Evening Star Newspaper, March 14, 1891, Page 11

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ere. _! THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, TS91-SIXTEEN PAGES. a sha) ot, the face. A man sith COLORADO SPRINGS. a face and chin. especially the latter. —— 2 = BOOTH MAY RETIRE. |so'te, tacts ci cecil Sela | a eeawunst uit cy. Sot not the Oren ot | Sas w canreern ao with hort ® Spring About. PAINTING #F & a“ - Is Sunapee Dt teacher ay * making-up has become such an art that the |T®® MRALTH-GIvING ATMOSPHERE axD THE terme sdliremn . His Declining Health May Bring His Borman class fontureg cae ae repre FIENDISH MUD—PIKE'6 PEAK AS AX. UNERRING na8. to Senta vicious pug-nosed pugilist. Ob, it isa sim- Be t : Career to a Close. ple matter to make a pug moee-” You attach to | cy Sechelt oTerranine Rest Lk, of the nose a piece of strong. sticki age = Friday A Terune, $18 mth Sr ee ter, to which you fasten a flenb- Correspondence of The Evening Star " * 7 thread, which rans over the head, pull it taut " . Gi ¢ a SOME THINK HIM DEMENTED. | and there you are: Plevible festhns are an ees ee ena a : 5 WONDER IF. MOST PEOPLE HAVE AS Pain important help to all actors, especially come- -- : diane, Tam bleased in this reepect, and can net I Soren one Springs as Thad | 9 Sch FE A Trip to Eurepe for Treatment Plaaned— | only twist my featares into ‘almost any | when I came here? I had thought of it as look- | f+ ana ncaa 8 acu ‘Ticket Speculators and Their Encrmous gem bet solain, the grimace indefinitely. | ing like the regulation watering place, and pic- | Suni trailers nind peeforms ma Profite—A Stage Door Idiot Snubbed—The | Tif the subject would —_ “T" hace a | tured it right in among the mountains. But I Micéties of Theatrical Make-up. large number, none of which’ cost less than | foUnd myself in quite a little city, set down on ¥ By veers NCED_ TW . Scapa $40. To suit me they must be skillfully made | the plains, five miles from the Rockies, and | ee Bee STR ae = of natural hair, else the audience would notice | there's not the ghost of a spring about the Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. the deception: ‘The shading of the eve | town. Sew York, March 14, 1891. | is not done now:with black penciling. Whe gutta vitae, Bi Pe a SS you look into a human cye'you wii observe | There are beautiful, wide avenues running I sn ndt $6 Gaae extent Gf tb that it is never jet black, but has a slichtbluish | Porth and south and handsome cross street rs of the rumor, _ bd ing se ; ae tinge. This to the use of a blue black | cutting them into ordinary city blocks, and all ive belief, that Booth is demented. color, and the improved effect is marked. The are b i trees, ‘The great tragedian’s acquaintances in the | gradations of colormust becarefally observed, re” epee conde} Players’ Club have been questioned by your | A true artist will not depict a sunburned coun. | Pinted in four or five rows on the avenues and very infirm physically. He is a taciturn man | I can then achieve the same results every night hag by temperament, and of late he has been a ver- | easily. : seems the bottomless pit. 6-8. Po Lee. Tr. Tks acres. 67—Montg’y Biair, 18,026 acres, ‘THE DIRT 18 FLENDINN, There are no pavements (except ona block 01 two of the business streets). The driveways | tenance with the entire face of the same | ™ust be beautifal insummer. The cottonwood Brig! : 63s. ores} , they would be slow | | 15—John W. Willis 5-1 rhtwood Driving Park, 4.914 39—J. B. Coit, 2.00 acres. 54—M. F. Hende . 22.557 acres. 1. Ws on spondent, Of course, shade. In real life a man exposed to the sun | i# the onlystree amiable enongh to grow in! Samce Shoemual ; 40-Blense Shoemaker, Ot acres. Se Hloasign t. Mwds, 30.00 serene OJ. to admis his insanity, if it were true, but they | will have different shades from where the hat | and and gravel and it is kept alive by irrigp. : abit taht ‘acres. sr acres, were so quick to indignantly and *positively | ends, which should be hardly shaded at all, | tion ditches, which border every street on both pate solicits Ai Pacres deny the assertion that there should remain no | to where the sun shines with fnll force. Al. . ihe rT acres. pas : tal health, rt | lowance must be made for the slight protcetion “ites, and when filled with snow make hopeless NORTH Gibney, acres. loubt at all of his men’ - The repo: “ded by the rim. I have worked on the | Pitfalls for unwary strangers. A false step vo abd ome x iy Sram sndoubtediy, from, the thet—quite Pal: | a, ag-cz of 6 character weeks Wefonn Leet | atzets thé. Spsetigally amtothént tanéeeae | © —A. B. Shepherd, 95.977 acres. pable in Booth’s acting this week—that he is | ton + satisfaction, but having once succeeded | looki: space and down you go into what Pp Vag amet i Scare, : | FA = s acres, = sienna ine hermit i he serine. w kn & = NEW < pp ) 71 e upper part of ouse whic! v4 = THE FINAL MAP OF ROCK CREEK PARK. ° Us Peary orn Ps ae = TRREP MONTH Teskows pad: Se wee a eS = the Players’ Club. He has denied himeelf to} oie sraresMan's YEAR-BOOK: Statistical | are hard dirt, kept well watered, but the side- THREE ges THs: Gssokg may most of the few men who are nearest to his in- and Historical Annual of the States of the | Walks are loose sand and gravel, and woe to the TERE Mw [Oe the same time it would not be such avery rash —_As. soon as the lines of the park were decided | we have now succeeded in settling upon the | timacy, and has restricted his personal inter- rane for ae: year Cg ae by J. Scorr ed boot that treads thereon and the " TTR Annual” Public: ou. Revised | dainty skirt that sweeps above it. There is acmillan & | something posi course to Mrs. Goodman, his only daughter. — nan & Taylor. ely fiendish about Colorado r 4y Ni to #500 as the ‘ice per | upon in a general way the survey was begun | minimum values. part i fy BOK | og eee omttee in ita work of valuation was | He has gone to and from the theater inacar-| Co. Washingeegr cna ppd i ye PSG anaes se up pf Te eds peg jay gis “ing | governed by the principles of law which the Hage, itso kad tntof witch pe hashed to be ap = 33 A h THE LANDSCAPE AND PASTORAL PAIS your clothes, and you shake and bras} until : rs " Court in General Term has just declared in ted, and 1 tit while alighting at the #5 « A ; ; . the park. Th ‘bout | ju i |, and several tim ighting OF HOLLAND: Ruisdael, Mi our arms ache and your whisk broom torn The Map Made by the Commission ead TA ba oed bag og "by the cc “ at| toot Site aed thie wane bate ‘the | the ease of the post office site. ‘The main e door, he has not recognized ever so Potter. By FKANK CUND! 1% pieces, and there it sticks. ‘The immense P y sbehld sch be xendy Jor Sling, ‘by the enc ot | 1M of these and this will give Some idee of the | rinciple was ‘hat they could not determine aiphtly. tub salutation of fotse Perso whom he) Hleweatary tisiony of Art: Paluting.* New | amSuet cf electricity in the ale ie tannate cee 2 " in making a valuation of the ground any vi new well. bg tee om So’ | countable for this. As to your boots, they aré Ready for Record. Then condemnation proceedings will be begun | stones shall be of a very substantial character, | 2 Uinen® & Yum joint use of the various parcels | ~All these things have impressed the actors, ert Beall. reste meap as nell . oon! — : — AGT che ettencnad otiee ove cals betoes | toa Boteeacke: co the aioee tals ot te | fi ea ay be ng Be a eS Fo hove consequently agreed in accounts of SE a LR RnANE: A Memale, By BROOD | sites ap os ey SB’ Shohen. merry is 4 District lines. joint use as the property is susceptible of in | Booth’s dementia. Genius of George Cruikshank. By Wiittaw | sible clothes are those as near dust color as pos- € OWNERS OF THE GROUND. | emery month of June it Rane. sage of | wn ie rene tho bands of private | purehaser, Inas; WRETCHEDLY BAD REALTH. Wagnaten Taacesat. New York Seibuer | ible, andall the men wear tan shock | ||| DR. RICHTAND a. ROMEATMAR, : Es fected, Capt. lossell to. subrais to them iis| ‘There are between 76 and 100 different tracts | private purchaser proposed to buy | ‘The truth is that wretchedly bad health has] & Welford Washington: Konert Beal so ease ee mp eae Pr Fe meen ree! y y 4 " ji 4 is not | THE PRIMES AND THEIR ¥ Preliminary Work of the Commission About | ideas for a park and his suggestions as to what | of land thafcome within the boundaries of the | Loy oe p Bi gg ai Pak ae psig py ot bape = = ihaes Le Re el Completed—The Valuation of the Land—Of- | i ahi erthe law and the necde snd eines | PATH: So far as appears now these are as fol- | fhe values for those purposes, but it has tried | ct hand, however, unless a contemplated] eter eter iilucitaton” New Yak fers to be Made to the Proprietors—The | Provisions ot ‘He drew the plang for two | OWS: Harvey L. Page, 6.68 acres; I. P. Klingle, | to 8x as the values a sum such as any corpora- frip to Europe for sanitary change and medical ton’ Co. Washington: Robert Beall. fork Ahead. different otylesof parksand a modification of | 31-817; Rosemount Park, 9.183; Reg. Fendall, bs ie bE lieved Rie a pare ‘s feeatment should oure him of as malady (which BESSIE BRADFORD'S PRIZE, By Joanya H. | into individualyards. In winter some peaple | TRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Fail : 4 ; giv ive parc " ont is digestive |. He was on a pro- ATHEWS, author of “The Bessie Books,” etc. > ~ STRICTLY 60! 1 . round work ‘of she plat for the park a te dost) Break Shessaker, 60a; Trores Shoot considered. Tn this. Connection it wan neces: feinal Par Dovate ea the eaiten| | Maasniar ete sax Harper. New Yor: | 1004 their yards and let them trosze over, | S"in'al grates of suis to be. “val mer we I es . a : 0 making delighiful little skatin, da, where | succgutul Preparsticn fell inferwenen ts eet sary to consider the value of the respective el ting. His last fe A. Stokes Company. Washingtom: iS Pons eae ‘The preliminary labors of the Rock Creek | ‘0 be .ds from Klingle’s Ford bridge | ™*Ker, 5.525; Pierce Shoemaker, 9.023; Pierce | tracts for agricultural games, ‘and for resi. | COmMPelled him to stop actin, Ag the chil rar commission are almost over and unless | 130° fic lice of the Zeolowind Park octes ie | Shoemaker, 15.612; Thos. Blagden, 24.598; Blag- | denice sites, und also i r leat f : ldren have a splendid time. This avenue | dears Shea tustraction toadute fe d through with dimi-) _ Robert F. Milter. is off the “ P Ay | ow has tem Deleted e “tle of the tunber | Ealty. Then he returned to this elfy with Ma | AN AMEKICAN GUL 18 LONDON, my tuna | wit (ie Sige of the. town, runing parallel | {ut“hean something unforeseen happens it is more than | District line, with Rock ereek running through | den estate, 2.269: Thos. Blagden, 1 | growing thereon. : ind made up to attempt no further work. SRANNETTE DeNCAN, author of “A De- uv likely that it will be able to tarn the new park | the center of it all. From Kiiag'e Yeed to the Warder, Mrs. Blagden, 1. “Before making the inspection the full com- Bs ficent view. Here everybody rides and drives, | Cascade avenue is the fashionable street and isk a. 5.8 has many handsome houses, set back from the Apple | sidewalke,as in our beautifal Washington. Only | PNOF, AGL. what we would call the “parking” is railed off | punts who wish to jest tu ee a ae 5 ut he arid Lawrence Barrett had taken the ture.” With 30 ‘Tilustrations. New Yor! 3: 0 x She ft Appleton & Co. Washington: Robert Beall. | 2Nd all the life of the “Springs” centers. begin Willis, 3.519; Pierce Shoemaker, 3.194; H. Tt | mission met and held a consultation, in which | Broadway Theater for twelve weeks and it was | __D--APplc . = Robe ap hfe pm le | SEROGEUDL Oe the ieee ey; | took eth teagan bentiery ean or ee eee | Porter and H. F. Douglass, 6.21; H.R. Porter | they discussed what they knew as to the value | atu heavy lose that Booth wns spared for about |THE YOUNGEST BROTHER. A Sociallatc | with an eye to the future extend far out on the | $egeef deewine Soar isle iy the valuation of the moa line it averages about 5,000 feet. In’ the first | and Hl. F. Donglass, ——; Jane Dickyon, 0.259; of land in the region of the park. This knowl: | two-thirds of that time. It is the remainder of | Homance. By Exxnsr Wicurur, autor of y | SWE Norbsaiiee dan F that will lie within the boundaries of the par Tages section the country is, rnaged and of great | Chas. Dickson. 0.215; Pierce Shoemaker, $9.263; | edge wae derived in the fret place from the as-| the term that Looth is now struggling manfully | <The Workers.” “A Brave Heart,” ete. Cale | Praities.| Tmever can get used to secing, t are about through with their share of the work natural beauty, and it is doubtful if such wild | John McKeon, 35.319; J. K, Dos. ‘Passos, | sessments both of the land and the improve- | but feebly to bring to afair conclusion, One over the open prai me ie il ir repo | ic ie 71.527; Pierce ' Shoemaker, 5.408; Chas. ments for purposes of taxation, and also from | week more remains. Then he will cease al oo pinay : = n p. mae BI caer. 6. we arhanclontichey fe pobiaara enepeakend b= Crap eanpleortl = aoe Soretaty ns Early and | Fred. W. Pratt, 6.896; Chas. | the opinions of persons competent to judge | exertions for the season. The visit to A Point to Be Remembered. ri cote} bei ao elle gee Mage ty from | For full moruatiim adlirees the i incurs aries of the park are now known. Capt. Ros- | other tract of land could be made into such a| Farly and Fred W. Pratt, 2.605; Bright- | that had been expressed before the passage of | Europe has been ‘planned for him by | From Life. 2.64 ¢ your cushioned seat in'a regulation street car 8 1407 Mannachuseti | Beant ‘ 7 wood Driving Park, 4.914; Louise Kuhn, 0.0009; the park bill. Barrett, who regained for himself marked 4 ‘hen edent | Office hour: 30 40 1. dai cell bas finished his map of the land and bas it | beautiful park With as little assistance from | wood Driving | _ “After the firat meeting a second was held at | relief from a serious disease by recourse to sronery fn thd oneal pases | Stee uonre: 28 2 =] an’ m. M. Jones, 4.885; Wm. Watson, 4.959: ri 4 scenery in this country. Colorado Springs is | ready to file with the commission. From this | ™ ‘ath ane wetens: Clark's. 1.00; Conway hich the full committee went carefully and in | German physicians, but Booth has not yet ft j where there is not a | ~ oHOOL, 1 i. Lannion wedaltst, Tibbs, 1.00; Pierce Shoe- | yw, 6,000 feet above tide water (about the hefght of - ° i .s ete i i > Hat heel, Mie clam Sime on the line of work is clearly marked out In the two and one-half miles from the Mili- | MAK", 1.146; 7. | Mt Washington) and only five miles aw towers Pike's Peak, with its snow-capped cre: PIKE'S PEAK AS A BAROMETER. The “Peak” is the barometer for all the ——s 4 . PHOOL, 407 — ol a ge — age to y Sanit Seri Sto Fe ira e untnitigged, for though the sky be a8 blue | Seytenuter ® iat. Cnty = changed and clear as on a midsummer day, if a little | Sum at oure COURT T Woobe LL ao relates, cloud no bigger than a powder puff restson its | 10 intitiadinatiaaia fummit there is sure to be a blow or a snow, | (yOLUNIIA CORRELATOR) and on the other hand, a leaden sky, however oa wrense, 1.337; E. T. Bar- i romised explicitly ‘to go, although urged by La ag beh a's5o, | detail over the whole ground and fixed upon a RE plicitly tbe 8) 24: it scale of values. These values related only to | his daughter, who would accompany him. An Ry opie Serge me i | the fatsd. "A vaduation ba how baking upon the | American professional tour of a few hg citi improvements and it is hoped that this will be | has been planned for Booth to make next se: conipleted in a few days. A schedule will then | son, buta great gain of strength will be re- . 0.358; A. Hayer, 0. = ; tary road to Blagden’s mill the creek bed falls | A. &. McLaughlin, 2.081; Eliza T. The valuation of the land placed upon it by | more than 300 feet, and there is searcelya H. Co rthwaite, 2.00; J. B. Coit, 2.00: Pi the committee is » thing no man can find out | stretch of half a hundred fect where the Shoemaker: 0.2; Cornelia, O. Trassdel, 16.04 ‘ ‘ BRAS oe Rs as yet. This price list, together with the map, i i . E. Gist, 1.5 and I. Sturbitts, 1484; J.R- be prepared which the committee will give to | quisite if he prefers i is impersonatic pd pt iat eee ot | pope Ngo Ente canendes, rapids OF Tos Passos, 8.789; duames M- Groen, 41.355; 3. W. the commission! to offer to the owners provided | this week; lave boen 0 weak as to bu almost the report of that body must be submitted | high and precipitous. At one point, where poss Ered. Dox, 23.036; Archibald White, ’ this is approved by the President. pitiful. igeph Gad tev Nite oe te ae to the lent for his approval It he finds | the creck sakes'a euddem turn, te the weet, & 7.300: W. J. Cowden, 79.685; A. “yan, 211; |g tt 8 evident now that no money will be with- | 1ain Unassailed or have only hinted at the de- it and to his taste then it will at once de- | big rock projects about 75 feet above the wate 010; John Saul, 2.031; Marian A. Ryan, 9.11; | ayawn from the District treasury this year to | tetioration, but the audiences have en volve upon the commission to offer to the + ; | Samuel Frens,40.373; Mary F. Henderson 22.557; | Grown from the District treasury this year to | oaty imiremed by the wreck of hie power omnes of the land tho price set upon it by the | Could Sak for. Some Tecate A. pot 88 ont | Eleanor T. Meeds, 20; Aug. Burgdor!, 25.239; |} s NG AND PAINTING TAUGHT Tepeh method Uy Atlee HELEN A, Maite P Ta seshunttd ove Ste o John Van Riswick, 125.123; 8. P. Lee, ms i c a HO HAY R Montgomery Blair, 18.026; John Van the controller of the treasury to Rey out the| The mistaken discussion of Edwin Booth asa » on the District in connection with a national | A collapse has been anticipated every night, dark and threatening, means nothing if the saluation committes and if these offers are ac-| Same t Lover's Leap, but until that time comes | Douglas Forrest, 9.06; Wm, “F. Eaton, 60401; Under the act of Congross the District | amd clote, observers, will be, happily disap jant mountain stands out clearly defined. i<c115. —_ cepted then the deed is done. it is a fact that within two miles of the national | Aiila, Cath, Brown, 221.47, Wm. Hi; Riley, jy assessed one-half the sum, with interest on LE SO eet er ey Phere is no rain from October to April and Ata TA ine ‘THE OFFERS MAY NOT BE ACCEPTED. | capital there is w section of country ns suvage | 100-12; 8. D. Cameron, - G, trades, deferred payments. No time is specified for | ™ ended. November and December are usually a loug oe A SITS eee gaane But will thesd offers be accepted? Thisis| and picturesquo as though it were ia the | a he . | the first payment and it isin the discretion of ACTORS WHO HAVE GOXE CRA?S. ie Coitee te = succession of glorious sunny days with just dro vugaln puettsone pet otal Pontos quite another matter, and one is pretty safein|veTty heart of the Appalachian system. ston pa a f gut the enough frost, in the air to ive, snap to it a " i 1 rk ti weeds | hy. Pa ial i jg Money for other expenses in the District an " neously with the verybody rides and drives the whole day long vega pe ————n saying thet they will not. ‘The act of Congress | Cr would stad any. artiicin! improvement ie | Riswick, 12740: J.T. Hnkuey'2.2%; ane, aflow the payment of the first installment ox the | Geaented actor Comes simultaneously with the and the invalids who are not strong enongh for | (COLCMRES COLLEGE OF COMMERCE. making provision for the Rock Creek Park ap-| the northeastern section. Here the ground is | CTUtchtield, 3.049; A. Pinkney, (2.947; Jane E. park to goover for the present. ‘The land~ alte : 4 ee ee that sit and sun themselves on southern piazzas. | Gives the best ites * SiGe tale world. the pip, propriated $1,200,000 and put the limit of ter-| more rolling. Much of the timber De 016, J HE Masse TUO, Peky Bronk, | Owners whore property is condemned and | theatrical people inevitably discuss the cases Tey ca But sick and well live out of doors and in the or ot which recet ritory at 2,000 acres. map that Cap’. | cut off, leaving it comparatively bare and unin- | Myrick, 2.976; J. H ER Gray 5252; opm | turned into park may get their money from | of Jobu MeCullough, Tony Hart, George F. Sopusiea eka Rane direct rays of the sun, and even the most anaes oes Hossell has prepared, a copy of which is given | teresting. Here the landscape gardener can get | 4,141; H; Brown, 1.347: EB. Girny, 6.282; syn- | she United States under the Rock Creek Park | Knight aud several others (to name w e yg pee fragile consumptives are tanned as brown as an Rael. A couditaney Veil bering, above, represents a strip of land about 1,960 | in his work,though Mr. Perry, who isone of fhe | Lease, 0.867; Geo. Civsel, 0.035; E. etand the District will havo the use of itsown | Would be cruel, becanse their cases arp not yet | Agnes, aged four, called at an uptown gro- | old sea captain. and so do not have the terribly | busrtand sud Lowers ‘Aunual wvlstabip ait seres in extent, running along either side of | members of the commission, thinks that the . | money until it is better able to stand the finan- | hopeless) who collectively make a singular |cery store the other day. “I want tick of ghastly look which is so painful to see. Nobody | Fc", on Kock creek and containing some of the most | proper thing to do is to make an.artificial Jake, THE VALUATION COMMITTEE. | cial strain brought about by the park. showing of recent dementia among actors. | gum," she announced. After getting the de- | walks, because it is very tiresome in thie a ©. 5 UMNER, A.M.,C.E..Prim beautiful stretches of landscape along that pic- | which can easily be done at this end: cleat | OE a i | | When the property has been condemned and | Within five years no less than eleven Ameri ited arti re tude and you so soon get winded. Each house- | CPL NCERIAN faresque stream. It will very likely be possible | out all the undergrowth and put the bills in | , Mt. BR Rose Perry, speaking of the work that | 4,0 trunefer in fall is made to the government | Players have gone crazy, and in that number is | ited article she remarked that she hadn't “any S) to acquire that much land for’ that im as chasers hold has at least ome sort (nian: | A ch | grasa. ‘There is plenty af room suitable for | ha® been done in connection with the park, | the real duties of the preseily comSrosinn out | fueluded no-one whose’ imental ‘trouble erase | Penny. How do you expect to pay for your | Ait a isnt backhoe eee ee eert (TT: | Reeaions of the ucw Sear tevie deutary®?, Ls money, but nobody thinks that it can be done | children’s play grounds and already one enter- | said to a Stan reporter a day or two ago: “The | cease. The park will be turned over to 4 new | from alcoholic excesses. queried the vender of the delicacies. vie on . the door and hitched overs you “Arcouste ad without going to law about it. Nothing could be | prising young man has put in an application | committee on valuation has-been greatly im- | park commission, which is to consist of the There is nd doubt,” said Dr. a. the ‘ounced the youthful philosopher, | don't care to take a regular dri ae itty Vain el "Baementary more secret than the results of the delibera-| for a base bail BUSINESS COLLEGE, 1D sts. hw. diamond where the young idea | peded in its work recently by the bad weathe- | three District Coimmissdoners and the chief of | specialist, ‘that the ‘long-continued aseump- give youa kiss.” The kiss was taken, | do errands, and never think of wall ch | Shecl at fherthens. Syeeusttine and sions ofthat same valuation committe, but at| may be taught tobatand pitch. + |andthe wretched consiton of te Fo tad cepectlly if the impersonations be. thor: | Put ASno® staged and Goaly,Guahed with wu Jag couple of blocks. It's w readfuly taay | icy g Qreete Aareraieacnadnccone™ of engrossing kinds, has a tendency to produce | Ethel would like a tick, and I'l give you an- THE WINDS MAKE ONE SEASICK. Sagar, auereesty cxmeenthie ay rates. sults, however, until verified by other ob- | his deep regret at parting with his colored sol- PATENT CONVENTIONS. pavorid condition of mindin an actor. I other kiss for it.” Both girls chewed that! With January come anow and: bitiag winds, | anak eee hae ie saitalinept rates. Day — servers, should be received ax probable only, | diers, and gives as his reason for his disband-| ag est have no personal knowledge of any of the cases | afternoon. aes ng Rouncement Alexander Graham Bell Explains His Views | and not certainly proved. Pemepese ae failed to provide the neces- | Th First One Held im 1845 and the Good | you mention, but it is entirely possible that SOE = Sk Sa eae The latter is the worst feature of Colorado eo HERTES SPENCER, 12.8. trmape. ) im @ Lecture at Kendall Green. ‘THE PROBABILITIES. 3 Sr led i ote ek Results That Followed. mania may result from the work Of an actor. DEATH DISCLOSED A SECRET. winter weather. Words fail me when I try to | — ce ee aaa “Sow,” continued the speaker, “there is a| Micon 1. iasy, provides for ne ‘than | TO the Faitor of The Evening Star: TICKET SPECULATING, ae ive an idea of those wind storms. It blows so Taterwiediaie aud Bush School fa ‘WIS ADVICE ABOUT MARRIAGE TO THOSE AFFLICTED eaation edity that may afford Leia conifect ee for oe gsi ‘ The convention of inventorseand others in-| Something nearer to the business of theatri-| A Marriage Which Took Place Ten Years reese | ———- — and Lan fog wo hi onc Lopgrcenegtigecocelhdleg, Meme] Puapibaantngg: toy: tons tas ar auaeeen reer untillers aca | rested in patents of the United States, to be | cals in this city is the new crusade against: real Ago Just Made Public. Seek cea unter you, so that people axe SEARCHES—HOW THE TENDENCY To INHERIT- battery of light artillery, one | xia next month in Washington city, will net | end pietendey spredlatlon a eae val < sow’ Sask. often made seasick by the motion. The dust * ‘There is a very strong tendency in offspring ta,| «i, : bula rps, one en-| ing y, wil and pretended speculation in tickets. The apbcial tothe ¥ ‘orld from | rises in dense clouds and sweeps down the ANCE MAY BE WEAKENED BY JUDICIOUS MATING. jgnal corps, one ambulance corps, | fi g 2 : revert to the normal type of the race. It re- {inset coepé, 06 bend of miusle kind one corps | be the first of its kind in this country. In Oc- | managers are still in disagreement, Some sin- | Atlanta, Ga., : The arrival of the body of | streets with such violence that a mancan hardly | "THE BERLITZ scHOot. OF ZAN@UAGES, EOF. NDER GRAHAM RI, IN | Wires constant selection from generation to ilar convention was held in | cerely desire to abolish the sidewalk pedlers, | Capt. John C. Rutherford in this city yester-| beat his way against it. It sifte through the 7 14th at i i of field musicians, besides making provisions | y, ..| and do it effectively by refusing to accept at i windows until evers thing you touch feels gritty fe abate ais Ge Ok Sic eee Cis sides to pe ig dag Pipe thas genders nd the proceedings wore car- | th aoor tickets bought of the bunkers: Gehens | 48¥ cleared up a mystery in his life. Ruther- ig gritty Best and Most Prectical Iastrestn, cig Bae in | @nd your throat is all choked up. For some - ~ ways, t ried on in great spirit and enthusinem. It ap-| wish todo away with actual speculators bat | 0rd married years ago a well-known Georgia pad ‘th i Terms #10. peor por: he sabjuchof = pel os a Gok ee | a eee Neeree eutren | Section 18 Ot the mind ct provides that | pointed an executive commitice, of which | mmaintaen thelr owe meek coulators, "thus |ladr. Thetr two daughters are now society | RUKBOWS reason sa ie Tamia omnes pintain a mock rom bis wife later | {e7ine.t0 the nerves, and after a twenty-four | » Branches. Now York, Boston, PiMladetphte, Chitra : ; : ; ~ ‘i a to the : pbaed Be at the outset what he said was generally be- Poth parties to 8 marriage ¢ some from fat cialale Veek Cau, Gis catatonia iadaher 06 40: arjes M. Keller of Washington was chairman. ge ting from 50 cent a dollar or two extra | belles. The captain parted from his wife later | hours “blow” one feels all on edge and cross lieved, that he war ted to prevent the deaf from | Pelonging to classes 2, 3 an he i i this i the best seats when crowds cor But the i is irritable to last degree. SVE Trot. Vice ‘Titt Whatever may be ihe character of the deat- | listed men prescribed by this act, or shall be at Larieobge saictedllgeedopapmase: coke question which most interests out-of-fowe — rocks - gor Iggy (i to hi ae igler Gh tae often gets down | MPamallin cig or earns ae marrying as they chose “You ean marry | nese may AE trokebly sisi: | found to have fallen below a proper standard | outlined by the convention, were to preparo a readers, if they visit New York, is whother the Se ee ee ee 8 | below zero during the night, but the sun is so | ¥8fed succesalully for civil service, Sstaruuett on aioe” th “and I h aisthiess haba olen ee ing. | Of, efliciency, the commanding general may | memorial to be presented to Congress, in| saleof tickets in buick atau cents apiece ad- | Florida orange grove, where he was de-| Powerful and the airs ihie thet te toe ‘xanuination= poorest peat We petagme iestg ore oom L. By marrying a deaf person (aot tore deed) | either disband such company or consolidate it | which the views of the convention were to be Vance is to be continued, Careful inquiry | tained by the sickness which resulted in his | people are sitting on their plazas, Tt escoet will be happy. It is not for me to Lieme you wheres ae doet Telatives, or a heating brothe, | With any other company of the National Guard | set forth, pointing ‘out the defects in the exist-| by the writer makes it sure that on|death. His friends were astonished when | queer to see your breath like steam from a tea for marrying to suit yourselv@s, for you all 4 f tow ad and grant an honorable discharge to the super- | ing laws of patents and the beneficial effects | the average throughout the winter sea-| notified t ke that he had just | kettleand yet feel the sun's rays warm and 2 know that I myself, the sonof = deat mother, | £5 StF ® Ze 6 ae By marrying ® | numerary officers and non-commissioned ofi- | anticipated! from’ the Proposed change. ‘The | son, 9,000 tickets a day are sold at | Dols a Mra Carrell of Viretal a mild as in September. One docs not feel the | fi lave Lemnotmas have married a deaf wife. I think, however, | deafness.” . gersproduced by such consolidation. I at | second annnal meeting of this convention was | the news *stands of the Broadway hotels | ® cca are iged ere | cold in this thin dry air to anything like the ex- 2 Saree ——— yea yop erage game ‘man and | On the other hand, you will probably increase | itformed that the total strength of theNational | held in Philadelphia in October, 1846, and the | In other words an excess over the advertised | Was curiosity as to who Mrs. Carroll was | tent we do in the east (“back east’ they always A. S Sees Sees omtnen, 3.8 ae _ pdtd fete Lag ack apeatoas (canoe BG Aa hone Difepring—1. By | Guard of the District of Columbia as mustered | third annual meeting in Boston in September, amounting to $9,000 a week is taken | Itis now made public that Mrs. Carroll has | say here). yt It iJ every good apy ae yt alga ‘barn deaf) who | 29¢8 not exceed 1,200 men, including ber | 347, Among the points nrged upon Congress | from those (and & ity are strangers) who | really been his wife for more than ten Es AN INVALID IN EVERY FAMILY. struction; 6 5 follow marriage, and I am sure that there is no | 8! - ing brother or | Colored Wattalions, which { presume number | by the executive committee of the convention | buy at the hotel atands. ‘The curious feature | Shordly after his trouble with bis free wite tee puntions one among the deat who desires to have his | sister of aeiatives, oF & hearing bro! ing a | Atleast 300 men. Congress by the act of March | was the necossity of increasing the snlaries of | of the trafte is that. the theater neragon get | visited New. York city. where he met Mra | Society is informal and very pleasant and | ty slick witieuty sdvance nayualy, Stores afiction handed down toghis children. You all | deaf person (born deat) who has no deaf. reia- | 3) 1801, lias appropriated for armory rent, fuel, | the examiners. ‘They very. forcibly ‘argued | So tieatrey dis profit. They place the tickets | Carroll, a Richmond lady, and married her. | cosmopolitan. There are representatives from | "jig" know that I have devoted considerable study | tives, or a hearing brother or sister of such a | U8t, care and repair of armories, #14, er that if the government expected to retain com- | on hotel tale and take back all that remain un- ‘The marriage was kept secret in order to avoid | all over the world (chiefly England and New a ee? + - itaney | person. 3. By marrying » deaf person (born | {lute large sum for 900 men after disbanding | petent persons in the office in that capacity the | sold at fifteen minutes before the performances unpleasant gossip. England), and the afternoon teas, which bring . and thought to the subject of the inheritance Beaty She he cahareag; # ing | the colored battalions. Sorae of the rents paid | gal must be made adequate to the abilities | begin. Only one manager in New York, Au- —_—— 0 80 man agreeable and cultivated le of deafness, and if you will put away prejudice —— hearing | are entirely out of proportion. to the number | required: that the inventols themetyer paid | gustin Daly, defies the hotels and refuses to] Found Dead Lodgi: together, t Washington on a small scale. ; repeat ve brother or sister of such a person. of men occupying these arwories, for this work; that they asked the increas in | supply tickets to them, "Th afrai tend decried imam egesan ho the reason out of your minds and take up my researches muavecetnis paivaies. We prone cf ae y should $5,000 per annum | salaries, and’ tere (he 7 inc! in yon bs rukeg em. e rest ak id of Edwin Monksa traveling salesman, who lived Every household has one sad for relating to the deaf you will find something wae hy should $5,000 per annum | salaries, and, nt theis cenaEN® {autice, | losing the hotel contingent of auditors, One | 44 soe East 10th stroct, New York, wee foned | Deine here. and you ean alwary find ‘an invalid = pdyetersfemli et “Of course, if you yourself were born deaf | be, paid for rent of the Market armory when | Congress should grant their request. Fifteen | man feases the ticket privilege along with the Ms in each family, for whose sake a litle home has os eee a es or have deaf relatives it is perfectly possible | °B1Y about ten companies occupy "an nee | Years later the request was granted. news stands in most of the big hotels. His | dead yesterday in‘a lodging house in the Bow- | been made in this After ing to resen field aout rfectly possi wonderful sanitarium. The maximum strength does not excee I started out to write only of thi "4 dnd he i i : this te with F ti made by various investigators, he said: that in any event some of your children may | men to a company? ‘Why not consolidate some | tions and to by any aoe te [riiaes name is ‘Tyson, hae grown rich at it. | ery. He had cut his throat f7om ear to ear | drives in every direction are most beautiful 4 4 a pocced- | Ason of the late Lester Wallack is in the busi- | a penknife. He came to New York three years and numerous. Turning eastward you ean , “It is obvious that persons born deaf rn con- | be deaf. Still, Iam inclined to think that if| of these skeleton companies and make room for | ings that they worked om lines similar to some | ness, too, but Tyson is almost a monopolist. toy rosy a ryt he ey been ill and | drive for miles and over the rolling siderable risk of having dea? offspriag if they | you ie a member of a family in which there | one of the colored battalions? Why Pay 2,400 | of the lines of work proj to be done in the | He has to yield ‘up the ter part of the in-| had been drinking heavily. He leaves @ wife | Prairie, without a tree or a house to break the marry persons who are also born deaf. If we | is no deafness (or only a single ease of non-| per annum for the Rink property for housing | approaching convention, but when I wrote the | come to the landlords, however. and it is into and family in Dublin. monotony. All my life I have take all the marriages of congenitally deaf per-; congenital denfness), you will not only have | two companies, artillery and cavalry—not! name of Charles M. Keller it reminded toecr | sone pockets that about, three out of every sare: cnet CSA rol ries,” Pobh wkifhont reference to whether they mar- j fewer deaf children tian if you married into a | counting the ambulance Corps, which amounts | the part he is said to have taken in framing the | four of the extorted tall d go. The thea- One Effect of the Cokers’ Strike. I saw them did I real i ried deaf or hearing persons, we have five inde- | family containing a congenital deaf mute or a | to nothing—whose total strength does not atent act of 1836—the act which marked a re- | ter managers think that hotel guests should be t i pomible Gescription*to give the least idea of their yendent sets of statistics from which we may ! number of deaf persons, but the deafness of | ceed seventy-tive men, and then, too, when the | birth of the patent system in this country. Mr. | accommodated without the exaction of any | 4 Pittsburg dispatch says: Asa result of the | SD ae Fothing bus alee and brown buffalo _— ee and. service " . wonderful dlerive information regarding the effects upgn | Fo children will not tend s0 strongly to be | law does not provide for one of these—the cay- | Keller's father was appointed by President Joby tribute, of of very little. As there is not a jot | stagnation in coke and iron affairs throughout | miles of andula READ THESE PRICER the offpring. oom S55 osaniins Suttiane pm: Get ihe Sane. ¥. . 4 = apart Lif Lar Lad Arangeny | 4 aiece — to Te gharee . sores in| of risk yom ES pg) seems ol a | the country all thelocal railroads have beencom- | with here there Xa) — leaves of the that one or both of the parties were born ey to inheritance wil weaker Infantry armor: e patent oftice and in on leath. young | dime icket wor & liberal demand i trenchment, which | “yucca” or onet. Nota — ‘teat there will be fifteen deaf children in every | one case and intensified in the oer, That ts | that tattallocs ther’ never paraies with, the | Soaps siven the vacaney. Now, hicre the | the more srvice of, handing out ¢ tekee sq | Pelied to adopt the line of retrenchment, anf nor ra hand: famailies: (2) Dr. Gillett’s statistics | in the former case your deaf child will have ‘tional Guard more than 100 men, and then | story begins. In 1834 Mr. ; E : 1 ickett succeeded | taking in the pay. give eighteen deaf ecbildren to every hundred tase condioney to franemit his may <2 — bed Arrcermt Bach ge gs pape troigre tidings 0 eg pny og office. The | visitors to the city, and it is outrageous. ities: (3) Dr. Turner's, thi (4) Mr. | children than you yourself possess; t- | and entertainmen: when 80 nt law of 1793 was then in force and th i ae ” Connor's, | ter case a greater tendency. debarred from National Guard uses and enters | Practice of the office was to lasue a yetent ait, ap Stace pode tao. "pevegnigtae ge agree mgyyg g 0 making large reductions in Folta Oak Antiqne-finished Bed Room Ruites. Spleen, working forces, and railway employes in this | stretches in limitless billows to meet the far-off and grows soft and bite and hazy in et ae en Some of the most diverting occurrences of | cent coke, strike and depression in the iron He Sigeoce Be i tree, bird is within sight, and yet ‘The abtse liew chiefly on | has brought disadtrous results to the employes. itis benutfal aa the sea fe beaut and an it | | “fake the case of a family in which three or | into competition with private halls for public | Put‘ making an voweineiienns eat a Fang | four ehildren are born deaf. "Now, suppose petro Why pay $1,800 per annum rent ‘invention. This practice feesud | the stage are outside the rear door. A pretty | market. Iuiles away is ‘Coming fcom the fanned of 5 | *0™li8 plush or best aint. for 4xbeuah oem op, a ted deaf from birth,as +t ail the members of this family and ‘heir | for a rite gallery tuat is of little practical use? | to Mr. Keller to be a violation of the words and | girl and a timid looking one was recognized by Cunarder. credit, 3 aseus ‘sho are reparted deat trem deaf slescendants are careful to marry only into | All the practicing required can be done at the | spirit of the law, asit declared that the patent | a fellow as an actress. It was after the per- egestas ee oe may ams TOUZALIN's RaNcft. Goog WOVEN-WIRR BED SPRIN ec. Iie idl ee hen oo eek ne eet | ‘oe cee sf caoncangeetia | thece Apeilend: Novembere’ And, lasts, way | Segui be dashed oply for, “any” new | formance and she was alone at Oe eee hee ae an Lan | Mico. Tonsecin; the deuphter of ®ia Ret he $ at defeet; and yet, when we come to indivi | contain single cases of non- ital n and November. And, lastly, and usefui art,” &c., and he x ten-year-old daughter from her lover, . croth. cculins. daslde | deatness. ‘Then the probebilition “are “inst at | pay sale for sumyraons hestatertens? ins gested to Mr. Pickeit oo | he tohecey Ee tees tee on eee ne ee = — hg en - that He followed for some time William Wright, who bad abbucted her. | J¥stice Miller, owns ranch about ten miles ct each generation the percentage of childre: le locality, when more modest quar- | Smination of the merite of the ; . | coi af es pes | SURUSSELS CARPET, €or. cosh or ane. on from. birth probably lost | born deaf will be less and the proportion of be obtained for a considerable less | ghould’be made. The knowledge of faven Ay the scuffle which followed | *°™' springs, amore ideal spot — Dering INGRAIN Bie. : others reported de: hearing children greater, uutil finally the deaf iwewhere? ith | DY this time acquired by Keller from his posi- PI Witt’s revolver exploded, fatally injuring | WOU!d be hard to find. The place siands on| Good CARPET, Sie. ceasb or 40c. on credit, infancy were probably born deaf. For tendency disappears and all the descendants | — It seems tome, as it does to many others with | ¢; high i of Cheyenne | V.csew and lay all CARPETS free’ of cost and.Gen's m in the model room’ induced Pickett to av- Wright and wo tho daughter, who was | Righ ground right at tional pomrpesee tion may be imtag- | Will hear. On the other hand, suppose that the | whom I have discussed this subject, that if Gen. | sign the new duty of determin hag nag 3 sine | oad fa ry tiful grove : 1 ing novelty, &e-, ime instant she | assisting her lov Lange tor the waste in See nee ettd? ot inheritance it | members of thin family and their deaf de- | Ordway is earnest in his wishos io retain the | upon Keller. In 1885 Henry Le Ellsworth be. | ote daea te eat tae the ate wan diecharged Coleseda, ny ee gE arrested. makes all the difference in the world whether | scendants marry into families cont battalions in the guard he can consol- | game superintendent. By this time Kellen Curterms are the easiest of any housein the tty: the deataese ocurred before cr after birth. | congenital deaf mute or containing several deaf | idate some of the skeleton, companies in the | fue ,SuPerinte <empotens tid Gthhe DEeea nse. . advanced, and he shortly Ser my research ik Ihave found rons. Then the probabilities ‘that at | two regiments and make room in the first regi- itted fc . Ellsworth’ wee ad caaee alae Laan tae net | Ga generation the’ percentage of ‘children | ment for the seventh battalion and in the ose. | submitted for Mr. a. ancein EASY WEEKLY or MONTHLY PAYMENTS, af liable to transmit the defect. = born deaf will increase and. the ion of | ond regiment for the eighth battalion, If this appr i Hf i “The new guide that J would give you is this: hearing children will be lesa, un\ feasible, then why the | plan Leck het ather than at the individ. | tendency to produce hearing off p- | uot reduce the rent of some of the buildings | niawinna the tay al. You will find in certain families that one pears “and all" the descendants Will be dent p ‘his family would then constitute adeaf variety | to rent for the colored battalions? | “At "imac aiee Hie, <:{ eel Logon ee bee child is deaf and a t hearing, the an- This family wo n constitute a deaf ¥: Pay armory t i = Scotecs sud other relatives alee botag five trons | of the tase, kn’ whies deat odieesion seaha ty | Thay were tae dees to join the National Guard, He pdt, oor apg og Dogma nize a deafuess. ‘This in what is known asa “spo- the rule and hearing offspring the exception. | have made about the best average record since — ie eee radie’ case of deafuess —deafness which afflicts Now, the point that I would im ‘upon you | they have formed a part thereof, and it accompanied by his bride. latter wen! one only in & famil all is’ the rigniticance of famlly deatheass I | not seem exactly foir that as citizens of this : “Weil, the deafness in such cases may beacei- | would have you reniember that all the mem- | District they ehould be deprived of representa- r 6RASIS 5b oka dental. ' Theze is no proof that such deafness ia | bers of @ family in which there ‘wre a number | tion ded a | age nee liable to be inherited, exceptit of deaf mutes have a liability to produce deaf the 4 . ‘inves! 3 et a’ son is reported deat from ing, the members of the family : majority. of REEEE eroea scarlet fever ur lke canses—and no other case of deafuess exists in the family—there is proba~ bly little, if any. tendency to imberitanee. But when you have two members of oxe tamily deaf or three or four or tive there you have the 4 pret @ tendency to deafness exists in the family. What term “family deafness” exists Something has been transmitted from any event i Ht bR% 54 Ai I f

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