Evening Star Newspaper, September 4, 1897, Page 10

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NG STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1897—24 GES, THE EVEN ‘S3T95| CANADA'S LOYALTY VPM OY OE VOWK NON IA TAONO ONG IE IWOWT oh ce) (oh sek se kse X sek se XsekseXs SESE ea Lee )is ENS SESE fc | LAS CA LV i) | Will Last Just ag, Long as She is Let ’ Our Midsummer Clearance Sale = si Will Wind Up Saturday, LER LAURER AD TE AGL : What He Accomplished Was All September ll I. j “by American Methods. = ———-+ + —_ This week will be your last chance to procure furniture at the ~ : aS 5 2 prices that are prevailing. Tine goods we offer you are iast spring’s AU EER ORNS EE EES EE ‘=: styles, and we wish to close them out in orker to make room for : ‘ our new patterns, which are arriving daily. MERTZ and MERTZ, . 2 Tailors, goo F SiN. W. A Prosperous | New Season to You! We greet you thusly with the sincerest hopes that these wishes will materialize We—ourselves—are going to be prosperous. You ask how and why? W. because earnest and honcst past efforts have brought us success and be made enlargements and broadened out on all‘our former methods to mz the new Fall Season the most brilliant and most glorious of our highly satisfactory career as tailors-for-the-masses We've defended Washington's clothing wearers against the general run of high-priced tailoring shops for a long time. It has been a pleasant fight, because we have succeeded, and believe today that ninety-five per cent of the Warr Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. 5 bas LONDON, August 25, 1897. male folks are our friends Schemes have been devised, tricks resorted to and soap s 1 . Dini Chai ‘| Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the premier of Can- bubble talk and quibble given by other dealers to undermine our extensive trade, U hite Enamel Steel Beds, | Parlor Suites, . ining na I's, “¢ | ada, who came to London plain Mr. Lau- but the public’s favor is with us today and will be with us again the coming sea- ? Brass trimmed. | 5 pleces, assorted colors. Hardwood, oe) | Tier, and bears home his ‘itle as a part of son 3 if (| the spoils of his visit, has left a stronger er aes gk x aaa aca ST 3 eee ns Tv $2.75. | $13.50. 35C. °c) | impression here than any other among a You ask why you should enlist yourseli in our immense army of patrons? The ; | hest of distinguished visitors of the summer. answer is—we will save you money—we never resort to methods that are dish morable The premier carries back to Canada other and more material trophies than a title, however, for the cemmercial treaties of Great Britain with Germany 2nd Belgium are in his pocket, or rather the remains of these treaties, which were destroyed for the benefit of Canada, It is from this stroke of work that Sir Wilfrid, who lan@ed ai Liverpool an unknown provincial, and one whose loyalty to the government was dis- trusted because of his French blood, de- parts a recognized factor in ihe politics of or questionable in the slightest degree—we show Washington's biggest and choicest stock of Fall Goods—we give the filling of every order a careful attention that in- 3 sures satisfaction in the fitting and serviceable wearing features—and we never claim ownership to your money until you are periectly satisfied. These straightforward and progressive methods are bound to bring us greater prosperity than ever before Don't you think so? Mertz And Pertz, _ REFRIGERATORS Oak Wardrobes, Solid oak, Double doors. At Cost. $7.50. 69c. - Straw [iatting, Oak Sideboards, Oak Chamber Sets, Wiars alate. fe gliss—big values, Bevel plate mirrors. : 8c. $6.50. $10.00. ) Hall Stands, Oak Parlor Tabies, Hair Mattresses, y YF rae ‘J $4.00. 39c. $5.00. ris bowed away end forgotten. Sir Wilfrid de- 006 F Street N. W. ; (0) | cstininuon or mtensrenteeetep pene LikASR SSAA ASEAREREAAASERRRSEAASEREREEE CE RRR R RRR R SEE eT: _ Baby Carriages, Decorated Dinner Sets, | Oak Arm Rockers, ee Sere eee oe SETPOINT a eatttaata aa tion of a commercial policy which Eng- land left to herself would have debated is wound by Ore ‘ » fac’ h fe tten certo! . . 1 ington, though the fact a neg See ae ODD KINDS OF LEATHER nier, around agree ya there. tl was during hand. Then t $3.00. | $7.50. $1.49. with h if) | cautiously and timidly for years; secondly, | when Mr. Marcy was secretary of state, hide. They are balls,” Ge because he taught the rulers of the em- ane a ai tes in ae oe bounce. QUOTATIONS IN MEDIUM GRADE GOODS. WE HAVE HIGH GRADE GOODS AT CORRESPONDINGLY LOW Prices. (46 Gee anos) ens ailestance St ment deemed it necessary to write a lec-| Skins of Beasts, Birds, Fishes aud Reptiles | nent piace in the leather’ ak WE KEEP se) | these to strengthen his political standing | ture to the United States Instructing us That Reach the T even preferred to French kid EVERYTHING NEEDED TO FURNISH A HOUSE. Wve | at_home. in our duties and rights as neutrals. | 3 at Reach the Tannery, smufacturers, who find it quite cr Mf 7. Cy The chief motive which inspired England | Sir Henry and his staff arrayed themselves PRE nd ble and much cheaper than CASH OR CREDIT. {| to invite the colonial premiers to be her| in official regalia and drove to the State foreign article. Pleskins an se | guests during the jubilee was undisguised- | Department to give the United States its Everything New Discovered in the | “€™2nd, and used lar; y for n ng sad- VC | ly to impress upon them the greatness of | lesson. They found Mr. Marcy in his ea dies. ‘| the British empire and the honor conferred | fice and the minister stated that “he ace Line Quickly Reprodaced by In- The Most Costly Leath )| upon them by the privilege of membership | sired to read a message from his govern- <6 ment. Z xenious Imitation. The most coi “Give it to me and I will read it care- fully myself,” said the Secretary of State. “But I am instructed to read it to yo sted the mirister. Written for The Evening Star. well,” Mr. Marcy acquiesced. So y leather now in the mar- ket is known to the trade as “pi er.” American tanners years » discov- ered the secret of making Russia leather, with Its farly pungent and lastii “It has beet ated all sort se chkies SKB the minister’ straightened himself and 191 6 yoathor muy be cane (hat all sor's | odor, but the secret of making piano leathe his most impressive tones read the 7 z m@ey be tanned, said a deele: ; £t is known only to a family of ers in document, which was a very supereilious | in fine skins ‘and leather in New York to | Thuringia, Germany Fan Bay net but and condescending lecture of a sort which | the writer recently. “Beasts, birds, fishes | one use—the covering of pacar e- + per qT Ar England would call “brutal” and “insult-| and reptilcs ave nowadays brought to the | Culiar thing about itis that th itbaddnesse Onto pa cracle Uy es ccictele (itn yards: where Wiel elds arc caren asa | ee pis <p Sherman. Meantime Mr. Marcy looked out | '@ = ‘kinds of usar.) | ely In America. It ts of the window and drummed on the table |then made up into all kinds of useful | of uct” therein. Sir Wilfrid was sharp enough to turn the tables on his hosts by taking ad- vantage of the opportunity to impress upon them the fact that British North Amer- NOVY ica is a dominion of considerable import- LARNS) LIS) Sk) | ance in her own right; that in the eyes of E Canadians the alliance was rather more no leath- pC) Soe Liberal Furnishers, 7th and I Sts. N.W. = = = | - = 3 in the nature of a partnership than chap- COLORED BAPTISTS] tt, form of a proposition to establish a | clergy of the Roman Catholic archdiocese | eromame, THE COL | national divinity schoo! in this city. This | of Baltimore is being held this week at | “Placed amid circumstances which might meets with the approbation of the denom- | ry's Seminary, Baltimore. give an excuse for dealing in flattery of SS ination genbrally, and as it will be in the | nference was recently held in south- | his hosts or at best for leaving the’ un- at, hands of the colored people entirely it is | arylana by the ministers of the Pro- | pleasant truths unsaid, Mr. Laurier has National Convention of Denominational | expected to command the united support of | testant Episcopal Church who are laboring Steeled his face against these postprandial red almost ex- rticular kind j the race. among the colored people of that section. | temptations, which even Mr. Bayard, with | with fingers, When he had finished | articles. ‘The skin of the ecmmon red or Virginia Workers to Be Held at Boston. Another feature to be brought up for di Rev. Fred. Heisse returned to Wash- | jess excuse, was unable to withstand. | reading Sir Henry sannounced: “And now “Alligator skins have long been a fa- | deer will not make the leather, a Species of cussion will be the establishment of a na- | ington y from the mountains of | Flattery he has ladled out in doses rather | her majesty’s government ventures to €x-| vorite material for the manufacture of | tte 2nimal known as the gray deer, and ——- tional Baptist Church extension board. | western near Williamsport, | heavy even for a man being dined and | press the hope that the United States will found only in the vicin y of the great alcne furnishing the ma- crman tanners have an » Which « ts the r trom the Indians and the half-breed hent see fit to observe these suggestions.” His | belts, pocket books, shippers and satchels. | northerm fuk, voice carried an interrogation point, andj The high price which the genuine article | terial. The UUs # row commanis, from $4 to $y for a sin- | Asency in the gle fair-sized skin, has irduced manu- | S¥ins of this ¢ There fs no such board in existence, such | where he has Leen spending his vacation | feted, but throughout the wallow of plati- and Seminary Removal to Be | work being looked after by the state asso- | of four weeks. tudes he has repeatedly drummed into Brit- clations and individual ehurches, but the | Rev. Sam Small, the evangelist of this | ish ears one unwelcome truth. If the gov- work accomplished by this means comes | city, is delivering lectures at the Allegheny ernment hugs any delusions as to the terms very far from supplying the need for such | Grove camp meeting, the director of which | 6n which she retains Canada as a province We Debated—National Church Ex- M y answered, “how is your good lady tension Board. i va a rs ‘oduce io a ‘s, who sup the an institution. jis the Rev, Dr. M. F. B. Rice, formerly |they are not the fault of the premier. | Mr. Labouchere says the incident was | f cturers to produce imitations. These are | market. When the ais ee Mid The Convention Program. pues of Trinity M. E. Church of this | “Canada is loyal so long as she is. let | closed there. R.M.C. | merely embossed leather. The pecultar | this country as piano leather they cost the cenagat eamag 7 city. . alone,” he has made the keynote of a two —_—_-. —— scaly nature of the real clligator hide ts | piano manu: from $1 to $18 The first day of the convention is to be | Tie Central Union Mission has accepted *« > guar colored Baptists months’ round of after-dinner speeches. | $1.00 Baltimore and Return vin B.| successfully imitated by means of steel | pound. The supply of this inval- guard of ieee a se is devoted to the enrollment of the delegates, | an invitation for a band of their work-| "We are loyal to England because one | * and 0. dies, which leave a dvrable impression de and ne rial is supplied from points south and from this city will | 4 are both ministerial and lay, the sec- | ers to go to Warrentou next week and | gives us liberty,” he/repeated many time For all trains Sunday, September 5.—| UPON the leather that ts so perfect a re- | by the Kutzchman family of tanners, who leave Wa: k to attend th ond day to the election of officers, and the | COMduct a series of mission services there | Until even the preternaturally pachyder- | aavertisement semblance to the genuine alligator skin | have six ¢ shments in Germany, the coler onvention, which | : " ot | extending over a pericd of three days. matous hide of Londen public dinners. was | Spee that only experts can tell the difference. | largest in Thuring The same process is used to imitate other ——-__ Jak dis. fancy skins, so that there is no novel: If You Want to Go Through : that is not imitated within three months ri * nary Precautions Taken (to : = - vator ching | TO Atlantic City without change of cars, of its appearance. The alligator skins | tak nla ft. &. Only abron Insure His Safety. Care irst Gate " st p the American market in ; 4 5 " From the London Telegraph. 1576. : route. sion Saturday and Sunday. Extraordinary supervision “The skin of the porpoise has long been z aie’ >: Six | Sed for making shoes, and is in great de- by the detective department over M. Felix | Deen (or making shoes. and is in great de- remainder of the session to the reading of | Rey. Edward Marshall. Mott, rector of Papers, addresses, discussions and reports | the Church of of the various boards and committees, The «ul train fs to be | executive séssions are to be he! week, and Hall, while the meeting pl ns.the 15th of this 2 and continue in session d pierced with understanding of the veiled G Advent, has returned | threat that Canada’s/loyalty would be end- from the Warm Spriuxs, "Va. Rev. AMr. | ed by any attempt to curtail her liberties. Mott has a number of plans for active goat ae and aggressive work at Church of Prove Her Affection, t of the Washingtonians will patronize | convention will be the Twelft the Advent, among which is the formaticn | It was because of this. declaration that dat sexvésak ave ta taxes Gite Chureh, Rey. J. Anderson Taylor, pa of a chapier of the Brotherhood of St. An- | England hastened to denounce her com- Slane achen shes: convention | f the Shiloh Church of this city, is the first | drei raaresal atreadiean witil!Germery. ace inci From present indications the convention | vice president of the convention, and among | The exterior of St. Michael's and All An- : OPAEHin Sanaa ectice ee ntoneae Will be the largest and most successful of | others of the pastors of local churches who | gels’ Church hi sium. Is" deep) affect! ich é HOW PRESIDENT ‘FAURE TRAY Extraord MONKEYS IN PENNSYLVANIA. Ss been considerably im- Faure during his progress through the | proot properties. It resembles @ goat aking |< — the ion ever hell. Judging from | are members of the various boards are the | proved by the placing of an iron railing | mother country professes for her colonies southern provinces. Whenever he sits |The skin of the seal has also been made Nambers of the Simtans Running the made at headquarters, and | following: Educational board, Revs. Wal-| around the church. is real let her prove;it by doing something | gown to an official lunch or dinner ten de- | itito leather for shoe uppers, and sells for Wild Near Philadelphia. - ; ter H. Brooks, George W. Lee, W. Bishop | Rev. Dr. A. J. Huntingto z aa oe ee has been | practical,” Sir Wilfred: said in. effect 4 - ill- | spending © summer at the arm Springs, | «., ‘a 2 a e sixteen and eighteen hun- | banks, It. Champ and J. A. Taylor. Revs. | Va. Rae DN ra in attendance. The District | Lec and Johnson are both down on the Herbert Scott Smith, minister in | not refuse to take the steps necessary to 1 probably send the largest | program for addresses. of the Church of the Good Shep- | carry it into. effect. trom other sources of information, there | Jonason, W. A; Credit AL will be between delega of Columbia w him | about $40 a dozen skin: From the Philadelphia Record. nse Trade in Kangaroo Skins. A number of monkeys have tectives from are eating m behind 2 curtain, ail taking care that no | Tm recently heen unauthorized person approaches him. Karoo skins have been on the mar- ; Seen running at large in the marshes along Long before the president left for the south | ket for about ten years. There are some | the Delawa and Schuylkill rivers, in the oan op bsigs Bhs and ered oe The Women Workers. Hen has Ee tuenetly ator the White Sul- | ‘The situation which the Canadian leader police of the places to be visited were put | 8,000 kangaroo skins received in New York inity of Girard Point and Point Bre : edna eee e wo § national Bapti i Phur Springs, and in addition to looking | faced was a humorous one to an outside e alert by m the every month. They are tanned in «ne | with the result that not only has the no’ committee The wemen’s national Baptist convention after his own chapel is in charge of the | Ho hat cecarel the Stee CA UE a tack on the alert by offici: fro y ey 3 ent. About | and the Baptis Young People’s ¥ of the loc ors are to go, be- | both colored, are to hold their si sides many of the laymen. Boston at the sa a > oO he er F: e 1c ee from the fact that the pro. Santaae vehi inion, | parochial affair ons in | minister in cha the larger con- | liker, being now at M. and whea M, Faur rted he companied by M. Henion, chief tendent of the presidential resideaces ofhicial’s orders are three o: hment in New: . N. J., and | circumstance gre y excited the residents are then made into fine shoes. They come | of the nelghborhood, many of the younger | from Australia and New Zealand. Up to ng taken to monkey-hunting, but four | 1809 the y Chapel, the | which gave England great advantages over A.M. Hil-| her Eurovean compeditors, and England er, bel 2 i seemed likely to maké him ridiculous by of course, most of the time | The Colored Baptist Ministerial Union | declining to accept the favor for fear she > tim lings A a der t : ; ‘angaroo wi killed and eaten 7 treasury ts started et cony nm are always of interest, it Bader asien ;_ | Will meet Monday morning the Verment | might offend her special rival and enem detectives, r to be ordina’ in Austra and only certain parts of their tigation discover suse of i pected its look- | Of the delegates will be taken up with busi- | Avenue Baptist Church, “Phe pastor of the | Germany. The government began to quib- duty it is hides were cut up into shoestrings. But of the ‘ very care: ar he local colored | ness, still the committee of Boston Bap- | Vermont Avenue Chu imposes a are on foot of | tists has arranged for trips to the statue ! Le Rev. George W. | ble and ponder over the probal from a thrce we the persons who appr: tions ia order to mak ities of Englishman named Brown in that year ks’ | making trouble if the treaty was dencun arif . has just returne J © scovered the remarkable character of on all such anim sterest to this city of ¢ s Attu a negro, the first to | trip to North Carolina, where he has heen | ed and to discuss the minutiae of diplomat- } sent flowers. the leather and brought several thousand Is are of the opin- \ Large Constituency. — ble Yeni bec ree war, and oftbs te the work of his denomination in | ie etiquette. At th: stage Sir Wilfred Preceding the president dey eoulbe: abe skins on speculetion to this country. jon that the monkeys esenped from small o Bun, ill and other places. that section. ee e wa ice official, M. Gerdeau, who hz 2 “He tried to. se des various | boats as they were being landed surrepti- convention has a constituency of Washington end of the convention is = protested that the way to denounce a| police official, M. le tried io sell the hides to variou 3 y is fed surrep n The pastors of the local Lutheran chureh- | treaty was to denounce it. He summoned TSE en en: | aiilisting. with the icéherai: synce isc | & Mareupport Wie “aulest Camiier matick or fuurteen men with him. Th lives mi vith the pe tanners, million, five hundred thousand y were shy of the noveli night aad he had to seil th : 7 " 3 € nat a sacriiice to a t month of ves- ‘t communicants, represented by thir- | posed of the Revs. George W. Lee, Walter | appointed repres of their church | Sir Louis Davies, the Canadian sta‘ through which the + bookbinder. The la made triangy at both tand ousand churches, twelve thousand | H- Brooks, W hop Johnson and J-"An-} on the committee which ‘slo iake charge | man, who was principally instrumenta! in| to conversations in and are sup- | corner pieces for ledgers and comme ; n the Philippine Islands ters and one hundred thousand Sun- derson Taylor. of the matter of making zements for | Securing the Halifax award, and the two] posed to have their ea es weil open | beoks out of them, and ascertain. . bringing not only nkeys @ ¢ -acliadin, IU iwastiiccan teceae = the entertainment of the Ma nod, | Set siege to the foreign office and stormed pater Sete renee OF ie N THE CHURCHES |¥tich is to meet at the e | the gloomy bastile with a vigor and enter- by the co-operation of three dif- Reformation in this city in tne early part | prise refreshingly American. ‘The sensation branc of Baptist work, and it of October. Messrs. Cornelius Eckhardt | with which the news that the German and ists of three branches—forei and A. V. Wagner have been appointed | Belgian governments had been notified irissions, home missions and educatio f ssien 3 members of the committee for St. Mark’s | that the treaties were to be canceled was work. Each district branch has its own The pastor of Zion's Baptist Church, Rev. | and the Church of the Reformation, re- | received is comparable only to that which re and beard of management, but all | William J. Howard, is making preparations | spectivel would be caused if the people of the United srou; under one pr nt tn the con- | for an extensive celebration of the thirty-| Rev. Richard P. Williams, rector of Trin- | States were to wake up to find that Con- while on duty few are told oif a: al watcher: president, and do not try to conc identic archists may know t the hi good qualities of the leather. It was in but laree coth this way that several large leather factories | other rare birds. In every were first attracted to the valuable prop- s of the v were noti erties of kangaroo hide. The skin is found ival that both the monk: tenacious, and the compactn dutiable, and that per: officers not sele of the grain preveats its absorbing wate: uld be adopt various disgui while the acids in blacking meet with they could be brovght ashor wear blouses and look like peasants or | almost impervious substance. of the monkeys have been seen workmen in a crowd. One agent who pn fica aie eee daring the pr week. ‘They hid- ion s and binds its from the sary before Th ion we Set : ation of the | !¥ Protestant Episcopal Church, will take | gress had made a new tariff over night] knows English is said to be fond of giving | ing in the ms spposite Girard Point, ee ee on Gor ses or coe ounce tion! Oe thes anv aeation (att severslsweekenintee ee eel Urata es Nine-tenths | himself the air of a sham “milo.” He | “The skin of the rattlesnake is now | si appeared te he Wonk ioe “ at Louisvil'e, Ky., with the | church. The Rev. F, D. Power, LL. D., pastor of | of them are dependent directly or indirectly y E. B. Ba: of the Ninth Street |the Vermont Avenue Christian Church, is | on foreign trade, and the importance of the at Little Church returned Tuesday from|to preach his twenty-second anniversary | stroke to them can be measured by the oy renin » Chri: ie congregation of the Liberty Ba 2 ee ‘ath Yas breached at the Christian Churehiat | Ghuven isth Gtomy oad ery Baptist | Syear, under a tariff 25 per cent less thon retary Mich., ard before he left received | js looking for a pastor, and expects to have | their competitors must pay, a margin quite goes about in a ones ans Aah eee used chiefly for making pocket books and | «exposure during the pent Te morocco slippe thus affecting the c' oF = 3 e ‘ arane j Officer Rogers of t British steamship generally attributed by minor pla Bes aoe see sites Petty lennon, | Whitefield, which is loading. at Girard and comic artists to the average I Fe ee eee eatneS | Point ‘caught @ lange ene, weich hall man. This man is foolishly supposed to be expensive. There is an imita- | dently come from Java, and proposes tak- the usual Joha Bull, who wants to sce | tion skin made of. embossed sheepskin. | ing it with him ax a pet. everything that is going on, and he gener- retary in| R that of the edu yashington, D. C., : shop Johnson, D.D., charge. Rev. Dr. Johr i The skin of the monkey is also ianacd | It is a common practice among sailors eer nal stor of | a call to the pastorate of the church. Mr.| one by the Ist of October sufficient to give them the entire market. | afly succeeds in imposing ‘on pis Jelow | aud used for making pocket books. Bear | to have monkeys and parrots as pets, and in the soutle ihe Sees cn at (nas | Bagby has declined the call, feeling that| A large excursion of colored Baptists of Laurier’s Awkward Position. countrymen. It is not reported that this’! skins have long been uscd with the hair | One of the theories of those famitlar ‘with : z i : the District and vicinity, composed main 3 wi r e = z nity, osed of | t would uot be) wise) to) leave) here) while | joo yan aud vic n's’ Church, went iy | ‘There is no doubt that Mr. Laurier was a Richmond last Saturday and’ returned | Politician in distress when he came to ety: but finds time te give a good d ateution to the work of the denomination | his congregation is building a new church. rally person is on duty in the southeastern prov- inces, but he has been frequently seen in the wake of M. Felix Faure at Havre and on for caps, gloves and coats, and the hides | the citcumstances is that the animals es- are also used for leather. caped from their owners and wandered off, ‘ “Horses’ hides are svecessfully ts or that the lors, becoming tired of the he foreign mination board supports eleven Through the generesity of Mr. William | Tuesday. These excursions are gotten up| England. Things had gone very badly | other places. and put upon the market “atenbara | bother and enpense of keeping the pets, nissionaries in Africa and ae parce ie, F. Downey, a new organ has replaced the r ly by the church for the purpose of | with his administration. His party had Rp ee gis er oe article of leather. There are two factories | had released them and turned them loose ubie mount of church property and a num. | 0!-fashioned melodeon which stood so long | &!Ving the local colored Baptists a chance been elected to office on a platform pledg- A WIFE THE PRIZE. in Philadel! that use up in a season | into the marshes. of mission . to hear their f sion schools in that country. in the rotunda of the jail. Rev Wo d. Wright of the THegnmond. | ing it to secure closer trade relations with chnuet RE Cana ties he ee After an Interval of some months, work | tan Church closed a serice of ernnecinis | the United States. Unfortunately for him, is responsible for the pabl ioe aE on the new house of worship of the North | meetings this week at the Snow Hill, Wor- | he came into power as the Dingicy bill was hoo! literature, and in January of | C@folina Avenue Methodist Protestant Shick nggunty, Md., Christian Church, | about to be framed, and his ministers who its fi pt, at Nash- | Church 4s to begin again and it is expected | “pen W2'¢,been very successful. went to Washington to negotiate a reci- thew turned out | that tt a ev. E. D. Bailey, president of the board procity treaty last spring had _ noth- school lit- | home by Chemo” Will be in their new | of trustees of the Central Union Mission, | ing to propose but that the manufactures ton ehoats, | y Christmas. : has been elected to and has accepted the] of the United States be admitted to Can, Itoord in ada tion to'colleer: | , There was a meeting last evening ef the ofice (of president of the National Gospel | ada free in return for a free market tor al Gata, publishes the National | 2¢ti¥€ members of the Young Men's Chris- | Mission Union. Canadian farm produce, a proposition Magazine, whi vas established jn | U@", Association at the building on New As an auxiliary to the work of the So- which Mr. Dingley would not listen to. On one hundred horse hid: S a week to cover ‘The customs officials have recently seized Mixsourl Man Starts Round the | base balls. They are alum-tanned. One | S€Veral lots of these animals, which were World on Novel Conditions. hide will furnish covers for ten dozen No. | being smuggled into the country, and they 2 he Chicago Chronic Is and from five to six dozen inferior | arc determined, if possible, to find ox ee ene Horses’ hides for this and other pur- | the foreign wanderers get into the F. Allen McQuary ts in St. Louls-on 4 | Doses sell from $2.50 tO $1, necectine ty | delphia marches journey round the world to win a wife and | size. Kips are also used. They sell at 12 -— $5,000 on the side. He wears purple plush, | cents a foot, and sheepskins from $3.50 to | “Want” ads a helmet and a sword of ancient style and | $8 2 dozen. A piece of rubber forms the | they bring ans rides a charger. He is accompanied by —soo——______ in The Star pay because ers. : two large dogs, and is a veritable knight. Ge i - 7 ee te chy be ma eto | ments te ‘Bie constitution eet mM | Cane SEL Vincent de Paul an’ orguniaa-| receiving this febutt the Taurler admin: | fe started around the world May 2) trem | GO QOOOSS SOSS SSS SSCSS OSSSISS n. D.D., of this city Is managing | ents to the constitution. tion, entitled the League of the Good Sa-| tration proceeded to turn its coat with one Mountain Grove, Mo. He earned enough | @ ; 8 It ds the official organ of ail colored | .,7h¢, Christian - Brothers of this section | Maritan, 1s now being formed, mainly | of the most rapid political shuffles on rec- | Mountain Le bi in the United States Fecently “at ier g members of thelr order | {hrough the efforts of Rev. John Glovd of | ord. It shifted. its" platform. tor clone ec. | money in a newspaper office (o purchase @ Interest to Washington, recently at the Ammendale Normal In- | St. Patrick's Church and Mr. William ¥F. | lations with the mother country, and the | his outfit, and began the long and ted!ous stitute. ; Downey of St. Matthew's Church. . party which had been voted into author- © of the questions of importance to A forty hours’ devotion is to commence Rev. James Burgdorf of Michigan has| ity because of its partiality toward the etl ; io, | 8 Holy Trinity Catholic Church taken membership in the V pene [eu ‘ be se . a cone: rch tomorrow p in the Vermont Aven tes, so strong that its ei : SR Siee tua : oe convention | with a solemn high mass, and close om the Christian Church. = was accused bby. Canadian tories of har- he plant at Nashville | following Tuesda The annual meeting of the Christian Mis-| toring a scheme for annexation, became jcurney. He must secure the signature of the postmaster in every town he visits, the governor of every state he passes | through and the ruler of every country he $1.00 $1.00 B. & O. BALTIMOR ® removed to this city and be con- | The choir of Trinity Protestant Episco- | #lonary convention of Maryland, Delaware | the party of friendship for England. enters. This must’ all be accomplished Bo with the magazine plant. By | Pal Church ts to recommence its work to- | #nd the District of Columbia is to be held It speaks volumes for’the political pow-| within eighteen months, and he must re- rome it is contended that the whcle busi- | Morrow uhder the direction of Mr. D. W. | October 12 to 14, inclusive, at Hagerstown, | ers of Mr. Laurier that°he has been able turn to Mountain Grove within that time. ‘This young man fell in love with a pretty Aykansas maid, and her father compelled him to sign the above agreement. The prospective father-in-law also furnished two large dogs. If the young man returns with both he is to receive the girl and $5,000. If one dog is missing, $4,000; if beth are gone, $3,000. But if he circles the giobe he will get his sweetheart at any iV be atine could ei Middleton. Director Middleton has de. | Md. ‘The president of the contemtna ns | or swap horses whilé crossing a stream, as J many of the delegates sr he | Cided to eliminate boys from the choir and | the Rev. Dr. F. D. Power, who has served | Mr. Lincoln said, and “still maintain ‘his Rh weneise vases at ms rom th in future those who wear the vestments | in the same position twenty consecutive | prestige. He has measured the capacity of case, it & Will be men and women. years, and the secretary is Mr. J. G.| the dull, straightforwatd, English for be- Poe ate newing officers of the Young | Thompson, a member of the Vermont | Ing tooled muck as Disracll diy the realized, ot >Leovle’s Society of Christian Endeavor of | Avenue Church. ‘There is a parallel ‘between the methods the bringing of the pablication | (2¢, Mount Pleasant Congregational Church | _,ReY- Dr. C. B. Ramsdell of the North by which the latterclever statesman and city. will afford work fart | Were elected at the annual business mect.| Presbyterian Church. resumen charge of | the shrewd French €anadi.n, beth aliens, colored perso1 gh tagtg |B of the society: President, Miss Kate | MS Services last Sunday, lieve played upon *the British for their meaae an Taare ¢ | Ronsaville; vice prestdent, Mr.’ D. M. Bald.| The national Christian convention fs to/ own advancement. For Mr. Leurier ts evi- SO@SCO0S eight months of | wi; rate. He will also visit Cuba, and must “Ss earned more than Je cording secretary, John B. Sleman, | meet the middle of next month: at Indian- | Gently of an aliensTacé! His speech is} secure the signatures of Generals Gomez ars of surplus. Heretofore | J! treasurer, Miss Lena Davis, and corres, | &Polls, and Washington is to be represented | tinged with a marked: Prench accent, and | and Weyler. From this place his route pists have been purchasing | P7RdM Secretary. Miss M. Louise Sleman. | by the Revs. F. D. Power and Eb. Bagby. | !t was a decidedly unique episode to hear | has not been determined upon, but he is from the American Baptine Rev. M. Ross Fishburn, pastor of the Mt. Rev. E. D. Huntley, pastor of Trinity M. | this Frenchman lecturing the leaders of | firm in his determination to win the money = lety (whitey, and aceord- | fy peaht Congregational Church, and tam- | 5. Church, who has been spending a tars | England upon the management of the em- and a wife. : stablishiment of a! plant of th Peake gone to the country for a part of | Weeks’ vacation at Ocean Groves will oe | pire. Mr. Laurier is more French thet Eng-| Thus far Mr. McQuary has been very inarks ishm their vacation. During Mr Fhenbenee eupy the pulpit Sunday. At 11 0° lish; he is more American than eit W er; . Fishburn’ ye 1 o'el ; either, and a for them. sence the pulpit of the church is te De eae he will make an address at the Soeenates his friends do not deny, nor does he, that i Seminary Issue. plied by the Rev. J. H. Jenkins of Falls | Service and at 7:30 p.m. will presen on | he would prefer to gave carried out his The Wayland Seminary maiter is io come | Church, Va. “Te, Fetsonality and Power of the Devil." | first proposed alliqnte jwith. the United fox’ diseusaloisy, sid as" eseen < A recent plenic of St. Jerome's Catholic The Epworth League of Twelfth Street | States than the second makeshift one with the city of Wacnne esate | Church netted the parish nearly $500. Hey | Church will again fesurse its services in| Epgland. Many Americaas who have met enting the city of Washington is in | Fether Tower, pastor nt ant church, has |the church. For two months this chapter | him are convinced that he is at heart na successful. He has. many signatures and kas visited many towns. He believes that he will be able to encompass the earth within the specified time, and that he will make enough money to support Mrs. Mc- Quary when he gets her. Wayks eeonceoac 45-Minute Trains. He is relying entirely upon his nerve and possession of the facts of the case, it is ] "turned from a pleasant visit_io his old | has been conducting open-air meetings at | 2nexaticnist. However that may be, no| the good will and generosity of the people expe ! that the debate on this question | home 1m Springfield, Mase. Duri bis | the corner of 13th and Pennsylvania avenue | ON€ questions that he 1s a most resourceful | he meets. He started absolutely penniless Wal be interesting, if not exciting. Though | 4)"ence the parish was in charge of Father | S0Utheast. During that period it ts cette | Politician. and with nothing but his clothing to sup- mint 08 the colscedi parted eit McKenny of St. Charles College, ott | mated that about nine hundred persons at- Related by “Labby.» port him. He is not lonesome, because he eaters Cel rs, and | City, Md. tended these services. has his dogs for comfort, and though tired % moval of Wayland freaa’ woes the | Rev. A. Thomas G. Apple ts to resume | The meeting tomorrow evening will he- Henry Labouchere, the brillant editor] ard worn at times, he Plucks up courage still it is realized that the Temigeabanaee ne aS Me aes taniarrow of the = 2 Sele aces for the even- | of Truth, and the thorn in the side of} when the vision of a happy nome, and a ~ oot 5 » | Grace Reformed Chure! e ce [ing w! “Benet ve ce fe e z bp ruomination, | of = month. eee et nL at Rarvieae eeeTe “De conducted iy | Pushful Joe” Chamberlain, tells a good | sweet eae er a r. . Howard, D.D.. a The St nday school teachers’ class of the | Miss M. E. Garrett. Story of American diplomacy, apropos of ae Cee aa ee Young Men's Christian ‘Association kas eee the pending negotiations in -Rurope over on the er, visited Richmond this we been discontinued until thi st Sunda ee ag c 1c iH é first unday in A Proper Qualification. Cuba. ‘Labby” when a young man was and tes that the Baptists there have | October ixed $25,000 to further the work, and Rev. Dr. Isaac Clark, who has occupied | From Life, felig csascdacerrenetoamt seo Congregational At they are working earnestly to raise | the pulpit. of the Piree fe ey, 80 that the trustees of Way- | Church since Dr. Newman left on nis va- |, TheY Sa¥ that President Kruger of the pnd may be in possession of it as soon as | cation in June, completed his engagement | South African Republic can scarcely write _ Divorce Granted. Judge Cox yeSterday granted Georgie Douglas a divorce from Henry J. Douglas. The parties were married here April 12, 1882, ard Mrs. Douglas charged her hus- bard with being an habitual drunkard and SEPTEMBER. 5. FOR NERVOUS HEADACHE GGO8 6006000000 8000s CeOeDef 0 HS: 4 s Use Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. . Sir ‘he fact § ecighiade titan tint _— a Se Aenean is to retura | his own name.” Dr. F. A. Roberts, Waterville, Mo. cats sass with deserting her in May, 1887. ; piers Bi ie recognize arily | and occupy his pulpit the last Sund “ ‘ sos He Bg Maberte,- Wateeville, Ste, : RasidBies Be easotin anything can be done to stop the removal, | September. Lite ey th ‘What a pity he isn’t an American citi- great ‘ous discases—nerv. tis e seS-2t "Esl ous headache, nervous If you want anything, try an ad. in The pected that the discussion will take | The annual retreat for the parochial | 2f sinter emake Such @ good Secretary | tina. pring” sreat hat daze! Gvapepela, neuraigia, and thorougtiy see we ae | i get an answers) "nat YOU, wish, SOSSSSCE OO OS ESOSSS SOC OSES Seeceoeceence

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