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THE EVENING STAR. Sy PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY, Qrinters’ In the fiftfe acfoo? AT THS STAR BUILDINGS, ae : STAR BUIL che master of advertising), saps: ‘Se loaig Ber Sacqeiet Oompa . It is claim: for fe ‘Was6ingfon SH KAUPFMANN’ Pree Part 2 Pages 13-24 and proGaife trutftutt, Kew York Office, 49 Potter Building. a eo. . e g aa x claimed, (Bat no offer netospaper a oe ae eee ee at the : counter 2 cents each. By mail—anyw! io the ; United States cr Cunada—postage prepaid—U0 cents ; 7 month. th - . Ss eSuUurtay, Quintople Sheet Star, $1 per sear, wi . or cage a i ‘Entered at'the Post oaice at Washington, D. C., ——— Fiala Se tbe pall fm adeance. WASHINGTON, D. ©. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1897-TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. . SOS@ date 4 DUTY OF MOTHERS helpfulness, witch gan gay be aporeciced | AT TRAC TIVE HOMES o MAYER BROS. & CO., ° As Set Forth in the Work of the pathy, encouragesgnt and inspiration. 937-939 F St. National W. 0. T. U. 11 Foubourg Poissonnierre, Paris. ODD LOTS THAT MUST BE SOLD. Small ,lots—quick sales and big bargains are the order of things next week. Certain lines that must be out before new goods are displayed. Here’s an idea: A Trade-wind Blows Rich Advantzeg> to You-- - =-AT-== PERRY’S Three Modern Residences That Adorn the City. OFFICIAL AND RESIDENTIAL WHO WILL ATTEND THE CONGRESS Some of the Brainy Leaders of the Temperance Movement. Senator. McMillan’s Valuable Li- . brary and Rare Paintings. This store’s story is always to the point—a record of happenings that bears directly upon your needs and to your SS==>- profit. Our lookouts are constantly on the watch for oppor- ° AN INTERESTING GROUP COMFORTABLE AND ELEGANT tunities that we can improve for you. The result is there is 50c Mohair € : an almost uninterrupted current of events that make inter- ° “4 esting reading and profitable buying for you at the “Greater HILE THE NATION- ‘ f There are few more luxurious homes thau Store.” al congress of wo- men, which convenes in this city next week, did not have ‘ts beginning in any of the regular organ- izations of women, that of Senator McMillan, who purchased the fine residence 1114 Vermont avenue im- Taediateiy after his coming to the Senate. The house is spacious, very desirably lo- cated, and has a large garden on the south side. This affords Senator McMillan op- portunilies for additions to his house,which Another The new effects are extremely rich in color, design and Silk Bargain. quality. Our choice of nov- elties will win the approval of dats, 5e. The last of the lot, and you may see how little we are caring for values. Mra, Frances J. Barnes. Mrs. Frances J. Barnes, the general sec- retary of the Y branch in both world’s and : Poth: Ss te ite alms and objects | national organisations a eee eater pleasure he can give himself from time to Five sections of five spe- everybody who appreciates > . are very closely akin rN cemer -| time. The addition which was built two i ‘ood S—O! re i 20 They , oan, in ail colors: Regularly 0c.) Ee to thore which act as | She entered tho temperance ranks at the years ago considerably enlarged the main cauly 1 1 ues 3 ~igeg rd ae egies eee bed @ LO ClOSEe for 10 yds. At.. 25c. & bond of union in| time of the crusade, althcugh she did not | Grawing room. The house is a double one SaaS y se er li are dreams of loveliness. They & begin public work until a few years later, don’t consider what quality are ideals of perfection. They Or 3c. yard). the case of several. | P¢ lated with Miss Wil.|2"4 has at the right of the entrance a 0 é u is of perfection. " 3 (Os oe ad) of all kinds This is notably the bea hep rs ie. py Raho tr meet-| Small reception room. At the ieft of the will bring when these surprises are wonderful offerings at the’ & ALS. ae : case with the Nation-| ing in lower Farwell Hall. At the Balt-| hall are the double drawing rooms, and come—but how little a price prices we have them marked, for inaugural decorations. al Woman's Christian Temperance Union, | more convention she was made a member | across the rear of the house extends the we can mark on them. We Handsomels Trimmed Hats, the very and exer since the first announcement of | Of the committee on young woman's Work, | gining room. Senator McMillan owns some pat ica hoe benefi = radi a Swe STE | LACES DOWM, O| ts serine mornere” conarom i ner nad | PUN, at, peeetehers eynee aesi| ore tnem sila atanenes saw one | buy them for your benefit | amr he wnat hee say ee $1.25 Z the hearty support and sympathy of the | branch, with herself as its general secre-| vate residence in this city. Many cf his and buy only what will benefit are the Point Lierre, : Freneh Felt ni trinuned. eee ee be eee MGs choice members of that organization. Since the | tary. To her tact and womanliness Is due | best possessions hang on the walls of the your satisfaction as well as Point Brissels, Point ve, Point Hata that bave been Be. all alone. DES and elegani Soecial Dc, Woman's Christian Temperance Union was | the increasing success of the association's | two drawing rooms. ‘The rooms are very Sree bute: thet Wenn, ‘tin piasreursaieise: a - Pint walinees frst started its field of usefulness has | ¥OrK among young women. She is a pleas | handsomely decorated, and at every turn 3 cb eee ‘ <lstacs, Docherse, Fotot D’ Baprit, widened very considerably. It now includes | mon ability of planning wisely and practi- there is some object of beauty upon which the “¥" Union, as the young women’s or- | cally for the furtherance of her work. In ganization {s called, departments of social | 1890 she went 9s fraternal delegate from purity, herdity and hygiene, and, by no| the National W. C. T. U. to the British 2 Women's Temperance Association at its mear.s least in interest and importance, ihe | ony mtion in London, She was there in. department of mothers’ meetings. strumental in having the department Oriental, Russ: « iy 24-inch Water-proof Fast Black Jap- 38 Fae germ aneve Bilk, very heavy quality Special all the destrable widths and popular price, shades. 244uch Allover Point Venise, Point ca yi is re, Crochet and Russian "Nets SOSSHSH OHSS HOS OSOSSEHISHOSSO GOS ° patttan gest 22 21 Oc. yd. Ribbons Cut. | lesrrcos <a pipe * 2 te yaaa ahs Jc Re Ee ee Henney 1214. eve’ Eat 7/- | Collarettes. Blege and Champagne. So it {s that the National Woman's Chris- | adopted, which was placed ler the sup- 40 Al-siIk Double-faced Satin “Ttth- Ladies? Ruste | Collaretion vee pope n under — a ig Im alt olor "Sie tm wide. BO darieatly ring ncckwear. "Special 3g) tion. Tomperance Union will be largely rep- | erintendency of Lady Henry Somerset. as ines’ Sueno poaeva om ibis. Embroidered Chiffons. Se. yd. "Wors-..52.-2222; IC. price Cc. resented at the congress of mothers next Mrs. ENin, White, and Black and White, together 24-inch Embroidered, Spangled and a es week. The women of the former organiza- Mrs. Margaret Dye Elis, daughter of Dr. Clarkson Dye of New York, a California Pioneer, is of Scotch-Butea ancestry; born in New York city, and received her bap- tiem of crusade fire at Alameda, Cal., where she had gone for her health. She with other women, organized a prayer meet'ng which led to te ¢rusade in that state. Returning to her adopted state, with some two-color effects--brand Jeweled Chiffons and Movssline 1 new patterns—Special price— + Soles, with Eages and Bards to mateh ~in fine and finest qualities. 50c. a yd. i REP CRE eae tion are for the most part familiar with AY R BROS & O convention work and methods, and their | ¢ j presence will doubtless lend an added in- S °98 terest to the gathering. » RB) i, - g RB) Q _ I St. tiste, fa Lilac, Pink, Blue and Malis $1.50 to $6 a yan. Sesdongongendengetoasoagongeageoesoatontongergesgatoatongongoneegentoasoatoatoatengengetoatragoagoageadegvegnaseacongongeegeeageatoatontoageaeey 22-inch Fancy Sitks, with Jacquard catia saci west pon eaatnae ane Gauzes. SSOSOOS GOSS New Jersey, she was, made state corre- ee ee rice See Rite ont Pigeed AS B oe sponding secretary of the W. C. T. U. in a ee ee ee: 68% S@S6 @E6ES 28 @SEO80 1881, which office she held for fifteen years, 79¢, a yd. oe : 2 Se wken she was clecicd national superinten- G adi SS = dent of the department of legislation and ae renadines. VERTICAL WRITING. and no amount of effort on the teachers’ enfcreement of law, which position she 21-inch Ombre ed Taffetas, with #5-inch All-silk Grenadipes, in spots, == part seemed to improve it materially. I now occupies. Durjng all her years of cathe stinks (ka io seoel uses oeale stripes and broche effects—Black and Why It is More Satisfactory Than the | Visited other schools, questioned. other service in the W..C..T. U. Mrs. Ellis has ees pe ievitk-apatla’- shsvoeagir sab “ae Gee Sloping Method. teachers, all with the same result, namely, made a specialty of mothers’ meetings, . - oes oe that It took so long and was so difficult to lo ret sie cy teach the average child to write legibly. I The style of writing now known as the| noticed that a child naturally makes round vertical originated as a system in Europe. | letters, and that the greatest fault teach- Ard, strange to say, it was the produce of | €fS have to overcome is the child’s un- = Ee vegans thee edasoeical investi- | Willlngr.ess to keep the proper slant of Its ce = — or | COPY book and the required position. I be- holdirg hundreds, of them in different states, where plain practical truths were disseminated concerping the mental, moral and physicat. training of children. Mrs. | a ¢ritical admirer might extend much at- Ellis is an evangelist i: iar and a wo- | tention. The wood work in the dining room man of sterling quali As a public | js espectally rich in ornamentaifon, and the Senator McMillan’s Residence. 24-inch Crepe ‘Chine—-TBilve, Pink, SS alee * Lilac. Mais, Cardinal, White, Cre -Foulards. and Gray-$1 a yard. 85c. a yd. Coopen, $1 to $2.50 0 yard. COOOL IN speaker. she Is one of fle most. forceful : aentian Fe hav 5 © gation. Physicians seeking the causes of| gan to think of the vertical system and ccc and elequent in-ine W. Gr. Be a woes the mesteor Atay nienztie Se teres set ot Xheke poahter Suk: 21-inch —Brocaded Crepes — W : t are in harmony with It. The house his a = hoeh ka inieeaed “oon ena eee Baa, © seh “Acton Phak the increasing prevalence of defective sight | termined to try it in some of the rooms. Mrs, Mabel 1. Conkgin®rganizer for pur- | magnificent library, which takes up the at Sr eee Mme. and spiral troubles traced them to sloping | In Seemann: time there gvas such a AACE Dou Rnen ty N: v. ee and gen- | entire width of the’ second story front. A ings. It is easy enough to Imagine this — oP 1 =o 2 "S| marked improvement that 1 feaaired the cral-secretary 6 te Cross branch, live: yen Be store's having the choicest of the entire Tel te the vertical opaceme PoTiments that teachers of every room to adopt it.” in Brooklyn He ree ee pe ear pe eer Hepes sere Drapery Nets. +e Hele kts Ganear. room to it, to house his treasures. The iection, We doubt af you are Sogn : 17 pew col Conklin is al t eBnstantly in the fell house’ 1s very bright and cheerful, having It was found that business men, noted 48-inch Black La Tosca Nets- plain, Elastic Corscts to Reduce Flesh. a southern exposure in all the living rooms, <eperting sucka yalene at, tbe-gulees ‘an. tted and striped—T5e. "i for their rapid and legible writing, had = the 8 = and with all other work ofdeeturing and as well a8 lence front, and thereane tow. name. ty . ipea- to Ho been forced to acquire a hand very dlffer-| ™m the St. James Gazette ; organisa she has ak the last six | houses more substanitiy built- or more —— ent from that taught in schools. ‘They hela | _ The Newest invention fs an elastic corset. Mrs. Mary Towne Bart. Tae a neous citles of the: Union, es- | richly furnished. : Novelty Silks. eee ee m bat au Z rears -| A French doctor—and they study th pretee tallished fifty-threé mothers’ meetings, veily Si 5 $1.50 a yard. cir pens differently, and assumed a_po- F het tne ee | The largest state Woman's Christian | with a combined membership of nearly ons jon at their de other than that which | things in France—assures us that the con- Temperance Union in the .cgentry is that | thousand women, all of whom are pur- ‘The strong point with our imported 72-inch Brussels Nets—Mack, White, pot oeresinge theses eae see oe eke | Stent contact of elastic has an excellent | of New York, of which Mrs. Mary Towne | Suirg the'plan foy this work as laid down Rovelties—next to the excellence of Pink, Dine, Cardinal and Mals—$1 a that the writers had gone back to the sim- | fect on what ts politely called “adipose | Burt is now and has been for fifteen years eee a oantaent Mes quality—ts exclusiveness. ‘That has al- yard. ple, round, Roman-like characters, which | issue.” It checks its development and re- | the president. Mrs. Burt possesses a geni- prometing the ‘White’ trose workcpuriey Ways been true, and is especially £0 of 72-inch Silk Mestons—White, Cream, many teachers claimed as natura! to young | duces it when developed. The elastic fur-| us for organization, and under her leader- | work for men only—as she believes that the this season’s ne. Makes promptness a Black and vbe latest eve: shades— children. These business men sat immedi-| ther tends to produce a long slim waist, | ship the growth of the union has been al- | surest and speediest way to Hft the bur- it ately in front of their desks, their hands if . Ge. a yard. necessity If you want a choive of the . ~ k ; without in any way hindering an easy res-| Most phenomenal. It numbers now over |dens of degraded womanhood is to ap ‘ : 5 : » San Gt vetted rites ac | piration and a healthful digestion, 11. te |2000M sctive members, nas=a young wo. | peak to the chivetyr or ore rer cheno pro- : entire collection. ‘They are ready now. Sine Mousseline D* Sates—White, feniof/ vexticall writing was | culiarly good at forming a “Louis xv | ™#n's branch, a Loyal Temperance Legion | tection. } —_—-— rand ——— aor Blue, Purple | Le 7 a anc 5 g and ~T5e. la ya It has spread through England and Can-| waist.” It is interesting to learn that there | PT@"c®. thirty departments of work and Dr. Mary Woed Allen, ais—T5e. and $1 a y F . seven standing committees. yste: ada, And is required of all applicants for| are periods in waists. Autocracy, we have | cruan‘eation canteens sireniee cy eet |_Dr. Mary Wood Allen was born in Delta, Ferner tap ae Re) ei PR the aay atet and democ- | ty counties of the state and 900 local | Ohio, in 1841, the village at that time con. om Canada ft car ited State: = ys of th = and is now employed to some degree in the | —an uncommonly short one. Early Vie- rare eee orenninae sisting of but two’ log cabins. Her public public schools of many of the larger cities | torlan waists were short, middle Victorian has achieved in legislative work is lar iS career beyan when she was fourteen years of the northern, eastern and | southern | waists substantial; but later Victorian | due. “One of the departments is that er | 14, and she taught the primary depart- | In Page bole —- ae Sa thase aE ihe ee poemees Neemes mothers’ meetings, which was adopted tn | Ment of the public schogl in her native vil- ic schocls the privilege posing | n days e Frenc % Meteden Srteraa (EEL PGR a een Fee 18s1, and has been carried steadily forward | lege for one year.’ At fifteen her sphere The Latest Plaitings. In Laces. ee te Plaitings—Black and to 27 inches wide. Almost every day sees the Veilings and Neckwear. assortment of Laces grow— oon hgdiae Veilings and baielpa lho bik tha pl ema Groat we since. Nearly 1,000 mothers’ meetings were | broadened, and sho went away fem pone larger and more attractive. & most tempting. attractive wariety, lowed the. princioak of Gach cchioar Kava Sa eee held last year, and $5,500 pages of literature | to take a position as music teacher, hav. Taeeke ake tia aa ‘and vertical sys- The Blazing. cieeibatea by this department alone. Six | ing a class of more than twenty pupils, tems are taught in the public schools of | From the Chicago Jcurnal. industrial schools for girls and one for boys | only two of whom. were younger than her- se cities. Though a majority of the = ‘ 3s fess the outcome of the work in this direc- | self. In 1858 she a, the classical de- ipals and teachers after a fair trial Boastful New Englander—“But you can't ion. The Woman's Christian Temperance | partment of the co} te - Unfon is chief among the moral f was graduated thei i { or the vertical. They claim that it {s|4€ny that the Pilgrim fathers blazed the the moral forces of refrom in 1861, Just at 5 % I E y S edalewhe tex read, <hr castest tar arite: [wevsta all tee facéatiican! Geloueaation the empire state and its power for good is | the beginning of the civil war. Her first 4 r 9 pr lege at Delaware, Chio, fa th 4 <a verywhere recognized. Mrs. Burt's ir - | appearance on the fe f «i the easiest to learn. That it admits of| Westerner-—“Blazed the way? Yes, eye urt’s leader. ups © platform as a speaker i ‘ = the C nsnieate ‘pesitiow, the most nat- | buicing witches.” if Th ag een one of great gentlene Seat conan oe ean oti ® fae toche i pa bs | “NINTH AND THE AVENUE. re ‘ek maviincal dnd the gretvent caculice: erates Thoroughly ‘aggressive in her methods cf | first company of volunteers ratsed in the : 2 . The position required is with the bod: 8 source of inspira- | State of} io. She, was married in i883, i ‘ ple ep ey No Doubt. tion to her large constituency, by whom she | and has two living’ children, a son and ¢ i ee eters, ics Sess sin tes Cons S08 aga eee is greatly beloved. daughter. She spent he years from 1871 ‘ : ee est on the desk and the pen is held so that | Stc—“Oh, I was so happy I just hugged Mra. Anna M. Hammer. received aie ee ee and study. She S Seeeeteteteteteceeetetetedetedeceeeeetetetee = - rig isles a bate pspeey tabrtyra sel mycelf Mrs. Anna M. Hammer, the president of | lar department of thédicine of the Unie == 3 = as in the oblique system. Hence it is as-| _H¢—“I suppose that was one of the occa- | the Pennsylvania Woman's Christian Tem-| versity of Michigan i Iss, Sed as te lands, and makes the cheeriest kind of a serted that the effort is more natural and | tet ae RE OES wish that | Derance Union, is a native of the keystone Noone years established in practice in sitting room for the younger members = On his om in Chicago he hunied up his less fatiguing. It is also claimed that it is | YOu were a # earnest.” state, and comes of good ok abs ; the household. On the other side of the | friend, the drumme hand and drawing, the position and manner 5. ss x lon o! ~ Cc. T. U, 23 I effects on the landings, which are | you play me? Why, the pl. ” Ee eee eae Nothing to Fear. ate ancestors having served in that war,| in Portland, N.Y... Miss Frances Wiliacd Lesion en —— incipal of a public | Fre™ the Detrott Journal. attempts the merchant had to pay his fare P ; is | exceedingly attractive. The drawing room | for a cent coming home.” A prominent teacher, p two #8 generals and one as an army sur-| Presiding, and at the national convention minten hiatiodes Neca Coe and iHbrary cover the entire front. These ‘That's strange,’ replied the other. ‘You scl.col in New York city which has a repu-| First Burglar—“Hist! Here comes the | £¢0n, while her grandfather served as an|{n Philadelphia, whieh followed immedi. nue, which is in the immediate neighbor-|f0oms are richly furnished. ‘The library | must have made some mistake. What did tation for the excellency of its penmanship, | janitor!” officer in the war of 1812, and her uncle, | ately, she was appointed national lecturer | hood of the Church of the Covenant, the | has an ivory tint in the woodwork. On the | you do coming back? when interviewed said: Second Burglar—“Well, we wiped our | Gen. William A. Nichols, was a graduate | in the department of’ heredity: and hygiene. residence of Senator Wolcott and Judge | Walls of both rooms are paintings of great |" “Why, I made the pass with my hand “The writing in my school was despicable | feet, didn’t we?” of West Point, and was assistant adjutant | In 1892 she was’ made superintendent of arets fs value by old masters. The dining room is | across my mouth and said Yuno.’ been actively engaged in W. C. T. U. work | Convention which met4n Denver, Col. house is of the design which has become | UP the walls in highly polished oak panels. | left?” for twenty-two years, during sixteen of | The purity department under her man- 0 great a Yavorite here the last few a The mantelpiece has china cupboards built re which she served as national superintend- | #gement has been divided into six sec. an English basement. It 1s built of light |.tuto the wall on each side, and making a where you made a blunder. You ent—three in evangelistic work, which em- | ticns, those of reform and legislation,rescue stone. The rooms on the first story make | Ost decorative feature. At the east side you were coming back, and should braced mothers’ meetings as a distinctive | Werk, mothers’ meetings, child-culture cir comfortable reception rooms and offices. | the light streams through a rounded bay | have passed your hand across your mouth feature; eight years were given to the chil-| cles, the White Cress and the White Shield On the second floor, which is approached | Window, which is almost the entire width | from left to right.’ ” % | dren’s work of the Loyal Temperance.| societies. Each of these is under the care f the room. The house has a lift, a gym- oe SS by an ornamental staircase, are the draw- | Of the roon “f Pes ec % | Legion, and five to drawing room or parlor | Of @ competent general secretary, and all = nasium on the top floor and about every ve - Another I [A Da y S & |. meetings. She has been elected five times | are working together at the fundamental | 98 Tooms, library and dining room. The A WCNDEROUS WATERFALL. S| t contrivance for comfort ever heard of in the presidency of Pennsylvania, which | problem of. the uplifting of humanity | "ouse !s elegantly furnished, and much of instruction. SsSesSondontoetonSonfondontoetoeoetontontontontontostony vs what adorns it has been brought on from @ modern home. A Cataract With a Th their home in Albany, the old Peckham a eae = mansion, where they lived twenty-two A YARN OF THE ROAD. State is making’ rapid gains in membership | through right Of The $50 Full Dress}}""~ Suits To-orderFor$40. : Eleven orders taken for the $50 Full Dress Suits at : ‘ division of lang dopid' possibly be. The $40 this week. We will take about a dozen mofe orders ; cirele would bé perfest but for the fact Foot Pluuge Discovered the Olympics. - v From the Seattle Post-Inte’‘sigencer. The Circte? nty. years. Justice Peckham has a coasiry = F ees WS 3 ve place, seventeen miles from Albany, named | The Merchant Found the Signal Was} The Olympic mountains have produced rom the St. Tenis I Coolmore. No Good on a Return Tri another attraction, the beauty of which is The oddest ‘shaped .ppunty among the From the Detroit Free Press. not excited op the western slope. What is 3,000 which go to smakée\up the separate di- visions of the va¥idus states is Warren county, Tenn. Ht jfes,alreost exactly ir? the geographical center: of the state mentioned “A good story is-told of a Chicago mer- | said to be a grand waterfall coming from chant,” said the ambassador of a Greater | the snow-capped peaks above the clouds New York mercantile house. “He had to! Over a bluff, falling a perpendicular dis- go unexpectedly to St. Louis on account| tance of over 1,000 feet and disappearing in of a ‘lame duck,’ and meeting a drummer | the bosom of a beautiful plain, has just 'from that ambitious and rather gay Mis-| been discovered near Lake Crescent, by two ont Aon Ee eal ranchmen. Their description of the scene eee 3 : that there is a 1 h of the north- “‘How do you fellows manage to get | Would exceed anything of similar charaeter at this price. Then the price will revert to $50. . ; \ BANS crn boundary ite we ib aes aaemll | such Sons ee to distant points? I want | in the Yellowstone Park. These are elegant full silk or satin lined dress suits 3 = ‘ Q by Cannon, DeKalb, ®, Grundy, ‘Van im SOF id | to go to St. Louis, but the price is rather| From the snow on the crests of the Olym- =a & ; N Buren and’ White 2 ‘eid ag tne be} tier” pics, where white men have never visited, of black English worsteds—tailored in our “faultless” . \ | ~ N way remarkable shape, “Tl fix that for you,” replied the drum- | Comes a little stream, which rapidly grows 3 > ag, : . *Give me $5 and I'll enroll your name | in volume until it reaches the edge of a style. ch : > , + SEA ley pon T. P. A. Then you can | perpendicular cliff overlooking a beautiful We ought to take orders for about 200 of them for peat rs: eee c Hee eer cat Sealy hanes out bis 33, “arate ne ae Leardgp std . . . e the inaugural ball at $50 after this offer expires. face of the earth burial sites in af) a f eels egy He acesmpanied him | the precipice until it has cut a smooth pas- ‘Westminster Abbey! cagnot bé bought with to the train. ‘Now,’ said he, ‘when the | sege, something like a large pipe split in ie oe E Pigs haif, in the side of the mountain. Here and : : gold) are the four ers where Wall j " Sat: iovuth coms | tse St -atrSuee, aa aterrertion axa oot ot Still making Black Diagonal Cutaway Coats and street touches Broad, and the two where it 5 oie wilt-tien | tha’ teoumtain'e aise spurt other falls, 5 . meets Broadway. ¥ gann larg Standing alongside iff a short Vests for $18. Brown Hilton, A. M., the Na. way. T qannot guess how large know you T. and you will have alon; of the cliff a short a @ price any one of these might bring in tance :.way the scene is beautiful and look: the market now; but milli ars ans fon secretary of mothers’ meetings, is the| . +, ah 3 buf » on Souaye 5d daughter of Andrew J. Brown, one of the iapp mere ‘voenty, % paid for five lofs on Broadway opposite * | early settlers and leading lawyers of Chi- the G. WARFIELD SIMPSON, §] ser ‘scmireittee srsa.ct OF | Bomuae een tu at ee Hilton, D. D. clergyman in the Methodist | at once to ‘ ES a seemed rate ‘ iscopal Church, and associated with hit in 1829 fc : Mr, Colton’s me Con- ° in active and ‘ministerial tte for eee ; 40 necticut avenue is a. delightful rondo, xpert Tailor t. f chamapter pees oe nga Et is bunt on broad, tin 9 o character, in n - the ‘well adapted to the table 1 : rations of oS of u, ~measurin; % tional Woman's Christian Temperance Un- .