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eee 3 i & {i } i. THE BEE. Pub ished every Saturday at 1109 1 Strect, northwest, Washington, D. C. Entered at the Post Office at Washirgtop as second class mail matter. W.CALY'N CHASF, Eprror, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 2-81.50 One copy per year.......... - 1.00 Six months. Three mouths. 3 City subscribers, monthly. ..... 2 ADVERTISING RATES. One inch, one month .. Quarter column * Ee Half column One column One inch, Quarter column * Half column One column one year - 10.00 3 00 Special notices 10 cents yer line. Ten lines constitute an inch. TAYLOR 18 CONFIRMED. he Senate, as the Bre always predicted, confirmed cB J. Taylor, Recorder ef D eds to: the District of Columbia, on last Hon We inesday afternoon. Notwithstanding the oppositicn of the Starand Post, and the many misrepresentations both — papers made under the petext that the oppos- to Tas ior be- resident, and of the Senate people we cause be was a no the adverse reper Commitee, Taylor was cufimed M:. Taylor is indebted tw the ifirmation, He e the masses of the Negro iv his interest than many who are supposed bo be leaders Of ihe rece Negro for bis cx (Taylor) did more to uni He is to be corg:atulated ; and now what Mr. Taylor shouid do, is to tender thank-, which tre BEE knows Le wil do to the Republicar manfuilly Senators who so sDps ported him. OUR PUBLIC PRINTER, On the front page of this paper will be seen the portrait of Hon. Thomas E. Benedict, Public Printer, who was nominated to succeed Hon. Frank W. Palmer. As the BEE before Benedict is no stranger to th While the recent discharges that oc- curred in the office were a necessity, no man has a keener conception of the necessities or wants of the people more than Mr. Benedict. He knows no man by his color: he has the same respect and appreciation for the poor that he has for the rich His one aim is to eonduct the Gov. erument Printing Office in a_Dbusines: like and practical manner. You wilh see a different foree at work in the printing office; you will see men anu women earning a aay’s work and earn. ing living wages: you will see a system of workmanship so practical and uni form that will cause the most prejudice to say that Mr. Benedict is the same mau that he was year con SUI systematica manuer. There is a gr deal of complaint about so many colored people being ¢ charged. While that may be a fact, Bre knows that Mr. Benedict did 1:0 know the color of the persons wher their names were handed to him, and the BEE predicts that there will be as many colored appointed by Mr. Bene- dict, in proportion to the number dis- charged by hii, if not more. The BEE commends Mr. Benedict for the reinstatement of Mr. Clark. Negri republicans taunted and hounded him staying qualities, Was loyal to the office at the time Mr. Benedict was public printer. Other colored men were disc ars on the recommendation of those milk and water white republican sub-bosses. because these coio-ed men had an inde- pendent political opinion. The Bee tl es ina division of the Negro vote, aid no man should be cou- dewned because he wants to support the demo e party. The public printer is a northern democrat who i rior to a southern republi equally as safe as a northern republi- can, so faras the Negro is concerned re We pass sentence en the new lic priuter let us give him a fair }, and then render a verdict. * The Bee believes in Mr. Benedict. ———— HIs FAITHFUL MAN. Whenever you find a faithful man, no atter who he may he. never desert him because others di like him. Rey. P. il. White was Mr. Taylor’s fathtul man. He was the man who his chief fally posted on all mat- ters, and to him Mr. taylor is no doubt indebted Rev. White has the congratulations of the BEE. . SPECIAL NOTICE. W. Calvin Chase, attorney and coun- Sellor at law, as moved in his new own town office, 406 5th and D streets. n. w., near the courts, whre he can be seen from 8 to 4, after which time he can be seen at his up town office, 1109 I street. n.w. All kinds of law business attended to with care. WELL PREPARED. |How Some Marriage Ceremonies Were Performed. A minister's wife, who is not so seriously minded at all times as her husband is, tells some laughable stories relating to marriage cere monies which he performed while they were living in a newly settled district in the backwoods of Canada. The minister always felt it to be his duty to give each young couple a little serious advice before he performed the marriage ceremony, and for this purpose he usually took them aside, one at a time, and talked very soberly to each of them regarding the great importance of the step they were to take, and the new responsibilities they were to assume. One day he talked in his most ear- nest manner for several minutes to a young woman who had come to be married. “And now,” he said, in closing, “T hope you fully realize the extreme im- portance of the step you are taking, } {and that you are prepared for it.” “Prepared,” she said, innocently; “well, if I ain’t prepared, I don’t know who is. I’ve got four common quilts and two nice ones, and four brand-new feather beds, ten sheets and twelve pairs of pillow slips, four linen table cloths, a dozen spoons, and a good six- quart kettle. If I ain't prepared, no girl in this county ever was! Even With the Condue' A young man wearing a red necktie and a new spring suit bearded a y low car at the post office last evening. He slid gracefully into a seat and had just buried his face in a paper when the conductor touched him on the shoulder and held out his hand for the fare. The young man fumbled through his pockets while the conductor still held out his hand expectantly. As he turn- is last pocket inside out he turned remarked: ill e to walk, I guess; I can’t find any mone “Never mind,” a ragged b a nickel.” The conductor took the mone id a small man urd and rusty hat, ans his bell and went out on the p nm. “It -» very kind of you, I am sure,” s the young man. “Where can I find rrow to repay nh to-m your kindness “You needn't mind bothering about that,” said the little “To was ac- tuated by a selfish fish motive? What was it pre tor. That nic When he turns of the mm it w will have to m next door to me and last week.”—iKansas City ke it good. He lives ed my dog Mixed Up the Two Webs During Daniel Webster's visit to England he was taken one day to see Lord Brougham. That eminent juris however, received him with such cool- ness that Mr. Webster w glad to get away, and took his pave at the first opportunity. The friend saw him to his rooms and then returned to Lord Brougham, and in some anger said: “My lord, how could you behave with such unseemly rudeness and dis- courtesy to so great a lawyer and statesman? It was insulting to him, and has filled me with mortification.” “Why, what on earth have I done, and whom haye I been rude to?” ask- ed his lordship. “To Daniel Webster, of the Senate of the United States.” “Great Jupiter, what a blunder!” ex- claimed Lord Brougham, realizing the istake he had made. “I thought it that fellow Webster who made a nary and nearly ruined the Eng- lish language.” Then, it is said, the great chancel- lor sought out Mr. Webster, explained and excused his conduct, which the latter generously accepted, and, it is added, having other tastes in common besides law and politics, they made a royal night of it. All of which is prob- ably true enough to found a story on. a He'd Have the Best. Going back to Washington from wit- nessing the test of the thirteen-inch gun, Jerry Simpson was asked what he thought of the day’s proceedings. After denouncing war as unnecessary, and a navy as useless, Mr. Simpson said that his opinion of the thirteen- inch gun could best be illustrated by a little story. “A staid New England Quaker,” he said, “who was strenuous- ly opposed to the use of an organ in church, at last found that he could not prevent his people from getting one, and so was induced to go and hear one played. He finally asquiesced about as fajows: ‘Well, if thee insists on praisitg” God by a machine, I sup- pose it’s best to have a good one.’ And that,” added Mr. Simpson, about my idea coneerning the thirteen-inch gun.” Interstate Commerce. The traffic on the waterways of the United States is enormous. On the t Lakes there is a fleet of 3,700 m and sailing vessels, with a net vistered tonnage of 1,250,000 tons. On the 16,000 miles of the navigable waters of the Mississippi and its tributaries, there were afloat in 1890, 7A45 crafts of all kinds, with a re- gistered tonnage of 3,400,000 tons. During the year this fleet carried 30,- 000,000 tons of freight and 11,000,000 passengers. The Hudson river had in the same year 5,000,000 passengers and 15,000,000 tons of freight, exclusive of 3,500,000 tons that passed from the State canals of New York by way of the Hudson river to tide water. To Keep Vegetables Fresh, All vegetables when cut may be kept fresh by putting the stalks into water. Servants generally insist on immersing them, which favors decom- position. Carrots, turnips and the like. | if placed in layers in a box of sand, will keep for many weeks. Clean, new-laid eggs will keep quite fresh for months if buried in dry salt, well closed. Boiled potatoes ought to be laid out on a plate and are then as good for frying or mashing as if they were freshly cooked. Sugglery. Miss Dymple—What in the world makes you so still? E Follibud—I have something on my mind. Miss Dymple (wonderingly)—How in the world do you ever manage tc balance it?—Somerville Journal. “RAVENS BUT NOT HAWKES. A Good Story of a Noted North Carolina Divine. ‘ 1 North Carolina probably never pro- duced an abler preacher than Dr. Francis L. Hawkes, who a quarter of a century ago was pastor of Grace Episcopal church, New York. Short, | thick-set, swarthy, black-eyed, and black-haired, he was a striking per- sonage. He was not only a great pul- pit orator, but considered the best ; reader in the New York episcopacy. ' His rather luxurious family deterred him from accepting a bishopric, which would have otherwise been tendered. One day a delegation from a Buffalo church waited upon him, and invited him to accept a pastorate in that city. “Well, gentlemen, other things*being satisfactory. the question of accept- dnee narrows down to a business mat- ter,” si Dr. Hawkes. “What salary do you ofver?* “Dr. Hawkes,” said the spokesman, “we recognize that you have a high reputation, and are willing to be liber- al. Our recent pastor has received D9, but on account of your stand- ing we have decided to offer you $3,500.” Y good man,” cried the doctor, you know what salary I am re ceiving here?” F “No, sir.” lf “I get $15,000 and this parsonage; and as I have an expensive family, I do not see my way clear to accept your offer.” The spokesman looked rather sheep- ish, but made another essay. “If we had known that fact, sir, we would undoubtedly have looked else- where; but you should remember that the work of the Lord must be done, and as for providing for your family, you know the story of Elijah and the ravens.” Now. clergy my friends,” responded — the n. quizzingly, “I have made the Bible my study ever since I, was twenty it. T have read it through earefully and prayerfully over a hun. dred times. I remember the raven in- cident perfe: but nowhere can I find any reference to the Lord’s pro- viding for young Hawkes.” The Gray Wolf of Am Of the very few instances of the Gray Wolf ng man, one is re lated by Johu Fannin in the ever in- columns of — Forest and iit HOE Mr. King, who was a huuter in ti: Coluindia. Once, When traveling quite alone through an immense forest, scarching for the best timber, and camping wherever night overtook him, Mr. King suddenly found himself surrounded by au pack of between forty and fifty Gray They thought they d him foul,” and would lunch at his expense: but they made one slight mistake. In- stead of being armed only with an axe, 3 ‘y supposed, he had a good re- and plenty of cartridges. Mr. King, “the fight, it it could be called one, lasted about half an he Then a few of them broke aw: into the timber and com- menced howling, which had the effect of drawing the rest after them, when hole band started away on the j , howling as they went. I <tecn of their number dead, ably not a few were wound- a rule the Gray Wolf soon dis- rs from settled regions. In the ited States there is probably not one wolf to . Where twenty years ago there w fifty. The killing of the ranchmen’s cattle. colts, and sheep Was not to be tolerated, and a bounty Ww put on the Gray Woli’s head, with fatal effect. More deadly than the ‘| trap or the Winchester, the str, ine bottle unive brought to bear upon most ¥ able point—h avenous appetite, Evy during the last days of the buffalo In Montana, the hunters poisoned wolves by hundreds for their pelts, which were worth from three to five dotiars each. Now it is a very disficult mat. r to find a Gray Wolf, even in the 1 Wes nd in Montana and Wy- y are almost as scarce as ichola: oming bears.—St. Vestibule Cars. People unaccustomed to probably imagine thi ear, which now occu: a place in railway a a particularly mod matter of fact it is not, and the won- der is that the railroads were so long in adopting it. The first vestibule ear was used on the Naugatuck railroad in 1853, and about ninety patents have been taken out since that time in this country and twenty in foreign coun- tries. It was formerly attached only te rlor and sleeping cars, but the service is now common on ordinary trains, and it is the most complete appliance of modern times for protec- tion and comfort. It is a preventive against telescoping; it assists in ventil- ation; it is a means of 1 vibratory motion of trains; it is a pro- tection in passing to and fro between It is a missing link suppl imizes the atmospheric § resi, e < of the trains, and in the provision of increased buffer resist- ance gi protection to the engine men against cars piling up over the tender and engine in collision, as some rozds are placing vestibule | attach- ments to the tenders. All signs point to a universal use in the near future. veling innle The staffordshire Brerometer. In a local collection of pottery there is a rge mug, dating from the last centur ealled the “Staffordshire Beerometer,” upon which is a repre- sentation of a tube of mercur the following degrees of intoxi and sobriety against it: 50 Drunk as a Lord. 45 Druak. 40 Disguised in Liquor. 35 As sober as a man ought to be; knows what he is about. 30 Drunk without but sober within. 25 Fresh; worse for Liquor. 20 Market Fresh; had had a drop. 15 Consarned in Liquor; had had a drink. 10 Sober as a Judge. | 5 Sober as I am now; had had 5 quarts among 3 of us. 0 Sober. i 5 Had nothing since Breakfast. 10 Had nothing to-day. The “Beerometer” does not exhaust the various states; a teetotaller might continue the descending scale with ad- vantage, while there are few police- men who could not supply higher de- grees than “59.”—Brighton (England) Herald. Love without limit is simply emo- tional jim-jams. ONE EGG FOR TEN. The Allowance at a California Oystrich Farm. - One egg for ten guests is the allow: ance at a California ostrich farm, asT found when I yisted one. “One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten,” said our host, counting ‘the guest he had invited to spend the day at the ostrich farm with him. “I guess that one egg will be enough.” Having given utterance to this ex- pression, he wended his way to the | paddock, and soon brought to the house an ich egg. Ror a ‘whole hour it was boiled, and though there was then some misgivings as to its being cooked, the shell was broken, for curiosity could be no longer res- trained, and a three-pound hard-boiled egg laid upon the table. But apart from its size there was nothing peculiar about it. ‘Nhe white had the bluish tinge seen in the duck’s egg, the yolk was of the usual color. It tasted as it looked, like a duck’s egg, and had no flavor peculiar to it- self. But it was immense! And it takes twenty-eight hens’ eggs to equal in weight the ostrich egg which was cooked. It was evident that the host knew what he was about in cooking only one. There was enough aad to spare, and before leaving the table the party unanimously agreed that ostrich egg was good. Solomon and His Family. Solomon was a large white rat, who lived in an artist's studio in New York. He received his name because of his wisdom and his solemn face. Solomon was as trustworthy as a dog. He refrained from nibbling the curtains and rich stuffs that were scattered about the studio, and was most particular not to take cheese or rich cake up on the sofa, whe he was allowed to play and sleep when his paws were clean. Now it so happened that a friend of Solomon’s mistress had some rats, @ father and mother and seven children. One night a stray cat found her to their cage and ate up the old rats. Solomon’s mistress agreed to adopt them, and the cage was taken into her rooms. Solomon stared and then went cau- tiously up to the newcomers. He soon showed signs of joy at their arrival, and immediately took the little rats under his protection. He called them to him and coaxed them to snuggle down by his side, as their mother would have done. When they were allowed to run about he watched them and taught them where they might go and where they were not to go, running after any wild youngster who strayed behind screens or meddled with what he ought not to touch. Only one of the seven orphans turn- ed out a genius, but all of them be- came respectable rats, and a great credit to Solomon. The genius of the family one day came upon a guitar lying on the sofa, and, running up to it, made the strings sound. The music pleased him so much that after his discovery he fre- quently went in search of the instru- ment and scampered back and forth over the strings to his own reat de- light and to the amusement of all who saw him, Irving Likes America. A gentleman who is an intimate friend of Henry Irving, says that the English actor has seriously consider- ed making New York his permanent home, and that when he sailed for England it was with the half-express- ed intention of returning in the spring > and remaining here. Irving had a strong prejudice against America ten years ago,” said his friend, “but his feelings changed and he became a great admirer of American methods and_ institutions. His western trip amazed him. He had no idea of the immensity of the country or of its varied features. “He was especially pleased with Colorado and bought some land there. Mr. Irving likes New York better than any other American city he has visit- ed. So strong was his desire to stay here he inspected a dwelling on Fifty- eighth street with a view to buying it. He might have remained if his pro- fessional engagements as well as some private business did not demand his presence in London. I think I am safe in predicting that Henry Irving will sign himself a New Yorker bef beginning of the year 1896. York Mail and Express. How to Preserve Feathers. The disposal and management of the feathers is a thing that calls for at tention. As soon as a fowl is killed, and while yet warm, let it be careful- ly plucked. Separate the large wing- feathers; put the others into small paper bags previously prepared. Put these bags into an oven and let them remain about half an hour; take them out, repeat the process two or three , times, then keep the feathers in a dry place till required. The oven must not be too hot. Care must be taken to free the feathers of any skin or flesh that may adhere to them while being | plucked, or they will be tainted. The hard quilly portion of the larger fea- thers must be cut off with a pair of scissors. The wing and tail feathers may be stripped and added to the others. Previous to putting them in the oven, some recommend that the ‘feathers should be put loosely into a dry tub or basket and shaken up daily, so that all may in turn be exposed to the air. Others recommend, as an easier plan, merely to suspend the bag from the ceiling of a warm kitchen, ‘or on the wall behind a fire-place, where it is practicable. In this case they will take longer to dry. Fea- thers can be quickly and effectually dried and cleaned by the agency of steam; but it is rather an expensive method, and the thrifty henwife will doubtless prefer having the produce of her own yard prepared under her own eye and by her own direction. *Round Too Much. Pale with suppressed indignation, Algernon MeStab uncrossed his legs. rose stiffy and turned up his coat collar. “Glycerine McCurdy,” he howled, “you have seen fit to sneer at me. You have accused me of having a wheel in my head. If I have, false beauty, it is at least a wheel that has run true to you.” “Ah, yes,” replied the young woman, with a pensive, far-away look in he: soulful eyes, “and yet I hardly want you for a hub, you know.”—Ohieago ‘Tribune. seo ___& HOUSE MOVING. DR <a ‘Some lef the Curiosities Connected With It. “The moving of houses, either of brick, stone or wood, for long dis- tances is a very simple matter nowa- days,” said Judge Robert Campbell, of St. Louis. “While at ee ae of the citizens 7 We ce ta fast; houses are being moved into the city every day. He referred to the fact that during the mad and frenzied days of the Wichita boom streets with sranit- oid walks were run away out into the cornfields of the prairie, and hand- some villas were built, several miles |from town by the suddenly enriched populace, who imagined that their suburban sites would in a few years be centrally located. The boom col- lapsed, Wichita lots again became farms, and these suburban villas bought for a song are now being haul- ed into town, to its vast improvement. “The most remarkable case of house moving I ever heard of was at Nau- voo, Ill. When the Mormons were driven out of Missouri by an armed foree they built the town of Nauvoo on the banks of the Mississippi. Here they erected their temple and con- structed a thriving town. Then the Tilinois peopie arose, burned the tem- ple, murdered the. prophet, Joseph Smith, and the entire community fled to Utah. Mennonites from Russia came along and bought the land. They had no use for the 350 buildings in the town. They wanted the land to plant vineyards upon. They sald the houses to a Missourian by the name of Boyd for a trifle. The next winiter he began to put rollers under the houses, slid them down the banks to the frozen river, and then elid and rolled and pushed them six miles up the river, and founded the town of Fert Madi- son, Io.; all except about forty of the houses which are to-day on the left bank of the river, opposite the site of the extinct town of Nauvoo.” Matthew Arnold’s Democracy- During Matthew Arnold’s visits to this country, there were few things in which he manifested so eager an interest as in the conversation of our laboring men as overheard by him from time to time. Frequently he re- peated to me sentences which had reached him in the street, upon the trains, or at railway stations, asking. “Is not such intelligence uncommon amongst your working people?” Upon my reply in the negative, he would say, “It is surprising; you would not Meet with it in England.” A demo- erat by conviction rather than by tem- perament, urging democracy as “the only method consistent with the hu- man instinct toward expansion, “he was yet an educator, and believed in equality upon a high, not upon a low, plane. Like Ruskin, he demanded of men their best, and with less than their best refused to be satisfied.”— Florence Earle Coates in the Century. Willing to Fig’ht For It. An English journal teHs a good story at the expense of the Karl of Derby. While walking on land belonging to the earl a collier chanced to meet the jowner. His Jordship inquired if the |colier knew he was waiking on his land. “Dhy land? Well, I got no land mysel’,” was the reply, “and I'm Hke to wake on somebody’s. Where did tha’ get it fro?’ “Oh,” explained his lardship, “I got it from my an- cestor.” ‘An’ wheer did they get it fro’?’ inquired the collier. “They got it from their ancestors,” was the re- ply. “And wheer did their ancestors get it fro?” “They fought for it.” “Well, bedad,” said the collier, squar- ing up to the noble earl, “I'll feight thee for it!” Wild Rice. It has been suggested by some stu- dents of food products that the wild Tice of the Northern Lakes might be profitably cultivated for food. It has a good grain, but it falls very easily when ripe, and is thus lost. The In- dians, however, ate it, and a book on Indian manners and customs contains a plate representing a party of Sioux gathering wild rice from bark canoes. One woman paddles the canoe while another knocks the rice from its hold with a stick. Fifty Dollar Coins. Fifty-dollar gokd pieces were never eoined by the United States govern- ment; there were, however, private is- sues of octagonal gold coins of this value in California in 1851, 1852, 1853 and 1855. In 1851-55, also, round fifty- dollar pieces were issued in California. They received their full value when deposited at the United States assay offices. By the now existing laws of this country there can be no revival iof private coinages bearing such close resemblance to authorized mint issues. It Looks Like a “Sure Thing.” The chances that an accident insur- ance company takes when it sells a policy good for twenty-four hours to @ casual travelet may be estimated when it is known that the interstate commerce commission has figured out that one person is killed by railroad accidents in this country for every miles. ig accident policies on these figures looks like a “sure thing” for the accident companies.—Albany Express. Born to’ be a Lawyer. Teacher (pointing to caricature of you are the best of my pupils. Say, who drew that horrid face on the board? Scholar—Please, sir, my sense of honor forbids my acting the part of informer unkess you assure the per- petrator immunity from punishment. “Ah, well, for your saké we will let | it pass this time. Now, who was it?’ “I did it myself.” Advantage of Matrimony. Friend—Ditd you lose anything in the Bustall bank? Depositor—Not a penny. “Well! wel! If you knew the thing bes going wrong, why didn’t you say | so?” | “I didn’t kaow. I bad to go off on be so I left my wife some blank checks. Then she went shopping.”— Tit-Bits. . ‘Well Occupied. where the bright girls of the past are? I should say that some of them are administeri of paregoric to the future.—Town (Tepics. i = = Bale O ete who ride twenty-four | Alin, himself on biackboard)—Hollerback, | RAtLROAD BALTIMORE AND OHLO R. R. Schedule in effect May 20h, 18 4 Leave W u Sfat en corner of dew Z Cire For Chieago and *o Vest Limited express trains m.. 82°0 _For ¢ nd [ndinape s, me. pr ss L210 nion, 1:15 For Win bh ster and w: ‘ For Luray. Nat Bridge, Kouneke, Knox Stations vile, Cb aud Mempi s and New Orleans « daily; seeping Cars tarevsa, For Lirey ny. daily For Bolunie:e weeks avs x29 520, 6 Xi10, x7 0, fe minuiesy $'30, 10 09 f5-minuies). a.m. x XID, i-my IDUteS), 428 pm. Sun Por Freder p.m, For Hag rstowa, $115 a, mcand 75,36 5. mm. roydand wa points (949 p. m ay ports, 16 00, 3 1,95, 7.05, (130 ynetion and wav m. EXpress tr, a s.atiOns Only « #130 F550 p. on YORK pD xt prine ROYAL BLUE “LINE FOR NEW AND PHIL. ELPHIA. For Phii-delph New Yous Boston, and ihe E ly 4 Sy Gv, a, m. ex.sun, (200 Dining Car, 300, Ged 0 L50p. m.; Sleeping Car, cluek.) t Parlor ¢ on all day trains. «and 12.0 neon, « gSunday ony. aS. ae entled for and ¢ eked from | oters and r sidences by Umion fer tompany cuet offices, 619 and Lei bd at depos CHAS. ©. SCULI Gen. Vass. Agext. . DODSON, Alering Rosairing, Suits Cleand for $1.09, Suits Cleanea and Dyed for $1.50, Coais Ste, Pants 25e, Vests 25e Goods Called fer and Delivered. ; Orders by mail Promptly Mtterded to First Cl&ss Work. H. Clarke, i hos ESTsATE AND LOANS 606 F Street. NL W Wasttixeton, D.C elmes D arse PESTO Rs ASSP > ee IXG PARIGCE Fire Yores, ( Piarcies Ard Old Whickies. S. PrRoPnIg.on 283 Va. Ave., Southwest en ts ROBERT EF EET Fine Wines and Liquors, Cigars, Rte LADIES’ DINING ROOM. MEAiS AT ALL HOUKS 211 third Street. “euthwest. & DOLLARS 7o PER DAY 20 Easily Made. We want many men, Work for womea, boys, and lear field and 1 special ability work. ple you a great deal and in great dem cirenlar, and receiv done if you conclude not to go on with the business. Georce Stinson &Co.. Box 42s, PORTLAND, MAINE. Intelligent Readers will notice that Tutt's Pills are not “warranted to cure” all classes of diseases, but only such as resulé from a disordered liver, viz: Vertigo, Headache, Dyspepsia, Bllerton—I should ike to know i Fevers, Costiveness, Bilious Colic, Flatulence, etc. For these they are not warranted in- z cautious.doses fallible, but are asnearlysoas it ht girls of the sibleto make a remedy. Price, ade tae SOLD EVER ZWaZiRE,