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— THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGES. . n A HOUSE OF MERCY, |===!8=ivsem sates BOSTON'S GLORY GONE |Siraersrvettersnteoe samen | hoops teter" ia et Geaeeceles WRITTEN YEARS AGO. ‘The face conveys an ©: ion of, honor of denounced and f: cheerfa prengih, quite diferent tro that cite ek ae F being’ pablely —_— THE SUMMER OUTING. Delightful Places at the Seashore and Moun- tain te Spend the Heated Term. many of the pictures seen i Durned ina Russian translation at Berwick Lodge at Avon-bs-the-Sea, N. J., 2 P eroeniven. burg by thateminent head of the Greek chureh, | : A Former Philadelphia Belle as a The Muses Desert the Hub for Wash=| 05 isan cranes aT» rare anto-| © ccmriiment nee een! Letters From Famous Men Found in brews Locos | men Song q . i . Bound in morocco he has Mr. Lincoin’s OTRER WRITERS. ” Charles Wagner ts the manager and Samoel Sister of Charity. ington. Sawin the remarkable Gettye-| Among the best known of present writers an Old Oollection. monet ears yay they Peer - — burg speech and in another Grinty book one of | here are Prof. Fey, who has done « vast work Mormchuneteevenve, Atlantic City. The dear producing a ‘concordance to “Danter” Prof E lor equipmen BRIEF STORY OF HER LIFE. OUR LITERARY COLONY. BH overhendbat mn ped pects evel Gallsiaek, aces dock on politics wis} MEMORIES THEY EVOKE. dated Niagara, houre are heightened by ite delightful prox- | imity to the ocean. A furnished ten-room new cottage is offered at Berkeley Springs, W. ¥: leon if taken now. perfectly preserv Z sen ri ps ae ee ua | ine (Un ni, De . — ou erica anid aecaarast ‘mes Gua WSS Poets, Histerians and Novelists Gather at | added and two erased. Ine similar luxarious | solamos): be fea poeta Dr. Milburn, Men Whe Were Once Familiar Figures on p — aa ae Refage for the Sick the Capital—Dr. Bailey's Famous Quartet— pb yey be orem, a the “blind preacher:” Mrs. Logan, Mary J. the Streets of Washington—The Author of ae a a Welliew: Seer Bay and Nicolay at Home—Some Gossip | of the dedication of his volume queen, | Safford, the translator; Ward Lamon, Wi Gen. Proci ppeared the next morning. I Berkeley Springs, Maritana—Stortes of Mr. Gales—A Peom by before long and “ aie Boynton, Miss E. R. Scidmore, Julia Schayer, ng For all the advantages of fi: Il-water sem a. aac ee or A entee ymelored—O rem that hold Mrs, Frances Hodgson Burnett, just back from | Ms. Te ene tien : avis ar tae paakeon oer bathing the Hote! she at Dematone, sss ean wees han ares, or power of brain, or birth, wee en How I chall anticipate a| I., will be found an_ excellent ‘Written for The Evening Star. Sime Varta Dab Molly Elliott’ Ul and Thomas INCE IssUB OF | pleasant evening with Robt. W. Johnson, Pike, | for the summer hot ————— gm evcort. Wind snd waves obeyed his voles, OSTON'S NOSE IS| This fret verse is completely transformed by igren, lott Beawel — and the others.” In another letter heaays: | Newport and within an hour's ride of Narragan- Rio pe Jawerno, April $0, 1892. | Fire, at his pleasure, undid the mischief which te wabsequent interlineations and erasures, being | 2"? English, the New Jersey poet and suthor lest Saturday's Even- |] was much gratified at the kind message from | ®¢tt Pier. ‘The rooms in the hotel are large and Ny SISTER OF CHARITY | {t had done, so that bread which had been burnt Soeeeloretty __Peokes. | octal ty mags wacker on oc ecotate oh | 8 mow ia en ie Stam Iam in re-| the President, thoagh not greatly surprised, | STF, pomessing all the comforts that are te welt died the other das in| ‘Cinder in the oven was Cae I ‘Minerveand her troupe | Commonplace such as you or I or any- + We aree. ceipt of some letters of | “ince from the time I frst entered Congress our | Come to the summer tourist g vedia | 222 S0ft by his interference. barret-cap of blue stockings will | hoay Bs welts, into the radiant jewel of en eee e rae prlitical relations generails, and our alre-| Moderate rates, a splendid equipment anda the great Mivericordis | was a cure fot ali diseases of the head. continue for awhile, in| poetry that it is. The first two words in the FIRE AND WATER. thanks from your sub- | fations always, were more then y cordial.” | magnificent view of Gre ovene ure the ottmne- Hospital of thi city ‘THE HOSPITAL A POOR ONE. spite of the naeal fre- | original version are “Revered Victoria,” ® weak | gragder Johnson and Uncle R n scribers who remember | Here is a letter from Robt. Johnson, the Pred-| tater cme ial Ingleside, Konuck= avenue, whose true name if| But notwithstanding the supernatural powers reside there and | S#lutation indeed. In another verse we have a ; <= — the writers whose let-} dent's son and private secretary, whose sudden | Atimmeie eter The house stands within fifty given here would be/| of Padre Anchieta his hospital was a very poor a tonch of sychophancy as well as of common- pinedroramnes ters have outlived them | death from an orerdose of chloral caused the | fect uf the ocean. nnd is conden be N Beck. recognized by mans of | one, having neither ae “aang Ny thereabouts, as cats ees both of which disappear under revision. | 66.2 RUDDER JOHNSON DEY DONE TELL an < = peegret. A note from Mr. Leutze, written | py noi Newport, with tte great facilities for my readers, and whose | and directly overlooking the old eity burial Leesa ar saath aeperenlcanin Te det dey hex bin havin’ terribul tinuance of those long- | Empire.” regretting he “conere ran an noe | the perfect enjorment of thow ho desire to brief life (she was| ground, of which patients in their beds had a the center of literary] {¢qourgrestness, 2nd the care floods out dar in de wes'an’ dat milyuns uf buried epistles, which accept an invitatlon to some- | Ret Away from the city and ite barely thirty) was a re- | perpetual view and needed no further momento rf} production threatens to pts hy money an’ hundreds of lives done bin los’. ‘a ° . A letter from the Hon. Rebt. C.| Place to spend a vacation. No Nrkable blending of | 0% suggestions from thelr spiritual advisers. be permanently trans- For saght af good that sr be there.” “Dat's right, Uncle Rastus, you is bin tol’ de chronicle 20 much of | Wy; , dated Boston, April 8, i867, dewir-| Coukl be found there than, thr Ocean Howse, markable blending of Its accommodations being totally inadequate Washington. 3 . ri the past and evoke 20} ing to correct an onedine of mis. | fitunted on Bellevue avenue, adjoining the i tragedy. ferred to Washington. | and the amended copy reading, very much im- | fac’s, shuab. ing 16 specimen ble romance and tragedy. | ¢he 4f in the pre-ent century, de— Zz Pnsigpeb Da prmapredtial Peaster py 7 Very hate ncn aitibebea many agreeable though | print. In his address at the Peabody bane | ©8*ino, and in the midat of the inshisuabi But since she kept her | termined to remove the cemetery to Ponta da eb ‘dl neces See ee tte AC Laroe (aa menmeriok 1, uaeaeny sears space to|quet the New York papers made him speak | @4rter. On application the -proprietor will secret so well, desiring | Oju and to build new hospital on its site. | more prolific of books, even books of a miscel~| ang shonta your greatness, and the care Johnson—sartenly sorry tu heah it. An’ de my oacals ther installment of | Of Mr. Webster's loose and impressive ‘inne tail @ pomp hi t illustrating the advantages of nothing kinder of fate than that her former po corner stone of bee Vege — laneous and general character, than any other Totti rina ofa ng 700 time news done brung tu my mind de quesshun uf | Sive nd peed gions rect the | FUSse. instead of terse. In the same note | gummer life at Newport. The hotel opens az edifice was k in 1840, but it tool years 4] rm a ¥ m% wad a “4 une 25 fientity should bé lost under the cap and gown | to build tt poe ae gen nr ‘ eis of | American city, and here reside many of the best Is aught of ancient worth be there what's de mos’ ‘struetive, fire or watah? these memorials, ourvived says: ‘ou put no address on your card at of @ Sister of Merey, which she had worn | granite and bricks two stories high, forming » | Known authors, and here, about to be sheltered | Hay isa thoroughly domestic man, with a| ‘Der aint no quessbun, Uncle Restus, in my | ¥iters, and in some instances even the mem-| New York. ‘As soon as Mr. Peal beard you | But 100 feet trom the ocean stands the Motel P inant ory of them, though the names of many are in-| were there he sent in every direction to find | Stickney, on Kentucky wvenue, Atlantic City, through seven busy rears, Iam not at liberty | rectangular parallelogram and covering an area | ina magnificent temple of gray granite, is the | comely and sympathetic wife and four hand. | mind ‘tall. pete i piefa per meg pga llpeemtgre pteng iar yee Bear inviting you to thobonyust. | er: wea Sean Atlantic : % fo tell you much of her story. Only this: Ten | f 10,000 square meters. Nothing less than ‘my | largest library in this country, of 700,000 titles. some children to help him. And in a large; | ‘Is dat a fac’, eah?” them rest lovingly im the memory | We weresorry that you lost 20 brilliant am oc-| to $12 ser nee na tt ago she was the petted darling of one of [rope a hr caper The floors ee coal tu summer’ ind has’ ever? syitence a et See rie Mi temna Micoelltes | nace wisi koe man ae ee conventence. Fropristor, most aristocratic families in Philadelphia ~ | are of native woods, polished and oiled; the | Great poets aud historians have always beon | comfort and Inxury, I shouldnt des sents i Theve & letter focus Poel, John Mt. eatib et SENATOR BRICE'S KEW ROUSE. — The Atwood, an w daughier of wealthy parents. who yet reside | wainseoating of gay-colored tiles. There is a| attracted hither. The best-knotn poet of | worth of werk in a year if I were he. ‘You is wrong, Brudder Johnson. You is Baltimore, wi ‘Gicth;'nt ex ebvencel age Senator Brice has taken Mr. Corcoran’s house | sett 1 is prepares that city—beautiful, accomplished, gay and did marble paved entrance hall, a still | America’s first qua-ter of a century, Joel Bar- SCION OF DISTINGTISHED STOCK. wrong ez shuah ez you is born, man.” ape pata: the last year. He intro.|°" H street. Extensive alterations are to be | the wants of pe: charming. Like many another's, he mciget more splendid reception room and _@ gorgeOUs | jow, lived here at “Kalorama” and here he fin- Next door to Hay lives Henry Adams, sonof| “Dat I mought be, Uncle Rastus—dat I discos 46 Sas Witte = t Wallace, the eom- | ™8@¢ and it may be presumed there will be re- pn bite i bes a depheedie ppypi tag lege Ripon oh MIke dipemare ‘und chemical | ished and published America’s irstand longest, | Charles Francis and grandson ot Joka Quincy. | Honght be, | Dut what ie de reason dat you hes | oser ot “"Marfiana” and. oder operas, and | Ted some of the elegant entertainments which | PTI a perverted to 7 not are held. The dispen: {f not most brilliant epic, the “Columbiad.” | i125, one of our moet an and | fur sayin’ dat fire aint de mos’ “structive?” whos i tions can never ‘cease | have heretofore been given in that celebrated | “"™ wisely, but too well,” and clung to the object ratory form a very Inrge department. a8 ®| Here, during that first decade wrote Phili most productive authors oe 4 Aierans se exquisite compositions can T have before mean invitetion totae| The home-tike her choice despite the protests of her erage of 500 people, not ae _ Frensau and William Wirt, the moet miecerefth | the quality of his work is = better than the = Restle pobe sie res’ my reason = ren his Iotter ~ oe = grand ball gisen thee bythe Marquis de Mow. | 7 Eoends. ients, and : ‘histo : mantity. He may be said to be the r | on dat Book dat we mus’ "on. , and subsequently a ‘ “ ns Page ‘ The dream was short. She awoke to find | iif; medicine ena “miviee Pthere ak | soba tea oaks Gat pele eng eeeeiae ‘of Bancroft, who lived on the } “Dat’s right, Uncle Ranius, but whar duz de| from Mr. Wallace of acknowledgment of por pm ep wperedl pla we the victim ofa pretended marriage, her ating room. with an amphitheater of | his little table at the window of the Washington | Same street, just a block away. He has written Good Book say dat fire is mo’ structiver den | {%0r*_he so highly merited. Prof. Hewitt The cccoemnceeas Tac el hon supposed husband ‘bigamist and. forger, who | « for attending medical students, an instra- | Cinh, Iter the Seward mansion and. now the | ® dozen histories besides the “History of Jeffer- a 2 resided here for some years and his musical | °° § tilmeariy daylight. Gen.| in their praisce of it Addsem W.. W. Gronee fs now serving @ senteuce in prison. Over- oom, a chapel, dissecti te, & deed | property and residence of James G. Blaine, he | 0n's and Madison's Administrations,” in nine | Watab? compositions were so ‘numerous end popular rear wn fl mo FP . spat with shame and sorrow, she ro-| house and of coure’ the usual complement of | BFOperty anc dashos at life with a free pencil | Volumes, an entertaining and exhaustive work. | _ ‘Hex you done read in dat Book, Brudder | that they are yet found on the shelves Gail ing dancing men and obliged to wait for the la-| Washing! be be nounced the world and # refuge in the | store rooms, kitchens, reception Tooms, private | by which he won his greatest popularity, Ilis | Adams is a man of independent fortune and an Johnson, war it talke uf de pit uf ebberlas'in’ or a an Prmeet> | dias unter cur enve, bad to eed come etal to Pe acs mea rage od — * arms of the church. As a Sister o! ‘tments for the officers, nurses, £0., an extensive traveler. He bas twice been aroun re?” vas] adel pl ugust “ S aiae agen 1 Piney Chesapeake need tied earyren eect meal cect | Pare ene oe | ta mer eg ete ne tent lpr olor ae eet eto | Oey a Rastue,” 1st, commending tho afdrem in the /~ele| "epented attacks ors the wupyer table, which | Su recommendation of the helene te thes f apparent, as well as the most perfect order and and isan enthnsiastic investigator anda| cluded, he made something of astudy of the| ‘An’ whar is dat pit, sah?” fhorar, Be ooamemn people at the clove of | Ai things human must ent, the germanemdea, | Recbnre not, it canbe said that if you are Gucipline. ‘The vast building seems. to be all willer of force, He bas mach of the aitvcls| islands of the Pacific: espaisiiy the Foto | _“Dowe tn teens uf de airth, uf courde, | the war. and then breakfast was sored’ and. we lang | {ited of the capital city and dedre en — vasa | alls and doors and windows, as is necessary in| g24 attractive manners of his father. He was for come weeks a guest of Sir Charles | Uncle Rastus. Fur wharin de name uf sence A SPEECH OF RANDOLPH'S. ieacrich Sik toon ne eng ft ie not gen. | 0% Phere away from aephalt streeia, 2 “Santa Cas | so hota climate. Some of the patients, Ising aa scehes Scum Somebody, the British representative at Samoa, | 18 you gwine ter put a pit ‘cept down in dis| The mention of Mr. Rush reminds me of an erally known that Senator Brice is @ biblictna- | of tiete jonny se steamer a "in recent years must have | in their beds, can look out upon the beautifal = pent oe who exhiblted to him thone islands of conten: | airth? i Incident Col, Wm. G. Moore related to mein [ina He "hon that’ aime, an eet | thee lovely my a, taake vour home wuiet but zealous young sister, | fower gardens and waving palms of the innor @ war for the Union caused an effervescence | tion in all their various possibilities, He| ‘Jus’ so, aah; jus’ so. An’ dat pit uf ebber- sonra tage Spd igo oa Gee ten ae ee oint for =p suse the Sourt Yards, acd others have incomparable | of literary elsmente, I remember going down| organized a fleet of his own et Tahiti, consist-|las'in’ fire is bin burnin’ an’ "burnin’ fas | Connection . erggmcangsad wie, fons Wooster aa pan EE 7| been refitied and furnished newly thro 5 in the worid and the | to the lunch table in the Treasury Dopartment | ing of twenty or thirty ‘boats ‘manned by | thousan on! thousan's uf years, ain't it Brud- | In ¥r- Gales’ room if the old Intelligencer | contains some | very Sole inne " . hi . yond. The * | fm 1864and meoting there amembled by acci- | Natives, and ciroumnavigated that tropical ap-| der Jobuson?” s pear dle recsctcle? mor ging papers, | Of the binders’ art dating’ beck to fenturi 1 hotel Soturday, June 11. betag the nly ene coseng Shes of purely . sroriatics | dent Walt Whitman, W. D. O'Connor, the | pendage to the French republic, waking a care-| ‘‘Dat am a fac’, Uncle Rastus, shuah. and one Gag Siar Galen oie ne | bhss Ratan mee eet be ae ee Se ee Anglo-Saxon blood Struck by her =. mat ive $000 to Benes | novelist; Ed. Stedman, now the banker ‘poet Ri'sindy of its coral reefs and social customs, | ‘‘Dis airth ain't ‘stroy'd yit, Brudder Johnson, rag Some :: — Prpiceice ke pooe —pp ccicaiaaah wie. Trine, deplin ide Soa | Fl on Pacific avenue near barley aa ‘ber fab; and ta | Tite, Seeattn Mere hone tees gis Pierpoat, the reform poet, end John J; _ OMAREES TANMAN. Dat it ain't, de good Lawd be prais'a, aah.” | speech mate by John Randolph of in | cial engagements, is an'industrions and. intel- » Atlantic City, is a resort known to great many private rooms for the’ reception of jonsul a x Ocenpying a unique position in a world of r ‘ ail visitors as one of the best there. The loce- “Wall, den, brudder Johnson, hez yon sber | opposition to the war of 112." Col, Moore was | gent buyer uf rare books, and several ia. his) sll vistors ne o moe those patients who are able to pay for special | {© pereral volumes of good verse since then. | rain workers is Charles Lunman, equally | reed srs weeny ee oe ge Good Book, | then in the fice, hardly more) than a boy, | collection are only equaled in the great collec-| 1 it ons of, its most attractive features, For such the exceedingly mod-| Ratton wes va clerk f te tice Yamench weed ‘thence | 2uthor and artist. He has published twenty-| Whar it talks uf de ‘struction uf die airth?” though 1 TRE, bright one, ont | Ms Galen | engin, Sue country ud in, Earope, “The | %- Ratert & the propriste ae etate price is 21.50 et day for jvate room, 5 re BF eZ, % ah, ud ie ~ eg ” licine, constant attendance of Pailled arses | % te editor's sanctum. aie Le pene ep rari ge a tee is, embellishing them with engavings, portraits, | at Rehoboth, De., will reopen Smmviey, Dame aud gretiitons services of the best physicians DB, BAILEY'S BRILITANT QUARTET. scapes in every one of the statos enst of the |OUdone furgot dis fac’, dat on dat ‘casion it | band notes, taken #0 many years before. The Ppl rehglloeed pee Pind ig deg ad fel Beer plendidly situa in the city reer before the war the most popular | Sfissintpp! and in Canada, He was Daniel | omy tuk wa‘ah forty dave an’ forty nights tu| specch began with an Iteration, for, when he | in bY those whose means and tastes hem | capable of entering in a most satiatactory man- = 5 Hoes wel cme ates & *ppi a u ad do what fire bas bin thousan’s an’ thousan’s uf | arose to address the House he said he ‘claimed | to that enjoyment. Isaw kk store the | ner to its sts. Information regurding terme and widely = m novel was given to! Webster's private secretary durinj eying sats its pardoa, its patience and its pity” for what | Other day a choice edition of Bancroft's His-| can be ub at the Hotel Oxford in this aity. the light here—“Cnele Tom's Cabin”—and Dr. feel are eed TEDats de Lawi's trath, Uncle Rastus; but | he wee ring t2 say, When the proof was taken | tory, which had been sent to the Paris exposi-| ‘The appointments of the Hotel Elkton night for the reception of the distressed, and | Bailey of the National Era, in which it ap- SLA cite ecaee ae, TUNES a a | cn You! Muro’ mals, Gal X adn's saberdooeia ot | Aodes alee moealdl ee ntact “ tion, and that was being “enriched” with anto-| a uscue ity, are Gret-clams tee beeen em a ae mneanen ee | Netresh arr TeS ae get a EO Te | Ree aa te a dab glint nt) ois Ee aes | Gen homme eee hough is might here | Crore of al the peemtloant Metocieal porsen-| Se enh ual evap ssebon ty esa, Se Te cen a ne eteeltted: / Tiews 58 | Gy task buon aul smock peudanitre’ itteracr | called by Weabingioneving: the “notemate: | SH” See aoe Fe ee ee ec The en, | copy of the “London Stage ‘enriched with ie & a. wards \dren, pevthe lorer.” . 7 7 <8 each, and ts mane, a SANTA CASA DA MISERICORDIA. 3 i , el ee po pom bang tag gg cctine tha Gatore oe aie oan ae THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE GIZZARD. Tae, Published with that omission, and — aneehd nek 3 testes’ ta bo The safest and finest surf bathing in America course of time a friendship resulted as close as pretic N. Sonthvorth and Mrs. Sara ‘J. Lippincott | ing the eeoretaryship of the Japanose legation, EEE lays after its publication Mr. : ‘ the restrictions of the stern order would allow Richard “fad” is an ; Tt Explains the Digestive Ability of the Or- | wrote Mr. Gales and said the report of the | against ite indulgence. It is carried to ei j Can be obtained at the Princess Anne Hotel, "), which he had held for twelve year , he was pre- it ishmet one oO = nun and e wanderer from the far-| ew nations of the earth are not represented | Comes Greemrood”), Tet me tell you a word | Mbit, he had held for twelve yoars, li of Jnpan, | dtnary Hen and the Extraordinary Ostrich. | speech was CR ayy ema premenggy ilgeor| regen Tork’ tf tn ee Aectboear oo amar gies coed tee voy world ‘which she bad long since re-| @@Ong ite patients, and especially numerous are hor husband was a professor ‘in Bowdoin. Dr. | Imhia old-fashioned three-story residenos ‘on | From the Hartford Titses eit a A ee pag ee 2 0 pub-| found. The table is excellent and the service eaceh deme, gangs, hotee te bnily — can end English Annes, No sort of dis: | Bailey had read some of her fugitive tketches, | the heights of Gecrgotown he is stil Andustri-| A fow!s gizzard, where oo many lost articles | Fhen Mr. Rpt yee bon pegs pooch | lished in two volumes octavo, enlarged ‘bj en. | uuexcclled.” Thw hotel is onoe mow’ fot wear superior was aware that death had | tine’ Ss mi yon’ and kno she was poor, he one day sent her | 078 and writes and paints every day. From his | tarn up, is a curious trap as well as a necessary i: ings, wood i and every con- on. Burned the sitter for his’ own, During the | disease, and ono sees black faces and white, Pere pi tated Tg calf ntl gareavur for Decoration day from Mr. Randolph thet it had impressed itself | €™™ Cok - ns flow fa es aud brown, side. hours spent at the bedside of the dying girl I | Yellow f - +f dia | Slavery s for the Era.” She began the ned to appreciate to the fullest extent the je internal supervision of the 2 Samott ohocy™ which to esiondeA fo caves, Ee lives of self-abnegation led by the gentle | 18 in the capable hands of @ mother superior | (01° ‘of the ra that she 1 famous half a century ego. sisterhood in all parts of the world where euffer- | ®ud her flock of “sisters.” Each nun has recently a cart load of flowers. The lls of vital organ of the fowl. Diamonds, pearls, | upon his memory. ‘The speech waa published | ceivable iMustration until the two volumes Thove contemplating a vieit to Atlantic City : . coins, buttons, tacks, orange 1 and about | for the first timein the Intelligencer in 1945, | 0ctavo were swelled to six volumes | should write to E. i & Sons of the Hotel his parlors are hung with paintings by artiste everything else, save dynamite, have been | though delivered ta 1814, “Mtr Geles’ notes ot folio. To gratify this expensive taste | Mou alfonte for « deseriptive illustrated pamphlet. ; 5 . itten | Faluable works are sacrificed. A) pit ; = | chaies of o dacians aoc ae “of a ward. | ened it until it became 's Cabin.” QATH’S MULTITUDINOUS HOUR. found in the gizzards of fowis. wf tulowain tye pees (food bps {ibs botel is on the ocean front. hes see water fug and sorrow existe, and also to understand | ¢h speech in reply out by Mrs. Gales, # volume, | COPY, of the “Versailles Gallery” costing ©250 | baths and possesses all convenionoss, “Grace Greenwood” was at that time a gov- Alfred nd, “Gath,” who does| A study of the organ is interesting. Experi- ith ‘Mr. Webster’ i | Was destroved to obtain some portraits for those | . pital. and more attracti t all are beautiful to see | began to lor the showing some’ thing with his own hand, excc; called the gastric juice in fowls has not auffi- | Boston library. Forster's lice o' is works, first edi- an, Domwand. Be.. a . . avm wit el ood auything wit own hand, except his poetry, * ion, enric] nuacr - | of this place are well known to the many who would not like to be classed with that im- | i= {2°,"omarly devotion to the helpless, their fign na eae ee wae for writing is to him an tatolerable drudgery. cient power to dissolve their food without the MA. GAUMDERS' COMPLAINS. vane mg ee prey et vey ge md [ee gee tm pet peculiar to the We would not like to be ci wil lives of unrequited toil for the — of ward blows a score of | He always dictates to a good stenographer. aid of the grinding action of the gizzard. Be- Mr. Fred. Saunders, the veteran librarian of ve volumes. With the rare editions Mr. Beall \iventage for many com- aginative servact who was discovered crying pros ning sorry to say — the ey Dodge, better | vocabulary is very large. He does not hesitate | fore the food is prepared for digestion, there- | the Astor library of New York and the author! hason handIdon't wonder he yields to the elocd in the kitchen and wes = ir besyeeas = oe lg le eg er pay corer a ni (because born in pool ee ee << Upon fore, the grains must be subjected to a triturat- | of a charming volume ‘Salad for the Solitary,” temptation. | When Mr. Brice takes up his resi-| A fine view of the ocean is great attraction sin the caure of her {—that t] ol i, Hamilton, Mass.) succeeded race een- iT refe! Hora ut pact . x lence here permanently, for six years anyhow, | of cciennea ta bar euad ae alee tabs tren ee ee a ee | rca Sax ua wee gavernens fa Iatrs tens | tas Soe and alka senigth ooo ee | “atereg peers es erred pape ny S goalienainsaell Baits De Son | his wo bo hoped kn wal Senos Eee ers Atul (iy, sine ain'te hee sci Hhshe ehonld get married sore dey arid | ot for the “ely House” the other ix would | 408 eoveral Years and there also first lexsned the | ing all hackneyed phrases, inventing comblus- | brutsed in this manner, before passing into the called on him and obtained an, expensive vol- | of rare books, that our lovers of such luxury | stands on Visginie avers near Ocoee ena i mau kone aaa papery tye are not for t o “Holy House Becme ox, the | STaceful magic of the pen. She has produced, I tions of words that no manever heard before gizzard, are there reduced to the proper state ‘of the “Feetival of ” by Mr, | 98 only wealth can obtain may enjoy them. open the year round. Address D. W. Chandler. SIEGE BOE tab tabed tose | Riehl contre to esomblos he chiens | Coo, rt boks i land baal he ott [and inulging dering Un cision tate ood | vie sarees PS puesar sae piace wy a in feats (eyes siberian he Rees ——= ee ee _pnaeged Ce yigorous gesture; | “The action of the gizzard is, in this respect, | the “Wartonet ten and would in-} An invitation to dinner is before me from | is the famous Bedtord Springs, at Bedford, Pa. Pappen to tall ill bere, as most foreigners ‘do. | fectly well one Sat mh Oi Sea EA oes nak galley Cha iliveu here coer re | ale van Gerromes oat Gites attain ions | movhanical; thle. ocoqn. sotviag es Mill (2 Teo book, Ashe bad no cooeetion “Tie™ of] Mr. Hammond of South Carolina. He was | All te powerful properties of the votes tosead Jour very wisest course would be to got rour- | Puried The next. In bed seasons the death rate | £8 ty of Mr. Blaine, writing occasionally: bre | emotion in. inflection at gesture ho fills up | grind the feed to pieces, and then, by ‘means of ects ba Senator and the misunderstanding of an ex- | # the celebrated German resort are duplicated Self conveyed with all ible speed to the | # not a ansually high ot 00 per deg ving most of her time to pleasant social | with Apollinaris water. “‘Gath” takes half a | its powerful muscles, pressing it gradually into ee aa Je reaghog — tap sescong pression he made use of ina speech led to his | ‘he eprings of Bedford. The hotel, which Ranta Case da Miseric: Few cities in the | hd ip favorable times at eee ita | Guties. She is no longer the slip of girl who | dozen papers, keeps abreast of the news and | the intestines, in the form of « pulp. The and being info <f te Senesbann ae | med fom public life, Mir. Hammond | °P¢* on June 22. long ago established pe ‘World are betier provided with housesof refnge | ho are atiacked wi eenee aoe teught the young idea how to shoot among | reads everybody's letters but his own. He has | power of thie organ is said to be sufficient to — ponition prac: r a than Rio—and none need them | 78 erpearance hero, neary half weantary ago, | G2SRt z tation by the splendid fashion in whic 4 ticed on him writes indignantly was a very able man and one of the handsomest H : A Th hildren, but a very matronly | Written seventeen books, three of which ate | pulverize hollow globules of glass in a very . : managed. Letters of inquiry should be ad | tha somnor the worse the ete ane ia tore "The other of Dr Bailey Dee Larrea eee eer ae | Beet me end ipod aaatens of mpidity of this | Gentleman had for years ind Mion | tho rdaive labor of fe north aud the woxth, of | eth ea gt e a hat known ami a # productions are his poetry, and heis ce-| stance ip a few wceks. The rapidity = i fi id slave labor, b f the whit ; dry years it always takes an epidemic form. toe mei ms to be cienase it he was connected with Inieliigencer | free and slave labor, he »; of white dades (brotherhoods), in whose charge are all | ot¥ 3 3 t as “Alphabet Southworth,” had | pable of better work than he has ever doue. He | process Broportionate generally the Hospitals and saglume, The irmandades | Naturally foreignors suffer from it much worse girls phal : an ; M - | under the old regime, very muoh to the annoy- | laborers as the “‘mudsills” of society. His ap-| Atthe oosan end of Kentucky avenue, Atlantic 3 already suffered from an unfortunate ives in New York city in winter, in his own | to the size of the bird. A chicken, for ex- | U2 i the - City, ie situated the Hotel Welli: of which ere not unlike the various benevolent societies Pees bree cesar foliage make up for | chen che bogan to write “Hetribution” for the | house up town, and at Crampton Gap, Md., in| ample, breaks up such substances as are re- | 2009 of those two gentlemen, who never claimed | plication of the word was inten fo express | City, fs situa ington, india end Sh mem ba Wacane “ees Pad hewts | ome word tetas eae ate ee | tied eto oes eens ae ae regen SN eae] heen iat coies rented onthe nbor of the | MA and HS, Minar are the propriion. The scale, as the climate is more un-| "bly from smallvox, leprosy, elephant ‘Now York; he rau away year or two | weather retreat in the shape of alittle straggling | ca = "oven | Higenoer, and I have letter here from the | South Carolina he reprecented the howecs are | equipment is one of the bent = ion Ot ot Oe Ber They are | Other terrible diseases. ‘sd Mall caer beens aan arte village of wood an stone. His chen Be ‘have been Ds te sue pomen onliann be Mr. Gales, dated Jenu- | built on huge logs, cut and laid on the ground | ‘The St. Charles Hotel at Berkeley Springs, posed i an Toom are in one house, his libra: 1 to Mr. nu- | bu ad I Sant Seen poe Gree . fee en ete ctl nee parlors and studid | pleoas and volded without any apparent injury | AY 81, 1863, complaining at that early day. “of | no for foundation—bat these logs are | w. Va.. is now open for the reception of Terceira da Misericordia, Ordem’ Terceira da si istrict and special act of | 900 foot away in another, his billiard room in| to the stomach. The reason undoubtedly is | the oold shoulder you have so pointe ee ee dailla,” an Pen, them | The hotel is directly opposite the celebrated Bom Jesus, Ordem Terceira da Boa Monte. &:. fan ~ was passed to enable her to free her- i another, pace! ae rooms for his | that the =e aves of — y hare thicker and — — a ——— eslom mek dace es hace he i — bathe, an qzocllent scoommods mation for — we culiar dre ™ o ‘from: cruel z and guesta over tl l. is eu more power organs ligestion, is ~ 10" ly ® fob dary dap ical, those prigesh pilosa, > Derccteck tenes “i or oe foams home atpin autch cor the ties Rigs oacoeee Tt has long been the ga opinion that | Pré =e me Bae Ss on ccigieal 5 —— jd appa Nggeenem nage = ses out, and everything that could tend to the com- < baving come popopre ieee To e . in a public school in Warhington when she first | precipitous mountains, and commands a view | from some deficiency in the digestive apparatus Soto or =| Shilo lebor of the morte ana rr gary ad fort of guests bas been looked after. ome a member one orders a > Baile; mica i - | of twenty-five miles across the valley of the | fowls are obliged to resort to the use of stones | by William Ross Wallace, and a poem, * i Mrs. S. Ake of the Hotel Pembroke, Atlantic Kiberal entrance fee is required, and afterward “ Pepper 7 iafscotanel as hy loo glen (leon a ee and gravel in order to enable them to dispose of Hs. Land marked by we frou Mr Fenn (oy lade pe mod ey max a" | coy, sanuapasinal ber edbhomen tones atk an annual subscription, the members being N Southworth was born in this city and her pres. SCIENTIFIC WRITERS, the food which they consume. Some have su MB. LEGARE's FORM. part in the war anf died betere te clecs "| seston be apen Geeughomt mepee aes guiiled fo support, in sickness or hralt, frum me Or the Potocnan ice wee Dest on, the banks | No city in the world has probably « more ac- | Posed that the use of, stones is to sheathe oa ooginilicheeng: ion se yinen |" Here is a note trom ‘Thomas B. ‘Thorpe, | hotel is situated ou North Uarolina avenue meat the general fund. and a funeral of ceremony > rs “ ward, smaller | while Mr. Legare was Attorney General. author of “Tom Owen, the Bee Hunter,” and | Pacific “ltet iota base, ee pom complished or prolific corps of scientifle writers | fragments the hard, angular substances which readers of Tax Stan will stand one verse, for| one from Lieut, Overton Carr of the nme, | The Berkeley Springs Hotel, Berkeley Springs, numerous legacies received, contribute to the ve | than Washington, the list including Simon New- | might be swallowed.” They have also been con- sided | dated rd, and bere is a b velo; ve recepti ere tion and support of churches. provide for cuctigwiek aanieae : 5 somb, Brown-Goode, Asaph Hall, Dodge, Beard, sidered to ee ee pol ok oy by Sey verses. It is entitled navy yard, and here isa huge envelope | W. Va, opened June 1 for. the on of the sick, bury the dead and support masses for}; Paden sh paid her @9,000 it, be- | Poweli, Willits, Ward, Wilev, Riley, Mallery, | imagined that they acted as absorbents for un- ¢ the repeee of sonia. Many of thece order hase | Cases of contagious diseases are not treated er @8,000 a you 4 3 sa | we 5 Od forge y dated — guests, The hotel bas been refurnished, mel a bert, Greely, McG Sushis due quantities of acid in the stomach, or as | ‘You've heard how Demosthenes wallked on the Fre ty . Tasistro x- | and painted, and will found to posses become enormonsly rich in the lapse of vears, | at the Mixericordia, but are sent to one or ich mgt l sil bas books, Rural Langley, Merriam, Mendosth lacks, | stimulants to digestion, while it has even’ been Willie the beh Ba and bas ers, worden YT gh perpen ae throngh donations and lege. other of the branch hospitals. Lepers go to | editions and were presented on the stage. ‘Tho | White and Dall,'most of them, of course, om | @ravely asserted that they contribute directly to Shove, tended or with friend: at any place outside of | "°™ oi rare ebip in them is sagecty sough is that of | 22 tfospital dos Lazares at San Christavao and | old Indy ts in prime health, her sight and hear-| the geological survey. Of those whose output | nutrition. . among rotherhoods is that of | small And the: A vey. Of those whos ‘ : the District or at any point in Canada, ipox veople to the refage at Gamboa, which | ing are good and che walks about and calls upon | is exclusively scientific writing it is not my | Repeated e ents, however, have estab- a he aan, “ee nukl cally Carroll Homeopathic Sanitariam, only Fanta Misercoriia, in whose hands have ‘been tb None & bet friends without effort, She, conned nea | purpors to speak lished that pebbles are not at all necessary to | An’ crab a aa of ee ee ants abe ae ctmatage ofS Placed the principal disease Fork about ten years ago, when, she was sixty-| | Lr. slexander Graham Bell is best known as | the trituration of the hardest kinds of sub- cere.” And last of all.except some personal | healthful location, unsurpased spring water Gity, and which hes receive ‘A “clephantiasis,” the name | four, and that year, in counting up her pro-| the inventor of the telephone, which, under the | stances which gan be introduced into their notes, isone from Artemus Ward, inclosing | and careful treatment. For re address Bequests as to be able to dispense large sums in | being derived from the enormous tumors which ductions, found that she had written exactly | direction of his father-in-law, Mr. Gurdiner | stomachs; and, of course, the usual food of and tickets for his lectare. "It is not | G. H. Wright, MD. Forest Gion, M sims and to maintain some at the best hospitals | it causes to arise on the lower limbs, making | sixty-four novela. She has two' chides | Havined, bea nad them both famous and both | fowls can be bruised without their aid. They | think, wi . | Heke thet Tum Brae will be called ‘on’ te, deny | AN out of health and broken down ow nd asylums in the world. It war founded 28 i Sev bang down in fapsand cir-|and enough grandchildren to fill a millionaites. But he {s also a distinguished | 40, however, eerve « useful auxiliary purpose. 3 Mr. iblished in | any of these epistien, ae with but ‘very few ex. ah cdusuan a early ag 1591, and has always been granted ex- de: like the legs of an elephant. Not-| couple of carta, Mre.__‘Lippineott, | physiciat and an extensive author, especially | When putin motion by the muscles, they are | ga" 3 Int a ty | ceptions the writers have gone over to the vast | Wowk oe ee ee ee ceptional favors from the church—such as ex-| wit ling the popular belief rri-| “Grace Greenwood,” lives here pitol | ou electricity and vocal physiology. ‘He is an | Capable of producing some effects ‘upon the n ‘ majority. Joun B. Coma, fered AY diy ok qo reed — 4 emption from parochial administration, | ble deformity is contagious, one may often | Hill, and is walking ‘down the declivity of life | enthysiastic student of anthropology and, hav-| Contents of the stomach, thus assisting to|; pee Pleat the bat reget _—— Games “as house taxes. &c., and ard, by papal bull, | meet on the streets of auy Brazilian city a man | with considerable comfort. She still retains | ing married a deaf mute while a teacher in a| 8Tind down the grain and separate its parte, BACKED BY UNCLE Sax. tonic to were a pam ry = the privilege of receiving the reversion of all | or woman dragging along a leg swoolen to many | something of the remarkable beauty for which | Boston college, has maintained a grow- | 9 that the digestive Bald ox qn peeeaeaes ibs ead Ee 3 from D. ‘unfulailled ‘ =™ ye gives it the | times its proper proportions, or sitting on @| hor youth was celebrated, and her firm mouth ing interest in methods of mute speech | more readily in contact with it. 14th street,or W. H. Sule, proprietor. or four annual lotteries, be- cs | qhurch step exposing the gangrened members | and Websterian brow and eyev give anim-|and the laws of heredity. He’ is ther taxes. Thus the “Sacred | to view as a plea for ebarity. Bhe —<—<_-+e-—__ Pression of great intellectual strength. is | an eloquent speaker—probably the most effec- The Trials of a Southern Tramp. has come toown houses and) Many years ago the Coant of Cunbs trans-| In good health i ora i ’ and enjoyment of life, and wil! | tive orator in the scientific world. Like most | From Judre. ids in every part of the city and to enjoy an | formed an old Jesuit convent into a hospital for | probably see a fair slice of the ren tury. | students he knows nothing about business cen annual income of at least a million milreis. | the esj treatment of elephantiasia, It was | Her husband and son are clerks hore. Of her | methods and never transacte business himself. Z MR. KNAP’S PARTY, Besides maintaining in the best possible man- | placed under the supervision of the Irmandade | work nothing need be aaid—a million chiliens | Dr: Hebleed a The Gene man of the firm, A note from our well-known and highly es- ee ee Temata oe Macricerdia (at | do Santissiino Sacramento and to this day re- | know all about it. She is not writing much jort | attending to every detail, whif Bell devotes his ileus ahaa en ancoal cost of about £200,000) it also sup- | mains in their care. It is said that the average | now, being absorbed with the ene of time to research. He ‘would probably never teemed fellow citizen, ‘ta Charles Knap; Ports three branch hospitals. the Pedro II In-| number of their patients is 100 = and that | house, and, as she expresses it, too much of a| have got a cent ont of the telephone if it had + no date, but about 1866. It is gane Asylum. two orphan asylums, a fonndlings | at least nine-tenths of them die. time ago | housekeeper to make a good author and too | not been for his eagacious and practical father- ome. two large cemeteries and ‘an exclusive | a Lio vr_claimed to have discovered that 4 wing a nice little game of $2 limit. There is | this city, but it is located high up in the Blue much of an author .to makeagood house-| in-law. Bell isaswarthy Scotchman, of me- en often a smart pile of money in s $2 limit, | mountains and iss delightfal = mouopaly of all the interments made i the elephantiasin of Brazil was the identical r. dium ‘size and sturdy build, assiduous, fucred- Around the hotel table were four of us,and| resther. The Send Gol EV. Brar the ancient Greeks cured oy the| It may not be genorally known that Lord Lyt- | ulous to the point of proof, ‘and thoroughly so- R . Gustni ne ohy Coapuamnabe tok Ketocken, is now a b esnake. He awakened pub! ton, “Owen Meredith,” wrote several of his | ciable, affable and companionable when be has ‘ F thank y sand | the proprietor, can all needed informe- ¥ ants, of whatever national-| tention to his theory by publishing several first poems and began his delightful romance of | time to be. Hie te constant investigating and 5 it enough and money enough to sit out the game. | tion. fty, are genereliy buried. learned disquisitions, and at length was given | ‘‘Lucile” while in this city rerving as attache to | discovering, and is atill perfecting hie method % There was a night cession and an exciting time a BEAUTIFUL SITCATION. opportunity of putting it to practical test, | his uncle, Sir Henry, then minister here, and | of communication by photographing a jet of % I in the House of Representatives and the others The Santa Casa da Misoricordia is beautifully | An educated gentleman in the Sacramento Hos- | living on Lafayette squarc, opposite the White | water exposed to the waves of sound caused by : out one by one ‘on the score of situated near fhs seashore, under the brow of | Pill. whe at the age of fifty had been afflicted | Kowse. Bawin Arn a, io, written some human speech. : pe bad a aw oS ti the dis became anxious by re turin, orn a CC ¥ Castle Hill, on che spot whers that celebrated | 7 Fedo daughter of Hees Wiles it” ‘ap PUSTEINESTS 500K TES DUAR: Hed & daughter of Rev. W: ; Channing, s Jesuit, Padre Jose de Anchieta, built the first | 4 or it, ian and | Unitarian minister, whote old. ehurch is now One of the moat remarkable of these men, and 2. Dospital in Brazil. away be. the police station and central lockup of Wash- | OP? Whose peryonal history is « fine example to ‘that time a Spanish armada of sixteen - ‘The serpent was brought in a cage, and into | ington. the boys of this land, is Lester F. Ward, who eels arrived in the port. having on board 3,000 | thie the conddent of speedy cure, i! i i734 it detract : MAY AND NICOLAY AT momE. has climbed to success over great difficulties is on ight bets s — Lo ald the Straits of Me; _ ‘ . At first pat pe etre yl to} Among the best known of our authors are on the ewe zona of epee ped ca | | send it ~ ‘The y had suffered severs storms and nearly a the contact, as if afraid of con- ; oy from’ the west, he fought vi corner whole number were sick on board. Anchiste, | tra the disease, and when “stirred up” 9 | Col Nicolay and Col. Hay, whose titles wero | 90) tad wen mend ae clerkehi one of the who was at that time visiting the old e hough rattling loudly, merely licked the | Won in the service of President Lincoln as pri- MeSoggins—‘‘I want a good equare meal, an’ in tho Treasury Department hero, i * Bis order, whose towers stl! surmount Cestle | band wichont biting it. At length the impe- | vate seoretaries during the war. ‘They are Leth enthusiastic study of botany, burned muck mide don't 7go fergit that I dom't want no lesinets ia re ere maake ar eanee eT fF, the dving tient invalid pinched, the serpent hard and re. | resting after the hard work of twonty years in | night Kerouene, graduated av Goltnetee, Do | Pa ° i tee doing lad tae Soend to ts elie? | ccived « thrust from his fangs near the base of | writing the life of their great chief. Col. Nico- | versity, passed through tholaw department and end in so doing laid the focndation of an in- | the little finger. A few drops of blood oozed | lay owns and occupies one of the old-fashioned | receiv the degree of A.M. He wrote one or stitution which has alleviated sn incalculable from the wound and a slight swelling appeared | homes of Capitol Hill, near the new Mbrary. | two books while bo coca verke ia his amount of human suffe During the 310 when the hand wes withdrawn from the cage, | He is alone in the world with the exception of a| great two-yolume work. on “Dynamio he many hundreds of but no pain wae felt. Moments of intense anx- t, interesting daughter, who hae attained ology,” the greatest contribution ever made in bave found an asylum within the iety followed, while it temained to be seen what | @ training in art, and whose studio on the | this“ country to scientific philosophy. On its “holy house!” How many tens of thousands a effect this disagreeable medicine would produce. | second floor contains many fine examples of competion resigned toacseptspodtion ca the It soon became evident that the disease which | marine views, in which ahe excels, and other | geological survey, ‘The titles of his publications had preoccupied the eystem retarded the nata- pagaral scenery. | She has Painted her fy number 220, » of which are in various lights and attitudes with much bl; i i ori il ral result, but iu twenty hours the man was dead. Farsx B. Wasp. | success. Her pictures have found place in he art exhibitions of New York and elsew! Hy ut rg — “It Does Not Always Follow.” Province of Brasil, end ite pablication was | Proms Lite uly licensed by the various censors of preas. Among other startling ments it declares Anchieta to have been the second Adan. “Because it was expected ‘hat, aethere had been an Adan in the old®worid there should be one in the new, to be the head Ty Li} i tik tf SEE the dences and of all its inhabitants and to ba cn + the elemen a ns re oe the ae te bare, | From little book 1 Wee duties _ iron him (Anchieta) over ie elem nts and all ~ dwell ‘The earth brought. formh caga's | You setting fruit st command and even gave up the dead that they might be restored to life ani re- ceive baptism at his hands. The birds of the air formed tom came into his net when he