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14 4 f ‘Written for The Evening Star. “ OUR NEXT DOOR NEIGHBORS. Bow Sixteen American Republics Flock To- gether. WHAT THIS CONGRESS I8 GoINe TO Do—mEAs- URES BEING TAKEN—THE JOINT STOCK coM- MERCIAL BURZAU—ITS WORK FOR THE COMIXG YEAR—THE LAYOUT FOR CHICAGO. Hert obligations to Maj. McKinley, fo: his loss is likely to be their gain. cumstances that Secretary Blaine is personally cultivating most intimate relations with the ministers who here represent the other repub- lics on this hemisphere, and that he has re- cently been in close conference with the most influential of them are regarded as significant. I called on a leading republican Senator “First,” he said, “you must not mention my this in name. Icannot be quoted as early the game. The tariff law may be mended thi winter where there are some obvious holes in it, but the important thing we shall do during thi: session and the next year is to cultivate South America. Reciprocity of trade to sqme extent will no doubt be arranged for. But quite a important will be the effect of organizing in- formation by the machinery provided last ing. It looks now as if close relations with all South America would be established and a good deai of its lost trade recovered.” I never saw such reticence as there is just now among public men of both parties. “But | that qiote me as saying anything about it,” is don't their first and last injunction. Mr. Blaine was more r United States. ‘MR. BLAINE’S VIEWS. “In two or three ways,” said the Secretary, “can Congress, if it chooses, take steps to pro- mote our closer relations with South America. It canmake the small appropriation of 265,000— our quota of the cost of surveying the ronte @ backbone rail over the unoccupied areas which divide us from the Spanish repub- ave rise in railroad con- . and it needs only vigorous co-opera~ of lies south of us. All of these countries sbown considerable ente: structi tion to weld us together with an iron rail. “It ean easily devise other means of making us better acquainted with each other, analogous to the commercial bureau of the American re- publics, which was authorized and established Ruring the summer and placed, at the request of the foreign delegates, in’ charge of Mr. Curtis. That burean is now busy making a jossary of the terms used in trade, so as to ilitate purchases and remove some of the exasperating embarrassments that now exis ‘The Spanish language has been modified by proviucialisms and local usnge till a good deal of confusion prevails in making orders and con- signments. A name used in one market may deseribe an entirely different article in another market. The fabric which known as ‘print’ in England and as ‘calico’ in the United States is known by half a dozen <lifferent designations to our continental neighbors; and the terms for ‘handkerchie‘s’ are oqually ambiguous. So ofbundreds or thousands of other things. Ourtis is trying to straighten this out. Better eal on hi ‘THE NEW COMME'CIAL BUREAU. T took the advice and sought information of Wm. E. Curtis, the chief of the new bureau. Information is sadly needed in this country. Our knowledge of South America is as dense as that of the average Englishman about this re- public. When a London newspaper alludes to Chicago as the capital of San Francisco and of Boston as one of the middle states, we think it inexenanble. but how much more enlightened was it for a member of our cabinet recently to refer to Buenas Ayres as the capital of Brazil, and a justice of the Supreme Court, in conversation “with a South American dele- gate. to inquire what language they spoke in Mr. Curtis, when I called at his bur tioned another i ‘Argentine confederation,’ old confederation was abolished in ty years ago ane! the republic (with |. Whe state of Buenos cede because she rmine whether the ler a national ora ‘iom_conquered, the were coerced, the constitution Wasamended and now it is as improper to speak of the Argentine confederation as entity as toallude to the sethern confederacy. jelegutes from Chi'e protested against ppointment of Mr. Curtis to the head the buresw which Peru received from tha the planation inollitied them. 1 he new bureau well sheltered in a stylish modern «well-fronf; brick house on Ver- mont avenue, in the social center of the city. A well-dressed colored ser vitor met me at the door; another halted mre in the hall while he Dore my card to the chiet of the bureau, and when I was summoned to enter the office’ a boy deferentially tock my hat and kept it for me. ‘The place is furnished with a good deal of completeness and some <legance—a tribute to Spanish taste. Adozen oe twenty clerks and typewriters were busy im the dozen rooms of the building ant it Sooke as if Me. Curtis would sueceed in spending his $36,000 appropriation without much of an effort.” This expense, Dy the way, is ro rata by all the countries interested; the United States advances the money, for convenience sake, and sends bills, Dased on population, 1 believe, to each of tho nations sonth of WHAT ME. CURTIS PROPOSES TO Do. In reply to my question whether he had laid out his work for the coming year, Mr. Curtis said: “Yes. Three things we are going to try to do: First, we are going to make a glossary of all the commercial terms that have different meanings in the different countries. We are at this now. It is not, of course, purposed to in- duce the adoption of a uniform nomenclature, for that would be impossible. I shall get out a containing all the equivocal names, with their local port as well as by our own shippers. ‘There are about 8,000 Of these words. ee Kes a series of bulletins, ing pamphlets of 150 pages or so, each giving & sketch of the staples of one of these countries and some account of the articles of merchandise which they import and others ef which they Stand in need. “Here is a year’s work laid out easy enough and the work is educating —tending to make all the people of this het re better acquainted with each other” ae bureau is to have an organ enti e Bulletin of the Commercial Bureau of the American Republics. It will be printed in the three sof commerce—Eng- language: lish, Spanish and Pot it ‘Mr. Curtis estimates that there are at 250,000 people in this country interested in the commercial life of the countries south of us and he bas their names and addresses on his books and will offer to swap information with ‘THE PROPOSED EXHIBIT AT CRICAGO. He has, moreover, devised a rather compre- hensive plan for the apotheosis of the dis- coverer at Chicago. He wants a motel of the house at Genoa in which Columbus was born. full-size reproduction of the caravel in which he sailed, manned by in the costume of that time; a plaster relief of the West India Islands and adjoining shores; relics of Colum- bus and his original letters: wax models of Cor- tez and Pizarro and their men: the palace of the Montezumas; “the banner of . embroidered by Queen Isabella, now im the city hall at Caracas;” models of Toltee ruins, with illustrations and studies of the arts ‘of the colonial period and of the present time. is proposed to have this ambitious exhibit in s buildi: constructed in the exact form of the South American continent, each Ration confining itself to an area with outlines correspondin, ding to ite own. be ‘Unique, attracti teetural This would ve and instructive, but archi- HE SPANISH-AMERICAN republics are responsive. He spoke with frankness and enthusiasm, and I believe he would rather have his name handed down to the fature as the creator of a continental com- merce than as the nineteenth President of the ‘A said he, | THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1890—SIXTEEN, PAGES, GIFTS FROM FAR-OFF LANDS. Received by: Foreign HOME MATTERS. ‘= Washington Astronomer From | Seasonable Suggestions andEvery-Day Hints Societies and Governments. to Practical H Prof. Simon Newcomb, the as-| Oxe Port or Guaxvatep Svoan weighs one tronomer of Washington, has recently been made the recipient of several very remarkable and flattering testimonials from foreign gov- lamp will improve the quality of the light. ernments and institutions. Atwoxp Mzan 1s Very Warrexrxo and will ‘A Stan reporter learned that the University | tend to soften hands. Put a little of it in the of Tokio has sent him two superb bronze vases, | palm of one hand, moisten it and then use it about two and a half feet high, ornamented in | exactly as soap. the highest style of modern Japanese art. This] To Baxisq Rep Axts From THE PaNxtRy beautiful gift is partly in recognition of the | strew whole cloves around the shelves. The professor's services when, not lon; , the | same is also considered a good moth extermina- great educational institution ref to tor. fo obtain a photo: ph wherewith to take} | Oxp Buass Mar Br Curaxzp to look like ictures sun. Mr. Neweom! strong ammonia Ten to on the subject and selected the best man bese lier oa a ae joccactcent Ge inctrement. ‘Aces i " arrany @ contract for it, To Wi melt of felt by the uhiversity with the result inspired airex THE Have, an ounce the compliment which the pair of vases is in- eter ar peng feces {peop and tended to express. one Tautton w, and apply every Another pone now on its way to Prof. | night. Newcomb from Russia, sent by order of the| ‘To Ser Dezicate Cotors 1x EaBROIDERED = iat —— fcr nperthar Haxpxencareps, soak them ten minutes before bill of lading for if, but he feels some uncer. a pee ear ege tainty as to whether it will be in his power to | *Poonf ‘urpentine stirred. accept it. If itis the giftof the government| In Taavetixe rae Comptexiox is kept in the law in this country will prevent him from | good order if some simple cooling cream ia put See, Vary Misty, however, 0 wi ast 801 6, the taco ovary night. Washing the tees fa ee ae eee mama 00 8 Me IS | very hot and) thea tx oct iw tcc aseslibos = observatory ai Pulkows, for which Prof. New- feces pet ee Ba comb has rendered important services. * year the prseter ts pierre ite fiftieth | Stee. Psxs are Destnorep by the acid in anniversary, the ceremonies incidental to| the ink. If an old nail or old steel pen is put which were attended by the czar, and among | in the ink, the acid therein will exhaust iteelf other things it was determined on the occasion | on them, and pens in daily use will remain in # such a vase should be sent to the man who | good condition much longer- was so largely instrumental in proct for |“ ToCueay Har Bavsurs puta tablespoonful of . — puta: nful of escapes ae ee, inet tlerepe wilg © | ammonia nto the tepid water, dip them apand ioe au Gumnenns eck aoe, down until clean, then dry with the bristles = : down. In place of the ammonia they may be fo make this understood it is necessary to| Cleaned by duing a teaspoonful af vone, Goop Ham Toxic.—Ten grains quinine, twenty grains boracic acid, one ounce tincture jeldoc, one- ‘two ounces Apply once Hor Dressrxa ror Corp Meats is made by rubbing up a teaspoonful of cayenne with fresh butter toa stiffish paste and stirring it <= ere with a litte sifted sugar, the juice . Otto Struve, a brother of the | (trained) of pasicbuh yar tiered ga ahdbtoa| present Russian minister to this country. | Mr, | Stier catsup and a teacupful of stock or brown Newcomb recommended the firm he considered oa t the best makers of telescope lenses in the} A Lemon Tea Caxe.—Rub four ounces of World, and on the strength of his }pindorsement | butter into one pound of fine flour, add four largely a meeting was arranged between Prof. | ou; ifte of soda Struve and the firm, the result of which was s | gnd‘ong of cree of bon aateneaas pues neues tan ae [rooney heey 3s. | rind of a large lemon and a well-beaten egg. crtain makers obec, bat, eee ating with | Mix with milk to a moderately stiff dough and Observatory to take aii the Ho and ieatst | bake in patty-pans or very shallow round tins. upon what he considered an unreasonable time | STEWED Cnaxserures.—Wash and drain one quart of cranberries; add one pint of cold for the completion of the lenses. The Ameri- can firm guaranteed their work and agreed to | watet, cover closely and set to boil for ten min- deliver it within a much shorter period. utes, then add one pint of granulated sugar YOR THE LENSES. and stew for ten minutes longer, keeping them The head of the firm went abroad to get the | covered all the time. Cook in porcelain and stir with a wooden spoon to preserve the color of the berries. A TzasPooxrct or Sait put into a kerosene r ‘The cir- Whose voice is generally heard on all ques tions which involve international _ relation’ and asked him about it. t 3 the czar was obtained for setting up in the ob- servatory at Pulkowa a larger i scope than at that time existed : ‘The astronomer in charge of the institution went on @ journey in search of the that were necessary to compose the instrument, and finally landed in Cambridge, Mass., where he went pot lycerine and one pint rain water. in to see Prof. Pickering of Harvard Uni- versity. Prof. Newcomb chanced to be sum- mering in the neighborhood and had an oppor- tunity of meeting the Russian astronomer, who was Prof. glass for the lenses in the rough. He managed to procure the crown glass for one of the lenses at ieomgien, England, and a year later he| BREAD Sponcr.—One square of yeast cake obtained in France the flint glass for the other | put with an ordinary sizo white potatoe; put Jens. (The reason for the, delay in the latter | pétato through the colander and set uway cov- Siece Of shat, He manufacture of such a big | ered over night. In the morning beat in a pint Piece of glass as was required for this huge | of milk and on oggand atableepsonfal of eugar, beeen isa very difficult matter. Tos begin | ard the size of a walnuts mix with flour until With. the silica and other ingredients necewtrs | you ‘have e. stiff sponge put ina warm, place fo the composition of the finest glass are put |‘ rise, and mold and’ pat in pans, Bake ina quick oven. into an earthen pot and melted. Next the pot iwo on Taree Coorxa Hers pay for with its contents is stowed away in an oven to gradually cool down for weeks. Then the mass a of glass, that is to be, is melted and cooled once | themselves soon. A braising pan converts a more. after which it is poured out and pressed | neck of mutton into a neck of young lamb, to into the shape of a disc. All over the surface | be garnished as follows: Out and trim the chops of this disc, when it is d¢old, impurities | from the neck of braised mutton after it bes are to be discovered, and these are frown cold. Put a little gelatine into the liquor sawed off carefully with wires and|Jeft from the mutton amd flavor it with fresh otherwise, because it is obviously impossible to | mint chopped finely. Cover each cutlet with attack the mass with chisels, lest it be cracked. | this jelly and serve with hot marrowfat peas Following this are many subsequent meltings | around the dish, and removals of impurities, until the material is freed as far a8 possible from bubbles and | T!BALE oF SaLxox.—One pound can of sal- foreign particles. Any part of a melting may be | ™0n, four eggs, four tablespoonfuls of cream; taken away from the mass as long agahole is not | salt and pepper to taste. Remove the salmon ade through it, which would destroy its con-| from the can and reject all bone and skin. | epfeney be interfering with the cohesive flow | Mash the salmon fine, adding slowly the cream: In the process of purifying | then add the salt and pepper and the yelks of by these successive operations its | the eggs well beaten. Beat the whites of the | bulk is necessarily much diminished, so that a | eggs to a stiff froth, stir them carefully into the chunk of the material designed for 2 big lens | mixture. Fill greased custard cups two-thirds | may be so reduced as to be unavailable for the | full of this mixture, stand the cup in a pan of purpose intended. Eventually, however. if | hot water and bake in a quick oven fifteen min- | Success is achieved, the mass of glass is turned | utes. n done remove the timbale carefully out in the shape of a dise ready for working. | from the cups, arrajage them on a meat platter DIFFICULT DETAILS. and hand around. This was only the beginning. All that was| For Cuarrep Lres.—Dissolve some beeswax got in Europe, as the result of a year’s work, | in a little sweet oil by heating together gently. Was two cart wheels of fine glass in the rough. | Apply to the lips several times a day and avoid They were shipped to this country, where they | wetting them as much as possible. An old- had to be put through processes that requi fashioned recipe flor a perfectly harmless face three years more for their completion. The | lotion is the following: Take seeds of pumpkin, contractor $5,000 a piece for the cart | melon, gourd and cucumbers and pound them wheels, and, inasmuch as he had contracted to | to a powder, add?ag fresh cream to dilute the supply the lenses for $32,000, he had $22,000 | powder, then add sweet milk enough to make a left for his expenses and profit on the contract. | thin paste; afew drops of oil of lemon or of First the big discs had to be ground off into | lemon juice must be added. Apply this to the approximate shape with coarse emery and after- | face for half an hour at a time or it may be put NERVY MISS COULTER Practicing With # Six-Shooter in Order to Hold Her Own With Mormon Saints. From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ‘ Miss Jennie Coulter, the Presbyterian school teacher who furnished the press of the country with true accounts of the miserable life of the Mormon laity, has returned to Utah and has already felt the first effect of Mormon persecu- tion. The Saints were particularly cause Miss Coulter said they lived on TO PREVENT BALDNESS. A Sage Barber's Unique Ideas Upon the Subject. THIS EVENING FECHNER. AUCTION 3 tater Metropaifen Wotes tical ex te. su. AUCTION SALES. = ——<——=== JUNCANSON BROS. Auctioneers. PEREMPTORY SALE OF LARGE LOTOF GROUND. IN GOOD HOPE HILL PARK. BESEEEE ORV), Ol AD OR HARRISON AYLOK'S ROAD. ‘From the New York World. “The preservation of the hair and the pre- vention of baldness is a matter to which I have given considerable attention and thought,” said a barber not far from the World office the other day. “And [have come to the conclu- sion that all the patent tonics that were ever ot | [THOMAS DOWLING, Auctioncer. ECEMBE PAST POCR OCLOX . real estate, ising and being tn the ¢ inthe District of Colusa bta, Jered fourteem (14) i t angry be- "ALOGUE SALE a7; dried fish az. and burned sage brush, just as they do in the | asa few simple and-natural remedies which a pare oar Soar cont (eters *or Green's) the low tunet; caek nmmunities, and demanded a retraction, |child can make and use. It is, of course, | the purchaser. Aderontor &0)requiredatase, Boor! he] which has not been made. imposible to prevent baldness ‘where it is | yyencingst purchaser scost. Lerus to becon}' x o cieguaved papas $0 Spee eS ee i Mo Sceall on the peesicrey ny to beer furore se we co fer most anpleamnt experience since aS hereditary, but it can, however, be warded Ca WR COMPRISIXG Sia 5 about thirty-three miles south of this city.} ‘The hair, like every other portion of ‘the Supreme Court of t! MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, Sie. toed When the intrepid school teacher arrived at! human Pere eae ator a — : at a racldnt the the town where she formerly kept school to| waste and eventually WENTY-NINTH DAT MEDICAL BOOKS, ‘and “reconling at the pf PAST FOUR visit her successor, Mrs. Brush, the Mormons | to. splitting of the ends of the hair. aS AT HALE Pa Eo fier eens WALTER, Trustee, 244 D at became very much excited and demanded that | bt, ‘is exposed and parties {9 said cause KS, i Pe she take back all she had said about them, say- | of the hair runs to waste, overflows upon the TO TAKE PLAVE AT MY ing it would go hard with her unless she did. | head, See ruff, which impe the It is claimed that Dr. Brush, the husband of | growth of hair just as much as the tares AUCTION ROOMS, 11TH ST. AND PA. AVE., MONDAY AND TUESDAY, DECEMBER FIRST AND SECOND, 1800, AT SEVEN O'CLOCK P.M. among wheat. The best means to prevent this is a strengthening of the hair, and this can be easil: Rots eee by Petite one = the use of salt and water and a lit vaseline. Have you ever uoticed what bushy hair seafar-| ("Pe equal instal Mrs. Brush, was the instigator of the attack, as | he claims Miss Coulter's remarks have ruined practice. Mrs. Brush succeeded, however. in getting her friend out of town safely. doctor and Mrs. Brash were established as provided by the decree, are: One- Soe? mecha iments: ae the day of sale, WH SE BRE payment i I and eighteen months trot oe ing men have? I followed the sea for anumber | cent inte \e deferred be sec ’ pest obey os sepa eo s scot feneel of + don’ remeraber ever having seen a | tae perchons N.B.—Books mow ready for examination and cate- sailor. It is because their hair is in con- | th? Sone eae eae eee cmtiee Day) | tent con tars with en in viguceting cals als aod logues ready for distribution. Sainte would have dared to resort to oj n2-5t vio- ‘ie an come lence, as American Forks is on two lines of | 12 often wet with salt water. A good tonic of | ¢ FP®* DWELlincs, TakGE AND WELL LO- > See eer . Miteo tee salt water should contain a teaspoonful of teeny oj ol eet The poo tienen} salt toa tumbler of water, and should be a] Fentall CATED BUILDING LoTS EES DOWLING, Auctioneer States mn conta be thrown into the town | plied to the hair 2. a slice! AND VALUABLE WAREHOUSES AND WHARF FINANCIAL. Se ee ee oes | pricing it tbe batcis thoroughly washed once FUTURE DAYS. PROPERTY IN ALEXANDRIA, Va, 5 a woman. Moreover, the Saints havo a whole-| © reek, with caatile soap and the scalp rubbed | Spuarig NALUABLE IMPROVED AT PUBLIC AUCTION. Hausa. some dread of martial law, and they know Utah | With vaseline, the hair will not only cease to REAL ESTATE AND PERSONAL hi tive in Gov. Th fle does not | fall out and the dandruff disappear, but will ROPERTY, SITUATE NEAR SENECA, IN| Om SATURDAY AT 12 M., THEGTH DAY OF DE- MONTANA, MiMiciedsk: actually thicken. Having once got the hair in] | MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARL LAND. CEMBER, 1800, at the front door of the Corporation Miss Coulter's friends in Salt Lake have pre- | $000 condition, vigorous dry brushing and a | , Under and» Court room, Fairfax street, Alexandria, Va., te s0- sented her with a handsome six-ehooter, which | Fe%0rt opcasionally to the treatment I have de- of 3 ecriber, as executor of Win. N. McVeigh, will offer at 48 A PLACE TO INVEST MONEY, the is learning tobe handy with ‘Thete is, of, %tibed will keep it so. Bulzac, the famous ‘an Public auction, the real estate of which said Me ¥ PES piled this, but the young mis- | French novelist, was a great stickler for brush- | &4Tecorded in Liber died seized in said city, embracing a dwe was ing and rubbing the hair, and claimed to have warded off time, though he sionary proposes to resume her teaching, this Gi bln for on er and mother. time at Fillmore City, the county seat_of ill- | ard county, and a veritable hotbed of Mormon- house, his late resideuce on St. Asaph street near tue Post office, two fine building lots adjacent, 25 teet by inherited it from both his fat 3.5, abutting on alley in the rear; ail most eligibiy It is alarming how prevalent baldness now is | { ‘ind nathed therein fof thst purpose, The enormous amount of funds invested sotakseioc-eiitiae od boon eeaeet ie qmong roung men, and Lattribute it entirly srctiog-om then ren ine, ahh seosf Hclens in mining euterprioes wetted tp tte A 5 le Bt lert nowin le. 1c ) oe “4 ortually lance profit hemetn He a Diente aay Units attempt to make bes | Cupedes the circulntion.of the bisod es tie i tate ad peraual poteety naanely | Mond and Danville Rervad Company on one side and | for ators eer eh tear therein inane open tal exceptional opportunities tn real property, naively | tne wharree aa eae crown of the head and thus shuts off from the | Ail the property: mentioned. aim by rail from this city to Juab on the Union 4 © and building investuents, which, while abso rs i i mo . consisting of all those tracts, pieces OF VaT~| At the same thme will be offered by Francis L. Smith, | pis . a toate“ Gome oe enlace it | of bat arto bent Nett ens ™™*| Regis ite Moy sam | ne tetra oat ae Snel Baars cam ees 3 ; waton | Jecent to the 28 late residence, the whole em at a an armed United States deputy marshal should —— 0+ — sol Geuchar sees argmenee —aolhnade tied | See cae ean of am Save at ah quietly accompany the stage, ready for busi- Epicurean, Ress property in the city. incomes based upon 5 and 6 per cent invest Rese the brethren ass’ her. She will be ‘There are sonneteto an eyebrow, ry cous ; ‘Terms: One-third cash, balance st six and twelve y cngmented ethos tam ay subjected more or less to insults, but the ‘There are rondeaus to a shoe; others, No. 118 equity ‘and containing 500 | Mouths, with interest, securedjoy purchaser's bonds Vrinctjal to a locality offer wider op plucky little woman says she is ready for thera. There are mairigals to duchesses, ares |. mnore oF less, ‘The said tracts of land | anu lieu on property. he will go on with her work undeterred by ‘Whose rose and hose are blue. the sane which were heretotore. 8. FERGUSON BEACH, Executor of Win. N. VE ROSEWOOD 4 ENT EBUNY CA’ tame ssid Beton fed Sounty, "Maryland, EW ihson, Tis wiles day of Decewber anything the Saints may say. : © Saints have at times very original ways like to the Philistines. It in only a few years ago that a noble band of them out in Tuilla county frescoed the entire front of a Methodist minister's house with the contents of a cattle pen. This they called using the weapons of the spirit, pouring out the vials of God’s wrath upon the enemies of his chosen people. Up in Kaysville a gang of ‘chosen tried to blow up a Presbyterian school house an finding inside after school the young woman who was teaching there. These incidents cause the Gentiles to smile when they hear Mormon leaders talking about the law- abiding qualities of their flock ——— +00 —___ SOBERED BY HYPNOTISM. ‘There are ballads to the dairymaid pavitt her fakies in the brook, nt why don't poets write a rhyme (Or #0 about the couk? cf Ah, the cook! Is he not always In immediate demand? Does he not hold your digestion In the hollow of his hand? Is there potentate more absolute ‘Throughout his own demesne ‘Than the cook that knows the subtleties , Of intricate cuisine? What ravishing enchantment In the breath of a puree! What exhilarating rapture Hovers o'er a consommet What a dream of sweet contentment wcities ina pate'a heart, at a world of passing pleasures In the limits of a tarts ‘Where is fond most satisfaction, In the heart or in the mina? Or the organ which beneath a Spacious waistcoat is confined? ‘What can minister to pleasure As the white-robed unseen priest Sandstone Co 4 4, by Nathaniel “Wisc ‘annie ‘deed. Usarine. date. the 1et ‘in the ‘year ‘Ime aud recorded oof “maid Montxom cou in Mber FE. B. P., No. And aiso all the mills, inachinery, tools ckS, cows, Loais, ‘stone quarried and unguarrs snd personal property of every kind and description, belonging to the said coupsny, and situate, lying and ins on about and upon tie aioresaid tracts of land, ner used in connection with the quarries n, and all and sincular the appurten- eu water ruchts nN N_OCTA| GN TEICI EL, El A visit to Helena will demonstrate the truth of thie fatcinent and convert (he most incredulous. For full information address MAGNIFICI KDROBE | BEDS WAL W ity ances five hundred acres described in themort- sold inciude the celebrated Seneca quar- of Ked sand stone, with all th derricks, &c. , nec the i Grorata- Aapawa INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 00. GEN. BEN. PF. BUTLER, President. HON. JAS. W. HYATT, Treasurer. mt eure ie Pics epenieaad 18 NOW OFFERING a rinks, suddenly astonished his friends about a| ‘The Presence not presiding, fected with the’ farnvare's lanes double stone ses ; cen, Sunn eases on year and a half ago by reforming. He drank eee ste! A Man Cured of Intemperate Habits by the New Science. From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Carroll Cook, a young San Francisco lawyer, who wasfond of good company and mixed 3 yablic Toad leading trom G wn voolesville, known as the River road, and adjoins the yson, Upton Darby others. lon been regarded as the best farm- twouery county, the soil benz natur- ally very fertile and susceptibie of the bixbes! fronts on the p s Fe ‘EMBER “FIRST, ‘we will wall on tho streets north went, ure is nearly new ego, and K, hand furnit mat fh AND INVESTORS, WHETHER SMALL OR LARGE, WILL FIND iT THE BEST THING ON THE MARKET. FULL PARTICULARS FURNISHED BY containing six rooms, with a back buildiny attached, a Stone for ned, nothing, but no one could get from him the secret of his change of habits. Ithas just leaked out that he was hypnotized by Ken- nedy, the mesmerist, and that he can’t swallow Let us toast this perfect product Of materiality. Let us hand his praises down to Generations yet to be; Let no heart be cold or he . 8 4 Let no ear be dull and 4 ‘THE COMPANY'S AGENT, liquor, as his palate immediately rejects it. For the greatest man just now is ‘The secret came outatan evening reception ‘Not the poet, bur the chet, W. K. PEABODY, this week. Carroll Cook wasa guest, and at —+oe-—_—__— al3-im 916 F. st... supper among other articles on the table was a ‘The Anti-Cigarette Crusade. * Placards bearing the words “Cigarette smok- ing is forbidden in this office” have become quite common in the banking and brokerage houses down town, says the New York Times. This prohibitory crusade against the cigarette is said to have been started by Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, whose hatred of “paper cigars” is in- tense. ‘As the story goee, Mr. Morgan step) into a bank in Wall street. one morning to about-some securities that his firm had been ‘As he stood talking with the male; Opethind canny: be the thin smoke and fumes from @ | Gsrerred payments tebe coon oe the igarette attracted his attention and, looking over the railing, he saw one of the subordinate attaches of the bank pufing away serenely mince pie. Cook is very fond of mince pie, and took a piece. As soon as he put it in his mouth he began choking. When he recovered every one wanted to know the reason of his curious attack. “Ian't. there some alcoholic liquor in this | pie?” asked Cook. “Of course,” said the hostess, “there's brandy “That settles it,” said Cook; “you see my palate is hypnotized.” ‘ Asked for an explanation, he said: “When Kennedy was here intimate with the mesmerist. I was then drinking heavily and rapidly losing my practice. Kennedy said one Gay, ‘Cook, whisky will be your rnis. I coms mand you never to drink alcoholic liquors dgain.’” He fixed his bright eyes on me, but I laughed and ordered a drink. “When I lifted it T could not control the muscles of my mouth to swallow. I poured the liquor between my lips and it fell out. I tried to swallow that liquor as though my life depended upon it, but it was use, and from that day to this it has been ber" deneraity a the machionty sa Inree alles, to Binks wit : ay aol rock ali, Two. helstine Perel bettas mans & nd sx stone boats. a Will recerve inte EWIS G. TEWKSBURY, Lite dine “Ny. a Meuler Washington Stock Exchange. LEWIS G. TEWKSBURY & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, F st WASHINGTON, D.c., cash oF ou anarin Stocks, a ve ret allowed ou denon, Out-of-town business a specialty. ‘All Local Securities dealt in, Constant quotations all markets. ‘Telephone 645. MACARTN: Stok Es. CORSON & MACARTNEY, GLOVER BU balance in and of the pr * reeers HIRD Part a seid 7 and umn of oriwinal lot Seestining at ‘net conveyancing and recording x ase TEMES BEND The attorney named in the smoke cigarettes.” great fimancier then walked out of the bank, and it required a good deal of tact and persuasion on the part of the bank officers subsequently to get him to renew =e FOURTH—All of orizinal lot § in same square, cRT ° in. . front cording to the pit) SW feet 8 inches o fhe south Side of Mt. Vernon "place bys depth of 100 ward with fine emery. Then they were laid in | on when retiring and left on over night. pasins shaped according to the lines of the} ‘Tgose Havixa GREEXHOUSES will find that Ree ae halen See alee ae eran | cel lls ab plead Gaal ba grown wares tee the inside of the basin to accomplish the fine | benches quite as well as on them, and in this grinding required. The final touches to way much can be economize. Ferns, the surface of the lenses precisely to | tradescantia, many varieties of begonia, lyco- the curvature required by ‘the mathe-| podiums and even geraniume. will well matical drawings were given by rubbing with the hand. In this way were the great Pulkowa glasses finished for the tele- scope. which is now only surpassed. by the Lick observatory in California. Even such with, don’t throw them away, but stick carefully made lenses cannot be made freefrom | them into ‘the soil under the bench, and let bubbles. If you will look at the ob; * ject glass of | them take care of themselves. In little time the telescope at the National observatory in | they will root and soon become fine plants. Washington you will observe that there are} Ax Arsicot Tant—Take a pint of the desic- found of avokding them, Nand yee de Meiven | cated or evaporated apricots, sonk and steam observ: pe is the naet aad. biggest | them, not letting them go to palp, but pretery- i n of the You do not know what in the United States, with the exceptior ing their shape. Toss them in a skillet with Lick. | The celebrated telescope of Lord Rosse | four ounces of fresh butter, the same of sifted is six feet across, but it is only tele- | sugar and the finely grated’ rind of a lemon. reflecting scope, which means that the object viewed is] Meanwhile cut out a round of pie paste and not seen directly, but by jon. There are | edge it all round with @ strip about an inch plenty of moderate-sized refracting telescopes | wide of the same and have ready another that are as effective for seeing purposes as Lord | circle of the ‘size of the first, but Kosse’s. The one at the National observatory } rolled out as thin as possible. Lay in the fruit here is ever so much more serviceable. mixture carefully (the fruit, though well mixed Prof. Newcomb also received recently | with the butter and sugar, should not be from the Royal Society of Great Britain the |a mash), cover it all over with the second Copley medal for his researches as to the rela-| round of puff paste, wetting the edges and tion of gravity to the movementsof the planets. | pressing it well together. Brush it over ‘with white of egg and bake in a gentle oven. the whites of two eggs to a stiff froth with four ounces sifted sugar, and when the tart is mask the center with this meringue and garnish the band at the edge with it. eo ——____ A MEMORIAL AT DELFSHAVEN. I warrant me he'd mocked at fate with someden-| 7° ow pho son eases ols ant song. = But, being he warn’t much on tune, whenever | From the Boston Herald. times were biue, S * The project is afoot to erect at Delfshaven, in : , Ne any to MueaE theeutyrtene be ba Tec aade anv Aimeciooa ial to the Pilgrim fathers. Samuel R. Thayer, present Now. futher whistled mo, “tzed thst tune WRIh | yicister of the United States at The Hague, 0 first suggested that a memorial be reared to = =i ‘A mark the spot in the Old World whence the nn en ae et os | eilatiens salle ecrtaiphading wilh he taian: whe m certain as can be some trouble is to | rial now standing on ‘the spot in the New World And 80, etimes, quite natural like, tous observant where those heroic men and women landed. bodied i Trercscrhed suggestion in that tame of deep pe- His suggestion was em! in a dispatch to ic the State Department, written on August 26, 1889. It briefly urged the appropriateness of such a remembrance, described the peculiar advantages of the site—within the present cor- porate limits of the city of Rotterdam and in Father's Way. {To Wisow Baxrerr.] My father was no pessimist; he loved the things of eart Its cheerfulness and sunshine, its music and its ‘mirth; He never sighed or moped around whenever things ‘went wrong: lant soldier boys right gayly out of To see the gai town; A-comin’ home, poor mother eriedasif her heart would brea matter to the Secretary of State for his consid- eration. The Department of State caused s y to be at once sent to the governor of Mas- sachusetts, to be by him laid before the Pilgrim sister paeren ety. pest" arcane nena ant | Mei tho Netherlands the interest awakened bes Seemed like it took tne tuk right out of mother| been marked. ‘The the rest; She was the sunligs in our home; why, father osed Kept whisilin’ to himgelf, so sort of solemn like and low. ments thereon, elicited unanimo it Te wouldnt seem ce home at all if Sue anould. go | ** 5 eumon. of, the king's cabinet: erlands min- aw: ‘Yet, when she went, a-leavin’ us all sorrow and all ister of foreign affairs said: “The communica- tears, tions were welcomed with the liveliest atisfac- Poor father wW istled lonesome like, and went to | tion by all the and the final realiza- feed the ‘steers. tion of this project be regarded by the ‘When cropa. were bad, and other ills befell our siderations will probably make it | ne: at a and a further proof of te inviolable. re- wna enter inane ot te| sna tecame ane weet coer ne neve Steet me eA ad when ¢ favor shown to journalists Dy this sdminist wor nipped ~ ‘The historic point of land on the Mass at tion. He the tation of “a hustler” How vair ly did his lips belie the heart benumbed ren wae the spot, be it always remem among men, having wed J bored, whence was James and ouiger their’ Mimourt | 7° Sit, the tll tale whistle tle & mood ne'a not | Defed, hence ras Stally gathered few world 2 narrow (THOMAS DOWLING, Auctioneer, 11th and Pa.ave. to impossible for me to drink liquor of any kind. ‘One day I was given o glass of lemonade in a negotiations. Very soon afterward a notice Src ‘ that cigarette smoking was forbidden ‘was put DAY OF DE. nd on WEDNESDAY ENDER io. at THREE TWO HUNDRED O'CLOCK P-M., we will iaee that had a trace of whisky in it, and the | up in that bank, and so popular has the placard s ong forint ont ot the preauae, al ion parts “Sache as ink splattered all over my clothes.” ome among ‘employers dor KISH CARPETS 4D RUGS contained n fol ciate unde of faestment "Although ‘Kennedy is now in. London, Cook | worth their while to go about peddling them ae bd ai! local Halirosd, Gas, says his spell is as strong as ever. at ten and fifteen cents each. AND OTHER worms cit —- = we a x, the south line of THE STORY OF A FATAL MISTAKE. eee ater, ‘thene tot fee as Tot, thence south abv thence. west fect "10% juches. to said. cast line of said street ail Ehence north 41-02 feet tu the point of beginning, sub ject to and with the Use of a private alley'on the south —— of the pnrchase ‘From Munsey's Weekly. ‘Teme of sale: One-third Important opening of » magnificent consignment, | casi and bela embracing Camel's Hair Carpets and Ruzs, Khorassan Carpets and Rugs, Cashmere, Inilis, Shervaban, Mer- zapore, Mohair, Royal Sumac, Kernit, Royal Eilore, Zviti, Zariff, Kazak, Mella, Candahar, Baku, Anstotian and Carabagh Carpets and Rugs, Angora and Gulistan ae Mats, Antique Rugs, Rich Portieres and other Rare Plasters.. = Crlantal Testes, PARTITION SALE OF MOST DESIRABLE UNIM- | German Porous Plasters, i Es 3 s ‘THE | Ayer's Sarsaparilia =f ‘To be sold at PUBLIC AUCTION, without reserve, west oa aa oh as wird ohne > Pema is AT MY ART ROOMS, By virtue he 9 Supreme Court of. the | Ayer's Cathartic _S SOUTHWEST CORNER PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE | Dysitict of Colunubia, pase dune 6, 18090, in th Bovinine, Ps a of Johnson ys. Juan, 4 Docket 330, 12000, winin 2 3 AND ELEVENTH STREET, iomat HOCK, br TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, Fa DECEMBER SECOND, THIRD, FOURTH, AT ELEVEN A.M. AND THREE P.M. mat 1,301 square fect. “ fermid of exis One-third cash: installiueuss in one apd two Fears, Principal a cate ee Ee ; fal parchaser's cost, ie and forfeited tn in Bfteen days alter date of sale. GRAND EXHIBITION MONDAY DECEMBER FIRST, 1890. ‘solu zn al lervescing Bromo Caffein’ L TV. . . THOMAS DOWLIN3, Good Sip or ao si. Fe jiow Sirup Hypophosphites, ‘That evening youag Simpson devoted in| And returns to the ball room without losing . ENJAMIN L. Com. Ris guiatmuats ta taeene ee an instant on the way. bachad Auctioneer. WATCaE the countess. 4 RUSTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE HOUSEHOLD T FURNITURE. trad trou Many Cleemet: acok Tinecin chattel Ber husvund, to the undersisned trustee, dated the aist ‘of May, 180, and recorded in. Liber No. 1. |. 123, one e chattel record books of the Distric of Columbia, default beine made in the therein secured, by the uncersixned trustee, ANC! IMPROVED PROPERTY Cis SEobsi) SENUET: BETWEEN B AND fe ~ & zt E4 SE D—LIBLARY FURNITURE. os of Rainut Deas, 1 Walnut Table, 1 Chair, 1 Sota, 4 2 "RD—BED ROOM. No. 2. ra B seal, i \aimut Warurobe, 1 Marble- wa sctstund. s 1¥ me art ‘B-BED ROOM No. 2. iB 0. Watnut Bedscead, I Wardrube, 1 Bureat, 2 Rocker, aa -BED ROOM Nc : cdsfini® Bedatend, Bureau, 1 Wardrobe, 2 arm nu 2,00, BY apartment and bring ve Concealed behind a éurtain, the countess ap- plies her powder puff. “vould me my pouae irtue of the power Fez Manbets and Lap Robes at low peices,