Evening Star Newspaper, May 30, 1895, Page 8

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ae THE EVENING STAR, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1895—-TWELVE PAGES. S MADE T U FOR $13.25. lems T REDUCED FROM S S$i7.25. To convince you that we are producers of the Finest Made-to- Measure Suits in America for the price, we will make to your order for the next ten days a select line of Fine Imported Suit- ings for $13.25, including Clay’s Worsteds, Tweeds, Cassimers and Cheviots. Also a select line of Blue and Black Serge, all wool and fast colors. Remember, these Suits are cut to order and trim= med in the most artistic styles. The fit we guarantee to be per- fect. We only ask for a trial. THE LYMOUTE ROCK CO. 043 Pennsylvania Ave. S6, 50 Trunks| Don’t Put Off Now 95:7. 75: ICE PITCHER ssortment of Quadruple- tchers— BEST to be but the $7.50. Goldsmiths, | cheapest, ¢ to show it to 911 PA. AVE. Do Your Feet ines 0° the Teather In your shoes ts im- TONIC. 0000 and of a poor q 0000 You may have p h price for aia 0.000 shoes but the g in the pri See vated 0000 of le: affected your s £5 + compared of trite amd spices, and pot Sloooo n forced to substitute se s rfully effee- § | 0000 a poorer quality of shoe for the same brs ments, and 619000 amount of mony at whieh he tae mee oe its effects inp aes ss e tl) ooo0 selling od Teather”? shoe. He did 0000 not stock up In leather before the boom enough st Six months, with- Iee a cent. ¥ ° ° 0000 we have 6 bottles for $s.’ Totunecs G we Will still atl sboe to order’ for few e Sewers 3 MAKER FOR TE: 929 IE St. /N.W wr FEET, * my28-26d “3 e e cs “The ay B S a e f) 3 as ies) @ a e ard. cold, shelves sweet SONNETTE Fah neeaeads ot en anaben ann aer se inite Mountain” 3 Ice Cream Freezers CORSETS zen ams Muee 3 Beveridge, 3! | The C. P. Importers | 12 15 F St. and 1214 G St. < miaikelthear $a7-42d5m ¥ geet aod a otese PPOP-P POT dealer may not handle the RSIBLE MAT but se'l you one “that’s just Don’t belicve it. ee Reversible: Mattress air Dealing Helps eaLaguee will tr as good."” ot ? Has cotton fling on oth sides ry res TWH service. as 3 a ress, and COSTS ? that 8. & B. is stamped 4 in pel. chtidtren. in price. Robt.Co en& Sont 630 Pena. Ave. N.W. ie cach corner of the lat i Come Here — To be feiescstl are rertyed both in ap- De - TOWN AMBRIOAN SHOE MEN. end: Tet we make ye at 8 s dresses a3 good as new. Very ees es 22 OSESCCOODE 20080065 mod reese. Work ‘called for and de- Uvered, © SS, AW. | we ag, Feits, Fire Brick and Clay, Ash i) Os a | ints, Bru ore Line, Cement, two and thr; | gets as tart, sei | mny20-100 0 MEASURE S, Kann, Sons & Co, MARKET SPACE TOMORROW EMINANT DAY. We decorate the living while the living decorate the dead. No patriotism so grand asthe true Ameri= can’s love for those that fought, bled and died for their COUNTRY, And no enterprise so great as the one that has the in- terest of the shopping pub- lic at heart at all times, and any business house that will live up to the old proverb, ‘‘Do unto others as you would have others do unto you,” need never fear of not making a suc- cess. EVERY FRIDAY We give a complete list of Remnants on hand. 2 £8" YD. 3 7-B° YD. WILL BUY RED AND BENE FIGURE INDIGO BL SIMPSON URED MOURN = EVERY PIECE DIRECT FROM THE MILLS, S” AYD. 5 7-8° YD. WILL BUY PLAIN: ASD FANCY EPES—V1 °P FROM OR O3 y DISPLAYED. fo 22" YD. WILL BUY FINE LIGHT AND DARK OU BING NE y IN ALL THE AND DARK s WILL BUY LIGHT AND DA 28 INCHES WIDE; I IN ALL THE DIFFE! dae -2°YD, PRICI GOODS, IS) FULLY 3D FLOOR.. ‘AKE THD ELEVATOR, OUR REGULAR Line of Silk Remnants that have accumulated during the past week will have their regular space on our center bargain counter. Some very choice Silk Ends will be on sale, ranging in price from 16C., 236., SAG., 486. & 596. Don’t Miss Your Chance. MERCHANTS TO THE PEOPLE. ua \Creary Blend | ‘ = iFlou a Is for eale by allvdrst-class grocers. Ask for it next time. Cream Blend” NEVER FAILS, urder pkoper conditions, to make IDEAL Bread a&@astry. . Its sale grows larger and iarger!dyery day. Those who use Xf once will havi other. BRO, Wholesalers, x | i 3 i z ba Se ie Bamana aan onan Corsets, Si. EXCLUSIVELY corsets and GOOD COR- SETS EXCLUSIVELY. Nothing shoddy here. Sust received a lot’ of 180 dor Of those graceful, comfortable C. B. a la Spirite Summer Corsets, in white and black, extra Jong waist, 2 side steels, imported, net, to HOW sell at ABB’s CEE 1003 Fb Sts \oc cone The Knox Sailor. You'll be offered imitations of them clse- Where, but not the genuine, for nobody else D. can sell them. It’s a strong Hon to other hatters to palm off Sefer, al stalls ladies want Others—some as low as $1.50 e¥ ure good Sailors, too. Men's Itz & SON, in tempt som my30-20d -should be cleaned before you put it in the moth chest—and redyed If you want its brightness and beauty restored. do boti—sead for it, too, Moderate 1068 Jem. st., Georgetown. upon the quickness and ion, If your sight is the let_me_ tes selected and cdjusted when necessary. ation costs nothing. Take Dr. Elliott, creo | Herwr Loan and Trust bldg., Rooms 69-70, 5th floor, my30-16d. We repair all makes of machines. We,krow ‘all about them. We do the fine: to be sat- Pa for $23. ‘The chine in the’ world for any- = F our price. Standard Sewing [ich. Co., JOSEPH H, I Bes my30- 20d $ oe ee ce tetece tose (Getting ; jSpringFever? Daings hae pounded of the purest drug no_quinings Produc o> Ask —— ples free, {Arabian Mig. Co., {1009 H St. NW. 30-280. SVS OO CH OO, re $09 OS oe rrrrry PRPS SS SOSSSSSSssesoes $1 Is: All 3 You Need to save. your glare of the s roof E fitted the heat a a with our FD examined and % Justed WITH: % McAllister & Co., Opticians, 1211 F STREET. (Next to “Sun” butld: sos ‘ Peeeererereacossosseeoos Put Any Ladies’ Watch inFirst= oe eee Vu call If she will send me a postal card. tell w ded_and Are expensive Iuxuries, but AND 7TH STS. Get Stalee to Take That Photo f you want a good finished like all In the wa, poser—good pieturi s in America. of the Mauntellos at No Trade Bargains alon Wit honest W One price to all, Jowest compatible with high qu: think too much of our reputation (¢ fod of 9 years) to offer lt gallon good Claret, only 50c. To- KalonWiné Co., 614 14th CF West Washington orders filled pgue & Jones, 22d and M sts. nw. You’ fi Need Awnings To Make. You Comfortable for we've weather, 1 put up. tomor t telephone us or es at hon- Ml that the uM say the w ee in when Qut she coe & Com 409 1th St. ished 1861. Awnings, Canopies, &c. Bargains: In = Long ‘Hair Switches. $2.30. Formerly $5.00. $4.60. Formerly $6.50. $6.50. Fortierly $10.50, 67 Halr Dressing, Cutting, Shampooing, S. HIELLER’S 720 7th Street N.W. : 50C. 9, Men’s Straw Hats, —either mae or, fancy braids—silk trim- meas and leather sweatband. You'll pay Tbe. and a dollar elsewhere for then it Braid Hats, Yeddos_and Sennette for a dollar—the $1.50 quality, Suaw Hats as low as Sc, and 8 Th st. COAL, ; WOOD. E. M. Willis, Propr. sig and 14th st. wharves. o Best g1 Gori and Woods Wholesale aud retail. | prices always, api5-6m Purify : i And Enrich Your Blood By Taking A\lrabecite It was the Only Sarsaparilla admitted At World’s Fair. Ayer’s Pills for the Liver. ip THE BABY 1S CUTTING TEETH BE SURE and uso that old and well-tried remedy, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children ca It soothes the child, softens the gum, all i in, cures wind colic and {s the best reme larrhoea. 25 cents a bottle. HAVE NO EQUAL AS A PROMPT AND POSITIVE cure for sick headache, biliousness, const!pation, ‘in in the side and ail liver troubles. Carter's ttle Liver Pills, Try them. $20.00 For $10.00. We do not wish to confuse you with words. We mention only facts and prices. Facts. Our stock 1s too large. PRICES. Suit to Order = = = $10.00 Former Prices, $15 & $20 Suit to Order = = = $15.00 Former Prices, $20 & $25 Suit to Order = = = $20.00 Former Prices, $25, $30, $35 Fit and workmanship guarfnteed. Morton C. Stout & Co., MERCHANT TAILORS, m2 F St. N.W. my24-404 ly_ for sel0-1y CORSE OCESESE TINIE E EDIE tchapped Hands and Faces Cured by | rs Pine Blossom PEPPETOEE IFES CED FES DEOL DOCS Soap. The best Medicated Toilet Soap known for inflammation, blotches and all skin blem- fishes. Chapping and roughening of the skin can be prevented by using this soap freely. Pure and antiseptic, it is always soothlag and healing in its effect. Price 25 Cents, AT ALL DRUGGISTS. Foster Medicine Co., Baltimore, Md. 42d12r-12 ther than ever, than ail others, is Hurchell’s Family myl7-14d MAKB. “Waists.” Won't these low prices tempt you to make —— your own Waists and save money? ns in Jaconette New Importation Beautiful : ods 6 yards makes a Waist, only | J.B.Nalle, SUCCESSOR TO HOOE BROS. & CO. 20d aS [o) \S) 2 lee) E aed - © Fa o” [s) o3 Prompt—on time always—and THE @ KENNEBEC ICE we serve has no & ‘fhe drivers of White @ don’t “split halrs"—the superior. Wagons weight they give is generous, our rates, as usual, the lowest notch. eat Falls Ice Co., ° ° and @ are down to 2A PENNA. AVE. 2 PIVILOSOSSD OOO IG see9 "Phone 37 | 2SS999OO Your Liver Is Torpid —if you're suffering from could Builds up the or only $1 Makes Life Enjoyable thoroughly and Bun- THE Mest cite th ters. WAYLAND SEMINARY. Diplomas Conferred on Graduates Lest Night. At the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church last evening the twenty-ninth annual com- mencement of the normal and theological departments of Wayland Seminary was held. Prayer was offered by Rey. Dr. Bur- rell of Richmond, and then the following orations, were delivered: N. B. Curtis, “The Unknown Quantity in the Problem Life;” Samuel L. Wade, ‘Feudalism Helen N. Penrose, “Rowing, Not Drifting; Warner Curtis, “Agriculture as an Employ- ment;” Samuel B. Holmes, “How to Choose Our Fields;” Alberta M. Pack, “Over the Alps to Italy; James M. Ellis, “The False and the True in Politics; Lucy J. Shep- herd, “The Standards for Character;” Robert J. Terrell, “What Makes a Safe tion certificates were distributed by President King to the following: Normal department—Warner Curtis, Napoleon Bon- aparte Curtis, James M. Ells, W. A, N. Harrod, Grant Haynes, Samuel B. Holmes, Evan GC. Lewin, P. D. Morris, James E. H. Taylor, Robert J. Terrell, John H. Terrell, George G. Tolliver, S. L. Wade, Benjamin F. White, Florence C. Hutchinson, Ada Jackson, Mary C. Morrison, Alberta M. Pack, Helen L, Penrose, Emily K. Robin- son and Lucy Theological de- partment—I man Brown, Samuel B. { Holmes and Victor R. Mapp. ISTAND BY THE FLAG Ex-Senator Blair's Oration at Glen: wood. — LESSONS TAUGHT BY THE CONFLICT Work Yet to Be Done to Advance the Cause of Humanity. THE SOLDIERS’ GLORY The orator at Glenwood this afternoon was ex-Senator Henry W. Blair of New Hampshire, who deliyered an eloquent ora- tion. Mr. Blair, in his address, said: “All these long years during which our fathers had been engaged planting the seeds of civil and religious freedom in America and writing the perfect literature of human rights, they had forgotten that God had made of one blood all the nations of the earth, and side by side with their own liberty and happiness they had plant- ed and fostered the slavery and misery of their darker-hued brethren—children of the same God. “The same year that the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, when ‘Amid the storm they sang, and the clouds heard and the sea,’ their triumphant jubilee of freedom, the slave was lorded by his master at James- town and poured forth that pathetic la- ment which resounded throughout our his- tory for centuries. The commerce and manufactures of the north and the agri- Ex-Senator Blair. culture of the south found profit in the black man’s sl-very and blood, and che lib- erty for which our fathers had fought and died and of which our orators prated, so far as he was concerned, belonged to the skin and not to the soul. “But there is that in man which will not tolerate a wrong. Conscience will not al- ways sleep. She awoke in the heart of America, and she took up arms against the terrible coalition between hypocrisy, avarice and crime. She protested against that gigantic robbery by the American peo- ple which feloniously took and carried away not only the goods and estate, but also the hodies and souls, the lives, the af- fections and the eternal fate of millions of human beings for whom God himself had died, and ccnscience brought on the war. Conscience waged it to the bitter end. Con- sclence conquered at last, and all men un- der the flag were free. But in that strug- gle these men did die, and thirty millions of people lay down in the depths of woe. And so it was that these beloved and sa- cred dead gave up their lives—a vicarious sacrifice for the nation’s guilt. Glory of War. The orator spoke of inevitable expiation for all sins, and continued: “War Is always a calamity and generally a crime, but it is nevertheless true that if the great deeds which war has written in human history were blotted out human nature would be deprived of some of its highest evidences of affinity with the su- preme, and all great eras of progress seem to be eras of convulsion. Resistless causes work on in silence for years, it may be for generations of peace; but when transition mes from the old to the new, and a na- tion or a race is summoned to come up higher, and does come up higher, the vic- tors climb over the heaped corpses of the You may have what thou- Sands visit Europe for yearly, that is the natural Sprudel Salt of Carlsbad. It is obtained by evapora- tion at the Springs, and is identical with the waters in its action and results, which'are the same to-day as when Emperor Charles IV. was cured four hun- dred years ago, and later George Ill., Peter the Great, and Maria Theresa benefited by their use. They aid digestion, cure constipation, and purify the blood. Be sure to oBtain the genuine im- wted article, with the ee of Agents, “Eisner & Mendelson Co., takes on the bottle, the opportunity and the glory, if you aay no higher motive than glory, are infinite. “The responsibilities of the sovereign power are upon us all,” said the orator, and continued: “How, ‘then, are we per- forming our duties as sovereigns, equals all, but equals, not as subjects, but as kings? The Snered Ballot. “The ballot box is the seat of govern- ment. There is the secret of our power. Is the ballot honest and pure? Is there any- where the just suspicion of fraud, or the false registering of force, or the baleful effect of igrorance and incompetency in the verdict of the people as wrought out in popular elections? How is it in this great capital? Alas! here there is no suf- frage at all. How is it in the country at large? For we are as much interested in the ballot of New York and Texas, New England and the great west, upon the great issues of the times, as the people of the states themselves. No free government can long exist whose elections are dictated by force or fraud. When either enters largely into the result real elections cease, and free government is superseded by tyr- anny ruling under the forms of liberty, which is the worst despotism possible, be- cause it serves the devil in the livery of heaven. I appeal to the conscience of every citizen on this solemn occasion to confess the truth to himself, whatever it may be; and to say, whether he is doing his whole duty to keep the suffrage pure and sacred, and, if not, that he will forth- with stretch out the arm of his sovereignty to rescue the ballot box, that sacred urn of freedom, from worse than vandalic dese- eration.” The integrity of the jury system and its preservation in purity and strength, Mr. Blair continued, was another of the duties falling to the citizen. Legislative Purity. “There is another subject,” he continued, “to which I must allude in connection with the discharge of our primary duties as sovereigns of our state and country, that is the necessity of securing the high- est possible standard of wisdom and integ- rity in those whom we select to make as well as to administer the law. “The legislature is the direct creation of the people and should be wholly above any just suspicion of liability to undue influence from any extraneous power. If the people are careless themselves their representa- tives will become indifferent to the stern obligations of public virtue, and when venality and corruption have invaded the purity of primary elections by which legis- latures are chosen, the old principle, that the stream cannot rise higher than the fountain, applies, and fraud and greed must be expected to bear sway, while probity and devotion to the public welfare become the characteristics of so-called cranks, and those who are actuated by these ancient and homely motives may consider them- selves fortunate if they are allowed to live and mourn in silence the degeneracy of those whose fathers’ graves we have this past and plant the standard of light and progress on more exalted ramparts amid shot and shell and death. “So it is that these, our dead, shall live forever. Dying like the great martyr for the crimes of others, even thus did their sacrifice bring political life and salvation into the world in a higher and completer form than it had ever before been bestowed upon man. To have thus died is cause for triumph, and for these dead we should weep only tears of joy. , Weep not for them at all, for they are risen!” Work to Be Done. Mr. Blair continued by asking if the childfen of the illustrious sires whose deeds we commemorate are left only to a record of dull achievement, to an existence which demands no stern stuff in the soul, and gives no opportunity for high endeavor? “Never before,” he continued, “was there so vast and hopeful a field in Which to la- bor for the good of man open as now to you and to me in this latter day, when the happier fate of man seems to be ripening in harvest suns of approaching millennial But do not be too sure of an early Do not mistake the signs of the Men may peace; but there fs no peac s hot come be- e reason and e, justice and have done their perfect work. fortified and guaranteed » Was the cause of the xr As a result of that w in changed, but was for the civil ‘aw es was not the isted in the @ fell forces continue in operation in human society something of slavery and of its consequences will remain, and the war must go on for their extermination and elimination from human life. Mr. Blair spoke earnestly of the danger to a nation coming from ignorance of the citizen. “Seek out,” he said, land where the colored man was once a slave under the civil law, and the white man was still worse off because he was the master of the slave, by the same law; which was then the more-in- “those parts of our jured by ‘slave ow is it now? Igncrance, which 1 tes and per- petuates slavery, still chains millions; and mlions of our fellow citizens will te that, but for the hope of a bette! they would seek refuge in their conditio before the war. “Are you, my young friends, with that Ught flashing in your cyes, which I have seen shine in battle from the orbs of your patriotic sires, are you to rest quietly in ness and personal ¢: sile the one- part of your felio that power and opporty vate their mental and m: a are required to enable them to secur: defend the rights of freemen? If not, y ve enough to do, aud far more’ per- ps than you think. Whe Great Probiems. “The common school is the republic, but the common school is not doing its perfect work; nor is the common school an insti- tution which is now safe in our land Young man and young woman, I commend to your keeping the common school; the common school, which came here in the Mayflower; the common school, that high- est of all seats of learning in which Amer- ican liberty studied, from which she grad- uated, and now turning anxiously to her beloved alma mater prays for her the pro- tection of God and the aroused solicitude of all American citizens. Mr, Blair followed with a strong plea for temperance ag one of the things the generation should fight und struggle for, The great problems of all ages, he said, were education, temperance, social and in- dustrial conditions. “They are not yet solved. Their solution les before us. That solution is a process which precedes the millennial condition of the race. It is all before us, and the labor, day clothed in the hues and perfumes of the early year. “I believe that we of this generation have our full burden of responsibilities and that the highest capacity, the most profound wisdom, the loftiest ’ patriotism and the most unimpeachable integrity are as urgently demanded by the exigencies of today as at any previous period in human affairs. The Soldiers’ Glory. “To the Surviving Soldiers of the Union: I have but few words to say, for of what consequence 10 you are words? You live in imperishavle deeds. You made the most glorious part of your country's history. Mortal endeavor shall emulate, but shall never surpass it. What care you now for the vicissitudes of time? What if the line lessens yearly, and the tottering step of many a veteran has teday for the last time borne him to the graves of departed comrades, laden with the flowers of re- membrance and love? Over how many of us will the stil diminishing and more fal- tering band spread the rose and forget- me not one year from today! What of it? Ye have done enough. The past is secure. Go ye now proudly and gladly to join fought his way through SS to the line of eternal and Sheridan, who is vic- but in happier valleys n the Shenandoah; and Sherman, who, with the great body of his legions, haS al- ready eccomplished his triumphant march to the sea of life; and Logan, black prince ar, pride of victorious volunteers for- Be it so, and farewell! “But until the summons come, we will stand by the flag on earth, and continue in peace the service of the country we love. ————— Interstate Democrats’ Excursion, There was a large gathering of demo- crats at Marshall Hall yesterday. The Interstate Democratic Association gave an excursion to the hall, where they listened to a patriotic speech by ex-Representative J. A. Richards of Ohio on the Monroe doc- trine. Mr. Richards condemned the course of Great Britain in building fortresses around the United States, and said that the demvcratic forefathers would not have permitted it. It would have been better to forbid their construction, he said, than to sacrifice li i ure in captu Mr. Richards re- ferred to the Nicaraguan trouble and the difficulty in Venezuela, end declared that the sister republics have a right to look to the United States for aid. Resolutions were passed on the death of the late Secretary of State. The purpose of the excursion was to raise funds for the establishrent of a club house and home for th» association in this city. A sum of $1,000 will be realized for this fund from the sale of tickets for the excursion. ‘The committee of entertainment consisted of 5 npson, . H. Rutherford, W, “Matre, z. “EB. Hardwick and J.T. Me- i. vere read from several Among the writ- Campbell of Ohio, ator Gor- ex-Speaker Crisp, & Morton and Congress- tchings and Isider Bay- distinguished democr: ers were ex-Gov. J. James K. Jone man, Senator Secretary J. men Thomas out of part of sures was omitte, and after 2 o'clock the musicians retired, from tho grounds. See Smalls Flowers. J. H. Smali & Sons, 14th and G eg Washington, D. C., and 1153 Iway, New York. ntion to orders for oc all outgoing Steamer Mac Indian Head, 7 ings at 6:30 o'clock. —-Advt.

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