Evening Star Newspaper, June 6, 1883, Page 6

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4 BODY AS A BALL. ‘ways Policeman’s Blood Runs Cold When fie Thinks of a Hecent Ex- perience. ‘From the Providence Jourual. ‘As the train which leaves this city for Boston | &t 4:15 o'clock was drawing out of the station on Friday, a drunken man rushed through the ¢rowd and attempted to leap to the platform of One of the cars. He seized the railing, but his feet slipped and he was drauged. the railing, however, and some persons on the Platform succeeded, with the assistance of Police- man Isaac W. Fairbrother, in pulling him up as the car neared the wall passing out of the station. At this point bez with a space oi about thirty inches bet’ wall and the cars, which widened outward to about six feet. This stretch is about fifty feet fn lenzth, when anothing jutting wall is en- countered. but the sp: i the car will not admit the presence of a man. Several accidents haye occurred here. Persons n knocked from the platform, and but months ago a man knocked from the is projection had his arm severed y Policeman Fairbrother did not observe his own peril as the car reached the projegting wall at the news room. His first intimation of dan- jim on the left shoulder and p: Rarrow passageway ot about thirty inches. He is a large, powerfully-built man and tips the | seales at about 240 po Moment began to move more rapidly and the policeman, with the breath partially crushed from his body and bruised, was. by the motion The train every ric 3 Although bruised ana dazed he did not lose his resence of mind and knew that were he ¢: the second projection it would be certa’ death. Gathering himself ne made one more effort, and when the wider space was reached he suc- ceeded, assisted by the momentum of the car, in throwing himself to the further corner, out ot harm's way. He nded feet first against a slanting platform of wood put there to prevent rain water lodging in the corner. He strack with such force that the imprint of one of his boots is discernible on the boards. Atter being Teleased from the narrow s He clung to | out-of-door “program” which sounds attract! wall and | was when the end of the car caught | ssed him into the | & June Bride. From Harper's Bazar. The June bride has determined this year to trust to the doctrine of chances, and to have a part of her wedding out-of-doors. So much bad weather has been doled out to us this spring that she reasons that a great deal of fair weather ; Ought to follow, and that she can reasonably expect a pleasant day, when skles are bright | and grass is dry. tor the great occasion of her | bridal feast. | _At least three suburban brides have made an | One of these forthcoming June weddings will be upon the lordly Hudson, at a rural church | not far from a historical locality. ‘The rector's | Tesidence is near the church, with a sorPot little | garden lawn between, something like the gar- | dens at Oxford; this, like them, is shadowed by lofty trees. It Is a delightful arrangement; the le stone church, with it vines, and the rec- y. all stand In one green. park-like inclosure, | inviting to all the senses. The bridal procession will form In the rectory, and will walk to the ehurch in the following order: First, the |ehildren of the Sunday school, seattering then the choir boys, _ singing. 1 stop about twenty feet from dividing on either side, forming an | | alley for the procession. The Sunday scholars | go inte the church, and arrange themselves in which he carries off his bride. The family of the bride, if they have invited guests in the house, farnish carriages for all who to the church from their house, but invited guests from the outside furnish their own carriages, At a wedding breakfast in the country, as elsewhere, every lady guest wears her bonnet and removes her gloves as she sits down to table. There should be some usher, or near relative, or master of ceremonies, who shall tell each gentleman what lady he Is to take in to the breakfast, for, if a seated banquet, it has much the formality of a dinner. A table spread under the trees, with camp- stools scattered abont—no formality, but a gen- eral sort of a garden party—is the favorite method adopted at June weddings for “feeding” the guests, to use a vulgar Americanism. Often another table Is furnished in the house, to avold | the accident of bad weather The bride, if she is to walk to the church, shouid either have a carpet of flowers or a real carpet to walk on. Great care must be taken that the wedding dress, with its voluminous train and trimmings, is not soiled in the transit. ee Harmony of Color in Floriculture. From Land and Water. Artistic arrangement in flower gardens is a thing very easy to talk about, but it is not quite so easy to put it into practice. Anybody the side aisles, having scattered their flowers even to the altar; on one occasion these flowers | will be ¢ ies. Then will come the relatives | and friends of the young couple; then the six | ushers; then the bridemaids, all dressed in dif- | ferent colors, with hats to match their dresses, | and carrying parasols of flowers of various | color hen the bride, leaning on her father's | arm, and carrying a parasol of white flowers; then six young married women, friends of the | bride, in an informal zroup,surround the bride’s mother, who thus follows her daughter out of the house where she was bred, and watches her | en to the altar steps. The groom and best | in will meet the bride at the altar. The choir | boys sing the epithalamium until the bride | reaches the altar. The friends who follow the bride take their places in the front pews,and the ceremony goes on as usual. We have been asked by some correspondents | if there is any change of program at a Presby- | | terian wedding. We know of none. The selec- | tion of the Episcopal service is now allowed by most clergymen of different and simpler denom- | Inations, if the young couple so elect. But even | if the clergyman marries by the usual form of | twenty feet bounded like a ball backward: terwards against the car and wall by the mentum of the train until he gathered himself for his final effort which saved his lif is narrow escape. he says, causes cold chills when he thinks of it. —— Storms aad Gales. The exceptional character of the season, which has prevailed, not only in our own country, but over nearly the entire continent of Europe, has | directed public attention very forcibly to the forecasts of the meteorologists which are pub- lished in the daily papers, and to the evidence on which their assumptions are founded. Nor very many years have passed weather prophets were regarded very much as elairvoyants and spirit media are at the present time; a lucky hit in a weather almanac has more than once sold off numerous editions, and made the fortune of the proprietor; but with the ad- vance of science, and the greater diffusion of | scientific knowledge among the reading public, these empirical announcements have fallen into decay, and few. if any, readers could now be found to believe in the prophecies of Mr.Murphy, or Zadkiel, or even Old Moore himself. The storms which are so frequently predicted, and, in the majority of instances, with extraor- dinary accuracy, are foretold by the state of the barometer at Various places on the earth's sur- face. The reports are received by telegram at the chief office. and, bein studied hour after hour, serve to indicate the depression at diffe ent places, as shown by the fall of the mercury and the rate at which the atmospheric disturb- | ances are traveling, thus enabling a very accu- | Tate estimate to be formed of the direction of | the coming storm. Aithough in this and other tempera’ on of vari- able winds, a calculate on trade winds either constantly or | for weeks tozether in one direction, neyerthe- | Jess the storms that ravage our coasts and wreek our strongest shipping obey certain laws; and away since | | the Presbyterian church, the entrance and exit may be the same. Another country wedding, at a large place in Orange, will have the usual ceremony at the church, but the wedding breakfast will be spread out-of-doors under the trees." At this wedding the English fashion of speeches will be in order. The bridegroom will respond for the bride, the best man for the bride- maids. This last speech is always intended to be humorous, the best man insisting that the time is coming when the bridemaids shall speak for themselves, etc. Each speaker must endeavor to be easy and funny, and not to destroy the peace ot mind of the bride by breaking down. The easy small-talk which paves the way toward pleasant companionship should never flag at these entertainments, and ; the slightest thread of merriment should ve woven into the rather dangerous topic of fare- well and departure. Charles Lamb says, “The bridemaids were in tears and white muslin.” There are almost always tears, and the speakers do not need to be too emotional. Every one is not gifted with this talent for making an off-hand and lively g| h. Let no one attempt it without thinking it over and arranging his thoughts. Let him try to get rid of self-consctousness, and utter the simplest and most agreeable expressions of good- wi Admiration of the bride, a few words of encomium on the groom, a very great profusion of flowery compiiments to the bridemaids, all in | afunny vein, with a tittle dash of sentiment at the end, would seem to be a good recipe for the wedding-breaktast speeches, without. superla- tives or any very great attempt at eloquence. People expecially clever in making what is called small-talk are very useful at the wedding break- fast. June weddings are very pretty occasions, as they admit of that light, delicate. airy kind of ume which is most becoming to our young ris. Since the admission of color in bride- maids’ dresses the group is exceedingly effective if the colors are studied by an artist or profes- sional costumer, so that they set off each otner. once their presence is known, even on the opp ai the Atlantic. their course, and e n, can be predicted with a great ertainty. | few persons of any observant power | have noticed that a violent gale | eeldom biows for any length of time in one di- | Fection. The wind changes from souti to north, | and veers about in rratie man. ed at sea, wing with | nly be sue- | but, before | had tie to congratulate | supposed eseape from the | imminent peril with which they were surround- | ed, the gale with all its original vio- lence, but in the opposi ngers it appe s | . Fegretrul of having allowed pe. had come back to complete the work of destruction. It is now some years since that the theory ot storms was investizated by scientifle men, when it was discovered that they were but gigantic | eddies and whirlwinds, such as are in miniature Tendered visible at street corners ona windy day when the clouds of dust, with leaves and straws. are whirled about by the eddy caused by the meeting of two opposing currents of air. If! we imagine whirlwinds several miles, or some- | times several hundred miles in extent, moving with a velocity that is unknown in this country, we shall have an idea of a cyclonic storm; and as the eddy that has carried the cloud of dust which renders it visible to the eye travels | the highway. so does this huge whirlwind, that ally near the West Indian | Atlantic until it reaches | ill retaining sufficient force to inflict ge with which we are so familiar. One sinzular circumstance respecti | storms has been detinitely ascertained—that the | circling of the current Is always in the same di- Fection, which is the reverse to that of the hands of a watch. As the wind thus moves in Scircie, it is evident that the direction in which it strikes any building or vessel in its course de- | pends onthe part of the circle in whlch they | are; and if the ship is sosituated as to be passed over by the center of the eycione. the gale will increase in intensity until thie center is reached, when there will be a sudden calm, wh | aprelude to the recommencement of the tem- | pest trom the opposite direction. Since the | Publication of these facts vessels seldom | allow the center, which is the worst of | to pass over them. w | uce has shown the way, they steer out | of the storm, instead of following the course | previously adopted of running before the gale, and allowing the terrible wind to blow them north, west, south, and east for days to; It fs a knowledge of the existence of these cir- eular storms of yreater or less intensity, of their | Fate of passage across the Atlantic, and of their exact direction, which enables our meteorolo- gists to predict with wonderful though not Unerring accuracy the coming of gales and tempests, and to enable the mariner to take measures accordingly. By the aid of the returns Pabtisned daily in the morning papers, and sent wv telegram to all seaport towns, thonsands of lives have been added to the list of those saved Queen. n | by selence.— London ita oe At the Matinee. They talked of their babies, thelr clothes, and heir teeth, And there isn’t a thing you can think of beneath ‘The sun or the moon they didn’t disc With a wonderful din and a wonderful But the music we all had assembled to hear, ‘These three charming mothersof babies so dear. ‘The orchestra played that musical dream (Of Schubert—his last—until It would seem ‘That a chorus of angels had caught up the theme ‘Aad lent the sweet tone of their voices supreme, ‘To lift our souls up; but these fair mothers three Bull talked of their babtes in innocent gice. And now the grand chorus rings out through the And mel reigns supreme over all— Over all save these mothers, who seem to forget ‘The charms of the music, because they have set ‘Themselves for a talk, their babies for text, Without e’en a thought for those they have vexed. ‘They tell us that music will charm the wild breast Of the savage. and set him completely at rest, But, with babies for text, no song ever sung Can stop for a moment a fond mother’s tongue. —Pittsturg Dispatch. —— Path Is 4 Woman's Brre Poisonovs?—In a party in St. Joseph, Mo., were a young man “noted for his brilliant conversational powers,” anda beau- ful girl ‘from one of the upper counties,” and in the course of a struggle for the possession of @ trinket “the girl sank her ivory teeth into the fleshy part of the young man’s arm.” He po- ltely concealed his pain till he returned home, when, on removing his garments, blood was found trickling from the wound. Next mor- ning the lacerated arm was swollen to twice its ‘The bridal dresses for June are made of lighter fabries than those of winter. A very beautiful crepe de chine embroidered with silver, with | tulle vell ornamented with crystal drops, has Just been imported for a June bride. The effect | is carefully delicate. It has no garish or theatri- cal effect. It looks like dew-drops on the flow- ers, and will form a part of that procession un- der the tress in early June of which we have spoken. At another wedding the effect will be more Amazoni: rly English. All. will wear | bonnets @ la directoire. Bride and bridemaids | will look like pictures of the days long past. | The bride will be in white, and her maids in | lilae, yellow, blue and pale pink surah, with dra- peries of gaze de Chambery, and Leghorn hats tied down. We cannot sufficiently emphasize the fact that | black, especially mourning black, should never be worn at a wedding by any of the relatives of the bride. The mother, if a widow, must lay aside mourning for that day, and all the near relatives must avoid any suspicion of crape. ‘The bride has a right to decide on the dresses of her bridemaids, and is in all things the queen of the occasion. If she gives the bridemaids their dresses, she can, of course, command them as costly as she pleases, but if she allows them to buy them she should be careful howshe taxes a slender purse too freely. The groom presents the ring and any other article of jewelry he may choose. and he gives the bridemaids a handsome fan or piece of jew- elry, and a bridal bouquet, also bouquets for the bridemaias. Wedding favors for the groom, best man and ushers, made otf white satin ribbon and silver, are coming back, and willbe worn at some June veddings. There is no doubt that these favors give a very festive look to the whole scene in a | country neighborhood when the universal refine- | ment of June in the rural districts prevents any association which might seem too showy. In one or two instances the bride will not ap- pear at the wedding breakfast. She leaves the groom to represent her on this trying occasion. and slips off with her mother for a few farew words, and to change her wedding dress for the traveling costume. is dress in our country is almost always of. some soft drab color, and is ge ally of woolen orfoulard. In England it is frequently ot vel- vet, but in our warm summer weather velvet would be uncomfortable. When the bride absents herself from the break- fast of course it is a sign of great timidity or of fatigue, and yet it may seem to have its advan- tages. it gives the speakers greater opportunity to speak words in her praise; it certainly spares her blushes. She re-appeara in her traveling dress fresh for the shower of rice and slippers, which should not, however, be thrown so as to frighten the horses. The wedding presents will be shown at these June weddings. They are to be laid out in an upper room,and carefully guarded by the trusted servants of the family, asin these days of tramps one cannot be too carefulat the wedding, which has also a garden party freedom. It is'an ex- posed occasion for yaluable silver and jewelry. A wedding breakfast in the open air should be @ cold collation, bouillon being, however,served hot if the guests please to call for it. Salads of cnicken, lobster, and salmon, pate de foie gras, Jellies and ices, champagne and sherry, and per- haps a bowl of punch on a side table, are in or- der, but no hot dishes. The great bride-cake, so famousamongst Eng- lish pastry-cooks, has hardly taken its place amongst us; but as an accompaniment of the re- Introduction of the wedding breakfast we hear of a very elaborate one which has just been made, which will contain a ring, and will be cut by the bride and passed after the ceremony. As for June weddings in town, they can have but few features which render them in any way unlike the winter weddings, excepting in the lighter character of the dreases, and the depart- ure of the bride and groom in a carriage and four horses, gayly decorated with favors and bouquets, fog the country house which they bor- row tor the honeymoon. #rAnother innoyatioa which the June bride makes this year is a very good one, and pre- vents an awkwardness which has been seriously felt: she does not wear gloves. This has been observed as a growing custom this winter, sev- eral brides having gone to the altar with glove- less hands. There is thus avoided that dreadful moment when the first bridemaid is pulling off the sticky glove from a hot and trembling hand. It would seem an especial propriety to leave oft the glove, if the glove is ever to be dropped, during that short transit from the house to the altar and back again; certainly the two be- trothed hands should meet gloveless, and the ring hand should be ungloved always. A widow should be married in a bonnet; there- fore the coming fashion for even the June bride natural size, and he was laid up for several The St. Joseph paper, in relating the in- Tefers to another, and a worse one of a similar nature, that occurred at Cape Girardeau ®@ few years ago, in which a young gentleman actually died from a playful bite on his thamb by a young lady. The paper remarks: “It fre- quently happens that the bite of a woman is Poisonous. to wear a bonnet will be very convenient tor those who en secondes noces tempt the hazard- ous experiment of matrimony. Some of our correspondents have asked us if See ee ee carriages, » if the wedding were to take from a hotel. It is not the custom in Eng- or in polite society anywhere, for carriage but the one in groom to furniah any can point out the errors, the want of taste, the glaring defectsin the laying out of a parterre, but it is quite another thing ifthey are asked how it is to be remedied. Everything seems so easy and so simple when you merely look on a8 acritic prepared to'find fault without having any share in the labor. So many difficulties lie in the way of harmonious coloring and arrange- ment as applied to flower gardening—far more than would appear to a superficial observer. Al- though there are flowers of every hue and of all sizes, yet they may not bloom at exactly the same time, or some may fade sooner than others, or the form and size of one plant may not contrast favorably with the others. Ot late years we have made rapid progress in artistic floriculture. No longer do we submit to see our gardens scattered over recklessly, with- ‘out regard to harmony or contrast, with flowers of every color or species. In our days we see more tasteful arrangements and dispositions in the flower gardens‘of some of the poorer subur- ban streets than were displayed in the extensive and costly parterres of thirty or forty years back. Flowers were formerly taken by striking con- trast, without relation to harmony, and planted here and there, wherever a spot appeared sult- able for their reception; but now, by grouping plants in masses, and attending, so far as possi- ble, to their relative hues and forms, we can produce a finer and more striking effect with halt a dozen species than the gardeners of past times did with haif a hundred. ° Nothing looks worse in a flower garden than to see plants, large and small, bright or somber, placed heterogeneously together in one bed. It is usual to see small beds filled with six orseven varieties of flowers of as many different colors. This imparts a very scattered effect toa par- terre, for too much variety in detail leaves no spot for the eye to rest on. Small beds should never contain more than one species and one color, though this may be as bright as you please. Large beds, on the contrary, may be planted with a greater variety of flowers. Great, care should always be taken to plant flowers of the brightest hues—scarlet pelargoniums, for example—in the center of the group; and these should be softened by degrees with flowers of a less brilliant tint toward the margin of the bed. White flowers are. perhaps, the best to plant along the margin immediately inside the box or turf edging. In large parterres the beds should be sepa- rated from the bright gravel paths by a margin of green turt not less than two teet in breadth. In smaller gardens, however, this would occupy too much space, and box edging is generally substituted, But this verge should not be less than three inches in thickness, and perfectly flat on the top. To form perfectly harmonious contrasts in a parterre, it is best to plant one of the three primary colors—scarlet, blue, or yellow—next to another; or, if a pertect primary Is not at hand, to take the complementary color tormed by compounding the other two, green being | complementary color to red, orange to blue, and purple to yellow. Many persons, indeed, say that two primaries form too violent a contrast, and recommend that the complementary should be employed in preference. For instance, red must be contrasted by blue or yellow, or else by green, but not by purple or orange, because red enters into the composition of both these colors. In default of any of these colors, white or some neutral tinted flowers may be employed. In the same way blue flowers should be contrasted by either red, yellow or orange, but pot by purple or green, because blue enters into the composi- tion of both colors. Also, with vellow, you must. contrast with blue, red or purple, but’ not with green or orange. There are many neutral col- 3 red brown, or olive brown, or pale layen- der, or even light pink, which will form sufti- cient contrast to the others. White is very use- ful for placing between flowers of a brilliant hue whicli harmonize badly. Very bright colors, however, should always be used sparingly and never placed in large masses, because the eye Is wearied by too much positive coloring. It is a very great mistake to plant a clump of dark, funereal-looking ever- greens in the center of a bed of bright scarlet pelargoniums, bright yellow dablias, or white candytuft as a strong contrast, and to make the whole look cheerful. But so far trom having this effect, it imparts a harsh, disagreeable effect to the entire group. Masses of dark green should never be contrasted immediately with brighter colors. If they are softened by de- grees with neutral tints, or even by pale yellow or white flowers, the group blends insensibly into the surrounding landscape in place of standing out in violent contrast from the rest. —+e-—_____ A Cyclone’s Destructive Point. From the St. Louis Republican. The pendent stem, or small end of the funnel, is always the center of the track and the force of the storm. Where it swept along the ground near Hillsboro, Ill., can easily be seen, The track of the stem proper is not more than four or five feet wide, There is nothing more cer- tain than that there is absolutely no safety for anything in the track of the stem. It will take the water out of wells, and in many places ac- tually dig trenches in the solid earth. There is no safety in cellars or caves in its immediate track, but a cellar or cave would be a safe place if only ten or fifteen feet on either side of the stem. — Indestructible Bank Notes. It !s a curious fact that so firm in texture is the paper of a genuine Bank ot England note that burning alone can hardly destroy it. The authorities have in a little glazed frame the remnants of the note which was in the great fire of Chicago. Though completely charred and black, the paper holds together, and the note is sufficiently legible to establish its genuineness and to be cashed. ——__—_-o+______ The Newest Rage. From the Detroit Tribune. One of the “rages” among fashionable young women is photographs of themselves with al. most as little clothing upon them as the day they did soclety the great honor to be born Sometimes they are known to pose, masked, in artists’ studios. A picture in New York ot a Moorish slave in a hammock was painted in a private studio in Chicago before a small class The lady model always came in a carriage alone and heavily veiled, appeared before the class masked, with a most exquisitely beautiful form. Each sitting completed, she went away in her carriage, which one of the students, ae. at- ad ee one night to follow it, deck pur- sued a circuitous route too ions id puzzling to trace to its destination. Nol knew her, not even the artist. She had applied to him to serve, heavily veiled, and her face was never visible. By a peculiar series ot accidents, it wae learned that she was the wife of a very rich and prominent merchant, and ehtertained magnifi- cently at her mansion on the south side. She was meet to modelling simply by vanity. Her husband bought the picture through an agent, and it for a long time hung in his parlor. The face being a fanciful one painted in afterwards itwas never known that the mistress of the mansion was the original of the subject. Be- coming bankrupt, the painting passed out of her husband’s hands, and now constitutes the chief object of interest in a New York bar-room. —————_-e-—_____ A CLERGYMAN SUED FOR SLANDER.—William: ‘From the London Spectator. : A little more than ten years ago, having an in- terest in that curious and little studied subject, the history of property, we published a list, com- piled from the IUustrated London News, of all British fortunes exceeding a quarter of a million personalty which had been transferred by death within the decade. That list, which was the first of its kind, and excited at the time a pre- posterous amount of interest, showed that with- inthe ten years ten persons had died in Great Britain leaving more than £1,000,000, fifty-three leaving more than £500,000, and 161 leaving more than £150,000. We promised to repeat the lig at the end of another decade. * * * This list is a disappointment. We had expected that the number would have doubled,or at least greatly increased, and that the scale of fortunes would be mich larger; but this is not the case. The number of fortunes ranging between £100, 000 and £250,000 has increased enormously, and is now far beyond anything we care to print, and a fact perceptible in the old list might have been made a marked feature in the present one. The wealthy of the world are investing in Eng- land very largely, indeed, especially the Spanish- Americans, who find it convenient to (plies a section of their often gigantic fortunes beyond the reach of plunder. But, excluding a Roths- child, whose wealth is of a separate kind, there is no double millionaire in the list, and no man whom the rich Americans and the cosmopolitan Jew millionaires, with their fingers in every ple, would allow to be possessed of a first-class for- tune. No one approaches eyen at a distance the wealth of W. H. Vanderbilt or Jay Gould, and No one’s personalty enables us to compare him With a @rst-class English landed property. About £80,000 a year would represent the very highest. sum upon the list. No British subject, in fact, has left wealth so large as to raise social ques- tions or seriously affect the budget, and the fact is a very curious one. It is, of course, in part explained by the method of computation. These returns are based on the payments made for probate duty on per- sonalty, and do not include land and houses, still a favorite investment in England, or the enormous masses of wealth now held abroad, which, though liable to income tax, escape legacy duty altogether. Much of this mass belongs to the Mat rich, who have accurate in- formation, who like a good percentage, and who are in many cases haunted by an idea that distribution in many countries is equivalent to insurance. ‘I'he English holdings in the rents of all countries, in railways and banks abroad, and in foreign house property elude this list al- together, as do also the immense sources of wealth Classed as “businesses,” with their offices outside Great Britain. Still, we are surprised at the figures. Only thirteen men have left more thana million, only 56 more than half a million, and only 195 more than a quarter of a million. That is an increase among millionaires of 30 per cent, among half-million- aires of 6 percent and among quarter-million- aires of 18 per cent, and we expected the num- bers to be doubled. Considering the increase of opportunities, there must be some cause operat- ing against excessive accumulation, and we are ‘happy to believe it isa reluctance to spend life in mere amassing, which prevents the children of millionaires, who In England are usually cul- tivated, from treading in their fathers’ footsteps. They either retire altogether from such work or pursue it with acertain languor, and end by merging themselves in the ordinary aristocracy, who hunt down exceptional weaith with per- sistence and success. Still, what a list it ts! Among all those millionaires and demi-millionaires and quarter- millionaires, there is only one great grandee, the late duke of Portland, whose eccentric waste- fulness did not in the least impair his magnifi- cent income; only three or tour peers, and not above 10 persons who were at all widely, not to say nationally, Known. The immense majority were quiet traders, bankers, manufacturers, ironmasters, and the like, who led usually quiet though wealthy lives, spent money on col- lections and gardens, and were unknown even to those who make it a business to know. They represent the profits of trade and that is all, and their wealth increases the wages fund without disturbing’the social calm. If they do good it 8 generally by cultivating art; if they do harm it is by keeping upa standard of outlay which destroys much of the ease and enjoyment of. social life. and would anywhere but in England make the able restless and discon- tented. Here, however, the wall which sur- rounds private life is seldom broken, expendi- ture is apt to be steadily profuse rather than ostentatious, the love of country seclusion is deep-rooted, and ambition is much more com- mon than acrid envy. The foible of rising men in England is sensitiveness rather than ostenta- tion, and though purse-pride often exists in a high degree, it 1s lost amtd other prides and toned down by the social ascendency of an aristocracy which loves money and despises moneyed men. As to popular hostility to the millionaires, there 1s no trace of it... We detect strong signs of a growing desire to spoil cer- tain privileges, rather than let the rich monop- olize them—as, for example, in the agitation to throw open gardens which are worthless> and worse, the moment they cease to be secluded— but of dislike to an individual because he is rich, we see no signs. Any butler in London who, on reading our list, finds that hjs master inherited more than he thought, will not only respect him more, but oddly enough, will resent his economies _ less. Wealth, when not too pompous, is liked, like any other ornament; and if a man shod his horses with silver, his grooms would quote that fact as one reflecting a certain credit and rank upon themselves. Indeed, even opinion hardly presses on the rich; there is no ‘‘feelinj asin America, that a millionaire should do something for the public, and we very much doubt if lega- cles to charities excite any great respect. They become more frequent, we fancy, but the com- ments upon them delivered on omnibusesare not entirely eulogistic. “He was a charitable beg- gar; but, Lord, how his folks must feel!” was actually said, and expresses forcibly, if Inele- gantly, the genuine popular idea. There is no point on which English and Continental feelings differ so widely as the appreciation of wealth. To “kill a bourgeois” as the French Socialist did the other day, strikes Englishmen as something worse than killing a man; and they lament over a fire all the more, if the person burned out was rich. The Bridge's Christening. From the Burlington Hawkeye. That I might the more properly observe the Queen’s birthday, 1 went, on the 24th, to the growing English city of York. I said to a man: 2 “And this is the culmination of 1819.” “Shadow of time! No!” he said. ‘She wasn’t begun till 1865.” “So young as that?” I sald. ‘The only off- spring of Edward of Kent—” “Edward nobody,” said a tall policeman. “ William C. Kingsley was the man, but Roeb- ling was the engineer.” ‘And to-day,” I said, “we rejoice in her grandeur, her majesty, her power, her——” “*She’s a buster, for sure; 5,989 feet long,” said a man in mechanic's dress. “And,” I said, thinking the man’s metaphor was a little strained, “her world-wide * Oh, pshaw!” sald the mechanic, “that’s all gammon. She won't sway enougit to feel it.” “Well,” I said, “a woman whose laws are obeyed from John O’Groat’s to Australia——” “ What under the sun are you talking about?” the man said. "_ “Victoria,” I told him; ‘‘and what are you crazy over?” Bridge it,” he said, ‘another woman en- tirely. Victor ia isn’t down on the program to-day.’ And I realized that the great suspension bridge had swallowed up all the birthdays onthe continent. Wants A New HusBAND.—‘‘I'm Mrs. Schnel- der and I’m in search of my husband, Francie, who is nearly sixty years,” sald a buxom young woman, scarcely twenty-three years old, to Superintendent Walling, at the police central office, in New York city Monday. “I wag born in Sweden and I met my husband less than eight months ago on the steamer Soin from the Old Country,” she sald, and continuing, “I did not marry for love. but for his money. We lived together in Washington and Phila- delphia, and some weeks since the old man gave me @100and sent me to New York, saying he aoe inet a abs Rice paee bays be jasn’t showed up yet. It’s an way ve and I would Tike (A get another husband that would not desert me. One between forty and sixty, but not over, would suit me.” After Mrs. Schelder’s tongue had ‘stopped fora few minutes B. Miner has brought action against Rev. R. C. Morgan, pastor of the Baptist church at Con- nellsville, Pa., for slander. Miner, who is wealthy coke oven builder, was formerly a dea- conin the Baptist church. When the church was divided by dissension he was one of the first toleave. In his declaration, filed a few days ago, Miner alleges that Rev. Mr. Morgan told three different ministers in Mt. Pleasant, one of whom was Rev. Mr. Reynolds, that Miner was @ man of no character and that he had a former wife living from whom he has never been aimee. Pe ‘ner Meat the mes aa whgm rmer pastor is alleged we made ie statements and puen rceeedled to Union-. town, where he brought n, lay! for damages, it is said, at $10,000. . ing his claim | the superintendent told his fair visitor that he was not at prcent engaged making matches. Mrs. ‘Schneider then pulled on her gloves, and, disgusted, left the building. The single eyeglass is worn by the dude. The theory is that he can seewith one eye much more than he can comprehend.—New Orleans Leonidas U. Reavis, of St. Louis, the capital mover, has married @ young Illinois girl and moved her to St. Louis. This was a capital move on the part of Reavis. There is gaid to be one physician to every 18 families in the United States. It is well that this statement has come cut. Many persons have all al been that there 13 doctors wo overy tami. Ne me Mr. G. F. Bowls, of No. 24 Common street, Lynn, ‘Mass., says: ““While in the army, at the battle of Spottayivania, I fell while getting over a rail-ferfoe and was badly injured and left for dead, but after s time I was picked up by comrades, and upon examination it was found that my back waa badly hurt and my kidneys serioudly injured, and I have suffered the most excruciating pain mnce, and could obtain no rehef, althongh treated by several physiclang, and I had given up all hope of getting help when I was recommended to use Hunt's Remedy. I Purchased several bottles at one of our drug stores in Lynn, and began to use it as directed, and can now attend to business, and am free from the pains I for- merly had; and I wish to say to my friends and com- rades that Hunt's Remedy will do all that is claimed for it, and worthy of all praise. You can use my testimony when you have occasion to, as I most heartily recom- mend {t to all that have kidney or liver troubles.” April 26, 1883, “YOU MAY USE MY NAME.” Tdesire to inform you what your valuable medicine has done for me. Iwas induced to try it by a member of our family ‘who had been benefited by its use." I havs suffered terribly from kidney difficulties. At times I have been very bad, having severe pains in my back, with general loss of strength and vitality. ‘My urine.was very bed, with a heavy sediment of Drick-dust, which was fast leading to gravel. I com- menced using Hunt's Remedy, with « marked improve- ment from the start; the pains left, the urine became more natural, and I can truly say one bottle efected @ permanent cure. Ihave recommended {it to many persons both here and in Boston, ali of whom speak of it with the highest praise. ‘You are at liberty to uso this letter or my name in any Manner you may think best, that other sufferers may Jearn the value of the greatest of all remedies. Most truly yours, JOHN F. COX, 62 Pleasant street. MALDEN, Mass., April 23, 1883. Max Greens . PURE HUNGARIAN WINE, Owing to the rapidly increasing demand for our PURE HUNGARIAN WINES, we have opened an Branch, where a large Stock will alwaye be kept. NOTES UPON HUNGARIAN WINES, By MAX GREGER, Purveyor of Hungarian Wines by special appointment to Her Majesty the Queen, member of the Jury of. the International Exhibition at Vien 1878, President of the Jury of the Agricultural Exhib{- tion of Keschau, 1880, Pamphlets free on application. CARLOWITZ, THE CELKBRATED HUNGARIAN ‘CLARET, $8, $9, $10, $12 and $16 per case, RUSTER, A VALUABLE SEDATIVE.—SEE Dr. = Druitt's report. $15 per case. TOKAY CROWN.—STRONGLY ADVOCATED FOR Nervous Debility and Consumption. $24 and $36 per dozen, RED KADARKA.—$11 PER CASE. WHITE RIESLING.—#8 AND $11 PER CASE. OFNER AUSLESE, (BUDA).—$11 PER CASE. HUNGARIAN BURGUNDY.-$12 PER CASE. SAMPLE CASE, CONTAINING SIX BOTTLES OF different kinds of Wines most in demand, including the famous Tokay, delivered free to any part of the United States, $6.7 Address MAX GREGER, (Limited), Purveyor of Hun- garian Wines. American Branch, No. 282 5th avenue, corner 27th street, New York. ‘Orders from the trade carefully executed on reason- able terms, ‘my30-w26t FFF REET, ah BE B83 FE OS Mow aes Beer Se Ste 8 08 8 8S ¥ EERCILLSsss§ “ask* Coo 00 Sgss8 L m UlTD! L pig 229. u BHD D Eto Pub e LLL ne) uu DDD OCO 00 FFFFFF ERE Oo 0O OF F ie oS oF F ELE vc OO F ¥F EKEREE 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 IN BOTTLES AND NOL EXPOSED TO THE alk. Made Instantly— One Cup or many. No labor. no worry— Always uniform. Always delicious. Your Grocer Szxts Ir axp RecomMENDS Ir. FELS & CO., Proprietors, p23 PHILADELPHIA. oo ° cag vw u u u aainiat=} oO ou MARYLAND CLUB, $6 per gallon. MONTICELLO '77, $6 per gallon. ROYAL CABINET, $6 per gallon. OLD BAKER, $6 per gallon. OLD CROW, % per zallon. GOOD OLD RYE, $3 per gallon. BOTTLE GOOD RYE, 50 cents. BOTTLE GOOD RYE, 75 cents. BOTTLE OLD CROW, $1. HENNESSEY BRANDY, 1865. GALLON SPANISH SHERRY, $5. GALLON OPORTO WINE, 35. GALLON COOKING SHERRY, $2, GALLON MEDFORD RUM, $3. PIPEK HEIDSIECK, SOUVERAIN EXTRA DRY CHAMPAGNE, BASS’ ALE, GUINNESS’ STOUT AND YOUNGER'S SCOTCH ALE, BOTTLED, $2.50 DOZEN. E. C. KNIGHT, 2732 Pennsylvania ayenue. Gas Cooxine Sroves, FOR SALE AT THE GASLIGHT OFFICE, TENTH STREET. Cu. Rover, NOS. 403 AND 405 1TH STREET NORTHWEST. HEADQUARTERS FOR THE WHITNEY CHIL- QO SREN'S OADRIAGE COMPANY: TRE CHEAPERT FOR BEAUTY, COMFORT AND DURABILITY IN THE MARKET. Lawn Tenni: ‘cles, Velocipedes, Arch- ery, Fishing acon, ‘Wagons, &c, 00 20 ‘overcome. more likely to Kes psa th le LD WINE AND OLD FRIENDS ARE KNOWN AS Oi 'ehe Weee oo ns SUBTHNS Old Stand Eevee for where first-class SECOND-! iD Si PteNe Gite Sut pes ee aes JUST O14 tana, No. 610 D sires bewoen 6th and N. B.—Note tinal prompty auended to. 9 New Discovery Tx Meorcre. IMPORTANT NOTICE. ae POTOMAC RIVER BOATS. RTHER REDUCTI Re eponTRESS won STPAMER LA) is FARE Leaves street st. MON PB mute Ga nel ofan, Kee tional Metropotten Bank, 613 Tae Eoeton Freight taken as ustial. my% ALFRED WOOD, Secretary and Treasurer. OW RATES NORFOLK AND FORTRESS MONnO SINGLE FARE, $1.00: ROUND.’ 1. BO. FIRST-CLASS ACCOMMODATIONS CANNOT BE FURNISHED AT LOWER RATES THAN ABOVE. DAILY LINE. MAIL SIEAMERS. Steamer EXCELSIOR. MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and “FRIDAYS at 5:30 b. M. FROM itn S1REE ARF. Steamer GEOKGE LEARY on TUESDAYS and THURSDAYS at 5.30, SATURDAYS at 6 P. M. EXCLUSIVE CONNECTION WITH BOSTON AND PROVIDENCE STEAMERS. FREIGHTS FOR THESE AND OTHER EASTERN POINTS CAN GO,BY THE STEAMERS OF INE ONLY. FURTHER PARTICULARS INQUIRE at pany's OMtce, 7th 4 rR treet wharf. K WELCH, Agent. 1.3. 1UDGINS, Gen. Sapt. FO! Comp wW.P i! GTEAMER JOHN W. THOMPSON Leaves Sixth Street Wharf EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND.SATURDAY Stonping atnearly all the river landings as far down as Inquire at General Office, 615 15th street or at boat, Mt VERNON! MT. ViRNoNt STEAMER W. W. CORCORAN Feaves 7th streot wharf daily (except Sunday) for Mt. ernon at 10 o'clock a m. ; returning reaches Washing- ton about 3:30 p.m. 030 L. L. BLAKE, Captain. HOUSEFURNISHINGS. ) Scinme Goons. . EDDY REFRIGERATORS, DINING-ROOM REFRIGERATOR®, WATER COOLERS AND STANDEy WATER COOLERS AND FILTERS COMBINED, WHITE MOUNTAIN FREEZERS, ; SODA AND MINERAL ICE PITCHERS, CREAM AND BERRY SETS, DINNER SETS cheap for country used M. W. BEVERIDGE. my26 No. 1009 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. Fe iodine atone. EFRIGERATORS (IMPLOVED MAKE), CHESTS (all sizoe), ER COOL! ES and STANDS. CREAM FI ES. FLUTING MACHINES, al at lowest prices, GEO. WATTS, 314 7th street, 5 doors above Penna. avenne, Dasronnrs Fic. We have just received load of the genuine DANS FORTIES ELUTD direct Trane aeraanh autre aoe fofurnish tin any quantity We alsoexbitit the” of VAPOR STOV oxy menorts t 8 ever shen Before purcharing, . and if you will give the’ Danforth's Flatd you will be convinced of ite superiority to Gasuline. A nee line of COOKING STOVES, KANGES. PORTA. BLE and BRICK SETT; LATRORES, SLATE MAN- TELS and FURNAGES constantly on hand. W. & SENKS & CO. mh29 7 ‘TIT Tth street nortnwest. REMNER'S STOVE EXCHANGE, OM « 2710 M street, Georsetor ELLS DANFORTWS VAPOR STOVES AND FLUID AT LOWEST RATES. tmyt2-Im® PIANOS AND ORGANS. UMMER SCHEDULE_—STEAMER ARROWSMITH leaves 7th street wherf at 7 a. m. for River herd's: sien at Alevandsin with 90 a; soe cy Bet 8: jexandria 30a. m. from Washington. On Mondays for Nomin and inter. 8 formation apyip at ofica: Teh at Shad wks. D formation appiy a ™ . J. B. PADGETT ‘Aut. (ap23] C. W. RIDLEY, Man. ‘porowac TRANSPORTATION LINE. The steamer ‘UF, Capt_W. C. Geoghoran,, leaves Stephenson's wharf, foot of 7th every SUNDAY, Sta o'clock p. in for Baltimore and Hivee Landis, Returning, leaves Baltimore every FRIDAY at 5 o'clock p.m. ‘All accommodations strictly first-clans. Miver freight must bo prepaidcand will be received on SATURDAYS PA STEPHENSON & BRO., Agents, m16-6m__ 7th treet wharf and 12th et. and Pa. ave. TRE STEAMER MATTANO LEAVES WASHING. ton on 3 jesdaye and Thuredays, at 7 Grinder's wiiast Sundaysand Tucedaya down, Weanee, Brent's wharf and ‘Chapel Pot om recei ns L. SHERIFF, 328 and 1114 Penosylvania avenue. T! JONES, Agect, 7th street wharf, mhi2 STEAMERS. Traver To Evnorr. ESTIMATES OF COST FOR TOURS TO ANY PART OF EUROPE AND TRE ORUENT TICKETS ISSUED and RELIABLE INFOKMA- for oncorted patties io forciga isade: Fa ic (or. foreign Ian monthly “Travels, with mapa Sent Free.” “Addrone AMERICAN EXCHANGE TRAY] * BUREAU, 62 Broadway, New York. mh10-s, t, th, 39t Cc. A. BARATTONI. Manager. Ae LINS. SUMMER SERVICE. Sailing from QUEBEC to LIVERPOOL every SATUR- ailing from BALTIMORE to LIVERPOOL every al- "ernate MOND. ia QUEENSTOWN.) SHORTEST OCEAN VOYAGE. ONLY FIVE DAYS FROM LAND TO LAND. Weekly 5! from. GALWAY, LIMERIC SLONDUNDERRY and GLas- Only DIRECT LINE trom GAJ, WAY and LIMERICK. Accommiodatic Us led. Cabin 70 ana $20. intermediate | $10, Prepaid Steerage For information, &c., apply to LEVE & ALDEN, General Agents, 207 Broadway, New York. G. W. MOSS, 225 Pennsylvania avenue; mi3 5 Agents in Washington, D.C. VY OXTH GERMAN LLOyD— N° Staisdne tive Berweue New Yorn, Haven, The steaaners of this corspasiy will sal EVERY WED. ‘of this corny NESDAY AND SATURDAY from Bremen , foot of 3d street, Hoboken. Rates of passage: From’ New York to Havre, London, Southam) and Bremen, firet cabin, $100; second cabin, $00, steerage, $30; Dre paid sorere Cran = $24. For freight or YUE. W. G6. METZEROTT k Con dee Ponaanivnels uo northwest, Agents for x Jal2 avenue ni E UROPB!!! EUkorenr COOK'S GRAND EXCURSIONS leave New York April 20th, Juno 1st, June 13th and Tune 30th, 1833, = Paseaze ‘Tickets by all Atlsntic Steamers. Special fa- cilities for securing GUOD BER1HS, Se TOURIST TICKETS for individual travelers in Eu- rope, by all routes, at reduced rat COOKS EXCURSIONIST. with Maps and fall par- mulars, by mail 10cents. Address THOS. COOK & SON, 261 Broadway, N. f21-wke3dt EW YORK, “ROTTERDAM, AMSTERDAM.— N the firet-class, Toll Powered, Clyde-bullt Dutch 8 this Line, AMSTERDAM. ROTTER- DAM AM. LEMRDAM. ZAANDAM. P. CA- iD, W. A. SCHOLTEN. MAAS, carrving the U.8. Mails to the Netherlands, leave comjany's Pier, foot of Buesex street, Jersey City,N.J.. recuiarly every | Hewceaur Pixos ARE THE BEST IN ALL THE ESSENTIAL QUALITIES OF A FIRST-CLASS INSTRUMENT. Upright and Square Pianos sold on n mis ana the lowest cash ‘month! mente: tory. prices, Pian ins. exchange at full value. sel [DPCEER BROS” rrANog, BURDETT ORGANS, H. KUH 407 , Agent. street n.w. ae frrPAl Norce or Trustees Sate or PIANOS AND ORGANS. At the trustee's sale on the 10th of May of, ‘the ansets of tho late firm of Biackmar, Eb. ling & Co., agents for the Chickering Piano in Baltimore, I purchased some magnificent bangaing an NEW AND SECOND-HAND PIANOS AND OR GANS. As I was crowded for room before making this’ purchase, I find myself now compelled to sell these goods ata trifl.ng advance, as I have no room to store them. Iwill sell for ten days bran new BQUARE PIANOS for $160, worth $300; UPRIGHTS for $175, worth $350; SQUARE GRAND PIANOS for $190, worth $600; NEW ORGANS for $50, worth $90, &o.; BEVEN-OCTAVE SQUARE PIANOS, used, as low aa $65; SIX-OCTAVE for $90. These instruments made by the best known firme in the business and are fully warranted. People of good countenanos can pur- ‘chase of us on monthly payments, For further particulars call on CHAUNCEY J. REED, myl5 433 SEVENTH STREET N. W. HE STIEFF, THE KRANI and the NEW ENGLANL BARKER, BALTIMORE andthe TRIN a - o7 at lowest fact: instal: 1 ory prices f ory UF cee = or on G. L. WILD & BRO.'S MUSICAL WAREROOMS, 709 7th street northwest, =. ee — JR ECHENBACHIS PIANO WAREROO) of various makes for sale and rent at uced prices. Win. Knabe & Co.'s world. nowned Pianos. Tuning and Repairing. Tithairect, above Pe. te ene Pinos, ORGANS, SHEET MUSIC. STECK & CO. PIANO, ‘The most Perfect Piano Mada, EMERSON PIANO, ‘The Pest Medium-priced Piano Mannfactnraa. WILCOX & WHITE AND KIMBALL ORGANS Pianos and Organssold on instalmouts, rented or ex changed ; rent applied if purchased. 5 CENT MUSIC. ‘The only complete Stock in the oite. HENRY EBERBACH, No 915 F 8' ™ firm Elis On PTA’ Jan30_ Meracine rertner of the K SPI. STEEL MAILS. MAGNIFICEN’ \ EFFECT MAY l4ru, 1883. ‘Tnarns LEAVE WASHINGTON, FROM STATION, CORNER: OF SIXTH AND DB STREETS, AB POLLOWS:— For Pittsburg and the West, Chicazo Linitted Express of Palace Sleeping Cars at 9:30 a.m., duily; Fast Line, 9:30 a.m., daily, with Sleeping Care from Harrisburg to Cincnnati. "Wentora Uxprosa 7-80 p. m., daily. with Palace to Pittebury aud Gindae nati. Also, connects, except Satu for Chica- £. vie og coed eS L aes with ‘Ieeping Car na Shicago. 9:50 p.m. daily, for Fittst ‘and the West. with: Palace Sleeping Car Washington to © BALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RALLROAD. For Erie, Canandsigua, Rochester, Buffalo, N 9:50 p. m. daily, except Saturday. with Palace Washington to’Cansndaigua, and Harrisburg to For Williamsport, Haven and Elmira, at 9:30 a. y NESDAY for Rotterdam and Ameterdant, alternately, lor 3 First cabin, $70: second rst cabin, $70: cabin, $50: $26. H. CAZAUX, General Agent, 27 Sovth Wallin cme CUNARD LINE ules THE CUNARD 8° .MSHIP COMPANY LIMITED, BETWEEN NEW YORK AND LIVE! Le CALLING AT CORK HARBOR. : FROM PIER 40.8. 2 NEW YORE a fed..June 6. | Bothnia Wea., ed., June 13. | Aurania June 20. | Se: a Seythi: AU LEVERY WE DRESDAY eit0if NEW YOUR” ‘man i not carry stee! eatet of paunage—#80 ana 100. decoraing to acorn: spot at very low rates. 8f tick Liv. grea ee ace Tams RES ER th bills of laden given for Belfs Havre, Autwerp and other forts our tie Continent"and ‘ror renauacie er! BPvoss of oe freight .] Company's office, No. 4 Bowling Groen, or ‘cabin to oris BIGELOW & U0-, 605 Tincues, Woskineoe "|. VERNON H. BROWN & CO., New York, Messrs. OTIS BIGELOW & CO., G05 Tih street, Washingt MEDICAL, &e. RS. BKOTHIRS AND GRAY GIVE NO FR prescriptions gn‘ send yon tosome side-show drug- mist, who fits with the doctor. ‘Tl Or to Jani? dinap- follited of a cure of private diseases ahould consult ‘Dre, ROTHERS and GI B ‘1 ines, AY, 906 B street southwest, Will peculiar Fst All irregularities and Ovarian Troubles ‘Thirty-five years’ experience. = M4¥#00p RESTORED. victim of early imprudshos, gue ing Nervous De- _ yknown E bas ‘incorered ode rs Sa rs "a REEVES, SS oka, streot, New York, i ‘Dé-s, tu, th&sk6m ‘AS Si who are saffering the errors andin- tions of Rervous early decay, ie rap OF oaaude Ae ae OF a selcnddromed envelopsto the Sey: Jousru T.temsnt Station D, New York City. 7-4, tu, th, ik, 1y ‘ANHOOD RED SING A BOTTLE io twoot Da. BROTHEL Invigorating Duby and Iowponney. “It impart vigor tothe whole system. 906 Bat ew. ‘ap26-1m" ‘ADAME DE FOREST HAS 2§ Mi ‘ilferaaie comaplaiats quicbly ou La- Can be ‘consulted daily at 1245 7th streetnorthwest. Officchours from 1 to9 ‘p.m.. With ladiesonly.—_16-4m" EAD! BEAD aan cE ional Under Bocas Te ae. ag, Se iadeaataiateae PROFESSIONAL. Lock m. dails, except Sunday. : ‘ork and the East, 8:02, m., 10:08. m.,° E Hand ert On Bi nt p.m. Limited Express iam, jor: :30 a. in: daily, except Sunday. Boston without change, 1:36 p. m. every week day. On Bunday, 4:20 p. m. For Brooklyn,” N-¥-, al je For ferri ross New York C For Philadelphia 8°00" as tne, 10°50. 9. 10:20 p.m. Gn Sunde 9°50 an Limited Express, 9:30 4. m. daily, ex- m.. and 2 so mi. On Sun- 230, 9:50 and. m. For Pope's Creek ‘except Sunday Line, 6:40 a.m. and 4:40 p.m. daily, 0 a.m, and 4:40 p.m. dally, except For Anuapoli ‘Sunday. ALEXANDRIA AND FREDERICKSKURG RATE WAL AND ALEXANDUIA AND WASHINGTON AD. For Alexandria, 6:30, 7-00, 9:20, 11-00 and 11-25.8.m.. 200, 4:30, "5:00," 6:00, 8:00 and 11:30 pam. On Sunday at 6:80, $.20 and 11:25 a.1., 2:00 aud 8:00 pm, For Richmond and the South, 6:30 and 11:25am. and 5:00 p.m. daily, exept Sun ‘Trains deave Alexandria for Was: 9:58 and 10:00.a.m.: 12-30, 12 eps and ‘00 8:00, 9:53 10:00 a.m. ‘Tickets and information at the Oey ner of 13th street and Pennsylvania avent station, where orders can be left for the Laggage to destination from hotels and Feaiden JR. General Passenger Agent. CHAS, E, PUGH, Gencral Manacer. JRALTINORE AND ONTO RAILROAD. THE MODEL FAST LINE AND THE ONLY LINB THE EAST AND THE WEST. VIA WASHINGTON. DOUBLE TRACK! JANNEY STEEL RAIL: Schedule to take effect SUNDAY, MAY 23th, 1883, Leave Washington from station, corner of New Jersey avenue and C street— ‘or Chicazo, Cincinnati, Louisville and St. Loule daily 3:05 a m., 10:15 a m., 10:10 p.m. with r Coaches abd Palace Cars to" above points, without change; 10:15. m. to Chicano, except 5 Cleveland and Detroit at 8:30. m. Gaily ,8:40 p. m. is a solid train to Pitts jew York at 8:10, daily, nm. ‘™m. 40 p.m. mr Yor stations oF Metropolitan Bousee, 3 faunton, 8:80: sm, “duily “except, Bus f Frederick, 6:30 a.m., 10:16 ai, ood 4a ‘arrive from the West daily, 6:20, 7:35am, oe ty 2:3, 440 64, ame hab &: mm 1 ae, cept 4:30 p.m. further information apply at the Baltimore ghotiter fice Wea Tath rtreet where soa iat ‘will be taken for baggage to be checked and received a3, any point ip the a , LEMS LORD, Gat ‘Passenger Agent. THE TRADES. . Li trae nana EE tt i. M. myié

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