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14 THE EVENING STAR, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1900-16 PAGES. = PEEP eee eet tt LANSBURGH & BRO. Washington’s Favorite Store. Some Astonishing Values For Friday’s Selling. Jewelry. Jewelry. We were fortunate enough to secure another lot of Jewelry— but this lot is not so great as the first; but styles are even better than in previous sale. Tomorrow morning at 8 o'clock this purchase of Gold-plated Up-to-date Jewelry will go on sale at 50c. on the dollar. Come early and get the pick. —Plated Cuff Links, Stick Pins, with and without At 4c. —Gold-plated Brdoches, all kinds; Stick Pins, Beauty Pins, Cuff Buttons. Values, from 25c. to jeweled and plain; Link Buttons, Stick and Hat Pins. Values from 25c. to 48c. At 23c. These goods will be found at Jewelr; settings; Collar Buttons, Brooches, enameled and fancy. Value, from 15¢. to 25c. At 8c. ¥ : —Hundreds of styles of Plated Brooches, both At 14c. —Fancy Shirt Waist Sets, Link Buttons, Scarf Pins, Brooches, etc. Values from 48c. to 68c. Dept., Main Entrance. Hebb bbb bbe bbb bbb bbb Unusually Deep Cut in the Price of MERCERIZED LINING. 45c. to 55c. Values of Mercerized Linings Reduced to = = = = = = These Linings are equal to silk in appearance. They are one- quarter the price and wear better than silk. This lot includes every- thing we have in the house in the way of Mercerized Linings— such as Suratine, 40-inch Serge, Italian Cloth, Merceratine, &c., in every desirable shade. Lining Dept. for these goods. Percale Wrapper Special. FOR ONE DAY ONLY. Tomorrow morning we will put on sale 10 dozen $1.00 Wrap- pers, made of fine quality percale,in good washable shades of navy, red and black; in stripes and figures; with fitted waist lining, princess back, full front, with yoke finished, with shoulder capes and braid trim- ming; full width and length skirt, deep hem; all ° Wrapper and Skirt Dept., Second Floor. We Are Agents for the Standard Patterns. Lansburgh & Bro., sizes. Remember the price—for one day only... 420 to 426 7th St. EEEEEEEEEEEE EEL EEEEEEEEEEEEELELEELSE In conjunction with the above wrapper spe- cial we'll offer you for tomorrow 20 dozen serv- iceable House Skirts, made of st iped gingham— full width and length; finished with six-inch ruf- fle at the bottom, gored at the top; yoke with draw string. Special price for one day only..... SEE EE EEE EEE eletolete foe _bebedeededebededeb bob deddbeted debt deseo bebo debited ted ob ob eb ld botob> fobole your business on the merits of our work. prices, linked with pure woolen fabrics, commend our BETTER- ‘ET tailoring to you. Our double purchasing power and com- mercial courage makes it possible for us to buy woolens at lower prices than usually prevail. This benefit in Eaver § ll 5 ing is yours. Hence we make to-order a BETTERYET MERTZ and MERTZ, Betteryet Tailoring, 906 and 908 F St. Baltimore Store, 6 East Baltimore St. KEEP YOUR EVE ON THIS —= WHAT DOES IT MEAN? It Means Your Independence. SEE TOMORROW'S POST. LEER EEE EEE EEE EE EEE EERE EEE EEE EE EEE EEE EEE DEED EE EEE EEE EPPEEEEE ED EDD P EEE EE EEEEEEEEEEALEE EEE EEEE EEE EEE EEE EEE EE EEE EEE EE EEE DEEP ES fe felnetet PRECISE FITTING, good workmanship and _littleness of £ | i i : eek i i : As Fate Would Have It. From the Galveston Dally News. Many years ago an Arkansas youth, on leaving the home of his sweetheart late at night, received a severe kick as he stepped out of the door. His beloved had not re- sponded definitely to his proposal of mar- riage, but had assured him that she would soon let him know what she could do for him. He, unfortunately for two tender hearts, took the kick for an answer and de- parted for a far and wild country. Here be brooded over his wound and his broken heart until his beard grew down to his Imees and his nose became Roman. As fate would have it, as fate always has it, he turned up late one sad, sad evening hen the straw-neck hens were quarreling the roost and the brindle cow was low- mournfully for her hungry offspring: A ly visitor. from time to time, unto his old love. planations followed. no! It was her angry father. him. It was all clear now. He +o. An Inevitable Conclusion, From Life, to receive! calls me a bilthering idiot!” Teeple—“What's his name?* ows no signature.” Se “Don't you recognizs writing? must be somebody who knows you young man some six feet tall met the !one- It was one of seven sons, born, Ex- It was not the girl who kicked him thirty years before. oh Bhe loved went out to the horse lot, cut off his beard with the sheepahears and kicked himself down the Stuper—“Here’s a nica letter for a man The scoundrel who wrote it “That's just what I'd like to find out; but It PASSED BY 8 VOTES Final Struggle Over the Porto Rican Bill, NINE REPUBLICANS IN OPPOSITION On'y One Representative Absent and Unpaired. SOME DRAMATIC SCENES The long and bitter struggle over the Porto Rican tariff bill ended yesterday when the House of Representatives, bysa vote of 161 to 153, concurred in all the Senate amendments. As the bill originally passed the House it was a simple bill, imposing 15 per cent of the Dingley rates on goods going into Porto Rico from the United States and coming from Porto Rico into the United States. As amended by the Senate and agreed to by the House certain food stuffs and other articles which heretofore have gone into Porto Rico free by executive order are ex- cluded from the operation of the 15 per cent duty imposed on goods entering the island from the United States. A complete scheme of civil government for the island {is also attached to the meas- ure. Upon the final vote nine republicans Voted against the bill—Messrs. Heatwole of Minnesota, Crumpacker of Indiana, Lane of Iowa, Littlefield of Maine, McCall of Massachusetts, H. C. Smith of Michigan, Warner of Illinois, Fletcher of Maine and Lorimer of IWlinois. Two democrats— Messrs. Davey and Meyer of Louisiana— were paired with democrats in favor of the bill, and one democrat—Mr. Sibley of Penn- sylvania—voted for it outright. Mr. De Vries, the other democrat who voted for the original bill, voted against concurrence. Mr. Stallings (Ala.) was the only member on either side absent and unpaired. The vote came at 5 o'clock, after a very inter- esting and at times exciting debate of five hours, which covered not only the bill but the special order under which the House acted. One of the most dramatic features of the day was the reading by Mr. Richard- son, the minority leader, of the original opinion of Charles E. Magoon, the legal adviser of the War Department, in favor of the view that the Constitution extended over Porto Rico ex propria vigore. Mr. Dolliver of lowa in reply termed Mr. Ma- goon a clerk who tried to overrule the great lawyer at the head of the War Di partment. Messrs. H. C. Smith of Michi- gan, Warner of Illinois, Crumpacker of In- diana, McCall of Massachusetts and Lori- mer of Illinois, all republicans, made speeches against the motion to concur. After The Star's report sed yesterday Mr. Jones (Va.) followed on the democratic ide. He devoted himself principally to the civil government features of the bill. Re- plying to Mr. Watson’s query as to what the democrats would do, he said that if they could they would give to the Inhabit- ants of Porto Rico a representative free government with the same rights, privi- leges and immunities enjoyed by every American citizen. The Republican Opposition. Mr. Richardson then yielded thirty min- utes to Mr. McCall (Mass.), who divided his time among the republican opponents of the bill. First, Mr. H. C. Smith (Mich.) stated the grounds of his opposition. He believed, with Bismarck, that the world was ruled from above, and not below, and that the God of nations and of battles points the victory to the right. Now was the exalted opportunity of this country, he said, and it should be the republican party which shoul dit. But as a believer In the survival of the good and the true, he said he could not bring his support the bill. It was a piece of bad faith against the people of Porto Rico, who had fallen upon their knees to the ‘stars and stripes. Gen. Miles’ promise then made should, he said, be redeemed. Good morals demanded it. Mr. Warner (Ill.) urged the same ground of objection. The bill was, he said, a breach of trust. It was more objectionable as it came back from the Senate than as it left the House. It would e a righteous revolution. “The proposed measure, I submit,’ he said in conclusion, “is : ‘us depar- ture from the life-long y of the United Star a 5 inde we are in the air, no one can the result will be. If this measure be adopted no people can safely be they can have 1 or tfeatment. our borders: ter here.’ “With due respect for the opinien of those from whom I differ,” he said, “in my judgment this House made a mistake in passing the tariff feature of this bill, and now, having the opportunity, !t should cor- rect that mistake. In my judgement, unrepublican; and as a republican I will against It in whatever shape or com- pany it is submitted.” Mr. Crumpacker (Ind.), in the minute al- lowed him, argued that the bill was funda- mentally wrong, contrary to the history and traditions of the party to which he be- longed. The first platform of the republi- can party, he said, declared that the Con- stitution carried political liberty to the peo- ple of the territories, as well as the states, and that declaration was as true now as it was then. Mr. O'Grady (N. Y.) and Mr. Hamilton (Mich.) each spoke fifteen minutes in sup- port of the bill. The lat said the pending bill gave free food products to the Porto Ricans; free flour, rice, codfisa, bacon, fresh beef, pork and mutton, machinery for mak- ing and refining sugar and other agricultu- ral. purposes, plows, hoes, hatchets and other agricultural ' implements; qunine, rough lumber and wood for making hogs: heads and casks for sugar and molasses. What a glorious thing it would be for a HYOMEI ome @ part of us, as urance of thelr status y a8 well write upon bandon ye who en- ‘All hope As a Cure For Catarrh, Bronchitis, Consumption. THE FIRST ONE Ever endorsed by the regular medical profession. THE ONLY ONE Ever recognized by the United States Health Reports. YOU BREATHE IT And we refund the money if it fails to cure. “Hyomei” is sold by all druggists or sent by mail. Complete Outfit, $1.00. Trial Outfit, 25c. Five Days’ Treatment Free to All Ss ers. THE R. T. BOOTH CO., Ithaca, N. ¥. hungry Porto Ricap toe told by some gen- tleman with Harveyized lungs that the Con- stitution was there, and had brought with it the beneficent operation of an internal revenue system with which to collect out of wretchedness and @ilstress something with which to reliey tchedness and dis- tress, Mr. Lorinjer Applauded. Mr. Lorimer (1119 delivered a ten-minute Speech in opposition§to the bill which brought out frequent ajfplause from the op- Position. “I have alw: favored civil] gov- ernment for Porto Rico,” said he, “but I have only thought of giving the people of that island such government as free men should give to those who come under their control by conquest otherwise. I will only vote for a ci€il gbvernment bill when it will give them such government as we would accept for ourselves. I am sure this measure would not be accepted by any man favoring it, on the floor of this House, if the conditions were reversed and were it in his power to resist it. I assure you I would never accept it. I am a protectionist and an expansionist. I favor protecting American industries against foreign com- petition, but do not favor protecting: the commercial interests of one or more of our own states or territories against an- other. And when I find that we cannot expand, assimilate and extend to our new territories the same rights and privileges that we insist upon for ourselves, then I will no longer favor expansion. | (Demo- cratic applause.) “I am convinced that we can treat the People of Porto Rico as we do the people of New Mexico, Arizona and Oklahoma, without in any way affecting our industry, progress and civilization. And the benefit will be mutual. “Therefore, I favor retaining the island and extending to it all the rights and privi- leges of American citizenship as enjoyed by the people in our other territories, and thereby keep the pledge made to the peo- ple of the island by General Miles. ‘The People of the United States rightfully ex- pect and demand that this shall be done. “Mr. Speaker,” sald he in conclusion, think we have reached the crisis in our hi: tory. I think we need a liberty revival. If we are true to ourselves, we must have it. If we are to be untrue, then the ulti- mate penalty will be dissolution of our re- publican institutions. A nation which sur- renders its basic principles cannot survive. I am not an alarmist, I do not think the dissolution will come in our day or genera- tion; such changes work slowly, but they are none the less inevitable. I doubt not that as imperialists we will have our day of grandeur, and perhaps our imperial splendor will eclipse that of ancient Rome. “Columbia if shamefully bedecked with the precious pearl of the Antilles and the gems of the Pacific and the orient, may ex- cite for a time such admiration as is won by riches and voluptuousness. But, sir, the light of liberty, which is to her what virtue {s to woman, will have faded from her eye. And all the riches of the world cannot mak up for that loss to those who really love her; to those who look upon her starry em- blem as the symbol of God-given rights, and not as a commercial asset. Mr. McCall's Protest. Mr. McCall (Mass.) was the last republi- can who antagonized the bill. “Mr. Speak- said he, “it may be well to consider for a moment the course of events sinec this bill first came into the House. Thx committee on ways and means, of which I have the honor to be a member, apparently misconstruing the measure of the Pre: voted to Impose a ‘plain duty’ of 25 p cent. The situation has materially changed since that time. That duty has been de- sed to 15 per cent. Inst of being permanent in form, it fs s epealing in- side of two years, and may be repealed by the territorial logislature in two months So much, Mr. Speaker, for what has been conceded upon the question of the tariff. "hi nsider the arguments that w need in support of the measure first presented here and compare with the constitutional situation today, we find an equally great change. The Dill was predicated upon the proposition that Congress was acting under general powers of sovereignty outside of the Constitution it it and was subject to no limitations what- ever. It may have occurred to you who have been reading speeches recently d livered that it {s now sought to bring th duty strictly under the terms of the Con- stitution, and it is now maintained that it is constitutional. Some of my colleagues who do not agree with me have decorated the doctrine which I have asserted here, purely for ad captandum purposes as the doctrine of John C. Calhoun. I have dis puted the despotic power on the part of Congress. That doctrine fs the doctrine of every justice who hzs spoken upon this subject from our Supreme Court. It is the octrine of the republican platforms, and I assert it here in the presence of the gen- tleman from Pennsylvania who today made a contrary assertion, it {s the doctrine of the republican platforms of 1856 and of 1860, and it is the doctrine of Abraham Lincoln.” In conclusion he said that the proposal to tax the products of Porto Rico had aroused indignation everywhere. It had transformed the whoie country into a Boston tea party. (Democratic applause.) Messrs. Maddox (Ga.), q.), son (Va.) and Newlands (Nev.) op- posed the bill in very brief but vigorous speeches, The Land Question Considered. Mr. Newlands took up those provisions re- lating to the government of Porto Rico out- side of the tariff features. He insisted upon it that an organic act for the government of any and all of our new acquisitions should provide for the obtaining of statistical in- formation relating to the system of land tenure, the extent of the holdings, the char- acter of the cultivation, the nationality of the labor employed, the wages paid, the hours of labor and the general conditions from a sanitary and educational point of view of the laboring classes. The tendency in all these islands would be toward an Increase of land values, re- sulting from a commercial union with the United States and the vast markets af- forded by this country for their products. This tendency would lead to a centraliza- tion of the ownership of these lands, in the hands of wealthy syndicates and corpora- tions. The ownership of the land would in- volve the absolute control of the labor em- ployed on the land and the tendency would be, as it always has been in these semi- tropical countries, to the employment of slave or of semi-slave lebor, the laborer being regarded as a mere machine for the production of certain results. It would be, therefore, necessary to legislate so as to restrain and prevent the monopoly of land and to restrain and prevent the degrada- tion of labor. Republican institutions could not be sus- tained in a country where the lands were massed in the hands of a few, and where the great mass of the population had no rights in the soll save such as the land owners yielded to them as a matter of con- venience or sufferance, Small holdings of land were essential to the development of free institutions. Amend- ments had been presented in the House to the Hawaiian bill which met these ques- tions and furnished the basis for compre- hensive legislation; but the Porto Rico bill was silent on the subject, and the rule re- quiring immediate actfon on the Senate bill as a whole absolutely. denied the House the opportunity of considering these important questions and of presenting amendments re- garding them. Sych precipitate action was a bad augury for, thoughtful action regard- ing our insular possessions. Mr. Dalzell aroge at:this point to correct an inadvertent remark he had made earlier in the day about a “subsidized republican press.” He had not fntended to use such a remark, and he 42sired to correct it pub- lely. - Mr. Rhea (Ky.) ‘salé-the civil government feature of the Bill presented some novel Propositions. It proposed to govern a peu- ple not citizens of the/Unit24 States in ter- ritory not a partiof the United States, yet every official was to/take an oath to sup- port and defend the United States. Mr. Hay (Va: also criticised the civil government schem2 proposed in the bill. Mr. Hopkins (IN) agserted that the bill when enacted into law would be far more advantageous to the people of Porto Rico than the United States laws in force in New Mexico, Arizona or any territory of the United States. o Richardson Causes Enthusiasm. Mr. Richardson (Tenn.), the minority leader, concluded the debate on his side. He aroused great enthusiasm among the democrats by reading extracts from the original opinion of Charl3s E. Maguon, the legal adviser of the insular bureau of the ‘War Department, in which he argued that the Constitution was extended ex-proprio vigore to Porto Rico. The opinion had been sent to the Hous3 in answer to the House resolution adopted on Saturdsy last and arrived after Mr. Richardson spoke earlier in the day. The opinion was dated February 22. He had no words of criticism, he said, for Mr. Magoon for changing his mind. He was but a subordinate officer. But what would the country think, he Williams asked, of the Secretary of War, who had demanded that he reverse his opinion? (Prolonged democratic applause). Mr. Dolliver (iowa) followed. In all char- ity and genzrosity, he said, he conceded the right of every man to hold his own opinion. Much had been made of the [fect that changes had been made in the opin‘ons of men on the floor and in the executive branches of th> government, and the final act of eloquence on the other side, he said, had been the reading of the opinion of ‘‘a law clerk who thought he could overrule the great lawyer who presides over the War Department.” Mr. Doliver said he would prefer the opinion of lawyers like Mr. McCall or Mr. Littlefield to the opinion of a law clerk. Proceeding, he asked Mr. Richardson point. edly whether he would accept the opinion of Gen. Davis. “Which opinion?” asked Mr. Richardson. “Give us both opinions and I will take my choice.” (Laughter.) n “This is his official report,” said Mr. Do!- iver. “Did he not in his sworn testimony be- fore the insular committee recommend free trade?” asked Mr. Richardson. Mr. Dolliver read Gen. Davis’ and also the opinion of Dr. President's confidential agent. “Did not Dr. Carroll recommend free trade?” asked Mr. Richardson. .,_Ultimate free trade,” responded Mr. Dol- iver, “just as this bill does.” In conclusion he dismissed as beneath contempt the charge of bribery as a motive for this bi!l. He had as well accuse Mr. Rich- ardson of corruption for introducing a res- olution to place raw sugar on the free list. But he would not simply accuse him of stupidity. Not a ray of sunshine penetrated his dungeon. This was a republican meas- ure, he said, indorsed by the republican President and the republican leaders. Mr. Payne (N. Y.), the floor leader of the majority, closed the debate with a vig- orous speech, in which he said he was ready to submit the issue involved in the pending bill to the common people of the country. “The proudest act of my life,’ said he. “is my connection with this bill from start to finish.” (Prolonged applause on the re- publican side.) At 5 o'clock the House, under the terms of the special order, proceeded to vote. Both sides rose en masse In response to the de- mand for the ayes and noes and the roll was called, An Excellent Combination. opinion Carroll, the oF irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. printed on the front of Ty package. The Roll Call. The roll was followed with intense Inter- The only demonstrations occurred when Mr. Henry C. Smith of Michigan veted “No,” and when the Speaker di- ected the clerk to call his name and an- wered “Aye.” When the Speaker an- nounced the passage of the bill—ayes 161, notes 158, and present and not voting 11— ihe republicans cheered for several minutes, The roll call was as follows: Yeas—Acheson, Adams, Aldrich, Alexan- der, Allen (Me.), Babcock, Bailey (Kan.), Baker, Barham, Bartholdt, Bingham, Bish- op, Boreing, Boutell, Bowersock, Brick, Bromwell, Brosius, Brown, Brownlow, Bull, Burke (S.D.), Burleigh, Burton, Butler, Cal- head, Cannon, Capron, Clarke CN. HL), chrane (N. ¥.), Connell, Cooper (Wis), Corliss, Cousins, ‘Cromer, Crump, Curtis, Cushman, Dahle, Dalzell,’ Davenport (Sam: uel), Davidson, Dayton, Dick, Dolliver, Do- Eddy, Emerson, Faris, Fowler, Freer, ‘Gamble, Mich), Gardner (N. J.), Gibson, Gillett. (N.Y), Graff,” Graham; ne (Mass.), Grosvenor, Grout, Grow Hamilton, Haugen, Hedge, | Hemenw: Speaker Henderson, Henry, Hepburn, Hil Hitt, Hoffecker, Hopkins, Howell, Jack, Jenkins, Jones (Wash), Joy, Kahn,’ Ketch: am, Knox, Lacey, Landis, Lawrence, Lins Littauer, Long, Loud, Loudenslager, ring, M¢Cléary, McPherson, Mann, rsh, Mercer, Mesick, Metcalf, Miller, Mondell, Moody (Mess. Moody (Ore.), Mor- gan, Morris, Mudd, Needham, O'Grady,Olm- SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORZ, N. ¥. te20-tu,th,s,1y84 “Strictly One Price.” Pure Gold Bridgework, As a result of our offer to make the best pure gold bridgework at $5 e had all the work d would be pleased you some of the fine bridges we are now putting in for patients at this very moderate price. U S Dental fo} o Ass’n, Cor. 7th and D Sts. Over Franc & Sons. E. O. PIGEON, D. D. S. apli-i2a The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, SYRUP OF FIGS, man- ufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP 00., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid lax- ative principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the sys- tem. It is the one perfect atrengthening laxative, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly, and en- abling one to overcome habitual constipation per- manently. Its perfect freedom from every objec- tonable quality and substance, and ita acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, Please remember the full name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG For sale by all Druggists.—Price, 50c. per bottle. DO Dandruff the Beginning, Baldness the End. ‘The majority of people never think of treating the hatr until tt ps to fall out or they notice here and there a bali Tmmediatel t. thes rm for one of the so- Nea “HAIR RI *RERS' Which contain elther Lead. Sulphur, SHver or some other hatr-destroying drug. The: remedy, but at what a cost. What they nerd ie something to strengthen avd stimulate the bait follicles and not weaken or enfeeble them with minerals, etc. They require a clean, scientific vege etable compound, and Dr. Bell’s Hair Food and Dandruff Cure Is the only one of this kind now on the markets idea of Dr. BELL'S TREATMENT Is first to Kill the microbes that eat away and destroy the ‘itality of the hair itself: then to cleanse thoreagh- a leave the scalp in a healthy condition, so that the gland and small surface venecie will pourish each and every follicle. (The Hair i ment contains the elements of the hair and ts = perfect food for feeding and promoting the growth of the hair.) One does not become bald In a minute, or in .kradually, but nevertheless surely. “DANDRUFF ‘THE BBGINNING, BALDNESS THB END,” and when the former firet appears then is HAI FOOD AND. the time to apply DR. BELL’ DANDRUFF CURE until all er of future bald- hess ix removed. The Hair For! will etir up the languld condition of the scalp, while at the same time it cleanses and removes the unhealthy eecre- tions known as dandruff. ‘Then if ftom disease or any other cause there is lack of nourishment to the hair the hair becomes dry and falls out. DR. BELL'S supplies this lack of pourishment hg forcing these small surface blood vessels to perform thelr in- tended work and thus restores the scalp to its former healthy condition. And there Is no penalty |. as the Halr Food is @ hermless compound, clean and made up of pure vegetable ingredients. We recommend the use of Craddock's Tar Soap with the Hair Food, as the tar soap is 2 very good antiseptic in the treatment of all scalp diseases, Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dr. Bell’s Hair Food and Dandruff Cure CURES, Full treatment, 60 cents, MANUFACTURED BY THE BELL CHEMICAL COMPANY, WASHINGTON, D. G@ For Sale by PALAIS ROYAL, 11th and G. JAMES O'DONNELL, 301 Pa, ave. 6. INO. W. RO 901 East Capitol st. ap7-s,tw&th-3m-100 An Easter Souvenir ( FREE With each loaf of ~~ ted, Ove et, “Parker, Payne, Pearce 5 9 (Mo). Pearre, ‘Philipps,’ Powers, Prince, | 3 oe or y S ugh, Ray (N. Y.), Reeder, Reeves, Rob- | ; erts, Rodenberg, Russell, Shattuc, Shelden, a Full Quart Bottles Fs Sherman, Showalter, Sibley, Smith (l1.), | % a = se Smith (S. W.), Smith (W. 'A.), Southard, | Lucca Olive Oil & Spalding, Sperry, Sprague, Steele, Stevens. bd art (N. Y.), Stewart (Wis.), Sulloway, ‘Tawney, yler (Ohio), Thomas (Iowa), SS SS = Thropp, ‘ompKins, Tongue, Van Voorhis, | } ( S= Vreeland, Wadsworth, Wanger, Waters, | = Weeks, White, Wise, |S Wright and Young—161. x ae eee mcuest, “eae panes Na Adamson, Allen (Ky.), Atwater, | 3g table oll in the world. Imported from Ball, Bankhead, Barber, Bartlett, Bell, | $j aces. Italy -and bottled by us. Pull Bellamy, Benton, Berry, Bradiey, Brantley, Breazeale, Brewer, Brundidge, | Burleso: Burnett, “Caldwell, Campbell,” Catching: Chandler, Clark (Mo.), Clayton (Ala.), Clay ton (N. Y.), Cooney, Cowherd, Cox, ‘Craw- -W. S. Thompson, ‘Pharmacist, 703 15th St.% -__. “Mother’s Bread” Sold Friday. ford, Crumpacker,, | Cummings, ‘Cusack, Seer g|5 ee San Easter greeting to our pa- Daly, Davenport (Stanley), Davis, DeAr- | 3f apl26d oo acmpreumimnanacdd o- A trons we will give away Friday mond, DeGraffenreid, Devries, Denny, Dins- | ££ ER RES eis eseeseussuessenesen |) with each loaf of “MOTHER'S more, Dougherty, Driggs, Elliott, Finle = .- BREAD” sold a beautiful eouve- Fitzgerald (Mass.), Fitzgerald (N. ¥.), Fitz * © air, Be sure you secure one! patrick, Fleming,” Fletcher, Foster, Fox, our Fee “Hes Gaines, Gayle, Gilbert, Glynn, Gordon, oe LWAYS tosist on having orby's Green (Pa.), Griffith, Griggs, Hall, Heat- . A “MOTHER'S BREAD™—it_ con- : fe i ome in and get one of our inter- ans wole, Henry (Miss.), Henry (Tex.), Howard, esting ‘booklets -F REE explei oe tains 20 per cent more nutriment Jett, Johnston, Jones (Va.), Kitchin, Kle- ing all about the care of and ee than any Your berg, Klutts, Lamb, Lane, Lanham,’ Lati- tre of the feet. Tells how | 2 2 2 ae oo mer, Lentz, Lester, Levy, Le Little, | to become YOUR OWN CHIROPODIST. Agents ee Littlefield, Livingston, Lio Lorimer, Mc- | W8ted for ou: remedies in every town. Corns and ° * fuse substitutes. if stamped. Aleer, McCall, McClellan, McCullough, Mc- | bunlons treated for 25 cts. Dowell, McLain, McRae, Maddox, May, Meekinson, Miers (Ind.), Moon, Muller, Na- phen, Neville, Newlands, Noonan, Norton (Ohio), Norton (S.C.), Pierce | (Tenn.), the use of the knife. J. J. GEORGES & SON, Foot Specialists, 1115 Pa. avi Hours: 8 to 6 p.m. Sundays, 9 to 12. ap2 Our bunion and corn shields afford imme Mate and absolute relief without Corby’s [Modern Bakery, Quarles, Ransdell, Rhea (Ky.), Rhea (Va.), Richardson, Ridgely, Riordan, Robb, Rob- inson (Ind.), Robinson (Neb.), Rucker, Ruppert, Ryan (N. ¥.), Ryan (Pa.), Scud- der, Shackleford, Shafroth, Sheppard, Sims, Slayden, Smith (Ky.), Smith (Henry C.), Snodgrass, Sparkman, Spight, Stark, Stephens (Tex.), Stokes, Sulzer, Sutherland, Swanson, Talbert, Tate, Taylor (Ala.), Ter- ry, Thomas (N. C.), Turner, Underhill, Un- derwood, Vandiver, Warner, Wheeler, Wil- liams (J. R.), Williams (Wm. E.), Williams The now accepted Remedy for 1: Grippe, Severe Colds, Wasting Fev and all Nervous Affections. (Miss.), Wilson (Idaho), Wilson (N. ¥.), | _Indorsed by Physicians and Nurses. Used in Wilson (S. Zenor, Ziegler—153. Hospitals everywhere. The pairs were as follow: being in favor of the bill: Hull with Hay, Packer with Polk, Barney with Allen the first named mb26-tf,20 KAFRIKO Trial Size, 10cts. at Drug Stores. 2335 Brightwood Ave. apl1-sod New Offices. Among the offices recently opened by the Postal Telegraph-Cable (Miss.), Weymouth with Broussard, Gillett (Mass.) with Thayer, Hawley with Cooper (Texas), Burkett with Burke (Texas), Ma- hon with Otey, Minor (Wis.) with Rixey, Lybrand with Gaston, Kerr with Carmack, Davey (Dem.) with Crowley, Meyer (Dem.) with Robinson (La.), Otjen with Brenner, Wachter with Small, Stewart (N. J.) with Salmon, Esch with Bailey (Texas), Boutelle (Me.) with Cochran (Mo.). Unpaired—Stallings. ——_\_>o+____ As He Remembered It. From the Chicago Tribune. Sunday School Teacher (of waifs’ mission) —“And when the owner of the vineyard went out about the eleventh hour and found a lot of men standing Idle in the market place, what did he say to them?” Muggsy de Newsboy—“He say soldierin’ fur? Git busy!” SERVICE $3 per Month and Up. Cheaper than car fare or messenger hire. subscribe today. THE fhesapeake nd Po(OM Telephone Company HAS MORE THAN : ‘Wot ye Trustable —= ington. Contract Dept., 619 14th Street N. W. aps-bétt TELEPHONE Emergencies promptly coped with by means of telephone. Don't wait for an emergency, but 3,300 Teiephones in use in Wash- Call (free) Telephones Nos. 345 and 1893, or ad- dress Company , N. 0. Burlington, N. GQ Upper Marlboro’, Ma. Chesapeake Beach, Md. ‘Chesapeake Junction, D.Q) Connellsville, Pa. Uniontown, Pa. Pa. mb5-42tt Vintondale, Pa. SCS Ot 23> OO 3s 59-40 OS A Staunch Steamer A splendid Trank, $ low priced, to take ° complete with steel clamps,strong bolts, reinforced frame, Exceleinr foe abroad with Clothbound and Tined. The price $4 25 BECKER, :3*# ster apll-2sd SSO 26 > OF 06 66 24 > r ‘Trunk at $4 Go to Siccardi’s FOR BARGAINS IN HUMAN HAR. ‘We are also selling Hair Switches at it bargains. 00 Switches reduced to 00 Switches 1educed to $2.50. .00 Switches reduced to $5.00. Gray and White Hair reduced Mme. Siccardi, 711 11th st., next to Palais Royal. Private rooms for’ bairdressing. When You Ask for Hunter Baltimore Rye You may be sure to always find it what it is represented to be, viz.: A Pure Whiskey Old, Smooth, Mellow 4. H. NEUMEYER, A 4 1424 E Street N.W., Washington, D. a Ja20-16re New Family Sewing Machine $ ll gs With beautiful oak woodwork and all lates: a! tachments, oO Equal to any $60 machine. At Oppenheimer’s, 514 9th St. repaired, $1, apil-28a & lot of All Long Human im same proportion. , shampooing an@ Warranted Ten Years. N.W. Righting cot. Wrongs | PLUMBING | No matter i werthy of the atten- tion of expert—espe- clally when xpert serv- ice from Shedd's costs no more than ordinary service. s, SHEDD ,£, 432 Oth St. ,,Pambing, Mowtns, lenting. Gas Fixtures. apll-24d on | (mae we NE 772 F PAN Kicide | Sewing | Machine Repairing. Renting 1c. a Day. C. Auerbach, 7 & H. ‘Try our new Bieycle Ball-bearing “‘Domes- 8 ed silent au the tick of a watch 204