Evening Star Newspaper, July 5, 1882, Page 6

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- THE RUSSEAN SEETC!, rections fer the Fashionabie Wet Newest and mcs: | od oF “ry— Fancy Work mmer— mt Devices for minz Clothes and | Passing Away the Time, From the Pnit There i; fase’ the feminine mind in a fancy nee: work, whieh m much more than one would Imagine, for it not deco- | rated ishings toi but embraces a hun nes for | . including Among the Europe ladies who favor f designs for Russian Printed on die itch style of shading I: Papers ar work and will enable those them to embroider True Rus patterns ¢ as this ecution wt only on line spers. Tie iy reproduced from the old st for ‘work n where it when Russi idery is silk tothe m ry canvas must 1 and the work ads to be afterwards draw away. The lines canvas should be worked either with silk or cotton of in THE RUSSIAN strTeH. The oldest and most purely Russ called poin cause when well ex- ecuted it is a square stiteh, exactly t both s It may be vari can be done in four threads variety has two sides of the sauare omitte ced done over it. that the stitches form little vandykes. Another is simply @ he return’ stitches being omitted, but the different rows alternating, and work.” which | will be the sam Holby in ecution. This metlig work appe orate. The third stite worked in s -d designs, squai ry here and there in conven- used in pur ad bi and the through it. be A day or so at the may be spent TIVE watering-place or sue of the rush bas- rk er the purse hows the pat on full according to the I runnine round t! is carried down and neat! Reath the basket. T y be red, y t blu A her the blac! The Ivee is about four inet: i th eases, Diack lace ome or with the eém! This employment is v ladies dee ors after the So many u: these hours « simple and yet With grounawork of ilne cre fringed round th a outline embroide either rope or silks of variou and many ets in col- APPLIQUE Wor Applique work on ser: i cloth is much in favor for mantel et tinishi: cushions, footstuols, chair-back covers cloths. Velveteen or clo ‘as they do not fray out. T ean be w ered or app in some i y. In plai orders o} with eloth or veive totton dresses of ¢ som ation fabric Serviettes are finished wit! . The colors y pally * and red. One is worked fantastic birds, and anotl ers Chinese men the tea plant in in the four eor- ling branches of to edge the bax. and the tassels bined colors of the embroi mental piece a larze palin is plush on an olive p executed in cold th: Another pretty ¢ painting on lace, wi used to trim bonnets and tea gowns. This is very dainty, and the colors should her trim- wings. The painting is don: water cole tolerably moist. mixed wit! specimen has a ; was filled up in color. im a deeper tint, and he roundias it. and a slicht ser: p blue. This luce fsarranced as cuffs, rues and cascades, on pale bine and pa also soft ¥ cashmere and fon the bonnet trimmed to match. Furniture lace is painted in olis and water colors and is used for Vallances aud tables. —— Mow Long Branch Has Fallen Off. Long Branch Letter in New York Times. “Upon Clark street. about a quarter of a mile A pink rose was shaded some green leaves sur- Row a septagenarian, who was, in his vigorous aya, one of Long Branch’s best-known and most active waiters. said to your correspondent yesterday, “de place am gwine ter ‘struction, ‘n "hit taint feasible no more for nizzers. 1 was bo'n on the Yallavam, on Cunnel Adams’ place—yo' knowed Cunnel Adams, didn't yo'?—'n jes before de wah de ole Curnei he sole ine ter Mass’ Gyarlan, of Lynch- barg, Foginny. whar I wuz till Jinnel Grant tak Fredricksbug, "n den me’n de ole woman mos- Norf, ‘nv I sot up here in de Brawnch. dey wuzgenlemen den! Hit wuz ‘Jerry, dam yer brack fuce--some ice water!’ (two dol- Jahs)—‘look hyar, nigcah, wha’s de bar?’ (a dol- Iah)— xo Ses scoundrel, fotch me fo" | treme dimness one of the stron t of | opening a 1 was done in pale | 2 | Toasted carcasses of four pigs and two sheep, “But Lor goramity,” he ; were numerous pyramids of confections, THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. W EDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1882-DOUBLE SHEET. SS eee et Piantonic Flirtatio elpbia Times. y has gone ont, and sulky printing presse’, ballot- es Darwin bave come in. Now ice gentiemen, with very high | Is, lacking what the phre- aps of reason.” the Dr. Joneses has run the Concord summer and then cert and narrow for nolo: and school of the prophets, try to revive Platonic | mings; but modern briliian es not take with any enthusiasm. It is different, ho sof the heart. Fashions do in that reg nd quite found discussing ic love, cailed here and as, perhaps he matter. Not 1e importance 18 singed in flitting too near the is it? And are there “women specially capable of Pla- nt or other theo- and here, as is worth a ton of ame. ee tment?” AL bout it is quite u un ounce of fact is little or no telling how near Plato walked to the chalk line of his tine | 3 come down to us rather as a a In Parton or Abbott might e written his biography and have come as rthet itis likely that Plato was no ter than his m er Sor es, vexed some- with } itippe, did try Platonic love e his great pupil was heard of, and there is : the went decidedly shead intended. Tt and in rags, the climate the nude more popular then th 2ot hard to drink hemlock and mire and ap who, in tur’ her—this Greek. Some people say that Paul’s thorn in the : the result of bachelorhood: again, that it hence Ci ess modern de his Janie tried Pia- te a while, and here it | suzh, for Miss Welshe’s heart had | Edward Irving, and it was to ma aylor tri the busir cide ac- pi of the re Platonie love” not only loses its heart before it {Is aware, it | lose: nce also. George Lewes and Miss Evans ected in the same field, and | found not ss, if we read right arties. It made I than he was and weakened to ex- © women of all time. en Burns failed oj one to speak of ¢ and d te of divinity and . calling them by na: i ‘0 do— who have pr: aud found their he: nd broken by ! how many sk id leave thei ud walk abiro: : skly ied ifthe sun elt haited in | wrong. ee Elephants all Cowards. ‘rom the Ls lon F Tonce had a grané maze with a She had mauled my own tasker badly, crunched the mahout’s foot into a j he had cai @ to be throw ent up to areas with 3 would go ne 1 together need with hea the When dead forward. until their lowered ground, wit tig scat- notwithstanding ir ma- it | They ere we were | ion and level | ephant would ad- to drink water or to be bathed. othe mahouts, | in es3, te of the jerked up thei th upon the body the punishment they rece! hou broke awa was the m¢ next di hoiding on to them in a body down toware denly a young tusker, Jerry, which Ci and was of trumpted in camp: hot the It intert pede. ~- see. ix Shonider Straps. of Wagner, and the | a few hundred yards clear space in point-blank ra and sharpshoote: nt (for we w I started nT got to the opering I put’e eof wind. What, with grape, shot, and a regular bees’ 1 _A just think there ul drain‘of ammunition on the rate army about that time. I don't kno it was. but I get so much a but I got ared. When I got under | I cowidn't er told for the life of me_ er it was a hundred ora thousand paces I should soone a hundred thou ‘Says the Soon's ‘I get my wind, says captain.” He looks across the econd or two, then says: “A handred and seventy-tive paces “Thunder, tuin,’ says 1, ‘you've made a pretty close cu it’s just a hundred and seventy-one. 5 ant, after the laugh had subsided, “that's how I got my shoulder eee ee | A Chinese Funeral in San Francisco, Lee Poy Foon, president of the Ning Yung Tong, one cf the oldest of the Chinese Six Com: panies, died a fortnight in San Francisco, and his friends immediately had the body em- | baimed for shipment to China. Before its de- | parture an elaborate funeral ceremony was per- | formed in public. A low booth sixty by twenty | feet in size was erected on Commercial st: . the body of the structure was draped in white, j and four upright posts supported a white can- | Opy. On the. lower end of the booth were the i each placed on a trencher with noses to the Above these was @ stand, on which | West. | consecrated nuts, etc., each pile | decorated with fancy streamers and sur- mounted bs sticks of burning punk and greasy | incense. Above these was an open space about | twenty feet square, fenced in with ropes, and in | the center of this was deposited the rosewood ; coffin containing the mortal remains of Lee Poy | Foon. The funeral exercises were conducted with great ceremony, and the chief mourners | his lips together and ti | some di | the second Fenayron. | hit the fir Ir | But it wa AS LAR MURDER FRANCE. ‘The Terrible Revenge of an Apothecary From the London Standard, Panis, June 11.—Fenayron, the retired apoth- ecary who murdered his wife’s lover, another apothecary named Aubert, at a villa at Chatou, under circumstances of peculiar atrocity, has a tuil confession, Aubert, whose ac- quaintance with Mme. Fenayron had continued | for some years, was, it will be remembered, in- zled by her to visit her at night at Chatou at the instigation of her husband, and his brother Henri aided him in the crime. The murder appears to have been very deliberately planned. Fenayron’s confession ts as follow: “In the morning my wife and JT went out and | purchased twenty-five meters of stout rep a perambulator, whic cht Tinight want | to take t! fe went alone to ined at Chatou. I Kill her if she did not s ceed in bringing her lever. She had no di in doing so. My ¥ waited for him, and | he came put her arms around his neck sed him. As he was suffering from the | she took him into the bed room and mixed for him a glass of sugar and water. Iwas in joining room, and through a glass door 1 her k x Aubert. After he had drunk | the eau s my wife went out, and took the light with her. Trushed at him and hit him on the head with the hammer as hard as Tcould. He fell, and a ible struggle ensued between us. But he w weak from loss of blood, and withasword- Kis sk him repeatedly inthe chest. I then called for a light. My wife came in with a mp, which she put down ona table, and ran I then saidto M. Aubert: ‘Do youknow | Tbroazht you up: for your sake I lost my fortune; and you seduced'my wife and went about boasting of it.” I then again began to | strike him with the hammer and the swordstick, and soon he ceased to . My wife and other then joined me. They assisted me in | ing his clothes off, and to gag him, and we | bound his aris round’ him with a piece of lead piph : W then reflected that if the water entered his mouth the body, being distended, might float, | so we took a pin frém my wife's dress, fastened da napkin fast over h head. Inour haste we had forgotten to un mark the napkin, so we picked out the red cot- | on of the mark after we had tied it on. W then burnt the clothes, and haying placed the | body on the perambulator we went out by the side door to the Bridge of the body fell off the perambulator, and we had ‘ulty in replacing it. We then went to the bridge and threw the body oy and third arche: It ‘oa. On the way | between | 8 I alone | who did it all, and I would have done more if I could.” The law papers intimate that the Public Pros- | ecutor holds that the murderer ¥ of hy fally aware wite m, and that he decoyed the | to Chatou, not in a spirit of reve t money from him, and murdered him to help him out of his pecuniary assments. A complete confession was made by the woman She said that she had decided fo murder M. Aubert seve previous to the killing. AtS o'clock t her rendezvous with aw. who, according to the prisoner, ation in taking tickets for Chatou. ted, but T coaxed and fawned upon much that he at leagth consented. at Chatou, we went directly in the Rue d@Espremenil. s in the courtyard planted | iteh d Here Aubert n him again. ering him so When we ad uy he use deand x rm whieh £ Hi st to induce him to | nonce he had pene som, Whiel wasnot lighted, | and told Aubert to strike a | other door, which 1 closed us. We were in the ¢ wi $ lighted only by the wax ma It is very It required all the eh over hiin for a long t into the f cked the door, Te ad miediat i 2. WH Aubert match. i ad his brothes nation, he e and at | ‘It’s all over with in not pre ny husband and his brother tort A The tor they inflicted on him lasted three- quarters of of all hour, Tam aware that they f sked hit to sign bills for a certain sum of nd that when Aubert retused they cave! st blow with the hammer, which laid | him prostrate on the floor. He strugeled against hi to the very last. It was only when ti had been consummated that f | ntered the drawing-room. [helped to pl the body in the little handeart.” +e ise Cary and ier Sister. 4 the Portlend (Me.) Press, June 24. otwithstanding the announcement in ye s papers that Miss Cary would be w sing in the evening, there was a large audience gathered in the city hall to listen to the other ladies an teered thei tended b; Clapp, of Furbish, G.E. Bird, and Fritz | ed her many friends in reception | hall for an hour preceding the concert, all of whom sympathized with her in her misfortune | and tendered her theirsincere wishes for a speedy | recovery. They assured her, as all_ our peoph well may, from the Atlantic to the Pacilic, that voice would be a national etlam- ity, for, be It remembered, we have but one othe ipare with iton the . that of Mme. Trebelle-Bettini. f we have but words of pra s selected, the singers were all in its and no good ve appe are no} ‘icher, will of its |? than ease ; wene- es only with the ded AS she led by Annie Louise, the ddous Durst of applause, and as Annie Louis ister to the audience, kissed her | dy t bail seemed to push elf up into many athroat at the thought of | her ‘i at platforin, and the | ing to anotier what it. How charmingly day Is done” with aplicity and beauty of tone! for “Kathleen Mavourneen’ dst last. in. re ded and sang aner that delighted ail to stir ol Street Cars in Vienna, Vienna Letter to the Globe-Demoerat, The street cars are run on a singular plan. A tranger affords the natives considerable amuse- ment by hailing a car which he wishes to take. He puts up a finger in the usual way, of which neither driver nor conductor takes the jeast no- ti He next calls gently, then louder and louder, with the same result. Finally growing desperate he has recourse to his fingers; if ne does not possess a whistle, trom which he pro- duces a sound loud enough to awake the dead, running the while and becoming very much ex cited. The car goes peacefuty on, while in- mates and drivers of cars going in the opposite direction enjoy the situation exceedingly, Inuzh- ing heartily at the frate stranger. At length the car reaches the halt-stelle, or stopping place, where passengers get on, while others, though not within a square or two of their destination, alight. The halt-stelles are stationed throughout the city at. intervals of three or four squares. It is neces- sary to be at these stations the moment the car stops, for they are off in an instant. A car has three compartments. Lovers of fresh air are seated on the front platform, riding backward, while in the middle compartments the seats face as in our railway coaches. Gentlemen never offer a lady a seat. On the panned they fre- pently push the lady ahead and e the seat ie contemplated taking. Ladies jump on and off the car while in motion. Upon the passen- ger paying the conductor his money he receives a ticket, which is later en inspects another went through a variety of genuflections; but the gongs and f cher Vi ay ied conductor, who acts in the capacity of a detec- tive. In other words, he is a oll pane, and prevents conductor No. 1 from making little jaisites. The ‘conductor has no chance. is his lot.” ascertains from ut [tion of his ow | gas, acting throuch the medium of the lun! | Vening medium, and so pass | moret ble to see that he was face | + | once | he ever | complimentary pre standing behind her With his fingers lightly touching her shoulders.. He certainly could not by any intentional effort in such a position have seeded in guiding #%* gicl’s fingers in rapid fumbling motion among the chaos of let- ters heaped confisedly together. On another occasion one of us witnessed the successful per- formance by a lady—the daughter of an eminent y varied and complicated op- erations silently fixed upon by him in her ab- sence. For instance, he decided tnat she should pick up alittle agate ornament standing amid ‘ome twenty other small objects on a. shelf, should put it insid i red jar in an other part of the room, reopen the jat, remov | the ornament, and hana. it to a certain friend who was pr This as done not only cor- reetly to the st detail, but so rapidly that the hypothesis of unconscious muscular action on the part of the “wilier,” who lightly touched the lady's shoulders, seetned, to say the least, a violent one. Still more was this the case when Se ore | selected notes on the piano were four times in succession correctly struck, and particular books, fixed upon at random, were taken from a full bookease on six consecutive trials. Finally, the hands, thouzh placed near, were not allowed to touch the person of the guesser: the effect of this was to render the performance slower and more hesitating, but nevertheless even now the number of the successes exceeded that of the failures; while of course the odds axainst suc- cess remained on each occasion enormous. In these experiments it was very noticeable that a much larzer pereentaxe of successful results (in fact, almost unbroken success if the tips of the fingers of the willer touched the guesser) oceur- red when a near rejative of the suesser was the ‘-willer.” ‘This sort of eireumstanee is very com- and must naturally excite suspicion; for ly no one in such a case can call on science ceept as strict evidence any private convie- , based on knowledge of the family, that deception was out of the question * * * Psychological treatisesmay be searched in vain for any account of transmission of men- tal images otherwise than by ordinary sensory channels. At the same time it may serve to dis- arm parely a priori criticism if we point out that the word “thought-reading” is merely used as a popular and provi ption, and is y intended to exclude an explanation resting on @ physical basis. It is quite open to y to the familiar on and reception of swinging pendulum sus- lid support will throw into chronous vibration another pendulum attac to the same support if the period of oscillation of the two be the same, the medium of trans- mission here being the Solid material of the sup- port. One tuning. r string In unison with another will comumunicate its Impulses through the medium of the air. Glowing particles of a surmise some sort of analo: phenomena of the tr vibratory ener; iferous ether, can throw into sympathetic vibra- tion cool molecules of the sam ubstance at a . A permanent magnet brought into a throw any surroundins iron into a ion similar to its own; and here the me- dium of communication is unknown, though the fact is undisputed. Similarly we may conceive, it we please, that the vibration of molecules of brain-stuff may be communicated to an inter- under certain cir- es from one brain to another, witha ponding simultaneity of impressions. No anin the case of the magnetic phenomena any inv ator bound to determine the me. dium before inquiring into the fact of transit. On the other hand the possibility must not, be overlooked that furth + the lines of research here indicated m: teamodi- fication of that gencral view of the relation of mind to matter to which modern science has long been gravitating. cur cori A Clése Call. From the Evansville Argus. the people of a little town in Warrick county have been haugi right over the brink of a nt chureh 1, but are not are ot fact. nor w until this copy of the reach lers over there. Just be- fore the close of the servi last Sunday a good brother ked forward to the pulpit, handed the minister an announcement, as he thought, and asked him to read it to the con it berore he dismissed them. Just before time was ealied on the doxology. the min Brother Bramley fias hani and i r voice he rea follows : My Own Per Bram; A see me again? Tam dyin: id 3 into Wy old mummy that calls herself your wife will never find it out. How can you endure her? Come, darling, to eae who truly loves you. Your own, and oniy, Mary. The good broth ad handed inthe wrong nouncement. minister looked horror-struck, the concreg unley with cold, hard @tares, seat and glared at him s equal to the occasion, y.With a look of per- he said: “Brothers appear strange to you that ved pastor to read such a e from the pulpit, but the fight the devil is to fight him boldly The writer of that vile note is but is evidently some dep child of sin who is ‘ing to besmireh my n reputation. vet cut the writ y proclai the contempt of n people.” down amid the murmur of appr mpathy, and his wife wanted to hug consrecation. e told the writer of the note what had ocearred, and remarked with a grin that it was the clos ci the note, which vou never comin to see my darling beloved eyes. ‘The to ation howe fect res and s I ‘The Meorish From the London 8! Morocco, M law no man is permitted to have more than four wives; but there is no limit but that of the purse to the number of female slaves who may ment. The Sultan’s numbered by hundreds, if they do not e four figures; and-in proportion Ith the well-to-do-Moor ment. The ring the honor of entering he will, and any gi more than crdi court for his ileze of confe r- *m upon whom in the provinces who are ly pretty are sent up to the inspection or sent to hi a it. Men in high positions, 8 the Vizier, are also often presented with adies, and, being frequently very wealthy, omplete their establishment by private contract, ' £200 fora girl they may ad? ‘The ordinary well-to-do Moor, of whom there large number of the merchant class, have r in the open K the slave market is a highly patronized institution The court in which this is usually held, on thre a in opens out of a labyrinth of small, narrow streets, which form the bazaar or gen- eral market of the city, a place in which the hisher class of Moet would not on other occa- sions deign to be seen. As the afternoon wears. on, however, they may be seen ambling dowt on their gaily caparisoned mules, with a slave walking behind them, ta the entraace of the court, where they: dismount and recline in picturesqu2 groups areund the enclosure. About the same time arrive by twos and threes those who are to be sold, being placed by the salesmen in some small recesses or stalls open- ing on to the court. f There were about fifty or sixty persons for sale, of both rexes and all ages, most of them black as Jet, and from their features evidently natives of the Soudan, sdme of whom were to be sold only in lots, with two or three children. These were the drudges for house and field work, the price ofiwhom is always moderate, and strictly commensurate to the amount of work they are likely to becable to perform. But beside these were two female figures who | evidently excited no small amount of interest in the gray-bearded old Moors who formed no small proportion of the purchasers. One of them was a closely-velled Moorish girl, whose features were revealed only to inquiring cus- tomers, but who froma passing glance did not loegs to be remarkable for her beauty. The other was a really pretty girl from the province of Sus, whose rose-colored craftan and green silk head-dress contrasted petty with her olive complexion and long black lashes. They were all neatly and tldlly dressed, bearing no sign of ill-treatment or scant nourishment, and were treated with all consideration. both by salesmen and porbares though the examina- by latter of the teeth, arms, &., of those they bid for was very repulsive to those ‘unaccustomed to such goatee, found At the close of the reading the | nd | LY. E. PINKHAMWS. VEGETABLE COMPOUND IS A POSITIVE CURE FOR ALL THOSE PAINFUL COMPLAINTS AND WEAKNESSES 80 COMMON TO OUR BEST FEMALE POPULATION. A MEDICINE FOR WOMAN. INVENTED BY A WOMAN. PREPARED BY A WOMAN, THE GREATEST MEDICAL DISCOVERY SINCE THE DAWN OF HISTORY, Tt revives the drooping spirit, invigorates and har- manizes t he organic functions, vives elasticity and Sirm- hess to the step, restores the natural Inste: e eye, and plants on the pale check of woman the fresl: roses of life's spring and early summer time, PHYSICIANS USE IT AND PRESCRIBE IT FREELY. It removes faintness, fiatuiency, destroys all craving for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. ‘hat feeling of bearing dow and backache, is always permane’ caneing pain, ‘cured by it weixht FOR THE CURE OF KIDNEY COMPLAINTS OF EITHER SEX THIS COMPOUND IS UNSURPASSED. LYDIA E. PINKUAM'S BLOOD PURIFIER will eradicate every vestice of Humors from the Blood, and vive tone and strength tothe system Of mau, woman or chiid. “Insist on having it. Both the nponnd and Blood Purifier are prepared 4 Lynn, Mass. Pri at 2:3 an . either, $1. “Six botties for 85. ‘Sent b i in the form Of pill. or of lozenges, ou receipt BL per box for either, Mre. Tinkham freely answers all letters of inguiry, “Enclose get. stamp. Send for pamphlet. No family should be AF, PINKHAM’: LIVER PILLS. | ‘They cure constipation, billiousn and torpidity r 32-Sold by all druggists. PATENT COMBINED FLY TRAP AND ADJUSTABLE 25 cents per box. Je3 SSS CCC RRR EEE REE NN SSO UR SRE he Nw N N Cc N Sgss5 EEEN DAISY LAWN MOWERS, HYDRANT HOSE, BUILD- ERS’ AND MISCELLANEOUS HARDWARE, F. P. MAY & CO., 634 Penna. avenue, near 7th street. 305 L“*¢==2 THE BEST IN THE DISTRICT. BEER, : = | JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING CO.'S MILWAUKEE LAGER BEER, FOR SALE BY DEALERS AND THE AGi SAML C. PALMER, DEPOT, 1224 TWENTY-NINTH STREET N.W. ans £2-Telephonie conneetion. qu PP} UPPE NOS. 403 AND 405 7TH STREET NORTHWEST, HEADQUARTE FOR THE WHIT. DREN'S CARRIAGE COMPANY the cheapest for Beauty, C: ‘marke ¥, FISHING TA LES, CROQUET and VELOCIPE! TRI be bought at the lowest CHR, RUPPERT. FLCONOMICAL AND SAFE. WEAVFR, GLA & 00.3 LAUNDRY soap IS FCONOMICAL, BECAUSE IT IS PURE: RrING FREE FROM ALL ADU) ‘D TO ADD WEIGHT ULK, AND WHICH QUICKLY WEAu OUT AND ROT TH CLOTHES. IT Is SAFE, Bi E IT 1S MANUFACTURED fRICTLY PUB!’ MATERTALS, V) D TALLOW (PAEPARED BY OUR: D COCOANUT OIL é H OUR NAME. FOR SALE BY GROCERS GENFRALY AND WHOL E AT OFF) eopae CONCORD HAR: GET THE BEST. LUTZ & BRO., “The Concord Harness” of all ption eget CARRIAGE and very It stock of the 3 nuine Concord Harness is rs name and trade mark. Agent for the Kinds and @ KOAD HARN: Have open celebrated ¢ TRUNK ECHELS, &e., in great variety at bot+ tom prices. LUTZ & BRO., 497 PI YLVANIA AVENUE, Je7-1m jal Hotel. N HAIR ts in the vegetal al color. e ches the nutzitive prineini which the hair is nourished and supported, It makes ur moist, soft and lossy, and is unsurpossed as i. It is the most economical preparation eyer offered to the public, as fects remain a long time, making only an occa ‘ation necessary. yatinent medical men, the State Asseyer of Mas: y of HALL'S HAIR Bi known and used in all the civilized countries of the world. For sale by all dealers. eet PUBLIC IS REQUESTED CARE- FULLY TO NOTICE THE NEW AND ENLARGED SCHEME TO BE DRAWN MONTHLY. &@~ CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. TICKETS ONLY $5. SHARES IN PROPORTION. LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY, In ted in 1868 for twenty-tive years by the Legis- attire for Educational and Charitable’ purposes witha capital of $1,000,000—to ‘which a reserve fund $550,000 has sizice been added. By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise was made a part of the present State Constitution December 2d, A. D-. 1819. The only Lottery ever yoted on and endorsed by the Peopie of any state, IT NEVER SCALES OR POSTPONES, ITS GRAND SINGLE NUMBER DRAWINGS TAKE PLACE MONTHLY, ASPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FORTUNE. SEVENTH GRAND DRAWING, CLASSG, AT NEW ORLEANS, Tagth Monthly Drait Look at the following Scheme, "under the exclusive eu, m and management of Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana, and Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia, ne Wh all the drawings of this Company, both Sa edt a a Set the pul Official Lists, CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000. 100,000 TICKETS AT FIVE DOLLARS EACH. FRACTIONS, IN FIFTHS IN PROPORTION. 228-6 | u y EI fl SEE ES once i 1 wee BUBBESESENS S52 SSssseesess HOUSEFURNISHINGS EPPY REFRIGERATORS, WHITE MOUNTAIN FREEZERS, PORCELAIN-LINED COOLERS, ICE PITCHERS, &e. M. W. BEVERIDGE, Importer oF Curxa axp GLAssware, _430 1009 PENS A Lf BUY THE BEST. 709 a We call special attention to our heives; Charcoal Packed. iehed and strongiy built. E GUARANTEED TO GIVE ENTI RB . TON, R MARES AT COST. WILMARTH & EDMONSTON, IMPORTERS OF CHINA AND _3elT iz 09 MARKET SP JR eEBIGERATORS SOLID Ww r ALK D PRICES. ICE CHESTS a WHITE MOUN RERLESS FREEZERS. s m5 (all styles). fit any window. EO. WATTS, S14 7th street. 5 doors above Penna. avenue. AMILY SUPPLIES._ TWO YEARS OLD, $1.00 GALLON. Jel6 Od BA WINE, $ .50 bottle ME 1.50 dozen AMERIC joven FINE OLD WHISKIES, 3.00 galion AKMY AND NAVY WHL 1.00 bottle C. WITMER, Frxe Grocentes, NUE. TRE RRR ERE SS! CE” RR 88s L L ~ TLLL LLL WILL ALWAYS MAKE BEAUTIFUL ROLLS, BREAD AND BISCUITS. Wholesale Depot: Corner Ist street and Indian: Jel enue. WM. M. GALT & CO. FO EXCURSIONISTS. POTTED HAY trED GAM LUXCH TONG! BONED HAM B B.W. REEDS an 1216 F STREI CLARET! _my2t (ener: T NORTHWEST. CLARET We offer, as x sneci THREE BOTTLE ABLE CLARET FOR €1, OR NR. KELL, - Deruen ss Prest-Cras LAMB, VEAL, MUT At Btalls 628, 629 and iG ane Market, 9th street wing, ‘Address ap. 8 Northern Liberty Mark Lox il, City Post Ottice. Marketing del:verd free of charge to sll parteof the city. mari V his PHILADELPHIA At the BOSTON MARKET, LEON SCHELL & CO., 19 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. GENTLEMEN'S GOODS. Wwe AKE UNDE 1 EVERYBODY Linen Collars, Linen Cuffs, Silk Neckwear, Cotton Socks, Undershirts and Drawers, New stvies of Percale Shirts, the yery best quality, only #1 Fine Percale Shirts, only 75 cents. Finest Dress Shirts to order, elecantly made, only $2. Six fine Dress Shirts to order for $9. All goods are guaranteed to give satisfaction in every “nds MEGINNISS", 1002 F etrect northwest. Ss B. ELLERY, ° SUCCESSOR TO DUBREUIL BROTHERS, NUFACTU! OF FINE DRESS SHIRTS HOE ACT ENTS FURNISHINGS. 1112 F Srreer Norrawesr, Wasurscrox, D.C. IN Six of the Finest Dress Shicts to order., + $12.00 ~ 1.50 if Le LOMPSON'S DRESS SHIRT MANUFACTORY AND MEN'S FURNISHING EMPORIUM, 816 F Street Northwest, FOOTWEAR NECKWEAR, _ HANDWEAR amsutta, unbnished, Toc. sisted, 903, of the L., unfinisked, 65¢. ; finished, 89 Boy's Wamsutta, unfinished, Gc. finished, 7: Ready-made STUIRTS at following est Lest no FINANCIAL. GTock SPECULATION Parties wishing to make moncy in’Stocks should com- municate with the old established firm of JOHN A. DODGE & CO., Baxxens axp Stock Broxens, No. 12 Watt Sturer, New Yous, \d free full information showing how Who will send free owing how large profits may be ‘on investinents 506 $10 TO $1,000. i. . RAYMOND & CO., . COMMISSION STOCK BROKERS, No. 4 Pine street, New York. ‘Kerage business with experien jo per: ae a Sal Report, dovoved to te 10. in. an interest of investors and operator, mailed complete information. ERS ON SAN FRANCISCO EXCHANGE ALSO —— EXECUTED. ef or Se gi ened pe to-out-of-town investors i furnish prominent ref Fe wil, Nhen desired, tarnish. ree at references, | or lo ted STOCK TELEGRAPH WIRES ‘Transact a BETWEEN WASHINGTON AND NEW YORK. H. H. DODGE, ‘Bonds, Stocks and Investment Securities Bought and ‘Seld on Commission, ‘No. 639 Sem STREET. (CORCORAN BUILDING.) Agency for Prince and Whitely, Stock Brokers, 4 Baoapwar. New Yorn ‘Every class of Securities bought and sold en ecmthie sion in San Francisco, Baltimore, Philadephia, New ‘York, Bostcn and Washington. Orders executed on the ‘New York Stock Excharge at one-eighth of one peccen: commission, Private and direct telexraph wires to ‘Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston, through MEDICAL, &e. VIGTINS oF src X Beohoury trun 1 to ¥ o'clock pau ™ . ™ 1 2 exeit:blit eelf-exar Address Secretary, 4 weed be or, r SIGESMOND, 34 Vauderb Dian Nocturnal ete. 10 "days, consulted We at his ottica, Jeacdine phy POSITIVE CURE AS Ks It Drs. Brothe veriet ADAME DE FOR: dies. All female quny ited dally at 634 9 EN. save Laws ov Live axn 1 the nied by the Medical Ci ific for nervous and physical debi te Seth. 8. Hance ITs experience, will ‘ams, N ES esione, Lmpotency (lose Gonorrhoea and Syphilis positively cured in Bt om 56 ~ Bal Trineasen, 8 esdays and Saturdays, fre y who can Many have SST HAS REMEDY w failed to reoatvo ich as Mei RICORD'S VITAL I STORATIVE, S a OK TWO OF DR. BROTHERS IN- will cure ang case of Ni FOR La ‘Can’ Academy of Medicine, of Parte, ree writing of the of Leransn 2 al ory ations #iriclly confidential C street northwest. itimore, Ma. Without Medicines. World aw TNO? im . Be bile Bh : ERTSON, THE MOST RELIABLE AND establiehed ty, with 18 ‘iiseamet Weakness, sexual power), Can be Before to thie ane of Baltimors, Main ofhoa, 30 North ALLAN’S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BOUGIES, Patented October 16, 1876, Ono box cular, Of $100. | Sold by all deusriet ceipt of price. For further pai 1 wil cure any casein four days or loss, will cure the most obstinate case, 40 matter of standing. seous doses of cubebs, tare certain to prodiice yepopsia by the stomach, pabia or ot] of sandal- destroy= re wend for ci . Box 1,533. ©. ALLAN CO., 83 John street, New York.” 17-tu.th, s A victim of youthful tiny iy. Nervous Del 4 ‘thed in vain every known remedy, has disoo which he will Address J. Ht REEVES, 43 Chath ple melt cure, New York, ay BE S50 2 years expert I cure 5 hey Diseases de Serofula, Syphilie ‘ epeedily cured. Gonorrhea cured in 48 hou sale by WM. B. street and Pennsylvania avenue. under seal on receipt of price. byn indulzen 0: rr RICHMOND, Fi ce, wh will cure recent cares. Each box coniaius one n's treatment. sim _ TARTLING DISCOVERY! Lose Maxnoob ResTorEn. nee R. JOHN TRIPP'S BLOOD PURIFP! or Syphilis, Scrofula, Ovarium Tu rreceived by us dollars, we will we >return the Guaras y cane of Sapp corrhem (or Irregularities of th: wither stare. E it; ml, ete, nd FREE to hin 10. premmed or Pain hits 906 Bi street southwest. in all’ Blood Pe fison. d and Skin WISLE, Dro Pace sper ay an eolykk WARD IF DR. BROTHERS FAILS TO nful Men- ail Tnter- jenstraal Periods; 35 a 18-3" acertaim ore, Kid= Cure of Syyphilia Send two stamps for paan~ mm. For corner 12th box, sent _ dd i death, ‘One dollar a box, or six boxes for y mail prepaid on” receipt of price. boxes came. With cae maariied witht ritten guar t mut dex by |S ane, Warhin Ageuts, to wou ali rr RAILROADS. ALL POINTS 8 ERICKSBUK the trains le fo all Southern Pom STEAMEK LEAVE SDERICKSBU ow” ae WHARF AT 9: PM. n, D. SOA. ML AND 3:40 P.M. TICKETS BY Rall. GOOD VIA BOAT AND VICE For information, &c., apply at Company's office, Tim street wharf. GEORGE WM. P. WELC MATTINGLY, Gen i, Agent. 8 B THE Mc BLTW 6:50—Baltimore, Am ALTIMORE & OHIO RATLROAD. IL FAST, AD D THE TH E VAST ANE 1 sand ty and Way Statio; polis nnd ‘ay (Piedmon Chicago. 8. Stras. burg, Winchester, Hagerstown and Way, via *) 5H 230—Ialtin erick, — Balti — Point nie, a i nore, chester and 1 Way, via Kelay 05. Point Bi EXPR! 10—BALT! leeping Cars of Be ore and ¥ an 1M: p BALTIM For further imforiat Ohio Ti will be taken, ania avenue, corn any point in the city C. K. LORD, Gen, Passenger Ac . OLE: Ttocks, site OnE ESP ATA, 3 ALTIMORE EXPRE cks and Way ELPHIA tations. EW YORK A ND BOSTON (counsets for Hae tor Fre svilie and Laurel Annapolis Junction Snnidays stops at itl st r via Relay Laurel Lxpre ue at Ann and Way Station Frederick. Ht ‘ay Stations. lations 2 EXPRESS, Stops at Uyattavitie aud L cis and Ws Anna (Martineyans and jared.) " « iy akhineton st Rp Baits et Ollices, Washington Station, 1éth street, ok.) Xprowa, Jeneup's rations. acerstown, Wins (8 Sunday to Polut of zion. more and ned 1351 re or wr hagyiue to be checked and received iN nm Master of Trane., Balto. > Balt, myd Bae ars “IN EFFE MAGNI JUNE Trams Leave Wasnixor or (TH aND BST RE! For Pittsburg and the West, of Pu daily 7:30 p.m. daily, Express, 9: hicazo Lim 302.12, daily, day, with Palnos C For Wil 4:20, For Piniede: ii ] oF oot aa ae 20 p.m. lor Cara, 9: For N, ‘City with direst trannfer to Fulton . ‘across New Yor! % 20 p.m. ‘Limited 10-302. od Fxproe, man Hotel apd Siceping Cars at 9: ‘ast Line, Cars from Harrisburg to Cincinnati. Western Es with Palace Care to Pitts. 50 p.m. daily for Pittsbung Ty Steeping nsport, Lock Haven, and Kimira, at 9.39 a, m. daily, ot eg 2 For New York and the Bast, £00 a.m. 2 9:50, and 10 m..1 -m. On Sunday, 4:30, m. daily, except Sunday. ‘all throueh trains: Goats of Brooklyn Aj 8:00 a.m., 10:30 Ww. ‘Express of Pullmaat Par- ‘connect at Jer avoiding 40am, andd:4® p.m. daily, yam and 4:40 p.m. daily, except RAI 1G"

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