Evening Star Newspaper, January 28, 1893, Page 12

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THENS¥YENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. = great establishment, ns young having been born in Baltimore in 1860. At the age of fifteen, the youngest member of the class, he graduated with the Baltimore City College. v in August, 197! Mercantile life. He is a man, extremely THE CONCORDIA CLUB. A Well-Known Organization of| high honors from Mr. Gaus moved | t once entering | rake, progressive erever known, and | Jewish Citizens. charitable and fraternal organizations. of the important citizens’ mittees during the late G. A. R. national mpment here. Mr. Gans is chairman of amittee on amusements of the Concordia Chub, and is well kflown in theatrical circles .@ throughout the count ‘and bas one child. served on several >» A NEW HOUSE.| Sm » im the O14 her, BACK IN 1865, year in American his- y never to be fi city organized what | neordia Club, an or- xAnization formed for and social enjoym: and for sever SECRETARY E. D. MAYER. Mayer is the secretary of the club and one of its most popular younger members. Mr. Mayer has resided here for the past eight | years, and daring that short time has become quite prominent in local business circles. t present connected with m Mr. Maver is known as the organizer of the Eatre Nous Club, an exceeding! 1 organization. club met and had its n Pennsylvania avenne wn home and in bolds an enviable | Charles Herzberg of the clab and Otto | Both are now de- xb was a success from the firs ‘ompelied its members | venient quar- He | just as Tilden was. the Bon Marche. Iso connected ber of the most succesaful fraternal this time the old Cha: rner of 6th and iub house may be | co has been appointed | rized to con- 4” Z Pz S Or (2 AS, TREASURER 8. GOLDSTEIN. Mr. S. Goldstein of the banking house of | is the treasurer of the club, and bas held that position for the past ten years. Jdstein is also prominent in local real He is an influential member of a number of the leading fraternal socioties of «l ix on the legislative committee of | P. B. Association. and it is inten estate circles. Such entertainments nts, once a month. and ng is given up to the Indies, NEW PUBLICATION: OF WATERLOO. A military PES, author of JouN CopMaAN library are als Washington: Brentano's. Undoubtedly the most complete and authentic | (history of the bloody struggle which closed | the military and imperial career of the great Every known source has been vis- { floor are devoted to those who | ited by Mr. Ropes in search of facts—docu- | ped | mentary or otherwie—and the result is a work on which students may rely. ‘over by « celebrated ther pleasant custom and that is the dining lege deeply appre- »nd and a por- | Napoleon. te’ quarters are ted on the fourth | ANCIS DRAKE, A TRAGEDY OF THE SE. asp THE MOTHER, and other poems. | By Weim Mirewet, M.D., LL.D.. Harv. THF MEMBERSHIP. { the Concordia Club repre- ments of the Jewish-American | The rules of the club tion of those not of the Jewish f Gentiles have been #0 ents of the city The membership Mimin & Company. ‘Two volumesof great ment. “Franc isa tragedy of the highest type; a superior production, worthy of all commendation. ‘Washington: Brentano's: ilege on the cards of members. The a yor ae f the elub are md the name | for membership must be posted ks, together with the name of the The applicant In which some of the world’s ways—particu- —are made very plain. Orig- | rejected by the board of managers. | inal as to much of its plot and a clever piece of literary work. The pure minded and_ the vil- President, Samuel | Jains receive about an equal amount of atten- on, and in the end virtue and constancy some- how or other manage to triumph. proposing member. is then larly its ugly w: id financial conditior thcers being as Isaac Gans: secretar, nest I. Maver; treasarer, 8. Goldstein. They, together with M.D. Dyrenforth, Charles Banm, ndolph Gold: schmidt. form the board of managera. ‘tthe present time the membership of the | ‘CHS PRIZE NOVELS. New series. By Tiustrations from bh.” New York: United States Book Com- Washington: Brentano's. For those who are sufficiently anglicized to oS Bensinger, B. Baer, A.M. | ®ppreciate, or who pretend to appreciate, that peculiar something which is regarded as humor- satlantic readers of “Punch” this Adler, H. Adler, B. Burn- | Blout, 8. Bien, 8. i, FE. Blout. M. Brookheimer, Baum. H. Bernbeimer, Max | ous by tr: . Calisher. Mever Cohen, | is an amusing volume. hird annual nambe 3 V. aud H.W. Poor. Washington: Robert Beail. | | ‘The principal feature of this useful volume is the comprehensive series of articles upon the ces and resources of the United States and | of the several states, supp! tailed statements of ‘the financial condition of | emith, S. Goldstein. H. J. Goodman, 1. ¢ damith, K. Goldschmid, R. Harrii A. Herman, L Herman, J. Kaufman, J.King,Henry Lansburgh, Julius ashurgh, A. Lisner, Ed. layer, A. Morris, Nordlinger, W throught the Union. | ADZUMA; OR, TH j four acts. By WIFE. A play | SOLD. author of Powdermaker, L. . "IL. Strasburger, Meyer Joe Strasburger, rger, J. K. Stras” L Steinem, E. Steinem, . Sinsheimer, A. Sommers, B. Saks, L. Tobriner, Dramatic sketches of life in old Japan, ar- ranged for the stage, but not a probabilit | presentation in the United is much of the poetic utterance. FURONO AMATI. 3 ates, beautiful as | Silverberg, A. Wolf, 5. Wallach, N. Wallerstein, 8. By Mrs. L. C. ELiswor A Little Worldling.” dc. es Book Company. ington: Brentano's. A story of passion, of a sweetheart and a|up lest he in some way suffer. bride won by a violin’s strains, Fascinating | Dorsheimer said to me, who was deeply moved throughout and tragical. | THE FALLEN RACE. By Avstx Graxviie, | “The Shadow of Sham gend of Kaara,” &. Chicago: Out-Haggards Rider Haggard. Is a novel! novel and palpably a work of fiction. UE CHICAGO, and Gulde to the | elected President and I expect you to see me ‘air. Baltimore: KR. H. Woodward & | seated.’ To this Mr. ‘Tilden’ replied, said A matter-of-fact yet interesting story of what is in many senses the greatest of American cities. Profusely and well illustrated. SHORT STORIES. The eleventa volui magazine of select fiction. New York: The Current Literature Publishing Co. An aggregation of the delightfal narratives | which were published weekly during the last | quarter of 1892. THUMP-NAIL SKETCHES By C. Happon (1 “Capt. Swift,” ‘Tait, Sons & Company. Washington: Bren- PRESIDENT SAMUEL BIEBER sadent of the club is one of Washing- ton s best known citizens, Mr. Samuel Biebs Mr. Bieber was born in Germany in 1345 and re the club was organized nfry. a poor boy of nineteen, DE AUSTRALIAN Unpretentions but di series of short crisp storie: THE EVOLUTION 01 idedly realable. A ate business, Mr. Bieber ne of the largest dealers in S EMPIRE. By Mary ParweLe. New York: William Beverley Har- aintance throughout the ion of his departure he was tendered f his fellow citi- ¢ of the board of direct- Safe Deposit Company fed with many other local busi- with his family, 4 three children, at 630G street eouth- eutertains bis friends in a truly is an enterprising, Leizen, and the Bieber block on stheast is an indication of his busi- | THE LOYALTY OF LJ " V.GiLiat. Chicago: Morr THE MYSTERIES OF THE COURT OF NAPO- By GILBERT AUGUSTIN THIERRY. Miustrated. Chicagu: Laird & Lee. <o Epworth League Reception. One the most enjoyable receptions of the (wason was held in Hamline M. E. Church last night. The following named chapters, Grace, North Capitol, McKendree, Fletcher and Ham- line, entertained the rest of the Epworth A brief historical sketch of Germany; the first of a series, The story of a nation popu- last May on a F : <D WHAT? By Mary Par- ete. New York: William Beverley Harison An ingeniously constructed historical chart, a correct teacher and a valuable time saver. By E. ANSON Moore, gm. St. Paul: The Price-MeGtil Company. LET IT BURN. STRETH. By Joun R. 1y the entireaudience, led Hough presided and i aay ‘h Young’ Men's. Christian ’ Mundel, lender, rendered base solo was ti VICE PRESIDENT ISAAC GANS. Few pgople in Washington there are who are not acquainted with Mr. Isaac Gans, the vice President of the club, the popular manager fér the past tweive years of Lansburgh & Bro.’s | served wi ties.” by Mr. Possibilities,” by 1 refreshmen entire audience THE CA ing Period, |THE STRUGGLE FOR VOTES. ry. He is married | q., interview With Tilden—Men Said to Been Ruined by Placing Too Much casion. ——-——___ HE MOST ASSU: burial of Hayes wa den, who cl To the end of Van Buren’s pupil. Buren was the hero of a grievance and a feud, Having forced Calhoun, who corresponded to Horatio Seymour, aud Sanford E. Church out of the presidenti path, rather by a trick, Van Buren could take ests pushed him aside with convention, and in 1848 he bolted, unitia the- ever bolting Adamses, and ‘c: York against Gen. Cass. fraud and treache: democratic party ended at Charleston and Bal: timore. Mr. Van | other principle i personal satisfaction, and he figures rt | ‘The soldiers marching by th of the treasury ped for Hayes, . | that they were draped for Tilden, too, | both claimed that terni which bas brought a sident now to be publicly honozed in death. ar seventeen Years have passed, and men were still muttering agai ing gotten another man's clot quarrel, but lad seen Mr. Haves in very recent celebrations, but knew nothing about Tilden. It reminded me of a family long resi- med otland, They were in the departments, and the elder son of the clam, the artifice, or whatever it war always recognized by one or two the carl. Meantime there the smallest chip to carry around on on for a long period of time a dis- tant, a cold and a dead stranger's grievance. In this Columbian year all sects look with pitying scorn upon the per cutions done in Spain in 1492 becanse Jesus had been refused by the Jews, Mr. Tilden bad the support of the republican party in his is- sue with President Hayes, but not the support of the democratic party. I met Senator K logg of Lousiana, whose political interests were necessarily hostile to Mr. Hayes, because Hayes had made up his mind to take the first step in the inevitable dropping of the southern states to be held by force. Said I to Kellogg, stand- ing under the crepe of the Treasury Depart- ment: “Do you remember that the principal sign of 9 d seen in President Hayes was when you went to the White House with a petition for him to make Packard, the turned-down governor in Louisi- ana, collector of the port there? You told me that Hayes replied that he would regard it as an insult for anybody to bring hima petition of that character.” Vell,” said Mr. Kellogg, “Hayes is dead and I think he was an honest man. It is all over now. He sent Packard to Liverpool, where he had a good long stay.”” Said I: “Mr. Kellogg, it was the republican rty which treated Mr. Haves badly. The eight years of Grant. the previous four years of Johnson, the war and its necessary corruptions had resolved the republican politiciuns that if Hayes meant to introduce any civil ser’ re- form or any other in these public departmenta they would oppose him. And s “suppose that Hayes had becn seconded by the republican party of that time, the civil service would be today so firmly and gray hea be trembling in the winter cold concerning its discharge.” Mr. Kellogg replied that he thought son before he went out of office woul tend the civil service provisions to the govern ment printing office and the burean of engra ing. Said That can be done by the Presi- dent's proclamation, but it does not prevent turning those in out of aifice. scribes that those hereafter to be put in shall submit to the civil service examinations.” IN WASHINGTON IN 18 Iwas in Washington during the electoral | count proceedings of 1877. It was well known to me that the south, so far a¥ its main poli- ticians were concerned, had abandoned Tilden, ‘on account of the prospect of the return of Florida, Louisiana and South Carolina to the democracy, but because Mr. Tilden's advocates had already commenced to make imputations against them. Inthe samo way the old demo- cratic leaders in New York, like Seymour, Church and Kernan, believed that tney had de tected Mr. ‘Tilden in such a conspi to befoul them with his things that they gave no moral support to their candidate, He stood entirely alone; and then he felt his weakness, with a man like nt holding the peace at Washington The old man was afraid to start the popul Lieut. Gov, is | at the situation because he had expectations, {told Mr. Tilden that unless be did thing he would lose the presidency.” n I do? ¢, sitting in bis own house. “Why,” said I, “there are enough people now standing on your sidewalk for you to open | your front door and say to them, ‘I have been Dorsheimer, ‘If I whould do a thing like that there would not bea stock in WalP street but would take a panic tomorrow morning.’ And there,” concluded Dorsheimer, “‘was that old man, with a great cause, made Acoward by his great wealth. He bad ‘no wife nor child, but his money made bim a coward.” The next thing Dorsheimer had ceased to | speak to Tilden, accusing Tilden of having caused him to run up large bills at the St. Louis convention and in other places and re- pndiated the payment of them. “But for the help,” said Dorsheimer. “of some friends bank at Albany I would have been « ruined man.” A MEETING WITH TILD! shemmer arranged for me to meet Mr. Tilden his house; we weat there together. after Tilden was nominated. I bad made up my mind not to support Tilden, chiefly because MPAIGN OR’76. Gath’s Reminiscences of an Interest- | intics of Hayes—The Man Suited to the Oc- thing I have seen is the mourning crepe for | President Hayes around the pillars of the big einssical public build- ings. Thirty-one years ago I saw them creped for President Van Bu- ren’s death, and it oc- curred to me that the also the burial of Til- ed to be | grudging with it the Com ona came to an end. life Van | All these persons, who not # punishment in 1844, when other inter- is majority in the Thence a cry arose of Which never ended till the Buren seemed to have no the anti-slavery cause than 1 that cause mere Burgundian and ally paid in revenge. ereped columns hardly ‘knew who Van Buren ppose in spirit ince while Hayes, as a young eration went by which knew nothing about to be the shoulders | It merely pre- | Yet I well recollect the evening when Dor- t It was Wife's relations, than to hear another shot fired | man,and those who assert that he only ran oneo in civil war. But I found there was literally no | because he could not run twicesdo mot know Principle in the way the friends of both candi- | what thev are talking about The business | dates set about getting the one vote wanted for | element all over the country wanted Hayes to Tilden. Zachariah Chandler and his younger | be renominated. We had gotten over a slump | namesake were not men to give up acause in| of about five years which nearly destroved | politics any more than at law. Chandler, I every fortune in the land, Cotmodore Vander- | think, was Secretary of War at the time in bilt lay down. to use the Wall street term. Gragt's cabinet. The other Chandler was an That great business head, as I know from expert handler of presidential campaigns in de- family information, surrendered after the fail- | tail. But right there in Mr. Tilden's house ure of Jay Cooke, But the very lapse of Pelton and a parcel of others not necessary to tical excitability following the electoral tri- name, because some of them are living and | bunal, the making of a ‘personal issue there, have since been badly treated, made up their | instead of advancing public heresies, set the mindg to get thint vote by purchase. ple to work. They wore really chastened Gepuants tae A coak ake. 7 hard times and forgot thelr frivolities and a | profigacies, Tre was plunging into such | Tam not speaking nonsense, for my diary has | caserprlave altho Peconth ennai eacl ad est always been the printed press, and the files will | crops for years. John Sherman found specie | show all these matters, While Cleveland was payments not hard to be restored. The coun- running but the other day for President, I meta | try stepped out of the civil war at last and un- distinguished man from Louisiana, who may be- | til this silver issue haa been raised, as a post- come a member of Mr. Jand’s cabinet. | humous chapter of inflation, we have had no Talking these matters over in a group of three | Tecriminating subjects. or four, this gentleman énid in eae HAYES AND HIS ASSOCIATES. parties who came down there had arran wil Some persons think that the weakness of the returning board to get Mr. Tilden’s vote . ° re eoditional “iow a esctene: eu being. paid. | Haves’ administration was permitting the When it was thought to be all arranged: if e- | members of his cabinet to openly lay plans to gurred to the parties in confidence in New successor. Probably we can trace to York that they could buy a vote cheaper than re-empting the administration the that, and they went off to Oregon, and in the hostility of Blaine, Conkling, Logan, Edmunds issue the whole matter was shown. and others. The tight on the New York custom In short, the issue in Louisiana and South | house, which finally led to Arthur's becoming Carolina, if not in Florida, was whether money | President instead of Conkling, but through the could corrupt the republican returning boards, | murder of Hayes’ successor, as due to Conk- That money was to come out of Mr. Tilden’s | ling’s idea that Sherman would put a man in |fortune, which had really been the principal | the custom honse who would bring him the | plank in his platform, and when it was found | New York delegation if 1880. We all know that | that he would not spend this money or was | Guil Hamilton opened her letters against civil service reform in the New York Tribune about nd she was not very far from Biaine’s household. Those unfortunate letters were the main cause of Biaine’s desertion by the civil service reformers, led by George m Curtis, six years later. Hayes might neutralized hostility if he had extended | his own abnegation to all his cabinet. You can see how little real hostility there was to Haves because he had drawn the white bean in the electoral tribunal from what Gov. Pattison of Pennsylvania said to me last spri Hayes had a wonderful cabinet,” said he. 1 big bills to put in | after the election was over, finding that they could get no money, turned against Mr. Tilden. | Billahad been owing ever since the St. Loui: convention and before that. Iknew indignant | | newspaper men from the south who had been | sent through states there with a little money, | but with the wink like a promise of plenty more | to come, who had secured delegations for Mr. Tilden and hired rooms to entertain them at St. Louis, and they were going around Washington ruined by the fallacious hopes his household in- red. Yet the motto of that convention was On the other hand, Mr. Hayes no doubi felt reform; not specitic reform. but the reform that | and shared the aspirations of those around him is suppored to come from investigations such as | to be President. What right had he to step out the canal ring investigation in New York and | and sa’ nan shail have this thing,” the Tweed ring investigation. How curious it | and leave his wife, bis children and those who is to.sco the perhaps permanent return of the | had backed his campaign to curse him to the democratic party in the nation accompanied | end of their days. Besides, he would have bi | by the complete return of Tammany Hall, J recoguttion if he had done so. which Mr. ‘Tilden investigated. This | it for granted ¢ he was like very week we have had a conven- | quite good eng to be our tion at Washington to demand that the but not good enough to ref Erie canal be made twenty feet deep throughout | when it was to become a subject its entire length, so as to constitute another fety would simply have di Mississippi river from New York to the lakes, the champion fool of the And it isan old friend of Mr. Tweed who but | born, if in < he the other day in Congress introduced a resolu- Haves had said in effect to the friends of Mr. | tion to investigate tho Panama canal, t 2 "Go Yonder and take that eapitol by ground that whoever abetted it in Ams Hie would have be Henry Watter- | sold out the Monroe doctrine. It is both amua- a without a drink. | ing and mournful to have lived long among the hundred thousand men | affairs of men and see how they skate around in | Mr. Tilden was not complete paradoxes those literary mon he had » | Watterson, “who had once accomplish |feat of getting into Tildeu’s wine cellar, to the last, the flavo nisberg was on the ery of men and send me the persed, and would have been 5 had TILDEN AND PELTON. When ex-President Hayes died itwns alleged, as if a convincing argument, that he had given agreat many offices to persons connected with the returning boards in the south or the party organization which sustained them. As thes d the party and_ were its le- nd had resisted bribery | le, was Mr. Hayes to | t Columbas and owned the state organ r. Hayes, that the repnblicansgit seemed | did not want to make a conte¥t over one 6 when Mr. Hayes lacked three states. Comiy | in long and some shat indignantly, hold- ing that Mr. Hayes had been elected, and that rampant fraud in the south wax to blame. The man who mixes in these conflicts as a peace- maker gets what the «stranger received from the Irishman’s wife whom he undertook to pro- tect from a marital licking. ‘The wife and hus- band gave him ballyhoo. HE MAN YOR THE TIME. ink it more important to the genius of ¢ and the pieturesqueness of our his- tory that President Hayes had just the compo- sition he possessed. A nervous man would have wanted toplacatesomebody. He was courageous enough and probably had conscience just enough to hold his month and his countenance too. “Why, what evil hath he done?” expressed | the minority tirst and the majority afterward, until by the time he died a great new conv’ tion hid come over the minds of most of the | except to listen to recommendations of the Sou- | ators,dcc., from those states. Tilden turned Mr. | Pelton out of his house subsequently to conv | either the fact or the impression that he lad disapproved of Pelton’s up and down bribery in the case of the Oregon vote. It is curions, | however, to see what different views men take | | of such) political services as Petton's. Pelton | |was the son of Mr. Tilden’s own | |¥ister, who had long been his honseckeepe He must have been the judge of the extent Mr. Tilden’s desire to’ pursue the presideney | while it was in dispute. He obtained a moneyed | | man, who took him to Jordan's bank and | vouched for him, though Pelton had no money, that he would be good for alarge loan of money | made without security. That security was un- | questionably understood among the three | parties to be Mr, Tilden’s large for- tune. With this. money Pelton bi a telegraph dispatch sent to Oregon to buy an me ‘ople, namely, that the beneficiary | electoral vote there, where there was really no litiga ion such as a family | question worth a cent as to which candidate ‘ecret is the hero to be pitied. He who did | | had won the state. And as my Louisiana friend ch the preside ould tive sump- ly and thing to ambit lodged in the popular hos, Mr. 1 threw that pathos away, his friends seeking to press Mr. Hayes hard gave at last th that at the second a to power, in the person of the fame man, it ia not the President of the United States who goes to Fremont to bury Haves, but the Pres- ident-clect, whom Mr. “Tilden requested to be his heir-at-law, tuo! said to me but recently, this was an attempt to save Mr. Tilden’s pocket; to do the seme thing | cheap which was to na and South Caroli ne funeral Isat right behind Abraham inthecar, Said he to me: “If Mr. Tilde knew what he wanted in that dispate he n told me. I was the cbait nf his nation committee, and [ tried to find what he He did not know. He seemed to be ina co: tinzal daze. ‘The only person about him who seemed to have force of character wi young Pelton, his 1 rtand bold in his uncle's A hittle while passe: . Tilden’s other nephews attacked his will and broke it all to pieces upon the ground that they had made Inve tments upon the same kind of guarantees which Tilden gave to the political messengers and others and never paid. Though he had left publig libraries to New York, Yonkers Lebanon Springs, the highest ¢ in the state of New York threw will aside. They said in effect: responsible for racted by these nephews, a to give all his lone} he bad done | justic hese nephews | come forward and s We will arily |eurrender a part of our fortune, | part, to these library purposes | THE ELEC The electoral commission or tribunal which settled the case between Hayes and Tilden was one of the most important steps ver taken in | answers itself, “He must be a bold man any- this country to remedy our imperfect system of | how.’* a E electing Presidents. uch is to the cou- | | The fact has been that Cleveland is perhaps federate element in Congress and the Senate, | the first. President since Washington to look the honest and commissioned confederate ele- | among the people for their greater if secondary ment, for refusing to make a civil war twice in | moral conviction. ty Years on the subject of officia Because he was not in favor of knocking the tariff all to pieces when he came to Washington | admonition on that point was all the | stronger when he had made up his mind. He tried Randall first and Carlisle afterward. | Cleveland impresses us like Sir Robert Peel e up philantin no to CLEVELAND. It is a singular fact, as I have understood, hat Cleveland would not go to see Mr. Ti and receive his blessing after being in the cam- ign of 1834. Manning thougit that ‘Tilden’s influence was paramount in the party. Cleve- land did not believe that the presidency was worth having if Tildeniem must prevail in ix. He had probably heard from some of his ass ex, who hail been in the Filden interest pre- viously, that there were tricky things done on in Mr. Cleveland's confi- ry of the he is grat This ed upon Mr. Maming’s appointment. little incident of Clevelund gomg to Hs | foneral has acted asa stimulation to mode | thought all over the land. | “What kind of man is this who could take ep?” No answer being returned the Irish echo all men in the world put through the Hou: Congress the terms of the agreement. ‘That | equitation will stand as long as this nation stands and has similer disputes, and they are | ever liable tooccur. We nearly had one in 1834, | or Gladstone or some man who, having been for ‘The dispute being settled the democratic party | Years on’ one side of ideas. is finally made, by | had decidedly the moral advantage, thoagh the | the powerful currents which slowly move | republicans had the offices. Suddenly Mr. Tilden | through a large composition, the agent to work threw away this advantage by reopening the | out those thmgs he once cared nothing about. case ata public reception in the Manhattan | How much Christianity there might be in the Club House, which T attended. He was about | world without Saint Paul, who had to be to go to Europe, and it was characteristic of his | knocked off his horse, who can nay. As Cleve- methods of warfare to start this bitter contro- | land has been the opponent of a piratical vyersy and then leave the country which should | of office grabbing in this government, he is com- fightitout. Mr. Hendricks was broughton there | ing to the next great idea, perhaps, that those to assist. Hendricks had made his eminence | people who try to be right ought to be sepa- by listening to the voice of ¢ and union. | Tated from those who are merely predatory in He bad found Jesse D. Bright in Indiana dis-| their ideas, We have long Leen wanting a J. to turn that state over to rebellion. He | man who could reform the methods of making EX declined ‘fo co-operate and, became the one ag oe oh neering Miner paced 4 beneficiary of Mr. Bright's expulsion from the its influence to make men act on their | Senate and subsequent complete decay. | Hen- | prejudices rather than their thoughts | Cleve- dricks gave no echo to Mr. Tilden’s sobbing | land has probably himself followed the repub- ery: “I have not been robbed, but you have been. If you condone it it 1s your disgrace.” THE POTTER COMMITTEE, Directly after that the Potter committee was proposed in Congress to reopen that whole case after it had taken so much pains, concession and thought to settle it. George. Pendleton said to me in Cincinnati: “I think Mr. Titden lican party since the war a part of the way into their ideasand conclusions, and he is, therefore, the man perhaps to redistribute ‘the publie forces. He surely is the only President we have had in our time who owes as little to the | democratic as to the republican party, and a good deal to the people of both parties. ‘They are now trying tv make animosities for him from the state of New York, but he has a Thad not known him. Nevertheless, this meet- ing was arranged for, probably with the notion that I might modify my selection. When folding doors opened there stood Dorsheimer nd Tilden arm in arm, as if to recei eign ambassador. 1 walked up the trio till we came to the elbow of the library, where sat the beautiful Mrs. Pelton, a second wife, in a dove-colored silk dress. ‘At a table right opposite sat her husband, Pelton, stiil the old man's secretary, and not apparently much inclined to take me into a deal which then looked to be a sure thing. As we returned down the room Tilden said suggestively: “I have never known any.literary men to get their proper consideration in tics unless the: 5 “who took and Irving and others. All my friends are literary men, Dorsheimer and Bigelow and Fairchild. After the election was over I hada of information which I A slippery Senator from the south was getting ready to sell out and I went to Grammercy Park and saw Mr. Tilden, whose courage was all gone and be bad no nor i Fs i i t F a would have been m better off had he let that matter alone. His case was stronger with- out stirring it up.” Returning from the west Imet President Hayes at Gettrsburg, by the aid of this conversation and some others, drew him into an expression as to whether a lent iseue might arise under the Potter com- | mittea, He said that ander a sufticient influ- comparatively easy tas 7 pealed from the New York delegation at Chicago to the country and was renominated. He can appeal against the New York senatorial delega- ion with the same success. The profounder eapect he will feel on entering upon his duties this year may al¥o compromise his hard head and ‘make him do the right things ina mere Rox IS NOW WELL AS EVER. | Thanks to Use. of Paine’s Celery Compound. C A Delaney of Holyoke, Mass , Suffered From Extreme Nervousness and Could Not Sleep— He Took the Famous Remedy That Dart- mouth College’s Great Professor First Pre-|"""™".” scribed—Its Good and Lasting Effects Were! Soon Seen. WINTER IN SOUTHRY VESTINULED TRAINS WINTER IN PayrT ra To Ronthannte a | ARTERS POR AN HOTELS. Wutaws —=—— Of ait the - mee DENTISTRY usands of unsolicited testimon| that have come from every state in the Union, from those who have been made well by the use of that great remedy which was first prescribed by Dart mouth’s famous professor, E. E. Phelps, M.D. LL. D., none teach a better lesson than those sent by G b men of affairs, who by overwork and worry have begun to suffer from sleeplessness and @ther forms of nervous exaustion, and found health and renewed vitality in the use of Paine's Celery Compound. It has been well said by a famous physician that this remedy is as superior to all ordinary sarsapa- | ¢ Tillas, tonics, nervines, as the diam is to common glass. y Compound {s not a patent | It is the prescription of o of the most eminent practitioners that met kis G | Graxpuornens the remedy that when work begins to be a little less facile, and one begins to sleep badly, and the thoughts of the day invest his dreams, and he rises unrefreshed, nd finds that day after day Bis Work | The aay of the “string aud flatir nd that perhaps with certain new symptoms, such as giddiness, dimness of sight, | methods in dentistry are preva he has entire nights of insomnia and grewing difficulty in the use of his mental | ploying modern time-saving apr should be taken at once, and it will at once be of benefit. . Delaney of Holyoke, Mass., writes regarding her husband, who is one of the best known business men in that city, and whose portrait is given above: grows more trying, neuralgia of the f: powers—it is the remedy | operators that we are a “Owing to a very severe attack of the grip, and also to business troubles, my husband was very | much run down, He suffered from extreme nervousness so that he could not sleep, he had no appetite ja. J had read of Pain ‘The good effects of the compound in my husband's case were soon Pintina, $1.00 VERY BEST TEETH, $5.09. U.S. Desrar, Asso. 7TH AND D STS mpound, and I purchased a bottle. n, and after taking three bottles as as Weil as it at every oppor lar ease we should certai Iy use it again, I shall surely recommend unity Ihave. I have some friends who are taking it now on my recommendation, with | | ‘PE EVANS DeNTaL pan the best of resuit SPECIALIST 1X Ci F, FINE GOLD AND AMA ancy Frove EXTRACTING WT \a"" Flour of the fol recognized Bien . that it is the very best | ¢ iésale by BB. LAKNSMAW & iV. CONNELLY, 09 1st nom B. 8. DULEY. 1 G. W. GOLDEN, 103 HAMMACK, S00) ROBERT WHITE KAMMERER, 130 is EST AND BEST dani fol ave ow 2. HOGAN, OOLN. J. ave. now. JOHN 1. ONTRICH, SOLA now. WILLIAM KERR, oo Ist ant ow, Mrs. AJ. MARSHALL, RK BROS., 1000 On. w. NEWMAN & BRO. CR AG ot we, HM. DE ATLEY, XBURY RYE is wold direct tothe Retail Trade, bu sto reach, and te W. A. L. HUNTT, 80146 JAMES FERRY, 441 advertising clairvoyant, n with wonder? th | M. J. SCHNEIDER, 732 Md. ave. na, | BERNARD WALLS, cor. 3dand Cae. R. E. MILES, 27 34n.e. JOHN M. CLARK, cor. 4thand Bae Mrs. WILLIAM BRAHLER, 401 Ha.0 BRISON NORRIS, 501 H n.e. J. C. LIPPOLD. 6th and Boundary a.w. HAGAN BROS., 12th andGa.w. Residence, 489 M st.. ber 4 DREAMER, THE English and German astr. gilevents of life. Geo. W. Driver. 605 Pa. eve. Sobiile, 1741 Lst. nw. y & Co., Grocers, 3d and E ste. "Zi Harry Hungerford, 1354 9th st. = L. Lynch, Drugwist, 1345 14th ‘Manoeue & Jones, 4 W. Washington, D.C. shhy & ‘unwertord. Oh and On.w, oh near Dat. nw: lotterbeck, 439 New T have been amazed some redit houses wiaiming that the ‘cash house will sell ‘same ith the intelligenes of the public, as ignorant of our people know that to bus” oa ue as low a8 an) nicw Waits ind -hat no ad. pays uniess it inspires con- fidence in the readers, and it must not carry with it any doubt as to the writer's ability and iutentions to a ase we believe or ads, are read. and we are just ws careful to state you were looking at the goods and tthe same tt ‘eet adotlar. We do | foods four exes to tbe fact pariors.808 Llch st bso ute facts a se. ‘We are in business f¢ we do not consider it alPot | Dusiness right or not at ail. ‘hic no Rowse in Office and Sales Warchouse: - - BALTIMORE, GEO. T.GAMBRILL. Prop. Roxbury Roxbury Roxbu Roxbury Roxbury 37 8. GAY ST. MF. BROOKE Tr try "Rex Roxbury Roxb Rexbury_ Roxoury ‘Solid Oak Extension T: SolidOak do. cluster ence or coercion the houses of Congress, one or the other, might refuse to recognize him as President and bring the government to a chaos, ‘The report of this conversation, which I made next day, alarmed Hayes as much as it did Congress. But the people all over this land sent telegraph dispatches, “Stand by that in- Yerview.” Congress thereupon yielded to an immense business pressure and da reso- jution that the findings of the Potter com- mittee should not affect Mr. Hayes’ term of the presidency. When the committee got to work they were lost in the swamps of Louisiana, in the everglades of politic way. Gata. plea See ee ‘Women as Orators. From the Chicago Post. “I do wish,” said a man prominently eon- necter with world’s fair matters, “that women would study orator’. It has become so much the fashion for women to speak in public that they are brought to the fore on most occasions, and I am heartily tired of their little sparrow-like parlor ways and piping voices on the rostrum. ‘There are only very few good speakers among the shoals of women that are before the public today. It is positively painful to listen to them. ir and! power of Golvecy’ tee “all'te idagres of aro substance i irritating. However 3 withont the iiguor GOLDEN ‘epee FB and Gauarerex—Courortixa EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. amet = ‘ine "propertion “of well: S—OARD READE H from #t0@. 239 Ist st. . MANICURE AND » TOR ISTH ST. N. W of FINE MAN “By a thoronzh kno" gorerp theonerationsar We can furnish your houre, me. “Remernier ways n office offiie hours Cansio eos ‘room im it, with Ser house in Wasi ‘and DEEDS POR EVERY STATE S. Coma | tesiomer. BEALL. Lee Pt. nw . I, WUNDRAM'S © ‘Hasa wide reputation in Eu-ope ss a nerve tonte and appetizer. and ail those afflicted with neryonsness ‘eral debility or impaired digesiion wail deri real benefit from the usp of t is most palatable ‘aromatic herb medicine than from any siutiar preys ration on the market, while sick headache will van before it Ike magic. Physicians prescribe tt. sale by Scbeller & Stevens, cor, th st. and Pa. ave. end druggists wenerally. ‘Dr. JULIUS DIENELT & co., 5 aera Ne Grete Aewas for U. Saud Conde don, Dia ceasy: HAINES’ GOLDEN SPECIFIC. “ADMINISTERING 2 Be Ger Tur Basr. THE CONCORD maRwEss. LUTZ & BRO. 407 Pena. eve., adjoining National Hotel ‘the | Horse Biankets and Lap Robes at low prices. pS eae Runt ea periect cure c= BEiFIC co. Peym. Qaemny WILLIAMS & CO. cor. Fand Sthets. n.w., Sad CQERIS THE HEAD CURED IN ONE NIGHT SENEner, Ni-+ta,thsly

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