Evening Star Newspaper, November 10, 1888, Page 6

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Pe Sk ie oi, ea si a te SEI ah yr 3 ip Fi 6 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1888, JAPANESE CURIOS. In what respects did the Satsuma faience of | Weitten for Tux Evawzre Sean ile to the mission at Washington A NEW YORKER’S NOTES. HARRISON’S MUSEUM. HOUSEFURNISHINGS, ic Makers, Their Buyers and Their | Te boty oe ae ay?” sieitics teers? Iubject "bas boon tothe atiention | The to its Normal State | An Interesting Collection of Gifts of ‘The - ty of pi i isitely mellow, Cc Br Gas ee eho as cae har ~ a ——— ee et Weitere ee es me ghey eA alder spy sree ay iy rey x — Ay INTERVIEW WITH THE FIRST LiviNG AUTHORITY | ich yet suffici ‘dy subdued to suggest « rect. imaten con Social Canter. is parpowe fo lsve Washington af the cries SOME FCST- ELECTION REFLECTIONS — QUEER | VALUABLE AND CURIOUS PRESENTS THAT HAVE 5 uae UPON JAPANESE AND CHIN@SE PORCELAIN—NATIVE ae ton ty, offered an inns ground Bee MER-INTENTIONS DURING THE COMING SEASON— bay oy to k the THINGS IN BETS ON THE BESULT—vEREST-| ARRIVED AT HIS HOME FROM ALL OVER THE Aur AxD YUREION TASTE—MASTENS I MANUFAC- | Preen, and. blue so clevegly ley ee ane Bak, | MISG ENDIOOTT'S MARRIAGE—THR OROOM, HID epi Teltotee iotiling of the nefetaans | cules ‘nxkiemmom or Parrripe crane | cluwrET_astnie ov sum caueanen ov 2000 GAS COOKING STOVES ‘TURING ANTIQUITIES, suma potter. It is not impossible now tore-] CAREER AND HIS HOME—LORD SACKVILLE's eg nd It was Ge ‘TO-DAY—A MARVELOUS COLLECTION OF CUBIOS. | "100 CABINS, ETC, On hand and for sale. —— roduce the same delicacy, wealth, and chaste-| DEPARTURE—HOW HE WROTE THE LETTER, y at Beverly Farms. Without was Se =paares , From Tue Stan's Traveling Commissioner. Bees of decoration, but the incomparable ite cheerless | and —— ial Within it | Correspondence of Tux Evaxmne Stan. PsNcsaheoeaiade of geo aan ae Rare, = - ‘ Toxyo, August 28. | is seen no more. It is probably unde by] ‘The latest turn in the wheel of fortune hav- | ¥®* venti lonely. = beau! — New Yorx, Nov. 9. ; nials of good a admi raya mb31 |ASHINGTON GASLIGRT COMPANY. It fs ensy enough to write of the curio shops | very few Western collectors.” ing made the republican party the possessors ale enor es Whiteeyig | ‘Thank fortune, the ebullient enthusiasm of | sent to Gen. Harrison from all parts o ince of Japan and of the odd manners and custome | _ “Yet ‘old Satsuma’ has always been a sort of | Ct Aone Soe Prise, the oiled vadboent ine the Berkshire Hills. “In shere desperation ct | Political campaigning is over. One can now | country bave multiplied into a ae Caner: Cawers:: Cawers:1t tT aiid taldaae ot “Strangely enough, it has, Tsay ‘strangely,’ | of the capital will in a fewbrief monthe witness | eclation and ennui Lord ‘Seckiie ‘toroc, | sleep nights without waking every twenty min. | large that it has been determined to give i because the great siatuatve of one of the best rooms Weare daily receiving our Pall supply of BIGELOW, “ ajority of its devotees can- | another shifting of scenes and the appearance | himself to disposing mass of utes to hear a thick but powerful yell under his | exclusive occupancy < A w Pal eupply of Bi th of a correspond- e _ & BARTPORD WILTON CARPETS, BODY e elves. This is a subject upon | not have any practical acquaintance with the ence which had accumulated on his hands. | window concerning some leader alleged to be | in the Harrison home. So writes an Indian- ¢ BRUSSELS, MOQUETS, VELVETS, TAPESTRIES, which only an expert who has found wisdom | ware. They must have simply followed the | Of new characters to, PIRY their parts in the | Among the letters was the epistolary bomb | In’ concomene potage printaniére or other | apolis correspondent, Everything that has wipe TURERPLIG, Inouaiwn oa tuk saoeaEe, by years of experience and the wasting of a | fshfon. Genuine examples of, old, Hatsune | = of next quadre: sceacoarolic bong ly) force —— soup. It is a matter for thankfulness, too, that | been received, the commonest and least valu- E; —— Me SORTAINS, and DRAYING sara aol " have alws bee are as choice monda, seve \tercourse twee! . rartet; tmapect or stock ts solicited. os a Se lensing Sat te mabe sale: are eas pest ts yes he oreome meaner | | The Insden/taj hal gereleien Go yeesens | So rest setlons, Dut to attract the attention | the termination, of the strugyie has deter-|eble relia or tcinket x wall ss = oe Ee oie senate diel noe takes has the Fight to an opinion. Now, Capt. | of pieces coming into the market has not ex-| Administration has been Plone Pa e Whitney, | of the diplomatic centers and circles of | mined the oft-shouted question “Who's all | laboriously wrought work of art, m a Rm ee # 00.1 irinkley, B. A., the edita a ve. Thousands, however, spe p|the civilized world. The letter was a| right?” There is now an end to the wearisome | carefully saved, and at present many of them Fos A 2B ST Class nearine erov B or of the Japan Mail, | ceeded ten or twelve. Thou: + | She has filled the sphere of social leaderahi i we ‘or Latrube, at low pret of whom I Written in my letter on Japan- | have been sent to Europe. Stained with chem- =a Ramee “ P| plain and | spparently straightforward | raggle-daszle of wobbling torches, the equezoot | are displayed in the hall, the parlors and the WARTRELE, 825 71m wt, pa peo! als und otherwise dishgured to simulate age, | of the Administration as did the stately Mrs. | Socument of inquiry and Pureuit of light, just | 6? rockets and the ° library as attractions of special interest to the —Jatrobes and Ranges Repaired Promptly. oi-dun ee crane ang an Seth Uirlany, antlanaihy | SES tome cdemiand = cy talon Mian at aes during the eight years of President | such as # person would feel like snawering rockets an sledge-hammer harrangues pirate} ihe dilty wis @ J.P ERRREEE «00. - dee ce nae of tee ttese Porcelain, and he | mayati among average connoissenrs. Inex-| Grant's term, and as did Mrs. Frelinghuysen | when shut up in a befogged, rain-epattered | of cart-tail orators, ‘The return of the Ameri- | great number of persons w ly visit the o Gormeriy wie} has been one of the closest students for many Fienced collectors would do well to remem- | during the fractional executive career of Peal country abode, Ane answer was penned and can citizen to post-election sanity is pleasant | house of the republican standard bearer, years of other branches of Japanese art, though | ber that there are no large, highly decorated of the last Administration were given in. the printwere heard from the Qotaat eestor S| and the trade papers this week unanimously | Ware case, of ample capacity, filled. with « cific. small iaiet prosperity in all directions,” | €reat_ variety of campaign relics and + twenty years he has collected here and in China, and armies of saints, peacocks and historical scenes, | same historic mansion which hes bog sho scsne of which, | are attractive ornaments in their way, but they H tort : emblems, in itself a museum of such attrac- Bejakley Collection,” was dispersed | have nothing in common with old Satsuma.” | Sienaery ot the Neer ity OF the wife of the | "Ty was observed by one capable of formin x tiveness as to afford the seeker of the odd and Absolutely Pure. rar rears 260, are famous among MANUFACTURING ANTIQUE. come of the election will not change the plans | 4 pecurate opinion that the letter would | ‘Thirty-two per cent. of the voting done in Interesting an bour or more of delight Gen tters from all parts of the civilized | “Then the art of manufacturing ancient | f Mrs. Whitney. It was her purpose to re- toria West been at Beverly Farm. In matters | this city last Tuesday was performed in barber- | ¢ral Harrison an anes teks at ad i i . sincere aj tion of these tokens of “kk , nilliousine are kone, of them. an | specimens is not unknown to the Japanese?” | Five made het home ao atime tor the oa | of informal correspondence Lord Sackville in | shops. Why these establishmenta should be | #n0ere, apprecintio spite ith which ——— Pr eee ee in, millionaire, was begging to buy a} They are masters of it. All the familiar | yave,™*4e her home so attractive for the past | Sr tatire relies upon his daughter, “In all the | favored at the expense of other shops I’cannot | shown to callers. Hew strangers are permiy-| tieosdtacy © seep cana in eompetition few of his pieces—“so that I can say I have + of burying in the ground, exposing on | idence in Washington and return to her. ele- | Ces of houschold affairs she has the directing | say, but the fact remains that out of 887 poll- | toa vo leave the house withont ae inniteene Phosphate pow cb oxy ix cane fowat Bax some bits from your collection. you know.” q he | voice. In social mattors she ishisguide. ‘They | ing’ pieces in the whole city 377 were barber-| look st “the general's presents,” as they are | ne Reswue Se ios Wan eee se and The work of his life, a “History of Chinese and were companions. There never was a father > he to 45, Alb Teaco Patuting and Tinting «specialty 3° LEPREUX & BRO, 508 7th st.nw, 7th street cars jae the doer. mo flow collections, ao on dent Arthur. It i i ing coinci pri . and profitable to everybody. Business is brisk | while removed from public view in a bed- heiscareful not toclaim expertahip in them. For | *Peeimens of genuine old Batwuma in existence. that the briliiaat entertainments 6 toe preter pee as And noghing more was thought of it) again, merchants aro hurried, stocks are lively | room on the second floor is an clegant silver- nd big vases, censers an ars, bedizened wit connoimeur de the roof, stec ig in tea or decoctions of yasha, | gant home in New York at the close of anes begriming with fumes of incense and so'forth, | present term of the President. Speakin i shops. The cigar stores came ina second, | called, but allare not and cannot be shown. goeet besutifal water et pcrntitude of the | gre now thrown into the shade by a Yokohama | ber experiences in Washinecer sooth ine fis, eS aIee ee ones oa cee | wa Giny rere Cunsem tne ten rpaline aime Ie was upon the special invitation of « mem- have ever seen. is nearly rocdy foc the oube | artist, and a great potter at that, who actually | Whitney said : a y Deb. Ree Next came the shoe stores with sixty-seven, bar of So uty es j Spent a — _ Lishers. He is a very buss tran bat I took the | Simulates marks of age in manufacturing a WASHINGTON SOCIETY. a i a sixty-one tailor shops received votes, so did ee evenings ago looking over the col- cceasion of being thrown with him for a few | Piece, and fixes them in the furnace. Such} “T had heard a great deal of the attractions of BOOKS OF THE WEEK. twenty-seven. plumber shops and twenty-seven | lection, ay days, to elicit from him in several interviews | j7ick® Will, flourish so Jong as the folly of col- | taghionable life in Washington before I came ae candy stores; Srrontyrone undertakers’ estab: | egerirorse saa we | lee duces the! i i ere are some really strange storii the following very interesting ‘true truths pec ag aggre gn derstand tho mous | hero, butmever hed an opportunity to judge | THE STORY OF MEDIEVAL FRANCE. From | lishments voters threaded their way in and ow e about Japanese curios, old and new—their - . ; the reign of Hugues Capet to, the beginning of | among coffins and caskets to vote; among other | connection -with Inck bringers. In the collec- saahe eon S daenee 4 their | Of such infatuation. Of course in the products | for myself. We determined when we came the Eighteenth Contry. |, By Gustave Mas. pation Places were fourteen harness shops, | tion ig a horseshoe no larger than a silver wow At ‘4 f0ek -" Nollect 1 do | Of very country there are specimens which, | here to do our share in public entertainments, £0 BA. [The Story of, the Nation's Series.) | twelve stables, four laundries, three oyster bea = to lay a rh ewes Collectors wil though not pleasing from either an artistic or a] Which contribute so much to the pleasures of New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Washington: 4 juarter, sent by a blacksmith at Martinsburg, Rey ant on Wo dag 0 wen seccinds Seal e vet saloons, three jewelry stores, three bakeries, ‘ eal si Miller & Herbert. “Do you believe,” Lasked him, to begin with, | 2°coT*tive point of view, possess interest as | any city during the season, and particularly to Pealine coi Soest say So two florists’, one bird fancier’s, one fishing 5 nl dl istorii i the enjoy it of the many persons who come | CHILDREN’S STORIES OF THE GREAT SCIEN- i » vi b min the hopeless decadence of Japanese ai pe yar question quite | {0 tis oapltal’ ast thet’ snes now. thes | Uae or Muxnierra Cuntstia® WhiGut, | an} one Greener er Oe Georats | the South Side Horseshoe Club of Indianapolis, uch talked of by connoisseurs in Europe i, | gutside the ordinary collector's domain, | Washington is tho social “as well as | Author of “Children’s Stories In Americal | Wore erected for the express D ‘of voting | #24 two well-worn horseshoes were found in . Bx eo ze. = chink, |The points of attraction for him are — Political center of ot nation. We ees emcee we: So | pistes aul Gisie wee ta So mea pple! fhe’ street aiectly, in seent ot 1 the Harrison -* need ; | practically limited to beauties’ of d| understand that. New York an i = ‘Son. —_ the swell residence distrret S 3 three y hep image pce rel Wechnique or artistic ‘conception, Ho ought, | delphin and the. other metropolitan ities | Ballantyne & a Se the collection, one of which came from a twelve- “ i ROMULUS AND REMUS. A Story. 5 living in Ohio, who, in - Of dealers, who seck to enhance the value of | therefore, to recognize that marks of age are | have their social pleasures, but taken at their | ROM ‘nor of “orel bowris® | ‘There are some curious things to be done | ¥ear-old fap ing in Ohio, who, in « letter ac. tically a blemisl ; best they do not afford the diversity and nov-} ¢ ‘compan; . gift, says that it hed lain in her Old pieces?” pe mene eager rey Feteiee, in tins | elt ex Weabingion mete. te ee York, for oe {lustrations by Frank | hereabouts by men who made unconventional | mamma's spool box for over twenty years, and “Bias there been no-deesdence, then?” ata, Racenin, Spettaen’’ daguatce vi taeel | welsace teaiteneons eagelen mere totes en, Bost Ne. estan ot ings, | 224 Fash bets on Cleveland. Numbers of | the little well-wisher adds: “Both of my grande 4 TEMPORARY LAPSE. have always understood this. They preserve | too much of a routine. One or two grand ote ei ues “of the Day, Ne, | democrats will shave off beards for various | fathers eae —— —. 4 = “By no means. Some lapse from the best | choice vases and censers wrapped in silk or | evening entertainments and the rest of the Ley New York: G. R Putnam’s Sons. Wash- | periods, and others will go unshorn and with | 89g = x = say woh pli tee pote . and standards was inevitable, but itis not such a| brocades and enclosed in nests of boxes, | time filled out with the opera, and the theater} }nz) NSM York: @. 0 Pa hair uncut and unkempt for a considerable | °° ™ you can, too. y bones,’ lapse as M. Louis Gonse would lead us to sup- | E¥ery scratch, every stain, they regard asa | makes up the sum of a New York season. ONWARD. A Scripture Text Book, with poetical | length of time. Col. Ochiltree’s bet compels | nck, TOM. White perch aie sees defect, and by periodical washings they kee “Now, what is it at Washington? Drawing = a oe i pen = ae. ated a ver, sent by a Hoosier republican, an their treammes pare and bright, As’s rule | rooms #0 enjoyable to hostess and quests for York: EP. Dutton Zo." Washingios: Wan, | Bim {0 shave the head barber of the Hoffman | pit's foot, “taken in the dark of the moon,” the there is a period of greatest excellence for each | their informality and genuine social feeling; Ballantyne & Son. House, in the latter's own professional chair | present of a physician, are among the gifts Pose when he speaks of ‘the wretched modern Products of Japanese art, so feeble in every way.’ With the fallof feudalism in 1868, Ja- ¢ ; . 5 a day for six weeks. A newspaper man | that were expected to be important campui; class of ware. Sometimes it isa remote period; | evening receptions where official and unofiici <0" re oy oo ‘ h spec paign 1-90, Panese art manufactures lost the most libe sometimes a more modern, ‘Thus, a ‘an | life is represented, A social gathering at Wash- | 4 ced ae ee - Ler ee om se — idee epee — = a aids, as well as protectors from harm. ‘i 4 Bit and eager pati developed by an example of ‘Famille Verte’ of the Kanghsi | ington is always a source of interest. It may E. P. Dutton & Co. Wi : Win. Balan | oy Pore has stipulated toe eek t pronenear ban THE COLLECTION OF CANES. < ; F ' cial cond: Each feudal (1661-1722) era is finer, in many respects, than | be said to be a reflex of the national tyne & Son. Ce ee he ‘Was a kimg who based the reputation of his on martial prowess up to the time of the Taiko, and on industrial superiori Specimens of the art pro fiefs used to be sent gun's court in ¥ Fial court in Ky themsel ve a “winter composition,” which contains the larg-| About the most interesting of the presents est proportion of molasses, and — — are the canes which are kept in the lib: ' ; 2 H tion of glue, Mr. Bernard Degenkolb, | where Gen. Harrison spends most of his time | monochromes; and while Owari blue-c1 ineludes the representatives of Washington: J.J. Decker. Lamon rah “ ' e spel white dating from the middle of this century | almost every nationality. on’ the globe. Te] gary nee By Epoan Asay Por. New York: | Of, 0, Columbia street, Brooklyn, will have to | while at home. ‘They are rare pieces of skill- far excels its predecessors of the same factory, | is representative of the Government through | "pp. Dutton & Co. Washingious Won Baling Dlack every Be Patrick's dey fer toe aint it | fal workmanship, but about the most wonder- one mnst go much the ofticials, and has also the additional inter-| tyne & Son. ovary Bt. Patrick's day for four years. | ful of this lot is one that was sent to the gen- amples of the same style in Imari porce- | est of the presence of officers of the Army and see SSE anon ek ethers ha A have beg nent. iu | eral within a couple of weeks after his nomina- | lain,” Apart from the place occupied by a par- | Navy and the prominent personages in the un- | FASHION FANCIES OF THE HOUR. etahe pele thors he pane warecy | tion, by Comrade Truesdale, of the Grand ® | ticular epoch in respect of artistic or technical | official social life at the capital. ‘The unoffi je gol aon cee oe re Tare. | Army Post at Sharon, Pa. It is made of | excellence, there is not the ema society within the past three or four years has | Seazrxo Wax has “gone out.” Fined en pp re pore Wp arte el Eh Pieces of wood of thirty-eight varieties, Keramie specimen, and if col- | grown almost into overshadowing importance. cal z losely worked together and 0 neatly tors would make up their minds to regard | it is now well established, and will from ney earns arene Phan: hes nko ioe has already begun to canvass sewing ma- polished that it ix only upon clove inspection antiquity as tokens to agvaken to year become more and more national in its | °@Ste- % es J : ate a ht t the wonderfully complex work of the her than’ to excite admiratio character. There was a time when fashionable | _ Fasutoy is particularly partial to that modest Varela costar Saker an Resale sa painstaking old veteran can be discerned, ie people went away from Washington to enjoy a | lower, the violet. morning next week at 10 o'clock, ond will wong | TBC, cane is not’ over an inch an MODERATE PRICES, @ similar piece of the Lungching or Wan-li | as it embrac THE OLD FOLKS AT HOME. Milustrated by G. time (1567-1620), the converse is true of yellow | the countr, i v. Brenneman. New York: White & Alien. nd to n the would al- easor i vety. Ni ion |" . m a half diameter im the thickest “There is one thing in Washington | f* both men and women, fifteen minutes. until 8 o'clock at night. | 10,060 pieces of wood in it are larger than an 615 AND 617 PENNSYLVANIA 4VE. | not found elsewhere, and that is the ever-| 18 Boas, now so fashionable, the longer they | clerk at democratic headquarters will parade | ordinary nail head. The various solors of the of high development. China, in her palmiest | changing figures in social life. While these | are the better, They should almost touch the ce Broadway to-morrow afternoon carrying | different varicties of wood give the stick a WASHINGTON, D. 0, days, never produced cloisouné enamels com- | changes are frequent there is just enough of | ground. Peryeesboge iy aaltag ang tariff creates | mottled appearance. In the top of the cane is | se19-wks,27t ALLBOAD. parable with those now made in Japan. No | permanency not to have all the changes come | Tue Passton in evening gowns among the fea retical DO dal aat k Geo ea Sun- | Worked the emblem of the Twenticth Army Sched Rov. ist. 1688. country, indeed, ever mannfactured anything | *toBce. At Washington people from all sec- | young debutantes of this season is to have a gross tions have an opportunity to meet each other thi ch perfectly. xterity: and. decorative ware | and get acquainted. This exerts very bened: | Cvet¥thing maxtch perfectly showing PI To apprecia only recall the attit ‘ a 5 Corps, to which Mr. Truesdale belonged. An- wwe Washington from station corner of New Jersey day, at the same time that his opponent dines | Stier cane of little leas wonderfal. Sorkmen: For apa*Northwent, verti ited ex P ‘aia at the same table on quail provided by M. Mon- | ship was carved out of hickory by an old soldier Unenecevesren Arrnacriom paces, SalyeT0 3 am SRY . this i tcaliy ‘de~ | ‘ial effect upon public sentiment and strength- | _T## Rict Broowe and cashmere designs | quin. A guest at the Astor House Trill answer | whose hands were disabled by service in the For Cinetatists “Mr Audsiey: in his stupendous way | ens the feeling of union and. national A | noted on rich summer foulards and Pompadour | calls trom the guests’ rooms as a bell boy all | war, and yet he has become #9 skillful in care- OVER A MILLION DISTRIBUTED, Denaicnial Arts of Japan,’ haw been | Sason.at Washington is really an education.” | silks seem likely to enter into a new lease of | day and all nig ¢ Tuosday next, Other bets I | ing that his work yields him a livelihood. ‘The raved into singular cone enw been |" Mre Whitney will be at home informally on | favor. have Meer? of Gomand the grinding of s hand, Moreov parture. tion that profusion ¢ _ 7 | handle of the cane is a well-near perfect repre- ee yada, mont, elaborad det i and decorati sk =% Wednesdays after December 1, and after the | As Street Dresses will no longer be loaded Gedaerrdeende ery = PP car ibiesrgaa aa sentation of « lad: a band Partly closed, below LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY. = ey were "st essentials of a sue o le oni caso ‘ i ; row, earse, * rang heh + . appeal to Western approval. Hence the pro- | Produc nese worke Peete cries of aad Sa a Dey Will | down with jet the average woman will be re- | ¢yyueclbarrow doings. pepe pci wemphen’ rpm envy Re Ste ont ming of ¢ “ } Bf could make them, out duction of a host of objects meretricious, | ¥eTe oe oan aeeerene, mill goueber cartes ancient one he ea ; tm ‘a.m. and 13:15 p.m. ‘and " yi " of a eer le . 7 : lieved of a considerable handicap. The aver-| ‘The largest amount of cash betting has been espe og ™ naerly intermediate points, {7.30 am, ar an Uyeer, representing uot Japnnons | had no ty cogmied stats and its ouicome was | Feeoed of the socal hfe of Weshisebor rll | age weight of w heavily Jetted drow is twent- | done'at te Hoffman Blouse’ "ior Was cpanel | meee tea nh and the White ‘Tarr, |eotnal and that puro, tod Ae. ent a but a eption of foreign | ¢ ae ted Bat ES Yours after | Ways Keep raps onsplouges Temenbtanee tee | 27° ieee 5 a oie the proprietor hes in bank bject to call from | son, nominated for President, Chicago Conven Puade s vart of the present State Constitution 72, | a5-tutuane et a, Trego lrwrsl, webwrns| | jor edingemer peg opp thine aren aie axiinors’s WETTIG. abroad, both in fine wools, rough-surface 0.00 A very long cane from maple, with the figure | 1 0a 3:30, = 7 Anni (June and », amd ite anons, and she now j#ftists to turn their attention in this] ‘The prospective marriage of Miss Endicott | °!t®s for yrdcd silk ‘matdrials for dinner and | Dr. Hammond, ex-urgeon-general of the | of 4amake about it, was sent by'an Ohio repub- | Easy MAGEE NOMBe DRAWINGS tke and in corded + lican, frank); that it ade fc cb of the other ten months 3 Manufactures objects worthy of comparison | direction. | They | were | encouraged by | to Mr. Chamberlain, was notan entire surprise, | visiting gowns. Army, and his young wife, to whom he was | Johu Shermen with the expectation that the ail Grawn in public af ‘he “Academy of” Male, Yuh the choicest masterpieces of former | foreign ie oes Quite a large | bt there wasno authoritative acknowledgment | For Heap Gansrrone in fall dress there aro | united about two years ago, have sent out their | Ohio statesman would be the republican nomi. er “Is that true of all branches of art?” number of imposing vases, plaques, censers, | Of the engagement or of the time of the pro- | visible indications of a return to narrow flower- | P. P. C. cards to their large list of friends in| nee. A very gold-headed cane is in- ities and so forth, found thei way to Europe. They | SPective event until the fateful day of the pres- were somber pieces, PICTORIAL ART. fective in color, but} emt Week when the people were exer- # ibed: “Ge njamin Harrison—From Treaths, sometimes two and three rows of fine | New York city and will at once remove to Wash- | the Irish Protectionsen et distin Wine Branch, 40, « ss 3 : : ~ : ~ | blossoms going round the head after the fashion | j, . which city the Doctor intends to “= — i! oe ou) ‘15 pam. for pri stations ‘0108 eee eects ties cfart manafuc-| showing elaborate workmanship, and ‘their | ising their cree opr eatite att | of the classic coif worn by the ancient Greeks, | tuSipm "nich city the Doctor intends to make rosewood cane with an ivory handle from s | ox.c7eck tmerd ot my 1435 i iesieatiaie, that Span pone jt ny manos | eee cae daar ween eT | Hts oe en broched to HEME | Mare Puerre Dascro.Tourra are in| Mayhomey. fur, He mc intro in| member of Gen Hanon aid opment now | Say Sa Sa Sea S Ea ere nme ‘Worthy to rank with the celebeiticeol past anae iearions dignity of a piece. ‘The sisteen- | dent and Mrs, Cleveland, and since that time | Princesse shape, demi-trained, and finished | his time to that object, Dr. Hamm ing some difficult. work, from an admirer at ngboRm. rm ee Bhe has no Seeshiu, no Motonobu, to peg alled chrysanthemum and the five-foil Paw- | Mrs. Endicott has made formal calls of an- | witha very full pleated rose-ruching at the | very popular in New York socieiy. Princeton, Ind.; fancy canes, in the top of Church trains leave Washington on Supday on he has, perhaps, a Hokusai, an [ownia Sgurea rofasely on vessels innocent of | ROwncement of the engagement upon the ladies | edge of the skirt, Above this is a Greek dray . which are concealed fans or flags, and_a ver; stopping stations on Metroi " tok i ee a e of the Cabinet. Miss Endicott hasalsosentnotes | ery of tulle or tinted silk net, made with « wide | Ihave been allowed & peep at the interior of | plain-looking stick cut out of, au 1940 Saget Frederick, 110:10 am, 13.00, 14:35, 15:30— ial dinentneee ky ene | winced ae Pacenine, cect to her most intimate friends, | hem, into which gold or silver threads are | the American art galleries, where Vasili Vereat- re amony phe ee een "yor Hngerntown. Fi roam. 2041520 0m. coon aeiad con ony Se _— he affair wil very quiet. No invitations | worked. , the fi i . tly of bo preci ‘arrive daily 7:20 aan and 5:1 Fence estate ed | acreage casera ete Ouse Dna oma we wma anes aan | Sek” ee senne SanaS oe ine ae is “ =th y do not reach |e enamels. Do you think that they have | side of the President and chief members of the i r oe % J < ° $ HS"iighet emincncen, “Uniotedy’ Kya | enced their aeme of development? fim renew rites sefcinon” | the gnire Bure, Th arnt re not rocked | tres ect age the Amerianartga-| able" of, sanding much hard ae. Wha 7m epee ; Shok 4 os Misoeiiena 4 is * mily fri ill witness t] . Mi 5 0 jeries alm eat e 3 mn. dls atm. Sopikea Baw, and cmne ef apn eee | gene eretiom, you. 3 te tuaposniblo, to| Hoary eae ee to Salem, but will retarn to | om the shoulders, but have ‘heavy plaite, ail d arranging the ac- | old regiment at Clayton a few days ago, he From a rtormaging inte nore of Sedpes decerre fo be nanos MAngTO's land-| conecive higher ‘efforts of technical skill | Wasisojems gone, to 88 turning forward from a center plait in’ the 4 ‘diftic ‘Beside | took with him a light, elastic stick with a silver =. aie ae Sees side wi Horate, aecnrscy than the enamels of ao ee: middle of the back. ‘The collar and both the H ise] bonis, ad a rea nem coeelibeh ie de 3 But in Té a new departure was “But might a collector safely assume thxt the Porcelains, lacquers, bronzes, and ivories, now Offered for sale in Japanese shops, are virtually | a fronts are edged with fur, inter's studio properties will be on exhibi-| gavel of the presiding officer, and gave his The distinguished groom has been twice | axoxo the new fall smuitings are a number of | lion, On the floor of tho main room ie what is | chair toa tired country woman who carried a widower. In 1861, at twenty-five years of age, | rough, shaggy tweeds, which are favored by alleged to be the, most magnificent rag in the | 2+pound babe in her arm "Miniature log raged when still with his father, whom he haa joined ; j world. It is certainly the gran jece of | cabins are conspicuous among the present ee ene weeks of peat ‘ in 1854, in the wood-screw castaniias Soak: | nee Gere caee iis ett eee Se TRO: | motacouvectngiilare ever max ae teenie [conten ce iuutumerable log cabin pictares “That assumption would be too large, Let | © relieved | by gradations of | ness at Birmingham, and. before he had | pont they are as twenty to one in this | M. Verestchagin had it made expressly for him | books and papers, relics of the campaign of Us examine the matter a little in detai’ In the pes. floral | achieved a name local celebrity, he —there are smoothly woven twills of | ring his travels in Persia, and he says that | Gen. Harrison's grandfather, all sent to the re- Keramic industry, for example : crupective anal shicrcontty fects | married Harriet Kenrick, a daughter of Archi-| exquisite softness, aud the neocth toned tie oe ae any Sesh Oa | Stee een ee ee ee at le: aes - and chiaroscuro being enrick, * ed in weavin; is over eet juare | al e yeags since }, treasure: m™m as Secon ang Tee ara eee loas skill. Whether the | pridhenrick, ¢ court, Edgbaston. | cloth, nd reguires ten or a dozen men to lift ic | mementoce of old whig day One of the [2% THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC, NEW ORLEANS, Spects; first, in the purity and fineness of por- | SMS." : ne strictly observed in such eee Teneie cae ee Vatver Bowxers are imported in all the | There {s also an admirable collection of arms, | imitation log cabins which has been on exhi TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1888. forme v ~ | work may be a question. y i The artists conceived pictures in enamel, In oom : - The results achieved : handsome shades noted in the autumn models | armor, and war souvenirs, which the artist | tion in the hall came from far away California . eelain pate; and. secondly, in the brilliancy are certainly mest beantiful, but the > Henne, esq., of Maple Bank. Edgbaston, who : : . 2 ‘ = “ ear hary CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000. Tt ke, Bristol, a am amels used for sur- | S70 Cor uinly most bew . est de- | ai 7: in i in felt, and are either plain, with moire ribbon | has collected in his wide wanderings | and another from Virginia, but the most per- ~—2 —~ ee a ry pte g employed, and a higher stage is | 2¢4.im 187). Mr. PRN AT Ae oe | bese ieicloaas eae te le Europe and Asis, “Tho handsomest | fectly constructed and the smallest of these oll 199,000 Tickete at areeuty Dollars, sack | nace Top culty, apparently insurmountable, in obtaining ane onging to the same | ago. Miss Mary C. Endicott, whom he will wed | or wrought in delicate devices in gold and | pieces of armor came from China, and there | is the work of a Minnesota man, #10; 3 o>. one i yor Warcen ton, Char & pate equal to that of former times. no one sicetul enamels are some | noxt week, is only twenty-five years old. "On | silver threads,with crown-trimmings of galloon | are specime in, Seay LIST OF PRIZES. Pretendsto explain exact!y. Chemically con-| f,tue modern embroideries of Kyotoe In that | her father's side he comes down throusiemes | to correspond, é The tapestries alone which’are hung in the ex-|__ Senator Vest as a Poker Player. sidered. there are six distinct varieties of por- | Si, *4" Sud experts who paint with their nee- 4 ibiti PRIZE OF $300,000 dies. Their best works are scarcely distinguish. | ta" two centuries anda half of Puritan descent | _A Few Utna-Fasutoxante young women in | hibition rooms are such as cannot be seen any-| Years ago, says the Chicago Herald, Senator i FINZE OF * 100.000 -” gu from the subernatorial settler of Salem in |New York have lost their sense and screwed | WheFe this side of the Atlantic. As for the | Vest, when a young man, occasionally indulged iZE OF ble from pictures on canvas or silk, ‘There ; 8 si wd = 7 ictures, there has been the test trouble is ms to be no limit to the expacity of the Jap- bey meponiig tie ed bp Be any fide Pineir courage up to the point of appearing om ESbanging thom. ‘Their weig enormous, | 12 the fascinating game called draw poker, a anese F artisan. If his genins c ive or vay Sth avenue with the La Tosca stick, the latest inegine when T game which is thoroughly understood in all ite nization a wide vista of industrial telumphs | POU f Boston calture. wheats waits S2v9R-| European “fad.” ‘The sticks are es high as the | “Soo rnay umugine when I any 28190 feet and | detail in Clinton County, especially Lathrop. before him.” feminine social arts, and’ will grace the | Moulder, and ‘cost from €5 to €50. "No one | the frame for this work is of the tron seeosee | Ouse Vest add erica cane Pecan 2 county ‘In other branches also, glyptic art and | feminine soci ant grace the r ¢elain in Japan, but for our present purpose it is enough to speak of the two great centers of production. ARITA AND OWARI, ‘The porcelain of the former contains, in a hundred parts, seventy-seven of silicia and i considers them of real use, but what their pre-| Kind. It actually has to be supported from the | seat and received a large fee for his eighteen of alumina; the porcelain of the lat- | metal work for example, does he give similar |roundings of her | husband, whether | tonded use is has not become apparent, ‘cen be aneath sabsentl of tr welght being hung. | man. So much money in the hands of the hy Ser Worrenten, ter, seventy of silica and twenty-one of alum- | Promise of success?” Ong Fasmion Paren says terra-cotta and all| Several of the other paintings approach you to i ouierilie. Cincinnetl, inia. The Arita (Hizen) porcelain differs from METAL WORK AND CARVIXO, joor Green, the Birmi Home | the reds have dieppeared, and another says | one m size, M. Veresichagin will aot sell any | isn cool watermelon toa negro. The result was nt all other porcelains in being manufactured ai, | _ “Undoubtedly his modern bronzes and his inguished British radic: that red in all tones is the winter's color. One | of, his works, a8 he can make a good gy og ved ere 2 eel go yall. he] Zectly from the stone of Iznmiyama, Else. | iron inlaid with gold and silver are remarka. ‘THE CONSPICUOUS CAREER says green is on the wane, while another de- | Visited every large ety. ond erie ital in | the cards. ‘They had no place to playin but a Sreenke rein ates are obtained by [niting | ble accomplishments, As in pictorial art. so | of Mr. Chamberlain will place the young Amer- | clarcs it more, RoPuler than ever and not even | civilized countrics he little shed that had no for but sche freak ‘dry Eales te Eytynise and | also in metal work, certain epochs were happy | ican girl in the first rank of the social life of pied ip dooy Bigadey Koigeaplpa oa part wheat straw. It was a five-handed Bat, im Hizen nature has provided material | 1 *He possession of great masters, From the | the British gentry which may go higher with erty to consult one's predilections and com. | SbIy #0 the Russian Feady to be employed without any admixture, | time when his sword and his armor ceased to | the progress of his public earcer. In his public themselves, at lexion. ‘This dixpensation, a source of much pride to | be the first objects of a Japanese gentleman's | S¢Fvices thus far he has scored many important bs - : Tux Parcesse Dress is revived ina new ised be- the potters of the district in olden times, oncern the field for workers in metal was im-| triumphs. He has been chairman of the execu- ite disadvantages us well as its advantages | menscly narrowed. We shallnever Perllaps, sec | five committee ofthe educational league, Ho | ShAP® for tea-gowns, This dress, aa is well SaeeeeO ine REE tele aie [eee ‘woudbave it he os eer ‘The manipulation of the stone demands 1m-| @gait those extraordinary miniatures in metal | ha® been councilman, alderman, and three | known, is high, and made with the waist and expressions of intense agony they depict, They | other queen. The betting commences: sad mense care end skill.” Succes depends that are found on the sword farniture. of ‘for-| mes mayor of the city of hs residence. Ee | perk oC ae eee Eee eee ck | ars potzeqroninislicas OF batts ie ince Leos cee ee eat degree, upon an unsparing mer times, But the ability that conceived ¢ has sat for ingham, © Britis direct cy ra ‘concept wyer, poet fare Of labor ‘nu experince 1S Guy | exvouted there toarvele tect ak ers Farliament. | He has been the associate of John gan 16, often without | idea realiotic snl aa kicribioss poste’ °° | gr cual Iatae’ Bao wh i's on the contrary, the usual process is| been diverted. You see unmistukable evi , the liberal leader. On the formation | #leeves, the sleeves of underdress itic and as horrible as possible, go a little better. An outsider, who stood in H. H. Sourz. | with the gang, looked over Vest’s shoulder and oe J mg ele held followed—the porcelain stone is mixed with | dences of its existence and full exercise in the | Of the Gladstone administration in 1880 he | their place. ‘This novel gown is fastened at ® Kaolin clay? Both stone ani clay are meee metal work of to-day. So, too, of carving in | a8 made president of the board of trade with | the neck and Lose bngeld anne arses emcee! able in almost unlimited qua . but their | wood and ivory. There are glyptic artists of | ® seat in the cabinet, In the political ques- | OF mnonterie, upper dress invariably composition is #0 variable th ction of the | the utmost excellence. None of the master-| tions current in English affairs he is opposed | differs from the under one. Tans im the Presence of « high temperature ig | pieces of their predecessors put them to | to Gladstone's Irish policy; he is in favor of | Guat Luxory and magnificence are illus- & matter of the greatest uncertainty. TheQwari| the blush. It is true that large quanti- | disestablishment, free schools and free trade. trated in outdoor garments for the winter. otter, not yet sufficiently scientutic to analyze | ties of wood and ivory carvings are ex- ith hi scperionse in affairs and | he whether long or short, are uncom- materials, trusts much to chance, and con-| ported which preseng no commendable | tency of speech, will make him more or leas monly stylish and elegant. Satin and velvet Sequently devotes a minimum of labor to pre-| features of any kind.” The majority. of | Potential od prominent, as the ups and downs | brocades, velvet-striy India stuffs, rare Liminary processes which, for aught he knows, | Western collectors buy these much as they | f British politics shall determine As mayor. | broche textiles ek spore effects woven Tay be ultimately thrown away. Owari now Yigald bay chairs or tables, No matior whether | Minister sad member, Mr- Chamberlain ‘snd | with gold and silver threads, heavy, matclasee roduces nearly all the blue-and-white porce- | there is any display of the true 's feelii . aa ate, Will receive a rare dark in of Japan, beside quanti ‘ware subse. | oF the modcler’s siill-it inenough thatthe até | ing in English society, SS and. quently decorated with pigments and enamels | jects represent a great deal of labor, a certain iu the ateliers of Yokohama and Téky®. Arita | amount of bizarre vigor and a phase of Japan- Produces the bull of the enameled porcelain. | © y- You can go to shops in Yokohama Atneither place can the wofkmen afford to | and see ivory carvings of this c ranged upon Prepare their pites with the loving care be- | shelves by scores and hundreds. ‘The mechan- towed in former times. _ Probably the finesse | ical Taketition of such toys is a steadily degrad- of the process has escaped them through want | ing influence. Happily, however, there are Of practice. At all events the results obtained | artists who refuse to prostitue thei talonte to are decidedly inferior. $0, to0, of decorative | the wholesale demand of upholstecers nad ex, fuamels, though in a much less marked degree. | mage Among their works the patron and The preparation of these is often imperfect, | lover of true art will find no lack of exquisite re is always ® disposition to replace | objects. Were La tourist visiting Japan with them with pigments. This latter tendency be- | @ full purse, I should collect only. the honest Jougs toa more serious class of fanits. Crude, | and beautifal products of her modern art, in- | their Erity pate is bad technique, but the use of pig- | stead of encouraging forgeries and deceiving Ments for surface decoration is bad art.” myself by running after specimens which, in “Then you exelude porcelain from your ver-| uine hundred and ninety-nine cases out of : —_———e0___"_— Fatal Fire at Rochester. i a3 i i } i it H Peck 8 3 4 E i G ety Fri uh fe Gh Teh ft elle i Hut ill ak Eat i EE il t Hi co ff 8 i a tr § iJ it i é i i bee i LE Gict that art industries have not deteriorated?” | every thousand, are inferior, examples of nee “Insome respects, yen” But remember that | work, disfigured by sinaleiea saan iat of, BeTe the item of decorative designs enters into the | Wear: Hexar Nomwax. = “ccount. aud bere the advantage is on the side of moder Keramists. They choose their sub- Little. Jects from « wider field, and execute them with cuimel = ~ Bo lews tidelity than their predecessors, Be- | S°ittle made me glad, for I was Sides, porcelain proper has always been a sec-| Gray’ thi ondary product of the Keramic industry in this shrough— count, lm felence the Japanese have achieved | How litue made me giad when I was youngt ad still achieve their greatest triumphs. |. Probably the most asthetle outcome of the “fear bans ta mae Potter's art in any country was ‘The children TUE CELLRBATED MATSUMA PAIENCE. In the manifacture of this beautiful ware the workmen of forincr times far excelled those of the present generation; butif you go to Kyitd, you will find Tanzen. Dohachi, Seifu, and Kan- man turning ont faienca which, in respect of techni artisne alike, is cer- huniy FE ut i it i i i i us [e ! ique and q not inferior to the chefe-d cewcre Awata, Iwakure and ie F H i

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