and Tiber sewers are lo- | for their entertainment. Mr. Appleton wrote De wateh-dog howlin’ in de yahd outstde— i Se = i A 4 SDA’ be by open canals and ditches, and the water | .otaq along the lowest line of the valleys to | hisnameon the books and paid, while demurr- | Da’ll be weeptu’ in a¢ cabin on de hilltop dar Sie Cie Sy bee tess eae ae TY: ING ax Scat Ex AN D AFTERNOONS AT pumped into the river. hich thi t descend betore it can be | ing at the price cl ed. Ez de ole man’s soul washes out on de 4 ing pl Z > % a Aside from the economy of his system, the | Wich the water must ore price charg z Den a new-made in de little chureh yi the ridges, and often seem to dance together is ‘TWENTY-NINTR, THIRTIETH advantaze is claimed of affording eary ‘deep | T° Vere Tignt evade, “ata depoale eoneeS Ne eae aay pate on Hi Cooke” sale | lo, dat de lag ob de homestid race like specters in the fluttering winding-sheets. Sans and THIRTY-FIRST, 1882, f m i ver grade, ir. Longfellow, “‘an¢ ou will allow me 1 w! come ter jine wi lee} “ ” ‘4 THIS NING. See ee ee sewage matter and fill. An faterception of the | 2.0% finskecper ea tic Gneerven ‘Tell dey all wakes ter gedier in de Lan’ ob Gracet | OU “Land of the Sky” in the Southern Alle- Se ghenies must be a mere piazza compared with c At my Spacious Galesroom, 13th etrest end Peunsyives also asserted that such of the reclaimed land as | Wate on a higher plane, discharging freely at | ‘The name of the inn was the “Raven.” He Samopt W. Saaut (“O148") | that top-roof of the earth. nen ee Se Rae, reread are ey is not needed for municipal purposes, would, | #€ highest tides, would so much reduce Room took the book away and soon returned with | Jacksonville, Match 18, 188%. CIGARS! CIGARS! CIGARS! Pe paw Sing a from its fertility, and its nearness to the market, | duantity Teaching the lowest lines that what re- | these lines: Semone pee Artemus Ward in England. $10,000 WORTH GENUINE IMPOR Rooms comfortably heated. have an acricuiturai value fully compensating | omned could readily be removed in a smaller Beware of the raven of Zurich, taining a Jury. HL. R. Haweis in Good Words. ‘WIR boned oe RUST Om, m22-8t THOS. DOWLING. Avet. - for the original and permanent cost of its im- | $ret, with Its bottom at « higher i wilt bird of omen il, From the Brooklyn Bugle, When Artemus arrived bere in 1866 he was a | to cis out the estate of Mondyireas °0 TmAMOERY SAG — provement. “Finally, Col. Waring asserts that | * The Chytneers of the Disteree hold that it is And a vee very aeeg Uk The case of thé People against Tom Smith | dying man. Ican see him now as he came on ws | Cipy Mirine cfs dccren of the fhe Ailing in of the Kidwell bottoms would be | savantazeous to have the principal main sewers | Mr. Longfellow had a very Leon onse of the | Was called and they were going through the cir- Y, ‘The sale NG. MARCH TWENTY-FIGHTH, at 1 a ih h lic health i ned. the platform in front of his interior panorama, x SE HALE PAST Two = HALF-PAST SEVEN ¥ is Sg wt of Cobum! jure as far as the public ith is conce: bi Pr tal i ¢ Sve hundred >. doubt the practical feasibility of the Dutch | @!scharge below high tide, through “broad and | humerous, and many a witty impromptu was | cus of obtaining a jury. Out of and stole a glance atthe densely packed room Oe WALTEE'S: WILLIAMS & CO., Aucte. h ed, would not be justif- | 2¢ep channels,” asit diffuseathe sewage through | occasioned by some slight incident or accident. and fifty men examined they had succeeded in | and then at his panorama. His tall, gaunt, — L— — thie. as the conditions afe quite favorable to W, | te Water. The sewage is cheeked for a time | One summer, twenty years ago, when the Ap- | Shaqeianitte Jurors;;and No. 551 was called EOOCLOCK offer for sale at auction though slender figure, his curly light hair and TO-mMORKOW Of 86 foot 6 tnchen on hereh ‘tarclion areoaet cat ae b zl er fet ’ 2 the eng hy J esti in the outlet canals the influx of the tide, | pletons were living in Lynn, the poet’s son | to the stand. 1 ough siender figure, his curly ligt air ans = — average depth of abont 156 fe The LM lan Repos pet — with er which dilutes ‘while he efflux diffuses it.* | Charles, who was very fond of sailing a boat, | Lawyer.—What Is your profession, Mr. Jones? ape ae Mice ein eae Ewe ©, Banana, BENSINGER, Auctioneer | a (pieemes Oueshir ach health. As to how far it ma be cheaper must | HOWever true this may be in principit | and who lag since become a famous yachtsman;| Ms" Jonca (very mach on the alert).—What is —— tion, his little cough, which seemed to shake — months, with six per cent interest. Conveyancing st it seems to usthatthe largemass of water | came in his boat to make acall. The surf was | that to you? in: i sere ASSIGNEE SALE OF ENTIRE STOCK OF cost. A deposit of $50 will be required as oven, that the diiferenee ead trikes us,how: | in the river Itself, assisted by the free flow | high aud. the vost was esesized endie was Lawyer.—WiN the cotirt please command Mr. | ji" £9 Pieces, ‘Which "weal nuphed mreeeeie | URES AnD RUPEEES CONTENTS OF | “SLES | Re ay FRNDARL, reste, As ai frst sight might be supposed. ‘The streets, | tH tide, should perform this oMice rather | thrown into the water. He was wet through, | Jones to answer my questions? and then felt. ashamed of ourselves, as well we] 81 HART L. STRAS: ER as laid out on Observatory hil, will necessitate | than the sewers or outlet. canals, where at best | of course, and was compelled to make an entire | "Court-atr Sones, you will answer the ques- | mignt; but he himself seeined to enjoy his Sue of & dood of hanigument tain a TUESDAT A. POCR AD Gee comeral of coax @uuamie ote rth, for | it would be done much less perfectly. Again, | change of clothing. Captain Nathan Appleton, | tions put to you unless I direct otherwise. cough. It was all part of that odd topsy-turvy : TH DAY OF AER, watch the, Sota riliae “a eoaventeat seating the Trise and fall of the tide in the sewers is | in place of shoes, loaned him a pair of slippers, | Lawyer.—Onco more 1 ask you, Mr. Jones, i ted ay NTY-NINTH come Rowe and Fine, eaLD FENDALL, Troster. pround. When the river abalt to eoeuinPing | claimed as an advantage in aiding their ventila- | which he wore’ home. Mr. fellow, the | what is your profession ? Fal upaide dows Pears most nat | RS Gomaicing. af Tat QcUG 4M | _Doncanton shia!" Aucatae ae THE ABOVE SALE 18 POSTPONED rm 1882, I : : : rai upside down. fee tate o = ss tion, which is said to be especially necessary as | poet, returned the slippers afew days afterward | Mr. Jones.—Well, 1 don’t see how that's got Ld wheel an c FS’ SALE OF sri wi Sct‘ esl 's| tative tet duet gi) Soe ops neta eB | amine dh tae ae | Ot celine ng aed wom pont | Sega, fale | TYREE Soa, greater depth of water way, or to prevent a re- | Plumbing in h bod ly generated in the | stanza: S Jihat difference does it make whether I'm a bro-! but after looking at the audience, then at. his | {shed Of, al the ee By virtue of a deed of deposit of silt near Alexandria, which an in-| tidal sections of the wewers.” We think It Slippers that perhaps another ker ora tinsmith? 1, | OWN clothes, and then apologeticaliy at his pan- | and lanrest stocks in the city of creased velocity in the new channel would carry | W°w!d be rather better to endeavor to prevent ling o’er the Bay of Lynn, Court (severely.)—You will answer counsel’s | orama, he bean to explain its merits. ‘The tact | _,2e stention of dealers and = ally invited to this sale, as was that invited to thie for filling up, and the remaining quantity re-|™UCh as possible. A sufficient number of sur- Biorpaceys Loepeennter Mr. Jones.—Of course Iwill; but now, Judge, I Bead OO paleton, mayne the Snest | Grety, and en to be in the dry goodstrade. Of what earth! : : srer it would somewhat displace the same. Bat | We also do not see the advantage of having the | Mr. Longfellow married his wife. One day when | Se0cks ¥ | mined to get the worst as the next best thing Is same. up he would pause and gaze admiringly at the ° profession? $t Long bridge. Tore OO, say, “18 a great work it t i ; sitates ‘2 constant. expenditure for pumping the | 0, Fequire dredging, which seems improbable | holds. It is as follows: . Jones.—What do I do for a living? y t work of art, it isan oll painting ing the entire area, under less favorable condi- | Wen confined to the canals, where there will be | I said “If there’s grease to be found in the world, They did this and tien they expired. I wish Z ire re % E' ARC) 1882, at FT . quired will therefore not be very great. “The | {ce openings would always permit of sufficient | The mother of Capt. Appleton wasa Mrs. Sum- | put it to you straight. Suppose I should hap- | Scenes that could be painted, but he eaye that | BENSINGER, “tacit, JACOB Oe, See i ee a Ko. 17, tm om . This could not be to any great extent, if judged | OUtlet canal of the B street sewer and the James | he came from Portland to call upon her, he wore inc . ‘ the protection of the river.” If sufficient silt | he went away the next day he left a little poem | * Mr. Jones.—Well, [ haven't any. canvas, and then look round a little reproach- has been paid to J Subsoll water, and without heavy Heterees cag | after a rectification’ of the channel, thle silt | 1 knew by the boots that so terribly creakea Daye Fee Wee ee rs. ene { done m petroleum. It is by the old masters: | AUCTION! ‘Terme: One-hatt casks” bales tions thau ii tue territory were raised toa higher | Mote deposit and consequent exhalation, on ac- | MY frlend from the Rast stands tn need of tt here.» Mr. Jones.—T ain't in any. Igot the sack last you were nearer to it so you could see it better. away. This dredged material can also be used | ts generation by peers tidal sewers as A forlorn or shipwrecked nephew, question at once. present soil of the meadows is soft, and filling | Yettilation caused by differences of temperatare. | ner before she married Mr. Appleton, and before up on account of the expense, and then Weter- TaGLNROy Sais amescee * for his purpose. When anything very bad came D Lawyer.—For the last time, sir, what is your fom the effect of the causeway leading to the | canal perform the office of “settling tanks for | a pairof new boots which were very noisy. When The pian advocated by Colonel Waring neces- | "0m the sewers would accumulate in the latter | written on a card, which Capt. Appleton still wyer.—What do you do for & living? fully at the company. “This picture,” he would precautions permits the risk of flood- | ¥0Uld not be as detrimental to public health as | Along the front entry a stranger was near. in? Jt was the last_thing they did betore dying. week. t ¥ wish I could take it to your residences and let aed , 2 count of the reduced velocity in them. WHITTIER ON THE DEAD POET. Lawyer.—Well, why didn't say that in the | ,, = L. 2! wer. why didn'tyou say that you see it by daylight. “Some of the greatest S2~ THE ABOVE SALE I8 POSTPONED UNTIL We cannot: theremee. toot tn sanguine about | 4¢The subject of sewage purification is disposed | Mr, Whittier was seen this morning and he| frst piace?’ = : artists in Loudon come here every imoeding he. WEDNESDAY, the FHPIH DAY OF APRIL. 1883, at the great economy of this plan as its author, nor | OF EY & comparison with London, and itisshown | expressed in a few subdued words his keen| Mr. Jones.—You didn't ask me. fore daylight with lanterns to look at it, They same hour and’ ‘ss can we feel assured that the filling in of the flats | that the pollatio bappoaargr perso: 1, no doubt, re-| |, Lawyer.—Have you ever read anything about | say they never saw anything like it’ before, and ne A less than that of the Thames, and “while that | Sense of nal sorrow, and, * this case in th 2 y aa . would be a comparative failure from a sanitary | 8 ¢ beat ectha on the eanoes Of belie Galea soon Hk. e in the newspapers they hope they never shall again ! ; 4 ite aes % Polat of view. (On the contrary, we think there es sovigs of Tandon ay ny Turned: with | sei. The oewl he said, ee sad and sudden | wnt fiona raw fed Ee este p Pesca! ee ineompes, aot ae Pe ape sae eae ti ee ee CHANCERY, SAUE_OF VALUABLE IMPROVE; q = ” a fore ‘ing, than his manner us m1 ND UNIMPROVED REAL ESTATE, SITUAT! panne ee rene bs Beare sregnity into the Thames, with respect to@pos-| shock to him, althongh he could not eay that | alx weeks. ur not blind, man. the moment he entered, he seemed. te be ddina ON OELEVENTH AND OF SELAH ‘cont ‘The drainage and gradual drying of @ marshy | bani, wey aay ieaperk tpone the question | & 8S wholly unexpected, as on Saturday last | Lawyer.—Answer my question. Have you or soil exposes it at least fora few years, until a y BToeEHly Pome a EE’ everything for the first tine and without the BETWEEN F AND G 8T ‘TS NORTHEAST, f a dist: fall here.” A misleadi: . | he had visited Longfellow’s home and was | have you not read about the case? ¥ purified by rain water and oxydation, | Of ® distant out ere. mis! argu: REE’ ing least preparation, and, indeed, he was most un- Under and by virtue of « decree of the Sui t, hi is embodied in the remark that | 22@ble to see him. His first introduction to} | Mr. Jones.—Why, any fool would know better | like such mechanical’ artists All Smith, Court of the District ofl to the dispersion of miasmatic influences which | Met’, however, is em| al 66 Albert Mr. Longfellow was in 1845, at the residence of | than to ask such a question as that. who used to say he could go through his “Mont | We have taken ont s nermit to build, and shall com- would necessarily affect the heaith of Washing- | ® long as a sufficient eee ee | tte ae Fields, with whom Mr. Whit- | Lawyer.—Give me an answer; yes or no. Blanc” half asleep. Artemus was always in — oe ton more seriously than even the present condi- | freatly dilute the sewage can provided for | tier was then making his first arrangement for | Mr. Jones. Well, then yes. réality at hizh pressure. He was never twice eee, tion of the flats. “Proofs of such influence are | '¢ city, ‘vat less expense an ghe cambrousand | the publication of his works. Mr. Whittier has | Lawyer.—Have you forined any opinion upon | the same: he poured ont new jokes with prodi- abundant, and even the instance cited in favor | fuynblicated svetem of distant transferto sewage | never been as intimate with the deceased as lie | the case? gal invention, and every gesture was original a Peis ce, of this plan, namely, the Surrey Side of London, | rms, and filtrati Aithoagn’a highly ditutea | Wished, but in all bis relations with him,es with | Mr. Jones—well, any man in Brooklyn who | and arose out of the immediate occasion. — His : which is partly below high water mark of the | Provide t eho Beet a gh Te water, | other American authora, there has beon a per- | can read, and who hasn't formed an opinion— _ | finger was ever on the pulse of the people; they Thames, and aeunet somewhat as here pro- | S°Waee. caused avn Ips sation cr A water, | fect freedom from all jealousy, professional and | _Lawyer.—I didn’t ask you about any man in Were always absolutely in his power, whilst he | coxneeNciiG MOND AY MORNING, MARCH 2728, shows, as a rule, the highest rate of mor- jo Romceeab a better ees the minouat of | otherwise. His death was a great loss to | Brooklyn. flattered them by appearing to be entirely in ity in the metropolis. An’ embankment of | ttemselves. noe end eS ee ae Boston and to the world, as no man wad more} Mr. Jones.—I live in Brooklyn. theirs. fle would conciliate them, inspire pity, ¢lean soil or river silt could not have the same | 1¢composable matter which en sity for | beloved. His ways were always cheerful with| Lawyer.—Answer me at onee. Have you any | claim indulgence. throw hineuit capi) Sait | sc pme euros wench we mail Bekk acc etiect. all. He never lost patience, even with inter-| opinion in regard to this case? generosity, pretend to exert himself, to labor _ = ‘The next object considered is the drying of the | P. viewers. He considered him the foremost of} Mr. Jones.—Do you take me for a fool? under @ depressing sense of failure, even make soll in those parts of the city where it is now American poets, and only second to Tennyson.{ Lawyer.—If the court please, we shall never | capital out of his poor cough; and then he was sul to saturation. It is proposed to la) His culture, travel and experience, written into | get a jury at this rate. 80 deeply wounded if some very mild joke failed ural draining tiles in the same ‘ceuek = oo his wo! showed him the man and the} Court.—Youwillanswerthequestions of coun- | to elicit applause that he would stop and look Senn xr, } Trumtess, THOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer. ms dkde uy No. 420 SEVENTH STREET, with sew and discharging it into the latter scholar. ‘week ago he met Dr. Holmes in | sel and reserve your own opinions. Treproachfully at the people until they shook Our old shop-worn goods to the highest bidder. in euch a manner that there can he'oe inflow of Boston and conversed with him in regard to} Mr. Jones.—Yes, judge, but why don't the] with a new sense of the rd situation. At sewage matters. This plan, which has often fever, the inevitable separation that must come sooner | lawyer come to the point? Now, if I was ex- other times when interrupted by laughter, he _ been executed. can have none other than good ¥ or later, and none could tell which one would | amining a— would loo’ round with surprise and say, did results. Practically, however, most of the sew- be first called. Longfellow had once visited } Court.—Never mind your opinions, I say. At-| not expect you to laugh at that. I cea throw ‘All goods on which a bid is not promptly given wil be ers, especially when built of’ brick, are rarely him at hig residence in Amesbury, in company | tend to the questions. off numbers of those little things, but I assure with his lifetong friend, the late Charles Sum— Lawyer.—I will put the question again. Have you I can do better than that.” THROWN TO THE CROWD GRATIS ner, and all his meetings had been unusually | yor an opinion— * When he opened his lecture on the Mormons = pleasant. Mr. Whittier alladed more than once | Mr. Joues.—Thefadge just said it wasn’t any | at the yptian hali, be said quite apolozeti- We have now to consider the plan suggested tender-hearted! they are at- | to the entire absence of jealousy among Boston | matter about my opinions. s Gaity: “I don’t expect to do much here, but Ihave — by Col. Waring for removing the rain water and nt and authors, and expressed his regrets that he could | Lawyer.—BSilence, sir, answer my question. ,. | thought if I could make money enough to buy sewage from the city. As elsewhere, he ‘With their amatory music, once so delicate and | not say more in regard to the deceased. pam Agee Sor 80, eee mea passage toNew 3 Zoniand I should feel tat 1 ‘We must get xid of all ench goods as Poses here to abandon the met! of sweet; a ani your qu: al a not livea in in. lon’t want to live street aid house drainage into the seme chase | NOW,We Never sigh to hear them, but we fy them | Lengfeliow as a Harvard Professor. Lawyer.— Answer rily question at once, or you | vain. I'd rather live in Margate, or here.” Soiled BED-SPREADS, nels, We net eet bes aoe te of and we fear them— From the Evening Post. will be fined and imprisoned for contempt. os u The heat was most oppressive and the hall Separation in general, but simply show that the | “utreet’ “SnCu TEARS on the comers of the |” Por eighteen years Longtellow falfiled the ac- | "Mr. Jones.—Welk, then, I have formed an | very crowded the day I was there, and lookiag " BLANEXTS, arguments made in favor of it apply less to tiyedutiee of his professorship—from 1836 to | opinion. I think ie man is guilty. In fatt. | up to the roof, he continued: “But I wish when “ ComrorTs, ‘Washington than to many other cities. In the Set | Goethe Pirate and the Sea King, and Buccaneer | io54 when he was succeeded by his brother- Tm sure he ts, ang Fa like to hang him my-| the Egyptiape built this hall (a burst of lauzh- ace, have to deal with a water £¢ per a je have t Coe ne EYRE | area he Banner of the Rover, hushed his can- than that in most places. The sewage is, there- | And the only reminiscence of his nautical exist- fore, highly diluted, and cannot be nearly as of- ence fensive as in other cities, if properly carried | Is the banging of the big drum in the play of “Pin- ; ter; had not forgotten’ the ventilation.” at ae Vocecerh lta iors ener enotigh. Leave the stand. ieropor of mating at ail, a little further on he ‘ou are excused. And | observed: “I really don’t care for money; I only rarely invited them to his house or cultivated | No. 552 took the + | travel around to show my clothes.” This was a their private acquaintance. That sort of inter- = t favorite joke of his; he would look with a. away. In the second place, the street wash course was rare in his time, and it is excen- ilteral Oi 54 wrenbiot Waters. ee of Sueomtart are see rapiles will, on the other hand, be no less foul in Wash- aia = ’ | Prom the London Daily News. s black trousers and swallow- at, & cos- ington than elsewhere. The difference, th Gone’s the glamour and the glory of the Knig! tional even to-day. But in respect of courtesy of song and story, ty A most striking experiment was tried at the | tame in which he raid he was always most fore, between it and the highly diluted sewage | With their love and high endeavor, and thetr nobie | MS, manners quite anticipated Le py the merely | Scottish port of Peterhead yesterday. A igure | Wretched. “These elothes [have on,” he con- will not be as great, and it will much less war-| deeds and aims! ‘s rise ps coy deel Maersk F little else, | tinued, “were a great suecess in America,” (and east 6: rant their complete separation, If at all. In the | Of heroic days behind us, now tnere’s nothing to Late Seer ia apo prevailed. ae of sees toe t bradiger fad oan a le =: then quite irrelevantly and rather hastily), ow fy five (25) feet, te the place. fi a - | remind us b é ~ | was turned into a literal fact. wa’ poured | often do large fortunes ruin young men. 5 earch poner ively reli bea ak on Spruit ‘Of an ef. | BUC the Solitary Horseman in the narrative of | dressed cheir pupils as “Mr.;" his tone to them, | Need into a liter result of calming the fair | Should like tobe Tuined, but lean met on very banding. —— sewage removal, or conla be made te aa | suaes! fMongh not paternal, or brotherly, was| way at the harbor’s mouth, so that a small boat | Sol asTam!” So the lecture dribbled ga with £0 at no great expense, which Col. Waring read- | Yes! the Knights so celebrated, in these Gays de- | “Ways gentlemanly. On one” _ oc | could enter in a storm. It has long been known & > little fragments of impertinent biszraphy. mere J . ori rtive movement | that oil exerted this effect. Itdoes so by simply el ici: i ¥ ily admits. A a sect ly used for | _ generated casion, during an abo e his ry pegs for slender witticisma ike this: “When sewers in Washington ia an epg-alace wills | Would bo madmen or maracdera—owe would nat. | toward rebellion, some of the Ciler_ professors | destroying the friction of the air on the surface | Guite a child I used to draw on wood. 1 drew a Ci BROIDERY. teu (10) days, the ttroerty. will b sinall semi-circular pipe forming the invert. | , Cwle thelr cause— tried in vain to obtain a heartngirom a crowd of | of the water. It smooths the way of the wind, | qmail cattiond of raw Cerericn woo ‘a wooden — 2 folion, ar tos canna. rt ‘That the sewage. when flowing in this smooth And the Pirate of the shipping would be hanged, | angry students collected in the college yard; and, consequently, calms the surface of the sea. semi-circular channel, is substantially under the | avi tas Tren poae et ‘cont of : bridge; the people of tie village noticed me; [ NRY M. BAKER, | Trustees. it wh fell there was a hush, | its ace ‘obabl cad % fe of the 9 ust ee ete seme conditions as when flowing ia chose ,Jroubadours be prisoned under local va- ba thowant Seat eee Let us hear’ Pro. ne eeareead, pean as 5 eee pet aero pane ees aoe J.T. COLDWELt, Auctioneer. 125, 20ap1,5,8K11 jo reul 73, ’ % hat 3 tris pe of the same diameter and less than halt | "Ze Lantlemenmrellow, for he always, treats us as | has made the figure of speech universal. We | behind ma”. Or thie: “I becemea men, Ihnce | Remnants of CURTAIN LACE, running from1 to 35 | FOLEY, Auctioneer. fit cannot be questioned, and the arguments | Now the soul that scorns to grovel, can but revel | gentlemen.” As an instructor he was clear, | are not aware that any scientific attempt has * alwi ixed up withart. Thaveanuncle ards in length, rr FIRST, for ‘separation, as given by Col. Waring, have | .1%.the novel Suggestive and encouraging ; his lectures on the | ever been made to apply ofl to the waves. At | who here tah Sid t Mave: a eerrant zi woralll pel at the Nation fear Otho teh i ee Uittle, if any, weight in these instances.” “| Of Sit Walter Scott or Bulwer, on the days of long | great French writers were admirable, and his | Peterhead pipes were laid down and « lance Tie Uber ie eee pe ae ee 3 To construct an entirely new system of sew-| and of Brian de Bourbeos, and ot mighty Couer | fility in equivalent phrases was of creat use to | quantity of oll waa foreed through them. ‘The | ¥!0 takes a Was something besides a sparkling thd Narjed atsortment of Uniedestied Peden, eam ers in addition to the present one entails an ex- | de Li his pupils, and elevated their standard of trans- | oi at once rose to the surface and spread in a pense whieh, under these existing conditions, . : humorist; he was a man of character and_prin- : old snd Silver Watches, And of Liuncelot and Arthur, and immortal Ivan- | lation. He was scrupulously faithful to his du- | thin lm on the water, with the effect or wonace cipal; there was nothing of the adventurer | OW md Bids in FANOY Goops. | osteny, | gn Wal USTs Coute Chane ld hardl arrante same | oe. ties, and even went through the exhausting | ing the roughness to a mere ewell. Small | pal there was nothing of the adventurer GLOVES, PARASO UMBRELLAS. = Brace oak Tey.a cleus, rmination oeay seareonene eae ramming French exercises with ex: | boats were thus ableto enter the harbor which | Even in the depths of comedy he wen eloaye wa Ailver and'Pinted Warp. Ar and Band Rings. thow the advisability of confining some of the | "Tomnticn7 ns Puan’ nave exuinguished the | emplary patience. | Resides poctey ho tea’ the | could not have + ventured to do eo in the Tough | the side of justice and virtue, and not. with the —_ Guns, Revolvers and Musical tnetraments, older sewers to the conveyance of rain water, | And the big battalions. “I ax these questions” (about go ee dof building others instead for sewage | “fromthe stages | Pte % ChIVALY are driven | reneral’ supervision of his Sie yrmcnh Buch | spread upon ft. So far. therefore, yesterday's | Louls Napoleon), aays the Tshowman, “amy | undreds of pieces of DRESSGOODS, GRENADINES x fonda Pawelindbers ie. bem fined to eamnis goutse could probably be eon- | Allis now so faint and tender that the world has | included subordinate teachers in French, Span- | experiment was successful. Whether it opens | roval dulie aed mect nokie hive ad ay and BUNTINGS. wak;B. gill persons having deposited with me fined to comparatively few sewers and to the | , lost its gender, {eh, Itelian and German. All these were under | up the possibility that harbor mouths may be | perials, because: Fie ananery ne ee ane — low parts where sewers are tide-locked, and | 404 the enervate Esthetic is the model of the | his authority, and he doubtless had the selec- | made generally safe in rough weather by the where it might be found advisable to pump the SBIGNEE'S SALE, sewage. at least during the high stages of the tion of all appointees. There was probably no | expenditure of a few hundred gallons of cil can | “208,88 @ man. Tknow he’s smart, He is = ‘in’, he is long-headed, he is grate; but . At auction, on the FT! DAY OF APRIL, 1882, af college in the United States which had so large | perhaps only be decided by further trials, ‘The | CURD, he Is ‘ fi FOUR O'CLOCK P.M,, (wuless eld privately) on the tide. Geant oe & Dever: & corpee of instructors in the modern languages | machinery is, however, laid down, and farther Pde eae — ee ee Ont Sn ee Water street Do bie ion As regards the general ailznment of the sys- | From the Keokuk Constitution. s as had Harvard at that time. Fe a oe eer busted up again. Bet yer life.” These comic, fom and Gorge fo cole the wet, together wilt hghE rasa | ct ae ees 2, aay ving 10 thle} pmwinG rane cam wanpow, | {ot initve ells a5 dcteribed yerterday, late emperor was at tue climat of he power, | OBEAT BARGAINS MAY BE EXPECTED. Some Te from all but the lower and flatter parts of the | Cit "#0 had once been courted by Gen. U. B. aan Goos | een safety and danger in'a harbor fre- | and about the tlme it was so much the fashion Pome. See city, aud to lead tem by gravitation directly to | Oramt, and who had refused her hand in early | Whe Experience @ Gallant Man Goes | Ghented by shins bostsrend tw innate & suitable point at the river for discharge. Un-| Womanhood to this noted American civil and ie bors that itis likely, if anywhere, to be of per- | °° pal the second empire a perfect success. B. WILLIAMS & CO., Auctioneers, Burlington Hawkeye. nent cakes. Artemas Ward was a worthy and loveable less purification Is required, it is advisable to | military character, a Constitution reporter virtue of a deed of trust date’ June 90th, A.D. . ete Sala hepy antl xised ecayear = man; he was sound, blameless, ‘shrewd, sensi. DUNCANSON BROTHERS, usr fied duly nected in Taber Na. 180, fel can | Muild intereepting sewers also, when their con- | sought an interview with the lady, with ver laybe a man PPY i te Ji % , | tive and affectiqnate. is devotion to his old ee ateiet tents must be prevented from reaching the iow patrmcvemanehirel jie Maat send represent, | tered and envied and blessed among men when est — oepo Sapir. mother was Tike that of tle child ‘her com ‘Anctioncers for re aie suctign onthe jrenines 10 xb ne grounds to which they would naturally flow. pa A - al secorid-han 2 4 : : That they are therefore advisable for the topo. | At!ve found the early sweetheart of Gen. Grant pd cap ged ap and gots Inatcoa | book stall Keepers and Junk dealers in New York | teocehta. ey ee ee ay anpermost in his LANSBURGH & BROTHER. tno two- 5 dwell situated on spare conditions presented by Washington, | to be a lady considerably advanced in years, yet | # Tallway-car, er fhe’ center lot of nds of Columbia Unk ¥ ms not as the richest and most industrious Judge | England—alas, it would only have been to weep NCANSON BROS., Auctioneers. Yersity, in said county of Washi together with cot ciorm wates fet more Important to | still large, active and buoyant, and not nearly | Of the other boye and says “Allow me?” ob, so | Trim pe nies and, most industrious Jo acs | over lis gravel At another he thought of poe | DD — iseslable and outbuildings to the ame belenesng, trices, the principle eat asting in the | so reticent as the General. She had not seen | courteously, and she says, “Oh, if you please ; I | Chany Pench, but as the man who collects old | SoS Keen her after makion tie oa BLOME NORTHWEST CORNER OF DEFREES | Sua feugimes Deine fore to advantages ithe ronntcee SeParation | Gen. Grant since the "80s, she sald, and then his | would be so glad,” and the other male paseen- | manacs., This whimsical pursult ts almost, a } Home te hve with 9 A quite as much for the pleas. | _ AND'NOnTH CAPITOL STREET. offers no advantages in this respect. father carried on a tannery in Portsmouth, Ohio. | gers turn green with envy, and he leans over | liest nautical almanac down to the humbiest | Ure itgavethe old lady as for the cash it brouht ot ine Geet cf — yy f me and bet | nde of Wane eee prob- | the family of & farmer whose farm jomen ghic | the back of the seat and takes the window in a patent-medicine annual, nothing with the signs He as tha gatirat hie of bigotry, Pecksnim- | f2¢Jand recorde for Washinxton county, tn ably be safe, at least for a long time to come, to ~ Enowing war with oe hand, {f peradventare | & Sty ms taen When eens aes ch | sien, nod icouanrailiy of every ia bese diseharge the sewage in afresh state into the he may toss it airily, with a simple turn of| tio bar he was largely concerned with admiralty | 8f@ many hits at h; ites, formalists, shams, river. Then it may be necessary to dispose of | ¢} by the wrist, but it kind of holds on. and he| cases anda series of almanacs 18 rt of the li- | 82d religious scoundrels; but throughout the it by irrigation at a safe distance below the city. ing’ time, for che says sho both hands, but brary equipment ot every admiralty lawyer, | Whole of his works you will not find one sneer fourth project before us is the one advo- the division fence, on each y b a ‘This was the origin of his specialty. He has now | 2t virtue or ion, and in spite of a few broad gated by the engineering authorities of the Dis- | side of which were beautiful flowers. ands i on hand the largest and most varied lot of old | Jokes not quite in European there is not trict, as may be gathered from their reports on | “liek,” sald she, “would say to me, ‘Let's | seems ttle a “leetle cl Place, almanacs in the country, if not in the world. 1] one Teally loose or ungarded thought. The the subj With reference to the rectification | gather flowers and see who will have the most should not call it a very interesting collection; to | Times sald of his lecture on Mormons, “it is of the Potomac, they hold to the opinion that hrough.’” him it is amazingly interesting. He has ran- | Utterly free from offenve, though the opportuni- eo 7s stds Ua as | cones orate eae Pia sce Aeon ae coe oes ia | ey aa haan’ Sarat of 7.5 feet above je, an t is ly are 3 le, Fiver should be confined noatly to the line of its | “Tsyeees ane feat Taek Bintaas te Stns onl resmartg proee beng baa wan Uesemetion es Present deep-water channel. The extensive ‘me and ready in his collection. Several well as consummate humorist.” “I never stain area reclaimed in front of the city is to be iaid f a Blatchford went to my "writes Artemus, ‘with even mild — iceait amaxttt of the line of the B street piagne ing, ‘He is the greenest looking ¥ E Ys. fe ne Bre pisos ss wioked, ant: tn er outfall, and to be utitized as a park, with ever second it is not funny.’ extensive lakes between this line ‘and the x bridge. The water stored in the lakes at s north ak Wome, wae Vinee aac: Scout cinartier nas Sen eeene penal Pporeeaicres used. ‘The question ofa sab-soil is n: es, to build asep- arate system for the conveyance of sewage alone, together with the necessary pumps and outils. The Boundary avenue sewer, incorpo- Fated in Mr. Karwiese’s project, 's to be mainly & waier course. intercepting the Tiber Valley and receiving Site fae i pee fat you bal ‘that.