Evening Star Newspaper, June 6, 1891, Page 12

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“ THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES. Apron dresses may be made up in percales England. I can assure my readers that, though 4 NICARAGUAN COLLEGE. MR. AND MES, BOWSER, nd they are pretty as they are ornamental. n foreign merchants with plenty of pluck and a —— They should by made to button at the back STATUS OF THE WAR ital may here ante aeeticm ji- | The Bulldings Were Once the Refuge of the | From the New York World. with mother-of-pearl buttons. In the front tions, thegare ‘Omeans so popular with these Jesuits, Who Were Driven Away. SS —_ starting out from nat ‘jealous Chilians as to beable to brew meee . an ombroi yoke, the bottom of which is such serious trouble among them—not to men-| 4 VISIT TO THE INSTITUTION AND WHAT was Pretty and Effective Costumes for | rin with a broad red’ ribbon, same. garniture Balmaceda Has the Best of the Chil-| tion the fact that nothing could be more detri-| LEARNED OF THE SCHOOL CURRICULUM AxD a at the back. The bottom of the apron should mental to the financial interests of the mer-| ux sruDENTs—MosT OF THE BOYs G0 ABROAD Little Ones, be embroidered on the stuff itself. The neck ian Situation, chants themselves than the present unsettled | sree gnapvatiox. bas —— — of Cerose tg > —s state of —_ 2 ee a 4 z J hour shead of his usual | ‘hai s,Period of thirty Ci) days tae expired since the — ss 01 red epaulets also em! idered. business here att ni Somimisson caus te be fied and record = Poosing under the wide box pleat tm front prosperity above everything else, for long-con- | 8P¢isl Correspondence of The Evening Star. time, and being loaded | the public records of the Pnstrict of HEALTHY ENGLISH BABIES. | thereis a red ribbon sash tied at the back.|HIS FINANCIAL POLICY. | tinued strifo means utter ruin. centane, Daunians, Sag 5 1. aon wae a heewy, pe RANDSOME ENGLISH CHILDREN. ‘THE GRACE PROPLE SUFFERING. y® WERE WALKING ABOUT THE CITY | gpg” chase of something. Turning from the consideration of thechild’s The Grace people are liable to suffer par- of Granada and when at @ short dis- “Don't ask me eny Metamorphosis of the Village Maiden Into | dresses to the child itself, I am free to confess He Issues Paper Money in the Present Emer-| ticularly by this war, having enormous] tance from the plaza a great brick struc- eee questions now!” he re- the Woman of Fashion—Uses of Fongee | that, quito apart from the why and the how,I| gency—“'The Right by Force” the Motto of | interests in various parts of South America, | ture was noticed. It was of the style of plied as he dropped his hat and squirmed out . 6 Me ‘aster 2 pe ue Flannel—Bathi 01 shouldn't hesitate an instant in awarding dei Baees a all of which are more or less jeopardized. | the monasteries of the Jesuits as seen | of his overcoat %. “ the English woman the honor of being the Insurgente—American Interests in the at IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE | St that time. District ef Colma, hold-ng a peneralters | United Sates am he 1. Ma May 2 su ’ Saket the United Seater , * HATS THE MATTER | jeiticn of fainmicn to seneet th and what have you got | titied “"An act emiorining the exabiisiine ats Sent” quad Mee. | Eee tak oi Ole: Bowser as he came home . . Upon consider the bove-nal Dog the other day half an | Gout toth tals ani cay se Slaee AB = con: ¥ " Some Effective Costumes. Besides their banking and commission houses | throughout the world. Approached by short | «j wrong—are Se mother of the handsomest children born into| Southern Republics, in Lima, Callao, Yalparaiso. and Santiago, flights of ston fap tail s BecaN saved gees la selina bmi ee 9,3 E Parcel & 10, — = this world of care and sorrow. And the and agencies in every other important | solemnity of the place wae such thatcoulda| “Pert 4 me 1. Parcel 10. 12, Janes « Seaknet The Teed tan honor has been in their hands for city on the continent, the celebrated |e witht n't say 8 word—not word, and don’t | 5; —M, 2 Lambert -parcels 13 ead | Allcock's Poroes! = ae many a century. As long ago the | From The Star's Traveling Correspondent. “Grace-Donoughmore railroad contract” of | ight within be had one expected it would | bother me for ten minutes! I hope I'm in time ty Blair: 17 ’ nt: | Gera " Paneees end of the sixth century, during the papacy of Santiago pz Curie, May 6, 1891. Pera ise gigantic scheme, involving many mil- | surely reveal stern-visaged inmates of the | to avert the danger!” lair: 28, R New York, June 5. 1891. | Gregory the Great, some English children were (HERE 18 ALMOST NO NEWS TO COM-| liots of dollars, and when Chili (until now the | cloister. Great doors, heavily spiked, seemed | She turned and fell upon the sofa. and The Hock Creek OETIC RAPTURE AND | either bought or stolen and carried to Rome. municate regarding the war in this un- | ™0*t prosperous of South American countries) | to forever shut off communication with the |he hurriedly broke the string securing the | Sorporste: Di; Nenrs Wise Gather oe itation | Their big blue eves, their golden blond hair, is in trouble, Peru suffers in consequence, be- sees Pats mehuaatea | their satiny thine and cheeks of roses uttracted | MAppy countey, because during some woeks | “nuns her commerce repens largely apor her | ™ Comprised ite contents and rushed upstairs, | 20.72." Whiltan iis, Meter AEM ee the most lively attention in that land of dark eyes | past nothing of account has been accomplished | so athorn neighbor, although the two republics, | Sides of the approaches were massive copingsof | down the back stairs, down into the basement | !4 Caineron. parce! >!" "Su." Mary b. White. bo. themselves over the | aud swarthy complexions. They were ex- | by either side. ‘The president fa awaiting the | #0 lately at war with one another, are Hot at | stone, while over the gateway, tothe right of the | Cor up again. A strange. disagreeable odor | Wit. 3 “Yulee OPT, Na wonderful transforma | hibited to the pope, who asked where they | completion of some war ships which are being | heart the most affectionate friends. main portion of the building which appeared | followed bim as he hustled around, and by | 3 Y w tion of grub into but- | came from. CHILI AND PERU. to be the chapel, hung three bells in a row. | the time he had returned to the sitting room ~ - built in France to carry on the conflict by sea, fecly, and yot in tt any | _“#r0m the Tan of the Anglen!” won: tee ee ee re ciscicon as dclontre, | To sndecolend | wars’ clowly why Okie Af tees ts ee ft wasa sign which an. | 2f% Bowser had recovered sufficiently to ask: World and no one was ia sight near by At the | P&ckage, seized the threo quart bottles which | 4... 708, rustens i ‘Mr. Bowser, what on earth lary Ee Vien E 5 ¥. more wonderful than glee exclaimed the pontiff; ‘von mean | while the rebels, resting upon the questionable | ftsancial status 90 nearly concerns Peru it must | nounced that the door below it led to the “In- | and wher Te the saen or oie ieee ; peri Dee the metamorphosis of | angels, for it seems hardly possible that these | laurels already won, are striving“by hook or by | be remembered that under the treaty of Ancon, | stitato N. de Oriente.” stuff?” 80. 45, M. Green. parse: 31. 46, Marian | Cashivere Bo didn't come from some celestial | crook” to secure more arms and ammunition, | Which followed the war between the two eoun- tries (ended in 1883), a large extent of Peruvian for want of which they are greatly hampered joins ACen ‘was ceded to Chili until the year 1893, the simple and artless | cherul village maiden into the ‘What have I been doing? Saving onr lives, hie Millard F Press St, | Wikiane' ‘Frees THE NATIONAL COLLEGE OF NICARAGUA. of every one under “Here is quartered the National College of full-tledged woman of in their work of destruction. when it is to be determined by popular vote | Nicaragua for boys,” said my companion, with} “But I—I didn't know our lives were in : fashion? Her tangled Happily—as all lovers of law and order will | whether the debatable land shall revert to Peru | suggestion at the same time that we visit danger. ba ES. 08. i . ws sirup Hyponwoms = curls, her ungainly car- agree—the federal government has yet very | oF remain permanently in Chili's possession, | the institute. A rap on the door caused it to], “Of course not. If the house was on fire Com. atyay By pophont Hy pophoaphites, the latter country being pledged to pay to . © | trom top to bottom and the firemen pitchi = ry per toe Portion of the couster inclading’ Mths | Pett in the meantlwne 60 per cers of the proft | fnchanes, tu wesw ithin rather 8 stad |S te oe ee nee nee tien, rae Pinte, | wheter ery Portion of the country, including all derived from the stolen guano beds. It may | who, however, “had ‘the bearing of s men, | Possibly realize the fact, but it has never struck 3 territory between the desert of Ata- inted, en. passant, that if Chili fears. mi- | dressed as he was in the con sic Bec} je of | You that death silently lurks in every room in riage, her brown skin, her neglected nail yacuous expression, her oe NES eUMEURTECHERHS eS EEREEREE oni ¥uouuvat eee nosarnensinersrcenessnsceelc Ty tutored voice, her cama and the Strait of Magellan, remains on her side, when it comes to the test | biack clothes, whi the well-to-do | this house. Ly 5 Phospuatea: faree poser ao all dis- loyal to Balmaceda, while the revolters ears hence, she will, donbtlets import | claesos, is the rote attire for all placesand | “How you talk, Mr. Bowser! What bas been | (=; 5 Bore Watenn, tt * 92-4; have ponseesi only of those north- | Votes enough tocontrol an election of such vital | all times. An tn uiry for the director resulted | the danger banging ¢ Malt Extract, the best appear. She puts forth At Ps ion y importance to her exchequer. She will have | j i over us?” pratt, Trustecs ; . ¥ winaed that ae wise ete will jbaxe | in our being led through the ante room to the 0. Charles Cen the gauzy wings of fash- S iy Z ern provinces that were recently wr: the advantage of the government “machine” | court yard, where a number of boys, ranging ‘Microbes, Mrs. Bow- 80, Joshus K. Bee n, she treads the earth Le 4 Peru, holding them por razon de fuerza (‘‘by | already established on the spot and can afford | in age from ten to twenty years, were standing | #t!” he wi red, as Scott: 3, Sara M en cinpeiie ins pale ofS Tight of force,” the characteristic motto that is | to spend m: of pesos rather than lose the | about in groups or seaied alone, apparently | he sat down and wi Boron McKeown: t Bay poten actin tg stamped on the silver dollars of Chili), from | province that yields nearly all, the saltpetre | preparing their lewsons. Mr. Jose ve ~¢, | his heated face.“ Forcer. i 3 J having bombarded into subjection the cities of | and sodine used in the world. Poor Peru has | }rebs nach crobes and bacteria— her red hands, now soft - that section and massacred all the opposing in- | no surplus cash to sqnander. ‘That disastrous Tae Sean ee ee hae the | cuillions of ‘em * and white, have . habitants. conflict, which wits not of her own secking, de- | institution of learning. His assistant is Prof | ‘It can’t be!” she 7 A wson.” “and | shrunken till they just THE UNHOLY CONFLICT. stroyed half her army, all the railways and | Victor Lesage of Paris, who is also well quali, | replied. 3 . rs Pierce's Favorite Prescription. “= re - | most ot the towns south of Lima. took sway | fied f. fai i “Can't it?” You've Fg ee : i fill small 6's; you could ‘There is nothing heroicsbout this unholy con- | FoF hict source of revenue and ieft her ores | "22 for ia eS si'G5 cea l BONEN ee renaee 9. Francis D. Shor’ : r almost span her waist flict on the part of the rebels, since no quet-| whelmingly burdened with debt, = hae = class rooms was suggested. The style of archi- | Weeks, been out as far = midal!, truste uy ; with your thumpe and , Ge GES oe ping 7HE FAMOUS aRACE-DoxOvoMNOnE coxraAcr. | tecture cated fe noon without exception, | # Broadway once and et, . ott s Eusuison God Liver Oi" gS S rs; her harsh, tangled curls are gathere ing % b Although a di he topic i to be poorly lighted. Everywhere the floors aoe oe i, a 3 om “a Tanck wit ter apts = = grandizement and the vicious determination of ee — from: the topo Iman, | oe p ors oe rick, large ‘and square, the | all about itt I kne W. Thou 3 Pore, sunail wine % nar the heathen gee tormtip ir : & political faction to rule or ruin. The disturbers | Perhapes few words concerning that famous | Poms commodious and witk high rect, fer the | of course, but avin = Francis. fit ds Preses Kite s t teeth shine Like pearls ssabe faintly sniles | cx ruer xxow now ro mean cmnarx. | of the country's pence, whodonot devervetove | Grace-Donoughmoro contract may not be | rooms commodious and with high root, for the | of course, but having is A : B thusiastic compliments. Wins * f this beauty of | ‘ignified by the name of revolutionists,called it | amise, since it is by all odds thegrestest Anglo- | in height, the rafters and their covering being | t0 see to this one SES, Sheldon Jackson. parcels 1-8. 3b. : = Shadden, br at Je ihe explanation of this beauty of \war” when they wantonly devastated prosper- | American enterprise ever undertaken on this | in plate view Whe walla ose Generally white-| slipped my mind un- —=—& BACTERIUE. baw, parce. S14 & 18 thitt she has blossomed out i childhood so common in the mother country— | ous cities, murdered unofiending men, women | continent. The principals are the well-known | washed. ‘ til today.” bard F. Paro or, if you choose, « pink of modishnesa, | a beauty that has remained the characteristic | and children by thousands, cut the throats of | New York banker, Mr. Wm.R Grace, and Lord pe ‘But what causes that terrible odor?” » Elijah Width eo 10 comes Elise Chateayne. But what should we of the English child through all these long | Wounded soldiers and butchered every officer | Donoughmore of London. backed by u power- ms eee are ‘Nothing terrible about it as I see. On the | js", 2.3 : te 7» 20 gain by reminding the bear Miss Cha- | centuries? Climate, you wili ay. and no doubt | of the government forces who fell into their | ful syndicate, and through their meane Peru is e curriculum of the school includes all the | contrary, I rather like it. It is the odor of | Thomas'suitht E sof Pumaren Ay » aw Heayne of her humble origin, of ‘the days when | that does enter into it, bat there is more than | hands—but impartial history will commemo-| afforded an opportunity to emerge irom the | branches of one of the standard colleges in the | disinfectants, Mra. Bowser—the odor of some- | 16. Josep Clark. tenant a. | Silhiee Gone ee ee her bare, brown feet flashed along the dusty | sn ‘needed to account for 1, The Englich | rate their deeds bya less honcrable name. ‘The | period of deadly. depression that followed kee | slates. ‘The laboratory seemed well equipped which has no doubt saved our lives.” | {£BABC, 1%. Joly Bras. tenant CiRnas Quinnoans Gum Mair Beats e Engl y quipper Koss, 1 Souatry fond and her avin were scrtche(| by | mother knows how to rear children and allows | insurgents began the shooting of captured | four years’ conflict with Chili, and ber wubse- | wit i i ;.| “How?” 2 | pitigindotine te unequaled es 0 benutifer of 3 01 0 . d . 7 . ih appl onst z fo t | plestons a jnsable requisite the brambies as sie hunted the re Rotiing to swerve her fromher daty to her off | oficerm and Intterly the government has re-| quent civil war. She rids herself of the huge | W239? The moet intersting fans CPi | “<By killing off the microbes and becteria, , 3 Er jet it renders the akin wists sussoth aid earth The imitial illustration pict ; tia ha tes glk cous in rare | taliated by serving in the ame manner the few | nationsl debt which thote wars occasioned, | place was the museum of natural bistore, aca | Which would soon have entered our svstems | ,..,5% —, 4 : . wuapbitg. Evers lady should use st.” Per mation of thie wild woodlan: that one runs against the spoiled child, 40 com- | febei commanders that have beer, taken prison- | smounting tc some $260,000,000, by ceding all | Kithough the collection there ie incomplete 1t and produced terrible illness, if not death. £ - lachsn, QUININE. gentle ard enbraissive subject, mon in our republic, the little tyrant of the |ers. There is some shcw of justice in the | her government railways to the holders of the | is the best to be found in Nicerresee? There | ‘Well, Isuppose you Know best,” she anid, e mode. But the inf bh ‘ household ruling father, mother and servants | Jatter proceeding, especially in the :ase of | bonds, tog:ther with all the guano deposits | are about Personag>, whose seep with a rod of iron, crying for eakes and pad | those who, while in the pay of the govsrnment, | that were originally ;ledged as security for the | 76," Yet so strongly felt, extends ev dings ana pies and meats and candy, and | turned traitor and misused their position as | loan, but had been seized by Chili. 50 mounted birds of the country, a | #8 #he opened a window to let a yard or two of | Hesaen, “tenant, 1a sper) i ‘et | the carbolic smell dodge out. 144. Boswell Whites tenant oo acer ale Teale “patvecy and LUNN | |e: rertataly Sige; corteteny all Masbanes al 146, ae d c “ ticles arra ve : a belliocusand intractable specimens of human | setting them, too. the means of working greater harm. The terms of the contract are briefly Whe collection of Inscets te quite laree court, | Mrs. owner, let ‘me draw you a picture of a teen eae ae HANGING OF CAPT. VELASCO. lows: The holders of the country’s bon probably as complete an assortment of insects |™icrobe. You can then realize the danger which menaced us.” T then: for “anceilation (they were worth | of Nicaragua as exists in America. The collec ‘ pol vishing ev z upon % | Te u reaches the little romp of the nurs | ; = dip A doleful ery has been raired by the insur- tar), pay down £50,000 | tions have been made and mounted bya pro-| He drew the insect—to be found at the head |. who soon barely 5 cents on the dol! Ce Ee hg mae come er and when he brandishes | 8¢nts and their sympathizers over the hanging | and £40,000 afterward, in nts of £10,000 i \f this col i : y doy “poe . r . rard, it 1000 | fassoe Of the collar anda of this column—and as she surveyed it in sur- | points of the compass, and the call Stern ber 6 waren bem “Hisaipate lis | €#t by themveives | wholesome food and | maceda reposéd entire confidence, and who, | bondholders receive all the government rail- | yard, lying prostrate, exposed to the action |, ,“Nice thing to have about forty of those | fcr yok son post : tect with malicious | **eetsare kept from them. Daily baths and | while in command at a betrayed that | roads of Peru on a ‘ease of sixty-six years. of sun and rain, and'where the boys of the — cantering around through your system, | pressed — eof schoolmaster and |Ubbing and massage and exercise in the open | important post into the hands of the enemy. . : hol ‘th sna hack 1% jo. of schoolmaster and |") * iB ee ps eda (CHILI'S SHARE IN IT. school can use them as seats and hac! re yo ‘on the opposs zi air are begun at his or her eppearance on this | Balmact umbers about 45,000 men, | ee them at will, ricsl ‘Where do they come from? Blagdon Mall Heed ty pin. Goethe said, busy scene and kept up until they become sce. | including the militia, and although many of | Chili hasan important part in it also. She ot will, are several images of sbout a it ‘ . jaltive san | six feet in height, havi “Sewer gas. By this time tomorrow the = bbe prof egemarg mra ond nature with the cbild. At school and col- | the so-called aristocrats are in league with the | agreed to liquidate her share of the account by | iiond of neraees in Tae Heeaaee ane house would have been swarming with them vanity in a child, for it’s the first | lege this regimen is continued, and this is the | belligerents, the “bone and smew'’of the coun- | yielding to'waid bondholders all the guano on | island being, according to the divetreries of | 2d nothing on earth could have saved us from | 3!xeth ‘ 8\Case On Crepre. only abracadabra made use of. It is simple, | try—the middle and laboring classes, whick | four islands and for eight that of Tara- | archwological students throughout thie resion, | t¥Phoid fever or diphtheria. If the microbe | 03 5 MO tect, “to a sto eae te anit respect. Fational and effective. Wellington used to say | comprie the most useful part of the popula- | poca ulso, Fenerving only what is needed. for | the localtiy of the most denned aboriginal | 88 the only thing to look out for I shouldn't he Diseret a! that it was to the outdoor exercis ; giudergone | tion—remain faithful to a Constitutional | her own agriculture, bu: none for export; and settlement in the country. It is strange to note have been so anxious, bus there is the bac- 5 y him at Eton that he was indebted for his | government. Asa rule iatable a uct | 2t the end of eight years Taripoca to revert to | that the formation of the faces of these images, ” iu ere fh , : READ THESE ability to resist excensive fatigue on the field of | are as arrogant, hot-blooded and unstable w set | Chili ‘She also promised to" pay ‘8 per cent | which are alll well preserved recersblescneea | sWhat' that?” i muniates, Eo 2474.0 feet, to PRICES. battle. of people as can easily be found, possessing more | of the net profit on all the guano she had ex-| those of Phenician gods that may be seen in ‘Here is a picture of him. Comes in the | the ‘suia ca Roud, . THE NECESSARY BATH. Yanity and pride than Sood grounds for the | ported during the eight years since she seized | the principal museums of the world. Nica-| $Me Way, and his mission is to eat out the | minutes, ‘y. fo & ot wad The last illustration pictures young Hopeful, | Stme; and whose riches were inherited, as well | it up to the date of the contract, and to. pay | Tagua lacks a national museum where relies of |!ng* It is calculated that 2.000 of them will | thence 8. deere as the tendency to treachery and rebellion | 3) t of all fut +} lity Ghucactec ooelatio un d and exbib- | €@t out the strongest man’s lungs in a month.” Solid Oak Antique-finished Bed Room Suites, 3° or Princess Beautiful, taking a tub, and as to | hich seems 10 belong to # preponderance of | jy bor Cent fall future sales until the account | this charact Cangas Uiagn Gierees noes | “kak tear wont in this house?” she asked. shih: trou enhs uetibenebalii, this question of bath taking, I have only to say | Spanish blood. sterling; and how far the present revolution | time to time, find their way ‘to private houses} “Right here in this house.” 4 F. stone No. 10; thence & Ly ese - that the mistake we make is to imagine that | | The rebel troops do not number more then | will interfere with this arrangement remains | or are taken’ from the country to be added to| “ANd ready to be absorbed into oursystems?” eet, to BCP. stone 7-plece Parlor Suites, solid walnut frames, uphol- the da‘ly bath is all sufficient of itself to keep | 6,000 and their leaders have not arms and | to be seen, collections abroad. “Not only ready, but anxious.” decrees U0 feet, to HLCP. stone | stored a “i 3 “ A Re | tered im plush or best baircloth, for €28 cash er €30 the child in good health. ‘There could be no | ammunition enough on hand to properly | “The Grace-Donoughmore people are given You are sure you don’t mean cockrosches? | j wig om the sont greater mistake: “te ‘shouid nig" be regarded | equp, se" many, thoogh meane™ Vai tit | qatigertenngncaeheate peor te gives FORMERLY A HOME YOR THE JESUITS. I saw two under the kitchen sink yesterday and ateatwed tranny on credit. a part of the treatment—the outdoor exercise | and foul are being energetically employed | to complete all the old ones: and are promised The present home of the institute was| was going to ask you to get some powdered Se south line of the said Miltary Koad. 8. Good WOVEN-WIRE BED SPRINGS fer 62.25 and plain food making up the whole system. | to gain fresh supplies. It is stated on | liberal concessions for every mile of accom- | formerly « refuge for the Jesuits, who were | borax. c thence 5. Sl TS duinites, We steer tok It may interest the young mother to know Suthority that | emissarieg | have been | plished work, besides being allowed to bringin | compelled to leave Guatemala by a government | ,,.1*8 Bowser!” he began, as he stood up, | (" No-'15, on the wast it priced eicugy y sa that there is a simple Way to test the healthful ched | fo arious countries with in- | all their materials free of duty, This gives them | decree about ten yeare ago. They remained | ,2T YOU ktowing soft in the top of your head? ; insolent ine BRUSSELS CARPET, @0c. cash oF G5c. on credit. growth of her baby. When two days old he fo bay, beg: Parrow or steal, if need | almost absolute control of Peru's commerce | jiere bute short tite beley Poet anc | Do I know a Bengal tige: from « woodchuck?” So tnimvtes, Eto 1 feet, tok 4 : should weigh about three and a quarter ounces | be, munitions w herewith to continue this hope- | and much of Bolivia's, their only competitors | took ‘setion oitninn te tet fone miter US; thence 8.4 veerces 27 | Se name less than at birth. On the seventh day he | less struggle; bu: carry iBicdlt se ntue, | in the line of carriers being the backs of a few i i i i ° 5st tect. to x ARPETS ” should go back to Lis first weight and after | tions Wwill doubtless prove a dificult matter, | Indians. mules and llamac’ ‘The scorrey States | Tepublic, and the Jesuits were again invited to 3 Weeewand lay all Ci tenet com antes that he should gain about three-quarters of an | considering the unwritten code of honor that | ig directly interested in all this, becaune ae | S°X¢,,2¢, Country. ‘The old ‘monastery was hare for the waste in matching fgrures. cunceaday up to bis fifth month, but after | exists between civilized lands, in addition to | will doubtiess continue to furnish a considera. | “2°2"t for some time until the college now i r rn ing it took possession. In no form does Our terms are the easiest of any bouse in the city; that make a daily gain of not more than a third | the neutrality laws. ble portion of Peru's railway and mining ap- | the evorch | £ pos _ in no toa half an ounce a day. SEW GOVERNMENT OF THE INSURGENTS. pliances, which have been estimated to amount the care a Senge a 1 only ammall payment at time of purchase and the bal- Be Sar anER RET nk The Chilian insurgents have set up what is | to not less than $30,000,000 per annum. ‘The students are recruited from all parts of Easutes, We % gy ? | ance in EASY WEEKLY or MONTHLY PAYMENTS. PEED Dees WEBSTER'S FIRST LAW CASE. practically anew government in the northern ‘THE MEIGGS’ RAILWAY CONTRACTS. the country and number about five hundred, \ Cra $4 a “ ject. to | No notes required and 6 per cent discount allowed are i . rovinces, in opposition to that of Balmaceda,| The late Henry Meiggs from California had | °%¢-half of whom are domiciled within the to. ROR see be The second illustration sets forth acharming | How He Brought Some New Hampshire | ry BB" picne No. ZU. | on all accounte settled in thirty age building. ‘The bulk of these find quarters in one riedin r : ; emt ob the Broad “Bram Seid Wi AM Wis ac, mean cccreatiy spent dae nd have taken for their capital what remains | contracts with the Peruvian government for | jong room, andlor post ha wt tarowe a th st tine of ~ Just beyond the beautiful dreamland of child- | Richard B. Kimball in New York Times. of conquered Iquique. The business portion] building seven railways which amounted to| that the necommogetens toe ie ient for W768 of that once prosperous city was com-| 2134 6 t : , hood and just thisside the mysterious thought-| I can probably furnish to the readers of the | pletely destroyed in. the recent battles, pepaeto ray Recalling so ee ee ete any Skink Oa oe quneit cae land of Womanhood. | These two dainty little | qimes Daniel Webster's earliest experience in| but a few streets escaped serious | front ‘the United Staves The an (worth | fai ° j i e = we ed ver the floor, which, as elsewhere, is of Se The oe othe eat ecard charmingly | managing a difficult legal case. I give it onthe | d#mage. Provisions are now coming in, s0 | $5,500 each when delivered) were farnished by | sun-dried bricks. Even the corridore about — ee een Leong eel | authority of my father, for the scene dates back | tthe horrors of threatened starvation are | Messrs. Gilbert, Bush & Co. of Troy, the | the patio are called into use to find room for @rocan's OREDIT ROUSE, abating, though all but the barest necessaries | jocomotives cinostly Itogers?)came from Pater, | te “Easiy ise” i fone No. ‘ . x 6 8 | the cots. “Early to bed and early to rise” is Batiste. The skirt is made up on a foundation | to 1805. of life still remain far above the reach of the | son, N. J.. and cost, when arrived, from $25,000 | the slnost. ueiversally binned wrote. we aa, ae 108 oat 7 The aw. Of white silk and is lined with muslin half way | At that period there was no good road from | poor. ‘The railway, too, which was entirely | {0 $30,000 gach, ‘The ties anne frre Oregon, | aragua, and it is applied to the regimen of th thence S. i > — —— = hope bo hg what were called the “Ports,” to wit, the towns | torn up, has been again put into working order | the rails from England, the diamond drills from | stutenis. ‘The early morning is cool, and da; f There is a double ruching. as represented, at | t Boston, Salem, Newburyport and Ports- By the way, who ever heard of utilizing loco- | Chicago (worked by Rand & Warring’s com- | light does not find one pair of closed eyes in the motives and trains as battering rams and en- i ti ‘i Seftlaks the neck and yoke and the sleeves ‘are | mcuth, through the state of } | gines of war? At this point. when the ammani- | Pooty ane laberets mone chechinery from | dormitory. puffed at the wrist and also ornamented with C cf tion of the rebels ran low, they adopted the ese. The shoveis they used’ were Ames’, MOST OF THE STUDENTS STUDY MEDICINE. Fuching. The littie lady on the right is dressed The means of com- | shrewd scheme of making upa long line of cars. | and even their food and fuel Lad to be mostly | Several of the class rooms are well furnished b ; " RU Son 1H: ima very pretty costume of white crepe. the | . y ry afull head cf steamand then, lea 1 = y : oa 2 c Bray am usheles male up ona atk feundetion fined sere so wretchedly bad that the Pe pir copy remy cede precioubeame (2 ected. ihe shops snd sation houses gen- | with desks and the drawing room contains a —1 suppose #0.” . r D TIVELY CURED BY ADM With muslin. All the edge of the material, | Merchants could not send goods to the int: let the loccmotive “run away” and go crashing | fron’ and. the iron wuter teks: eulvanized | number of models. A number of blackbourds| “But [don't know a microbe or a bacteria 8. U3 ders manufactured aaa powdery which hich is cut on the bias. is trimmed with em- | except at great inconvenience. The legis into the government train on the track ahead. | patent.” 7 uke are “Pills’ | arranged about the room showed creditable ef- 3 4 ose test. 8 cap ot colive or" broidery sewed on the wrong side. The cor- | of New Hampshire finally chartered the “Fourth | with which they had been fighting. Rather forts of the students, as well as did sheets of ‘But I never heard you speak of them before t *.'P. stone | harmless ane will eflect @ perinanent a1 sage is also trimmed in the same manner. and | yew Hampshire Turnpike” to be con expensive warfare, both as» regards life and A MANIA FOR RAILROAD BUILDING. drawings hanging on the wall. ‘The main class 1-1 * pty "‘Eioscnsaeas ae Mare is « bouffant sleeve over an ordinary one. | over tne route mentioned. The stock was prin. | Property, but for the moment effective, The} Peruvians seem to have a mania for railroad | room isin the courtyard. where lattice work, | “Do you imagine that Tor any other bi 7 ~ ; ‘The ceinture must be made upon stiff material taken in the towns on the seaboard, and | Failroad was an important factor in the battles | building, for that impoverished country has al- | Which forms its wails, permits the free circu- | sits down and tells his wife all he know S20 desrees 2 v. | Reser taiie. ‘The system once and have a rosette of ribbou. % oration of Portsmouth itself subscribed | of this section. Both armies used it whenever | ready invented in railrondsa trifle orer £140,000, | !##i2u of air. ‘Two hundred and fifty boys can | shouted. “Because I haven't told you that a | stone Soi 48* thence S| E Shecitt ecomesau utter ‘TWo PRETTY costtmEs. 0 the undertaking. A special they conla, making a new sort of men-of-war | 999 —"y very iarge sum for only 3,000,000 of people; | De seated in this room. ‘The students “have a | jack rabbit's legs have three joints is that any | inivate, W._ 3 : | GOLDEN’ SFECIPIC Co., SOLE PROPRIETORS, The left-hand figure of the tiny couple repre- | levied to meet the subscription, the money eol- | gt land Ly’ mounting field and gatling guns om | about £47 for every mun, woman ‘and baby in tc Cok Tone tee ae nals why [haven't known it for forty | thence in WSpars boot SRC NAT ED ar By. sented in the third illustration is dressed in eseaapeh oars paid bripllorad a a ~ money ae Fee ting as long as possible from | the republic, reckering her population accord- o'clock in the morning and they are not finally |» “But this is medical science, isn't it?” she feet. vas ie ence BARE. under 4 a s gray linen with a band of blue embroidery, when the road had been finisled toa cer. | HOW DALMACEDA MET TRE FINANCIAL EMERGENCY. nities with seference'to pel tex and guewed ae | dum-ssed until pm, thengh a Tong reces at | softy protested. 6 KC. P te a wemnnz ain d forming a square yoke, with ribbons on the pata ™ roms | char od with veference to pell tax and guessed at | noon js given. Quite a large percentage of the | “And suppose it is! Do you. suppose I've | tee. me No: ati, themes ie Having secured control of ail the ports from | the re: Loys graduating here go abroad, usually to the | gone sloshing around all those years with noth- "SB; themes shoulders. A band of the embroidery also My father was the engineer for the upper | which nitrate of soca is shipped, the rebels do | On this western coast of South America the serves fo: The garment is bu f Sout s, for thei s ing but making soft soap i me No 56 naive Our Sitio back. “Thefigure en'the right wenre' | PATE! tue oud. and when all way ready the | Totecy tor fundn aa the extort dee on tee | Dumineneimeronts ofthe New Vork Graces are | sity OF thelr further education, though nie | pearocaet aete aed : : Gigured white batiste. with « band of em- | PiCRGr Gocuments were prepared to verity | Or tee ee y 1 yo0,- | Butiuly looked after by three noted brothers, | that purpose. ‘They almost uniformly study | She wassilent, and after striding up and down pee 3S $h_Sreerttion of tho SEOOD. Ste ap Mo _ = of em-/ ad been done. These were taken by k valuable commodity are not less than #10,000,-| Kho are nephews o: William B. Grace, tcan iahlch iy thatcaga asm. tmows grins | featcgmeaa Sew tienes as Salad Remeee har Gon = 3 A i liver, Lulld up the system, regulate the bowels ce of Judge Thompson in Boscawen, YE course the public trensury | The elder of the trio, Mr Edward Eyro--who | Medicine. which is the case among those going | the room a : gy ty, m ‘Abd jut the kidneyein « healthy coudition with fer the turnpike company. I give crippled by the loss of ‘this sum; but | is now in the United States—has charge of the | 22fO™ Aaa ana fucka cae feet, to KC follows in my father's own words: there is still a considerable revenue from the to be educated. and consequently the most wife isn’t expected to know these things, | minutes, W ‘ : mn spiendid house in Lima Mr. Jack Eyre super- | & Tot ° tt ,Op,handing the pavers to Judge Thompson | custom houses at Valparaiso and ‘Talea- | intends the branch at Callao, while Air, William | commOR title met, here apclelicral coltsec, | bea incl Setar aaa sobaber ott psiums | ee ce, 5.8 desrees 53 iiniuter be = eee se a law, who bee or - oo o ae vie tke | Eyre attends affairs in Valparnisoaud Santiagc. | of the states would receive a quota of those | club if Ididn’t knowall about microbes and : F iong Bio. GS: thenc a rtner, rismouth, gency by 7 y hes % 3 w ‘ “y ie 58 Seat, to aad requisted mo to call in couple of days, | at of $13,000,000, which is received by the Fassit B. Wauo. | seeking education, if merely a utilitarian end | bacteria. “hegre. 3 when the money would be ready for me. and used to pay the army. The regular CHER em wry. Were sougut, as the great wealth of Nicaragua | “But that picture of a bacteria looks like a the appointed time J was at his office. Currency of Chill consiste of notes issued’ and An Apt Rebuke, lies in the development of her agricultural we she persisted. x partner bad returned without ‘he money. guarauteed by the government. When the war | Prom the Boston Couri riches. Buta small portion of those who ro-| _ “Lobster! Looks like a lobster, does it? seems there had been a change of political par- | Legan these ‘nates wero worth ouly about 60) There is a Unitarian clergyman who is not | {rn to their homes with a diploma and thé | Very well, Mra. Bowser, this diseuesion will ties, and the new selectmen decided that the | cents on the dollar and have now dropped to | without a power of keen retort and who is none | SW/8* of M.D. to their names ever devote them-|end right here. It is plain enough that you action of their predecessors ‘vas unconstitu- | 28 cents. banger ‘< | sélves exclusively to the practice of medicine, | haven't the necessary knowledge to appreciate x ei tional and declared they intended to test A recent dispatch, which, it is needless to | the less gifted with the grace tocommand his | their residence abroad generally being re- | it- rece SN mabe sy * quctionn inthe court. say, was of rebel origin, line gone abroad to | tongue rather than .allow his tongue to com-| garded desirable as securing them a polite {oa point S. 1 degrees 20 animiites, W. 383 GG 2 ‘I was dumbfounded. I ined felt sure of the | the world stating that “many leading families | mand him. He has in_his congregation one of | ¢ducatic However, several Nicaraguan: . yser! Let it drop | trou the esi center marked Uy &-C-P: stone mouey. The company was in great need of it, | have been forced to leave Santiago and go into | those women who meke a pretence of frank- | Taduates of medical schools, have remained | tight here. Is supper ready?” s No. a1; thence following the-c and I knew how much this failure would em- | the Argentine Republic and other countries to | ness au excuse for rudeness and who are given | «broad for a number of years while attached to rhe odor was so strong in the dining room center is N. 5 ten, barrass them. My fuce must have exlubited | escape persecution from the dictator, Balma-|{o boasting that they are plain-spoken, when | the staff of prominent hospitals, and returning | that the butter tasted of it, and after supper | ©- ates, W. 202 Qfect trou the center marie | inteuse disappointment. Suddenly Judge | ceda.” Does any reasonable person suppose | the truth is that they are simply iil-bred and | home with valuable experience have practiced | the cook called Mrs. Bowser into the kitchen to | f°*¢* 9" Ko. ence B.A : Thompson exciaime that the harassed and bard-pushed president is | insolent. This especial lady is wealthy, and | their profession and worked great benefit to ask a . to KC. Lieve L will send Dan.’ going out of lis way in these trying times, | there are not many in the list of her acquaint- | their communities. But, speaking of his ex-| “Is it going to be like this all the time?” i Paegroos 1S intautes, W. 10Le rect ee ee “At this a thin face was turned up from a | Wien friends are noue too numerous, to “per- | ances who dare rebuke her. albeit they do to- | perience in’ beginning practice here, a young | “Oh, no. Mr. Bowser had to kill off the mi- | 5,7 derras 10, uinutes, W. 161-* Fa desk near by, showing « pair of immense black | sectite” rexpectable citizens? ‘The truth is thet | gether console each other for the wounds they | Physician lately suid: Gee and bacteria, you see. feet trou the center ‘ eyes and a swarthy visage. It was Daniel Web- | Balmaceda discovered among his closest asso- | suifer from her tongue by abusing her roundly. | + TWO CLASSES OF PATIENTS. mt at — 3 The waist is {en twenty-two oF twenty-three years |clates in the heart of the capital a number of | it chanced that oue evening the luly and the | 41 have two clamesof pationta. One of them | kl! ave him come out and explain. of two insertions of embroidery acal-| ‘was wiaw student in Judge farailicy allod “leading.” because of otticial | clergyman were partners at whist at the uouse | ig well able to pay good foes bat bone sone jo need ot SF mann, Sas. say apie loall onan edge and run with ribbon on the | positions which he himself had bestowed upon | of a common friend and so suecessful were they Ls Seger id oF | made up and T’m going. Aman who'll drag | *._ . *e. Sie 7 We ‘They cross at the back and are but. them, who were secretly abetting the rebellion | that they won almost every game for the even- | less nearly related to me would be surprised to | dead cats through his own house would cheat ‘S58 degrees. “A3.S fect: thence the belt. . r while publicly enjoying the pay and emolu-| ing. Like people who arc fond of having their | be givou a bill for services rendered; the other | ® POOF girl out of her wages at the end of a muinuter, 2 ni. feet : thence 8. silks and cashmeres in delicate shades o “ ments of the federal government | What course | own way the lady way in high humor over this | class is not able to pay at all, ur very little, and | ™gnth. Microbes and bacteria, eh? I don’t ‘thence. 8.73 cream, gray and pale blue make up|“ would any ruler in # similar case bave taken | success, and when the play was over she pushed | to send bills to them would be quite uscless. ve it! Let him show them to me up in | Ti, for children's dresses. They tay with sucli double-dyed' traitors: ‘The ‘‘perse- | back her chair from the table with the char-| In view of theye facts I have concluded that if | the zoological gardens ith full blouse waists, smocked at t the ead of three days I returned. Young | cution” hus consisted in their Leing allowed to | acteristic and graceful remark to her partner: | I want to make money there are many inore at- ‘hen Hepes rept pier what had and wrist or with a plain front cut to | Webster had collected the money. I exchanged | leave the country unharmed, insteud of being| “You do playa good game of whist, Mr. | tractive methods for doing it.” occurred he bristled up, got red in the feceand i in front and finished to the neck with a | but a few words with him at the time. When in | imprisoned as they deserve, that they may dis-| Blank. If 1S call sreabed an enka 90m Granada also contains a college for young tap gome i . chemisette, sleeves full, drawn in | Judge Thompson's private office I asked how it | seminate evil reports about the too lenient Bal- | play whist it would’ be a treat to go to church | ladies, the education of girls having become with see ~ it is; couldn’t carry your point at the wrist. Pongee silk’ for ite soft, | was done. This was his explanation: maceda. : to hear you.” muoh, more popular here in the past several | ith Tp, Sade you wont out end upest the texture falls very gracefully in full| ‘Taking a letter of introduction to the| Auother allegation against the president,| ‘The gletgyman was quite equal to the occa- | roars; formerly but litile attention was paid to girl! Mrs. you are ——e > dan- Straight from s voke of the same silk; | judge's correspondent in Portamouth young | which is being copied from newspaper to uews- | sion. He kept his temper aud his face under it. Several hundred pupils are enrolled as serous groan; freuen - 5 hebend ‘also made very full. | Webster presented himself and asked permis-| paper as though it were a crime, Is that Bal- | perfect control ax he replied: scholars there, their curriculum alsy being = ia igra bet that worm is stepped on Pretty combination dress for a little | sion to use his office to transact a little busi- | maceda has canceled the commissions of those | | “Thank you. Miss Sharp: but you know any- | quite comprehensive, and there is « healthy | t00 often he turns be made up in pale pick and pale blue | ness. “He at once proceeded to issue in Judge body can learn to play whist, whi ins’ gud | competition sinong the pupils for prizes. The the skirt being of the pale blue. | Thompson's name separate writs for each of Good breeding come by grace of God.” teachers in the female college are Ameri- chemisette of pale pink and the | the town officials, holding each to bail, after | he see a OSE sadios chielty, Cicegh, smatsp! yt also of pale pink. There is a | the practice of that time, in bis individual ca- i 1 y teacl judes a number of graduates of the of biue embroidered with white silk | pacity. The sheriff was sent for, the writs put if Making a Pleasure of a Duty. school. The building for the accommodation te is framed by blue braces. | in his hands with directions to serve immedi- From Puck. of this college ix one of the finest in the city jackets look very well in navy | ately and to inform the persons against whom. ; and the courtyard within is the resort of the it gray stockinctte, with embroidered | they ran that Judge Thompson's representative students during tho hours wher they have would be for that day at the office designated. a leisure. A it deal of attention is given to BLUE FLANNEL In.2 short time the; swe running in. : on'whigh the soe ree Aaa ver 00 ‘Young man," ¢ spokesman, “yor i ng are get ‘anxious fastefelly trimmed makes up very nicely for | aiiing's bistals. Tou shone througe: rep is to Quite a number of gradi Ustle girls from tive to eight years of age. Let | ration. We as individuals have notin B college school " ing to do ‘the waist be plain and button at the back, with | with the matter. * 2 - Both polegre govern- © gathered surah yoke, front and back bor- ‘ou are yourselves mistaken, gentlemen,’ r ment, though the charges for tuition are made with braided trefoil design. Running | wasthe reply. “The corporation | separa : as in a private institatior. a ee ‘the yoke to the waist there are three rows | to do with it. for the corporation has done its he generally has . prizes aro published ently in duty. 1 prosecute you individually for mal- i i a the Gaceta Oficial, and great is felt in the is feasance in office ! money has been paid ‘ maintenance of these seats of education, which ‘the in for this specific purpose, and the turnpike S are destined to be important factors in the af- i company will hold each of 'you personally re ! ‘taire of the republic. CE.K. sponsible for heavy damages for ite fin Hi i ie ia He a Hi f hs fe

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