Iowa State Bystander
Friday, June 30, 1916
Des Moines, Iowa
Page text (machine-generated)
ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER The Best and only medium that reaches the colored people of the middle west.
XXIII No. 3
Miss Mary Cecil will leave for the lakes Saturday for an indefinite stay.
Miss Pearl Cecil of Mason City, who was visiting her sister, will return home Saturday.
Mrs. Bacon of Davenport, Iowa is the guest of Mrs. C. S. Lewis of this city.
Mrs. Florenc Johnson of St. Paul is in the city, the guest of Mrs. S. D. Miller.
The Eliza E. Peterson W. C. T. U. will meet next Tuesday, July 6th at the residence of Mrs. Maud Birt, 1015 W. 13th street.
All members of Doers are requested to meet at St. Paul's church Sunday afternoon. Business of importance. Mrs. J. L. Edwards.
Mrs. Watts of Osakloosa returned home Wednesday, after visiting at the home of Mrs. W. E. Morton, 779 West Tenth street.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Lee have issued cards announcing the marriage of their daughter, D. Mae, to Mr. W. E. Fine, February 9, 1916, Maywood III. Rev. Manley tied the knot.
A full report of the Iowa State Colored High School and College association that was held recently in Buxton will be published next week, as it came in to late for publication.
The Virginia Piper association will meet with Mr. Spencer Cary, 1715 Oxford. July 2nd. All members requested to be present.
The D. Y. W. Y. K. Art club will hold their monthly meeting Friday afternoon, July 7th, at the home of Mrs. Bryant, 1012 Eighth street. The president desires all members to be present. Mrs. J. A. Jefferson, president; Mrs. S. B. Bryant, secretary.
Mr. W. H. Hammett returned home Monday morning from Kansas City, Kansas, where he was called by the death of his sister, Mrs. Nellie Bryant who passed away June 19th. Mrs. Bryant had been ill for a couple of years She leaves to mourn her death one sister, Mrs. Anna Morris of Kansas City and a brother, W. H. Hammett of Des Moines and a host of friends.
All boys between the ages of 12 and 17 are requested to meet at the A. M. E. church, Second and Center streets, Monday evening at 7 o'clock. Arrangements have been made with one of the national boy scout organizers to meet the boys on above date and place to perfect a local company. The boys will meet at the residence of Mr. C. P. Jones, 717 West Thirteenth street, at 6 p. m. Monday, July 3, and will march in a body to the church.
Sunday was Rally Day at St. Paul's A. M. E. church. The pastor and trustees have planned this campaign for a new St. Paul. Every loyal member is expected to pay $25 on that day. Rally to your standard. Preaching morning and evening services. Bishop I. N. Ross of Washington, D. C., is expected. The afternoon service will be a platform meeting. The colored ministers of the city have been invited to take part. S. L. Birt, P. C.
On last Friday afternoon at the Central Presbyterian church Mrs. S. L. Birt, president of the Missionary society of St. Paul's A. M. E. church, and Mrs. S. Joe Brown, president of the Iowa Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, delivered addresses before the Woman's Missionary society. Mrs. Birt's address, which was supplemented with stereotype views, dealt with the work among freedmen, while Mrs. Brown talked on the accomplishments of the colored women of the state. Miss Mildred I. Griffin, honorary president of the High School Girls' club, who had accompanied Mrs. Brown, was introduced and she told of what the colored girls were doing.
REMEMBER THE
Palace Sweet Cafe
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Is the best place to go for
Good Home Cooking
Everything First Class
Red 1267 1012 Center Street
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Erickson,
Proprs.
The Cutt Studio
220½ West 2nd St.
Containing the original
paintings.
"Mother Knitting" "Tutt"
"Mand" and many others.
THE BYSTANDER
The popular baby contest at the rink Tuesday evening was a pretty affair. Beautifully dressed babies were the center of attraction. The following entries and votes were cast: La Vera Master, 465; Harold Wilkinson, 424; Ione Wiley, 370; Harry Callo-424; Ione Wiley, 370; Harry Callo-154; Tresa Thomas, 68; Stanley Morgan, 45; Ruth Brewer, 25; Hazel Bell, 9; Walker Rhodes, 5; Kelly Dixon, 4; Audville Brewer, 4; Augusta Claybrook, 0. Total number of votes cast, 1,565. A gold watch was awarded to La Vera La Master, who received the highest number of votes; Harold Wilkinson, son of our popular policeman, the silver cup, and Ione Wiley the spoon. Rev. Birt wishes to thank all mothers and friends who contributed to the success of the affair.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS' CLUB
At the Girl's Social Center, 1058 Fifth street, on last Sunday afternoon a business meeting was held, after which remarks were made by Miss Eydythe M. Jones, who left the city this week to spend her vacation with her parents in Buxton, and Miss Mildred I. Griffin, who left the city to spend a few weeks with relatives in Kansas City, Mo. Because of the annual thanksgiving service at the Corinthian Baptist church there will be no meeting next Sunday.
N. A. A. C. P.
On account of the musicale at the Auditorium on Monday evening July 3, the date for the Juily meeting of the executive committee of the National Association for the advancement of Colored People there will be no meeting of said committee on that date. By order S. Joe Brown, Chairman,
OBITUARY
Chester Phenix Woods was born in the city of Des Moines on October 28, 1893, and died June 23, 1916, being just in the prime of life, he was stricken down by the monster death. He leaves to mourn his loss a father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Woods; one brother and sister, Chas Woods, Jr., and Lillian H. Woods; a grandmother, Mrs. Rachel Jefferson; one auntie, two uncles and a host of friends.
Mary Ann Alexander was born in Keosauqua, Iowa, December 25, 1888, and died June 25, 1916, aged 47 years, 6 months. She was married to Price Alexander on November 12, 1885, at Ottawa, Iowa. To this union nine children were born, James Leonard of Lewiston, South Dakota, Archie A. Edna Belle, Mary Coleen Jones, Harold Louise, Leland Russell, Harold Creighton, Ida Helen, Doris Elaine, all of Des Moines. She was converted twenty-nine years ago at Ottumwa, Iowa, joining M. Zion A. M. E. church, and transferred her membership to St. Paul's A. M. E. church after moving to Des Moines in 1899, and has been a faithful and active worker. She leaves to mourn her demise a husband, nine children, one grandchild, two sisters, Mrs. Ella Smith of Pierre, South Dakota, Mrs. Emma Holeman of Chicago, Ill., other close relatives and a host of friends.
NEGROES BARRED FROM SER
VICE WITH GUARDS,
Dr. A. J. Booker Had Enlisted in Medical Corps and Expected To Go To the Border.
Dr. Arthur J. Booker, Negro physician and surgeon, was among those excluded from service with the Iowa National guard by the orders which were received at Camp Dodge yesterday from Washington instructing the officers that Negroes were not to be accepted for service in the guard in any capacity. Dr. Booker had enlisted in the field hospital corps under Major Duhigg and had hoped to go to the border with the Iowa troops. He was keenly disappointed at hearing of the order excluding him. A number of Negro cooks who have formerly been accepted in the guard are also excluded under the order and will be sent to their homes.
CARD OF THANKS
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Woods and family wishes to thank their many friends for their kind assistance and beautiful floral offering during the bereavement of their son Chester.
For expressions of love and sympathy during the illness of Mr. Nichols we hereby extend our heartfelt thanks to friends and members of the Altar Guild and B. Y. P. U. of the Corinthian Baptist church.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Nichols.
DES MOINES MASONS HONOR ST. JOHN AND DR. GRIFITH.
As a fitting tribute of respect jointly in honor of the anniversary of the birth of St. John the Baptist and also of the last Sunday of the fourteen and a half years of the pastorate in Des Moines of Rev. Dr. T. L. Griffith, a member of Dovic lodge, No. 30, A. F. & A. M., as well as of H. C. Heggett chapter, No. 30, R. A. M., and Ocellet chapter, No. 30, O. E. S., more than a hundred members of the various branches of the Masonic fraternity turned out in a body at the Corinthian Baptist church to hear the
farewell address of Dr. Griffith last Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
It was the largest Masonic demonstration ever held in Des Moines and the members of the fraternity who were present were unanimous in the opinion that the sermon, which was based upon Amos VII, was fitting to the auspicious occasion from a Masonic as well as from a spiritual point of view.
Special music for the occasion was furnished by the Corinthian choir, Rev. J. H Reynolds, Malcolm and Anna Griffith.
Short addresses were delivered on the principles of the order by Atty. S. Joe Brown, grand custodian, and B. N. Hyde, the newly elected master of North Star lodge, No. 2.
C. C. Johnson, master of Doric lodge, No. 30, presided.
At the conclusion of the service an offering of $55.15 was lifted and presented to Dr. Griffith as an humble token of the appreciation of the fraternity for the life and character of this very worthy brother, who is leaving this community for a new and larger field of labor attopeka, Kan.
purchased a new home at 3532 N. Twenty-ninth street. This is one of the most modern and beautiful homes located in Omaha. C. Trent, a former Iowa man, is also employed in the fire department in this city, and the colored people have charge of f one whole fire department except the captain. We congratulate them. A. L. Anderson is doing well and he formerly lived in Iowa. Rev. W. T. Botts has charge of the St. John's Baptist church. They are building a new church and are worshipping in the basement of the new church. And we hope it will soon be finished. Mrs. N. P. Patton is running a hotel and restaurant at 1014 S. Eleventh street. She is doing a large business. Mme. South and Johnson are still in the hair dressing business and are expecting to enlarge and increase the business this year. Mr. D. G. Russell is still running a rooming house, barber shop and pool hall at Nineteenth and Cummings streets. He is a hustler and is doing well. He is a great help to this community. Mrs. L. B. Burton, a prominent family here, has been appointed deputy and abolished.
They have given their freedom ered into the same the Bethlehem haben a place to lay their with the thought of slavery for older years or more, you or draw a picture of the stress of circumcise now free men and wi in. Russia and the country of whom they way boasted of the virtue of their high Russia's barbarian this to be a fact, R slaves when they wi tract of land and sufficient to start the journey, and America black men and wom alone, with no p heads, and yet we the land of the free brave. A coward than this after our works as slaves worked as slaves king, and four thousand black men
EDITOR'S OBSERVATIONS.
Council Bluffs is one of the oldest cities on the Iowa side of the Missouri river located in what is known as the bluffs along the east bluffs of the Missouri river. It is a town of about 30,000, with about 500 colored people. The town has two colored churches, the Bishop, which is almost completed, and are worshipping in the basement. The A. M. E. is a new church just constructed a few years ago. Rev. Edwards, the pastor and the church is doing well, as is the Baptist Mr. Chas. Burke, who has run a rooming house and restaurant, has gone out of business and is employed in the railroad company. This place has no restaurant now and the colored people of this town are greatly in need of such business. Mrs. Hopkins has charge of the dining room at the Ogden hotel, but says that the business is rather quiet. Mrs. F. C. Walker has moved to Minneapolis. Mrs. J. F. Means, 2657 Second avenue, has a beautiful home, and is doing nicely. Mrs. M. Stewart has opened a first class dressing and manicure parlor at 623 W Broadway park. It is indeed a credit not to any race but to herself. we wish for her a large patronage. Her husband is employed in the Elks club and has a daughter who is in the high school. C. W. Lyons is still in the hotel. Mr. Hertington is still in the bank, at which place he has been for the last few years. Mr. C. H. Hall is one of the successful men here, and he owns a beautiful home at 2125 Sixth avenue, and keeps his parnd and lot well cared for, and it contains all kinds of fruit trees. He is employed at the Kimball hotel. Mrs. S. Davis owns a valuable home at t2004 Seventh avenue and keeps his place in a fine condition. W. H. Birdson is doing nicely at his home at 1710 Avenue D. Mrs. C. Rose is running a barber shop. The Twin City Masonic lodge is growing and doing well.
Across the river into Omaha. Here we find this large, busy city flourishing as heretofore. There are about 12,000 colored people located in this city, and many are doing well and holding good positions. Among them are T. L. Barnett, who is clerk in the city pound office and has been for many years. Another prominent man is J. G. Pegg, who is superintendent of the market and weight, and has been for the last twelve years. Mr. Pegg owns a farm in western Nebraska and is doing nicely. He is a prominent citizen and is a good man. He owns a beautiful bank at 4083 Patrick avenue. P. R. Warner is employed at the South Omaha bank. C. W. Dickinson is still employed by the First National bank, Omaha. Neb. John James is a former Buxton young man and is still clerk in the postoffice. Mr. W. H. Jackson, formerly of Buxton, is situated on the fire department and has
Younkers' for July
Attention is especially directed to our daily announcements in the newspapers, and to our windows, for particulars of special selling events scheduled for July.
Youmker Brothers
purchased a new home at 3532 N. Twenty-ninth street. This is one of the most modern and beautiful homes located in Omaha. C. C. Trent, a former Iowa man, is also employed in the fire department in this city, and the colored people have charge of one whole fire department except the captain. We congratulate them. A. L. Anderson is doing well and he formerly lived in Iowa. Rev. W. T. Botts has charge of the St. John's Baptist church. They are building a new church and are worshipping in the basement of the new church. And we hope it will soon be finished. Mrs. N. P. Patton is running a hotel and restaurant at 101 S. Eleventh street. She is doing a large business. Mme. South and Johnson are still in the hair dressing business and are expecting to enlarge and increase the business this year. Mr. D. G. Russell is still running a rooming house, barber shop and pool hall at Nineeth and Cummings streets. He is a hustler and is doing well. He is a great help to this community. Mrs. L. B. Burton, a prominent family here, has been appointed deputy and international organizer of the S. M. T., and will soon start out to organize some new lodges. Omaha has a new colored paper, called the Centimeter, juts began this month. We is published by Fred C. Williams. We wish him success in the journalistic field. Rev. Williams is still publishing the Monitor, a weekly, in magazine form, and is doing nicely. Young Mr. Lacour, formerly of this city, is business manager for him. Mr. Allen Jones, formerly of Clarinda, Iowa, has opened up an undertaking parlor in partnership with Mr. Chiles on North Twenty-fourth street. He is doing well and we wish for him success. There are two more understake establishments in this city. Dr. Edwards, formerly of Des Moines, is still practicing and saps he is doing nicely. He has added one more member to his family, a little girl about five months old. He says he is doing much in increasing the population of America. He has a nice home and his son Gerald is in high school and is quite a golf player. His daughter Anthone, is developing in intellectual lines nicely. He has a fine family. Geo. Moore, formerly of Des Moines, is still working in the Western Real Estate Co. He has purchased a new home and is getting along well. Mrs. W. W. Morton is still living here and she is formerly a Des Moines woman. L. H. Brown is in the city in the lunch business on Twenty-fourth and Erskine and is doing well. Luther was well known in our city and we wish for him success.
COLOR LINE DRAWN.
It is indeed a sad as well as a peculiar circumstance that at this time the color line should be drawn in the United States army. The colord people should be excluded from the regular service in the army, especially those who are now organizing to go to the front elsewhere, preventing one of our prominent citizens as well as the colored cooks from enlisting. While we try to be loyal and true patriots, yet there comes a time when we feel that we cannot say this is our country, the land of the free and the home of the brave. Yet we must not be traitors or disloyal, because in authority demand us that privilege. We do not think it is a consensus of opinion among the American people, and some day truth and justice will reign supreme. And the Negro race will be appreciated and his services will be accepted as any other American citizen. Wait, boys, there is a better day coming.
THE NEGRO AND PREPAREDNESS.
(Special to The Bystander.)
(Special to the Bystander).
Fifty years ago almost the million
Women. Without their liberty
and their suffrage, thanks to the
Emancipator, to the God who rules
both in heaven and earth, from this
evolution from darkness to light. "Twas
then the rights of men were fully
vindicated when African slavery was
abolished. These Negroes although given their freedom were almost ushered into the same plane as Jesus, the Botheleh habe, for they had not a place to lay their heads; burdened with the thought of the torture of slavery for almost three hundred years or more, you can well imagine or draw a picture within your minds the stress of circumstances that these now free men and women were placed in. Russia and the people of that country of whom this nation has always boasted of their superiority by virtue of their higher civilization, and Russia's barbarianess, knowing this to be a fact, Russia gave to her slaves when she turned them loose a tract of land and a sum of money sufficient to start them out upon life's journey, and America's three million black men and women, unlearned and alone, with no place to lay their heads, and yet we term this nation the land of the free and the hhme of the brave. A coward could do no less than this after our fathers and mothers worked as slaves and made cotton king, and four hundred and fifty thousand black men shouldering guns in the heat of the rebellion and as a matter of fact was the direct cause of the crisis of that might struggle at Vicksburg and Appomattox, this was our reward for service rendered from a country who boasts of their Jeffersonian doctrine.
Politically these free men finally wended their way into our halls of congress, both national and state, through the shrewdness of white men who were political gods at that time, taking advantage of the ignorance of the minds of our fathers' rights, right after the war. You can well imagine our progress from a political viewpoint, especially at a time that reconstruction was necessary. These Negroes, our fathers, then our representatives in the halls of fame, handled the English language from the dis and dat, do and de odder standpoint. The writer of this article is personally acquainted with a past senator of the state of Louisiana, whose learning could not be compared with one of our boys from a grammar school. Little wonder then that the Negro lot power and their prestige when the days of reconstruction became inevitable. Lost privileges are almost like golden moments, gone in the dark forever. The white people of this age and of this century can clearly see, through our trend toward social development and intellectual attainments that we have also learned to manage pecuniary concerns with frugality. And through all of this they seem to still close the door of the affairs of life against we ten million black men and women and men. They say, place no restraint on trade in order that it may not be stagnant, neither usurp the rights of men, and what is the most golden to them they deny us of.
My propaganda on preparedness, my idea of political betterment for the Negroes are that there should be established bureau in communities where there are at least fifty men and women and from that up an instructive lesson given by the one best fit for such, upon the political issues of the times and to hold open discussion upon the same, thereby we would be better able to arrive at some conclusion tending toward our political movement. This bureau to be national as well as state. Let us prepare for the invisible government. The writer endorses fireside talks in our homes upon political economics and ethical standards instead of so much worldly gossip and ordinary fricol. Negro organizations of every kind all over the United States should have meetings once a month to have a review of the current events, touching on racial questins in general, by keeping in touch with the music of the republic. We should see to it that our race should have at least three or more U. S. congressmen as well as senators to be elected by a majority of the Negroes. There should be at least one representative to every state to promote our causes there in order that they may not be eradicated. We should have what is known as the men and measure league to be strictly non-partisan, for I believe that the future hopes of the Negro politically in the United States lies in the fact that he does away with partisanism. Because we are now at the place when we must look to the ann, regardless of the party; I mean the mai who will bring or give to us results.
Reciprocity in a democratic government like ours should be dealt universal in its adaptations ant bestowals. Our grand notto should be in an age like this, Taxation without representation is tyranny.
Now, my brothers and sisters, let us hope to free ourselves from the yoke of this new bondage of separation, segregation and annihilation.
Through an ear stet warfare against these evils let us ojourn in one grand band of intellect at Negroes of this land to extend to our brothers a hand of on earth peace and good will to every man, for nothing can rivate our cause.
Horace Spencer,
Mason City, Iowa.
To the Public
To the Public
"I have been using Chamberlain's
Tablets for indigestion for the past
six months and it affords me pleasure
to say I have never used a remedy
that did me so much good."-Mrs. G.
E-Riley, Illan, N. W., Chamberlain's
Tablets are obtainable everywhere.
WATERLOO, IOWA.
Well, here we are again, after some three weeks' absence, to say that we are well and doing well.
Oh, yes, we never told you about Esther day. Well, Queen of Sheba chapter, No. 19, turned out in full dress and they certainly looked fine, and had a splendid program, and won many friends to their cause.
Rev. I. W. Bess and Mr. U. G. Smith attended the Sunday school convention at Ottumwa and reported a grand session.
Rev. I. W. Bess was in Fort Dodge last week, where he installed the officers of Jepha chapter, No. 21, and looked after some business for the new A. M. E. mission there.
A carload of men from New Orleans arrived in the city last week to work for the Illinois Central railroad,
John. C. Wells of Dubuque was the guest of Mrs. I. W. Bess over Sunday to attend the dedication of St. John's hall.
The wedding of Miss Eva M. Smith to Mr. Robert Mallory of Minnesota was solemnized last Thursday.
The daily papers report that Miss Betty Birkley and Mr. Flippings of Marshalltown were married Sunday.
Rev. N. R. Morgan of Albia was in town Sunday and Monday and attended the dedication of St. John's hall.
The social club of Myrtle Wreath court, No. 9, will give a musical and social July 18th.
Rev. Bess and the A. C. E. delegation will leave Tuesday night for Davenport to attend the A. C. E. convention.
Mrs. Bessie Clayton is moving this week to Wisconsin.
Mrs. John Brock was called to Chicago this week to attend the funeral of her brother, who died suddenly in the south.
A company of ladies, their husbands and friends took supper in ear Heights park last Friday and reported a lne time.
Last Sunday, the 25th, was the day set for the dedication of the new hall that was crested last winter by St John's lodge, No. 35. It was a beautiful day and a fine crowd was out to hear the program in the afternoon.
There was some delay in waiting for the out of town guests, but the program as rendered was well received.
The banquet was held Monday night in the dining room of Bess Chapel A. M. E. church, which was prettily decorated.
Mr. J. D. Hopkins made the address of the evening, responded to by Rev. I. W. Bess, after which the guests repaired to the hall, where delightful music was had. It was a time of history making in Waterloo bp the colored people and a monument has been erected that will serve the coming generation.
ROCK ISLAND ILL
Rev. R. C. Campbell and Miss Luretha Jackson, delegate of Wayman A. M. E. Sunday school, are attending the Sunday school convention which convened in Aurora, Ill.
ALBIA NEWS
Rev. Page of Ottumwa preached at the A. M. E. church on Sunday morning.
Those who attended services at the A. M. E. church from Hocking on Sunday were Mrs. Joe Robinson, Mrs. Burns, Miss Anna Robinson, Alberta Robinson and Viola Young, Mrs. Gathers and daughter.
Miss Sarah Gathers of Chicago have come to Albia to visit with her daughter, Mrs. Bessie Thomas, and son, Waverly Gathers, for an indefinite time.
Lawyer James Spears was in Albia the past week from Buxton.
"The Birth of a Nation" played three days at King's theater of this city to a very large crowd and will return again.
Mr. Luther Brown of Ottumwa was in Albia over Sunday.
Quite a number of people from Hiteman, Buxton and Hocking were in Albia the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Britton Thomas, Mrs. G. A. Davis, Misses Ada Davis and May F. Davis spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Bessie Grayson, North No. 3, Hocking.
A number of the soldiers passed through Albia this week The band played all Sunday morning and the streets were decorated like the Fourth of July in national colors.
Bowel Complaints in India
In a lecture at one of the Des Moines, Iowa, churches a missionary from India told of going into the interior of India, where he was taken sick, that he had a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy with him and believed that it saved his life. This remedy is used successfully in India both as a preventive and cure for cholera. You may know from this that it can be depended upon for the milder forms of bowel complaint that occur in this country. Obtainable everywhere.
When in Ft. Dodge go to Wright & Venable Cafe
225 Central Avenue
Quick Meals and
Prompt Service.
Ft. Dodge,
Iowa
FT. MADISON NOTES.
Misses Jennie Harper and Ruth
Mack returned Sunday morning from
Aurora, Ill, where they attended the
Pay
Boost
and read the
Bystander
Dont borrow or read your neighbors, help make this a great paper
Price Five Cents
Sunday school convention. They report an enjoyable time.
Miss Lizzie Ewing and Mrs. Melinda Kitrell returned Monday night from a visit in Waterloo and Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Mrs. Thomas Freeman and Mr. and Mrs. E. Summer motored to Fort Madison on Sunday in the Summer car. While in the city they were the guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harper.
Mr. Arthur Graves of Monmouth, Ill., was a Fort Madison visitor one day last week.
Mr. W. Hampton was a Burlington visitor Saturday.
The A. M. E. Sunday school will hold its annual picnic Thursday, July 6th.
CLARINDA, IOWA
Mr. L. W. Williams left Monday noon for Albia and Centerville for a few days.
Mrs. E. Grant of Keokuk is visiting at the home of Rev. D. W. Brown and wife.
The Ladies' Missionary circle met at the home of Mrs. Rane on Friday. Light refreshments were served.
Master Joe Howe royally entertained his friends to a birthday party on Monday at the home of his sister, Mrs. Robt. Franklin.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones of Kansas City have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Able.
Mr. Joe Jones departed for Des Moines Sunday as cook with the Third Iowa infantry band.
Mrs. E. B. Cook and granddaughter, Helen Williams, returned home Wednesday, after a two weeks' visit in Hiawatha and White Cloud, Kans., and St. Joe, Mo.
Mrs. Jane Jackson is reported some better at this writing.
Mrs. Henry Ferrior went to St. Joe to meet her little nephew from Kansas City, where he expects to make it his home.
Mrs. E. B. Cook entertained Mrs. Eliza Jones and Mrs. Martha Wright of Omaha to a 1 o'clock dinner Sunday.
Mr. Carl Looney, who is head chef at the Linderman, has been enjoying enjoying a week's vacation.
Mr. Robert Lane made a business trip to Shenandoah on Monday.
Mrs. Phaliab Pemberton visited friends over Sunday in Creston and Red Oak.
Mr. Henry Johnson of Hamburg visited couple of days as successor, Mrs. Queen.
Mr. Collins of Sandaloah, who is cook for the infant army of Shenandoah, and his son, Robert, who enlisted, were shaking hands with their colored friends Sunday before their departure for Des Moines.
Miss Griffin, who has been visiting at the home of her sister, Mrs. W. Walker, departed for her home Monday at Plattsburg, Mo.
Mrs. K. D. Black returned home last Saturday from Des Moines, where she went as delegate to the Sunday school convention.
If you have any news for The Bystander call Bell 184 R.
KIRKSVILLE, MO. ITEMS.
The sick in our city are convalescing.
Rev, T. R. Sayles, who has been assisting in a series of meetings in Kansas City, Mo., has returned home.
Miss Lucille Ferman was called to Dubuque, Iowa, Monday by the sudden death of her uncle, Mr. Henry Hayden.
Dr. Crossland of St. Joseph, Mo., made a professional trip to our city last week.
Mrs. Cora Sayles and little daughter, Willene, having spent an extended visit with friends and relatives in south Missouri, has returned home.
Dr. James H. Garnett of Western college, Macon, Mo., preached a most excellent sermon to the Masons and Heroines on Sunday. He preached to an appreciative audience and all are anxious to hear him again.
A very pleasant surprise was given to Mrs. Ball last Sunday, when Mrs. Ball returned from church Sunday morning to find her table all set and filled with the season's delicacies, and her children all waiting to greet her.
The event was her birthday and the surprise was so complete that she was too overcome for words to express herself. After dinner the afternoon was spent with conversation and singing, the favorite songs of Mrs. Ball. All departed wishing her many more happy birthdays.
Rev, C. B. Johnson and wife have returned to their home, after a month's vacation at Paris, Mo.
Mrs. J. D. Lightfoot was a supper guest of Miss L. V. Edmonds on Sunday.
Miss Ward of Fayette, Mo, has returned to her home, after an extended visit with her brothers, Mr. Harrison and La. Valle ards of this place.
CAPE MAY, N. J.
The G. G. of New Jersey held her fourth grand session at Cape May. All guests were beautifully entertained in the Hotels Richardson and Dale. The beautiful Dale hotel was a scene of unusual gayety for the reception in honor of Oziel grand chapter and Mrs. Alfonso Wilson of Omana. Mrs. Wilson enjoins the distinction of being one of the best informed Eastern Stars in our many jurisdictions. Mrs. L. R. Perry was elected for the fourth time as G. M. of New Jersey.
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
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Many of the students enrolled in the Houston schools have taken much interest in the industrial arts courses. There are three manual training teachers in the city, R. M. Catchings is the teacher of the night school, and two others divide their time among the ward schools. Mary J. Holden is at the head of the domestic science department. R. M. Catchings was graduated from the Prairie View State Normal and Industrial college and later he pursued a post-graduate course at Bradley Polytechnic at Peoria, Ill. Later he made an inspection of manual training and industrial art schools in St. Louis and Chicago.
"Manual training in our Houston schools," said Mr. Catchings, "is included in all the courses from the fourth grade through the high school, and every boy student passing through these grades is compelled to take the course, while the girls passing through the same grades are compelled to take the course, and domestic art in order that they may be taught the essentials of taking care of homes properly.
"Manual training gives the boys the fundamental ideas about handling the tools. We want to teach the boys the underlying principles of the trades. We endeavor to give them ideas about designs and try to raise their tastes. In doing this we bring to the boy's mind that there is a great advantage in skilled labor. All the manual training done according to mechanical drawing, and in this way the student is compelled to have a certain thing in
"Mary J. Holden, the teacher of domestic art and domestic science in the high school, is a graduate of Tuskegee institute. In these classes the girls are taught the essentials of cooking, launderery and proper care of the home.
"In a way our work will be slow but even in ten years the things we are teaching in the schools in Houston will be readily observed in the Negro race. Our people will be better citizens, more able to help themselves and they will make a greater impression on the white people as well as the colored race of Houston.
"This occasion is evidence that the leading men and women of Houston—and what is true here is becoming generally all over the country—believe that education makes the Negro a better citizen by making of him a more useful citizen. That is a logical and very evident fact. It is the ignorant, idle Negro who causes most of the disturbance. And what is true of the Negro is in education. Like all races, it is the least intelligent among any people that are hardest to control, and for this reason education everywhere is receiving a new impetus—whether it is education of the head or of the hands. One is impossible without the other, to a great extent. Do not just won't be idle. He will employ his time to some profitable end and therefore has no time for evil contemplations. On the other hand, ignorance breeds indolence, indolence induces idleness and idleness leads to crime.
"With the night school open in addition to the excellent public day schools there is no reason why, within a few years, every Negro-old and young—in the past, in the present or himself or herself a better and more useful man or woman
President James H. Dillard of the Slater and Jeanne funds, himself a southern man from the state of Louisiana, and up to the time of his election as president of the above funds, dean of Tulane university, and large numbers of others like him, are putting forth all their energies to create sentiment in the South that shall induce officials to give the Negro a larger share of public funds for educational purposes. Conditions are improving in this respect, and quite largely as a result of the church school and the educational mission, who went from the North into the South fifty years ago and have continued to this day, in spite of ostracism and misunderstanding, to do for the Negro that which the great missionary workers of the world are doing for the non-Christian races.—Northern Christian Advocate.
After a long investigation a French scientist has declared that tuberculosis can be transmitted by the perspiration of a person afflicted with the disease, the germs passing through the
bore. ____
A large part of the South's race problems would be solved if municipal authorities and social workers would provide suitable playgrounds for the Negro children, declared A. M. Trawick of Nashville, social service secretary of the International Y. M. C. A. Many Negroes, he said, who developed vicious habits were compelled, as children, to seek recreation in back alleys.
China has increased its telegraph lines to a total of about 30,000 miles, of which the government owns more than one-half.
The spokes of a new automobile model that is resilient without using pneumatic tires are telescoping tubes containing springs, the spokes being connected with lateral springs to provide rigidity.
In Germany there has been invented a balloon fabric having an inner lining of pulverized cork to overcome the danger of the sun's heat.
Half a million is a conservative as
timate of the number of malmed in
American industries every year.
by means of increasing intelligence. And let me say to you men and women who are having the special honors of graduates conferred upon you, that your responsibility increases with your advantages. In proportion as you have been lifted in the scale of human intelligence, by just so much have your responsibilities to the public increased, and you owe it to the people to advertise their opportunities offered by the night school and the great need for every man and woman who otherwise has not had the chance to do so, to take advantage of this opportunity to better prepare themselves for life's duties."
The Ven. Floyd Keeler in the Living Church of March 11, in an article entitled "The Church's Mission Among Afro-Americans," expresses surprise that Bishop Darset's plan of a separate racial district for Negroes in the South, presided over by a white bishop, has excited so little comment. The difficulty with this plan is fundamental and would suit no one, least of all the Negroes themselves. I repeat here what I have said to my own diocesan council, "that no white man can work effectively or satisfactorily among a race that he cannot visit socially." A large part of a bishop's influence and success comes from social contact with his people. As chief shepherd over the flock his relations to his people must necessarily be something more than official. The Negro is therefore perfectly right in asking for a bishop of his own race, one who can visit him socially and which bread at his household will represent him in the general councils of the church and at all industrial and educational gatherings of his people. This a white man could never do.
The plan of a separate racial missionary district with a Negro bishop in charge having full powers of jurisdiction evidently favors in the eyes of Mr. Keeler, who cites with approval the apostolic precedent that in the early church the gospel of the circumcision was committed to St. Peter, and the mission to the Gerrites to St. Paul, and that this involved a division of labor and authority in the same territory. But we would remind him that this was done long before the days of a settled diocesan episcopate and could hardly be cited as a precedent to guide us now. The hard, stubborn fact with which history confronts us is not since the days of diocesan bishops has the church ever been divided on racial lines. The idea that a bishop should ever be called to surrender part of his back or brown or some other color is an absolutely new property and entirely at variance with the whole teaching of the church for nearly two thousand years. To do so is to surrender the catholic ideal of one bishop "one father in God," over one undivided family in God. Make the family small, if you please, limit your bishop to a single city if necessary, but when you make him a bishop and give him jurisdiction he is the bishop of every living man, woman and child in his diocese, whether they acknowledge his authority or not—Bishop of South Carolina.
The carr is reputed to be the world's wealthiest man. His individual holdings are estimated at $35,000,000,000.
The Russian wheat yield is only ten bushels to the acre.
Cities of the second class cannot have separate schools for Negroes in Kansas. This was the ruling of the supreme court in an application of three Negroes of Galena for a writ of mandamus to compel the city to admit their children to the schools attended by white children. Last merger the city established a separate school for all Negro children, and provided it with as good teachers and equipment as was provided in the regular schools. The supreme court granted the writ of mandamus, holding that no discrimination could be made between children of whites and Negroes.
A short time ago a plea for unprejudiced co-operation by white people to assist the Negro's progress was made by Mrs. Booker T. Washington, widow of the late head of Tuskegee institute. She declared that one Negro in twenty in the South today owns his own home.
There is an average of about 350 births and 70 deaths a day in London.
The annual commencement exercises of Lincoln Institute, Jefferson City, Mo., "the Tuskegee of the North," closed with the graduation of 160 young Negro men and women, 94 of whom were graduated in the trades, and 60 in the pedagogical course.
Texas, which in 1850 stood twelfth in rank, is now the seventh state in the American union in point of wealth. It is first in point of size and fifth in population, and its railroads are of higher value than those of any other state.
Japan is planning to adopt an alphabet of 47 letters, including most of the Roman characters, some Russian and the rest original symbols.
So serious was a recent invasion of Uruguay by locusts that an agricultural and live stock census of that country was postponed for three months.
King George of England speaks seven engravers.
During his long stage career John Drew has played more than 100 parts.
DRIVING OFF THE RAIDERS
International Film Service
Kilindir and the adjacent in Salonki was the scene of a daring air raid by German aeroplanes recently. The raiders, consisting of a squadron of German aeroplanes, bombarded the camp, but were driven off by the British antiaircraft guns, one of which is shown trained on an enemy plane.
GERMAN ANILINE DYEMAKERS FORM GIGANTIC TRUST
Seven Concerns With an Aggregate Capitalization of $56, 500,000 Are United.
FIGHT TO REGAIN MARKETS
Apparently in Position to Stifle Swiss Dye Industry by Withholding Coal—Allies and Neutrais Are Developing New Industries.
Berne, Switzerland—With a capital of $56,500,000 and cash deposits in New York of $50,000,000, the seven leading German aniline dye factories have organized a gigantic trust with the object of regaining German supremacy in the world markets after the war. Their plans, long and carefully prepared, include gaining eventual control of the Swiss and Dutch chemical industries, which would give Germany 90 per cent of the total output of the world.
Three of the manufactories in the new trust have a capital each of $13,500,000, namely, the Baden Aniline and Soda works, the Eiberfeld Color works and the Hoechst Color works. The other four members are: Leoop Casselia, capital $7,500,000; the Aniline Manufacturing company, $5,000,000; Weilertler Meer, $2,000,000 and Kalle & Co., $1,500,000. The Baden works reported net profits last year of nearly $5,000,000 and the Hoechst company of just under $4,000,000. Each paid a dividend of 20 per cent, besides adding very large sums to their reserves.
German Apprehension.
The endeavors of the allies' governments, especially England, and of the chemical industries in neutral lands, particularly Switzerland, to capture German foreign markets have aroused considerable apprehension in Germany. It is feared that if the war lasts another year the foreign markets will have learned to get along without German products; the more so as since the beginning of the war Germany has brought out no new colors. All her highly organized and comprehensive experimental and research work in synthetic combinations, carried out by hundreds of chemists and experts, has stopped. The chemists are now employed in devising new gas bombs and other deadly weapons to be used against the enemy. Rather hand, the allies and neutrals have been developing their new industries, and have not only sought to discover new combinations but have also succeeded in modifying international fashions to meet their temporarily restricted capacity of production.
Keenly alive to these dangers, the German manufacturers have long been preparing the organization of the combine, which includes some new features. It has been arranged that full details of every specialty hitherto made only in individual factories shall be communicated to all the rest, and the same applies to each new discovery as soon as it is made. Then too every dyesulfet will be produced and at least to water. And naturally all the other trust details, such as selling prices at home and abroad and questions of distribution and profits and dividends, will be arranged too.
High Tariff Wall.
Protected by very high tariffs, German manufacturers will be able to charge such prices at home as will offset their losses in dumping goods abroad, by which they hope to stifle the new competition. That these measures will cause serious injury to the German textile trades is certain, but the textile manufacturers are not strong enough to stand up against the combine, which will have the power-
DRIVING OFF
Kilindir and the adjacent country air raid by German aeroplanes recently. of German aeroplanes, bombarded the British antiaircraft guns, one of which
PAYS AFTER HALF CENTURY
Man Sends Heir Money on a Debt 63
Years Ahead Creditor's
Fees
Fairmont, W. Va.-Payment of a bill due Jerry Hutchinson, who has been dead 38 years, has been received here from a man in Morgantown. The letter is written to M. L. Hutchinson, son of the late Jerry Hutchinson, who conducted a general store. Mrs. E. W. Arnett and C. F. Hutchin.
THE BYSTANDER
FORMER STAGE STAR
Mother and baby
Miss Izetta Jewell was a star in Poll's stock company for a number of years before her marriage to William G. Brown, late congressman from West Virginia. Baby Izetta Jewell Brown was born only a few days before the death of her father, and since that time Mrs. Brown has been spending most of her time in West Virginia. ful support of the Imperial government.
At present Germany's most serious competitor is the Swiss chemical industry, a very highly developed organization doing 30 per cent of the world's trade. Since the war this Swiss business has increased considerably; hence the German manufacturers feel the necessity of taking steps to gain control of this industry. In the meantime, however, they have been doing their best to cripple their Swiss rivals by preventing them from getting coal, for which Switzerland is entirely dependent upon Germany. Through a coal monopoly sales centres, the German competitors who are trying to make trouble for them in foreign markets. They are planning too to get control of the Dutch chemical industry, although this is much smaller than the Swiss. If they succeed in getting the Swiss alone they will control nineteenth of the whole chemical and dye trade of the world.
A $50,000,000 Fund Here.
A $50,000,000 fund here.
When the war broke out the German dye manufacturer of goods abroad, especially in America and China. These they have since sold at fantastically high prices and deposited the proceeds chiefly in New York banks. Well-informed Swiss bankers estimate that the total of these sales, which are now consolidated in the hands of the trust, amounts to $50,000,000. This immense capital will be available for buying the vast quantities of chemical raw materials which Germany must have immediately after the war.
Naturally the new trust is prepared to meet with considerable opposition, for, despite all the difficulties in communication, the Germans have contrived to keep remarkably well informed as to what is going on in other countries, to fund the financial and commercial market reports their leading papers are quite as full and prompt and accurate as in times of peace. Hence they are fully aware of the high tariff projects and all the other schemes which the allies and neutrals are proposing to offset the threatened dumping of German goods in their territories. In all branches of industry in Germany at the present time capitalists and manufacturers are busy planning
THE RAIDERS
by in Saloniki was the scene of a daring
y. The raiders, consisting of a squadron
the camp, but were driven off by the
bh is shown trained on an enemy plane.
son are also surviving children. The letter follows:
Dear Sir: I owe the heirs of the late Jerry Hutchinson $1.50. Please hand Clyde and your sister their share, 50 cents each."
All-Prevailing Truth
The truth has great power when it is free; the true endures; the false is ever changing and decays. Thus it is that the true always rises to the surface, and in the end prevails.—Renan.
new combinations, uniting powerful interests and commanding large financial resources. They reckon confidently on being able to produce goods at such low prices as will compel foreigners, even their present enemies, to buy from them. Only recently the Frankfurter Zeitung, the leading paper in Germany, declared: "We shall make such low prices as will defy competition, and everybody will be forced to buy from us just as before." The apprehension felt in Swiss business circles of another invasion of cheap German goods immediately after the war, and the consequent danger to Swiss commercial interests, seems to indicate that the German menace is not to be disregarded.
GUN CAN'T MISS AIM NOW
Italian Officer's Invention Determines Speed and Distance of Aircraft Automatically.
Rome. — An Italian noncommissioned officer of engineers has invented a special telemeter for anti-aircraft guns, whose aim is automatically rendered practically a detailed description of the wonderful device, which has been adopted in all the allied armies, cannot be given. It consists of a mirror attached to the gun in which the object fired at, aeroplane or airship, is reflected in such a way that the gun is enabled not only to determine automatically the distance between the gun and the target but to calculate the speed of the aircraft.
The mirror is graduated so that the distance and the speed of the target can be ascertained at a glance, and no time or ammunition is lost. Provided the enemy aircraft is within firing range, and the range of the anti-aircraft gun has been considerably increased of late, the chances of its being missed when the special telemeter is used are reduced to less than 1 per cent.
Three out of five seaplanes were brought down during a recent air raid at Ancona and about eight Austrian aeroplanes were hit and destroyed or captured a few weeks ago at the front.
IS SOME SHOT-PUTTER
C
In the massive form of H. B. Leveredge of California, the college athletic world has discovered a worthy successor to Larry Whitney of Dartmouth, and R. L. Beatty of Columbia, who formerly were the giants who heaved the weight considerably farther than their rivals. Leveredge came all the way out of the golden West to show our eastern champs a chance to win. He showed the 15,000 spectators in the Harvard stadium just how good he was. Leveredge is a born weight thrower and resembles a great deal the giant traffic cop, Pat McDonald. Leveredge appears good enough to within a year, break all records for hurling the 16-pound missile.
JURY DIDN'T USE TOBACCO
Indiana Court Belliff Believes He Has Most Remarkable Panel Ever Assembled.
Shelbyville, Ind.-George Tolen, bailiff of the Shelby court circuit, believes that during the last four days he has had one of the most remarkable juries of 12 men that was ever assembled. The men were selected as jurors in the case of Mrs. Maude R. Hann against the Merchants Heat and Light company of Indianapolis, which was sent here from Marion county on a change of venue. The jurors retired Tuesday evening to delibrate on a verdict. From the time they were sworn they had not smoked or chewed tobacco, and during their deliberations kept free from the weed, although out a number of hours. The fact that none of the 12 men used tobacco was first noticed by the custodian of the courtroom.
Find $570 in Bottles
West Chester, Pa.—Just before commencing the public sale of the effects of Carl McCauley in Londonderry township, those in charge began to look around the barn, where they found two bottles stored away on rafters close to the roof containing $570, of which sum $120 was in gold. Further search disclosed an old wallet in a cupboard which held $46 in notes. Carl McCauley was a bachelor.
An electric dental drill so small it can be carried in the pocket has been invented to permit work to be done in patients' homes.
Had an Unpleasant Sound. She—if mamma consents to our engagement, we needn't bother about what paps say.
He—I do hope the nonimportance of the male member of the family is not an ingrained idea with you.
Preparing for Summer.
"Why did you get such a tremendous refrigerator?"
"I wanted one that would hold a watermelon occasionally without putting everything else on the floor."
U. S. MAR
SOLDIERS OF
U. S. MAR
RECRUTT
Miss Payne in Front of Enlistment Station Established by Her in New York City.
Uncle Sam's first woman recruiting "officer" recently opened headquarters in New York. This "officer"—Miss Edna Payne, a pretty California girl not recognized officially as a representative of the United States government. She didn't obtain the job from Uncle Sam; she just created the job and appointed herself to fill it.
Miss Payne became imbued with the idea that she would like to assist in securing recruits for Uncle Sam's army and navy, so with her sister, Miss Lillian, who accompanied her to New York from California several months ago, she established an enlistment station. Clad in sailor's cap and middy, Miss Payne stationed herself in front of the station, distributed reading matter relative to the opportunities offered by service in the army and navy, and brought many recruits dally to the regular army and navy officers in chargg of the New York enlistment stations.
BIG NEW INDUSTRY GROWS
FROM CANNING MOVEMENT
Uncle Sam's Efforts Enable Women and Girls to Make Money and Stop Huge Waste on the Farms.
Uncle Sam and his aids in the department of agriculture have created a great new industry for the women and girls of the country. So far this industry has been developed most highly in the southern states, but it is expected that it will be extended throughout the remainder of the country.
Last year 50,000 girls in 15 southern states each made an average profit of $23.30 in this new industry, it is estimated.
The canning movement, initiated by the government several years ago, is responsible for the birth of this new industry. There has always been a prominent stake in the country because of the excess of fruit and vegetables for which a ready market could not be found. The women and girls are now being taught to put a stop to this waste by canning the surplus crops for home use or for sale during the ensuing year.
Canning clubs have been organized by government representatives for the purpose of encouraging this work, but where there is no club individual women and girls can obtain from Uclea Sam full instructions and recipes so that they can engage in this work without the aid of any organization.
BOOSTS COMMUNITY CENTERS
Commissioner of Education is Distributing Copies of Songs Designed for Schoolhouse Forums.
Five community center songs, especially designed for schoolhouse community forums, have been brought together for the use of the Grover Cleveland fan club of Washington, of the first mayor of Washington is honorary president, and copies have been obtained from the commissioner of education, department of the interior, Washington.
Two of the songs are entirely new, having just made their bow to the public at the Grover Cleveland'* forum. One is called "It's a Short Way to the Schoolhouse," and is sung to the air of "Tipperary;" the other, entitled "Neighborhood," is sung to the air of "Die Wacht am Rhein." The others are: "The Fellowship of Folks," a song of the mayor, sung to the air of "Dring to Me Only With Thine Eyes" or "Auld Lang Syne," "Heart and Hand," and "This Good Common Ground."
These songs all emphasize the significance of the schoolhouse as the common meeting place. All five songs were written by E. J. Ward, supervisal in community organization of the bureau of education. They are unusually well adapted to the communal singing that has become so popular a feature of the neighborhood meetings in the schoolhouse.
Little Pitcher.
Maiden Aunt—So you're studying physiology, Willie? Well, tell me, to what part of the animal kingdom do I belong?
Sweet Little Willie—Dunno. Pa says you're an old hen, and ma says you're an old cat.
To Kill Mosquitoes.
In the early morning mosquitoes nearly always go to the windows, so if you watch the windows and screens at that time you can make a complete killing—Farm and Fireline.
CHANCEDISCLOSES SOURCE OF POTASH
United States May Be Freed From Dependence Upon Foreign Supply.
Surprising Discovery Is Made While Efforts Are Being Made to Prevent Fumes From Damaging California Orange Groves.
Uncle Sam's chemical experts believe that by the merest chance, in an effort to abate a serious nuisance, which was menacing the orange groves of California, a discovery has been made which may result in giving the United States an adequate supply of potash for fertilizing purposes and thus free this country from its absolute dependence upon Germany for bread-needs. Commodity. While the government experts say it too early to make a sweeping prediction, they are optimistic and are conducting their investigations along these lines.
In the past the United States has paid tribute to Germany to the extent of $20,000,000 a year for potash, so necessary for enriching the soil, especially in the cotton-growing districts of the South. The European war, however, stopped these importations, and, necessity being the stern mother of invention, the federal chemists and others accelerated their efforts toward finding a potash supply in this country. The latest discoveries, which promise to free the United States from the dominance of Germany in regard to this valuable product, came about accidentally, as have many other important discoveries. A great cement mill in the orange-growing regions of California or Florida was dug directly into the air, the whirl carrying it on the orange groves, much to their detriment. When the owners protested, the cement mill men began buying in the nearest groves at $1,000 an acre, but finally had to give this up as being too expensive. Suits were filed and inquiries asked.
About this time the attention of the cement-mill owners was attracted to an invention of Dr. F. G. Cottress for the precipitation of dusts from smelters' fumes. Doctor Cottrell, who later became the chief metallurgist of the United States bureau of mines, worked out this process while a professor at the University of California several years ago. The cement people with the new invention, and the Cottrell process was installed. The surprising result was that the new process not only eliminated the dust fumes, but gave the cement people a product that contained a great amount of potash. The results are said to have been so satisfactory that it was thought for a while that the potash might prove to be the main product of some cement mills, with the manufacture of cement only a by-product. This has not exactly come about, but the company year, with potash at war-time prices, sold $100,000 worth, and it is said that the profit was $80,000.
The result of this has been that the cement companies generally are taking notice. Another company near Higerstown, Md., which from its location did not have to bother about the dust nuisance, is voluntarily putting in the Cottrell process in order to save potash, which it estimates to amount to four tons a day. Some cement-mill men declare that the present mills in this country, properly equipped, are capable to turning out 100,000 tons of potash yearly, which is about one-fourth of the amount imported from Germany in normal times. It is further declared that there will be an incentive to establish new mills located near deposits that are rich in potash, and that in the future no cem-mill will have a haphazord mill may be created in certain parts of the country for the purpose ofaking potash the main product and making the by-product. The belief is prevalent among those who are interested that, as a by-product in the manufacture of cement, potash can be made at such a price as to make it profitable in normal times at normal prices.
The stopping of the dust nuisance in California by the use of the Cottrell process has suggested another field of endear. Now chemists are talking of applying this process for the obtaining of potash from the gases of the blast furnaces in the manufacture of pig iron. Charles Catlett of Staunton, Va., a widely known metall and metallurgical expert, makes the statement that the byproduct that can be collected from the blast-furnace gases is in value to affect profoundly the question of the manufacture of iron in certain sections and from certain materials.
Alds Rural School Teachers
Uncle Sam is endeavoring to raise the standard in rural schools and to this end has arranged a reading course for teachers. Representatives of the government are also organizing the teachers into reading circles with the idea of enabling them to broaden the scope of their work.
The Limit.
Biggs—The Uppsons are very exclusive, I understand.
Biggs—Yes, indeed, they even have their doors and windows so their doors don't get out and associate with the flies of their neighbors.
Amenable.
"Would you let any man dictate to you about how you are going to vote?" "No, sir." replied his delegate. "But I'm not so stubborn as to refuse to take advice."
: ata!
i Aa aaa oa a p
= . ; 2,
PS 7 a yl ~®
Re ee
Your Flag and My Flag
By WILBUR D. NESBIT
se Fag and my Flag! And ch, how much it hols
Keurand and my land—secure within its folds!
Nees: nd my heart beat quicker at the sight;
Jt 8 Need aid antbtessed, red and blue-and white.
| ene flag the area igs, Fl for me and you—
Glorifies rie Fede ne et andi and blue!
BO Ra
Yout Flhg’sihemiy: Hae! Shad how tiles ies
In your| land-ands ys and “ane Esa -vatdowayh
Rosdre ai-beed re thd ges freer gear:
Si i and Saul white wood =far hese Stheam;
“y Blue Soe
he spl ia i
SA ae SS
i |}
You aN ake sa id ine
/ oS ESS ;
he/ drums beat as hearts beat and fitee=ahally” pipe!
fof Flag and my Flag—a blessing in the skwes—~
fur hope and my hope—It never hid a lie!
Py land and far land and half the world around,
Qld/Glory hears our glad salute and ripples to the sound!
HAD TO WAIT
FORTY DAYS
Long Time Before
England Got News
\, of the Battle of
Lexington
‘T SEEMS strange in these days
when nows of the battles in far
away Europe is cabled to America
‘within a few minutes atte they 00
cur“when flying machines equipped
with machine guns are fighting each
Other in the clouds—when advocates
of preparedness are arguing that the
ecean is no barrier to a forelgn foe
hheeause of the swiftness of thelr
steam crflsers—to ark ack to the
‘battle of Lexington, “April 19, 1775,
and try to realize the length of time it
required for the news of that confiict
to reach England.
There were no telegraph wires, n0
telephone, no dispatch boats or “spe-
tial correspondents” with each reg!
ment. A steam vessel had not then
been dreamed of. There were no
cables, no fying machines, no machine
runs.” Only sailing vessels, of small
size, were available to cross the ocean,
And’ as a consequence {t took « long,
long time for the shot to be “heard
round the world.”
Dependent on Salling Ships.
Journalism in America was then
fo ite ewaddling clothes. ‘The race of
the enterprising Journalist to outfoot
fleet-footed Time had not then begun.
‘There was not the intense rivalry of
today between metropolitan papers,
with thelr epecials and war extras—to
fay nothing of baseball extras. ‘There
Yeas, too, a simflar lack of activity on
the part of editors fn London.
‘The newspapers in Boston and oth-
er nearby towns at that time were
published weekly, usually on Monday.
News of sanguinary events, if they
ceurred during the week, was neces:
farily held. for publication until the
following Monday. Tt was not sur-
rising, therefore, that tho news of
‘the battles of Lexington and Concord
‘Was not printed in Boston until April
25—for the idea of issuing an “extra”
ta uch emergencies was not then Im
vorue,
In the Essex Gazette.
‘The Ensex Gazette, published at
Salem, had by far the best report of
the events of the day, with an almost
complete ist of the killed and wound-
ed. The news of this first encounter
between the provincials and his majes-
‘y's troops was many hours in reach-
ing the other colonies, although post.
WERE PRACTICAL IDEALISTS
Bignéra’ of the Declaration of Inde-
Pendence Were Statesmen
With a Vialon,
‘Thoso signers of the Declaration of
M0 years ago-were practical {deallets
They were statesmen with a vision.
‘The immortal document to which they
Attached thelr names was no mere
statement of provincial or even na-
tional purposes and principles. It was
eee a all humanity. It set forth
merely the aspirations of a na
tot the Meals of mankind, ‘Tekdog
their stand on “the laws of nature and
st nature's God,” they easorted as self-
¢vident that not only the people of the
thirteen United States of America, but
att mén, are. “endowed with the an-
alienable rights of life, liberty and the
persuit of bappiness.” And chief
‘the. purposes of that govern-
‘ertving ite aythority from the
1 of the spoverned ‘they hold to
the powers “most likely to effect
reatety xd happiness.”
E This) relteration of the purault of
Ba Dt ‘shows that it was mo mere
riders and expresses were started {m-
mediately for Hartford, New York,
Philadelphia and the South.
In two days nearly all the scattered
peoples of the young nation had been
Informed of the result, and the spirit
of the hour had inspired the raising
‘of troops.
To the king, the parliament and the
people of Great Britain the days had
been filled with anxiety. The main
question discmced was “How far
dare the colonists carry their resist:
ance?" “Will the provinclals stand
before the British regulars?” was also
a mooted question.
Didn't Anticipate War.
In the face of the steady inpouring
of grenadiers, dragoons and infantry
from the mother country, and the rap-
{aly Increasing fleet of vessels of war,
all heavily manned, it was believed
that the Americans would be cowed
and the whole attention of Great Brit-
ain was centered upon her rebelljpus
children across the seas.
Day succeeded day. March became
April, and April in turn was left be-
hind in the rush of time. May grew
old, with no word of decisive action
from. the colonists.
Not a single word from the conflict
of April 19, 1775, had reached Eng-
Jand until ‘the bright, clean page,
labeled “June,” was about to be
Drought into view and king and sub-
Jects were leaving London to escape
‘the summer heat.
Forty Daya to Reach England.
It was on May 29, 1775, when the
first sailing vessel to arrive from the
colontes after the skirmish at Lexing-
ton reached Bristol, England. Even
at this early day journalism had
shown {ts superiority over govern-
ment methods, for the vessel brought
‘copies of the Essex Gazette of April
26, containing the brief account of the
engagement.
Post haste, they were carried to
London, and on the following day the
nows was printed in the London
Chronicle. ‘Thus, 41 days after the
shot was fired, its reverberations
‘were heard in distant Britain.
With but a simple headiine—
“LONDON’—the Chronicle _ printed
the important news, prefacing it with
the statement:
“Tuosday, May 20, 1775.
“Yesterday morning some dispatches
arrived at Lord Dartmouth's office
from General Gage, at Boston, brought
by a ship arrived at Bistol, from that
Province. They were forwarded by @
mesnenger to his majesty at Kew.”
‘These dispatches contained no news
of the skirmish, being dated several
days before it occurred.
Now Somebody'l! Tell.
First Fratter—"Why are you so anx-
fous to kiss Tessie?” Second Fratter
wel, everyone eae In ou nt hag
and T don't want to appear snobbiel.”
Dartmouth Jacko'Lantern.
nnn
empty phrage in the minds of the
Steners, but a clear, definite Ideal. It
was the eighteenth century conception
Of tho twentieth contury slogan of
making a country or a city “a good
place to live in.” ‘They bad no
thought of simply exchanging’ one
fpecies of formal authority for an-
other, of setting up a governmental
Mmacainery for the collection of taxes
and the protection of the community.
Tholr vision went much further then
that—to the pursuit ef happiness. It
{o almost ax if those young republic:
fans of 140 yeara ago had foreseen the
modern use of government for the
amelioration of social conditions, the
extension of the function of public
‘action to do those things for the
people that can best be done by ‘united
effort.
Country ‘True to Ite ideale,
How trily the United states bas
pursued the ideal of human progress
set forth in the: Declaration of Inde.
pendence bas been shown since the
world. wee bees, ‘by our. 8
mand for the righte, of hes » bow |
: } ° i
Patriotic
a Tail
mflymn
! <a “OR, sathiere Sissi
: ) Thine tee“
ae
= y sehat le
teat
S /) sue fatere spake
yt, ore
a
— Of rended bolt and
Q os ae ett
The ones of earth our guests we cal
Be with us while the new world greets
The old world thronging all Ite streets,
Unveiling all the trlumphs won
By art or toll beneath the sun;
And unto common good ordain
This rivalship of hand and brain.
Thou who fast here in’ Concord turlee
The war fags of m gathered world,
Beneath our western skies full!
The Orlent’s mission of good wil,
And freighted with love's golden Meeoe,
Bend Suck Its argonauts of peace.
For art and labor met in truce,
For beauty made the bride of” use,
We thank thee: but withal we crave
The austere virtues strong to save,
The honor proof to place or gold,
The manhood never bought nor Hold
Oh make thou us, through centuries lone
In peace secure, in justice strong:
Around our gift of freedom draw
The safesuards of thy righteous law;
And cast in some diviner mold,
Let the new cycle shame the old.
STohn Greenleat Whiter.
Portrait of the Signers.
While the painting by ‘Trumbull
“The Declaration of Independence,”
shows forty-four actual life portraits,
it is to be regretted that more were
not secured, as the major portion were
still living when the material for the
capitel rotunda pictures was gath-
ered.
In the Smithsontan collection at
Washington there are fifty-three por-
traits of the signers, which will be
used in due time by the government
in a “Room of the Declaration Sign-
ers” In a new building already
planned.
corners of the earth, a great people
United In a common purpose. leading
the world toward a realization of the
brotherhood of mankind and pointing
out to all nations that man's real and
enduring alm should be the conquest
of himself and of the vast forces of
nature, to the end that all may get
the Dest out of life and ever advance
Jn the pureuit of happiness,
Much Still fo Be Done.
‘The thinking Amierican {e daily con-
fronted with the fact that greater
problems remain to be solved than
those which the founders faced. They
gave us independence. ‘The work of
establishing social and politica! sux
tice, for which independence was de-
creed, remains to be done.
God's Hand Upheld Patriots,
the. sirugle for indopentionce
teaches anything it-ta that mynte
and mighty unseen forces. co-operate,
cost eben pol pin Sechelt:
phased tere sumed meanest =
THE BYSTANDER is
|NEW WOODS TO BE USED
Uncle Sam Finds Materials From
Which Paper Can Be Made.
= | Experiments Made by Government »
‘porta, It ta Believed, Will Ald in
Stepping Rise In Prices,
Experiments made by Uncle Sam
ead to the conclusion that satisfactory
‘wood pulp can bo.made from a number
of heretofore little known woods. A
government publication just Issued
contains 70 samples of paper manufac
tured by different processes, chiefly
from woods heretofore practically un:
used tor this purpose,
It fs pointed out that:the spruce for-
ests of the country are threateend with
exhaustion and that ‘the.cost of spruce
ulpwood hae steadily increased. If
the price of news print paper fs to be
Kept at a reasonable figuro, say the ex-
perts, more efficient methods of con-
verting spruce into pulp must be de-
veloped or cheaper wood substituted
for it.
‘The bulletin goes on to way that tho
method of manufacturing ground wood
pulp has changed very little since its
Introduction into this country in 1867
It was with (he {dea of developing new
methods and improving the old that
testa were undertaken at the forest
service laboratories at Wausau and
Madison, Wis, As @ result, the rela-
tion of the different steps in the manu:
faciuring process to each other has
deen definitely established and the
merits of each troatment determined.
‘The paper made from new woods «as
given a practical tryout by two large
newspapers with satistactory results.
‘The tests showed that eleven new
woods give promise of being suitable
for the production of news print paper.
while a number of others will produce
manila paper and boxboards. Most of
‘these woods are confined to the West,
while the ground-wood industry now ob-
taina the bulk of its raw material from
the East. It {8 thought that pulp-
making plants must eventually move
to points where they can obtain a plen-
tiful supply of wood and an abundance
of cheap water power, two prime requi-
sites in tho business.
‘The experts say that because the n-
tional forests contain immense quanti-
ties of the suitable woods and abun-
dant opportunities for power develop-
ment, they will undoubtedly play an
Important part in the future of the
wood pulp Industry.
FLOWERS IN GREAT VARIETY
Natural Gardens of Mount Ranier Na
tional Park Surpass Those of Any
Other Alpine Region in World,
‘That the natural flower gardens of
Mount Ranier National park surpass
in beauty of color, number of spectes
and luxurlance of growth those in any
other alpine region of the world is a
statement mado by J. B. Flett in a
pamphlet entitled “Features of the
Flora of Mount Ranier National Park,”
recently issued by the department of
the interlor,
‘Among the plants illustrated and
discussed are the Indian pipe or ghost
plant, which la nowhere more at home
than in the woods of Washington; the
barber's pole, a beautiful red-and-white
striped plant confined to the Pacific
coast; the Canada dogwood, which 1s
Known fn the East as the berry bunch;
the anemone, which forms beautiful
‘spots here and there; the white rhodo-
dendron, whose creamy white flowers
fare conspicuous in the woods; the twin
flowor, a dainty and graceful training
vine; the squaw grass, used by the In-
Alans in basket making; the avalanche
Mly, which thrusts {ts leaves and flow-
‘era through the snow; the valerian,
‘which grows in great beds of brilliant
color; the mountain phlox, arrayed in
large masses of lavender flowers, and
the heather, with tts bell-shaped droop-
ing flowers.
SUBMARINE SCHOOL OPENED
Great Increase In Fleet of Undersea
Boats Makes It Necessary to Have
New Training Institution.
Beeause of the great increase that is
being made in the number of subma-
rines in the Pnited States navy, Uncle
Sam has established a new school for
navy officers, In this school, which is
located at New London, Conn,, off
cers will be given instruction in the
theoretical and practical working of
submarines,
‘There were only 18 submarines in
active service in the United States
navy in 1913 and assigned to these
‘boats there were only 19 officers, 18 of
whom were ensigns, who had been
out of the naval academy less than
three years.
It is planned that officers, when they
graduate from the submarine school,
shall be appointed to subordinate post-
tions on board boats and be placed in
command only after they have been
trained and have proved their aptitude
for submarine work In subordinate po-
sitions. It is bolleved that this ar
rangement will assure the best han-
ling of the submarine engines and bat-
terles now existing and perhaps afd
in the development of the machinery
which s far from perfect.
BEST FOOD FOR THE CHILD
Unele Sam Issues Bulletin Showing
Mothers Proper Diet and Way to
‘Prepare Dishes Suggested.
‘Uncle Sam has done much for the
farmers, the business men and other
Cleawes of citizens and ho is now pay
fng considerable attention to the chit
dren of the country. Hoe is now telling
the mothers what they should feed
thetr children’ after they avo out
grown the baby diet.
‘A bulletin on this subject, which has
just been issued, avoids everything in
the way of scientific terms but tells
plainly what should be. ‘nated a
chfid’s meals for’ each ¢ rch tas
ible Tg let sen Ci
ue ie chiléres Hee coating
recipes for making the] dishion ove
TIMBER WASTE GREAT
Amounts to 36,000,000 Cords
Annually It Is Estimated.
Refure of Sawmills Each Year Would
Make Block of Wood Quarter of
Mile on Bach Edge.
Uncle Sam's atatisticians have com-
led some Intrenting fgtree regard
ing the extent of the timber waste that
venus fom the operation of te oe
falls ofthe United Staten
There are more than” 48000 sn
nulls tn the country. and thelr stp
At waste tte for of sander. sha
tien sate ant sage wool sess
eattanted ns 36207000 corde per peat
‘hse cua! to over four and oneal
billon cable feet of waste wiles
the eapacty fs bin onsite Se
wits bes covering a abuso ft, Or
Soastléring eat ond to conto 3
cuble feet‘of eli wood wit all th
cracks end air spec taken oun thee
Soro 000 corde would make a bioek ef
wood more Chan'e quarter of 8 tl
Bore thas
Yerhape ouehait of this socalled
waste pratct aot eely oponb
Siac aman cal mrare
Tiel under the botlere uc of th
remaining 1800000 corde not cay
cto bt usta survene tot ts nett
Sve 6 seers ef ooeaventones
ft annge, sod owt the mil tne
Saar
Sarr wate fe dapoted of fn var
oun ways. "outs goss to. the ioc
fuel marhotatome fo pup mls orto
trond dition plants, Shavings and
Tog eutogs, ao wall as eters
taste ao semetines uscd ofl ow
place i the yard However, to moe
Conon metiod et getting rd of waste
fo by burning elthes Ina Aeeptt having
fe open tre hich sometinoy ta. 6
Protecting wall on the sidé toward the
al or ir '6 Vora foclooed ‘ou,
fides tnd. baving.'paricarrening
feteen at the fop and « fre gros nant
the baton
A clvnd Heroor snd contorer cos
about $12,000 for a mill of a hundred
Chowrnnd fet daily capac. Forty
por cont ofthe larger mln: etttng
More than 82000 bourd foetal, are
Sitpned fan cece bersnta Pony
Bo ge cnt lave tropa The te
minder Save heliber end dpote of
iigereas sep elie vee
ita eolimoted that tora il ot 10-
oo0 fet caacty the cottof conveying
the waste frm the machine whore tt
ta made and destroying Hin n dosed
burner 8 42 cents per cord or $10.05
or irr, Besers suscn bree an
Perens, lthoueh n'a fom ‘cases
cates orb so or dacutier foe a
numberof ethers the burme furnishes
Rot toed water forthe Doles
No well managed mill woald produce
waste iti could bo. avlded. Thi,
Rowever, is sot posta, s0 the nest
beat tg eto seek ou some method
or lization af the wasto sot wil
pey for ile dlepstion. The fore
Ssrrce tn wording ‘on his problem,
but has not yet found a satisfactory
tied
DID YOU HAVE YOUR FIVE?
That Many Boots and Shots Manufac-
tured for Every Inhabitant of
United States in 1914,
‘Two and a half pairs of shoes wore
manufactured in the United States tn
1914 for every inhabitant of the coun
try, according to Uncle Sam's sta-
tistics, as contained in a report of tho
bureau of the census.
‘Tho total output of boots and shoes
tn 1914 amounted to 252,616,603 pairs.
Of this total, men used the greatest
proportion, getting 38.8 per cent of the
entire output. Women’s -boots and
shoes came second with 82 per cent
of the ‘total. Misses’ and children’s
boots and shoes represented 19.1 per
cent of the entire output while boys’
and youths’ footwear was only 9.1 per
cent of the total.
‘Cengus returns showed that 1,355 os-
tablishments were engaged in the
manufacture of footwear, exclusive of
rubber, In 1914 and the total value of
boots, shoes and slippers. manufac
tured was $501,707,937, an Increase of
13.3 per cent over 1909,
$2,713,782 IN “PIN MONEY”
Factories in United States Report Big
Output—Few Hand Sewing Needles
Are Now Placed on Market.
American women spent $2,713,782 In
vpin money” In 1914, At least that was
the value of the output of ping of all
varieties. from factories engaged In
thelr production in the United States,
according to Uncle Sam's statisticlans,
Common oF toilet pins formed the prin-
cipal varlety, the production of which
was valued at $1,248,757.
‘Phe total output of pins, needles and
hooks and eyes for the year was val-
ued at $8,952,097, an Increase of 25.9
per cent in five years,
‘The production of needles in the
United States now consists almost en:
tirely of knitting machine and sewing
machine needles. Of 168,644,000 needien
manufactured in 1914, 94,099,000, or
65.8 per cent, were knitting machine
needles and "74,545,000, or 44.2. pot
cent, were sewing machine needles
Only 90,000 hand-sewing needles were
manufactured in 1914,
UUTPUT OF PAPER IS LARGE
Production In United States In 1914
Valued at $294,355,875, Increase
of 25 Per Cent.
‘The United States produced $294,
356,875 worth of paper in 1914, accord-
ing to statistics of the census bureau,
which have just been made public
This represented an increase of 26.1
per cent in a period of five years. The
production of news print paper alone,
in 1914, amounted to 1,813,284 tons, val-
ued at sonsinrr4. ‘There were manu.
tactared in the same your 624,079 tone
Doerboraritigr ply iret
increase of $4.5 bet cent 18 quantity,
over the production in 1908, > |
‘The United States to 1914 produced
What the
Wind Did
a
ROY soa PEASE.
ee eee ee
Plain David Brown was used to plain
aud homely things. He was repressed
‘and homely -himeelt, except when his
great soul spoke forth. ‘There were
‘Occasions where, In his lectures at
the town college where ho was a pro-
fessor of metaphysics, the plain simple
face was transformed undor the influ:
ence of eloquence and enthusiasm.
It was a windy day—in fect, taking
his customary atroll and forced to hold
on his broad brimmed hat, David cast
his weather-wise eyes across the sky
and discorned hurricane conditions.
"TN get back to the college,” de-
elded David, but Just then he noticed
that the Dale placo, a cottage that had
been for some time without a tenant,
showed signs of life and activity. He
had heard that a widow with two
email children, a Mra, Briggs, had pur-
chased the place.
“That must be Mrs, Briggs now,”
ruminated the professor, who took note
of everything going on usually.
‘She was hanging up her washing and
it was a big one, She was young-look-
ing, handsome and alert as she moved
among the fluttering garments,
“Ob, dear mo!" challenged the pro-
fessor as he turned to regain shelter.
‘There was a roar, a ripping, tearing
sound, Down to earth swooped a
mighty wind. The lady grasped at a
string of clothes torn loose at both
ends. Then, holding the grouped mass
in her arms, petrified she saw the sec-
ond line of clothes wrenched from
place and go sailing aloft and then
mako a dive.
‘The tangled rope caught the pro-
fesror about the shoulders, just escap-
ing a plungo into the mud and mire of
the street. In fact, caught In a vorter,
they wound round and round him.
“Extraordinary!” he uttered.
“Ob, you grand man!” cried the flur-
ried woman, hastening to the spot.
“You've just saved the clothes from
pes Pa
s es
being utterly ruined. That's it—you
hold them tight until f remove, them,
one by one.”
| “I declare!” muttered the professor,
and not displeased. Never had a bonny
‘female face been so close to his. Thelr
Hnands touched at times and it gavo
him a tingle and a thrill.
Finally the lady had the clothes in
her arms, tightly hold, Her animated
face regarded him over the top of the
white fluttering barrier,
“are thoy all safo?” he asked in an
embarrassed, hesitating way.
“All but one sheet,” was the reply.
“1 savy that go over the tops of those
trees yonder toward the woods.”
"L will look for it," began tho pro-
fessor.
“No, no," objected the Indy. “It was
old. Tt may have been caught way up
in some branches. It has. probably
been riddied by this time.”
But, consciously flustered by the
bright, smiling eyes of the woman, the
professor fammed his hat down over
his head and started on his seltap-
pointed quest.
He kept looking aloft as he wont
down the road, but there was no sign
of the missing sheet. Before ho real
{zed ft he was in the woods. It began
to rain, but the professor was a per-
severing man.
aha! T've found tt.”
He had come to a fringe of bushes
beyond which lay a mucky’ stretch.
‘Twenty feot out, caught on a clump of
reeds and trailing in the muddy slime,
‘was a sheet—the sheet, of course!
‘The professor had low shoes. He
thought of the lady in whose bohait ho
was laboring and became reckless, ex-
perlencing a keen senso of chivalric
devotion. Ho waded and sank in the
Doggy soll, but he got the sheet. It
‘was not torn, but the mud had stained
#2 and all he could do was to wad tt
‘up in a sort of disreputable roll.
""L-won't take it back to Mrs, Briges
40 thia condition,” he decided, “There's
the town laundry. I'l have it done up
nicely and send it—er, no, I'll take it
back myself. It may entertain her to
know how far the wind carried it"
Several people stared broadly at the
wet, muddy and disordered professor.
He reached the laundry. The sheet
would be all ready for him that eve-
ing, he was informed.
It-was a fow minutes after eight that
renlie when the profomor reseed
Ben er ie th oat Ba
bgt of ta winnonie 160Y.
Bie ceed ad Be eee “i as
ee ae a Oe ue tle!
A beetle-browed individual occupled
the apartinent, He had Just pried opem
an escritoire and had taken thence @
amall lacquered and tvoried box. He
tucked ft under bis arm, picked Up
from the table a big revolver and start
@d to Ieave the house by the side door:
“A burglar!” gasped the professor:
“and 1am unarmed! He 1s coming:
‘Ah! 9 thought!”
Quick as lightning the professor tore-
open tho package containing the sheet:
He grabbed up from the ground a pleoe-
of atick. He enfolded himself in ther
ample folds of the sheet, Holding the-
fragment of wood, against the light
contrast of the shoet resembling the:
barrel of a pistol, os the burglar
opened the door he extended his handy
“Drop everything, or your doom ta:
sealed!" he voiced in a deep, sepuk
chral tone.
“Ghosts!” yolled the burglar in. a
wild scream, dropped both pistol and
box. and took to hie heels. The:pro
fessor rushed forward and: secured:
both. Then, not knowing why. het
pulled the trigger.
Bang, bang, bans-—bang—bang, bang.
bang!
The side door of the noxt houses
opencd. ‘Its owner, a brawny. fellows.
alarmed by the pistol shots, stood peer
ing all about. Following him was his:
wife and Mrs. Briggs and her twa-
children.
“There's something white moving~
about the house!” chattored the man's
wife,
“Hey! what's all this?” challenged
her husband, advancing.
“Your sheet,” spoke the excited prov:
fessor, removing it from his shoulders.
“Your box,” he added, tendering the:
object indicated. ‘
“My Jewels, my bonds, all safe, but;~
oh, how careless 1 was to leavo them:
almost open to anybody!" erled Mra!
Briggs. “But what does it all meant”
Come in, come in, all of you!" andt
sho actually pulled the blushing pro-
fessor by the arm. Her bright eyes"
viewed him approvingly as he stumbled.
through his story.
“Oh, what is a lonely woman with
out a strong, brave man to protect,
her?” uttered Mrs. Briggs, and then
flushed peony red at the bold intima-
tion, and the professor experlenced
new thrills, \
‘What came of it all? What coulg—
and did! Widowllke, Mrs. Lara
Briggs read the innocent, transpare
mind of the professor clearly, an
was glad that she hind Interested him.
‘Ten years later it became a regular
event stormy evenings, to have the
two children nestle up to thelr adopt
ed father and beg of him to tell them
the sheet story.
‘Then Laura, his wite, would go to
the clothes:press and bring out the:
cherished sheet. Then the professor
would dramatically don the sheet, and
take up from the mantel the captured.
weapon, and begin his waird story.
‘And atter that he would say, with a
guizzlcal glance at bis happy wite, “N
bad to atay here ever since for fear
the bi/lglar might come back agatn!”
OPPOSES. ONE aguiaeer eM
Weiter Tella. of Danger in Allow.
ing. Nobody to: Work but
ay
Kindly disposed persons wee are in-
tereated in the provention of eternal
CGnmomonees shoul take note of tho
fact that our moet prize Inttuion,
the family, bas gone far enough fn to
explotatin. of fathers caring. alle
Wi. Only within the last bat century
for eo hae We been the pritce for one
one member of the ‘amily to grab
‘cuough of tho word's gots to auppore
ail tee othore in ilenet and soc
Bilary. it basn’t been long since
mother and. the bors resin {ook
hand tn. getting, and oceatosally
tron the gifs helped out a ite
‘tention fo also called 0 th fact
tat te oneman system of eupport is
only am experiment I r subject to
change” without notice, and. without
Suerter. "Honest, sinpiemindet tok,
find all other, afe warned that there
trill dovbtlonn "bo a ito weenibg end
Greening. of teeth wheu the break
Somoos "If we don't take cro there
ay Be conelderably are than a tl,
dreams may have. to be fvartol (a
faye 0 writer In Judge
ome of the more esetable friends
ot man say that iis igh tiue that
ur sone and daughters te provided
‘with something other than advantages,
jand that they be taught to expect
Something beslden allowances and
patrimontes, Alarmista re foresee
Ine all orte of dre cndttns—e raco
Of pineleas depentens ring (0 co
feet tho living that some’ feo! has
aid tho. world owes com 20 being
tho. Least of such coins, AF
though fe will not be ae bad 9 Cha,
wo may with propriy sara mol
tet preperation; hy making tafe
Sny for parents to provide thelr chk
roo with nothing bt advantages. Wer
tay thu in sowe teanure alevate
tony thoe. 1 some meet
Garden Statuary.
‘The day when we came unespected
ly on stark and ataring iron deer of no
particular artistic value In our own
fand our neighboru’ gartens ts, for
tuuately, almost passed. Rut garden:
| statuary {6 not amiss if it ke of the
Meht sort, A charming fountain In
one of the amall parks of.New York
city fa of suat the sort that a bit of
garden statuary anould do. Its Just
At the edge of one of the park pathn-
and yet it possesses an: unexpected,
fairyitke charm. A child faun-crouchess
comfortably under a bowlder and over?
the edge of the bowldor appears ‘thor
friendly face of a sprawling bear:cub;
clinging flat with all foyra, tote:
rock's surface and looking down on:
‘this strange little playfellow: There:
fs true beauty im the modeling-ofthis=
fountain, and it bas, moreovers justo
the sentiment ang feeling to: makIt
sultable to the outof doors:
‘ure Thing:
“Mopey doean’t bring happiness.”
sikeybp not. “Bue ft will help you
t x soln. aftar it.”
sft cx pak
Sie ee Bare no use for the
dt
ac Mecca et tm vain for
FIREWORKS ALL READY
That usual supremacy which we always held is dominant again here this year.
We advise buying early because you can select better while the stock is always fresh and varied— while as usual our prices are lowest.
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SKYROCKETS
We always have a big lot
of this piece and you will
be able to get any quan-
tity you want.
4-lb. Rocket, each...65c
3-lb. Rocket, each...50c
2-lb. Rocket, each...25c
1-lb. Rocket, each...15c
8-oz. Rocket, each...10c
6-oz. Rocket, 2 for...10c
4-oz. Rocket, per doz.60c
3- rocket, 3 for...10c
1-oz. Rocket, 4 for...5c
ROMAN
CANDLES
These are the favorite
night piece and this store
can furnish you any size
order.
4 ball, 4 for.....5c
6 ball, per doz.....30c
8 ball, per doz.....40c
10 ball, per doz.....60c
12 ball, per doz.....75c
15 ball, each.....10c
20 ball, each.....15c
25 ball, each.....20c
30 ball, each.....25c
MARKLERS
supply for the town. Enough to
want.
ung America, doz. in a box...5¢
ties, per doz...10¢
r doz...25¢
each...5¢
h...10¢
Y GOODS
y goods including many noise
ems in the lot and boys can have
MINES
SPARKLERS
We have this year the supply for the town. Enough to give everybody all they want.
8-inch Standard size Young America, doz. in a box... 5¢
10-inch American Beauties, per doz... 10¢
12-inch Jumbo Torch, per doz... 25¢
21-inch Jumbo Torch, each... 5¢
26-inch Giant Torch, each... 10¢
PENNY GOODS
Big assortment penny goods including many noise makers. Hundreds of items in the lot and boys can have a big time with them.
No. 1, each ..... 5¢
No. 3, each ..... 10¢
No. 4, each ..... 15¢
No. 6, each ..... 40¢
No. 8, each ..... 90¢
No. 9, each ..... 1.25
ER POTS
and Burst, each.....5¢
and Burst, 3 for.....10¢
and Burst, 2 for.....15¢
VERTICAL WHEELS
Changing Colors
12 inch, each.....50¢
10 inch, each.....35¢
8 inch, each.....20¢
6 inch, each.....15¢
llaneous
1¢
10¢
5¢
5¢
5¢
5¢
5¢
5¢
1¢
a dozen.....5¢
FLAGS
10-inch. Fountain Spray and Burst, each
6-inch. Fountain Spray and Burst, 3 for
4-inch. Fountain Spray and Burst, 2 for.
Miscellaneous
Colored Star Sticks.
Snake Nests, per doz.
Colored Torch
Trick Match Box
Shooting Match Box
No. 3 Son-of-a-Gun, each
No. 1 Son-of-a-Gun, 3 for
Erupting Volcano, each
Cricket, (Noise Maker) each
Serpents, each
There's one thing should be done. Every home in the country should show its patriotism and every one should own a good, serviceable flag. We have them from the smallest size to the largest and the regulation size may be had on short order. Why not present a good silk flag to each regiment before they go.
KINS
S. CO.
LOCUST ST.
MOINES
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FIRE CRACKERS
40-82 per pack.....5c
40-83 per pack.....5c
40-84 per pack.....5c
40-80 pkg.....10c
100-24 j 2 pkgs. for 25c
SALUTES
Big Chief, 5 in., 3 for.
Gold Dragon, 5 in., 5
for.
5c
2 in. salutes, 15 for.
BENGOLAS
½-lb. each ..... 15c
½-lb. each ..... 10c
TOURBILLIONS
No. 4, each ..... 65c
No. 1, each ..... 25c
No. 1, each ..... 10c
LARGE TORPE-
DOES
The big Jap Torpedoes,
per box ..... 5c
Larger size Jap Torpedoes,
per box ..... 10c
SPARK
We have its year the supp
give everybody all they want.
8-inch Standard size Young
10-inch American Beauties,
12-inch Jumbo Torch, per doz
21-inch Jumbo Torch, each.
36-inch Giant Torch, each...
PENNY
Big assortment penny go
makers. Hundreds of items
a big time with them.
BALLOONS
No. 10, each ..... 25¢
No. 10, each ..... 20¢
No. 6, each ..... 10¢
No. 6, each ..... 10¢
Assorted Animals.
FLOWER
10-inch, Fountain Spray and B
6-inch, Fountain Spray and B
4-inch, Fountain Spray and B
TRIANGLES
Varied Fire Colors
1 lb., each ... 30¢
¼ lb., each ... 25¢
¼ lb., each ... 15¢
3 oz., 2 for ... 25¢
1 oz., each ... 5¢
Miscella
Colored Star Sticks...
Snake Nests, per doz...
Colored Torch...
Trick-Match Box...
Shooting Match Box...
No. 3 Son-of-a-Gun, each...
No. 1 Son-of-a-Gun, 3 for...
Erupting Volcano, each...
Criket, (Noise Maker) each...
Serpents, each...
PUNK—Package of a do
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HOPK
BROS
618-620 LO
DES MO
MINES
Have Smooth Straight Hair
BEFORE AFTER
Reltas Hair Straightener
will make YOUR hair smooth and straight. It's absolutely guaranteed to make YOUR hair thicker, more YOUR hair rest, pretty and soft-looking. No more bother with obstinate "hinky" that won't behave.
People will enjoy YOUR hair if you get RELTAS HAIR STRAIGHTENER. It is pure and guaranteed. On record of only one well-written jar, it gives you a little number of other important beauty secrets which you can't learn a bout in any other way. Send So NOW. Then you, too, will have nice straight hair.
Sattler Chemical Co., Dept. A. 153 F. 28th Street, NEW YORK CITY.
Pure Cream
Good Coffee
Country Butter
Choice Meats
HARRISON'S LUNCH
"QUICK SERVICE"
Special Bill of Fare. Open All Night
3515 State Street, Chicago
There is not a finer promise in the world than, "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." Many people have the unhappy faculty of mistrusting information which comes in a more or less authoritative way, thinking that any statistics which are not favorable are colored by prejudice. The fact remains just the same that statistics are often valuable and granting that they might be colored, if we heed them we
will be better off.
It is a fact which is borne out by local experience that Negroes do die rapidly and all to quickly from pneumonia and tuberculosis. It is also a fact that is borne out by universal experience that tuberculosis is the most easily cured disease in the world if properly and promptly handled. The fact that some people die is no evidence of the difficulty of the proposition. It also is a notorious fact that Negroes are among the most promiscuous medicine takers in the world. They are gullible and believe anything that is said of medicine, paying too little attention to other factors than merely swallowing things. Too often do they follow the misguided that there is a remedy for every disease and seek for the elixir of life even though they dit in the search.
Pains are not necessarily a reliable index of a condition, consequently the taking of such and such thing because some one else had the same supposed illness is frequently a disastrous procedure.
No medicine ought be given without a definite indication. Definite indications can be had only by careful and understanding examination. Anyone can pretend to examine a person, but it is the proper interpretation of the findings which counts.
The sooner we awaken to the fact that we are neither discriminated against nor favored in matters of health, and that we are to be more careful in matters of hygiene the better off we will be.
We need to shake off some antiquated ideas of cures. Men wh presume the knowledge and skill to direct a soul to heaven will tell people to take dog oil for tuberculosis. The idea of the neighbor is pitted against the doctor's opinion and too often there is a faith in some intervening force which might be called sublime if it were not so pathetic and founded upon colloidal ignorance. If every Negro felt that he was singled out as a favorable prey for pneumonia and tuberculosis and lived correctly, plenty of air, proper rest, wholesome food and sense enough to pick a good doctor and listen to him there would be less of these dread deaths would not be so high. Still it is more important to know about the hereafter than it is to know about the here.
Business Man Praises Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy
Successful Merchant After Investigation
Found a Remedy That Restored His Health.
"This is Thanksgiving day in the state of Pennsylvania, and want to devote a part of it in writing a letter to you. On the 26th day of November, 190, I went with heart trouble. My family physician called Angina Pectoris. I had from one to five attacks in 24 hours, in the latter part of December, 1910. I wrote to the Miles Medical Office."
J. H.
Miles Medical Co., for information concerning my case, and in reply I received a very kind and instructive letter, which I handed to my family doctor, and I received a letter in connection with the medicines he gave me, so I did. I used five bottles of Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy and seven bottles of Dr. Miles' Norvine. I was confined to the house for about four months. The section of my heart is and has been cannulated six month ago, and I try recommend Dr. Miles' Norvine and Heart Remedy to do what they are intended for, if used according to directions. I thank you kindly for your advice in answer to my monthly reports. I am now sixty-seven years of age, have been in the hospital for five years, and lived retired for the last thirteen years." A. E. HOLLINGER, Lincoln, Penna.
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy is sold and guaranteed by all druggists.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhard, Ind.
THE BYSTANDE
Many remarkable cures of stomach troubles have been ejected by Chamberlain's Tablets. One man who had spent over two thousand dollars for medicine and treatment was cured by a few boxes of these tablets. Price, 25 cents. For sale by all dealers.
E. A. LONDON
Pool and Billiards
Barber Shop.
Cleaning and Pressing
Soft Drinks Tobacco and Cigars
Your Patronage Solicited
229 W. 3rd Street
A.
Woman's Crowning Glory is Her Hair
Why not grow your hair by using
Mme. M. Beard Hair Grower
It removes dandruff, stops itching of
the scalp and makes it grow long, soft
and beautiful. Price 50c a box.
Send stamp for pamphlet.
519 So 16th St. St. Joseph, Mo.
Boys or Girls Make Money
During vacation selling our Fine Quality Hair Nets. Many people use them for veils. Easy work. Good pay. Send 75c for sample outfit.
You double your money ALEX MARKS
Write today and start 652 BROADWAY
NEW YORK
PORO Satisfaction
Hair 'Grower Guaranteed
Madam M. Downs
HAIR CULTURIST
Satisfaction Guaranteed
(Graduate Poro College of St. Louis)
Office Des Moines
3lo 1/2 W. Grand Ava. Iowa
Office
Creole Hair Straightine
Especially for Men
Guaranteed to straighten
and make the most stub-
born hair straight and
soft regardless of length.
Call at 229 W. 3rd St.
and see Henry Le Garde
100 testimonials furnished in the city
believes CATARRH of
SANTAL
CAPSULES
MIDY
BLADDER
and all
Discharges in
24HOURS
Buckinghamshire
East C.
Kenton C.
Middlesbrough
conduit贞贝
Salford all over
UK.
KEOKUK ITEMS.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Sommers, Mrs. J. Freeman and Mr. E. Taylor motored to Fort Madison, Iowa, last Sunday and spent the day.
Wm. Smith left on Tuesday of last week for Des Moines.
Mr. Samuel Johnson left on Saturday of last week for a week's visit in Davenport, Iowa. From there Mr. Johnson will go to Havana, Ill., where he has accepted a position.
Two persons from Fort Madison, Iowa, were baptized by Rev. Lindell at the Pilgrim's Rest Baptist church.
Straight Hair
Hair Straightener
air smooth and straight. It's absolutely guarantee the kink; makes YOUR hair easy to comb; keeps your hair looking. No more bother with obstructing it. Hair you go is straight. If it is pure and guaranteed. On record of only 500 jar, and we'll give you FREE a number of other accessories which you can't learn a quick in any other OW. Then you, too, will have nice straight hir.
cal Co., Depl. A. 153 f. 28th Street,
NEW YORK CITY.
Country Butter
Choice Meats
Miss Frances Bland Reeder, daughter of Mrs. Gertrude Shortridge of this city, graduated from the Provident hospital and training school at Chicago, Ill., on Monday evening of this week. The exercises were held at the First Baptist church on the South Side.
At the home of her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Johnson, occurred the death of Mrs. Agnes Marshall on Monday of this week. Mrs. Marshall is survived by four children, Benjamin Jackson, Mrs. Mary South, Mrs. Margaret Johnson and Mrs. Elizabeth Broadus. There are also ten grandchildren, six great grandchildren and three great great grandchildren.
Mrs. Elizabeth Bandy is ill at her her, 1312 Morgan street.
Mrs. I. C. Kellis returned last week from Omaha, Neb., after a visit with her daughter, Mrs. George Maston. Mrs. Kellis attended the wedding of her daughter, which occurred in Omaha on June 14th.
People are learning that a little forethought often saves them a big expense. Here is an instance: E. W. Archer, aldwell, Ohio, writes: "I do not believe that our family has been without Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy since we commenced keeping house years ago. When we go on an extended visit we take it with us." Obtainable everywhere.
DR. PALMER'S
SKIN
WHITENER
25c
Postpaid
Whitens and Clears dark or brown skin. Bleaches sallow or dark complexion, causing it to grow whiter. Get the original Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener. Do not accept imitations. Sold by druggists or sent direct postpaid anywhere in the United States for 25c. Remember the name, Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener. Made only by JACOBS' PHARMACY ATLANTA, CA. AGENTS WANTED
WHAT YOU WANT IS
TRADE PORO MARK HAIR
PORO MARK HAIR GROWER THERES NOTHING
"JUST AS GOOD"
3100 Pine St., Dept Q. St, Louis, Mo. HAVE YOU BEAUTIFUL HAIR?
HAVE YOU BEAUTIFUL HAIR?
WE are the only importers and Manufacturers of Real Colored People's Hair. Also Wavy Hair.
- We absolutely guarantee our hair to stand combing and washing and to retain its color and crimp.
- Wigs, Plats, Braids, Transformations and Puffs in stock or to order; all shades, none too difficult.
- Straightening Combs and Teilet Articles.
cent stamp for Price List. Mail Orders receive prompt attention.
Old Reliable Mme. Baum's Hair Emporium
11-16-2-16 Between 8th and 88th Sts. NEW YORK CITY
DR. PALMER'S
SKIN
WHITENER
Postpaid
DR. PALMER'S
SKIN
WHITENER
Bend two-cent stamp for Price List. Mail Orders receive prompt attention.
The Old Reliable Mme. Baum's Hair Emporium
486 8th Avenue 11-18-218 Between 8th and 88th St. NEW YORK CITY
Send two-cent stamp for Price List. Mail Or
The Old Reliable Mme. Baum
486 8th Avenue 11-10-216 Between 9th and
DR. PALM
SKI
WHITE
25c Postpaid
Whitens and Clears dark and brown skin. Bleaches sallow or dark complexion, causing it to grow whiter. Get the original. Dr. Palmer's Skin Do not accept imitations, gists or sent direct postpaid United States for 25c. Reme Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener. Jacobs' Pharmacy, At AGENTS WA WRITE FOR T
Valmer's Skin Whitener
not accept imitations. Sold by drugs-
sent direct postpaid anywhere in the
States for 25c. Remember the name,
Valmer's Skin Whitener. Made only by
Jobs' Pharmacy, Atlanta, Ga.
AGENTS WANTED
WRITE FOR TERMS
Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener
Do not accept imitations. Sold by druggists or sent direct postpaid anywhere in the United States for 25c. Remember the name, Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener. Made only by.
Forethought.
H4
Pool & Billiard Parlor
V. L. Jones Director
E. F. Samuels Manager
519 E. Court Ave. Des Moines, Ia.
SCOTTS
SKIN WHITENER
CREAM
AND
SCOTTS
SKIN WHITENER
SOAP
BEFORE AFTER
PRICE 25¢ EACH
CLEARS THE COMPLEXION AND
KEEPS IT FREE FROM PIMPLES
BLEACHES DARK SKINS.
JAMES S. ROBINSON.
MEMPHIS, TENN.
Sore Nipples.
Any mother who has had experience with this distressing alliment will be pleased to know that a cure amy be affected by applying Chamberlain's Salve as soon as the child is done nursing. Wipe it off with a soft cloth before allowing the babe to nurse. Many trained nurses use this salve with best results. For sale by all dealer.
Look for the collector. Don't dodge him.
BYSTANDER PUBLISHING CO., PUBLISHERS
DES MOINES, IOWA
Published every Friday by the By-
stander Publishing Company, Des
Moines, Iowa. Office in Chemical
building, corner Seventh and Mul-
berry streets. Phone, alnut 899.
Official paper of the M. W. U. Grand
Lodge of Iowa, A. F. & A. M., and
International Grand Congress of
Heroines of Jericho of America,
and Western Baptist Association.
Entered at the postoffice as second class matter.
Advertising rates for display ads,
25 cents per inch, for each insertion.
Three to six months' contracts, 15
cents per inch. Local advertising
10 cents per line for each insertion,
counting seven words to a line. For
churches and secret societies where
admission is charged, one-half of
the above-mentioned rates. For professional, legal and announcement
cards, yearly contracts, etc., terms
are given on application. All advertising is to be paid in advance.
We are prepared to do first class job work at reasonable prices. All of our work is guaranteed.
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS.
Communications must be written on one side of the paper only and be of interest to the public. "Brevity is the soul of wit," remember.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
One year ..... $1.50
Six months ..... .75
Three months ..... 50
We will not return rejected manuscript, unless accompanied by postage stamps.
Send money by postoffice order, money order, express or draft, to The Bystander Company.
All subscriptions payable in advance.
This notice applies to all writers contributors, agents and correspondents. Sign all articles, write only upon one side of paper, write a plain or receptions nor send in programs to be published before or after the event. Do not give an eulogy or write your personal comment upon hand and spell accurately. Do not send in names of persons at parties the event. Simply tell the news or event in a brief, simple manner and let the readers of The Bystander comment. Write the news of all classes, all societies, all religious denominations, irrespective of your personal whims or ideas. The Iowa State Bystander is the oldest Afro-American journal published in Iowa. It was established in 1894, and is read by nearly all the colored people of Iowa. We have correspondents in the following towns:
L. E. Hanger
NEW
Elite Restaurant
New Reliable Place to Eat
Meals 15c and up
Lunches or Short Orders Served
304 W. Grand Ave.
Des Moines Iowa
Iowa Phone 778 Rates $1 per day
Automatic 3952
Tenth Avenue Hotel
1 block from C. & N. W. Ry.
All Rooms are Warm.
Restaurant and Lunch Room
SPECIATIES
Chop Suey Chill Con Carne Yokeem
Oysters in Season
Special attention given to Theatrical People
Barber Shop in connection
F. F. JACKSON, PROP.
OPEN DAY
AND NIGHT
Clinton, Iowa
PERSIAN CREAM
HAIR GROWER
If a Beautiful Head of Hair Is Your Pride, then
Traveler of the Century, the Most Wonderful Diversity
of the Century.
2013
PERSIAN CREAM
Affair Grower and Straightener
The New Way of Treating the Scalp
and Growing the Hair.
There is nothing like it on the market—entirely different both in principle as well as in its effect. Absolutely guaranteed, to the extent that it is petroleum, but only the best and finest of oils. No you bind guarantee to refund your money if Persian Cream Hair Growth is represented fails to improve your hair. Persian one on one is acting as hair growers known—inexpensive and easily used.
U-N-E-E-D-A
DANDERCIDE
AND SHAMPOO
For Dandruff, Scales, Itching and Roughness,
growth affecting the roots of the hair, causing the
growth affect the roots of the hair, causing the
growth affect the roots of the hair, causing the
U-N-E-K-D-A Dandruff. The scalp in a hygienic way.
It presents dandruff and stone fibres of the scalp.
It presents healthy scalp condition so that the hair causes
it. It presents any unpleasant odor of the scalp
at hair and holds a delicate perfume of its own.
U-N-E-E-D-A
SKIN BLEACH
Clear and Bleaches the Completion Instantly.
Wakes Bark or Brown Skin Whiner. Will Not Grow.
Hair.
Price 50 Cents.
Manufactured only by the RANKIN MANUFACTURING CO., Hair. Toilet and Household Preparations.
Office. 236 W. Walmart Street.
Stomach Troubles and Constipation.
"I will cheerfully say that Chamberlain's Tablets are the most satisfactory remedy for stomach troubles and contipation that I have old in thirty-four years' drug store service."
writes S. H. Murphy, druggist, Wellsburg, N. Y. Obtainable everywhere.