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14— ENVOYS TO DETROIT. Representative Citizens Who Will Bear the Invitation. THEY WILL GO TONIGHT. Chairman Douglass and His Associates— Sketches of the Men Who Will Invite the Grand Army to the National Capital in the Name of the People. Y lp COMMITTEE APPOINTED BY THE citizens of Washington to go to Detroit and invite the Grand Army of the Kepublic to hold its sunual eacampment in this city will depart on their mission tonight. They will leave on especial car attached to a special train for Detroit, which will pull out of the Pennsylvania station at 7:40 o'clock tonight. They will break- fast at Watkins Glen tomorrow morning and after spending three hours there will resume their journey, stopping again at Niagara Falls, where they will remain until 11 o'clock at night. Then taking their car again they will reach Detroit at 7 o'clock Monday morning and go direct to their headquarters at the Russell House and begin their work. The committee will present its card to all whom they meet at Detroit, as follows: Citizens’ Committee On Invitation to the G. A. R Washington, D. C., 1892. John W. Douglass. Isadore Saks. John Joy Edson. O. G. Staples. Edwin Bi. Hay Louis D. Wine. 8. B. Hege. Geo. W. Driver. Frank Hatton. Chas. T. Wood. Robert A Parke. jeadquarters: Parlor A, Russell Honse. os ‘hs beck of this card, is printed the fol- = Reasons Why Washington, D. C., Should Have the G. A. K. Encampment In 1892. It fs the nation’s city. It is the most beautifal city. It is easy of access. It has accommodations for all. It has the broadest and best paved streets. It is surrounded by battlefields. It is filled with war me It extends » hear! Every old soldier wants Patriotism should rise above local pride. | The merabers of this committee need no in- | troductior. to Washingtonians. They are weil- known men, active in business and in public movements. They were not selected, as one might su; from looking over the array, on poead aan good looks, but because atsof the city . who would be styled “hustlers” if they lived west of the Mis- | sissippi. The committee represents not onl the business men of the city. who guarantee an ample fund for the entertainment of the en- eampment in case it is held here, but also the government of the District of Columbia. | CHATRMAN DOTGLASS. In the person of Commissioner Donglass, who Will act as spokesman for the committee, the terans of the Grand Army will gaze upon t representative of the majesty and might of the District government. As president of the board of District Commissioners ie may be said to be the mayor of the city. Mr. Dx of Philadelphia. When b rents moved to Eric borhood and professional life were spent 1969 he came to this city, having received’an appointment as first deputy commissioner of internal revenue. Subse-yiently he was placed | at the head of the office. retiring to public life and the practice of his profession of the law in this city in 1475. He is thoroughly identified | with the interests of the city, and from the be- ginning bas a lively interest in the move- ment which its object the meeting of | the national encampment in this city. He is} the chairman of the citizens’ committee and bas presided at all the meetings and has given freely of his time to the work. Mr. John Joy Edson is not only one of the leading business men of the city. but he isa Veteran of the late war, that is in point of ser- ¥ice. but not in years. He was born in Ohio, served through the war, although he was a mere boy when he entered | the army.and afterward came to this city, tak- ing a position in the overnment service. He has for a number of Years past devoted bim- | self to building associa- tion interests and ie known all over the try as one of the most successful man- agers of enterprises of that character. He JOUN JOY EDSON. is also identitied with | several of the leading finsncial mstitutions of | the city and is always ready to promote public fit the cit: twin B. Hay is a bright member of the Pr; who is always cal'ed upon when persuasive effort is needs: nian by birth, but has ved here since 1438. In 1873 he received the degrees in Columbian University and one vear Inter be graduated ia the law department, since which time he has been engaged in the practice of his profes- He has been en- Jumbian University also the Georgetown College. Endowed with e@talent for music and ‘eB. Bar. literature he has been active in many of the sucieties of the city. He was president of the Washington Operatic Association and for a number of years president of the popular Shakespeare Club, the oldest literary organiza tion in the city. “He is now the grand exalted ruler of the Henevolent and Protective Order ef Elks. ‘To this position he was unanimously chosen at the meeting of the Grand Lodge in May. He i» al-o the past exalted ruler of Washington Lo ige. has also attained high dignities in the Masonic order and is a staf? ef of the National Rifles. Bir. 8. K Hege, who is also. prominent and active member of the committee. i a rising Failroad man holding the respensible position of city passenger agent of the Baltimore ard Ohio railroad. He isa Pennsylvanian by birth, having made his debut in Marion, Franklin county, thirty-six years 0 next Wednesday. fe was well educated in Franklin, where be afterward taught school himself for four years, graduating into the commercial de part- ment of Dickinson Col- is connection local passenger agent at Chambers burg. His merits, however, were too large for town like Chambersburg (the railroad mag- nates themselves recognized that fact), and in April, 1887, he was transferred to the capital in ‘the capacity of assistant city passenger agent, nd later on the assistant was dropped from his title. He is a hard worker and will talk the beauties of Washington fora G. A. R. gueamagry ment as eloquently as he can those of his o veatibuled trains. ‘Mr. Frank Hatton, the editor of the Post, has been connected with the newspa; nearly all bis life, and though has oceupied many posi- tions of trust and im- portance. in Cambridge, O bio, the earl plunged into the field of journalism with a bun- | Ule of papers under his needs deliver. later he beg: th | man and local editor of | his father’s | Cadiz Kepublican. | left the case at seven- | teen to enter the army when the war broke out, | and he came outalieutenant before be was twe pris controlling interest in the Burlington Harkeye. | | Mr. Hatton was appointed fi and in September, 1844, he was appointed Post= master General to succeed Gen. Si | newspaper work in Chicago, New York and Washington. est in the movement from the st given his time and lots of energetic work in that house in connection With Willard’s. ' THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTO - N. D.C. SATURDAY. AUGUST 1, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES. Blew F. Mtarty Welerrece. wail ai etisve CHER NIus Tt 2 Oe a Sea! ZA ar Bnae THE 1 offi He was born April 28, 1546, and at age of nine he of arm which he must )) A year J to learn printing business nd at fifteen was fore- the paper He > enli FRANK HATTON. city y. He was engaged in newspaper enter in Iowa until 1874, when he purchased a | t assistant post- master general by President Arthur in 1881, | quit Gresham. Mareb, 1585, he has devoted himself to the Col. O. G. Staples has taken an active inter- art and has | | of advancing it. He was born in Jefferson coun- ty. New York, and in| early life was engaged in Commercial enter- prises and then in the real estate business in wn. Sub he became in- terested in hotels snd he came to this city to take charge of Willard’s Hotel, which he has condticted with so much F success. He is public spirited and « man of recognized business states. judgment. He has re-| ed the Riggs House and will conduct S of the offic positi south of Baltimore and His maternal grand of the Grant locomotive. B. Parke, colonel second infantry, and a cousin West Point Garfield shooting and was one of the first to a Col ber Washington Light Infantry corps and of the National Rift An effective worker in any cause in which he the committee which goes to renresent this business interests of the city tire fife. Loudoun county, Va., engaged in commercial j business. | Fear and is a member of the fiem of B. H. Warner & Co. Mechanics’ | Georgetow Mr. Isadore Saks is the junior member of the firm of Saks & Co., the house of this city. ice here. In 1878, after the reorganization he was promoted to his present m, with supervision of all the section st of Atlanta. her was the inventor He is a brother of J. John Gen. Parke, late commandant of Mr Parke ‘was a witness of the ehend Guit ‘Mystic Shriner, jambia Athletic Club and Knight Templar, a member of the an honorary mem- ists, Mr. Louis D, Wine will add strength 0 Detroit. He has = identified with the gy ractically his en A native of came here ' when ite a young man and For some * be has been in al estate business He is a director Farmers and Bank of the LOUIS D. WINE. ful clothing Mr. Saks is Baltimorean by birth, but he can hardly be blamed for that, for assoon as he was old enough to start out for himself he came on to Washington and he is likely to stay here, too. He commenced the clothing business in this city in 1872, when he was but nine- teen years old, and remained athis avenue store with but slight interruption until he VITATION j here. Mr. Wood is not a member of the PLATE Mr. Charles T. Wood, a member of the com- mittee, is a life-long resident of the capital city. He is well known and highly respected among business men. For thirty-five years he was business as @ builder and: contractor and in that capacity superintended work on many public buildings, ‘Two or three years ago, having acquired a com- petence, he — retired from active business pursuits. Hisson is the well-known — liveryman on Mstreet. Mr. Wood has a pleasant home on New Hampshire avenue. He takes much interest ments for its benefit, and is enthusiastic on the subject of having the G. A. R. encampment -R., but has many acquaintances among the veter- ans, and is on the list of “honorary members” of the post in Bloomsburg, Pa WASHINGTON IN 1892. The Attractions of the Capital of the | Nation. MEMORIES OF THE WAR. Washington the Center of a Region Made Sacred by the Valor of the Soldiers of the Union—In the Midst of Battlefields--Memo- of the Great Conflict. The citizens’ committee, when it reaches De- troit, can present claims for the cit ington that are irresistible. No other city in te CHANCELLORS: witte BATTLEFIELDS AROUND WASHINGTON. |tamous by the echocs of Mr. | | | | | | | | Mr. RB. A. Parke, who is one of the acti members of the citizens’ committee and chair- man of the executive committee, is one of the best known railroad men in this section of the country, as he has been for several years past in charge of the southeastern passenger department of the Pean- ‘The ¢ county, Pa., April MRR A PARKE. [954 and in’a thember of one of the oldest families of the keystone state. He is of Scotch descent, his father being au extensive land holder. ‘At ihe age of seve! teen he entered the banking house of Parke, Smith & Co. Two years later be became con. nected with the Pénnsylvania railroad in the general superintendent's office at Altoona, and & year later he was ted to special agent at Baltimore under the general superintendent of the Northern Central and Baltimore and Po- tome railroads in charge of looking up claims lamages. In the fall of 1875 he was appointed at about to the charge of the ticket joined his brother at $16 7th street in 1877. In August, 1885, a copartnership was formed between him, his brother and Mr. Geo. C. Henning for the purpose eeiaaad cule auale tubsias Wak seni Beat in the clothing business before in this city. space is familiar to every one. M Dri York, bavit ber, 1837. 1 of continuing bor 1 big building at 7th street and Market George W. r is ‘a native of New been born in that eity in Decem- je was engaged in jumbing business until 1862, whon he came here and went into the restaurant busi- new, in which he has been most successful. Mr. Driver bas taken an’ active part in many movements look- ing to the general wel- fare of the city and has beens member of sev- eral inauguration com: mittees as well as of com- the land possesses such attractions. The on- campment if held here will be the most nota- ble gathering of war veterans ever held. Washington, as the capital of a great nation and as the most beautiful city in the world, is an object of patriotic interest and curiosity to every American. Thousands come here every year merely to visit the city and to see for themselves the historic and attractive features with which the place abounds. . Here ono ean come in contact with the great ones of the Iand— thoso prominent in public life. ‘The city is as- sociated with the past of the nation. From the time of John Adams down to the pres- ent this city has becn the official home of the Presidents. The site of the ‘city was selected by Gen. Washingtor was 9) mn, ite Proved by him and he watched over ite early development anxious solicitude. Here the latesmen have lived and have carved out for themselves lotty niches in the temple of fame. There is hardly a locality. in ee ee ee ee ae some that is rendered immortal in history. With such associations and such memories and lor renewed and intensified in the city and all move- | | he took the oath of office as his successor. thousands of citizens each year find it so. (They come singly and in groups and then they come in great bodies and annual meetings are held here of learned, political, social and_philai thropic organizations. ’ Washington is big enough to receive all that come and furnish hospitable entertainment. Spacious and well- kept hotels provide accommodations for a vast army. It is especially fitting that the Grand “Army veterans should” hold their annual reunion in this ci The men of the Grand Army made a big of the history of our country, and much of | their work as “history makers was done in the vicinity of Washington. Washington was a center of interes: throughout the war, and xear the city are many famous battlefields. Some were considered uncomfortably near at the time the battles were fought. The city is full of memorials of the great conflict. On every hill around it are the footprints of the war. A few miles away is the field of Bull Ran, where the soldiors of the Union got their first stern lesson in tho war and where it was clearly demonstrated that it was no mean foe d to meet and that the quelling of the lion was no trifling summer's task. All about the city are points that will be remem- bered with interest by the patriots who has- tened here in 1861 at the call of President Lin- coln, by the hundreds of thousands of veterans who passed through this city on the way to the front in the years that followed or who were camped in sight of the Capitol dome and by the members of the great armies who marched in triumph on Pennsylvania avenue in the grand review in 1865. CHANOES sINcE 1865. Many of the veterans who participated in the grand review have never visited Washington since they marched up Pennsylvania avenue and past the President on that memorable ocea- sion. Those who then saw the national capital | for the first time felt « thrill of pride that they | had been instrumental in saving the seat of the t from destruction and preserviny ct. That was over a quarter o} acentury ago and when they come here again next year at the national encampment of the ‘and Army of the Republic these veterans will |hordly recognize the city which they then thought beautiful. It was beautiful then only in ite plan and | Possibilities. There were the same broad ave- | nues and ‘streets, but they were unpaved and unimproved. The government buildings were | unfinished. ‘The treasury was about half its present size, and at the southwest corner of 15th street and Pennsylvania avenue, opposite | Riggs’ Buak, stood the ruins of the stoall brick building that had been occupied by the De- partment of State, and which had been made vard’s little Lell. “Tie old War and Navy buildings were upon 17th street, und the great incrense of the clerical force, which had become necessary during the war, had overflowed into ever: house on the opposite side of the street. The | Corcoran Art Guilery building was occupied by the force of the quartermaster general, and on the northeast corner of 154 street and the ave- nue stood a three-story brick building with a row of one-story frame additions along the avenue, which were the headquarters of the department of Washington The patent office was unfinished and blocks of marble filled the then vacant spot on G street between 9th and 10th, through which ran a stream that has since been taken up as a sewer. The noble approaches to the Capitol | had not been conceived in the brain of the architect and the lofty Washington monument stopped at an clevation of a littie over 100 feet and looked like an abandoned ruin. The Smithsonian Institution had aot recovered from the effects of the fire which nearly destroyed this beautiful pile, and the National Museum building was in the womb of the future. South Washington was then an island sepa- rated from the rest of the city by the old canal, whose fetid waters, filled with sewuge and refuse, spread malaria all over the District. There were no handsome stores upon Pennsyl- vania avenue, and where the Palais Royal_ now stands was the Kirkwood House, where Presi- dent Johnson was boarding on the night that President Lincoln was assassinated, and where Judiciary Square was then disfigured by the District jail, which, with its inclosure, occu- the northeast corner of the ‘The old Capitol prison held its captives on Ist street east, instead of the handsome dwel- hngs which now meet the eye in that locality. All about the city were barracks ‘occupied by soldiers of the veteran reserve corps, while hospitals filled with sick and wounded from the long marches ond flerco battles of the army were numerous, How di:ferent from the city that the soldier knew in 1865 when he marched over the cobble stones of Pennsylvania avenue of that day or floundered through the mud in regions then desolate, now famous for their beuuty! One has but to get a glimpe of the lofty dome ofthe Capitol, glistening white in the summer unlight, the wide and smooth avenues stretch- ing away trom it; here and there in the dis | tance a colornade or a stately facade; the coloseal shaft of the Washington monument overtopping all; streets handsomely built up. shaded with myriade of trees, making the city | look from s height like @ vast park, and paved | with lengues aud Icaguee of asphalt; a city that has redeemed the promise made by the gener- ous founder, and thereisno need for a enumer- ation of the attractions of Washington. IX THE MIDST OF BATTLEFIELDS. While the city itself is full of interest to the veterans of the war, it has a farther claim upon their attention, for'the reason that it is about the central point in the section of country where the heaviest fighting and the most en- gagements took place. In the east the bloody ground was between Gettysburg, Pa., on the north and Suffolk. Va., | on the south, the western limit on a line drawn | through Lynchburg and tho eastern through | Norfolk. In this district, about 150 miles broad and 200 miles long, occurred thirteen battles, | Where the Union loss in killed outright num: bered over £0,000, and the aggregate of Union killed and wounded was over 120,000." In the lesser €1 ments and in probably 90,000 more wore mumibared pik ake castalties. Here were fought the te of Gettysburg, Antietam, Malvern Hill Win- chester, ficlds of glorious memory to the vet- erans who conquered there. Here the Monitor bore down the aferrimac and led off in a new era of naval warfare. Here, was Ay mattox, Back and forth over this are! armies con in the cam) of the Hteppabannoek, the. (> vasions of Maryland Pennsylvania, the Shenandoah and the Wilderness. with splend Ssh ees x, a interesting Place to visit, Hundreds of Here “‘Little Mac" rode along the serried lino with animating jesture by Antietam’s reddened Hood. Here Phil Sheridan dashed from Win- chester down to save the day at Cedar creek. Here the heroic sailor, Morris, went down the ill-starred Cumberland, shouting when sum. moned to surrender to the Merrimac, “Never! T'll sink alongside!” Here rose and fell the battle shouts of Hooker and Burnside. Here | Meade, with calm equipoise, guided the hosts | that fling back rebellion’s foaming tide. Here Grant led the exultant hosts of Lee and Longstreet by his ever memorable battle or- ders, “Forward by the left flank!” The graves at the Union dead in this conse- crated arena number over ninety thousand, and tens of thousands more who there received their death stroke were borne north to their last resting e. The pisins of Manassas, the vales through which the Shenandoah rolls its placid streams, the banks of the Potomac and the James, were altars whereon the rich blood of patriots was shed as libations to the god of nationality. It is buta pleasant day's excursion to the field of Antietam, where McClellan checked the first confederate invasion of the loyal states and retrieved the disaster of the second Bull Run. Itisashort and easy journey to the great battle ground of Gettysburg, where the tide of war was turned. In this region, all within the radius of a day's journey, lie all the famous fields on which the Army of the Poto- mac fonght its great battles, from Bull Run to Appomattox. An inviting steamboat ride down the river and bay, past many points of historic interest, brings one to Hampton Roads, where the Monitor and Merrimac fought and naval warfare was revolutionized. Then the ground of all of McClellan's opera- tions against Richmond in 1862—Yorktown, Seven Pines, Fair Oaks, Gaines’ Mill, the seven days’ battle, Savage station and Malvern Hill— can all be ‘easily reached and trayersed from Washington. Fredericksburg and Chancellors- Ville of tragic memory are close at hand. ‘Then | the men who were with Grant in 1864 and 1865! ‘They can again visit the wilderness where such hot fighting was done—Spottsylvania Court House, Cold Harbor, Five Forks and all the fields where the great captain commanded, and Richmond, whose fall signaled the death of the confederae; Harper's Ferry, teeming with its War associations, und the Shenandoah valle: quite as famous for its memories of Sheridan and his men as for its beauty, lies within the | limits of a day's excursion. To write of the battles that were fought on fields near Wash- ington would be almost to write @ history of the war, MEMORIALS IN WASHINGTON. In Washington itself are countless objects of special interest to the war veteran. Here in the War Department are kept the trophies won by the boys in blue in those great battles for the Union. In other muscums are preserved many relics of the war. Here are monumen tothe commanders whose memories are r vered by the men who fought with them—M Pherson, Thomas, Rawlins, Farragut. In this city Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, Logan had their homes. Logan’s tomb is i the Soldiers’ Home grounds, overlooking the city from the north, and Sheridan's tomb is on the crest of the heights at Arlington, overlooking the city from the south. Both of the great commanders sleep surrounded by their old comrades in reat national cemeteries. It was in this city incoln, patient, magnanimous, true to the soldier ‘during those four troublous years, guided the affairs of state with a wisdoin that scems almost inspired. It was here that the great warcouncils were held. The theater where the assassin fired his fatal shot and the house where the martyred President died re- main as objects of mournful interest. city which have a vivid interest fo: the veteran of the war. > A SILVER ITATION. The Elegant Plate to Be Presented by the Committee to the Encampment. The encampment at Detroit is the twenty fifth (‘silver’) encampment of the Grand Army. The invitation of the citizens of Wash- ington to be presented by the committee that goes to Detroit takes the material form of a beautiful plate of silver suitably inscribed. This arrived last night from Philadelphia, where it was engraved, and was exhibited to- day at Saks & Co.'s. The shape of the plate is generally square, but the outline is broken into graceful curves. Some of these curves, leaving the bor are continued around into the plate, forming panels for the various vignettes that are etched into the silver and oxidized. The Capitol in perspective occupics the top central panel, with the Washington monument looming up in the distance. In & sunburst radiating from the dome of the Capitol is the legend, gton to the Grand Army of the Republic, greeting.” The center panel, oval in form, contains the invitation, in bold script. as foliow The citizens of Washingtcn cordially invite the veterans of the Grand Army of the Repub- lic to hold their annual encampment for 1892 at the national capital, assuring them of hearty welcome and attractive entertainment in a city rich with historic memories of the war. | Through the Commissioners of the District of Columbia they tender them the freedom of the city, the key of which accompanies this invita- tion. | Then follow the names of the Commissioners -of the District of Columbia and of ti tive committee representing the citizens of Washington. At the left of this panel is a large figure of a boy in blue of 1861 patrolling his beat on the banks of the Potomac. On the opposite shore the hillside is dotted with an encampment of white tents. Balancing this figure, on the right, is another figure of the same boy in blue in 1892, in the uniform of the Grand Army of the Repubiic, the armless sleeve telling the story of sacrifice made for his country, aud the gray beard showing the lupse of years since he made his first encampment on the banks of the Potomac. In the lower left-hand corner is a shield, stack of arms, mortar and other imple- ments of war, and on the right the badge of the Grand Army lying upon two volumes, one the history, the other rofi of honor of those who fought in the greatstrife. An artistic group is formed in the lower center of the plate by a wreath of laure! and onk sur- rounding the names of the principal battles of the war, the bronze statues of Gen. Thomas and Admiral Farragut on either side representing the army and navy. The upper corner pancls are filled with vignettes of Mount Vernon, the home of the first great general of our country, and Arlington, a place made sacred to every veteran of the war, being. as it is, the resting lace of Sheridan, Porter and thousands of who fell upon the fields near Washing- ton. ‘The key which accompanies the invitation is seven inches long, made of solid gold, and is inscribed with the words “G. A. K., Washing. ton, 1892.” ‘The silver plate on which the in: tation is engraved and the golden key will be deposited in a sumptuously finished casket of Russia leather, lined with rich satin. The de- sign on the plate is the work of Mr. 8. H. Nealy. it really does not now look as if the accom- panyiug cut shows the design on the face of the plate. —<——<— Gertie White's Assailant Caught. Wm. Fielding, aged nineteon, was on Thurs- day night arrested in Canton, R J., for stabbing little Gertie White with a chisel in Johnston, Wednesday. He was fully iden- tifled and confessed and was held for trial. Search for him had been made in remote local- ities and clews were reported from all direc- tions, including Woonsocket, but he had fled no farther than the town adjoining the scene of the crime. There is little doubt that he is tho man who attempted to assault a little girl in Arlington, Providence, at an early hour Wednesda; ——__—+ee-—_____ ‘Cadets to Escort the President. Orders are expected to reach West Point inafew days for the corps of cadets at the United States Military Academy to participate in the ceremonies at the approaching dedica- tion of the new battle monument at en: Thus | are indicated some of the objects within the | SUMMER RESORTS. ATLANTIC C1IY, N. J. ATHANTIC ciry, x3 THE WINGFIELD. ‘Ocean avenue near the Beach. Mc:icrm conveniences. | Jeota.thareze Mm CASIO. = | EAR zae, | HOUSE, Am beach end Reads wers aud #bruvt losic. Ter: Bo de KANSAS AVE. vest secoach. JAMES BRADY, P.O. £0,th,6, 3a (COS GRESS HA ia. Attentic City, N.J., Now open. Near the bea: b and ew & on pier. T.c. GILLETTE 210-2 Late Colonnade Hote OTEL ALBION. | ATLANTIC CITY, | Now open. Three minutes’ walk ft | grounds. Accommodates SW. 14 uy veckiy. | _*8-2m PS. ATTICK H°tD BRUNSWICK, ATLANTIC CITY, NS. PACIFIC AVE. BET. NEW YORK AND T NOW Rew and first-cless in CHAKLES € _™s25-3m Lat Ho™= CENTRAL, TENNESSEE AVE. NEAR PACIFIO, ATLANTIC CITY N. J. Newly farnished and enlarged. Now open }eEeo6w L. A. ROWAN, Prop. HoT cares ATLANTIC CITY, N. Jy Virginia aver bear the oceai, ‘Open ali the year. ol. JOHN M. CLARK. Jets, Ho?! Dena, fe5-im, OTEL EMERSON, sous AgLAXTIC crr ‘ uth Carolina ave. near the beach, 2223-2 SAMUEL J. YOUN OTEL IMP 1 Maryland Prettiest houses: ty the week, # wiyi0Sen Ho™= Es Avs Unobstructed vie N.3., now open. P ber Ly Portable rout 20 pieces en: Schieckit & Me! Sh CHa, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Ocean end Delaware ave. Now Open. 2m, JONAH WUUTTON, IR. Tie CITY, N. J, PACIF ; and thiproved. 1 to $2.00 per day. No diner house on the | se rates. Seud fur paupuiet. H. D.£AST LA apanio = [82 CHALFONTE, 1C CITY, N. J. On the Beach, with uneutparsed Oveau' View. Salt water baths in the Ludee. Send tor circular. | Ler FE. ROBERTS & SONS. Nitec 3 ‘open all the ye from Leach ; tern 2m 209-2: ‘THE RENBEKTON. Ucean . e13-2m ‘EALL of Tioga. PRE LINWoo. TTY, NJ, NEW York ave. ne: 1S convert nt to 5 Unde? new management | Reptentor KIGHT HOUSE. CAPE HENIC ig Doe ate dune . will PROP Rotel axty yards iro good outivck” FESS] CLASS BOARD AND ROOM, #7 PER WEEE; bine tree, Mrs. GE. JOHNSON, _ayte Coccaia: Beach, Vay Oc® Gham =, . OCEAN CITY, MD. As Bayard Taylor rem the Ata: NS trains frov, Baltan The velvet beach of Bioeguitces, no hay fever Dine $10 hote! dour tt four Bours. TLANTIC HOTEL OPEN JUNE 2. Books now open ai Hote, GEO RLINGSTINE, Proprietor, ASIDE HOLE. OCEAN CIT\, Mi OPEN Pow TH® Stason inven” pet ormation apply to JOHN TR: Proprietor, Oona € NPOKT, VA SHERI Beara bot and, Mi Sietate ratemy » ROCKER. ner and Prop. 7) A \P MILE PROM PORT © Toy. 8 for rent, @10 aul #12 TX PRIVAT sc vere el per day 1 COLE Propriet P-0., Si. Maryn to Ma, HOTEL, ST. MARIS COUNTY, ina, Pontinut, fishing, crave - muri) th aeanon "sith the doeab hog rom gem Wiliewe, 315 Tem ven ber wharf, foot of and Setarday- Moser 8, of the camer Lady Lake jeav h street, ‘Tu Th P {jcinding ome day board amd Wed to be landed at the Pout SPRINGS BEPPORD srEINos, BEDFORD, Pa HOTEL OPENS JUNEIS ‘Write for pamphlet on this ereat Resort andthe tai ous BEDFORD SPRINGS MINERAL WATER, my7am L. B. DOTY, MANAGER. WHITE SULPRUR SPH ick county. Va... will be open 13h * drive trom K. K, pringe. For ined ‘eeneraiiy a Address J. WATKINS 1K E Ki axes axconmmodate table. ‘Th srrings. Fine mineral bath be ery, bowling alleys, ten eait ball rooul eniawed thie pear. Fe fe pamph Tx SONS, Sun ANDOAH ALUM SPRINGS, VA., NOW to Visitors, accommodations wood co vii us ood ad rate J.B. FLEMING, Manager PRINGS ~MAGNIFE cent shade. elevant tutidines 7 : > fair charwes. “Cire [Wikre at Breutano's, 1015 Feuueylvania ave Addsess a Mae sels New Winds: BION, ATLANTIC Cli THE LARGEST OTL Open all the your. CHARLES McGLADE. = MARYLAND, OCEAN E z Atlantic Clip, Ni J. mew Bouse; wew furuitures jectric Veils, Lathe, &e. myi4- Su ¥. 5. OREM, Prop. and Manager. 7PuE OKTENTA AURORA, WiST ‘W Kesoxt . sunble rates. Bend for 2 SHAFFEK, proprietor, MOUStAls SILw HOUSE. AtiionA, W.VA, 2M now open; elevation 3,000 feet; pure sir, delight: ul scenery, «ood board, larwe room ‘fait powling,crivius and suddiehurees, JON A- LA | | ‘PE Shin . | tucky are. ‘Open gun Noveuber 1. “For information apply Koom 10. 614 F | MoT. SOUTHALL, Manaver. my21-tun ‘PP HE STODDART, CORNER IL oar Araya 4 INOIS 3 bi iret Referen 3. ag L SMALL & Sc Waslunet CITY, NI EAR THE BEACH. M. WILLIAMS. ELET, ATLANITC CITY et. New York and Kentu per day; jean ‘pee WEELING ToS, OCEAN END OF KENTUCKY AVENUE, ATLANTIC CITY, OPEN THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. _3e20-2m___M. A. & H. 8. MILNOR, Proprietors. nt. All modern improvements, nj WM. APPLEGATE. Trop. SBURY PARK, Directiy on the bea. 4 ‘ow open.’ ‘Vor rates, dixerazis aud iuzormation ad | dress THE COLEMAN HOUSE, ALERED 8. AMER, Room! Clerk. SBURY, PARI Sanitation: Ka: Lops, teni Perwor tabie season. Upen June 8 to October formerly of Wasuington, D.C. (ASBURY PARK, i ICTORIA. i Family hotel; fronting ocean, lighted by eas and electricity ; artesian Water; all wodern haproveuentes superior table abd appuintwente, teraus moderate. “myis3m = NO8Woon HALL, ASBURY PARK, N. One block from ocean. Under supervision of Mrs. E, A. HUMPHREYS and fis Mok. SMITH-wul-scgw2> ‘PRE BELDEN, Athiave. near Kinsley ot A. B. WASHMOOD. iuideniade i. SEA-SIDE—JERSEY COAST. HOTEL convaia, BELMAR, N. 3. Fifteenth Season. Finest location on the coast. Hotel open after June 5. For circular, terms, &c., address FRED. E. FOSTER, Manager. y2-Ln rat Hui Foam, Bin Reise noun Shetceload stet Somimuteairoy Wanye Rey nly. .'W. GREEN. Proprietor: Terie, 90 per week? Ealidren ani serve S MOUNTAIN HOUSE, LOCATED i Fors" HES oe RY. Wo VAL: ) feet above town and rivers railroad station porticoes ubsurpessed. table ULB's MORRELL HOUSE, BARP! PERRY, pli ket. ow, Washington, D0. ire. MM. KOLB P my Ptoeeah HA - VEIT. Proprietress, from June & to October 1 Tera 1. BU per Week. uy 18pm HIS ESsick — HEALTHIEST “MOUNTAIN resort im America, Write for puive pain let. H.M. Essick. Prop., 2316-10 ___ Highiand'Lake, Lycoming Go.; Pa, VW 08 DER Wares. ANEW ERA AMONG VIRGINIA’S FAMOUS BOT, WARM AND HEALING SPRINGS. A standard cance railway now under construction by the Chesape. ke and Obio Vatlway Company. from Covinst.u, Va. tothe Kot bprumws will be coupleted early iu Adrust the ave been greatly umproved and ere now open cor the recephon of wurst Bxtepsive im ments, coLsisting of ew Lathing vai ud beW hotels, will be made im the Bear F. F. V. Limited” leaves Washt herives at the stibes sation ag 840 ot like with dina car, leaves “Washe wat Wp. and arrives at the apringe stato Dt wan lo. ations, descriitive pamphiets and full ion Bay be obtained CCeeapeane and vet offices, S13 aud 1421 Penn. ave. oF MISC POREST GLEN IN a The most Rewutiful aind comfort inutes trom the city. “It is open for expectable taulies for the have agreed to f ab summer may Le spent comfortably. be Mabacement of G. SMITH WORMLF: unter ti Jy 22-108 UMMER RESORT Sl reoren June 13, Has wel shaded lawn. fine motntaia water, ot patie. orth Scenery and latge roomie “Address” M DELI 3 Tiaeerstown, Ma. ENECA LAK OSG bonst Horr: ~cear Watkins Glen). Nomosquttoss, rowiins, arciry, teunia, boating. Lethe ine and fishing: good livery’:a Brst-cless orchestras Weekly hops, table audservice Unsurpassed: trabsrente ver day’ and upward. Special rates Tor families ‘Address HAKIISON 8. DOWNS, my2S-cosst Long Point, N.¥.. on Senece Lake VILLE ROAD, TWENTI “unutes irom, Was'imston by - euallytown ‘electric mailway ;® cool au, Piece for ladies and gentlemen to spend suevening Enc “enjoy the best of dimers: rare atop at the dot Jtwelve minutes. C- KIKKWOOD. dyin W DLAWS. ROCKVILLE MD WILL Rl Opened for receytion terms apply at the CLARESDEN MOTEL, 14th and New hurk ave. per ; &e. D* bx. 464 C ST., BET. 4 AND 6TH STS. ¥.w., ‘The well-known ladies’ physician, can be consulted daily from 10to Land Sto®. Prompt treatment. aya Cc 'SULTATION FREE! CONSULTATION / Specialist im wale and frmale discuses and $f skin. fice LoursSto li «me 307 “a vers Seton Vt. ‘The cadets aro to act as an escort for the President. ————— Manley Will Be Milliken’s Rival. It is said that Hon. J. H. Manley, postmas- ter at Angusta, will be a candidate to represent Congress for this district. Gov. Burleigh is al- ready in the field, as is also Milliken; the t incumbent, who wants a renomination. {tis said Mr.Blaine favors Manley’s candidacy. ‘The Misery in Newfoundland. The steamship Portia, Capt. Ash, arrived at New York from Halifax yesterday with a number of cabin passengers on board. They ‘say that the closing of the lobster canning fac- STE ee aro BO is condition of aififs could be oxaggersied. seems ‘EPTUNE HOUSE, BELMAR, theocean. N JBBEXTON VILLA, CAPE May, N. 3. ocean. ‘Has iarge piazzas abd ‘sun parlor. with ail §odern convenionces, Sjccial Fates to. faiiiles for ‘HE ALDINE, CAPE MA’ cA ‘First house from the beac Peposite het and cold ‘Water baths.” Open ail 3015-2m T™, STOCKTON HOTEL, CAPE MAY, N.J. ‘LONGPORT, N. 3. Directly on the beach. Hot and cold sea baths. Un- obstructed ocean View. fishing and sailing. IRE, SPRING LAKE. N. J. beach. | First-class t ‘Artesian water. ‘my18-3m HE “CARLETON,~ ‘SPRING LAKE BEACH, N.3. AKIBBKUOKE INN. VENTNOR, N- J. ‘The new resort, one iuile below Atlantic Ties, he season. Mire. J. A. MibkS. " nyO-2un,J 702m PHEODORE MurLiEk. ¥.'T: WALTON, Proprietor. HE ABERDEEN. cre JAMES 31; MOURE. OTEL ALLA’ Hood E. M. RICHARDSON. June 1. rates for June and pe Ty tn dS HINKBUS, Propricior rey Sc. SEA-SIDE—NEW ENGLAND. W orrsony, Xx. KINGSWOOD HOUSE, WINNIPISEOGEE LAKE. June 20. New Hee ae Job ek wows SEA-SIDE—MISCELLANEOUS. RED AND BE we = SE.—DK. BROTHERS, 905 B betore me and made oath ihat BiLe peor 2a PEE, Seirarar =i