The Washington Bee Newspaper, September 13, 1902, Page 2

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snort never Friends be deserted. mag gine Jon’t : 1! that you jon’ tue dyout doing wel friends. Sometimes our indifference Suspicious wise things. roads made @ The rail Young money from tne Cong Had the same ed to contribute th they spent on the ral 1 rome industrial would have cert Pgople’s e same amon nt S hes A lot of wind and cheap speechés are often exploded ings. Retribution often ¢ who do wrong. Deception is who are treach omes to those g vg it will Speak tbe truth always pey- : Don’t «llow yourse:It lvantage your ow What is the result 0 tian Congress: It resolved peat the best thin 8 the negro i Justrial training. Ten’t get dis are in the right Sneak the tru’h always 1 in the long run. Don’t your best frien an men do you aharm be that you guard against them 1 future. da, desert Some people would do you an 10- jury if they could. It is so strange that some pe ople cannot tell when they are not want- ed. Columbia will District have two representative men 1D the next National Republican Conven- tion. Don’t wo people’s troubles. This isan age gence mus about other rry yourse iich intelli- r duty and then you wil The most refined world is the man who can respect himaelf. Read The Bee if you want a live paper. Nothing succeeds li e success. The man who cannot tell the truth is a dangerous man. Never desert your friends when he is in trouble — Harry “est of the Post is the new Commissioner. Why should not the negro be represented on the board of Com- @issioners. Read The Bee if you want a live paper. Keen Observation, “Do you know anything about the people wh moved next door?” ske inqu “Not o have .” he answered; “except is not yet over.” t the front door Washington Star. What He Would Need. “My friend,” the eloquent age man to arely in the turn eyes and ask himself w needed most, w reply suggested to his mind?” Fa “A rubber neck!” shouted the preco-| © cious urchin in the rear of the room. —Tit-Bits. mint of{; in these meet-| to be used to turbed when you) t | HIS | | man in the} hat he really | would be the first | SHE WASHINGTUN SEB. 'THE PANGS OF LOVE. | Many Men Have Been Driven by | Them to Madness. | Romances in the Careers of Hermits | | Who Led Sordid and Secluded = | | Lives—Driven to Despair by Bitterness of Failure. \ runken man, of was known be- was rarely seer his cot . where h simple | Wants were att Y that something of his became known. When studying for the | e had rhter of the attorney law in Pt fallen in love with the DAILY PILGRIMAGE. to wh so far | ations had been made | as to Crown eve of | note fri loved an claring tha time his wa wractice and the world inte | here he spent the re- With a perverse ed to the last the 1 who had d that her portrait e had received from d be buried with him eivea | ‘ s something stra y pa- ut these love stories of her- A singularly touthing case of loyalty came within the knowledge of the writer when he was living in a small English town. One of the in- habitants of the town and a near neig bor was an old gentleman who for over one in the same z it except once a | day for a pilgrimage to a churchyard | in an adjacent village. During all in the heat of summer | in the storms and cold of winter, M— had never once been known to miss this daily journey or fail to | take with him a few flowers to lay on the grave of the girl who had won his 40 years had live house, rarely legvi these years, heart so lor o. She had died trag ally within a few hours of the day ap- ed for their wedding and during \a hose years, the lover had shut him- self as far as possible from the world and had lived only for her memory. | in his house had its me- | 1e ill-fated girl, from ner favorite books to the Every roor portraits and veil and wreath which she was to have worn as a bride. | | ter. | ple live in the crater | 10, 30 miles from | They dwell in tt vunded by gh. The journey in Busy Town in a © ver bit- | o the practically form a I by themselves. Horse Likes Limburger, A horse belonging to Balt ine No. 17 has developed strong t It is fond of cheese sanwiches 1 prefers those made of Limburger. } parts, fineness of finish, bea | it has Automatic Tension, Double Fed, al 8S. OPPENHEIMER & BEv. J.F.KEEN N ‘Wines, Liguors; YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD A House & Herrman eS The Only C omplete Housefurnishing Establishment Washington. ODD SPORTING EVENT. } reach, Which Lasted an Hour and Was Very Exciting. “The funniest sporting event I ever witz ed was in a Texas saloon a few years ago. It was a race between a cockroach jed .our used upward of $1,- a citi- Lone James, f the ng his first ion, to te, he race, I afterward le ed, was for Ithe cowboys of that section. fact, | ‘they gathered nightly in a certain gees and held their meets. It was o 7 Chas. &. Spieldez Manufactu er of Plain and Ornaments [ROR RAILING Iron Porches, Window Guards, Grills, Balconies, Gratings, Cel- lar Doors, Etc., of Every De- scription. Builders’ Werk A Specialty All work Firstclass. Shop in Rear of 1344 H Street, N. E ADVANTAGE ——- OF —___ BAILEYS Improved Truss, hen get @ hine that is noted tion with perfect safety. Lig t Running All uncemfortable and iniurious steel | } i eiiaee tees tadbeunis tah spring Pressure is avoided. can equal in mechanical con- | The pad is held in Place by woven struction, durability of working bands, which retain an equal pres- sure in all positions of the bodv. It can be worn in bed, a er €ratum to the youu perfect cure. Itis the only sui dren and females the Proner amount of pressure can = vrought to bear and maintained i “Y position witho ros "m to the wearer, wi. ‘eure hernia if plac - | tiem ‘ufficiently early. oo Exc eptiig umbilical, trus: hernia, in appearance, or has as many improvements as the eat desid- . e & as tending toa NEw HoMe table truss for clul- des of needle ( fatented), nocther and ( patented), drivig wheel hingsd b - centers, thus rec.acing friction t nt ut pinching = | WRITE. _ FOR CIZCULARE | TE KEW a Seu a MACHINE U0. it is the bes It is so perfect and comfortable in s adjustment that the 2 Patient in a short time forgets he is y | 514 Ninth St., N. > Johneant, cert ficat i. Danie rs : Ns jeri e of Mr. Daniel | ASHINGTON, 1 Sent postage paid to any address on! ree ot of price; for double trus¢ In ordering, vive location of hernia, poms O68 left’ sic d measurement atisfaction give money refunded when the trnec 15 eturn order Address: : Sa <n) L.C. Bailey, Room 15, 609 F St..N W. ‘ag 2921MSt., N. W., Was. D.C. $3 for single and 4 ‘Elegant Club Rye Wh sey a> | WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALER ———_. ——=a= 40a PENN. AVENUE, N. W. Washington, D.C. : CENTER MARKET. HOLIDAY AT———__ JOHKRICKLES’ BUF —ALL KINDS OF— Miller & Krogmann, —— DEALERS IN —_ Hams, Bacon, Lard, ant Giger. Heurich’s Beer sc per bottle. | holt Whiskey $1.00 per Quart, | drink. Cor. 6th and C Streets Northwest. Washington, D. C. Beef and Beef Tongues, “Dove Brand” Hams a Specalty —— 451, 452 and 453 Center Market. 401 302 Northern Liberty Market. Over- roc per 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE *500 CENTRE MARKET, Hams, Bacon, Lard, DRIED AND CHIPPED BEEF, COOKED HAMS, TONGUES BRANCHES: 169 Centre Market, 94495 OSt. Market, * Residence, 122 M Btu Oe ee Trace Marks Des'cns CopyricuTs & & sketch and description may pinion free whether patentable, Communica- ial. Handbook on Pat ® it ae Patent taken t special notice, Without charge, in the Scientific American, strated weekly. Largest cir- ntifie journal. Terms, $3 sur months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. s “| id & 00.2010 New York Washington. BQ ver offered for all kinds “| WILBUR F. NA8H, SPIDER STARTED TO RUN. so extensive an entertainment that a couple of men acted as bookmakers, and odds wv red and taken right and lef The character of the race was such that bets could be accepted “cad within a few minutes of its close. “The animals were furnished by | the ‘house.’ A white line was drawn jacross the floor at each end of the | bar-room, making the course straight- Jaway, end about 20 feet long. The janimals; were dumped on the floor ja As soon as the roach saw |the spicer he'd start to run. The | spider would jump over him, and the roach would run in the other direc- . it was for the world like a bu ht, with the spider the bull and th *he torreador. sometimes Pre oO t one end. roach As you can see the rece would be in one jdireetion and sometimes in another. | Sometimes the bets would be against jthe ime it would take the spider to jget the roach, and sometimes a |the as test time in wh i keep free. Somet | would be that the roach could get j2cross the room first, or vice versa. jIt was a great thing to watch, and jlots of fun for the cowboys. The | always | won, which mads the odds in his favor.” a |spider usually TRAGEDY IN KANSAS. | | | So Fast That He Is Unable | to Get Down, | Many remarkable stories are com- |fog from Kansas regarding the v derful corn crop. Some of them jtheir humorous side, but this jtaken from a little paper publi hear Lee’s Summit, tells of a trag such as well may shock the corn belt: This horrible news comes from Blue Springs that near that“town the er day Willie McKei a climbed a talk to see how the ex getting along, and the stalk is grow- a CLIMBING THE CORNSTALK. ing up faster t! down, an the boy can climb The boy is plump cut of sight. | Three men have undertaken te cut down the stalk with axes and save {the boy from starvation, but it gro: }so fast that they can't hack twice in | the si The boy jnothing but raw corn, and me place. | ready th ‘rown down over four bushels of co | It is seported that the stalk has at- tained such a dizzy height that the cobs now catch fire and are con- sumed before reaching the earth. Seythe in a Cherry Tree, e In a cherry tree ont m of Hen- Deitch n New London, Oneida county, N. Y., is a seythe that hung there since 1812. The rusty blade fis in deep in the limb over wh a hired man hung it when he |} left the field one morning to enlist second war against England as learned some time afterward hat ke was killed. The scythe for a | Sime was forgotten, and when found it was imbeddéd in the tree to such ; 4 depth that the owner of the farm, Joseph Miller, deci there. Mr. jas Deitche purchased the | farm three years ago and refuses to | move either the scythe or the cherry { tree. Race Between Tarantala and Cock- | } | | | Boy Climbs a Cornstalk Which Grows | whole | “Jry 4 | tom trt ed to let it remain | | ODD HUNTING sj py dt] | Tales of the Extracr of a Wild Tu | Burney’s Intelligent p 5 ceived, Though Its Mi, —A Discovery Wh prived the Nim: the bir« half mile. The setter, b on for a dead a strong her with Five yard small bare ~N ~ }one lay across the othe 78 sort of V y were bare of | j tion of the t squatted ful belief hidden it ¢ (like an ostri in South Africa blown the purpose. (x | become bewi back track for home chase. Fifty yards dist tree top that hz € : fallen trunk, and | t é “4 he might as weil ha : on the chance hidden in it and he fg shot. He went half wa into it. There, complete branches, was the sette and five st, with ts as if it were crou key, stone dead it jas hard hit with the it reached the tree dog. strangely be had not attemp: Crippled by a The champ nia is John H New Castle. W scription he f and to steady } £ ing. The f so great that it thre of joint. His Pension Came To Many years ag | Wa w, Ind., a for a pensi ed, and the gover | a check for $25 ! fore er is pot likely ic € { tune, as he is demente¢ —

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