The Washington Bee Newspaper, September 8, 1888, Page 1

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Terms. $2.00 Per year in Advance, VIL. WASILINGTON, D. G 4 5 cents per cop . AMUSEMEN: Musical engagements accepted PICNICS, CONCERTS and asures of all kind. Callon or re TL. FURBY 1113 14TH ST. \WEAREGOING TO RICH MOND!” ~-THE~s BUILDING COMMITTEE ~ 7 OF THERA SKOCOND BAPTIST CHURCH, EA GRAND — EXCURSION T0 AUGHMOND, VA. SATUROMYS SEPTEMBER TSTH, 1888- We cordially solicit our friends i neral public to assist us this etiort. Our friends know t when we say we are going mean to go. lrain will leave B. & P. depot 11:30 ». m., returning leave ond at 10 p. m. 1 IQURDANCE. OF. REFRESH NOG, SHUTS WL secommodation of the 1 Don’t forget that the train ves Saturday night, Sept. 15, at 1 o'clock and stops at \ exandria and Fredricksburg. ihe committee guarantee every rson seats, and ample comfort. ‘ev. Bishop Joknson, pastor of church will be on hand to come our friends, and Rev, Troy, pastor of the 2nd Bap- church, Richmond, Va., will preach a sermon to the éxcrrsion-~ sis at 3p, m,, at the said church .2nd and Bird sts. Severa the pastors of Alexandria and Washington will be present. Kev. W. B. Johnson, pastor; TH. Franey, ch, clerk. —Recreption CoMMITTEE:— J. P. Rawles, chairman; Sam- uel Hunter, vancial secretary; Ss. A. White, Recording secretary; Jas Hester, treasurer, Round trip tickets, — $200. feSee that the seal of the 2nd Baptist church is on your ticket, the SUMMER RESORTS. Avondale + SUMMER RESORT - Will be opened tor the reception of of guests, JUNE 25th, 1588. Terms, - $3.50 per week. S$. A. Peck, Proprietress ; J. Peck, Jr., Manager. P.O. Petersville, Maryland. june 9,3 mo. ASBURY PARK NEW JERSEY, —THE— HUBBERT HOUSE. ner of Springwood and Sylvan aves. House and Furniture New. Open May 16th, 1888. STRICKLY FIRST CLASS.— aged by the owner, L. C’ HUBBERT. P. O. Box,773, dical expert, by the use of the vscope, have recently discovered and ssifled specific liying germs in the od ofall persons suffering from, and lat to cure the patient these germs a. Thirty years ago Dr. er advanecd this theory as “ to destroy these 1f you have Mala: tem, a few aoses of this my troy the poison immediately, end t Sold by Druggists. ave. > an infant. — ee — NOTICE. Kev. C. W. Fitzhugh is from and “ler this issue our authorized atter for publication are requested send it to Rev. Fitzhugh’s office, Everydody Hi streets. w. sm —tThe First— Grand Musical --FEAST-- ~—- AND~ CARNIVAL. THE MOST EMINANT VIOLIN. IST & CONDUCTOR IN THE COUNTRY. —THE— ‘Straus & Thomas OF HIS RACE Professor ALBERT F. MANDO, (New York City.) | And his Famous Concert Orcnestra Of Skil'ed Musicians. TuEspay & WEDNESDAY Even’s., Oct. 2nd and 8rd, ’88. Ai Metropolitan A. M, E. Church, M bet. 15th and 16th sts., n. w. Rev. J.G. MITtcHEL, Pastor. A. F. MANDO, Conductor and Manager. see For parnculars see Bills and Papers. RAYS OF MIRTH. (Phila. Herald.) The mau that’s rich should happy be, : He need not put on airs, Nor care a single cent, not he, What kind of clothes he wears- The man by poverty oppressed, ‘Must in his garb take pride; Wear clothiug of the very vest His poverty to hide. uupu is diways SsuUVULIUL @auU forever making Mrs. The right to pay taxes has nevy- er been denied woman. A bar at which you can keep perfectly sober—the crow-bar. Aman doesn’t get even even when he gets married two times. Teacher—What is the plural of child? Boy (promptly)---Twins. Before arithmetic was invented people multiplied on the face of the earth, Fanny isn’t it, that after a man has once given his word he should try so hard to keep it? A womans motto: There’s al- ways room at the bottom-—sfor a postscript or two. Talk is cheap. If talk were dear | we should have less trouble and | more work in Congress. | Milk River, Montana, is bly so called because of the it contains. proba- | water | No use arging doctors to get up a trust. Itis pretty mach all trust with them uow. Lightning never strikes twice in the same place, Neither does a mule. They don’t have too. A lady advertises that she bas “a fine, airy well furnished bed- room fora gentleman twelve fvot square.” At the horticultural show: ‘TLis is a tobacco plant, wy dear.” “In- deed ! how very interesting! But I don’t see any cigars on it.” “What becomes of the old moon, pa?” ©The old moons, my son? Why, they die of newmoniz, to be sure.” An English paper asks: “Should men sew?” They should mend, we think, but not sew. Lt is never too late to mend. If an empty purse should speak, what lovely speech would it make? ‘You'll find no change in me.” One of the main questions of the age in regard to some men, is not who pulls ont other people’s teeth to get something for his own to bite.” It always bothers a Frenchman whois learning English, to read oue day that a murder has been committed and the next that the murderer has been committed. a ee EDUCATION, PROF, STORUM IN THE A, CHURCH REVIEW. M. EL |_ The A.M. E. Chureh Review of July containsan excellent article | on Education and Labor from the pen of Prof. J. M. Storum, of this | city. In speaking of the schools | the professor says: ‘Those who are to educate and prepare for ua- tional use this vast body of illiter acy ; those who are to crystallize into intelligent sovereigns this ele ment, that to-day stands as a_po- application to teach. He was very positively and, according to their idea, very courteously requested to | leave the State within twenty four honrs, or receive from the hands of | his sympathizing citizens the very | suggestive present of hemp. Not | having been accostomed to so warm a climate for seyeral years, and not being able to appreciate ! the kind reception tendered him, | and not wishing to appear so con- spicuous, he accepted the first prop- osition and returned to New Eng. land, where the climate and social surroundings are more congenial. To secure national greatness the means must be properly employed, | and untrained hands can not ac- complish it. So teachers must be | thoroughly and well prepared. The idea has obtained, and it is not yet entirely obliterated, that a} teacher need ouly toknow how to “read and write and cipher” a little to teach school, We are more par- ticular with our blooded stock than that. If one of our children is sick IN RELIABLE FOOT WEAR! ——AT THE 912 7th Street, northwest. GENTS CALF SHOES tent menace to this Republic, must be prepared intellect ally and morally to successfully meet and overcome theevil. The fact is that too little attention is given to the nae Sate ee nen au fact, ®% man whose reputation of, and any Cases It 1s entirely ig-/ gill in, the treatment of th are nored. Ido not hesitate to assert, | ticular’ mal: neageid a Pres and always shall main. Re ae suas ain, that no one ought to be per- Instruct our ehildre ‘ t di rel mitted to train children, that no | the immort: 1 soul ans is sae wit one ought to be allowed to teach, has bad ae aa tae Me i sta Mette one antl s work and is devon of both talent! d ssential F ki 3 re- | rec than that of an irreproach- ialeedktojceeelndesutagigading able character and fixed principle away and the aetie id t pj Q of duty and obligation. ‘As the for etal ie h ae ae ae teacher so the pupil,”is a familiar mand mast ae ete ae Li on adage, and, to a very great extent, | parts ee aie a truism. The teacher must, trom | dominates there must be the most the very relation he or she sustains | skillful teachers, if there is to fe to ms on her pupils, leave bis or] any distinction at all. And for this her impress and lead them in the] reason Iam in favor of, and be- ae pttowt a treads. Unless, | lieve it is the duty of the govern- en, the teacher has well-defined | ment to contribute largely for the principles of right aud wrong, such | education of the people and contrc1 instractor will lead the little .ones, | it, so that all people shall bars too, astray, and the result will bo | alike in its benefits. The govern. that, instead of our schools being a| ment must conserve the forces that baie acts Sit “trod ven’ Wu | party, vy wuaveves* wet come our future rulers and citizens | known, that desires to educate the void of truth, virtue and morality. | people, that demands that the in- | Be it far from me to argue or claim | cubus of ignorance be lifted from that iu our schools should be tought | the body politic, is the friend of the the tenets of religious denomina- | government and seeks its good and | tions. But I do not hesitate to as-| desires to provide for its contin- sert that these grand and uoble|uance. The party wbich will not principles of virtue, truth, honesty | educate the people is an enemy to and temperance, without which no| the government and will seek its community is safe and goverument | overthrow. I have already said that is impossible, should be and must | education has for its object the de- we send for the best physician within ourreach,a man who has had large experience and is skilled in his profession. Why, if our borses or cows are sick we seek for, we see | in the life and character of every | make man the best of his kind. cbild, and form 4 part of its very | [t is to tell man how to live in this being. Tiais is within the proviuce | life and to prepare him for the life ofour schools and must not be dis-| to come, Then to prepare one tor regarded. Dr. Mayo says: “The | this life, the hand wust be educat- common school is the place of all) ed as well as the heart and bead. others to inculeate the great indus- | The idea that labor is Lonorable trial, social and civic virtues of | and essential to oar existance must honesty, charity, truthfuluess, jus- | be implanted in the very being of tice, responsibility for social order, | our citizensbip and stamped upon all the woral safegu rds ef national | the character of our national life. life.” The teacher whose life aud | We mast joiu in holy wedlock the character are averse to. these high | brain and hand, and with such a and lotty principles can not impress | union oar success Is assure d. them upon others, and has no right to instruct the future men and women of this or any other couo- try. Such a teacher robs the child- ren of what properly belongs to them, and is guilty of acrime that will surely be punished. ‘He that causes one of these little ones to of- fend, it were better that a will- stone were banged about his neck and he be drowned in the depths of the sea.” If the pupils of our schools are to be taught, by precept or exam- ple, intrigue, deception, fraud, mis. representation, extravagance 10 thought, expression aud appear- ance, then indeed will we infuse into the veins and arteries of our social and natioual life the elements that will iusare death. Tue aim land purpose of education is to | make man a complete creature of his kind, having a well-developed body, a fiuely cultured aud well- trained intellect, and a refined moral nature, To grow such men | —__~= From the Herald of Faith St. L-uis, Misscuri, August 10, 1887. Referring to Shalleeberger’s Antidote for Malaria, the busme-s manager of the Herald of Math would say, that he gave this medi cine a personal trial, and was speedly cured of an uuplearant In termittert Fever. He then re-com- mended itto F. J. Tiefenbraun, 1915 Papin street, and to police officer Meidenger, at the Union Depot, both of whom were cured by it of chil's and fever of several years’ standing. Recently _ his wife, after a fever of severa! days duration, took a single dose and was perfectly cu ed. In view of these remarkable cures, and re~ membering how much mouey is spent tor quinine, so little to be depended upon, and often so in- jurious, we cau only wish that a” . ?, ae ) i and women is the grand ultimatum | Shallenberger’s Antidote we uli of education, to nurture, to direct | come into general use. Avt. j and to shape these is the pohle pre- | | rogative of the teacher. Such con- | | stituent elements contributing to our naticu’s growth will produce Prof. J. H Laweon is the sol be infused—implanted deep down | velopment of the entire being, 0) outh Washington correspondent. | lersons in that section who have what they liveon, but why they live on | fruit both nutcitious, beautiful, de- ‘ : \licious and perennial. There is/| It is said that no man can arrest | scarcely a person who will uot cou- | the flight of Time, but who is there jcede that the teacher’s scholastic: who is not able te stop a minute?) prepara‘ions ought to be detinte, | Woman(to tramp)—“After you broad aud liberal, yet in too many have eaten that pie will you saw a instances it is practically ignored. little wood?” “Tramp(eyeing Ws ‘articles fiom his pen “Dpreciated beyond all doubt. this distinguished divine will be pie)—‘Yes, ma’am, if I’m a | " England colleges returned to bis the | In October last a young man who | live. | bad graduated from one of our New) |} azeut in the District of Columbia | Requested to detine the word | “dentst”paphir said, “He is a map native state, Mississippi, aud made for “men: of mark” during the} summer vecation. Men of Mark | isa popular aud wide spread book | IN ALL STYLES AT PRICES FAR BELOW THE LOWEST. | ILadies, Misses and Childrens Shoes IN ALL STYLES & PRICES TO SUIT TUE MOST ECONOMICAL BUYER, Kivery parr of Shoes we sell we guar- apvtee andifnot satisfactory, after being purchased, money refunded. Call early and seeure good bargains. We close at 7 p.m. at 11:30 p. m. Saturday BOSTON SHOE HOU=sE, HI, Go'dstein, Prop. 912 SEVENTH STRERT, N. W. yn eS ee A house Keepers Attention! BACHSCHMID AND MYERS New Emporium of House Furnishings. FURNITURE, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, STOVES, RANGES BEDDING, &e. Gecods sold on the Credit System. fe" 1007 Tth Street and 657 N. Y. Ave., p. w. BOOK., "HREE CENTS EACH! The following books are published in ni mphiet form, printed from good readab.~ on paper; and many ‘of them nangsomety tltustr ey are without exception the cheapest boos ever pub. ished in any land or language, and furnish 19 Masse. of *he people an opportunity to secure the best Literature of the day at th the= series these great works would cost many times the price at which the; gle. im itself: B; Pearl ofthe Ocean, A Novel. By Cu yw Ash Hall. 4 Novel. By Mane. a pestt. _By Brva W. Preace. gnee nce A Bezel. By the author of “Dore profuse {ilustrations. “A Pleasure Exertl “ Josram AuLaN’s Wir sketches by the most The Aunt kezt anc Siner Sketches. Br U: llvetion of irresistibly fanmy 4 Th: pular humorous writer of the day. ‘ Papers, by Crama Avovera, author ; “PS ont ridiculously fanny book t “Widow ‘“=versSecret. A Novel. By Ms . Baanvem, Su vase or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde A ‘Stavawsow. ed Girl. A Novel. 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Address Bez oftice 1109 Ist. u. w - The Ladies Guild of St. Mary’s | chureh, in a moonlight excursion to River View, Sept. 14, 88. | | | | | | | \ 4 we REN IT Bae a ie RS

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