Evening Star Newspaper, January 1, 1889, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘et - THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JA ay 4% »| r at ttl é NUARY 1, 1889. © 7 eihes amAL: GUMS: FOREIGN NEWS AND GOssIP. EXCELLENCE IN ART ATHLETICS IN EDUCATION. SOME PHILANTHROPIC WAYS. EDUCATIONAL. ee eee * E Harrington, M. P., has been 1 witl Muscula: ition Does Not Lower | Charity Which Carries Gall to the Un- THIS EVENING. ZPWARDC.TOWNSEND, Lessons in the Art of War-Col. Mr, Edward inpndiartnSe Is Not Concerned with Private Moral | Muscular Competition ies eae 1 i" : . ns in the Art of War—Col. 3ige- sentaped to six months’ imprisonment, with Chi ‘ the Physical Condition of Students. fortunate Recipient. UCTION, 476 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, RE- E « ine etn, ad low’s Explanation of Strategy sented 10/0 abliahing ta his paper, the — ; eer i — ASS SH and OU eoets portent of CLOTH. | Dramatic Athan at L417 Lath ee mee eaten . y ‘Sentinel, reports concerning a suppressed " From the Atlantic Monthly. From the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette, a ery reliable establishment declin. | QT, JOHN'S COLLEGE. ANNAPOLIS, MD. Col. John Bigelow. adjutant general f We | Kerry cr'tne uational league. No appeal wes | 0° {8° aauthors, artists and actors are in| Frumthe Atlantic Monthly. | pears to| It may not be practical or “horse sense,” but | fools come from e very reliable establishment decin | (7) JOM ae eh eee ats, District national guard, in his lecture o the ic question it is in their public performances and ‘ vi have | Who with any spark of proud independence in | serve piecewise, so ax to give you all a chance. They tory oficers of the District national guard: the | KOR. nave fallen in the department | BOt in their private characters that society is | Bave been noticed that athletic contests ry | eishc Gp laparts aha UAcede aha pee acne pont ot Menee Bore and ‘ailaress Overcoat: | pyre pRPRCINE ATE Hoe i iA aia artof war, devoted othe differentkindsof tmi-| HT" "Gara" and. Bouches du Rhone, | Prinetpally, if not exclusively, interested, It | Ser¥ed to diminish the interest of the student | thelr own hearts can blame th ‘he says, “We | Men, Bet and Children: “Furiahings of aiikinde AHI NAVAL acaEa egy, said that for the purpose of study | = boy “the country round “Mare files is is on, the London World says, the first; and not bee paseregewras teria one bea iy will all ‘stot enti before t will pe alms Fess ee snd coutinue thereafter, TEX isn — THOMAS FeLi. AM. may be resolved into the following kindsitye, | 1 .5q¢. on the second, that their claims to recognition nailed Leeda nigel seca pipe from these women, who will shout our names | A;,M,aud SIX P.M, until the entire stock 1s clomd MSS SCEMIUDS KINDERGARTEN AND PRING Strategy proper or regular strategy, Regat statistics show that Germany has at | are founded, and there is, as a matter of fact. | Ph¥sic Tis AgrLOeE ac eek cr | WILiOvar eheke aiicahs Gk cela oe Gy 476 Penngyivania avenne northwest porthwestern section, teacher scrompenyice aims at depriving the enemy of his su her digosal in the event of war an army of | no necessary connection between them. See ee os caren Welativai, wes oie GGA. cnn eee ke 5. SAMSTAG & CO. tion and shecch renting tawebt te deat ad 2d, Tactical strategy. which aims at ousoug 3 513,46 completely drilled men, Nothing. can’ be snore. .cortsin.| (han thal | ome cet Ce RE OOHRS ate ee eee dan aaah cota t cleas = ee ei al Lg bering him on the field of battle. 34. Politigh | “The government authorities at Brussels | neither in literature nor in art does excellence | H#¥® attained to perfection in the art. Thus, beere™ Orth uch Boca casi soem — — or moral strategy, which aims at disl | assert liat the reported revolution in Uganda, | in any way depend on the personal cultivation in the report made by a committee of the board . ‘% ien-down but hopeful young -—: 608 F st. now. atm i i i laborer who says, “I will get along somehow h ation or body politic, or at eri results in the deposition of King Mwanga by ‘ of overseers of Harvard college, the ground 'y poss S eechaneale There was no analogy, y. | one of?is brothers, both explains and prem chic of morals, whether major or minor, and very ‘ " was taken that competitive athletics had | Without the nourishment I need, and my tired a ie ae a telegam recently received from East Africa. | fW People are likely, we should prunes served to lower the physical condition of the | Young wife will be willing to work a little in ‘single combat. Generally eS This teloce eeaat rnich, was, in | eevee with Mrs Lynn Linton in her artiols | students, few taking part in auch sports for | harder rather than take from theee people, ing. he «aid, it is tactics alone that esange? t0 the shores af the Vitis’ Nonmen | as pcan” noe itcen better for | the reason that they could not attain distin- | Whose effusive patronage would be eet the brain andsinews of the * | where 2€ awaited the arrival of Stanley, and it | mankind if Coleridge and Moore had been | 8tished excellence in their work. My own | Wormwood in our cup of happiness by an “manly art” and other modes . | is now:onfidently believed that the mews con- | ‘two worthy sitisene ‘and exemplary fathers of | ©XPerience as a student and teacher in by?’ Or, the yearning, ambitious young fi Nc AT AUCTION ; ampaign of Napoleon in Italy (ig | yeregoy the messenger was entirely correct. | families, even if the sweet music of ‘Christo- | Harvard college, which extends altogether | Scholar, who cries out, “I will die a} mee: IN FRIDAY G, JANUARY 4TH. 1880, id, w won mainly by tietigg; Col, Yandeleur hb: pap eruetes to | bel? had been forever mute and the glit- | Over @ period of thirty years, does not ag nothing. I will go home and scrub the kitchen ae peed ty a pa E rategy. his second (1800) by strategy pTOper, r has made a final proposal teri f ‘Lal kh’ had never been | this judgment. I note in the first place that a | floor again before I will become indebted to pe pete ty Sn ged jal . FOLUTION. the temnts on his estate in West Clare, Ireland. | tering gems o' la Rool oor physical condition i these girls, whose violent efforts to step down aa = ee RET q | _nlT-2 IN THE REVOLUTH He offre to ace binder : polished, than that two prominent examples of | Poor physical condition is at present a matter i foots ith a up and in- | ()FEICE oF THE COMMISSIONERS, DisTRICT | _? Ih 2 i tit a8 stify . Mrs. | Notice is he: , eo snl, Swen mainly Oe | this OPE by etecnry 15 th witha withCrawn. | Poen Ueorided for the, iaitatiom! of Wok | p> mt Sniea of plea ta urate eden tenting: | Hoval Worchevter, calls out in patronizing | reminet cont Inarfears on real ‘ separately subjugating the northern | ‘ThePading German newspapers all express | « little further to say’ that it would Tave been | furthermore, that, in teaching geology in the | ™anner to poor, timid, erring Mrs. Crock my» | Gt ultuy UskS has been printed abd copy thereof | 1 gr the New England and the middle *a%"$ on | the hope and expectation that 1849 will be a | better that “Hamlet” or the “Novum Organum” | field, set walks which twenty years ago sur- | Who has put her pride in her pocket bagel] ot Soe fag ye ee talaiaaiiinasied - nd the southern sttes. of the | vear of Peace. ‘The North German Gazette says | should never have been written than that | Passed the pedestrian powers of quite one-half j but whose dilated eyes and hot checks ide at | Heuaitien and ‘conte that may have accrued thereon | J)KAWING AND PAINTING INSTRUCTION 1 er and the autumn were the | that the difference between the French and Shakespeare should have supplied us with a|™y students are now within their abilities. her noble benefactors not to make her | ide it | Thal ‘not te pasa eh aay Very branch apd ° seasons of activity in the north; the winter and | Ttalian Governments with reference to Tunis | precedent in deer stealing, or ‘Bacon witha pre- | That the reader may not be led to explain this | entirely, “Just see, Mra, Crockery, What we c , - spring inthe sonth, The British gener#l. Who | will not have important results, Ln yoery in judicial corruptic difference by the fact of growing infirmity on | are gi to give you. I shall let you have could move his troops by sea. might Weave | The French steamer Panama, Capt. Chabot, |. It is really in their publ lessons Envclish NIVERSITY - TRAINED TEA Le ae Day and Evening. TEACHERS, 221 E st. p. we 15m pecetion. es 4 MISS EMILY E. FRECH, i BAL street ne. HAND —INSTRUCTION THOROUGH, SYS. J succesful. berinning, advanced, and sees for laclie ud clase » STRATEC er. 1 public auction, aPthe office of the District of Columbia, commenci DOF JANUARY, ISSB, and e WENTY. « JANUARY, L MY SE bis secede teceies be sold, unde and underful progress of studente “ge y , is- | these half-worn suits of my little Freddie's, and lie, not in their pri- | ™y own part. I may say that not only the dis- . er depa liers enor : » No tances, but the ti H your boy will be as proud as can be in them. either d partment with 9 aoe the ane | from Baltimore, December 9, which arrived at | ¥te. capacity that authors, artists, and actors f ut the times involved in the journey TY-SECO! RTEN AND GRADED SCHOOL, NEAR : 1 Sth stn. w.” Misses ‘ eee it Is wi i There is Mrs, Haviland over there who is so kind. ach following day, Sunday and leeal | POLTOCK » Fourteenth years — ron 3 ecer pacity, icty, and it is with their | re the same now as of old. There cai be no | There is Mrs, Havila ° , sea sl afi sack daipavant property | Quite a. ogee imited the operations that could be conducted | Timeri aber imber 27, encountered 8 cyclone | a enaflenscn, not with their private delin- | question in my mind. that. the physical condi | She's going’ to give you three pairs of new sc34 MUEL E. WueAT. | feat gs snp Ay oe Saee jends. The steamer righted after being on her | quencies, that society is primarily concerned. | tion of the average student at Harvard college | Stockings for yourself, and Mrs. Canton- was more impo be > is v: i M Hi i for three months. The vatican has received news of terrible | ee er ana or ae ree oe than an | Condition of youths has'gone a decided gein in | that sounds all over the vestry, full of well-fed there, and maiut: where snch snper r The problem in the north was divided ac- cording similar plan into the separate wub- wissioners schers’ Normal Departme: ox Teachers’ Normal Department. O'SEVINSEITUTE. A select school for girls, 3122 P st Tht Misses BoNsey Principals ORNER LOT, THIRTY poh WTTAN ALLEY. . it Sicha sttle, the Supreme Court of the | a1a..m* jugation of the New England states on the | foods. accompanied by great loss of life. in | author or authoress who leads an immoral or | certain moral qualities. ‘Thus, between, 1864 ee an mink Ue ee eee little tause 11656. ia | 7 aeTHENIGO-CLANTRIGEW WALL Seas one hand and the middie states on the other. | Manchooria, “Indian advices say that cholera irreligious life. and when they are guilty on | 4nd 1870 it was not uncommon to find students | Mrs. Crockery’s stiffening heart. If the poor wn, on Tuesdays and Fridays st 10 For In the exeention of this sub-plan the Pritish, | prevails in a virulent form at Quilon, on the | both counts of the indictment, their position is | in Harvard college seriously the worse for at mechanic asks for a little a jent reas Miss M.'G, De With fatal inconsistency. undertook wih di- | Malabar coast. It is reported that 2,000 | naturally worse than if they were innocent on | habits of drinking, I can recollect in those | little loan, only to pull him through—he knows 3122 Pat vided forces to divide the fo x of the Ameri- | Christians have succumbed to the disease. “ It is by no means only | Years a dozen cases in which I felt impelled to | Only too well that his name will be handed Cans, thus offering their enemy the very ad-| Italian Carmelite missionaries are attending |r qjcr oenet of them, It public achievementis | €xpostulate with young men on this subject, | About as freely as a political nominee and a, the real ost vantage whieh they w to obtain Am} the plague-stricken people, accepted in palliation of private transgression. | Af least as many persons were known to me to | bis family seized upon and visited to an extent | four (Py an with the improvements, 1 vost ta jaande en-| The loss to Great Britain from the bad | What does it signify to anybody that William | be what we may properly call drunkards; but | Which will drive him to despair and is neigh= | rivary tne thousand anton (1001. boring a th rgoyne marched by vt the Ie gi | harvest of this year is indicated in the statis- | Pitt lived an habitual drunkard and died an in- | from 1870, when the athletic motive began to bors to twitting him of being “helped by the : fe t east al the north line tics just issued “from the solvent debtor, or that Charles James Fox was | develop, and particularly since the foundation | ity.’ (#0) feet three north t NY PARLE A PARIS LA BONNE 80. Prof. H. LAKROQUE, AM, of Paris. Private ‘tat Fre ol ier languages, 90: 16th st.u.w d8-1m* W SSHINGTON CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, 8¢ ‘ uh SBaou} me Tengen Grae Toraliomsuseme tree Thu fines | These show that while 250,000 ceccnn ie cs ster and a debauchee? of the new gymnasium, and the consequent | “Now, girls,” says Rosebud Royal Worcester, | ninety tio ‘ Mvantac i HOLLER Disco ieee © tion would have enab seizean hold | devoted to wheat-grociey arr more ware |" Ko doubt it would have been better if there | Wide development of fielt and house athletics, | “we must not ask those Commonplace girls to | 11chstrect cast tnirey (0) fect. So the, place ut be: | . MAL TRAINING OLAS te tas of a tocar meet Now | yield is leas by neatly 3.600.000 pence ae, | bad been none of those things, as it would | this vice bas been rapidly diminishing, At|contribute anything to the club. Yow know | Spuine. , mnderiand Placa, speek of Papen 84 England from her sis “es = Tepresents a direct loss of about half a million have been better if Coleridge had eschewed | Present I do not know in my acquaintance | they can't afford it, and we must be very care-| 1 Mus. arto eras of sale: The purchase money to be or | depesit of #100 is required at the thnie th | bid off, Conveyanc ois sel-4m a | ML® VERNON SEMINARY, 1100-1104—-1116 M STREET AND 1128 11TH STREET, BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL yound POSTPONED UNTIL LADIES AND LITTLE ‘othe VE. SALE 1s POS ANUARY THIRD, 1889, at the same in all branches: in groans . th o it could be effected B: on the heights of Sara compelled to surrender. 1 of this preliminary plan the their atten’ LOUISA MAN) rounds ji > » ium and Moore had been faithful to his wife, | With the students, which extends, perhaps, to | ful not to let them know we feel any bet nole ariny | PO ae ies nn ee eplabag tp Ce eae Ga a aaitece aod | DRIER ‘members of the university, @ ain. | than they do. Is wouldn't be kind, you kno’ lcipericae ats tie failure | inferior in quality. Barley ‘shows a rathes | not the private persons, who were of import- | gle case in which the young man can be ealled | And thus she and her mothe und 'a thousand | with ‘within yen days the Trustee re better yield than Inst pear *yoth in total and | ance to their contemporaries and to posterity. | # drungard. I believe this gain to be due in | others like them, move on’ in their placi Lies, ote ot, acreag*, and oats a slight decrease in each of | That Southey and Wordsworth were moral | large measure to the sense of pride ina phys-| philosophy, careless of the self-respect th | these respects, men, or that Dickens, Thackeray, Trollope | eal state which affect by far the larger part | are crushing, and unconscious of the worthy i Oreck, whe” ts . Suakim | #ud others worked hard and managed their | of the students, Their experience in train-| poor they are driving away from them by the fe ine nis Just arrived at Suakim | sits creditably, is very satisfactory and | ing, which is undergone in one way or another | presumptuous patronizing which see agreeable to know. It proves that genius, more | by a very large part of the young men, gives | one of the chief characteristics of fashionable a or less, ax the case may be, is at all events not | them by experiment a clear understanding as charity. Shae a31-tads “ incompatible with respectability and_its sur- | to the influence of hygienic conditions. [na ecg IES, : _ roundings and consequences, But it does not | similar way the use of tobacco bas diminished. Women who Eat Teas Tuomas DOWLING, Auctionter. in the slightest degree affect the value of their | Between 1865 and 1880 it was not uncom- | Boston Dispatch to Chicago Tri er list party ¥ again gave the an opportunity tended to seiz sor to 1 ¢hief in America, failed adeq the southern army under ( nee of which the they Sir Henry Clinton, | from Khartoum, whence he started two months rd Howe as commanger-in- | #80. coming by way of Kassala, says that noth- ing ha- been heard at Khartoum of the fall of the government of the equatorial provinces or uched lmself | Of the fr org of Emin Bey. On the contrary, the » NE F. ARNOLD, Trustee, 455 Louisiana ave, For further informat ELIZABETH J. 8OME CROSS, 131 ; W an PUBLIC § Musical Course in the lines of Yorktown, A sudden march of | he says that the forces of the Mahdi had been | Contributions to the literature of their country, | mon to tind men so sodden with tobacco that | Two servants who were hauled up before a COnLICT Weshington brought him from the Hudon to | twic rated in Bahrgahel. and it was on account of their contributions to | they were unpleasant subjects to have in a olice justice here the other day charged with | LAGE PUES | thoroaeh Bane classe the front of this position mY The Archduke Lows Victor Joseph, the | the literature of their country that they were | 8mé 1 lecture room, Pp * - ae Ach pein TUMBER AXE | GPENCERIAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, COR 7H the French fleet held th youngest brother of Emperor Francis Joseph of | courted when they were alive, and are remem-| In this decade I have found but two or three | Creating a rumpus, ind ignantly denied having ING THE ENTI S| Sand Dats. nw, lished 1864. Central location. army was driven by a two we Austri. is seriously ill with a gastric attack. | bered now that they are dead. In the case of | persons affected to this extent by tobacco, | been drunk. They said that they had been 1 ENTE x | tu modious h ry <n Superior methods, a that dftarn- | Ho has received tho bat cxcvomenn Women of genius, it is to be feared that the | Even the use of tea and coffee, on the whole | somewhat under the influence of tea, which] — FACT, ANP WITT N Glo ATGss | pling t a oficisl preriop, jenry Clinton had | “py. Moscow Gaze learns that the shab of | single virtue on which their good names used | Undesirable with youth, but extremely com- | was responsible for their eccentric behavior. AND Si STRAT AND js of youu > jt 3 - : A formerly, more than at present, perhaps, to |™on in former years. has remarkably dimin- Kod the judec, “I mever knew CHUSETTS AVENUE XO} can COUTRR: hes, ersia will pay a visit to the czar in the spring. | gepend, hawpeldom been their strong point, | ished, Iam informed that only about one-half ee ntah Gecet dene man te oe » Haprestion. Teltian ex he reteexed te It isreported that the ameer, of Afghanistan | anq from the social elevation of the Empress | of the students who take their meals at Memo- Shat any one could become really intoxicated | inet. and duly reconiod. we, will sell r uthiy iustallnenta. General Washington. has lett Cabni with a iarge retinue on a tour of | Theodora or the Empress Catherine 11 down- | rial hall indulge in these beverages, In fact, | ffm drinking tea wine eatin t= RSDAY, JANUARY. 2 WENT S. Princapa wea | inspection through Afghan Turkestan. ward, great capacity has rarely been associated ee yet of ihe aed men in « college, like | 44," “Washes jatt sf Mand cotinine from day ts | HN 1 Be Primewpall "8 " a kK i js fe i e a he custom: yi 5 whe ly. “We ete rae | weed of, Catalogue pe tur- | = iiitiats operations im our wor Open | lene Tiga, lester othe recent revot, tias,| fn tie Tair penis 8 teaiperament)fevorable to oT ees has great importance, onc caters |. Te is becoming quite a popular vice in Bi f DIANO LESSONS INS CLARA MARIS were characterized. itshould seem.by an eqgally | transferred his residence to Samarcand. a ive upon the body of the folk, Reasonable liv- | t8—and presumably elsewhere —this tea eat- “HARD T. MORSETIA) assignees. hidren se Specuaity. injudic nd unlucky division of forces and Thieves Getting Clumsy Philosophy of a Cold. ing is necessary to athletic success, and the | in8- And, curiously enough, ite vic he 2 . os an n of effort. Th f the . x From the Youth's Companion. habits of those men become in a way a pattern | ™tly found among the “help,” who, OF AC BLE FRAME | UMBIAN UNIVERSITY. THE CoROo 3 ‘ PIFCTIVE SAYS THEY ARE © ‘ : ; ° ae Sectional tifa he household tea-cuddy always access MeiNIA AVE: | tie School upened October 1 thes hrown upcn two expeditions directed, | “ DPOTVE Sars THEY ARE NoT 80 CLEVER a8 | "ROOD Of Woccabury, of the Medico-Chi- | for the school life. ; Spe Hone tee Sanny eluate ooceen Diet SOMIAS TNSTL | 5 ny Sehod ent rth 1 Ei ae he gg ecg THEY ONCE WERE. rurgical college of Philadelphia, “If there ix | auiries which have just been made by a| ccustomed to helping, themselves from it, a BOSIAN INSTI | tha Sette, | _ “Do you know New York thieves are not any- arch of | thing like so clever as they used to be committee of the college faculty, to whom was | Pinch at atime of the dry leaves. These they " ; try aud referred the report of the board of overseers | CBE; thus extracting the alkaloid, which is a anything calculated to take all the brightness 7 Mathematics, i t t HLL, HODGRIN ne tt By : < -rnes’ | Out of the sunshine, all the savor out of onr | concerning intercollegi ; in | # toxic agent of a most powerful description. * ek of Plattsburgon| ‘The speaker was one of Inspector Byrnes’ ’ x Rife; de | CAG ALOR Geter rey nete SBOWD| 5. art etlecs de an agrestis ectilacation ve parts Exwernox, ( wes forced to full baele by | veterans, and there was actually a touch of | f00d and all the sweetness out of our life, it | that about one-half of the students in Harvard Siltiniatsly it dntecta ciseniseenen aaa fesnt of the x s f the dotilla h actem- | sadness in his voic as though the |#8cold in the head.” He presents some lege submit themselves to the valuable Li | NEDNE oF he spoke PRIVATE in any cme OF am mselves t 4 abnormal condition of mind with strange wishes | PAST © OUE ae Te ee ey hs ia depended tee cuiaa, J . bee P - e : and moral discipline involved in train- i | situsted in Wee OF ELCUTE , gett iapeptatasda soar of clever rascality was really a bad | thoughts m its philosophy, the substance of Though only a part of this number have | #4 delirium, wei bunbered a muaboneomumbedaede "<i an a Weabiacion. sack being | public generally. The Mail ana | Which may interest the mighty host of suf- ned to snecess as athletes, they all share aa Elo} ee te F BERLITE oct " sig battled in a similar attempt upon Baltimore. | Eprrs sked the detective the cause | ferers, dvantages which the preparation gives. fa astern Shere PS posal - — 1. akan ae ee ee ge ee Was ted upon New Orleans, where it was | which seemed to affect him so. In every case there are two factors, an irri- ain in physical and moral stnina which | THE FUGITIVE YOUNG LADY'S PARENTS SAY THEY | jiu, repulsed by Geu. Jackson, with the lows of half | more than T can tell,” was the | tant and a susceptibility of the system, Among | Comes from such modes of life is _incalculably yeah alld colt ai ——e of its numbers. reply. be because so many of the | the irritants are microscopic germs taken in | great. All the teachers of Harvard college who | A Talbot county, Md., special to the Balti- ad the war of | leading thieves are in jail. or have been scared | from without, as in influenza, and certain poi- | have kept themselves in close relations with the | more American says: Quite a sensatic ¥ use of political | out ot New York by the police, and that their | sons which are developed from bad nutrition | students are sensible of this profit. In both the revolntion: urenemies made ma was 3 14th at_nw. fi sad ty the cement here on Se y | eyes nemney x T SCHOOL—A PRIMARY, De . While Burgoyne was advaneing upon | Places have been taken by new hands. It is | or imperfect assimilation within the body, end a oe ee Perens =a = a it | #100 will be teat "1 High School fur both sexx the line of the Hud Howe sailed upthe | not because there are no thieves. for there are | which it is the office of the liver to destroy. it’s Woman’s Way. last that Miss Ida Mullikin and Mr. James Prat! aveiyy at & INL T st uw. Cheeny THOS. W. SIDWELL, Principal esapeake tenrporaty ¢ EDUCATION — BOOK-KEEPING jailed | Indeed, the effects of the two causes are essen. | From the New York Mail and Express. had run off to Baltimore to be the | or frightened off another bobs up and takes | tially the same, for the germs act by generat-| Three women tripped more or less light! arried. Mr. | d marched ou Philadelphia, the | just as many as ever, As soon as one is 'y | Pratt had been in the green-grocer business | pital of the United States his place. But, be it as 3t may, the whole gang | ing certain violent poisons, which irritate the | onto a Broadw Py Tey 1 reial Branches, Type-writing of Congress, whi > : y car going up town yesterday. | here for some time, and early last spring bega ution - Live Scholarsiip, @25, rapid pra Le pees {on hmpes | there to" the ent sroand now to get up| Fungersomaciror bores, NOT PHAFDNS| As they sank into their eats two uf the women | puting attention i" Mine Td ub, the BAS rama wTmtscwons' 5 k on his vi e a e . ac! vel rg) es ely " -ket- | eighteen-year-o! jaughter of George A. , bars > = — — wuitown was forced to abandon, The | another Manhattan Bank affair. Even the | As to susceptibility to colds, a healthy body, | St'™gled desperately to open their pocket-| Genteen-yewr-old daughter of George A-| a. reas & GEO. W. STICKNEY, Aue SSIMERCIAL “COLUDGE, AN war of the revolution, moreover, was brought | bunco and ‘badger’ game men are losing their | under ordinary circumstances, has very little | books, and when neither succeeded in getting parents, as well as the ver. HHOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer. ea teers ee © Ce wg LL home to the American people by the eruel| grip, Take the attempt to rob Phil Daly, the | of it. But sudden climatic changes may induce | her purse open, each grasped the other's arm ‘ a i peop! y the cruel | P iy s Braspe | ard Business ¢ S ° thing pointed to an early . Last sur catment of prisoners, and those atrocities | Sambler. That affair was a betch. So was the | it. Horses brought from,the west often have a | and exclaimed: mer Mr. Pratt failed in’ business. and then the toned the thundering of Lord Chat- | attempted diamond robbery. As for the at-| discharge from the nostrils which lasts about! “Don’t, dear, Tl pay.” trouble began, for the parents of the young! By virtue of adeed of trust dated 5 uation at the use of the Indianand | tempt to _‘bunco’ W. D. Morrissey, the western | six months. A ship's crew who had been| The small woman between them says noth- | lady forbade him to come to the house. Mr. | D. {ssi.and duly reconted aL: his sealping-knife as the the allies of England | Miner and horseman, it was clumsy enough to| perfectly healthly while absent several | ing, and the cross-eyed conductor awaitefurthes | Peett moved to Baltimace and were into busi- | 14. _ umst her children. In the war of 1812 the | use some of the old-time ‘bunco’ men tc | months on the Alask: ts : | coast, were all, on their | developments before going in to collect fares. | ness. The young couple were determined that | 6°!" British captured Washington, and before eme- ‘And so the thing goes. It may be that | return, taken down with a cold in the head. us aed ae is cone by MPROVED BUILDING LOTS IN OWN, D. C., AT AUCTION b day of r Nc Prineajsai \S pee E CEDARS" — 4 IN AND cnt yon yee AF sell, at y d . The comedy goes on, they would some day be joined in wedlock | ESDA é Ss OL. FOR YOUNG nating the city burned its public buildings to rooks) are down on their luck, for ‘Hun-| Of an audience going out intoa bleak atmos- | “T'ye got the change right here,” says the | in “spite of the girl's pela (hs eats a ©. M. the Slowies ; mS OCTOBER) Ste an the ground.” gry Joe,’ who used to be the clever est of the | phere from a close, warm room, a certain por- | woman on the right. Bs meetings were held at frequent intervals in | (2,8 be County of Wa = a. ol. = ? CoMBISING DIFFERENT KINDS oF stnateor, | HUBCOTIEN, has made more bad breaks lately | tion will take cold.’ These have the requisite | ” “So have I,” says the woman on the left. different places, At last arrangements were | of er , singly oF in small classes Appl .- 2 AOS Ob STRATEGY. | than agreenhorn, aud is locked up in Balti- | susceptibility; the rest are happily free from it.| ‘The small woman between the contestants | made for the wedding. Mr. Pratt sent Miss | ad vein & ote | Wa wet It is with a view to bringing better men than | More as a result. The only clever stealing that | In al cases of this special susceptibility there | still says nothing, and at this juncture the | Mullikin word, and, accordingly, he went to ablis sion j _0019-Omo_At Gandere & Suymes Se the enemy's upon the field of battle. he mid, | bas been done of late,” the detective went on|isa lowering of the nutrition, a certain de-| cross. eyed conductor approaches to discharge | Oxford last Friday. and Miss Mullikin, who tn ! OF. SHELDON'S DANCING AC MY Now that the general practic to say. “has been done by men who were not in | praved or depressed condition. The luxurious : ‘or’s office of the regular stralegy. his more or less disagreeable dut said she was gi ing upstairs to bed, wen reception of pl the regular order of th MD WE - 4 : SBAYS ands. s wneud fore Sorgen rap ps pec ves and who struck | und indolent are as liable to it as the poor, | ~Don't you dare to pay the fares,” saya the | instead, to Oxford in Mr. Dexter's carriag Baye | SESDANS mug SATCRDAGS' Gall or nena igre : : te tet. heif-clothed. | ont ons new line for themselves. These were | and those whose surroundings are bad. woman on the right, clutching at the woman | Then she met Mr. Pratt, and they ared by aad nen, with — that are well off in | such men as Foster and Bedell, the lawyers. A normal condition of the skin is the chief | on the left. steamer for Baltimore Friday night. “The FINANCIAL. b is with a view to | Yut the old line of thieves, as I have said, seem | protection against a cold. Three-fourths of | “And don't yon,” responds the woman on the | family did not discover the girl's flight until | ¢ a ction ~ = & batore mecting him | to be losing their grip. and if they keep on |the sufferers from catarrh, pneumonia or | eft, grasping the woman on the right, her mother went next morning to call her to | = —— tactical strategy. Bythe | there won't be any credit in getting the best of | chronic bronchitis are found to be in the habit ays 3 ey he ain terial s enemy or at affecting his r Th re fou ; The woman between them still says nothing, | bre: | them or in hunting then | of neglecting the skin, Their skin has become | but. as. the conductor anchors before the trig, And with this the veteran, who has made | degraded. and is no longer a protective cover-| pays the fares—and still says nothing. while |. oat ame from the war. | some very clever captures in his day, turned | ing for the body. The skin needs to be | th: é Fontne | erent formes of strateny ar not aes | away with a sigh, hardened by the use of the flesh brush, the | le = in practice: on the contrary —+o0————_______ cold douche, the air bath, and by frequent Thim’s the way wid thim wimmin,” says the all Be ticed in combination, one | This Marriage a Conspicuous Failure. change of underclothing. Active exercise | conductor as he takes up his position on the elias ce est eect vith r. There are few modern em-| From tle Atlanta Constitution needs to be added, to keep the tissues from | back platform et nner eerae Ae eriecseae | igh rotifers ition for alt caithesk | ,, Chiewo is justly noted for swift divorces and | clogging. ‘The time to cure the patient is be- -————_se0____ carci ahinea pr aiaainagend 4 pray inptatere bebop oe all of them | the calculating coolness With which couples | fore he gets the cold. A Chess-Playing Sultan. Ata banquet last night in Chattanooga, in fast. Her father did not know it until he | Tenetye fhe rel te me home in the evening from ducking. The | “’*° ents declare they will never forgive their 1e woman on the right and the woman on the | daughter. press much indignation. 000. J. S. Buse AN, EANKER AND BROKER, * { Trustees. 6 F st. No. 1405 F st. now, IMPROVED Orders executed on all the Exchanges, Stocks, Bouds, Grain, Provisions and Petroleum, PRIVATE WIRES TO NEW YORK AND CHICAGQ@ by virture of adeed of trust dated the 1 psevers i ae = Court Journal. 2 electii . Clay Ev. epub- OF sl MBER, A.D., ISS&, ou: Interest aliowed on depusita. “ ms oceed to the severance of bonds matrimonial From the London Court Journal. honor of the election of H. Clay ‘ans, repul E y 2 A.D., . . ARMY THE MARCH. = " She had Got Religion. = i me Eee i ore Tak, z | recorded in at q.,oneof | a14-3m igelow then passed to a description of | PM there is one pair who take the lead. The | From the Boston ‘Transcript, The present sultan is one of the most enthu- | lican, to Congress. a letter of congratulation | Land K rthe District of Col young wan came from the east some months | Dry-goods clerks are not the only persons | *!##tic chess amateurs in Europe. He will play | was read from Gen. Longstreet, which was the | Tame ago with plenty of money, good looks and ree- | who have queer experiences with the great the game for hours without intermission, and | feature of the evening. After referring to the | | SY)» ilg ] - “ ‘ will not allow any matter of state to interfere t he took in the battles adjacen Chatta- Arve pounecIaly et fara) Beant suttged | seen eee eases Eeovle | Tin daa pedis iawiiah of in tens he ls eae | Seoee a toes tes cate me w weeks they were married, | 2C¥*P4Pe ; innlly Notion, | aged. His ministers often find themselves | points at issue in the present complicated con- | end 1 t long. One day he | SPecimens of humanity occasionally. Notlong 1 Py rs Jots number unable to approach the imperial presence for | gressional contest, and said in substance: ¥ there? 1. In front of the preiise TFTH DAY OF JANUARY, AD. Ts F-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P. M., the tollowiny a. iin the said’ city of Wast CORSON & MAI pia, destenated “on the hyn : GLOVER BUILDING mn (1d) and twelve dae Bankers and De the formation of an army on the march, based or arranged with regard to a sa: the following requirements: 1, bia, and wt + Lwill eel at ON SATUR- JX0- ¥-CoMSON. JNO. Ww. MACARTNEY, Member N. ¥, Stock Ex CARTNEY, 1419 F ST. N rt of the different p: nt. He described the square » alia e where he said he had | 480 & Woman came into the counting-room of a geod ee “Chattanooga is the centerand pioneer of the | Deposits, Exe be Loans. Collections. Mele eMeetive format, mats | been text by his firm. The following week she | certain newspaper. and drew a loug face at the | 26, Feason that the sultan is deep ina game, | VCvatanvogs iit couer and pioneer of the Bj ea ee tl pmemmete me = left for Michigan to see her folks, Then two|same moment that she drew a handsome the sultan has checkmated his adversary or de- | ¢l¢ct @ republican Congressman pledged to the inches, thenc a = TE also of the order follow i © spoke | Jetters came to the honse here a few days | pocket-book from the depths of her dress, cided upon the next move, Abdul Hamid has | Pretection of American labor and American | two (52) feet three | A eed a Tere pelivceh, Gre lee pee hostile Indian country Med ty aes BA apart wldressed tothe husband and wife, and | ‘I want an advertisement put in the newsp: place of bexinning, Tance and his own court chess player, a Hungarian, who | dustries, she has laid out a path to industrial receives a handsome salary for letting the sul- | Supremacy that her sister cities would do well tan win afew games off bimeach dey. Tt is | t imitate. Our party has to see that Mr. ds a * ~ ephone Stock dealt ir puildings, suitable te either returne conclude eclel 8 i Telephone Stock bo of the country and the character of the | 22 Beiter returned it was concluded to open | per, id the woman to one of the clerks at the om wereetenenees i . The seventh Caster’? old | tate one counter, fumbling the pocketbook. tovertain indehted- ys’ public notice of such resale —. nl? forever. ldressed to the wife read: “Yes: what kind of an advertisement?” i he present ¢ shes Evans and_ every man fairly elected shall te mat, end soereesing SPEC TIES § he | said ormal ord of inced that youand Tare | ‘The woman fidgeted a little and fumbled the | Sud that the present court, chessanan’ his seat, If there were more Bob Taylors in | ni , Ao tans," SPECIALTIES. | c between the aoe ft snot be happy. Llett | pocketbook some more. ; ungenerously insisted on profiting by his su-| the executive chairs of the southern state r tt LE, POS ISTH ST ANNs TREATS ae square amd the coke © : wer. Take it and gets |" «7°I] tell you how it ia.” she suid. xmonths | jerior skill, ‘and checkmated. his tmporial an: | there jrould be less complaint about agup- | Hi. i, Chronic Atections of the ‘Eys, Bar, ‘ - “a T now tel! you a wile oe in. Good- | ago I—I stole this here pocketboo! a store. I allt wear Sb i ars ‘ter | Pressed vote. But for the Morrill tariff of 1561 | erms of sale:) 1,800 in cash, and the balance in ire, 912: 2-5, 8 a Mr. Bayard When Out of OMe . _| tsevand uay's crhitk next tings oy | wea pretty bad women then; but sence that | tncertote plats. neey poe qangarian master | Pr attanooga would have been in itt sraddting | six outhe Trou 3 day of cae for which de pre aie 5 Suniey, tom 10008, ¥ generally un¢ ec e- e aed ke mm} y. ¥ pe. each defeat, whe the thirty-1 a , and e 3 i he property sold, or all cash a y. 2S ard atthe clove of the present, sdmin-| mailed at Buffon tyvcag, 2° Basband was |Yo'pucin an advertisement iat for ten. doltars | cach defeat, whereat the thirty-Afth represen | Fabien A, £et og mea Tour Made At mu ah depen ot Go wt Be re NOTARIES PUBLIC. __ ion will return to his h i is city, DEAR CHARLIE: I am tired of ativan cash I'll return this pocketbook! light and claps his hands, locked up in government bonds or hoarded in | {ures purchaser's cost. If the teria ee hin yt MMIsSIONER OF DEEDS FOR EVERY STATE —— his home in this city. | DrAR it You will never see me again. Took ————_+er_—____ = oe bank vaults that would be gladly released from | complied with in seven days the trustee feserves the ee ne ory and © 8. ’ _ — oa = permanent $300 w bon forgot sn the pues drawer. Dealt Turning Out to the Left. A Tutti Frutti Cop. its prison bonds and seek the fertile fields and | right to resell at the risk and cost of the defaulting | 23 EALL, 1321 F st.nw. In office from 9 leuce here. He will doubtless withdraw | Dever touble you, no matter what you do. Good-bye EpitH. peso " > purchaser sf AN IMPORTED ENGLISH FASHION THAT PROMISES | CIGARETTE SMOKING INFANTS TAKEN IN By a | Tih mineral deposits of the sunny south land | aan. . vs] ished in Wash . D.C. == —=—= —_ from active political life. even so far as it per- = Se TO MAKE DRIVING DANGEROUS, BIG GUM CHEWING BLUECOAT. if the conditions were believed to be favorable. poe age ASIUEL MADDOS “Trustee, MEDICA tains to local affairs. and will live in abselate Two Hands. From the New York Sun. : From the New York Herald. : Two reosnt events will, SS azzasds 462 Lowisianwave, | = MEDICAL, &. , Tetirement. It is sc ly probable that he | From the Philadelphia Record. ‘There is a new fashion in park driving which | Policeman John A. McCarthy, of the Mul- isi ahr J 4 USHNELL & CARUSI, ESMERISM USED AS A HEALING AGEN’ engi : =a | w Phy, ‘ reagan : . > - | and second, the visit of Birmingham's delega- : ay A Til! cugage in the practice of the law appin. | Wealthy Physician —T suppose you wish me | wit cause trouble if it in persisted in, A large | borry street station, come marching into the | mo wou the visit of Birmingham's deloga- oe ane mest nertuwest, | servousend chrcpic Slemmon alee’ oer a tract of land close to kis kane ung aes j to look at your hand. I see it is all bound | namber of coach and saddle horses have been | tombs police court yesterday morning with a|rison will ‘meet. with no. factions opposition PWELLING-HOUSE, OX | in Practical Paychology by Prof, CARPENTER, O1 his tastes in fancy farmi im up. imported from England within a few years, | prisoner in each hand. Their heads reached | from the south, for our people owe him more Unknown Caller I—I wish thi can discern. The approval of MOWK ab we. 2803, | _Sowen ttom Spm __ em Zontrary to the general opinion Mr, Bayard | Unknown Caller—No, sir. I—I wish to see | Many of the imported horses are kept in New | almost to his belt and their names were Leon | ‘#2 We now | ee, eee ADIES WHO REQUIRE THE SERVICES OF AN i - ar. . a * ” oe 7 = arn y Id have be ity, y virtue of a deed of trust, recorded iber No. I — a fomparatively rich man. He is at least in | YOU about your daughter's hand. York, and are now driven by their owners | and William Smolinsky, of No. 535 enst 5th | oiabiy to obs cextiongy oe Cen # Calamity, | By witne fw, deed of trust resopted in Taber So, | We Tee Phpaician Siguldgoumat ex z abont ee umstances, b “Eh? in the daily park parades. The young men | street. One was seven’ and the other eight ‘ = Fi sessed of al 30 ae Goluabia, we Will offer for sale at public auction, ix anh Lot one a Een ps. bec Bend DY seed of about £360.00 “eg eet. a % action, | ES .. greater part of it, is pales: pe We who have not English-born horses try to get | years old. frout ot the emises, on FRIDA: THE FOURTH ‘only, Remedy, @5. ove each other, sir, and I hope—— G ., *, Pe ¥ ViFE —J DAY 0! ANUAKY, . 188%, at HALF-PAST Brien Part Of ti inverted juicy || cuties: Galen! I don't know sou. How did | their own horses up in imitation of them, with | “What's, the charge against these babies?” | q,A Mintyren's Ware, Hex yor Pousoawy —A | Bits clk Pe, te pared of eronnd situate Rise. Nyetel bebe mean ence oath Ae Fevenue. From the late Senetor Pe.udeme | you hurt your hand, eh? Get hit with beer | clipped manes, banged tails, and English har- | asked Justice O' A. Long Haskell, third wife of Rev. Mr. Haskell, | {n‘iucene Carusi and’ Williams J) Miller's trestecg? | 6 Cidekt Established Expert Specialist im nator Pavard, fa- | bottle ness. Youn is : = ther of th cretary ° i ippii i aeckeunee o a patil bape latter inherited | +1 cur my hand yesterday while clipping | especial pride in having their horses, carts, | “I d th ing alk tary has acquir. *p. hour cmd e- | coupons,” and men as English as importation or imitation | With a lit cigarette in his mouth. pufting out Bone of his investments eae “O! Bisse you, my children. can make them, clouds of smoke. on compl men who drive dog-carts take | “Yer Honor,” said the guardian of the peace, i is i ubdivision in Square No. 444, as recorded in the all eyarantes a cure in all cases of private 0 ii y. each | #.7¢tired Congregational clergyman, of Bille- | Subdivision - of men and furnish medicine, or no charge. I found them walking along the Bowery, each | Sretved Cousreguttonal, clergyman. polygamy | $tce of the Surveyor of the District of Columbia in | Tiow snd advice free at any hour of the it of Rev. Mr. Haskell, Jas. C. | | The lot fe improved tr s nearly new a seven rooms, including bath ruonn brick dwelling : 2 ate oF ; ee Wilkinson, a prominent real estate agent, who | house. contain pour nha by J nipany been exgeed- | 0 soo feted youn he di ath ‘What's the penalty for the crime of cigarette | V1) “ey 4 nit | Botand cold water, cas, range and latrobe stoves con: tilcrotla monew-getter he hne pig, Rvt gat; | He Strikes One Repeatedly and ‘Truly. | way qo tell the Weel English neele hee the | smoking, Jou” inguised the justiee of Ciers | NaS married February 7, 1888, to, Mr. Haskell me-tiird cash alae in ST, LONG-ESTABLI: $100,000 to his fortune ¥ added | From the Atlanta Constitution. imitation, and other young men are taking ad- | McGowan. in New York, has left the city through ts crete = SS ate of Mrs, | “Terms: One-third cash: balance in one and, ME. DE FOREST, LONG-EST, Bi ing ia $200 | Purchaser to give his notes for the deerred paytaente, ey : es cil She ee f- | Pittenn is aourpeciidr, with hendquacters en oe a Clerk McGowan answered, “I think it is five | #askell’s money. beating interest at rate of six pet Cebtn pean aes ments. Mr. Bayard has a Smad invest-) Pittman is a carpe iq vantage of his discovery as fast as they learn : © | a week ago. iy, cured by’ apes horses and high-bred stock ant n't, £ "gas. | Hunter street, near the courthouse. And a} it, though the knowledge has not become gen- years for the policeman who arrests the 4 ee — Property, Goverances St Coat ef soreheea og ee been one of his pleasant anticipations ‘te lay | $000 one he is, Just as the clock on the court- | eral yet. Horses have habits as much as men. | *™9ker- aside public life and eng dive : mY ji ‘ ParespyTERIAN Uston Looxen For.—The con- | 40¥# at time of sale. we GPT |b case eee Waseca ha Gi: A horse that has been used to doing things in | 4, ¥¢i had no rhe agd eet those chil-| gerence of the Presbyterians of the north and WILLIAM 3 NitzeRt Trustees mand pastime. “The fortunes of poli: | “In thet half-past 12, 1,or half-past 1 o'clock?” | ® c¢Ftain way in his youth wants to pursue it pial pe 2 © policeman in @| south was continued in New York yesterday. ties have not presented — that bat at half P\ paeaecltgpsteewacisy when he grows up. in England drivers turn to | “i8qus' oes 86 Lan aveume. tention to all diseases ‘ | 4 rate . is i 1 i : th < | WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO, ucts. dos-tds “ Pitherto. and he will doubtless emt rit i¢'gow, |,, 18 sntleman to whom Mr. Pittman was | the left in passing instead of to the right, as in | 4," V¥-1 found cigarettes in their pockets, | }Ne, Proceedings were, secret, and the mem career enon teenies ce in fe ” bers positively declined to make public any | pygoMas) . awa as ‘There is no thought but that he will sett to | talking smiled a funny smile. this country. As an American-bred horse in- | tj. Was the answer. part of their deliberations, stating. that the | [04S DOWLING, Auctioneer. ;sANOGp RESTORED Ux Sane reside here. He is devotedly he ‘Ob. you can smile,” remarked the con- | stinctively turns to the right. an English horse tof McCarthy wine” next inquired the | fame course was pursued at the last conference. | SALE, OF VALUABLE Uxtwrnoven ror ox | MANEOOP RESTORED. Bi ryercatine, Cardia ome here. which was the childhood | tractor, “but I tell you that clock is a nuisance | turns to the left, Some young man noticed | Curt Of McCarthy, At was inferred, however, that the northern | SUI EM TEI STEEL IN SOUAKE IM- Will cure any case of nervous nuity sd tome of Myra ¢ lark Gaines, the world-far between 12 and 2 o'clock.” Sis and told his friends ati Sow the correct ip oue bebick ace) iu charged. We don’t | 224 southern delegates were getting along Saltket sews af te Manioen ot the | ee same Bt imparts vigor to ee ent. « cozy old mansion in a splenc ¢ “Why so?” ing for a young man with an English horse aban "t | harmoniously, and that a union might be con. | Detrat of Colmnbin: pacecd ia ems Court ns —_$_ forest trees. Mrs. Bavard's fondect awn of | “Weil, you see it strikes every half-hour. At | in driving to pass his friends on the left, jock up anyone for smoking cigarettes. But if | dently looked forward to. = et al., vs. McDonsid E S MOTE FRENCH ARE Bagh Ameband te retire from ‘pubile lige to Mlf-Paeti2 it strikes one. ‘Then, at 1 it strikes | When other young men who haven't English | L¢veF have & policeman before me ‘charged pena aenoaai dertied, trustee wil’ kell at Remedy for al this old homestead and pass hh Vie life.te and then, at half-past 1 it strikes one | horses learn this they may try to turn their | raw, quewing tutti fratti T think the lawcan be! 1, s/s Rewanesaiy FuaraIn Minne- | SatOkeh gee ene infortyenit hours. ‘Erie @3 per box. Be ae eens the effects of the lard work | SS%R. Sitting in here where I can’t see it the | horses to the left, too. It will not be easy, for | Stretched 80 as to give hima term in Sing apolix, at 2:80 Sunday morning. Dr. Carver | lowins-descriteed real mS BR, YM a sd he has been doing since entering si, "%a | strokes break me up until I go to the window | many American horses will resent being forced | "2; saan McCarthy's f completed a marvelous feat ofjgharksmanship, | of as part of lot na TR Be Price G1. bent avaled by aia. Bore s cabinet minister, and his trends | 24 look at the time.” to adopt English customs, Tt will not be a archist flag ua he followed the tee wok | At 10 o'clock Monday morning last week he set | terscx hundred and thir ay STANDIFOUD Sec Oiand ms Shy be, will rejoice at being able. to Iay'"dehde | = soo safe thing to attempt unless there is an under- | 2" *archist flag as he followed the two urch- + the ‘same at e Cures of office and come "g 7 id liv i the neighbors and friends of ‘hin = Ovexntirp,—Judge Wallace, ix the United | y truggling to the left when | Obscurity. f c pou a ep.—Judge e, ib nil young men struggling to pass on the left when a the task in’ seven and one-half lis defective hearing, an ey, amar States cireuit court, in new York, yesterday, | their horses want to go on the right, you may! Diep of HypRorHosia.—Patrolman Fehle, fours less than the time ‘allotted. He Tooked = a, dim a measure interfere with ©’¢rruled the demurrer of the Baltimore and | know that they are not ignorant of the law of | of the St. Louis police force, died from hydro- completely worn out when the last Winchester practice of his * Profession did he even “de- | Ohio railroad to the suit filed against it by the the road, but that they want to be as fashion- | phobia Frida: night Last September the offi- | was unloaded. The 60,670 cartridges which he sire to go back to the bar. | Pennsylvania railroad over the building of the | able as other young men with real English cer while walking his beat was bitten in the | shot weighed 150 pounds. The doctor receives naa | Arthur Kill bridge between New Jersey and | horses, © among |, DeMUtaen or Tue Banrrwore axp Ourg | standing between both drivers. If you see two | 18 out of court to hunt for a place of lonely dag Sits Winmneter tae stereseaee coo es - i ight leg by a small dog. i ‘the reward of his efforts. Pansies : na} “Well. good-by, Fred; if I don't “ | Staten Island. The Pennsylvania railroad pe asrad ‘otue sruad tad kee ae 4 wa Oise te siedaed ito 100 required at the ‘of sale. fa @gain, I wish you a happy new » Se FOU) wieged that the Baltimore and Ohio, by Col. John S. Mosby’s Wishes. Tuesday the Yea hagas $s sell and the wound raster mS wes the right at rial PERUVIAN ‘AMD “Yes, if you don’t see me again I propably | T8802 of the construction of the bridge, | From the Virginia (Nev.) Enterprise. began ‘to pain. ursday the officer was] ‘The meri and faulting purchaser. — A? hall have a happy new year. f4,)r°UMbIs | was about to obstruct navigation unnecessarily | Col. John 8. Mosby announces through a Sen | teisken wit tery eonees ce hydrophobia. Sng toniar posnieeed by Der Flore oaaes | aus-ane, Presa 3) PURE CAT! of STE [Tran eee eee ae eemarrier of goods | 7™Nelsco paper that he will go to Washington page eh RE et ng through drugelet = = For nai 2 et ny ten canta ei scdueomatgy ate ete demueed.t | tom. The colonel taht wnt way | secre inte ante nant nigh | Seat anes apa tae, Pca fa | WW ERULLRATEA ETL OF pet, tenga be a) ckie e gro n N. 1 failed Thad 90 mech property iaet.,, When | with and that the structure was. lawful Tone. that he may be appointed to some constr po- se erie enn, tee gare Teepe oz seezld rvs, ag indugnstion or dyepepete, | FNG'SO. Ee Parle, to pay fifty cents on doliar " overruling the demurrer, Judge Wallace | sition, but says he wo sen’ cause arising, as skin, scalp or scrofulous affec- | J ¥.YOU WANT A a ae Weekly. ~ New York | allows the the usual | where than Hong-K as be has it} During the present year 1,800 girls have been | tions. to. for the T.. ferme,” Crremdans to anewer upen already six years on that “rock in the sea” | graduated from the Boston schools. | returacas” "me 0F%® benefit or cure, or money | try o ro 2 se } naane ‘.

Other pages from this issue: