The Washington Bee Newspaper, June 8, 1889, Page 1

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perms. $2.00 Per year in Advance. r Blaine appointed Exami- ‘ims in the State Depart- the second son of James G. e, Secretary of State, and was w School. iring his father’s secretary der Garfield and afterwards vointed Assistant Attorney i sident Arthur where he re- Commission sago he opened a law offive in 20, continuing to practice his , returned home and accom- | tend to encourage iis father on stumping trips Maine and the west. ered quite a promising young VIEWED BY A I C ) WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1889. c gram sent to one of the counties} We are prepared to submit your was miscarried and fell into the} plans, ete. please call upon or com- hands of my friends, which disclos- | municate with Mr. J. D. Taggart, ed the plans, And after all, Iwas! President, Fidelity Trust and Safe- elected by a majoity of about 700. | ty Vault Co., Louisville, Ky. The throwing outofmy votes was Y ic done contrary tolaw as has been | CUES EEnUL Ys decided heretofore in similar eases M. H. Smith by the supreme court of my state. | Vice President. The plan was so atrocious and far | Having called on Mr. Taggart. from right, that leading Demo-| we find you have placed this money crats in the state denounced it. at our disposal subject to the eon- The Legislature of my state in| dition we ourselves imposed and February last amended our elec-| which we shall. meet. We shall tion law in sach a way that it|take such steps in the matter as practically disfranchises nearly half! will carry out our designs, as laid of our colored voters. To register,|down inour letter. The place wlil which is necessary before voting, | be selected, and grounds and build- aman has to tell his age, where| ings prepared. We are sure your bora, the street and namber on | generosity will be appreciated by which he lives, and a great many | the race, and that it is only the other unnecessrry things which are | begining of greater things. May impossible for a class of people) the Lord be praised for this splenid who are destitute of an education, | donation to the education of the and unless they can swear to the/ race. Again we thank you. exact day of their birth, the regis- Respectfally. ter refused to register them un- Wn. J. Simmons. der the law. This new law has just | C, H. Parrish. been tested in Raleigh N, C. pr -/| paratory to an election on a school | RSET ae question to be held June 10th, | THE 11th CENSUS. and not more than 50 per-ct., of | the colored voters could register. | Ques. What do you think of his | DR. BILLING To TAKE CHARGE OF THE appeintments? | REPORT ON THE MORTALITY, etc, | | | | vusta, Me. in 1855. He is preliminary education ‘Seminary was graduated 1 took the Course at Har- To obtain a bet- cal knowledge of law he Answer. I think = they) 4 goop APPOINTMENT. years iu the office of Sen-| have given general satisfaction «of St. Paul Minn. He | thus far, and have not heard of any | Ii0.N. . P. CHEATHAM, His serious objections to but one, and he is ove Parson of Alabama who ae Ane has been appointed District Attor- = enous Oitee ney and whois prime mover of the |, Washington, D. C., May 1, 1889. “white man’s party” in that state, | To the Medical Profession: bat T hope it will prove to be a@| he various medical associations good one after all. It is is thought! and the medical profession will be his appointment means the ignor- | glad to learn that Dr. John S. Bill- ing of the colored people of thé] ings, Surg U.S. has con- 5 : : c gs, Surgeon U.S. Army, has cou jstate, but Lam of the impression | sented to take charge of the Report there until he closed his| that the President does uot in-| oy the Mortality and Vital Statis- such orga \ties of the United States as return- What 4 i jed by the Eleventh Census. hat do you think 2U Stat ¢ yS- policy of the President ete Pept pital att {toward the colored people in the | ties Sachiens relied upon by other |distribution of the patronage? | ciyijized nations for the purpose of Ans, The appointments of Messrs. | ascertaining the actual movement Townsend, eae Peete SS ee ot pouplation, our census affords seem to indicate that the resl- 2 7 ity of nin dent is going ia the right direction; alee ee ee actinae of the opposition of many southern | the birth and death rates of much white Republicans to the contrary |the larger part of the country, F Wiebiparensebr eT hice te the Pres- | which is entirely unprovided with ident appreciates the fact that the | any satisfactory system of State colored yoters rendered valuable | ayij municipal registration. id Assistant Secretary of Department of the Interior, yvama Claims Commission ee years until the term of expired. Four itons, He is} — Qi will be the BEE REPRESED GROES REPRE GREAT services to our partyin the last) Jy view of this, the Census Office, 3 IN THE election, in the states of Indiana} quying the monti of May this year, AROL ELECTION and New York, and that he will will insu to the medicel profession A NATIONAL EL&@c- do the right thing by us in the] throughout the country ‘Phystcan’s \ lent’s policy regarding the rs of the government as to tle w of his AW WILL BE RECOM- distribation of the the patronage. | Resisters’ for the purpose of obtain- iLNDED, Gee . What do you thinkof his ing more accurate returns of death ae 4 rt ad | than it is possible for the aus crete save had occas") tors to make. It is earnestly hope siot to visit all ot the Cabinet offl- | tpat physicians in every part of the cers on official business, and I do | country will co-operate with the not think that the President coald | Census Office iu his important have made a better selection. | work. The record should be kept | from June 1, 1889, to May 31, 1590. . Cheatham, a member from North Carolina, colored representative is called on at his : eesaray cara. es eee | Nearly 26,000 of these registation : darned oy z ib A NEW INDUSTRIAL books were filled up and returned nh, aay cansaen SCHOOL | to the office in 1880, and nearly all er 8 engage ; of them used for statistical pur- | poses. It is hoped that donble this number will be obtained for the Eleventh Census. s from his constit- ug asked to be representative had AN OPEN LETTER OF THANKS TO THE talk with the great | pRESIDENT AND BOARD OF DIRECTORS | "Physician not receiving Regis- Mecaes : a OF THE LOUISVILLE AND NASHVILLE | ters can obtain them by sending w are You pleased with RAILROAD C)MPANY. | their names and addresses to the Warrison’s administra- | Census Office, and, with the Reg- isvi c pee 39, |ister, ¢ cial envelope which sville, Ky. May 22, 1889. | ister, an official enve echaen: desis Bale | requires no stamps will be provided We take this pub'ie method of | for their return to W ashington. thanking you for the kindness you) | If all medical and surgical Lee tes? have done us 1m responding so | titiouers throughout the country te ana! 5 ill lend their aid, the mortality do vot think the Pres. | generously and so promptly to our | wn i eel + Hatt ’ Pale Bleeeull ‘any special southern | request to assist in the founding of | a8 pate rh lcs 0 pe cnatoe he will so manage | an Ludustrial school somewhere on Census will be more re Wee : -axto|your line. J quote bere the letter, | S1V¢ and complete tian they a ae ” Office of the Louisville and Nash- | 6VeT been. Every physician 8 ou d ville Rail road Co. take a personal pride in having anit Louisville Ky this report as full and as accurate seas May 10th, 1889, | as it is possible to make it- am very well pleased vy vat do you think will be ballot and a fair ions of the Union; strive to place the n equal equality in " | Prof. W i P It is hereby promised that all in ular with whe other nad: dei Simmons and | rormation ovtained through this i iN i ee OSS source shall be held strictly confi- ne wi recommens Z ofering ny | dential. the passage of a na- Refering to my Robert L. Porter, n law, and 1 judge coramunication of 22nd Ult. beg Superintendent of Census. 4 inaugu-| to advise you that the following | whie seemed to have| amount as subscribed below, has wtlying carrent the | this day been deposited to the cred-| GiNp,, BUSSEY’S SENSATION © cgwred man i the} jt ofa committee consisting of Me. | AL SPEECH. ,and have bis vote| J, D. Taggart Chairman, John A. cast. | Garter and Rassell Heaston with | E : : Do you think al J, W. Ellis as seeretasy and treas-! The sp rech delivered in Balti- election law becessary ?| yrer, | more on Decoration day by Gen. do. On the night ‘of| J. ¢ N. Railroad Co., $1500 00 | Gyrus Bussey, before the G, A. R. last Fall after the} president Ex Nerton, 500 00 | shows that the memory and hero- ven counted in my Dis-| J. D. Probet, 100 00 ism of the men who helped to make saunounced thatI bad| Thomas Rutter, 100 00 | treason odious and the Union per- d over my competitor} August Belmount, 100 00 | petual have 1p him a brave champ- nity of 5,000 to 6,000; J. 8. Roger, 100 00 ion and defender. The studied at- Dewocrats then to| Wm. Wenten, 100 00 | temps of living rebel sympathiz- tom getting the certifi-| J. A. Carter, 100 00 ers, to make heroes and patriots of ion, telegraphed oyer| John H. Inman, 100 00 their misguided brethren who fell ' to theeanvassiug board} =M. H. Smith, 100 00 in that bloody contest, and to pat nty, which met two days; Russell Houston, 100 00 | them on a par, with those who fell lon to. throw out) J, A. Horsey, 50 00 at Merathon and shen 1 my votes in the Dis-| i. W. Foote, 50 00 | and those who won the day pas ‘lcome the announced J. D. Taggart, 100 00 | loh,Gettysburgb, Antietam, Ciick- 7, : F : andred other {t happened that a tele-' Total 3,100 00! amanga, and a h NO. 2 ot ae apotheosis of |OUT-PRICHK SALE IN F. 10T audacity. . The speeches delivered at Alex- WEAR. andria, on the occasion of the ua- veiling of the confederate monu- ment, reveals the fact that the fires of secession were not effectually extinguished by the federal troops, that the southern people recog- nize the fact that they still owe allegiance to the principles tor which Lee and Jackson fought, and Jost, that they owe qualified allegiauce only to the federal gov- ernment. The spirit of secession yet lives and the advocates of that idea only need the opportunity to again assert themselves. Gen. Bussey deserves the thanks of every patriotic American for his manly denunciation of the mislead- ing idea advanced by the southern leaders; that the rebels who fought to disrupt this Union—to blot out the stars and stripes, and to make buman slavery the chief corner stone—are heroes and that their cause was 4 just and rigteous one. Such treasonable utterances are an insult to the magnanimity of the living and the dead Union soldiers who helped to put down treason and rebellion. A dignified silence on the part of living ex-rebels concerning their participation in the late war would be more becoming. It is quite time for Southern white men, who fought against the Union and who secretly belieye they were right, tocease their boasting aud to join hands and hearts with those who saved it and are endeavoring to make it ‘‘a queen among the na- tions of ‘the earth.” There is no room in this country for more than one great governmeat. The wisest statesmanship of modern times has succeeded in establishing here the grandest government the world ever saw. It is the duty of every American citizen to uphold and defend this government at all haz- ards and this applies to southern men who sought to wipe it out of existence. Infants’ Button, regular price 40c, ; now 23cts. Infants’ good quality, regular price 50c.; now 39 cts. Child’s Spriug Heels, 4.7, regular price 60cts.; now 39 cts. Child’s Spring heels, 8-11, regular price $1; now 63c. Child’s better quality Spring heels, 811, regular price, $1.20; now Goce. Ladies’ French Dong., all shapes, regular price, 400; now $3.15. 500 pairs Ladies’ French Dong., hand-made shoes, all sizes and widths, regular price 4,00; choice $2.40. Boy’s and Youth’s Shoes in all styles, reduced from 98¢ to $1.50, former prices 25c, and 50c. per pair more. Gent’s Calf Shoes, regular price $2.50 all shapes; now $1.75. Gent’s Calf Shoes, all shapes and sizes, free from nails and tacks, regu- lar price $3.50 ; now $2.48. ‘ Old Gent’s Broad Toe and Solid Comfort Shoes, all solid calf skin, reg- ular price $2.50 to $3.50; now $1.75 to $2.50. Ladies’ Hand-made Knit Slippers , all colors and Lamb’s wool soles, rea- ular price $1.00; cut prices 50c. These are great bargains. Call and see them. Our Trunk Department. We keep coustantly on hand a full supply of trunks of all discription, and are now selling them at the lowest prices. Trunks of all sizes at a percentage lower than elsewhere. Call and Inspect Our Trunk Depart- ment. BOSTON SHOE HOUSE. AMUSEMENTS. H, GOLDSTEIN, Proprietor. Grand rally at the Mt. Zion Bap- tist church corner 12th and E Sts., n.e., 2nd Sunday in June, 11 a. m. Rev. A. S. Thomas, of Enon Bapt. Church, 3 p. m., the great financier; Rev. Sandy Alexander, pastor of the 1st Bapt., church Georgetown; 8 o’clock p. m., sermon by the pas- tor. Allare welcome, come over in the Northeast. 912 SEVENTH STREFT, N. W., BET. 1& EK v's. HEADOQUART ERS FOR LADIES WEAR. )— READY MADE DRESSES!” For ladies and children, Wrappies Cloaks and Underwear. Or any garment made to order on one days notice. For style and fit we are supreme and wecannot be undersold. 1n our Dry Goods, Hosiery, Gents Un- derwear, etc.. we guarantee a save of 25 percent. “We Want Your Trade.” And we guarantee satisfaction. All we ask of you is to call as we feel a pride to show our goods and consider it no trouble. Remember the place and number. Manufacturing Establishment 918 7th St.,n.w. HERZOGS OLD STAND. M—25--3t MASONIC PICNIC. A grand Masonic picnic, will be given at Vanness park, Monday Juoe 10, 89, for the benefit of Warren Lodge No. 8 F. A. A. Ma- son. A fine band of music and a pleasant time is assured to all who may attend. Gates open at 5} o’clock p. m. Admission - - 25 cents. The tickets held for Jane 3rd will be good for this date. BISHOP, PHOTOGRAPHER. NOTICE THE DATE. C. 0. G. TUESDAY, JUNE 11. First and only grand military picnic! of the Capital City Guard, Maj. F. C. Revells, Com., given AT VANNESS PARK, corner 17th and B Sts. N. W. The corps will marca tothe park and give and give an exhibition drill, Prize drill at 7 o’clock P. M. (the best drilled man will get the medal) Prize Waltz at 9 o’clock. Prize to the best Lady and Gen- tleman waltzers. Sergt. Turner, floor manager. Music by the great and only Hibners Orchestra | eng»ged for this occasion at great | expeuse. Refreshments at regular rates. Gates open from 6 to 12 P.) o——— Makes a Specialty of Fine Work PRICES ALWAYS MODERATE. Old Pictures of every kind copied. PARTICULAR ATTENTION TO THIS CLASS OF 905 Penn. WORK Avenue n.w. May 18; m. M. TICKETS, — — 25 CENTS.| EXECUTIVE COMMMITTEE. | Capt. Joice, Capt. Chapman, Lieut. Hill, Lieut, Edwards, Serg'. | Beckley, Sergt. Robinson. | pas-In case of rain, the dancing will be in the mansion in the Park | 1c | The Capital City Guard at Van-| ness park, a grand Military picnic from 12 m. to 11:30 p. m. Admis- sion 25 cts, yee * 2 a

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