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- THE EVENING ‘STAR, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1900-16 PAGES. FATAL ECONOMY. Y, A Bi VERY old maxim declares that it isn’t econ- omy to pick up pins; the time is worth more than the pins. Similarly it is not true econ- omy to do without Ivory Soap; your health requires the daily removal of the bodily excretions which are discharged through the pores of the skin. These tiny mouths must kept open, and they should be opened only with a pure soap. IVORY SOAP—99*%%. PER CENT. PURE. COPYRIGHT 1999 BYTHE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATE ——- ——— Ss a ae ae a ee se a eeeneredtentnenentnnoee " orniptntotte monthly—will be a great plenty for us. It’s time you had the Refrigerator and the Mattings. You can get these things here and feel safe, with our guarantee, that qualities are RIGHT. Our Lwohetetttete waste to pay for—because patterns here to select from. Between H OO OM AMAL ESA AEM ee Sa a te a se ae se a Be a ae a a POTS TSS Tea 4 Cooking ; , Lectures 5 q Continued. | oe emer anil 0:30 4s. Lectures daily at 10:30 q e* have F a Such a | 4s: en ‘ t: fon tuner : have been itv ; epportunity for selection 4 efor ey ning su! r, q st makes are represent r | & Rosa, it { 3 | B. Shedd & Bro. Me W. S. Jenks. A. El iy & CA. Muddiman& Co.) : ¥. Brocks 4 spe72sa cet No Foul Creosote OWL.” It's a pow- ; taut and deodoriz Oil, plumbing free of Typhoid Fever 10c. quart Zeid Cet E7SUPPLIES FOR BUILDERS. E. B. WARREN & C@., ANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALERS, 27th and H sts. o.w. "Phore 2256. £ Instant Death to Moth EU RN THOMPSON INSECT POW DE «fwherever you Thompson's | Ctothes. Blankets ete your and € « Insect Entertainment and Instruction. The Halls of the Ancients, ISIZ-14.1618 New York Ave. 9AM. TO 6 PM. OF NATIONAL GALLERIES. lustrate Egyptian, Assyrian, Roman and Sara- eenic Art, Architecture, Manner Admission. The Lecture and Assyrian Halls or the entire eight Halls will be available to ilterary or bis. torical clubs for evening lectures, receptions, ete. de2 6m,30 Comfort. Put Into one of those 4. burner Gas Rauges means comfort in the kitchen this sammer. Economical, quick, safe and thorough. s SHEDD ;§, 432 9th St. Sipser ‘Tinning, mytd jeating, Gas Pixtures. GROGAN’S cra Rouse, 817-819-821-823 7th Street N. W. —e Your Own Way About the Payments. No credit house in this or any other city has ever taken greater care in the arranging of payments for its patrons. We exert every possible effort to mak and to make your payments so small that you will never miss the money. The small amount you can easily spare—weekly or you feel welcome here— | CREDIT | prices are marked in plain figures—as proof that they are low- est. We tack all matting down iree of cost—and you have no rou are charged only with the ac- tual number of yards necessary to cover vour floor. need a Baby Carriage or Go-Cart—you will find a hundred Beautiful Carriages at $10 and $12. If you Oo a a a a a a a a a a a a a a ao a a oo Mammoth Soe and I sts. 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Drop a line to DISTRICT CONCRETE CO. 1905 4th st. nw. a ip24-26t- For the Kidneys and Liver Use BLACKISTONE WATER —unfailing as a diuretic and mild laxative. 5 gals., $1.00—12 %4-gal. bots., $1.50. N. W. BURCHELL, 1325 F St. EASTER IN ENGLAND The Many Quaint Old Customs That Mark the Day. LEARNING THE LESSONS OF THE WAR A Comparison of the Beauties of Paris and Vienna. AN AUTOMOBILE EXHIBIT ——— oe Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. LONDON, April 17, 1900. Easter has been observed very heartily in England this year. Christmas was terri- bly saddened by the deaths in South Africa that left gaps in so many households; but Easter, more than Christmas, partakes of the character of a purely religious festival, and has not so many memories as Christ- mas. The weather has been delightful, though cold for the season, and crowds have left London to enjoy the holidays at the various seaside places. London has generally suspended business from last Thursday until today (Tuesday) or in some cases until Wednesday. All work is at a standstill and London is at play. Many quaint customs are observed at this time. For several hundred years ancient and needy widows, selected by the vicar of a certain city parish, pick new sixpences from the gravestones of the originator of this singular custom. At another church bags of raisins, an orange and a sixpence are given to fifty poor children. This practice has been going on, too, for unknown years. At Westminster School the boys scramble for pancakes in the great hall, and on Maundy Thursday the queen’s gifts of pieces of newly minted silver of the value, respectively, of one, two, three and four- pence are given to sixty poor men and women in Westminster Abbey. Dozens of these ancient customs are observed all over England. Easter Sunday and Monday are feast days of special interest to the young folk in the northern counties, notably in Cumberland, Westmoreland and Northum- berland. Sunday was “Pasche Egg day,” but the celebrations of the day are generally left over till the next day, when few chil- dren are to be found who have not received presents of eggs and oranges, the former hard-boiled and dyed in divers colors, many bearing the child’s Christian name. The market in eggs at Carlis'e on Saturday was enormous. Pasche Egg day is one of the prettiest festivities in the north, for it is a characteristic that upon that day every child must appear in new clothing, and luck! is the wean which has nothing new to disport. It is a practice widely fol- lowed for children to visit their friends, from whom they receive presents of Pasche eggs and oranges, and in many cases a penny. At numerous Sunday schools or- anges are given away on this day, and in some villages the custom has been adopted by the innkeeper, who makes liberal pres- ents upon the same lines to the children of the locality. “Kid, Mid and Miseray. Carlin, palm and Pasche Egg day.’* Qu t Easter Customs, This is the familiar rhyme which guides children through Lent to the final festival. ster Sunday has its old customs among lults as well as among youngsters. It is the day for “mulled ale.” At most inns in the country this spicy beverage is to be ned on the asking in celebration of Innkeepers, indeed, have much to eping up of the old customs, r fh they are kept busy riin Sun which happened : fortnight before. Frequenters of the vari- asion are treated to a which, with butter, ketch- pepper and other concomitants spicy that persons have been known to journey Specially from one inn to another and outdo themselves with the ous inns on this ac dish of * rum, arlins,” town, appointed on the ay following furnish evidence of a le ant character of the customs, for the pavemenis and gutters are thick with the hard dried peas, which the youth of the town seem privileged to throw at their acquaintances as they met them the preceding evening. The origin of the cus- tom is left in doubt. It is said to pertain to Carlisle, and also to ng told of each, namely, that s having undergone a siege them famished, were grateful for a cargo of carlins, which was the first food to reach them, and which was brought by ship up the Eden In one case, and up the Tyne in the ot Lesxons of the War. There is little that is new with regard to the war. Lord Roberts is preparing as fast as reinforcements and remounts can reach him for some great blow, but no one knows what the coming movement will be, nor in which direction. Winston Churchill, in a telegram rday from Bloemfontein, rather throws cold water on the present faction of the English people with the ays that 250,000 soldiers will needed to finish the war, and the sooner the public realizes this the better. The Beers, he says, intend to fight to the bitter end, and will glve a large army plenty to do. Many lessons of the war are being taken to heart now. Special instructions just issued regarding the training of the Reserve Battalions and the militia ent tes imony that the lessons are actually making tem, the wonderful tem that has not been altered since the Only the best of British officers been able to rise ings of thi $ uperior to the teach- drill book and to recognize the changes caused by the introduction of mod- ern arms. In these instructions Sir Evelyn Wood is emphatic in pointing out that in the battalion drill only such operations are to be attempted as will enable the men to be moved promptly and without confusion trom point to another, while special attention be paid to movements in extended or- r, and the advantages of additional care In advancing are to be impressed on the men. In the training of the militia much latitude is to be allowed to company offi- cers in formulating and carrying out their own schemes of instruction, and of- ficers and non-commissioncd officers are ‘o be encouraged to act on their own initia tive and to accept responsibility. Taking cover is to be encouraged, and when blank cartridges are used an officer in front of the men and an officer in their rear are to see that they take advantage of the irregu- Jarities of the ground and to judge of their method of doing so. All this is exactly as it should be. The pity of it is that it has been left to the dearly bought experience of war to teach the milltary authorities the necessity of inculeating these precepts. ris Versus Vienna. Many people compare Vienna with Paris and there is perhaps a suggestion of the newer Paris along the Ringstrasse, or the new part of Vienna. Here are the impos- ing parliament buildings, the Opera House, the Hofburg Theater and the Town Hall, reminding one somewhat of the Hotel de Ville at Brussels. But no place can, to my mind, present the numerous fine vistas that Paris does. The view from the arch in the Place du Carrousel at the Louvre through the gardens of the Tuilleries across the Place de la Concorde and up the beautiful Champs Elysees to the Arc de Triomphe 1s, I think, the finest thing in the way of city vistas that the capitals of the world can offer. I know of nothing to compare with it anywhere. The magnificent view up broad Pennsylvania avenue with the Capitol in the distance comes the nearest to it. Of course the national Capitol is a far grander structure than the Arc de Tri- omphe and crowns the hill in Washington in St imposing fashion. The two are not comparable in themselves, but I am think- ing of the general scene, which has the same aspect in both cities. Vienna has nothing of this sort, but presents a grace- ful and dignified appearance. An Incom- parable river, the beautiful Danube en- circles it and gives the city life and light. The glimpses of the orient obtained from Vienna make it one of the most attractive of western. cities. The framework of the mountains surrounding the city is also vary fine and there is scarcely a more brilliapt sight than a sunset scene from the Joseph- dorf Castle an the Kahlenberg. Vienna 1s bar excellence the city of cafe life. Every Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, SYRUP OF FIGS, man- ufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP ©O., illustrate the value of obtaining the Mquid lax- ative principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the sys- tem. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly, and en- abling one to overcome habitual constipation per- manently. Its perfect freedom from every objec- tlonable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. Jn the process of manufacturing figs are used, a8 they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, Please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N. ¥. For sale by all Druggists.—Price, 50c. per bottle. fe20-tu,th,s,1y384 Viennese has his hours for being at cer- tain cafes. It is a part of his daily life and he uses these public places far more than the Parisian or the Berliner, and fine cazes there are there, too. Life {s taken easily in the Austrian capital. Many shops and all banks and offices close for two hours at noon while the midday meal is eaten. I had forgotten that lunch in Austria was as formidable as dinner in London and New York, and when a Viennese friend invited me to lunch at his house I went gladly and in a light-hearted way made an appoint- ment for 5 o'clock in the afternoon, never dreaming that I was not likely to keep it. My friend called for me at the hotel and we drove for over half an hour until we reached the suburbs of Dobling on the out- skirts of the city. From the windows of the house, which was built in the time of Maria Theresa, the high hills of the Kah- lenberg and Tafelberg seemed but a few miles away and the air was delicious. Presently we sat down to the hospitable table and it was two hours before the de- lightful meal was finished. Most courteous and kind, my hosts had arranged every- thing for my entertainment in true Vien- nese style and I must do justice to their hospitality. The time passed rapidly, but it was long after five when I reached the city again. I asked my friend, who ts an editor on one of the chief Vienna papers, how he managed his work, being so far from his office and dependent upon cabs or the slow-going funny little tramcars for conveyance to and fro, as he told me he made the Journey four times a day, always going home to lunch! Nearly four hours a day used in this fashion! The lunch” would not thrive In Vienna. * A Feature of Viennese Life. Some English and American friends gave an amusing account of the difficulties en- countered with the concierge or portier, as he is called there. It seems that the Vienna specimen is a sort of glorified New York flat janitor and Paris concierge in one. He is an autocrat who uses his power despot- ieally unless he fs frequently insulted in the “Pooh Bah” manner. In the first place the Jaw upholds him, and as Vienna is an early to bed town, the portier is allowed to close the doors of your apartment house at 10 o'clock, and if you want to get in later you must pay him ten kreutzers (four cents) for the privilege. The newspaper correspon- dents especially feel this imposition, as they frequently receive telegrams after 10, and are obliged to go out to attend to them. You see, it Is ten kreutzers for the telegraph messenger to go in, and the same for him to go out after his messages have been deliv- ered; ten for the correspondent to go out and ten to go back. So one call of this kind costs forty kreutzers, or sixteen cents. Re- peat this once or twice a night with two or three nights a week, and it amounts to a re- spectable weekly sum. The portier also must receive a decent pourboire every few days, or your letters go astray or your friends are told that you are not at home when they call; your goods are not deliv- ered, and, worst of all, you find your credit diminish and your character js aspersed, unless the friend at the door is appeased. The trades people go to him to find if you pay your bills, new acquaintances who have invited you to dinner send their servants to him to find out how you live at home, in order to know how to treat you, and a nod from Janus is all powerful. It is marvelous that people stand it, but custom has sanc- tioned his office. It {s not quite as bad as this in Berlin, though one night when I went out to dine a door porter gave me the rough side of his Prussian tongue because I did not know that the closed door was un- fastened, and mage him leave his comfort- able chair to open it. On another occasion one of these beauties utterly refused to direct me to the rooms of one of the occupants of the house because I did not pronounce the English name in the barbaric manner he had fashioned for himself. This, despite the production of the man’s card, with the name and same ad- dress on it. An Automobile Exhibit. ‘That the marked development of the mo- tor car since its more general use was made possible by the passing of the locomotives on highways act of 1896 is obvious to all who visit the show of the Automobile Club opened at the Agricultural Hall on Satur- day. On nearly 100 stands are to be seen motor cars of every conceivable variety— dogearts, phaetons, wagonettes, parcel vans, sporting drags, butchers’ carts, cycles and sociables. The chief change since the similar exhibition held a year ago is in the compactness and neatness of the fittings and the finish of the upholstery. The mo- tive power is most commonly petroleum, but electricity is also in general use, and “quick 222400400 sesbsenensnanncar Nerves Make. the Man Strong, steady nerves are es- sential to good health and en- joyment of lifé: Without strong nerves you are'sure to fall in the battle of life. There is a food for the nerves thatha$-been made for over fifty yedfs, and is known from one end ef the world to the other—Johantt HOff’s Malt Ex- tract. It feeds and nourishes the nerves, makes them strong and healthy. If you are in an un- nerved, run-down condition, try ohann Hoff’s Plalt Extract Its health-giving, strengthening properties will be felt at onve in new blood. increased vigor und a general strengthening of the system. Johann Hof’s brings good appetite, cures dyspepsia and makes flesh and blood. ‘Don’t be misled by the cheap, so-called malt extracts offe-rd by dealers for the sake of few cents’ extra profit. ‘They are abeolu thless. Got the genitine Johann Holf's you will not be disappointed. Www vewvevVTYYY AAbAAAAAAAAMARARARAADARAD MS RAARAADARAREMARARRAD DAS ———- We Are the Pioneers, and We Get the Business Because We are the Best Value-givers in This City. This Week, Suits To-order, 58-80 We are known far and wide as the best value- givers for made-to-measure tailoring. utation has been earned made it our purpose to study the interests of our patrons. wear our clothes. Betteryet Tailoring, This season we have introduced a new systenr of PRECISE FITTING. This system is exclusively our own, and the improvement in our fitting department is noticeable to those who This rep- because we have always Mertz and Mertz, 9006 and 908 F Street. ————— Ir = ——— = . ° Expert’s ° ° ‘Weak or worn-out nerves and an exhausted and irritable condition of the brain are at the bottom pl n 10 n of all head troubles, such as dullness, pressure, rush of blood to the head, dizziness, headache, irrita- bility of temper, the blues, poor memory, bysteria, melancholy, mania and insanity, no matter | a ae a buy | : anS| hat th 1 e that brought them about. A medicine that will strengthen and invigorate the ies: = = S i what the special caus cD MOTHER S| shattered nerves, rest the weary body and soothe the tired brain is greatly to be desired, @ medicine is Dr. Miles’ Nervine. Such It is a nerve food and tonic that acts directly on the nervous system, toning it up into sound and vigorous action, “I was troubled for years with severe spells of headache In the back part of my bead, confusion of memory, nervousness and {nability to sleep. I got the blues and at times thought I was losing my mind. Miles’ Nervine and Nerve and Liver Pills all this was changed. bappy and my health soon returned.”* 1610 Eagle St., After trying in vain to find relief When I began taking Dr. I grew cheerful and 3. C. KUHLMAN, Terre Haute, Ind. Dr. Miles’ Nervine Sold at all drug stores on a positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet on diseases of the heart and nerves to Dr. [Miles Medical Company, Elkhart, Indiana. is utilized in a few instances. The Srhole center of the hall is set apart as a ground upon which the running powers of the vehicles may be demonstrated. The ca~ pabilities of the motor are shown by one rider who runs his carriage up a pair of in- clined planes and down a steep flight of steps. Cycles are not shown to the extent which might have been expected, owing, it 1s said, to the arrangements existing be- tween the makers and the organizers of the Stanley show, but a few of the quadricycle form seem to offer as comfortable a ve- hicle as the aged or nervous traveler could desire. Some of the carriages on show are to take part in the 1,000-mile trial which commences this week. Electric Trams. It is a welcome fact to Londoners that the London county council will shortly run all its trams by electricity. The under- ground railway people have been experi- menting in the same motive power recently, with the result that we may very soon ex- pect the introduction of a certain number of electric engines on the underground road. This will be a boon indeed. Not many English people have gone to the Paris exhibition yet, as every one here understands that it Is in an incomplete con- dition at present. Later on there will doubtless be a great exodus from the Brit- ish Isles, the feeling against France not be- ing strong enough to prevent people going to Paris. Even the volunteers, under the guidance of Sir Howard Vincent, are ar- ranging to go in their thousands in August next. The cold weather here has kept visitors away and London is not so crowded as usual at this season of the year. Ameri- cans, who generally begin to fill the hotels at this time, are few in number compara- tively. But London is bound to be the call- ing place for thousands of Americans on their way to Paris, and we shall see plenty of our countrymen later on. H. MOORE. _———— AUTHORS FROM MAINE, The Pine Tree State Claims a Good Number Eminent in Letters. From the Boston Transcript. Authors’ night at the Pine Tree State Club was a brilliant event in the history of that flourishing organization. A similar evening several years ago, when women writers of Maine delighted an enthusiastic company, is still pleasantly remembered. At Wednesday night's meeting Daniel C. Heath, the president, paid tribute to native Maine authors and spoke of others who had written world-famous words within the bor- ders of “Down East land”—notably Long- fellow, Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Thoreau and Lowell. The roll of honor, he said, should also include Artemus Ward, Sarah Orne Jewett, Elijah Kellogg, Harriet Prescott Spofford, Kate Douglas Wiggin, Laura E. Richards, Elizabeth Akers Allen, Robert Grant, Willis Boyd Allen, Noah Brooks, Rebecca Sophia Clarke, Sarah J. Clarke, Prof. C. C. Everett, Caroline Dana Howe and President Harris of Amherst. President Heath continued: . “We must not forget that Mrs. Stowe’ ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’ was written in Bruns- wick, and within a year went into 120 edi- tions. From that time on publishers have considered favorably anything written in a Maine atmosphere, and things written in a Maine atmosphere have been legion, as are the things written about Maine by people living outside the state, but whose summers are spent there. Among these were Thoreau and Lowell, who both wrote in and of the Maine woods. “N. P. Willis, the author of poems of much excellence on Scriptural subjects, was born in Portland, and Jacob Abbott, who wrote the ‘Rollo Books,’ or the books for children that have had a wider circulation than any others in this country, was born at Hallowell. John S. C. Abbott, who is known by his ‘History of Napoleon’ and other books, was born at Brunswick.” —+-2-+___ Summer Car Etiquette. From the Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette. Now that open cars are in general use again, a few remarks about common-sense etiquette in connection with their use may not be amiss. So much selfishness, which in many cases harms most the person dis- playing the selfish streak, is displayed that it would be a good step to have some rules posted for the direction of passengers. Some of the following points might be touched upon: In taking a seat move to the left-hand side. Why compel the next passenger to climb over one and step upon a favorite corn? Women folk especially should note this rule, not that they are more general offenders, but if a man steps on an open car from the black slime of an asphalt street, but lately sprinkled, his shoes are apt to make some damaging impressions upon a neat skirt. Those who object to the smell of tobacco smoke, whether from a pipe, cigar or cigar- ette, should remember that the last three seats in the open cars are for smokers, and they should be left for the smokers. At least, those who occupy them should not glare at a man enjoying an after-breakfast cigar or pipe. Bear in mind that the seats are wide enough to hold comfortably five passengers, unless, perchance, four of unusual avoirdu- pois should be in one seat. They should not be bothered; but when four of moderate size are occupying a seat they should evince a disposition to move up a little to accom- modate a new arrival. When a pretty girl is looking for a seat even five men will scrouge up a bit closer to accommodate her. But there are other cases where politeness is not so pronounced. In general, care for the rights and comfort of others should prevail, not only on open cars, but in all public places. Selfishness is a grievous fault, and it looks all the worse in public. ——+o+___ Populists Indorse Bryan. The Minnesota populist state convention, which met in Minneapolis yesterday, had a wrangle over the geustion of indorsing the fusion state administration, but the in- dorsement carried. There was a little trou- ble over indorsing C. A. Towne for Vice President, but Towne's friends won, and the delegates to the national convention were all Bryan and Towne men. BREAD.” Pro-! fessor David] Chidlow, director || of the Chidlow| Institute of ‘Mill-| ing and Baking, says: “I find that | Corby’s ““Mother’s Bros. by | the use of their Bread.” | patented process |) of making dough || absolutely de- |] velop 20 per cent || more gluten in the | bread than is pos- |! sible by any other known method.” || Accept no _ substitute || from your grocer. Look | for the stamp. whites ap-|| ; oat of | {OTHER'S || Se. lo CORBY’S Modern Bakery, 2335 Brightwood Ave. || my1-80d = THE HIGHEST GLASS MESSENGER SERVICE I8 SUPPLIED BY THE Postal Telegraph-Cable Company At its thirty local offices or through a messenger call system, Get Telegraph and Messenger Rate Cards. apl6-42tr ‘SHAVE MOSES DO oT. Let us clean, care for, alter and relay your carpets and rugs. Our cold storage is absolute protection against moth. Repairing Oriental Rugs by native expert weav- ers. Our methods are mod- ern and prices lowest for superior work. Ask for es- timate. ’Phone 2o1. .B. MOSES & SONS, F St., Cor. 11th. iN KAPRIKO Grippe, Severe Colds, Wasting Fevers and all Nervous Affections. Indorsed by Physicians and Nurses, Used tn Hospitals everywhere. CARRIAGES and WAGONS in abundance; styles unsurpassed ; prices unequaled. tures comprise the entire pew stock are ‘3.5. MEEKS’ BONG, 622 G st. b. at short Repairing ia all its branches done tice, ‘8p21-26t