Evening Star Newspaper, June 6, 1885, Page 3

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4 Pa aul . D.C., SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1885—DOUBLE SHEET. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. MM, WANFORD NEXT SKASON—MORE PERBONAL MENTION—“THE BANKUR'S WIFE"—VICTOR HUGO'S ULAYS—HENRY {RVING AGAIN—FRED. SCHWAB AND MISS SEVADA—BIC. —Mr. Chas. B. Hanford, of this city, has Teturned to Washington,aMer a long season With Keene. He has signed with Robson and & r next y Eyeon.tn their iva ¢ ‘of Errors,” which ofpext weasiin. | Mr. ‘Sengagement for ‘yeon Is the res si'ateess its that part atthe Cinelar fe festival. — Estelle Clayton wil! begin a 40 weeks’ tour in “Favette” on September 14. — Mr. and Mrs. Geo. $. Knight will spend the sammer in Europe, instead of at Saratoga, —The“New Magitalen” has been revived 1m London at the Standard theater, with Ada Cavendish as Merey Merrick. —“Fedora” reached {ts three hundredth English representation at the Royad theater, in Glasgow, last Saturday. —The statement that Miss Fortescue, the @isappointed flancee of Lord Garmosle, would come to America next season, ishappily incor rect, She begins a provinial tour of Great Britain in, September. having fust closed one that was bigbly profliable. [t is Said that sl cannot act, but ibat her notoriety draws god houses. — A dramatic paper makes the startling state- ment that Jobn R. Rogers will manage Lotta in America while Minnie Palmer is making her tour around the world. —John Howson and Emma Howson will go out next season in a new comedy by Robert Grittin Morris. —Theodore Thomas’ concert season in San Francisco is said to be @ financial failure thus — Ezra Kendall, who made such a hit as Dr. Mulo Medicus in “We, Us & Co,,” will produce iuls new plece“A Paif of Kids" at Tony Pas twr's theater, New York, on the 12th instant. —“Nanon, ° which is soon to be put on at the Casino, New York, has now passed the 350th night of its run in Berlin. — “The Banker's Wife” 1s the latest member ofthe family to be made the subject of a play. vy Howard Russell, and was San It ix duced at ro Franeisco this week. The or the banker's confidential put into a play, but it is feared it would barrow up the populat feelings to too greut an extent, — Mark Twain's play, called “Tom Sawyer,” ‘Was tried on last week in Hartford, New Haven and oth wns. It wasa failure. ‘Dhe piece pen e been pretty bad, and the fact that it did ndt draw even in the city where the author resides is @ sufficient indication of its quality. — Frank Mayo’s excellent play, “Nordeck,” seems to have taken hold In New York. Its stay at the Union square theater, which was to ha -d a week ago, has been prolonged. — Harry Lee, who was not a conspicuous sne- us leading support to Fanny Davenport in ‘eddora’” the past season, will, it Is said, go out 1 season in Maurice Barrymore's play, “The Don.” & wus tbe cat” which caused a delay In the a ng o thecurtain on the first scene of “Adonis” at the Bijou theater, New York, one re are five of them in the eral occasions they hat oken the spell of Harry Dixey's Inspiration by “ppearing on the stage at the most eritical moment. Therefore, Dixey refused to zo ahead until all the cats had been banished from the staze. — Minnfe Palmer will remain abroad for two years, it issaid, visiting India, Australia and New Zealand, and returning home by way of Sau Francisco, in May, 188° —John T. Raymond begins bis summer en- g mt at the Mudison Square Theater, New York. on Monday next. —Mr. Whitney Mockridge, the tenor, who was heard here recently in the Choral Society concerts, will agsist Chica Louise Kellogg in her fortheoming summer concert tour. —Mrs. Augusta Poster will play Lady Mac- deth, Volumnic In “Cortolanus,” andthe Em- press in “The Gladiator” with Salvini next sea- ®n, having been specially engaged for these parts. —Mr. Arthur B. Chase, formerly Rhea’s man- ager, aid who will manage Lawrence Barrett Rext season, had Me mistortune recently to brewk a lez While dshing at Rangeley Lakes. —Victor Hugo's dramas have furnished the subjects of many operas. Verdi based two of his great works on “Hernani” and “Le Rol S Amuse.” Donizettl took “Lucrece Borge,” Mereadante “Angelo,” and Salvi “Les Bu: graves,” Two other composers besides Verdi Wrote operas from “Hernant,” *Marfon de Lorme” ‘inspired two, “Marie Tudor” two, “Ruy Blas” five, and “Notre Dame,” or “Es: meralda,” no less San nine—Preach, Italian, Belgian, Russian, Hungarian, English and American. —The cure of one actress-smitten man is re- ported. He had for many years been an inmate fan insane asylum. He became a furious lover Queen was all that alled him. that Ristor on her recent fareweil tour, h become @ middle-aged woman, with none of her persona beauty left. the physician decided to take his patient to sce her. "The result was astonishingly successful. There was enough of the former Ristori to convince the man that she was the same individual; but he was so thoroughly disenchanted that recovery was alinest Instantaneous. — Henry Irving {s thought by nearly all the London papers to have been greatly improved iu his acting by his American tour. The Satur enunelation hs ess and natural ra is far more distinet, and as acorollary the sentences are better balanced and curry more welzht, with: out Josimg anything in fineness,” and coes on to f + at his whole style is “refined and Seein, moderated. —Mr. Gustave Frohman’s Lyceum Theater Co., composed of the principal scholars of the Lyceum Sebool of Acting, will open their season aty ergon the 12th. 4 large theater company ew York will go up to observe the per- David Belasco and Bronson Howard on plays ior the Lyceum pupils, — Mr. Thom is W. Keene's manager declares that he did not hve « losing week the past season, Keene confined himself to “Richard ILL” gad “Macbetu,” the former being his piece de Femist nc: xt'season he will do “Othello” and “Hamlet” frequently. His manager sai “I am going to do this tragedy business as It has never Leon done in America. We shall have entirely yew scenery and costumes of the very best quality, and we siall enzage a couple of cars fa which to carry this stuf throug country.” — The Ford-Wallac? season at the Fifth Ave- nue theater, New York, will last six weeks. The arrangement upon which the theater 1s provides that if the stand Wallace inust then Rice, Miles and Last week it Is said ‘the week nearly neut the BiGeou pay it ail receipts Were $3,900, and the fh that sum, and the —In an Interview cabled from London toa New York paper Emma Nevada, the stuger, ts reported as saying, In speaking of Frederick Schawb. dramatic eritte of the New York Tunes: . uded thet ie wanted money favorabie notices, and he wrote unfavorable Dir. Schwab gaid wave Instructed imy faw- . Nevada on a charge of erimi- 1, be Lt oue oF teu years hence, when she returns to. Au Ihave aiso cabled to friends in L to wateh the Euro- Sevada haf the mis ofa siunilar sort will dnd herself where Su Jul fi aay Bucoy js Mrs. Weldon is at present —— When Your Girth Increases. There is that occasional visit to the tallor. who, tape in band, announces in commerctal Monotone to the listening cierk the various measurements of our girth, and congratulates tus on the gradual increuse thereof, He never im his life saw you looking so well, and “iancy, sir, you are another inch below your armpite”— & good deal below—“since last year!” insidiously Ynlimwating that in another year or so you will uve near.y as fine a chest as Heenan! And You, poor deluded victim, are more than balf Willine to believe that your increasing size is @n &/vivalent to increasing health and strength, especially as your wile emphatically takes that View, and regards your auginenting portiness With’ approval. Ten years have now passed Siray since od, were 40, ana by weight 12iy mone—a ial proportion for your height am Dutid. Now you turn the scale toone stone moi every ounce of which Is fat—extra weight to garvied through all the laborwot lite, Lvoucoa jaue your present dietary and habits and live five or seven yeurs more the burden of fat will Be doubled. and that insinuating tallor will be still congratulating you. Meantime you are PTanning the race of Mie”—a gure of gueech less appropriate to you at the present n it than It formeriy was handicapped Ls a welght which makes active movement diff SiS stairs ascents troublesome, respiration and panting. Not one mun in lives to a good old age in this condition. Ian of $0 or 90 years, still retaining a able amount of eneriy of bod: 7 and healthily, being opps gradualiy gathering ‘fat ‘And this ease you continue to eat and drink as you di oreven sore luxuriously than you did, whe! and activity dixposed of which Was co.umed over and above w! ftaport or tla: balance of unespeaded simone % x) ry wiles your tailor and foolish friends ad- mire, and the gradual diss fee should you recover your senses and dimin’ to your ou back ‘old its again by fom are ‘hin; what be ter tateee ee Cote THE SUMMER FASHIONS. FALLING BODIES. CALIFORNIA'S PLAGUE. THE QUEEEWS LAST “DRAWING The War-Horecs of the World. Soe re Reoxu.” From the Londen Telegraph. 7-00 Physiology Discussed by « Med. | The People Call Them Grasshoppers. — Horses, or, as the French phrase tt, “In ques- DAY DRESSES—opTrerpooR weaR—DiNNeER | Thels oh lorses, oF, a3 | DREWES—BELTED WAISTS—THE NEW BON- ent Jogos — Weerd tus Weal Frances cgi, How Victoria peroneal tion chevaliae,” must always be suggestive of ‘NETMS—TME EMBRODERX RAGE—THE LATEST considerable anxiety to nations about toem- bark upon a big war. We learn, upon the au- thority of the Baron d’Etreillis, better known under his assumed name of “Ned Pearson,” that Colbert, the great minister of Louis XIV., was the first to perceive the dangers to which France was exposed by the searcity and infe- riority of the horses existing within her borders at the close of the seventeenth century, and A large portion of the foothill region of Call- = fornia is not only threatened but is being de- | From tne New York Post. Vastated by such swarms of grasshoppers tl In on Interesting letter written from London, they amount to nothing short ofa plague. The | s correspondent sends quite a lengthy deserip- lne of maroh has been westward across thecen- | tion of the queen's late “Drawing Room.” The ter of the state, All authorities and reports ap- | qucen’s tollct consisted of a bodice and train of Pear to agree in fixing upon the desolate wastes | black eatin frise magnificently decorated with Of the Sierra slopes as the birthplaee of the in- | arabesques and pendants ofcut jet and chenille. ‘The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal re cently bad an Interesting article on the phyal- ‘logy of “‘talling bodies,” suggosted by the fatal experiment of Bob Odlum. It asserts that the physiological questions must be treated from am @ priori standpoint to a large extent, as in fatal cases it cannot be definitely determined whether the heart stopped beating beiore the BAckAcee, srrvotes ce Ter sror, rv. ‘ation amd soreness of the bowels, dre aymptoms ofa disordered state of the digestive and aestmilative ‘NOVELTIES, BTC. ALL JACKETS are eut short. Gnay Mouarasare coming into populasity. PLAIN SaTTees are trimmed with velvets of the same shade. ‘Tumsaxs are selfom to be seen now, and when worn are piaced baek on the head. rected by the use of Ayer’s Cathartic Pilla As dinner Pills, andasaids to digestion, they have ue equal ‘They cure constipation. si setts. There among the stenes andscrub the | Along white tulle vell waa wurmounted by a | tliat Colbert saggested ine ieumatiow of goss AYERS SARSAPARILLA 8 A HIGHLY fsa coearecs eciceast cele Chott Creneaee | MOE a Ee Cet eee Le etd | enki lie biden your altar sean’ Gall sorte pe: | corterine Cate pearls, Her majesty | stad farms sunuirted by ‘the state, which Mr. | {cobeeBtrated extract of Marsanertin, and other with Turkish enabsoldarlos and worn with salior | jumpers’ have retained consciousned through | Cullar climatic or physiological condition—eth- | also wore a necklace of four rows of pearls, and | Flimund Tattersall desires so ardentiy to seg | blood-puritying roots, hats of eoru straw. Exsnorery is extensively used to trim afternoon dresses for both walking and driving. Reds, blues in light and dark shades, browns, and greens In pale shades, are the colors most to be seen in these dresses. GRAY AND PALE CorsEE-BROWS of the soft- est tints are two colors, which, In various fab- Fics, {rom natin to verge, are to prove very popu; lar the coming season in carriage, traveling and walking costumes. AFTERNOON AND Evextxe Dresses for children are elaborately trimmed with Oriental and Valenciennes lace, in addition to quaptl- {aes of satin ribbons.’ Children's bangs are worn @ trifle shorter than was the fashion dur- hug the winter. New Boxers fit the head closely. They are jexs elaborate than those wern during the Spring, and many of tiem are without strings. Waite tn gauzy materials and tack velvet favorite combination of colors, ulyo olive and falntest pink, and seal brown and yellow. Ar THE Private View In the Grosvenor gal- lary this year Mrs, Langtry was the abserved of all observers. She enjoyed the distinction of being mobbed. It has been remarked ‘with satistaction that her dress was alfead of the fasbions,and that her bounet was adorned with 4 brilliant Chartreuse velvet bow. Tue Lapras’ Civs, in New York, which kas been spoken of in the newspapers, is still in a state of indefiniteness, although many promi- bent women have it actually in hand, and de- glare that It will be tablished. If so. it will Ge a strictly fashionable society, and the list of membership will be small and efclusive. For QutT-os-poors Morstxa WEAR white casbmeres are tobe worn agreat deal. They will not be made up elaborately, tucks on the skirt, long pointed drapery and plaited waists, with belts, being the principal style. ‘The white lawns and hundsome embroidery dresses will aisobe extensively worn, with dainty white bats and gaily colored parasols. FLoUNces MADE oF WooLLExs which have a canvas Weave or a loose mesh, and fine white nds which bave no dressing in them, are now aintily finisbed in henfstitehing up’ half the distances as great as 190 feet. Odlum’s fall Oc- cupied about three and a quarter seconds, and therate of motion just before he reached the wa- ter was not oer 100 feet persecond, “a speed not rarely eqnalied hy railway trains, and exededed by ieebouts.” ‘Thus tne couclusion is drawn that he was probably perfectly couselous at the moment of striking the water. eS As to the dangers of vertical motion ata rapid rate of speed the article says; ‘The only way in which thi: motion could have an effect greater than horizontal motion at an equal rate would be either by involving a sud- den chanve in Uarametric pressure, or bY, acca mpulating the blood in the brain through tae vie fnertic, the motion belug In the direction of the long axtsof the body. Aa to the former point, We nay say that for the heizht In question. at | hon, few using their wings Cven when possessed Average temperatures, the difference in the | of barouietric record would be hardly more than one-eighth of an inch. Of course, & change of pressyro even to this Amount becurring™in three seconds te more | rapid than one is ordinarily subjected to: but there seems no reason to suppose the body could not accommodate itself to it, eyen if any effet were produced in so short @ tithe, As to | strength of the jttmping legs and the color of the throwing of the blood back upon the brain | the insects. by the rapid motion in the direttion of the feet, | George 8. Waterman, who. lives between We Row that persons who ure inexperie eed | Farmington and ‘Trigo, San Joaquin county, in traveling often sleep In rallway trains with | has furnished discouraging accounts from his thelr feet foremost without evil eflects. section of the eountry. What the drought has if this reasoning Ig correct, Odlum wie killed | spared the grasshoppers are taking. E> Dreds, by the shock Of the impact, aud if he bad struck | who lives our and one-half miles cast of Farm: exe introdueed into this country. “The state,” Says the Baron q'Etreillis, in his able mono» gtaph upoy “Les Uhevaux de Pur Sang,” “did not hesli J» or delay to act, at Colbert's In- stance, With energy and” authority, upon the sole ground “whieh could jusiity its interference with __ private "inten ests, and especially with agriculture—to wit, the paramount importance of providing @ Staupnlg of horses for the French ‘armas. the exumpie set by Colbert was followed by ‘the great Napoleon, whose use of horses be tween 1800 and 1815 was without a parallel in any similar space of time In anciént or modern: history. Finally, Napoleon UI. conferred an- told advantages tpon his subjects by transfer ring English horses, and especially thorough- breds, to the other side of the channel, and by fudoctrimasing Frenchmen with a taste of Eng- lish horseracing. Again, it 1s notorious that ier the last fiity years Germany has devoted her attention gealously to buying and breeding horses for her army, and has done so with such success that (he cavalry regiments which acted as the eyes and ears of the German force In- Vadng France in 1870 were so. weil mounted as to cxeite universal admira- tion in the minds of Englishmen who witnessed the operations of the Franco- siumand Irom. Its conttol over scrofulows diseasce: nologists are unable to agree upon this point— unequalled by any other mediewe ved bring them to life. In Colusa county the most destructive areof a light buff when young, growing dark brown In a few weeks, and reach- ing two inches in eae ae} with disproportion ately long legs and having great leaping powers. ‘Those in Ei Dorado county are small, brown in color, hgve white stripes around their body, and their clicking aoise Is not unlike the sound heard In clowk shop, where at the same time hundreds of timepleces are t icking. A sample of the pests, obtain¢d on tie other side of the American Tiver, near Sacramento, were from. one-fourth to three-fourths of an a in length ‘and wingless. All agree, however, that thelr eneral mode of Progression 1s to crawl or to broach and earrings of diamonds and pearls, the riband and star of thb Order of the Garter, the Orders of Victoria and Albert, the crown, of india, the Royal Red Cross, the Hessian Order of the Golden Lipn, and the Saxe-Coburg and Gotia Family Order. ‘Te Princess of Wales Was attired In a court-trained dress of crimson satin brocade, combined with a deeper shade piain satin, veiled with flounces of pomt @’Alencon lace. The dress Was looped with clusters of strawberry blossoms and Serries, with corsage bouqyet to currespond. She wore upon her head a cosonet of diamond stars, with other ornaments to mateh,aud carfied seven or- Gers. ‘The Princess Beatrice was costumed ina pointed bodice and train of waite corded silk, Veiled with white silk musiin, the dripings caught up with bouquets of pink and crunson roses and foilage, with the reguintion headdress of feathers and veil, with dh¢inynd sturs above. Her highness carried seven orders, Princess Louise of Wales wore a dress of very rich and sheeny white poud de soic, trimaned ‘and veiled With tulleand White Ince, draped. with sprays of pink apple-blussoms and leaves. The lon train opened up the sides, and_ was lined wil white/aiie, and the entire skirt-edge in the back, was bordered witli fall rache-pleatings of the fille, into which were set tiny clusters of | German war. It has been laid down, iudesty apple-blossoms aud fullage. Het feathers and | by Von Moltke, Mit in an army thoroughly. Neil were fasiened with a cresgent of diamonds | equipped for active hostilities there ought and pink pearls ti be two horgps for every flve men employed in heade 2 the field. Probably there never was a war In Tied the order of Victoria and Albert, Prinecss | which so many: homes ato teal wore aan Christian, of Schlesw ig Boel was superbly ry as in the case of one of the armies en- attired in'a bodice and ttain of the riche ed in the great American struggle between satin, brocaded with silver lilies and v 1 and 1805, ‘The suuthernens or confeder- with deep wine-celored tulle. Her ornaments ere oblived fo fight the wat. trough to were diamonds, rubies and pearls, The the bitter end without being able to draw sup- at Buckinghout Spahce ae sebed ae e Plies of horses and mules irom abroad. The cou- brifliant one, each tosiet being carefully chosen, | Yequence was that duis tie let ween tee so that there shold ve no clashing of colors. | montis of the exhausting strife the cavalry re- ‘The costumes and all the accessories wei of giments of the confederacy, commanded, after the most magniticent, but with very few ex- | The death of Genersic Tf be t ond Sor ceptions beauty, either of form or seuture, was | can, by Generals Fitzhugh Lee Whore conspicuous by {ts absence.” ‘orrest, Were shrunk to little more than squad- ee rons. On the other band, the armies of Gen, Erle County Giants. Grant, Gen. Sheridan and Gen. She: were SKELETONS OF MEN TEN FEET HIGH FOUND IN pted and rendered additionally formid- ‘A CAVE. by the presence of a splendidly-equipped From the Philadelphia Times. cavalry foree, mounted uper horses drawn in Eure, Pa,, May 30, Feat ingastre frown minion of Canada, “Why, this man was ten or twelve feet hig FOOT TOk {ie quartermaster general of «Thunder and lightning!” exelatmed Farmer Keazr Coot: WHAT I8 THE USEOF BEINGIN 4 CONSTANT STATE OF DISCOMFORT WHEN THE EXPENDI- TURE OF ASMALL AMOUNT OF MONEY WILL ENABLE YOU TO BE NeT ONLY COMFORT. ABLE, BUT GENTEEL IN APPEARANCE? em. The probabilities are that the small and big insects ure not different kinds, but the ‘oung and grown of the: pa sea the hatch- rg nec being Focal about the end of April or the begsinhig of May, and the proba- bilities are algo that the grasshoppers’ are not getsshoppers at all, but locusts of the genuseap- tenus tenmurrubrum, trom the length and OUR HOT WEATHER GOODS WILL FILL THE BILL ENTIRELY. MANDSOME SEERSUCKER COATS AND VESTS FROM $8 UP. GENUINE CALCUTTA SEERSUCKER COATS, VESTS AND TROWSERS. ELEGANT ENGLISH CHECK COATS AND VESTS THE FIMEST SUMMER GOODS IN THE GITY. SILK ALPACA COATS AND VESTS. DARP D’ ETE COATS AND VESTS. Light Colors, Finest Imported Goods. BROWN STRIPED SEERSUCKERS, ‘The Newest Goods in this Line, BLACK DRAP D ETE QOATS, ‘Long and Short, Rack und Frock. LINEN COATS AND VESTS. « WHITE DUCK VESTS. ALPACA AND LINEN DUSTERS le water fect foremost he would probably have | ington, had 120 acres of wheat, but the grass ay ‘The writer, however, expresses a | hopjiers came down a little ereek lending into doubt if any person, however skillful, can matn- and tovlcevery léafand stalk until tain a vertical postion through so long a de- | nota grees thing en their track was lef, “The scent unballasted, and combats the theory ad- | same Informant also says shat all wintergrown, vaneed since Odium’s fatal Reap, that he bad | grain in his section of the country, whether Droved the possibliity of a persir dropping a | wheat or barley, has been entirely cut off by considerable distance without danger to life. | the locusts. The Marysville Demoeraé states In respect to this he says: that a farmer fo that neighbothood named It does not, however, follow that because acro- | Amox Lane lias lost avout 26-acres of wheat by bats and sailors can dfup 130 feet or 80 without | them, eaten off close to the ground, and tuat losing consciousness, the satig thing would hold | others are threate rmy of fre of all persons ‘falling irom such a height, | grasshoppers invaded the agricultural Iauds ‘The sensation of giddiness cauged in inexpe- | comtiguous to Wick's, tl en miles trom. Fienced persons by a high elevation some- | Oroviile, on the Cui y raided John {mes leads to syncope, “and there is no | Cullum's place and annilulated eighty acres of Teason why the giddinevs induced by high | grain In short order. Grasshoppers have ape altitude, When increased by the terror of} peared in fone Valley in stick tuinbers a3 40 tually faiting, may not cause syncope, If not | umount toa scourge, The grain crop, which death by shock, before the concussion comes. | only promised about half yield belore, fs HOW We have no right to assume that what may | likely to be utierly ruimet. At Folsom the happen toa cool, professional gymnast, taking | crasshoppers are nunicrousand-are dlestoy nee a E BR BARNUM & ©O, Washington, which covers the last year of the war, IUis distinctly stated that the eonsum gu Querm FOR BOYS AND CHILDREN, organs, which can be prompily amd thorougidy co | TRE LARGEST AND BRST ASSORTMENT WIL ALWAYS BE FOUND AT TILE BOYS CLOTHING HOUSE, 900 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUB alsa, A COMPLETE a8SORTMENT * oF MENS AND BOYS SUMMER UNDERWEAR OUR CELEBRATED STAR SUIRT WalsT, HAS NO BQUAL, PERFECT IN FIT, IN FLAN- NEL&, LINENS, PERCALES 4ND MUSLING BR ROBINSON -@ oo, rn 909 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, PLA RE aac ss BB AA uous Seng me SL EP EYE alte 416 Tru Srecer Nortawaet. FRIDAY 18 OUR RED TICKET DAY! GREAT BARGAINS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS! SELLING OUT DRY G00Ds aT PRIME CosT IN ANTICIPATION OF 4 CHANGE OF BUBINESS WE HAVE DECIDED To CLOSE OUT OUR ENTIRESTOCK OF DRY GoobsaT ACTUAL 43 931 PENNSYEVANIA AVENUE BLACK CUINET SILKS. Greene {ieee Rory cetics an and ty atta t aleap ee aarauy nae peapen Se case OE aS a thin reach, Porter in astonishmeut. The first speaker,who rat of Loe ane e, the pees rang snd | 278m unused to giddy ights ng acel- | jainy has a fo ce of about fi has won local distinction as a scientist, reiter- yooh gee n jon i Our $1.10 BLACK GULNET SILKS, selling out price above. "Thi ae drawn, and the hem and | dentally. lighting then, and S¥v pounds ws : = When disbanded in 1965, ainount tuake are then stitched ee sma way 9 8 see. = esterday, wien. they ciaed: heaalen nce Ps im near Northeast, nov | yl’ Bumdred ead in every. twenty-four Averiox. Averios, Avveriox. 0c, at Baus, A DINNER Duss of fine black silk grenadine, ee eneem Siemon: Zeinw roe beuhteameyparatirs hens mapy miles from. w @ the Lake Shore ratl- The only two great mations which contain RIBBONS. RIBBONS RIBBONS, — ry _— erry te a From the Cornhill Magazine. he di thick ~ | Toad crosses the New York State boundarglne, } enough horses within their borders to mect all ™ io . made over black satin and brightened by a gar- ahs 0 tblels that you can: |\ Tory this wool: yorkinen In Mr. Porter's | the encies of war or pe: e, ion 1 niture of buttercups and narrow yellow satin | In the same year was established a school of eae ae OH Rg TNE | oy cnc amas ae Eco eee Bele aera oar OF Bence are, unqusstion- Our $1.00 BLACK GUINET SILKS, siting out price a y i : ri ey Visited his place and did over $2,001 came upo nitranes ER eRuatia ar gored suales ia — 20, at Baus. dnd'eliow atu tutto By catcle@’wrnie | the brigade histo undergo period ericaree | guises mae day St Casio oy Shean | et oaterige fe kunt Meas 0 com dirs cAntonje Gaeta th on that the eat Our $1.75 BLACK GUINET SIL.K& selling out price he rats ig cut very low and found, without | ton, daring which timo he draws pay. He bas | hon 7 a a Ce ee ae eee ar coer whidy empire under the dominion orthe Great | THE NEW YORK MILLINERY STORE, ry reg tem enue Comaue The akict is doared: and fine | % be clothed, taught, housed, and inevery way | Jil Miller, of Lutobe, Nad acMae: Meniad | Hbived to the naguraligs aa NN POE eee eaten Cine ceocrioeied a Our 62.00 BLACK GULNET SILKA, setting out price med, and has a long train surrounded by a gar- | looked after, and for’ aconsiderable time gives | 200 ucres.or Untles See grees cua owes i id Gofmany, its two nearest nelgive stad act ey aie niture of the buttercyy and yellow ribbon. | no return whatever for the expense, which {s | 128" Hours ar Da pres athiass se ps y pense, TOL the elphtenter eect Beton lane | Those of giants, 4.” Mr. Gillengs adds that the Rot tbe slightest-vestige of the crop leit, | WAADIY th qhete algo extend diagonally down the front of | calculated at about £100 per man, After a ir $1.50, at BAUM'S, eae even to the roots, andthe ground the nest diy Hota silage oe Northeast was are peas aes in Has RECEIVED THIS WEEK A LARGE IN- Our $2.25 BLACK GULNET SILKS, clomng ou! priat the ile ene the he the discovery and tovday hundreds of people | mouths, irom the Ph; = i nz, at BAUS, time he gi tule, bout the end of a | looked as if it had just been ploug pyene ‘ pis t ot , A Furscu Mopisre recently, in planniis | sear becomes thoroughly. useful. Tho re | Seve. fens’ in tue neigiberreess tpuleittio sane, Ht wuvat dra conjectured | i tal'marscey Insel mie bce | elon or RIRRONS FROM A EW YORK =e: Gree Of fine exshmore, required strong surah | «roi¢ must in the first place ben seataan, under tend bodies er the Somer Larne trum We | shar tha semaine werevinoce of eoldiors killedta | Sod trees cee ea eee BY steambe ADORED, WEI WEE: BR SOLD AS ANI SUARCER SILKS! for the waist lining. In making up the skirt, | 30 years of age and rrfed: must measure PP ce ae battle with fie Indians that abounded in the | or about eleven thousand three hundred miles TION PRICES. years of ag unmat ; must me running streams is more offensive (hin i vi =’ she used a Bu, Ge yards of sili: and. linen | nottexs than 37 inches round the chest, and is | worst aggregavian of slaughter houses. The Ae eer Aa ane pine ct meee almost aay Sas moire Brancaise. This seemed rather an ex-| gonyrully preferred at least Sivet 6 luebes in| ° be a pe Lda 2 S and length of the lez bones dispe amuzing empire, sparsely occupied by human SUMWER, travagant outlay for lining, but in the end the | feignt. te musi bes ian oF weno ele erie ven coaed Wik e olar abouta hundred and tity | beings, when its prodigious bulle Is borue lr | RIBBONS FOR SCHOOLS, or ine a ake softness and grace with which the dress mate*- | gence able to read und write, must pass a medi- | decked with wild lowers: beeae anaes celvtons of powerful proportions Lave | mind, boasts possession of more horses t RIBHONS FOR SASHES, fal draped itaulf above the stir Vuing, and the | Eitingpedtion, and produce cerullesies of birth | ¢ e appearance, and looks as thouzh it had | Be¢a exhumed and indications point to a sec- jon upon the fuce of the gh EISBANA SOR Ge atte perfection of Wt the surah sili gave the bodice, | and téstimonialsias to character aud service: the been swept by fire, ‘The large farmers in thay | od cave vard, Which may probably con- eral Sit Robert Wilson, who was Bi N os R HATS, sulliciently Justitied the extra expenditure. If | ha; aL first Joining is Week, and it rises to | neizhborhood have, like Me Miben hose teat | & y more. fist’ who bave ex- missioner at the headquarters of the Rus-| RIBBONS FOR DRESSRS, DRESS GOODS! is no doubt In a great measure dae to their ex- | 275. "Gd., Sus. 10d. 413. 3d dis and Ane Od, i ad a | humed skeletons and made carcidl measuce- ng the M gntire crop and the teed on their pustures, | Wmed skeletons und made 7 : Zhovo in the neighborhond of White Rock and | ments of the Donessay that tify, are the re, (lark-ville bave suilered equal as bud. “th whieh our tallest meh would’ appear as informant from the Cousunmes says the pic ure ise he MOTD HENGE atone heppe Are arto ye at Waville PAIGE ae implements of war with the hat the Wwidat ilelds. are, being dévasiea Ly | Bodies, “Some of the bomes are on exubbition pensive linings tirat French dresses owe much to their acknowledged cachet. For Lovers of novelty there are changeable batistes, in which gitt Is introduced In dots all over the fabric, and in stripes near the selvedge | for borders. The sweet-pea color, showing both r ow campaticn in 2, tells us that no troops in the world are better mounted or can deiend ground better thon the Russian regulars, “Their artillery,” “is BO Wi ed and so nimbly au dily worked tbat it bowles over all imecu- jarities of Surface with an ease, lightness and velocity whic ‘The uniform is supplied yeurly, und there is now & liberal arraugement (or gratuities and pensions, with Whica the men appear to be in general gatistied. The candidate must be a seaman, {to that rule there has been no @x- cepfion’ tor 30 years), and he is referred when coming from th. merchant service ratuer than RIBBONS FOR THE NECK, RIBBONS FOR THE RATR, RIBBONS IN ALL SHADES, WIDTHS AND QUALITIMs. 4 pink, i tiest in this goods. Th “myriuds of geasshoppers.”” goak tures. One is as thick as a good ch give ita great superiority. ‘The =e bine and pink, is_preti Os goods. The | from the navy. ‘The reason for preferring the | 4 . Mercury zed bucket. vivaci alertness of their cavalry and the | ALSO, a’ y PI = silver and gilt’borders are also tntfuduced in | callor to the iaadstaan ie vd Bae fumiltarity | nopere ee ereary Mavs that the gra VERY LOW PRICES, LARGE LOT ——_—_—_+o-+, A Parisinn Restaurant. THE MOST DEMOCKATIC DINING-BOOM IN ALL EUROP! un Scoteh ginghams and in widte cotton that is called Indiacotton. Old-fashioned cambrics in halfinch stripes of three gay colors, such ay blue, poppy red and olive or brown, are again shown for gay over-dresses, with skirts entirely ig steadiness of the fnlantry make it and them in extremest di is the case with the British nost unbounded contidence may be reposed—to use a sailor's expression—in their hoppers wre euting the foliage trom orange, peach, and apple trees about Wyandotte, aad are wiao destroying the vegetables in whe gar- dens. The Natoma vineyard is said to be fering severely irom the with climbing, with the handling of ropes, with doiug work at a heigat, all give him # primary training of the highest import- ance. ‘The preference extended to time merchant service arises from the fact that WHITE PLUMES, CREAM PLUMB, WHITE PLUMES, CREAM PLUMES, suk WHITE TLPS, CREAM TIPS, hoppers,” with 2 pros-| Under the very shadow of the people’s palace a oir tiischier inere: gautie answer at the helta iu every stress of situation | WHITE TLPs, CREAM TIPS of embroidered cambric. nowadays two-thirds of the navy men are | froin took states ee ae Le eeaAe | (writes a Purls correspondent), in the Rue de la | Sey Sderot ee ‘From the same ad A Haxpsome Dasss, worn at a matinee in| merely engineers and fighters, en accus- compauy’s vineyatd, near that place, has been | Vérrerie, I found Dentos' table spread. At the | Soureo we learn that the tlist Napoleon had wit. = New York last Wednesday, consisted of a skirt | lomed to work on deck rather than wluit: | entirely denuded by the grasshoppers, Capt | end of ablack and sooty couriyard men and ie Usdin SordICee ae en elding valor Of) witte GIL MULL, of golden brown velvet with a narrow ruffie of |8U4_ though no doubt there are among Leott, the manger of the contpany’s prop- i : them still many good climbers, they are not i the sume proportion as in the merchantservice, where the greater part of the men’s work lies in the rizgiug. On ‘presenting himself at bead quarters the candid prop- | women wero passing in and out throngh swing- of she 4 e side of the doors was the ee anine Wvot dat | tug doors, At one side o: lars, the fruit of the catire 160 acres of beariug | tariff: Plate of meat, 20 centimes; wine, 20 ill uot this year be over $5 centimes; soup, bread, vegetables and dessert the same, box-pleated around the foot. Above this was a deep flounce of dark ecru lace in Nama. 1 tunic of the Vélvet was draped above this skirt, the peint reaching quite to the : Mio {unpropitions for its display, and had rec- ays that while the raisin prod «i qualities and propeusities which would. + Russian armies, when prope ized, pre-eminent in the field. “He had become WHITE SILK MULLS, CREAM SILK MULLS CREAM SILK MULLS, cack te has to undergo » very nis almost complete. “A” Sacramento | (), each 10 centiines. ‘On tueother side of the the no jess resolute character | WHITE CRAPES, bottom of the underdress In front. This was | severe physical test, in whieh i ke fall he ts not | vector Is almos' SOciere. atoet ate Gh Pecan oe : 3 peasantry, and had found nothe edged with a gathered rude of the luce, and the | fartuetocamineds An ee rae eee ge | Paver states that a 1U,0UU-aere stock rancu In | doors were. placards, one Mating: chat Ae wes WHITE CRAPES, the southern part of El’ Dorado county has been CREAM CRAPER bodice was of velvet with the inevitable waist; | zontally on the ground, and by ua arrangement ntirely denuded Of every thing gr | fren throat to waistline The het Saenr oieit | OfFepes and policy’ las to be raised to. vertl= | willowruses aicinged Se eee Eee eae gine frem throat to waistline. eee ae Sas of brown | eal position. It is calculated that for the frst every instance the trees, tines, and Tough-and-ready straw trimmed with lace and | 12 (pulls this test represeuts a strain of 300 cen entirely kill The springs, brown velvet flowers. pounds, after which there fs a gradual diminu- ‘oirs, ditches, Watering troughs, au Biack Satty or surah dresses are effectively | tion of tue wei ht, as Lue worst of it 6 over and re filled with dead bodies af iayriads remodelled by adding panels, vest front, and | the escape beylus to rise, ‘OMe men ure drilled ects in w putid state, the water has collar and cuffs of dark red surah laid in ne | G4lly, except Saturday and Suntlay, and poisoned, stock Hinse to drink It, and 1 belore pusing Into the brigade wait for #| tie steaca urisiug thereitom Is nauseating ia pleatings, or bright red satin, aes with ieee certificate from the chief drill instructor. The | the exircine, see ee ethic tonne baila very, Mund-| @rill ts of wa exceedingly diversiiied and in- | “4e,¢s4re1a Valley the insects are eating the Fee eae Un prcnading Cmutle ver,” with | venious churseter. They Jump (rom. wiudows peuches down to the pits, Information: hs panels haptic beta couee oe Poppy, aoe in.o sheets: they pick each ee Up and carry | been sent te the office of the State Bourd of Vite in ralsed desizns. En sud with the dress was | C20 other down ladders; the# are slung out | jculture of seriotis ravazes committed by the 2 i : ~ Which at and discipline might forbidden to bring bread, meator drink Into the ie Neate Fon, and. the other stating that te table | 2 oR ee eh orp utensils were paced Iu the sare Keeping of the i SO TintSamnes the usta : soldiers’ pay Was hot more than twelve sUlll- Offices LE Son ay Ten onuide 18.8 toket | Tres per annum, and kis, only ration in tment | 4 ; : Pray ace Was water and rye bread baked like cheeks as your purse and appetite permit. I ity Bence aro ste took tive atid followed the crowd. Hach one as | piscuit. Belund the army stands an enormous , ee x territory, with a reserve of horses—a considera- he entered stopped near the door and snatened | Tanorrhen ita : re a glass out of a baskotiul that stood there. | Ue proportion of them, it ia true, not more than Then, bearing leftward, approached a wire | Powles—nutnbering fom thirteen to fourteen erating, through which’ {s seen an ‘immense Ta eee pny deem fGtchen, and furnaces charged with buge caul- mverror wile the: nistare oF oi dons, Lolding a hossuead of steaming food, | SWength—an error witeh the history @f the Ug on rails, ‘This grating Is plored | Past shows that of all other coun ne Mfttle trap-doors; at the first ‘is sold | MOSt apt to commit. Turning to the United 4™D aLL THE NEW SHAPES IN WHITE HATS FOR DRESS AND SHADE PURPOSES, NEW YORK MILLINERY STORE, ad 930 7th street northwest. he escape cun- | §. counties. In atta © al vinesnra 5 at andte States, we find that not less than eleven million rod silk, 4 short dolman-shaved wrap oF the | nor penetrate; they receue cuch othice wien iary | Nobo, Couties ening a yinerard | th Sn wt oe beer and cabbage, | head of excellent horses is contained at this Yelvet brocaded grenadine, and a short red and | state of insensibility; and soine of them, attired eating the vines down ™ th d i black parasol, the wuols coinpleting # rich and extremely becoming twilet. Iuprovep ENGLisH WALKING Hats have appeared once again, a little wider in the brim and with less roll at the sides than upon the old models. Many ladies pre‘er this style of hat to any shape ever praduced among the scores de- | sigued for general Wear. Velvet edes Ute beim | and a searf of elunine or figured suraa, caagit | here and there with fame? gold pins, are the | uly trluumiugs seen weon these new’ sliaper, | making them the tfavellay hats par excellence, | moment within the broad limits of the Union— Kk upow Lay es epes wie rn Cee iteces of the Dominion of Canada it get abort half pound for | ue war departiuent of this FERS LODE Grek | Soluaisy ave to draw largely in the event Nder for tio checks | Of & protrieet ar with such a power as that isis choice, and gets served | “ ey ee Ry Saal at the diferent trap-t a knife, spoon and fork out of a bask ; With his bread to, and Bave piayed such bavoe wiih | under his arm, hiss: da the tender Vineyards that tals year's crop is a pixie of ment in the other he goes and sits nul jon wherever be can fiad a place and eats in wifornia and Oregon freight train of | peuce. the and leutis; ut the fourth, dessert, ‘old wood, proceed | ved pitines, Jam, chéese and to the next,and soon. The orchards around | Ked Biuif are said to have been entirely devas: fed. Tae fruit trees and urapevines a Foleom are being stripped, and Iu is no © ailuu to say thatall the Lop 5 ern portion of te sts leit eutirely bare. ©. inwh tis kuown asa “female dress,” are sent head first down the netting of the escape, in Which uncomforguble manner tt appents la lies in peril are brduzht out of danger. The | coachime In No. 66 do not belong to the bri- | cada, im the seuse tiutt they have wothing to ds with extinguishing adres; ey have only to look after their horses, Which, at the pace they travel—a mile in’about jour m take them all their tune. They are pluced uuder the charge of the head couehman, whu, be.ore enguging, tries their capallities ‘in crow pares of the city aud makes ar No Bus No Bivsrma will ‘The Man With an Appetite. shington Spreia! in Cincinnati Com. Guzétte, There 1s aboutas much diplomacy in Hub- bard as there is ina ball bat. Heis made up ‘are come ‘onthe be port. | He is re | thity-tive cars got stalle! wiout a mile fe Here, indeed, you see all sorts principally of voice, neck and appetite. The ‘The man who geteup the circus bills gener. Gyesslicttiy,and wre devold or ths Wipgers and | SPoasvle Tor Uo horass, of whic there are 131 | Hasta ite a teetede mead tlle foam | | Here, inde inva, Washerwouncuy beggars, | litter is a howling terror, wide as tae universe, | gliyseaeneetgetee ne ines ee “fuss afd iathers” which uiways lduk out of | Sa norbuucat ee or Me sake Of economy, | grasshoppers {uae Lad collcered on the. truck | orgamagraidcrs clerks, Sool gle wr iew Meee | Latter Is a howl th, and Wherever its possessor | found im the dictionary: geta off some very place upon the head of a toutist. und not‘bou; was fund necessary to cul the train im two. | all dey Inisfyrtune, Many ine follows bot upon bis beels, Among EXPENSIVes Noveutiss in French gloves are medium ioug oues of the finest and most delicate kid, the backs of which are cov- ered with a narrow, dainty design, wrought in beads of silver, stewi, Jet, pearl, ete., to fateh | with the shade of the glove. TPuese yloves lok | Very dressy with a Suitable costume, aud the wohder ts that in tise days oi embroidery work, ladies donot atiemyt this easy decora tion.” Itis easy ve obtain a flue deticaie pattera on paper, and wot at all d.dicult to Tullow the dedga ta Uureaded on strong silk. The cost would be aDout half tht of gloves pur- chased already embroidered in the inanner de- serfueds Tue New York Post says that among the overjackets for summer wear ate those of Ne- apolitan red serge, braided with a deeper color and ina fine arabesque pattern. These ure de- signed for morning Wear in the mountains er at the seashore. For more dressy use are visites of ceru llama net over linings of lila blue surah With lace triminibgs to ¢: ilie, and then go outlandish and bewildering phrases and ties ey ‘are so Uni in every way to aniaze and mystify the reader, ‘The more exaggeration he can throw im the ‘quarter man be is supposed s ba, ack aiter | come in all alung the | on the ent Is are plau- | Ine my seniper to clear ‘of thei? atiucks oa not ondy eleared oF atau wad dug out toc twigs, but also dely 1 Jamping From an Express Train. Frona the Budde Tunes. “Practice makes perfect,” observed the train boy as he folded and smoothed the newspapers: he hud gathered from the seats, getting them P ready tobe weld again. “Practice makes per- | }ith frou t below U Wate up the 5 fect. If a railroad man jumps from a tain | pate siorea Cn eneeeaneae whea itis making 20 miles am hour he does ea, oe and ericketsare pretty well if he keeps his feet, but I used to anu eae Jump off the lmited express on the New York | orrivar or iwixeatoryy Deehe Cree oF a Central when It was making 50 miles an hour. | Siiicton‘a Lumice was so Overune atta eae Did this time ana in, and often with a basket | that the ney oy ue ap is Well, but uiso of peanuts in iy hand, never spiiling a pea- | forced their way into his wouse, witch, in de. hut.” “Go aud tell that to some greenhorn,” | Spllrand diecast, “ue was wnally obliged to remarked the brakcutan, as be sneaked an | S28 Up and lew orange Lato his overcuat pocket “don't tell me eee T know better,’ “But it's tae Vanderbilt's Mome Life. insisted the train boy, “and 1 r HOW THE RICHES? MAN IN AMERICA LOOKS tell you how I did it, Youare not too old to learn a thing or two, and wow Just keep your | mouth suut and your cars open. Thad a ran on jeclare that tneir ouly object dont of the country’ was to save the part of the State where he resides from frequeat famines and the hunger and distress caused by the fell destruction of all edi les by Hubbard. ey Sweats that for breakfast every morning Hubbard eats four pounds of fresli beef, wo dozen of boiled eggs, two pounds calves’ livers, a peck of potatoes, ound ef butter ani drinks four gallons of This ts upon days When he is not fecling well, If I ain misia- formed, and Senator Maxey never suid this, the Senator can write x ca SL sored Anthori ronunciation. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean. I have had recently a long correspondence with military men as to the pronunciation of certain army words like aide-de-camp and re- veille, There is a great difference in the schools as to how these words should be pronounced, ig Up seri aie of Stew (apparently c al, potatees tnd oneluded (st it | my keuite Iroad taut the offic kind af ulouga or om lac ras Ino: od, near Gat t, Ui aves ANd xr h from the qeud gravy), 1 and afd down nf. Suddeniy an sbouider, aud a coven, e Thad d. No Alas for buyers of clothing. ‘This is thestyle of advertising which many clothlers ape. ‘Their “ads.” are circus bills on a reduced plane Gnd about equally as reliable. Impossible Promiscs are made, improbable statements ate Published, and to read sme clothing “ada” ope might Imagine @at certain dealers got ‘their goeds for nothing apd then pay people to come take tham away, Vous ne mau and aluiost bet: time to . my plate had d | body seemed to Uhiak the phenomenon stance, and afer further observation [notice that it was quite common, Pieces of bre half finished owis of soup, Immps of chees were being antly appropriated by thé huagry, so ‘that the dish-coliector found enly eiead platters and no leavings, ‘You will find Adler’s Ten Per Cent Clothing House doing no circus advertising. You will find no false assertions or improbable stories in our appeals te the public. All we promise is to sell you Ube Guest clothing ever sold in Wash- ington and give it w yeu at exactly ten per Grasshopper Tales. From the San Fruncise) Alta, Since the invasion of Northern Callfornia by 's, there has been a marked re- rature appertaining to this in- ATER HES DU From the New York Cook. WHAT HE EATS. ‘ent above oust. Ae giiea ay Woy , esting Insei Some of the purest insist that we should say id those of velvet-brucaded wspeclal Chicagoexpress. Beery Sat wf Since my boyhood,” said Mr. Wm. H. Van- Alea Saidekong" “revaya.” v1 3 bows of watered ribbon. Iu long pelisses ate novelties uve of creaui-colored canvas with gay colored satin stripes. These are lodse down, the fronts, and are ed with golden browa ‘woollen hice, 4 For Tue Moxsixo Dkesses of housewives, missesand young girls the housemaid skirt without drapery Is used with the plain belted tis not boasting to tell the truth, a4 when ‘we claim that our goodsare the finest and our prices the lowest we are giving you facts, which an inspection will prove to be trie. Allwe Promise is the most for your money aud the best possible make, 500 Genuine Seersucker Coats and Vesta at ived but the uxpre:s made no stop there.” So 1 ad to gv up ty Syracuwe and ther jucal traia badk. One day It oc that by a lithe “strategy I might yet off tie Lsnited at the staticn wad save all tat time. I noticed that just be.ore we got te tae station where my gift lived we always passed w local tain vutning In the same direction we were Sherman and Sheridan as to army wi these peints. They ail xgree that in this case wwe should say aide-de-camp and revalee. ‘They algo asree that in England as well as in France Apis usage to say aidecong. In the United States the army and West Point constitute the au- n pronunciation. peaking of authority,” said a theatrical Grain Exchange across the p Well car reading a newspape: dealy it grew quite dark, and T theaght sure a terrible Storm was on ‘as, 1 wasacloud of grasshoppers; so thick that when they settled ‘ou the ck they stopped the train, ‘There holesome living. To my style of living and bits I attribute my uniformly good health, Ihavemy ills and aches like otaer men, but 1 am tree from spells of sickness. I ha tried to think if there was one thing that suited my palate more than another, Ido uot believe thre ts, My appetite, as a rile, keeps so good erday, “I was, coming 1, sir, Iwas seated in a about noon, when sud- iuke the Wred to me 100 pieces 22 inch DRES® GOODS, tn plain colors and plald effects, previous prige 2c: selling ous Priee, L2%yc., at BAUN'S, 100 pieces Best makes BATISTES in new and hand some designs, previous price 18¢., selling out price 15c. per yard, a BUMS 100 pleces DRESS GINGHAMS, previous price 10a, end 12%y0., selling out price Tige. per yard. at BAUMS. 500 pleces DRESS GOODS. consisting of Cashmeres, ‘Nun's Vellings, Basket Suiting. @o. @c. af Pane Cosr, at BaUws. 4 full and complete amortment of TABLE LINENS, NAPKINS, DOY Los, and TOWELS, at AcToaR Cost, at BauM's REMEMBER! WE ane SELLING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF DRY GOODS 4T PRIME COST; 804 Vart YOURSELVES OF THE OFFOR- TUNITY TO OBTALY GREAT BABGaLNS, AND CaLL RABLY aT EAU RPS? 36) | 406 SEVENTH STREET NORTHWEST. a A BB bod got S Ie THE MILLINERY CAM, THE or RINGS % Ba GSS A A FER a a A COCO HAS DECLARED WAR. NO QUARTERS GIVEN OR TAKEN. THE COMMAND HAS GONE: FORTH TO MARCH ONWARD TOTHE SLAUGHTER om afm wim win “as Soue we 44.55 8500 ow MT Me Mag My HATS AND BONNETS For Ladies’, Misses’ and Children, of every descrig- Won, to be slaughtered. Flowers, Tips, Plumes, Velvets an@ Ribbons will share the mme tute, Laces, Gloves, Jerseys and Corsets, and Lace Cape and Parasols, are also lucluded. The King baa deuted® lou the next track i Usual thal tone th i t Meetaty Ee Re ae one “Matthew Arnold, when he was| 61.97. poem ene and on the next track tous. Usually our train | that I can eat one thing with yuite es miaea | pronthe ine) s to @ halt. We were | here, was asked one evening, ‘What ta ye o oo ox?o0 cxt™op Waist Just described. Four breadths of yard- | was going just a little faster than the . So | relish her. Iwas brought upona farm, | pissed for twentecod here, Was asked one evening, “What is your au- Ride ibusiin whl suilice thr tid sl@rt for wo- | Que Guy f| bee ee Lae | Souk uner nt Lee oer eer cee” for twentysour hours, until a snow | thority for pronunciation in Englands and he oe pote w ne mediain size. oe a , rs) ‘554 Pure Linen Vests, Hair Line Stripe, a fe front breeds | Que uay Loe plow was telegraphed tor, aud when iteut the 2c. re u Z ed, ‘London.’ ‘The questioner repeated ‘and kot dowm on the lower step, | for guod roast beer and rouct Mutton, Tdo net for ws, ivicita bank ‘of ‘hoppers on each | fete meart what digi sloped narrower at the top. and ig may be ne- | fuse ay'we cuught up with the rear end of tice | like elthier too well done or tes ran Meee ee ie ees Thathe nieamt what dictionary, what work on om ee cessary te slope siightiy the putts 0: the side pred crus wo the lower stop of the | believe. in citer state tues are iit igher than the smokestack of the locomo- | pronunciation was Bathority. To this Armolt ngee Coats, $5.50. breadths next the front; the fallness is massctl tast car of te othe: It was just as eu: 4 stepping from one freight cur Wo auother on the sume train, even if we were inaking 80 mites an hour, Th tive minut I want them brown, rich aud juicy, and with them I like to have ser andfloury. Above all Id answered, ‘What is ‘your authorit, then, on pronunciation? the questioner pe id Arnold; and he then-ex- behind, and tke irdht’ ts leit alinost entirely plain. ‘Ifthe material is a lfght print or an int expensive ginghatn, the skirtis duidied with “That was pretty bad,” sald another broker, “but L have scea worse.” We were camped ong sumiher ja Kansas, iastking a survey for a new 2,000 Office Coats, Neat Stripes, at 250. To bescld on Tuesday and Thursday nights d potatoes, white my food pri nite ee 5 CACHE a x in } ¢ aed that tle best usage in England was | only, from 7 until o'clock at hem four to six Inelies deep, but teks ate added iSwoppedlat the scaties, and tacts Lies | Pebavored coulanats are notsaked ome, | fi the nonners struck us at wigutvand 44 | Lie and that Londou mafe the hee ne wa eral for nice lawns and iuslins Munk about thate minute or tworyes, thier | aud Lao wot belleve they are Gouna ee had‘cuue, “they were plied air, twenty vers | Huselation of all words, because it was the lit. ADLER'’S Coronep Lixixes of poppy red, pale Iilac | beaded stove stoker, aud don't be’ so dresh 1a clea PE aus own thy this respect and L | decp over our encampment, and we were nine | Sitys th, Political and’ the Business center of x Pink, cict blue, and primrose underdresses of felling your betters that they lie. ‘Ten cents for ee See ees toe noe An ie aveustom: | Lowrs tunnelling out of them. If we did not = ————er—_____ TEN PER CENT grenadine, lace, net, and otWfer transparent fab | Must Orange, please.” | mthier tings, that, taste Horeibhe ar qazes nd | happen to have ® few glant powder cartri Who Deeeived the Poor Newsboy? 2 KS tha st 1 is siin- i a les Fies, are to be the height of fashion tae eouslog @ cultivation of a vitlated taste. w; blest otc alchoics weshould have Goen sus ©. P. Huntington's Butter. From the Financial Journai, Collis P. Huntington, the ratlway magnate, years ago kept # ycneral store in Sacramento, well witual, One day a trader came in from a mining camp $8 OF Livi x to buy stores, and among other things he wanted. adFppilt talked of kis mot butter. Huntington had severai tubs brought ae alee | from Orange county, the famous butter produc. | j{VCKs oF hillivad. It is true ts ort | Fall u , ing region of New York. ‘The miners had all | calculates to retire at 10 oiock at night, and | evens, thousund yards of Senbeiwerseetee the good things that money would buy, and | be rarely miwes going to bed at that Hine, He | tet atm gute i> were, Hee Bee the storekeeper from the mining camp was | Hedllod at 7430 in the morning, and at 8:30 Is | we had a cunvad sack Made, ballocy woke Riuak che Betis ouana ane At breaktist with his Whole faititly. He usually | ouiy bigucr than auy ballood pou exes ee: bound to take se e could find. spends the sorning at home. Sometime. he | Well, siz, we filled {t chock full of hoppers—ilve “I waat some bang-up butter,” was the way | xocs out before lunch and sometimes not until hoppers—and hitched it on to the wagons, and he storekeeper from the camp signitied his de- | after lunch. When the wentuer will admit he | wien the swarms neactan te go our caged bop: "anid Huntin, ‘Way from York state, Thave 2 of clear comp¥exions and n persons zccustomed to lor aud clear eyes and. 23 who live plali sanimer, Beneath tie new wooleapr val la ‘hese linings are very eifective. Waiere: are again popular, and these may be cor bined with luce, either woolen or silk. Burexe too Is likewise festored to favor, and is often tianmed with Hama lace. Black bare: nd black French are combined for umurning folivts, aud French Roluualses of the frter material, over kiled skirts of the laiter, ave trimined straight down the frout wita’ haudyome jet pendants set one above the other, until the hem on cach side is reached. Presu Ilborrarions oP MILLINERY for the summer openings of bounets show many more models in pokes, gypsies and larger round hats thaa have bean shown as yet. Still the milft-| 1) pers say that the experience of a year ago is re— | «1 peated, ahd that the capote and the snug pas cesse Donuets and sinall fiat-wife poRes are by far preierred for dressy wear even for young From Tex:s Sifting Yesterday a newsboy passed down Houston street bawling out “Warin Europe!” A coun- tryfied-looking old gentleman gave a start, pur- chased a paper, adjusted a pair of specs, aud placing his ancient umbrella between his knees, assumed an ungraceful position, and proceeded to go through‘that paper then and there on the sidewalk. Aiter he hud turned the paper Inside out two or three times and read itall over sev- eral times, he put itup and wiped his specs. CLOTHING HOUSE, STRICTLY ONE PRICR 927 and 929 Seventh atrest northwest, Southeast corner Mamachusetts avenue Alwaya be sure that you are in the RIGHT PLACE, Seo “ADLER” ever the door, cated beiore the muss, “Didn't you hive any of em?” inquired a rarelouseinan who bud seen @ good deal of Western lite, What Go yon mean?” asked the broker, “Just Unis! Iwas caught in the same fix you haye told about, once in Kanaas. I was in chatze of a mule team, hauling supplies a railroad camp. Among other things we had re could hay ed the truck @ shovel Into ies 2 ant spirits le of life with uked Of m Be Rt ‘S27 Open evenings until 0; Saterdays anti 11, a xots out for @ drive in the aiterhoon, vas went wun non ion, “here issomeall the | drive may be through the Park: it may Ue to \ he Feal genuine Oringe | Nucomb’s Dam Bride, or It may extend to| «a ad,tovk olf Zour balloon 2 Tae Poors ik tey hauled our wagon for over county article.” Huntington ran the trier down ‘leet nd Park, When Mr. Vanderbilt retarns vi . te ema ne Manker varieties ure kept in reserve | to tive boltom of tae tb, and the storekeeper | from ithe lies down i Ws Ubrerp be eee Subaie ote ae ee coyesns - Wan? Low Fanome for summer oats, but War anemmercy | PAR Me nose along it when It was pulled out.” | which lusts unt the dinner hour ‘He ‘aries | NG UsoH, MEW IO, XE bent mule power: ail driven cio. “Tue most eltgaat Sf the poss | aaWbaYs the taxon that grease® headed. | reirethed and alts down to ule evening meat as | HpMON, <ften\le hes Geeurred to me ey WANT Low PRICES Sree ei dan amt elegant of the large | Thats thirty Ave cents a pound,” replied | laucn wo enjoy thecouversation win tisme eae rowing, of uppdee tees areal en tee alley or suraly aud: also’ o¢ Reve peed | Mantis t yon got something alectio betterr” | fae car tus vinuds Petoeg Nise AE Tego Ra | fon green,” wullled od to find'« more credulous Has Meop. Got Inve the Revise ae DESInOUS TO MECURE Tom a. WARE ‘y, , Py r" | tale of Viane et a . Va ‘f Be ie eeeas eee tye sak tn, eine anata in | HERS sce eet aca | hese, eer oe ont wor | Bese Soma a . x m He takes , and, the garuitures, roses and lace oF nd or butters He kuew the | Havel st ‘however, be Mumility. ‘Walter Learned in ‘The Century. ‘You say, when { kissed T must quite Have forgotten myselt. gp Tala. rou ake Tm x dear. INGRESSAE eee Expensive Florienitare. From the New York Town Topics. It is claimed that Mr. John Hoey sets out half tines after his dinner, Sometimes, however, he does not drink it at ali, Mr. Vunderbilt is an extremely abstemtous man in every way. He never uses liqdor in any form, If is in comy where he is compelled to take wine he wi imply raise i af in tne mols a place his no taste tor liquor, and In the second place physical composition will not admit of iudul- ce In gy Onaccount of: ‘same Starekeaeeeemend not de satisfied if he did not gecusion. “Here's some for fifty cents,” sald Hautugion, ashe drew the tet out and whe cireneceecy Duar followed it from one end to “Now, that's a little like it,” suid the store- addeti with a wink, “comé From he Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin. The crop destroyer is putting in his best re- ports, prophesying that » fallare all along the Une fs imminent, Like the in esas t Tile the ery, ‘oid pant, sateen, Chambery, batiste aud the saoet a but gathered i i i i i é H Hi iH fel } E i Sh 22-85 82 82 WORTH OF MILLINERY, All new, desirable ond stylish goods. Every dollar's worth has got to go. Call and oom ‘vince yourself of the inducements beld out, Now isyour chance. Dou't mia this oppor ‘anlty wo save your money. KING'S PALACR, my?) G14 SEVENTH GTREBT. Raovas To Reson ‘June 1 we will move to 941 Pennayivania ‘avenue to rebuild on our present locality, ‘and ubiil that time we will offer our stock of ‘Plawed Tea Sets, Soup Tureens, Berry Bowls, (Cake api Card Baskets, Vegetsbie, Baking and Butter Dishes, Candelabra, Casters, French Marble, Gilt and Bras Mantel 0, 0, a greatly reduced prises for canis RaReis 4 GHAFER,

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