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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, JUNE*1%, 1891-SIXTEEN PAGES. es 3 : b tf ‘TRE GOVERNMENT MINT. % between seas he soon disappeared over the side Row resides, is generally considered the hand- noon the Vandalia swung sufficiently close to + Yupe ides fe generally — the Nipsic for several of our men. to essay es- ana re gusdrangular in sep, 00 fet lone, wih seh lay arrow our oboe, tw aectonrt = or in shape, 500 feet lon: a a 7 across our ite front 360 fect wide and being mach higher than Desperate Condition of Those Who| end touching the Nipsicnt ass ‘A. few | vied with each other in acts of kindness, and, suetastes rear 4 Sct neens ae ar] tia: ge 7 ped in this way.and thef, the ships drifting | although in desperate circumstances them- Norfolk ‘Western Railroad. tor Of dignity and strength rather than of beauty — Survived the Terrible apart agnin. no farther opportunity for resru | selves, should the ale gentinue much longer, eviiie, Bristol, Knoxville: Chatteneses, i in manner fe ii +} A secogd-class | we felt perfect le heen a gio en gereg = oe at Bee A A Us | deka “boleaghng toy vena Mesened | Ind teed ont cee eee, ee night | Fismyegeictt oe of the elder O'Higgins, more than a century ‘ Callarito, succeeded in getting on board the | the creaking and grinding of the Trenton, = =. ago, at the cost of a million and a half of pesos, | LEEUT. WEBSTER’S EXPERIENCE | Nipsic, and at once made Sra nts to nave | stern having caught on the gcige of the reet but'the whole thing was a misconception, hav- as many lives as possible by letting down lad- | while her bow was on the sand, banished sleep | ‘Tye pertitz scnoot. or LANGUAGES, ing been planned for a government edifice in ders, ropes and boatewains’ chairs to the water's | from the rescued, but about 3 o'clock Sunday 73 14th tn we. il side A Mexico and given to Chili through s stupid | Clinsing to the Wrecked Ship Through Long edge, and was thus ‘the means of saving sev-| morning. the gale began to subside, and. as on Open all summer. Lower summer rates ‘ - eye . ‘ ; mistake on the part of the architect. How: | Hours of Great PerllHopes of Assistance | © account of the narrow entrance and Teef-locked Prepar. it t of i This man also succeeded in passing a line | character of the harbor, the sea speedily went | tne for college a specialty. ‘ fn which there ig Givens toommbae | Blasted—The Final Rescus of the Few Sur-| ¢, 20%," pric, by which » haweer was hauled | down, by daylight the harbor of Apia was fast PP Ree ort Reston, Catone, | 4! more. It holds not only ihe president's | Vivote—THe Brave Engineer Foros. across and made fast to the foremast of the | resuming its wonted calm, and the perils of the Sr ‘Tredon Alse stinaner ar tiers | 5 $2 household, . the officers of the cabi an Butlet Sleeper, New York and Washington tite, couureting with Pull rh elcome vio Nehaumner Vandalia, but no opportunity was afforded of | wreck*were over. >! 1st sebamaome — 21” | van Siceper to Mee ministers, the government architect, the com: ; construcking a traveling Light of breeches buoy a TEE BnAte ENeureeh soon. a oe ee FS EE a of the army, the civil engineer Pant Il. aaa of > heavy 3 frequent seas, "¢ | Abler pens than mine have told of the weary hod for becinners.. Terme: Sk. per hour, sx. aah of state, the superintendent of primary educa- ink it was of no availin saving any, an¢ 5 - - hour. Mrs. aid st. nw my pape ane $3 tion ‘and the families of reveral of the above | | East Saturday I stopped just as I was making | finally, through the metioncof the wee ships to | waiting for relief to come, and there remains NOT SELECT BOARDIN “Tate menti ied officials. It also contains the North-|® last desperate effort to reach the deck. | and fro, the line was snapped in two. for me but the task, which is a pleasure, as it is . tue youne ladies and children Seperinckraph office, the headquarters for the | My final struggle was determined by the | | While the hawser just mentioned was still ex- | also a duty, of recording here the names of | MME Oct. 1. 1801: under the auspice ‘of tee superintendent of police—beside being the | fact of the apparent impossibility of getting on | tended between the two ships, Mr. John Roche, | those men’ in my department who #0. nobly Se Goncore “Galland Chilian treasury and the place where all the our pay clerk, came floating by, having either | stood at their posts in the midst of appalling dan- | sisted oy Prot. Gaili of peri Eres Sher: Seg deck by way of the after hatch, the water OF tase: = nleey been swept overboard or made a desperate at-| gers for so many hours, obedient, zealous, | ¢AU-LARD SCHOO! Qusereation Care “of the pouring over the stern and portside of the ship }tempt to tunke the beach, drifted quité wont | Pave, their names deserve lineestiabke evened | son Ansatre feretetherecdoe TER CAPITOL. in such volumes that I felt the desperate con- | the ship, and, although pretty nearly exhausted, | But for the skill and attention to duty of these Viret-cinee ‘Ticketm, mot Probably the most conspicuous edifice in| dition of my affairs, and, guided by what little | beard our cries to catch the hawser, and for | men the wreck of the Vandalia would have aaa we the -city is the capitol. It occupies an en- : few minutes held on by one arm.’ ‘The line, | occurred and would probably have been even. eect folios tire Sours a ber paiva meter atten sarge esename) fore Batol: and s00ci- | Lovever_telng ia ccontncal slate of sess | more disastrous in lowe of life. My official re EEL, TEACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN. A iY INTERIOR OF A RECOLETA. pauied by a fireman named Melville, I strug-| or alteruate tautering and slacking, s00n shook | port, made to Lieut. Carlin, commanding the Particular atieution to be- new, are coated with a brownish-yellow Ste Bering press for Lynch- Raliabury amd — gled forward on the berth deck, the violent | him and, foiding his arms, closing his eyes, | survivors, records these names, which I here Polite people is that of doffing the hat at sight | tng °mand have great rows of | columns | motions of the ship ; 0 k ont | re i Bia oo grout joo she thumped the bottom | and without making another effort, he sat peat: f of a funeral procession. The funeral pageant on i i- | With every gpa thrawing us to the deck every | of ight and was drowned under the very eyes of | | chipist Adam Gibson, Machinist J. B. THE CHILI AN CA PITAL. is not like tobe particularly solemn, as there is Fev memo Sbeawtinelt ieee Geo ores Lod taketh area ce ‘my way | Si# sbipmiates. ‘Beveral nafrow escapes from | Collier, Boilermaker Chas. Howren, Oiler Joha Ms AMY C. LEAVITT OF BOSTON, A bs Te Met - * Ty PIANO AND HARMONY. no black about the hearse nor weeping women | ousin front, notuolike toar veoend he teoncacy | Lowen the neeeimbled on tthe | {rowning occurred during thowe weaty hours, | Myers, Oiler Thomas Langon, Oiler James L- | yeasone durftANOan? eid | following it—only a few men and the horses | at Washingion whick the bande faintly wo. | berth deck won being filed witta bhadenmie ne man having been swe 1 overboard twits, *yt. Wanerza, ART NsrROCHioN.— rae GKEATEST orpon. | 4 —s aad being driven asif at a race, but.to- eee every- | sembies. ‘There are three extensive halls inside, | which must have ectse from the pipe supply. | Put each time he succeeded in'clutching some Passed Engineer, U.S.N. | A Nouhy ever odened to Parmnie thitinen Tee ber j pan Buftet Sleeper, New York to Knoxville via Peouliarities of Life in That South | toir'in the streets, in the horse ‘earn, in there | “C0! scnators, the deputies and that in which | ing steam to the capntan engine wbeee there | Of the floating cordage hanging from the fore- a Bestemers, oeorators we Aviat sean trem and ivaliny Malisury” aid’ Western North . . carriages, on the pavements or in their balco-| the president takes the oath of ofice., ‘They | Gellant foreegstic, hat thrown the Gite light 1] 78Fd and so crawled aboard. He is still alive. HOME MATTERS. ee Reeekeee ee fee American City. nies, paving « last token of courtesy, to the | are piainly finished in white stucco, with a few | recognized Bnsign Heath, who” bad Some FAINT HOPE IMMEDIATELY KILLED. ——— its toonter | ¥i8 Passing stranger who is on the way to his long thant, ul simple frescoes on the ceiling, illuminated with | below for,some purpose in connection — i Seasonable Suggestions and Every-Day Hints | trou IMOGENE ROBLY. ‘ id be pueda te an: \ o 2 “Deslden being. the. cast ot goverment, tbe Fut his duty,” Determined’ that no” Te-1 by-an apparent all im the tespent, or a ing te Practical Housekeepers. Seeccatintint tate SIGHT-SEEING IN SANTIAGO. | courts oflaw ant the legislature, Santiago ivan tet ofleer in Tan BOE PY, MOMONT | Aceh of lighter clouds would pase over, when | NOTHING Mape Wrrw Scoan, eggs and milk ool Senuony of Fiat ace a via Churches, Plazas and Public tion to the fact that all'of iny mon were ont of | gale had blown itself out. But no such good | SALT Dissoven 1x Atcouot, is often found | ( iidings—The | tio: Among the finestare that of San Au- J draw a lite-size crayon portrait im 15 lemons - : - 4 the engine rooms and fire rooms and requested | fortune attended us, and the only change would | good to remove grease spots from cloth. fo Anowledse of drawing meccmary. J. W- KEN | Isckera ine Shops and Their Hours of Trade—A Visit |e eed = boot pd Reo — him.to remember this te ‘erpdit shoals. he | be a fiercer blast and a heavier sea and ®| Tux Motassxs To ne User Por Grxcemsanan | NOLDS, Artist, @23 0 et. mylists” | furnished and te Congress and the Preside H ? Case—| adorned with a ’ pillared portico; the Some Pleasant Customs of the People. ehurehes of La Merced, Santa Domingo fand Sen Francisco—all built in previous century; the San Angustin nunnery, eam The Star's Traveling Corveapendeat. founded in 1576 by Bishop Medellin; the Carmen Saxtiaco pe Cure, May, 1891. | Alto, or church of, the Carmelite nunnery, an . _ 5 ING elegant little Gothic structure where most of iE TOURIST ON A SIGHT-SEEING EX- | th Vtschionable weddings take piace; the stately Pedition cannot do better than to begin | church of the Reformed Dominicans, rich im JitB Santiago's central aquare, named La | marble monolithic columns; the church whi Plaza de Ia Independencia, because from it all | was erected about forty vears ago to the mem- things radiate, even the tramway lines and | 9FY of Pedro Valdivia, the city’s founder, next be my survivor. He hurriedly promised to ro- | blacker cloud to quench’ what little hope re- | ;, i SLOCUTION AND ORATORY. member my request and, in’ point of fact, re- | mained, leaving a but that phase of Ef pats ek ete, ares a Ln pian rare minded me afterward of ,my reporting to him | courage called “grit.” ~All efforts to send lines Do Nor Satz B: hile cookl: Weeks’ course for Indies and ie under stich circumstances the fact that the en-| from the shore had proved fruitless and the ‘0 Nor Satt Beer before or while cooking, Shaftesbury wethod. | gineer department was under discipline and | *ingle attempt to send a line from the ship had | 9 it draws out the juices, which, in boiling es- a lessons, @Uior twenty lessous, obedience to the bitter end. resulted in the death of the brave man who | pecially thereby lost. ‘irculars to the Reaching the hatch immediately abaft the | made the effort. Bankers axp Fens put away well sprinkled | MAKIYS “CULLEGL “Or” “1'Locu: break of the forecastle managed to scramble | | The after part of the ship was apparently | with borax and doné up air tight will never be ng Taste on deck not far from the galleyrand in com- | breaking up, the cabin. had. been completely | troubled with moths, mon with évery ope else in hborhood , no figures could be seen aft except in 3s ing thas seized a Inahal “Remmock, ‘any ‘of whieh | €0 rigging St tho tutzzennmact amd the’ ick pene oper mela es were pumder the forecustle, as @ sort of life | deck looked as though ready to brenk sdrift | Milicked with acidity of the stomach should Pe nidivie, the meaee aes preserver at the last extremity. Many of the | from the ship at any time, an it, in truth, did | #8 tullge in cold drinks. Hox: % 3 ‘ hackney coaches, and in the streets immedi- | a taek Woke temeceue frees hea ae Poatd are ,ftuddled together under the star-| finally. With every surge of the ship the fore- | _Oxroxs should be soaked in salted warm water fSctency in three monte, Seidtor pamphicts, erudens iene axes ‘pal sn. | Lxed: and last, but a long way — board side-of the forecastle and fora few min-| mast would apparently almost unstrip itself | previous to cooking to partly remove any strong | Piri? tauren mam. Sena for pe ately environing it are found the Lier ea elegant Kecoleta, now —~ — —— CHILIAN BEAUTIES. utes it seemed as though we were in a place of | from the keelson of the ship, in which event | odor th Pupils. Head School Acue Phonugraphy. ayaa ee ne ee ee eee ee great skrlights and furnished with leather-cov- | Shfety, for although the water was pouring over | the chances for life of all those on and around | 4 Lrrrux Scaanudded to beets, corn, equash, | 2! eee. =. 0 | this id old capital. It is an imposing | Maguificent structures syn cst i the to, it Were very slim indeed. Qne notable thin, A cache WOLUMBIA COLLEGE OF COMMERCE, Proud old capital. is posing ered armchairs and the plainest of desks and mt forecastio and threatening to 3, e &e., a / It ‘contains vast amount of imported : PI engulf't Gook | struck me at the ti Pthat war the ale | Peas, &c., during or utter cooking will improve | ( te te city fost of space, with « handsome marble fountain in the | arhic, in pillars, walle and altars rich | tables. ‘The large cool’ scinicircular senate | Cngul ip with every surge, the spar deck | struck meat the time, and that was the ab- | fron 4t- Guring ¢ yey at speciay rates urine the middle, surrounded by a well-kept garden con-| carvings and costly, brand-new _ paint- | Chamber has anarea of about 230 squaro meters | W®4 comparatively free of water, probably two | sence of all human cries or shouts during the ON AND Acrive at Old Pout at G30 pee > pte twenty eecond 5 var. wornet, te.” Dre Director. my ining trees, flowers, statues, walks and stone | ings; but is by far too new to be improssive | 4nd looks as inviting to repose as our own in | feet deep, and the port forw: whole day. Ni ¥ 5 THe Meat Oxp Ratner Taax a junnee, ‘Enwlish, A: taney, Civil Service, Short oe VLVANIA ROUTE taini flo’ i id looks as i feet deep, and the port forward pivot port still day. Not a cry was given by the 2 e Meat or ax Oxp Ratner Tua E taney. Civil Bervice, Short: 1 a wore beneh and is entirely wanting in “dim religious Uncle Samuel's capital. When visiting this Chil- | ™aintained itself against the blows of the sea. | number of men who lost their lives du a Axmwat for soups. It is more nutritious | LS ee SPEER ND eee mehes. f Land and 1 1 w Newy ALENT, : Catalogs ou Syplieation, . as | | ; ing this C Soon, however, as the ship settled more aad he wreck, and the only sound which | and has a more pronounced flavor. ms CR URNER, A.M, CE, Prin. 2 : is | light,” and that smell of mold and martyr’s | ian fog bank Thave found it easy to imagine 5 iP ly | Nearly all the west side of thix great plaza is | ing th bones and the ghost of incense burned years | Myself at home gazing down from the gallery | M0Fe and as the sea rose with each interval of filed the ears of the survivers was the roar Is Maxixe Custanp, Powrxry on Lewox Pres n x GPENCERIAN Bi FROM STATION P * | 0 ce re Prd ray Die te time, the port brid'e ports were stove in, the | of the wind, the crash of the waves and the | ;¢ ; s at Corner STs. AS FoLlows * ae | ome droning Senator who has apparently no realize what had happened we found ee wt regres Trl | by the paste. Fs Fehool of Business, Accounts and English, tainly one of the oldest. Originally erected | gencTatious have worshipped. — PP jeep. | OUrselves up to the neck in wate: \d a wild | Cane toward the beuch; and so the day came to ¥ echoat ot? Prepay Luglisn aud by the conqueror, Pedro de Valdivia, SHOPS AND A BIG HOTEL. other listeners, while the stenographers xleep- p ck in r and a wil \ ily seribble, and the presiding officer, yawning | $¢r#mble began for a place on the topgallant |#clore andthe end of the gale and rescue | | 1¥ 4 Lrrrue Conxstancu 18 Por 1x Tue Sarr | Pookkeering it has been several times partially de-| To return to our starting point, the Plaza de | behind his “hand, mal stroyed by earthquakes and was recon-| la Independencia: The side opposite the cathe- | paying attention. structed on its present plan by Garcia de | dral is occupied by an unique building, faced és | forecastle. seemed as far off as over. During the last hour | for the table it will keep it from lumping and| D¢b0e! of SLorthand. es a shallow pretense of Casting aside my hammock as a needless in-| of daylight the body of a drowned man washed | the pretty little shakers will not have so hard @| School of ccbam cumbrance, I made adash for the starboard | upon the bridge ge forward of the smoke | scold rehitecttiral Drawing. ing in damp weather. Eeheol of Civil Pervice Lrainins. ‘THE HALL OF DEPUTIES. " : oe ; ‘uouthiy rates.” Day ahd nicht seesions | ladder leading to the forecastle, but while do- | Pipe, and one of the stiffened arms becoming | Tue Warre or ax oo, with alittle water | {uaesiy cr mouthis sactnet ‘Weame Ba Mendoza. somewhere about the year 1650; or | toward the street by an arched pathway. known | ‘The hall of deputies iv « good deal larger ing my beet fe cenepe from san beatingreeses | setangiod with's ‘stanchicn'ie sear $s ne and suger, is good for children who are| 1. Heutif'c. srinck saith sleeiting Cars Woah oe rather, it was carried as near to completion as | as the portales, which has shops insi than that of the senators and its members are | Which ail at once seemed to take complete pos- | fro directly under our eyes, until at last an | mb2i een 3S St. Last ue tem Aladly y seems to be cousistent with local principles | dwelling rooms above. On another side is ; : 2 c4 . : | troubled with an irritable stomach. It is very rates session of the ship, I lost my footing, was cast | €xceptionally heavy sea tore him adrift aud the . of economy. It has never been quite fin-| big hotel and two enormous arches, known as | MOF lively and quarrelsome, but the gale! 1S | headlong into the waterway, and is’ my wild | wful object’ dispeared over the rail to be | ing and will prove an excellent remedy for ished, and probobly never will be. because —| Bulner’s arcade, crowsing each other at right | Fe 80 few and cramped that it is evident the | struggles for something to hold fast to I must | seen no more. ‘iva, as well us a simple preventive for like. ‘the licensed beggars of Mexico—ite | angles and extending from street to street. | dear public are not expected to attend its wes | haveclutched ropes or other objectsinsuchaway | _ By the violence of the waves our smoke pipe lisorders. N OkWoop ixstiiUT eae sc utraittel source of | The arches are of whito stucco, resembling |slons. | There are forty-two .sonstors in | that pretty-easly all of my finger nalle, aati. | Wee beat considerably ont atthe perpenliotifn, | A Goon Pray yon Kegermo Borres: Cece. axe WASHINGTON, D. a. Fevenue. Though millions of dollars have | marble, with rounded roofs of glues and fron. | the Chilian congress and one hundred and ten | ened'as they were by the Lower soaking they | tnd stood as though ready for the final plunge; | Swrar iu summer i to fill a box with aand to | Teh Sup wii iecia OO been collected from pious parishioners—almost | One of Santiago's most peculiar structures ig | deputies. Among other peculiari I no-| had undergone, were turned back, all uncon- | but it did not go overboard and was used after- | within an inch ox two of the top; sink the but- | #6 4ull information a the principale ene to veneer the whole pile with a coating | the adjacen: Portales de Fernandez Concha, | ticed that no meniber rises to his feet when ad- sgiously to myself at the time, and, as I had | ward to replace the one lost. from the Nipsie. ter jars in the sand, then prin.) miy wet the ‘Mk. AND MiB. WMD. CADET, of gold—there is still a standing call for “funds | the name referring to its builder. It is a| dressing the house, bat indolently “keeps his | kicked my shoes off at the first sign of a strug- | Of course every boat had long since been torn J ighiy 140s Massacbusettaave | - 8 , ; u L | sand with cold water. Cover the box air tight. | _ Office hours: 10 to 1 asiy, Pe fo finish the cathedral:" and year after year. as | spacious gallery of eighteen arches, supporting | sittin’;” and in their most exciting differences | gle for life, my fect. beeame Ledley, breil | from lis davite ent wits the eee | 8 artis = of | eae homes: 20 aces Tia generations come and go, a contribution bor, | a two-storied building, the whole’ beng four m and wildest flights of vituperation | during my ‘struggles, and when at length I | Jeots from the ship served to lino the beach for | 22° a Oe nee oe CADERY OF TER © ently ends in duels outside), they | managed to secure a Tope made fast at its | miles up and down the coast. i. g ever depart from the strict rules of Spanish | upper end aud clambertd to the topgellant poasaan arsoasie Curuse that has been cut in suitable pieces etiquette, but “cuss” one auother in politest | forecastle I found I hnd been soneeceutle slight failed one ne RKSESS. | for the table and left some time becomes hard terms. ; bruised, but eo far as I could ascertain no| As the daylight faded away the situation was | and dry. One way of disposing of it in such a ‘The small park in front of the capitol was | bones were broken, certainly forlorn in theextreme. Although the | case is to gruto it and put it ina wide-mouthed formerly the site of the Jesuit church of (ia ‘THE BEAL CONDITION. cOMPRENEXDED, Woather was warm anil the water, undet ordi- | bottle that ean be coriced. It is then ready for important place in Chilian history for three | self the Cpachy far ag the Vandalia was | tT Toen subjected Torte ekg, hour eran’ | i undred years and more, no event that ever | concerne: 4 : . ree aeeery a . tranapired here sent such a senmtion through~ | ‘The majority of the officers were aft on the | {bate taken.all the heat from our bodies aud | is. Itie a very good aubatitute for, potatoes | Ont the civilized world as that holocaust, in| poop deck, some of the mor or Waka ok Chethriag: Chit es her ee ® for Louevilie sud Pittsburg to Riche ccisus mnAbons, aces Soe Frome GATS a 1, . 2 Lhtted tages « a Cars, with Din= jue Car to New York, 9:40 4.1. daily except Buns day For New York only, Litaited Express with Dining Car wus. dtl trou B LawiA heating, fire escapes. HANLOS, B.D. Presiten fo MA Wssrirere oF recHNOLOG : F when that vegetable is scarce and high, as it is BOwLON. Asn one aloft tering ebilliness, and. bet pee plale 5s ons Entrance exazammation fn Wastin: Pom. every day hich uprard of fo thowand worship” | tone wore in tho rigging and nat x for were | Pes dene ee cet ea ia Matos | this teu Neue phgwiions abject somoulyd ato Green etertn in chan of ieee pers, mostly women, out of xn audi-| the same situat ¢ n y degr 8 to the use of old potatoes after they have kiln Setiow ng, LRA and K ste. we ‘ a Aged gare Detected ea eect ents WOuld tae galt. Once in awhile | the body another enguliment would send the | Yun ‘te sprout and on their own tables use direct ‘rameter 1g" Fltcn sic, avandia flames. "The calamity, which plunged. the |} mat Would take his iife in his hands, and, | most atrocious chilliness through onc, until it ork city ‘ jumping overboard, make a brave attempt t0 i nation in mourning, i9 commemrated bx 4 | reach the shore. believe, with P e 3 a ing this everybody knows. Hracefal monument ‘of bronze and marble, | these menmere: drowied, fOr meres eee: | one must let go. Few words were exchanged Tux Boston Globe gives the following recij ipti saeai a : between us as we stood close pressed together, | gi ig recipe Teteaatage Me nena ne is es Senne | Eipnitr, lnarensing, while tha, strqngin ol tas! cagine cele co cinee tae eens | tor the semoval-at freien Aqua ammonia, men Was us ste: aig victims, more or less,” miserably perished, and | tance’ incide ot ase ey eme., A short dis- | tell the truth there was very littleto talk about. | two onnces: bay rum, twelve ounces; rose macaroni instead. ‘The simple ways oi prepar- seemed as though from very cold and stiffuess Ir, Recretary. a, Week days, 11:25 p.m, MH 400, 4:20, 4 Bb pm. BOSTON, MASS. 4 i - ia lay the Nipsic, | I remember thinking to myself “what a lot I | water, two ounces; borax, two ounces; glycer- | CCUM, i” civil. mechanical, raining, electrical, | 4 inettinguadatie, St Of the Sentiagouns js | driven up on the beach and abandoned byha; | shail ove te bell abet i bene ecveks ine, one ounce: water, sixteen ounces; alcohol, es a eee bee reccy : crew and officers. Darkness comes on apace in the tropics when | two ounces. Mix; apply to the face and neck | -Lutrance Pxuuuinations ia West For Aunapol, 23 a.m., 11:50 ana 420 A TERRIBLE HoLocaust. We were lying approximately broadside to | the sun onee goes down, and before we kuew it | with a soft woul te RN coda Sopa et Sunday. Sundays, 94 am. Tt seems there was a grand fiesta, and La | the beach and about 250 yards distant, where | the night had settled down, which seemed to Catalogue tree. WASHINGTON SOUTAERN RATLWat. Compania was decorated for the occasion | ¥¢ Could plainly see the natives and men and | have no promise of ® daybreak to auy of us Uncle Moso’s Views of the Grip. TUURE RalLwar. _ my20-whs, St - . officers from the Nipsic passing to and f el coming from adirecti a i vening and packed to its utmost me passing to and fro in | But relief was coming from adirection and in a | Written for The Evening Star. praia hie rhe: Raed Linnie vain gudeavors to render some assistance to | tanver Jittle iim: ined. It must have been | Sitting alone at my sewing the other day I ig) wt lest, A ekngered fellows. Soon the sitip began | not far from 7 o'clock in the evening wlien I was interrupted by the entrance of vi famihes of the capital, for this was the | to all with water and a miscellaneous quantity | descried the dark hull and few twinkling lights |". Be ed deep -nesgerid fashionable sanctiary. ‘Thousands of damps, | of floating. objects-came pouring up through | of the flag ship Prenton, of whose whereabouts | With-the announcement that Uncle Mose, our candies and glass vases containing paraifine | the hatchways; chairs, mattresses, pieces of | we bad been up to this time ignorant. If we | man-of-all-work, had returned, after an ab- Tere glighted alll Over the walls and | lumber, hammocks, all the debris of a wrecked | had felt hopeless before, the appearance of the | sence of siz weeks, caused by the grip. I told AS SCHOOL FOR GIRL 7 Ste cenze” qaprevent stars, amid clouds | ship. soon filled the decks, and, floating away | ‘Trenton slowly dragging down on us filled us | the girl to usher hitn into he sitting room,4 twelfth sear begins Seritetuber 2B; OF eennze, | While miles upon miles of | over the bulwarks, which ‘by thie time were | with despair, for but one revult could. bappen | which ale dit cittont ceremony. — Reedy ees panded the whole interior. | just awash, covered the sea with floating wreck- | should sue come in contact with what was’ left | “How you do. Mise Meg »” broke from the SISTER SUPERIOR. Nobody knows how the configration began. | 9g¢ dangerous. to swimmers and in os of the Vandalia—quick and total destraction. | old mars lips as he caught sight of me. “Lord, — probably from the overturning of a lump, but | the sad fact that the Vandalia was a doom So the few faint Lopes of clinging to the rig- | chile, I'se so glad to see you agin, Tis Vv tna moment the entire roof was a mass of flames | ship. ; ging until morning seemed dead beyond ren Why, Uncle Mose,” sid I, “from your POTOMAC RIVER BOATS. and the floor a aea of fire, in which human be- fur situation was desperate to the last de-| rection by the certainty of the fate bearing | absence you must have had a very severe eel seated in old pictae, anid, struggling. as repre- | gree, and as the seas began pouring over the | down on us from the gloom to the windward. | of sickness.” sented in old pictures of purgatory. | The fright- | topgallant forecastle it became evident thats | ‘The progres of the ‘Trenton was very slow, | “Lord, Miss Mary, I leetle more’n would er sped omen crowded against the doors, which | higher perch was necessary, xo, with Hobson's | and as-at times the drift would seem to ceaso | dicd, "Dis per diseceo whut dee calls de gri opened inward, thereby forming with their own | choice before me, I clumbered to the fife rail of | allogether, it may, perhaps, be imagined with | gbertack men ‘de ‘ole “oman, too, an'—well | Bens piled-up, scorching bodies an impassable bar | the foremast and securing a- position on the lee | whut solicitude the Approach of ur destroyer | I'se nincty-tree yars ole dis yer comin’ July, | rae Orc hen tng rangers. And when all | side of the mast prepared to hold on for deat | was watched. Slowly drifting down before the | but hit's de fast time T-eber wee enter ee Fattane kapr ov hie ue, Was over, when the shrieks of agony were sui 4 hfe, ind and sea, the big ybip looted up against | sich a mizble disease. I "tknow | ion pi. Steams loaves Sik ceeded by silence even more ghastly and. the | ‘The popitian was one fled with the way aver os nl | waa ith wort—foat ‘ay heu den iy a - ul for the | the waves which bxoke. over her bows. nntil Lit hurt de wusi—fust my head, den my fires tiint leaped to the skies gave place to faint |'seus, motntains high tne 8 o'clock, it must have been, she had | po" ole bones—and de po" i bluish flames, fed by the gases exiated from dead rotate high, engulfed, all that aeted plies . "th Gia | aces ic wera Grae ont tera ae eee for Quant: ‘and the sout pnd information at the office, wortheast cor. treet aud _Seneral Mamucer. (el ALTIMORE & ONTO RATLROAD.” Schaiuse in eftet May 10, 101, Leave Waslututon tron Vor Pittavune the ship every few minutes, and as I was stand- | approached sufiiciently near to see figures in e her wus'n hit done me, fur her head is so yy ta bodies, the horrified city whose every family | ing barefooted on the coils of rope cast over the | Hef rigging and on the rails. Soon-a cheer | bed dat I've gwine tee ae "spencerary on my For Wine (way Statiowe 9230 p.m, was bereft of one or moremembers, beheld rows | pins of the fife rail, one bere arm thrust | Came over the waves, given, we heard later, by | way home dis yer very day an’ git some kinder For Luray 0. c of fom haem a =. iled Cre above | through the starboard Jacob's ladder, the other | order of Admiral Kimberly as inh rnest of | mediceen fur her. Po’ ole soul, she suffers ve sane se snother in almost symmetrical rows, to cou- | lund-geaxping some of the runni their appreciation of our desporate situation, | mightily Miss Sallie, ’deed she do. ‘Company. Stan = seereee Se Sena earena! ~. —— | siderable height. scénés of grief that fol- | lending aloft, I found my rushes ple mr Memes tas anseor TEAR: "Uncle Moss, I'm’ very sorzy yon have had Seaines. 7eumeneey Soucy: , capt, coun As ct in 8 conspienor position and frequently | stories in height. When within it no great | lowed cannot be described. There were chil- | painful. With mo adit Precisely the same such a hard time with this awful grip. Where | Ketchau, Jeives every, ‘and “Tu ery ded aroun, presente its xaping mouth like | stretch of imagination fw required to finey | dren whose parents were dostroyed; inen loft | blight were tive oF cit of eae ee Prepared th | + Sts every mann who dened that: chene | Cr curth Gid it come from? To Mick of ae | pan teen Maees eet x ® Perpetual men licant cryiag “Give! Give!” yourself iu the conrt of some marble palace— | entirely alonc, having lost wife and children, | "stand by the wreck’ white line en deeee must have shed tears. I know the little group | trouble it has caused is dreadful. EE arenas stunnaaaa | the Alhambra, perhaps—axched with glass over- | and other houses that remained closed, for mas-| -Bome distance up the starbourd fore rigging | of which I was ong wept for « few. minutes as ‘Well, now, Miss Mary, jest you wait "tell I Bid Face wuart, or cor. wwe. and 12th at. ‘/<_ on as hee - helter | Dad. the sides beautified by frescoes. carvings, | teré and servants had dined together. crouched Assistant Surgeon Cordeiro an: though impossible to restrain the feeling which | ’spress my views ob it. w T'se studied on dis | _™e3-tu e cathedral is large enough to shelter | paintings and niches full of statuettes. Here Faxxir B. Wan. | Lieut. Culver, while somewhere aloft, and cx is difficult to describe. Before the tag ship | yer subjec’ powerful hard, an’ I’se done con- | @TEAMER “WAKLFIELD™ 14.000 poopie, vet has no striking feature except | fw eave, apparently as nature made it, beneath posed to the full fury of the blast,’Surgeon | struck us, which she did finally, the order was | clusioned dat hit sent yer to show des yer mall- IGATULDATS arf cin, lesen PURER that of size. It is built of» course kind of por- | a chaos of boulders, overhung! with growing A LOADED CIGAR, Hace was clinging, waked from the waist up, | given on board her to throw a rocket line | ionniries dat dey can't take all de money frum | idDal end SUNDAY evenings Phyry. with « single tower of rough brick and ¥. Penetrate the miniature cavern ————a the fierce gale having torn his shirt off some | across us,which was done, and in a few minutes de po’, but de jus’ God say ‘Now you'se dats | “Tor Nomi Creek, Va., shunt, Clements Bay, atde & tall iron cross over the main entrance. | 124 Yow are first startled by n remarkably life-| woich Seemed to Go Hack om » Geniat | time during the forenoon: : e hawser was made fast to our foretopmast | rich in dis yer worl’s goods an’ bows down "n | teuyuity atamiermliate lain ‘Thsnglt kediugiliea « wnccamentet oiliatir. og wry lpn raised ssf to strike, and eee: Soon witer acquiring a foothold on the'fife |hend, the other end being secured to the worships de gold money, ce like dey did de gee emamamenes yg Peet, garthguake-cracked walishave been condemned | :ently wandered into private dwelling, whose | A pleasant little surprise wis planned the tpbtes, peg gee peng See aes ae [eae Seok ene, Mpwhigh so: | eokd cate “et sabhect oh yer le var | (lee exe erg gt ie Blaghtest ‘torch ee ee cet tbat the | owner bas had the singalar taste to thus dis- | other day by Mr. Childs, the chlef clerk of the going to capsize or bebeaten to picoos by the ene ‘iswiy around bringing her pearly | came ta dro oobool end let Go setoes er floor Ponbs Seles wercienete ma: nm about | suise the front entranee. : consus office, for Mr. Wardie, the assistant.| ¥aVes, which grow in vidleneo the longer the to the Vandalia, the sternsncerly tough- | a lizard which be hed previously wound up, South American « ries, thougi: contain- ‘A FAVORITE SUMMER ResDRT. chief clerk. ‘The latter is an inveterate smoker, | 8##¢ continted. ee se oes ‘and th e bows separated by some forty'feet or | ‘‘F'dte de Lord, Mars Henry (jumping up and ing score of sltars CHANCES You RescUE suazt. more, cracking his, heels), whut wuz dat yer thing? finde of graven | All these faney doors along the sides lead into | and so Mr. Childs thought that if he gave mage -. of “ i i . r ithi ‘ is lace hoy began once more to | Fo’ iness’ sake don’ you let dat tin, come | , Program of GAZE’S (of London) SELECT EXCUT re a pated s at sliver’ and precious | aseem, Bauses,, the fashionable shopping | him a cigar that lad been specially pre- ra tree eae thle thomghe | ae en eee ev erialin for tae ball ies | sgt ea mae Be fe back | SION" now ready. SEED: | ofall ticker acne, = “aime s06 Sime tables, to boned Stones galore. ba laces of the elite, where jewelry, bric-a-brac | pared with explosives even a man of Mr. | Passed through my mind, for in the face of | agship made an effectual breakwater agaiust | to be skeart wid dese yer Yankee contraptions. | Bradbury Palace of Text simay Dai {Sunday only. and Parisian millinery are chiefly sold. ‘This is | Wardle’s active habits would be somewhat | Such @ sea as was then running, filled agit would | wind and sea, and a rescue seemed , quite a | Well, to be sho {on seeing thatit could not harm ei Union Tronne men 3 «favorite Fesort for ‘the fair Yantiagoans, par-| etartled when the loaded. cigar began | be with the most dangerous wreckage, the | near possibility. As 4oon as the hawier be- | him}, whut nes?” T Ww Sees ante, Deas Co. on aos ‘achat ticularly after morning mase, when they are | to goof. ‘The more he thought about it the chance for rescue was too smull to be reckone@ | tween the two ships was properiy secured some |, He then resumed the thread of his discourse, Rovuxp HE ORLD. er on Gite ecu ndreds, A 4 | on. by an a e Trenton | but evi jorgotten where 4 oa prea = ‘aan t= ag o = funnier the prospect seemed iebe.- In fact, it-| just ds it seemed that the next'sea would tear in thar way, band over hand, but on testing my | forhe said: “Why dis yer ‘grip’ dey calls GAZE’S LIMITED EXCURSION gf —- raver book aud rosary in hand, and a nou{i | W880 amusing that Mr. Childs concluded that | the ship to pieces the movement stopped and | ability to ‘do the same 1} found sutticient | hit, taint no mo’ nor less dan de han’ ob de PIANOS AND ORGANS rag thrown over her arm. The latter is | he ought not to enjoy it all by himself. He | slowly began. to retrograde, until at ‘le th, | strength was not left to make the attempt. | Lord punishin’ de whole yearth fur de sins of | Leave. ~ September 10, Vancouver the 28th, | —— ——= raga _ > 7 ri uswelly of embroidered felt, but sometimes | therefore hit upon the device of giving a little | Teaching approximately an even keel, the s ip | Abandoning the place I had up to this time | dose whutlubes dey money so much dat dey | on one of the magnificent new steamers of the Can: KBAKAVER Pianos nay b WON THE ADMIRA- is ti oma y A thon of the lovers of russe by tin ead ei eg ina, Kaanaco oF alpaca | luncheon at his house. He revealed his plan | ‘ettled on the bottom wud our fear ai inet was coupled I Slambered into'the port forerigging, | sin't catia’ whedder de po' gits euy food to ent | atten FeciBa Raeay Onmveny, cresting tho Fectto iat Tenipteot Mune TOS. and it is used B, a ; - and durabliity: “See then at Tetaphet ume i in | over. . i ring in what way rescue and safety. would | or no, dat’s hit, dey ain't carin’ nothin’, | im 11 days; three weeks will be spent in Japan, | $0G. ‘it KLIN. “detabisshed 7 Mtones of the chureh for, whem'n, | to several officials in the census ofée and in| "Slowly the houés passed, and to afl appear | eeeearing.im What way tes Tong to wait. The f a Sete = y ‘lon, India and Egypt will be visited ; coli et only dat gold, ‘on's yer eee, chile, don’t yer | thas Chine, Gxrion, India and Ee owner kneels to he vited them to tke luncheon with him and see:| anece the gule was no nearer xn end thane the officers and men of the Trenton, in spite of the | see? Do Lord he done say: *You'se ali tink | Teturaing to New Htaly, Guitsoriand, France | ag, ee tobe ‘role for a sesvaptto a Wardle smoke his loaded cigar. ‘The invi- | beginning, while the sea, stes Ancrgasing, fact that their ship was e wreck ea well as the | caze hit's yourn You can tan a deol year to de en a ps mew gle Ro Rrpre etn od Sas, 8 a nordays, porkape Orie ta has retires | ration was accepted with alacity, and fre. | P2d'ss wo everbourd coat ea at overboard, | Vandalia, used ovary exer dy To oretiake | feet an Welles you, an’ eo you so; how Gains | wethallie pleced torecive depostteaseariy aw pee | Suet ff Bey Fs sete perhaps owing to the example of | Childs, who had been let into the secret, certain deat ym the yhich “seemed rake ey . : sible. For complete programs and all particulars call | : moms * Some of our men tried to awim to both shi ‘Miss Mary, but mo'n de ole’ooman is lef” 5 + | ght Meda Marg tayestion, 200 tie pret: Lectin doce een ntsiege cf cee | gota the inh Aer the ood things had siya once In wise the "attompt wa te ‘About a0 my attention rae attracted bythe | Wo snes de waee fur wear, But wo kin do | Soo/ tassel Muae: 1sistuae ew Sasa Be Oe en Sterne —— 4 gentle “hurch goers do not disdain to bear their | the party settled down toa smoke. While ‘up- | Sei! are cere wt of those trying the | chief bostewain’s mai fandalio, Win- | righ rit Oia aah take She place of a Grane: oo = desperate venture were carried by the ourrent | chester, calli ‘Here's achauce for. de yousent de ole folks FEM & CONLIY, 516 2 we Ma Cs et Taree ge ery one was natal watehing "Wal, out past the range of fasion, and wth two ex Doys," fund ustrating “his words by crawling Ite en, doy Sid tnend, on we's so m mal ‘orEast. | STEINWAY, CHASE GABLEK, BELUGH FLANO®, int are struug all long the outer ee of ais | whe, uncoussious thet he wus cousployous, was | oo¥ considerable Gietet ce esqueier® Tenchi | tour portfore yard arm, ca Pand wus | “Ob, Dacle Mose, after the lecture you ; cee OES Mae eam, accades or gather together in groups to solace | PULTE , Say im bis, uiual | nonchalant 1 eapeapgrane Engineer y on the deck of that vessel. Feeling | given me I feel quite ashamed of myself to n2ote os their feminine souls with bite of gomip, aus ‘was ou tiptoe and eonver, | Gteene und Naval Cadet Wi Nee ret rene tT | araeeaaert tee ke dit 40 Kanon RE ider- i tion half port fore and jow chile 01 i “ . ’ 2 vain WoBMurrEne, ‘Tux HOURS OF TRADE. sation was “maintained | with "comider- dl faabag may nay 08 the ded of tee pat nS foe | nach Ton ete des dom ’ x "e Xo Chilian—high vc wu. wnether clad in| The best shops donot open before? or 10| Sblc di@culty | by ‘oouivany toms 7 y funate enough to catch the bight of line cast T'll be on ban’ de fust Sante ae OF, Secratively pbed, im roval |o'clock im the morning, because before that | sling Ww ‘his Garcless way, when presene Lnereenreiyy Selgunan snmestyieeatnmnens ine, stood or a Berother chareh for. that mation wr.Or | hour there is nobody to’ patronize them; then | an expluxion took place and the, company, wee | See ee pene ene Eitling the hat, making the sign of tke eno | they are closed between 6 and 7 p.m. to allow | dumbtounded to "ace pyrotechnics” fasbies ota ners z ‘spencerary’ le eee ng the hat, one OF : muttering an Ave’ ‘Maris. The” popalar | the clerks and proprietors time to dine as in prep mee bac ral lg ype “A their the - POORATIVE ANT. Panes forte. deference to religious shrines is shown | many Mexican ‘ities, where the post oftice rer | War of laugh was geod grt ea every occasion. In the front wall | maine leched: mont of of one of Rantiagos dences, neur the main e: niche. in which stands an i i ‘co thas the | Cuvored that a mistake bad been madp andthe midsomest rent | employes may uot be bmnindy ae their ‘ty ra . a i sta o rh . weze of the Blessed | might, an the heaviest part Of the retail tants | expecting to see biue, with a satin mantie | accom 3 ¥ clothed in gold embroidered a 1 star-bespangled, crowned | On With « halo of gas jets. An iron grating protects | ernment “pa heavy the figure from the street, butevery day boaguets | ing pile, which was formerly the abode of ard garlands of flowers, rich gifts and widow's | president of Rites, and votive offerings of various sorte are | for public good in @ variety of showered upon it Ly people in bodily or mental | eh <. distress, who believe that trustful appeals tothe | ively Holy Mother wiil bring speedy mitigation of | and their intirmities. The story is that some years | they ago the senora of the cass. alady of wealth, being | of the government buildings—not even ex- i fi i ‘ H 3 i if Hi BEOUND-HAND PIANOS. —A larve Naete, ‘sei wat ks Ey ! = Co., FEE ATTORNEYS. # ‘the game,” he replied. fe EE Ee Yery ill, made a vow to the Virgin that if herhealth | © is the new office close move.” R ae restored she would slow her gratitude in | with it. tiled door, gilded Peciiieg nae | health?” Sell, I do not care for a ‘stale mate,’ re- this manner: and there stands the more and | walls of marble. By the waking ; i the es ae SE ae more venerated image, an effective illustration | of the post office the traveler , JH game of the power of prayer and tue senora’s piety. | two anexpected ghosts standing before Citizen. bim > It i« said that maa: umarble statues ere Tovalted aid all goed Sentiagoeng Lif | Abraham ‘Lincela-bolle ot