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ae: a * THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON AUSIRIA’S AFFLICTION. Profound Sorrow Caused by the Death of the Crown Prince. SENSATIONAL RUMORS AS TO THE CAUSE OF IT— ALARM IN VIENNA-—COMPLICATIONS REGARDING ‘THE SUCCESSION— EFFECT OF THE NEWS AT OTHER COURTS—THE PRINCE'S UNHAPPY MARRIAGE. ‘The death of Crown Prince Rudolf, of Aus- tria, has caused a profound sensation through- at Europe. The crown prince on Monday went on a shooting excursion to Meyerling, near Baden, about twelve miles from Vienna, a by a party of friends, including » Philip, of Coburg, and Count Hoyos. The crown prince felt somewhat indisposed yesterday, and therofore excused himself from attending the family dinner party at the Hof- burg. When the shooting guests assembled yesterday morning the crown prince did not appear. Immediate inquiries were made, and the gnests were overcome by the terrible news that the crown prince was dead from a stroke of apoplexy. An official inquiry established the fact that the crown prince expired between the hours of seven and eight Wednesday morn- ing. It is said that on Tuesday evening he had @ severe shivering fit. He suffered of late years with rheumatism of the joints. WHEN THE FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT of the death of the crown prince was made in Vienna yesterday, sensational rumors at once started tothe effect that he had been killed while shooting. Another report said he had been murdered by a peasant. The official an- mouncement that ay op was the cause of death modified the alarm of the public. Large crowds traversed the main streets, and assem- bled in gronps discussing the event. The bourse was immediately closed, and the com- mittee decided to keep it closed until Friday. ‘The reichsrath also adjourned amid great ex- citement. The theaters and places of amuse- ment gave no performances last night. Almost every public body was hastily con- yoked, and resolutions expressing sor- row at the death of the crown prince. Crowds of persons dressed in black gathered about the palace to watch the arrivals of dis- bem poe persons to condole with the impe- rial family. . The papal nuncio and the members of the foreign diplomatic corps visited Count Kalnoky and condoled with a i their = spective soverei . Telegrams o' mpathy din from ‘all parts of the kingdom and the eapitals of Europe, the former all telling of the sorrow aroused by the sad event. The emperor and empress were to have gone to Pesth yesterday, but the visit was, of course, abandoned. EXPRESSIONS OF SORROW. All the Vienna papers express the profound- est sorrow at the death of the crown prince, and deplore the sad blow which it inflicts on the hopes of the empire. Emperor William was agitated by the news of the death of the Austrian crown prince. He drove to the residence of Count Szechenyi, the Austrian ambassador at Berlin, and remained there half an hour. He then telegraphed to Prince Henry at Kiel, mforming him that Prince Rudolf died of apoplexy of the heart. The queen of Belgium wept on hearing the news ad the death of the crown prince. and sent a telegram of condolence to her daughter. The Austrian embassy in London has re- ceived only the bare announcement of the death of Crown Prince Rudolf. The queen and the Prince of Wales have sent telegrams of condolence to Vienna. The Prince of Wales and probably the Duke of Edinburg will attend the funeral. A grand ball at Sofia, at which Prince Ferdi- nand and Princess Clementine had intended to be present, was given up, owing to the news of Prince Rudolf's death. The students at Pesth. upon learning of the | crown prince's death, voluntarily stopped their demonstrations against Her von Tisza, and the troops that had been called out to maintain order returned to their barracks. A PREMONITION. A Vienna dispatch to the London Daily News says Crown Prince Rudolf and Count Hoyos stayed up for several hours after midnight Tuesday night and retired in very good spirits. Yesterday morning the door of the crown rince’s room was found to be fastened and it| ad to be forcedopen. It is stated that latterly the crown prince had been sometimes gay and sometimes dejected. When spoken to about | the future of Austria he would smile sadly and | say: “You will see. Iwill not live as long as that.” He worked very hard in literature. and | read every new book, besides perusing daily a large number of h and foreign papers. Last Christmas he his mother thirty au- tograph letters of Heine. her favorite poet. | He never tired of sport of any kind, and was | careless of his health. One of his chief char- | acteristics, besides his kindness @ad generosity, was his love for his father. He used to say “I think it the greatest luck to possess a father to whom I can look up to with pride and love.” THE CAREER OF THE DEAD PRINC | Rudolf Franz Carl Joseph. crown prince of | Austria and prince royal of Hungary and Bohe- | mia, was born August 21, 1853 He was the | second child of his parents, his eldest sister, | Gisela, the wife of Prince Leopold, regent of Bavaria, having been born in Saly, 1836. On the 24th of June, 1877, he was officially pro- | claimed to be of age, an event which was at-| tended by great national rejoicings, and since | that time he has taken a prominent part in public celebrations of various kinds, and has assisted his father in much of the routine busi- ness of the state. He entered the Austrian army on the 23d of July, 1378, and in Septem- ber, 1880, became a major-general. It was not, however, in his military capacity that he was best known to the general public. being a man of very different general di pee ion from the present German emperor, who is six months | Laer than he was. From his earliest days is serious inclinations ran in the direction of science and literature, while in his periods of relaxation he devoted himself with great en- to sport of all kinds, especially hunting and shooting. LIKE ALL AUSTRIAN PRINCES, he received an excellent education and is said to have displayed especial apitude as a linguist. acquiring new tongues and dialects with great facility. His devotion to his studies may have been the cause, in part. of that delicate appear- ence which created some anxiety concerning his health during his earlier years, but, upon reaching manhood, he displayed abundant vitality ‘and energy, although his figure was tall and slight. His freedom from al! minor | ills of the flesh was, indeed, often a subject of comment. There seems to be no doubt that he was really ® young man of good abilities, after all al- lowance has been made for the exaggerated | admiration which is commonly expressed for the quahties and achievements of royal per- sovages. Itis certain that he found peculiar | pleasure in the companionship of men dis- tinguished for their .iterary and scientific at- tainments. One of bis most intimate personal friends was Dr. Alfred Brehm. the noted writer | ‘upon ornithology, and it is said that the prefer- ence which he exhibited for his society was the cause of s great deal of heartburning in the us circles of the court. ‘The Austro-| jungarian Monarchie in Word and Picture.” in | sixteen volumes, which he edited personally, is | a valuable work, both for its contents, and the | manner of its execution, and is a proof at once of bis industry and Suod taste. His life and | pursuits won for him the general reputation of S broad-minded man of medern ideas, and his nal popularity, both with the masses and This own cocial sphere, was indisputable. RUDOLF WAS MARRIED IN VIENNA on the 10th of May, 1881, to the Archduchess Stephanie Clotilde Louise Hermine Marie Charlotte, duchess of Saxe, princess of Saxe- | and Gotha, daughter of Leopold II, | king of the Belgians, The only offspring of this union is little girl, the Princess Eliza- beth, who was born on the 2d of September. 1883, and is therefore now in her sixth year. The marriage has not proved happy. It is tolerably certain that the royal pair were not | well mated and that the princess believed her- | self to be greatly neglected. She stood his shortcomings as long as she could. but in August, 1887, she created a pro- found sensation by suddenly taking her de- a from Ischl, without taking leave of her usband or of any member of his family, and without any previous announcement of her in- tention. She passed several weeks in the Island of Jersey, and then joined her own family in Belgium. The incident forcibly re- called E th’s simi! urse How bitter the nities to which the eb ming princees bed besa y may be gathered coon So lesheeaaseoe queen i eemperor and of Austria, of the Prince of Wales, of her sister, Princess to alter failure of the crown princess to provide'a male heir to the imperi: rani, The Salic law pre- vails in Austria,but not in Hungary.and in con- uence the dynastic bonds of the two countries will be separated on the death of Emporor Francis Joseph, and Hungary become an independent kingdom under the little five- year-old Archduchess Elizabeth. The Aus- trian crown will be inherited by the Archduke Carl Ludwig, second brother of Francis Joseph, and in the event of his death by his his son, Archduke Otto, In the event of the demise of Rudolf's little daughter the Hungarian crown devolves on the emperor's youngest danghter, the accom- plished Princess Valerie, who was formally be- ‘hrothed on last Christmas eve to the Archduke Francis Salvator, second son of the Archduke Carl Salvator, and a member of the Tuscan branch of the house of ee ego This princess was once before betrothed to Prince Alphonse of Portugal, but she broke off the engagement and declared her intention of never marrying, in consequence of the discovery that she was afflicted in a terrible manner with epilepsy, that hereditary curse of the Hapsb: Archduke Otto, who is in the direct line of suc- cession to the Austrian crown, has the reputa- tion of being the most unpopular and offensive of the ninety-eight archdukes and archduch- esses composing the imperial family of Haps- burg, and has been behaving himself in suc! scandalous manner since his marriage two or three years ago to the Princess Josepha of Saxony that most people believe him to be half insane. The Archduke Otto has one elder brother, Francis. who some years ago con- tracted a morganatic marriage with the Count- ess L. But he can scarcely be regarded as being in the line of succession, as epilepsy has reduced him to such a state of dementia that it has been found necessary to place him under medical restraint. eee —___ Celery to Cure Rheumatism. From the Lee d's Mercury. New discoveries—or what claim to be dis- coveries—of the healing virtue of plants are continually being made. One of the latest is that celery is a cure for rheumatism; indeed, it is asserted that the disease is impoasible if the vegetable be cooked and freely eaten. The fact that it is always put on the table raw pre- vents its therapeutic powers from being known. The celery should be cut into bits, boiled in water until soft, and the water drank by the patient. Put new milk, with a little flour and nutmeg, into a saucepan with the boiled celery, serve it warm with pieces of toast, eat it wil potatoes and the painful element will soon yield, Such is the declaration of a ph; who has again and again tried the experiment and with uniform success, He adds that cold or damp never produces but simply develops the disease, of which acid ven te the primary and sustaining cause, and that While the blood is alkaline there can be neither rheumatism nor out. . Statistics show that in one year—1876—2,650 persons died of rheumatism in this country, who, it is claimed, might have been cured or prevented by the adoption of tho remedy men- tioned. At least two-thirds of the cases named heart disease are ascribed to rheumatism and its agonizing ally, gout. Small-pox, so much dreaded, is not so destructive as rheumatism, which, it is mamtained by many physicians, can be_ prevented by obeying nature’s laws in diet. But, if you have incurred it, boiled celery is pronounced unhesitatingly to be specific. The proper way to eat celery is to have it cooked as a vegetable after the manner above described. The writer makes constant use of it im this way. Try it once, and you would sooner do without any vegetable, with the single exception of the potato, rather than celery. Cooked celery is a delicious dish for the table, and the most conducive to the health of any vegetable that can be mentioned. elles th His Majesty of Japan. From the Figaro. The emperor of Japan isrich. He is allowed 500,000 a year for his household department, and his private fortune is large and increasing. He thoroughly understands business matters, and keeps himself well informed as to his in- vestments. Some of these are in the public lands and roads, and they are, of course, man- aged by officials appointed by him. The house- hold department has to do with all matters re- lating to the imperial palace and to the mikado. It prescribes the ceremonies and attends to matters connected with the life of the emperor and empress. It has a board of chamberlains, a board of ceremonies, a department which takes care of the emperor's horses, and one which has charge of the imperial sepulehrea, Itcontains a bureau of nine imperial physicians, | Prince Iwakura is grand master of the imperial kitchen and the cooking. His majesty is a very studious man. He rises and breakfasts at 7 or 8 o'clock. He uses the knife and fork in eating when he takes fo eign food, and he adopts the chopsticks at his Japanese dinners. He eats ata table and sits upon chairs, He varies his meals, sometimes taking foreign food and sometimes Japanese. He is fond of meats and has a well-trained Jap- anese cook toserve them for him. It is not customary for him to cat with the empress, and he usually eats alone. After breakfast is over he goes to his study, and at 9 o'clock he receives such ministers of state as have mat- ters to report to him. His audiences with them often last until 12 o'clock. He then returns to his own room and takes his lunch, ally consists of fish, meats, bread, and wines. He is a good eater and likes good wine. After lunch the emperor spends some time in reading the newspapers and books. All of the leading Japanese newspapers come to the pal- ace, and he watches closely the current of pub- lic opinion. Many of the newspapers are marked, and in the case of the foreign papers of Japan the more prominentarticles are trans- lated for him. Articles in the New York, Lon- don, and Paris papers which have a bearing upon Japan are also translated and handed to him to read, and he is especially fond of the illustrated foreign papers. After reading he takes his exercise, and dinner comes in the evening. Sometimes the empress dines with him, and at times the little prince who is the heir to the throne has a seat at the table. Both have, however, their separate establishments. | The dinner is served in table d’hote style and with all the European accompaniments. Information. - From the San Francisco Chronicl Her grandmother was so sick that the report got out that she was dead. A sympathetic old gentleman met the child on the street. “And when is your grandmother to be buried. my dear?” he asked her. “Not till she’s dead, sir. a Mr. O'Bax AGarn iN JarL.—Mr. William O'Brien arrived at Kingstown yesterday after- noon. The lord mayor and other Parnellites awaited his arrival at the Westland Row station, in Dublin, but the police changed the route, conveying O’Brien to the Clonmel prison via the King's Bridge station. The magistrates | who tried William O’Brien refuse to state the case against him for the opinion of the court of exchequer on the ground that the demand Was frivolous. Mr. Healey will now apply to the higher courts for an order compelling the magistrates to comply with his client's demand. Tre Exxcrric Svcar Fravp ix Courr.—The alleged electric sugar swindle is now in the Michigan. supreme court. That body yester- day ordered the Washtenaw circuit judge to show cause why the attachment issued on Mrs. Olive C. Friend’s property at Milan should not be declared void. Mrs. Friend claims that the deputy sheriff used fraud and force to make the attachments; that he got a box containing her private papers, and among these is the for- mula of Friend's electrie sugar process. It is in cipher, but she does not want President Cot- trell to get his hands on it. - ss Wit Nor Use Coupoxs.—The movement re- cently inaugurated in Richmond, Va., against the use of coupons in payment of state taxes is growing. Gov. Lee and Mayor Ellyson ad- dressed a largely attended meeting of business men at the chamber of commerce last night, and it was unanimously resolved not to use coupons until the state debt was settled. pencil stn nace \Lixa.—R. N. Nes- ARRESTED ror Horse-STEALINa. bitt, aged nineteen, the adopted son of Mr. Nesbitt, of Front Koyal, Va., was arrested at Culpeper yesterday with a horse in bis sion, which he was trying to sell. The animal | was stolen from the farm of 8. J. Johnson, in London county. Young Nesbitt comes of a re- spectable family and was married only a short while ago. An officer who came for him to-day says his mind is unbalanced. oes eS Avpert WiLL Nor Comrets.—An Atlantic City special to the Philadelphia Times says: Abert, the ——— pedestrian, will not 2 ; to go on and 50 per cent of gate receipts. Al- bert accepted the offer and requested ¢ draft to be forwarded. Hall did not send the draft, but wrote saying he would turn over the money the moment Albert arrived. ‘The ex-champion has just written Hall refusing to go on any terms, Ax OLp Man Arremprs Suictpr.—A. H. Me- Culioh, one of the best-known citizens of ibersburg, Pa., attempted suicide at his home. He became frightened. was sent for and his life was ak: was for thirty-five years in the em- ploy of the ‘Cumberland Valley railroad com- because of ill health, He ‘This usu- | two seventy | fast. j FASHIONS FOR MEN. What New York Swells Approve. From tho Men's Ontiitter. Black buttons in semi-globe shape arc worn on white P jue vests by men in mourning. There is for the moment more or less preju- dice against striped underwear. Whites and grays are favorites. _— color Peper in oe worsteds are soft shades and bro’ stripings, and preacuneed broad chest” ee In ogy harms Roman in sashes, mufflers, &c.. have been well received, and found useful for household decorative pur- poses, Black and steel gray are effectively combined in silk mufflers. The result produced is a happy medium between the “loud” and the sober. The attempt to revive scarf ringsisa failure. Puff scarfs of extreme size in white-ribbed silk are a decided “go” for afternoon wedding wear. of plain white pique which go twice around the collar, and are folded into a bow by the wearer, are accepted by high dressers as correct for full dress. ° Woolen gloves in dark, solid colors and fancy mixtures have almost entirely superseded white Ringwoods. They are cheaper, keep cleaner, and are just as warm. New pajamas ordered out by New York im- porters are in zephyr (a cobweb sort of woolen goods), spun silk, and a new flannel which is almost as delicate as silk. One and two strands of silk-stitching are seen on the lavender gloves shown by high-class furnishers whose customers favor less width than is seen in the embroidery commonly used. A shirt seen at a recent fancy dress ball had a dead black bosom, and the collar and cuffs and tie were also black. It was worn in con- junction with trousers, vest, and coat in plain white silk, Here is a suggestion for alady’s gift um- brella. Let the donor have his photograph, postage stamp size, set in the handle and cov- ered with glass, It is likely that tan-colored gloves will con- tinue to be accepted for some time. Tans run intoso many shades that they afford a good variety from which to make a selection. — @ Double-breasted vests with extra large a and buttoned medium high, nave been taken up by the patrons of a well-known 5th | avenue tailor as a welcome change from the single-breasted affairs so long in vogue. use of the diamond solitaire as a full dress stud is confined to the “lower stratum.” What may be called a new fad is to have one’s autograph embroidered on one’s sus- penders, All the colors of the rainbow are seen in the silk stripes that run through negligee shirts intended for next summer, Many of the new smoking jackets are alto- gether too elegant to be worn for the pur- poses for which they are intended. “Dark rose” is anew ground color in neck- wear, It will make its appearance among the early offerings of next spring. The same materials and patterns that will be seen next summer in ladies’ blouses will also appear in men’s tennis and lounging shirts, A cut-away coat in fine wale cloth, with the vest of some fancy figured material, is con- sidered a dressy combination for business wear. pecan ik eae Anecdote of a Russian Belle. Blakely Hall in Pittsburg Dispatch. “Iwent down and found my host, who, in Paris was, as I have said, the most correct and proper of men, sitting at the breakfast table in a dressing gown that was absolutely the dirtiest and most repulsive thing I had ever seen. His wife was presiding over a tea urn, and we had ie about half through the breakfast when his aughter, a girl of about nineteen years, came bouncing in. She stopped when she was about half way across the room—and what do you think she did? There is no good telling you for you would not believe it and you would cer- tainly be very much shocked.” “I think very likely I can stand it.” “Well, it is not a nice thing to say, and cer- tainly it is an unpleasant thing to repeat, but the incident goes to illustrate what I have just said, that if novelists and writers would tell the exact facts about people they pretended to ibe they could convey a real idea of the existing condition of things. Yet no writer would tell the incident that I am about to re- late to you. and I doubt whether either you or I would dare to put it in a book.” I asked him what he referred to, and he said slowly: ell, you must remember in the first place that this was a young lady that moved in re- spectable, middle class society in St. Peters- burg, whose father was an official in the czar’s palace and a man of position and learning, and who was herself a young person of 1m tractions. She was pretty, spoke French, Ger- man and a little English, beside her native tongue, was an admirable musician, and a joliy sort of a girl generally. She walked half way across the floor that morning at breakfast, and then stopped and deliberately spat on the car- et. “Her mother reproved her by asking her why she did not go to the hearth, and the young lady replied that it was too far off. Then I was presented to her and she ‘sat down to break- Image such a thing in the house of an English, American, French or German gentle- man! That little incident will give you a bet- ter idea of Russian life than any other. I do } not mean to say, of course, that all Russian women are like this. Afew of the upper classes, Russian princesses, countesses and so on, are tremendously clever persons, but* they are notallso. There is a lack of breeding among the women that is amazin, —--s00 Undressing Was From the Fargo Angus. In 1863 President Lincoln sent a force under Gen, Henry H. Sibley to punish the Indians for their barbarities in Minnesota and Dakota, and drive them back to the Rocky mountain plains. Among the many incidents of the Sibley expe- dition, says the Fargo Argus, against the Sioux which are still afloat in Dakota is the foliowing: | On the return the camps were usually 1a on the banks of a lake or river, and frequentl: when the men learned where the camp would be some of them would rush forward and have a bath; this roiled up the water and made it unfit for camp purposes. This action so in- censed Gen. Sibley that he issued an order pro- hibiting bathing ‘until the officer of the day should announce that water had been served for camp purposesand the stock had been watered. One night the camp had been made on the bank of asmail lake. Capt. Horace Austin was the officer of the day, and hesent a detdil to the lake in charge of Sergt. 8. P. Childs, now of Mankato, to see that the general’s order was obeyed, Childs saw a man come down to the lake, look at the water, step back behind abush and begin undressing. Soon he was disrobed and walked to the edge of the water, and me at his foot in it as if too see how cold it was, when Childs yelled “Halt!” ‘What is the matter?” asked the would-be bather. The sergeant xe- plied the general’s orders were that no bathing | should be allowed until the officer of the day had announced sufficient water had been se- cured, The man remonstrated, and finally said that if Childs knew the order he ought to have informed him before he undressed. “Yes,” said Childs, ‘I know it, but the order does not rohibit disrobing.” The man who wanted to Pathe was Gen, Sibley himself, and Childs knew it, but he didn't bathe then. Trade and Fashion. London Correspondence Louisville Courier-Journal. Apropos of bonnets, I am told that Lady Gor- don, who went in for millinery, has continued to make a deal of money. She was the daughter of a famous Dublin distiller, and so inherited a bit of the mercantile instinct. When the Scotch tenants didn’t come to the fore promptly with their rents my lady made up her mind that she intended to have a well-filled purse, and so she began to sell bonnets and hats. She had the reputation of dressing extremely well her- self,and that was of worth in a business ven- ture; her bonnets were all imported from Paris and her hats were all English round ones. She positively refused to give credit, and conse- uently found her best customers among the British middle class, who so dearly love a lord and who were charmed to pay out their gold for a bonnet they thought my lady's hand touched. Lady Gordon used her own name, which was wise. When Lady Mackenzie went into the millinery business she called herself Mme. Something, and has, I hardly think, been as successful as her rival in trade. She in for very smart tea gowns, in addition to bon- nets, and says, with a smile: “It is quite the fashion nowaday to be in trade.” Eve: knows that the de name at so much a year an nent over millinery shops in Paris, London and New York. He Had Several Creditors. From the Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. “I owe $10 to O'Grady,” sang young Mr. Dudekin, “O’Grady’s not your only creditor,” replied Not Bathing. @ man who ned to hear it. “You owe me $25 for that you have on.” railroads, after session week in Chicago, sgh areal Se iss which is to form the of the railway association, and ad- journe evening, subject to the call The inthe Delaware legislature is ‘unbroken, YOUTHFUL TALENT. \ —— A Restaurant Where the Waitresses are Only Ten Years Old. From the New York World. “A sirloin steak, with fried potatoes. Do you want coffee, sir?” The speaker was addressing a World re- porter, who had dropped into a Grand street restaurant for lunch, Of course she was a waitress, but strange to say, only ten years of age. She did not seem out of place, as the restaurant was a small one, the tables neat and pretty, and about the room were flitting other girls of her own age. The one in question wasa pretty dark- haired girl, with amiling lips and large brown eyes. She took the reporter's order and soon returned, bringing the dishes with more grace, and as much skill as one of Delmonico’s finest. After she had arranged the order in appetizing style before the hungry reporter, she retired at # respectful distance to await further orders. It was shortly after 1 o'clock and about fifteen of the little maidens were in attendance. They were ali dressed alike, and as they formed in small groups during an idle moment they were ! avery pleasing sight. The costume consisted of a gray woolen dress, reaching slightly below the knees, and trimmed with dark-red embroi- dery at the waist, A fiuffy apron, trimmed with red ribbon, hung tastily in front, while upon the head a large snowy baker's cap was jauntily placed, making them look prettier than ever. All of the girls wore cardinal stockings, and their hair, which hung down their backs, was neatly woven into a braid and tied with red ribbon, They scemed to take especial pride in keeping themselves looking as clean and at- tractive as possible, and as soon as an apron commenced to show the least sign of being soiled off it came anda new one was substi- tuted. When the little waitress who was a the reporter brought his coffeo she was aske: how ake like the business at her tender years, “Oh,” she replied, with a smile, “I like it very much, and it helps mamma so much. It is a great deal nicer than running around a dry goods store as a cash girl, as [was once. Ol, that was terrible work, and I was so tired every night that I could hardly stand. ‘The reporter's cnriosity was excitea, and when he finished his Inch he hunted up Mr. Harriman, the proprietor of the place, and asked him how he came to employ so novel and 80 youthful a staff of waitresses. “When I first started this restaurant,” he said, “I employed men as waiters. I soon tired of them. however, for they were constantly going off on sprecs and I never could depend on them. Frequently they left me short- handed and I had to jump in and attend tho tables myself. T commenced tolose money and consequently discharged them all and put in their places girls ranging from twenty to twenty-five years of age. My trade commenced to grow rapidly, and I thought I had hit the right thing at last. In a few months, however, the gentlemen patrons and the waitresses became very well acquainted with each other, and often I would see a lady patron impatientty waiting for service, while one of the girls talked toa young man at an- other table. This ‘mashing’ prac such an alarming extent that the lady shoppers, who were among best patrone, dropped off one by one, I became alarmed and was in a wndry as to how to get out of the diificuity. “Among my empl was a little girl twelve years of uge, whose duty it was to gather the s and fill them when it was neces- during a rush, she took an nd filled it in a satisfactory manner. I dit and immediately told “her to con- in the work and tell me how she liked it, night she said she was very much pleased with her new duties, so I raised her salary and set her to work, [had at last struck the idea, “At the end of two months I had every large girlout and their places filled by the little maidens, who perform the duties just as well and show partiality to none.” The faces of the maidens looked fresh and happy, forming a strong contrast to the tired, weary countenances of the hundreds of little cash girls in the big stores in the vicinity. +. id the Baltimore Widow. From the k Evening Sun, In 1876 a distinguished Baltimorean gave a dinner, At the table the fiery glance of the general rested on a beautiful Washington widow. The guests had only risen when he broke away from the lady he had taken in and asked to be presented to the fair enslaver. He could speak no English, the lady could speak no French, but before the evening was over the general's devotion was in possession of the room. He followed the Indy Washington and there his attentions became so assiduous that the lady became frightened end retreated to u upper chamber, from whence she plead ill- Nothing discouraged, the brave general elf at the door with persistent adame, has your danghter a Boulanger jet one, get two. get three!” “Gen- joulanger, rest assured my daughter shall ave all the medical atten illness de- | mands,” replied the intre perley- ing on the doorstep. The general then pro- ceeded to bombard the invalid with letters, three a day—curions epistles, gritten in French and laborionsly Englished by means of a dic- tionary. The time came when the general had and he composed what to him was a fitting farewell. ow that everything is over,” he wrote’ to the lady, who was unaware that anything was begun, “I beg you to remember that I ain a gallant man.” (un gallant homme.) An Army of Menials. From Town Topics. Agreat many people have been surprised, when attending the Vanderbilt entertainments during the past year or more, to notice the marvelous number of servants inlivery. After the English fashion, this household army is usually drawn up in line in the ball and the guests pass into the drawing room With a line of servants on either side. The question that naturally arises is, what in the world does the amily do with this army of menials when they have no social affair on hand and are not enter- taining. As a simple matter of fact it may be explained that these servants are not regular Vanderbilt attaches. They are oniy taken on when the occasion requires their services, In the language of the theater, they are the “extra ballet.” The liveries in which they a: ear are supplied them by the butler of the [ices trom an ievcssnes traaktak ofeach gar- ments which have been imported and are con- stantly kept on hand. The butler’s wardrobe contains fifty or seventy-five such suits of liv- ery, so that no matter what the peculiarities of size and shape among these hap-hazard domes- ties may be it is a comparatively easy thing to fit them out. pode ee ee A Case of Biind Luck. From the Baltimore News. “Do I believe in Iuck? Why, I should say so.” This remark was made by aman well- known about town. “Not that I have had any great Inck myself. Oh, no! Buti have known other men whose lives have been one series of fortunate ex- periences. I do not mean that they are lucky in the matter of races, lotteries, &c., but rather in the little things of life. To illustrate what I mean I will take the case of a brother of mine, who seems to me to be pursued by good fortune in whatever he undertakes. ‘To begin with, he took a notion to enter the navy. No sooner did he form the desire than he received an appointment to Annapolis. He wasregarded as He 9 duli at his books, and there was some doubt about his passing the examinations, but these doubts might as well have been laid aside for he weut through the ordeal with fly- ing colors. He graduated and started ona three years’ cruise around the world. Instead of staying three years on board ship. which would have been monotonous, his vessel re- turned in eighteen months, not a single acci- dent having taken place during the cruise. Soon after this he was, for the time being, laid on the shelf, I suppose you would not cail that luck. But first let me inform you that he re- ceived 250 a month from the government for simply loafing. Then almost immediately he secured an engagement at some outside work which pai hin bendeomely, and required no special ability on his part to perform. Well, he was ultimately returned to the navy, and after, a little time was transferred to the United States steamer Bos aa tt ohBnakio SECOND SESSION OPENS a. ae 4. EXAMINATIONS FOR EN’ iCE SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2. ALS 7 SANG macmanne 2,2 MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, ay Medical ed Hi street northwest. tablished 1851. Apply MAGRUDER, M. D., Drax, SIs ‘Vermont avenue, northwest. w TMENT, Georgetown Law cor. an ao F strects northwest” Pstabiished 70. Apply G. T. Ker TAILOR oc-4m 414 9TH STREET. B.D. Bax IMPORTER AND TAILOR, Piss the St BAM personaliy fite all garments made in his bonor te inform you that his NEW GOODS BUSINESS. ‘The attention of the business public ts invited with confidence to the superior advantages pre sented by TRE WasuincTox EVENING STAR as am advertising medium. The sworn statements of ite aily circulation, published from week tw week, taken in connection with the data given below, lustrate in the most striking manner the steady and rapid growth of the paper in circulation and influence. They also establish, beyond contro ‘Versy, the fact that THE STAK is the best focal ad- certising medium, not only in the United States, Dut in the whole world! This claim is based and conceded on the fact that no city in any country is #0 thoroughly covered by the regular circulation of @ single paper as is the city of Washington by that extent alone, but also on the character of circula- tion. Not only is its local circulation the largest §. M. YEATMAN, Secretary. , 711 PEXNGYLVANIA AVE. | and fulieat of any daily paper printed, in propor REV. J. HAVENS RICHARDS,'S.J."Hzcton, | _mni7 —___Wastineton. b,c. ton population, bat ts ‘tho chet, nes Gn HORTHAND IN SIXTEEN SIMPLE LESSONS, % Paper does not merely go into the hands of the SS Ginsoee daily. “Nuttion Up taail e ovecnte cokes RAILROADS. People of the District of Columbia asa body, but send for pamphlet. ‘writing songs free of | ——————_ Lee | into reir )—into the families of all i Head school Acme phy, 921 F | PIEDMONT ale LINE. 1 oe. cond! | _28-lwt re eT: | Sy.50 PGhetule 12 effect January 13h, 1889. tions, and into those of the money-spending as ' ERIAN, BUSINESS | COLLEGE: COR. 77H | cova Je, Charlothantilies Ly ucttvare; and Seances pet reg Ce Ne Wanita SE Gu arm } > Ww, Fou peation os +. betwee ‘Xandria ot " Hi in a om larger ravio than | commodious balis: appointments complete. | More | Knoxville lau, Calers, Monteascrs net Noe Oe | journal’ that ee won ym 2 50,000 men and wom ve {or business fn"the Spencerian Colleges of | Day and night sessions. Tuition inoderate. ive ine, Practical ‘English? spencers’ Hauid Wertine Reading and Oratory, men ; ‘method. ‘Business houusements fee SARS A CRDENCER Vie beat: howuee a SARA A : a Pal: HENRY C. SPENCER, LL. B, Prinelpa ja28 MYIL SERVICE, LATIN, HIGHER MATHEMA- / tics by successful college teacher; private or class instruction day or evening; terms rate. Ak MISS ‘T.-orcall LO am oF 6:30 py 929 Eats Rw. J ES-ONS IN CRAYON, TAPESTRY, AND on. Painting by a teacher of large experience from north: temts tery low: will eck oe eae pupil when desi 2032 T st. n. Bt" IRENCH LESSONS —MADAME CHEVREMONT, ae de l'Académie de Paris. Special classes for children daily. Evening classes { dress 1512 13th st. n.w. FPUE FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY WILL gommenee its next session February 1) LS. For elogue and terms address WM. Ho PUENELL. LL. Frederick, Md. Sw ISS CLARA HARRISON, 1234 13th st. nw. AND PAT INSTRUCTION IN every branch and for all rivate or in classes, at THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF F! ARTS, 804 Est. Call and see the wonderful progress o’ students Ja21-28t" ERNA V. RODENSTEIN, SOPRANO, HAV- Ang rettraed trom New York, cun be enigaied for concerts, &. A limited number of pupils will aleo be received. A eas 1. Wallach Place. jal 8-1m* N CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, St md Building, 9th and F sts. Twentieth year, Pieno, Organ, Voice, Violin, Flute. Cornet, &c. | advantawes, 0. LLARD, Dit 10-11 1992 15TH ST. NW. e ‘The MISSES KERR'S School for Young Ladies and Little Girls, ‘ond Term begins FRIDAY Feb. 1st. 21 WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF ELOQUTION 4 Oratory, 904 M st. n.w., Mra. M. STEVENS HART, Principal. Voice culture aud Natural Expres | sion carefully taught. STAMMERING Thoroughly cured. References to patrons. _ja5-1m* RT STUDENTS’ GUE, SUN BUILDING 1317 F st. Day and Evening classes. Drawine | and Painting in Oils and Water color from life. Classes tor beginners. Instructors—A. G. Heston, E.C. Mes- ver, D.W, Gill, W. H. Holines, and 8. Jerome Uhl as-10w* EPWA8D ©. TOWNSEND, v) Teacher of Elocution, Correct (deep) breathing Voice Culture, Drematic Action, at 1317 13th st. new. JOHN'S COLLEGE, ANNAPOLIS, MD. Set Separcuente and four courses of study. hes Oratorica] and 431-3m0 ident, _ THOMAS FELL, A.M. RY, 1100-1104-1116 M STREET AND 1128 11TH STREET. BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES AND LITTLE GIRLS. Thorovgh instruction in all branches in accordance with the best modern methods, Commodions school Luilding, heated by steam and having sunlight ond ft an! IMERS.« resh air. For further info ¢ Principal, Mrs. ELIZABETH J. SC Y OF THE HOLY, CROSS, usetts ave.—Thorough ;Course ‘in English and on the Piano, with dail of Technicon,Organ, itar and Banjo. Special attention given to and thorough bass classes ; also to vocal. INESS EDUCATION- BOOK-KEEPING,P! onunercial Branches, Ty pe-writing, [1o- rapid progress. Low rates, Eat. 1883. Call 0. WOOD'S COMMERCIAL CROCE. SCHOOL—A PRIMARY, IN- ediate, and High School for both sexes, 1811 T st. n. w. THOS. W. SIDWELL, Principal. COLLEGE AND Type-writing, bh the Hix! ous building in Catalogues free ing. ou spplication, Colored | students not admitted. FRANCIS G. MARTYN, President. C. K. URNEK, A.M. CLE, Principal. ocl A HARVARD, GRADUATE DESIRES PUPILS, suvely oF a smmall classes. Ayp ly te WM. I NAM. A.M, es 8e19-6mo At Sanders & Stayman’'s, 0:4 F st w. ROF. SHELDON’S DANCING ACADEMY NOW open for the reception of pupils MONDAYS, WED- NESDAYS and SATURDAYS, or send for circu- lars, 1004 F st, a BOOKS AND STATIONERY. ALENTINES! WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Favors for the German, Scrap Pictures, Studies to Paint, Gold Punt, 10 cents: Gift Cards, T Flowers, dxpanese Scrolls, Fuus, Nap- sandle "Sitadess Toys, Novelties. GUULD FE "5 a ons, Ov Rea. Vac AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. 'HAMBEES' ENCYCLOPAEDIA, ATE! ‘8 CONCISE —E: YOUNG FOLKS CYC THINGS. st WM. BALLANTYNE & ial7-eo 425, Bux Booxs Of all sizes and des, from the smallest Memorandum Book to the largest Ledgers, Journals, Day-Booka, Record-Books, &c. ‘Tablets or Memorandums Bloc! Ja25 SON, 7TH STREET. ‘8 froin a penny up. CC. PoRRE A 18 9th st f GRANULATED Si 7 Best Kio Coffee, 25c. Ib. per 1b ; Mocha und Java dC" Periecti (excelling ill) Oe, her Ib.” Best Sugar rer Ib. ; Bes 123 r Ib. ; Sugar Cured Shoulders, 10c. pez 1b, “Star of ‘the East,” fancy patent process Fionr, sack; “Old Time” 1.50 fboice country Fol 86.75 per barrel; $1.75 per 5 Family Flour, 3 80 ser bul. Alte: Lard for 81. OI utter, per Ib.; good country roll Butter, 20c. per Ib. 5 Ibs. uirkish Prunes for 3c. 1G lbs. Buckwheat for S0e. 6 gts. Hominy for Postal card or call and see us if convenient. J. T. D. PYLES, Ja20-3m, 412 4th ste. IVE POUNDS BUTTER 81; TEN POUNDS BUCK- Re Groceries often lower than adv: elsewhere, OHARE’s, dal z-Limt 1245 7th st. nw. Te BEST GRANULATED SUGAR, 7igc. THE Sas — r-Cured Past waco Beceem sweet end juicy. I te. mK ve Bat mon retuiided, ‘Also a fuil Hine choke Groce a, very cheap ort ye. ‘ash. aL: 944 La ave. n. _WOOD AND COAL = on 4 _ JOST RECEIVED A FRESH col minent of superior ‘Cannel” Coal; also in stock ‘Nem-Cannel, hand-picked Cumberland Luuwp and Semi-Bitum! Red Ash Coal. _Sutleost JNO. T, GIVEN, 423 10th st. n.we RETAIL PRICES FOR COAL AND WOOD, hanged, ol] White Ash Stove, per tow of 240. Ibe. esq 2 a = 40 = Broken 3 * 830 Shamokin Ress = 4 Td Ash Stove,” ; = Boo Lykens Valley Stove, *: “ $39 wait S.£8. Piney Special prices t: reorders, Pa. Renee 1020 Lsthstanw, ‘Cap. Coa: Coxe: Woon: JOHNSON BROTHERS, 1515 7thet.». w. 1740 Pa, ave.n. w. oe pleudidly equip- | } ‘Wharves and Rail yards, 12th & Water sta. Southwest. | and a ‘ashington to’ New Orleans, 11:24 A. M.~Past Misil Daily for: Warrenton, Char teavilie, Gordonsville, peiuins Chee Tonto Route, jung, Rocky Mount. je atid Stations be: tween Lynch and Danville, Greensboro, Charlotie, Columbia, Aikem Augasta, Atlan ham, Montgomery, New Texas, and Califor Pull - Ee wy ita: Pullman x gomery to ‘New Orleans and Mann Bondole ple pose tor Birmingham, V x t Greensboro to Col a, and Augusta. trains Washington to Atlanta, ‘Does not'commect ee ee ene Dae ‘Sunday, for Manassas, Strasburx and intermediate stations, jonaville, Charlot i ville, Pullman’ Slee Solid’ Traine Washing om to , Bristol, Chattanooga, southwestern points. to Memphis Lynch- Colum- Caltdoruia: Puiman Vestibule Sie xs and California, estibule Sleeper ington to New Orleans via Atlanta and Mont y. Pullman Sleeper Washington to Augusta, nge. P. M—Southern Express for Danville, Ralench, Asheville, Charlotte, en, AU Bamed. By reason of the fullness, freshness and reliability of its news, local, domestic and foreign, its independent an@ fair treatment of all public questions, and espe cially because of its intelligent and effective de Votion to local interests, and its close attention te matters with which the household, and particu- larly its lauy members, are concerned, THE STAB is srerrwnare recognized and admitted to be, im every q ity, the leading and favorite newspaper of the National Capital, alike in the counting- Foom, the work-shop, ond the family circle. More conclusive evidence on these points me Person can ask than that afforded by the table | below. The growth of circulation therein indi- cated, with the analysis following, clearly shows the esteem in which the paper is held by the com- munity to whose interests it is so steadfastly de- voted. It will be seen that, in the number of copies issued, every month in the year I8RS shows ® handsome increase over the corresponding uston and Ohio division leave month in each year given; and, asa further Mus- A.M, Dally excopt Sunday,and 4 3M. | tration on that point, it may be stated here that rive Hound Hill 11:30 A. M. and ~M | on Returhing leave Round Hill 6:05 A.M. Daily and 1:36 | there has been a corresponding advance in the EME Rais Seep panday, arriving Washington 8:30 | number of new advertisements printed during the year. The comparative figures for the four years last past are as follows: DAILY CIRCULATION IN 1885—"S6-'87—"88, ISS6. 1887. ‘Tickets, sleeping car reservation and informat: Janvary. 23, furnished, and’ bengare Checked of othe Taae ee 2321 26 roe oe avenue, and at Prssenger Station, Pennsy nia Ratiroad, 6th aud B sts. JAS. L. TAYLO! 25,594 26,009 sone General Passenger Ageut._ 24,727 25,575 HI: GREA. 24,359 25,742 TOT 23,902 23,116 DOUBL 23,186 24,870 STEEL RAILS 2.364 24.859 auarne tater es HINGT Sases 24,905 N a E WASHIN CORNER SIXTH AD 21,701 24,807 For Pittsbu fand the West. Chicago [.imited Express of 23,651 25,697 valiman Vestibuled Cura, at 0:50 daily ; Fast 24,687 26,468 Line 2-50 a. daily, to Cinciupet! and St Louis, a Rill Sloepine Care ifoin Pittsburg to Ciueinnati, com and Harrisburg to St. Louis; daily, except Satur: 23,682 25,484 27,082 day, to Chicazo, with Sleeping Car Altoona to Chi- caro. Western’ Express, at F 40 pan. Guily, with 1,559 1,803 1,598 rao and St. Louis f sriburse with owe daily circulation of 27,082 = for. Men, phis, Pac ite Ex- pen oreo books of the office show that an average Yess 10:00 pan. daily, for Pittsbune and. the 20,629 copies were regularly delivered each ith through . cane cs Celene ne OEREae MAREN | ony, ty eneciorn, af the hemes af permanent mabe BALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RAILR gua. and Rochester, dui! iagura, daily, except Saturd: Pp leeping Car Washington to Rochester. Haven, and Elmira, at 9:50a, For Ene, Canans falo and m. daily, exc For New York 11:00, and 1:4 and 11:20 p.m. On 4:10, 10:00, and ‘a.m, daily, exce! y, with Dining Cay ut chanse 2°00 p.m. every day N. ¥., ail through: tra sey City with boats of Brook! direct transier to Fulton street ferriage across New \ ork City For Philadelphia. 7-20, 8:10. 9-00. 11:00, and 11 2:00, 4:10,6:00.8:T0, 11:20, pt sunday, und 3:40 p. am, 2 10: ™. On Sunday, 0:40, 11:40 &. m., 2:00, 4:10, 6:6 $:10, 10:00 and, 11:20 pan, Limited’ Express, Parlor Cars. 1:40 a.m. week days, aud 3-49 pan. daily, with Dining Gor For, Baltimore, 6:35, 7 9:50 13:00, and ‘11: 0, 4:40. 6:00, 7 On Sunday, 1-0 345, 4:10.6 9:00, 9 Ol fe exe For Annapolis, 7:20 and 9-00 a... pam, daily, except Sunday. 2. Way RSD abe RAILROAD. For Al tet tor Quantico, P.m. week days, For Richmond and the South. 4:20, 10:57 a, m. daily, und 33:40 p. mi. daily, except Sunday. Trains leave Aletanaria tor Washi 11:07 9. m. rs cau be left for the checking of ation from hotels and residences. i. WOOD, edule ij on fi ‘tibuled limited ex- Uo pan. srmpdiate pointa, $9:00 rm F », 11:20 pan, ney 55 bare m,, 11230, 14:40, © . For stations, 17:00 p.m. Boyd's and a interuiediate Wi PHILADELPHIA DIVISION. adelphia and Wilmington, daily, 8:15 and. 0 p. ma. ‘Buitet Parlor Care on >} a. tral. daily, a, ind 12:05 night. ba Sats tine resi. at it offices, 619 and 1351 Limited Express of Pullman Parlor ‘evoiding double 40 22:05 and 4:40 ‘Sundays, 9:00 a im, AND FREDERICKSBURG RATI- -XANDRIA AND WASHINGION “ er.__(s71_Gon. Fas, Agont._ ALTDIORE AND OHIO RATLROAD. in effect Dee. 9th, L888, net of New Jersey uis, express, daily, 3 and seribers in thecity and suburbs. Of theremainder, 4 daily average of 5,421 were sold at the office, in the hotels and railway stations, etc., and on the streets, by newsboys, making a grand total average within the District of 23,458 copi¢s daily, leaving | @ daily average of 1,632 to be sent to regular sub- scribers residing beyond its limits, by mail, express, and railway trains. In addition to the 20,029 copies daily delivered At the homes of subscribers, a large proportion of the 3,421 otherwise disposed of in the city is reg- ularly purchased by permanent residents, living in lodgings, &c. (not householders), while the resi- due goes into the hands of transient visitors, from all parts of the country, who each year come to the National Capital in greater numbers and for longer periods, and who, furthermore, largely rep- Tesent the well-to-do and purchasing portions of the communities to which they respectively belong. ‘The last-named is « class of readers alone well Worth reaching; Dut it is to the phenomenally | large permanent local circulation of the paper, and esp®ially to its unparalleled hold upon the household and family circle, that the attention of advertisers is particularly directed. ; A comparison of the home circulation of 25,450 with the figures representing the entire popula- tion of the city will conclusively establish the fact that THE STak reaches about every family in the | Districtof Columbia, and is read every day by more than three-fourths af tts population who are able to read! It follows, therefore, that an advertise- ment inserted in its columns will meet the eye,of every person in the District worth reaching, of whatever race, creed, sex, age, or condition in life. It only remains to be said, for the information of those interested in the subject, that, in proportion to its circulation, the rates of advertising in Tum EVENING Stak, whether transient or for long periods, rank with the very lowest in the United States. Indeed, taking both the extent and char- acter of its circulation into consideration, it may safely be claimed that so wide and such an excel- lent quality of publicity can nowhere else be bought for the same money. “Trial by Peers.” For the information of those not familiar with THE STAR, a few extracts from potices by its com temporaries, called out by its recent change im form, are appended: From the Washington Post. We congratulate Tx STAR on its great prosperity. There is no vetter evening newspaper in ihe United States, From the Philadelphia Ledger. THE WastiNGTON LvexING Stam has marked the close of twenty-one years under its present manage- inent by permanent enlargement to a double sieet, oF ud mechanical improvements that facilities tor puvlicauou. THE ouaiderably more than twice ae lange as it Was im 1567, turuishes daily three Utes as much reading matter, aud has almost five times the circuls- tou that it then enjoyed. It is, indecd, @ first-class Paper, “worthy of any city in the sand.” From the Brookiyn Bagic. Wi ton's best, if not really its only news paper, is Tum Stan, which has acireulstion o 30, | a population of” 200,000, served by wacoue carriers. “CMe STAR bas no politics. but it publishes ue pen, Eives both aidew equally impartial treat Met, and hes attained an exceilent reputation for tairness of 11s tone aud management. From the Baltimore Sun. THE WASHINGTON STAR, one of the most prosperous newspapers in the country, li hlanged. 1s now per. luanently an citt-pasc paper. CL) Ys Was cre: y its cupies successt exteudiug to it our New Year's prosperity may never wane. Prom the Philadelphia Times. THE Stax fills the Journalistic field of the capital, sud fille it adasirab ly and with great iw From the New York Onnmerciai Bulletin, ‘That enterprising journal, THe WasHINGTOX EVENING Stag, has Just couipleted ‘twenty-one years under its present mm insnagement, and tbe ut adopting permauently: su elgut-page fori, in which is ove of: the and handsumest afternvon, in ‘tie United States, a8 it haa loug been ‘the best Joug been oue of the best ~_— From the Baitimore American. ME VEBSON! ous, vauava: ‘Tae WasitxcToN EvENiNe STAR last night STEAMER W. W. CORCORAN Soul sppeur permsmentiy esas ieee 4 Leaves 7th-street wharf daily (except Sunday) for Mt. | Tae Stam has loug. been one of the mational capital's Vernon and Kiver Landings as far down as Glymont, Of interest,” and ia its ew form it wills withe at 0 glock ain. ieturning, Wi our doubt, go on increasing iu circulation aud worth. ee L. L. BLAKE, Captain. | From the Chester (Pa.) Times. PUR POTOMAC HIVER LANDING. ‘toil, perhaps: the genius of Sdeaediice soln a NEW JRON STEAMER “WAKEFIELD” S measure of success that excites, the wonder of Leaves 7ih-street whart on MONDAXS, THURSDAYS | Sommetitors. Such = jonmhal it eve, us Hud SATURDATS 407 9 in het TUESDAYS to be able to say, is Tm Evamine Stans Landings as far as Nowini Crock Va ht Cintents Bay | asmumeton City. fe om : r Fae ge ee ome Bend Om Heat Sais oe aes eoamemtotia evidence Shenkoras Bee sel s note this Ow. LiDURY. hae | pat fering tae rhs oe of the beet aud cleanest country, and isa most creditaule bapers in the co repre- OCEAN ERS. ‘Ten Erase Ors Spee than and is = EAN S TEAMERS. __ aR Suonry TO LONDO! the best newspaper Washinton ever bad, NORDDEUTSCHER 8.8.00. ‘From the Pattodelphin Record, Southampton (1 Havre), Bremen. Shae SORE eerie 3 pan; ‘Elbe, Sat, é saloon werd a berth, according to : cite 926 denn. ave. “STALL BROWN a 00, 1: Fst —— 8 2 ‘> A WARD LINE, the News, Secceraeg Be orem meee pegs aan rs SS SOUT Ts Bhar =e ROYAL VICTORIA HOTEL, NASSAU, of Tuk EVENING Stak; and it does not rest on the @