Kansas City Sun
Saturday, March 14, 1914
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
We Demand Equal Punishment for All Rapists White or Black
VOLUME VI. NUMBER 29.
We Deman
M. H.
PROF. J. C. HOBBS.
Kansas City's most popular Dancing Master, and Proprietor of the Palace Barber Shop at Nineteenth and Vine streets.
EVERYBODY IS GOING
Everybody is going to Smith's Drug Store to try the famous Tango Sundae on a Blazer. The following is a list of distinguished guests and popular society people who have visited and declared the Tango Sundae to be the most delicious they have ever eaten.
Is Your Name In the List?
Miss Kingsbury, Dr. Pearl, Mrs. E. M. McMillan, Mrs. William Snell, Miss T. W. H. Williams, Mrs. Barrilln, Mrs. C. Johnson, Mrs. Bert Lahay, Mrs. C. Johnson, Mrs. Bert Lahay, Lawyer Bruce, Miss Sweetman, Mr. Simpson, G. Williams, Mrs. Carnack Helen, Andrew G. Williams, Mrs. Carnack Helen, Frances Brown, Mrs. L. E. Strickland, Mrs. T. B. Beard, Bert Taylor, Mrs. E. L. Washington, Mrs. Edward Whitmore, Kansas City, Kas; Mrs. Phur-man, Mrs. May Hackworth, Geo. Hurd, Chicago; Mrs. J. W. Mitchell, Mrs. Abernathy, Miss Carrier Sanders, Mr. Willie Miller, Mrs. Lon Loreal, Miss Willie Miller, Mrs. A. K. Ackman, Miss Nancy Taylor, Hon. C. C. Crews, Mrs. F. Pryor, Mrs. M. A. Kahne, Backwell, Mrs. C. Hollinsworth, Miss Emma Gardner, Mr. Andrew Rollin, Mrs. Rosemary, Rossette, Mrs. Miss Bentrice L. Schol, Mrs. Edna Kirkpatrick, Mrs. M. y Day.
The Ka-See Gliris in a body, and the following Clio Club members: Mrs. P. C. Washington; also Mrs. E. R. Whitmore, Washington; also Mrs. E. R. Whitmore, Miss Ia F. Bell, Miss Armeda Jarrett, Mrs. Washington; also Mrs. E. R. Whitmore, Mrs. Ia F. Bell, Miss Armeda Jarrett, Mrs. Washington; also Mrs. E. R. Whitmore, Mrs. Ia F. Bell, Miss Armeda Jarrett, Mrs. Elizabeth Stokes, and Mrs. Willis.
Mrs. A. Williams, Mrs. T. L. Tatman, Miss Susie Pearl, Miss Anna Caro, Miss Dorsy Brown, Mrs. Thilford Davis, J. K. C. K., Mrs. J. Lewis Gambles, K. C, K.
Miss Bryce, Mrs. Brown, Miss Stella Washington, Miss Coleman, Mrs. Carter Washington, D. A. Wills, Mrs. Wells, Mrs. T. B Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin, Dr. E. C O'Bears of Los Angeles, Calif.
HON. C. C, CLARK, ST. LOUIS. MO.
Grand Attorney of the A. F. and A.
M, who will be in this city on business
shortly.
---
The Kansas City Sun
SOLITUDE AND THOUGHT.
In the realm of Being where Silence
Supreme, when the Mind finds Consolation sweet,
Wondering over the interminable bounds,
The Soul exulting in the Atmosphere of Security,
Acts Best, Thinks Best, and is Best,
Oh, Solitude!
Still Noble Thought catches us everywhere,
With most great spirit in hearts
All is Mind, hence the low places are Skimmed
And the lofty peaks are touched, Oh
Thought!
A BRILLIANT RECEPTION.
On Saturday, March 7th, a very lightful reception complimentary to Mesdames Work and Riz of Nashville, Tenn., was given by Mesdames Swan, Carter and Croosthaile, at the residence of the latter, 1020 Va. Ave. The house was appropriately decorated after a harmonious color scheme of yellow and green. The guests began arriving at 3:00 o'clock in the afternoon and were still being received after 10:00 o'clock. The following well known society ladies formed a charming receiving line: Mesdames G. A. Page, Chas, Lester, Wm. Dabney, Sidney Johnson, Luther Wallace, J. Siles Harris, M, Gamble, Rob. De Frantz, Miss Maude Olden and tittle Miss Nora I. Work. Service was a ple and consisted of Orange ice, confections and mints. The costumes of the guests were particularly elegant and artistic, evidencing the suldude elegance and refinement belonging only to the most cultured people. The ladies of the receiving line as well as the hostess received rare social fitness both in their apparel and queenly bearing. It is such events as these which most truly reflect the remarkable advancement among colored people. The hostesses were graciously assisted by the following ladies: Mesdames I. F. Bradley, T. C. Unthank, Toney Dickens, Jas. Dickson, John Taylor, Jerry Grey, Miss Nares White, Sadie Ovetton, Carrie Brydle, Ruth Bradley, Lottie Whittington Grace White, Etheline Wilson, Messrs Geo. S. Ellison and Lorenzon Countee
EMERY-FERGUSON WEDDING.
The marriage of Miss Mattie Elizabeth Emery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Emery and Mr. Oather Ferguson was solemnized at 8:00 o'clock Wednesday evening, March 4th, at the cozy little home of the bride's cousin, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Patton, 2336 Flora Avenue. The Rev. Richard Davis, pastor of Centennial M. E. Church, performed the ceremony. Preceding the ceremony Frau Meri was played on the piano by Mrs. Jordan Williams; the bride wore a beautiful gown of white ivory satin. The bodice was of Chantilly lace, trimmed in Orange blossoms and she carried a booq of bride's roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Claudia Quarrels was bridesmaid a wore a lovely gown of Shadow 14, with three tiers tinted with pink. She carried a bouquet of pink and white roses. Mr. Cornellus Emery, brother of the bride, was best man.
A reception was tendered after the ceremony. Many useful and valuable presents were received. Mr. and Mrs. Emery were assisted
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldron,
Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson will be at home to their many friends at 2527 Woodland Avenue.
The Kansas City Sun can be found on sale at the following prominent places:
Palace Barber Shop, 19th and Vine streets; Shumacher's News Stand, 18th and Highland; Unthanks' Drug Store, Independence and Harrison; Tucker's News Stand, 12th and Vine.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1914.
Women's Club Notes
A meeting of the members of the greater Kansas City branch of the National Association for the advancement of colored people was held Saturday evening at Lyric Hall, President Woody Jacobs in charge, the object being to place the Association in the firing line for active work during the year. The refusal of the Loose-Wiles Biscuit Company to admit the colored women members of the Welfare Board Study Class and the attempt to oust the colored tenants in the 25th Block in Highland Avenue were among some of the more serious matters the society will aim to redress. A light lunch-on was served. The next meeting will be with Miss Anna H. Jones, April 4th.
The Sorosis which is composed of some of the most intellectual ladies of the two Kansas Cities met Monday with Mrs. R. E. L. Bailey, 2620 Euclid Ave. Much time was given to the laying of plans for the study of Modern Social problems and the appointment of delegates to the various Institutions of the City. After a very instructive address by Rev. E. S. Willett the Club was served with a three-course luncheon. Mrs. Harry Watkins will entertain the Club next week at 332 Greely Ave, Kansas City, Kansas.
Thursday, March 5th, the L. S. P. Club entertained complimentary to the Cosmopolitan Club at the residence of Mrs. M. Willis who was assisted by Mesdames W. C. Hueston, E. C. Bunch, J. C. Stokes, J. Gardner and R. J. Lockhart. The decorations were carried out in red, yellow and pink, the colors of the respective Clubs; each lady was presented with white carnations and each gentleman with a red carnation as a buttoner. Music was furnished by Mr. Hoke. Card prizes were won by Miss Compton and Mr. Fassett. Prizes in the guessing contest were won by Mrs. R. J. Lockhart, Mr. J. C. Stokes and Mr. Fassett. A refreshing two-course repast was served after which the guests departed declaring the affair one of the most delightful of the season.
The Oak Leaf Art Club met with Mrs. Fannie White 1716 E. 24th St. Visitors were Mesdames Johnson of Ohanla, Nebr., Payton and McBride An elegant luncheon was served the Club meets March 13th, at 1415 E. 24th St.
Progress Study Club met at 2116 Woodland Avenue with Mrs. R. G. Moore as hostess. An excellent paper was read by Mrs. Wm. J. Thompkins on the "Model Woman." Discussion was led by Mrs. J. Sillas Harris. Visitors present were: Mrs. W. H. Hubbel and Mrs. Edmonia Brown. Delicious refreshments were served. Mrs. W. C. Mallory will be the hostess to the Club Tuesday, Maron 17th.
The XX History and Art Club was entertained March 12 by Miss Francis Hayes and Mrs. Wm. Patrick at the residence of the latter, 2322 Flora avenue.
Interesting discussions on the 14th and 15th amendments, "Enoch Arden" and the modern man. Miss Catherine Washington volunteered a vocal solo, Mrs. E. Hendricks an instrumental solo, and Miss Hayes a violin solo.
Mesdames Fagan, Sayers and Careral, the Misses Maddox, Sexton and Moore were pleasant visitors at the club.
A delightful course luncheon was served, which consisted of chicken salad, olives, cheese straws, ice cream, moulded in various fruit forms; cake, nuts, candy and demitasse.
Club will meet March 19 with Mrs Ben McCormie at 1013 Virginia ave. MRS. WM. SNELL.
Miss Nina Brown and Miss Anna Blackburn entertained the Maccadonia Club very nicely Wednesday night at the beautiful apartments of Mrs. Wm. Grant, the former's sister. Each member left declaring they had spent a very pleasant night and asking when they could return again.
AN APPEAL TO AFRO-AMERICANS
Afro Americans let your voices rise,
Let your echoes rink thru the skies
That by your country you'll do the
Let your echoes sink thru the sites
That by your country you'll do the
work.
That for your liberty you will fight.
Afro Americans betray not your trust
Nation's blood has been shed for us
Then by your country you should be
true,
For your race's success depends on
you.
Afro American upon you the lives
Hang on your sons, your daughters
andwives,
Then by your race you should fall
And abstain the things that injure us
all.
Afro Americans go on until you hear
The voice of God, ringing out so clear
Come unto me, you who the victory
has won,
As to respect of persons I have none.
God we know created all mankind,
And in the midst the blackman you'll
find
110
Where you're going to shun him no one can tell.
For he is sure to be found in earth heaven and hell.
We have just read a complete account of what will undoubtedly prove to be the most dastardly and outrageous assault upon womanhood that has ever blackened the pages of civilized history. Edgar Allen Poe and Balzac could not with their remarkable imagery have detailed a more horrible account of rape than that alleged to have been perpetrated by six WHITE men of this city upon a WHITE woman. That they were sober is the testimony of the victim. THEY THEN MUST HAVE BEEN impelled by a brutality indigenous to their very nature augmented by a constant practice. The very contemplation of the assault is revolting to the most conservative mind. The luring by that serpent, the calm and calculated preparation for the attack, the actual assault by the brutes; the excruciating torture; the threat of death for resistance; this on the part of the six fiends, the pitiful cries for mercy, the futile struggle for freedom, the sustained agony, the longing for that Demon to pull the trigger, the swooning, the dash for liberty, all this from the victim and finally her own relation of the awful details of the afternoon's terrible outrage present to the citizens of this city a graphic picture of the most infamous and perfidious crime ever conceived and perpetrated by men of any race. What motive actuated these despoilers remains to be proved. What extenuating circumstances can be urged? What alibi can be offered? What plea for clemency? NONE. Death is the only reward. The law says Death. The honor and safety of women cry out, Death. Justice decides Death. The necks of two Negroes were broken for a crime less brutal.
We stand waiting to see how fares Justice in the hands of a white man when white men are to be judged. Will the Potters hand shake?
We stand waiting to see how fares Justice in the hands of a white man when white men are to be judged. Will the Potters hand shake?
"I did not know you were keeping store here been around to patronize you," was what a co-heard to say to a colored business man a few days man had been at the one stand for several y did not know it. He was managing to make a list gotten his friends' trade because he had neglect know that he was in business.
How many friends were there just like the fiars had this colored man lost through neglect which includes his friends.
The business man did not even resort to the date method of scattering circulars. He had no vertising. He, too, knew that white merchants a business from small beginning to large proposition users of advertising space in the newspapers. care to know that the public largely patronized cause they let the community know what they still in the beginning class, making but little gets.
Mr. Colored Business Man, the opportunity of the white man who began small. The race wants wants you to let the public know what you have. Try the Sun for results.
how you were keeping store here, tronize you," was what a colorful business man a few days at the one stand for several years was managing to make a life trade because he had neglected in business. Friends were there just like the friend man lost through neglect to friends. Man did not even resort to the lettering circulars. He had not knew that white merchants had beginning to large proposing space in the newspapers. The public largely patronized community know what they having class, making but little in business Man, the opportunity was began small. The race wants the public know what you have, or results.
"I did not know you were keeping store here, else I would have been around to patronize you," was what a colored man was overheard to say to a colored business man a few days ago. This business man had been at the one stand for several years, but this friend did not know it. He was managing to make a living, but he had not gotten his friends' trade because he had neglected to let his friends know that he was in business.
How many friends were there just like the first? How many dollars had this colored man lost through neglect to notify the public which includes his friends.
The business man did not even resort to the somewhat out-of-date method of scattering circulars. He had never considered advertising. He, too, knew that white merchants who have built their business from small beginning to large propositions had been large users of advertising space in the newspapers. He did not seem to care to know that the public largely patronized these merchants because they let the community know what they had for sale. He was still in the beginning class, making but little more than a laborer gets.
Mr. Colored Business Man, the opportunity is yours, like that of the white man who began small. The race wants to support you, but wants you to let the public know what you have.
PROVIDENT HOSPITAL.
PROVIDENT HOSPITAL.
The Provident Hospital and Nurse Training Association wishes to thank the public for its patronage at the monthly dance last Friday night. The success of this entertainment was due to the Domestic Science Circle. These young ladies under the able direction of Mrs. T. W. H. Williams are commanding much attention by their cap ability in this profession.
```markdown
```
uping store here, else I would have was what a colored man was overman a few days ago. This busied for several years, but this friend to make a living, but he had not one had neglected to let his friends just like the first? How many dolloough neglect to notify the public when resort to the somewhat out-of-ers. He had never considered adde merchants who have built their large propositions had been large newspapers. He did not seem to rely patronized these merchants beow what they had for sale. He was big but little more than a laborer the opportunity is yours, like that of The race wants to support you, but what you have.
LAST CALL
YOU PEOPLE TO WHOM WE HAVE MAILED STATEMENTS, WHY DON'T YOU PAY UP? OR AT LEAST BE KIND ENOUGH TO ANSWER OUR LETTERS WHICH WERE SENT YOU?
LAWN TENNIS CLUB.
The Kansas City, Lawn Tennis Club Missouri Valley Champions will begin practice in a few days preparatory to making up the team that will play St. Louis early in June. In the interview with Dr. McQueen Carrion, captain of the Kansas City Tennis Club, he said to a reporter for the Sun that all members will be given a chance to make the 1914 team, and that they would be expected to report promptly for try out. The Doctor said that when the games are played with St. Joseph this summer he hopes to charter four cars to carry the Kansas City Club and their friends and make it the social event of the year. He also expects a large number to accompany the Club on their trip to St. Louis. Preparatory to the work of the season the Club will give a ball immediately after the Lenten season which is expected to be one of the most delightful affairs ever given here. Regardless of the fact that news reaches this city that the St. Louis players have been practicing constantly all fall and winter, Dr. Carrion predicts that Kansas City will have no more trouble "trimming" them this season than they did last. All Tennis players desiring to join the Club and all others desiring information are invited to call Dr. McQueen Carrion, captain, 18th and Paseo, over the Peoples' Drug Store.
HIGHLAND AVENUE BAPTIST
CHURCH
This Church is still marching on. God is blessing us both spiritually and financially. Since making our last report we have had eight additions to the church thus bringing our total for the past ten days up to twelve souls ushered into God's vineyard. Our pastor has instituted a mid-week preaching service which will be held on Thursday night of each week. The Sunday School hour has been changed from 1:00 p. m. to 9:30 a. m. The Order of Services Sunday, March 15 are: 9:30 a. m., Sunday School; 11:00 a. m., Preaching by Pastor Mills;—"Nearness to the Cross"; 4:00 p. m. B. Y. P. U.; 8:00 p. m. Preaching by Pastor Mills;—"Spiritual Apathy Dounced"; The public in general is cordially invited to attend these services.
B. J. KNOX. Reporter.
* The Colored Commercial Club
* formed by R. Quinn will give a
* grand entertainment and the place
* will be stated in next week's is.
* sue. For further information write
* R. F. Quinn, 5714 Main Street.
[Image of a man in a suit with a tie and glasses, looking directly at the camera. The background is plain white. There is no text or additional details in the image.]]
[Name not visible]
DR. J. EDGAR DIBBLE.
Chairman of the Entertainment Committee at the Booker T. Washington reception, to whom is due much credit for the unequaled success of the affair.
Submission to constituted authority is a cardinal point in the doctrine of Masonry. Through that principle only has the great importance with the words, "one is right all the time, therefore should not have his way all the time." In this respect, this in mind when tempted to continue vain contentions. The peace and harmony of the lodge should be maintained by the care of personalities, Harsh, ill-tempered speech is the tool of the ruffian, not of the Mason. True Masonry exertes its power and the care of benefits as not as compared to diviner tenets of the order. In former days Masons met only to converse with the little ones. We hear little of them—Herrford.
The Crisis can be bought at the Unthank Drug Store, Independence and Harrison Streets at ten cents per copy each month. Both Phones Main 7488.
MASONIC
ALL THE TIME
or Black
WENDELL PHILLIPS SCHOOL
Will Give a Delightful Entertainment in Auditorium of Lincoln High School, Friday, March 20th 8:00 P.M.
PROGRAM FURNISHED BY 7TH GRADE
The seventh grade pupils of Wendell Phillips School, Howard and Vine Streets, of which Prof. R. W. Foster is the able principal and the brilliant and progressive Whitfield Ross teacher of this grade, will give a Musical and Drama in the Auditorium of the Lincoln High School Friday evening, March 20th, at 8:00 o'clock, to which the parents, patrons and friends are cordially invited. The program is as follows:
1. Chorus from Beethovan's 2nd Symphony.
2. Calesthenics Drill...Sixteen Girls
3. Chorus—Star of Bethleham—Beirth.
4. Drama—three acts—"Out in the Streets".
**Dramatis Personae.**
Colonel Wayne...J. Edward Fladger, Soloman Davis...Walter Page
Mat Davis (his son)...Robert Garner Dr. Medfield...Oswald Bartlett Pete (Col. Wayne's servant...
Leslie Williams
Policeman...Norman Williams
Mrs. Wayne...Irene Cowden
Nina Wayne (her daughter...
Ruby Saunders
Mrs. Bradford (a widow who has been turned out into the streets...
Ida Bush
Nina, her daughter...
Ruth Redd
5. Solo and Chorus—The Heavenly Song.
6. Calesthenics Drill—Eight girls and eight boys.
7. Pantomime—Advertising for a wife.
Bachelor.....Elmer Lee
Servant Boy.....Milton Burnett
Washerwoman.....Emma Perry
Grand Lady.....Mildred Hollingsworth
Gay young lady.....Beulah Lawrence
Old Maid.....Susie Nuby
Prominent Lady.....Helen Maupin
Genteel young lady.....Elmora Moore
Widow and children.....Honora Wells
Solo and Chorus—"Joy to the Earth"
.....Lyon
Soloist.....Marguerite Spencer
Doubtless the auditorium will be crowded to its capacity to witness this first demonstration of the year on the part of the schools.
```markdown
```
VINE STREET BAPISTER CHURCH.
Sister Thos. Pollard has improved so very much that she was able to attend church Sunday. We are glad to see her out again, and hope she will continue to improve...Mrs. John Reed has returned home from the hospital. We hope she will improve rapidly...Last Sunday was a day of feasting at the church in the morning. The candidates which were baptized recently were crowned and made full fledged members of the church. We pray that they will continue in the faith; after which Prof. S. S. R. S. Stewart sang that famous solo "I heard the voice of Jesus say". It was indeed grand. The professor will give a grand musical at the Vine Baptist Church, March 17. Virted to attend. Admiss.
Prof. Stewart has no and pianist. P. on 10 cents. Miss equal as a singer ha.
Ada McAfee of 2110 Highland, been very ill, but is much improved now.
PRICE. 5c.
Dramatis Personae.
Cast of Characters
STRIKING A GUSHER
When Jared Bliss took sick and the reports from the doctor looked gloomy and foreboding, his friends and relatives called once or twice and then left him to die. It had been ascertained that he was "all in," not only physically but in a financial sense.
"He's simply reaping the folly he sowed," sapiently observed his nephew, Walter Pope, forgetting that it was the liberality of the good old man that originally started him in business.
Other selfish and ungrateful relatives echoed the sentiments of the ingrate, Pope. The man upon whom they had counted to enrich them when he was through with life had "wantonly thrown away his fortune!" He had given about half of it to charity. He had a hobby for antiques and became the victim of every unprincipled curio huckster. He was credulous, benevolent, unsophisticated. The stock jobber and the promoter had worked him to a finish.
100 100 100 100
Netta Lysle was an orphan and daughter of a half-sister of Bliss. The old man knew her, and when her mother died had seen to it that her child was bestowed in the care of the Pope family. They had made Netta work for what they gave her. One Christmas Jared Bless had given her a pretty watch and chain. Its inner case bore a photograph of her mother, and she had always cherished the gift.
Feeling kindly as she always did towards all humanity, Netta was shocked at the petty meanness of the Pope family when sickness and ill fortune overtook the artless kind hearted old man. She realized that he was practically deserted. One morning she appeared down stairs with her few possessions packed in a satchel.
"I am going away, Aunt Martha," she said simply.
"When? Where? Why?" challenged Mrs. Pope.
"Right now, to Mr. Bliss, because he must need some one to take care of him in his sickness."
"Folly! Why. He has no money! Do you want to starve to death with him?"
"I won't let him starve while I am able to work," declared Netta.
"This is simple nonsense!" insisted Aunt Martha. "So, Netta, if you leave
A
"I Found This Among the Rubbish."
this house on any foolhardy errand you need not come back again."
"You have been very kind to me, Aunt Martha," replied Netta, "but I feel it my duty to go to Uncle Jared." Netta found Mr. Bliss hobbling about his home scarcely able to get around. He listened gravely as she told him she had come to be his housekeeper until he got well. The place was in a state of great neglect and disorder. The piano, the books and some of the furniture had been eized and carted away to satisfy a debt and most of the rooms were bare and cheerless looking.
Before night the industrious Netta had Uncle Jared so comfortable and well fed that he began to cheer up magically.
"You are going to get well very fast," she declared the next morning. "Now I am going to clean house."
It was when she had removed all the rubbish that littered the place, swept it into one room and dusted and put in order the rest of the house, that she told Uncle Jared that he must look over the mass of papers and sort out what was of value.
"You'll find nothing amounting to anything," he observed. "They've taken all the books, old coins and pictures that would sell. I'll go over the mess, though, to please you," but he soon got tired of sorting out the stuff.
Then Netta took a hand. She came to the old man somewhat later with a legal looking document.
"Uncle Jared," she said, "I found this amongst the rubbish. It is a deed, it seems. It tells about some land that you bought."
"Well! Well!" exclaimed the old man, as he glanced at the document, "I had actually forgotten all about it. I remember now, I bought the land, some forty acres, from a friend who paid a large price for it thinking it was oil land. He spent a fortune sinking wells but never found any oil. I took it off his hands to help him out." A few days later Netta came to him again.
"I've been thinking about that land, Uncle Jared," she said. "It is right over the state line. It must have some value. Why, it would make a nice little farm. You say there is a house on it. Why couldn't we make a living there?" "We!" repeated the old man. "You don't mean to say you'd bury yourself in that desolate spot?" "Uncle Jared," replied Netta, "I am help take care of you just as I will let me."
going to. with later when Mr.
long as you. themselves lo.
It was in
It was just a m.
subject
Bless and Nettia found.
cated to their new home.
the midst of an oil producing u.
and the landscape was not very invi.
fax.
own over 20,000,000 acres of have built and paid for also houses: our property
The intercept ever, that they could the land to live co outdoor life was his old man. And the element into the loir girl—love.
nd, how-
lough on
and the
g for the
ne a new
the loyal
a young
n a day's
a. He was
refineries.
illage near
eal love at
As handsome s
fellow as one wi
journey came upo
superintendent at
He met Netta in
by and it was s
freet sight.
Ned Burton
sort of a fellow
come to the lit
and her uncle
There was no
have their dril
barrels from
to remedy t
day Ned arri
tap the grot
gone down
still boring,
ran back,
and then
high into t
"It's oll!
we've stru
"A gusl
companion
"Why,
the surp
"From
plied Ne
say that
come in
ery helpful
ys he would
help Netta
ds of work.
they had to
r brought in
miles away.
feentful Satur-
oring outfit to
er. They had
feet and were
nan at the drill
an explosion
at showered up
he mean?" faltered
ow of oil wells," re-
statically, "I should
has accidentally
tune."
Before the week was out an operative company in the field made Mr. Bliss an offer of a fabulous amount for his forty acres. Uncle Jared did two things right away. The first was to purchase a lovely home in the village, the next to settle on his faithful little housekeeper one-half of his fortune.
And then—a wedding. They called the new home "Heart's Delight," because it sheltered three loving spirits who had known adversity and appreciated the new dawning prosperity with humble, grateful souls.
(Copyright, 1914, by W. G. Chapman.)
FAITHFUL FOR MANY YEARS
Great Clock in New York Courthouse Tower Has Given Time to Good and Bad Allike.
High in a courthouse tower in the greatest of our cities, a clock has given the time to several generations of men. By day, black hands on a white face are visible down the streets and avenues that radiate from the triangular courthouse which uplifts the tower and its timekeeper. That bland face in the sky starts the newsboy on his rounds with his sheaf of penny papers, and keeps tab on the loiterer leaning against the railing far below, or half-slumbering on the steps. Girls of the department stores, scurrying to work, glance up at the early morning face and slacken pace when the day still gives them a portion of grace. Motormen, chained to their schedules and clanging their way through the choked traffic, speed up their laden compartments, under threat of those ongings.
By night the tower is a pillar of light, and time to a fractional minute can be read for a half mile. With a fire in its belly, the clock throws its beams into the naughty world of midnight, speeding the tardy lover, rebuking the roisterer who staggers past its base as it circles toward the new day. And soon it signals the corner tavern that the gracious eve ning is ended, and time is for turning out of doors the befuddled cus tomer, mumbling in his cups.
It seems to those who have lived in sight of this sure-footed and lofty witness, that it would conduct their journey to the end. But, of late, workmen have been tinkering with its stately process and have obscured it with their laths and timbers. From the ground clear to the summit of the tower has sprung a rude temporary structure of ladders and scaffolding which sprawls across the high red pillar in uneasy zigzag lines. The tangle of woodwork is as dense as a thicket, so that you can no longer read the face of time. All the unfailing witness is quite blotted out—Harper's Weekly.
First Davy Safety Lamp.
January 9, 1816, saw in the deeps of an English coal mine near Newcastle a little drama in which there were but two actors, the one a clergyman, the other a miner. The latter was busily picking out the coal by the light of a "steel-mill" when he saw approaching him a light. The miner knew the gassy nature of the pit and shouted, "Put out the light!" but no notice was taken even when prayers took the place of oaths. The newcomer was Rev. John Hodgson, rector of Jarrow, and he had in his hand the first Davy safety lamp, now safely housed in the Museum of Practical Geology in Jermyn street, London. Sir Humphrey Davy, when urged to patent it, replied: "It might undoubtedly enable me to put four horses in my carriage, but what could it avail me to have it said that Sir Humphrey drives his carriage and four bought at the expense of miners' lives?"
Titled Bounders.
Eva Tanguay, the actress, was congratulated at Jack's in New York upon her recent marriage.
"It's a love match, too," said Miss Tanguay. "It's not the sort of match that our young heiresses make with title bounders. The average titled bounder, if he told the truth, would, when he proposed to a young heiress, make a speech like this:
"Miss Golde—Lotta—I love you for your self alone."
Danger.
The proud father who tells his young hopeful that some day he may be president had better not let the boy find out that the president gets only three weeks' vacation.
Bargains.
Apropos of a railroad property that had been sold at a ruhously high price, a statistician said: "It takes two to make a bargain, but only one them gets it."
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
When Alonzo Steele died in Texas a year or two ago the last white man who fought in the battle of San Jacinto passed away, writes Frank Putnam.
A few days ago W. P. Zuber, who, as a boy of sixteen, was with the Texas army at San Jacinto, but did not bear arms in the fight, died at his Texas home. He was on hospital duty during the fighting. He was the last survivor of all the white men present on that occasion, but it is not wholly clear that he was the last survivor.
It is likely that honor belongs to an ancient darkey, believed to have been Sam Houston's body servant, who still lives in or near Houston. The old man's story is accepted by the oldest residents, sons, some of them, of men who fought at San Jacinto, and more familiar than any one else with the history of that afair.
The passing of the last white survivor of San Jacinto directs attention to one of the most extraordinary pages of all history. San Jacinto ranks next after the battle of Saratoga and Gettysburg among the decisive battles fought on this continent.
Saratoga proved the British could not subdue their revolting American colonists; Gettysburg determined the fate of the Confederacy; San Jacinto pushed the American rule southward from a vast region on the Pacific coast and from an inland region including all of Texas, with parts of New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming.
The battle of San Jacinto was in character unique. It was won with the bowie knife against odds of three to one; won by undisciplined plainsmen opposing Santa Anna's best drilled and best equipped regiments. It was the only battle in which the lesser army lured the greater into a position from which there was no escape for either except by death or victory. Houston, retreating before Santa Anna, led him into a region bounded by swamps and marshes on two sides, with a wide, deep bayon on another and a narrow bayon, branch of the first, on the fourth side. Houston backed into his position and Santa Anna followed. 'Then Houston burned the bridge across the narrow bayon, the only entrance or exit of the theater of battle.
A whirlwind campaign was carried on by the colored people of Philadelphia to raise enough of the money pledged last year toward a colored Y. M. C. A. to make the $15,000 originally asked of them. It was announced at a meeting of the board of directors of the Y. M. C. A. that the choice of location had narrowed down to two lots, on both of which they have options. The money for the lot is already in bank, and when a decision is made it will be bought at once. An architect accompanied a special committee to Indianapolis to study the new colored Y. M. C. A. that has recently been erected there and is considered one of the most complete in the country. It is expected the building will be well under way early in the summer.
The building will contain a gymnasium, swimming pool, etc. It will have educational features and be a social center for the colored men of the city. It will also provide a hotel for the better class of colored people who are passing through the city and now have no accommodations.
Of the 2,273,000 illiterates 617,000 are native whites, including both those of native, foreign and mixed parentage; 879,000 are negroes and 738,000 are immigrants. There are interesting and encouraging points with regard to the two latter classes. The negro illiterates seem to be a large number. But it represents a decrease of 157,999 during the decade, while the total of that population shows an increase of 398,000. The illiterate negroes are almost wholly located in the south, where they are not permitted to vote and are decreasing there.
In 1894 the total forest area of Switzerland was 2,091,000 acres, representing 20.2 per cent of the total surface area of the country. In 1911 the forest acreage was 2,258,000, equal to 21.86 per cent of the total area of the country, an increase of 167,000 acres. Instead of being an expense, the foresta of Switzerland are a source of profit to the government.
Most of the widows of Paris are remarried within 18 months of their first bereavement.
The colored men's branch of the Y. M. C. A. of Indianapolis closed its observance of health week. The state exhibit placed in the lobby of the Y. M. C. A. was studied by hundreds of persons. A special lecture was given each evening in the auditorium of the building, to which the public was invited. A large number heard Dr. I. N. Hurty deliver an illustrated lecture. Doctor Atkins and Dr. L. A. Lewis lectured Friday evening to men only.
A man is, indeed, ignorant if he is ignorant of his own ignorance.
You Are *Part of Influence*.
"We are, all of us, whether young or old, famous or obscure, women of influence. We cannot live a day without affecting the world somewhat for good or ill, whether we will or not.
"We are all a part of its forces, whether we know it or not. Be as humble as you like, you are still a person of influence, if not by your own choosing, then often by God's decree. It may be only a smile or a simple kindness that you have given to a little child, but it starts agencies you lit-
After a careful investigation of the facts, I am convinced that every day in the year there are as many as 200,000 people of my race who are sick enough to be incapacitated for work, writes Booker T. Washington. Other persons have estimated the number of negroes who are sick all the time to be as high as 450,000. If these figures are correct, it means that on the average every member of my race spends annually 18 days in bed, in the hospital, suffering pain or recuperating from sickness that might be spent in some form of wholesome enjoyment or in useful and efficient labor.
It is safe to say, on the same basis, that every day in the year there are 112,000 negro workers idle, as result of sickness, who would otherwise be at work in some form of useful employment. This is a great loss not only to the negro, but it is a great loss to the country. It has been estimated that in the south alone there is a net loss to the negro in earnings and to the community as a whole in productive labor of $40,000,000 a year.
"This immense loss is not due to the physical weakness of the negro race. I have frequently heard it said that the negro, as he lived in Africa, was more vigorous and more robust than any other race on earth. He had to be so to stand the climate. Even today one will seldom find among any race of people finer specimens of physical manhood than the sturdy, unspoiled people of the negro race in the country districts of the south. These people are an asset to the country and to the south, and it seems to me that it is the duty of every patriotic citizen to do what he can to conserve the life and health of this portion of the population in the condition in which it now is.
Boston people who are deeply interested in the work that Dr. Bookeer T. Washington is doing at Tuskegee turned out in numbers to hear him at Trinity church, where he told the story of Tuskegee's progress during the last year. Dr. Washington has just come from the south on his annual visit to Boston. Owing to the generosity of thousands of Tuskegee's friends Dr. Washington has been able to give more of his time to the administrative work of the institution year after year. One of the great problems now is that of training specialists in varied lines of southern work, particularly those of education and agriculture. Just before Dr. Washington left Tuskegee 26 county superintendents of education from various counties in Alabama spent a part of two days at Tuskegee with the idea of getting information and plans for their work among the colored children. The influence which Tuskegee is exerting as a strictly educational force is rightly gratifying to the trustees. Furthermore, Tuskegee cannot begin to supply the demand for farm leaders. The boll weevil has convinced the southern planters that they must take up diversified farming in order to make their lands pay. Bankers and merchants are also vitally interested in the training of these agriculturists and many prizes are being offered. Dr. Washington told his Boston audience about the greatest year the institution ever had and the possibilities of splendid advances in the near future.
Many a man punctures his tire on the road to wealth.
The United Layman's evangelistic campaign was one of the largest religious efforts that has been attempted by the colored people of Indianapolis. Rev. S. L. Howard of Nashville, Teen. conducted the meetings. Special meetings for boys were held several afternoons during the week. The series of meetings closed with a united church service under the direction of the Interdenominational Ministers' association, Sunday evening, March 1.
The state of Hyderabad, located about midway between Madras and Bombay, in the south central part of India, with a population of about 13,500,000 (about equal to that of New York and Massachusetts combined), and with an area of $23,987 square miles (just about the same area as Kansas), is generally speaking, the most important native state in India in population, wealth and potential resources.
Co-operative stores, owned and managed by natives, are fostered wherever possible in Alaska by the United States bureau of education, which has charge of education for the natives of Alaska.
Theodore Harris, colored, whose funeral was held at Camden, N. J., recently, was one hundred and eleven years old when he died, according to war department records. He was born on the eastern shore of Maryland. February 13, 1803. Harris was a veteran of the Civil war and received a pension.
In Greece the minister of education has opened negotiations for the installation of 4,000 natural color moving picture machines, with supplies of films, for use in the state schools.
the dream of; or it may be some selfishness and lack of honor, some weakness in you that sets in motion a long process of change in places or circumstances. For all life is endangered, and whether you wish it or not your life affects other lives."—Woman's Home Companion.
Truth About It.
Many a man who is credited with being wise enough to keep silent, is really growing deaf—but won't acknowledge it.
TO GET PERFECT CHOCOLATE
One Way Recommended Is to Mix It With Sugar Before Cooking—When Cocoa Is Used.
If you have difficulty in cooking chocolate with any liquid so that it is smooth and without lumps, try always mixing the chocolate with sugar before cooking it.
For hot chocolate, for instance, shave the chocolate, melt it, add sugar, let the sugar melt and then add milk and water.
For chocolate sauce for puddings and ice cream melt the chocolate—in a double boiler, of course, so that it will not burn—add sugar, melt that, and then add the water. One recipe for this sort of sauce says to melt the sugar in the water and to boil them together for ten minutes, then to add them to the melted chocolate. But it is better to melt the chocolate, add half the sugar, boil the rest of the sugar with the water for ten minutes, and then add this syrup to the sugar and chocolate. The sauce made in the first way is smooth if you use great care in mixing the syrup and the chocolate. Made in the second way it is practically sure to be smooth.
In many cases cocoa can be substituted for chocolate in cooking. In blan mange, for instance, cocoa can be used. So can it be used for cake filling and for chocolate sauce. When it can be used it can be more easily mixed with other ingredients than chocolate, for it is part sugar.
RECIPE FOR PLANKED STEAK
Served With Duchess Potatoes It is an ideal Dish for Dinner or Luncheon.
Wipe, remove superfluous fat and parboil seven minutes a porterhouse or crosscut of the rump steak, cut one and three-fourths inches thick. Butter a plank and arrange a border of duchess potatoes close to edge, using a pastry bag and rose tube. Remove steak to plank, put in a hot oven and bake until steak is cooked and potatoes are browned. Sprad steak with butter, sprinkle with salt, pepper and finely chopped parsley. Garnish top of steak with saute mushroom caps and put around steak at equal distances halves of small tomatoes saute in butter, and on top of each tomato a circular slice of cucumber. You can use potato balls, small onions, peas and carrots diced as a garnish.
Duchess Potatoes—To two cups hot riced potatoes add two tablespoons of butter, one-half teaspoon salt and yolks of three eggs slightly beaten. Shape, using pastry bag and bag. Brush over with beaten egg diluted with one teaspoon water.
Braised Beef and Carrots
Braised Beer and Carrots.
Select a nice piece of brisket or shoulder and have the butcher cut it into suitable pieces for serving, rejecting superfluous fat. Heat a little dripping or bacon fat in a kettle, toss in the meat and sear it quickly on all sides, than let it simmer until all the juices that have been liberated at first are absorbed again. Now see that the meat is actually browning, but do not let it scorch. Season with a grated onion, salt and pepper, then pour on enough hot water to make a nice brown gravy, almost covering the meat. Cover and let simmer about two hours, then add scraped carrots, sliced lengthwise, laying them on top. In about an hour everything should be tender. However, this depends somewhat on the age of the beef. When serving take up the carrots and place in center of plate, thicken gravy with a little dissolved flour, boll smooth, then pour around carrots.
French Grilled Oysters
Procure large, fat oysters, the creamy looking kind. Drain and wipe on a soft cloth. Dust with salt and pepper. Have some melted butter in a large frying pan, drop in the oysters and fry briskly for a moment or so, simply to stiffen the oysters on each side, then quickly arange in a fine wire oyster broiler, and broil a light brown on both sides over a moderate fire. Place them on buttered toast, moistening a little with some of the heated liquor, then pour the butter from the frying pan over the oysters and serve with parsley and lemon quartered.
Stuffed Onions.
Stuffed onions give the paper bag enthusiast an opportunity to try a new dish. Parbell onions for 15 minutes. Drain and scoop out half the onion. Chop this and mix with sausage or ground meat (either raw or cooked). Season to taste and put back in the onion. Wrap each onion in tissue paper or a greased cookery bag and bake in a hot oven. Baste occasionally with hot water in which a little butter has been melted.
Table Linen Note.
Breakfast or luncheon cloths are now embroidered in colors to match the china used. Some of the gaily flowered sets in use at present suggest an appropriate embroidery design, while the china is an easy model for the woman who can do her own stamping.
For Burnt Pans.
To clean cooking utensils save your eggshells, and when you burn anything in your granite pans or anything sticks badly, use the eggshells to scour the pans. Take a bunch of shells and rub over the burned part and see how quickly all trace of burned food is removed.
Model: Concept Stickhead
making sure they are busy.
Five times the orange wood stick to the side of the washstand by a cord. Children are less likely to forget when the "cleaner" is handy, and the nails also clean more easily when the hands are moist.
Orange Sauce
Cook one-half cup sugar with one tablespoonful rice flour and cup water; and one teaspoonful lemon juice. one-fourth cup orange juice and grated rind of one orange.
九京
奉
Copyright
Underwood & Underwood
TEMPLE GARDEN, KYOTO
YOTO has long withstood the temptation of foreign architecture to mar or beautify or modernize. In Tokio these new buildings have gradually grown up, and the feudal gates and walls have long since disappeared. It is only as we are shut up in our new rubber tired, steel wheeled, coupe-like jinriksha that we fall to dreaming that we are once more being pulled in and out the old gateways into the outer closures of the palace. In those days the great spaces incleded were used for parade or practice ground for the guards. Only a few foreign buildings were found there, writes Nellie Hall Clement in the Chicago Daily News.
As we rode about we could see just how the dalmyo trains must have appeared in bygone days. Today there are, besides the great steel structure of the new central station, large office buildings of stone or brick, hotels, clubhouses, banks and, last but not least, the new Imperial theater. In this last mentioned beautiful place the only thing which reminded us that it was not in some European city was the attendance of Japanese young men and women at the stand at one side of the entrance where picture post cards of plays and players were on sale, and on the opposite side the flower hair pins and hair ornaments.
A favorite writer on Japan, who has given us such delightful descriptions of travel here, says of "Old Kyoto": "The situation was wisely chosen in a beautiful plain crossed by the Kamogawa and circled by wooded mountains. Even so Florence lies in the Tuscan hill, but there comparison ceases, for the view from Yaami's or Murayama shows no Duoum, no Palazyo Vocchol, only a sea of low black, tiled roofs and here and there a mass of trees or a red temple, showing up, as LaFarge says, 'among the lesser houses.'"
But today the fascination is broken and we see a new building, the Dalmaru department store, "showing up" above the trees and temples. We are glad, though, that the invader is such a fine structure.
I remember the great surprise which waited us in one of the old Japanese stores of Kyoto in 1908. After doing temples, palaces and parks, we went to see where the beautiful Kyoto dolls are made. The building was small, low and rambling, but even so it was the headquarters for dolls. We were ushered into one storeroom where thousands of the white cotton "bunnies" covered shelves and tables. On our inquiring, our guide informed us these were for exporting to the United States for the eastern trade. But that invasion was under the low Japanese roofs.
Dalmanu boasts of "electric cable cash carriers," foreign reception
We are glad to get off by ourselves in the quiet tea and rest rooms and think things out. Did we really mind because up in the lunchroom a group of kindly country people stood about our table to see us eating with chopsticks? It was embarrassing when we could not succeed as well as we generally did just on account of our self-consciousness. What does all this mean to these country people who have come in to see the sights of the metropolis? We love their kindly friendly curiosity and courtesy. Yes, we are happy and contented in the new but more so that we have had our share of experience in the Japan of the old days.
Growing Children and Study.
As soon as a child begins to grow rapidly all intellectual exertion should be checked. Such is the theory, which Dr. C. Mercier, an English authority on children, expresses in an article in the London Lancet. Especially when there is any family tendency to nervous or mental disorder, rapidly growing children should be withdrawn from school altogether until the period of rapid growth is over.
Paris Plana Monument
President Polincare received a delegation proposing to erect by 1920 a monument commemorative of the Bittithe year of the third French republic, which would be a companion piece to the Arc de Triomphe. It is proposed to erect the monument in the Place de La Defense. The design represents a Latin cross the four arms of which will form a terrace.
Kind of Man He Likes.
The best citizen we have in town,
to my notion, is a fellow who comes
around every week and pats me on the back and says: "Deacon, that
room in green and white, two Japanese reception rooms, a room for entertainments with band stand at one end and a stage at the other, photograph studio, roof garden, and a children's playroom with latest good-time appliances from a Chicago house. Last but not least is a lunchroom, where tea, coffee or chocolate and foreign cakes are served, or, if you prefer, the daintiest of Japanese lunches.
It will not be long before we will only have dreams of the days when it took many hours for shopping. We went to the somber looking black buildings, entered amid the profound bows of the clerks sitting on the floor by their "hibachi" Tea was brought in, and finally, when we had made known our wants, owed the messenger boys to the storehouse and in course of time returned with goods from which our selection could be made. No one ever complained; however often he had to tret back and forth. To be in haste on our side would mean we were not the women of leisure who frequented such stores. As for the clerks, that was-what they were there for!
When finally the purchases were made the clerk clapped his hands to call the attendant to bring writing box and paper. The ink was deliberately made "while we waited," our bill properly made out and stamped with the various seals, the goods partially done up (for no woman went shopping without her "bundle handkerchief" in those old days) and we took our departure with bows and "thank you" from the whole staff.
Getting Used to It.
We are very glad of all these new and facilitating arrangements for shopping, because we are learning to "hustle" in the East. We are trying to adjust our senses gracefully to the present, dodging the automobiles on our way, having our boots covered by overcloth shoes or slippers at the door, trading at counters, having our purchases registered on cash recorders, being jostled and pushed (politely) at the special sale tables and hearing telephone bells on this side and that.
We are glad to get off by ourselves in the quiet tea and rest rooms and think things out. Did we really mind because up in the lunchroom a group of kindly country people stood about our table to see us eating with chopsticks? It was embarrassing when we could not succeed as well as we generally did just on account of our self-consciousness. What does all this mean to these country people who have come in to see the sights of the metropolis? We love their kindly friendly curiosity and courtesy. Yes, we are happy and contented in the new but more so that we have had our share of experience in the Japan of the old days.
was some great stuff you gave us last week. I think you are the smartest man in the county. I am for you for congress. We need more level-headed fellows like you." I despise the narrow fellow who sneaks off and tells the neighbors that the stuff is passing fair, but it is either old or all stolen. Don't you feel the same way about your neighbors?—Kansas City Star.
Longest Twelve-Word Telegram.
There were 450 competitors for the prize offered by an English journal for the longest 12-word telegram, and the winner put in the following, which was transmitted for 12 cents, the regular rate: "Administrator general's counterrevolutionary intercommunications unchromatized. Quartermaster general's disproportionableness characteristically contradistinguished unconstitutionalists' incomprehensibilities."
It is believed that the river Nile contains more kinds of fish than any other river in the world.
Getting Used to It.
Office, 1301 EAST 18th STREET
Residence, 1326 Highland Ave.
Res. Home Phone, East 852
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Over THEODORE SMITH, Druggist
Home Phone, 5467 Main
Boll 4914 Grand
1301 EAST 18th St.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Office of
DR. M. G. BROOKINS,
24th and Vine Sts.
Bell Phone Last 232.
Residence, 1816 Woodland Avenue
Bell Phone E. 838.
Office hours: 11 to 12 a. m.; 2 to
4 p. m.; 6 to 8 p. m.
Calls Answered Day or Night.
Office Hours
8 to 12 m. & 1 to 5 p. m.
Sunday by Appointment
Bell Grand 2553W
DR. E. C. BUNCH
Gold Crown, Bridges and
Plates A Specialty
Painless Extraction
716 East 12th St. Kansas City, Mo
Mrs. C. A. Smith
has opened a branch office of
MRS. S. BEDFORD'S
Wonderful Hair Grower & Scalp Treatment
This treatment has proved to be a
wonderful success. Mrs. Smith will
receive patients for treatment from
From 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. at
her residence. 11th and Highland
Every ingredient used on the hair
is perfectly safe and
Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction Bell Phone, East 4975.
A.
J. H. SIMMONS, Prop.
ATLAS HOTEL,
915 Oak Street
Nicely Modern
Furnished Rooms
For Light
Housekeeping
BY DAY OR WEEK
Rates $1.50, $2.00, $2.50
and $3.00 a week.
Some of these days some brave Masons are going to get together and rewrite the major ceremonies and not only to deter them but to bring them into touch with modern spirit. Each ceremony appears to have been written without regard for any other and the higher the rank of the degree, the longer and more tedious the ceremony, and positively tiresome, especially as they are usually carried out. There was a time when ceremonies were a time taken to the public but the time has passed. What formerly interested them now borens them and the demand for norms and laws perhaps it would be better to carry out all the ceremonies in private, without the demand for norms and laws sincerity in our grief and eliminating the physical endurance features of our public appearances.
If You Want What You Ask For Call on the Beatty Coal Co.
Second and Oak Sts.
Either Phone Main 1136
We see that you get correct weight.
Coal without slack or slate in it.
We attend to your order at once.
Call for J. L. Alexander, B. East 999
Peace Power Plenty
Are you Discouraged, Discontented or
Despondent?
Are you Poor, Poverty-stricken or Painful?
Are you Sick, Sad or Sinful?
If so, write now and learn the SECRETS OF
PEACE, POWER AND PLENTY.
GEO. W. SPEARS
P. O. Box 21 INDEPENDENCE, MO.
[Picture of a man in a suit with a white shirt and a black tie].
H. B. MOORE, Proprietor.
The Eureka Carpet
1718 Euclid A
The Only Steam Carpet Clean
and Operated by
Your Old Carpets Made to Look New
Special Attention G
Town Orders---Y
Freight One Way
the Rest.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Call Up or Write for
The Eureka Carpet Cleaning Co.
1718 Euclid Avenue
The Only Steam Carpet Cleaner in Missouri Owned and Operated by a Negro.
Your Old Carpets Made to Look New for a Reasonable Price
Special Attention Given to Out of Town Orders---You Pay the Freight One Way and I Pay the Rest.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED TO BE FIRST CLASS
Call Up or Write for Information.
Yours in J. M. & T.
PHONES: Home M. 1169. Bell E. 3555. 1718 EUCLID AVE.
TYPEWRITING DONE at Kansas City Son office, 1803 East Eighteenth street. Neat, quick work. Rates reasonable. Engagements by appoint ment. Bell phone East 999.
KELLEY'S BEST HIGH PATENT
```markdown
```
```markdown
```
Do You Read The Sun?
DO YOU LIKE IT?
Do you know you can get it for ONE YEAR for ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS. Sent anywhere in the United States.
ORDER NOW! OUR PHONE IS BELL EAST 999.
Kansas City Undertaking Co.
Motto: Prompt attention and courteous treatment.
Only Chapel Room in the City
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Home Phone, Main 3541.
Bell Phone, Main 3598.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Carpet Cleaning Co.
Selid Avenue
It Cleaner in Missouri Owned
otted by a Negro.
Look New for a Reasonable Price
On Given to Out of
Rs---You Pay the
Way and I Pay
TEED TO BE FIRST CLASS
ite for Information.
D. M. WEST, Prop. Kansas City, Mo
Cheap rent and light expenses en-
able me to give you the same shoe you
get downtown at 10, 15 and 20 per-
cent reduction. G. A. Page, 1507 East
Eighteenth street.
FLOUR
Kelley's Best
Beat all the Rest.
Kelley Milling Co.
K.C., U.S.A.
Hello
Hello, Neighbor!
Call us, write, or see our agents.
Uncle Eph. is passing,—bare the head.
Let no words of scorn or shame e'er be said.
For he wrought as doth the mole
Save that light shone in his soul.
And his like comes not again,—bare the head.
Uncle Eph. is passing,—bow the knee.
For, whate'er the future holds, still 'twas to be.
Who hath fathered well the race
And his grave yet kindly face
Conquers wrong, and grief and death,—bow the knee.
Uncle Eph. is passing,—whisper low.
While the mild and soothing tears gently flow.
Who but he the way could tread
Through the living and the dead
And survive the dread ordurel—whisper low.
Uncle Eph. is passing,—let us pray;
Grant, on wondrous Lord of Hosts, in our day,
We may rise to equal height
By our standards and our light
And the glory shall be Thine,—so we pray.
—Tilford Davis, Jr.
"The Republican party is the ship, all else the sea for the Negro," said Frederick Douglass forty years ago. What was true then is true now. Stick to the party, boys.
"PRESTO"
stightens the most obstinate stubborn Kinky Hair. "PRESTO" eradicates Dandruff, Tetter and other diseases of the scalp. "PRESTO" promotes a luxuriant growth of hair. "PRESTO" is the greatest discovery known to chemists in this line.
Throw away your old pulling and pinching hot irons, also the so-called Electric Combs, and use "PRESTO", the king of all hair preparations.
Apply "PRESTO" just once to your hair and your hair becomes straight and remains straight for months.
"THINK OF IT!"
"PRESTO" is applied only two or three times a year, "that's all." Nothing in the world like "PRESTO". A package of "PRESTO" with full directions sent postpaid on receipt of One Dollar ($1.00). Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded.
A Dumb Agent Can Sell "PRESTO."
It Talks.
ADVERTISE YOUR SOCIETY.
We would like to see every lodge and society in Kansas City put their cards in The Sun. It is the most popular way to let the world know who you are, when and where you meet and your object and purpose. For the next month we will make special announcements to have you put in your lodge or society list of of officers in this paper.
Mme. Benton Dean, the popular milliner, has moved to 1010 Troost avenue, where she is elegantly located and will be extremely pleased to meet her many friends and customers at that number. Belle phone Main 2102J.
Read The Sun
, Neig
REAL ESTATE Property of All Kinds For Sale In Both Kansas Citys and Topeka TERMS TO SUIT
Main Office: 400 Haskell Ave., Kansas City, Kas.
BELL PHONE WEST 644
Branch Office: Portsmouth Bldg., Sixth and Minnesota Ave.
Branch Office, Topeka, Kas.: 410 Kansas Ave
Expert Dental Specialists
Our work has stood the test. We have been doing high class guaranteed Dental Work for the past 26 years. We have thousands of satisfied patients
Remember, in Business 26 Years
All work kept in repair free of charge.
The doctor who extracts your teeth here has undoubtedly had more experience in this line than any other dentist in the city, so you get the most expo$^{g}$ service. Painless Extracting, 35c.
Gold Crowns #3, $4 and $5
Silver Fillings, 75c. and $1
White Crowns $3, $4 and $5
Plating Fillings 30c.
New Location 1017-19 Walnut St.
Over Jaccard's Jewelry store, 1 door north Emery, Bird, Thayer Ce
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
Everything Fresh and First Class
HOME PHONE 6496 MAIN
A man working at a desk.
ALL HAND WORK
REAL
Property of A
In Both Kansas
TERM
MISS RUTH
Main Office: 400 H
BELL PR
Branch Office: Portsmouth
Branch Office, Tope
Expert Dent
OF KAN
Our work has stood the test.
Dental Work for the past 26 year
Remember
All work k
SAVE MONEY EXAM
All work k
The doctor who extracts your teeth in this line than any other dental service. Painless Extracting, 250
```markdown
```
Gold Crowns $3, $4 and
Silver Filling
Whole
FULL SET
'NEW YORK
New Location
Over Jaccard's Jewelry store
FRED M
GROCERIES
FRUITS AND
Everything
HOME P
700 Charlotte Street
hbo
718 East 8th St.
Suits Cleaned and Pressed, $100. Goods called for and delivered. Bell phone Main
4231Y.
ESTATE
All Kinds For Sale
S Citys and Topeka
MS TO SUIT
BRADLEY & CO.
Maskell Ave., Kansas City, Kas.
PHONE WEST 644
Sixth Bldg., Sixth and Minnesota Ave.
Eka, Kas.: 410 Kansas Ave.
Dental Specialists
KISAS CITY.
We have been doing high class guaranteed
cases. We have thousands of satisfied patients.
In Business 20 Years
except in repair free of charge.
MINIMATION FREE
guaranteed 20 years
GET THE BEST
with here has undoubtedly had more experience,
artist in the city, so you get the most expen
BRIDGE WORK
Spaces where from one to ten teeth have been lost we replace with bridge work. It looks the same as natural teeth, lasts a lifetime and requires no plata. Broken down teeth we restore to beauty and usefulness with crowns of porcelain and gold.
and $5
a, 75c. and $1
White Crowne $3, $4 and $5
Platina Fillings 200
T TEETH $4 TO $8
BK DENTAL CO
on 1017-19 Walnut St.
e, 1 door north Emery, Bird, Thayer Co
MARSHOCK
S AND MEATS
ND VEGETABLES
Fresh and First Class
PHONE 6496 MAIN
Kansas City, Mo.
or!
A. F. and A. M.
Missouri Jurisdiction
Officers—1913.
N. C. Crews, Kansas City, Grand Master.
Deputy Grand Master, Richard Young, Lincoln, Neb.
L. F. Payne, Glasgow, Mo., Grand Senior Warden.
F. J. Brown, St. Louis, Grand Junior Warden.
H. H. Walker, St. Joseph, Grand Treasurer.
Geo. W. K. Love, Grand Secretary, Kansas City, Mo.
W. W. Fields, Secretary of Masonic Relief, Cameron, Mo.
E. J. Cooper, Mexico, Mo., Grand Lecturer.
Grand Commandery Officers.
A. D. Butler, R. E. G. C., St. Joseph.
Mo.
W. G. Mosely, V. E. G. C., Kansas
City.
P. C. Kincade, E. G. C. G., Kansas
City.
T. P. Mahammitt, G. Treasurer,
Omaha, Neb.
C. H. Lewis, G. Rec., Kansas City.
Geo. Broomfield, G. H. P., St. Louis,
Mo.
T. G. McCampbell, D. G. H. P., Kansas City.
A. L. Thomas, G. K., Jefferson City,
Mo.
J. P. Moffitte, G. S., Sedalla, Mo.
Chas. Griggsby, G. Treas, Liberty,
Mo.
E. S. Baker, G. Sec'y, Kansas City,
Mo.
MASONIC BUILDING ASSOCIATION
MEMBERS.
R. T. Coles, Chairman.
E. S. Baker, Secretary.
C. H. Lewis, Asst. Secretary.
R. W. Foster, Treasurer.
W. C. Mallory, Sandy Meyers,
Wm. Washington, Geo. Bradley,
T. W. H. Williams, H. R. Edwards,
J. E. Herriford, E. G. Lacey,
E. G. Miller, W. C. Hueston.
Lodge Directory
LUDGE DIRECTORY
Pritchard Lodge No. 42, A. F. and A. M. meet the 2nd and 4th Monday in each month. All Master Masons in good standing welcome. R. Greer, W. M.; J. H. Snigler, Sec'y.
Rone Lodge No. 25, A. F. and A. M. meet the 2nd and Monday in each month. All Master Masons in good standing welcome. F. W. Glmore, W. M.; T. J. McCampbell, Sec'y.
Mt. Olive Lodge No. 53, A. F. and A. M. meets the 2nd and 4th Friday in every month. Visitors are welcome. Thos. Jackson, W. M.; J. A. Johnson, Sec'y.
Expert
Furnace and Stove
Repairs
RESIDENCE 1612 COTTAGE AVENUE.
VISIT THE
New Negro Enterprise
Known as the
Fad Studio
A First Class, Up-to-Date Gallery.
Views, Flashlights of Banquets, Parties, Groups of all Public Functions.
Enlargements our Specialty.
Post Cards, three for.....25c
Cabinet Photos made, per dozen,
$2.00 UP.
AGENTS WANTED.
C. BRUCE SANTEE, Prop.
1718 E. 18th ST., KANSAS CITY, MO.
J.C.WAGNER
The Clean Market Man
Oysters, Fish and Game in
Season.
Fancy Groceries and all Table
Luxuries.
Courteous Treatment to All
1819 Howard Ave.
Bell Phone 3596 East
Kansas City, Missouri.
Best Shine in K. C. 5c For Ladies Gents
AGENCY FOR
The Kansas City Son.
The Crisis,
The New York Age,
The Freeman
and All Daily Papers
Ice Cream and Soda
Cigars and Tobacco
HENRY SHUMAKER
1702 East 18th St.
<All communications should be addressed
tgtve umaan City" Sun, tabs Bast 18th
3 Bell Phone East 999.
Entered as second-class matter, August
Theat the poatofticw at Kanan Cty,
Mo"inaer the det of March 8 1878.
Kelson ©. Grews.....---Iealtor and Owner
Wille "nGiennes:20.22 General Atanager
FG! Bhterssnescs.s-Advertiving Solleltor
Hive Was orieen coeds ue
Rosa Mort sss csseessersnersssCOUOCLOE
Rima Grower 2000 SUES Goneetor
SUBSCRIPTION RATES! |,
nk Peak cccticsssescscsscrsssseesss SLM
Si stontns Warne
Three Months cocci Be
Rete eter peers cases r
TE oceastonaity happens that papers went
to aubweribers are font or stolen. In eave
fomde'nor ideeive any tomer when de
form ‘wn iy" postal card” and. we wii
cheerfully forward a duplicate “ot ‘the
missing. nomen %
ADVERTISING RATE 60 CENTS Pur
INCH.
eeunou. SreotOR:
Bete ee Caren ate ead Ce
toh Stephen's Baptist ‘Church, 604 Char-
Secs ATLA ES 0.
ne
wei
es
7
ra
Ten Bue uh ate
P Ward ‘Chapel A. M. EB, Church, 11th and
wwa
MER A. a. chusch, center
wes
ASRS cur, aanate
es
iow A. MB Mon, sth an
ie
. M.'B. Church, 1817 Flora Ave.
me ite
ate
oBie BORIS OMEENS an
inte A. M, B, Guueh, Quite
penne Re Ba, a
‘M, E. Church, 9th and Oakland,
a ea a RE
ER ER Petal, rand
EES Boral, at Stee
ond Bie CMa
Rater ee
Bethel A.M. B. Church, Roselale, Ka
ot
tee 0 ae our amet a
Sbenes
More than 2,000 people struggled for
admission at St. Stephen's Baptist
church last Sunday night to hear Rev.
J. W, Hurse preach on “Hell,” and
among his audience wns about 100
hundred prominent whic people who
came in a body, Dr. Hurse preached
one of tis characteristic sermons and
proved conclusively to his hearers
that hell was a good place to stay
away from, The collection was nearly
$100, =
‘The local daily press reports that
six white men lured a woman into a
room and criminally mistreated her
this week, No colored man could in
any way be connected with the dread-
ful affair, so the attention of the pub-
lic was recalled by the reminiscent
reporters to an offense committed by
“two black brutes” several years azo.
A Nesro is sure to be connected up
in every rape offense even if he must
be found in bis grave.
There is one respect in wilich the
Negro is not “getting more like the
white folks every day”. Tie does not
stand with his own people hke the
“white folks” do. He easily takes cn
the weaknesses of his fair criterion,
but he spurns his virtues, In this way
the race is bound to lose more sub-
stantial ground than it gains. ‘The
few examples of brave, loyal manhood
and patriotie womanhood make a sor-
ry showing in contrast to taat great
sullen, indifferent throng which, hay-
ing eyes, sees not; having ears, hear
not,
On last Tuesday the Parent-Teach:
ers’ Associations of all the Colored
schools in Kansas City were organized
into a Federation at the School Board
rooms by Mrs. L. V. Defrantz of the
Board of Public Welfare and Mra, M.
R. Weeks, Vice President of the Na
tlonal ‘Association of Mothers, Every
school save one had a representative
and that one Is to be organized short
ly, ‘This is a record to be proud of
ag it surpasses the record of the white
schools, Miss Anna H. Jones was
elected President and Mrs. T, W. H.
Williams, Vice President, An Execu
tive Committee was Real which
‘will meet once a month and the Fed
‘eration once every two months,
Negro voters should think carefully
before aligning themselves with any
of the factions into which the old po-
litical parties are breaking up. Let
those fight who started the fray, Ex.
perience has shown that the black
man usually gets the worst in all these
intra-party seraps and he is the last
to be forgiven whea the was is over.
Our participation into politics should
‘be intelligent but conservative, We
Raye no occasion for wild frenzy or
Diatant enthusiasm. As a rule it ts
eth: Mire nig alr
4 mt Wilson just to see how
sare going to start off. ‘Ther
{ most
lint Neo least ttt appenre the
FIGHTING FOR LIFE.
Father and Son, Because the Latter
Tried to Protect His Aged Parents
—Let Us All Help Financially,
Colorado State Penitentiary.
Hon. N. ©. Crews, Dear Sir; [am
enclosing herewith a copy of a dects:
fon handed down by the supreme court
of Colorado in regard to my case,
which was hastily tried in district
court of Otero county at La Junta,
Colo. in July, 1911, where I was In-
etantly convicted and sentenced to
death and my aged father, a man of
near 8 years, was also convicted us
an accomplice and sentenced from 80
to 50 years at hand labor in state pen-
itentiary, I was sentenced to deat
for protecting my aged father and
mother, in their own home, and my
life at the cost of the lives of the two
‘brutal, imhuman, prejudiced, Negro-
‘hating, Iawless policemen who were
assaulting my mother and father, and
seeking to murder me,
But after being dented a new trial
by the judge trying my case, my at-
torney, ExJudge Lyman 1, Henry of
Pueblo, Colo,, assisted by W. B, Town-
send, attorney-atlaw of Denver, Colo.,
‘aided at great expense by good citl:
zens of both races and members of
my lodge, the R. T. Coles lodge, No.
86, A. F. and A. M., Kansas City, Mo,
and my father's, Prudent lodge, No. 6
A. F, and A. M., Kansas City, Kas.
I succeeded in getting our case to the
supreme court, which readily reversed
the judgment of the lower court, and
granted me a new trial which wil
soen come.
Now, dear sir, the fight has jus
commenced as the prejudiced class In
that community are determined that
the sentence imposed on my fathel
and myself ‘be carried out, and they
will use every means in their power
to gain their hellish ends, and tc
thwart all in their desire to see me
get justice. I appeal to you for finan
‘cial aid, if you can assist me in any
way through the columns of your pa
per, or otherwise, to meet the finan
cial demands involved, it will be great
ly appreciated, My reason for sendin
you a copy of the supreme court's de
cision and comments, is for you to se
clearly it was not an act trying or at
tempting to defy the law in any way
but one of protecting my parents an
my life. I again beg to state that
Jam a worthy member of R. T. Cole
| lodge, No. 86, Kansas City, Mo., an
my father, Joseph Harris, of Pruden
| lodge, No 6, Kansas City, Kas., beins
a 32 degree man and a 33 degree gen
|tleman. So I appeal to you most ea:
nestly, that you may do for us wha
J you can, You may refer to your re
spective lodges as to our standing
| Should you feel disposed to aid u:
|forward same to my mother, Mrs
Clara Harris, No, 1319 River streel
| Canon City, Colo., as she is strivin
to gain us justice and every one look
| to her to be paid for any expense ir
| curred in helping father and me.
Please acknowledge receipt to m
.| Hoping for your assistance, I am,
Yours respectfully and fraternal
)in A. F, and A, M,,
ROBERT HARRIS,
| No, 8180, Colorado State Prison,
, Canon City, Colorado.
|
F |
a
pene
ee ty
; Be
i
ie |
MR. R. QUINN,
The enterprising and intrepid young
hustler who will give a mammoth en-
tertainment in Convention. Hall
GRAND MUSICAL RECITAL.
at Convention Hall, June 19, 1914.
Speakers of Note In and Out of
the City Will Be Present,
Music by the Best Talent Procured
Tickets will be on sale at the
leading drug stores of the city
after February 15, 1914.
For further information write
R. F. Quinn, 5714 Main street,
Kansas City, Mo.
RESOLUTIONS.
Whereas, it has pleased tho Al
mighty Father, the Creator and Ruler
of Heaven and of Earth, on Peoruary
16, 1014, at 8:40 p. m. to donyaich whe
death Angel to the bedside of our be-
Ioted Goctpanton, #2. Setwania, 900
Baraassen bles is tay anlty tle work
ing tools on earth; weary Companion
rest from thy labor and work ao more,
Wheress believing all things vor
together for the good of mankind, we
Nam one bade ta RGROuM’ eavarseee
to the will of Him who doeth all things
aright, we fully realize that he is not
dead but only sleepeth until thhe res.
urection trumpet shall sound, then all
shall rise to give an account of thel:
deeds on Earth,
Bett therefore resolved that th
heartfelt sympathy and condolence
of St. Paul Chapter No. 4, Roya! Arci
| =vfaag be extended to the bereaved
ly and stricken relatives of Coia
panion Edwards. ’
Be it further resolved that a cop)
‘of these resolutions be tendere to th¢
bereaved family and a copy to th
Kansas City Sun, and a copy be place:
in the minutes of the Chapter,
We loved bim, yes we loved him, bu
the Angels loved him more, for they
have gently called him to yonder shin
“Gomme
Nae Se wasn, WP.
2 ea ERE ROE
Y. M. C. A. NOTES
A large audience of men heard the
well delivered subject “Molern Gi-
ants” by Dr. Chesteen Smith on Inst
Sunday, Rey. Becklm of Independ-
ence will-gpeak on the subject “Save
the Boy or Reform the Man?” next
Sunday March 15th, 3:30 p. m,
‘The following note has veen one of
the most encouraging notes recived
by the building committee:
Mr, Wm. T. Kemper,
Dear Sir:—You will please excuse
me for not sending vou my last pay-
ment for the Y. M. 2. ». any sooner
for I am a poor womaa and could not
spare it any sooner. { hope ihe under
taking will be a great success,
Respectfully,
MRS. MARY UUGRES.
The writer is an eidetly woman,
working for a mere pittance. She
subscribed and paid $25,00. She says
that she has a grown son who had not
the advantages or the restraining in-
fluences that the Youns Men's Chris-
tian Association offers.
Y. W. C. A. NOTES
Mrs. Dr. Thompkins will ‘be the
speaker at our Vesper service Sunday,
‘March 15, at 3:00 p, m. .
The City Federation of Women's
Clubs, Mrs. Geo, Minor, President,
which gave a donation of $5.00 last
week furnished the reception room of
our Association building last Spring
with nice Mission furniture and a
large rug.
Miss Eva D. Bowles, City Secretary
for the Colored Association at the
National Y. ‘Ws C, A. Headquarters
in New York City, is to be the guest
of our Association the latter part of
this month,
—— \
We are asking all our members who
Joined the Y. W. C. A. before or dur-
ing March, 1913, to come and renew |
their membership or send check, |
We note with pleasure the roving
interest ‘in the Y. W. C. A. since our
our annual meeting March 2nd, our
young women have been coming in
and calling over the phone desiring
to know when we will meet again or
what we desire them to do, The
Young Women’s Christian Association
fs the largest organization of women
in the world, Its purpose is to bring
all women to Christ and to make them
useful in the home, community and
the Chureh, The membership is one
dollar yearly,
Notice—The Lincoin Theatre at
12th and Vine Streets is an up-to-
date picture show house and deserves
your patronage,
Betty@ Sam's
Little Cormer)
Ja, Nbim aR) |
Bimter, A) TWA H,
A tag i
fe Yee ee ea \ eed |
ee om
fomey
| hed; F-4-< Yom
i <a) HP
Le A an N. es
Ve NIP
| ie Wil
Le at i
pa
THEY SAY
—That a certain house has ten cases
of beer left every Saturday, Why?
| —That you can do anything you
please provided you don’t get caught,
—That the affections of a certain}
lady for her husband have increased |
recently. Why? |
—That no man living can serve God |
and the devil at one and the same
time," Selah |
ee roat-acacBaceiye ds aah ne}
how to keep our personal feeling ont
of our business relations. |
ee
‘That a well known lady ran against.|
the door jamb the other night which
accounts for an awful black eye—Uh-
huh,
—That a handsome pair of silk
tights were found after the Booker
Washington lecture. Speak up, who
lost them?
—That since the girls have gone in
for tight dresses, the dudes are begin-
ning to wear skin tight pants, Oh
ou pants, i
—That a certain husband who ‘ai
been entertaining other ladies, for
years found out recently that his wife
had gotten wise and now he's carrying
big gun threatening to “kill him if 1
see him”. Oh consistency,
—That a certain doctor met a well
known citizen the other day and usked
him how he was. - Andon the follow:
ing Saturday the citizen got a bill for
two dollars for services. ‘That's going
some,
—That a certain lady was highly en-
tertained on @ recent visit to another
town and the Sun gave a glowing ac:
count of the social affairs tendered
her while away. Another Indy who
apparently doesn't admire the firs
party called up this office and sald
“You're wasting ink on that old nig:
gab, you all was writing up kase she
‘ain't nuthin ‘but @ suds buster,” Now
what did she mean? |
DIRECTORY
or THE
Negro Business League of Kansas City.
A, &. ESTES, Secretary.
‘Wm. D. Foster Auto Co, 1423 Forest, hire and repair; office Bell
Grand 1630W; res. phone Bell Hast 4417W.
BAKERS.
Henry Compton, home bakery, 1512 East 18th,
Susie Owens, 2329 Vine.
George Purnell, 1212 Vine; East 4916W Bell,
‘ BARBERS,
Wm, Lewis, Atlanta Pool Hall, Barber Shop and Bath, 1609-11 B. 18th
St. Bell Phone, East 721,
William Dabbs, 1219 Baltimore; Grand 3125 Bell,
J. A. Jones, 1514 B, 18th St.; Home Phone Main 6119,
Palace Barber Shop, J. C. Hobbs, Prop., 1518 B. 19th St. Bell phone,
2833 East.
Wm, Stitts, Criterion Barber Shop and Pool Hall, 1717 Bast 18th St.
BLACKSMITH.
Jas, Hopkins, 2325 Vine St.
CAFES AND RESTAURANTS.
Nannie Glover & Daughter, East End Dairy Lunch, 1613 East Bigh-
teenth Street. Bell phone, ast 3813,
Henry Compton, 1512 E. 18th St. Bell phone, East 618.
Mrs, King, Eighteenth and Paseo,
Magele Seamster, 1507% Kast Twelfth,
Harmless Wynn, barbecued meats, 2315 Vine.
Mrs. H, W. Dotson, 1705 E. Twelfth St. Phone, Bell 2214
Madame U, F. Scales, Northeast Cor. 5th and State, Kansas City, Kans,
Bishop's Cate, H. Bishop, Prop., 911 McGee St. Bell phone, Main 751.
Mrs. Glover and Daughter, East End Dairy Lunch, 1613 1, 18th St.
Phone, East. 3813. :
R. W. Alexander, 1619 E, 18th St, Barbecued Meats.
Hughes & Buckner, 1514 E. 19th Bt. Barbecued Moats. Bell Phone,
East 2833.
M, Hunter & Son, 1919 B. 18th St, “M, C, Lunch Room,”
Dora Tilson, Baltimore Cafe No, 2, 675 Grand Avenue,
Mrs, Lyda Franklin, Lincoln Cate, 1312 B. 18th St.
CHRISTIAN SOCIETIES.
Mrs. Lydia C. Smith, General Secretary ¥. W. C. A. Fifth and State
Avenue, Kansas City, Kans. Bell phone, West 1566.
RB, Defrantz, Secretary Y. M. C. A., 1419 Bast Eighteenth Street.
Bell phone, Grand 885.
CLEANERS, DYERS AND TAILORS,
©. K. Cleaners and Dyers, guaranteed not to shrink any garment we
dye, 1113 Bast 18th; Bell Grand 2437.
R, Bennett, 1515 East Eighteenth; Bast 4746 Bell,
J. F, Basil, 1509 Main; Main 6449 ‘Home.
John Holmes, 1903 Vine.
Wortham Bros,, 1222 E, 19th St. Bell Phone, Grand 3933-W.
Laden Bros, Tailors, Designers and Cutters, 2427 Vine Street. Bell
Phone, East 569-W.
G, W. Golden Steam Dye Works, 1605 Hast 18th; Bell East 539.
R, L. Hopkins, 2826 Vine St. “The Star.” Bell Phone, East $135.
CARPET CLEANERS.
D. W. West, 1718 Euclid, Phones, Bell Hast 3555; Home, Main 1169,
CIGAR MANUFACTURER.
Henry Parks.1509 East Bighteenth; Main 4905 Home, East 45 Bell
CLERGYMEN,
Rey. G. H, Daniels, 2313 Vine Street. Home phone, Main 5618,
4. N, Cohron, State Baptist Missionary, 708 North 24th St,, St. Joseph,
Mo. Phone 2137,
J. R. Ransom, Pastor A. M, B. Church, 8th and Nebraska, Kansas City,
Kans. “Bell Phone, West 2004.
8, W. Bacote, Pastor Second Baptist Church, Kansas City, Mo. Bell
Phone, East. 3522,
G. T. Mosby, Pastor Greenwood Baptist Church, 18th and Terrace,
Kansas City, Mo.
W. H. Thomas, Pastor Allen Chapel A. M. E. Church, Bell, Main 3660,
J. W. Hurse, Pastor Saint Stephens Bapiist Chirch, Bell, East 4090,
G. W. Boyd, Pastor Highland Avenue Baptist Church,
W. A. Bowren, Pastor First Baptist Church. Bell Phone,-West 3510.
‘Lee H. Mills, 10th and Euclid Ave. Kansas City, Mo.
Rey. G. E, Arnett, 14th and Spruce, Baptist Church,
Rev 0. T. Reed, State Baptist Church Convention and Twin City Min:
isters’ Alliance Secretary.
Rev. J. W. Carter, 2224 Mich. ‘St. James A. M. E. Chureh,
Rev. W. ©. Williams, 17th and Tracy Ave, Ebenézer A, M, B, Church,
Rey. T. A. Wilsou, 1747 Belleview Ave,, Grand 2668,
COAL, FEED, ICE AND KINDLING,
James Alexander, 574 Tracy Ave. Both Phones, Main 7488,
3, H, Hall, 1208 Vine.
Herman Kinslee, 2012 Harrison; Grand 2760W Bell.
E, A. Salisbury, 2206 Vine; East 879 Bgll,
W. H. Winters, 1915 Highland.
R, Williams, 1815 East Seventeenth,
Hopkins Bros., 2328 Vine.
W. H, Lambright & Sons, Coal, Ice and Feed. Bell phone, W. 1923.
1620 North 3d street, Kansas City, Kas,
CONTRACTORS—GENERAL.
Wm. T. Garner, contractor and builder, 1728 Woodland; Bell B. 4741W.
A. E, Estes, 2460 Waldron, Bell, East 4394-¥,
Leon H. Jordan, 712 East 12th St. Bell Grand 2873,
W. R, Nelson, 1822 Pacific Street.
C. 8, Page, 1514 East Eighteenth; Main 5119 Home, £
COOPER. \
Lee London, 407 West 5th.
DENTISTS.
. C. Chapman, 1505 East Eighteenth; East 798 Bell.
A. H. Hudson, 2330 Vine; East 2330 Bell,
‘MeQueen Carrion, 18th and Paseo, Bell Phone, B. 144, Home
Phone, Main’ 3490,
H, D. Vooriies, 500 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kans, Bell Phone,
West 1910,
DRESSMAKING. .
Mrs. Blanche Page, Dressmaker, 2413 Vine St., Bell Phone, East 2192,
Miss Georgia Coleman, 1510 E. 18th street.
Birdie Jackson; 1912 East Nineteenth,
DRUG STORES,
Peoples Drug Store, M. H. Lambfight, Mgr, Bell Phone, East 1814,
Home Phone, Main 4382,
McCampbell & Houston, 2300 Vine street, and N. W. Cor, Howard and
Vine Sts.
E. 8. Lee Palace Drug Store, 19th and Vine, Both phones,
Ideal Pharmacy, 1532 F, 12th Street. Bell phone, East 26; Home
phone, Main 1532,
DRY GOODS, GENT’S FURNISHINGS, NOTIONS.
‘Mrs, Josephine Abernathy, Ladies Furnishings and Notiom, 2413
Vine street... Bell phone East 3192, .
Ell Harris, 2833 Vine St.
Taylor Homes '& Laden Bros. & Co., gents’ furnishings and notions,
) 4427 Vine,
EMPLOYMENT AGENTS.
Afro-American Employment & Inv, Co, 911 McGee. Both phones,
» ,,, EXPRESS AND BAGGAGE, :
BH, A. Robinson, 2413 Montgall Ave, Bell, East 754,
i FLORISTS,
Weaver Floral Co. 1510 Bast 18th St, Main 7655 Home; E, 4798 Bell
FURNITURE DEALERS,
L, M. Furnitute & Repair Co, Lewis Townsend, 1720 Lydia Ave,
Bell phone, Grand 1772,
GROCERS,
Wilson & Gray, 1604 North 3rd St,, Kansas City, Kans,
G, B, Arnett, 2200 Bast Twenty-firth, .
A. Mason, 1905 Vine.
J. L, Matson, 19th and Grove, Bell Grand 1417-X.
‘M. R. Wilson, 2644 Woodland,
Geo. M, King, 3208 North Sth St, Kansas City, Kan, Bell Phone,
jest, 3097.
J, H, Claybourne, 10th and Washington Blvd. Bell phone, West 2682,
E, Jonson & Son, 852 Froeman Ave,, Kansas Clty, Kan,”
rant soft AND scatp cuLTunier. Susie
‘Madame Grant Jones, 5th an ve, Kansas City, Kans. Res,
Phoue, Bell, West 3716-J,
Mrs. Ella Neff. 1714 E. 18th St. Bell ohone Rear 412
By led hrc tity Maerua tigen acteet igri!
JEWELER.
J. A. Wilson, 1616 W. 8th St Bell Main, 6453-¥,
HAIR DRESSING AND MILLINERY.
Madame N. P. Jones, Beauty Culture, Hair Goods, etc, 2110 Vine
street,
Mattie P. Garner, electric straighteneing, comb and hair goods; Bell
East 4741W, ~
Lillie Johnson, 1508 East 18th; Bell East 1795,
Chapman & Caidwell, 18t band Pase», Phone East 798.
Eva P. Washington, milliner and hair dresser, 849 Freeman, Bell
phone, 2806 West.
Mrs, Stella Hubbard, 1510 B. 18th St. Bell Phone Bast 1007,
LAWYERS.
L. W. Johnson Offices, 825 New York Life building, Stein-Miller build-
ing, see Sixth and State. Bell phone, West 988; Residence,
fest 3985.
Judge I, F. Bradley, 721 Minnosota Ave., Kansas City, Kan, Rooms
5 and 6. Beli Phone, West 2925,
William B, Bruce, Attorney-at-Law and Counsellor. Phone, Home
Main 5478; Otfice, 117 West Sixth Street.
Chas, H. Callaway, 117 W. 6th. Home Main 68.
'W. C, Hueston, 117 W. 6th. Home Main 58.
L, A. Knox, 117 W. 6thSt. Home Main 5478.
MISCELLANEOUS,
John Hill, 1513 Woodland, Beil Phone, Bast 1254.
Amus Barnett, 1230 Forest; Main 5018 Home,
R. ©, Holland, 2423 Grove Street.
8. J. Hightower, 2436 Highland.
Solomon Smith, 2643 Highland,
George Teeters, Southwest National Bank of Commerce,
John Thomas, 425 Waverly Way; South 6087W Bell.
H. T, Kealing, Western University; West 4480 Bell.
Edward D. Craig, sausage manufacturer, 6328 Kansas,
Henry P, Ewing, scientific farmer, 1105 Woodland.
Wm. Sprangles, milk and butter, 53rd and Montgall; Lin, 750 Home.
D, W. White, “White's Furniture Exchange.” Bell West 483, 423
Minnesota avenue Kansas City, Kas,
Mr. TG. McCampbell, Custodian’ Western University Grounds,
Phone, West 1454.
MUSICIANS,
Samuel S. R. 8. Stewart, 1714 South 4th Street, East, Salt Lake City,
Utah.
NEWSPAPERS.
Arthur A, Anderson, 543 State St., Kansas City, Kans,
N. C. Crews, Kansas City Sun, 18th and Woodland; East 999 Bell,
Rey, J. Frank McDonald, Western Christian Recorder, 2517 Grove St.
Bell phone East 488,
PAINTERS AND PAPERHANGERS,
T. H. Bailey, 911 McGee St. Bell phone, Main 751,
PHYSICIANS.
W. Hubert Bruce, 1512 East Eighteenth Street. Home .phone, Main
4620; Bell phone, East 3151.
Lucian P, Richardson, 2439 Waldron. Bell phone, East 2527.
C. A. Murray Kane, Southeast corner 18th and Paseo, Bell, Rast 5069.
Home, Main 5807, Residence Phone, Bell East 693.
ae Dillard, Graduate Ph.D., 1512 North 5th St., Kansas City,
‘ans,
M. H. Lambright, 1508 East 18th; Bell East 144; Home Main 3490,
Thos. A. Fletcher, Home West 171; Residence, Home East 2856.
M, L, Flinn, pharmacist, 1301 East 18th.
L. E. Bailer, N, W. Cor. 12th and Vine. Bell East 232,
Howard M. Smith, 1509 East 18th St. Bell East 495,
Wm. J. Thompkins, 1509 E. 18th St. Bell East 495,
L, J. Holly, 1117 Campbell. Bell phone, 783 Grand.
EB. J, McCampbell, 2302 Vine street. Bell phone, 501 East.
M. G, mace Northwest Corner 24th and Vine Sts, Bell phone,
ast 232.
J. Edgar Dibble, 19th and Vine. Bell East 887,
J. EB. Perry, 1512 B 18th St. Bell Bast 3151. Home East 4620,
Jas. F, Shannon, N. B, Cor. 18th and Paseo. Bell East 670.
T, C, Unthank, 1112 Independence avenue. Both phones, Main 7488.
W. W. Montgomery, 400 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kans, Phones:
Bell, West 2402; Home, West 478.
J, Franklin Wilson, 1317 North 10th St, Kansas City, Kans. Bell
Phone, West 2249. Res., Bell West 3734-R.
Thos. A. Jones, Southeast Cor. 18th and Paseo, Phones; Home, Main
5807; Bell, East 5069.
POULTRY RAISERS, ’
8. M, Steele, 29 Sloan Avenue, Quindaro, Kans.
Fred T. Drew, 2002 Bales avenue. Bell phone, East 5277-W.
PHOTOGRAPHERS.
Charles Williams....-.....-..+-+..++1015 Oak; Main 3154 Bell a
C. Bruce Santee, 1718 East 18th St. “Photo Fad.”
PIANO SALESMAN. :
J. H. Malone, Talking Machines, Mtc, Bell, East 4573-W.
PRINTERS,
C, A. Franklin, 1409 Main; Grand 2983 Bell.
John H. Fairley, Square Deal Printing Co., 1731 Lydia. Bell phone
Grand 1647-Y,
REAL ESTATE,
William Hopkins Afro-American Investment Co,
J. Dallas Bowser, 2400 Paseo. Bell Phone 3795 W Grand.
F, J. Weaver, President Afro-American Inv, Co,, 911 McGee St. Bell
Main 751,
The Ward & Samlington Investment Co., Bell Phone East 4294Y.
W. M, Johnston, rental agent; Main 7555 Home; Main 751 Bell.
W. G, Mosely, Ivanhoe Investment Co,, 2220 Woodland avenue,
E. E. Vaughan, 26th and Parkway, Kansas City, Kan. Bell, West 1757,
Patterson & Gayden, 527 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan. Bell phone,
‘West 215; Home phone, West 503.
Geo, W. Edwards, Moberly, Mo. :
PROBATION OFFICER,
Edward Ross, 1419 E. 18th St. Bell Grand 885.
REGALIAS, BADGES, ETC.
| Moses Dixon, 1217 Woodland; Kast 3797 Bell,
SHOE SHINING PARLOR. 4.
Moses Fields, 614 Main,
SHOE STORES.
‘Temple Shoe Store, G, A. Page, Prop., 1507 EB. 18th St.
SIGN PAINTER AND SCENIC ARTIST.
_ Geo, W. Martin, 1812 East 17th St. Home Phone, Main 1133.
STOCKMEN,
‘Thos, Bass, Dealer in High Class Stock, Mexico, Mo.
‘TEACHERS,
R, T. Coles, Principal Garrison School, 2327 Lydia; Grand 1851 Bell.
W. T. White, manual training, 1612 Lydia; Grand 3631 Bell.
G. A. Page, 2419 Flora. Bell B. 501, Principal Attucks School,
T. W. H, Williams, 1323 Jackson, Bell EB. $259-Y, Principal Bruce
School.
Chas. A. Westmoreland, 2325 Lydia, Bell Grand 1320-W. Lincoln High
School. y
Prof, D, G. Watson, 1906 East Twenty-fourth,
‘THEATRES,
Homer Roberts, “Dixie Theatre,” 2411 Vine St,
‘TRANSFER,
Lewis Towusend, 1720 Lydia Ave. Bell, Grand 1772,
Geo. Jones, 1008 McGee, Home Phone, 5188 Main.
W. Lee Whibby, 18th and Forest. Home phone M. 4023.
KR. W, Elmore, 1607 Harrison street.
UNDERTAKERS, :
C. H, Countee, 2220 Vine St. Bell East 3336,
Watkins Bros. & Co., 1729 Lydia, Telephone Grand 987,
People's Undertaking Co., 1211 Hast 18th; Phones, Bell Grand 1565;
Home 8163 Main, Edward Jones, Mgr,
Jno, W. Jones, 440 State Ave. Kansas City, Kans, Both Phones,
West 253. - ;
L_ weet
COAt? BE CRE kh usaemehkewineae.
Home Phone Main 7646,
re BUFFET
All Bonded Whiskeys with Soda 10c.
Hot and Cold Lunch Free
800 East 12th St, Kansas City, Mo.
COAL TO SELL
IN SMALL ORDERS
Lexington or Richmond Lump Forked
Per Ton . . $4.00
Walf Ton sw, 2,25
10 Full Half Bushel Baskets 1.00
Deliveries Made Promptly
Hell Phone Grand 2503R.
Home Phone Main 6516
H. L. KINSLER
918 East 2Ist. Street
NOTICE, NOTICE, NOTICE.
Bargain in real estate: One 50
x187_ lot_in beautiful Fisher
Heights, Rosedale, Kansas,
This lot is one of choice in the
exclusive section of Rosedale,
where several of Kassas City’s
best families recently have
bought.
THIRTY MINUTE RIDE FROM
DOWNTOWN DISTRICT,
An ideal location for one who
is tired of the congeated district
. of the city, For information call
Bell phone, Grand $891, or call in
Person at 1611 Forest avenue
after 6 ofclock p.m.
Why have kinky hair when "Presto" will make the necessary improvements? See ad in this paper.
Mrs. Pearl Fallings of Denver, Colo. is visiting her sister, Mrs. R. B. De Frantz.
Mrs. N. Lowe, 3411 E. 6th St., spent Saturday and Sunday with parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Crowley, Fleming, Mo.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished front room; modern. Mrs. Wheeler, 1801 East 18th street, second floor.
Mr. C. D. Frazier of Grand Canyon, Ariz. sent Mrs. Jas. H. Craws, who has been ill, a box of beautiful flowers last week.
Mrs. Katie Martin who has been seriously ill at the Provident Hospital is convalescent. She has returned to her home, 2220 Michigan Ave.
Mrs. A. T. Wooldridge, 101 E. Armour Blvd., met with a painful accident by catching her hand in an electric washing machine but is slightly improved.
Have your collar, cuffs and hat piece crocheted, only $5.00 entire set. Send in your order for hand crocheted set. Write Miss Pearl Newton, 3921 Scarritt Ave.
NOTICE—TO ROSEDALE SUBSCRIBERS.
Our Collector, Miss Morton, will call on you Monday and Tuesday of the coming week.
NOTICE.
Ladies and Gents' Shoe shining at the Colored Shoe Store.
1507½ E 18th St.
Ladies Especially Invited.
Poro hair dressing, hair weaving and facial massaging. Scalp treatment a specialty. Mrs. E. Norles, 1737 Paseo, upstairs.
Get used to the imprint of the race printer, who wishes your patronage on the basis of better and quicker printing service. This is it:
C. A. Franklin Printer 1409 Main St
C. A. Franklin, Printer, 1409 Main St.
Stenographic work done at home—promptly, neatly and quickly. Work called for and delivered. Bell phone East 804. Res. 2624 Highland avenue. MISS HAZEL MILLER.
Mr. and Mrs. Soney Wilson, 2309 Highland Avenue, will leave March 15th to visit relatives and friends at Memphis, Tenn., Little Rock, Hot Springs, Cotton Plant and Marrillton, Ark.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Cowden announce the marriage of their sister, Iza May, to Mr. Wm. H. Hayden, Wednesday, March 25th, at 3:00 p. m., at their residence, 948 Nebraska Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas.
The Second Quarterly Meeting of Allen Chapel will be held tomorrow and doubtless will be the largest meeting of its character held in Allen in years. Members and friends are earnestly requested to attend all the services of the day. Rev. Wm. H. Thomas, minister.
Thomas Galnes, a member of Mt. Olive, No. 53, A. F. & A. M., this city, died last Monday and will be buried Sunday morning at 9:00 o'clock under the auspices of the lodge and Peaceful Path Lodge U. B. F. of which he was a member. He leaves a wife and other relatives and 'many friends to mourn his loss.
A farewell reception was tendered Past Master John W. Carter by Ideal Lodge No. 70, A. F. & A. M., at the Masonic Temple Saturday evening, March 7th. Addresses were made by L. A. Knox, Theodore Clay, G. A. Page while music was furnished by F. J. Work and Miss Joyce Dorsey. Many ladies were in attendance and all had an enjoyable time.
On Saturday night, March 7th, the members of Grant Chapel A, M. E. Church gave a surprise party to their pastor, Sister Pearl, 923 Vine Street, in honor of her birthday anniversary. A splendid time was had. The gits consisted of pads, sacks, and cans of foodstuffs. Sister Pearl is a strong leader and Christian woman. A practical teacher. Grant Chapel is Kansas City's infant in African Methodism.
N. H. Washington and Miss Vivienne Lee were quietly married at the parsonage of Allen Chapel last Tuesday night by Rev. W. H. Thomas. The groom was compelled to leave the next day for Arizona where he has a position and the bride will follow him in a month or two. Mrs. Washington is at home to friends at 1415 E. 24th Street.
Miss Hattie Scott of 2838 East Sixth Street entertained a few friends last Wednesday afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock with a very pretty tea party. The dining room was beautifully decorated. And cut flowers and ferns and palms were much in evidence. The guests were: Miss Hattie Scott. Mrs. L. M. Jackson, Mrs. T. H. Mock, Miss M. Smith, Mrs. J. B. Johnson, Mrs. L. V. Foundsworth, Mrs. A. Cleveland, Mrs. J. R. Rone, Mrs. E. W Everett.
We are trying to serve the people in a legitimate business by giving them the best and latest in all styles of shoes and slippers. Think seri-
CITY NEWS.
ously about this matter and let us fit you out in your Easter Goods. Bring your children with you. Special care will be taken to give complete satisfaction. Our prices are low and goods guaranteed. Give us a chance. 1507 E. 18th St., G. A. Page, Prop.
On Monday evening, March 9th, Mrs. M. Willis entertained a number of friends at a line party in compliment to her sister, Mrs. J. Henderson, of Parsons, Kansas. After the theure refreshments were served at the Ideal Pharmacy. Those included were: Mesdames; J. Gardner, J. D. Johnson, J. C. Stokes, H. A. Brooks, E. C. Bunch, T Rummings, Sidney Johnson, Misses Magnolia Lewis and Bertha Holland and the hostess.
CARD OF THANKS
Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Kingsberry, 1007 Tracy A.E. wish to thank the friends for the kindnesses shown during the illness of their daughter Cozetta and for the beautiful flowers. We refer especially to the Jolly Bachelor Malds Club and Rev. W. H. Thomas for his visits and prayers. Miss Cozetta has almost fully recovered and is able to be out again.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for the tender care given our mother, sister and aunt, Mrs. Clarissa Staten, during her recent illness and for the sympathy shown at her death. We refer especially to Mrs Fanny Frye, Mrs. Lizzie Slatter and Mrs. Maria Morgan.
MRS. BERTIE BLANKS,
MRS. MOLLIE JACKSON,
MRS. GERTRUDE YOUNG.
CARD OF THANKS
We desire to extend our sincere and heartfelt thanks to the many friends in particular and the public' in general for their many kindnesses and consideration shown during the long illness and death of my beloved daughter Emma, and for the beautiful floral offerings. We shall ever treasure their deeds of kindness in our heart.
MRS. JOSEPHINE SMITH,
915 Woodland Ave
There is a reason why the larger per cent of Californian State land by Kansas City's "400" is turned from the Arthur W. Harris Printing Business. First their workmanship. First their service is unexcelled by any of the larger and best equipped. printing establishment, but make a specialty of its class of work. Second, while their prices are not always the lowest, they are all altered" with accuracy and despatch to over 90 per cent of the class woodland for the past year and now when a function of class is announced its a ten-to-one shot that Harris will handle the fox.
Carl H. X. Stewart will take a few pupils in Harmony, or on the Piano and Violin.
Mrs. Mary D. S. few pupils on either Mandolin, or Banjo Music.
1321 Jackson Avenue, Kansas City, Mo.
Grand Easter Ball
MONDAY EVENING APRIL 13th, 1914
ARMORY
Cottage and
Grand March
GREAT WESTER
PROF. S. J. MOR
Dance Every Monday
GREAT WESTERN ORCHESTRA
PROF. S. J. MORTON, Conductor
Dance Every Monday Evening, From 8 to 12
REMEMBER.
The Delmonico Cafe and Home Bakery (first in everything). The best meals at popular prices, carrying a large line of the finest bakery goods. The place to get your daily bread. Banquets, weddings and parties served. Where the Elite go.
FUNERAL OF EMMA SMITH.
FUNERAL OF EMMA SMITH.
The funeral services of Miss Emma Smith for many years with the Blind Boone Concert Co., was held Sunday, at 10:00 o'clock from the Second Baptist Church and the order of services was as follows: Organ Voluntary, Miss Lulu Knox; Scripture Reading, Rev. W. C. Williams; Hymn, "Nearer My God to Thee," Choir; Prayer, Solo, Mrs. Caddle Witcher; Sermon, Rev. S. E. Bacote; Solo, Mrs. Corrine Lester; Resolutions, Fannie J. Dawley Court No. 44; Resolutions, Clio Art Club; Hymn, "God Be With You." Choir. The Blind Boone Concert Co. was represented by A. O. Coffin and Miss Melissa Fuell. The body was enclosed in a beautiful white plush couch casket and was borne in a white hearse drawn by white horses with white trappings and the funeral was under the personal supervision of Mr. A. T. Moore and burial was in Highland Cemetery. The Clios attended in a body and acted as ushers and the flowers were the most beautiful seen in years, at a funeral.
---
After rescuing a boy from a pond at Zurich, Switzerland, recently, a peculiar reason for doing so was given by another boy, ten years old, Hans Weber. "I should never have troubled about him, if he had not been wearing my skates," was the laconic protest of the boy, when complimented on the rescue, at the risk of his life, of the boy, who had fallen through the ice.
Good Kindler.
In some sections kindlings are very hard to secure, owing to a lack of timber of all kinds. An inexpensive kindler may be made as follows: Take to one pound of resin three ounces of tallow, and while still hot after melting mix with fine sawdust, straw or any inflammable material and mold in small pieces about one inch square. One pair will start a fire in the stove.
Self-Confidence.
Lack of self-confidence ever makes you fall back in the ranks, weak, helpless, despairing. It shuts from you the revelation of power that is born only of action. Feel in every fiber of your being, feel with the heat and glow of conviction that you have infinite possibilities you must yourself make realities, or you will do nothing truly great.-Herbert Knowles.
"Under the lax American system of bringing up girls," says a Paris journal, "the American young man rarely wins the first kiss from the girl who is to be his bride." Maybe, but by Heck! that is not so bad as the Gallic discomfort of never knowing who has won the last kiss from the "madame."—Louisville, Courier Journal.
Rather, Far-Fetched.
A scientist, at least he styles himself "Dr.," has been suggesting that young people and children may be cured of bad habits when in a hypnotic sleep. He has a long, long time to wait till parents, or teachers, either, will approve of hypnotic influences being used upon the young.
As a Last Resort
"Should a girl propose to a bashful suitor?" "Not until she has tried everything else. Ask him if he is going to invite you to his wedding. That usually starts something."
German Use of Potatoes
German Use of Potatoes. Potatoes are dried in slices, chips and flakes in Germany for feeding to cattle, swine and sheep and hundreds of thousands of tons are consumed in that way.
Mrs. Mary D. Stewart will take a few pupils on either the Plano, Guitar, Mandolin, or Banjo and the Theory of Music. e, Kansas City, Mo.
Y HALL
Vine Streets
10:15 P. M.
BURN ORCHESTRA
BARTON, Conductor
Evening, From 8 to 12
Just the Information We Need
WEBSTER'S
NEW INTERNATIONAL
- THE MERRIAM WEBSTER
Every day in your talk and reading, on the street car, in the coche, shop, and school some new question is sure to come up. You seek quick, accurate, encyclopedic, up-to-date information.
This NEW CREATION will answer all your questions with final authority. 400,000 Words Defined. 2700 Illustrations. Illustrations. Cost $400,000. The new dictionary the new divided book. A "Stroke of Genius."
Write for specimen pages, it instructions, etc.
Mention this publication and receive FREE set of pooled maps.
C. & C.
MERRIAM
CO.,
Springfield,
Mass.
U. S. A.
LYDIA COURTS,
1422-32 E. 3rd St.,
STRICTLY MODERN FLATS
KANSAS CITY, KAN.
KANSAS CITY, KAN.
KANSAS CITY, KANSAS.
Mrs. Sarah Russel, 943 Wash. Blvd., received her diploma in sewing and also a prize of $5.00 in gold from the Negro Civile League. Mr. Ed Harris prize from White's Exchange; Mrs. Childs' $5.00 prize in merchandise at J. H. Claybourne's.
Bachelor Maids went on a trolley to Excelsior Springs, Mo., Saturday and report a pleasant time.
The funeral of Mrs. Dwiggins 730 Walker Ave. was held at the A. M. E. Church Thursday, March 12 under the auspices of Golden Leaf Court. She leaves two sons and one daughter to mourn her loss.
Mrs. E. Whitmore, 921 Freeman Ave., spent several days in Leavenworth, Kans., last week.
The funeral of Mrs. Julia Robinson,
945 Everett Ave., was held at the A. M. E. Church under the auspices of Rebecca Tabernacle, Fidday, March 13.
Rev. J. R. Ransom officiated. She leaves a daughter and two sons to mourn her loss. Many resolutions were read and the floral offerings were beautiful.
The funeral of Mrs. Jennie Reims,
2021 N. Water St., was held from the A. M. E. Church last Wednesday.
Mrs. Lee, mother of Mrs. J. A. Wilson, 308 Franklin Ave., lies seriously ill.
Miss Georgia Johnson, 1509 N. 8th St., is somewhat improved.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Davis, 915 Freeman Ave., entertained a few friends in honor of her sister, Mrs. Michael, of Winnipeg, Canada, last week.
The closing exercises of the Night School, Friday, March 6th, were splendid. Prayer was offered by Rev. W. A. Bowren and the welcome address was delivered by Mrs. Dameron. The program was made up of elderly people who had never been on the stage. After the program remarks were made by Principal J. M. Marquess and Supt. Pearson.
Mrs. J. H. Lawson, 1225 Lincoln St., was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ewing, 2415 N. 4th St.
Mrs. Tilford Davis, 1116 Wash. Blvd., entertained the Auit Fait Whist Club, Friday.
Mrs. Lucy Saunders 1706 N. 8th St., is somewhat improved.
Mrs. J. C. Ray, 325 Troupe Ave., made a flying trip to Slater, Mo., Tuesday.
Thirty were baptized at the First Baptist Church, 5th and Nebr. Ave., Sunday by the pastor, Rev. W. A. Bowren.
The funeral of Mr. Leonard Thornton, 946 N. J. Ave., was held Thursday afternoon.
The funeral of Mrs. Jennie Rennick of Quindaro, Kansas, was held Thursday afternoon at the Baptist Church under the auspices of Alice Brown Chapter, No. 40.
THE COLORED SHOE STORE.
The following is the standing of the various churches in the purchase of shoes at the Colored Shoe Store, 1507 East 18th street:
St. Augustine ..... $20.75
Second Baptist ..... 20.90
Alen Chapel ..... 23.05
Vine St. Baptist Church.. 14.10
Ebenezer A. M. E. Church.. 13.70
Morning Star Bap. Church 12.60
Centennial M. E. Church.. 12.85
St. Stephen's Bap. Church 13.35
Pleasant Green ..... 12.75
Greenwood Baptist Church. 11.80
Zion A. M. E. Church ..... 9.00
Eighth St. Baptist Church ..... 6.10
ONLY ONE (1) WEEK MORE.
Please mention the name of your
church when making purchases and
remember the place.
1507 EAST 18th ST.
NOTICE.
Leading Negroes and Society people will dance at the Hod Carriers' Benefit at Lyric Hall, March 20, 1914. The entire理事会 will go to the Association's building fund. The following is a list of patrons and patronesses: Mrs. D. D. Crossthawe, Mrs. I. F. Bradley, Mrs. John Lange, Mrs. Salle C. Rodgers, Mrs. J. Silas Harris, Mrs. Robt. Wiley, Mrs. Silas Chaney, Mrs. Annie Garrett, Miss Ruth Bradley, Miss Anna Bell Montgomery, Miss Edna Herndon, Miss Viola Robinson, Miss Armeda Jarrett, Miss Viola McDaniel, Miss Grace Dusen, Miss Effie Pennisson, Miss Alice Shores. Prof. G. N. Grisham, Prof Work, Dr. Kane, Dr. Bruce, Dr. A. D. Bradbury, Prof. T. B. Stewart, Dr Theo. Smith and many others. Every body is invited to help us make it the social event of the season. Admission will be 25 cents.
Not a Complaint.
There is a good deal of complaint because people don't walk more, but it doesn't come, from the head of a large family with shoes to buy.—Atchison Globe.
Doing the Impossible.
The only one who can answer all a small child's questions is the youth who has just finished his first year in college.-Rochester Union.
Source of Joy.
Among eligible women there is more joy over one divorced man than over ninety and nine men who stay married—Judge.
To Be a Man.
A man shall and must be valiant; he must march forward and quit him self like a man.—Carlyle "On Heroes."
E. EUGENE VAUGHAN.
There is a man of great renown.
In every hamlet, village and town,
And in his face you'll likely see
Many deeds to the family property.
HOUSES $100 DOWN—4 TO 7 ROOMS.
2600 block Vine street; 2000 and 3100 block Hersington avenue; 600 block Rowland avenue; 600 block Winona avenue; 2400 block Tremont avenue; 2700 block Mt. Allis; 3000 block Washington boulevard; 1400 block East 17th St.
Modern: 2400 Block Belfonteain; 3000 block Norris; 2000 block Hallock; 4400 block Euclid; 2000 block Brighton.
Suburban: $300 to $500 down—8 rooms and bath, $2,800; 4 rooms 1½ acres, $2,500; 5 rooms 100x132 feet, $1,500; 2 rooms, 3½ acres, $3,300.
EUGENE EDWARD VAUGHAN,
Twenty-sixth and Parkway,
KANAS CITY, KANASAS
Bell phone, West 1757.
Come in and see our Spring Offering of the very latest and smartest ladies' and gent's Footwear. Try our Tango Boots, Mary James and Men's Oxfords. 1507 E, 18th Street. G. A. Page, Prop.
Confer with me--It costs you nothing
Representing
THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN
INVESTMENT & IMPLOYMENT CO.
Makes a Specialty of Assisting You to
Buy a Home in Either Kansas City
PHONES: Bell, Main 751 HomeMain 7555
911 McGee Street., Kansas City, Mo.
A CHANCE FOR EVERYBODY.
An opportunity for the School teacher, school boys and girls to win three valuable prizes for the best ad of twenty-five words describing the Tango Sundae on a Blazer at Smith's Drug Store at 18th and Tracy avenue. Send your suggestions in at once. Each purchase entitles you to a suggestion. The Contest will close one week before Easter. The first prize is $5 in gold; second prize is a first class tennis racquet; third prize one year's subscription to the Kansas City Sun. The names of the winners will be published Easter Sunday in the Kansas City Sun.
Furnished and Unfurnished Rooms For Rent.
FOR RENT—Large, light basement room, furnished, $1.25 a week, 2634 Euclid avenue.
Furnished rooms for rent, modern 1210 Highland Ave. Also two nice un-furnished rooms. Mrs. T. B. Carter.
Mr. Colored Man:—Are you looking around to buy a home? If so call Main 751, Bell Phone. Ask for Wm. Hopkins. Why Worry? Why tire yourself out when I can take you indirect to what you want?
For Rent—A store room at 2409 Vine street. Two living rooms in the rear and a basement well suited for laundry. Prices made reasonable.
WORDS OF APPRECIATION.
More Mothera Testify to Merite of XXth Century Hair Preparations.
Nelson, Mo., April 13, 1913.
Dear Madam Dabney: I am writing you for a small order. I want you to please send by mail 3 bottles of shampoo, 3 boxes of hair grower and 2 boxes of pressing oil. I like the remedy just fine; I would not be without it for anything. I am using it on my little girl's hair; it seems to be helping it greatly.
MRS. ANNA BRUNER.
Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 20, 1913.
Dear Madam Dabney: I am a mother of four girls. In trying to improve their hair I had tried several preparations, but none gave me good results until I used Madam Dabney's X7th Century Preparations. Their hair was thin, harsh and would fall out so that I dreaded to use a comb. Now their hair is growing nicely—does not fall out—has no dandruff—is soft and pretty. Three of these girls are attending Wendell Phillips School, Howard and Vine streets. Investigation will bear out my testimony. I would not be without the X7th Century Preparation in my house.
A six week's treatment of Madam P. M. Dabney's XXth Century Hair Preparations sent on receipt of P. O. money order of $1.25, or a single package of XXth Century Hair Grower, Pressing Oil or Shampoo sent for 50c. Write today to Madam P. M. Dabney's XXth Century Hair Preparations Co., 1806 E. 24th St, Kansas City, Mo., Dept. 40.
Persons living in Kansas City who cannot be supplied by their druggist will be called upon by an agent on dropping a postal card to the above address or calling Bell phone, East 2476.
1900
This house was built for an ex-Mayor of Kansas City. It has 9 large, light and airy rooms, large attic suitable for pool room or gymnasium, full cemented basement, combination furnace, lot 50x150, east front, street and alley paved, large barn suitable for garage.
Several prominent Negroes have bought in this block, so the owner has decided to sell and in order to make a quick sale has reduced the price from $4,000 to $3,500, $500 down and $20 monthly. An ordinary family could live in four of the rooms and the other five could be rented for enough to make the payments and interest.
Surely opportunity is knocking at your door. Will you continue to pay rent or will you buy? If this is too large, we have several others.
AFRO-AMERICAN INVESTMENT CO.
proceries and Meats w
Less and Give You
faction if You Buy The
Our Prices are Right
We Treat You Right
foods are Always Depe
Your Groceries and You Less and Satisfaction if Y
Our Prices
We Treat
Our Goods are All
COME AN
Your Groceries and Meats will Cost You Less and Give You Better Satisfaction if You Buy Them Here
Our Prices are Right We Treat You Right Our Goods are Always Dependable
THREE STORES BalsigerBros THREE STORES ORGER CO. 9th and Charlotte Sts. 1121 East 12th St. 9th and Campbell Sts.
[Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit].
THE LE
12th and V
The most of the best for the best of good, clean pictures every week best Western pictures, in fact, the being offered. Come and be conv
Admission All
Calling Cards, Business Cards
Stationery Print
THE LINCOLN
12th and Vine Streets
Most of the best for the least in motion pictures
clean pictures every week night and five Sunday
ern pictures, in fact, the best pictures of all
ed. Come and be convinced.
Admission Always 5 Cent
Cards, Business Cards, Church, Society,
Stationery Printing of all kinds.
THE LINCOLN
The most of the best for the least in motion pictures. Four reels of good, clean pictures every week night and five Sunday night. The best Western pictures, in fact, the best pictures of any kind now being offered. Come and be convinced.
Admission Always 5 Cents
Calling Cards, Business Cards, Church, Society, Book and Stationery Printing of all kinds.
JNO. R. FAIRLEY, Mgr.
Square Deal Printing Co.
The Printing House for the two Kansas Citys. Our Facilitie
for doing first class work unexcelled
Home 2783 Main
Bell 1647Y Grand
1731 Lydia Ave. (Hod Carriers' Hall.)
Square Deal Printing Co
ing House for the two Kansas Citys. O
for doing first class work unexcelled
1731 Lydia Ave. (Hod Carrie
TY Grand
The Printing House for the two Kansas Citys. Our Facilities for doing first class work unexcelled
Subscribe for The Sun
HAVE YOU SEEN IT?
McCampbell @ Houston's
New Drug Store
The Finest in the City
Everything Fresh and New
Druggists' Sundries, Cigars and Tobacco
Perfumes, Soda Water
Prescriptions a Specialty
Phones—Bell 765 East; Home 5806 Main
N. W. Cor. Howard and Vine Sts.
Home 7555 Main.
THREE STORES
I Meats will Cost
I Give You Better
You Buy Them Here
are Right
You Right
always Dependable
O SEE US
If you should ask a Kansas Cityan as to the most elegant and popular barber shop in the city he would unhesitatingly say—The Palace Barber Shop at 1516 East Nineteenth street (near Vine) owned by that prince of good fellow—Prof. J. C. Hobbs—who, also, has next door one of the neatest and best kept Pool Halls in town.
Prof. Hobbs employees only the BEST workmen, among whom are Messrs. C. J. Nelson, David Robinson, W. T. Scott and H. A. Peace, while he himself is a barber of acknowledged ability. Ernest Turner, the best knownporter in Kansas City, looks after the comfort of his patrons with Miss Mary A. Woodson, the neat and capable cashier. Prof. J. C. Hobbs' Kansas City's most popular dancing master, the People's Dancing Academy, which dances every Thursday night at Lyric Hall, 1731 Lydia avenue, all the latest dances, Telephone, Bell 2833 East.
NNCOLN
One Streets
fast in motion pictures. Four reels
night and five Sunday night. The
best pictures of any kind now
raced.
ways 5 Cents
s, Church, Society, Book and
ing of all kinds.
Printing Co.
Kansas Citys. Our Facilities
work unexcelled
ia Ave. (Hod Carriers' Hall.)
Bell 751 Main
THREE STORES
The Coronation
of Nikolai
Aa dao, nerd of iol Intpendent Agi
(Copyright, 1913, by W. G. Chapman)
‘Stat, it was a summary of the long
‘column that followed, and merely stat-
ed that Prince Leopold, of a certain
Balkan state, the identity of which I
shall conceal under the name of
‘Transylvania, was to be crowned king
‘on the following Monday.
“You have followed the events which
Jed up to this, of course,” said my
‘companion.
“Not with much interest,” I an-
swered.
“Weil,” sald Nikolai, “I will explain
them to you. As you are doubtless
aware, Transylvania has played a long
and unhappy role as champion of the
eastern Christians against the Turks.
Alter five centuries of subjection, she
achieved her independence in 1878. A
prince from the native stock was chos-
en to rule the people. Unfortunately
their many wars and insurrections
had unsettled their habits and six
months ago, his son was driven from
the throne and a republic established.
‘This proved disagreeable to Rus-
sia and Austria, A threat of war,
which followed, induced the parlia-
ment to submit'to the appointment of
a new prince, Leopold, a scion of a
petty German state. As a salve to his
subjects, who hate him vehemently, he
is to be made a king, and he arrived
in Chesicaf, the capital, yesterday eve-
ning, for the first time tn his life, On
‘Monday he will be crowned in the
cathedral with some little ceremony
and strongly guarded, for riots are
feared, and, if the mob gets hold of
‘him, his life will be endangered.”
“What is your scheme?” | asked.
Nikolai took up the paper and read
aloud:
“*The new crown, with the orb,
scoptre, and complete royal regalia,
thas arrived from Paris at the king's
residence in Cheskaf, where yntil the
coronation they will be displayed each
day to his majesty’s future subjects.’
You are not going to steal the
crown?" I cried.
“Tam going to take the next train
to Cheskaf and have a look at it.”
Nikolai replied enigratically. “Are
you going to accompany me?"
‘That evening we were speeding over
‘he vast Hungarian plains, At noon
next day our train steamed into Ches-
kat station, We engaged apartments
at the best hotel aud, that same after.
noon followed the multitudes into the
pelace, to the room where the regalia
‘were oa exhibition,
Here we encountered our first dis-
appointment, for the statement con-
cerning the orb and scepter proved
incorrect. ‘There was nelther, There
was however, a magnificent crown,
fresh from the Paris jeweler's, stud-
ded with pearls, diamonds, rubies, and
sapphires; its value, Nickolal whis-
pered to me, must have been close up-
on a million and a half in American
dollars, Beside it lay a few of the
iking’s decorations, but of trivial value,
“The crown alone is worth the at-
tempt,” said Nikolai, planting himself
in front of it until moved on by the
sentries. There were at least a doz-
en of these Germans, from Leopold's
own principality, and they formed the
butt of much Jesting and scurrilous re-
marks among the native visitors, who
evidently bore them no good will.
‘The crown was placed within a case
of strong plate glass. Around this
ran an tron railing, and the whole was
enclosed in a network of tough, ex-
ceedingingly fine steel wire. Even had
the sontries been absent it would
have been dificult enough to get at
our booty. Nikolai admitted defeat
when we had returned to our hotel.
“Then for heaven's sake let us re-
‘curn to Vienna,” I exclaimed. “The
‘thing, as you say, 1s impossible.”
“At least we'll see the coronation,”
Nikolai answered. “Who knows but
that I may yet become a king. I have
tong wished to be. Once I nearly
was, but that—" He paused. “Did
you ascertain which was his majesty’s
apartment?” he asked.
He laughed when I replied curtly.
“1 did,” he said. “I gathered its lo-
eality from some remarks let fall by
one of the Transylvania chamber.
‘lains, who was abusing the German
sentries. Transylvania Is almost iden-
‘tical with French; Rome was the par-
ent of either tongue, The apartment
overlooks the inner courtyard, so that
to reach it one must pass through
‘the palace. One cannot enter from
the street.”
“In heaven's name, what is in your
mind?" I cried.
“Leopold is still unmarried,” said
‘Nikolai thoughtfully, “That immense-
ty lightens our problem. I hate to
deal with women; they're apt to
‘scream. Besides, one cannot well
break into a princess’ apartment—at
least, not if one ts a gentleman. Good-
night, Summers.”
And he strolled off to bed, leaving
me & prey to suspense during the en
tire night.
‘The first moment that I clapped
Sanus ithe following morning he
daily paper says that the ar
Fangements for tomorrow's coronatior
‘Stue trown hae been faten Voth
tise been talon 10 th
Reena Garninncn
DEFIES THE TOUCH OF AGE
Great Songstress True to Her Child-
leh Vow That She Will Always
Remain Young.
‘Madame Patt! bas certainly discov-
‘ered the secret of eternal youth, and
‘has carriod out her childish vow, “I
will be young a8 long as I live.”
Sho lives for her vo, and begins
an open
‘ . She ie al-
ywways out of doors ‘for two or three
tn a long, black gown to the ceremony,
and, at the precise moment ordained,
will cast it aside and reveal himself
An all the splendor of a king. By the
way, here 18 a colored supplement of
‘him, to familiarize the people with
his face. Don't you think we should
be much alike if I had a square red
beard like our beloved Leopold?”
T glanced at the portrait, There was
indeed, a resemblance; had Nikolai
a beard it would have been striking.
“And nobody knows him,” sald Nik-
olal, chuckling. He slapped his thigh,
as was his habit In moments of excite:
‘ment. “Summers,” he said, “I am go-
ing to be crowned tomorrow. And wo
shall dispose of Leopold, for the nonce,
in the cistern at the back of his bed:
room. Yes, I looked over the ground
| last night after I left you. The Tran-
sylvanian plumbing arrangements are
primitive.”
Then from a pocket he pulled a
square, red beard and put it on. I
glanced at the picture; the resom-
blance was amazing. And now I knew
that nothing 1 could Bay or do would
| restrain my companion from his
prank. | So I fell in with tt perforee.
“Now here's the plan, Summers,” he
said, when he had gained my reluc-
tant’ acquiescence. “At the palace I
have already established my status as
a detective, sent by the king of Hoch
Darmstadt, who is Leopold's brother,
to look after bis interests. You know
|1 was once a more or less important
personage at the petty Buropean
courts, and these roles come. very
easy tO mo, Besides, I knew the king's
handwriting, and Leopold recognized
the signature on my credentials, or
| thought he did, He is desperately
"nervous and afraid of assassination to-
morrow. So I have arranged to take
up my station tonight, with my conf
dential assistant, at his bedroom door,
while, in an ante-room, there will be
stationed six Transylvanian officers
and six of his Germans, whose mutual
hatred may be reckoned on to prevent
"any conspiracy against him and, incl
dentally, to divert attention from us.
Now then:
“At 8 o'clock in the morning we
enter to robe him—he won't trust his
‘own people for that, he's so afraid of
poniard thrust. At 9 the heralds ar-
rive at the palace with his coach, At
10 we reach the cathedral. At 11 the
gorgeous, million-and-ahalf dollar
crown is placed on Leopold's head.
He throws off bis black robe, appears
in all his glory, and marches down the
| aisle behind his guards and gets into
his coach, to drive back to the palace
amid the cries of a mob thirsting for
Leopold, bound and gagged, will be
balancing himself on tip-toe in the cis-
tern at the back to bis bedroom, to
keep his head above the water. I shall
march down the aisle with my crown
on—but I shall not drive to the pal-
ace, Overcome with terror, I shall ad-
dress the mob, plead for my life, abdi-
cate, and drive to the railroad station
to take train for Vienna. They'll see
that I get into the train. But in the
excitement they won't be thinking of
the crown. That will go into a-pocket
which I have had specially construct:
ed in the most voluminous portion of
my royal robes, which were made for
me in Vienna.”
I gasped with amazement, The man
detailed this scheme as though he
were planning some simple detail of
Dusiness, And the plan was perfect,
down to every detail. None knew the
king. Only the unexpected could pre-
vent success. And Nikolai had
planned it all in Vienna, before he
even spoke to me of Transylvania!
Let me here interpose to say that
not even Nikolat’s mind could have
{magined the denouement which frus
trated him.
Shortly before midnight we were
installed in the prince's anteroom.
Nikolal was in the complete attire
which Leopold was to wear on the
morrow, concealed beneath a long
overcoat. In his pocket was the red
beard. We found the six Germans and
six Transylvanians scowling at one an
other from opposite sides of the room
Beyond, behind a closed door, Leopold
was sleeping, dreaming of his king:
ship.
‘The officers, who had been instruct
ed as to our advent, saluted us briefly
and would have pald no further atten
tion to us, but Nikolai, who seemed
to speak every language perfectly, a
once launched into a panegyric | o!
Leopold’s virtues. He spoke in Ger
man, which tho Transylvanians di
| not understand. ‘They could perceive
| however, the drift of bis speech, anc
their scowls grew deadly. If looks
| could have devoured, Nikolat woul
have disappeared. The Germans be
came more and more enthusiastic
| and, welcoming Nikolai as a brother
opened a case of champagne, Th
‘Transylvanians, not to be outdone
| opened another and drank, ignoring
| us with studied insolence.
“Before long Nikolal made bis nex
-| move. All were flushed with wine an
‘| shouting loudly, regardless of thel
| royal ward. They were in the good
| fellowship stage.
hours every day, and the elements do
not frighten her from her regular daily
exercise,
Madame Patt! ts a great admirer of
the Jewish people, and she constantly
‘wears what {8 called a mezuzah, a
small case containing a Hebrew parch-
‘ment scroll, inscribed with a passage
from Deuteronomy, which is usually
aifixed to the doorpost of a Jewish
‘house,
Sho Is also very fond of birds,
At her residence she has a large af
lection of stuffed rongsters from all
=X { igo
Wt AN WW Aa eA
1 hil ak | UW See eS
tis 7 [Seen TOMMTT Si
ere ee OM I"
TBST NES AE AN UT SS ule rs iY
Yen a At Sie Gib Le
LAS ieee
ANI ii Pao ce ! =
eae
WS pS SS SN Seg ih
| | Sia Za
“ZA es. == a
f 7 WZ Sc 2 ag
CE AZ. SS
GS WS Se SS
_ Z
ei ee, eee cae
“Don't let us quarrel, gentlemen,"
he pleaded. "I am going to say a fen
words to those fellows, for the sake
of amity.”
And, crossing the room, he address.
ed the ‘Transylvanians in their own
tongue. ‘Their astonishment was
doundiess, ‘They thawed under his
persuasive eloquence as he urged har
mony between the factions.
Thon he turned the screw again,
and, having brought the two parties
‘to speaking terms, he sowed tho seeds
of discord. Before another hour had
passed, swords were rattling in thelr
seabbards. And Nikolai was forgot:
ton. Ho had effaced himself, and the
‘guards, morosely drunk, were passing
the Ife one to another. Nikolat Iook
ed at me. I looked at my watch; it
was balf-past four.
“Now!” he sald, and slipped into the
King’s _bedchamber.
‘As I stood by the hdltopea door,
uncertain whether or not to follow
watching the brawlers, I heard the
faintest groan from within. I hur
rled in. The king lay in his sleeping
robes, gagged, and writhing in Niko
Iat's strong arms, but helpless. Niko
lal pointed to the pocket of his over
cont, from which the end of a cord
protruded. In a moment I had trussed
up Leopold and he lay helpless before
us.
“It you attempt to utter a sound, you
die,” sald Nikolai sternly. “Other
wise you shall not be injured. Sum-
mers, you take his feet.”
‘Together we carried him through his
bedroom to the bath-room, Beyond this
lay an immense cistern, connecting
with the roof, in which rainwater was
stored. It was empty, all but for a
few inches of muddy water, for pipes
had been laid that summer to the
new reservoir. We ascended the lad-
der which led to it, carrying our bur
den. We hoisted him with an effort
and let him drop inside. ‘Then we
stood and looked at him, He was not
hurt, but his face was gray from
terror.
“The servants will find him this
evening,” said Nikolai to me. “The
palace will be empty through the day.
And anyway, he can't ery.” Then a
thought came into his head.
“Listen! he whispered in German.
“There 1s a conspiracy to have your
life, We are your friends, Do you un-
derstand?”
The helpless king nodded.
“1 am fulfilling your brother's tn-
structions to watch over you. ‘The
palace 1s in the hands of the revolu-
Uonaries. If they discover you, your
life will not be worth « moment's pur
chase. At night we shall come for
you and take you to safety. Now do
you understand? I crave your ma
Jesty's pardon.”
He unbound and ungagged him. He
kissed his hand, and we departed
leaving the prince cowering there.
“If I know human nature,” Nikola
said, “he will not stir or ery. It would
have been inhuman to have left him
trussed and gagged.”
‘When we returned, the partisan
were still quarreling.
“And now,” said Nikolal, “I think |
will go to bed. Help me off with m3
royal robes.”
‘Ten minutes later he was sleeping
»| over the world, as well as many live
‘| parrots, which-are great favorites with
her.
( te
/| Salt From Western Australia,
| Enormous depouits of. sult exist in
-| the Hsperance district of western
,| Australia, which are now being work-
ed by a strong company, ‘The salt 19
1| seraped from lakes and treated in a
mill, recently erected. It ts then bag-
| ged and exported, the quantity 10
| treated being some 15,000 bags 4
1| month.
ora ans dei of the prince. The
roy: over &
i had etd, vate
was to ‘at the appointed
hour and dress him, not forgetting
‘the beard. When I should use my dia-
cretion. I might attempt to gain en:
trance to the cathedral, or proceed
directly to the railway station. In
any event, {f we missed each other,
‘wo were to meet at the same hotel
which we had occupied in Vienna. I
carried out my instructions. The tu-
mult gradually abated as the guards
sank into various stages of intoxt:
cation; by seven o'clock the ontire
twelve were stretched out upon the
floor, sleeping off the effects of the
champagne.
T aroused Nikolai at elght. For a
moment he did not realize where he
‘was; thon he sprang to his feet and
smiled as he caught sight of the royal
robes.
“Can you get mo something to eat,
Summers?” ho asked
“Not if we have to depend upon the
guards," I answered, and told bim of
thelr condition. He laughed out loud
But as if in answer to his demand,
there came a knock at the door. I
sprang forward and opened it a cou
ple of inches, at tho same time inter
posing my body. A little page stood
there with a tray on which was a light
repast. I took {t trom him and set
it down on the. bed. As I dismissed
him, I looked after him into the ante-
room and saw him wake the guards.
When I turned my head Nikolai and
the tray had disappeared,
I looked around in consternation.
A moment later I heard him coming
from the direction of the bathroom.
“L gaye the food to that poor devil
in the cistern,” he sald. “I told him
that the palace is in the hands of the
mob, but that they had given up the
search for him and that relief will
arrive by nightfall. Oh, he hasn't
stirred, Summers. Now help me
dress.”
Five minutes later he was strug-
gling into the royal robes. He cast
the black coat around his shoulders.
He affixed the square red beard. And
he stood before me, a very falr coun-
terfelt of the prines. ‘Then he strode
to the door, opened It, and stood
there, Squinting over his shoulder, I
could barely restrain my laughter.
‘Twelve very haggard and disheveled
figures struggled to thelr feet and sa-
luted him. ‘They ‘were in no state to
Getect the fraud that was being play-
@d_upon them.
‘Then, from without, I heard a fan-
fare upon horns. I hurried back to
the bedroom and looked out. In the
courtyard below, twelve heralds, in
fantastic, mediaeval costumes, were
drawn up, and, as I watched, 1 saw
the blue and yellow coach, drawn by
eight cream-colored ponies, swing over
the stones. Following it, two by two,
came mounted guards. I turned back.
Nikolai stood tacing me.
“Good-by, Summers,” he sald, grip
ping my hand. “Or au revoir, rath
erj, we meet in Vienna.”
And he marched forward to meet
his followers, the cloak east over bis
arm, his plumed bat pulled well down,
every inch as kingly as the man whose
place he had taken
A Century Ago.
About one hundred years ago a pub-
Mc reception and dinner were given tn
New York city in honor of Commo-
dore Oliver Hazard Perry, the hero
of the battle of Lake Erie. This was
put one of many similar honors be-
stowed upon Commodore Perry in
- recognition of the nation’s gratitude
‘ for his sigaal yictory over the Brit-
fh in the great naval coullict at Put
" fm-Bay Septomber 15, 1815, and as
» commander of the ‘naval battalion in
the battle of the Thames the follow.
T heard tho footsteps of the attend:
ants die away down tho corridor. Now
1 could go where T pleased, for there
‘was no mote order in the palace. Leo-
pold’s recent arrival with his retinue,
‘his own attendants and those of his
brother, had thoroughly upset all
plans and arrangements, — Nobody
knew who his nelghbor was, Guards
and attendants in every possible cos-
tume swung pell-mell into the court-
yard, forming in a rabble around Ni
kolal, their king. I saw him enter the
coach and leave the palace. Follow-
Ing {t, I found myself all at once in the
middle of a jeering mob, not openly
hostile, but wanting, I could see, only
the stimulus of a leader to convert
‘them into a bloodthirsty horde. They
thronged around the coach, which
could proceed through the streets at a
snail's pace only, thrusting — them-
selves among the guards, who rode
with drawn swords, catching at the
horses’ manes, even insinuating their
heads into the carriage windows and
‘hurling taunts at their new ruler, as
they supposed Nikolai to be. And he
played his part well. Forcing my
way beside the coach, T saw him cow:
er back as though in terror—he, who
hnd never cowered before any man,
At that moment I wished with all my
heart that fortune had cast him for
some better role than that of an im:
postor and—even though he aimed
at High stakes—a common thief. The
prize, the magnificent crown of
‘Transylvania, with {ts rubies and dia-
monds, seemed a strangely insignifi-
‘cant guerdon to be won at the expense
of such emotions.
‘They conveyed him onward to the
cathedral. At the doors, some order
had been created. A regiment of
‘Transylvanian troops was drawn up,
and, a8 Nikola! stepped from his ve-
hicle and passed in, something like a
cheer came from thelr throats. To
the minds of these men he represented
something of the ancient glories of
their race. How he could have
changed hostility into enthusiasm at
such @ juncture, had he been set upon
a throne and not on a crown!
I forced my way into the cathedral.
‘was resolved to witness the drama to
{ts conclusion. I elbowed aside all
in my way. While men muttered and
stared and jostled, I calmly made my
way on until I found a place among
the ranks of the nobility. ‘They made
room for me perforce, and then, as
the archbishop came forward, in mitre,
with golden wand, the tumult died
away.
I saw Nikolai stand straight up be-
fore him. He cast aside the sable
cloak that covered him and flashed
forth in all the magnificance of royal
array. A sigh went up through the
whole vast assemblage. This was
their first king—thelr king, even
though {n.posed upon them from with
out. ‘Then, stooping, the archbishop
raised something in his hands and,
holding it aloft, placed it upon Niko
lat's brow.
It was a plain fron circlet!
And suddenly I remembered,
What fools we had both been, and
how a little thing had defeated all ou:
far-flung aims, The papers had saic
that Leopold would be crowned. Yes
but they had not stated with wha
{ng month. With the coming of win-
-|ter the opposing forees had ceased
1}active operations, and Commodore
-| Perry took advantage of the oppor-
>| tunity to visit his native Newport
s|and other cities in the cast. Ho was
-|feted wherever he went, Citizens of
n| Philadelphia turned out en masse to
e|greet him. From the citizens of Bos:
-|ton he recelved a chest of silver, and
-|when he visited Washington he was
s | presented with the thanks of congress,
nia magaiflcent sword and a gold
- | medal.
| ‘
y i
‘had I'not read of It 1a choo! books,
‘was It not almost @ portion of the
elementary education of every man,
that the priticen of Transylvania re:
celved, upon the day of thelr corona.
Hon, not the Jeweled crown of their
kind, but the clrclet of rusty iron,
fashioned from cannon taken from tho
‘Turks upon the glorious battlefield of
Rastenica, a symbol ot tholr warrior
history? a
‘They bent low before him, all that
vast assemblage. I saw Nikolai stride
from the dais and advance down the
aisle toward his coach at the door. I
‘Sprang to my feet and followed him,
pushing my way over the bodies of
the half prostrate multitude. I was
five paces behind him at the door.
It was flung open, and, as Nikolai ap-
peared in the sunlight, a roar went up
from a vast multitude without. But
it was no roar of welcome—it was a
clamor of death.
They sprang for him, fighting back
‘his guards, who formed a solid circle
around him. They beat them back,
they clutched at him, they seized his
‘robe. The crown fell from his head.
A courtier seized it before it touched
the ground. Nikolai was at the car-
riage door. They urged him in. But
he hesitated, and, with bent shoul-
ders and quavering knees he looked
a king no more. And suddenly, with
what seemed a supreme effort, raising
his hands, he cried in accents tremu-
lous with fear:
“I abdicate my throne. Spare my
life, good people of Cheskaf, and let
me go home.”
For one brief instant, overcome with
astonishment, the mob was silent.
Then hideous cries went up:
“His life! His life! Death to the
usurpert”
But others answered them.
“No! Let him go. To the railroad
station! Take him to the railroad
station!"
‘They sprang upon the box, they
dragged at the wheels, they lashed the
horses into a furious gallop. Run-
ning at top speed, amid the cheering
throng, I arrived at the terminal in
time to see them drag Nikolai from
the coach and hurry him to the train,
A few of his attendants, seeing that
his cause was hopeless, managed to
form a flying wedge in front of him
and to beat back the baser element
among the mob. They thrust him into
a carriage and stood guard before the
door with swords drawn, while Niko
lai, cowering within, bespattered with
filth and mud, his long robes trailing
upon the ground, hid his face in
feigned humiliation and terror. Some-
body brought up an engine. Some-
body gave the signal for departure.
His guards, stood with shame-bowed
heads as the revolving wheels carried
their broken idol trom the ken of
‘Transylvania forever.
When I rejojned him in Vienna the
papers teemed with conflicting stories
of the emeute, Some sald that Leo
pold had taken flight in fear; others
spoke of an impostor, believed to be
a lunatic, who had been found in Leo
pold’s apartments in the palace that
same evening, claiming to be the king.
Some even said that the king’s en
emies had contrived a plot. whereby
‘a tool of theirs was crowned in place
of the real sovereign, tha abdicated in
the streets to ruin his cause. But
Leopold now lives in his brother's cas
tle in High Darmstadt; and in the
window of Paix et Lepine, those fa
mous jewelers of Paris, you may still
see the unpaid-for crown which they
manufactured once for the ex-sover
eign of Transylvania,
Lights Floating on Quicksilver.
Quicksilver is used mainly, accord-
ing to the United States Geological
survey, in the manufacture of ful-
minate for explosive caps, of drugs,
of electric lighting and scientific ap-
paratus and in the recovery of the
precious metals, especially of gold, by
amalgamation. An increasing demand
has been reported in manufactures of
electric appliances. An interesting
and increasing use in Scotland is the
floating of the lights of lighthouses
upon a body of quicksilver. The metal
{s not consumed, of course, and the
Joss in use is insignificant.
Concerning this Consul Fleming
writes as follows: “Quicksilver 1s
used for ‘floating’ the revolving lights
in lighthouses. The commissioners
of Northern Lighthouses, Edinburgh,
have in their charge 90 lighthouses
on the coast of Scotland. Up to the
year 1900 the revolving lights were
borne on rollers, The ‘float’ system
has been gradually introduced, how-
ever, and is now in operation at 30
coast stations and will be used at all
others. The lUghting machinery rests
‘on @ pontoon which runs on quick-
silver in a groove. The quantity of
mercury required in a lghthouse ts
from seven to eight flasks of 75
pounds each.’—Consular Reports,
Joke Founded Merely on Tradition.
Baldness, if itisa sign of anything
at all, is a sign of respectability. The
conventional jest about the gayety of
the baldheaded man has absolutely no
foundation in fact, Occupants of front
rows at the theaters and musical
comedies are not at all remarkable
for their baldness, whatever else their
claim to distinction,
One of the prominent papers in Lon-
don made an extensive investigation
to prove the truth of this statement.
‘The result was that the proportion of
baldheaded men at the churches and
universities and lecture hally in Lon-
don was so enormously in advance of
‘tho baldheaded men at the theaters
that there was no possible conclusion
other than that baldness 1s really an
indisputable concomitant of reapeo-
| tability and that the jokes about bald
heads and the front rows of theaters
‘aro merely traditional,
ON nn OOD
Shell of the Crab.
By messuring the ashes of blue
crabs boat to shed thelr shells, Dr.
Selig Hecht of the biological labora-
torles of the City college finds that the
caletum used by the “softshell” crus.
tacean for the purpose of hardening
{ts new shell ts not present at the
time of the molt, but 1s absorbed by
the sea water during the hardening
Process. ‘The ‘hardshell spectm
oatain about 20 times the Amount of
calcium contained in the "rsadder”
COMMUNITY IDEA THE THING
No Doubt That Towna Should Be Lald
Out for the Benefit of All the
he Benefit 0
Tt ts pleasing to note that town:
planning organizations are coming
into fashion even in villages or 1,000
population. Such agencies are not as
general as they should be, but the
Idea of directing the future develop:
ments of clustered communities along
thoughtfully planned lines, instead of
on the old style goas-yop-pleaso plan,
{a spreading, with hopeful indications
that tt will come into universal ac-
coptance,
‘The small town or village has the
same sort of interfering dimeulty In
planning the layout in accord with ar-
tistic {deals that blocks the way in
the older parts of the cities. Tho
town { built, and quite often built
wrong. To put it right would mean
to tear down and respace and replace
the old structures. Such a costly re-
modeling 1s never thought of—It 1s
simply out of the question.
Sometimes a sweeping fire clears a
‘large business or residential area, and
then there is a real opportunity to do
some effective planning, not only as to
the architecture of the buildings that
aro to arise, but as to the setting and
spacing, and, perhaps, the parking.
But what every town can and should
do ts to arrange the space that 18
available not only to beautification,
but with regard to convenience and
sanitation. There is rather too much
Individual freedom in the average
small town in tho matter of handling
property. There needs to be a com:
munity {dea that dominates individual
action.
ACTION SHOULD BE GENERAL
New York Post Heartily Indorses the
City Planning Exhibition Being
Held There.
Especial interest attaches to the city
planning exhibition from the fact that
the probable ratification of the excess
condemnation amendment will enlarge
the possibilities before New York. Bx-
cess condemnation has probably
worked to best effect In Ohio, where
Cincinnati and Toledo have entered
upon large programs of city building;
while Cleveland, as the current Survey
records, has “undertaken the first mu-
nictpal experiment in suburban plan-
ning and housing,” through acquisition
of large tracts of land to be divided
and sold in building lots for working-
men’s houses, In many other ways the
exhibition, which we owe to George
McAneny ‘and the Merchants’ associa-
tion, should be highly stimulating.
More than forty among the 200 Ameri-
can cities participating, and 12 among
the Canadian, have elty planning com-
missions, while in Massachusetts, New
Jersey and Pennsylvania helpful legis-
Intion has been enacted. Our adminis-
trators cannot afford to lag in fore-
sight behind those of Toronto and
Philadelphia. ‘The exhibition should
contribute to the enlightenment of
thousands of citizens upon our civio
problems.—New York Evening Post,
Streat Slate Resulaten.
Pictoral advertising on a large scale
on the streets 1s not favored abroad,
where the advertising is confined either
to newspapers or to small artistic post-
ers placed on special cqlumns, some
three or four feet in diameter, each of
which carries a dozen or more post-
ers. The effort is to attract attention
by the artistic effect of a poster rather
than by its size, Such advertising col-
umns may with advantage be placed
on safety isles, or in public squares or
at spacious corners, The interiors of
such colmns aro fitted with switches
or transformers of electric distributing
systems, or telephones for the police
or fire departments.
Workmen's Village Formed.
A model workingmen's village 1s to
be built adjacent to a large motor car
plant at Hast Springfield, Mass., nc-
cording to the latest plans. ‘The mod-
el village 1s the enterprise of a num-
ber of Boston capitalists, who pro-
pose utilizing a 60-acre tract close to
the factory's new 40-acre property.
Complete sewernge and water sy
tems will be laid out, and streets,
parks and attractive houses at mod-
erate rentals are some of the features
promised.
‘Meiiam 6a ebseek. Gataee
‘The names of streets should prefer.
ably be placed on tho corners of
butldings, and each of the four corners
should have the names of both streets.
‘This 1s cheaper and moro effective
method than the placing of signs on
poste, which obstruct the sidewalk and
which, owing to the expense, are usu-
ally placed only on two diagonal cor
ners. The post method is, however,
at times a necessity. f
Worse and More of It.
“How, or, fat Bileen 18 getting,” aald
the young man “I think it's a shame
for girl to take on flesh that way.”
“You shouldn't say that to me,” pro-
tested the young woman archly. “I
am a little plump, myself, you know.”
“I know, I know,” he hastened to
apologize, “But its all right with you,
T mean it's | shame when a girl's
young.”
No Age Without Its Heroes,
No age or condition is without its
heroes. The least incapable general
in @ nation is its Caesar, the least im-
bectle statesman its Solon, the least
confused thinker its Socrates, the
least commonplace post, tts Shake
apeare.—George Bernard’ Shaw.
Worth Thinking Of, Girls,
varne happiest witd a"racent Eng
ish Woman writer fs quoted as saying,
“tg not always the one who marries
the best man, but the one who
the best of the man she sno soaks
For Handy Bous and
Girls to Make and Do
{ No mechanical toy is more interest
Ing to make, nor more interesting to
watch when In operation than a min-
fature windmill, It is a very simple
toy to construct, and all of the ma-
‘terial that it requires can usually be
‘found at hand, which are two reasons
‘why It is one of the most popular of
home-made toys, and why nearly
vevery boy at one time or another
‘builds one.
Figure 1 shows a small model
which may be constructed quickly.
‘You will notice by the detail iustra-
tions that the hub of the windmill is
® spool (Fig. 2), that the blades are
cut out of clgarbox wood, shingles,
tin, or cardboard, and are fastened to
tho side of, short spoke sticks driven
into holes bored in the spool hub
(Fig, 3), that the hub turns on the
rounded end of a stick shaft (Fig. 4),
that the square end of the shaft ts
slotted to receive a fan-shaped tail
(Fig. 5), and that the shaft is pivoted
to the top of a clothes-post, or a post
put up for the purpose (Figs. 1
and 6).
Use a large ribbon-spool for the
hub. You can get one at any dry
goods store. Locate eight holes
around the center of the spool, at
equal distances from one another, and
Dore these with a gimlet or bit, or cut
them with the small blade of your
Jackknife,
Cut the eight blades 6 Inches long,
5 inches wide on thelr wide edge, and
1% inches wide on their yarrow edge.
Prepare the hub sticks about % inch
by % Inch by 4% inches in size, and
whittle one end polnted to fit in the
hub (Fig. 3). Fasten the blades to
the spokes with nails long enough to
drive through the spokes and clinch
on the under side. Glue the spokes
in the hub holes, turning them so the
dlades will stand at about the angle
shown.
‘The shaft should be made of 2
hard wood stick about % inch by 1%
inches by 14 inches in, size. Cut the
round end small enough so the hut
will turn on it freely, and punch a
small hole through it so a brad may
be driven through it to hold the hut
4n place. Cut the slot in the square
end with a saw. Make the tall about
5% Inches long, 4 inches wide at its
wide end, and 2 inches wide at Its
narrow end (Fig. 5).
‘The windmill must be pivoted te
‘the post support at its exact balanc
ing point. Pivot the shaft with a
i SB BLADES:
URETHISGVT OP ee
Gesenar noon,
Siinehes Te,
eee
Prag
oe zy
||» Cif) capaci
|| A stocks SSE ArT
long nafl. Bore a hole through the
shaft a trifle larger than the nail, sc
the shaft will turn freely. Place a
‘washer between the nail-head and the
shaft, and another between the shaft
‘and the post support.
Figure 6 shows how the power
from the toy windmill may be utilized
to operate a toy jumping-jack, by sup-
porting the jumping-Jack on a bracke:
and connecting its string to the hub
of the windmill. Cut the upright of
‘the bracket (A) 14 inches long and
the cross piece (B) 7 Inches long.
Nail A to B, and nail the jumping-jack
at its center to the end of B (Fig. 7).
Fasten the triangular block (C) to
the lower end of A, and then nail both
A and B to the edge of the shaft at a
point that will bring the string of the
Jumping-jack a trifle beyond the wind
mill blades, Fasten a small stick,
having a brad driven in one end, tn
notches cut in the hub's flanged (Fig.
a A
sroociua Hf 3
ome | a
. WS fa
“AMINGIACK od
isStrorTDig@s ts
c
sonnet, fl
4 nu fl
MAY BE-MADE 70°
OPERATE -A“ToY:
SJUMPING-JacK: |
8), and connect the brad and jack's
“tring with @ plece of wire or strong
string. Then as the eee re
volves it will operate thé toy as in.
dicated in Figs. 6 and 7.
Of Some Use.
Old Gotrox (to his fashionable son)
—You and your set thoroughly die
gust me. You could get along as well
without a head on your shoulders as
with one.
Aer shw tan eel How weedieu:
Jous! Why, whe would @ fellah
‘woah his bat?—Puck.
Use Many Cor
Nearly Tee at ot Metin need.
ed tor the beer and aerated
waters consumed annually in Britain.
By A. NEELY HALL,
A TOY WINDMILL.
‘Of Some Use.
Uee Many Gaoks.
By DOROTHY PERKINS,
BERRY BOX FURNITURE,
Has it ever occurred to you girls
what pretty pieces of doll furniture
may be made out of the little berry
boxes so plentiful at this season of
the year? Several of the easily made
pieces are illustrated below. All the
material you need to make these are
i ‘
i
1
“SWINGING ‘SEAT-
d = PS
_=_—__
SP
=
-SOFA:
various shapes and sizes of berry
boxes, a sharp knife, and a bottle of
glue.
The little swinging seat in iNustra-
tion No, 1 is made from the bottom
and two ends of a square pint box,
with the ends tapered off with a knife.
A strong linen thread, knotted on the
end and rin through holes plerced in
four places, provides “chains” to hang
It by. It may. be suspended from a
chair round.
Mlustration No, 2 shows # sofa that
{s made out of a long shaped quart
berry box. All you have to do is re
move one side of the box down to the
bottom, then carefully cut away the
end as shown, to form arms, and the
sofa Is completed.
‘The chair shown in illustration No.
3 Is made of two adjoining sides of a
pint box, which form the back, seat,
IM ue
—
A pes.
3 =
- CHAIR: FOOTSTOOL:
<=
2 i
5
LIBRARY: TABLE:
and front legs, and an extra piece
which forms the back legs. One side
piece forms the chair back, and the
other side is scored along its center
with a knife, and bent down to form
the seat and front legs, The rear
legs are made of the extra piece,
whch is glued to the chair back.
‘The little footstool shown in illus-
tration No. 4 is quite simple to make.
One side of a pint box is used, and it
is only necessary to score the piece
one-half inch from each end, and bend
down the ends for legs.
‘The library table (INustration No. 5)
is made out of a pint berry box, with
] \
8. BED:
1S
1 os 7
7 .CUPBOARD:
one-half of the height of the sides re
moved all around, in one piece, and
the pleco removed fastened edgewise
inside of the box for the base.
In illustration No. 6 {shown a very
comfortable ‘little doll’s bed, made
from a quart berry box. Split down
each corner half-way. Then, leaving
fone side of the box whole, for the
head of the bed, cut down the oppo-
site side about one-half, for the foot,
and trim down the other two sides for
the sides of the bed.
‘The cupboard in illustration No. 7 ts
made out of a quart berry box, with
shelves cut from the sides of other
boxes fastened inside with glue. Hang
curtains made of scraps from the rag
‘bag across the front.
Tdeas for a cradle, a dresser and
other ‘furniture will suggest them
selves to you.
‘The berry box wood may be stained
@ pretty brown by using the coffee
Jett over from breakfast.
) “I understand that your mother
‘tripped and fell fiat yesterday.”
"Yes."
“Were you not sorry?”
“I certainly was! I just happened
to be looking the other way.”
A Proverb Made Over.
‘The man who wins success Is not,
The one who hesitates to swat
‘The iron hard when it's hot
Why He Was Sorry
A Proverb Made Over.
3 *
ie ay
I) he
ome \
ee ‘ate
{ |
ts ‘
- ,
: ens e .
X Pe yy’ ape 3
Die. cee a <a £P oe =
ERM NES oe Sik =m eS ee seh Oy STO MLA TAR Si tr nse
WUACKLETOY FAT TS las Sa aes po pega s rove Mies Sc)
s , ote. A agen ad PRAT ENE EO ee
1 ee ae Set ones ager
ss tS Ce a ee a
’ ‘an 4 Pe BM ire A
Doc | | ee pee ge
We A NO | |i Se Ce |
ie we : i gg rr ae
\ RSet yon) | Peet OSE ss igs < t}
\ 4 WR re ae )
\ 255 oo \| Bee “ ot . gstiaLe
i" Re Wg i ee >
P Ne P oe ite y} je Re
y Ne POON MR ee > wer | a Ae BN st
NBR LL ,
ta }43£.: 2 hCFBE4’ 6
A ee SOT. ths es
| ors 2 ie re ee ee
SAAALEL ONS AUR PROPELLED Wate Dow | Yee wih oe C= Pose Fee
‘ IR ERNEST SHACKLETON’S coming | |e flagged i ee. eg : et,
My trip across the Antarctic continent, EE ok : Sree
RBG? with the South pote as a haltway ata: Cen r ee A e * hipaa |
SARSGEN tion, is probably the most daring Pn al ho a ite 2 me Oe
| FANS ioutney ever undertaken by man. tt 5 i ee Re Ey,
WQPRER) reminds one of the conqueror Cortez See By pw a ME at A) d
SEK burning bis ships behind him. On See” Pe p Si ‘ q 4
Ss previous expeditions with the pole as a ot ee ee ~~ a 1 ee :
Bae El ius tence havi Bid a pcos ee fei 25 Me aes
ss of taken ehoh Wet ter Cou epee Soe ML ok CAE BOS)
| returning. Sir Ernest ywill push straight onward, Le Al ig BS he
|| from sea to sea, not reckoning at all on. the pos- Bee wre oe o ie Pe a oe E5G nS
|| sibility that an expedition may come a little way Ps gi Pete Wi fg Ore. Rp i
| fo meet him, ae ge as Ey aah A,
For several years Sir Ernest held the record of a eer ed
| approaching closer to the South pole than any ee ei Co. ye eS 2 oe
,| other man. He feels keenly the dimming of Brit- Wee ar ls. Be Geass IWF sae
'} ish fame by the exploits of Amundsen and Peary. Cpe
‘With no more boles ta conauer. he might wall ait SS ees op SO KTP PRIDDY Ut Det
sion of bases upon which they could depend when
returning, Sir Ernest will push straight onward,
from sea to sea, not reckoning at all on. the pos-
sibility that an expedition may come a little way
to meet him,
For several years Sir Ernest held the record of
approaching closer to the South pole than any
other man. Ho feels keenly the dimming of Brit-
ish fame by the exploits of Amundsen and Peary.
‘With no more poles to conquer, he might well sit
down and weep, like Alexander the Great. But
Ynstead he has set himself this unique feat.
‘The news that Sir Ernest expects to come to
the United States before leaving for the south
seas has stirred great interest among Americans
over plans for the exploring expedition. Sir
‘Brnest |s very popular here, where he has lectured
extensively. It s probable that wealthy Amer-
feans will add considerably to the funds of his ex-
pedition.
He started on his last expedition $100,000 in
debt. It took him two years after his return. to
pay off this debt and {t was hard work, too. This
time he has resolved not to run into debt again.
He has $260,000 guaranteed by a friend whose
name has not been made public. ‘This sum he will
make do if necessary, but he will be able to
carry on scientific work much more extensively
if he can obtain a further sum of $100,000,
Sir Ernest has announced that he will experi-
ment with aeroplane motors and propellers for
travel over the snow this winter, his laboratories
to be in Canada or Siberia. He hopes to perfect
this novel substitute for the Eskimo dog, which
he will also use, and the hardy Shetland pony.
Besides aeroplanes and parts of aeroplanes,
Shackleton will take advantage of wireless, the
movies, prepared foods, and many other of the
newest inventions.
He believes he will have the most perfectly
planned expedition that ever set out, and as he
himself helped to equip many others expeditions
‘and has been a member of several, he ought to
know.
Sir Emest Shackleton is now in the prime of
life, a splendid man physteally and possessing an
inspiring presence. He is a born leader. He
makes all about him enthusiastic, especially when
the fire of memories of the frozen south moves
him. Ho is forty years old—pictures taken of
him on his antarctic trips before he has had a
shave make him appear sixty-five, while in his
street clothes on the Strand he appears a virile
thirty.
To the layman {t may be surprising to learn that
there are 5,000,000 square miles of unknown terri-
tory on the continent of Antarctica. This gives an
{dea of the possibilities of discovery open to Sir
Ernest. More than half his journey fs sald to be
laid along a new route and, if things go right, al-
most all of it will traverse virgin flelds. It 18 no
overstatement to call it the biggest polar journey
ever attempted.
Briefly stated, {t will cross the dead continent
of snow, mountain ranges, volcanoes and frightful
storms from the side of the Western hemisphere
to tho side of the Eastern hemisphere,
‘The main party will leave clvilization at Buenos
Ayres and reach it again in Christchurch, or some
bther New Zealand city.
‘The start will be from Argentina in October of
this year, and if @ good landing 1s made on the
shore of Weddell sea by the beginning of Novem-
ber, @ shore party will proceed immediately
‘across. In this case the expedition should reach
Ross sea, on the other side, by March, 1916,
But if the shore party has hard luck, it will
content itself with laying a series of caches and
will then return to the Weddell sea shore, start-
ing out again a year later
‘The expedition will have two ships. ‘The first,
‘which carries Shackleton to the Antarctic contt-
nent, will do work {n tracing the shore of the con-
tinent to the west, and will go back to South
America before the close of navigation, return-
ing the next year to take up 4 party which will
winter on the shore of Weddell sea and carry out
sclentific work in the so-called “Weddell quad-
rant." Long sledge Journeys will be taken east
‘and west of the base by this party.
‘The second ship will approach the continent
from the other, or Ross. wea, side, and take back
Shackleton, according to his plans. If Shackleton
HOLLAND’S NEW LAND
A ABS Oe OP SR NN S79" io Sah Te ES SRT ae ate bY a2 Leet lad OAT Me
FES SO AS ee aA Sts ice ea Th NY i Mae aT rel eae Na EV aU ar elias Tn Rainer eS, Mao ig
Little Holland is about to begin the
great work of draining the Zuyder Zee,
It 18 expected that 17 years will be
required to make the entire area now
covered by water fit for habitation and
eultivation. About 24,700 acres of land
land are already being annually ro-
claimed, and this reclamation ts likely
to continue for about ten years. ‘The
reclaimed lands of the Zuyder Zee will
be sold by the state in small lots and
en a
= hs
> >» ~
if Pay | a. — \
ieee
ee sete) ci ALY
OE 1s | a) \
Beate ae ste ea ee ‘
df sg Rs |S
Le,
es fag ee
ie gy
Lee. “DOPE SHAPED. LBL CONVERIALLE
WLIO AV IGLOO + Se Re ae
crosses the first season, he will reach civilization
again by the middle of April, 1915. Otherwise, it
will be a year later.
‘This second vessel will sail from New Zealand
about the same time as the Weddell sea ship sails
south. On landing at a prearranged base, the
second party will send a sledging expedition as
far south as possible, to latitude 83, if practicable,
but this expedition will return in time to go north
again before the close of navigation. The expedt-
tion will endeavor to lay a series of depots along
what may be the last stages of Shackleton's route.
But Shackleton will not depend on them in any
way. They may not be lad at all. If Shackleton
doesn't arrive this season, the second ship will
return south the next year again,
Five months 1s the time Shackleton estimates
as necessary for his crossing of the south polar
continent. He allows ten days for delays by bliz-
zards. The minimum distance from sea to sea is,
1,700 miles, but it 1s probable that Sir Ernest will
try to cover new ground throughout and so go
much farther.
The “transarctic party,” as Sir Ernest calls
it, will begin {ts Journey with 120 dogs, two
sledges driven by aeroplane propellers with aero-
plane engines, and an, aeroplane with clipped
wings to “tarr!” over the ice. But a large part of
the work of transport will be by dogs. Dogs will
eat their fellows’ flesh, while ponies will not.
Motor sledges have been found to be practical-
ly useless in the Antarctic, as the amount of work
put on the engine when passing over varying sur-
faces generally causes the motor to break down.
Sir Ernest proposes to build an ordinary sledge,
larger than the usual size, and on this to mount
‘an seroplane engine, with an aeroplane propeller
in front. He figures that a sledge of this descrip-
tion 1s capable of dragging a ton at five or six,
miles an hour.
Instead of one sleeping bag, each explorer will
carry three, so that when one is iced up it can
be discarded. The tents will be made of three-ply
wood, strong enough to support a domeshaped
covering of snow, thus insuring more warmth.
‘The full complement of the short party will be
12 men, and six of these will make the Journey
across. Both of the ships will be fitted to burn oil
tstead of coal, as the liquid fuel extends the
radius of action and renders the vessels inde
pendent of ballast, The ships, which will carry
80 men altogether, will be fully equipped with
cages and tanks for bringing home live penguins
‘and seals, such as have never been taken from
the antarctic regions.
Bach ship will have a biologist, geologist and
physicist, and the three from the first ship will
‘be stationed in her winter quarters in the Weddell
gradually, 80 as not to depress exist:
ing prices. It fs estimated that at
Jeast 40,000 persons will be required to
cultivate this reclaimed sea land,
which will be used for the grow:
ing of root crops, sugar beets, pots:
toes, peas and other vegetables, “It
4s estimated," says La Gazette de Hol-
land, “that the value of these crops
will be nearly $30,000,000. The prea-
ent Zuyder Zee fisheries employ 3,017
4
eae — el
men and produce herrings, flounders,
anchovies, smelts and shrimps to the
value of $835,000 a year. The boats
in use tn the Zuyder Zoo will be un-
suitable for fishing in the North sea,
and new boats will be supplied by
the state to enable the fishermen to
work that sea.”
Spontaneous Generation Life's Origin.
Dr. Charles Bastion brings forward
fresh evidence intended to prove the
spontaneous generation origin of life.
From solutions of sodium silicate and
ki
sea. Another party of three will explore un-
known tracts along the coast near the winter
quarters,
‘The aeroplane with clipped wings will not be
able to fly. Its wings will take practically all the
weight off the wheels,
Wireless and moving picture outfits will not be
carried, it 1s expected, on the transcontinental
trip. But one cinematograph machine will go with
the party working from Ross sea and another
with the party working about Weddell sea. These
films will have both scientific and popular inter-
est. Pocket wireless outfits having a range of
from 100 to 200 miles will also be carried by
these two expeditions, but the main party will not
attempt the added welght of either device.
While the North pole is situated about two
miles beneath the sea, the South pole is on the
plateau two miles above the sea. The conditions
of journeys to the two points are widely different.
In the North, within 500 mites “of the pole, in
summer time, there are 100 different species of
flowering plants. There are no flowering plants
within 1,700 miles of the South pole, and within
700 miles of it there is no plant or animal life of
any description whatever.
In the North you may expect to get the arctic
hare and the ptarmigan on the northermost land.
‘There are also bears and the life in the sea.
On a trip to the North pole, the explorer sledges
over a moving sea of ice that packs up and
breaks up, and it is impossible to lay any depots.
‘The danger of northern sledge traveling is the
break-up of the ice and the opening of what are
called leads—open water channels left by the
parting of the tee.
In the South the difficulties are the varying na-
ture of the snow surfaces, the fact that the tem.
peratures are much lower and the danger of
crevasses. In the North one can fall 10 to 20 feet
Into the sea, but in the South one may fall 1,000
feet down a.crevasse.
By this notable expedition, Sir Ernest hopes to
cut In two one of the largest, if not the largest,
white spaces yet remaining on the map. He ex-
pects to solve the complete continental nature of
the Antarctic,
Especially scientists would lke to know
whether the great range of mountains on the
New Zealand side of the Antarctic continent
really stretches all the way across and ts a con-
tinuation of the Andes. This Victoria chain has
been traced to the pole by Amundsen and other
explorers. The solving of this problem is of in-
tense Interest to geographers all over the world.
‘The discovery of the great mountain range, which
is assumed to extend in a general way from the
pole to Weddell sea, would be one of the biggest
geographical triumps possible,
The geological results will also be of the great-
est scientific value. The Weddell sea party will
take many specimens, and even the transconti-
nental party will chip off pleces of all exposed
rocks they find.
Continuous magnetic observations will be taken
all the way from Weddell sea to Ross sca, as the
route will He not far from the magnetic pole. In-
formation of great value to navigators would be
jearned.
Continuous scientific observations of the weath-
er will algo be taken, and these should be very
valuable when correlated with the results obtained
by other expeditions.
Biological work will be thoroughly carried on,
and the distribution of fauna and flora will be
studied. Both the ships will be equipped for dredg-
ing and sounding. All branches of science will
be most carefully attended to and the net result
Saee But ant aod tergaesh, fon Geagtae et
t and foremost, the crossing of
the polar continent, will be the main object of the
‘expedition.
Dernitrate of tron, which were bolled
30 minutes to destroy all lite, he
claims to haye grown de novo moulds
and fungus germs. He malintatns
these are genuine organic growth and
Adduces proot of thelr growth and
multiplication, with the formation of
filaments, Doctor Bastion concludes
that te de novo origin of living mat-
ter is established beyond the region
of doubt. At the same time he fully
recognizes that the actual steps of the
spontaneous generation process re-
‘main to be discovered,
ROMANCE IN RAIN
Cupid Chose Wet Night for Work,
but His Arrows Were None
the Less Effective.
Lilian,”
He returned (o the shelf the book be.
had been trying to read. ‘The janitor
of the library was preparing to closd
for the night.
“Pouring.” Jackson muttered. “Ob,
well, I can stay inside the storm door,
and be Just us gloomy as 1 please.”
Another young man awaited the ces-
sation of the shower in the shelter of
| the storm door. In accordance with
the rules, the door leading Into the
| library was locked behind them
“Pretty wet,” Juckson ventured.
“Yes,” his’ companion returned,
briefly.
| "Tcame here to read something that
| Would make me forget my troubles,”
|Jackson confided, “I ought to have
known better than to come without am
umbrella,”
| "Odd." his companton replied, with
an effort ata laugh. “I did the same
thing.”
"You did?" Jackson inquired. “So %
see that other people have troubles,
too.”
myself.”
| ‘They both laughed uncomfortably ak
| this confession, after whch they re
mained silent for a moment or two.
| “You've it it right,” Jackson ad-
mitted. “I don't think you lost her,
though, as 1 did.”
“I did lose her.”
“Good heavens!” Jackson burst out.
“We seem to be twins, J guess you
jean understand, so 1 tell you aout
It.
| “Lillian is her name—never mind
the rest. I've been mad about her
| since I first met her, I could always
see, though, that there was some one
|else where she was concerned. She's
jaway from home now—until tomorrow,
Since she went, I heard on good au-
|thority that her engagement to this
some one else, whoever he {s, will soom
|e announced, No use—I‘knew it all
along. So I'm sailing for England to~
morrow morning.”
“Mine's not much different,” the
other stated, after a thoughtful pause.
|11 call her Helen—because that isn’t
jher name. I've known her since we
|were children. 1 thought she really
\carea for me, Maybe I wasn't bril-
tant enough. A few woeks ago, she
- | went to stay at her aunt's. She met a
r |foretener there. T suppose he tas-
cinated her for the time. Anyhow, I
» |could tell by the way she spoke of him
@ |in the one or two letters I had from
\her that she's mad over him. They're
© |to become engaged. She is to return
1 |tonight. I have decided that it would
h | be better for us not to meet again. So
T |I'm leaving tomorrow. I'm sorry that
e |I'm not going your way—I'm going
- |west. On the way here, I stopped at
f|the house and talked with Helen's
y |mother—a fine old lady. She under.
t | stood. So I left a note for Helen, and
|— Well, I hope you make out better
© |than I did. I see it has almost stopped
e | raining.”
8 | “Glad to have met you,” said Jack
- |son, as they stepped out into the
n | street. “If you~"
t | A motorcar, making a turn, cast the
#|glare of its lights in his eyes. I
n |stopped at the curb. A girl stepped
f | out. Jackson's companion started for
ward with an exclamation.
| Jackson, unnoticed, stood staring
1. unable for the moment to move from
| bis position
®| “Lillian!” he muttered, under his
d|preath. “So my friend here is the oth-
ler man!”
©| “Why, Tom!" the girl exclaimed.
© |«'m so glad I found you! It was
, | mother—she's waiting In the car. The
|attair about the Frenchman was only
| talk. I'm so glad you didn’t go wherever
|you were going! Mother gave me
{|Your note, and told me what you sald
| Texplained to her that the talk about
the Frenchman was only gossip. So
she decided we had better chase you
: jand tell you. You told her you wonld
t |stop at the library. She guessed that
% |you had been caught in the storm.”
t |" “Thank God!" the young man de
clared, heartily.
¥ | ‘The girl turned, noticing Jackson for
© | the first time.
t | “Why, Mr. Jackson!” she greeted.
* | “Lillian—I mean, Miss Hunter!” he
# | responded.
* | This is about the sixth thme I've
+ /peon mistaken for Lillian Hunter this
1. | week,” she declared. “You ought to
h | know better than that, Mr. Jackson—
© |you've made the mistake before.”
t |" "A light dawned upon Jackson. “Miss
Matthews,” he corrected. "I"
t- | “Pardon me a moment. I haye some
i | thing to say to Mr. Jackson,” the gir
{| requested of the other young man, whe
stepped aside.
“Twas talking to Lillian a number o
"| times while I was away,” she tn
@ | formed. “She's in love with you. Sh
* | can’t think of anyone else. She con
© | teased it to me. She told me you
‘seemed to have a notion that she care
| for some one else, which isn’t true
y | So, it you know vee ein 7s kar
‘8 good chance—well, don’t neglect it.”
“You can be sure T won't,” Jacksox
| assured. "I guess,” he commented te
® | himself, “I won't go to Bngland.”—
: pew ‘York Press.
The Swiss government is considers
ing the electrification of all of ite rail
ways.
Made a Hit With Him.
Jenkins—“Didn't that lawyer on the
other side give you @ terrible over-
hauling?” Thompson—"Didn't he,
though? You can bet if T have any
more Iaw business, I'm going to hire
him."—Puek.
aaecti e
Shakespearean Gloowary.
Macbeth strode down upon the
witches, “What make you ‘there?
quoth he, “Serapplo,” replied whe of
Wndor, and Macbeth strode off the
while the cold wind howled upon the
laird’s bonnie blue knees,
The Tuskegee Edition of DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S WORKS
THE STORY OF THE NEGRO
WASHINGTON
VOLUME I
THE STORY OF THE NEGRO
WASHINGTON
VOLUME II
MY LARGER EDUCATION
WASHINGTON
THE FAMILY DOX
WASHINGTON
CHAPTER BUILDING
WORKING WITH HIS HOME
BOOK PAGE
WORKING WITH HIS HOME
BOOK PAGE
WORKING WITH HIS HOME
BOOK PAGE
WORKING WITH HIS HOME
BOOK PAGE
"Up From Slavery" A history of Dr. Washington's life and experiences told by himself. In this book also is given a history of the Tuskogee Institute and Dr. Washington's famous Aalanta Address of 1895. PRICE $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
"Working With The Hands" Contains Dr. Washington's experience and advice with reference to the importance of industrial education and the methods of imparting same. PRICE $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
"Character Building" A collection of Dr. Washington's Sunday Evening Talks to the student body in the Chapel of the Tuskogee Institute. These talks have become widely known and famous. PRICE $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
"Story of the Negro." (Two Volumes) Gives the history of the Negro race from its beginning in plain, simple words that may be understood by any school child. This history also contains sketches of many noted colored men and women who have succeeded in various walks of life. This history should form a part of the education of every Negro boy or girl. PRICE $3.00, postage 20 cents extra.
"My Larger Education" is a supplement to "Up From Slavery" and contains Dr. Washington's experiences in contact with men and movements in this and other countries. PRICE $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
"The Man Farthest Down" the latest book from the pen of Dr. Washings ton. It contains an account of his observations and experiences among the working classes in Europe. In this book he compares the progress and the problems of the American Negro with that of the same type of people in Europe. PRICE $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
Tear Off Here and Mail.
Date.....
Enclosed please find two dollars, for which please send at once your Tuskegee Edition of Booker T. Washington's Works. After examination, if I am satisfied with the books I agree to send you $1.00 per month for six onths. If not satisfied, I agree to return the books in good order within five days and you are to return my two dollars. Title not to pass to me until the books are fully paid for.
"House of Love"
Badges, Banners,
Books, Robes, Emblems,
Buttons, Furniture,
Uniforms
FOR ALL
Lodge and Church Societies
The Love Regalia Company
2418 Flora Avenue Kansas City, Missouri
Bell Phone, East 944
MISSOURI
MISSOURI
MOBERLY, MO.
Mr. Edward Harris sold his property on Horon Street to the Electric Light Co. for a large sum. Since the transaction he has bought two pieces of property, one on East Rollin Street formerly owned by Geo. W. Edwards, the other is a half acre in the west part of the city; both of these are splendid investments and will prove profitable to Mr. Harris in the future. What Mr. Harris has done others can do. It was a pleasant surprise to the members and church goers of Grant Chapel to see the Presiding Elder of the St. Joseph District, Rev. M. S. Bryant, filling the pulpit last Sunday and as usual he delivered one of his practical and powerful sermons and all who heard him must have been inspired. We found upon investigation that it was an accident that caused Bryant to be with us at this time, but at any rate we were benefitted. The Firtnight Club met last Tuesday and made a good report, $8.50 had been raised to pay on the piano, only six of the clubs reported; the young ladies are doing great work for the church. Miss Bertha Althouse led the club report $3.55. The service day at Grant Chapel was good, total $22.71. The Second Baptist Church also reports good service all day. Rev. J. K. Ponder is out of the city this week, away on special business. Rev. J. S. Swaney also is out of the city attending to church business... Rev. S. E. Boone was at Hardin last Sunday. We are glad to know that our sick are improving...Mr. Jessie Brown and Mr. Roy Oliver are very much better and little Erma Arizona Hurley is improving rapidly. Rev. A. W. Ross formerly pastor of Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church was in the city last week, all were glad to see him and learn of his success at Leavenworth, Kansas. Rev W. H. Davis of Brunswick spent a few pleasant hours in our city last week. "The Ecclesiastical Alliance experienced another very interesting meeting. Rev J. D. Davis instructed the Class in the S. L. Lesson and S. E. Boone delivered a lecture on "Growth of Preception". The subject was well prepared and the illustrations given very good. W. B. Coleman will deliver the lecture on next Tuesday morning and we hope that all members, and as many friends as possible will be present, because our prophecy is that the production will be good. Strangers and visitors are always welcome.
MARYSVILLE, MO.
Mrs. Chas. Webb of Savannah is visiting her sister Miss Bessie Maudling... Mr. Arthur Smith made a flying trip to Omaha Saturday... Mrs. Joe Graves who lives in the South part has been very ill with pneumonia... Mrs. Frank Smith returned home Tuesday after a short visit with her daughter Miss Goldie of Omaha, Nebr. ...Mr. Wm. L. Vance returned to Clarinda after a visit with parents Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Vance... Rev. J. R. Woodson, D. D. pastor of the Second Baptist Church of Larned, Kansas, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Smart... Mrs. P. Thomas is very sick with Laglippe... Mrs. J. L. Goodnie is on the sick list... Miss Minnie
Gunn of Council Bluffs, Ia., is visiting with relatives.
FARMINGTON, MO.
Mrs. Jane Hunt left Thursday for Cape Girardeau....The Clover Bee Club was entertained by Mrs. Ella Cherry, Thursday....Mr. Thos. Cryce of the Iron Mt. Railroad visited Mrs. Cayce Saturday....Mrs. Laura Kennedy returned from Coffman Thursday....Presiding Elder J. D. Barksdale arrived Saturday and conducted the Quarterly Meeting for the Second Quarter at the A. M. E. Church....Miss Dayce F. Baker spend the week's end in Bonne Terre as the guest of Miss Ruth B. Davis.
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO.
Mr. and Mrs. Mabian spent Monday and Tuesday in Parksville, Mo....Mr. McKnight and Mrs. Hugh White, the proprietors of the dance pavilion, received their largest crowd on last Thursday. Everything was fine....Miss Ora Clark visited Channie Golf at Liberty, Monday....Mrs. Eliza Jacobs is taking the place of Chef at the Mitchell House in her absence....We are glad to know that Mr. McKnight will soon move his family to this city. They will room at the Albany until May or June when he will build a 6-room Fresco——The Club hopes to have Hon. N. C. Crews address them in the near future....The people are willing to entertain any of the citizens of Kansas City at any time——Miss Irene Brassfield of Weson, Mo., arrived here Sunday night to take a position at the Inni. Mr. Carl Glisson is employee d the Elms....The wedding chimes are slowly tolling for another Excelsior girl.
PRESIDENT
REV. T. A. WILSON
CHILLICOTHE, MO.
Mr. Joseph Murray who underwent an operation at St. Mary's Hospital several weeks ago is able to be up and about.... Mrs. Emma Longdon is indisposed from a severe cold.... Mr. Wallace Rowland arrived last Monday from Des Moines, Ia. He and his mother, who will arrive this week, will resume housekeeping at their comfortable home. We are glad to have them join our citizenship again. .... The members of the Sir Knights and Daughters of Tabor who feel justly proud of their order and its numerical strength here, gave an entertainment at the Armory Hall last Friday night. The attendance was very good and the refreshments sold were equally so. Everybody returned to their homes conscious of several hours well spent. ... The Bachelor Girls recorded another pleasant meeting before they departed from the fireside entertainment given by Miss Bertha Monroe last Saturday afternoon. As is customary a delicious luncheon was served by Mrs. Monroe, who was assisted by Mrs. Edward Gilbert. ... The Garrison Patrons League held an enthusiastic meeting at Bethel Church night. The reading by Mrs. Clifton Ballow, the essay by Miss Eileaxton, the vocal solo by Miss Marguerite Estes and the cornet solo by Mrs. Carl Talley pleased the audience because they were well selected and well rendered. The discussion "Woman Rushmore" was very instructive Misses Minnie Payne and Odessa Hillman made such intelligent arguments and presented such well guarded facts that they proved to be the right women to defend woman's right to vote. Mr Herbert Beasech and Prof. Wm. Longdon were compelled to ransack their mental armory for the proper thought with which to defend the negative side. They fired away and were humorous, thoughtful and eloquent at times. After an encouraging collection was raised, the President, Mr Lucillius Sawyer and Rev. Oaks closed the meeting with optimistic remarks. ... Rev. Daniel Oaks made several telling strokes with his gospel hammer last Sunday night. The antebellum and the modern dance, like the average white man says the negroes all looks alike to him. When the pastor took his seat the congregation failed to grasp the fitness of thing by singing "I surrender all".
ELMWOOD, MO.
The Baptist Church had preaching Sunday, March 8th. There was good attendance all day. Mrs. F. Fisher is improved. Mrs. Mary Williams of Sedalia, her old friend is at her bedside, also Mrs. S. M. Buford, her daughter.
TALENT, ORE.
March 1st, Mrs. W. M. Miller, 935 Walker Ave., gave a five-course dinner party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Jones. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. W. Battle, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Love, Mr. and Mrs. C. Aupton, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Jones, Mrs. Emily Clark, Mrs. W. M. Miller, Mr. Bert Bowlin, Mr. Evert Clark. The decorations were pink and white. All had a delightful time and went away wishing their host and hostess would remain forever in the Valley with much success.
KANSAS
TONGANOXIE, KANASAS.
Rev. Saunders took dinner with Mr. Arthur Wood and sister Sunday.....
Mr. Fred Carter and Mr. Roywaiton visited Mr. Willis Nelson and family Sunday....Quarterly. Meeting was held at the A. M. E. Church Sunday.....
Rev. Owena of Kansas City, Kansas, presided....Mr. Mat Wilson attended Church Sunday....Mr. Will Reynolds made a business trip to Kansas City, Kansas, last week....Mrs. B. J. Wood left for Kansas City Saturday morning to spend a few days....Mrs. Chas. Grant left for Kansas City, Kansas, to visit for a few days....Mrs. Z. E. Nelson and Mrs. Alec Jackson visited Mrs. Martin Williams at Fairmont Tuesday....Mrs. Annie Mason visited Mrs. Martin Williams a few days at Fairmont, last week. There will be guessing contest at the First Baptist Church Saturday, March 14th.
OSKALOOSA. KANSAS.
Mr. Ben Slimms and family will move to Bonner Springs soon...Mr. Geo. Jones is in Nicoodemus writing Insurance...Miss Della Nichols and Mr. Oscar Burnett were married last Monday night at the home of the bride by Rev. Self, pastor of the A. M. E. Church...Rev. Owens of Kansas City, held Quarterly Meeting at the A. M. E. Church Sunday...Mr. Geo. Cotton had a woodchopping last Thursday which was quite a success. The A. M. E.'s are preparing an Easter program—Miss Estella Huff of Topeka visited home folks last week...Mr. Henry Holland has moved into the house lately vacated by John Nichols
ROSEDALE, KANSAS.
Mrs. Clarissa Staten died Tuesday and her funeral was held from the Primitive Baptist Church Thursday. She leaves a daughter, niece and other relatives... The Juvenile Choir of the St. Paul A. M. E. Zlon Church will give a Sacred Concert at the Church Sunday evening, March 15th...Mr. T. Smith is ill at the residence of his parents Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Smith...Sunday will be Quarterly Meeting day at the Bethel A. M. E. Church on Valley St.
Worth of Man of Force.
There is always room for a man of force, and he, in turn, makes room for many. Society is a troop of thinkers, and the best heads among them take the best places. A feeble man can see the farms that are fenced and tilled and the houses that are built. A strong man sees the possible houses and farms. His clear eye makes es tates as fast as the sun breeds clouds. -Emerson.
First Use of Stage Money
Stage money, that is, money of no value off the stage, is first said to have been used by David Garrick in the eighteenth century. The money is said to have been made by the wealthy actor-manager so as to look actually like real money. There was little money, even of this counterfeit kind, used in the days of Shakespeare, because of the scarcity of any kind of money, particularly among actors.
Charlemagne's Talisman.
Charlemagne's talisman is famous in history. It was of the fine gold, circular in shape and set with gems, with two sapphires and a fragment of the holy cross at the center. This charm was found attached to the neck of Charlemagne when his tomb was opened, and was presented to the great Napoleon, who in turn gave it to Hortense, ex-queen of Holland.
Find Statue in Tree Trunk.
Find Statue in Tree, Trunk.
While cutting up a century-old fir tree on the Simplon (France) foresters found in the heart of the trunk a bronze statue of the Virgin Mary. It was about a foot tall and perfectly preserved. It is supposed that the statue was placed in a niche carved in the tree and that the wood gradually grew all around it.
And He Got the Pardon.
The Judge (to the accuser)—The lady whom you kissed agree her will is ready not to press for a conviction if you ask her pardon and express your regret. Accused (to the pretty prosecutrix)—Yes, I humbly ask your pardon, but as a truthful man I cannot honestly express my regret.
For Cane Seats.
When cane bottomed seats sag, sponge both sides of the cane with hot soapsuds in which a handful of salt has been dissolved, then stand the chair in the open air. Treated like this, the seats will become as firm as when new, shrinking into place.
About of Equal Worth.
The Son (proudly)—I am going to have my college diploma framed. Where would you advise me to hang it? The Father (grlmy)—Put it alongside that beautifully embossed mining stock certificate of mine—Puck.
Cause of Pink Eyes.
Albins have pink eyes, because in their case the cornea is absolutely free of all pigment as well as the iris, and as all is absolutely transparent the blood-vessels make their color shine through.
Reflection on the Lawyer.
Lawyer—I must know the whole truth before I can successfully defend you and establish your innocence.
Have you told me everything? Prisoner—Except where I hid the money.
I want that for myself.
Principle.
To go with the tide of another's thinking is easy. To stand outwardly but, more important yet, inwardly by the higher Christian ideal may cost you something; but it pays.—Mary Stanhope.
Scalp Treatment a Specialty. Caldwell's Pomade and Tonic really Grows Hair. Try it. Save your combings, cut hair and any old hat you may have.
Hair Matched From Samples. Feathers and Hats Cleaned, Dyed and Blocked. Agents for Spirilla Corsets. Mail orders answered promptly
1910
GOOD SERVICE ELECTRIC LIGHTED First Class Shaves, Hair Cuts & Shampoos. Best Shop in the City. Do not take your money down town when you can get good service for it at home. You will always find us at our post and ready to serve.
If You are Pleased Tell Your Friends and If not Tell Us. Fine Cigars and Tobaccos Jackson Laundry Agency
General Contracting Repairing a Specialty
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED (The Modern Builders Co., are successors to) A. E. ESTES Contracting @ Building Co.
The People's Undertaking Co.
Cut Rate Undertakers
Funeral Directors and Licensed Embalmers
OUR MOTTO
"Do unto others as you would they
should do unto you."
Our Specialties
LOW PRICES—FIRST CLASS SERVICE.
When in need of an Undertaker call and get our prices and
look over our stock before going elsewhere.
Experienced and EDWARD JONES,
Practical Licensed Embalmer. Manager.
HOME PHONE, 8165 MAIN. BELL PHONE, 1565 GRAND.
1211 EAST 18th STREET.
Growers and Shippers of Early Garden Vegetables. Sweet Potato Plants, Tomato. Pepper and Cabbage Plants, Potataes and Watermelons.
General Offices 117 West Sixth Street. H. P. EWING, Mgr.
Aegnts: J. P. MAYNARD, 2330 Vine Street, Bell Phone, East 2330.
REV. G. T. MOSBY, 2404 Highland Avenue.
Bell Phone E. 4394Y
Office 2460 Waldrond Ave
In Builder
All Contract
ing a Special
Cheerfully Fun
TION GUARANTY
builders Co., are succ
E. ESTES
Building & Building Co.
Yer's Undertak
ate Undertak
ers and Licensed E
OUR MOTTO
others as you would
do unto you."
Our Specialties
FIRST CLASS SELE
undertaker call and get
stock before going elsewhere.
EDWARD J.
E. Enbalmer.
MAIN. BELL PHONE, I
AST 18th STREET
Opportunity For
FOR SALE IN THE
Y TRUCK FAC
(INCORPORATED)
Hoppers of Early G
Potato Plants,
Cabbage Plants
and Watermelons.
National Bank, Independen
National Bank, Kansas C
Builders Co.
Contracting
a Specialty
Warrfully Furnished
GUARANTEED
(Co., are successors to)
ESTES
Building Co.
Undertaking Co.
Undertakers
I Licensed Embalmers
MOTTO
as you would they
unto you."
Specialties
BEST CLASS SERVICE.
For call and get our prices and
before going elsewhere.
EDWARD JONES,
Palmer. Manager.
BELL PHONE, 1565 GRAND.
8th STREET.
unity For Investment
SALE IN THE
TRUCK FARM CO.
(ORATED)
of Early Garden Veget-
to Plants, Tomato,
bage Plants, Po-
Watermelons.
Al Bank, Independence, Kans.
Al Bank, Kansas City, Kans.
E. A. Robinson, Pres.
W. R. Carter, Vice Pres.
H. P. Ewing, Secy.
Robt. Turner, Asst. Treas.
Geo. McNeal, Asst. Secy.
D. B. Jackson, Treasurer.
Nick Chiles, Asst. Auditor.
C H. Calloway, Atty.
West Sixth Stfrest. H. P. E.
D. 2330 Vine Street, Bell Pl
DSBY, 2404 Highland Avenue
h Street. H. P. EWING, Mgr.
Vine Street, Bell Phone, East 2330.
44 Highland Avenue.