Evening Star Newspaper, March 14, 1889, Page 7

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rr THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C., THE BALTIMORE OONFERENCE. VISITED KING KALAKAUA. Announcement of the Annual Appoint- ments. In the Baltimore M. E. comference yesterday afternoon, after Taz Star's report cloved, the action admitting Rev. Henry A. Braner on ‘rial was reconsidered, and he was received in fall connection. Congratulations were voted to Bishop Bow- man upon having attained the fiftieth year of his church work. Resolutions of thanks were voted Bishop Foss for his ability and fairness as = presiding officer, to the pastor and officers of Grace church, and to the press, The bi announced the transfer of the Rev. Andrew Longacre to the New York con- ference, Bishop Foss’ closing address was brief, and at its conclusion he announced the appoint- ments as follows: THE ANNUAL APPOINTMENTS. Baltimore district—W. 8. Edwards, P. E., Baltimore—Bennett memorial, ©. T. House; city station, J. F. Goucher, E. L. Watson, J. F. Heisse, J. M. Slarrow, W. T. D. Clemm (super- numerary), Joseph (supernumerary); Bethel, W. R. Gwinn; Eutaw street, J. A. Cauley ‘ort avenue, E. H. Smith; Hanover- street mission, W. H. Reed; Madison avenue. J. J. G. Webster, bg —— 8S. A. Wilson (supernum: 3 (‘super- namerary); Mount Vernon. Place So" ‘be supplied; South Baltimore, G. W. Hobbs, Harr: V ; Wesley chapel, W. R. Stricklen. Bal- timore cireuit—C. A. Jones, L. M. Bennett; Calvert circuit—Daniel Haskell. Annapolis— First church, E. D. Huntley; Wesley chapel, Samuel Shannon. Hunt’s—E. T. Mowbray. Lutherville—W. L. McDowell. Mount Vernon Washin, —W. C. W. T.L. Weech, J. T. Wilhide. Smithvilie—S. 8. Greenwell. Solomons—G. W. Cecil. South riyer—J. W. Steele, West River—W. Rogers, M._H. Courtenay. Wooaberry—First church, L. M. Gardner. Grace, ©. D. Bmith. Roland avenue, J. W. Cornelius, . H. Carroll, president Baltimore church extension and city missionary society, member of Mount Vernon quarterly conference; Thomas Meyers, agent Maryland Bible society, member of Strawbridge quarterly conference; F. J. Wagner, president Centenary Biblical institute, member of Mount Vernon place quarterly con- ference: J. B. Van Meter, professor in Woman's college, member of Mount Vernon place quar- terly conference; W. M. Frysinger, editor of the Baltimore Methodist, member of the First church quarterly conference. East Baltimore District—W. F. Ockerman; Chester, D. Baltimore, B. P. Brown, G. street, EL i Righland avenue and Patapsco, High street, W. G. Herbert; Jefferson street, R. R. Murphy; Madison square, North avenue and Homestead, A. M. Courtenay, son, C. E. Dudrear; North Baltimore, W. McKenney. Belair—Thomas Wood. Bentley Springs—W. F. Roberts, Wm. Anthony. Dar- lington circ G. R. Sanner, East Harford cireuit—H. C. Smith, Solomon German. Gov- 8. N. Alford, F. H. Havenner, Edward Hayes. Long Green—O. C. Marriott. North Harford— Cuddy. Sparrow's Point—H. D. Mitchell. Towson — Milburn. Waverly—D. G. Miller, G. W. Feelemeyer, West Harford—T. E. Pete y Jones. j G. W. Heyde, chaplain of Seamen's Union Bethel, member of lway quarterly con- ference. W. B. Geoghegan, left without aj pointment to attend one of our -schools, member of East Baltimore quarterly confer- ence. West Baltimore District.—J. E. Amos, P. E.— Arlington and Pimlico—W. W. Rarnes. Ball more—Columbia avenue, Joel Rrown; David Rogers’ mission, to be pplied, G C. Harris; Emory, B. G. Reid; Fayette street, J. B. Stitt; Franklin street, J. R. Wheeler; Grace, E. 8. Todd; Harlem Park, L. T. Widerman, R. W. Black (supernumerary); Lafayette ave- nue, M. J. Law; Monroe ‘street, Henry Nice; Summerfield. H. P. West; Union square, 8. M. Hartsock; Whatcoat, A. E. Gibson. Carroll- ton—W. 1. Dice, C. A. Reid Catonsville—D. A. Ford. Smith. Ellicott City—Henry Baker. Ham stead. West, J. “W. Fleming, J. B. Hall, supernumerary. Laurel—H. FP. Downs. Liberty—H. R. Savage, J.J. Sargent (supernumerary). nore and Union bridge—Osborn Belt. Lae ers and Mount Carmel—J. C. Starr. Mechanicstown—J._N. Dai Middleburg and Double Pipe cree! W. ©. Brian. Mount Olivet—W. W. Davis. New Windsor—J. H. Marsh, one to be supplied, J.T. Marsh. Patapsco—Emory Buhrman, C. C. Cook, E. E. Shipley (su; omega tes Savage and Guilford—W. , Summerfield circuit— C, C. Cronin. Walkersville—C. E. Gutherie. West Falls—J. 8. Burton. Westminster—G. W. Cooper. depository, mem- John Lanahan, agent book ber of Laurel quarterly conference; H. M. Harman, professor in Dickinson college, mem- ber of Fayette street quarterly conference; C. Young, professor in Centenary Biblical in- stitute, member of Harlem Park quarterly con- ference; W. J. Thompson, left without appoint- ment to attend one of our schools, member of Ellicott City quarterly conference. . vurley. ele: rings—Wm. jcomington and Ell Gerdew FW. . F. F. Gray, J. W. Hi berland—Center street, Richard ; Grace, W. F. Lowe; Ki y, W. E. Bird. Flintstone, Heury Mann. ederick City—A. J. Gill. Frostburg—G. V. Leech. Frostburg circuit— J. BR. Par Grant—P. C. Edwards. Hagers- town—H. 8. France, R. W. wey Cad- den (( ay Apne ae Pascoe, . "s one to be suppl Gallaher. —— Ferry—C. ber. Hyndman—Alex. Bielaski. Keyser—F. i. Porter. Lonaconing—Jas. P. Wilson. Mar- tinsburg—John Edwards, Middletown—C. J. Price. Mt. Savage—8. 8. Wilson. Old Town— ones. Paw-Paw—Reuben Kolb. Pied- mont—Watson Case. Rawlings—H. M. Thur- low. Romney—W. A. Carroll. Washington district—J. McK. Reiley, P. E.— Anacostia~ Ezekiel Richardso Silver Spring—G. @. it. Mary's—A. J. Bender. ‘ad. Spencerville— rary ern—W. G. Cassar —- t Price. Weasley c! pe Pi Rev. Andrew Longacre goes to Newburgh, N. Y., and his successor at Moun’ Vernon place church will be Rev. A. H. Tuttle, of Wilkesbarre, Pa. He is said to be one of the ablest preachers in the Methodist church. —————_—— A Sister’s Sympathy. From the Somervile Journal. f ! ii i -; ? 3; i | ahi? reel & Soren | ikridge—J. ef m. Baldwin Me-' to be Capt. Anson Tells How His Base-Ball Men Were Treated. Correspondence Chicsgo Herald. Since writing these perhaps dull and uninter- of my life on Thave (or sand, rather) and seen the Sandwich Islands. This is the first Thave ever seen. Hitherto these au- have appeared to me in the form of mute, sightless creatures printed on linen backs and usually held by other persons, But I have now seen a king in flesh and blood. King Kala- kaud, the monarch of the dabs of dirt in the soup known as the Sandwich Islands, has re- Cape) ite have told 7 all about our ‘and luncheon with Kiog alakane and told it much better I butasI am a sort of bushw! in inion of manner of 2 and the first authen- tic story of my interview with him. It was a torridly hot day when the Alameda aro! in the white harbor of Honolulu. There ripple on the ocean and the trees hung rank and limp. Amid some stirring patriotic music from the king's band we disembarked, and were immediatel: surrounded by thousands of natives, who st about with mouths agape. As soon as we our land legs we were hastily driven to king’s palace, which stands among e most beautiful trees I have ever beheld. And right here { want to say that I was crowned with a wreath of white flowers, the name of which I cannot, for the life of me, remember. The crown was tenderly hung w my brow by a pretty Kanaka girl, who laughed Dewitehingly as she notice mny embarrass- ment. We found King Kalakaua in his recep- tion-room. He is a stout, middle-aged man, with a large full face and bright eyes. He ex- tended his hand to Presieent Spalding, who reverently bowed as he grasped the outstretched fin. Then I was introduced. With the white flowers dangling annoyingly from my brow, I seized the imperial flipper and squeezed it with all the ardor of a howling wolf. Then the rest of the boys and the ladies were PRESENTED TO THE KING, who showed graceful attention to each. The monarch of the Sandwich islands needs exer- cise. He ought togoto the Hot Springs and boil out. His flesh is soft and I don't believe he could do a hundred yards in less than two minutes. Of course I didn’t tell him this, but it is my honest conviction that if he would take @ course of training, such as the boys are used to, he would last several seasons. The king dresses with considerable gorgeousness. When I first caw him he reminded me of a horse doc- tor I know on the West Side. His diamonds were large but genuine. There was a great deal of white shirt about him and his col- lar was of the turn-down variety with an old-fashioned fiyblown, butterfly neck- tie. His clothes were neat but illy out. At the luncheon, which was held on the im; grounds and beneath stars so large an trious that they ap Tus- to be electric lamps swaying in the dark, I had an Y srgpenme | to talk with the king. One of the first questions he asked me was about the sidential elec- tion. He could not have pitched a better ball for me to hit, for I had been priming myself with politics for six months or more. HOW THE KING KNEW HARRISON WAS GOING TO BE ELECTED. “It was aclean sweep for Harrison,” I replied, “and I lost $250 on the game.” This seemed to amuse the king, for he laughed with all his soul. “That speaks well for your loyalty to your party, but very poorly for your judgment,” he replied, and for a moment I sat wiggling my finger in a native dish called poi. Before I could make answer to the kingly sally Kally (this is the disloyal nickname applied to Kala- kaua by the natives) resumed: “I did much better than you, Monsieur Ang- song. I knew three weeks before the election who was to be the successful candidate.” “Tip?” I inqured, not knowing what else to say. bes .” replied the . “She knows i tog Tl call her.” ee A messenger was dispatched toa building near the king's palace, and in a moment a little dried-up woman with & yellow face and scrawny | hair approached us in a timid sort of way. In | some lands she would have been called a witch. To King Kalakaua, I soon learned, the woman was a clairvoyant. With profuse courtesies the hag approached the king and was introduced tousas we sat, tailor fashion,on the mats spread out in the banquet garden. “She can tell you anything, Monsieur Ang- song,” the king whispered to me and I bowed knowingly. Then waving his hand in an im- perial way, Kalakaua demanded of the witch | that she tell my fortune. The old Woman ran her fingers around my head and chanted some meaningless doggerel. Her eyes were always fixed on the stars. Finally she blurted out: “The tiger lilly stranger is great. He will marry one of Kanaka’s feather ferns and the buds will outbloom in warmth of color Hawaii's fairest peonies.” I heard a snort from some disreputable mem- ber at the board. I could have snorted, too. if asnort had been proper, but it wasn't. The king was profoundly grave, although I thought I discovered in his fat brown face a look of pleasure. Having finished, the witch looked at meadmiringly. I smiled and nodded my head. “Who'll win the championship next season?” I finally asked. wishing to test the fortune tell- Ai wers, Masonic and the words of a de: Jangnage passed between the king and Zeep. en the old woman ran her fin- ers through my hair, and with her eyes still xed on the blaging stars exclaimed: . Am\ 1d, while we all clay Tange Tho "king." proud of witch’s knowledge of the base ball situation in the United States, returned to his food with aj — satisfaction. Meanwhile the imperial id be; to play with great vigor and merit. When the repast was over we were re- galed with A DANCE BY SEVERAL KANAKA GIRLS, Such supple maidens I never before beheld. The earth upon which they tripped seemed to have an elasticity about it which sent them rollick- ing off into the air. And such eyes! If my boys had them we would lead the batting for years to come. With fingers daubed with iand my stomach filled with all the good things that grace a king’s table on state occa- sions, I sat in the balmy air watching these lithe, queenly creatures float and glide among the flowers and ferns. The king suddenly with- drew during the festivities, but I saw him again before we embarked and received from him as a mascot for the coming season a purse made of shark's teeth and cinnamon fiber. We were to have Co Ps at least one game of ball for Kalakauaand the royal household, but some missionaries whom the cannibals did not catch in years gone by rebelled against such on anday, and we were forced to leave Hawaii without showing our skill with the ball and bat, Thus far we have been blessed with good health, fair winds and most enjoyable compan- ions. ‘ou correct any grammatical errors inane letter, asthe hestnes is entirely new to me andI am aware of having made We are now sailing for Auck- get poe you will hear from me. Beacon. Between the dances.—Miss Ranter (a cele- brated amateur)—On, by the way, Jack, you've wJesk (het cousin) Well, oom: jac! fel ed to me that the had decidedly too Mise Re Whe what rtp ‘mean? Tt had only one act. Jack—Exactly. He Wasn’t Homesick, Oh, No. ‘From the Youth's Companion, . A boy may be homesick enough to feel badly, and yet not quite homesick his self-possession. i THE FIRST COMMONWEALTH. | REMINISCENCES OF LAWYERS. Vane. f From ‘1D. Mead's address tn the O14 South His- It was Sir Harry Vane whom Cromwell always found in his way when he tried to be too despotic. “The Lord deliver me from Sir Harry Vane,” you remember he said when he went down to Whitehall and cleared out the Bump parliament. And in 1656, when Crom- well had again dissolved parliament, and un- dertook to rule alone, Vane published a tract sharply criticising him. This tract, entitled “A Its Scheme was First Set Forth Harry way in which it proposed a new constitution for England. Cromwell's constitution, the “In- strament of government,” had been drawn up by a council of state, which had been appointed in a hurried and somewhat arbitrary way. Vane proposed that a constitution should be framed by @ general convention chosen for the purpose the whole x the way,” says eee ene tury 7» was M immortal associates.” “This production of a er rl may safe! for the first time—the idea of a written consti- tution, or body of fundamental laws, by which the government itself is to be controled, re- 2 oe ee Soir lan pid Soren ion, to q e inning, by which the people dx the boundaries wishin which their own legislative and civil power shall be confined, constitutes the pee arity of the governments, federal state, within the American Union.” But the American scholar, like the En- = scholar, is wrong in saying that Vane levelops and illustrates, for the first time in history, the idea of a written constitution. That honor belo: not to Old land, but to New England. ‘ifteen years before Crom- well's “Instrument of vernment” was framed in England and eighteen years be- fore Vane wrote his ‘Healing Question,” on Jan. 14, 1688 (N. 8., Jan. 24, 1639], a general assembly of the planters of the three towns of Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor, which then constituted the whole of the little colony of Connecticut, met at Hartford and conjoined themselves to be “‘one public state or common- wealth, for the pi sof maintaining and Loy den the liberty and purity of the gospel, he discipline of the churches, and the order! conduct of civil affairs according to law.” There is no mention or hint of royal authority or any superior authority whatever in the iper which they framed; but the tone Gioeckoat is that of independent freemen. To avoid any ible question, the general court, at its next meeting, @ series of orders, securing to the towns certain powers not to be assumed by the — government. All these privileges be- longed to the towns already, and the new orders, as one of the historians observes, ‘are much more like the first ten amendments to the Con- stitution of the United States, a bill of rights, originating in the jealousy of the politi unite. Indeed,” he says, ‘there is hardly a step in the proceedings in Connecticut, in 1638, which does not tempt one to digress into the Spe; mebean in the action on the national stage 150 years later”—that is, the adoption of our national constitution in 1783, This constitution of Connecticut was really the first written constitution known in history. “Here,” says the historian, ‘‘is the first practi- cal assertion of the right of the people not only to choose but to limit the powers of their rulers; an assertion which lies at the foundation of the American system. It is on the banks of the Connecticut, under the mighty preaching of Thomas Hooker and in the constitution to which he gave life, if not form, that we draw the first breath of that atmosphere which is now so familiar to us.” I trust that all of you who are to hear these lectures on the growth of our constitution may read these old ‘funda- mental orders of Connecticut;” and I wish especially that you might ali learn more of Thomas Hooker, one of the most far-seeing men our country ever had and the truest dem- ocrat of the time in which he lived, save Sir Harry Vane alone. The famous compact signed by the Pilgrim Fathers in the cabin of the Mayflower, ia 1620, just before they landed at Plymouth, by which they combined themselves into a ‘civil body politic’ and promised obedience to such just and equal laws as they might frame from time to time, cannot, perhaps, be called a constitu- tion in the strictest sense, but was a great step toward @ constitution, and was a great work for the first day of England in America, ated a state, and a democratic state. It took the first step toward independence, while it looked reverently back toward the old home. I have already dwelt upon the signifi- cance of the way in which the Pilgrim Fathers, driven out of England, begin this compact, with which they begin their life in this new world, with warm professions of allegiance to England’s king. Old England, whose kings and bishops drove them out, is proud of them to-day, and counts them as truly her children as Shakespeare and Miltor and Vane. As the American walks the cor- ridors and halls of the parliament house at Westminster, he pays no great heed to the painted kings upon the painted windows and cares little for the gilded throne in the gilded house of lords. The speaker's chair in the com- mons does not stir him most, nor the white form of Hampden that stands silent at the door, but his heart beats fastest where, among great scenes from English history painted on the walls, the 8 and triumphs of the days of Puritanism and of the Revolution, he sees the departure of the oe fathers to found New England. England will not let that scene goasa part of American history only, but claims it now as one of the proudest scenes in her own history, too. It is a bud of promise, I said, when first I saw it there. 5! not its full unfolding be some great reunion of the English race, a prelude to the federation of the world? Let’ that picture thee in the parlia- ment house at Westminster stay always in your mind, to remind you of the England in you. Let the picture of the signing of the compact on the Mayflower stay with it to remind you of progress and greater freedom. That, I take it, is what America—New England, now tempered. by New Germany, New Ireland, New France— that, I take it, is what America stands HOME INFLUENCE A PROTECTION. Its Great Value to Both Girls and Boys in After Life. From the St. Louis Republic. The girls who have had a watchful, gallan tender father, to use shrewd wit for them and give them the shelter of a strong, kindly arm, are not the prey of s smooth-tongue and arti- ficial love-making from worthless dudes. The boys who have had mothers of warm feelings and keen perceptions, sharp-sighted as they were fond, and devoted as they were acute, are hardly so ready to surrender to the wiles of de- signing women inside or outside of the social pale. When the coquette’s lips are on a boy's forhead he will miss the warm, magnetic touch that comes only from hearts wholly un- selfish and passionately fond, as bright mothers are. The bandied jests and pert repartee of small actresses and intri- gantes will sound stale to a lad used to the fresh, gay humor of a kindly home. For for. One sees in so many neighbor- ey yi e never told me how you liked our theatricals | The fEEE H eg: af a i 3 z 5 Be H ii it if It cre- | by Str | Recalling of ood | nothing. became and the party was about to break up, when one of them said: ‘This case reminds me of one in which I was engaged years ago, It was in this state, somewhere up near the Canada line, that a man had been arrested for counter- failings The care ee et a doubted inclined to give up in despair, I found one sufficiently well preserved to answer my Fesigeg Ma an ge SAE respects except the ‘es, wl were clumsily executed. But when I compared the genuine note withit,I made a very which caused me to feel that I had won the case. Between the signatures on the genuine note only was a vignette so small as to boost notice except the most carefuland searching examination. Well, to make a k story shi bank notes. He told his story, and offered in evidence the note that had been found on the person of my client when he was arrested. He swore to its being connterfeit. He knew this was so by the signatures, I had my genuine note lying on the Ubicnadie« piece of paper beside me, and when I began the cross-examination I asked for the counterfeit thatI —_— examine it. While putting ques- tions to the witness I laid it down on my table, and by a neat sleight-of-hand trick, picked uj the genuine note without being detected an: han it to the witness, at the same time asking ‘Is this bill counterfeit?” He looked at it carelessly and said it was for the reasons he before stated. ‘That will do,’ said I. iow, your Honor,’ turning to the magistrate. ‘I want yon to take this billand mark it so that you will know it again.’ He didso. After cr] @ number of eople, who testified to the g character of @ prisoner, I called the casbier of the bank that issued the bill and asked him if the marked note was genuine. His examination of it was very careful, but he finally swore that it. was genuine. e detective was recalled, and this rare was not so positive that it was a counter- eit. | Sergey the ned or jury, sore argument, and the judge unhesitatingly direc! ed a verdict of ‘not guilty.’ What Became of the counterfeit? Oh, I had that stowed away in a safe place, and it is in my possession now.” “That was something like one of my first case: remarked another of the lawyers, “I was prac tising in New England and was one day calle: upon to defend an old woman who was ac- cused of the larceny of a breastpin by her step- son, He was the most ungrateful man I ever met. The woman had supported him since he was a little boy, when his father had died, leaving her a widow. The old man left no property and she had worked to support her- self and his son for twenty years. Now he had lost a breastpin. One which he said he identi- fied as his was found in s pawnshop. The pawnbroker said an old woman had pledged it. So he accused his step-mother of the theft, and she was arrested. *T ascertained that the pin was a secret so- elety badge and that the young man had iden- tified it by some symbolic characters on its face. I spent a whole day in hiring at various jewelry stores exactly similar pins. When the Young man was put on the witness stand he swore that he knew the pin found in the pawnshop was his, because of the symbolic character engraved on it, and| because no member of the society "would | dare pawn one, and only members could have them. You can imagine his surprise when I LSyreat a dozen such badges an: roved by he jewellers where I had obtained them. The judge decided that there was not sufficient evidence to convict and discharged my client, But to cap the climax the young man found that very afternoon the badge pimned to a waist- coat which he had discarded a few days before he missed it.” ate ene LATE FOREIGN NEWS. Henry George addressed an enthusiastic meeting at Camberwell, England, last evening. He was asked many questions, Admiral Jaures, French minister of marine, was seized with anapoplectic fit in the Place de la Concorde last evening. He is dead. M. Fouque, a Frencn metallurgist, claims to have discovered the art of making the famous Pompeii blue. His process is based on a mix- ture Of silicate, copper, and chalk, and he says that he can produce any quantity of it ata moderate cost. A terrible explosion occurred in the Brynally colliery, at Wrexham, Wales, resulting in the death of twenty persons. Eleven dead bodies have been taken from the pit. The governor of the province of West Prus- | sia, in view of the scarcity of farm hands, has suggested the introduction of Chinese labor. A strange accident has befallen a young lady, the niece of the mayor of Cherveux, France. She was playing with alittle child upon her lap when she suddenly threw back her head and remained motionless, A hairpin had pene- tasted her skull, She never recovered con- sciousness, and expired a short time afterward. Sir William Vernon Harcourt, at a meeting at Ely last night, read a letter from Pigott to Sir Hugh Childers, written in 1885, offering to sell the secrets of the alliance between the nellites and tories, A council of the nationalist members of par- liament and their a advisers will shortly be held to consider their line of defense before the Parnell commission, The Irish sculptress, Miss Mary Redmond, who has been studying for several years in Tealy, baa Lleeig 2 to ae poms = wenty-one, her work is much praised, an vp edie ginn, cedars, akong them one for a bust of Gladstone, The Salisbury government has abandoned the idea of prosecuting Mr. O’Brien for con- spiracy. The London Standard's Buda Pesth corres- dent t poarboytry the absolute authenticit Uf the following: ‘Austria has given urgent wd ders to hold in readiness a corps of observation on the Servian frontier at Behis, Semlin, end two other equi-distant points. Two tugs and ten barges must be ly at each point to trans- port the troops. At the other two points twice this number must be in readiness. The rail- for immediat troops at twelve hours’ notice.’ ‘The Paris police have searched the houses bers of the patriotic league tem Beem ‘documents, but have b ecsecbr) Three Boilers Blow Up. fc 4 BABY KILLED AND A NUMBER OF PERSONS BADLY MANGLED BY FLYING FRAGMENTS. A nest of three boilers at the St, Nicholas col- liery, near Mahonoy city, Pa., exploded at 11 o'clock Wednesday morning with terrific effect. One of the boilers was blown 500 yards; l P Fair ears air white hands: Brightclearcomplexion Soft healthfal skin. © PEARS'—The Great Engish Complason SOMP,—Sold Eryn.” So BLOOKER'S DUTCH COCOA. MADE INSTANTLY with boiling water or milk. NO COOKING REQUIRED! Prof. R. OGDEN DOREMUS (Belleowe Hospital Medical Colieze), writes: — “* No choicer, purer or better cocoa can be made.” Bold by all leading grocers and druggists st $1 per b. tin; 55c. per % Ib. tin, U. 8. DEPOT, 35 MERCER ST. NEWYORK. m6 Asx Your Grocer Fon __WINTER RESORTS NTIC CITY— itn Wenders 3 W. E, CHEESEMAN, G4RaTOGS | SPRINGS, N. ¥. DR. STRONG'S SANITARIUM. OPEN ALL THE YEAR. For the treatment of female, nervous, respiratory, mala aod other chronic diseases.” Equipped with all the best remedial appliances—among them Massage, Vacuum treatmeut, Swedish movements, Electricity, Turkish, Russian, Roman, Electro theriual, French douche and all baths. ‘Labie appointments first-cl: Acheertul resort for treatment, rest or recreation. Outdoor and indoor with special ad- inter and Spriug mb2-30t sports, Ina dry and tonic climate, W vantages of the SPRING W Fates iow. Send tor circu) OCEAN HOUSE, AT NOW OvEN Under Old Management, ATEKS. ar. {21-0e03m YEW WINTER THE PRI oe 3. A. REID. ESOR’ 8 This new, artistic and completely-appointed hotel is now open. Situatedon the ATLANTIC OCEAN, 18 miles east of NORFOLK, VA., accessible by NORFOLK AND VIRGINIA BEACH R.B.,and on direct line between the North and South. A primeval pine forest of about 1,000 acres, with beautiful drives and walks, Asa health resort it has no super! Address iW. Or 8. E. CRITTENDEN, (late of Point Comfort, Va.), 44 Broadway, New York (Room 4.) fe2-26te0 HE LEHMAN, OCEAN END OF PEN: ja ave., AUantic City, N. J. Eul Sun parlor, electric bell ~ Ja26-4,t0,th-om KS. MP HE MCTORTA, DS CA = lantic City. Thoroughly renovated, heated, gas, &c. hot and cold sea water: open wll the Fear, Ja19-s,tu&th, sin M. WILLIAMS, ¥V INDERMERE—TENNESSEE UE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. Near the ocean ; oven all year ; tcl £26-1m RS, C, L. Ho" NT. VERNON ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. SYLVA. 5 ‘hone 105. HOUSTON, Gi ocean rooms, Near the ch. Thorong! heated. _f18-1m PEE JAMES 5. MOO. S HIRLEY-NEAR THE UCKY AVE, LANTIC C AT Popular location.” Opens March i, r26-$m" Miss, M.'T.SOULHALL of Washington, D.C. Q® THE BEACH. HADDON HALL. 115-3m. EDWIN LIPPINCOTT. Ty \HE AC! MRS. STODDARD, TLANTIC CITY, N. J.—HOTELS, BOARDING- Houses, Cottages, Lots and Bath-Houses to let oF for sale by 1G. ADAMS & CO., real estate agents, Heal Estate and Law Buildings, Atlantic City, N. J. 114-3ut CHALFONTE, T= ATLANTIC CITY, N. J ‘Moved to the Beach. > ENLARGED AND IMPROVED. pu ner none ac eTa nD OORT SIE at levator. fed-3m. E. ROBERTS & SONS. OTEL LURAY, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., ‘On the aes Will open February 16, 2680._3._ WH ENNHURST, ear the beach TEANTIO CITY, ¥.3. ear the beach; open wretes: good drainage, fel-3m JAMES HOOD, 115-2m SsruE WAVERLY,” Open all the Jer hot gud gold ae pen yer hot and col house; sun par? ‘ts Mrs, JL. BAYA CORONa’ 0. Ocean End, Virginia ave, Atlantic City, N. J. year. Excellent Cuizine, = n MES. W. L. ADA! bh ISLESWORTH, ATLANTIC Cr On the beach, sea end of Vi WILL OPEN FEBRUARY jal4-6m BUCK & Li Ware AND SPRING RESORT. EATON COT- tage Hotel. Old Pomt Comfort, Va Terms $2 Sao dua BOOKER, Proprietor, FAMILY SUPPLIES. whee LIQUID \GLUE" MENDS EVERY. ken Chine Glass, Furniture, and y GEOKG! We ‘Everlasting Te: 10c. and 25c. mhl4-eoly 85. “Same ee it Ib. oe fe ee RAILROADS, _ ere. For Chicage. spa "Kcrthiweat, Vestibuled Limited daily 8:! press 9-05 p.m. octet Bt Loi, and’ Indisuapolia, exprese ‘the Metropolitan Branch, 16-2 Pm, for privetpal iatious oul tad m. intermediate pointe, tO x Patton eee rmediate stations, t7:00 p.m, ya’ $10:00 pm Cbure! Seine eave Se any st P Por Frederie fashington on Sunday at 1:15 ‘at all stations on Metropolitan Branch. ‘or 10:10 am., 14:35 and 15:30 pam. Sor Harerstowa #1010 am. and 5:30 or Hlarerstown, am. mn, ius arrive from Chicago daily 8 ag nd Cincinnati and St Lo Pyttsburg, *8 « from 3 Mae, $7 20 P. NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA DIVISION. For New York, Trenton, Newark Eiiza! peat x, J., 18: 11:25 a.m, *2:30,°¢:15and*16:30 Care on ‘all day trains. Sleeping Car on tue 10:30 p.m., open ai P hiladelphia, Newark, W ili: 11:25 a.m, *2:; 158.008 and | ‘Trains les 111:00a ht. lea) Philadelphia for W: 1B am, 1143, "4:15, Seb awk p.m. Except Sunday. *Daily. $5: , Exfrere called for wed Tcbanenk ot Lente and rest- Gences on orders left at Uoket offices, 619 and 1304 Pea CLEMENTS, CHAS. 0. SCULL, mbit ~~ Gen. Manager. Gen. Pasa Ag’t. HE GREASE MNSYLVANTA ROUTE, TO THE NORTH, WEST AND BO DOUBLE TRACK." | SPLEN STEEL RAILS. MAG! FI ds bes sCP FEB Ak. 24H. ln TRAINS LEAVE WASHINGTON FROM STATION, CORNER SIXTH AND B STREETS, #5 FOL- | For Pittsburg and the West, Chicago Limited E: Pullman Vestibuled Cars, at 9:50 a.m. dai Line, 9:50 a.m, daily, to’ Cincinnati and St with Sleeping Cars from Pittsburg to Cincinn: and Harrisburg to St, Louis: daily, day, to Chicuwo, with Sleeping Car cago. Western’ Express, at eeping Cars Washington to daily st Harrisburg wi jor Louisville and Memphis, 10:00 p.m. daily, for Pittsburg and est, with through, Sleeper to Pittsburg, and Pitts- ic urg'to Cl , BALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RAILROAD. Erie, Canandaigua, and Rochester, daily ; for But- akars, daily, except Sattirday, 10-00 ‘on to ter. Haven, aud Elmira, at 9:08 " 9:00, 21:00, and ind $3290 pm. “Oa 10:00, and press of 5 ars, 9:40 a.m, daily, except Sunday, and 3:49 p. ma. daily, with Dining Car, For Borton without chane 2:10 p.m. every day. For Brooklyn, N. ¥., all through trains connect at Jen. sey City with boats of Brooklyn Annex, affording direct transfer to Pultop street, avoiding double ferriaie across New York City ectin th thro Pacific Ex- Tess, the re, Sy lls and 1 m. On Sunday, and 9:00 am., 12:05 and 4:40 pt Sunday. Subdays, 9:00 am, 4:10 pan. ALEXANDRIA AND FREDERICKSBURG RAIL- WAX, AND ALEXANDRIA AND WASHINGTON tween Lynchbu: Charlotte, Colum! ham, Mon: 6:11 P. M—Memplis Express Daily, vie Lynchburg ol Chat v Slee; eS ea ere ee int. 8:30 P, M.—Western Daily for Manassas, Cali * Charlot ville, Cincin- ville. Danville, Asi Colum- bia, Aiken, Ai wants, Sew Or- ye teed Tae trans neg 7 Catan we tt furnished, ‘checked st Tetra erie POTOMAC RIVER BOATS. TRANSPORTATION LINE Se + an further | mhé-Om ok where, cred SPRING MILLINERY. cA we dtoreat of Farared, bad Sy TORR mama B® M3. BUNT, 1300 Effi "Shosnr. A * Antiby FORMERLY CARRYING ON DRESS __|& LS Sens LADY, making sritoetey dade, Meiers one cad apt For Kvexme EaR NEW DESIGNS IW SH. sre! = FINE FRENOH aay x avian’ srawpoomne.*** — ~ L828 ax Pakis STYLES EIVED SPRING Ladies’ Riding hisbits, Trev ‘S ern, Secuctn: Del : Walking an ledies" ‘work, Under the » ts St Jaa, Phloging, Inte with C of London and Paria.” MERCHANT TAILOR, mngtm_ © *"'Cor. New York ave. and 10th et, Kusceers Darss Sureps, ABSOLUTELY TRE BEST AND MOST RELIABLE. Kieinert's FEATRER-WEIGHT cwashabie.) KLEINERT’S SEAMLESS STOCKINETT. KLEINERT'S SEAMLESS PURE RUI Vikious OfHin Duss AuiELDSY EVERY PAIR WARRANTED. mbl-3m_—_— BEWARE OF IMITATION. x: AKMENTS RB: | {Ds AL SRI 1S REDYED, 4b The MISSES CUNNINGHAM, "ure 3 , Yad F at. 1310 Sth at nw, bet. Nand’. Sodas RA DRESS SHii XG AND DRY 10S New class Ladies’ and Gents! work of every Flush, Velvet aud Evening Dreseee. i E LERCH, formerly with A. jainon ¥riewe, Paria, eel S DRY CLEANING ESTAB- DYE WORKS, 906 G at. n. en" Gente’ jie of wll Dyed without being ry ‘Ladies’ Evening . a y-ive : iuoderate.” Goods calied for and delivered. ARGROOE GARMENTS, MADE UP O& RIPPED. dyed s goud mourning A. FISCHER, 906 G st. aw. a4 5 Saxvens Sranuax LEADING PiANOS AND ORGANS. ee Bhus. WEBER, FISCHEK and ESTEE ESTEY ORGANS. Pianos for rent aud sold on accommodating terma, Siti betas Mite Lita Ma 934 ¥ st. a. w., Wi mi, D0, Charles st. baltimore, Md ml 7 Mam et. mond, Va Tx Srerr Urnoar Piso It is the most durable Piano made. It is thoroughly constructed. His artistic in design atid ouieh, It has the most brilliant siusing quality of tone te be found in auy Upright Piano. ‘Terms—Cash or woutly installments, ELPFER oF E RE hd bh ~y me i-4 | wold here el , ree” G. H RUB, Bole Agent, 1 TONE, Nb Denman _frgeinl attention of “Purchasers” if tvited te, thele “New Artistic ” finished in designe 4 Est /RCOKATIVE ART. Pianos for rent. SECOND-HAND PIANOS. —A large comprising aluost every. well-known. make i hs fow teures. SPECIAL TNDUCEMEN TSS which will be on STS when WM, KNABE & 00. iu prices and in tes MONTHLY INST, ac MEDICAL, &e. ‘WHO RE THE SERVICES oF ees seer ues nya Mireta’n-e. ‘Ladies ouly. ismedy. 6 Pa) 12th ste.'ne. E TAS NEVER BEEN CONTRADICTED THAT Dr. BROTHERS AQ the edvertio- P oi Remedy for gee yh Td lorty -cigt hours. Price, ¢3 per box. Dr. D's NERVINE No. 2 ptbinl weean lon of vitality ntrycun deel 44 il ** STANDIFORD's, cor Ot aud Paw. 421 Oth st. nw. Dorr Tanz Wis Youn Exe aes aes petra 415-3m J. ¥. LEWENBERG, M.D. Manage Tae Fost LIEBIG COMPAXT'S EXTRACT OF MEAT. USE IT FOR SOUPS, BEEF TEA, SAUCES, AXD MADE DISHES. (Genuine only with facsimile of Justus vou Licbigte SIGNATURE IX BLUE IKK

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