Evening Star Newspaper, July 29, 1893, Page 14

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A RECORD BREAKER. THE IRON HORSE. Improvement in Railway Equip ment Made in Late Years, pri ater nrkesre FLYING THROUGH THE AIR. Care Necessary in the Construc- tlon of Locomotives. SPEED AND ACCIDENTS. ANY OF US CAN recall a boytsh idola- try for that splendid ; servant, the rajiway locomotive, and an ambition to sit some day m the cab and di- rect its flight along the gleaming ruils. In mature years those who possess | am eye for the beau-/ tiful may still gaze | admiringly at the | lines of strength and speed which combined by the tri- umphs of modern mechanics. ‘There is no achievement of which Amert- | cans may feel more justly proud than the | remarkabie progress made of late years in | improvement of railway ‘equipment, and | especially in the matter of locomotives. Today sought by progressive railway m out the weld. Hundreds are annually €x- | ported, going to every portion of the globe, | from Norway to Palestine, from Brazil to New Zealand, wherever the beneticent fron | bonds penetrate, and the demand for them 4s always increasing. ‘The American tourist, who entertains his me friends with accouncs of the great peed of the trains abroad, is ignorant of the fact that the best of ihe “foreign” en- es are furnished fr: his owa cour on A ve While to most 1s simply a locomoti with a Boiler, headlight, it is worthy of statement sig American establishn an one thousand tspes of ace consiructed, vm the light logging machine to mous “Decapod,” d rv haul- trains of iron ‘und ardaous: grades. At the Kaidwin works > thousand completed tocomo- nnually, the product ex- it Ukes about three inary engine laced with the no oetier flustra- from the time the or factory. The be tion of al conditiog and growth of the United Staies chan thig great and Mnereasing output of locomotives, for the | Yeason that ratiway comp2aies to hot, as @ rule, in cash for their rolling stock, | Dut purciiase it with construction band: intending to make It pay for ‘tself. Thus, the product measures the «xpeccation of the ead to have proittabie trans: on cen- tracts. When an order tor a locumotive Is received at the shops drauxhtsmn submit esigns to the intending purcaaser, end if approved, the plans are the nasis of the contract “executed, and then the work ts begun. In many of the larsest establish- ments there are numerous department: each engaged in the making of a particular art. worsing inaependentiy of the other departments and knowing nothing of their Operations. The various parts are fnally assembied in the erecting shop, and there the machine assumes its prover form. By the use of elec anes the boilers and other unwieldy materials are swung stout in the air, and the heaviest completed joco- | motive is picked up by them bodily and | shifted about at the will of the workmen. | ‘Throughout the country are many foun- dries engaged in ances, locomotive appli- heullights, tires, | >. Which are} ad'in the ereet- e works of bought by ing deparum America hay SAhibIts to the worlt's fair, will be sean patterns of the dest freight anc enyines | built for world. | ex tion : ble variety of er, Wh rodisst competing express every pos: graceful 3 nd the ponderous and powerful freight hauler up the mountain si:jes. A duplicate of what is Joubtleas the fest- Duilt will be | buiit for the ¥ same road, on | under untav- “Vau- nd aj of a type of * ivers six acity 400 pou! i run a mile | and it was for the pur- i= the performance repeated | of experts accompanied the jar run from Phila- | It had rained hard ne tracks were still | wet w the’ de at Sth and Green | streets was left behind. The boilers show- | da pressure of 189 pounds, which did not a party train on its next reg deiphia to Jersey Cit: during the day, and vary during the run. At its highest speed there was ho perceptible change in vibra- tion. Between Somerton and Parkland, limbered up, and for five miles the longest time for a ingle mile was 4 seconds. The first_m! covered in 42 seconds, the second in {, the two following in 40, and the fifth in 42 thus making five | miles in 3 minutes and 2 seconds. | ‘Now ‘watch her.” said the engineer. | as Fanwood w 1. Whea 3% was | given her head ‘ation of the men in lel through is generally regarded by ailroad men that the run of 3% named was the best ever recor At the rate of a mife in 3 the train was going ab. miles an hour, nd at the end of mile run, which included spurts at = ble speed, the boilers were essure res a F ngines will eS. m New York to Washington, mak- ing 25 miles, including st daily, in five hours. They are models of graceful struction, as well as remarkable for speed. ‘The heaviést locomotive ever built will also be seen in th nsportation build- ing at the fair. It vo. $0, for freight Work on the New York, Lake Erie and Western road. It “Decaped” typa, 195,00 (early 100 shert ) aad its len.:h over engine and t feet What the modern locomotive is doing for an ¥ its work | eastern ab} 1 1 to the the m Itue din ne use of ng sien that, service. | Some very remarkabl e been ! made of | te in thé i- | not be likely to ask to —— THE HEAVIEST EVER BUILT. ules are worthy of note. On March 18, of this year, Engine 88 on the Union Pacific fast “mail, ran from Julesburg to North Platte, “$1 miles, in. 7# minutes; and on August 13, 1890, Engine S18, same line, ran from North Platte to Grand Island, 138 miies, in 143 minutes, including stops. ‘The Union Pacitic builds its own engines. The fast mail is made of two mail cars and a baggage car, and the rece} a bonus from the government for. ex- pedition. In order to make tts time its ftight must take it up and down the Rock- fes like a roller coaster. The schedule of No. 2 limited coming eastward from Ogden fo Omaha. drawing ten cars, 1,081 miles, across Sherman Hill in 31 hours, is a very creditable one, while that from Omaha to Denver, 569 miles,- with six cars, making eighteen stops, in 14 hours, ts about as good as can be found anywhere in the country. Care in Construction. It fs natural to ask how locomotives can in safety endure such strains upon them. The reason {s that every part of the mate- rial used in their construction is selected and tested with as great care as is the mechanism of a fine repeater watch. The boiler sheets are separately tested, and a thin strip cut from each sheet must show an ultimate tensile strength.with the grain, of twenty-five toys, and an elongation of not less than’ one-fifth. Brass or copper tubes must be of uniform thickness and soud-drawn. From the tube under test a piece four inches long {s cut, annealed, sawn lengthwise and then doubled inside out, and it is rejected if it shows signs of cracks in this operation, and so on, down through all the materials used. ‘The cost of the best express locomotive now in use is about $10,000. Although these modern flyers are capable of whirling the traveler along so smoothly that a glass of water filled to the brim ean be easily held without spilling, yet it can be very easily shown, nevertheless, tha@ fast railroading does fecessarily in- crease the number of casualties as the schedules are lowered. Railway accidents occur, as a rule, from causes other than de- fective rolling’ stock. They result from collisions, washouts and obstructions, which would certainly do much less dam- | age to life if the train approached them at moderate speed. The fact is, the Nghtning engine is the result of genius, study and fine mental training. When it {s evolved it must run | upon the rails, subject to carelessness and errors of ordinary track employes, who are paid low wages for guarding the bridges, Switches and signals, and whose vigilance does not always keep pace with the con- stantly improved trains. Danger of Accidents. The momentum acquired by a train traveling at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour, drawing heavy coaches, could hardly be stated intelligibly, and thus when a bridge is out of plumb, or a rall broken by the frost, it requires no argument to show that the danger would be less if ap- proached slowly. While the roads have generally increased their celerity during the last ten years, accidents upon them have correspondingly multiplied. The best proof of this fs found in the records of the railway mail service, whose cars run upon the best and fastest express trains as a rule. For ten years the number df casua!- ties to the mail cars has steadily increased from about one weekly to more than one daily. Take the last four years for ex- ample: In 18% there were 19% accidents, in 189 there was an increase to 261, in 1891'the number was 313, and the last ‘year there were 345 casualties. Moreover,the character of these accidents has grown more serious, an¢ it must increase to do so as trains lower their schedule time. A Railroad Wreek. ‘To illustrate the momentum acquired by one of these flyers a picture Is given of an accident to the fast mail at New Hamburg, N. ¥., on September 21, 1892. This was due to an open draw bridge. The engincer had hot time to apply the brakes and engine 970 leaped the gap like a well-trained hynt- er, landing upright on the farther side. The gap was twenty-eight feet in width. The tender and cars did not clear it, but fell into the opening. There is a delightful exhilaration of speed- ing to and from our work that we shall have eliminated, even if the ratio of accidents is increased thereby; and it is very likely that we are fast nearing the time when 100 miles an hour will not be regarded as noteworthy. ‘There is but one contingency which might tend to lower the rates of speed, and pos- sibly to lower some other things ‘connected with railroading—and that is, governmental control of railroad business.’ By discourag- ing the building of lines and thus reducing competition, a principal inducement to greater speed would be avoided; but until that time shall come we shall certainly see from time to time reports of faster and faster locomotives. In the work, as here- tofore, American master mechanics will continue to far outstrip the world. HE KNEW HIS BURDEN. Running for Congress Had No Attractions for Him. From the Detroit Free Press. A gentleman not at all wealthy, who had at one time represented in Congress through @ couple of terms a district not far from the national capital, moved to California, where in a year or so he became suffi- ciently prominént to become a congres- sional subject, and he was visited by the central committee to be talked to. “We want you,” said the spokesman, “to accept the nomination for Congress.” “I can't do it, gentlemen,” he responded promptly. “You mus “But poor.” “Oh, plen the spokesman demanded. 1 can't," he insisted. “I'm too that will be all right; we've got ty of money for the campaign. ut that is nothing,”” contended the gen- tleman; “it's the expenses in Washington. I've been there and know about it.” “Well, you didn’t lose by it, and it doesn’t font aRY More because you come from Call- fornia, ‘The gentleman became very earnest. Doesn't it?" he exclaimed in a business- like tone. “Why, my dear sirs, I used to have to send home every month about half @ dozen busted office-seeker constituents, and the fare only $3 apiece, and f could stand it; but it would cost me over a hundred dollars a head to send them out here, and I'm no millionaire; therefore, as much as I regret it, I must insist on de- elining.”” ‘The committee coaxed, but he was in- exorable, and his friends had to go after a less experienced and cautious candidate. . ss ‘The Storm Deferred. | From the P. and S. Bulletin. There is nothing more tantalizing to a man than to go home with something in his mind he wants to scold about and find company there and be obliged to act agree- ably. THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON; D. C. SATURDAY, JULY 29, A ROMAN MUSIC HALL The Popular Kind of Entertainment in the Ancient City, PERFORMERS AND AUDIENCE. The Difference Between the French, Austrian and Italian. THE BUFFO AND MADAME. Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. Rome, July 20, 1893. HERE ARE EVEN- ings In Rome when the hotel parlor con- versation pails, when female appreciations of art and archae- ology fall almost un- heeded upon the too accustomed ear. In the Concerto delle Varleta they will 4_ give you beer and let .) you smoke. The floor is maxbie, black and white, and the hun- dred tiny tables are topped with the same cool stone. The or- chestra is fenced off with brass rails, which glitter fiercely in the crude electric light. The walls are hidden by long mirrors, though the interior looks like a church—tt has a nave and two side aisles, with the ceiling in a Roman arch. ‘The colors are white and gold, and the rop-curtain has a background of the blue of Roman skies. The two brown gizls re- Posing voluptuously on a bank of clouds mean nothing in this classic city, where models may be found in every doorway; the songs which one may hear from Latin lips are also beautifully bare. The orchestra plays well. There are a trombone, a cornet, four violins, a clarion- gtte, a flute and two large double basses. They play Buppe, the Wiener Jubilee; and a Uttle study of the program and the faces round about among the audience will show the hand of Austria still hard upon Italians. The beer you drink is imitation Pilsen, brewed in Rome by southern Germans; two of the performers sing in the language of Vienna, and at your right and left you hear the German tongue. ‘3 Mrs. Benors. The first singer is a Viennese girl. She has almost an English style in comparison with the Roman types around us. She is both stiff and pretty, self-confident to ca: lessness, and takes the audience into her confidence. Her dress is like the comic gbera Gretchens in the pas de quatre of the jayety burlesque, “Faust up to Date,” and her giory is her ‘hair. It is a soft, bright brown, magnificently’ kept. She has even rouged her ears to make them worthy of their place so near it. Her neck is whit and bears a string of pearls. The fraulein sang of military life and that there was nothing so terrible as the death of a sublieutenant. Her verses were of a confidential nature and explained the strange dizzy feeling, not at all unpleasant, she invariably experienced in conversation with a certain type of officer. She was tre- mendously encored, not for her song, but for another reason: there was a French girl on the program. ‘That the triple alliance of Germany, Aus- tria and Italy, ghould exercise its influence upon commerce is a matter of course. In these days economic wars, scarcely less disastrous than those of blood ‘and. fron, are waged by politicians. But that the con- solidation of central Europe against France and Russia should affect a Iittle singer whose home is at the Batignolles and who only wants her money is another story. The audience hissed the pretty cantante francese; and to show they really meant {t, gave ‘the German girl a round of glor- fous encores to start with. This patriotism, able to move 500 men against a girl of The German Language is Heard. twenty years, who smiled her best and tried to please, is a flower of human nature which develops best among the Latin races. Before, however, they had the chance of hooting of the French girl, the makers of a Roman holiday presented an Itallan buff to the audience. The Buffo. A buffo is a comic singer in the old Italian style, which was a good style. Signor Belflore was tall, muscular and active. His red face bore a black mustache in his first piece and appeared smooth later on; his pleasantries were sly and mischiev- ous, his voice magnificent and his acting excellent. Both in his singing and his act- ing there were tricks of faint exaggera- ‘The German Girl. | tion, the basis of their wit. In one song he | mimicked a young Roman exquisite—a |Tady kilier, twenty-one years old. He had | just got out of college, he had just got his degree. He went a-walking one evening with a young girl in a garden and when her father discovered them they were both looking at the moon. There was no let-up to the flow of Belfiore’s spirits, and his ugly verses gained wit and. spirit. from him—for they had little of their own. It is true that to a Frenchman or Italian the exploitation of a lady is pure fun, and half the good of it 1s lost unless you tell ft to your friends and show her letters, So the buifo was artistic, his sketch was | Austrian. She wears a quantity of dia- 1 made from fe, and #0 he should be| praised. His second tmpersonation was a you walk upon the Pincian rden of a spring afternoon you see ecclesiastics with- out number, single or in groups, out to take their walk. These inoffensive men in black have often now to hear the sneering word gn ene from the Roman loafers. It is a difficulty in uplifting the oppressed that, the moment you uplift them, they begin op- pressing others on their own account. It is not pretty even for English and American mistionary maiden ladies to see Roman Street boys baiting priests, nor nice for American men to assist at a cafe concert while a buffo ridicules hi tters. This Belfiore did with verve and splendid swing. He had studied the abstracted ecclesiasti- cul stride and the slightly pompous eccle- siastical strut, the blowing out of the lips in. anger, the rubbing of the hands, the cla) ping of the breast, the management of t! snuff box. The song he put into the cure's mouth was not pretty, and an audience in America would have hissed him from the stage. But in Rome these things have — with the telephone and the electric cure. If ‘he fat French girl came on now to be hissed instead. Her dress was made of Steen silk. Her self-possession was re- markable. She was quick, yet not too quick; each gesture was a’ necessary one, each Intonation, each lifting of the eyes, each turn, each’step, each smile was tn its lace. Her face was roguish and delight- ‘ul and her body was one solid chunk. But her green dress shined in vain and all‘her bravery was useless against the Triple Al- liance and United italy. ‘The intermission finds the waiters bus- tling about azgressively. It is to stir the Roman conscience. Otherwise the sreater rt of the audience would sit contentediy hind their first half-emptied glasses all the evening—as many of them do. Coffee And tobacco are two things in demand. ‘Tobacco is a government monoply in Italy and on the whole its quality is bad. There is a certain sweet, light pipe tobacco, some- thing like the Turkish, which they call Trinciato dolce, Its price 1s moderate and it is good. They also have cigarettes scarcely inferior to the Egyptian cigarettes QL One Glass of Beer for the Evening. of commerce. But the cigars and dark to- bacco are without flavor and are strong to rankness. The commonest kind is like a Pittsburg stogie, long and slender. A straw Tuns through its center like a chimney. to give a chance for draught. When you buy one of these the custodian of tobacco brings a candle with a small iron oracket at its side, which sticks out like an arn. You let the cigar on this bracket with its end in the flame and turn your atter- tion to the stage again or read the paper. In about four minutes the cigar takes tive, smouldering odoriferously. Grasp it quick- ly and begin sucking at the other end. The Audience, Among the audience the ordinary Roman man looks more like an American than a Frenchman or German. Part of this is due to his dress but more to his manner. Like the American the Italian finds {t -lif- ficult to come under discipline. His ways are easy and unconventional; he is very democratic and has few set forms. ‘The men in the audience wear sack coats and bright neckties. They cross their legs and lean back carelessly. They are talking all the time, but in low tones. The only ex- ptions are the exquisites, with dress and airs completely modeled after Paris, which is their Mecca. Sometimes the imitation is 80 good that the Parisian is outdone. It 1s well for every people to stick to their own Ways. There is very little drinking and the whole vlace has an air of tranquility. Un- accompanied ladies are scarce and sit back modestly in the side aisles. There is no Promenade and next to no Mirtation. The truth is that this Roman music hall is just @ trifle melancholy. On the stage the second part begins with a strange white creature, Signorina Carlson, cantante Internazionale—she is the second | noise. amon, SS Pretty girl swishing her skirts around the stage, ogling the audience and showing her lttle very much as she would do were she a belle in a ballroom. The man- ner of the Roman singer was a composi- tion of the two and very different from either. She was there, first of all, to sing and she never forgot it. She knew that she could sing well and she let herself loose with pleasure. When she warmed up to the acting she did it with the same fine zest, and when, in answer to repeated encores, she did a dance, she was at once an artist and a human being—say a laughing child. From now on in the program there ts only a repetition of those faces we have al- read: till undaunted, with the buffo nd his wife, ‘who sings one ‘The program has contained fifteen numbers, five of which are simply orchestral pieces. Of the performers there have been but eight. ‘The French Girl. ‘On the whole, the entertainment, ff itis not keyed to sadness, has at least’ a most noticeable lack of all that liveliness and Spontaneity for which you never look in ‘ain in France and Germany. There 1s neither the bangy orchestra of German music halls nor their overfiow of beer and the audience, and there is nothing of the champagne-like effervesence of the Parisians, with their inevitable prom- enade and loose flirtations. When all is over the crowd disperses chattering deco! ously into the ghostly moonlight of a Ro- man night. A block away and you are by yourself in narrow, crooked streets. An- other block away you strike the broad and silent Corso or an open square. A solitary cab Js rattling languidly along and a cloak- ed figure turns around a corner. Monu- ments and pillars, church towers in the moonlight, solemn ‘fountains splashing in their ‘solftude, with ite nymphs and saints in marble. Over all there is a hush, for it is night In Rome. Amid the dust of ages it is well a music hail should not be too amusing. STERLING HEILIG. ——-— Snap Shots. From the Galveston News, A man’s good name is sometimes stolen goods. Father Time has no files on him. He is always on the fly. The conventional write-y is merely plate matter. p of a banquet The fat man in the ald welght for his victime |) =O™ i lying In “A little learning 1s’a dangerous thing.” It is even more explosive than outright ignorance. ‘The trouble about vanity is that it al- r to tote it. ways makes one so P“plumps ‘down into a When a plump gii hammock she takes a seat on the earth's ple marry for love surface. When two young Peel fortune, although they as @ couple of Job's shab- they both marry a may be as poor biest turkeys. World's Fair Italians, ‘From the Bonton Gazette. First young lady at White City, “Oh, Penelope, I could ride forever in those gondolas; how they do remind one of Venice, dear Venice; how I do wish I had kept up my Italian so I could converse with that lonely gondolier. I feel quite sure he is the very one we used to hire when we were last in Venice. Second young lady—“Oh, Melpomene, do ing away in terror— Chicago— try.” Gondoller scuttl “Be gobs, I'll lose me job if I roll_me tongue at ‘em. I'll send ‘em round Tom monds, which are real, and has a manner | Brannigan, he's got the gall to be a rale at once dissatisfied and wooden. She at | Ryetallan.* very tall; her long trained dre: white and with white feather trimming; htr long | kid gloves are white—all white’ down to her slippers. She has even blacked her art Pits with burnt cork by way of contrast. With all this she is a bleached blonde, with the voice of a ventriloquist. Nevertheles her beauty is undeniable. Her songs are serious attempts and badly managed. There is persistent applause from one section of the house—perhaps paid for with the same money as bought the diamonds. The audi- ence laugh and jeer openly, and she retires in a fine temper. The Operatic Failure. The next upon the stage are two strong sisters, who lift weights, and after them an operatic failure. Every cafe concert stage in Europe has its quota of these fail- ures, who come and go as regularly as the ebb ‘and flow of the tides. The raw mate- rial Is some girl who has ideas of being a great star. Either her voice breaks down, she cannot learn to handle it, or she { stupid in some other way. The result {s something which Is neither ‘song and dance nor grand opera and a discontented girl oc- cupying room and time the audience grudge her. She sings too well for a variety stage and not well enough for what her training was intended. From the operatic failure to the wife of Belfiore, our old friend, the Italian buffo, is lke coming from darkness into light. Belfiore and Madame. Belflore comes out again with something even better than himself. Madame is pure Roman in her beauty—heavy, placid, with @ certain childish archness and a vast fund of good humor and gay spirits. Together they do a scene from an ancient opera bouffe. The signor walks in on the stage feeling his way cautiously, for he is su| posed to be in the dark.’ He encounters madame, who gives a shriek, surprise ‘and she her terror. her volce and expresses his rapture; she, only half contented, tries vainly to escape. He grasps her hand and sings more gal- lantly than ever; she warbles of her weak- ness. He repays her artlessness with kisses until she breaks away and rushes from the stage. Then Belflore sings the song of one forsaken, while from behind the scenes comes a’ faint song from a lady, to show that perhaps he {s not quite unforgiven. ‘The Three Stytes. Among the three singers, the Viennese girl who was applauded, the French girl who was hissed, and the Italian girl who carried everything before her, there are striking differences. The French giri is the artiste pure and simple. Her song is a thing made—com- plete, rounded, polished, with each gesture and ‘Intonation in its ‘place. She effaces herself in the presence of her piece, which she presents to the audience as a painter would present his picture or a baker would present his cake. The German girl walked through her act without ever once forget- ting her own personality. Look at my neck, look at my stockings and my white teeth and listen to my pretty voice. She has no idea of anything else. was a READY FOR CHOLERA. Clear Up the Rubbish Be- fore Disease Appears. Experience of a Physician With a Dyspepsia Patient. All Danger Over in Less Than Ten Days— A Simple Treatment “Clear up the rubbish from back yards and ‘sweeten cellars with broom, scrubbing brashes and disinfectant. Now’s the time to get ready for cholera,” says the Boston Ciiobe. Clean streets and alleys diminish the chances of epidemte, but {6 ts of more vital importance that ‘the nataral gates and alleys of the body be swept ‘and clean, ‘The only way to secure this healthy condition of the blood vossels ig through the nerves. Blushing ‘and sudden pallor show how absolutely the nerves Tegulate the blood supply. Sound nerves make A. PAGE, XD. healthy blood possible, and lastitude, irritability, dyspepsia, liver complaint and nervous weakness cannot exist where nerves and blood are vigorous and in harmony. A case in point comes from Rushmore, Ohio, where Dr. A. Page, one of the most prominent paysiclans in the state resides. He writes: “About three months ago I secured for the first ime two bottles of Palne’s celery compound. I carelessly laid them to one side, until I found one of my patients I was treating for dyspepsia gradu- ally growing worse and that remedies I bad pre- ‘YViously been successful with would not have any fect on him, I then thought of the Paine’s celery compound, and as an experiment I gave him one of them, telling hin to take It according to diree- tions on the bottle. Imagine my surprise when, ‘Yen days later, he walked into my office and said: ‘Doctor, I believe I am cured of my dyspepsia.” “Now. after having taken the second bottie he, as also myself, considers himseif sound and well man, being entirely free from any disagreeable sensations after eating. Since first commencing the use of Paine’s celery compound he has gained thirty-five pounds, and is the very picture of health. “I shall cheerfully answer any communications I may receive in regard to the compound, and hope that my experience may be of beneilt to some pro- fessional brother who is not too narrow minded to ‘be liberal professionally.” _ AUCTION SALES. as | ° EEE EEE “SIXTEEN PAGES. AUCTION SALES. —— SSE eee FUTURE DAYS. os FUTERE DAYS. @ ©0., Anctio 1407 Ost. nw, lees 2) SALE OF CAST_AND WROUGHT IRON, BRASS, LOT BARRELS, &e., BY OXDER THE DISTRICT GOVERN MENT. On FNIDAY, AUGUST FOURTH, 1893, AT TWELVE M.. at the pumping station. 16: and U Streets northwest we will sell to the highest bidder ASUS BSR Ruane om LOT BRASS, OLD B. LS, &a, eo. cash. By order of the Commission-re OLD ‘OF ‘of the Coltmbia. ‘0. G. SLOAN & CO., 3530-dte Auctionera Ets. D STS. NW, TRUSTEES SALE OF TWO-STORY BnICK DWELLING NO. 611 F STREPT NOVHEAST. By virtue of a deed of trust to us bearing date June 11, A. D., 189". recorded in Liber 1494, Tolio 213 et'sea,, of the land. records of be District of Colmmbla, and) at” the request of the party secured we Public ‘auction, fn "Front oa ¥, ai the prem THU sp the TERTH DAY OF AUGUST. A. Doi HAL!-PAST POUR O'CLOCK P. M., the tollow= {ue described piece or pavce’ of land, “situate in the Gly oF Washinewon, istrict of Colamabt Gistineaiehed as and bein Jot pamube by nitot Investment Company. Seededt in {IoerI7, folio Wot the recontaof here Tier 17, folio0 of the reconts of” Seon fice of the District of Columbia, toweiber ‘{uprovements thereohy cor.slstin Story brick welling numbered G11 F street sorth- ferms of sale: One-third of the purchass money in cake balance: in threo equal installments: im. #1, fwelve a'd eichteen quontiis, with interest at 6 Pet cent par annum, payab’e soLannually, rectired by finea of trunt on tuo property sold. oral cash, at, the eption of the iurchase!.” All cohweyaycine and se. red of sale. Terms of sale to be com- Fisk and cost of defanitiue purchaser of purchasers. MAHLON ASHTO J528-00 ALDIS. nOW r[uomas DowLin' Hen > AUCTIONE! JUNCANSON BROS., AUCTION & SON, Auctioneers, 4 612 Est. nw. INISTRATOR'S SALE OF HORS?S. CAR’ AOWAGON WHEEL BARROWS, BLICK, CO! YOOD. ke. AT AUCTION. Om MONDAY, JULY. THIRTY-FIRST, 1800. at TWO OCLOCK P.M. we will sell at Enterprise lime Kilns, Virzinia avenue ber ween I and K'streets uorth- west, two good Work Horses, one Dirt Wagon, two Wheelbarrows, 35,000 old Brick, lot of Cord Wood, ‘fiy order of Supreme Court of the Dist-ict of Co- lamblia Us2ba) MARY SMITH, Collector. RATCLIFFE, DARE & C0. . AUCTIONEERS, TWO TWO-STORY FRAME HOUSES ON GALES ND NINETEENTH STREETS NORTHEAST, ON TUESDAY, AUGUST FIRST, AT HALF-PAST FIVE U'CLOCK'?.M., we will sell, in front of the Premi Bub lot 53, block 22, Of the subdivision of it'sedale & Isherwood, im- ved tory frame house, No. 1826 Galeset. ne Firmediateiy after lot 37, block 22, vision improved ty S-story frame Ureliius, Nov sao doth st? nes Bach bowes will be gusta railcast at the ption. of tof 8100 on each Bose rea ‘Terma. to be complied with in Aftcen, dase ‘day of sale, otherwise the right to resell at cont of "the ‘defaulting ‘purchaser in re- onveyaneine, recon ling. &c.~ atthe cost Of the purchaser. KATOLIFFE, DARE & CO. duis Autioncets. ‘NITED STATES MARSHAL’S SAI. writ of fierifacias issued tod Twill offer at cash, at the door of the conrt house of seid District, on WEDNESDAY, THE SIXTEP NTH DAY OF AU- GUST, 1803, at TWELVE, OCLOCK M., ail the Ticht, title, claim, interest and estate of the defendant fm anit to the following described proverty, a tract of land locatedfat or near Benn! Columba, containing one bund 3 abite wa'e, for Acres, inoFe or less, being the same land of which Benjamin Owens died seized and possessed, said tract, the Baltimore and Po ‘east by iand belong ‘on the south by subdi- ‘Mrs. bone borinded on the north fomec Hatleoad Company om ing to De Sailan We bean vision of Linco.n and on the west by the li Manping, with all end singular the * seized and levied upon as the ip" Owens, and will besold to autiety execution Kd in favor of Geo. N. Hol M. RANSDELL, U. 8 Ms FFE, DARK & CO., Auctioneers. 98, josept No. TEI. cL JDURCANSON BROS., Auctioneers STREET, COOKE PARK, WEST SOON, AUGUST. FIRST, PAST FIVE O'CLOCK. we will DAY AFTER! HALE. mrs tnelateee Seas" inetuste, ay A {orn 1O-foot alles” “Tun Houses are pens brick front, bay con ainig rooms and’ bath, conereed figre modern {improvement ‘collar aad This row of ten Louses has just been completed and the remain:ng four are to besold at ancton. fourth cash and the balance iu one, two and three years from December 7, 1802. at 8 per Cent per annum, payable semi-annually. or all casbrat the option of the purchaser. A deposit of $200 te- auired on each hot Sncing and recordin je to be. a the time of sale. Convey- purchaser's cost. Terms of complied with in fifteen daysor the right Teserved to reseil the proverty at the risk. and cost of defaulting such resal purchaser after five im some hewspaper Pi 28d DUNCANSON BRO! C, & sLoaN wc fe ys" advertinement of foiuabed in Washinge PO., Auctioneers, 1407 G st. (Surcessors to Latimer & Sloan), TRUSTEFS' SALT OF DESIRABLE BRICK ms $02 NEW HAMPSHIRE AVE- ¥ Ry virtue of a certain deedof trast dated Jniy 1, 1890, ‘and recorded in Liber No. 144, folio “400 et sey. . one of the land records of the Disttict of Comm bia. ‘and at the written request of the party thereby secured. ‘we will well in Tront of ‘the prelatses on WEDNESDAY, THE SFOOND DAY OF AUGUBT, A.D.” 1803, AT FIVE O'CLOCK ¥. M., the followinse Aéscribed real estate. situate in the city of Wasting fon, District of Columbia.to vit: Lot nombered forty- four (44). in Charles” Fariy, and” others’ sul Aiviwon ct oricinal lot numbered one in square Bumboret twenty-nine (An, as said subdivision 1s recorded in Book 17, pase 50; th the office of the sur- Yexor of the District of Columbia, together with & Flekt of wax im common with the owners of ther lots wision for the purpose of an alley over 1 3,80.100 feet by the fait width of lots ae 0, 51. 52 of waid au'utivision, and also over the orth 5 fost by the full width of lots 46 and 47 of said subdivision. ‘Terins of sale: One-half of the purchase money in ‘nd the balance in tworgual justallments ip One years Fes ectively trv day of sale, with in ferest at 6 per centum per anuuin, payable semi-an- nd secured by purchaser's notes and deed of erty sid. of all cash. at option of purchaser, Adepositot &200 required at time of aaie, f terius of sale are Rot complied with Witl!s twenty days from day of sale tees raserve the theht to Fesell at tisk and cost of defaulting all cers, J)ENCANBON BROS., Auction D ‘Sth and D sta now. TEES’ SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED TRUS RE AL ESTATE ON THE GRORGETOWN AND TENNALEA TOWN TURNPIKE AT TRE TN- TERSECTION OF THE LOUGHDOKOCGH Ry virtue of a deed of trust duly reconted in Liber 1700, folto 454 et seq... one of the land records of the District of Columbia, "we. the unde ‘trustees, Lotter for sale 1m trout of the vrentiace ou THY TS AY THE THIRD DAY OF AUGUST, A.D. 1803. AT FIVE O'CLOCK P.M... the followine described Tent estete.towit: All of fot ummbered two), in asube division of a part of a tract of land called “Friend ship,” according toa" description of ‘sail lot as the Simms appeare “in a cortnia’ deed of ‘anid trererny Bnd plat attached therets. recorted in Liver! maavied teal >. 17, at folie 63. one of the laud recor of the District off Columbie, except the worth i Shdidue-tenth feet (40 D) fron of lot bp the derth thereat ‘conveyed to Davi J: Coleman br deciree conied in Titer numbered 1G, at folks 410, encther of diand re-ords, towether with the improvements, asemients,richts, privileges and ai partenances same belotigiaz oF in anywis> appertaining. ‘Terms of sale: One-fourth cash, balance su aix, twelve and eighteen months, with interest at 6 per cent perannus, jememf annually, and to be se- cured by deed of fr qu at the option ‘of the p Will berequired at tine of cording, &c., at purchaser’ Terms of complied with within fifteen days from day of sale, otherwise trustees, reserve the rizht to resell the property at the risk and cost of defaulting pur: Chaser after five days’ advi j2OS., Auctionsera: TRUSTER'S SALE OF VALUABLE FAT, Fs TATE TX TAKOMA PAXK. BEING THE DROG STORE PROPERTY OPPOSITE DEPOTS By virtue of adecree of the Supreme Court of the District of Cohimbia, passed, July", NOK fe the canse of Moss va. Moss, Xo. 14400 equity, Pwill seit St nubile suction, in front of the premises, om ENT DAY, AUGUST FOURTH, Tea ut FIVE OCLOCK PAL’ Tot 18 of therestbdiviston of blocks 10 an 14 of Takoma Park, DC. located opposite: the rate teriuinue of the electrie Fond, The umproverrenta const of « two-story fratse Swelline, used aon drug store. ‘Term of salo: Une-thir cash, one-third in one year and ‘one-third in two sears, defercod pavinonte te bear intereat from day of sale and to Ueserumed be trast ‘on the, property, or all cash. at cption of the Parchaser, “Taxes paid to June fi, TSO8 Convers ins and recor ling at purchaser's cont. Deraqit of joo required on day of sale, If terms offaate are Rorcomplied with in Aftean’ days property wilt beter Sold at risk and cost of defaulting purchaser FILLMORE BEALL, “Trustee Dat p. TRUSTEFS’ SALE OF VALUABLE IMPRovep PROPERTY. HOUSE NUMBERED 3330 zg STREET NORTHWEST, GEORGETOWN, . C. Under and by virtue of a deed of trast to as made on the 19th day of July, A.D. TSW, and duly recorded: among ths fand if the District of Colmabie, nt the request of ' in Liber 1608, fol parties secnred thereby. we wii! sell at pubite a in front of the premises on MONDAY, JULY THI. TY-FIRST, 1833, at HALP-PAST POUR P. ML, ail that certain piece or parce of land and promines situate in the eity of Washinston, District of Co- lumbia, “known and distinguished ‘and be ing part of ‘lot No, ‘198, i ‘wddition to Georgetown, bring in equate No. 87. berinning for the same at the end of aline drawn ot) the south line of West street three hundred and one (201) feet, More or less, from the southwest corner of West and Wash- ington streets (ald the inlddle of ‘the party senanbered | 303° B nthe east | thereof) and. ru e line of tY-eight (2A) fect to the middle of the WV wall between ssid house No. 3030 P strert horthwest and tie honse on the west thereof; thence south and parailel with W dred and twenty (1 with Went street twenty eleht Rorth to the! ace of besinuine. Termsotf sale: One-haif o: the purchase money in cane, Ualance in twoequal payiara's at one and t¥o east aud parallel 28) “feet “and! thence pees ‘with six (G) per cent interest per annum, payable semi-annually. The deferred payinents ‘to be renresented 1 the purchaser and secure by deed of property, oF allcash, at the option A deposit of two hi Quired at time of #1! 200) will be res The terms must b= complind with in fifteen (15) dave from sale, or the tristers re- Serve the right to vesell at the risk and cost of dee All conveyancing Burcpower's or Varchasers' cont. faulting purchaser or purchasers recording at @. SLOAN & 00., Auctioneers, 1407 G st. C. © Gitcemaoes ts Yathiner aS GOVERNMENT SALE OF ADOUT 88,332 POUNDS OF WASTE PAPER. On WEDNESDAY, AUGUST TWELVE O'CLOCK M.. at the hower & Co.. comer cf "Vi aren 8 ewe wi lsell for Metso > POUNDS OF WASTE PAPER. asTerme cash and paper to be eaoved aner's expense. By order of the SHES 0G ercas TRUSTEES SALE OF VALUABI NORTH G STREET BETWE! SIXTH STRERTS EAST A STRE:T BrTWEEN F AND @ NORTHEAST By virtue of a certain deed of trust, duly recorded fu Liver numbered 1:07, folie 15 et seq, Jand records of the District of Col SSDAY THE in “front of | the ines. on TU" E ‘oF "AUGUST. A. D. Inga wt SIX NGHTH DAY K P.“i,. the following described real estate Mtnate in the city of Washington, D. C., to wit: All ‘one of the we ll nell OCLC those certain pieces or parcels of land and premises known and distineuished as apd being oriina lots Rumbered 13.and 16, in square ‘towetier with all {be improvements, ways, easements, rehts, privi- Joges and aj purteninces to the same b'l orin Any Wise apperia' nit, ‘Terms; (ne-third of the purchase to be paid in cash; balance in one and two years, at the rate of Sr . cent a apnum, payable semi-anpnally, and to De ascnred'by a decd of tras: on the vroperty bold. or allcash, at the opifon of the purchaser. Comveyanc- ing and recordite at purchasers coat. Terive te be complied with in fifteen days, otherwise trustees reserve the richt to rese] the property at the risk and cost of defaulting purcuaser after fv: day-’ advertise: =.= a Fesa'ein some uewspaper px nm jon, D.C ROSWELL A FI<#,? _3y27-dkas SOHN L. PKENCH, { Trustees. JPUNCASSON BROS. AUCTIONEERS, TRUSTEES’ SALE_OF VALUABLE RTY ORS uinee, eer wees PPOs prigeets Nowturas virtue of a cersas trust, duly recorded: Liter 1707, folio 2 et aeqrs ons of the laud recone iF the District of Colum sf q premises ‘on TUESDAY. "THE FTGHTE, Dav. OF AUGUST. (A. D. isd, AT HALE-PAST FIVE eee Hat, the folowing dancrdbnd real entate, ‘uate inetou District Coltniuia, to'wit: All that coral’ Mese*or parcel of Jand and premises known ani distiue ialved a and being original lot numbered 171m aquare SB, together TAN AL Reware._tmprovementa eauamenis, rele, yrivilewes and aprurtenances ‘came belowing OF in anywise apperta ning. > ‘Terms: Que-third cash, balance fn one and two HOTELS seer eee eesese eee Waues rx poust as To waene to go for s cocl, comfortable, airy Foom and first-class table board choose the “ELSMERE"—the hotel home of our lead- ine statesmen. Every comfort of home— every luxury of a hotel, Near all car lines —tieht in the heart of the city—but one cool, shady street. ‘Terms, 82 per day. 428 1406-12 HST., NEAR 14TH ST. ‘T= tincors. Joth and Hate. 3712___Opensil the year;surhmerrates. wOTEL, Ae ave and lather, EBBITT HOUSE. WASHINGTON, D. 0. es LEGAL NOTICES. ees PHIs IS 10 GIVE NOTICF THAT THE SUB scriber, of the District of Columbia, Las obtained frohi ihe Supreme Court of the Dis:rirt of Covummbla: letters inntafuentars'on tie coeaaea, OSUrt weetuuae, ars ont min K. Plain. inte of the District of Ceiummblar tee Seied. |All permmm: having clainen ageinet tee destared are hereby warned to exbint tae the Guctirs theree tothe ubeeriber, on ae 3 ‘peat. they may ctherwiee Secx-iuded from afi Benefit of tiesailtsaetees “Givwo under nay hand this “ist dey of 3 oe ND a Rahn Bet oo _JOMN B, LARNER, Proctor, the ‘N THE SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF I ‘COLUMATA, ts Botan a apects er fo ruses Court bustnem, In, te of Martla Martin, iate of the Dirtriet Fs gotate of Marthe ihe District of Application having been mad forletier of tration on the estate of sail Marthe by award A. ‘Taylor. acrediterd Thotire is. hereby given to a ‘years, at 6 percent, abuun, Dy ant | te bear in this court on FRIDAL Bn Yo vel anes ee deed of nt ou te prone | Richtee far tei at Fen OCuoCK A, .% seit of C500 Fequired sk Manet ale Een ane | Septic: aby exe Arainat the erento of rich jug and reconting at vurcheser's cost. ‘Terms of sale to be complied with in fifteen days from ‘day of stler otherwise trustees reserve the rixlt to resell the prope ‘erty at the risk and cost of defaulting purchaser after five dass’ advertisement of such resale in soine news. paper fo Washineton, Dic. ROSWELL A. FIs dy27-akeds JOHN 1. FRENTE} Traeen RstcurrE panx & fo. Avctio: $20 PENNA, AVE Siw. USTEES’ SALF OF TWo-sTORY HOUSE. NO. 1416 NORTH CAPITOL STREET: BY PUBLIC AUCTION. By virtue of a deed of trust given to us.and duly recorded among the land records of the District of Columbia, in Liber No. 1726, at folio 224 eteeq.,and At the reqivest of the Martie secured un dersi Srustecs will offer for sale, by vublic auc Ho, in trout of the, premises, on MONDAY, THE SEVENTH DAY OF AUGUST, A.D. 1883, AT HALF. FAST FIVE O'CLOCK P.M. all that piece or parcel of ground and premises sittste, lying and beloe in the city of Waslinion, iu the District of Columbia, and known and distinguished as and being jot poi tered fourteen (14). tn, Uhimans subdivision of cor. tain square iumbered six hundred end sixteea (G16). touethier with “ail the improvements, “wara, sth, ee Tertus of sale: Seventeen hundred (81,700) dollars must be paid in cash, the balance in mi (6), twelve (12 p08 ehemteon OB) amonthe iron the dar of rainy the deferred payments to besecured by deed of ‘on the preinises sold and the notes to bear Interest at {he rate of per cent ‘per aasitim Until ‘Paid, payable semi-aunually, or all, cash, at the option of the ur chaser. A deposit of $500 will be regul ed at the time of wale. ‘Terms tobe complied with in sifteen Gave from the day of sale. otherwiae the ‘trustees, reserve FRAME the right to resell the property at the rist aud the defaulting purcbaser. All conveyancing. record ing, Beas ot the OTN W, SCHAEFER, ty26dkds HENRY JORDAN, "f Trustees. (7 @- SLOAN & CO. Auctioneers, 1407 Gt c.* ‘(Saccesors to Latimer & Sloan), TRUSTEES’ SALE OF FRAME HOUSE AND ‘ON TENTH ATR: C1 NORTHWEST BETWEES RAND 8 STREETS. copy of this order shall be pub'tshed | jorton Law: Nevorier ant” Testing ie eg ened eT es iawat Ee P. WRIGHT, Bacteter af Wilix OCEAN TRAVEL. Wesb- ence Pasteneer and Tourist Aewnt,615, Anew Tel 3 5 smetel spline iinet Branelat Bal imo, > Piao is Nneate Europe, Asie, Siricg, At ‘Aire to Boston, ;,Prorttence, Norfolk. Se and points south. Berths or state rooms rese- any Reamer" ontward or revarn ie is aiabed.on = cate sheets and plans of steamers fan cat AGENT FOR’ THO, COOK & 50%. “ven Yoaay part of the world. eed in sums to wait om and scot! Foreign express; cnscom house broiter. malteong patter kinase ath APES PROFESSIONAL. = BOF. CLAY 18 THE OLDEST ES” ‘ABLISHED Pipl crores oni ‘Born with wondertnl prophetic eift second siett sche eohsentnte momen ot ronan Schaar Metin See Solen gooda, I your enemies from your ‘Open Sundays Ottists. southwest. Br virtue of s dead of trust dated the 19th day of | \ MF. MAPHAEL, GLATRVOTANT ASIROLOG- ber, 1801, ani recorded smacma the, tand recs ; bora with obul coves ames and lucky @atect of the Disirice of Columbia ta liber 1624 at, folio ow to retain husband foray Getsra.. and at the written request of the party se ‘fseann to guction. in fran pte 4 OF. JOHNSON 18 THE OURTH DAY OF AUGUST, 1883. at HALF-PAST reader: he wa: oo FOUR O'CLOCE P.M. Sot huaterea seven 12) In jun tulle ld thy oeaoee ae oeeee todiiston of Hola square’ wusebered thoes vey ad *hirty- Ave (KiS), ae aid subd vision in gue of recorded in the ofBce of the surveyor of the District of = Columbia in book if. D. ©., folio 17 with pe lmproremeute thereon, ‘consisting of « two-story fraune Swell-e ‘Terms of sale: The amount secured by said deed $5 gustun obo puldcash end the Salaute in sesteme prt te pudess ince 18 ome Feat, fSr'which’the note of tive varcbaser will be taken, with, IN MEDICATED ARD GEA RAT} EaeeR interes ach ber conta per apnure,. pavatie snai- | PLAIN MEDICATED AND SEX FAUT, PATER Secoaty gisestans senamaeheee gamete, | Sanco no TELL ALE ELV oF c y a r ‘The rixbt ts reenrved to forfeit aaid Gepoait and reseli | MI lige. At aus Souda Eaten ernie: at the risk and rost of the purchaser Wf the terme of | iven- Ste. each Hone Be ae Bene alg Sr not cousbited with haa V0 due front da of York ave. news. near Oot : cies joan kiben ‘| ‘PRE BowPonD eecTRIO MEDICATED H.W, SOHON. Attorney, ‘Trustees, apor bah, unercelied as « and ane pre- MS Dat aw ery RATCLIFFE, DARE & CO. AUCTS. TKUSTEE'S SALT OF UNIMPROVED REAL ESTAIE ON FOURTH STREET B-TWEEN G STREPT AND NIRGINIA AVENUE BOUTH- EAST BY AUCTION. Virtue ofa decree of the Supreme Court of the Jests ant a further Oecree pareed-on the Tote Any ot ‘ant a further decree on duly: A.D. Iss, dp equity cause No. suet a za E. Wenley te complainant and Mary det al. arn defendants, the ‘under wall’ fier for sala ‘at 'ublle premise on" WEDNESDAY. COND DAY OF ACGUST FIVE O'CLOCK P.M Di F< of Jot nunibered fifteen (23) in square <8) ‘Bowinning for the same foot dered ‘seven hundred and ninety-sx Dounded as. follow: point on Fourth (4th) street thesoutheast angie of sail is extended ‘to. an slley, West at right anzles wit cant along said alley Att GO ft. alley) ten (10) feet, thence ficht C&S) feet to the northeast two (2), thence northwesterly, line between jo's two (2) end feet eleven and. one. ‘eust one hundred an I thirty-tw> (32) feet nine and ‘gue-talf (86) inches to Fourth (4th) street east. thence due south’ fourteen (14) feet four (4) inches to the place of beginning. ‘Terms of sale as vrescribed by the decree are: One-third of the parchase money to be paid in cash om the day of sale or within ten (10) days t and ‘the residue in two egual istaliments at one andtwo Years from the day of sale, the purchaser of Purchasers Fiving his, ber or chelr pr ‘uissory notes tor the sam", ‘with interest thereon from the day of sale, at tie rate of 6 per century per annum; the said deferred ments to be secured by deed of trust. Upon sold, or all cash, at the purchaser or I of saie are not comlied with in tan (i Gays from the day of sale’ the right is reserved j sell the property at the risk and cost of the defau! Purchaser or purchasers. A deposit of Fequired when the properiy is knock conveyancine, ‘chaser or pur Jy 20-e0t 4s ~__ PROPOSALS PROPOSALS FOR THE const ‘Duild neat Washington Barrocks ‘east ten (10) A lot, which down. All ling. &o., at the cost of the pur- ALBERT SILLERS, Trustee, Webster Law building. RUCTION OF D. C.—Sealed n triplicate. subject to the usual conattions, at the office of oat garter 3 racks. Detie unlit TRELVE Mt om SATURDAY, AUGUST NINETEENTH, 1593, for the erection of one double wet of N.C. sta’ quarter, and will be opened in the presence of bidd-rs finme- diately thereafigr. Writton'wuarantees by two digit terested parties for $500.00 each will be Tequired to accompany Dds. The stioreseful Uidder to cuter inte the United “States, wnier. bond. for 81.000 00, sisned by two Aisint-restad parties us pure: ties, within ten days avter hotification of acceprance of bid. Specifications, blank proposals and draw can be obtained by thurs tutentime to bid from Shagrmeney ¢., TOs NSLEY. Pipe . Four ery. C2 1 pees EARIMENT OF | STATE, |W sHTNOTON july 13, INKS. —Sealed proposals will be recely: at aie Derartmnent of Susie Rnd TWELVE, Me De peoreens, tH T RE Fearw' exyerience, 45 years at 000 Gition free and stric iy coufidential STRANGERS TAKE NOTICL DUS BROTHERS S ana G 3 ‘treat all @isea. Tehind adverts SURGEON SPRCIALIST ‘TO GENTLEMEN ONLY. Graguates London, England. 186, New York, 187 Biadder and Kits ‘Allments. Acute of Obremie ‘Thsea Norwe a ae sroves Boieny POIESTIFIC, SKI S00 RAIMENT GUaiANTERD T 29 105:30.m. Stem Sundar te Sylism CONSULTATION FEUER. YOUNG MARRIED PEOPLE Can make no better hecinnine in life than to far nish their howse com niei#ly froin top to bottom. ‘There is nothing tobe gained by payincash for 1) this farnitare—you can't saves penmy by it— for we sell Furniture and Carpets just as cheap on credit ax other folks do for cash—we won't ask you tosicn s nole—nor there won't les dissgresable feature in the whole transaction. Ourturniture is up to date—thoreughly med ern—every piece of tk. FURNISH YOUR HOUSE OW CREDIT. TBE SEVENTH DAY OF AUGUST, IMs, to’ for nish said department with Stationery and Mis- Sellancons Articies. incinding horse feed, for the year ending Jun» 30, 1804, tu accoriance witha le of articles witen will ‘be supplied to per. and firwws provosing to bid. The right to reject any and ail bids, of to sccep® aay portion of any hi oramend the quantity civen of any article tr schedule, 1s reserved. “Each bidder will ber to furnish with his bila bond, with two s the sum of $2.00, asa zuarantee of a fai formance of the contract which jy 14, 15,17. 19,22. 97,98, A Free Troser From Wasim TON, D. C., OR BALTIMORE, MD., TO OCEAN CITY, MD., OR ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., AND $25 IN CASH, The E. A BUTTS CO. will give the above prize to the per-on sending in the «reatest muniber of words made up from the letters in the words BUTTS’ BROMO LITHIA, using the letters aa many times as is wished, but not to use the sume letters in making any word more times than it appears in BUTTS’ BROMO LITHIA. All answers to this offer must he addressed tothe A. BUTTS CO., 808 17th st, Washington, D. C.. Sach answer must be accompanied bys LABEL taken from « bottle of BUTTS’ ROMO LITAIA. No limit to the number of trials under the same sig- nature. BU1TS' BROMO LITHIA cures headache where al! other bromos fail. For sale by all druggista. Price, 10 cents. You Need These’ “Fddy” Refrigerators are so perfect that there are none equal to them. Have dry air cireuistion. Consume the minimam of ice. Haveslate stoue shelves. We're sole agents. You can make your own foe cream and save Daif your money—tt you «wn atreczer. We have them—2-gt sort at $1.75. { We have an immense variety of Parior Ferattare: for you to select trom—Wilton Rug, Tapestry, Drocatelie, Gilt, &r. One of our creat offers is the choice bet ween a seven-viece Parlor Suite ta plusa crbatr-cioth, tor @22.50. We sell Soild Osk Bet Room Suite for $13—bevel gins in Duress. A forts-pound sion Table for $3.50. tress for $7. Woven Wire Sprine, i. whatever you need. We'll help you to arrange tue Payments satisfactorily. A little money once « ‘week or once s month will do Gret rate, Pay just ‘What you can apare comvensentin GROGAN'S MAMMOTH CREDIT HOUSE, We 81, 825 ITH ST. Nw, EET. ANDI STS. T. B. Towsyn & Sos, LEBS, Wo stir ap bosiness Tuy have see rt adonted the followine pl Fatine the dull months of ‘summa, prec «nga neces <form! tier, coneletine of | Soip “Oak ANTIQUE Finis’ FOLDING TABLES, SOLID_OAK ANTIQUE FINISH FOLDING MUSIC ‘Ok NEWSPAPER RACES, SOLL Aw ANTIQUE FINISH FOLDING BOOK Kee Them attractive an well as useful pisces of furnt- ture ire not for sale, Dut we propose to «ive shen 10 SSNS Call at neta capi and cleeaiar wie will ection one ich we trecent them Make the collection of garbaze any for the | SHINS tug aber sitrsctione'we are saline PAVA- p~cemanagnpe ne ‘the denser te 2S) SOLSand UMBRELLAS cne-tourts off of regular Gisease and sickness by providing the proper | price. é Tecertacie for the warbaze. Peentiful line of PERCALTS just recetved. Heral:tion Galvanized Iron Garbage Cans, with top, 65e. end up. M.W. Breeusen 1215 F Sz Bic assortment of. ASM GOOD™ at popuiar prices. SEL POT TON, 2e, CoAUNBLVACHED COn TON, tnobort lenggns 36, BOYS’ WAIST and KNEE ES GENS 1GQAN idtiine Gh W cbicndia UNLAUNDERED SEY bos se

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