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Zz . THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C., SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1885-DOUBLE SHEET. r ow +2. P 13 got upon his feet, and had to on one |THE PUBLIC SCHOOL CALENDAR.| TELLING YARNS FOR DRINKS. vi COLON AND COLOMBIAN POLITICS. |oms. So the insurrection has deen going ” THE 14TH OF APRIL, 1865. foot ta tttesinge doors Where hewas Realy Ave ettas Bk ne Sea RE LITERARY NOTES. = F cai | With various fortunes to the eoniending — a4 = . | minutes (as he afterwards tol lerold) |The Pregram e Exal tions and e Odd Characters One Meets About a SREELY. w.s | Interesting Information Concerning | Gen. eta, whe tacena with two THRILLING RECORD OF A TRAGIC | mounting his horse. The pain from his frac Closing Exercises. + | Hotel Lonby—The Judges Romance | see Uae erate ee tee Ostaaanns Baten, steamers and a dctachme troops, number: DAY. fee then was of the moss seme Linmiype Teld to ae of i i anos Rx spor . SS mee Faas ing gc Boog ony: villa, w, Lys oe fe rode He met Herold; the other con-| The program of examinations in the public ilustrated “froin es eee ee eeribners | COLON AND ITS SURROUNDINGS—AN UNWHOLE | into city: by 2 by spl rs— 1—tal . Relief ition. y Lor ‘hares Seribner's: rebels, who then pouner: = al Fresh and Intensely Interesting De- | i jniczveac ant neue Herold wenton: He | #bools has been arranged by Messrs, Curtis, | "Yee, str, LJamped right overboard and savea | Bele Expedition. “Now York: Charles neribner's | COMON AND ITS SURROUNDINGS WACTIONS OF | Rom up the river ae ae ee enadonl fails—Narrative of Booth’s Movements | would have taken the direct road to the lower | Smith and Birney, the school board committee | her!—I don't cate ifI do. I don’t drink otten, tyne & Son. COLOMBIA—THE STALWARTS AND CONSERV A> ness, but the agony occasioned by the fracture | on examinations, as follows: but I'll take a little something with you, When | Ih one way and another pretty much every-| trys rHE STALWARTS CARRYING ON THE! If Cartagena has in torn succumbed to oo great, and he turned aside and went | ware sow OF WASHINGTON AND man’: ink he needs a little | thing contained in this portly volume has| ppgsr: | Ported sieze.and Colon and Panama should t night to'Dr, Mudd’s residence to have his | “¥1T® SCHOONS oe ee ee eee 0, thts " ar REVOLT: hands « : ates be TOWN AND COUNTY SCHOOLS, something to brace him up, you know. Let me | Slready been made known to the public; and on t Hh se jcal aid, and this was how the doctor was | 45ri193 to $0—Examination in Spelling.— | introduce you to my friends, Judge—Greent| taking it up the reader will be puzzled-more than | CoFrespondence of Tam EVENING STAR. ernment will und; foliow, There is e after much study and ee ee April 23, Third Grade; April 24, Fourth Grade; | Yes, Green. Judge Green, Col. A—, Col. B—., | # little toknow how a narrative coveringso short | Aspinwall—Spanish, Coion, « ¢., Columbus, | sition bel: mers—at the Carroll—an Others, Sbout | Aprii27, Fifth Grade; April 28, Sixth Grade; | Col. C—, Col. D—. They'll go along with us,” | ® Period of time and so few incidents can well | named after the great discoverer, the scene of f ing of Throughout the Day—A Conscientious Defense of Mra. Surratt—Booth's Last Interview With Her—His Visit to the Theater—What He Heard There and What Fi ed. I may write again, but nowIam only | aprii 29, Seventh Grade; April 30, Eighth Ve | be expanded 80 as to fill ly three hundred | the recent war flurry, is the eastern terminus of | Parties have Written for Tue Star by John T. Ford. felling ° Satay: P 4 ‘ ntendmatend ee Then the whole party went off to the bar. We a ae $4 orth. | Others’ throats, Ti mses Of th Fils! line abla sa theakl Ea te URAC OSA ling Ce history of one day Grade —Examiners: Superintendent and Super- were in the lobby ofone of the uptown hotels. | broad pages. As a matter of fuct, however, the | the Panama raflroad. It ts jocated at the north: wiv a scwntution ee-cnte vn Be Blwn’ T : rs MRS. SURRATT AND THE WITNESS WRICHMAN. | vising Principais. a breakfast, on t . | BS. . vi rd of the rescue proper covers only about a | east corner of the :ittle low island of Manza-! y, emorning of April 14th, 1865, ie eard | _May 1 to 11—Oral Examination of Eighth | The man-that was doing all the talking was | Teco! re Ps 2 tic ioha Wikkes Focth, When be enieca ths Oe CEs tree Grade of City Schools.—Examiners: Superin- | about 60, had long, white hair under a biack | !!rdof this space. Nearly halfthe volume isoc- | nilla, and is a compromise between a raw s : cupted with preliminary matter, in the form of | Wwostern pall ‘ential tropic | Witt breakfast ro B—, was | after April 14th, 1865. I noted her in prison | “yacht and Supervising Principals. || | | slouch hat, and had on a rusty black suit that | gldnees at previous espaditinne ete, miele pie | road town and » pest ention by @ has personally apelesanens of lad: youn, the the lower classes, whil t le. The Jungle was on the ground first with -~ shing her medi at a smal! table near by the € ‘Secor y| shone inthe back when he got up, and was | pares the reader to understand the objects | Jung! plelds | setting se eS wet Over @ one i ned bir by the waiter in ¢ : Fen Vin eee aioe some a Schools, 25 ae Pomeranian City | well polished at the elbows. Was stooped in | Greely’s adventure had in view, and the hard. | tts mosqyitoes, alligators and fevers, and yields setting their factions quarrels ne assigned him by , ie DV ele Tita HD, FAB THEY SERIO DEMON a iciag Erin. the shoulders and hada very cunning expres. | ships and perils he and his little band endured | slowly and reluctantly to modera improve-| itant. nf w ne sleejing in the mount Slanced over the Dill of fare and pleasantly | frequently conversed with me, said “she was | SGpervising Frincipala, ss canas| sion in bis iittie gray eyes, We is an habtue | in their forthersnce: hie: the Senaemee ee | ments, The railroad dumped cnough rock and | 40s and savan puseription—can Whispered his order for itmeal, which Was | an exemplary, christian woman, tohim she had | gates for Teachers Positions and for Proeotinn, | of the hotel lobby. His companion wore a | cites the Incidents of the homeward. voyage, | s | only wish the t to speedily soon brought. The ady lingered at Examiners: Committee on Teachers and Board | Proad-brimmed hat and had astrangerfrom- | Although there is nothing absolutely new | drt to get a foothold for its track and sidings, | DOS 70) i" | : you: ome when some lly filled the place of his mother, and in eves top them from the = cm 1 built sundry wharves and warehouses and then | Wick * ‘ ple. The young ” n ac tion of life she was eminently ‘a consisten the-west look about him. The colonels were all | set forth, the narrative will nevertheless hold | cl ss aud 1olly of the so-called “politicos, Pe ee) ARS Jenne, see er nee ee us lady." ‘The trivute to her character by | “Mav'sg Sem, and June 6, Da.m.—Examt-| Mditwer. the attehtion of the reader from the begin- | apparently left the town to work out its own | WB quaintance, and a known admirer of one of her who was afterwards the chief witness | nation of Candidates for the Washington Nor | g “Bums!” exclaimed the clerk; then sat down | Hing to its close by reason of Its terse, fresh and | Gearing. Cadormmenercotaie inuense thane eee feminine friends—(the ¢ ier of a distin- | acainst her, did more to impel me to search | inal Bohol To be held im the Frewkite Balla. | #24 bezan to pick his teeth. Sttractive stvle. This result is largely due to | igthmian trac andextensive pubic works tli Impromptu. guished public man, wh umily occupied a | out the trath than any other cause. So much | ingExaminers: Committee on Terchors aia |. What?” said Tits Stak man, who had his| the skill of Prof, Scie Whose Mterary experts | City has of late Feats grown prodigious | ae Suite of rooms at the sume hotel,) besides he parenthesis. She, Mrs. Surratt, went to Sur- | Superintendent: elbows on the register. ence and natural abilities have enabied him to | taining a population estimated at 10,000 TO SENATOR MORRILL.ON Hrs 75TH BIRTHDAY, sae rattsville with Weichtuan; remained near him une 4,9 a.m.—Fourth Quarterly Examino-|,,. That, story always fetches a drink all | construct a very interesting story out of rather | Streets have been blocked out in the mp; APRIL. 14,1585. . meine. Hizbakiust ne noon finished: he soso | ete: did not see Liovd, the inn-keeper, | tion of the Washington Normnal Sekaoke ee: | POUNd,” continued the clerk. “They're all | scant and decided slight material, In the | houses, cheap and shabby, crowd the man : some, His breakfast was soon finished, he rose | nne'l Weichman had turned the buggy around: : ‘ ‘bums, and they work the strangers.” hands of any but a trained writer the whole | BOOS on, often oft peton te t ntl W had turns eey ; | aminers: Committee on Teachers and Superin: | ‘PY ; ¥ Wor ge of a le | grove bushes, often built’ on. pote r the ‘Siavbae: = as the lady did, and they walked together to the | facing Washington, as a light rain began to fall, | fendent ‘What's the story?” history, save its exciting climaxwould have Dice batering waiersor thie bosiorede lagaoen, e YeAT AgO, caMe Hot @ few cane and | when Llovd came up much in liquor, He had | Sune 6, 8 p.mn.—Graduating Exercises of the | 4}. WBF, the Judge, as he calls himself, and all | been a spiritiess and tedious chajfer. And in | Which In the Tass season ane iateated wal Within door, at | been to the county court during the day. What Washington Normal School.—To be held in the | P¢ colonels, hang’ around here all the time, | reading the account of the relict expedition, Exuiting thought that you alligators, prratt said to him was said while seated | High School Building, O street, between 6th | Waiting to be treated by some one whom they | Presented us it is, Im the best aspect | “RENT a atstance, as one approaches by buggy with her escort, and it was matnl; mI 4} can talk into it. They all have their stories, and | Possible, it is difficult to understand just | sea the h is sufliciently lively and inter tothe business of collecting what was due | ard.th streets northwest; under the direction | ean “generally maker themselves, agresavie | upon what ground the propesed. veteat shanks | cating. Forty or Ofty eicamersand canting cratt » as to meet her obligation to the Calvert | June 9—Graduating Exercises of the Wash- | C20Ugh to strangers to get the drinks out of | bv Congress to those in command of it could rest, | Sry seen lying at anchor, waiting their turn to Ington High School=-To be held inthe High | tem. They're a study. ‘There's a whole gang | The officers engaged Mm this particular service discharge cargo at the scant wharf acconnnoda- School Balding, O sirect, between Oth ond Mik | Ofthem, and there is @ sort of free masonry | did nothing but the plainest and simplest dut tious. Lumber vessels usually throw their cargo rasta 7 Streets northmeel, under the Aivectoe ae ita | among them, When one strikes a good thing | No one in government employ could done s. ‘And young at sev'nty-five Mr, Weichman drove her to Washington and toherhome. He boarded there with her, he ts = nhs * | into the sea, raft {U ashore, where it is laborious door on had been her son's schoolmate at Charlotte | Committee on Teachers. he calls the rest into it, and the Judge's story is less, and there was no call or opportunity to do | 1y'Dulled out of the water by gang: aked 4 - ‘ . a coe gael (E 2 h, Sixth, Seventh an ighth Grades of perey eure iu aniven > + 5 _ipaerscemnostve . ing oa when he aren erinotherly care sofar as to dam Weichman's | Sypervising Princlpals: | ation of the | distributed thomsclves among the cushioned | Party endured any” more. hardsuips ora | A walk through the town soon dieabiees one's ; j picture from a side pocket. | bossiand mend hi: n, as she did for herown | County Schools.—Examiners: Superintendent Mies ea ale: eae ye etn pres ree od mind of all favorable impressions. The railroad Hence you are bound, as all must see, Of the two ludies we = There is no evidence, ne probability that | ana Supervising Principal, ead ihe ae eye aera pares Jane me: and fiahing vessels engaged in their beatin ; | occupies the main street, frontitig the wharves, “A prtctncheirrelng a popaces thew ‘ alter he lett hor Ou the pavenent Wess pool | June 15—Closing Day of the First, Second and | f4!d the Ju pened the conversation, “i hare | avocations in the waters traversed by the sites | Shabby shops, packed with goods in inextrica- And ne'er forget, at wast, to be tn ans eany watering walk (oe ont street ut middagon the, Lath of Apa Tein Grades of City SebOOs. Fourth, Finh, | St WMA to 1k It's a son of halfway decent | Geet. ‘There ts inv tuct. every reason Go taleve | bie comfasion, coonpy all aveiable strost front: SUA young at RIUNTY-oN the corner of whic! 1865. He then had no information that would | sixth and Seventh Grades of city seheols | Risse, (eatronizingly) anvhow, you Know. I Bias the Greely party ices bay Aes age. There are no pavements, and in the rainy i Honario Krwa, BOOTH'S MORNING WALK. Hie of that nignt.2 Contemplate his terrible | "June 17—Closing Day of the Eighth Grade of } {!K¢ it. Paris. Couldn't expect that, Wen Tt | emment vessels not hppeared an the sesueeag | Season the mud beggars description. Courage Tay > It was Good Friday morning numbers were | “Te of that night. City Schools and of the County Schools, Was consul general to Pane oh ‘yea, I waa in but probably at toc day to have saved | and high-top boots are neces: > effect a Te a Pair of Bine Byes. returning from church service and many 2 Fa ee iyethore t the latter regard, | Street crossing. There is no sewerage, and the | Written for Tux Ev ews COLORED SCHOOLS OF WASHINGTON AND | Paris four years ives of the'sufferei "d rather live there than an: an ndsome actoras | He had determined on and arranged for the ing este 1 ot GEORGETOWN. lace in the world; I'd be there now but fora e relief expedition was worth all it cost, but it | Streets excel each other only in the amount When the dark of the night with the starlight aatmelot * cht of way to the pass- | 20duetion of the President some months pre-| November 20, 94 a.m.—First Quarterly Ex- hittte incident, Yes, my quarters at Paris were Bys not an exceptionally hazardous or heroic ye ane garbage t Cee oe lor Once 1 ‘, ers by. Up 6th street he went until he re 1 but the thought of murder only came to | amination of the Miner Normal School. very elegant, It came about very curious! adventure, in any sense, and therefore not en- | the common receptable of th: A Mooubeam was mixed with the fresh blue the incident I mean, ‘That's what brought ime | titled to special recognition. fuse and offal of the whole city when he heard of the intended visit tothe | December 13 and 20,9 a. m. Or morn, street, and, t to the west, he noticed a —First Semi-An- | pack to this a? 2 2 festering in the tropic heat, and emitting an odor z : a ae GY KGne k Rene Se wR ater that fatal evening. He knew both thea- | nual Examination for Teachers’ Positions and | ing overcl an aIV epininn Feuer aA ENE A Clacucler and Dying elation of tne Bost es | £0 vile that, together with theemanations of the | AD@raysof these colors from Meaven basiedorpieos note ters well, and would have probably attempted | for Promotions.—Examiners: Committee on | abroad for pleasure. When I was golng over 1 Account f his Death, by “his attending | StAgnant lagoons, the smell of the place Is no) sibbcel icine ene aun e guests he had visited, and whose per- | the capture of the President at either, but his krone eis irene Sesond perowas 2,very beautiful young girl on Board. Midian JOHN J. Mqnax) M.D. Washington: | torus in ail this malodoroas region. aaiseg eine’ inthe eves ofa baby ® : d inade during the | Pith up. Rome Cobh eee oad ich | Third and Fourth Grades of Schools,-rxamt | sog"as{ust, budding into womanhood, 1 Just | In this handsomely-printed monograph the | live thousands of poor wretches, negroes, eles ked along to. the f then this. suede ee eta ek | ners: Superintendent and Supervising Princl- | jeitede She Sas Ath heraged father. Ia ER P and Colombians, the scum of ‘two continents, | and now, when the simmers have passed with each ' one Gone ton: then this murderous temptation | Bert young Choke Tote nee ae een dens | Memory of Poe is cleared from 9 cruel stain | Alway tue mate oe asusion ata decurmnien iat | nest ae atk it (Sir, Weichman,} | (am¢. Brutus was recalled to him; itstimulated | Pals... 99 9.80 a. m.-—Sccond Quarterly Ex: Upon her. “i loved fan a deed, any €Xe8 | that has long rested upon it,—partly the result | Invites disease and deathr to de thelr atment mieten vseas > to th sing, BUSINES Or Tage ES Meee reaped Re Proceeded 19 | amination ofthe Miner Normal scuool very reserved and Twas proud Oh; when 1 | of Unfortunate cireumstances, and partly, also, | Apparent ‘@ process of exclusion, the re- of the infant she advised her visitor. She asked bit | hom both. Plutarch aad. Shakespeare fad | , APH @ to 80—Oral Examination of Fifth, | thikk how han’ one heen abo SE a can | it is to be feared, theenelnche malice ofenemies, | Verse of selection, the rag-tag and bob- essed by the executors of | Made a patriot and a hero, but. whose terrible | Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Grades of Schools.— | when I bore rt to mo mount was due hy sountry. lier toraier honie nized the chief assassin. i 9 lathior in the comntry. (her former howe, she | “atk. “ue crate conchen ber Home, 4 the | nation of the Miner Normal School. : y nationality within a thousand nt! r up from the black depths of | Dr. Moran was at the time physician of the hos. | “#il_Of every nationality w “ debt, | Grime brought from the great Caesar the fearful, Sn ob eumiendiéné and: Supervising, pie soRy Stopped, and looked very hard at Tare | Pital where Poe died, and he shows conclusively wae and nigbec mortaliiy.. Beorle who exe A ihe cbt the) id - mi E | that so. ft < of the hee by. a} despairing ery 10, Brute,” as he recog” | Principal a, me Third Quarterly Examt- | grat man iontell Winas Ming Wee PROner ee | (kgs laos, geal oF the aba fect. Then he swelled out his chest and spoke ie having occurred during a dranken People who can geta decent livelihood elsewhere give Colon a And rate, e- | wide birth. A story is current illustrative of t ‘3 a h, aus has been generally sup) ed, it rr ler, detained one of . re . that she had been to morning service, and ng of Good Friday with her household, | Avr ,22,t0 30 Examinations jn Spelling — | with an air of much linportaiice. trom Violence at theinds of a couple uf | the hotels Aor afew dase, Hel ease toed cet | ABM eet to thle day aretiove colors aut § ack The N a ast before retiring the fearfal news of thé | 4Pril 23, Third Grade; Ap , Fourth Grade; Y a storm cume up and swept her off first drugged and th Vha ine % A-Swetiag Minter ie Geeean thea aaa retuen pefore | assassination of the President reached her, and | 2Pril 27, Firth Grade; April 28, Sixth Grade; | intothe sen” I prangen nae ae bee Yes, POE RHO LOSES Goa eee patie thins’ heasked the waiter. | where first, of their will, they Ibad wettiea aeticlee be mine at the tavern L dantesoute | that the name of the assuscin was that of the | APF 20,Seventh Grade; April 30, Eighth Grade. | str, I plansed inte tine eee aa ete na? prea Rev eae en - then tt witnenen “To re ‘ fovisitthere avait, “Obliae me by asking Mr, | YOUNE man she had met and talked with at her | EX@mMiners: Superintendent and Supervising | from the dark coral caverns of the deep! Is entitled to credit ior his generous and suc: | he continued: oe nainty ae ee And nothing in Heaven or earth ts ease, the tantiiond, ee them end bring wher pnt door at midday, and who had previously | PEPCPAE, of second Examination of First, | 20Mfcueif1 do. Justa litle someting once In | Costu citort tone pasties eee ane ace | he disgust—“Take it away. I'dontwantit, A Excelling kere With This she promised and he bid | And fequentis, visiléd her son nd other in- | gocona ahird and Fourth Grades of Senoole: | °c iav'ahave therestotthe story first, Don't | Waste catver, did much to confer luster upon thing that had wings, and was too biank foolish | ‘The charm of those eves, the dearest Porthwest telotiinrninethendewn thatetreet | APT 14th, 1885, Brinclpatse, superintendent and Supervising | stop there,” pleaded thescribe lnndcentiy. "| gyared, must have taken a, pie ioe ee oe | eg aNay {fom this blank place isn't at or ae | ene Towards Pennssiv tie He Jaleneas the SonrGe or Clima. May 16 and 23, 9 a, m.—Examination of Can- | sarod er Goon Mwhat did. you say your | 278 Hiters of the present age RECKLESS OF LIFE. $9. Surrais Mr. a : ND 5 S, : very grateful. aneratnrels ; om’ the German, ; 4 Feturn to Washington until after dark U INSTEAD OF ORNAMENTAL—NEED OF INDUs- | Board of Examiners. theif loved miga—-Tinowalie lovdme Bete Goumene Siniition: New Yorks Wi aes al. conta oe es prt rbentaod aa ce ar a HRALTSN wes) HE SAUNTERS INTO THE THEATER. TRIAL EDUCATION. June 6,8 a. m.—Examination of Candidates | jost track of them in Paris. There was a mys- sberger. Washington: W H. Morrison. monicn RAEIa GK Goat cee kaon | Babies batai'bs take Prinehin Chacala At Ford's theater, 10th street (now National | To the Editor of Tae EVENING Stan: for Miner Normal School—To be held in the | tery about them—a great mystery. Iknow if| Another novel of Ezypt, as might be inferred | or by the roadside with indifference. A dead meer a SYP ig] morning,| The brief reference in your editorial of the 4th Sumner Bullding.Examiners: Joint Commit. | she isallve w-day she fovesme, And—er-erver. | both from author and title. Itis marked by | Caf goes out to Monkey Hill, a suburban burial | __/e¢ XUIL has aged very much during the last to thoabove subject calls attention toone of | “June 1,2 and S—Written Examination of the | gr'ivee Trace erent, Rats Taspy from talking | the careful attention to historical details and Beet Tae oC tae pee ae eTies ootiac es | or hic respomcleiltion, Mat fs ance Sau tot the most important cuestions of the day. It | High School Examiners: Superintendent and | gram ifom Ainorieameying Dat con aoe tike | the fine descriptive scenes which charseteries { £2 fall view of the passers by. “The bodies.aré | Of his responstbiti gaat pad edt oeedimerd Medical Museum), at 11 o'clock tha messenger came from th® White House, say ing that the President and family and Gen = nite . ater zi $ 2 i Sei re i anne Soph z placed in unpainted wooden boxes, just as they | nothing of its expressive and mobile vivacl y Grant wished to witness the production by | was formerly understood that the want of | 7eachers of the High School. Quarterly Examt. | Young INdy's father, had died, and lert mean: OOM, § writings, and Is in fact, in one | ure clad, and within afew hours after death, | and, although net handsome. i. will, ne 1 Miss Laura Keene and company of “The Amer- | school education was the great source of crime, | ,i,)0¢ Gy 9:30, #.m.—Four SS eehnoe pmaone forane. MARY and otae aE Sion | epse quite as much of a history as a novel, | and deposited in the cemetery withont a burial forgotten by any one who lias seen it ' foam Comsin.” The reply that cue from Mr. J; | and statistics were elted showing the relative | “June 4, 8 p. m.—Graduating Exercises of the | for'ammater Pimipotentiaty, and started Wag tke | But tor all that itis not exactly agreeable read. | service. It og ae oe te en | teens cceaenion Ge einen’ Bea Silk te. abitele ie waluchat ia | Proportion of criminals who ¢ould not read or | Miner Normal School.—To be held in the Miner | yung tide” What dist sese tor ae Susy ied | AB, the, scene NT etree Pep on prt ge perdeetorep ern ge ey for iinpm i eip eg pen gry ahepe Pee md Mictente tie hontart evaihe we = Seas ere a ype i a i Exercises of the | Plenty. When T got nee ate ws gon nibé | ism were strugvling for the supremacy. sit | the ed mae poo ond waich x rtition whi divided it into two | have given close attention to this sul T | High School.—To be held i er hall. oT acne rs ie wae pons. An portrays the country torn with in- | 1saw with my own eyes will not bear repeti- paxtauan to remove the partition | years past have, however, become satisfied that | High School —To be held in the Miner ha uncle had sold everything and carried her off by June 8—Closing Exercises of the High School. | force and hid her away eon 8 exert isl Was given to Mr. Gitford, the master carpenter, | it is not so much the absence of education as it | To be held In the Miner hall. Tguess 1 spent. moet Olin own forkane toning and the same Mr. Ford soon went out to look | is the want of the right kind of education that fills |" June 10, 11 and 12—Writien Examination of for her, I'ltget the money before long, but {shail ‘up some extra buntt ‘e., on account of | our alinshouses and prisons, and by thisImean | Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Grades of : ever sce he! 3 is 1s thhe reason of i Gen. Grant expec ps had that education which qualifies the tsing gener- | Schosls.Examiners: Superintendent and Sur | Never ue Her again. Ol. vex: Lhayd instituted | story ‘that “perennial terest MNS, Contes | lars: and veutere thelt, hurd earnings wpa . This is the reason of te indecision and ngtor ppor a 4, he shake of the dice, with | the seeming contradictions in his polley, It ureacare ation for pursuing some Industrial calling by | pervising Principals. Here he stopped and pressed tis throat with | fiom voters aes And triumphs of human affee- | turn of the card, or the shi tempt at con- | leads him to act eaddenly—on the inspiration ‘were procured from the Treasury department. | | which to secure a livelihood, June 15—Closing day of schools in the Cham- | nis fingers ant coughed. “My throat gets very ton In every axe and every elime, Sain cae Woe catia sensd Mitscesin Ceecncee | of tr wacatinnh. On tp apcakccana’ satan eo e mail delivery of the taorning had brougt {As is apparent to all who will give the subject | berlain, Lincoln and Lovejoy bulldings. dry when T talk Jong. You see, when I was | A CARPET KNIGHT, 4. Novel, and several games are seen iu progress at the | Who has studied his face cau doubt his energy, fected tod, Wilkes Inoth—he always had Is | {tule thought the great mass of our people | June'16—Closing day of schools in the Ste-| minister at Berlin Leet into a bad henivor oa EMNLNG, author of Cupid and th creo cima, Pedeirans ave treqton fie mann | or the Gnralung vot hic wil, That ete nail left there,and made the placsa daly re, | MUSCO necessity work fora living in sone | vens, Miner, John F. Cook, Proctor and Ban- | jng'a cocktail jast at this time: ite ee eel Slide @ ton ow into the streets to get around the dense masses Of action and born to govern, he abund- Sort when In the city. Familiar on account of | CapicttS., Hence, the great aim and object of | neker buildihgs. 1 habit. Let me introduce you to my friends, - olevee eto: of human ebony gathered about these tables, proved at Perouse, when he’ was arch- his professional standing with the house, and | gu7caucational system'should be to qualify all | | June 17—Closing day of schools in the Sum- | Colonels An Bee Coe, De eee ual] | A very clever story this of society Ife in Phil- Sian oes ol cteasameem ant eeeineee rp tibiae ea ramen ie WiC use. and | for some useful pursult and as far as possible fit ner, Garnet, Randall and Anthony Bowen | the colonels who had been snoring on the | adelphia, where the scene is laid, albeit the con- | pant in’ this forsaken place. Sunday is the |. When he was clected pope he was In such bad melled uecess everywhere, He had promised | {2m for the special calling they are to pursue | builaings. {eather settees, filed out in front of the scribe | versations are too much protracted at times, and | busiest day ofthe week in the groggeries and | health that evs-yhody thought his. pontificate who had, in that year, just reached his major- | and ornamental, and versity scholarships to be awarded—the Ken-| kde down'in his mouths Gol Bees woe brits | advantage. There is no plot, but there are in. | to pieces the previous Sunday night, lying at a | it was this fact, Pear yt Loy nen pout 12 m.—i fyoung b - B— ‘was built i is 5 the ti it. | Of the Sacred Colicge to vo him, His health ae ree ara mgr oun OF yonmy men T00 LITTLE TO THE PRACTICAT, Gall scholarship Jn the Columbian university, | something like a bottle. “He had litte feet and | ¢{den's aplenty; the style febig Rt, Sin BONO | eer thie Eeomnine Ela Canon On tee Pah | AS mover teean Geta, aime be eaaaed oe, nding on the pavement near the front deor | A. large proportion of the pupils leave school eet painting Honciyunivetiraed the uuie lege, under an immense belly that had all | ticularly that of Cecil’ Wilmot, the “Gafeet | mail steamer. beer poe bene ee ee =! ae : Be : ¢ Bo settles n in one place. He wore a beayer | K N eone ate ave been based cn ehleness must lon used during the day, when Hurrs Ford called | unqualified for engaging in practical business, Birney scholarship in Cornell university, ‘These | that, Tooke as I it Lad been pale wea a Rare a cer ene tome eS ae HIGH ART IN COLOX. since have been set cside, He ts posted on al Here comes the handsomest young man te | 224 hence we have in nearly every elty what | scholarships will be awarded in the high schol | face looked as If it might have been dipped in, | perlod, spoiled by his mother and sisterse“ine | ‘The only pretensions to the artistic which I| the men aud the things of the tiny and has ‘Washington,’—and the oot all were | 8f€ termed business colleges to instruct a cer- | to the candidates whose records for attendauce, | too, long enough to turn colon like w hace oxactl¥ selfish but self-centered.”—yet with coe, | witnessea in Colon can be briefly dispatched, | Manifested inuch tact in reconeiling the tra: fumed up’ 10th street and reeognized | tain lass for engaing in ordinary mereantile | {uEii be adjudged the ber? eee Te CONrBE | The droge of wine had settled in his nose, and | fain ‘good nantes ee Bora oe is in bronze, heroic size, “Colum. | dition and p ‘icy of ‘the He with those of 3, Wilkes Boo:h “coming. towards them. | pursuits, But by farthe greatest defect in our | “Dal! be adjudged the best. COL" once hal nit tice rast ng Wheezed. | stances might develop into something above the bus brestating ‘araecise As Earope.” Colum | Secomion there has hee n-horabie sinaee it fs eee os atte, & lounging, | schools is the utter absence of industrial educa- cere ie ee ncmeees: here, but he has gotten tired of the life of a cee ree ne e bus is @ benevolentlooking old dutfer, who | the -acred College. Che forvign element fe nowt = and C@ibelan ont tion—that practical education in the element- | Tothe Editor of Taz EVENING STaR: society man now," said the judge. The colonel MINAL. By Ew1ux Zora. author of “1 Asso- ‘limatic conditi Fea rons, that it almost counterbaiances the Beets ict of Nin tail and ae etien | dey Rnsoladge and yeaekies secansare ty cueing || MEL TOLn He Bronks Gud of tus board of ecliool trledfo smile,but coughedand wheezed instead, | 0lt, ic, Translated by Carlvnne Chicago and | SHOWS his disdain of mere ellmat ‘fare, waten | Jtalian. "So fur his “creations” have given sate Bis coal black hair fell In short ‘curls over and | the young to engage in the industrial. or | trustees, in his article on the Colored Zeonle, at Sree HIN ESL ead are Go oe Giharies Baum. CaTKe Co. Washington: muieoee to his fect, n'a region where the | matter which depends conical iphones sbout a face almost perfect in its lines of manly | inechanical pursuits. | It Banceause (of this | the Capital, published in last Saturday's STAR, | Siithe rest oF the colousio hea long hair’ red | ‘The only possible excuse for the existence of | mercury rarely, drops below seventy-five, Mics | matt are ceriain archbishoprics the Inbura A aicutae, te ee with idle youth, youngmen and boys who are | 88¥8: “But we cannot hope to do much practi- | noses,and a great deal of dignity, "Om being | this book lies in the claim that it was written | America is a bewitching Zemale, aangerously | pents ef wich he cannot well avoid making nfiriued the exclamation that had | not naturally viclous oridie, who would works | cal work in that line until the trade unions are | informed that thelr new acqtaintance week in the interest of labor. But how working | Stegestive of @ ae Penge gectoy tpn ye rd cardinals, = : ‘ galled attention to hia and his manner indi-| if they only knew how and had a chance, but | broken up, and the people are allowed togivo | emperance man, they vcattered SNornful as hy | People can be helped by it Is difficu toun- | Sud figure, but clad, so fur i she ¢ approved | Steele Mackaye's Latest Eden in Theatri beignets ary neces See ine Riders Lope dear eos thelr boys trades. We have gone as far as we | sumed off into the reading room and fell | derstand. A darker and more repulsive pitture aboriginal style. The statue was the gift of enl Oomiort. Salutation was cordial, and he took is letters, | and saloons, form bad associations, and then | Ba¥e meuns in laying the foundation by adding | usleep in a chair. oe eons RGnyinese sa — eng former president of Colombia, It te |_ They may howl! “crank” at Steele Mackaye, 5 % industrial and mechanical drawing to the 2+ __ which were handed to him, and seated himself | ¢ventually graduate griminals, It is because of ” nm he has pract on e Guan adjoining doorsill to: read them: When | tis condition ore at we find in every | Course [of studies in the schools] prescribed. YOUNG LA WHO CHEW. | stronzest possible lizht its vilest and most boo nprorided with s pedestal, and when first set | but be ha practical Mees, & x instanon.eiving this was done he placed them in one of his | factory and workshop throughout the land | And right here wish to take issue with Mr. | ¢, avGhoeciaal tal features, Nothing, however gross or tin. | UP 0 the plaza, Columbus and his falr proteges | every one in the audience what the newspaper aide pockets and commenced conversation with | American laborers, old and young, displaced Brooks, as I think the board of school trustees | Gum ani 1e Kind of People That | moral, is left to :he imagination’ That Zola paket Be Ae rospect, and were only induced | MCB Call a “wet seat” —that Is, a seat offering those waiting to talk with hi Py rcee, skilled Iuborers from foréign lands, | cab go much farther, as has been done inthe | Use It—A Vice to Which Some West | has a decided power of delineation 1s not tobe ted Te tach realities of life by mente cre | fatilities for getting outoften, The seats in ‘A CHANGE OF Moon. ‘Three outof four, ifnot nine out of ten, of all | Public schools of Boston, of St. Louis and ofcer-| End Belles are Addicted. denied. but the effect of his efforts 1s anything | 10 1ece ‘he sree re wattached to the old navien: | Mackaye's new theater, New York, are placed lon oulckiy = the skilled laborers of the country are foreign. | tain other cities, and has been done at Howard but elevating or [Pare and it is nov surpris- | MBDOF NAT nd by which he was set on feet | 18 fours, with four aisles affording facilities tor The conversation quickly turned upon the | ers—men who by the industrial schools of | University in our own city. They can go to the “Don't you chew, Rosa? Youdon’t! Why | 10g that this particularone has been suppressed aay et the resent location, near the French | €Xit. 80 any couple may go or come in surrender of General Lee, and Harry Ford, ina | Switzerland, Germany, Austria, France and | length of teaching the use of tools of various ~ | in England. again in the p a 5 sposi- | Without disturbing an entire row of people ; ‘ t rr dealt heise eee: an how funny. All us girls chew; its awfully jolly. quarters. Since then he has shown no disposi- | Wit e spirit of badinage, knowing Booth’s strong | England have been qualified for the business, ee TE sae roe erie Vow, 10 Poneo: vhat' MIND-READING AND BEYOND. By Witt1, Pluto’s domains with his inter- | By .these extra aisies Mackaye has sacrijiced southern proclivities,said: “John, the President | including every branch. of industry, ‘Thess | tlon- with . the public school course. At How. | Oh, you little goosey! _, What's the matter with Hovey, Boston: Lee & Shepank Washing: | Won {0 elope to Pluto's dom: fome seats that might Lave brought in money, estate box te nicht ana se _ men coming here take the places which | ard University boys are tanght the use of the | you? You look asifI'd told youI hada mouse | tou; Wor Balkin done ET eee eee clon of high art was en ebon | buthe ded to the comfort of bis audiences has the state box to-night, and is coming with | should be occupied by our own citizens— | tools of the carpenter, the cabinetmaker, the | in my bosom, or some other dreadfully awful | ‘This book is mainly mad ¢ th bi ope La mn one Sunday afternoon prom- | “24 revolutionized the plans of theater arrange- General Grant to see the play of ‘The American | by our own sons—who are thus crowded | tinsmith, the printer, the tailor and the sh0e-| thing” We don't chew tobacen nor abate on, Rae atop peer leek See ee ag ep emerge poe pS : Cousin,’ and possibly General Lee will als out and driven into enforced idleness, or a vain er. The last graduating class stood, on 2 % 2 yeaa r ndon Society for Psyc! ’ oa heel rare ay with them.” Hestartied at this, said immed | effort to find some. “genteel”. postin bat we | commencement day, in thoes of thar own | horrors: Think of my chewing snuff. Whs, Research, or rather that branch of it devoted to | Zing whiteness, a palr of sky blue shoes on her Between the Acts. ately: “Never! Lee would not let himself be | often ending in acareer of erime and disgrace, | making. During vacation, boys from the car-| oh, you little goo—! We just chew gum.” mind-reading with explanations and diagrams | ana string of gold heads around her neck,and | Fem the Detroit Journal. used as Romans used their captives, and be | It is true, that native energy and enterprise en- | Pentry class earned from $1 to $2 per day, ac- illustrating a number of experiments mad 01 colored silk turban surmounting her | “Too bad I had togoout to see that ticket 3 paraded.” The answer was: “Oh, no; I was | able some to surmount these difficulties, and | Coding to thelr expertness, among the house- iz periments made | an orange feuds and members of families divided | tion, Drinking and gambling are in progress against each other. There are of course several | at all hours of the day and night. Groups of ve Passuges interwoven in the narrative, to | black, yellow and white workingmen surround en mak ld “the reader's attention and give to ‘the | little tables, upon which lie heaps of silver dol- | insigniticant right They were acouple of West End belles, and tt = _ didn't know Tue Stax man heard them. Or, | to a strate? the ext kinky hair! A granite column, erected in honor | seller about seats for next week,” he 1 marked only joking. From that moment ‘Booth’s | graduate eventually as successful “self-made” | builders ofthe city. The teacher of carpentry Le » | to demonstrate? the existence of that faculty. t rn a . a ° mannerunderwent an entirechange: ne became | men; but they are the exception to the seseral | has aSaturday class, {nto which eight’ white | Tather, one of them was a West End gitl, the | Those interested in the Investigation of mental | eee aaa cia aaa Emel | t2 luis new wife as he settled himself down atter quiet and abstracted, as if some dark thought | rule. Every observiug person knows that dur- | boys have been admitted, and that is the only | other might have been a stranger. phenomena will find the book worthy their | 2° ‘ @ trip down stairs between acts, The affair was in his brain, and he very soon left the | ing periods of depression in business, when men | Class of the kind they could find. They are of ma oy Gothie chureh, built and. supported by the rail : ft “It’s nice white gum,” the first attention, though to the majority ofreaders the quite slipped my mind as we came in. Were, Where he met | ire thrown out of employment, there Is @ great | 600d families; three of them are sons of heads | “and mamma don't know it. Nor Hemet ieee | manifestations relied On Ly. the ante ees | road So ee ee , y dear?” and after a | increase of crime. Wherever, and from what- | Of departmental bureaus, and these boys not | Oh, gracious, no! I wouldn't have hin snow | base for his conclusions will seem pueriie snd | atures of Colon. eer A: erowd, hurried down i0th stre @ friend at the corner of E st “Oh, » T didn't mind it In the east, thank word or two as to Lee's surrender, he asked | ever cause, idleness Increases, there and in like | Only give up their Saturdays to this work with for the world. He came near catchii unsatisfactory, and the conclusions them- THE COLOMBIAN CONFEDERACY, 4 uite busy worki abruptly: “What would be the result if some | proportion we find an increase of erime the | Pleasure, but they look forward to it with eager- | other day, though. Didn't I Dil yomancat ny selves not well founded. A few words about the political disturbances Brot as ¥ = eee a ee Pie impulsive reply wass“Thore aro a eunete | orld over pit seems to bes universal law, | hess, though they attend the public schools the | Ohtjust think of it; {t would have beenall broken | aLit#r0, A Romance, By Joux Eersrm New lombia, which several weeks’ suy in Car- ce aneadin ge ong he impulsive reply w: re no Brutuses | from which there is no escape. Test of the week. a ate 1 | Qfat once. Wouldn't it have made a stir? York: John D. Williams. * in Colombis, which se Yodan Vhy they call the front curtain the drop.” > t e words, “i! ol « ant y su se.” be “ud matters much worse.” He lett his eompanion mtn ee ee ararnee is the far as we oan while the scholars of the p public | “Rtv! ‘What dia yond be written with & Purpose, but Just what that os me a favorable iy es, T think I got the oa r. ou tails, and walked hurriedly up E street * e; but as | schools, colo! a ave join “swallowed it.” urpose is or whether it be worth attaini: As 4 ‘Becar drop the'direction of the Kirkwood honsa, °°’ * | shown by the statistics of our penal institutions | the Saturday classes at Howard University,and | Gracious!” And Rosa hold her hands in the hot clear. Iisa love story, dealing with fey. | The United States of Colombia is a confedera- Taw e when it is down, m: pay. SS Pay for obtaining the instruction which’ is a | air fora minute and said: “Ob tay” 4, chical phenomena and the occult theo tlon of nine separate states, each of which re- ee es ce as it is not,es many suppose, merely or even | Pa¥; orthe publicechool course in certain othics Sious” once or twice, and than teey nae 1ef; | the orient, ‘The hero, who is interact fjords tains its own autonomy, élects a president, He was not seen again until late in the efter- | mainly an ignorance of reading and writing, or | Ditise: of hearing. J Y DAG GOV Ont | Holise the tendency to advanced thought, seeks | coins money. etc., being to all practical pure faturday Smiles. Seon, when on horseback he rode near the side- | the lack ¢f & good common School education, so | “Now that the Public school system ts being | ‘Do you sell gum?” asked THE Star man of | perfection, and with his bride Allena endeavors | poses an independent sovereignty, feebly united | A movable feast—old cheese. walkand hailed John Matthews, the actor, on | Much &§ Se pant of an sndustrial educa. | reformed, let us have manual culture made & | themecde young man who stands in the drug | to live up to his high ideal, but the results are | to its sister states by the central government at | Mand S.may out-trot herself: but she can Pennsyivania avenue, and gave him a large en- | prisoners im the seni enti ae eer eee Partocthe curriculum, at least in the schools of | store on thé corner, disastrous. Some of the descriptive portions | Bogota. The feebleness of the central author- | never beat the Congressional. decord. New On velope, directed to the National Intetii Phia,and of these 1,118 could both rent ey | the higher grades. ALPHA. | “Do you want it perfumed?” he said, as he | are Very good, but the time spent in reading it | ity; the sparse population, scattered over an | loans Picuyune. lope; eects to the. ees engi Lana ere hegre yng cain Fron tor ee ‘Washington, D, C., April 17, 1885. handed out fancy green box, on the lids of | could easily be put to better use. immense territory, the lack of rapid communi-/ ‘Pat young ladies are ce" into fashion ani m to keep mill morning. Mat-| Write, Dat L2l7 Aad ong fade. From 1870 to The box ees fig Chtgmnos chewing gum. Inside | BACCALAUREATE SERMONS. By Axpaew p. | ation, enable the factious local “chiefs,” a8 | acain, “This is us it should be. Make room for thews, after the crime that night, opened, read | Mead and write, bat d O60 had ne rie” Goud | Testimony as to Loyalty Before the | tie box was full of lite snake Sea eae Pranopy. D.D., LL. D., Preacher to the University | they are called, to organize a revolution, with | the squab.—Atlanta Constitution. sna burnt tin bis own room aud at Kis own neures whieh’ way’ he Guplitaied at come Emancipation Commissio Side mnlllong, done up tn white tssue paper | and Flumer Prifessor of Coristian Morals in Hiar-| little Ukelibood of immediate disturbance by | “AIT Sinners: a gentleman went into & Thunder, aud U'diew irom Koman nstary'a yas | syeyg benim the land, are® eleguent tn prot | Tote tor ofthe Sv mare Stax th andy avon. “wthatn thowind'we ssl tie | Der Fyubody isonet the eovadent and moat | minds ou have the Key €0 the present situa: | rNedeg tone to, ty some. wlgekgs for hi - of the above fact & Wan’ ed allel for Justification. knowledge necessary to enable them to engang | , OD@ fact not mentioned in your interesting | most of. White gum, sweetened and perfumed. | jiperal theologians in the country, and at the | #92. ve very few stripes, rir,” the clerk Sipe | on in some honest industrial calling, and the idfe- | Listory ofthe acts ofthe emancipation in this | We have the spruce, i you premer it ny sheets of paper. It Dr. Rafael Nunez (by the way, the honorary | Terk. “We hy the hurried work of . Ae m ted the | 8sme time a mostclear and cogent reasoner, It ‘Dr. belongs to lawyers as well as medical | eplied, “they are uot much worn now.” “Are bably nearly all the period that had elapsed | Ness Tesulting snerefrom, that fills Our jails and | District should be noted and emphasized. Scribe oe Waaae oe Tanlaront aaEwenied tie)| Oe Atiecetine: shat ta mince or ie oon: practitioners fa southern countries; applicd 10 Zou surer” “Oh, ves, guite sure. I will demon: tween the tine he left the theater Rich | Prisons with erimin Atatime when sectional spirit was intensi- | “Not this, It's too fine for them. They chew | mons, preached from 1861 to 1873, there will | an official It usually means a Dr.at-law), who you, Was near 1 o'cloc ie and the hour he met Mat-| nundreds, yes, thousande, Of boy Blase ang | #08 by an sppesl to arms, and the feelings of | the plain. white without the perfureror wee | be found much to challenge Sosa ones ee | eee ry ee prin iaatgonite | the counter, snd. shouted: “Rats! Then he leaned over “See?” he thews late in the aftern “J sked. “Yes; give me plain colors.”—Drake's He had in thatin- | white ‘who daily and ni, many of our residents were so involved by | spruce. Some ofthem like the spruce best be- | gest serious thought. man of high attainments, trained in diplomacy, | ® vi owever, SEE] ei ightly throng its streets 'y involved by TOF Magazine. Serunged thels shave in the Iino oeeean | and alleys, in comparative, if not absolute, idio- | family tles, in sympathy for those who were Setisreustomers eer wate, This is for our! “With its next issue The Century will adopt the | BaVing resided many years in Europe as arep- | Migheing. | ay tions, which includ Secretary Seward and | 23% large share of whom, sooner or later, | thus maintaining the cause of the Confed- “Who are your better customers?” very sensible rule of appearing on the first of | He ig ic h-golng patriot, loves his coun-| “No, my son, what is it?” Nice President Johnson, besides the party at | G°e em’ XO Saquale 88 criminals of various | eracy, Messrs, Goodloe, King and Broadhead,| “Wh, ‘oung ladies.” the month, instead of several days before that | try and wishes to see it advance in wealth and| “They ain't going to have lamp posts any she tbeater tle was then riding on his way t0 | Wisse it would be if they Wore taaeae Seeks | then constituting that commission, disrogarded | «Wai gate, How the custom of anticipating pub-| culture and position among neighboring na-| longer.” Roe Nar id eas needed as an escort | Tul "Gecupation oF trade, but thes silt ies ey | uch suggestions made by informers and spies, | _ “Yes, sir, lots of the young ladies in the West | lication day by our montni es | tions. Elected to the presidency by the liberal | “Why not? < through the Maryland peninsula to the nelgh- ving on the decent portion of ta ewenby | a8 to the loyalty of claimants, and in every caso | End chew gum. Teele sear duantity of it to | Originated no One seems tO” be able to | party, he has seen fit, u fa President Hayes, to Onnee tlney ore hong enough Sow. borhood of Bryantown, where they expected to | PITS 0H Natt thos to te cdioe cerene commu: | insisted that such informer and spy be con: | them, Ofserse they wouldn't want any body | tell; but one periodical having adopted it the | associate with himeell, in the administration of | That evening the young man would not sleep Sree tat vioma before morning and to find | they’ donot escape, and to try and convite rare | wonted, with those whom they had tn seeret | to know-—don't let them know { told gout Trey | others were rather forced to follow i Per er ee | ee eee en eines (and aiiite | om his back, orton Romo refuge » ia V Iginla, | making thelr way event- | fii that be posstble under the absurd und oom | #0ught to injure by privatecommunication with | come in here and buy it on the ‘quiet, like an | liked itor not, ‘The same foolish habit prevails | eral hates a’ conservative ‘with a holy hatred) | Freshman— ‘May I have the pleasure?” ually 0 ' + ys = the nation, endl. Soclety— quated mast of techatcalities ealled laws in ex. | ‘4eidividual commissioner. red, that not one | 2a ¢PEF BUYS his grog in a temperance neigh- | With our illustrated weeklies, and in even a | with the hopes of pacifying the ending | Miss Society—“Oul. Y more marked form, With the the dis- | the political vendettas, and to avoid the ever | Freshman—“W lat does ‘we’ mean?” THE STORY OF THE TRAGEDY. tenes here), and then, 1 convicted, tp support | of those then Held sn slavery, aad. whose oo | Soe Rae tease ene M tt Just like aman | more marke than with te monthiles, | recurring ‘trlies attending presidential clee-| Aieattto U uae eee Soon after the performance bezan Booth rode them in. A payee gh Fag open ae portunity for Knowing the feelings of the | street. Hardly! It starts in with the little | since, in referring to their bound files, they are fons, tolengthen the tenure of office | «what did the sparrow do yesterday?” asks @ up to the rear (stage door) of the theater and | Cases,0ne guy 2 one any day. meg the | owner been great, appeared against a | misses and runs clear up to the young ladies in | always made to appear from one to three weeks two to six years, Like other reformers he tess. Well, dear, we thitk he rollowed out called “Spangler,” the assistant carpenter, and | Sim Ral, Court almost any day. eisiinent, ‘That degrading service weeks society. They do all their chewing-at home, | behind the times-as their iilustrations and text | finds bimeeit pevay seacivance of his times. By | fix ‘usual scheme, whieh Is tonget upata a asked him to take care of bis horse; it was near | laud, aud that,toy, in the afernoomor tblcntne | tered by neighbors. | mosey Ap ine moming. Sometimes s ivtis | enerally relate toevents which (zanspired tas | his conciliatory policy he hes vesplitting up | #Hop around in, the gutte Sing, bat dor 4 the time for a change of the stage scenery, and | teendh century, and among s ‘who claim 5 enact, Siete But they Te eet Lor ect lne sane | ligsiioone ae rotid be Decioe tee titose aan Fears | Leto eee caer ooh eee eet ake a telt o toe neon an Spangler had to get another to do so, and be | eatin the word | Oareigy ae oe an | ction for Tan Evenure cram. te wobldn’t defor some one, to betray them to | tenders also if they would follow the example of | the latter, with ‘the conservatives, endorsing | Tei the rext of the Cay—and retireat about 6 p. < nas ea : i . Tan eir beaus. I, pear President and his endeavors, .—Boston Post. Smsdhelaerene remaiog | System which produces such resulta cannot be | ms evening. thwart the western skies, the yor en Found she chewed gum. Some | wlth pletures and reading matter fred to date, THE REVOLT OF THE STALWARTS. 3 theatrical star—“Oh, my darling there in the rear untt! about 10:30 p.m., when | ‘Trade unions and kindred associat in. | _ The gorgeous drapery of the day god’s bed oe like ee spout in press in the] We have from Cassell & Co., through Bren- ‘The rodicals, or stalwarts, at first protested | how glad Iam to see you Tooking 80 well t (epothad bron aniie bone ae rp od ery Ser oe aoa They sake’ cnewing gum likeschool gis do | 80% 8 copy of Kurt's National Academy | gésinat due recognition ofthe conservatives, and | haven teeen the Papen yet, Was Theceneat a an anki) a jump) and | Notes and Complete Catalogue, for 1885. It is ON 4 “4 Genes toe was occupied, Gee. me the rest: | learning to qualify ‘them for And brings each living fuce our fond hearts hold thdicimatimas and ther hanes Loria Hiner | Invaluable to those visiting Ihe eeiteitone and |-then, after the manner of polities in 8. A.,gave | Mar_—"No, che ankeweas wap vert : . Gra ves of industry, and prevent others who are | And places it amidat the sea of gold. ig Sg pec Fay s there; he had concluded to go to Philadel- qualified from obtaining em; yment; thus by . it. Some timés they ‘will comein and say: | of very considerable interest to those not able eee ee by, toangeeating, oe flat, and the y, ae place @ strict | but everything fell flat, aud the peuple ES teat guy i! pr" | and cota a aie | "ant anne en, || then aay hd wis |S eb ng dein maa | arta ae, Slt ou ow nf Ser, earael soon after o'clock. He greeted Mr. Bucking: | And this is at evil that will grow wht aes iepapiees! be etashtrsd ie ate el ee Sin ¥ you acs ‘ i ponttde rh have little or nothing to’ do with the present | you against that’ new dressmaker.”—Philadet- ham, then doorkeeper, and soon leit to th x ‘T gaze, and to my mind comes every grace window, swallow it, hide it in their phia Call, TOth'atreet, “He weut into Ferguson's saloon | fron" ibn uuce Geiee GER che aot Ee PP et ap secre Ariciph ad a Bosom, or something of that sort, because their! Other Publications Received. Ser Renitation si tetnant Renae ae oaths | acca that army officers object to oe TnnForaeinct avant tp aan 2ayabagt | up and beeoines more valuable, At wil oe none | M7 foaming fancy draws tbe vlads, Guta about te trout thelr tale amon them: | RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS. oy, Haxay. 2. Seman mite “stripes on ‘Guneers boca they Went Into the theater again and ing the | of thei which bonds of good. selves, They never pay nition re aaah ey cleat salen ae hax anere Tevolutionists under | Sant tie floors pf the Washi halls doorkeeper he ascended the stairs to the dress | genship, and the new opportunities oo te, ‘The whispering wind breathes soflyinmyear, . | toclerks, you know. From what them pio val Sime Gan; Gnitau, es So meine oil the river seasenens sbecnen very dusty, but tha no ideu tek they 4 gies, Mt Backingiam ‘noted ‘une’ time aa | quenly’ oce 1 Ia ceeat A THEY, Will con, | Like some sweet harp's chord touched by angel's | (AY; nome OC juem hide it in thelr shoe tops or | O Pg a eae Ter: | on the the great central artery of | Were as bad as that.—Graphic. kA by the cloc! hen he reached the floor | stantly decrease, thus increasing the number of hand, c logs. titory. (Studies "in Civil jew York: | traffic travel, and possess themselves of | «pia a woman ever clean ups rented house Of this circle he took a position on the side near | the idleand uently of the claus— | And, dreamtly, a fond-loved voice I hear, Goa't say bout that I wouldn't) — Jonn W. Lowell Company. Baronquilla, the ‘seaport, thus secur. |.) Did s womed cut of it?’ asks Where the state box was located, and stood for | especially if foreign, imtinigration aia : : have them know I for the world.” The AILS, customs dues. “Afterwards emissaries | yhen she ‘another ever Sfow minutes. A’ picture of Washington was | tibee as heretorree Tete a, kmpeesebes | ti marmuring wares wane firof'etrand, - | Young ‘en blushed Wiolently, and io | THE, WHARTON SCHOOL. ANNALS OF ing the customs dues. Afterward: emissaries Rnd she gid did solver womh, ever mote shd'uateromed, about it He then entewsd the | Satie att nt seach aid aye rs BatrbOReT | Ty eae te thee SNM circa, ewenon Sebi, Otieeat a tag oe we | tea mera ace, tn ef ata | tory” sea meat Pond 3 gE erossed, . ie, an ro 4 BE norongh cleaning avant small passage way leading to the box, and with- | tion of ble to the in five minutes # pistol shot was beard, aud | In this sduuecton t dete ane HERBERT SPENCERS FEILOSOPHY, as calmt Bad by detail T'was on ‘board 'e, Steamer at | an Fi tee fr, androgens’ "thier" des, Nf | nde e teense cone age Eig ut epee tga | eemaar tins ea ae eee fs | i ain ee dae 7S cl | on “] cat ¥ looked Into the house through @ little ‘offies | try.” It every eltizen carefully read that | But in my heart still beams the rosy light ‘ ‘The Kentucky View. Sew ork: Chiries ‘Seriouer's Bona ‘when @ detachmentof national tamed Ly Ry ge FE Pindow, remarked, “Wilkes, Booth has just | work, which coats but @1.40,1 ain contdent | Caught foce the glory of ine deine aye rom the New York Citizen. ‘ton: Robert Beall. bay pa oy Proveeded 0 search | Coursn and tne men's meeting house. gray.» He, Sessford, rave bat ite thought to | Wahe be we be oe a eee 8 Lig at | Love, hope, enlcipaion, hold thelr away, A gentleman fresh from Washington, but | DEFECTIVE 42D Some. br sige orem Rundved Reminetoa rifies:placed there by reve. | into about » dozen churches, bat as they set eguceuccttnra tseait tea | Abi 00 nis once | ners eet ‘Se Arg yomee me | Setepce nas Ree tuomass| eee ees ae, eae | akeg pertain WNctare” | suerte, | apes oe 7 ————-___ y commissioner to Baronquilla— c ‘know. the alleys adjacent, and such reports were often | Commissioner Colman’s Almost everybody now favors woman suf. : at "i ie Day few Ye coe, | a *violation of the flag of " truce | upon thelr privacy, you Beers: heard, pormny stn ce Big Comtract. | nage except woman.—Ayrucuse Mandard, thea! situation: yzit ja all quite sim-| — Prtsan‘sSona” Washington: ober? Beal. I ag Punishment’ ne | ecriat. Booth had succeeded in committing hiscrime EG io Jamping to the stage from the box, @ height of fully nine feet. Gne of his spurs got tangled in the drapery around the Washiogton ture, and it also caught against the edge of frame, so when he struck the he had Jost his balance, and the fail fractured his ahin bone—(to use the homeliest description of it.) He by a territic effort, and in the greatest pain,