Evening Star Newspaper, May 18, 1889, Page 9

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

sir THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C., SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1889-TWELVE PAGES. WIVES OF NAVAL OFFICERS. PROMINENT IN OFFICIAL SOCIETY. Some Handsome and Accomplished Women and Their Histories. —ne The ladies of the naval circle have always filled an important place in the social life of the capital. In the days of long cruises and imperfect methods of travel quite a colony of the wives and daughters of heroes of the sea re- sided at Washington, and were among the most favored guests at the executive mansion. In later years many have enjoyed exceptional op- portunities of visiting foreign countries, resid- ing at cities which were the ports of rendezvous of the vessels of the fleet in which their hus- bands were serving, and assisting in gracing occasions of a social character in which the American officers participated. In the United States they have mingled in the fashionable s of the cities contiguous to navy-yards have been the scenes of their husband's duties, and in Washington they have adorned the highest sphere of social lite. With the adaptiveness of American woman the ladies of the navy possess all the charms and spirit of their country-women with the added acquire- ments and accomplishments, the result of con- tact with the fashionable circles of the capitals and seaports of foreign lands and the metro- politan cities and capital of their own country. ‘MRS. FRANKLIN. One of the most interesting figures in this array of feminine beauty and social accom- plishments is Mrs. Marion Sands-Franklin, wife of Rear Admiral Samuel F. Franklin, and daughter of Rear Admiral Benjamin F. Sands, @ native of Baltimore. who entered the navy in 1828, and served with distinction in the late war, hoisting the United States flag over Gal- veston. Tex., the last confederate stronghold to surrender to the United States forces. Her mother was Henrietta M. French, sister of Gen. Wm. F. French, of the United States ar- tillery. also a native of Baltimore. aide to Gen. Franklin Pierce in Mexico, distinguished in many battles in the war with Mexico, the Semi- noles, and in the war of the rebellion, where be commanded a division. Mrs. Franklin was born in Washington and educated at Eaton Hall, near Philadelphia. When she married Admiral Franklin in 1883, she was the widow of Col. Arthur H. Dutton, United States engineers, a native of Connecti- cut, graduate of West Point, colonel twenty- first Connecticut voluneers, mortally wounded on the field of battle near Burmuda Hundred, Va., while leading his brigade. REAR ADMIRAL FRANKLIN, who isa brother of Gen. Wm. B. Franklin, of the late war, isa native of Pennsylvania. He entered the navy in 1841, being attached to the Pacific squadron. He was a yolunteer on the frigate Roanoke in the action with the Merri- mac, when the frigates Cumberland and Con- gress were destroyed. He has had various commands, having particularly distinguished himself during the operations against Mobile. The admirals great-grandfather, Franklin, was a brother of Walter Franklin, of New York. whose house was the residence of George Washington, first President of the United States, when he was inaugurated in New York on April 30, 1739. The admiral’s grand- father, Thomas Franklin, married a daughter ef Samuel Rhoades, of Philadelphia, a distin- guished family of Pennsylvania. The admiral’s father, Walter Franklin, was a public-spirited citizen of Pennsyivania. Thegreat-grand uncle of the admiral, who owned the first executive residence, was an importing merchant of New York, engaged in the Russian and East Indian trade. He was said to have as much wealth in Russia as in America, He married Maria Bound, whose mother was a sister of Gov. Win- throp, of Massachusetts. She had three daugh- ters, one of whom, Maria, was the first wife of DeWitt Clinton, and another the wife of his | brother George. The home of Admiral and Mrs. Franklin in the West End is one of the most popular centres of fashionable society MRS. J. M. BROWNE, of the ladies of the naval circle who occupy a prominent place among the historic families, is the wife of Surgeon-General J. Mills Browne. Mrs. Browne was Miss Anna Key Turner. She is a daughter of Daniel Turner, an officer of the United States army and son of a Sen- ator and governor of North Carolina. Col. Turner was one of the few officers retained after the disbanding of the army of the war of 1812. He resigned his position, however, and after taking a collegiate course at William Mary college settled on a plantation in Carolina at Warrenton, near Raleigh, wh daughter was born and educated. Browne's mother wasa daughter of Francis Scott Key, the author of the “Star Spangled Banner.” and sister of Mrs. George H. Pendle- ton, formerly United States Senator and minis- ter to Germany, of Mrs. Charles Howard, of Baltimore. and of Philip Barton Key, who was slain by Gen. Daniel E. Sickles on th ment at the northeast corner of Pennsylvania avenue and 1544 street, withina few feet of Premier Blaine’s future residence. The father of Mrs. Browne, being a civil engi- neer, he was em ed by the government on civil engineer duty at Mare Island, California. He was accompanied to t by his daugh- ter. At that time. in 18: |. M. Browne, a native of New Hampshire, and graduate of Harvard, entered upon®his first duty as assist- ant surgeon on the United States Steamship Warren, and proceeded to Mare Island, then just occupied by Commodore David G. Farra- | gut, and in 1855 he became his first medical officer. In 1856, Dr. Browne married the daughter of Civil Engineer Turner, which the first wedding on the Island. After his marriage Mrs. Browne resided in California during her husband's duty with survey, north- western boundary, and Indian expeditions. He st on the Dolphin, h captured the slaver Echo, and on the Kearsarge in the Thomas | | | above the left knee, | pave- | action which suuk the confederate privateer | Alabama, and has twice been fleet surgeon on the Paci Upon his elevation to the rank and duties of surgeon general of the navy, Dr. Browne made his home in Washington, and Mrs, Browne after the varied experiences of a naval officer's wife. entered the list of brilliant ladies who grace the fashionable life of the capi tal im the circle of the families of the navy. After the close of the American revolution, a brave officer of the line in Napoleon's victor- ious army arrived in America with two sons and settled in Massachusetts. This officer was Captain Mallard. He was a widower, and soon after his arrival married Misa Crosby, an lish lady, whose family had also settled Massachusetts, and was later interested in the famous Crosby square London litigation. One of the sons of Captain Mallard was the great- grandfather of Mrs. James Fulton, wife of the —— ral of the United States navy. her mot s side, Mra, Fulton belongs to the noted family of Arnold, of Khode Iskand, poe ety Mrs. ton was Miss ughter Mallard, of Los Angeles, where she was and mother still California in 1850, ” where father began the practice of law at Los Angeles. He retired from his profession about twenty years ago, but still makes that city his home. THE MARRIAGE. Miss Mallard and Paymaster Fulton made each other’s acquaintance while Mr. Fulton was stationed at San Francisco. Their marriage took place in 1879. Paymaster-General Fulton is a native of Tennessee; was appointed into the navy in 1858, and since that time has performed the duties of his responsible branch of the staff with eminent satisfaction to the depart- ment. Mrs. Fulton continued her residence in California until her husband's promotion to the bp ‘generalship, when he estab- lished his wife in the elegant home over which she now presides at the capital of the nation. Mrs. Fulton is a woman of commanding figure, with an extremely interesting face, which shows decided traits of her French an- cestry. She is very attractive in manners and is one of the most popular ladies, not only in naval circles but in official society of Wash- ington. wife of the naval aide to the Secretary of the Navy, was Miss Edmona Taylor Phelps, daugh- ter of Rear-Admiral Thomas 8. Phelps. Her father, a native of Maine, was one of the most distinguished officers of the old navy. He served on the Pacific coast in the Indian war, in Washington territory, in 1855-6, was in the expedition for the relief of fort Sumter, made a survey and replaced, under fire, the removed maritime marks in the Potomac and James riv- ers and North Carolina coast, to facilitate the movements of naval and military expeditions; was inthe attack on fort Fisher, where he bourrrmgagae a vessel on the advance line of attle. Mrs. Mason was born in Norfolk, Va., the native place of her mother and where her father was stationed. Her mother, who was Marga- ret Richet Levy, was sister of William M. Levy, who served in the Mexican war, in the first V ginia volunteers in the confederate army. in the campaign of the York peninsula, was adju- tant and inspector-general on the staff of Gen. Dick Taylor, and was a representative in the Forty-fourth Congress from Louisiana. Through her father, Mrs. Mason is descended from Israel Putnam, the Cincinnatus of the American revolution. In 1875 _ Miss Phelps married Lieut. Theodorus Baile Myers Mason. a native of New York, and grad- | uate of the United States naval academy in 1368. While inthe South American squadron he received the thanks of the Secretary of the Navy. a gold medal from the New York life- saving institution, and decoration of the Order of the Rose from the emperor of Brazil for saving the lives of two sailors in the harbor of Rio Janeiro. He accompanied Gen, Grant to Boston in 1872. Took part in the landing of American Marines at Panama 1873, received a silver medal from the king of Italy for saving an Italian bark from fire at Callao, was instruc- wr of wodern languages, ordnance and gun- nery at the naval academy, organized the naval | intelligence bureau, and was chief of artillery in the last Panama expedition. He has since been flag lieutenant to Admiral Chandler and secretary to Admiral Davis, and now fills his resent important post. A sister of Mrs, Mason, ‘et Phelps, is the wife of Lieut. J. Dex- ter Adams,U. 8. and Lieut. Thos, 8, Phelps, 8. her brother. Mason is one of the most beautiful and fascinating ladies of the naval circle, and is a great favorite in the most select sphere of fash- ionable life at the capital. DeB. R. K. “see — THE YELLOW GARTER. They All Wear One Just Above the Left Knee—Why They Do So. From the New York Sun. The very latest and funniest whim is the wear- ing of the yellow garter. Just one garter, not two, you understand, and it must be worn just ‘The other stocking may be wrinkled disconsolately over the shoe top or be fastened in place by any one or all of the mysterious devices known only to the initiated, but the left one is held firmly by a band of yel- low silk elastic, with a ribbon rosette of the | same shade, and the correct and proper thing is to wear it night and day for six months. The yellow garter’s origin is shrouded in | murky uncertainty, but its signification is known to every girl who possesses it, and this is its charm: Any girl who wears a yellow garter above her left knee is sure to be engaged in less than six months. The garter must be given to her by a friend, she must not make or buy it, and it has never been known to fail of its purpose but once, and then the owner was wearing it on the wrong extremity, or rather the right one instead of the left. Just wherein lies its potency belongs to the ethics of the esoterics of girlhood, but the girls all wear them. The slim slips of girls who want to be engaged just for fun, though they aren't half old enough to be married; the bright, clever girls, as sweet and spicy and wholesome as carnations, who have a career before them, and say they wouldn’t marry the best man in the world; the hopeless girls that have tried everything else, you know, and are accustomed to failures; the sweet-hearted, womanly girls, who are waiting like Mariana in the moated grange and sighing because “he cometh not,” and the naughty, witching girls, who could marry every ietiorw ta the market if they were not so sort of bewildering that no one quite dares ask them, and the shy girls who hide the yellow band from their very best friends, and think of it when they say their prayers, all waiting for some a e knight of the garter to help them solve the problem concerning the success or failure of the time-honored institution which is caus- ing so much controversy at present—all wear the yellow garter. a grees “MRS. MADISON’S COMPLIMENTS” The First Message that Ever Was Ticked Over a Telegraph Wire. From the Chicago News. In your issue of this morning you have a re- ference to Mistress Dolly Madison, justly laud- ing her womanliness and advising young writers to study her free and charming style. No beiter advice could be given. This refer- ence to Mistress Dolly brings tomy mind the fact that Mistress Dolly carried to her grave an honor never presented to any other woman, ané one that can never befall again. History, you know, is not always to be relied upon. It is due to the memory of Mistress Madison that I correct an accepted historical statement as to the first telegraphic message ever sent over a wire. It is generally supposed that the words, “What hath God wrought,” were the first four words thus transmitte: This is not true, When Prof. Morse was in Washington pre- | aang 3 to test the telegraph line which had een erected at government expense between Washington and Baltimore, he was attended by several gentlemen friends, amo whom was Congressman John P. Wetherill, of Maryland, Prof. Morse rang up the Baltimore office, then located in a room over the post-office at Fayette and North streets, and ving received an answering signal, he announced that he was ready to transmit a message to Baltimore. At this juncture Congressman Wetherill suggested that, as communication by electricity was a great event in the world’s history, the honor of sending the first message should be bestowed upon some one identified with the nation's pro- gress. This suggestion met with approval, but none could think of a person whom this honor would conspicuously befit, Suddenly Weth- erill eried out: “I have it! jadison is in Washington, and she is just the person!” That distinguished lady was sent for and in half an hour she arrived, duly excited,but with the heavenly, obliging smile she peees wore, Prof. Morse asked her to write out a brief mes- sage to some friend in Baltimore, and Mrs, Madison accordingly wrote a line to the wife of the Congressman, simply the words: ‘Mrs, james Madison's com} nts to Mrs. Wether- ES office by a courier on horseback. Several other poms laren gga es “How are rom,” be, word come then came the f communication: “Whet hath God , has been Marquis ff A TALK ABOUT THEOSOPHY. What Dr. Elliott Coues safd in a Chat with a Star Reporter. ‘HE CLAIMS THAT THE THEOSOPHICAL MOVEMENT 18 GROWING—THEOSOPHY AND CHRISTIANITY— KARMA AND INCARNATION—€PIRIT MANIFES- TATIONS AND THE HUMAN SOUL, Such notions prevail concerning theosophy that it is not at all wonderful if the man who gave a pleasant welcome to a Star reporter who called at his residence on N street a few evenings ago, has been invested in popular gossip with a mantle of mystery. This was Dr. Elliott Coues, the leader of what is known as the theosophical movement in this country, aman of good height, lithe, well-knit figure and large head with strong features, a mass of blonde hair and a flowing beard of the Saxon type. Kis surroundings at home are of modest ele- gence, such as one would expect to find in the house of a student and scientist, who had the means to gratify his tastes. Dr. Coues con- ducted the reporter to his library, and smiled when he learned that the reporter had come to talk about theosophy. “This thing is all abroad,” said Dr. Coues, as he settled himself in an easy chair and leisurely rolled a cigarette. ‘Beneath the surface there is a movement the strength of which I am in a position to feel and measure. You can meet on the streets of Washington to-day a thousand people who are members of the secret gnostic theosophical society.” The doctor paused to light his cigariette, and, perhaps, to give the reporter a chance to get over the surprise which he manifested at this statement. THE INTEREST IN THE MOVEMENT. “There isa growing interest in this matter,” the doctor went on, “an interest manifeste 1 in the constant inquiries made for information. At social gatherings you will catch people talk- ing of theosophy. People who have heard little of it want to know what it is; people who have learned something want to learn more. You will find it everywhere barely below the surface, This psychic movement is a natural turning toward something that promises, to explain facts and experiences in every m€n's life which his preacher and the orthodox, or surface religion, throw no light een Theos- ophy, however, is nota religion, It is philos- ophy—the philosophy of spiritualism, HOW HE BEGAN, “Ten years ago,” said Dr. Cones, “I began to seriously inquire into the truth of these mut- ters. Icame to the inquiry with twenty-five years of scientific work and training behind me. It wasa matter of intellectual integrity with me and a duty that I felt I owed to science, as well as to my own spiritual S called phenomena deminded _investigatio Traveling to Europe, I sought information in England, where men of reputation as scien- tists had long conducted psychical research, I applied to’ magnetizers and hypnotizers in France and in Germany consulted men who had given serious study to questions relating | to these phenomena, including a number of the leading psychical researchers, like Baron DuPrel for example. Asa result I found that | there was a body of fact, of phenomena, that in any honest spirit of inquiry could not be ignored. Returning home I began to make researches for myself, pursuing inquiries with as much caution, sifting testimony with the same care that I had been accustomed to employ for years in the work which had gained for me a recognized position as a biologist and natural- ist. There were truths which I brought for- ward and put in scientific boots and breeches, so to speak—truths which had been in the keeping, for the most part, of cranks and per- sons who did not understand them and had never applied the test of scientific inquiry to them, Asa scientist of some reputation, I had the ear of the public and gained a hear- ing for many statements which would have fallen unheeded from unknown lips, however true and important they might have been. There is also much in modes of expression or ways of putting things which sometimes make all the difference of accept- ance or rejection. Ihave a certain faculty of expression which sometimes tells a person w! he really believes better than he can say it hi elf. A large proportion of the so-calle iritual phenomena—exhibitions of spirits at a dollar ahead—are the grossest frauds and the stupidest shams. But there are manifesta- tions, and one who seeks can have experiences which cannot be explained by any assumption of fraud. These ordinary manifestations, the so-called materializations in cases where no fraud is possible, are almost never spiritual manifestations in the sense of being produced by the soul of some one who has passed out of this life.” CONDENSED ASTRAL FLUID. The reporter spoke of the theory that such manifestations might be produced by an aura surrounding the medium and persons in the seance room. “That is it,” said Dr. Coues. “These forms are produced by what I may cail the condensa- tion of astral fluid, which by this process be- comes palpaple and visible for a brief time. Theosophy, however, does offer proof of the life hereafter, but this proof does not lie in the ordinary spiritual phenomena. I have had other evidences of, and have proved in other ways, the existence of the soul and its sur- vival of the dissolution of the body, as a con- scious individual entity, capable of sustaining the functions of thinking, feeling, remember- ing, and willing on a higher plane, just as the physical body does on the material plane.” FAITA AND FACT. “Then, if you can prove that, why do not clergymen co-operate with you?” asked Tur Srak reporter, Dr. Coues’ face lighted up with a smile. ” he said, “thatis the very point. The moment you prove the case the parson’s oceu- pation is gone. It passes from a question of faith toa matter of fact. When you prove a creed to be true you destroy it for all priestly purposes, The truths that religion that the parson asks you to accept on faith then become matters of fact, capable of proof, and the par- son has to give way to the scientist. In the old days the Persian magus or the Greek hiero- phant combined the two—the scientist and the parson—in one person, but we have no men big enough forthat to-day. Whena thing becomes accurately known it is no longer a religion. It is science. Theosophy is not a religion; it is a philosophy with a science that offers e dence of things unseen, I cannot sit and listen with patience to a man who does not know whether his liver is on the right or left side of his body, who knows nothing of the structure of his own body, expound literally a text from the Bible, to which some of the greatest minds of the world have given its proper esoteric in- terpretation. The old Jewish Qabbalah, and the interpretation given the New Testament by the gnostics during the first three hundred years of the Christian era before Constantine established his official church, give rational readings of these texts and records. For in- stance, take the story of Jonah and the whale, which is believed in and repeated day after day as a literal record of an actual occurrence—the swallowing of a man by the whale. Now the record, as read by a Qabbalist is that Jonah went on a missionary expedition to Nineveh. The Nine- vites worshiped Dagon, the fish god. Jonah was swallowed up by the great fish, or the fish god, and thrown up again. That is, the Nine- vites would not accept his teachings and put him out. All of the stories in the Old Testa~ ment are explicable by Qabbalistic interpreta- tion in a similar way, the written garment of the Mosaic law being a very different thing trom the spirituality which it enfolded. THE HUXLEY LIMIT OF THE UNKNOWABLE. “No church has a monopoly of truth, nor, in- deed, of anything but the errors peculiar to it- self, There is a point where all religions come together, where all e; under- lying all religions is a faith in some things whee theosophy proves as matters of fact, Huxley, who, you know, invented the term rational agnosticism, places the limit of re- belief at what he calls the un- He is, I maintain, wrong, perhaps only in assuming that many things are unknowable which any well informed theosophist has found to be knowable. 801 prefer gnosticism to agnosti- cism, quite as much as I do knowledge to igno- rance. I take norefuge in that asylum of ig- norance ¢ailed the unknowable, because { can explore and have explored much of that terri- torys The really unknowable is non-existent for men, The bounds of the knowable may in- clude Rip Aer! short of the great first cause. Itis the definitely locating of this assumed boundary that I object to, for it continually shifts in rey individual with srey. oey ex- perience, and continually recedes before the evolution of the spiritual faculties of the hu- man race as a whole, so when they say, for ex- search ant kuowable. ample, that Kant fixed forever the bilities of human know! , Leay he fixed them for nobody but ‘’ THEOSOPHY AND THE CHRISTIAN FAITH. “How far,” asked the reporter, “do the teachings of theosophy coincide with what are known as Christian teachings?” Y are identical,” replied Dr. Coues, “with of the greatest Christian itudes which many misconceive to be the of Christianity. For ‘oxample, T think that Saint was one of the greatest theoso- whom we have any record, and the of the few letters of his ex- Eras interpreta tion upheld; a reason anda necessity for them ex- | chism of that fa tant are of themselves an excellent theosophist treatise. But always and always, in the AUCTION SALES. AUCTION SALES. course of time, truth that starts from a THIS AFTERNOON. AUCTION SALES. ____ FUTURE DAYs._ FUTURE Days. true spiritual source becomes perverted, dis- torted and defiled by the credulity of the hu- man minds through which it successively flows, a and we must in all cases seek back to the | O° TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY FOURTEENTH, source of the stream if we would find that | $5! O'CLOCK, we will sell in trontof the prem which is pure and true. There are numbers of LOT 86, SQUARE 546. the ordinary doctrines and dogmas of Christian | Ses Jy asd renee eee haat as churches which have no basis of fact. They are eae aby s the concessions of a wise priesteraft to the | andes” Eee eer ean een ean. years, ugten to beat intel ate eee im, Pe . siz per cent fro sale, and to be sectired by teed of trust on premises oF pu of purchaser. A deposit of $100 at ‘yancing, &. pure! P's cost. DUNCANSON BROS., Aucts. t#-THE ABOVE SALE IS POSTPON! uence of the rain until SATL Fe rH enee o! 2 SATU! N Seaeenes of the RDAY EIGHTEENTH necessities of infirm humanity. As such they are valuable, indeed necessary, for the bulk of mankind. IfI could destroy every Christian church to-morrow I would say ‘no, let them be ists,” but I would strive to make them less nec- essary by improving the quality of human be- ings. The Christian scheme of salvation is a portion of the old doctrine of Karma, according to which each man must suffer exactly the con- sequences of his deeds, good or evil, and mnst work out his own salvation, without regard to fear of the wrath of a personal God, or without reliance upon the alleged divine character of any person, + at same hour and pisc < ee DUNCANSON Bi /HOMAS DOWLING, Auctionser. VALUABLE UNIMPROVED PROPERTY ON J STREET. BETWEEN 3 r STREET. 8 N AND O° STREETS, * aT AUCTION. On SATURDAY, MAY EIGi ENTH, FIVE O'CLOCK P. M., in fremt at a eee 6 Will vell part of lot 20, in square 65:3, being the south THE LAW OF KARMA, So fect 2 inches on Half street southwest bys depth paacees ¥ OFT TS feet, T incheay with sine clic dy hee wide What is the meaning of the Sanscrit word | “yrmsOne-thint reske tae eet mde. months with interest, and secured by a de on the property, or all cash at purehi ai] conveyaue:ny: and recording at cc deposit of $100 will be my11-dkds Karma, which you theosophists use so much?” asked Tue Star reporter. “It is Englished in many ways,” said Dr. Coues, “according to the different aspects of the ease. You may call it, if you please, the principle of justice, according to which every man must suffer exactly the consequences of his own actions, through an intrinsic causality which subsists in those actions, In another sense it may be defined as merit or demerit, of trust sell in. fre 1's SUtxli Vis according to which a man realizes in his own | ant Carrols chasvinen of aeike person eh effect of all his thoughts, words, | feet front by about NS fect deep to 25-foot alley, with and deeds, if you wish to personify Karma | iaprovement, consisting of a two frame as a god, you may liken it to the old Greek | “Utne made known at the time of ea’ idea of Nemesis, or fate, which was said to override and overrule ‘even the decrees of Zeus, showing how deeply rooted in human nature is this idea of necessary LIER B. WILLIA) rr 2 . Ui ES’ SALE ANG) B, retributive justice as the effect of a cause. The | 7 YoucDED WY GEOHGTE AR Ck Seu ARE: nearest the Christians seem to me to have got oe aa 1 SITRER bt to the idea of Karma is when they talk of pre- Sel treet an : nat, . dof trust duly. re nation or foreordination, You know per- yoq., one of a 1, et seq., one Of th fectly well that what you did_ yesterday, for | the District of Columbia, we will sell in better or worse, has, if only in the sli Premises on Tt you a different man t sterday'’s Karma m little things gree, made other words, in the greatest things, and in the sum of | (1) and two ‘ing all of square numbered assquare things, will the results of this inevitable | south of square numbered one thousaud amd. ninety. one (8. of sq. 1091), containing th ‘two hindred and Nift together with all the improvements, wa rights, privileges, hercditaments and a the sdiine belonging or in any ‘Terms; One-t c tv-six thousand . more oF less, , easements, purt wise appertaining. . balance in one, two, three, otes to Dear interest from day’ of sale; uully, and to be secured by deed of premises sold or all cash,at option of pur- Jaw of cause and effect be felt. Recollect that every known cause is the effect of an anteced- ent cause; that every effect becomes in turn the cause of something else; therefore every effect upona man becomes an active cause within him to produce yet other and farther effects, The causes of yesterday are the effects of to-day, these in turn to become the causes of to-morrow for each and every individual.” REINCARNATION, DALES tO rust on chaser; a deposit of $200 on each lot required at tine of sale; conveyancing, &c., et purchaser's cost, If 3 of sale ar t complied with in 10 days from stecs reserve the right to resell the in default at the risk and cost of the default- “What do theosophists mean,” asked the@re- | n# purchaser after > days public notice of such resale ” bout rein tion?” J A.B porter, “when they talk about reincarnation’ atin Gane “To judge from whatI read in the news- papers,” said Dr. Coues, “I should say that most of them mean to talk about something they | know nothing about, just as they will go on and | give you learned disquisitions on Nirvana, Ex- actly what the orthodox Buddhistie dogma of reiucarnation is you can learn from any cate- h, The notion that we have this world is a wide-spread one. The old Greek philosophy had_a good deal to ay alaut fe oner te ramet Metempsychosis. A good deal has been preached against it, in later times, under the vulgar name transmigra- t2-THE ABOVE sequence of the raiu up DAY OF MA SETS AND SEP. lived before re on ITURE INS PRING UNDE tion of souls, Some logical basis for specula- BEDS, HANDSOME IRON BED: | tions respecting rebirth is found in the idea that Reet Oe ee Wane CARPETS, KITCHEN that which is to continue forever or for an in- AY "MC Y_TWENT definite period must have already existed since the beginning or for an indefinite period. I can not imagine such a thing, as I sup- O'CLOCK. re “Secret yard, 1413 Massachu- setts avenue, I shall sell the above articles, being & portion of his personal eff ose =a) tuman = soul «ss too be ~—s to | _ my 7-dts THOS, DOWLING, Auct. ave actually come into existence a y ALTER B. WILLIAMS & Ci few years ago, but rather to have had a being # ‘opriate to its own nature from all time, as well as now having the same nature which may ‘KUST SALE OF VALUABLE FRONTING ON 19TH STRE ox AND R STREETS NORTHW Uc guable it to subsist for an indefinite time in the | ,By.vistue of » deed of trust dated September 3d A. future. In other words, only that which has | 2j}°?<." pe aE te By SA ., one of the land records for the Districtot » and, at the written request of the party se- ront ST nine of lots in had no beginning can be supposed to have no | end snail thers isany truth in the ordinary | notions of the immortality of the soul, I sup- pose the soul to have been always immortal. ‘This is the logical basis of the thought. Some ascertained facts of human experience may be taken as coliateral evidence in favor of this view. I don't refer so much to those flashes of intuitions which some people have that make it seem to them as if they had ‘been here before,’ but I cannot ex- plain the recognized inequalities and apparent injustices of human life so well on the theory | 1889, at HALE-P. of lot numbered fort: set al. sul square numbered one hundred and per plat recorded in liber “I. H. one, two und three years, fi notes, bearing interest from da: by a deed of trust on the p orall cash, at the option t the cost of @re not complied with within ys trom day of that our souls begun to be when our bodies | sale property will be resold at risk and cost of default- were conceived, as on that that our souls had | {ps fitcheser, 4 deposit of 8200 will be requ.redat previously existed and came into bodies, & CHARLES EAR’ charged as it were with the results of former | _™y17-d&ds JOSEPH T. DY experiences with matter acting as a predeter- mining cause upon their present lives, It is simply carrying to its logical consequences the Karmic idea of cause and effect, = we work ay pe out in each set of experiences with matter— BAP Eee that is to say in a given incarnation—that| EE AN, AND POTHER HANDS nature Aco had been already impressed Ba sie t 2 pr eol TER! upon the soul by its previons experiences. PLUSH, TF URKE 2 Reincarnation is also a philosophical key to CXRPETOOXIE LADIESY REO i! what orthodox naturalists call laws of heredity. HOGANY DWARF BOUKCA: MEN WHO MIGHT BE THEOSOPHISTS. ee “Yes,” said the doctor, as he finished his fous DOWLING, Auctioneer. SALE BY CATALOGUE. MAHOGAN FA z, cose 2. = TABLE TO cigarette, “there is a deep and vivid interest in ERED ARM DI the subject. Itiseven now stirring the thoughts | SOME,.CHERRY M and words of men in the pulpit who dare ere utterance to their most honest thoughts. Prominent among these men of strong mind and deep insight are Rev. Minot J. Savage, the leading Unitarian clergyman of Boston; the Rev. RK. Heber Newton, the equally prominent Episcopal clergyman of New York. They are men who show how glorious the ministry might be. It is better that they should remain in, and not forsake their pulpits, and bring DESK, ANTEL REFRIGERATORS, KITCHEN KEQUI- SITES, &c., &0. On THURSDAY MORNING MAY TWENTY-THIRD, ths their people and their churches up to them. | 210s conteutsof the elegant realenee Non das There is another man who knew and spoke of | SEVENTEENIH STREET N these matters and he is now seeking to make a living by the precarious means of lecturing. That is the Rev. Edward McGlynn. Another man who will I believe accept the truths of theosophy is Robert G. Ingersoll. I say it be- cause of his honesty, hig intellectual hospital- ity. Allthat the doughty colonel requires is biden enlarge the boundary of his knowable a little.” Parties who desire first-class furniture would study their interest by giving this sale their attention. _myl7~ ts THOMA Ww uctioneer, NHOMAS DOWLING, EXECUTORS’ SALE OF HOUSE No. 125G8 SOUTHWEST. sini Under and by virtue of the last will of Peter Mc- Vary the undersigned executors will sell at public auction, in frout of the premises, on THURSDAY, r ‘bY-THIRD DAY OF MAY, 1889, at HALF: i FIVE P. M., lot No. 17, square o86, improved use. ‘Terins cash. GAN & LEONARD, Executors. \ NORTH SIDE 0} ee THE EVIL EYE, Peculiar Superstitions Still Held in S H PK BETWEEN FIRST AND Ni Ital: L STRELTS N. W. pe aorsnar: sda On THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY TWENTY- — THIRD, at SIX O'CLOCK we wili sellin front of the From the Saturday Review. premii PARTS LOT | SQUARE. », being the east 32 8-12 feet front of lot 2 and the west 5 feet front of lot 1, making a total front of 37 feet 8 inches on K street, near North Capitol street, and run- Shortly after his election Pius IX, who was then adored by the Romans, and perhaps the best-loved man in Italy, was driving through Beifividea foto we bulking ine ober 2c ese i into uilding lots, being near Electri the streets when he happened to glance upward BOB ana Be Mlcyoine Cech ea te == a a jectric at an open window at which a nurse was stand- | “Terms: One-third cash, balance in one and two ears, notes to bear interest at 6 per cent trom day ‘of wal payable semi-annually, and to be secured by deed of trust on premises sold or all cash at option of pur chaser. A deposit of 8200 required at tue of sale, Conveyancing, &c., at purchaser's ing with achild. A few minutes afterward the nurse let the child drop and it was killed. No one thought the pope had wished this, but the fancy that he had the evil eye became univer- sal and lasted till his death. In Carniola if you tell a mother that her baby is strong and large for its age, a farmer that his crops are Jooking well, or a coachman that his team is good, all three will spit at your feet to avert the omen, and, if you understana the custom, you will do the same as an act of liteness. A person who wandered through upper Carniola and (enon everything he saw would soon come to be considered the most malevolent of men. In Naples exactly the same feeling exists, The terms of endear- ment which mothers of the lower class use to their children, and the pet names they call them by, are often so indecent that it would be impossible to reproduce them in English, and always so contemptuous that they would be offensive in any other relation. The i ponte habit isd ake igen to offer a guest anything at e may praise has probably the same origin. It is, of course, now to a very large extent only a form of courtesy; but even now another feel- ing lurks behind, at least in a good many cases. Your host has been delighted by our admiration of his oman ie would have been ppointed if it had not been so warmly expressed as it was; but still he is « little afraid of the ill luck the kind Caw you have said may bring. By offering the objects you have liked best to you, and receiving your certain refusal to accept them, he puts them in a bad light, and thus counteracts the evil effects of your i He as to fate, You see their value is not great after This a perme however, is by no means confined to Naples or Italy; it is said to be common in China and Japan and se | ne- groes and red Indians, Even in England it is not unknown, In fact in all countries, when vis- y SALE OF A VALUABLE THREE- Y BRICK DWELLING HO! E (No. 901 ROOF VIKG! A AVENUE iE AND NINT! of the holder of the note grade secured, we will seil at public auction, on THURSDAY, THE TWENTY- THIKD DAY OF MAY, A. D, 1889, at FIVE O'CLOCK ‘ighest bidder, that piece of land sit- and being lot num- F. Barker's recorded square three hi and ), the said land being @ corner lot, three-story brick dwelling house with vements. uate in Washi: mm city, D. C., bored thirty-eight (Bs) of Abana three ¢ improved by & MHermeof sale: Gus half of the purchase in ‘erms of le: One-! e money cash within ten days from the day of sale, and the balance in two eq: payments at one and two secured by the notes of the purchaser and a first deed of trust on the property ¢ said notes to bear in- terest at six Pont pee. annum from the day of 5 A deposit of #150 will be required when the propert is sold. All conve} at the purchaser's fa of sale to be complied with within ten Irom the day of sale, otherwise the trustees right to resell the property at the risk and cost eee TV ESTER B, BOARMAN, WILLIAM W BOAKMAN, '} Trustees. GEORGE W. STICKNEY, Auctioneer. HREE-STORY AND MANSARD- BRICK BAY-WINDOW DWELLING, NO. 212 FOURTH STREET SOUTHEAST, NEAK PENNSYLVANIA On TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY TWENTY- FIRST, at HALF-PAST FIVE O'CLOCK, we will sell, im front of the it LOT 8, SQUARE 819, a, did iauptover by 8 wel-buit freee rick , with bay win- eeeace front lo feet 52 feet 64g inc! story semi-anm iting a sick acquaintance, itis better to say, “I Poreab ous Sat Dee Tas are es — we anclng. &e.. a, ee than “I am see you looking so reserved much better.” © Nor ‘is the belief by Fak and eget of Seta aye any means confined to the lower Kitted fh Wanngtan,D, DuNCANSO! 4 classes. A person who is highly educa’ _imyli Auctioneers. yery intelligent, and by no means in religions matters, “= once sake peo the words acted as an evil charm or whether John T, Ab! United States tive seeseer on the from New York ‘O-8TO! Us 3 SEERCE FARES Re MaENS | WES © Qo brcazeen, | Hilleset al acainst Peter McNamara and others, the | and rovmine thence south along the iine of said street | BO. W. STICKNEY, Auctioneer, 936 F street. Opposite City Post-Office. EMPTORY OF VERY VALUABLE TM- ss TY, BEING NUMBER 1130 « x4 REMO) STREET NOMTNWEST. MONDAY. MAY TH, 1889, ay. rhe: rwF srt TR Otbock: SSO, "AT SIX O'CLOCK P pax Cirare: all Kinda, 40 doe Paine Flour, Blacking, glass, ‘Three Coffee Mills, sal rit : Sate, echo, ue date Shor Co tad 1 SALE OE VALTABIE REAL ReTATE Molasace, Oli Can and Measures, ' NG Seo nee pen tat na Sae Se, myi Estate oF Be TAT PLENDID BUILDING LOT 0 RTH ASTE: Sst EET, EEIREES A ASD 3 STREETS by - ate) Ww! DNESDA ATERS ON, MA’ Ac ANACOSTI SECOND, AT FIVE O'CLOCK, in front OWN AS ; trove 28 22-100 tect by vee of the Supreme Court of the -100 feet on 4th street, between A is} 2 i . se: he best locations east of the Capitol, and is equity, we iil offer at pb= is siitable for two dwelling sites. Iron fence in front | 1 Sees fe winning op WEDNESDAY, and free use of ‘wall accompany lot t SECOND MAX. A. D. ISN, at HALP- erms. One-fourth cash; dalanice i ai and twelve ] PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P”M.. lots tn the months, with notes bearing interest and secured by | SUdivision of “Twining City" made by us as trustees: deed of trust on property sold, or all cash, at option of | 8P4 recorded in Book No. © County) at page 131, im purchaser. S100 depoatt required at the time of sale. | hp eurveyor's office of the I grict of Columban. aman EkES & CO, Oly ers cost. | stalmentw#at one and two y La ave. y Auctioneers. myl4-7t ing 6 per cent interest f = SE ea — | annually, and to be secured by of trust on the RUSTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE PROPERTY. | property'sold, or ail cash at opgion of purchaser Ades plhoe posit of @25 cn each jot will be required at time of By virtue of a deed of trust to dated August sale, Conveyancing, &c., at Ee eost. If terme 1874, and of record in Liber So. 760, folio 157, one of | of sale are not complied with in 10-day from day of the land records of the District of Columbia, and at the | sale the Tenerve the rucht {pearl the propert risk tng pure trnstees request of the ‘secured thereby, 1 will sell at pub- | in default at the ulting pure and cost of the de Teclanetion, in front of the premises ‘on the TWENTY. | chaser or purchasers. after five dage pBblic police of SECOND DAY OF MAY, 1889, AT FIVE CLOCK | such resale iu some Bewsvaper published in Washing- PM. the following real estate, situated in Was ton, D.C. on, D. C;, Known as and being original lot, numbered | | N.B Plats showing thesubstivision can be obtained “ix (6), ih square Dumbered six hundred ‘and mine on application to the trustees or the auctioneers, (609), CHAK ’ ‘Terms of sale: Amount of inde! OO D et a of sale in cash, balan CHAS. A. ELLIc 406 Sth ata. DUNCANSON BROS. a Auctioneers, my1,4,7,9,11.14,16%0kas FINANCIAL __ — = & CO, and expense ce in six and twelve months, with interest at six per cent from day of sale. $50 deposit at aa Conveyancing and ug at purchaser's: bf ° JACOB K. UPTON, Trustee Vv ALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO, Auctioneers. VAND W, No. 2114. : a Ov WEDNESDAY, MAY TWENTY-SECOND, 1889, DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN at HALF PAST FIVE O'CLOCK P M, we shail sell in " : at : at: pve vg bd a 203 Ss, 20 feet BANKERS, ront by 120 feet Pe Uv tore and stable. 3 od - Pennsylvania ave, and 10th at, adi tins of sale.—Purchager to assume pote of $1,000 Ti raearee atae and ¢2.000 duein about two years, | Rxchange, Letters of Crodit, Cable ‘Tranaferson Prin- with interest at 6 per cent; the balance in cas! = au = agree at purchaser's cost, cipal Cities in Europe. c wu on day of sale. Government and Investment Bonds, Telegraphie WALTER m wiazaMs £00, | communications vith Sew Nock Peicbanee mone _my16-d&as ____Avctioneefa._ | screend Boston. SOUTHEAST CORNER OF Wi sfookD | LOANS MADE AND NEGOTIATED; GENERAL a g STREEIS NORTHWEST, WASHING- BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED. By virtue of @ decree of the Supreme Court of the | ™b22-2m _ District of Columbia, passed in equity cause 11684, on the 13th day of April, 188%, t) trustee, will offer for sale, at public auctior WEDNES!/AY, OF MAX, 1889, a! hours hereinafter mentioned, the following Washington, Dis! J ¥. CORSON. §— INO. W. MACARTNE Member N, 3. Stock Zp CORSON & MACARTNEY, GIOVER BUILDING, 1419 F 8ST. 8 vv. Bankers and Dealers in Goverument Bond Deposits. F Railroad Stocks on the Fxchanges of and Baltiinore be pattems made: pent securities, Distr: of respective premises, on TWENTY-stCOND DAY Teal estate in the city of Tunbia At FIVE O'CLOCK P. M., sub lots 16 to 23, both in- clusive, im square 84, each of said lots having a front— age of 17 feet on 22d str rth 97 feet, to a public alley: fronting 20 feet on 22 Paste street, by 97 feet deep on stree a ‘ ‘ 1 Local Railroad, Gas, Insurance and Te AtHALF-PAST FIVE O'CLOCK P. M., sublot 25, | Bands and ail tore faany SH srepuing 26 feet on D street. and running | “Liserican Bell Teicyphone Stock bought and sold. gy! back that width about 146, feet to a publie alley; and Bet Taephene @ “ m4 oved by a three-story brick dwelling; and sub lot | nn quare 84, fronting 2 feet 10inches front on D street. by 140 feet deep toa publicalley, aud also sub F: lot 27, square B4, front ae ect 16 ‘iheues on D ——__ EDUCATIONAL. —— street by 130 feet deep, to a public alley. No AN NTING- oCTIO The foregoing lota being a recent subdivision of lots | [JEAN AGAND, PAINTING men y S30 did Saeere 4, and recorded in surveyor's joan TONAL ACADEMY OF INE ARTS, 804 E at. ‘Terins of aale are as follows, to wit: One-third of the | tay 1O-bat ee erel ProKTess of students, hase money in cash, and the balance in two equal | = a uts in one and two years from the day of sale, NIVERSI with iuterest, or all cash, at the option of the par chaser. “A deposit of 8100. will be required on each, Jot at the wine of sale. “derma of sale to be complied with in seven days trom day of sale. A plat of the sub division will be exhibited at the time of sale. hy FRANK. I. BROWSING, Trustee, - . 416 Sth street new. | Summer classes for a FIVE W) EX'S SESS! SEY, Auct, 930 ¥et. myli-diis, | Commence ‘Wediesday “eveuing, Juue 12 for civil wer ot nd private lessous day or E st. aw. eve VHANCERY SALE OF REAL E TE THIRD | Send for C8 STREET EAST, BETWEEN PENNSYLVA- | _ Thiscoliece ruiches Ii SLOCUTION,” 1A AVENUE AND SOUTH C STREET. | SORATORY,” TING,” and “PERSONAL MAG- By virtue of @ decree of Supreme Court of the Dis- | NETISM.”’ Descriptive 1 trict of Columbia passed in Equity Cause No. 4877 of COLLEGE OF LLOCUTION st. now. (Half a block east ¢ | ORATOR Sis.cus ‘URY, 313 61 uucersicned trustees will sell at. public auction, in -ottees oe frovt cf the preinines on MONDAY, the TWENTY SEVENTH DAY OF MAY, A. D.” 1889, et FIVE O'CLOCK P.M, all that parcel of real estate in the city of Washington, District of Columbia, being part of ot 1, in square 762, Beginning on 3d street feet south of the northeast corner of Ri POLYTECHNI red. weil equipped dey xtensive and laborai lot | Eater ps ora tes. For catalogue, MENDENHALL, Brest, feet, thence west 8 fect, thence north 13 feet. and | _? thence east 85 feet to place of bexiuning. q MOST RAPID, taps of male; Ope-third cagh. balance payable in 6, | S'cgtuie- 7 in three mouth « Avachutel ud 18 months from duy of sale with hotallures. Tyyewritng taucht free HEAD SCHOOL esteccured by the promissory notes of the pur- | OF ACME PHONOGE APH, 151 T ot ane chaser, with a surety or sureties approved by the trus- tees; and on ratification of sale and payment of the purchase and interest a deed will be given to the pur- | chaser, his or her heirs and assi ISS BALCH’S CIVIL SERVICE INSTITUE, 1207 10th st. n.w. Perse bis, [Revated most wccess- his M A deposit of | fully for all examinati K | P. M., we shail sell in front of the prem isgnees, om taught $200 will bereguiredat time of sale, All conveyancing | positions carefuily revised ; fereum@e. 14 at cost of purchaser. Terms complied ‘with in 5 “CONS! = ; = ten days, otherwise trustees reserve rigut to resell at | COQLUMBIA CONSELVATOKY OF MUSIC, P Purchaser's costs and risk after five days’ notice by | primary aud advanced cons ~ advertivement of such resale in “The Evening Star.” | Der terms, Mey 1810. oy JOHN SELDEN. Penna. ave. B. W. Rugiend Gonetteekees of Be 3AS.S. EDWARDS, 500 Sth st, n.w. | Trustees. =~ 4 VILLIAM J. MILLER. 486 La. SS_ EDUCATION IAN, Real Estate Auctioneer. Tatumnr, history, * WL THOMAS E. WAGGAM. myli-d&ds ALTER B, WILLIAMS & 00, Auctioneera ‘ularw address THREESTORY AND BASEMENT DWELLING, FRONTING ON TENTH SIKEET, BETWEEN G,AND H NORTHWEST. AT AUCTION (XO. On MONDAY, MAY TWENTIETH, at SIX orcLock part lot 7 No. 12, in square 345, having 10 feet 8 inches frout. za : — = funni ach 100 feet suiproved bya three-story and | A/PWARDC. Tow — ~~ | sement dwelling, 8 rooms. : a*; ecutior ‘Terms: One-fourth cash; balance in twelveand eich. | Parrect seem) breathans Vc witure, Oratorical and teen months, for notes bearing interest from day of | Dramatic Action, ai 1 nw 351 -6m Terms ven iow, ny ‘ese Also Summer School at Asbury sale, and secured by & deed of trust on property sold. | GPENCERIAN BUSINESS All conveyancing, &., at purchaser's cost. €100down | Saud D sts. t-w. Pow, WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO., Young men aud women lias Auctioneers. cerian Colle Day and rag intone Business Course; Shorthan: ue abd Graph: ophone; Practical Eng list phy. Spencers* EIGHT SMALL BRICKS, SOUTHWEST CORNER | Hibid Writing, tieading aia QE TENTH AND W BIRLEIS NORMMIWEST, | seauees men Surniehed ws Ww SDAY AFTERNOON, MAY TWENTY | PPuicivsl, HENRY 4) On WEDN SECOND, 188%, at SIX O'CLOCK, in front of premises, I shall’ sell Seven iwo-story Brick Houses and One Three-story Brick, located as above. ‘Terms: One-third cash, balance in 1, 2, and 3 years, paatrrs col st, near City Post ada Mee. Ge with notes ing interest at five r cent ited. Call or send for ental Hua all com vey atch ap eco eat Purchaser's | =n mes SO CRO cost: 50 deposit req ‘at the time of sale on each = — house. THOMAS DOWLING, MEDICAL, &c. Auctioneer, NTRADICTED THAT i adver HHOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer, SALE OF THE ALDERNEY NG, 929 AND 931 D STREET WN. AUCTION. By virtue of A. D, 1584, an: ing Ladies’ Physician 1 confidently consult: Dr | Particular attention paid DAIRY WIN ‘ON, D.C, A’ a deod of trust dated the Ist day of May, | dies. married or single. id reconled in Liber No. 1079, folio 477 | _™916- Lan tot Co- et seq.,one of the land records of the District of B DR. BLOTHERS, 906 B 8 lumbja, and at the written request of the parties se- | Wa appeared bevore me and Made oath that by cured thereby, the undersigned will offer for sale, in | the Oldest Established Lapert Specialist im this cit front of the premises, ou MONDAY, THE TWEN- } and will guarantee a cure in all cases of private TIETH DAY OF MAY. 1889, at the hour of FIVE | of men and furnish mediciue, ore vite. O'CLOCK P. M., the following described real estate | tion and advice free at auy hour of the day. Sub- situated in Washi ty, in the Districtof Colum: | scribed and sworn before we by Dr. BhOTHELS. bia, viz: All that part of original lot numbered six (6) | SAMUEL C. MILLS, Notary Public, in aud tor the in square numbered three hundred and seventy-ei¢ht | District of Golumibis, this third day of July, 1885. (378), contamed within the following metes and | © apl6-1m* bounds: Bewinning at the southest corner of said lot and rupuing thence north one hundred and eighty-seven (187) feet and tem and one-half (10% , inches to a public alley; thence west thirty (30) feet six and One-half (6%) inches; thence south one hundred aud eighty-seven (187) feet ten and one-half ANHOOD RESTORED BY USING A BOTTLE ortwoot Dr. BROTHERS’ Invigorating Cordial, cure safe y ~ of nervous nyo) 4 jones of berve-power. It imparts vicur whole system, Male or female. god Bstaw my ifm (1056) inches to D street; and thence east thirty (30) | JF api vHO | y HE 1 < fect Siz and one-half (Oig| iuchen the ‘lace ef ‘be- | J JADIES WHO REQUIRE THE SERVICES OF AX ginning. Together with all and singular the tm-| Hr WILSON, 1105 Turk Place me, bet Bande ae ovement Shereon, conaieting of & six-story brick | and 12th sts. n.e. Ladies only. Kemedy.#5, 1ay14-lw uilding covering the entire lot and the fixtures | 92° ——— ~ > therein. This substantial and elegant building was | (\HICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS. desixned aud built in 1884. ex for the dairy Ked Cross Diamond Brand. Oriinal, best, only business: aud is complete in all its appointments, the | genuine and reliable pill for wale Never tail” “Aak for main saloon, or lunch room, on the first floor, being | Chichester’s Eugiish Diainond Brand, in red metallic the largest and handsomest in the city. There are | boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. At Drugyiste, accept three elevators in Spe paliding—cno paweengee, ked | Hoother. All pills in pasteboard boxes, pink wrap- by steam, and two freight elevators, The building is * wus counterfeit, Send 4c. (stampa) heated by steam, and in addition to its capacity for | for particulars and “KELIEE Fok LADIES” im the dairy business has « Kitchen and dining. | Jetter, by return tail. 10,090 westinioutals frou room, besides about forty sleeping apartments (on LADIES who have used them, Nac ajer sixth oor) for emy ‘On all the floors above CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., second there is a l.rge storage capacity. 820-skw52t fadiscn Sq.. Phu Terms of sale: One-fourth of the purchase money in ‘ME. DE FOREST, LONG-ESTALLISHLD ALD cash, = fe Seve eee Sneenans reliable Ladies’ Phiywician, can be consulted: payable in two, three and four Fears after da atherresidence, S01 Tat. nw. Otiice hours trom. [ES Eee Eee 7h eae Saeed peas an TRE erty sold, or option In deferred payments the purchaser will Standard Remedy for all blood diseases, quired to keep the property insured to the ‘basal, or. ‘troul urinary of the trustees, A it of &. ‘will be in forty-eight hours. Price, #3 per box. of the purchaser on the day of All con Dr. DODD'S NERVINE'No. 2 permanently cures to be at the purchaser's Terms of sale to patural of vitality, nervous detiility, a. plied with within ten days sale, if not tc. Price, $1. Sent scaled Uy uiail Fur male wt Srusteos reserve the right to resell the property at 332 STANDIFORD'S, cor. oti and Faw. Says previous advertiscment tharest in The ee - Star. os PROFESSIONAL. INDERFULLY D Cl joer and Syiritaal Seaien bate Bw Jost Gives lucky wumiers" Causes a separated togetber, Gives at 2 all family troubles and hIDAY, fluences. Cures sickness. If Giearyouited by 13 AY OF “MAY, 1889 Stothers, Dot all alike, as the Ay O'CLOCK P. M. the skeptical. Strangers from other cities erty situate and belng im the city of seve time snd disappointment by calling on the the District of Columbia, to se aabeiNih bs Seer all a ath aecettd 2° be gucceeds and Callaghan, snd’ Hagher's ‘Aud advertises Ss a A eer rethe two. gether wi oprovemenia rh a oe 421 94st. nw, — = ephipreperedabetean YP nee Eee ‘Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase ‘cents each. 408 wi between ch and ax cash, and the resid two ‘ths . whereof shall be secuted by" the a i ively in two day es Pee eae irene ‘& DAVIS’ UPRIGHT PIANOS cuore ended est ti 3

Other pages from this issue: