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q ‘THE iv. “ice TEAR OFF THE VEIL, ‘The Unhbcalthiness of Dotted Veils. Acrusade has been made against the cigarette gmoking young man, the girl who stops up the pores of her skin with bandoline and cosmetics, | the women or men who wear tight shoes or | colored stockings, yet the uze of dotted veiling by ladies is entirely overlooked. For some time | past opticians and eye specialists have been | discussing the evils which are wrought by the | dotted veil. and they are. with but few excep- tions, right in their opinion that their use is | Very detrimental to their visio | The dangerous ‘“beautifler.” This kind of | veiling is made in a number of styles, out in a Inajority of cases the veils are made and worn to beautify the features and complexion of the | person who peers through them, and the name | of “beautifier” has come to be the accepted term by which this fabric 1s designated. It is | manufactured in all grades and at all prices, and so universally is It worn that a reporter counted seventy ladies out of every hundred ‘who wore veils with this fabric on. When spoken to upon the subject a prominent optician sald that the damage that Is done to the eye by the use of this style of vell can hardly be imagined. “You would be surprised,” said he, “if T should tell you that a large part of my practice | is owing to the use of those vells. A lady with | perfectly healthy eyes and strong optical nerves can stand the strain of them for a long period— 1n fact, for years. She could endure them fora Ifetime, probably, 'f the styles did not change To-day, however, we have the closel: veil. To-morrow a veil will be displ: | store windows with the dots sparsely studded | over the fabric; and that is the way fashion | Varies. Seven ladies out of every ten are troubled in some way with their eyes. Some have weak nerves of the oyelid; others have | weak optical nerves, and ail the diseases to | which the eye is heir are shown to a greater or | less degree in these seven ladies. The cause of this trouble is the beams and shadows that are | continually flashed Into the eye and the coun- tenance, and the spasmodic twitching of the eyeball when the person desires to see some ob- Ject which is hidden by the dot in the veil.” | “Some yells have dots of ditferent eolors from | the thread of the this irritate the | Beryes toany degree?” inquired the reporter. | “Yes, Indeed; it makes @ material dltference,” | was the reply. he colors are very trying | upon the delicate nerves of the eye, and such a Neil is far more prejudi@al to the vision than the ordinary dotted yell of one solid color.” “What is your opinion of the zigzag cords in the mourning veil?” “That is very injurious; Indeed, it is far more | injurious than the dotted veil; yet there Is one advantage that it has, and that Is not attributa- ble to the merits of the veil. When a lady is in mourning she usually wears one yell, and there- by becomes accustomed to its use; but a lady who wears a dotted veil for a beautifier usually has a great variety, and she {s continually changing them. The dotted veiling can be pur- chased as low as 25 cents a yard. and an elghth of a yard will be sufficient for a veil, according to the present style, as they are only worn over the upper portion of the “Idon’t suppose you ol queried the reporter. “Well, no,” laughingly replied the optician, “not in a pecuniary point of view, but In a gen- eral sense Ido. Tsee so many cases of optical affection which are handed down to the children of those people that in my opinion, if the pres- ct to their use?” ent ruinous fashion prevails for any length of time, it will have a marked etfect on the rising generation.” In Pantomime. From the Detroit Free Press. One of the traces of the street-car horse broke delaying the car for seven or eight mimutes. | Afar off to the right one could see into the back yard of a house. and directly the passengers on | the car were guziny that way at a pantomime, | A manon the car took it upon himeelf to explain | what was occurring. He bezan: “A woman and her husband appear at the back door. Sheis excited—he the picture of calmness.” Tt was so. The woman waved her arms an¢ gesticulated—the man seemed to whistle, ‘ “Now she leads him to a bedstead which she been scalding,” continued the passenger. | “She is probably saying that she will smash. it | with the ax.and he is probably replyin she'll have to sleep on the floor ifshe do I had time l'dadytse her to use kerosene oi the crevises. but I haven't.” The woman then led the manto a carpet Ranging on the fence and waved her arms some | wo “She's telling him to pull off his coat and beat | it.” explained the passenger, “and he replies | that he ll seethe old thing burned first. No true wife will ever ask herhusband to have any thing | to do with a carpet.” | The two suddenly disappeard into the house, | and the interpreter remarke¢ | “Hold on—this isn’t the end! She's taken him into show where she wants the kitchen stove moved to. There they come, and she is Wadder’n ever. The actors Feappenred. and stood in the atti- tude of enemies about to begin a combat. “She's saying she rues the day she ever eyes on him!” whispered the passenger. “She's | calling himaloafer anda drunkard, and he's | telling her to set the chimney afire and let the frewan do her house-cleaniug. Whoa! there | <she's flying off the handle! ‘There! she's hit him with a bedstead slat! He staggers, but | Fecovers, and tries to grasp her! She whacks bimayain, and now he turns to flee. Hereaches the fence. but she reaches him!” Some of the passengers ran out upon the plat- form to get aclear view, but the interpreter slimbed to the roof, and continued: “She has him down on an asti-heap! She's tell- ing him that he has reached the end of his rope, | and has got to cut bait or He struggles she chokes him and jams hi: Now he is quiet. N. he is walkin on isover, and virtue ap severence have | Won another glorious triumpl — —-~ ities of a Second-hand Described by the Seller From the Detroit Free Presa, A party of three young men from the agricul- tural districts ente: a second-hand store, and it @ second-hand coat. that it was a fit that been proud of, and that 200 per cent. and he ‘tly satisfied. In about an urved aud i: nt aft y P hour. however. “Say, this ¢ “Weil, it’s too short “Let me look. Too short, eh? Um. ls you so? My friendt, who t 0.” *“Vhell. how Ish it dose poys know so much? | Dot goat allows for you to shtand oop und bend eafer. It allows for your back to shorten oop and lengthen oudt.” “But the sleeves are too short.” “Led me see. Only last night my wife sit up all night to eut off dose sleeves und make “ ip style, and now you vhant a sleeve like Noah Wore in der Ark.” Vhell, nobody would think dot of you.” — can hardly bend my arms,” continued the Vhell, I sold you dot goat for Sunday. You doan’ chop wood on Sundays, I hope? Vhen you desire to bend your arms put on sume odder goat.” Tam not at all satisfied with It, no matter what you say.” “Vhell, I t heipdot. After you buy dot goat you fall down or shump around or drink Peer, und get your body all out ot shape, und den come pack und complain. My friendt, dot goat vhas fora shentlemen. Vhen you wear it you must be a shentleman.” “I paid you eight dollars for it, apd I'll take “No.” ‘You can have it for three dollars.” ‘Young man, let me oxplain. 1 vhas partner mit my wife. She buys und I sell: She Is now in Chicago. Doan’ you sell dot goat. Take it home find wait until you shrink a leedle und is u in the back for onething.” | ADVICE TO PYSPEPTICS, What, When IKow Much te Eat. The late Dr. Leared, in his recently published essay on “The Causes and Treatment of Indi- gestion,” lays down as a fundamental principle that the amount of food which each man is limit which bears relation to his age, constitu- tion, health and habits, and that indigestion is a consequence of exceeding this limit. kinds of food are also diffe ferent constitutions. D: 2 ia may be brought on by eating irregularly, by allowing too long an interval between meal&, and by eating too often. Frequently the meals are not gauged as to thejr relative amount, or distributed with a due regard to health. Thus, when we go out after taking alight breakfast and keep at our work, with a still lighter lunch only duting the interval. till evening, we are apt, with the solid meai which tempts us to induigence, to put the mach to @ harder test than it can bear. “When a light breakfast ts eaten. a solid meal is requisite In the middle of the day. When the organs are left too long unemployed they secrete an ‘8 of mucus, which greatly interferes with digestion. One meal has a direct influence on the next, and a poor breakfast leaves the stomach over active for dinner, * * * The point to bear in mind is. that not to eat a suffi- ciency at one meal makes you too hungry for the next; and that. when you are too hungry, yen are apt to overload the stomach, and give the gastric Juices more to do than they have the power to perform.” Persons who eat one meal too quickly on another must likewise expect thestomach finally to give notice that it is imposed upon. Other provocatives of dyapepsia are Imperfect. masti- cation, smoking and snuff-taking, which occa- sion a waste of saliva, althongh some people find that smoking assists digestion, it done in moderation; sitting in positions that cramp the stomach, and the pressure that is inflicted on the stomach by the tools of some trades, as of curriers, shoemakers and weavers. The geueral symptoms of dyspepsia are well known. Some that deserve special remark are fancies that the limbs or the hands are distorted, mental de- pression, extreme nervousness, hypochondria, and other affections of the mind. he cure Is to be sought in avoiding the food and habits by which dyspepsia is promoted, and using and practis e which are found to agree best with the system of the subject. Regularity In the hours of sisted on. appointed when it expects to be replenished. If disappointed, even a diminished amount of food will be taken without appetite, which canses the secretions to injure the stomach, or else impairs its museular actlo: UNDER Lock erently adapted to dif- ND KEY, Snfe Deposit Vaults and Those Who Use hem—The Safeguards They Give, From the New York Sun. “The first record of a safe deposit in this country,” an officer of one of our large safe de- posit companies said, ‘is that of a liquor dealer near the old Canal street market, who took boxes of valuables belonging to his customers and cared for them forasmall fee. Subsequently another Mquor dealer in the neighborhood started a competition by doing the same servico for the sake of the liquor custom. The same spirit of competition has been shown In the present system of eafe deposit companies which was started by Francis H. Jencks in 1866, The business has !ncreased rapidly, so that there-are how ten companies in New York alone,and other cities have copled the idea extensively. “It would naturally be supposed that the ma- Jority of those using the safe deposit would be old persons; but such is not the fact. It is a common thing for young married couples to hire compartments for their wedding presents. There are also many boys and youug men living in boarding-houses who have no safe place to keep thelr bank-books at home, and they bire compartments. There has been a visible de- crease In the number of lost bi ‘books since the establishment of safe deposits. The busi- hess has not interfered with savings banks, be- cause money is seldom kept in safe deposits, but chiefly bonds and valuable papers. Tho | idea, in fact. had its origin In the necessity for some sate place to Keep United States bonds. There are many foreign owners of bonds who keep their property on de- posit here and have agents to’ clip their coupons for them. It occasionally happens that compartment owners lose their keys. smetimes they lock up their duplicate keys and then lose the otier key. Insuch cases they have to pay for breaking open the safe. Thus far the sate deposit companies haye been very fortunate in escapiug any great loss or defalc tion. The main cause of this ts that there would be a necessity for a considerable number of per- sous to be implicated to make anything of the kind suecesstul. The Idea that anumber of dis- reputable persons might combine to hire safes and thus secure the right to be insidg among the vaults has been considered, and even such an apparently dangerous risk has been provided for by the separate security of each compart- ment, and by the diMcuity of getting out of the afe rooms without proper Identification. The safe deposit system has proved a boon to married women, who have thus an opportu- nity of keepinz out of their husbands’ reach any private papers that they may wish to pre- serve. I could tell you of pathetic scenes that we sometimes observe where depositors bring out old mementoes and keepsakes and ylew them with emotion. Of such, however, we get only a chance glimpse, as the rule fs that only the-depositor knows what ts in the boxes. An- | other peculiarity about safe deposits in that they have been singularly free from litigation. No case of any magnitude has arleen from the disputed ownersh contents. The rapid increase of companies, and the keen competition, rather. tends to decrease | the safeguards, but it isevident that the safe deposit system met a great public want. It may safely be sald that the evidence of own- ership of a very large part of the wealth of the country is locked up in the boxes of these ten companies. B= tes, Railway Travelers’ Right From the New York Times. The courts have recently given the benefits of Jee, in two notable cases, to railway passen- rs. These persons were traveling upon tick- ets which had been bought In the usual way, and they were ylolently ejected from raflway trains by the conductors of one of the most pow- ful of our railway companies. The verdicts indicate once more that the traveler whose rights have been ignored upon railways can i coniidence to the courts for fair and may reasonably expect to re- cover a round sui of money from the offending company. ju the Pen ania Railroad Company has been tried twice, and at the end of each trial the nti has recovered $ that he demanded. Mr. Connell came to Wash- ington tn 1880. Having made an argument be- fore the Supreme Court he undertook to come to this city. He had come from the west upon ‘an unlimited, or stop-over, ticket, which gave | road to Washington and over the Pennsylvania | road from Washington to this city. Soon after ing Philadelphia a conductor retused to the Pennsylvania Company had led the last named company to discontinue the sale of tickets al- lowing a passenger to travel part of his way on one road and the remainder of his way on the other. Mr. Connell refused to ped any addi- tlonal money, and was thrown from the train by several employes ofthe road. It appeared during the trials that the pooling arrangement had not been broken until after Mr. Connell had bought his ticket, and that the Pennsylvania company had received its pro rata for the identi- cal ticket which the conductor refused. The defense was so weak that the only question for the Jury to consider was whether the passen- ger’s rights had beenaffected because he stopped over at Washington, although his ticket allowed him to do so. The jury gave the plaintiff $15,000, as hasalready been stated. The other case was that of Frank Spickner, a salesman, who was traveling in 1881, between Williamsport and Philadelphia, upon an excur- sion ticket, which one conductor accepted and another refused. Spicker wae pushed from the train and left in the open country while it was ralning heavily. The fact that the ticket had your back shortens oop, und you vhill den put on dot guat und set all der gals grazy und make @l der younz men shealous. Take my advice. I vhas in der clothing peesness forty years, und I know der cloth in dot goat. It vhants a good thunder shower und two games of base ball to make it it you like a handle to a coffey mill.” Among the patients treated at the Swinburne Dispe: yesterday was a girl afflicted with what Is called a “tobacco heart.” The victim of the disease is a stripper in a cigar employment which superinduces the causo ‘of 0. ich su © cause fer trouble. The affection may result from con- stant lite in an atmosphere Im; with Ddaceo or from excessive use weed. It is degeneracy of the vital organ. Dr. Swinburne id that a girl with a “tobacco heart” was still @asceptible to the tender passion. been paid for was not denied, but it was shown that the company had by advertising tried to call In tickets of that class. The jury gave the plalotitf €5,000. It appears from the published reports that the cosnenys defense in each of these cases hardly deserved consideration. The plaintiffs had both the law and the facts on their side. Yet they have been compelled to wait twy or three years for Justice. Many persons who are wronged by rallway companies are unwilling or unable to begin and costly contest in the courts. Theoonrts; however, have almost uniformly pro- Vindicated those who have chosen to them, and if every wronged and Yallway traveler could be induced to | ees case before a jury the companies would mé leas tyrannical, and travelers on every Pp of a box or the loss of its | Nicholas’ proclamations, often remembered and lway in the country would have cause for ving. Different | i The case of W. J. Connell, of Omaha, against | 000, which was all | him transportation over the Baltimore and Ohio | ABOUT CANARY BIRDS, How to Tell a Norwich Canary from a Belgium—The Length of Their Lives. From the New York Sun. The big goldfish swam around and around in his globe regardless of the efforts of the green jcapable of digesting with ease always has a | parrot to attract his attention. The white ma— caws were screaming with all their might In rivalry with a mocking bird which was making @ variety of sounds. A score of white mice Scampered hither and thither ina glase-sided box, while a squirrel made a wire wheel spin. The bird fancier was examining a deep yellow canary bird, not very large, but beautifully shaped. “It is a clear Norwich canary,” he said to the reporter, ‘which I have just received. Notice what a compact form he has, and how handsome his plumage is. People can talk about their Belgian birds, but tor my partI think there is no canary like the Norwich canary. Of course they are not as aristocratic in appearance as the Belgians, but they are more robust, and, if well tutored, cannot be surpassed. Their notes are bold and musical, and their large chest ca- pacity gives them a very long song.” “What are the points by which a Norwich bird can be told?” “There are quite a number. A short, clear beak, head of moderate size, with a fullneck, a straight wide back, wings which do not cross at the tips, @ broad, full chest, which gradually ex- pands from the neck, a rather short tail, com- pact but thin, and feet and lexs of a light flesh color or white. A person familiar with birds can distinguish them at a glance. There are six Classes of Norwich canaries.” “Are they very healthy birds 2” “Very healthy and long of life. They are used to our climate and are not subject to the ailments to which German birds 20 often fall victims. They seldom suffer from cold. I once had @ Norwich bird which lived five years with- out being sick a day as far as I could ece. I expect that It would have been Iving yet if it had not met with a queer accident. Its cage was on a table when a procession passed the door. My wife went to the window to look at it. Her little dog jumped on the table, and the bird fluttered agalnst the side of the cage and fae ils head too far out, and the dog bit off.” “How long ought tt to have lived 2” “For seven or elght years. The reason why.| many birds die young is that they are not treated properly. In mistaken kindness their owners give them too much sugar, cake, and other rich food, which destroys their digestion. They lose their song, become listlese, and die.” ee ‘The Crown of the Czars. From the New York Times. The fashion of Russia’s imperial coronations has changed almost as often as the spot where they were celebrated. Ruric, the first Russian sovereign, fixed his capital at Great Novgorod, about 100 miles from the present site of St. Petersburg. In the ensulng century it was superseded by Kleff, on the Dnieper. Kieff in turn gave place to Vladimir, between Moscow and Nijni-Novgorod. Moscow itself ranked as the metropolis of Russla from the middle ot the fitteenth century to the foundation of St. Pe- tersburg at the opening of the eighteenth. In the eyes of all true Russians, “Mother Moscow,” as they affectionately call the great city, is still the real center of national life, and the fitting place tor the coronation ot their sovereigns and the consecration of their archbishops. In fact, the bulk of the population rank their ‘Felo- kamennaya Moskva,” (White-walled Moscow,) as far above St. Petersburg as the Italians rank Rome above Florence, or as the Afghans rank Kandahar above Cabul. The gorgeous ceremonial which has just drawn upon Moscow the eyes of the whole civi- lized world bas certainly but little in common with the barbarous rite of the tenth century, wi flerce spearmen of the Dnieper raised upon a buckler of hide, and | y their weapons”—the customary oath of these wild warriors—to be trae to him and to each other. But the varlous coronations of the house of Romanoff undoubtedly form a very gloomy retrospect. Its founder, Michael Feo- doroviteh, was crowned amid the ruins of Mos- cow, which had been destroyed by the Polish in- vasion of 1612, and but for the devotion of a Russian peasant his rein would have been ended by treacherous mfler before it had well begun, Asimilar fate overtoon his tiird juccessor, Peter the Great. who slynalized hisaccesston by behe ing hundreds of his insurzent Lifeguards! close to the ate by which Alexander ITT. en- tered the Kreilin yesterday. Peter's daughter, Elizabeth, owed her crown to the violent depo- sition of her predecessor, Anna Tyanoy: Cath- } arine I1.’s coron: "was celebrated while the corpse of her muy tered husband, Peter IIL, lay unburled in the uiccmy old palace of Oran baum, twenty wiles away, and the very hands | which held out the crown to Alexander I.,at the opening of the present century, had straugled his father, Paul. But even more sinister omens attended the accession of Nicholas in 1825. Only a few inentis before it two-thirds of St. Petersburg had been laid in ruins by the overflowing of the Neva, and to the tury of the elements was added the yet more fatal rage of civil war. In December, 1825, the capitaL-vas convulsed by @ deadly conilict between the adherents of the Graud Duke Constantine—known. in history as the Pecenibrists—and those of his brother Nichola he nbrist party fought des- ps y. but the powerful artillery and ruthless determination of Nicholas speedily crushed all Tesistance. ‘Thousands were slain, thousands more dragged away to Siberia, and not afew hanged or shot after the fight was over. Among these last was a Russian poet of some note.who defied his doom ina caustic parody of one of repeated during the thirty years’ tyranny that ousued: “To the soul said he: ‘Into darkness flee, Thus I decree.’ ” Alexander IT., coming to the throne amid the accumulated disasters of the Crimean war, found his crown a thorny one indeed. It was noticed by many that during the ceremony of coronation his handsome face was clouded with deep sadness, and that on the same night a ter- rite storm broke over the city, shattering .a magnificent monument which bore his name. The sinister augury was only too traly fulfilled. His eldest son, Nicholas, was snatched from him by death the very midst of those mighty reforms which marked the nine years between the ser? eirancipation of 1861 and the ‘‘Moscow yy" of 18) while his own lite was the hand of an assassin at the very moment wien he was about to give to Russia the emstitution for which she had so long waited in vain. a Emperor Williau’s Wardrobe. From the Hatter's Gazette. An interesting and extensive wardrobe ig that of Emperor William. His uniforms comprise one of each of the regiments of the guards and of the body regiments; one each of Baden, Ba- varia, Saxony, and Wurtemburg; four Russian uniforms, and one each of his Austrian regl- ments of the line and hussars. Ghe civilian suits are ciegant and chiefly dark, although a light pair of pantaloons is now and then tolera- | ted; the regular head covering is the high silk | houor his ticket. upon the ground that a conflict | between the Baltimore and Ohio Company and | hat. The hunting suits are rarely renewed, on the principle the older the better and more com- fortable. Most of the interesting pieces have long been sent to different museums, except the dress worn on the day of Nobiling’s attempt. Perhaps the most remarkable piece is the em- peror’s brownish-gray havelock, which he wears in the spring and fallon his drives, and with which, although nearly twenty-five | Bo old, he is not willing to part. All his uniforms and EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. WEDNESDAY, 4 A SHEEP IN A'SHIBT. ‘Why Horses Ran A and Why the Plow Boys Halleed “Wheal ‘Whear’ From the Nashvilie American, * An incident which was both rich and racy, and quite laughable, actually did occur near Smyrna, in this state. a few days since, which ‘Was about as tollows: One of our nelghbors, Mr. T. D., sheared the long wool of his favorite pet sheep a few days since. As the shades of evening began to gather the air grew chilly. Mr. D. being a man of much sympathy, and in order to make his pet as pleasant as possible, took a shirt and pulled It over the body of the sheep and buttoned the collar around the sheep's neck, and let the sleeves hang looee. like ® pair of wings. Mr. D.’s faithful dog espied this wonderful fréak of art and nature, and made battle at the poor creature at once. The or sheep jumped the yard fence and ran for his life. It ran into the public road Just as Mrs. R. H. Nicholson and infant child chanced to be riding by. Her horse grew frightened and ran for several hundred yards, but as fate would have it she remained firm in her saddle, and nelther she nor the child was hurt. On the following morning this wonderful, cele- brated sheep made its appearance in Joe Der- ryberry’s field, where its visit causcd a general stampede, where the snapping of trace chains and knocking down fences, and the word “whoa! whoa! whoa!” bursting from the mouths of plow boys, made music inthe air. During the day Mr. D. was seen hunting a sheep that could be easily identified, because It had a shirt on, Rosalie’s Request. From the Chicago Tribune. “The doughnuts are gone.” A look of ghastly horror that made the pretty dimpled cheeks of Rosalle McCloskey take on anashen hue of blank despair passed quickly over the girl’s face as her sister, who stood with one voluptuous foot swinging ina dreamy, sensuous fashion over the front yard, while the other rested on the doorstep, spoke the fateful sentence with which this chapter opens, Up from the meadows where the chestnut mare that with a splint on her off foreleg that Lord Dacres had traded for last spring was nibbling the tender blades of grass there came the scent of the violets and daisies that were Jast peeping from the ground, and away to the westward were floating great masses of fleecy-white clouds, whose edges were made radiant by great shafts of golden light that streamed up from below the horizon as if in holy bene- diction upon the dying day. The crickets, those faithful harbingers of night, were beginning to crick a little in spots, and the lowing kine were lying down on the sidewalk so that people who wished to fall overthem would not have any un- necessary trouble In doing so. And while the swaliows that were flying in little circles around the eaves of Buerton Villa twittered away ina sleepy fashion there came floating up on the twilight air the deep, solemn tones of the vil- lage church bell, telling to the little, world of souls within the precincts of its volce that the semi-monthly meeting of the Perkingville Home Missionary Society was about to begin. And then. as Rosalie’s eyes were becoming dim with tears of longing and sorrow, she saw approaching the form of the man she loved so Well, andin an instant she was by his side, her Su <claimed, in her Impulsive, if- you-haven't - got-any - caramels- give-me - some- marshmatlow-drops way, ‘I was so afraid you wonld not come.” “and were you anxious to see me, my darling?” he asks, seating himself on a rustic bench and coyly poising one knee so that the heiress may perch upon it. “You know I was, sweetheart,” replies the girl, looking down coyty and MOHSInE how the sun glints fell with a hectic flush on his rococo pants. “You know that when you are not with me, when I can not feel the pressure of your cheek upon mine and quaff the nectar of your two-drinks-for-a-quarter breath every hour of my life goes by with leaden feet, every moment seems an age”—and placing her arma ‘about his neck she draws him to her in a passionately col- lar-breaking fashion. “I am going away to-morrow, my precious one,” George W. Simpson says presently. Shalt you be gone long?” the girl asks in hoarse, agonized tones. “about a week.” he replies, and then, secing that Kosalie has fallen almost fainting into his arms, he kisses her tenderly back of the leftear, and says hurriedly, ‘‘but.[ have left orders at the candy-store that you are to have whatever you want during my absence.” ‘There are no tears on Rosalie’s cheeks now, but her face is pale as the moonlight that is stealing through the leafy bower above them. and on it a new, deep meaning that George had ever seen there before—a gentle light, as kind as death, as soft as holy love. Alarined by the expression of her features he bends over her. ‘Tell me, darling,” he says, “Is there anything I can do for you?” “Yes,” she answers. "What is it?” “You can give me a promise—a promise that you will not break.” “Tell me what it ig,” he says, in anxious, hag- gard tones, “that I may prove to you my love?” “When does your train leave?” “At 9 o'clock.” “Promise me,” she says, looking into his eyes witha wild, passionate yearning, “that you will not get left.” ——_—_—_+e. The House of Romanoff. From the New York Times. The name of Romanoff (which, literally trans- lated, assumes the less poetical form of Robert- son) first took Its place in history at the acces- sion of Mikhail Feodoroyitch Romanoff after the expulsion of the Poles from Russia in 1612. His reign—prosperously uneventful save for an abortive attempt of the Poles to murder him at its outset—ended in 1645. The most memorable event In that of his son and successor, Alexey, (who held the scepter twenty-one years,) was the revolt of the Ukraine Cossacks against Po- land, and thelr annexation by Russia a few years later. The short and feeble reigns of Feodor and Ivan V. made way for the ruth- less vigor of Peter the Great, who. despite the formidable rebellion kindled by the in- trigues of his sister Sophia, became sole master of Russia in 1696. The chief events of his reizn—his working as a ship-carpenter at Saar dam, his visits to France and England, his foun- dation of St. Petersburg at acost of 100,000 lives, his wars with Charles XIT of Sweden, be- ginning with the defeat of Narva, in 1700, and ending with the decisive victory of Poltava, in 1709—are too well known to need repetition. His death, in 1725, was quickly succeeded by that of his widow, Catharine I., who was fol- lowed to the grave three years later by the oung and feeble Peter II. The partiality shown iy the Empress Anne toward her German fayor- ites produced a reaction in favor of Peter the Great's daughter, Elizabeth Petrovna. The latter Is memorable In history for the part taken by her against Frederick the Great in the seven year’s war, and has received an unenviable im- mortality from the memoirs of her niece by mar- riage, Catharine II., whom the deposition and murder of her half-imbecile husband, Peter III., after aseven months’ reign, raised to the throne in her turao, Catherine’s masculine ambition andthe genius of Marshal Suvoroff added to her empire the Crimea and Bessarabia and quelled the formida- ble revolt of the Cossack itcheff in 1772-8. Under her son and successor, Paul—whose in- sane freaks 8] ily ied to his murder by four officers of the Imperial Guard—the Russian armies were disastrously beaten in Switzerland suits are made by a member ot the same family, whose predecessors presented the young Prince William with his first uniform. jumerous as the contents of the wardrobe have been and still are, it has never held an article which nearly every citizen looks upon as an indispen- sable one, viz., a dreasing-gown. A Jawbreaker. From the New York Sun. An officer of the Welsh steamer Gwalla, now in this port, says that a new vessel of that line, to be built at Sunderland, isto have the name of Llanfalrpwilgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrowlisa- nttysillogogogoch. “ Where did you find the name?” “Itis pure Welsh,” hesaid. ‘‘ Haveyounever heard of the Englishman’s pertect cure for lock- jaw? Here it is printed.” He handed the reporter the following card: “*Is your father at home ?’ asked an English- man of a Welsh boy whom he met on the Great Orme’s Head, Liandudno. ‘No, sir; he’s gone to work at Liansantifraid-glan-Conwy.’ ‘Is your mother in, then?’ ‘She’ at Liantihangel-tre'r-beirdd.’ ‘Dear me! but where Is your sister?’ ‘My slater has gone to school at Lan naltn wlan yea NRoReryOuN YTB drowllsanttysiliogogogoch.’ *G: gracious |” exciaimed the Englishman; ‘I must goand take a smile.’ ‘ ——__—_+e.—_____ Although Russia has vast beds of excellent coal, she imports nearly half ot what she usese— a through lack of internal communica- One (1799) by the French under Massena. But Alex- ander I., who su led_hind in 1801, redeemed the Russian prestige by the hard-fought fields of Eylau and Helleberg Napoleon in 1807, the Turkish war of 1810-12, the immortal Mos- cow campaign, and the final overthrow of the French Empire nore 5 Alexander died af Taganrog in 185, his last act being to provide for the relief ofthe sufferers by the St. Petersburg inundation of the preted- ing year. With him died his half-completed re- forme, and the Tarkish wars of 1826 and 1898-9, though crowned by the treaty of Adrianople ay th 5 ay aaateal ber a a the canes eq e mt and ¢he manta of his brother Nicholas. The lapels hav- ing appropriated several provinces of western Persia, and crushed the Hungarian inst Austria in 1843-9, was so confident and the supposed att end his own death. mn of the serfs in 1861 by his Al IL, the long se- ries of reforms that followed, the conquest of the central Asian kand and Bok .) the nihilist conspiracies of ere ee ees ma 1870, the Ruseo- war of 1877-8, and the czar’s murder by pure yourg tace radiant with smiles, and her |- ts DROPS OF WATER, Mr. Josrrn G. Brcxwei1, No. 642 Main street, Cambridgeport, Mass.. writes, April 27, 1883: “Ihave Deen terribly affticted for # number of years with gravel and kidney disease. My urine contained brick-dust Gepoaits, and at times I could not pass my water except in drops and with great pain; and have had to get up aa many ee fifteen times during the night. I tried sev- eral physicians; they did me no good, buta friend of mine, who had used Hunt's Remedy told me to get @ bott'e and try it He had been cured of severe case Similar to mine, and that others had used Hunt's Rem- ‘edy in Cambridge and pronounced it a medicine of rea merit. After being repeatedly urged I purchased a Dottie, and before I had used all of it I passed s stone ‘as large as 8 pea, followed by emallerones. I haveusea in all ten bottles, and it has completely cured me. My Kidneys are in excellent condition, and for one of my ‘age (68), sixty-eight years, I can truly say I feel like = young man with strengtn and vitality. My family use the Remedy, and would not be without it, ana never fail to recommend it to our friends and neighbors in Cam- bridge and Boston. You are at liberty to use my name in praise of the best kidney and liver medicine, Hunt's Remedy.” “DID WONDERS FOR ME.” ‘The above words are from Mr. Lewis Keen, No. 9 ‘Highland avenue, Malden, Mass., April 28, 1683. He saya: *‘T have been troubled for years with kidney and liver complaint, followed by gravel, with severe pains in my baok and groins. I had great trouble in passing water, it being scanty, and sccompanied by terrible Durning, the vessel being coated with brick-dust de- Dosit. I was recommended to use Hunt's Remedy by a friend who had been completely cured of a similar trouble. I purchased a bottle at the druggists, and commenced to improve at onee. I have used but two bottles, and ithas done wonders for me—no more kid- ney trouble, no more pain. It has given me new life, and I would not be without Hunt's Remedy at any Price. It is all that it is recommended to be, and I cheerfully give this testimony for the benefit of themany sufferers from kidney disease and gravel.” my24 18 PURE COFEEE REDUCED TO A LIQUID AND QUICKLY MADE READY FOR THE TABLE BY ADDING BOILING WATER. IT DOES NOT LOSE STRENGTH AND AROMA LIKE ROASTED COFFEE, BEING PUT UP aN DOTaLNS AND NOL EXPOSED TO THE Made Instantly— One Cup or many. No labor. no worry— Always uniform, Always delicious, Youn Grocer Seuts Ir axp Recommenns Ir. FELS & CO., Proprietors, ap23 PHILADELPHIA, Hale ane Fee F Se, S HH 0? Ssss8 Ene fi TTTT ERB RRR @ BSS t Ee Ear, ‘ sss, t dee f B Sgss8 CELEBRATED STOMACH ce | ie F i Eb ‘s Baa HOE Hizs BoB Segg® = ‘There has never been an instance in which this sterl- ing invigorant and anti-febrile medicine has failed to ‘ward off the complaint, when taken duly es a protection against malaria. Hundreds of physicians have aban- doned all the officinal specifics, and now prescribe this harmless veyetable tonic for chills and fever, as well as dyspepsia and nervous affections. Hostetter’s Bitters is the specific you need. For sale by all Druggists ana Dealers generally. ERR, (00 ¥Y A I Mends Glass, Crockery, RO ha YaaL ‘Wood, China, 88 AAR | Eeauearretiie R BOO Y¥ ‘A ALLLL GRANITE! Stron oa Spnehest and most olas- oo fob f} Peeeeees a L U UO KE aillotherGluce and Ce- GGG L UU rE ents! Absolutely Un- GGG LLLL UU ERE breakable and Inse; arab'e! NoHEATING! No Preraration—Alwaye Ready—Alwaya Mends Marble, Stone. Patches on Leather and Goods, Brie-a-brac, Jewel and Cloth, Card Board in Scrap Books, Leather Belting, kind, Book Backs, Earthenware and everything clse with everlasting inseperaUle tenacity!! Manufacturers of Gnmmed Labels, ‘Textite Fabrics, Fine Ca:riage and Pianos and Cabiuct Makers, Scroll Sawyers, &c., supplied by gallon or barrel. 20.Cts. per’ Bolte: by mall, post-paid, 100. extra, Matiod Gnly by the mamutactucera, 4.,U. OMEARA & CO... 1341 Pa. av. Wash'ngton, D.C. ve wanted éverywhere. Sold by Druggis Grocers, Stationers, Hardware and general stores. mb2 E PPS’ cocoa BREAKFAST. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING “By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which routed Gis mera rene Tected Cocoa, Mr. ape ties provided our breakfast ta- bles with a deli ly-flavored gave us many peavy, doctors’ Riba as the jadicoes % judicious ‘une of such art of diet that « constit be dually built up until oe? tution may ‘enough to reslet ever, lendency to d'sease. Hanoesie of subtie maladies are floating around us, ready to al wherever there is a ing ourocives well fortifed with pure blobs, and a peo erfy nourished frame."-—Civul Service Gasstte, Made simply with boiling water or milk, ola in tins, (only 3-Ib. and Ib.), by Grocers, labejpd. JAMES EPPS & 00., :ALTH LIFT.—THE SIMPLEST AND SAFEST not north woat. m28-whe, 2m* rand Rubber y, Metals, Billiard Cue Tips For at 18211 Cu.. Rovrzer, ‘OS. 403 AND 405 1TH STREET NORTHWEST. UAE ENS CARRIAGE BoMENe iT BI CO! THE CBP ADILITY Dae useeers AN? We Areh- Eee) rica Weve, ‘Fishing oom Call and examine the Goods. Prices ae Gas Coozme Stoves FOR SALE AT THE GASLIGHT OFFICE, TENTH STREET. e0 RB ‘AND, X SAFE Feist fo fae Nasa uood for over Bitter yeee by the ‘of this ity, They nothing dale- terious—are gentle and yet thorough action, ARTHUR NATTANS, Pharmacist, ‘Mthendl, 2dand D, and 7th ana N ste.n.w. myS says_Heteend Sent Dato aX eae CELL TRUSS: T NEVER aca wis ding as Govedoggy om Se amb Dorthwest. 10 Gewenet SESS Eaves * 623 FISHER, devotes her attention POTOMAC RIVER BOATS. RTHER REDUCTION T0_ FORTRESS EVAR AND Ni LE. Rae MEE. FARE FI ce Kat a street ears, MONDAT! WED: SEspates and ae UkDaYs. st6:90 pm " Tickets secured at office, Ne- eee my26 ALERED WUOD, ‘Secretary and Treasurer. OW BATES 70 NORFOLK AND FU! SINGLY. Bane B00: 1% PULAISHED ACLOWER WaT RS TH: ~ DAILY LINK. MAIL BT Steamer EXCELS (ONDA: ra _ GFORGE LEARY on yew p Sp and 7 SD. 5:30, SATURDAYS até P. M. EXCLUSIVE. CORR ION as BOSTON AND A ag NESDAYS VIDENOE STEAMERS. EIGHTS FOR THESE AND OTHER EASTERN ms ToINTs CAN GO BY THE STEA) co) ONLY INE ONLY. FOR FURTHER SAW TICU RS INQUIRE at wharf, Wee WELCH. Agent TE WL HUDGINS, Gen. Supt, Et HE MUTUAL ASSOCIATION ease itie to: nee orable BANKERS, BROKERS AND INSURANCE, 2420 F STREET NORTHWEST, Wasrrseron, D. 0. We pay special attention to obtaining CORRECT RELIABLE information regarding our various b~] securities, and are prepared at all times to answer ingule ries revanting same, HARKY C. TOWERS, mbt! STEAMER JOHN W. . THOMPSON Leaves Sixth Street Wharf EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY Stopping atneariy all the river landings as far down as Inquire at General ‘OMice, 613 15th street or at boat. mm! Mt VERNON! MT. VERNONI STEAMER W. W. CORCORAN ‘Feares Tth strect wharf daily (except Sunaay) for Mt. fermen at 0 o'clock ma. ; returning reaches Washing Sem about: 3:30 p.m. 1. L. BLAKE, Captain. 'UMMER SCHEDULE—STEAMER ARROWSMITH eaves 7th street wharf at Ze. m. for, ee Serie tae Jandi i “returning anday. ‘See Re ith at. wi 1 barf, Wash. D.C. PB PADae Ant (apis) O. We RIDLEY. Man. POTOMAC TRANSPORTATION LINE. steamer BUF, Capt. W. ©. Geogh: Stephenson's whurt foot of Ttu street eters atéo'clock p. m., for Baltimore and River urning, leaves Baltimore every FRIDAY at pam. All accommodations strictly first-class. River freight must bo prepaid, and will be received on SATURDAGS only. STEPHENSON & BRO., m16-6m 7th street wharf and 12th st. an Ta ton o'clock: SUNDA’ Landings. ‘S o'clock Taare. STEAMER MATTANO at days uy ‘Thu: an: seestination) hts. information ‘at offi a. ER and 1114 Penoaylvania avenue. G. T. JON ith street whar?. 12. STEAMERS. 'UKTH GERMAN LLOYD— Sreamsuip Line Berween New Youre, Havag, Loxpo: UTHAMEPTON AND Bi ais ‘The steams ‘this com ¥ WED. NENDAY AND SATURDAY trom Bremen pier. foot of 8d street, Hoboken, Rates From pal gpely to 0 ee '; W. G. MET: Sventie vorthwest: EW ROTTERDAM, AMSTERDAM. The toe fon erage Dutch eamanlps of ae Line, AMSTERDAM. TTER- AM HIEDA’ LEtRDAM. ZAANDAM. P. Ca- HD, WA, SOHOLTEN. MAAS. carryiae the 0-6, N AY for Rotterdam and Amsterdam, all a "AZAU a Rew Yorn. to W. Gd. METZERORE 200... 925 Penn, ave. Washington. "Traver, To Evnorr. ESTIMATES OF COST KR TOURS TO ANY PART OF EUROPE AND T FORTE TICKETS ISSUED and RELIABLE INFORMA- TION CHEERFULLY GIVEN. 81 arrangements Bionthly eaves” oie wnper “ocnt Wieer Address mo} % AMERICAN Fo ANGE TRAVELERS BUMEAU, 162 Broadway, New York. ©. A. BARATTONI. Manager. 162 Broadway, mb10-s, t, th, 39 (Abts LINE. SUMMER SERVICE. Bail from QUEBEC to LIVERPOOL every SATUR- ss from BALTIMO) Salling from BALTIMORE to LIVERPOOL every al- NSTOWN.) AY, (Via. QUEE SHORTEST OCEAN VOYAGE. FKOM LAND TO LAND. ONLY FIVE Days Extra Weekly Ships from GaLway, LIMERICK, LON, DONDERRY and GLAS- re Only DIRECT LINE trom GALWAY and LIMERICK. Stock Exchange. $$ $$_$$_$___—.. PBvaTe STOCK TELEGRAPH WIRES WASHINGTON, NEW YORK aND RICHMOND, — H. H. DODGR, Bonds, ‘Stocks and tnvestmen: ities Bought eld on Commision as No. £89 167m STREET, (CORCORAN BUILDING) Agency for Prince and Whitely, ‘Stock Brokera, (4 Buoapwar. New Youu, Frerv clans of Fecnritien boncht anf aol on commie sion in Ban Francisco, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Ree York, Boston end Washington. Orders executed on the New York Stock Exchange at one-eighth of one per cent the Markets received wires INSTANTLY direct irom the Jew Exchange. SAFE DEPOSIT ©O. ECURITY FROM LOSS BY BURGL ROBBERY, FIRE OR ACCIDENT. THE NATIONAL SAFE DEPOSIT COMPAR. of Washington, In ita own butlding, Conven 16TH Srueer axp New Yous Ave. Charter Act of a 224, 1 ity “at lant Fete a in re Proof Vaults, at price varying from 88 10860 per neat ing to size and ieeatiog Rooms and Berke ad Joining Vaults, provided for Safe-reuters. — -ARY, VAULT DOORS GUARDED BY THE SARGENT TIME-LOCK. nae Hates.” SECURITIES AND VALUABLES of tion, including BONDS and 810CKS, ELA EEE REEDS, Ke., taken for SAPE-KEC! "ECIAL GUARANTEE, at the Lowest BENJAMIN P. sy: Prowia ALBERT L. STURTEVANT, Secretary. C.F. Nyman, Anet. Seay, myt oe = SPECIALTIES. (0 AND SEF PROF. WARRING, MEDIUM AND REAL ASTROLOGER, 715 Ninth street horth weet Five thousand dollars to any one who can equal in telling ~ a oe futare, comeing ws marri i separa ther, and in busines, Sifaire, whowe acvice is invaluatle.. Hie tells conmuitere pame Jo full, and ta the only person that can do , Warring asks no questions and uses no cards ot any description ju hie profession: : SATISFACTION GIVEN OR NO PAY. Fee—Ladies, $1; gentlemen, $1. my 2-8t? HR. ROBERTSON, SPECIALIST AND CONFI- dential consulting Physician; 20 years exper be consulted Wednesday and Saturday, som 3 tp.8 Bes at 456 Cxtreet northwest; main Office, 30 N, erty street, Baltimore. a ARAM 2088, THE LONG-ESTABLISHED, RES Hable Clairvoyant and Astrologint, gives fctixfaction in all affairs of life than any one in the pro- ferwion ; tells the past, present and future destiny, ives sdvice ‘and assistance on all matt Dieiness, love and matrimony. ALL Fatisfaction given or no pay. eultation Kooms, 2d street, above DP etrect nortuweet. This month reduced. Ladies, 50 cents, gentemen,| Accommodations Unegualied. Cabin $70 and $0. eee Prepaid Steerage For information, &c.. apply to LEVE & ALDEN, General ‘267 Broadway. New fork, G. W. MOSS, 225 Pey ia avenue; Shs. BELLEW, 711 fh streets » Mus. D. A. BROSNAN, mil: Age! RS, M. A. FRENCH, MAG and Business Medium, hax wi Street northwest, where she will be pleased to many friends aud customers. f . BROOKE TELLS ALL THE EVE LIFE. All business confidential hen 5U cents each. 408 L street between 4th Sth xtreets nortan west Ow? Evtoren EvUoren COOK'S GRAND EXCURSIONS aes jerk ABril 20th, Juve let, Juno 13th and june . Passage Tickets by all Atlantic Steamers. Special fs cilities for necuring GUOD BERTHS SPeCia fae TOURIST TICKETS for individual travelers in Eu- rope, by all row juced rates. COOKS EXCURSIONIST. with Maps and full par- ticulars, by mail 10 cents. Address THOS. COOK & SON, f21-whs3it 261 Broadway, N.Y. CUNaRD LINE. Ey noore, IE CUNAR: MSHIP COMPANY LIMITED, CAI LN RK HARBOR. NEW YORE alin .....Wed., June 27. Bothnia July 4. Wed.. June 13. | Auranta 1.) Wed.,July 11. Rervia. << Wea Zuly 18. DAY FROM NeW YORK. £ Steamers marked * do not carry Rates of passage—$80 ana $100, stecrago passengers. according to accom modation. at very low rates. Rtecrage tickets from Liv- ibe] and Queenstown and all other pariaof Europeat Jbrough, bills of laden given for Belfast, Glasgow, Havre, Antwerp and other ports on the Continent Jor Mediterranean pot ports. For freight and ply at the Company's office, os Eee” Glaaeae Ml Ste coma ace, O18 BIGELOW & CO., GUS 7th strvet, Washington, ” VERNON H. BROWN & CO., New York, paaty Messrs. O 1 BIGELOW & \n MEDICAL, &c. DUS. SECTHERS AND GRay Grv prescriptions and send you wlat, who divi i Bulnted of ROTH. NO FREE tosomeside-rhow drng- doctor. “Those disap- dikeases whould co les profits ure of ri aud GRAY, £06 B street southwest, Will | furnish medicines, guaranteo a cure, or no pas. Thirty years’ experience. myi7-1m* R. ROBERTSON, THE MOST RELIABLE AND Diinzer cunts specialist in this city, with 13 iy, experience, will OUR 2 ihe Urins ere fons stricdly confidential “Gan 7 ‘trot Cut. n.w. Refers to the ‘Main oftios, 30 N. Liberty aplé ADI YOU CAN CONFIDENTLY CONSULT L Dr. PROTRERS 906 se Says Particular ness iseanen peculiar t2 Ladien. inarcied oF ‘All irrogularitice and Ovarian Trowbles treated, ive Years’ exverience. CARD. ‘To all who are suffering T A. Se as x of ce you, FREE OF CHALGE. Tine covered by a missional self-addressed envelope to the errors andin- ervOUs Weakness, cary, lecay, will senda recipe that wilcure it was dis- dosrrn fIswane W- Josen T. oft ths keke jon D, New York City. ANHOOD EESTORED. (A victim of carly jmpradencs, quan Tine peepee Ts eee mee Sufferers, “Address J." REEVES, 03 street, New York. ‘pé-«. tu, ' Deere for sre. boop Ovarian Tange a aoe ase ore Gra ae USING A Da. JOHN TRIPP. ‘ANHOOD RI ‘or two of Dn. ormeas Ipvigorating ous De. fed tn vata cure any case of Mig Fe Be RS from to Pom, withiadiasoniy.” team" - R= BeaDu sialon recelbtor price pa THE TRADES. a a ne a ee i Gees ‘sous hes, : RAILROADS. HE GREA PENNSYLVANIA ROUTE. TO THE NOKTH, WEST, DOUBLE TRACK. si STLEL KAILS. " MAGNIFICENT E S EFFECT MAY: ‘Trarns Leave Wasiinaton, For Pittsburg gud the West, chicago Lite! Fxyireas for Pittabuirg at vent, Chicago Litited Px of Palace Sleeping Care at 9:30 a.m.. daily Fab "30 ‘eth (Sleeping Care from for Chicag: 1 Pittsburg. to’ Chiceco. ‘Mail tap rg hicaro. ‘ime 9:50 p.m. daily. for Fattabury ‘and the West. with re Sleeping Car Washington to Chicago. BALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RAILROAD, For, Erie, Canand Rochester, Buffalo, N 9:50 p. m. dally, except Saturday, with Palace Wartitogton to'Caushdaigun, wid Marneoung Baftalo. For Willamsp a.m. daily, except 5: For New ‘York and 80, 4:20. 9:50 and 10:20'p. 60 and 10:20 Parlor Cars, 9 For Boston without change, 1 mn Sunday, nm. For Brooklyn, N. ¥., all through trains connect af Ferry Ry wit oats of rocky Anivex, “atlorg- ing dfrect transfer to Fulton street, avoiding dow New York City. 00 a. m., 10-30@. m., 1:30, 4 On Sunday 20, 9 50. ‘Lintited Express, 9:30 & mi. dail iv. 5:40, 8:00, 9:39, 10-30 a. ‘6:20, '7:80,9:60 and 10:20 10:30 @. tu, 4:20, 6:20, 7:30, 9:50 and 10:20 p. - For Popels Creek Line, 6:40 a.m. and 4:40 p.m. daily, except Sunday, For Annapolis, 6:40 a.m. and 4:40 p.m. daily, except ‘Sunday. ALEXANDRIA AND FREDERICKSBURG RATLe WAX. AND ALLXANDKIA AND WASHINGION For Alexandria, | 20, 11:00 and 11:250.m.. 20, 4:90, 9:00," 8-00, B00 and AE homme Ok Sunday at 6:30, 9.20 and 11.25 a.m. and 6:00 Tn, 3 For ichmona gna the South, ¢:30 and 11:25a.m, pt Bun ington, a my4-1m" | JQALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD, ‘HE MODEL FAST LINE AND THE ONLY LIX® THE EAST AND THE WEST. VIA WASHINGTON. DOUBLE TRACK! ag COUPLER! le to take effect SUNDAY, MAY 2eth Fears Wesharten from station, Corner: New Jontey aygnueand daily Except Saturday pecbead pr dng 840. fo void rain 4 Fl ‘Ciacinnatt, ‘Bt. Seas Get, wrarsh, s,% eae aay to Chivawee ‘without changé; 10:15 8 a2, 6:30. £8, 10, 6140, 11:30 p.m on Sun! 30, 7489, 20-065 a.m, i path ie ea Sunday, p.m. iietieyerce ce eee ke “ior Frederick, €:30a1-, 10:1ba.tn ead For Hegemnpw 10 em daly exoopt Bunday, 648 Trains arrive from the Weet daily, 6:20, 7:35a.m_ From i shit Philadelphia, 3:58, 8:90 a.m 5 820 as., 150, 6:97 p.m; Sunday, econ eg . Pabee rater alts gee “F