Washington Bee
Saturday, May 22, 1909
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XXIX NO 52
PARAGRAPHIC NEWS
It is said that a threat has been made to dynamite the home of Judge A. W. Williams, in Mercer County, Pennsylvania, unless he helps to obtain a new trial for James Boyle and his wife, lately convicted before him of kidnapping Willie Whitla.
A fire broke out in the city last week, in Maryland avenue, between 4 1-2 and Sixth streets, southwest, and caused a loss of about $100,000 to property. One fireman was badly injured.
The children, as well as many of the grown folks, enjoyed seeing the trained ponies, dogs and elephants at the circus this week in the city.
A distinct earthquake shock was felt at Great Falls, Montana, last week.
Representative Sims, of Tennessee, who is said to have been among the Southern Congressmen who deserted the House of Representatives restaurant at the Capitol, when Mr. W. T. Vernon, Register of the Treasury, entered and took his seat, has denied the assertion.
George Meredith, the aged English novelist, died at his home in London, early last Tuesday morning. Mrs. Taft, the wife of the President, was taken ill last Monday while on her way to Mount Vernon. The President says that she is suffering from a nervous breakdown. At the Negro Baptist Ministers' Conference of the District, held this week, speeches were made in favor of the establishment of an industrial school for colored boys and girls in this city. The lepers of Porto Rico are allowed to roam about the island, and victims in advanced stages are allowed to beg in the market place of Ponce. The first Annual Recital of the Howard University Glee Club was held in the Andrew Rankin Chapel last Monday evening, before an appreciatice audience. The French Government has accepted the amendments to the Franco-American extradition treaty suggested by the American Senate.
Senator Owen has announced his intention of voting for a tariff on crude petroleum unless "advised to the contrary in an authoritative way."
The Senate has confirmed the appointment of Oscar S. Straus, of New York, former Secretary of Commerce and Labor, as Ambassador to Turkey.
Andrew Carnegie was received in an audience by King Victor Emmanuel last Monday.
Rev. George W. Lee, of Vermont Avenue Baptist Church, will deliver the commencement sermon of the Mannassas Industrial School, May 30.
The National Negro American Political League will hold its second annual meeting on the 26th and 27th of this month in Columbus, Ohio.
Nearly five hundred feet of the famuos tunnel in the Tennessee pass on the Denver and Rio Grande railway near Leadville, Colorado, caved in this week.
Captain Peter C. Haines, who arrived at Ossining, New York, is prisoner No. 2002 in Sing Sing.
William Victor Tunnell has been appointed on the School Board to succeed John F. Cook.
The National Conference on city planning, met in this city yesterday and today. The Conference formally opened at the Masonic Temple Auditorium.
Sheriff Laird was captured in the swamp near Prentiss, Mississippi, this week. He has shunned civilization for five years and is titled a "wild man."
A destructive fire broke out last Tuesday morning on the wharf of the Hamburg-American line at Kingston, Jamaica, and burned it to the water's edge.
The Palm Garden opened last Sunday with prospects of great success. The garden is opposite True Reformers' Hall.
By the large attendance at Washington Park, and by the charter of the largest organizations, convince Lewis Jefferson that the people of Washington have some Race Pride
in them, as well as other races. The Steamer Jane Moseley is at Baltimore, undergoing special repairs and renovation. She will soon be brought back ready to receive dates.
OFFICER WATTS FINED $20.00 Robert A. Pelham Wins His Case Against Bumptious Policeman A Victory For The Race The sessions of the Police Trial Board in the case of Robert A. Pelham, against Officer "Jack" Watts, attracted large audiences to the police court at each of the three hearings. In the throng were men of the greatest prominence in legal, medical, journalistic and business circles in Washington, and the proceedings were watched with the deepest interest.
After a hard-fought battle between Lawyer W. H. H. H. Hart, chief counsel for Mr. Pelham, and Lawyer Cusack, who made a feeble attempt to ustify the actions of his client. The Board found Watts guilty of "conduct unbecoming an officer and prejudicial to the good name of the Metropolitan Police Force of the District of Columbia," and assessed a fine of $20 against him. Watts was severely reprimanded for his ignorance and brutality in connection with the matters involved in the case, and has been assigned to an outlying district where he will not be liable to arrest orderly and respectable colored men for the purpose of humiliating them before the public.
The inside history of the case is familiar to the country. It will be remembered that on the evening of April 17, Mr. Pelham was one of a crowd which witnessed the cowardly assault made by Officer Watts upon a colored woman whom he was endeavoring to place under arrest. As an act of humanity, he interested himself sufficiently to take the names of a few of the bystanders who had also witnessed the incident. While complying with the officer's request to "move on," Mr. Pelham's activity was noticed by the offending policeman, and he, without the color of justification, insisted upon taking Mr. Pelham to the 8th precinct station.
The later went without any show of resistance, preferring to carry his protest to a higher and more intelligent tribunal. At the station, in the presence of a score or more of personal friends who had come on to render .any assistance that might be needed, a charge of "disorderly assemblage" was entered against Mr. Pelham's name and he was released upon depositing $5.00 collateral. Had Mr. Pelham needed $200, the amount would have been immediately forthcoming, for before the sum was fixed, greenbacks were flourished from every pocket in the indignant group.
In the police court, Mr. Pelham scored a clean-cut victory. Not only was he triumphantly acquitted of the officer's charge, but he surprised Judge Kimball and all the persons present by bringing forward as his counsel, no less distinguished an individual than United States Senator William Alden Smith, of Michigan, who handled Watts without gloves, and testified in the strongest language to the high character, veracity and law-abiding disposition of Mr. Pelham. The latter then preferred charges against the officer before the police trial board, with the result above noted. Mr. Pelham was sustained at every point, and he is being warmly praised from one end of the country to the other for his manly stand, not only for his own rights as a citizen, but in behalf of the race as a whole. The capital police have been treated to a much needed object lesson, and they will now be extremely careful how they handle colored people, be they of high or low degree.
It will be remembered 'also that Watts is the same bumptious policeman who arrested Former Register Judson W. Lyons, and Receiver of Public Moneys H. V. Cashin, some months ago, but was "let off" by Mr. Lyons because the officer pleaded that his family would suffer if the case should be pressed against him in such a way that he might be dismissed from the force.
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON, D. C., S.A.
EUGENE
MANAGER TH
MESSRS. VERNON AND
HOUSTON
WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY MAY 22, 1909
Washington, D. C., May 17, 1909—On Thursday afternoon, March 13, the Honorable W. T. Vernon, and Mr. W. L. Houston, Grand Master of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, visited the Capitol on business. While there they entered the dining room of the House Office Building, which is opened to the general public and took luncheon. On the followin- day an Associated Press dispatch appeared in the daily papers throughout the country to the effect that five Southern Congressmen seated at a neighboring table in the dining room, became so incensed at the appearance of Messrs. Vernon and Houston, that they at once cancelled their order and informed the proprietor of the dining room, that he would either have to exclude colored men from the place or they would organize a boycott of Southern Congressmen against his establishment.
The dispatch further stated that these gentlemen appealed to Speaker Cannon, laid the matter before him, and insisted that he take the necessary steps to exclude colored men from future entertainment in the place.
A later notice appeared in the Washington Times of Saturday, March 15th., which asserted that these gentlemen were informed by Speaker Cannon's secretary that the dining room in question was not reserved exclusively for members of Congress and their friends.
It now appears that these irate Southerners realize that they simply created a tempest in a tea pot, and that their colorophobia led them into making themselves ridiculous.
Mr. Vernon had been time and again in the same cafe, as have other colored men, and as citizens they have a perfect right there.
One Southern Congressman whose name was mentioned as being among the number involved in the incident, denied in the public prints that he was present, all of which shows that he did not care to be mixed up in such silly business.
Strange to relate, neither Messrs. Vernon nor Houston knew anything about the commotion their presence created until the story appeared in the newspapers of Washington.
COMMENCEMENT TIDE
Howard University has just experienced the most prosperous and successful year in its history. Over twelve hundred students have been in attendance, and there has been a quickened interest in all the departments of University activities. Mr. Andrew Carnegie has given a Library Building costing fifty-five thousand dollars, which will accommodate the fifty thousand books and pamphlets already on hand, and also make room for future growth and expansion.
Congress has been most liberal in its provisions for the institution. The total appropriation for the year will amount to one hundred and sixty thousand dollars.
This includes ninety-thousand dollars for a new Science Hall, with laboratory accommodations for the departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. The Alumni Association has agreed to raise funds for a much needed
SATURDAY MAY 22, 1909
E KERNAN
THE NEW LYCEUM
gymnasium during the coming year. The Commencement takes place on the 26th of May, and promises to be an extraordinary occasion. At this time the cornerstone of the new library will be laid. President Taft will deliver the Commencement Address to one hundred young men who will take their degrees in Arts and Sciences, Theology, Medicine, Law and Pedagogy. Besides these there will be about sixty graduates in the several branches without a degree. During the next school year President Thirkield expects to have completed the New Library, the Science Hall, and the Gymnasium, adding over one hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the permanent plant and equipment of the institution.
"AT THE GATE"
With apologies to Mr. T. Shirley Nelson, A. B.
Far be it from me to set myself up as a literary critic, but I like not the idea that when we black folk are done toiling and suffering here, that we shall be met at the entrance to the golden city by the keeper of the gate with the somewhat doubtful welcome, "You are a Negro, but I'll let you in."
There came to the gate of the City where God and His angels dwell A soul let loose from earth's burden, a soul with a story to tell; Quoth he as he gazed at the Keeper, are you collecting the fares? I hope that I have the right ticket,
I hope that I have the right ticket,
I am weary of earth and its cares.
His bearing indeed was pathetic, he looked so downcast and sad,
His garments were threadbare and ragged., but they were the best that he had;
St. Peter came close to the Pilgrim, and looking with sorrowing eyes
Said, friend can you give me your
Hath thou a right to admittance, if so wilt thou kindly state Or else present thy credentials, before thou canst enter the gate; Hath thou been true to thy brethren,
The laws of thy land, hath thou kept them, as best as thou could from thy birth?
Credentials! I have sorrowed, I have suffered down below
I have borne the white man's burden, I have felt his cruel blow;
I have helped to fight his battles, kept his loved ones safe from harm
In those days my humble presence did not cause the least alarm.
For the country where I came from, if was called the "white man's land."
And he rules his darker brethren with a cruel relentless hand;
For long hours I have to tell on
For long hours I've had to toil on, sometimes night as well as day, Tho' I've had some peace and pleas-
I have had so many hardships, tossed and driven to and fro That at times I almost gave up, hardly knew which way to go;
Through it all I have been patient,
for I trusted in a God
Who will see that all get justice,
tho' they sleep beneath the sod.
Enter in. O worthy brother! good St.
Enter in, O worthy brother! good St Peter then replied
Just cast off thy ragged garments,
for thy robe is just inside;
Every soul's alike in Heaven, who
hath let their light so shine
For beyond these pearly portals,
there can be no line line.
—James Conway Jackson.
From the first I have been the butt of malicious and libellous stories from the tongue of one who in his eagerness to gain the colored man's favor, likewise his money, has left all scruples behind. He has even gone so far as to say that the steamer River Queen has been made at different times, a cock pit, and a prize ring. That is a lie out of the whole cloth. Since I have had her nothing of the sort has ever taken place on board of her, or at Washington Park. The man who will sink to maliciousness and lying persecution in order to down his business-competitor, is no man at all. In all my experience I have never deceived my friends, by attacking them behind their backs, then grasp them cordially by the hand when I meet them, nor have I ever been unreasonable in any way with various parties who have from time to time chartered my boats. Can you picture me with a gun in one hand and blackjack in the other calling upon the Captain of my vessel to help quell an-affray? Or knocking down a woman and dragging her about the deck, or asking the local police for their aid?
I have never written to the local and Maryland authorities telling them that the river resorts were being used as a dumping ground for the roughs and riff-raff of Washington, yet those things have been done, and that, by one who calls himself your friends.
(To be concluded next week.)
Much interest has been manifested in the case of Attorney P. W. Frisby that was tried in Criminal Court No. 1, last week. The case was hotly contested by both the government and the defense.
Messrs. Turner and Atkins represented the government, and Mr. Harry Davis the defense.
The defense will appeal. The conviction was a great disappointment to the friends of Mr. Frisby.
HOWARD ALUMNI REUNION
HOWARD ALUMNI REUNION
On Wednesday, May 26, 1909, the
Alumni Association of Howard University will hold a reunion extraordinary in the Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel. The following program has been arranged:
9:00 A. M. Business Meeting.
Very important plans to be considered.
11:00 A. M. Addresses:
Representative J. Van Vechten Olcott, of New York.
James R. Wilder, M. D., of Washington, District of Columbia.
Class and Departmental Reunions.
3:30 P. M. Cornerstone laying of the Carnegie Library.
8:00 P. M. Grand Banquet of the Alumni.
The cost of plate will be $1.50. Alumni who expect to be present must notify the committee immediately of their intentions and forward remittance to the Acting Secretary, George W. Cook, Howard University.
FELL FROM A WINDOW
On Saturday morning, May 15, John Edward Colbert, departed this life at his residence, 1724 Vermont avenue, after a brief illness, caused by an accident for which he was wholly irresponsible...
Shortly after reaching his place of employment at the George Washington Law School, he was seized with a severe nervous attack, and on go-
ing to the window to inhale the fresh air, he lost his balance and fell to the concrete pavement below. The deceased was buried from the Plymouth Congregational Church, Rev. Garner officiating.
RETURN FLAGS
Cincinnati, O., May 11—Nine veterans of the civil war, two of them official representatives of the state of Ohio, left last Monday night for Selma, Alabama, to return, with proper ceremony, the Confederate flags captured by the 4th Ohio Cavalry on the battlefield near that town. Those in the party were Chairman John A. Pitts of this city, and Major W. W. Shoemaker, of Dayton, Ohio, appointed by the last legislature to arrange for the return of the colors, and the following volunteer commissioners:
Captain Thomas H. Osborn, M. H. Richardson, W. H. Hendy, James I. Quinton and L. C. Brankamp, of this city, Joseph A. Goddard of Muncie, Indiana, and T. C. Lindsay, of Dayton, Ohio.
The flags belonged to the Rifle Scouts, which was a part of General Forrest's command.
MANAGER KERNAN
Mr. Eugene Kernan, manager of the New Lyceum, is determined to make his house agreeable to those attending the performances, and there is no manager more willing to please the public than he.
GOOD WORK
Mr. Miles C. Maxfield, one of the most prominent musicians in the city, is doing good work among all classes in the city. His work is very effective. He spoke last Sabbath at Ebenezer.
DR. SHEPARD
From the Durham Reformer Dr. Shepard has a national reputation as an orator and fluent speaker. He is popular, very useful and his services ever in demand. The Raleigh Evening Times speaks thus complimented before the literary society. "The address before the literary societies of Shaw University will be delivered tonight by Dr. James E. Shepard of Durham. Dr. Shepard is regarded as one of the ablest orators of his race. A man of wide experience and varied ability. He has traveled extensively in the old world and was the only colored speaker on the program of the World's Sunday School Convention, held in Rome, Italy, in 1907. "Dr. Shepard enjoys the confidence and respect of the white people of the south to a remark-
The Metropolitan Baptist Church on R street, northwest, closed a two-week double anniversary celebration with a tally and collection which amounted to $1,200.
It was the forty-fifth anniversary of the church and the fourth of the pastor, Rev. M. W. D. Norman, D. D., LL. D. May 10 the pastor held a reception in the main auditorium of the church, after which the church gave a banquet in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Norman. More than 500 persons met around the tables.
The reports show that the pastor's four year service has been marked by continuous and unusual success. The church has collected $27,500, the Sunday school more than $6,000 and over 800 members have been added to the church.
Among the pastors of the city churches who attended and took part in the exercises were Rev. W. J. Howard, Rev. J. T. Clark, Rev. S. G. Lamkins, Rev. W. D. Jarvis, Rev.J. I. Loving and Rev. G. W. Lee.
Hundreds of people were reported this week to be starving in the mountains of Zitacuaro, Mexico.
As played by the Metropolitan Opera House Orchestra, N.Y.
Andante moderato.
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New W. B. Reduse No. 770. For large tall women. Made of white couil. Hose supporters front and sides. Sizes 20 to 36. Price $3.00.
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A YOUNG LION SLAYER
Beer Farmer Boys Make Good Shoes On the African Veldt.
Three lions were killed near Pietersburg, Transvaal by the nineteen-year-old son of Jozef Erasmus, a Beer farmer. It appears that young Erasmus was on his way to the Messina mine and had outspanned his donkey team, when his kaffr boy came running to tell him that three lions were tackling the donkeys. Erasmus seized his gun and ran hard in the direction indicated. On his arrival at the spot he found the lions lying around one of the donkeys. He fired and killed a big lioness. The other two jumped up but he was ready and shot another (younger) lioness. The young lion which was left ran behind some brushwood. Erasmus first collected his donkeys and brought them into safety and then once more carefully approached the scene of the fight. In order to find out if the two lionesses were dead he fired another shot at one of them. This disturbed the surviving lion who thereupon came forth roaring. Erasmus was again ready and shot him dead on the spot. Asked by the Volkestem correspondent whether he was alone at the time, Erasmus replied; "Oh, no, Oom,' I had my little Kaffr boy, with me.'—The skins were sold in Pietersburg.—Pretoria Volkestem.
Petronous Brazilian Vipers.
Much is made of the lance-head viper, "the most deadly of all know snakes," brought from Brazil to New York for the purpose of an operation which will give a serum that is practically extinct. There are several singularly interesting snakes in Brazil. The suru cueu is supposed to cause death in six hours. It is sometimes found nine feet long. Its skin is a dirty tawny yellow, with dark brown losses on the back. It is said to be attracted by fire but soldom to injure travellers. The fiercest of the lance-headed vipers is the Jarareca, and it, also, it a dirty yellow, but it is brown-black about the tail.—Boston Herald.
Birds, Fruit, Dead Leaves.
The Moki Indian women of Arizona have an ingenious and romantic form of coifure. When young these women call their treasures at the sides of their heads, so as to represent the buds of a native plant. This signifies that they themselves are in the flush of youth and of marriageable age. When they are married their hair is arranged to represent the fruit of the plant; while in old age their jocks hang straggling down their backs, typical of the withered stalk of the deed or dying plant.
Bridal Chorus. 2 pp—2d p.
Brides Older Than Bridegroomes. The vital statistics prepared by City Clerk Entwisle of Salem shows that during 1907 there were 479 marriage licenses issued and 306 solemnized in the city, which is 18 fewer than the previous year. The oldest bridegroom was 68 and the oldest bride 50, while the youngest bridegroom was 16 and the youngest bride 15. Seventy-one brides were older than the bridegrooms.—Boston Transcript.
Vegetable Milk.
"Vegetable milk" is used in Japan. It is made from the soja bean. The liquid is exactly like cow's milk in appearance, and in taste can hardly be distinguished from it. To make it the beans are first soaked and then boiled in water. Some sugar and phosphate potassium are added, and it is boiled down till it has the consistency of condensed milk.
Valuable Relics.
At an auction sale at Christie's in London of the late Marchioness of Conyngham's art collection a silver ewer and dish, weighing together 90 ounces, a gift of George IV to an ancestor of the Marchioness, sold for $21,000.
A Venerable Turtle.
A Massachusetts boy, Nathan Sampson, has found a venerable turtle which bears markings made by his grandfather, now 81 years old, which were put on in 1840, and by his great-grandfather, who marked the same turtle in 1816.
Slightly M.xed.
The story is now going the rounds of the country papers about a man who visited the paying-teller's window in a bank and asked for one of the new coins with "God Bless Our Home" left off.
A Healthfel Occupation.
Bull fighters receive $417 per hour, and the occupation is so healthful that unless killed by accident its followers invariably reach a green old age.
Newspapers in Persia
Persian newspapers are reproduced from handwriting by lithography, no types being used.
Vienna has 32,000 street beggars, and many of them make a better living than workmen.
It has been estimated that a London fog weighs 2,000,000,000 tons.
YOU WILL BE ASTONISHED when you receive our beautiful catalogue and low prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money than any other factory. We are satisfied with $1,000 profit above factory cost. BICYCLE DEALERS, you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at our prices. Orders filled the day received.
SECOND HAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but usually have a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear out promptly and ship to us on time. We also mail free. COASTER-BRAKES, single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, repairs and equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices.
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IF YOU NEED TIRES don't buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair of the special introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which describes and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about the same price. DO NOT WAIT or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful offers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW.
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COUNTERFEITERS' NEW SCHEME
Now the Smooth Demonstrator Gets His Victim's Coin.
"One of the latest schemes of the counterfeit money swindlers is to show guillible people a machine with which they can print for themselves large also bills, imitative of Government currency," said Capt. S. F. Rhodes, formerly of the secret service. "This money producing machine has a smooth demonstrator who will, after getting a prospective victim interested, turn the crank and grind out a $20 note, which, it is needless to say, is genuine. The victim shows the bill to a bank cashier, and hears it pronounced good, and his mercenary nature being aroused, he sees visions of gigantic wealth, and hands over to Mr. Sharper $500, or at least $250, for the instrument that is going to make him a Rockefeller. It is needless to say that the subsequent specimens turned out are such miserable imitations that they would hardly fool a blind man, but the ignoramus is in a place where he can't make a roar for his best money.
The Swaying Skyscraper.
Through the chance of perfect adjustment in the way of balance, of a row of large photographs that hang on a wall on an office building down town the clerks in the place have a good deal of quiet amusement with persons who visit the place for the first time. Owing to this balance the pictures are easily swayed by the wind that blows through the open windows and since the office force goes in for fresh air the year round the pictures are never still. The joke lies in catching the horrified expression on the faces of the callers when they get a sight of the swinging frames. Then it is always explained with due solemnity, if the boss is not around that the swaying of the frames is due to the oscillation of the structure. It usually takes some time for the object of the joke to see the point. Meanwhile he has suffered a considerable shock.—M. Y. World.
Odd South American Animals
Many curious animals mount the marshy parts of South America north of the pampas. Frog big and ferocious, given to making violent springs when closely approached; the capybara, a cavy "contented with the bulk of a sheep"; the huge copu rat and the swarthy piglike tapir are frequently seen. Along the forest margins troops of peccaries are often met with, occasionally the jaguar sometimes the puma, likewise that toothless curiosity, the great ant bear, long in claw, long nosed and remarkably long tongued. A familiar object is the great jabiru, a stork with a preference for the desolate lagoons, where it may often be observed statuesque on one leg and wrapped in prospection. -Scottsman.
The Gingko Tree.
Studies by Miss M. C. Stopes of the fossil flora of Scotland have shown that the gingko or maidenhair, tree, a native of Japan and China, which is cultivated in Europe and this country on account of its remarkable foliage, belongs to an extremely ancient family, of which it is now, apparently, the last surviving representative. At one time it seems to have been widely spread. A singular fact is that the fossil specimens of the gingko, found in the rock beds of the Inferior Oolite series, at Brom, Scotland, are so similar to the living trees that at first sight no difference is apparent. Only an examination of the structure of the calls reveals a variation.—Youth's Companion.
For Preasing Plaiten Ekirts.
Plaited Skirts which have been washed are difficult to press. Time and expense may be saved by having the work done after the following method, which is so. Dolen skirts especially: Before the skirt has become badly creased or rumpled run a basting thread, using short, even stitches, down the entire length of each crease which marks the folds of the plaits. By this means, after the skirt has been washed, the proper location of each lest can readily be determined, and the pressing done successfully.
Balzac in Church Pew.
The woman who had left a volume of Balzac in the church pew on prayer meeting night felt a little bit ashamed when she asked for the book, but the sexton assured her she need not feel that way. "Many things are left in the church," he said, "and some of them are a whole lot less respectable than Balzac. After each service the pews yleld a strange grist of forgotten or discarded articles."
A Clever Bear.
A noted ethnologist observed in Vienna a bear deliberately making with his paw, a current in some water which was close to the bars of his cage so as to draw a piece of floating bread within his reach. These actions of the bear could hardly be attributed to instinct or inherited habit, as they would be of little use to an animal in a state of nature.
Quill Tcothpicks.
The largest quill toothpick factory in the world is near Paris, where there is an annual product of 20,000,000 quilts. The factory was started to make quill pens, but when these went out of general use it was converted into a toothpick mill.
KINK
A Beautiful Hair Dressing and Tonic for the Hair!
PROF. ROBERTS, New York City, Deaf Sir:
I have used your Kink-me 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. I does all you claim for it, and I would not be without it. Yours sincerely, MME ROBERTS
I have used your Kink-ine for the past to find it the most delightful-hair dressing and toning the many cheap pomades and vaselines on the 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 wilt.
Kink-ine Hair Dressing is a delightful per-colored people; is guaranteed to be absolutely silky, curly hair soft, silky and glossy, enabled in any style that you may wish.
ESSING by supplying the needed oils directly to your wilt and giving new life and vigor to the hair.ESSING is for sale at all druggists for 35c per bottle or six bottles and six cakes of soap for $3.00 get it. If not, send me 50c., and I will send same.
FREE
Prop 343 W 14th
ColoredSkin
For centuries scientific men lighter colored, not by artificialism. At last the Chemical Wonder of Complexion Wonder, which on very time it is applied. The effect is natural. The effect on the price of Complexion Wonder has another preparation which as well as white people. It is aparation which prevents perspiration with perfumed daintiness. It come in society or business center positions in banks, clubs, or toomers advance faster in life.
Our Wonder Comb will straight magneto-metallic. Will last a one. Wonder Grow fertilizes which makes hair grow lengthy, prevent the hair from falling.
Wonder Uncurl—This prepares the hair pliable, so as that our specialties will do more and commercially than show.
Delivery free. Application Berger & Co., 2 Rector Street, Chemical Wonder Company.
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 st KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING by the scalp, increasing the growth and KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING is for him order it for you; he can get it.
KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING by supplying the needed oils directly to the roots of the hair tones up and nourishes the scalp, increasing the growth and giving new life and vigor to the hair.
KINK-INE HAIR DRESSING is for sale at all druggists for 35c per bottle. If yourdruggist 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 qu
bottle of Klink-size, price 35 cents, one
cents, both for only 50 cents, or six b
stores!
Henry Evins,928 F street nor
wtst.
R. Ballinger, Pro
SPECIAL OFFER. To prove the quality and superiority of our goods over all others, we will sell one full-size bottle of Klink-lce, price 35 cents, one cake of Klink-lce 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- F. A. Tschiffeley, 485 Pennsyl- William H. Davis, 2001 Elevwtst. vania avenue northwest. enth street northwest.
Never fails; nothing like it for Price, 25 and 50 cents a box. F Board & McGuire, 1912 1-2 F Mayer, Fourth and N streets n F streets southwest; A. F. Price Georgetown, D. C.
FRANK E. WH
Box 107,
Goods mailed on receipt of pri
Find enclosed two dollars. Send to my address below The Bee and McCall's Fashion Magazine for one year.
No.....
Street.....
Town or City....
For twenty-five long years never been a remedy equal to miasmatic diseases. Thousand results. Malaria is prevalent most of you. Begin the use of Babek will tell you that Babek is the best condition stands at the machines only.
For MALARIA,
Many Sewing Machines are made to sell regardless 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 Sold by authorized dealers only.
FOR SALE BY
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Main Phone 2315.
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magazine-million a month. Invaluable. Latest styles, patterns, dressmaking, millinery,
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to Agents. Postal brings premium catalogue and new cash prize offers. Address
McCALL CO., 239 to 243 W. 37th St., NEW YORK
THE BEE AND McCALL'S GREAT FASHION MAGAZINE for one year for $2.00. COUPON.
BUY THE
NEW HOME
LIGHT RUNNING
SEWING MACHINE
Before You Purchase Any Other Write
THE N.W HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
ORANGE, MASS.
We used your Kink-me for the past year and my hair is growing most delightful-hair dressing and tonic I have ever used, altogether we kept pomades and vaselines on the market. It makes my hair so soft as entirely removed all dandruff and stopped it from falling out. Enables me to do it up in any of the many styles that I use on claim for it, and I would not be without it. Yours sincerely, Ms. Jane Hair Dressing is a delightful perfumed tonic prepared largely by oil; is guaranteed to be absolutely safe and harmless. It makes hair soft, silky and glossy, enables you to comb it with ease and that you may wish.
Applying the needed oils directly to the roots of the hair tones up, brings new life and vigor to the hair.
We sale at all druggists for 35c per bottle. If your druggist does not not, send me 50c. and I will send same to you, prepaid.
FREE OFFER
City and superlity of our goods over all others, we will sell the Kink-in: Soap, the best shampoo and Toilet Soap in the wiles and six enks of soap for $3.00. Special offer good only at F. A. Tschiffeley, 485 Pennsyl- William H. Davis, Pennsylvania avenue northwest.enth street northwest.
Top 343 W 14th St New York
ColoredSkin MadeLight
For centuries scientific men have been trying to make lighter colored, not by artificial whitening, but in a nail. At last the Chemical Wonder Co., of New York, has made Complexion Wonder, which does bring a lighter natural every time it is applied. The effect is not artificial. The life is natural. The effect on the colored countenance is made at price of Complexion Wonder is 50c. The Chemical Wonder has another preparation which is indispensable for color as well as white people. It is called Odor Wonder, a preparation which prevents perspiration odor and encircles with perfumed daintiness. It will make anyone physically come in society or business circles. Our men customers prefer positions in banks, clubs, or business houses. Our women advance faster in life. Price of Odor Wonder, 50c. Our Wonder Comb will straighten any hair. A head magneto-metallic. Will last a life-time—50c. Don't fail me. Wonder Grow fertilizes the scalp; supplies now which makes hair grow lengthy; gives the scalp strength, prevents the hair from falling—50c.
Wonder Uncurl—This preparation uncurls knots and makes the hair pliable, so as to dress well—50c. We what our specialties will do more to advance-colored people and commercially than showy garments or gew-gaw Delivery free. Applications for agency consideredberger & Co., 2 Rector Street, New York City, selling a chemical Wonder Company.
FREE OFFER
ColoredSkin MadeLighter
For centuries scientific men have been trying to make dark skin lighter colored, not by artificial whitening, but in a natural way. At last the Chemical Wonder Co., of New York, has discovered Complexion Wonder, which does bring a lighter natural color every time it is applied. The effect is not artificial. The lighter color is natural. The effect on the colored countenance is magical. The price of Complexion Wonder is 50c. The Chemical Wonder Co. has another preparation which is indispensable for colored people, as well as white people. It is called Odor Wonder, a toilet preparation which prevents perspiration odor and encircles the body with perfumed daintiness. It will make anyone physically welcome in society or business circles. Our men customers secure better positions in banks, clubs, or business houses. Our women customers advance faster in life. Price of Odor Wonder, $1.00.
Our Wonder Comb will straighten any hair. A heavy comb, magneto-metallic. Will last a life-time—50c. Don't fail to order one. Wonder Grow fertilizes the scalp; supplies nourishment which makes hair grow lengthy; gives the scalp strength which prevent the hair from falling—50c.
Wonder Uncurl—This preparation uncurls knots and kinks and makes the hair pliable, so as to dress well.—50c. We promise that our specialties will do more to advance-colored people socially and commercially than showy garments or gew-gaw jewelry.
Delivery free. Applications for agency considered. M. B. Berger & Co., 2 Rector Street, New York City, selling agents for Chemical Wonder Company.
Ross & Mundin, 100 20th St., Washington, D. C.
Board & McGuire, 14th St., Washington, D. C.
ME-LANGE
BEFORE SIX AFTER USING. MONTHS USING.
Never fails; nothing like it for hair that is not naturally
Price, 25 and 50 cents a box. For sale by the following
Board & McGuire, 1912 1-2 Fourteenth street northwest
Mayer, Fourth and N streets northwest; L. H. Harris, T.
streets southwest; A. F. Pride, Twenty-eighth and
Georgetown, D. C.
FRANK E. WHITE M'F'G. CO.,
Box 107,
East Oran
Goods mailed on receipt of price.
Never fails; nothing like it for hair that is not naturally straight. Price, 25 and 50 cents a box. For sale by the following druggists: Board & McGuire, 1912 1-2 Fourteenth street northwest; Julius Mayer, Fourth and N streets northwest; L. H. Harris, Third and F streets southwest; A. F. Pride, Twenty-eightth and P streets, Georgetown, D. C.
FRANK E. WHITE M'F'G. CO.,
Box 107, East Orange, N. J.
Goods mailed on receipt of price.
BABEK
The Old Reliable Remedy.
For twenty-five long years—a quarter of a century—never been a remedy equal to Elixir Babek for Malaria, plasmatic diseases. Thousands have used it with most results. Malaria is prevalent now, Do not wait for it to if you. Begin the use of Babek now. 50c Bottles. You will tell you that Babek is the best thing he sells
For MALARIA, CHILLS & FEW
For twenty-five long years—a quarter of a century—there has never been a remedy equal to Elixir Babek for Malaria and such mismatic 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 & FEVER
Edward E. Thomas
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
UNDER
EM
Wm.
Unde
510 O Street Northw
Ca
The Wm. F. Newman
and its friends that t
at the above address
to-date service at "M
and, thanking you for
We are
Wm. T. Newman, for
James
UNDERTAKEN
ALL WORK FIRST
TWELF
J H
Hiring
Carriages hired for f
Horses and carriages
unteed. Business at 11
at 222 More street, A
Telephone for Office,
Telephone call for S
OUR STAB
Where I can accommodate
Call and inspect our
J. H. DABN
W. Side
A
RENDERING IN
MONOTONE, WATER C
AND PEN & INK
STEEL CON
Phone: Main 6059-M.
The Wm. F. Newman & Co. wishes to announce to the public and its friends that they have opened a modern Funeral Parlor at the above address, and are prepared to render nothing but up-to-date service at "Moderate Prices." We solicit your patronage and, thanking you for your former patronage,
We are yours,
WM. T. NEWMAN & CO.,
Undertakers and Embalmers.
Wm. T. Newman, formerly of Georgetown, D. C.
James H. Winslow
James H. Winslow
UNDERTAKER AND PRACTICAL EMBALMEK. ALL WORK FIRST CLASS. TERMS MOST REASONABLE TWELFTH AND R STREETS, N. W.
J H DABNEY
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.
W.SidneyPittman Architect
RENDERING IN PATENT DRAWING MONOTONE, WATER COLOR DRAFTING,DETAILING,TRAC AND PEN & INK BLUE PRINTING STEEL CONSTRUCTION A SPECIALTY. Phone: Main 6059-M. Office 494 Louisiana Ave., N.W.
Wm. Cannon,
J275
OLE
213
200
150
164
140
128
120
110
100
90
88
70
68
60
50
40
30
20
10
1225 E. D, 1227 7th Street, N. W.
OLE DISTRIBUTER OF OLD PURI SIM WHISKE
HIGH DEGREE
A HIGH DEGREE
because of the exceptional attention be stowed on the making. The only cheapness in it anywhere is the price. A Goodyear-welted shoe, made on several of the season's handsomest lasts, in the most popular leathers. Looks first that way every time. It's worth your while to in and look the Signet over, even if you're not ready to buy.
Wm.
491F
HOLTMAN'S OL
m. Moreland.
Wm. Moreland 491 Penna Ave HOLTMAN'S OLD STAND. BIG VOL. THE BIG BOOK
OF SATISFACTION IS A RARE 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 OUR
SCHOOLS ARE INTRODUCING FORESTRY
Forestry is attracting wide attention among the schools of the United States. Not only have many colleges and universities introduced courses and even professional schools of forestry, but elementary phases of the subject have been introduced into hundreds of the graded and high schools, and teachers give enthusiastic reports of the success which is attending the new study. Public school teachers say that they have found in it a subject interesting to children, and one which furnishes much attractive, tangible material to work upon, developing the child's observation, and being at once acceptable to the young mind, and most practical.
The public schools of Washington, District of Columbia, and of parts of Iowa are in the vanguard of this movement. Every graded school in Washington, and a large number of the rural schools of Pottawattamie County, Iowa, are now teaching the elements of forestry.
In Iowa the subject is being taught as a commercial course in connection with home geography and agriculture, while in the Washington schools it is used in the nature study courses. The four upper grades of the Washington schools are studying the forest and this year all are following practically the same outline; next year this outline will be confined to the fifth grade, while the other grades will follow an outline one step advance-
ed, and so on until by the fourth year a four-year course will have been introduced. As a preparation for this work, forestry has been taught in the Normal School of the District of Columbia for several years past, and when the young student teachers take up the actual work of teaching they are already familiar with the details of elementary forest study. Prominent among the other normal schools of the country to take up work of this kind are those of Cleveland, Ohio, Rochester, New York; and Joliet, Illinois.
There is a section in the Forest Service of the United States Department of Agriculture which works in cooperation with the schools in teaching forestry and its related subjects. This cooperation is not limited to technical schools of forestry; it is equally open to primary and kindergarten grades; it is as willing to help teach tree study in a first year nature-study class as to assist in the establishment of a professional forest school.
This section of education, as it is called is now working out model courses of study for graded and high schools, in cooperation with the public schools of Washington, District of Columbia, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The work in Philadelphia is being conducted by W. N. Clifford, head of the Commerce Department of the Southern High
In Washington, the Section of Education is directing a similar work for graded schools in four of the public schools of that city. Besides special lessons in the class room, the pupils collect and mount specimens of leaves, twig, bark, and seeds, and, in connection with wook-working, wood specimens of different commercial trees are prepared and placed in cabinets. Opposite each wood section is placed the name of the wood, its qualities, and uses. Extensive field work is planned for the spring months, and the different classes will be brought out into the woods, there to study the trees at first hand. As these courses are built up and tested, they will be published from time to time for distribution among teachers, and it is expected that the practical line along which the courses are being evolved will win for them a wide application in other schools.
Most of the schools now teaching forestry are using as text books several of the publications issued by the Forest Service, including Farmers' Bulletin 173, "A Primer of Forestry." The Service also issues many circulars dealing with local conditions, which teachers in the localities dealt with might find very useful. By writing to the Forest Service, Washington, District of Columbia, as many copies of these various publications as are needed for class room use, as well as other helpful material and information may be secured free of charge.
ALLEY DENIZENS
ALLEY DENIZENS
The annual census, taken by the police, for Washington, has just been completed, and in it may be found one potent reason for the prevalence of crime and disease among the colored people. According to this census, the number of white people living in alleys is but 1,608 in the entire city of Washington, while the number of colored people living in the alleys reaches the stupendous figure of 13,410. In the case of the white dwellers in the alleys, they are either there from choice, or because, possibly, they are unable to pay street rents. In the case of the colored dwellers in the alleys, however, they are forced to dwell in filthy, disease-infected, crime-breeding alleys, just because their skin is dark.
We hear much, in the white press, and from the business and professional white men in this community about criminal colored people and about their spreading the germs of the white plague, and yet if they would but investigate they would find that, if this be true, and we are not saying it is not, the white men of this city are to blame.
These people, because of the refusal of white landlords to rent them decent dwellings, are forced back into the alleys, forced into houses that are so unsanitary that they are but hovels, and back in these alleys, the good and bad, the moral and the criminal element of the race, are forced to reside together; the moral mothers and fathers witnessing daily the corruption of their children by those old crime. It is an awful picture, this picture of the black dwellers in the germ-infested, crime-breeding alleys of the Capitol City of the Nation, the "city of magnificent distances," the city that should be the example in cleanliness and morality for other cities to follow.
The selection of Dr. Tunnell, of Howard University, to succeed Mr. John F. Cook, as member of the Board of Education, is a wise one, and The Bee congratulates the new member, and bespeaks for him success. There are some who question the propriety of a member of the faculty of Howard University being chosen as a member of the Board of Education in charge of the Washington schools. This, however, is not a new precedent, though it may be for Washington, for there have been many instances where school board members have been taken from the faculty of some college. Let all assist Dr. Tunnell to make a splendid record, as a conscientious worker for the betterment of our schools.
"THE SMART SET"
The "Smart Set," which was at the New Lyceum last week, played to a packed house at all performances. This of itself is proof of the ability of the troupe. Every character in the comedy was great and good, and Dudley and his donkey can not be excelled.
Mr. M. J. Joyce, the agent, was pleased with the reception given the troupe.
Mr. Eugene Kernan, manager of the Lyceum, did everything in his power to accommodate the rush, and the people expressed general satisfaction.
This week the Octoroon Burlesquers have been playing to a full house at every performance.
SCHOOL NOTES
Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, and Mr. William D. Hover, members of the Board of Education, were reappointed to succeed themselves. Mr. W. V. Tunnell, a professor of Howard University, was selected by the Supreme Court, District of Columbia, to succeed Mr. John T. Cook, whose term expires July 1.
Mr. Tunnell was graduated from Howard University, class of 1885, and from the General Theological Seminary in New York, class of 1889. He was called to the pastorate of a Brooklyn church. In 1893 he was appointed Professor of Belle Lettres, at Howard University, where he had studied. He was a trustee of Howard, and was appointed Supervising Principal of the 13th division of our schools, which he gave up to return to the University in 1905 to take the chair of history.
He is identified with everything pertaining to the betterment of the schools and education, and ranks deservedly high as an orator.
The members of the Board of Education, under the leadership of Captain James F. Oyster, are working nobly in the shaping and uplifting of our educational system. In the course of a few years, after Congress shall have passed the bill to pension the teachers who have made the schools what they are, the schools of Washington will take their places in the foremost ranks of an ideal system.
The many knotty problems which were piled as obstacles, montain high, in the path of this board, are being reduced to mere foot hills by their wisdom and scund judgment.
It is regretted that Congress did not pass the bill this year, but it is hoped that it will be one of the first items placed on the cal-
The Andamanese are particularly interesting to the anthropologist as they seem to furnish an example of a people of pure descent. Since the stone age they have remained secluded from the outer world, and to this isolation is due the uniformity they exhibit in their physical and mental characteristics. They belong to the Negrito race, and are small but remarkably well formed. A series of measurements made by General E. H. Man gives the average height of the men as 4 feet 10% inches, and of the women 4 feet 7% 1iches, while their average weight is 98% pounds and 93% pounds respectively. Neither sex wears anything that can be called clothing as we understonahtttaau-o for q3A.o SEvderstand the word—usually a girdle about the waist from which is suspended one or more leaves. They further adorn themselves with necklaces, armlets, and bands about the legs, made of bone, shell, and wood. The men often wear a bunch of pandanus leaves hanging down behind from the the girdle, which custom is supposed to have given rise to the story, commonly believed in olden times, that they had tails like horses. It was also said that their heads grew from below their shoulders. This belief probably arose from their custom of wearing the skulls of their ancestors suspended by a strap from their neck.—Charles W. Mead in the May Southern Workman.
An Air with Real Air.
During one of the political tours of Mr. Cleveland, in which he was accompanied by Secretary Olney, he arrived during a severe storm at a town in which he was to speak. As he entered the carriage with his friends and was driven from the station the rain changed to hall, and immense stones battered and rattled against the vehicle. A brass band, rather demoralized by the storm, stuck bravely to its post and played.
"Hall to the Chief"—with real hall!" rejoined Mr. Cleveland.
White Skill.
In Hawaii the Japanese children outnumber the whites and natives combined; the Chinese children are as numerous, and the Portuguese, who are in a class by themselves, more than equal the number of American-born children in Hawaii; yet it is the white children only who have successfully mastered the Hawaiian sports. I was more than amused when learning to ride the surf-board to notice that the Japanese seemed never able to acquire the difficult knack, while the small white boy very quickly became more adept than the native himself.
Garantized Oils.
The following advertisement of olive oil is the work of a Rio Janeiro firm:
"Our olives have garantized of fitts quality. Diligently fabricated add filtrated, the consumer will find with them, the good taste and perfect preservation. For to escape to any conterfeit, is necessary to requiere on any bottles this contremarc deposed conformably to the law. The corks and the boxes have all marked with the fire."—Case and Comment.
Fine Old English Oak Burned.
One of the seven fine old oaks in Salcey forest, Buckinghamshire, England, has been burned to the ground.
It is surmised that visitors to the forest made a picnic fire in the hollow trunk, and the result was the complete destruction of the tree, which is said to be 300 years old. Salcey is the second great royal forest and has belonged to the crown since the conquest.
HOTEL MACEO.
When visiting New York City, stop at the Hotel Maceo, 213 West 53rd. Street, corner Broadway Steam heated. Telephone, 803 Columbus.
MADE TO ENTOMB A TARTAR GIRL
Austrian Mason Goes Insane After a
Horror Among Caucasus Tribe.
Odessa.—Peter Kavullitch, an Austrian mason, went mad here as the result of brooding over being forced to wall up the daughter of the chieftain of a Tartar tribe in the Caucasus in a living tomb. He was kidnapped in Baku a month ago, taken blindfolded into the mountains, compelled to build the wall around the girl and then was turned loose outside Baku. For a week he led a party of soldiers in a vain attempt to find the girl.
The girl was condemned to death in the tomb because she eloped with one of her father's servants. She was engaged to the son of a wealthy Tartar, and all preparations had been made for the wedding. She was caught with the servant after a two days' chase, and was tried at a family council. It was decided to build a wall around her and leave her to her fate. Kavullitch was kidnapped, and he was taken into the mountains to find the whole tribe drawn up to witness the living burial of the girl.
The man protested against the work, but his life was threatened unless he obeyed. The girl was tled hand and foot to a stake. She implored mercy, but her cries were unheeded. A circle was drawn around her, and the mason was made to follow it with a wall two feet thick. The wall was raised a foot above the victim's head, and a small opening was made for air, so that her sufferings might be prolonged. As soon as his work was finished Kavullitch was blindfolded again. He was set at liberty with 100 roubles in his pocket. He came to Odessa and went mad in the street. He was taken to a hospital in a straitjacket.
A LOAF OF BREAD PUT IN TWO COFFINS.
Brooklyn.—Adolph Raad, who formerly lived at No. 110 Luquer street, was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, the coffin containing one-half of a loaf of rye bread, the other half of which had been buried with Mrs. Raad four years ago. The aged couple were born in Ludenbach, Germany. They purchased a farm in what is now Flatbush, and as the city gradually encreached upon their farm land they cut it up and sold it until they were soon able to retire comfortably.
There is an old German custom of making a wish whenever a fresh loaf of bread is cut. On September 7, 1904. Mrs. Raad had just made the customary wish, and was about to cut a loaf when she dropped dead. The husband cut the loaf and put half in his wife's coffin. The other half was preserved in a tin box, the neighbors having been instructed to put it in his coffin.
FORTUNE FOR FAMILY OF SWINDLED MAN.
Galveston, Tex. — Mrs. George Overton and family of two sons and two daughters who have been eking out an existence on a small farm near Fort Lancaster. In Crockett County, have been presented with a thousand-acre ranch in Edward County, well stocked with cattle and $10,000 in cash, by a former partner of the husband and father of the Overtons.
George Overton, who died five years ago, was once a wealthy cattleman of West Texas, but entered into a mining project with a man who swindled him out of his wealth and lands. The partner disappeared fifteen years ago and went to Mexico, where he amassed wealth in mining and returned to make restitution.
FIRST SEA VOYAGE.
Chicago.—Prof. James S. Breasted of the University of Chicago, announced his discovery in Sicily of a portion of a tablet covered with inscriptions, showing that Solomon did not make the first sea voyages. He says that the translation shows that the builder of the first pyramid made a journey with forty ships across the Mediterranean to Lebanon for cedar. This, he says, was two thousand years before Solomon's time.
Coin Found in a Fish's Backbone. Long Branch, N. J.—Nellie Case, a servant in the home' of Mrs. Oliver Byron, discovered a nickel imbedded in the backbone of a butterfly while preparing the fish for the Monday meal. The fish was bought at the market of Capt. John Hennessey. Capt. Hennessey was unable to explain the finding of the coin in the bone of the fish. He is confident, however, that the fish must have swallowed it.
Lasso Saved Man From Abym.
San Francisco, Cal.-Lazsoed at the brink of a steep precipice, A. L. Banks of Philadelphia owes his life to William Rogers of New York city. With Robert Shea of New York, and James Archer of London, Banks and Rogers were riding in the mountains, when Banks's horse slipped. To save himself Banks grasped a bush. Rogers swung his rope and caught Banks around the waist.
The Week in Society
On account of the ever increasing volume of business done by the board and McGuire Pharmacy, Dr. L. Board, the junior member of the firm, will soon sever his connection with the government service and vote his entire time to business and the profession of pharmacy. The regular annual excursion of the congregation and friends of St. Luke's Church, will take place on Wednesday, July 21st, 1909. Mrs. Amanda Collins has returned her home in Baltimore after visiting friends in this city. Mrs. Helen Cardoza has returned the city, well pleased with her hit to Baltimore.
Mrs. J. B. Searles, who has been sitting in this city some time, has turned to her home in Philadelphia.
Mr. William Harper, who took theamination in Freedmen's Hospital, is returned to his home in New York.
Mrs. Laura Mason, who has been sitting in this city, has returned to her home in Baltimore.
Mrs. Amelia Wormley, who has been visiting in Philadelphia, has turned to the city.
Miss. Edith Fleetwood, while in Baltimore, was the guest of Mrs. bell Calloway.
Miss Grace Campbell, of New York, who has been visiting in this city, has returned home. Full particulars will appear in our advertising columns. River View Park has been selected, but a subuent excursion will be given her to Somerset Beach or to Washington Park, as the friends and paths of the church may elect. Attorney and Editor W. Calvin Case, who has been quite ill, under professional care of Drs. Willis, Warfield, Curtis and Mitchell, attinues to improve.
The little boy of Mr. and Mrs. W. Diney Pittman, who has been so angerously ill, under the professional care of Drs. Curtis and John, is out of danger. Register W. T. Vernon will speak at month at the commencement exises at Wilberforce University. Rev. J. W. Ross, the newly appointed pastor of Metropolitan Africa Methodist Episcopal Church, will his pulpit tomorrow. The new Mett School Building is dedicated last Monday. This is one of the best buildings in the city. Bishop G. W. Clinton arrived in the city last week, as the guest of shop I. W. Smith.
in the case of Robert A. Pelham
inst Officer Watts, who arrested
. Pelham, a severe reprimand was
ministered and a fine of $20 im-
ced upon the officer.
President Thirkield will preach the
calaureate sermon tomorrow at
o. m., in the Memorial Chapel of
ward University.
Mr. R. W. Thompson, the well
own newspaper man, has moved
to the Whitfield McKinley home-
ead, 1918 111th street, northwest,
fently vacated by Auditor Ralph
Tyler.
No place in the city is like Board and McGuire's drug store, on 14th street, between Tea and You, when comes to ice cream soda and delius sundaes. See where the crowds Dr. A. W. Curtis, chairman of the surgical section of the National Medical Association, is arranging in two of Boston's leading hospitals for the use of their facilities in connection with the clinics that are held under his direction. Some difficult feats in surgery, with modern methods and appliances, are being planned by Dr. Curtis, who acknowledged to be an expert in its line of medical science.
Ex-Governor B. A. Pinchback is e to be out aagin.
Miss Goneva B. Maxfield, who has been dangerously ill at her home, is up and out again. 'She will spend several weeks in the country with her mother.
Attorney T. S. Jones, who has been sick at his home, is out again.
The many friends of Miss Rosa Thornton, of Pierce Place, will be pleased to learn that she is making an excellent recovery from a serious abdominal operation performed on Thursday, May 6th, at the Providence Hospital, 2nd and D. streets, southeast, by Dr. Charles I. West.
The teachers of Washington are a studious, thrifty people. By economy many of them have bought their own homes, in which are all the aids to culture and refinement. There are few of their homes without well-selected libraries. Like all large cities, they have their reading circles, culture clubs, and many of them are pursuing courses in the languages. Professor J. T. Layton's Choral Society had a very successful recital on last Friday evening at the Lincoln Memorial Church.
The American minister to Haiti, and Mrs. Furniss, who are now spending their vacation in America, were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Charles I. West; 924 M street, north west, last week. They arrived in Washington from Port au Prince, Haiti, Monday morning, and left town Friday afternoon for the minister's home, Indianapolis, Indiana. During their visit to Washington, they were the recipients of numerous attentions. Monday night Dr. and Mrs. West gave an impromptu progressive whist party in their honor. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. Francis, Dr. and Mrs. Curtis, Dr. and Mrs. Dowling, Dr. and Mrs. Lofton, Mr. and Dr. Gray, Mrs. B. K. Bruge, Mrs. Holly, Mrs. Keelan, and Miss Perry.
Tuesday Mrs. Curtis took Mrs. Furniss through the sanctums of the public buildings; Wednesday afternoon Dr. and Mrs. Francis gave them an automobile ride; at night they attended a circus party; Thursday afternoon the Matrons' Whist Club entertained Mrs. Furniss at the home of Mrs. Pickett; and the same night Mrs. Holly entertained at whist; the remaining hours were filled in receiving hosts of friends who called to pay their respects. Dr. Furniss gave a talk on Haiti to the Armstrong Manual Training School and also to the M Street High School.
Mrs. Furniss made a host of friends during her short stay. by her charming personality: she is a brilliant conversationalist, speaking fluently English, French, German and Portuguese. She visited many of our public schools and on Wednesday gave a lesson in German to the pupils, of the Armstrong school. She is charmed with Washington society. On their way retiring to Haiti, they will again visit Washington for a few days. Minister Furniss' conduct of the affairs of his office has been so successful, particularly during the recent disturbances in Haiti, that he has received the highest commendation from the administration.
One good room, with-the use of the kitchen for a single lady. Apply on premises, 1460 Q street, northwest, or Thomas Walker, 506 5th street, northwest.
FOR RENT
3 rooms, 1 front, 2 back; furnished. Will rent single or in suite. 1224 You street, northwest. Single lady or gentleman preferred.
WANTED We have an exceptional proposition to offer a penteel colored man who has extensi acquaintance among departmental and District Government employees. Address Box'C, Bee 1109 Eye street, northwest.
SOON WE'LL EAT CANNED WHALE
Like Beef and Very Palatable Cheap, Too-Danger of Exterminating Whales.
MANY MERITS OF THE NEW DIET
Salted Meat is Sold at the Rate of Two Cents a Pound—Most of it Now Used to Make Fertilizers—Wider Market Sought.
Victoria, B. C.—Whale meat as an article of food and the preservation of whale life in the waters of the Pacific are questions agitating the whaling industry on the coasts of Vancouver and in the far East. The many whaling companies of Japan operating steam whalers have formed a combination to enforce a close season, owing to the decreasing number of whales. This news was brought here by the Japanese liner Akl Maru, from the far East. The various companies interested in whaling held a conference, and a resolution was passed favoring the formation of a guild.
Whaling in the waters of the Canadian Pacific seaboard is still in its infancy, but the need is clearly realized of protection to the quarry. Roy C. Andrews of the department of mammals and birds of the American Museum of Natural History, New York, who has recently returned home from a five months trip spent on this island for the purpose of studying whale life, said before leaving that the whales are being hunted so extensively that they will soon become extinct.
Mr. Andrews during his stay at the whaling station on the west coast was enabled to study the subject at first hand. He himself saw more then 200 whales killed with the harpoon gun, with which the steam whalers Orion and St. Lawrence of the coast stations are armed. From the mast head of the Orion Mr. Andrews has witnessed their last struggles. Some of the whales measured eighty feet in length. From his observations carried on here and at other places he is satisfied that the days of the whale are numbered.
Up to this date the two little steamers named have accounted for the lives of more than 500 whales, and in the course of a few weeks another station on the east coast of the island will be in full operation, while the sites for two more stations in the Queen Charlotte Islands have been selected, and by next season these also will be at work adding to the slaughter.
An effort is now being made to introduce whale meat as an article of food. Already quite a trade is done with Japan in canned and salted whale meat. The new idea is to start a campaign to educate the people of European race on the undoubted merits of the new diet. Samples of canned whale meat have been distributed from the headquarters of the whaling company in this city, and those who have tried it say that the meat is exceedingly palatable, being much tenderer than beef and greatly resembling it in taste. At present tons and tons of whale flesh are used in the manufacture of fertilizers, which are one of the most valuable by-products of the industry, but it takes three tons of flesh to make one of fertilizer, and this latter is sold at the rate of two cents per pound, the price at which the salted meat is sold. For this reason the company is trying to create a larger market for the meat, both salted and canned.
MEN 100,000 YEARS AGQ.
Exchange Professor Peck Deduces This from Conditions in Alpine Cave. London.—Prof. Peck, director of the Berlin Deep Sea Institute and American Exchange professor, is to lecture on the interesting anthropological discovery made in a wonderful cave named the Weldkerchlihohle, at Santis, Switzerland. Dr. Eckehardt discovered this cave and later on Dr. Bachler unearthed in it numerous remains of a colony of bears with a quantity of human bones of the prepalaeolithic period. The discovery showed that mankind dwelt in the cave and lived on the bears which they killed in hunting.
Prof. Peuck in the course of a visit to the cave ascertained that this state of things could only have occurred during the last interglacial era. He thereby proved that human beings must have lived in the mountains before the last glacial modification of the Alps, which, according to Prof. Peuck's calculation, was about 100,000 years ago.
Robbed Ostriches.
Tucson, Arizona.—J. H. Blevn, and J. H. Rinehart were arrested, charged with the, theft of feathers from ostriches. The feathers show that they have been pulled out of the ostriches and not plucked in the regular way. This is always a damaging proceeding and sometimes results fatally. At any rate, a feather will never grow in the socket from which a feather has been pulled. Blevn and Rinehart were sent to the county jail.
NEW MEALAND'S WHITE ISLAND.
Always Enveloped in Clouds of Steam—Its Strange Lakes.
White Island, New Zealand, derives its name from the clouds of white steam in which it appears to be continually enveloped. Its area is only 600 acres, and its height about 880 feet above the sea level.
In form and color it is like a reposing camel, while its interior with its gray, weather beaten, almost perpendicular cliffs, recalls the Coliseum at Rome. Overhanging the southern landing place stands a column of rock closely resembling a sentinel, which has been dedicated to the memory of Capt. Cook. The water of the island is of a pale green hue, and anything dipped into it becomes of a red brick color. The fumes of sulphur are always plainly perceptible.
On a fine moonlight night a wonderful sight is afforded to any one who will sit in an open boat in one of the lakes of the island. Covering an area of fifty acres is an immense caldron hissing and snorting and sends forth volumes of poisonous steam, while all chances of egress appear to be denied by the steep-silent and gloomy cliffs.
Japan's Purpose to Rise.
The important inquiry with regard to Japan in a large way—is it not?—as to the direction in which the nation is now moving. And in answer to this inquiry I am able to give a most unequivocal and quite satisfactory answer. Never before in the history of the country, and at the present time in the history of no other country, do we find the same intelligent, deliberate and widely prevalent purpose to do away with the nation's reproach and to rise in the scale of national business morality. In saying this I speak what I know to be true.—Charles Vernon.
Montenegro's New Capital.
Montenegro is building a new capital at Antivarl, the port of its present capital. The works, which are in the hands of Italian contractors, were inaugurated this month by the ruling prince, who insisted in his speech on the close ties of interest binding Montenegro to Italy on the one hand and to Russia on the other, while he left Austria out in the cold. It is supposed that the new town is to be the terminal of Russia's Balkan line, and the speech is regarded as having considerable diplomatic importance for that reason.
Nuta for Squirrels.
The New York Park Department asked that visitors feed to the squirrels only hard-shelled nuts as the eating of soft-shelled ones permits the teeth of the pets to grow long and turn under, so that they are unable thereafter to crack the hard nuts they bury in the ground for the winter's store. These hard nuts consequently, rot and the squirrels die of starvation. Here is an excellent object lesson for the human race in the care of teeth.
Peanuts in India.
The cultivation of American peanuts which was introduced into the Kolhapur State some years ago by one of the American medical missionaries, has become so popular that they now have become almost the chief crop. Unfortunately the people persist in eating them raw, as they formerly ate the little country nuts and as the American nuts are much richer acute digestive troubles and liver inflammation are the frequent result.
Decadence of Billiards
Billiards are dying out—in France, at least. According to statistics of taxes, while there were 94,123 billiard tables in France in 1892, in 1906 there were only 89.939. It is probably to the success of outdoor sports and of motoring that is due this loss of affection for a game which has had famous volteries.
Value of the Nile.
The Nile is one of the longest rivers in the world, but it is not especially valuable as a navigable stream. It's chief benefit to the country is from the immense deposits of mud carried down in the annual floods and which have made the region overflowed one of the most fertile in the world.
No wonder that so many shops in New York City sell shoes and that so many shops sell nothing but shoes, for it is estimated that the pedestrians of the city wear out 28,900 pairs of shoes each day.
Big Engineering Feat
One of the biggest pieces of engineering in New England is a 2,500 horsepower dam in the Union river, at Ellsworth, Me. It is constructed of hollow concrete, and cost nearly $500,000.
Coal of New Zealand
It is estimated that New Zealand has an available coal supply of 1,200,600,000 tons, of which no more than 20,000,000 tons have been touched.
Mephants as Sandwich Men.
Mephants are being employed in Paris as "sandwich men" to advertise a music hall in the Champs Elysees.
The Purposeless Man.
A man without a purpose in life has a dog with no tail to wag.
THE YOUNG MENS' PROTECTIVE LEAGUE THE YOUNG MENS' PROTCTIVE LEAGUE WILL CEL EBRATE ITS 15TH ANNUAL OUTING AT WASHINGTON PARK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1909. STEAMERS LEAVE WHARF AT 7TH AND M STREETS AT 9 A. M., 2-4 AND 6:30 P. M., AND THE LEAGUE HOPES THEIR MANY FRIENDS WILL PATRONIZE THIS OUTING.
Excursion Season For 1909
Excursion Season For 1909
Steamer River Queen to Washington Park.
Steamer Jane Moseley to Norfolk, Baltimore, and Landings down the Potomac River.
Books now open for charter on the River Queen and Jane Moseley.
Secure your dates at once, before they are all taken.
THE HOUSE OF THE GRADES
WASHINGTON PARK
This beautiful park has a co- offered to the Washington pub- from Washington on the Potom- with its electric power plant for Caroussel, double-decker, with a recent Theater. A Penny Arcadia Gallery. A Dairy Lunch Depot Pool and Billiard Hall, and forty The River Queen makes daily a. m., 12 m., and 2, 4, 6, and 8. For particulars address Lewi-enth and N Streets Wharf.
Columbia I
COLUMBIA ICE COMPANY.
Prompt delivery made to a or postal card.
John E. McGaw, President and Joseph T. Peake, Secretary and 10th Street Wharf, southwest.
Buffalo park has a collection of attractions near the Washington public. It is located about Bengton on the Potomac River. The Scenic electric power plant for 7,000 lights—a Figure double-decker, with music attachments. A. A Penny Arcadium, Moving Pictures, Dairy Lunch Depot and Buffet. Dancing Giard Hall, and forty acres of Shady Woods. Queen makes daily trips to Washington and 2, 4, 6, and 8 p.m. Sculptors address Lewis Jefferson, General Mail Streets Wharf.
Cumbia Ice Company
A ICE COMPANY COAL AND W
delivery made to all parts of the city, by
rd.
Gaw, President and General Manager.
Peake, Secretary and Treasurer.
Wharf, southwest. Phone
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 Theater. A 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.
Columbia Ice Company
COLUMBIA ICE COMPANY COAL AND WOOD Prompt delivery made to all parts of the city, by telephone or postal card.
A
I wish to say that my hair was only about three inches long and so kinky, stiff and harsh I could not manage it at all, but after ensing two jars of your Her-tru.line I have as pretty suit of hair as any lady in Atlanta. I wish every once in curly or kinky hair knew of this wonderful Her-tru line.
Yours, respectfully,
Miss LoveMayes
Marietta St. Atlanta, Ga.
Southern I
Box 754
Southern Medicine Co
ox 754 Atlanta G
Southern Medicine Co.
CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM.
OPEN DAILY FROM 9 A.M. ASS L
TO APPEASE YOUR APPE
COMMODIOUS DINING R
THE BAR ASSOCIATION.
QUICKLY SERVED.
CITY HALL
MRS. A
ILY ESON 9 A. M. TO 4 P. M.
ASS LUNCH ROOM. EVEN
ASE YOUR APPEL THE
OUS DINING RC OMS FOR THE PU
ASSOCIATION. HOT AND COLD
SERVED.
CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM,
MRS. AL TOPER. PROPRIE
OPEN DAILY FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. ASS LUNCH ROOM. EVERYTHING TO APPEASE YOUR APPEET LIE COMMODIOUS DINING RC OMS FOR THE PUBLIC AND THE BAR ASSOCIATION. HOT AND COLD LUNCHES QUICKLY SERVED. CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM. MRS. AL TOPER, PROPRIETRESS.
We lay all Mattings without extra charge
We will replace—fro give you satisfactory full rolls. We'll measure only for the actual nu cover them.
We will replace—free—any piece which does not you satisfactory service. You need not rolls. We'll measure your floors and chy for the actual number of yards require them.
We will replace—free—any piece which does not give you satisfactory service. You need not buy full rolls. We'll measure your floors and charge only for the actual number of yards required to cover them.
There are Refrigerators which will save enough on your ice bill in a season to cover a good part of their cost. We'll sell you one that will do it.
Tell us to charge whatever you need on an open account, and say what you wish to pay each week or month. You own the goods, because we trust you without any contract, lease, or notes. That kind of credit is offered to all.
Tell us to charge whatever you need on an account, and say what you wish to pay each w month. You own the goods, because we do without any contract, lease, or notes. Aid of credit is offered to all.
Tell us to charge whatever you need on an open account, and say what you wish to pay each week or month. You own the goods, because we trust you without any contract, lease, or notes. That kind of credit is offered to all.
Peter Grogan & Sons Company,
817-823 7th Street
---
Southeast Medicine Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
action of attractions never before it. It is located about ten miles of the River. The Scenic Railway, 7,000 lights—a Figure 8. The music attachments. A 5 and 10-m, Moving Pictures, Shooting and Buffet. Dancing Pavilion. Acres of Shady Woods and Dells. Trips to Washington Park at 10 am. Jefferson, General Manager, Sev-
ce Company
COAL AND WOOD
parts of the city, by telephone
General Manager.
Treasurer.
Phone, Main 272.
Her-Tru-Line For The Hair
THE GREAT HAIR GROWER HER-TRU-LIN1: emoves daudruff. Cures all skin and scalp diseases, makes the HAIR soft and glossy and stops it from falling out. HER-TRU-LINE penetrates to the roots of the HAIR, gives it new life and vigor, causing it to take on a new and rapid growth. Large jars 50 cents at all drug stores and by our special agents. Sample box mailed to any address on receipt of five two-cent stamps.
Agents wanted everywhere to sell this wonderful HAIR GROWER. Medicine Co. Atlanta Ga.
TO 4 P. M.
NCH ROOM. EVERYTHING
LIE
OMS FOR THE PUBLIC AND
HOT AND COLD LUNCHES
LUNCH ROOM,
TOPER. PROPRIETRESS.
any piece which does not service. You need not buy your floors and charge number of yards required to
ever you need on an open you wish to pay each week the goods, because we trust act, lease, or notes. That so all.
---
Re a aS aka RM A a a lr a lo sil 4
‘ oe eyes ace : it ys, < ‘i ok %s..
‘ s@® « Ekta. 22s oie cer «Lobe eve Sie ee ck kk NP Le
‘ TUSKLMSS ELEPHANTS.
Ceylon the Only Part of the World
Where They Exist.
& re: are
‘What a sight for a Ceylon elephant
Banter would be the first view of a
Berd of African elephants—all tus-
kers! It ts a singular thing that
Ceylon ts the only part of the world
where the male elephants havé no
tusksj they have miserable little
grabbers projecting two or three
faches from the upper jaw and !n-
@ining downward.
Nothing produces elther ivory or
horn in fine specimens througout
Ceylon, Although some of the buf-
faloes have tolerably fine heads, they
will not bear a comparison with
those of other countries. The horns
ef the native cattle are not above
four inches in length.
The elk and the spotted deers ant-
Jers are small compared with deer
ef thelr size In India. This 1s more
ainguler, 2s it {s evident from the
Geological formaton that at some re-
mote period Ceylon was not an {s-
Yand, but formed a portion of the
main land. It is thought there must
be elements wanting in the Ceylon
pasturage for the formation af
fvory.—Ceylon Manual.
Smokeless Coal.
A London Inventor claims to have
@iscovered a process for producing
smokeless coal, apparently by distil-
Yatton of .coal at 2 low temperature.
‘This, after distillation, ts sald to de-
posit very brilliant substance, the
besting properties of which are far
greater than those of the original
eoal, and which is absolutely free
from smoke and dirt. The Inventor
contends that efforts to overcome the
gmoke plague hare hitherto been un-
successful because they have been
made In the wrong direction, aad
that by the extraction of the smoke-
producing material In coal befcre be-
ing burned, he hes been successful
ta producing a smokeless coal.
. Electrocuting Antmals.
‘The slaughter of animals for tood
Wy electrocution is being experinent-
e@& by Dr. Leduc, a French scientist,
who has been conducting his tnvesth-
gations in the French abbattoirs He
has been using the intermittent low,
tension currents and says that ‘ne is
satisfiee that the syster: ts palrless,
the central functions of percer tioa
being first destroyed and then tacse
ef circulation and respiration se
that there Is neither suffering nor re.
action in the animals thu killed. The
doctor is endeavoring to devise iome
piece of apparatus by which the kil-
ing of cattle may be accompliste! by
electricity with economy and cele-tty,
‘The Shy Man.
‘Women show no mercy to the shy
wan, for he stands outside ef the
cempass of conrention. Could be
break ont all might be eaved; the
wan might be permanently o red,
But he cannot. He has been broighd
€p to respect convention, His nus
cles may be of steel, his heart of Are,
dat in his soul the spirit of dims noe
holds him in a vice. In a-dra ving
room he stands gaping, quakiss, a
prey to Introspective torment —be
who would perhaps storm ¢ ram
part with a triumphant mileo hm
Mpse.—London Observer.
Hanging Pictures Dangerom.
“Railroad casualties recelve suc®
wide publicity,” sald a: insurances
man, “that there Is 2 common billef
en the part of the public that ose ts
more Ilable to accidents while trivel-
‘Ming than when living the simple life
fm the confines of his home. “As
matter of cold fact, statistics show
that accident insurance compuntes
pay more money to people wht get
hurt hanging pictures or taking
stoves apart than they do to the vio-
tims of head-on collistons. n
sounds strange, but it's the truth.”
—Kansas City Journal.
Three Men to Move Book.
There Iles In ‘the British Mureum
the largest book yet printed, & co-
Jossai atlas of engraved ancient
Dutch maps. It takes three men to
move It from the glant book case
ta which it {s stored In the library of
the museum. It is bound In eather,
maagaificently decorated, and is fas
tened with clasps of solid silver,
richly gilt. It is nearly seven feet
high and welghs 800 pounds and was
presented to King Charles Il. before
he left Holland in the year 1660.
Valuable East African Forest.
The Colontal Office recently sent
ext an expert to report on the Ken-
le forest, In the East Africa protec-
torate. He finds the forest extends
287 miles long by elght miles broad,
and comprises 1.000,900 acres of
timber, Taking the average value
of the 2%4, per cuble fogt, this
works out to £23 per acre, or a total
value for the whole forest of £23,-
400,000,—London Tit-Dits.
Dead Mistorians. -
I for-my part belleve in the dead»
Alstorfans. I glory In the posses-
sion of some hundreds of volumes by:
them. A great deal of cant Ix talk
‘ed and written on this subject. There
fs an iGea in‘some minds that a book
om history to be good must be new.
In nine cases cut of ten the new book
fs a common-place re-statement of
facts that were better presented by
en older writer.—The Sphere,
‘A Man and a Woman.
A man’s [dpe of being stylishly
dreaved 1g to wear something
whisk be looks atroclously bad; z
Woman's to wear something no otht
Coman aan duplicate. |
a i,
HTH THE BREAD LIKE”
AThousand Men Are Fed
Every Night.
THE BOWERY MISSION
At this Place and at Fielschmann's
May Be Found the Men In Actual
Need—It {s the Alm of These
Places to Send Away No Hungry
Person,
Bhancing at. the carner of Canal
Street und the Bowery as I approacn-
eu them looked ne over when taey
srw ' was about to laterrupt their
cunversation, It wa anything but 1
Pleasant nizht; the coat I haf hor
rowed for tue evening was none tuo
tuck, and the old shoes 1 wore were
uet waterproof. If my abject por-
erty was assumed, I felt a semblance
of the real thing, for I was cold and
tired after trampi»g up and down tno
tmauddy streets for an hour.
“Where kin a feller git a cup o'
coffee 'r a handout?" I asked.
One of the officers smiled affably.
“Two doors tp,’ he sald, indicating
one of the numerous five and ten-
cent foding places, of which theco
ate one or two In avery block In this
neighborhood.
“I didn't mean that kind,” I re-
plied “I've got to find a place
where there afn't a price on the
‘grub.’ * /
“I guess the bread line at Flelsch-
mann’s or the Bowery Mission's
the only place, then, Jack,” sald tae
officer as he tumed his ‘ack on me.
So 1 slouched along to 55 Bowery,
| where a sign in the window, reading,
“Bowery Mission—Services Every
Evening,” indicated that I had found
the right place. 1 looked in the door,
The big room, filled with chairs, waa
diml, Mghted, and on the platform
at the far end, a man was moviag
Some chairs around.
“Nothin’ doin’ yet, bo," sald a
rough-looking fellow. “They don’t
glve ye no grub until 1 o'clock.”
‘This was disheartening, or would
have been, bad I really needed the
food, for it was only a little after
eleven, ‘I'm goin’ up ter the bak-
ery,” the tramp .ontinued. “Ye git
your at 12 sharp 1p there.”
8 we ambled up the Bowery to
Elghth street. and from. there to
Tenth street and Fourth avenue. Al-
ready the waiting line extended frura
th: rear door of the bakery around
the corner to the entrance of Grace
church. I dropped tnto the proc»s-
ston which fn a few moments reached
up Broaaway to Twelfth street. I
hid been fn the line but a short time
when a clock nearby sounded for
midnight. The line began to move
along and the waiting men on elther
Islde of me cheered up a bit. There
was very little conversation, howevzr.
Now,and then some of them muttered
curses, und once when a sightscelug
automobile stopped at the corner the
curses wecame quit= yudible.
After the Mne of waiting mea—
over 600 in number, as I ascertained
—had had their bread And coffee,
most of them dispersed, though a fey
“repeatea” in order to get a second
helping. A number of them hung
around until they could get a chance
to ask the manager of the restaurant
for work. But there was no chance
for any one, though the refusal was
not made unpleasantly.
From the bakery I went back tc
the Bowery Mission.
A thousand men are fed every
night at the Bowery Misslon—eome.
times more. It is the atm at bott
this place and at Flelschmann’s tc
vend no one away hungry, but Just
now the demand fs much In excess o
that usual at ‘this time of year.
One sees at these two places the
men who are in actual need of fou
and drink. The street beggars aré
in nine cases out of ten unworthy u:
notice. But tue man or woman wh
doubts the distress—the real need o
food among the unemployed—shoul¢
spend a couple of hours at the tw
places I have described, and he o}
she will be convinced, that there |
no lack of opportunity for the office
of the Good Samaritan, and no ex
‘| cessive crowding !n the ranks 0
helpers of -udYortunate humanity.
| RONERIC C. PENFIELD.
Bronze Statue of Schiller.”
The bronze statue of Schiller by
Hermann Matzen, which Is to be
erected in Cleveland by German citl-
zens, has been completed in Berlin,
The poet Js seated Inan arm chair. A
Berlin paper is quoted as remarking
apropos that “the German who goes
to America becomes an American Jn
all that the word Implies, but even
unto the third generation he is loy-
al to German poetry and German
song.”
Goad Roads.
Out of the 900 towns tn the Sthte
of New York, 600, have voted to have
their roads built under the Fuller-
Plank Act, or, as it is geareally call-
ed, the moneyesystem. The matter
is now opflonal with the towns, but
in the opinion of persous who have
given the matter considerable at-
tention the {dea of.making It com-
pulsory is favoret.—Good Roads
sae
‘The Eraberg, Austria's ‘ron moun-
tain, will furnish ore ‘or 1,000
,; more years.
SELLS Hild BLOOD
AT BARGAIN RATE
Man Charees $10 to Give Up
15 Ounces of Life Fluid to -
Save Boy's Life.
PATIENT'S FATHER GLOSES DEAL
‘Transfusion Operation is Made as
cr and Seller Waa Struck--Siau
and Boy Eyed Each Other During
Oieration,
Operation,
New . York City.—Human blood
went at bargain-counter prices in
Bellevue Hospital when for $10 %
guest of Mills Hotel No. 3 sold fif-
teen ounces of his life fluid, thereby
probably saving the life of John Den-
nison, 15 years old, a patient suffer-
ing from malignant growth on the
right leg. There was nothing herole
about the manner in which the man
sold his blood. It was purely a bus-
{ness proposition. The Mills Hotel
man needed the ten-spot'and felt he
could spare the blool. The father
of the patient, tho gh poor, felt he
could spare the $10 in view of bis
son's need for the fres> “ood.
Striking a bargain between buyer
and seller was easy. Dennison’s fath-
er went to MilJs Hotel No, 3 and
announced he was in the market for
human blood. He explatned that his
son was {n Bellevue Hospital and
that the surgeons’ were anrious to
transfuse the blood of a healthy per
son into the body of the boy.
“The doctors want a strong man
who {s healthy in every way,” the
father explained.
A guest registered as Mark Owen,
who refused to tell anything further
about himself, stepped forward, and
remarked he would lke to know
more about it.
Big, broad-shouldered, with the
glow of? health in bis cheeks, he
looked as If he would pass the teat of
the physicians.
“T guess you'll do,” sald Dennison.
“How much blood do you want!
casket! Owen.
“Fifteen ounces.”
“How much do I get?”
“Ten dollars.”
“I'm your man,” and the bargain
was struck. The rate was 66 2-3
cents an onuco.
Up to Bellevue Hospital marched
Dennison and Owen. The surgeons
examined the man who was willing
to sell fifteen ounces of his blood for
$10, and told him he would do. The
nature of the operation then was ex-
plained to him.
He was told that the patient was
suffering from what fs known as sa
coma, a malignant growth. To save
the boy’s life {t was necessary to take
from his body about sixteen ounces
of the impure blood and transfuse in
the body sbout fifteen ounces of
healthy flutd.
“I don’t ‘want to be chloroformed
during the operation,” Owen sald,
“No anaesthetics will be given,”
replied one of the surgeons. “We'll
deaden the pain by an injection of
cocaine."
“Go ahead,” sald Owen, “I'm
ready." -
Dennison was placed on the op
erating table and Owen was laid om
another table. Between the two was
& narrow table upon which the boy
and the man each placed an arm.
The sutgeons made an Incision In
the boy’s upper arm and blood was
permitted to fow from the upper
part of the median vein, while the
lower part was closed. In this way
the boy was relleved of about slx-
teen ounces of his {mpure and un-
nourished blood. An incision then
was made In the forearm of the man.
The surgeons rapidly connected the
lower Igament of the man’s radial
artery with the upper veln of the
boy’s arm, and the blood of the man
began to pass Into the body of the
doy.
Dennison and Owen watched each
other coolly throughout the opera
tion, Not a whimper came from the
boy, not @ groan from the man,
When the operation was over the
boy's temperature showed marked
improvement.
Owen was weak after the operm
tion. He took a stimulant and ther
left the hospital, not forgetting, o:
course, to collect his $10- befor
leaving. ‘
BURGLARS' GAZETTE 1N RUSSIA.
ews Of the “Craft.”
St. Petersburg.—A “trade paper”
for burglars {s now published in St.
Petersburg. It 1s called the ““Bostat~
ska Gazette,” or the “‘Barefooted
Gazette’—the title betng apparently
an Illusfon-to the stealthy ways of its
readers.
‘The paper contains full reports of
the latest thefts and burglaries, artl-
cles by experts on the art of bur
guary and what to avold in pursuing
ait, and columns of advice and hints
to help the beginner. Naturally the
paper {s published In strict secrecy,
but the police will sooner or later
discover its printing office and. sup
press it,
Péris Abates a Nuisance.
| The Paris prefect of police has de
cided that in future no more licenses
; to play barrel organs tn that city wild
De granted.
a= a
aC a —3 ee a
Sma’ ora
Bere eee ee
eee ee ee ee
ied Deas a ete
a a ae
at Mg le pase BG
ote Gomme ts " “a
SICK AND pe INSUR-
ANCE UP TO $25.00 PER WEEK
WHOLE LIFE INSURANCE ON
VERY LIBERAL TERMS
PAYABLE ONE HOUR AFTER DEATH.
AMERICAN HOME LIFE INSURANCE CO,,
FIFTH and G Streets N. W. * , Washington, D. C
WORTH ADVERTISING FOR.
here are 5,499 Negroes empfoyed 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 thiscity would refuse ‘to get the big
end of it did they but realize how much money the Negroes are real-
ly spending. LAL uha G8 ting Bs
Now The Bee is the only Negro publication in this city. It stands
without a rival or competitor, anckovers' the field like a blanket. If
a few of the merchants in this city will patronize the advertising col-
umns 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 collars — will assume that by pat
‘ronizing « 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 thre milions of dollars received ans
spent by the Negtoes 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 apprecia-
‘tive Negroes spend their over three millions of dollars with you.
Now is the time to advertise in Thé Bee, the newspaper that goes
into every Negro home jn Washington. Remember, merchants of
Washington, it’s what adyertising Pays yotl, not what it costs.
rym igi dpe Be lp N og vd
DEATH TRAP* FOR BIRDS.
Lighthouses on the Maine Coast At
tract and Kill Thousands.
One of the keepers who came ashore
from Boon Island recently tells the
story of the strange death encoun-
tered by thousands of the migrat-
ing birds every spring. Flying along
the coast at night they are instantly
attracted by the, powerful Nght from
the watch tower! as moths are drawn
to a candle. Thousands of these
birds in their passage north fly with
full force against the thick glass of
the brilllantly lighted lantern,
Stunned to death they fall”to the
rocks below or scale away for a lit-
tle distance and flutter helplessly in-
to the water. The light of morning
sometimes reveals the rocks covered
with the Ittle creatures whose. joure
ney to their summer homes has met
this sudden and fatal termination.
Hundreds of species are found
among the unfortunate little tour-
{sts. Bost of them are easlly rec-
ognized as belonging to the various
common classes of song birds, But
very often large birds of beautiful
plumage come to their final resting
place in this manner upon the bleak
Tocks, of Boon Island.) On one occa-
sion several years ago the thick
glass of the lantern was shivered to
atoms by the impact of some strange
bird of powerful bill—York Tran-
script.
Fires Started by Moths.
Moths and flames are universally
connected, yet few people suspect
that danger could arise -therefrom.
Tho Insects are of,such frall struc-
ture that generally they get destroy-
ed before ft is possible for them
to-{nfllct Injury, and it ts hardly
creditable that the wings would Ig-
nite and retain the flames long
enough to enable the moth to fly to
{ts surroundings.
That, however, has occurred, The
moth was a yéry large one and its
wings must have been very dry, so
that when it floundered through the
flame it set fire to one wing and
darted out to a curtain nearby which
at once flared up. It {s possible that
many summer evening fires In the
country could be attributed to «
source of this kind. It 1s notorious
that mysterfous fires often arise at
sunset in the hot months.—Strané
Magazine.
As History Micht Be Tanght.
Another way of teaching history
which the schools might adopt has
apparently not appealed to them. A
good newspaper, {f tho teacher
knows how to Interpret Its dally rec-
ord, may stimulate an interest In
history itself. If the pupil can be
taught the continuity and relation of
events, an awakened interest in the
dally happenings will arouse a de-
| sire to trace them back through pre-
ceding stages. It is the break In
, continuity between the past and the
immediate present that deadens en-
thusiasm. By studying history
backward from the immediate pres-
ent this chasm would be bridged
and the passion for tracing to cause
atimulated.—Boston Transcript. .
.
«=F ge ie.
* Massachusetts has a town of 600
Inhabitants which receives $2,670
annually from a single hotel for Il-
cense to sell iquor. This.is believed
to be the/highest Ilcense fee pald In
the United States. The fee fs nearly
double the amount pald in Boston
and other large cities,
The Fastidious Burglar,
Visitors at a Parls hotel were dis-
agreeably surprised one morning to
find that thé boots they had left out-
side their doors had been stolen by
a burglar. Only one pair was left,
on which was a paper with the
words; “Not good enough for me.”
Value of Three Grains.
The Vienna Academy of Science has
spent nearly $9,000 in working 10
tons of uranium ore for radium.
The yield was three grains of pure
radium, the largest amount ever se-
cured at once, the,value being $320,-
000, .
Cave fae Sleenleamnees.
Sleeplessness is often caused by
the head being exposed to tne cold,
while thezrest of the body {s warm.
In nine cases out of ten if the head
Is covered with a allk handkerchief.
ft will Induce sleep.
The population of the world !s now
estimated to be about 1,503,000,000.
Of this number 150,000,000 are
black, 600,000,000 yellow and 755,
000.000 white.
ee g
Mme. Davis,
my. @
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Pte ee Segoe. 3
BORN CLAIRVOYANT
AND
CARD READER
TELM ABOUT BUSINESS.
hast
1238 ath St. N.W., Washington, D. €
Gives Lack to AIL
N. BONo Ieters answered enlem
accompanied by stamp.
N. B.—Mention The Bee. ,
A Hich L'cense,
Worlds Population.
STRATHGICAL USES OF Tans,
‘The Clever Little ‘Weasel and Hie
Means of Defense.
Take another of our animals, 9
force Uttle weasel, clad in summer
in a coat of brown, In winter turn-
Ing white, but always with a jet black
Up to the tall. The ermine, as it is
Incorrectly called in Its winter coat,
bas an easy time of !t, sneaktag cpom
the mice and birds upon which if
Preys, bat when a hawk takes after
{t In an open field In the sunlight on
ar owl in the moonlight, it would
Rave but short shrift with all its
sinuous leaping, were it not that the
Diack tall tip ts so conspicuous that
it constantly attracts the eye and al-
lows the pure white of the body te
be confused with the snow. Brea
when we place a dead weasel on the
snow and look at It from « distance,
we realize how true this fs, and how
valuable must be the pencil tufts of
Diack halrs to this little vermin
who spends his life in hunting or
being hunted.—The Outing Maga
sine.
Everyone of Them a Bird.
A current newspaper item fa as
follows: “The wife of a Methodist
mintster In West Virginia, has been
married three times. Her maiden
name wes Partridge; her first hus-
band was named Robin; her second
husband, Sparrow; and the present
one’s name fs Quayle. There are
tow two young Robins, one Sparrow,
and three little Quaylea In the family.
One grandfather was a Swan, and
another was a Jay; but he's desd
and now a bird of Paradise,
“They live on Hawk-are., Eagle-
ville, Canary Islands, and the fellow
who wrote this article {s a lyre bird
and an Interesting relative of the
family.”
Arctic Dog Life.
_ Nowhere in the world hag the dog
such unrestricted right of way as ia
our most northerly possession—
Alaska. In winter, when the more
than 60,000 square miles of territory
‘are sealed up In solid !ce, dogs are
almost the sole means of getting
from place to place—in fact, they
seem necessary to life iteelf. .
The aristocrats of Arctic dog life
are the mall teams in the service of
the United States Government. They
are to-day a superior breed te the
dogs employed some half dozen
Years ago before great gold discor-
erles demanded Increased mal! ser
vice.—S8t Nicholas.
Names that Don't Name
Many chemical names convey 20
exact {dea of the things they stand
for. Oil ef vitriol ts no oll, nelther
are oils of turpeatine and kerosere.
Copperas {s an fron compound and
cantalns no copper. Salts of lemon.
1s the extremely potsonous oxalle
acid. Carbolic acid is not on acid
bat an sicohol. Cobalt contains
none of that metal but arcensic. Soda
water bas no trace of soda, and sux
gar of lead has no sugar; cream of
tartar has pothing of cream, ror milz
of lime any milk. German silver
has no silver and blacklead no lead.
Dogs Around Blacksmith Shops.
Two or three dogs are nearly ab
ways to be found loafing about every
blacksmith shop. This fact Is s0
well recognized that détectives when
-sent out after valuable dogs that
have been lost Invariably visit first
all the blacksmith shops iz the neigh-
borhood. The reason why dogs visit
the Diacksmith shops !s that they
love {nordiaately the odor and the
taste of burning hoets. They salf
the odor as a woman sniffs & rees,
and they eat the hoof parings au a
gourmet eats trafies.—Minneapelis
Journal.
Sapply of Geld.
It ts malaly from Africa, Ameri.
ca and Australia that the world
draws {ts supply ef gold, some $400,-
000,000 worth won regularly every
year, Africa leads with about $150,-
009,086; next comes the United
States with about $35,600,000; Aus-
tralia reaks third with some $85,-
000,000, while Russia, both in Zu-
rope and Asia, Mexico, Cazads and
several other countries, make up the
remainder.
A Long Steep.
‘An astonishing trance case bas
come to Hght in Berlin. A clerk,
aged 46—a healthy normal maz—
suddenly fell asleep In June 1904.
All efforts to awaken hina were un-
successful and the sleeper since then
has never opened his eyes. He
breathes regularly and swallows his
food mechanically, but !s tnsensible
to the severest attempts to arouse
him.
Lace Curtains.
Lace inuow curtains should ak
ways Le soaked for an hour {n cold
water to which x little borar has
been added, before being put Into
warm sods. This ete owt the
smoky smell that is sometimes s0
noticeable In curtains that bare
have been used in « city.
Ife In Germany.
Every one who has travelled in
Germany {3 famillar with the word
“verboten"—forbidden. He finds it
fs verboten to almost everything
which he thinks he has-been accus
tomed to de in the United States—
Chicago Standard.
A Valuable Relic.
A thirteenth century copper and
ailt clboriam, supposed to have come
from Malmesbury abbey. was sold
by auction fa London for $38,000,
ENTE | 2 GREAT OFFERs |
- & Ak. Ke ge Beg tl mp x ¥ ~) & wats 7 as te RE sg _ * . yw eye ‘i
About Good Roads.
»
COMPANIES DISOBEYED THE LAW"
Drimes Committed Now Are by.
Gango Hiding Eehind Name of Old
Association Which Caused the
Abolishment of the Turnpike Com-
panics.
Leutsville, Ky.—There bas not
a, It fs safd, a crime of mob vio-
mca committed In this State, in
mnesaee, or, in fact, in any of the
cuthern States or in any of the
Ciddle Western States In the past
eral years, with the exception of
he eccasional lynching of 2 negro
& mob, that has not been should-
4 on the Night Riders.
The Night Riders were an organ-
d body back tn 1200, when the
tate Legislature passed 2 law do-
bac away with private ownership of
tate reads. For months the turn-
o Corporations refused to obey
Phe Sate laws. They appealed to
State Supreme Court, then to
be Court ef Appeals, and lastly to
e United States Supreme Court,
4 on each appeal they would get
stay, which made !t possible for
e to continue running thelr toll
and charging two cents 2 mile
every herve er vehicle that passed
their prorerty.
Becavee of the law's delay the
ttien ef the roads became tm-
ibe. The ewners of the turn-
Ces would met expend ene cent
fmprevements a4 long as there
qeoction ef their lesing thelr
ty by a inal court decision,
they d[d met cease te mulct trav-
5 All thig whfle they refused
accept the fair price effered by
e Btate for their reads.
Tt was then that the Might Riders
re ergeained. The erganization
4 trem Shelby Ceunty to every
ef the tate, an€ ene night In
Jate fall men rode frem their
os aad began burning toll gates.
fa ne recerd sf a tol} gate
being Injured unless he abow-
resistance. Then he was taken
the house, and If he continued
be defart he wae flogred. In
teety-nine cases eut of a hundred
6 Sele gute keeper was glad to give
Als fob and let the cate burs.
Night Riders andowdtedly breught
turnpike corporations to ternts.
ere was not 2 toll gate left stand-
fz the State of Keatucky dy the
Mowing spring. Had: tke taxpay
aad farmers been cantented to
New the law to take its never end-
course the chances are that tel!
tes would still be holding ep tra
om the State roads to-day,
4 that the roads would have been
© now than they were when the
t Riders became organized.
The Kentucky roads now are
mong thé best in the United States.
here are not millions of dollars of
tered stock on which to pay iut-
rest, and the State tax has mprov-
4 them and even made it possible
cr almost all of them to be sprin-
cled with ofl during the summer
on, thus laying the dust.
The success of the Night Riders
the he toll gates led to
n organization of a similar char
cter when the fight was waged
net the American Tobacco Com-
ny. But out of this last organira-
on there grew a body of violent
a, who live on excitement and
hrive on lawlessness. Then sprang
Pp, too, Iawleax bodies of men In
pany of the Southern and Middle
Western States, who chose to Call
emselvea Night Riders, though the
robabilities are that 99 per cent. of
@ men didn’t own so much az &
jeree to ride.
If a Met ef the original body of
Might Riders could be had the
hantes are that the names of mary
nen who figured In the operations
the old Ku-Klux gang would be
and, and If this Iist were sifted
n it would show that many prop-
owners and men of prominence
4 resorted to violence Lecause ef
ir belef that action was thelr
safeguard against ruin, and
it a Geflance of law had to be met
a like defiance.
Payche Knot 2 Life Saver,
Altoona, Pa.—Haring washed and
ed her halr, Mary Housner, aged
atetwo, did it up in a Psyche
and walked out op the front
While she leaned against
yelling it gave way and she was
tated backward, head first,
feet to the sidewalk, alfghting
her head. The colffure broke the
of her bead against the fiag-
eg, but she did net entirely ee
pe injury.
She suffered a slight concussion
the brain, but recovered censcious-
a few hours later. :
Old Age Common in Rechefort.
Paris, France—Rochetort seems
‘ben great town for longevity. In-
tien of the records reveals the
that during the last century
m January 1, 1801, to December
, 1900, 144 persons im Rochefort
od the age of 80 . Two
these ware outa, on
the age of 100, ant the
éyiag m 106.
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Do not delay. Cut out this coupon and mail it today.
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THe LEADING PLACE IN THE CITY FOR
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OYSTER’S BUTTER IS THE SWEETEST IN THE MAR-
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FRESHEST. s
_ SQUARE STANDS, CENTER MARKEI, 5TH AND K
STREETS, NORTHWEST, AND RIGGS MARKET.
OFFICE 2
WHOLESALE DEALER AND SALESMAN, 900 AND 902
PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, NORTHWEST. bis
SS
M. HENNESSY ~—
Buffet and Restaurant. The Best place in the city for hot
lunches and dinner. 216 Ninth Street, Northwest.
NEW YORK CANDY KITCH-
EN, 1506 SEVENTH STREET,
NORTHWEST.
SPECIAL CANDIES.
10 CENTS PER POUND, 3
POUNDS FOR 25 CENTS.
MIXED FANCY CHOCO-
LATES,
15 CENTS PER POUND.
2 POUNDS FOR 25 CENTS.
ICE CREAM
30 CENTS PER QUART, $1.00
PER GALLON.
1505 yTH STREET, NORTH-
WEST.
E VOIGT
If yeu want something in thhe jew"
elry line, Catholic Bibles, or any-
thing as 2 Christmas gift to friends,
tead the advertisement of E. Voigt
in another column of The Bee. This
is one of the most reliable places in
the city, where you may obtain the
genuine article,
Mr. Voigt is 2 man of the most ac-
commodating disposition. Treat him
tigit and ke will do likewise,
‘ONE TEST FOR PEARLS,
Berlin Hotel Porter's Experiment
That Was Not a Success.
The porter of one of the leading
Berlin hotels has just had a curious
aaventure, Some time ago a dealer
in pearls who was stopping at the
hotel told him an infallible way to
distinguish real pearls from false,
which wag to put them on the
ground and stamp on them. If real
they wauld resist the test, H false
they wanld be crushed, .
The Serter, however, nover had a
chance of putting this theory to the
test until a few days ago. The dt-
rector of a well known company in
Berlin, while dining at the hotel,
lost a valuable pearl pin. This was
found by the waiter, who gave ff to
the porter to return to Its owner.
The porter saw his opportunity
had come at last to test the quality
of e pearl. He put the pin on the
ground, placed his heel on tt and
ground it to a powder. When the
owner arrived to claim it there was
& somewhat stormy scene, but he
was good natured enough to consent
to say no more about the affair on
the porter refunding half the raiue
ef the pim, 600 marks, fm futuse
the porter will submit any jewelry
he may find for expert owaion.
This Offer of The Washington Bee Will Appeal Especially tc
Women | 3
SELF-TIGHTENING SHEARS -
4 __, REDE :
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igre gt ONice, TIOg Eye'Street, northwest, and see this
“Self-Tightening Shear.” You never saw anything like it,
ABSOLUTELY FREER
HOW WHEN WHY = To Get a Pair, 3
1—Bring us one NEW subscriber, paid one year in advance; o
three NEW subscribers, each paid three months in advance,
2—RIGHT NOW because this is an excellent offer and in al
Probability our supply will soon be exhausted.
3—Because it costs you nothing—it is impossible to buy then
—if you could the Shears would cost you about $1.50.
Do not delay. Cut out this coupon and mail it today.
The Washington Bee Publishing Co.,
1109 Eye Street, Washington, D. C. * --
Enclosed herewith Please find $2.00 for which please send m
for one year, The Washington Bee, and at once, free, postag:
paid, one Pair of Self-Tightening Shears, as advertised. *-
Name sheet tees eeecenceceesees Address LACLOSadlemregwowewens
Name Tt tte ce eeeeeeen eres ees AUPeSS Lo. ceeccesnececeeenes
Name cette WRN S aw ew amend Pees SRA SEES USS RiAReERRR
" > oe
* 1
ouis J. Kessel,
: 4
‘importer of anu Wholesale Dealer in
me
AND .
= =
whiskies
fefe Owner of the......
| fee Following tsranass
Peivate Stock, :
Old Reserve,
Yernrt -
: + Oxford,
* ‘rem3st
zs TENTH SKEET, N. W.
Tetenhons —Ma n—165
OW. n
Wn. Cannon
GET THE BEST.
Old Purissima Whiskey is a
compound of pure grain and free
from harmful impurities. Guar-
anteed under the Pure Food and
Deug Act, June 30, 1906,
Sold by William Carman, 1225
wth street, northwest. Phone.
North, 528.
CHAS. H JAVINS & SONS,
FISH
POULTRY AND OYSTER
DEALERS,
930 C STREET NORTHWEST,
AND
CENTER MARKET.
PHONE, MAIN 4480
WASHINGTON, D. C.
the largest in the city. Theer is no
excuse for the housewife; she is in
a position to call and make her own
selection.
Every husband should see that his
wife is datisfied before the beginning
of the New Year.
JAMES H. HUDNELL.
Mr. James H. Hudnell, one o
the best known business men it
this city has returned to Castle
berg’s National Jewelry Co.
935 Penne. Ave, N. W. Mr
Hudnell can always be relic
upon to give you the genuine
article, Now is the time to plact
your orders before the holidays
Phone. Main 2363.
Address 2009 th street northwest
|
VELV-INE |
WILL GIVE.YOU SMOOTH
SILKEN TRESSES.. THE
MOST OBSTINATE HAIR
YIELDS TO IT, KEEPS THE
SCALP HEALTHY, PRE-
VENTS DANDRUFF AND
FALLING HAIR. EASY TO
USE. SEND 25 CENTS FOR
MONTH’S SUPPLY, PRE-
PAID TO ANY ADDRESS,
M. MAYO—CIRCUIT ROAD,
—NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. |
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.
ee ,,,,_______
Things are going in a rush at the
drug store of Board & McGuire 291254
14th St. N. W. Best up-town store to
buy fine Candies, perfumery, cigars
and toilec articles, as well as drugs
and medicines of the best quality, _
WED DEATH IN DESERT,
ae 2
Los Angeles, Cal.—Water, if I
could only find water! I'm suffering
terribly rom hunger. To-day T ate
some green brush, but I can't ge say
more. I vonder how long It will
take to dte~
These ents in the notebook of
B. T. Pratt, whose body‘ was found
on the desert {n Inyo county by twe
Proepectors, give pathetic evidence
of the suffering the man underwent
as he watched the approach of death
far from brman habitation. The
dlacy also was found by G. W. Lewis
and 8. E. Shattuck, the prospectors
while on g trip through the Argus
Mountains in Inyo county. Pratt had
been dead nearly two months., He
was evidently trying ~. reach the
mouatains, where he aew he would
find food ef a sort and water tn
Abundance, but within sight of his
refuge he gave out and could go mv
further. Pratt was sixty years old.
The entries In the notebook were
scribbled and began only when the
man foynd he was In danger of dy-
Ing.
“Food gave out to-day; guess 1
can make Argus,” was the entry for
August 3, seven days after he had
started to cross the desert. “Water
gone,” told the story of the follow
ing day.
For one whole day he went with-
out water or food, but maintained
an optimistic spirit, as is witnessed
by the following entry for Augut 61
“Signs of water about half mile
ahead. There will be green stuf
.there too. Will reach it early in
the morning.” But evidently .the
usert was playing tricks on him, as
% so often does by means of a mir
age. Two days later came the twe
entries quoted frst. The last entry
reads:—
“I deft Grapeville, Inyo county,
Cal., July 38. Tom Spratt teld me
I wouSd perish. I thought I could
make f{t, but got lost, so guess I
will have to gtve in. I have ne
water, nothing to eat and can’t wulk.
I have brothers, C. H. Pratt, at Ban-
ner Springs, Wysndotte ceuaty,
Kax.; E. B. Pratt, in 8t. Louts, and
W. R. Pratt, Custer county, Wye-
wing.”
LONGEST AUTO FREIGHT LINZ.
Oars Will Oarry 27 Paseengers aad
1@ Tens of Freight.
Bpokane, Waah.—What fs belisved
te be the longest automobile freight
and passenger stage line om the com
tinent {s In eperation between Ore-
ville and Brewster ja Obenegaa
Oounty, Wash., connecting with a
steamer line ts Wenatchee.
‘The Ine bas two 60-herse power
cars, which will carry tweaty-sevea
passengers and ten tons of frpight,
making ths run of eighty miles ia
eight hours. The trip by wagoa oo-
‘cupies almost two days. Branch
Hnes will also be established te
ether points in the Okanogan coum
try. The other line is between Mar
cus and Kettle Falls im Stevens
County, north of Spokakne, connect-
ing with = steamer to Spokane Falls.
‘These cars will be of twenty-fire
and thirty horse power, respectively.
¥. L. Barney has charge of the auto
mobile line, while Capt. Bruce A.
Griggs, & veteran river: man, will
eperate the steamer line. .
HAS A RABBIT PLAGUE
Bold Cottontails Destroy Orops o2.
Oaltfornia Ranches.
San Fraaciaco, Cal.—lack rabbits
gre said to be so numerous im the
Aatelope valley of California that
the ranchmen are in despair, Phe
animals are becoming so flerce Vat
they are actually breaking dowa the
fences around the adjacent fields and
eating crops down to the roots. Not
content with this, they are swarm-
ing into the desert towns and tm
yading front yards of the dwellers.
Citizens ef Lancester turaed cat
recently and made a round-up. They
put up a fence across the road be-
tween fences surroundiag fields on.
each side and in short time drove in
and killed: with clubs five hundred
Jack rabbits.
EAGLE KILLS A SHARK. :
@hip's Crew Witness Desperate Fight
in Chesapeake Bay.
Baltimore.—A remarkable com
Bat between « large eagle and.@
shark was witnessed recently by
Captain Headersom anu che crew of
the steamer Tangier in Chesapeake
Bay. When coming out of Occohan-
nock Creek they saw the eagle dive
and come to the oe whh a
shark. Then followed » Reree strug-
gle, the shark pulling the eagle ua-
der the water uati] It was almost
exhausted. The Ssh was Ssally kil-
Ted aad floated dead on the water.
Members of the steamer’s crew
put off im a small boat and captured
the eagle, elthough it clawed them
Tepeatedly aad its mate, hovering
@lose by, tried to attack them.
Sbot an Albino Bquirrel.
Marquette, Mich.—While huatiag
ear Grand Marais, Gustay Herbert
shot and killed an albino squirret.
It has been presented to James
Cairas, of Grand Marais, and will be
mounted. Albino deer are eccasten-
ally killed in upper Michigaa, but
this Is the first time of whieh ther
fa recerd that ‘a white squirrel bes
‘bese bagaed
I. M. KING, ATTORNEY SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS-
TRIC OF COLUMBIA
MOLDING A PROBATE COURT
No. 15802,
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 on the estate of James W. Davis, 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 beofre the 1st day of March, A. D. 1910, otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 1st day of March, 1909,
Mary J. Davis,
1738 New York avenue.
Register of Wills for the District of Columbia. Clerk of the Probate Court.
L. M. King. Attorney.
M. T. CLINKSCALES,
ATTORNEY.
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
George H. Getts, et al, Trustees,
etc., Complainants, vs., Rosa W.
Cash, et al, Defendants.
Equity No. 28,397.
The object of this suit is to have a decree passed herein to Reform a certain Deed from Sumner S. Kirk to Frank S. Bakewell, trustee, to the following described real estate, situated in the City of Washington, District of Columbia, to-wit:
Part of lot Numbered Thirteen (13), in Square Numbered One thousand and ten (1010), beginning for the same at the Northeast angle of said lot, thence West Ninety (90) feet, thence South Forty-four (44) feet, thence East Ninety(90) feet, and thence North Forty-four (44) feet to the place of beginning.
Upon motion of Complainants, it is, by the Court, this 16th day of April, A. D. 1909, Ordered: That the defendants, George W. Kirk, John L. Kirk, William H. Kirk, James F. Kirk, Amanda J. Deal and Mary E. Jones, if living, and if any such be dead their and each of their unknown heirs, alienees, devisees, assignes or their executors or administrators, cause their appearance to be entered herein on or before the fortieth day exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the day of the first publication of this Order; otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default: Provided a copy of this order be published once a week for three successive weeks in The Washington Law Reporter and The Bee.
Job Barnard. Justice.
A True Copy.
Test:
J. R. Young, Clerk, by F. E. Cunningham, Assistant Clerk.
HUGHES AND GRAY,
ATTORNEYS
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
HOLDING: PROBATE COURT
Estate of James H. Smith, Deceased.
No. 15883
Application having been made herein for probate of the last will and testament of said deceased, and for letters of administration cum testamento annexo on said estate, by James H. Smith, it is trdered this seventh day of April, A. D., 1909, that George Clinton Smith and all others concerned, appear in said Court on Wednesday, the 12th day of May, A. D., 1909, at 10 o'clock A. M., 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—first publication to be not less than thirty days before said return day.
Wright, Justice.
James Tanner,
Register of Wills for the District of
Columbia, Clerk of the Probate
Court.
Hughes and Gray, Attorneys.
For Sale to Colored Parties, desirable property near Dupont Circle. Rents $160 per month. Only $6,000 required,—$10,000 secured by Trust. 'Address D. F. S., Bee Office.
JAMES F. BUNDY AND IRVING WILLIAMSON, ATTORNEYS SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA HOLDING PROBATE COURT Estate of Zachary Carter, Deceased. No. 15857.
Administration Docket 39. Application having been made herein for probate of the last will and testament of said deceased, and letters testamentary (with the said will annexed) on said estate, by Willian Carter, it is ordered this 22nd day of March A. D., 1909, that Charles Carter, John M. Carter, Nellie A. Carter, Charles T. Carter, Walter O. Carter, Johanna A. Carter, Wendell P. Carter, Gertie V. Carter, Adelaide Carter, Sarah Elizabeth Carter, William Brown, William L. G. Carter, Louisa M. Carter, George A. Carter, Sarah B. Carter and Carrie Brown and all others concerned, appear in said Court on Monday, the 26th day of April, A. D., 1909, at 10 o'clock A. M., 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 thirty days before said return day.
Wright, Justice
Attest:·
James Tanner.
Register of Wills for the District of
Columbia. Clerk of the Probate
Court.
James F. Bundy, Irving Williamson,
Attorneys.
E. M. HEWLETT ATTORNEY.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS-
TRICT OF COLUMBIA
TRICT OF COLUMBIA.
HOLDING PROBATE COURT.
No.15472
Estate of John Moore, Deceased. Application having been made herein for probate of the last will and testament of said deceased, and for letters testamentary on said estate, by Cornelius Johnson, it is ordered this 6th day of May, A. D., 1909, that Temple Moore, Alexander Moore and Peter Moore, and all others concerned, appear in said Court on Wednesday, the ninth day of June, A. D., 1909, at 10 o'clock A. M., 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 thirty days before said return day. Wright, Justice.
James Tanner, Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court. E. M. Hewlett, Attorney.
A C. JOY
CONFECTIONERY
Wedding and Fancy Cakes.
714 Seventh St., N. W., and 433
Seventh St. S. W.
Washington, D. C.
ROBERT ALLEN
Buffet and Family Liquor Store
Phone North 2340
1917 4th Street, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
RELIGIOUS SHOWS
Dr. Richardson, the Religious Show King, of moving pictures, having expended more than $250.00 for fireproof cabinet, automatic machine and electric fixtures, to satisfy the new
fire law, is now ready to make dates to show in all churches, with all new pictures. His name alone means success. Very liberal terms. Call or write, 2310 F treet, northwest. Phone.
Visit The Best
One of the leading places in the city is that of Samuel G. Stewart, 1141 Seventh street northwest (between L and M streets), Washington, D. C. Wines, Liquors, etc. Phone, N 4117.
HOLTMAN'S
OLD STAND
FINE BOOTS AND SHOES
Ford's Hair Pomade
Is Your Hair E
air Beautiful Soft, Silky and Long?
Is Your Hair Beautiful
Soft, S
NELS
pomade
It makes your hair
tangled hair as c
It keeps it from
and gives it tha
Use Nelson's
Your head will be clean.
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the finest hair pomade on the face of the face for colored people. It makes your hair grow fast! it makes stubborn, kinky and tangled hair as soft and supple as silk. It makes it healthy. It keeps it from splitting or breaking off. It makes it rich and gives it that charm so longed for by all true ladies.
Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never have dandruff. Will keep clean. The roots of your hair will have the necessary help disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Dressing is put up in handsome four-square tin boise, like the lady holds in her hand. Druggists and box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it now, or all right down and write us. Address
ACTURING CO., Richmond, Va.
ed.
Write Quick for Terms.
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up
agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can
you a full size box postpaid. Go and buy it now, or set it
NELSON MANUFACTURING
Live Agents Wanted.
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handsome four-sence square tn boxes, like the lady holds in her hand. Druggists and agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail you a full size box postpaid. Go and buy it now, or sit right down and write us. Address
RIOJA CLARET
ing Anouso's Table Wine.
Delicious taste, exquisite bouquet. Grand Prix, Paris, 1900
$6 doz. bottle; $6.50 24 half botles. Sole Distributer.
CHRISTIAN X
Qualit
House: CLO 77*
HOUSE AND HERRMAN Accidents sometimes happen by babies getting their heads caught in the ordinary crib. This "Safety Crib" has the fillers set close together to guard against such accident. The sides, which raise and lower, are also unusually high. This crib is artistically designed, has woven wire springs and excellent white enamel. If you want the safest and best crib, by all means buy the Safety. Our
When in Doubt, Buy of HOUSE AND HERRMANN 7th and I (Eye) Sts. N. W.
Straighten Your Hair
DEAR SIRS:—I have used only one bottle of your pomade and now I would not be without it, for it makes my hair soft and straight and easy to crumb and also suits a new growth.
MRS. W. E. WALKER SIRS
(Formerly known as Ozonized Ox Marrow)
Fifty years of success has proved its merits. The use of Ford's Hair Pomade made stubborn, harsh, kinky or curly-hair straight, and easy to comb, and arrange in any style desired. It grows to its length. Removes and prevents dandruff.
Dedicately perfumed, its use is a pleasure, as ladies of refinement everywhere declare. Ford's Hair Pomade has imitators. Don't buy anything else alleged to be "just as good." If you want the best results, buy the best Pomade—it will pay on. Look for this name
on every package.
If your drugs need supply you with the
genuine, we will send you
One bottle regular size for - - - - $.50
Three bottles " " - - - - 1.40
Six - - - - - - - - 2.50
One bottle small - - - - - - - - 2.50
We pay postage and express charges to all points
in U.S.A. When ordering send Postal or Express
foryou One All orders shipped promptly on
receipts of price. Address
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co,
in East Hartford St. Chicago, Ill.
FORD'S HALL MADE is made only in Chicago
by the above firm.
Agents Wanted Every where.
E. MURRAY
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ICE CREAM AND CONFECTIONS. OYSTERS IN SEASON. 1216 YOU STREET, NORTHWEST. PHONE. NORTH 908.
OLD MADE NEW.
If you want your clothing cleaned, altered or repaired, you should send a card or call at the up-to-date repair establishment. All work guaranteed or money refunded. J. C. Colvin, Proprietor, 614 D street, northwest.
Would wealthy colored gentleman like a refined, educated and talented gentleman as a companion? If so, address W. J. Waistill, care of The Bee, Washington, D. C.
491 Penn. ave., N. W.]
OUR $2.50 AND $3 SHOES ARE
THE BEST MADE.
SIGN OF THE BIG BOOT
WM. MORELAND, PROP.
J. D. O'CONNOR, Union Bar, and Union Goods. Yellow Keystone Pure Rye Whiskey. J. D. O'CONNOR'S BUFFET, Cor. Seventh and P Sts. N. W.
Tel. Lincoln 2959
All kinds of hair cleaned Wgs, braids, pompadours, puffs, and curls made to order. 80r East Capito Wash, D. C.
THE ONLY UP TO DATE HAIR DRESSING PARLOR IN THE CITY FOR COLORED LADIES. SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT. ELECTRIC FACIAL AND SCALP MASSAGE. MANICURING, SHAMPOOING, ELECTRIC HAIR DRYING. HAIR CULTURE A SPECIALTY. ALL WORK DONE IN SEPARATE APARTMENTS.
DAVIS & THORN, 1403 & 1405 T STREET NORTH WEST.
BURNSTINE LOAN OFFICE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, GUNS, MECHANICAL TOOLS, LADIES' AND GENTS' WEARING APPAREL. OLD GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT. 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.
WANTED.
We have an exceptional proposition to offer a Genteel colored man who has extensive acquaintance among departmental and District Government employees. Address Box C, Bee 110g Eye St., N. W.
Does it comb easily without breaking?
Is it straight?
Does it smooth out nicely?
Can you do it up in any of the charming styles, so it will stay, and make you proud of it?
Is it long and full of life?
If you cannot say YES to all of the above questions, then you need
Nelson's
Hair Dressing
THE MAGIC TWO TIMES LARGER THAN PICTURES IT IS 9 IN LENGTH
STEEL MEATING BAR
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER
AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $100
POSTAGE PAID.
SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
Address all letters to Magic Shampoo Drier Co. Minneapolis, Minn.
Mrs. Agnes Smith, 935 R street, northwest, this city, is the agent.
Call or send for the Magic Shampoo and Hair Straightener. 935 R street,
northwest, Washington. D. C.
THE ESSENTIAL PART OF YOUR TOILET IS THE POWDER YOU USE-ELSE YOUR COMPLEXION WILL EITHER SHINE OR BE OILY-AND WIND AND DIRT WILL ROUGHEN AND IRRITATE YOUR SKIN BUT CHOOSE YOUR POWDER WITH CARE-ONE THAT BLENDS PERFECTLY WITH YOUR COMPLEXION ONE OF IMPALPABLE FINENESS. THAT IS RICHARDSON'S HOME MADE TOILET POWDER W. S. RICHARDSON. PURE DRUGS 316 41/2 ST. S. W.
M. H. H.
MR. A. C. HOWARD, OF NEW YORK. Where to Buy Howard's Polish in Washington: WHERE TO BUY HOWARD'S POLISH
CITY HALL LUNCH ROOM Whecnever you want a good lunch go to the City Hall Lunch Room, where you can be served quickly. Polite and accomodating service.
Dr. George Murray
For your Easter goods in the drug line, don't fail to call at the Friend's Drug Store, Second and George W. Murray. D streets, southwest.
THE HUDNELL EUROPEAN PLAN FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS J. H. HUDNELL AND P. D. WASHINGTON, PROPRIETORS Phone, Main 3322. 107 SIXTH STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON, D. C
ODD FELLOW'S CAFE IF YOU WANT A CHOICE LUNCH AND A GOOD DINNER, DON'T FAIL TO VISIT THE ODD FELLOW'S CAFE, 1601 M ST., N. W. NOW UNDER A NEW MANAGEMENT. MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS BOARDING BY DAY, WEEK OR MONTH CHOICE CONFECTIONERIES ICE CREAM, SOFT DRINKS AND CIGARS STUMPH JOHNSON, PRO. TELEPHONE, NORTH 1228.
TO LET
Two nicely furnished rooms for gentlemen, 1742 14th street; also one large room for rent to persons desiring to bring their friends for a pleasant evening. For further information, all N 864, or address A. H. Underdown, 1742 14th street.