Evening Star Newspaper, June 20, 1885, Page 3

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CITY AND DISTRICT. RELIGIOUS NOTES. i a ee "8 ger trp sega THE PINKNEY MONUMENT. CHURCHES ERE AND ELSEWHERE. FROM A FRENCH ORIGINAL At the Macy mansion the @inner hour is six SANA SOAS ONE, clock sharp.” Mr. Macy, who has been absent since morning, comes home seven minutes late, ‘Mrs. Macy (not giving him time to offer an excuse)—Well, when you rang I thought cer- tainly it was the doctor. ‘Mr, Macy (anxiously)—The doctor? Are you expecting him? What le the matter? es ‘She—I suppose it has never entered your m! that's woman, though blewed with a constitu- tion of Right suder fom having’ wer meals at all hours of the day and night. Neither would you call it sick, I suppose, for ber to sit and walt and worry, tormented by all jn res and fears, ex; moment to hear that her husband has been erusbed to death by acablecar,or met with | 1626. ‘some other frightful accident. Irs. ae — Rev. George R. Kramer, of Brooklyn, N.Y., A Memorial Erected by Mr. Coréoran | 4.5 of Chaplain Kramer, is visiting the laiter ver the Grave of His Friend—De- | at his residence, on C street southeast, and Will seripticn of the Statue That New | officiate at the Metropolitan M.E. church to- ‘Stands in Oak Hill Cemetery. morrow. —The Joint committees of the African M. E. Mr. W. W. Corcoran has Just given another | church —o A.M.E.Zion perros proof of his devotion to the best qualities ofman | the sul of ie un! ween these and the earnestness of his friendship by the | bodies, will meet in this clty on Wednesday, erection of a beautiful monument over the | gt Union Bethel church, M street, between 15th. grave of the Right Rev. Mr. Pinkney, late | and 16th, at 2 o'clock July 14th, bishop of the P. E. diocese of Marylaitd, at Oak | — About $100,000 have been raised for the Hilleemetery. The accompanying cut shows | new First Presbyterian church of Buffalo, the monuments {t appears under the huge | N. Y. oaks that shade the cemetery. It is not farfrom | — The Presbyterian board of church erection that erected in honor of the poet, John | received from all sources the past year Howard Payne, whose remains were brought | $120,696. from Tunis by Mr. Coreorar. The design 1s by |. —Rev. Dr.John Hall,ofthe Fifth Avenue Pres- : eee ne en Soming, wisely to pos Sema Alex. Doyle, sculptor. It consists of a portrait | byterian church, has been elected ehancellor of Es ‘She—Will you at leasg. condescend to answer 3 i- Statue of heroic alze, carved im white marble, | the university of the elty of New York. 8s the only question t shall ask gout Fe ae standing on a pedestal of the same material, | —Rev. A. S. Flock, late pastor at Baptist Ho—-Anlurediy, miy dear. APPROXIMATION the whole standing ona base of granite. The | church at Woodbury. ‘Md., has entered upon She—Will you be good enough to inform me 100 numbers from 51038 to $1156 inclusive, being Pedestal, contrary to most monuments of this | the pastorate of the chureh at Columbus, N.J- 4f you Intend to come home at this late hour eharacter | low one, bringing the base of the side of the number drawing the — Frank Parker, son of Bishop Linus Parker, $200. every night? * rs » 86404 Inclusive. being Stutue but little above the level of the eye. It He (deprecatingly)—Surely, my dear, you are : Z f * : sing. oc of the M. E. church sonth, has been licensed to ey) carey . z the number drawing the aacteerene, On oeseees ike ‘pedestal | preach, as also Gerald Parker, another son of not guing to scold because I am seven ‘minutes | 3490- it late this once. I was detained by business; but do not ask what it was, for 1 promised not to She-I have no doubt that you will be a whole week late one of these days, and will end, perhaps, by being away from your family for Years. He—Pshaw, my dear!” How absurd! jous ciablem of cross en | te bishop. circled by a crown: on the otlersidethe jeweled | —The Roanoke Presbyterian chureh in Char- mitre and crozier—symbols of the Episcopal | lotte county, Va., has extended a unanimous rank In the statue Bishop Pinkney is repre- | call to Rev. Baxter D. D. Greer, of South Ala- —- in his —_ Bina sop with the | bama presbytery. Tight arm on a carved pedest: % * —Rev. 8. H. Thompson, formerly pastor of tal gentitre: ‘Vive rant hat a advaneed aad the | Govane (Presbyterian) chapel, at Govanstown, fsearved the rei om 4076 (0.4776 Inclusive, being 50 | numbers on each site wing the Cap 383 | matic sta: gig ee ewe xn) numbers ending with 6, tet two | Reutes of "the Tumber drawing the Cepitel Prise of | $1D0,0N)—-B0. land the Single Nam Pi" Focistann thane Neoncery | The subscribers has ber "Drawing, Class hereby certify That d © are the numbers which She—Absurd, is it. Why, it was no later than were this day drawn from the 100000 placed inte : = * has been compelled to go to’ St. Paul, Minn: ‘ poy x FER os the pods i= thrown ou the Jet leg. | Om Punt or its health. last night that you were télling me about. that Wherl. with the pranes corresponding to them. —Acommittee has been appointed by the general assembly at Cincinnat!, looking to the celebration of the centenary In 1888 of the for- mation of the general assembly. —Mrs. Margaret 8. Foster, of Philadetphia, has given $8,000 for the erection of a cottage at the Baptis Orphanage, as a memorial to her husband, Mr. Thomas 8. Foster. fi —The sixth reunion of the United States sea captain—La Perouse, I believe his nate Wwas—who left home one day, promising to re- turn at the usual time, and has never been seen since by his unhappy family. He—But that happened nliety sear ago. She—So much the worse. He—Besides, don't you remember that I told you he was shipwrecked, She—Oh, yes; it is easy enough to say that man was lost at sea, especially when he is not Wittens cur lands at New Urleans, Tos | day, June ein, Iss sang 4. 'T. BEAUREGARD, 3. Al EARLY ‘ommissioners, Prizes cashed tn full without deduction. No. 51.108 draws Qupltal Prive $150,000, Francisco, Cal: Nashville, Tenn... end Sa m. | se NhhthEe naws second Capital Prize $50,000,9018 0 ork, oe CHESAPEAKE here to contradict you. But you think, when 726 draws third Capital "Prize br tn a eee fe ae Oe one che make oP | ety ve socio nog teppei 3 Detroit, Mich; Mound City, Til,’ Gran army chaplains, ete., Ww! held in at you Will be able to deceive me by some ex. chard. Me., from Jue 26th to South. fooltah, story printed tm the papers. declaring, isnoweivitle, ser Mock ese ame Tee? —The Madison-avenue Congregational church for instance, that you have gone up In a balloon zl 2 Jn New York has at last, without a dissenting which bas never come down again; oh, no, I No. 52°085 draws $10,000, sold tm Boston; Galvew voice, resolved to invite "Rev, William F. Price, shall not beYeve that story any more than the tou, Tex and Cala angaa, Pa. of Lynn, Mass., to become their setiled pastor. one you tell to eg tone He-1am sure T'do not know to what story you refer, my dear. She—Oh, indeed?’ A man comes home b rim- fal of mystery, and when his wife questions —The Rev. D. L, Rathbun, who was recently elected to the principalship of the academy at Darnestown, Md., has been called to the Pres- byterlen chureh at that place also. v ERRACES. | (sometimes so ancient and profoundly eroded as | the Potomac nor any other considerable stream | him, when she’ ventures to ask him a question, —Kev. Wiliam Lewis, of Lagrange, I, but | TESTIMONY OF THE oes barely ernie) bo a Renee varvioe (cle Gare sete ie ee ie eee Ho Fésponds guardedly that it is a secivt, Oh, a native of Baltimore, bas been selected rector | Hew the Potomac Walley has been | from just above high tide at the river mouth to | modifie: am notat allcurious. [have not the slight- » nswcola, Fla: Puirmount, Ind.: | Texas Neptune, Tean, and Saguaw City, Mich. a@ CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000.68 Tickets only $5. Shares in on in topographie configuration than " Sree aS of St. Stephen's P.E. chureh, Baltimore, and rea more than 300 feet at Washington, car be postulated, “and since, too, no_ such | est desire to know your secrets. Far be eS ete Eee, will enter upon his duties on’ the first Sunday VE ee ee ‘THE TERRANES OF THE POTOMAC VALLEY. stream could have fashioned the Plain {without | 16 trom me £0 By, fo fing Tian Gees, fo hereby cortiny tha we moe the arrange 5 E g caving a re ‘ 5 ds for all the Monthy nat Smet toe in July. EVIDENCES THAT THE SEA ROLLED UPON THE| The rock masses traversed by the valley of Hens ing acorn ie vance P so aleyaae, token. nts Yor ait the Monthiy and. Annual Drawings ® — It is said that the new board of directors of | 11s ABOUT WASHINGTON IN RECENT GEO- ; ana State Lotiery Cmmpany. and in prem the Potémac are shown in their natural order | altitude of this terrace wor aanl comtrok the Drawings themsctoes, and Doak ‘About 250 feet above | _ He—Now, are you going to imagine all sorts of the Academy of Music in Philadelphia havere- es ZOLOGY . foolish thin; happen to tell you that | the same sire conducted with honesty, faurmes gna tn penn disseminate inddeiise N° WO Proposes | ois THROUGH WHICH If MEANDERS : Maryland.” | Higher terraces occur on both side of the Po- | PEM 0-day? et ae hata mam “HU | teaches un ts adver tiementa — Alter acouncil called to consider the case,| SYNOPSIS OF AN INTERESTING PAPER BY un, | Cenozole, Neozen aS tomae. Some of these terraces are represented | dare not tell bis wife. You are the greatest the Willis Street Baptist church, of Paterson,| W- J. GEE, areas OH ARS by the plain between Georgetown and Tenally- | talker inthe universe away from home, but it N. J., hus excluded from membership and de town; the plain upon which Woodley road 1s lo- | 1s siuply impossible to get a word out of you Cretaceous. (?) .Potomac, [an Hae c he ministry their late pastor,! Atthe last meeting of the Philosophical So-| Mesozole, { Triassic. @) ee ee = Sie ciety Mr. W. J. MeGee, of the geological survey, Carboniferous, sane Methodist churches of Chicago received | wing has explored the whole extent of the Pots, Paleozole. { Devonian, by the long spur southwestward from | WheD you are alone with your wife. Tenallytown: by ‘he 1 hest portion of the Sol- ae spe! pet yonae ts'not my seoret, diers’ Home grounds; by the insulated knob at he—I suppose ry se cuse, the Reform school; ‘by the plain south of the that. nearly one thousand new members within the ; re Siluri i eoyeothie He (Irritated)—Good heavens! ‘How exasper- Past Uiree. months, and. the additions to. the | M#e Valley, read a paper on “The Terraces of Cambria, qhatn bridge; by the spurs encroaching Open | ating a womau can be. “= churches of other denominations in that city | the Potomac Valley,” which excited much in- Azic (2) Archaen (2) Cts; "but they are so widely seattored, aud ag | She—A man never 1s—of course not. have also been very large. terest. He illustrated the subject: matter with te Ereatly: Taodle bested tl 3 — Well, for the sake of peace and quietness Si The Columbian gravels and brick clay forma- | xteatly modified by erosion, that without ac- | eV. ‘bol 7 Fete D. A. Straker, of Allen untveraity, re- | a large chart of the Potomac valley, of which | yon sho: nocnal “piven ot ate ete | cueate nape they Ceanee be mus ere ee Regd areaieetrer pee nae geived the honorary degree of LL. D., at the | the map accompanying this article is a reduced | hiblied in the great: boundary sewer, near the | lated. agnelueGuaiee ey hands of the Selina (Ala.) university recently. | fue simile. deafand dumb asylum, in the grading of the | _The eastern shore of the Potomac and_ the | 4¢ not care to heat it it, are you not willing to Prof straker is prominent among those likely | “y ice other rivers, Mr. McGee said, the Poto- | lot bounded by New York avenue, M street, | Eastern Branch. are as consplcuousiy. terraced ap entins 4 ba to succeed Dr. Waters as president of Allen. haw made ite own beds but the Dress we | North Capitol street and 1st street’ and exea: | as the western, ‘The National Asylum for the “Shor Whatis the use? You would only Invent —The Young Men’s Christian association of | M#e has made its own bed; but the process has | cavations on Virginiaavente, near the Observa. | Insane’ stands upon the tnurgio-af a. terrace something. You are very good at that sort of Richmond, Va., are making a vigorous effort | Bt progressed uniformly, and its irregalarities | tory, is described by Mr. Me senually | plain, so broad and so nearly horizontal that e- to seeure w building in which to prosecute their | have recorded themselves in the terraces which | & tiilpartite deposit, generally made up of a) Its interior is imperfectly dratned. pest octane Die will you alley toe So ppeake _—_ Commiasioners, 1 tel in 1864 for twenty—five Sativa tescel arratcasiens Coornee epee | fund of ow 850,000 has since been added. | aut over simi populag vote te fee wag Timg diss a te ws ins moet ge rork. ce 9,000, | Skirt the valley from orizin to embouehure. | mixture of clay, fine sand and boulders; more | in part by tue old national race course “an i 5 peuple of any Sater = bie A the building find | These terraces tell of varintionsin reintieetenci | oF less distinetiy: strate lly it may | tournament grounds. ‘This terrace is 160 feat | ,, Ses caunot prevent it, can 1? You need not ts Grand Singic Number Drsetes take place amounting to $11,000. Ofland and sea, and with thelr corrclative de- | be either & hom 4 8 mass Of ee nd Seton inate mney soutaward, | Sty (about to confese)—I-—, mon not ndica iv ‘somewhat spas- | gravel and boulde: SO ng the promontory. betw y eggs SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TOW: : BE | icine cnet, sions OF the: new chiapel of the | Peo ie aia austen lal Cle vesiORe ae ae ne | Oe eae anaHTLS, OC | Uae pop, prommoniaey, Lecwoen Oxee San snte; But warn you shall not believe one SEVENTH GRAND DICAWING LABS tk [. — iid | Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal | commencing in the later Mesozoic, progressing | clay superiorly, straciiied Sanit medialis, aude | trom the north wom. the scarcely less, definite | Ee Tore you ey. well rematn silent, 1 F MUSIC SEW Ole ‘ing inscription appears on the east | church, at 50th street and Darby road, Phila- | slowly, with frequent and long pauses, throught Ider bed basally, ‘The bricic Phase is | 24d horizontal pidin traversed Nine, Hamil | she ariumpbuntly) There what dil I tell s JULY 24. 1685, face of the pedestal delphi laid last week by Bishop Stevens, | out the Tertiary, and culminating in Quaten- | exemplified at the brick yards between the | ton road, and occupied by the village of Good you? I iknew very well thatyou wouldn't have CAPITAL PHAZE, Bon ob. ‘The chapel is being erected by Miss Catharine | ary and recent time. arsenal and navy yard In the southeastern | Hope. i extends several miles further north: | Yous, {knew very well that you wouldn't have 100,000 Tickets nt Pits Detlore Rack, Be taken Bae, # mentorial of the late | To render the testimony of the terraces tn-| part of the city, and at the brick yardson the | ward, and in that direction 4s deeply incised | Anything to s z Fractions, tn. Pitt Bishop Alonzo Potter. teiligible, Mr. McGee gave an analysts of ter- | South side of the Potomac near the end of the | and destroyed by rovion, It also appears to Gi cer ath eee a $89 AT Hey, | Long bridge. The gravelly phase is well the eastward beyond “Oxen Ttun, and — A Congregational meeting was held re- | Faces applicable to those of the Potomac i She—Oh, certainly—swear; that’s just like 4 4 and a deseription of the geography and geology | Niblied in the street, cellar and other exeava-| forms the summit of the long’ ridge | | St . d seonte Van ae ence church, im Rock- | Orthat valley. He separates the terres or the | tions in the ‘northwestern. part of the elis-ono: | between “this stream aud ‘Henson's cret, | Mab. It wilt give you more time to invent a List oF LCAPITAL PRIZE... i 'do ‘do. bridge county, Va. at which 9 resolution was | Potomac, as well as those of other similarly sit- | tably In the cellar of the unfinished casino {It 1s about 200. feet ta altitude.” So far | Dlausible story, too. 2 PRIZES OF gonoo. in friendsbip, be se do. : | Adopted inviting the synod of Virginia to hold id rivers 0 ka slope, into - | building on Connecticut it has been found impossible to correlate this | _ He (in a rage)—Do you intend to let me get a ‘2000. ich he was both the | *Y20U beld tts first meeting at New Providence | Viz: (1,) Terraces, of ce tion and (2) ter | phase was well displayed in the excavations th those on the west, the probable error | ,, She Oh, go on, go on—your humble servan| we Akane i on bere were but seven ministers is races of destruction. Terraces of truction | for the Moses bullatn ence or and 1ith | h feces on altitudes being ot greater ‘He Well, then, a friend p= ims tt P oe @ time of the organization. It| are formed of alluvt 0 by stre Streets, in the few brickyards In which the cut- | value than vertical dist parating een, boo has upwards of two hundred now. Saal sutineete Wark toe fos dace or | tae elisa Or te Ueno Uae cc | enn ee the Verge of bankruptey came to me this morn- 23 a tieinory ot Saiy | Nev. W. 8. Kelsey, of Geneva, N.¥., a re-| waver aud currents of oienns, streamng and | €'f, cuting,eastof the Navy Vatd tunnel, s0| rausacks OF THE Tues, wocwrasy orvic| gd bonged ime Cove him some siti nkney, wile of the Hight Reverend | cent graduate of Amherst college and Hartford | Fiver. Terraces of destruction are carved out | far as Known, the. depont fe ‘uniomiliterias Perk ani bere bce Tanuing stout all day trying Finkpey, who icll asleep April 20th, | Theological seminary, was installed pastor of | 0f.4 hreexisting terrane by wandering streams | T lie formation is contine 4° altitudes not cx) Ascending the Potomac the first terrace plain | as his security. Secs eee Ee ae seeing | tbe Elst Congrecational ehureh, of Windham, | Sng. ya.be grees, and currents of oceans and | eedibg about one hundred fect, It prevails | o¢ conciderablo area is found on the south side ghe—is that allt re “» anes 1D» bul ¥ chu separated Into two classes, defined by specitic | north by Boundary street and over the broad | of the river between Leesburg and White's Siveeitas te rom. the tranguit depths of | Srerhite sae age Meet arek eee, peeMhed | mode of operntion of the ageneieshy weick ches | low plains souln of tho Potomac ia’ atecariiniy| Ferry, ‘tte alvitede tetera ee es aid tne bales yeatsrday: ee shail east nae a fife.” “Ou the | {n'1700, and hast had an ‘eventiul carer, tne | Were fashioned —(1) beach terraces aud. 2) ter | county, Va, ILalso oecury on the east sd? Of | the river Ie hes slight, declivity in the direc- ao do, , Were seen in her dignified | Conn., on the 27th ult. — This ‘is. the chureti | €stuaries, The same terraces may be a Prizes, amOUNtINE L0.-eeremneenne | 265,500 | | Application for rates to clubs should be made only to the office of the Company In New Orleans. auty of her & holy al . a read one more month—and I shall begin this For further information write clearly, giving fall face ix the cross and crown, and on the | eluding in its membership many names promi | T8ces of planation, terraces are fash Turan Gh SAG OL ee ein ver iP tion of the drainage, and while the sub-terrace | very night to let the children go barefvot, for Shes, AORTAL NOTES Expres Money Orders, gems the cette in eruce salus.” | nent in the early bisiory pf Comneatnna. foned by oc ne, and lucustral wave: iiry.though with some doubLby reason | ted sandstone, and schists of the Triassic | that is what the future has in store for the poor Sew York Exchange in ordinary Jetter. Cur- een Mar 6 eitthcetint Ky shin and current her constructive Jjthough with some doubt.by reason | and Azoic groups, it bears upon {ts surface & things, with thelr father squandering his for- ney bs Express (all suns of $ and Upwards mt our Cofnro Druthers, | She Dropped Mer Mamdkerehter, | pructive, aud are preeminently charw the brick cays ‘and gravel of mths Sele | late matic of pulverized loata, evidently ale | tunc'upom every seallawag he mects expense) ‘<a: ealeeene te wo) re erraces: in jo lays gravels of northe ela- | vial in ori le jus It ay ars @ terrace 'obeall yy Ne ? es a scholar, besides | THE ENDING OF A RowsNCE THAT BEGAN ox | from thelatcral Corrosionol wandenne Pacraebleh arg tu, tara correiatable with tue | of planation, Less eonsplouons terraces occur | wit yea call ease ait sow en eS See Make P. ©. Money Onters payshie and noisy fatmple pure Curistian, aude fase pro THE LONG BRANCH BEACH. which elther from the proximity of Philadelphia Brick Clay ‘and ited Gravel of | at ‘altitudes up to about 200 feet above the | “ens (scornfuily)—Oh! I’ean guess fast enough; istered Letters to verbial fur his charity. He loved the becutr | From the New York San, 19th. OF the presence, of burrlers are ‘incompetent to | Lewis, which are known t represent the later] river in aidferent terraces of the plain section of | It shes eee Fee f NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, Py FON ot Pogtical ideas, which, he ex-| Ida V. Cooper, who was married to George | corrode vertically. | They may beseparated into | stages ofthe quatenary. The neovene forma-| the Piedmont division, but. they are in general : He—In the first place, madame, Farnsworth “ vi facil ‘ * a two sub-classes—base level terraces and barrier | tions are confived to the extreme distal portion | fndefiaite r * ‘man: Haid woe hr ner sa equaled ange gate | pe Gps ot ne 22 of Augut 2665, ued hm | raat ie evel at hare ences | ef hori yond Cee Matias plat abe | Hult nd capnce be coed eter | nat fon bur Ut itchigant ear gd fa foe dag ena and everything he had to | 2 the supreme court for a limited divorce, | are characterized by a gentie inclination, sist oun of little ‘consolidated. clavs and | more accurate maps of the region than are DOW She (angrily}—And for such a miserable crea- the poor. Two sui en must be friends; their | ®8serting that he had treated her cruelly. -Mr. | responding to the declivity of the strean sands dipping slight! Et New Orleans, La Sr | Smver, Suver, Surver ne to, (he eastward: the | iuesistence. Most of them appear to be ter- | ture as Farnsworth: do T seem self and chil- thoughts and sete sympathies chimed barmo- | Cooper denied these charges, and asked that vai ee were pone hes poe wep a arene SOC OR: soa Ge poe OF pads Faces of planation; Home Of el by sed soe! dren reduced to ry? if ow cers 3 ey met tl y ye ago mn fe Inclina 1 ce roost . reg J are up of Coar: jeall Before’ the cne became bishop of the other so | #Ue Marriage be annulled upon the ground that | 1s inuteutiee of differential cevation. “Absolute | eiaracter/stically developed upon tue Paturent, | Are, made UP of Gonrso detritus, the Polomae | nar Bares yon ee L eeah that it was ¢ known as a philanthropist, and their | 8© had been induced to enter it by deception | jevel (particularly in the cas 1 base level ter- | on the Piscataway, in the summits of the bluffs | formation. ie hak Ae a SWELTERING, SWELTERING WEATHER, Attachment wasclose from the first to the last, | $4 fraudulent representations on the Part of | races) 1s ludicated by the elevation of the ter- overlooking the Potomac riven et: Port) Wash.| oie! conspleuous plains of the Trans.montane age fellow, whose name you dare not tell. op | Not from malarial causes,but by exercise of the powers They spent much time Ineaeh other's company | nize each yesterday Sirs, Cooter allen ag | race above the stream, ington, apd in the river bluffs east of the | division of the Potomac valley are those of | Sie Be oe en pentane pty tos | crate wangeaaiten: Rauseares peenee Gon ee oF and took delight in discuss! ‘sul : “ mouth of the Aequia creek. easauta - Fi appear. | Mr. Cooper testified that in July, 1883, BEUGEAE AS OF TEE LCTOMAS YAUDEY- ‘The Potomac formation, exemplified in the | fore deserted Ta eo oan “bam be re- oT ut Geet w = . a ‘ibed. In so tr as they can She—{t must have been sharper or a a sted both. * he ‘was standing on the beach at’ Long | Regarding the longest affluent as the river | pints, bounding the basin in whieh Washing: | © jaeraces thee e races Seon thie Tehed lor hitn {nr the house’ atjeinine ot, Cour | Branch, the plainti went tripping by him for | proper, the: Potomac and its valley are natu- | ton is situated, and along both shores of the | Stided. as terraces they Cnet nee Sete heted orp eee aren ogee grag fesidence, watch he occupied wien in | fer hanakereiier wuich ne Heke ee et eke | AY separated into four divisions, which, Mr. | Potomac as fr sautn as the mouth of Acquta | fuiuigech osama he eT eee | «He (out fo it, kuow Yhat It is your brother Be ee SAE ee ME COCOTAM | Mmnilinaly received Tt. Soomaiter Uney waked | MeGee stated, may be denominaced respec: | FeCK, # made up of Writhont ‘continuous | iM addition to the old base level plas ofthe | Whom vou aré abusing, and. that he has been Tucuatly Seate” aaae Whee 1attteP,g ME; | together to the hotelwhere he was Introduced | Helv; 1, the synmontane division, extending | yAniously combined; is, without, {UP BoAtane region, there are two basins nota- | speculating too deeply dal is neavily involv 100 | feet tis y that the ‘be in con- Whigh most interested both. Bishop Pink seoeRsary surroundings sonance with the idea, | _ When the thermometer is way up tn the nineties the 4) | sixht of anicicie, even though It bean imitation, baw | a tendency to reduce temperature several degrees im imagination. ‘Therefore, if one would “Keep Kool" ‘hen “Old Sot” ts pouring down his wrath he must | have constantly before the mind's eye that which sage | eats Arctic deus, ‘The idea materializes in garments composed of FROSTY FIBRES, | thousands of Coats and Vests of which are on exhibit tion and sale at ie" wno would coine ‘to. him in distress, | 124,¥oman whom the plalntiif sald was hee | Houmas woures of the slver to the ednfiuence at | A consideraite partion of the plat section of | US terraced ad a third trom. which, pies gee eT Naples and when others would call for charity atter all mnother. ‘The mother sald the plaintlif was a sion, extendin: from the confluence ‘to the | the Pladinont division of the Potomac valley ts bash re iy absolutely no terracing, in the eo ohey fall ti ito, +h other's his story was zone he would all upon Mr. Cor. | widOw ating an annuity by herlate iuaband's | Sasternmoat range of the Riue idessystenr® | Hoare hy sandstones and slates aud congiom: | Uiyit, Luere ls absolutely, no, terracing in the | © ey Misty cay lore, vale eens coran. ‘The death of Bishop Pinkney was the | Will, which she would bave to sacrifice it sbe the Catoctin range; 3, the Piedme mt divi Grate wach bavegener ed ie ussn aces waluuee Mee Jowe fo Mr. Corcoran of his dearest friend, and | Mairled again. Qn the night before thelr mar- fe Catoctin to the fi de Hy been felerred to | lation of aliuvial or other superficial detritus, | stored, letus todl’ the Triassic. ‘The puleozole ‘rocks, of which the ao = ist us sit down to dl nner. fage th a : extending from the Catoctin to the head of ude i . and the river dows throughout Ina channel 1e—-Not quite he bi wn his devotion by contributions of mies Beg meee % herself, saying she 4 Ee es ending e Appalachian system is composed, consist ofa | 224. t 3 ;, | Water at Georgetown; 4, the tide-water division, Ate st “ es excavated in the rock. In mney basin ter Be—And why not? Tota Bienes mamandred thousand doles | Rhe produced. a dressing gown, and slippers | COMDZTHnS the estnarine portion’ of the river, Succession of sandstones, Iimestoues and shales | Faces occur at various altitudes op S00 kent | BEADS NES BOs sont the cook away this Sets Rimes memorial char the Church | hich she sald belonged fo her late husargd” | exeHomns -from Georgetown to Chesapeake | Sera! thousand feet in thickness. The azole | ore, pe riyer, | Phelr escarpments, expose | morning she was saucy, and T have of the jon, corner of Massachusetts av = ss a ‘& niniea’ erst a ue atified sands and clays, with occasional in- ity ail day, try! “ict, and by the erection ofthis | Charles Blandy; late assistant corporation ‘Throughout the synmontane division the river | Felated crystallines found in the plateau sec- Peat y eraceivewronnd the city aii day, srying i Spa : S alated beds of gravel and scattered boulders | to tind anothere-going from pill ADLER'S me Bt ls his piemory. |The peculiar vetx | the trial of & sult: by Sire Cooer meatal tie | Eeneraily occuples valleys separating. the par | We of the Piedmont division ofthe valley. | ofigealtaud waiiceal see hee ee ee one employinent®olige to another—and f only ; Sration tn rpich the memory of Bisiop Fink | City. in whieh she. clattned. $50,000 demmages t Hliel, Abpuluchian ranges, but It occasionally | TERRACES OF Tift TIDE WATER DIVISION. _ | festly tentaeen of Comet iea, Goa ey | one emNplON ID getting one alittle while ago, #0 TEN PER CENT CLOTHING HOUSE, ney fa held bere renders. the frection of his | tor Raving been thrown trom her carriage on | bfeaks through one or more of the ranges. | Mr. MeGee deseribed a few typical ter of xccumalated material is such as to Indicate Monument a particularly grateful dec at $1.97; °rComtand Ves. ‘The principle of Protection, as advocated and prac ticed by us is no mere bagatelle, neither is it a pre | tense, bata stern and sterling fact, which hus been so | clearly demonstrated and fully established that the that— : : Thus the immediate river valley ts a succession | eaeh of the divisions of the Parnes cy tie entire basin Was at one time Billed with | ““He—So that, I suppose, 1 get no dinner at ‘A SKETCH OF DISHOP PINKNEY. © | Sorted fo IBGE the Le ea eee OC | of contracted gorges und clongaiod wastes, ge ee ar ans of the Pacomae wall alluviai or possibly lacustral deposits up to the | all? = s ; ime ait epost a . : Gee Three of these’ basins Moorfield: basin, Rom- | Stning with the terraces of the tidewater divi-| ove] of the lighest. terrace. ‘The terraces of | Shey t dinne: y at 7.— POSTE. Hie eo coer tad a ee Las | Ce ra aC rnmuam, and th2a. ON | oy basin aad. Groce Gprine easier ace ae | mon. “Gansploubus among the terraces tring. | Med ean eae ae character and gene- | May 4. Malsey te the tenons Tenay at 7. ben esas Raped cle cenrmnseet Nahas tute] Can Dae sponding bat ear em never been | S¢fibed in detail. Astriking feature of the ing the Potomac in the vicinity of Washing. | SIs, though the materials of which they are most distinguished families in Maryland, his | married before she married Cooper’ bat had | (division is the existence of « double reifef—a | ton,” he said, “is that upon which the Capitol | COmpose Dnely lamigated clays, with in- y the youngest brother of the re- | been the mistress of Chapmane oP? al Fs of cross-laminated sands, the high relief expressed by the mountain ranges Across the Crimson Clover Seas. : - oeuetlt is lovated. It is represented on the north | Wray! 4 ‘Clinton Scollard in the Boston Transcript. People have rushed to oursupport with such wnanim nowned tm Pinkney, one of the leadii i : and the main river Valleys,and a low refer W8% ole darkly stained by carbonaceous matter. | ny: owned fad in’ his tiiue, and bis mother | qevendane seagitng te caadn VOR Of the | Cx prensed” by the foot bile forming the imines side of the river not only by Capitol Hith but | Pies eoe te eevee, by carbons stich as tosug-| Across the crimson clover seas rdongacnal derailer unas regagen grurnbyad were being « sister of Governor Grayson. When diate river Uluils and, the ravines of the see alyo by the plateau upon which the northwest | g°-ta Incusiral ‘origin, ‘though It ts perhaps ‘That rifled wt the Hen pestorse We have overteaped every burr-er. brushed lad of sev urs he entered old St. John’s aha awiee Sane sae ondary and tertlary tributaries. ‘The crests of portion of the city is built. On the sunth side | cyually probable that they were laid down ina. From Jasmine and magnolia bloom, Lodoynsartatuig fai ine —. college, at An: His first intention after How Men Dress Now. the ranges are tolerably sharp, and the slopes of the Potomac it is represented by the shelf | broad, wandering river of little declivity. When with hrs paild,iey bands, every obsiacle andare now fully prepared to mous le: 2 a cay GREG Ang bar, OL while | The cutaway coat ts longer than tt was last | have, the moderate declivity Gliaracteristic of skirling the Wlulfs upon wiilel ts located the TIE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE TERRACES, Zul Winter bound oar horthern lands, —e engaged in his legal studies bis attention tumes a old mounta: gions.” The slope from Uulted States cemetery “at Arlington, at 5 is R spicy, paim-gmbowered isles ME! to the ministrys and he Ghaily determined. to | S480, aad its edges are Anished with narrow | the crastar the Tange. to the principal water-, étreteliing thence southcastiard. loFour-siiia | The obvibus gevesls of the Washington brick Woeeheven ‘N's, YOUTHS’, ROYS' and CHILDREN'S aban CLOTHING | of every concetvable shade, grade and style, at prices ing Summer smiles, n the law and become a Ininister. He | braid, The vest isof the same material or of ay Is u complex curve, first steep, then of less Run. ‘The old plain of which itis the remnant | “lays and gravels indicates that at » period ‘My spirit orifty upon the breeze d Princeton col: time, and | fancy eassimere or of linen duck. The trousers | and progressively dihinishing lope to the bus been largely removed by the Potomac river | probably as recent as the late quaternary the ee over sons, Sherwards c ew York | areof dark striped cloth or of plaids In lighter | W2ter-way, and again so steep as to form some- end its tributaries: and the origin luated irom the 3 I regularity | seaoceupied the broad basin in which Wash- And where the Gulf Stream softly laves ne ay cueg by omen es | colors Nantea Uy itoriver, "Auitier woublo Range oglu My Gelutiahtsteey mtseeet EI Ae | ogton located: theunguestongbly basadevel | Poni tape re ty wan ‘lor thom cureter advantages we toe pou tore Episcopal chureh by . ed by ver. Anotier notable featu: ‘eyed by artificial excavatior aces | tobiey okies ‘ ‘see the _ shaniky aterwarde: Men's sults for business and office wear are | of the division is the rocky churacter of the are botable, y are terraces of | from Geometetan to cireat alle Dee Like bo member Uhat we muke no bad debis, because we sell he priesthood and given the rector- | made of plain cassimeres, checked Angola | tiver bed. Fully. uine-tenths of the construc: er preserved the plain 13 | G period whuse remoteness in meseed ee Alon to | for Cash only. thereby avoiding all’ unpleasant com- Bese MTS Aa Ae Spimerset coun | sultings, homespuns and fine. mixtures. ‘The | CoWrse ofthe siraim is ‘upon andistarbed forined of tho loys, sans and gravelsorths | period Mbose remoteness is measured only Uy | Asay plications, the most outrageous of which ts requiring $5, a_ In 1538 he was elected rector of St.| three pieces of these sulle should te alien Teel apd nearly allot the remaining portion of Coluinbia rorumation, While nowLere extends | fails, the tide rose 160 fect abyve its present Seam uttering: ‘the good customers to pay for the bad. eG county. | thy of thes | the bed is made up of great boulders and angu- much above its level. The materials of this | fe! eat ter narvied Mise. Elizabeth | though occasionally the trousersare of different | lar blacks. inanifeetiy fittie rerseed Ree ete OAC veo eed, ApS materials Origin, | Gxtending: frown Fore Meanie Rae Ge ‘eroas the crimson Selling goods,as we do, at exactly Ten Per Cent 1 Benjamin 0. Lowndes, | goods. parent ledges, which churn the river into a and thelr coarseness and heterugenclty j ‘ould | Gemonstrates that at a period so recent that Above the Actual Cost of Manufacture it does not re eg. Near the time of | , The fashion of wearing wider trousers has raging torrent. Mr. McGee infers from the fact Indicate that the; * sub jueous se fF ‘The vision fades. Ab! weil it g | quire an; ‘meatal strain to comprehend the Sope grray with the parrrow-pointed shoes that | that the river valley, thought generally foe portion of the delta of tike Potomae when the | SUOSd sauLiFS plain: the oochate Renee aan ced Gne who makes more Bright te day Denigel Ught trousers brought into vogue. Buttoned | lows, sometimes deserts the depressed corruga- Sea rose 80 to 100 feet ibove its present level, ‘a shores feek hteber than that or one Pown greening disles of tall grass tips, ~ ADLER ON THE BRAIN, calfskin gaiters for the street have medium | tions or orographic valleys, that the riverls The altitude of the terraces is about 80 feet, but | the higher, terraces at Penle ay bia eg 4 song upon ter Jovel Ups z 7 2 Tea chee Ta, peels and less heavy soles | about of equal age with the inountains among since the Washingion deposit extends a little | te, Ul ‘Suggest that beach action took pisces Out-triillog t of love But in order that you may take im the situation tn its those of last year. Which Itmeanders, as repeated observations in higher It Is probable that the old estuary was | Sort, taeeah fiat beach aetlon took: place ‘nd ail mg pulses owltver mane? entirety call at being his Saad rolled bene: rill eeahale the nigh | tegions of uctive mountain-making haveshown never completely iiiled with sediments, and | Mere than 400 feet above Its present fretted eg ‘ada 1uy heart gogs out to her, sslstant | crown aud rolled bri. will remain the sum-| that rivers maintain thelr courses despite, Unt the terrace Was ashioned in part during «| (Se thoephemoral tllia, la like mentor ine fie while snare grecefa Sane ADLER’s rytand, and upon | mer dress hat, notwithstanding the rumor that | the orogenic movemeits. { temporary hult in the recession of the sea, Oli baseictel plains inthe cet teens Acroas the crimsou clover seas. But euars, In Octoher, | they were to, be abandoned. Regt eds THE TRANSMONTANE DIVISION, ‘THE CONDUIT TERRACE, of the valley are indicative of terrestrial eleva- TEN PER CEN? uillce of bishup was marked with | bah they have been in previous suiamers In the transmontane division of its valley the | The next notable terrace is tho rock shelf | tion at an epoch so neur the geologic. toda ‘The Plague Revived. Duriog bis sdininistration over | Lighter searfs are worn as th weather grows | Potomac battles with the Appalachians, and | ekirting the north shore of the Potomac from | ‘hat the stream is yet struggling to adjust iteeif | prymourn’s PEST SPREADING IN SUGAR NOTCH, to the new relation between land and sea, ‘The . Hee ee een eae ee eee ae apes we made very small and either | though compelied to meander deviously to , Gergetown to Great Falls, and occupied by the | x ‘coual 7 WARRIOR RUN AND WILKESBARRE, STRICTLY ONE PRICE, Bathe a tacese.. fe never | ad iow Chih isan ae Toe ep ccs tee enorteen right and left by successive ridges of obdurate | conduit through which the city water supply walleye satlogiesliy recrn tine ak eee A special dispatch to the Philadelphia Press (927 and 929 Seventh street northwesk, AS Sen terete rene een ae India silks in the cream, white, and navyeblue | Fock, itgenerally cuts directly through the giant | is conveyed. Itis formed of rock, thinly cov. | lure be Teyarded as established. from ‘Wilkesbarre, June 18th, says: “There Women on the Street Cars, gruunds, so popular for ladies’ dresses. corrugations constituting the Appalachian | ered witha mantle of debris in part derived b Fhe ae iey ot eee een. is also recorded | are now fourteen persons sick of fever at Sugar ‘Southeast corner Massachusetts avenue From: the Colu EOF tea an eed Eid gloves are worn by | mountain system, breaking through the succes | from the secular disintegration of the terrane, | PY,h@ terraces. ‘Thus far Violnity of Was, | NOB. At Warner Bun, a little town near Su- Jou |, Always besure that youpre in the Right Placa, See them come, ate pte o let a eae quality sive Fidsee in 9 3 Phere Pi eae rates, anal | and in part formed of the detritus washed river- | fagton has not been detected; but the fact that, ores 200 | “ADLER” over the door. ian paitons, aud have three ide rowa.ot atitiing | the Susquehanna, and k ligewumer et aie | Neeaeet ss gate hil Tt is @ terrace uf the Potonnae has hngyed Its wou shore ins cee eee) een ae OR, destruction, and since there are no barriers to| the corrasion of the gorge below Great Falls was fal meats. F 4n selfcolored silk on the back. Pearl-colored | verse troughs, sometimes ex, the seaward competent to arrest the course of | initiated suggests that there is relatively greater uded into con- co gloves are cecasionally seen with’ day dress | siderable plains. Loudon, Pieasant and Shen- the Potom: it wbviously esents an old | clevati met ne fd pisos tne tontfomartableuteron We eka hus ol a fet eat | Tate? a ane amma and, sean eas ace breasted frock cout aoe mae aana the double- | tane pluins of the trunsinontane division— | this terrace forms purt, appears ‘wo "be Lmnper, | Lie meoLthe land to the south Tiver of the old gut have sat. cin frock Son dng bled considered equally | together with the less conspicuous: plains to the | fectly represented by the Thderinite Temnuuts | base-levei plains of the montane divisions to On any cerenionious oscar ee ees wore | Westward are unmistakable expressions of the | jn aid orth of Le Drolt park-and by a uastow.| thewenteree ae ee eastward, indicates tee the aged man, whitetaired aud benty oe ken Gus occaslonthat takes place in | double relief loss strikingly manifested in the | shelf skirting the bls cast aud: hosth of Fort | greater relative elevation there by an amount shrougt tasetor aug girl. ree eneak ene, Such as breakfast parties, | synmontane division. ‘The transmontane river : Myer, Measured by this ditference in altitude plus the | came sick and returned to hishome in Sugar chs tardy intent, luncheons, uouw of afternoon Weddings, day re- | bed is as notably rocky as is that of the proxi | ‘The next Important terrace {s that forming | still greater amount required to reduce the | Notch April 14th. The excreta were thrown ¥ . foo day Bakes, paige also sultable for church, | mal division, the river flowing for fully four- | the highlands in the north of the city. ‘The | present streams to base level—for the old rivers | Without disinfection into a vault directly in 4 ge avec tuna eae The popatar’ cone wwhecity and for driving. | nfths of its lcngth upon undisturbed ledges of | traveler upon Columbia road, Teen secet Howed at base level, while the new streams Now | Fear of the House. In ‘the early part or May Window talk fashion to frlende, he ular coat for ev Say uit ts @ | the palacozole terranes, and for the remalning | 14th strect road, und. 7th street rond cannot | far i her than their baye level. But the differ | heavy set in, the vault overflowed and Aud Workusen, too tired to Walk ou the street, singe rested suck, semi-fiting, and slightly | fifth upon shifting beds ‘of boulders and coarse | fail to observe that all of these roads occupy a | ential elevation eust and west is not confined to | the fever breedi alfait on tive trum caressa, warmer than those oi tase sumer; it isalso eut | gravel and sharp sand. Thus the entire chan-| plain of uniform altitude, though tt Is deeply | simple tilting, The difference in altitude of neigh- che groan John Tent = woe fous beetle: eee Deck, and Its fastened by | nel is manifestly undergoing degradation. corraded and lobed marginally by ravines, and | boriug intersuontane plains in the Apj “9 double dwellings. In the cellars of: aur Taties ndricks Stagger | four buttons the vest hus usinall reverse collat, ‘THE PIEDMONT DIvision bruptly cut off on the south by the depression | tore gasganns that contiguous orographic blocks | these houses were wells of Zou os0be 7 Spy eouen: 00 | Ladies’ Hand-tore, $6.50, . = | OF may be oy have: been for seven eee | of the Potomac valley comprises a gently undu- | UPON Which the greater part of the elty. is 10: have moved independently since the buse-level | excellent water. Such wells e3 10057) D0 S65." "100 | Ladies’ Kid Poxed Button, Hand-sewed, 93.50. From the Harrisburg Patrol larger than they have been {Or several seasons; | © ending from | cad. ‘The same old plain ts represetted on | plains wore tashigned. gris is well exemonter | houses Of tbe ‘abxt Diock "totes Darke Ghote | Aveo dow Seto tie) San ur, Hendricks; being taformed of the cham- | #24 thls Is true of all other trousers as well. eae eee rene a eke ees extending from | the opposite sid® of the river by the lovel. truct | At the Blue Ridge wisi the heen See ese | ee Gabligae ‘one of these and a widow | 25103.” i900} te mon” Pantha mun ang a ee the Catoctin range, at the Polnt of Rocks, to the | upon witich Fort Myer and Arlington, ¢tand. | plain. la appatoatiy Gilded westward and ity | lady uaitiod. Me Davie tive other tas seat | Soo Eine ecsemeste Me tas expeonet d deste A School Girl Elopes. first gneissie range of the Washington belt at | The same terrace extends southward to near | Sastern mati iited chore ae Jovel of the | gan and two of her vers are down with | 25471 Freee * the Satna” wile crowing the Allegheutes | «2 %psationalelopement gvarred at Atheng, | Seneei corresponding in s gunoral way with | Jezanars, thenaucosiasrs uae dus | halacene Baty of Pensast vay. i i i | fe fover, sad Bre, Dati on i aise nek ee and the two were presented to each other. | Ga, Wednesday. Among the young ladies in | the triasale terrane, and a low, ill-defined pla-| curtiugs on 10tstrect and 44th street, snd division, in whieh the basin drained eastward ‘alittle lower down, and his son Sop etier-- poulseeet 200 | , Our famous, Dest, stylish and Gurable $3.80 shows + introductions around elgars were pro- | @ttendance at the Lucy Cobb institute during | teau to the eastward, extending from Seneca to prticularly in the projected strecia intémscet| throughs remudued free from. is ‘other cases occurred in the Sean 1 aa ‘ut woked tod ciated: "ns SS | Wgbah, a mcmber aeons shes | Maly owe seen a the Waahipgtoa ang | EC hs 'ssmoaiaal unitate cctat te | mie we tana ained npg torgueh fb | gun's cll nod riauing'rom | 0504 108 Seal} wat smoked and chatied. ap vYannab, # member of the Junior class, She was | 27 The occupied by the Potomad nue formation are ‘form sur- | drained throug! Deen | 28517 ——-—" 2009807 they aay pod rea Lard hitters Wel | arelative of Mr. Tim Barnard, who imarried a | waverses the plateau, tie comnth e face. ‘Tue terraces of this level are abeus 200 the wedtments uagoss a¥és, when’ E bik ane ty to bit him | Geushter of Professor Woodfin. of the univer- | defined lateraly, but save where modified by | feet in altitude. excavation of the ee sity. She frequently visited Professor Wood- | recent erosion, remarkably uniform in the con-| ‘The next iinportant terrace ts imy rfeetly | mountatn “io you everhit anybody as hard ax you | BS Bouse, #8 8, guest of his danghter and guration of its bottom and tn decuvity. {he | represented on the north ide of the river, bub sno contised Yo. one” ss she ‘met George Woodiin, a son ot Professor | which it has simost entirely denuded of debris, | sagtonene is aban ee ont | tide level alten = $00 Sad lea en n't aight 1 try tody my man as soos asf | Woodiia, and acase of love ot frst signt was | to Great Fuils, where it enters the memee ard | Cfompmens, about a quart datwardiy | division or tietbstintes i Zan | Ssht 1 try todo my man a6 soon as I ihe result. Young Mr. Woodin ls graduate of | narrsoer Gorge Walch fer bes. een er one | Of Fost, Myer ‘where it just east of | land 8 not uo a 3 g0 ‘aria, passes J ‘not cll, dosn't it hurt to be hit in the acer” | The Class of 82, aud now occuplos « rexponsible | itselfin the south side of the old, leaving ait | Fairiax seminary.” Westward this terrace ex | tbaresehee of Jes: it hurts, but 1 don't tet them hit me | Place, with thé Northeastern, railroad. After | of the old valley-bottom as a coutinuous shelf | eudis 1 within about emliens Feits © vil- | emplified in “And mad! must get used to the hurt | te,Gutistinad vacation Mss Rowland revarmed Spear rom rong foaanetaa Mag lagowore tts bound in by Irregular spurs and | tlon tn the — . lege ises closed yester- | measur feet oul gneiss, often yy gruvels and jurat road . ,and among the bappy young ladiés who | the falls fo one hundred and firty feet at the | oy ot aasatted ‘this | and the abser soos turded their tices homeward was Miss Row. | distributing reservoir hear Gecmetagn. Bees ares itis diversiied by wr waterways, but | tus prostoltos slugs A Ten Yorty-Five Drank. land. | She was accompanied from the institute | where It 1s by artificial structures, the is unmistakable. Its area cannot | elsewhere, From the Boston Gazette. by Miss Woodfin, whom her mother had given | whole of this portion of the Potomac flows pos | te lee than twesty sitane coit eroaching’ One night iast week a man who was wander the Parad stati visit. Instead of galing to fndistarved rook, sud ts manllestly undergo the {grrace consists of the sane and valley; while the 100 90278 ing along Tremont street, in the close neighbor. railroad station were ng ‘acth Hon, particy ‘Bt the locus tommac formation, an residua montane divisions 108 90333 Lox a wegen meee Woodi and Mt. Basli obo, and the fous | ofgreat ucclviiy at Gras Fails o¢| Hved trom thelr dosompieition; and, went ae 100 buses ioe man, who asked him where he had his liquor, whereupon be replied: 0 {eh firty-ve drank” All iguircests ot or haw | received by Poateoe Wedae eer ara | in. progress, It is flanked on both aides firey cave dram er ‘are ve boon complied with” ing the congratulations of freinds in the ity." | terraced ‘shores rising in “succoeantte sees 100 #107 ie fat ue - Faeae : id a

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