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ame e > "A i Ness, AUCTION SALES. THIS AFTERNOON. THREE MEN WiI0 HAVE STRANGE: LY DISAPPEARED IN BOSTON. PUT IN A BECEFVEN’S HANDS, The Co-operative Dress Association Cleves Its Doors. ‘The Schools of Lendon. One of the most interesting lighta In which the Engliah people can be viewed, though a AUCTION SALES. FUTURE Days STEAMERS. &c. we SCHEDULE. — Onc Promises to Meet His Wife in a ~ eee that ‘BROS., Anctioneers, FISHER Estate Auctionsers, | _ Steamers ARROWSMITH and Ege, Sus eee Seats Deans Tight in whi few care to examine them, i =. = nce 2, FRE 6 OO. et Baa sacs | eae SPP aie! Third wands from His Ship, ad | yom ine xew York Sun, Dec. 27. bolts cece gees iene eases, of STOWN. BG No tbe eTGR On THOSE BEAL ESTATE, OF STMEER NOR an on MONDAYS, Not One is Seen Agaim Cen CO eatin.” He one whe We” | undestyl cara'pagrayenien of wiatia aeatinad sean | _ SECOND BTSERE. ROnr Aveeod Een AND VEE THURSDAY. Yor Cursioman S ‘Bt. The Co-operative Dress Association at 31 and | tonds to s general knowledge of the educa- By virtue of a deoree of the Supreme Court of MONT AVENUE NORTHWEST. bey wharves, and interm: ge 53 west 23d street opened its store as usual for .- | tobe the standard and leading specific of the whole | pi«! jt of Gotamutia, pared on the Sth day of De: fel ‘The underriened, trustees, in equity cause of, DAVE "On GATCRD AT, or Currioman, A telezram from Boston to the New York Sun business yesterday morning, and stead tional systems of the different agemite wide world, for kidney and liver &o. Mra, D. comber,, A. D. 1882. "in Cause, No, 7, 202, Bguity Andrew 5. joyce ve} Wai | ardtown, and intermediate {returning 4 Pays that several men have disappearedin a most | $ ming, custo tries is ignorant of the national educational | >) senso oket iy wherein Margaret L.. Ramsey is complain- aS i oll at public auction, DAYS. Unaccountable and mysterious manner within | Went in and out Seen Altcustomers } policy and practice of the French or of the | " --rariy test iets seine eutitel Gok ee fienet rasteee, gorctnted bya forsee decre mead | Day oF uae ABY, 1800, FOUR OCLC taterredighe toting seers TOMER, ee eee the past few days in that city. Last Saturday a | were then requested to leave the store. the | Germans, scarcely any one in this couD- pitty of the kidneys and enlargement of the liver, and | fiom “at HALE EAGT: TOUS COLO Be there | pert cf lots Lettered B and C. in Dal ‘street forty sud intermediohe faethe geet eee aetecanat, OF oung man who has charge of a manufactory in | 400FS Were fastened, and upon one of the glasses try bas definite infermation with regard | tho kidney disoaso came me so fast and suddenly PAY, the ZWENTY-SECOND DAY OF DECEM- | four inches from the southwest corner of said square, | FAIDATE fer Une Maden ee 2 " of the 23d street door was pasted a small paper » BER, A.D. 1882, parts of lots numbered one hundred | running thence north ry feet three and intermediate Inpdings, return S4 TURDAYS. ; ledford came to Bostom with his wife, left her with the word “Closed” written on it. Ail day to the English system, or can give» an! that before I was ely aware of the cause of my | and ec greys a7) and one. Baeared abe Po thence nc her’y. pe , wity Vermont ons For information: apply to Agents. Bt a dentist's at noon, and engazed to meet her long ladies tried the doors in the e‘fort toenter, | intelligent opinion upon it. Per- | trouble I became bidly bloated, and my body and limbs ee iguatreet ga Bd rtrect. Sine dirteen i oe ler ie woapeton | ai JOBN paar. sOuy 8. wom, &t the depot at 12:45 o'clock. He went to the | and several times they gathered in groups and | haps this Is because attention has been _at- | very much swollen, so that it was with great difficulty bya story Brick Building. metes and Bounda Sommient svenan, which jo fteen feet from, th ealley ————— a treasurer of the company, drew $350 to pay the | exchanged surmises as to. what was the matter. | tracted to the systems of the French and Ger- and severe pain that I was able to walk any. I became Shar ah ot alg ad ay om — a Srey He aay fonrtares Past gt ta XN T. VERNON! MT. VERNONI! help for the week, and has not been seen since. | The rumor soon spread along 23d street that the | inans by the discussions on educational matters Greadfulty troubled by being short breathed, so that | for the District of Columbia, ches: thence south twenty-cicht feet three and a-| == i t in the habit of drinking strong | CO-operative Dress Association nad. failed, and | which have been going on in these countries for jven « alight exertion Or w little exerct id tice ine Terms of srle: One-third cash, of which $100 must SatteLoent, mecdae Lat ee = es was = z/ he ts ; iS = in st aj | W388 in the hands of a receiver. The entire | severat years; it may be, also, because there is a | °Ve28 xertion or a: exercise wou! e be paid attime of sale, and the balance in notes at one, street; thence along ora iquors, did not gamble, had no debts, receive pod salary, aad was so thoroughly devoted to bis wife, to whom he had been married less than & year, that he had not spent an evening except in her company for more than two months. Mr. Charles Seymour, for a number of years Connected with the Howard Athenanm, and durin ier Part of the present season nager for Mr. William Parris, of r combination, has been miss- ing since last Friday night, and his relatives and friends are exceedingly anxious and fear he has met with foul play. When the Proctor combination called In about a fortnizht ago he returned to Beston with it, and immediately Bet about orzanizing a strail company to play Muluvon’s Pienic” on the read. He engaged ple and latd out a route through New rk state, Intending to open on Christmas evening in Newburgh, on the Hudson. All his pre ations were made, the company was re- ie everything was ready on Friday except that Muidoon’s donkey, which plays so amusing apart in the “had not been procured. Mr. S out that day to hunt up aa He has not been seen or | He heard of since. was in ood health and Bpirits, was not financially embarrassed. had but Uitle money with him, was not in the habit of | @rinking to exces is no Known rea- fen for his pi . Mv. Seymour is | 5 teet Tinches in he hs about 160 pounds, and |: aplexion. When last seen he had or Las' lark suit of cl ry Friday He Lock, captain of the schooner Admiral. of Gloucester, got ready to fail from Commereial wharf, but having furzot- en something, went on shore to procure it. fe told the crew he would return in a few min- Utes, but has not been seen since. re am from Canada says that ‘ the missing theatrical agent, Yas found in a demented condition on a railway train at Toronto, Ont., yesterday. ED BY KE HER LOVER. A Curious and Fatal Accident and a Young Man’s Grief. A special dispatch to the Philadelphia Times from Syracuse, N. Y., December 26, says one of | the saddest tragedies known to this communi ¥ ‘Was that of this afternoon, when Miss Imogene Lewis, a respected and beautiful young lady, met her death almost instantly from the acci- dental discharge of her lover's revolver. She been but time to add a few words to her be- rothed before breathing her last. Miss Lewis lived in Diamond street, and had received the ldre=ses of George W. Gates for some time, and their wedding was announced in the near future. Preparations of an elaborate nature Were already under way. This afternoon Mr. Gates cailed upon Miss Lewis, and at her solici- tation was rearranging some of the evergreens at the chandelier. He had mounted a step- ‘adder and was engaged with the decorations when a thirty-two calibre revolver fell from his outside coat pocket and in its descent struck the ladder A cartridge in one of the chambers Was exploded. Miss Lewis was standing near and the ball struck hersn the neck. She fell to the floor, but before Mr. Gates could reach her @rose, but only to fall into his arms with the : . George, you have killed me! you have killed me! He =upposed her exclamation was caused by fright and endeavored to quiet her, but she ae to the bullet hole in her neck and asked | for her =melling salts. She was able to walk to asettee, but expired almost immediately. Mr. Gates was fraatic with grief and rushed into the Street 'ke a mad man and gaye the alarm. To the coroner. who was summoned, he said, be- tween his sobs: “I loved and cherished the Youns lady and she perfectly worshiped me.” When asked about the weapon he said: “I| have not been accustomed to carry a revolver. I | Douzht this one to shoot dogs in the outskirts | | | of the city when out riding. On Sunday Istarted | for a drive and slipped my revolver into my out- | side coat pocket and it remained there till to- day, when thisterribie catastrophe has overtaken me.” No one was in the room at the time of the tragedy, but Mr. Gates’ account of the affair is fully credited. He has the sympathy of the entire community. the Snow. An old lady by the name of Pareux. who lived With her dauzhter, Mrs. Joseph Gavoille, In Dingwian township, near the Dark Swamp creek, Rear Milford, Pa., was found dead in the woods Rear her home on Christmas day. A coroner's inquest was held, when it was shown that the ars old. had | | | going ‘ vut half a mile distant, and beccauing bewildered. in the woods had p. 1d. The snow around her for some distance was trodden down, showin, she had tried to keep warm by walking. and | hear her was a pile of brakers and brush which she bh thered either fora bed or fire, but been used for neither. a aa ‘The ‘Fraiuing of an Artist. | aL ynell in $+. Nicholas. h Thompson (Mra. Butier) was pos usknown to the great public when her ” took the world by storm, and it was "4, 10 be wondered at that the surprise at wees, Jolned to tie common love of won- rise to many mistakes In regard to One dejusion it is well to put an end the outset opinion that her sudden | “ose Was not ded by long and careful | Tn fact, Mrs. Butler has been a worker | af tive. t of instruction consisted | hed to | nile she practised draw- | ing and sketching. A little questioning at the ead of each a was, of course, necessary to test whether the pursuit of art had or had not | been tuo absorbing. Undoubtedly the success of this plan was mainly due to his own genth i patience. Upon the whole the system 4d to work weil, aad-it was no doubt eitenablet her tather to more advanced Instruction ‘bie without the con- ad explanation which a reader ly. better than any other teacher, He urdertook the whole edu- | at ais dangiiters, viving up his time, and | much that otherwise | tivated nature would have enjoyed, for, of conscientiously fulililing hls self eating aloud th Anstil inte her ming father’s friendship with Charles Dick- need be recorded here, except that it | and that it waa iced him to the lady Cho Dickens who who became his second wife and the mother of | the battle painter. He was the confidant of the } eugage*nent, the life of the wedding, and, with Mrs. Dickens, the companion of the élosing | month of a long weding journey. About sevea or it years later he met m: s again; this time they were living wit! their two littie b prison wg the id pale peaks of the Apennines, in an old pal- pone Villa de Franchi. A great billiard room, hung with Chinese designs, was Elizabet! ‘Thompson's first school-room; and there Charles Dickens, upon one of his Italian visits, burst In upon a lesson In rultiplication. It’ was the first and almost the only time I ever saw him. In dim remembrance, he abides as a nolsy, v Fosy, very energetic, and emphaticaily ity, though his person itself is quite ‘ten; and the fact that nine times nine are ity-one has remaioed fh the giris’ minds as one of the most unmistakable items of arithme- tic, accompanied by the clap of hands and the cordial shout with which he it. ‘The two children never went to school. and had no other teacher than their father—except | tradesmen, but all remained apparently under | The leather and springs of the cushions and | time soothes the still excited imagination on | all over the country were wont to put a fez on force of elerks were folding goods, and up stairs Secretary Darley Randall and Treasurer J. M. Hoyt were busy with the receiver, Mr. Freling H. Smith. Mr. Hoyt was subsquently put in charge of the store by the receiver. In the afternoon Deputy Sheriff Thomas H. Sullivan appeared with attachments tor £6,000, issued on the suits of RB. J. Smith and Philip Seiulhoff. He was told that he had no right there because the concern was already in the hands of a receiver, but he said he thought he would stay. According to statements made by the direc- tors, the trouble has been coming on for months, Trade since the spring had been very bad, and they trusted that they might regain lost ground “in the Christmas and holiday tramfic. In this they were disappointed. Cns- tomers seemed to go anywhere else. They would still have kept on, if they had not learned that several suits had been begun against them and that attachments were about to be executed. A meeting of the board of directors was held on Monday afternoon. The directors were Miss e Field, who had been president till about a fortnight before; Secretary Darley Randall, Treasurer J. M. Hoyt. J. A. Jameson and W. F. Drake. They decided that it would be unwise to aliow the stock to be attached for the benefit of a few of the creditors, and that it would be best to turn the concern over to a receiver, so that all creditors would fare alike. After pass- ing a resolution to this effect the board resigned ina body. The retiring board of directors re- ported the a: abil ies = mainly ot the on hand, some $9,000 due from customers «] a few thousand dollars inthe Gartield na- al bank. Miss Field said that the closing tie was the result of the bad_trade of the fall sea- soa, and had been precipitated by the action of certain small creditors in pushing their suits. The Co-operative Dress Association was opened for business on October 4, 1881. It occupied the large new brick building, five stories high, at 31 and 83 West Twenty-third street, and running through to Twenty-fourth street. “The incorpo- rators were E. C. Stedman, Isaac H. Bailey, J. M. Jameson, T. B. Musgrave and le in England Miss Kate Field had conceived the idea of the co-operative asso- ciation, and she brought over Mr. Anthony Pul- brook, who had managed many co-operative stores there, to start this one. A subsequent quarrel caused his return to London. Mr. Dar- ley Randall was made secretary, Mr. B. Y. Pippy treasurer, and Mr. John Wales general manager. A great crowd was present at the opening. The concern was a joint stock company, Iinited, with a capital of 250,000, divided into 10,000 shares of $25 exch. These shares sold rapidly for a time, and $230,000 was raised among 6,000 subseribers for preferred stock. A very large part of the shares was taken by officers ot the army and navy or their wives, and much of the | remainder by women living out of town. Espe- cial privileges in buying were to be secured to stockholders. At the end of the first six months the concern had cleared about 26,000 protits. In May following the late board of directors was elected, and Manager John Wales resigned ‘The secretary and treasurer received salaries. Miss Field received no regular salary, but the directors yeted her about £3,000 or 4,000 a year for her services. It is said that she has not drawn all of this, and that besides she has advanced to the assuciation all her savings, 50 that next to H.B. Claflin & Co. she is the largest creditor of the association. This is exclusive of a large block of stock which she holds. The building was leased tor three and a half years of Arnola, Constable & Co. at 220,000 a year. This | was a heavy rent, and subsequently the third floor was sub-let to dealers in shoes and other the control of the association. There were re- ception rooms, a circulating brary, and a res- taurant where food was sold to customers. +e Cairo After the War. From the London Globe. The rolling stock of the railway station has certainly not improved since I wasin Egypt. seats are the worse for wear. The oil cloth on the floor is all cut up. Absolutely nothing has suffered in my house from the four months’ neglect. As regards dust, some of those old offices Dickens describes were clean compared to the thick brown coating which covered everything in my rooms. The two bed-rooms and dining-room were cleared of it somewhat in view of my return, but there is @ week’s work of cleaning and turning out to be done in the house before it is again respectable. f found everything just as I had left it on June 21, the dirty te i “dat our last meal, some fossil bread and butter, a tes-pot with mouldy tea leaves in it, and cobwebs trom chair to chair. and from taile to floor. ete. The sheets, towels and other coverings used to throw over piano and other furniture looked like old | Issther in celor, and one could noi tell what eojects were until shaken free from this cloth- ing of dust. The broken windows, of course, It in latterly no end of thi Twas glad wehad taken down and earefully folded eyery curtain in the house before leavi 1 that nevet ‘be forgotten oceasion. come out now fr and clean, and Be: vertails were pleut seem to have done any damage carpet aud sheet [had thrown over the p tremblingly, expecting to find the instru Innceent of red cloth or felt, but, won t» relate, everything ct. a few chords, the tone was as rich as ever, and in good tune. I breathed agai played “God Save the Queen.” The Eng- | lish horses, I noticed, were sadly reduced in flesh, and looked all like old animais. Many | troopers were mounted on horses taken from | the Arab cavalry, bearing the Egyptian war | office brandon the flank. Soldiers making their he mt do not | I took off the | and | | way to or from the can bestrode the Calro donkeys, and looked, of course. ridiculous, es- pecially the long ‘cavalrymen, booted ‘and | spurred. Beyond a few houses having been robbed by unfaithful servants, who thought | their padroni would never return, Cairo has in | no wise suffered from the state of affairs. Every now and then (in Alexandria at least.) a ramor gets about that there is going to be a row, and the Europeans at nightfall keep within their houses. A similar rumor that the Christians are going to pitch into the Arabs gains ground in| the native circles, and they stop at home. Nelther has any foundation, and all ends in smoke. These scares are but natural, and until both sides, such rumors may from time to time crop up. Native dogs and cats, especially dogs, are few about the city now, The Arab Troughs one dog, and something like a European hat or helmet on another, and call them Khediye and Seymori (Seymour), The last word, I am in- formed, is another Arab term for dog or mon- grel; then these dogs were dragged about with cords round their necks, aad subjected to every species of turture, until finally they were dis- patched—itence the scarcity of di Many eats died, as numbers of fainilies left, and the cats could not al! find food. _ ——+ 0+ Idahe Selfishness, From a San Francisco Paper. don't you go there!” he said, as he turned ground on the passenger who announced that he was going through to Idaho. “They are the most seiiish people you ever saw.” “How?” ‘Well, take my case. Iran a witdcat under a schoolhouse and discovered a rich mine, and yet they wouldn't let me do any blasting under there during school hours for fear of disturbing the children. I had to work at night out, and even then the bodles made Fl tor the coffins and their mother for music, andthe usual professors for * im later years. And depot happily In thetr beautiful Geno- home, or her —— among the pictar- esque Italian lekes,or witzerland, or among the Kentish a and the parks of Sur- @ more than Bedaween movement,) Elizabeth's of drawing was never , not for aday. one central occu | schools, Such schools were instituted and flour- neglected classes, and herding them to- | gether, without any admixture of bet- ter class, better dressed and better ; children would be repelled ai would find ac- | Commodation elsewhere.” | garded as one of the most efficient in the world. genera®bellef that the English aystem is exactly similar to our own—the model after which ours has been patterned—and, therefore, does not need to be examined by Americans. Whatever isthe reason, it is: certain that Americans are very ignorant of the nature of the English edu- tional system, and, indeed, are altogether un- acquainted with its essential features. The best type of the common schools of Eng- land is naturally found in the schools of the city which is the type of England, morally and so- cially. A knowledge of the nature of the Eng- lish educational ‘tem, and of its essential fea- tures, will, therefore, be best zained by examin- ing into the educational couditions exhibited by the present state of the schools of London. The London common sehools are of two kinds. First, what are known as **Board” schools; and, second, what are called “voluntary” schools. The “Board” schools are the public schools proper. As their name indicates, they are schools operated by an educational board— founded at the pablic cost, and supported for the public, The term “voluntary schools” is also self-defining—these schools being of private or “voluntary” origin—established by Individu- als in competition with the “Board” Schools, or public schools proper. The latest statistics show that there are Inthe whole of London 716,000 children between three and fourteen years requiring elementary educa- tion, and this number increases yearly at a rate of abont 14,000. The actual number of children attending the schools is more than 100,000 less, being 613.000. Of these, 350,000 attend the ** Board” schools, and 230,000 the “voluntary” sehools, ‘y education in London ts not, as, doubt- less, nearly all Americans suppose, free. A small attendance fee, payable at convenient tines and in nominal instalments, is charged. This will account for the fact that more than one-third of the ehildren of London attend the “voluntary” or private schools, in preference to the “board” or public schools; since, as neither class of schools is tree, many parents choose to send their children to the schools which, being the more exclusive, are supposed to be the more ecient in instruction and to offer the greater inducements in point of associations. Although an attendance fee is charged in the London public schools, It is not to be supposed that the privileges of education are denied the children of parents who, from extreme Indigence or other excusable causes, are unable to pay for their tuition. For reasons which have been deemed good and proper {t has been thought unwise to make the public schools free; and every parent who sends his child to school_-and all are required by law to do so, compulsory education being in vogue in London—is expected to pay the nominal sum fixed by the “Board.” But in cases of real poverty the fees are freely remitted, and no child is excluded from chools ‘on account of non-payment of at- tendance fees, unless it is known that its parents are fully able to pay. To show how freely and completely remission is granted to the children of indigent pa- rents, it will be sufficient to say that twenty five per cent of those attending the “Board” schools are excused from paying the price of tuition. Exclusions of children for arrears and Continued non-payment are sometimes made; but children are never excluded except when it | is known that their parents are abundantly able to pay for them, and willfully will not. A pro- position which has recently been made and is gaining favor,and no doubt willsoon be adopted, proyides that hereafter no child shalt be ex- cluded from school on account of non-payment. Should a parent who fs able to pay refuse to do so, it is proposed that he shall be proceeded against in the courts for the debt, but that his child shall not be removed. This would give the child the advantages of education, and at the same time be a sufficient means of enforcing the law. There Is much discussion at present among English educators as to whether it will not be advisable to abolish the fee system altogether, and make primary education free to all. To an American who looks at the question from a the- oretical standpoint, without knowing anything of educational conditions In England, it would seem that there could be but one opinion. The English view the matter differently, however. Sentiment fs divided, and the burden of opinion is rather hostile than favorable to the change. Without going over the arguments advanced in favor of free schools, with which all Ameri- cans must be familiar, it will be sufficient to give the reasons which govern the opponents of @ chaage. 1. The introduction of a free school system would work destruction to the “voluntary” schools, which, for the most part, are good and efficient and constitute, as a whole, a most val- uable part of the school system of London. The “voluntary” schools being owned by private in- cividuals must depend for their existence upon the payment of tuition fees by pupils them.” If the “Board” schools made great majority of pupils attending the “volun- tary” schools would be attracted to them, and the “voluntary” schools losing their patronage would soon cease to exist. The adoption of the proposition to make jon tree would have the effect of re- lishing, in certain quarters of London, the ceed” schools of former days, thereby lower- the standard of morality, decency and and gaining no atoning advantages the general public. On tiis point an English ter ay aword except In praise of promoters of the old ragged ished before the count: wakened to the neces- | on, and, supplying a | want, they were of great use in their day. ‘Th have now for the most part disappeared, thei places having been tnken by board schools. | ‘Their disappearance is not to be regretted, for | 'y Were founded on a mistaken principle—a principle which would have even worse conse- quences if reintroduced—of collecting trom the | by-ways and lanes of life the poorest and most children. * * * If we were to open few ragged schools we should have crowded into them, from all around, not only the chil- dren of the very poor, whom we are professing to assist, but, to consort with them, those also of the improvident, the dissolute and. the dran- ken; while at the same time, the better class The London common school system ts re- It is an error to suppose that, because it is not a free system, It necessarily lacks the quality of eficieney. The establishment of free schools in Place of the schools of to-day may be possible at some fu'ure time, but it ls manifestly impos- sible at present. ——____+¢+_____ Wigs Coming Into Fashionabie Use. From the Brooklyn Engie. A wig-maker talked me into a secret the other day. It was becoming fashionable, he sald, for women to wear wigs. Wigs are not worn to © ver up baldness or because even the hair is thin, but to save trouble and as a precaution axainst accident. A woman who has straight r is just now out of fashion as far as her head goes, She must crimp her hair and paste it into little waves and Yee around her forehead and down the sides of her head. This requires great care and becomes burdensome after a time. Be- side, hair that is not inclined to curl at all is apt to defy crimping pins and pomade andstraighten out at an inopportune moment. The wig-maker, therefore, has come to the rescue of women so unfortunate as to have rebellious hair. He makes mice pee may be worn on the front of the head, between the line of the forehead and the crown. The false hair fs crimped and never straightens out. Some burglars whoa short time ago broke into a country house at Lachen have, our Brus- and one day the police, who had ing fruitless attempts to trace the cul- Se eee ae See er of sacro tins oube: character almost toexhaustion, and I was so distressed when I | two, and three years from day of sale, with interest at | improvements thereon. STEAMER W. Ww. CORCORAN 6 rercent, payable semi-annually: the deferred pay- | Ard after above sale we will sell lot Jettere’ F, ec- | Leaves 7th street wh , root wharf datiy excest Sunaay) for MM retired nights that I eould not sleep, and was vory rest~ | mons to Besccured rate Seance penne ER” | cording to John Yaly's ecbaivision of Davidecpremubal- | yermn at 10 c.cock a. an. ; returning reaches Washing> erty sd recording af cost sic 0 jenients there Toon, One of my Hmbs eapecially hed = very severe | Eisen pee es bel ee ee ane Oe: | THONG equare No. 3 third ('5) purehase money enh; | _ 30 i. UL. BLARF, Captian. _ nervous pain, which always seemed to be more severe erwise the trustees reserve the right to resell atrick and | bala:ce of purchase money to be paid in equal instal: : STEAMER © NO” LPAVES 7 cost of urchaser, five day ce of | ments in six, twelve, and exhteen inenths from day of | PVEE STEAMER “MATTAN, . at night than at any other time, and would frequently | Sici\recale iit some eee Ee Ne Wee tale tojbearsuterst ‘oat ay of ale formic pur | A geTT, Wart every SENDAY, TUESDAY chy ache so sharpl; arouse was | ton, D. Gy chater to give promiscry notes, with a surety Of Mure- * . Hx! vor pcmcia poeseoen een SUSANNAH A, CRANDELL, tes to be approved by the, Trustees, or purchascr cr | landings etopning at landings in Komiat on Tuesday Yery nervous and uncomfortable all the time, and was wld H street northwest, Brtohasere can pay ail purchase money in cash on day ayy, Chane! Pint and Brom’ Wharf Sundays “sow . i MH. WEIZEL ‘Trustees. sale or on retification thereof by the cou ‘- a + being doctored, and taking all kinds of medicine for this ee wae fiestion of sale and pay: rihaee woner (and | $4 Weduesdaye up.” returning 49 Mantiuugion complaint and that and the other, butall to no good Purpose, until at about the time when I was tired outand somewhat disgusted and almost discouraged with medi- clues and doctors, a relative and highly esteemed friend Monday, For mformation apply to 025, 7.9, 12, 15, 1821 §#~ THE ABOVE SALE IS POSTPONED, OX ACc- count of the rein, until THURSDAY, the TWENTY- EIGHTH DAY OF DECEMBER, A. D. 1882, at same hour and piace. ‘not before) Trustees will convey property to purchaser or purchasers. A deposit of $50 on each piece of prop- Grty wo wail be Fequired when the property is knocked down to the purcharer. ‘The terms of sale must be com- Phed with within ten days from day of sale or property will be re-advortised and sold at cost and risk of pure |. T_JONER, ©. Tyiletrect what EW YORK, ROTTERDAM, AMSTERDAM. y SUSANNAH A. CRAN chaser. All conveyancing at oon: of purchaser. . cwered, Clyde-bait Duta Persuaded me to try Hunt's Remedy. I tegan to ebeemege Ay poe —— - ‘MARIN F NORT Steamy oft tay take ita few days ago, and am happi'y disappointed WILLIAM H. Wisi ZELL, ~* 1 iS AMSTERDAM. Rov TERDAM SCHIEDAM, by the result, for before I had used a bottle of it I bean a a19-a&ae “486 La ave, NOAM E: ALAR. to feel relieved, and soon commenced tosleep splendidly ; Fae the severe nervous pains in my limb, which I had to handle so tenderly, do not appear any more, my head- For Other Auctions Sce 3th Page. Ww Carrying the U.S. Mails to the d stagriande, Joa Pany'e Pier, foctof Sumy wrest Semey OMG Me, reculariy every WEDNESDAY for Kotterdam and ‘s T. rv Ss Bs sterdam, alter sae sche and Dackache have disappeared, Ifea! better every | | Uiviar a deer Spree! te Pe JAPANESE GOOI Firetrap. 310. mronnd cabin, #90 } ; 4 rict of Columta, parsed Februsry 3st 2 . Way, and rest well all night The swelling has disap- | {i<t,° cause Ne so poe JAY GouLp. 4 421 Oru, STE LCET, BET WEE > peared from my body and limbs, I am now able to do 5p ainant and Job 't Wor Glee Srockhe atte, to |“ Scrolis, Lanteron Pana, Deooratiee biter te | my housework comfortably and easily. Hunt's Remedy | #l"8ienec : yreuten en THU sit bre an Hig ders, etc. Also, new Xmas Carts, Scrap Pictures, eto. of A™ LINE. a ‘inly SWENTY-LIGHTH, 2, PR OCLOC S —_=__= === - BCE en the following described real estate, situate and lying ii PROFESSION AL TO AND FROM “Mas, GEO. DAWLEY.” | the City of Washinton, ‘D.C. “and known awiots | ___P’ ROF Es iad, “3 BOSTON AND BALTIMORE, <= Ons, Trontinuon Lath eine eaek Tet tickeee ete pete Tee atta TEE | LVERPOOL, QUEEWETOWN, Safe and Reliable. jmnoved by & commodious Brick, Res idence; end im: | &h Se peor Beep etes 5 Ths Ones eld . “ENS . A. W. Brown, M.D., of Providence. R.I., says: ‘*I In frontof the premises lote Oana Oe eas | Old Stand, 459 Penne; ivanin senor GLASGOW, LONDONDERRY square $83, fronting on 11th streat east. have used Hunt's Restepy in my practice for the past Lots 5. 6, 12 | ¥ ApiEs, and GALWAY. and 13 have a frontage of 65 feet with a depth ot 132 - - sixteon yeara, and cheerfully recommend it as being a feet Bi suche Gach; lot 13 contains about 7,900 square L suffer with Binivan when bs callie on Mrs. Dr, | _ Prepata certifiontes for Friends and Relatt safe and reiablo remedy.” ifriajokanty 28 preerinad ny. darren, Ope: thin | Seam gptahaey, CuroPoush vou can bare Ge | from tne Ga co. foamy fag wa Hunt's Remedy is purely a vegetable compound, scien- egal, Dalancs in’ equal, insta POTN ee aa eas pilrs. Semmes is here by Feauest of some a the eitte Passer direct from «alway. ” liar 7 y er es Sec —— e 1» Ni Yo M 2 ve been wf bse ae Hasally propared by a first-clasa reeistered pharmacist, | Cured by deed of trust.on the premlorss oA depeatt of | Fronted at her office In raid cities, Are, Semnes bias | antare Stil a eaegt awed for safety and 1 and will surely cure all diseases of the kidneys, blad- =o = Cony pepe Gbphese A ‘on the improved lot had Biteen fears of sncceartul penctlan. mK a et passengers. #70 and it 7 a ee . iat nonials of extraord nary cures can rT der, liver and urinary Ongans.—Cox. 3 ELON TOBEINER, had! af office, S01, cor. E and 13th strccts northwest, ae TAR BELLEW rfid TM ak Me. ihe r me Trustees. over flor ‘s. XN 2 ‘ * 3 ARD P. JACKSON, Office hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., or later by int- « General, J.T. COLDWELLs Auct, EME e cotteay | ERE a ” aes Brag: Boston, Mase. ate og FTE (00, 888g THT EER TTT eee = EASE, FEET, Fre — DAILY WALKS IN 7 a ae HES SBus & ca : aa open air and eun-hine oxyxeniz- and deoarbonize rere eT HHO seed Loben EO ee eS ET ENTS Bnd De WET TES eotin heath and longevity | Hour GERMAN LLOTD— : 5 and Da. we e coumegutive years ™ H H OO Sgss' tg Foes. Avctioneer. a Sucoesaful practice in" Washington, : S. pe Hs | ops - Lise Eevean wey Foss, avms, AUCTION SALE OF FORFFITED PLEDGES, nisite treatment for Hard an: Soft Corné, Bunions, The steamers of this company will wall FVERY SAT> TTTT EEE RRR ™ -8ss, < i aud Iuverted Nails, Frost Bite, Vasouler Excres- | CRDAY trom Bower pen at ead . » ‘S rE. Selinger, north wast, ete. Refers t) the moet eminent physi- ey o Fae From New York to ae = Ee Ear BSSg | PEEVE BA pA NOVEMBER THIRTIETH, ngeons., His Chirepodial establisunient, Southamyton and. ‘Bremen, first eabin, £100, earoah at siVi gale will consist of— ; - 2 n . 5 EB Hee EB. Sago | pAlsrerline or radica'and Gente $id Gold Watchoa | $416 feu ave. Opp, Willard Hotel tavatromignd Uy | Si" ey ea HEE E 2 Fey and Stem Winders, Cameo and Solid Gold Sete of | (Sundays 0 acar tot port” Glen foo i por iat oe (Se fetes x » ary, 2 2 Lu‘ties' Jewelry, Solid Gold Gent's and Ladies’ Chains, = 2 = £.Gb-, 935 Fenusylvanis avenue nord < Laces’ and Gent's Gold Rings of all description, Piated KX. STARE PARSONS, DENTIST, Fel 2 Penneyivania aveuue northwest, agent and Solid Silver, and in alone of the lanest stock of 439 9TH STREET NORTHWEST. — Jewelry ever ofteted at public auction. “Also, a very |" Omfice hours 9a.m. to 3 p.m. Testh extracted with CELEBRATED STOMACH five tig of custom-made Qverceats, Ulstera, Suits and | out pain. nls Pants: Ladies’ Dresses and Silk Dress Patterns: Shawls, - = ~ i lo ks, Bibles, Books, Tools, Boots and Shoes, Quilts, a PARSONS, Mi DICAL CTHICIAN, WEEKLY LINE OF STREAMERS: Spreads, Blankets, Carpets, Trunks, &6., avd will con- ‘Galvanic ana Electro Vapor Baths, ——— Br LEAVING SEW YORK EVERY THURSDAR s Fi nae at Pein. until every lor is sold. movements, Maguotic Treatment. 8.” Houre fra roy a BBB ot TTTT ERE RR fT plone alc ne gckess on which the time has expired ed ee a | AND, FRANCE AND GERMANT. BBR fTPT ERR wi 3°55 WU plane take notices SELINGER, Bro He, UNDERSIGNED WAS Kemoaten ug] FO! See 2 5 | 2 . SELINGER, s jee hours nurton, nueylvan ne Roe EoRE BRR, S885 Bs HOLEY, Auctioneer. 28-4 _| avenne, every Wedue-day, frou't to 4 pm GLO, C. B. RICHARD & 00., d BBB ‘ 2 kes Sgsa8 3 WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO., Auctioneers. ee Se n change of Maryland ee, ni ONLY _A FEW DAYS LONGER. = . FRED r ERCY G. SMITH, The Taunton Silver-plate Company echtinne the sale ated with bin hile aon, De WHER TAN ATA ore Toland OL Ponnayivanta avenue. 77 of fine Silver-plated re, French Clocks, Bronzes, yw York, wil! resume the practice of ei Send for ‘ouriet Gazette. - din Rules, Goldstned suseays eae enh pean HAL. | Bureery iu this city Residence sat omens mate | Some ane ___ sa Sets, Sulvers, Wine and Toilet Seta, and over 300 same — es Down town office, “* May Building. | Oh taeed LL Remember that sttmins, vital energy, the life-prin- | ples of rich and eleaent, Triqle a are, to be sold — ciple or whatever you may choose to call the resistant | auction EVERY Day THIS 2K, at the gaics- ANDALL PARSONS. Dentist, Dit room of Walter B. Wiliiains & Co., corner 10th aad ‘7th etrect northwest, over Bailantyne’s Book 3. Power which battles against the causes of disease and | Penusyivan: avenue, aes Store. Gold fillings s specialty, Gas «iven day or CQNPANY LIMITED, death, is the grand safeguard of health, It is the gar- Sf WaLvee Bo Ati Se night. = as 215 = —— ria EBER, ENVIS" rison of the human fortresa, and when it waxes weak, ) MK. 01 cas Grass Uomieweees the true policy is to throw in reinforcements. In other TO-MORROW, ‘Vitalized Air by the Hurd System, for the painless words, when such an emergency occurs, commence = traction of Teeth. aucd q 7 EF KS & CO., Anctioneers, dreds of famtites, Bottle in front of the course of Hostetter’s Bitters. For sale by Druggista |W '¢30 Houleinn a nee oatte City Post Office. Dace Sc aC TS DENTIBT. Bo. 637 30a Se 4 and Dealers, to whom apply for Hostetter’s Almanac | -»,.., Se - ité brauchés. ‘Teeth inserted $7 per sct. All work war- $60, $80 and $100 for passeneer accommodations. SPECIAL AND POSITIVE SALE OF 500 preces | it bra Sanid | _stecrage at very low telee te ee eee ee for 1883. ic paps AN 5 UNDERGARMENTS, = erro! and Queciistow aud all otuctparisof’ Lusnsah a A TTTE 3 es Srhetant meiately efter extracting nataral tect, | °Throwch bills of Iden given for Belfast, SWITCHES, BRAIDS, RUCH MISS’ WOOL | vita splendid au . Modern methods in p and « 2 15° O'MEARA’S LIQUID 15°} YRS Licks EMsho; WOMEN'S, | Uranches of, Dentistry. Modersts tee DE Lo Hee Makerere nee porte on the Conlinent Fs) z ME AND CHILDEE MEN'S | NALLY, 1321 F street horthwest. cil or frei and pateaaeapviy atthe Companys FFF II <Sss, H sa OWLAN BSOCEA ; 0. + Be Green, or steerure and cabin S883 R Ts, OWLAND DENTAL ASSOCIATION, No. 211 | No. ioe cea tn Fr I Sgss. find D_ LADIES' LINEN © HANDKERCHIEFS, 45 Street, three doors north of | Pennaylvanta | BIES BIGELOW & Co., 005 Teh street, W FR 8 H 11H A VARIETY OF OT GOODS; TWo- | avenue, east side. lereafter extractions under | °° vienxon sy BROWN & CO., Now York: B tt Ssss8 H PLATE GLASS SHOW CASES, &e., Nitrous Oxide, without pain, will be # for the first | O45 ‘Messrs. OTIS BIGELOW & OO. aco Fre | | At auction, within our suesrooma, E tooth and 50 cents each additional at the sams | OFt,, ‘0S three 5 @ GL BEE ING, DE Dee cag ENTX-NISTH, COMMEN yee —- ge ey conte each, tooth, g L UU RR ‘N O'CLOCK. — — : i WEEKS, Salesman, Amsizam Fillings, fron. $1 to $5." All work warranted C68 tere “owl Bee Vag teeta fe mp py ‘Witrous Oxide to over ou RAILROADS. = ot (katlduts couing by car will be furnished free tickets j & OHIO RAILROAD. qmerranted the, strongest, toughest and m< oe LE OF IMPROVED REAL ESTATE | tound trom the office.) mai E MODEL FAST. AND THE ONLY LIM@ Baird, of the U.S. Fish Commission, Giueseyers: | Oo ET NORTH, Neak FLF.LEESTH << Ea AST AND THE WEY ing solid aa a Hock! Wood, Paver, Leather, ¢ virtug of a decree of the Supreme Court of the, SPECIALTIES. NNEY COUPLE] STEEL RAILSE Galle BSUS USS samnave ready for metant use Used | pistclet of Columbia, in equity cause No. #303, fi —— —— Fy DO TARE, EYER Departinents, Cubinet Marble-cufters and buu- PangLy oe Ferry et al Gated December 11, 1582 ME. BLOOKE TELLS: ALL THE EVENTS OF 88: y SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12rn, 1 LEA’ # LIFE. Ail tial and Gen- E WASHINGTON. the TWE} confiden tlemen 50 cents each. 403 L street. between, Me Gove NTY-THIRD DAY sth and ; Cincinnati and St, ‘Louis Fast B: Bile undo amaael saugptied py? ale e- Sate | DP" DECEMBER, In, “at FOUr Oc OK P.M. | Stietreots port west “Ase t Siam Care tonctinat, St Latent pes y Part of Lots No. Tl and 12 of Davidson's subdivision of — = de =| x iieott ‘ay Stations. ISL Remsen rene ele siaton: DIO. equate No, 216, in the city of Washinuton, in the Diss BSS, EAC%, WORLD RENOWNED FORTUNE | 10-90 BALTIMORE EXPRESS. Headquarters for that auctor fers te One That | trict of Uoiumbia, becinuiteon Lett ot fetes Teller, Medical, Business Cairvoyant, born with timore, Ani and Way (Piedmont, Stra. 5 GUN! ‘That $1 CORN KNIFE, endorsed by all | {fom the northwest corner of said square sud running | eecond sight, telle without questioning memes burs, Winchester, ownaud Wav, vin Relay.) Chiropodists. “Sporting Goods Cataldcuevent postpaid | Hevee cust 14 fect 2 inches; Heres south Ol fect toa | events “yersonal Gescriptions « charkcler ef” abitere | 47 45—BALTIMORE EXPRESS. anywhere, thr: Hey: thence wiat 14 feet 2 inches: thenes | friends, Satisfaction guaranteed. 990 E strost. d13-3w Sua —Hornt of Rocks and Way ations. aS ; a 51 feet to the beginning, improve © | eS eG: LADELIAIA, > ORK AND BOSTON Sold slob W. ©. O'MEARA. 215 Penna. eve: _o5\_ | Hip feet to the pestnain, proved Uy 6 oe Be EE |g g@XERESS. Farior Gas to Now Yorke FLCONOMICAL “AND SAFE. cash on ie day of eal ap naee money fo Bensid in | 1 pClare at Ronee Ist aa tee Seamed | Bs genown and’ at Posnt of Rocks for Fredericks) monta, at six and twelve months, with intercet thereon, ce, India apd | 19:00—Baltnory Hyattville and Laurel 1x1 tebe secured by approved notes or Londa to the satie- = Bt ne a [Swe eecyeed Ju pe WEAVER, KENGLA & CO.'3 fection of the Trustee, | Alleonverancing at purchaser's RTSON, THE MOST RELIABLE AND ani . On Sundays stops at all stations, iI Years experience, will LAUNDRY scuttyies 2 : ' 10:00—BALTI MORE EXPLESS, (stops at Hyattaville SOAP 416 Sth atooet norte, Jonvest established Specialist in this city. with 20 ‘aud Laurel.) c c jarantee a cure in all di-eases of | 439.1224 Shetcaan, Ix FCONOMICAL, BECAUSE IT ISPURE: BEING | 1HOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer,“ did-co&ds fhe Uniuary Oncins, Nerve ag and Seminal Weakness, ve epee Honaaatos tthe ec FREE FROM ALL ADULTERATIONS, SUCH AS | §2-7THE ABOVE. SALE IS POSTPONED UNTIL | Can to Shheciond Wena Gaicdinn treed and Chicago. Lye MARBLE DUST, SOAPST PIPE CLAY, DR URESBAY. JANUARY THIRD, 1883, sumo hour | {Spin at is a ae ays from EPRI e Naltmors, licott Cty, Aunapolia, Way DATE, } ace, by ordyr of the Trustee to the leading physitiane ‘of Be'timors: ‘Main offer i 2 tore and THOMAS Di . Tpuonas bo WLI ING, Auctioneer. ALTI MOK 2 i North Liberty st-eet, Bultimore, Md, Special and | ALTIMORE & Positive treatment for ladies. 020-3m OTHES. SAFE, BECAUSE IT Is MANUFACTURED $ H. F. WRIGHT, MAGNETIC AND CLAIR. | 3: us, Winchester, Frege STI TRUSTER'S SALE OF AL M vant Phye cian, hae eminent #ucecss in treatin erck. Hagerstown and Way, via Relay.) FROM STE PROVED BY A CEAR ube and chronic diseases’ C tentaland physicaly | @ oti are, Hyutdns lle Laurel Levees, (fred Ri KNOWN AS THE HARRY Withont medicine, Rooms 600 6th strect northwest. opal ideas at Annapolis Junction. PAL ;_ WHILE ON THE ROPENT =D BY. < Pfc pation Atinapolis and Way Sationa. CONTRARY MANY OF THE SOAPS ON THE MAR IU LH K SYRELS AND NEW JE: fast Tolut of Hodes, Droderiok. Barton. Wiss DE FROMGE PROCURED FROM eee REET SOUTHEAST. " — Rocks and Way Station t545—BALTIMOKE EXP1U Was, via Keluy, ‘ E only) f a deed of trust, bearing date the 2 h, 1878, and duly recorded in Lib OF PUTRID DEAD ANIMA ENDANGERING LIVE AND HEALTH. (Martiosvurg and evlile aud Laurel t UPIN BARS, AND EVELY BAR ANDED lumbia, and by Dr, D EBS, 906 Bs ee south w\ ae i Baltimore and Way Stacie 4 * by, t ndersi {tention paid to all Diseases Peculiar to Ladies, macried = MOKE WITH OUR NAME. ‘ PRNNaaea Se eniicley AN tmerceriGes and Oostina eeibies | 3h PALL FOR SALE BY GROCERS GENERAUL Y, to:40—PITTSBULG ‘Thirty-five yerrs’ experience. n21-2m0" (OTT'S HOMEOPATHIC from irrezularitics; no taste or 906 B street southwest.d15-1m* AND WHOL! #ood and substan! CONCORD HARN ‘Terma of ral GET THE BEST. Sleeping Care to Cincamnati, St. Louinand 11:30-BALTIMOLKE AND WAY STATIONS, One third cash; the balence in two equal payments, at 4x and twelve months, wth oles = =D AND | tDuily. Sunday only. Other tratnsdaily, exoentSanday LUTZ & BRO., ——_| gual tavments at x aud twilve inoutin, B, LEON, THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED AND | ily fouanday cus: Other trainedaily, exerts Aginiafor tye sal. of “THE CONCORD HARNESS" | ail secured 1y a den ot teust on de port eA aN Ee ey All Fenals | Rorftrthar insuruation "way St the Baltnons MI CARHIAG SS abvecialty. Guired st time cf sale. CHARLES VaysON, "| Conwiaints | and ears ctay _remmwed. | Punmayivaida avenoa commer tath ste, een is stamped with Sad Trustee. _| strictly confidential. Separate rooms for Ladies, fies ca Beech for acuage to Ue checked snd reosived: HORSE BLANKW1S and LAP ROBES in great va | /JYMOMAS DOWLING, Auctionosr, hours tod and 6 t08 p.in. d6-1m C. K. LOKD, Gen. Passenger Agent, = riety, at Bottom Prices, CHANCERY SALE OF VALUABLE Dd SoRGS 94 SOUTH HIGH STREET, BAT WM. CLEMENS, Master of Trans., Balto. LE BUS more, Md., makes a specialty of ALL FEMALE LUTZ & BRO. St MPR f DISEASES, viz., Ovarian Troubles. ME GREAT ‘ z D SIREET AND LOVISI- | N.0.—Patieuts’ boarded if required or visited at their PENNSYLVANTA ROUTE 491 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, PROVED BY A FOUR-STORY | houies. ae | oT UE AGHTH. WEST AND SOUTHWEST. v Natic OUSE, NO. 307—LOT 20 FEET BY 40 PLES C] “ CK. 7 wat Adjoining National Hotel! _ AND, tS, LOT ON NORTH SIDE Y RL BOVEE, MEDICAL, ELSOTSIOIAx, SIEEL RAILS, lg MAGNIFICENT 1 CieMERE, | THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MEDICINE ORTHWEST, BETWEEN FOURTH | thoumatian Guile — Nemgue Discares Be ae Ka oie wo a ‘Jurkish, Russién, Sulphur end all Medicated Baths OF 6TH AND BSTLEETS, an FOLLOWS: No preps cn ton ever pectonned § pach nscrallous) Supreme Court of the 2a | Fiven-_ +417 G streei, opposite Rigs House. 020 _ | For Fittsourg and te Went, Cl Lamited See vGteicea fromm oGed | YES BROTH ny AND Guay GIVE NO RuEE |" i Fear seging Cxivots Moa me duly : ¢ : paced on the 18th day of De Prescriptions and send you to someside show drag- Harrlshure to Ginchatl” "Wests fox comes which is recognized as the world's remedy for all dis- ¢ wherein Elizabeth A. Moore | Get who will agree to divide profits with the doctor. ally, ‘with Palace’ Case te Pineteee caves of the throat and lungs. “Its long-continuedseries | ‘ze complainants, and Mary E. Harrison and other | Thoas disappoluted of © cue of Gree eee See : “Mail Expres 9:50 prin daly of wonderful cures in all climates has made it univer- | jt ¢eferdents, No. 6,192, docket 18, the undersizned | Gleet atould consult Drs BROTHERS aml Gat. 905 OE Da . af mal vs | Promises i Aell at public suction, in front of the | B ‘street southwest, who will furnish you medicines TIMOLE AND POTOMAC RATLROAD. sally known as a cafo aud reliable agent to employ. | Ste on, MONDAY, THE EIGHT H| and guarantee scum or bape -five veary | 5% apeiintren, Wacteaiee ai. Nieg Againzt ordinary colds, which aro tne forerunners of | bs '¥ JANUARY, 183, at FOUR | expetieace ol-3m°* 'p-ta.daliy except Sacurday, with Paleos Ge more serious disordets, tacts speedily and surely, al- | O'CLOCK P. ° M.. Seer eerie aeseren at ana en FOREST HAS REMEDY FOR LA Washiiwtm to Cauadsicus. ways relieving suffering, and often saving Ufo. ‘Tho | St Wechingtag, Sete eerie eats, a the, cat Re eres, Bee REMEDY FOR 5a- ForWiliamsport, Lock Haven, aid Elmira, 9t0.904, Cees rds, Dy sti timoly use in throat and | hered wx (6), of the subdivision of part of square nus | cemscienl GA ert ete CRY ou Otticebours ew York and tif East, 6-00 a.m., 20:0a.m..1 chest disorders, inskes it” an invaluable remedy to be | bered four hundred and fitty-eght (458), made and re. from 1 to o’c.ock p.m.. with ladies on!y. — m11-10m* 1, and$0-20 p.m, On Sun 26, kept always on hand in every home. No person can ted by the heirs of William Whetcroft, deceased. 1m.) Limited Express of Pullman Par- v ween 7 ey eth as sroved by a three-story brick building ind #lso, on R. ROBERTSON, THE MOST RELIABLE AND adn, daily, exeept Sunday. afford to be without it, and those who have onco used it | ‘Tiik SAME DAY. AT Hark Pace aoc O'CLOCK longest established epecialist in this city, with 8 ail throweh trains contect at Jer never will. From their Enéwledge of its composition | P. M., that other piece of rel estate, unimproved, in | yrarrohterienae Will quarantee sctre in ail diecases ow béats of Brooklyn Annex, and operation, physicians use the CHERRY PECTORAL, | said cause mentioned, situate in said ety and Distric! © Urinary Nervous. We ete. Con- Givect teanster 20 Falicn stot reprint Soa : d | to wit: Tho cast half of the west half of lot numbered | gultations confidential. Can be ccnsulted fercinge across New York City, extensively in their piructice, and clergymen recommend | (.34'(a), in equare numbered five hugdred and sixteen | Wednesdays and. Saturdays, from 2 to Pp. ma, it, Itis absolutely certain in its healing effects, and will GAS. fronting fifteen (15) feet on “1” street, Ly the | at hus office, 456 C strect uorthwest. Refers ‘to the always cure where cures are poasiblia epi of ead For. physicians of Baltimore. Main offica, 80 Nor ‘Boreada by slicevigdets rye io tenis of ‘sale, as prescribed by eaid decree, are: | Liberty strect, Baltimore, Md. 020 ‘The purchase money to be paid in equal instalments of — she; hind in cash, and the balance in one and two years | FREAD! BEADIt $50,000 FOX $2 FIFTY-FIRST from the day of sale, the whoie day of sale, and the deed of truston the to bear interest from the ‘payment thereof to be secured by property sold, (ar eash to be paid on GRAND EXTRAORDINARY HOLIDAY DRAWING | the day of sale, or on the ratification by the court.) A | S¥DLINe &e. Gonorrhea cured in 48 hours’ yO ere deporit of $500 on the 7th street property snl of $10) on | BCENTWISLE'R. corner 15ty erect and pocrey ee For fae COMMONWEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO., the I street property wili be respectively required at the | 8Yenus northwest. Price $3 per box, seat by mau under ‘Sun: in the oity of Lorieville, on timo ofmale. The ‘Trustees reserve the reht to resell | eal cu reoaibe of price. sail | ALEXARD SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30. the respective pieces of property at the risk and cost of ‘These drawings occur on the last day of each month | the ‘aultiny purchaser, unless the purc! of the : Gunter excepted.) 250-000 Capital Prize, this month | seme shell comply with =o above terms within one oniy. Repeated acing cztion by Federal and State | week atter any ae, All veyancing at courts have placed ‘Comm ny beyond the contro- | cost, Kadir tts tana ha one ree SANs PANE, onor of having daanga Only plan by Ww i wes drawings are proven honest aid” fair beyond a EDWAIGD Hl THOMAS, } Trustees. ertion, kas treet northwest OND The has now on hand a largo capital aad sndresorve fund.” Read carefully the list of prizes for T. COLDWELL, Real Estate Auctionser. DECEMBER DRAWING. TRUSTEE'S 8. OF VALUABLE IMPROVED SURE ora ene eae See AND EIGHTH STREF1'S EAST. : By virtueof adeed of trust date the, inth (9) of December. A. D. 1867, a i day ‘ee and duly Froo! land records for the’ Columbia in iber E. O. E., No. fol. 358, and at the written of the cere i SHESEEOEe eegdsessess ‘sions $2, half tickets, $1:27 ssenota, $50;'99 EE: Doce” Seeman eD ratrE ts ‘Onn and upward NTON FISHER, 58 all orders: be cers CHEMICAL Dk’ ESTA [- Ves, Lacon tie ars feliy cferiet by th is eU}erlor Drops. Taatlon retest rpeciaiy Fombin: Your chemical aeoy tis me emeceat Oo burpassea in Pasiay Now York Sree Wee Grouse spots gusriukod woe Grorseeas