Evening Star Newspaper, July 8, 1882, Page 2

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2 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1882—DOUBLE SHEET. N WASHING-| LETTER FROM LONG BRANCH. RELIGIOUS NOTES. AMONG THE WEST VIRGINIA HIGH- | wastike walking on hot splinters of glass,andthe ABOUT TORNADOES. farm at Hohokus, N.J., and his plantation in —- , HANDS, cay mae sateen, ye of ee ain no ato be — 4 ~ a aieeeeen > — = “ _—— le When she went to bed, was to im-| Hew They Get Themselves Up, and | ties, 80 fon landscape ices Wacts About the. Mastnces-se| fests ee wae The eaiivond | — There are reports of revivals in many of | «their Scenery and People, and Ther | merse hor feet in warm water for half an hour ‘Where. a speak of fishing, that bis hands are never idle, 1 Growth During the Last Few Years—| ranch at Night The Ollonaie amg | be cities and towns of Sweden. Peenliaritics—Washingtonians in the | or so. I hardly know whether she was most No man is more truly fond of nature than Mr. a rane! e Climat Sock “ : AN Clawes Engaged in Spectlating—| the Toilettes-Personal Gossip—Etc. |, THe London Missionary Society recently | Woods—Haw They Enjoy Life, Ren Rd who WAH Capos ae a att | ANew York Star reporter has interviewed catenin i Combet ae eee en omer Wii Atgora, Pritstox Uo., W. Va., July 3, 188%. | establishment. Instead of corns, she had blis. | Signal Service Officer Merrill of that city to this | Qf tustrati grove, and he is partial, apparent! + _ Speculation in ts s0 commonnow| Deane y ae iene es —The Washington (Methodist) Preacher's} To-day we climbed‘one of the highest knobs | ters on the soles of her feet, and which of late | effect : to every bird save the English sparry Hi Association has adjourned its weekly meetings till September. —The Reformed Episcopal chureh (Cummins’ Memorial), Baltimore, of which Bishop Latare is the rector, is progressing finely. —Rey. W. W. Bowdish, of the 79th street Methodist church, New York, has received the ‘ ee of D. D. from the lowa Wesleyan Col- of this “‘nobby” region, from the breezy top of | had so incapacitated her from getting about “IT amcome,” said the reporter, “to ask you | paraphrase of a certain famous injunction would which we had @ sweep of vision tor many dim | BFK, fhat phe had been threatened with dis-| to tell me about tornadoes. In fact, I wish one read: “The frst English sparrow sou see shoot ‘ Za charge from her present situation. 2. ¢ . i him on the spe There are excellent reasons Inlles in all directions over mountain ranges and | “"i+72 onty just to say that of all those I talked | Were blowing now”—mopping his face with his why this enamve cna destracbes tard darkling valleys. At-the foot of the mountain | with this wasthe only shop-girl who complained | handkerchief. “I want to know something, or, | should be discouraged Mr. Jefferson knows —and its “fobdt,” mind you, is ited. three | of harsh treatment on the part of the employer. | rather, the ie do, as to how those western ch and every tree on his Louisiana plantation, y I y peo vy thousand feet ‘Above! tidewater—skirting a rich | The female employes asa rule seem to beliberally | tornadoes, such as are now playing their dam- | 28 well as though these orange bearers were Int meadow on thb,gentlé’ banks of a noisy stream, | aid. fairly fed and comfortably lodged, and | acing antics out weat—in short, how they get | ‘viduals and old friends. He is so familiar ‘, oe : have nothing to find fault with excepting the Jota cp . ~ | with them, having planted them, and watched spread a “sugar orchard” of majestic maples. | many hours a day they are kept at works aud | em Se ae i eee nent Unie: | Chete’ growth faces letenoy, Ghat Sse eam toll pre Winding and serabbiing up, up, a steep, narrow | the cruelty inflicted on them by denying them ste ‘g 7] cisely what each one requires, and how they —The Rey. Samuel W. Dike, of Royalton,Vt., | road between two humble mountain hoases, we | ihe privilege ofsitting down in thelr brief spells | POSS; | nm sorts my bie teak extemeore tea | ‘aust be treated. He finds. pecullar pleasure il as been offered the position of permanent sec- | reached a shoulder plateau, where opened the Seem Saari ee ot mained eneral way. Tornadoes usually run off the | © ing the fruit borne by these productive ac- retary of the New England Divorce Reform | hundred acres of an old and well-impfoved | <7! ¥' Me nr en eeemed to have fallen | couthern border of areas of low barometer. | (uaintances. days that its mysteries, its hopes and disap-] Agam the Fourth of July celebration was ointments are familiar to all grades and con- } spolled at this place, so it has known no really ditions of life. It is no longer the man of | “glorious” Fourth for two years. Last year. Wealth who invesis his thousands and tens | when the weather was fine, except for a short of thousands: but the clerk, the mechanic, | time in the afternoon, the anxiety about the and the newsboy makes his modest “call” | President was too great to admit of much gay- and “put” and inve his ten or twenty | ety. This time the weather was foul, and dolfars in a “short” or “long” yenture. The | many were feeling gloomy on account of the Janguaze of Wall street has become Incor- | railroad accident last week, by which Mr. Wil Porated into the vernacular ot the people, and | tiam Garrison, who was so popular, lost his life its mysteries are now open secrets. The mil- | Some of those who had known him, went to his Boogaires in prospecto jostle the millionaires de | funeral, on Monday, while others attended the | up farm—a farm that its present proprietor had | |2t0 the hands of exceptionally hard taskmas- | These areas extend over the whole western ————— Sure, 50 that the distin hae, | nauest held in consequence of the deaths by |” “Roy, N. M, Carroll, pastor of Asbury | €WN out of the heavy. solltary forest. many | ‘7%, We,can't hare youhere, you know:limp- | snntry."“Hese aul ae it on the map’ hold M. QUAD FOOLED, Jatter are now lar: polized by the for- | that accident. les - e ears ago, when he and his old wife, now rps ing up’ map and running his blue pencil across I mer. The taste for stock ulation, like that y Phe Li yee ° Racers en (colored) M. E. church, has initiated measures | jroken as their Dutch, ‘were young and fool- | 5. the unfeeling remark, as she informed u: oct : ittle aged op reccagge e jock came just as resi- it, as though maps were as cheap as decorated ' io ” y “ ” xs ‘he shopwalker had addressed to her on a pre- ee ms P c Man quired one; bi heu 01 e " 5 , c Gi 73 2 pid 2 ively ant nt, not look cross and sulky . - ‘ fascination of the “tape” ana the “board” wetsa | Son's wife dad ethers Taal dee Tint cat, | —The Chinese Sunday school of the Mount | liave, with these ‘mountain-wikierneca’ abet. at every Gustome® they have {0 serra artuey | long period of meteorological quiet. From two | irom the Detroit Free Prove e a Upon @ person's mind, it is rarely shaken | ould have a reception and give in-| Vernon church, Boston, numbers 110, and is in- | cles.) The fences were in good repair, and the o'clock or so, as though they resented thelr weeks to at least a month soft, warm, moist « i < . <4 z Now when you reach Macon you go and see é rmal s Wafterncon teas.” and in othe: | creasing so rapidly that it is dificult to find | Zaft quaug niyen wedrove lung as lightly on | coming at_all’at that hour. “Customers don't Fe ae ear in| O0k Slack." Rhaoy Gath Genes ad ithe Galion THE GROWTH OF THIS BUSINESS, be | Maye gmake It ay for each other and | teachers. : and weather-stained stood the rambling yrange. | Ke it, and 7 peaks Be ane cone tae ‘at.{ | is the material for the tremendous rainfall which | office in Atlanta. “The colonel knows evers« Pleasure, dissipation, or whatever it may heir friends: by came ane) emt oti —The Sunday school of the Mt. Vernon | house. The stone “spring-house” was covered | tne poor creature, “it is because my feet ache | *CCO™Panies the tornado. After these winds | body for miles around, and he'll post you on called, in this city has been very marked during — se ee teed Se dari Place M. E. church, south, spent a very enjoya-| with grape vines. The fat ducks and geese bo J y have ceased, dry, cold winds will begin to blow the * so and I am go tired. juhere teeta erything.” Past few years. Two years ago there was | Vii be very secluded. ‘They had opened thely | able day at hockviile,on Thursday, plenicing on | shook their tails saucily in the face of the world. from the north, continuing anywhere from two Rot an office or a firm devoted exclusively to | Cottace here tec erea aney had opened thelr | the Fair grounds, reo | gals.” more or less fair and sun-burnt,| the Judge and the Dusky Brother. | {© five weeks. ' By this time an overwhelming = = es ~é hoed the corn as the old farmer plowed. Roses “You" this business in existence in this city. Now | dent by whieh his son lost his life, and expected || — The Syrian Protestant college at Berleut | lived the o¢ the debe caed aan bes ‘skir. | Frankfort Cor. Louisville Courier-Journal. count R for hot, Strike him just right or he won't there are four well equipped offices connected | to enjoy their summer Very much, for there was | numbers 152 students, most of them paying | mished for sweets. The ‘goblet trom which wo |’ At Brother Barnes meeting Inst night there | ""Cail alr be banked in that fashton, ——~ wot poumer take aaa aie ee by direct wire with the New York Stock Ex-| ‘9 be @reunion at his resi penee of Commodore tee wee Last year 15,715 Bibles | qrank the eweet cold water of the deep well, | was en episode in which a colored brother and | Subject to draft or check, as it were 7” asked | 7 elidpge, and where quotations of every sale : ibs drink. It’s an old southern custom, you know, ia o: bas = smelled of onions. The old lady Informed us | the highest judicial officer in the state gave a | tte greenhorn. and, while he won't touch a drop he'll expect to made in New York during the day can be seen. Hpi ed ehh meidactaily dietiaa oes —Rev. Page Milburn, pastor of Mt. Savage | that they had just bought a new $6 dog: and an ighest j a “Yes, it can, just as water can. Airis then : p Sen sxpec . ven = s ; E is | PUbMe exhibition of the fraternal relations ex- | something like great masses of gunpowder in | Le invited to. You can fill the flask with water, Adanking house In this cite hes etaeaes | Sixty years ago. There is another sister now nae Cie e apeite Oe as Seas eee neta sing Ronee bigs! Gar eee isting between the white and colored races in | storage, eooae for some other power to de- and he'll never Know the difference. Sada special wire to New York. "a cousie of Tee, ee tee eee Elor kt Wee imi patented but a few weeks ago, and sold | Kentucky, while the evangelist stood with out- | velop its hidden resources. “By-and-bye, these | yen {reached Macon 1 sist feck cto rae { ma ago there were only two or three “tck-| caine here with him last week, and two others | —'The 8:30 o'clock mass maintained at St. iat eels 24 end a meadow we | stretched hands asking, “Who will trust the Spponite nthe cirneyia for tie eeaterr then | store, and told the clerk to’ fill it with rome, Constantly scott Oars the quotations are | have arrived since; but it Is probable that Com- | Aloysius for the accommodation of students at man's corn feld;through'a pale df bare oer | LO%W" Sudgo Thomas WP. Harzis, of the court | 2" ever see a dog ent?” ; ppd ig etng er monnreg ed ee | fhe business has increased for cach neaatSa reat | modore Garrison and his wife, who never leaves | Gonraza College, and well attended, will not | rolling pasture spotted with’ sheep and echoine { Of Appeals, was moved to a confession and took | > mover suspicious of @ verbal “trap,” the re- | hin what it was, but @sulff or two convinced that additional facilities had to, be. provided thay way be detained in New York, whither | be resumed till vacation is over. with the drowsy tinkle of their bells. Near by eareeceliea pes Aah Chairs Shortly | porter auswered cautiously, “I've seen twodogs | Me that sweet oll Bottioin my pocket T cmered. of 4 “| they went on Sunday, for some time. ey| =; ola ted hes of | after there passed down the aisle a penitent Bek é 4 eet ee rae bare Found iC necessary recently. | haye azain opened their town house, which they Rev. W. F. Parker, of Indianapolis—a_min ria feed a aS eee aera blacker than the midnight eyes of the axble | 1! That's what I mean. The cold, dry air and | ‘he Colonel's office and told him who I was and onan to accommodate their customers, to Alt | a4 so recently closed. Conant, the artist, is to | ister of the Disciples, or Christian church—in side its choked spring, where we left our team | 0ddess. Then came others who, Brother | the ware, venet ameam, he cold dogs. They | What I wanted. | EP rooms adjoining thelr offices where quota- | | int the portraits of the five Garrison brothers | an active service of thirty years has buried but | * pring, wl yur : . ) mass of air is accumulated in that section of the | ,,, But he's a peculiar man,” continued Grady. h pam “Yes, sir; glad to see you—sit’down,” he re- shes mS and spring wagon, to be, foot ks | Barnes observed, were careful to choose seats | meet, grapple and roll over and ovyer_—now one > 4 tions can be re ected an. ina group. three members of the congregations he was | *° anes 2 Ae Geis dian cerns as far away as possible from the “dusky | on eataee MSCOLLie an caretiantihe bane pied, S08 ss ook as he had sealed his letters he none “TICKER” : HoW THE NEWS CAME. serving. bold mountain. In an abandoned field, plas-|>rother.” Stopping in the midst of the sing- | guage, that’s a tornado. "Uy woutwenr to know what i has —_ wisest sine ee _ wee a Tn some families the news of the railroad dis- | | — The Southern Methodists of this city have | tered up against the mountain, of scanty vegota. | %€, Brother Barnes said: “My dear friends, | “What are the signs to show when the fight |)... i Operator and the blackboard. These facilities aster fortunately was first heard from the mem- | recently established a Sunday-school at Odd | tion and thick with smallloosestones, we found | YU See that this colored brother has come | is Seta ae tes, AT OOF, you can aay oming on 2” : 2s : . : a aie forward foe ‘ 1g © . | everythinz—everything. “We raise wheat, corn, She eae ag eowided for stock operators, but | vers of the family who returned unhurt gave | Fellows’ hall, 8th strect east, which numbers | “excavation made by prospectors for iron ore. SE eeay oe Boe as BLE) cae ee ae ne Samo; all 55 8-1 cata, pidatonn pean eode = the same are extended to the operators in corn, ete i 1 : aud there were certainly evidences to the very | fy Mt haste hin eee ite haem t want | practiced eye might not observe’ them at all. | O&®. potatoes, looked over to the water cooler, oe & speculator ean | 27 2 few scratches and wet clothing. This was y scholars, under the superintendence | to» of the knob that irca might be found. to sit beside him. Here he sits alone on this| Commonly the symptoms are something like sud. pat ta with oa oe eofton and wheat. So that a speculator can | the case with Mr. Victor Newcomb’s wife and | of Mr. R. W. Best. Turrah! On the top rail of the fence that | front row. and all that have come forward have | this: Clouds are seen approaching each other “Ben, Colonel, hem a f 7 now Parchase in this eity not only share Goes her sister, Mrs. Smith,-both of whose husbands | |—The Tri Centenary of St. Teresa, will be ob- | winds its straggling line on the very top of the | beet careful not to seat themselves near him. | from opposite directions: they come into con- aT antriisecoeee Toad stock and other securities, but also dabble HABE oi ‘i Spat EE CE . ing forward, despite the prejudice | t; y and fc vhirl. This is the | £004; put up by the best house here. were on the wrecked train. Mr. Newcomb, who | Served in this country in October, and the Car-| mountains, the breeze was glorious and the | ANY man com ; P ne-Tarey tact presently and form a whirl 8 “ a - ate " ie rac Qvbortunities | was in the drawing-room ear, did not get wet | melita nuns of New Orleans ask that contri- | View was wide and beautiful, With a field glass Trainer color, and taking a seat by the side of | focus or vortex of the disturbance. Other Biches anne Lene gine iby orang $ racter ate now fully | even, while his brother-in-law, who went down | butions be made on that occasion to enable jhe houses and walks and the lanes of the vil- TRbow in tie pyes of societs nha AR aries fees epee ee eink r city, and the ex- “smoker” into the water, came home | the : ane : lages, miles below, were distinct in the rich in) eo in like floating bits of timber into the Norwe- a apparently rapid, malay sina trtlsct th We Mecenatoee pas Palla» chapel: afternoon. The “Blue Ridge” | (eyyrien fen and lim, but, dear friends, before } gian maelstrom. ‘Then they take the shape of a ter noreen trea, what b reordance with there | Gen. Grant were on the boat which last summer { THe Sunday school convention of the | slept far to the soiltheatontd ie theca he. | God the ifference does not exist. He was born | funnel, point downward, and stoop until they Ga Gsicn een nd. The methods | had a collision with another steamer between | Baltimore conference, M.E. church, south, will bininion;” while line on line of smoky dist Soul Le eae, UNE help his color; still he has a | come in contact with the earth.” > | lanta who may look. upon as in these establishments | here and New York, so now they scarcely | be held in Harrisonburg, Va.,on Tuesday next | stretched over each other, about the “Wild Soul to save. If you stay away now it will prove What is the next step in the movement ?” doomed men. ‘The Colonel teok this inet by brokers. The | know which to prefer as tie safer, | continuing till Frida expected that | Ness,” on the borders of North Carolina, far up | {he success of the devil's device. The devil Se en Ce rn | dally, SAA E wena put-uy som bo get bad oF fseeins the state | the all rail route or the boat to New | Bishop A. W. Wil e the headwaters of Cheat river. Then a descent | KNONS Frankfort people, and has taken this ad- | indicated by this visible cloud funnel, has ve dead body for a new medical college ot Se the stocks | York. Both of them go there to at- to our wagon and a rattle and aclatter down to | {antase of their prejudices. Ah. my friends, | distinct motions, as follows: First, an upward hank y almost as soon as if he w York. and | tend” to business nearly every day. ¢ vales, and rocky, rollicking, rollick- | {8 Same devil is a sharp old fello motion interiorily, resembling that'of a thread rm if he wishes to buy or * the order in | Colonel Fred Grant has always been his mother's | the formal announcement of the retirement of | ing, limpid brooks and f vely | <0ing to get ahead of him. He doesn’t of ascrew, by which it picks up articles from American Engtish the hands of the proprietor, who at unce : : Sas a . : 7 ‘in hg ” anyone will have courage to sit next to this col- | the surface, lifts them into the air and carries . - = proy . idol, and her anxiety about bins (Be day of the | Rev. J. B. Van Meter from the editorial chair of rnery y ltusted ored man. Friends, will you let the devil tri- | them as though on an invisible platform ; sec- | FFm 4 Paper by G. M. Tucker of the Country Gentle MAKES THE PURCHASE accident even exceeded that of his wife. who | that paper. The paper will be edited by the , oS UALGD OR: iaphoTiACbeays man, poiember, ts he chy sodbie A a aman. cent. for buying and th for seliing again, or | 4) fed not 6 ai Oe Scns | W. B. Brown, P. E. of Washington | on Alps arise.”! ures reper ie "hai alone | has come forward to confess Christ and save his | to side, as around a moving center, like as when | !0cality or ofcaste. In regard to enunciation, the reverse, is charzed se condl- | knew i ed” had been on it he would have | ‘istrict, Washington (colored) conference, M.E. | the south side of the valley, audon either side of BOR ont peril of ettenalidanination:: one holds the end of a string in his fingers and | the average American will make himself heard tions operations are carried on during the day. | come to sit with him in the same |chureh, has just completed his first round of | the pike, which’ a third of a contur Vas’ | che uanitent by thane tanta and ee the | revolves the other end to which a piece of lead | and understood, wherever there is difficulty in In some places no smatier order than 250 is | his habit. His mother's anx pic- | visitation to the 25 appointments in the District, | “teat staging thoroughfare “across. the i Nero sther Barn ig iu ia the chair | is attached; fourth, a motion by which currents in corn and other prod for investments of this 1 par with that of any ot tension of the business, wni has beep gradual. and in quirments of alezitimate de of conducting bu: T cat remem- Tt n Will participate. —This week’s Baltimore Methodist contains | the nest! r has an opy of the market and tl i es he hearing, far better then the average Briton— 3 r y io- | : : : et biaare : to him, Brother Barnes in the meanwhil i all si > draw: : - Skee, while-in others the, purctiaser can invest | Sure: (oe trey Tee eae foe Beer cece conditions Nera or MOS Te ing on appro with a quiet smile | general promentve wot eee and. th, 8 | not by virtue of vociferation, but on account of reed nia alae ere Se eee | - Eldridye recently bequeathed $10,000 | ristie chureh-sptre p of happy satisfaction, exclaiming, “The record- That is about as complicated asa Waltham | his clearer and more accurate speech, especially 8. Grant of this being the case that she be- | C&C to the American Board of Foreign Mis- | nut wrove about it. 1} the dense pine grove in- | IN #nel will note thison the book of life; praise | watch. How fast does the tornado move, as a| in following more closely the spelling. This is brine 3 crhusbavd | sions, the 3 Society of Connecticut, | tervening is a fine spring bubbling up through | the Lord. body. across country, when it is bent on mils-| illustrated by such words as trait, sliver and ready cash. For thi s | to share He had | and the Wi nary. cae cent grassy eijde, has walled the spring in| , A" 0M French chateau with a red root, a | Of sixty miles an hour. Pree es eae tas ae ie jus cause for alarm about their eldest ehild. | — Rev. J.J. Murphy, formerly of Trinity RC. | Horseshoe shape, and with its waters Intends to | !fty watch-tower and solid sand-stone walls |" “That is true of the revolving motion, but | Britain special and exceptional pronunciations, Despite the widely cireniated report that his | church, Georsetown, has, been “appotnted prear: | MAKE AN artificial poo! in the pines, | Stands in the neighborhood of Rouen, France, | not ot the general advancing one. The latter | It is illustrated still more elearly by dozens of collar bone was broken by the railroad disaster | ouureh; Geors 1. Deen appointed presi” | “It is twelve miles to Oakland, and ten to) and it is there, Alfred Dumesnil, son-in-law | Varies from ten to thirty miles. an hour. This | geographical names. st Week, Mr. John T. Raymond (Colonel | ent of Gonzaga college, and he will be also in Cranberry. Five mileg down an excellent and | and pupil of ‘Michelet and disciple of Edgar movement does no harm; all the damage is American spelling differs from British in one Sellers) was not even on the train on which.it | Charge of the parish. Rey. Father Fulton took | lovely mountain toad 8 you to Cheat river. | Quint, has made himself additionally fan done by the twisting, whirling motion, and the | respect only—its greater simplicity. Mlustra- Occurred, nor on any other train that day. formal leave of the college and parish on the | On the north side of tite little town runs Wolf | eat deco Self additionally famous | power of that is incalculable.” tions: Waggon, parlour, storey (of a house,) rey ene a Ist inst. Greek, a troutini:streain, which leaps and roars | PY @ great discovers in horticulture. Ina | “Is thedamage ordinarily as great as report- | pease (plural of pea), plough, draught, slew. seams to be the same with owners of Band | 55 Tea" e000) for mlasion dusocen ore Gants | Ua Guoal Hvees NEeAUUGEa en TS nes | racmans cuaten ot tus Me and work, B. Heath, | iu the: sooount: published in the newape- boon sitpited in tits country"? ast have Some houses here as with so many in Washing- | St Year £30.000 for mission purposes,$70,000 to | {4,1 heat river. |} hae lear pring fod bees, 2 After years of patient study, Af bya considerable margin, The news-| "American speech changes less than British, and the 1income may t 0 | bee 7 Beated side by side <azinz on the fizures on the | Se Re Dinckboard and maxing « rders for | short or long purchase eharacter of the speculators in stocks is very striking. and a Star reporter who sat looking idiy at the board in one of these offices and stu- @yine the faces of the absorbed investors could Bot but help noticing the difference WHAT A BROKER samp. Turning to a well-known broker, who seemed me moments of leisure, the reporter sed, despite his own duck. until his wife made him think there was ton, who, as soon as they move into dwellings | the church Board of Home Missions, $50,000 for | Who waters. ultinmtele: ied ee way to the nil, the gardener of “Vascceuil,” has dis- | paper stories are mostly lies—” (a) We have preserved hundreds of words that ‘ho were the patrons of these places. which they have built to suit them exactly, are foreign missions, $328,597 for congregational | Potomac and the sea. ‘The forests ar in | covered a means of giving continued life and “Sir,” shouted the reporter, springing to his | have gone out of use in Great Britain, and we “That is hardly a question that can be an- | too restless to remsin in them, sowander ofr to nd ‘act and city mission | the varieties of their trees, and cold springs | nourishment to plants, without bringing them | feet in a paroxysm of indignation, ‘newspapers | avoid the use of many novelties invented in that wwered off-hand,” was the reply. The stock | ro Testless for 2 them, go wander off to | causes, $227,084. : gush from hillside and dell. ‘The limestone land | in contact with the soil. All he does’ is to | never lie, except, ethane, when they publish | country, euch speculators “Ti this city include “all classes, end he ends of the earth. r. and Mrs. Victor | _ The Chinese are helping the Methodists in |produces grasses and grains, and the bi in some moss to which he | Weather reports, for which the editors cannot | ped, Davy “fat,” ly ; g ste Newcomb will soon give up their magnificent | Chicago. A church was in debt, and an orehes- | fekion presents au infinite and pieas~ d thisfife-ziving power. This “fer- | be held responsitie. : and ‘tum @) recent are constantly changing. The old faces disap- | home here for the primitive accommodations of tra of conyerted Chinamen volunteeteil to’ give | BZ Vatlety of landscape and scenery. tilizing moss” is not only capable of affording ‘here, then; cool down and you'll do your- changes in meaning that are accepted by the pear aud new otfes Gome on the scene.” Mt. Desert, where they have engaged rooms for | eM To mect the increasing popularity ofthe place | nourishment to all kinds of vegetable life, but | selt a Sixual Service. Only western newspapers | Enzlish, such as using “trafic” for — “Weil. 1 should think that there would be | @teater part of the summer. Commodore and | Concert. The entertainment drew €260, and | a ahealthtul, plone quiet mountain resort, | will do so indefinitely. Since November, 1880, | lie. The New York journals are sometimes led | “4 ,” “famous” for “excellent,” in’ some cjesses more ly represented than | Sr. Garrison will probably spend several weeks | the sausloians Tefused to accept even the pay- | Squire Shaffer has had to enlarze hi inviting | the date at which his researches proved success- | astray by them—that isall. Why, a Chicago pa-| for “haggle,” “rot” for nonsense,” “jug” for others,” i the reporter. at Saratoga. ment of their car-fares. two-story frame hotel, and starts in at the be- | ful, he has constantly been testing his process, | per printed a story that in a late tornado out | “pitcher,” “good form" for “in ‘good taste,” “ tive chase Tn eideitaliveonine:* RENEW SEERE Genito — |The Supreme Secular Benevolent associa- | ginning of the season with a housefull of sum- | and has never found the least interruption i | west @ Wagon and four horses were lifted from | “trap” for “carriage,” “tub” for “bathe,” aigpoce hat members | Ex-Senator Stockton and his wife, son and | tion.” of Port Jervis, wasincorporated in Albany | et boarders—all from Washington, The | the vegetative functions of the plants subjected | the road and lodged in the top of = big tree.” | “starved” for “frozen,” “stop” for “stay,” ‘as mstiture a large number of the | danghter are here. Mrs. Stockton,who has been | last Tharsday.* Its object is ‘the doing away | 4¥?ora house is flanked by flowers and plants, | to its influence: on the contrary. winter and “Well, weren't they ?” innocently as one who | sist” for *‘be present,” “intimate” for “an- Ferular customers. It used to be that stock ee pa pie fae RauBHE Koc With the GUsérvanes of!Ganday andl aatican jean by orchard and garden, while in front e | gprin plants have blossomed with a vigor he crodived the tale of Washington and his little ne enn) Tied Tefuse to follow the —— Sopheres ogutirely confined to | Ty se Gate apes Bs days of thanksuiving a8 religious days, and the tare maaan aed sy IES ofa wis Eales cen Vaccacn Ne | [cba toil Thigy oeee caught in the whirl | meaning of cenatt pra sf caine ld Found feised in, the city tor their beneft. But the /6n the bed to the West End Hotel, where sne| schoola’ te We OF the Bible in publi} There goes the Methodist minister, bound for | vember aiid the middle of Dever tee ea, re- | and twisted roand-a little tree and left there, | son” is always a with in Eygland. The Hrton siness has outzrown. cur : ZS Maple run to spread the gospel. (A ve | mained two and a half to three the horses and driver dead, and the wagon | “rides” inan omnis, Dut always “drives” in while memters.of Con ‘I Gen | has spent so many seasons: She hasaroomon| —The Catholic Union ‘having a few weeks imastine he spreads it pretty thin). HS. has on * at udenpecs daiter vin - 7 i { He has on | blossom. Other plants, primroses, daisies, vio- | Smashed into kindling wood.” » | ® carriage, and though he will say that he is clerks in the depart. | the {Arst floor, next fo. the pasion, where, with | since referred to their eighteen institutions of | his clothes and a linen duster—though it’s | Iets, aurieulas have not only been in bloom for | ‘Might as well have gone up the big tree”— Confined to @ sick room or stretched upon a sick i and even ladies are con- | Hor husbend ber Siiiaee wore ae zayety. | learning in the state, tour being colleges, the | 48 cool as a cucumbet .and there hasn't been any € ‘hs, but have thrown out new buds, | philosophically. bed, he is horrified at the idea of being called ‘mers. You would be surprised at | fonenu: renee selVes | Baltimore Methodist calla attention to the work | ust for a dry month. He is riding a horse, and } At Veseealt aes w plants loaded with blos- | “W i you, St ee aes, gona Perant Meanpaslorrgtery = — @. We uaount of orders that zo dally from this city | Es Genstor Randolph has been here this week | of a Methodist college In thar vente men eo | old-fashioned, wind leather saddle | 80 hich had been in the fertilizing moss for | me of any indubitable cases tha € come | do not turn active and reflective verbs into in- York se je Kandolph ha: m here this wee oP : i SEAY oO hundred pounds, has There appearto be no practical dimi- | within your knowledge illustrating the power | transitives. (©) Wedo not abbreviate words ii to make arrangements to bring his family to | {hut the Protestants in the state maintain but ) cives piano lessons and cooks | C i nx out the process. The one | of the tornado?” somuch. (f) We are not so apt to get in = a : oes As SF end a part of the summer. Perhaps they a oe . h H mutton for him, and his horse | all-important point is to preserve the roots of | ‘I can do that honestly, because I've been out superfluous’ words—“What erer are you do- should think t rks in the depart-| may visit White Sulphur Springs, West Vir- | — he Jackson Grove cayyp-meeting, (Meth- | hasa long tail and an orthodox walt. And here | the plant from being tern or otherwise mutila- | with a view to investigate that very thing, by | ing! he Infant mortality is so one 4 Micult to attend to | ginia, during the season. Odist Protestant,) near Odenton, on the B. and | comes the representative of the United s | ted, and frow being brought inte close prox-| order of the Signal Service Department. 1| enormous.” “I don't say but what this wor said the reporter. NIGHT AT THE BRANCH. P.R.R., will commence on July 27th and con-| on the outside of a poor hor nity with the ‘fertilizing . In taking a | have seen—seen! mark you—a piece of pine | has got to be done.” naze to do it, by st In spite of the storm on Tu we have had | tinue to A: 9th, and it bids fai arger | the newly worked street of the villaze. ant fr M. Dumesnil removes the | blow! zh a hickory sapling, making al-| American writers of the first class seem to be, efore and then Fourth of July illuminations here nearly every | than ever re. For the first week the follow- | THis horse als rries a pa by placing it in slightly | most as clean a wreck of it _as though a cannon | on the whole, rather more careful about gram night without any being speciatly planned for | IZ ministers have been assigned to conduct the Which are transported the m: i ts prepared, in the basket or | ball had gone through it. I have seen shingles | mar than are British. Of course, however, no- aring the Shs withous ‘aay Ing peciatly planned (or | services: Revs, T. D. Valiant. J. T. Murray.J. {re certain the route has never been y vase intened for the plant, a bed of fertilizing | torn from the roofs of houses and driven into | body denies that the language has suffere It doesn’t t | the purpose. The sunsets for many successive ills, C. H. Littleton, J. E. Colbourn ana: W ii nothing could hurry that p { moss/#he quantity bei ‘ulated according | telezraph poles. There isone curious fact about | bad treatment here as well as abroad. No less : were more gorgeous in eolor than any | fi, Stones second eon SF: mare snd ie horse is gray; ain boy that | to the strefth of the plant, he places over ita | these tornadoes which I ought to mention. | than tour elaborate lists have appeared of words on the spell | imitations of art could possibly be. land, H. C. Cushing, A. D. Melvin, F. 7. Little, | pels him is green. The boy's fi | layer of ord Mary moss of sim! thickness. He | When a woman is caught up by one of them and | supposed to have been either invented or r upon the | faded the moon was shinine its b W. J. Floyd and W. F. Roberts. ’ | the mile on quarter days, so as to ¢ y, | then takes the plant and. spreading out the | Whirled around in the air a’ , She is finally | wrenched from their proper meanings, in this be sure to ci up agaey 7: Seen | roots, fastens it in the ordinary m covering | Sat down without a rag of clothing on her; and | gountry. Among (supposed to be) genuine the electric Hahts were rain : 1 ; anization of the Society of | any of his seven nildre the whole with another layer of the fertilizing when ahen or chicken is taken up, the wind | Americanisms ae irely omitted or not viy tie door opened | OC ot nue, while Ve ae Ss wlittered in the | the usalam (Swedeuborgian) dates from | of it to “fi SS. en at first and the | cleans the feathers off as though the bird had | satisfactorily treated by Bartlett, the following man came in, evid-at-y from one meavens. At the Ocean House, in ad- | , 1846, there having been prior to this shiny for the sum- kept humid. If been scalded and plucked forthe pot. Now, the | are mentioned: ned as to the eroup, pees i Rie elcebrie ants tone, the hotel, | date house meetings held, in which perhaps a nd. leave the | change from the e: wind treats men differently, rarely destroying | — Blizzard (with some account of the history of ag toented, Ne | site and In the saloons On each side of ited | dozen joined. Ina little frame house near tet | Starch out of the collars and cuffs and put it in | intelligence, ‘the plant soon exhibi their dress.” this remarkable word); boom (with its probable Falnbow eplocs are iteowa/ our a foueeala | ‘the | and B streets northwest (the site now being |t€ Under-clothing. ‘The. old sub-contractor b nd treedom of fife, its satisfaction in| ‘That's odd enough,” mused the reporter. | etymology); to buck against; canaille (kind of front garden of the Ocean House. | Within the Capitol zrounds) they worshipped fox | Yes tw up the hollow.” and used to be | its onditions being shown by the quantity | “Perhaps Old Boreas ‘is diszusted with the| flour); coral of lobster (not correctly defined in { tels do their share fully in making | S¢Veral years. from 1854 to about 1859, when the | Pretty well off, but “failed;” that is, he failed | of rootlets it throws out, Other gardeners be- | styles in women and chickens, and takes that any dictionary); dodger (handbil]); escalan; fair Bronce Gent after nent. t the cottaas | present building 2 \t ri keeping a retail whisky store and | M. Dumesnil have tested the process and | rude way of showing it. (an exhibition): furore; gripsack: highwines; ' fits ae faatiy Gomplath that tron =| ad on , H | being his own best customer. It is very rar ‘ ifyto the same results. M Cabos, director | ‘Maybe. But speaking of the power of the | institute (a conyention); Hable, for likely; authorities donot light the ‘roals whieh lout ty, | the Di pastor. of Ma se me here : , thous | of the public wardens at Havre, has since the | tornado. I've known objects of considerable | must not” for “You may not”: ninepence: pit their residences. ‘These drives are very dere, | aout 1815 and spent rs, but returned Net Tesaceherally a Cloud fale atte | Ratner ever last. been cultivating in the | welght carried from a few yards to twenty | (stone of fruit); emirech; solid-colored: spilth except near the hotele i That toy enh? again about 18st. Under ministrations the } UYing it. It’s gen a “dead failure.” ‘The | fert moss draceni, alternantheri, crotons | miles. I knew of a egy onl from a bara, | (street mud); super (of a theater—Bartlett says cial . nh it | catia Owner Tay cere Hetiese cs Id | Society has gradually grown until now it num. | ld man, like President Arthur, is a good fisher- | and cocoanut trees, | hot-house plants; as well | to be picked up by the tornado, carried eight | it stands for superintendent); tenderfoot (anew order for a ¢ ives ce Sta bs SRI jee Pane ih rly communicants. The 101st mom. | 22. ve have been on two fishing ex as palm trees, chamorrops and the Pteris Ar- | miles, and then driven haif its length into the | arrival from civilization in the wila regions of Based oo a pr ings lighted, as Long Branch village is lighten, | ber was a colored man, W. AL. Gompbetle en | Hons m, in Cheat river and down zuta had developed numerous new roots in: the | round; and it weighed 400 pounds.” the far west). A LUEKY INV “ene a ou oy a poe * | was ordained as a minister abont three years | Vol trout. He's a clever old + P, j moss. None of these plants had lost a single | ‘Seems to me that’s about as tough a story . caiguet veuioy Gia. tee TUT ince, and is now engaged as anew church mis- | “tS @ pity he drinks,” for it he didn’t—and | leaf, nor had even faded at the time of their | as those told in the newspapers,” suggested the ‘Sparring for Health. © depa «vl by careful | the turn in the road. by the West End hotel, all ORE a Tae ea eaes Onl NOE ome daye nn ete pea rencent | Wansmteniation Ins fortnight they) nadie v pal fay Bo be facta,” lag pee og attra itso ed ye ‘Steutnn son ? | the way to the Eiberon hotel, Ocean avenue is | CaPitol street a few years ago had added to it a | SMe day pletely taken possession of the moss, and had | ‘But my stories happen tobefacta,” answered | strong,” the writer recommends sparring as an Hived gu tea large | garg except when lighted’ by the moon al. | handsome stone front of blue stone and Seneca, |, The thermometer loafsaround between 50.and | thrown out new leaves, In the chameerops two | Mr. Merrill, with perfect command of temper, | excellent torm of exercise for strengthening the amet we | thouih most of the handsomest villas occupied | #teatly improving its appearance ga) co Shee ily maoraines agtll Fon comeran cn wire: tong SL ees pr Geplaatst They all ty pxeia Seen es weet A arseeh = ESS oon, he $s bracing as came ot jad appeared, one of the indications of the | area of higt meter. < ¢ Jookters at het s Sia al epee residents are within the Na ldancskinieircevcas of the lakes of the north or the blue rolling | vigor of a young palm tree. The old roots had | ‘What's the difference between a tornado Not aday should beallowed to pass withoutex- to-day. W) 2 it has al- | THe CLIMATE AND TOMETTES. To the Editor of the EvaxIxo Stan. z Mr. Vall, formerly of the Washington World, con bert Gil tie ee ee an aire eee is a baby cyclone. A ey soawed Galery has been filled pee . — nou BS Abe neti on ~ \\ vest- | Long Branch ts more fortunate than most of |, 18m @rexular reader of your paper. and see | who has bousht a farm at the foot of the moun- | very delicate, had also produced new roots, and retired sesayiresen : - i = ts utmost capacity. Once, at least, each day this thie ale wakerinir ol ; that local affairs are ® specialty with you. Two | tain we climbed _ this ruorning, has just been in| were in perfect health, pus garde sped cry climate. | street car nulsanees which I dally uotize on the | Under the ised reads oe a been in | were In per observed that these perfect results ion ranges from one-quarter to should be done by active exertion, such as @ | Ex > stu | line ranning through Connecticut avenue, H | “Planter,” and Major Dinwiddie, another Wash. | have been obtained by practical horticulturists. | mile in width. The disturbance {s local; it is| sharp, but not distressing, run, increasing | starched goods can be worn here without in-| nq p streets, to the Capitol, ought to be | !ston landed proprietor of this region, with his | Amateurs must not expect that this Process in | like a locomotive confined to @ track. Three or | gradually until two or three hundred yards are and | jury, and allks are never spotted by the| abated at once. “Gentlemen” Both white and pleasant lady, came into trade and gossip a | any way dispenses with attention to the ordi- | four miles from this track there is comparatively | covered at tull speed, or from haif a mile to : ite Ce | atmosphere here. The consequence is that the | colored, if dress is a citerion of Judzment, often | little and dined at our table. nary laws of vegetable life. Happy results will | little disturbance during its The fortiiuate specu: the office. aud uate t would know of & « day. While money is mate | i cis fw the unlucky ones ‘ mile at a swing. But any run dressing is far gayer than at most seaside re-| enter these cars, sit down in’ the seats and |. TWO of our fishermemhad breakfast this morn- | depend as heretofore on the degree to which the enough to set lung bellows activel; : bust: | Sorts, where Lbebsl goods only can be worn | Smoke cigars, when ladies and gentlemen are | iN With the birds that»tcatch worms,” at sun- plants are loved and cared for. The object in 'y perfc how does it for this purpose. J of wi Niet MSAK anecaben : — with impunity. White and colored lawns are | present, and annoyed by this ungentlemanty | tise. for instance, and started down ‘Little’ the cultivation of vegetables being increased al Galeaasoats 4 “e"" worn here on all clear days. Many of the | conduct. I have chanced to notice, in iny o2-| Wolf” for ‘speckled beauties.” If their “‘string” | and regular productiveness, the plan adopted s Res fresses worn when driving are of the most bril- | casional trips, flve instances of this sort within | '8 !ong enough, thelr table will have fried trout | by the gardener of ““Vascceull,” Is to place thelr The Luray ©xcarsion liant hues. a week. Thesedo not include many other cases | °F supper. f Toots, enveloped as above described, in an ordi- To the Miter of wars Mrs. Fred. Grant wears a stylish visiting cos- | of smokers who stand on the platform or step, Of the Washington pedple who are ScuEning nary bed of mold. The results are most satis- A f “ene tame which is becoming to h while the wind blows the here with their fishing: tackle, hammocks factory. We saw there as many as thi fine . Twas one of ta re . Laray | Witn treat clot ae ne pers aan care he aE LoS ALS aaee Teading, etc.,;aad finding consolation | potatoes, the prodnceof one mother tuber Thus ittentl th of daly. ait st | satin de Lyon, with oe panels downthe front. | The other is a dog-ged nuisance. Men, wo- | it the mountain breezesand genuine fried spring | the poorest land may be made to teem with rich , : erally, I wisit ay | of black. with chene flowers in violet and old | men,and negroes bringin to thesesamecars dogs, | Chicken and trout, are these at the “Aurora | crops, the soil being of no Importanee, the ease room. | This gold hues. These fancy colors in ribbot » | loose, and they run over the seats and sk | House:” W. J. Sherwood, Mrs. Sherwood and | merely affording room and shelter for the plants. made into bows on the dress and black lace ine | thelr ditty noses Into recplare clothing, and ‘ir | to daughters, and Mr. N. King, wife and. two | Seedings and exttings ane egeca or tne) same left the depot on ume, and are also repeated on the black parasol. | complaint is made the dogs growl and their | 1uzhters. From the Bureau of Engraving and | way. In fact, the process seems to have all the br calle tera we nth Little Miss Juha accompanies her mother when | owners scowl. ‘The driver takes ho notice of | Printing: Miss Mami@Jrish and Master Mat. | characteristics of a great discovery; perfection stony eran visiting, and while when at play she is very | these things. But will not the officers of the | Howard Irish. Mra.S. M Clark and two daugh- | in principle and indefinite powers of further de- x | sensibly permitted to enjoy herself in a calico | company stop these Indecencies? or must an | ters; Mrs. T. E. Woods; daughter and son; Mrs. eelenment, The discovery of a nourishment a 4st | slip, when she goes out to make calls she wears | impatient public continue to endure them? K. L, Powers, Mrs,.Bobt. S. Brown and son, | applicable to all forms of vegetable life is the a white muslin frock, trimmed in dainty style, July 6. Yours, Hopefully, RL. 8. Mrs. E. M. Bardea asd Master Willie, Mrs. H. J. pumary fact in the Dumesnil culture. The fer- and a blue satin * Mother Hubbard” cloak, with SSS yg eto oe Hanford and son, Miss Eiiza Gardner, Mr. D. E. ay moss agrees with every kind of a cape of white embroidery, and a hat of yellow Anti-Nalarial Plants. McComb city Engineer's office), wife and babe, | those that grow wild, as well as exotics. herba- sist was the train me - Pend eet vined cet ian Pleated across the fore-| Another plant possessing anti-malatial prop- | “- Lloyd Wight, Miss Saran F. Merwin. W. fen fonteringy pewter Wich with plate mail said wu r zn head. an ined wi lue satin. ives of ee nate | het _ : on s At the hops lately the dressing has been very erties, as alleged, is receiving public attention. Torturing Shop-Girls in London. Pyrenees, the Alps, the Carpathian mountains. was telesraphol. I pre tg beautiful. The “racquet” is danced every even | This is the jussieua grandiflora or floating plant | From tne Londen Telenor, the Cuucasus and the Himalayas, introduced an yak foe ~ now aS ing with a vim. This is the third successive | Of the bayous and lower lakes of Louisiana, Swollen feet and ankles, sharp and at times | during recent vears into English gardens, w' ; : a | poason that it has been the most popular dance | which has been long observed to prevent the | almost unendurable pains in the knee-Joints, in to ie ence Comsat paces * rie eine would leave as advert sed —ave i 5 ere, co mt is Teetons Pecaltarly the hips and in the back were chief among the ph an idea justified co ehagetcpaadinltte jg oct ietestarieatien| | pyOrTnn pleasure of seeing Gen, Van Vitet | OPtn for It that it parities ail stagnant water ay patient aliments, bat two or three, hoon | the extemal” abundant, i bai : hich i less_serlously, were per! much more tor- called po bw al — i bevy an art of | here afew daysago. He had driven over from Eabliod iy ears evi ae = a mentingly afflicted. ‘eect was one poor girl nen anaes teonee ay pai vate at @ | his cottage at Shrewsbury, where his family are. | taste and smell, and that to its presence and its | of robust habit and sturdily built who came in @ny stronger lanuaze f wrie t advise | , Mme. Preston, the wife of the Haytien minis- | undoubted hygienic or health-preserving quali- | shaming along and flinching at evei Like rhe & Rita ean ter, and her snd younger-¢hildren are ties in to be attributed the remarkable ¢xemp- a. ad’ ay seee Ue all persons going to Luray in exer narties | at ‘thelr costae af Spring “ die [tion of tbe. andi dnere: ton ‘from | * Person with gout, and who was suffering from _ board ben, which can be tity say. Pe Yanbe by ral from Long Branch rilasmatiedincasn It is also | corns on the soles of her feet; and the doctor Bearly one o'clock when the t-1 6 arty el 2 Guuxpy,: e rz region thus reputedly pre- | informed me that this’was 3 common result of depot, aud. ne herse-cars were cone tog adil, Wine? lation derv Heeroma sre 5 soadieg soe walk hws cl ead sUnnevessary— Thre tr: 7 fet “Sparkling. 4 Tame of'a new than Part oes on & boarded . poor patient paid sac all tay, tronbie. Sar She eae Hoe of Roum to be a fashionable : = . question—she was about elghteen years old. erable. es i 5 s hy Hf i Eee 34 1 a if > HF | ii it Fi ; A uf f ceeos, eee wach heen i

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