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4 = MVESTHIENTS. INVESTMENTS. vy EER SNR oTTTT ROCKVILLE AND PRONTING RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PERSONS DESIROUS OF SAFELY IN. fi he YT 2 iy OF Ry 5 7” ABOUT ONE MILE NORTH OF ONTING ON THE = . LL i i ‘ HOR wy E z x 3 gE NN oa FREDERICK PIKE FOR ABOUT A MILE. LOCATION IS DELIGHTFUL, VESTING SMALL SUMS. $100 WILL MAKE THE CASH PAYMENT ON A i oR MM Vv wee Sus8 au kee 8 Oke ? ~ WESLEY HEIGHTS, ROCKVILLE. NORTHWEST WASHINGTON, TERMINUS OF MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE 371 ACRES LYING ON BOTH SIDES OF THE B. AND 0. RAILROAD, EXTENDED, AND ADJOINING SITE OF GREAT AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, GOoD LOT. STREETS ARE LAID OFF IN CONFORMITY WITH THE PLAN OF THE CITY, AND ARE NOW BEING GRADED TO THEIR FULL WIDTH, 90 FEET. FOUR HANDSOME SUBURBAN COTTAGES WILL BE BUILT AT COMMANDING CHARMING VIEWS OF THE SUEROUNDING COUNTRY. THE NEW ADDITION TO WEST END PARK, WHERE LOTS SELL POR @300 x as Sn Sa 8330 TTT a eg BACH, 18 IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF THIS PROPERTY, AND THE ELEC- ONCE. SEVERAL PARTIES HAVE EXPRESSED THEIR INTENTION OF I Ri x oe a . E Sugg t ay os TRIC ROAD BEING CONSTRUCTED FROM THIS CITY TO ROCKVILLE BUILDING ALSO. THE WESLEY HEIGHTS BUILDING AND LOAN ASSO- i BY gE Ee a Sus t ror’ ? rs wins uxweis wo 3 ORE-FOURTH OF A MILE OF Tr. TuR Wonk CIATION IS NOW BEING ORGANIZED. ITS OFFICERS AND BOARD OF RPE ae reach 9 SUTELbge Beate Arar atead tc DIRECTORS WILL BE COMPOSED OF GENTLEMEN OF WELL KNOWN ay Saal sem anaes a oro cece INTELLIGENCE, ABILITY AND EXPERIENCE, INSURING SECURITY —_——_ aciges Geroon Seniors aie oe hate eee AND GOOD MANAGEMENT. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO 1N- oo apr barge diac oalicateed eee Se eg ee ae ae te HOMES, SUBURBAN SUBDIVISIONS, SPECULATIVE PROPERTIES, INTEREST-PAYING PROPERTIES. ACRE, THIS IS THE BEST CHANCE POR INVPSTMENT TO A CAPITALIST PLar. Ob SYNDICATE ON THE METROPOLITAN BRANCH. NOW 18 THE TIME TO BUY, BEFORE THE SPRING BOOM AFTER THE PERIOD OF INACTIVITY COMES THE REACTION. Zt te a great thing to own a little bit of the Lord's Earth wp to the heavens. A man feels the better for it. —WHITTIER. HANDSOME SSTORY AND BASEMENT PRESS-BRICK RESIDENCE FRONTING IOWA CIRCLE. CONTAINS 20 ROOMS AND ALL THE LATEST CONVENIENCES; FINELY PAPERED AND PRETTILY DECORATED; FIRST STORY FINISHED IN WALNUT. THE LOCATION IS ONE OF THE FINEST 200 FEET FRONT ON 7TH STREET, SHORT DISTANCE ABOVE FLORIDA AVENUE. PAVED STREET, SIDEWALK, &c., SUITABLE FOR BUSINESS BLOCK OR MANUFACTURING CONCERN. 50c. SQ. FT. par a IN THE CITY, WILL BE SOLD AT A SACRIFICE. 341.000 8Q. FT. OF GROUND ON H 8T. N.E., WELL LOCATED FOR pone BUILDING PURPOSES; ON A PROMINENT BUSINESS STREET CON- VENIENT TO STREET CARS AND HERDICS; GROUND IN VICINITY Ms 3STORY AND BASEMENT BAY-WINDOW BRICK RESIDENCE NEAR SELLING FOR S0c. SQ. FT. AT lic. SQ. FI. THIS IS A BARGAIN. : DUPONT CIRCLE; CONTAINS 9 ROOMS, BATH, ELECTRIC BELLS, INVESTMENTS GUARANTEED UPON DIVISION SPEAKING TUBES, &.; HANDSOMELY PAPERED THROUGHOUT; ECONOMICAL BUSINESS LOTS ON PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, KEN- OF PROFITS. MONEY DEPOSITED WITH ME WILL DRAW 6 PER CENT INTEREST UNTIL SATISFAQ- ‘TORILY INVESTED. HEATED BY FURNACE. PRICE, $8,500 TUCKY AVENUE, 13TH AND 14TH STS. 8.E. THIS PROPERTY 18 ADVANTAGEOUSLY LOCATED AND ON THE LINE OF THE PROPOSED NO TROUBLE TO SHOW OUR PROPERTY, TRE SHOWING SELLSIT. BUY NOW WHILE PRICES TRACTION RAILWAY. EXTENSIVE IMPROVEMENTS ARE BEING MADE 3-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE ON I ST. NEAR CONN. AVE. ; CONTAINS AND PRICES WILL. ADVANCE RAPIDLY. PRICES Se. PER FT. UPWARD. aga 9ROOMS AND BATH; HOT AND COLD WATER, RANGE, LATROBES, SPEAKING TUBES; NICELY PAPERED THROUGHOUT. WILL SELL ee ene RITES | WISIN U5 : : siicilaae 3 SQUARES OF THE CAPITOL AND NEW NATIONAL LIBRARY BUILDING. ON AN AVENUE WITH WIDE PARKING. sUR- ROUNDING IMPROVEMENTS FIRST-CLASS AND CONSTANTLY IN- SSTORY 11-ROOM PRESS-BRICK RESIDENCE ON K 8ST. NEAR CREASING. A CHANCE FOR A LIVE BUILDER. HOUSES IN —— NORTH CAPITOL; HAS ALL MOD. IMPS. ; THIS PROPERTY RENTS WELL THIS LOCALITY RENT READILY. PRICES, $700 TO 61,200 PER AND IS IN GREAT DEMAND. PRICE, 84,000 Lor. ONE OF THE CHOICE LOTS IN WOODLEY PARK, CONTAIN. ING ABOUT THREE-QUARTERS OF AN ACRE, OVERLOOKING CON- NECTICUT AVENUE, THE ZOO PARK AND THE NEW BRIDGE NOW BEING CONSTRUCTED OVER ROCK CREEK. WILL SELL AT 40 CENTS PER FOOT ON EASY TERMS. THE ATTENTION oF PARTIES OF MEANS INTENDING TO BUILD A FIRST-CLASS RESIDENCE 18 ESPECIALLY CALLED TO THIS LOT, FURTHER PARTICULARS ON APPLICATION. L® DROIT PARK, UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR BUYING HOMES IN LE DROIT PARK. WE HAVE THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF HOUSES AND LOTS IN THIS POPULAR SUBDIVISION ; SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN THE WAY OF LOW PRICES AND EASY TERMS. INTENDING PURCHASERS ARE INVITED TO CALL AND OBTAIN SPECIAL BULLETIN. THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY, NEAR WHICH LOTS SELL FOR 2c. SQUARE FOOT, IS ABOUT ONE PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE EXTENDED. AND 4 HALF MILES WEST OF 100 ACRES OF HIGH AND BEAUTIFULLY a FIFTY ACRES ON THE HIGH PLATEAU IN LINE OF PENNSYLVANIA . LOCATED LAND ON THE BUNKER HILL ROAD. THIS TRACT 18 NOW yi AVENUE EXTEXDED, ABOUT 2% MILES FROM THE CAPITOL AND OFFERED FOR SALE FOR THE FIRST TIME AND FAR BELOW THE THREE-FOURTHS OF A MILE FROM NEW BRIDGE. THIS VALUABLE PRICE OF THE ADJOINING PROPERTY. A TWENTY MINUTES’ DRIVE er Vwww A 2% $65 A na Se TRACT LIES ON BOTH SIDES OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE EXTENDED OVER EITHER THE SOLDIERS’ HOME, BUNKER HILL OR BRENTWOOD S Yar FON S96 Geo mah MANE AA RRR AND ABOUNDS IN BEAUTIFUL VILLA SITES, COMMANDING GRAND ROADS WILL SUFFICE TO REACH IT. THE NEAREST RAILROAD ip ea ae eee a STATION 1S RIVES. WILL SUBDIVIDE PROFITABLY AND IS AN UN- USUAL CHANCE FOR A SYNDICATE OR CAPITALIST TO INVEST IN ‘THE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE DISTRICT. A BARGAIN AT 6250 PER ACRE PANORAMIC VIEWS OF WASHINGTON. SEVERAL ADJACENT sUB- DIVISIONS, NOT SO DESIRABLY LOCATED, READILY SELL FROM 5 TO 10 CENTS PER SQUARE FOOT. THIS PROPERTY WILL MAKE A UPERB AND PROFITABLE SUBDIVISION AND THE LOW PRICE OF 850,000. observable. One night he in a Broadway dustry are. N woman met has or- | Written for The Evening Star. ) theater where Booth Bi id , abl handsome and artistic. ’ The: e oth hi ments— y brooches ith | c ON AND OFF THE STAGE proscenium box. The tacitarn Saagpdlan was | wee hac holiah torah etmek iors co: | Skil of) tee mauseTTatinc woskest "icc y mon F the carck ae | cen, seen Of gehl—be wora with carve rings and ornaments of the ceyol nut, | chains of gold ds, finger ri ii ed coutial auc lien tare har een ot | cet ee ‘Nicaragua, used in making jewelry. each workman contin: |in abundance, There weet pabeernent’ | unlaieeaen or apeoghantia; Ricerwenditing ernasiatoees a| Chea in ee ee ee ing himself to w separate branch of the work. | ness for. jewelry. Some I fags Motos! on usual, and many observers ‘wondered whetiee ANTIQUITY IN THE MApLET. A STAR CORRESPONDENT a7} aol ba “ta exe j when they made their way A LIVELY CORPSE. they were once more grec chter. The people by this time Two American Officers im @ thet the corpse was none other th Among the masses of the Mexican City. Don Pedro Munoe, lnyed di : EXPERIENCE AS A MAKING A HAMMOCK. people these native-made ornaments are very | object of saving hi irom arrest or mo- ho was suffering from their obseqaious atten-| 1+ seems that the jokes about atronliness in | ®ELIC HUNTER—WwomEN wuo CARVE cHocoLATE Bat now we want a hammock. We ean find | Popular, but, as everywhere else, that which f OIRL’s BRIGHT EYES THE CAUSE OF THE | iertation. From the jlara the trooper excorte ions med ! PRerry ora’ cs, i ing Topics From New York. hoecretiy enfoved the malate’ “hue ate | balleta are not unfounded. A troupe uow en- | CUFSMEAVTIYULLY—MiLIONER WORK AKIN 4 none where the cups are made, though the | qe" iS0_,"ry often has the preference among |" prscovzar—a nui Cuast, so fixer car | DOD Pedro te his base ne enna tion is a puzzle to persons close to Booth "and | gaged in a Broadway theater actually contains | | WAMMOcK—aNtiqurries Nor easx To optaix. | Dave Wiven pines healer nen forits manu- | tasteful. Parisian jovolee ie olny oot Pe 8° | i aes ian jewelry is sold on all hands | TURE—THE Dow's wosrrraLiry axp Tux Ux1guE | 20, cordisllY Invited his new-made friends to Sxietena oe — gel — py er gel = seadongul —— fa Corres; nce of The Evening Star. railaghe grows bee as readily as anywhere in | —* reso) —. @ most popular of the pre- | SAFE CONDUCT NOTE. From the hospitable mansion of Don- Pedro “7 y, | He icly spoken or naword | grandmother, mother and d . ae 5 tl try, ‘i | cious stones, and they m ready sale. evelry were A STRANGE COMBINATION. |} theory oF opinion Teeeding tia: Genny ba| Sanh Se taeae oo ak, Meena, tee ce Guaxapa, Nrcanaava, Dec. 20. ¢ Country, and we are met by the sight of ey meeet a ready sale, f revelry wer: : i hedges of it des. We must go to Leo! MUD STATUES Uill the wee cannot into conversation with ctu sight ofthese three graces. ‘The grandmother MERICANS “ARE "YAI-FAMED RELIC jor {Masaya and there probetiy Sot Bene Among Whe carina tite Sack Sots ing of esbers acquaintances on the subject, and if over he 4 and a. gra Ae edad taaliogs (ee ‘ ings lanking of» Booth and Sullivan as = Dramatic Team—| utter: his views one topic of the stage it is| supple woman yet, with a face whose lin termined to dake ee 2 natural instinct |single fine hammock ready to bo sold. We qur, trooper friend i : | was again heard and : - | are the mad figures made by the Indians. They | Command of one of the volunteer generale—I | was again oe ‘Don Pedra Mow Doubles Can Hoodwink Audie ces -,| Guite confidentially to very intimate friends. | agecan readily be smoothed over with the | ¥¢ determined to make the most of our oppor- ies arene oats Ester ae o” the | Fepresent familiar scenes here—women engaged | have forgotten which—swung out from Gen. | Peared on the wide front of Don Pedro's writer once went to him with a request to | chalk and rouge of imitation youth. She looks | tunities for ferreting out interesting native manufacturers of these hammocks. the ensy |in making tortillas, men and king | Scott's main army and took the road leading to | dence a: ee ee te | aes aarti te petal Published | no more than sixty per cent of her years. The | work and antique remains of the aborigines of | 7 enn ; omen packing 4 UNIQUE sArravan. the Ballet Corps. 1 c] i ii Alvarad ith bject of turing that ci } > ata fair held by the famous Seventh regiment. | mother is thirty end the geanddaughter only Sain a Hnses of the country. in which ' heavy louds, &c., painted gandily in red and | Alvarado wi ject of capturing There they held a few minutes’ conversation io ow | of the le, but in skill of execution do not | that Hunter—Alvarado Hunter as he was after- ic. | attracted by le of Indian girls and sotheryl ae, H Speetal Correspondence of The Evening Star. “Sit down there.” he ng politely | arc of almost precisely the same size and shape. | A Professor of languages at Princeton, speak- | attrac as the road from one of th — i dice | fnan-of-warand bageed the game. Here then was, little better safeguard than the one he had im- = age | rs a n-of-war and beg; . ; SE OF THE MOST WIDELY KNOWN | summer villa, “and belp me with the beer aud | isa skirt dance and in the play-bill they are | the dull routine of a college life two years agp | Of the houses, euch with a bundle of Aber. in i : ‘we approacl gested that serious consequences might begun to fill another frou a canister of tobacco | cord, 1aoreover, that grandma can kick ight a after the fall of Very Cruz, a column in sinail hours of morn, a Mun x aid dn | QOS A BRIGHT MORNING, IMMEDIATELY ese S wes aks Gat con ‘aragua. My companion, Mr. 8. ©. Braida, | ¢U ee ieitl q : ; bisdcshul oi Mochhusbion totuh be aean i A score of the mos: eminegt men in the coun-| fourieen. There isn strons family resemblance | i" poeta Dorhood white they ket, visiting the neigh- | yellow. They form quaint records of the life | OW its arrival at ite objective point it wasfound a which S. said he intended, as Don, hare | equal stmilu Provised the evening before. hand and gradually leng: of the current farces in which two gro- | tobacco.” He was steol | has traveled in many odd corners of tho earth. | borhood where they are mado our ‘attentiog ae ha nt ined. | in the trio, nc y facially, but be the rises hn | Pear jolly good fellow, to give bi ‘d consented, but BoMth firmly declined. | in the trio, not only facially, but because. they F | tite by couple of Indian girlz anda an ee ee ecw’ Daepsalaioias aces 0 was a jolly g w, to give New York, Jan. 23. | toa chair beside a table on ‘the veranda of his | One of their contributions to ihe entertainment | ing perfectly half a dozen i ioms, he gave up | | thoning, a cord bei In our hunt for antiquities we have not been a source of much disappointment to those of the ||. at once expostulated with him and & clay pipe and he | declared to be risters. It may be worth a re- | and has since been in the active service of the twisted from the other end. ke = 4 ft rewlt i anaes oak Sa es cana gaan Canal Construction Co 0 ti ld. Indi ral hundred yards | ey Whe tabs ey interesting discor- | intended attacking force, who hed visions of | nt raption of auth tesq: is i “t off i truction Company. On | we notice an old Indian eeveral hundred ya though for this pur, we have visited | brevets and good times generally on gettin; a a iy ea are couph that stood on the table. >I can't offer you a| higher than either of her descendants. oe ee ‘th. t ug! purpose ve vis revel SPneely On OE | ee abd eae ap Renmede manner as stars has just flaished a week at a | cigar, becase I haven't one. Liike 5 Kicxeno, | the staff of Chief Engineer Menocal he now | ftom the others turning a great wooden wheel, pated nd Any e & pil ce . by hich gives to the strands the rot, | outlying Indian villages, where such things | into the city. Of course maledictions were king trom his pocket an heater inthe Bowers. One member of the | better. And this pitcher nah ute, api ——_~s9-_> sccompanios kimn-on 'n frip to he'onpitel eal | Ti sgiog: tes vakece th tone nicer ne might be’ found. ‘Weekes cette able to | showered on Hunter's devoted head, still the | the beck or thee ti duo was ill in a hospital, but the audiences saw | been bottled. I prefer it that w POLITICS AND THE FAIR. inspection of the work west of the lake, and | end. thus it ck of the sue the following lines: meheeer atl 4 fo iritting, it into longer and longer | carry on our searches in this line in the proper fact remained that to him belonged the glory | “"Whossever belonging te, the, enue of the and heard him in the play notwithstanding his ahh weed oo ‘alk a seal on th whiyes ‘cg, | 1Mnois Legislators Who Want the Elections | While the chief engineer is engaged in official n 5 aot eg It is kept from the ground by pronged | way. The only sure way to find remains of the of having captured Alvarado and the troops | United States: ree ~ — parts shall absence. He had for several seasons been @ | He chatted and listened wlio BIN Tabled. matters we find time to go hunting—hunting | sticks on which it rests, Starting “ut the great | aborigines that collectors would value would | could de nothing but accept the situation. The 10306 * ssfeguard shall suffer death. and listen en other things acdAend: in Ni ai wheel thore feeding the fiber yctreat hundreds 5 After favorite with them, they had enjoyed his per- | were under discussion, but aa to the errand of| ‘The Tilinois senate esterday passed unani- | fF Whatis odd and curious in Nicaraguan handi- | “? yards in any direction in which they can go |P° to dig up the graves of some of the old In- | men of both services soon met amicably and | gone formance before in the same role, and how | the visitor he would only say that he had no mously the house joint resolution thanking in something ‘like a straight line. When the | dian burying places, time having elmost oblit-| proceeded to reconnoiter every nook and could they be mistaken as to his identity? Yet | t#eories ——< «d couldn't express them eran, fren ike lace iatindiom ts almost impossible for one accustomed | single threads are so made two of them are | erated the monuments that have marked these | corner of the city, as soldiers and sailors will | that the precious p ng along the 3 - : the subati- | i*erestingly if he had them. Now, how does | Other states for making approp commercial life in the states and un- | twisted together for greater strength, and with | localities, though a number of them of great me, sidewalk toward camp, which they reached im they were. An imitation actor wae the subati- | he find any satisfaction in tho society of the | behalf of the world’s fa tutored in the ways of people here to compre- | this material in anothe i | time to be re; Present at reveille, $A. tute sud so close was the likeness that nobody | men who filled that theater box, and his he tt g er portion of ‘the antiquity are still known. The island of, So) Among them were two officers it 1 x oor] A Tewintion was introduced setting forth | hend the wars of doing business, the possibil- | which ts. well: shaded. Wy mange, Coase, | tera din Lake Ne ante magibickeod | ocatetsage mimes titan Peau | doubted that it was the original. Clever coun- i conversation about theatricals? that the legislature of Alabama had laid upon | ities of trade here and the mechanical genius plantain and other varicties of trees, we can Granada are _ or promising fields, ‘iguers and bosom friends, who loved a lark Canada Ready tw Reciprocate. terfeits of that sort are frequently passed upon BOOTH AND SULLIVAN AS A TEAM. the table the proposed appropriation for a | of the people that, through the force of ciz- |see men or women weaving ‘8 net not unlike a | being, it is thought, the oldest settle- | Petter than anything in the world. These | Hon. Mr. Chapley, secretary of state for theatrical sudiences. and perhaps it was these | | Itwas on his way out of the theater that | state exhibit at she'world'’s wie on the ground | Cumstences, has been sllowsd to eer seine, striped blue, rod Zellow and white,which | ment in the country known nat the timo of the | worthies, Shon | wil designate 008. ond T.. | casts, ina recent ellison delivered, selene’ Saks case nmicry thet Ind o mansger to | Booth encountered Billy O'Brien. The actor | thet if the elections bill pending’ in Congress is very provalent that the people living ie thoes |are placod perpendicularly te tor pad | Seen map, nearly” three centuries old, | 2, usual wi Amer gee tog rea so SUEELSE | ¢0 the extended powers of ttecrctary Blaian make a queer proposition to Talmage. | was leaning heavily on @ cane as he walked, | Should be passed such an exhibit would be of | warm climates are ‘indolent beyond reclama- | the weaving is done with a large wooden | that we have seen here showing the American | and barred doors, the: finally came to large and said he believed that Mr. Blaipe was, in his “Eve just had an opportunit: | and his decreptitude was painfully manifest. ' no yaine to the state, and calling upon the Illi- | tion is shown to be false in many ways. As | necdle from bottom to top. On order any | discoveries of that time, which marks the | mansion frouiiag on tha grand plaza, the door | innermost heart, « friend of Canada. He said elf,” said ti Kly: F | Billy joined him in the ‘pasesewar, sad bluntly | nois delegation in Congress to vote against the | #turdy laborers the canal company can find no yariety of design will be worked, a hammock | region west of the thirteen colonies as un- | of which was ajar. that those who argued that Canada must sur- your 3 ical mat | Zot politely said: “Str.Booth, I'm Billy O'Brien, | passage of the elections bill in the taterests of | better employes than those it hires here, and | forming an American flag being a favorite. | known, yet defines the shore line of Nica A BLACK-EYED MEXICAN orm. | render her growing industries to the United thinks he has : | the sporting man. Eve handled some of the | bie far, gne who travels through the country sees evi- | When the body is knit the cords for uspend- | and her great lake plainly, and the only city A cunning looking, black eyed little Mexican | Sttes are opposing the wishes of the people of and speak precisely as Ido. The scheme is to | best tuen in the prize ring. What you want to Motions to table and refer to a committee | 1nces of industry, handicapped by a lack of | ing it, with a fringe of tassels, are | located is that of Granada. thenan Indian village | ‘iho instill Sash poebik dhe sauedaatier bo) the dominion. It is im », he sieclard, have me provide this actor beforehand with jae is to get to work.” were defeated by the full democratic vote, aided | improved methods, that would be a power if | added. paper ope from | of considerable size. pottery | girl, resist ity tosce to have free trade with the United States am the manuscripts of Sunday morning sermons | It isa fact that Booth, although com led | by the three Farmers’ Mutual Benefit Associa- | PPOperly guided. ‘After all, in dealing with | house to house where the weavi was in my discriminate i pace Me lo agg ae Be oemey snare ng 6 Up what was going on outside, peered through the at the same time to and authorize him to deliver them ‘in charac- | by bad health to abandon the stage at the very | BY, tHe: mblican. course | estions of nat character, the inte | py ut co ind no completed ham- place. an is well | Qpening. Discovering her bright eyes the fer’ simultaneously with my atterance of them | time fixed upon for w long New York cig | Hon, voee soit was Pointed, out that. ie, tee | incentive to effort and the possibility of nding | Prod e Indians doing this work all live in | preserved, though the pec t be of | ersapiel ted here in Brooklyn. My doable would be taken | engagement, is better when acting; and so the om Lilinots hold the balance of power | intelligent guidance in work is answerable for cane houses .with mud rs anda fire for t antiquity. An idol of stone with mapa | verustion i “ from city to city, halls hired for his use, ad- | proposition commanded bis attcution. He Senate and can defeat the passage of the | % large part of what is accomplished by a peo- | cooking on the ground, in true wigwam style. | features, and a mold, which the Indians used | t enter the how mission fees i and half the proceeds (hobbled along beside the impertinent sport | pi ple. Here we find, in abundance, the native | ‘The labor is all done in the open air. What do | in their — among these pieces. A pe- | To conversation farned over to our tabernacle building fand. | and gave ear tw him. Pending action on the resolution the hour for | #2Stinct for the execution of artistic work, but they do when it rains? ‘They rest, but then the | culiarity of the relics is that ‘are formed Wasn't that @ curious idea? It was almost a] “Ive got a scheme, and I'll giv the joint session of the House and Senate to | 0" the one hand the jocal market is too small | dry season here lasts for six months, and dur- | hollow and have inclosed pieces of loose cla: poor Pity to say “no.’” | straight,” Billy went on earnest ballot for United States Senator arrived and the | t° bring an industry to any large tb Nabgreed ing that time seldom a drop of rain falls and ped as marbles, which causes a rattling noise | It is only with sta iddling or minor | to double up with John L. Sullivan. matter went over. {nd the work done is not of the kind that can | the Indians are never interrupted in fren moved. All the pieces of bowis found | acor. ‘whic the grade tat the fooling of aw by sub- | nthe Yasedian ejaculated, “EL?” en-| “After the eighth ballot for the day and the | be exported except as curiosities. work. have this peculiarity, the supporting legs being there was an expression of ill-feeling between the two countries it never went from this side of the line. Canada wants to deal with the United States as nation to nation, ty , Dinner to Henry M. Stanley. stitutes can be accomp! i for he thought that some plan | twelfth of the contest, without change, the CUP CARVERS. THE WEAVING OF SHAWLS. gencrally in the form of some hideous monster | *2¢ - ‘The arrangements for the dinner to be given has often been done in ; cuefieiil exercise was ‘in view Billy con- | joint assembly adjourved till today. Of half dozen cities of thecountry with pop- | If we wish to see the weaving of shawls, | OF other fanc but ‘always with the loose | xt week at Delmonico's by the New York win, whose convivial insured | tinue eres big money in it. You'll play Sroxsnsoramiecataes ulations ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 cach has | which are finely embroidered in bright colors, a against « m rles Coo! lawio in *As Y i 4 4 i h ¢ hb enserl i that gules of Goodwin eo ieee Petey | Cher ee ca ee Like 18 and Sallivan Be'll| 4, MUGURE WELL ware Min. | 9 distinct class of work that is turned out, and | we must go to Granada, where only lately heavy York as just ‘ac . Jersey City What the great actor saw may have been a | soari house Thursday in reference to the world’s = "We started poco acy foe Suriogition . shocks of earthquake drove the people from srs Ogedwin hiasclt was jolly off the stage | vision of himself in a wrestling match with the | fair appropriation bill was ealled up again vee: | Rivas, less than twenty miles from the Pacific | their homes and where they are now busy re- on Broadway. re tart, need of great slugger, and, aside from any purely ar- | terday and was passed. It declares it the sense | ang west of the great lake, as ere all the larger Pairing the cracked walls and broken tile roofs. Eeehor impelled by urvent busiuew or merely | tistic demage, v sch, He might suffer froma of the house {hat no appropriation should bo | settlements of the country. Ai an outlyiog Norking with weaving machines, fashioned in ness Ww a substitute throught a week | “doubling up” with John Lo the probability | Seat d's fair purposes while the elec- hich i @ manner we are accustomed of “one-night stands,” without thereally harax. | of more taatoriat bree gaay. have Sarieent ie. | Senne Lan ci, epbaas while the town to which we are guided we stop before bei a i : if i i E New : tions bill is pending in ‘Congress, and, further, | {08 to whi . Jews fraud ‘ste | idly to his mind. Slanced at dilly per- | nota penny’ shall be expended by’ Missouri | 2° belie and caine ak ae eee f Faust,” Col. Hobert pee OO | plexediy anc passed on.” The demented ‘sport: | should the force bill become a law. ter the yard. Our every step is contested by & mn 18 das rn One of the thiags that are successfully dis- | 185 Man died with the scheme of « Booth Bulli: SRised in the theaters is an old tune. The | “" ¢°™Pination in his muddled mind. Greater proportion of the eatchy airs are | merely alterations of former favorites, which, | it would be supposed, could not so easily ex ; eape recognition. Gen. Sherma is sn inver. | What usually heppens in the show business. Tea RAymt at dramatic performances in | She was « ballet dancer in the theaters of Spain | the bedside of his sister, the Princess Henriette. can equal. Sis city, and be has «habit of mching com-| at wages of never more than $20 week, that | The remains of the prince now lay in state on | house, ments in a loud tone as the performance goes | being lair remuneration in that country of gar-| the bed om whieh: he aeee yunded Sea Dull, « deep respect for the old warrior | lic aud brunets. During the Paris exposition | wax candies in golden candlesticks, makes even his interruptions more interesting | she figured among the Spanish adjuncts as an | of the x ‘than annoying to most people. Aba musical | exhivit of the peasant dances of her country, | form comedy the other night an actress sang the | and her pay was doubled. American mana: ular ballad “Down on the Farm,” and she | gers were on the lookout for novelties to bring it very neatly and sweetly; but ail through | across the ocean, and two of them decided that it Sherman slapped one hand ox his knee in | Cermencita would prove a profitable import. yan with the melody, and during the chorus | They bid against each other, until one of demonstration became really noisy, while | offered £100 a week for a term enaudible humming of the air came to a | Ine spectacular piece here ¢limax in an expiosive exclamation as the song- | contortive dancing did not please the specta~ stress finished. tors much, and she engaged another manager at the hundred dollar salary, having eigned a cou- tenct fora year. Then ile strange bap- Aun artist, desiring to amuse a gathering Of friends im his studio, hired Carmencita to dance before them. Paul Dana of the Sun saw sig ss coleies es puma os Soe A few days before Billy O'Brien died crazy | Cit? that he orde: pal on of a long hhohed the ers in w with Edwin | ultstrated article about it. That started the Booth imagisable. O’Brien had been in the show business ins rough and tumble way. It was | f he who val of the six-day pedes- te al 1 if THE CARMENCITA FAD. i in i = The ease of this Spanish dancer, Carmencita, i in | features, who calls ih is illustrative of the fact that the unexpected is = ee Aa feed Sa chocolate a i hi i i HF [ i i i F g i F a ag # i } cE i if i i if | f it i i ‘i 4 i i