The Washington Bee Newspaper, May 10, 1902, Page 3

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——— THE WASHINGTON BF RAILROADS, NUKLHWESI | = aK 5 ANNAPOLIS SHORT Ch H ] * | pe Ease Hs. Kander’ Quality Sore fy cs AVE CAMDEN STATION. ‘ i way statious, week days, : way stat eee eel p.m m, G09 Th Sk. Established 36 years ago. The | largest wholesale store ofthe most | exquisite, taultless wines and dis- | ne tillates (240 kinds inall.) At Chris. | — | Xander’s moderate prices it is im- | AND OHIO} possible that others can compete | 8 ROAD. in quality and purity with any of | 3 LF his good. Notably so as to his + station corner of liquors. None that contain fusel a > st poison are admitted to his Massa- 10.45 a. m., | powengtd ee nek are and ence the safest kinds only are ‘ nd Louisville, mn obtainable by hi: t t his | g EWING *MACHIN sale store * 90) 7TH ST. N. w. - > 458. m5 Ego, HAS NO EQUAL. (No branches) Phone 1425. *6 20 p- m. | i aan fia, and ts30 | PERFECT SATISFACTION: J.T. CARTER, soc tuseaw.,{ NOW Home Sewing Machine Co,'| ..Hovuse Painter.. | || -—ORANGE, Mass.—_ | | : t1o.55, 8. m., Sits, | Xe lalon Square, N.Y. Chleago, Ml, St. Lous, Mo, ( | ies: ji *tanta,Ga, Dallas. Tex. San Francisco, Cz’ ¢ ‘| Painting, Graining, Glazing,"Kalsomin | : Balai a 1 _-. TOW Sag ema ing, Wall Painting, Paper hanging ‘ S| Floor staining, and Waxing. | fi k *3.35, | ] i 4 —_— | 30, 5.00, | ID ming Room, Estimates ar ata cca Never} = nud points | Sheeting Gallery 1004 20 St. Washington, D.C} c £3.09, $00, 6.50, AND = ——-- -— - BES (POOL, ROOMEL [ teeiose maw is. Estas.isuxn 1873 * x8.0c, x10.00, 11.30, | 225 Pa. ave. & 212 B at., n. w- . x7.05 7.15, 5 <0, 330, 1505,| ROOMS, 26, & 606 Cents . 4 HINES & G0 Xit.35 Pm. : NE Wm. H. Lee, Pro,| uNpERTAKERS, EMBALMERS t ch light. | are —AND— aot =| SAMUEL G. ST: WART FUNERAL DIRECTORS. — Bs me | SALOON 1315 14thSt.N.W., Washington,D. ‘nd *11.30 p. m.| 1144 7th 8t.,bet L& M&ts., NW | —_ SS i. Elite Whiskey 4 sPeciaLny LUM nani Sos and all the Poplar Brands Go UMBUS wo | Phe largest glass of Henrich’s} HATTER AND MEN’S pie peairied| BEER IN THE CITY. oils mae nsylvania Ave- FURNISH ER, h Street, ihe tat ze 7 = a s for B. and | HANLON k MURRAY Latest Styles in Neckwear Ps ave 3 Gloves, Hosiery,t Suspen- Pass, Traffic. ders &c. Latest fall Derbys Whulesale and Reta $1.00 and up. ~~~ | J . Chesa eake | Dealer In 1s che place where you will get w | Fire th worth jof your money. Call and aan AND OHIO in ect our goods. ONE PRICE. Wie | \A7 ines. — | 337 Pennsylvana, Ave. Liquor.} Dunie & kiados. 119 Seventh Street, fi W, New York oe ulate } f md) ien Washington, Df. i — — | OUR CANDIES MADE DAILY. | Karl Xander, g18 Seventh Street, Northwest ‘| IMPORTER, WASHINGTON, D. C. : “| Reotifter and Wholesale and | —————~ — snd for’ Rickmond, | Retail Dealer in Chesapeake and | FINE I 609 | n Tele- | 1 Cab | BB H.W. FULLER, MEEHAN, Parties contemplating going WV rth and H sts., S. W. into the grocery business will places in S’h Washing’n | Liquors, and Cigars brands, MEEHAN, Prop. “Edward Murphy-- Te ant ft vas att Ligure, We, nye BY, i igth Street Northwest. Tears ONE - Louis J. Kessel Vines & Liguors dicnal and tamily 1 TREMONT, Pure YUESALE ONLY, et Northwest. = xve Whiskey ‘“ & Liquors, | “rs & Tobacco. lb. turer oF fine Cigars. ¥ Street Northwest, a ton, D. LIQUORS 1530—32 7th Street N. W. Agent for ‘Southern’ Bougust JAMES THARP. Importer sae Dealer te, Versign WINES AND LIQUORS, 812 F STREET, X. W. Pure Rye Whiskey; = a “~- BUY THE NE®2REME SEWING MACHINE Do not be deceived by those who ad- vertise a $60.00 Sewing Machine for $20.00. This kind of a iiachine can be bought from us or any of sur dealers from $15.00 to $18.0. WE MAKE A VARIETY. THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST. The Feed determines the strength or weakness of Sewing Machines. The Deuble Feed combined with other | strong points makes the New Home the best Sewing Machine to buy. Write for CIRCULARS scsi ferent styles of we manufacture and prices before purchasing Sewing Machines THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE 60. ORANGE, MASS. 28 Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, IL, Atlanta, Ga, St. Louis,Mo., Dallas,Tex.,San Francisco, Cal FOR S\.6 BY fats do well by visiting this firm: 454 Penn Ave. WASHINGTON, D. C. DENTY SIMMS & CO. 3 —DEALERS IN HIGH GRABE— wood —AND— coal Full weight guaranteed. Promptness our motto. 1519 4th St., N W. WME 4 Egle Oy WILL Washington, D.C Offer special indncement to classes in reading, music an! singing. Aj} general musical and vocal instrection | guranteed. Sohn Eputa’s music book | and Mme Daly’s note chain method, For further imformation APPLY 10 Me Daty Studio, {Basement St. Augustines | Charch, 5th Street bet. L and M. N. W. Monfay and Cuessdiy on and ‘afterthe 22nd, of September. Hours $to8 p.m. } } _ Tenors and bassors afford special iilicen totea Letea Daly's cliisical clos arslyia bist nate SHOT A SEA SERPENT. The 1902 Reptile of the Deep Is Fired At After Exposing Itself for a Quiet Half Hour, A monstrous sea serpent, vicious and awful looking, was the sight that | brought fright to the crew of the| schooner Samuel B. Hubbard only a} few days ago. This vessel, of which Capt. Mahaffey is master, has just ar- | | rived in Brunswick, Ga., from New | Yo k. Her commander, who is wel} known to all the north Atlantic seek! vouches for the authenticity of the! story, and the facts are corroborated by his first mate, Mr. Coverdale. Capt. Mahaffey says: | “It was_on the 1, in north latitude | 34 degrees 41 minutes, and west longi- was lying becalmed about 12 noon, when the chief mate called my atten- tion to something in the water just abeam, a quarter of a mile off. A long, slim object, moving from side to side, | and coming toward us with such great rapidity that it looked like an old thresher at work. It very quickly worked under our quarter, and in the clear water we saw the queerest fisb out. As it lay quiet within 15 feet of the vessel it appeared to be about 30 feet long by three feet in cireumfer- ence. A smooth | owing no fins but the dorsals, three of them, one hort, one, say, about a foot long, near heac half way down the b ke fin a mut seven feet long and about five and near thet Ni hir tail was a fish, enc point, w 1 fin. The be ght brown » the top . se to the top of the at the fel- alf an hour, mate got a shotgun and as sh lay with half of his upper smal for leaped ont of the water half his length and sounded like a whale. Tt came to the surface in a few s nds and if it kept upt it started with the serpent is near the western coast of Africa by this time.” SHREWD CANINE THIEF. Doggie Had Been ught to Steal in a Scientifie Way by His Wicked Mistress, For some time several articles were stolen f a large store in Paris, France. ery effort on the part of the proprietor to discover the culprit proving useless, many detectives were employed. The F ian detective has a great name for his skill, but in this case one and all were baffled; although it was a police inspector who hap- DEPOSITING THE SPOILS. pened at last, by accident, to get on the track of the thief. This adroit seoundrel turned out to possess four egs. It had never occurred to any- body to suspect a certain dog. Yet this particular animal had been trained by his mistress to become a perfect mplice. Having indicated the article she desired she left the store. By and by she halted in an ad- joining street and laid down her basket, as if tired. Presently her dog came along in a leisurely manner, with the stolen goods hidden, as well as he eould hide them, in his muzzle. When he reached the basket he sniffed at it, and finally, as if curious to see what it contained, thrust his head beneath the lid, where. of course, be laid the article. His mistress having rested, or anxious to remove her basket out of the strange dog’s way, picked it up and walked off Tin Soldiers for Everybody. In Nuremburg, Germany, 800 work- men are employed making lead sol- diers and lead toys. They turn out about 100,000 lead soldiers a day. _————— ee ey PULL DID NOT WORK. A Tammany Man’s Experience with Mr. Lewis Nixon. New Head of New York's Great Po- ‘Mtical Organization has a Ree- ord That Is Not Pleasing te the Ward Hummers, Mr. Lewis Nixon, the new leader of Tammany hall, represents the most pronounced departure from the trad tions of that organization. fore the Tammany leader has always been a man whose sole occupation was polities. From Tweed to Croker the boss depended for a living on the or- ganization and the power that he wielded. ‘Tweedsmade millions. apon ons by robbing the} who wrested the here power from ‘ Tweed, thongh untoubtedfy atf'Kénest man so. far-as the direct taking of money was concerned, weytointe the, organization poor and died worth a quarter of a million. Richard Crokér is reputed to be a, millionaire several times over. Since he went actively into politics he has never been engaged in any, pursuitithatwieldedan income ex- cept for short periods when he served as fire commissioner and city cham- berlain. Now comes a man whose record is such as to make it certain that instead of making money out of politics he will lose it. Mr. Nixon has coined his time into money at'a rate that must seem fabulous to most men. Though very young, he has througt*his own exertions built up one of the most ex- tensive shipbuilding enterprises in the country. At his yard at Elizabeth- port there is work under way of the value of $5,000,000 or $6,000,000. In ad- dition he has gone extensively into the ss of building automobiles. Outside of these pursuits he is also actively engaged as director in a num- ber of other important enterprises. busin He had the reputation, even before assuming the active leadership of Tammany hall, of being the busiest man in the metropolis. Every minute of every day was laid out carefully WIS NIXON. of New York's Tammany Hall Democracy.) in advance, and he transacted his busi- an exact time schedule. He moved about from place to place and from office to office with as much pre- ad t ness cision as a railr sulting his secretary it was possible always to strike him at any point at any time no matter in how wide a circle he moved. He generally began work at eight o’clock in the morning and kept steadily at it until seven in when he went home to n. By con- the evening dine. Out of a day as compactly filled as this Mr. Nixon now devotes at least three hours in each 24 to the affairs of Tammany hall. At nine o’clock in the morning or at three in the afternoon he is to be found at his desk in the wigwam where, since his advent as chief, the affairs of Tammany are once more transacted instead of at the Democratic club in upper Fifth ave- nue, which was the Tammany head- quarters under the Croker regime. Probably no other topic is proving of such extraordinary interest to the citizens of New York as the question of what Mr. Nixon will be able to ac- complish in Tammany hall. He is op- posed to everything for which the rul- ing powers in the wigwam have for many years stood. He isa man of high honor, and any one who should offer him a bribe, no matter how disguised, would probably not revive for several hours, for Mr. Nixon stands over six feet in his stockings and hits straight from the shoulder. The Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post says that an interesting incident occurred while Mr. Nixon was at the head of the East River bridge commission, the body that had charge of planving and build- ing the new bridge between New York and the eastern district of Brooklyn. A henchman of one of the most promi- nent men in Tammany hall had got into_an ugly scrape. To help him out it was necessary to secure the influ- ence of a man who stood high in the community. The Tammany politician concluded that Mr. Nixon would do, “and he sought him out at the off ce of the bridge commission. He stated his mission in a manner which took it for granted that his wish would be com- plied with. Mr. Nixon heard him to the end and then turned on him fiercely. “You have,” thundered the irate young shipbuilder, thumping his desk antil the ink-well jumped, “the most infernal impudence to come te me with such a request! This fellowis a black- guard and a scoundrel, and I hope he will get everything that is coming tc him under the law!” When the Tammany man had suffi- ciently recovered his breath he mum- bled an apology and slunk away, _ John Kel. 7 HOTELS—BALTIMORE SARATOGA HOTER, A. H. Cole, Proprietor. Special Ra "New Management" Bar Stocked With The Finest [me ported Wines,” Liquovs and Cigars. ‘Lerms ; $1.50 to $2.00 pe. day. $7 to $12 per weer. Howard and Saratoga Streets, BALTIMORE, MD Cars to end from all Depots pass the Mote. — RESTAUKANTS—NORTH WEST, ———————__. LEECH 'S ae Lasieerant, b 4 Cor 19th & L sts, NORTHWEST Harper Whiskey a Specialty -IQUOR DEALEE® © BALTIMORE. : NRG OE a, WHITE DALY. & C@e DISTILLERS. Baltimere, Md. WHOLESALE LIQUOR DZALERA Re. m7 Kive Stzxzza, _ Alexandria, Va, 5" OLD DOM.«ION FAMIL' BYE AND MOUNT VERN WHISKIES A SPEOIALTY. e Nov. pth s man STYLISH, RELIABLE ARTISTIC] Recommended by 2 iin Dressmakers. They Always Please. MAL | PATTERNS NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE fo These ae are gold in measly alt se not keep thea cent stamps ress your nearest point. THE McCALL COMPANY, 38 to 146 W. 16th Street, Now York © McCALL CO. 38 to 146 W. nth St., Mew York 302 Exchange Place, * Our Specialtion YREARY’S OWL WHISHEE, BAKER’S PURS GYB WHISKEY, HUSS AND HOSS AND PATAPEOO CLUB WHIEEEE Importers cof BEANDIES, WINES, G/h@ ALE, AND STOUT, ETG. P. 0. BOX 445. BAL/TIMORE, D4 TELEPHONT) CALL 1576. ote

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