Evening Star Newspaper, November 21, 1882, Page 3

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An Account of the Ceremonies Attend- ing the Procession of the Carpe! fl eeareependence of the Londia Times es to you the follow- | A. JOurnal in the North of England recently ceremonies attend- | Contained the following correction: “We have Sin ing bs ing the annual de pilsrims fi I venture to that the presence of our tre does not in the people, in anythi acquired in Bombay Provides the Caat @new canopy « ance ¢ ean: its four th ith the y recession of no sen reverse Tal &: dans until mixed wi rement 1s u done at the mo sown toze: surface is Placed in charze of the le grims. They starting in wh the i itt as ing to be and yet fi Institute Tepresent empty cx actly Tike an ered with- beautifully and is carried on the ba is the symbol of the reign tuner and not at al! in salutat Caaba. The carpet fs there, erated away with th caravan. Caaba for a ye attaches to ita harins. uncovered, and pilvinas fr the tradit It will be seen. th Adolatrous <pirit is tr: in ¥ mmedan f eo-called (by our E: t to the Sult: self as innocent Lord Mayor's show Why He Didnt “x From the Detroit Free There is somethin will upset the b he hits it just richt. All the outy roiters don't eswin, Detroit post o majority of D. fact until | Citizen descended trom his carriage at the curb- THE CANOPY OF THTE CAABA. sat them this year ate us. as a Christian | st of ti €n idolatrous act. I write trom inform tep of it, an f ten fi rrs.as it wou It Is partly n but from square and In this st lit is quite ‘silk, and silk asan an parts being there er with tex’ arpet has been completed it is Wer ©: nets thi urepe we send onr | Cb als. This jitter is ex- | Rimity a typosraphi armous Indis K of atall e tote ti nt in his imp tation of the aah time the € t until the Cairo that it nee of the m such of a goat in the place of | (and not how little of to last A PUFF FOR PROOF-READERS. Faithful Class. caruvan of |t@ thank the Intelligent proof-reader for the necessity which compels us to make this state- ment. In our editorial yesterday on Irish affairs we were made to say:—“The government police should be hanged;’ whereas we wrote: ‘The vernment policy should be changed.’” 1 of Turkey | That is the editor's side of the question, and ae with the unfortusate proof-reader never gets a cre for the | Chance to put in a word of defense, although he ad then the * riler to show 3 of the | how 3 a partner in taking the “intelligent” compositor. The risa patient person, with a green ov f everything, and who is the only man on ‘arth who reads all that appears in a paper. ists | On a daily peper there are. of course, several of him. “and lectively he reads eve ch side Word of @ of the jour lene 1 with. ‘This of itself ought to ost a for him. Yet the proof-reader is orn at and reviled more than che of The proof-re copy-holder, if T remema ¢ the copy- | € or enly when there | | are of work, oF, perhaps, in * particular state of the proof or revise; . as eral 1 interje nd ten years served as a Bey in the army of the Khedive of Egypt, lectured upon “ Modern Egypt and the Causes Leading to the Late War with England” in Cooper Union, N. Y., last Saturday evening. “Under Mohammed All,” he said, “the Egyptian. army was a eplen- dia fighting body, but the Egyptian army of toxlay Is a°sad affair. It is recruited entirely populace of the cities of Alexandria and Cairo are exempt from the press, the fellah of the rural dis: | tary a fellow his exes, who must’ know a little | alone to till the coll In his mud-hut village. He | is tall and straight and well-made; he Is frugal, and will march further and uncomplainiims upon less food than any soldier In the world. | ¥ He is drilled in French tactics and armed with | he | Remington's best | eoid y | quisite, and that is he can’t fit, doe | tof is ral ¢ dicated in favor of the present Khedive, was a very extravagant potentate. He upon the Suez Canal and an equal amount upon the sea wall at Ale E: then as he follows the reader ont he hokls, the reader rhadi shp. If'any writer ona paper has a little too : t about what he se 1e monGtonou: appreciative tone that he uses on the market ports or the advertisements, the copy-holder aremark now and then. T of the place— This is what is ton, while its ~* Peace in the Interior of Michigan had | a chase before. a unity of ¢ at have i that ourt ‘ore him seven days a—" $ ago, in which the de- s ious character,” &e. youthful journalist who imagines the that climbs up two steps at a time and the head of the proot-re: When a person can view with equa- Terror in his own artic rlitter to | he is cons > ome people ne r desire to murder the proof-reade are persons who always anyhow. and a proof-reader to stand it than any one uitan ms to L | else.— De Cu id, M.D. in the Popular ; Texp stowed | the marvelous control which: sou women have over their faces. ; | question what viees can be detected by the expression of the countenance, he say Physical excesses a'ways leave their mark, and there is no doubt that an expert physi gaurecognize adrunkard, adebauchee, aghat oF a opium eater without any difficulty, and even without confounding the effects of their different But, though phrenologists assert, ‘ssions, and hit would dan than even for a ye rival of the is recovered with Ne “Arabi Pasha was a man of the people. He the Sul lover of justice should wish It to be, ot was a fellah, educated at the militacy aed r Bairam wise. overwhelining evidence obliges one to! and he won his distinction. He was no ad- he whole } admit that. as a rule, moral turpitude leaves no | Venturer or demagoyue. He could have sold t If free frem he Ith: -destroying aceording to ‘oft eyes Abraham = was Guido's those of & f penitentiary in tes who might pose for saints in the an alinal while an honest villaze of Soutliern i may combine ace the defe of Breushel’s by indu! and Sauerkraut part in the | few days at Brownsvil sion of the United States district court. The cause eelebre of the Season was the ease of Fran- n xiean bandit, who had han a vorite f robbing the poor farmhouses of his en whenever the absence of the able ce of executing inimum risk to his own ouzh he assured the court that he had ome to realize the | No hard feelings azainst an: bas stone with two letters in his hand and started | Persons—all females and minors. His last enter- to enter the p: st oifice. Of course, he pushed @n the doors when he should have pulled. Ther prise had involved a hand to hand fight with a stout old woman, who broke his left arm before | he dispatched her. He was tracked to the Rio Wasn't the least doubt in his mind that he was | Grande, and. trying to swim the river in his going right In, but he didn't ‘ht up with such suddenn Jommed his plug Il on his kne were chucklin Girectly up te “Is thix a national ho “Then why is t elosed.” **Didr over |b do. eh? Is there a sign whether must find out. His impetus | crippled condition, saw himself obliged to turn that he | back Into pistol range of his pursuers, was cap- down to his chin and | tured and arraigned for five murders in the sec- When he arose several people | ond and three in the first degree. I strolledinto sfortune. H. alked | the court house while his trial was going on, ‘xpecting to see one of those bull-necked old cutthroats of the negrofd ty who abound in ch e post office closes It isn't | this region of murder and mixed races. He t you see me. try to enter: “Yes, sir: but the doors pull to you. n them to that effec How am I to know | pr push?" TH be hat proved to be a pale-faced creole, of some elght- | een or twenty years, slender built, modest | spoken and resigned looking to a pathetle de- His profile was absolutely perfect, and the same might have been said of his eyes, their look had not been too ghost-like spiritual “I suppose you dif ldo! I've got letters here which ought to go west to-| to leave an agreeable impression. — Cwsar night. but I won't mail ‘em—no. sir, I wi Those doors might as well push fn as to elear across the stree > = througit” on the grey of Bakhwut, in he has an estate stored the m the grass Merine she gon. and from his never saw doors before which didn't— | somest man of histime, The fiend who ager: Ro. I never did. Let ‘em pull themselves | vated the guilt of the most unheard of crimes . for all Andhe walked ble flocks of sheep | ern stepy * province of Ekaterinostatt, | iq exhib 9.000 acres, purchased som by his wife at a bs But the count has re 1 and grounds, and put upon | Understand Madame de s antry ‘t! Borgia, the natural son of Pope Alexan- iz der VI., was at once the wickedest and hand- I care—I've got | by perpetrating them in the name of a senti- tand got into | mental religion wore a face which, in the words 1 Who had suf- | of Delia Porta, might inspire a saint to live up mere sound of his yoice succeeded where the arguments of others failed: his eye could bes with the inspiration of a prophet while he me | tated those fatti assassini to which the recor | of the most barbarous nations furnish scarce it is a pity that his skull has not li |. though we need not doi all those fine “development” that were necessary to harmonize with such a face. In the district nkrupt auction. It | Children and’ childlike men, and most men nd Was ina most | @ Priori, are prepossessed by ‘a handsome face and repulsed by an ugl ael When she speaks Ugliness is something no doubt, the conse- rhaps, quite uncon- ul laws of God. 000 choice | Of unpardonable face: ate in per- | Abnermual, and original: ine eb quences of sin—though | scious sin—against the pl of Is the e: a welc does not * dethrone diplomacy But, even about mor berrations, the lan- his mind, however, but keeps up alively interest _ {Uave of the facets not altogether silent, though fm foreen f which: fa {t announces them in a different way. | Besides igiven the 0 “Bismarck” to the biggest , those of the studied, calm expression, there are ir wicat be fe vate to Bis Bock. © | indications in what Sir Charles Bell calls the see. HABITS OF THE F. The Wise Un From th» Arksusaw Tr rkansaw. the manner of laughing, of speaking under the influence of passion. or of meeting a sudden Probably the politest and most considerate | #lunce. In these habits even meral_peculiarl- man who ever lived was ¢ Arkansaw. he perceived his son, whe twenty years, occupyin; server, and often quite unbeknown tothe object time ago, boarding a train, | of observation. Experience, in fact, can teach n he had not seen for | us to distinguish acquired from & seat, reading. The | beauty or ugliness ereditary They may be combined in old geatieman sat down immediately behind the | the Same face, but are altogether independent Ehewred man. After th . and discovering his fat! old man with affectionate didn't you train, fathe: “Because, And beside —s0s Strange History train had gone about | irty miles, the young man Ind aside his news| or talents from culture. The tongue, theugh, ould b ade no difference.” J re That would comaee de father, uz | lnstinetively, though bygnethods which it would you might want to borrow & few | Rot be quite easy to define. What subtile differ- of each other, and differ as forms from manners can be taught to refute this language of the fe: | tures, hence the significance of first impressions. er, seized the warmth. “Why me ao tha” Seu was on the Physiognomy and craniology are yet far from aving been reduced to the rules of a logical system—the one through want of cultivation, replied the old gentleman, “I saw | 8 ; : ere reading and I did not’ wishty | the other in spite of it.” as the physiologist Camper said of his and Pastor Goetze’s science. In the meantime we all practice physiognomy ences in the torm of the features enable us to = Indicate the age of a man, his habits, his tem- = per, the average amount of his education, and even the country of his birth! One has heard of wills written on bedposts, poeta aol bs €oncealed in haylofts and flower-pots, and other |The Country Editor Helongy to the possible and impossible places, but probably no Public Will hasever passed through stranger vicissi- A country editor stating that he is in his tudes than one admitted to probate by Sir | OMice seventeen hours a day, declines to see James Hannen. The testator was an engineer | people upon business at home. By his own on board a channel steamer, and made his will | statement of seventeen hours a day, !f he goes giving everything to his wite, and gave the will | to duty at 5a.m. he ls off at 10 p.m., or there- toher. Some time afterwards they had a quar- | sbouts, and it would bea safe wager that he rel, during which she tore the will up and | takes an hour to dinnerin the middie of the day. threw the pieces into the fire. The husband | He has seven hours then all to lumself for sleep Picked up the pieces and put them into an en- | and idleness, and to make the acquaintance of Yelope labelled “poison.” but sald he would | his family. ‘And what does he do with his Sun- make a new one. However, several years after- | days? ‘is editor has pee to learn that he can- Wards he died of small-pox on his steamer, and, | notruna newspaperan spend seven hoursout of on his clothes being searched before burning, | the twenty-four doing nothing. He is unreason- the envelope with the pieces of the -will inside | able In prohibiting people from coming to his it was luckily found and given to his wife. ouse and talking to him upon business. It is @ This brand. plucked from the burning. has now | well known that when a man arrives at a news- been pieced together and will be deposited at | paper office to ascertain “why in Hades was House: a lesson to all time to wives | that put in the et the editor is never th go Rot to lose their tempers too far if they do not | and where can to look for him bat at hie Wish also to lose their husband’s property, or | home out of office hours. Indignant subscrib- to sare it only by a laweuit.— Pall on eee ers have some rights.—, were insuficient to pay the bill whispered to. Ismail: wasn't a Jew. He wasan Englishman. He gen- (erally is. So Ismail borrowed mon bonds, and he only got £70 out of every < | dred, and had to pay fourteen per cent on the | whole £100. When the time came around to | Pay up | paid the loan with anew loan at still’ more | frightful interest, and soa third and fourth | time. But when’ easy. good-natured Ismail | sent out for a fifth loan it fell flat. He eent for | a set of 4 |The con jupon the Egyptians. The __ first | | they did was to vote themselves salaries of highest to the low | cut without compunction. Out of a revenue of | | £9.000,000 two-thirds went to pay coupons upon {bonds, for the commissioners said: ‘These | bonds’ must be paid if ail Egypt starves.’ The i whole country was administered in the interest volves around the articles he writes is | of the bondholders. In October, 1878, the cou- pons became due. stance bondholders, northern E; in the sprin in one di i fift: served the Khedi army, were dismnis | cers. t followed the riots of June. unp spontaneous, There was no ¢ bombardment. ever pe whole war, on FE in children. out for millions. He did not, an he is a peor man to-day. " He took but $1,000,000 from the tre the records of history not | Calro when he might b applied it all to the I nominious death black biotch to her escu From the New York Hersid. tains an opinione the liability of railroad companies for inj sustained by The plaintiff in the case di the front platform of a Brooklyn ho he was thrown off and injured through the neg- cant seats inside, but he tcok the front platform be whei pany claimed that ft was exe \liability under the statnt | road corporations from lial In their cars a warning as platfo inside. The Brooklyn company’s notice forbade r form,” but this, as the court poi stal ‘The court does not accept this that where a company not only per- any injuries the negligence of the dri | From the Chicago Tribune. di- residence, Lurline Loosehair allowed her taper fingers to wander idly over the keys of the plano, and, obedient to her del forth upon th miserere, as she sat there, absorbed in the sad reflections tow softly, and Berwyck Hetherington entered the room. Lurline, all the senses of her passionate nature absorbed in the music, con not knowing that the man she | whose pocketbook in return she would have hustled around with dread earnestness, was standing by her side. But at last Berwyck one, and one can | eral Bradsbale, of | ties may betray themselyes to a shrewd ob- | & GOOD WORD FOR ARABI. Kind Words for a Much-Abused, but | @e™- Colton Says that the Late War was a War of Greed and Iniquity. Gen. R. E. Colton, of Washington, who for by conscription, and, as the ‘ict is forced to do unwilling mili- The fellah is the most inoffensive the world. He wants only to be let He is the best-le Ww. and only lack: Tthat I eve it, and won't fight if he can help it. That | army that the British admiral and gene- honored for humbling. smail Pasha, the former Khedive, who ab- pent $100,000 ndria. Exypt’s revenue: The usurer The usurer | “Borrow. upon | hun- mail Pasha still had no tunds, so he | and English commissioner loners came like the t 000 a year each. Then they took possession erything from the Khediye down. Eng- | were put into every office from the | nd natives were turned he government, at the in- dupon the whole of the cropof ypt. givin a nominal payment, and 10,060_persons died of starvation trict—the richest of the Nile mm. Next, the American officers, over of them, who had for ten years in reorganizing the ext. 2.500 native offi- | pald for over a year, y. but they got up a ¢ ed a compromis | Stung past ail bearing, the | je demanded a convocation of a popular n Legislature and a promise of keepi together, and after a des:onstration y the Khodive was forced to yield. id stepped in and said no. ‘Then meditated and | sion for the It was the greatest iniquity | d against the people. The fund's part, was concelyed n and carried out in iniquity. Tt was a war the bondholders. It was a war against had not be <d to go without pa nd petrate He neve pillaged or plundered. sury of | ve taken all, and he whsistencg of his troops. bt Pasha to suffer an ig will have added another chigon. and allows 4 she ‘The Law of the Front Platform. The latest volume of New York reports con- the court of appeals touching 8 platform. ided was riding on car when passengers riding on the fence of the driver. There were plenty of va- use that was the only part of the car smoking was allowed. The com- npt from which relleves rail- lity when they post st riding on the and provide a seat for every passenger engers “to get on or off the front plat- ted out, did hot prohibit them from riding there. The com- pany then contended that independently of the cand inthe absence of any notice every passenger who rides on the piatform when a at may be had inside is guilty of negligence. w. It holds mits passengers to ride on the front platform but requires smokers to ride there it is liable for sustained by a passenger through er or conductor. This is the law In the abs oe . Tie the Dog at Eigh Night in St. Louis, Seated in the parlor of her father’s magnificent ‘e touch, there floated air the strains of that beautiful ince Papa Tore His Pants.” And ih the music gave rise, the door opened ued to play, loved, and to win. placed his hand gently on her shoulder, and by that indeflnable sense that tells us of a human presence, although we see it not, she knew that somebody was around. Turning quickly, she saw Mr. Hetherington. “I did not know you were here,” she said, a blush flooding the face that such a little time ugo was pale and calm, ‘or I should not have played so confidently.’ “Can you not favor me with something more ?” he asked. The blush grows deeperand more vivid now, and the drooping eyes are moist with tears. But in an instant she recovers her self-posses- sion, and looks at him in the frank, honest way in which Cincinnati girls ask for more pie. “I cannot play any other piece,” she says, half sadly, half defiantly. “Are you sure of this, Lurline!” asks, bending over her in a loving way. “Think well before you speak,” he continues, “for on your answer may depend the future happiness of two young lives.” “T am quite sure,” she says, “Then you must be my wife.” And as he speaks these words Berwyck Hetherington’s face lights up with a rapturous, Schuyler Col- fax smile. ‘Do you love me 2” he asks. For answer she puts her arms around his neck, kisses him coldly behind the left ear, and then a great silence falls upon them. Presently Berwyck rises to go. “You will come again to-morrow evening ?” she asks. “Yes.” he replies, “you may tie the dog at 8." nd you will not regret your choice?” . Never,” he says, in clear, steady tones. “I have spent the best years of my life looking ie a girl who could play only one tune on the piano.” Berwyck Venice Dispatch to the London Times, An unusual occurence is taking place here as I write—Venice is under water. With this morning’s high tide, at ten o'clock, the water has risen so high that every pavement {s under Piazza of St. Mark. gue comand, Teadi room, bureau, &¢., of this hotel are flooded, and the wind is still-very high and the sea bois- Ui gears nap Beara a gtavated state of things. DRY GOODS. MERINO UNDERWEAR.’ q HOUSEFURNISHINGS. pottery AND PORCELA Horry AND UNDERWEAR. GUINNIP, DAY & CO., ‘We are daily receiving, per steamer, Choice Goods in 820, 822, 624 SEVENTH STREET NORTHWEST. DECORATED POTTERY AND PORCELAIN, from the best manufacturers in Europe. DINNER, TEA and TOILET SETS in Great Variety. HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS OF ALL KINDS. M. W. BEVERIDGE, No. 1009 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. MEDICATED RED FLANNELS. EXTRA WEIGHT CANTON FLANKELS,, 6-POUND ALL-WOOL WHITE BLANKETS, $5. SILESIA COMFORTS. NOVELTIES IN HOSIERY. ‘We have just received a most attractive stock of FALL AND WINTER HOSIERY AND U Comprising the following: INFANTS’ FINE WOOL HOSE, FANCY COLORS. RENS' AND MISSES". FA RED, HEAVY ALL- WOOL AND MISSES’ CASHMERE HOSE. LADIES) FLEECE-LISED HOSE, IN COLORS AND 'Y EMBROIDEKED FINE CASH- NDERWEAR. '¥ y ASHINGTON CONSERVATORY OF MUSIO_AP oY AND PLAIN > Da. NEW GOODS. BBED HOSE. Tym & Cuewnra, a 918 77H STREET NORTHWEST. HHE*PSTONE & PERRY. ENGLISH DECORATED VASES, BASKETS, &c., &c. CANDELABRAS and LAMPS. IN PARIAN MARBLE and Ih | Froete: HOUSEFURNISHIN AND AT LOW PRIC WILMARTH & EDMONSTON, 709 MARKET SPACE. _ AN ELEGANT LINE OF FINE IMPORTED COTTON HOSE, for Ladee and Children, inal the new and moet de- GOODS IN LARGE VARIETY Ss. TO MAKE ROOM PREVIOUS TO PURCHASING | HOLIDAY GOODS, WE WILL OFFER (FOR ONE INDUCs MENTS OTTOMAN AND RHADAMA D BROCADED ALSO, BLACK AND COLOR THESE GOODS ARE VERY DiSIRA- BLACK HOSE A SPECIALTY. ALSO, A FULL LINE OF L XD KITC! NEW GOODS AT LOW PRICES. #EO. WATTS, SHING STORE, S14 7th street, 5 doors above Penna. avenue, Coe WEATHE fi ites STOVE, LAT! LE THREAD AND VED ANOTHER LARGE LoT OF CLOAKINGS, WHICH WE WILL CONTINUE TO SELL AT PRICES TO SUIT ALL. A FINE LINE OF PLAIN DRESS FABRICS, WITH VELVETS AND PLUSHES 10 MATCH. UNDERWEAR. te, Misses’ and Ladies’ zxt-class HEATING | Our stock istiow | rus with a call we can r inspection the largest assortiucut of above goods in this city. \CARLET = ALL-WUOL Acents for tho St. George snd Stag Hi HEMPSTONE & PERRY, 8 803 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. | BAe SILK LYON’S VELVETS. wel und Barstow Furnaces. te Plumbing and Gas Fitting. Jub- Montel and Grates. Ling and Keyairine promptiy attended to. W. 8S. JENKS & CC 17 Tth strat nortnweat. BOOKS, &e. MOEnRison’s: BooK We shall open our late stoch of D DRAWEXS, in DI SEATON PERRY (Suecessor to Perry & Brother) HAS NOW OPEN A VERY LARGE AND COMPLETE GUINNIP, DAY & CO., 824 SEVENTH STREET. | Pertormen, “Terms miodcrate. | west. SILK LYON'S VELVETS, FROM 2% TO 27 INCHES WIDE, IN BLACK AND ALL THE COLORS, Ranging from $7 tos9, from $1.75 to $3. RISTMAS CARDS FASt IONABLE is is the mostextensive ALL SILK OTTOMAN: AND COLORED TRIMMIN from $1.50 to $5. MBO3SED PLUSHES aND VELVETS. LACK AND COLORED PLUSHES, fr0'1 $2.50 to $6. from 75 ets. to #3. - : tot.m, ect them, as well aa FINE SHIRTS y Novelties we have received for our Holiday Cheayer than any other house in on't want you to take ou *‘Hannis” Shirt for 75c. 3 nanan ie. ; Pataca. | have already received ind are receiving daily | beautiful ascortment of repared sizing to nen bosoin, lined | | WV Aste BLACK SILK " ELEGANT O1TOMAN SILK BLACK SICILI of every description and pr.ce. Wa. H. MORRIS 175 Penneylvan’ BY AUrHok linen sleeve banak from $25 to 860. ‘TS, from $35 to $75. (not worked and then e: for the "*Hannis nf the commissioners, backed up by the | FUR-LIN shiri#iand Drawers at prices t BROCADED ( ‘TOMAN DOLMANS. 5 N CIRCULARS. MADE OF HEAVY Scarfs sold for $1. Doctrinally, Practically as Scufs sold tor 0c. At GINNISS', 1002 F street. AN ‘The Irish Questic Science and Sentiment. By Noah Porter. WM. BALLANTYNE & SON. 428 Teh xtra, GENTLEMEN'S GOODS. HOMPSONS -_ = S¥~DARK ROOM FOR DISPLAYING EVENING OM @00DS, PLAIN FIGURES AND COR- i S | Landicayes a apeciaity. 3 7 SHIRT FACTORY Sratoy Prnry, PERRY BUILDING, Penusylvania ave., corner tt atrort. GoopDs. 'S FURNISHING EMPORIUM, £16 F Street, opporits Patent Oftice. Fine Dre s § irts to order. rand new styles M. SHUSTER & SON (HIS DAY OPE! THE FINEST BUILDING NEW YORK! ED ANOTHER LARGE SIOCK OF LADIES' SILK WRAPS, . bets,” Large assortment Bi S B. ELLERY, '° SILK, BROCADE'SILK, BROCADE VEL- SUCCESSOR TO VET AND SEAL PLUSH, COMPRISING THE N MANS, PELISSES, CLIC CHOICE WRAPS FOR $25, $30, $35 AND $40, MILITARY JA-KETSIN GREAT VA- 28,000 SQUARE VEST SHAPES IN LARS and JACKETS, MANUFACTURER) OF FINE ENTS’ FURNISH 1112 F Street Norrmwesr, WasHixeroy, D.O. ‘inert Dress Shirts to order. “ue Shirts to order, ec Shirts to order... FINEST ELEVATOR AND EVERY MODERN IMPROVE SCIENCZ CAN THINK OF ON THE PRE! SILK FINISHED JERS! AT $3.50 PER PIANOS AND ORGANS. A CARD. i FOR TAILOR-MADE NEW SHADES. SHES IN GREAT va. | Al those whohave seen it admire it, and judging from the immense business of the last month we in confess ikis@, grand success, and we shall etrive to OTTOMAN SILKS OF SUPERIOR QUALITY IN SIX- i maintain the ¢ idence of al, and instead of doubling IN TWELVE SHADES. our business, as we did last month, we chall try and | TS AND PLUSHES IN tripleit during the first year. Wheze there is a wi there is a way, and we know howto do it-that is by | STRIPED PLUSH IN CHOICE EFFECTS. | PURE SILK VELVETS, 25 INCHES WIDE IN 12 BEAUTIFUL COL buying only from first hands by the origina} p: S0a8 to save the middie man’s profit, N IMPORTATION.) IE VERY LATEST When we say profit it is something sel- TY | Erauce) hax resumed her | gtove. prvately aud in classes, dom touched by advertisers; but no merchant can exist N se FLANNELS, TABLE LINENS ana SHEE 11NGS: without it, agit certainly costs something to pay One prem o7. oy tm you. 1 WDED | Hundred and Thirty-six Hands, which we now have on 2 DOOR WITH GooDS THAT MUST BE | 2) ra ¢ W. M. SHUSTER & SONS, our pay-rolls. This is a large number for Washington, H | 4 r Youve Ladies and Children, but not one too many for us, end we are now willing to | NTH STREET NORTHWEST. WILD & BRO., 769 SEVENTH St. NORTHW: Sole awent< for the Unrivale the celebrated Kranich & Bach PIANOS. 1 > ie Bank, 14-Stop Petal Bass ORGANS, excellent tor church Org. practising, take ten more clerks (experienced hands only) if we | only knew where togetthem We do notemploy all | 919 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. FULL STOCK OF ELEGANT SILK UMBRELLAS. 2.—THE BEST IS THE CHEA\ fs BEMREND'S BALTIMORE STORE, ° 908 SEVENTH STREET, these for show, and must have work to do it. Come and convince yourself that notwithetanding the warm spell our building is like a bee hive, and reminds | HAT DAVIS & CO.S PIANOS. anybody of the Bonmarche, of Paris, A SELECTED STOCK OF THESE SUPERB PIANOS NEW STYLES, TOW PRICES. We have given ourimport orders for March and April de! about One Hundred Cases Dress Goods, Cashmeres, White Goods and Linen Housefurnishing Good, ete. Is it a wonder that we should be entitled to buy at lower figures than other merchants, ag our house is classed with the largest jobbing houses of New York and second | to none IN STANDING. 52 The memorandum invoices of the above we have now on hand. Weask one and all to deal with us. In return guarantee to sell at lowest New York retail prices and in many instances much lower (as we can prove by New York Retailers’ Pattern Books.) Our as- sortments shall always be complete, and we shall try to make our building and business the pride of the Cap- ital. For bulletins of goods and pric7s see other daily and weekly papers, and remember that we only adver- tise such goods as we have in quantities, so as to give ce uttenticn to his selections of ¥ GOODS, which are offered at re- loth, Mall colors, 25c., ‘Terra Cotta, Bronze, Se. ik anu Wool, 25c. Goods thet retailed at huddah Cloth, 15c.. 4 tendid Cushineres, in black and colurs, 35¢. ool Caslimeres, It in Dress Goods, -4 Cloth, choice quaity, # «and Satins, Brocades, &c. er pMies in Ladie s* C) nce of the prohibltory | HANDSOME NI if | notice. What it would be In case the notice Is | mars | posted up in the cars is a question on which the | court expressed no opinion. But it would be | strange law if a company which not only habit- | | ually allows passengers to ride on the platform i but often c&mpels them to ride there b | running cars enough could escape liability for | ‘the negligence of its own servants by a mere | formal notice of a rule which it does not pretend | to enforce. to every sublime precept of that creed. Tne | ee H. MNEN 9th street northwest. Souare and Baby Grand to ¢ ICHENBACH? PIANO WAREROOMS.—Pianos renowned factory of Wn. Kuabe & Co., well-known fretory of E. Car-| ers. Pianos for rent. ‘Tuning ring carefully attended to. 423 11th street est, above Pennsylvania avenue. TY'S ORGANS, 27 STOP: NEC Fr BEA y not ; Fi #125, PIANOS, 17 50. | logue free.” As N. J. a repared ted Flanne! Uuder- or we sell a puro megicmaily Ter yard, equal to coods usual- 50. 75c., $1, $1.25 and up. vy received lots of p rheumatism to buy our 1.25 to $1.50 SEWING MACHINES, & ‘'S MACHINE OFFIC! Corner 7th and H streets. Another lotof Machines we have taken in ex ones the past week, have put them in gook. T them at these extremely low prices A UERBACH’: ire Linen Handkerchiefe perfect, at lesa than half prices. Call and ure all sold out. estics, ‘Table Linen and Towels. Blankets, Flannels, Cassimeres and Housekeeping ut not least, Misses’ Woolen Hose, in sizes 8), 25c. ver pair. RE CASH STORE. 908 7th street northwest. GPECIAL ATTRACTIONS sce them before Full stock of T ler & Wilson Ma 6 Grover & Baker Machin 2 Domertic Machines, at. 2 Empire Machines, ALL parties fromthe distance ashow to writefor them, ‘Thanking you all for the liberal patronage and friendly feelings extended to us during the last twenty years, Weare, respectfully, your obedient servants, LANSBURGH & BRO., 420, 422, 424 BEVENTH STREET, IN FALL AND WINTER DRESS GOODS HATEVER YOUR PREFERENCE MAY don’t purchase a Rewing M: “running DOMESTIC and the new! Otber first-class machines in etoc Y Prices and terms are ak low and reasonable as can De had anywhere. I have no outeide agente. ‘Also, Teecond-hand Domestic, $1 ine until you have AND NOVELTIES AT <3 CARTER’ R R's, 5; 1 W. and W., No. 2 Wilicox “& Gibbs, $12 $5; 1 White, £10. These and for the price can WM. STIEBELING, near Corcoran Art Galicry. Grover & Baker, ‘11 MARKET SPACE. ines are in excellent order, nct be duplicated in Washi ‘Repairing and 1717 Singer needles, 1c. A SEWING MACHINE DEALER AND no Agent, and employ no agents, y no inferior Machines, because they are ches rt fusementsand employ class and reliable Mac! IMMENSE ASSORTMENT of Black and Colored t 50c., We., $1, $1.25, $1.50; $2, $2.50 and $3 'S, PLUSHE! artouble widths Plain and Brocade SI VELVE1S8, CASHMERES, LANSEL SUITING and I, ; the new hades at the lowest pricen c= LADIES’ CLOAKS, SHA and CASSIMERES. MOURNING DRESS GOODS in all the new and oe RGR CASHMERE. SH. AWLS RYAULD'S CHAPE and CRAPE VEILS. > M24 COU) A {full lineof HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS; BLAN- HAM LACE, &c. ‘agents to shove them. Welt Bret. ines from the oftice only. J. F, McKENNEY, 427 9th street northwest. PURCHASING A SEWING MACHINE Do not fail to examine the finest finished, 1 = ing and moxt quiet Sewine Machinesin ewer THE NEW HARTFORD! THE NEW ELDREDG! And the new No. 4 VICTOR. ‘macht: hand and easy Special discount for cash at OPPENHEIMER’S, fachi 1d Fanhic fachine and Fashion Rooms, Needles one cent each; all other g858g KEE 8gss, reer DOLMANS. ‘act All other makes of Tl MARKET SPACE. monthly payments. NEW FALL DRY GOODs. TRUNNEL & CLARK, | 811 MARKET SPACE, ‘Have now a very large stock of DRY GOODS of the best Clase, weet paicithcie. SO PORY EAS tnd Bide OCADE PLUSH! line of PLAIN <p ificent line of FLANNELS, BEANE ETS Gurstock of TABLE LINE ENGLISH DYED, from $160 up. FUR LINED GARMENTS, IN SILK AND SATIN. LADIES’ FURS OF ALL KINDS, LADIES’ SEAL CAPs, GENTS' FUR CAPS, GLOVES AND MUFFLERS. BOYS’ SEAL CAPS. FUR TRIMMING. FUR CARRIAGE ROBES, AGENTS FOR DUNLAP & CO.'S CELEBRATED NEW YORK HaTs, JAMES Y. DAVIS SONS, Reliable Sewing Mi WOOD AND COAL. PENNSYLVANIA COKE. BETTER THAN COAL. re or commen On circulars. A. R. WILLIAMS, Jz., 713 7th street northwest. 2, “Cannot BE BEAT. JOLORED SILKS, $1,$1.25, $1.50 SL sea Tare cc) ‘Wide for Veils, id CO} TS. NB, TOWELS, NAPEINS ____ EDUCATIONAL, CDisTaitar the Inth Rowanlers Wee "The sume A Home Scnoor.—The Norwood Ractteete, F—* an corner of Massachusetts avenne and 14th, Se PE Lethe excellent mianagrment of Mand Wm. D. Cxbel!, incipals, t+ already * Parente desiting to Pinte theit dstathers tnt heme ad Tefipement and comfort, wher: they can be taught all the Enatieh branchey and secure torouch | training ta music, French aud Gertian, will ind thie schol Thoet gevep table one. na 8tt NSTRUCTION IN LATIN, GREEK, ENGLISH, Matheny Ke. by & graduate . Cail after Spon. or address NT, 1300 Vermont avenue northwest. TIMM Sy Dy or. ne, Ke. Twelve teas S80 BBULE i, { INDERGARTEN the training of tens at Sth, oor J ISth et. with Primary snd Adi yuire of MRS. LOUISE POLLOCK eearten, or of MISS SUSIE POLLOC! stitute. ulé-aw QP LECT SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES, D Parents destrine in a home of ref sporaril DLEWORK, Vernon iow, oth street LEPRINCE, street northwest, will give Coy ther own and pups’ resid ing Classes. Price moserate. #203) KOSTRE:T NORTHWEST. FRENCH 1323! catural Svetem Clases of ‘all ‘fo~ ts and Kindergarten daily ai.-paxt 1. Papi's claw y tie. - see MLLE. V. PRUDHC: rench Bose tir O12 Lith etree? : Day School ry ber 2ist. Music under th: wert, Tuopenc barge of Mile, ni6-th, Particular. at wishing JROEBEL INSTITUTE. AND RINDE! 2 are from 4 hens Circle. — Prim rtinents, Lane and Professors, : Misses POLLOCK : K, Principals, 1 street northwest. Training Clasktor Teachers, oye. Superinteadant and prtliwost, .CUTION AND SLINE DUVA eyeane Reading day Lveringes, § TUTOR, UK ster Germon, An agents and examinations. nis in eden 2 A. BOLKIS, LATELY AMKIVEE erinan, will mee! awing at bis et BOOL OF ELOCUTION AND PHYSI- CAL CU LU ctype. IMPS VOCAL oki, NSINGTON AND ARKASENE y given by Mra. V2 Ruetwam, Boun iary steeet, private resi yd at Mow. "Sen, Koppert’s, 608 "9th wtrect Mondays and Thur-days. am ‘ KINDEiv TRAINING tien ds’ I street, moar ANth. A class for vothers will non Thureday, November 2a. five lectures frye. Apply to Mea, ANNA BLOGDEN. Am WT ESD DANCING ACADEMY, N. earner 1 ot and Penn Felect clas Mond: d ave. Koxular Clams Tuesay ond Driday a S BOOKKE ASIEST, SHORTEST, Monts of ody saved. Above, with pon= . W. HOWE, 1030 7th street. ASSES, (day and pst Liberal terms for t northwest, corner 12th; by Prateesor'e new training voices te oncerts, &e. ROP. AND MRS. 1 ©, COLLIERES Englich Tsewieal Ys jar, ad drew AM. Principal, AME CHEVREMONT (GRADUATED Al By) Gey ‘t at th 702 12ch street Lorthwest. Frenc’ Clasees for the nose 1323 street northwort, Hou rses—For Ladies’ and Gentlemen, 4 of 7 pom. : “oy ‘for Ladies, Miyhdyaneets daly, at 9, “Kinder-Gaien clases, lai 5. ‘Lermx moderate. Pupils learn to converse In a short time. A Parivian pronunciation taught. 05 OL OF MUSIC, (ESTABLISHED 1877.) 307 Nth stroce nrtw t, ‘Low rates, niches. Church for practice, _S0-2m ” 0. INGALLS KING, Principals GRENCERIAN BUSINESS COLLEGE. LINCOLN Ph Hal tas ‘9th and D streets, “Day and Evenine * the education of sons and dauzh- | ters, and 1nen and women for sclf-eupport and real life. Teameac The bree taught are the English, ; Bari- Spencerian Practical Fenmananip: 2, He c and double entry, wdayted, imines; Bune ractice, whole- Dauking, en ploying the methods of | accounts, basiness papers and corres) | by Teadin bus ners houses: Plyweal pied ywical and Vocal Cul- y: Contuercial Law; Business ite in _Elocution, Phen = nebane of best master. Co H, for the recertion of students for Hay or evening. Tuition ay’ the year, in Hhments of $10, $0: by the quarter, twelve year echolarship for day or evening, pur- on catering, $50); evening tuition, three months, uing tuition, one month, $6. The uew, hand- ustrated Colleze Announcement, containing full ye sent free upon application by mail, or at the College HENRY C. SPENCER, Principal. SARA A. SPENCER, Vice-Principal. auld NCH WILL RESUME HIS LESSONS: VIOLIN’ AND ORGHESTRAL. TS- For northwest. 253m phy gpeu AUGUST yea WASHINGTON, COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. —§ H Boarding and_Duy ‘School for ¥« ‘Lacon | Children, re-opens September 18, 1882. For circulars Rand Mise M.C. DOUG- 12th street northwest.a6 ly to Mrs. £ D. BUI my Principals, 1023 and 1 Up SRENON SEMINARY, es English and French Bagrine and Day School for ‘onus Tadien, 1100 M street northwest, Washington, D. Ca. Ke — SEPTEMBEM itn, 1nH2. Pe porough collaciate courme. Special advantages studente. ukic and art. For catalogues, apply to the pemeiyal, "MI . J. EL SOMERS “ =i 5-3 MES; 8. CADY'S BOARDING AND DA¥ oe for Home Cation, West End cs a 1, Conn. ye ‘commences §! 4 BEL 28TH. ‘Send for circular. . - ayis I8S_AMY LEAVITT, OF BOSTON, TEACHER Address 944 K street northwest. Lessons resumed a tember 4th. cr JY USICAL acapEm Bet 1721 Dr SALES STREET, lween Connecticut ave. and 17th #t. n.w. J. P, CAULFIELD, Mi Doc. Studien rewuimed ber Mth, auly Tare, GREEK, MATHEMATICS, NATURAL SOI ‘ence and. vately clans. Stndeute reo enn a ake ___ HOTELS, &. Ho™ BRUNSWICK, FIFTH AVENUE, BANQUETS, Exo. For rooms and terms address 08-t, th, 8, 26t MITCHELL & KINZLER. RI ju! ASBURY P) Cae ae prec a e From: excsl’ent board; ndings and comforts. A very desirable place for’ very attractive: Gent's HOSIERY WEAR. and Gent's HANDREAGHIEI Se besa fal (21 PENN. AVE., between 6th and 7th streets. Saf thea tdead 6 SAFE DEPOSIT OO. stock of Prints. Brown Bleach Canton ‘and all Leading’ aad“ Heoak bottom Established 1830. GF. E. KENNEDY & SON, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, TABLE LUXURIES Proprietors ‘‘WHITE SWAN” MINN, FLOUR. Specialty OLD GOVERNMENT JAVA COFFEE, CONSERVED PEACHF3, LIME. FRUIT JUICE TABLETS: PEEK, FREAN & CO.'S SUGAR WAFERS, TABASCO PEPPER SAUCE. iter sraxit Noninwesr, 13th OFFICE_605 7th street, opposite ia: and the verdictis Coal sent in Locked Carts and ited,” WELL VENTIMATED and WELL weighere, thus guarantesing ‘and Goods and comparison S7QORRD. An examination of Oxx Paice Onyx. TRUNNEL & CLARE. 811 MARKET SPACE, AMPANE AND HOREHOUND taken the lead ‘introdi COUGH DROPS. Eromprseeats a dain ana Yor Ra aad aR : "Oniers by mail receive prompt attention. 113m i a 14th st. northwest: odor led at IGN AND MESTIC ‘&o. eo) = = ECURITY FROM LOSS BY BURGLARY BOBBERY, a ey ee Perpetual Charter Act of Congress Capital... “ of Soca ual Waaob Saat ba ‘eats

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