Washington Bee
Saturday, September 12, 1908
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XXIX NO15
Odd-Fellows Jubilee
WEEK OF REJOICING.
Large Meetings of the Odd Fellows Hall Association—Six Days of Jubilee
The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows of the District of Columbia held six days jublee from August 30 to Friday, September 4. It was a jubilaton of the Odd Fellows Hall Association, commemorative of the cancelling of the mortgage and the payment of all other indebtedness against the hall, which is the property of this great organization.
Each evening was the occasion of large crowds, presided over by different members of the Hall Association.
The officers of the association are: Thomas H. Wright, president; Lawrence Clark, vice president; Samuel W. Watson, secretary; Alexander F. Hicks, assistant secretary; Joseph Manning, treasurer.
The board of directors are: Thomas H. Wright, Isaac W. Scott, Henry P. Slaughter, Samuel W. Watson, James Langham and W. A. Davis.
M. V. P. James Langhorne, master of ceremonies.
A Religious Service—Special sermon, appropriate to the occasion, by P. N. F. Rev. Edgar E. Ricks. The members of the Order will then join in thanksgiving and praise to our Heavenly Father for the blessings vouchsafed in enabling us to bring to a successful termination our great undertaking.
Monday, August 31.
P. N. F. Henry P. Slaughter, master of ceremonies.
Congratulatory address on behalf of the Patriarchie, Council, and Subordinate Lodges, by M. V. P. Rev. Wm. J. Howard. Three-minute addresses by members of the Order.
Tuesday, September 1.
M. V. P. David Walker, master of ceremonies.
Statistical address by M. V. P. Samuel W. Watson, secretary of the Hall Association. Three-minute addresses by members of the Order.
Wednesday, September 2.
M. V. P. Joseph Manning, master of ceremonies.
Congratulatory address on behalf of Households of Ruth and Juvenile Societies by District Most Noble Governor Mrs.Mary Alice Parker. Three-minute addresses by members of the Order, W. Calvin Chase, M. C. Maxfield and others.
Thursday, September 3.
M. V. P. Daniel B. Webster, master of ceremonies.
Congratulatory address on behalf of the Veteran Association by P. N. F. J. B. Askins, and on behalf of the Ladies' Veteran Association by Mrs. Sarah J. Lancaster, Chief Lady Veteran. Three-minute addresses by members of the Order. Friday, September 4. P. N. F. W. O. Davis, master of ceremonies. Closing Address — Review of the work of the Hall Association, by M. V. P. Thomas H. Wright, president of the Association. Burning of mortgage by Miss Edna Brown, of the Rosebud Juvenile Society, No. 1, of Queen of Sheba Household, No. 29, that purchased the first share of stock issued by the Hall Association. After which the members of the Order and their friends will join in social intercourse and fraternal greetings. Vocal and instrumental music each evening. Ushers — P. N. F. Isaac W. Scott, M. V. P. Alexander Hicks, P. G. M. R. P. Williams, P. N. F. George J Freeman Chaplains — P. N. F. Lawrence Clark, M. V. P. Edward P. Brown.
The crowd on Friday evening, on which occasion Mr. Thomas H. Wright, president of the Hall Association, spoke, was the largest that attended any of the evenings. Each evening the work of Mr. Wright and his fidelity and honesty were applauded in the highest terms. Mr. Samuel Watson, on Wednesday, on which occasion Mr. Joseph Manning presided, delivered a fine address, as did the old veteran and race loving representative Mr. M. C. Maxfield, who
is always greeted with applause when he appears before the public. Everybody knows him to be a man who is sincerely devoted to his people and their advancement. Mr. Maxfield gave a brief history of his long connecte with the Order, and how the Order struggled to obtain a hall of its own. He referred to the early struggles of the colored race, and what the present generation should do if it wanted to advance.
Mr. Manning's address was also full of good thoughts. He is an easy speaker, calm and deliberate.
The ladies who took part in the proceedings showed that they were not behind the men. If anything, they showed as much enthusiasm as the men did in the early struggle of the organization.
The ovation that was accorded Mr. Thomas H. Wright on Friday will long be remembered. It was evident that he has the confidence and respect of the organization. It was manifest that his honesty and integrity were above reproach. His work was commended by all of the speakers, and applauded to the echo.
CAPT. JAMES F. OYSTER.
The president of the Board of Education, Capt. James F. Oyster, is one of the best friends to the colored school's and teachers. No teacher suffers in anything under his jurisdiction. He knows no teacher by the color of his skin. He believes in
CAPT. JAMES F. OYSTER. President of the Board of Education and a Friend of the Colored Schools.
CAPT. JAMES F. OYSTER. President of the Board of Education and a Friend of the Colored Schools.
fair play to all teachers, white or black. He has no favorites. What he wants is for teachers to be competent and there is no better friend in the schools to them. He has already blotted out favoritism in the schools and personally seen colored teachers given their just reward.
There are colored teachers in authority today who are more inimical to the colored schools and teachers than many members of the Board of Education. No teacher will be permitted to be imposed upon whi'c Captain James F. Oyster is president of the Board of Education.
MR. JOSEPH MANNING.
One of the most wide-awake business men-in this city and prominent Odd Fellow is Mr. Joseph Manning, who will represent Bloom of Youth
MR. JOSEPH MANNING.
odge, No. 1368, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows of the District of
WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1908.
DR. JAMES E. SHEPPARD, ONE OF THE COMING MEN OF THE SOUTH. ORATOR AND EDUCATOR
Columbia in the B. M. C. which is to convene in Atlantic City next week. There is not a more popular man in the Order than Mr. Manning. His affable and genial manners have won for him a host of friends. He is a practical carpenter and builder, and one of the members of the executive committee of the local Negro Business League. He is treasurer of the Odd Fellows Veteran Association; president of the Union Relief Association, and treasurer of the Odd Fellows Hall Association, through whose hands thousands of dollars have passed. He is a member of the Rising Sun Lodge, No. 1365, and also a member and officer of the
ONE OF THE CO
Zion Baptist Church. In business he is a very careful man, and in his business transactions you will find him to be one of the most honest men to deal with. As a representative to the next B. M. C. no better man could have been selected.
B. M. C. AT ATLANTIC CITY. Grand Master Housion to Be Re...Elected—A Big Event Assured... Grand Master W. L.Houston leaves Sunday, with his staff, for Atlantic City to preside over the sessions of the Biennial Movable Committee, which opens on the 14th. 7,000 delegates and visitors are expected at the city-by-the-sea, and Young's Pavilion will be granted for the accomodation of colored people for the first time in its history. A great street pageant will be a feature of the week, many of the Grand Lodges, Patriarchies, Households, Juveniles, etc., from all parts of the country participating. The re-election of Mr. Houston as Grand Master is assured.
COMING CHANGES.
There is some likelihood of Supervising Principals Nolle and Baily being transferred to the graded schools.
Read The Bee.
DR. JAMES E. SHEPPARD.
One of the coming men of the South is Dr. James T. Sheppard, of Durham, N. C. The new enterprise in which he is now engaged will be a monument to him and posterity.Dr. Sheppard is a young and progressive man and an orator of ability. Wherever he speaks he wins his hearers. Within a few months he will have erected in Durham, N. C., one of the largest institutions in the South. He has the confidence and respect of all classes of citizens, irrespective of color.
He stands today at the head of the list of young orators, and during this campaign Dr. Sheppard will no doubt
DR. JAMES E. SHEPPARD,
OMING MEN OF THE SOUTH. OR.
UCA TOR.
be heard upholding the principles of the Republican party and strongly urging his people to support and vote for Taft and Sherman. He is a man upon whom any race may rely. He gives facts and figures which cannot be contradicted. Dr. Sheppard has been an extensive traveler in the interest of his people. His new methods of teaching his people have had telling effect. He knows the colored Americans and their wants. No man has greater appreciation and respect for colored Americans, and especially those in the South, than this distinguished advocate of the rights of his people.
"TAFT AND THE NEGRO." Millionaire John Hays Hammond and Chief of Staff Arthur I. Vorsy
The Colored American Magazine forAugust contains an excellent study of the character of William Howard Taft from the pen of Mr. Ralph W. Tyler Auditor for the Navy Department. Mr. Tyler has had over a quarter of a century's experience as a writer, editor and literateur, and any contribution from him is sure to
combine literary finish with historical comprehensiveness, forceful argument with graceful expression. Referring to Mr. Tyler's graphic story of Judge Taft, John Hays Hammond, the millionaire mining engineer, who draws a salary of $500,000 per year, sends the following not of congratulation. Dear Mr. Tyler: — I have read with pleasure your excellent article entitled "Taft and the Negro," and I beg to tender by congratulations on the very intelligent and broad view you have expressed on the subject. I hope this valuable article will find extensive circulation." Yours very truly, John Hays Hammond.
ATOR AND ED-
Mr. Arthur I. Vorys, Judge Taft's capable chief of staff, also wrote as follows to Mr. Tyler, in the same connection:
"My Dear Sir: — I have received a copy of the Colored American Magazine containing your article, "Taft and the Negro." I have read every word of it. It is fine. Of course you never write any other way."
It goes without saying that the article reciting the true attitude of Judge Taft toward the Negro has been read by thousands of race-loving colored people all over the country. If anyone has failed to read it, he should yet take steps to procure a copy of the Colored American Magazine for August and absorb every line of Mr. Tyler's informing and enterprising production.
"Heroic size" lions are to ornament the western end of the Connecticut avenue bridge.
Saturday night he was at work, as was his custom. Suddenly a crowd surrounded, his little place of business. It set fire to the building, and the man, choking in the smoke, fled to the street.
PARAGRAPHIC NEWS
Queen Margharita is said to be opposed to the marriage of Count of Abruzzi and Katherine Elkins.
A labor congress representing 1,776,000 workingmen opened at Nottingham last Monday.
Isaiah Davis, colored, who was arrested in Georgetown last Sunday, and charged with selling liquor to minors, was acquitted before Judge Mullowney in the Police Court last Tuesday morning.
Four thousand officers and enlisted men left Fort Riley, Kansas, last Tuesday morning on a march to St. Joseph, Mo.
The seventh annual fashion exposition of the Dressmakers' Association of America opened last Monday in the Masonic Temple, New York city.
The Tuberculosis Congress will convene the 21st instant. President Roosevelt will be the president of the congress.
The Nashville Globe of September 4 was a special edition containing three parts, in which there were twenty-four pages.
Although one of her guides will have to lose one hand and both feet, which were frozen, Miss Annie S. Peck has succeeded in reaching the summit of Mount Huascaran, about 26,000 feet high, at Lima, Peru.
A person signing himself as "Your Unknown rFriend" has written a letter to Hon. W. H. Taft, warning him of a plot which he heard among some men who intend to assassinate him the next time he goes to Chicago.
The Lott Carey convention, which was in session in this city a few days, came to a close last week.
The twenty-eighth annual session of the Grand Fountain of True Reformers convened in the True Reformers' Hall, Richmond, Va., last Tuesday morning.
Barbara Pope, colored, committed suicide last week by hanging herself to a tree in "Lovers' Lane."
It is said that orders are being prepared at the War Department for the test in skilled horsemanship to be taken by all officers between the grades of captain and brigadier general stationed in this city, except where specially excepted.
The dedication of the new No. 3 Chemical Engine house at Langdon took place September 10.
John H. Smythe, the Negro minister to Liberia, under the administration of President Cleveland, died in Richmond, Va., Sept. 5.
Mrs. Annie M. Johnson, who doubted as to whether her husband was white or colored, is reported as having been satisfied that he is white.
Prof. A. B. Alexander, chief of the Division of Fisheries, Department of Commerce and Labor, has left the city for Newfoundland, where he will advise with American fishermen regarding their rights under the modus vivendi.
Gertrude I. Sutton, colored, six years old, whose ability to play the piano in her section is "creating quite a sensation." The instrument on which she plays is the make of 1822. She has never had a lesson.
The Navy Department was obliged to decline the invitation extended by the Netherlands Government for the battleship fleet to visit the Landjong Priok. Java, on the way to Manila.
A balloon from Berlin carrying two German aeronauts descended on last Wednesday at Nezhin, Russia, after being in the air twenty-three hours. Dr. W. C. Woodward, the health officer of the District, returned to his desk at the District Building last Wednesday.
THE NEGRO VOTE.
Two years ago the Negroes bolted the Republican State ticket in Kansas, and of their 15,000 votes they cast 10,000 for the Democratic ticket headed by an ex-Confederate general for governor. It is not strange, therefore, that the National and Tendependent Democratic parties are vieing with each ether for the Negro vote in that particular State. Can the Republicans hold the Negro vote in line in Kansas with such recognition as is being given him by the Democrats?
RUST THAT FARMERS FEAR.
The Kind That Ruins Wheat the World Round.
Rust still corrupted the American cereal crops, and that to annual damage exceeding $500,000,000. The Department of Agriculture has put on record the amazing statement that the injury to wheat and oats from rust probably exceeds that caused by any other fungus or insect pest, and in some localities is greater than that caused by all other enemies of the crop combined.
The farmer in some season or other in looking over his fields during the early summer cannot help noting that the fresh green appearance of the wheat crop is changing in color from way to day becoming gradually quite yellow. On examining closely one of the withered leaves the observant cultivator can detect orange yellow spots or lines, and with the aid of a low power lens also can see that the epidermal tissue of the leaf has been ruptured by the emission of countless numbers of orange yellow seeds or spores.
The spots and lines upon the leaves multiply rapidly, and when the leaves are shaken by the wind the spores are set free and fall upon the other leaves, and thus the disease is spread. Wherever wheat is grown th's destructive pest is known and dreaded.
In appearance the disease is the same wherever the crop attacked is gown—Europe, America, Austral,a—pale yellow during springtime and summer, deepening later in the season to a dark brown or black on the green leaves not only of the cereal crops but of many surrounding wild grasses. In the early days of rust the fungal spores or seeds are called "uredo spores," from "uro," to burn, owing to the rusty or burnt appearance of the leaves.
Poison Ivy.
The three leaved poison ivy that lines so many roadsides with its handsome, shiny foliage, is harmless to some persons, but others cannot pass by a patch of it, much less touch it, without painful erysipelas like swelling and bur ing of the skin. A correspondent describes for ivy polishing as follows:—Zinc sulph, one dram; plumbl, acetate AA, one dram; water, distilled, four or six ounces. Apply three or four times a day. Or tincture ferril chloridil, applied full strength is also very good. Always give a saline cathartic at the start.
New Patent Act in Britain.
By the paten act which recently passed the British Parliament and has already gone into effect, it becomes necessary for fore.gn holders of patents under British authority to erect and operate works in Great Britain for the production of articles thus patented. Foreign patentees under the old act were protected against competition by their patent rights, but did not have to produce in the country which protected their patents.
Turkey's Postal System.
Postal conditions in the interior of Turkey are still in a patriarchal stage of evolution. When a postman arrives in a village on muleback, he distributes the letters in a public place, giving each his own and then putting the undelivered ones in the hands of relatives or acquaintances of those to whom they are addressed. Yet it is said that 99 per cent reach their destination.
Man's Endless Guest.
As a great preacher once said: "Man is continually looking for his lost inheritance of happiness, which the allegory of the Garden of Eden prefigures. He knows it exists for him somewhere, and he is ever knocking, knocking—generally at the wrong door, of selfishness, greed, ambition, lust, all sorts of foolish doors; and we call his mistaken seeking by a name, "Sin."
For Burning Feet
If you are a sufferer from burning feet about as speedy a relief as any may be had from soaking the feet in tepid water in which washing soda has been dissolved. A tablespoonful to a bucket of water, is a good proportion.
The Safest Helm.
The best and safest helm for a man is a good wife. Give her a quarter of a chance and she will steer him straight. But don't call her a hellum, as the sailors pronounce helm.-New York Press.
Alcohol drunk in New York.
New York city people are consuming more alcoholic beverages than ever before, for the consumption is increasing more rapidly than the population. Each day the city drinks about 200,000 gallons.
Smallest Mammal.
The smallest of all animals are the shrew—nocturnal, mouselike creatures, that hunt for worms and insects in woods and meadows. An egg-shell barn for the mother and her little ones.
Patriotism.
A man's country is not a certain area of land, but it is a principle, and patriotism is loyalty to that principle.—George William Curtis.
Eylla to Be Rid Of
The only real thing is to study how to rid life of lamentation and complaint—Epictetus.
Dancing Put to Practical Use French Military Campa.
Dancing was considered historically, philosophically and morally in a lecture before the International Academy of Choregraphic Authors and Masters by M. Giraudet, a high authority on the subject. He recommended the study of the deportment for getting on in the world, and spoke at length of "the influences of dancing on public affairs in the reign of Napoleon I." Capt. Cook, whose name, sald the lecturer, figures prominently in the golden book of choregraphy, insisted on his sailors dancing an hour or two daily, "thus preserving them in health and spirits." M. Giraudet also related, with approval, that under the first French republic the government of the convention had provided for dancing lessons to be given in all barracks "to cure homesickness among the troops." The lecturer approved highly of the new rule of etiquette, which, it appears, the last congress of dancing laid down, and which enables any man at a ball to dance with any girl without being introduced. The reform, said M. Giraudet, has now been carried out, and has been received with joy by all concerned.
Misspelled Names of Places.
A name very difficult to find correctly spelled is that of the Lake Ontario port, Sacket Harbor. When it it not "Sackett's Harbor," or "Sackett Harbor," it is commonly "Sackett's Harbor." Another not so frequently wrong is "Newburgh," the city of which name is in the town of "Newburg." This brings up the problem of "Pittsburg," which its citizens like so well to spell "Pittsburgh." Another puzzler is "Hoosick Falls," which is on the Hoosac River, in Rensselaer County. The United States Geographical Board is the ultimate authority on the names of places in America.
On Mt. Etna.
The characters of all the climates of the earth can be detected—the frigid close around one, the temperate with its belt of trees just underneath and the tropical at the base of the mountain, with its vineyards and luxuriant groves. The great ocean around, with Lipari, Panari, Allcudi, Stromboli, and Volcano, with their smoking summits, appear under your feet and you look down upon the whole of Sicily as upon a map.
Gifted Woman.
There can be no high society where conversation is not the chief attraction; and men seldom learn to talk well when not inspired by gifted women. Women are nothing in the social circle who cannot draw out the sentiments of able men; and a man of genius gains more from the inspiration of one brilliant woman than from all the book worms of many colleges.
A Tutor in Time.
A woman on the train, entering Grand Rapids asked the conductor how long the train stopped at Union Station.
He replied: "Madam, we stop just four minutes from two to two two."
The woman turned to her companion and said: "I wonder if he thinks he's the whistle on the engine."
Touch.
I am sure that if a fairy bld me choose between the sense of sight and that of touch-I would not part with the warm, endearing contact of human hands or the wealth of form, the nobility and fullness that press into my palms.—Helen Keller, in Country Magazine.
Shock of a Suicide's Restored Voice.
When Howard Roberts of Turner, Me., heard of the suicide of his brother he had been dumb for two years. The shock caused temporary paralysis. Then he began to whisper and now his voice has been completely restored.
Oil Fuel for Warships
The British admiralty is considering the possibility of supplanting coal with oil in the "mosquito" fleet, the swiftest of England's war boats. A fleet of naval tank steamers would keep the depots supplied.
Care of Rubbers.
To prevent the heel plates of children's shoes wearing and cutting through their rubbers glue pieces of thick flannel in the heels where the wear comes. The overshoes will last much longer.
An Impossible Task.
A leading woman's magazine is demanding that men shall be as good as women. They seem to forget that the average man has a hard time being as good as he is.—Washington Post.
Faith.
The faith that passeth understanding is the kind one has, who pays one dollar for a blood purifier which is passed over the counter by a man whose face is full of blotches.
Just a Thought.
It is easy finding reasons why other folks should be patient.—George Elliot.
Epigrammatic.
However, it isn't alway the man who talks the loudest, who is heard the farthest off.
ESTIMATING OUR COAL SUPPLY.
At Present Rate Pennsylvania Fields Will Last 490 Years.
M. R. Campbell of the United States Geological Survey estimates the amount of coal originally in the anthracite fields of Pennsylvania at 21,000,000,000 short tons; and that in the bituminous fields at 112,574,000,000 short tons. It is said that by the methods of mining anthracite coal in former years, for every ton of coal mined and marketed 1 1-2 tons were either wasted or left in the ground as pillars for the protection of the workings, so that the actual yields of the beds was only about 40 per cent of the contents. This percentage of waste has now been materially reduced, but the exhaustion to the close of 1907 has probably amounted to about double the production, or 4,000,000,000 short tons. This would leave still in the ground approximately 17,000,000,000 short tons, which would be capable of yielding at the rate of one ton of coal for each ton mined, 8,500,000,000 tons, or approximately 100 times the amount of anthracite produced in 1907.
If we estimated for the bituminous production one ton of coal lost for every two tons mined, the exhaustion to the close of 1907 has been 2,760,000,000 tons, which would leave still in the ground in Pennsylvania a little less than 110,000,000,000 short tons of bituminous coal. The annual consumption and production of coal will no doubt continue to increase, but at the rate of production reached in 1907 the available supply in Pennsylvania would last about 490 years.—New York Evening Post.
Japan's Population.
The population of Japan to-day is just about 50,000,000. The exact figures for 1907 are not yet available, but the estimates just published are based on the average growth of the last thirty years and may be taken as fairly accurate. In each of the five year periods for which figures are shown, over the past twenty-five years, the population has increased roughly speaking, by 2,060,-000. To-day the estimate is that there are 49,267,744 native born Japanese in the territory ruled over by the Mikado.
Machine Counts Money.
A machine that will count money has been produced by an Austrian inventor. The coins are thrown into a funnel at the top of the machine and slide downward, lighting on a spiral track. This track has a raised border containing slits corresponding to the size of the various coins. As each coin slides on the track it passes through the slit corresponding to its denomination and dropped into a basket.
Children's Sleep.
As a general rule the lad at school between the ages of 13 and 16 requires nine to ten hours sleep. Growing boys need a large amount of sleep and when this is denied them, neither their bodies nor their minds can develop properly. An English authority points out that this lack of hours of rest falls most heavily on the clever boys.
The Overfed Husband.
Prof, Carl von Noordon, addressing a number of prominent scientists at Vienna on the subject of "Food and Nourishment," declared that the reason so many men begin to get fat immediately after they have been married is because their wives give them their favorite dishes on every possible occasion.
Germany's Hunters.
Consul Ilt of Annaberg reports that 600,000 hunting permits are issued every year in Germany. The government receives in fees something like $1,500,000. The annual kill by the hunters is estimated at 55,000,000 pounds, having a market value of $6,500,000.
The Way to Man's Heart.
"It's all right to talk about art, but give us the woman who can take a peck of apples, some flour and a rolling pin and make a bunch of ples that put a man in love with even his next door neighbor," says the Los Angeles Express.
Where Ivy is Beneficial.
Ivy growing over the walls of a house renders the structure cool in summer and warm in winter. It also keeps the walls dry. It is, however, very destructive to woodwork, forcing the joints apart.
The Untidiness of Suicide
I always dress elaborately when I am contemplating suicide; then by the time the last carl is in its place it seems a pity to do any thing untidy.—Anna McClue Sholl, "The Greater Love."
Dangerous Employment.
On the various car lines of New York city, including the steam surface, subway and elevated roads, there is an average of 20 employees injured each day.
Somewhere.
A man may be absolutely impossible but somewhere there is some woman who doesn't think so.
He Knew.
"Are you in pain, my little man?" asked the kind old gentleman. "No," answered the boy, "'the pain's in me.'—Indianapolis Journal.
USES LIMESTONE FOR FUEL
St. Louis Man Mixes It With Coal and Obtains Intense Heat.
Alexander Marshall of St. Louis told recently how he has solved an important problem that may greatly reduce the world's consumption of coal.
claims to have discovered a method whereby the cost of coal by the use of limestone, in furnaces of any kind may be reduced to one-half. The limestone exists in sufficient quantities in the Pisa Bluets along the Mississippi River to supply Alton with fuel for centuries to come. Marshall's scheme proves generally successful.
"You see, I throw in plenty of coal to get a red-hot fire in the furnace. The former dark, black smoke from the stacks began to be transformed into a light, alry gas—carbonic acid gas released from the carbonate of lime. The heat was intense and in a few minutes seemed as if the seams of the boilers would melt.
"Coal alone never gave such a heat," remarked Mr. Marshall. "In a few weeks I will have a testing apparatus here for the purpose of finding out exactly the amount of coal and then the number of units in coal and limestone."
After the test the residue left was exhibited in the grate. There were no clinkers; the coal had evidently all been consumed.
"The residue makes a good fertilizer," Mr. Marshall said. "Of course the ashes are not so good as the limestone before burning, for that contains forty per cent more of carbon. The advantage lies in the fact that use has already been made of the coal. Left in the ground for a longer time, the burned limestone will bring about exactly the same effect as the pure limestone; that is, in correcting the acidity of the soil."
The Eternal Feminine.
"I'll tell you how I am saving money so that I can entertain my friends at dinner, Marie," said a New York stenographer to her chum as they soared upward in the office elevator. "Whenever I am invited to dine out and do not have to pay for my own dinner, I put the amount I save in my little iron bank. "However," she continued, with the particularly pleasant purr that sometimes precedes a scratch, "that plan won't do you any good, will it dear, for you are never invited out, are you?"
Swiss School Wisdom.
Whenever the natural temperature reaches a certain point in Switzerland the schools are dismissed. This is on the theory that after a certain point of suffering has been reached by both teachers and pupils, the one cannot impart nor the other absorb instruction that would be of any value, and so the time spent in attempting it is wasted.
First "Dress Sult" in Kansas.
The first dress suit that ever came to Kansas came with the "aid" from Boston during the dry summer of 1860. Some rich man in the east contributed it, having outgrown it, and a farmer named Paswell, in Kaploma township in this county, ploughed corn in it all summer. Atchison, Globe.
Friendship.
A slender acquaintance with the world must convince every man that actions not words, are the true criterion of the attachment of friends; and that the most liberal professions of good will are very far from being the surest marks of it.—George Washington.
What Hurts Most.
"I tell you," said Sinnick, "men are getting so deceitful these days that you can't trust your best friends—" "And what's worse," interrupted Boroughs, gloomily, "you can't get your best friends to trust you."—Philadelphia Press.
Rivers and Men.
Little rivers seem to have the indefinable quality that belongs to certain people in the world—the power of drawing attention without courting it, the faculty of exciting interest by their very presence and way of doing things.—Henry Van Dyke.
Straight Business Offer.
An advertisement in an English paper reads as follows: "Stolen, a watch worth £10. If the thief will return it, he shall be informed gratis, where he may steal one worth two of it, and no questions asked."
Beyond Mans Realization.
Men make fun of the fashions, but even the wisest of them do not realize that the style change in the invisible clothes, with quasi-visible ribbons, just as often as they do for the more apparent ones.
Sweetness by the Ton.
Pertume manufacturers of Italy every year consume 1,860 tons of orange blossoms, 930 tons of roses, 150 tons each of jasmine and violets and 15 tons of jonquils.
City's Benefactors
No greater can befall a city than when several educated men, thinking in the same way as to what is good and right, live together in it.—Goethe.
In Manchuria, Siberia and North China much use is made of Chinese brick tea, not as a beverage, but as a vegetable, boiled with rice and mutton.
Wm. Cannon,
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Live With Others.
Life's best school is living with people. It is there we learn our best lessons. Someone says: "It is better to live with others even at the cost of considerable jarring and friction, than to live in undisturbed quiet alone."
That Sawing Motion.
"Some people do dislike work." remarked the Observer of Events and Things; "and yet it takes about the same number of motions to play one of Schubert's sonatas on the fiddle as it does to saw a cord of wood." Yonkers Statesman.
Save the Soot.
A cheap way to keep house plants free from disease is to put a bag of soot into a pail of water, let the contents settle and use a very weak solution for watering plants. Boot is a valuable fungicide.
West Grows Independent.
The matter of securing funds to remove the crop no longer disturbs western bankers. To use an expression of one of the number, "The West no longer sneezes when Wall Street takes snuff."
Sticky Varnish.
Sticky varnish put on furniture by cheap wormmen may be remedied by first placing on shallac varnish and then follow with a coat of copal varnish.
Soldiers Love on Nuts
The small soldier keeps himself in perfect fighting condition on a diet of nuts. He eats only twenty a day, but they are of a very nourishing kind.
An Endscooped Goin
An Undiscovered Genius.
The world has never learned the name of the genius who conceived the idea of spreading butter upon his bread.
60 YEARS EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS & C
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain the nature of the
invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. oldest agency for securing patents. Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation journal. Terms, $3 a year; four months $1. Sold by a widester-MUNH & Co. 381 Broadway, New York Branch Office, 212 F. P. W. Washington, D.C.
WOMEN'S GUIDE
A NEW PAMPHLET BY MRS.
MARY J. BOLTON - ITS
CONTENTS.
Birth and early life of the authoress.
A word to the young girls and
others.
The man who is little protection
to his family.
Color line among Negroes.
A word to the better class preacher.
Why married people don't stay
together.
A talk to the mother of good
character.
Price, 15 cents.
Address, 512 You street north-west
Mme. Davis,
A
CARD READER
TELLS ABOUT BUSINESS.
Reunites the Separated, and
Removes Spells and Evil Influence.
1228 25th St. N.W., Washington, D. C.
Gives Luck to All.
N. B.-No letters answered unless
accompanied by stamp.
N. B.-Mention The Bee
HOUSE CLAN OA SHP
Re ee ee ee ee ee
pected of Him—Two Miles of
Decks to Scrub. ~
In all households “rpring clean-
ing” ts very properly regarded as an
ordeal, but 1t does not often occur.
‘The case 1s vastly different with one
of the modern transatiantic liners,
however, where a° most thorough
house cleaning takes place twice a
monta, and that without the ald of
& single womun!
No sooner bas the last Immigrant
got ashore with his bundles than
boys with gongs go clnaging down
the immense decks; and from the
reat saloons right uown to the stoke.
holes, the small army of men making
up the line: s crew are made aware
that house-c.eaning {s about to be-
gin.
‘The great Iife-boats are swung out
and back and found to be in good
condition, The first officer roars un-
intellible orders through a mega-
phone, and work begins with ma-
chine-like precision. There may be
fifty ‘thousand pleces of linen to be
sorted and counted, done up in sacks,
sent to the laundry, and recounted
and put away on their return, There
are something like thirty thousand
Pieces of silver to be counted, sorted
and cleaned; mfty thousand items or
lacs, and double that number of
dishes and cooking utensils to be
dealt with by washers and polishers.
‘There may well be from five to sev-
en hundred staterooms to be cleaned
in every corner with scrupulous care.
‘There are probably fifty or sixty
bathrooms to be cleaned, and a small
army of men {s let loose In the vast
dintng-saloon of the ship, where per-
haps seyen hundred and fifty people
may be seated at once.
Another and smaller army attacks
the second saloon. Deft-handed
sweepers, dusters and cleaners are in
every part of the great drawing
room. Outside thera may be two
_talles of decks to scrub,and the same
“mileage” of rugs and carpets to be
beaten in the open alr. Hundreds
of mattresses are to be put out In
the sun and some of them remade.
The work goes with clock-lko pre-
cision. A smaller Iiner with accom-
" modation for about seventeen hun-
dreed first- and sceond-class passen-
gers, has been cleaned with exquisite
care tn exactly four and thirty hours
trom the time the bell-boys first
clanged thelr gong. If the great
ship makes fast to her pler in the
moroing and discharges her passen-
gers befora poon, the housecleaning
starts promptly at one. If, however,
she docks later in the afternoon, oF
at night, the house-cleanlug signal !¢
given at six o'clock the next morn-
. ing.
It need hardly be sald that every
man and boy knows his post and
what 1s expected of him. Scaffold-
ings are bullt about the great smoke
Stacks, and up here painters scrape
and lay on new coats. The next day
may find them at work on the bull
Stalwart sallors are washing down the
walls or the deck-houses. The stew.
ards are stripping the berths in the
staterooms; and the linen steward
with his stam, ts counting the solled
Hnen with amazing rapidity. The
table-stewards are busy tn the grea!
saloons with thelr silver; there ar
boys in the pantry wash’ng dishe
With most unboylike alacrity. Th
head steward, with a telephone bj
his side and a line of subordinate:
before rm, is busy with accounts
breakage losses, 1nd the tke. Hi
divides the staterooms into groups 0
ten, with a “cayain” over eact
group. :
House-cleaning in the steerag
quarters 1s, of course, mucn simzier
although not less thorough. very
thizg that might be Injured {s firs
of all removed, and then varlou
lengths of hose are brought into play
throwing tremendously powerfu
streams of water,
The men are, of course, barefoot
ed, and are followed by their mate:
Wlelding brooms, brusbes and scrul
cloths. There are stalwart men ever
down in the hold, getting it ready fo
fresh mountains of baggage and car
gol "The tremendously powertu
engines now still and sileat, are like
“wie being overhauled, polished an
olled, and In Jess time than {t woul
take one of our housewives to clea
her Ittle suburban or country dwell
nig, the ship is suddenly pronounce
“ready,” to recelve two or thre
* thousand more or less fastidious pas
sengers.
How Snakes Hear.
Snakes have no external ears, but
Inside the head the ear bone are
Yory crude, Snakes “hear,” however,
-¥ feeling vibration of sound on
their delicate scaly covering, and
searching for sound vibrations by
Drotruding the wonderfully sensitive
tongue, which is filled with thous-
ands of microscopic nerves. Their
aight ts very keen in distingulsbing
moring objects.—St_ Nicholas.
1200 To the Acre. sf
The world’s population could be
contained in Delaware If It were as
congested as eleven New York City
blocks,.at the rate of 1200 people ta
the acre.
A GREAT ENDURANCE RACE.
(Old Santa Fe Trati.
_ When we come to talk about mod-
ern endurance races for sport or for
pelf, the present riders can scarce-
ly Sola a candle to F. X. Aubrey,
who used to do some great stunts on
the roof of a oroncho. In 1850 he
‘made « bet that he could cover the
distance from Santa Fe, N, M., to In-
depeadense, Mo., over the old trail
in eight days. It ts 765 miles be-
tween the two points as the freight
caravans travelled it, and by that
route on a wager of $1,000 Aubrey
was to ride.
He succeeded In winning, making
his destination, the Jones House in
Independence, three hours before the
expiration of thrt time. During this
his first ride he killed a number of
horses, the death of one when with-
in twerty-tve miles of Council
Grove, compelling him to walk to
that place, carrying bis saddle on his
back where he obtained another ant-
mal.
This feat of Aubrey was regarded
as the greatest ride ever made by
anyone in ancient or modern times
and he became the hero of the in-
ciplent border town, Independence,
where he was fetéd and made the
jon of the day. His fame spread
throughout the entire West, includ-
ing Callfornia, where he was well
known,
“Although people marvelled muot
at the wonderful endurance of the
‘man and the remarkable time in
whtch he had made the trip, still Au-
‘brey bimeelf was not at all satisfied
‘with tt, He determined to break
that record, and the following season
made another wager of $6,000 tn
gold that he would do it. He ac-
complisted his record-breaking dash
across the plans In the marvellous
time of only five days and thirteen
ous.
His objective point was the same
‘hotel to which ae bad ridden on his
former trip. On this ride when be
‘reached that hostelry he was perfect.
ty exhausted and In fainting condl-
‘tion, hls horse quivering from head
to foot and white with foam. Au-
brey was lifted from the back: of the
animal by bis frends and carried
Into his room in the house, where he
layin acomplet stupor for two days.
Six horses, which previous to starting
trom Santa Fe had been stationed at
distances varying from twenty-five
te fifty miles along the route fell
dead under bim, so terribly fast had
he forced them on.
He possessed a Yeautiful maro,
javellle, a favorite anmlal, noted for
‘speed and enduraace, but she expired
at the end of the first 150 miles. On
his last great trip he rode day and
night, stopping only long enough to
leap from bis tired anima) and spring
on to @ fresh one. He made more
taan two hundred zalles every twenty-
four hours, and all the sleep he took
Aggregated but three hours during
the entire five days.
Diet for Sleeplessness,
Dr. William Stevens says that In-
somnla ts not a fsease Itself, but
the effect of an unhealthy condition
of body or mind. When the cause
1s removed the insomnia may be ex-
pected to disappear, 5
Every physician bas had stubborn
cases of it whitch would not yield to
any treatment, and for which a
change of alr or of scene may be
necessary. But such cases as these
should not occur, and do occur only
when the sufferer has neglected pre-
cautions that should have been tak-
en when the trouble first made It:
self manifest,
Insomnta results from cause:
which can be removed if attended to
tn season. the most common cause
4s found in the digestive organs—
itner unsuitable food causing som-
nia as a feature of Indigestion, or in-
sufticlent food causing the patient
to be kept awake by hunger,
‘Thefe are few things which cat
be universally recommended as dle!
sor sleeplessness, slnce what will
agree with ono man will disagrec
with another. But two things which
may almost always be recommended
are lettuce and celery.—Londox
| Globe.
: On the Ocean Bottom.
Sitting Inside a submarine on the
ocean bottom you would be no more
conscious of the erormous water
pressure without than If you were
going to sleep In your own bed, You
might remain twenty-four hours un-
der water without coming up, using
only the natural alr supplied by the
boat without feeling the least un-
comfortable. If you wished, sou
might remalr down four or five days,
tapping the air tank, as you needed a
fresh supply of alr. In the mean-
time you would bunk over the torpe-
doeg and torture youréelf by letting
your Imagination loose to your
heart’s content., or you might ttad
by electric light, or play cards or
dominoes or checkers, the cook serv-
ing you with coffee or canned things
that can be heated on an electric fur-
Bace—St. Nicholas.
Bee's Bad Pointe.
“I have been hearing of the busy
bee until I am tired of It,” says
Drake Watson. “A bee works dur-
ing the summer and then rests all
‘winter uke a plasterer. And a bee
has bad habits, Go Into a vineyard
and you will: nnd bee drunkards
around bursted grapes. The drunk-
ard bees stp the juice until they bo-
come full, and then fall to the ground
and sleep off their debauch; a drunk.
ard bee knows enough not to go
home with a jag.
Where Poe Got the Plot for a
Famous Short Story.
BAFFLING GOTHAM CRIME
Details of the Most Puzzling Murder
Case in New York's Criminal An-
nals—Pathetic Fate of Beantifal
Mary Rogers—Attempts to Solve
Riddle by Expert Criminologists.
Riddle by Expert Criminologists,
‘rhe most famous murder mystery
in New York was the caso of Mary
Kogers, around which Edgar Allan
Poe wrote his famous story of Marie
Roget. Mary Rogers was a pretty
cigar girl.who worked on lower
Broadway and lived with her mother,
One Sunday morning she left home,
and was geen later boarding a stage
coach at the Aster House with a
strange man. About a week later
the body was found In the North Riv-
er, opposite the Stuvens Institute in
Hoboken, Poe was iving in Phila-
delphia at the time, but read the New
York papers—at that time there
were several flashy Sunday papers In
New York—and from the cllppings
or these Sunday papers he wrote his
celebrated Marle Roget, setting the
scene of the murder In Paris Instead
of New York. That story and “The
Murders In the Rue Morgue,” are the
two stories that made Poe famous on
both continents and ‘established nis
reputation as a writer of detective
tales. :
His theory was that a young naval
officer had gone with this girl to
Hoboken, to ths Elystan Fields which
was not unlike the Coney Jsland of
to-day, but withou its large buildings,
Where people went on Sunday to
drink beer. Poe's theory, as brought
out In his story of Marie Roget, was
that the young naval officer had as-
saulted the gifl and choked her In a
small boat that he had previously
moored on the Jersey side, and that
he rowed down the river, threw her
body overboard and escaped to his
vessel {n the tower harbor. In just!-
fication of this theory Poe describes
marks on her back as having been
the tmprint of the ribs of the boat
where she tay before belng thrown
overboard. He also noted the fact
that a boat was found floating in
the bay about where the Liberty
Monument now stands. That was
generally accepted as the solution of
the mystery.
Superintendent Byrnes, in his
book on “The Criminal] Cases of
America,” tanes up the Mary Rogers
case and puts another construction
on the case—that she was accomipa-
nied‘by a dark man wh> came from
Philadelphia end murdered her and
then escaped.
‘The girl's body was found in the
river nearly nude, but In a thicket on
the shore of Hoboken, arranged
w'th Very dramatic effect, were found
ber belongings—hat, shawl, &c.,—to
give the impression that the murder
had been done there. Some four or
five years ago, writes Willlam M.
Clemens, 1 went to Hoboken and
looked into this case. 1 found, fifty
years after, that there were five liv-
ing witnesses, I found one old gen-
tleman who was a constable In 1842
and endeavored to make an arrest tr
the case I fount there was a road:
house run by an old woman and her
two sons, two rough, tough boys of
the Bowery type, and it was proved
by these “witnesses that this girl had
been seen at the roadhouse, justify:
ing the theory both of Poe and
Byrnes. But, going over the news:
paper files, I found a small account
of the finding of a man's body In tne
river off Fulton street without coat o1
hat, well dressed, as a dandy of tha’
day dressed; and in further invest
gating the case and talking wit!
these old people, I proved to my sat
isfaction that both the man and the
woman were killed in the road hous¢
for thelr money and both thrown In
to the boat, and the girl's appare
placed in the thicket to attract at
tention. One of these witnesses wa:
arrested on suspicion at the time
and atterwards moved West and dis
Appeared, The other was drowned
‘The Bachelors’ Excuses. _
Ata June wedding breakfast {n
Pittsburg, the bachelors were called
upon to give their reasons for re-
maining single.
The following were among the
Teasons given:
“Lam like the frog in the fable,
who, though he loved the water,
would not jump into the well because
he could not jump out again,”
“Lam too celfish, and honest
enough to admit It.”"
“'l prefer, on the one hand, liberty,
refreshing sleep, the opera, midnight
suppers, quiet seclusion, dreams, cl-
gars, a bank account and club to—
on the other hand—disturbed rest,
cold meat, baby linen, soothing
syrup; rocking horses, bread pudding
and empty pockets.”
“Lhave atwin brother and we
have never bad a secret from one
another. He is married.’"—New Or-
leans Times-Democrat,
ee
‘The Windsor Chair.
Windsor chairs are thought by
many, to have “derived thelr name
from Windsor Conn., where they
Yere made in Colonfal days. In an
article in Country Life in America,
howevei, Mr. Waher A. Dyer states
that they were of Engilsh peasant
origin and were made in Englend
before the first specimens from
Windsor, Conn,, «ere turned out,
2 steve Viaepeaaale E rebadalgt
WARM AIR ABOVE THE COLD.
A‘Curlous Fact Recently Observed
By Meteoroligista,
= SE Nn ee
Students of the upper alr were a3-
tonished when ‘he little balloon they
sent up, with self-recording ther
mometers, told them one day that in
the bigh atmosphere there !s a stra-
tuin which is warmer than the afr
immediately below it. No one has
yet explained this strange inversion
of temperature, but it has now been
observed so many times in different
part of the world tuat there can be
no doubt about it.
1t was discoveerd in 1891, almost
simultaaeously, by Mr. Telssereno de
Bort near Paris and by Prof, Ass-
mann in Germany. Since then near-
ly all the balloons that have risen
above 40,000 feet In central Europe
have penetrated this stratum of
warmer air. No one knows yet its
upper Hmits,
in England tt bas ben found that
the average helg® of the layer of
warmer alr 1s about 36,000 feet.
In the last three years Dr. A, Law-
rence Rotch has set afloat seventy-
seven ballonssondes at St. Louts.
Most of those which rose higher than
43,000 feet entered the stratum of
warmer temperature,
On October 8, for Instance, the
temperature at 47,600 feet was—
90 degrees Farenheit, while at the
greater altitude of 64,100 feet the
temperature had risen to —72 de-
grees. Two days later the coldest
temperature, —80 degrees, was
found at 39,700 feet, while only
2,600 feet higher the temperature
rose to —69 degrees. .
This warmer stradium of air has
not yet been discovered over the
tropical -Atlantic, but the noteworthy
fact has been established that above
the equator in summer it {Is colder
ac a hetght of elght miles than tt is
in winter at the same height in north
temperate regions,
Meteorologists now think they
dave reason to believe that this
warmer alr exists throughout the
tropical regions at heights exceeding
50,000 Ceet and that it is probably a
universal phenomenon existing at
some height all around the globe,
The Call of the Jungle.
Many a time I've come pack from
a trip, leaving half my men ane all
my ivory in some deadly African
swamp, half dead with fever, swear-
ing that I'm done with the busingss
for good. And some bright day in
six months, or even Ir threo, the
smell of the Jungle gets into my nos-
trils, through all the street tramc I
hear the squeal of an elephant or the
coughing roar of a Iion’s challenge—
and that settles the business. Back
1 go again, knowing precisely what {s
coming—the sweating days with the
chilling nights, the torments of fn-
sects and of thirst, the risks and
hardships and the privations. For
once Africa bas laid ter spell upon a
man he’s hers forever. He'll dream
of her, of the black tangle ox forests
he's broken through, hot on the trall
of a wounded bull tusker; of the
Parched and bilstered veldts he's
crossed under the blazing sunligttt;
of the nights, those meonlit haunt-
ed nights, wnen he’s watched beside
runway, waiting for the game te
come down and drink, and listened ta
the rippie of the water on the fats,
the splasn of a crocodile, the stealthy
snapping of branches all around
him, the scurry of monkeys over:
head, Iistened to the vast black st.
lence, tto which all smaller sound:
are cast ag pebbles are dropped intc
f pool.—Herkeley Hutton in Every.
body’s,
Citric Acid and Water .
Dr, Riegel of the Austrian army
describes In Archty fuer Hygiene a
number of expertments with citric
acid to determine {ts value as a ster-
Mizer of water. The experiments
were made with typhus, diarrhoea
and ‘cholera bacilll. A solution of
0.6 per cent cftric acld was placed
in shallow vessels. The cholera
germs were killed in 16 minutes; the
diarrhoea bacill! wero killed In 5 to
6 hours and tne typhus tn .24 hours.
When the vessels were placed tn the
sun's rays, the action was much
quicker; the cholera germs were Kill-
ed in § minutes and the typhus In
1% hours,
_ It Is therefore probable, says Dr.
Hegel, that the use of cltric acid in
water exposed to the rays of the sun
in flat vessels would be of great ben-
efit in countries where the usual
sterilization methods (cooking,ozon-
tation) caanot be well employed, as
Is the case tn most of the tropical
and sub-tropelal countries.
“A Late Alarm.
“One of tue most extraordinary
sounds I hear In New York,” sald an
early riser, “Is the alarm clocks that
strike at 8 or 9 o'clock in the morn-
ing. I was born and brought up on
a farm and my time for rising {s 6
a, m. In the summer I not infrequent-
ty get up at four and am hard at
work by 6. Some time along in
what seems the middle of the day to
me 1 hear an alarm clock suddenly
begin to strike and keep whirring
away as If to wake the dead. I nev-
er get used to it. { Invariably think
tt had struck by mistake, and then“l
remember that It is Just arousing
some of my netghbors. What trou:
bles me {s how anybody can sleep £0
tate with the tearful racket of New
York dinning all around him.”—New
York Press,
Missourt's Eggs. -
, Missourl marketed 107,155,655 ¢
“en of egge In 1908, for which .~
received more than §16,U00,t0U.
WORLDS BIGGEST FARK
'A Mexican Don Who Owns an
| - 8,000,000 Acre Ranch.
HOMESTEAD IS A PALACE
|Don Luis Terrazas, of Chihachag,
Employs 2,000 Cow Punchers,
Line Riders, Shepherds and Hun-
ters—He Owns 1,000,000 Cattle,
700,000 Sheep, 109,c00 Horses.
The biggest farm—it “farm” it
can be called—tIs that owned by Don
Lute Terrazas in the State of Chl-
hauhau, Mexico, which measures
from north to south 150 miles and
from east to west 200 miles, or 8,
000,000 acres in all. On ts prairies
ard mountains roam 1,000,000 head
of cattle, 700,000 sheep and 100,000
horses. The “farm house” ts prob-
ably the most magnificent in the
world for it cost £400,000 to build
and s more richly furnished than
many a royal palace. On the home-
stead alone are employed a hundred
servants, Tne gardens are superbly
laid ovt, the stables more magnifi-
cent than those of the German Em-
Perar and there fs accommodation
for 500 guests if necessary.
Scattered over tls vast ranch are
a hundred outlying stations, each one
of which has charge of a certain por-
tion of the estate. [he horsemen,
cow punchers line riders, shepherds
and hunters number 2,000 and the
‘L..razas ranch {s the only one In the
world which maintains its own
| slaughtering snd packing plant, Each
year 150,000 head of cattle are
slaughtered, dressed and packed, and
100,000 sheep. Don Luts personally
superintends the different industries
on his ranch, covering many thous-
ands of miles on horseback during a
twelvemonth. Don Luis was at one
time Governor of Chihauhau, but
public life did not sult him; it was
too quiet, and he preferred to spend
his Mfe riding over the plalns and
loking after his own enterprises. He
ts three times as rich as any other
man in Mexico and bas the name of
being Mberal and generous toward
his workpeople.
Don Luls fs a very handsome man,
married to a beautiful wife. He fs
the father of twelve children—seven
sons and five daughters. The sons
are all assoclateu with Don Luis in
looking after the ranch, while the
daughters, said to be the most beau-
tiful women- in Mexico—remain
quietly atthe homestead, All the
children were educated in the United
States, are highly accomplished, have
travelled through Europe, and speak
several languages.
Don Luis founded his cattle ranch
about fourteen years ago and four
years later he sought to Import the
finest cattle from Scotland and Eng-
land. But there was a considerable
ditticulty in the way. The Import
duty on cattle was so heavy that it
was impossible to bring over the ant-
mals in quantities sufficient for his
purpose, so Don Luts appealed to the
Maxican (Government, pointed out
the absurdity of restricting the Im:-
portation of good stock Into the
country and succeeded in getting the
Import tax repealed. Since that
time ‘lerrazas has increased his
stock by the importation of some
thing like 6,000 bulls of the best
breeds from the famous studs of Eu.
rope.
'| Five years ago Terrazas Installed of
‘| bis ranch four big reservoirs costing
£100,000, besides which there are
300 Wells scattered over the hug
farm, some of them going cown tc
a depth of 500 feet. ‘These wells
the water from which js raised by the
| use of windmills, cost another £100,
| 000, Every kind of grain Is grow:
and Don Luis ts consantly expert
| menting In the rafsing of differen
| “foods for supplying the wants o
|| bis Immense herds during the rain
| less season.
| An enemy which has to be sternl:
»} fought on this great ranch Is fire, an
.| scarcely a summer passes withou
,|} great tracts of pralrle being ial
1] Waste by its destroying advance
-| Through the torrid months there 1
| a man-stationed on the lookout a
every station each hour of the twen
_| ty-fouf, and directly he sees Aidice
|} tions which tells him that Bre ha
, | started he rings the m Asive alarr
-j bell and and in an.incr2dibl¥ shor
|| time men come riding in ready t
.| tight the danger with their lives !
| necessary.
1] ‘The frightened cattle are drive
sideways from the oncoming fire an
then the enemy its attacked fom th
ALWAYS LOOK FOR TWISTERS.
Worries and Fears of the Nerrous in
the Tornado Belt.
To the region where tornadoes are
common, whicn is a pretty narge ter-
ritory, nearly every family bas one
thember who has a highly developed
fear of storms. When warm weath-
er and the cyclone sut tn thelr ap-
pearance the scary one begins the
Properation of a safe retreat, proba-
bly in the cellar under the house; or
It he happens to be a thirty-third de-
grea member of the Amalgamated
Order of Fraldcats, he has a cave.
lined with reenforced concrete can-
structed somewhere in ihe back
yard, .
in bis cave or cellar retreat ‘the
coward puts a bed, snd 1 fhe has it
bad he is apt to lay in a stock of pro-
visions and a barrel of water. During
the day the other members of the
family have a good deal of fun chat-
fing the coward; but he gets even
at night by disturbing their sleep.
Among other pecullarities of the
cyclone coward {s an optical illusion
which possesses him atout the time
the bass begin to bite. From then
untl harvest time every cloud he sees
assumes a funnel shape and he ts
sure we are going to have a twister.
And he never misses a cloud. When
he sees one, he gets up, gathers up
his clothes and th einsurance papers
and proceeds to try to herd the fam-
ily to safety,
If the coward happeas to be the
man of the house he s~ aetimes suc-
ceeds in dragging the sizepy wife and
children t othe cellar while he looks
out the door until a gentle summer
shower begins to fall. But it the
coward 1s the wife she never has
much succes with the old man be-
yond getting him angry, and because
ot her duty to the children she takes
them to the ‘fraid hole, abardoning
the husband to bis fate—and sleep.
About once In 2,000.00 times the
cyclone coward makes a good bet
and then bis name Is numbered with
the survivors. But {t costs him a lot
of good sleep.
Strange Scenes at Conventions.
To a newcomer a political conven-
tion is an hitherto unimagined carni-
val of senile friskiness, nolse, tem-
per and downright lunacy. . The so-
cial leader, the millionaire; the
flashy, hall-fellow-well-met who lives
by the sweat of his political brow;
the tmportant politictan from a small
city; the difiidem, nervous, country
lawyer; the gaping backwoodsman;
the suave, confident statesman, all
mingle here to plot and plan, to mine
and countermine, to charge and re-
treat, and to take in flank and in the
Tear, Just as armies sttuggle with
strength and strategy for the mas-
tery ofa field. And as the smoke of
battle brings beyond the surface of
civilization’s veneer the primeval In-
stincts of mas, eo Is the rougher man
exposed in the fight of the conven-
tion hall, with Its ambitions, Its hat-
red and ita lust of power. Although
such moments do not come fn all con-
ventions, in each the same lack of
dignity may be found. The easily
aroused Igughter, the readiness to
cheer at any and all times, the high-
ty strung nerves on which, it may
bappen, an orator plays with results
that can be compurea to the ease
with which the French people were
accustomed to raise and pull down
their popular heroes—these are some
of its inalienable traits.
‘The American Game.
Why 1g baseball so popular. It is
in no sense a gambling game, Mem
do not go to a baseball game for the
purpose of winnin the price of 2 box
at the theatre, a suit of clothes. or
an elaborate dinner with a party of
friends. No betting sheds are found
in baseball enclosures. There are
no bookmakers with odds on the dif-
ferent teams posted up. And prac-
tcally all of them forbid the sale of
any drinks more harmful than soda
water, root beer, and similar “soft”
beverages. Lovers af baseball do
not turn gut in ofder to drink or
gamble. hey g¢ because they aro
really fond of the sport. The base-
ball “tan’ goes because he Itkes to
get out Into the open air, to sit In
grandstand or on bleacher for an
hour or two, and see efficent ath-
letes contest for the mastery. There
1s no brutality about baseball, noth-
ing fhat ts debasing or ‘demoralizing.
| And It Is the most popular sport Ia
)the United States to-day, as for
many years past. It wilt be popular
| fong after public sentiment has
closed every race track at which
gambling fs permitted.—Salt Lake
Herald.
| Honduran Hardwood.
A raflroad in Honduras which bas
Just been opened to trafic as far as
Celba, thirty-five miles, was built
with creosoted ple ‘tles from the
United States. It is worthy of note
that while creosoted pine ties are be-
ing shipped trom the United States
te Honduras, hardwoods are coming
to fhe United States from that coun-
try. Americans are doing the sh{p-
ping both ways. A tract of 8,000
acres in Honduras bas been secured
by an American company which will
ent the mahogany and other valuable
hardwoods and ship them to the
United States.—Forest and Stream.
Why He Kept a Goat.
‘A man whose house adjoined the
railway, kept a goat tethered in bis
garden. A friend asked him one
day what was the use of the goat.
“Uso of the goat!” he replied. “Stan,
that goat keeps me {n coals. Never
a train passes but the fireman throws
‘a bit of coal at it.” .
The Weekly Society
Attorney A. W. Scott will either go to Atlantic City or Boston, Mass.
Mr. Joseph H. Jones and wife have returned to the city from Silcott Springs.
Miss J. E. Anderson, who has been summering at Silcott Springs, has returned.
Prof. J. D. Baltimore has returned to the city from Silcott Springs.
Rev. Ray, of Zion Methodist Church preached a most eloquent sermon last Sunday morning. The singing by the choir, under the leadership of Prof. J.-T. Newman, was excellent.
Miss Clarice Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Jones, left the city Monday for Wilberforce University.
Misses Eva A. Chase and Rachel Bell have returned to the city from the North, where they have been all the summer.
Mrs. Marietta Cinkscales is visiting friends in New York city and Brooklyn. While there she will be the guest of Mrs.Eva Coxton Seward. Before retraining home she will visit the B. M. C. of the G. U. O. of O. F. at Atlantic City.
Mrs. William H. Johnson and daughter Marie, of 1904 Third street northwest, have returned to their home after spending a delightful vacation in Atlantic City, N. J.
Mrs. R. R. Cobert, of this city, has been visiting for the past two weeks in Atlantic City, A. J., with her sister Mrs. John C. Geiger, of New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Jones and wife have returned from Silcott Springs, Va.
Professor Montgomery left the city Monday morning on a hunting trip.
Dr. S. H. George, physician and singer, ot raucah, Ky., and Prof. G. A. Lowes, Jr., ot Shaw University, were in the city last week.
Dr. J. E. Sneppard paid the city a visit last week.
Mrs. Naplu W. Tyler and sons, who spent the summer in Ohio, have returned to Washington.
Miss Cance Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Jones, lett the city Monday to enter Cornell University.
Rev. S. R. W. Drew will leave the city today to join his wife in the South.
Among those who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Chapman, at Lincoln, D. C., this summer are: Misses Wayne, Dublin and Joannas, of New York city; Stack, Murphy and Coleman, of Baltimore, Md.
Miss Campbell, of this city, returned this week.
Mr. W. H. McNeal, of this city, is at Alexander Bay, N.Y. He will return to the city shortly.
Mr. W. E. Fletcher, of the City Postoffice, and his wife, Mrs. Mary V. Fletcher, returned to the city on Wednesday morning from Merrith, Pa., where they have been visiting for three or four weeks. While there they were the guests of the parents of Mrs. Fletcher. They had a most enjoyable trip.
Prof. Alice Cary, of Atlanta, Ga., was in the city this week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lankford.
Prof. H. M. Brown, of Cheney, Pa., was in the city Wednesday on business.
Mr. Thomas H. Wright is in Atlantic City.
Attorney W. C. Martin will leave for Atlantic City tomorrow.
Dr. E. D. Scott and daughter, Miss Marion, have returned to the city.
Editor Devaux, of the Savannah Tribune, was in the city this week.
Ex-Register J.W.Lyons, of Georgia, has returned to the city from the South.
Register W. P. Vernon has returned.
Auditor Ralph W. Tyler arrived from New York a few days ago. You will receive no paper next because you haven't paid your subscript-
Everybody pays his subscription but you. Why don't you send a check, postal money order, or registered letter? No more deadheads after this issue. Send your money if you want The Bee.
WILSON — HENDESRON
A quiet but very pretty wedding occurred last Monday afternoon at two o'clock, when Miss Helen E.Wilson was united in marriage to Mr. Joseph S. Henderson. Miss Wilson was becomingly gowned and made an exceedingly pretty picture whi'e the solemn services were being pronounced which made her the bride of the groom.
Mrs. W.M. Miller served as bridesmaid, wearing a handsomely tailored gown that gave both grace and beauty to her figure. The groom, Mr. Henderson, is one of the popular porters in the Pullman service, and together with his bride left for Atlantic City, where a portion of the honeymoon will be spent.
MR. UNDERDOWN
s Mrs.Margaret Underdown, wife of Mr. Alexander Underdown, the popular caterer and delicatessen man at the corner of Fourteenth and S sts., has been spending the summer with her mother in Cincinnati,Ohio, where she is taking a much needed rest.The Bee regrets to learn that maternal duties have forced Mrs. Underdown to retire from active connection with the California Fruit and Delicatessen Store,the present beautiful and flourishing condition of which establishment has been largely brought about through her neatness, courteous manners, business tact, and devotion to duty. The Bee wishes Mr. Underdown continued prosperity.
THE BENEFIT A SUCCESS. The benefit given in honor of Miss Lulu Ellis, at 1522 L street northwest, last Friday evening, was an entire success, and far surpassed the expectations of the ladies who gave it. The suggestion was made by Miss Mary Reese to a number of her friends, as well as Miss Ellis' friends some weeks ago, and heartily agreed upon by a'll. Tickets were printed, and sold very readily, one noted young man taking fifty. It is thought by the committee that when all returns are in about fifty dollars will be realized.
The lawn was decorated in Japanese lanterns, which made a pretty and an effective sight. Music was furnished by Mr. Henry Davis and his friends, consisting of mandolins, guitars.
Committeee — Miss Mary Reese, Miss Nanme Lewis, Miss Mary Bradford, Mrs. George Payne and Mrs. L. K. Chambers, were among those present.
.. COUNCILMAN CUMMINGS ..
HONORED.
Democratic Governor of Maryland
Appoints Leading Negro Repub-
on Record.
Governor Crothers has appointed Hon. Harry S. Cummings to represent the State of Maryland at the National Negro Fair to be held in Mobile the last of November. The honor came to Mr. Cummings unsolicited and is the first time a Negro has been appointed by a governor of the State of Maryland to represent the Commonwealth. Mr. Cummings is the leading attorney of Baltimore,and is also a member of the City Council from the Seventeenth Ward. He was largely instrumental in making the reception of the National Negro Business League in that city the most brilliant that the Maryland metropolis has ever known. Governor Cro-
thers' action is both a fitting recognition of Mr. Cummings and a testimonial to the value and importance of the great fair projected at Mobile by Dr. H. W. Newsome.
MR. HERSHAW WAKES UP.
Discovers That Dr. Booker T. Washington Is a Statesman — New York World Interview on "Lynching" Commended as "Unexceptionable."
Mr. L. M. Hershaw, editor of the "Outlook Department" of the Horizon, published in this city, has the following significant comment to make upon the recent deliverance of Dr. Booker T. Washington on the lynching evil. Mr. Hershaw has long been looked upon as an irreconcilable opponent to the teachings, philosophies and methods of the "Wizard of Tuskegee," and it is noteworthy to find a common ground upon which they are able to meet. Says Mr. Hershaw:
"On the 19th of August, Mr. Booker T. Washington sent to the New York World from Baltimore a communication consisting of six or seven hundred words, leading with the lynching question, doubtlessly suggested by the Springfield affair, though he does not specifically say so. His views as here expressed are the c'earest, strongest and most courageous he has uttered since his Chicago speech at the celebration of the close-of the Spanish-American War. The whole statement is unexceptionable."
After over a decade of critical examination, Mr. Hershaw has finally awakened to what everybody else has long since found out — that Dr.Book is a staeseman. However, revelation and conversion even at the e'eventh hour is better than to die in one's sins. There is hope for Mr. Hershaw.
RALLY AND BARBECUE
There were fully five to six thousand people present on Labor Day at Madre's Park to the Taft and Sherman Rally and aBrbecue. Rev. Simon P. W. Drew presided, and in a short, interesting address he introduced as the first speaker ex-Justice E. M. Hewlett, who delivered a most eloquent address. He was followed by Rev. George W. Lee, who paid his respects to the colored independent agitators — Rev. Corrothers, Walters, Newsome and others. Rev. Wilbanks also spoke and he was followed by Editor W. Calvin Chase, of The Bee. There was music, dancing and the slaughtering of a large fat cow, from which the thousands took a piece. It was a great day for Repub'icans.
RATIFICATION MEETING. Great Ratification Meeting of Negro Republicans at Madre's Park, on Labor Day — Taft and Sherman Endorsed, and Democracy Assailed by Eminent Negroes — Thousands Attended.
Fully five thousand colored people crowded Madre's aPrk, Eckington, Dr. C., Labor Day, September 7, 1908, attending the ratification meeting of Negro Republicans of the District of Columbia, under the auspices of the National Negro Taft and Sherman Campaign Bureau — Dr. Simon P. W. Drew, president—and joint auspices of the Cosmopolitan Temple Baptist Church, of which Dr. Drew is pastor, and the National Negro Labor Union.
Dr. Drew's church is located in N street between Ninth and Tenth sts. northwest, Washington, D. C. The meeting was called to order by the New Empire Orchestra playing "America;" after which they again played "John Brown's Body Lies Molding in the Grave," the immense throng joining in the singing. After which Dr. Drew, who presided, said in part: "Never before since the disfranchisement of our race has it been as important as now that the Negro should make no mistake in casting his vote. Within the past four years certain things have happened affecting the race which have caused many of its leading men of thought to urge upon the Negro the advisability of supporting the Democratic nominees as a warning to all political parties as regards their treatment of the race. Should the Negro support the party of slavery, the worst that ever disgraced the globe; that has disfranchised him merely because he is a Negro; that established the Jim Crow system to humiliate and disgrace his wife and daughter by compelling them to ride in cars unfit for beasts and subject them to all kinds of diseases; the party that has always opposed him in his manhood rights and tells him now that he does not want his vote; or, shall he support
the party of freedom, the party that gave us the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution, the party that has given us every right that we enjoy? This is the question that the Negro is to decide within the next few weeks. We have therefore met today to hear some of the brainiest men now of our race upon these questions. I have the honor, of intgroducing to you Judge E. M. Hewlett, who will speak to you."
Judge E. M. Hewlett said in part. The Democratic party has always been the party of oppression; the party of disfranchisement; the party of Jim Crowism, while the Republican party has always been the party of freedom. It was the Republican party that freed the Negro; that made him a citizen and gave him the ballot; that erected the schoolhouse where the auction block stood; that gave the race representation as foreign ministers, United States Senators, members of Congress, Registers of the Treasury, and the like. Why then are we asked by prominent men of our race to to desert the grand old party? It is on account of the Brownsville incident. No man regrets more than I do the discharge of those gallant boys; no man is a firmer believer in their innocence than I am. Still I as firmly believe that the President acted in perfect good faith in this matter, and that the color of the skin of the soldiers had nothing whatever to do with his action. He has always stood for justice and right, regardless of the color of the skin. Judge Taft is condemned because he carried out the order of the president. How ridiculous! Does any man honestly believe that Judge Taft, born of abolition parents, parents who were prominent workers with the underground railroad, that carried many a poor, weary slave to freedom, could possibly be anything other than friendly toward our race? His sympathies have always been, and always will be on the side of the oppressed, and, if elected president, he will know no man by the color of his skin. Shall we, on account of the discharge of these soldiers, sacrifice the interests of ten millions of our race? No no; a thousand times no
Editor W. Calvin Chase, of The Bee," that veteran journalist of the Negro race, also delivered a powerful address urging upon his hearers the great necessity of voting for the G. O. P. No man in all the country speaks with more power, convincing, swaying and determined in his oratory, than W. Calvin Chase, whose voice rings out clear, as the sound of a clarion upon the morning breeze, whose physique is as commanding as that of Bismarck, and whose manner is as assiduous as that of Doug'ass. The stifling cheers that greeted his remarks manifested that his hearers drank deeply from the fountain of his brilliant essaying.
Dr. A. Wilbanks,pastors of Friendship Baptist Church, Chaplain W. H. Colston and others concluded the speech-making, which they did with great credit to themselves and the party. The meeting was a great success from every standpoint, and was largely attended, as the day was without blomish from an atmospheric standpoint.
The next speaker was Dr. George W. Lee, pastor of Vermont Avenue Baptist Church, whose very name when mentioned called forth loud applause. Dr. Lee spoke in the vein characteristic of himself, and which has made him famous in these parts. Always to the point, mincing neither words nor language, he went forthwith to the hearts of his hearers.
INSPECTOR ASHFORD.
The District Commissioners, in their vindication of Inspector Ashford was not more than what the public expected. There was no evidence whatever to convict him. Commissioner Morrow, from the very inception of the trial, declared that his office was above suspicion. The decision of Commissioners West and Macfarland vindicated Inspector Ashford and confirmed what Colone! Morrow said at first.
There is no government in these United States that is conducted upon a cleaner basis than our present local government. There is less scandal and less wrongdoing in all branches of our local government than in any government in the United States.
The Bee congratulates Col. Morrow and highly commends Commissioners West and Macfarland for the thorough manner in which they conducted the investigation.
MISS POPE DEAD.
Miss Barbara Pope, the eldest
EXCURSION SEASON For 1908
Steamer River Queen to Washington Park.
Steamer Jane Moseley to Norfolk, Baltimore, and Landings down the Potomac River.
Books now open for charters on the River Queen and Jane Moseley.
Secure your dates at once, before they are all taken.
This beautiful park has a collection of attractions never before offered to the Washington public. It is located about ten miles from Washington on the Potomac River. The Scenic Railway, with its electric power plant for 7,000 lights—a Figure 8. The Caroussel, double-decker, with music attachments. A 5- and 10-cent Theatre. Penny Arcadium, Moving Pictures, Shooting Gallery. A Dairy Lunch Depot and Buffet. Dancing Pavilion. Pool and Billiard Hall, and forty acres of Shady Woods and Dells. The River Queen makes daily trips to Washington Park at 10 a.m., 12 m., and 2, 4, 6, and 8 p.m. For particulars address Lewis Jefferson, General Manager, Seventh and N Streets Wharf.
WORTH ADVERTISING FOR
There are 5,499 Negroes employ Government alone, and these 5,499 $3,044,404. These more than three here in Washington, but scattered. Is this amount of money worth but not even the largest stores in this end of it did they but realize howly spending.
Now The Bee is the only Negro without a rival or competitor, and a few of the merchants in this city columns of The Bee, presenting the these Negroes — these 5,499 Negro Government over three millions of firmizing a publication edited and of such firms desire and deserve their receive the bulk of these over three spent by the Negroes of Washington.
What clothing stores, what fur, and what other lines of business will themselves these over three million Negroes by advertising in The Bee.
Place your advertising in The Beive Negroes spend their over three. Now is the time to advertise in into every Negro home in Washington. it's what advertising p
There are 5,499 Negroes employed here in Washington by the Government alone, and these 5,499 Negroes draw salaries aggregating $3,044,404. These more than three millions of dollars are spent right here in Washington, but scattered among the hundreds of tradesmen. Is this amount of money worth bidding for? It certainly is, and not even the largest stores in this city would refuse to get the big end of it did they but realize how much money the Negroes are really spending.
Now The Bee is the only Negro publication in this city. It stands without a rival or competitor, and covers the field like a blanket. If a few of the merchants in this city will patronize the advertising columns of The Bee, presenting the attractive bargains they may have, these Negroes — these 5,499 Negroes who draw annually from the Government over three millions of dollars — will assume that bf patronizing a publication edited and operated by one of their race that such firms desire and deserve their patronage. And such firms will receive the bulk of these over three millions of dollars received and spent by the Negroes of Washington.
What clothing stores, what furniture stores, what dry goods stores and what other lines of business will now make an effort to divert to themselves these over three millions tf dollars spent by Washington Negroes by advertising in The Bee?
Place your advertising in The Bee and watch these 5,499 appreciative Negroes spend their over three millions of dollars with you. Now is the time to advertise in The Bee, the newspaper that goes into every Negro home in Washington. Remember, merchants of Washington. it's what advertising pays you, not what it costs.
NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO.
The new photographic studio of W. ed. It is an up-to-date studio and a superior class of work it turns out. Life-size portraits in oil, pastel and WARREN & TURNER,
ColoredSkin I
For centuries, scientific men's skin lighter coloured, not by arti- way. At the Chemical Wonder Co. ed Complexion Wonder, which on every time it it applied. Their coloring is natural. The ef- is magical. Price of Complexi- Wonder Co. has another prepa- colored people as well as whiter, a toilet preparation which pre- circles the body with perfumed, physically welcome in society or tomers secure better positions in! Our women customers advance Wonder $1.00. If you have hairt cription, but if you have our' have no more trouble. It con- takes out the kinks and makes well. A bottle of Wonder Hair-g longer and a metal magnetico will send all the specialties of the and guarantee they will do more and commercially than showy Booklet free. Delivery free. ed. M. B. Berger & Co., 2 Rector Chemical Wonder Co.
photographic studio of Warren & Turner Bldg. up-to-date studio and one that commends the work it turns out. Portraits in oil, pastel and water colors. WARREN & TURNER, 248 Ninth Street
RedSkin MadeLight
Series, scientific menhave been trying to blooored, not by anti-ficial whitening, but by Chemical WonderCo. of New York or Wonder, which does bring a lighter skin it applied. The effect is not artificial as natural. The ef-fect on the colored Price of Complex-ion Wonder 50c. You has another preparation which is in use as well as whitepeople. It is called preparation which pre-vents perspiration body with perfumeddaintiness. It will welcome in society orbusiness circles. Our better positions inbanks, clubs or bus customers advancefaster in life. Price. If you have hairtrouble, write us for advice if you have ourWonder Hair equipment trouble. It con-sists of "Wonder Ure kinks and makeshair soft and pliable. Use of Wonder Hair-grow tonic to make it a metal magneticcomb, all in one box. The specialties of theChemical Wonder are they will do moreto advance colored specially than showygarments or gew-wire. Delivery free.Applications for age larger & Co., 2 RectorSt., New York, sell Wonder Co.
The new photographic studio ofWarren & Turner has just opened. It is an up-to-date studio and one that commends itself by the superior class of work it turns out. Life-size portraits in oil, pastel and water colors. WARREN & TURNER, 248 Ninth Street Northwest
ColoredSkin MadeLighter
For centuries, scientific menhave been trying to make dark skin lighter coloured, not by arti-ficial whitening, but in a natural way. At the Chemical WonderCo. of New York has discovered Complexion Wonder, which does bring a lighter natural color every time it it applied. The effect is not artificial. The lighter coloring is natural. The ef-fect on the colored countenance is magical. Price of Complex-ion Wonder 50c. The Chemical Wonder Co. has another prepa-ration which is indspensable for colored people as well as whitepeople. It is called Odor Wonder, a toilet preparation which pre-vents perspiration odor and encircles the body with perfumeddaintiness. It will make any one physically welcome in society orbusiness circles. Our men customers secure better positions inbanks, clubs or business houses. Our women customers advancefaster in life. Price of Odor Wonder $1.00. If you have hairtrouble, write us for special prescription, but if you have ourWonder Hair equipment you will have no more trouble. It con-sists of "Wonder Uncurl" which takes out the kinks and makeshair soft and pliable so as to dress well. A bottle of Wonder Hair-grow tonic to make the hair grow longer and a metal magneticcomb, all in one box $1.00. We will send all the specialties of theChemical Wonder Co. for $2. and guarantee they will do moreto advance colored people socially and commercially than showygarments or gew-gaw jewelry. Booklet free. Delivery free.Applications for agency considered. M. B. Berger & Co., 2 RectorSt., New York, selling agents for Chemical Wonder Co.
daughter of the late William Pope, of Georgetown, D. C., committed suicide in Lovers Lane, Massachusetts avenue extended, Saturday evening, September 5. Miss Pope was formerly a teacher in the public schools of this city. She had a remarkable intellect, having written several stories which commanded her liberal pay. Miss Pope, since last June, had bee stopping in Finchester, Va., with friends. She went there to regain
served here in Washington by the Negroes draw salaries aggregating for millions of dollars are spent right among the hundreds of tradesmen. Adding for? It certainly is, and city would refuse to get the big much money the Negroes are real-publication in this city. It stands covers the field like a blanket. If will patronize the advertising-collective bargains they may have, Negroes who draw annually from the dollars — will assume that by pat operated by one of their race that patronage. And such firms will millions of dollars received and on.iture stores, what dry goods stores I now make an effort to divert to as tf dollars spent by Washington be?
We and watch these 5,499 appreciation millions of dollars with you. The Bee, the newspaper that goes on. Remember, merchants of days you, not what it costs.
MadeLighter
have been trying to make dark special whitening, but in a natural Co. of New York has discoveries bring a lighter natural color effect is not artificial. The light-rect on the colored countenance on Wonder 50c. The Chemicalation which is indspensable for people. It is called Odor Wonders perspiration odor and enaintiness. It will make any one business circles. Our men cusanks, clubs or business houses. Master in life. Price of Odor trouble, write us for special pres-Wonder Hair equipment you will lists of "Wonder Uncurl" which hair soft and pliable so as to dress grow tonic to make the hair grow bomb, all in one box $1.00. We Chemical Wonder Co. for $2.00 advance colored people socially garments or gew-gaw jewelry. Applications for agency consider-St., New York, selling agents for
her health, and everything was done for her to restore her health, but she did not seem to improve. Her sister returned with her to the city, Sunday, August 31, and her death resulted as announced above, to the regret of a large number of her friends.
FOR RENT.
Three rooms and bath flats for rent in a fashionable neighborhood, close to all car lines. Write or call at 2124 L street northwest.
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Every pale of Kleinert’s Dress Shields 1s warranted.
When properly used, we will not only refund money
paid for shields that are not perfect, but will hold our= fuanttarnarr ff
selves responsible for any resulting damage to gown. 4s
Klelnert’s Dress Shields are made in ten sizes, SS
from size 1 to size 10. If your dealer does not WASHABLE
Keep the kind or size you want, send us 25c. for IK AGeets_ A
sample pair of elther kind In size 3. If you want
a larger size, add Sc. for each additional size.
© Send for our Dress Shield Book. é@ BS yp
* ls worth reading. Sent free on application. N Le
. _ |. B. KLEINERT RUBBER CO. SSF
721-723-725-727 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ODORLESS NORUBBER.
RUBNER FINGEES,
*h y're Common Enourh Now, Bat
Viany Still Cut off a Glove Finger.
When you cut your finger nowa-
‘oy6 and wrap It up in gauze, you
1 n't have .o bunt for-an od pa'r
. goves and lop off a fifiger to
+m the outer bandage of your
“aded member; yeu simply go
1 ‘he drug store ana buy a rubber
iecr for a nicke.
and yet many persons go on cut-
t g off glove fingers. They have
t into the habit of saving up old
‘loves for just such ,perposes of
fome surgery, and the habl sticks
sertinac‘ously.
Most of them don't know that you
ion get rubber fingers of all sizes.
They are made to Mt the baby whe
r Ws first adventures {s pretty sure
ta find a knife somewhere and te
.eaure the kKnowredge that it cuts,
«id grownups, too, no matter how
the hand. And they dre might;
a. nient, for you pet one on anc
-tays on, wherens you know
ave finger has to be tled on by
rings passing over the hand ant
reund the wrist.
Sew devices to save'time and, both
ve put on the market dally, bu
kes some folks a leng time to fin
t tabout them.—New York Sun.
‘ ;
B Reduso
7 ae
so
The Perfect Corset SSS
4 Yy
for Large Women -” .
It places over-developed women on = : }
the same basis as their slender sisters. Ry 7 yO
It tapers off the bust, flattens the ab- £28 i { fe}
or and abechtely aedurss the ES sop fo .
Bps from | to 5 in t f ays 5, 4
BR hamess—not a cinbenone ofa, SK COATT | j NY
no torturing straps, but the most ™)\) Rey \camaraeaetay \\
scientific example of conetry, boned . #*\ ra FW \
in such a manner as to give the wearer” cis f 5
absolute freedom of movement. ‘ SN | ig
New W. B. Reduso Na. 770. For large \\ i Po
tall women.” Made of white coutl. Hote suppodt= j 3
“ers froat and sides, Sizes 20 to 36. Price $3.00. \ \ NX
New W.B.Reduso No. 771. Is the same as i
pierces RV
‘supporters cs 20 to :
Price $3.00. M4
Noe W. Bi Reduso No. 772. For large KL 37, / ] ]
shoet women. The same as No. 770, except that the y \ :
busts somewbat lower all around, Made of white ~
coutil, hoe supporters frontand sides Sizes 20 to 36, I Fees @.
Prica $3.00. ee 4 zoe
6, 33-00; a. Reduso No. 773, ia the ume as LY 43%
No. 772 buti made of Eight weight white batiste, Hose
supporters froot and sides. Sizes 20 to 36, Price $3.00,
‘Ask aay dealer anywhere to sbow you the pew We B” Thipacbdiing™ model
‘hich will produce the correct for prevail od. mi
we wil ern the comes ate oe opi lsloccasy pega
From $1.00_to_ $3.00 per pair.
WEINGARTEN BROS., Mfrs.. 377-379 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Golden Wedd ngs.
. Matrled couples look eagerly for+
vard to thelr golden wedding an-
niversary, and immediate y after its
re’ebration one or the other as &
rule, dies, This is due to supersti-
ton. If the golden wedding were
celebrated at s'xty-five years of mar-
riei Mfe people would live fifteen
wears longer than 'h y do,, ever
‘oak'ng forward In happy anticlpa-
tion of its approach. fet’s try it.
Gut of 1,000 couples only seventeen
_ye to celebrate their golden wed:
\'ng. Assuming thet the marriage
‘akeg place at 20 years, this means
a Wfe of three-score and ten, the al
otted space. Tue sulden wedding tt
he crossing of the Ruvicon.
ahent the Fottto..
the history of this vegetable af-
rords a striking {I:ustration of the in-
suence of authority. For more than |
(so centuries \its use as a food was
-Sementy opposed. At last Louls
XV. wore a burch of {ts flowers in
the midst of his courtters, and the
onsumption of the root became unl
versal In France.
—————. >
House Refuse in Germany.
In certain towns in Germany
householders are compelled by law
to sort out thelr house dust. They
hava to provide three receptacles—
one for ashes and sweepings, one for
a
> -— a 2 : 6 > oes
love I'll be to you. i But they say the bee’s a rov-er, That he'll
-be = to ‘you «my dear!
mich zu dir’ ge-fihrt. Doch die Bien’ ist nicht be-stin~dig, Wenn der
ich dich, lie - ber Mann. ~
o =. N a — er -
p—, 2———— i — pe
(2 eS
———__— ee
pe eter |e bee
— | |
SS SS FF ae aaa aaa eae
Tt a a
. ‘,
4 piucresc, : > >
== Ses
i eee
fly when the sweets are gone; And when once the Kiss is © - ver, Faith-less~ %
Tau von der Blit’ ist fort, Und die’ Wel - len sind un - bin-dig, Kis - sex
‘
oe a — er Ppt
eS ESS Se eee
——— a
—
i —— Sh _—— ———I
es ee
ot
- ™ | _pocameno, @ tempo.
(= eS eS Se
brooks will wan-der on! Nay, if flow'rs will lose their looks)\If sun-ny banks will wear a -
bald ’nen aud-ern Ort! Weundie Blit’ auch wel-ken muss,” Wenn's somn'ge Uf-er auch ver-
9 be» ee ot :
to
ee ee ee eee eS eee
el ae
arc a—s——| ¢_F a
Sr ee —— fo
es Fer : =t =
. .
a » os As
eS SSS SSS SS = F
ee
way, “Tis but right that bees and brooks Should sip and kiss them while they may. «=
weht, Ist's nur recht, dass Bien’ und Fluss, Sie so lang kiss-en wie e3 geht. %,
5 on poommens * , 1 =
= — —— a 2
rl
cresc,
ase le
——— — SS ———}
2 Sd
aj br oS =
Yoath’s Privilege. 2 pp—2d p, “
ecoking refuse, and one for rags and
paper. The rubbish 's utilized by
the town authsritios.
hy ee (NEAR TOWR
7 pos WARTED—F RIDER AGENT 22sec
PM, rample Latest Model *Ranger” bicrel creaywherse aie
BPR eee ear iors teette ny grime
EY ir NO MONEY REQUIRED antil you receive and approve of your bicycle. We ship
v A Lg to anyone, anywhere in the U_S. without a cent depomt in advance, prepay freigat, and
i 1 i Slow TEN DAYS" ERE TRIAL dunag wach tne pou mayide te beecls tad
\ uti to any test you wish, If you are thea not perfectly used or do not ‘wish 12
h iy p the bicycle Ie bask to us 3¢ oar expense said pens wall net be ond one cent. te
ish the fi
\ Wa, FACTORY PRICES ot one‘saatl prote above actusl factory cost” You save $19
AVI AERESSE to $25 Biddjemen’s profits by buying dect of us and have the manufacturer's guat~
BERR st sy price onal yoo recenve soar ctalogues sad cara our unheard o ec ‘ary
8% | aH prices asd remarkable sferust fers 9 rider agents. i ee
ANNI Wop Ow WILL BE ASTOWISHED sss te Nears sauteed stewart
4 NERY Wage dow prices we can make youthis year, We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money
! I B than any other factory, | We are suushied with $1.09 prost above lactory com
Sng RCE REAL ERE, vote ger Uereles Wade Your ova mate Ha
|W | SECOND MAND IICYCLES, We do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but
scilly havea number on hand taken va ade by ‘Our Chicago retail stores, ‘These we cleat of
P’promptly at prices ranging {rom 83 t wa ot SLO. Dexcnpure barra jitis mailed tree .
COASTER-BRAKES, cxibmcat of al kinds at ha che wal ren! pric, one? Parte SDA tak
$@p 5.0 HEDGETHORK ~SUNCTURE-PROOF Sa 80
= C &y
i A SAMPLE PAIR
SELF-HEALING TIRES TQ IMT AGDUCE, ONLY
The regular retait price of these teres és Ser rete.
$3.50 fer pair, but lo introduce we wil! SA.
sellyouasample pair for $4 80 cashwithorder$4$5 ane pad re
KO MORE TROBBLE FROM PUNCTURES pests rns
NAILS, Tacks or Glass will not let the ee tee E
air oat. ‘Sixty thousand pairs sold [ast year, = Eaamoncras
Over two hundred thousand pairs now in sc, i F
DESCRIPTION: Made inall sizes, Itistively ee
and easymding.very durableand lined inside with a
a special quality of rubber, which never becomes 0
closes up'small punctures without allow.
Fetvunandwbich less ep aaall penzarearaneotallon- AMM Wotleo tho thick rabbar tran)
Bedeustomers stating that thelr regharconlybeen bumped and “D," "also rim strip “i>
uponceortwice ina whole season. They weigh nomorethan fo prevent rims ptt Pt
Su ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given tre, iit ontiast one avs, i.
by several Layers of thin, specially prepared fabricon the fake SOFT, ELASTIO ee
tread, Theregular price of thesetiresis53 soperpair,butfor If Pasy RIDING. 7
advertisin; purposes we are making a special facto ‘priceto a
Ueevider eT only sudo per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship ©. 0. D. on
approval, You do Got pay a cent until you have examined and found thend strictly as represented,
ie will allow a eash discoant of § per cent (thereby making the price 64.05 per pain if you
send FULL CASH WITH ORDEIt and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one
tickel plated brass band pump. Tiresto be returucd at OU expense if for any reason they are
Tot satisfactory on examination, We are perfectly reliable and moucy sent tous isassa(cas ix a
Bank. If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easi¢r, run faster,
swear bette?, lat longer and look finer than any tirz you have ever used or geen at any price. We
Enow that you will beso well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order.
We want you tosend usa trial order at ance, hence hie remarkable tre offer, 7
jon at any price un a pair o!
IF YOU HEED TIRES Seagetnoen Puncture-Proot lites oa approval aoa teal at
the special introductory price quoted above, OF ‘write for our big Tire and sundry Catalogue wich
bes and quotes all MACs $04 esa postal today, DO NOT THINK OF BUYING a bey
t write us a . 2
DO NOT WAIT ors pair of ures from anyouc until you kuow the new and wooderfal
offers weare making. It only costs a postal to learneverything. Write it NOW. a
J. L. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL.
Txt
LHe Mw\\ - Remove the dandruff if you want fine Iust-
( a d _ yous hair. Give your hair a chance
IWS y to thrive by using
aa ’
WS ED. PINAUD’S
< WY (Eau de Quinine)
we) é :
| ye HAIR TONIC .
Beantiful women in the world of fashion keep
their hair healthy and beautifal by regular use of
& this peerless French preparation,
Try it for yourself—simply send us oc. (to pay postage
) wWehe fee Bs and packing) and we will send you enough for three
Pocket Dk applications—-Write to-day.
: 2 “ ‘ PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD rn
F EU, PINAUD BLDG. pret.m13 FIFTILAV,NEW YORK
, —_
Electric Meat Saw. |
The un-to-date butcher shop is n0W
rroyided with an electr’e nfeat sew, |
and the o'd handsaw ‘s re‘egated to
the junk pile, In its, place Is @ '
:mall hanusaw driven “by an electric
motor, wh'ch severs all bo.es in &
neat and expeditious manner.
—_——
« Whales and Dolphins; .
About 40 different kin is of whales
and doipl’ns are known, and al-
though they Vive ‘n the open sea and
look-like fish they are not fish at all,
but are true mammats, breathing alt
and feeding thefr young on milk like
cows and horses.
Tobacco Smoke.
The smoke from the bowl of one’s
pipe is blue because coming direct
from the red hot tobacco, it ‘s very
highly oxidized, but the smoke from
one’s ips, is gray, because it Is high-
ly watered and hydrocarbonized.
4 Costly Attempts.
It has become known that the eves
attempts made by Sir Thomas Lipton
to capture the America’s cup, the in-
trinsic value of whick 1s about $25¢,-
have cost him $500,000 for yachts
alone, t
Effect of Color on Dew.
The deposit of dew Is greatly tn-
fluenced by color. It will be found
thickest on a board painted yéllow,
but not at all on red and black.
Float the Wearer.
A suit of clothes which will foat
the wearer In case’ of accident at sea,
has been patented by a Norwegiaa in-
ventor. .
Mail Orders, In the East. ‘
Mall orders for merchandise are
practically unknown in China and the
rast In general.
An intoxicated petnoa is, as a rule,
no more fit to be at large than a
junafic. No one, may say what he
wiil do next,
The rock of Gibraltar is honey-
combed with 70 miles of tunneling.
The Bank of England employs
about 1,000 people,
—_—_—_———__—_——_
England has about 13,000 square
miles of coal fields.
——_——_——_-
| ‘Ninety-six per cent of the coal Is
— north of the equator.
——
In many parts of Africa, gin fs
the only currency. .
Ceremony of a Set of Brahmins in Honor of Gods of Fire and Water. Six thousand Hindus and a select few English officials have recently witnessed in the neighborhood of Madras a remarkable religious ceremony, the principal actors being Sivrastas, a sect of Brahmins. The festival was called "the match through fire," and it is appropriately enough named. The ceremonies were in honor of Brahma and Vishnu, the gods of water and fire.
Fr. a stons for the ceremony had been going on for a month. A French twenty-three feet long and nineteen feet deep was dug and in a fire was kindled. At sunrise, early fanatics, who were to demonstrate their asbestos nature, slowly searched around the furnace, bearing the curious ido's. The Savasas were clothed in yellow tunics, and without hesitation, entered the fire trench singing a brimn the reign of which was "Govindal! Gorilla. After walking around this street a Gehenna three times they emerged apparently none, the worse for their experience, and have established an unassailable claim for sanctity among their people.—London Gate
A Remarkable Test.
A Copenhagen newspaper, with a view to testing the comparative rate of speed of various telegraph systems sent off to itself two telegrams, each of five words; one telegram went eastward while the other went to the west. One telegram went via Shanghai, New York, and London; while the other went via London, New York and Shanghai the telegram sent off by Shanghai or the eastern route, arrived back in Copenhagen in three hours, 23 minutes. Each telegram had to be taken over and telegraphed afrcsh eight times during transmission — London Chronicle.
An Underground Wonder.
One of the most wonderful underground waterways in the world, which was constructed at the latter end of the eighteenth century by the Dukes of Bridgewater, is now being used for the conveyance of waste water from the Earl of Ellesmere's tolls at Walkden, near Manchester. This canal, which is entirely undergound, with its arms and junctions overlays over 40 miles
Vibration of Wings.
Recent measurements of the vibrations of the wings of a dragon fly in the Stuttgart University showed that they ranged from 1.000 to 12.000 a second. The common house fly makes 60 strokes of its wings a second when flying at its highest speed.
Automobile Disease.
The automobile disease" has been discovered by Dr. Henry Becker of New York After studying the maady for a year he says it affects the tissues of the throat and lungs, causing congestion and decay.
The Wonderful Petrel.
The tiny stormy petrel is a bird of immense wing power; it be.ongs to every sea and, although so seeming, y fra.l. it casily breasts furious storms. Petrels have been observed 2,000 miles from nearest land.
Mohammedan Photography.
Until a few years ago Mohammedang were greatly opposed to photography but now they have taken it up seriously, and some photographers of real merit are found among them
Sorrow Is Fleeting.
The compensation that life offers for growing old is finding out that sorrow is as fleeting as joy, and that there are just as many picnics to come a we have missed.
No Flies on This Cow.
Missouri's latest is a cow with two ta's, which brushes the files from both of her sides at once. Man who mills her muet have happy times.
Coal in Canada.
A serious problem for the people of Canada to solve is the fuel supply of the future. No coal of any kind has ever been discovered in Ontario.
Taxing the Single.
During the reign of William and Mary, bachelors and widowers over 25 years were taxed one shilling early
Within 20 miles of New York City Hall there is a population of 1,000,- 100 Jews, more than in all America besides.
A Thin Film.
The film of a soap bubble is so thin that fifty millions of them would be required to make one inch.
There are three kinds of lies—white lies, black lies and society fbs.
When misery is at hand there isn't much pleasure in recalling former joys.
In Portugal married women retain their maiden names and are always known by them.
A mole eats as many as 20,000 earth worms in the course of a year.
Annual Annoucement
MANUFACTURINGJEWELER 725 7th Street, Northwest
Everybody has some friend whom they wish to make happy. It may be mother or father, sister or brother. It may be a wife, or it may be a sweetheart — and no better time than Christmas is so appropriate — so suggestive. Nothing makes one feel happier than to gladden the heart of another.
Our stock of Jewelry and Bric-a-brac is now complete. Each is elected and we feel satisfied thata visit from you will bear us out can be found anywhere. Why not give us a call tomorrow? will be laid aside and deliveredwhen wanted. Experienced clerks
We mention here but a few of our
specials.
Gentlemen's 20-year Gold Filled Am-
mium Stem Winders and Setters, $10.
Ladies' 20-year Gold Filled Stem
Winders and Setters, $10.
Gentlemen's 14-karat Solid Gold Am-
mium Stem Winders and Setters, as
cheap as $35.
Children's Solid Silver Watches with
Pn Attachment, $2.50; regular price,
$4.50.
Ladies' Solid Cold Watches, Open
Face, $8.00.
Boys' Solid Silver Watches, $5.00 up.
DIAMONDS.
Put Your Monet. in Diamonds. No Better Investment Today.
Prices in the Diamond market are advancing, but OUR PRICES HAVE ENEEN ADVANCED in some time. We still have a large collection of superb Diamonds which we bought a considerable time ago at lower prices than prall today. We shall not advance prices on these stores. We are merchants and not simulators, and our fair percentage of is all we ask. So, as long as these Diamonds last, it will be possible to buy them here under the regular market for
W.Sidney Arch
W.SidneyPittman Architect
RENDERING IN
MONOTONE, WATER COLOR
AND PEN & INK
STEEL CONSTRUCT
Poone: Main 6059-M. Office
Virginia vs. Havana.
STEEL CONSTRUCTION A SPECIALTY. Poone: Main 6059—M. Office 494 Louisiana Ave., N.W.
Virginia vs. Havana.
"Havana is spelt with a 'B' on genuine imported cigar boxes and with a 'V' in the case of home-made cigars," explained a tobaccoist presented at Cardiff recently, for selling British cigars as Havana. The magistrate agreed that the custom prevailed and inflicted a nominal fine.—London Dally.
The gypsies are nearer to the animals than any race known to us in Europe. They have the lawlessness and abandonment, the natural physical grace in form and gesture of animals; only a stealthy and something wary in their eyes makes them human.—Arthur Symons.
Pharaoh's mummy has been discovered and unfolded, and the eyes of the readers of these pages can rest on the very features on which the eyes of Moses looked 3,000 years and more ago.
Youth is the best time for the building of character and the forming of principle, and the future depends on the decisions and actions of the present.—Rev. G. Denton.
A wise man has well reminded us that in any controversy the instant we feel anger we have already ceased striving for the truth, and have begun striving for ourselves.—Carlyle.
According to statistics quoted by Congressman Cooper, the fatalities in Pennsylvania's mines rose from 611 in 1898 to 1,514 in 1908.
In shortening the hours of labor, no one tries to shorten the hours for women in the household.
"A Natural Inference. "Pop," anxiously inquired the doctor's inquisitive little boy, "is a jumping toothache a muscular pain?" —Baltimore American.
Bernaldo in his Calendar says that in medieval times there was much more food than money given for church tithes.
J.
final piece has been carefully that we have as fine a selection as Any article that you may select
1. The image contains a series of dots arranged in a grid pattern. Each dot is represented by a small square with a black center and white border. The dots are spaced evenly across the grid, creating a uniform pattern. There are no other discernible elements or text present in the image.
BARROW TRAVEL IN CHINA.
Long Distances Made by Passengers at Small Cost.
"Probably more freight and more passengers are transported in China by the wheelbarrow route than by any other land metLod," said Alexander F. Georgil of Hongkong, China, who is interested in the shipping trade in the Far East.
The whee barrow used in China differs from that used in America in the fact that the wheel is set in the center and thus supports practically the entire load, while the handle are supports in part by a strap or rope over the shoulders of the man who operates it.
"As a result the coolie in China will transport, nearly half a ton on his wheel. Wheelbarrows are much used in the country where the roads are but little developed, and I have heard that passengers sometimes make the entire trip from Shanghai to Pekin, a distance of 600 miles by harrow.
"A two passenger barrow will make about 20 miles a day, and the cooie is content with a pay of about twenty cents a day, or an average of about half a cent a mile for each passenger. On the level, well kept streets of the foreign quarters of such cities as Hongkong, Shanghai and Pekin, the wheelbarrow cooie will struggle along with a load of six or even eight people.
Figureheads for Autos.
In some parts of the civilized world the fetch or idol which disappeare long ago is coming back, in fact, has already returned to duty as a guardian, protector, mascot or whatever one may be pleased to call it. The new idol is in shape according to the fancy of the automobile owner, who places it on the front of the machine to prevent accidents and arrest. These figureheads are all grotesque in style, the most popular being the image of a police officer with watch in hand, a barking cur and a crowing rooster.
When Korea Led the World.
Few are aware that Korea preceded Europe in inventing three things which have had a vast influence upon the world. Printing with movable types originated in Korea in 1324, 126 years before the invention of the art in Europe. The two other inventions in which the Koreans seem to have anticipated Europe were the mortar and the ironclad, both used with considerable effect, during the Japanese Korean war of 1598-98.
A Coy Young Thing.
The following advertisement recently appeared: "Being aware that it is indicate to advertise for a husband, I refrain from doing so; but if any gentleman should be inclined to advertise for a wife, I will answer the advertisement without delay. I am young am domesticated, and am considered ladylike. Apply," etc.—Philippines Gossip.
E.VOIGT
fine stones.
Ladies' Diamond Rings, $5.00 to $150
Ladies' Diamond Brooches, $5.50 to
$1.00.
We have Ladies' Handsome Diamond Rings set in Tiffany Mounting, which we are selling at $30.00. This will make an appropriate present for Christmas Every stone a ball of fire.
Youth the Time to Build Wisely
Showing Folly of Anger.
WATCHES
Gypsies and Animals.
Pharaoh's Mummy.
Deaths Among Miners
Long. Weary Day.
Food as Church Tithes
KEYSTONE
D-779
---
earrings, $15.00 to $500.00.
scarf Pins, $7.00 up.
uff Buttons, $7.00 up
studs, $10.00 up.
My Pittman
nitect
PATENT DRAWINGS
DRAFTING,DETAILING,TRACING
BLUE PRINTING
TION A SPECIALTY.
404 Louisiana Ave., N.W
BUY THE
NEW HOME
LIGHT RUNNING
SEWING MACHINE
Before You Purchase Any Other Write
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
ORANGE, MASS.
Many Sewing Machines are made to sell very
dess of quality, but the "New Home" made
wear. Our guaranty never runs out.
We make Sewing Machines to suit all conditions of the trade. The "New Home" stands at the head of all High-grade family sewing machines. Fold by authorised dealers only.
FOR SALE @7
McCALL PATTERN
10
15
NEW INDEX
McCALL MAGAZINE
50
YEAR
AMERICAN
MAGAZINE
There are more McCall Patterns sold in the United States than of any other make of pattern. This is an interest of their city in pattern and simplicity.
McCall's Magazine (The Queen of Fashion) has more subscribers than any other magazine. Our magazine has been growing 50 percent in number, & more. Every subscriber gets a free 10-page magazine from McCall's.
Lady Agents Wanted. Kindly provide
their social promotion. Partner Catalogue (of box de-
tenure) and Funeral Catalogue (sharing one pre-
mium box). Address THE MCCALL'S NEW YORK
THE BEE AND McCALL'S GREAT
FASHION MAGAZINE
for one year for $2.00.
COUPO'.
Editor Bee:—
Find enclosed two dollars. Send to
my address below The Bee and M~all's
Fashion Magazine for one year.
t
n
r
No.....
Street.....
Town or City....
ESTABLISHED 1873 TELEPHONE NORTH 1595
S. H.
UNDERTAKE
AND FUNERA
1715 Fourtee
GOOD CE
ACCOMMODA
Metallic
on Hand F
Best S
Guara
Use Hines
H. H. HINES
BORTAKER, EMBALMER
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Fourteenth St., N. W.
GOOD CEMETERY
IMMODATIONS Offered
Metallic Caskets
Hand For Shipping
Best Service
Guaranteed
Hines Cloth Casket.
UNDERTAKER,EMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1715 Fourteenth St.,N. W.
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Metallic Caskets on Hand For Shipping
Best Service Guaranteed Use Hines Cloth Casket.
```markdown
```
J H. W
UNDERTANER AND P
ALL WORK FIRST CLASS
TWELFTH AND
J H D
H. Winslow
TANER AND PRACTICAL EMBALMER
FIRST CLASS TERMS MOST REASONABLE
TWELFTH AND R STREETS, N. W.
H DABNEY
J H. Winslow
UNDERTAKER AND PRACTICAL EMBALMER ALL WORK FIRST CLASS TERMS MOST REASONABLE. TWELFTH AND R STREETS, N. W.
JHDABNEY
FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Hiring, Lever, and Sale Stable.
Carriages hired for funerals, p
Horses and carriages kept in
anteed. Business at 1132 Third
at 222 More street, Alexandria,
Telephone for Office, Main 172
Telephone call for Stable, Ma
OUR STABLES IN
Where I can accommodate 50 H
Call and inspect our new and
J. H. DABNEY, Prop
legal for funerals, parties, balls, receptions, etc.
carriages kept in first-class style. Satisfaction guar-
ness at 1132 Third street northwest. Main office branch
street, Alexandria, Va.
or Office, Main 1727.
all for Stable, Main 1428-5.
STABLES IN FREEMAN'S ALLEY.
commodate 50 Horses.
set our new and modern stable
DABNEY, Prop., 1132 Third Street N. W.
HIGH·DEGREE·
Carriages hired for funerals, parties, balls, receptions, etc. Horses and carriages kept in first-class style. Satisfaction guaranteed. Business at 1132 Third street northwest. Main office branch at 222 More street, Alexandria, Va.
A HIGH DEGREE
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 Always welcome.
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 vour while to come in and look the Signet over, even if you're not ready to buy Always welcome.
Wm.M
491Per
HOLTMAN'S OLD STAN
Wm.Moreland 491Penna Ave
HOLTMAN'S OLD STAND. BIGV OF THE BIG BOX
210
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OF SATISFACTION IS A FARE THING IN MOST $3.00 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 CUR
SIGNET SHOE
EDUCATIONAL
HOWARD UNIV
School of Medicine
18 67. Rev. W. P. Thirkield, LL.I
PRESIDENT
UNIVERSITY Medicine -
irkield, LL.D., 1908
SIDENT
HOWARD UNIVERSITY School of Medicine
18 67. Rev. W. P. Thirkield, LL.D., 1908
The Forty-first Annual Session will begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight months. Four Years' Graded Course in Medicine. Three Years' Graded Course in Dental Surgery. Three' Years' Graded Course in Pharmacy. An optional Five-Year Course in Medicine is offered.
An optional Five-Year Course in Medicine
Full-corps of instructors. Well equipped la
The New Freedmen's Hospital, which adjou
lege, just completed at a cost of $500,000, o
cal facilities.
The Third Session of the Post-Graduate S
will begin May 9, 1909, and continue six wee
and four weeks for Dental Course.
For further information or catalogue, write
Secretary, 539 Florida avenue, Washington,
in Medicine is offered.
all equipped laboratories.
, which adjoins the Medical Collof $500,000, offers unexcelled clini-
t-Graduate School and Polyclinic continue six weeks for Medical Course.
Dialogue, write W. C. McNeill, M.D..
Washington, D. C.
NOTICE.
Full corps of instructors. Well equipped laboratories. The New Freedmen's Hospital, which adjoins the Medical College, just completed at a cost of $500,000, offers unexcelled clinical facilities. The Third Session of the Post-Graduate School and Polyclinic will begin May 9, 1909, and continue six weeks for Medical Course and four weeks for Dental Course. For further information or catalogue, write W. C. McNeill, M.D. Secretary, 539 Florida avenue, Washington, D. C.
To give everybody an opportunity to try Ford's Hair Pomade, and owing to occasional requests for a smaller size, we have decided to put up a 25c size in addition to our regular 50c size, either size mailed postpaid on receipt of price. Address The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 153 E. Kinzie Street, Chicago, Ill. For further particulars see advertisement elsewhere in this paper.
SALES AND DABNEY.
FUNERAL DIRECTRESSES
—AND—
STEWART CAMPBELL,
CARRIE SALES
—AND—
RUTH DABNEY
First class service guaranteed at
reasonable prices.
Carriages furnished for Balls,
Parties and Receptions.
Phone, Main 2524.
ROBERT ALLEN,
BUFFET AND FAMILY
LIQUOR STORE
1017 14th St. N. W.
BURNSTINE LOAN OFFICE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, GUNS, MECHANICAL TOOLS, LADIES' AND GENTS' WEARING APPAREL.
UNREDEEMED PLEDGES FOR SALE. 361 Pennsylvania Ave. N. W.
Why pay 10 percent when you can get it for 3 percent?
H. K. FULTON'S LOAN OFFICE,
No. 314 Ninth Street N. W.
Loans made on Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, Etc.
If you want to buy a good watch diamond ring, or jewelry of any kind, look at our stock first. You can save money.
A SAD DEATH.
One of the largest and most impressive funerals took place at the Metropolitan A. M. E. Z. Church, D street between Second and Third streets southwest, was held at the above church Wednesday, September 2nd, over the remains of Miss Carrie I. onesome, who died at her residence. No. 255 Third street southwest, Sunday morning, August 30, after a brief illness of typhoid fever.
Miss Lonesome was a graduate of the Washington public schools, and was appointed a teacher in September, 1907. She was considered a model young woman, not alone in the church, but also in the community. The funeral sermon was preached by the pastor, Rev. W. O. Ray, D.D., after which remarks were made by Rev. W. J. Howard, A. Wilbanks, Rev. A. Sayles, and Rev. William D. Jarvis, during which they spoke in the highest terms of the deceased. She leaves to mourn her loss a mother, a step-father, and a host of friends. She was soon to be married to Mr. T. J. Marshall, Sr., who is one of the trustees of the church.
Purchase your ice from the Columbia Ice Company wagons. It is the best.
Robert Reyburn, M.D., Dean.
Absolutely peerless for preserving fruits. Not only preserves, but brings into prominence the the clean flavor and savor of cherries, peaches, pears and tutti frutti. $2.50 ga' ; 65c full qt. CHRISTIAN XANDER'S Quality House 909 7th St. Phone 774 CREDIT FOR ALL WASHINGTON.
It's Time To Get Your HOUSE FIXED Up For Fall
If your home needs new Furniture, Floor Coverings, or Draperies, come and select what you wish from our superb stocks, and we will gladly arrange the terms of payment to suit you. You will find all our prices marked in plain figures, so that they may be easily compared with what others charge; and you can see that it is not expensive to buy on credit here.
All bills are payable at the store
—no collector will call at your
home, except by special request.
All transactions are considered
strictly confidential; and no notes
or bonds are required.
PETER GROGAN
817-819-821-823 7TH ST.
HOUSE AND HERMMANN.
Nothing is in better form nowadays than this style of furniture for dens, dining, rooms, halls, and various nooks and corners.
This Mission Table is just the right size for den or library made of quarter-sawed oak in the popular Early English finish double top, a new idea, and also a new design.
When in doubt, buy of OUR PRICE IS $9.85
When in doubt, buy of HOUSE AND HERRMANN Seventh and Eye Sts. N. W. COMPLETE HOMEFURNISHINGS
THOMAS J. CALLOWAY,
Attorney at Law.
494 Louisiana Avenue,
Washington, D. C
General Practice. Phone M 2404
Prompt and Careful Attention to
All Matters.
TRY HIM.
DADE'S BUFFET,
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Polite Attention
Ladies' and Gents' Dining Room
Meals Served at All Hours
Pool Room Attached
MOSES DADE, Proprietor,
1216 Pennsylvania Avenue,
Washington, D. C.
Purchase your ice from the Columbia Ice Company wagons. It is the best.
W. C. McNeill, M.D. Secretary.
NOTICE
OLD GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT.
W. C. MARTIN, ATTORNEY. Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.
Application having been, made herein for probate of the last will and testament of said deceased, and for letters of administration, with a copy of the will thereto annexed, on said estate, by Martha Gant, it is ordered this 16th day of July, A.D. 1908, that Henry Jacskon, Robert Jackson and James Jackson, and all others concerned, appear in said Court on Tuesday, the 18th day of August, A.D. 1908, to show cause why such application should not be granted. Let notice hereof be published in the "Washington Law Reporter" and "The Washington Bee" once in each of three successive weeks before the return day herein mentioned — the first publication to be not less than 30 days before said return day.
Attest: James Tanner, Register of Wil's for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
W. C. MARTIN, ATTORNEY.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
Holding Probate Court.
No. 15353. 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 of administration c. t.a. on the estate of Emily Haynes, alias Haines, late of the District of Columbia, deceased. All persons having claims against the deceased are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers threof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 25th day of August A. D. 1909; otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 25th day of August. 1908.
Robert F. Ward,
434 Ninth St. S.W.
Attest: James Tanner, Register of Wills for the District of Columbia,
Clerk of the Probate 'Court.
W. C. Martin, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
Holding Probate Court.
No. 14994.
In re Estate of Robert
E. Walker; deceased.
The object of the petition filed in this cause is to sell the real estate owned by decedent for the payment of debts, the petition being filed by the administrator. On motion of the administrator, it is this 18th day of August, 1908, ordered that Eva Parham, Corr Parham, Amanda Parham, Oakley Parham, and Amelia Hardy, not resident heirs-at-law and next of kin of Robert E. Walker, deceased cause their appearances to be entered herein on or before the fortieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the date of the first publication of this order; otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default. Provided, a copy of this order is published at least once a week for three successive weeks in the "Washington Law Reporter" and the "Washington Bee."
Attest: James Tanner, Register of
W. C. MARTIN, ATTORNEY. SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS-
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 of administration on the estate of Robert W. Taylor, 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 13th day of August, A.D. 1909; otherwise they may by law, be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 21st day of August, 1908.
William J. Howard,
100 Mass. Ave. N. W.
Attest: James Tanner, Register of Wills for the, District of Columbia,
Clerk of the Probate Court.
W: C. Martin, Attorney.
KINK·NE
A Beautiful Hair Dressing and Tonic for the Hair!
Read what Madam Robinson, the Famous Black Patti, Queen of the Opera, says of Kink-line PROF. ROBERTS, New York City, Dca. Sir:
I have used your Kink-ine for the past
find it the most delightful hair dressing and tonic
the many cheap pomades and vaselines on the m
silky, and has entirely removed all dandruff and
off. And enables me to do it up in any of the
does all you claim for it, and I would not be wi
Kink-ine Hair Dressing is a delightful per-
colored people; is guaranteed to be absolutely sa-
kiny, curly hair soft, silky and glossy, enables
in any style that you may wish.
ROBINSON
HE HAIR DRESSING by supplying the needed oils directly to t
easing the growth and giving new life and vigor to the hair.
HE HAIR DRESSING is for sale at all druggists for 35c per bo
or you; he can get it. If not, send me 50c. and I will send same
FREE
OFFER.—To prove the quality and superiority of our goods o
-ine, price 35 cents, one cake of Kink-ine Soap, the best shan
or only 50 cents, or six bottles and six cakes of soap for $3.00
I have used your Kink-ine for the past year and my hair is growing very fast. I find it the most delightful hair dressing and tonic I have ever used, altogether different from the many cheap pomades and vaselines on the market. It makes my hair so beautiful, soft, silky, and has entirely removed all dandruff and stopped it from falling out and breaking off. And enables me to do it up in any of the many styles that I use on the stage. It does all you claim for it, and I would not be without it. Yours sincerely, MME. ROBINSON.
Kink-ine Hair Dressing is a delightful perfumed tonic prepared largely for the use of colored people; is guaranteed to be absolutely safe and harmless. It makes harsh, stubborn, kinky, curly hair soft, silky and glossy, enables you to comb it with ease and to dress it in any style that you may wish.
MADAM ROBINSON in any style that you KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING by supplying to the scalp, increasing the growth and giving new KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING is for sale at him order it for you; he can get it. If not, send SPECIAL OFFER.—To prove the quality and the bottle of Kink-ine, price 35 cents, one cake of K cents, both for only 50 cents, or six bottles and stores:
KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING is for sale at all druggists for 35c per bottle. If your druggist does not keep it have him order it for you; he can get it. If not, send me 50c. and I will send same to you, prepaid.
SPECIAL OFFER. To prove the quality and superiority of our goods over all others, we will sell one full-size bottle of Kink-line, price 35 cents, one cake of Kink-line Soap, the best shampoo and Toilet Soap in the world, price 25 cents, both for only 50 cents, or six bottles and six cakes of soap for $3.00. Special offer good only at the following stores:
Henry Evins,928 F street north-west.
F. A. Tschiffeley, 485 Pennsylvania avenue northwest.
William H. Davis and Eleventh street north-west.
R. Batinger, prop jet 3,38 W. Fourteenth street, New York City.
$1 Cash $1 a Month
STOP PAYING RENT
ash $1 a Month OP PAYING RENT
$1 Cash $1 a Month STOP PAYING RENT
OWN YOUR OWN HOME. BEAUTIFUL EAST DUPONT HEIGHTS, WHERE YOU CAN VOTE. Three hundred feet elevation. Healthy spring for its purity. The finest opportunity ever offered public for a home or make an investment. No tax No landlord. No permits. No building restriction No mosquitos. Be independent; raise your own garden products.
hundred feet elevation. Healthy spring water, celebrat ed day. The finest opportunity ever offered the Washington home or make an investment. No taxes. No interest. No permits. No building restrictions. No malaria. Be independent; raise your own poultry, pork andDUCTS.
Three hundred feet elevation. Healthy spring water, celebrated for its purity. The finest opportunity ever offered the Washington public for a home or make an investment. No taxes. No interest. No landlord. No permits. No building restrictions. No malaria. No mosquitos. Be independent; raise your own poultry, pork and garden products.
LOT5 FROM $11 TO $51.
One Dollar Cash and One Dollar It is proposed by the incorporators of the land Electric Railway Company, charter islature, Session 1908, to run their road three Located near Suitland Park, east of Gri the distant from United States Capitol Bu where lots command from $10,000 to $108,000 level land. Take green cars on Pennsylvania Avenue ing East, and transfer to Twining City, wha take you toEast Dupont Heights, Sundays. Sundays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For weekly particulars apply to the
One Dollar Cash and One Dollar Per Month. Observed by the incorporators of the Washington and Man- Electric Railway Company, chartered by the Maryland Lea- vision 1908, to run their road through this property. near Suitland Park, east of Greater Washington; twi- tle from United States Capitol Building as Dupont Circ- command from $10,000 to $108,000. Beautiful shade and open cars on Pennsylvania Avenue, marked F and G, go and transfer to Twining City, where free automobiles will East Dupont Heights, Sundays. Agent on the grounds of 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For weekly engagements and further apply to the
It proposed by the incorporators of the Washington and Maryland Electric Railway Company, chartered by the Maryland Legislature, Session 1008, to run their road through this property.
Located near Suitland Park, east of Greater Washington, twice the distance from United States Capitol Building as Dupont Circle, where lots command from $10,000 to $108,000. Beautiful shade and level land.
Take green cars on Pennsylvania Avenue, marked F and G, going East, and transfer to Twining City, where free automobiles will take you to East Dupont Heights, Sundays. Agent on the grounds on Sundays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For weekly engagements and further particulars apply to the
DUPONT HEIGHTS COMPANY.
Room 6, 512 F Street Northwest.
BABI
The Old Reliable R
For twenty-five long years—a quarter never been a remedy equal to Elixir Babi miasmatic diseases. Thousands have used results. Malaria is prevalent now. Do not of you. Begin the use of Babek now. 500 will tell you that Babek is the best thing he
For MALARIA, CHILL
If you are unable to secure Babek at the in your vicinity write to Kloczewski & C Street, Washington, D. C
SABEK
The Old Reliable Remedy.
Twenty-five long years—a quarter of a century—there has a remedy equal to Elixir Babek for Malaria and such diseases. Thousands have used it with most gratifying malaria is prevalent now. Do not wait for it to take hold in the use of Babek now. 50c Bottles. Your druggist that Babek is the best thing he sells
MALARIA, CHILLS & FEVER
Unable to secure Babek at the Drug or General Store, unity write to Kloczewski & Co., Chemists, 500 Ninth Washington, D. C
Room 6, 512 F Street Northwest. Washington, D. C. BABEK
The Old Reliable Remedy.
For twenty-five long years—a quarter of a century—there has never been a remedy equal to Elixir Babek for Malaria and such mlasmatic diseases. Thousands have used it with most gratifying results. Malaria is prevalent now. Do not wait for it to take hold of you. Begin the use of Babek now. 50c Bottles. Your druggist will tell you that Babek is the best thing he sells
For MALARIA, CHILLS and FEVER
If you are unable to secure Babek at the Drug or General Stores in your vicinity write to Kloczewski & Co., Chemists, 500 Ninth Street, Washington, D. C
CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM.
Open daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
This is a first-class lunch room. Everythi
petite.
Commodious dining rooms for the public a
Hot and cold lunches quickly served.
CITY HALL LUNCH
M.S.
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. first-class lunch room. Everything to appease your appears dining rooms for the public and the Bar Association. Old lunches quickly served. CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM, M.s. Altoper, Proprietress.
This is a first-class lunch room. Everything to appease your appetite. Commodious dining rooms for the public and the Bar Association. Hot and cold lunches quickly served.
FORSALE
FORSALE
1622 11th St., N. W. Two-Story, Bay Window, Pressed Brick, Many ways, Two Bathrooms, Modern and Up to ment; rest, like rent FOUNTAIN PEYTON, 494
1622 11th St., N. W. Bay Window, Pressed Brick, Nine Rooms, Two Stainathrooms, Modern and Up to Date. Small cash paye rent NTAIN PEYTON.
Two-Story, Bay Window, Pressed Brick, Nine Rooms, Two Stairways, Two Bathrooms, Modern and Up to Date. Small cash payment; rest, like rent
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494 Louisiana Ave., N. W.
William H. Davis and Eleventh street n. n. west.
R. Balinger, prop jet 2, 34S W.
Fourteenth street. New York City.
WELCOME
AND
WELCOME
THE CLOTHES CLEANING
SHOP
014 123 456 789.
J. S. J. S.
Straighten Your Hair
Dear Sirs: I have used only one bottle of your pomade and now I would not be without it. It makes my hair soft and straight and easy to comb and also starts a new growth.
Mrs. W. F. WALKER, Sir. I-Harriman Trust
Ford's Hair Pomade
Formerly known as Ozonized Ox Marrow.
Fifty years of success has proved its merits.
Its use makes the hair straight, glossy, soft and pliable, so you can comb it and arrange it in any style you wish consistent with its length.
Removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp, stops the hair from falling out of breaking off and gives it new life and vigor.
Absolutely harmless—used with splendid re
Absolutely harmless—used with splendid re-
sults. Delicately perfumed. Warm and pleasurable.
ladies of refinement everywhere declare. Ford's Forsham Pomade has initiators. Do you buy anything else alleged to be "just as good. If you want the best results, buy the best Pomade—it will pay you. Look for this name
If your druggist will not supply you with the penumbra send us, express or postal money grade 30 cents for regular size or 25 cents for small size bottle and give us your druggist's name and address. We will forward bottle prepaid to any points in U. E. A. by return mail on receipt of price. Address
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
153 East Kentle St.
Chicago, IL
FORD'S HAIR POMADE is made only in Chicago by the above firm.
Agents Wanted Everywhere.
FOR KENT — FURNISHED ROOMS.
NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS. Nicely furnished rooms for gentlemen: bath and all modern improvements. Also very desirable light office at 1742 Fourteenth street northwest.
A. H. Underdown
Three-room flat, large back yard,
412 V street northwest: $9.
FOR RENT.
Two large clean rooms, with privilege of bath and kitchen; 3226 Sherman avenue northwest.
Apply to
Thomas Walker,
506 Fifth Street Northwest.
One beautiful brick cottage, 8 rooms, cellar, attic, front and back porch, lot 90 by 323 feet. East avenue, Burnsville, D. C.; near car line;
$17.50.
Thomas Walker, Attorney.
FOR RENT.
Three flats; four rooms; bath and range in each; on Irving street near Howard University.
Thomas Walker.
506 Fifth Street Northwest.