The American Citizen
Friday, August 15, 1902
Topeka, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE AMERICAN CITIZEN.
dest and Best Weekly paper devoted to the Race in this section of the County
of the greatest young Negroes of to-day.
In all ages of the world there has been a certain amount of civilization and culture display among all races of people. Each succeeding generation plays its part upon the great stage of action, in literature, in science, in art and in industrial pursuits, and they leave behind their acts and deeds of valor and romance, to be told and perpetuated by the who follow them.
they are right. The childs autiful realm, full of ideas, faith in all things. The best impressions are made then a become pessimistic by life. Nothing can be more b a well trained mind-one trai the medium of books they who believes in the good rather than the evil, and w
The history of a nation is its acts and things during its existence. We only know what has been done in the past by the record that have been kept. Those who survive the past, hand down to their posterity in words, in deeds, in actions—their history. We must profit by the successes and failures of those who lived in the past. It is indeed important that our children know the true history of all ages past—the doings and dealings of all nations of long ago; and as the young mind is a susceptible one one ready to grasp and perhaps idealize some character some action found in daily study, in the reading, in the history studied in their school work, is it not then very important that only literature that contains we would be proud to have ones and daughters emulate, be placed in their hands; that only the history of those nations whose foundations is Christianity, whose pass word is love and charity and good will to all men, whose existence has been measured by helping the oppressed, by setting right the wrong, be placed in to their hands? Who would hesitate to place into the hands of his son or daughter the history of how our grand old country came to the rescue of wretched and oppressed Cata, and freed her from the tyrant Plains, more bitter more galling than death? Of how she fed her starving thousands and made them men 'among men? Can we not in our imagination see our little ones after reading this being inspired with love of right, and justice from its pages stretching their little hands to some less fortunate?
There is no way of estimating the val
value of good books.
They leave their traces upon mankind as the might ocean leaves its imprint upon the great rock of the shore. Show a man whose life is one of success, of good will to ward his fellow man, and I will show you one, who, as a child, moulded his life from the authors he studied. Children should be taught how to use good books. Many people merely look at a book and pass it by while others peruse and study it carefully. The contents of a good book should be digested and assimilated as ones food is digested and assimilated. A good book should be read 2 or 3 times. Emerson says, that a book that is worth reading once, is worth reading twice or a half a dozen times. Teach a child how to use a good book, just as you would teach it how to eat or talk properly. The reason the minds of many of our children is so weak as that they are not taught to think, consider and reflect over the things they have read. We must be taught to make that we get out of books our own.
fresh literature should not be given to children to read, but instead, good books, containing selections from the best authors, something to inspire them to lead them so higher things. For childrearing recreations, I would advise "Black Beauty," "Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea," "Arabians Knights," "Uche Tom's Cabin" and many others. Such books as these inspire as well as amuse and awaken the best thoughts and reflections in the child. As a race, we have no literature of which we are proud. We are just beginning to produce posts, historians and novelists—I see in the dawn of the coming ages coming from the Negro children of to day, authors, historians and novelists—the Shakespearees. It behoves us then as teachers, praachers and instructors to lead our children along lines that tend to develop intellectually, morally and physically. Nothing is more pleasing, more entertaining and more helpful than a well stored mind. We cannot estimate the value, the good such a person is to this fellowman. But it requires years of careful teaching, of good training, and of good reading. Such training.
thing must commence in childhood. The hours lost then can never be regained in later life. True, a lack of proper training in childhood may be bridged over in after life, by perhaps a shorter course; but one is never so rough, so well grounded in those things that make him so useful as a man. The Catholic church is so imbued with the importance of child training, that they say, "Give the church the child until he is nine years old and he can never afterwards be changed in his religious views," and I do not.
they are right. The childs mind is a beautiful realm, full of ideas, of fancies, of faith in all things. The best permanent impressions are made then one has not become pessimistic by wrong views of life. Nothing can be more beautiful than a well trained mind-one trained through the medium of books they have read, who believes in the good of mankind rather than the evil, and who is continually searching for something truer, nobler and better.
Too much importance cannot be placed upon the value of good literature for children. I wish I could place it in the hands of every child in this beautiful, broad land of ours, especially in the hand of the Negro child, the life of those who have lived for their fellow man; for, "Greater love hath no man than this; that he lay dewn his life for his friend." I wish I could train the child's mind through the medium of its literature, to cling to right and might as the tender vines cling to the mighty oak. We ask, how best results can be secured.
It should be the duty of every teacher of every parent to lay out a course of reading for the child, something, amusing, interesting and instructive. Children love poetry. They love the rhyme of thought and they soon learn to commit the most difficult selections. The deeds of the brave are none the less brave because they be in rhyme. If the child fancies that method of representation of thought, let him learn life's lesson in that way.
Children should not only be taught to read good books, but should be taught to think and speak properly. They soon grow up and enter society and they should know something of society and etiquette; and what it requires to be above all, a citizen. They should be taught to speak grammatically and be dignified in their conversations and actions. A good book of expressions is J. H. Bechols "Slip Speech" and Mrs. Sherwood's "Manners and Social Usages," and Agnes Hall's Encyclopedia of Etiquette. These books should be studied just as the multiplication table is studied over and over again. The best book The Book that instruct the child of His Maker and his God, to whom he must look for aid, strength aid and salvation, is the Bible. The Book of Books! If properly scrutinized it will be found to contain every thing that makes man better and to lead hind to a higher plane of life where he can be numbered with the angels above.
"There is a book, who runs may read,
That Heavenly truth impart
And all the lore its scholars need,
Pure lives and loving hearts,
The gifts of God, above, below,
Within us and around,
Are pages in that Book to show.
How God Himse f is found."
John R. Smith.
NOTICE
Low rates to Birmingham via Wabash & L.N.R. R. Route Monday September 15 1902. at 9:20 p.m. a free reclining chair car will be run from Kansas City to Birmingham Ala.for 18 or more Pesons who desire to attend the National Baptist Convention Sept. 17-22nd. This trip is via St. Louis "The World Fair city" via Nashville where the publishing house is located. A stop over will be allowed in Nashville to visit the Publishing house and be entertained by a special com.of said house.
For accommodations and sight seeing this is the best route and the lowest fare will be made. Sleeping car tickets can be purchased at a reasonable rate from Kansas City or St. Louis to Birmingham. Remember; Board and Lodging during your stay in Birmingham is free. Send name in time in order that your home may be selected. For further information
101 Jersey ave. Kansas City, Kas.
L. S. McClellan, W. P. Agt
9th & Delaware. Kansas City, Mo.
KANSAS CITY, KANSAS FRIDAY MORNING,
TOPEKA
Mrs. J. M. Rivers entertained at her residence Monday eve. complimentary to Miss Ollie Henderson of Leavenworth Misses Jacobs and Mrs. Evens of Richmond Mo. a very pleasant eve was at different parlor games.
Mrs. Laura Anderson of Leavenworth is the guest of Mrs. N. Chiles this week.
Miss Lizzie Spaulding entertained the Golden Rod club Friday at 4 p.m.
Miss Price of Ft. Smith Ark. has been the guest of Miss Luvenia Brown for the past week.
Misses Fannie Lain and L. Moore of Carthage Mo. are the guest of Mrs. Ramsey of Lowman Hill.
Mrs. H. H. DeShaltes entertained at 4 o'clock luncheon Monday afternoon complimentary to Miss Jacobs & Evens. The 19th annual session of the North Western Missionary Baptist Association is being held at the B. Street Baptist church this week.
Mr. Geo. Smith died Sat. afternoon at Christ Hospital and was buried Sunday by the Knights Temple of Masonary
E. Lett of Atchison and H. H. Jones of Emporia attended the funeral of Mr. Smith.
A crowd of young people went three one half miles in the country Thursday eve. to Mr. & Mrs. R. H. Turner, on a Hay Ride.
Tales of Two Cities
N. W. B. Associatoin convenes in Topka this week many messenger are expected to attend .
Rev.D,B Jackson preach the Annual sermon for the Sunday School Convention Tuesbay 11 a.m.
H.P. Drake of Fairdale Kansas a highter reflected Citizen and one of the leading farmers of this Contry made our office a present call this week.
Mrs. Nannie Smith of Perry, Ok. is here soliciting funds for the purpose of building a Orphans home in her city,
The delegates who will leave Sunday night to attend the Grand Session of the U B F's at Charleston Mo. which will be in session there next week are: R. A. Motten, C. H. Blanton, John Hayworth, John Gotely, Mrs Ida B Saarber, Sarah Jackson, Annie E Brown, Mrs. John Gotely, Mrs Thayer, Mrs. Laura Cliff
Sunday Aug 24, 19)2 at Metropolitan Baptist Church. Dr.W.H. Simes, Muskogee Ind Ter will p cash mornings & Ecasing On Monday eve Aug 25 Dr.W.H Sims will lecture from the subject A race of Cowards and why ;Door free to all day eve Aug 18, Mrs M, A Will wi lecture on her trip Atlan
FOR SALE
No 921 Walker
3 rooms Nice 25 ft lot.
Rice $650 Cistern & shed.
No 923 Walker ave
3 rooms 25 ft Lot Cistern & shed
Price $650
No 214 Troup ave
Large 6 rooms house
good lot South front Cistern & Barn.
Price $900
No 1108 Oakland ave
3 room Good South front lot
7 lots & 3 cow's house
Gistern & shed Price $1.100.
Two acres of land adjoining the city
can be purchased at a price that will
surprise you. Call at this offices for
further information.
The Chicago Cafe one of the faintest and
ocated establishment of its kind at 706
E 12 St. for sale arties desrig a bar
sing wl 1 w. o see the propriet
Our bookmaker in his forecast last week regarding what the convention would do named the right man in the right place except in the representative fight where county attorney E. A. Enright won out over Jim Getty. We can usually pick the winners. Our bookmaker is busy making up a winning slate in the fall races. He has the ticket partly made up and says he will give us a list of winners in a few weeks.
Owing to lack of help and in eneperience of that we do have we have beeu materially crippled in putting our a paper that is the Editors delight.
BARGAIN! BARGAIN!!
Now is a chance for those who want a Bargain in lots we have on hand a few lots that can babought now at a bargain Any one who wishes to provide himself with a home now is the time to buy.
Call at this office and get location and price.
Hot weather is on just keep going.
When you want cesspool work done you can always find Patterson and Gayden at the old stand. 543 Minn. ave.
In the district court of Wyandotte County Kansas.
To the above named defendant, that you are hereby notified that you have been sued in the above named court by the above msmdd plaintiff, and that unless you appear and answer on or before the 2nd day of September 1902, the petition files said case will be taken as true, and a judgement rendered ageinst you, the nature of which will be a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant, and divorcing plaintiff from you, the said defendant, and for costs of said suit.
Charge Medicine is just what it i-recomended to be. it will take charge and ericate the human system and purify the blood the sick and affected only need to try it in order to be convivence:
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
STATE OF KANSAS
STATE OF KANSAS,
COUNTY OF WYANDOTTE. } ss
In the Probate Court in and for said
County.
In the matter of the estate of }
Caroline Peavy Deceased. }
Creditors and all other persons interested
in the aforesaid estate, are hereby
notified, that at the next regular term
of Probate Court in and for said Court to
be begun and held at the Court room
in Kansas City, County of Wyandotte
and state aforesaid, on the first Monday
in the month, October A. D. 1902,
I shall apply to said Court for a full
and final settlement of said estate.
W. B. Raymond Executor,
Joseph Peavy.
Publication Notice
In the District Court of Wyandotte County Kansas.
Joseph C Keller Plaintiff.
vs.
Annie Keller. Defendant.
The State of Kansas to Annie Keller you will hereby take notice. That you have been sued in the District court of Wyandotte county Kansas wherein Joseph C. Keller is Plaintiff and Annie Keller is Defendant and unless you answer on or before the 3rd day of August 1902, the petition will be taken as true and Judgement will be rendered against you as prayed for. The plaintiff is asking absolute divorce forever desolving the bonds of matrimony costody of the minor children and such other relief so in equity and good conscience the nature of the plaintiff claim demand.
Duted July 11 1902.
Joseph C. Keller Plaintiff.
Chas. W. Frey Atty.
Publication Notice
In the District Court of Wyandotte County Kansas.
Eli Porter, Plaintiff.
vs.
Pearly Porter, Defendant.
To the above named defendant, you are here-by notified that you have been sued in the above named court, by the above named plaintiff, and that unless you appear and answer, on or before the 31st day of July, the petition filed against you, will be taken as true, and a judgement rendered thereon-, the nature of which will be decree, dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and and defendant and forever divorcing plaintiff from said defendant; and for costs of this suit.
Eli Porter, Plaintiff by,
I. F. Bradley, his attorney.
WANTED.
Woman as cook, and Laundress add Mrs A. W Solomon Employment agt. Office 115 E. 5th St. Leadville Colorad
All diseases start in the bowels keep them open or you will be sick cascarets et like nature Keep liver and bowels activewithout a sickening gripping feeling. six million people take and recommend cascarets. Try a 10c. box. All druggists. Read the Citizen each week
SPARKS
From the Anvil of the Republican Convention.
Old timers say it was a love feast.
Big and little Gnat was there.
B. S. was in darkness.
Sam McGonigt officiated rather lively.
Jno. McFadden the next county attorney had a reserved seat in the rear and occasionly smiled.
Judge Bowling lookec mildly on.
Ex-city assessor Harry Dar lington wore glasses.
Al Baker the boss policy man was a busy soul.
The slate was not insured against breaking.
Eugene Robinson was up from Armourdale.
They Say
He was a delegate
When the storm came.
She says you heard me.
Did you find my picture.
How about the Popular block.
It so funny about some people.
What about the Rareback shop.
She certain think he is a geese.
The Rareback shop was close d Tue.
Some wise people inagise they know it all.
It's a cold doing Summer when he gets left.
Lower Minn ave is so popular t knows out everything else.
There is always some thing doing in the Sea foam block.
How would you like to be tea ice man Booze says its alright.
what peculiar methods some folks adopt in getting even
Its so hard for new simple people to learn that oil is not gold that glitters. Its certainly amusing to see what sardens some women thinks men are and some men think women are.
Wake up you have slep to long having served in this life for 340 year and leaning that there was a Promise land Sambo set out to reach this place ben jug over taking later on by one mister Brown going the same Direction good evenn. Uncle Sam where are you going up to behan said Uncle Sam well said Brown I am going that way we will be gather alright boss thus the folling conversession took place well Uncle Sum. Do you understand the rules of the City No sash said Sam well the rules is this said Brown. we cannot enter are we expected is that so! Boss well I will tell you how we can do said Brown gust before we get up to the gait you get Doren on you alfowes and I will get on your back and thus booth came Enter and when we get there the dore keeper will haunt us allright Boss haven reached the gate Brown called hato who comes ther saik the watchman a friend said Brown are you morented on dis mounced said the watchman mounted said Brown get down and hitch your horse and come in saib the watch man with thi in Struction Mr Brown obeyed hitching Sam on the outside walked in heaven and the watchman shut the gait thus the Negro Republican have ben rode up to office for thirty six years until his black is nearly broke he is Bownd to leave his good white Republans friends and Soak rest and as the eye is opened to these facts you can clip after the Negro wrier.
If you want to be in the push Vote for Mc Faden for he is head in the rase for county attorney.
NOTICE
Spend your pleasure evenings down at the Douglass Hospital where you can find all the Ice Creams Soda Pops and other Refreshments for sale.
Primaries for Delegates to the County Convention to morrow at the Auditorium resulted in a general slate breaking and many who would could not and many who could! would not what the result will be remains to be seen when the three hundred or more delegates assemble whatever is done it will not heal up the sour spots that are gaping. The black-brother had an innisy in the 2nd and 3rd word, whatis up a good many of theirs sleeve time will tell. Let t the Lord
The Frettful Baby in an Omnibus.
A correspondent of the London Pall Mall Gazette vouchers for this incident:
A young woman with a frettful baby in a full omnibus (aloud): "Poor little slipper, I suppose I shall end by 'aving to take 'im to the 'orspital.' (Raising the child's veil and looking around for sympathy.) "Don't get no rest. 'E is sufferer' in smallpox."
Woman Sells Her Teeth.
A Chandler (O. T.) paper says that a Kansas City woman visiting in Chandler noticed the fine teeth possessed by one of the local belies. She offered the belie $100 for two of the teeth, besides all her expenses in coming to Kansas City to have them extracted, and it is understood that the offer was accepted.
Toys for Poor Children.
The prefect of the Seine distributed 25,000 francs ($5,000) in the arrondissements of Paris to buy toys for poor children on Jan. 1. The sum was bequeathed to M. Vincent, a friend of Victor Hugo, who made an annual distribution after the poet's death and continued the benefaction in his will.
Origin of "Arabian Nights."
Professor Seybold of Stuttgart has discovered in the Tuebingen university library an Arabian manuscript 500 years old, which is probably the original of "The Arabian Nights." He has also found manuscripts describing the whole religious system of the Druses.
Boers Still in the Field.
Col. Sir Vincent Sheffield, who has returned from South Africa, said in a speech at Eaton, England, Feb. 8, that when he left from eighty to ninety Boer commandos of about 200 men such were still in the field, or in all 16,000 to 18,000 men.
The business of the council of government of Malta is no transacted by the vice president and six official members, the thirteen elected representatives having withdrawn as a protest against a legal illegal taxes.
Good Hater.
This phrase was first used by Dr. Johnson, who said of Bathurst, a physician: "He was a man to my very heart's content. He hated a fool, and he hated a rogue, and he hated a whig; he was a very good hater."
Cure for Blackwater Fever.
Hitherto blackwater fever, the terrible scurge of central Africa, has been with out remedy, but one has been discovered in a native decoction made from the roots of the cassia tree.
Turin Uses. Oil Lamps.
Owing to a strike of gas workers at Turin the principal streets of the town are now illuminated by oil lamps. The supply of gas to private houses has been gummed.
Perfume for Lemon Wings
Greek and Roman wines were perfumed, generally by steeping the leaves of roses or violets in the liquor until it had acquired the odor of the flowers.
"Wha' is the chief food of the people of India?" asked a teacher in a London school the other day. "Famine" promptly answered a little girl, who had apparently been reading the eapers.
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AGENTS WANTED In Every Town and City. Liberal Salary Paid.
AFTER USING
MARTONA
Toys for Poor Children.
Higher Taxes in Malta
Good Hater
Turin Uses Oil Lamps.
BEFORE USING
HARTONA
TRADE-MARK.
AFTER USING
MARTONA
AUGUST 15 1X2
Byeducation
LORD KELVIN AS DAMOOLER
The Great Scotch Scientist Absolute
Faith in Figures.
Lord Kelvin, so his friends say, used to make of himself a sort of Damocles, but it was a cannon ball instead of a sharp sword which was suspended over his head. Few living scientists have as high a reputation as Lord Kelvin, and few have to their credit more useful inventions or valuable discoveries. Though now in his seventy-eighth year the old professor, who for more than half a century occupied the chair of natural philosophy at Glasgow university, still maintains his reputation for being one of the most energetic men in Scotland. Those who know him are fond of telling of the boyish eagerness and almost incredible energy with which he attacks his work. When lecturing he used to become so absorbed and wrapped up in the experiments he was conducting that he could scarcely wait for the results. Disdainting the services of an assistant, he scurried about his lecture room like a youth of 16. Indeed the students liked to say that they never saw him cross his laboratory except at a run. The ruling passion of Lord Kelvin, who is a member of half the learned societies of Europe, and who has been decorated by the emperor of Germany, the president of France and the king of Belgium, is his absolute faith in figures, and it is this ruling passion which led to his experiment as a Damocles. When he has once solved a problem in mathematics he is willing to stake upon its correctness not only his reputation, but, if necessary, his life. Taking an immensely heavy cannon ball, he calculated with the utmost accuracy the size of the smallest wire which would bear the weight of the load of iron. He then procured a length of wire of just the requisite strength, and, to prove the truth of his figuring, had the cannon ball suspended over his lecturing platform at the very spot where it would be most likely to strike and crush him should the wire give way, and it remained there for weeks.—London Mall.
MORGAN'S ONE "INTERVIEW."
The Story of It is as Told by the Multi-
millionaire Himself.
The interviewer disturbs J. Pierpoint Morgan. He makes his boast that he never has been interviewed, and declares that in the last seven years but one interviewer ever has been able to approach him. The story of this one exception he yesterday told to Bishop Potter and Doane. On a recent trip to Europe a representative of the London Times would not take no for his answer. "Tell the Times man my time is worth £10 a minute," at last said Morgan. "The Times man says he'll take two minutes at that," came back the reply. "He handed me £20," said Mr. Morgan, "taked just two minutes by both our watches, did all the talking himself, and rose to go on the instant. 'Why do you want to see me?' I asked in curiosity. 'Oh, I wagered £100 that I would interview you personally, that's all,' was his reply. I congratulated him on his enterprise and dismissed him within the third minute of his call." "Did you keep his £20?" dryly asked Bishop Potter, as Mr. Morgan did. "Yes, and I haven't earned money in a long time that gave me the satisfaction that £20 did."-San Francisco Examiner.
TRADE-MARA.
AFTER USING
HARTONA
TRADE-MARK.
BEFORE USING
Sayings Culled from the Lecture of Rev. Sam Jones.
I would like a liberal gambler a great deal more than I do a stingy Methodist. You can reform a gambler and make a first rate man of him, but the stingy Methodist is bound to go to hell sure.
The trouble with us is we put too much in the belly; if we don't quit putting so much in the belly and put more in the head we'll be idiots.
The men are all after the dollar and letting the children go to hell. I'd rather have a Billy goat than such people. The way to preach to these men is to find what hole they're in and fire into that hole. They'll holler when they are hit.
The child is the embryo citizen, he'll grow to be what he is trained to be. I often wonder when I see a picture of the mother of George Washington danding her child on her knee if she knew that she held the greatest man of the world in her arms. She taught him right. The country never needed great men as she was now. Texas named Sam Huston, South Carolina calhoun, Kentucky needs Henry Clay, Illinois needs Stephen A. Doughlas and Abraham Lincoln. The nation is short on men. If I had a hundred of you fellows to make one man of I'd be mighty economical with my dirt. I'd rather have a horse thief for a neighbor than a saloonkeeper. If the horse htft stole my best horse I could buy another for $12, but if the saloonkeeper boy I could not replace him. You won't be voting for saloons must feel like dogs and don't you feel natural?
I am a prohibitionist and if you fellows had any backbone you'd be, too. If you "brethren" would swap sparerib for backbone and if the preachers would swap jawbone for backbone you might be worth something. But you hain't got any backbone.
If you put the Democratic party and the Republican party under the most powerful microscope you could not tell the difference. They are high-cook-ololons and humming. "I want to please you. How you think I've took? Everybody follows the head. Get the head right and you're all right."
Bob Taylor was on a train. Bob's tender hearted. He saw a woman on the train crying as though her heart would break. He asked her what was the matter. She said "I've-Ive-Ive I've burried four husbands and now I am taking the fifth one to New York to be cremated." Pretty soon he was about to be cremated. He asked her what she was crying about. She said, "I've-Ive-Ive I've been a-huntin' an for man nigh onto 40 years an 'never got a'one; an-'an-'an' that woman has husbands to burn-boo hoo."
You men talk about the principles of the old Democratic party, and the grand old Republican party. You couldn't find them with a microscope. I tell you I'm goin' to vote to honor my wife, protect my mother, to send my children home sober. I'm goin' to vote for Laura and the children. I see you old Democrats and Republicans don't applaud that. No niggers driver in the house who wiped a dinky like the Republican and Democratic parles whip their voters. I'm a concentrated, consolidated, consummated stand-up-and-knock-down prohibitionist. I don't believe in aristocracy. I don't believe in an intellectual aristocracy. I don't believe in a moneyed aristocracy.
Revenge in Kind.
A story was told at a recent dinner of a New York literary club which goes back to the time when a certain famous man was governor of Massachusetts. The tale sounds like a revival of a newspaper yarn contemporaneous with its hero. At any rate, it is worth retelling. A country road in the north of Maine plodded a French-Canadian with a trained bear, making his way to a county fair. At a crossroad he met a long-whiskered Yankee driving a mule. They nodded to each other and were continuing on their ways, when suddenly the Frenchman pricked up his ears. Long there, Napoleon!" the farmer drawn to his mule. The Frenchman stopped short and listened again. "Git up, Napoleon!" called the Yankee. "I say, ma frien!" called the Canadian, bringing his bear to a halt, "what for you call ze chackass Napoleon?"
The Austro-Hungarian government has paid the widow of Captain von Thoman, the commander of the Austrian force who was killed at Pekin, 200,000 crowns, adding an annuity of 1,200 crowns for the education of his daughters until they attain their majority. Dr. von Rosthorn, counsellor of the Austro-Hungarian government, has received 1,000 crowns on account of the loss of his property, and the government has also paid compensation to the sailors and to the relatives of those who were killed. Much satisfaction, says a Reuter's telegram from Vienna, is expressed at this prompt action, as Austro-Hungary, like other nations, only receives the Chinese indemnity in $3 annual installments.
S. Teakle Wallis, the eminent lawyer, literateir and ardent Southerner, of Baltimore, who died several years ago, left a collection of paintings to St. Mary's seminary, a leading Roman Catholic institution in that city. H. Weldenbach, a Canadian artist, who has been retouching some of the paintings, declares after close examination of old paintings of St. Peter and St. Paul that they are the work of Rubens, and that the paintings must be the ones which disappeared in 1840.
Scientific mammas are feeding their daughters on phosphorus, because it is a good thing for making matches.
To the long list of strange deaths must be added that of James W. Carroll, a merchant of Lambertville, N. J. Mr. Carroll's death was caused by a rooster. He was taking two hens from the chicken yard when a rooster flew at him and trust one of his spurs into Mr. Carroll's hands. The wound became very painful but was not regarded as serious. A few hours later he dropped dead. It is supposed that the rooster's spur pierced an artery, causing a blood cot, which went to the brain.
A piece of cloth and a dirty man are similar in the respect that they both shrink from washing.
I believe in common sense. Common sense is the most uncommon kind of sense. The aristocracy with character that can't be bought, that can't be sold. "The beauty of woman is her purity." "I'd rather be like the homely little brown bear than the butterfly." It's a beautiful character, girls that consider Girls, your mothers. You bear that dring and smoke and break your mothers' hearts, you need killin', that's what you need. I'm disgusted with the man who swells up and says, "my wife's the best woman on earth, but I don't make no profession myself." My wife has a right to go wherever I go. If I go to a saloon she's got a right to. I should not expect more of her than I'm willing to do. My daughter has as much right in a mother as we might. Those who are the brothers-in-law to the church are the sons of the devil. Now you can go home and howl. Hit a dog and he'll howl.
I feel sorry for the preacher. You pack him in an icebox and expect him to sweat. You fetch him up to your church carryall, then all jump In and expect him to pull you through to the New Jerusalem. Rev. Sam P. Jones expressed himself quite forcibly as to the combines of names and the effect on children. He said: "You get out of a child just the ideas you put into his mind. "We put gold above God. We put chattles above character. We put mammon above manhood. We have inverted God's order of things. Whatever a nation has made its idol it has at last gone out and fallen down under its idol and died. Greece focalized her life and central role being in their literature that she has supported her toes and died under a book.
Rome focalized her life in her military power and died at last pierced through with a sword. So America has focalized her life and centralized her whole being around the dollar not the coin. The dollar could not form a combine and raise enough money to buy one drop of water.
"This country will never succeed in the best sense until we put God above gold, manhood above money and teach our children that not cash is the only thing striking for
There is nothing in money or property to bring peace or happiness. God has adjusted matters so that there is not much difference between being rich and being poor. It's all in how we feel and how we think about it. I'd rather be a pauner and feel like a prince than be a prince and feel like a pauper. The philosopher is ye to be born who can tell which the king is and have nothing to eat or to have one colie from eating too much. Who can tell which is the best estate, to be a millionaire and roll all night upon his downy bed and can't sleep a wink, or to be an old tramp on the roadside with his head on a log snoring so you can hear him a hundred rods? The tramp has the drop on him for the time being, anyway.
Speaking of men who have piled up millions at the expense of their employees and the jobs and then opted on conscience by endowing universities or building libraries, he continued: "They must do something to get the respect of others and they employ different methods.
NEW CYCLONE STORIES
What the Wind Recently Accomplished in Michigan.
Hudson (Mich.) Post. A Wheatland farmer says that upon entering his pig pen, immediately after the passage of the cyclone last Wednesday, he was surprised to find what he at first supposed was a new species of swine. His porkers had been driven so full of splitters as to be scarcely recognizable. A man sitting in a back window of his residence, just out of the path of the twister, saw his cows, which were grazing in a neighboring field, go sailing skyward. They landed on an adjoining farm and began grazing again. He has not yet recovered from his astonishment.
"Do you know the reason they couldn't find that piano?" asked a man in the barber shop. "I was standing in front of the hotel at Manitou Beach, when I heard something that sounded like music directly overhead. I looked up and saw a plano going northward over the lake at an elevation of about 200 feet. The wind was agitating the plano and distinguish the strains of 'Ain't It a Shimmer?' I have told a lot of people about this, but they don't seem to believe it."
The foregoing stories were gathered from reliable sources.
The Live Lay Figure
Lay figures upon which to display clothing in shop windows have been in modern times erroneously improved; so that the good ones are now far from presenting that woodiness of appearance that was once commonly characteristic of them. But occasionally some clothing merchant, going in for realism, puts in his window, as a display figure, upon which to display suits of clothes, a living man; and it is easy to see how soon a figure will fix attentions to the same man in the same clothes, soon among other men, in the street or elsewhere, familiar surroundings, might attract no special attention whatever. But in the unfamiliar surroundings of a show window he attracts the eyes of many.
Seeking a Buried Treasure
The schooner Hermann has sailed for the South seas, ostensibly on a pleasure trip, but in reality, it is said, in search of buried treasures amounting to $70,000,00, reported to have been hidden on an island by the mutinous crew of a Japanese ship, Captain James Brown, is retired mariner of the Atlantic coast is in command of the Hermann, and is accompanied by four or five Eastern friends. The lit's schooner was fitted out at an expense of $18,000.
It is better to fall in line than in the mud.
Though the Japanese folded fan is a common object in this country, little is known of its manufacture. One of the largest factories is at Kyoto, where an average of 3,000,000 fans yearly are turned out. Spain is the principal customer for the Kyoto fans, Italy coming next in importance, and then America and Mexico. The fans are not at all easy to manufacture. As many as eight different workmen are required to make a single frame, while before the fan is finished it has to pass through the hands of no fewer than ten people.
ARE MAGNETIC CANNON.
Astonishing Possibilities of Warfare in the Future.
Harper's Weekly: If the machine will throw dynamite, it need not throw so much. Half, ton of dynamite, equally distributed over New York, would unobtainably provide ample space for rebuilding. The cables describe this pleasing new invention as an electromagnetic affair. It uses no powder or other explosive in throwing the shell. No details of the invention are given, but it is easy to see how a series of electromagnets, set at convenient spaces along the length of a barrel, might do the trick. The ball would be drawn forward by a powerful magnet, and just as the latter reached the moment of maximum intensity in the magnetic field, it could be made to strike some little mechanism which would break the electric circuit of the magnet to be dead and the momentum of the shell would carry it into the field of the next magnet of the series along the tube.
Powerful electro-magnets are made nowadays capable of lifting a ton or so and half a dozen of them would give a tremendous velocity to a heavy ball. As there would be no concussion in the discharge of the gun, it would carry the highest and most deadly explosive known. It would be cheap, too, both to build and operate for practically it would never wear out, while the big guns of today have an average life of but 100 shots. It would be no more accurate than a bullet at high speed is invisible for the most part, a battery could operate without in the least disclosing its whereabouts. And armies would have no warning of its presence until the rain of hail which it could produce down upon them. No wonder artillery experts in Europe are said to be excited. The invention is described as the work of Prof. Bikeland, "a Norwegian physicist." If this be the distinguished professor of physics at Christiana, it may be set down that the invention is not a cable yarn. At any rate, we hope it will be used. We hope it miles might inconveniently reach the people who make war—congressmen and kins and such—and expose them to danger. The moment this result is attained, it may be safely prophesied that war will have come to an end.
ALCOHOL'S VICTIMS
Author Who Was a Drunkard and Did Not Realize His Condition.
Not long ago M. Henry Fouquier, writing for Le Matin of the peculiarities of the French character, says of the use of alcohol: "In certain alcoholic, at least, there is one alcoholic for every ten of the population, whether they be conscious of it or not. The devoted men who have made themselves the apostles of the crusade against alcohol, which I deem necessary for their movements of our times, give in their pamphlets and their lectures, which cannot be too great in number, the eloquent picture of the ravages that alcohol produces, in whatever manner it is introduced, into our economy. Only they do not insist enough, perhaps, on disguised alcoholism—that is, alcoholic poisoning in subjects that possess all appearances of temperate and who are really not drunkards. Hereditary or acquired, alcoholic. The race that the evil of alcoholism can cause its have in men who do not suspect it.
"I knew a literary man who was not only full of talent and a gallant man, but moreover of a most scupulous correctness of life. He would have died of shame to be a drunkard, yet he was one in his time. Experiencing nervous troubles, menacing symptoms of paralysis, he went, without revealing his identity, to the doctor, after a rapid examination, said, rather brusquely: "You are losing your time coming to see me. You know very well that if you want to be cured you have only to stop getting drunk." "Only those who know my friend can imagine the indignant stupefaction caused by the words of the doctor." "I? I a drunkard! I was never in-toxicated once in my life. I never enter a cafe, I dine with my family." "I was drunk! My friend drank one bottle of wine a day and one finger of chartreuse after his coffee. For him that was alcoholism.
"We must understand it. Alcoholic poisoning exists outside even of habitual intoxication. The enemy of human reason can insinuate itself without warning. If you drink one may say, and yet may take possession of the place all the same."
Root's Advice to the Farmer.
New York Correspondence Cincinnati Enquirer: There is a good story being told regarding Secretary of War Root. The secretary was on his way to Southampton recently when a farmer edged into the seat and began telling the cabinet member how to run the government. When the citizen's supply of criticisms began to run low, Mr. Root asked: "What is your occupation?"
What is your occupation?
"Poultry farmer." was the reply
"Do you know how many eggs each of your hens lay?"
"Why, no." confessed the man.
"Well, the man who looks after my chickens knows how much each hen does. If he didn't I'd discharge him for not knowing his business. If a hen doesn't produce 15 eggs a month it's a loss to keep it. Now, my friend, doesn't it strike you that after you have learned your own business so well that I can't give you points on it, then would be the proper time for you to come and teach me how the government ought to be run?"
Rail Road Reform
If the railroads keep on in the reform work other reformers can go out of business, for the railroads have no difficulty in enforcing their laws. They ordered their employees to quit drinking, they shut out cigarette fiends and cigar smokers, and now they quietly order the public to quit kissing on their premises. Next they will decree that women must travel in short skirts, and it will be done. The railroad is a business enterprise and they consult only the business side of the equation.
The reel business of life is taught by the dancing master.
His Sheepish Actions
Baltimore American: "Again," complains the devoted wife, "I am told that you have been flirting with that odious Miss Mashem on the plaza." "Bah!" retorts the gay husband, thinking to ridicule the suspicions of his wife. "Bah!" he recents.
"It isn't so bad," asserts the wife,
"for a man to be guilty, but what I detest is when he acts so sheepish about it."
A broad river does not always cut a deep channel.
A CHICAGO SVENGALA
WAS HALF BLIND THROUGH
FAILING SIGHT.
in His Optical Trade.
Chicago letter: How much is Swengalism practiced for the purpose of accomplishing crimes of a more or less diabolical character?
This is a point which no bureau of criminal investigation in the world can answer, even with the assistance of the faculty of the Charcot institute.
Hypothetically in its history, the possessors of this uncanny power often discover the fact that they are hypnotists, by accident, and then carefully conceal the fact from others for the consummation of their own ends.
It has also become a common thing nowadays for persons who are accused of offenses to attribute their guilty acts to entrainment by stronger minds. Of course nine-tenths of such accusations are pure inventions and fictitious excuses. They have no ground in even a decent suspicion, but are invented "out of whole cloth," as the saying goes. In this city, however, in which a man is accused of being a Swengal in which the accusation bears upon it the carmarks of probability.
The case involves the mysterious disappearance of a society woman of culture and refinement, whose husband holds a fine professional position in Chicago, with an old, illiterate, half-blind, poor and unattractive man. The friends of the young couple are dumbfounded over the occurrence and ability of this man, many rational excuse for the old infatuation, declare that the abductor is a Swengall, Oddly enough his sardonic features embody the same peculiar facial characteristics as did those of the original of Trilhy's Nemesis and the circumstances leading up to the elopement somewhat resemble those which formed the basis of Du Maurier's romance. Even the name by which the Chicago Swengall was known appears in doubt. He was a German, about 55 years of age and had been an eye specialist, according to his own statement, until his death, which led to his downfall in a profession of which he was almost a master.
He became acquainted with the Law-sons, by which name the young couple were known, early this year in some informal manner. The husband recognizing him as a man who knew something of optics and not having the remotest idea of becoming jealous of him left him in the society of his young and beautiful wife without one of the contact. By a resemblance coincidence Mrs. Lawson had a pair of particularly bright and strong eyes—eyes which to an eye specialist would be a fortune in themselves. It is supposed that by the use of Mrs. Lawson's eyes the German Swengali was enabled to see clearly with his own half-blind eyes when he had her under the effect of hypnotism. In fact the excuse made by this intruder in the Lawson home was a request that Mrs. Lawson would aid him by looking through the optical work that he was trying to struggle with in spite of his visual defect. Toby tried to identify the organ of a voice, was made to sing magnificently by aid of Swengali's knowledge of technique under the influence of his hypnotic power.
Unfortunately the comparison ceases there, for Trilby was not a young woman of unblemished reputation but a young person who had never been particular in her morals. Mrs. Lawson, on the contrary, comes from a group of the best families in the middle West and has borne an unblemished reputation. Her marriage to her husband, which occurred shortly after her graduation, was a purely love affair and her married life has been an exemplary one hitherto. Her mother and the other members of her family are the most astounded people in the world over the occurrence, that has so blighted the young woman's life. She is a doctor of nurses in the idea that her abductor really possesses the nefarious power attributed to him. Her husband strangely enough, refuses to accept the excuse and wants to blot her out of his life forever, so deeply is he enraged at her inexplicable conduct. From what can be gleaned it looks and is the eloping couple had gone to Germany when Svengall No. 2 alleged he had an interest in a large optical goods factory.
The opinion of the police is that the man has merely separated the young woman from her husband because he wanted her for himself and that no other explanation is necessary than that given for other sloppy beats. Be that as it may, the disappearance of the couple is one of the biggest sensations of the week.
JOHN ARMITAGE
A Habitable Church Tower
A Biobased Church Tower.
The famous Broadway Luncheon church, located beneath the corner of Broadway and Thirty-fourth street, is building a new tabernacle on another site, which will have at least one peculiar feature, a tower some 50 feet square, with a highly decorated palatial part, that it is to be used for church offices, which may be reached by elevators. The church, although wealthy, could not, afford to have the parish house built on the church building proper. Therefore, the parish house is located in the upper stories of the tower, the lower stories being devoted to Sunday school rooms and halls for various purposes. Above the Sunday school rooms is the ladies' boor, above that the men's floor, above that the administration floor, with the ladies' floors, above that the sexton's apartments, and there is still room above for other uses as needed. This tower is a "sky-scraper," rising far above surrounding buildings and affording a fine prospect. When some one remarked to the pastor, Dr. Jefferson, that the sexton's quarters were very desirable, he said: "Well, I think our sexton ought to pay about $4,000 a year for his administration, and can be found in neighboring apartment houses"—Boston Herald.
Schoolboy Repartee.
St. Louis Post Dispatch: Prof. H. W. Prentiss, principal of the Hodgden school, tells a joke on himself with much enjoyment. One day during an examination, when he was visiting the various rooms, he stopped to ask a very bright boy a sum in algebra, and, although the problem was comparatively easy, he could not answer it. Prof. Prentiss remarked, and with some show of severity:
"My boy, you ought to be able to do that. At your age George Washington was a surveyor."
The boy looked him straight in the eye and answered:
"Yes, sir, and at your age he was president of the United States." The conversation dropped at that point.
A SWEET FROCK FOR SWEET SIXTEEN.
A SWEET FRUCK FOR SWEET SIXTEEN.
1. Pretty frock of lavender fig batiste, and bands of lace. The slew wrist, where it is gathered into a row, with wide flounce, headed by the hat is of white straw, with wreath at back.
2. Pretty useful autumn model of bands of white taffeta. The skirt is back, in line with the waist. The w harmonizing with the skirt. Hat of bow of soft black ribbon.
pretty frock of lavender figured lawn, with yoke and bands of lace. The sleeve is narrow at top, where it is gathered into a white tucked band. The wide flounce, headed by tucked batiste and two of white straw, with wreath of roses, and bow of white taffeta. The skirt is cut with flare and bane with the waist. The waist is in blouse forming with the skirt. Hat of white summer felt, it black ribbon.
Fashion Notes From L
1. Pretty frock of lavender figured lawn, with yoke of tucked white batiste, and bands of lace. The sleeve is narrow at top, widening to the wrist, where it is gathered into a white tucked band. The skirt is narrow, with wide flounce, headed by tucked batiste and two bands of lace. The hat is of white straw, with wreath of roses, and bow of white ribbon at back.
2. Pretty useful autumn model of black volle trimmed with graduated bands of white taffeta. The skirt is cut with flare and buttons down in back, in line with the waist. The waist is in blouse form, the trimming harmonizing with the skirt. Hat of white summer felt, with Alsatian bow of soft black ribbon.
Fashion Notes From Paris.
Paris letter: Abominable weather once more marked the crowning social event of the month, the "Kermesse," held at the Paris Polo, where most of the beauty and fashion gathered, principally perhaps to display the latest and most lovely toiletts, some of which I took the opportunity of sketching.
Among the notables present I observed Queen Natalie of Serbia, looking very much like a princess in dress, Duchesse de Morny, in gray and blue striped serge, Contesse Boni de Castellane, in a Louis Seize costume of drab cloth, and the Marquise de Mun in a charming linen face-encrusted dress. Linen and lace still hold their own, and linens are being made up with taffeta. Linen, lawn and cambric.绒线 and amplified with lace, were conspicuous sartorial features of the kermesse.
A new autumn model gown, illustrated, is of black volleo, trimmed with graduated bands of white taffeta, edged with fine black silk. The skirt is cut to fit the hips, but flares considerably below the knees and is made to button down the back. The waist fits smoothly above the bust, but is gathered into the waistband. The sleeves are neatly, being slightly full at the bands, where they are gathered into a white silk band. The waist buttons at back. The color is of white taffeta folds, with
TWO CHARM
TWO CHARMING HATS.
TWO CHARMING HATS.
1. This pretty simple hat is of white straw and silk braid, trimmed with a scarf of white Louisine silk tucked and hemmed with black. It is drawn through four cut steel buckles, and tied in a wide bow with long ends at the back.
2. This becoming hat is of double yellow straw braid, bent to become the youthful face and loosely arranged hair. It is fully trimmed with shaded pink roses and foliage, a big cluster on the front and more under the turned down brim.
ured lawn, with yoke of tucked white ve is narrow at top, widening to the white tucked band. The skirt is narcked batiste and two bands of lace. h of roses, and bow of white ribbon of black voile trimmed with graduated cut with flare and buttons down in aist is in blouse form, the trimming white summer felt, with Alsatian
s From Paris.
bars of the braid.
The hat is of white felt, with under facing of black lace and Alsaian bow of wide soft black ribbon.
As will be seen from my illustrations, our children's frocks are made only to the knees, and with very long waists. The little miss holding her doll is in a frock of white batiste, two very full flouces, with tucked hems, forming the short skirt. The long waist is fulled on to an insertion of raised valencenelles, with a wide band of the same down the front. The short cape sleevees are banded with the same. The yoke and full undersleeve are of piece lace to match. There are deep cuffs to the sleeves. The white lace socks reach to the calves only.
I illustrate a charmingly simple young girl's frock. The material is lavender lawn, figured with white, with a thin lace underneath. The shirt is made clinging at the top, with the favorite circular flounce. A wide band of white batiste, with diagonal tucks, is set between the upper part of skirt and the flounce, having a band of white lace insertion on either side.
The yoke and upper part of the sleeves are of white tucked batiste with insertion to match the skirt. The waist is made in simple blouse style, slightly fulled where it joins the yoke. It buttons at the back. The sleeves MING HATS.
are tight at the top, gradually widening to the waist, where they are gathered to a batiste cuff. The stock is also tucked batiste. The little maid holding her dolly hind her, has a charming frock of pink French lawn, with deep rose color in raised dots. The skirt is very full, and has two rows or white lace insertion let in. The full blouse waist has two rows of insertion let in around it above. The yoke is of white tucked lawn, finished in front with narrow lace, and a beading through which the drawn narrow black welt ribbon. The berta raffia, as also the choice on the sleeves, are of pink lawn, embroidered with white. The sash is black. Black ery silk. White lace cuffs, and pink kid shoes are worn with the
Another charming model shown is a sage green pongee and illustrates the popularity of this silk, a new departure which promises to remain in flavor. This frock is designed for a young girl, but the idea is also seen in old dresses. The tucks are laid from the waist down, very deep, and stitched down at the edges, thence the skin flares out very full. The hem is deeply turned up, and interlined, so that the many rows of stitching will show up well. The skirt is unlined. Above the hem are two blas stitched bands of the silk, and between them a hinge of a narrow ribbon velvet in a much darker
SMART LARLEY AUTOMN COAT
Dressy little coat of black cloth, with collar bands and straps of white cloth, dotted with red. The sleeves are cut with a double bell; the coat being cut in an upward curve at the back to match. The coat is lined with white silk with red dots. The hat is of white silk folds with black wings, and red velvet bow.
shade of green. The blouse is also tucked, the round sailor collar and full sleeves being of the silk plain, but having bands and velvet lacing to match the skirt, as also the girdle. A loosely knotted scarf of green and white silk is tied under the collar. The chic sailor hat is of white stiff straw with bad and bow of green satin ribbon.
The silk stockings match the frock and are embroidered with white. The embroidery is illustrated in natural ponge, embroidered with red, and having three stitched bands of red taffeta on the skirt, and one wide band on the square collar.
The white and red sailor hat is trimmed with white and red taffeta ribbon. I illustrate a handsome waist of taffeta, embroidered in open rings all over worn over a white chiffon blouse, with bands of black ribbon velvet down the front. The taffeta has revers of black velvet with deep stock of the same. The pretty little coat is pictured made of fine light weight enamel with bands of white purple collar of white cloth, a fitted border of the same around the edge of the coat and double sleeves, also straps of the white on the coat and sleeves below the collar. All the white is hand dotted with red silk. The sleeve is rather short, with a double bell effect, curving upward at the back of the arm. The back of the coat curves upward in the middle in the same way. The coat is lined with white satin and red dots. The coat is of folds of white silk with fine red straw between a pair of large black wings running forward, finished at the back with a bow of red ribbon velvet.
The becoming picture hat illustrates is a deep yellow straw, sewn on both sides of a frame, the deep front filled with with pink roses in various shades, and plenty of foliage, trails running round the hat, and falling over the turned down brim at the back. A few flowers are massed under the brim at the back falling on the loose curls. This is a charming style both for chapstick and coiffure, the lines being bent in the hat to suit the face of the weaver.
Keep Vice in Hiding Hol
Keep vices in hiding House
The always difficult problem of restraining gambling houses of restitution is to some extent simulated when it is to be understood and understood stand for public decency and the enforcement of law. It is still a problem, however, from which it is impossible to eliminate the controlling factors—the gambling instinct and debased human passions. Shifty, perilous, clamorous, these vices will most likely live in the dark if they forbid them themselves in the light and force them under cover is about the best of municipal affairs can hope to do. But this is manifestly a great gain, since in this enforced retirement these vices attract only those who seek their haunts, and cause to offend public decency or cruit the ranks of their attentions through the agency of "surveillance," that subtle force the power which is but dimly comprehended, but against which wise people scribbled so seriously that the ignorant one expects to eradicate vice from a city, but it is not unreasonable to believe that it can be placed under restraint—Portland Oregonian.
Practical measures are now in press with a view to exploiting the various coal fields existing in Egypt in elsewhere on the direct Eastern route. The Egyptian government has granted the Nicholas an Englishman.
ear eae
i Se ob
eth cere
iF eo
spider Peat at
every serious difficulty
a rah tes
pubic #8 deseribed by
argentine Moliows: “The small
pei Grcty that spins a tong
He thea
pe #2 (here that the floating
itil fue wires in enormous
gs tl Joon as dow'falls oF a
rf je es: wet and estab
gf teas The effect ot
p28 ait millions of sch leaks
pe ally to stop the operation of
otiay ian government, tele-
a Aen especially in Buenos
a pul t0_ vast Inconven-
Bn ’n number of ex-
get horn tried but to BO
pats MO jn yortant line between
pe sn Htosarfo the effect of
pe a fo cat down | the
pe i from 200 oF 400 to 20
fon pou. The government
si Merri, as a Inst resort,
sat ye tse points by an under
pre ail one hundred and
is ond
ig. Tat, of Kansas: Clty, Mon eS
n Tesy ia tle dental profession to
eee be yursuer. Finding that
vitor’, a8 a rule, make
‘ego estirbitant, really charg-
# fe or reputation, soetal position
peereclion with dental soclettes
Moe skill in Workmanship, OF 60
irly low that it fails t cover
aiff aatecial aud time, Dr. Tatt
eiet that there must mecessarily
silt for the man who would adopt
sre courve, charging enough to
y nthe best of service and leaving
iy a fair profit
ya pe resulved to do, and as @ re-
he sues as gone beyond his
fils practice bas grown to such
Peat that he can afford a special
fireach branch of the work, some-
never attempted in the city be-
Me may wronstully be classed with
Moeay dentists, because he adver
tnt as a matter of fact, his meth-
prices and advertisements, put
naclass by himself, Do not rely
jyon his statement, but call at bis
rooms, s Kast Bleventh street,
swtain for yourself the merits of
ork
Sia aikenieaN
Wen a famous archaeologist came
pe cub one afternoon his erudite
fenance as ornamented at sever-
joints wilh sticking-uplaster, and
fe mas general Inquiry among his
eas to what was the matter.
“taor,” said (he professor briefly.
“Wwol gracious! Where did you get
sed?" asked owe of the younger
ters synmptlietically.
‘tsa strange thing,” said the man
lamning. “1 was shaved this morn-
ty aman who really és, 1 suppose,
ite above the ordinary barber. 1
wot my ovn knowledge that he
A double First Class at Oxford;
fe stuliel in Heidelberg after:
sand spent several years in other
ign slucational centers, 1 know,
ot my own knowledge, that he has
ibited scientif articles to. our
nagavines, and has numbered
ng his intimate friends men of the
st well and selentifie standing In
ijeaud Auweriva. And yet,” solilo-
the savant, “he can’t Shave a
decently
“ty Jove!” oxclaimed. the young
mers in astonishment, “What Is
alnrber for with all those accom-
ments?”
0h, he isn't @ barber!" said_ the
worm, yawning. “You see, T shav-
Byself this morning!”
Ciyman—1 wanted to thank you for
landsome beer mug you sent on
birthday,
Mrs Goodart—-Of course; you'll un-
inl I meant it to be used only as
oruament
‘Sayman—Oh, my wife keeps it full
me all the time,
Ms Goodart—She doesn't really?
fayman—Yes; full of temperance
‘A~Philalolphia Press,
ith STRIKE IN ‘THE WICHITA
MORIN A4id GAR
fanaas City. Mo., Aug. 12.—The Con-
Mated Miners) Company of this eity
W fst reeived advices from thelr
vers. giving results at a depth of
fon the Nellie mine of $14.80 in
0d 14 ounces of silver per ton,
Mein in this mine has widened
inches at the grass roots where
Mi fist divvovered to 8 feet at the
tom 0 {the shaft, representing one
be largest bovlies of pay ore ever
rel in any district. ‘They have
Ietived trom Prof. J. R. Moeehel,
falnent chemist of Kansas City, an
ivi of the ore in the Gold and
me Min, giving a result at a
ot 1 fo. of $35 per ton In gold.
‘oman! is composed of about
Hy ofthe best business men, and
‘eto be congratulated upon thelr
forte,
Se-What is sho worrying about
no ease she can't think of any
0 Worry about.
mal” YOY about—Somerville
sitters will fod Mrs. Winslow's:
SSE Ssrap the best remedy to use
si chllicon during the teething
te ge GUMS.” said the owner of
ae Streak,“ getting etmply un
eta tetleman to livedne Tran
wi ttle gicl yesterday, “and when I
ey 2 BAY hor father @ reasonable
ste brute got a club and would
rraaulted me i it hadn't been for
Police
gat trasonnbioneas of the tower
raHlied tue owner of the Yel-
artet, “almost pascen” compre:
“Chicago Record-Herald.
tid that 2 000,000 inhabitants of
Pilopines ac nowledge Arabic as
Wed language
Smo Lat ame you got a dis-
Mt Of the jury
wmlor Cane yes; it was
“WY A you tusaage see"
mis (Wo fellows on the fury,
maint Motoblte ana ‘the canes
rage knew those two weonea
Ae." Voukers Statesman,
PY tsi marry the widower?”
“ing 2 380% that ane cowie
Yau she marry the young
rat 0 show ‘hat she wouldn't,” —
8 Post, =
Rupture 7.
MMERCIAL CO! NEW YORK LIFE BUILDING
SP ALDING’S COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, NEW Yor Lire BUILD
yaa tenia tiaciee eh Se, nae tang
Engllsh Rranches at low rates. “20 rooms, 18 Teachers and Lecturers.” Pree Employment Bure
tage Muntrated Gataloguetind Jourtal seutftee on resus TOL ine 5 Feevelaleg AM Pees
COUNTRY PUBLISHERS CO.. KANSAS CITY. VOL. 2. NO. Io
‘You Want Facts.
‘I Present Them to You in
- the Letters of My
Former Patients,
You Do Not Pay Me One
Cent Until You Are
Cured,
J present to the readers of this paper
a few testimonial letters and names of
former pationts whom I have cured of
rupture, believing that the aMicted
would rather correspond with some one
who has been cured than read what f
night say about myself. You ean more
fully investigate and convince yourself
as to the merits of my treatment. You
Might doubt any. statements T might
make, Dut you cannot help but believe
the statements of those I have cured.
Iwill ask you to write to any or all
of them. “If you are. satisfied with
what they say “about my. rellability
and methods of treatments write to me
or eall and see me. Remember that in
all cases I guarairtee a cure and do not
accept one cent of money until you are
well. Consultation by mail or im per-
con is entirely free. i will be. pleased
to correspond with you rega-ding your
a
DR. ERNEST HENDERSON.
A Very find Cane of Rupture Cared in
three Weeks,
McPherson, Kann, June 8, 1909.
J.bad a neiy bad cave of rupture for yest abd
Snt'war Cored fs thfee worca, “Teainoteay too
much for him. know he cau do just what be
tiyshecando., ‘The Doctor do. it nak one
SEEC of pay ani the patient well, "anni the
st zunrantee he ean poseibly give to any person
Aftlcted ag Iwan. Iwill abewer anyone who
Wishes to Kuow more about my case.
‘Very truly youre, ASHE onson.
Write For My Trestion on the Cure of
Rupture Sent Froe.
Another find Case Permanently Cared in
a short Tlme—Gratefat for Same.
My Derr Doctor: desire to add. my teat
smonfal to those you have cared of rupture. My
fate waned ue an you made a permanent
cure inn short time, without pais, and I never
Fonts day from muy work Teaanot tay top mech
for yume care, and would. mot be bick 1a the con
dition | wantor' thousand dollare, {hank you
nd would recommen) your rapture care ty any
fone." Use thia Ir you wish Iara traly; than
fall yours, ‘FRED HARPER; 2011 Indlaaa Ave,
Suffered for Years—Pronounced Incura-
ble by other Doctors,
Dear Doctor:—I wish to atate that I ean moat
hearily recommend your ‘raptire. treatment,
Since curly youth | had been seriously troubted
quia Fich¢ocrotal uutare that wan prooeaced
ty doctors to be inci able except. possibiy: by a
logerous surgical operation. tering a pat
treatment, 1 determined to try the sume and am
Kind | did'so, for after taking your treatwent for
thve weeks mi 'now sound aod well,” Your
{reatunentin al that goo lai fort
SE es
Tho “'WeberJunlor” ()aisvatstumsttss
Pumper cesses
SL ( er] PS, senate
aoe Soe
. HO faaerncna |
~ Ge Osa: fier tarot date
| Selle “Ele S
|
A Young Man Without Money
-Wintind special taciities for SEL SUPPORT
Win Boe creleateating hinoeltat ine
| Kansas City University
Many students here get emplorment selding
pear iee oan adline per weak: tar ee
Reesor porsanys Term’ gyn pt th,
AGlirose’p: $°'srepweNs, Chancellor, Kan:
Seo Rassias
eRrneeee oe be aeeeee oe
| > i
-Brown’s Business College,
1228 Maiu St., Kansas City, Mo-
Voucher Bookkeeping, New Standard
Shorthand, Practical Telegraphy.
Finest Penman in the West. 5 months
Gregg Shorthand $25, to Introduce.
Write for free catalogue.
A cure Guaranteed. Ne
C ANGER mone aceptcdatipe
Tents welt 400 page
ook sent free, naaboss,
Dec E Sith, 1016 AMR nee Oe we
$286 GAINED YEARLY
ee» Chandler’sCream Extractor
Bee | weer eTe
ee ore ur ta tg sane
peed Sttount of miles 1-8. Rep, Cater,
Bem Minn saya: We” get ge more ©
; | teu in onc
ed rzticars assoc
GOOD SALARY TO AGENTS.
Rcrencess War Bank of "goo Wes Stath Ses,
sarees ind BapresGare. © Kamas Cree, Mo
MONEY.
You can make quick money if you
buy consolidated stock now at
10 Cents per Share.
Send orders, drafts and all
correspondence to
The Consol dated Mineral Co,
209 Lycoum Building,
RANSASOITY, ~~~ = MO.
Hamlin’s Wizard Oit will eure a targ-
er number of painful ailments than
anything which you can find, |
“Jobn,” she said solicitously, “I wish
you would quit drinking. You know it
is nothing in the world but plain pois-
on.”
“There you are, Mirandy,”-he retort-
ed. “The minute a man takes out life
insurance you women folks get un-
Treasonable!"—Baltimore News.
“I haven't seen a good short story
for months, What has become of all
‘the writers of fletion?”
“Don't you know? They are all at
work writing attractive little pamph-
lets for the proprietors of summer re-
sort hotels."—Chicago Tribune.
First Congressman—You have voted
against every measure that was for the
best interests of the nation. "What wil
you say to your constituents when you
get home?
‘Second Congressman—Say? I'll tell
‘em I've got an appropriation for Mud
creek. —New York Weekly.
Mrs. Graball—Our cook is going to
get married. What'll we give her for a
wedding present?
Graball—I think a nice recommenda-
tion, suitably framed, would be as
pleasing to her husband as anything I
kaow—Brookiya Life, hres
Lutheran Minister Tells of His Care
“Accor Satering nix Soars
Lnagrcl vayetisthna verted ropar
aquaiea't ulthine ore dire Eads
Sete ead get oak ts to ame
Tecate thee ie ty oly he
ices
Bre Maes ar P Pater, of dain
alton Oe ta fan Sra
eases eles Stat anon Se
Moringa afm neces an ub
polars tsapectd aah
feeereeteiaremadue (ieee
aoe eee
Sefems astar nisin wince
aoe
pa
rapa
SOHN saveR,
orc 1, 119 Oak Se eins oy
Kasay cig, Mo. Jane 1,
pg rere eroee
ga eee tig
peeh acy alata cee oe
ioe tre Tad hepa gr oa
eee eo era
She au Wea astincoee esa
Sareea eS tain cee
Ieiesawers Tecacertoey pomees
Safle {es sort cect baton
tie opetdnny 5 dacag sent go
vee meee
Tall gap Sisto engoneabont my con,
ee eee ee
eae eae
feapecly your fea
ee evn,
BAMMICK,
‘The Following Have Been Cared of Rup-
troandare selected nr ieundom from
Many Iitiuve Cured. In Writing them
Please Enclose s Stamp for Answer.
Mike Gayuor, 20 Ewing St Kansas City, Mi
Alt lyon, MePbereon, Kanne tT"
geberta Bio, county altormey, Manattn,
Ni'M. Kent, 1 Orchard St, Chleago, 0.
uicat Dilly ot Catmpoel Bt, Mee’ hey.
WM. McDonald, Dennison, Kan-.
Bo Dobbs, 1095 Nth: Kuneas City, Kane
4 Young, $418 Wiodvor ave, Kansas iy. Mo
£8 ilamintck, plumbing, Kannns Cy, Mo,
Thom Bato, Katana Citys Mo.
W.'G. Penk, grocer, 31 Central Ave, Kanes
co Kanata
[ §. Welch, eare Goodlander Milling Co. Pt
Scott, ane,
‘De. Parker, 1617 Brooklyn Ave, Kansas
ty, Mor
jevuaon Segatt, Kansas City, Mo
Won han anion
MG. dlartzelt 710 Felix Se, St Josep, Me,
bred aspen 4B dnaiton Ave, Ramee Clty
{Wiliam Wellman, $10 Landis Cour, Kanea
ty, Me.
er Ptlter, Sedalia, Mo,
TCG. Ghataptos, ArmodrBtatlon, Raneas Ott
| Kane,
FST Wood, merchant, Greenwood, fo,
| Chis, 1 idamer, <8 Edmond St, St Joe, Mo
| Wits cater YN: Bpriog Ave, Be Louies
| Frag Phares, Kansas Chy, Mo,
|B Demoveat, Kansas City, Mo,
E.b.Grimin, Temple Bldg: Kauaas Clty, Mo,
| Boa. MeMabon, 700%. 7th St, St. Lanta Mo,
E:W. Dement. rostaoraat. ecper, 100 i. 1th
St, seidence 102 Tocist St, Kasaas City, Mo
Silas months od
AF. Sham assistant county surveyor, Inde
pendence Mo.
‘Washington Baker, Ual's Summit, Kans.
ADDRESS
DR, ERNEST HENDERSON,
103 West Ninth St.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI.
101 W. 9th St.. Kansas City, Mo.
Tie Ola nallable Doctor, O1-
Sal Geadehte ie eat:
dines Oren Sb Tense Bpeciel
Taketnea by the fate to
enti Ota
SPECIAL Disease elses ponies
Seedy noraiors sy and al picig
Sean batceganrenioedotmoney rine
SForton Sian Casiges oe Nonna
Sete eet ereoneee We eects
dee eee eee eaten cad
Gaia taunts tect cate Coe
Set are seer tere mcs es
Stricture sisatuatrsubaraan a et
sanont core eartans ot ny eek
Serre core seats oe nae anes
Varicocele, Hydrocele and
Phimosis reaioatiy sured Siihous pain
Book Wi teu'aeamnlon ot alors oe
ono es nal recone canada git
veer eee tone m aoueye io
PREG MUSEUM OF ANATOMY for Mea.
The WEBER 4B P, Ee 7 bs
Gasoline Engines! § h/@ ZA IS
coe ol ,
Sieateate. pare ARNT
‘reine ste i eal] oS
foc geen teen
ees Gitoea e
Kasoas City, wo SU =
Taft’s
Dental Rooms,
8 East Eleventh Street,
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
Wiehe doa tae oohaeshgoaeatcal
out of sorts, dreading the pain of ex-
traction, remember
VITALIZED AIR
is the only painless way to have teeth
catrasted,
Best set of teeth.........+.+++++--88,00
A God Bb... eee cece eee eee ee = 85.00
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The largest Dental Establishment in
tho world
2 bottle of Hamlin’s Wieard ofl tsa
medicine chest in itself; it cures pain
in every form. 50 cents at druggists.
Seven clergymen and sixteen lawyers
are inmates of work houses (alms
houses) in Yorkshirt, England.
An Eastern newspaper complains
that the toilet room for women in Pull-
man cars is only big enough for one
person at a time, whereas the men are
given ample space for several to dress
at once. Does this unsophisticated
Eastern editor fancy that, if the wo-
men’s compartment were big enough to
accommodate ten the first arrival
would not lock the door and let the
others wait thelr turn?—Kansas City
Star.
“Well, Donovan, here's a toast to you
Boston railroad men: May every aiu-
gle hair on your heads be so many tal-
low candies light to your souls to
glory.”
“And here's one for you New York-
crs, Haskins: Here's to Fortune. May
you in all your travels never meet her
daughter, Miss Fortune.”
“I never heard of any bottle of wine
being broken over the bow of the ark,”
remarked the observer of events and
things, “and yet it was considered a
pretty good sort of craft, I believe,”—
Yonkers Statesman.
NAVAL MANEUVERS.
Important Tests in Minnie Warfare
Planned in New York Waters.
New York letter: The maneuvers to
be held next month at this port are to
be on an unprecedented scale and in-
tended to demonstrate whether or not
the ships of the United States navy,
which can be present, will be able to
successfully attack the forts and cap-
ture New York.
Everything in the way of strategy is
to be tried and the possibilities of a
hostile fleet ever capturing the capital
of the new world is to be thoroughly
demonstrated.
Even the newspapers are to be rep-
resented and New York scribes will
have a chance to smell powder and
learn the etiquette of war correspond-
ence.
‘The plan at present is to have the
North Atlantic squadron, which will as-
semble for the occasion, separated into
two navies.
One of these will represent the
enemy's fleet, the other being detailed
to guard the coast and co-operate with
the land forces.
At least 1,400 of the naval militia are
expected to take part in these naval
maneuvers and will in this way obtain
practical knowledge of their actual du-
ties which must prove of great advan-
tage to them. ‘The contingents will be
drawn from the New York, Connecticut
and Massachusetts regiments. ‘These
men will be divided up among the vari-
ous ships and will be given every op-
portunity to distinguish themselves
aboard. They will also be attached to
sailor battalions sent ashore with fletd
guns. These landings will take place
on the Connecticut and Maine coasts.
‘The maneuvers will commence by an
attempt on the part of the Invading
squadron to elnde the defensive squad-
ron at some point between New Bed-
ford on the north and New York on the
sonth and to make a landing on the
coast.
‘The defending squadron will be busy
In the meantime, sending ont sconts to
locate the invading squadron and to
keep posted the ships held in reserve
in order to precipitate a sea engage-
ment and prevent the landing of any
hostile troops.
Among the ships which will take part
in the maneuvers will be the Kearsage.
Alabama, Massachusetts, the crutser
Olympia, the Montgomery, Scorplon,
Marblehead and a number of the crack
shins of the navy.
‘The onteome of the conflict will be
decided by naval experts acting as um-
pires who will decide mainly upon the
strategical advantages gained by either
side and upon the possibilities that
would have ensued had they pursued
the advantages obtained in a genuine
fight.
Should the defending fleet surprise
the attacking fleet and precipitate a
conflict there will be no set rules by
which any vessel will be declared out
of action, but the umpire will settle each
point upon its merits,
‘As the ships approach each other and
near to fring distance there will be first
a discharge of the big guns, followed as
they close In on one another by the ais-
charge of rapid fire artillery. ‘The um-
pires on each ship will decide which
shots would have told most had they
een in actual warfare and will thu
say which had the advantage. Upon the
maneuvers for place from which the
shots would be fired will depend the
points gained by efther ships.
‘When one side considers that it has
beaten the other it will fly a signal
reading: “Propose reference to um-
pires.””
If agreeable to the other side action
will cease, but. it the enemy remains
obdurate the sham battle will keep up
until the senfor officer decides It is
proper to ston,
‘Torpedo bonts will figure extensively
in the operations. When one of the
crafts gets sufficiently near to a hattle-
ship to fire its torpedoes the ship will
be declared “ont of action.”
‘There wil be a certain limit fixed
hevond which the ships must not go
out to sea and on each ship will be a
fort referee or umpire to decide wheth-
er fort or ship wins,
It a ship succeeds in getting by all
the ontside forts and reaches Forts
Schuyler and Slocum there will be a
certain line defined which will estab-
lish the effective firing line from the
fort. When the ship gets past this zone
and in on the forts without encounter-
Ing a searchlight or having a gun fired
at her from the forts and succeeds in
firing two or three shots at short range
the fort will be considered taken.
‘When the ship Is held up by @ search-
light before it reaches the zone and the
fort fires its gun before It can retreat
the vessel will have lost and the army
‘Of course these are only bare out-
lines of the maneuvers,
GEORGE MORRIS.
MOVE UP IN MONTGOMERY.
How the Race Question is Settled on
‘Alabama Street Cars.
Moline (Ala.) Register: “If you wish
to see how the separate car business
works take a ride on the cars In Mont-
gomery,” was the suggestion of a for-
mer Mobilian to a Mobilian. “Good or
bad?” was the question. “It works all
right.” “Are the blacks satisfied?”
“Yes; the line was boycotted by them
at first, but they soon learned that it
was a god thing for them, as It defined
thelr rights on the cars and lessened
friction between the races.” There is
no separate car or compartment of a
car set aside or any artificial division
line ina car. ‘The system of Montgom-
ery may be called the move-up system.
‘The whites sit in the forward part of
a car, beginning at the front, and the
Dlacks in the back part, beginning at
the back, and so Jong as there Is room
in the ear each race must move up or
crowd to itself to make place for the
other. This fs how {t worked: Three
Mobilians were in an open car, and
upon the last two rear seats with other
white men enjoying a smoke, when a
colored woman stopped the car. The
white men in the last soat were told to
move up. They moved up one seat for-
ward. Presently the last seat was full
of colored passengers and four others
stopped the car. Move up again! and
the white passengers had to go forward
and find room with the class. In the
same way the blacks are required to
compact themselves when demand for
room is made by the whites. When the
car is full that ends the matter, and it
may be full of whites or full of blacks—
the rule works the same way for both
races. The conductors are clothed with
pollee authority. They appear fo have
ho trouble enforcing the rules.
‘The most interesting of the new de-
partures maue at the English war office
{s the appointment of a lady on the
staf. This is the first time a lady has
had a local habitation In the building.
‘The lady in question served at the front
‘as a nurse, and, having recently re-
turned, has been appointed to a post-
tion at the war office. She has a pri-
vate office and a separate little sub-
Gepartment of her own. She is to have
charge within the war office of the af-
fairennf the army nursing department.
Launching Ghe Thomas W. Lawson;
, Gigantic Seven Masted Schooner.
Li rrr,
Se
ee ee oe
Boston letter: When the gigantic
seven-masted steel schooner , Thomas
W. Lawson—the first seven-masted
vessel anywhere, and the largest sailing
ship ever launched in this country—
slid off the ways at the Fore
River yard at Quincy Point
last week with a perfection of
graceful motion that caused old
Boston sea captains to declare that
it was the neatest bit of work of its
‘kind that they had ever seen, it seemed
too little significant to more than one
spectator that the loudest note in the
din of jubilation should have happened
to be the big vessel's own steam siren
whistle. Not because it made so much
noise—though it made a great deal—
but because it typified the new idea of
the sailing vessel—In other — words,
bringing steam to conquer steam. The
popular opinion for a generation has
been that the steamer is slowly but
surely making the sailor obsolete; but
now comes the modern sailing vessel
and with the help of steam bids fair to
enter into a competition with her rival
with certain definite advantages in the
way of economy nd money-making
that are not at ail to be despised. There
will only be 16 men required for the
Lawson's crew, counting cook and cabin
boy and captain, sailors and engineers
A steam freight carrier of equal siz
would require 75 or 100; and men arc
expensive and steam is cheap. Thi
Lawson has five engines on her deck
for hauling the anchors, for hoisting
‘and lowering the sails, for doing steve-
dore work in ports, for pumping In and
‘out the water that will serve as ballast
in her double bottom, and for supply:
ing the primary power for the electri
plant that will give her light and tele.
phone service from stem to stern.
Altogether the Lawson is about th
most modern proposition, bar none
that has ever slipped into the Sever
Seas, Nominally she is not so big. as
the great five-masted ship Preussen
which was launched a month or so agc
‘at Geestemuende, Germany, for a Ham-
burg firm; but apparently she 1s capa-
ble of carrying more coal, for instanee
—and coal is what she fs meant to car-
ry, and carrying capacity is more tm-
portant than length of beam or depth
of hold. Her net register tonvage—to
give a guess before she is registered —
Should be rising 5600 tons, as against
the next largest schooner affoat, the
six-masted wooden Perey, with 3400.
Steam and steel have made her possi-
ble, as steam and steel may one day
make another schooner possible which
Will bo almost if not quite as big. as all
but the biggest ocean liners, the diff
culty of increasing the size being ap-
parently not so much Inherent in the
Schooner principle per se as in the fact
that schooners on this coast are built
with a very definite idea of making
thelr profit from the coastwise trade,
and must be governed as to thelr di-
mensions by the depth of water in the
more profitable ports.
‘The man who is mainly responsible
for the Lawson is Captain John 6.
Crowley, who has done more toward
making the schooner a big modern in-
Stitution than any other one man. His
experience covers the schooner from
ine first stage of her construction to the
Jast, although he is still in the prime of
life-not over 45. He was born at his-
torie Plymouth, and has lived on the
Massachusetts South Shore—where the
Fore River yard is located—ever since,
although his business office is in Bos:
ton. When he was only 11 he went as
FEMALE PROGRESS IN IRELAND
‘Advancement in Suffrage and Good
‘Work Done.
Baltimore American: In 1898 the
women of Ireland obtained every form
for poor law guardians, a responsible
of suffrage, and were made eligible for
the county and borough councils and
office. The first year 87 women were
elected guardians and a number to the
councils, several being made chatrmen.
‘Luey have voted in large numbers, and
the testimony as to the excellent effect
of their vote in local polities 1s unim-
beachable. The Irish Women’s Suffrage
and Local Government association has
just held a mecting in the Mansion
House, at Dublin, to consider action at
the approaching election.
‘They were welcomed by the lord
mayor, who spoke of the great improve-
ment which had taken place in the
management of the charitable institu-
tions in the short time since women
had had a volce in it. He expressed the
bellef that their presence in parliament
might be desirable, and thought the
body with which he was connecteed—
the corporation—might be not a little
improved in a similar manner, and he
hoped that a larger number of women
than ever before would be elected to
the local boards.
‘A great many prominent women were
present, and it was resolved not to rest
until women had been placed on every
hoard that dealt with women and chil-
dren, and women inspectors put Inte
every stich institution. They resolved
also to work without ceasing for the
pecliamentary franchise.
‘About 100,000 women are qualified tc
yee under the present law. The Daily
Yndependent and Nation, a leading pa
per, gave hearty commendation of the
Retion of the meeting, and said
“No person who feels the least inter
est in the working of the local govern.
ment. act can have failed to perceive
that since the administration of th
right of women to fill representativ
positions a great improvement has beer
effected in nearly every branch of ad
coe ctration. This statement Is true
cook on a two-masted schooner belong-
ing to his father, Captain Thomas
Crowley, who followed the sea until he
was 60 years old. When he was 21
Captain Crowley was master of the
three-masted schooner Florence Dean.
‘Then he built a three-master of his
own, the Helen 8. Caldwell, which was
the first of ten schooners, ending for
the moment with the Lawson, which
he has had a main share in putting into
the sea. In 1899 he built in Maine the
third flve-masted schooner, at that time
the largest of her class afloat, the John
B. Prescott. A year later he was re-
sponsible for the first six-master, the
George W. Wells—and now for the big-
gest schooner ever dreamed of, the first
Seven-master, the Lawson,
But Captain John Crowley is not the
only one of his family. ‘The “Crowley
Boys,” as they are known along the
South Shore, are three. The second
brother is Captain Arthur L. Crowley,
who has been in command of the Wells
and is soon to take out the Lawson on
her trip south to Baltimore, Philadel-
phia, and Newport News. ‘The third
brother is Captain Elmer, who pretty
soon will take out still another Crowley
schoner—this time of wood—which fs
now building on the Maine coast, It is
a remarkable family, and when there
is another Prince Henry luncheon to
snecessful Americans of accomplish-
ment it is not at all unlikely that they
head of it will find himself voted in as
‘a genuine captain of industry, for no
man has done more for the American
merchant marine, so far as sailing ships
are concerned, than he.
‘The launching of the Lawson meant
a god deal sentimentally, too. Massa-
chusetts used to be the typical ship-
building state in the Union. But for a
generation the industry has practically
died out, although there is hardly a boy
in the old shipping towns along the
shores of Massachusetts Bay who hasn't
a theory of how to whittle a model and
build a boat. Yacht building, lingering
in Boston harbor, was until a year or
0 ago about all that was left. So that
is what largely interested almost every-
body at the Lawson's launching—the
revival on this coast of shipbuilding on
the largest scate, Under the huge ship-
house that towered beside the big. hull
of the schooner were the frames of the
first-class battlechips New Jersey and
Rhode Island; the officers from the
Charleston navy yard watched the
launching from the deck of the nearly
completed cruiser Des Moines, and in
the Fore river itself lay the torpedo
boat destroyers Lawrence and Mac-
donough, ready for their trial trips.
For a first launching at a Massachusetts
yard only two years old nothing could
have been more appropriate than this
great schooner, The first schooner in
the world was built not many miles
away, the Gloucester, almost 200 years
‘ago; and the Gloucester fishing schoon-
ers are today the most distinctive por-
tion of the, Massachusetts sailing fleet,
if one accepts the waning bark-carried
whaling industry of New Bedford.
Everyone knows the story of how the
first two-master was named. As she
slid into the water, a bystander called
out: “There she schoons!” and the
owner, wondering what to call her, an-
swered, “A schooner let her be.”
‘There was a little craft in Boston
harbor a couple of months ago which
practically was the same In build and
size, in all likelihood, as that first
Glotcester experiment. She was the
Polly, the most historic American mer-
chant boat affoat in the North Atlantic.
‘The Polly was launched at Amesbury,
‘on the Merrimac river in this state—
especially with regard to the adminis-
tration of the poor laws, for which wo-
men have @ natural aptitude, and in
which the sphere of congenial work is
very large. We do not exaggerate when
we say that the duties of poor law guar-
dians have never, as a whole, been more
efficiently discharged than’ they have
during the recent years—a state of
things due entirely to the fact that a
considerable proportion of the guardi-
‘ans are ladies, who are are animated by
‘a desire at once to assume the hard lot
of the poor, and to perform a meritori-
‘ous public ‘service.
“Every board in the country should
have Its quota of women guardians
whose busines It would be in an espe-
cial manner to look after the well-being
‘of poor persons of their own sex and of
the children, who in the past have been
80 badly neglected.”
‘Stace: Beaaintes teers eee.
With every indication of nervousness
Satan continued turning on the heat
in furnace No. 2,867 until he had the
blast running to its full limit. From
the inside came the muffled tones of
the vietim:
“Yes, this is kind of warm, but you'd
ought fo have beon with me at New Or-
Jeans one day last July. Why they fried
eggs on the sidewalk, and before the
barkeeper could get the cracked ice
into your julep it was dissolved into
steam. And, then, one day in August,
I went over to San Antonio and saw a
fellow's straw hat burst into flames
right on his head—"
Here Satan moved away, mopping his
forehead and muttering:
“It's no wonder he came here. But
| his blamed reminiscences are going to
spoil the reputation of my establish-
ment."Baltimore American.
Miss Friedlander, of the United He-
brew Charities, and Miss Hitchcock, of
the Nurses’ Settlement, in New York,
say that one of the greatest needs
| among philanthropic work in their own
| and all crowded cities is at present the
establishment of diet kitchens to fur-
nish nourishing food for the sick poor
in their homes.
where building buggies has replaced
building schooners—about 1805, and
was used as a privateer in the war of
1812. Her log during the early part of
her career 1s still in existence, being
owned in Machias, Me., and her story 13
ood to read. For example, under com-
mand of Captain Jeduthun Upton of
Salem, she was captured by the British
ship Phoebe of 40 guns, and her captain
‘and crew taken to England and held as
‘prisoners for seven months; but the
Polly herself did not go to England—
her British prize crew declared for the
young republic and carried her trlum-
Dhantly back to the American flag. ‘The
Polly's last fight was with arich British
merchantman, said to be heavily armed,
half way between Mount Desert and the
Duck Islands, off the const of Maine.
This time she was successful, and
brought the merchantman into ‘port.
‘The Polly, with her crew of two men,
is to be seen constantly in New Eng-
land harbors still, from here to Castine
—useful still, although she ta as stubby
as a ferry boat and hardly larger than
the gasoline launch which hangs from
the Lawson's stern davits. Though she
may look battered and dingy she is still
as sound as a nut.
It took nearly a century and a half
for the schooner to become a three-
master.
The first three-masted schooner was
the Zachary Taylor, which was. built
at Philadeiphia in 1849. She carried
something less than one twentieth the
cargo capacity of the Lawson. The sec
ond three-master was built the same
year at Wilmington in Delaware. Sev-
enteen years later a Bath shipyard turn-
ed out the first four-master—four-mas-
ter, however, by accident, since the
fourth mast was an afterthought. when
it appeared that she would be rather
unwleldly with no more than three. Tt
Was as Tate as 1882 that the schooner
rose to over a thousand tons register,
when the Ellicott B, Church, 1187 tons,
was built In Maine with four masts,
‘The year 1884 saw the schooner’ reg-
Istored tonnage rise to 1,300 tons; 1887,
to 1.600 tons; 1897, 2,000 tons; 1900,
8,000 tons; and last week to 6,000. ‘The
first five-master was the ‘Governor
‘Ames, in 1888; the slx-masted Wells,
followed the next year by her rival, the
Perey, was built in 1900.
‘These are bare statistics, but if they
are any indication of the future there
is no telling when the schooner will
stop, except, as has been mentioned be-
fore, that her size must always be gov-
erned, if by nothing else, by the depth
of the coastwise harbors which she
wishes to enter. Probably the Wells
and Perey are the last very large wood-
en schooners. ‘The special advantages
of steel are numerous. ‘The cost ts per-
haps a third more over wood, but in
stability, in economy of repairs, and es-
pecially 'in cargo capacity, everything
is in favor of steel. The big’six-masters,
for example, had to be braced from
stem to stern by an enormous back-
bone of keelson of wood, which took
up valuable cargo room. Even then in
‘a stiff sea one could stand at one end
of them and see them give under the
strain of the wind and water. Tt is
probable that owners like Capt. Crow-
ley will use steel more and more here-
after. One reason, perhaps, for thelr
not having employed it before 1s that
steel shipyards in New England, where
the schooner has its special habitat,
are comparatively a new institution;
but in Maine and Connecticut and espe-
cially here at Fore river this difficulty
has now been overcome by the estab-
lishment, on the most modern prin-
ciples, of exclusively steel yards.
1 ete Whee.
Apropos of the declaration of Presi-
dent Jordan of Stanford university in
defense of “co-educational marriages.””
does not co-edueation lead to marriage?
Certainly it may, and fortunately 80.
No better marriages can be made than
those founded on common interests and
intellectual friendships. It is part of the
legitimate function of higher education
to prepare women, as well as men, for
happy and sucessful lives.
It is stated that a reporter of the San
Francisco Call proceeded to investigate
the number of matches made at the
Stanford university, and found that the
young people followed the !Mustrious
example set by their faculty. President
Jordan was a Cornell man, and he mar-
ried a Cornell woman. crofessor Miller
first met his wife at the University of
Michigan. Professors Smith and Barnes
each married a Stanford university
‘woman, and there are others. The wri-
ter in the Call enumerates about twen-
ty-five marriages contracted between
Stanford young men and women. These
collegians have set up their homes in
the West and East. One couple are liv-
ing In South Africa. Another heroically
withstood the Boxer siege in China.
‘Two homes have been bereft by death;
in one the wife was taken, in the other
the husband,
In winding up the story of these
Standford marriages wwe Call says:
But the said stories are very, very
few, and the happy ones are very, very
many.
Does co-edueation lead to marriage?
“Certainly it may,” replies Doctor Jor-
dan, “and fortunately 80.”
‘And, judging from the Stanford
matches Doctor Jordan 1s entirely
right.
Egyptian cotton is being introduced
in Texas, and promises to revolution-
ize the cotton industry of the South. It
is much more desirable than the cotton
raised in the United States now, and Is
even better than the sea island cotton,
‘The Egyptian cotton has much longer
fiber than other cottons, and its seed
jan be removed so easily that it Is not
necessary to cut up the cotton In gine
ning It, ais ~
....BY .....
American Citizen Publishing and Printing Co.
VERY WEEK AT 417 MINNESOTA AVE
KANSAS CITY. KANSAS.
Telephone "375 Blue"
W. C. Martin Editor
Terms Of Subscription.
Weekly one year ..... $1 00
Entered at the pos. office at Kansas City
Kansas as secu' class matter.
Chicago & Alton, R. R.
The best and most popular line from Kansas City to Chicago and St. Louis is the Chicago and Alton Ry. "The Only Way" Elegant up to date, equitement fast time cour ecomplyes, etc.
CURES DIPLOMATIC AMBITION.
A Short Term in the Zanzibar Con- erchition. Generalisable Sufficient
sulphide Generally Sufficient.
Undesirable consults have long given rise to humorous incidents. But Zanzibar, to which the President has appointed Mason Mitchell, a rough rider, seems to be in the lead in unattractiveness, if the length of consular terms proves any test, says the Washington correspondent of the New York Evening Post. Indiana has usually claimed the honor of furnishing candidates for this place, but after the resignation of a man named Rogers of Shoales, the Indiana senators notified the President that they were through with it. They had constituents who were willing to take chances, but the senators were not prepared to promise that these veenures individuales would stay more than a month. Before Rogers took the place it was held for nearly a year by "Bob" Mansfield, at one time private secretary to Senator Beveridge and now consul at Valparaiso. Mansfield came back, according to Indiana descriptions, "as tibn as a toothpick and as yellow as June butter." He said he had stuck it out as long as the insurance company would let him and that he returned to save his premiums. Before Mansfield, there was an Indianian named Billheimer, described as a husky Hoosier, with a large nose and frame pickled in maleria. He was cured of diplomatic ambition in about two months, and has never asked for a place since Before Billheimer, Judge Riley of Virginia served; he remained as long as his aversion to the negroes would permit. Finally, he is said to have taken a gun and emptied a load of fine birdshot into the dusky natives who persisted in taking a daily bath in front of the American consulate which, the Judge "allowed," was an indignity to be resented by this government's representative.
HE LIKES FRIED POTATOES.
Grand Duke Alexis Has a Favorite
Dish. So They Say.
Grand Duke Alexis of Russia is very fond of fried potatoes, and during his recent visit to Paris he was wont to buy a few every day from a woman in the street and to cat them beside her stall.
The woman did not know him, but as he paid her in princely fashion, she was very anxious to find out who he was.
"I can tell you who he is," said a neighbor one day. "He is Grand Duke Alexis, uncle of the czar and one of the greatest men in Russia."
Utterly amazed, the woman asked: "In heaven's name, how should I address him?"
"Oh, call him 'Your Excellency,' or 'Your Royal Highness,' was the answer.
The woman resolved to do so, and the next day, as she was sprinkling some salt over the smoking potatoes which the grand duke had bought, she said: "I can recommend them to your royal highness, for I know your excellency has never tasted better potatoes." The grand duke burst out laughing, and paid more for the potatoes than he had ever paid before, but he was annoyed at finding himself recognized and never returned to buy another potato.
Girard Was Considerate.
One of the sea captains in the employ of Stephen Glirard had a rural Yankee's fondness for whittling with his jackknife, and on one trip succeeded in getting away with a large part of the rail, although, feeling that he was not without the artistic sense, he really regarded the rail as greatly improved in appearance. When the vessel came to Philadelphia Glirard went aboard, made a general inspection in the captain's absence, and, as he was about to return to shore, asked one of the seamen who had been cutting the rail. The seaman told him the captain, and then, afraid his telling might have unpleasant consequences were the captain to learn of it in a roundabout way, informed that official of the interview with Glirard. The captain was in terror of a reprimand, but, hearing nothing from his employer, supposed the incident closed. As he was about weighing anchor ready to leave port, a dray loaded with shingles drove down to the wharf, and the driver hailed the vessel.
"There must be some mistake! shouted the captain, "Our bill of lading doesn't mention shingles!" "This is where they belong!" sung back the driver. "Mr. Girard, himself, told me to deliver them! He said they're for the captain to whittle!" Gillette a Real Sherlock Holmes. William Gillette, whose impersonation of Sherlock Holmes has become so famous, has acquired much of the running of the character he portrays, and on being interviewed by the newspaper reporters extracts from them all they know without himself imparting any information. On his return from Europe the other day all the Boston scribes sought to learn of his future plans, but were obliged to abandon the effort.
Lusorone is put up in 2 forms, both must be used to secure positive results.
LUSTORONE No. 1.—To be used at bed-time every night. Straightens Knoty, Nappy, Kinky, Curl Hair. It acts quickly, taking only one box to thoroughly straighten the hair by settling the hair. It does not have to wait weeks for the results. It is not true Hair Straightener. No hot irons are used. Lustorone straightens without any outside assistance.
LUSTORONE No. 2.—Must be used in connection with Lustorone No. 1. It is used for hair loss. Lustorone sprays as as dandruff, Teizer, Itch, Eczema, &c. Causes the hair to grow longer, thicken out, and causes the hair to grow on the baldest head. Restores Gray hair to its Natural Color.
LUSTORONE FACE BLEACH.—Whitens the darkest skin, making it several shades lighter. Will bring the skin to any desired shade of color. Cures All Facial Blemishes, Pimples, Black Heads, &c., also cuts all Skin Dueses and removes Small Pox Pits.
LUSTORONE SCALP SOAP.—Is absolutely pore it. Should be used with Lustorone No. 1. It does not fall out. The regular price for the treatment is $5.00.
Cut out this advertisement and mail it on with $1.00 and we will send you all of the goods as named above, in plain wrapper, so no one can know contents. This offer made to introduce Honest Goods. We can send to any place in the world. Full Directions with every treatment.
Beard Her Lover Dio
A cheerful telephone story is reported from Vienna. A young woman of Magyar-Czernya in Hungary was called upon the long-distance telephone by her sweetheart in the town of Taba. He said: "Would you like to hear how I shoot myself?" Then she heard the sound of a shot. It was found afterward that the man had really killed himself.
House Built of Buttons
A house built of buttons is the latest thing in architecture, and a certain French musical celebrity is building it. The walls, the ceilings, the doors, exterior and the interior are all ornamented with buttons of every description. Every country has been ransacked and some very curious specimens are reported to have been brought to light.
Bible for the Coronation
The king has already ordered the coronation Bible from the British and Foreign Bible Society, to be used in Westminster Abbey in June. It will be a large quarto volume, bound in red morocco, with gold clasps and stamped with the royal arms. It will become the property of the bishop who administers the oaths.
London's Catholic Cathedral
The Roman Catholic cathedral in London, now in course of erection, is 360 feet long and 156 feet wide. Apart from the site, it has already co- $750.000. The material used is red brick, with Portland stone courses, and its Oriental decorative features, it is said, suggest a mosque rather than a cathedral.
Small Navy of Uruguay.
Three gunboats of twelve-knot speed constitute the invincible navy of Uruguay, a force which would have a hard time with the mobilized fleet of Slam, which has two 800-ton corvettes, six gunboats, a 2,500-ton deck-protected cruiser armed with fourteen guns, and a 650-ton cruiser.
400,000 Jews in Africa
A writer in the Jewish World gives the total number of Jews in Africa at 400,000, of whom 20,000 have located in South Africa, where, says the writer, the most solid and tangible results have been attained by Jewish pioneers in all branches of development.
Ex-Soldiers for Clerks
Ex-soldiers will in future be employed as clerks in all departments of the British war office. Preference will be given to such as possess first-class certificates of education, or have been invalided from active service by wounds or sickness.
Steady Vote of Nevada
The vote of Nevada fluctuates very little. In 1892 it was 10,878; in 1894, 10,508; in 1896, 10,305; in 1898, 10,011; and in 1900, 10,196. No other state in the Union has such a record of an undeviating vote as has Nevada.
Lucky to be in jail.
The believers in the thirteen idoocy are now eiting cases of the man with thirteen wives who was sent to jail the other day, as if a man with thirteen wives were not in good luck to get safely inside a jail.
Convicts Ask Clemency.
The white convicts employed on the breakwater at Capetown are sending a loyal address to King Edward, praying his clemency on the occasion of the approaching coronation
Paper Mills in America
There are now more than 1,100 pulp and paper mills in the United States. They use about 1,000,000,000 feet of lumber a year. The sawmills consume twenty times as much.
Birthday of a Nation
The new Australian federal government is appointing a Commonwealth Day on the lines of the American Independence Day. It is now engaged in weighing the claims of July 1, when Queen Victoria assented to the constitution; September 30, the date of the proclamation; January 1, the inauguration of the Commonwealth, and May 9, the date of the Duke of Cornwall's opening of the first federal parliament. The January date is the one most favored.
Holland and Its Colonies
The hold that Holland has on its Bast Indian colonies is rather precarious. The Archon war, stretched over well-nigh thirty years, is having a period of recrudescence that will sadly try Dutch resources. The Jambi war has also kept the Hollanders busy. Strange to say, in both districts the Dutch troops are doing what the Dutch condemn in South Africa—burning farms. They are even destroying whole villages.
Henrik Ibsen's Early Life.
Henrik Thenen fifty years ago was serving behind the counter of a country drug store. The dispensing of medicines, however, did not suit tastes of the celebrated Norwegian, and during his apprenticeship he was hard at work reading for the profession of a doctor. In order to eke out a very small salary he took to writing, with what result the whole world knows.
Fortunate Child.
in the town of Manzanares, in Spain, the birth of the first year of this century was curiously honored by the municipality. Having recognized the claims of the expiring year by paying the funeral expenses of the last inhabitant of the town to die in it, the local authority undertook to bear the cost of the education of the first child born in the new year.
Lakes in Arid Australia.
Subterranean lakes have recently been discovered in the Eucla district, Australia. They lie about thirty feet below the surface and contain an abundance of water. This discovery is of the greatest practical importance to this especially arid district. It is of scientific value also, as it affords an explanation of the disappearance of certain rivers.
Robbery by Wholesale
A remarkable robbery has been committed at Birds' Island, near Toulon. There was on the island a bed containing 100,000 two-year-old oysters. They were safe at a recent date, but on the proprietor visiting the place again seven days later the whole stock had been cleared without any clue to the robbers being discoverable.
Flying Not a New Idea.
Flying is not a twentieth century idea. As far back as 1273 Friar Bacon predicted that flying would "shortly" become a general practice and Bishop Wilkins in 1652 said: "it will yet be as usual to hear a man call for his wings when he is going on a journey as it is now to hear him call for his boots."
Honor for Italian Literary Man-
Prof. Rodolfo Lanciaana has just received the greatest prize a literary man can hope for in Italy. The Academia Reale della Science of Turin has awarded him the triennial prize of 12,000 lire, called the Premio Bressa, from the name of its founder, for his recent scientific work.
Home of the Cholera.
The marshy ground of th. Ganges delta, with its vast masses o. vegetation, decaying under a tropical sun, is the native home of the cholera. In that pestential region the cholera and plague are found every year and all the year round.
DIAMOND C SOAP
IT SAVES CLOTHES,
SAVES TIME,
SAVES HANDS,
YOU
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PREMIUMS GIVEN.
A complete catalogue showing over 300 premiums that may be secured by saving the wrappers, furnished free upon request. Send your name on a postal card, and we will mail you the catalogue. Address:
Premium Dept., THE CUDAHY PACKING CO.,
South Omaha, Neb.
Diamond "C" Soap for sale by all Grocers
HERE YOU ARE
The best place in town to have your boots and shoes repaired.
Mr. D. A. Wynne the old reliable boot and shoe maker, has re-opened at 1110 N. 5th St. where he invites all his old customers and new ones as well.
His reputation is so well established that he needs no elaborate introduction. When wanting anything done in his line don't fail to give him a call.
Publication Notice.
To Isaac Hatton, Jr.
You are hereby notified that the will of Isaac Hatton Sr. has been filled in the Probate Court of Wyandotte County Kansas, for the purpose of probating the same, and that the hearing on the same will be had on the 6th day of May 1902, at 9 o'clock a.m., you will take due notice thereof and govern yourself accordingly and be present to represent and protect any interest you may claim under the said will.
Respt. Yours
Iretta Hatton Baker.
CANDY CAINARTIC
THEY WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP
10c
25c.50c.
All
Drugsale
Genuine stamped C C C C. Never sold in bulbs
Beware of the stamped C C C C. to sell
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DIAMOND C
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A complete catalogue showing over
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EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.
State of Kansas, } ss.
Wyandotto County }
In the Probate Court of Said County.
In the matter of the Estate of Ellen Buchanan deceased.
Notice is hereby given that letters testamentary have be n granted to the undersigned on the last will and testament of Ellen Buchanan, late of said County, deceased, by the Honorable the Probate Court of the County and State aforesaid, dated the 16th day of May, 1902. Now, all persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified that they must present the same to the undersigned for allowance within one year from the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estates; and that claims be not exhibited within three years after the date of said letters, they shall be forever barred.
WM. PRICE.
Executer of the last will and testament of Ellen Buchanan, deceased.
Dated May 16 1902.
State of Kansas, { ss.
Wyandotte County, }
In the Probate Court in and for said County.
In the matter of the estate of Clara Williams, Alias Clara Slurge, deceased, Notice is hereby given that Letters of Administration have been granted to the undersigned on the estate of Clara Williams, Alias Clara Slurge late of said County, deceased, by the Honorable, the Probate Court of the County and State aforesaid, dated the 8th day of February A. D. 1302. Now, all persons having claims against the said Estate, are hereby notified that they must present the same to the undersigned for allowance within one year from the date of said Letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such Estate; and that if such claims be not exhibited within three years after the date of said Letters, they shall be forever barred.
PETER YOUNG.
WANTED—AN IDEA We can think
thing to eat? Possess your knowledge of some simple
thing you wealth. Walter JOHN WENDER
BURN & CO., Inc. attorneys. Washington
office.
The Boer horses are remarkably well-trained animals, and when the Transvaalers desire to form an ambush or firing line, their horses are taught to remain stationary as soon as they feel the reins dropped over their necks
Atmospheric Waves.
The atmospheric ocean surrounding the earth is frequently disturbed by gigantic waves, which are invisible except when they carry parts of the air charged with moisture up into a colder atmospheric stratum, where sudden condensation occurs. In this manner long, parallel lines of clouds sometimes make their appearance at a great height, marking the crests of a ripple of air waves running miles above our heads.-Chicago Chronicle.
Ashbalt Pavements
About twenty-five years ago government engineers decided to pave Pennsylvania avenue in Washington with asphalt. That was the beginning of the general use of the scientific mystery for street pavements. To-day over 234,000,000 square feet of street pavements in the United States and Canada are covered with asphalt. This asphalt pavement would make a boulevard twenty-six feet wide over 1,750 miles long and would reach from New York to New Orleans, and then have several miles for side streets.
"Chair-House" Lodging
Known as "the chair house," a New York institution's title is derived from the fact that human beings so poor they can not buy a lodging at the cheapest Bowery resorts put up five cents for a chance to occupy a chair for the night. By 11 o'clock the night's contingent is fast asleep in the chairs, the usual number being twenty-five or thirty men, of all kinds and degrees of decrepit poverty
SAVES CLOTHES,
SAVES TIME,
SAVES HANDS.
WRAPPERS,
IS GIVEN.
For 300 premiums that may be secured free upon request. Send your name to the catalogue. Address:
BUDAHY PACKING CO.,
Naha, Neb.
for sale by all Grocers
In the District Court of Wyandotte County Kans.
William Banks, Plaintiff.
Lizzie Bank Defendant.
To the above named defendant, you are hereby notified that you have been sued in the Court by the above plaintiff, and that unless you appear and answer on or before the 3rd day of August, 1902, the petition filed therein, will be taken as, and a judgement rendered against you, the nature of which will be a decree, dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant, and divorcing plaintiff from said defendant, and awarding to him the care and custody of two of the minor children, .Pearly Banks, and Corinne Banks, and for cost of this suit.
I. F. Bradley,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Publication Notice
In the District Court of Wyandotte County Kansas.
Mary Smith, Plaintiff.
vs.
Allen Smith, Defendant.
To the above named defendant you are hereby notified that you have been sued in the above named court by the above named plaintiff, and unless you appear and answer, on or before the 1st day of July 1902 the petition will be taken as true and a judgment rendered against you the nature of which will be a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant and divorcing plaintiff from defendant and for cost of suit.
I. F. Bradley, Attorney Mary Smith.
Read' The Citizen.
---
DRUGS, MEDICINE, CHEMIALS. & Fine Toilet Soaps, Brushes, Combs, Etc. PERFUMERY AND FANCY TOILET ARTICLES The Citizen is in the Push Better keep your Eyes open
FEED AND CALT MEAT,
Tobacco and Cigars All kinds of country Produce in season. Good
delivered to any part of the city.
Corner of 4th, and Oakland Ave., Kansas City,
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For the past five years ago my right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until my hearing in this ear was completely lost. I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months, without any success, consulted a number of physicians, among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this city, who told me that the ear was completely damaged, that the head noises were then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever.
Then saw your advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treatment. After I had used it only a few days according to your directions, the noises ceased, and days later, the hearing in the affected ear has been entirely restored. I thank you heartily and beg to remain.
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UNDERTAKING RESUPPLIES FIRST-CLASS CARRIAGES FOR ALL PURPOSES AT ALL HOURS AMBULANCE FOR THE CONVEYANCE OF THE SICK AND WOUNDED Undertaking Rooms, 431 Minnesota ave. Telephone West 32. Factory Cor 6 st St. and Reynolds Ave. Telephone 28 KansasCity Kansas
HARTONA makes the hair grow long, straight, beautiful, soft, and glossy. Cures Dandruff, Baldness, Kebeing, Eczema, and all Scalp Diseases. Prevents Falling Out of the Hair and Premature Baldness. HARTONA POSITIVELY STRAIGHTENS THE KINKIEST HAIR. Guaranteed harmless. Sent anywhere on receipt of price—25c, and 50c, per box.
HARTONA FACE BLEACH will gradually turn the skin of a black or dark person five or six shades lighter, and will turn the skin of a mulatto person almost white. HARTONA FACE BLEACH removes Wrinkles, Dark Spots, Pimples, Freckles, Blackheads, and all Blemishes of the Skin. Guaranteed absolutely harmless. Sent to any address on receipt of price—25c, and 50c, per bottle.
Hartona Remedies are absolutely guaranteed, and your money is positively refunded if you are not perfectly satisfied. Write to us, and we will send you free a book of testimonials of more than one hundred people in your own State who have used and are using Hartona Remedies.
SPECIAL GRAND OFFER. Send us One Dollar and mention this paper, and we will send you three large boxes of HARTONA HAIR GROWER AND STRAIGHTENER, two large bottles of HARTONA FACE BLEACH, and one large box of HARTONA NO-SMELL, which removes all disagreeable odors caused by Perspiration of the Feet, Arm-Pits, &c.
Goods will be sent securely sealed from observation. Write your name and post-office and express office address very plainly. Money can be sent in Stamps or by Post-Office Money Order, or enclosed in Registered Letter or by Express.
TRADE-MARK.
BEFORE 1800
HARTONA
HARTON
and glossy.
Scalp Disease
ture BAINKIEST
receipt of pr
HARTON
black or dark
skin of a BLEACH
heads, and
harmless. S
per bottle.
Hartona
is positively
us, and we
one hundred
using Hartona
SPECI
we will send
AND STRAIN
BLEACH, and
remove all of
Arm-Pits, &
Goods your
Money can
enclosed in
Address
TRADE MARK
TRADE-MARK.
AFTER USING
AFTER USING
HARTONA
1512 North Fifth Street,
THE PUREST DRUGS AND CH
every thing in Paints, Glass and Wall Paper
ended. Prices always the LOWEST at our site
night bell. Phone W. 171 Medicio
RAYMO
Manufacturer of and Wholesale dealer in
RTAI RSSUPFL
S CARRIAGES FOR ALL PURPOSES AT A
FOR THE CONVEYANCE OF THE SICK A
Boms, 431 Minnesota ave. Telephone V
factory Cor 6 st St. and Reynolds Ave.
KansasCity Kansas
HARTONA
POSITIVELY STRAIGHTERS
ALL
Kinky, Knotty, Stubborn,
Harsh, Curly Hair.
---
HARTONA makes the hair grow long, straight, beard, Cure Dandruff, Baldness, Rching, Eczema, Hair Failure, Painful Out of the hair, HARTONA POSITIVELY STRAIGHT HAIR. Guaranteed harmless. Sent an price—25c. and 50c. per box.
HARTONA FACE BLEACH will gradually turn the dark person five or six shades lighter, and will mulatto person almost white. HARTON removes Wrinkles, Dark Spots, Pimples, Freckles all Blemishes of the Skin. Guaranteed to any address on receipt of price—25c.
A Remedies are absolutely guaranteed, and you refound if you are not perfectly satisfied will send you one a book of testimonials of people in your own State who have used HARTONA Remedies.
MAL GRAND OFFER. Send us One and you three large boxes of HARTONA HAIR MIGHTENER, two large bottles of HARTON and one large box of HARTONA NO-SMELT disagreeable odors caused by Perspiration or it will be sent securely sealed from observation and post-office and express office address we be sent in Stamps or by Post-Office Money. Registered Letter or by Express.
HARTONA REMEDY CO.
909 E. Main Street,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
AGENTS WANTED in Every Town and City. Liberal Salary Paid.
AFTERQUING
beautiful, soft,
zemea, and all
r and Prema-
LIGHTENS THE
anywhere on
the skin of a
will turn the
TONA FACE
beckles, Black-
ed absolutely
-25c. and 50c.
and your money
read. Write to
of more than
used and are
the Dollar and
his paper,
and GROWER
TONA FACE
MELL, which
n of the Feet,
ation. Write
very plainly,
money Order, or
TRADE-MARK
NATIONAL LISTING
HARTONA