Evening Star Newspaper, August 16, 1892, Page 7

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=———* THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D. C. TUESDAY, AUGUST 16. 1892. THE SENATORS WON. It Was « Pitchers’ Battle, and Killen Was the Vietor—Other Games. Yesterday's game at Pittspurg was a pitchers’ | battle for the first six innings, with the odds slightly in favor of the Washington youth. In| the seventh inning, however, the visitors got to | work, and, with tho singles, three sacrifices, a | wild pitch, a base on bails, Shugart’s fumble and Farrell's effort to beat the long-distance | throwing record, the visitors piled up three | runs. This virtually settled the game. While | the entire Pittsburg team took « hand in the coaching inthe ninth inning, doing all they knew how to rattle Killen. the latter stood in the center of the diamond like a man of steel and shot the ball over the plate with deadly | aim. The Senators put ups snappy article of Dall and played with the dash and confidence of champions. The Pittsburg team kicked hard, often and long at Umpire Mitchell, and lay | nine-tenths of the defeat at his door.“ Kadford was fined $5 for disputing one of the umpire’ decisions, while Berger was pres nted with » of roses. | Balt 18989888 Lo er a First base op balls ler. 2, yf] |. Dowd and Nae ss ia a ‘The failure of the home team to hit Staley | and their poor work in the field gave Boston ‘an easy victory over “the Spiders.” os » Q eben gaan deren at By Hutchinson received miserable support from | the Colts and in the ninth inning be weakened bimself, five hits and four errors yielding tive runs. Anson's pop up over third base was the only thing that saved the Colts from a shutout. | ° oe ZO OR0OF 05-2) #0800888 02 Two-tone hit Stoves ita Biter “benign: pane” cue. Rost and Serie Easiae Up teres. wees. Uupire—Mr. Snyder. sii Aap The Reds put up a very “sloppy” artic! Dall jetordny. y made five errors in the and the New Yorks made three bite. This combination guve the visitorna big lead. Rusie itched in good style and Eddie Burke bit the hard and timely. -1199900 Eis?73s runs—Cimcinpats, 1; New York. 4. Farned runs— Chu ‘omiske Buller SRanle vlare “Sunt and” MePhes: toaee op Lig By Dwyer. }: by Bapecdealr Latta. Bir Deine i Uwiid plch—Suiltvan ‘Time of wane | Hadurana to minutes Uupleeate. Lynch. | Pitcher Hawley was the choice of yesterday's game between St. Louis and Brooklyn. He did great work in the box, and errors of the visitors on bix bite gave the home team all the | runs they secured und won them the game. | o 0 og x9) Gore made a phenomenal catch in the third inning and saved the contest, Heddock’s wild | throw lost the game. go 0001-3 Broatign Lae ee Earped s_-St. Louts, 1. Brook), ‘Two-base pat UPB ao” Geog Danes laces cE, ~.. Struck ont Passed btall—Ruekley. Wild pitch Time of game—2 boars. Umpire—Mr. ‘The Phillies won an interesting game from the | Colonels. It was anybody's game until the last man was ont in the ninth inning. Both pitchers | @id food work and both teams fielded bril- liantly. He... PElisdalpia >— TURNPIKE TO BALTIMORE. It Looks as if the Boulevard Project Will Be @ Succesa, From the activity exercised lately it seems probable that the grand scheme of a boulevard ‘end new line of railway between Washington and Baltimore will be realized. The last legis- lature of Maryland granted «charter to the corporation orgunized under the name of the Baltimore and Washington Turnpikeand Tram- way Company, which seems to more than pro- vide for all the requirements. Congress last session provided for the entrance of the road into the District. The boulevard and tramway is designed to rum along the line of the old Washington turnpike. The old Washington turnpike is a country roud, and each county owned the part which passed throngh the respective counties. The state bill gave the right of way through the counties without the consent of the coun- ties, so long as the proposed boulevard and tramway kept on the old pike, but whenever it | was necemary to deviate from the line the county commissioners have to be applied to. The special acts of Congress only gave the rivilege of coming into the District of Colum- Gin ue power of incorporation and the right to issue stocks and bonds. COMPETITOR OF THE B. AND 0. The boulevard 1s to be sixty feet wide and | forty feet additional, if necessary, for the rail- | way. The tramway will be built first, so as to give conveniences for hauling the material re- quired for its constrnetion, and for the rebuild- ing, bridging. grading and widening af the | ward. The tramway company is not| allowed to charge more than a cent and a half a mile betwoen Baitimore and We ‘nd may charge not lees than 5 cents between | any two intermediate stations on its line. The company was alto given the privilege of con- demning private property for ite road After the first mile of the uew rood is built | the company has the right to erect tollgates, ut a rate to be fixed by the company, but not to exceed 2 cents » mile for each mile traveled by each horse, head of cattle, chaise, wagon or car- Fiage, but no toll is to be charged any person in esting from his own farm to another, or to any eral procession. Under a general law in the District of Columbia the company at that end ie privileged to charge not more than 5 cents fare to each passenger. ‘The incorporators in the act were Messrs. C. HL. Stanley, Daniel Charles F. Fleisher. George W. Kellogg, Edward Phelps, Henry C. Frost, M. M. Chollar. Robert Ober. Ellery Coffin, Gen. John Gill, Gambrill, James Rittenhouse and Wilken Henry Baldwin. All of the stock, amounting to $150,000, in | 20 shares, wax immediately subseribed. The company Ine aathoriey crease its capital to $900,000 and to mortgage ite property for $5,000a mile. (p= sioners of counties through which the boule- vard and tramway is to pass were also author- ized to subscribe for bonds of the company not execeding $5,000 for each mile of the road in their couaty. Banquet to Chief Justice Fuller. Arrangements have been made for a reception and banquet to be given at Camden, to Chief Justice Puller of the United States Su- preme Court, now spending the summer in Camden. The Knox County Bar Association will take the steamer Gov. Bidwell tomorrow calling at [ | desire to pose asa prophet, I will say candidly | A. Hearn of Boston, who is to; THE GREAT FIGHT. THE SWITCHMEN’S STRIKE. 1 MeCaffrey Thinks Sullivan Will Win—Both He and Corbett in Good Condition. The great fight between Sullivan and Corbett | pain is now only three weeks off and the interest is| re tre-p of FREIGHT TRAIXS—THE VERSION getting to boiling point Prominent fighters | oy ze TROUBLE GIVEN RY PRESIDENT ¥'LEOD all over the world are coming to the front with | or tHe READING—DEPUTIES WHO @GAVR UP predictions as to the probable winner. The) yer ciuns. Intest to give his views is Dominick MeCaffrey, | who believes Sullivan will have an easy thing. | Aasteted in Tux Stan's dispatches yester- Among other things McCaffrey says: | day the strike of switchmen at Buffalo haa “Since the match between Sullivan and Cor- | seriously impeded freight traffic, and its effecta bett was made I have been asked bungreds of | are felt in New York. times what I thought of it. While I have no| Great excitement prevailed yesterday at | Waverly, N. ¥.,and Sayre, just over the state that I think Sullivan has the easiest job of his | line, on account of the strike of the Lehigh life before him, providing he is as well as re- Valley awitchmen. Fifty-one Lehigh men aro ported. Having boxed both men, T can/out. Two Lehigh freight trains slipped out, | fay, without any intention of Eragging, that I the trainmen doing their own switching, bat | competent to judge. | ‘ | By bel ar wr s = way Corbett may | With these exceptions mo trains have gone prolong the fight, but Sullivan is too good a through Sayre since Saturday night. Between Ting tactician to waste bis strength charing a | 2,500 and 3,000 cars are tied up at Sayre, Sher- nimble-footed adversary, aud when it comes to | iff Geer of Tiogacounty, N. ¥., was at Waverly @ square stand-up fight, whfch it must come to, | with twenty-five deputies sworn in, and Sheriff | one man will have a marked advantage, and that | Powoll of fiedford ecnate By pipes | man will be Sullivan. * with a large force of deputies. Great excite- | “OF course, if the champion isin poor form | ment rerulted from the attempt to run an engine | there is a chance for the other fellow. but with | tnd caboose ou! of ‘Sayre yesterday morting, | Sullivan well and fit it looks to me as though be | The men surrounded the engine and. Tefecod > has a first mortgage on that $45,000. | let it proceed. Sheriff Powell turned the switch BOTH MEX IX G00D CONDITION. himself, but it wus immediately turned by the | Recent reports from Bay Head, Long Island, | *ttikers. A start was made, but thestrikers pulled tell of the excellent condition in which Sullivan | ‘B¢ coupling pin betweon the engiue and ca- t | boose and caused another delay. The sheriff is, and equally favorable reports come from | tried to arrest some of the mer but the Corbett. On Friday Dr. Dudley Sergeant of | immediately rescued by their comrades. sical culture department of Harvard; | intendent Stephenson and the sheriff mounted istunt, Dr. Wells Fitz, and some enthu- | the pilot, but could not keep the men away from ic medical associatesaccompanied by Jamea | the engirc. At noon the engines had gone iblish Sullivan's | about 200 vards and the strikers were in com- book, went down ‘to Sullivan's quarters and | mand of the situation. No trouble has occurred | took a large number of measurements of the | at Elmira or Hornellsville. The altercations be- fighter. An interesting experiment with an | tween the sheriff's posse and the strikers has electric apparatus told the rapidity of one of | been conducted so for without any serious re- Ballivan's biows, and {t was that Mr. Sullivan's | sults. A meeting of union trainmen ‘was weld fist when aimed ata bag travels at the rate of | yesterday afiernoon at Sayre and it was decided | twenty feet acecond. How fast it may travel | that trainmen would uot do switehmen’s work | when aimed at a real face other mathematicians | north of Sayre. may calculate. apie turmoll subsided in the afternoon, the RESULTS OF SULLIVAN'S TRAINING, riff admitting bis powerlessness, but more 7 ’ trouble is threatened when he undertakes to Sullivan is now said to weigh 209 pounds, | Se ee ee which shows a loss since training of thirty-tive | Ono striker, Wun. Jones, was burt in one of the | pounds. His chest whon expanded measured | melees with the sheriff's force. 463¢ inches and at normal 42 inches. Dr.| The only event that relieved the daylight mo- Schrady found it 42 inches normally and capa-| notony of events onthe Buffalo and South- ble of un expansion of an inch and a half. It| western waa little episode which occurred | will be seen that its expansion, if Dr. Schrady | yesterday afternoon next to Taylor & Crate's | was correctly reported, has increased wonder- | lumber yard just enst of the Elk street cross- Regiments of Militia Called Out to the Buffalo Yards. |line would be more easily controlled its charter to in- | his fully, ‘The saype doctor found the circumference of Mz. SNC) ot its oesimum 45 inches. Dr. Sergeant computed it to be 40 inches yester- day. His’ neck used to be 17¢ inches round. Now it iv 17 inches. His thighs are 25 inches | round now and his upper arm is 16 inches in | the stagnant pools at the side of the track and circumference. It is impossible to compare these with the figures noted by Dr. Schrady, ay he made no mention of thighs or upper arm, 2 oe s THREE DAYS TO EUROPE. By Rall to the Labrador Coast and Across to Wales by Steamship, A special to the Boston Herald from Quebec says: The shortening of the trans-Atlantic passage Caruthers, | toa three days’ voyage is the inducement now | t0 take the places of the strikers, reached But- 2nd ai? | held ont to the Canadian government by the | promoters of the new Labrador railway scheme. The proposal involves the establishment of an ocean steamship port at Port Manaham, which is situated on Lewis it “about sixty miles north of the Straits of Belle Isle. It is claimed that the short crossing between Port Manaham and Milford Haven in Wales could be easily | made in seventy-two hours by the greyhounds now running between New York and Liverpool. “It is claimed by the authors of the scheme that during the season of navigation almost wll the mails between Europe and America, as well as the bulk of the passenger trade, would follow the shortest existing route. Public interest in the scheme has been awakened in Canada by the publication of the report of a survey for a line of railway from Quebec to Labrador. which for its entire length is practically level. “The westward connections of th» projected thern Pacific people than by anybody else, and railroad men are now asking if it is with this object in view that Mr. McNaught of that corporation and his friend, John C. Eno and others connected with them, have secured a controlling interest in charter and existing lines of railway running westward toward the great lakes from a point on the line of the Quebec and Lake St. John railway.” A CONVICT STOCKADE RAIDED. Te easee Miners Take Possession of Works at Inman. Tre Stan's dispatches yesterday from Chat- tanooga announced that 500 miners had pro- ceeded in a body to Inman, where 250 convicts were at work in the iron mines. Taman is about 100 miles by rail from Chat- tanooga, in Sequatchie valley, ona branch of the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis rail- From Tracy City it is but a short day’ walk down the mountain to Victoria, and trouble was partially expected after the out- break at Tracy City. The suspicion was well founded, for early Sunday morning little knots of miners began to congregate, some strangers from Traty Cit : miner was visited by them. They gathered together about 200 well-armed men and pro- ceeded toward the stockude. A squad of guards, formerly on duty at Tracy City, who had taken the released prisoners from there to the peni- tentiary at Nashville, were en route to Inman to reinforce the men protecting the prisoners there. At Whitwell the train was stopped on a trestle and the reinforcement cut off. Then « movement was made on Inman. No resisiance was made, and 282 convicts and twenty-seven guards were taken prisoners by a mob of free miners led by R. P. Helton. The party having left Whitwell secretly Sunday night, the pris- oners were marched to Victoria, loaded on cars and hauled away by the switch engine. The stockade was not burned and no damage was done to the property of the company. The convicts were taken to Bridgeport, Als, a1 from there sent via the Nashville and Chat nd itta- nooga railroad to Nashville under the charge of Eth B. Wade, state superintendent of prisons. Everything was quict at Inman last night, and the other company works in the valley, and the members of the mob were returning to their homes. Judge Moon. holding court at Jasper, promptly and iy ordered sheriff to sammon a posse and, if possible, pro- tect the eaptured stockade. The sheriff says he ean secure ® sufficient force to enforce the order, but left~on the first train for Inman. It is though that work will be resumed in the mines today, and there seems to be considerable uneasiness among the free miners, they fea 4 lockout as the result of their aioe yesterday. ye wires were cut early yester morning, fer festa te ec by a roundabout circuit to Nashville. A messenger boy on horse- back was busy carrying reports from the station at Whitwell to the telegraph office. ‘The miners ordered him to stop, and be, not heeding their orders, was fired on and the horse shot under im. ‘Sheriff Mortison wired Gov. Buchanan the facts in the case yesterday morning and was ordered by the governor to summon @ posse brah soph emp ag ba ee says tre so much fa with the slonte gh cannot get a force. He does not know any of the men in the mob and has little to way. “He has advised the governor ‘that he (the sheriff) is utterly helpless to do anything toward bringing members of the mob to justice. A second mob assembled at Inman in the afternoon, and, armed with axes, practically demolished the stockade. One side was cut | the yard, down, the roof crushed in and the interiors of | nose, &c. all houses are in ruins and dining hall wrecked. Fire was bneplersplneiin ger the rail- | violence: road trestle and several private ———_ eo Washington Can Care for Them. From the Hutchinson (Kan.) News. A The old soldiers are making extensive preps- rations for the national encampment at Wash- ington next month Quite ® number of our by the | ring | other employes in the east, “Although the |ing. About 4:90 p.m. engine No. 9 was pulling | freight train No. 188 into the city, when twenty | | or thirty of the striking «witchmen came up | |from behind the lumber yard, boarded the | in the U train, set the brakes, stalled the train, pulled | the coupling pins, threw pins and links into disappeared. ‘The engineer ran down to the | | Seneca street crossing. got a new supply of | | pins and Links, and at about 5:30 o'clock hauled | the train in, with a policeman on about every | fifth car. ‘The event attracted a large crowd of men, women and children at the Elk etreet crossing. A patrol wagon was also stationed at that place. NON-UNION MEN KEEP UNDER COVER. About forty non-union men, brought from | Philadelphia by the Philadelphia and Reading falo yesterday thornitig and were quartered at | the United States Motel ‘o attempt waa made to work them, and all reniained at the hotel in eharge of Phillip Kranz, a detective employed by the road. . Last evening the men were ad- | vised to go to their rooma, so in case any of the strikers came around there would be no | trouble. Most of the men acted on the advice and retired, ‘The air was full of dark hints of coming | trouble, which was said to be deferred until after dark. Tho specials, who had been brave | as lions on the train nnd indulged in tall talk about what they would do in the region of Cheektowaga, now felt their courage oozing | away as soon as they Innded, and finally, in re- sponse to the appeals of the men, one after an- | other thr-w away his club or handed it to the powerless hands of the sheriff, while at each conversion a cheer went up from the strikers, | and soon all that remained of the sheriff's brave sse could be counted on the fingers of one and. Sheriff Beck bowed to the inevitable | and came back to Buffalo to call out the militia. No disturbance was reported up to 11 o'clock last night at the Cheektowaga yards, except the burning of One empty Lehigh freight car at 8:80 p. m. THE MILITIA READY. The seventy-fourth regiment and sixty-fifth regiment were assembled at their armories ready to move ata moment's notice, though the ‘mateur soldiers do not much relish the idea of & repetition of the fight of 1877. i¢ first battalion of the sixty-fifth “a left at 1 o'clock for the Cheektowaga freight yards. They will be followed in the morning by the second battalon and both battalions of the seventy-fourth regiment. PRESIDENT M'LEOD'S STATEMENT. A Philadelphia dispatch says that the switch- men’s strike on the Lehigh Valley railroad, while viewed with becoming seriousness by the Reading ment, occasions no apprehen- sions as to the outcome. Men in numbers more than sufficient to fill the places of the strikers have been secured, they say, and thus far there has been no absolute stoppage of traffic. Three freight trains were moved this morning. None of the perishable freight has been stopped. In an interview President McLeod furnished some exceedingly interesting information re- garding the strike. “To intelligently understand the situation at Buffalo.” he explained, “you must know that Buffalo is the dividing line between the west- ern roads and the trunk lines. Both concen- trate there and that point forms the phi- cal line between the western and eastern rail- way systems. It likewise supplies the line of differing conditions between the eastern and western The roads west of Buffalo get higher rates for trafiic, the classifications are higher, everything is on a higher scale, and the cost of living to the railway employes is also higher, hence they are paid higher wages than ‘are paid in the cast. “Some years ago the labor organizations, starting at Chicago, inaugurated a movement for higher wages along the western lines, mo¥- ing eastward in their work of agitation, One by one they took in the various railroad yards ‘until B was finally reached. Here the two ms meet, and here, as at Chicago, the em- joyes of the western roads get higher » use the western roads, receiving better Tates, can afford to pay the difference. The walking delegate jumped at the opportunity and urged equalization of wages, notwithstanding the widely differing conditions. When the de- mand for an advance was made to the eastern Sowied Gd nies aineaey oo eine nm advance, alt! so it Storeised manifest discrimination against’ ite Lehigh Valley declined to meet the demands of the men when the road was a separate organization, they renewed them when the road was leased by the Rexding. I sonally investigated the matter and cessions to the demands of the strikers, — McLeod answered, emphatically, ‘‘No, ir. Arrest of any person or persons ailty of violence to the company’s p bore Atay eyo “A. he Mcledo, Preehient.” A Reading official in speaking of this notice said: “The Reading company means by this an- nouncement that sum measures wilbbe adopted to protect itself against acts of incen- diatom, aseaults upon its employes, criminal attempts to obstruct travel and bring about general destruction to life and property. It is @ question between property and crime.” ¢ notice has been printed in large type on cardboard, and will be displayed at points the company’s lines, where the ewitchmen’s strike w now iu progress. —se2. AN ORIENTAL PARADE. The Order of the Mystic Shrine Makes a Fine jpectacle in Omaha. ‘The grand parade in Omaha yesterday of the Ancient Arabic Order of the Mystic Shrine made a most imposing spectacle. Twenty who shall be employes or | thousand persons gathered along the line of march and witnessed the parade marching until 9 o'clock, when it disbanded on Farnum street after having been reviewed by illustrious Poten- tate Briggs from the Paxton balcony. WATER BOTTLES OPENED. ‘Then came a grand reception to the nobles and their Indies, at which they were weleomed by Mayor Bemis and given the key and the free- dom of the city. The rooms of the temples represented here were crowded with nobles. The water bottles, long upon the backs of the camels, were oj , and the so} re drank deep of the refreehing liquid. Then for thove who desired deeper draughts there were punch pompeed gooey over by dusky sons of the des- ert, and other refreshments worthy the trav- clers who had journeyed hither from every state ‘nion, ‘The imperial council opened yesterday morn- ing at 9 o'clock in ihe Masonic Diu trious Potentate Samuel Brij cil to and Imperial order Frank M. Luce called the r Immediately after the call . Potentate Briggs delivered his annual re- port. Among other things he quoted statistics shor that there were in this country 62 tem- ples and 22,789 nobles, against 18 temples and a in 1878. \e reports of the imperial treasurer, Jos. 8. Wright, and the imperial recorder, Frank M. Luce, were then and referred. ‘The imperial recorder, in concluding his ad- dress, stated that the Imperial Council waa en- tirely free from debt and had a balance of €16,571.42 in the treasury. The committee on jurisprudence made ite re- port and the active work of the session began. ¢ question of limiting the number of temples ina state to three. recommended by the com- mittee, called forth a great deal of oratdry on the part of Moslems, and it was finally decided discretion of the coun- to leave.the whole matter to the the Imperial Council. So ee B. and O. Telegraphers May Strike. A Cumberland, Md., dispatch says that it fs quite probable that within the next week the Balti- more and Ohio railroad will be offered a new schedule of wages by the order of railway tele- graphers to sign. In the new list higher sal- aries are asked by the men and the advance ly every station on the road wl the order flourishes, will meet in Pittsburg and begin their work. Immediately after the sched- ule is completed the committee will go to Balti more and present it. If the railroad company do not grant the advance a strike along the entire line will probably be ordered. About 2,500 operajors will be affected by the strike. A Cholera Scare in Kansas, Considerable excitement has been caused at Topeka, Kan., over the arrival of large num- bers of Russians in the state, some of whom came from the cholera infected district. Ou Thureday last a car lond of these people were brought to Kansas, five families stopping in To- peka. The others went to Willis county. Four Of the families went to Mavette Sunday, leaving only one family in T: . As these people are froma region on. the. Volga whete cholera 1s now raging, fear is ex yy thoxe who know the clreumstances, that they might ring in ¢ -up household goods of the disease, . oY ———_~+e- Ate the Poison Intended for Bugs. A family named Morgan, living in Hamp- den, Me. were poisoned on Saturday by eating potatoes on which paris green had been used to kill bugs. The father and son are now somewhat relieved, but the mother may not recover. Other persons in the hborhood who used the potatoes were also taken sick, but less violgntly than were the Morgans. ‘With the Theft of Arms, The New Orleans Picayune's Del Rio, Tex., special says: Esitacis Villibos, a Mexican who publishes » paper here in the Spanish langungo, is under arrest on complaint instigated by the Moxican government charg- ing him with the theft of government arms from thearsenal in Garza Galan some months ago. ‘The Mexican officials have asked Judge is for extradition and the trial has been fixed for August 19. Villiboa the charge is merely a ruse of tho Diaz government to get him out of the way. He has been an ardent anti-administrutionist and his paper has been favorable to the Garzaites. ? ae ‘Neo World's Fair in Berlin, The North German Gazette, in discussing the abandoned project of an international exhibi- tion at Berlin, says: “‘If itia desirable to find new markets we believe that Chicago isim- measurably better situated than Berlin, and is likely to do more for our position in Central Emperor Willfam has squeiched the world’s fair in Berlin by withdrawing support from the scheme. The Prassian cabi- net and many members of the bundesrath ware ° & majorit federal” governabent deuled. ls ‘asstedty on ‘THE PLAN OF THE STRIKE. “On our declination, the strikers held a meet- ing on July 22 at Waverly. there may be proceedings: What occurred worthy master says SS ee one to yw the strike would be conducted. M< says be was in favor of using force should todo so, That his good thing.” jcNamata further said that tho plan of the strike was to have aman named Cros—a uffalo—and one oF ting on a report trom Chancellor von Caprivi, act ona von a eon bpp a si wi though he favored the exhibition. hs Union. No. 6, of New York has voted €250 for the Homestead strikers, Py. Figg ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results whea Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleas ant and refreshing to the taste, and sotsgently yet promptly on the Kid. neys,Liverand Bowels, cleanses the system ellectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers,and cureshab- itual constipation, Syrup of Fige is (he only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt tn its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable sub- stances,its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most poole remedy known. Bey of Figs is for sale in 50c. and n tles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who muy not Wave it on band will procure it ‘omptly tor any one who wishes te Yi“ e not wccept any substitute CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, (OUIBVALE. AY. EW YORK, Aw SUMMER RESORTS. __ ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. PMDIHosE, atanticcrry. N, J.—ARKAI ‘ave. near the ocean and Reading main 3 well furnished rooms; pryeg, or terms moderate. JA! aD ¥. P. O'Bor on Fi pelle BEB y OTEL ALBION. ATLANTIC CITY, ¥. J. ee miner’ walk from bathing ero Accommodates 33. tesiag _weeum GUSTAV A. KN OTEL BRUN@WIOK. PACIFIC AV! Between New York pa rasan, cHacES eC CREA oi¢-2m Late of Colonnade Hotel, Phitedelphta, ON— ms} Michirap aves.. near the beach fall arranges fect: : suaple.” irs SOHN i COURE sores: Be Ee == me OTEL HECKLER. RMERLY NO} NDU Cor. attaniican Fonss, = dyn HENRY WRCKLEN, Prop. ‘OTEL _ ONTHE BEACH. MARYLAND AVE: ue, Receives 200 cuests, All mode IMPERIAL trp conveniances. Apocintments and table Arstclase, @. W- KENDRICK. €2t0 83 por aay. Pot week. Jem to 818 FOTEL Wei TON, OCEAN END OF KENTUCKY AVE. ATLANTIC CITY, ¥. 1. fearon M.A. & HS. MIT.XOR. A FONTAINE, EENTUOKY AVE.. ATLANTIO Lago MEATUS Uacak? oreritulag iow Sad ae chang: $0 Bi xt _____—*O. 8. WRIGHT. ONTEREY HOTEL. ATLANTICCITY, N. J. ‘Coot nttuation' all consorts: geestient tabte vita __E. K. NEWCOMER. THE EERTON, RENTUCK AVE. ATLANTIO ;J...near beach. Appoint ivt-clases ; ‘convenience, at TT es Atlantic City, %,3. ‘Homelike and lance, "Ty 7 10 $10 week LOE BOLT tase Baton” eR T SIDE, ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., ntucky ave. . 50 feet from ocean. BO to #2 + 68 to 81S per weok. auaase _ N. REED. CITY, ¥. 7. ON THE BEACH. __ CHAMBERS & HOOPES. iP 3E MANSION. © ciry. ‘Largest hotel. ‘Open all the year. Orchestra from June to October. _ 212m. _, CHARLES McGLADR._ ‘TEEMARTTAND. NEW YORE AVE) Nran THE + unobst ‘ocean vie moder! conveniences; erected April, = = 73 F. 8, OREM, Proprietor and Manager. PARK. N. J. ‘Aseuay, PARK 3. IE BELDEN, 4TH AVE. block from ocean. “Delteheal mySPhet Wi ____ SEA-SIDE_JERSEY NGRESS HALL, CAPE MAY, N. SEPTEMBER 10, AND WILL BE CONDUCTED ON THE SAME LIBERAL MANAGEMENT AS FOR- MERLY. FORINFORMATION ADDRESS: 3y20-1m MRS. J. F. CAEE. 'QTEL LAFAYETTE. CAPE MAY, N. Han vapor focated directty anh ty 10 SOHN, aia or improvements: 3 ashton otal. 3 pe ay pop day $10.0 BG ot wk Paral os | EDUCATIONAL. ene call Eft IN WASHINGTON Siiretraction to tmtued ‘auater [NG_PRIVATR S apecd Pract tee teraw Teencmnbie : dhor Feit oe Sa rerr. =e Pag a WEDN: x Sr ee polis. Cataligree aid’ full “ART INSTRUCTION. —THE GREATEST OPPOR- tunity ever to parents, children, teachers tors or to learn to'draw and paint iy: best and cl FoR. Exfetanriemaagh a meaner Gputtele qrtor frqm $10 65.005. The teacher, Ck jorrel}, Mss twelve medals and Afters : with rola fees opaepubatten ta = NT git 8, Ad Rat. nw. ‘yi im TERS ROE circular. FVE! ACTICAL BUSINESS. O19 st. Bow t eC ATION FOR REAL RE, THE SPENCERTAN SUSINESS OOLLES! ‘Nationr] Bank of the vabite Building, cor Th and aw. Ee th scholasti"yeer decine : senor 2 Th Bayand night scetona & Fapid writina ab training for the civil weteices ry Book! atlas aceaan fa} Soortinsd and rypewe: ma Wr “Architectural aod lec wth sural and Mert TUTE FOR GIRLS, .W.. WASHINGTON, D. c. "s College unde |. Send walomue, “Brother FABRICIAN. President, 1525 re. subse (GO%z4G4 corLear, NO. 191 ST. ¥.W., Under the direction of the Fathers of the Society of Jeans, SCHOOLS WILL REOPEX ON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1892. ‘Three Free Scholarships are open tosuccessful com- petition om the 1st, 24 and 34 of September. ‘This competition is open to all, even to studente YOUNG LADIES AND WM reopen MONDAY, SEPT! creased facilities for muparting s thoroagh course of géucation ta the primary, rreparatory: axa acaderaie Separtment Ne nasfeal cores <mbraces vol ns and tions on the piano, hare, viola and euiter, eldeution, "LDREN ER 12, with in. siresdy belonsing to the college. 2217 Penn. ave. n.w. Our Spectaltios: For farther particulars appiy to CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK OR TEETH WITH- CORNELIUS GILLESPIE, 8. 3., sas ogennt deca; au32m President. raed Binet area meee L 4d ORWOOD INSTITUTE, WASHINGTON, D. ©. able every wey msasturd owes fy ‘ones. 2 BOARDING AND DAY aqtt0ot, FoR YOUNG permanently arreat devay at the broken LAD END Litvee Stans * eat — re woose {vin te atts coer. Wy the Principals. all reqi Me ee Sa pect, ‘bride work consists sae MS Sa Piet ee are ing testh that have een aitracteds ‘ACADENY OF FOL IS Ser Ticcsat Se eee . . ‘the ib. instr Special attention given to art, phonography andtypowriting. OME SCHOOL FOR GIRLS WITH Hine ith, a ieee Hueh McCulloch, Prof, Simon Newcomb. Mo Kine. att Horetio King. ‘HE MISSES KERR'S SCHOOT. FOR indies and little children, 1450 5 st” ow. Bresent dyke BROCK ENON, VA. “YOUNG . Address Mr. Vinxox Sewrsany. CORNER M AND 11TH STREETS X, WASHINGTON, D.C., BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES AND LITTLE GIRLS. Eighteenth year opens OCTOBER 4, 1992. Now buildings perfectly equipped for health and comfort. ‘Steam heat, passenger elevator, perfect sanitation. Special advantawesin Literature, Modern Languages and Music. For circulars apply to the principal. re Mra ELIZABETH J. SOMERS. 307, Batty Sins ATV aCu thod for learniny ta speak and 1d . Fyprivate lessons: $16. BO clam losesus: $6. Syl Tee Hw UNIVERSIT! , MEDTOAL ten Hf iment Deotal sad aripacrutiel will o1 October 1, 1892. etroular address 0. BUPURVIS, Secretary, 1118 190k st “elStoct W 0008 coMMencraL contest, 497 Rast Capitol wt all simmer.’ Day ant evening aictdtion amen 3to7 p.m. mh5-Bu Petes Et, AM oh and orthand, Saisaiony oy comoetant readersand the puonograph.Tndivitual instraction Pr seeaanced Tenortors, ‘rnoroa ch favirasdoats the Encitsh business and civil courses. R»- Sucedrates for suinmer montha" Bend for cataloraa Ms AMY C. LEAVITT OF BOSTON. 138 L SP. N.W. PIANO AND HARMONY. — SS Batowrs crvit, service ixerirore rod suscomtully for civ gorvico: dspartementa tor Tadeonsan cas YEAR AT LUTHERVILLE SFMI- : nary (near Baltiioore) for young Indies, EROY HALDEMAN, Manager. | Rend fo- catalowue. ‘Revs 3 NER ALM Eee : Bah Peet ea 2 POE OS Sop RBA RIDE MISCELLANEOUS. | ASST ueceding nchogl tor gouge lire as entte men: OPENS MBI : cal (OTEL HENLOPEE, courses and or business or collsve. tine nelche CAPE HENLOPEN ia heal moral and religious; prompt ig ggg abd Biall servioes Ait rens will reopen Seturday, Juue 25, 1892 AR. JONES, A. M., Principal, ‘Take the 2:01 p.m. train. ArrivestSp.m_ ané-2n_ Millersville, Ma. Write for JYAGERSTOWN. MD., KEE MA LLEGE AND my17-3ea* WALTER BURTON, Manacer. Hex seratry ae es ent sober forse : for catelowus. . ; CoETONS POINT, 7 NOW | OPEN: 3 “Ses din President. 1 . LE MY Lid S ane tae Sets ateur | ROGETUA® oACARENY, 2OT, BONE, ROCK: bers Saaachok et ip Wat ig E z_F CRUMP. Proprietor. | Sarees WF MASON. An Principal, EOSIN INTHE MOUNTAINS. Newae CQMroRT RETREA IOUNTAINS OF Mary. | WINDSOR (near , unexcalled for health, tt] ll. Fishing and bi W. M. CL, Keep Feyets Washtaston sousiy Sia, waiéim” OUNTAIN VIEW HOUSE. pnw 3 te ABOVE 00; ; good board; saddle and dri rates, mk, Aurora, W. Va. jy19-1 MOUNT, GEES oe ee Hoh attire H™ Be ner ny Fleets fee TOP HOUSE, WARPER'S FERRY, W. VA. Firiglece table; test location; open —_ Li iS 4 En xX OPEN. well- z = See ee LLoczwoop HOUSE, [3 FERRE! 4 N. OT. eS 'XGTON 4XD SOUTH. TMIT 2 Li Sean ares - 0 pounce wath vile "Yuliean ‘sleeper Ringtone Hot pring vie habe: NaTON Axpomo prviszoy ot 8.100... 435 p.m. datly, p.m. day ‘ations and Infor franta Raliroed.” W (CHESAPEAKE AxD oro RarLWay Cor, Thend Date aw ‘The largest ormantzation devoted to high lass dental practice tm the world. Pledord to the promotion of cotentite ‘end tickets at Company's Offices, para TGPSPeten cars ameneeAret ane * NSYLVANTA ROUTP 5 AG! . ENT. Gate. arn © VERY BEST TEETH (fall e)............ Te rs Bars Va Wisgarion aul2 Crown and Bridge Work « apectalty. tibule Core ea ee ‘BE EVANS DENTAL PaRLOna, imwrovements benent Spagaen tee tid To tg noat of work willbe found as rea ry = Pinker ited with eld ‘Fattecting without pela. nae es xB DiS eae rs eres SS a eae a Stes See At present location twelve years. 2.80, aA, _— (ONAL LIMITED.” = Bae pacar Pont guyrees FED ins ond Mages nad 48 pom june '¥ NATION: = Daan oe eeeer PIANOS AND ORGANS. Fane ae po BRiegs For ia ENTAL INFIRMABY—TEETH FILLED salad aoe Sttueiden n University. roms tte pee Beckson segs Aone Coey 43 beeen ere Ce crane Bein ra Eo Fa fork. eat Mizu, era op amuse ta Sheree aed cn lar) a.m. Cor), (11.30 pm, end Chester, 6.08 ee eee teers ay 10 00 an4 12.00 nooa Sundaya, spettin POTOMAC RIVER BOATS. AXD MEDICAL, &c eg Se ea Oe bee ae D* © 2: canzzror, i la etaw.

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