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10 CAUSES OF DEPRESSION Special House Committee Report on the Condition of Agriculture, The Remonetization of Silver and a Boanty on Agricultural Staples Among the Remedies. ‘The majority of the special committee of the House appointed to inquire into the causes of the prevailing agricultural de- pression has prepared a report, in which it ‘says: = “It is unnecessary for the committee to enter into or dwell upon the fact that agricllture is depressed in every branch of this most important industry; that the val- ues of land and farm products, unless under exceptionally rare conditions, have depre- clated steadily as the purchasing power of the dollar has increased. But while the value of property owned by the American farmers has decreased in thirty years from nearly one-half of the total wealth in 1860 to less than one-fourth in 1890, of which 30 per cent is now under mortgage— taxes have steadily increased, and debts now require four times the labor to be paid off than was then required. The pur- chasing capacity of the dollar to secure the farmers’ land and produce has in- creased four-fold, while the power to pay his taxes and debts have remained at a stand-still. In 1873 wheat sold from $1.55 to $2.25 a bushel (according to Spofford’s almanac) in New York; in 1894 it sold at 50 cents.”” Discussing the causes of the depression the committee says: “Class legislation of the worst character incumbers the statute books, and has been carried on to the detriment of agriculture and its dependent industries for thirty years, culminating in the crime of the age, the demonetization of silver in 1873. “The demonetization of silver was a bold stroke in the interest of capital that has reduced the value of every product in the _ World; this is conclusively proven by the fact that just as silver has depreciated, in like proportion have all other values failen in the scale. Silver bullion today has the capacity to purchase as much wheat, cot- ton, pork, corn and land and every other commodity that it ever had; therefore the depreciation of the white metal simply means the depreciation of every article under the sun with one single exception, the gold of Shylock. ‘The tariff system of taxation is not only unequal, but as for the past thirty years administered in this country is most unjust to the consumer, and has built up trusts, combines and gigantic corporations that have not only amassed immense wealth at the expense of the people, but have assumed to control and direct legis- lation, so as to perpetuate their power and &ratify their greed. “The tariff bears with undue weight up- on the producer of agricultural staples, as it forces him not only to buy in the dear- est market, but to sell in open competition with the world’s lowest prices. “Agricultural depression js still further augmented by the sale of futures on our stock exchanges,where the grain gamblers Brow rich by farming the telegraph wires and selling wind, while the honest and in- dustrious toiler on the prairies reaps the whirlwind. Food adulterations add mill- fons annually to the farmers’ losses, end compel him to meet in competition the thief. To these might be added other causes, but the principal ones, to which agricultural depression and stagnation in trade is due, have been cited. “The remedy les in remedial legislation, and until that is secured relief will not come permanently. “To secure relief we suggest: “1, That silver should be remonetized at the ratio of 16 to 1. “2. That so long as the present unjust and unequal system of protection contin- ues that agriculture should receive its just proportion, and this cannot be secured by a protective tariff, that a bounty on ex- ported agricultural staples should he al- lowed, similar to that on fish in 1813, and for. which John C. Calhoun yoted. prevented by law, “4. That’ a natfonal pure food law should be enacted.” A minority report is being prepared. er cat dE he “eh elena ab THEY BOUGHT THE QUESTIONS. Conspiracy Among Hoosier Teachers to Obtain Certificates by Fraud. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. Several months ago the Indiana depart- ment of public instruction had reason to be suspicious of some exceptionally tine examinations passed by applicants for teachers’ licenses in Bartholomew and ad- joining counties. The state superintendent instituted a personal investigation, which showed that the law governing such exam- inations was being outrageously violated. developed, for instance, that the printed list of questions sent out by the state superin- tendent reached Columbus, the county seat of Bartholomew, one day in advance of the required examination. At further was disclosed that for sev- eral months these questions had been sur- reptitiously printed and hawked about in Bartholomew, Shelby, Decatur and Rush counties. Seven mcn were engaged in the deal. They drummed up customers and sold the questions to applicants at prices ranging from $5 to $10 per list. Couriers carried written mimeograph copies of questions either on horseback or by rail from Columbus, making such quick distri- bution that the receiver had fully twenty- four hours in which to cram. City and county teachers were alike involved, and, by arresting a teacher named Hurst, who was afterward fined on a long-range con- fession of guilt, the whole thing was made clear. The state superintendent thereupon turned the matter over to the grand juries of the counties named, and he is now awaiting results. Under the bill as in- dorsed by the state board this previous publication of questions and the sale of the same is made a penal offense, instead of a misdemeanor. ——_—__+ e+ _____. WASHINGTON CONFERENCE. the THE Gratifying Report Regarding Alexandria District. In the Washington conference of the M. E. Church at Richmond yesterday I. L. Thomas, presiding elder, read his report of the work on the Alexandria district. Many converts, many Epworth Leagues have been organized, many churches have been built and several have been re- modeled. The following were Introduced to the conference: Rey. J. C. Hartzell, D. D., sec- retary of the Freedman’s Aid and South- ern Educational Society; Rev. J. W. Ham- flton, D. D., assistant secretary of the Freedman’s Aid and Southern Educational Society; Rev Wheatley Taylor, Drs. Young and Christian of the Methodist Episcopal Church South; Revs. Graham, White, Wells, Braton, Edwards, J. P. Turner and Clark of the Baptist Church; Rev. Dr. Dunton of Claflin University, South Caro- lina; Prof. J. M. Gregory of Howard Uni- versity, Washington, D. C., and Dr, Hun- ter of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. In the afternoon there was an educa- tional mass meeting. Addresses were de- livered by Dr. Dunton, Dr. Hartzell and Dr. Hamilton. Last night the missionary anniversary was held. Chaplain McCabe and Dr. J. W. E. Brown addressed the meeting. 00 The Nun’s Garb Bill. The Smith nun garb bill passed second reading in the Pennsylvania house by a large majority Wednesday, after a long and earnest discussion. The penalty fea- ture, which had been knocked off in com- mittee, was added to the bill. It makes it a misdemeanor for any teacher to wear in the public schools any garb or insignia of a religious character. The limit of the fine for the first offense is $100, leaving it to the discretion of the court; for the sec- ond offense the fine is $100, and the teacher will be deprived of the position. After two convictions the teacher {fs not eligible for five years. The penalty clause was adopted by a vote of 131 to 38. The main arguments against the bill were that it was aimed at the Catholic Church, that it is a blow at religious and civil liberty, and that it will interfere with Dunkards, Amish, Mennonites and other Protestant denominations. Opponents de- nounced {it as the most atrocious and un- American bill ever presented in a legisla- ture, and claimed the bill would keep out of the schools the members of the Wo- men’s Christian Temperance Union, who wore the white ribbon, and several other associations who wear a badge of some Kind to designate their order. ‘3. That gambling in futures should be™ GENERAL KEWS-NOTES, A bill has been introduced in the Penn- sylvania legislature to prevent-the black- mailing of oleo dealers... It. provides The Four Seasons Hotel at Middlesboro’, Ky., was bought in Wednesday by I. Un- termyer of New York for $28,000. The orig- inal cost was $1,500,000. It was built owing to the fron boom. . An application has been made for the admission of C. W. Couldcck to the Forrest Home, signed by the manager of McVick- er’s Theater of Chicago. Eunice Conrad, one hundred and twenty years old, died Tuesday at Cedarville, W. ‘Va. She was born August~-4, 1775, a few miles from where she died. : ‘When Charles Elisworth died the other day at Saratoga, N. Y., he was buried with his boots on, as he directed. A new gold find is reported from Indio, Southern California. It is supposed to be an old Aztec mine, and some of its ore has gone as high as $953 per ton. 2 Mrs. Jeremiah Mish, daughter of Justice Bossard, committed suicide at Hagerstown Tuesday by hanging herself with a rope to @ beam in a barn. She was forty-five years old, and leaves a husband and seven chil- en. John W. Mackey, jr., is engaged to Miss Consuela Vanderbilt, daughter of W. K. Vanderbilt, David Douglass, one hundred and _ five years old, died near Ottawa, Ill, Wednes- day, leaving three crops of children and two..conflicting wills. In the circuit court of Lamar county, Ala., Wednesday, a judgment was given in favor of Allen H. Burrows, administrator of Rube Burrows, for $204 against the Southern Express Company. The suit was for conversion of Rube’s property, consist- ing of pistols, guns, oxen, wagon, trunk end money. . The Lick trustees have applied to the court to be discharged from their trust, having executed the will. The enhance- ment of property and income from interest increased the estate by $1,000,000 during their trust. Soldiers shot a mad bull near Moulins, France, recently with a Lebel rifle. The bullet cut a neat hole through the animal from shoulder to crupper. It is believed that the shot would have penetrated eight ranks of men. A Chicago dentist-says the fumes in a candy factory entirely ruin the teeth of the operatives. Abyssinia is coining for the first time money of its own. y Clara Louise Kellogg has lost a fortune in the suspension of the New York branch of the publishing house of Cassell & Co. She lost a fortune in 1863 in a London in- vestment. George A. Ballentine, the Newark, N. J., brewer, who got a divorce this week from his wife in Paris, has an income of $600,- 000 a year. Georgetown, S. C., has a big kindling fac- tory, which ships its product to London and New York. Gov. Oates pardoned. Ann Holmes Mon- day, after she had served three years over the time for which she was sentenced. Great Britain’s population, according to the census just closed, is 38,776,154. Hundreds of Georgia negroes are tramp- ing back from Mexico, where they colo- nized last year. Hugh T. Galen, millionaire miner, politi- cian and father-in-law of Senator-elect T. H. Carter, was married secretly to Miss Laura B. Tague, a school teacher, Jan- uary 6. Norfolk is thinking of annexing Ports- mouth, Berkeley and Huntersville. The Minnesota legislature has passed a law declaring all game state property and regulating shooting, trapping and fishing on that basis. Archbishop Purcell’s creditors have held several meetings this week and are said to be encouraged by _a communication re- ceived from Mgr. Satolli, the contents of which have not been made public. oo SAN DOMINGO WILL PAY. The Difficulty With France Has Been Settled. Special correspondence of the New York World, dated Puerto Plata, San Domingo, February 26, says: The difficulty between San Domingo and France has been adjust- ed, according to advices received today by steamer from the capital. President Heureaux agrees, the report states,that the republic shall pay to France 150,000 francs cash, to come from the dis- puted funds on deposit in Paris for some time, and to reckon her so-called interna- tional debt at 1,200,000 francs, at least 15,000 francs to be paid monthly in cash. That debt was stated at $213,295 January 1, 1891. The precise amount of it has been in dispute since that time on account of sun- dry French claims. This arrangement is understood to be a settlement in full of all French claims. The French men-of-war have left. The claim against San Domingo was that several Frenchmen had been killed through the instigation or connivance of San Do- mingo officials. —__-+e+—___ THE FATE OF THE SEAL, Interests of the North American Com- mercial Company. From the San Francisco Examiner. “I do not believe that two great nations would agree to the extermination of seals and the consequent utter annihilation of a big industry for the sake of a handful of pelagic seal hunters.” The speaker was E. A. Cox, secretary of the North American Commercial Company. Mr. Cox was asked what he thought was the object of the bill before Congress to exterminate seals and the amendment to stop all killing for one or two years. His answer was: “I can only think that the original object of the bill is to draw attention to the heavy slaughter going on and to say in so many words: ‘These Canadians will wipe out all the seals in three or four years; let us take our share by wiping up the entire stock at once!” This is really what will happen if the British government does not stop this pelagic sealing. I should have mentioned that these seals which the hunters shoot are ‘pink’ and are not worth one-half the price of the skin of a bachelor seal. Last season the price dropped very much in London, and though 50,000 seals were killed, the proportion of ‘pink’ female skins with bullet holes in them was so large that they did not pay for the killing. “The seal is born in about equal numbers of each sex. The full-grown male is a polygamist of the most pronounced type, and will have from fifteen to thirty cows in his wake. There are, therefore, a great many bachelor seal, and tyese are the only ones that our company is allowed to kill. So serious is the killing of female seals that our lease contains a forfeiture clause if we kill intentionally a single fe- male. We have only killed one in five years, and that was an accident. The kill- ing of the bachelors dees absolutely no harm, as they only fight a war for the survival of the fittest before they can be- come the heads of harems. These young seals furnish the best skins; In fact, they are 50 per cent more valuable than the female skins. “I am now writing to Washington to find out whether this proposed stoppage of seal hunting for a year or two is to apply to the Pribliov islands, as if it does it will work us a serious injury.” ——+o+____ A Remarkable Memory. George W. McMillion of Friar’s Hill, W. Va., is about forty years old and has the gift of remembrance wonderfully developed. He remembers everything he ever knew or read and can perform the most remarkable feats. He can, off hand, recite the names, birthdays, hour of death, majorities and the closest details of the lives of all the Presi- dents in regular order; can name all the horses in his neighborhood; can recite po- ems of 3,000 words without missing a word; can recount the details of every visit he has made in his life; can name all the people he has met in two weeks and every word every one of them has said; can quote chapter after chapter of the Bible and has a like penchant for repeating history. He is hardly human in many respects, sleep- ing in the woods and often going for weeks without washing his face. One of his most interesting feats is the repetition of every word of a marriage ceremony which he heard when he was twenty-one and which united a girl who was his sweetheart to an- other man. It is said that thls ceremony was the first thing he ever tried to remember and that the circumstances surrounding it are the cause for his peculiar habits, having been a very promising young man before this girl jilted him. Since then he has given no attention to his personal appearance and cares for nothing but reading and remem- bering things. Rev. Dr. Breed of Pittsburg has invented a@ new way to color lantern slides. THE EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1895-TWELVE PAGES. SUBURBAN NEWS ANACOSTIA. ‘There will be a meeting tonight of the Anacostia Citizens’ Association, at Haines’ Fial. sir. ii. A. Linger, president of the association, has announced the completion of the list of committees, and it is expect- ed considerable business will be transacted. Residents of Minnesota avenue will again appeal through the association for gas lamps on that thoroughfare, and many per- sors will ask for street crossings. The Anacostia Association will also take ac- tion regarding the proposed consolidation of citizens’ orgarfizations of the District. Mr. Swindells, who has been ill at his home on Harrison street, was able to come out today. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Owen have taken up their residence on Minnesota avenue. There was a fire the other night, which destroyed a barn near Benning, on the Anacostia road. The regular Thursday evening meeting took place last night at Garden Memorial Presbyterian Church. BROOKLAND. Instead of the regular exercises of the Queenstown Mite and Literary Society next Tuesday evening the T. T. €lub of Brookland will present in the Baptist Church the drama, ‘“‘The Coming Woman, or the New Spirit of '96."" Visitors from Brookland to Gen. Beale’s stock farm report a scene of devastation upon the site of the destructive fire of Wednesday night. The large barn and all the outbuildings but one were consumed and thirty pigs were burnt. All of the horses and other animals were gotten out safely. The origin of the fire is supposed to be incendiary, incited by revenge. The Brookland M. E. prayer meeting this week was Well attended and unusually in- teresting. Rev. Church Tabor purposes severing his connection with the M. E. congregation here and at Landover at this conference, to enter upon a new field of labor at his old home in Vermont, and it is probable a young minister will be as- signed to these promising charges. The entire family of Mr. J. H. Small of Brentwood road have been prostrated with attacks of grip of more or less severity. Mr. Frank Andrews .and family have moved from Mr. J. S. P. Greene's house, in the addition to South Brookland, to the subdivision of Woodridge, on the Brent- wood road. Miss Carrie Otterbein of Marietta, Obio, is the guest of Miss Annette Ete of Lan- sing street, Brookland. — KENSINGTON. Miss Ida Calhoun has gone to Baltimore for a week's visit. Mrs. S. Waters of Burnt Mills has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Dr. John L. Lewis. Mrs. Celia Seitz of Washington has been visiting her sister, Mrs. E. H. Hardesty. Miss Fannie Reese is spending a few weeks in Baltimore. 5 Miss Jennie Gatch, who has been seri- ously ill, is slowly improving. A well-attended meeting of citizens, call- ed by Mayor. Martin for the purpose of considering the subject of sewer exten- sions, was held in the Noyes library on Wednesday evening last. The best meth- ods-of disposing of garbage and feculent matter were discussed from a sanitary and economic standpoint. It was the sense of the meeting that the rapid growth of Ken- sington made the adoption of a compre- hensive system of sewerage imperative. The freedom from zymotic diseases, which had been so far due to natural drainage, would not survive long if only primitive methods were employed. The warning gf other suburban villages, which had been rapidly, but not safeiy built up, and were now unhealthful, must not be lost. After a general discussion, a committée, consist- ing of Dr. R. B. Detrick, chairman; B. H. Warner, Dr. J. L. Lewis, H. L. Amiss, J. , F. Stoek, H. L. Milliken and C. F. Scott, was named by the mayor “to ascertain the cost of a pipe sewer from’ the intersection of Baltimore street and Connecticut ave- nue extended to the run emptying into Rock creek.” The committee was in- structed to make an equable distribution of the estimated cost among the property owners directly benefited, and to report its findings to a future meeting, to be called by the mayor. Also to report what other sanitary measures are desired for protection during the coming summer. The committee will hold its tirst meeting at the library tomorrow evening. Dr. John L. Lewis, who had his foot in- jured by his horse stepping on it, is able to be out. Rev. James A. Marshall of Boothwyn, Pa., father of the pastor, will preach in the Warner Memorial Presbytcrian Church on Sunday morning. The anthem, “Praise God, From Whom All Blessings Flow,” will be sung by the choir, and Mr. Wilcox will sing a tenor solo, “Thy Will Be Done. Mr. William M. Terrell will lead the Chris: tian Endeavor service in the evening, and a hymn will be sung by Misses Sadie Kin- near, Grace Dorian and Blanche Ridgely. A ‘large and pleasant meeting of the Dorcas Society was held on Wednesday at the home of Mrs. J. H. Fishback, there being twenty present, and the names of a number of new members were added to the roll. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. W. M. Terrell. = NEGROES OVW ING SLAVES, Deeds Showing That They Emanci- pated Their Chattels, Free negroes in old slavery times were themselves really the owners of slaves of their own color. The Baltimore Sun pub- lishes the following deed of emancipation, bearing date December 9, 1793, duly recorded in record book No. 25, page 312, in the clerk's office of the circuit court at Easton, Talbot county, Md.: Know all men by these presents, that I, Negre Tom, late slave of Christopher Birk- head of Talbot county, and state of Mary- land, being possessed of a negro girl named Grace, who Is now about the age of sixteen years old, who is held by me in a state of slavery, and think it in my conscience that all mankind are entitled to equal freedom in this life and being desirous of securing to her liberty and freedom: Now know ye that I do hereby declare that the said negro girl Grace shall be free immediately from the date hereof, and I do hereby, for myself, my heirs, executors, administrators, renounce all right, title, and claim from and after the date hereof. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 9th day of. Decem- ber, anno Domini, 1795. = His Negro X Tom. mark. Signed, sealed and delivered in the pres- ence of us. PETER WEBB, SARAH TRIPPE. A similar deed of emancipation was re- corded by a free negro, Abraham Gastus, May 17, 1794. There were afterwards other deeds of emancipation by free negroes of slaves purchased or otherwise acquired. Similar records have been found in New York and Massachusetts, and perhaps they could be found in Virginia and other states. eee Gama Again in the Field. It is reported at Montevideo that Admiral Da Gama, leader of the recent rebellion in Brazil, has re-entered Brazil and taken up arms against the -government in the province of Rio Grande, with a force of 3,200 men, comprising a naval battalion with twenty-seven naval officers. Crathie’s Officers Contradicted. John Wentzel, a passenger in January on the Crathie, the boat that sent the Elbe to the bottom with her cargo of human freight, is visiting his brother at Myers Valley, Kan. He claims that at 5 o'clock, when the boats collided, the sky was clear with no fog, just the reverse of what was testified to by the officers of the Crathie, and that the latter deliberately backed off and left the Elbe to her fate. Expectant Mothers Find the Electropoise Indispensable as a rellef from Nausea and other ills. Local references. For sale or rent, John N. Webb, wh5-6t 728 11TH ST. N.W. A PASTOR’S BIG (ORTAGE. Rev. Mr. Newbold “Confesses to the Defalcation of Rearly $20,000. Rey. William A. Newbold, pastor of the Episcopal Church at Montclair, N. J., who was officially notified ‘on Wednesday that his sefvices as. él and assistant treasurer of the American Church Mission- ary Society were no longer needed, is $19,- 000 short in his accoufifs, according to the statement made by Gedrge C. White, chalr- man of the society’s investigating commit- tee. The statement rroborated by Rev. Dr. A. B. Kinsolving‘of Brooklyn, who 18 the society’s secretary-pro tem. The result of an invéstigation, Mr. White says, shows that Mr. Newbold has over- drawn from the salary: fund $12,000; fur- ther, that money received on interest ac- count and from other sources to the amount of $7,000 he failed to credit on the books. Mr. Newbold has confessed these defal- cations to four different members of the society,pleading for leniency on the ground of past faithfulness. He claimed that he had to use the money to support a large and expensive place at Montclair, N. J. He has expressed a willingness to deed the equity in his house to the society. He has been general secretary for twenty-six years and was a man in whom implicit confi- dence was placed. The expert has ascer- tained that certainly for ten years, and he can’t say for how much longer, Mr. New- bold has been regularly and systematically robbing the treasury of the society. COLLECTOR OF COINS. Pouch of Rare Specimens Found on a Criminal. Capt. James E. Stuart of the postal in- spector’s office, Chicago, has a collection of rare coins with which to remember his late prisoner, Harold K. Cavelle. When Cavelle secured his liberty on Neeley’s bond he begged piteously for the return of his rare coins. When Capt. Stuart opened the leather pouch containing the coins to ascertain their character he was surprised by a rich find that would be the pride of coin collectors. : ‘Whoever made the collection did so with a view of getting together all the silver coins in the world of the size and weight of the American silver dollar. There are seventy-three coins in the collection. Each was wrapped in paper to prevent abrasion in the pouch, and all are bright and clean as if handled with the greatest care. Among the collection are all the Ameri- can dollars from 1799 and the trade dollar. French ‘five-frane pieces from the revolu- tion to the present, and all of the Central and Southern American states are repre- sented. A coin from Spain, Belgium, Rus- sia, Austria, England and the German kingdoms are among the lot. There are Turkish, Japanese, Chinese and Siamese coins, and a complete collection of the coinage of the Congo Free State. There is an old English copper shilling the size of a dollar and an oriental coin consist- ing of a mass of silver about the weight of an American dollar and in the shape of a pear. Cavelle was either a collector of during the time he could spare from his voluminous matrimonial correspondénce or, as Capt. Stuart surmises, obtained them from some one of his numerous victims. coins A Singular Tragedy. Several days ago Miss Grace Benjamin, @ pretty eighteen-yéarold girl, was as- phyxiated while takings bath in the suite of rooms belonging to'@."A. Meir,a wealthy young man, at San>‘Francisco: The girl had called on Meir about 9 o'clock in the evening, and finding*him out, proceeded to take a bath. Two héurs later her. lifeless form was discovered in the bath room. A large gas burner, use@ in)heating water for the bath, had exhaugtethe oxygen in the air and the girl died before she could get out. In explaining the-girl’s visit to his apartments Meir said {here was nothing impreper in their relations. Their affee~ tion was purely platgnic, and the girl was in the habit of comigg there to admire his bric-a-brac and to read. novels with him. Recently it was developed that Meir had married the. girl la: August in” Oakland, and some of the dea 's frienda said. she had told them that he reason for Keeping the marriage a secret was Meir had another wife in the east, from whom he was get- ting a divorce. The coroner’s jury inquest was held Wednesday, and the jury decided death was accidental. Meir was not pres- ent at the inquest, and it Is stated he could not be found. ——_—_ee-—_—__ Figgatt and Associates Indicted. The grand jury at Lexington, Va., has found indictments against C. M. Figgatt, late cashier of the Bank of Lexington, for embezzlement, against R. K. Godwin, book- keeper, for making false entries, and against C. W. Irvine for receiving money, knowing his bank account to be overdrawn, ——_-+0+_+____ A New York and New Haven locomotive Baie its whistle the other day and went “dead.”” AUCTION SALES. FUTURE DAYS. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS. 2 E st. nw. Under and by virtue of a cer dated September 12, 1893, snd duly recorded in Liber 1:00, folio of the land records of the District of Columbia, we will sell at public suc- entises, on THURSDAY, THE ly ARCH, 1805, AT P.M., the following described real estate, situate in the city of Ws ington, District of Columbia, and designated as and being Jots uunbercd two’ handred aul ninety- ¢ ), tw andred and pinety-nine (299), and hundred (20u), of Early and Allison, trus- subdivision of lots in square numbered one red and fifty-six (156), us per plat recorded page 79, of the records of the office @ surveyor of suid District, each of said lots e! improved by a three-story, basement and buck’ butiding brick dwelling hous ‘This property will be cold subject to a certain indebtedness, Zecured by deeds of trust of $5,000 ‘on each lot,’ with interest, payable sem{-annually, at 6 per cent, from September 9, 1893, The par- ticulars whereof will be announced at time of sale. ‘Terms of sale: One-thinl of the purchase money in cash, and the balance in five and ten months from day of sale, for which the notes of the pur- chaser inust be given, with interest at the rate of 6 per centum per’ annum until paid, and se- cured by deed of trust oa the property sold, or all cash, at the purchaser's option. All convey- ancing und recording at the purchaser's cost. A deposit of $200 will be required on each lot sold. If the terms of sale are not complied with within fifteen days from day of sale the trustees reserve the right to resell at the risk and cost of the de- faulting purchaser after five days’ previous notice in The Evening Star. ‘THOS. P. STEPHENSON, 8th and Maryland ave. s, JOHN MITCHELL, Jr., 201 ith st. n.w., ‘Trustees. ain deed in trust, mhS-d&ds LE OF OMA," At North Takoma station of the Baltimore and Ohia railroad, in Montgomery county, Maryland, about 6 miles from the city’ of Washington, DG. to be sold at the court: house door, in Rockville, Maryland, on SATURDAY, MARCH TWENTY-THIRD, 1895, AT HALF-PAST TWELVE O'CLOCK P.M. ("This property is well, located, is new, ped for HOTEL about 150 KOOMS and ts eat or for an INSTIPUTION, SEMINARY, HOS- Pra on OTHER PUBLIC PSE. For terms of sale and other particulars see the Mongomery County Sentinel @r the undersigned. dSAM'L E. HILL, Attorney Named in the Mortgage, witable'ballting, Baltimore, ‘Md. EDW'D ©. PETER, Sgliciter, Rockville, Ma. mh4-eo9t® 5 © G. SLOAN & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 1007 G ST. (Successors to Latitter & Sloan.) 2 TRUSTEES’ SALE OF ¥ACUABLE REAL ESTAT) GN THE CITY. OFW WASHINGTON IS TE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, AT AUCTION, BE- ING AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF TWENTIETH AND | STREETS NORTH WEST. By virtue of a decreé of the Supreme the District of Columbid; dated October 16th, 2894, ssed in equity cause nunfbered 13,514, wherein Sohn, Francis Buyers et al. are complainants: and Comfort Cisco Jones et al. are defendants, we will sell, at public auction. 1 of the preinis MONDAY, the ELEVENTH DAY of MARCH’ J8u5, at FOUR O'CLOCK P.M., all of lot numbered 32, square numbered 85, in the city of Washington, in'the District of Columbia. ‘Terms of sale, as provided by the decree: One- third of the purchase money in cash, within ten days of the day of sale, of which two'huudred dol- lars ($200) 1s to be paid as @ deposit at the tine of sale, and the balance of the purchase money in two equal installments in one and two years from the day of sale, for which the purchaser or pur- chasers shall deliver his or their promissory notes, dated on the day of sale, and to bear interest at the rate of six per centum per annum and secured by a decd or deeds of trust upon the property sold, b, at the option of the purchaser, eyancing and recording at the cost of the purchaser or purchasers. Tt the terms of sale are not complied with within twenty (20) days after the date of the sale the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser or purchasers, or otherwise, as the court may direct. SLION LYON, Trustee, 416 F HENRY 8. MATTHEWS, Tra 1410 G st. aw. Court of nw. 128-d&ds TIME WASTED CAN NEVER BE REGATNED. It is folly to waste time with uncertain and un- tried remedies when the evidence is so abundant and conclusive that Dr. Walker positively cures all disorders of the brain and nervous system, diseases wee skin and blood, catarrh, asthma, consump- tion, malaria, - dyspey rheumatism, neuralgia, hemorrhoids, a ot ‘waren andsall. aflecteoss of the throat, lungs, heart, lver, stomach, kid- heys, bladder, ‘bowels and other organs, foung or midi men suffering from the ef- fects of thelr own follies or excesses, or those who feel thelr youthful vigor declining, should consult Dr. Walker, who has been the means of restori of such unfortunates to health, stri and happiness. = See testimonials of wonderful cures of well-known. citizens published daily in the Post, Times or News. Dr. Walker may be consulted free of charge, per- sonally or by letter. His well-known sanitarium, at 1411 Pennsylvania avenue, adjoining — Willard’s Hotel, is open dally for consultation and treatment. Office hours, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m ve lay Saturday evenings, 7 to 8; Sundays, 10 to 12. Charges for treatment very low. All interyiews and correspondence sacredly confi- a NG cases made public without consent of patients. AUCTION SALES. TomMoaRow. RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO., AUCTIONEERS. SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH NINT! ‘T TEN 0 iS, KB N.W., Regular sale of Household Furniture, Carpets, &c. SPECIAL. - 12 FINE OAK STORE TABLES. ALSO AT TWELVE O'CLOCK M.,’in front of the rooms, Horses, Buggies, Wagons, Surreys, Phaetons, Rock- aways,’ Harness, &. Consignments ‘for each department received up to the hours of sale. Telephone 1282. 1t___ RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO., Auctioneers. WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO., AUCTIONEERS. LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE SALE OF HOUSE- HOLD FURNITURE, CARPETS, REFRIGERA- TORS, PIER MIRKORS, FOLDING BEDS, CHAMBER FURNITURE, REDDING, HATIt MATTRESSES, CHINA AND GLASS WARE ‘HER ARTICLES FOR HOUSE- TOMORROW, MARCH NINTH, commencing at TEN O'CLOCK 'A.M., we shall sell, within and in front of our sales room, a large collection of Honsehola Furniture, removed to our sales room for convenience of sale. TWELVE M. ALSO, AT a HORSE, BUGGY AND HARNESS, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, SURREYS, HARNESS, Ete. + Al ONE LARGE SOLID OAK _ REFRIGERATOR, PLATE GLASS FRONT, COST $150; LOT PIC: TURE MOLDINGS, Etc. Terms cash. WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO. Horses. GREAT SALE ON SATURDAY, MARCH NINTH. ‘Two car loads of Young, Sound Horses, consigned from Western Maryland, will be sold to the Bighest. iidders. (10 STEEES CAR HORSES, with- out 1 lage Horse, 4-passenger _' and Harnessall_ without. limit. MAGHATH & KENNELLY, Auctioneers, 211 11th st. nw. mh7-2t C. G. SLOAN & - (Suecesso CO., AUCTIONEERS, 1407 G ST. rs-to Latimer & Sloan.) Furniture, Fine Old China, Cut Glass, Plated Ware, Oil Paintings, Curios, &c., from several private residences zn i theArgen= tine legation at auction within our rooms, 1407 G, Saturday, March Ninth, 1895, at Ten a.m. COMPRISING MIRROR-FRONT - WARDROBE, MIRRORS, SIDEBOARDS, s LES, PARLOK SUITES, CHIFFONIERS, OAK AND WAL- NUT SUITES, HAIR MATTRESSES, PILLOWS AND BOLSTERS, 3-PIECE PARLOR — SUITES, LEATHER-COVERED CHAIRS, ANTIQUE CHINA AND GLASS WARE, FINE VASES. CURIOS, EBONY CABINET, HANGING TAPESTRIES, UAIt- P OFFICE ‘TABLES, LT ING ‘BEDS, COUCHES, CHAIRS, TOI WARE, COOKT: AND AT 12 M., AT ND ES, CARRIAGES, HARNESS , 30, 1 ‘APR, 30 FEET LONG. BN. 410) VIRGINIA LAND a ¥ SHARES OF COMPANY STOCK TO SATISFY EDNESS FOR WHICH THE ABOVE STOCK IS HELD AS COLLATERAL. . G. SLOAN & CO., Auctioneers. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 612 E st. nw. ALSO, IMPROVE! AN_INDEBT DESCRIBED TERMS CAs mb7 EXTENSIVE AND ATTRACTIVE SALE OF A LARG: OF _ WELL-KEP1 TO BE SOLD WITE IN OUR OMS. 612 EB STRE! NORTHWI SATURDAY MORNIN MARCH 5, AT TEN O'CLOC EMBRACE Two Upright Pianos, Five Mirror-front Oak Fold- ing Reds, one of which is very handsome; Hand- some Rosewood M. T. Bureau and Washstand, a number of Oak and Walnut Chamber Suites, Odd Bedsteads, Bureaus and Washstands, Hair and Other Mattgesses, W. W. Springs, Bolsters and Pillows, large lot of Blankets, Parlor Furniture, Hall Pieces, Oak and Walnut Sideboards, Extei sion Tables, Dining Room Chairs, Rockers, ete. About forty New and Second-hand Brussels and I rain Carpets, Stoves, Kitchen Furniture, Couches, Hypewriter's Desk, Crockery Ware, ete.; also 10,000 assorted Cigars. ‘ALSO, AT TWELVE O'CLOCK, rriages, Harness, ete. Horses. Horses. AT PUBLIC AUCTIO: §. BENSINGER, AUCTIONEER, WASHINGTON HORSE AND CARRIAGE BAZAAR, NO. 940 LA, AVE. PEREMPTORY SALE OF 60 HEAD OF HORSES AND MARES. Messrs. MILLER & RHOADS and Messrs, YANTZ & BUCKHOLDER ot HUMMETSTOWN, PA., have consigned to us a car load of Tiorses and Mares, to be sold within the Bazaar SA7URDAY MORNING, MARCH NINTH, AT TEN O'CLOCK. This lot consists of extra workers and fine drivers; have been selected with care from farmers in Lancaster county especially to suit this market and will be sold WITHOUT RESERV! IMMEDIATELY THEREAFTER, 35 head of Horses and Mares, good workers and drivers, consigned by other parties, to be sold for want of use. We Invite rons wishing to buy Horses for any use to attend this PEREMPTORY SALE. mh7-2t 8. BENSINGER, Auctioneer. © G. SLOAN: & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 1407 G ST. (Successors to Latimer & Sloan.) PROPERTY, KNOW? . STREET NORTHWEST, WASHINGTON, D. C. By virtue of a certain deed of trust, dated the Ist day of August, A.D. 1894, and duly recorded in Liber No. 1926, folio 348 et seq., one of the land records cf the District of Columbia, and at the request of the party secured thereby, we will sell, at public auction, in front of the premises, on SATURDAY, MARCH NINTH, 1895, AT HALF- FAST FOUR O'CLOCK P-M.,’ all that piece or reel of land lying and Washington, in the District of Columbia, and being part of orizinal lot numbered fifteen (15), in square numbered one hundred and eighty-four (184), contained within the following tuetes and bounds, viz: Beginning for the same at the northeast corner of said lot fifteen and run- ning thence south one hundrel and forty-six (146) feet eleven (11) inches to the alley in the rear of sald lot, thence west twenty-six (26) feet eleven (1) inches, thence north seventy (70) feet five (5) inches, thence east seven (7) feet one (1) inch, thence north seventy-six (76) fect six (G) inches, and therce east nineteen (19) feet ten (10) inches to the place of beginning, being embraced in lots numbered fifty-three (63),’ fifty-four (54) and fifty- five (55° and the east eix (6) feet three (3) inches front by full depth of lot numbered fifty-two (52), of an incomplete subdivision of said original. lot fifteen, as said subdivision is recorded in the office of the surveyor of the District of Columbia, in Book H. D. C., page 53, together with the ‘im- rovements, consisting of a two-story and attic Pitine store and dwelling, with two two-story brick dwellings in the rear, known as No. 1616 L st. n.w., Washington, D.C. ‘Terms of sale: One-third cash, and the balance in one and two years, with interest payable semi- annually, and secured by a deed of trust on the property, or all cash. All conveyancing and_re- Cording ‘at purchaser's cost. A deposit of $100 Will be required at time of sale. Terms must be compiled with in fifteen days from day of sale, or the trustees may reseli the property at the risk ind cost of the defaulting purchaser, after such public notice as they may deem necessary. T. RAWLINGS, A. OSCAR LUCKETT, ‘Trustees. £26-d&ds FUTURE DAYS. WALTER B. WILLIAMS &.CO., AUCTIONEERS. SALE_OF WELL-MADE AND HIGH-COST FUR- NITURE, ‘T AUCTION, OM CARPETS, &C.. A’ as ‘ULDING MIRROR FRONT BEDS, RGE PIER MIRRORS, LARG! PAINTINGS, PARLOR F AND OAK 'CHAMBER FUR: BL T 3 , EASY CHAIRS, MARBLE TOP TA . WALNUT SIDEBOARD AND DINING | ROOM CHAIRS, EXTENSION TABLES, WARDROBES, COUCHES, HAIR AND HUSK MATTRES BEDDING, BRUSSELS HALL AND STAIR C. PETS, ELS CAREETS — THROUGHO! HOUSE, CHINA AND GLASSWARE, AND MANY OTHER ARTICLES TOO NUMEROUS TO MEN- TION, ON TUESDAY, MARCH TWELFTH, COMMENC- ING AT TEN O'CLOCK A.M., we shall sell, at residence No. 22 Grant place, between 9th and 10th and G and H streets northwest, the above collec- tion of household furniture parti«lly enumerated, The attention of private buyers is called to this sale. The goods are well made and in good con- ‘WALTER B, WILLIAMS & CO., Auctioneers. ituate in the city of |” AUCTION SALES. FUTURE DAYS. CHANCERY SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE KNOWN 833. XTH CG. AS NOS. 829 AND NORTHWEST. By virtue of a decree Court of the District of Gclumbia, Yineed ex Decessber 15, ARt4, in equity. cause No. 15783, wherein Margaret Noonan is complainant Michael J. Noonan and others are defendants, we, the undersigned trus- tees, Will offer for sale at pablic auction, in front 9 respective premises, on AY, RINETEENTH Day OF MARCH, A.D. 1905, the iret of the hereinafter described. pieces of property at HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P.M, the Second of the hereinafter described pieces of prop- erty at FIVE OCLOCK Pal. of sald days said pleces of property respectively described as follows and being situate in the city of Washing- ton, in the District of Columbia, and the firet of said pieces of property being designated on the Plat or plan of said cizy as part of lot 9, im square 7, and described as “follows: Gegiuning on 26th street at a point 30 feet south from North I street, and running thence east 54 fect 6 inches; thence south 16 feet 6 inches; thence west 54 feet and 6 inches to said 26th street, and thence north on sald 26th street 16 feet 6 Inches to the place of be- inning. ‘The second of sald. pieces of property be- ing that part (the southeramost) of lot 3, in square 17, described as follows: Ucginning at ‘tie south- west corner of sald Jot and running thence north on 26th street 14 feet and 3 inches to the middie of a brick wall, the south wall of a house owned throat ait’ o¢ Se" al apne e mi le sal wall ai ject! this Tine Si fect and 6 Inches thence sooth Dy thence west by and with the south line of said Jot 54 feet and 3 inches to the 7» to- gether with the use of said back wall for ever. ch piece of 9 ch plece of property is improved by @ two-story bri. ‘Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase money in cash and th: balance in two equal installments, payable in one and two years, with interest at 6 Per cent per annum from the day yy decd of trust upon the property sol cash, at the option of the purchaser. A deposit of one hundred dollars on each plece of property will be required of the purchaser or time of sale. All conveyancing and recording at the cost of the purchaser. Terms of sale to be complied with within ten days from day of sale, otherwise the trastees reserve the right to reseli the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser, * EDWIN FORREST, Trustee, 5 ave, n.w. CAMPBELL CARRINGTON, ‘iruve mh7-d&ds ‘505 D st. hw. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS, G12 E st. n. By virtue of a deed of trust, dated the 12th day of July, A. ‘D," 1805, ‘aod duly receded ta Liber 1710, at folio 313 et’ seq., one of the land records of the District of Columbia, and at the request of the parties secured thereby,’ we will sell, at public auction, in front of the premises, on ihe NINE- TEENTH DAY OF MARCH, 1835, AT HALF- VAST FOUR O'CLOCK P-M-._ the 'fo 5c premises, sittiated in Georgetown, District of Columbia, and designated and being part of lot seventy (76), in square numbered ninety- three (93), being the west twenty (20) feet front on P street by a depth of one hundred and twenty (120) feet of sald lot. Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase money in cash, and the balance in one and two years, With interest, payable quarterly, and secured by deed of treet os the property, ‘or all cash. All conve: reco! at pure! "8 cos Gepostt of $200 will. be requied at the time of sale. If the terms of sale are not complied with Rithin ten days from the sale, the, tras- at the Fisk aod. cost of the defaulting purchaser, after Buch public notice as they may deem necessary. ‘ALBERT F. FOX, iste, F st. nw. THOMAS P. WOODWARD, Trustee, mb7-d&ds 464 La. ave. RATCLIFFE, DART & CO., AUCTIONEERS. ASSIGNEE’S SALE OF THREE NEW TWO-STORY SEVEN-ROOM FRAME DWFLLINGS, NOS. 1032, 1634 AND 1036 15TH STREET NORTH- EAST, AT AUCTION. By virtue of a deed of assign.nent given to me, dated January 9, 1994, Tecorded among the land records of the District of Columbia, in Liber 1879, at folio. 261, I will sell, at public auction, in front of the respective premises, on TUESDAY, ‘the NINETEENTH DAY of MARCH, 1895, at ‘FIF- TEEN MINUTES PAST FIVE O'CLOCK’ P.M., the following described land and premises in the’ Dis- trict of Columbia, to wit: Lots 136, 137 and 138 in Walker & Bane’s subdivision of Long Meadows, 8 sald subdivision is recorded in Book County No. 9, G1, of the surveyor’s office of the District of Columbia. Each house and lot will be sold sub- ject to an incumbrance of $800, due in two years. ‘Terms: One-half of the purchase money to be paid in cash, the balance in six months, by deed cf trust on the property sold, with interest, or all cash, at the option of the purchaser. A de- posit of $160 on each plece required at the time of gale. Terms to be complied with in fifteen days fem the day of sale, otherwise the right is re= served to resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser or purchasers. «ll con- Yyerancing, re2ording, etc., at the cost of the pur- cboser or’ purchasers W. H. WALKER, Assignee, mb6-d&ds + 1006 F at. nw. RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO., AUCTIONEERS. TRUSTFES’ SALE OF TWO-STORY BRICK DWELLING, KNOWN AS NO. 716 L STREET SOUTHEAST. Ry virtue of a deed of trust given to us and duly recorded in Hber No. 1854, at folio 391 et sea., ‘one ef the land records of the District of Columbia, and at the request of the party secured thereby,we will sell, by public auction, in front of the prem- ses, on WEDNESDAY, THE THIRTEENTH DAY OF MARCH, A. D. 1895, AT HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P.’ M., the following described land and premises, situate in the city ‘of Washington, Dis- trict of Columbia, and designated part of original lot numbered one (1), in ing are numbered nine hundred and Fix (905), beginning at a point on the line of south L -street fifty-six (6) feet west from the southeast corner of said lot and square, and running thence west along the line of said L street tweity (20) feet, thence north sev- enty-five (75) feet, thence east twenty (20) feet, thence south seventy-five (75) feet to the point of beginning, together with the Improvements. Terms of tale: One-third of the purchase mouey to be paid in cash, the balance in one sand two years from tke day ‘of sale, the deferred payments to be eecnred by deed of trust on the premises sold, and to bear interest, from the day of sale, at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable scmt-an- zually, or all ersh, at the option of the purchaver. A deposit of $200 required at the time of sale. Terms to be complied with in 15 days from the day of sale, otherwise the trustees reserve the right to reseil the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser, | All conveyancing, recording, &e., ut the cost of the purchaser, Sone MICHAEL. L WELLER, GEORGE ‘R.” REPETTI, mh1-d&cbs Trustees. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 612 E st. nw. TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL ESTATE IN THE CITY OF WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. By virtue of a deed of trust duly recorded among the land records of the District of Columbia, in Liber 1915, follo $4 et #eq., we shall sell at auction, In front of the premises, on WEDNI Y, THE THIRTEENTH OF MARCH, 1895, AT HALF- PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P.M., ail those parcels of ground situated in said city of Washington, and distinguished as lots 82 to 87 inclusive, in’ John Chester's recorded subdivision of part of square 878, as per plat in the surveyor's office of sald District, in Book 14, page 193, together with the improveinents, ete., consisting of six_ two-story brick in alley between Gth and 7th, G and I streets southeast. Terms of sale: One-third cash, residue in two gual payments at one and two years respectively 6 ‘per cent interest, payable semi-annually, secu by the notes of the purchasers and deeds of trust on the property sold, or all cash, at option of pur- chasers. $50 deposit on each lot at time of sale. All conveyancing, ete., at purchaser's cost. to be complied with in fifteen days or trustees re- serve the right to readvertise and sell at default- purchaser's cost and risk. Certificate of title of Real Estate Title Ins. Co. exhibited at sale, and all taxes will be paid to day of sale. JOHN 8S. McKENNEY, WILLIAM McK. OSBORN, ‘Trustees. mhI-10t RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO., AUCTIONEERS. TRUSTEES’ SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED PROPERTY, KNOWN AS NO. +615 S STREET NORTHEAST, W. TON, D.C. By virtue of a certain deed of trust, dated the 34 day of March, A. D, 1892, and duly ‘recorded in Liber No. 1662, folio 278 et’seq., one of the land records of the’ District of Culumbla, and at the written request of the party secured thereby, we will sell at public auction, in front of the prem- ises, on MONDAY, THE EIGHTEENTH DAY OF MARCH, 1895, AT FIVE O'CLOCK P.M., all that plece ‘or parcel of land lying and siiuate in the city of a ee in the District of Columbia, and known and being lot numbered thirty-five (35), in William A. Smoot's subdivision of lots in square numbered seven hundred and fifty-four (754), a3 per plat recorded tn TAber 18, folio 59, of’ the records of the office of the surveyor of the District of Columbia, together with the improvements there- on, consisting of a two-story and cellar brick dwelling, known as No. 515 2d street northeast. ‘Terms’ of sale: One-third cash, and the balance in one and two years, the deferred payments to be represented by the notes of the purchaser, bear- ing interest at the rate of 6 per centum per annum from day of sale, payable in equal semt-annual in- stallments and secured by first decd of trust on the property, sold, or all cash, at the option of the purchaser, “All conveyancing, recording and notarial fees at purchaser's cost. A deposit of $150 will be required at time of sale, and if terms of sale are not complied with within fifteen days from day of sgle the trustees reserve the right to resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser after such public advertisement as they may deem proper and necessary. CALDERON CARLISLE, OSCAR LUCKETT, Trastees, mh6-d&ds Fendall Law building. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 612 E st. HANCERY SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED PROPERTY ON G STREET BETWEEN 8D AND 4TH SCREETS SOUTHEAST. By virtue of 2 decree of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbla, passed in equity cause No. 5867, on the 13th day’of December, 1894, in the vs. Smnaliwood, I will on WEDNESDAY, — the TWENTIETH DAY of MAKCH, 1895, at HALF- PAST FOUR O°CLOCK P.M., in front of the prem- fses, the following described real estate, situated in the city of Washington, in the District of Co- lumbia, to wit: izinal lot four (4), in square seven imndred and ninety-five (795), and the cast elght (8) feet by the depth of fifty (50) of original lot five () of said square, with the improvements, consisting of a two-story frame dwelling, 4 rooms. ‘Terms: One-third cash; balance in one and two years, secured by a.deed’ of trust on the property sold, with interest at 6 per cent per annum. $100 deposit required at time of sale. All conveyancing and recording Cea cost. FRANKLIN H. MACKEY, Trustce, wh7-dids 344 D st. nw. case of Smallwood et al “Il,_at_publie. suction, .. AUCTION SALES. “ SUTURE DArs. ba —---—s——-—$S$SFTFTOFTF ue THOMAS DO’ CO., AUCTION Wee Bat ae eS SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED HEAL ESTATE AT AND NEAI THE NORTH. XR SREETS NORTHWEST, GEORGETOWN, By virtue of a decd in trust, recorded the lond records of the District of Columbia, tn Liber 1980, folio 55 et seq., one of the land records of | the District of Columbia, the undersigned will, as trustee, in front of prem! on MONDAY, MARCH EIGHTEENTH, 1895, at HALF-PAST POUR O'CLOCK P.M, tell at public auction to bidder, ‘all’ that of Jot 151, in square 65, being ‘Besii's addition ning ‘for the fame at the orth along the west line of 2hth street 120 feet al west of th street thence west 60 feet, south 49 feet, thencd enst 30 feet, thence 80 fect to N street, thence with the north line of N street cast 30 feet, to the place of beginning. ‘The front of this real tate being tmproved by a two-story brick dwell- , No. 2801, on nd ‘the ‘rear part being improved by a two-story frame dwelling. No, 1808, on 28th strect. ‘This real estate be sold "in bulk or by subdivision, accordingly as an- neuncement may be made at the time and place of sale. ‘Terms of sale: One-third cash, and for the resi due of the purchase money promissory notes bear the date of rale, with interest ine ee with from B82! ite at the rate of 6 6 ceatum annum, payable ‘semi-nunnatlyy and’ for equal ne stallments of the purchase money, le Te- spectively one and two years after Gace, to be secured by 2 deed of trust upon the premises sold, shall be given, or all cash, at the option of the purchaser. If the terms of sale be not co: With within fifieen days nd faulting porchaser, after Ave days’ advertisement in The Evening "Star newspaper, published Weshington, D.C. roperty be sold bulk a deposit of five dollars ($502) shall be made by the purchaser at the time of purchase: if the same be sold by subdivision, two hundred and fifty dollars ($250) shall be deposited by the purchaser on each lot at the time of sale. All conveyancing, recording, dic. at purchaser's cost. ENRY 8. MATTHEWS, Trustee, mh7-d&ds 1410 G si 3 WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO., AUCTIONEERS, ‘TRUSTEE’S SALE OF TWO-STORY AND CELLAR BRICK DWELLING, NO. 1118 FLORIDA AVE- NUE NORTHWEST, WITH TWO-STORY FRAME STABLE IN REAR. By virtue of 2 deed of trust given to me and recorded in Liber No. 1930, folio 317 et seq., one of the records of the District of Colum- bia, and at the request of the party secured t by, 1 will sell_at pablic auction. in ses, on THURSDAY, THE FOURTEENTH AY OF MARCH, A. D. 1895, AT HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK 'P.M., the following described land and premises, situate in the county of Wash- ington, District of Columbia, and designated as and being lot numbered seventy-elght (78), im Ino. E. Beal's subdivision of certain lots in block lumbia, together with the improvements, ete. It will be sold subject to incumbrances amounting to $1,950, with accrued interest thereon. Terms of sale: Cash. A deposit of $100 will {0 be ‘complied with in fen (10) dass from “da fen (rom of sale, otherwise the it to iu trustee reserves the right resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. All conveyancing, records ing, ete., at the cost of the rong mbi-dé&ds L. H. JACKSON, Trustee. THOMAS DOWLING & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 612 E st. nw, TRUSTEES’ SALE -OF VALUABLE UNIMPROVED PROPERTY ON B STREET RETWEEN FIRST AND SOUTH CAPITOL STREETS SOUTH. > By virtue of a deed of trust dated March 1892, and duly recorded gt teas one of the land records jumbia, front of ‘the Day, Past ed MARCH FIFTEEN’ FOUR O'CLOCK P.M. 2 All of original =, Scere mumbered six hundred and thirty- we . ‘Terms: One-third cash, balance in one and two Years, with interest at 6'per cent, secured hy deed. of trust on the property, or all cash, at the option of the purchaser. All recording and conveyancing at purchaser's cost. A deposit of $100 required at the time of sale. If terms of sale are not with within ten days the trustees reserve the right to resell at risk and cost of defa purchaser after five Gaye notice in some newspaper printed |. BRADLEY DAVIDSON, Trustee, m5-d&ds° JOHN 0. DAVIDSON, Trustee. THOMAS DOWLING & ©O., AUCTIONEERS, 612 E st. nw. OF IMPROVED REAL ESTATE ‘TRUSTEES’ S&LE ry PAT OF D.C., FORMERLY GEORGE By virtue of a deed of trust, duly recorded among the land of the District of Columbia, 13 Liber 1658, folio 73 et seq., we sell, at pub+ Uc auction, in front of the ‘premises. on, WEDS Day, ihe THIRTEENTH DAY of MARCH, 1896, at HALF-PAST FIVE O'CLOCK P.M., ail thai parcel of ground situated in thet part of the Dise trict of Colun formerly known as Georgetown, distinguished as the east 20 fect front by depth 120 feet of lot 120 in Beall’s addition thereto (square 69), together with the improvements, ete., consisting of the two-story frame.dwelling house, No. 27220 street. ; Terms of sale: One-third cash, residue in tre equal payments, at one and two years, ve~_ 3S Per cont interest. "payable semi-annually, ge- y noté of the purchaser, and deed of trust Property sold, or all cash, at option of pur- chaser. "$90 deposit at thme of sale, All. convey ancing, etc., at purchaser's cost. Terms to be complied with in fifteen days, or trustces reserve the right to readvertise, and sell at defaulting pure chaser's cost and risk. CHAS. H. CRAGIN, WILLIAM McK. OSBORN, mhl-10t Trustees, RATCLIFFR. DARR & CO., AUCTIONEERS. TRUSTERS' SALE OF VALUABLE UNIMPROVED PROPERTY AT THE CORNER OF TWELYTH AND B STREETS SOUTHEAST. By virtue of a certain deed of trust, beering date on the 15th day of June, A.D. 1894,’ and duly re- corded in Liber 1948, folio 425 et seq., one of the land records of the District of Columiia, and at the request of the holder of the note secured thereby, we will sell, at public auction, in front of the ‘premises, on ‘TUESDAY, THE SWELETH DAY OF MARCH, A.D, 1895, AT HALP-PAST eal eatetes eit es the city of hingt real _estste, eituate city of Wash District of Columbia, to wit: All of lots ‘aumbered. one hundred and twenty-seven (127), one bi and twenty-eight (128), one hundred and twenty- nine (129) and one bundred and thirty (130), of the Washington Real Estate Company's subdivision of lots in square numbered one thousand and fif- teen (1015), us per plat recorded in Liber 18, folio SI, in the ‘surveyor's office of the District of Com embia. ‘Terms of sale: One-third (1-3) of the purchase money to be paid in cash, the balance to be pald in two (2 equal installments, payable respectively, in one (1) and two (2) years from date of sale, se cured by deed of trust on the property sold, with Interest at 6 per sent per annum, or all cash, at the option of the purchaser. A’ deposit of ‘two hundred ($200) dollars will be at the time of the sale. Terms of require sale to be complied with vithin fifteen (15) days from day of sale or the trustees reserve the right to resell at the risk and cest of the defaulting purchaser, after five days” advertiscment of such resale in some newspaper published in the city of Washington. SEORGE H. PLANT, JR., JOHN G. WEIDE, 128-d&ds ees. ©. G. SLOAN & ©O., AUCTIONEERS, 1407 G ST. @ucceseors to Latimer & Swan.) TRUSTEES’ SALB OF VALUABLE IMPROVED PRUPERTY SITUATE ON P (WK WESE) ST. SEORGETOW: susk GEv! i. D.C. AND KNOWN AS By virtue of a certain deed of trast dated the Decem! AND 5048 P ST 9th day of ver, A. D. 1891, and duly re- corded ‘in Liber No. 1639 at folio 218 et seq., one of the land recorés for the District of Colt and at the written request of the party thereby, we will sell, at public sucticn. in front of the ises, on ‘THURSDAY, MACH FOUR- TEENTH, 1895, AT HALF-PAST FOUR U'CLOCK P.M., ths follcwing described real estate, to wit: All ‘those certain pieces or parcels of aud premises situate and Leing in Georgetown, District of Columbia, and known as and being ‘the east thirty @0) feet of lot numbered one hundred and nitety-five (195), and the west thirty (0) feet of lot niambered one hundred and nivety-six in Beall’s addition to Georgetown, both with a depth of nivety (90) feet, sore or less, to the nortu line of @ lot conveyed’ to A. by R. Parrott by deed recorded in Liber 289, &c., of the and us more vemerts, consisting of two two-story dwell Ingk (one ‘brick and one frame), known as 30M and 3048 P ct, n.w., Washington, D. C. ‘Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase money in cash, balance in one and two years with im terest. at 6 per cent per annum, payable semi- annually and y a deed of trust on the property sold, or all cash, All conveyancing and recording at purchaser's cost. The property will be offered separately, ard a Geposit of $100 will be required on each house at time of sale. f sale, or the trustees may resell the Uiperty ‘at “the defaulting =purchaser's ‘risk and Rost after such public notice as they may deem ae JESSE H. WILSON. Equity bidz., Trustee, CHARLES G. SLOAN. mh2-d&ds 1407 G st., Trustee, RATCLIFFB, DARR & ©0.; AUCTIONEERS, USTEES' SALE OF sWO-STORY BRICK TR WELLINGS, NUM 482 AND 484 H AVASHINGTOS. D. REET 8.W., WASHINGTON, D. C. vader ard by virtue of a certain deed of trust as recorded in Liber 1227, folio 208 et seq., land Tecords of the District of Columbia, the ‘under- signed, as trustees named therein, will, at the re- quest of the holder of the note ‘secured thereby, fell_at public auction in front of the premises, om TUESDAY, THE TWELFTH (12TH) DAY "OF MARCH, ‘A. D. 189, AT HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P: M., all that certain piece or parcel ‘of land and premises knows as original lot num- bered tweaty-five (25) in square nutabered four hundred and ninety-elght (498), Washington city, as per plat of same as shown’ on records of the surveyor's office in said District, said lot f: 27 fect on said H street by 122 feet 4 inches to a 30-foot paved alles, and improved by two brick Awellings numbered ‘as above. ‘Terms of sale:,Ou-third (1-9) cash, balance ta one (1) and two (2) years, deferred payment’ oridanced by notes of the purchaser, bea terest at six per cent per annum, payable semi- annually, and secured by first lien deed of trust om said premises. A deposit of $200 required at the time of sale. Terms to be complied with in 16 days from the day of tale, otherwise, the trustees reserve the right to resell the property at the risk and cost of the it ercuaner an. con. veyancing, recording, &c., at the cost of the pure aur. NC. CUPTER, 3B, WIMER, mbi-d&ds by