Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
you. XU {a inthe District $75. 00 Hs] (DENEWOO D & ip $75 Each, payMeDTs the price yeyance © ts heirs 0° rssigns $ C.D,.E&F. ot eb gcaser's on A a yerms. $1.60 Per year in Aryans. WASHINGTON, D. O., SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1898, R. R. as heretofore between Washington and Beston over the Poughkeepsie Bridge Route via Simsbury, Northampton and the Boston and Maine R. R, leav ing Washington at 2 40 Pp. Mm. ie J aly Ist 993 1 will sell lots ast Deanewood D, C., at the low vrice of RATES TO CHICAGO VIAB. & 0. R B, World’s Fair excursion ticket/,° arenow on sale forall B. and O trains at the rate of $26.00 for th e reund-trip feom Washington ry Chicago, Through sleeping on all trains. terms of $10 down and $5 per and m the event of the ofthe purchaser befor ¢e ce is paid, I will accept the re so made as full payment and will make a like f the lotte the pur cars MACHINE: IVECO ECOG EU BLEUE LETETONBUNLB ESS IW. E., Extend run direetly through Bast anewood, which ism the District: uvdivision is only about 34 rom the Capitol Building. the Soutbern Marylano ad, When this road is ration these lots will sell for matty times the present price. The ets will be 90 feet in width and ail lots run back to aD alley from 12 to 20 feet wide. If you waut to secure ODE or two lots” at the present low price lose no time put call or address at once. Bh. M. Pine, 1320 F St. N. W. this miles p. FREEMAY'S Elegant - E Has a Perfect Adjustm: studio. _|E Hasabonitee St., n. w., Cor. 17ibeM Has Stvitsh Furniture does a Larger Range = ey Work a ge than any Sewing Machine in the World. Examine THE ROYAL for polnte of = i> excellence; and you will = eas, aanascape Palutint = buy no other. “s * en’s el every .. coups et Sep eisas.”"” ROYAL $, M. €0., Rockford, tl, £ Banner and Sign Painting of... win NU AA +g. every description attended to. ae Established Fifty-five Years, (Oppo. new cit; postofiice.’) RAVEN PIANOS, sractical We Jeweler Practical Watchmaker and Banging aaa bani Manafacturer of 2 Sreitl encien wanna e + @ ewe FRO! e MA] ‘ACTURER AND 8A’ Society Badges, Medals am 50 PER CENT. of Gold aad Suver. 4 acini Sil — |, There Piauos aro made from the best material, i ished in tho best, manner, and being in ev Watches," Clocks and Jewelry, fespect Honest and First-Class, bave been award ee the First Premium wherever exhibited for the last orty Years, Every piano guaranteed for alx years, End Ave Gays trial allowed that it way be thoreusily criticised by yourself and friends before paying for it. Look at the prices and send for Descriptive Catalogue before baying elsewhere. No. 1, Upright or Square, $230, worth $400 No.2 « “ 260, “ 500 No.3, « “ 290, “ 600 ALL 7" s OCTATER Fine and Complicated Watch and Masic Box Repairing 4 Specialty. ; All Work Warranted. —_— No. 632 G St., D- W- a WASHINGTON, D- With Wm. F. LUTZ. Pension The Disability Bill Is a Law OLDIERS DISABLED SINCE THE WAR ARE ENTITLED. t widows and parents now depen = sons died from effects of army se reluded Ifyou wish your claim ccess. u'¥ Prosecuted, addres sui JAMES Tha nt Late Commissionea of Pensions. 4 ‘ er Washington D.C. in usefal, inventive progress, that enri probably the ereatest oprrerta ity Ia own. Now isthe time. Delay mes write mt once. A: bad i & Co,, Box 488. P- oulTy, “SIENINY “OTF * *eouo ye ssouppy “Sa BAL wer NSA UNDERTAKER & CABINET MAKER. Ofice 441 L Street N. W. JARRIAGKS FOR BIRE. — yTelegnoe jp ZoaagsyAA*OrsT0] BAKO TION Wawa @ Pi 3 : 0 00 f ‘Ki “aor | P 2 a0u219 r va Jepgaemepen: § AVIA VW Scientific American Agency for CAVE! TRADE MARKS, DESION PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, etc rmation and free Handbook write to & CO,, 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. for securing patents in America. aken out by us is brought before notice given free of charge in the Stieutific American Latest circutati paper. t circulation of any scientifie in the idly illustrated, No justrat be without it. West, 88.08, Osix months. Address Ml Sus, 361 Bror¢way, New York City. Ly wondermy effect produced by Dr. Alex onae EWanors Compound of Pure Cod-Liver OF ona Phosphates renders it beyond doubt the mos! perfect p-eparation of its kind known to-day. ‘Consumption, coughs, colds,asthma, debility,wast ing diseases and all s humors disappear un der its influence. as palatabie as cream n with y delicate persons an¢ seome very fond of it pereases the fiesh and ti a.m. Pullman sleeping car will] HH heard that the President was continue to run Via the B. and O.| going away. Who is going to Liberia to die? Hundreds are auxious to go and dia for their country. Fools die for honor. Brave men die for game. Liberia 1s dead game, Ex-Gov- Pinchback will. reside in this city. - The Governor is a lively and jolly fellow. He is brave and honest. He is ont of politics. Probably until it pays to enter again. BA great man is dead. Leland Standtord is no more He was loved by all who knew him. Mr. W, A. Stewart will join the lock next fall. Single birds never catch worms, Guss thinks that _way.; He has been thinking that way or a long time. He had many birds but, ovly a certain specie had any effect on him. That was a home bird. Do you read the BEE? Marriages are pamerous now. The genial Walter Lewis will join the matramonial tlock. Marriage is a devine institution. What is life without a kind and honest companion? Life is what you make it. Read the BEE and be happy. You will find life in the BEE. COLORED MYSTIC SHRIN- ERS, There is now among the colored Masons of this country an order of the Mystic Shrine, the degree having been brought here and in- troduced by _ Lilustrious Noble Kofelt Pasha, deputy for Arabic western Asia, and conferred upon John G. Joner, thirty-third de- gree. ‘The order is known as the Imperial Grand Council of the Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine of the United States aud has been duly organ ized among the colored Masons of the country. The following otticers havé been elected: J. G. Jones, illustrious grand potentate; P. W. Randolph, de- puty grand potentate; D. W. Dempsey, grand chief rabbau;-J, F, '’homas, assistant rabban, J. W Dunmore, bigh priest and pro, phet; A Hampton, grand oriental guide; E, W. Totten, treasurer; J. H, Lewis, recorder; J. H. Shreeves, first ceremonial master 8. H. Hudlin, second ceremonial master; Joseph Wynn, marshal; Charles Williams, architect; J. H, Carter, organist; Willium Oliver, standard bearer; Alexander Brown, captain of guard; George Augustus, assistant guard and W. R. Wilbur,outer guard. ‘This is the first time in the Uni. | ted States that these degrees have been conferred up colored Masons The grand council will have ex. clusive control over these degrees among colored Masons. The col» ored Masons now claim to have. all the degrees in regular manner, the same as the whites. NEW ROUTE TOjBOSTON. Commencing on Sunday, June 25th, a daily sleeping car service will be established from Washing tou to Boston via the Baltimore and Obio Railroad to Phila delahia, thence over the Reading Railroad system viaP oughkeepsie Bridge thence via Hartford to Boston over the New York and New Eng- land Railroad. Train will leave B. and O. station at Washington 2:40 p. m. and will arrive at New York and New England Depot. Boston, the next morning at_7:45 em. to Hopewell Junction, &. WILLIAM McADOO. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy, ex Congressman, McAdoo, bas recently removed from New Jersey to New York. He was born in Ireland, October 25, 1853 and soon after his parents emi- grated to the United States, His parents were poor, and before he had received an education he was compelled to earn his own living; He was ambitions, however, aud while workiug as office boy in a law office mastered Blackstone and studied __ political economy and parliamentary law. He was admitted to the bar in 1874, He was elected 10 the 48 Congress, and was three times re~ elected. Mr. McAdoo’s wife was Miss Eva Lee Yardy, of Lynch- burg, Va. THEY SAY. ‘Lhe boys are waiting. They are looking for the pro- mised land. Itis in sight but how to reach it they do not kaow. The administration owns that land. Smith got a piece of that land and will hold it for four years. It is uncertain property anno one has a life tenure. The old and young have filed their claims. Some are rejected and some are granted. £ This 1s bad land to obtain. It belongs to the people, Only certain people can get it. They must entertain certaiu political faith. It is uncertain then, although explanatory petitions are often filed, : Aside from your faith, you mast owe alegence to certain successful land owners. This time Mr. a four years lease. Those who did not file Oleveland claims before the election, cannoi get a piece of this land. Lacey is making more arrests than any of his assoeiates. The American Pilot will be ite name. It must have a BRE to give {it substance. Editor Thornton knows how to use the flattery box. A little flatterary does well some times, Secretary Hoke Smith is liked by negro democrats. There was a little misunderstand ing between the 19th St. Baptisi church and Prof. Layton’s bride, Notwithstanding the marriage went on just the same. wo The Capital Savings Bank isa reliable institution. Miss Lucy Moten is highly thought of by the best educators of this country, While there is life, there 18 hope, District republicans are talking about the next convention. They are all going as delegates. Two will be chosen and the rest will be left, The man who shows his teeth 18 a’ dapgerous animal. ‘ All animals do not show their teeth. Cleveland has ‘A map who. will&knite his friends will kill his enemies. cer You may do 99 favors and be thrown over-board tif you fail to do the hundreth. -~ + ~« fy <gugg <.919. Thompson of New York is in the city. J. W. Brown, United States Marshal for West Tennessee, was dangerously wounded and Special Deputy Marshal C. W. Green, of McNary county, was Killed in a battle with moonshiners near White Sulphur Springs, Hardin county. Mrs. U. S. Grant and Mrs. Jefferson Davis had a cordial meeting at West Point and have apparently struck up a friendship. The West Point military authorities will not officially recognize Mrs. Davis, but she will receive social courtesies. nonce J. Power has been appoint- | ed shi ipping commissioner at the port of New York, vice James C. Reed, re- moved. Maurice J. Power is leader of the County Democracy. He was appointed a police justice by ex-Mayor W. R. Grace, who was one of his backers for the present position. A RACE WAR IN INDIA Bloody Riot Growing Out of a Religious | Disturbance, A despatch from Rangoon states that for several days the Moslems had been preparing to celebrate a re- ligious festival on Sunday, the 25th inst. They were forbidden by Mr. Fleming, British magistrate, to sacri- fice a cow near the Hindoo temple. The Mohammedans were greatly ex- cited before the hour of the sacrifice. When the police appeared near the temple with the announcement that the sacrifice was forbidden the Mo- bammedans began stoning them. The police charged without firing, but the Mohammedans held their ground stub- bornly and fought back with sticks and stones. Mr. Fleming, who had gone to the spot as soon as trouble became imminent, and several police- men were wounded. The police with- drew, got re-enforcements and charged again, but without effect. Mr. Flem- Ing then ordered them to fire. The volley was delivered at close quarters. Twenty Mohammedans fell dead and many more were wounded severely. s the Mohammedans still refused to disperse the military were called out. Four companies charged on the double quick with fixed bayonets. The Mo- hammedans dispersed slowly and still fighting, although many had been wounded in the charge of the troops. They gathered again, however, in street a short distance from the tem- ple. They were hardly dispersed be- fore they reassembled in another street. Desultory fighting continued all through Sunday, and many Mo- bammedans and Hindoos were killed and wounded. The rioters showed no sign of yielding at last advices, but as fast as they are driven from one point gather at another. Heavy re-enforce- ments have been sent to Rangoon. HUNTING THE BORDEN MURDERER. Lizzie Borden Said to be Determined to Have the Aasassin Found. Lizzie Andrew Borden, accompanied by her sister Emma, has reoccupied her old home in Second street, Fall River. Lawyer Jennings has no the- ory which he can sustain with proof as to who committed the Borden mur- ders. Nevertheless, he says, Miss Liz- zie Borden and her sister will leave ho stone unturned to discover, if pos- sible, who the murderers are. The hunt is already on and will continue. Of Lizzie Borden’s plans for the future he says he knows little, but thinks it probable that she may leave the city for a while and seek rest from the ter- rible strain that she has been under for the past ten months. Charles Richards, foreman of the jury, says: “After the jury had assembled to talk over the case one juror offered to pay for drinks for the entire number if they would agree on the first ballot, and he paid, and Lizzie Borden’s fate was decided by the jurors’ thirst. We arrived at our verdict,” said Foreman Richards, “on the evidence. The Gov- ernment did not prove its case. The arguments had little weight, though they helped to clear some things in our minds.” Damages Wantea for Hazing. — The hazing episode in the Ohio Wes- leyan University, at Toledo, O., was supposed to have been compromised. } The hazers were to pay the costs and attorneys’ fees. This they have failed to do. The case will now be fought in the courts. The plaintiffs, who were horribly branded with nitrate of silver, are Percival H. Wilson, Joseph B. Rodgers, Orland C. Harris and Milton W. Brown. The youths against whom the suit was brought are Ralph Har- old, Peter Adams, Holoway Farrar, Wilber B. Morrison, W. H. Irving, Harry D. Bell, Walter Evans, Charles W. Phellis and Calvin S. Welch. The boys who were hazed are disfigured for life. A Lizzte Borden Case. St. Louis, Mo., is to have a murder trial after the New Bedford pattern. Maud McKibben, eighteen, has been arrested for poisoning her father and sister, Mrs. Stewart. An autopsy showed that both had died from the effects of strychnine. Maud tried to purchase both arsenic and strychnine a few days before the meal was eaten that resulted in her father’s and sis- ter’s death. Maud, however, ate of the same food and became very ill herself, but she tecovered, while the two others died. Big Political Piams Expected. New York politicians look for a num- ber of important New York appoint- ments to be made during the present week. It is believed that President Cleveland will settle the matter of these appointments before taking his Fourth of July trip to Gray Gables. Gold Comi:g Back. ‘The steamship Columbia, which is expected in New York this week, brings $500,000 in gold. This is be-. lieved to be the actual Se te ee es. golden tide towards the U THIS WHER” NES Doings for the Past Six Days Gathered and Condensed for Our Readers. General. The attendance of visitors at the World's Pair is gradually increasing. The Domestic Sewing Machine Com- pany will resume business. The Spanish Princess Eulalia sailed eee from New York on Saturday ast. Amusement-seekers at Coney Island have had life made miserable by swarms of mosquitoes. About 85 of the 250 consulships that pay $1,500 per annum and upward have been filled by new men. The new Cunard steamer Campania, on her last arrival in New York, came within an hour of breaking the ocean record. Associate Justice Blatchford, of the United States Supreme Court, is ex- remely ill, and there is little hope of very. The Spanish Colony of Puerto Rico will hold an exposition in honor of the discovery of America, which will open in November, 1893. The Czar has officially thanked the issioners who negotiated the ex- a nm treaty between Russia and the United States. The Cataract Bank,at Niagara Falls, has closed its doors. It has a capital of $300,000 and a surplus of $50,000, and will meet all liabilities. Leland Stanford, Republican Senator from California, and well known the country over as one of the great rail- road kings of the West, died suddenly at his residence at Menlo Park, Cal. There is much excitement at Dan- bury, Conn., over the discovery of a vein of coal, apparently indicating a rich deposit underlying the city. The discovery was made by cellar-diggers. Secretary Lamont issued an order this week dissolving the military court of inquiry ordered in connection with the Ford’s Theatre disaster. He will leave the eivil authorities to deal with the casa. The Interior Department has refused to pay for the tuition of a Carlisle Indian School graduate at a normal school on the ground that there are too many Indains needing primary education. The directors of the Northern Pacific Railway Company have accepted the resignation of Mr. Henry Villard as Chairman of the Board of Directors and elected J. D. Rockefeller to the position. Alice, the only lioness at the Central Park Zoo, New York, has given birth to three male cubs. The babies are yellow as gold, about ten inches long and round and fat. Alice ate up a previous litter of cubs. A stone the size of a hazelnut was removed from the right kidney of Mayor Wanser, of Jersey City, at St. Luke’s Hospital. The operation was of an unusual and delicate nature, but the Mayor will recover. During a severe thunder storm at River Falls, Wis., just over the Min- nesota line, lightning struck the cen- tre-pole of the circus tent of Ringling Brothers. Seven people were killed instantly and quite a number injured, none of the latter fatally. Miss Lizzie Borden and her sister Emma have resumed their old _resi- dence at Fall River, Mass., and will devote themselves to an effort, with proper legal and detective assistance, to discover the murderer of their father and stepmother. There has arrived in Washington a distinguished party of French country gentlemen, who have been sent to the United States at the expense of their Government to study American ideas of agriculture. The most noted person in the party is M. Vassaliere, Inspector- General of the Department of Agricul- ture of France. Rainmaker Jewell, at present of Kansas, has made the announcement that he proposes to convince the skep- tics of his rainmaking capacities by going to Chicago during “Kansas Week” in September next and flood- ing the Exposition with immense downpours of rain. ’ The earthquake which shook Charles- ton, S. C., for some minutes shortly after 11 o'clock on Tuesday night last was unattended with material dis- aster, yet it was a sufficiently start- ling reminder of the ‘quake of "86 to arouse the sleeping community and to fill the streets with frightened people. The American Steamship Line has developed into the International Steamship Company, which will con- trol the Red Star and Inman trans- atlantic companies and enter largely into the European trade. Five new steamships, to cost $2,000,000 each, and which are expected to prove the fastest aflcat, have been ordered in Philadelphia. The big Ferris wheel in the Midway Plaisance, Chicago, has been opened to the public. There are thirty-six cars on the wheel, each capable of comfortably seating forty people. The ears are twenty-seven feet long, thir- teen feet wide and nine feet high, and each one weighs thirteen tous. The highest altitude of the cars is 265 feet. The wheel and cars weigh 1,206 tons. The city of Madrid is in a state of alarm over a dynamite disaster by which a number of bombs were dis- charged in front of ex-Premier Can- ovas del Castillo’s house. One person was killed there and several injured. The explosion caused a panic in a cir- cus and in the rush the son of the Marquis of Guadaled was killed, the grandson of the Marquis of Havana fatally injured and a number of others seriously burt.