The American Citizen
Friday, July 14, 1905
Topeka, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE AMERICAN CITIZEN.
BERAL COMMISSION PAID RELIABLE AGENTS FOR THIS PAPER CALL HERE.
TheOak Ridge Baptist CHURCH of
EXCURSION To Topeka Kans. on Sunday July 30th 1905
at the low figures of $1.25 the Round trip Over the Union Pacific Railroad. Train leaves the Union Station at 9 a. m. return leaves Topeka at 6 p, m. And exceptionlly good time promised, Big Basket meeting at one of the Noted Topeka parks has been arranged. So every body will made welcome and should take advanag of these cheap rates and go. Rev. Wm M. Martin is Pastor, of the above church And should be encouraged.
The Wit of Woman.
Women are the inheritors of the oldest most universal human wisdom, they have more sense than men, for the simple reason that a man has to be a specialist, and a specialist has to be a fanatic. The normal man all over the world is a hunter or a fisher or a banker or a man of letters or some silly thing. If so, he has to be a hunter or a wise banker. But body with the smallest knowledge professional life would ever expect him to be a wise man. But his wife has to be a wise woman. She has to save an eye on everything.—G. K. Westerston on the Daily News.
Indian Remedy for Coughs.
A decoction of cherry bark and truce bark, boiled and strained, is a old Indian remedy for coughs, which has been largely sold under various names for years by venders of plant medicines. The white trapper radish dissolves spruce gum in alcohol, adds a certain proportion of the spirits to the bark mixture and extracts the whole with maple sugar. Images the most experienced chemist did not prepare a better cough up than this makes.
Shylock's Prized Turquoise.
We all remember reading of poor stock's despair and indignation for learning that his turquoise ring had been exchanged by the gay young woman for a chattering monkey, when he tells us: "It was my turquoise; and it of Loch when I was a bachelor, I would not have given it for a bolderness of monkeys." Which passage shows the antiquity of the turquoise as a love-pledge.
Whenever a new typewriter girl is employed in one of the departments she names the machine and it is purchased for her.
Remarkable Act of Aberration Credited to Edward L. Henry.
Edward L. Henry, the Academician, was considerably over sixty years old, but his youthful smooth face, aside from his gray hair, has deceived many persons. He is an inveterate joker, and also exceedingly absent minded. This is an actual experience he had at the Century club not long ago. It was a reception, and Mr. Henry was very busy talking to a fellow artist, when something irritated his ankle. He stooped down, lifted the edge of the bottom) of one of the other man's pursuer legs, calmly scratched the other man's ankle just above the patient's tie, and replacing the garment, went on talking, wholly oblivious of his action and apparently perfectly satisfied.
At a recent convention of airbrakes an interesting report was presented showing how the distance required for the stopping of trains had been reduced by the new high-speed brake. A train running eighty miles an hour was stopped in 2,240 feet by the high-speed brake at 110 pounds, where ordinary pressure of seventy pounds took exactly half a mile to bring it to a stand. Other train speeds and reductions in stopping distances were: Fifty feet an hour, from 840 to 700 feet; fifty-five miles, 1,030 feet; fifty-five miles, 1,635 to 1,300 feet; seventy miles, 2,010 to 1,530 feet; seventy miles, 2,295 to 1,840 feet.
HIS IDEA OF A GENTLEMAN.
Cardinal Newman's Estimate Is Well Worthy the Attention of All.
Cardinal Newman's definition of a gentleman has probably never been surpassed. Here it is:
"It is almost the definition of a gentleman to say he is one who never inflicts pain. He has his eyes on all his company; he is tender toward the bashful, gentle toward the distant and merciful toward the absurd; he can recollect to whom he is speaking; he guards against unseasonable allusions or topics which may irritate; he is seldom prominent in conversation and never wearisome.
"He makes light of favors while he does them and seems to be receiving when he is conferring. He never speaks of himself except when compelled, never defends himself by a mere retort; he has no care for slander or gossip, is scrupulous in imputing motives to those who interfere with him and interprets everything for the best. He is never mean or little in his disputes, never takes unfair advantage, never mistakes personalities or sharp sayings for arguments or insinuates evil which he dare not say out."
HOW TO OPEN A BOOK.
Right and Wrong Way in This as There is in Everything.
Many people, when they first come into possession of a new book, are apt to spoil the back by not knowing how to open the book properly. Here are a few hints as to the best way of opening a volume. It should be held with its back on a table, the front board cover should be let down, the leaves being held in one hand. Next, the other board cover should be let down. Following this operation, a few leaves should be opened at the back, then a few at the front, and soon, alternately opening back and front, gently pressing open the sections till the center of the volume is reached. The best results will be obtained if this is done two or three times. If the book is violently or carelessly opened in any one place, the back will very likely be broken.—Pearson's Weekly.
The Song of the Plains.
No harp have I for the singing, nor fingers fashioned for skill.
Nor ever shall words express it, the that which heart my heart.
A saga, swept from the distant horizon beyond the hill.
Singing of life and endurance, and bidding me bear my part.
For this is song, as I sing it, the song that I love the best.
The song that I love the furrow, the grind of the gleaning steel.
An anthem sung to the noonday, a chant of the open West.
Echoning deep my spirit to gladden and help and heal.
And this is Life, as I read it, and life to breathe the wind on the ranges, the scent of the upturned sod.
To stride, and strive, and be thankful, to breathe the saline and storm.
Penelling over the prairies, the destiny planned by God.
And no reward do I ask for, save only to work and wait.
To praise the God of my fathers, to labor beneath his sky.
To do work with diligence, to strike and to follow straight.
Silent, and strong, and contented—the limitless plains and I.
—H. H. Bashford in the Spectator.
Bank Run by Negroes
English Paupers Costly. England's expenditure on paupers is rising at the rate of $1,400,000 a year.
KANSAS CITY, KANSAS FRIDAY EVENING,
Mount Etna Lodge of K. P's. gave a three days Picnic at Larks Grove, Quindaro, Kas. Today, tomorrow and Sunday.
The mother of Patrolman B. F. Jones and Mrs. Tillery it is reported was burned to death in Marshall, Mo, the past week.
The installation of officers of the International Order of Twelve Kans.-Nebraska Jurisdiction will be held tonigh at the K. T. hall.
Nick Chiles of the Topeka Plaindealer blew into town this week to attend the grand session.
Mrs. W. F. Williams is visiting in Parsons, Kas. and will doubtless teach millinery in that city.
The International Order of Twelve of the Kansas and Nebraska Jurisdiction held its grand session in this city the past week at their new hall, 11 & Washington ave. over three hundred delegates were in attendance.
Sir Frank Wilson C. G. M. presided. A very enjoyable banquet was tendered the visitors on Tuesday eve., the close of the first days session.
The Baptist Sunday Schools will give a Union Picnic at Wolecott, Kas., a surburban village on the Leavenworth electric line.
Mrs. Lula Johnson of State ave., who has been back to the scenes of her old home, Peoria, Ill., has resumed at the city hall. Unverified reports still are flying that she changed her name during her absence.
Mr. Jas. Harrison is back from Chicago, Ill.
Mrs. Anna Hubbard of State ave. who is in Sedalia Mo. is having much success in teaching milliner to the progressive ladies of that city.
Mrs. J. T. Brown of N. 3rd Street is visiting in Parsons, Kansas.
Miss Mabel Jacques of Washington ave. is spending the summer with relatives in Valley Falls, Kas.
Mrs. Leura Crowder of Armstrong av. is enjoying the lake breeze in Chicago.
The Young Men's Christian Union tendered the public and their friends a very swell reception at the M. and O. hall on last Wednesday eve, and a very creditable program was rendered.
Read the Citizen.
Capt. T. S. Booker of No. 5 is taking a week vacation this week.
Mrs. Emma Fields of Lafayette ave., who has been ill for some time is rapidly sinking with the sad possibility of the end being near.
Judge I. F. Bradley our well known attorney has been sojourning in Buffalo, N. Y.
Deputy County Attorney B. S. Smith is traversing New York State.
The funeral of Mr. Amos Alexander will be held from the 1st Baptist church Sunday afternoon.
Mrs.Pauline[Clay of Minneapolis,who has been visiting Mrs. Lulu Johnson will return home early in the week.
Mrs. Margaret Crow of Hutchinson is the guest of Mrs. Lulu Johnson of State ave.
Little Miss Edna Bush of 1001 north 3rd street is spending some time in St. Paul Minnesota with her Sister Mr Birdie Blue.
Mrs Lizzie Massy of Colorado Spring Col. will be in the City, next week and will spend some time with her sister law Mrs. Carrie Tennel of 1415 N 4 St.
Publication Notice
In The District Court of Wyandotte, kansas
Charlie Rochester, *Plaintiff*.
VS.
□Louise H. Rochester, Defendant.
Louise H. Rochester, the above—named
Defendant, will take notice that she has
been sued by the plaintiff, Charlie Rochester,
and that the Defendant, Louis A. Rochester,
must, on or before the first day of July,
1905, answer the petition filed by the plaintiff
in the above—intended action in said
Court or the matter and things set forth
in said petition will be taken as true and
judgment-rendered divoring the plaintiff
from the defendant, and awarding the plaintiff
the custody of their only child.
Charlie Rochester.
For Green and Henderson attorneys
for plaintiff.
1st pub June 16th
If I might breathe your beauty into song,
The singing stars wouldarry into flight
To hearken, dreaming that death's ancient wrong.
Enhanced with so song,
Warmer battered by the evastating light,
And earth new winged with singing and with flame.
As when exultant she from out of chaos
A LONG SENTENCE
One Thousand And One Years. For an Attempt at Assault. Spectators Cheer When Verdic Was Read.
When verdict was read:
New Orleans, La., June 24th. -In the case of Lee Robertson, a colored man, charged at Waco, Texas, with attempted criminal assault upon a white woman, the jury las Friday brought in the following verdict We, the jury find the defend int guilty as charged and recommend his punish ment at confinement in the penitentiary a 1,901 years." The spectators in court cheered when the verdict was read dispit the admonition of the court.
THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
OF WYANDOTTE COUNEY KANSAS.
Henry Jrckson assignee Plaintiff.
of D. W, White No. 6880
PUBLICATION NOTICE:
Mary King, defendant, you will take notice that the said Henry Jackson, the plaintiff above name did, on the first day of July 1905, file his petition in the Court of Common Pleas, in and for the County and State above named, against Mary King, the defendant above named, and that the said Mary King must answer said petition filed herein as aforesaid, on or before the 17th day of August, 1905, or said petition will be taken as true, and a judgment rendered in said action against you, the said Mary King, for the sum of $0.00, with interest therom at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from the 28th day of December, 1901; said amo n: being for five promissory Notes, made, executed and delivered to one D. W. White, for ten dollars each, payables in one. Two. Three. Four and Five Months respectively offer date thereof with interest thereom at the rate of ten per cent per annum from date until paid. Said Notes was sold, transferred and Indented to this plaintiff, for a valuable consideration And unless you answer as aforesaid, judgement will be rendered for said amount, and for costs.
Dorsey Green atty. for Plaintiff.
attest; J. L. Baggs Clerk.
first pub. July 7th 1905.
Sugar a Universal Need.
"Sugar has modified the history of Europe and of the world in more ways than one," says a writer. "Used four centuries ago, almost exclusively in the preparation of medicines, and long afterward an article of luxury only accessible to the rich, it has by enlarged production and cheapened manufacture been brought within the reach of all. The universal use of this practically pure carbohydrate, which is not only a freely burning fuel and proteld sparer, but a muscle food, increasing the power of doing work and lessening fatigue, must have had widespread and beneficial effects on the general health. Especially in the case of children, whose greed of sugar is the expression of a physiological want, has that food been valuable in conducting to growth, contentment and well-being."
One of Life's Tragedies.
When a bachelor sees a widow he shakes his head knowingly. When a widow sees a bachelor she shakes her head knowingly. Watching them is a spinster, who also shakes her head knowingly.
Feminine Solace.
Sorrow finds a fertile field in femininity. Strange, too, are the remedies sought. Many women, overtaken by calamity and grief, find a deep solace in having their photographs taken.
Among some of the ancient Mexican tribes the husband left his people and dwelt with his wife's family, where he seems to have been considered of minor importance.
Homes in Various Countries. Italy and Spain have fewer houses in proportion to their population than any other country in the world. The Argentine republic and Uruguay have the most.
Log Cabin Philosophy.
Spite of all de bright sunshine in
dis wort', some mens will go round'
hunting' fer happiness wld a candle.
Frank Stanton in Atlanta Constitution.
Why. Indeed?
"Why," asked Willie, as he sat in the grand stand with his father, "do they call it football when they play with their heads, papa?"
Otherwise, the "Big Head."
The first time a man is nominated for a back township office he thinks it is up to him to save the country from ruin.
BUT He Has to Wait.
Nothing would please the small boy more than the privilege of assuming the role of father to the man occasionally.
Publication Notice
of Wyandotte County,
Mary Darkis, Plaintiff,
VS.
William Darkis Defendant
Notice
The State of Kansas, to William Darkis
Greeting, you are hereby notified that you
have been sued on the grounds of gross neglect of duty, extreme cruelty; and adultery, in the above entitle cause in the above named Court, Wheren Mary Darkis is Plaintiff and William darkis is Defendant, and unless you answer on or before the first day of July 1905. Plaintiff petition will be taken as true Judgement will be rendered against you as prayed for. The plaintiff is asking an absolute divorce, custody of two minor children and a reasonable attorney fee, for cost, and for other relief such as the nature of Plaintiff case demands.
Mary Darkis.
Chas. w. Frye, attorney
First Published April 28th 1905.
PUBLICATION' NOTCIE.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
WYANDOTTE COUNTY, STATE OF KANSAS,
annie Johnson.
Plaintiff.
VS.
ewis J. Johnson.
Defendant.
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO
LEWIS J. JOHNSON, GREETING.
You are hereby notified that you have been sued in the above named District Court of Wyandotte County, Kansas by the above named Plaintiff. Fannie Johnson, whose petition is now on file in the office, and that you must as such defendant answer the petition filed by the plaintiff on or before Thursday 22nd, day of June 1905, or the petition will be taken as true and judgment will be rendered accordingly against you, and adjudging you to pay the cost, of said suit and this suit is for the further purpose of devesting the title to certain house and lots owned by you in the town of Quildar Wyandotte County Kansas and investing the title in the plaintiff as alimony and dissolving the bonds of matrimony now subsisting between the plaintiff and defendant and such other and further relief as the honorable court may adjudge in the premises, as may appear just and equitable in behalf of the plaintiff
Wm. Needles Clerk of the said Court of Wyandotte County Kansas. per D. C. McCambs. Deputy.
NOW IS the time to Subscribe For the Weekly American Citizen.
PATTERSON & GAYDEN
Dealers In
Hard and Soft Coal, Wood.
Vault & Cesspool Cleaning
Cisterns Filled
Tel. 215 West.
527 STATE AVE.
Largest Building in the World.
The Crystal palace accommodates more people than any other building in the world. It will hold 100,000.
Trades in London.
According to the late returns, there are 1,756 distinct trades being carried on in London and its suburbs.
Berlin Land Values Double.
The ground value of the city of Berlin is said to be worth twice what it was in 1887.
Woman Mountain Climber.
By far the most expert woman mountaineer in the world is Mrs. Fanny Bullock Workman. In the Himalayas she has climbed to an altitude of 22,568 feet. On the same occasion her husband broke the world's record for men by 311 feet, by climbing 28.194 feet up a mountain 24,479 feet high. Mrs. Workman is of medium height, and there is nothing in her appearance to suggest the strength she has displayed in some of her wonderful feats.
---
JULY 14, 1:05
is Section
CALL HERE,
The kansas City Kansa
Soap Company.
is the name of a new Stock Company with a 2.000 capital stock recentley organized and will soon be doing business at 1510 North 4th street it give promise of a successful venture Wm. Arnold general manager. Rev. M. Phillips ast manager. Mr. Wm. Overton a well known business man Treasure Mr. Isaac Parker President. Mr. J. W. Gillispie Secretary. Shares are $10 each, already 115 shares have been sold and indication are that the Capital Stock will soon be subscribed. Befter get in on the ground floor of a good thing. Let your money help make you aREAM.
EXECUTORS NOTICE
STATE OF KANSAS.
WYANDOTTE COUNTY.
IN THE PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY
In the matter of the Estate of Mary L.
Gordon Deceased. Notice is hereby given
that letters tenamentary have been granted
to the undersigned on the last will and
testament of Mary L. Gordon late of said county,
deceased, by the Honorable, the Probate
Court of the County and State aforesaid.
Dated the 21 day of March 1905. Now all persons having elamms 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 estate; and that if such claims be
not exhibited within three years after the
date of said letters, they shall be forever barred.
CORVINE PATTERSON
Executor of the last will and testament
of Mary L. Gordon deceased.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
In the District Court of Wyandotte county
State of Kansas.
Mary Atkinson. Plaintiff.
vs.
J. B. Atkinson. Defendant.
No. 18207
The State of Kansas to J. B. Atkinson,
Greeting:—
You are hereby notified that the plaintiff
in the above entitled cause did on the 22nd
day of September, 1904, file her petition in
a certain action against you in the District
Court in Wyandotte County State of Kansas
asking for an absolute divorce on the
grounds of abandonment and desertion,
and unless youdemur, answer or otherwise
object on or before the 30th day of January
1905, the allegations therein will be taken as
true and upon further proof thereof judgement
will be rendered as prayed for in said
petition.
JOHNSON and TOOLE.
Attys, for Plaintiff.
Wm. Needles, Clerk.
By D. C. McCombs, Deputy
IN THE PROBAT
COURT IN AND
SS FOR SAID
COUNTY
n the matter of the Estate of,
Jane Redd Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that Letters Testamentary have been granted to the undersigned on the Last Will and Testament of Jane Redd, late of said County, deceased by the Honorable, the Probate Court of the county and State aforesaid, date the day of February A. D. 1905. Now, all persons having claims against the said Estate are hereby notified that they must pr sent 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.
I. F. BRADLEY
executor of the Last Will and Testament of Jane Redd Deceased.
First published Feb. 11th, 1905.
Notice of Final Settlement
State of Kansas In the Probate
County of Wynadotte Court in and for
said County.
COUNTY.
IN THE MATTER OF THE DEATH
OF CLARA WILLIAMS BHEFHE, DECEASED
CLARA WILLIAMS SLEDGE DECEASED
Creditors and all other persons interested in the aforesaid estate, are hereby notified that at the next egular term of the Prabate Court in and for said County, to be begun and held at the Prabate Court room in Kansas City, County of Wyandotte and State aforesaid on the first Monday in the month of March A. D. 1905. I shall apply to said Court for a full and final settlement of said estate. Peter young Administrator of Clara Williams Sledge Deceased.
In Witness Whereof, the undersigned, Probate Judge in and for the County of Wyon dotte. State of Kansas, have hereto set my hand, and affixed the seal of the Probate Court this 20th Day of January A. D. 1900 Winfield Freeman
Japanese Farming.
The ingenuity of the farming in Japan may be inferred from the fact that the 45,000,000 inhabitants live almost entirely on the productions of a cultivated area about one-third the size of Illinois.
American Citizen
The Oldest Negro Journal Published
Weekly in this part of the Country.
FUBIISHE LT WEEKLY
at 1510 Norh 3rd Street
MANSAS CITY - = KANSAS
W. C. Martin Editor,
Geo. A. Dudley, Publisher
and Bus:ness Manager.
Fe eerie
Terms OF SubscriptioninAdvance.
Oiae Pear, be. 8oks anes. y:-02) 2 --e= BEAD
Bix Months,................ 65 conts
Phroo Months, *.....2........+.4+4-40.€
me Month, c see ede
Advertisoing 25 cts. Per Inch First
Insertion.
A Standing Display ‘Ada’ for 3 Months
or longer 15e per inch, each insertion.
Botered as second class matter December
first, 1904 at the Post office at Kansas City,
Kansas under the Act of congress of March
sp 7
‘Cea mth ati nae:
A French professor is ‘the owner of
@ collection of 920 human heads, rep-
rerenting every known race of people,
Scarlet for Bachelor Maids.
‘When an unmarried woman dies in
Brazil the coffin, hearse and livery of
the coachman are all scarlet.
Cost of London’s Paupers.
Every year $4,000,000 is spent on
‘the food and clothing of indoor pau-
pers in London.
Here is the Place.
TONSORIAL PARLOR,
All the Latest Style Hair Cuts, Clean
Shave strictlyJUp-to-Date.
438’Minnesora AVENUE.
Call and see H.S. Sykes and
and A. Gooden mauufactor of
Pop corn in ball aud brick at
316 Oakland ave
A Word To You.
‘The lack of proper appreciation of the
efforts of Negro newspaners make in an
uphill business to maintain the standard
of excellence desired by those in the bus-
iness. Just why the race is so utterly
slack. in giving to their own the proper
patronage is one of the ‘unsolved myster-
ies. Each day and week bring to us the
warving of being a unit in behalf of our
own salvation. It takes something besi-
do wind to publish the most weakly of
weeklies. If every [Afro-American fami-
y would pledge themselves to stand by
an organ buplished in their behalf. just
one year,the results would be unboliev.
‘ed we ask the colored brother to wake up
ook around and observe,see if y>u can-
not discern that the signs of the times
don’t speak in thundering tones for a
the public advocates of our interests
han, why wait do your part by subscrip.
ng getting your neighbors to do the
‘same vnd watch the good results,
Notice of Final Settlement,
Reinier Wyaveon fs
‘In the Probate Court in ana forsaid County,
In the Matter of the Estate ot John R.Smith
Deceased. ;
Creditors and all other persons interested
‘a the aforesaid estate, are hereby notified,
‘that at the next regular term of the Probate
Court inand for suid County, to. be begun
and held at the Probate Court room. in
Kaneas City, County of Wyandotte and State
aforesaid, on the first Monday in month of
February, A. D, 195, I shall apply to said
Court fora full and final settlement of
‘said estate,
June D, Sarr,
Administrator of the Estate John R.
Smith. Deceased.
In Witness Wnereof, the undesigned Pro-
bate Judge in and for the County of Wyan-
dotte State of Kansus.have hereto
set my hand, and affixed -the seal
of the sald Probate Court this 24th
ay of December, A. D, 1904.
Winfield Freeman, Probate Judge
‘Bes.4%) Nebraskaave. | _ Tel.383 White.
SOUTH AMERICAN
MEDICAL = INSTITUTE
Office Houro: From 10 a. m., till 4 p, m.
and from 6 till 9 p. «.,
CHC. JORDAN. M.M.M.D..
———____
Reaching the sey one OF the
eommittee halted ani ssid:
“Sir, I wish to direct your attention
to that grave. The man who lies buried
there had to be provided with the
largest coffin even mace in this city.”
‘The honored guest thanked his host
not so much for the information as for
Yelieving the strain—Pittsburg Dis
TRUTH PROVED BY EXAMPLE.
storekeeper Certainly Lacked the Gift
of Enerny.
saath ene
William C. Greene, the copper mag-
tate, was talking to a young man
tbout success.
“The secret of success is enterprise,
mergy,” said Col. Greene. “To be lazy,
© stick always in the same old rut,
hat is how to make a wretched fail
tre of your life.
“I went West when I was 17, and
xfter a spell of contracting and pros-
recting about Prescott, I farmed a bit
n the San Pedro Valley. There was a
storekeeper I used to buy my supplies
‘rom at that time who was a failure of
he first water. This man’s lack of en-
erprise was so great that people used
o bring their children from miles
tround to study him. He was valu-
ible as a horrible example.
“There, they would say to the
roungsters, ‘take warning by Manners.
He is a failure. He has no enterprise.
Don't grow up like him. He resembles
\ tortoise, doesn't he?”
“Poor Manners in his sluggishness
lid resemble a tortoise a good deal. I
sent a boy in to him one day with a
rack mule to get five gallons of mo-
lasses. The boy told me afterward
that when he entered the store Man-
ners was dozing. The boy coughed
and the man awoke and got up. He
opened his mouth wide, and stood on
iptoe and stretched out his arms in a
vast yawn. Then he said to the boy:
“‘Wotcha want?”
“ ‘Five gallons of molasses, Mr. Man-
cers, the boy spoke up, sharp and
quick.
“Wab-h-h-h,’ yawned Manners again.
Then as he took up the jug he grum-
dled:
“ ‘Ain't there nobody what sells mo-
lasses in this here town but me?’”
PLEASURE OF EASTERN WOMEN.
Their Main Occupation the Diver-
sions of the Toilet.
An eastern lady of high degree
speads an amount of time over her
toilet that would quite astonish the
most fashionable society lady, First
she has her hair dressed by her maid,
who, after anointing the long, silky
black locks with a little oil, made
from aloe wood or cocoanut, arranges
it simply in a long, smooth plait, low
on the nape of the neck, and decorat-
ed either with gold or jewelled orna-
ments,
Next the bath Is prepared as hot as
it cam be borne, and in this the Indy
may stay as long as two or three
hours. Soaps are not used, but, in-
stead, there are multifarious unguents,
secret preparations of the bathing
women, which render the skin soft
as velvet and delicately perfumed.
Oftentimes the face is washed over
with milk, into which has been
squeezed lemon juice.
‘The hair of the oriental woman is
usually beautifully long, soft and glos-
sy, and the way they arrange it is in-
variably becoming to their soft type
of beauty. Perfumes are much in-
dulged in, These are introduced in
the bath and permeate the garments,
but are rarely used on a handker-
chief
‘The Foam on the Top.
Don't snuggle concelt to your bosom, my
Because you're on top of the wave,
or here. 8'a thought tat igh weve
se alloy
‘ro the gold of the credit you crave:
The best isnot ‘always at’ surfaces my
20,
Ang Zinn, 4 to notice vou't stop
You'll ooserve’ thatthe good to the Bot.
tom may Tun,
But the fosin alviays lingers on top.
I would not, discourage your zeal, m
dear lad; eee. _ :
Xe bgt keep working alway,
But aie funny old world often labels as
‘The! thing that ts good in its day.
In fact, 1 may say that Tt classifies wrong
Serme part of the reat earthly chop
And T’ think You 'will mote as "You sair-
ney along
‘Thal the form often gets to the top.
We will not mention names if you please,
my dear ‘youth,
But look ‘on the World as you go.
See the men whom We place ae Uke sum-
mit in truth,
‘Then gaze_on the mortalg delow,
And T'give you my word Til have noth-
ig to teach
Ana’ this brief little anthem will stop,
ir'You do not agree with the thine ‘Gost
1 reach,
‘That the foam may be found on the
on.
—A. J""Waterhouse in Sunset Magazine.
A Polite Dischafae.
James Rankin Young, the new su:
perintendent of the Dead Letter office
admires politeness.
“It is possible,” he said recently, “to
be polite always. It is possible to be
polite even when discharging a drunk-
en coachman. I know that this is so,
for I have seeg the thing done.
“A friend of mine found himself
obliged last week to get rid of his
coachman for drunkenness. He sum-
moned the man into his presence, and
discharged him with this polite
speech:
“I fear, Montgomery, that we must
part. It has been impossible for me
to avoid noticing that several times
during the past month you have been
—er—sober. Now, I don't believe that
any man can attend properly to drink-
ing if he has driving to do, and, there
fore, ‘at the month’s end you will be
free to devote yourself exclusively to
your chosen occupation.’”
ie cae coro
In his article in the Woman's Home
Companion, describing the Inter
aational Sunday School Convention in
Jerusalem, Doctor Devins relates the
following significant incident:
“An unexpected favor was received
from the officers of the Russian
church on the Mount of Olives. A
meeting had “een planned to be held
gear the place of the Ascension. As
the leader of the meeting, the writer
went to see if it could be held under
the trees near the church.
“‘Why not?’ was the reply, accom-
panied by a smile on the saintly face
af the speaker. ‘Why not? Do we
‘fot worship the same Christ?"
WIT IS NOT APPRECIATED.
Glasgow, Scotland, Character Has
Fun With Actors.
A provincial theater in the east of
Scotland is being tormented ana
amused at intervals by a wit among
the gallery gods who insists on keep-
ing up a running commentary on the
play. He has enlivened many a dull
piece by his droll interpolations, but
‘e has also come pretty near ruining
many an intensely dramatic or senti-
mental situation by the sudden and
always apropos qualities of his inter-
ruptions. He has a high pitched, pene-
trating voice, and the town police, who
have been on the verge of ejecting
him a dozen times, say that he was a
Glasgow cab driver who retired with
a competence and now takes this way
to give play to a wit that was once
famous in the great city.
On one occasion a dreary melo-
arama was being presented. The
heroine of the play, pursued by the
villain, had taken refuge in the house
of her lover, who, as the hero of the
play, was of course, at variance with
uis sweetheart’s parents. The exigen-
cies of the plot required that the irate
father, sword in hand and at the head
of his faithful retainers, should track
the girl to the gates of the hero's
treacherous and disgracefui elope.
ment, enter the room where the
seared heroine had been secreted
under the table.
“Wretch!” cried the furious father,
“your life shall answer for this. 1 de
mand my child. Where is she.”
‘Then, shrill and startling in the ex
pectant silence, from the gallery came
the answer:
“Unner the table, ye dinged lout!
Dinna ye see her slipper stickin’ oot?
‘The house was in a tumult of mer
riment in a moment, but it was the
“angry father” himself, who ruines
the situation, for he burst into immod
erate laughter and the curtain fell ir
the middle of the act, to rise agair
upon an audience that could not re
press its risibles for the rest of th
evening.
HE WANTED A MORTGAGE.
Swede’s Experience With a Deed Had
Taught Him Caution.
Halvor Steenerson, Congressman
from Minnesota, tells a story of 2
Swede who went to that state from
one of the Dakotas for the purpose
of buying a farm.
A land agent acted as guide and
informant to the Swede, who eventu-
ally found what he wanted. When
the tim> came to make out the neces-
sary papers, the agent asked the
Swede what method he preferred to
adopt in making payments,
| “Ay pay all. Ay haf da money,” re-
plied the Swede,
“Very well, then. I'll make out the
deed,” said the agent.
“No!” suddenly exclaimed the
Swede. “Ay no want deed!”
‘Why, yes, you do!” rejoined the
agent, astonished. “You pay the
money and you take a deed for the
farm.”
“No, no!” earnestly asseverated the
Swede. “Ay no want deed! Ay had
deed oop in Dakoty. Ay pay man da
money. He gif me deed. Ay gif heem
mortgage. Ay tak land. By en by
he get land, he get deed, he haf da
money. Dees time Ay want no deed;
Ay want mortgage. Ay pay da money;
you gif me mortgage!”—The Sunday
Magazine.
Getting Posted.
“T would like to ask you a questior
if you don't mind,” said the old raar
in the street car to the man on hi:
right,
“Go ahead, sir.”
“I should like to know the meaning
of the term ‘History repeats itself.’ 1
come across it most every day. How
does history repeat itself?”
“That's easily answered,” said the
other. “For instance, if you should
ask me what I thought of the weather
I should tell you to go and be hanged
te you. If we should meet a mont
hence and you asked me the same
question over again my reply would
be the same.”
“I think I see—I think I do,” mused
the old man, as he leaned back and
crossed his feet. “Yes, I guess |
understand, and I want to tell you that
you are a durned mean jackass of a
man and that history is going to re-
peat itself every blamed time I run
across you for the next ten years to
come.”—Chicago News.
A Gentle Thrust.
James Jeffrey Roche, the new Con
sul to Genoa, was talking about
magazine editor.
“This man,” he said, “rejected some
of the best of my early verse. He re
jected some of the best verse of my
friends. Why he {s an editor I can’t
imagine. He certainly has no critical
sense.
“I indicated this to him one day.
He had announced to me that he was
going to get married. He had praised
the lady of his choice ardently, de-
claring her to be a poem.
“A poem?’ said I.
“A poem,’ he repeated.
“‘And still you do not reject her?
{ exclaimed.”
Winter.
Soft as the plumes of sleep drifts down
‘The pure white silence of the snow
The bells ‘make merry in the town,
‘Where happy faces come and go.
The*brooding quiet of the trees,
Is, broken sweet, in yonder glen,
By “day, day day,” of chekadees
‘And Keen, sweet song of winter wren.
Of glowing da: e magic word
a warbled when the ‘grosbeae sing;
‘And in the moaning pines 15 heard
The whisper of returning spring
his is tue birthday of the year,
Now fay off summer's butiles start;
nd lo; the very cold grows dear,
‘The, wildest storm “wing warms the
ear
—B. Brumbaugh, in Field aay Stream.
Telephone Bell W. 32, : Telephone Home W. 32 |
Ww. B, Raymond
And, Embalmer The Very Best of Service, Fine Carri-
ages For All Purpose. At All Hours.
The Bast Equipad White Enameled
Ambulance For Sick and wounded
On Short Notice. Charges Reasonable Call At
: 431 Minnesota, Ave.|}Kansas .,City,'gKansas. ie
Notice.
\Nice Fu ¢ rished
ey
‘ROOM AND BOARD3AT :
At$3.25 por wask —
» Corner of second andjDeleware streets iat”
Armourdale Kansas. And in a good Ly: tsioay]: orvanin
to street car sevice. You will Jz2t best of treatment.
MRS. E, L, SMITH PROPRIETRESS,
KANSAS CITY SOAP CO.
1510 N, 4th St,
Are Manufactors of the Best Grades of Toilet & Wash
| ing Soaps. A Home Institution.
-GIVETHEMYOUR PATRONAGE
One trial of their brand the Snowflake and Union will
convince you of their merits.
RESTAURANT,
Ae 1012 N 8rd St.
ie the best place in tne city and will serve you from 5,3)
a,m, toll p. m, every thing is cooked ‘to taste,
MEALS ‘15 CENTS,
-Mrs. Thatcher the prop, is one of the best cooks in the
city and§will please you, givether a call. |
~=— Money to Loan—~
on Watches. Diamonds Jewelry
CLOTHING AND EVERYTHING
ccxcrerrs ()f Value socom
Watches and Jewelry Sold on Payments
AT CASH PRICES.
Unclaim Pledges For Sale Cheap.
ue FINE A OEES AND JEWELRY Eee
Union Loan Office.
427 Minnesota ave. kansas‘city. kans.
TO SAVE MONEY.
Ladies suits,dressing sacques, aprons and in fact
anything in the Dressmaking line
and sold:on weekly and monthly payments. Here isa
few prices: Belt dresses $1.00 and up; dressing sacques
50cts and up. Call and see me. :
| ne
Mrs W. F. Williams,
1510 North Third St. Kansas City, Kansas
pe
‘xvoddesyp woos (ja oq) MME
40} 093 z
[aleteraeet poy . pill » L, F. JOHNSON,
aed s — a Gaeiimuareee es an Shampooing, Manicuring, Massage
pue suepie2 [woiZo]00z wopuoT om and Scalp Treatmsnt,
Om} ore O70
: Suompods oa) ore oUt 98H | ne. na.w. 4 sPecraur,
MME. L, F. JOHNSON,
Shampooing, Manicuring, Massage
and Scalp Treatmant,
Tel.733.W. 4 8PEstaur.
Ouplex Telegraphy in £y.._
ween em View g
xernowitz is the longest tine ing
Fope which uses the duptex sf)
being 630 miles long. ‘The irae
was adopted a few months agg’ al
was found necessary to increase iy
capacity of the line, which tata
the matter for Roumania, southeastn
Russia and a part of Bulgaria, ™
System works well at presey,"™
hough the line is constructed ef
wire instead of copper.
eee
Good Luck for Turtles at Lean,
‘The Chinese have a peculiar eu
with regard to turtles, which they ge
alder as very good Joss. Almost
day one can see these Creatures, son,
of them of huge size, being cam
on board the river steamers, not gy
taken to Canton for culinary’ pioaye
but to be dumped into the sets
restored to liberty and freedom. Gag
luck fs thought to follow —Hong ig
Press.
ee
dee A Bebe wk toi
op new. lately @ dainty and origig
sift for a young mother. It was al
“a measuring stick for baby,” maj,
White wood thirty-six inches log w
marked off into inches as accuntg
as a tape measure. Forgotmencts ve
Pai ted down the side, and at om
Ww a hole in which was a ribbon
and loop by which to suspend i.
Good Housekeeping.
‘Moisture in Tobacco.
‘The presence of moisture in totagy
1s, the Lancet believes, of sone ig
Portance to public health, since
combustion of tobacco containing
large proportion of moisture is ig
peded, while as the eration g
vapor is increased, so are chang
of the potsonous princi; + being «wp
ried into the mouth diminished,
Early Japanese University,
It will surprise most. readers 4
learn from a recent Japanese wie
that there was a university in Joya
in the elghth century, with schools
ethics, mathematics and history, a
that text books were employed é
Ing with such specialties as the
eases of women, veterinary su
and materia medica.
Casting a Gloom.
“Yes, for local talent, it was a ta
rate entertainment,” said the subup
an resident, “and we made seve
hundred doliars for the hospital te
but there was one little hitch. T™
town undertaker was down for ate
solo, and he insisted on singing ta
Waiting for Thee.’"—New York Sa
Consider Dreame Revelation. |
Among the people of the east4
dream is considered to be a iid
revelation from God, and there im
in the Orient, even to-day, soothe
ers, or fortune tellers, who inte
dreams, just as the soothssyers
im bible times, and from dreams i
the future of the dreamer.
Cancer Victims Well to Do.
Statistics show that cancer is iit
common among those who are a
tomed to the refinements of life ta
among the very poor, and to caret
much patients the doctors say ti
good surroundings are a necessity.
Snakes in India.
About 400,000 snakes are kill
every year in British India. The fe
pald as rewards annually for the
struction of beasts of prey and ra
omous snakes by the governmest
India amount to about $125,000.
German Colony in Palestine,
‘Thirty-four years ago a German ¢#}
ony settled at Haifa, Palestine. 1
day all of the ninety families i
are prosperous. They raise sr
and make wine free from alco
which is sold to the natives.
NRE
A ledger kept in the Irish Ianguf
was produced at the Roscommon #
sizes, in Ireland, and the witness!
to go on the bench to translate &
terms for the judge.
Gravity. a
An observing schoolboy wrote
short essay: “Gravity was disco?
ered by Izaak Walton. It is ctit
Roticeable when the apples are
ing from the trees.”
Novices Leave Convent.
Stealing the front door key from
pocket of the mother superior, hm
young novices escaped from the 0
Yent of Santa Clara in Lisbon and
appeared.
Dogs May Ride in Berlin.
Dogs are allowed to enter tram"it
cars in Berlin, but must be be
thelr master’s laps and paid for #8
they were human passengers.
Credit Is a Necessity.
As trade now stands, there 18
enough gold out of the earth, #
were all coined, to transact he bi
mess of a day.
Nationalities Among Russlant
The Russian population reve
120 nationaitties, the three great
‘being Finns, Tartans and Slav
Aluminum for Sharpening Cutie,
Aluminuin is superior to any
fer sharpening cutlery.
Denmark’s Honey Export
Denmark exports. 2,500,000 00
ef bouey a year.
ATAXIA FOUR YEARS
FOLLOWS MALARIA CONTRACTED IN SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR.
Vietim Had Become Helpless When He Tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, but Was Cured in Four Months.
Because he did not know that there is a remedy for ataxia, Mr. Ariel endured four years of weakness, pain and the misery of thinking his case incurable.
"At the outbreak of the Spanish-American war," he says, "I went with Company B, Eighth Regiment, M.V.M., into camp at Chickamauga, and there my system became thoroughly poisoned with malaria. When I was mustered out, I carried that disease home with me. After a while locomotor ataxia appeared."
"How did the ataxia begin?"
"I first noticed a pain in my ankles and knee joints. This was followed by a numb feeling in my legs. At times I had to drag myself around; my legs would shake or become perfectly dead. I had constant trouble in getting about in the dark. I kept a light burning in my room at night as I could not balance myself in the darkness. Even with the aid of a light I wobbled, and would reach out and catch hold of chairs to prevent myself from falling?" "How long were you a sufferer?" "Four years in all. During the last three years I was confined to bed, sometimes for a week, again for three or four weeks at a time. When I was lying down the pain in my back was frequently so severe that I had to be helped up and put in a chair to get a little relief. I had considerable pain in my bowels and no control over my kidneys. The worst of all was that the doctor could give me no hope of recovery."
"I read that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had cured locomotor ataxia and one or two friends spoke to me about them. In the fall of 1903 I began to take them for myself and I had not used more than one box before I found that the pains in my knees and ankles were greatly relieved. Four months afterward I became a perfectly well man, and I am today enjoying the best of health." Mr. Edward H. Ariel lives at No. 43 Powow street, Amesbury, Mass. Every sufferer from locomotor ataxia should try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills without delay. Any druggist can supply them.
Painless Dentistry
'It out with a plate. That's the truth.
What has Russia left? we are asked.
Everything and every place it should not!
Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs — WM O. ENDSLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
The man who is hard pushed for money usually gets a backward shove
Avoid the Cheap and "Big Can" Baking Powders.
The cheap baking powders have but one recommendation: they certainly give the purchaser plenty of powder for his money. These powders are so carelessly made from inferior materials that they will not make light, wholesome food. Further, these cheap baking powders have a very small percentage of leavening gas; therefore it takes from two to three times as much of such powder to raise the cake or biscuit as it does of Calumet Baking Powder. Therefore, in the long run, the actual cost to the consumer of such powders is more than Calumet would be. Cheap baking powders leave the bread sometimes bleached and acid, sometimes yellow and alkaline, and always unpalatable. They are never of uniform strength and quality.
Why not buy a perfectly wholesome baking powder like Calumet, that is at the same time moderate in price and one which can be relied upon? Calumet is always the same, keeps indefinitely and gives the cook the least trouble.
This Is No Joke
What is the most terrible fate you ever encountered?" "A lawn fete at the church."—Kan City Drovers Telegram.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, the gums, reduces in fumination, all pain, cures wind colic. Soa bottle.
Short.
They have a queer custom out in the short-grass country of Western Kansas and Eastern Colorado." "Eat."
"Eat palrine dogs?"
"No, but when a very poor man dies
they say he leaves a short grass wild
widow."—Kansas City Drovers Telegram
Wonderful Courage
is displayed by many a poor invalid, crushed under the weight of chronic troubles, like constipation, billiousness, neuralgia, headache, stomach trouble, etc. But such suffering, though brave, is quite unnecessary, for Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin will surely cure all these diseases, drive away all the unpleasant symptoms, and restore every invalid to health. Try it. Sold by all drugists at 50c and $1.00. Money back if it fails.
You will find him on the other ship, as Mr. Rojestensky
"Missians are hopelessly beat
"Oh, I don't
Oh, I don't know. It isn't all over pet.
"Deed it is. American railroad trains are now running a mile in 28 1-3 seconds."
HUMOUR of the DAY
The Secret Out.
"That poet didn't make a dollar out of his great epic poem."
"Exactly."
"And his 'Ode to America' fell flat."
"That's what."
"Well, how is it he rides in an automobile now?"
"My friend, he's the author of a popular song entitled, 'My Honey's Black Ez de Chimbly-Back, Jump Jim-Crow in de Mawnin'!"—Atlanta Constitution
Matrimonial Economics.
She—Are you sure you could earn
enough to support two?
Mr. Slimsky—"I don't believe the city water is safe. I notice it has a clouded appearance this morning and tastes sort of—milky—and—" Mrs. Starvem—"That glass contains milk, Mr. Slimsky; the water is at your left. And, by the way, your board bill was due yesterday."—Cleveland Leader.
Friendly Encouragement
Pearl—All of their friends advised them to elope instead of being married in the regular way.
Ruby—I don't see why their friends should care.
Pearl—Oh, yes. Elopers never expect wedding presents.
Looking Out for the Family.
Sniggs—Aren't you working any more? It seems that every time I pass your house I see you looking out of the window.
Diggs—Well, some one has to look out for the family.
Taking Down the Swelling.
"This hat's too small for me," said the man who had come into sudden prominence; "I'll have to have it exchanged for a larger one."
"Ah!" exclaimed the hatter. "You haven't read to-day's issue of the morning Wasp, have you?" "No. Why?"
"Just read what it has to say about you. I think that will fix you."—Philadelphia Press.
Forced to Change His Mind.
"Timmins, I'm going to have to reduce your salary till business gets a little better."
"Well, I see I'll have to smoke cheaper cigars."
"Cheaper than those you now use?"
"Yes, a blamed sight cheaper."
"Well—er—say, I guess I'll economize some other way."
Premium on Single Life
She—I see by this paper that a single Greenland whale is worth $13,000.
He—I judge from that statement that a single whale is worth more than a married one."
Same Results
Philo Soffer—Is marriage a failure? Finan Seer—Well, if you marry a wealthy girl, it's almost as good.
"Seeing himself as others see him."
Tommy—I guess Mr. Roxley ain't as rich as people think. You said he didn't have to work, but could jest go 'round enjoyin' himself wherever he pleased.
Jimmy—So he knl.
Tommy—Well, he wasn't at that
dandy Sunday school picnic of ours
yesterday, an' the tickets wuz only 25
cents.
To the Last
First Burglar—Bill was a burglar until he wuz sixty years old.
Second Burglar—Is dat so?
First Burglar—Yep, an' de last t'ing he took wuz chloroform.
Here is Relief for Women.
Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, discovered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF, Cures female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y.
Nothing seems to please a woman so much as her ability to manufacture a piece of furniture out of a few yards of fancy calico and a dry goods box.
The White River Division of the Iron Mountain Rou's between Newport, Arkansas and Carthage, Mo., is rapidly approaching completion, and reports of representatives of the General Passenger Deartment, who recently made complete trip over the line, indicates that through trains will be running inside of sixty days.
"While several thousand tourists have already made the trip from each end of the completed line, and we have hauled during the month of June over forty fishing parties from Carthage, who desired to make the five-day float from Galena to Branson, returning on train in fifty minutes, for the complete daylight run over the new line," said Mr. H. C. Townsend, General Passenger Agent, "there will be a tourist travel unprecedented over any line in this part of the country. The fishing proposition is becoming so well-known that a number of clubhouses on the James River, between Galena and Branson, are now completed and are taxed to their capacity.
"The romantic features of the new line are naturally the ones to attract the most general attention, but the agricultural and mineral possibilities of this new region are remarkable.
"The road itself is a marvel of engineering and the eighty-five pound rail with rock ballast promises the highest degree of speed and safety."
Know How it Feels
I've never been to Europe
And I've never seen a king.
I've never seen a prince, a duke,
A lord, or any thing
That has got blue blood inside it,
But I tell you folks, just once
When I went to school the teacher
Stood ME up to be a dune.
Write to S. G. Warner, G. P. and T.
A., Kansas City Southern Ry., Kansas
City, Mo., for information concerning
Free Government Homesteads, New
Colony Locations, Improved farms,
Mineral lands, Rice lands, and Timber
lands and for copy of "Current Events"
Business Opportunities, Rice book, K.
C. S. Fruit Book. Cheap trip
homeseekers tickets on sale first and
third Tuésdays of each month. The
short line to the "Land of Fulfillment"
Household receipts
Raspberry Jam: Boil the berries until thoroughly cooked; drain off everything possible of meat and juice and make jelly. Take the seeds, sweet en to taste, stew with water, pour off and bottle liquid for flavoring extracts. Take the seeds and dry in the sun, seal tightly with paraffin paper. Label plainly, "Raspberry Jam, 1905."—Kansas City Drovers Telegram.
To the housewife who has not yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market and who is reasonably satisfied with the old, we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold Water Starch be made at once. Not alone because it is guaranteed by the manufacturers to be superior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 16 ozs, while all the other kinds contain but 12 ozs. It is safe to say that the lady who once uses Defiance Starch will use no other. Quality and quantity must win.
Might Have Been an Ocean Greyhound, Pat—Cap'n yer 'oner, would yez moid pointin' er prow nor'east?
Captain—Why do you want to go Northeast? Our course is due North. Pat—Sure, but Oi never seed a dogfish and Oi noticed a bark over there 'st now, begorah.—Kansas City Drovers Telegram.
All Lost
The doctors were holding a consultation over the case.
"Gentlemen," remarked the physician in charge, "I am unable to discover any change whatever."
"Then we might as well give his up," they remarked, in chorus.—Kan-City Drovers Telegram.
Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in $ \frac{3}{4} $ -pound packages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chemicals. If your grocery tries to sell you a 12 oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large letters and figures "16 ozs." Demand Defiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron sticking. Defiance never sticks.
Janapese Cleaning Day.
clean up the Russian fleet today.
Admiral Takabita (later)—Your Excellency, it is my pleasure to report that your orders have been obeyed.
The Russiaon fleet has been wiped out.
"Then we might as well give him
"Then we might as well give him
And Some Old Ones Come Down.
If everybody were appreciated for his intrinsic worth, says Uncle Hiram, there would be a lot of stranger faces on the world's pedestals.—Kansas City Drovers Telegram
CONSTANT ACHING.
Back aches all the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies the body, worries the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's Kidney Pills relieve and cure it. H. B. McCarver, of 201 Cherry St., Portland, Ore., inspector of freight for the Trans-Continental Co., says: "I used Doan's Kidney Pills for back ache and other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annoyed me for months. I
H. B. McCarrer, of 201 Cherry St., Portland, Ore., inspector of freight for the Trans-Continental Co., says "I used Doan's Kidney Pills for back ache and other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annoyed me for months. I think
think a cold was responsible for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle in my kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills rooted it out. It is several months since I used them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble."
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents per box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
The amateur pianist once in a while makes swell music when his foot hits the loud pedal.
BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE
Body Raw With Humor—Caused Untold Agony—Doctor Did No Good
—Cuticura Cured at Once.
"My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on his body, looking like raw flesh, and causing the child untold agony. My physician prescribed various remedies, none of which helped at all. I became discouraged and took the matter into my own hands, and tried Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment with almost immediate success. Before the second week had passed the soreness was gone, not leaving a trace of anything. Mrs. Jeannette H. Block, 281 Rosedale St, Rochester, N. Y."
The Melancholy Days
When from gritty greens and hash
The boarding houses shift us
On to this year's succotash.—Kansas
City Doves Daily Telegram.
MARKETING POTATO CROPS.
In line with the classic case of the oyster shippers, cited by President Hadley of Yale University in his book on Railroad Transportation, is the case of the Aroostook potato growers brought by President Tuttle of the Boston and Maine Railroad before the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce. Nothing could better show how a railroad works for the interest of the localities which it serves. A main dependence of the farmers of the Aroostook region is the potato crop, aggregating annually eight to ten million bushels, which find a market largely in Boston and the adjacent thickly settled regions of New England. The competition of cheap water transportation from Maine to all points along the New England coast keeps railroad freight rates on these potatoes always at a very low level.
Potatoes are also a considerable output of the truck farms of Michigan, their normal market being obtained in and through Detroit and Chicago and other communities of that region.
Not many years ago favoring sun and rains brought a tremendous yield of potatoes from the Michigan fields. At normal rates and prices there would have been a glut of the customary markets and the potatoes would have rotted on the farms. To help the potato growers the railroads from Michigan made unprecedentedly low rates on potatoes to every reachable market, even carrying them in large quantities to a place so remote as Boston. The Aroostook growers had to reduce the price on their potatoes and even then could not dispose of them unless the Boston and Maine Railroad reduced its already low rate, which it did. By means of these low rates, making possible low prices, the potato crops of both Michigan and Maine were finally marketed. Everybody eats potatoes, and that year everybody had all the potatoes he wanted.
While the Michigan railroads made rates that would have been ruinous to the railroads, had they been applied to the movement of all potatoes at all times, to all places, they helped their patrons to find markets then. The Boston and Maine Railroad suffered a decrease in its revenue from potatoes, but it enabled the Aroostook farmers to market their crop and thereby to obtain money which they spent for the varied supplies which the railroads brought to them. If the making of rates were subject to governmental adjustment such radical and prompt action could never have been taken, because it is well established that if a rate be once reduced by a railroad company it cannot be restored through the red tape of governmental proce dure. If the Michigan railroads and the Boston and Maine Railroad had been subjected to governmental limitation they would have felt obliged to keep up their rates as do the railroads of France and England and Germany under governmental limitation and let the potatoes rot. $E$ have.
Fixed It.
Maude—How did Aggie happen to have a rib broken?
Claude—Will Caesar, a clerk in the water company's office, was sitting on the porch with her the other night talking about sprinkling the lawn when Aggie said: "Oh, Will, you pressure it too weak."—Kansas City, Drovers Telegram.
It is a good thing a man isn't as hard on his trousers as is a woman on her shirtwalts, for the latter are always worn full of holes.
RECORDS OF THE PULSE RATE.
Instrument Shows Heart's Action Dur-
Jpn: Murculae, Work and Afgan
ing Muscular Work and After.
A recent publication of the University of Michigan describes an instrument for securing a continuous graphic record of the pulse rate in man which afford valuable indications of the heart's work. The records showed that the commencement of muscular work is followed almost simultaneously by a marked acceleration of the pulse. In fact, this modification of the pulse rate is observed in the next heart cycle after the work begins.
In typical cases there are three well-marked stages—a primary rise, a period of sustained acceleration and a secondary rise. Similar stages of decrease in rate occur after the work stops. The rapidity of the pulse during work depends not only upon the amount of work done, but much more upon the manner in which it is done. Speed and resistance are factors requiring separate consideration and of these two speed has the greater influence. These records show that while muscular work may not appreciably require the expenditure of bodily force it immediately reacts upon the heart and that conversely cessation of muscular exertion is an immediate relief to the heart.
Scott and the Simple Life
Sir Walter Scott was an out-of-doors man, as he had been a tramping boy, says McClure's. It is impossible to think of him without his horses and dogs. His duties as sheriff took him across country continually, and he always had more months out of Edinburgh that in it, notwithstanding his court clerkship. He was thus in constant contact with Scotch life and country, and he never lost or relaxed his first impulse to know and see with his eyes, so far as eyes could see it, all the local history. He was also in love with the genius of Scotland as it was stamped in the people of all sorts and conditions. Human nature, the rough, hard article free from its alloy of the town, was treasure trove to him. On those annual "raids into Lidddesdale," and on many another journey, he made himself master of this book of truth out of which came so much of the character, anecdote and phrase that are most sterling, real and humorsome in his books.
View of Happiness.
I have been trying to figure out a general condition of happiness, and I reach the conclusion that it consists mainly in the ability to march with one's own generation, neither deploring the progress the generation makes nor grumbling because it doesn't make more, says Frank Putnam in the National Magazine. We can understand best the men and women of our own age, or near it. Dr. Osler spoke truth when he said that most men cease to be receptive to new ideas after 40; hence our elders in the 50s and 60s and 70s, say, who have ably guided the affairs of the world during the decades immediately ahead of us will often seem to us to move less rapidly than we think they should, toward new industrial conditions. And the generation immediately behind us—the restless chaps in their 20s, are putting more pressure upon us from the rear than we are able to believe is wholly justified.
A Kipling Souvenir
Of an interesting Kipling relic, Charles Warren Stoddard writes:
"The object that first caught my eye was an old desk, black with age, and no doubt rheumatic in every joint. Its lid was a solid panel, but curved in the fashion of a roll-top desk. Across the length of it, cut deep in large letters, such as schoolboys love to carve was this legend:
"Oft was I weary when I toled at Thee,'
"So sang the galley slave in a faultless verse; and so, in the hour of triumph, Rudyard Kipling graved upon the cover of the desk at which he won his fame."—National Magazine.
Heroic Remedy.
Some anonymous individual with no poetry in his soul has written to a New York paper complaining of a whip-poor-will that bothers him at night, and another anonymous individual who has in his soul no innate love of birds suggests:
"If Pater Familias really desires to drive the whip-poor-will from the tree, the following is a recipe guaranteed to cause it to quit the place:
"R: One dozen roman candles. Dose: Three each evening on retiring (10-11 p. m.) exploded through the tree. This has been known to cure the most aggrivating cases."
Wal-lu-lah.
Eer the palace saw the westland
In its grandeur by the sea
Lived a dusky Indian princess
By Columbia's thunderning cascades,
Oer the beauteous upland plain,
Wandered lone the fair Wal-lu-lah
Chanting eer some wild refrain.
Dusky sultors thronged about her,
Pleaded for Wal-lu-lah's hand,
But she wept her absent lover,
By Columbia's murmuring cascades,
Long and lone her tireless quest.
Now she sleeps, but still awaits him,
With her face toward the west.
Drifting sands above her mingle,
Happy homes bedeck her plain.
Shielded from murmurs
In Columbia's wild refrain.
—Bert Huffman in New York Herald
Greatest Trout Hatchery.
The greatest trout hatchery in the world will be located by the government on the Grand Mesa, about twenty-five miles north of Delta. The annual output of fish will not fall below 25,000,000 within a year after the hatchery is completed. These fish will be distributed all over the west.
Are now using our
International Type-High Plates
Sawed to
LABOR-SAVING LENGTHS.
They will save time in your composing
room as they can be handled even quicker
than they can be handled even quicker.
No extra charge is made for sawing plates
to short lengths.
Send a trial order to this office and be
convinced.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,
KANSAS CITY, M.C.
SKIN
HUMORS
Complete External and
Internal Treatment
ONE DOLLAR
Consisting of warm baths with
Cuticura
SOAP
to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle: CUTICURA Ointment to instantly allay itching, irritation, and inflammation and soothe and heal; and CUTICURA Pills to cool and cleanse the blood.
A Single Set, costing but One Dollar, is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, distinguer skin, scalp, and blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itchings, and irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, when all else fails.
Sold throughout the world. Cutura Soap, 256, Ointment, 60, Resolvent, 500. (In form of Chocolate Coated Pill, 100, Resolvent, 500, London, 157, Columbus House Sq. i Paris, 5, Rue de la Pala; Boston, 157, Columbus Ave. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Prope.
Humphrey, 197, H. H. Cure Torturing, Distinguer.
For HotWeather A FREE BOTTLE OF Mull's Grape Tonic
TO ANYONE WHO WILL WRITE FOR IT NOW
Have You Constipation, Stomach
Trouble, Indigestion, Dyspepsia,
Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Sores,
Sudden Bowel Trouble, Diarrhea,
Cholera, Etc.?
No one whose bowels are healthy and active contracts these complaints. Invariably they are the result of Constipation which means decayed, poisoned and dying bowels or intestines. Check diarrhea and you are liable to fatal blood poison—a physic makes you worse. There is only one right course and that is to treat the cause. Re-
vive and strengthen the bowels and intestines. We will prove to you that Mull's Grape Tonic cures Constipation and these terrible Bowel troubles because it cleanses the Blood and makes the intestines practically new. It feeds the starved condition and brings them back to life—nothing else will. For hot weather lilts it has no equal.
No one whose bowls are healthy and active contracts these complaints. Invariably they are the result of Constipation which means decayed, poisoned and dying bowels or intestines. Check diarrhea and you are liable to fatal blood poison—a physic makes you worse. There is only one right course and that is to treat the cause. Reive and strengthen the bowels and intestines. We will prove to you that Mull's Grape Tonic cure Constipation and all these terrible Bowel troubles because it cleanses the Blood and makes the intestines practically new. It feeds the starved condition and brings them back to life—nothing else will. For hot weather ills it has no equal.
WRITE FOR THIS FREE BOTTLE TODAY
Good for alling children and nursing mothers.
FREE COUPON
Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name, for a free bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic, Stomach Tonic and Constipation Cure.
To Mull's Grape Tonic Co.,
148 Third Ave., Rock Island, III.
Give Full Address and Write Plainly
The $1.00 bottle contains nearly three times the 50c size. At drug stores.
The genuine has a date and number stamped on the label—no take other from your druggist.
THE DAISY FLY KILLER destroys all the flies and home—in dining-room, sleeping-room and places where whole people clean, clean, neat and fure anything you will never be without them. If not kept away great prepaid for 20c. Harold Jackson 4919 Main Ave. Brooklyn, R.I.
DIP THERIA
A treatment, beyond price in homes where there are children, beyond price in homes where all other throat diseases. A harmless home treatment. Children like it. Write to-day for information.
THE PABULUM CO. BOX 828 KANSAS CITY, MO.
WANTED AGENT
A person in good standing only. Will appoint only one in your town to sell a small block of the best gold mining stock ever offered to the public. Non-exemptable. Balance treasury stock to be divided pro-rata by gift to stockholders. Paying ore from the Mine. Hold Company. Warehouse for full particulars. Stock now selling its share. Chance of lifetime. Address PRINCIPALS, Lock Box 2074, San Francisco, California.
PISO'S CURE FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAIL Best House Condition. Use in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
“com ACASTORIA
| com | li For Infants and Children.
See euer a) The Kind You Have
eet Always Bought
Bears the
INFANTS “CHILDREN _[f = 8
Promotes Digestion Cheerful- Signature (iy
ness and Rest Contains neither of
Sen eee sie Mineral.
jOoT NARCOTIC.
Ee ‘oi
1 Tove
igecccmelg(\p° Use
ea For Over
a s
_xevcom ia Thirty Years
Eee
EXACT COPY OF WRAPRER,
Four Facts For
‘s Sick Women
To Considez
Epdio B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Has an Unequalled Record of Cures—
Mrs. Pinkham's. Advice Is Confiden-
tial, Free, and always Helpful
Frst.—That almost every operation
our hospitals performed upon women
es necessary through neglect of
puch symptoms ‘as backache, ipegalas
And painful menstruation, leucorrheea,
Wisplacements of the uterus, pain in
tthe side, burning sensation in the stom-
ach, bearing-down pains, nervousness,
izziness and sleeplessness.
Sxconp,—The medicine that holds
the record for the largest number of
ybsolute cures of fe ills is Lydia
E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
it regulates, strengthens and cures
Wiseases of ‘the female organism as
Bothing else can.
' For thirty years it has been helping
wromen to be strong, curing backache,
nervousness, kidney troubles, all uter-
fne and ovarian inflammation, weak-
ness and displacements, regulating
menstruation perfectly snd overcom:
{ng its pains. It has also proved itselt
fovaluable in preparing for childbirth
and the change of life.
‘Turp.—The great volume of unso-
Ueited and grateful testimonials on file
at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., many of which are from time to
time published by permission, give ab-
solute evidence of the value of Lydia
E-Piaktan’s Vegetable Compound and
rs. Pinkham’s advice.
Fourrs.—Every ailing woman inthe
United States is asked to accept the
following invitation. It is free, will
beoe: you health and may save your
‘Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation
toWomen.—-Women suffering from any
form of female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs. Pink
‘am, at Lynn, Mass. “All letters are
received, opened, read and answered
by women only. From symptoms given,
your trouble may be located and the
quickest and surest way of recovery
advised, Out of the vast volume of ex-
paienee, in ieee female ills Mrs.
inkham probably has the very knowl-
‘edge that will help your case. Surely,
any worpan, rich or poor is ery foolish
if she does ‘hot take advantage of this
generous offer of assistance,
Saas ame Or eae
Balia th Wt elite
Botnet es tr hanna ceed
fe iaghearesynrs oom cote opens
Fanches, There le need of more hands to develo
the country. In the Southwest Indian Terst
tepigred lane wet pas yiitiee er eee
which ite capable. Practically the same golieg
Hin of es avout eae
Stora for WIDE-AWAKE MEN SRit
eat ain gta eat
‘now ihued you ave to fayew and we Wil any
fev seats ae
Com juntey.” Hee tree,
cece es
GEORGE MORTON, G. P.&T. A.
‘BOX st, ‘ST. LOUIS, MO.
y Sliameee ss
TP aee ai
FOR WOMEN PA
troubled with ills peculiar to "2 a
Sareea eas Ae
' fans Seeing
Staines tae anteater ae
ase
ayaa
eee ee eres
Sesion ae
‘TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL
1 Rye aie toes teases
! Trial Box and of instructions Pree,
‘Mur R. Paxton Company Boston, Mase,
Wpeayy A Bure
RIDUERS PAsTiLLes, See Astima,
BIOWELL £00. Mire, Tah nal.& gow.
“Blazed Trall” Ploneer,
Andrew McFarlane, “pioneer of the
blazed trail,” who died in San Bernar-
dino, Cal, recently, was a native of
Allegheny, Pa., where he was born in
1829, He was one of the most noted
prospectors and hunters of California.
His chief gold discovery was the Long
Tom mine in Kern county, from which
many millions have been taken. He
and two brothers crossed the plains
in the early ‘50s,
Where Stars Are Barred.
Turkey's government has issued an
order to its custom authorities not
to admit any foreign goods which bear
the mark or design of a star. It is
supposed that the reason for this is
that the representation of a star is a
part of the Turkish coat of arms,
When Your Grocer Says
be does not have Defiance Starch, you: pe
be sure he is afraid to keep it until
stock of 12 oz. packages are sold. Defiance
Btarch is Fs coy better than ay other
Soe ees
oo beast
German Working Women.
While Germany has 6,500,000 women
who earn their own living, Italy, with
only one-half the population, has
5,250,000. In Germany the number of
servant girls who have a savings bank
account is nearly three times as large
as that of shop girls who bave them.
Be beoareeeapanern ict the
Emcee ree
Horses Ate Goose Eggs.
“What do you think of feeding horses
on goose eggs?” asks an Australian
backwoodsman. “That was done by a
party who were stuck up on the Ade-
laide during the wet season. The na-
tives used to bring in canoeloads of
eggs, which were broken into buckets
and supplied to the horses.”
Many who fonaely smoked 100 lence,
pow stoke Lewis’ Slugle inden rai
Se cigar. The best combination of the best
tobaceos. Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, aL
Praise for the Police.
His eyes in death were firmly closed,
‘As were the acts he did.
A copper on each eye reposed,
Just holding down the lid—Kansas
City Daily Drovers Telegram.
Try me just once and I am sure
to come again. Deftance Starch,
Meet Expenses.
“We've cut soup and dessert from
our bill of fare.”
onrWhy?"
“It makes both ends meat.”
—Kansas City Drovers Telegram,
ingen Be
Soot “Whe use Company, Sovts Bond, oe,
Far-Sighted.
Old Jones he reads his title clear
To mansions in the skies,
But Jones for night on forty years
Had trouble with his eyes,
ANEAT FOLDER...
Tells All About Lewis ang Clark
Exposition,
‘The Union Pacific Railroad Passen-
ger Department has put before the
public a folder of the Lewis and Clark
Exposition at Portland. It is wonder.
fully neat and attractive, colors having
been employed in the printing. Con.
tents embrace a very complete de.
scription of the exposition and its at
tractions, including a bird's-eye view
of the beautiful grounds and buildings,
done in numerous colors. Scenes in
and around Portland are strikingly
portrayed, and all contemplating visit.
ing the exposition this summer should
have a copy of the folder in order that
they may know of points where the
greatest enjoyment and satisfaction
may be found.
FOR SIMPLE FARM HOUSE.
Plans Show a Layout for Comfort and
Convenience.
I should like to build a housé 18x26
feet with 14 feet walls and attach to it
a kitchen 14x24 feet with walls 8 feet
high. How much lumber would be re-
quired if the walls are sheeted witb
ship lap and sides?
The amount of Iymber required for
the house, the main part would be as
Ss eee
q
ch? wrcnen KIS"
4 W"x16" | PANTRY
v . *
ON a
7 DINING,
q Ror
wrx” /
4 BED
{] PARLOUR, | Room
ap HOMRAZ™ | gery: ge
f
S20 Sg Sees
Ground Floor Plan,
follows: Ninety-five pieces of 2x4 inch
x14 feet for outside studding, plates
and sills; 40 pieces of 2x4-inch x14
feet for rafters; 20 pieces of 2x4-inch
x10 feet for collar ties; 75 pieces of
2x4-Inch x8 feet for studding for parti-
ttons; 784 feet of l-inch sheeting; 8
Squares of shingles; 936 feet of floor
ing; 40 pieces 2x8-inchx18 feet for
c
—
——
-— BEDROOM
——4 IR" KI”
7
=
u
HALL ©
BED BED
Room » ROOM
9”x10" o"x107
Upper Floor Plan.
Joist; 1,300 feet of ship lap and 1,480
feet of siding. For the kitchen there
would be required the following:
Forty-four pieces of 2x4inch x8 feet
for studding; 18 pieces of 2x4-inch 416
feet for rafters; 10 pieces of 2x4-Inch
x12 feet for sills and plate; 420 feet of
sheeting; 580 feet of ship lap; 700 feet
of siding; 18 joists 2x8-inch x14 feet;
18 pieces of 2x4-Inch x14 feet for cell
ing joists; 340 feet of flooring and 41.3
squares of shingles. The accompany-
ing plans show how the house may be
laid out for convenience and comfort.
Laying Pipes for Water Works.
‘What would be the probable cost of
laying tron water pipes in trenches
from 8 to 10 feet deep. The main
pipes would be 10 inches, branches
from 4 to 6 inches with lead joints.
‘What would be the additional cost for
valves, elbows and tees?
‘Twenty men would excavate about
200 feet of trench 10 feet deep each
day, three men would lay the pipe,
and ten others would fill it in. At
$1.75 per day the wages for laying 200
feet would be about $600.00, which
would be about 30 cents per foot.
Valves and’ hydrants would cost about
$1.00 each to put in, ‘These estimates
are for doing the work in soil that is
easily handled.
Siinias «enue
I wish to raise the roof of a kitch-
en 14 feet square in order to build on
another story. How should this be
done and how many jack screws would
be required?
To raise the roof of a small build-
ing, place stringers or needle beams
across under plate near to each end,
then put jack screws under these;
take a strain and loosen the plate
from studing; now raise the roof as
high as the jack will go, shove up the
Toof, take ont the jacks, block them
up and raise again, following the root
up with shores until the proper height
is reached. Stay the roof from blow-
ing over sideways, then splice on old
studding and nail the top of studs to
the plate. Yow can use two jacks, one
at each end, or four, one at each cor
ner, which is safer.
Stone Milk House.
How much lime, stone and sand is
required to build a stone milk house
12x14 feet inside, having T-foot walls,
2 feet thicky Would ft be necessary
to have walls of this thickness to en-
sure coolness in summer? In what
‘proportions should the lime and sand
be maixed, and what depth of founda-
tion Is needed?
The house would reqmre 13 cords
of stone, 14 yards of gravel and 80
Dushels of lime. The usual propor-
tions of lime and sand for mortar-are
6 bushels of lime to one cubie yard
of sand. A wall two feet thick would
‘keep out warmth in summer and cold
fn winter. The foundation should go
to the bottom of the frost line, or-at
least low enough to rest on firm clay
er rock.
Ask Your Dealer far Allen’e Enct.Caca,
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swol-
Jen, Sore, Hot,Callous, Aching Sweating
Feet and Ingrowing Nails. ‘Rail Drug
gists and Shoe stores, 25 cents, Aceest
Ro substitute. Sample mailed Fl
Address, A'S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. ¥,
Chicago should be glad that Oyama
doesn’t live there. He ts about of
strike. ,
ret Cross ae THE FAMOUS
ents "tho Ws Company Sects Beatimin
Japan's’ Tobacco Law,
Viscount Hayashi, of Japan, has in-
formed the Scottish Antitobbacco So-
ciety that the Japanese police con-
fiscate the “smoking instruments” of
any youth under 20 years, as well as
his supply of the weed, Parents and
guardians who knowingly permit the
offense are liable to a fine of 50 cents
and dealers who furnish a minor with
the wherewithal may be fined $5. The
law was passed in 1900.
For a College City,
A movement to colonize a tract of
land three miles from the campus and
form a new town has been started by
members of the faculty of Stanford
university, at Palo Alto, Cal, Subdi-
vision and buildings are to be begun
at once, and its is assumed that only
college people will be encouraged to
become residents.
In the Stone Ace.
David has just discharged the con:
tents of his sling,
“What's the matter with Goliath?”
asked @ member of the Philistine
army.
No reply. .
Afterwards they ascertained that the
slant was stone blind.
Arriving at a Verdict.
Kushequa, Pa., July 10.—(Spectal)—
In this section of Pennsylvania there
4s a growing belief that for such Kid-
ney Diseases as Rheumatism and
Lame Back there is only one sure
cure and that is Dodd’s Kidney Pills.
‘This belief grows from such cases as
that of Mrs. M. L. Davison of this
place, She tells the story herself as
follows:
“I have suffered from Rheumatism
for thirty years and find that Dodd's
Kidney Pills have done me more good
than any medicine I have ever taken.
I was also bothered .with Lame Back
and I can only say that my back hasn't
bothered me since I took Dodd’s Kid-
ney Pills.”
Considering that Mrs. Davison only
took two boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills,
the result would be considered wonder-
ful if it were not that others are re-
Porting similar results daily. Kushe
qua {s fast arriving at a verdict that
“Dodd's Kidney Pills are the one sure
eure for Rheumatism.”
Old English Family.
The new speaker of the house of
commons, James William Lowther,
comes of one of the most ancient fam:
ilies of England, for when Sir Richard
Lowther was his sheriff of Cumber-
land in the eigth and ninth of Eliza
beth, he was the thirtieth knight in
succession. Lowther is the family
name of the Earls of Lonsdale, and
the speaker is grandson of the first
earl, while the fourth and present earl
is a great-grandson, but born in the
same year (1885) as the speaker
James William Lowther has been in
official life since 1883, when he was
first elected to parliment, in which he
issnow thember for Penrith. In his
youth he was quite celebrated as an
amateur actor, with special skill in
caricature,
As He Explained It.
“Dearie,” remarked Mrs. Small, “I
see the railroads are going to put in
flat rates. Does that mean we can
rent the flat cheaper?”
“Oh, no, darling, it merely means
they are short of coaches and are go:
ing to put in a low rate on flat cars
and make a run on it.”—Kansas City
Drover Telegram.
‘Sih
“Oh, yes, there is something very
small about the DeSmythes.”
“Little, are they?”
“Yes, indeed. ‘They have to be.
They live in a flat.”
WANTED TO SLEEP
Have Such Desire.
A minister speaks of the curious ef-
fect of Grape Nuts food on him and
how {t has relieved him.
“You will doubtless understand how
the suffering with indigestion with
which I used to be troubled made my
work an almost unendurable burden,
and why it was that after my Sabbath
duties had been performed, sleep was
stranger to my pillow till nearly day-
light.
| “Thad to be very careful as to what
Tate, and even with all my care I ex-
perienced poignant physical distress
after meals, and my food never satis-
fled me.
“Six months have elapsed since I
began to use Grape-Nuts food, and the
benefits I have derived from it are
very definite. I no longer suffer from
Indigestion, and I began to tmprove
from the time Grape-Nuts appeared on
our table. I find that by eating a dish
of it after my Sabbath work is done
(and I always do so now) my nerves
tre quieted and rest and refreshing
sleep are ensured me. I feel that I
could not possibly do without Grape
Nuts food, now that I know its value.
It 4s invariably on our table—we feel
that we need it to complete the meal
—and our children will eat Grape
Nuts when they cannot be persuaded
to touch anything else.” Name given
by Postum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich.
‘There's a reason.
Read the famous little book, “The
|Road to Wellville,” in each pkg.
le i le ete ee mt °° 2
Send a Postal for
“Book of Presents
" Proteet
of your families by insisting on gee
Pure Food. When it comes to fepeetenesd
Baking Powder, it means a saving ri
of health and money if you use the f ty
standard article of purity and effi-
ciency—the wonderful ‘3 D
K C BAKING ReaD
POWDER if ly
An absolutely pute baking powder PNW [YY
scientifically combined. 25 ounces fagrmomeo
for 25 cents. Your grocer refunds ST ot
. your money if you are not sat- tases oa
isfied. Don’t accept a substi- Sa
tute! They are impure and a men-
MA ace to health. Ask for K C,
3 the standard of quality.
a JAQUE:
i ona eo
‘That you want LION COFFEE Always and he,
being a square man, will not try to sell you any-
thing else. You may not eare for our opinion, but
What About the United Judgment of Millions
of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century?
_Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the
ey . Confidence of the People
Bom and ever increasing popularity?
SAB LION COFFEE fs carefully se-
a} ay lected at the plantation, shipped
fi | \% a, direct to our various factories,
UW. Wee SS where it is skillfully roasted and
NWN, carefully packed in sealed pack-
i / l WY J ages—unlike loose coffee, which
ye eS 2 is exposed to germs, dust, in«
wa Nay yp sects, etc. LION COFFEEreaches
LA ; you as pure and clean as when
0, Seigetee q it left the factory. Sold only in
eer SE sso? 1 1b. packages.
Lion-head on every package,
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums,
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE C0., Toledo, Ohio,
IPILES XO MONEY TILL CORED -scnmimine azar
‘hee Follow the Flag.
) \iu
S \yWARAA
$28.50 NIAGARA FALLS and return,
On sale June 16-17-18-19,
$10.00 MILWAUKEE and return, ‘
On sale June 16-17-18-19. 1
$26.90 TORONTO, ONTARIO and return,
On sale June 18-19-20-21-22,
$16.00 INDIANAPOLIS and return,
On sale June 19-20-21-22,
$8240 ASBURY PARK, N. J. and return via NeW Yorks
On sale June 28-29-30 and July ist,
$29.75 BALTIMORE and return,
On sale July 1-23,
$26.50 BUFFALO and return,
On sale July 7-8-9, ity
$23.90 PITTSBURG and return, j 4
On sale August 17-18. ¥
$30.50 PHILADELPHIA and return,
On sale September 14-15-16, \
WABASH saves a day to the East. Throigh trains
from Kansas City.
FURTHER PARTICULARS, TICKETS AND BERTHS,
WABASH OFFICE, 803 MAIN STREET.
a
d zt
=<
Sar
é
Yr
SPECIAL OFFER
‘The name and address of your
‘shoe dealer and 16c to cover
cost of mailing, etc., willsecure
one of the handsome rolled
gold pins illustrated above,
Enameled in colors and will
wear for years. These pins
were secured by thousands of
World’s Fair visitors. ic
Only a few hundred left,
Write Quick.
ROBERTS. JOFINSON 6 RAND
SHOE CO. ST. LOUIS
MANUPACTURER® OF
“STAR BRAND SHOES”
Red Cro:s
Ball Blue
4s the name of t "
are looking fo *
grocer. He sells .
the name. A lar ss
age for only 5 -
you see your clot!
Snowy i it
| wade so vf RARER
BLUE ou will wast spot .