Evening Star Newspaper, December 11, 1882, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

+? © @Gnot interfere in a fight, remarked that he eee in Doth cases was that the policeman AN ADVENTURE ON SALT LAKE. fhe Rough Experience of Two Yachts- men Whe Were Caught in an Ice Flee. From the Salt Lake Tribu: During the storm on November 15 the cata- maran Cambria broke loose and drifted twel miles out into Salt Lake. Captains Davis and Hardie, in the yacht Petrel, sailed out and secured the Cambria. Whea they started out in the morniag they had less than haif a pound of bread and meat to eat on the trip, and dividing this they a: half at noon and the balance at night, 1! a their return. C Davis west ard the Cambria and Ha’ Temalned 62 the Petrel. Soon they were under good headway, hing the shore before the moon we But in this y Were disappvinted by running into an ice flo At the time they 1 r wind from the south- ack they ore. Th Petrel went cruising through the ice tor about a mille, but the Cambria, being a double hall, the packed in between and the boat became Hardie found that his partner i his own boat being fast, the next thing was to keep from freezing. With the oars he tried to break the ice, but findin; that use! it the hest he ¢ the ice protection. There shis heels to keep his v en sat in their boat: separated one mile from each other, and suite: ing the pangs thirst, freezing. vlay in the ne they say the: day they worked all and in the evening th gether anid. ast resolved to abandon way to the shore in the had been woun fire in the pot. t and eaten four how making as c+ sails to lie on suffered all th A goose which | and. with a £3 were broi 5 We a bed as they could with nl for cover, the y down and night. Sunday morning found the ice-pack had been driven near the Kaysville shore, and they | broke their way througli and landed at 11:30 a. m. They were so weak that on the road ti e | residence of Mr. Day. they were com, 0 | sit down and rest. they could get up. = — Kalstrom’s Wife at the Crib. From the Chicaso Tribune. I wonder how many of the hundreds wholook | out at the lake every day and see the erib-tower | rising up azainst 2 blue or + as the case may be, known of ascene that took place | there nearly three y | At the time of which I speak the crib-keeper | wasa Finn named Kalstrom, a gizant and heavy in propertion to his size. He t the wharves as “Big Charlie, his claim to distinction was that he had, as he bark of a dousand duns.’ | sailed the North seas, and in| which, Vikinglike, he had carried off his wife, a | bright-faced Irish irl. from Drogheda, one of the east ports of Ireland. She was a small woman. with gray eyes and Tong bla She had str eyebrows and a ma: crept in little curls around her temples and the nape ofher neck. She had the piquant nose of | her race anda generous mouth filled with strong | white teeth. It was in March, and the day was | one of those soft, trea that lure un- wary flowers to th Pneumonia and bronchitis bro: shone warmly. and the dream of springtime. | The crib-t hike Mother Hubbard's | eup-board. and Kalstrom took his small boat and | Towed ashore. In the few hours he spent among | the shops and in taki er with his | friends, the wind d when he reached the shore w rs. he found the lake | eourned up to the fury peculiar to inland se He was worried. but had snch confidence in y marked | his little Irish virl, as he called her, that he | spent the nizht qui The ne y found the storm as wild and he spent the | hours of dayti, s.ore, for by t we up and down the time he knew the few provi- n out, and that his wife wa actually suffering f Twi launched his boat. and twice nped. At dark light gleamed out from the crib- top, but to Kalstrom’s eye it had a baleful | glare, and morning found him determined “to | go ev I hey to svim vor it,” as he swore with some round Scandinavian oaths. Fortunately, | the wind was more quiet, and, after hard work | he came under the lee of the cri walls. His wife had spied him, and she cast him a noosed Tope from the top story of the crib; for the | wayes rolled so high that all the storm-doors and shutters were battened down and the white caps spit at the lantern asthey drove hefore the He caught the rope. and passed up his bundle of supplies. She dropped ita second time: and, Just as he got it under his arms, a great wave swamped the boat, leaving him clinging to the wall, blinded and bruised, and depending on the | little woman up aloft for his lite. She beggn hauling on the rope, and had drawn hinras high as’ the sill-frame—he thrust- fingers and toes into whatever crevices | offered. As he reached his right hand up the wind came round the corner with a yell and tore him loose, dropping him into the lake: but the faithful Irish girl paid out the line as fast as she ¢ould. and he found himself with a chance for | life still in his reach. } Up he came. hand over hand, and as he en- | tered the window he saw her fail, and in the dim light he noticed a strange discoloration of | her face, a black stain on the bright rag carpet, and the fact that her dress was torn to rags in | Well, to make a long story short, when he | fot her up he found the wedding finger of | left hand entirely gone and the tendon | ripped out up to the elbow. It had been caught | between the rope and the stone casing when he | fell, and his great weight, playing against the | wedding-ring, had done the mischief. But, as | she said, “It weren't atime for faintin’, Miss.” And she had hauled him up with the right hand | and those stronz, white teeth, The rugying of the hemp had cut her mouth eruelly, and she had ground her knees against the wall su desperately that the thick stuff-gown tne wore was frayed through and through. That night the wind shrieked and roared till | the lake went mad with the noise, and the waves | threw their spray among the plzeons under the | eve of the lantern roof, and the injured woman moaned through the house for the relief that coald not come. Kalstrom signalled and sig- aalled for help, and four days after the accident | a boat got out, and Mrs. Kalstrom was taken to | the hospital, where the wound was dressed and where she lay for many a weary day. When I saw her tirst, I noticed with great satisfaction that a fall of pretty lace covered her maimed hand, and that * Big Charlie” under | his rough husk held a real reverence and aifec- | tion for her. To these feelings he bore witness | everywhere, and when his frieuds would play | @pon him and say half in jest and half in earn-| = a Charite. you're a fine fellow, ain't you?” he would answer with naive conceit and | confidence: “Yase, [ am; tor I hef gommanded a bark of adousand duns; but dere’s a better dan me at | home. And ev anybody says *Kalstrom’s a vine yellow,’ you gan dell him, *Yase. but Galstrom’s vife is a viner."” According to the Rerwe Chronometrique, there | are annually manufactured 2,500,000 watch and during the last fitty years more than 70, 900,000 have been put on the market; tnere re- | mains yet for us to add a stock of not less than | *P,000,000 of ol watches. which makes a total ef 36,000,000 to 87.000,000 watches requiring | slasses. The new watches consume nearly | $,000,000, which makes an annual consumption | ef not less than 47,000,000 of glasses. But we must add that every watchmaker away from a town sees the necessity of always haying on | hand an assortment pete to the wants of customers. Then i we take into account | 's watches, lockets, compasses, etc., one | - finds one’s self with astonisiment in the face of | @@annual consumption which cannot be less than 100,000,000 of gissses. —<o.—___- Why They Didn't Interfere in the Fight. A Boston policeman, on being asked why he was never inclined to be pragmatical. A Chi- said it was against the rules. vd || , and re! |i | immediate presence in Louisville. THE ROMANCE OF WAR. Sir Garnet Wolseles’s Stories of Egypt— His Opinions of the “Great American Wai Londen letter to San Francisco Chronicle. It was my good fortune to see General Wolse- ley times during the campaign and to with hin and his staff from Tel-le-Kebir There were several correspondents artists in the big, open freight car. The al was very high-spirited, as you may ne. The war wes over, Arabi was a pris- oner and he had fultiled a rather bumptious assertion, that he would be in Cario on the 15th of September and home yery shortly atterward, He made a rouzh perspective picture of the battle-field as seen from the station and laughed and chatted right merrily. When his chief of taf, Sir Joha Adye, called his attention to im- portant business he ti 1 him to settle it, for to-day he felt like enjoying himself. He was not in the best of health. Indeed, everybody was more orless sick, avd E was in- cluded in the invalid Hist, ‘THe andria to Trieste, in a government dispatch that goes twenty-five miles an hour, is asly fitted out and moves always over @ mas xn lulaud lake, is the maximum unt of comfort-tobe hed in a sea veyage. The bold shores of Montenegro and Greece on the east, in contrast with the lower lands of Italy on the west, the cloudless sky, the cool shing breezes one enjoyed from ng under awnings on a blissfol change from the sinand Tel-el-Matuta and the hot unhealthy airs of Cairo and Alexandria. “You are credited with saying, Sir Garnet, at the tendency or war is for a shorter Journe to Caire and wars will become shorter and shorter. The ability and speed with which large bodies of troops and forage ean be transported will lead to that. Steamships instead of sailing ships re how used, and with the arrangements now loyed battles Lecome more and more deci- sive—inind you, T do not say that ia regard to the campaign just closing. ‘It is not representa- tive of a great war.” of the American war, ou NOI ig I was then stationed in Canada, and I watched it with a de interest. It was a great war in all that t finition of that term im- It did much to advance the science of fare. Gen. McClellan's campaign on the Peninsula was a great affair. [think he lost it ly by reason of the insufficiency of his stat. seemed to me then, and Tam assured of.it now, that the great mistake of be sides was the enermous quantities of artillery employed. Possit necessary for the reason that the North a first short of infantry. | The value of artillery is more of a morai weight than anyth ink the proportion of men wo in the German war with those K by three in one hundred wrong. but they approxin depend gely upon i of cavalry for pur: for rece ze IS of course incalenlable. nian similarly armed is more than a match for a cavairyman. Indeed, lam not sure that a reso- lute nian on foot, armed only with a sti might not successfully defend himself against drazoon who carried only a saber. The fantry I know stands in great fear of cavalry, and I haveseen a whole regiment tremble be- fore the advance ot half their number of horse something. ly warlike h of a sq but it is more ‘ance than anything else iat do you think are the n bullets was about figures may be must value But one ost essential be pro de corps and pride. nad of I soldier should s profession, and he should have individ dwell. ndyisin that you dress a y he will be thought of by quently by himself. The Duke is officers in| Spain th of the best of them were the greatest i ampaisns of the past w ‘rv the more I and cons of Wellington s m d pride themselves in being slovenly. To be un- shayen and dirty was supposed to be the | a good officer. The spirit runs like wildtire amonsst an army. Whatever the offi fine the men will think so, too. It is ficult to make an Enzlishir r like asoldier. He is fond of lon: uncut whiskers. In the field no person s| wear his hair oyer half an inch in le nould never be long enough to part. No man an have smart hearing who can part his hair. Hair Is the glory of a woman, but the shame of aman. cers think y dite — = Pretty Fast Traveling. From the Louisville Commercial. “Did you ever hear how Jim Hamett brought De Funiak from Nashville to Louisville?” ed one of the Louisville engineers. “Well, you all know Jim, I guess, or know of him. He can make the fastest time on the Louisville and Nashville when he wants to. He has been in a dozen wrecks, and got hurt inallofthem. I don’t believe there is a sound bone in little Jim’s body, but the more bumps and knocks ‘he gets, the faster he wants torun. About two years ago De Funlak was down at Nashville, and nad important business that required his He was then general manager of the Louisville and Nashville, and ordered the road clear between the two cities. Then he looked for an engineer to haul him through. Hamett was just in off his ran, and De Funiak sent tor him and said: “Mr. Hamett, I waut to get to Louisville as soon as possible. The road’s clear; you won't find any obstruction. Will you take m “Hamett’s eyes sparkled, but he touched his hat and said quietly, ‘I'll try, sir.’ Any man who knows Jim Hamett would know what that meant. De Funlak had his car coupled right on next to the tender and another car behind. Jim climbed up into his engine, (he can’t walk straight since the last wreck), and there was a kind of a smile hanging around his mouth. The train pulled out of the depot at Nashville as the negro porter was fixing the dishes in the side board. They started out at a pretty lively gait, and went on increasing it. The conductor in the back car bezan to get uneasy, for he hadn't heard Jim’s instructions. Every minute the train went faster and faster. Houses and trees and fences became a blurred line. The cars jumped and rolled and rocked like mad animals wanting to leap from their place of confinement. The porter began to took frightened. The train, instead of slackening, increased its speed. No- body in De Funiak’s car could remain in the seats without desparately clutching to the seat infront. It seemed impossible for the cars to remain on the track, they bounded and rolled so violently. The dishes in the sideboard rolled out, the bed fell inthe middle of the floor, chairs were rent from their fastenings; but the porter didn’t care a straw for that—he thouzht his time had come, and was praying desperately. “De Funiak, with his expressionless face, was calmly holding on to some straps hanging from the cviling, and waving at Hamett through the back door to go on. The conductor grabbed the bell cord and nearly jerked it off. He firmly believed that if they escaped with their lives both he and the engineer would be discharged as soon as they reached the city. Jim was sit- ting on his seat in the engine calmly smiling and paying not the least attention to the frantic conductor. About 100 miles from Nashvill eJim got a couple of hot boxes and had to stop. He made the hundred miles in about 87 alaean: about the fastest time on the road. There wasn't a bit of furniture left in De Funiak’s car. There was a confused heap of broken plates, pictures and chairs, and that was all. Jim was outside, calmly limping around and cursing the hot boxes between times, when De Funtak came out of the car and brusquely told Jim he had made a fast run. é “* Not very fast, sir.’ sald Jim. ‘If Thad run as fast as shec#1 go it wouldn't have only broke you plates and pictures, but there wouldn't have been a bit of ‘he inside of the car left. That was a mighty poor run, sir; a mighty poor run.’ The porter resigned as soon as he got to tewn, and always goes by buat now, when he can.” Se Detected By Hiv Mother-in-Law. A Chicago judge riding in the cars last week, from a single glance at the countenance of a | lady by his side, imagined he knew her and yen- tured to remark that the day was only answered: “Yes.” “Why do you wear ay “Lest I attract attention.’ “Itisa plied the gallant man of law. ‘Not wi they are married.” “But I am not. indeed.” “Oh, no; I am a bachelor.” pleasant. She his wotner-in-law. eeage | if he interfered he woald get walloped, our judgment was a mighty good rea- au for Some out.-—Boston Post. He has been § raving maniac ever since.— 3 Chicago Cheek. yoyage from | in the | province of gentlemen to admire,” re- ‘Then the lady quietly removed her veil, dis- closing to the astonished magistrate the face of PEOPLANG ALt. THE EARTH. Boom That Still Remains and the Oc- cupation of It. CHANCES THAT IN A HUNDRED YEARS NORTH AMERICA MAY CONTAIN EIGHT HUNDRED MILLIONS—CAUSES THAT MAY INTERFERE WITIL THIS—UNOCCUPIED LAND THAT WOULD STILL REMAIN. From the London Spectator. Sir Cornewall Lewis may have been narrow- minded in advising statesmen to “take short views,” but we confessto a rooted distrust ofall | prophetic politics. Very few calculations of | things to happen 50 years ater ever prove ac- | curate, some unexpected and dominant factor | always intervening to confound the wisdom of | the wise. We are not, therefore, much frightened | when a statist. even though, like Mr. R. Giffen, he | unites exceptional knowledge of his science to | great power of generalization—indeed, strange as | the remark may appear, there is something of a poetic strain in, some of Mr. Giffen’s specula- | lons—tells us that in the near future Americ may be fully peopled, and that Europ | gration stopped, may be filled with masses of | Workimen driven to dangerous discontent by in- suflictent food. Over population Is a possible | evil, for it has occurred in China, though, be it | noted, without the result of producing social disvord—the Chinese, though they have been crowded until they haye developed abnormal |industry and thrift, still believing — their ‘social system nearly divine—but there is |no certainty that the evil will arrive. We know, to begin with, wonderfully little of the true law of the expansion of | population.” The old theory that it depended |on the means of subsistence, that population | expanded with prosperity, is totally opposed to |the facts. Not to mention the phenomenal | growth ot the population of India, without a | proportionate increase in their means of sub- | sistence—a growth which. we entirely agree with Mr. Giffen, threatens to undo all the mate- | rial advantages of our rule—the Irish popula- tion multiplied in misery till subsistence tailed; | while the Jews, a splendidly healthy and fairly | | fed people, have either not increased at all or | with exceeding slowness. Had they multiplied | after the final dispersion like Teutons, the world ! Would now belong to the Jewish people. The | | two branches of the Teutons, again, increase | with such startling rapidity that they promise | te overwhelm all other white races; but that | rapid increase is novel, and did not occur. |fur example, dnring the long period o Feomparative “peace enjoyed in sind | under th of Tudor. "In 1982 there may, | imates, be 890,000,000 people eviea: but also there may | The emigration from Europe | wether. or be diverted; the aze of | “ thrown back by social causes. undoubtedly happened among certain es of our own society; or the rate of in- | ela ange, as has repeatedly occurred parts of the world. without the jou of new causes of mortalit: on to believe.as Mr. Giffen will | better than ourselves, that In Sean- dinavia, trom 1709 to 1800, without any percep- | tible emigration, the increase of population | stopped aliogether. ‘There may be, probably a truth somewhere in Mr. Herbert Spencer's opinion that culture diminishes population, the educated: as we see in New England, increasing 4 lowly. Certainly the decliné of a popula- | tion without war, without emigration, and with- out are of food is possible, while station | arine: itedly been observed. seni, that is, for the thirty y hold it vain to ealeul Y hope of certainty the grand rush and sweep of the European peoples to. the west, which the future historiam wili record as one of the dis- | j tinetive marks of the Victorian era, need not | cease for any want of room. A historian of | some mark, writing in our own columns many . . predicted, as the result of personal | servation, that the United States would re- ject immigrants within twenty years after he wrote his letter. Three-fourths of the time has elapsed, and that astoundiny march of the Eu n ies, before which all other move- nk into insizniticance, has only in- “ breadth and volume till, as we write, from all the Teutonic and Scan an coun- ud from Ireland four regiments a da precipitate themselves upon the New | | World, and still the Old World is full. Here | and there, in Sweden and In freland principally, | the drain be: ‘0 tell perceptibly on numbers, until North Swe is threatened with some. thing like depopulation, and the place of Ireland in the Rritish Empire sinks, as Mr. Giffen has no- ticed. year by year. The island, which In 1840 | contained a third of the population of the United Kingdom, now holds only a seventh, and by the | time of the next census will probably contain only a tenth, a fact which profoundly modifies the importance of Irish movements and ex- plains, ii it does not Justify, the nationalist hor- | | ror ofany measure caiculated to increase the rate | f outflow. Britain, however, increases, and so 3 Germany, while the absorbing power of the nited States shows no perceptible diminution. The thousands who land every week pass on westward in endless succession, settle on the land, and still there is room for all. The aver- age population is only 35 to the square mile. The state of New York itself is still very unset- tled, still full of ancient forests, the state which, if peopled like Suffolk, could maintain 30,000,000 at least,containing as yet only 5,000,000. There | is, except in the eastern states, where the fer- tility of the land, originally poor, has been par- tially worn out, no sign of exhaustion, nor can | we trace even the first beginning of that cry in the west against further immigration which will be the first, probably even the first prema- ture, sign that the land is full. We think we mark, though this may be an error, a slight decrease In wages, but there isno tendency anywhere to avoid payment in food as supple- ment of wages, such as would happen the mo- ment food became an article of economic im- portance. As forthe huge Canadian Dominion, which might hold 50,000,000 in comfort, without neizh- bors ever visiting each other on foot, its great lamente*ion is that people do not come fast enoug! hile its government is straining every nerve to increase the culturable area under its control.; Gradually, yet rapldly, the engineers are driving a railway westward from the lakes, crossing the wastes, and piercing the huge mountain barriers which separate settled Canada | from the Pacific, till within five years the jour- ney to British Columbia will be as easy as the | journey to Minnesota. Read the speech of Lord orne reported inthe Times of Wednesday. Lord Lorne, though he has succeeded fairly well as Governor General of the Dominion, is not a very strong man; but he has been staying in} | know mucl | | { | British Columbia, he has the landlord's eye for | | propert: timber and communications, and the pf the visible resources of the colony | him almost inte He finds /a country rough ind of moun- tains, but tuil also of fertile straths, where “all the small fruits reach | perfection,” and the tomato, which in England loves the hottest corners, grows in the open air; fall of coal, full also of vast and dense forests, | where men cut logs 90 feet in length and 40 | inches square. In this vast province of 350,000 square miles, nearly double the size of France, there are but 20,000 white men, though over much of extent—over, indeed, all the wide re- gion west of the mountains. a territory, in- cluding Vancouver's Island, of at least 50,000 juare miles—the climate is as pleasant as that of Cornwall would be if it had half its rain-fall. “No words can be too strong to express the charm of this delightful land. where a climate sotter and more constant than the south of Eng- land insures, at all times of the year, a full en- Joyment of the wonderful loveliness’ of nature around you.” There is room in British Coluin- bia alone—under, let us trust In Providence, some less cumbrously grandiloquent name—for 20,000,000 of happy people, and Lord Lorne be- lieves that, the railway once finished, she may receive 900 immigrants a day, a fourth or the over-spill of Teutonic and Scandinavian Europe. There Is no sign, for this generation, at all events, of want of room, and when the Ameri- can Republic and the dominion are both get- ting so thick that it Is possible, as in England, to be unable to ride or drive, yet never lack soclety, there will still be temperate Australia, which, though practically only a broad belt [Surrounding what should be a sea, and isa desert, is a belt which will support 40,000,000; and the immense expanses which throughout South America are not only not oceupied, but are not in reality explored. There is room in | Brazil tor all Europe; while in a state go little regarded as Peru, a kingdom full of men could be established on lands which no white man in- telligent enough to report on them has ever traversed. and about which Spanish geographers are as ignorant as our own map-makers about that second Nyanza Lake,now vaguely known to exist weatward of the other. Ne couse other. than misgovernment prevents the settlement of South America, and if the increase of which Mr. Giffen speaks goes on in the north, and the white race multiplies even. to 200.od0,000, no human power can prevent its torcing itself into the cacti now held in ominal ‘Socupatics mainly by half-caste Spaniards, who haye not. ot even a stable form of government. oe | says Mrs. Palmer's | the priest an j car the Man Who Spits will spit, ; at all, the world is one vast spittoon. and thor we look “forwaril with no p fre to the oaites which that it will produce, we are not able to doubt that the new nations now forming will be mainly Teutonic, will be in some form or another Christian, and will speak English. Why our race should conquer, we hardly know, for, whatever its qualities, sym- pathy with the ‘alien js not among them; but it does conquer. Only the Jew resists the absorbing force of the Englishman. The Irishman tells us. in speeches growing always shriller,that we are the most hateful of people; but, thouzh wandering all over the world, he will settle no- where save where the . population is essentially British: while the German who scolds us daily, the instant he tinds a British community to settle in, forsakes his language, sloughs off caste, &@becomes the most contented, industrious, and loyal of citizens... The -objection to him is only that he works so wellthat he leaves no lace for the Briton, whose civilization, and language, and method of life—teetotalism ex- cepted—he so eazerly adopts. The English and German speaking races, at least, have a suffi- cient heritage before them, and those among them who remain behind will not consent to starve. If the land will not feed them they also will depart, and, indeed, it 1s to an increased rate of emigration that we look for the natural check upon perpetual overflow. Twenty-mil- lions of people—and we shall be reduced to that—will not throw _ off the swarms who now hive out from among thirty-five millions. gee FUNERALS IN OLDEN TIME. The Manner of Obsequies in the Days Of Chrisvs Ministry. The touching Gospel account of the faneral Procession that wound out of the gates of Nain. Home Life in the Bible,” as our Lord and His disciples came nigh, gives us probably the most tamiliar idea of the ordi- nary mode of committing the dead to their “long homes” in that day. First in order came the women, according to an ancient commentary of the Jews, which explains that, as “woman brought death Into our world, she it is who ought to lead the way in a funeral procession.” Among them, how easy for any one. much more the Lord, her Maker, to recognize the widow, about to hide away forever from her eyes an only son. Behind the bier followed “much people of the city,” and last of all the hired mourners and the musicians, with their distracting and dis- cordant wailing and piping. According to pre- iling custom, our Lord and His companions hould have joined the processiun. and wept with them who wept. or shared in bearing the burden of the open bier on which lay the young man, “the only soa-of his mother, and she was "It was contrary to the law that a. ch priest should attend the faneral or observe any of the customary rites of mourning for any relative, not even for his father or his mother; ht be “defiled” for his mother, father, son, dauzhter, brother, and unmarried sister, but for no other relation in life (Levit. Axi. 1-4, 10, 11). In the time of Christ it was the custom, from the moment the body was carried out of the house, to reverse all. chairs or couches, or seats ot whatever sort. “The mourners sat on th floor, except on the Sabbath and on one hour of the Friday, the day of preparation, and on some feast-days in which “mourning” prohibited. On the return of the family from the burial with their friends, they were served by their neigh- bors with mbolical refreshment in earthen- Ware, consisting of bread, hard-boiled e lentil ‘The friends and funeral guests, ever, partook of a generous meal, but at which the supply of wine was limited to ten cups. These “cups” may have been ‘a relic of the an- cient custom referred to in Jeremiah: “Neither shall men give them” (the mourners) “the cup. of — consola for their father or for their mother” (xvi. 6, 7). An allusion to funeral banquets is supp to be found in the — circumstance ner’s death, as recorded in this text: r all the people came to cause David to eat meat while it was yet day, David sware, saying, ‘So. do God to me, and more also, if I taste bread, or aught else, till the sun be down,’” (IT Sam., and Jeremy, in his epistie, sp ‘sts in the temples of idol: ery before their sods. when one is de With the yrave began the formal mourning, when the passic xpres- ions of grief, loud and a rative before the burial, were, if possible, redoubled and intensi- fied. The prescribed season for deep mourninz was seven days, the firstthree of these being those of the others those of “lamentation These being fulfilled, there followed a iter mourning of thirty days or more, according to the nature of the bereave- ment. Under the rabbis, children mourn their parents a whole year The anniversary of the death cf a relative was also to be kept; while, for a season. the Jewish ‘prayer for the dead” (not, however, intercessory in its charac- ter) was to be offered vaks of the who * roar and men do at the feast soe ‘The Man Who Spits. From the Philadelphia Times. The man who spits is aliberal creature, but unlovely in his liverality. That which he has to dispense he sheds around with generous pro- fusion, regardless of time, place or the presence of company. In the physical economy of most men the liver is the largest gland in the body. But to observe the habits ct the Man Who Spi is to gather the fdea that his salivary glands must be at least five times as large as his liver and fifty times as active. The man’s life seems to be given up to spitting. He spits at his home and whene’r he takes his walks abroad. On entering a public conveyance, whether stage, car or steamboat, his first proceeding is to spit on the floor. Having made a beginning he continues, spitting at convenient intervals until the floor in his vielnity assumes the ap- pearance of a pool, and sometimes he stimulates his sallvary glands with tobacco or other druz in order to make his spitting a more abunda and fouler nuisance than It otherwise would be. ‘Yo look at a company of spitters engaged in thelr favorite pastiine one would suppose. they had been fed on some article of diet which has left a disagreeable taste behind it. In some in- stances they have not this apology for spittins, but they spit simply from force of habit. ‘The pursuit of this habit blunts their sensibili to the comfort and des! ings who maybe p ment with them. street. en though the only visible section of flooriag is no larger than a man’s hand. In thus spitting at a mark he narrowly 3 defiling the gar- ments of those who stand or sit close be- side him. But he is bound to spit, even though he spit all over his fellow-men. Recent actual and careful observation of several of these beings in one street car showed that while the vehicle was going five squares one man spit eleven time other — seventeen another twenty-three and a fourth thirty-one. ‘This may seen. | butalmost anybody with afair knowlede of aritimetic may count for himself or any trip of a cat and find nearly the same result. To the moral perception of the Man Who Spits, if indeed he haye any moral perception He seems to have taken a contract to Mil it, and diligently he labors, day after day with spit, spit, spit, un- til his wretched task shall be fultilied. At best, it isan ugly habit. At worst, he runs the risk of spitting out most of his vitality and becoming not only an unsavory object but a miserable dys- peptic. bs —————— Boys and Girls. From the Pall Mall Gazette. Why do more boys die than girls? For every hundred girls born into the world there are one hundred and four boys, and it used to be im- agined that the extra four boys were supplied in order to meet the extra wear and tear of lite which must be borne by the breadwinners of the world. But the odd thing to which Dr. Bid- dle calls attention in a medical contemporary is that the extra four per cent of boys is wiped out by death before they attain the age of five years. Why is this? Dr. Biddle makes two su; tions—first, that the greater ‘‘waste” of boys may be due to their higher organism; and, sec- ondly, that it may be ‘due to the fact that our littie boys are given over to the tender mercies of mothers and maids instead of being reared by those who understand them.” “Those who un- derstand thein” would seem to refer to persons of their own sex, so that Dr. Biddle would seem tolook with favor upon the appointment of male nurses for male infants. The non-medical observer would be inclined to accept heavy odds that, if Dr. Biddle’s suggestion were acted upon, the “waste” of the higher organism, instead of being reduced, would increase at a very alarm- ing ratio, indeed. { ———___+¢4—_____ A Modern Imstance. “How canI keep the cattle from breaking down the tence to get into my garden at nights?” said an Austin man to a neighbor. “That’s easy enot ad “Bat how can { keep the cattle from break- ing down the ‘By leaving the gate open."—TZezas Siftings. | “Spry” fox terrier nas obtained many ed for | Fashion In Dogs. Of late years the King Charles and Blenheim spaniels—in spite of their tearful beseeching eyes, thelr trailing ears, their blunt black noses, their silky coats. and the glories of their bushy tails and teathered legs, have undergone un- merited neglect. Nor has the Italian gray- hound, for all the grace and beauty of its slen- der form, its taper, almost transparent limbs, and the elastic agility of its movements, been prized as once it was. Fashion has turned its approved eyes rather uponthe fluffy white Pome- ranian, with its fox-like pricked ears, and point- ed black nose; the Dandie Dinmont, brought into vozue by Sir Walter Scott’s “Guy Manner- | ing;” the Skye terrier, save the turnspt the longest of all dogs in proportion to its height, with its floceulent door-mat coat, its masked eyes, and obscured nose: and the Maltese terrier, a duodecimo edition of the Skye, shorter of back, however, and with whiter and silkier jacket. The pug. too, has recovered the favor it had lost so completely that between 1: most extinct in England; it has returned to so- ciety in the retinue of Queen Anne, as it were, one of the emblems and scenic properties of her reign, its tastes, modes and foibles. Hay the cruel mutilation of the ears of the animal which once prevailed as a_ means of wrinkling | [hm and puckerinz its forehead and muzzie has been abandoned. The poodle has never been so es- | i teemed in Engiand as in the land of its natiy- ity. Of the Daimatian, spotted or carriage dog— popularly known as the “plum pudding” —there has been some yanishing of late. The creature, perhaps, was always regarded as more orna- meatal than usetul, and then, with the circus horse, he became the object of suspicion. Could he not, unlike the leopard. change his spots upon occasion? rather to art than to nature? Stories were told s that had gone out spotted and had returned home pure white. Heavy rain had fallen, and the footman had neglected to hold the carriage umbrella over the carriage dog. The great popularity enjoved just at present by the Scotch cvilie, or Highland sheep doz, has to be reckoned among the striking events or “landiharks” of canine history ie collie have been sacrificed almostjthe entire spaniel family, and even that former romance, the Newfoundland do; mous as a saytor of chiidren from w: and in such wise as a member of the Royal Hfu- mane society. Collie worship 1s, indeed, one of the popular delusions of the time. There r symptoms, however, of the coming close of his reign. arch, 0 long fa- And, after all, his origin is humble enoush—a'mere sheepdog. Should he have been raised from the ranks, promoted to be ex- clusively a domestic pet?’ The stately Mount St. Bernard is securing more and more adintr- ers and upholders, The British bulldos finds Interest in him reawakening. The slim tri late. There is even talk of another of King Charies. And other spanic up their heads, reminding the world that, In addition to their other merits, they own certain sporting gifts and qualities to which no collie dog can pretend.—London Graphic. ‘Whe Sleep of the Just. THE LAWYER. Islept In an editor's b> When no other cha How I thought, as I tu How easily editors li THE EDITOR. If the lawyer slept in the editor's bed When no iawyer chanced to be nigh, And though he hus written and naively said, How casily editors lt He must then admit, as he lay on that bed And slept to bis he :ti’s desire, Whatever he nay say of the editor’s bed, ‘Then the lawyer himself was the —Chaniber [From the New York Sun.J RELIABLE SKIN CURE. THERE 13 ONLY ONE and that with simple name. Beware of imposters, pi- ratce, or any old articles which now suddenly claim to bebest. They have been tried an? found wanting winle this has been proved a remarkabie success, NO POMPOUS NA M ‘This curative needs no pompous or incomprehensible titte of Greek or Latin to sustain it, but its staple Eng- lich uame appeals directly to the eommon sense of the people. And the people are signally manifesting their appreciation of this frankness by selecting and using Dr. Benson's Sxr~ Cuze in preference tw all other pro- fessed remedies. E2~ Beware of imitations, or the varions articles which haye been advertised for years or struzgle1 along, haying no rea’ hol or merit on the public, that now endeavor to keep head above water by adve themselves as “The Great Skin Cure.” None is gena- ine and reliable except Dr. C. W. Benson's Skin Cure. Fach packaze and bottle bears his likeness. Internat and external remedy, two bottiesin one packaze. Price $1. Get at your druggist’s, Dr. C. W. Benson has jong been well known as a sue- cessful physician and surgeon, and his life study has been the diseases of the nervous eystem and. of the ski since he has been persuaded to put his New Remely and Favorite Prescription asa “‘Skin Cure” on the market, various things have sprung up into existence, or have woke up from the sleepy state in which they were before, and now clin to be The Great Skin Cures. RELIEF FOR ALL OVERWORKED BRAINS. Dr. C. W. Benson's Celery and Chamomile Pils are valuable for school childcen who suffer from nervous headaches caused by an overworked brain in their stud- ies, and for all classes of hard brain-workers whose overtasked nervous centera need repair and sedation. Nervous tremor, weakness and paralysis arc being daily | cured Ly these pills. They correct coativeness, but are not purgative, Price, 50 cents, or six boxes for $2.50, postage free, toany ad.tress. For sale by all druggists, Depot, Baltimore, Md., where the Doctor can be ad- Gressed. Letters of inquiry freely answered. C. N. Crittenton, New York, is wholesale agent for Dr. C.W. Benson's remedies. 018-2 O'MEARA’S LIQUID FFF It 888s H gee HOW Ssssg HHH Sgog8 H sss° H H GGG GG G 6 Go _L. UK GGG -LLIL UU KEE Warrented the strongest, tonghest and most elastic Glue on Earth! Endorsed By that crest scientest, Prof. Fated, of the U. 8. Fish Commi Ir Il iL oiciel [la)J falolni=} lies, Bottle of O'Meara’s Fish Glue, with Brush and Tin Cover, ouly 15°. By mail, 0c. extra, ‘The trade and public supplied by UN! {$1 CORN KNIFE, endorsed, by ail Chiropodists. ‘Sporting Goods Cataldgue sent postpaid anywhere. Sold also by W. C. O'MEARA, 215 Penua. ave. 05 Se THE $3, $4 AND $5 CHILD! = Single Pants, 75c., 90c., and $1 School ‘Suits, trom"#3.5 Boys’ Schcol Suits. from $4, $5 and $6 up, age, 13 tol. Sinsie Pants, from $1 tips Be Bags Ban Boys ‘Hats, from 6Uc. up. Dress do., 75c. an D, The best $1 School Button Shoes in the District of Columbia, at J. W. SELBYS, ol4 1914-1916 Pennsylvania avenue. Bows DIRECTORY, 1883. ‘The canvass for the above work being completed, all perscna who have changed their residence or, confom- plate a change, will please send the correction to. bSitice, 50 ‘Le Droit building, or turouish the Post Otca, n27-2w WM. H. BOYD. GAs COOKING STOVES, FOR SALE AT THE GASLIGHT OFFICE, TENTH STREET. 66 D HARNESS.” Te ON cOnR TRE BEST. LUTZ & BRO., Agent sale of “THE CONCORD HARNESS” MAE Weitere OF all inte and descriptions. ‘COUPE and CARHIAGE HARNESS agpecialty. Every genuine ‘*Concord Harness” is stamped with maker's name and trade mark. HORSE BLANKETS and LAP ROBES in great va riety, at Bottom Prices, LUTZ & BRO., PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, Adjoining National Hotel. and 1846 the breed was al- | are lifting | ising | | j } | LADIES’ GOODS. Mur PALMER, : 107 F STREET NORTHWEST. WINTER OPENING or PARIS AND LONDON MILLINERY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22. The latest importation in colors and shapes. EDUCATIONAL. _ Dice gate Seca ae bee Foom. In twetity | petwon ean earn to tery wel Tot Bok EA Teacher of Barber Flute ang Guitar, 401 Sdstroet northwest. ts. LEPRINCE, FROM PARIS, street northwest, will give Conversational cr OWN and Pupi's’ residence. Also, open Evening Clanses, Call at Sc my Price moderate. N ‘WW MEVHOD FOR PIANO AND SINGING. PROF. DE WOLOWSKre shortest and best new system, saving years of praction, reading music at sieht, traiitoe voices to the bigs Nt s = ture for operas, concerts, otc. New singing INKING TWO CENTS PER YARD! are now opeieds: Prof, Dew clowente Mess - 202 91t street northwest. corner of T. | fies 1116 M1 street northwest. corner ithe ag Variety of styles. Special rates to Dressiuakers, — = - PLALIISG (Parisi le) 2c. per yard. AND DAY SCHOOL FOR Rose Trimming. Agency Mine. Demorest’s Patterns. xo SAND CHILDII Drosswaking. "Mise BELLE LUCAS, 902 9th stan. Ww: HORWOOD INGLITUTE. —— A 1214 16th street, 14t Me VON BRAN English, Leth Pl MODISTR, formerly with Lord & T aylors, New York; Wm. Barr Co., Mo. Clout S se, Dolinang a ¢ Work. Su rfaction sisrauteed. TROUSSO4U8 & 8) OC: Dhssivaria wv rods, & Mus. WM. D. CABELL, Principals. Usivemary or ¥ The undersigned take pleasiire in, rec the con! «of the friends of ed LIAM D. CABELL, of Was well known te CINTA. netine to y NTH STREET NORTHWEST, TS toorder in every etylsand tuateriay and guaran tees perfect ft 5 fort. HER SPECIALTIES 4 charee which may be confided to tun Userclothiag, Merino Underwear | 94%. 1, HARRISOX-MD.,NOATLK. DAVIS, “t Imported Hosiery WM. F. PETERS, ler Braces and ali Dress Reform Gools. Tench Corsets and Bustios. | The *‘Hereulas” Sap- et, for which Miss H. is spec ret, her own make, that HELE DeVERE, NR PAGE, JOUN B. MINOR, Jouxs Horxixs Usivgwstte, | Dacron, Mo. Were they not sometimes due | | favorite of aquatic | He has been rather too absolute a mon- | | Thave known Mr. WILLIAM D. CABELL Tor many | years as bead and founder of £ our leading ¥c nae j io Virginia. Mr. Cabell is x ceutieman of hugh sock Position, of unusual attainments, and of rare encrey. who will not fail to give promizcnve to any scheme wi which he tuay connect himself, RNACE. Oar stock tsnow Nor us With a call we can poction the largest assortment of For further reference of infe Mn. & Mus. WM. D. a7-1m MAPesors rte BRUN. A Native French Teacher, ontion address . CABELL, Washingt: . George and Stag Head Elevated and Fire Side Jewel Latrobes, arstow Furnaces, Also Slate fibing and Gas Futing. Job: | as-ame 719 Lath strost. fi % e: : - es wis ga Geers COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, W.S. JENS & CO. 7 1 , West Washington. Schoo for} 22 717 7th strest nortnwest. SAFE DEPOSIT CO. R BY BURGLARY KOBRE OR ACCTDEN a3 Wply to Miss L. STE Pgtkccttes rs arr Math om the Seience the U digan. € T ENT, 1900 Vermovt Sk era after 31.1. Ar address aveuve northwest, - $20 . Year, aud takes ali kinds ites aud Valuables on Special Depos:t at lowest Singing, ‘Violin. & advaiitages. { INDERC the t tens at Isth at. Tnguire of MRS. LOUISE PULLOCK, at t Twelve te 0. B. BULLARD, Director. TEN NORMAL t ry ni8-tm?) FOR INSTITUTE 1 Kin A Chories ©, Gloves, Kindergarten, or of MISS SUSIE BOLLOC Henry A, Willard, | Froeber Institute. 7 ie K STRECT t.— FRENCH Lessons. . Classes of all = Ande if omigee so SPECTAL TIE: . For partion = SPEC{ALTIES. —— — | lars see MI nil FLUOL JROELUL INSTITUTE AND. KINDERGARTEN, sg arms Pate: | At one square from Thomas Circle.—Primars and Ad= Pt ae | yanced departments. Childre 14 years of aga. Bi at mace enn tees | Lane Music, Drawinw and Calisthenies. Com= ! patent Ag ra and Professors, . tery: Misses POLLOCK tht street northwest. OF ELOCUTION AND Dy: SVART. “ois. ADELINE DUVAL, MAC Street northwest. Private less:nus and claree %} ‘Lng Clas for Ladies aud Gentlemen “ws _ THE nped testi Ss. they ba ngland, France, In ae History: Geography, FLY ae AM YNN, A.M, PRIVAT TOR, ete. W. Cor. th xtrocts northwnat. suited Wed: German, + Point, ding phy nell sad Terms tn advat 2 INGTON AND ARUASEND ¥. Ruebsam, 2 re, and at Mra. Selma, west, Monday Nortin 1. Yeteeet, Baltimore, al nt for Indies. Penn. ave. ay: Regular Clams = wtrvet ai ALL THE nd That ‘Ali business confidential Ladies and ¢ We cents cach. 4U3 L street between 4th aud to northwest. PROFESSIONAL. OH WHAT A MISTAKE ysuffer with Bu . When by calling onfltre. Dr. Chiropodist, you caa have them | Ser esis here by request of son New York and By:ton, E. €. COLLILRE'S treated et her office in . ch ai Classical hi + vs Will re-open Sept: mber 28, 1882, at 1538 I street northwest, Full corns of teachers. For fu i cular, address -» Principal, M REMONT (GRADUATED AB zai Tescher at the Academie of Paris University of France) has resumed her lessons in the French Lan- and in Classes. Lerms reas. abe, SPENCERIAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, LINCOL Prue Bulain:, corner Sth and D streets, “Day and | Evening Sessions, for the education of sons and ach } ters, and men and w n for self --upport and real life, Office foe $i per iit aaa | The branches taught are the Engiisn Lam " hese Arithmetic; Spencerian Practical Penmaueniy D* Ss DE’ ST. | Bookkeeping by sing € and double entry, adapted 439 9TH ‘Y NORTHWEST. | every variety of business; Business Practice, whole- Otice hours Yam. to 5). im. Teeth extracted with- | sale, retail snd havking, employing the methots out pai: | accounts, business papers and correspondence, adoy , Waseulie E most eminent Chiropodial estaiishment, Willsrd’s Hotel. is patronized by hours 8 a.m. to6p. j by leading bux new houses: Physical and Voeal Gul= D ture: Political nay: Commercial Law, Business 1G | Ethics. Special departments in Elocation, Phonogra- sh novements, Magnetic ‘Treatment, &e a | phy and Dri Tnchange of best anton. Ga F street northwest RESUMED HIS t 1209 Pennsylvania a AUGUST 28TH, for the recention of students for the year, day or evening. Tuition:—sy the year, in Tuouthiy inetsiliuents of $10, od. by the quarter. twelve Weel 8 rs year echolarship for day or eveuing, pur- Wednesday, fro:u 1 to 4 p.m. GEO. | Thame) soa jcan schular es enitering, $50; evening tuition, three me rina eine ay? Of Maryland | $16: evenine tuition, one mouth, $6. The see. tee fomely it sirated Collewe Anuouncement, containing JonN ERED ove ayy A xa R ¢ . Tall intocsiaction, cent free upon application by mail, oF ‘ated with him his eon, Dr. WILLIA f, late | ce othice. : ‘ew York, will resume the practice of Medics. and HENRY C. SPENCER, Principal, Surgery in this city. Residence and office. 2022 G@ | SARA A. SPENCEK, Vice-Principal DONCH WILL RESUME LESSON! E VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRAL. IN- on and after MONDAY, September i call or address 608 A street, street nurthwest. “Down town office, **May Building.” | o: wh RANDALL PARSONS, Dexrist, | 7th street northwi over Ballantyne's Book Goll “nil:nws a apectalty. Gas’ given day ‘or ‘ASHINGTON, EGIATE INSTITU Boarding and Day School for Noung Lad Children, re-opens September 18. 1882. For me guply to Me. 2. D; BUTCHER and Mise M. C; DOUG- 8, Principals, 1023 and 1027 12th street northwost.a6 PISS AMY LEAVITT, OF BOSTON, TEACHER Tustrus NM) ST, ¥ Sraeer Nonrawesr. by the Hurd System, for the painloas ex- : a LBOTT, DENTIST, No. i ‘of Voea! and mental Music and Harmony. its teandiite: Toth Tan St ok OLAS | Siimester Kemet aatnet Lee oe Jang” | teuber ath, a RTIFICIAL TEETH MADE BEFORE AND IN- USICAL ACADEMY, 1 oid A’ serted Immediately after extracting vatural tee MN Somer ¥ ita nplendid success.” Modern mn and ekill c branches of Dentistry. Moderate fees. Dit. DUN- | _ Studies réeumed September ws NALLY, 1321 F street northwest, al ATIN, GREEK, MATHEMATICS, NATURAL SCE OWLAND DENTAL ASSOCIATION, No. 211 | ed Tar Coe ny ce in cine. Seales 43 strect, three doors north of Penn: ia | Prepared for Colloge and. tive examinations. enue, cast side. ‘Hereafter ‘extractions’ under | Address A. JANUS. A.M. Nitrous Oxide, without pain, will be $1 for the first | tooth and_50 cents each additional tooth at the same | ——— sitting. Extractions without gan, 50 cents each tooth. Columbian Colter, 7 P PICTURE Bent “Artiseial feeth "tusde, $1" per “eet GOL weak SCRAP PICTURES. Amalgam Fillings, fron. $1 to $5. AN work warranted | =—— = = first-clas. Have administered’ Nitrous Oxide to over | JOR SCRAP BOOKS, SCREENS, POCKETS, CAS- 30,000 patients, tles, Christmns Presents, auy Decorative Work, also Carns coming by car will be furnished free tickets | Tissue Payer. Borders, XuakCarda, Wonders for jivist= toand from the office. m2 | maa, 3, 9A GOULD, 421 btu etre." See adv. ood. ATTORNEYS. =| ,{CONoMIcaL AND SAFE. NRREW ee 1 ‘ TTORNEY-aT-Law, — 13 Tehaistana Avenng, near City Tull; moved to roma WEAVER, KENGLA & €0."S @-6m Wand 13, Gunton Building. LAUNDRY SOAP z HAS, J. GOOCH, 7 ICAL, BECAUSE IT ISPURE; BrINa@ SOLICITOR OF PATENTS, aia cde ieee 7a SUCH 1 Coeronat Law and! zpert, St Cloud Butlding, oth | FREE FROM ALL ADULTERATIONS, SUCH AS and F streets. Good work, good references, moderate | MARBLE DUST, SOAPSTONE, PIPE CLAY, SILI- changes. nzi-6m_ | CATE, &c., WHICH ARE USED T0 ADD WEIGHT T. FITZGERALD, AND BULK, AND WHICH QUICKLY WEAK OUT © ATTORNEY-at-na Ww. AND ROT THE CLOTHES. 60, Corcoran Building. IT IS SAFE, BECAUSE IT 18 MANUFACTURED eetioes taal tee hares £23_| FROM STRICTLY PURE MATERIALS, VIZ: STEAM. ¢ H. MILLER, REFINED TALLOW (PREPARED BY OURSELVES), N. Attorney-at-Law, PALM AND COCOANUT OILS; WHILE ON THE ‘Rooms 2 and 4G: B sieseeee CONTRARY MANY OF THE SOAPS ON THE MAR- KET ARE MADE FROM GREASE PROCURKED FROM. THE CARCASSES OF PUTRID DEAD ANIMALS PUT UPIN BARS, ANDEVELY BAR BEANDED THUS ENDANGERING LIFE AND HEALTH. WITH OUR NAME. FOK SALE BY GROCERS GENERALLY, AND WHOLESALE AT OFFICE, #13 3244 WATER STREET, GEORGETOWN, D.C. | LARK HOUSE, A~BURY PARK, NEW JER: is in readiness for at reduced rates until June. 1883, It iy heated by furace, has gag in every mi; Lent board; cbeerft rroundings Home’ gomitorts. A very desirable place for families. mn. LIXIR OF THE TRADES. E (GBSON BROTHERS, Ee a BP EEF OE PRACTICAL BOOK JOB PRINTERS, iB AA BBB KE KK ew BSP ‘Rania aveate Weskhagtans ». C. yo eek P fees & eieapeee An Infallible Remedy for LXGS7ES SINDERY, 1012 FENN. AVE PLATS conte MALAuIA, CHILLS AND FEVER. Inail prompuy attended to. M-W-MENEAL: Pomat-ae | Sold by Drigwletn, “Price 50 cents per botile ol? = W, © Wheatiers _UNDERTAKERS. ° RED. SI Ni AND DRY FuXDentta tit i283 1a ‘et, bet. Mand X n.w. SCOURING ESTABI ISHMENT. Bodies embalned ‘and prepared’ for transportation. | Wim eall for and deliver Wé in the Die+ Residence at place of Vusiuesa. ‘dé | trict upon cy nado hr en eek Use ae we Sa a i ibrnpnon sre, SUPPLIES. Hacks and Doggies tor hire. “Sap Pome: | ash 10 QLD sO Jee wm. Be sy Ivania avenue northwest. n238-im* H D. B. A . ARR, JOE GESENAL FURNISHING UNDERTAKER, . Koy reason aes nee, Ree ImnORSER AND TAILOR J uAN B. WRIGHT, 1837 ‘Torts DEne Nekrawery, ‘Telephone Connection. ‘UGUSTUS: nF, UNDFRT. Xo. 316 Pennayivanis avenuenorthwest, 1211 Pennsylvania Aveuue Northwest. For first-cless work and autistic tal'oring plac: your orders with the leading house of Washington, ome Sas.3 dani IRD MANNA KEEPS CANARIES ‘And Cures Diseases, 10-268 ‘Witten Cents at Draggiste,

Other pages from this issue: