Evening Star Newspaper, September 28, 1889, Page 9

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G STAR: WASHINGTON, ers i % & < JAPANESE ART PRODUCTS. CURIOS FROM HE MIKADO'’S LAND, AFEW OF THE GEMS IN THE HERR COLLECTION. f i utes Fue f What the Orientals Can Do With Wood and Ivory—Rare Specimens of Old Satsuma—G@rotesque Carvings. -——__ arope | Murderous indeed are the swords which Mr. a <a to Merr brought with him fromthe land where, beautify the world with | Until recently, most officials carried two swords cimens of their | 0d where the most insignificant subdeputy a | constable strutted around with one stuck in his skill, and American ®r-| jas) Many of these official swords hare tists of all degrees have interesting history, and™“aad their ene-tii not been idle, but they | proprietors been lees thorough in the art of have never attempted to Cleaning and polishing bleod stains would be te in certain lines | Visible on the blados today. One of the least — ~. | @laborate of these weapons is of the Gnest of work with their | grade of steel and owes its presunce in the col- Japanese brethren, and | fection to the fact tbat it once. belei to it is doubtful whether ——— in pegs. greg Machi = who was one ef Japan's m famous geu- any Cancnssion is, Po*- | ccaln, Hechiman pessed away frem Japenese sessed at once of the history into a better ceuntry a couple of hun- combined patience and | dred years ago. He is buried at Kamakura, acity skill necessary to make of about 10,000 inhabitants and of very little him an artist according to the Japanese stand- importaneé Ouce Kamakura was teat = ELT. & conscientious Jap EAT will labor for years upon city, with a population that numbered more than 1,000,000 people, but a tidal wave rolled bac one piece of work and will only be satisfied with it when the most critical pronounce it over it and we: ik to its nutive ocean. good and worthy of his reputation. There are When it had retired there were but few sur- vivors, and of buildings the place was as deso- bat few comprehensive collections of Japanese &rtto be found in this country, although in a | late as the beach at Atiantic City. The surviv- ing officials, who previously had supposed that Kamakura was a desirable place of residence, wrang the moisture out of their garments and moved away to a town where tidal waves never General wayan immense queatity of Japanese come and where the populace does not work is scattered all over the United States. Locally, the number of persons who are pos- sessed of valuable specimens is extremely | small, and that mal ME. AUSTIN HERR'S COLLECTION THE STILL-BUNT. ®osen, the well-known painter, long since dead. is represented by one of his charac- teristic works, It is panel shaped and rep- resents three monkeys, one of whom is en- deavoring to rid a little one’s hide of ento- mological invaders. The finish in this picture is unexceptionally good, SMALL BRIC~A-BRAC, all of it valuable, is scattered around evory- where. Crystal spheres and cubes, medicine boxes and gongs. are plentiful as the flowers which are habitually born in the spring. A brass box is a masterpiece of the etcher's art, and Mr. Herr holds on to it tenacionsly. Musical instraments—three of which operating at one time would drive any two men crazy in half a minute—are ina corner of one of the rooms and not far away is a bronze vase, which another of these patient artisans labor- iously, painfully, but successfully, hammered out of arough block of bronze, A novel de- scription of dragon is on top of it. Especially lurid and startling are some of the combinations of color and material in the tex- tile fabrics, A buttle scene in gold and crimsen | deavor to evade taxation by allowing itself to be drowned by the thousand. Eyes weary in examining the carving on the | ivory hilts and scabbards of two blades; there are ngewe Pe Agi ‘a ‘ 4 5 - | and every one perfect, on asingle swor Of rare and beautiful products of the Orient 8p- | Saziki po nin caer hed & blade whine Pear the more fascinating and precious. Not | ghomietd could not beat und an edge that starte so very long ago Mr. Herr returned after an! chills up and down the spinal column of nerv- extended foreign tour, which included the | ous people. The carrying of swords, except rincipal cities of China and Japan. His letters | by the military, is no longer allowed in Japan; Eome Were filled with glowing descriptions of | therefore a great many very excellent “chop- the precise beauties of Japanese maufactures, | pers” may be secured by those whose financial and it was nut surprising that when he returned | resources are equal to the strain. he bronght back with him an immense quan- 4 tity of the wares of that land of semi-civil- ized barbarians. More than a score of huge eases, filled with the products of a patient and highly industrious people, were among his baggage, and it was weeks after his return before the contents were gazed at im the light of an American day. Mr. Herr’s beautiful home on Georgetowa heights has its interior decorated with new bric-a-brac. Japanese art hangs on the walls and beautities Japanese cabinets and Stands on Japanese rugs. The long-ago invita- tion of Mr. Herr was accepted by a Stan re- it afewevenings since. In response to @ ringing of the door beil the house was Opened by a real live pleasant looking little fellow, whose age was Ungurssable and whose expressionless visage looked as though it might have been carved Out of oak. He rejoices. if he ever does re- feice, in aname thatsounds like Sagamoto. A CHERRY LACQUER CABINET. It seems to matter but little to the Japanese what the nature of the material he works in; the evidences of his handicraft are as unmis- takable in oneas in the One of the gems in Mr. arlors is of wood. It is a‘cherry lacquer” cabinet. The rich tints of the wood are indescribable. but beautiful as the cabinet is now it will be far more so as time rollson and the work of the artist reveals itself more fully. Gradually the cherry blossoms—now dark—will lighten until they are white and then the perfection of the woodworker's art will be visible, MONKEYS AT PLAY, Infinitely more elaborate and of a differeut variety is a gold lacquer cabinet. The shelves of this are nearly all behind sliding panels, on which with rare fidelity the artist bas depicted s number of scenes in which monkeys are rep- resented at play. The peculiarities of monk motion are apparentin the attitudes of the agile tricksters—it is the perfection of art. One of the very pretty pieces of combinstion work is an ivory vase, small and flat; on o: side are several storks and on the other are i To make the counterfei ity as possible the artist employ: different tints of ivory, gold and gilver bronze and lacquer. onablack velvet ground is enough to scare any one who has a predisposition to nervous- ness, A fight between a tiger and a dragon, done in geld bullion on silk, is al @ of japa’ brocade work not often excelled. nese embroidery is at the front—itleads the world— and Mr. Herr has some of the prettiest ox- amples. On velvet ground are depicted tige: ta, dragons and all manner creeping crawling things. The sheen on these figures is so manipulated that it follows the natural ‘in of the feathers or fur. To show the uperiority of the Japanese over his near meighbor and half brother, the Chinese, a few specimens of what the latter can do in the same line were contras: The difference is ver: sticks, and in a bundred ways the excluded heathens prove that their mste in colors ix simply abominable. The Chinese embroid m Sagamoto closed the door and vanished, ving the reporter with Mr. Herr, the sur- Foundings were scarcely less odd. On the hall lad green and black something which does not look &s though it would be a satisfactory defense against an active boy and a bean-shooter; it would make a § ood picturesque summer uni- form for the police of Georgetown. A cloisone card receiver, a stack of bows and arrows and several odd things picked up beyond the Pa- cific are in the viciuity of the armor, and no matter what direction the visitor gazes in there is wealth of all that is Japanese, To name all the curios would be to construct a tiresomely long catalogue and to attempt to describe them abesvy task. A few of the more choice or pe- euliar specimens will sutfic A JAPANESE PANEL, One of the most thoroughly realistic samples of Japanese handicraft is « panel four fect long snd twenty-two inches wide. It is made of Hitan wood, which is very hard and very heavy and the front surface is covered with a clear blue steel-tinted lacquer. The sabject portrayed on the panel is 4 fight between an eagle and one of the large red-faced apes of eastern Asia. and it is worked in ivory and mother of pearl, No mere description can be- gin wdo justice to this marvelous piece of work; it is realism itself. Not only is there that perfection of detail, but there is accuracy of position and perfect freedom of action. Every feather on the eagle is nature itself, while the hair on the aye’s body has every ap- pearance of being actually in motion. It isa masterpiece of which any artist might be proud and Fugita, the famous Jap who executed it, thinks it is an excellent specimen of what his good right hand can do. 4 GEM OF THE COLLECTION. Equal in point of skill, bat another variety of art, is a cloisone globe by Honda of Nagoya. Only those who know how tedious and difi- oult is the process of making cloisone ware can sadentand why that little sphere. large as a shaddock—should 500. Ti loring in this richest hues while the thousands of hair lines of carefully wrought upright metal are perfect inevery detail, In many Ne this is the gemef the ecllection. Gold stone has been introduced in several places and the effect is very pleasing. Another notable specimen of cloisone is a chicken tray, which was brought into existence by the de agers of Namakawa, one of the well known artists iu thecity of Tokio. The group on the tray is not @ romarkab!s une—simply three ‘owls, one of them a young chick ut the fidelity with which the texture of the feathers is prodaced and the extreme fineness of the shading made up a really exquisit= piece of work. The effect of the Suc lines of bright metal with the spaces filled ap with the multi- tinted enamel is remarkably attractive. There are half dozen other varieties of this ware, all Graceful in design, and marvelousiy executed, y is about all the workers iv ean earn. The most modern specimens in the collec. tion were made to the order of Mr. Herr, and ome time in the future Mrs. Herr will appear at a ball in a dress that will be admired by every one who sees it. It is of ivory silk erape and wonderfuily embroidered in blue with heads of wheat in gold. Between th arti ly arranged heads birds and bees flit; nothing could be more beautiful. A tea gown of pale blue silk is just as artistically decorated with birds and flowers and vin HE THOUGHT HK KNEW HER, The Not Uncommon Experience Every Que Meets With. From the Chicago Mail. “Did you ever meeta person you felt you knew without being sure enough to speak, and as time went on and you racked your brain the uncertainty only grew?” asked a young man whom I chat with occasionally, I told him I was teo busy, asa rule, to rack my brains about anything like that. “Well, I want to tell you about this cas continued. “I've been worrying over it fora loug time. Last fall I was walking with a gentieman on State street when we passed two young ladies, and in the fleeting glance I gave them I felt that I knew one of them. “The young woman was very pretty, with the sweetest of brown eyes, big and expressive, aud you may believe that I cudgeled my brains to remember where I had seen her or met her, as the case might be. Her face was familiar to me, and I thought I saw signs of recognition in her look, but f didn't kuow whether I had really made her acquaintance or whether I had seen her face at the theaters or in the street cars often enough to remember it. So I didn’t speak, and they passed on. “Well, about three months afterward I got on a West Side car one evening—a drizzly winter evening—and stood on the back plat- form trying to keep out of the drip. The car was d like a sardine bex, but on glancing inside I saw the same young lady whose brown eyes snd pleasant face had so tly per- plexed me. She saw me, too, and I saw the same flash of recognition cross her face. I made up my mind I'd find out about the matter right then. “Then I grabbed a strap over the young, wo- man’s head, leaned over and said to , 08 Te spectfuily and earnestly as a en: ’ “Will you kindly tell me who I am?” “She lifted her big brown eyes to mine and said, with the sweetest of smiles: ‘I think I can.’ es T asked again. Seen So-and-So,’ she said. meet? very hu toask must confess I've fergotten. ‘Why, don’t you remember?’ she met you at the art So-and-So introduced us.” Thea I remembered | A JOLLY-LOOKING FAT OLD MAN | is the God of Plenty as he sits on his throne on |amantel. The artist who carved him out of « | huge blosk of ivory succeeded in representing admirably those characteristics which are sup- posed to be visible in the demeanor and rotund contour of an elderly gentleman who is at peace | with himself and the rest of mankind. He | to incline toward bers #8 and would impress | most people with the ides that he lived ina land | where the good things of this life were a little too plentiful for the nation’s well being. A BUDDUIST SUAIXE, The biggest piece of lacquer work in the house is a Buddhist shrine, five feet high and two feet six inches wide. Gold and | black are the colors which prodominate, the former being used lavishly. “Red curtains on | the altars relieve the brassy appearance of the interior, for there are double doors in front of the image of Buddha. Whenever Sagamoto feels as though he ought to little praying he always approaches the shrine very carefully and with a little felt-covered miniature base | ball bat thumps several times upon a little | bell: then the Japanese kneels and performs | his gyroscopic evolutions and religious recite- | tions, he be wares are all fitly represented in collection The familiar red, white and blue Kutani, one narrow-mouthed so marked. The Chinese birds look lixe | 28, 1889-TWELVE PAGES. D.C., SATURDAY, | HOME MATTERS. SEASONABLE SUGGESTIONS Te PRAGTICAL HOwSE KEEPERS—RARGIPES WORTH CUTIING OUT AND TRYING—BINTS FOR THE DINING ROOM, PAN- TRY AND EITCUEN. ‘Tounsies, Cannors axp Omtoxs should net be mt Dee sliced in rings across, as they cook Cansron Diet wi vo Mucu toward re- moving the greasy appearance from your skin, HOFFELDT BAS: gy in INSTR ih etter ceune taben “ In addition put a little borax in used for bathing your face, "= = the water Primary and. 6 artnet Kinder. Cexsumerives witt Fixp Rewier from using, | Srceptic renoss:, ‘ter daily, glycerine and powdered willow ebarcoal, | 7 tie re Proportions: On harcoal immu to two parts 4 Cunz von Warretes.—Take a necdle or some other sharp instrument and draw it along the wrinkle, just hard enough to bring blood, theulet it heal and the wriakle will ‘entirely disappear, is ar, for REAPER Tor To TE Be Aber a eer - : (O GREAT COURSES SIONS SHOULD Be Soaxep in salted warm MAKTYN COMMERCIAL, water previous to cooking to partly remove any 1-PRACTICAL Bl MINERS ‘aud’ BOOKRERPING strong odor they may possess, Peas, stri 2 ENGLIQH EDUCATIONAL COURSE. beans and green corn should not be prepared ie ‘imatitution hase hationn) reputation for for cooking until about ready to be used. Soe naserakatetes eae Have Att Mepicivxs rx Oxe Prace—a box, | “No person m suply who ts to Birict amd thor- drawer or chest—and always keep all therein. | oué instruction. Pupils may euter at any time for Have each member of the family understand Diplomas awarded, Graduates aided fu, p: ro- curing employment. wend for catalogue comtainin fall eto tudies aiid highest referenecsiu the United Tuk MakrYy conizor, $12 @that. new. 7 D.C. BiB TS studies of the Commercial tation’ pec in vnnected with the well-known Martyn College no way of kioeution and Oratory. Worty-eight paye iliu! ted catalogue of latter college frye. , HERMANN Raj Be BSOLO tiOLts where it is and what it is for, and have your rolls of linen, cotton and flannel in a handy place easily got at when needed. Green VecrrasLes, wird some Exceptions, should be cooked in plenty of sulted water, putting them in at its first boil, The quantity of salt to be used isa large tablespoon to one Ei Ist gallon of water. All vegetables are done as | xill receive pupile for inetraction after October 1 at soon as tender, and should be immediately ide 07 Cth st. 2.w. A nell taken up and drained in a colander. A. DANIEL WILL BE! E LES- Ovex Appte Tant.—Stew some apples until itera und Piano Instruction Ooto- quite soft; take out any hard pieces, beat them toa pulp, and to one-half pound of pulp allow six ounces of sugar, five eggs and the grated | rind of a lemon. Heat all Moess well together, then add gradually tive ounces of meited but- ter. Linea dish with puff paste, pour in the mixture and bake it at once: Tuene 1s Notuixa Berren ror « Ccr than powdered resin, Pound it until fine and put it in an empty clean pepper box with perforated top. Then you can easily sift it out on the cut, AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN AND WOMEN educated ina Practical Manner for the Business reuits of Life. Business Course: Book-keeging, (kastmam System, embracing Theory, Bumness Prae- tice, and Banking), Penimauship, Correspondenoe,Com- mercial Arithuz Word-Lessous Commercial Law, English Course: Word. us. Granluar, Rhet- oric, Feniuanship, arithmetic, Algebra, History: aud G phy. Also courses in Accountancy, Short- hand, “Type-writing ‘sud Telegresby. New yaildsng, hew furuiturs, steam: heat and otlier modera con: Venieness. Send circulars. Former students Cwuile with Marty a's Collgge) apd. the yublic a ¥ied to call” COLUMBIA COLLEGE OF MELCE, Cov F st. aw. oM- and puta soft cloth around the injured mem-| JUST TORE LESSONS FREE | | ber and wet with cold water once ina while. | ¥:30 aid O:45 eclosk, Uclober 8. See Aniuseavante It will prevent inflammation and soreness, Coiu - welt-Sw* Paruy Bazaxrasr Brscurr.—Mix a seant table- spoontul of butter witha pint of flour, Salt to taste and enough water to make a dough that can bekneaded. When suficiently worked with the hands roll out the dough as thin asa sheet of paper, cut in rounds with « mudin ring, prick them with a fork and bake fora | minute in a moderately-hot oven. Svean Covxies.—One egg, three-fourths of a cup of butter, one cup of sugar, two tablespoon- fuls of milk, one teaspoonful of cream tartar, ‘© hb ‘irst-cldss iustructors ; sl bra heme for Little Beys, JUS. x |. A.M, Principal, 4 EDICAL DEPARTING GEUKGETOW) 2 oust; ove SworT- LibCx (ale), Par XY NT UNIVERSITY, Waehiugion, D. Hist, betweou th dnd 10th sts. forty-firet session ef this medival colleee will beyin Mouday. teplember 50. ‘The in troduetory address will be dekivered at 8 pan. by Dr. P J. Murphy, Professor of obstetrics aud sur- eon ip charge of Celumbia Hospital for Women and be is cordially invited. aadirese one-half teaspoonful of seda flour to roll, salt AGKUDER, ==. Dem, and cinnamon; roll thin and bake in a quick ix ne ORE ae. oven. ‘fhey are very ni E88 COLLEGE, Corner 7th aud D sia, nw. ‘Bebool of Business and Coumuug House Training, School of Practical Eos anv Caspace.—Warm up a large cup- ful of cold, boiled cabbage, chupped fine; sea son with butier, pepperand salt. Stir in three beaten eggs and a cupfal of milk and bake for twenty minutes in a pudding dish, In this way a sinall remnant of cold cabbage will make anehip. J wud Arcuiteetural Drawing, nid night eeemone. or seud tor iLustrated cataloyne free. KY ©, BPENCHIG LLB, Principal; SARA A. an excellent side dish for diune R, Vice Prinetps. eas Sa ges y RT SCHOU! i A Pretty Dussent.—A quick dessert may be eae ee De a Medalist, Prinesi Yat 1015 16 r + La ‘chool ieopeus Bepteniby: bet. Kand Late ae HORTHAND REVOIUTIO: & PHON( | mude of dried apples. Roll a piece of light Diseuit dough very thin; spread with the | stewed fruit, roll it upand eutin blocks an inch thick, place in a pan and sprinkle with sugar. a little cream or butter on each pivce and fill the crevices with water. Bake aud serve with lemon sauce. iy France, Waen a Parent ts Uspen Cuto- norony, on the slightest symptora appeuring of failure of the heart, they tura him nearly up-| side down—that is, with his head downwar and his heels in the air, This, they say restores him, and such is their faith in ¢ cacy of this method that the operating tables in the Paris hospitals are made so that in au iu- nt they can be elevated with one end in the air, so as to bring the patient into a position resembling that of standing on his huss. Creaw or Sweet Cony.—Cut the kernels from six large ears of green corn or use two quarts of canned sweet corn to three quarts of boiling soft water or stock of meat soup, and boil until it is tender. If green corn is used, boil the cobs in the water fifteea minutes and pal. DW. red in sixteen a. Seud or cail for waa Hows pelo = MULY ed pauphiet. pousgraphy, 1 NIVERSITY-TRAINED TEACME! L Pi pare for Civil Service, West Peiut, College, En, c. Private iessoue $1, clase Duy and ev Latter 5. FRANK L. HALL, 221° ot.u.w ry E JILLIAN WA. ‘aelg Consery eburch ironies V thews b. mony PIANO INAURUCTION Teychwr of we Pano, 11 bepecial Attention given and terms m.@erate 0 bezinuers. eacuer of Pinte, 140 6th st. uw SS JLL/A WiDDO) 15 st. Low. | seltawe BS . TAACKER OF BANJO, Justruction beure frem 4 te ¥ p.m then remove. Strain through a strainer cloth | _Addrew S423 0st. a to prevent the hulls from ecaping. ‘then | TTA PUPILS BY A LADY WHO place the seup agsin over the fire. Mix «mooth the Tustruineit a Spegalty'; two y 490) erasdut ave, tablespoonful each of butter and flour, stir- | S85 * mente. Call at 150 be three months. | i eee, 2, ll aah tal EDUCATION. w ¥. MATTINGLY. eat Bate a (Assistant Attormey of the District of sociate Professor of cues, Judge Court, and Lect on the istory of a BORERI c. Ds bie), Ae ix. The exercises of the sehooi will be resumed veraity leetare hail \satheget Corner re st. b.w.) on WEDNESDAY, OCT. ¥ at 8 o'clock p. and introdi dresses will M emits ef the fasulty in of Uuuir poverst Courses. ‘The exercises im the Schoo! of Practice are te be en- Library, to wate inte sat ual! to Wiel made, Will be open duliy forstady or research frome D lock yim. to 10 o'elock p.m, With a brief iutermis ter woUR. t the University from mn 4 to 6 o'closk p.m. te Mhiries, Be. Ca information Conserning the school he bok stares Wilthn Mor. ree > Williaa ram D 14 am Peliantyn Sou, $28 7 at it Messrs, Bitch, Fox.and Brown, it ‘er by letter to sold-Lm JAMES C. WELLING, Pres. ATIONAL MEDICAL, COLLPGE MEDICAL DAPARIMENT axp DENTAL DEPARTMENT or Tne COLUMBIAN UNIVERSITY. The sixty-eighth Annual Course of Medical Lectures and the third 1 Course will besau ou Mewday, Oc- tow . ipioecuctoty exer , Las Ni street uorth weet h departinens apply to br. A 26 (Stu etree nordiwest, Washing: 805. ‘wave-ow N 196, Civil . MINERAL SICS, CHEMIST payee From Cte 1G vcivek pan. Women od: The opening address will be delivered by Prof. W. CLARRE of the Uf. Geological Survey Yersity Mall’ om TUESDAY. Ucteber 1. at 8 P. the Unie v'clock “For Catalogue or ether intorgpation apply to sla Pon &. 1 TRistOn LED. Dean, AME COLUMBIA iVERSITY.—TBE COnCO- Yak Scsewtitic Scho: Ocwwber 1. Taec. which meet in the ev For information atiow try, Trivumometay, Analy a; ply 10. L. BODGAIN ‘wel 0-Lm 170 Oct re open to nce Lh Alge! tie Geometry ai calus, 8, Professor ot Mathematics. & beter Tear Coumect i. TERE SCMOUL Prepared for Geor i Be MBRing Octob Atthey MC As tarn & Competent “instructors in Luglish, Brench, Ger- wan, | Mathemrtics, Bookkeeping, | btenexraph ), (Hen Vituman), Light-line Bucrthabd and iypewrit: ing. Privileges of the sebeol free to members of th Pare ENING SESSIONS 1, isso, cw York ave. now, ciation, : \DWARD ©. i ih Br Correct (deep) Drawatic Tus Cyxvaze BOARDING AND DaY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES AND LITTLE GIRLS. » 1916 S5th st, INTING, CAR of decorative work . PIKE, principal, Fisros | wSardinw." susl-smy | '® ACADEMY, GOl E. CAPITAL ST., Ls of the Holy Cross, re: demic course for surht in all the pewriting will receive special attention, TROLS pre) Elocution ta ARY SCHOOL, ANRTEN NOLMAL TRAINING CLASS, ane KINDERG. 1918 Buncerlaud Place, south of Dupont citcle, under ERGARTEN *_ se3-1m* | riug coustantly in a thick saucepan over the | fire and pour in gradually a pint aud a half of ‘MALL FOR BOYS AND YOUNG r St, George's, Ma. College or Busines. Unsur- | hot milk, When the soup boils udd this and 200 Bio yaars J.C. KUNAL. AM, cook a few minutes to the consistency of thick | PBeipal. Bend for circles. 38). j | eeum. Salt or further season ai the Inst, A | ((RAKLES B, 7 . slice of onion is sometimes boiled with the Seb ious? milk to flaver it | slices of petato, Water Firrzntve, — Various patterns of filters are in use, very few of which arg of any value whatever. They act ouly asa strainer to remove the coarser impurities, but have ne effect upon the microscopie bacteria or matters held in solution, which are the most Gauger- ous, A flannel bag is ex: good filter as these expensive devices and possesses the ad- ditional advantages of uf easily cleaned or renewed. The wost cifective filters are these in which a disk of porous stone or carthen- ware forms the filtering material, but it is bess to muke sure of the original supply of water, rather than to attempt to purify it by any such uncertain methods, Waar 1¢ Minx—In pure milk there is a large pereentage of water and, fleating in it, invisible te the naked eye, are small but on- merous little balls of casein, each hold- lightly, and sometimes a few sel 7-1m* "MaEO. IN@ALL® Ki T Sap 2 eu pipe exwan for ae” Une, stmw., Sto S daily; resideice, GOU Mus at dv une N ATION UNIVERSITY—LAW FaCULty: IN. ARTHUR MacARTHUR, LLD., of the nets Court of the Vistrict of Pal DENT. HON. SAMUEL F. MI Justice of the Sai Ce af tae oie ata of > Soult he Limi a Proteawer of Geustitutioul Law 00k. Er Late Jusi HON. WILLIAM ¥. WEBB, LL.D, Lecturer oi the Jurisdiction ef the Federal Courts. Jas. BCHOULER, Ese, Lecturer on the haw of Beilucuts dud Domestic Relations. puity, Commercial, Cons! Masia. od Grusiocitae: EUGENES CARUSI, Professor of the Law ef 1 LLD., id Personal Property, ing im its center a little globule of fat, Cousrae fable” *ruments, Cor justas the white of an egg holds the yelk: spe > con rie a These little balls floating together in’ the CWAS. & WHITMAN, Esq. Lecturer ou Putwut Law and Fraction HON, SAMUEL F. PHILLIPS, Late Solicitor mange of the Uulted States, Lecturer on the kaw of ‘artuersbip and Corpurations, HON. JOHN GOODE, LL.D., Lecturer eu the Law of Crinies, HON, WESTEL WILLOUGBBY, Late President ‘of the Court of Appeals of Lecturer on the Law of Keal Proper JACKSON H. RALSTON, LL.B. Lecturer om Practice and Judge of the Mcet Court. ho Seasign of 1889-00 will Open TUKSDA’ Onaber LAT 7 O'CLOCE P.M. the 4 water give to the milk its ordiuary white color, In cheese the casein is precipitated with more or less of ite fat. The difference in two kinds Virginia, the well-known process ef churning the casein sai envelope ef a fat globule is broken »p and the latter excapes, and meeting with ite neighbora Just liberated also, forms butter, ‘The fluid ? , ‘Law Colle Saar | after butter is formed is butter- | {Ode Si. NW, when anoouucements wid bemerie, milk, and ccntains casein in great cay An excelient Library, co: ell 4-e is iD | weports, and Digests, has Leeu and is, therefere, very nitrogenous, Whey is pao ted ‘The Reading hoom will be open the fluid ebtained after precipitation of th casein by beiliug and contains the remainin; constituents, viz., sugar and salt with a small quantity of albumen, 00 THE NITRATE KING’S PALACE, A Magnificent Residence Being Built Near Londoa for Col. North. From the London Werld. Col. North is the fortunate owner of the Italian palace which is rising rapidly on the wooded slope commanding a superb view of the Chiselhurst valley. The picture gallery ig 100 feet long by 50 broad. At one end is a lofty vestibule, to be filled with sculpture, and st the other a marble musicians’ gallery, sup- ported by columns of Mexican onyx. The walls are nearly 40 feet high. Ih addition to the famous Italian pictures, which are new in Manchester, Cel. North has recently pur- chased the “Last of the Buffaloes” and the “Silver King” (two paintings of enormous size), ae well as Mr. Frederick Goodall’s ‘Misery and Merey.” The course ef the high road from Landon to Bexley has been changed to improve the the strong reom alone has cost 00; the dining ball (outside which rane = vedieed will be paneled with s " dauiy (except Subdays) from Sai. to 10 p.m, for the saclusive ‘aye of the Students and Graduates, talegues can, Ue hil nf the principal Book tore suden application o EUGENE D. CARUST cpa. Treas. uret, coruer Luth and E ste. p.w., CAM. LW. BUSHNELL, eng. Seoretury, 1U08¥ st. u.w. sel-tw BS. GKO. W. kOSS WILL RESUME IN- ustions on the Piano at new residence, 140. poy st., Beptember 16; vacancies for a liuited num. sel4-ln* EDICAL AND DENTAL DEPART: Tt, NA- Mi icat Gaiverasy, fa tad Bete pws ie aise anna! sourgo of lectures will begin Monday, Uctol ctugnts aud infor ply toh. we BAL KERCMD, ‘Dean, 1110 Bet. nw sel4-3w \APITOL HILL KIND: ARTEN AND PRI! “4 Ooh Su gdat we. Tukwoeuth year onene WORT DAY, vero! fi te principal, a AEBE Mee Ly nd saiurquatie COUNELIA TF BOyDER ge oa «D. eb Sor- ae p Doane leton & Lo. ter of mycale bonne,” lucators of ry Wy for circulars.) N LANGUAGI | SHELARD'S, AN EX. original, scien ti! Sh by the French Mfinis- {ilbauy) says an iy ae fi Edacber nie pesthoat in wap in pun aghestene ea Papet Kebools sina Ea SR 2a ac ewe ets et ey yaa se ‘Mr. Butler will reseive # limited numberef Oman Pupils. {SANDERS & STAYMAN'S, 994 F at. nw. cM REAPER te Pos sn ana ‘by Prefs. 3. every ° Hi £8 [ s & QRS Mi E i i i i af at 4:30 by Prof. Rebt. os os pa i PREPALATORY SCHOOL WILL | Sd INST iu the porth session room, Instruction thorough, “4 NEERVATORY OF MUSIC, #13 wh iusts a vanced course, plane, K t 4 1@ 14:h et. bet. Dand K ste. Select Classical and Matiewstical Schoel for Young je and Bore, Berius is thirty-aghth yeur MONDAY, Septem Prepares fer Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Jehne Hop- | ine aud other Colleges nud Cuiversiiies: for the Besentific bebools, ber French classes and private lessous; bost refer- om. eS ISS BALSTEAD WILL OPEN A PRIVAT wchoul for Wirls and September 25 et 14 A limited nuwl 3 o KINDERGARTEN amber 30 at 401 3d nw. Couch frou, hurthweatern section, seucber accompauyiny. Articulauen peer! dips t Dest eG. laa oxordy EWR sp. Sava As ina oe ‘eb and ar ailding Wb oom ~~ — oper ‘ain, to 10 pt. daily, Sundays eseepied, teateneees alumul of the sehewi. ‘secseiary opm be seen at the Law re, Linigiey and acurdeye trem 2 iol, enrcliwent, de ‘tore of weuc = ” St book steres of WA ucrine. i ‘e ee be Co. lame Siougt arthoweat. an 3 TEtb strest nerehweek or on application, percenaliy i undernigned er By lexter, te the M. YEQTMAN, Oly Sapreiny KPaCL MIERS er of VIOLONCELLO, FIASG AND THEORY, removed to 1151 1a ape JOUNT Veinon siuiNaky NM 43 Lecturer - terue, ee... 1100, 1104, 1106, 1116 M st. and 1126220 st BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL POR YOUNG La DISS AND LITTLE GIRLS Fifteenth year opens fer reg tion of Bearing Puyile Wedi Pupils Thurway, October 3 ‘Vanmar, Suith and Wellesley Colleges Fou further imtermation apply 4 tLe Principal sot ELIZABETH J. SOMERS. _ MAKVARD GRADUsTE DksikeS singly or in email « Tar ‘ 154M, AM, ide * AY age. sere & She reenm se, ¢ poe ye : x oY Bekvol 1 2 x : ee oe 4 vue adies and Little G ten ehs Uctolet yoRw 1 . N OOD INSTITUTE, 1407 SOSageuserre ay iviz 14TH STEAL A SELECT ope efade tor TORRES + iad aad DAY SCHOOL of (ES aed LITTLE SIRES. Uys bpepared to cuter the Lighest lagse® of any eqiexe. Special tacilt selected tition. Signi seasion opens Munday, Sepmuber Jv, at @ o'@ork aw. Address the Principal, bet aS. abd MRS. Wi D. Cama ETAENI BG ST, ‘The Misses Kerr's #ebool for Young Megses aud Little Children. Fall Term begins Sept. 3. Pour Boarding Pupile taken, wed tC S TuPRYS SCHOOL FOR GL Boye reupeus bey ber 18 circulate aud further inemuetion apply at 14 reuran ettest eles Gees AMERICAN ACADEMY. “how Ligh sty REOPENS MOND), SEPTEME — frewing tas oh v BENKY and gn, Teacher of jap. 9.805 - cs = _OUT OF WARMING TEN, TON HOMA SGRHOL FOR Gis Lyuniwesd: Rectiuyhaus Gon va” Mise Elsner C. Wheat, Prizeipal. Ls Fourta Senion Opens Sept, 11, 1889. iter ecucagon. ore, eed phyw ‘be course evecialty. iu English, Latin, whe, &1 76. pal or be a 2 Set 2 c1y : Board, with T andl ttrveutal For circulars ay CrsRESS 8c oy imac y Lal, ® i Situation List au ys enced teachers. # J ouxs HOPEINS UNIVERSITY, BALTIMORE Announcements for the next academic year are now ready and will be sent on application. sy13212 I V¥ WaAll—a bi ARDING for Chill AND EW WINDEOR COLLEGE; WIN: College, Windsor Busitew (x Dutidinge: full Propmatory de re SM, Poets Us aps CF ees , DD. Fresigextor Prot bk. #. NORMA, pal, Clings, Dew Windsor, MQ, alta TOR GIs REOPERS hb tren bene re aw i Ke‘ MAR COLLEGE, WITE MUSIC aE? oat Conservatory, i 2 Compete A ter ior eatalogae Wo C. L READY, Pree, town, wd Ig THE ART OF ALL ARTS education is complete witheut fuow what powers they possess until Art develops them” —Sacrwn = MAKTEN © OF ELOCUTION AND 7 ORSTORY, 313 Gt at OBER. Pupils mt in®? n.w. Reopens Ot clase position aby tuue after September ) well-known College lias develuped some of the eapivbal talent iu this country by tie AFAgSBULY METHOD, It hae “7: Pike COUREES: | 1 Professional or ND WIN — BUSINESS COURSES, jo mt ‘i Arithmetic, steet “beerung aud errr and ry Conumencia| ocution, tet all Ladies and Gentlemen whe an ued bducatien in the Eugijsh foams ts reessand Teschers’ Cartificatesawarded and Teachers’ .ficasesaw: to yreduates. “Ghorier courses privately of ti Forty-eight page cataloruc free, es I 8T. NW. A Primary, Interpediate aud Bigh Schoo! for bots ‘th year 5 with a corps fou teackers it fesaioual an ruetion in lish, tice, apd to th cate for Sollee Sectioeet. abe lor colleges Soe ae yutextre ebarge. ‘be reusder te ligt heat veuidnien, aod ole fect. Office hours, 10 am. t0 120. THOS, cis WELL, 03-5 yg tg Gi and : Arithmetic, > Lew. Classes siso in lype- writius, Givii Service, pecgrenp end pear tome i between 5 and 7 pm WOOD'S 407 Bast Capitol st au28-Gm geaize « finighed anid je; 2d. Professional Course iu Oratory? Brufeechoual Dra iat irre FPREESDS, SELECT SCMOOL, 181 ims Septern t experienced. tn. | ® Beicuce: pupile prepared for’ col supplied whn au ‘ahd chemical books fut wit Jun ar fog. Sook Bus Civil Govern: opers Sept. 2. Commersial ATO! SSE PIANOS AND ORGANS. Bn wt 5 ed ats new. Decxzr Baos. Praxos RMPRESENT ALL THAT 18 BEST IN THE ABT OF PiANO-FORTE MAKING. THE “FISCKEK” PIANO Ia troly “Old Reliebie.” Letebliahed 1840 80,000 im use, Fully Warrunted; Svld oh easy terms. ier rent, SANDERS & STAYMAN, ea Fat. ae, EVEERBODY ENOWS THE “WEESR" | As onoot the Grevtest Pisnos in the World Mini Laine it comumandisy” Position. Mapos BANDAS & Bla! we raiw, THE “KSTEY" PIANO Ts winning “Golden Opwicya” on every side, hamea guarantee of tis worth 5 wae! Pikes fer rent. e Fert oat had CONSERY, LY OF MUSIC, ST. wi Ne. aud F ste.—' rent; aus Grea oie Uni Bis Comet ep Bes CADEMY OF TEE HOLY CROSS, ea apes ees

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