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10 THE EVENING STAR. THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1897-12 RAGES. PASS IS NOT SO BAD Dangers of the Chilkoot Have Been Greatly Exaggerated. a TESTIMONY OF JOAQUIN MILLER Fine Vegetables and Fat Cattle Raised in Alaska. YUKON BACK BY ROUTE Under date of Fort Wrangel, Alaska, July 29, Joaquin Miller writes to the New York Journal: An old returning miner to the Mecca of our present pilgrimage, who has spent winters in Alaska, told me that at kahtla the climate in the Indian town exactly like that at Klondike. “What, and you raise potatoes, cabbage and so on in the upper region?” “Why, certainly, and the best hay I ever saw. I e seen grass as high as my head there in June, and cattle driven in from Juneau to Dawson are in better con- dition when they arrive than when they are started from the trail.” Now, what do you think of that, my readers, thousands of miles away? I have followed up. this cattle story and find it true. I learned today that two bands of cattle were driven Into the Klondike last summer, and that three bands have al- ready been driven in this year. I find that a ba of 1,000 sheep passed up these wa- ters in a steamer a few days back, but I do not know certainly that they are now being driven into the Klondike, but they coukl not well be meant for any other place. That Road Not So Terrible. And now as to the road, that fearful and perilous, steep and stupendous mountain of ice that had to be climbed with ice staff in ene hand and rope in the other. Truly, I that net a single person has yet per- on the line in all these past four fin years that the trail has been in use. Fur- ther than that, I find that whole families, women and children, old men and old wo- men, have gone in by the river recently, and nobody has been the worse for it. And now for news, the newest news ut the dread mountain pass, which, ac- cording to all received accounts, was to be undertaken only at the peril of life and Well, men all along here at the In- L a villa, and post offices where we find men to talk to, tell me that the true rews was not one-quarter as bad as pub- lished; that last winter two mails were brought this way by English mail carriers and three by American mail carriers, mak- ing the monthly mail trips over the sky- scraping glaciers and impassable pass as regularly then in the midwinter as they make it now in the midsummer. a Mr. White went almost More than this, a@ month ago to cut a trail below and around the alled death trap, and now it is comfortable. It is three or four miles longer, but it is of easy grade and a good, safe pack trail four feet wide. Five The firs Miles of Wagon Road. five miles is already wagon road, so, you see, as I prophesied on leaving Seattle, there was a whole lot of big stories told for the benefit of the far-off poor man who was trying to get to the mines. The nearer we approach the less formid- able are all the obstacles before us. The walls of Jericho are already down and we have not once trumpeted. if we in thirty days r the Klondike country ace cars. hness and area of the mines, remember, I am not sent to this country to tell what I hear, but what I see, and can say nothing at all about the gold fields till on the ground. I can only report that the glaring accounts silence as we go for- ward. But bear in mind we see next to hone directly from there. The Yukon the Road Back. Look at the map and you will see that the way out is not back this way, meeting but on down the Yukon, where you step more u A man may stand tnder the running slip- roose of death and not! ‘ize it. Diseases, fa- tai to both body and brain, like nervous pros- tration and exhaustion, creep upon a man slow- ly. A man overworks, his meals, and pays no attention to his di- xestion. His liver gets sluggish. His ap- Petite falls off. The blood is impro tly nourished and becomes impure. The brain and nerve tissues do not receive proper nu- triment and are befogged with the poisons in the blood. The man cannot sleep or eat. Then comes nervous prostration, and ex- haustion. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery makes the appetite hearty, the di- gestion perfect, the liver active, the blood pure, the brain clear and the nerves steady. it makes pure blood and healthy flesh, mus- rain and nerve tissue. It cures nerv- diseases. No honest dealer will urge an inferior substitute for the little extra profit there is in it. ~ About fourteen years ago,” writes C. P. Wil- hans, Esq., of Perrows, Campbell Co., Va., “I lied a severe attack of sickness. I became despondent about my situation. I thought I was going to starve todeath. I could not rest at night and could not describe my feelings. I employed ¢ or four doctors and they pronounced my asc to be Nervous Prostration. I was weak- jown almost to a skeleton. and every body ought I was going todie. I red two bot- of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery they made a perfect cure of me. My syst uit up rapidly. | From a living skeleton Z ast and healthy. I am 67 years of nd am enjoying good health.” ae A good wife should be a good nurse and something of a doctor. Send twenty-one one-cent stamps, to cover mailing only, to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y., for a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce's’ Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser. Cloth bind- ing. ten cents extra. One thousand and eight pages, over three hundred illustra- tions, some of them in colors. The best r-book extant. OR.CHASES Then he neglects Blood/Nerve Food iH YOURSELF E ES Berane TAKING E> For Weak and Run Down People. Mie Wh ‘The richest of all restora- at is Tt the ot sary: als of life that are exhausted high ving, overwork, waking the blood re and rich and the it creates solid flesh, muxcle and The nerv-s being wade stroag—the brain tive and clear. It restores lost vital- wasting drains and weakness in elther femal> regulator bas no equal. Price, five boxes $2.00. Druggists or by mail! help you. Advice and book free. Mrite Us About Your Case. The Dr. Chase Company, Sak Sth&sSot estnut street, Philadelphia. WOODBURY FACIAL SOAP nd, Factal Geam, if used daily. will soften, Whiten, beautify aod preserve in, ent Frevles, tam aod sunburn. ‘These articles exceed im saic$ avy stuilar preparations, and are sold erswhere. A sample of elther sent oo Jobn H. Woodbury, Dermatologist, 1: Cee ee ee = on the boat at Dawson, and without set-| RUNAWAY MOTOR CYCLE ting food on land, and making only, one change of steamers, you can step out on the wharf at San Francisco. My next let- ter will be from the foot of the pass, or trail, as it now’ is, where we find the last post’ office till Dawson, nearly 700 miles further on. ‘Then we will continue to get letters back from the other side of the pass or end of the line. On, then, past lakes, woods, waterfalls, the howling wilderness, into the heart of the mines. If the returning. post- man is met with, or any other responsible party, we may be able to send out the story of our voyage by boat or raft through the lakes and down the tumbling head- waters of the Yukon. We are looking for- ward with exultation and anticipation of wild joy in our hurried and headlong jour- ney to the mines. MILLIONAIRES SEEK GOLD. Chicago Capitalists Bound for Klon- dike—New Route Discovered. A party of seven Chicego capitalists, said to represent fully $5,000,000, arrived In Seat- tle yesterday aftcrnoon en route to the Klondike diggings. They go via St. Michaels, taking passage on the North American Trading and Transportation Company's steamer Cleveland. A member of the party is W. A. Hutchin- son, scn of P. B. Hutchinson, better known “Old Hutch,” and a brother of Charles Hutchinson, president of the Corn Ex- change Bank of Chicago. The party are reported to have in view not only the ac- quirement of placer properties, but the de- velopment of Yukon coal mines. Other members of the Chicago party are Harola Sturges, a broker; Charles B. Elliot, P. R. Hatch and William Buckingham of the Union League Club. Cariboo miners returning from that coun- try report having discovered a new route to Yukon. It starts at the upper end of Stuart lake, about 500 miles above Ash- croft, B. C. For 162 miles above that town there is reported to be an excellent wagon read which brings the traveler to the up- per Fraser river, which is nevigable for light steamers, a distance of 350 miles. 2e- INDIA’S RECENT PLAGUE. tives Have an Aversion to Going to Hospitals. From the London News. There was a “Blue Book” issued yester- day containing the official story of the bu- bonic plague in India down to May. This, of course, does not include the period of the outrages in Poona and the riots in Cal- cutts; but there is much in the dispatches that helps us to understand the native peric. * * * As to the sanitary precau- tions enforced, the Bombay government resisted for some time the attempt of the Indian government, urged by the home government, to impose too drastic regu- lations upcn tke people. This was the opinion of the Bombay administration: “From the beginning of the outbreak of this disease it has been found that the na- tive inhabitants of the city are very: re- luctant to leave their houses or to allow any member of tkeir family afflicted with the disease to be taken away. Indeed, their dread of the disease itself appears to be hardly so powerful as their horror of being removed from their houses. Igrror- ance and superstition prevent them from discerning either that removal to a hos- pital is good for the sick or removal to uninfected dwellings good for the healthy, and they are far more easily moved by fear of the municipal and police authori- ties than by any realization of the bene- fits that will accrue from a sensible course of action. It is estimated that not less han three hundred thousand persons have already ficd from Rombay, moved so to do, not only by fear of the plague, but quite as much, if not more, by an unfound- ed and unreasonable fear of what might happen to them at the hands of the police and municipal authorities were they io remain. “The exodus has already necessitated LTrecautionary measures against arrivals from Bombay in every part of this presi- dency; tt has led to the plague becoming endemic in Poona and in parts of the Thana district; it has resulted in over- crowding by refugees from Bombay of many cities and towns, and it has made demands on the number of qualified medi- eal practitioners available to government that can with difficulty be met. Every addition to the number of refugees adds to the possibility of spreading the disease and to the difficulty of dealing with it should it break out. “The measures taken may not have been so stringent as those that would, in a European city, have gained general sup- port, but they are the most stringent that it was possible to undertake without al- most certainly producing a calamity more serious and more widespread than the very terrible one that has now to be dealt with.” The Indian government, hcwever, were impressed by the necessity of decisive ac- tion, and replied: “The government of India having care- fully considered your telegram 292-P., dated 15th, and letter 263-P., dated 12th regarding the evacuation of plague-infec:. ed houses, regret that, while giving full weight to the opinions of the local gov- ernment in regard to the disposition of the people, they are unable to accept the view that the considerations adduced in your letter show that it is impracticable to in- duce people to move from infected houses to a healthy locality. This course has been strongly recommended by the medical ad- viser of the government of India. It is only the measure attacking the root of evil which appears practicable, and ex- perience in Kafachi seems to show that it can be so introduced as rot to offend the prejudices of the people and is effec- tual in holding the disease in check.” at ro Cargo of a Great Vessel. From the Atlanta Constitution, The famous steamship Great Eastern, historically associated with the first efforts to lay Atlantic telegraph cables, has nitn- erto been regarded as the largest vessel ever launched. Its laurels 2S a sea levia- than, however, are of late endangered. The new ocean freighter, Pennsylvania, although scarcely attaining the external measurements of the former celebrated ship, will carry far more cargo. The ca- Facity, indeed, of these new freight ships is a matter for astonishment to a lands- man. The Pennsylvania, for example, is rated at 20,000 tons burden, and will carry loads such as may be briefly itemized thus: One hundred and sixty thousand bushels of wheat, equal to 320 car loads, or sixteea trains of twenty cars each; 1,000 tons of flour, eighty car loads; 4,000 boxes of bacon, seventy-five car loads; 3,000 tierces of iard, forty-eight car loads; “ww bales of cot- ton, forty car loads; 1,200 head of live cat- tle, eighty car loads; 3,600 quarters of dressed beef. In addition there will probably be 1,000 tons of miscellaneous merchandise, ssy eighty car loads more; in all not less than 780 car loads, or thirty-nine long trains of twenty cars each. Nor is the above by any means the entire load of the modern ark. The Pennsylvania will have accommodations for from eight hundred to one thousand steerage passen- gers, as also for a crew of 15) men and fifty cattlemen, with food and fodder for all. In the fuel bins, too, there will be carried a burden of 1,300 tons of coal, or more than 100 car loads. If we were to say that the entire agri- cultural products of sixty New Engiand towns, or twenty western counties, could all be stowed away in this mammoth ship, we should not exceed the facts. ——— The Smaliest Haman Bei: From the New York World. The smallest human being the ever ex- isted 1s believed to have been a little girl named Catharine Elliott. The coroner of Liverpool, England, was called upon to hold an inquest on her diminutive body. This human atom was born in Glasgow, Scot- land, about three weeks ago. Her parents were poor and were easily induced by man- agers to place their daughter on exhibition as a freak. She was, being exhibited in Liverpool, her parents receiving £3 103s. for showing and attending her. The child weighed only twenty ounces at the time of her death and was just a foot high. ‘The palm of her hand was not as large as a silver 25-cent piece. Her feet were no larger than an ordinary man’s thumb. Her parents disclaimed any desire to limit the growth of the midget. The Httle one had been guarded from cold, was well nurtured and never had @ day’s illness until the day it died. The jury returned a verdict that the child died from natural causes, Ni AT COLONIAL BEACH. Navy place s.e. at 4:30 p.m. And No. 1002 AUCTION SALES. AUCTION SALES. = ave. se. at 5 p.m. ; one y The Washingtod Visitors Are Happy Tomorrow. TOMORROW. es SO : d Enjoying Themselves. Ratcliffe, Sutton & Cé., Aucts., 920 Pa. ave. n. RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & CO., AUCTIONEERS. ON & 00. AUCTIONBERS, George Sherman’s Performance Recalls the | Coespomdence of The Bening Star. jy_Stle of collateral note, on Friday, August 6, at 2 sei wresaha pEuike Coase . ave. BIW. ree COLONIAL BE We, August 3, 1807. |'0'cloek pm a co. a Sgt COLLATERAL. RODS Ae BUREN, TRUSTEES SALE OF TWO BRICK NOUSRS ON "i Famous John Gilpin Bide. The,season at Solonte! Beach was late in | ‘Trastees' sule of unimproved property. In Gearge-)} GREEN GuTH) STREET NEAR’ DUM ARTON getting a start t year, and the number | town, on Friday, August 6, at 5:30 o'clock p.m. By virtee of a decree of the Sapreme ¢ of visitors will probably not be as large as | Join D. Coughlin and Henry P. Glibert, trustees.” the District of Columbia, pameed In Eaait Something Gets Wrong With the | last year. During the past week, however, ae = a ag Fg oy Fgh ™ a arrivals have been: numerous, and there AUCTION SALES. THURSDAY, AUGUST TW! Battery and His Motor Cycle Spo reer, aT Hata - c ; will doubtless be as guests during THIS AFTERNOON. the following described real ext Runs Fast Away. August as the Bedch can comfortably 2c- jon aod Im the coal @.G. SLOAN & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 1407 G ST. mia. to wit: Part of lot one hundred commodate. Those who are here manage ———— even (137). in Reall’s nddition to to keep well and are happy, enjoying them- | TRUSTEES’ SALE OF A VALUABLE TWO-STORY feorgetown, in the District aforesaid, more par It has arrived at last—the runaway motor | Recent visitors from Washington at the] | NUE SOUTHEAST. — the northeast "corner of aah tot, “ned” ronint Brook! Colonial Beach hotels tnclude: By virtue of a certain deed of trust, dated the thence southward on the west line of Green street cycle. It made its first bow 2 rooklyn | ~‘alvin—Senator Maliory of Florida, Mrs. | twer first day of Februarg, 1803, and duly 1¢- Wirty GO) feet: thence west yesterday afternoon and conducted itself |g. D. Stevenson, ‘Them Luckett and wife, in Liber 1795, et neq., one 3 in| with Dambarton xtreet xiaty witn a wealth of eccentricity that would | Paul Carr, Arthur Varlea, J. W. Hancock, | the rajest of Tht sete ened eeepias and at | front, Of the Premiacs, (on FRIDAY. SIXTH AU- Soca nek Shakes aqabensly aud peaiea sam tee have cheered the soul of a colored supple- | F. B. Woodbury, T. G.. Davis and wife. | sell at public auction, in front of the premises, on M., those parcels of ground in G etown, iu the | barton street to the pli Reni araine Frank Cassidy and wife, Thos. Burns on — a8 Pi — =e a4 cs a vente — design = = ont ing “greed ie tee. feet cram . i r S wife, H. J. Collins, J. E. Rowell, Mrs. L. ‘LOCK P.M., the Ing desert a is numbered €0 ai » in Old Georgetown, being | ¢ feet p, together with all the impre This particular machine is the invention | Mendenhall, H. K. ’Montrop, D. J. Hamil- | 804 premises, situate in the city of Washing‘on, | in square 21 of said Georgetown, described by metes | rights, & Af A = < “Ee District of Columbia, and designated as and being | and bounds as follows: Beginning for the same at a ‘erms prescribed by the decree One-third of one George Dunton of Jamaica, L. I. It | ion and wife, Arthur Comstock, E. L. Con- 7 “4 : a i : 4 is a formidable-looking tricycle, with a|don, H. J. Miller and wife, Mrs. Thos. | Bt't,0f Jot sixteen (16), in square 943, beginning | point on east line of Jefferson strect, where the | of (he purchase mo paid in cash, the bal at the northwest corner of sald lot and running thence southeasterly 87 feet 7 inches; thence north easterly to public alley, and again beginning at the northwest corner of said lot, running northeasterly fame is intersected by the south boundary line of | ance in one (1) and two (2) years from date of sale; deferred payments to be secured by dead of trust on the property sold, aud bearing interest at the rate of six 46) per cent per annam from the Cranston, H. B. Thompson, Henry Brid- well, R. T. Adams, H. O. Lovejoy, Judge W. W. Willoughby, C. U. Webster and the Chesapeake and Obio Canal Condemnation, and running thenve southerly with said east line of Jet- ferson street 80 feet; thence east parailel to Bridge small storage battery tucked away near the axle of the front wheel. Dunton, who : 7 along the line of North Carolina avenue sixteen (16) | Street 105 feet 10 Inches to the eastern outline of | day of sale, secured by deed of trust > prop cherishes it as the apple of his eye, took | Mrs. Webster, Miss Se Fors fect elght (8) inches; thence southeasterly on a line | the ort plan of the city of Georgetown; thence | erty sold, of all cash, at the option of the purchase, it out for a trial trip on Tuesday. While | and Mrs. D. M. Thomas, Otis B. Goodall, rallel with the west line of lot 16 to public al- | Northerly with said outline to the south line of suid | A deposit of $100 required at the th sale. If he was bumping sedately over the cobble- Dr. W. B. Summey, J. B. Forker, W. 8S. tS: together with the iinprovements, consisting of | Canal boundary line; thence by and with sald south | the terms of sale sre not complied with in Pe ft E; me NewYork athoauawereave Royer, Mr. and Mrs. Pate, Miss Davis, A. | a two-story and basement brick dwelling, known | line to the point of beginning; also all that parcel | 1 days from the day of sale, the trustees reserves stones of East New = L. J. Titus, D. McKenzie, jr., and Robert | as 911 North Carolina avenue southeset, of ground lying in said square 21, in said George. | the right to resell the property. at the risk and Terms of sale: One-third cash, balance in one | tewn, described as follows: Beginning on the east | cost of the ulting purchaser or purchasers, af- out, and he found himself became a oa a BE. Rosen and family, Mrs, | and two years, with Sateresltntixhercaterar a per Line of Jefferson street 530 feet & inches south from | ter 5 days’ advertisement of euch resale. or sales, this predicament, he trundled the vehicle Geo. E. Loe cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and secured | the Southeast Intersection of Bridge and Jefferson | in some newspaper published in Washington, Doc. to Grant street and Glenmore avenue, | M. L. Rush, Miss A. Miller, T. Y+ | by deed of trast!on the property wold, or all each, | Stfeets, amd running thence south with said cast | Ajl conveyancing. &C, at the parcmsrts cost, where George Shermun conducts the dual |B. H. Taylor, R. B. Claughton, A. H. Me- | at the optica of the purchaser, A deposit of $100 | line Jefferson street 50 feet; theace east and JOSEPH A. REPETTI. Trustee Cormick, R. Harrison, W. McCarthy, I. Wilde, F. Arandes, G. Miller, H. Miller, H. F. Farmer, R. Thurston, J. Hartnett, J. J. Pittman, C. J. Turner, M. Lampton, H. B. parallel with Bridze street 105 ‘feet 10 inches to eastern outline of original plan of Georgetown: thence north with said east line 50 fect, and thence West 105 feet 10 inches to the beginning, being the south 50 feet of Iet 63 by depth on plan of Old trades of a bicycle repairer and electrician. Sherman looked the machine over, saw what was the matter and promised the in- ventor to fix it over night if he would leave required at time-of sale. All conveyancing and recording at purchaser's cost. If terms of sale are not complied with within ten days from day of sale the trustees reserve the right to resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser TRUSTEE’S SALE OF VALU- 3 = .'T. Pay: a Miss H. Kiely. e Georgetown; sald two parcels bel fe conversed = fo Hearyils Kecret heart the versatile Sher. | Joharmans—Geo, “Hayden, dB. Ham: | Sieh lve, notice of euch resale published tn some | Sree rented smote pete eee | ABLE AND DESIRABLE man was yearning to take a ride, but he | Sherman’s—Geo. Hayden, Washington newspape BY, Osea recorded among said lan in dissembled his feelings, and Dunton, sus- mugnd Goose, a 8 or aner Ske SA property’ will be sold ‘subject. tow prior deal or BUILDI LOTS ON : 3, N 5 ER, trust, ec No. IE ode ee reste back tee tatnaion (Caramel ana aie nobact and Lee Combs, Jeb-d&as ‘Trustees. TiN ftlo 28 “The amon of arcades unas 3d ST. NEAR H ST. 2 P. R. Terry, Geo. B. Sheetz, Geo. n, 7 =o . reunder will be made krown at day of sa’e. Also ‘i EAST, Mounted the Monster. T, Arthur Smith, G. W. Ayers, Mrs. Geo. | ,22,7NE AROVe SALE ah ee SRE all of lot 27 and so much of lot’ 26 ax ts not in N OR a: HEAST % Sherman applied a few deft touches to] Woods. A. J. Strasburger and wife, Mrs. | JUNE TWENTY HOOND, 1%, AT HALE-PAST | fim" ig Beate’ AdGithe Ry Goer WASHING- Uke EEGEHLIS 1 (a Goer, Gat! Uke mace Boise cee oe aes Glark and wife, | jets-dts By order of the Trustees, | StFiP of lot of ground south of said lot 27, known as TON, D.C. Was as good as new. Yesterday afternocn he left his shop in charge of a boy, took the tricycle into the street and mounted, having utterly neglected to make his will. The lever was set against a dial plat on which various rates of speed were marked. Sherman was resolved to preserve a modest pace, s> he set the indicator at the “five miles an hour’ mark. Even as he did so part of “Wapping” and bounded on the north by sald lot 27, on the east by Washington street, on the south by lot 62 of Deakins, Lee & Casanave's Addition to Georgetown, and on the west by line of Old Georgetown: all of said parcels being in square 21, in said Georgetown teaid lot 27, pte 20 and pt. “Wapping” will be sold subjt-t to prior + | deeds of trust recorded among said Ixnd records Gertrude Higdon and John P. Hoadley. Eckington—A. C. Lamb, R. L. Lamb, L. M. Rudd, Mrs. C. L. Grant and son, Miss Kronnagle, Mr. Aufrecht, A. C. Gusdorf, Emil Holst, Rudolph Steinmetz, J. E. Sar- do, Mrs. Viola Wimsatt and granddaughter, Mr. George R. May, Mr. George E. Clark and Mrs. Clark. Irving—Mrs. A. J. Wonde and daughter, Ry virtue of a certain deed of trust, dated Sth day of June, A. D. 1894, apd duly rece in Laber No. 19th, . of the land records of the D! . and at the will sett The purchaser at the above sale having failed to comply with the terms thereof the pro therein mentioned will be resold at public auction, in front of the premises, on THURSDAY, AUGUST FIFTH, 1897, AT FIVE O'CLOCK P. same terms and conditions ax at the pre GEO. H. B. WBITE, HENRY M. BAKER, ‘Trustees. RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & CO., AUCTIONEERS. ck PM, emiises, with Apparterancos ing, situate and lying in ity of Wasisu, in Liber No. 1569, folios 28% amd 292. The amount of indebtedness secured thereunder will be made dy24-d&ds known at day of sale.) Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase Miss Nellie Murphy, Mrs. Annie Baker, in cash, and the balance in equal install t the tricycle leaped forward with such vio- | ‘soll, E. §. McPherson; <= 2 5 qual installments Ience as to nearly unseat him, and sped | MTS. Fred. Ingersoll, E. 8. PEREMPTORY SALE OF VERY | se rate of 6 percent snterast from day of sale Mine. de Lyssin, H. F. Rust and wife, F. P. Norton, Chas. R. Yeatman, Miss F. Kemp, A. Upperman, T. Boyle, J. J. Kemp, J. Ruppert, R. Docring, F. Donaldson, Carrie at rate of 6 pei cent, payable s:mi-ani all in cash, at purchaser's option. warments to be secured by purchaser's notes and led of trust cn property sold. A deposit cf $200 will be required at time of saie. Terms of wale to down Glenmore avenue at a rate that Sher- man afterward declared seemed to him at least a mile a minute. The rider’s hat blew off at the first bound, VALUABLE REAL ESTATE TO CLOSE AN_ ESTAT otiice of the surve V. Riordan. BRICK HOUSE No. 108 7TH | be complied with within ten dase from day of male. | begining for th and he found it necessary to cling to the s a . 7 Conveyancing and recordi tales inches south of guides like grim death iy order to avoia| J: Marconier and wife, Miss Sadie Mey eyancing avd recording at pirchaser's cost. ST. N. E, BRICK HOUSE No. 41 running north on A six (6) Inches (with ers, Mrs. E. J. Wood, Miss Nellie Murphy, JOHN D. Cou nine being thrown. Whenever the wheels struck : HENRY P. GILBERT, — | sixty a hole in the roadway the machine rocked | MF. and Mrs. I. G. Scott and mother, Mr. | 303 7TH ST. S. E., 2 BRICK] ss2v-eds OTR eette, | tion of the Bp feet” front of tor from ‘side to side like a cockle shell in the| Fed, McC. Smith, Mr. Louls Becker, Mr. FOtSES “Nos 65g AND 661 — rd) te the northwest corner in Wash of a ferryboat, “Disengaging one| 29d Mrs. Getz and family will be here to RE OL oe 52 nafs FUTURE DAYs. <; mhence hand, he tried to shut off the current, but | ™orrow. - . E DUNGANSON BROS, AUCIONEEES: sencgiaed the lever would not budge. This alarm- pW cocmoreland airs Se CaOUE pel BRICK HOUSE No. 1002 NEW - wing, sub- ing @iscovery left but one course open to| Children, Miss Cora Dyer, Mrs. J. W. ERS ; 3 TRUSTEES’ SALE AT AUCTION OF VALUABLE east five him, as a man of resource and presence| !9& Wright, Mrs. F. Herzog, Mrs. J. W. JERSEY AVE. S. E. REAL ESTATE AT ‘THE NORTHWEST Con of mind, to trust in God and keep in the Gregg, Mrs. J. W. Swainson, Miss Edith On THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST FIFTH, NER OF MAND 10TH STREETS middle of the road. Applying all his intel-| Gregg. I. A. Friend, Jas. Ballinger and | 1997. COMMENCING AT FOUR O'CLOCK. ws WASHINGTON, D.C. AND IMPs the entire length of lect, therefore, to the steering gear, the un-| Wife, J. M. Taylor, F. E. Everhardt, A. D. | will sell by order of the beirs, in front of the re- | On M ‘st e y 8 3 s *CLOC! above described land. happy Sherman resigned himself to what-| Grimes, Miss Jennie Page, F. W. Payne, | spective premises: orcLax ALSO 3 First—Lot 68, tees, under 2 “eed of trust dated May "28, 1895, ever fate might have in store for him. In-] Thos. D. Dwyer, Grover Goodwin, Mrs. | . Groom pres Wicket foe Qax67). improved by | Tid recorded in Liber 3029, folio 223 et eeqe ot | all of lot numbered tw ree (28) of sald sub- cidentatly, he screamed at the top of his| Pullman and daughter. Second—On the same day, Immediately after the | the land records of the District cf Columbia.’ the | diviston of lots in square numbered seven hundred voice ind kept the gong clanging without | _ Wolcott’s-Chas. Engle, J. Mason Ford, | above, lot 58, square 873 (12x72), Improved by a 6. | undersigned will sei at public auction all of tots | and seventy-seven ¢ , Ft intermisator R. A. Reeves, Joe Auth, H. Auth, 8. Houck, | room brick house, No. 303 7th st. s.e. numnbered one (1), two (2), three 3) and four (4) 100) Gent). Teens bots will be adda ta Foner Bicyclists r A. P. Geier, Geo. Seger, Louis Ruppert, L. | , Thrd—On the ‘same day. at 4:30 o'clock p.m.. | In the subdivision of square 1umbered three bun- | (1) feet), Those lots willl be sald In scr. cyclists along the avenue joined in a Schu: W. S. Moore, R. Theo. Cook, | lots 50 and 60, square 878, Improved by 2 Bitck | dred and forty (340), made bs the betrs of John ee a Ee kode apg unanimous “sauve qui peut.” Some rode| Schuman, W. S. . R. . + | houses, Nos. 659 and 661 Navy place se. Davidson, as said subdivision ts recorded in the | Purchase money in cash, palaner in one, two, into the gutter and others into side streets. | Thos. Roland, Walter Atkinson. Hourth--On theamenlsr rat Office of the surveyor of the District of Col three and four years, secured by a decd of trust ‘clock p.m., mbia, . = = part = 5. upon the property, with interest at 6 per cent per motor mnmehbice meesteg aia Ce Ge] Kelier, Mr. and Mra H. Ws: Kelster, Mew. | Shute, So. 4oOBS ztupeumeree "9 a0 old Vick | In Wot Ni GE G9 fest the sm idea | stm, pttabc snail othe” purcawtrs Of the Way dulckly oaeeer, ene eae he | James Tavior, J. Hickey, Mr. J. C. Carroll, ra east, the. batance im six and | MU sttect portly by depth of 12) fect, bindiag en | MAY pay all che” A drowalt’ of $100 will Me ve- of the way quickly enough. ewear wheel | 7G. Josien aad Mara B. Canteal fall cash, “A ‘deposit of $100 on | the west side of 10th street west, and Improved by | quired on each lot at the rial feos at cost of her bicycle was struck by one of the Ds orc see. = each piece required at the time of sale. Terms to | frame stores and dwellings. Porgy S Id the tes tot be rear wheels of the runaway machine and] _Shirley—Andrew Ketner and wife. J. M- | he complied with in fifteen days from day of sale. | ‘Terms: One-third cash, of which $500 must be | of the purchasers. © terms on ot be Simpson and wifes! Mary Keiner, Miss Liz- not complied with in fiftecn days from the day of Miss Nellie Loenard, Miss she was thrown to the ground, but not sale the lot or lots so in default may, at the dis- Conveyancing, ete., at the purchaser's cost. deposited with the trustees at time of sale, and badly hurt. zie Branson, By order of the heirs. balance in two equal installments, at one and two 4 o i in eo cretion of the trustee, be resold at risk yd cost Emma Kaiser, Miss Gertrude Casey, Miss RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & ©O., years, with interest from date of sale at 6 per | CT th oe Bb wth iy wg Thought Him a Scorcher. ‘Annie ce Frank Manning, te R. | _ y23-d&ds Auctioneers, | cent ‘per armum. pa ble Semi-annually, and ee rE gemerinrn ft haser or See Two bicycle policemen caught sight of| Hunter, Mr. and Mrs:iD. Lynch, Mrs. Ed- AUNCANSON BROS., AUCTIONEERS. (options bud Af terse ate mot complied wath wattae | Star taweparcr of aforesaid city. rma a a ward Lowe and sot,’ Thos. Lynch, Mr. aT ten dars from day of sale the trustees reserve the NES viving Trusty Pee eh een eeae on the phantom | Taylor, Mr and Mra Slicer and family; | TRUSTEES SALE OF TWOSTORY aND cersadn | S.Ct" tom Say ot Male, the trurtoee cos pur: | _320-dads ain st. and N.Y. ave. tricycle, which gethered momentum with Mrs. Thomas Cannor® and Mrs. Vincent PRESSED-BRICK AND BROW STONE | chaser, on five days’ advertisement. Conveyancing RATCLIFFE, TION AUCTIONEERS, FRONT DWELLING, NO. 521 TWENTY-FIRST STREET NORTHWEST. By virtue of a certzin deed of trust to us, dated March 14, 1802, and duly recorded March 16, 1802, . i - pin ber No. I at follo et seq., of the lan WV poe nkey (Me BMeonnald, FE. Rich- | Neords of the District of Columbia.” and at the meansa vite, "BA - » C- | request of the party recured thereby, we, the Evans and wife, B. Eeonard and wife, R. | undersigned, trustees, will sell, at public auction, every block, and reached the simultaneous conclusion that he was the most depraved type of scorcher they bad ever laid eyes on. Bending over their handlebars they started in pursuit, “followed by a small army of civilian wheelmen. at purchaser's cost. J. ROBERTS FOULKE, J. BARTON TOWNSEND, ‘Trustees. M. ASHFORD, Attorney, 470 La. ave. n.w. 4y10,17,22,24,27,29.31,0U3,5,7,9 Miller and family? + A Washington House—Wallace Brown, E. F. King, E. E. Denmhan, Edward Marsh, TRUSTEES SALE OF REAL ESTATE 1 DISTRICT ¢ ES NUME: It: NORTHWEST AND. ‘VALUABLE IMPROVED THE CITY Y SLOAN & CO., AUCTIONEERS, There seemed to be method in Sherman's] C- Grinder, C. Kadlsttom, W. H. Towers | in front of the premises, on’ THURSDAY, THE 1407 G st. n.w. my onten ak > Gotan oF the hacen madness. When he reached the corner ot | #nd wife, William Michener, Frank Wil- | FIFTH DAY OF AUGUST, A.D RUSTEES SALE OF VALUABLE DxPRoven | District of Colum Enfield street something prompted him to| 80m, Thomas Kelly, W. V. Chatterton and | eee tenn ee ence ae Wachast oe eee ORT oN PROSE AOD ee ii wheel into that tnoroughfare. ‘Thence he| Wife. Christian Hansen and wife, James | fistrict of Columbia, and designated as and. belng EN THIRTY-SPCOND AND —‘THIRTY- | “herein Se eee ie W. Rarcliffe and famil O. F. Merillat, and Laweence O'Neli et al. are defe T 2 turned into Broadway, the clickety-clack THIRD STREETS 1 of the motor sounding above the clang of 'y, John U. Perkins, all of lot numbered’ one hundred (100), in Jose famés Howland, Cc. R. Johnson's subdivision of lot six (6), in square J Lotta elton dersigned will offer for sale, at publ By virtue of a decree of the Supreme Court of | fem™msned wi : a ective premises: ics ” Wilde, J. R. Trave: oR. Cruse, wif numbered one hundred and four (104), as per pl the District of Columbia, passed in equity cause "| : THE mE - > ‘3 ty miles an hour, hardly gained on him at| | Charles Karr recently arrived in his cata- | With’ the Improvements, consisting of a two-story | dats, the undersigned trustees will offer for salen at | °C, 0rieinal lot numbered thirtsen (13, In sauare all. maran “Fleetwing,” for a short stay in the numbered five G), the sai northern half and cellar dwelling house, with pressed-brick and | public auction. in front of the premises, on MON. ing the y Mi ~ nen HON, | of lot lettered and marked ip Julia A. Smogt's From Broadway Sherman and the tri-| neighboring waters. The boat {s of Mr. | brownstone front, 2ist stteet northwest. | DAY. the NINTH DAY of AUGUST, at. FIVE | & red and marked OF.” , eyets whileeea ints SE: coe ur KAECE Gon construction. Terms of gale: "One-third of the purchase money | O'CLOCK P.M., the following real estate, situated | 2h Quan, premised eyadivision of ‘sald pct 4 way there was badly cut up. Gangs ot] Harry Bliss and William Aman, two | to be paid in cash, and the balance in two equal | in Georgetown, D.C. and known and distinguished | Wiisee ss) Holtaean taker deed dated the workmen were excavating trenches for the | Washington boys, were here on thelr way | {astalliments, parable in one and two sears, w Ter gt deren peed POTEET A.D. 1878, and recorded Jn Woodhaven Water Company. Sherman| down the river. They will spend the sum- feet east of the west line of lot 90; thence north | Het’ of Gokentin te Seay Ee Seale: saw his peril and at the same time his op-| mer cruising on their yacht, the “Princess 99 feet, east 15 feet, south to Prospect street, ard | two-stor brick dwelling, known as ‘ portunity. He steered the monster that] Mae,” and expect to go as far south as the - 2 Street northwest. ‘On the same afternoon and immedi the above sale, pact numbered one (1 square numbered five being the same cony by decd dated the ISth day of August, A. and recorded in Liber fallo records of the Disteict of Columbia, two-story (2) frame house, numbered 2607 1 rtreet perthwest. thence west to the beginning, improved by prem- ises No. 3225 Prospect avenue’ northwest. Terms of sale: One-third cash and the balance in ome and two years, with interest, or all cash. If the terms are not complied with in fifteen days the right is reserved to sell at the risk and cost of the defaulting purcheser. All conveyancing and recording at the cost of the purchaser. A deposit of $100 will be required at the time of sale. Florida coast. Dr. John H. Junghaus and Dr. William F. alker recently spent a few days at Wol- had taken him captive against the softest thing in sight—a huge pile of dirt. 1t halt- ed even more suddenly than it bad started, and threw the misguided Sherman head first into the ditch beyond. As he clambered out, groaning from his bruises, his pursuers arrived. Mr. L. P. Wade and wife of Washington are at the Bluff Point House for the sea- son. M. Edward Stockett, with his wife the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. MAHLON ASHFORD, ALDIS B. BROWNE, MILY 1. Gl § “Why didn’t you stop when we shouted?”’| and children, will be there a considerable | jyos-aaas ‘Trustees, WILLIAM, MARSHALL, she shape Gate it oF bt Saeed a eae they demanded in a breath. part ofthe) summer. . G. SLOAN & ©0., AUCTIONEERS. 1407 G st. aw. Daniel G. Major's sub livision ef orkcinal lots nam. ‘Because,”” responded Sherman, as he| Mr. F. 8. Hays and wife were recent ar- a Sy28-d&ds besed onc abd six ql aul @), tn square wenbered bent down to look at the battery, “the] rivals at Dr. Eaton's Everett cottage. ‘ALE OF TWO-STORY BRICK STORE TRUSTEES" AND DWELLID WEST. By virtue of an order of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, passed in Equity Cause No. 18417, and the power contained in a deed of trust recorded among the land records of the Dis- trict of Colurabin tu Liter 1049, at fotlo 371 et seq. the same as survess ftapreved conéed in Liber -W, wires were cross ————— The Speed of Clouds. From the Boston Evening Transcript. Look 2bout the heavens on the next clear day until your eye falls upon_a coilection of detached clouds, delicate, fibrous and generally white, against a bright blue back- George H. Chandlee, Horace C. Chandlee and S. J. Finley were here a short time ago in their steam yacht for a brief visit. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mueller, accompan- ied by Mrs. L. M. Bradley, were at the Colonial Beach Hotel recent: Mrs. M. J. Evans and Mrs. Frank Coon of Alexandria chaperoned a recent straw ride to Wilkerson’s, composed of a party G 0. 300 N STREET SOUTH- Ui street noctheest. 2 One-third of the . : . the residue in two equal installments, at one and two tively, from the date of sale, the rents to be secured by deed of tra jses sold, and to bear interest at th centum per annum fom the dite payable ‘semi-annually, or all cast THIRD STREET NEAR L STREET EAST, WASHINGTON, D. C. By virtue of a deed of trust, dated the 12th of July, 1893, and duly recorded in Liber No. 1844. at folio 95 et’ sey., one of the land records of the Dis- trict of Columbia, and at the request of the party secured thereby, we Will sell ic auetion, in , on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST the undersigned will sell, by public front of the premises, on ‘THURSDA’ AT FIVE O'CLOCK F FIFTH, 1897, in square 546, according to the subdivi > from the Westmoreland. Ice cream and ce of the surveyor of the District of Co- | ELEVENTH, 1 AT FIVE O'CIOCK FM... the | of the purchaser. A deposit of two h ground. Sometimes they are arranged in| cake were served upon arrival at Wilker- | lunitia, Im Bom 14, page 96.0 tt following deecribed Isant and, premises, situate im | Ygago) ou enc piece to be pald at. the. tim belts, crossing a portion of the sky in great | son's Terms of sale: Gne-third of the purchase mones Ey 3 eT ety. Ae, Gt) ta Patrick oe sale, Terms to b circles. Sometimes, by perspective, they | A party of thirty or more from the Eck- | must be paid in cash, and the balance in two equal = from the Gx; oghte’s subdivision of square numbered seven hun- able o t rs after inctallments, payable one and two years after the | oghue's subdly day of sale, respectively, with interest at the rate of six per centuin per annum from said day, and represented by the promissory notes of the’ pur- cbeser, secured by deed of trust on the property sold, iu form and teaor satisfactory to the under- sigved, or all cash, at the option of the pur- se the right to resell’ the property and cost of the defaulting purchaser days’ notice of such sale or sales in Peper published in the city of W: trict of Columbia. AN convey ete., to be at the cost of the p ebasers. ington enjoyed a delightful straw ride to Oak Grove and a lawn dance last Wednes- day. Frank Howard and Samuel Levi are vis- iting at Monroe Cottage. Mrs. P. B. Otterbach and daughter are appear to converge toward opposite points on the horizon. They are usually long and slender, extending in the direction of the upper air currents of their region. These are what are to be known as cirrus clouds. When you see them in the west you may nine (749), as the same ts recorded in the surveyor's office of said city of Washington, D. C., in Bock C. H. B., page 1 together with the improvements, consisting of a frame dwelling. ‘Terms in relation to deferred payments announced on day of sale, when $100 will be required as a rechaser or pUr- CHAS. W. DARK, Trast chaser. A deposit of $100 will be required at time | deposit. 5 au2-dkds Equity building, 319 4% st. be satisfied that the weather is to be clear. | visiting at the Bay View cottage. Miss | of sale. The right is reserved to resell, at the ELON A. woopwanrp, ne te Cirrus clouds are the highest which float | Annie Knott and Miss Laura Garcia, who | risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser, if the | _jy20-d&ds JAMES WHITE, Trustees. RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & 00., AUCTIONEERS. above our heads, either in summef or win- | have been visiting there, have returned to | terms of sale are not complied with within fifteen TRUSTEE’S SALE OF VERY VALUARLE REAL ter. Were you to ascend into the center | Washington. days. All conveyancing, recording and notarial CONN eee trace res Ae Ee : of one of average height you would be six Mrs. David Lewis and Mr. William E. ALFRED S. WILLSON, ‘TRUSTEES’ SALE OF VALUABLE REAL EaraTe PRICK HOUSE, NO. 111; SOUTH CAROLINA miles above the earth, in hot weather like | Leyton are visiting the family of Dr. John- EDWARD F. BUCKLEY, ‘ FOURTEENTH STREET EXTENDED >} VENUE Al By virtue of District of Co SPRING ROAD, this. In winter you would be a mile lower. By virtue of a certain deed of trust to us, dated son, in their Rosedale cottage. The whole system of clouds rises as the Mrs. L. A. Bell and daughter and Mrs. Jy26-10t ‘Trustees. the No. FUTURE DAYS. january 10, 1896, and duly recorded January 31, weather gets warm, apd falls as it grows | J. K. Mangum are occuying their cottage 3358" in Liber No. 2103, folio 84 ct seq., of the cold. Another interesting fact, lately dis- | for the season.. 8. BENSINGER’S land’ records of the District of Coinmbia, and at covered, is that clouds begin to rise to. ——____ HORSE AND CARRIAGE BAZAAR, the est aruthep gt ogee 4 serra some extent in the morning and continue Letter’s Long Travels. NO. 040 LA. AVE. - tone ‘of the premises, on WEDNESDAY, THE | city of Wa: ¥ end Toons whens tney commence stouta Us ‘ WORK AND DRIVING HORSES. ELEVENTH DAY OF AUGUST, A.D, 1897, AT | trict of Columbia > Lots mum 1 Imagine that each of these long, feathery | From the Galveston News. On SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST SEVENTH, | FIVE O'CLOCK P.M., the following described land | 19, in. Rothwell's gecorded subdivisle original cirrus clouds is a white airship ploughing through the celestial deep. Though its mo- tion is scarcely perceptible, on account of the great height, its average rate of speed bas been found to be more than 4 mile a minute in summer, or about as fast as an ordinary express train. In winter clouds travel almost doubly as fast as in summer. Cirrus clouds in winter have an average speed of more than 100 miles an hour, while they sometimes attain a velocity of 230 miles in the same interval. o-—____ A Chinese Cemetery. rom the Philadelphia Press. E. 8. Phillips, a local real estate agent, says he has closed a transaction with a national syndicate of Chinamen for the purchase of the title to 109 acres of ground belonging to the estate of the late Col. Jones at Wynne Wood station on the Penn- sylvania railroad, with the object of con- verting it into a Chinese cemetery similar to the one on the outskirts of San Fran- cisco. The price named by Agent Phillips is $350,000, and the deed, with the property, is said to have been placed in the name of Nations nowadays pride themselves on the promptness of their mail service, but a bit of evidence of an incident to the con- trary was exhibited in the News office yes- terday. It is a letter mailed in San <An- tonfo on August 9, 1884, to Francisca Gon- zales, Jimenes, Mexico. It never reached Gonzales, and only came back to the branch office in Galveston on Monday. It had been gone thirteen years. The town of Jimenes is 'n the state of Tamaulipas, of which the capital is Victoria. Had the au- thor of the letter put the name of the state cn the envelope it is probable that this tale would not have been told. : Irish Names in, the, French Nobility. From the New York Word. A recent marriagé-&t Toulouse, France among the old noblesse would incline one to believe that the ‘time-honored pleasantry of “the Frenchman frem Cork’’ has a larg- er foundation in faed than most people have given it credit ‘fér. The wedding was that of Mr. Patridk Boland to Mlle. Norah O'Byrne, daughtef of “the Comte and Com- at TEN O'CLOCK, we will sell, within the bazaar: 1 pair Sorrel Horses, 5 years old, 15% hands, sound workers, single or double. 1 pefr Gray “Horses, 4 and 5 years old, sound, good workers, weigh 2,400 pounds. 3 1 Bay Horse, 5 years old, sound and good worker, will weigh 1,400 pounds. 1 Gray Cob, 6 years old, sound and & Draught Horses, 5 and 6 years workers. - Hi jigned by =local parties. 20 -head of Horses consi y > parties. Parties in need of heavy deaught stock are par- ticularly invited to attend this sale. ‘ Also jes, 8, ‘agons, Harness, etc. aueze St 8. BENSINGER, Auctioneer. RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & CO., AUCTIONEERS. ‘TRUSTEES’ SALE OF A FRAME HOUSE IN LIN- COLN, D.C. By virtue of a deed of trust duly recorded in Liber No. 2145, folio 151 et seq., of the land records for the District of Columbia, and at the request of the party secured, the undersigned trus- tees will sell by public auction, within the sales rooms of Ratcliffe, Sutton & Co., 920 Peun. ave. n.w., on TUESDAY, SEVENTEENTH DAY OF AUGUST, A.D. 4¢97, AT THREE O'CLOCK P.M., the following described real estate, situate in the county of Washington, in the District of Columbia, to wit: Lots nine (y) to sixteen (16), both inclusive, in square one (1), of Lincoln, D. C:, together with el the fmprovements, rights, etc. ‘Terns will be announced at time of sale. and mires, with the easements, rights, wx, nd appurtenances thereunto belonging, situate and ly- ing in the county of Washington, in the District of Columbia, namely: Lot five 6) B, in the subdivision of the tract of land known as “Padsworth,” as per plat recorded in Liber Levy Court Carberry folio 24, of the records of the office of the surveyor of the District of Columbia. ‘Terms of sale: One-third of the purchase money to be paid in cash, and the balance in tow equa: installments, payable in one and two years, with interest at 6 per cent per annum, payable’ semi- annually from day of sale, secured by deed of trust upon the property sold, or ail cash, at the option of the purchaser. A’ deposit of $500 will be required of the purchaser at the time of sale. All conveyancing, recording and notarial fees at the cost of the purchaser. Terms of sale to be complied with within ten days from day of sale. otherwise the trustees reserve the right to resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting pitchaser. lots numbered nine and ten (# and 10) and part of eleven (11), in square nie hundred and ninety-one (91), together with all the impooveweats, rights, &e.; "to be sold in tse parcels. ece as proscribed by the de- erce are: One-third of the purchase money to be paid in cash, the balance m one 1) and two (2) years from date of sale; deferred payments 10 be secured by deed of trust’on the ety sold, and bearing interest at the rate of six (6) per ceut per annum from the day of sale, secursl by deed of trust on the rty wold, or all cash. ot the sption the purchaner, A it of $100 on cach piece req at the time of sale. If the terms of sale are not complied with in 15 days from the day of sale, the trustee reserves the right tw re- sell the property at the risk and cost of the de- faulting purchaser or purchasers, ufter 5 days’ ad- vertisement of such resale, or sales, in some news- paper published in Washington, D. All convey ancing, &c., at t Jos au3-d&ds RATOLIFFE, SUTTON & ©0., AUCTION TWO BRICK HOUSES, NOS. AND 305 FIRST STREET e » 11 ROOMS EACH, WITH ALL MODERN _IMPROVE- MENTS, BY AUCTION. On SATURDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST SEV- worker. sound and Sy20-d&da* RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & CO., AUCTIONEERS. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, TO Pay sTOR- AGE CHARGES, &e. I will sell at the rooms of Ratcliffe, Sutton & Co., Pa. ave. n.w., on SATURDAY, THE SEVENTH DAY OF AUGUST, A. D. 1897, AT TEN O'CLOCK A.M., a lot of household goods stored with me in the name of F. H. Jones. All parties interested jlease take notice. °. WHITEFIELD McKINLAY, ENTH, at HALF PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P.M. an American citizen as trustee for the syn- | teese O'Byrne. The Ceremony was per- CLIFTON A. JOHNSON, dy3i-6t BUGENE MAY. | Thi after for sale, by public auction, tm frost ef dicate. sensed 2 Mee nae ely, and among the | _au5-cotds THOMAS DOWLING & 00., AUCTIONEERS, | the promises, sublote 15 and 16, square @92, front- Phillips says the syndicate represents | Chief guests we ne. O'Kelly, Miles. | —“rHoMAS DOWLING & 00., AUCTIONEDRS, G12 E st. nw. mg t-te GTS qe ee ie Hickey” sndsNe ee Ete See eee See a AUCTION SALE OF VALUABLE BUSINESS | sale. $200 ft on each house at thine of cai . B , , Pittsburg, —— — 3 . soni TA igs and aaa WOOO U A'S | Sie" Oulyenee” and traces the actif back | murnovap.pnoriiery xan covcumas | “PEST aat Tues, tae OU eAGE URE | Spe, tn alae fh HEIGHTS AT AUCTION. On_ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST ELEVENTH, 1897, at HALF-PAST FOUR O'CLOCK P.M., we wili PERTY, NER OF TWENTY-THIRD AND G STREETS NORTH WEST. On TUESDAY, AUGUST TENTH, 1897, aT back. to the union of th; t of the line, an un- Gallicized Paddy, With Mlle. de Saint Gery. This accounts for_th¥' fact that the Cha- col record Sora ‘the Irish origin of It fs also said that-plans for a joss house : Jy30-d&ds a interest at six (6) per centum per annum, payable semi-annually, from day of sale, secured’ by deed of trust upon ‘the property eold, or all: cash, at the option of the purchaser. A deposit of $150 will be required of the purchaser at the time of sale. All conveyancing, recording and notarial fees at the cost of the purchaser. Terms of sale to be complied with within ten days from day of rale, otherwise, the trustees reserve, the right to resell tenis lion on th auction, front FOUR THIRTY O'CLOCK P.M., we will sell at farina Rens Stra avcnane: Srornas are | Dae goCeunre Gerke Wilthe resent osct or Sint dart ot tot 19 in Bomast’ premises, lot | iiie auction, in front of the part of Lee Toy, an intelligent Chinaman, -known | the Compte O’Byrhe, mnaking as nice a na- rt of Elizabeth, and improved by a five-room 3, in square ——_ a —, a seeps as the mayor of Chinatown, who is re- | tional pot-pourri as well be devised. me dwelling, store and stable. stcre’and dwelling, with stable tu th yp PRES ¥ Ported to figure in the transaction, sald Be Pe ee ped oe required ‘at the time of sale, | ne’s px: pila could not exercise ceriain butial rites | AUCTION SALES OF REAL RararE, ao. | Ravi? cutt ette tale at atc: abi | So a Set ie raglan. thei ‘une ul to tl ir rel m, it became kni and recording at purchaser's cost. that they would establish a cemetene ct ‘Today. Sina se Oey THRE ie ye NEE SOR: | OF the Batualting infront of the premines: on SOSDAN NIST aC: their own. C. G. Sloan & Ob, Aveta, 1407 @ st. n.w.— | SPT Us eed at the risk and cost of the FMC” the following, described. real guiate.slinate ————_+e+__. : ~t— Dies: Bridget’s Reception Hours. ibaa tents ange Beene yo atinea & |G G- SLOAN & CO., AUOTS, 1407 G STREET. Yamba "to wit: Lor, Atty sieht G8). in Powel's sub From Tid-Bits. ‘Willson api Edwin F. Buekley, trustees. ON SATURDAY, AUGUST SEVENTH, 1907, aT] aND 20 pe tigi Bridget has a kitchen full of company,| ©. G. Sloan & Co., Aucts, 1407 G st. nw.—| TEN AM. WE WILL SELL, WITHIN OUR AUG] NAYLOR Drgeemenin righte, x. 2 , . TION ROOMS, 1407 G ST.” N.W. ‘Terms: cash, the balance fh one and mistress, (from ‘the hes of the stata ee ee ee rer Coe onan | FOLDING BED, “WALAT two year, with interest from the day of sale at G “Bi rt! : ae ee, “4 y p.m. | AND CHIFFUNIBR cent annum, secured by deed of ih Se Sees Geo. H. B. Whito and Henry M, Baker, trustees. ‘OAK, W. ESS properts col. ot all cant, the caption ofthe Mistress—“It’s 10 o'clock.” Duncanson Bros., Aucts., 9th.and D sts. n.w.— | ROOM PARLOR A deposit of required at the time Bridget—“‘Thank ye, ma'am. And wit | Trustees’ sale of dwelling No. 521 2ist st. n.w., | ROOM AND Jehto fm aiteen Gaye treo the der of cals tie nee ye be so koind ez to tell me whin {t's 122” | 0 Thureday, August 5, at 5 o'clock p.m. Bons, EASY ferve ie ight to at. the risk Ratcliffe, Sutton . Aucts., Pa. ay Esctmemt, oe fo Mary, Queen turned . ‘ashiugton, sure SASSER havg estore. ty caer had —Peremptory sale of dwelling No. 108 7th Sestincien, 'D, Gal a a