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AY, AUGUST: 11, 1892. KNIGHTS ENJOYING THEMSELVES. The hibition Dri Fine Affair—Parade of Cyclists. The Knights Templar viewed Denver snd its suburbs yesterday that is, those who were not in attendance at the grand encampment or who were not engaged in looking after the comforts of guests in various clubs and headquarters, ‘The weather was delightful and the visitors en- joved itimmensely. All day and far into the night the street cars were crowded and so were the sidewalks. Several commanderies left the city early in the morning and journeyed around the loop and to other points of interest. The smelters and other milling places also received many visitors during the day. Courtesies were exchanged between dif- ferent clubs in the shape of visits. Bands marched to and fro all day and there was good ebeer everywhere. EXMIBITION DRILL. The principal event of the day outside of the grand encampment was the exhibition drill in River Front Park. It is estimated that at least 6,000 spectators witnessed it, and although only two commanderies had entered, everybody was well satistied with the exhibition. Grand Master Gobin had forbidden « competitive drill and many companies which bad entered declined to take part in the exhibition «rill, but they prob- ably regret it now, for St. Bernard’: of Chicago and California, No. 1, the only two com- manderies which entered. will receive hand- some presents from the Denver chamber of commerce. ‘ 2 They will probably be the silver bricks which were intended for prizes in the competitive drill. The California knights drilled first. They were mounted on black horses, and were attire in back snits trimmed with silver. They pre- sented 2 handsome appearance. There were twenty-five men, headed by six trumpeters from the seventh United States cavalry, Cus- ter’s fighting musicians, Sir R. P. Harlburt was in command. The various cavalry evolu- tions were gone through with, columns, dia- monds, crosses and circles were formed amid the greatest applause, and the commandery retired knowing that they had pleased the te. P'Then St. Bernard Commandery of Chicago marched in, headed by the George W. Cook Drum Corps. H.M. Purton was in command, and there were twenty-five «words in line. The St. Bernards drilled on foot, Templar tactics. Their column formations could not be excelled. They were simply perfect. The platoons wheeled perfectly. and equal distances were observed between the marching sete, Beverai very difficult donble-quick movements and wheels were executed on a marching pivot and drew forth much applause. The drill ended by the formation of fancy figures, and the men marched off the field covered with glory and dust. Promptly at 10 o'clock the California knights threw open their reception rooms, and visiting knights began to throng in. Refreshments were served on a set of tables arranged in the form of a hollow square. It has been stated that there was only one Indian knight attend ing the conclave. "This is a mistake, according to Sir Robert W. Hill. eminent commander of Muskogee, the only cor der in Indian ter- he has six Indtlans in his 3 . the Choo- tax, the Cherokee and the Creek tribes. All of them are leading chiefs in the fndian uation. PARADE OF BICYCLISTS. Last night's bicycle parade was a grand affair, There were nearly one thousand wheeimen in line. and th: riders were cheer J applauded as they rode urder the many colored electric lights ‘which spanned the intersecting streets ioday the knights will be treated toa parade and exhibi- tion by the Denver fire department. An inter- esting program has been s The routine bas and encamp- William Pett officers W. €. Proctor, Texas; on: Lafayette Little, Nebraska: C. Swenle bam, Virginia: T.0O. a juryland: S. P, Georgia: D. W. Wallace, Missourt businese—W. B. Melish. Chio: tof Columbia: y nton, Colorado . Missixsippi; A. Wilson, North Carolina: b. M. Holmes, North Dakota: || Jobn Martin. Te: E. B. Hay, District of Colun Ch Finch, Nebraska; T. B. Oregou: T. Montgomery, Minnesota, e of meeting—D. W. Parker, een jorgas, . P. Webster, Florida: J. P. WoW. Van Wick! West Virginia; J. H. Brown, Kansas. Dispensa tions avd new charters Conover, Colorado; K. U. The report of the spec rituals on the Hed Crosp and Templar order occupied the atiention of the encampment the greater portion of the day. The committee bas been working for three years on this re- port. It was adopted unanimously. Of course the proceedings wore secret to outsiders, but this information was given out to the press officially. —-— eee SHE SHOT HER LOVER. A Telegraph Operator Got Two Ball Head. Patrick Quinn, an operator employed by the Western Union Telegraph Company in their office at Delaware station. is lying at his home in Oxford, Pa, suffering from two pistol shot wounds in the head and neck, inflicted by Misa Hattie Acres of Cresco, Pa, Mies Acres re-| garded Quinn asa lover, and it is said that the | shooting was the outcome of his desertion of | the young woman. Mies Acres left her home in Cresco Tuesday night and went over to Delaware static traveled on the night train as far as PS land, Pa..and then walked the rest of the way. As/ soon as she entered the telegraph office she drew a revolver from the folds of her dress and | at once began firing at Quinn. She fired two shots in rapid succession, one of which entered the man's headand the other lo. 1 his neck. The young woman then walked out of the office with the smoking revolver in her hand. She did not go far before she took from her pocket small bottle which contained laudanum, and swallowed ite contents. She was soon seized with at pains, but prompt medical aid saved her life. When she recoveréd sufficiently to speak she arked if Quinn was dead, and said that it would be better for both of them to be out of the world. The voung woman subse- ently became hysterical, and was placed in the custody of x constable. Operator Quinn, after being attended by a surgeon. was removed to bis home at Oxford. ‘The attending surgeon said that he did not think either of the wounds was necessarily fatal. Quinn was formerly employed in the office ut Cresco, and while there made the acquaintance of Miss Acres. It ix enid that he frequently took her to places of amasement, and that she often culled at the telegraph ottice at Cresco to ———-e2-_____ Neither Jew Nor Christian. Fron the Acerican Ieraclite An atheist is no Jew any more than he is a ChrixGian, Mohammedan, Brahmist or Buddhist, He belongs toa class of his own, called by the Hebrews Kofar b'ikkar, denying all, who, #0 far | «» Judaism aa religion is concerned, stands outside of all cousection and communion with the houe of Israel, even if ail his ancestors uj to father Abraham were of that race. It is known thet uihiheis, anarchists and some also Of the extreme socialists are confessed apd im- placable enemies of ail religions, outspoken and ‘The Authorities Trying te Discover the Criminals. | Don Jose Miguel Velasco Cotapos was the lessee of the San Jose and San Juan del Peral | estates. situated in the Cajon de Maipo, Chile. His usual place of residence was on the former estate, and toward the end of last week he made preparations to visit Santiago with his family. | The necessary arrangements baving been com- | pleted, he set out on Friday, accompanied by | his wife, his sisters-in-law—the Misses Sara and | Julia Velasco—and his four children, for the | San Juan del Peral estate, where they stayed for | the night,proposing to resume the journey onthe | following @#y. Rain, however, fell on that day, and the journey wss postponed. Mins Julia, however, with some ms of the household, proceeded in one of the cer to Sant At about 7:30 p. m. on Sal y Mr. Velasco, in the company of all the members of the fam- ily who remained, was in » room which opened {onto a corridor of the house, when murmuring a« of Mr. Velasco, thinking it was probably the man- ager or some of employes of the estate, cheek, the ball lodging in the bran, and he fell Suvtuey wemneet oOos of the bandite threw | himself nj the unfortunate victim, and, after bind his arms. took possession of his ket book, his watch and his wedding ring. done, others of the bandits clubbed the dying man in the head with the butt ends of their carbines. several shots, seized two of her children an: took refuge in an adjoining room, while Mis Sara, with the other two, fled into the yard. | The bandits quiekly tracked Mrs. Velasco to her hiding place, and, after maltreating her, they threw her to the ground and bound her then tore out her earrings and stripped her g* from her fingers; and this done, they threw her onto a bed and. covering Ler bead with a blanket, threatened to kill “her if she made the slightest noise. Others of the bandits pursued Miss Sara Velasco, firing at her as she fled across the yard with two of the children, but fortunately none of the shots took effect. ‘She sought refuge in a room near to the kitchen, to which place a female servant had already fled: but she, too, was quickly tracked to her hiding place, and, like her sister, was thrown to the ground and bound hand and foot. A nurse hid herself under a bed and escaped the notice of the bandits. ‘The gang then, commenced to plunder the | house, one of the first things which fell into their hands being Mrs. Velasco's jewel case. At the sound of the first hot the butler, who | was eating his dinner in the kitchen, ran out | into the yard, and comprehending thut it was a | case of attack by robbers armed bimself with an iron bar and started to assist his master. He had only half crossed the yard, however, when he was felled to the ground invensible, and in this condition be was dragged to where his mas- ter Iny dead and was thrown across his body. | Almost at the same time the manager of the estates, Don Andres Paredes, who lives close by, hearing shots, armed himself with a Remington ne and, accompanied by bis son, started for his employer's house. He had not gone far, | however, before some of the bandits, who we: posted behind a mnd wall, opened fire and bi sou fell, shot in the left thigh. Finding that was impossible to proceed further, Mi ‘The bandits, who numbered some fifteen to | twenty, left about 9 o'clock at night in the di-/ ~itis believed, of Pirque. After the arcure the nurse came out of her hiding and unbound her mistress and Miss Sara Velasco. lead to verved by the inmates from their mode of ¢: and from the fact that the hands of those who bound the Indies were white and, soft. The | faces of these men were covered with silk hand- kerchiefs, A suspicious cirenmstance connected with this tragical ceeurrence is that the dogs did not bark at all, which is a proof that somebody in 2 connivance with the bandits | or that somebody among the bandits was known | ‘Was the the house was to the dogs. In fact, the question object of the band robbery or revenge’ OTHER OUTRAGES. At about the same time three men arrived at | the house of one Don Jose Mercedes Leal, at Kobleria, department of Arauco, and asked to be allowed to remain for the night. Not ouly was this ranted, but meat and drink apparently j In the middle of the night, however, they arose and forced an entrance into their generous host's bed room and stabbed him and his wife to death. two men who have been arrested on suspicion of being concerned in the crime. fi A man named Acevedo rode up to the door of a despache in the heart of Sant was the worse for liquor, refused to sell hint wine. After a short parley, Acevedo said: eli, as you won't sell me wine, sell me ten nts’ worth of tobacco and five cents of paper.” ‘The despacho consented, and took the tobacco and paper to Acevedo, when the treacherous fellow nearly split open the skull of the unsus- pecting Jtalinn with a blow from a matchete, Acevedo was apprehended on the following day, and his punishment will depend upon the recovery of the Italian, who lies in the hospital in u critical condition. —_—+e-+—____ A British Steamer to Be Libeled. The Britieh steamer Wilmington will be | libeled by the United States district attorney at | Portland, Oreg., for smuggling opium into the | United Stafes from British Columbia. This j vessel was observed to enter the Columbia river below Portland and buoy a number of casks con- taining opium in the river, to be subsequently removed by confederates, but they were cup- tured by treasury agents. The penalty for emuggling opium is confiseation of vessel and cargo and punishment of the officers. tage Yankton Indian Commission Appointed. The following named persons have been ap- pointed by Secretary Noble as a commission to | negotiate with the Yenkton Indians of South Dakota for a cession of their surplus lands, under the act of February 8, 1887: J.C. Adams of Webster. 8. D.; W. L. Brown of Chicago, MUL., and John J. Cole of St. Louis, Mo. These 63,000 acres. Trade With Mexico. Minister Ryan in transmitting to the State Department recently published statistical tables of Mexican foreign and domestic | shipping movements for 1891 calls at- tention to the highly gratifying condition of our ocean commerce with the neighboring republic. He says: “It will be seen that more | American steamers entered the Mexican ports than those of all the other nations of the world combined: that American sailing vessels enter- were infinitely in exceas of those of any er country, and that Mexico's domestic or internal commerce was carried by more Ameri- can steamships and sailing vessels than those of all other nations combined, with the single ex- ception of Mexico iteelf. Another table mani- fests the great increase in Mexico's maritime movement during the sid fiscal year over the preceding: how large a part the United States bated thereto is indicated above.” Chemical Wérks Burned. The extensive works of the-Lancaster, Pn., | goods. The loss is trom #60,000 or £70,000; in- | surance $19,500. The fire is believed to have | been of incendiary origin, ———-e-—____ To Be Evieted From the Cherokee Strip. Dispatches have been received at El Reno, even bragging atheists. Hence they are neither | that the: assassin. of Henry C. Frick and would-be suicide Alexander Berkman is no more a Bussian Jew than be is an Italian Roman Catholic of » Ger- man Protestant. He is an anarchist and atheist, like his confreres the world over, Ax much mb Jew and Gentile condemn anarchism—with its barbarous and criminal outbursts anywhere— a EH Li am, 1: m. m. Sundays om 10 pm, S18 pom. Sl round te =a el FOR MENTAL DEPRESSION Use Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. » a ay Sdeea Soe Noee, ge ota ‘from gastric troables.’ OUTRAGES BY CHILEAN BRIGANDS. uJ yecsoaa tlbiagt won tenet | Riess o the door, when be was shot in the left | and Mire, Velasco, after mirenloualy, escaping hands and feet with silk handkerchiefs. They | Paredes | » his son on his back and retreated to his A two-link gold stud possessed by one of the | its has been found, and it is believed it will | important discoveries, In the gang, were men far above the vulgar class, as was ob- | from the ‘sultan to pay off old scores, which | they could not have otherwise done, by a suc- j cessful attack on the" biggest bullies of their | escaped from the | | clutches of the murderers, and he bas identified and called | for two bottles of wine. The owner of the shop, | an Italian named Grossi. seeing that Acevedo | phia yesterday. It consisted of a large engine and three private cars, containing twenty-eight officials and invited guests. On board were ject of the trip was to inspect the new road from =a CRUISE OF THE BEAR. Hardships Endured by Americans on the _ _ Desolate Alnskas Islands, News from the far northwest of suffering and hardships endured by Americans on the desolate Alnekan Islands comes to the Treasury Depart- ment in a report from Capt. Healy, command- ing the U. 8. revenue cutter Bear. He reports from Port Clarénce, Alaska, under date of June 29, that on June 3 he visited St. Matthew's Island and found one of the three men—Peter ‘Vinni—who was reduced to the last of hie pro- visions and would soon have been in a starving condition. The other men—Fred Burns and J. B. Pulsford—had left the island in a dory for a Wip to Hall's Island May4 They had pro- visions for not more than one week and they ex- to be back at St. Matthew's Island in less ‘seeped pare ggg were trace men was a place where they had camped for the night, apparently about three weeks before. He then visited Pinnacle Island, the nearest GOV. BUCRANAN DENOUNCED. His Exercise of Merey tm the King Case Un: land, and made s search for them there, but | Jovers was unable to find any trace of them. He | 4 thinks they were either picked up by a whaler or their boat capsized at sea and they were Growned. The men only captured in all, tho time they wore on the land. one large beat and one small one. Capt. Healy thinks the story about the number of bears on the island Must we mn ly @ L. Hoaly also visited “King’s Island, where found about 100 natives in danger of starva- tion last year on account of their failure to secure their usual supplies of food. He left them « sunply of provisions, and this year be found they had Hved all right through the winter and had been able to take the usual food. supplies this year and were in no dangor of starvation. a REVOLT AGAINST OPPRESSIO: ‘The Angheras Resisted the Moorish Troops and Defeated Them. ‘The Moorish soldiers fared very badly in their engagements with the rebels yesterday. one hundred of their number being oither killed or badly wounded. The Angheras, on the other hand, suffered but few casualties. Two thousand of the sultan’s troops made two attacks upon the rebellious Angherite tribesmen, and were each time driven back in great disorder. Orders were finally given for the troops to retreat, and the force, in a badly disorganized condition, made their way to the camp at Tangier. Considerable excitement prevailed in the ci tribesmen in the first. flush of their victory might attempt an attack upon the city. The district inhabited by the Angheras, a | race of independent character, has long been oppressed by governors who gether, or attempt to gather, taxes with rolentleashand. During the English occupation of Tangier, from 1662 to 1634, none of the surromnding tribos gave y, as it was feared that the | thi more trouble to the British than did these Angheras, and since that time the injustices which they have suffered have frequently led them to give equal trouble to their own govern- ment. Their home, among the fertile hills on the peninsula at the western end of the Med- erranean, among the heights surrounding Jebel Moosa, is a country difficult of access at any time. on account of the frequeht steep- | ness of the bridle path which serves for roads, but in the bands of a hostile people it be- comes quite impregnable to anything save a! well-organized force. ‘The rocks with which it is studded, the thick | base of almost every hill afford the best of am- bushes, and many passes could be held by a small force against thousands compelled to ap- roach through the extremely narrow defile. | No scope is here afforded for the cavalry | manenvers of the Arabs and the Moorish soldiers | can make scarcely any headway even under the | most favorable circumstances against anything | like organized resistance. But these People| never combined for any length of time. | is their greatest weak The visers, being intimately acquainted with the intertribal feuds and joalousies of every clan, stir up dissension by promises of assistance to | the most loral. Often, in this way, a number of small tribes temporarily combined with reinforcements | neighborhood. Would these tribes but aid the | Angheras, instead of fighting them, they would | Le able unitediy to resist the imperial army and claim what terms they like. What is at precent happening is thia: “The people of Anghera, thoroughly loyal to the sultan, as their spiritual chief or ruler ordained by God, are simply de- manding their rights as toyal subjects. The disturbances, when stripped of ail sensational exaggerations, are. nothing more than one of those local insurrections against tyrannical and extortionate authorities which have long been frequent in the neighborhood of Tangier, and there is no reason to suppose that this insurrec- | tion will have more important consequences | than its numerous predecessors, unless France | or Spain should think fit to use it as a pretext for interverttion, ‘ —2ee EXTENDING THE READING SYSTEM. Buffalo and Philadelphia Are Now Directly Connected. The first train over the new Lehigh Valley- Reading road arrived in Buffalo from Phiiadel- many distinguished railrond men, and the ob- Ettenville to Geneva to Buffalo. The party left Philadelphia on Monday and went to New York, going west on the Lehigh Valley route, being the first truin to arrive in Buffalo from New York on this read exclu- sively. The officers were very much gratified with the rogress of the road. ‘The new liue, which ex- | nds from Buffuio to Van Ettenville, will be opened for busines September 1. The new line will be an important link between Buffalo, New York and Philadelphia. The officials of the Reading road recognize the importance of an independent line into Buffalo. It will not be long before grain now hipped to the metrop- olis will be sent direct to the Quaker city, where the facilitios for transporting it to the ocean carriers are superior. ——— eee ROYAL MESSAGE TO GLADSTONE, The Queen Arranges to See the Incoming Premier Tomorrow. ‘Mr. Gladstone yesterday received « commu- nication from General the Right Hon. Sir Henry | P. Ponsonby. private secretary to the queen, | announcing that arrangements were being made | for his reception tomorrow at the queen's resi- dence, on the Inle of Wight, whither Mr. Glad- i! mse to a summons ject of the queen in to Osborne House is with the formation of » new gov- Lord Satisbury is expeoted at Osborne House today to tender the resignation of the present government. of laudanum. Morrison had been drinking heavily of late, and on Monday went into » purchased num, which he said was fora child suffering with toothache. Going home he swallowed the contents of the bottle. Medical aid was sum- moned and antidotes administered, but he was beyond medical aid. 4 | bushes which cover considerable tracts and the | Peritentiary, pressing themselves and their pronuneiation, maltan’s ad- | deal ewee. It was felt throughout the whole United States, and the supreme court of ‘Tennessee gained enduring honor of advancing civilization to that degree. The court did not k any phase of the case. It considered even the excuses King made for his act. But the governor has brought all this to naught. Having the greater power to save, he has met the court's power to condemn, and has whistled e latter's judgment down ‘the wind. With a stroke of his pon be bas siven hope to every murderer in the jails of Tennessee. He bas re- buked the jor and made light of the state's highest tribunal of justice, It were infinitely better if the jury of the trial court had bado King go free. We now wish sincerely that it had done so. It were better if the — had granted an absolute pardon. He acted without the ieee of the trial judge, the jury or the prosecutor, usually an essential perqui- tite in gubernatorial clemency, and it now re- mains for King’s art to solve the question of his freedom.”” The evening Scimiter vehemently denounces the | epontag! in a sensational editorial abound- jug in such sentences as these: ‘“He has spit | on the courts of the state and nation, and held out his hand to save an assassin in whose Pervon was centered, but upon whose fate de- led, the question whether money and in- luence in the south was sufficient to make » distinction between persons convicted of cold- blooded murder. “The resene of H. Clay King from the gal- lows, to which all of the courts of the country, after a careful review of the evidence, had con demned him, was a crime more damnable even the murder of Poston. fe has risen above all law. all right and all justice. What King did as a citizen he has done as the chief executive of the state. He has taken iaw into his hands, He has justified the murder of Poston. He has saved the as- sessin. He has taken the smoking pistol from King’s hand, stepped into his shoes, dipped his hands in the blood of his victim and trampled upon the already outraged law. He has turned a deat eur to the pleadings of the victim's family for justice. He has made the governor of the state the champion of murdcrets. “The governor's conduct teara the ban from the eyes of justice. It pulls down piliars of the temple. It paralyzes the strong arm of the law. It stifles the cry of the widow and orphans; makes of the courtasham. It shakes the very foundation of society, and makes every man a law unto himself. “If Buchanan shoutd be shot down from be- hind a pillar on the portico of the capitol to- aay, if King should bo slain on his way tc -¥, Who shall say that the gallows wonld bear fruit?" KING TRANSFERRED. These publications aroused intense feeling. A mass meeting was arranged for,lsst night, at which Gov. Bucharan wns to have been hung | jin e@igy. It was given out that the jall would be attacked and the notorious prisonor lynched. So great was the anxiety that Criminal Court Judge J. J. Dubose issued the following order ‘ t even “Lt appearing to the conrt that there ia now undue excitement in the public mind on account of the commutation of the sentence of H. Clay King, who was by the supreme court sentenced to hang on the 12th day of August, 1892, and it further appearing that, becuuse of threatened mob violence, it 1s not safe to longer keep said King in the county jail of Shelby county, it ix therefore ordered’ by the court that the sheriff of Shelby county, without delay, take and del tiary at Nashville, in pureuance to the order as id King him to the keeper of the peniten- by the governor commuting his sentence to life imprisonment in the penitentiary of the J. J. Dusose. ©. . the most central int in the city, and after hanging in effigy iov. Buckanan ph pole set the jummy on fire and ‘watched “it burn. “There ‘was no speaking indulged in, Telegrams from Mississippi, Arkansas and Tennéssee are pouring in protesting with fiery indignation against the action of the governor. Sheriff McLendenen took Col. King from the Jail last ovening and out of the city on the Chesapeake aud Ohio railroad to Nashville. The eheriff is one-1 and unaccompanied. ‘King’s son was with the part; RIGGIN’S BODY AT HOME, Brought From.New York by the Philadel- phia Committee. The body of Boatswain's Mate Rigg of the United States steamship Baltimore, who was Killed by @ Chilean mob, arrived in Philadelphia | Fp boar Box 207. yesterday afternoon, The general reception committee, composed of delegates from the Grand Army poste, Army and Navy Unions, Sons of Veterans, Patriotic Order of Sons of America and United Order of American Me- chanics, under the leadership of Chief Marshal Reed, left Philadelphia on a special car attached to the 8:20 express to Jersey City. At Jersey City the party embarked on the tu; Belvidere, which conveyed it to the Pacific Mail Steamship wharf. Consul McCreery of Val; raiso met the delegation at the wharf. and in accordance with the instructions received by letter from Secretary Foster formally turned the body over to the Philadelphians. The body was incased In_a metallic coffin in- closed in a rosewood box. It was covered with a United States flag, placed in the fore com- iment of a parlor cur, and at 2:25 started for Piece goer » Germantown jeucine it was fen in charge by an undertaker, who removed it to his establishment, ae Pleasant Days ut Day Ridge. Cool breezes from’ the Chesapeake, boating fishing, bathing, crabbing, sailing. Music by Great Southern Band and Fourth Re; mt Band. Baltimore and Ohio trains at 9:16 a.m., 9:85 leave Rockford, IIL tations with some ry owners a few south of Keokuk for the purchase of a large tract of land lying along the Missouri boundary. H Fopotes to buy & Hike tract of land on of the line. if THE RIVER EXCURSI IN BOATS. Official Reports Show That There Has Been Ne Crowding Them. Gen, Nettleton, acting secretary of the treas- ury, has received the following report from Special Deputy Watkins of the collector of cus- tom's office of Georgetown relative to the al- leged overcrowding of Potomac river excur-)_ sion boate: “Replying to » letier referred to by you to Han this office for a report ato the taken in the overcrowding of steamboats ou the Potomac river I have the bonor toinform you owned by the Mount Vernon, Marshall Hall Steamboat Company on the particular day mentioned, also from statements made by offi- — ae i which they weit inghe aft- it umber passengers carried June 23, 1891, wse3.070, viz: Charles Macalester—First trip down, 884; re- eS Ta onniter Queen—First ‘804; generally taken by this office to overcrowding of steam- boate I have to inform you that we have one fires ducing Gn evening and ce Sepags. ont ing the evi on ra ani holidays the whole force, Every possible. pre- caution is taken to protect the public. ‘The letter states that all who'come are received. I can state positively that often many are turned awa} Accompanying this report is one from Steam- boat Ih Cooper and Seville of Balti- more, as follows: “We have the honor to report that in com- pliance with your requet we had two assistant inspectors viait W: to count the num- der of passengers on exctirsion steamers, both assistants at River View on Saturday, July 28, and ono at River View and one at Marshall Hall on Sunday, July 24. ‘The following is the number of passengers carried on those day Seas oan 23, Lod serge oo . Pentz brought up on 1. pas suupnea fcc ieee ‘Views uke’ Deitg suo Sony steamer running to that point. Sunday, July 24. from River View, Mary W: ; Pilot Boy, 815; Samuel J. Pentz, 931.” To and from Marshall Hall the bigbest num- ber carried by the Macalester on this day was 1,805 and by the River Queen 717. The limit allowed the Mary Washington 1,000, the Pentz 1,300 and the Pilot Boy 600. i a Ag rE id The health inspectors of New York three cases of smalipox yesterday, one of them fatal. ONE EN Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleas. ant and refreshing to the taste, and actsgently yet promptly on the Kid. neys, liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels col esashaneea) fevers, 2 peli itual constipation, Syrup of Fige is the only remedy of ‘its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only irom the most healthy and agreeable sub- stances,its many excellent qnalities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Fige is for sale in 50c. and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not \ave it on hand will. procure it ‘fomptly tor any one who wishes te Yi Do not accept any substitute SUMMER RESORTS. ___ ATLANTIC CITY, N. J- TLA! io CITY, 5 Pek ne y beac $8 to'ei8 por week. CHARE: TLANTIO CIT" ‘and Re JAMES & GEORGE BEW. ‘OTEL BRUNSWICK. PACIFIC AV! H ites ew York 2 “ets tt Sein-em Late of Colonnade Hasal, iladelpata. SUMMER RESORTS _ EDUCATIONAL | ASBURY PARK. N. J. ye 2 erent. Po TALANTA HOTEL Weare conarnya’ Pate a * My. and Mrs. BEVERLEY B MASON. es Be eter. any d-den® TRESS oe ae . er Reta Se ka ae (CONGRESS HALL. CAPE MAY, NJ. OPEN TILL SEPTEMBER 10, AND WILL BE CONDUCTED ON ‘THE SAME LIBERAL. MANAGEMENT AS FOR- MERLY. FOR INFORMATION ADDRESS Mus. J. F. CAKE. NO 191 8T. XW, Under the direction of the Fathore of the Society of Jeane. SCHOOLS WILL RROPEN ON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1802. Three Frev Scholacehipe are open to succosatl com: | petition om the Ist, <d and Bd of Bertember. ‘This competition is open to all, even te studente | already belonging to the collere. For further particulars apply to CORNELIUS GILLESPIE, 8. 032m President SEA-SIDE_—MISCELLANEOUn. REARS CQpen July 16: erin +2 JAMES 2. POWELL, ‘OTEL HENLOPEN, oulte bs 1407 AODENT oF: Bt ees. . wn C Se grunaly preparatory eretem': ta. frat tee aa ee oe ‘will reopen ‘Take the 2:01 p.m. train. ArriveatSp.m WALTER BURTON. Menacer. > MD. NOW OPEX: NEA IN THE MOUNTAINS, OGRWOOD INSTITUTE, WASHINGTON, D.C x Seat ASPCRILDAES at core of Sod waiter. Special atton‘ion given to art . = 5 Siem, Suen eee ate et eo BOCK ENON, VA. WORMLEY's Ins, 4. T. WORMLEY, Proprietor, CHABLES TOWN, W. VA. it View of Shenandoah veliey snd Blue Ridge mountains. USE, HARPER’: .. Fine scenery ‘Mrs. M: KOLB, Proprictrees. RPER'S FERRY, W. VA. ,Kireouar” SUMMER RESORT Mas wall-shadad lawn, fine mountain » porticoes, fine sernery and __ Hagerstown, Ma. SPRINGS AND BATHS. ms BPoPoED sverxas, BEDFORD, Pa. “THE CARLSBAD OF AMERION~ HOTEL OPENS |___—_L B. DOTY, Manager. OCK ENON APRINGS era rt AND MINERAL, In the Great North wowntaius, 300 quests. NO BAR: alleys: lance swimainz yool JHOUCATE Poe wratwEs: ‘and all the Mbcautitay casino. quests. wee RUperion and. f ny: BPE MATSON, 5 Watt st. TRASBURG, VA EXCELLENT S Woome: aoe chai beate sorta: pe sara: See mo., 625 t0 €85.- "A. P. MclNTU! he inal and Proprietor. i} 188 Lows CIVIL SERVICE INSTITUTE Mahe eS Mr. Veaxox Suussanz, CORNER M AND 11TH STREETS 5. W., WASHINGTON, D.C., BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES AND LITTLE GIRLS. Eighteenth year opens @CTOBER 4, 1892. New buildings perfectly equipped for health and comfort. ‘Steam heat, passenger elevator, perfect santtation. Special advantages in Literature, Modern Languages and Music. For circulars apply to the principal. wet Mrs. ELIZABETH J. sowrRs. 307 2S & W.CINTRIAIGENT INSTRUC? YUE Hon by Mic. V. PRUDHOMME on her rapid | dyrthod for learning to speak and understand Prem | 12 private lemons. #16. Boe | FIO*ARD Uxrvensiry, MEDICAL DEPART. ii on October 1 Se ‘cireular 2 Br PURVIS, Werteearys 1118 oth ae ed oel W oats, commence n K. class lessons, $8. jy11~tin* Wetiaced maton feacad Office hours 5 to 7 p.m. +. eis wv. PIANO AND BARMONY. s, PeGHE NPENCE RIAN BUSINESS COLES Cae Thaw Damen a ee Q9OF PER YEAR AT LUTHERVILLE SEMI. $8225 ste. Saag 1217 Penn. ave. n.w. a Onur Specisities: CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK OR TEETH WITH- OUT PLATES. i { BE i i a ee NER eae JOTEI. EDIBON. Pacific and Mic! ifigan aves.. near the beech: full Stearig gake” aoe COR oe ee oe ORS HENAT WeoxLeR, Prop. _ OT! ON THE BEACH. MARYLAND AVE- Bs = te, Roca tea 200 rues ‘All mod- S2to 83.per day. $101 818 per ees ‘OTEL ORIENTAT, Ocean ‘Virginia ave, Atlantic City.N. J. Weds je rend of pasa ne dae ie FPCre, STICKNEY. ATLANTIC ¢ 100 irgm coma, ave. ; $2 to $2.50 per ign AO Lewy. Horie wax END OF KEWTUoKY AVR. ATLANTIC CITY, ¥. 3. JeP-Bn MLA. & HLS U, ® DENTAL association, OF WASHINGTON. AF, ARUNDEL COUNTY ACADEMY, A DAY rx: SEPT BE compe Indice anid eentie: AY courses and | ‘business: ‘the peigh- Sri hy Beate sah aod mttons wromae an6-2m ERSTOWN, OCKVT ACADEMY FOR ‘Bors. Full aren. Fo" ahs WIN cor aies tases ei ath vA 2, 5, : ce aa oe eee Cor. 7th and Dats. a. w. ‘The largest orwanization devoted to hish- class dental prectice in the world. Pled@ite the promotion of sctentife At present location twelvs years, IN Wi c__|R¥ Eyaaeioas Gann epee, aeer = ERBATIM REPORTING IT AT ST. Whe RHINOTON AND SOT GO824G4 cOLLRar, ars, and rianste ine throurh New York ay | Ween vie Montgomery and a Avante INGTOR AND ONTO DIY aati Pm dabiy and © Se mm (CBPSAPEAKE AND OBTO RATLWAY &e aN RPE So Misty ronnie, rowch srenery ip As saX tment socatiet Soild Yate wetene ya. dally Cineimenstt and St Louis Liaitadt™ snmeti, In Manat tie “oho. “Lapiuaton ant Ls - connecting in Uuiou Depot fae ots at Company's Offre, WF ULLER, Gent Pasencor Acwnt rpg MOTE ay — SES ay TRAIns {RAVE ares ity oe 20.50 arm. Ally te. ron to Warriehicre and i Lonte ‘and ‘Cincinnet! E contort, Exvrem, wnbus, Cin-innath, 9m d Rowheater Aatly for shagnd seu A Niazare del mn. with For Williamsport AeA staan, Kepovo and Elmira at 10 304m. LABELPITA, New YORK « “a mits ara Falls, | 40 ith Sleeping Gar Thee and Diwine Tar Noah tara es ee es ‘With Dinine Car A ONLY. Oa te einlblltS y ma. tains okiyp Aunx, ated .avotding dence etegieora # FOkk Rep Pate