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1s ESTABLISHED iJNE 2, 1881. jehas the largest ong fide circula- son of any Afro- journal the plished at WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, N-VEMBEK gag, Sie Bee —s a— Great Advertsing Medium TRY IT! fearless race advo- cate? Do you want eol- ored trade? Read and adver- tisein THE BEE! Fortune-Teller and Clairvoyant. time-don’t delay t® »geatest hving Clair. eath. To be tore. warn. foresrmed. Come Sand y at once. Re main but seek ge, and learn iysterious fuure bulds fact that the lady ie ® the jairvoysnt iv the Stat: tha st the troubled, bring hap. to the unhappy, and give allmisfortune and = trogbl personal interview or by only too well known: by who come to see her from ar and afar, Her mysterious wers bave convirCed the -most ytical that she perfectly u ‘nder science of all the 3 love and cky , which will overcome your vs, remove all family < ouble happmess; brings the sep- d together—never fui.e re- #ffections; brings bappy marrieges t love; removes evil ces; breaks up all bad bab- e!l conjuring, and gives duck bay piness to last a lie time. She will give correct information aw suits, divorces, absent is,and never failing advice g people on love, courtship arrege, end how to chuose ner for heppiness, what bus- you will succeed and mako Gives initials of pres fature wife or busband sands have = bveen made y her pever failing help to those that have ucrushed down by mus‘ortane d unhappiness. Reader. if ubave been deceived by the y anserapulous pretenders din every city, judge not wl! , for your owv conscience tells itnere 18 & Way to Overcome ‘ , just the sume as there is nediene or al] disessee.Ail who we in trouble, whoee fovd hopes sudembit ons have been blasted, been deceived and dis ed by false predicnone of s, before giving up, sre invit- consult this true lady, she lees perfect satisfaction. land be convinced of the ¥ true statementa, Fee 50 cts. $100 Those who cannot len me can bave weir life in full from cradle to sending $200 correet ute aad year ofbirth,eex color Any other information feertally unewered on receipt ed envelope. Curry 1614 7th et. N. W. dington, Db. C. 2 er the > oi stores Jost and apeedy ANE write grave by of air, Samy yy W A. @, Hu tterly, pe. new city postoftice. ) | Watchmaker and Jewele Manafacturer of 2adges, Medals and Jewels OC Gnd aed Silver, \ Watches,'Cloeks and Jewelry. and Complicated Watch Musie Box Repairing a Specialty. and Pension WIERS DISABLED SINCE THE va AREZENTITLED. widowe and parents now depen us died from effects of army se included Ifyou wish your claim And successiu “v prosecuted,add es JAMES TAnnti, amissionea of Pensions, Washington D.C. Peedi }y. late Cor SITTERS. *p it, $l per bottle. Genuine hms “k Gad crossed red lines on Wrappek: (hea and the World’s Fair Send ten cents (silver) or twelve cents in stamps for a Handy Pocket Guide to the great Exposition ; gives informatiun of value to every visitor, Street Guide, Hotel Pr Cab Fares, Restaurant Rates, etc. De- scribes the hiddem pitfa!ls for the un- wary, and hints how to keep out of them. This indispensable companion to every visitor to the windy city will be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of ten cents silver, or twelve cents in stamps. Address H. STAFFORD, Publisher, P. O. Box 226 New York, N. Y. Please mntion this paper. Hiow Is This? Something unique even in these days of mammoth premium offers is the latest eff rt of Stafford’s Mag zine, a New York monthly of. home and general readi g. lhe proposition is to send the Maga- zine one year for one dollar, the regular subscription price, and i» addition to send each subscriber fifty-two complete novels during the twelve mon hs—one eac week, Think of it. You receive 4 new and complete novel by mail, post paid, every week for fifty-two w and in addi- tion you get the magazine once a month for twelve months, all for one dollar. It anoffer which the publishers«an only afford to make inthe confident «x tation of one hundred thousand sub- seribers. Among the thor- in the comaing series are Wilk | Collins, Walter Besant, Mrs. Oliphant, ‘Ma; ecilHay, Florence M t, Anthony Trollope, A. Conan De iss Braddon, Captain Marryat, Thachery, and Jules Verne. If you wish to take advantage of this unusual opportunity send one dollar for Stafford’s Magazine, one year. Your first copy of the magazne and your first number of the fifty-two nov- els (one each week) which you are to re- ccive during the year will be sent you bv return mail. Remit by P. Order, registered letter or exprsss. Address H. STAFFORD, Publisher, Stafford’s Magazine, P.O. Bo: New York Please mention this paper. 64, R. S... SMITH, Late A. U.S. Special agent in the morgage branch of the 11th Census, Attorney at Law. 420 5th street N. W. Wash., D. C Howard University Law Building. Practices in all the Conrts in the Dis- trict of Columbia Claims and other collections attended to. ne ee ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cos’ |of any proposed line o advertising in Americap papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co. Newspeper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St, Now York. | taee tate 9 nce Pam eee THE CAW’S PEN AND INK COM- PANY EXHIBIT AT CHICAGO. Krom the Sclentifi American, Sept, 16th, 199 Avong the Exhibits in the great Manufactuersand J.iberal arts Building at the Fair, one very beautifully arrang- ed showcase is devoted to the display of the wel-known goods of the Caw’s Pen and Ink + ompany of 104 Bro:dway, New York. These articles have been so popular from their large use by all who have any writing to do in every depart ment of business and in all walks of life as well asfrom the numberless unstint ed indorsements of men prominent in the leading professions, that any detailed description would be superfluous. Foun- tain Pens, for many years us-d almost exclusively by eporters and_ traveling men, have within a comparative! period become almost indispens the bus ness man and to those whose avocations are of a literary character in anyway. This is becaus» these pens have of late been made so simple, clan and thoroughly effective that one can, how With the least care, depend upon alway ig and conveniently carry ng upon the person a pen in good working condition, without danger of soiling the clothes or fingers therewith, the ink carried in the holder, and readily replen ishe', being sufficient to do a large amount of work. In consequence also, of this la gely increased use, and of the improvements introduced in the nmyanu- facture, the prices of thisclass of pens i been very greatly > Fountain Pen, a fgold pen of any e may be used. In this respect it diff other foun tain pen. Another difference is in its do- ublle feed.’’ one on each side of the gold pen, which insures a more uniform and reliable delivery of ink than can be ob- | tained from ngle feed. President Cleveland uses one of these pens and has furnished the Company with a hand some testimonial. .,In Caw’s Stylogra- phic Pens the inventor seems to have- obtained the acme of perfection and sim- plic. The writing isdone witha cir- cular point simJar t» a penci ut being tipped with and alloy of jum and plantinum, making it almost as hard as diamond, it will last many years. The Stylographic Pen carries ink in the hold e the same as the Fountain Pen, and by may jt is preferred to the ordinary split pen. With both of these pens any good writing or copying ink manufactured by the Caw’s Pen and Ink Company has as high reputation as the pens, and has had mvery large sale in stationery trade for r Itisa good black when a and in its maunfacture an special Point ismade to produce and ink which wid not fade or mould, and will not gum or corrode the pen. ‘Ihe Company displays its medals from the New Orleans Exposition of 1884, and ine Paris Exposition of 1889, and ex- pects to be equally successful in competi tion in Chicago. s andard shape or FASHION NOTES. The very latest shirt is called the serpentine skirt, Velvet continues to rise in impor tance. An exquisite costume of shot brown and green foulard with trimmings of old lace as an appropriate carriage costume, Basque pieces are nm vogue. A beautiful walking costume is com posed of ombre woo en goods and 1uty velvet. A Paris traveling costume is biscuit color cheviot fleeked with darker shades in brown, The half length coats fall are among the latest. A circular skirt in changeab e blue and tan being aine with lengthwise cord weave is very pretty. Ten prunella cloth makes an appro riate dress for any occasion. New fichus are seen in silver em broidered gui, ure net and consists of a very full ruching for the neck, ‘ou? Some earn cver $509.60 + ou cu do the work and live , Wherever ¥ arare. Even De are easily earning from BD to ‘Marert.¢ te Fox 880 Portl ar, Wall rend preqesd io an nes BARE CATA FBREampoce, Epavters AQ sisnka Drom Musk St \pejHet, Seo iry THE HAWAIIAN SITUATION: PresIDENT CLEVELAND ENDORSED. Tue MISSIONARIES DENOUNCE THE Democratic Party. Celso Ceasar Moreno, Esq. Dear Sir.—Having been accussd a8 being my correspondent. from Washington probably by the Hawaiian Provisional Government Minister at your Capital, without any truth, we way well ve excuse} after so serious a cbirge tcom our bigoted friends of Puritan extrac- tion in Gpening up a correspond- ence for our mutual edification, and for the purpose of thwarting the un crapulons and unprivcipled schemer against the public welfare of your present or adopted country as well as mive. 1 was agreeably surprised when I received your lester, the first since you wrote me 1p 1880, and the news papers from Washington especially as they had some referance to this ittle country. An article in the Post of Sept. 12, 1893, beaded **The President Will Soon Act on the Hawaiian Question” was very wel- come on Its arrival here, more es- pecially as being the oniy one that. gave definite bopes of an early set- tlement of our affairs up to that date ud also the voofirmation of Mr. Wilis and Mr. Mills appointments as Minister Resident aud Counsul general respectively, You cao, no doubt realize the satisfaction with which these appointments were re received by the Sawaiian pe ple and thei) royalist friends, and tbe utter demoralization of the ubsera- pulous plotams and jetsams and so- calicd christians who have banded hemselves uvder ao association called the Aonexation Club, to pil- ter the Islands from ite original owners and disfranchise them, with strong bope that the then Kepubli- can adminisivation would sanction the dirty little business witb out ary consideration what vver as to the indelible stain such a course mast inevitable cast upon the yet uptarnished character of the American Nativn. The abuse of these two gentiemen, expecially Mr M lls by the Hessian editor of the ADoexation Club newspaper, when the newe first reached here, was bitter and groundless excep: ihe fear that these meu were South- erne:s and ‘ike Mr. Blount would be equally as fearless and impartial in the discharge of their duties ar the latter proved himself during tis too short a stay in Hawaii. The missionary sheet the A ve tiser, or as it is commonly known bere, the “Morning Liar,’? was about ou a par with its cotemporary, the Eve- uing Star, or “Twinkier.” These sheets were vituperative agains the democratic party, and denoucec President Cleveland anu his Cabi net, going so far in its imbecility as to say that the American Na- gon would not stand such acts as turnivg ou* such good and faithtui public servants? as Mr. Stey- ens and Mr. Severance, because presumably these genJdemep were born iu Maine, and were more or less connected wits the elect five hun dred or the Cuosen ones, and tha! Congress would in all probability be colbpelled tu take steps to im peach the President and bis Oabine:. Such absurdities as are publ si: by tha writers of these u¢ wspape's would land themin an asylum as Len compos Quder any other gov elumept *xcept such a one as we baye at present, and administered by men equally as saue, differing in their malady only, that the form eris gaseously violeut and the latter isotthe miidly phariseeic order. It Is sickening and disgusting to see the barefeced hes put forward by the advocies of annexation. As au acmirer of the fundamental princi- ples Opon which the American Na- tion is instituted, I must say, that the way that country bas been ad- mipisiered and the princip.es have been prostituted to seltish intrests, my respect, or rather my self=re- pect, 1 regret to say, is causing me to look with deubt upon the abilix ty and iuitegrity of men placed in authority to carry out impartially those glorious principles of freedom and egaality which all lovers of hon est goverument had hope to see SeOUSTON TS “TOnsTe 133 O2 queswoid gt 4x 19 NOL SNMOUR aye} pmoys ‘dn ur *PIMNgyawx oy TeIpTyo so ‘7U0} 8 bet ied read carried out united!y in the hitherto great and Glorious Republic and as inducement for Hawaiians to advo- cate aunexation to the United States Monarebical England today is more democratic, freer and juster and more impartially governed, ard saiter to live in than America is to- day, The lawles-ness and anarchy in America today is the best evi deuce to prove the charge against man’s failure to carry out these immutable principles of government which she has embodied upon her statutes, The principles are correct and impartially administered would make ts all feei , ban they efe dot ibely Go Oey uhba lD beer restored to his first condition. The very act of stealing ou gove’nwent fromus, by a high official of the United Sgates’ govern- ment and placing the power iu . the hands 2f its owa citizens by its superior force and xa lroading 2 treaty of annexation through the creatures which that gentleman bad set apand claiming barefacedly tbat such a proffer was the will ot tbe people, is of itseif so dishouor- able, mean and Coutemptible, that we never have nor never can be- heve that the better nature of the American people will tolerate saci a treaty, or allow such a stigma to stand against her Uncorrected, at lopger thar sufficient time will give her to understand the facts an- make restitution of tbose thing that.belong to others no matt ho insigvificant the sufferers 11 the case may be. Itis a cave of bure justice which the Hawaiia: expect by restoration from th United States, of a shameless ac committed by one of its diplomatic officers, committing her to a wrong act. Asan American by prineijic though 2 Hawaiian by patio: ality, I feel a burning shame for that cou try and the people from when we have derived so maci that suc a stain has been, I bope mome: tari ly thrust upon her fair fame vy rene gade Americans wearing th- gait ot Christians who cajoled aud fai- tered an old fossil to make tie ai- tempt to carry out the lusts vtih-i hearts. My dear sir, 1 bope you will ex- cuss me for gaying such harsh things againgt there fill.busiess andagainst judoism, Lcaawot rm- sist it, I feel myself asa ciiiz-n 0 the United States on principle an thus am impelled to speas condem nitcry of 2 wiong committed b men claiming to be inspired by th priuciples which vreatedthe gove + - me.ut which their ancestors fous: t aud maintaiued uot to be ag sive bat to resist aggressivil. teel Lcould write a volume, 1 05 ‘moperfect way, upon this subj c but time and circumstances tur Gi fur the present. i The Queen has been living in tiremeut, bearing . the shame, i- columnies trom the pen «f Men + womeu professing to ve the bea € uf “good will to all manki a” » more of the sweet spirit of the Ma ter than those who profess it. Before the Steven’s revolution of January las these very same people who are -liam- lessly abusive and have so much fauit to find with her Majesty, were the very ‘adies and gentlemen of her Court. a more obsequious and dissembiin; lot of courtiers it would be hard to se: gathered together. The idea of such characters as Judge judd and M Judge M. Cully Rev. Serren: EB hop, Viescn, Mts. W. fda cua cL. writing candestinly to some u. known newspaper or friend the bette: things and lies which they have to wards poor Queen Liliuokalani, js of itself sufficien' to condemn them & exonesate her, Itreminds me of the attitude of King David when reville.. and spat upon while fleeing from th revolution of his own son, by his very countries and I believe that the same reward will be meted out to those inventioned in scripture in David’s case. However with more courage aidcharacter she bears the | ca umny of these former royal parisit | es who often supposed and dinedat her expense. She is happy and con-| tented, and rests in that enjoyavic | mood of mind trusting with more sag acity in the great republic, than her treacherous friends and traducers. She has never for once movered in her be lief that the justice of her position willbe recognized by the American Government, and that she will honor ably restored by that government to her rights. Almost every native Haw atian and a large number of foreigners liks being uniced | | firm buying it for an employee. —— are of the same belief and sympathize with her majesty in her forced retire— ment, . eb b bee Time compelsjme to close. Au revoir until my next. Jno. E. Bush. OUR FOREIGN EXPORTS. ‘ They Show a Present Increase, but a Fall. ing Off for the Year. The Bureau of Statistics at Wash- ington has issued a comparative state- ment of exports for the fiscal year of 1892 and 1893 up to June 1st." The exports of | Mineral oils were as follows: | For the month ended May 81 last $3,- | 758,149. an increase over the month of | May, 1892, of more than $500,000: for | theeleven months ended May 31 last | $87,611,595. a decrease from the corres- | ponding period of 1892 of more than $3,- | 000,000, The total values of the exports | of cotton are reported as follows: For | the month ended May 81 last $11,251,126, an increase of nearly $500,000 over May of last year, but for the nine months ended May 31 last $174,779,878, a decrease of nearly $68,000,000 from the corres- ponding period of 1892. | ‘The bureau reports the total values of | beef, hog, and dairy products exported as follows: For the month ended May last $10,400,410, a falling off of nearly $700,000 as compared with the exports for a similar period of 1892; for the five months ended May 81 last $45,245,992, a loss of a little more than $10,000,000, aa compared with the same months of 1892. AN AMERICAN PRINCESS. A Young Vanderbilt Said to be About to Wed a Borghese, According toa recent telegram, it looka at Paris as if there is to bean American princess, Itissaid thata young Vander- bilt is to be the happy groom, and the daughter of the house of Borghese the blushing bride. The only impediment to the union seems to be the religious scruples of the Italians. The Borghese, who claim the distinction of having a saint among their ancestors, and asainted Pope at that (Paul V, in 1605), can hardly afford to mix with a family of disbeliev- ers, as they call them in Rome. They are also somewhat chagrined over the fact that the Vanderbilts cannot go | back further than « steamboat captain. The Vanderbilts, on the other hand, have recalled the fact that one of the best known of the family, Camillo Burg- hese, married the widow of a commoner, though she was the sister of Napoleon Bonaparte, to which the Borghese reply that Camillo separated from his wife efter the overthrow of Napoleon, and broke off all communciation with the family of the Corsican, Fortune Lost by Greed. Tom Flemming, Jr., of Memphis, Tenn., a miserly son of a stingy father, had $2,683 in gold coin stolen from a ' chest in a garret, along with mortgages and deeds representing nearly $100,000, which he was too stingy to have recorded. | Tom Bowland, a farm hand, was accused ;| of the robbery and went toa field and ; nnearthed $1,500 of the money. He took the remainder from under the roots of a tree. The thief admitted he burned the deeds. The makers of the deeds and mortgages will repudiate their agree- ment. Not being on record Flemming will lose nearly the entire amount called , for by them. The German Elections. The canvass in Germany draws to 4 close with the usual multiplicity of hopes and fears. The confidence felt by the Government recently that it would find a majority in the new Reichstag ready to accept a compromise Army bill has vanished gradually before the approach of the decisive day, and its newspaper | organs now speak in an uncertain tone, which is interpreted generally as ominous for Chancellor von Caprivi’s defeat. The voting begins on Thursday, June 15, and continues for several days. Three hun- ' dred and ninety-seven members of the | Reichstag will be elected. piacd Ee Sea “Old Hutoh’s” Seat sold. The once famous wheat speculator, B. P. Hutchinson, “Old Hutch,” has | sold his membership in the | Board of Trade. The cartidente, whale whick out to these traducers as we meied | was issued to the old gentleman twan- ty-six years ago, went at a very low price. It is understood that he realized a little less than $900 by the sale. The membership went into Armour & Co.’s office, the hard-headed senior 4 that inson was at one time worth $8,000,- 000, accummlated in speculation chiefly. The sale of his membership is taken as marking the formal close of his business career, ___ - = oe ‘TO CONSUMPTIVES:” 4 No better remedy ean be fou ~ & orm cough, colds, bronchitis and gewcat AoDtitg. tee consumption in aay of ftm stages. “iat Dr. Withers Compound of Pare Cué-Ltver Oil sud Phosphates of Lime, Soda aud Iron. 't’- the frit of long expent= te e: