Plaindealer
Friday, February 1, 1907
Topeka, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE TOPEKA PLAINDEALER.
VOLUME IX
MAKING READY!
"Brave Men" Will Receive Characteristic Kentucky Hospitality in Old Louisville.
Louisville, Ky., Jan. 30. More and more the Pythians of this city are giving the coming of the Supreme Lodge serious consideration. Many of the committees are getting their local workers together and each is being given some specific work to accomplish. It is not surprising to learn how the professional class of our citizens are offering their services to the Pythians to help make the event the greatest that has ever occurred in the South. Dr. J. A. C. Lattimore one of the leading Pythians of this city, will have for his guest Dr. R. F. Boyd, the well-known surgeon and physician, and no doubt his office will be the social headquarters for the delegation of Nashville.
This city has been visited by such well known characters as Dr. Booker T. Washington, Prof. W. E. Du Bois, Hon. W. T. Vernon, Bishop Alexander Walters, Prof. Roscoe Conkling Bruce, Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, Miss Hallis Q. Brown and others of no lesser prominence and they have been loud in their praises of the cordial hospitality rendered them. They have declared that no place in America surpasses Louisville, the seat of Kentucky hospitality for its warm and heartfelt reception given to strangers.
The mayor of the city has indicated that he will do all in his power to help make the stay of the visitor pleasant so far as public conveniences is concerned. The Pythiaeus who are interested in the success of the race, and the organizations that are doing a great deal along this line, will find the headquarters of the Afro-American Council at 726 Walnut street, with Rev. L. G. Jordan as corresponding secretary. This is also the office of the Foreign Mission Board of the Baptist denomination, and the office of Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, secretary to the Women's Convention, auxiliary to the National Baptist convention. The second floor is used for office rooms, but the main dining room to be used for the reginaeen of the cloth" to take meals, and no doubt this spacious building will be used for the headquarters of the Pythiaeus ministers regardless of denomination.
Pythrima who are physicians will find two hospitals of their race that can be used in cases of emergency, on the Red Cross institution and the other the Louisville National hospital. At time moves on there will be much public in these columns many of the attractions and the places of interest about the Falls City, and the head printers of different cities and states.
Louisville has one of the largest and handsomest Y. M. C. A. buildings in America for colored people. It is located on West Chestnut street and is the most popular section of the city. It is a two story and a half stone building with the latest and most modern conveniences and conveniences and up-to-date in all its departments. Mr. Bullock is the secretary, formerly of New Jersey, and the work under his charge
TOPEKA, KANSAS, FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 1. 1907
has been very gratifying to the citizens of this city. 'This building will be open to all visiting Pythianus, especially those who are affiliated with Y. M. C. A. work in other cities. This building which is one of the most spacious owned by Negroes in Kentucky, will be a "bee hive" where young men of the Pythian rauks can be accommodated and assured of a pleasant stay.
Supreme Chancellor S. W. Starks will be located at one of the luxurious and magnificent Kentucky homes, with headquarters at one of the down town office buildings with telephone, messenger and etenographia service at his command.
Mr. Fanning, a clarinetist of rare ability, has organised thirty-five of the best musicians of this city into a concert band. They are rehearsing every Sunday at the Odd Fellows' hall. They anticipate playing some grand music for the Amorial rank this summer. They realize that some of the best bands in the country will be here, but they expect to "make good" with soon airs as "Dixie," My Old Kentucky Home," "Swance Biver," I. Trevastore.
One of the most welcome visitors to "Old Kentucky' will be Dr. C. N. Wade, of Hot Springs, Ark. The doctor is a prominent Pythian, and stands high in the council of the Supreme officers. This state being his old camping ground, he will no doubt make many after dinner speeches, which he is often called upon t, do. Miss Melnote C. Wade will head a large delegation of the Court of Calanthe in this "neck of the woods" to come to Louisville to see some of the prettiest women in this country, and be extended the courtesies of Kentucky chivalry.
KOOSEVELT WATCH
A dispatch from Washington says that President Roosevelt is deeply concerned in the work of the Oklahoma constitutional convention He has clearly indicated that if the constitution does not measure up to his idea of what a state constitution should be, he will reject it regardless of consequences.
Recently reports have reached the white house that it has been proposed to insert in the constitution certain provisions, it is said, would prevent railroads and other corporations from employing men to protect their property in time of strikes. President Roosevelt has told some of his callers that he would not approve a constitution that does not guarantee full protection to the property of citizens. The proposed 'Jim Crow' provision has also been discussed at the white house. The president is quoted as saying that he earnestly hoped the convention would send him a constitution that he could constitutionally approve. He added that if the right kind of constitution was not adopted he would report it, even if such action would delay statehood unfinitely.
Ohioan Oklahoma who offered on him to say, the president asked many questions regarding the work of the convention. He predicted a great future for the new state and indicated the worst he takes in the people. The others referred to were Delegate B, S McGairo, D R Boyd president of the University of Oklahoma, and Justice B T. Harner of the Oklahoma supreme court. Later Mr. Roosvelt had a long talk with Delegate McGure regarding the proposed constitution.
Democratic senators have warned the delegates against the adoption of a constitution with a "Jim Crow" provision. "They say that the president would not consider a 'Jim Crow' constitution for a moment.
Oklahoma Rebels Place no Restriction Upon Themselves in Order to Defraud the Red Man of His Land and Money.
We see that the Democratic convention is attempting to place in its constitution not only a Jim Crow clause, separating the colored and white people in the depot waiting rooms and coaches, but also a clause preventing intermarriage between whites and Negroes and Negroes and Indians. This is the most outrageous and contemptible act that has been perpetrated upon the American people and especially upon the colored people since this has been a Union. The hypocrisy and deceit that is being practiced by these would-be angelic white Democrats is more than we can conceive of. The idea of enacting a law prohibiting Negroes from intermarrying with whites or Indians and at the same allowing the white man to intermarry with the Indian. This is a scheme of the white man to get the land that is owned by the Indians and at the same time exclude the Negroes from it. Blacks and whites have intermarried with Indians for years and such a law would not be in keeping with their rights.
This constitutional convention is made up of Southern rebels which class of white men have raised several families of colored people before they came to the Indian Territory and in the state from which they hail, laws are now on the statute books prohibiting whites from intermarrying with Indians. One has but to step across the line into Arkansas to find in the statutes a law prohibiting the intermarrying of whites and Indians and
IOLA: KANSAS.
'The Old Mands' Convention, under the management of Mrs. J. W Gordon, rendered on Jan 21 at the Groomer Hall by the ladies of the Second Baptist church, was quite a success. Something like $43.05 was received.
Rev. Salwell, state evangelist of the A M E. church of Kansas, is in the city assisting Rev W B Johnson in a series of meetings.
Mrs Fred holds left last Tuesday for Curtthage, Mo., to visit with relatives. Mrs. Joe Pool is also visiting relatives in Missouri.
Mrs Mary Wood and left last Monday for Burlington KY, to visit with relatives.
On last Thursday evening, Jan. 27 Mr. Mount P. Hughes and Mrs. John Hall of Lola were invited in the holy body of matrimony. Rev W. W. Johnson attending. The marriage is noted at the beautiful home of the room's mother. Mrs Mary Linners 412 W Monroe.
Pcv. W. London and wife were on arrival at dinner Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Dennis.
Mrs L. H. McColour who has been invited to her room for the past two weeks is able to be out again.
Mrs Linnara pots who has been sick with pneumonia is available.
Mr. Better Strawder visited in Flam old last Sunday.
Mr. John Potts is a prominent young man of Lola has opened up a skating and for the young people in Grover Hall.
SIRLING NEWS
Mrs. Neal White is up after having the mumps.
Mr. and Mrs. B Hawkins are visiting in Hutchinson.
Poor to sit and Mrs. Frank Sutherland,
January 25, a girl.
Mrs. Grace Daydaton is up after a very
sweet mumps.
The new course of the W.M.L. school
similarly for this year are sup-
ported by Daydaton assistant, Warner L.
secretary, Jill's White in sister, Lana
Goufford.
P. F. Brooks held his second quinquel
whites and Negroes, and the same is true in most all of the southern states. And yet these same devils will come over into this territory and enact a law giving them a right to marry the Indian because the Indian owns the land, and as a number of white men have married Indians years ago, and raised families, therefore they are bound to stand by their actions. The constitution will not be approved by the president and we advise the colored people to organize and prepare to send a delegation to Washington to protest against the acceptance of the constitution with these obnoxious clauses by the president. It is an outrage and is not conducive to good citizenship and order.
We hope the colored people will bestir themselves, obtain a committee and furnish money and transportation, and be sure to furnish that class of men who will be able to present the matter to the president in an intelligent and business like manner so that it will have effect. We will also write our congressman and advise all colored people to write their congressmen to see the president and protest against this kind of legislatin. LAW AS APPLIED IN SOUTHERN STATES
Vol. 1, Code of Lawt—1902. South Carolina sec. 2664: 'I shall be an lawful for any white man to intermarry with any woman of either the Indian or Negro race or any mulatto, mestizo or half breed, or for any white woman to intermarry with any person other than a white man, or for any mulatto, half breed. Negro, Indian or metizo to intermarry with a white man, and any such marriage or attempted marriage shall be utterly null and void and of no effect.'
meeting Sunday and preached a grand sermon at 3 o'clock. Owing to sickness lots of the members were absent. Miss Lilhel Emily and Miss A Will looms are visiting Mina L. Stewart.
MANHATTAN NEWS.
Rev Tox of Salina was in town this week and preached a soul sturring sermon to an appreciative audience Tuesday night at the Second Baptist church.
Rev J. M. Pope spent Sunday after sun and night in Wamega, carrying on his usual order of service.
The young people and students who attend the A M. L. church are getting in readiness to organize a literary society. They have the best talented young men and ladies, others and a good work is in progress.
Prestling Lidder H King will hold his quarterly meeting here Sunday. King is expecting great work from the Christians on Sunday.
Mr. Leyhold Koe is slowly on the mind.
Mr. Colbert O'Brien is on the ask list.
Mrs. Catherine Bradshaw being somewhat impaired last for her home Saturday in Christchurch, Kane.
PITTSBURG ITEMS
Mr. Hobbs has arrived at the name
of Mr. and Mrs. George Lovett to
class soon. Mother and child are
going well.
Mr. H. Mason is in the
guest of Mrs. M. Patterson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Halloway has
gone to Kansas to provide
of the winter.
Mr. H. Hovell is on the
hill.
Mr. H. Hovell will physician and
sure that phone than phone phone 144
other homes from 6 to 10 a.m. from 2 to
10 p.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. calls answered
day and night. Other over the Owl
Hill State, Fountain and Broadway.
Mr. Burt is still seen, but is departed
some latter at the writing.
Have the department at the college out
on time to attend night for the home of
Mr. M. Phillips on West and attend to
just put a small blouse which weight from
the waist. The blouse was small.
Around it B. Poster spent Sunday at
home visiting Mrs. H. H. H. H. H.
Mr. H. Cole left last week for Mus.
CENTRALIA, KANSAS.
We are having a blizzard now.
Mr. Henry Rice has his bills out for his sale Feb 5, 3½ miles from town.
Mr. Sanders Smith was visiting his many friends here last week. Mr. Smith was lately married to Miss Jessie Brown and is a prosperous farmer at Mila.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin are moving on a farm noar Kelly.
Mr. and Mrs. Allie Johnson spent a couple of days in the country visiting his brother, John Johnson, and wife.
Rev. Copeland preached a noble sermon here last Sunday.
Mr. Aaron Habb took his first degree in the Masonic lodge last week.
Miss Hattle Rice leaves this week for St. Joe to visit a week with her brother and wife, before going to Muscogee, I. T. Rev. Copeland and wife left Saturday with their household goods for Atchison. Mrs Copeland will visit in Atchison for a while and Rev. Copeland will go on South where he has a church and a good salary. We regret very much to see them go Mrs. Copeland will be greatly missed in the circle and Sunday school, as she was loved by all, and they have both done much good here. And we wish them much success in their new location.
IEFFERSON CITY, MO
The Missouri Legislature being in session has attracted many visitors to the city. These, together with the members, have crowded all the hotels and boarding houses, and added unusual life and activity to the streets and public places. Of course, the separate coach bill has been introduced in both houses, a thing which has happened every year for the last ten years. As yet no enthusiasm has been aroused.
The Mercantile Grocery Company, which is operated by colored men, is doing a good and paying business. Dr. J. T. Caston is president, and Mr. J. D Clay is manager. The colored citizens are giving loyal support to this enter prise.
Mr Chas B Lane is running a first class hotel and cafe. The cafe is patronized almost entirely by whites. The success which he has had for the last two years and is still having, shows what can be done along this line by a colored man who will hustle and attend to business, as does Mr Lane
Dr J F Canton, our only colored physician, is kept busy at his practice. He has offices in the Lane Hotel, richly furnished and well supplied with surgical instruments
The Ministerial Alliance decided that revivals would be given in all the churches the first of February
Mr. I. M. Cunningham of Kansas City Mo. was sent to take charge of the Madison House the largest hotel in the city. Mr. Cunningham has twenty men under him.
Rev R. I. Ferguson pastor of the A M I. Zion Church had an old time clutter long supper. It was a very enjoyable affair and a neat sum was realized.
Rev R. I. Smith attended the Bishop's Council held in Kansas City last week and his pulp was recent Sunday. He considered it a privilege to see all the Bishop's and general offices assembled at one place.
Mr. Morgan Illustrator who has been teaching at Allenton High School for the school on account of illness and has been appointed the secretary in the school.
President of Allenton College who were in the work on business of the life in living well and is very much encouraged by the progress of his school.
Prior to the admission principal of the public school at California Mills, spent
Friday and Saturday in the city visiting
me with who is the matron of the
congregation on grounds of the institute
From the plaque in Valle of Lincoln
institute have shown absent from the desk
on several days on account of illness
We wish her a happy recovery
Mrs. Iona D. Moton has organized the service, made into a demonstration which the manner of which is applied in the room is described within the roof and the roof and interior, thanks for coding the plaque on little stairs to it in them, measures the roof and also uses project portraits to the swallows, dolphins and secretary late.
to Sneak Homel
TO ENSLAVE
SOLDIERS' WIVES
Army Officers Want Enlist Men to Reduce Their Wives to a State of Slavery.
Headquarters Ninth U. S. Cavalry Fort Walla. Walla, Wash. May 11, '07.
The following example of statement made by applicant for re- listment as married man is approved by the Regimental Commander and published for the information of the Regiment.
"In making application for re-enlistment as a married man it is with the understanding on my part and the part of my wife, as witness on signatures hereto, that as far as practicable in the opinion of the troop commander, my wife will assist the officers of the troop and garrison and their families when called upon so to do, and when no so employed will render such services as laundress for enlisted men as may be necessary or proper in the opinion of the troop commander."
Sig. of soldier. _____
Sig of wife. _____
(8gd.) A. M. MILLAR JR.,
Captain & Adjt., 9th Cav.
From a recent order issued from headquarters to the Ninth Uvalry, stationed at Walla Walla, Washington, May 13th, a copy of which appears as above, it seems that the officer who issued this order is intending to make slaves of the wives of the private soldiers, o compel them to work for the commissioned officers whether they see it or not, from the fact of their husbands being in the service and they being compelled to be n ar where they are stationed. It seems that the commissioned officers have made it imperative that the wives of the private soldiers and non-commissioned officers must work in the families of the commissioned officers or else their husbands will not be reenlisted. This is the most ridiculous order that we have ever heard issued by army officials. It is absurd on the face of it and a soldier who would sign such memorandum is certainly not acting as a freeborn American citizen and cannot demand the respect that is due man who respects and loves his family. This is equal to slavery days and surely the United States army has not fallen into the days before Reconstruction, compelling soldiers' wives to work for the commissioned officers. We hope President Roosevelt will have this order rescinded; and know that if his attention is called to this by the private and non commissioned officers, it will be done. The President may stand for some things, but this is one that we know he will not tolerate. We hope some of the soldiers who have courage and manhood enough to talk in defense of their rights will send the order to the President and have him give this commissioned officer who thinks that there must be slavery in the army to understand what his military duties are and for him to keep straight in the path of his duty or be cashiered. Refusal of any soldier to sign this will show that he is a man and he will have as good a standing as those who sign it.
PHOENIA, ARIZONA.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. White of Phoenix
entertained in honor of their eighth an
tuesday, on January 18, the Phyllis
Wheattley club. Those present were
Bilton Washington and wife.
Mr. Burgess and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turner,
Mr. and Mrs. Vaun,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordner,
Mr. and Mrs. McCallough,
Mr. and Mrs. McClure,
Mrs. Trent,
Mrs. W. H. Noble,
Mrs. Hawkins,
Mrs. Frye of Lawrence, Kas.
Mrs. Romson,
Miss Simpson of Los Angeles, Calh.
Miss Williams of Lawrence, Kas.
Mr. and Mrs. Gee, Caldwell,
Mr. Isaith Salisb.
A dinner of six courses was served
The decorations were warmth or holly
and roses. The club ladies presented
the hostess with a set of twelve Haskell
dinner cups and saucers. Everyone left
feeling they had spent an enjoyable evening.
Mr. Gardner is on the sick list
Mr. Walt Biker, a former resident of
Dunster who known better perhaps for
his great manliness is very ill
The Phyllis Whistley club gave the
first public concert last Thursday even
ing. The program was grand, perhaps a
little short. They hope to do better
in than drama in the near future.
Eddie Noble is telephone boy at Dr.
Fox's office.
- DOVE.R. OKLA.
Rev. Van e recently transferred from Paris, TN, conducted a very nice service at St Paul's A. M. E. church Jan 20. He is the pastor in charge and is an intelligent preacher and it is hoped that success will crown his yous work.
Mrs T. P. Currin, after spending a week with her husband in Walburton T., returned last Saturday. She reports a pleasant time.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Riley are the parents of a nine pound girl.
Mr and Mrs. John Clarke called on Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walker last Sunday. There was an oyster supper given at the Old Fellows' hall last Friday evening. Everyone had a nice time.
Lone OY's school, taught by Mrs H
mora Winn Currin, is getting along very
much. The scholars enjoy the latter
reading exercises on Friday afternoons
Mr. Sam Poole is adding another room
to his residence
Mr Elmas Wilson is in the land busi
ness for McLim & to For such busi
ness write him
Mr and Mrs. Archie Winchester are
the happy parents of a fine girl
Hon. G. J. Currin is visiting his sons
in Wilburton, I F his sons are manu
factures
BONNER SPRINGS, KAS
Rev. R. P. Banks, who has pastored the First Baptist church successfully for two years, giving half of his time. The members showed a high appreciation of his work by calling him for all of his time. He takes full charge of the church the first Sunday in the new year. The church is doing efficient work under the management of its pastor.
Mr. Mike Banks, the leading carpenter of Bonner Springs, and adjoining towns, reports his father very all, on his farm one half mile from town.
Mr. Garland's brother, whom he had not seen for thirty five years, visited him last week. He is a prosperous farmer at Downs, Kau, and is one of the emplovers in the Legislature at Hopka.
The home of Mr Clarence Graves was totally destroyed by fire Thursday of last week. It is reported that they lost everything. Mr Graves is a prosperous former.
The gas on Mr John Reed's term is still holding out and supplying Homer Springs with natural gas. Mr Reed Springs with natural gas. Mr Reed has one mile from town and is a good churchman and a deacon in the First Baptist church.
Rev 1 4 Hammond pastor of Ili ward with stopped out to call on New Banks, on route to Leavenworth to attend the State Executive Board.
Rev Banks is preaching a statue of
sermons this month for the benefit of
his church. The subject is at 11 a.m.
Sunday. What Are the Characteristic
Issues of a Real Christianity? At 7
p.m., the subject is The Prophet
of Little Things.
M COLLINS. P P
First Quarterly Report of K. C. D., Oct
28, 1905, to Jan 13, 1907.
Receiving my third appointment in
preaching elder of the house at the
District, at the last annual conference
began my work at Vale Green and Lab
mom, with all abiding faith and closest
to my success on this conference.
Rev R. Baltham on the pastor at Vale
Green and Labmom had begun his work
as a the pastor in this conference.
I am now in a union several months with the chaplain of
and had several conversations to the land
of the Lord and pastor. Jesus hirs
The land was with us in a good quiet
foolly manner at Springfield I
have a W. W. White house
and your house is near the
that year we are. He settled there
is being gathered back to the old field
at the place we just mentioned.
At no time had we been in the
final course of motion. There was a
good out look for a glorious revival. I spent several nights with him and held a good quarterly meeting. At Joplin, Rev. F. L. Scott, A. M., the new pastor, is hard at work. The people received him cordially, and the outlook is good for a successful year's work by him. He has organized a Forum, which is drawing the young people to his church. The Lord was with us in a glorious quarterly meeting
Brother Henry Green, of Nevada, has begun his second year's work with all his former zeal. The people like him, and he now has a helpmate to make his work a success. Rev Henry Green and Mrs. R. L. Binkley were united in the holy bonds of maltimony November 24, 1900. May God bless them.
At Butler, Rev J. B Wallace had just arrived, but was beginning his work nicely. He and his wife are well liked by the Bristol people, who promote their neat support, to make the year's work a success. We had a great quarterly meeting, received and discussed the Newkins, at the M. L. Church, as a local teacher.
At Pleasant Hill, Rev. J. Church plan is beginning his last year's work with many hopes of success, and the good will of his trustees he has taken on himself to write. May they do much good. We had a good quarterly meet our brother Mitchell is doing nicely at the beginning of his second year's work in Wellington. He is a young man and a good preacher, and is loved by the inmates of the church. Rev. J. Donnell hold my quarterly meeting there and give good service and satisfaction. This London has been appointed missionary for this conference year. I hope the pastor will use him as much as they can. He is a good preacher.
Joe P. W. Chester, at Malta Bond, is beginning his new year's work with much zeal. We had a glorious quarterly meeting.
Bruce L. W. McDowns, at Waverly is doing nicely. This is his last year there. The outlook is good. He is in a revival meeting now, and has organized a literary society in his church. We had a good quarterly meeting.
Roy J. H. Allen, at Independence, is at work with as much zeal as at this way his last year instead of his fourth year's work. He is now remodeling and popping his church, looking forward to the Bishop's Council, January 17.
Rev. I. L. Peck, B. D., at Allen Chapel, is a successful pastor. He handles his large congregation with case. They all seem to love him. He is a great and good man, a student, a faithful pastor, the quarterly meeting was good and largely attended.
From Allen Chapel I went to Lbenzei, Rev. I. P. Howard, D. D., pastor. The members say he is the right man in the right place. He is giving satisfaction. We had a glorious quarterly meeting. When the invitation was extended to those desiring prayer a soldier of the 10th Cavalry came forward and bowed at the altar and gave his heart to God and was saved.
At Westport, Rev. N. Pitcher is beginning his second year's work with all his former zeal. He will know no failure. The best quarterly meeting in the history of the church was held December 21, 1900.
At St Paul's Mission, Brother Walter Lee is lobbying for disadvantages. Not having a permanent location he can not accomplish much. We hold his quarterly meeting in a Baptist church 1021 Pacific Street and had a good meeting. I what the cooperation of all pastors and members of the sister churches at St Paul's Mission
For honey Pursuit at St. John is on
going the best work that has been done
since the church was built. This is a
second visit there. He is a very
premier and liked by all who know him.
We had a good particularly meeting.
The food come down our side to
guest.
And glory crown, the motto sent
by our pastor, Rev. Win Hawkins hold
his quarterly meeting. He a good
meeting, so reported to the quarterly
conference. This church is in a good
location the property will always be
valuable. Brother Hawkins is mortal
in his homes with sincerity.
At Maysview Row 11 Hammill is in full charge of his work. He is a devoted and keen keeping him himself, spiritually, the thing our churches so much need. He quietly meeting was a success along all lines. He had taken the ministers of houses city district.
Muscillatus
ARE YOU
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Insues policies for $350,
We issue policies for $100, $150 and $200.
Every intelligent Negro should c
good, live, hustling agents in every t
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The Knights and Ladies
Col. James Beck, Nat'l Pres.
James M. Mason, Nat'l Vice Pres.
P. C. THOM
Headquarters: 413 Kansas avenue.
Louisville National Medical College
Medical Department
FOUR QUARTERS of ten weeks
Students may begin at begin
weeks made a school year.
TUITION VERY LOW—815
Libatory fees Extra.
SPRING QUARTER S
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C. W. HOUSER
112 West Green St.,
NOTICE.
for $350, $500 and $1000.
and $200 for children aged from 6 to 12.
should carry some Insurance. We want
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long.
and Ladies of Protection.
P. C. Thomas, Nat'l Supt.
Press.
J. G Groves, Nat'l Treas.
THOMAS, Nat'l Sec.,
at avenue, Topeka, Kansas.
National
College...
Department State University
of ten weeks in each calendar year
at beginning of any quarter. 30
col year.
SW—815 per quarter in advance.
CHARTER Begins March 12.
CHARTER begins May 15;
or further particulars write to
SER, M.D., Registrar
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Every intelligent Negro should carry some Insurance. We was good, live, hustling agents in every town. Write at once for term Liberal terms to the right persons.
The Knights and Ladies of Protection.
Col. James Beck, Nat'l Pres. P. C. Thomas, Nat'l Bupt.
James M. Mason, Nat'l Vice Pres. J. G. Groves, Nat'l Treas.
Louisville National Medical College...
Medical Department State University FOUR QUARTERS of ten weeks in each calendar year Students may begin at beginning of any quarter. 30 weeks made a school year. TUITION VERY LOW-815 per quarter in advance. Labatory fees Extra.
Write for Catalogue or further particulars write to
112 West Green St., LOUISVILLE, KY.
Mister D. H. Pemberton and Mr. W. W. Shultz
on Sunday, June 10th, 1915, at the Sunday School
The annual program was well handled and
sunday night under the management
2117 Lawrence St
Denver, Colo
KELO
PROVINCIA
NOTICE.
To the subscribers of Yale, Weir City, and Chanute.
The representative of THE PLAIN-DEALER will call on you soon for money due the paper. Please have your money ready, as we need considerable in our business. We hope all will be prepared to meet the agent w en he calls.
CLARKSVILLE, TEXAS
Miss Mary E. Johnson has returned from H. Paso after spending two months.
Mr. Frank Parker is the only Negro that has shown any back bone during these big months. Recently the boys have been usually led up to the practice once like sheep to the slaughter with out a murmur and plead guilty to the games, so the officers have a good thing
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PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
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Mme. C. J. Walker.
INSURED?
Boys protect your innocence. In after years here in Clarksville the Negro will be arrested for giving social and banquets at their homes and churches. Mr John Green has returned from Dallas. Mrs Mud Wren died on the 20th. The Sunday School Teachers' meeting was held in spite of the cold. A few loyal members met at Mr and Mrs. H Harris' last Friday and enjoyed a nice time.
GALENA NOTES
The N. S. of Little Bethel A M. L. Church is growing more interesting each Sunday morning.
Mallie The Quadon—Out of Bondage. A drama, in five acts. Played by the Gabina Dramatic Club at the Mt Zion Baptist Church, Jan 22, 1907. was quite a treat to all who attended
of Japan, was in the city on the 22nd.
Mrs L R Partce spent a few days in
Cherryvale, Kau last week, visiting relatives.
Quite a number of baptisms were in
the city last Tuesday night to see the
play at the Baptist Church.
The Junior A F League tendered
quite a nice program last Sunday even-
ing at A M F Church.
Mr Joseph Branch of Mineral, spent
last Sunday in the city visiting his
family.
The Stewartless board of the A M F
Church gave a special last Saturday ev-
ning and everything was quite lovely.
The big tour was entertained last
business evening at Mrs Crawley.
Mr Will Smith formerly a resident of this city has moved to Minneapolis, Kane to work in the coal mines.
Numeral of our people are very successful local & local mine operators Muskita W. Woll, Lewis Gibnn, N. K Gibnn Jack Price, / Daniel Nelson and George Ballard Logan Morrison and a number of others.
The pastor of the A M I Church at the corner of Buster Springs will exchange purpure on the last Sunday in July at 11 o'clock a.m.
There was a chatham supporter at the Lacey's last Monday night at the home in Chicago Woman.
NEWTON NOTES
Mrs. I. Dean and son, late returned home briefly from a ten day trip in the Indian Territory where they went on business trip. They were well pleased with the prospects of the country and are talking strongly of home stealing them. They visited the toll road town Muskegan and then went to the Negroes and solving the two problems by the progress they are making in business at all kinds.
R. Washington passed on the common Sunday morning at the M. W. Church. Come out to the Sunday Sunday interment at 2:00 p.m. The program is under the direction of Mrs. H. Browley.
Mrs. G. E. Payne
Mrs. J. M. Gross is suffering with an attack of la gripe
The N. U. N. Club met at the home of Mrs. A. Ford, 321 West Fifth Street, Monday at 2:30 p.m. Members responded to roll call. B. T. Washington read the lesson, the Declaration of Independence. M. V. Ford, after topic, No life that breaths with human breath has ever truly tongued for death, by each member adjourned to meet with Mrs. W. M. Coleman, Feb. 4
Roy Denton is still carrying on the meeting at the Baptist Church assisted by Roy Howard of Strong City. They are having quite a success
Don't forget the concert at Old Hall
lowe's Hall Friday February 15th At
museum 10 Come out and have a good
laugh.
CANON CITY, COLO
Mrs Alice Walton has been indepossed
for the last week
Mr Will Johnson of Johnson was on
the city Sunday
Rev. H. Payne provided a service
casting sermon Sunday evening at the
Mt Olive church
Little Miss A Pave is very in with
quinnomans
Mrs Arthur of Pave was in the
city Friday night to be entertained com-
test
Mrs C. A Moore entertained the Lau-
ka club Monday evening at her home
at 321 River street. The club danced
to entertain the Pleasant Workers in the
near future.
Herbert and Lovett Reynolds came on Saturday from Coal Creek to spend Sunday with their parents.
The home of James Yates caught fire last Monday from a defective fire. Lt. the damage was done
INDEPENDENCE NOTES
The Independence Epworth League Literary society met the Cherryvale Dumbar Literary society in a joint discussion of the subject, "Resolved. That works of nature are more beautiful than those of art. Narrative, Cherryvale a negative. Independence. The affirmative opening market was Garfield Willie second writer Mrs Johnson third Joseph Campbell negative, G. I. Allen second. I. Perry that Mann McCoulough third points in favor of Independence we must say that Cherryvale has some talent that cannot be surpassed.
Mrs Johnson rendered some instrumental music that spellbound the audience Monday evening. Also Mrs. Taylor reruned a vocal solo that was very sweet, accompanied by Mrs. Campbell. Mr. G. Wahlar, the comic man reruned two solos that were lovely. Mr. Jerome Smith of Chenyvale will go to K 1. February 1st.
VINITA. I T.
Mr. A. Boha and daughter Georgia, were called to Hopka the past week to pay them last respects to his sister Mrs. Georgia Tarbatt who departed this life Wednesday evening Miss Georgia returned to Charleston I. L., on Saturday, where she is teaching school. W H Venters, section boss, living 3 miles south on the M. K. & I was in the city Sunday. Miss Alta Williams, the young school mistress made a flying trip to Kelso, I. F., Saturday returning on the evening train. D Hicks, who has been sick so long is reported about the same.
Mr. and Mrs. John Davis were on town Monday visiting relatives and friends. It seemed as if business was rushing Monday in the clock's office. It couples were noted in the bounds of holy past annuity.
Mr. Thomas Powell of Hammond was in the city the past week visiting his daughter Mrs. Elizabeth Moon.
After though invoye the marriage of Stagel Johnson was postponed until now.
There will be a great deal of building within the next thirty on society a ninety days and what Amina needs worse is Negro companies and plasteries. Our wishing to figure out building will do well to write Mr. Sorrall at once.
Mr. Wain Martin the tonsorial artist who has a nice little business in town was due to be living in from the country some summer pumpkins and other oranges but the weather disappeared his alms.
PUEBLO, COLORADO
Mrs B H Gregory of the Van Bacon
street entertained at dinner Thursday
Lew and Mrs Owen De De Lance and
Mrs Phillips of Ottumwa La
Mrs H W Jones entertained the M
state Art club Honesty afternoon at the
hour of Mrs Ine Ashley Bristol
street
Pav H H Donaldson late preacher
Paul A M M church his writings
the bishop asking to be released from
the pastorate of the church
Mr H H North church minister
Sunday Mrs A Phillips of Ottumwa
Ia' and son, Mr. Pearl W. Phillips.
known members of the collar
that his death being due to heart fail-
er it was never held
known that his death was
and was along time
and the temporal way
I was not born in the
I was not born in the
Rev. J. W. Sanders of Denver, Rev. A. Wagner of Trinidad, Father Rise of Colorado Springs and Rev. H. F. Bray and Rev. D. E. Over of this city Rev. MeNeal of Kansas City and Rev. Hardy of this city were also in attendance.
Revival services at Balthachem Baptist church closed Sunday night with eighty-three additions to the church
Rev. H. M. Tillman of Colorado Springs and Rev. Payne of Denver were in the city last week to pay their respects to the widow of the late Rev. W. Bray.
NOTCE.
To Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Mo: We are desirous of increasing our circulation in the two cities. We shall in a short time offer a good prize for the most popular lady in those cities, and shall enter them in the race for this prize with the understanding that these ladies work to secure a large subscription which insures votes in securing the prize.
This most peculiar and striking incident in the history of the American people at this time is that of Ben Tillman supporting the Negro by force and compulsion. He has at last admitted that all men are entitled to a fair and impartial trial before they are convicted, and for his hatred toward the president as well as the Negroes, he has taken a dos with the Negroes as far as possible in acknowledging that right and justice should prevail in the Brownsville case. Keepon, Brother Tillman, you remember Paul of Tarsus who went to Damascus to persecute the Christians, but the Lord in His wisdom converted him and caused him to become a lover and a most powerful leader of the people he had once hated. There is no question that if Ben Tillman lives long enough he will come to espouse the cause of all men, irrespective of color, before the law.
GRAND OFFICERS KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
The following officers have been elected for the Sunflower Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, Jurisdiction N. A. S. A. E.
A. A. and A.:
Jno. E. Lewis, Grand Chancellor, Wichita, Kas.
J. B. Davis, Grand Vice Chancellor, Weir.
H. Pope, Past Grand Chancellor, Topeka.
Rev. S. W. Hutchison, Grand Prelate, Lawrence.
Rev. J. S. King, Grand Treasurer, Weir.
E. S. Lee, Grand Master of Exchequer, Topeka.
Dr. I. H. Anthony, Grand Keeper of Records and Seal, Kansas City
W. A. Wright, Grand Master at Arms, Winfield
J. E. Hobson, Grand Inner Guard, Columbus.
Fred Martin, Grand Outer Guard, Wichita
Dr. S. H. Thompson, Grand Medical Director, Kansas City.
J. H. Guy, Grand Attorney, Topeka.
A. F. Glover, Grand Secretary and Downtown Board, Wichita.
S. W. Flaming, Grand Treasurer Enlancement Board, Wichita
Doe Williams, Supreme Representative, Lawrence.
Place of next meeting, Lawrence, 1907.
The Albany Hotel
The Albany Hotel
SANFORD W. KING, Prop.
Rates $5 to $7 per week.
Spaz arrangements
101 .S.
Home 'Phone
No 10
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO
Barbers
Wanted
PROP, HARRY ROBINSON,
314 Felix Street, St. Joseph, Mo. is in need of two first-class baggage.
This is a fine shop, and good barbers can make good money.
OLYMPIC CLUB.
OLYMPIC CLUB.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Smith ..... Sam S through G
Williams ..... Ed Linton
Matt John ..... Sam Jones
PTR TE Tr EF TT TRE RT TE STE erga Sainte oF, BE Aer re Wee! 38. 3
.
QUITS TIIR CONSERVATOR,
We tell the sad atory tu the pub
Tie not because we have any persor al
feeling agaist the Colonel, not be
(aude we can’t get slong without
the Colonel and his two dollara, bul
that the people may know some of
the difticuliies Negro enterprires
ave with a certain olaes of big
Negroes who condescend to patron:
we them, and to emphasize the fact
that it, genorally epeaking, the
bard fated, honeat working men and
women of the race, and not the high
dying, office holding, big Negr),
tbat patronizes and supporte Negro
¢aterpiises. The Couservator has
praised and pampered Volonel Joba
Marshall fo. yeata as arace man, 4
lover of his race, and an honor to
his aeighbors, wi hno thought thet
there was anything amall about
him. Whea oar collector called on
tee Colonel for the two dollars past
due for the paper, the Colonel got
oa the high cavalry horse, vonsid
ered himeolf insulted, aud paid 20
oeutas and ordered the paper diecon
tinued to the bouse. Hoe leotured
the humble frightened colleotoe for
dariog to call to collect from HIM,
aad told him to go eut and collet
from others, eto.
This new, aristooratic move of
our gallant Colonel pute him in the
light of being a man who, if he had
it in is power, would destroy
and atop the publication of The
Couserva or because it dared to
treat him aa it does ordinary people
—dared to send « Nogro boy to
ovllect s dill dae and muoh needed
at the office—an admitted proper
enatom connected with every senei:
ble business injthe world.
We do not speak of thie matter
becauec we want to get even with
the Colonel, or because we waut to
vex him, or beosuse we seek his old
love and friendship for The Con=
aervator, Muthe only ecrvea au a
taxt for a word touching » preva—
leat principle wherein » crite n
class of well to do Nogroca seem tu
feel that any trade they give tua
Negro enterprise is more ef a high
compliment than a matter of race
pride, Thisolses of men, for the
most psrt, aro men who hold civil
and politisal office and feel in no
way dependent on the Negro masses
for thoir suppuit. They seldom buy
at Negro groceries or stores of any
kind, and when they do theydo it
with sn air of condescension ¥bich
avems to indicate that they feel they
have greatiy stooped to show their
usce love, There is mot a Negro
enterprise ia the city that can boast
ofgetting 82 worth of trade per
weck from that high-tly clase uf
wouldbe white Nogroes, Itae tho
working, toiling and professional
loans w of the Negrovs, who inters
depund on one another, and wha
hive all things coramon jn their
Judges, churches, clubs, aud homer,
who support and patronize Negio
eptaprived and keep them alive,
Huw many of the otficcholding Ne~
giver of Chieage buy their furniel «
ings from Negro notion stun +
How many yet theiz pgrocerten and
wus from busine Negioin? They
wil tive nett Negio grovery and
jue hy tageliothe others phe
Commis ar is forthe rice wud dee
ponteon the potion ys of the race
due sin didey thd at ho per te ue able
tee lives Whether tle qe Colonel
nnd tin clanw at camyeliving othce]|
hoblers pitronize ator net,
Thin dees not aptly ta all, othee
hebhiog Negroce by any meane; but]
whon they want to apeak to the
people in the interest of sumo white
politclan ani? put themselves on
exhibition eas leader, Neitner a
Negro church nor a +choulhouee
would be erected if it depended on
thisclaen of big Negroes, They
woul! do more guod in Heaven,
fanming the ies from angel f od,
than they do down bere. We cannot
figure where the Cot xervator of ary
other Nogro enterpriae 1a under any
epectal obligation to rub grease on
Col. Maraball because be is living
easy.—The Chioago Conservator,
“COLORADO SPRINGS
Prot 4, 1 duckson baa been oppoimter
tor the third term aa deputy clerk it
the county aasesnor's office,
Throagh the infuenca of the colored
taspayits Me. Ey P Mooze in working i
the dastrht clerk «odue, The Gent time
@ colored mun has teen employed it
this office
The Men's Sunday Forum will tendes
@ publ bunquit Heb a¥th at Payne
chapel
| Rerival sessices ase am progress at
Payne chapel tev. Tillman ie being as:
sivted by Kev. Velntyre,
Mis. May ©, Johnson of Detroit, Mich:
Igan, 1s the guent ut her quae, the post:
ean and song weiter Mre Eva Carter.
Bucket,
The Dahhe Art club met woth Mra
Woody lust weth nkadow embroidery
fe thew presint work
Mra da Joyce Jackson instructs twa
lube in pathumnentary law, ond. the
women aie taking advantage of this op-
portunity «o they may conduct their
conventions, ete. parliamentarian
ePople's MoE chutch is holding » one
week wersice,
Atty, George Rows isin the aty trom
Denver ay attorney tor a murderer. He
is the quent ot his sister Mra, Logon
Rev, Ttlman and Father Rice were
summuned to Pueblo on aciount of the
death of Rev Hyd
Mrs Fannie Itukner continuen very
low,
Harr WoC. Tot met with Mrs.
Hiva Camm), Wedaenday,
Mr Wilhe Curtis, while moving a
Jama}y an trem the country, was in a
runaway and sustained a broken leg
Mr. Dick Jefeison was killed instont-
yom Cotoradu Cats by Fred Walhams,
who new awaits taal ia the county jail
‘The Dallas Reading club entertamed
fhe trends wath an evening a Japan
ist Fuesday evening af the residence of
‘he Colliae Mb uberts gave an ade
Hiss oth dapan
Mas Mand Maren chonmian ot the
Malanthiyae deputment of the City
Judcration, 1s conducting a sewing els
far ede every Satundas atternoon with
Mis Mali tt@ine as mstiuctions
Mise Neto Wilhams as an the ats
dom Vener She ts the guest of View
HIta tubusen
Mes. ROM Calvan is qaite a woth
ntlananation
‘The entotammient, “An Bvemng with,
Dunbai,” way piven at the vemdence of
Mes Cuincla Rieming dist week under
he auspices or Hapa WoO E
The death of Min larbet haa aad
ined the beatts of her host ot friends
tte, Whe loved and honored ber,
Theie as the Dagest attendance of
oluied bays and gatly a the bith school
ow that ever enrolied aumberng Af
no Mane
WESTERN UNIVERSITY.
Mot Shelton Tieneh addressed th
Forum at the Metropalitan | Baptis
chine Wansae City iv, dist santos
Mis suet Destiny wos the theme a
the oe tsteat
Hies Fea MiP pom atel sedetig seed oh
Eversate Pevnie Piet Sundin ie sah
od Th Young Segue Wonca at be
Wants ose Spteate ETe tule ane
tal meme
(ed Pte te seth stp as ison ‘
meted betment hes loon une t
totes past tata thas pus oveed os
wet at at ee
Mi Rati Aeansts phd.
vi ee te man teal te
tment om st te hey at Bate ay
Mis Sapte bar ove alk
Caw peat wie tee i
veh pre am Ve abet ens
for Me mest ay were tal laa ail
attend naust el tabat dee the ote
tate me ddoe weebhe eT
Che Cha eile ase tote the
the Cast Magnet ctonete beet Maden
Hoong Bhar hiatat abo ren tae |
Verb annaters Phe peopl stant,
Funyglis cingeevead te peng ait
Vay 0 tate te eteeataie wt the tis
sapiens stnittes pave ais gute stan,
fe eH es umpatint tok aedeagal best
Week on Hom, Bight tram Peau apts
Mie VOM Waly Mie hare dearty,
Mis Fins st tent Mae Panana Gite et
Milanese tte tye Mae. Maths at the
ae tad Ane a eae Saito ne eat
Codimtans tte wen setts ot the
Vane geade bast Woidteadas
Deeeathnsg at Weeteon Qativereaty a
on tie poet teem d Pleae aie aie
ee Ce oe)
Pas Pat ea the ae
otef gt the msi tl hepatic
Mets aN cP asm sere tee tie
Worpem ee wo twee bate 1
Pe ee eh Ly
Hh obee ae Neag veh vatl sets sae) Cane
:- onl
DO YOV CARRY LIFE INSURANCE?
,
If Not, Whv Not?
The Knights and Ladies
f the Ori
or the Ortent.
A FRATERNAL BENEFICIARY
SOCIETY. |
WILL Isst'h YOU POLICIES POLY OL RSELE AND CHILDHEN,
PAYING, PAICTIAL-LIEE, SICK, FUNERAL AND DEALIE
BENELITS, PROM s2 00 ta addy INJCASE OF PEATH |
No home loving man can afford to be without Lint Insurance |
THE KNIGHTS and LADIES af the ORIN T as daly autho |
rized by the laws of the State of Kansis, amdisunder the Sup't |
of Insurance of Kansas Ite flcers are bonded tn a reliable Surety |
Company. LIBERAL TERMS [TO AGENTS. F information |
Address. National headquarters, |
gor Kansas Ave, Topeha, Kansas,
OurMotta, Paap Papert of Clam
John M. Wright, Pearl McNeal,
Nat'l President, Nat'l Secretary,
in tailoring.
The Uterary nociety is domg a fine
work, We are prepating dcbalera, ore
store ant ingore Viatore ae urged
lu gave ua then presence
THECRITTENDEN MISSION, |
Th's is to certify that ths I lorence
Crittenden Mission for col -red girle
and women is opened at 1020 Wash,
burn avenue, and will take woinen
and gitls coming feom all parts of
the state
NEMDE OF THE NIABION,
The support of the people, mot
only of the city, but of the entire
state. in needed. The mission is ea-
tablished for the state.
Weekly, monthly or yearly contrib:
utlons.
Contnbutions of food, fuel, furns
ture, bedding or other material do-
nations will be thankfully recelved,
Anyone desiring to contribute to:
the msuch neoded work may address
Mrs. 8. F,. Malone, 835 Center “
Mrs. M. J. Cox, 1020 Washburn
avenue, Topeke, Kansas, |
BOARD OF DIRECTORS;
Mra. S, Malone Mrs. Elia MN. Guy
Mm, M. E. Van Cleve, Mrs. M. J.
Coz, Mrs. Anna Jacobs,
The environments will be good.
Religious and manual trainiog, j
Bais Paors 10g: Mam
Teor A.M.
vrice nouns! 12M, wer M.
0a Phoue Oe, [Tio 10P, M.
i. M. JAMISON, M.D.,
Puysician AND SURGEON
Gremioing Physician of the Reights snd Ladies
8 ridoe.
(Sreromca Sca'privass Ssecates,
Ucieo ené Residecos, 037 Masson Bracet.
Periodic
Pains.
Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills
are a most semarhable remedy;
for the relief of periodic pains,
backache, nervous or sich head-
ache, or any of the distress-
ing aches and pains that cause
women so much suffering.
As pain is weakening, and
leaves the system in an ex-
hausted condition, it is wrong
to suffer a moment longer than
necessary, and you should take
the Anti-Pain Pills on first in-
dication of an attack,
If taken as directed you may
have entire confidence in their
effectiveness, as well,as in the
fact that they will leave no dis-
sgrecable after-effccté, .
Whey contain no morphine,
opium, chloral, cocaine or other
dangerous drugs.
or lun
eakth, SudkEadibed skate tattsd
eat more than dean endur
Festeeettirg oth an is Sane
and last two or tine diye J have
Bever Leon alle te grt anit Ing thot
ould give ma musi sell fuutil Ye
Sopan fhe use of Dir Bilew Avti-Pain
Pils, and they atwasa relicse mo in a
short tine. My, estar, wha wuffors
the same wos, has used thim with
the cime reeulte MES OPS Iedy
21d. Michigan St, Suuth fei J" tnd,
Dr. Miles Antl-Patn Pitts are sotd by
YRur arugalet, who will quarantve wnat
Ie first packane wit benett it it
false will ret arm your mrt 7
£5 doses, £3 cents. Never eats” a bulk,
Miles Mecical Co, Eli.hart, ind
Ww. E Jackson,
Parsioian ann Suramn
(tive 4064 Kannns Ave
Pere TOLER U, KANSAS
3. A TAYLOR, M. D.
+ wlan ANT SUKGKUR
492 Maree Ave, Voth ‘Phoue 176
Oalla snewered day oud night,
Ofice Hours{ 2to 4 and 7 to 8 p.m.
Residence 3043 Van Buren
IMooorer Lee's Drug store O81 Kas, Av
W. H. LUCAS,
The price at my Studio
is cheap, but the work is of
the highest class. Why pay
such an enormous price
when the same careful work
can be secured for ONE-
HALF? = Stop and sce me,
198 Kansas Ave TOPEKA
Clerk Gupreme Court
PUBLICATIUN NO1ICE.
(First Published in The Topexa cian:
dealer. June 18. 1906.)
dealer, June 18, 1906.)
To Adolph Bailey, aliae Adotpa Ue-
gall; Mr. ————Beahas aad Mr, ——
Beahan end Mr. ———— Beahan whon
Christian 7ames are unknown ead who
are brothers of Hattis Roberts mee liss-
te Beahas, deceased, ———~ Beahas
and ——— Beenhaa ead ———— neahan,
whose Christina mames are uaknowa, and
who are elstera of the eald Hattie
Roberts nee Hattle Beham deceased; and
the unknown heire and devisees and the
unknown executors, edmialstrators sul
trustees of tha aforesaid Adolpa Baley,
ling Adolph vogeu, ana wi the afore
easa brothers aad aletera of eaid Hattie
the several persoas who would, wader the
eeveral persoas weo would, uader the
laws of the State of hansps, have been
hélre at law of the cald Hattle Roberts,
nee Hattle Behan, deceased, had she
been at the time of her death a feme
sole and whose real names are unknown,
defendants fa error:
You and eact of you are hereby ott:
fled thet W. A. Roberte, plaintiff im ee-
ror, did om the bth dsy of June, A.D,
1006, Sle in the office of the Clerk of the
Supreme Court of the Btate of Kansas,
& petition in error anu case made, the
object of which is to obtain the reversal
of m cortsin judgment rendered by the
District Court mtting within and sor the
County of Shewnes, in the State of Kau-
sac, io en actton pending before sald
court wherels the said W. A. Roberts
was plaintiff avd tte sid defendants ta
error wore defendants
W. ¥F. Scnoox,
Lee Monsor, sad
&. P. Horcnxisa,
Attorneys for plaintiff in error.
Attest: D W. Vasanttee,
Clerk Bupreme Court.
°
M. 0. Lawrie,
tailor and cleaner
Suite and Trouser made to Order
PANTS ¢4.40 to #12
SUITS #14 to 645
ore Piewncis
Sig ST. JOSEPIL, Mo,
LG
i Soe ie x25 tS
_ HE STRUCK IT,
Tommy's Thoughts Were ilsewhere,
bat He Could Geena,
“There is a sentimentat Tommy to al-
most every school,” suld Michael King
of Lewiston as he leaned over the coun-
ter of bis cafe on Main street and cut
@ tusclous pumpkin ple, “There was
ene io our school when § waa @ boy.
He was Tommy Frazier, and be was
a@ mighty smart little fellow, but be
mever bad his lessons. He knew where
every bird nested, where (he May flow-
ors grew the thickest and where the
Bigh top eweetingy fell frat; but, bless
yeu, be coulda’t remember bis lessous.
He was critical in many matters too
‘He knew all that was passing In the
politics of the state and nation, but be
‘Wes eff to bis hiatory Ieeson. One day
Re came in late and couldn't keep bis
thoughts on bis book, On bis way to
poboo! he bad seen s big mud turtle by
the aide of the track, and he bad to
peta dig rock on Lim te bold him til!
Gagbt, and bis anxiety lest the turtle
geal get away bilnded bis eyes. He
beped that scomebow the teacher would
pase bim over, He letened to the oth-
er children reciting, with a biz mud
turtie crawling away before bie eyes
with a rock on bis back, but Aually the
teacher's eyes fell on him.
“Tommy Frasier, what battle was
ford Nelson killed in?’
“Tommy was in despair, but be foved
a way.
= "Did you eay Lord Nelson? he ask:
od cautiously.
"Yea!
which battle?
"Yea, certaialy”
= Weil,’ sald Tommy as the light of
eee broke over him—‘well, 1
it must have been his last’*
& Leocoon From Files.
It was ip a country school, and |
was hearing my little second reader
Glass, The lesson that day was a
story about files, their curious ways
and habits. Among other things the
atory sald that files alwaye kept their
fees clean and then went on to tell
hew they rabbed their feet over their
Beads, a8 could often be seen by
watebing them. The last thing tn the
lesson was (he question, “What lessone
ean doyh and girls learn frem the
Mieat" 1 anked the children to answer
the question. Only one smal} boy vpa-
tured an answer, and that was, “Te
wash our faces with our fe Certs
an Register,
Beoy Fer an Expert.
“Hah,” sald Sherlock Holmes, Jr.
after shaking hande with his host and
taking a basty giance at the other
vests, “your wife is jealous of your
“By George, Holmes, you're « won-
Gert I’ve never told @ soul about 20,
and I don't believe she bas. How did
Pou fod it cut?”
“Merely one of my wonderful de-
@eetions, wy dear sir. It's very sia-
pie. I see she bes Invited only old
indies and homely onea."—Chicago Reo-
erd-Herald.
What Ther Did.
What do you do when you outgrow
yeur clothes? Representative Jobs
Bharp Williams asked two of Repre-
meotative Chewp Clark’s children, te
whom be was trying to explala why
crabe and lobsters shed thelr shetle
and soakes thelr ekins
Lat out ie tucks,” answered ose ef
@e youthfo) Clarks.—Denver Repub-
Mean
Thelr Good “Feature.”
fom (at the Innch counter)—Pretty
tough doughnuts these
Dick—One good thing about them,
though,
Tom—And what's that, for bearem's
eake?
Dick—The hole, That part you don't
bave to chew, you know. — Boston
‘Trepscript.
A twa.
“Ee's still employed by that big
wholenale Louse, isn't he?"
“No 1 think he'n in business for
himself now, fe used to take an hone
for lunch, but now he only takes @
bere fre minutes" - Pbitadelphie
Preas.
! toselfiah,
Ts
“AE
2 Peeve
“ - Ye
fa ery
eo)
Ne.
mpi %
fai =
tf
[———. “
5
Father=Ilere! Take that drum eet of
here}
Willle—Lut, pop, 1 wanted you te
enjoy It with te—New York Amert
con
‘The #trange Part.
“The suters Wuut know what was
the matier with Lim
“Well, there's nothing anuscal about
that”
“Bat they entd they dido't"=Ttfe.
They Koow Where te step
Wotsea ulwaye chide thelr huevasds
for worbing orertine, but they never
@pem the wonry which 1s careed that
wege-New York Presa,
08a Fines for Lasy Husbands,
Young men of Burhngtoa, Yt,
have taken wives outside the state
in the last two years are alleged 1
neglected to comply with the Vers
statutes, and are liable to fine of
each. City Clerk M. D. MoMahoa
compiled a list of briaegroome whe f
come hack here to reside after Chel {
eymoon, and hes sent out notices eal
attention to thelr delinquency. "
The lew requires male
Vermont, if married without the
to within sixty days deposit with
clerk of the town or city where
fiden » certificate embracing (he
tion required by law in marriage
tifwates. The city clerk asye many
have neglected ta comply with thi
vinion, and that some of them have
liable to a fine for more thaa e ye
Hugtees Dancing je Schoola.
“Ituglese” dancing and %
eesinming are to be taught In the
cago public achoola, be a
2. The 270,000 pupild+wit baleeca,,
ward and back, tip through the
mical etepa of the stately magurke,
Rracefully into waltzes and tw
trip through polkas or dash over
floor In an old-fashioned gallop.
they will trip, glide and dash aloes.
youthful arm will be ellowed te
the girlish waist, and they won't
know that they are denciag,
the rurriculum the “hugiess*
cot alonued at “fancy stepe.” it
An for the “swimming,” the puplle
be allowed to hang themeclves from
ing hicury rings and go through the
tions of ewimming in midalr, !
—_— .
Remarrie4 for Fifth Tima ‘
Robert J. Burkett ond Haunah
Burkett, who are to live oma ranch
of Lander, Wyo, bave just been
for the fifth time, having been df
four times aince they first became
Dand and wife, twenty-odd years ag
Within aix monthe after the first
riage, In Montana, Mrs, Barkett ee
for and obtained a divorce from het
band on the ground of cruelty. With
year they remarried, quarreled ‘3
after the necond marriage, and
Rurkett teft her husband, ou
& divorce on the ground of
The next divorce wae obtained by
wife on the ground of desertion;
non-aupport, The fast divorcee wee
tained by the husband on the ground
desertion. .
The couple have lived in a number
weatern states since thelr first marri
and no two divorces were obtained ta
same state, i
Bear Sroila Hobe Feast. ~
| even (ramps were gathered eroum
campfire in “Dume’ weeds” @. notort
‘hoha renort, just weat of Altoona, }
recently, preparing luncheom from
they had begged at beck doors, wha
huge bear came plungog through
‘camp, eauaing a panie. ?
| The hear was in such « hurry tha
knocked three of the men down Bef
they could get out of the way, and r
tered the cooking utensils and the
in all directions,
Fearing bruin‘a return, the men beg
ed a paaung freight train and epa
for nafer quarters. It is believed the’
in the xame ong which a day or twe 4
ran a race with the Pennsylvania
ied
Complains af Witches. ¥
“LT have had no luck no more no
Tam consinced that I have beens
witched, and I wish you would give,
something against at,” wan the close
aw letter reecived by Pennsylvania St
oulugimt Surface at Harrisburg reonal
‘The wtter came from a farmer in }
enxtern part of the atate, ‘Tho man a
that sn a year he hos lont three fan
lin norees dicd, hin hens grew fat’ ¢
woukt not lay, hia “aquab factory”, ta
rd out a dixmal failure and hie b
Proved worthless, while porkers of f
anme breed that used to yield 260 pow
at nine montha now gave only i
pounds at @ year. 3
burface suyn the man bas been by
to do tow many things at once, «
wall wisle him and tell him to speciali
Lut the atule will not stand for ¢
witches, }
Tu wooing Ind progressed sph
diddy. Ut bad even progressed
a point where she had been w
Hf she proved to be a truthful girl, 4
would an tame be lus wife, If ehe y
hot fruthfal well, ne man wants a w
Who ie not trutatul, That's the w
hon met console themselves when, th
fd fo marry
Mut she seed to by truthful, and
he drew her closgg to Win he whinpers
“Sink when we are marred, deare
we sald have the hapmest home ta
the wolegvide wor hi
Yes, Lee phe replied {
*Uhite can never be a haw word
au tame *
Mud when Doce heme thed a
sertont with work at the office a
fhe worrtes ef busaness you'll be hind
me
Yea boage!
Tokmw ym wo ald | Vault soot
fee aud pat me an de tter humor?
Ves bat di sos taemger
Ses dbousest *
Wits shoutta't seu dea inttle of tl
saan lf }
Why, daha 4
‘Mes thit’s all right Bus to cot
Halt dawn fo buries, a= papa sat
the shoul net voy alse te kind top
when thines ga wrongs J don't we
tale it all ven know You're not log
ne for A pevute nurse wre sont |
“Way, Mabel!
“When the oh leaves uncapecta
(us sto ta the bedeide of her eccond cou
Voit migeht da diet a tothe conse
vent hive
“How ptsanely ven talk pect?
Mel tre say Tne papas gh,
hiew. aed bonitne when any one «
fo make a bodguia with bhn he ger
tly gets pene = ageatations to hie of
interest par at, qist ae ad pre autlons™
Geo peau Eo LT hive soe been mar
tel ovitly a Meats cot btw mont
UO te a ert 8 aang: te pty
tive never ob ante quand —9
as =
Ve Paget tard fancy an thy wor
is the bearded sultine. which measar
from wing tip do sing Up, as anuch |
nine cr ten feet, A
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for mayor of the city of Topeka at the next Republican primaries. I stand on a platform for the upbuilding of the city and its continued prosperity S. A. SWENDSON,
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for city clerk, subject to the Republican primaries
M. M. Hale is a candidate for re-election to the office of City Treasurer, subject to the Republican primaries.
Ernest R. Simon announces himself as a candidate for the office of judge of the city of Topeka, subject to the Republican city primary election.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for councilman from the Fifth ward, subject to the Republican primaries. C. H. Kitts.
J. H. Squires announces himself a candidate for City Clerk, subject to the Republican primaries.
William Green announces himself a candidate for Mayor, subject to the Republican primaries
Charles K. Holliday announces himself as a candidate for Mayor, subject to the Republican primaries
In response to the urgent and persistent demand of numerous citizens of all classes, I announce myself as candidate for the office of City Attorney, subject to the Republican primary election to be held March 13th, 1907. CHAS. F. SPENCER.
Robert Killer is a candidate for Marshall of the Court of Topeka, subject to the Republican primaries.
Ed L. Good announces himself as candidate for Clerk of the Court of Topeka, subject to the Republican primaries.
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for judge of the Court of Topeka, subject to the Republican primary election.
CAPT J. R. McNARY.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of Clerk of the Court of Topeka for a second term.
EDWIN L. O'NEIL.
I hereby announce myself for re-election to the office of Marshall of the City Court, subject to the Republican primaries.
J. T. WINSTEDI
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for re-election to the office of Councilman from the First ward subject to the Republican primary
E. R. HAYES.
Kansas ave.
DAN ANTHONY has a chance on going to Congress. He is in every way qualified and the people feel that he is the only man that will be able to take up where Mr. Curtis left off and continue the good work for Kansas and the First district,
for a pardon, a honor to a place wi
pay, at the disposal of the governor
It is quite certain that unjust Mr.
Townsend is appointed to that place that no position of tangible recognition will be given to the colored element of the party. The colored Republicans in the state are for Mr. Townsend for the place. They see in him a worthy representative and will respectfully urge his appointment by the governor. There can be no objection to Mr. Townsend, for he is competent and by reason of wide experience as a lawyer and his sterling integrity he would make a useful member of the board. We voice the sentiments of the colored voters of this state in asking for the appointment of Mr. Townsend for a place on the board of pardons.
The above article is clipped from a Colorado paper, and we hope our friend, Mr Townsend will land the job, as he is capable and worthy in every particular and one of the most distinguished jurists in that state.
Things Political
Captain J. T. Wintrode is an old soldier, a veteran of the Civil war and is well known by every man, woman and child in Fiji. He has been faithful in the performance of his duties and there is not a pot or tittle against his reputation. He prompts if elected to the office of marshall of the City Court, to continue to serve the people faithfully in the future as in the past. There seems to be a disposition on the part of the public to do what they can for the old soldiers in these their declining days, as it will only be a question of a few years until all will be extinct
Mr. J. H. Squires, who announces himself as candidate for City Clerk, subject to the Republican primary election, has filed the office with credit and honor and there is not one blight against his record not he promises i re elected, to continue the faithful performance of his duties Mr. Squires is a member of several lodges and other enterprises identified with the upbuilding of Topeks.
Mr. E. R. Hayes, who announces himself as candidate for councilman from the First ward, subject to the Republican primaries, is a Topeka young man, who has resided here for the past twenty three years. He is engaged in the commission business at 529 N. Kansas avenue, just across the Melan bridge. He is one of the most prosperous, upright young business men in the city of Topeka and has not a single enemy among the business fraternity in Topeka. He has conducted his business in such a manner as to demand the respect and confidence of all. He is a member of the Lagges, K. P.'s. Woodman of the World and the Woodmen circle. He is a property owner and taxpayer and employs from five to twelve men the year round, which means a great deal for Topeka. His platform is to build up North Topeka first, and reater Topeka afterwards. He says that the North side has been discriminated against, on the proportion that they have paid taxes for years for the improvement of parks, and that not one piny of the city has been expanded for the purpose of the North side. He is also complaining a plan to move the Topeka made a tractor, or a North side will have a place for creation. He
Undertakers and Embalmers
---
also in favor of draining the streets in such a way that the water will not stand in them, and so that cost of such drainage will come out of the general taxes. He will see that this is carried out also. Mr. Hayes is an energetic young man and should be nominated.
Edwin L. O'Neil today announces his candidacy for clerk of the court of Topeka for a second term. Mr. O'Neil was nominated two years ago by a handsome plurality in a three cornered fight, his opponents being M. F. Laycock and Robert De Frantz. He has made a competent and obliging official and there is little disposition not to accord him a second term.
Mr. O'Neil is a graduate of Washburn college of the class of 1901 and for the past two years has been doing special work in the Washburn law school with the object of fitting himself for the practice of law. He is a Mason and one of the most active workers of the young man in the Commercial club.
He stands well with all classes of voters in the city and will be given as cordial support as any man asking for a place on the ticket in the coming Republican primary.
His only opponent is a man who held the office for six years, resigning a few months ago at the expiration of his third term to become night clerk at the Throop hotel.
Mr. O'Neil is a stock holder and director of the Capital Brick company, which employs a large number of men, many of whom are colored men and they are among Mr. O'Neil's best friends.
Mr. O'Neil is entitled to the nomination without opposition.
M. Ed L. Good has announced his candidacy for election to the office of clerk of the court of Topeka. He is an affable, courteous, polite and worthy of young, man and stands well with all classes. He promises if elected to the office to fill its duties with promptness and give them his close attention. He has resided in Topeka for a number of years and has endeared himself to the hearts of those who know him. He served in this position once before and resigned to take up another position, but upon the solicitation of several friends, he has decided to make the race again. We would like for his friends to give him favorable consideration and if his past record merits it, give him their votes. He has always voted the straight Republican ticket and has contributed his time and money in supporting others for office.
Capt. J. R. McNary, who announces himself as a candidate for Judge of the Court of Topeka, is one of the leading attorneys at the bar. He is an old solider and a veteran of the civil war. He served as Assistant Attorney under Otto L. Hungate for two terms and proved himself to be capable and officer for the position. He is a man who is well versed in the law, in honest and upright and will deal out justice to all who come before him according to the law and our denot produced
Bob Miller, the well known police officer, is a candidate for Marshal of the County of Popka, subject to the Republican position. Miller was candidate to serve two and lost the nomination by only
---
---
votes to J. T. Wintrode, the present marshal, who is closing his second term. Owing to the close result of the primary two years ago, Miller feels justified in attempting to capture those 17 votes. At that time he ran against a man who had served one term and according to Republican rules, was entitled to a second term. He does not have to contend with that feature at present.
Miler has been an efficient city and county officer for seven years. He was a special officer by appointment of the Supreme court to assist Sheriff Lucas in the arrest of Dewy, Mr Brady and Wilson, charged with the murder of the Berry family, in Rawlinson county, three years ago, and has been chosen for several other special jobs of importance. He was the first probation officer of Shawnee county, under the new juvenile court laws, and resigned the position to return to the police force, on which he has served as jujot and petrolman for the past 8 years with the exception of a year on the city fire department, and the few months he was county probation officer.
Mr. Miller is thirty four years of age and a native of Kansas, having spent his boyhood in Dodge City and vicinity. He has lived in Tospika about 12 years.
Topoki, Kan. Jan. 26, 1907.
TO THE VOLKERS OF TOTKA
I have the honor to announce my candidacy for mayor, subject to the Republican primary to be held March 14, 1907.
The year 1907 promises to be a banner year for Topeka. There are enough good things in sight if properly handled, encouraged and pushed to make this year a memorable one in the growth and development of the city.
If nominated and elected I will do everything in my power to push Topeka constantly to the front, and will see to it that Topeka gets everything that is coming to her.
While it is my attention, if elected, to go after every bing in sight for Topeka, I guarantee, as far as any act of my administration is concerned, that the tax rate of the city will not be raised. On the contrary, it will be my aim and ambition to make the tax rate lower, if possible, and give the people a good, clean, economical administration. To accomplish this, new railroads, new industries and thousands of new people must be brought to Topeka. What has been "as complished" in the building up of a "new Topeka" in the three years since 1901, can be more than duplicated before 1911. Let us work together and do it.
Again, if elected, the office of mayor will be open during the business hours of the day, and the mayor will be at his desk every working day of the year transmitting city business. All will be welcome andpoor will be denied a hearing.
ALL ENFORCED LAWS
While as a citizen and while in the council as a legislative officer, I voted against the prohibitory law, because I did not believe such a law practical in the larger cities of Kansas, will, if I am elected, as an
FEELING
LIVER-ISH
This Morning?
BLUE DOG
A Gentle Joke
And April
from the liquor traffic even in communities where such a tax is popular.
This being true I see no reason for the existence of joints, dives and kindred evil places in any city in Kansas, when a high licensed, police regulated saloon, even if desired by the majority, is an utter impossibility. Hence, if elected, I will certainly see to it that such places do not exist in Topeka.
As police commissioner of Topeskys under Governor Morrill along with Hon. P. I. Bonebrake, Rev. S. F. McCabe and A. K. Rogers, I have had two years experience in the administration of police affairs and I believe I know something about the business. At any rate, I will be entirely responsible for the condition of Traffic from a police standpoint during my ministration.
Again, it has been I was to be the candidate of the whatever that may signify. I am not the candidate of the wits, or drys, or any fiction of the Republic in party. I announce my candidacy at the earliest solicitation of the best people in Topica. I am backed by the large factory and wholesale interests, the large financial and educational institutions and progressive retail establishments. And I am especially encouraged by my friends the State Farm shopmen, large numbers of working men and a host of others, who are interested in seeing Topika reach 5,000 to 100,000 population within the next five years.
PERSONAL B. STORY.
To those who are not acquainted with me I would say that I have lived in Topeka all my life and believe that I am acquainted with the needs of the city. I am a product of the Topeka schools and a graduate of Washburn and the Kansas university. My father was one of the founders of Topeka. He was the founder, first president and lifelong director of the great Santa Fe Railway company, the original charter of which lies up at the capitol in his own handwriting. Among other things in which I have tried to and the city, I was instrumental in bringing the present street car system and natural gas to Topeka.
EARL DUNN, Prec. H. J. BETTS, Hec.
J. F. PHILLIPS Steward.
Afro-American
Social Club
When at Leavure, Call and See
us. We Strive to Please.
'PHONE 1349.
196 W. DOUGLAS. WICHITA, KS.
INFORMATION WANTED OF WILL DOUBTLY.
Any information of Will Doubtl who was last heard of at Wyberg I.T., will be thankfully received by his brother, W. BROWN.
I Have Any Number of Houses to Rent from $7.00 up.
BARGAINS FOR HIRLITY
PEOPLI
G. J. JONES,
FOLKLA KANS
KALLITHRIX PAPIO
MRS. M. L. FIELD,
819 KANSAS AVZ.
I am now serving my third year in the city council and my third year an president of the Commercial Club.
It is therefore to be hoped, inasmuch as Mr. Swendson and Mr. Green, the two other candidates for the mayorality, and myself, are all pledged to law enforcement, that there will be no bitterness, vampation or strife in the coming campaign.
Yours for the 'Greater Topska.'
G. K. HOLLIDAY.
The announcement of Mr. Holiday reads well and no one questions his loyalty to Topeka, or his vital interest in the promotion of her welfare.
Mr. Holliday is more modest in his announcement than he might have been. He says nothing about the high position he held as a commissioner of the World's Fair at Chicago, appointed by President Harrison, where he presided at many of the meetings of the commission, and audited bills aggregating enormous sums, filling the position with great credit. He does not refer to the honor conferred on him by President Cleveland in placing him in charge of diplomatic affairs in Venezuela. He commandably refers to the fact that all three candidates are pledged to law enforcement, and trusts that accordingly "there we are no baggers, vituperation or strife in the coming campaign."
NOTICE NOTICE TO THE SUBSCRIBERS OF MEMPHIS.
To the subscribers of Memphis, Tenn.. Do not be surprised if you do not receive your paper hereafter. It will be the fault of the agent, and the excuse of the agent probably will be that you have not paid your subscription to him. We would like to have a remittance from our subscribers in this portion of the country and unless we do, the paper will be stopped. If you wish to continue, pay the agent so he can send the subscriptions in as this will be the last week.
A. SIMS'
POOL AND BILLIARD
PARLORS
Headquarters for all who wish a nice time. When Hutchinson call on him. 806 SOUTH MAIN STREET
Williamson House...
Rooms and Board-first class accommodation. When in Okmulgee stop at the above hotel if you want good treatment at REASONABLE : RATES.
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Mr. B. H. Tarbet left Tuseday for
hie home in Denver, Colo,
Mr. R, Moody, who has b324 sick
is convalescing
» Rev N.T Ganthte feft Monday
for Chanute, Kans,
“Mr. Clarenee Meadshaw is having
‘consilerable trouble with hie eyes
Hetbas been confined ts us hame
several ilaye,
Mrs. U. HE Fanteroy and hittle
daughter, Georgia, left, Monday for
. Garden City, altcr a pleasant visi
of ttre weeks with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Cooper.
We have a number of furnished
rooms to rent. .indergou and .An-
derson, 1013 W Tenth street, Cal)
up 2s2t
Dr. S.M Paomoson recent.y pre-
sented the Donglas- school a lile size
portrait of Crispus Attucks, marty)
of the Kevolutonary war
Prof. Sheltou Nathaul of Bonner
Springs was in Kansas City, Kansas
Tact wert taking the stale exaannation
REVIVAL MEEIINGS
At Shiloh Bapust Church,
We are holding gospel meetings
at Shiloh Baptist church each even
ing. A special invitation 1s extend-
ed to the unsaved.
The pastor's brother, Dr. FE. ¢
Fishback, uf Fraaklin, Ky, is dong
the preaching. [ie is a powerlul
speaker. [et the young men of our
ety hear him.
Bong service from 7 tod p.m,
each evening Public cordially in-
vited to attend,
C.G, Fisupacn, Pastor,
WANTED—A good short onter
aad pastry cook. None but the best
need apply. Also an upto date
lady waitresr at Martin’s Cafe, 106
Coart strect, Muskogee, Okla.
of, JOUN A.M. &. CAaURCTT
The sewing circle was indeel is
the midet of good things on Wetnes-
day afteraoon and evening at the
residence of Mrs, Cora Ry. U1
looked hike the retura of batter days
Many persens came and took ditaer
with the hostess in order to help the
circle, Atgy. m. many ladies of
the cirele, with a number of visiton
were happy in the enjoyment of th ¢
pleasures of the alternoon.
“the ctrcle took steps toward con
ducting a booth at the early spring
fair whic! is to be held in St, John,
The classes ot St, John made their
reports for the month on last Mon-
day night, Mr, J 8. Hatton, leader
atcliss No. ce inada the best show.
ing for the month The amount
raised by t's class for the mouth
w January waa $18 50.
The haly communion will be ad-
miuusterel ut diam Sinday, Ser
morb, % pastor imommmgz and ev-
eumng
Tic Suaday School continues to
mereoe reeverplhing gool Supt
Rak Vade aml the teachers are
using cory Sflort te make the work
B Breas fCeNs
Mir fos.e Rao the new pea
wdent oC tn AHO edeaguzal 1, as
assist 1b arsarnust carps af wash.
ersant zoel salteare already men
ates cdl
the Ree Lom Moore of Logan
romy Kiiw divested an titer -
esting ou 1 at St, Jolin on Sunday
ev oboe
bus Va a. Workers were beautt
tay on fon sAtoaday oven,
Dy Mri “tay Cat Bpautles
A lak nor ot members ag!
frm» tages ula, atter the
ditsa Douaath oo isiuges, copayed
Mety 6 tepmat unl a gue al
fate rhour Riv Win Ale ce
a sO bs ead Glee
Aaom or, bth t visitors
4 rota? $ aes
lit, ct Watt 1 Bde PUL
fo mect regularly twee a meath 2
th YME AG oe a der y rah
for ths good Of tu, waoly peaple o
the city. Officers elected: Rev. J,
E, Edwards, president, Rev, J.B.
Barton, vice president; Rev, T. J,
Carr. secretary and treasurer. The
next meeting will ba on the second
Tuesday of February st 10 a. m,
WESTERN TUSKEGEE,
The moch trlal given by the youns
men Saturday night for the purpos
of defraying the expenses of the del
egates to the state Y, M. ©. A. meet.
ing, was highly euccessful, City
friends were wut is apite of the snow
storm,
A friend tu Qakland, Cat has gus!
cunatibuted latts tu complete the
bam and construct cattle sheds. 11
ss very encouraging to note the in-
tereat that ts being man.tested in out
work,
Prinerpal Carter has been invited
to deliver the entumencement add rees
ofthe Carthage, Mo. high school
Owing to the pressure of work at
that time, he has not uccded upon
Mia eeceplance,
: Mrs, John M. Wright, the wife of
our treasurer, has been invited to
aldress the ladies of the Cen-
tial Congregational church next
Wedneaday in the interest of our
instttution, We are confident that
she will make many frends fur ont
work,
Uhe department of elucution and
delsarte will render a program at the
Metropolitan ballin the very near
future. Watch for the date.
‘The county commuasionera are
reducing the hillain frontof the school
property, and are filling the old
street cur grade, This work is add
ing very much to the brauty of our
surroumudlings, aad We are graterul to
the commissioners fur their interest,
Mesura, Fred Helm aud Robert
Greer have been clected elevates
from our YM. C, A to attend the
state meeting ab Ottawa neat month,
PAOLO ITEMS
Misa Tillie Wellings as no better,
Mi Walter Webb t4 home from inde
pend nee
Mia Miles Coopre Ts hetter,
Chithe Pillad 1s poorly
Mrs 2 OE Whauteld, fielT amissioniny
jor the Natit Convention, delivered 3
Twelure on Misatuna at the 4, WOE
Church list Wednos tay evening
Mi, laseph Wintley came home nom
ansis Caty det Siardiy on account. of
the itincss of bis mother
Miss Annie Coopis ts on the sick list
Mr Newtan Walhoste at Hilldale at:
tented the tewhers’ cesonnatin here
Jast woek,
Mr Booker Boatts 1s no better
Mi Henry Piyne is slowly improving
Mig Nelle Mbishal has an attack of
Ia srppe
Vhe Union meeting whieh was an nes
rion at the 4M OR chuach list week
under the auspices af Revs, shepperd
ani Wooison, wis moved bich to the
derond Bopladt chinch this week | Dur
ing Jarl week's morting there were three
conversions, So fu two additions ta the
4 WOK choreh
WINFIFLD. RANSAS
Mig Andy Charles heft Isat Wednes
day tor Wachrla, where dee will dah
treatment im che hope .
Leon Jane cine dewn from Wictin
Vist Vraday
the ladack ot the VOM LT church lase
Asoc] Weer Unies day sven
Rev SoS Bandy preichel ta Pes B
Nosmith ef the Second Bape fet
on the faite
Mass Poul Mardin, who kotor
sich wath the Gao ppe oa the a rlen
on Sb and Me FW We stews
recov gine
J Me WD tutte ea ap cen
wn one ar his eyes drs ve wmitot
sbosls aecuvaring.
Mr Charles Laankti as on ths |
Hy
Mes Voed Vorstht. who Bis i cr vbat
wean the elts with relatives sal frond
the past fhe weds ft sunday on he
heme, to Join hab smd oa tras
| tune ton, Cole~ade.
Mr Frau Ment curvy tei nse
hoy sabeeription to fie tia leal cat
aavs every eater E riumiy on Wanted
ought te take Ph Pond et be an
wots gat she pedo bon
Haver te wars
Hw, So Bande ul Honan
Willington Lie panies
Nia daable attepise po « fi
hehe BON Reh bet bate on
ned wae gd ud out hoop
Mion) Me Yon t t Sone
Bowes ob whet one PIE
(hon
WAY CAP DWE Hy
Phyo aed \
weesee
Fonnce i ih ro aie
aly Osl Kansas Ady, WA bK A, Ran
Seow Yow 08, 0k Vw a Ten AR AO APS HON mreky ¥
1W lV tC
estern Universty, ‘
x QUINDARO, KANSAS K
x Whe j
xf <7 Lome = &reat
A e re pg NG ee Kaucationa j
. ee on — CS 0 ‘ Be .
Sa OS ul eee fastitution
tes C au Apa or .#ansas
! “ Poe oe MEU] EE a 4h Aiea af my 4 AAO the Ves is
oo a the ee fPppe, :
Eto ee ty a5) ay 4 R
x iE E n Ht ri F 4 Ral | a of Gepaitmeatr >
ws Eel My eee Te Beal
hy 4 y ar — 1h - EL toons See r le yrs y Rete ode, Theulogi at if
xf 3 EE ‘| bees | bed ; cl |p ea College, Normil,
» & sh, chy, begat t= P= epmene SC , on we s 7 a Se Sub-Nornaal and iy
SN suslltagig tag cet vy ay ate State Normal,
ara maces reiaig onwesyeen UIynRET gy avITIen ae
( — i
The Peacing and flest ‘institwtion of its Kind in the Great YYest
of OH Eesha Bot ates oh
yw “OURTZES , Advantages &
x » spoorda Tf cato Wehin Cioete, God Ine «
% sed 8 Oe 3H ‘ tater ETH es tr ve
ota 5 1 A © '
vi yy Be EN arrmaAcdan 7
y , 4 { + « ft hucements f+ *
, t ea we eeee . wie
Coo $n ee ae © oe OP TS Beeetder se ff
GVEA Chaaete be Vanes Wy ort, . Presideur |
ns . fo oerldree V' Mti Wenes btiiserJ ibe ie iff
™ 7 * . se * Nise, ~ Nt” Ye Nea Mery Bh sue Pea Ce ne
ORECAST REN INERT SET RO RE
Dr.P.Holmes,
Regular Medical Physician with
Thirty Years of Expcrienee
in the United States,
A GREAT DIVINE HEALER,
With 24 yeare Ezpericnce,
You Muat Se Him,
Ate will cure you ata distance o!
one hualrod yards, Wall relieve
any one of Fever and Chillein five
minnter, Willenre you of alldia
cacer, Uld Sorex, Toothache, Cram)
Colie, Rheumatiem, Nervous Trou
bles, Loose and Stiff Joint—In fact
ALL DISEASKS OF MANKIND,
He makes paace where there is war
binge luved ones: back to thelr
home who have bean driven off by
unfair means,
His IS A MEDLUMI.
Me ts you everyfthing yo ever
did an sour life, he sou favor,
mother or father, or ever will do,
On September 5, 1005, be Drought
Ira Burrell, of Greenville, Texag,
back to life.
! ~
Try Meand You Will
Be Blessed,
HOURS AT RACH OFTICE,
Ram, till 12m, 648 James St,
Kanaay City, Kare,
12:30 tof p.m, 16145 Cottagesst,
Kansaw City, Mo.
—————_—=—E=E=&=&![===>*»*«™
WICHITA. KANSAS.
Mre. Theo, Kennedy left Tnesday for
rea Oble, in despense ty aos
eaat stating: the serious atincss ol het
mother,
the Indies of the GL A ub were
«ntortamed at the heme ut Mire). 7
Tewas Luesdas atternoon
Mero and Mix HW Tansbore, who have
resitd in (hit aty a onmmbor of years
we now located in Langstun, Okla
Mir Woot Eel, formerds et) this
ety, Whose home iy new im Kiowa
Vesting hae wath friends
Mrs 1 Diame of Newton vistted an
the oty List week.
Mie Many Andersen has Leam quite
alt fon several ataye
A pleasint hours sock) woe given at
the home of Mr A) Paul, Wednesday
vvemng of lost week
The Didies or the Alsbie Club inet on
‘Thueday allanoon with Mis. Bo Gol
min,
Mry Henry Walkine whiner home was
Jormerdy am this cits) dad an Oklahoma,
‘The domains woe brought to this city
for interment The fancral service was
hild from the Second Hiptet chureh on
Sunday aftarnoon Me leaves a wife and
Mrs. Fannie A. Smuth, wife of dr. R.
E. Smith, deed Wedaeaday of last wrek.
She war a seadent of Wichita for 19
Sears and was a devoted Christian, «
fasthful member of the A Af. E, church
and was a hybly cultured and sefined
Woman. She was a graduate of Oberbn
college and a sister of the late James
Trotter, register of deeds of D. C, under
the administration of ex-Preatgent Cleve-
land. She leavce no relatives exeept ber
faithfal ond loving bastaad, A wide
carte et aends nina det boas
John Wood, of Strong City waa
an agreeable caller one day this
week, Heis oneat the most sub-
s‘antral ¢ lizens nt that section of the
state,anit actaunch friend ot ‘Ti
Piainvryirk. While here, he was
the guest of thre sister Mira Inez
Wood, a poputar teacher in the
publre echogis
Mcp tte Mus
? >
Fowler’s Place
HS WH LEAMS Manage
Deatly Eatmehel Reome in Con
Deettom
MAS SF REIT netuoge
wer bath Sut Kansas (ity bt
—S eS
caf,
J. W. Voohie’s
Restaurant
Dalocerry a fine line
of GROCERIES and
MISATS. Give me a
shate of your trade
ALLA NILE Hue eity Manga
Hetue ou bun Went.
WHEN IN MUSKOGEL I T i
——— STOP Ar ~ --
MARTIN'S HOTEL and CAFE
It is one of the nicest
cleanest Cafes im the
city Everything up-to-
date and served in style.
Cican Beds a Specialty
Jas. W. H, Martin, Proprietor
106 COURT STREET.
Mrs.L.P.Allen
HAIR-DRESSING,
MANICURING
BEAUTY PARLOR
25 HK. Shermer ‘Ave,
HWUTCHINDON, KANSAS
‘ebildrem berides other relatives.
oF ate.
SEY: SPT
SEEEnnNSeinnnennee een oe
A grand oppertusity fer cotered pee-
ple te buy geed farms or city property.
The land im the surrounding neighbor-
hood of Vinita is fertile and rich, cheap
in price, will grow cetton, all kinds ef
Rains and vegetables The health and
chmate of this nerghberboed ie fine,
All kinds of poultry and hve stock
does weil here The market 1s good the
ytar round Now is the state colored
man’s chance to get seme ef this new
terntory land before it i» atl taken by
other races.
The colored eitisens are seling and
leasing their land fo white peopl tverv
day. For fucther information call or
write
Real Estate Deater and Colored Immi+
Rtalion soheitor tet good farm finds and
tenants
Come at once and let me put vou m
the race for a good farm of eis prop.
erty
M. A, Sorrell,
Office Madden Burldrng, Vinita, Okla
4 Oa
is aoe x
’ ee
a \
: aes t}
p { = }
q =) & Y a}
US To SEAT
A a rao, © a ws
f hs79 i yy a
DB adanihel) SES Nea 43 ‘al (9 N Y
aan 1] 4 - Lr s Ye
rv BPs), & i
CRIS EEE aD Rel +9 y
») @ yy
. < oO = ENN
A Delightfully Perfumed Hair Pomade Z AS ~POY:
PREPARED ESPFCIALLY FOR COL @RED PEOPLE = vol
This okt rehdble preparition has ben at j
fonsiant uve fer ever inn sear, and mo con a ayo teat oath
thou ands theme ler puurantecd frre from yo mes ray at chen
NLLSON'S MAIR DRESSING mits harsh, stubborn, kioky, cat |
hair soft, pliant and glonny, cnatics von ti torwtheveambte fd
up oan any etyle comsrstent wrth ats length, Thos pent tly aft cat hori
By supplving the needed anls direath tothe rect of the hur NELSONS
HAL DRESSING tones up, anvapocates and no le the cys Sts they
hur from falling out, Increases its growth, ual prevett ve ho or teen
sphttuyg and breaking off at the ends and prove othe har wen Uefe rsh sapere
NELSON'S MAIR DRESSING removes Dandrutfyrun Totter, Itchiag
and Scaling of the Scalp, etc
There iv nothing expenmental about Nelson? Harr Die np at das been
thoreughly tected ind is endorved by thousands of atahed user Try bay ad
be convinced that it does all and more than what weal tar it,
WHAT THOSE WHO KNOW HAVE TO SAY:
Atv Inabelie fired, Hattie Creek Michwans 0 OMi € Guvema Retnae sa bin oytie
wnies LD arcommead it waerern: Fy0 Mba ST base bee am ayers for seen Nae Mott
dyer wonders foe me Biemseg tore ads ent mmm Hos bh ote
Mus Wille 1 Grifter, MuMiestille Deon, Betbiag art ele De ree
writent ‘0 Rave card pour Nelson a itais Dressiog: Cota Re rover ledtomareli |e vue
for oraily tout veare and wonld aot he without 1 | ty be onle Mair Dorrie Wt abe ies ry
Le Te sean paar woah ee bddes a:
Melon's” '
¥ is put up in deeunee square tin bose ane sela
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING at atl drug stores for 25c.nhox. If seu
cannot petit at your drug store, send a SOC. an tay sand we will mulyenabes BP
We want good agents (male or female), Winte for ynees, terms, ee
*
Address NELSON MANUFACTURING CO., Richmond, Virginia.
we
are =
7
al CORE gt
°
Cummings
Hotel
1009 St. Louis Avenne, Kaneaa
City, Me.
Viret.claee aecomedations for
firat classpeople. Rates reasonable.
Headquarters fer railroad men
————— $<
a hen in Museagee Stop at
‘Mrs. Nettiee Drake's
\
612 South Third St.
i ae 8 9
| te Patri elass accomudations
$e
Oak Leaf Hotel
Fast Nee Katy Katiroge a
URN SISETICKREF Op
ee nr)
Old friends all expected New
Incnlesilad insited, ° '
28 WINTAL LL Te
OEE TE OTE
—
O HILIMI has gone forth from the
world of power on an enchanting
cruel or poison in western town to shoot street officers and masters who annoy women on the street and attempt to clude officers. This, having no relation to the monkey house, may be taken seriously. To enforce it by a fine challenge to the marksmanship of his men is the adroit pledge of sincerity on the part of the chief. Two bullets from his own revolver hit to let a fleeing culprit, but he hops his men "will be better markedmen." Perhaps they will, but as a rule the marksmanship is not one that others the "maniac" victim commonly estimates at its full worth. The chief recognizes this when he says, "These men are incapable home breakers, a mensace to the whole community, but our laws do not permit judges to impose punishment sufficient to stop their offenses, hence a bullet in one or two of the brutes will help the rest to understand the seriousness of their crimes.
The logo of such a position is a wild one, a significant one, too, in the aptiation touching "the unwritten law," which recent events in various quarters has created. It moves a natural wonders as to how much more private shooting lynching and other demoralizing efforts at justice and awakening of brutes to the nature of their offenses will have to go on before the unwritten law becomes the written one, and laws offer some real and not century-off vindication of the rights of human beings, males or female, and some reasonable protection against the boastful crimes that can afflict society. When "Virginian plunged a dagger to the heart of the fair and beloved Virginia to save her from just such human friends as exist today, even pagan Rome was stirred with indignation against the tyrant Claudius. But when now the sense of justice in human breast recognizes the demand for vengeance against those who with more than a tyrant's arts entice and betray their victims, and fling innocent and guilty alike into the pit, their face has opened, men are actually found to call it "a maudlin sentiment." Fortunately, however, they are few—and growing fewer.
Vindication Denied Women.
vindication Deadly Wounds
"The great soul of the world is put, and begins to discern that any law of self defense against the assailant who would destroy the body must hold doubly good against, with allusion to the covertly and indiscriminately strikes at the pierceess honor of the soul. It is the fashion today to demand one code of law and judgment for men and women alike, and the main, it is well. But Alexander Buman knew where to draw the law when he said, "Woman can never fall as low as man, because love has always had something to do with her fall." What terrible something that is, all the masters of literature have been trying to tell us in all ages. Nevertheless it is all Margaret who languages in jeal, for the sine of Fauat more than her own, and, save with the "Lombard girls" who, Roesch tells us, "wear daggers in their belts" and never sprave a betrayer, the vindication of such wrongs, either by the written or unwritten law, is still denied to woman Hence they go on—even though cases like "Billy Brown" draw tears from the eyes of grave lawyers and judges, and move the court itself to recognize that in her soul the victim was "pure" and her destroyer "a rat" by comparison in the scale of being Yet if the "rat" had not ankish his treating victim in the death waters, what vindication would the counts have allowed her for the far greater wrong done her by the demon who took aantage of the strength and unquestioning confidence of a "succere level."
What, moreover, are they moved to do for the innocent young lives thrown upon a scourge world in the case of a father who refuses to give them the protection of his name or care! The sword of a distracted mother, caught in the toils of such a diagran and wrong, chasing the cold blooded perpetrator of it about the land, agoniously pleading with him to fulfill his pledges and save her children, ought to move something that could never be called a maudlin sentiment in the minds of just men, and suggest some legal provision for meeting such a case and holding a recurrent creature to some fine of decency and duty to helpless offspring whatever became of his outworn infestation.
Pisa for the Women.
The tragedy that calls the attention of a nation to the need of better legal treatment when better man are still lacking in any corner of the land may alter all be in the interest of the eternal mull of the gods that grind already but not only time. It may be all we wish for the torturous and audacious to write histories against the "woman in the crowd" and of the wound wrong in all men and there can be no question but the rotten and the poor. In the clast, could not not, but are moved only to pity and care. What I mention and appreciate of the putt-putt black woman and clothes in the lives of the angels to entrap the water, probably to steal in every vessel, like though many have told it. But no matter in the case, could not put it all in demand that it must be made. If should not have disguised and deserted Cling, flogged and numbered in world and if law has not tried to face this what really would the punishment of mankind have the benefit and outraged mother down in the earth she caught the domestic father hanging over her helpers' hands with an asses' kinshe she would be allowed to save at the price of the life. If fults him holding the Damn - black man over their guiltless soil what ever her own respitable should she plaint leave him to the deadly work
No doubt the "washing out" of the *Bronze* will will eventually point the time of escape from all the strained business, but while women as high-minded and noble as she can become entangled in it, some do dealing with the vulnerable. Phones, who leave and tell them, should be divided in some quarters. The gallant chief of police who prepares to start the business with the street murderer says, significantly, "the men who are inpatient home breakers, the guilty of more than any wrong person who have no direct means of detainment themselves." That goes to the case of the matter. The means of detainment first to last against the whole line of offenses, the blackest in human history, is wholly inadequate or totally lacking. The perpetrators of their trade upon the pride and sensitivities of their victims to keep them under cover, down to
the last stages of their dastardly work, and the "Jamband girls with daggers in their belts" are really the proper ones to deal with them. Curious that "our laws do not permit judges to impose a punishment sufficient to stop them." When a stab at character and honor means more in the eyes of the law than a stab at human flesh, probably this matter will right itself, and the being, whether sinned against or sinning, who can bring this truth to light, will benefit all subsequent ages, though dying in prison cell, or on ignominious scaffold.
"Crimes sometimes shock us too much, vices almost always too little," says August Hare. Murder is a great crime, and a recognition of the sacredness of human life the safeguard of any society. Yet the time may come when, in the blackness of the toit, that in many cases leap up to it, murder will be seen to show almost white in comparisons. Death is by no means the worst thing that can come to mind, the bribery a specter of disdain into a woman's life is worse than the man who cuts her throat—and infinitely crueler. If murder could ever be justified (which is not saying that it could), it would be for such soulslayers—and even then the lines would not be equal.
Tough a great hard has said that "if the course of justice none of us should see salvation" yet it is certain that our chances are better there than in the courses of injustice laboriously substituted for it in human history. Here, as elsewhere, it may be true that "the hearts are farther than the head" and that with all the coffling at sentiment, our greatest age was right when he said "every action is measured by the depths of sentiment from which it proceeds." Assuredly, no fair estimate can be made of an action without including the inner depths of feeling and motive from which it springs. With Justice Brewer and other lights of law and philosophy, Emerson also maintains that "the antidote to the abuses of formal government is in the influence of private character, the growth of the individual." That forenic thunderer, Carlyle, also sends the individual, "black in the face" and "near strangled with dictateant legislation," to cry out in his own behalf, "Jet me have show room, throat room, and I will not fail; 'sinews of war' he in me, untold sources towards the conquest of the planet, if, instead of hanging me, you husband it them and help me!" But, after all, it is the Puritan Mitten who best meets the need of our blind and troubled hour when he writes, "Men have sometimes, by transgressing, most truly kept the law."—Irene Clark Safford.
POULTRY NOTES
Male eggs have slick smooth surfaces.
If the boiled egg adheres to the shell it is a fresh one.
Small flocks or those of moderate size are most profitable.
Overfeeding is more of an injury to fowl than underfeeding.
Bran is not a good packing for eggs. Eggs packed thereon soon snell and taste mucky.
Kneen the drinking vessels free from fith. Fathly drinking places are disease breeds.
A hen of good breed ceases laying during the laying season only when out out of condition.
A vigorous offspring come from well matured parents. Remember that in choosing your breeding stock next spring.
Keep the hears busy even in cold weather by feeding them their grain among litter and letting them scratch it out.
Milk in any form is both meat and drink for laying fowls, out also third drink for laying nests, supply it in abundance to them.
Soft and thin shredded eggs are caused by a lack of time in the food. Give the bens access to plenty of grit, coarse sand or gravel and avoid them.
Putting fowls for market is quite an industry these days. It is a thing that is easy to accomplish if the fowls appetite is properly tempted. Too much soft food is bad for a fowl. It tends to produce indigestion. The gizzard was made to grind food and when folded of its work the fowl does not do so well. Bread drying is coming to be almost the exclusive poultry food.
Legghorn on kens are small eaters and good toasters. They are bright and in tingle of fowls, with a happy disposition, singing and cooking the greater part of their lives. The eggs are large and usually quite nutritive. In addition, is usually industrious. If you would keep your hens healthy then you probably forage every day. A nesting shed is almost a necessity during winter keep it well supported at litter changed frequently to coarse cloth.
Many lardies are in varying pure bacon
pâté at a point others lay pane
bread stock and bread griddle. For
most it imposes a high grade tawel
not only of quite equal to a pure bacon
breading units in poultry as well as in
cattle.
Not all lardies a chicken was a chicken
but a chicken did tawel to the bovine
the expression has developed the fact
that lardies is much different in the
quality of the dish of different brow-
dies is more in the egg white
---
I do not matter so much the kind
of a poultry house one has when it
comes to the question of poultry
truths to many species of poultry.
to no other thing of mine handle
wit. It is and there are no other things
in nature a exactly alike, so so with
poultry houses, in two are alike.
By the kind of poultry house is an
natural. Every man may build to suit
his purpose and his fancy and yet get good
results in proper attention is paid to
also details. We are not arguing
against the building of warm, common
house, but we do say that the lack
of a poultry house built in accordance
with the best ideas of advanced poultry
house construction is not fatal to su-
cessful poultry. We have seen a fair
degree of profit made from houses that
only the worst excuse of a poultry
house for shelter. With the same men
for woman and better equipment, it
is likely that greater profits would have
been obtained. Too much "caddling" as
is fatal to the best results with poultry
the little
the bee house should be given due
consideration. Whether it is a thousand
dollar billing or a hay shed, it must
be cared for in a manner as manner to keep
it clean. Unliness is of more importance
than most persons think. Some people think if their poultry house is "cleaned out" once or twice a year they have done their full duty. The fowls don't seem to mind standing or scratching in their own excrement, so why should the poultry house be cleaned out oftener? The result is that such people fail with poultry, as they should.
Mites and lice thrive in proportion as the care of the poultry house is neglected. If you want to be a place that is literally aire with vermin go into an old poultry house that is seldom or never cleaned. Mites and lice are the bane of the poultryman. Keep the poultry and poultry house free from them and the probabilities are that your fowls will be free from other ailments.
We are told that the healthy human body is not subject to disease, it is only when some part is weakened that the germs of disease are able to thrive. We believe that there is much truth in the statements and we believe that it applies equally well to poultry as to man. Mites and lice are living parasites. They exist by sacking the blood of their victims. The fowl, weakened by the loss of blood drawn by the mites are readily susceptible to any disease that happens along. Ily keeping the poultry houses clean and free from mites and, like your fowl will be more healthy and hardy.
Clean the poultry house once a week or once every two weeks at least. Clean it thoroughly. Use plenty of lime and sulphur, plenty of whitewash and insect powder. What if you have to spend a dollar or so? You will get it back many fold. Change the litter in the scratching shed frequently or it will become foul and the breeding place of faith and verm. Light and ventilation are requisite to poultry houses but are not more so than thorough cleanliness.
Poultry Manure.
Great care should be exercised less the droppings of the farm poultry be allowed to go to waste. Besides being one of the roibest manures produced on the farm, it wastes very rapidly.
Horse manure is generally recognized as one of the most valuable of the farm manures, yet compared to it poultry manure is three times as rich in nitrogen, six times as rich in phosphoric acid, and one and one half times as rich in potash. The importance of saving all of the poultry droppings must be easily apparent.
More care must be exercised to save these droppings without loss than most other manures. Owing to its comparative dryness it ferments rapidly and much of the nitrogen is volatilized and escapes unless some preservative is added to it to prevent it.
One of the best plans is to spread it direct about as rapidly as it is made and stir it at once into the soil. Or it may be mixed with the absorbents and manures obtained from the other farm animals, which will prevent its too rapid fermentation. Owing to its extreme richness, care must be taken not to spread it too thickly on cultivated ground less it cause the crop to "burn out." For a top dressing for garden truck light applications of poultry dressings thoroughly mixed with fine loam and a small quantity of finely ground land litter is unequalled.
Eating a "Hell-Bender"
A live "hell bender" considered the highest amphibian that inhabits the Pennsylvania streams, and always regarded as poisonous, after eaten, was received at the state economic ecologist's department recently, and two of the bugs and snake students got into an argument as to whether the water dog or fresh water alligator was edible. It called in the "hell bender" forming the new resistance at their Thanksgiving day dinner, and after the "bird" had been eaten all pronounced it delicious. This is the first recorded instance of the amphibian those eggs ate.
A Relationship Tangle
In the marriage of Isaac totton and Miss Sarah Frances at Yardley, Pa. the deadly tungled relations of the Garton and Francis families become more connected. The father of the triple, George Ivan, some time ago married a sister of a bachelor, and a brother of the wife is the husband of a sister of the very bachelor. This mother, George Ivan, father in law to his own daughter, and the daughter in law to her father, and sister in law to his brother in law to his mother.
He Cannot Let His Error
one of the story is very high
warm and very warm and very warm
time going to sleep
time going to sleep
time going to sleep
time going to sleep
time going to sleep
What's written?
Packing down your bag for you
"Well, it can wait till morning. I suppose."
The low deptired, and after a long time the man was sound sleep again when the came another rooming I look at the door.
"Well what is it now" he enquired "I am not for you that package." It put.
Didn't State Ben Any.
And w a Carnegie is famous for the
court a bicep that he gives to poor
wrong men.
"I consider this fear," said a New
York millionaire who consulted Mr.
Carnegie about a new venture. The
business locked as if it ought to be pro-
titable. I got used to it, a public
party. It still there was some risk
my food and I was at all.
"But Mr. Carnegie laughs at my
fear.
"If it was a good thing, plunge in," he
said, "or be old wears him." Fear is
what keeps untold and a man from making
tortures. When Benjamin Franklin
thought of stunting a paper in Philadelphia
his motto, greatly altered, that
dissolves him. She pointed out that
there were already two newspapers in
America."
A Useless Attt.
"Well," said the manager, turning to the fair applicant for a place in his company, "have you any diamonds that you can love on a railroad train or be robbed of on a ferry boat?"
"No. I'm sorry to say that I do not own any jewelry."
"Is there anybody that we can have arrested for following you around from town to town and making love to you?" "I don't know of any such person." "Would you have any objection to being thrown out of an automobile and rolling down a sleep embankment?" "Dear me, that would be dangerous, wouldn't it?" "Well, what are your recommendations, anyway?" "I can act." "Of you must think you are still living in the dark ages."—Chicago Record-Herald.
She'll Warm His Cold Feet.
A correspondent at Wilkesbarre, Pw writes as follows: "John Davenport, an aged farmer of Hunlock's creek, was arrested before Magistrate Brown charged with committing assault and battery on his young wife, Dorie. After the fair plaintiff had told her story on the witness stand and given a detailed account of how she had been abused, the aged husband said: "It is not true. I always treated her kindly. Anphow, I only married her to keep my feet warm in winter." Magistrate Brown said the weather prophets were predicting that this was going to be a cold winter, and he thought Davenport's feet would be quite cold if he did not have a "warmer." The old man admitted that that would be the case, and when the wife was appealed to she said she would forgive him, and the couple made up and kissed, leaving the alderman's office arm in arm.
THE best selling stock, whether it be horses, cattle, swine, or what not, is in the long run the kind that makes its owner a profit. It takes less feed and less time to fatten out a bunch of well bred steers or hogs than one of mongrel breeding and consequently lack of quality, and the well bred cattle or swine when put on the market will sell SIRE. for from $1 to $3 per hundred weight more than the "scrub" stuff. It would seem, then, that more farmers would raise well bred stock. The percent of pure bred stock grown in the United States in comparison to the total number is exceedingly small. It is an indisputable fact that cattle of short-born blood predominate in the United States yet the total number of Short-born cattle recorded to date is only 89,400. It is estimated that not over 35 per cent of those are now living, or a total of only 41,300.
Of the millions of cattle in the United States less than a half million are pure bred. What an indictment against the American farmer! It is little wonder the quality of our cattle is so poor. There is ample room for more breeders of pure bred cattle. Were there a dozen breeders of pure bred cattle to where there now is one there would still be room for more and the profit in breeding would be quite as much as at present.
The proportion of pure bred horses to the total number of horses is less than that of cattle. The same may be said of sheep. Probably the proportion of pure bred hogs is a little greater than that of other kinds of stock but even it is rationally small. The number of breeders of pure bred swine is comparatively large and getting larger. At the same time the demand for pure bred hogs outruns the supply. We need more pure bred stock breeders of every kind.
Now what is the reason for the predominance of the "acrob" in all lines of breeding? New farmers question the superiority of well bred stock and yet they continue to breed the "acrob". There must be some fundamental misconception regarding the breeding of good stock else more of it would be produced. If we can discover what this misconception is we shall have arrived at the cause of the error, then having discovered the cause we can point out the remedy. We have given much thought to the question of "acrob" stock and have arrived at the conclusion that the root of the soil lies in the use of the grade size. We have come to regard the grade size as the base of the breeding business. There are maternal animals belonging to the pumkin classes but in pure bred size must be very mature if he be not better than the best grade size, the on the other is not hard to master.
In all animals there are two tender and one to reproduce themselves and another to reproduce some ancestor more or more. Pureed animals are those that have been bred along line units a certain definition type has been fixed these animals will reproduce themselves with certainty. When a pureed body is used the pathome of a dog is not of course for certain types of animals but in the program thus to there both will invariably stop to get a way to face, the Angus or other way will remove the pathome. Short both will get a drive with blood, deep holes. Whatever the type of the one the tendency is to reproduce from its offspring.
Now the influence of new blood tend to be up long established tend not in proportion as the likelihood of desirable qualities being produced is low that of bringing forth undesirable qualities is increased. This is exactly what happens when a grade size is used that can not tell with my degree or certainty what type of animal will be produced by the grade size. One of his got may be of this type, another of that, and the minority will be of no particular type, will be a mixture of several types, or only works in "sumb"
Unanimity of types places the top
even of the type he not the most bona-
fide. A grade one holds the power to
begat outspring of an uncommon type
of any kind, he is a monarchy, an amity
with each child. Him however he is
will appearing individual the average
mon is devoted. In an amity mon
only to the child, liking the other
paint or the animal, belongs to him,
not so wang that the grade is an uneer
tion than as a more nor why there
are not the themes to account for the
park site's inability to take him
self. Perhaps there is a desire of truth
in each and more than likely there is
at least correct. But for practical pur-
pose it is not essential that we know
---
the why and the wherefore of everything, nor need we know this. What we do need to know in this connection is thus: The grade site lacks the power to reproduce any particular type in his gut and should be avoided whenever possible. The doing away with the grade site would accomplish more in the way of improvement of American live stock than any other one thing.
FARM NOTES
The heavy coating of ice on the trees caused much damage by breaking branches, limbs and even whole trees. The damage to orchards is especially great.
The excessive rainfall has put a stop to plowing for the time being. The farmer who has a goodly number of acres plowed is in luck.
Selecting seed corn and making germination tests of the same is an excellent and profitable way to spend the rainy days between now and planting time.
Barbed wire is cheaper than it was thirty years ago, cheaper per pound, but we are not so sure but it is costlier in the long run. It doesn't take ordinary barb wire long to rust out these days.
Speaking of barb wire reminds us that quality is a thing lost sight of these days. The demand is ever for something cheaper. Things are made to sell nowadays, not to last. Even by paying a good round sum we are not issued of good goods. Sometimes we almost doubt if there are any really good goods manufactured.
The roads have been pretty good thus far but now they are almost impossible. How much better it would be if our public roads were intensively worked instead of extensively. It seems to us the theory of intensive rather than extensive farming might well be applied to road making.
If your farm is afflicted (?) with hedge fences now is a good time to work some of the wood up into fence posts and fire wood. A hedge fence is a poor piece of property nowadays. Still hedge posts of fair size are about the best on the market. Don't make wood of trees suitable for fence posts.
Every farmer should now be planning for a fruit garden. To one who is unacquainted with the luxury of having fresh fruit in season of any and all kinds adapted to this latitude we will say you are missing much. Every farmer owes it to himself and his family to have an ample fruit garden.
This has been peculiar weather for January. It is more like April. Fog, rain and mud is bad enough in warm weather but is much more disagreeable in winter. We prefer cold weather to mud every time. If the spring of 1907 is not one of the most backward on record we shall be agreeably surprised. In Germany there is an absence of large orchards as we know them, but along the roadside and in every garden fruit trees are abundant. How would it do for us to imitate the Germans in the planting of trees along public highway? There is there as much valuable land lympia field as there is woodland to weeds within the road limits that is doing nobody good. Our public roads and our railroads have mostly as much again land as a right of way as is needed. If this alle land was utilized for growing of fruit how much better it would be for all concerned. Let us try planting a few trees by the roadside than spring. We will never regret it.
We notice accounts in several papers of great rabbit hunts in which many hunters participate. It is a good thing for the country that these hunts take place but a bad advertisement for the locality in which they occur. To our mind rabbits are an unmitigated nuisance and we would hate to live in a locality where they were numerous. Our plan for keeping them relatively scarcen on our farm is not only to kill all we ourselves can conveniently but also to allow all responsible hunters the privilege of hunting rabbits as they please. We have no doubt but that some of these hunters kill a quail occasionally but we are till of the rabbits, which is a great deal of satisfaction.
The rural mail carrier comes as nearly earning his money nowadays as he ever does. The worst thing he encounters is the mud. Muddy roads are aggravating to the driver and hard on the team. We are heartily in flavor of a parcel post system, but none can be unimaginated and carried out until the condition of our country roads is greatly improved. We should like to see the government take hold of the good roads movement. A million dollars is a vast sum of money, but that much and more can be spent to a great advantage on our public roads. The national government is the legal good lumber.
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
NO. 10
For the submission of a proposition to
the section 8, article 3, of the con-
stitution.
be it resolved by the legislature of the State of Kansas two thirds of the members appointed to each house thereof of meeting, be it
Statutes. The following proportion to round the estimation of State of Kansas is submitted to the qualified electors of the state, their approval or rejection. That sort of article be amended so as to follow. Shall there shall be a jury court in each county, which shall be a court of record, and have such probate jurisdiction and are of states of the dead persons, minors, and persons of amount in cash may be prosecuted by law, and shall have jurisdiction in cases of habeus corpus. The court shall consist of one judge, who shall be elected the qualified officer of the county and hold the office of a judge, and the court at such times and receive for compensation such fees or salary as may be prescribed by law. The legislature may provide for the appointment or selection of a probate judge pro tem, when the probate judge is not oldly absent or others be unable or disqualified to sit in any case.
SFC. 2. This proposition shall be submitted to the elections of the state at the general election of representatives in the year 1906 for their approval or rejection. The amendment hereby proposed shall be designated on the official ballot by the following title: "the pro bate judge amendment to the constitution" and shall be voted for or against is provided by law under such title. Passed the Senate February 8, 1905. Passed the House February 2, 1903. I hereby certify, that the foregoing is a true and correct copy of original selections concurrent resolution No. 13, now an file in my office. J. R. Bussow.
Nakahize Hozuml, professor of law in the University of Tokyo, in a paper on the new Japanese code read at the recent international congress of arts and sciences at St. Louis gave an interesting exposition of the manner in which the Japanese have sought to conform their legal system to western means. The method employed has been conservative, recognizing for the time being of the most firmly implanted of the old customs rather than inviting by an attempt to revolutionise everything a reaction which might defeat the purpose of the new code.
About the year 700 a legal code, based upon Chinese moral philosophy, with the cult of ancestor worships and the feudal system, was drawn up and promulgated. This code, with some minor changes, continued in force, until the beginning of the nineteenth century. A system of such antiquity naturally had to be reckoned with by the drafters of the new code, though their task was somewhat simplified by the fact that the old laws had never been published. They had been made for the edification of the judges and other officials.
The decree promulgating the new preliminary code after the restoration of the emperor in 1868 followed this tradition in addressing itself to the officials of the empire. When the second code was proclaimed, however, in 1872, the emperor's subjects, as well as his officials, were commanded to obey it, and it was declared that "honor-ferth every law upon its promulgation shall be posted in conspicuous places for the information of the people," making it evident to the Japanese that their government was to be from that time one of laws and not of men.
The legal condition of women was one of the most complicated problems which confronted the revisionists. Both Buddhism and feudalism had Japanese women kept in a state of dependency. The Chinese doctrine of the three obediences was strictly enforced under the old law—in childhood a female was subject to her father, in youth to her husband, after her husband's death to her sons. A woman had no legal rights which her husband or sons were bound to respect.
In dealing with this question the drafters of the new code made a clean sweep of tradition and established legal rights for women similar to those of the most advanced European nations. Unless otherwise stated in the marriage contract, the property of a woman at the time of her marriage now remains here. She may also acquire property after marriage and hold it in her own name. There is no distinction between the legal rights of an unmarried woman and a male citizen. A woman now has the same rights as a man in the matter of divorce.
In the maintenance of the "house," a survival of the old clan system, the new code has been less radical. The unit of state in Japan is still the family rather than the individual, but the powers of the head of the house new are practically limited to certain rights connected with ancestor worship and control over the marriage of subdivide members. Any member of the house may own property and on his death leave it to his heirs, where formerly it reverted to the head of the clan. It is believed that in time the "house" will be disintegrated and will join the rest of the medieval customs of Japan in the limbo of the past.
A French authority on European affairs, M. Yves Guyot, predicts in the North American Review that Russia will hereafter encounter hostility in attempting to float war loans. He says that the French investors are now awake to the fact that the Franco-Russian alliance is a one sided affair, so far as advantage goes, and that Russia has flooded that country with her bonds Russia's weakness is so manifest, says M. Guyot, that the limit of faith in her future will soon be reached in France Russia still has an immense gold reserve to fight on, and the end of the war is not likely to come soon because of her financial straits. Yet failure of credit in the house of friends is not a pleasant prospect for a nation situated as Russia is.
Our neighbors on the north seem not at all given to the worship of imported greatness. Some time ago England sent over a titled major general to reorganize the Canadian militia, and the colonial premier plainly told his lordship that he was not wanted. In the late national election the Laurier administration, which enabbed this pretentious individual and caused his retali, gained votes as a result of the incident.
Not alone St. Louis, but the whole country, may be congratulated over the success of the Louisiana purchase position. The labors of the project and managers have been appraised, and millions of people have added to their stock of knowledge in a way that can never be forgotten.
The correspondents in the far east, having nothing better to do, seem to be amusing themselves by inventing new and more tantalizing ways of speaking the names of hammurian villages.
SIRES AND SONS,
James Bryee, M. P., can speak move
wr less perfectly In sixtecn languages,
Eliphalet N. Potter, nephew of Bisb-
sp Pottcr, has purchased a meat ow the
New Tork Stock Uxchange.
Alfred Deunctt, who once owned ree
taurants in many citics from Boston te
San Francisco, te insane in the latter
city.
Whitam H, Baldwin recently foished
fle thirty-seventh year as prealdent of
the Young Men's Christian ansociation
ef Boston.
| Judge Alton B, Parker is now Gf
two years of age, He has scarcely @
wrinkle In his frce and tooke Iike a
man who bas taken life eaally.
& popular Japanese Student at Har
vard is Otohize Matsukata, a member
ef the baseball squad, Ills father was
@ former minister ef Ooacce in Japan.
Yulia Hooth, cerumauder In chie€
ef the Salvation Army, began hia sev-
enty-olzth year on Aprii 10. Mr. Booth
was bors in Nottlagham, Ragtand, and
preached Als Grst sermen Ia the open
air whea net tweaty years ol4.
B. P. Harrie of Tepoke, the only lv-
ing mam whe act type on the fret pa-
get published in Kansas, has been col-
G@uratiag his semsicenteaalal as a priat-
er. For Stty yeara he has worked ows-
fimwoudly at his trade aad ts atill alle
te ture out a respectable “striag.”
Dr. Jacquee Bertiliea, the (ameas
ebfiet of the statiatical bereas of Parta,
fms written a volume catitied “Aloo
fheliem aad the Way to Fight [t.”
Drtak, he dederes, is likely ta Move
fee ruin of the French race unless
something is dene to evercomne the
e
Camatile Peiletas, the French toinis-
‘ter of marine, ia meted as a typical De
‘bemntan. He has spent a ceed part of
pls Mite in the Latin quarter, and even
aow, though competied te lire la the
qeagaticont palace of mariac, he fre-
qutatiy entertelae tbls Bohemian
| Daten he
WANT
6,000
CD, WLI
More Men, Women and Children to
Read and Pay for
THE
TOPEKA
PLAINDEALER
Liberal Commission
to Energetic
CURIOUS CULLINGS.
Wate rather Gisheartening sign was
G@ixpleged te the view of customers in
@ fia store la lower Hirth areaue, New
York: “Bey Wanted te Open Oysters
@ixteen Years O64.”
We organ of ens of the churches in
Deifent having retyped to work, Laver
figation revealed the presence of 4
large cel (a the exhaust pipe. It wea
of course dead, amd there ts to expla-
nafien as te how it get there.
A Partaten whe has been much an
meyeal by dene has connected his bell
bandie with a powerful clectric bat
tery and awitahes on the curcent ot
purchelegical mements. We far the pe-
ligp have declined te Laterfere. 23
A large Gock of quall ecilied dewn
om Main street, Les Angeles, Cal. right
fm the business heart of the town.
They were seem fsightconod away end
eaked of, toward the hills, The eldest
imbablteal [a trying to cudgel up a
preendiat fer thés anuaval thing.
. Asriet dimmers are new the fashicg in
Parts. M. Gantee-Dument recently
gare ene at whick the tables and
elenies were suspended from the eclling
by wires, the walters walked on stilts
eid the plates end dishes were raised
on Mfw. The guests cot inte their
wants bg meses vf: ptapiaddces.
TIMELY TOPICS.
Aa English rellway expert ie astee
fained to Mad that the “one idea of yout
sallwaye is te ‘get there.’” That's why
Wve bullé them.—New York Horak.
Me year will be better than this year
to make a teat te see whether Fourtd
of Jaly camnct be celebrated without
the anced ga willing of boya and giris.
~Chicag) Recerd-Herald
Old New York is inughizg at Brook-
Wn because the etéef police officer of
the united cities saye be doesn't see
any harm in playing Sunday baseball
fn isolated sections, meaning Brooklyn,
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
‘The bot! weevil caused a lose to the
cotton growers laat year of $50,000,000,
The value of the birds sinughtered for
mulluery in the same period was pos-
albly hulf e@ million, ff the birds had
decn Iet Alone they would husve destroy-
ed the weesiia, [tig a queer economy
we practice sometimes - Brooklyn
Bazia,
LAW POINTS,
:
If there ts an expresa of Lioplied no
tice to the purchaser that an agent has
Do authority to collect woue), a pay-
ment will not blod the principal (OT
iL App, B25
Wheie o contract recites the payment
of $2 as Ita cung derution, it 14 valid, al
though the sun were not actuilly paid,
ae ft crontes an obUgidon which cap
be enforced by the other party (44 B.
2 Rep, 65.
When a debtor offers a creditor «
certa'n sun in eatisfuction of all de
minds ind the creditor gives a writ
Po scceptume of the same, there are
accord and sgusfuctlon, theuh the
Cralior states fn acecoting it that be
cannet a cept tt in full settement, 83
So Rep 102)
— 4 LEN eg yrs AES ee ay ET tans etiam
7 r ea eee <r Bed f Pr ebety aS Anan: a Sree
Sb eae” sNear Kien a Bid Fer os a) - Panere ee ue ppt q ep cata
GY A A i , ‘ind Udy 7 ae y a een
a ~ i ed SS Zee
gin" ey a ~" i a feo p
a Prd) 5 - ete (73S) Sere 6S i cet
Bibcoery herent Ere ee NS ae
THE ROYAL BOX.
There is only one wonsa admiral to
the world The queen of Greece ts an
admiral in the Russian navy,
The Priacesa Victoria of Wales is
sext to rooke af One Welsh rebbite as
¢an he produced, and the royal family
enjoys then.
Kag Wdwanl sever partakes of but
fer oe we wich inlh. fle prefers it is
the Iesvias faabion, with a plece of
lemon lostemd of irik +
The German eiujeror haa given on
ere tant docrving school children!
shall fa futire be sewardad by a copy
of hte wejeaty’s photograph
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