The Professional World
Friday, June 27, 1902
Columbia, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
THE PROFESSIONAL WORLD.
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THE STATE CONVENTION.
The Republican State Convention day morning and was in session two- tion of its kind ever held in Missouri the leaders was manifested, the sess- tion and all interested are well pleased w contesting delegations in this conventions held in recent years, owing to great leaders were trying to contri- gates that would support one facti- known as the Kerens and the anti- difficult to tell who of these leaders work of the convention was done in state ticket was nominated and a ne- A state ticket was nominated. superintendent of public schools an members of the state committee re the state were announced. 'Eight t were elected by the convention, as The convention adopted a strong public issue, strongly indorsing the dent Roosevelt and Mr. Ethan Aller- prior, as an honored son of the state The contests which had been ex- cussed, did not materialize. The rials and on permanent organiz- adopted without discussion or distance through the healthy rivalry
Republican State Convention met in Jefferson City and was in session two days. It was the last and ever held in Missouri, and while much was manifested, the session was conceded to be rejected are well pleased with the results. Their delegations in this convention than in any other recent years, owing to the fact that the friend were trying to control the convention by would support one faction or the other. The Kerens and the anti-Kerens or Akin crowd all who of these leaders had the strongest for convention was done in a very harmonious way was nominated and a new state committee was ticket was nominated. It included names for point of public schools and two railroad committees the state committee representing the sixteen们 announced. 'Eight members at large of by the convention, as were two colored men convention adopted a strong set of resolutions or strongly indorsing the national administration and Mr. Ethan Allen Hitchcock, secretary honored son of the state. Testests which had been expected, and have been not materialize. The reports of the committee in permanent organization and order of without discussion or dissent. Contests came through the healthy rivalry of opposing candidates
The Republican State Convention met in Jefferson City last Tuesday morning and was in session two days. It was the largest convention of its kind ever held in Missouri, and while much strife between the leaders was manifested, the session was conceded to be harmonious and all interested are well pleased with the results. There were more contesting delegations in this convention than in any of the conventions held in recent years, owing to the fact that the friends of the two great leaders were trying to control the convention by electing delegates that would support one faction or the other. The factions are known as the Kerens and the anti-Kerens or Akin crowds, and it was difficult to tell who of these leaders had the strongest following. The work of the convention was done in a very harmonious way. A strong state ticket was nominated and a new state committee was elected.
A state ticket was nominated. It included names for the office of superintendent of public schools and two railroad commissioners. The members of the state committee representing the sixteen districts of the state were announced. Eight members at large of the committee were elected by the convention, as were two colored members at large.
The convention adopted a strong set of resolutions covering every public issue, strongly indorsing the national administration and President Roosevelt and Mr. Ethan Allen Hitchcock, secretary of the interior, as an honored son of the state.
The contests which had been expected, and have been so much discussed, did not materialize. The reports of the committees on credentials and on permanent organization and order of business were adopted without discussion or dissent. Contests came in every instance through the healthy rivalry of opposing candidates.
PLACES FOR TWO NEGROES.
The convention then approach gramme, the election of eight mem-
When the chairman announced that Boonville, moved that the rules be-
two members-at-large to represent
upon the committee, in addition to
The motion prevailed, after some
St. Charles, on behalf of the young
presented the names of Prof. Char-
R. C. Martin, of Kansas City. He
language for recognition of the young
who were ever ready to go out to
waiting to locate the money for c
without asking any compensation
The 4th district had a candidate
of St. Louis, president of the league
Prof. Willhams' nomination w
on the east side of the hall, and a
nation for the 1st district. The ch
upon two members at once in the
and Campbell were elected on 1st
BANKRU
vention then approached the last business of the election of eight members-at-large on the stewardship chairman announced that this was in order. We moved that the rules be suspended and the co-att-at-large to represent the colored Republican committee, in addition to the eight other members prevailed, after some debate, and Rev. W. On behalf of the young negro Republicans the names of Prof. Charles J. Williams, of Kansas City. He made a strong plea in recognition of the young, ambitious and fairer ready to go out to do anything for the district the money for compensation before being any compensation further than the success a district had a candidate in the person of C. C., president of the league of negro Republicans, Williams' nomination was seconded by a co- outside of the hall, and a colored delegate second the 1st district. The chairman ruled that the members at once in the ballot. This was do- all were elected on 1st ballot.
ANKRUPT SA
The convention then approached the last business on the programme, the election of eight members-at large on the state committee. When the chairman announced that this was in order, W. Martin, of Boonville, moved that the rules be suspended and the convention name two members-at-large to represent the colored Republicans of the state upon the committee, in addition to the eight other members-at-large. The motion prevailed, after some debate, and Rev. W. H. Peck, of St. Charles, on behalf of the young negro Republicans of the state, presented the names of Prof. Charles J. Williams, of Boonville, and R. C. Martin, of Kansas City. He made a strong plea in eloquent language for recognition of the young, ambitious and faithful workers who were ever ready to go out to do anything for the party without waiting to locate the money for compensation before they go, and without asking any compensation further than the success of the party. The 4th district had a candidate in the person of Capt. Campbell, of St. Louis, president of the league of negro Republican clubs. Prof. Williams' nomination was seconded by a country delegate on the east side of the hall, and a colored delegate seconded the nomination for the 1st district. The chairman ruled that the delegates vote upon two members at once in the ballot. This was done. Williams and Campbell were elected on 1st ballot.
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COLUMBIA, MISSOURI, FRIDAY, JUNE 27 1902.
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Contracting Church Debts.
Very few Negro churches are out of debt. There is a constant clamor for the rally. Special days in each month are set aside for the purpose of raising money to meet the bonded indebtedness. Concerts, entertainments, and festivals are given in the church and out, and ingenious devices are evolved for the purpose of raising money to meet these never decreasing obligations. No person will object to the payment of honest debts contracted. None will object to the building of churches. But common sense would dictate that it is not an act of wisdom on the part of a congregation to indebt itself beyond its means to pay, any more than it is for an individual. Our church people should take a common sense view of these matters, and not mortgage the children "even unto the fourth generation." We do not believe it is required by God of his followers to live in one hundred dollar homes and build ten thousand dollar churches. Two years ago, two churches were built in a western city by Negroes at a cost of one hundred thousand dollars. They are beautiful structures, and a credit to the city in which they are built, but how do they compare with homes of the majority of those who come to worship. In that city the average income of the large Negro population will not exceed thirty dollars per month throughout the year, and the majority live in rented property. How much more Christianity would have been displayed had the pastors urged the members of their congregation to buy homes; save their money; open business enterprises for the employment of their boys and girls, and satisfied their religious ambitions by worshiping God in a less pretentious edifice. It is very clear that the effectiveness of Negro churchmen as elements in the future uplift of the race will depend largely upon a changing of the direction of the energy of the church from a great church building force to a great character building force.—Topeka Plain-Dealer.
Quincy Boat Excursion, Sunday, June 29,
via the M. K. & T. Ry., and the fine excursion steamer "J. S." capacity 2,000.
Plenty of room. The Fayette Brass Band will furnish the music. $2.25 round trip.
Special train leaves Columbia at 5:15 a. m.
For particulars, see Katy's agent.
Dr. Perry No 2.
A telegram received here Monday morning from Springfield announced the arrival of a junior Dr. Perry. Mother and son are both doing well. Dr. J. E. Perry, who is now in Springfield will return Monday and as a result of the recent arrival at Springfield will do all office work free of charge for the next ten days.
Color Line Not drawn.
Denver, Colo., June 24.—Acting Chairman W. N. Hartshorn, of the executive committee of the national Sunday school congress, announced to-day that no color line would be drawn, all negro delegates being given the same recognition as whites. The congress would open Wednesday morning. President Hoke Smith, of the congress, notified the chairman of the general convention that he would not be able to attend the sessions here on account of illness.
Having Serious Trouble.
A very popular young lady of this city who is practicing house-keeping (while she waits) has met with a serious hindrance to her success as a house-keeper. In a certain corner in the house a very ambitious little mouse was discovered several days ago and she promptly gave the alarm and called for help to rid herself of the monster's presence and the little fellow would have been murdered in cold blood had he not found his way into a hole; the young lady at once ordered a good supply of rough on rats and cheese and placed it in the animal's pass-way, and retired hoping that this menu would save her from having to commit justifiable homicide, but to her surprise she found that this dangerous beast had devoured the prepared meal and when seen next day was much more vicious looking than ever. The young lady has been threatened with nervous prostration from the dangerous excitement and the matter will be turned over to the city authorities in a few days.
Mr. Thomas Ridgeway attended the Republican convention at Jefferson City.
Mr. Jerry Morrison is still improving.
Mr. A. M. Schweish and Rev. Fisher attend the Republican convention this week.
A moonlight picnic and social was given at the second Baptist Church last Tuesday evening.
The editor of the Professional World was a spectator at the state convention this week.
Subscribe to the Professional World only $1.00 per year.
Mr. Willard Turner left last week for Detroit, Michigan.
$2.25 Excursion to Quincy, Sunday, June 29th, via the M. K. & T. Ry., and the Excursion Steamer "J. S." The Fayette band will furnish the music.
Misses Mary Richardson and Bessie Diggs, Mr. James Williams and Rev. A. A. Adams, are attendethe Baptist S. S. convention at St. Charles, Mo.
Mrs. Kate grandison will leave in a few days for a visit in Detroit, Michigan.
The M. E. Sunday school and Epworth League conventions are in session at Sturgeon, Mo. A number of delegates from the M. E. Church in this city are attending.
Master Georgia Caldwell who has been attending school at Fisk University completed the preparatory course last week and is now spending the summer in Chicago where the President of the university has secured him a good position. Mrs. Susan Vaughn of Chicago is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Morrison.
[Name]
To Pay the Penalty.
Sheriff Bradford last Monday sent three of his boarders over the road—William Price, who was found guilty of forgery at last term of circuit court, went to the penitentiary for five years. John Smart, for the killing of a negro, went down for two years. Elijah Asbury went to the reform school at Boonville for two years.
Store for Negroes.
Dr. J. E. Perry, Bart Akers, and W. W. Lampkin are the promoters of a new grocery store to be opened on West Broadway for the colored people of Columbia. It is a stock company, such as has been advocated for some time by the Professional World, the organ of the colored people published by R. L. Logan. If the enterprise pays, as it doubtless will, other lines of business may be taken up in the same way. The colored people are numerous and their trade amounts to considerable in course of a year. This new firm which is to be known as the Columbia Grocery Co., will open for business about the first of July.-Statesman.
Arch Buckner Found Dead.
On receipt of the news that the body of Arch Buckner, colored, had been found in a pasture near Rock Bridge, 6 miles south of Columbia, Coroner Moss P. Parker, went down to that neighborhood Sunday afternoon to make an investigation and hold an inquest. The story of the killing as developed at the inquest was about as follows: Last Friday afternoon Dave Grant, Arch Buckner and four or five other negroes started from Rock Bridge and had been drinking. They stopped at the home of Bill Moore, who fires the distillery at that place, and stayed until late at night. Dave Grant left about 11 o'clock, and soon Arch Buckner went out to find him. Parties in the neighborhood heard pistol shots, and when he returned Moore's wife asked him if he had killed Buckner. He did not know. Then he left, and finally the carousel broke up. Moore's children found the body of Buckner next day, but it was not reported to the coroner till Sunday. The clothes on the upper part of the body were burned off, supposed to have been set on fire by the pistol shot. The body was literally cooked. The jury found that Buckner had been killed by Dave Grant, but Grant had left and has not been found.
Record Price for Fat Cattle.
The highest price ever paid for fat cattle on the Kansas City market was received Tuesday morning by Champ Workman of Grain Valley, Mo. He received $8.25 per hundred-weight for thirty-eight fancy fat 2-year-old Shorthorns averaging 1,466 pounds. They were fed by D. Lee Shawhan of Lone Jack, Mo. Sixteen months ago the cattle were bought as calves on the Kansas City market. At that time they averaged 572 pounds and cost $5.15.
Columbia's P. O. Building.
A letter from Congressman Rucker informs the Moberly Democrat that owing to the error of an enrolling clerk the appropriations for Moberly and Columbia for purchase of site only was incorporated into the section for site and erection, instead of a section providing for purchase of site only. As soon as it was discovered he had a resolution introduced in the house to correct the mistake. This resolution has passed the house and will pass the senate in a very few days. As soon as this is done the advertisements for site will be published.
VOL. I. NO. 34.
GUARDIANSHIP.CONTESTED.
Important Case from Hallsville Heard by Judge Switzler Wednesday.
In the matter of the persons of Georgia L. Johnson and Harrell H. Johnson, minors. These minors were children of Aubrey Johnson and Mary Johnson, both of whom are now deceased. Mrs. Rachle Johnson was appointed guardian of the persons of the three minors by the probate court on April 11 last. Her husband, Luther Johnson, was a brother of the deceased father of sald minors. A few days ago Green Johnson and Sarah Johnson, his wife, grandparents of sald minors, filed application in probate court asking that Mrs. Rachle Johnson be removed as guardian and themselves appointed, for a number of causes, in substance towit: Because the grandparents were nearer in relationship and feel nearer towards them; could give them better home and better provide for them; because Mrs. Johnson is ill-tempered and unkind to them and treats them badly and would not permit them to visit their grandparents, and lives too far from the school house where the eldest children attend school.
The matter came up in the probate court for hearing last Wednesday, and the number of witnesses and interested parties was so large that Judge Switzler held the trial in the circuit court room. J. L. Stephens represented the petitioners, Green and Sarah Johnson; N. T. Gentry represented the defendant guardian, Mrs. Rachie Johnson. The trial consumed the entire day. A great number of lady witnesses were present from the vicinity where the parties live, which is near Hallsville. The case was vigorously contested by both sides. The case was extensively and ably argued by counsel on either side. The court decided that the application be overruled and the guardianship left undisturbed. It, however, made an order to the effect that the guardian was to permit the children to visit their grandparents one day out of each month, on the application of the grandparents.
The two children are about 4 and 6 years of age, are the great grandchildren of Geo. W. Harrell, Sr., and also of D. B. Cunningham, of Columbia.
Suit for Toll.
The Columbia and Cedar Creek Turnpike Co., last Saturday filed suit in Judge Boggs' court against Irvin C. Vivion for $26.21 which they allege the defendant owes them for toll. Mr. Vivion's defense will be that the company has not fulfilled its contract as agreed in its charter and does not keep its road in good repair. The case has been set for July 3. N. T. Gentry has been engaged as counsel for the road company. C. B. Sebastian is attorney for Mr. Vivion. The case is one of special interest.
New Republican Committee.
Missouri republicans who will look after the interests of Akins's organizations by congressional districts: Second—R. R. Smith, Brookfield; Grant McCullogh, Milan. Third—W. J. Wrightman, Bethany; W. J. Gromer, Stanberry. Fourth—Ralph O. Stauber, St. Joseph; Samuel P. O'Fallon, Oregon.
Sixth—Daniel T. Boisseau, Warreensburg; Bernard Tich, Harrisonville. Seventh—C. N. Van Hosen, Springfield; S. P. Huston, Malta Bend.
Eighth—J. F. Gmelich, Boonville; R. S. Harvey, Eidon. Ninth—J. C. Parish, Vandalia; Rolla S. Paul, Montgomery.
Tenth—Max Starkloff, St. Louis;
Theodore Kalbfeld, St. Louis.
Eleventh—A. F. Sturtevand, Chas.
F. Busche.
Twelfth—Hiram Lloyd, Chris
Schaecker.
Thirteenth—M. E. Rhodes, Potosi;
Peter Geising, Farmington.
Fourteenth—M. E. Leming, Cape
Girardeau; J. A. Toberton, Toberton.
Fifteenth—Thomas M. Allen, Cass-
ville; Robert Stickney, Carthage.
Sixteenth—J. W. Tuson, Marsh-
field; Ed Long, Rolla.
From Preacher to Lawyer.
Louisiana, Mo., June 24--Elder F. A. Mayhall, pastor of the Christian church here, has announced that he will leave the ministry to take up the study of law. He has presented his resignation, to take effect September 1, when he will enter the law department of Missouri University.
RUFUS L. LOGAN, B. S. D., Editor.
COLUMBIA. : : : MISSOURI
THE NEWS CONDENSED.
THE NEWS CONDENSED.
George Heweson, formerly a prominent constructing architect and builder of St. Louis, was adjudged insane and removed to the asylum at Elgin, Ill. Mr. Heweson is 67 years old and some years ago constructed several office building at St. Louis.
Last week's average cost of hogs at Chicago was $7.33, being the highest week's average in nine weeks, against $7.21 the previous week, $7.09 the week ending May, 31, $6.10 March 1, $6.08 a year ago last week, $5.10 two years ago, and $3.80 three years ago.
The American board of foreign missions has received word of the death of Rev. Willis C. Dewey, D. D., in New York. Dr. Dewey has been a member of the Eastern Turkey mission of the board since 1877, with his location at Mardin, in northern Mesopotamia. He was born in Canton, Ill., and was graduated from Beloit college in 1873 and from Chicago Theological seminary in 1877.
According to advises received by the steamer Aorangi, at Victoria, B. C., a Malayan sailor recently arrived at Port Darwin and reported that he was the only survivor of a crew of ten men of a Malay trading schooner which had been wrecked off Cape Wilberforce, North Australia. The crew was attacked by blacks and all but one murdered. The survivor suffered severe privation before being rescued.
A special bulletin issued by the weather bureau at noon Saturday says Storms of the type that appear this morning over the east gulf usually cause copious general rains in the Atlantic states. Semi-drought conditions will in all probability be broken in the south Atlantic states and in the middle Atlantic Sunday and Sunday night and east to southeast winds increasing in force and lower temperatures.
W. W. Atchison, a saloonkeeper, shot and killed James O'Meara and wounded William Thayer, after a quarrel in Atchison's saioon, at San Pedro, N. M. Atchison had been drinking and was flourishing a revolver when O'Meara took it away from him. Atchison went home and secured a rifle and began to shoot, with the above result. O'Meara was a bookkeeper for the Santa Fe Gold and Copper Mining company, and his home was in Des Moines.
The people of the Davis chapel section of Marshal county, Ky., were thrown into great excitement by a fusillade of bullets being fired into a Mormon meeting by some of the opposition in the neighborhood. Hardy Lamb was shot in the leg. The mormon converts, fifteen or sixteen in number, returned the fire and more bloodshed is feared. Less than a year ago the Mormon church there was burned and two elders were driven away.
The degree of doctor of jurisprudence (juris utriusque doctor,) has been conferred upon former President Cleveland at the commencement exercises of the Augustianan college of St. Thomas at Villa Nova, a suburb of Philadelphia. Mr. Cleveland will bear the distinction of being the first person in the United States to receive this degree. Among others who will receive honorary degrees is Baron von Hengerva, Austrian ambassador to the United States.
Lemuel Hickman, restauranteur, of Springfield, IL, found his wife in a comprimising position with another man Saturday. About 9:30 at night Hickman induced his wife to take a ride on the street car to Washington Park. While strolling in the park Hickman drew a revolver and shot his wife three times, in the right lung, right shoulder and right side of the head, the last named wound fracturing her skull. She died soon after. He then shot himself in the stomach.
Mrs. George W. Parker, wife of a farmer near Ann Arbor, Mich., committed suicide Saturday afternoon. Her husband had gone to a neighboring village and while her grandmother and her 7-year-old daughter were asleep Mrs. Parker went into a chicken coop poured a quart of kerosene over herself, and then ignited it. The body was not discovered until evening. Mrs. Parker read an account of the suicide of a woman in a similar manner a few days ago and remarked how terrible a death it was.
The design for the Jefferson Davis memorial arch to be erected in Richmond, Va., which was submitted by Louis Albert Gudebrod and accepted by a committee representing the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Federation of Southern Memorial Societies, has been announced. The design propose san arch. Corinthian in style, to be constructed of Southern granite, having a height of 65 feet, a width of 70 feet and a breadth of 24 feet. The archway is to be 25 feet wide and 40 feet high in the clear.
Henry C. White, the last colored man to sit in congress, a member from North Carolina in both the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth congresses, is reported to be at the head of a syndicate which has purchased from Senator Robert E. Hand 975½ acres of land near Burleigh, N. J., and Cape May. It is intended to establish a colony of negroes from North Carolina. The name of the town is to be Whiteboro. Already several avenues have been laid out. Each colonist is to buy a house on the installment plan, and is to have ten years to pay for it. It is to be an agricultural colony, on the same plan as the Jewish colony at Woodbine, founded by the Baron de Hirsch fund trustees.
Harry W. Bragg, a private in a company of the Twentieth United States infantry, Monday night shot and killed Mrs. Lizzie Tibbits and then shot and killed himself. The tragedy was enacted on the grounds at the Columbus barracks. Jealousy was the motive. Mrs. Tibbits was employed as cook for Major Augur of the Twentieth infantry. Her husband was an enlisted man, but was dishonorably discharged several weeks ago. Bragg became infatuated with the woman. Just preceding the tragedy, Bragg quarreled with her because she had gone out with another man.
Decides to Carry on as Far as Possible Business Requiring King's Signature.
London, June 24.—A cabinet council, which lasted an hour, was held at 7 o'clock this evening. It is understood it was arranged to carry on as far as possible the public business requiring the king's approval and signature without reference to his majesty in order to insure absolute mental and physical rest and quietude throughout what the ministers hope will be a period of convalescence.
Feeling in France.
Paris, June 25.—Paris papers this morning give great prominence to the accounts of the illness of King Edward. They are accompanied by expressions of deepest sympathy with Great Britain.
President Cables.
Washington, D. C., June 25.—The president just before leaving the white house for the railroad station sent the following to King Edward:
"I ask your majesty to accept my sincere assurances of sympathy and wishes for a speedy convalescence.
"THEODORE ROOSEVELT."
CONFESSES WHEN CAUGHT.
Minneapolis Detective Makes Some Startling Disclosures Implicating Many High Officials.
Minneapolis, Minn., June 25—C. C. Norbeck, who jumped a $5,000 bond in this city recently, was returned this morning from Carver, twenty-two miles southeast of here, and will again undergo trial on a charge of having accepted a bribe while a detective on the city police force.
Norbeck made a startling confession to the state's attorney of Hennepin county shortly after he was apprehended. He declared that he was guilty of all charges filed against him and implicated all other Minneapolis officials now under indictment.
When Norbeck entered a drug store in Carver, while intoxicated, yesterday afternoon, his actions excited the suspicions of Clerk C. C. Brunis, who telephoned the town marshal. Norbeck was taken by the two men and later lodged in the Chaska county jail.
Erwin Gardiner, also convicted on a bribery charge just before Norbeck escaped, was taken to the state Penitentiary at Stillwater last night.
STEAMER IN DIRE DISTRESS.
Sighted Outside of Baker's Island Firing Rockets and Whistling— A Steam Launch Sent Out.
New York, June 25.—A large steamer was sighted early today outside Baker's island firing rockets and whistling, evidently in distress, says a Beverly, Mass., dispatch to the Herald. A steam launch from Baker's island put into Marblehead with the information which was telephoned to Beverly.
It was impossible, owing to the extreme darkness, to learn the name of the vessel or to what line she belonged. A volunteer life saving crew at once left Marblehead. The tug Henry Preston also started from Beverly, manned by a volunteer crew. It was thought at that time that the steamer was either one of the Boston & Bangor line or the Portland line running from Boston, and that she became disabled and was making for the nearest port. The sea was very high, so that the possibility of a wreck was slight.
HEARS FROM HER HUSBAND.
Strange Disappearance of Dr. George H. Craft of Newark, N. J., Is Cleared Away.
New York, June 25.—Word has just been received of the whereabouts of Dr. Geo. H. Craft of Newark, N. J., who strangely disappeared last April, says a Geneva, N. Y., special to the Times. His wife received a letter from San Francisco, where the doctor says he is in a hospital recovering from typhoid fever. The physician left his home in Newark April 19 to find his father, who had wandered away from home. The elder Craft was found and later the son disappeared. He was heard from last at Sandusky, O. The police of the western cities were asked to search for him, but no trace was found. The letter says the writer cannot explain how he reached San Francisco.
A VANDERBILT IS INJURED.
Mrs. W. Seward Webb, Daughter of Late William H., Thrown from Her Horse.
New York, June 25—Mrs. W. Seward Webb, daughter of the late William H. Vanderbilt, has been severely injured by a fall from the horse, says a Burlington, Vt., dispatch to the World. The animal shied while Mrs. Webb was riding to Shelburn farm with a party of friends. The rider was thrown to the ground and was unconscious several hours. After an examination doctors from Burlington announced that the injuries were not serious, althoughkh Mrs. Webb would be confined to the house for some time and will suffer severely.
BRITISH BOAT WAS BEATEN.
Leander and Vol Au Vent Both Beat the English Schooner Yacht Cicely.
Island of Heligoland, June 25.—The Leander, owned by Rupert Guinness, arrived here at 8:50 p. m. yesterday, so that both of the yawls, the Vol Au Vent, owned by John Dempsey, and the Leander, which started from Dover, Eng., at noon June 21 in the race to this island for the German emperor's cup, beat the new English schooner yacht Cicely, owned by Cicil Quentin, designed to challenge Emperor William's American built schooner yacht Meteor. The Cicely was the first yacht in the race to reach Heligoland, but she was beaten on time allowance. She alloyed the Val Au Vent five and one-half hours and the Leander three and one-half hours.
EAR OPPOSED TO PEACE
MINDANAO MORO CHIEFS HATE AMERICANS.
They Prefer to Court Death Rather Than See the Americans Reign Supreme in the Island—Five Soldiers of Twenty-seventh Infantry Are Attacked and Two of Them Wounded — Chaffee Sends Death List.
Manila, June 25.—The Moros of Mindanao report that an extraordinary conference has been held at Bacolod to consider the question of recognizing American authority.
The suitan urged his followers to accept the friendship of the Americans. A majority of the dattos refused, and two of them declared they were willing to die rather than co-operate with the American invaders.
Three towns on the western shore continue hostile to the Americans. The officers and troops, however, hope to win them over in a short time.
Ten Moros attacked five men of the Twenty-Seventh infantry, who were guarding the transport service. They boiled two of them seriously. The Moros got away without suffering any casualties, capturing one rifle. This occurred a half mile from the American camp. The Badinglam Moros say the attackers were Moros from Bonolod, who went on the warpath in the morning for the avowed purpose of killing negligent Americans.
Chaffee Sends Death List.
Washington, D. C., June 25.—In reply to a cablegram of the 15th instant to General Chaffee, to cable the names of the men of troop M. Fifth cavalry, who were captured May 30, near Morong, and murdered June 1, the war department is advised that Sergeant Lewis Steward, Corporal William J. Black, Corporal Edmond J. Finnegan, Trumpeter Charles W. Davis and Private Patrick Carr were murdered.
CRISIS IN CUBAN AFFAIRS.
Industrial Conditions of the Young Republic Are Bad and Growing Worse Rapidly.
New York, June 25.—Charles M. Pepper returned today from a 4-month stay in Cuba. He represents the industrial conditions there as bad and growing worse and there is a distressing crisis in commercial affairs at Havana. President Palma is reducing the salaries abolishing offices to meet the economic situation and keep expenses within the income. The real trouble is the depression in the sugar industry, the big plantations doing nothing towards next year's crop. The Cubans are patient and will do everything possible to sustain Palma.
WILL BE BROUGHT TO IOWA
Yates Honors the Requisition of Gov Cummins and J. W. Laswell Will Come Here for Trial.
Springfield, Ill., June 25.—Governor Yates today honored the requisition of Governor Cummins of Iowa for the extradition of J. W. Laswell, wanted in Fort Madison, Ia., charged with borrowing $2,000 from the Lee County Savings bank with intent to defraud the bank. He is under arrest in Carthage, Ill.
PEORIA POLICE CHIEF DEAD.
Chas. E. Flynn Served as Chief of the Peoria Police for Several Years.
Peoria, June 25.—Charles E. Flynn for several years chief of police of Peoria and president of the Illinois Police Chiefs association, is dead. He was a resident of this city for 20 years.
LIGHTNING STRIKES A CHURCH
Structure at Pinerio, Spain is Struck While Funeral Services Are Being Held in It.
Madrid, June 25.—While a funeral was being held in a church at Pinerio today the building was struck by lightning. Twenty-five persons were killed and 25 injured.
IS SENT TO THE MAD HOUSE
Jane Toppan, Insane Nurse, Makes the Horrible Confession of Having Killed 31 People.
Boston, June 25.—Jane Toppan, who was sentenced to be sent to the insane asylum by the jury, at Barnstable yesterday, where she was tried for the murder of Mary D. Gibbs, has made a confession to her counsel, Judge Bixby, that she killed 31 persons, patients whom she had murdered, and was found not guilty Monday afternoon of charge of poisoning Mrs. Mary E. Gibbs, for whom she acted as nurse. She was freed of the charge because of her insanity and by order of the court she was committed to the Taunton insane asylum for the rest of her life. The defense called no witnesses except the alienists, who declared the defendant insane.
WELLINGTON IS BACK AGAIN.
The Maryland Senator Receives a Welcome on His Return to the Republican Party.
Baltimore, Md., June 25.—Senator Wellington's friends say he is back in the Republican party again and that Senators Quay and Hanna have extended him the hand of political fellowship. It is also predicted that in view of growing opposition to Senator McComas' leadership among the Maryland Republicans Wellington will take a hand in the fight to prevent McComas' re-election as United States senator. Hanna, it is charged, has been cultivating Wellington, who voted for his ship subsidy bill and for the Panama canal measure. It is said to be due to Hanna that Wellington has not been snubbed more in the senate.
TO HUNT DOWN THE REDS.
Government Secret Service Men Are Searching for Anarchists at Paterson, N. J.
Paterson, N. J., June 24.—The United States government is taking a hand in the anarchist troubles in Paterson.
Two secret service detectives arrived here this morning to ferret the ring-leaders of the anarchists. They are the men who worked on the Bresci case. Immediately upon arriving in the town they began work in the Italian quarter, and it is expected they will make several arrests before the week is over. These detectives are working independently of the local authorities. All over the city through the mill districts in the suburbs of the town the mayor's proclamation forbidding the use of pistols, guns or fireworks was posted last night on buildings and telegraph poles. This morning when the authorities awoke hundreds of the posters were almost completely hidden by the unsigned placards calling for the joining of forces for a general strike. When the factory whistles blew this morning the few hundred men who decided to return to work pending the result of the conference between the labor leaders and the manufacturers filed into the mills silently.
There were no hostile demonstrations against them and they were permitted to resume work.
Jersey City Mass Meeting
Union Hill, N. J., June 23—All the silk mills opened here this morning, and up to 11 o'clock the striking dyers' helpers had made no demonstration. A mass meeting is being held near Jersey City today and the police fear that an outbreak against the Union Hill mills may result.
DID THE PIRATES GET IT?
One of the Curious Letters Received at the World's Fair Head-
St. Louis, June 24.—In a letter received from Sanibel, Florida, at world's fair headquarters, the author expresses a desire to open up a correspondence with the exposition company concerning the $15,000,000 paid by the United States for the Louisiana concessions in 1803. "Was not some of this money lost—stolen by pirates?" he asks, and he then continues: "For many years people have been searching for $11,500,000 of gold bullion buried here in the vicinity of Charlotte harbor by old Gasparilla and Laffite, noted pirates. The survivors of this huge steal say it was the Louisiana purchase money. Laffite only acted as a spy; Gasparilla did the stealing. I have searched for it seven years and find considerable evidence concerning it, though it is very difficult to exactly locate. If it can be found, it will be the making of the Louisiana Purchase exposition. Please let me know if there was a portion of the money lost, for I am very much interested."
FUNERAL OF SAXONY'S KING.
Dresden, Saxony, June 24. The funeral of the late King Albert took place this evening, and was impressive. The coffin was covered with a red satin pall and around it a vigil had been kept by Saxon officers and dignitaries of the Saxon court since it was conveyed to the church last Saturday.
At the services this evening half of the church was occupied by the diplomatic corps of the extraordinary missions who had come to Dresden to attend the funeral, which included Andrew D. White and Marquis De Noailles, respectively, United States and French ambassadors, and deputations of foreign officers.
The royal mourners included King George and the Princess of Saxony, Emperor William, Emperor Francis Joseph, the grand duke of Baden and others. The widowed Queen Caroline and Empress of Germany, together with the Saxon princesses, occupied two pews in the church.
Dr. Brendlock, court chaplain, delivered the funeral oration. At the conclusion of the services the royal coffin was lowered into a vault beneath the church, and as this was done volleys of cannon and musketry were fired outside the building. Emperor William and Emperor Francis Joseph left Dresden late tonight.
HON. DAVID T. LITTLER DEAD.
One of the Illinois Republican Leaders and Brother-in-law of the Late Gov. Oglesby.
Springfield, Ill., June 24.—David T. Littler, former state senator and well known Republican leader, died today of Bright's disease. He had been alling for more than a year, so his death was not unexpected. He was born in Clifton, O., in 1836 and came to Illinois in 1860. He was admitted to the bar and at once began a career of political activity. For over 20 years he was a strong factor in Illinois politics.
YOUNG BOY HANGS HIMSELF.
He Feared a Father's Chastisement
Because a Team Got Away
from Him.
Creston, Ia., June 24.—Walter Davis,
a 12-year-old living near Lenox, committed suicide by hanging himself
with a halter strap. A team of horses ran away with the boy yesterday, and he is supposed to have committed the act in fear of chastisement.
TRAMP HEIR TO A FORTUNE.
Fred Warner, Umbrella Mender, Left a Large Fortune by a Michigan Relative.
South Befind., Ind. June 24.—Fred Warner, her to $100,000, hag been beaten by the South Bend Tribune, or years he has been tramping the country as an umbrella mender. He has gone to Kalamazoo, Mich., to claim a fortune which is held for him by Mary Park.
TO UTILIZE ARID LANDS
PACKERS TO RAISE CATTLE IN FLORIDA.
Gigantic Scheme That Will Probably Revolutionize the Cattle Raising Industry—Thousands of Acres to be Cultivated With Cassava Root—Experiment Will Show Value of the New Fattening Product.
Chicago, June 23.—Plans that were first taken into consideration about a year ago have been developing in the last few months to the point where Swift & Co. and others of the great packing establishments in Chicago have begun experiments on what may prove a revolution of the cattle industry of the country. The project involves the settlement of several hundred thousand acres of what is at present nearly valueless land in northern and northwestern Florida and southern Alabama, the cultivation on a large scale of the cassava root, and its use in feeding cattle and hogs. If the plan develops as it is now in the minds of the leading packers, the Southern states will become the center of the cattle-raising industry.
The cassava root was originally a product of South America. Its value as a food product was long ago discovered by the natives, who made from it tapioca. However, it was only recently that the adaptability of the plant to Florida soil was discovered and the great value of it as food for cattle and hogs was demonstrated. Recently the agricultural colleges in the South took for cattle and hogs was demonstrated. Recently the agricultural colleges in the South took up the study of the root and declared it to possess wonderful properties as a food for animals and men.
When the possibilities of the cassava became known to some of the prominent men of the South it was proposed to develop what are at present unoccupied and practically waste tracts of land. Consequently a committee was formed, which, in conjunction with officials of the Louisville & Nashville road, who are interested in booming the lands along their right of way, entered into negotiations with the Chicago packers as the center of the cattle business of the country. Preliminary correspondence was carried out, reports and investigations made. A few weeks ago the committee had an audience with the packers in Chicago, and it is believed that the big concerns, particularly Swift & Co., were so impressed with the representations made that it was determined to begin a test of the plans.
It was reported to the packers that fully 1,000,000 acres of iand, were available for the project, much of it belonging to the government and open for settlement free, under the home-steed law. The experiments that were under taken are said to have shown that an acre of this land would produce twenty tons of cassava to a crop, which in turn would yield about 8,000 pounds of starchy material. Corn produces about 4,000 pounds of starch to the acre, or just one-half the cassava crop, and it is said to cost much more to grow than cassava. Furthermore, the corn crops frequently fall from crimatic conditions, while the cassava crop is said to be practically certain, yet it is not. Experiments made with cattle fed on cassava are said to have shown a great advantage in it over corn or grass feed. Live beef costs only 1.1 cents a pound to fatten by cassava, against several cents a pound by present methods.
H. E. Stockbridge, a prominent agriculturist of the South, made the statement: "Cassava is distinctly a starch-forming fat and heat-forming foods for all classes of animals, human beings included. Its chief value lies in the cheapness with which fat-forming material can be produced." It appears, from the representations made by the Southerners, that experiments are also going on for the manufacture of starch and starch products from cassava instead of corn and potatoes, at present. It was pointed out by them that about twice as much starch to the acre could be grown through cassava than corn, and three times as much as by potatoes. It is hoped by them that the demonstration will be made so clearly as to carry with it a revolution of the starch-making industry.
It is stated that arrangements are now being made for the accommodation of a considerable number of cattle to be shipped from the stock yards here to northern Florida, to be fed on cassava root. The results of the fattening process will be compared with similar work in the West, regarding which the conditions and cost are already definitely known. The result obtained will determine the future of the cassava experiment.
THE VALLEY IS ALL AFLAME.
For a Distance of Seven Miles the Green River Valley, Washington, is One Mass of Fire.
Hot Springs, Wash., June 23.—For a distance of seven miles the Green river valley is a sea of flames. Since noon yesterday Dr. Kloeber and the employees and guests of the Kloeber Green river hot springs, have been persistently and successfully fighting the fire to save the hotel. Steadily the fire was held back and assistance was asked for from Tacoma, which was promptly sent by Mayor Campbell. Near Maywood, three miles below here, a lumber camp has been burned out. On each sie is a seething furnace so hot that the crew on the relief train was compelled to seek protection inside the caboose while passing. Morgan's camp, one mile down, is partially destroyed, though it is thought the most valuable effects can be saved. At Canton, nine miles below Hot Springs are congregated the few settlers and woodmen of the vicinity. They declare the forest for miles around to be ablaze. At Eagle gorge the same condition exists, and several smaller fires are reported within a radius of 25 miles.
Oskaloosa, June 23.—B. P. Bacon, aged 76, a retired capitalist and banker, and widely known, died today of apoplexy.
He Delivers a Forcible Speech on the Omnibus Territorial Bill—Debate in the House.
Washington, June 24.—A motion was entered formally in the senate today by Senator Quay of Pennsylvania to discharge the committee on territories from further consideration of what is known as the omnibus territorial bill, the measure to admit as states the territories of Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona. Senator Quay spoke briefly but forcibly in support of his motion, maintaining that both political parties in national convention had pledged themselves to the admission to statehood of the territories.
Senator Beveridge of Indiana, chairman of the committee, said the measure had been put over until the next session because it was not believed there would be time now to consider it properly. No action was taken on the motion.
During the greater part of the session unfinished business and the bill ratifying the convention with the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians was under discussion. It was not disposed of.
Civil Government Debate
Washington, June 24.—The debate on the civil government bill warmed up in the house today and henceforth promises to be of much livelier character. The increased interest is due to the injection into the debate of the comparison of cruelties charged to have been practiced in the Philippines with those which occurred during the civil war.
The subject had been lightly touched up once or twice before, but attracted little attention until Grosvenor of Ohio today revived the memory of the extremities to which Grant and Jackson were put during the rebellion. This was followed late in the day, by a speech from Mahon of Pennsylvania in which he paraded the horrors of the Andersonville and Libby prisons. He predicted that in the coming election the American people would stand by the "boys in blue." Grosvenor in his speech also defended the rules of the house against criticism passed upon them and paid a high tribute to Speaker Henderson's impartiality.
DeArmond of Missouri spoke at considerable length in opposition to the administration's Philippine policy. Other speakers today were Olmstead of Pennsylvania, Williams of Illinois, Corliss of Michigan and W. W. Kitchin of North Carolina.
Friends of the Panama canal route are confident a motion to concur can command a majority of both houses. This, however, may become complicated by the propositions to attach conditions to concurrence, one condition under discussion being the time limit for the period of negotiations to secure perfected title.
WANT LAMONT FOR GOVERNOR
The Cleveland-Hill Combination Has Suggested Him for Executive of New York.
New York, June 24.—The announcement that the Cleveland-Hill combination is seeking to make Daniel S. Lamont the Democratic candidate for governor is widely discussed by members of the state committee, who have been sounded by the former president and former senator about Mr. Lamont's availability. A leader with whom Mr. Hill talked the matter over said today: "Mr. Hill last April asked me my judgment as to the availability of Lamont for governor. I told him I believed he would prove the strongest man we could name, because he would hold nearly or quite all the voters who supported Bryan and Stanchfield in 1900 and would rally behind him in addition to the Democratic business men and independents who deserted to McKinley on the money issue."
RECEPTION TO CORNELL CREW
All Ithaca, New York, Turns Out to Welcome Home the Victorious Oarsmen.
Ithaca, N. Y., June 24—The victorious Cornell crews were given a great reception on their return from the regatta tonight. They were escorted by a long procession and cannon boomed, bells rang and whistles sounded.
ROADS CONFISCATING COAL
Are Beating Many of the Miners and Dealers Who Fear a General Strike.
Terre Haute, June 24.—The railroads are apprehensive of a suspension of work of the coal miners. To make sure of their own fuel results in placing a weapon in the hands of mine workers by curtailing the supply at this time. Operators complain in all parts of the Indiana field that the railroads have been confiscating coal for the last two weeks. Word was received at miners' headquarters that practically the same conditions exist among the Illinois mines. Meantime, the miners and dealers, who are also apprehensive of a general suspension of work, are trying to get a big supply ahead, but the railroads are beating them to it.
RESPONSIBLE FOR THE FIRE.
President Miller and General Manager Davis Held Blamable for Sanitarium Fire.
Chicago, June 24.—O. E. Miller, president, and Henry Clark Davis, general manager of St. Lukes' Society, were held responsible tonight by the coroner's jury for the fire at the santarium, which destroyed 11 lives. Four other employees were arrested after the fire but were released.
Baltimore, June 23.—Mrs. William Barrett Ridgegey, wife of the comptroller of the currency, died last night at Johns Hopkin's hospital, after an operation for appendicitis. She was the daughter of Senator S. M. Cullom, who, with Mr. Ridgley, was here when she expired. The remains will be taken to Springfield, Ill., for burial.
TRADING IN SAMOA.
Liewella Pierce Churchill in Lippin-
cott’s: Two youngsters in dirty laval-
‘vas come and sit on the veranda, wait-
ing until the trader finishes his break~
fast. They keep up a constant chat-
ter, as children do the world around;
they explain to one another out of their
ignorance what the white man does
With all the strange gear about his
room. Time is no object to them; not
for any Samoan does time exist. They
could be content thus waiting for hours,
When the trader has finished his corned
beef or his salmon, when he hus chop-
ped the navy plug on the corner of the
table and has broken it fine for his
pipe by grinding it in his left hand
with the ball of his right thumb, when
his pipe is alight, he is willing to traf-
fic with nis small customers. Take
this as a sample of native speech and
native custom:
“What is {t, then, that you two
want,” he asks in the native speech,
“that you sit on my portico, beginning
at sunrise and ending at all day?”
“O, Apa, it 1s thus, and we two will
declare the truth to thy highness.”
“Use not the high-sounding words of
the talk of chiefs; call me not excel-
lency, nor yet highness, for by that |
know you two are come to beg. That
thing do you two tell what you want,
and quickly.”
“0. Apa, smooth out the wrinkle from
‘thy heart, but listen. In the insignifi-
cant hut of the famfly of us two there fs
tobacoo, and we have plucked the dry
leaves of the banana. But there is not
fire. That thing have We come to ask
of thy excellency; afford to us two the
fire-eatcher, just one box, for great is
the poverty of the family of us two.”
“O pig-faced, it is the le, and you
two come to beg, It is true. It fs right
that you two buy fire-scratchers; I dc
not give away the articles of wenith
lest I too become poor while you twe
have all things.”
“Thou knowest, O Apa, the great pov-
‘erty of all this Samoa, and that we twe
are poor people and of no account, We
have not wherewith to buy. But because
great is the love of us two to thy excel:
Jency, we two give to thee the loving
gift of the fruit of the hen, one.”
“Not so is it true, Dirt and Pigs. I
you two love me, you give me fruit of
the hen, two. Give them now to me an¢
my black-boy thing shall look throug
‘them at the sun, and he shall spin them
in water lest they be bad.”
“O Apa, thou art wise to drive a har¢
bargain and Samoans are foolish. Here
then, are these two fruits of the hen:
now give to us two the box of fire
cratchers.””
CONSUMPTIVE POOR.
The address of Dr. S. A. Knopf of
New York, at the national conference
‘of charities and correction In Detroit,
emphasizes the necessity of making
better arrangements for the treatment
‘of the consumptive poor in the East.
Dr. Knopf pointed out that con-
sumption, while a communicable dis-
ease, does not belong to the diseases
that'are properly called dangerously
contagious. Much depends upon the
care of the patient in the first stages
of the disease. As matters stand to-
day there is little chance for a poor
person who becomes stricken with
consumption in any of the crowded
Eastern cities. Bad sanitary condi-
nons in the tenement districts give
the disease a firmer hold, and there is
practically no place where a consump-
tuve, without means, can turn for re-
lief, What the Eastern cities need is
not only a bettering of sanitary condi-
tions in the poorer quarters, but the
establishment of outdoor ‘colonies,
where patients in the first stages of
the disease can receive proper care.
Plenty of fresh air and sunshine
will cure consumption, as the sani-
tariums in Colorado ‘have proven.
‘These agencies will prove as effec:
tive in the Fast as in the West, if the
patient receives them at the ’Incep-
tion of the disease. Dr. Knopf has
shown that the large cities of the
East have a great responsibility to
face, and that some adequate means
of caring for the consumptive poor
should be provided—Denver Republl-
alata
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,
Lucas County—ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he ts
senior partner of the firm of F. J, Chen-
ey & Co,, doing business in the City of
‘Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and
that said firm will pay the sum of ONE
HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and ev-
ery case of Catarrh that cannot be cured
‘by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December;
B.D. 1586.
(seal) A. W. GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarth Cure {s taken Internally,
and acts dlrectly on the blood and mu-
ous surfaces of the system. Send for tes-
flmontals, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toiedo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, Te.
Hal's Family Pills are the best,
‘The H. F, Brammer Manufacturing
company of Davenport, Iowa, have a
unique puzzle souvenir, which they are
sending free to persons writing for
same. The Brammer company are
manufacturers of the O. K, Washing
Machine, one of the best machines ever
placed on the market. Any goods bear-
ing this company’s stamp may be relied
upon as being what the trade mark im-
plies, “0. K.”
Hallstones nearly three pounds in
weight fell during a recent storm at
Jessore, in Bengal, Metal veranda
roofs were perforated, cattle maimed,
trees beaten down and a man killed
outright by the downfall.
Mothers will find Mrs, Winslow's Sootn-
ee eee aurtng the. teething Period.
In the autoblography which he fur-
nished for the congressional directory
Representative Davis of Florida tells
of his early struggles and subsequent
achievements, and gallantly adds:
“Before reaching his majority he was
married to Miss Mercer, and to her in-
fluence is due whatever of sucess he has
attained.”
» Fox Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
\ Bear the (see
Bignature of y
ee Se 7S FN ES 1 _ 5 a ne a
RO VAS
Wochucks, crows, skunks and spar-
rows Increase in number as the coun-
try becomes more thickly settled.
The year 1877 was so wet all through
the West that {t came about that corn
was worth $1 per bushel and hay only
$1.50 per ton,
It takes Just as much of the fertiltty
of the soll to grow and mature a lot of
weeds as it does to grow a crop of use-
ful vegetables or grain.
‘The crops of a dry season when not
too dry are always far more satistac-
tory than those of a moderately wet
season, quality better, less waste in har-
vesting.
‘The enormous crops of strawberries
raised in North Carolina, on the coast,
have extended the season of cheap
strawberries for all the large Northern
cities one month.
‘The specific gravity of wood varies
more than one would think, a cubic
foot of white cedar weighing only 28
pounds when dry and a cubic foot of
lignum vitae 82% pounds.
One of the most profitable industries
of the Western farm today is the grow-
ing of hogs. A 10-months-old pig
which now sells for over $20 will not
cost the producer over $10, if it docs
that.
The actual losses sustained on any
farm where colts are raised by turning
them into the pasture fenced with barb-
ed wire will amount in two years to
more than enough to fence the pasture
with woven wire.
We never could see why {t 1s that the
blackberry will grow wild where tt Is
not wanted and will not grow in the
garden. The blackberry has a good
deal of meanness about It, anyhow.
Dry season and scant crops result tn
the storing of much plant food in the
fields ready for use when the rains
come and make the crop. All of the 6o-
called waste arid lands of the West are
very rich In stores of plant food and
only need a water supply to make them
very productive.
The average cost in the state of IIll-
nois of raising a bushel of corn as de-
termined from an exhaustive line of
experiments was found to be 16 cents.
‘When corn thus raised commands 50
cents a bushel, It 13 easy to see why
good corn land in that state readily
sells for $100 per acre and upward.
Fifty cents’ worth of rape seed sown
with the acre of barley will furnish
nearly three months’ feed for and fat-
ten for market ten medium sized sheep,
or it will keep ten shotes nicely for
three months. One thus gets two crops
in one year and finely fertilizes the
land for next season's crops besides.
It looks to us to be a pretty mean
sort of thing to give a sitting hen
goose eggs to hatch. If old Biddy has
any feelings at all, how must she re-
gard the fraud practiced upon her as
she tries to feed and train the ungainly
goslings? Any self-respecting hen ts
justified in striking under such circum-
Stances, Duck eggs are bad enough.
A very few years ago the stock grow-
ers were howling about the meat trust
and wanted an official investigation be-
cause prices were so low. Now the
stock grower is very quiet, while the
consumer is roaring at the prices he
must pay for his sirloin steak. The
law of supply and demand in its si-
lent and. irresistible work never
pleases all classes.
A friend of ours who has quite a
large grove of matured red cedar trees
derives a considerable income every
spring by selling the little cedar treea
which come up by the hundreds in his
timber lot, the cedar seeds being car-
ried there by the birds and finding un-
der the shade of these deciduous trees
just exactly the best conditions for
germination and development.
The West had to take care of nearly
a foot of water on the level during the
month of May. ‘There was a general
filling up of rivers, lakes, wells, cis-
terns, springs, swamps, such an all-
round soaking’ up as the territory cov-
ered has not experienced for years. As
a timely agricultural topic, ditching
and drainage have crowded that of
conserving soil moisture to the rear,
A cyclonic storm in early May swept
into its folds a host of migrating birds
during the night, and they were blown
hither and thither against. buildings,
wires and fences and were picked up
by the hundred the next morning—
grosbeaks, orioles, vireos, flycatchers,
tanagers, wood thrushes and scores of
other varities. The keen bird instinct
is not always equal to the perils which
beset our little feathered friends,
‘The cauliflower {s a dificult vegeta-
ble to grow with us. Of 50 planted we
will only get a few good heads. Infe-
rlor seed and too much hot weather
during the growing season seem to be
the cause, One needs the moist, cool
climate of England to produce this
Vegetable at its best,
Japan would hardly look at Amerl-
can flour in 1888, using only 1,200
pounds all told, but last year she took
over 50,000,000’ pounds. Breechclouts
and chopsticks have, made way | for
pants, plug hats and baking powder
biscuits, and more than any other peo-
nie are'the Japanese today adopting
‘che American type of civilization.
hap al ge
PRS iN] i
i seen R es |
Le BIN) er
oe oe cae *
A discouraging and disappointing
fact {s announced by the scientists. It
Js now asesrted that the old stockyards
smell, the pregnant odor of summer
common to depot stockyands and feed-
ing yards which has usually been abat-
ed by boards of health on the ground
of Its being a menace to the public
.| health, fs in no sense unhealthful or a
“| source’ of danger to the health of the
community—just slmply unpleasant,
that's all. But, then, unpleasant things
, | Will sometimes frritate men and move
, | them to action Just as quickly'as would
;| dangerous things.
‘The best things always seem to have
the most enemies, Here 1s the rose,
t| for instance, which {s best with slugs,
*| aphis, spiders, mildew and lots of other
pests, while a burdock will grow un-
eared for and !mmune from all eno-
,| mies. Here ts the apple, the nice sorts,
*) borer, blight, codling moth and canker-
{| Worm and what not to fret tts life out,
‘| while a wild crab will grow by the
“|roadside untouched and fruitfol. ‘The
beetles will clean out a Hubbard squash
g| Vine and let a pumpkfn vine alone, and
no bug that we ever knew would touch
| purslane, quack grass or cockleburs.
P| There is evidently a eort of community
H| of interest between the mean things of
this world.
The New Wav.
A friend wishes us to explain why, if
the methods used and prices charged
by the so-called beef trust are unfair
and extortionate, the retall butchers do
not refuse to buy meat of the combine
and instead buy and slaughter their
own cattle, sheep and hogs and be In-
dependent. An answer to this question
opens up the most pregnant and live is-
sue in America today. In criticising
special results tn special Ines of busi-
ness the average man Is apt to overlook
the fact of the radical and unprevent-
able change which 1s taking place in
the foundation principles underlying
our entire system of business and com-
merce. Little by little every manufao-
turer has come to realize the fact that
there are wonderful economies con-
nected with centralization and combi-
nation, and as the law which moves all
business along those lines offering the
least resistance {s as irresitible in its
operation as is the Inw of gravitation
{t comes that the methods of doing
business are being revolutionized. ‘The
meat business {s only one example, but
in {ts operation well !Mlustrates the rev-
olution which 18 taking place. The
facts are that the savings and econ-
omies connected with the killing and
dressing of the meats of the country at
two or three central points are so great
that the small concern which would be
rid of the evils now so loudly com-
plained of finas itself handicapped at
every point. When the fact is under-
stood that the running expenses and
profits of the big packing houses are
provided for almost wholly from what
is realized out of the offal of the animal
slaughtered, and as the small concern
is prevented in a score of ways from
such utilization of byproducts, it is
easy to see what an advantage the big
houses have. Then the further fact
that the animals killed by such con-
cerns are inspected by government ex-
perts and the meat properly cured be-
fore being placed on the block, giving
the consumer a better quality of meat,
is a big argument in favor of the com-
bine houses. If the present legal con-
tention shall settle how much of the
profits growing out of the economies
of the centralized system of slaughter-
ing and dressing the meats of the coun-
try belong to the retail butcher and
the consumer, it will be more than we
look for. ‘The same question is
seeking solution on the fuel, transporta-
tion, illumination problems—in_ fact,
with nearly all manufacturing interests
of whatever kind or name, Competi-
tion sought and found a remedy in co-
operation, this co-operative effort
breeds trusts and combines, the trust
fs easily tyrannical, and tyranny the
American people will not endure, and
there you have it in a nutshell “Quo
Vadis?”
The “Water Witch.”
Here {s an inquiry as to the prac-
tical use of the “water witch” in the lo-
cation of underground water supplies.
We are aware that some extraordinary
claims are made for this method of 10-
cating water; but nevertheless, we be-
Heve the whole business 1s a harmless
fake, the outgrowth of a latent element
of superstition incident to an ancestry
which burned witches, ducked scolding
wives, regulated seed’ time and the
weaning of colts, calves and babies by
the changes of the moon and which to-
day prevents many from beginning a
Journey or an imporant piece of work
on Friday and puts a ban on hotel
room No. 18 or that number at a dinner
party. The “water witch,” like the
weather prophet, will, of’ course, be
right a part of the time, and, as with
the prophet, the successful predictions
are alone noted. Modern progress and
development in all lines are distinctive-
ly marked by an entire absence of
signs, superstitions, legends and all the
mysteries which swarmed around the
ignorance of the past. It 1s cool, ex-
act, utterly unromantic and scientific,
and the “witch of the water” will have
to go with all the other witches, fairies
and superstitions of a past age, As
well give a beringed and dirty gypsy
wench @ quarter to tell your fortune.
The fertilizing of land by feeding off
the erop grown where it was produced
1s but little praction? in this country
and its value but Ittle realized, In
other lands, England particularly, the
feeding off of the turnip, clover, vetch,
trefoll and cinquefoil crops by sheep
is a prime factor in maintaining the
fertility of the flelds so fed. The use
of portable fencing makes the work of
doing this easy, especially so with sheep
and hogs.
Largely because of the fatal barbed
wire fence three horses have to be rais-
ed te secure one perfectly sound animal
to» pply the large markets. There 1s
='*%? waste along this line.
Shortsighted.
‘The attempt to drain a tract of 15,-
000 acres of swamp land in a Western
state—land which was almost worthless
and which when drained would bring
$60 per acre—met with the most bitter
and senseless opposition from many ot
the landowners through whose farms
the proposed ditch would have to pass.
Fortunately the laws of the state were
80 framed that the rights of the own-
ers of the swamp lands are fully pro-
tected, and the ditch will be dug ta
spite of the protests.
Just a Common Boy.
Sixteen years ago there was just an
ordinary common sort of boy attending
the public schools of a town in a West-
ern state, He was only fairly good in
his studies, undersized and no athlete
and found of mechanics, His parents
‘were poor, and when he graduated he
took up farm work with his father for
two years, in themeantime reading a
good deal along mechanical and engi
‘neering Ines. He then took a three-
Years” course at the agricultural college
of the state to fit himself as a mechan!-
cal engineer. While doing this he {n-
vented and patented a very valuable in-
vention, and when he left college he
had no ‘trouble in commanding all the
capital he needed to engage in the
manufacture of his invention, Today
at 28 years of age he is at the head and
manager of a mannfacturing plant em-
ploying 100 men and will soon become
@ very rich man. This is no fairy
story, but just a fact.
If your dog seems ont of sorts, take
no chances with him, Shut him up at
once or kill him,
Crows are becoming @ great nnlsance
in some parts of the West. A thou-
‘sand of them were shot In one day re-
cently by a party of 100 sportsmen in
an Illinois county.
‘The output of genuine olive ofl from
the California orchardds 1s about 5,500
barrels, but before this product reaches
the consumer the amount {s largely in-
¢reased by contamination with the
cotton field of the South,
‘The skimmik from the farm separa-
tor is conceded to be worth twice as
much for food for calves and the pigs
fag the milk frm the creamery separa-
tor. This is a fact which is bound to
€row in importance.
The American people can well afford
to sit down on the glucose, oleomarga-
rine and cottonseed oll type of pro-
grves, which, like the weeds In a corn-
field, ‘threatens to destroy the unadul-
terated and genuine products of the
country.
The one fruit which most sektom @is-
appoints the grower is the strawberry.
It will do well on almost any soll if
furnished enough moisture and fertil!-
zer. If people generally would pay
more attention to the strawberry and
less to some of the other fruits which
0 often fail them, it would be well
f
‘The John Brown Fort.
A decree has been entered by th ecir-
cult court for Jefferson count, W. Va,
in the case of Alexander” Murphy
against the administrator of the estate
of Miss Kate Field for the sale of a
tract of five acres of land, on which she
had located the John Brown Fort, says
the Baltimore Sun. The sale ts order-
ed to be made by special commission-
ers of the court to satify a debt of §1,-
116, which Miss Field owed Murphy for
the’ purchase of the land and money
loaned. This is the original John
Brewn fort, with authentic record. It
fs the same building that was om the
government property at Harper's Fer-
ry at the time Brown made his raid,
and wes the engine house inewhich he
was captured. It was removed to Chi-
cago curing the World's fair and ex-
hibited at that exposition. After the
fair Miss Field purchased {t, and re-
moved it to this tract of land, about
one mile south of Harper's Ferry. She
was never able to pay all the expenses,
and her deeth has caused its sale,
Warm Welcome for Wrone Man.
Here is a story which the late Con-
gressman Amos J. Cummings was fond
of telling: A member of congress was
going home late one night when he met
@ young man who was satisfactorily
“loaded.” ‘The congressman happened
to know where the young man lived,
and kindly guided him home. ‘The con-
gressman had no sooner pulled tne bell
than the door was thrown wide open
and a tall, husky woman appeared. She
never said a word, but grabbed the
young man by the collar and shook him
ull she fairly loosened his teeth; then
into the hall she took him and slammed
the door,
‘The congressman was descending the
steps when the door was thrown open
a second time, and his friend flew out
of it as if thrown by a catapult. At the
foot of the stairs he landed, and the
congressman picked him up, Much
frightened and considerably sobered,
the young man gasped: “We don’t live
here—we moved last week.”
In a Thicket,
Secretary of War Root {s credited
with a story about a New Yorker who
left his club rather late, and, proceed
ing homeward, encountered a tree, He
retreated and advanced again, meet-
ing the same tree. He sat down on
the street and exclaimed, in a sad
tone: “Lost, lost in an Impenetrable
forest!”
Excellent Succestion.
Gardner—Here, sir, are a few dead
trees that will haye to be felled,
New Owner—It's too bad to lose
them, Why not raise dried fruit on
them?—New York Times.
Why re K The Best ROTARY
is the m Be WASHING MACHINE
BECAUSE
1--It {s the only Rotary washer that
as eat aly en Carine cee
4 4 . ducing the friction and thus making
' FB machine so light running and almost
Ly Rare «= noiseless.
1 ELON aed 2.—The tub fs made of Louisiana Red
ee a Cypress Lumber, and corrugated sim-
Paice | flar to a washboard. The legs are
a ¥ solid with tub (not removable, break-
he a able legs fastened with screws.)
N ee p: 8—The wheel turns right or left, pin
Oat f wheel or dasher reverses automati-
Rn ae | cally, turning the clothes back and
raw forth through the hot soap-suds, and
ee cleaning them without rubbing them
te i to pieces.
Ca 4.—This washer is made by experienced
= mechanics and will out-last any other
5.—The tub has a wringer box fastened with steel brackets.
6.—The lid on tub closes tight, no escape of steam.
7.—Has Gilded Hoops, Castings and Name.
Send for beautiful Souvenir, free,
H. F. BRAMMER MANUFACTURING CO.,
% DEPARTMENT C. DAVENPORT, IOWA
DOG POLICEMAN NAMED BUM.
He Goes Out on Patrol, Catches Bur-
glars and Has Many Friends.
New York Sun: The policemen all
Ike Bum, anyhow, and it is not re-
corded that he has any enemies in the
precinct, except possibly some burglars
‘who have felt his teeth.
He arrived at the police station on
Eighty-elghth street, far over toward
the East river, one bitterly cold night
four winters ago. Captain Freers was
in command at the time, and he hap-
pened to be sitting beside Sergeant
‘Tom Rellly behind the desk. The street
door opened and a diminutive black-
and-tan dog dodged in at the heels of
Roundsman Hawkins.
“Here's a poor little bum almost
frozen to death,” said the roundsman.
“Lets thaw him out.”
“Sure,” said the captain; “let him Me
down by the stove.”
But Bum didn’t like the stove. He
was so benumbed by the cold that ke
could hardly walk. He managed to
crag himself around behind the deek,
however, and curl up by Sergeant Reil-
ly's chair,
That was the beginning of their
friendship. Sergeant Reilly was his
favorite from the first, and has con-
tinued so.
“He looked up at me in such an ap-
pealing way,” said the sergeant, “I
could not help but pity the little crea-
ture.”
Bum was not the spick-and-span-
looking dog then he is today. He was
small, scraggy aad half-starved. Ser-
geant Reilly sent out and bought him
some meat and liver when he was
thawed out. It was probably the first
‘square meal Bum had evr had.
His next acquisition of fortune was
an old blanket to He on upstairs in the
dormitory. The men all came to know
him soon, and his fortune prospered
correspondingly.
He made his home about the police
station and began to go about the pre-
cinct with the men when they went on
post. But he stuck to Sergeant Reilly
more than any of the rest, und ever
since that time they have ben accus-
tomed to take long walks together.
‘The name “Bum” stuck to him from
the remark made by Roundsman Haw-
kins the first night he came Into the
house. Before long the policemen in
the house chipped in and bought him a
handsome collar, inscribed “Bum” and
also bearing regulation brass figures
"98," used to indicate the number of
the’ precinct.
He is very fastidious about his meals
‘now, but he has friends about the pre-
einct who give him anything he wants.
‘The night watchman at the Astoria
ferry house has a plate of cooked meat
or liver ready for him every night at
11 o'clock. And Bum {s usually on
hand. So between the policemen in
the house and his friends on the out-
sid ehe fares pretty well.
He always turns out with the mid-
night platoon and barks his approval as
the men march out.
‘The conductors on the Eighty-sixth
street crosstown horse cars all know
him, and he rides with them just like
‘a policeman in uniform. He has learn-
ed the limits of the precincts from the
men on post, and has never been
known to go below Seventy-ninth street
or above Ninety-sixth street.
He has the record also of having fas-
tened his teeth in the trousers of more
than one burglar or thief running to
escape arrest. Bum always managed
to interest them until a policeman
could make the capture,
Altogether the men of the Twenty-
eight precinct think they have a pretty
intelligent dog.
Spain to Send a Minister.
Madrid, June 16,—It was announced
today that the government has de-
cided to appoint a minister to the
Cuban republic.
A New York book publisher says it is
Impossible to sell many copies of a
book without a great deal of advertis-
ing. He has tried many knds of pub-
leity, even employing persons to lec-
ture about the books, as well as dress
ing up persons to represent characters
in the stories and sending them
through the streets; but he finds that
nothing brings such large results as
newspaper advertising,
ee
o
ipa yg Bard Wire
Cee Cuts
TRADE HARK HEALS them
Tr istentahtitedte hcallae powder: Leepa
out browa'fesk Keeps flee from wound,
Bend tor, free sample
‘Rarede L'SeD-0 Medline Co., €6 Hast.
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4 Sunn cUnn For
Reze Blind & Bleeding
Prompt Rellef—Certain Curo—Try it,
Send 2c stamp for sample, Reso Remy
Co., Iowa City, Ia. wor
OVER FIVE MILLION BEES.
Colorado's Live Exhibit Will Contain
Millions of Workers—State
House of Bee Hives.
| St. Louls dispatch: The liveliest
live exhibit at the Loulsiana Purchase
exposition in 1904 will come from
Colorado.” ‘Thus spoke Van B. Rouse,
the Colorado Springs mine owner and
capitalist, during his visit to St. Louls
this week with the Colorado World's
Fair Commission, of which he is an ac
[tive member. “The world generally
“knows that as a mining, country Colo-
rado leads all nations on the globe,”
continued Mr. Rouse, “and this has
naturally created the’ impression out-
side of Colorado that all the wealth of
| our magnificent state is hidden under-
ground. Our exhibits at the World’s
| Fair will show Colorado to be not only
great in mining, but that ft is. a world-
|Ieader in horticulture and agriculture.”*
| "The World's Fair management im
their plan and scope of the exposition
declared they wanted live exhibits, 80
in casting about for plans to make our
exhibit conform to that idea we inter-
ested one of our wealthiest and most
public spirited citizens, Mayor Swink
of Rocky Ford. Mr. Swink fs an api-
arist, and he has, perhaps, the largest
| bee plant in America, He is going to
| bring his bees to the World's Fair, and
they will work here from the time the
| Exposition opens until it closes. Mr,
$10,000 of his own money, Is to bring
to St. Louis enough beehives to con-
struct In minfature a counterpart of the
Colorado state house at Denver. The
bees will then be turned ont to find ma-
terlal for honey making in the country
surrounding the World's Fair grounds.
[It will require about 640: hives to con-
struct the little state house and in tt
| aroxt five and one-half million bees
will work. It will be a great exhibit.
|In Colorado we make the finest honey
|in the world. We have one bee man
who works his bees all the year
through, In summer they work in his
alfalfa fields in Colorado, and in the
fall he ships them to his plantation in
Florida, where they work among the
flowers and orange groves until time
to return them to the West in the
spring.
“In Colorado we have each year a
‘Watermelon day at Rocky Ford, a Po-
|tato day at Greeley, a Strawberry day
jat Canon City, and a Fruit day at
| Grand Junction. ‘These are holidays,
/and all Colorado turns out to the cele
brations. In 1904 these celebrations
will be held in St. Louis, and we expect
many trainloads of people here to par-
tictpate in them, and on these days Col-
orado fruit will be as free as water for
those who celebrate with us.”
The Colorado exhibit will cost a total
of $300,000. 'The commissioners ap-
pointed by the governor under the law
creating the World's Fair Commission,
have so far refused to draw on the
state appropriation for thelr services,
preferring to leave the money in the
treasury to be used in making the ex-
hibit.
Notes of the Fair
Two more rivals of Santos-Dumont,
the wizard of the air, have come into
public nottce during the past week, One
of these is a Prof. Barnard, of Lynn,
Mass., who has a flying machine all but
ready for the contest in the air at the
vers Fair. The other is Parvin
Wright of Denver, Col., a mechanical
and electrical engineer of twenty years
experience. Now that Santos-Dumont
has packed his aerial craft and gono
back to Paris from London it {s quite
probable that daring aeronaut will be
kept busy until 1904 perfecting his fly-
ing machine for the World’s Fair races,
Towa has more button factories than
any other state in the union, according
to the United States census report, ahd
this fact prompts an Iowa editor to sug-
gest that it would be more appropriate
to erect a “Button Palace" instead of @
“Corn Palace” at the Louisiana Pur-
chase exposition.
Sir Sydney Fisher, minister of agri-
culture for Canada, has appointed Mr.
William Hutchison as Canadian com-
jmissioner to the World's Fair at St,
|Louls, Mr. Hutchison will have charge
of all the preliminary arrangements for
Canada’s big exhibit at the exposition
in 1904. His headquarters will be with
the department of agriculture, Ottawa,
Canada,
Rey. Samuel I. Lindsay, secretary of
the World's Fair Religious, Building
and Exhibit committee, has’ Written
President Francis of the Loutsiana Pur-
chase Exposition, conveying to that of-
ficer the thanks ‘of the committee for
the kind consideration he has already
shown their request for the erection of
a building of sufficient capacity and of
suitable architectural design to accom-
moiate the vast exhibit contemplated.
There will be no aigealty, Dr. Lindaay
says, in securing the. united co-opera-
tion of all the religious bodies involved
for making an ony worthy of the
World's Fair and the cause of
‘The plan of the religions, comm!
bas been See get
ni us
fas'veeo ate i en
ee eee re 00 Toe ee ae
CENTRAL N. U......+-N9. 17-08
The Professional World
RUFUS L. LOGAN, B. S. D. - EDITOR
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year in Advance - - - $1.50
Six Months in Advance - - - 1.00
Three Months in Advance - - - .50
Single Copies - - - .05
Special rates of $1.00 per year to ministers.
Advertising Rates on Application.
Job Work of all Kinds Solicited.
Published Every Friday.
Entered at the postoffice at Columbumbia, Mo., as second class matter, Jan. 15, 1902.
Agents wanted in every town in the state.
PRESS OF THE MISSOURI STATESMAN
Our thanks are due the following named individuals for subscription recently: Prof. W. H. Lynch, Mountain Grove, Mo., M. Emil Schott of Jefferson City.
The Columbia Grocery Co. will open its doors to the public tomorrow for business; there is no reason why that a colored grocery store should not succeed well in this city. We urge the public to give them their patronage.
THE negro State League which was organized several years ago, like most negro organizations has gone to nothing, caused, of course, by a few negroes trying to use the organization for personal promotion. Unfortunate for the negro, so few of them, if given power can refrain from sacrificing his race for personal gains; the negro in Mo., can never expect to get the proper recognition till he ceases to be dishonest and treacherous with his fellow negro.
SOME weeks ago there appeared in the columns of the Omaha Enterprise a statement charging the Faculty at Lincoln Institute with "indulging cheating in examinations." The following week The Professional World refuted the charges and suggested that the Enterprise inform itself as to the affairs at Lincoln Institute before publishing such statements. Last week the Enterprise attempted to defend itself by saying that "subsequent developements at Lincoln Institute prove conclusively, that the writer of that article knew what he was talking about," inferring that the change made there recently was due to the indulgence of "cheating in examinations." We are glad to state that the people of Mo., know why that Pres. E. A. Clarke was not re-elected and that no such silly charges were considered by the Board of regents. We can now see more than ever the necessity of the Enterprise informing itself about Missouri educational matters before publishing articles concerning the same.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm.
West & Traux, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Notice.
If you would like to have your cut with a short sketch of your life appear in the Professional World let us hear from you; a cut can be furnished you for a trifle.
The Summer Normal.
The summer school at Lincoln Institute opened on June 16th and is in charge of vice President, J. H. Garnet assisted by Profs. Murray and Reynolds. While the attendance is not so large as was expected much interest is manifested by those in attendance. A systematic course of study has been outlined by Supt. Carrington and will be carried out.
R.I.P.
For years I h
with chronic
pressure of gas and
bowels. I cont
doctors pronoun
malaria. I could
food at all, and o
of the lightest of
fever and vomiti
sent me a box of
saying he sold me
anything else for
I not only found
I have been pe
years I had been an chronic stomach of gas and distress. I contracted when pronounced a low I could not take all, and only a very tightest of diet would vomiting. The o a box of Ripans 'he sold more Ripans else for stomach only found relief, but been permanently
RIPANS
For years I had been a sufferer with chronic stomach trouble, pressure of gas and distress of my bowels. I contracted what the doctors pronounced a low type of malaria. I could not take solid food at all, and only a very little of the lightest of diet would create fever and vomiting. The druggist sent me a box of Ripans Tabules, saying he sold more Ripans than anything else for stomach trouble. I not only found relief, but believe I have been permanently cured.
AT DRUGGISTS.
The five-cent p for an ordinary family bottle, six a supply for a ye
space is Reserved. Columbia Grocery Co. which will open business in the Building, West Bridg June 28.
The five-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, sixty cents, contains a supply for a year.
Gordon Building, West Broadway June 28.
Do You Want
THE LADY OF THE ROAD
Your Wife, Child, Hus
Member of Your Family M
Gold Plated
turn as a brooch or breast
FEE to anyone paying in
tion to the PROFESSIO
e the beautiful samples we
ed with them. DON'T L
A Photo of Your Wife, Child, Husband or Any Other Member of Your Family Mounted in a
Heavy Gold Plated Frame.
They can be worn as a brooch or breast-pin. We will furnish one FREE to anyone paying in advance for one year's subscription to the PROFESSIONAL WORLD. Come in and see the beautiful samples we have. You are sure to be pleased with them. DON'T DELAY. COME NOW.
Took Carbolic Acid.
The Republic of Wednesday says that a woman known as Miss Callie Grace, formerly of Columbia, Mo., committed suicide at Forest Park Monday night. That paper says she came to St. Louis in February and had been working about from place to place. Inquiry about Columbia shows that a young woman by the name of Fanny Grace, whose family lived in the eastern part of the county, left home several months ago, having married a man by the name of Carroll. Little more can be learned of her.
had been a sufferer stomach trouble, and distress of myracted what the need a low type of diet not take solid only a very little diet would create ing. The druggist of Ripans Tabules, more Ripans than stomach trouble. relief, but believe permanently cured.
package is enough
ty occasion. The
ty cents, contains
ar.
Parker Bros. carry line of Columbia in North Missouri the handsomest of Goods Furniture & Undertaking
The diagram of the sentence above may not be correct, but the TRUTH of same cannot be questioned.
Lodge and Church Directory.
LODGE.
S. M. T.
Mrs. Irena Akers W. P.; Mrs. Lizzie Williams, W. S.
Meeting first Monday in each month at 3 p. m.
Crispus Attucks Lodge,No. 62. Meetings 2nd and 4th Tuesdays in each month. Visiting members cordially invited. Caleb Hall, W. M. A. M. Schweich, W. S.
K. P.
Acme Lodge, No. 24. Meetings second and fourth Fridays in each month. W. H. Turner, C. C. and D. D. G. C. W. W. Lampkins, M. F.
O. E. S.
Amos Chapter, No. 30. Meetings second Friday in each month. Mrs. A. B. Moore, W. M. Mrs. Lizzie Richardson, W. S.
LADIES COURT.
Golden Queen Court No. 19 meets first Friday in each month. Mrs. Annie Williams M. A. M. Mrs. V. L. Waldon Sec.
ST. PAUL LODGE. NO. 12.
St. Paul Lodge, No. 12, A. F. & A. M., meets every first and third Tuesday in each month. A cordial invitation extended to all visiting brothers. J. A. Mosely, W. M. J. A. Grant, Secretary.
SECOND CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Rev. J. B. Parsons, pastor.
Preaching Sundays 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesdays 7:30 p. m.
Everybody cordially invited to attend.
A. M. E. CHURCH.
Rev. P. C. Crews, Pastor.
Preaching Sundays 11 a.
m.; 7:30 p. m.
Sunday school 2:30 p. m.
Sunday school 2:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting every
Wednesday eve, at 8:30; every
body invited to attend.
M. E. CHURCH
Rev. J. Arlington Grant,
pastor.
Preaching Sundays 11, a.
m. and 7:30 p. m.
Sunday school, 9:30 a. m.
Prayer meeting Wednes-
days 7:30 to 8:30; all are made
welcome.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH.
Rev. A. A. Adams, Pastor.
Preaching Sundays 11 a.
m., and 7:30 p. m.
Sunday school at 2:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesday
evening, 7:30.
A cordial invitation
extended to all.
FOR SALE.
Old papers for sale, all you can carry for 5c at 305 N. fifth St.
50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHT & C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is truly patentable. Our inventions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through AA. Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Towers, 85 a year; four months. Sold by all newdealers. MUNN & Co. 361Broadway, New York Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C.
The Professional World will be sent to any one for one year who pays $1.00 in advance for subscription.
This Offer is
For Thirt
REGISTER
IN
PATENT
U.
BEFORE
A Wonderful
Hair Straightener, a Flesh Pro-
with Puff and a Little Pink, a
All seven of these articles pone Dollar, or three times as
for two Dollars. Guaranteed
directed. Full directions on
A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH. A pe
directed. It will turn the skin of a blacker, a mulatto person perfectly white an forty-eight hours a shade or two will be
spots but bleaches out white, the skin it removes pimples, black-heads, sunbur-
ox pits without any harm to the skin.
One package of our REFINED FAC
which goes with every box sold, com-
bleach and makes a beautiful finish--t
THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER, that go
guaranteed to make the hair grow long
and keeps it from falling out. The hair
One bottle of our FLESH PRODUC
you to perfect health. After taking a fe
getting fat, round, rosy and developing
thing for a thin or run-down person.
This Offer is Only One
For Thirty Days!
REGISTERED
IN
PATENT OFFICE
U.S.
BEFORE
AFTER
Wonderful Face B
rightener, a Flesh Producer, a Refined
and a Little Pink, and a package of
of these articles packed nicely in
a jar, or three times as much packed nice
dollars. Guaranteed to do what we s
Full directions on all articles.
FURFUL FACE BLEACH. A peach-like complexion o
will turn the skin of a black or brown person five
o person perfectly white and a white person a mo
ours a shade or two will be noticable. It does not
teaches out white, the skin remaining beautiful with
simple, black-heads, sunburns, freckles, burns, w
out any harm to the skin whatever
stage of our REFINED FACE POWDER with puff
with every box sold, comes in very nicely after
makes a beautiful finish--this being the finest one.
STRAIGHTENER, that goes in every box, is high
to make the hair grow long and straight, makes
it from falling out. The hair begins at once to go
e of our FLESH PRODUCER, that goes in every
act health. After taking a few drops of it, you will
round, rosy and developing a very pretty shape. Y
thin or run-down person.
This Offer is Only Good For Thirty Days!
---
REGISTERED
IN
PATENT OFFICE
U.S.
BEFORE AFTER
A Wonderful Face Bleach.
Hair Straightener, a Flesh Producer, a Refined Face Powder with Puff and a Little Pink, and a package of Love Powder. All seven of these articles packed nicely in one box for one Dollar, or three times as much packed nicely in one box for two Dollars. Guaranteed to do what we say if used as directed. Full directions on all articles.
A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH. A peach-like complexion obtained if used as directed. It will turn the skin of a black or brown person five or six shades lighter, a mulatto person perfectly white and a white person a model of beauty. In forty-eight hours a shade or two will be noticeable. It does not turn the skin in spots but bleaches out white, the skin remaining beautiful without continual use. It removes pimples, black-heads, sunburns, freckles, bumps, wrinkles and small-box pits without any harm to the skin whatever
One package of our REFINED FACE POWDER with puff and a little pink, which goes with every box sold, comes in very nicely after using the face bleach and makes a beautiful finish--this being the finest on the market.
THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER, that goes in every box, is highly perfumed and guaranteed to make the hair grow long and straight, makes it easy to comb and keeps it from falling out. The hair begins at once to grow log and soft.
One bottle of our FLESH PRODUCER, that goes in every box, will restore you to perfect health. After taking a few drops of it, you will see that you are getting fat, round, rosy and developing a very pretty shape. This is a very fine thing for a thin or run-down person.
One box of Face Bleach, worth.....$1.00
One box of Hair Straightener, worth.....50
One package of Love Powder, worth.....1.00
One box of Refined Face Powder, with Puff.....50
One bottle Flesh Producer, worth.....50
Total.....$3.50
These are the wholesale prices.
If you want all the above named articles send $1. or if you want three times as much in one box send $2. and we will send the
ant all the
named arti-
$1, or if
nt three
much in
send $2.
llsendthe
rough the mail, postage prepaid.
By Post Office or express money ordi-
r a sealed letter. If you want it to co-
you the express charges 35 Cts. ex-
no one will know contents except th
E IN
FREE.*
The Bell Drug
II West Jackson Street, - RI
goods through the mail, post money by Post Office or exp listered or a sealed letter. If will cost you the express ch packed so no one will know o
goods through the mail, postage prepaid. You can send money by Post Office or express money order, or in registered or a sealed letter. If you want it to come C. O. D., it will cost you the express charges 35 Cts. extra. All goods packed so no one will know contents except the receiver.
The Alexandrian Ers.
The "Alexandrian era" is by some authorities begun with the death and by others with the birth of Alexander the Great. For a long time after the death of Alexander this era was in common use in Egypt and many of the countries which had been under his rule. It began November 12, 324 B. C.
LOAD STONE IN
EVERY BOX FREE.
Only Good
Day Days!
ERED
OFFICE
S.
AFTER
Face Bleach.
Producer, a Refined Face Powder
and a package of Love Powder.
Packed nicely in one box for
much packed nicely in one box
to do what we say if used as
small articles.
Each-like complexion obtained if used as
or brown person five or six shades light-
ed a white person a model of beauty. In
noticable. It does not turn the skin in
remaining beautiful without continual use.
Ins, freckles, bumps, wrinkles and small-
hatever.
E POWDER with puff and a little pink,
lies in very nicely after using the face
is being the finest on the market.
Ins in every box, is highly perfumed and
and straight, makes it easy to comb
begins at once to grow log and soft.
ER, that goes in every box, will restore
drops of it, you will see that you are
a very pretty shape. This is a very fine
LOVE POWDER, that goes with every box, makes love and is the cause of many sweet kisses. This love powder is the greatest love-making thing on earth. You can make anyone love
age prepaid. You can send
press money order, or in regu-
lant you want it to come C. O. D., it
arges 35 Cts. extra. All goods
contents except the receiver.
The Bell Drug Co.,
Jackson Street, - RICHMOND, VA.
Philanthropist of Rare Modesty.
Charles A. Spring, Jr., who died in
Chicago last July, was a philanthropist
of rare modesty. He had made gifts
to the Illinois Manual Training School
aggregating $80,000, yet he was not a
rich man, and so modest was he about
his giving that the public has until
now been unaware of his generosity.
---
you that you want if used as directed. It is harmless and can be used in the presence of persons and they will not notice it.