Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1889, Page 3

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____ MONEY TO LOAN, Mor To LOAN 1X SUMS TO SUIT ON REAL $210-1m is CUTTER SSP Morr TO LOAN IN SUMS OF FROM $1,000 to 85.000. ARKANSAS WANTS RECOGNITION. Powell Clayton Urged _ DRS. BLISS AND BAXTER. Their Quarrel During President Gar- field’s Fatal ness Recalled. _ A HEARING BEFORE THE SENATE COMMITTEE ON DR. BLISS’ CLAIM FOR ADDITIONAL COMPENSA- ‘TION—AFFIDAVIT OF DR. REYBURN—DR. BAXTER CALLED DR. BLISS A LIAR, :: The Senate committee on claims gave a hear- for a Position to Cabinet. FAVORABLE TO ELKINS—AN INDIANA BANKER AND BROKER, No, 1405 F st. n.w. Orders executed on all the Exchanges. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Provisions and Petroleum. PRIVATE WIRES TO NEW YORK AND CHICAGO, On 2 prominent sve. brick, 1 ory PAIRO, te ‘Voukiant: pletely and handsome!y iurnished, vd Open dre-places and Tart R. Attorney, ESTATE os ate On one of our principal cirele 13 rooms, To. heated by furnac in rear. Bt... Stables... Interest allowed on deposits. ing yesterday to Dr. D. W. Bliss, who. was | in tlie Senate afternoon, caused by | blizzard yesterday, a delegation from Arkan- pF a FR wg, EE 85,000-TO LoaN a14-3m be ° physician in charge of President Garfield dur-| Mr, Yest’s motion to put bituminous coal on | sas, a Missourian and s Louisianian, besides heated by new furnace: Vonse hewiy papered at a cost La ed So38 ON REAL ESTATE. ing his long illness. There is an unexpended | the free list. In his position Mr. | Judge Berksire, of West Virginia, of whom ieee, will coumuaiae’3 hotees and Jearviages: $175. Cor F and 19th aw. “$00 yem)__THos. x. waccaman, | JNO W- CORSON. amo. w MacaRTNEY, | balance of about $10,000 ret available for use | Vest said that he made the motion upon his | mention was made yesterday, called upon Gen. ~di0-12¢"Tnquite of M. M, PARKER. 1418 st.” Jeter OREY TO LOAN ON WASHINGTON CITY" eee in recompensing the medical and other attend- | own responsibility and upon his personal con- | Harrison. The Arkansas people were, accord pment estate at S and 6 CORSON & MACARTNEY, ants upon the President that critical | victions of what was it. He did not make | ing to the New York Sun, “Judge Lafayette De Sales a1 per. ipo! during right pt I bet. 1a ee eS Osi Fan pw. LOVER BUILDING, 1919 F ST. ¥. w. period. The doctor argues that he was never | it as a politician or with a view to any local or | Gregg, of Fayetteville, and Henry M. Cooper, Fr ee ei me ad 2 ee _— Properly peid for his services, He was placed | sectional effect. He objected to the existing | of Little Rock. and Powell Clayton was the = r: k. | 18th st, near 000 in sums to suit at 5 per cont. Exchange, Loans. Collections. incharge of the case by Secretary Lincoln, | special exemption which allowed owners of | ™&2 Whose cabinet boom they came to launch. = Si i. tander! ‘Place. and ties listed bets Noch Capitol and’ tse in east: paz 96 ‘Gu bet: dtth and weasdnes pe Ag on fg Pxchanges of New York, Bet | and through all the weary weeks and months | steamers in the coasting-trade rebate of | foe's vlocs it entens seat eae ta eee w10-6t ; 1008 F at. 2.) that Dt Maen, wvedes Pee bee eat piczigeers anil monthly aotes cocured on realestate |S Oeamitr oi of investment egcuritien. Distriet | he gave up his entire time to the treatment of | the duty (75 cents per ton) on all coal im- Arkanaas, but this was the first formal presen- FOE EXE WHOLE OH PART OF, FURNISHED | Other furnished and unfurnished Homes, to which | “of din TY Fie, ae Thsurance the President; he personally washed the Presi | ported into the United States by them for use | tation of his claima Besides their own words onthe” hades BDOMSS PO. Dept. ja10-3 hades ‘ONEY AN, bought and sold.Jy! 's wounds pared their steamers. discrimi- Arkansans brought wri endorsements SS | rons & JONRSTON, Me oe HE RSTATE SECURITY, eserheeentennh ae cad F wee cy eg tee ey Herel of. TE avers | Setion against ths poopie of ths Uetiog Sten | Of Clayton Srem Teste Kanes mea antes ee ee i ave. | 323-3m i Sos Pa ee a. FAMILY SUPPLIES. ishi tice was completely broken up, and| Mr. Aldrich and Sir Allison assured him that | Mr. Cooper said the business interests of Ar 3th cod S; parking front and side. Apply st. 12348 RENT— 7 7 OANS- MONEY TO ‘SUMS TO SUIT : in addition to this he suflered: much from un- | the Proposition in the bill to lay a duty of 75 | kansas are anxious for Clayton. “The uw. ja10-3t St nw 9106.07 ii set 920.30 | J GWYNN NEWSIAR.. VL BS LARD OR o1,; 5 Dor, 1ygge | Just and malicious criticism, and, yet he only | cents per ton would repeal all existing law | cans down oor way are unanimous for’ (lay- ‘st.n.w.. 12r.-100 st, a1 ‘is: Estate for $1; 344 Ibs. Creamery Butter for $1; 5 lbs. | received $6,500 for his services. e amounts | an away wit iscriminati re- said.“ ! he confidence Tints Sata ts 419-1m ‘Auantic Building. Butter i tai Mince Meat for gi Jor: | rca yeu yee burn, Hamilton, and Agnew were | ferred to. e , and his business interests in the 0F-200 §3L E PYLES, 413 Sth at. fad-2w" ywern, , an = . ite, 2. 80 Sodas Mirgered eal 4 io oe fagge.uragunts 8 HE BEST GRANULATED SUGAR, Tic. I IN- far below the value of their services. ‘MR. FAULKNER AGAINST A CHANGE. tt are large » OPesaiched homeer in’ best sendent i 99 8084 apecialty. eer UTHERFORD, Cosette iblic to examine my immengs stock of DR. REYBURN’S AFFIDAVIT. Mr. Faulkner held that the duty should re- MR ELKINS’ CHANCES. rnished houses in best rewdent locations 9 1016.N.C. a19- Ln? 1307 Fst. nw. ‘which I offey at extreme ten, sev th affidavits i . : . F Judge Berkshire talked very freely to all the 100 t0 4,000 per year. EC. 5b 57 Lat. Guaranteed Aret dr'refunded, | Among the many affidavits introduced was | main just.as it is. He was interested in seeing magnersche emia bs 80734 3th MOE 70 1p ay, TermecannTntcet AiR clase or money *| the following, put in by Dr. Bliss to place on | it so. No area of couutry in the United States | COfespondents after his interview with Gem, sd shed; modern improvements: in good tepait: 30 110M 700% 48,000, aS 944 Ia ave. ¥-_ | record the conduet of Dr. Baxter: Ese ant Marpac as te deposits of bi- | Harrison, and said he was very cordially re- *G per tion Apply to W. ©. JOHNSON, 718 B08 ax t Ses: District of Columbid, County of Washingion, | tuminous coal, the coal area of that state cov-| ceived. When asked by the Times man if Gen, ae. —— | Buccessor taker : i area ex imee! vorabl JOR RENT-AT A REDUCED. PRIC E pre 418-1m ea Cee T. B. Towser & Sox. ss.: Personally appeared before me, a notary | ering 16,000 square miles in a total of pressed a y toward LARG: eight brick ; new!: red and painted ; 83:3 mouth: SUI6 Ht at oe Ass. CALWOOD. G3 st. ___ Jal 0-3t* | THREE STORY, 24,645 square miles embraced within her limits. A reduction of the duty on coal could not be Prompted by “‘a spirit of fairness to all inter- Mr. Elkins, he said: “Very favorably, i You know that the families i ‘ONEY TO LOAN ON GOOD REAL ESTATE 3 ‘no! Gen. Harrison and ex-Senator Davis are great security in sums to suit; cl _415-1m o2 ublic in and for the District of Columbia, Robert Reyburn, a practicing physician and surgeon, who deposes and says: That he was, DRY GOODS DEALERS. 1316 7TH ST. N.W., bs JOR RENT—FURN! ED—. ary bay-window, press- inedern improvements ; fo location ; rent, $100. 1907 Pennsylvania ave, n.w. ick dwelling; ten rooms; all a term of two years. WESCOTT & WL ONEY TO LOAN ON APPROVED te security JOHN SHERMAN & OO., 1407 F st. dab oxex TO LOAN ON REAL ESTATE IN SUMS int ; no delay when to suit, at lowest rates terest ; curit: 0. C. N, 303 7th st. nw. egypt is food. "0. OG fag ONEY ADVANCED TO BUY HOMES, OR TO pay off mo : long time and no risk. Mort- ages canceled in the event of death, easy monthly payments, a little nore than, rent will buy a home. or clgeular explanation “n2k-3int SMITH & SIBBALD, 629 F st, MS3E%, TO LOAN IN AMOUNTS TO SUI nv1-3m i est rate on approved urity. “vil-3un GEO. W. LINSINS 19th and H ata, ONEY 10, SM 10, 15 or 20 years. yinents, ou event of death loan is canceled without further pay ment, and property turned over free of incumbrance, ‘he plan of the Ouited Security Life and ‘Trust Co., of Philadelphia, is the best ever devised to enable par: fies to own their homes for the ordinary cost of rent, cireular and GBPlanation. jm _¥. H. SMITH & SON, Agents, 1222 F st. AT NED, IN SUMS TO SUIT. FOR 5, i Tn the e merchetes Pe Eee ae , Attorney at Law, tena r E house; 11 rooms rn improvements; SEE ad Ei \T-922 P ST. N.W., BRICK HOUS! d bath; corner house’: in good order b. R. M. MORRISO! hg F st. 7 AND 49 F ST. N. W. and Pension offices, each house coi chen and dining ‘room, parlo bed rooms, bath room, inguire LEON TOBRIN. that. 40 35th st. n.w., Lir, Suit of three de- eat and elevator ‘The above houses can be examined THOMAS J. = a 0] Glover Building, 14 sirable Office Rooms; HED—1209 O ST. N. W. -room house, with try, closets and all conven- ill be rented completely furnished by the if taken at once, for only HN SHERMAN & CO., 1407 F st. FS RENT—FURNISI ‘This comfortable 12. n.w., 12r., mod. imps. ie Fear 1533 13th . 3E0) NT—74 LST. NW. water rent paid by owner. ner Ist and H sts. u.w. NT—DESIRABLE BRICK HOUSE. 2 st. n.w.; 11 rooms and bath: all modern improve. at drug store, 2d and D sts. Inquii 318 Corcoran st. Jas-5 T—BY RK. O. HOLTZMAN, usurance Broker, 10th and F sts. La Pierre Hotel, 19th near 21st st., Sr... ted 941 F, 3d oor, 5 front re. N, ted by steam ...... Suskect The above is only a portion of the property on my Books. For full list call at office for bulletin issued o& the Ist and 15th. THOS. E. AM. ‘T — CONVENIFNTLY LOCATED 12- ick dwelling; northwest section, at reduced & RUTHERFORD, 1307 F st. nw. ‘EW HAMPSHIRE AVE. N. W., house, G rooms and ba ¥ #18 per month. THOS. E. mone SESS ‘ QR RENT—VERY COMFORTABLE NEW SIX Toom houses, near Electric railway; 1516, ONE TOUS nom 8500 UPW " at THE LOWEST HATES OF INTECEST AND COMMISSION ON REAL ESTATE IN THIS DISTRICT. KR. O. HOLTZMAN, Corner 10th and F sts. n.w. ONEY TO LOAN In sums to suit, at lowest rates on approved real je security. FITCH, FOX & ‘BROWS, 020 1427 Pennsylvania ave. MOR Towers RATES OF INTEREST ON REAL E: ESTATE SECURITY. THOS. J. FISHE _8e5 Mo%¥ TO 28. N DANENHOWE! ap24 Successor to DANENHOWER & SON, 1115 F st. PERSONAL WILLL GEO.W, Private Detectiy promptly attended to and si ‘open all hours, ic! 3 ney. Communic: ictly confidential. on ‘W. WILLIAMS, Manager, 926 F n.w. co 6% ALYDORA,” THE ONLY EFFECTIVE PREPA- ration for developing the bust. Attapuated and undeveloped forms made plump and beaudfal. Never fails. Used externally. No instruments. Chatige per ceptible in a week, MME. WILBUR, Inventor and Sole janufacturer, 703 15th n.w. __ d31-Im* IV ORCES—A. GOODRIC ‘ORNEY-AT-LA 124 Dearborn st., Chic vice free: twent; one years’ experience; business quietly transacted. Be. MIVIL - SERVICE EXAMINATION QUESTIONS and answers. Hend 10c, ta a27-1m* "Southwest cor. 8th: Where first-class Second-Hana an sold at respectable prices. Address or callat G19 D st Dw. my1-9m ___ WOOD AND COAL MX BETAIL PRICES FOR COAL AND WOOD, a gael ed, are ust Fug, 8. & 8. Pine Wood, per cord., "Oak Wood, Special prices for large ordi Pa, av. Wa 1020 Lath stats DES FOLLOWING PRICES FOR CASH: ‘Ss Cosrd nae RKLAND COAL, Call for prices. CHEST STOVE AN x SHAMOKIN, EGG, 5 8 We guarantee CLEAN COAL s the ton. KEN Office, No. R.R. Yard, Cor. Delaware ave. aud Telephone Connection. — ee Coxe: JOHNSON BROTHERS, Wharves and Rail yards, 12th & Water sts. Southwest. Offices: Coat: 1515 7th st. n. w. Bdand K st. n. w. 1740 Pa. ave. n. w. 1112 9th st. nw. 413 10th at. n. w. Exclusive agents in the District for the sale of some of the best coul mined. Supply more families than any retail yard in the United States. HONEST MEASURE, FAIR DEALING, PROMPT DELIVERIES AND REASONABLE PRICES have made our business a success. n2k LADIES’ GOODS. og ‘ork, Wor e the pat 1 Washington ladies. Moderat perfect ‘ft. fe Prices and’ per Cutting and basting a specialty. 7 Cat, ne. dl7-4w* Miss J. Boscess MODEL RIDING HABITS EVENING AND RECEPTION COSTUMES ja5-2w* 1202 F st. n. w. Are pushing their sale of Dry Goods with ‘a good deal ofenergy and activity, and say there is no humbug about prices being reduced ; for example: Androscoggin Bleach Cotton, yard wide, 734 cts. Fruit of the Loom Cotton, yard wide, 83¢ cts, Pillow-case Cotton, 114 yards wide, 8 cts. Brocade Velveteen, worth 50 cts., reduced to 25 cts. Ladies’ Muffs, 39 cts. Dress Flannel, in all shades (all wool), 19 cts. Extra Large White Blankets, Grecian border, worth 5, reduced to $3.99, nd Wide Cashmere, all shades, 21 cts, Gents’ Laundried Shirts, 45 cts, Good Dark Calico, 4 cts. Large line Bleached and Unbleached Table Linens at cost. Ja4-1m NY, CHILD'S SUIT OR OVERCOAT IN OUR Store we sell you at 50 cents on the dollar. VERPOOL LONDON AND'LI' CLOTHING Co. né-3m 7th and Gsts Dress Scrrs FOR HIRE, J28-2m_ 414 9TH ST. N.W. UR $7, $8, AND $10 SUITS BEAT ANYTHING ever offered at those prices. Come and look at them. THE LONDON AND LIVERPOOL CLOTH- ING CO, 7th and G sis, n6-3m QYERCOATS WE SOLD AT $10, #12, $14, 816, 2 POMaa sell you now at 85, #6, a7. and 8s. THE LONDON AXD Liv: iL’ CLOTHING CO, n6-3m ‘7th and G sts. INEBRIATE ASYLUMS. They Must Take the Places of Jails and Station Houses. Dr. T. D, Crothers, of Hartford, Conn., in an address on “Inebriate Asylums and Their Work,” delivered at Toronto, Canada, draws the following conclusions as being supported by the latest teachings of science and experi- ence: 1, Inebriate hospitals must take the place of the jails and station houses. Such places are dangerous in their mental and physical surroundings, by intensifying the degeneration and removing the patient be- yond hope of recovery. They are in many cases literal training stations for mustering in armies of chronic maniacs that never desert or leave the ranks until crushed ont for- ever. 2. Inebriate hospitals should receive the incurable inebriates and make them self-sup- porting and build them up physically and men- ly. They would relieve the taxpayer and re- lieve society of untold burdens of sorrow and misery. 3. Inebriate hospitals should receive the recent cases, and place them in the highest conditions of enforced health and vigor, and thus return a iarge number to health and s0- briety again. 4. Inebriate hospitals can and should be eeteels eee when once estab- lished. They should be managed on scientific business principles, like military training schools. 5. Inebriate hospitals should be built from the money raised by taxes on the sale of spirits on the principle that every business should be obliged to provide for the accidenta which grow out of it. 6, These are the realities Which every inebriate hospital is approaching, and which all experience points out as practi_ cal and literal in the near future. 7. The ine- briate hospitals of to-day are only in the in- fancy of their work, contending with great op- sition and prejudice, misunderstood, con- lemned and working against innumerable ob- stacles. 8. The work of the present inebriate hospitals, notwithstanding all the difficulties and imperfections, has the grandest promise for the future, and encouragement for fur- ther effort in this field, along the line of scientific research. 9, There is an in- tense personality in inebriate hospitalg to each one of us. ey may bring salvation and restoration to some one near and dear, They may be fountains of healing whose influence shall cross and influence ouppathway in many ways. 10. Inebriate hospitals and their work is the great new land which only a few settlers have reached. = are calling to us to come up and occupy, and thus help the race on in the great march from the lower to the higher. — —+oe——_—_____ School Examinations. From Popular Science Monthly. It cannot be too often insisted on that exam- ination is a good educational servant, but a bad master. It is a useful instrument in the hand of a teacher to test his own work, and to know how far his pupils have followed and profited by his teachéng. But it necessarily exerts a fatal influence whenever it is made of such im- portance that teachers simply conform to an external standard, lose faith in themselv. sink into the position of their own text-book: and give but little of their own personality to their work, It is true that it is necessary to test the work of teachers; but it is not neces- sary for the purpose of doing so to take the whole soul out of teaching. If examinations by selection, one of the surgeons in tem] service with the late James A. Garfield, Presi- dent of the United States, and was one of the permanent counsel of the President until the arrival at Elberon, September 6, 1881. That soon after the consultation on the morning of July 3, he was advised that the President —— Dr. Bliss to take charge of his case, and that Mrs, Garfield we her cheerful acquiescence. That the President had re- quested Dr. Bliss to select his permanent coun- sel. That in view of this request he had selected Surgeon-General Barnes, U. 8. A.; Surgeon J. J. Woodward, U. 8. A., and myself such counsel, and that he was commissioned by the President and Mrs. Garfield to thank the corps of volunteer surgeons for their kind and Medes assistance in conducting the case thus far. Dr. Bliss requested that I remain and assist him as might be necessary until Gen. Barnes and Dr, Woodward were notified of their selec- tion and reported for duty, when we would hold a consultation and arrange definite plans for the future. Dr. Bliss then requested me to take a seat by the table and write, at his dic- tation, the form of a letter to be copied and sent to each of the corps of volunteer physi- cians. thanking them in the name of President and Mrs. Garfield for their valuable services. Dr. Bliss took a recumbent ition upon the sofa in the room, and about this time Dr. J. H. Baxter, the medical purveyor of the army, ap- peared at the door. Dr. Bliss greeted him pleasantly and requested him to take a seat, which he did, at the foot of the sofa upon which the doctor was lying. Dr. Baxter then spoke to Dr. Bliss as follows: “Bliss, I want to see the President.” Dr. Bliss exhibited some surprise at such an unusual and unprofessional request, and re- plied to Dr. Baxter as follows: ‘Why, doctor, it would not be Soe! for me to take you to the bedside of the -esdent at this time; he has been vomiting as often as every thirty minutes during the night, and has just gone through the fatigues of a consultation and dressing of the wound, and has fallen asleep.” Dr. Baxter replied: “He is my patient and has been for five years.” Dr. Bliss replied: ‘‘He may have been your patient for ten years for all I know, but he certainly is not your patient this morning. The President has requested me to take professional charge of his case, the counsel are selected, and you are not of the number; and I must say, doctor, that this is the most extraordinary con- duct I ever witnessed by a physician who makes pretense of being a gentleman, and I must further say your conduct is entirely in keeping with your character and general repu- tation; it is well known among the faculty here that you always gladly offer your professional services gratuitously to any official who will accept them, and you bear the unenviable rep- utation of being a notorious lobbyist whenever and wherever you can influence your own preferment.” To this Dr. Baxter sai “You lie.” Dr. Bliss, suddenly rising to his feet, said in reply: You are no gentleman to make such bandying remarks in a place like this, where Iam unable to reply as I should be gladto do,” Dr. Baxter was then requested to leave the house, which he did immediately. Roser Reysurs, M. D. District of Columbia, ss.: Subscribed and sworn before me this 24th day of July, A. D. 1888. G. W. Batiocu. A true copy: Notary Public, DR. BLISS’ STATEMENT. Dr. Bliss also made the following statement to the committeé in relation to the wound which caused the death of President Garfield. Senator Spooner asked: ‘You said something about the immediate cause of President Gartield’s death being an aneurism?” A.—‘Yes, sir, a traumatic aneurism. The ball went in very singularly, about 2 inches to the right of the spine, broke the eleventh rib, turned over, and went down and struck the twelfth rib with sufficient force to fracture it, and then went into the twelfth lumbar vertebra so as to break it all to pieces in the center: passed through that vertebra, carrying frag- ments of bone over on to the left side, and there entting the splenic artery that is as large as that (indicating the end of a penkeldec), very near the aorta, so that it bled a great deal, and the wonder is that he had not bled to death immediately, but the fact that he was shot so— he did almost die, and had gasping respiration for hours—that very fact let him down so the circulation was so feeble that the blood formed a clot around and protected that fractured por- tion, so that finally, when he did get reaction, it was retained until after sceptic trouble was 80 severe that it finally burst. By Mr. Hoar—*Do you think that under any circumstances, or knowledge of his injury, it would have been curable?” A.—‘‘No, sir; it was absolutely fatal. There were three conditions of that injury, either one of which would have proved fatal.” Let me tell you: The vertebra was all crushed to pieces by this ball going through it, to say nothing about ests.” None of benefits of a reduction would reach the people of the interior, and the only way in which fuel would be cheapened for those who live on the seaboard would be by their -hasing the coal which would come in free of duty; coal which was bi ht either as ballast or at ridiculously low freight rates. In opposing the amendment of the Senator from Missouri, Mr. Faulkner claimed to be standing on firm, solid democratic doctrine. ‘MB, GORMAN OPPOSES THE AMENDMENT. Mr. Gorman opposed Mr. Vest’s amendment. The Senator from Missouri had, he said, gone beyond nearly everybody on the democratic side of the chamber. To put coal on the free list would be to strike a blow at a it eastern industry, and Mr. Vest well knew that when the coal reached his own state and Illinois and In- diana, where there are immense deposits of it, the cost of transportation by rail would pre- vent English pon peng hurting their interests, while it would seriously impair, if not destroy, the interest east of the Ohio river. Neither the democratic party nor any other party that openly advocated the putting of coal on the free list could maintain its supremacy in the great coal-producing states on the Atlantic seaboard. In conclusion Mr. Gorman said: “There never was a democratic statesman; there never has been a President elected by the democratic party, or a Secretary of the Treas- ury, or a committee of either branch of Con- ress that was controlled by democrats, know- ing that revenue must be raised from the tariff, who ever dreamed of putting coal on the free list. My friend wishes to reverse ail prece- dents. No, Mr. President, the democratic party is not a free-trade party.” MR. VEST SAID IT WAS TOO LATE FOR DEMOCRATS TO CHANGE FRONT. Mr. Vest said, in reply, the democrat who flinches now in the condition of the par- ties from the broad principle that this system of unlimited taxation is ning, "ec up his po- sition and abandons his flag. He cannot justify himself before the country. He surrenders at once every argument that’ we made in the last canvass, and upon which we must stand in the future whether we are willing or not. It is too late, Mr. President, to change front.” This statement of Mr. Vest’s was greeted with laughter by republicans, The amendment was defeated—31 to 11. The democrats who voted against it were Messrs, Bate, Brown, Daniel, Faulkner, Gorman, Payne, —_ Turpie, Voorhees, and Wilson, of Mary- Jan A Boy Wirn a _ Loapep Revorver.—This morning in the Police Court John Stewart and Wilson Holland, colored, aged respectively six- teen and fourteen years, were charged with being suspicious persons and Holland was also charged with carrying a loaded revolver. The boys were on 7th street yesterday and Holland went in a store and offered a vise for sale. The store-keeper suspected that the article was stolen and on his complaint Officer Harding arrested them. When questioned by Judge Miller the boy said that he loaded the revolver because he wanted to sell it. When the police- man arrested him he said he Pe the weapon in his boot leg because he did not want the oliceman to find it. Judge Miller said it was Para to tell what was going to become of the community when oak boys went about armed with loaded revolvers. The only thing that would do him any good would be to send him to the penitentiary for life. Sending him to the workhouse would only restrain him for the time he is there. He was given the extent of the law, bonds or 90 days, as a suspicious per- son, and $50 or 90 days for carrying the loaded revolver. a <ooe Catuotic Kxicuts or Amenica.—Carroll Branch No. 224, Catholic Knights of America, has elected officers for the year, as follows: President, Frank N. Devereux; vice-prest., Edward Voigt; rec. sec., John B. Murray; finan- cial sec., Charles L. Clarke; treasure! Hannan; sergeant-at-arms, Joseph E. Casey; sontinel, James Fitzpatrick; trustee, James Lackey; delegate to state council. John B. Mur- ray; spiritual director, Rev. Father J. A. Wal- ter. a ees He Dip Nor Live Taere.—Mr. John A. Graves states that the publications about the Daniels Garfield hospital case were incorrect in that they give Daniels’ residence at his house, He never boarded there, as his home was at the Metropolitan club.’ When under the influence of the drug he came to his (Graves’) house and was cared for until he could be persuaded to go to the hospital, the club having made arrangements for his going there. When he was released by the i surgeons he came back. To-day he left with his father for Ohio. oe Rospenies Rerortep.—J. 8. Johnson, No. 321 Missouri avenue, reports that he lostor had stolen from him on the street last evening a pocketbook containing $800 worth of promis- sory notes and $13 in cash.—Wm. McAllister friends, and the ladies of the families visit to and fro. After I had shown Mr. Harrison what astrong backing Mr. Elkins had in West Vir- ginia, and he had ascertained the names and sentiments of the prominent republicans in whose behalf I came to advocate the placing of Mr. Elkins in the cabinet, Gen. Harrison said: ‘Judge, y eg lt given me a great deal of light on the situation in West Virginia, When you get home go to work and get together all the S and petitions you can in favor of Mr. ins, and have them sent to me and J will con- sider them.’” “Did you get any idea while you were at Gen. Harrison's as to Mr. Blaine's going into the cabinet?” “Well, Iam satisfied that Gen. Harrison is greatly perplexed about Mr. Blaine, I don't think he has made up his mind what to do about it yet.” ABOUT MR. BLAINE, The World correspondent quotes ex-Congrese- man John E. Lamb as saying, when asked if he believed Mr. Blaine would be in the next cab- inet: “Yes, I believe Mr. Blaine will be in the cabinet, and my reason may seem trivial. I think be will be in the cabinet because he wants to be there. He told me himself it was the source of the ee regret to him that he was forced to surrender the duties of premier- ship before his term was completed. I know that he would rather be Secretary of State than President, and his wife would prefer it, too, He has told me so.” The correspondent continues: “This state- ment predicts what Indianians in the main be- lieve—that Mr. Blaine, if he goes into the eab- inet, will go with the firm intention of having his reach on the administration. It makes @ muss, in or out. Gen. Harrison's term, so far as Gen. Harrison is concerned, will have self- confidence for a keynote, and if he appoints Mr. Blaine it will be because be thinks he can overshadow Blaine in the administration. If he omits him it will be because he believes he can so successfully conduct the office without him that at the end of four years ular sentiment will say, a greater ne is here. YOR HENDERSON AND MAHONE. A. B. Crawford, of Springfield, one of the young republicans of the state, called in behalf of John B. Henderson, whom he said Missouri would be proud to have in the cabi- net. The oe ~ ae caucus of North Carolina night adopted a resolution which meets the approval of leading republicans in the state. It is as follows: “Hesolved, That the republicans of North Carolina believe that the south proper, as distinguished from the border states, which in their interests, their associ- ations, and their history, bel to the north rather than to the south, is entitled to a repre- sentation in the cabinet of President weer | and for this place we present Wm. Mahone, Virginia, as the mane whose national reputa- tion, great services, and splendid achievements ‘him as the foremost of southern states- men.” A SOUTHERN POLICY. Mr. H. C. Miner, a Louisiana planter, was another caller on Gen. Harrison. The Sun man says he denied “that the visit had any- thing todo with the cabinet. In fact he says he don't think there will be any southern man in the cabinet. He does, however, admit a lively contest on the question of a southern pol for the next inistration, and on that subject he talked with Gen. Harrison. Col. Miner's idea is « policy that will boom manufacturing and agriculture all through that section of the country and wipe out race problem. GEN. HARRISON'S RELIGIOUS LIFE. Pastor Haines, of Gen. Harrison's church, has written an article published in the current Paragraphs from which are interesting: ich are in’ : gt vo is emphatically an anti-sa- loon republican. In regard to the form in which issue has been joined in this «tate his trumpet has given no uncertain sound. He has daclared strongly for local option and in- creased restriction to the extent to which pub- lic sentiment can secure and maintain them.” “I sat in his office the day he received the nomination to the idency with a few gen- tiemen while the bulletins were bei in one after another, cancunciag, the five minutes after they were cast in the Chi- cago convention. The calmest person in that little group was the one most interested in the result. cr of the seventh ballot the word — “Cali! 14 oe Mrgene for Harrison,’ a friend sitting next to the general turned to him and said excitedly: ‘General, i w receive the you feel?’ ination. How do y “He answered in his quiet, deliberate way: ‘Well, if that does settle it, I feel more con- cerned than I did the other day, when thought I was beaten.” “Agai ney of certain friends he are to be defended on the ground that they reports that his store, No. 518 C street north- i the ribs. It went through the of the ver- i in his refusual to take any 4522 North Capitol st. ts desirable tenants, ot Ow at ein? | a anise — 1" -yOu—WisE A test the efficiency of teachers, then we reply | tebra, fracturing it all t0 pieces, and passing | (itt, Was entered last night and robbed of two | Sterns which would place him in the position of rent. H. L. RUST, 1008 F st. n. tubes, and stylish-fitting waist, buy White's Glove-t that other and better ways of doing this are to | through carried all this debris over into the reports the theft of an overcoat and pair of weeeker after the nomination to the office of YR RENT—BEAUTIFULLY-FU » ME- ncen, Wace concreted yard and | Ready-cut Waist Lin: ‘They are perfect in e be found, and must be found. We admit quite | left side. That would have caused fatal result i dium-sized new House, centrally located. © $100 eae at vhit President, and received that nomination, as I aS dail the Palais Hoyal 4 gloves, —Rachael Williams reports the larceny i month, by the year; to private family without chil- White's 1110 F Sa5-ct" | frankly that they can only be found and pur. White's, 1110 F st. n.w. Es * down the muscle and formed an abscess. Then ro adi nanny the injury of the splenic artery was so large that it could not have re nently, He would have Te Connon Civspine Case.—The relatives of Joseph Connor, who was clubbed by Po- liceman Branson, as described in Saturday's Sra, state that Connor forfeited the spared in this great matter we had better at once oreo the hope of attaining any moral and intellectual results of real value from what we are doing. in the end. He would have had pus forming | of three shirts and a cloak.—Clayt on | K20w from unquestioned authority, absolute , ‘Star of. | _@20-1m = 4 INGHAM, | Sted. at the price of some trouble and experi- | down and coming out below. Any one of these ii is ‘unp! I will not e to draw ee ee ree Fos rE (PSE MISSES CUNBINGEAD,, ment on the part of both parents and those re- | fragments of bone would have been a nucleus i acti nol bis page on over-/ aS weil that conceals the home life of Gen, OR RENT—509 6TH 8" v.; THIRTEEN is 2. Dapost Circle. reioo thee z st... 923 sponsible for the conduct of teaching; but if | fora pus cavity, and that would have followed A aahioioh Harrison and his family, yet I feel free to Fooms: all mode: ts, and in perfect | 1614-1616 R. I ave, Hep iobs 1310 8¢ . trouble and thought and experiment are to be repair; rent # a. otto 1 that it is a Christian American home of 00 a88 noblest 83. Muz M. J. Passos, 1229 F st. n.w. (Mrs. Harrison's), FINE FRENCH HAIR GOOD E ired itself perma- ied of that. So there i e were three reasons, any one of which wot because he was so badly clubbed b; century at NISHED. Also, rs oe BRITE have produced death. that he was unabl move in utterance of OR RENT—ONE SQUARE NORTH OF DUPONT . M, near Conn.jave... $1. A special sefection in SHELL, AMBER AND DULL His Corset Strings Broke. New, there is another fact I would like to t he le even to ‘the Cirele, 10-room house; $60 per month. JET ORNAMENTS, | SHAMPOOIXG, . doctor states that the right arm was fractured at the elbow-joint, and that he was bad); jured about the head. They say that it iece of brutality on the of the Doct drenken man until he became ‘ious and then bring in the lame excuse resisted. From the New York Star, A young man wearing the full dress uniform of the Knights of St. George attracted much attention from the passengers in a Third ave- nue “L” train Thursday evening. I: was quite evident that he felt very proud of his glittering ry Bangs Shi Tey 188 GAUTIER HAS RETURNED FROM NEW York, and informs her customers and the public \t ¢ Directoire Empire Gowns and IM. OF LEATHER ‘kets. Letter Holders, Brackets, &c. Jap- is, Fans, &c. Great variety of Scrap les for Pais Bi call your attention to: To follow that ball from the point of impact into the place where it was rrested, behind the spleen, we would have go through the vertebra, of course. it Cir. 10th...120 100 th.100 FITCH, FOX & BROWN, 1437 Penn. ave. nw. W. OPPOSITE PEN- ih; large parlor, id water; furnace Sy st. new. Ja W.-MODERN IM- ‘she ‘ailor-made Suits. 7: AVORS FOR THE GERMA. ‘Wall Poe! FE, BENT OFURNISHED, jew Hain} 16 rooms. 3.00 00 00 ‘ing, Birthday Cards, | ¢paulets and tight-fitting tunic. He sat in a Mme. Ayer, the nt 09 | Sames,Gold Paint. J. JAY GOULD, 421 th st, 013-3mi | painfully rigid position. bolt upright. One of of L 8. Ager & vements. ce rooms, 8, 00 OUS DESTRO’ 5 a party of three gentlemen, seated near, ex- skirt, with FiGEE & LIEBERMA’ N, 1303 Fet,, | 911 18th st. from Jan 1. nicely retitted. 33 Strcsevby cles needle qrecesa, endoraed BF clkimed audibly: a i ‘ ate Bo Res c ERAL HANDSOME | 2 rooms, 4th floor, Everett Flats, HI st. fhis 2 ee Pears Dractss ‘Playing soldier out of the ranks,” faille is peenie met | | Wee sce NockOdim* “MNS Dic CABMEEL 153'G Stee” | “Well, that is the worst case of « fellow be- brocade i northeast; two lines cars: rent | 1500 1:ith st a. oleae i to desirable tenants, Also. 229 New Jer- + U8 Fo i would hat and he would have died in a minute, id die finally, and then, of course, we would ANDI: lor-made Gor Vo Vii Street Costumes, etc. stack on his shape that I ever saw,” said . the train reached the 9th-street station and ith stable, season. Perfect i, st $ “on New York ave. ea gESSS8 if dic - aa — town Helghts, by yr. 1,500. juired. Measonable have been held responsible for his death.” OR REN 10M BRICK HOUSE,WITH MOD. |" W. ve man holes lor, New York, Wi the car gave a sudden lurch and the young ve Fine ag ghosn'on arplickeon "BEALL, BROWN b COoaBst Buttonhsles made.” ni3-su* | man@ the unifosm was thrown forward inte EEE ee GOEL — st. - fil 1 12th st. reasonable to a Apply © 0UK F. GREER, 1616 Oe. ai-im the lap of a fat woman who sat ina seat di- = te, | His brase-butioned coat, was very snug about waist before the acciden but if suddenly expanded. Something had eat tage there was no rent in the gar- ment “Tighten your corset unkindly remarked one of the party near me. The man blushed crimson, while broad smiles yed over the faces of the ers. He got out at 9th street and waited for another train, Seen Seeere bet Va., was nearly destroyed rT ap of Ottawa, severe and 17th, with a twenty- SE THE BEST. MANU- the Shield Co., Brooklyn, N Brooklyn = in the Gaited ING AND DRY CLEAN- Ping Grins MENT. 180 Raw York Bo TE a aS ‘The Situation in West Virginia. A VICTORY FOR THE REPUBLICANS IX COURT. Judge Guthrie has decided to ignore the injunction of Judge Campbell prohibit- Bw. Fee ZEN T HANDSOME NEW BAY-WINDOW house: 10 rooms and bath ; all conveniences: 1:87 th st. nw.: desirable neighborhood. of FRANK P. BROWNING, Fe RENT—708 STH 5T. Brick i Fat 7 2 | yuire h wt. nw. ‘Im W.; THREE-STORY nodern improvements: Ki th st. new. Pea to | | i ts Hi young man,” gentlemen of fs i ae OE ER i N SCHER’S DRY CLEANING ESTAB- Alii NT AND byt Woks vou at, n.W. jes" annd Gents’ 168 of all cleaned and Dyed without being ripped. Ladies’ Evening Dresses a 5 perience, Prices mi ‘Goods calied for and delivered. al4 LL-WOOL GARMENTS, MADE RIPPED — Aga a feud 1 mourning feed ‘zat alt 906 G st. n.1 Te, with cellar) 704 K. 1 av. n.w., 6.16.50) NEW watex RESORT. THE PRINCESS ANNE, e statement VIRG! fe and snow-storm which end Wie ae OR INIA BEACH, VA. HOUSEFURNISHINGS, block all railways east of Chicago, to be fol- ‘cabinet FO" BENT—ONFURNIsHED. tausderes ht metals EE p lowed with the coldest weather of ‘the cen- BBs nc}. Vt. miles east of Norfolk, Va, Within easy access of Old aah. Cir., 12 re. Point Comfort and Fortress Monroe, and on direct line See Rete A primeval pine forest of mt with beautiful Sih Per hae no superior Fey J aT , address, . We gs) Tey

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