The Washington Bee Newspaper, August 4, 1894, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

oi THE BEE AUTHORIZED aGENTS ol naves for advertising farnisned on appli jectiovable advertisements willnot dat any price. All ren.ittances draft, poste! money order etter Moue orwarded sat the sender’s risk. in made b listinetiv stated. etters, etc,, should bs ad-dressed BEE PUBLISHING, CO. Washington D.C pr BLISH ED EVERY SATURDAY A’ i091 ST..N.W.. WASH..D GC, WHERE THE BEE CAN BE HAD owler,s, 3183 d street, 8. e. orth west. WV, Jackson, 228 414 street, n. w ses Payne, 205 4% street, n.w, > stewart, NEW YORK CITY. D. A. Green, 429, 6th Ave, @ ~\TURDAY, AUG. 4 1894 ; $$$ Zocals. W. B. Johnson has began w ou bis church. iue colored Steamboat company Ss a LOW. want a good drink of go to the Philadelphia or the Holmes House or to Robert A, else Keys, see advertisements its appearance it will 1 alleged Judge knew what sin the “Bee” af be never read it. Ue koew the “Bee” said tirat be wes a thiet aud had his furni tare relieved by house mau. faslow’s man, Friday, has served atecm on Blackwells Island. Mr. W. . Brooker who went to d, Va.on Monday to en F Jobn Gasper to lecture in is Cily, returned Weduesday. IBER: Tae obligations y immposes on its mem 1 due regard to what o: fashion prescribes. Tuis isone of the Conditions of being diessed. By uot obeying the navdotes of fashion, aud by adopt lug a go-as-you-please style of their own Women suffer aa abate- ment of their personal dignity re apt to forteit the respect of s. Hxperience teaches. this The latest and most reli- able models of eveything for the tollet are always to be found in TOILETLES, with whose surpass is our lady readers are al jamiliar. The September 11s how issusd and can be ued from all pewsdealers, or rom the TOILETTES PUB LISHING OO., 126 west 23rd St. New Y Single copies 20 cents: y subscripuons SL. 50. wi suck well nk vices were held last Sunday ~econd Baptust church, and a- raised ta aid in the erection ulding. It is proposed to 1eduice costing $30,000, t tearing down the old Uready begun. t Colored Sunday-school { its quarterly meeting in of Our Redeemer, last 5un- Conner presiding. An in- (pers Were irch and Suu Charity” and ee 5 AY ANDSUNDAY EX- . NS LO BALTIMORE. nore & Ohio R. RK. Co. will ‘kets for all trains Satur lay, August 18th and 19th, ¢ round trip, valid for re- intil Monday following. L.S. Fletcher, Sr. SOLICITOR OF : ND LI INSURANCE SAND LOTS FOR SALE. Loans Negotiated. Rents Collected rn 11, 69 F St NW, N, E. Wash., D, C AUGNGTINE'S LOAN OFFICE. cuusylvania Aveuue. oat aud silver watehes, dia« bon 's, Jewelry, pistols, guns, me~ ag ools, ladi-s’ and gentle e's “wong apparel. soul aud silver bought. ned pledves for sale. 0 8. SQUANDER on ind Restaurant Win Whiskies and Cigars 0, 14th St BROS., MACKENZIE AY EPS AND GEATS henishers th Street Northwest, WASHINGTON, D RENOVATED. ey the emountand whatit is for ". Druggist, corner 16tn and M ynia House, 348 Penn. Ave. n. w, Pennsylvania Ave. n. w. seu the Colored daily makes be cool the installment HINTS TO GIRLS. you own. your own straightened, the you. Squeeze your feet in a when a double ‘G? would fit you better, When a girl parents approval. ed girl in preference to i S pie a noisy slangy In writing a lettix to a m: i MW Za a an friend begin it**My dear Mr,—” and Sl it, “‘yours truly.” It is not wise to refuse seeing a man matried to another, her attention to one m: r it i er e man, for i CS dom appreciated. ‘ aba is the is luiteresting girl who retains friends. her picture taken with a man’ 1 il au’s except she is engaged to him. Sudden and extreme friendships are hot very lasting and women should not confide in each other on short acquaint- ance. _ When a man begins talking about faithless and changeable women he should not be listened to. It is in bad taste to use strong per- fumes, especially musk. _ No refined girl will flirt although it is noticeable in our best society. Girls should wear wha to them, be it in the f, { is becoming shion or not. FOR HER DAINTY FOOT. Cotton, lisle and silk stockings are all worn, writes Isabel A. Mallon in an article that cannot fail to please all wo- men, under the title “Dainty Styles in Lingerie” in the August Ludies Home Journal. Many women, myself among the number, prefer a cotton to a lisle thread stocking, inasmuch as the twist of the thread iu the lisle ones irritates the soles of the feet. Dark blue and black stockings are liked for street Wear, except when tan shoes are worn, and then of course, the stockin natch s. The navy blue stocking is hose. ye fro: black stocking affects their skin. nis is by no means com- mon, but the very minute it is discov- ered one should cease wearing the black and select another color, or else Wear white, for one never knows to What extent a skin disorder may go. with grey or scarlet shoes or slippers the stockings are chosen to match, and these may be gotten in silk at a much lower price than is given for black ones. Many women have discovered that the wearing of suspenders pulls a silk stock ing so that it “railroads,” which means ““good bye”’ to the stockings, and so for this reason the wearing of the garter above the knee is gaining favor. << e-- DISRUPTION IN CAMP. ® The e was a row in camp at a meet- ing of the Steamboat Company in the Capital ings Bank building on last Monday evening. ’ The President, Mr. Patterson is to be investigated by a committre of three of the share holders of the boat compa- ny, cansisting of M. Hewlett, Fer- nanda Lee, and Thompson, Fernanda Lee charges fraud on the part of the president of the company and misap- prgpiating the funds of the company. It is also alleged that Glymount and the right to the boat are in the name of Patterson. Lee also makes some ugly charges against Misses Wilson and Jordan, Whether he can prove these charges it will be seen when the com- mittee concludes the investigation. Lawyer Hewlett who has been re- tained as consul by Lee and others informed a BEE representative that the boat company rotten. : The people who have put in their money by false representation should employ counsel imm ately. Lhe gdneral impression is that the institution is rotten. REDUCED RATES ON SHE ROYAL BLUE LINE} On Saturday and Sunday, August 18th and 19th, the B. & O. R. R. Co. wilh sell round trip tickets to Baltamore, good on all trains, including the Royal Blue Line flyers, at $1.25, valid for re- turn journey on all trains nntil the 20th inclusive. 7—28— 2 t. EXCURSION TO NIAGARA FALL $10. PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOURS VIA B.& 0. R. Re The signal success of the first excurs- ion to Niagara has induced the Balti- tmore and Qhio Railroad Co., to an- | nounce a second tour to Niagara Falls, Buffalo and Watkin’s Glen, via Royal Blue Line Express, Thursday, August 2nd. Train will leave Washington 5:05 p. m.; Camden Station, Baltimore, 6.00 p. m.; making direct connection at terminal stations, Philadelphia, with special through Express to Niagara Falls. : Through Pullman Sleeping Cars will be attatched from Washington and Bal- timore to Niagara Falls. The tickets are good for ten days and will permit ot stop over on going trip at Burdett sta- tion, three miles from Watkin’s Glen. Stage Coaches meet all trains and at Geneva. On the return trip, stop overs are allowed at Rochester, Burdett and Geneva Remember the date, Thursday, Au- gust 2nd. Round trip ticket $10. 7: Bt can be earned at our NEW tine of worm, fapidiy and honorable, by those of either sex, young or ol | in their own localities,wherever they live. ADY fone can do the work. Easy to learn. ‘overything. furnish . We start vou. No risk. You can devote Yourspure moments, or all your time to the work. | This ean -ntirely new lead,and brings wonderful success to every ws = Beginner ar ee covectence, We ees farath Yeu thes fter a little ex eon 2 ‘and more a Penns; here Eee Stn tae UE& Don,t wear false hair strai; hter th: It is in better dante to naga When you go to cbureh don’t 1 usher or escort, let the usher ad Ifyou want to walk in ease don’t tripple ‘*A” 1a accepts a man, s should insist upon him asking for ne A young man admires a quiet, refin- friend because you are engaged to be A young girl should not give all of A pretty girl always attracts, but it It is very foolish for a woman to have by those who find that , THIS WEEK'S NEWS A Summary of Current Events—The World's Doings for the Past Six Days Gathered and Condensed for Our Readers. General. : The Synlie of Rome will visit the United States soon. The beef-killers in the South Omaha packing houses are on strike. John W. Love, the Watkins, N. Y., embezzler, is now in jail at that place, ‘The budget bill has passed its second reading in the British House of Lords. The San Francisco Mint has begun the colnage of standard silver dollars. Wallace Burt was hanged at Doyles- town, Pa., for the murder of Mr. and Mrs. Wrightley. ‘The House of Representatives at Washington passed the raflway postal- clerk reinstatement bill. Thousands of small but lively frogs fell in the streets of Cambridgeport, Mass., during a heavy shower. More stories of Brockway’s brutal- ity were told before the Elmira Re formatory investigating committee. M. Rogers, one of the first men in this country to make a business of cut- ting ice, died at New London, Conn., aged seventy-nine. 3 Jack McAuliffe, the light-weight pugilist, and Catherine Rowe, one of the Inman sisters, actresses, have been married in Brooklyn. A five-year-old boy is said to have been cured of hip disease by the relic of St. Anne in the Ohurch of St. Jean Baptiste, in New York. The French Ohamber evicted the newspaper reporters, but soon invited them back; the reporters declined, and the Chamber soon adjourned. The gunboat Bennington has sailed from La Libertad for San Francisco via Acapulco with Gen. Ezeta and three other refugees on board. One hundred men have been dis- charged from the B. & O. shops at Chicago Junction for refusing to with- draw from the) American Railway Union. Nicaraguan Minister Guzman has been empowered to act for Salvador In a like capacity, and he will demand i the extradition of ex-Vice-President Antonio Ezeta. The Tillmanite Justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court decided that the dispensary law of 1893 is still in force and Justice-elect Gary is expect- ed to uphold him. i The steamer City of Peking, from Hong Kong for Yokohama and New York, which was ashore in Yeddo Bay, has been floated without damage aud has arrived at Yokohama. The Mayor of Enid, Okla., complains to the Secretary of War that armed United States soldiers there have brok- en imto houses and tried to extort in- formation by threats of death. Rabbi Joseph Krauskopf is trying to pecure permission from Russian and Polish Hebrews to form agricultural colonies within the Czar’s domains, in- Btead of being forced to emigrate. The House Committee on Immigra- tion has rejected the Lockswood bill de- signed to prevent persons living in Canada and Mexico from crossing the border to work in the United States. Mr. Gozo Tateno, the ex-Japanese Minister, took leave of the President, Expressions of personal and national goodwill were exchanged. Mr. Tateno and family will leave for Japan via San Francisco. Secretary Herbert has finally accept- ed the 300 tons of barbette armor in- tended for the battleship Oregon, rep- resented by the 17-inch Carnegie Har- veyized steel plate, which has been tried at Indian Head. A bill to incorporate an elevated elec- ric railway under the name of the National Rapid Transit Company, to connect New York and Washington, was adversely acted upon by the House Committee on Judiciary. Mrs. Sarah K. Stanton was run over and killed on the Dutchess County Railway at Van Wyck’s station. She was crossing the track in front of the approaching train, and did not, appar- ently, hear the whistle. While repairing a trolley line on Water street, Newburg, John Spratt, forty-five years of age, feil from the platform car to the street, a distance of about fifteen feet, breaking his neck and fracturing his skull. Reports that the Sherman Bank’s stockholders are not likely to receive full payment in that institution’s liqui- dation were admitted by bank officials to be true. A stockholders’ mecting was called for next Tuesday. Victims of Paddler Brockway swear at the Elmira investigation that he beat them into bearing false witness, whereby fifty inmates were railroaded to Auburn prison. One was kicked in the face for refusing to bring disgrace on his family. Speaker Crisp, having expressed the wish that Democratic members of the House shall remain in Washington un- til the tariff bill has been disposed of, the Armor-Plate Investigating Com- mittee may postpone its proposed visit to Homestead, Pa. The actors’ colony at Sayville, L. L., turned out to hear the trial of the men {mplicated in what is now known as the Comedy Castle drama. Manager Bob Monroe, who was accused of tabbing Hotelman Harris, was held b $2,000 for the Grand Jury. United States Consul Sundberg re- ports that since the May floods began to subside a malignant and fatal fever bas prevailed in the city of Bagdad and suburbs, more especially among the river, and these poor people are left to die without the aid of doctors or medicine. ‘The sub-committee of the House Committee on Immigration and Nat- uralization ‘having Tharge of the bill of Mr. Loekwood, of New York, for the protection of American labor and enforcement of the law of domicile, has reported it to the full committee favorably. William Henry Harrison Duncan, colored, aged twenty-seven, was hang- ed at Clayton, St. Louis County, Mo., for the murder of Policeman James Brady on the night of October 6, 1890. Duncan had been semtenced to death at seven different but cach time {nfiluence was Drot asi a a Issued in Ornate Covers. once a week, postpaic. Pj i “A ESTAS ERAU NAPE REE OEP NER ENON WED BE se] BS BY ce SRSA! aNESES | Wonders AND THE “OR THE Every Portfolio has Sixteen Mammoth Pages, each 11 x 13) i” ‘Beautiful Wonderful! Entrancing UESIGIAL —PIVTORIAL RISTORT of the WORLD'S AIR and the MIDWAY. VASIANZ: WONDERFUL CURIOUS AND BEAUTIFTL, 300 GRAND VIEWS, All the World’s Fair Buildings, Foreign and State Buildings, Artis Views, ic Most Wonderful Exhibits, Architectural Details, And all the Grand»and Surprising Features taken at the zenitn of tbe splendor of the World’s Great World’s Famous Paintings Celebrated Statu The Art Galle Interesting Sketches Curious Races of Men. hibition, rom the Midwag, Fair For further explanation call at this (flice. CAPITOL SAYINGS 609 F ST., N. W. WASHINGTON D. C. CAPITAL . . ; $50,000 ° HONJNO. KR, LYNCB, PRESIDENT DR. J. R. WILDER, ViCE- PRES., L. 0, BAILEY, TREASURER PROF. JAMES STORUM, __ SEC. DUUGLASS B. MCOARY, Casurer DIRECTORS: Jno. R. Lynek, W. MeKinlay,-. L. C. Bailey W. S. Lofton J, BR. Wilder Wyat Archer, Jno, A. Pierr J. A- Lewis, A. W. Taneil H. Ki. Baker, J. H. Meriwethe: W.5S. Montgomery, J. A. Johnson wa. James Storum. Deposits received from 10 cents apward. Interest allowed on $5.00 and above. Tieasurers of churches, associations, and other olaanizations can deposit ,tunds With this Bank and Receive Inter- est. The money 18 subject to check Without Notice. We hall b e glad to bave you open ab ccouuts BANK OPEN FROM 9 A M. to 5 P. M- ESERIES ENTS THE NATIUNAL BAPTIST ~{s) MAGAZINE QUARTELY. THE ORGAN OF NEGRO BAPTISTS IN THE UNITED STATES. in particular, and devoted to the inter ' est of the Negro race. | PUBLISHEE AT WASHINGTON D. C Every three months under the auspice of the American National Baptist Con- vention. W. Brsior JOUNSON D. D. MANAGING EDITOR 445 4h st. N. E Will contain papers, biographicalan homiletical sketches of distinguished minist 1s and scholars enomina- tion a.id race, with cuts WS, poet ry editorials and such other matters , within the sphere of a Christian Mag zine. The price if $1.25 perannum, if paid j in advance, and $1.60 if paid at the end | of the year or 35 cents a single copy. Send all money by registered letter. postal note or mouey order. Apr. 7—3 m. ; —— Year in their own loc the situation or em Ym money for me ani to bear on the execlr - f desire out ent GRAND PREMIUM OFFER! A SET OF THE WORKS UF oy the great Mental Depression, Painful Digestion, Pim- the Head, Sallow Com- Scald Head, Scrofula, Diseases, Sour Stom- Torpid Liver, Ulcers, other symptom or dis- meal, Wishing to largely in impure blood or a failure in the proper performance of their functions by the stomach, liver and intestines. to over-eating are benefited by taking one tabule after each A continued use of the Ripans Tabules is the surest cure for obstinate constipation. They contain nothing that can be injurious to the most delicate. \ gross 75C., 1-24 gross 15 cents. Sent by mail postage paid. Address THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, New York. PECVVEVEVSESTGEVSSSSSSISVSESSEGS GHARGES DICKENS In Twelve Large Volumes, Which we Offer with a Year’s Subscviption to this Paper for 2 Trifle More than Our Regular Subscription Price. ease the ci ion of thig B paper during the ne » tnade arrangements with howe whereby nfo our aubseribers + Dick- ens, in Twelve Large and Handsome Volumes, a year’s sul paper, for atrifle more than our Our great offe ver heretofo: the greatest to this are even more pop his lifetime. They : gre nt at to have read them is to ge in which we live. @ works which ffer as a new plates, wih new type -frmous works, each one of which is pub- d, aul absoiuely unabridged : | BARNABY RUDGE AND CHRISTMAS STGRIES OLIVER Twist AND GNEAT EXPEC- Le : 2 |THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP AND THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELER. FALE OF TWO CITIES, HARD TUES ASD THE MYSTERY OF A ee RIPANS TABULES regulate the stomach, liver and 4 bowels, purify the blood, are pleasant to take, safe and always effectual. A reliable remedy for Biliousness, Blotches on the Face, Bright’s Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Constipation, Chronic Diarrhea, Chronic Liver Trouble, Diabetes, Disordered Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery, Dyspepsia, Eczema, Flatulence, Female Complaints, Foul Breath, Headache, Heartburn, Hives, Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite, e e e Nausea, Nettle Rash, ples, Rush of Blood to plexion, Salt Rheum, Sick Headache, Skin ach, Tired Feeling, Water Brash and every ease that results from Persons given 1 gross $2, %4 gross $1.25, OS thi R RIC. YAEL LNIO TOLL Y

Other pages from this issue: