Washington Bee
Saturday, January 27, 1906
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
A FIRESIDE COMPANY.
It is true if you see it in
THE BEE.
FOR THOSE WHO PAPER
1910
M. H.
H N. WALTER I. SMITH.
The Game and the Candle
I am very much like Calvin E. Pratt, who, when he realized the difficulty and magnitude of the subject and saw to what dizzy heights he might have to climb in order to properly unfold his theme found himself very much in the condition of one of his school-mates, who having read "Two years before the mast" and "Pirates own book," conceived the splendid idea of becoming a sailor. He accordingly proceeded to Boston on foot, and shipped at once on a vessel ready to sail. The ship had scarcely got outside the harbor before the captain ordered the young sailor aloft to unfurl a sail. The boy looked at the towering mast-top and at the captain, but made no start to climb the rigging. The captain ordered him a second time with the same result, and then said to him, "Why don't you obey orders?" "I can't sir," and the young man. "But didn't you ship as an able seaman?" "Yes sir, but I am not the map I thought I was."
I am not unmindful of the vast opportunity that is mine this afternoon as I stand before young men. The opportunity is great but the responsibility is greater. It was the thought of the responsibility that decided me to speak on the subject, "The Game and the Candle." This phrase is of French origin, and the meaning simplified is, the object pursued is not worth the pains requisite for its attainment.
It was during an all-night ride enroute for Arkansas in the latter part of the year just closed, I fell into a retrospective mood, and the scroll of the past years unfolded itself before my memory, and as I reviewed them and marked the possibilities all past with the years, life took, even a graver aspect than it had already worn. I shall not discuss my life, but life with its probabilities and possibilities of power and achievement, life in its earnestness and life that is merely drifting with the tide, of no benefit to itself or humanity.
A man's life depends upon his emotions, his aspirations, his determinations. A young man, somebody's son, starts out with the determination that the world is indebted to him for a good time. Dollars were made to spend. I am young haile fellow well met with every one, ever ready to drink a social glass, to give a pum and to be a masher on the girls. So with this determination he starts, to be a good timer. Perhaps some mother expects to hear great things of her boy; some father's hopes are centred in him, but what does that matter; I am a good timer, from one gayety to another, from one glass to another, from one sin to another, and the good timer is soon broken in health, deserted by friends and left alone to die. Thus the good timer or the man about town passes off the stage. When you ask some of his friends about him the answer is, "Oh, John was all right, but he lived too fast." "I like a good time as well as anyone, but I could not keep up with Johnnie." Was the same worth the candle?
Two pictures come before my mind. Two cousins—both of them young men. One started out early in life with the determination of getting along easy, shirking work, looking for a soft snap. His motto was, "The world owes me a
VOL. XXV. NO. 35.
一
was employed first by one firm then another; if anything hard came along, he would pay another fellow to do the work and he took things easy. It was not long before no one would hire him. He still had the idea that the world was indebted to him and what another man had accumulated he could borrow without his knowledge. He forged another's name; was detected, tried and convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary, and is now wearing the stripes, all because he thought that no matter whatever he might do, wherever he went, whatever company he kept, whether he did his work well or did it ill, that the world was indebted to him for a living.
Young men, the world owes no man a living but those who work faithfully and make contributions to the happiness of mankind and the advancement of civilization. These will ever be honored and rewarded. Is the game worth the candle?
The other cousin started out with a different determination. He believed with Lord Brougham, that if he were a bootblack he would be the best bootblack in England. He began in a stores as window washer, and washed windows so nicely that they sparkled like diamonds under the sun; then as clerk no customer was too insignificant to be greeted with a smile or a pleasant word. No task was too great for him to attempt, and thus step by step each day bringing new duties, but also each day bringing new strength and new determination to master them, and today that cousin is a man of wealth, an honored citizen with a loving wife and a happy home.
Some young men start life with the idea that every dollar made required that one dollar and a half to be spent; that in order to be noticed they must make a big show, give big dinners, carriage drives and euchre parties, carry friends to the theatre and have a swell time, must do like Mr. So-and-so. They forgot in their desire to copy, that their pattern makes twenty times as much as they do, that he doubtless began to save before he began to spend. But no his name appears often in the papers and theirs must. So they begin their career. A few years passed. The young men marry; their debts begin to accumulate and press them; their countenances are always woe-begone and where once was a smile there is now a frown and what would otherise be happy homes there is gloom and shadows, all because men lived too fast and spent two dollars before one was earned.
Debt is the greatest burden that can be put upon man, it makes him afraid to look honest men in the face. No man can be a leader who is burdened by a great debt. If there is any young man here this afternoon who is spending more than he is making, ask yourself the question, is the game worth the candle?
I know a young man who believed he could be happy by spending one-third of what he made and saving the other. He said to me, "Some day I want to marry and I want to treat my wife better if possible, than she has been treated at home. I want the respect of my fellowmen; I want to be a leader and I know I can only do so by saving a part of what I make." It was my good pleasure, a few weeks ago, to go to the city where
Continued on Fifth Page
WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY JANUARY 27, 1906.
THE CHAMPION OF THE NEGRO RIGHTS.
We take great pleasure in presenting to the colored citizens of the United States, the Hon. Walter I. Smith, of Council Bluff, Iowa, member of Congress of the 9th Congressional District, whose cut and biography-appears in this week's issue. Judge Smith is now serving his third term in Congress from the 9th District and is one of the most popular members in the Iowa delegation.
His several speeches delivered in the Halls of Congress speak for themselves and he always can command a mark degree of attention by both republicans and democrats when he rises to address a house.
Judge Smith is very popular among the colored citizens from the various states who reside in Washington and especially since he so gallantly defended the two colored men at Council Bluff and rescued them from an enraged mob who were seeking to lynch them without judge or jury. It was on account of his kind and compassionate appeal that Iowa was saved from being placed in that list of states where men are put to death without judge or jury, and the Bee feels safe in saying that it voices the sentiment of every liberty loving negro not only of Iowa, but of the entire country, when it says that he has the best wishes. He is a member of the committee on appropriation. Judge Smith believes in human rights and equality of citizenship. No man in the state of Iowa is any more loved than this statesman.
ROAD ENGINE HAULS OATS
Pressed Into Service to Pull Train of Wagons to Market at Bozeman, Mont.
Bozeman, Mont.—A load of oats weighing 26,266 pounds has been brought in a novel way from the ranches in the valley to Bozeman. The oats, in sacks, were loaded on five wagons couple together, and the train of wagons thus made was hauled by a thrashing engine.
The, load was the first of its kind to be hauled in the valley, and was taken from C. Crandall's and J. T. Widener's ranch, a distance of more than six miles, in two hours, making an average speed of three miles per hour.
The grain was received by the Bozeman Elevator company, a new concern which has just begun operations.
As it was such a success the men in charge of the transportation of the grain are going to haul the remainder of the crop in the same manner, and then, perhaps, they will haul grain for others.
Oak Coffin for Bulldog.
Inclosed in an oak coffin with a metallic lining, a French bulldog which was the pet of a wealthy family of the Hill section in Brooklyn, N. Y., was buried with unusual honors. Dr. L. McClean, a veterinary surgeon, attended the dog during its last illness, and the coffin was made to order to fit the animal's body by undertakers. Both the doctor and the undertaker refused to give the name of the sorrowing owner of the bulldog, and both professed to be in ignorance of where the interment was made.
George Benninger, a Swiss laborer who went to Wooster, O., a few weeks ago from Cleveland, has received his share of his grandfather's estate, amounting to $59,000, though a Cleveland bank. Benninger does not seem to be carried away over the good fortune, and spends the time husking corn.
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A
DR.JAS. E. SHEPPHARD.
Still a Corn Husker
Paragraphic News
Mrs. Thomas Ryan, of Washington has given $16,000 for the establishment of a parochial school by St. James parish at Falls Church, Va.
Robert Davis, about thirty-five years old, dropped dead last week at the Wilson livery barn, at Cumberland, Md., where he was employed. He went to a barber shop one day before he died and said he wanted a good job, as he was going to die.
The sheep-dip plant at Richmond, Va., was destroyed by fire early last Saturday morning. The loss is estimated at $60,000, which is covered by insurance.
Judge Luke Ei Wright, of Tennessee, now governor of the Philippines, will be the first Ambassador to Japan.
Stanley B. Smith, President of the First National Bank at Zanesville, Wis., died last week in that city.
It is said that Great Britain has some of the most beautiful gardens.
Rev. William J. Smith, B.D., LL.D., is a colored candidate for the nomination for the Legislature on the republican ticket for the 48th senatorial district at Carmi, Ill.
On last Monday a meeting was held at Carnegie Hall, at which the work of Tuskgee Institute was explained and discussed.
Mme. Cornelie Brielle, of Vienna, who is now eighty years of age, was married to a man named Kolonan Poznyay, who is forty-six years her junior, in that city lately. She is very wealthy. It was thought at first she was insane, but she proved her sanity to a commission of doctors.
The members of the Tuskgee Institute Choir have presented its director, Mrs. J. C. Lee, with an ebony, silvermounted baton for use during chapel services.
Three men entered the flat of Mrs. Francesca Falaller on the top floor of a five story house in Thompson street, New York city and brigitly beat and stabbed her and tore a belt containing $950, the whole family savings.
Two wealthy men, one Leroy Fay, a Boston millionaire, and the other Frank B. Sanborn, Jr., of N. N. were married to poor girls last Saturday, who up to the day of their marriage were obliged to work.
Edward F. Hansen, president of the Nutrical Company at Chicago, and formerly mayor of a small town in northern Maine, was sentenced to one year in the penintentiary and finned $5,000 in the United States District Court for sending objectional literature through the United States mail, advertising his business.
The remains of Chaplain John S. Wallace, will be interred in the Arlington National Cemetery. Chaplain died on the 21st instant. He was appointed as Chaplain Mar. 10, 1863.
The naval battalion of the National Guard of the District of Columbia, has been ordered to disband, because of three of the officers declining to accept their resignations. All of the officers will be honorably discharged. The issue is said to be a military one and personal friendship is not considered.
H. C. Harris, said to be one of the wealthiest colored men of Birmingham, Ala., is buying supplies for the new barber shop and bath house which are to
3
M. H.
be constructed in the Florence Hotel at that city. The new tonsorial palace will cost $15,000. Mr. Harris also owns much property.
S. B. Hofman, a young colored man of Cincinnati, Ohio, has invented a mail crane. It is constructed so as to receive and deliver mail bags at the same time. He expects to receive quite a fortune.
Mrs. Booker T. Washington, lectured at Payne Chapel, Colorado Springs, not long ago. The people appreciated the lecture very much.
The Chinese commissioners who came to the United States to make a personal study of its industrial, social and political institutions, arrived in this city last Tuesday.
It is said that even the poor man in Paris stops on his way to work to have his shoes shined for fear he might lose his job if he did not.
European Russia is said to have about 23,000,000 horses which is more than any other country in the world.
HON. MARLIN E. OLMSTEDT
The honorary member of Congress appears one of the most Pennsylvania d a great many and then settle and every man publicans and elected to the account of his position. Mr. Olle been an uncommon a true friend is chairman of tion No. 2, and portant election his chairmanship is also a mem portant commit great admirer and did a great paign to bring a jority given to Pennsylvania.
Two passenger trains on the Northern Central Railroad were saved last Tuesday from being wrecked by Mary McCall, the sixteen year old daughter of a track walker living at Clark's Ferry, Pa.
Seven women, each of whom were stabbed with a sharp, apparently double-edged knife, at St. Louis, last Monday night by "Jack the Cutter."
The Mississippi Compress at Jackson, Miss., with 9,500 bales of cotton, was destroyed by fire last Tuesday afternoon the loss is estimated at $750,000 with about two-thirds that sum insurance.
CAUSING THE NEGROES TO
DIVIDE.
From the Springfield, Ill., Advance Citizen.'
The man who is calling down the wrath of every negro in Illinois, because of his disposition to try to dictate the affairs of our state is Dr. Booker T. Washington. Every leader and voter in Illinois think and say that Dr. Washington would do well to advance the affairs of his brother in Alabama. The negroes of Illinois, are voters with leaders who are capable of conducting our political affairs and selecting representatives. E H. Wright, Hon. J. G. Jones, Major John C. Buckner, Hon E. D. Green, Editor Cyrus Field Adams and even our Major Otis B. Duncan, can better tell what the negroes of Illinois want than the man from Alabama.
Aid from Travelers
If the Pullman Porters' union will seriously operate on a "no tip" basis in dealing with the company it can get a passengers' auxiliary with about 25,000,000 members to help it.
Maintaining the Balance
Maine hunters this year killed more game and fewer of each other than for many seasons. By these tactics it is hoped the supply of hunters will last as long as the deer.
Oldest University.
Highland university is the oldest university in Kansas, and the first west of the Mississippi to issue diplomas. It was chartered February 9, 1858. The school was the outgrowth of an Indian school, and began with white children in 1858. It has never closed its doors from the day it was opened.
The Bee
GREAT ADVERTISING MEDICAL
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Do you want reliable news? Do you want
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1910
HON. MARTIN E. OLMSTED.
The honorable Martin E. Olmsted member of Congress, whose cut and biography appears in this week's issue, one of the most popular members in the Pennsylvania delegation, and has made a great many friends both among re and then settle down. I want to be and every man must sow his wild oat publicans and democrats since he was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, a account of his kind and benevolent disposition. Mr. Olmsted is and always has been an uncompromising republican, and a true friend to the colored race. It is chairman of the committee on Election No. 2, and has had some very important election cases before him during his chairmanship of this committee. It is also a member of several other important committees. Mr. Olmsted is great admirer of President Roosevelt and did a great deal in the recent campaign to bring about the tremendous majority given to the National ticket in Pennsylvania.
Mr. Olmsted has just been elected the Fifty-ninth congress by an increase majority, and we feel safe in saying th we voice the sentiment of every color voter in the District, when we say th his re-election means a great deal to colored race, when we see the democra party doing all in its power to take fr the negro all the rights guaranteed by the constitution, and we need j such true and loyal republicans as Olmsted in the Fifty-ninth Congre when there will be several import measures come before that body, inviing the rights of the American Neg The Bee hopes to see the time when Olmsted will be called upon to fill higher and more exalted position. Mr. Olmsted was chairman of committee of the whole on the Philippine tariff bill and as chairman of committee of the Election No 2, opinion is respected.
DEER INCREASING IN JERSEY
Good Results of the Law Passed Eastern State to Save Them from Extermination.
Tuckahoe, N. J.—The greeswamp New Jersey's three lower counties, C. May, Atlantic and Cumberland, bid soon to rival the best deer hunt grounds in the country. Old residence of these counties declare that the deer now as plentiful as they were a century ago, when it was an ematter to shoot five or six in a hunt.
Six years ago deer were exceeding scarce in the South Jersey woods. T. were hunted so relentlessly that it kept to the most inaccessible swan and even at that the extermination the animals seemed likely. Then legislature interfered.
In 1901 a law was passed forhldd deer shooting for three years. During that period the deer increased so rapid that the legislature passed another making it unlawful to kill deer for further period of two years and they could be hunted only on Weddays in November. Many sportsmen in favor of continuing the closed ser for three or five years longer and alling each hunter to kill only two deer a season.
- Left unmolested for the last four yr the deer have become tame, and it is most a daily occurrence for farmer see them near their orchards and barns
ICE made from PURE SPRING water. Delivered at your door by our wagons. Sells largest 5 ceut piece of ice of any firm in the city. Also WOOD and Coal.
PARKER,BRIDGET&CO.
Among friends and acquaintances the question is often asked, "Who made your suit?" that is, of course, when the suit is mentorious enough to call for comment.
One of the best advertisements we have is when our patrons answer the question and tell the cost of the suit.
"Peculiar People" is a new book for the millions. By Mrs. Arabella Virginia Chase.
NEW SUBJECTS.
Every division, which are twelve (12) is discussed in a new way. The book will tell who the peculiar people are:
1. THEIR ORIGIN.
2. HE BECOMES A PECULIAR.
3. A MISAPPLICATION.
4. USELESS LEGISLATION.
5. NO LONGER BEGGARS.
6. HIS ABODE.
7. BUSINESS AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS.
8. IMITATIVENESS AND RESULTS.
9. THE POLITICAL ATMOSPHERE.
10. GOOD CITIZENSHIP.
11. UNWHOLESOME PRACTICES.
MRS. ARABELLA V. CHASE
KNOW YOURSELF.
To know yourself you will have to read this book.
library of every citizen.
It is a book that should be in the Fifty cents per copy, postage pre paid, sent to any part of the world.
Send money order or registered letter.
Mrs. Arabella Virginia Chase, 1212 Florida avenue northwest, or THE WASHINGTON BEE, 1109 Eye street northwest, Washington; D. C.
. CURIOUS LEGAL POINT.
Shall Cremated Corpse Pay Same Rate for Carriage as Body in Coffin?
Paris.—A curious case now before a French tribunal invokes a point which has not yet come up for legal settlement. A certain New York doctor, whose name thus far is withheld, recently accompanied a wealthy western American to Italy, where his patient after a lingering illness died.
In order to avoid the trouble and formalities of carrying the body to the United States in a coffin the doctor on his own authority had the corpse cremated. The ashes were placed in a small urn, which was then packed carefully and shipped as ordinary freight on which he paid the usual tariff according to weight.
The doctor landed on the American side all right, but the steamship company discovered his secret and demanded the price of carrying a dead body in a coffin, which amounts to nearly $150 more than the doctor paid for the urn's transportation. This he refused and the case must be decided at Paris, since it was at a French port that the urn was shipped. The impression here is that the company will lose the case.
Washington.—Every gun in the navy will have its duplicate to guard against any emergency and accident, if the recommendation of the naval chief of ordnance is carried out.
The naval general board, it is believed, thoroughly approves of it, and consequently the naval estimates to go before the next congress may contain a formidable item to cover the cost of producing the new guns.
Such accidents as have happened in recent years, particularly to the big, turret guns of the battleships, would compel the ship to go into action in disabled condition or be laid up for months in a navy yard. The idea is to keep spare guns in stock at convenient points to immediately replace the damaged ones.
Growth of Things Out West.
A correspondent of the Checotah (I. T.) Times, and for whose veracity that paper vouchers, tells the following: "The terrible news comes from the western part of the Cherokee Nation that a boy climbed a cornstalk to see how the corn was getting along, and now the corn is growing up faster than the boy can climb down. The boy is clear out of sight. Three men have undertaken to cut the stalk down with axes and save the boy from starvation, but it grows so fast that they can't hack twice in the same place. The boy is living on nothing but raw corn and already has thrown down over four bushels of cobs."
King Edward's chef, M. Menner, was among those to receive birthday honor on the occasion of his majesty's recent birthday. He is believed to be among the most accomplished chefs in the world. He was decorated with the Victorian medal. Other recipients of that distinction are understood to feel that in conferring the medal on a cook King Edward has rather cheapened the honor.
10
from PURE SPRING water. Delivered us. Sells largest 5 ceut piece of ice of a VOOD and Coal.
eCompany-cor50
HIGH·DEGRE
of satisfaction is a rare the $2.50 shoes. Shoes at the ally lack style or comfort or The style of more expensive good solid value are found in
Signet $2.50
because of the exceptional stowed on the making. The ness in it anywhere is the pr A Coodyear-welted shoe, moral of the season's handsor the most popular leathers. Looks first rate and wea every time.
It's worth your while to com the Signet over, even if you to buy
y-cor5th and L
DEGREE
is a rare thing in most Shoes at this price usu- comfort or both. More expensive shoes and are found in our
$2.50 Shoe
exceptional attention be-aking. The only cheap-ere is the price. Used shoe, made on seven's handsomest lasts, in leather. e and wears that way
while to come in and look even if you're not ready
oreland, na Ave
SIGN OF THE BIG BOOT
PRESENT INSURANCE
$0.00 PER WEEK
INSURANCE ON
REAL TERMS
AFTER DEATH.
THE INSURANCE CO.,
Washington, D. C.
BIDGET & CO.
The question is often asked, "Who when the suit is mentorious enough to live is when our patrons answer the
of satisfaction is a rare thing in most $2.50 shoes. Shoes at this price usually lack style or comfort or both. The style of more expensive shoes and good solid value are found in our
Signet $2.50 Shoe
because of the exceptional attention bestowed on the making. The only cheapness in it anywhere is the price. A Coodyear-welted shoe, made on several of the season's handsomest lasts, in the most popular leathers. Looks first rate and wears that way every time. It's worth your while to come in and look the Signet over, even if you're not ready to buy
m. Morela
PiPenna A
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KER, BRIDGE
and acquaintances the question is of that is, of course, when the suit is made. Advertisements we have is when our cost of the suit.
Wm.Moreland, 491Penna Ave
HOLTMAN'S OLD STAND. SIGN OF THE BIG BOOT
SICK AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE UP TO $25.00 PER WEEK WHOLE LIFE INSURANCE ON VERY LIBERAL TERMS PAYABLE ONE HOUR AFTER DEATH AMERICAN HOME LIFE INSURANCE CO. FIFTH and G Streets N.W. Washington, D. C.
Men's Top Coats, $12 to $35.
Men's Spring Suits, $12 to $30.
Youths' Clothing, $10 to $25.
Boys' Cloth Suits, $3.95 to $10.
Boys' Wash Suits, $1.50 to $6.
(The Better Kind of Clothing.)
ARKER, Bridget &
AND PENNTYLVANIA AVENUE,
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Always welcome.
IF YOU WANT A MARK
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HOLME'S Hotel
333 Vt. Ave., S. W. For The
Best Afro-American Accommodation
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-European And American
Bar Stocked with fine Wines, Imported Prand
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Best Line Cigars Good 1 Room
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JAMES OTTOWAY HOLMES Prop
Washington, D; C.
Louis J. Kessel
Importer of and Wholesale Dealer in WINES
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Sole Owner of the.....
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Telephone—Yam—160
FRATERNAL
I. O. N. I. C. of A., fraternal, meets at Lecompte, La., the second and third Tuesday nights in each month. R. E. Pickens, W. P. P. J. E. Dailey W. C. S.
I. O. I. N. I. C. of A. F., No. 127 meets at its office, 608 Bolton street east, the first and third Monday nights in each month. Rev. S. T Shephard, worthy president. T. P Haywood, W. C. S. Ocie Weathers W. P. P.
Golden' Star Department of the I. O. N. I. C. of A. F., No. 248, meet at St. James, La., the first and third Saturdays in each month. J. W Walker, W. P. P. Alex. Anoisar W. C. S.
Eastern Star Department, No. 243 of the I. O. N. I. C. of A. F., meet at Darrow, La., the second and fourth Saturdays in each month. Leon B. tise, W. P. P. M. Baptise, W. C. S Dempsey Wilson, W. R. S.
Lippman Department of the I. O. N. I. C. of A. F., No. 152, meets at Kings Ferry, Fla., the fourth Friday in each month. Jack Lippman, W. P. P. Loula Underwood, W. C. S.
Western Star Department, No. 231 meets at Ennis, Tex., first and third Saturdays in each month. Spencer Gary, W. P. F. C. C. Carlies, W. R S. A. Cattle, W. C. S.
Eagle's Wing Department, No. 27 meets at Ashville, Fla., the second and fourth Sundays in each month G. B. Brown, W. P. L. D. Dixon. W. C. S.
Elizabeth Department, I. O. N. of A. F., No. 53, meets at Chauncey, Ga., on the first Saturday in each month. Rev. E. Adams, W. P. P.; Peter Stanley, W. C. S.
Department No. 136 meets at Baton Rouge, La., first and third Wednesday nights in each month. Joe. Newton, W. P. P. M. B. Stewart, W. C. S.
Fraternet Sunrise Department, No. 17, meets at Fort Worth, Tex., the first and third Wednesdays in each month. R. R. Sloan, W. P. P.; Henry Henderson, W. P. P.; M. Mathew W. F. V. P.; I. B. Balenger, W. C. S.
Sunrise Department, No. 31, meets at Dallas, Tex., second and fourth Thursday nights in each month. A. R. Brown, W. P. P. S. A. N. Hamilton, W. P. Rebecca Carpenter, W. R. S. Savannah Slaughter, W. C. S.
Department No. 13 meets at Lake City, Fla., first and second Monday nights in each month. Joe Dorsey W. P. P. W. M. Pasco, W. F. V. P. Giles Duncan, W. C. C. B Bartley, W. C. S.
To all Departments of the I. O. N
I. C. of A. Fraternal, the semi-annual
pass word is ready for all Departments.
Send for it at once. See Ritual, page 13.
I. L. Walton
Evergreen Department, No. 240, meet
at Red Fish, La, the 1st and 3rd Friday
in each month. A. T. Finley, W. P.
P.; Chas. Dupar, F. V. P.; A. T. Finley,
W. C. S.
Harmony Department, No. 71, meet
LABOR LEADER IN CABINET
John Burns. Noted Englishman, Absolutely Unchanged by Appointment of British Premier.
London—John Burns, member of the house from Battersea, who has chosen president of the local government board in the new British cabinet, is one of the most vigorous personalities in the British parliament and in public life to-day.
The secret of Mr. Burns' power is his sincerity. It was the great dock strike of 1883 which first brought understanding of the real John Burns, who, before that time, had been known to most people as a man of nature sim.
A.
(President of Loth. Government Board in New British Cabinet) illar to that of Jack Cade. His own particular friends and adherents, all along, had recognized in the "demagogue" and "agitator" of the workmen's clubs one of the strongest and healthiest forces of the day. Then came the historic fight for the dockers' "tanner," when Burns' straw hat became as an oriflame in the fray. Since then it has been generally admitted that no man in all England exercises such influence over the working classes or speaks with more authority in their behalf than John Burns.
His career has been irreproachable, and except Keir Hardle and some others of his former labor associates no one has uttered a word of anything except commendation of his high personal character and deserved success. For years Mr. Burns has lived in a small workingman's house in Battersea, with his handsome wife and only son, on an allowance of $450 a year made to him by the Amalgamated Society of Engineers
Now, suddenly he has jumped into an income of $10,000 a year, but his mode of life remains absolutely unchanged. He went to Buckingham palace to be sworn in as a member of the king's privy council and to kiss the royal hand on acceptance of the cabinet office of president of the local government board dressed in his invariable dark-blue serge reefer suit, black derby hat and gloveless hands, carrying neither cane nor umbrella.
The king welcomed him with especial cordiality and told him he hoped his objection to wearing court costume would never prevent him from obeying royal commands to court entertainments. That night the premier, Sir Henry, Campbell-Bannerman, gave a cabinet dinner and John Burns, who never possessed or had any ambition to possess an evening suit, sat down in his usual reefer.
NEW OREGON SENATOR.
John M. Gearin of Portland Appointed to Succeed Mitchell—Was Born in a Prairie Schooner.
Portland, Ore—John M. Gearin, on whose shoulders—the senator toga of the late Senator John M. Mitchell has fallen, is an Oregonian by birth and breeding. The prairie schooner is
C. K.
JOHN M. GEARIN.
(Appointed by Governor of Oregon to Bucc
ceted Late Senator Mitchell)
which his parents came to this state in 1854 was standing on the banks of the Umatilla river when John was born, having tarried there for that event. The boy lived on a farm until he was 12, when he went to school in San Francisco, finishing his education at Notre Dame college, Indiana. He comes of democratic lineage and has followed in the steps of his forbears. He is a lawyer, a member of the first which has already furnished three United States senators for Oregon, and whi h announces that it is in a position to supply the demand for a long time to come. He has been city attorney, member of the state legislature district attorney, and candidate for congress against Blinger Hermann. In 1933 he was appointed special prosecutor by President Cleveland in the important snarling cases here. He favors retention of the Philippines at Hawaii and is an acknowledged admier of President Goosevelt.
MEN WHO FOUGHT GOTHAM FLAMES YEARS AGO
Association of Volunteers Has M
Interesting Beliefs—An Amusing
Incident—"Boys" Extinct
Blaze in Stage Cost
New York.—One of the most
and picturesque survivals in New Y
is the Volunteer Firemen's society.
It is composed exclusively o
of the New York Volunteer
partment. Here, amid our most
reliefs of days gone by, we
meet, keep alive old friend, a
once again enjoy, in spirit the ex-
ment of many a lively "run
The New York Volunteer Partment was disbanded 40 years and as there were at that critically none of its members age of 25, there are now none of the association less than of age, while the majority have passed their eighth The membership in 1834 was as the years have rolled away, bership has grown smaller, until now it numbers The first fire company in was organized in 1737, went of 24 men, and the same type as the before though with many modifications and much mental, were in use from until the advent of the Philadelphia in 1840.
In the early days horses used; instead the sturdy dragged their engines, which weighed as much as 6,000 pounds the rough cobblestones. But in citement of the frantic fervor first to reach the fire, or at the company just ahead feeling" was a thing unknown volunteer fireman Many tricks, and many the squabble sequence, of the effort to pass in the race. When a company a brand new engine or horse cerning which it felt a proud pride as to her capability "passed" by two or three.
ANCIENT FIRE ENGINE
(Built in 1725 and in Use for Over 25 Years).
panies on her first trip to a fire I was the talk of the town for days.
In addition to having various plete engines on view here, one all around remains of old favor, the shape of decorated backs of engines, and also several beautifully executed models of engines and apparatus used by the foreman and his assistant in giving orders at a fire. They played very important part in the proceedings, and have the post of honor on the front of the fireman's cap of to-day. An interesting report bearing date of 1812 hangs on the wall, none of the rooms, entitled, "Return of the engines, hook and ladder companies their apparatus, places of deposit condition, etc., together with the names of the engineer and foreman."
Among other relics which adorn the walls is Old Glory, which was raised from the fire which destroyed Barnum's museum in 1865. Speaking of Barnum's brings to mind an amusing incident which occurred there once connection with Engine No. 40. Barnum's manager, having noticed how well certain members of that company was gone through some military collections, thought it would be an excellent idea to get them to perform one of their tactics on the stage in connection with a play he was producing entitled, "The Patriot's of 76." The "boys" accepted the proposition, leading to apply the proceeds toward helping certain of their comrades who were out of work. The eventful evening arrived for their debut. There were about 30 of them in various characters, some dressed as Hessians and Continentalists, others as Indians, while one of them impersonated the famous "Molly" Pitcher. In the middle of a most exciting act the city hall fire bell rang. Their foreman, who was acting with them, yelled: Boy's there's a fire in the Seventh district! The words were hardly out of his mouth before the 30 revolutionary soldiers, Indians, etc., were off the stage, and rushing up Broadway for their engine with which they soon returned to the screen of the fire. With "Molly" Pitcher at the head of the rope, a stalwart Indian brave flourishing a speaking trumpet and a miscellaneous collection of revolutionary soldiers tugging at the rope, a more motley crowd was never seen on Broadway before or since.
The first steam fire engine was seen in New York about 1811, but it was not a success. Its great weight militated against it. It took half an hour after reaching a fire to get it started, and something generally broke down soon after it was in action. Then again, there was the inevitable opposition to an innovation of that kind, so that it was not until some years after that the steam fire engine was formally adopted by the department.
oy ee i . = Ps
AL TIMORE AND OHIO
RAILROAD.
p ae eaOorT~
cave Station, New Jersey ave & Ct.
ROYAL BLUE LINE. a
pres “Every otherhour on the odd
ous.”
te itnilade}phia and New York.
4, ooam. Diner, Pullman Parlor,
ve 2m Buffet, Parlor s He.Train
P Yo ara. Diner and Pullman Parlor
‘ae .
gra, ™ Diner and [Pollman Par-
jor Car.
wisSpem. Diner and Pullman Par-
tor Cate a
ip m. *Reral Limited." All
jutteran,
400 pt. Coaches to Philadelphia.
45.09 P-™. Diner and Pullman Parlor
s op.m. ‘Coaches to Philadelphia.
fw pam. Sleepers.
fy gram, Sieepers.
Avaatic C2RY, 47.00,,t9.00 #11.098.m
go 73.00 PT
zsety Hour on the Hour.
qo asusr0re with Pullman Service.
rece dave 2:32, $190) 6:98 7400, 7,20, 8:06
se Ts coo, es Som See
2 tom be tr MENS sr
2 tae 1 99,7 oT. 8.98 9:09,10+00 11,008.20
cee Oe EN ‘Jer GI, B30, Hoo. 10 06
WESTWARD.
€44 109 AND NOATHWEST, "1100 86
wee
{AN LWNAT, ST. LOULS AND LOUISVILLE
seem *6% Pilla 13-46 Bight.
PITTSSURG AND *1t.oy =. a. $9 159. mi, and’
anak
CLEVELAND y 150M.
ays) MBUS, *5 «0 Pm ,
guEELING 710.05 2,01. *5.30 p.m.
wax tustKe 18 35am 44.05 t5.00 pon
m
qwwaruLts,wee k days 72.0, 4. m.,
¥¢ 50005, 4 4S, 6.00P.1, 6+
Sandavs8.30 a.m., ands.jo p.m
#0 aad ELK ON 40.5 .m Th gbpelio!
* REE RICE, 1815, $9-45. 80 Oy Tatoo ae
ge tee tec pam,
MAG’ TOWN, 11005 «mand t30 0m
ay te way pe mts. Sas. Rats ma
fost te fies tre, p.m.
GATHERSBURG and way ponte ty
pee a. Tags sts, t30.
15.0 9. $78 Hedy, 11.30 p. ea
Whe UNGTON JUNCTION and way pornt
he 6a, FAS, 15.00, 15-30, Be
+ uy *Except Sunday §5u day only.
fagrree called forand checsed from hotel
wi reudeucesby Unlon Transfer Company
tiles tt at ticket offces,619 Peonaylvania ay
thet New York evenue and Fiftceat
gree alstations
= K Hex Dist Pass Axt
MORF AND OHIO TERMI-
. Ar TWENTY-THIRD
+ kts, NEW YORK CITY, 3
‘) raserger trains of the Baltimore
&+ ta Ra irosd to and from New York
Say have direct ferry connection
suk —su Strect Terminal, in addition
w Litery Strect; the South Ferry Ter-
ray nav:ng been discontinued.
*eecty Curd’ Street is the most popu-
ar wrass! cf the great metropolis be-
sew ft. convenience to the Hotel,
toeat vad shopping district. In the
teeex rinadelng of the terminal build-
Fg * ..1-s mfed canopy was construct-
co tty ret wrde, under which the
tstar cars of the 14th, 23rd, 28th
ane 24 Street lines pass, so that pass-
mer ax protected from the weather
feitax ‘he sorry house, and also avoid
Wes. sume of street traffic.
At oaggace destined to New York
‘er wiltx dehvered to 23rd Street un.
tes ietwtiy marked “Liberty Street,"
© Bere s
* amp'etr electric cab “service ha:
@ ceh cstubhshed for the transporta.
%c yaseergers and baggage at very
Mee tates
‘L umpctauce of 23rd Street is mos
Pi waly brought to attention in th
Amy’ a citer of the Book of the
Raw le piblshed by the passenge
eu 10 f the Baltimuce & Ohio
Gir ke vile “Into the Heart o}
‘Ui .. ine saterest centers withir
ame . caf 2grd street, Fifth are
Mt. t+ a'way, Full page photo
Fe a sual detail present a mos
"id's > ot this most interestin
fw Som’: cents for copy to D. B
XM OM. sr Pissenger Traffic, P
bo LL nore, Md. -
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
a Tract Maras
Desicns.
asniaget Coprricuts &c.
Son angen
tert GMVERBGbor oe Batents
Sientitic American,
saan +), rated weekly, Largest ott-
ae cn iad ems
HK @ Co.26teccateay. New York
wee * F St, Washington, D.C
Cl EW YORK
8 THE GREATEST
TEATRICAL 2 SHOW PAPER
salt THE Wortp.
Per Year, Stogle Copy, 10 tts
a ‘SSTED WEEELY.
AMPLE Copy Free
1K QUI 4
“muse renee,
When looking for good shoes, don't
leave out Richardson's fime shoe store
at t209 Penna.-ave.. N. W. He isecar.
fying ome of the finest “line” Gf ‘men’s
shoes that ever was put upon a counter
in this city.. Mr. Richards ig 2 Wash.
inguua wey, and if yerr shoes ate wot
what Le saya they ar; take them tack
You don’t have to wait to heir from
‘the firm out of the city. The firm (9.
‘this city, at 4229 Pemmsylrania avenme
WW
<s
“@) EN
feet X y
a
wm ’ =
‘a oak be
Semen
=
Eee ears
tom Brees ‘today. oe
ts et
wlatt esigd, Rekee retm
Sess
THE BEE AND McCALL'S GREAT
FASHION MAGAZINE
for one year for $2.00,
COUPON.
Editor Bee:—
Find enclosed ‘two dollars. Send tc
my address below The Bee and McCall’
Fashion Magazine for one year.
Neue .
Streetesessoecsen ns ieotssssees
Fown or Cltpissc <scsccssncncosevoes:
BUY THE:
Stet te ky
aces (iad om
- a!
Pelt a:
| 7 ee ine
4 Me aN ots
or We PS BY
A
enna
a atte al
' ARG MACHINE
Before You Purchase Any Other Write
THE MEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
ag Seine MAC
Many Sewing Machines are madeto sell raged:
less of qualty, but the ** New Mome” 4 made
‘*o.weas, Qur guaranty never runs out.
Wo make Sewing Nachines $o suit all canditions
ofthetrade, The “New Home” sands atthe
dead of all High-grade family sewing machines
Fald by authorised dealers only,
OPPENHE!MFRAAD BRO.
CHRISTMAS AT JAY GOULD.
A little girl can make Christmas Tree
Omaments with Tinsel, Pictures, Fav-
ors, Toys and Wonders for Children’s
Christmas,
J, JAY GOULD, 421 oth Street.
A JEWECRY STORE IS THE BEST
PLACE TO GET XMAS GIFT
een meds
ee ee
And Voight’s, 725 7th street, is the best
jewelry store at which to make your pur-
chases, Our stock and prices are so
varied that every pocketbook is sure to
be suited. We have many inexpensive
but dainty little novelties here which
will make excellent gifts, We do all
engraving free, and will lay aside your
purchase upon payment of a small de-
posit, Every price below has the ring
of a true bargain.
Gentlemen's 20-year gold-filled- Ameri-
can stem winders, $11.
Gentlemen’s solid gold signet rings,
$3.50 up.
Ladies’ solid gold rings, $2 up.
Babies’ solid gold rings, 75c. up.
Ladies’ diamond rings, $5 to $150.
Ladies’ diamond brooches, $5.50 to $t,-
00.
Diamond earrings, $15 to $500.
Solid gold sacred hearts, 75.
Rofaries in emerald, ruby, pearl, gar-
| net, sapphire, opal, topaz, bloodstone, and
jade, $2 up.
| High-grade prayer-books, $r up.
We are showing an artistic line of gilt
| cocks, cut glass, silverware, umbrellas
&c. Also a large line of china, imported
oe Austria, Prussia, Limoges, Wurt
temburg and Bohemia, .
| We.make a specialty of prize cups,
Iss up. ‘
FUNERAL DIREUV LUN
Hirine, Livery aNp Sate S=rers
Carriages hired for funerals, var
ties, balls, receptions, etc. .
Horses and carriages kept in first-
class style. Satisfaction guaranteed
Business at 1132 Third street, N. W
Main Office Branch at 222 Sire
‘street, Alexandria, V2.
Telephone for Office, Maiz 1727
Telephone Call for Stable, Main
1482-5. ;
‘OUR STABLES IN
FREEMAN'S ALLEY.
Where I can sccommodate 5C hor.ts
Call and inspect our-new and moder
ate caskets and investigate our meth
ods of doing first-class work.
| 1132 ‘Third street, N. W-
J. H. DABNEY, Pwp.
JE-SSRIDER AGENTS WANTED
a No Money Required
iS IN ee Jou receive and approve of your bicycle.
Ap RW anyoneon Fen Days Free Trial
Y Finest. teod
HA HIN) eeeaiadeis $10 to $24
\\ ] i i with Chaster “Beales and Punctureless Tires.
- Wi ie \ AN Beat Af (204 Modals $7 to $i2
\RRFRARMMSR AE Any make or model you tcant at one-third, usual
YS APE Zen@ price Choice of any standard tires and best
ey 7 Rr) B equipment on all our bicycles. Strongest guarantee,
ANB RUUD coats OF AnrnOiae CO oa
i BAR ut
f hN) OF Ue PR Ee TRIAL belore purchase 19 Maing
yf | Esti Gale 500 Second Hand Wheels $3: $8
TETEARSMRD Gren 2Ss Doe usa eee sores OO
We A HOT BUY ‘a bicycle until you havo written for our FAOTORY
LAM scuinment. sundries and sporting roots of all hinds. a7 pall reset price in Out
big tree Sundry Catalogue. Contains yorld of useful information. Write for..b
76
PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES *4:25
Regular price i. per par. Qe
To Introduce pmermee—c rea aa
we will Sell 75 ie Less
You a Sample (AO ss : am
Pair for Only @ otic ua ill a i
NO MORE TROUBLE trom PUNCTURES [' ~
pgcanlt of 15 yours exper e thomaking. EASY RIDING, STRONG,
genger. iy We DURABLE, SELF HEALING
PINS, HANS, TAOKS or GLASS. Serion! 8B eure coveneDbyPATENTS
vuldanized like any other tire. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
sete ete a a ee eet Gis At Hall the wewal metas:
Notice the thick rubber tread “A” and puncture Strips B" snd“ D." This tire will
gules nr ofber mbke Soft Karte ind Easy Hiding. “We will ship ©. 0, 0, ON APPROVAL
me sa Shas nna hah bine te een 8 eat
exegiination. ’ @
: " "
MEAD CYGLE CO., Dept. J.L."CHIGAGO, ILL.
ROAD HAS WOMAN HEAD.
‘Widow of Millionaire to Be Prealdent
of Line Between Ios Angeles
Santa Monica, Cal—Work has been
commenced on an electric railroad from
Santa Monica to Hueneme, Thenameot
the pew road is the Hueneme, Malibu &
Port Los Angeles, of which corporation
Mrs. May Rindge Js president and H. W.
Lemeke general manager, The company:
ds capitalised at $2,000,000, and will have
its offices in Santa Monica, The road
follows tho beach, and In Ventura coun-
ty will connect with the Burson road for
Ventura, and-thenca to Santa Barbara.
Ralls, rolling stock an¢ equipment have
been ordered to the east. Several hun-
dred yards of track have already been
laid and & force of 200 men will goon be
at work,
The line will be extended from Santa
Monica to Los Angeles, and at the other
end, after reaching Santa Barbara, it is
expected it will be ultimately pushed on
‘to San Francisco. The section of the
road now building is the first part of
what Is proposed to be a beach trolley
line from Los Angeles to San Francisco.
Mrs, Rindge, whose name appears as
the president of the company, is the
widow of ‘the late multi-millionaire
Frederick H. Rindge. who initiated the
enterprise. Rindze left an estate of
325,000,000, which fact guarantees the
financial stability of the present under-
taking. .
WILL MOVE THE TOWN.
Steel Corporation Likely to Change
Site of Sparta, Where Drills
Have Been Working.
Duluth, Minn.— .t is probable that the
village of Sparta, two and a half miles
east of Eveleth. Mesaba Range, will have
to be removed tu a new location near the
present site.
| The town, which bas 2 population of
1,000 people, has met with the experience
of Eveleth in its earlier days. Iron ore
has been found beneath the town site,
and to mine Jt it.will be necessary to
remove the bulldjngs,
Diamond drilling has been In progress
in the village. or close to it, for the last
two years, and, while there is no official
Information us to the extent of the ore
discoveries, it is the general under.
standing that the existence of large
bodies of mineral has been proved,
The exploratory work has been done
by a steel corporation, which contrals
theumineral rights in the town site. ‘The
village was established elght or nine
years ago, when the Genoa mine was
opened. This property is still in com
mission, as are the Malta, Sparta and
Pettit, in the same field. The Hobar
mine 1s a new property belpg opened uy
near Sparta,
DESIRE SANE LOVEMAKING
Indiana Girls Oppose Late “Spoon-
ing” and More Than Two
Nights a Week.
Logansport. Ind.—For the purpose of
diecouraging swains with a disposition
‘ monopolize all their time 2nJ to en-
courage the habit of “breaking away”
carly, the Cupid Ten O'Clock club is
‘waging a reforin tor sanity in love-
| making.
| Mass Florence Muore, the founder, Is
the president. She declared {hat two
evenings a week was abundant oppor-
tunity for the prosecution of the most
ardent sult, and believes that “no two
young people can have anyth:ng so Im.
portant to say tat it cannot, fully be
discussed in a thres hour call,”
Announcing In newspapers her in
tentidn to combat evils arising from
too great famillarity before marriage
she caHed for enrolments in the new
ciud, and declares it will revolutionize
lovemaking in Logansport She hope:
to extend thy id-t throughout th
state. Miss Moore ws enty 'S vears ol
ana Is of a prow nt o 1 fata ly
ANEW TERMINAL AT FOOT-OF
“ , s
New York City
+ HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED’
Affording a most conevoient
satrance near the centre
of the shopping and
hotel district.
The Down town terminal at foot of
LIBERTY STREET
- will be continued as beretofore.
Ferry Service to and from
South Ferry-Whitehall Termirtal
has been discontinued
B.N. AUSTIN, _C.W. BASSETT,
Gen'l Pass.Agt, Chicago-Il Gen'IPass. Ag:
Baltimore, Md.
D.B.MARTIN, Man. Pass. Traffic,
Baltimore, Md.
THE ARCTIC ICE CREAM CO
AND
OYSTER HOUSE.
1723 Seventh St, Northwest.
French and American Ice Creams
Ices an’ Sherbets,
Fine Line of Oysters and Sea fond:
Always in Stock.
Cafe for Gentlemen and Ladies
Prices always consistent with the ex
cellence of the goods. Special rata
offered to dealers, to churches anc
religious bodies. 1. E. Williamson
Proprietor and Manager.
Telephon Connection.
THROUGH STREET CAR SERVICE
BETWEEN THE NEW TERMIN-
AL OF THE BALTIMORE & OHIO
RR. AT 23D STREET, NEW
YORK, AND GRAND CENTRAL
STATION.
«On October 23rd the Metropolitari
Street Railway Co. of New York inau-
gurated a new line of through street cars
between West 23rd Street Station and
Grand Central Station of the New York
Central and New York, New Haven &
Hastferd Railrceds, cna four minute
headway between 7.30 A. M. and 7.00
P.M, msking the distance between the
two Stations in about twenty minutes.
without transfer, on a five-cent fare,
In addiiton to this excellent arrange-
‘ment is the splendid clectric cab service
at reasonable rates, —
All trains of the Baltimore & Ohio R.
R. have direct connection to and from
the New Terminal at West 23rd Street,
New York. -
WE DO BUSINESS AT ONE PRICK
Misfit Cloth-
5
‘
:
ing’ Parlor,
Fine Garinents (Slightly Worn) Made
~ by Our Leading Tailors.
JUSTH’S OLD STAND.
Established 186s. 619 D St. Nv W"
A UNIQUE CEMETERY.
BURYING GROUND. THAT CON-
TAINS NO GRAVES.
Place Where Bodies of Employes of
* Steel Company Who Have Fallen
Into Molten Metal Are
“Set at Rest.”
Whiting, Ind.—Just west of here,
where the surf of Lake Michigan beats
against the [ndiana-Illinois state line, 1s
the most extraordipary cemetery In In-
diana and one of the most remarkable
ones in the country. There is not a
grave in it, and every burial in it has
marked a tragedy in which a life was
lost. It is the old cemetery of the Illi-
nols Steel company, in which, until re-
cently, it ‘sat ‘to rest” those who lost
their lives In the molten metal in the
great steel works that line the lake a
little farther to the northwest—across
the state Hne, Those burled in this cem-
etery did, in fact, pass through dissolu-
tion. Their bodies were completely lost
—dissolved in thg molten metal and
practically no trace was left of them.
‘The funerals that have taken place In
this cemetery have not been marked by
any processions behind hearses—in fact,
there has been no seed of hearses,
The metal in which the workers have
Jost thelr lives has been run off into
great ingots, which have beén hauled out
and set up facing;the white breakers of
the lake, In some instances the metal
that has been run off has been cast with
slag which makes a more imposing and
better weathering monument, the metal
being given to discoloration while the
stone-like slag, for a number of years al
leust, looks like cast stone.
There fs probably no cemetery in the
state of which so little is known, unles:
it,be the peculiar Rappite burial inclos
ure at New Harmony. The Iillnois Stee
company {s not inclined to talk abou
it; as a rule, the people who lose thel:
lives in this manner are foreigners, ant
have no family or close friends to kee]
record. But for the sentimentot fellow
workers who have insisted that at leas
some of the metal in which their fellow
a
Cy ees “.
hn try a
Vi W Hf es a
Umea
iN cits aimee eal
NOI Rai
ONE OF THE BIG INGOTS.
worker lost his life be thus run off to
‘mark passing. it is probable there would
be no cemetery of this kind.
The cemetery began about three or:
four years ago, when a man named
| Resnotas fell Into one of the open-
hearth pots. It is sald that his fellow
Workers insisted that some of the
metal be run off and set up somewhere,
jin his memory. The company at that
time was filling in part of the lake
‘front, Just over the Indiana line, and
it was decided to set up the ingot
there—It would help to make the fill
anyway. This wag done and the new
cemetery was begun.
Several others who have met their
fate in a simifar manner, it is sald,
were thus remembered. From the first
there has never been a grave dug IN
the cemetery. Just how many are
thus “buried no one seems to know,
but there are probably eight or ten.
No markers have ever been put up.
Though the ingots are on top of a
great fill, made with’cast slag from
the furnaces, the location of the un-
usual cemetery is striking. Sltuated
| near the Indiana-Iinois’state line, it
is crowded in between the tracks of the
many trunk lines to the east that hug
the Jake-at this point and by the surf
,| rolling in over the slag beach. The
waves hit the southernmost point of
the lake with considerable force and
| dash over breakwaters that have been
} | extended out Into the Iake by the steel
,| company. “There {fs always the mur-
,| mur of the lapping waves, or the roar
of the lashing whitecaps in rough
| weather. - .
}) Htecently the attention of the coun
| try was attracted to one of these pe-
| culiar “burials.” At one of the Penn
+ sylvania steel inills two"men lost thel
| tives in molten metal, being completely
( lost. The metal wasz,run off into
great ingot and elaborate funeral serv-
| ices were held over It, a Catholic pries
} presiding. .
At one end of the fill {s an Interest:
fling rambling structure—the home o
:| John Cunea, a fisherman, Cuynea for
- | merly was a printer in Indianapolis.
.| “1 don't know which of those ingot
) | or dumpings out there contain all tha
f| remains of workers,” he sald, “but
understand that one”—pointing to on
between his house and the lake front-
“js the one that bas the man Reynold
dissolved in it, As I recall it, the:
were able to save part of one leg, bu
the rest of him was melted, I don’
know how many of those Ingots o
casts of slag have men in them. Th
. steel company has stopped bringin
5 them here. They are placed nearer th
41 mills now.”
Rogues in All Lands.
Over In Italy, where they haven’
any steel trust or Standard Oil com.
pany, the thieves steal Madonnas frou
the churches. Wherever you go Ir
this world ‘it is about, as broad as it
fis long. ?
TO PROMOTE ARMY OFFICER
‘President May Make Cart. Pershing
_-W:Brigadier Genera} Over Heads
of Many Others.
Washington."— Conviction is ex-
pressed among officers in the war de-
partment that Presidect Rovsevelt in-
tends to promote Capt. John J. Persh-
ing, Fifteenth cavalry. whose home is
| in Chicago, to a brigadier xeneralsbip.
This would jump him over the heads
of several hundred officers and give an
example of advancement by” “selec-
thon” which has no parallels in army
annals save In the cases of Gens. Leoa-
| ord Wood and Albert L. Mills, whoge
i.
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CAPT. JORN J. PERSHING.
(Chicagoan Who May Ue Made a Briget
dier Genera’)
Promotions caused a fire of criticism.
Capt. Pershing is a good officer and
his record of achievement in the Phtl-
Ippine islands attracted. the attention
of the presidedt. It was rumored &
year ago that promotion was awaiting
the Chicago man. but the fact that the
senate held up for so long a time the
nominations of Wood and Mills caused
the president to hesitate to send In the
name of 'a cavalry captain whose ad-
vancement would mean tht ignoring of
all the veterans and hard fighters of
the three ranks intervening between tha
grade of captain and that of brigadier
general.
| ‘There isn’t an army officer in the
service who has any criticism to pass
on Capt. Pershing personally. His reo-
ord speaks for itself, But the officers
are criticising sharply the known in-
tention of Presilent Roosevelt to cons
tinue the practice of making prome-
tions by selection. They are not slow
tm declare that {@voritism must enter
into the matter, and that favoriticm
cannot fall to work Injustice to tke
veterans.
The first vacancy in the rank of
brigadier general of the army will oo
cur February 6, when Maj. Gen. Sum-
ner retires, thus creating a place which
will be filled by a brigadier general,
who in turn will leave a Vacancy for
some junior to All, It is not probable
that Capt. Pershing will he given this
first promotion, though he may be
named as the presiient’s choice. There
are several retirements which will oc
cur in rapid succession afier Gen. Sum-
ner's day of service is ended and into
j one of the niches made vacant It fs
the intention of the president to plase
Pershing, «
Capt. Pershingg{hose promotion
over the heads of “his veniurs {fs ex-
pected, is now military attache at
okio.
NAMED TO SUCCEED FIFER.
President Selects Franklin K. Lane
of California for IAterstate
Commerce Commission.
San Francigco.--Franki'n K. Lane,
whose nomination by th~ president for
the office of interstate commerce com=
missioper to succeed ex:Gos. Fifer of
Mivols, fs meeting with opposition
in the senate. is a Demorrat, and one
of the leading politicians of this state,
He was defeated for governor of Call
‘fornia by Dr. Pardee in 1 2. and the
D
HH : .
ae ’ 7]
cs by
* . i
“>
; »
we, -
S J”
wae
j I.
fis
Gvominated to Succetd Fx-C20N. & iter 168
Interstate Commerce Board.) #
following year v.as defeated for mayor
or this clty by Mayor Schmitz. He
was born on Prince Edward Island,
British Columbla. in 1863, removed ta
this state when seven years old, and
with an Intermission of a short time
has res{ded here ever since. For vey-
eral years in carly life ne was em-
ployed in newspaper work, eventually
acquiring the Tacoma News, in Wash-
ington state, which he edited for a few
years. He is a lawyer by profession
and recently haa built. up a Inerative
practice.
Knows Constituents Well.
A certain English M. P. ix said to
have the record tf havior written dur-
Ing the last 11 sears 30,00 lett rs to ts
constituents, chiefly in answer t what
migbt be called family tun idenees
‘As the gentleman has only 119 ™ eva-
stitucnts, one can ezsily. InagLe “hat
be has become prety welt aequatoted
with them. note
:
that, self, might gain the ;aseendency, not|time.-If you want-dogic you need not! , >, esas : ‘ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY .
1 oe Cats that it might benefit-humanity, but that] talk about ‘Aristotle, but listen to the sahil ie Bee ae Loner i
“AS la self alone be helped. We follow the hunch-back,\‘ bald-headed, red-faced, el that ever lived. His life has kept 1 i
yiie f standard of this or that man, not be-|¢fooked nosé Jew, Saul of Tarsus, and] fe "hood ‘coursing through our veine | OAL and q usical and Rece tien
Cy GaaeA {cause we believe in his policies or him,|his logic is unsurpassed. If you want! and kept this old world ce swinging
We, & A eer, A, but because he is on the top round now,| history, you need not talk to me aboutls.s to him, I cannot describe his life:
. > ql Us Ad; aes) ‘so away with principles, away with right, Herodoms for you can. find the history: it 3. 3 part, of creation, a part of the] =
KYRA D PREZ away with conscience. T must follow the | Of fol thousand years in the Bible. Rea-}* ‘ : :
Wy es Ml e WEE ;man who will give me most. A sad]son with er flickering torch cannot! WOvld and the worlds that are to come m i
f eats mee Mala ‘awakening comes; some day the idol] Point to any such sublime truths as are| ‘er Mr. Beecher was writing his "hile e O UW
i A | BRE SHANWE? tumbles or else turas against you, and| found in the Bible". Philosophy, with| Of Christ” a friend called upon him in ate -V.rPr €
IR N35 toe fyow are left like a stranded ship on some] her school of philosophers, stands amSz-! ey nie) sais ve ace
G AV aN es uyast ocean, alone, amidst the lashing of ed when confronted with the philosophy a a5" Ne, Gesier ce tie i “The hte of SOPRANO SOLOIST, of New York City, Pupil of Signor M. C. DeMacchi
; RS SE the billows and the roaring of the waves, [Of the Bible. Science-itself, the greatest}¢*_ ir SE ict . assisted b: .
: oir We? TN \Cardinal Wolsey had the same exper-|Contsibutor to the happiness and com-| Christ will never be finished; it is a part Y _
ie a) ee 3 le ei of the life of humanity. Christ will live + THE AMPHION GLEE CLUB
: LE Toa jrence. In his dialogue with Cromweii| (ort of man, having penetrated the ar- Fee ~ of Warhingtun, D. C., Prof. J. Henry Lewis, D:
een 4 by) you may recall these lines: cana of nature, sunk her shafts into|?S long as man lives. re : Yeon, Gere ee
NBS f s * fear’ recesses, measured the heights of| Young men, you may not be able to saci Muf ANNALEE SLADE,
es By PWG \"Love thyself last, cherish those hearts] its massive pillars to the very pedestal Set YOUF names upon the printed pages sebine tevin FesNorie: Female Elocutienist'ana Singer:
oy an iY, {| that hate thee “of primeval granite, tracked the tqmna-[Of history, but if in your life you are MISS MAVME CHASE. .
Tipe RAY | Seurmion wee not pore tan tonety oes, uncunned the itn per | HP ae and god you ty toe Puri of Mie, ExputiDatey,
' | To silence envious tongues, Be just and] fFeteld the coming of the comets and|O\Rers. if vou scatter sunshine . speak] Mme. Pelham * Accomraniet
; " fear not . the return of the eclipses, has never as{# kind word to thase who are struggling AND OTHER LOCAL TALENT. -
FD eg [Ler all the end thou aim’st at be thy| yet been able to lift up degraded man, |i the world to come, somewhere beyond _ .
ae | been at Ye ee ee
Nzs. Mary Snead Fulcher, of Brook-
am, N.Y, after a few days visit with
De. and Mrs Thos. A. Stevens, of 2258
Cleveland avenue, N. W. enroute for
home, keft Tuesday for Philadelphia, for
‘a short stop With friends. She has been
sismng her parents in Lynchburg, Va,
hee former home, where she has many
frends and has been enjoying the very
sir bospmality of the soticty there
Abs. Fulcher is the wife of Mr. Oscar
Ww. Fulcher, a water meter Incpeetor
and a prominent New York politician
. SHE RECITAL,
Fhe Laem Reeital, Monday, Febru-
ary 12, at Lanvin Temple Church,
THE GAME AND THE CANDLE
Captinucd From ast Page.
tus young man is practicing medicine.
Fe carned me over that city in an aute-
noble, he entertained mic in his $5,000]
tene, he showed me other property
unch he owned, Ah, my friend, it was
«sappy home. Life to him was real.
fome yoang men start life with the
we. thai Sanday school is a place for
chifren; the church for the old people,
andthe Y M.C. A. a place for young
mea vith no life. Such a wrong idea.
Way the young men who are alive in
all the walks of life, and who are ir
the forward ranks are found in these
placs, The other young men with dis-
toned yews of life, think that they
must frequent places where the social!
flass s paseed, they do so, After awhile
wt becenes a necessity, the drink habit
fTows spon them; they die drunkards |
Rober Ferguson was the poct of Seot-
tush ony hfe, ar rathfer the laureate of
Eamtury Has dissipations’ were in the
mereast. ris tavern life and boon com-
pamens hstened him on to a premature
and jamnfu death. His reason gave way.
We was <er ta an asylum for the insane.
After alo twa months of confinement
be died in ans cell,
Young ma he master of yourself.
Vare to do te right. Dare to say no.
Have trong ‘aith not only in yourself
but faith in theuinseen power, who holds
_ ur déstimes » his hands. The world
neds trong mn,
A young mat may think that to. be
great he must gt into the broad field of
yoltice, waiting for an office, waiting
tr the changing vhims of men, instead
4 waiting upon timself. Waiting for
semethg to turnip instead of turning
ap something. Goig to the capitol be-
cai T helped to elrt some one, leaving
tehmd mé a good yb, but I have been
pramsed something retter. A few dol:
tars cred at home, kt I must spend it
Ixcaue Lam going’o gét a job anc
uke harrels of mone, The Mecca of
bie hopes #5 reached,ie finds himsel
2 inttle man at the gret centre of the
tation, hry few dollarsof capital soor
muted away; his friend:ran when they
sw him coming beqaushe wanted t
terrow a dollar. At hom he was boss
hut here, he is a woulde statesmar
sching a yob Was the gae worth th
cartie?
Mv inends, good men a+ needed it
Pecs—men who are saftand tried
mex who will not yicld to iejudice 0}
~nument, but will do the rint as the;
ste the night. God give us ich men
Votties for a helpless, depetient rac
wil never provera relief or bl¢ing un
“owe have strong, safe leadts, wh
having sight of self and a fv self
seatertd follaxers will see the whol
Tete, *
A soung man starts out in HiAwit
1 ‘termmation to fight his we b
2s wal force to the front ranks. Luis
et. disfigured, or killed, he is fe
bach cven beyond the lines again.
A trheously inclined youth asked:
rete. "Do you think it would be wre
"me to kam the noble art of s
1 ose* “Certainly not,” replied |
Poster,” “I Tearmned it in youth my:
#°! T have found it a great value in.
* “Indeed, sir! Did you learn
€!* Loghsh system or Sullivan syster
“Nether, I learned Solomon's syste
Kesred the minister. Yes you will {
+ tad down in the first verse of
fifteenth chapter of Proverbs—“A
Sine turneth away wrath,” it is
‘tC system of self defense that I kn
“€ Many of us starting out on li
“tess have a wrong ambition; 1
ston 1s a love of self in a de
ee ee ee ee: ee eee eee
[standard of this or that man, not be
tcause we believe in his policies or him
, but because he is on the top round now
so away with principles, away with right
away with conscience. I must follow the
man who will give me most. A sad
‘awakening comes; some day the ido!
tumbles or else turns against you, and
|you are left like a stranded ship on some
‘vast ocean, alone, amidst the lashing of
‘the billows and the roaring of the waves.
Cardinal Wolsey had the same exper-
acnce. In his dialogue with Cromweii
you may recall these lines:
© ‘
“Love thyself last, cherish those hearts
that hate thee
Corruption was not more than honesty
Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace
To silence envious tongues. Be just and
+ fear not
Let all the end thou aim’st at be thy
country’s,
Thy God's and-truth’s then if thow fall-
est. O Cromwell,
Thou fallest a blessed martyr.
Had I served my God with half the zeal
I served my king,
He would not in mine age have left me
naked to mine enemies.
Was the game worth the candle?
Another ypung man starts life with
a wrong idea regarding city and coun:
try life. Born in the country he is free
his thoughts and ambitions can feed on
a purer atmosphere, but he thinks he i:
circumscribed; he longs for the. city
with its turmoil and its conflicts. He
leaves the old homestead, the quict vil.
Tage, the country people and goes to the
city. He forgets to a large extent the
good boy he used to be in the desire tc
keep up with the fashions and to make
the people forget he was once a country
boy. Often city life breaks up youth
destroys morals, undermines character
steals reputation, and leaves the promis
ing youth a wrecked man, Was the gam
worth the candle?
“Young men, never be ashamed of th
old log cabin in, the country or the olc
bonnet your mother used to wear, o:
the jeans pants your father used to toi
in. I had rather be a country boy wit!
limited surroundings and a pure heart
than to be a city man bedecked with th
latest fashions, and money, with no mor
als or character. I had rather have th
religion and faith of my fathers than te
be president. Sir Walter Scott wa
right when he said: t=
“Sound, sound the clarion, fill the ff
To ali the sensual world proclaim
One crowded hour of glorious life
Is worth an age without a name!”
This Association is formed for th
purpose of giving you changed and loft
ly ideals of life. It fills it by giving yo
something bettcr, An old negro used t
sit by his lonely cabin door on the ol
plantation, work was over and he woul
take his old banjo, look at it longing,
then begin to pick it. The music fror
the banjo filled his life and made hir
Snape. But one day he went up to th
‘big house; his master’s daughter ha
just returned from college and she wa
Joringing from the piano melodiov
| strains. The old negro stood transfixec
He had never heard such music befor
| He stopped until she had finished, the
went slowly back to the little cabin
| changed man. He took his banjo fro1
jJunder the bed, looked at it long an
‘lovingly, then went to a chest to put
Jaway. A new music had filled his li
.J and entered his soul and the banjo woul
Jno longer do. This Association giv
J you new ideals and the former thin
.| will not do. David J. Hill says there,
{| an old legend which tells how long ag
i]the city of Is—a dream of the bo
;| sailor of Brittany, was swallowed up t
fjthe sca. When a storm sweeps the su
| face of the sea, the lonely sailor se
,| the tall spires of the sunken city in
[hollows of the waves, and when a pr
5| found calm broods over the waters |
| hears the sound of its bells ringing fro
3| the caverns of the sea and chiming tl
.| music of another time, Every man ca
ries in his bosom a humanity that
n| like the fabled city, and from the dep
,Jof his nature he hears the voices of f
¢| past breaking his profoundest silen
y| In the hidden recsses of his being, whe
tl eleen the souls of his ancestors, a sect
.| hunch-back,\* bald-headed, red-faced,
|crooked nos€ Jew, Saul of Tarsus, and
j[his logic is unsurpassed. If you want
history, you need not talk to me about
| Herodotus for you can. find the history
of foitr thousand years in the Bible. Rea-
}son with her flickering torch cannot
| point to any such sublime truths as are
|found in the Bible’. Philosophy, with:
her school of philosophers, stands amSz-
ed when confronted with the philosophy’
‘Of the Bible. Science itself, the greatest
contsibutor to the happiness and com-
fort of man, having penetrated the ar-
cana of nature, sunk her shafts into
carth’s recesses, measured the heights of
Jits massive pillars to the very pedestal
of primeval granite, tracked the torna-
jdocs, uncurtained tne distant plancts
|foretold the coming of the comets and
the return of the eclipses, has never as
‘}yet been able to lift up degraded man,
and point him to higher paths. I com-
'mend it to you, No life is great unless
that life is good. May I use a few lives
Jin comparison as I near my close—four
|} of them in profane history and three of
|them in sacred history.
| Alexander the Great, was a pupil of
Aristotle at fourtcen and whé reigned
over the Macedonians at sixteen, while
Vhis father was away ig battle and who
‘| succeeded Philip before he was twenty,
after weeping because there was no more
'] worlds to conquer, set a city on fire and
'} died amid scenes of debauch. Hannibal
‘Jone of the greatest soldiers that the
| world has ever produced, who climbed
"|the steep and perilous Alps, conquered
"| the armies of the Mistress of the World,
‘Jand stripped three bushels of gold rings
}from the fingers of her slaughtered
"| knights (his countrymer in a tit of mad
‘Yexultation, linked his name to that of
our God’and called him Hannibat) ; died
*| by poison administered by his own hand
"Junlamented in a distant land. Ceasar.
*|who as a statesman, warrior and king
has had no superior, having conquered
-Jeight hundred cities, murdered untold
HT enemies, was assassinated by his best
'| friends in the very place, the attainment
of which had been his chief ambition
"| Bonaparte, who was the greatest general
: of modern times and whose ambition was
to conquer the world like Alexander
,| was at last defeated and banished to z
,| lonely iste and died away from his ows
,{land. Selfish ambition was the ruling
passion in the lives of these four men.
In juxtaposition to these T desire tc
.| place the lives of threé men, who lived
and as tHe years roll by new lustre is
added to their names. They lived for
others, I recall a scene, amid the hillé
¢|of Judea, a shepherd hoy guarding his
-| flock, keeping away danger, doing hi
1] duty. Every danger was fearlessly met
ojevery duty was faithfully done; he
d| guards them well. With faith and pur:
4| pose true he arose from a sheep tende
y| to be a king of the chosen people of God
n| This was David—a man who follower
nj God and loved him in his heart. Where
e| ever he sinned he repented and put awa
d|that sin. He sinned—that is true, he fell
sjand he rose—the honor lieth not in neve
s| falling but in rising every.time you fall
i,| He wanted to do right and God honore
c.| him, \
n| For my next hero may I picture yor
ala young man conversing with his moth
njer. My’son, whatever befalls this Ian
d|do not forget your mother's religion o
it] your father’s God, nor forget your Naza
fc| rite vow. Always:be true and-brave an
id] you will ‘conquer. I promise, replie
-s|the youth. A little later an army bescig
ss] ed the city, it was captured and he wit
is| several others were carried away captiv
o,|to a strange land. He was faithful to hi
ld| duty. He never forgot his mother’s reli
»y| gion, his father’s God, nor the vow th:
r-|he had made, He was tempted on ever
es|hand. He was in an oriental country
1e}and you have read of the splendor an
o-| the vices of the oriental in days gone b;
1¢] but amid all the temptations he stoo
m| firm and God blessed him and advance
1¢|him ‘step by step. Those that éarric
r-| him away captive required of him a son
is] he replied, how can I sing the songs ¢
th| Zion in a strange land? They offerc
he| him “meats that had been offered th
.| idols, At the risk of offending the kin
rejand his advisors, he replied, it is ne
et} lawful for me to eat that which has bee
and you have read of the splendor and
the vices of the oriental in days gone by
but amid all the temptations he stood
firm and God blessed him.and advanced
him ‘step by step. Those that é¢arried
him away captive required of him a song
he replied, how can I sing the songs of
Zion in a strange land?, They offered
him “meats that had been offered the
idols. At the risk of offending the king
and his advisors, he replied, it is not
lawful for me to eat that which has been
offered to idols. He made enemies but
he conquered every time. He never for-
got his God, nor the religion of his fath-
er and mother. He was cast into a den
of lions because of his adherance to a
principle and was safely delivered.
Young men, Daniel is an example of
purpose and steadfastness that should
‘be emulated by all. As a youth he was
true to a purpose and was honored all
the way.
‘The last example, young men, is the
greatest that the world has ever seen
and because he was a young man and
did alt of his works as a young man
Young men will be honored as-long as
the world stands. Jesus Christ was 4
"young man; he believed in the young
men and he did his greatest work. as 2
.young man, having completed his Fath:
13 business at thirty-three years of ag:
and then died. One particular thing it
) his life that is especially appealing t«
‘jyou, is he started out early in life to de
| the work assigned to him. He never los
-|an opportunity for doing good. He neve
| shirked duty, but” he was always a mast
rjer of the situation. As the highest typ
you to the Inte of the greatest young
an that ever lived. His life has kept
the blood ‘coursing through our veins,
and kept this old world ever swinging
back to him, I cannot describe his life;
it is & part of creation, a part of the
world and the worlds that are to come.
When Mr. Beecher was writing his “Life
of Christ,” 2 friend called upon him in
his study and asked him the question,
“When will the life of Christ be finish-
ed?” Mr. Beecher replied, “The life of
Christ will never be finished; it is a part
of the life of humanity. Christ will live
as long as man lives.”
Young men, you may not be able to
get your names upon the printed pages
of history, but if in your life you are
manly, pure and good, if you try to help
others, if vou scatter sunshine , speak
a kind word to those who are struggling
in the world to come, somewhere beyond
sky and sunset, your pralses will be sung
before the inhabitants of all the worlds
and you will be honored for what you
shave done, I had rather have that, than
to have the plaudits of,men; for earthly
hhonor is fleeting. Each day is a life and
that life is wasted that does not bring
us nearer to God, nearer to our fellow
men, and nearer to the things which
God has created. Owen Meredith in Lu-
cile, says, “God means every man to be
happy, be sure he sends us no sorrows
that have not some cure. Our duty
down hefe is.to do, not to know. Live
as though life were earnest and life will
be so. Let cach moment like Time’s last
Ambassador come; it will wait to deliver
its message, and some sort of answer it
merits.
It is not the deed a man does, but the
way that he does it, that should plead
for man's compensation in doing it.”
There are two or three old Dutch words
which have resounded through the world
“Neen nimmer"—"“No never!" Wher
the order was given by the Roman le-
gions to the Botavians in the woods at
the’ mouth of the Rhine, to lay down
theis arms, the answer which came back
from the ancient Dutchman was, “Neen
nimmer;” when the hosts and fleets of
Spain dictated to the struggling Dutch
of ‘four centuries ago, “Give up your re-
ligion” the answer came back from the
men and the women, “Neen nimmer,”
and they repeated the answer, for eighty
years. When the Admiral of the Spanish
flect, with his twenty-six big galleons of
war, ordered the commander of the dis-
abled Dutch to surrender, the answer
came back from the commander, “Neen
nimmer,” and he fought for two days
ind nights longer. And when on the
hird day, the Admiral called out, “Strike
your flag; we will give you quarter,” thc
Dutchman with the orange flag nailed to
the stump of the shattered mainmast.
ind his crew on their knees shouted
back, “Neen nimmer” and set fire to the
magazine and went up in smoke ane
glory. i
Will the young men who are to be
leaders, spend their hours-in riotous liv:
ing, “Neen nimmer;” will they be fals
to duty? No, never! Wilt they shirk’
No, never! Will they be disloyal to self
{to home, to country? No, never! Wil
they be led away by things that do no
| 2dify? No, never! Will they spend thei
time chasing shadows and leaving th
| substance? No, never!
| I close with this illustration: Croesu:
| was a wealthy man, a king. It was pro
|| verbial for the people “to exclaim, “A
rich as Cresus!” One day Crasus sai
{to Solon, “Do you think, [ am a happ:
| tan?" Solon answered, “Alas, I do no
'|know, Creesus; that life is happy an
.| well that ends well.” A few years later
Jowhen Crassus had lost his wealth, ha
[lost his health and had been deserte:
by his friends and companions who i
his day of glory and prosperity faughe
: at his jest and ran to do his bidding
Cressus in anguish and misery exclamec
j|‘“Solon, Solon, thou said truly, that lif
y} is, well that ends well,
j} Truly, young men, that life is wel
,|and happy that ends well. Do not at th
¢| close of your life save your soul and fos
i) life, but save a life and save a sou
-|for all else will pass away, and the’
z when too late you certainly will ask th
{| question, “Was the game worth the can
‘die °°
MILLIONAIREINDIANSLAWES
Conti ued’ From Fourth Page
dians from the principle industries of
that country, which is now discovered
to be abundant in minerals, quartz, al-
pheet, lead, ete., together with thousands
and thousands of acres of gas and coal
oi} wells, already largely sought after
by the Standard Oil Company. The vari-
gated natural capacity of the soil is
shown by the fact that the negro mer
have for years produced cotton from on
cto ofen and a half bales per acre; wheat
from seventy to ninety bushels per acre
and corn accordingly. They are waiting
with great anxiety. Only honest n:
sincere people of enterprise n rac
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prejudice, Inde-~ -
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Tie Chickasaw 11 S 7 4
men were fortunzte», *% * 3
their attorneys. Mr, ° “« “
perience in matters pe~ --y to the in
terests of Indian Freedmen and Mi
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"PHENE'S FOLLY," FREAKIEST HOUSE IN LONDON. A Modern Building with Outlines of an Old French Chateau-Fad of a Bich and Eccentric
Antiquarian.
London. There is no doubt that the freakest house in London is that which stands at the corner of Upper Cheyne row and Oakley street, in Chelsea. Its owner calls it Chateau du Savinay, but locally it is known by the more appropriate designation of "Phone's Folly." The street on which it fronts is familiar to American visitors, because it contains Carlyle's house.
"Phene's Folly" presents one of the most curious conglomerations of architectural and sculptural incongruities that ever man wasted money on. It is backed by a wilderness garden, which really belongs to the eighteenth century house farther down the row. The entire front of the mansion, which is four stories high, is completely covered with mystic devices, angels, gargoyles, lions, griffins, armorial bearings, balustrades, columns, and capitals. No system has been followed in their arrangement. It is a veritable nightmare medley. To add to the incongruity of the designs, the figures are painted in the most vivid and startling colors, brilliant reds, bright yellows, and emerald greens being extensively employed.
Eight large female figures form the basis of the scheme, and between their heads are tablets and medallions on which are depicted snakes, elephants, sacred bulls, ecclesiastical emblems, goda, and goddesses. On the parapet of the house are the figures of Priam of Troy and Hecuba, each of them confronting a huge dragon. In the center of the front is a coat of arms with quarterings of mermen, stars and daggers, and the motto, "Ex supero spe pugnam." No body lives in the house
...
LONDON'S FREAK HOUSE.
and no visitors are ever admitted to it.
Dr. Phene, the owner of the property, lives in a house on the opposite side of the street. He is an antiquarian, with a purse long enough to permit him to indulge in his most eccentric fancies. Some of his ancestors at one time lived at the Chateau du Savenay, on the Lolre. The "folly" represents his efforts to ingraft the outlines of it on the skeleton of a comparatively modern house, with additions of his own. After viewing the copy one cannot blame the Vendeans much for having pulled the French chateau about the proprietor's cars.
The doctor claims descent from the Phoeniceans and is uncommonly proud of his ancient lineage. The house is supposed to embody the cryptic history of the family genealogy. Judging by results, it is awfully tangled and it is small wonder that Dr. Phene never seems satisfied that he has got things right. He is continually making alterations. Year after year goes by and still the house is never finished. Decorations, bas-reliefs, statues and twisted and gilded columns are put up only
most favorable view concerning the house was one the writer overheard as he passed two workmen who were discussing it. "Well," said one, "I suppose everybody has a right to his own fancies if he can afford 'em." "Right," agreed the other; "right you are, mate. An' it gives employment to the honest workingman."
Inventor Holland's Prophecies.
Inventor Ireland's Prophecies.
When John P. Holland prophesied the submarine boat people looked at him askance and said to one another: "Isn't it a pity?" And he looks so intelligent, too!" Now Mr. Holland says that he expects to fly from his home in Newark to his New York office within a few months and that before the year is out any man who has one of the machines he has invented can easily go through the air at a speed of 40 miles an hour or can move at the rate of 15 miles an hour with no more exertion than is required for walking three miles an hour on land.
Oklahoma Giants.
Roger Mills county, Oklahoma. is especially favored in the matter of giant citizens. In Elk City there are 10 business men over six feet tall, one being six feet four inches. Sayre has a merchant who stands six feet seven inches and four others over six feet two. Berlin clinches the list with a 15-year-old boy, Ell Guthrie, who measures six feet six inches in his stockings, weighs 162 pounds and is still growing.
M. FALLIERES THE FAVORITE
President of Senate May Be Elected to Succeed Loubet as President of France.
Paris.-Everybody knows that when the senate and deputies meet to elect a new president of the republic for seven years, M. Loubet will not be a candidate. He is tired of office, is growing old—he was 67 on December 31 last—and is determined to spend the rest of his days in unofficial peace. Who, then, will be elected?
M. Fallieres, the president of the senate, may be looked upon as first favorite, partly by reason of his office, and partly because he is known to be
M. FALLERIES.
(President of French Senate Who May Succeed Loubet.)
sound; known too, not to be too ambitious, and because he is distinctively decorative. M. Fallieres' election—and this is a great point in his favor—would not be too displeasing to the reactionary party. He is a large land owner and fond of entertaining members of the older nobility of France. Mme. Fallieres is also very popular, and the wife of a new president is not unnaturally of the first importance.
Next in favor to M. Fallieres comes M. Leon Bourgeios. He has been president of the chamber of deputies, premier, and was a member of M. Loubet's cabinet in 1892. M. Bourgeois is 54, and for a man who is comparatively young his years of office of one kind or another make a surprising total. The main thing against M. Leon Bourgeois' chances of success is that he is a widower. But it has been rumored that he intends marrying again. M. Doumer, the president of the chamber and former governor of Indo-China, ranks third in the list of probable presidents. He has been minister of finance and minister of the interior, and has a charming personality. But he is perhaps too active and pushing a man for the position, and his political opinions—he is a radical republican—are rather too clearly defined for those of a would-be president, who must, above all things, be politically neutral.
In the outsiders' class. M. Berteaux has lost ground by his sensational resignation from his post at the war office. He is a genial man and a rich one, and is very popular among his fellow deputies, but the senators are said to distrust him.
M. Paul Deschanel had a very strong chance indeed in 1899. Now he has no chance whatever. He has simply dropped out of the running and nobody, not even M. Deschanel himself, knows exactly why this has happened.
M. Combes' chances are extremely poor. Lastly, one must not overlook M. Jean Dupuy, whose influence as the proprietor of "Le Petit Parisien" is widespread, and who is known to have been canvassing.
PORTRAIT OF HANDEL.
Medallion of Famous Musical Composer Recently Discovered in a British Museum.
London.—The above medallion portrait of Handel, the famous musical composer, was discovered recently in Sir John Soane's museum. Lincoln's Inn Fields, London. It had been hanging in an ante-room for years, but had never attracted attention. It is especially interesting because it is evident
GEORGE FREDERICK MANDEL.
NEWLY DISCOVERED PORTRAIT OF
HANDEL.
ly true to life, the powdered wig and the evidences of pose being absent. The sculptor, George J. Frampton, R.A., examined the medallion and said he was confident that it was taken from life, and believes it to be the model for a monument. Certain details caused him to believe it to be the work of the Sculptor Roubillac. The curator of the museum reports that he can find no record of how the portrait came into Soane's possession. The portrait first appeared in print in the London Musical Times during the last month.
Her Grief Fatal
Ordered to write a composition on
fatal love, a schoolgirl at Versallies,
who had just lost her mother, was
seized with syncope and died.
NORTHWEST PASSAGE DISCOVERED BY CAPT. AMUNDSEN.
Young Norwegian Explorer Acquires Sudden Fame — Proves Route for Which Columbus Searched When He Reached America.
New York.—Capt. Amundsen is exceedingly modest about his trip through the northwest passage.
An observation station was established by Capt. Amundsen at King William's land, latitude 69 degrees and 36 minutes north and 90 degrees west. Capt. Amundsen declares his belief, based on the two years' of observation by him, that the north magnetic pole is within 90 minutes of that point. The observations have been taken day and night for a period of three years, and in the opinion of the explorer the actual position of the magnetic pole will be determined as soon as his observations can be figured out. Evidently the change from the position marked by Ross has been very slight.
Capt. Amundsen, with his crew of seven men, sailed from Christiana June 15, 1903. The route sailed was from Christiana to Baffin bay and then through Lancaster sound, Barrow strait, Peel sound, James Ross strait, Rae strait; Simpson's strait, Dease strait, Coronation gulf and Dolphin and Union straits to King point, where the explorers obtained communication with the winter-bound fleet of whalers from San Francisco.
The passage from King William's land and Victoria land, says Capt. Amundsea, is very shallow and very narrow. There are more than 100 islands there and at times the sounding was as shallow as three fathoms. These islands were seen and mentioned by Rea and Capt. Amundsen says it is now definitely proved that they are land. Capt. Amundsen is a Norwegian seaman, only 32 years old. His exredi-
A. B.
CAPT. ROAUD AMUNDSEN.
(Norwegian Explorer Who Discovered the Northwest Passage)
tion was fitted out with financial assistance from King Oscar, some influential men of Norway and Sweden and the Royal Geographical society of London. The coldest weather he experienced was in March, 1904, when the mercury registered 70 degrees below zero.
The existence of a northwest passage was discovered long ago. Earlier explorers succeeded in traversing it. But to do this they had to leave behind the vessels on which they had entered the Arctic ocean, walk some distance over the ice and get aboard vessels which had come from the opposite direction. Capt. Amundsen won the distinction of being the first man in the history of the world to navigate the Arctic region from Davis strait to Behring strait in one and the same vessel. He has realized the dream of ages.
When Columbus sailed from Spain in 1492 it was with the aim of finding toward the west a shorter and safer route to India than the one around the Cape of Good Hope. He thought when he reached America, that he had accomplished his object. Years passed before it became known that what he had found was not a new route to the east, but a new world. Efforts then began to find northeast and northwest passages from Europe to Asia. Adoll Erlk Nordenskjold, a Russian, completed the northwest passage in 1879. The first great advance in the exploration of the northwest passage was made by John Davis, who discovered the strait named for him in 1585. Henrik Hudson followed him in 1607, and in 1616 Baffin reached latitude 77 degrees 45 minutes, a record that stood unequaled for 236 years.
There was a great revival of Arctic exploration in the early part of the nineteenth century. Sir John Franklin was sent by the British government with two ships and 129 men expressly to make the northwest passage. Nothing was heard of the party from 1846 to 1854, when it was learned that it had perished. Numerous expeditions were sent out for its relief, among them that of Robert McClure, who passed through Behring strait in 1850 and went eastward as far as Melville Island. Here it was necessary to abandon the ship. In the spring of 1854 McClure and his crew were met and rescued by McClintock's party, which had come up from the east, and taken back to England. McClure was thus the first to make the northwest passage. For his achievement he was knighted by the British government, promoted to a captaincy in the navy and highly honored by scientific societies.
Blue Eyes Good. Color-blindness is very rarely found in persons with blue eyes.
JAPAN'S NEW AMBASSADOR.
Viscount Aoki to Represent Mikado in United States—Has Had a Distinguished Career.
Washington.—Viscount Siuzo Aoki who has been appointed Japanese ambassador to this country, is a member of the privy council and of the first class of the Order of the Rising Sun, the highest order in Japan. He stands in the first rank of Japanese diplomacy, far outranking Mr. Takahira and even Baron Hiyashi, the present Japanese minister to London. He has occupied a prominent place in the Japanese foreign office and was a delegate
[Painting of a man with a long beard and a mustache, wearing a suit and a hat.]
VISCOUNT SINZO AOKI.
(New Japanese Ambassador to the United States)
representing his country at The Hague conference.
Viscount Aoki comes as the first ambassador from Japan to the United States after a distinguished career in the diplomatic service, from which he retired about six years ago, when he was called by the emperor to be one of the privy councillors, the highest honor that can be hoped for by the nobility. When yet a young man the new ambassador went to Germany as a student and received there trailing in the large universities. Twice he was returned there as minister. Naturally, German is the language with which he is most familiar, but he speaks English readily.
It is expected that the viscount, accompanied by the viscountess, who is of German birth, the viscount having met and married her while serving his country in Germany, will come to this country without delay. It is believed here that the Japanese government will purchase an embassy building more conveniently located than is the present legation. Viscount Aoki is about 60 years old and is considered a man of great ability. Before entering the privy council he was twice minister of foreign affairs and Mr. Takabira, whom he succeeds here, served under him as vice minister.
POSTMAN'S STONE PALACE
Building Which M. Cheval Has Erected with Odd-Shaped Stones in France.
New York. After 26 years of unaided work M. Cheval, the postman of Hauterive, in the department of Drome, France, has completed his ideal palace, of which a picture is here printed.
M. Cheval was led to start the building by tripping over an odd shaped stone. He carried it home and the next day found another. Then he began a systematic hunt for what he
THE STONE PALACE
(Queer House Built in France by a Post-
man)
calls nature sculptures, with the idea
of using them in a building
The palace is about 85 feet long, 45 feet wide at one end and 33 at the other. In the center is a gallery with a catacomb at either end. These catacombs shelter all sorts of strange stone animals and figures.
For a Barbary tower, which includes a grotto of the Blessed Virgin, the postman-architect spent seven years in hunting the stones and putting them in place. One face of the building shows an Arab mosque, a Hindoo temple, a Swiss chalet, a medieval castle and two other buildings in its 85-foot stretch.
Stones formed by nature in the likeness of animals form the south front, where, also, there is a collection of flins. Altogether M. Cheval says he has spent $1,000 on his hobby.
- Moving Pictures in Science.
Jack of all useful trades is the moving picture machine which has been successfully applied to natural science research, microscopy, electrical and physical phenomena, medical science, chemistry and anthropology, and latest of all to a native devil dance in Borneo. The march of civilization is so rapidly taking undeveloped peoples beyond their native customs that it is of the greatest importance some means should be adopted for placing them on record. And in this work the moving picture is the ideal agent, for by its aid is obtained a truthful and permanent record of native ceremonies and customs.
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Richard L. Baltimore,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
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IS A LEARNED HINDU
HON. P. RAMANATHAN, K. C., TO
LECTURE IN AMERICA.
Is Solicitor General of Ceylon, India,
and Regarded as One of Wise
Men of the East—Will Expound the Bible.
Washington.—The other day one of the most eminent and interesting foreigners who ever arrived in this country, came to Washington as the invited guest of Mr. Albert S. Dullin, reagent of the Vedanta university. This insignified personage is none other than the Hon. P Ramanathan, K. C. C. M. G. solicitor general of Ceylon, India—a great Jana Yogi, or sage, as reputed to be one of the "Wise Men of the East." Mr. Ramanathan has other marks of distinction besides being knighted by Queen Victoria, solicitor general and Jana Yogi. He is considered to be the most learned philosopher and master of the English language in India. His works on interprudence are considered the best legal collection ever compiled by a Hindu scholar. His commentaries on religion and philosophy are volume-one the most celebrated of which, in his wonderful works entitled, "An Eastern Exposition of the Gospels of Jesus" ( unlike many orientals who have visited England and America for the purpose of proselytizing Brahmanism and Buddhism, Mr. Ramanathan sits in our own Bible the essence of all religion and philosophy, and expands his marvelous spiritual teachings as only a Jana Yogi can. The light he has thrown upon the gospels of St. Matthew and St. John stands out in brilliant and luminous contrast with the exposition of these gospels as presented by our Christian theologians either ancient or modern.
While in England, Mr. Ramanathan was called to the English bar honoris causa—a concession which has been granted only to the prince of Wales and to Mr. Benjamin, the great American lawyer. Mr. Ramanathan comes from what has long been the chief Hindu family, both in wealth and position, of the island of Ceylon, India. He comes to this country by the invitation of Myron H. Phelps, Albert S.
THE MASTER OF THE MUSIC
JANATHAN
S ar Wro Wd
America)
Dunn and many other well-known educators distinguished for their learning and spiritual knowledge. He will be the guest of Mr. Dulin at the Vedanta university in Washington, where he will have the opportunity of expounding on Vedanta and Yoga philosophy before the literary, scientific and philosophical audiences who meet him. He will meet Dr. Roosevelt, the justices of the Court and other eminent people, the official, secular and religious where he will translate from Sanskrit and Tamil into English the celebrated Hindu epics. In the Maha-Dharata" and Tirthaviva" These two epicles are so well as the most marvelous collections of these wonderful spiritual people.
Mr. Ramanathan's visit
has greatly intensified
that he will not only de-
tectures while here, but
is of special significance,
when known that he comes to join
hand with Albert S. Dullin, the found-
er of International Vedanta, in
a new educational system
which will make for a higher
and international civilization
be believed by those who are
familiar with the purpose that has
called for Hindu sage to Amer-
ica; that an educational sys-
tem is involved by these gentlemen
the water which will contain
all that is good in our
present needs, but reinforced and
enlarge the learning and wisdom
of the order.
He Sat on It
On a bitter, cold morning an old man got into a ariage on the Great Western railway. The guard, who was of a humble nature, offered the old man a hot water in which he accepted gratefully at the end of the journey the graveyard of the old man if he had found the man comforting.
he said, "but I should have like a letter for my feet."
that had been sitting on the foot of the river for nearly 30 miles.
In Old London.
"Knows they don't use the orfina transmitter on the London telephone."
"They talk right into the fog and take their chances."—Cleveland Plain Dear.
PAYNE RETAINS LEADERSHIP
New York Congressman Popular with Younger Element of House—Is a Great Student of Finance.
Washington.—For weeks before the opening of congress rumor piled on rumor that Mr. Sereno E. Payne, of New York, would be deposed from his place of Republican leader in the House of representatives at the present session. The deposing, however, did not take place for he was reappointed chairman of the ways and means committee of the house by Speaker Can-
M. H.
SERENO E. PAYNE
(New York Congressman Leader of Republican Party in the House)
son. This office carries with it the recognized leadership of the party.
Apparently the great majority of the Republicans of the last congress were thoroughly satisfied with the chieftainship of the veteran from New York. Mr. Payne has the grace of good nature, but there is no marked evidence that he ever permitted his good nature to reach the point of yielding party advantage to the opposition on the floor of the house. On several notable occasions last winter he came off rath er better than his adversary in the matter of honors when he met the Democracy's leader, John Sharp Williams, in debate.
The personal popularity of Mr. Payne with the younger Republican members of the house has invariably almed him in his ambitions. He is 62 years old but is as vigorous mentally as the youngest of his colleagues, and on occasion, when aroused, he is capable of powerful and effective eloquence. Mr. Payne, it is said, is the best student of finance in the house. He has written much upon financial subjects and a series of articles which appeared not long ago from his pen on the general subject of Wall street transactions marked him not only a student of finance but as one who understood to the smallest detail matters pertaining to investments of all kinds and to the manipulations of the market for purposes of gain. His articles were frank and made him some enemies in the stock market world.
FLAGS CF PEACE.
Emblems of Each Country with White Border Chosen to Typify the Cause.
Philadelphia.—The emblem of peace which has been adopted by the great powers of the world in their endeavor to ameliorate the horrors of war strange to say, had its birth in the same city where the first American flag was made. It was on October 12, 1891, the three hundred and ninety ninth anniversary of the discovery of America, that a committee of 400 representatives of peace advocates from
Pesce Unto All Nations
the different nations of the world meet at Philadelphia to plan the first peace congress ever held. Here, where the star spangled banner was made by the hands of Betsy Ross, and in the same room where the declaration of independence was signed, the world's sign of peace had its origin.
During this conference it was suggested that a banner should be chosen to typify the cause, and to wave as a universal peace flag over the international court of arbitration during its sessions in the peace palace at The Hague. The design that was accepted and since has been adopted, was the flag of each nation combined with a white border, which expresses individuality as well as unity, and could be readily adopted by each country.
The two largest and most handsome of these flags have been made, one American and the other British, with staffs surmounted with doves, were presented to Andrew Carnegie in honor of his gift of a large sum toward the building of the peace cathedral At The Hague. Mr. Carnegie afterward presented the flags to The Hague where they were afterward adopted at the international peace flag of all nations. These two magnificent flags are made of the finest banner silk, trimmed with heavy silk fringe and measure 6x8 feet. The stars are silk embroidered, and all those who sewed and worked upon them represented as many nations as it was possible to bring together.
CUPID LIKES VETS.'
LITTLE GOD WORKS HAVOC IN SOLDIERS' HOME.
Enough Courtships There to Keep Up Already Established Married Record Among Aged Defenders of the Nation.
Indianapolis, Ind. - Cupid in his most alluring garb is at work among the veterans in the State soldiers' home at Lafayette. In the last year seven or eight marriages have taken place at the home, and it is said there are enough courtships in progress to promise many more matrimonial alliances next year.
"It looks as if we'll have to find a way to head off the little god," declared R. M. Smock, commandant of the home, at G. A. R. headquarters.
The total population of the home is 1,003. Of this number 495 were women—thewives or widows of soldiers. The commandant says the mortality rate at the home seems to be increasing. Included in the population are seven or eight Spanish-American war veterans, mostly young men. Said the commandant:
"The percent of deaths is very much greater among the Spanish war soldiers than among the veterans of the civil war. The experience in tropical countries in which many of them had to serve seems to have lowered their vitality, and, besides, the boys who went out in the Spanish-American war were not nearly so well able to stand hardship as those who went out in 1862."
Commandant Smock spoke of many old couples in the home who seem perfectly happy. They have little work to do and are furnished with plenty of clothing and food. The commandant is inclined to encourage matrimony at the home. He says that among all the marriages that have taken place there since he took control only one has resulted unhappily. After their marriage the mismated pair left the institution. The husband has returned, however, and has sued his wife for divorce. The husband was formerly a member of the Indianapolis police force.
MONARCHS LOSE PRESENTS
Gifts Shah Was to Have Sent Them Now. Repose in Pawnshop—All Won't Take Them Back.
Vienna.—President Roosevelt, the kaiser and a king or two have been robbed of the Christmas presents which the shah of Persia intended to give them. Each potentate was to have a diamond studded miniature portrait of himself, and All-Bagair, a Persian jeweler in this city, was commissioned to do the work in true oriental style.
All had finished the portraits of Mr. Roosevelt, Emperor Francis Joseph and Kaiser Wilhelm, when he was obliged to go to Paris for more diamonds, and turned the finished portraits over to another Persian, Machmed Baga, for safe keeping. When All returned he found a nice little letter awaiting him, but no Baga. The missive contained a fine assortment of oriental greetings, wishes and kotows—and a pawn ticket.
Machmed, it seems, pawned the shah's portraits the day he received them and immediately set out for Italy. He was subsequently arrested in Florence, but had only a few hundred francs in his possession. 'The shah has refused to take the portraits out of pawn, and All declares it would ruin him to do so.
BOBTAIL STEERS AND COWS
Tails of Range Cattle Cut Off to Make Ropes—Hogs Robbed of Their Ears.
Redding, Cal.-W. B. Elam, an extensive stock raiser of Tehama county, came to Red Bluff and complained to the sheriff that parties unknown to him were cutting the tails off the stock on his ranges. He thinks there must be as many as 100 bobtailled steers and cows on the range about Hunter's station.
He says the mutilation is done by thieves, who want the hair to use in the manufacture of hair ropes, Mr. Elam claims that the men who rob the cattle of their tails slip up behind them while they are lying down, and with a sharp knife do the work quickly.
Ross McRaye, of Payne's creek, also in Tehama county, went to Red aluff and swore to a complaint charging that a neighbor had stolen 17 hogs from him. Later 16 of the hogs turned up at the home place, but all of them had been clipped clean of ears. These two complaints. coming so closely together, are a novelty in criminal proceedings in northern California.
Writes 4.917 Words in Hour.
Ray T. Vanetlisch, Colorado service editor of the Paulo Chieftain, broke the world's typewriting record for both the 30-minute and one-hour tests, taking 2,600 words during the first 30 minutes and finishing the hour with 4,917 words. The dictation was received over the long-distance telephone from Denver, a distance of 120 miles. The previous hour record, 3,830 words, direct dictation, was made by Paul Munter at Madison Square garden, New York, November 4, 1905.
Sun Will Be Cold
Sir Oliver Lodge, the great scientist, declares that one of the recent sun spots observed in the solar eclipse was so large that the earth could be dropped into the cavity with a clear space of 1,000 miles all around it. The sun shrinks very slowly. adds Sir Oliver, and Lord Kevin has calculated that in 20,000,000 years it would be incapable of warming the earth.
Bays Tried for Bottleness of Buffer-
ering Infants and in Asylums .
in Cases of Manis.
London. — Interesting experiments with blue light as an agent for producing analgesia, or insensibility to pain, the discovery of Prof. Redard, have been carried out by Dr. Harvey Hillard, anaesthetist to the Royal Dental hospital of London. In an article in the Medical Times and Hospital, Dr. Hillard states that he found that a blue light had on himself a most distinctly calming influence, a desire to close the eyes and sleep is experienced, and, after some minutes, sensibility to pain is lessened. For instance, the difference between a light pressure made with the tip of the little finger and a needle could not easily be detected, and surgical needles could be pushed into the face, lips, gums or arms and blood drawn thereby without actual pain being felt unless a still deeper pressure were exerted.
"I believe that the presence of a blue lamp suitably placed might give satisfactory results in the treatment of insomnia, owing to its calming influence. I have tried it with some benefit in one case, and similarly in restlessness of infants suffering from a mild illness, and in asylum in case of mania it is conceivable that blue light rays might be of value. This view is supported by the fact that red lights have been found to have a beneficial effect upon smallpox, as it is inimical to the vitality of the germs of that disease."
Dr. Hillard gives instances of the utility of the blue rays in the case of the extraction of teeth. One man said under its influence he felt no pain when the molar was extracted, and returned to have two others removed by the same agency.
Wife of Man Who Becomes Insane Saves Property by Her Exertions -Complimented by Judge.
Knightstown, Ind.-The final settlement in the Henry circuit court of the estate of George Shewmaker reveals the story of how a plucky little woman made a brave fight to save the farm, support two children and maintain the family respectability after she had been deprived of a husband's help when he was sent to the insane hospital.
A few years ago, when Rufus Shewmaker was murdered by John Thrawley in the northern part of this county, George Shewmaker, a brother of the murdered man, went insane from brooding over his brother's untimely death. Shortly before he had purchased a farm and when he was committed everyone thought the farm would revert to the original owner.
Not so, however, for the brave little wife set her heroically to work, met all the notes as they fell due, paid the taxes regularly and the court has just authorized the administrator of the estate to turn the farm over to her.
All the while Mrs. Shewmaker worked the farm herself, marketed the crops and did all the farm work without male assistance and at the same time she sent her children to school. When Judge Morris issued his order he publicly complimented the little woman for the brave fight she had made and declared that it was more than many men could have done.
WHO OWNS THESE TEETH?
That Is Mystery That Is Agitating Ypelanti, Mich., Mail Carriers Who Get Queer Package.
Ypsilanti, Mich.-There is a new version of the Cinderella story which is more up to date than the original which has done duty through several generations. According to the new one the modern prince is going about Ypsilanti inspecting the mouths of would-be princesses to see whom a wandering set of upper teeth may possibly fit.
Recently when the post office carriers made their collections from the city mail boxes one of them discovered a set of false teeth in one of the boxes. The teeth were not wrapped up or labeled as to their destination nor was postage prepaid. So that the authorities have no idea as to their ultimate destination. Just how they came there is also a mystery and whether some night wanderer tried to swallow the mail box and got too big a mouthful, or whether the teeth were destined as a gift for some member of the force, is not known. The teeth will be kept a week and then returned to the dead letter office as unmailed matter.
LEFT. FORTUNE BY A "VAG."
Denver Sheriff Befriended Stranger,
Who Wills Him $32,000 at
His Death.
Denver, Col.—Felix O'Neill, formerly sheriff of Denver county, has just received $2,000 by the will of a man named Garrity, who was serving a sentence for vagrancy when O'Neill, then a detective, became interested and helped him upon his feet.
Garrity told the officer that he had come west to make his fortune and was penniless, and O'Neill, with a kindly heart, took the man to his home after he had left jail, fed and clothed him and gave him a start. The old man soon left Denver, but often returned and O'Neill never had a truer friend.
Uncle Sam's Loose Change.
All to the money in the world now amounts to $1,250,000,000, of which $6,000,000,000 is in gold and more than $3,000,000,000 is in silver. Of the gold nearly one-fourth and of the silver more than one-fifth is held by the United States, the amount in both cases being more than that held by any other nation.
---
CUPID IN A TRUST.
IOWA PASTORS IN PACT REGARDING MARRIAGES.
Ministers Believe Divorce Is a Necessity and Would Control Weddings and Thus Cut Rate—New Law Is Advocated.
Des Moines, Ia.—To form a trust for the purpose of controlling matrimonial ventures is the latest movement on the part of Des Moines ministers. The plans were discussed at a regular weekly meeting of the Ministerial association, and if they are carried out Des Moines will no longer be the Gretna Green for lovers who have not for months calmly reflected over the logic of matrimony.
After a liberal discussion the ministers came to the final judgment that divorce is now a necessity, because of the improper matrimonial ties, and they propose to cede the social evil by guarding the divorce into the matrimonial fields by the strongest safeguards.
The agitation was started by Rev. Orian W. Fier pastor of Grace Methodist Episcopal church, who declared that he is firm in the belief that no man should put asunder those whom God hath joined together, but he expressed the firm belief that God has little to do with many of the modern weddings. He claimed to have had an interview with Judge William H. McHenry, of the equity court here, in which he learned that fully two-thirds of the divorces were granted in cases where love, probably had played a very small part in the marriage. He stated that he believed one of the greatest evils is because men and women plunge into marriage without the proper preparation.
Te ministers took up the discussion in a lively manner and practically entered into an agreement that ministers will not in the future marry so indiscriminately.
The preachers believe that where a divorce is wanted there should be arranged a schedule of years according to the offense of the guilty-party in which he or she must remain single.
It has also been agreed that the pastors will demand to know the past history of the participants, their financial condition and their past ventures, if any. It is expected that at the next meeting of the association rules will be drawn up governing the performance of marriages. The ministers will ask the cooperation of the justices of the peace.
it is possible that their present action will result in asking the legislature this winter to pass a law making more stringent requirements for securing a license.
LOVE, LIVE ON $3 A WEEK.
Young Plumber Takes Bride—Both Are Happy on Small Income—Secret Gets Out.
Philadelphia.—If at the lowest possible estimate it cost a mother three dollars a week to board and clothe a growing boy, how can a young man nearly 20 take unto himself a wife and keep her in this sum—without keeping her in want?
This might be a difficult problem for some persons, but James Higgins, a 19-year-old plumbers' apprentice, who lives on Stilies street, east of Eighteenth, believes a man can get married and keep a wife in comfort on this munificent sum.
Higgins loved 18-year-old Ella Ragan. They recently decided that if two persons were in love, money was of no consequence; they could live on love and kisses.
An elopement followed, and they were married. They decided to go to their homes and keep the marriage a secret until such a time as Higgins should blossom out as a full-fledged plumber, or until a time when his long-dreamed-of increase in wages should come true.
A friend betrayed them, and now all their friends and acquaintances are asking them "if it is true."
CUT SOLDIERS' BURIAL CASH
Bodies of Men Killed in United States Will Not Be Sent Home at Government Expense.
Washington.—The body of a soldier killed in active service cannot be sent home to his relatives at government expense for burial if he dies in the United States. Moreover, the body must be placed in the coffin issued by the quartermaster general's department. This was the decision of the comptroller of the treasury in the case of Private Albert Laste, Twenty-ninth battery field artillery, who was killed at Fort Riley, Kan., last October.
His commanding officer wished to send his body to his relatives for burial and desiring a better coffin than was supplied by the quartermaster's department, which was only allowed to spend $35 for that purpose, he offered to supply the necessary additional funds.
Scarcity of American Ships.
Out of 4,217 arrivals of all classes of vessels from foreign ports at New York last year the American flag flew over only 760 ships. According to figures given out at the barge office recently 478 of the 760 vessels were steam powered, and there were five ships, 25 barks, six brigs and 246 schooners among the sailing vessels. In this time there were 2,844 steamships under foreign flags entered at the customs house, of which 1,355 were British and 521 German.
Boy Uses Novel Method to Induce Parents to Take Him Out of Knickerbockers.
Chicago.—Municipal ownership and referendum petition advocates have their eyes on the home of N. Banks Cregler, son of a former mayor of Chicago. Ellsworth B. Cregler, the 15-year-old boy of the home, who secured the name of 50 experienced fathers and mothers to a petition asking his parents to take him from knickerbockers and provide long trousers, will probably run for alderman in his ward if his unique method of carrying his point is successful.
Ellsworth is a student of the Lake View high school, where he says he is ridiculed because he still wears short trousers, although he is five feet five and one-half inches tall. He tried to induce his mother and father to secure long trousers for him, but to no avail. They said he had to wait eight months more, until his sixteenth birthday.
Rather than continue a sufferer in the Fauntleroy bloomers, he circulated the following petition among the tenants of the Nordica building at 738 Fullerton avenue, where the Cregler family lives:
"To Mrs. N. B. Cregier: We, the undersigned, do most earnestly advise and request the application of long pants to Ellsworth B. Cregier as a public necessity, he being in his sixteenth year (or nearly so) and five feet five and one-half inches in height by measurement, and to this end we affix our signature."
When everybody in the building had signed young Cregier went outside to other friends. He soon got 50 names. The petition was presented and the long trousers obtained.
EARTH TO RESEMBLE MARS
Flammarion Believes Martians Have Reached Stage of Development Undreamt Of.
Paris.—Camille Flammarion, the famous author and astronomer, in an interview in one, of the Paris papers, draws an extremely attractive picture of life in Mars. After pointing out that no one can predict what weather Paris will have next week, while it is known to an utmost certainty what kind of weather Mars will have a fortnight in advance, Flammarion goes on to say that there are many advantages in favor of the Martians.
First of all, he says, it would be difficult, for any human species to be less intelligent than ours, seeing, that we do not know how to control ourselves. A second reason is that progress is an absolute law which nothing can resist, and as the inhabitants of Mars are older than we are, they may represent what we shall be in several millions of years. A third circumstance in their favor is that they are in a better position than we are to free themselves from the heaviness of matter. Martians weigh less and their years are twice as long as those on earth. Finally, climatic conditions on Mars appear to be much more agreeable.
Flammarion declares that the hypothesis that Mars is inhabited by an intellectual race, much superior to our own, is growing stronger every year as astronomical observations become more and more precise.
Halifax, N. S.—Prof. Alexander Graham Bell thinks he is a step nearer the attainment of his ambition to perfect a flying machine based on the tetrahedral kite principle. He has been experimenting in this direction for several years on his estate of Belnn Bhreagh, Cape Breton. Recently he succeeded in getting his latest designed kite, which he has named "Frost King" to lift Neill McDearnid, weighing 165 pounds, to a height of 30 feet, and support him there as steadily as if glued to the sky. This kite is named in honor of Walter Archer Frost, of Keenan, WIs., who recently, was married to Miss Susan Winlfred McCurdy, Mr. Bell's private secretary.
The kite, which is constructed of 1,300 tetrahedral cells having a total area of 752 square feet of silk, making a supporting surface of 440 square feet, carried aloft not only its own weight of 61 pounds, but also a load comprising flying lines, dangling ropes and a rope ladder, making 62 pounds more, together with McDearmid, a man of 165 pounds, a total altogether of 288 pounds.
Imports in 1805.
The total appraised value of merchandise handled by Appraiser Whitehead of the United States customs office at New York last year was $705,011,497, an increase of $72,500,000 over 1904, according to a statement. The chief lines of foreign merchandise and their appraised values were: Sugar $71,000,000; wool and woolen goods, $64,000,000; coffee and cocoa, $60,000,000; precious stones and pearls, $37,000,000; eigars and tobacco, $15,000,000; wines and liquors, $11,000,000 and 1,054 automobiles, valued at $4,000,000.
Eccentric. That's All.
Mrs. Burke-Roche's father says he will disinherit her if she doesn't pay him more respect and live within her allowance of $60,000 a year. He is an old man now, and the lady will probably regard his closeness as one of the eccentricities of advanced age.
Old Dixie
-RYE WHISKEY.
-reme
-quality at the price.
1.25 full Qt. $5 gal.
ONLY AT
Christian Xander's Quality
House.
909 7th st.----'Phone M. 274.
Absolute Reliability
Is an essential feature of our stock. No matter what you buy here, from a cheap kitchen chair to an expensive parlor suite, you will get absolute satisfaction with every purchase. Our long experience in the furniture business enables us to buy with good judgment, and we make it a point to handle only such goods as we can safely guarantee. We have a superb stock of things that will please you, for they are the prettiest patterns, and the newest styles that the factories have produced.
We invite you to open an account with us whenever you wish, and arrange the terms of payment to suit your convenience. All our prices are marked in plain figures and we make no extra charge for credit.
PETER GROGAN.
817-819 821 823 Seventh St.
Williams Prussian Syrup
OF
TAR. WILDiCHERRY &c.
The most certain and speedy remedy known for Cought, Colds, and Consumption.
And all Pulmonary Complaints.
For Sale by
E. S. WILLIAMS & CO.
Masonic Temple.
Cor. F and 9th Ttreets.
CITY TO OWN DEER
HARTFORD, CONN., BUYS HERD WITH LAND.
Bixteen of the Animals on Preserve Are Nearly All Full Grown—Bucks, in Bad Temper, Fight Among Each Other.
Hartford, Conn.—It is expected that the city of Hartford will soon number among its assets the herd of 16 deer now on the Colt estate, as it is thought that they will go with the property and continue to ornament the grounds, where deer have been for 30 years or more.
The deer, now in their preserve on the Colt property, are all practically full grown, as the youngest ones are over a year old. They are now wearing their winter suits, a trifle darker in color than the leaves that strew the ground in their little park, and they all seem as contented as if they were assured that a future of prosperity awaited them.
Things do not run smoothly in deer-dom, however, for the bucks are in bad temper and have been for a month or two, a characteristic of the male during the rutting season. They fight one another, and resent attention on the part of humans for matter. Within a few days one of the men on the grounds found two of the bucks lying on the grass, each with his horns hopelessly interlocked in the other's, while one, in addition, had caught his fore legs in the other's antlers, so that movement on his part was out of the question. Assistance was secured and the two animals were finally disentangled. They were exhausted and lay quietly on the ground for some little time after they had been released. Whatever their difference had been, they had forgotten it by the time they were able to walk about again. Had they been wild deer they would have starved to death where they lay.
No one now on the Colt estate can remember the time when the deer were brought there, though it is thought that they were secured by or given to Mrs. Colt after the death of her husband. The herd is now somewhere near high water mark, as for many years there were only seven or eight of the animals. While they are more numerous now, they are snowing the effects of in and in breeding, for, it is said, they do not average as large as their ancestors were 20 years ago. Most of them die natural deaths, though there have been some notable exceptions to the rule. One, said to be the finest buck ever on the grounds, was shot 12 or 13 years ago because he had become so ugly in disposition that his presence was dangerous to his fellows as well as to human visitors. He was an animated breach of the peace, and Mrs. Colt was forced to have him killed.
JAMES F. BUNDY AND GEORGE F. COLLINS, ATTORNEYS.
In the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.
Howard Broadus, Complainant, vs.
Georgiana Broadus and Alphonso Waters, Defendants.
No. 24903. Equity Docket No. 55.
The object of this suit is to obtain an absolute divorce on the grounds of adultery.
On bition of the complainant, it is this 20th day of November, A. D. 1905, ordered that the defendant Alphonso Waters cause his appearance to be entered herein on or before the fortieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the day of the first publication of this order; said order to be published in the Law Reporter and The Bee once a week for three weeks, otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default.
By the Court,
Thos. H. Anderson, Justice.
True Copy. Test:
John R. Young, Clerk.
By Wms. F. Lemon, Asst. Clerk.
W. C. MARTIN, ATTORNEY.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS
TRICT OF COLUMBIA,
Holding a Probate Court.
No. 13,285 Administration.
This is to Give Notice:
That the subscriber, of the District of Columbia has obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Columbia, Letters Testamentary on the estate of Robert H. Daggs, late of the District of Columbia, deceased. All persons having claims against the deceased are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 12th day of December, A. D. 1906; otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 15th day of December, 1905.
Wm. J. Howard, 100 Massachusetts avenue, N. W.
Attest: W. C. Taylor, Deputy Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
A beautiful front room, furnished on unfurnished. 2008 Third street, N. W. Linden Flats No. 9
CHASE ROYS, SOLICITOR.
In the Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia.
Daisy E. Belt vs. King Wilson Belt
Equity No. 22,893. Doc. No. 51.
The object of this suit is to obtain a
divorce from the bond of marriage
On motion of the petitioner, the per
attorney of record, it is this 19th day
of December, 1905 ordered that the defendant, Kung Wilson Bell, cause his appearance to be entered herein on or before the fortneth day, expiry of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the day of the first publication of this order, said order to be published in The Bee once a week for three weeks. Otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in the case of default.
By order of the Court,
Thos. H. Anderson, Justice.
True copy Test:
John R. Young, Clerk
By Wm. F. Lemon, Asst. Clerk
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
Formerly known as
"OZONIZED OX MARROW"
80
KINKY or CURLY HAIB that it can be put up in any style desired consistent with its length. Ford's Hair Pomade was formerly known as "OZONIZED OX MARROW" and is the only use preparation known to us that makes kinky or curly hair straight as shown above. It is also used to make hair harsh, kinky or curly hair soft, pliable and easy to comb. These results must be obtained from our treatment; to 3 or 4 bottles of Ford's Hair Pomade ("OZONIZED OX MARROW") removes and prevents dandruff, relieves itching, integrates the scalp, makes it grow and, by nourishing the roots, gives it now life and virgin. Being elegantly performed and harmless, it is a toilet necessity for adults, gentlemen and children. Ford's Hair Pomade has been made and sold consistently since about 1850, and label "OZONIZED OX MARROW" was registered in the United States in 1850. It has been a long period of time there has never been returned from the hundreds of thousands we have sold. Ford's Hair Pomade remains sweet and effective, no matter how long you make the hair STRAIGHT, SOFT, and PLIABLE. Beware of imitations. Remember that Ford's, Hair Pomade ("OZONIZED OX MARROW") is put up only in 80 c.c. size, and is made only by the genuine has the signature, Charles Ford Press, on each package. Refuse all others. Full directions with every bottle. Price only 80 c.c. for three bottles or 40 c.c. for six bottles. Gist or dealer can not supply you he can procure it from his jobber or wholesale dealer or send us 80 c.c. for one bottle postpaid, or 80 c.c. for three bottles or 40 c.c. for six bottles. Charges to all points in U.S.A. When ordering send postal or express money order, and add mention plainly so.
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
(None gensing without my signature)
Charlie Ford Park
78 Wabash Ave., Chicago, HI.
Agents wanted everywhere.
OFFICE OF E.VOIGHT,
MANUFACTURING JEWELER,
725 Seventh Street. N.W., between
Seventh Street, N. W., between G and H Streets,
Now that we are on the threshold of another Christmas, is it not about time to make up your mind to buy for your loved ones? Some people wait until the last minute to buy their Christmas things. A bad plan. Not but that we can satisfy you, or rather that you can satisfy yourself here at any time. But 'tis better to come before the rush. The selection is easier and then the prices are no greater now. Jewelry of tasteful design is here in abundance.
My Christmas line this year embraces Diamond Rings, Diamond Brooches, Scarf Pins, Cuff Buttons, Ladies' Watch Chains, Necklaces, Pendants, Link Bracelets, Gold, and Silver Watches, Fobs, Studs, Fountain Pens, Desk Sets, Collar Buttons, Desk Clocks, Shaving Sets, Mirrors,
J.
Military Brushes, Hair Brushes, Clothes Brushes, Hat Brushes, Mirrors, Comb, Brush and Mirror Sets, Ink Bottles, Powder Puffs and Cases, Jewel Cases, etc.
CUT GLASS
Is always appropriate at the Christmas season. There is something in its glitter and beauty and brightness which makes it appeal to those of refined tastes. There is a vast difference in Cut Glass qualities and patterns. I am showing only the kind you will be wise in buying. The right value is in each piece for the money you pay for it.
The largest assortment in the city of High Grade Rosaries in Solid Gold, Solid Silver, Pearl, Amethyst, Crystal, Garntt, Emerald, Jade, Opal, Sapphirc, Turquoise, Jasper, etc.
Religious Medals in Gold and Silver Immaculate Conception, St. Benedict, Infant of Prague, St. Joseph, St. Anthony, St. Aloysius, etc. Solid Gold Sacred Heart Medals'in great variety.
'SILVER.'
Tea Sets, Coffee Sets, Water Sets, Chafing Dishes, Pudding Dishes, Soup Tureens, Butter Dishes, Tea Spoons, Table Spoons, Sugar Shells, Fish Sets, Carving Sets, Oyster Forks, Orange Spoons, Sardine Forks, Tomato Servers, Berry Sets, Gravy Ladles, Souvenir Spoons, Chocolate Spoons, Cut Bowls, Etc., Etc. "DEN" DECORATIONS. Imported Metlach and Munich Steins, Brownies, Clocks, Etc. Novelties in Umbellas, Gold, Silver and French Grey. Rich Designs. CLOCKS.
Brass Clocks, Porcelain Clocks, Enameled Clocks, Gilt Clocks, Alarm Clocks. Each style will make an appropriate Christmas present.
Don't be misled by the "fake" discounts offered you by the Instalment Jewelry Houses. The prices of these places are fully 50 per cent. higher than the legitimate jeweler. They advertise a discount of 25 per cent. and yet with the fake discount offered you their prices are 25 per cent. higher than you would buy the same goods in a legitimate store. Goods laid by for the Holidays. Come now and avoid the rush.
American exports to Orient
There was a remarkable increase last year in American exports to China and Japan. In ten months the exports to China have been $50,900,000, compared with $20,000,000 in the previous year, and to Japan the total for the same time has jumped from $22,000,000 to $46,500,000. Our Pacific ferrigation to those countries is direct and Europe cannot hope to compete with it in distance and cheapness.
BASE BALL HOUSE.
1528 7th street, N. W.
The Base Ball House, 1528 7th street, is one of the most popular places of business in the city. There are places that claim to surpass this house for pure whiskey, but the concensus of opinion is among those who have good tastes that the BASE BALL HOUSE under the management of W. J. Donovan
PETER H. BURGESS
is unequalled. This house is known to have the purest and best whiskies in the market. His excellent selections are made with care. The patron's health is more important than anything else, hence W. J. Donovan makes it a business to purchase the purest and the best wines and liquors the market affords. HIS COLUMBIA CLUB. Whiskey is a household article. The very name tells you that Donovan is the only man who handles
COLUMBIA CLUB
FINE OLD WHISKEY
HOLIDAY
J.D. Garrison
VIRGINIA WEST 6
the goods. The Old Glory Cigars is something new. He has recently purchased several thousand of these cigars. He had them made especially for the trade. They are cigars that smoke appreciable and are equal to any cigar on the market. Smokers like a good cigar and this you can find at Donovan's. Night Cap
The Baseball House.
THE COLUMBIA CLUB
is especially distilled for this house.
It is Donovan's own brand.
1528 Seventh street. N. W.
COLUMBIA ICE COMPANY.
John E. McGaw, President and General Manager.
Joseph T. Peake, Secretary-Treasurer.
This ice is made from distilled water drawn from artesian wells. It is from the same water veins that furnish the famous Columbia Springs.
Also retail dealers in wood and coal.
Corner Fifth and L streets, N. W., Washington, D. C.
Telephone Main 272.
LA RODRICKER.
French Dressmaking, Ladies' Tailoring, Gentlemen's Repair Worni neatly done.
Fine Laces Carefully Done. Old garments cleaned so that they look like new.
MLLE. R. E. BELL
This is another step upward for the race, the opening of such an establishment; therefore we ask those who have race pride to join us in helping this lady to make her business a success.
J.C.O'Connor
Wines, Whiskeys and Cigars. The best liquors in the city. If you want pure liquors stop at J. D. O'Connor's, 7th and P streets, N. W. It is the place after all. Everybody invited. 7th and P streets, N. W.
PROTECTIVE BENEFIT ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. Capital Stock Fully Paid In.
We insure any person from 3 to 60 years of age if in good health, without regard to sex.
many person from 3 to 60 years of age to sex.
and accident benefits varying from 20 to 50 years of death benefit fund varying from $7.00 to $10.00. Iation has been and will continue.
INSPECTION OF THE INSURANCE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, and RESERVE FUND on hand for the FRED, thus putting it out of our power than LEGITIMATE, SAFE, SOUTH.
I can deal with us with the firm assured if you do your part.
WANTED AT ONCE!
Twenty Good Agents to represent the Protective Benefit Association.
STEADY EMPLOYMENT and secure territory.
OFFICE: 609 F STREET, N. W. (First day or Wednesday between 10 and 12 o'clock P. M.
AND OFFICERS FOR THE FIRST CVS, president, 1910 Vermont avenue, N. W. Vice-president, 1245 Hamlin street, Brooklyn, and vice-president, 320 8th street, N. W. Secretary, 609 Estreet, N. W. Treasurer, 1207 Youstreet, N. W. Williams, medical director, 1015 4th street, Manager, 1219 T street, N. W. King, attorney, 609 Estreet, N. W. Thomas, medical director, 1800 L street, N. W. Asst. secretary, Riggs House.
Beta Benefit Association is an Insurance Company which pays promptly; one whose terms men of ability, honesty and integrity; in full, and is incorporated and limited district of Columbia;
NTS of ability for all sections of the commission to agents.
OFFICERS.
President; H. nry H. Waring, vice-president and manager; D. Blair, physician, office, 494 Louisiana avenue, N. W., W. treasurer; Dr. Jos.
Special Announcement
FEED OF THE HOUSE
Attention of the public is cordially invited.
Wye-Foster Training School For Domestic Service
Street N. W.
Trained and Reliable Servants Furnished.
Best Situations for the highest Wages
J. H. Foste
A. Lankford
Architect And Builder
Examiner and estimator. Plans gotten on papers, pencil drawings, or from written or visual description of the country. In the past, shingles overhauled, repaired and built; over Five (500,000) worth of work in Washington, being of every description and character. Specialty of church and hall designs, and the building up of vacant lots in the District having plans gotten out, buildings glad to have you call or write us. No above named lines.
We pay sick and accident benefits varying from 75 cents to $1000 per week, and a death benefit fund varying from $7.50 to $12500. This Association has been and will continue to be under the CONSTANT INSPECTION OF THE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, and we are required to keep a certian RESERVE FUND on hand for the PROTECTION OF THE INSURED, thus putting it out of our power to render the Association other than LEGITIMATE, SAFE, SOUND AND RELIABLE. You can deal with us with the firm assurance that we will do whatever promised if you do your part.
Twenty Good Agents to represent the
PROTECTIVE BENEFIT ASSOCIATION.
GOOD PAY STEADY EMPLOYMENT
Call early and secure territory.
OFFICE: 609 F STREET, N. W. (First room front).
Call Monday or Wednesday between 10 and 12 o'clock. Saturday
from 1 to 3 o'clock P. M.
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS FOR THE FIRST YEAR
Dr. W. Bruce Evans, president, 1910Vermont avenue, N. W.
O. T. Taylor, 1st vice-president, 1245Hamlin street, Brookland, D. C.
Aaron J. Gaskins, and vice-president, 320 8th street, N. W.
L. Melendez King, secretary, 609 Fstreet, N. W.
Dr. I. A. Boyd, treasurer, 1207 Youstreet, N. W.
Dr. Harry J. Williams, medical director, 1015 4th street, N. W.
B. H. Baker, manager, 1219 T street, N. W.
L. Melendez King, attorney, 609 Fstreet, N. W.
Dr. M. O. Dumas, medical director, 1800 L street, N. W.
R. Slocum, asst. secretary, Rigga House-
Columbia Benefit Association
The Columbia Benefit Association is an Insurance Company for the masses. One which pays promptly; one whose terms are liberal; one whose officers are men of ability, honesty and integrity; one whose capital stock is paid up in full, and is incorporated and licensed under the new law of the District of Columbia;
We want AGENTS of ability for all sections of the city; we pay liberal salaries and commission to agents.
OFFICERS
Wm. J. Howard, president; H. nry H. Waring, vice-president; Edmund Hill, Jr., secretary and manager; D. Blair, physician; Geo. F. Collins, attorney. Main office, 494 Louisiana avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C. Jno. A. Lankford, treasurer; Dr. Jos.
A Special Announcement NEED OF THE HOUR The attention of the public is cordially invited to the Browne-Foster Training School For Domestic Science
J. A. Lankford,
A
Architect And Builder
Expert builder, examiner and estimator. Plans gotten out at short notice, from rough sketches, pencil drawings, or from written or verbal descriptions, and mailed to any section of the country. In the past thirty-two (32) months we have designed, overhauled, repaired and built over Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000.00) worth of work in Washington, D. C., and vicinity the class of work being of every description and character.
We make a specialty of church and hall designs, and arranging loans are also specialize the building up of vacant lots in the District of Columbia. Any one anticipating having plans gotten out, buildings overbauled or repaired, we would be glad to have you call or write us. No charges for advice given in any of the above named lines.
Office 6th and La. ave Northwest
Residence 1210 V. St. Northwest
GERMUIL
CTURER OF HARNESS AND
TRUNKS.
, Satchels, Hor Clothing, etc.
and up. Suit Cases, $1.15 and up
venue, northwest, Washington
. P. GERMUILLER
Phone East 462. Established 1850. MANUFACTURER OF HARNESS AND DEALER IN TRUNKS. Saddles, Whips, Satchels, Hor Clothing, etc. Trunks, $2.50 and up. Suit Cases, $1.15 and up. Harness and Trunks Repaired. 641 Louisiana avenue northwest Washington, D. C.