The Rising Son
Friday, March 6, 1903
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
RISING SON
It Pays to Advertise in]the]Rising Son for It Reaches More Homes of Colored People than any other Paper in the State.
VOLUME VIII.
GLEANINGS FROM PLEASANT GREEN BAPTIST CHURCH.
Located in the rear of Independence and Tracy avenues, Kansas City, Mo.
Sunday school opened at its usual hour, 9:30. Superintendent not being present, Rev. E. M. Wilson, pastor, orped services. Secretary being absent, Miss Effie Taylor officiated. Lesson exceedingly interesting. Explanation from cluster leaf, by pastor, which was nicely explained, and with interest. Rev. H. C. Caldwell, who has been, and is assisting Rev. E. M. Wilson in his revival, made remarks to the Sunday school, which information was very valuable.
The Sunday school was nicely attended. Regular 11 o'clock services. Congregation sang "Did Christ O'er Sinners Weap." Congregation read eleventh chapter of Luke 1:28, led by pastor. Choir entered choir box, sang "There Is a Fountain Filled With Blood." Pastor, who has been on sick list for a short time, preached a sermon, text I. Cor. 13:13. "And now abideth faith, hope, and charity, these three, but the greatest of these is charity." His subject was "The Ideal Christian," which was grandly discussed. This was his annual sermon, the time being two years since he first took charge of the church; his subject at that time was "My Sheep Hear My Voice, and They Follow Me." In this sermon, he said, "Faith is the substance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen, and discussed faith for fifteen minutes. And he gave the diffination for hope and charity, and discussed each fifteen minutes. Out of this text he gave us a golden chain of thought that would strengthen us in death, and live throughout eternity. Rev. Brown and Caldwell, was with us, and we had a glorious meeting. Doors of church were opened for the reception of members by pastor. Choir sang, "Blessed Jesus." Organist being absent, Mrs. Emma Hale officiated. At closing choir sang "Leaning on Jesus."
Sermon at 3:30 p. m. by Rev. H. C. Caldwell which was very good. The services were well attended.
On Sunday afternoon a number of the teachers, officers and pupils met with our pastor and read and discussed all the home readings, and the Sunday school lesson, and on Sunday afternoon our time was limited on account of revival services, but our discussion was warm indeed.
B. Y. P. U. opened at its usual hour, President F. L. Lewis presiding. Members read the 5th chapter of Matthew, 1-12, led by the superintendent. Lesson discussed most excellent.
Hon. F. A. Turner was with us and took part in the lesson, giving us some valuable information. He spoke of the Negro with reference to our government. The Spanish-American war, Cuban reciprocity and discussed the Negro question in general. He remarked that the white people have their papers and to cope with any people of this day and time, we certainly must have ours, and that they were putting forth their best and strenuous efforts to have a paper that will equal the white papers, so as to respond to some of the degrading and debased things, the white people are saying about the Negro. We should truly thank God that he has raised up such a man as Hon. J. S. Wise to speak in our defence in this our time of need. The white man intends to fight his battle with the sword, but the Negro will fight his with prayer. On account of the rich ideas, we should read, subscribe and pay for the Son. He made some other valuable remarks. After his remarks a paper by Miss Annie Taylor, subject, "Did Noah Have Faith in God?" Discussion, "Is Work Without Faith Dead."
Paper next Sunday by Miss Rachel Dagley, subject, "Life of Appolos. also his ministry, and was he a convert when John baptized him unto repentence twenty-five years before he received the Holy Ghost.
Paper by Gertrude W. McDonald, subject, "Was Paul at Ephesus the Same Time Appolos Was, and Did He See Him There on His First Visit to Ephesus?" Regular services at 7:30. Song by congregation "A Charge to Keep I Have." After prayer congregation read the 6th chapter of Romans, led by pastor. Choir enter choir box, sang "The Mercy Seat" in sweet strains.
Sermon by Rev. H. C. Caldwell, the evangelist. Text, Romans 6: 23: The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life. His subject was "The Salary of Sin," which was freely discussed. Doors of church were opened for the reception of members. Remarks by pastor, which had so much power that the audience was greatly stirred up.
Collection was taken at this time.
Choir sang "Wake Song of Jubilee."
"How Lovely Is Zion."
Pastor expounded the Negro cause just before dismission.
Collection $10.37.
Choir pealed forth the anthem.
"How Lovely Is Zion."
WITH THE SAGES.
Liberality consists rather in giving seasonably than much.—Clicero.
People seldom improve when they have no model but themselves to copy after.—Goldsmith.
Nobleness of character is nothing else but steady love of good and steady scorn of evil.—Epictetus.
Our character is but the stamp on our souls of the free choices of good and evil we have made through life.—Gelfille.
He who will not give some portion of his case, his blood, his wealth, for others, good is a poor man churl.—Joanna Baillile.
That alone can be called true refinement which elevates the soul of man, purifying the manners by improving the intellect.—Coleridge.
Remember that life is neither pain nor pleasure; it is serious business, to be entered upon with courage and in a spirit of self-sacrifice.—De Tocqueville.
No true man can live a half life when he has genuinely learned that it is only a half life. The other half—the higher half—must haunt him.—Pillips Brooks.
Life is no idle dream, but a solemn reality, based on and encompassed by eternity. Find out your work, and stand to it; the night cometh when no man can work.—Carlyle.
Thoughts of virtue lead to virtuous actions; acts of virtue ripen into habits; and the goodly and permanent result is the formation or establishment of a virtuous character.—Chalmers.
Experience serves to prove that the worth and strength of a state depend far less upon the form of its institutions than upon the character of its men; for the nation is only the aggregate of the individual conditions, and civilization itself is but a question of personal improvement. — Samuel Smiles.
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NEXT MORNING PHILOSOPHER.
A good listener is never without friends.
An incessant talker is seldom without enemies.
There are times when the fool-killer needs an assistant.
Often people who ask for public judgment want to take an appeal.
When a man realizes his folly the chances are even that he will amend it.
"Out of sight out of mind" does not apply to the detective or the tax inquisitor.
When a man takes the public into his confidence he should be careful not to betray it.
"Fine feathers make fine birds," but without the feathers no one would care to harbor them.
The man who does not share his troubles with his neighbors is a stoic worthy of emulation.
The romance of love is a flower that may produce either a crabapple or perchance a nectarine.
It requires great caution to decide a dispute between two friends without losing one or both of them.
Admittedly there is no standard of greatness, hence the difficulty of deciding who are the truly great.
When a woman sues to recover for breach of promise and receives a verdict of six cents she realizes the worthlessness of love.
Don't think a man can't keep a secret; just think of the bad things he knows about himself.
KANSAS CITY, MO., FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1903.
KANSAS CITY, KAS., LOCALS AND NEWS.
Prof. John R. Smith is very sick. The doctor gives no hope for his recovery.
Miss Lizzie Porter, a teacher in the Linconl school is very sick.
Miss Ethel Stafford is able to be out again.
Rev. E. V. Plummer, Rev. D. B. Jackson, Prof. Woods and Prof. Bowman was in Topeka this week.
Owen Nugent is as full of literature as an egg is of meat.
James Gross is as energetic as of yore. He knows the political forecast now as he did when in Lawrence. Rev. Dr. W. H. Swartz, pastor of First Baptist church, Wamego, Kas. will lecture at the Metropolitan church Monday, March 16, at 8 p. m. Subject: "A Door of Hope for the American Negro." Mr. Swartz's able article in the Kansas City Journal, February 23, against the "Jim Crow" bill of Missouri, shows him to be a fearless champion of the Negro. The public should hear him. Doors are free. A well prepared program will be rendered.
LEXINGTON NEWS.
Rev. Gilbert was called to Kansas City to preach the funeral of Mr. Peter Nunn, who was born in this city. His mother and father were old citizens, having lived here before the war. Rev. Gilbert returned Saturday. Mr. Eugene Conway and Nettle Colby were united in marriage on the 25th of February at the bride's home. They were both reared in this city. The bride attended Lincoln Institute at Jefferson City. Mr. Conway is a barber by trade; has a nice shop in town. Rev. A. A. Gilbert officiated. We hope them a long and prosperous life.
Rev, J. C. C. Owens held his quarterly conference on Tuesday night, February 24. The financial report for the quarter, $477.99, was the largest amount ever raised in one quarter for a long time. The quarterly conference voted the presiding elder a vote of thanks for the excellent manner of conducting the business.
Mr. A. B. Johnson, who has been sick for several weeks is able to be out again.
Mrs. Lucinda Holmes, who has been sick, is able to be out again.
Mrs. John Johnson is on the sick list; also Mrs. Amanda Hawkins.
Mr. George Walker, president of the Old Men's Club, has been quite ill, but is now better.
Mr. Peter Parker has moved from the country into the city to his new home. We welcome him in. He bought almost a half a block. Also Mr. Daniel Johnson has bought property and will move into the city soon.
Mr. Charles Porter of Kansas City came down Sunday night to look after his father and mother. Mr. Porter is one of our best old citizens. Old age is getting the best of him. We are glad to see his son come and look after them. They own a nice home in this city and they are well loved by every one.
Mr. Robert Hughes, Kansas City, and Miss Estell Warren of Lexington were united in matrimony on February 9. They both were reared in this city. Mr. Hughes has been living in Kansas City quite a while.
Mrs. Hannah White paid her subscription for the Rising Son. Mr. Morroco Saunders and Mrs. Samuel Graham, Mrs. Emma Caves.
Mrs. John Johnson subscribed for the Rising Son; also Mr. W. P. Gray. We hope all will pay up and others subscribe. It is the only paper that will publish the news of the Colored people of this city. We hope every family will take it. We are having an increase in our subscription list.
Next Sunday night will be Elder Smith's last Sunday night for this conference year. Rev. Gilbert and his congregation will worship with him.
The Mages and Pages entertainment on the 24th was a success. They cleared about $38.00. Their drill was just grand.
Kiralfy Buys Crystal Palace
The famed crystal palace of London has been purchased by Imre Kiralfy and will become the center of the class of amusements made popular by the Kiralfy brothers. Several others prominent in the theatrical world are associated with the purchaser.
VINE STREET BAPTIST CHURCH NEWS.
The revival services at the Vine Street Baptist church are progressing nicely; six additions the first week, three of which are candidates for Baptism. Rev. Jones of Higgineville is conducting the meeting.
Mr. Polk Jones, one of the most faithful church workers, who has been away from the city for several months with the Barber Asphalt Co. in Oklahoma, arrived in the city last a Saturday. He reports that the progress of Oklahoma is remarkable. He is so favorable impressed with the outlook there that he is going to make it his home.
The B. Y. P. U. met at 6 o'clock.
President G. W. Taylor in the chair.
Singing, "Jesus Keep Me Near the Cross." Prayer by the President.
Scripture reading by the Union, Lev. iticus, chap. 11. The program was then called for. The first question was "To who did the Bible liken the daughter of Zion?" Ans. I have likened the daughter of Zion to a comely and delicate woman. Second question, "To what conclusion has the fool come." Ans. "That there is no God." Third. Scripture reading by Willie L. Michael. Fourth. Scripture reading by Carrie Long. Comment by H. J. Spigener. Fifth question. What is the shape of the earth, according to the Bible? Answered by Union. The president then asked the following persons questions to be answered: Mrs. Oliver, Mrs Bable. Mr. J. Bowman. Scripture reading Hazel McFadden. Collection 31c. The meeting adjourned to next Sunday at 6 p. m. Read and pay for the Rising Son. V. B. C.
BARTLETT WARDER
The beloved husband of Martha Warder, an old and esteemed citizen of Lexington, Mo., died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Linnie Holloway, 509 McGee street, at 1:30 a. m. Tuesday, March 3, of acute kidney trouble. Interment will be in Lexington Sunday. Friends are invited.
ETIQUETTE OF THE AUTOMOBILE.
Never incur danger to yourself, but do not regard the safety of others in the least.
When you run over little children pay for them, thus avoiding all unpleasantness.
Don't on any account run down a policeman, as it awakens them and makes them cross.
Avoid all billy goats. The fact is a gont smells nearly as bad as an auto, and can butt nearly as hard.
Always blow your horn while passing a hospital as it rouses the inmates and keeps them from sleeping too much.
Old people are harder to kill than young ones, as they are usually tougher, but their bones break easier, hence they make good sport.
An auto fiend has the right of way on any road and any other human beings passing along do so at their own risk. Always bear that in mind.
If a farmer stops you and wants to chew the rag, get his whiskers tangled in the gearing and start suddenly, and you'll have lots of fun.
If you happen to start a runaway never stop to see the finish, although you can safely watch it for considerable time. To be caught when the remains are picked up is often embarrassing.
The latest fashion is to give your machine a nice, neat name, thus doing away with suggestive appellations. An eastern man calls his auto "The Soul Holster." Another man, with euphony in his soul, calls his machine "The Heaven Filler."
When you have killed a prominent citizen and feel that you wish to make some reparation send a wreath of roses with a motto reading, "He Stood in the Way of Progress."—Chicago Chronicle.
It's Up to Husband
A grateful Kansas wife has published a card in the local paper thanking "an unknown gentleman" who steered her husband home the other night when said husband's steering gear had become disarranged by alcoholic indulgence. The husband's card has not appeared. Minneapolis Times.
BILLY'S BEEATTITOODS
Blessid iz thee kat that iz nott black, for itt iz nott bad luck.
Blessid iz thee wooman whohaz lost hur hed, for shee doze nott nead a hatt.
Blessid iz thee blind man, for hee doze nott sea inn what aweful talist hiz frends dress.
Blessid iz thee deef man, for he kan eskape raagthyme, klassikal konserts and streat peeanows.
Blessid iz thee man who doze nott smok, for hee kan spend hiz monny onn sum other vice.
Blessid iz thee man with a woulden leg, for low, hee haz onley half az manny places for kornz.
Blessid iz thee man whoz iz married, for hee kan alwais find sumbody with whom hee kan kwarrel.
Blessid iz thee man whok reed Frentch, for hee kan tell what heez eating when hee iz att a swell hotel.
Blessid iz thee man with a short neck, for whenn he haz thee son throte thair iz nott sow mutch of itt.
Blessid iz thee man with the toothake, for iff hee haz hat hee is abel to forget awl other panes and akes.
Blessid iz thee man whoo iz inn luve, for awl other kalamities ar thenn forgottin and ar az nothing at awl.
Blessid is thee man whoo cannot reed, for hee thuss eskapes thee usual historikal novel and alsow the problem novel.
Blessid iz thee hungry man, for if hee kan get hungry it iz kwite likely hee haz a appetight, and iff hee haz a appetight hee iz lucky annyhow.
Blessid iz the child whoo parants ar poor, for hee will not have anny will too braik after deth—Chicago Chronicle.
SOME POSTSCRIPTS.
Canada has 100,000 Indians, the United States 270,000.
The puffin is the most punctual of birds in the matter of its annual migration.
Thousands of caribou, or North American reindeer, are to be found in Newfoundland.
Newfoundland caribou make two annual migrations—south in the fall and north in the spring.
The most familiar examples of migrant birds are swallows, swifts, white-cars, plovers and curlews.
The coast of Newfoundland is indented by deep and narrow bays, back of which rise steep and rugged hills.
Some few birds, notably the blue throat, accomplish the whole of their migratory journey in one stupendous effort.
Six million persons are expected by the Japanese to visit the exhibition to be opened at Osaka, Japan, next March.
Warm feet have much to do with white hands. When feet are habitually cold the hands are always red or blue.
Germany's latest addition to her navy is the Chinese torpedo boat Hilung, which was captured by the Germans at Taka.
What is known as an angel shark, an ugly fish with an eight-inch mouth containing three rows of teeth, has been caught with a hand line at Felix stowe, England.
More than seven times the distance round the earth has been walked by a Dover (England) postman, named Eden Harn, who has just retired after forty years' service.
PHILOSOPHIC MAUNDERINGS.
When quiet prevails it is a 10-to-1 shot that there's no baby in the house.
Insincerity sings that it wants to be an angel and then sends for a doctor.
The man who is always howling at fortune accomplishes quite as much as the bulldog baying at the barn.
In the natural speeding of events a mother-in-law now and then shows herself to be a good fellow by lifting the mortgage.
It's one thing to write a book and another to write a right book right.—Baltimore News.
NUMBER 4.
INDEPENDENCE NEWS.
Mrs. Emma Chambers, formerly of this city, has returned home from the Philippine Islands where she has been with her husband who is in the 25th Infantry.
Mrs. N B. Oxley, state deputy of the Grand Fountain U. O. T. R., will deliver an address at the A. M. E. church Sunday night. Come and hear her.
Rev. Howard's infant child is very sick. We hope for its recovery.
The quarterly meeting at the M. E. church Sunday was well attended. Rev. Caldwell preached the communion sermon at 3 o'clock. Next Sunday is Rev. Clarke's last Sunday before the annual conference. He desires to see all his members and friends.
Class No. 3. Brother A. S. Jones, leader, gave a unique entertainment last Thursday night at Mrs. Jackson's restaurant for the benefit of the A. M. E. church.
The revival meeting at the Macedonia Baptist church continues with much success.
The Independence wholesale and retail department house contemplates opening April 1.
Rev. Rozelle and wife are on the sick list, also Mr. Richard Smith and wife.
Miss Lutie Jackson's many friends tendered her a pleasant surprise last Thursday night.
Miss Pennich was called to Kansas City last week on account of her father being sick.
We are glad to see Miss Effie Fisher out again. She has been suffering with an attack of the grip.
Mrs. Julia Chrisman is contemplating spending a few weeks in Texas. We wish her a pleasant trip.
Secure the Rising Son L in Thomas
Stanton, 5c per copy. The liveliest
and newsiest paper published. We
want every Negro in this city to read
FIGS AND THISTLES.
The genius of the church depends on its genesis.
Heavenly manna is better than earthy mammon.
Foes without are less to be feared than faults within.
Watch out for the devil when he bids you "Good by."
Old truths are too great a price to pay for new doubts.
The temperature of the heart cannot be gaged by the head.
Selfishness is the cause of sin and sacrificing service its cure.
Men are valued by others in about the inverse ratio of their own valuation.
The star of faith will shine long after the comet of fame has disappeared.
To take the fuel of lust into the heart is to invite its fires to consume the life.
The first thing some people do when troubles fly into their lives is to clip their wings.
Happiness depends not on the things the heart has but on the heart that has the things.
Almost every fool thinks that he is bright enough to throw dust in the eyes of the Divine.
Talk about "looking for opportunities for doing good!" We may as well talk about looking for fire-wood in a forest or for water during a flood. The world is full of such opportunities.
Some people make a great show of fleeing from the roaring lion that men may not see the secret serpents they carry in their pockets. -Ram's Horn
The Best Disinfectants.
A one tenth per cent solution of corrosive sublimate is the only disinfectant capable of killing all injurious microbes. A five per cent solution of carbolic acid kills all except anthrax. Formalin is very deadly to diphtheria bacilli and carbolic acid to tubercle.
Fraight Sent from Pittsburg
Pittsburgh is the great coal and steel center of the United States. On one day recently 927 trains moved out of the city on five different railways. There were 46,225 cars and their estimated tonnage was 1,756,550 tons.
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The Granny Mutt. | der; a bow of black velvet ribbon at] meter to the tiny button of gold, ¢
A great furrior having declared that | the top (on the right or left) of the | ver, steel or Jewel, which 1s no larg
this should be a season of large muffs, | decolletage; a bunch of violets at| than a dot. Half a dozen large b
the granny mu immediately became | the belt, or a long ostrich plume nest: | tons may be placed on the front of
the fashion. Some fortunate woman | ling along one shoulder and falfing | coat, and in dressy garments ma
promptly visited thelr attics and un: | down on the bust, or a wreath of morn: | other places are found for these be
earthed the muffs carried by their | ing glories running down one side of | tiful articles, which nowadays * ¢
erantiles many years ago, Dame Fash: | the corsage and ending in a spray on | works of art.
fon, who Will always pause in her | the skirt, gives an artistic effect that | Large buttons In enamel designs,
Fapit ixht long cnongh to plek up a | ig as charming as it Is pleturesque, | openwork or in art nouveau effec
forgotten style, saw that the granny —_— will be used on coats, while the ve
muff Was worth cultivating and the re- Buttons in Profusion. will show rows or clusters of am
sult Is that every woman bas one gen: | A form of trimming which will be | buttons,
unine or otherwise, Some of the hand: | used in profusion this season {s fancy —
somest muffs are of sable, 30. Inches | buttons, ‘These are employed in all
round and half a yard wide, Others | sizes, from an inch and a half fn dia.
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The first gown is of bluish gray
mouseline de soie, or crepe de ehine
made up over silk of the same shade
and trimmed with an applique em:
brofdery of bunches of grapes and
their green leaves. ‘The grapes are of
stuffed, or raised, embroidery in silk,
the shade of delaware grapes.
The skirt is finished at the bottom
with two narrow ruffles, A simitar
rifle borders the low neck and. ts
headed by a festooned band of velvet
matching the erapes whieh, falling
over the ruffle, also border the low
neck, ‘The sleeve is finished at the el
how with agrill of the material headed
by a nan the velvet knotted on
the outside. ‘The girdle is also of the
velvet, prettily knotted in front.
‘The other gown is of white chiffon
or mouseline de soie, made up over
white sik
The skirt has a little hipyoke of
OO OO
are melon-shaped and again another
style is heart-shaped. ‘There are some
lovely combinations of velvet and fur
Nothing i prettier than a muff of the
same material as the gown worn, say
a sapphire bine velvet Is trimmed with
sable and has the hat and muff to
match.
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EMS
Before bread is cut for thin sand:
wiches it should be buttered,
If the bread knife is heated new
bread can be cut ay easily as old, but
the knife will eventually be ruined
with the heating.
All fatty tissues covering the shoul:
der or leg of mutton should be re-
moved before roasting to prevent the
strong odor and flavor,
If the spurs of a fowl are more
than a quarter of an inch long, or if
they have been chopped off, it ts
more Ihely than not a sign that the
bird ts old.
A fruit eake whieh has no fruit in
the batter but instead has alternate
layers of mixed raising, currants, nuts
and citron chopped fine and held to:
gether with a meringue of white of
egg and powdered sugar, Is a favorite
in the South, and it is declared by all
delicious.
Cotton may be distinguished from
Mnen when one is making purchases
by mofstening the tip of the finger and
pressing it on the fabric, If it wets
through at once it is linen, while I
any cotton enters into its’ manufac
ture it will take several seconds te
wet through the threads, In linen the
threads ave more uneven than in cot
ton,
Biniehina Teushes.
It is the little touches in waists and
gowns that give them their distin-
guish tone after the fashionable lines
dave been cut by the modiste. A black
tatin bow tied at the back of the waist,
with a cameo or a jeweled buckle;
4 dainty vest beneath a bolero of lace;
# strap of black velvet over the shoul:
der; a bow of black velvet ribbon at
the top (on the right or left) of the
decolletage; a bunch of violets at
the belt, or a long ostrich plume nest-
ling along one shoulder and falting
down on the bust, or a wreath of morn-
ing glories running down one side of
the corsage and ending in a spray on
the skirt, xlves an artistic effect that
is as charming as it is picturesque.
Buttons in Profusion.
A form of trimming which will be
used in profusion this season ts fancy
buttons, ‘These are employed in all
sizes, from an inch and a half in dia-
white lace, or embroidery, fncrusted
with pink silk, er panne. Below the
yoke the skirt is shirred and puted
for a short distance, then hangs free
to the bottom, which {s finished with
ruffles of the material embroidered
with knots of small plz! flowers and
thin green leaves and headed and bor:
dred with ruches of pale green mous:
seline de sole.
The blouse is almost covered with
these embroidered ruche-edged rut.
Hes, the upper one headed by a garland
of pink roses and green leaves, which
also forms the border of the low neck.
On the left side is a chou of the pale
xreen mousseline de sole, from which
escape long ends finished with pink
roses.
‘Two deep embroidered frills edged
with the green ruffle form the sleeves
‘The girdle is of darker green panne.—
Wiener Mode Album.
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t,| ‘This opera gown is ef silver gray
»; | chiffon spangled tn steel, with a plas-
p; | tron of steel on the bodice. The “fly-
| away” sleeves are of gray tulle aad
BEAUTIFUL OPERA GOWN,
meter to the tiny button of gold, sil-
ver, steel or jewel, which 1s no larger
than a dot. Haif a dozen large but-
tons may be placed on the front of a
coat, and in dressy garments many
other places are found for these boau-
tiful articles, which nowadays * are
works of art.
Large buttons In enamel designs, in
openwork or in art nouveau effects,
will be used on coats, while the vests
will show rows oF clusters of small
buttons,
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Sleeves in general aro tending to
smaller proportions at the wrist and
inerease the size of the top
‘Turnover collarettes of pleated ehit-
fon having long front pieces of fan
shaped pleated chiffon are among the
pretty novelties.
Stylish dimity shirtwaists, fresh
from the hands of the maker, designed
for spring and summer wear, are to
be had for prices ranging from $1
to $2.
The popularity of the bright red
dancing slipper as an appropriate foot.
gear to wear with a white chiffon
dress is more and more apparent
among the debutantes of the season.
The unique ribbon rose, made en:
tirely of satin ribbon colled deftly to
represent the flower, is being used in
‘place of a buckle on many of the
light suede shocs for evening wear.
Champagne etamine is one of the
delicate colors in a delicate fabric that
promises to be very popular for tea
and dinner gowns for the post-London
season.
Reseda green, generally popular for
carly spring gowns and hats, 1s a8 us
ual among the leading color tones for
| everything from a pair of gloves to 4
‘conlens ovenila sa,
Metallic calccum now costs about
$2,000 @ pound, but a new process of
reducing it from chloride of lime has
been discovered by a Belgian chemist
which will bring the cost down to
prehaps $1 a pound, As the metal ts
soft as butter and rapidly oxidizes in-
to lime {f left in the open alr, it 1s of
no use for construction purposes, but
it 1s a valuable agent in certain chem!
cal processes. ee
Black Velvet-Tied Bouquets.
‘The smart girl tles her bouquet with
black ribbon velvet streamers. ‘The
black brings out the soft tints of the
blossoms to perfection. A bunch ot
sweet peas and asparagus fern or a
cluster of daisies and maidenhair
would be especially lovely when tied in
black.
Cluny Lace.
An expensive lace with which many
of the new and stylish gowns are trim-
‘med is a heavy Cluny, in old conven-
| tlonal wheel designs and wide inser-
tions. Sometimes the material be
‘neath Ig cut away, while many prefer
4 lett wnent,
y | cluster of green velvet leaves tup each
s-|shoulder, A filet of silver leaves {s
y-|the single but effective ornament of
\d | the colffure.
Sy ie a a
Matafile Catalum,.
Cluny Lace.
OLD ENGLISH LANDMARK MAY
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The old tower of Temple church,
London, which, because of its in-
creasing tendency to lean to one side,
may have to be torn down, fs one of
the oldest landmarks in England. It
was built 718 years ago, and it has
ot only survived the great fire which
RIAN SOA
THE RESULT OF DIET. |
Effect of Brain Food on People of
Massachusetts Village.
Charles P. Thompson who for years
represented the Gloucester, Mass. dis-
trict in Congress and who once de-
feated “Ben” Butler for that position,
had a party of fellow representatives
/at the old seacoast town, | “What is
‘the diet of these people?” asked a
New Yorker. “Fish, mostly,” re-
sponded the Massachusetts man.
“Why,” spoke up a Virginian, “I
thought fish was brain food. These
are really the most unintelligent look-
tng persona I ever saw.” “Well,” said
Thompson, “just think what they
would look like if they didn’t eat
fish.”
BOSTON MAN'S HIGH HONOR.
Charles H. Taylor Again Head of
| Newspaper Publishers’ Association.
Charles H. Taylor, Jr., re-elected
president of the American Newspaper
Publishers’ association, is business
manager and treasurer of the Boston
Globe, He is the son of the editor
{n-chief and has had a thorough train-
ing In the newspaper business from
his youth up. After graduating he
studied newspaper methods in New
York, He}then began on the Globe as
@ reportersaud worked his way up to
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y a hy
Sey
DP i z
m7
| CHARLES H TAYLOR
assistant managing editor. Subse
quently, a8 business manager, he also
proved an eminent success.
Senators and Soldiers.
‘Thirty-eight years after the clvil
war there are fourteen men in the
United States senate who served in
the Confederate army and thirteen
who served in the federal army dur-
ing that great struggle. While a num-
ber of men in the last list are well
advanced in years, yet there is quite
‘a number of comparatively young men
who entered the army when boys of
15 to 18. In the ease of Union officers
who are now senators most of them
were quite young when they entered
the service, One senator, Pettus of
Alabama, served in both the Mexican
and civil wars.
Short Roads to Wealth.
There is no royal road to wealth,
any more than to learning. However,
the desire which lurks in the average
human breast to make @ fortune will
continue to Induce foolish people to
risk their money on schemes that
promise to save them from the neces:
sity of earning their daily bread, and
such lessons as that of the St. Louls
failure will only serve to act as 8
temporary brake on the train load of
gamblers running down grade on the
soad to ruin,
burned dangerous near to it, but thus
far it has withstood the ravages of
time. The Temple church was built
by the Knights Templar on the model
of the Holy Sepulcner at Jerusalem.
It is one of the five remaining round
churches of Europe.
AAR AIS AR SAR RAARSARABARS
BLAME PLACED ON KINLOCH.
British Army Scandal Centers in
Grenadier Commander.
Col. Kinloch is the central figure in
the army scandal which has been agi-
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tating England for several weeks. Al-
though he declares he knew nothing
of the “ragging” that prevailed in his
regiment, the Grenadier guards, and
which included the flogging of the
sons and nephews of several dukes,
Col. Kinloch has been held responsi-
ble for the escapades of his subal-
terns and retired on half pay.
Thinks Invention Valuable.
Great expectations have been form-
ed of a process for the electrolytic
extraction of zinc from its ores which
has been devised by M. De Laval, the
so-called “Edison of Sweden.” Zinc
ore occurs in considerable quantities
in Sweden and Norway and water-
falls are abundant, so that M. De
Laval has every natural advantage
for the successful application of his
process. i
AMERICAN ENVOY IN ILL ODOR
J. R. Crossland, Minister to Liberia,
Shoots and Wounds a Man.
J. R. Crossland, a Brooklyn negro
who is United States minister to LI-
beria, is accused in a letter received
at New York of shooting and wound-
ing T. J. B. Faulkner, The trouble
lwas started by Crossland, who was
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unduly attentive to Mrs. Faulkner.
Since the shooting it is said Cross-
land has avoided arrest by keeping
inaide the American legation.
ORATORY CAST SPELL
REMARKABLE POWER OF SER
GEANT 6MITH PRENTISS.
Mississippi's Most Famous Adopted
Son Swayed His Audiences at Hie
‘Will—Was Great, Brilllant and Re
eourceful.
8. 8. Prentiss was born in Portland,
Me., Sept. 30, 1808. He was descended
from an o'd and distinguished family,
which came to America in 1640. One
of his paternal aunts married Nathan-
fel Hancock and they were the great
grandparents of John Hancock, the fer
mous president of the Continental
Congress. When the family left Eng,
land the name was spelled Prentice,
but was changed to “Prentiss” by an
old minister, Joshua Prentice, and
thereafter all the descendants of Hen-
ty of Cambridge adopted the change,
(The great George D. Prentice of the
old Louisville Courier was undoubted-
ly of the same blood.)
Sergeant 8. Prentiss was reared un-
der the tutelage of the Rev. Edward
Payson, a man of extensive learning
and cultivation. Doubtless the subtle
influences of that man gave tone and
shape to the ambition which opened
up the matchless mind of the boy,
When @ boy Mr. Prentiss was admired
for his noble, beaming countenance
fine eyes, frank expression and keen
wit, and that intellectual fire which
in subsequent years was wont to flash
like sheets of lightning was predicted
by the old and knowing folks of the
vicinity,
After Mr. Prentiss had finished
‘school he studied law in the little
‘town where his family resided, but
the opportunities there were too small
for a great mind like his, and. he le-
clded to go West. Arriving at Cin-
cinnat! in September, 1827, he made
the acquaintance of several gentlemen,
to whom he imparted his wish to ob-
tain a position in some school and at.
the same time pursue his studies. For-
tunately for him, doubtless, and cer-
tainly so for Mississippl, he met two.
gentlemer. from Natchez, who per-
suaded him to go South. He soon
found an {deal place, where he en-
gaged to teach the children of Mrs.
Shields, near Natchez. Judge Shields
had died, leaving one of the finest
law libraries in the state, which Mrs.
Shields gave young Prentiss the en-
tire use of. Joseph D. Shields, one of
the children whom ho taught during
his work there, in writing about Mr.
Prentiss said: “It 1s my opinion that
he almost memorized the library. At
any rate, he mastered the contents of
every book in it.”
Along the scope of that great river
the name of Prentiss became a house-
hold word from Louisville to New Or-
leans. No man ever possessed 80
completely the love and admiration of
the people, and probably ne one cea
ever hope to do so. As an orator and
debater he had no peer, as a patriot
he never disappointed those whom he
professed to love,
Lovable and gentlo as he was, no
man could endure his sharp wit and
keen sarcasm when he was aroused in
debate.
Few men ever possessed the perfect
features of 8. S. Prentiss, and it is
doubtful if any man at any time pos-
sessed such a brain as his. After he
entered politics he met in debate the
ablest men of that day, and from his
earliest contests was more than a
match for any of them. The strength
and purity of the man was fathomless.
He was great and brilliant and re-
sourceful, because he could not be
otherwise.
‘On one occasion he was employed to
defend a case before the State Su:
preme Court at Jackson, Gen. Quit
man was his associate in the sult. By
an unavoidable circumstance he did
not reach Jackson until late in the
afternoon, while the attorney general
| was speaking, but he plunged into the
subject and changed the whole aspect
Judge Guion, in referring to his speech
sald: “To hear him was like standing
| on the prairie at night, listening to the
| wind making melody through the
grasses.”
|| While he spoke, every man in the
room arose to his feet, even the
| judges. His words, resonant witt
'| meaning, struck a new melody upot
every ear, and he won.
‘| Mr. Prentiss never learned the mys
tery of his matchless oratory. His
|] power was as unknown to himself as
| it was to his friends. He never for
') got anything he read or heard, an
“| there was no element of oratory tha
’| his genius did not supply. He died ir
‘| this city in 1850, but his body reposes
in the soll of Mississippi, near th
majestic river and among the peopl
he loved so well.—New Orleans Pica
yune.
Petit Larceny in Stamps,
“There Is @ fraud upon the public
that we would like to root out,” said
a postoffice inspector, “but it is al-
most impossible to reach the culprits,
‘and to make out cases against them—
difficult even to get evidence on which
to base a stop order against their
mail, This fraud is simply the lar-
ceny of two-cent stamps by means of
‘fake’ advertisements in the ‘help
wanted’ columns of reputable newspa-
pers which have no means of knowing
the fraudulent nature of the adyer-
tisements. It costs only a trifle to
advertise for some kind of help, and
some of these advertisements — will
bring from 1,000 to 1,500 repiles from
people who are looking for work or
seeking to better themselves. Four-
fifths of these applicants for the bo-
gus ‘Job’ will inclose stamps for re-
ply. You can figure it out, Hight hun-
dred stamps are wort. $16. These
stamps are taken out of the letters,
done up in packages of twenty-five
or Sfty, and sold at a smal! discoust”
THE ACQUITTAL OF JIM BURLEY
In a little town situated in the heart of the Rock Mountains there dwelt a community of individuals who delved for gold and other valuables in the daytime, and at night sat around in the various places of resort, exchanging lies, or devising schemes to get rid of their hard-earned gold without receiving a quid pro quo. In plain language Kokomo was a mining town.
A murder was committed one day, and the murderer was caught red-handed, or, rather, he caught himself, for he did not try to escape, actually sending a messenger for the sheriff, while he guarded the corpus delicti himself. It was well toward evening, and the thermometer had taken a sudden fancy to drop twenty degrees below zero.
There was absolutely no way of escape for a criminal, and when the sheriff escorted his prisoner to the jail he did not worry about the insecurity of that structure.
"Jim," quoth he to his prisoner, "I hain't got no key, an' can't lock you up, but it's my duty to put you in jail, for if I don't somebody will accuse me of bein' bribed, besides it's thunderin' cold, Jim. Tell you what you do, Jim, if you git too cold, come over to Sample', where I'll be, an' warm up."
Saying which he shut the door on the prisoner, who did not appear to be much worried over the situation, but apparently he became cold—or lonely—for later on that evening he left the narrow precincts of his prison, quits unconcernedly, and started out to find his friend the sheriff and get warmed up.
The sheriff at that particular time was enjoying a game of billiards at Sample's saloon, with the judge of the court, the clerk and about twenty prominent citizens, standing, or sitting around a red-hot, big-bellied stove, watching the game. The sheriff had massed the balls in a corner of the table, and was about to make a shot when he felt his arm touched. Turning instantly, he saw his prisoner with an anxious look on his face.
"Well, Jim," said he, putting down his cue, "what is it?"
"Nothing much," replied Jim, "thought I'd come over and warm up. But say, Bill, if you'd made that shot, you'd a missed. Give me the cue and I'll run the string out."
The others consenting, Jim took the cue and not only run the game
```markdown
```
A man in a cowboy hat points a gun at another man who is falling through a gap in the wall.
"So I stooped down without thinking."
out, but made a string of about a hundred over. Everybody at that quit the game and gathered about the hot stove to discuss the man who had handled a cue in that fashion, all agreeing that he ought to possess some redeeming trait, although he had just killed Bill Jackson. The judge, after ordering hot whiskies for the crowd, set the pace for Jim to tell about it.
could have been drawn stooping to pick up ground. That it was tell whether Bill Jack by the rock thrown or whether he had while lying unconscious Further, that, in his a special dispensator that Bill Jackson was Jim Burley and that
"Thar ain't much to tell, judge," said Mr. "but I don't allow it war my fault! Will Jackson has allus had it in fur me. I allus seemed to be gittin' in his way, an' the more I tried to keep away from him, the more I ran agin him. I never seemed to git along now, I was allus the under dog. Bill declared I was his hoodoo. He said I was a nightmare, an' it made him shiver only to see me around. He swore he would kill me if I didn't keep out of his way, an' every time he come across me on the
"Well, this evenin', along late in the afternoon, he run into me as I was turnin' a corner, an' he swore I did it a-purpose, but how could I? Then Bill says: 'Damn you, I've got you now where thar ain't nobody looking an' I'll just kill you an' feel easier'. With that he draws his gun and says: 'Say your prayers, if you've got any, afore you git sent over the range whar you'll never come back to bother me.' I didn't keer much about whether I was dead or alive, but just at that moment I felt as if I wanted to live, so I stooped down without thinkin' an' picked up a rock that happened to be layin' thar, an' dashed it at him. I didn't have no gun nor anything else about me, an' I had no thought to kill Bill. I just threw the rock for luck, an' it happened to slam him in the face. That's all thar is to it, judge."
"Jim, was Bill dead when you left him?" asked the judge.
"I don't know, judge," answered Jim. "He fell down when the rock struck him; that's all I know about it. I ain't no doctor, but I opine he was unconscious or he'd a shot."
"I suggest that we visit the res gestae," said the clerk of the court. "Second the motion," said a town councilman. "Let's take suthin' hot first; it's on me. What you goin' to have, Jim?"
In a few minutes the party returned to their former position around the hot stove, and after quiet was restored, the judge spoke:
"Mr. Sheriff, open court."
This having been done in the usual fashion, with the preliminary command, "Hats off, gentlemen; court's is session," the clerk called the case of "the people gainst James Burley, charged with the murder of William Jackson."
A jury of twelve was then impaneled and the defendant interposing no objection the prosecuting attorney examined witnesses, who testified to the finding of the corpus delicti and the defendant's admissions.
Jim repeated his story, and volunteers on his behalf testified that a careful examination of the res gestae disclosed the fact that a big rock lay beside the dead man, and that in his hand was a gun, on the trigger of which was still pressed a frozen finger, one cartridge of said gun being empty—that is to say, the one upon which the hammer had fallen when the trigger was pulled.
Joe Bowers, a policeman and a former cow puncher from Arizona, after qualifying as an expert, testified that Bill Jackson must have been ready with his gun before the rock was thrown, for the reason that the gun
A man is falling from a high building. He is wearing a hat and a coat. There are two rocks falling towards him.
could have been drawn quicker than stooping to pick up a rock from the ground. That it was impossible to tell whether Bill Jackson was killed by the rock thrown by the prisoner or whether he had frozen to death while lying unconscious after he fell. Further, that, in his opinion, it was a special dispensation of Providence that Bill Jackson was to die before Jim Burley, and that it was a mere accident, if not a clear case of self-defense.
The testimony having all been adduced, the judge charged the jury, who returned a verdict of "not guilty" without leaving their scats.
After shaking hands with the prisoner and congratulating him upon his acquittal, arrangements were made to bury Bill Jackson, and the judge and sherif resumed their interrupted game of billiards, with Jim Burley as referee.—Dupont Vicars in Chicago Record-Herald.
---
A PARADISE ON EARTH
(Special Correspondence.)
HE Riviera is in full swing.
Nice, Monte Carlo,
and Mentone are
crowded with guests.
But most people will
find that beautiful, subtle,
sinister place called
Monte Carlo the most
attractive spot in the
whole little paradise of towns that stretch along the Mediterranean in these regions. The love of gambling remains one of the primordial instincts of mankind, and also one of the strongest. Lately a distinguished man of science has been investigating Monte
The
MUSEO DE ARTE CIVIL
Carlo from the scientific point of view. This remarkable man, Sir Hiram Maxim, discusses all subjects in the cold light of reason. He has made a vast fortune by a death-dealing machine which has sent more men to dust than possibly any plague of modern times. You may talk of great statesmen, of wonderful generals, of magnificent tactics, but in the last resort it was Sir Hiram Maxim that decided the battles and the fates of nations.
Behold Sir Maxim, then, at the tables of Monte Carlo, and indifferent, like nature, to the poor human passions of hope and despair surging round him, examining the whole thing as he might a new shell.
Out of a very long article, I choose this passage as summing up in very clear terms, his judgment of the chances for and against the player when he fights against M. Blance with the tables as the battle ground.
He describes how a little guide book to Monte Carlo laid down that the chances between the player and the bank were as 60 to 61 and that the winnings of the bank were $5,000,000 a year.
He says:
"This appeared to indicate to me that the players of Europe and America took $305,000,000 to Monte Carlo ever year, staked it, won back $300,000,000, and left $5,000,000 with the bank. The magnitude of these figures staggered me. I could not understand it. Surely it could not be true. Still
THE MUSEUM OF THE HISTORY OF CHINA
Entrance te Gambling Room.
If the bank actually won $5,000,000 a year, and its chances were only 1 in 60 better than the players, it was quite evident that $305,000,000 must have been staked. However, upon visiting Monte Carlo and carefully studying the play, I found that, instead of the players taking $305,000,000 to Monte Carlo, and losing $5,000,000 of
倦
He says:
it, the total amount probably did not exceed $5,000,000, of which the bank, instead of winning, as shown in the guide book, about $1½ per cent, actually won rather more than 90 per cent; therefore, the advantages in favor of the bank, instead of being 61 to 60, were approximately 10 to 1." Before I give a delightful and characteristic little picture of Monte Carlo life from Sir Hiram Maxim's pen, I ought to premise to those who don't understand the laws of the tables that there are thirty-six numbers and zero on the roulette table. When zero turns up the punter gets nothing; the bank takes half his stake, and this is supposed to represent the advantage
Casiro.
the bank has over the player. Now bearing this in mind, read the following little episode of Monte Carlo life; it will show the absolute and incurable fatuity with which so many people play there:
"While at Monte Carlo I became acquainted with a married couple who went there every day to the bank, drew out £40, divided equally between them, and then went to the Casino, and played until they had lost their money. They generally commenced by staking a 20 franc piece at a time. If they won, they added a 20 franc piece to their little pile on the table. If they lost, they replenished their pile with another 20 franc piece from their pocket. On one occasion, I noticed that the wife was patiently backing red, while the husband quite as patiently backed black.
"When one lost, the other won, and at each put down 20 francs at each coup, they kept even so long as zero did not come up, but when zero did come up they lost half their stake—that is, the bank took from the two players 20 francs, and as about one coup was played in a minute, it followed that the zero came up on an average once in every thirty-seven minutes. Their average losses would therefore, be 20 francs every thirty-seven minutes, and this sum when only 20 francs was staked; but at the play dragged on they usually staked three or four times that amount, their money lasting them from about 1
CITY COURT
o'clock in the afternoon until 6 or 7 o'clock in the evening."
And so, of course, at the end of a certain number of days or weeks, this excellent couple had lost all the money with which they had come. This may appear an exceptional case; from what I have heard, it is very typical of Monte Carlo life.
The Casiro.
HAPPY AND HEALTHY.
MISS FLORENCE KENAH
MISS FLORENCE KENAIL
Miss Florence E. Kenah, 434 Maria st
"A few months ago I caught a lungs and remained there so persi took medicine without benefit, upset, and my head and back begs.
"I was advised to try Peruna felt so sick that I was ready to try relief at once, and I felt that I had three weeks I was completely r health since.
"I now have the greatest faith
Miss Florence E. Kenah, 434 Maria street, Ottawa, Ont., writes:
"A few months ago I caught a severe cold, which settled on my lungs and remained there so persistently that I became alarmed. I took medicine without benefit, until my digestive organs became upset, and my head and back began to ache severely and frequently.
"I was advised to try Peruna, and although I had little faith I felt so sick that I was ready to try anything. It brought me blessed relief at once, and I felt that I had the right medicine at last. Within three weeks I was completely restored and have enjoyed perfect health since.
"I now have the greatest faith in Peruna." F. E. KENAH.
WOMEN should beware of contracting catarrh. The cold wind and rain, slush and mud of winter are especially conducive to catarrh derangements. Few women escape. Upon the first symptoms of catching cold, Peruna should be taken. It fortifies the system against colds and catarrh. The following letter gives one young woman's experience with Peruna:
"You have a firm friend in me, and I not only advise its use to my friends, but have purchased several bottles to give to those without the means to buy, and have noticed without exception that it has brought about a speedy cure wherever it
Miss Rose Gerbing is a popular society woman of Crown Point, Ind., and she writes the following:
"Recently I took a long drive in the country, and being too thinly clad I caught a bad cold which settled on my lungs, and which I could not seem to shake off. I had heard a great deal of Peruna for colds and
Proving Truth of Old Adage
Secretary Shaw was noticed to join heartily in singing the hymns while at church on a recent Sunday. A friend whom he met outside commented on the fact and Mr. Shaw said in his slow drawing way: "Well, they say money talks. If that's true the secretary of the treasury ought to sing."
Gen. Sausaler Resigns Post.
Gen. Saussler, ex-military governor of Paris, has resigned his position as a member of the higher council of war on account of ill health. The General is in his seventy-fifth year. He took part in twenty-four campaigns and has the grand cross of the Legion of Honor.
The Gambler and His Victims
The New York gambler who left the shortest will on record was just so much better off than those who went up against his game. Most of them could leave a last testament like this:
"Please bury me in the clothes I had on when I cashed in. Uncle George will pay the funeral expenses."
The Cost of Monarchy.
It is roughly estimated that since the accession of King Edward no less than £60,000 has been spent by the office of works in the renovation of royal residences. Of these Buckingham Palace and Marlborough House have required by far the greatest attention.
A. Tama Sea Gulf.
An entertaining incident occurred on the roof of a London coach one morning recently. As the vehicle was proceeding over Blackfriars bridge a sea gull took his stand on the roof and took little or no notice of his fellow passengers. He rode several blocks and a young working girl opened a parcel containing her day's food and gave the gull some bread, which he ate with avidity.
Cautioned Bret Harte.
Ex-Minister Straus tells a new one on Bret Harte. He says that when Harte was sent to Glasgow as United States consul he asked the secretary of state for instructions. The secretary told him that he was going abroad with laurels on his brow, and that he should be careful not to browse on his laurels.
Uncle Reuben Says:
"I'm realizin' dat I hasn't created no pickler communism in dis world, but as an offset I am consolin' myself wid de reflection dat de world has bin none de worse for my living' in it. If I haven't helped, I haven't hurt."—Detroit Free Press.
Queen Name for Street
A remarkable specimen of street naming in Toledo, the ancient capital of Spain, is cited by a correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette. It is "Calla Del Diablo Pertence al Ayuntamiento," or, in English, "The Devil Belongs-to-the-Municipal Council Street."
Crops of Manitoba.
The Manitoba potato crop amounted to 4,459,325 bushels and the root crop to 3,230,995 bushels. There are 1,824 thrashing outfits in the province.
Crops of Manitoba
seet, Ottawa, Ont., writes: I severe cold, which settled on my instently that I became alarmed. I until my digestive organs became an to ache severely and frequently, and although I had little faith I anything. It brought me blessed the right medicine at last. Within restored and have enjoyed perfect in Peruna." F. E. KENAH. catarrh and I bought a bottle to try. I am pleased that I did, for it brought speedy relief. It only took about two bottles, and I considered this money well spent. "You have a firm friend in me, and I not only advise its use to my friends, but have purchased several bottles to give to those without the means to buy, and have noticed without exception that it has brought about a speedy care wherever it has been used."—Miss Rose Gerbing.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to assist you in addressing creases. Address Dr. Hartman, President, The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio
Has Led Adventurous Life
Dr. Arthur Evans, who lectured recently at the Royal Institution, London, upon the most remarkable archaeological discovery of modern times, has been a traveler and digger of the soil all his days, and has, on at least one occasion, spent a term in an Austrian prison for supposed complicity in an insurrection.
The presiding judge at the Seine (France) Assizes the other day performed the somewhat remarkable feats of inflicting 160 years' penal servitude and 70 years' imprisonment in just five minutes by the clock. The sentences passed were on defaulters, of whom there were fourteen, with the average of fifteen years a minute.
Protect home Industry
There is very little doubt now that a bill will shortly be introduced to prevent the influx of undesirable natens into England. Such a measure has become absolutely necessary, as it is declared that our own criminal classes are now finding it difficult to earn a living—London Punch.
Sons and Fathers.
Prof. Sparks complains that boys to-day meet their fathers as equals instead of looking up to them as they did in the days of John Quincy Adams. If the professor will just go around a little more he will discover that the father is lucky whose boys do not look down on him.
Woman Sanitary Inspector
Woman Sanitary Inspector
Miss Genevieve Wilson has been appointed sanitary inspector at Orange, N. J. Miss Wilson is the niece of Bishop Abiel Leonard, Protestant Episcopal bishop of Utah and Nevada, who has been a leader in the philanthropic and reform movements not only in Salt Lake City, but throughout the West. She is a trained nurse and is expected to make a record.
Spanish Blood in America
Of the 12,000,000 inhabitants of Mexico 10,000,000 are of pure Indian type. In the Spanish American republic, in the southern Pacific, the soldiers of Pizzaro made a much deeper radical impression, the majority of persons in all the cities being half breeds—cholas, as they are called.
Where Hats Are Unknown.
Although hats were first manufactured in England by Spaniards as far back as 1510, there are parts of Spain where the hat is unknown, except in pictures. The men, when they need a covering, the up their heads, and the women use flowers.
The North Dakota legislature has just passed suitable resolutions on the death of Capt. Alexander Griggs, the pioneer steamboat captain of the Red River, who founded the town of Grand Forks.
A. Perfume Spring.
What is stated to be a spring giving forth a liquid resembling essence of violet both in perfume and chemical composition, has been discovered in a valley near Millau, Aveyron, France.
Justice in France.
Sons and Fathers
HARRY R. GRAHAM, Editor.
FRED A. TURNER, Associate Eidor.
LEWIS WOODS.....Business Manager.
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OLDEST NEGRO JOURNAL
... IN KANSAS CITY.
The paid circulation of THE RISING SON is more than double the combined circulation of all the other Kansas City Golored weekly newspapers.
In South Carolina there are 155,000 colored adults, and 130,000 white adults. In the legislature, composed of 165 members and unanimously Democratic, there is not one colored man in either house. This has not been the fact before since Negro enfranchisement.
Well, this is simply in keeping with inevitable conditions, the more the Negro gives up and unresisting retires, the more he will be compelled to give up. Retreating has never won a battle, climbed a mountain nor overcome an obstacle.—St. Luke Herald.
The Rising Son is devoted to the best interests of our rase, a fearless advocate of right and fair play. There are those in high places who read and receive this paper and its benefits who think that printers' ink and labor are produced by wind and talk. Now, to all such we ask you again to pay us what you owe. Some of you have gained your notoriety through this paper. Come and see us with the money.
The man who has learned to do something better than any one else, who has learned to do a common thing in an uncommon manner, is the man who has a power and influence that no adverse surroundings can take from him. It is better to show a man how to make a place for himself than to put him in one that some one else has made for him.
THIS TRUE AS GOSPEL
We advise some of our white friends to be a Negro for an hour or two, and then honestly say what you would do, if you had to remain a Negro. Strange as it may seem, a Negro is a human being, made of flesh, blood and bone, and can feel pain, hate, contempt and outrage, just exactly like other people. This is really true!—St. Luke Herald. Of course, you would fight.
WARNING.
There are so many false leaders and hypocrites in our churches that it has become our duty to investigate and from now on the Rising Son shall expose a few of these impostors. To the good man you need not fear, do your duty; to the renegade and immoral one we ask you to move and get right. Look for the Son.
"THE AFRICAN LEAGUE."
The monovia business men's edition came to our office this wek. It is a splendid paper, ably edited, with cuts of the leading men of the Liberian Republic and a host of business and professional advertisements. From the appearance of the paper it appears that Ethiopia is about to stretch forth her hands. Success to the "African League."
THE SUFFRAGE CONVENTION
A national convention of Negroes as advocated by the "Negro Advocate" of Virginia meets our approval. We are for a united effort on the part of Negroes for an even brake as positive American citizens. He who would be tree should and must take action. Let us have the convention by all means, but how about Cleveland or Indianapolis.
WANTED—SEVERAL PERSONS of character an good reputation in each state (one in this county required) to represent and advertise an old established wealthy business house of solid financial standing. Salary $21.00 weekly and expenses additional, all payable in cash each Wednesday direct from head office. Horse and carriage furnished when necessary. References. Enclose self-addressed envelope. Colonial Co., 334 Dearborn St., Chicago.
---
We have often been told that a Colored professional man could not succeed in Kansas City, Mo.
We have lived to see the contrary established to the full satisfaction of all who have held the contrary opinion. Col. Geo. G. Wassom came to Kansas City in October, 1801, a stranger, but well indorsed by men of reputation, who stood at the head of the legal profession, where he had lived for years. For six months after he and family landed here—but little was known or seen of him, until he had gone before the examining board of the Jackson County Bar, where he was admitted to the practice of his profession. Since which time he has been employed in quite a number of leading cases and acquitted himself with great credit—and is an honor to the bar of our cosmopolitan city. It is a fact that he to-day does more business than all the other Colored lawyers combined in our city—and does it in an honorable professional way.
He is a moral man, with a refined and educated family; his wife is a graduate of Oberlin, O. His daughter is a graduate of the Austin High School, Shaw University, and Leonard Medical College; also of Bellview Hospital of New York City. The Colonel is a graduate of Maryville College, and bears a personal letter of endorsement from the old president, who has known him for nearly forty years. He is a member of our city board of associated charities; also a director of the Colored Children's Orphanage of this city. We need more men who have a fixed purpose in life, and is willing to extend a helping hand to a weak race.
He is honorable, polite and the white members of the bar treat him with all respect that any good and respectable citizen could, or should demand. He is a good lawyer, a Republican in politics, a gentleman by nature and we wish him many years of usefulness among our people.
HE IS HOPEFUL
Archbishop Ireland Writes Encouragingly to Prof. J. Silas Harris.
St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 20, 1903.
Prof. J. Silos Harris,
Kansas City, Mo.
My Dear Sir:
I thank you for your kind letter conveying to me your approval of the words spoken by me in Chicago. I am not discouraged over the prospects booming up before the Negro race.
There is an eddy in the current which seems at times to flow backwards, but this only to flow forward again with greater strength.
Sincerely,
JOHN IRELAND.
It is reported that Prof. Harris has been offered the principalship of one of the St. Louis schools.
Kansas City, Mo., March 3, 1903.
Office of the Postmaster,
Publishers, Rising Son.
In response to your inquiry, I beg to say your publication is duly entered as second class matter at this office and regularly mailed.
Very respectfully,
J. H. HARRIS,
Postmaster.
The Rising Son is the only paper published by Colored people in Kansas City, Mo., that is entered at the post office as second class mail.
FOR THE OLD COLORED PEOPLE'S HOME
Friends of the Old Colored People's home, an institution for the support of aged Negro men and women and for orphans, situated between Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth streets on Michigan avenue, will give an entertainment for the benefit of the home Tuesday evening, February 24, at Turner hall. Vaudeville work will be put on by the Hailey children, stereopticon views will be shown by Mrs. M. Losee. It is said that the home is in especial need of funds just now and this entertainment s given with a view to relieving the situation as much as possible.
The Old People's Home is a worthy cause and should be patronized.
Mrs. Losee is one of the charitably inclined ladies of the city. She has given this entertainment before for charity. The effort should be appreciated.
ALL SORTS.
Lying may be wicked, but it is still fashionable.
The faster a man is the slower he is about paying his debts.
Luck is a mighty uncertain thing to sit around and wait for.
Girls who would buy titled husbands must have legal-tender hearts.
A piece of a woman's mind is not good for her husband's peace of mind.
Every cloud may have a silver lining, but only an optimist can believe it.
A man is not in a calm condition when he finds it impossible to raise the wind.
It is difficult for some men to keep their mouths shut when they have nothing to say.
There are more ways than one to skin a cat, also a Rube. Subscribe for your local paper and keep posted. Enough whiskey is made in Kentucky every day to float a steamship—but, of course, it never gets a chance to do it.
Other Way Round.
People in New York have been arrested for smuggling cigars in hay. Some of the manufacturers should get their bumps for smuggling hay into cigars.
NEGRO SUFFRAGE.
A Letter from Hon. John B. Wise Replying to a Virginia Judge.
An Indictment Against Virginia— Methods and Unlawful Acts.
New York, December 22, 1902.
My Dear Judge:
Thank you once again for that sweet kind letter so grateful at this particular time when so many folks are saying mean things about me. They do not disturb me, because I know I am right and that they are wrong. When a man knows he is right he is serene and abuse does not ruffle him. The knowledge that they are violating plighted faith, and the doirg mean, disreputable and dishonest things, makes them irritable and abusive. In a sense their wrath amuses me. In another sense I am moved by pity for their narrow-mindedness and vindictiveness. They cannot turn back the hands of time or obliterate history.
I agree most heartily with all you say about the importance of denying suffrage to ignorance, and limiting it to intelligence. Any fair limitation of the right to those sufficiently educated to possess understanding as well as character must be approved by every right-thinking man; but when the limitations are not imposed in good faith; when they are applied with the confessed purpose of race discrimination; and when they are enacted by fraudulent abandonment of pledge and in defiance of all authority; the questions resulting are broader than any question of party or color and recur to the proposition whether, in defiance of law and precedent, a fractional oligarchy, in perpetuity, can establish itself, by over-throwing all Democratic-Republican government in any state of the Union.
That is the question presented by the Virginia situation. We are just at the threshold of the inquiry. You are much mistaken if you consider my cause is lost. I went to the courts simply to have a judicial determination whether the courts have power to redress this character of wrong. If the Supreme Court sustains the views of the court below, Congress will confront this issue with no pretense for saying the sufferers have redress in the courts. It must meet the responsibility, and cannot shut its eyes to the fact that every promise of the nation to the Negro race stands broken, in defiance of the pledges which the states gave the nation thirty years ago; and that if they are to remain broken, the nation stands guilty of a wrong and a crime to these people.
No people can exist in a free community without the power of self-protection. The ideas of freedom and political serfdom are inconsistent. The men who freed the slaves saw this so clearly that they bestowed suffrage upon the Negroes, as a means of political self-protection, pre-maturely.
NEGRO SUFFRAGE A CRIME.
Negro suffrage, as and when it was conferred, was both a crime and a blunder. It never ought to have been conferred at the time it was. It ought to have been made gradual. But it was conferred, wisely or unwise. And the Southern States solemnly coveted to accept it. At the present time it is nothing like as dangerous or as monstrous a proposition as it was then. There are thousands and hundreds of thousands of Negros fully qualified for the exercise of suffrage. The element of unlifted ignorance might easily be reached by equitable laws if they were fairly administered; and the evil might thus be practically eliminated.
But a foul device, thinly disguised, but universally admitted, whereby it is sought to remit every Negro possible to political slavery, without touching the lowest or most ignorant white, is repugnant to every sense of manhood, of far-sightedness, or good faith. The Negro is not what he was thirty years ago. We, as much as anybody else, have encouraged in him the aspiration for liberty and the sense of manhood. With those feelings stimulated and those rights acknowledged by us, we have seen him rear children, pay his taxes, accumulate property, vote, serve the state as her soldier and grow up not only with the pride of citizenship, but bearing its burdens along with his white fellow-citizens. Is it manly, is it just, is it honest, to seek now to filch him out of his rights, to trample out his ambitions, to remit him to a servile position?
Would any white race stand it? Can we expect him to remain with us, so degraded? Can we afford to lose him? With his place vacant where would we be? Do we not boast that he is the best of servants? Are we not spared the tyranny of more exciting laboring classes? Would not our condition be plitable if by a course of mean tyranny and the denial to him of rights which we are pledged by every consideration of honor and of interest to respect, if we drove him from our midst? No, sir, we could not afford it. There is not a pig-headed, bourbon, fool, Negro-hater living who, when pressed, will not admit these truths.
And if it be true that honor and self-interest make it so that his lot is cast with us, in the name of reason and humanity, I ask, what have we to lose by being just and humane to him, or by according to him those political rights which white men deem essential to the protection and the preservation of their liberty?
God help the state that falls within the control of small souls who cannot see these great truths through the bloody mists of race prejudice. If Virginians are not large enough and broad enough to see them, then her old race of statesmen is extinct, and the pigmies and degenerates who guide her destines now will have to be curbed
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PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER W HEN YOU WRITE.
and led away from political and economic suicide by the stronger and broader and truer humanity which controls the nation. Our people cannot ignore the existence of the nation. By bitter and bloody experience we learned we could not dissolve the Union. Against our will and in spite of us, these black people were made freemen.
SOUTHERN PEOPLE NARROW
And, once more, if the Southern people are so narrow and behind the advancement of the age, as to seek to violate their plighted faith, and to remand this race to slavery, they may bring down upon themselves the heavy hand which has never smitten them without carrying its point.
We hear a great deal of fine talk about the sovereignty of these communities nowadays, and about their right to regulate their own social and political problems. But Virginia's son, John Marshall warned them nearly a century ago, that the sovereignty was subordinate to federal authority, in matters which federal laws reach, and the federal laws is supreme on questions of citizenship. They have paid bitterly in the past for ignoring these warnings.
We heard much also of the duty to maintain white supremacy. This talk springs from no honest fear that white supremacy is imperilled. It is intended to enlist race sympathy from those who will not take the trouble to inform themselves upon the problem. But I say God help a white supremacy attained by breach of plighted faith to the nation; by cruel and unjust race discrimination against the blacks; by laws ordained without any legal sanction; lacking in any broad apprehension of the true relations between the races; dictated by vicious and half civilized race prejudice, and committed, for their administration, to willing tools, whose only idea of civic duty or loyalty is to work to perpetuate the rule of the faction which installed them.
Do not tell me that government under any such auspices will be better. No government so conceived or so executed, will be better than the bad men who sieze it, or the worst men who administer it. It is not democratic or republican government. It is the domination of a faction which neither respects the principles of government it pretends to administer, the rights of the governmed, nor its own pledges. "Doing evil that good may come of it" has been the pretense of usurpers and tyrants from the time that government began, with the invariable result that the evil has been done and the promised god did not come of it. I feel a contempt for the expression so often heard that even if the method resorted to, to eliminate the Negro vote, was bad and vicious, the results will emancipate thought in Virginia and build up what the parties using this argument of con enience are pleased to predict, will be two respectable parties there. In a word, that with the Negro vote removed as a fusing influence upon the whites, the whites will divide upon public issues, as they have not done before.
Those who talk this way are of two classes—they are either Democrats, who do not believe what they say, and say it as a consoling balm to their own consciences, or in order to reconcile credulous opponents; or they are people who hope always for better things and do not know the men who devised and are executing the scheme, Verily, the man is gullible who with knowledge of the career of the people, who have been piloting the politics of Virginia for the past thirty years, thinks that they have done anything or planned anything which will permit the power which they have selzed, and in which they have intrenched themselves with such care and cunning, and toil, to slip from their grasp now or hereafter.
Have not forty-seven of these men ordained a constitution which they were solemnly pledged to submit to the people for ratification or rejection? Have they not, while refusing to take any oaths themselves, in direct defiance of the law under which they were assembled, exacted oaths of fealty to their work, from every officeholder, great and small, in the commonwealth, under threat of vacating his office unless he acknowledges their supremacy within thirty days from the time they asserted it?
Have they not deliberately, by ordinance, provided for the amendment of all existing registration laws and the disfranchisement of at least two-fifths of the electorate which chose them, without consulting that electroate, as they promised to do?
Did they not so jealously regard this new enrollment of voters that they consulted their partisans in every part
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of the state and named personally every member of every registration board in every magisterial district and in every ward of the state. Who ever saw such an act or ordinance as this before? Were these men chosen to carry out the plans of these conspirators, or for a fair and exalted purpose? LET VIRGINIANS ANSWER. Let every citizen of Virginia, affected by the work of these tools of this conspiracy, answer this last query in the light of his knowledge of the character and attainments of the individuals chosen at his home to do this deed of political murder. And finally, has not every appointee, beneficiary and recipient of preferment, since this alleged new constitution has been put into operation, been one of those who planned it, and for whose benefit is was devised? Read the list and answer me.
Do not tell me they intend to lose their grip. The statement is a reflection upon your intelligence or upon mine. I tell you they gained this power, corruptly, to enjoy it themselves; and will retain it as unscrupulously as they gained it.
Under the plea of fettering the Negro they have fettered all the whites also. There is no more hope of white men successfully overcoming their factional domination than there was that black men, or black and white men, would do so. The poor deluded people of the state have, under the false fears excited by appeals to their race prejudices, allowed the coterie of Bourbon politicians, typified by the leaders in this convention, to fix upon them a thraldom, the end of which no man living can foresee, unless it is broken by the power of the law; and judicially declared to be, as it is, an outrage upon the rights of the people. It is worse than any monarchy, for it has no single head to chop off. It is as specious in its pretences of benefits, and will be, if it is permitted to stand, as tyrannical and corrupt as the Venitian Seignory of Forty.
In spite of all these people say to the contrary, I love Old Virginia better than any spot on earth, and her old glory is as dear to me as to any of her sons. I am heartily ashamed of what has been done there. I will break it up root and branch if I can, as a duty which I owe, not only to my clients, but to my native state. If I cannot, that is all; but I am neither afraid nor ashamed to try, even if I be the only white son of Virginia who feels as I do.
Is it or not natural that the Negroes, who are wronged by this thing, should seek in every way in their power, to obtain redress?
Are they so beneath the notice of the law that they are not entitled to seek its protection?
Are their claims so preposterous and outrageous that a reputable lawyer cannot present and urge them without aspersion upon his character and ability?
These questions bring their own answers. A negative answer must come from every honest man, lawyer or layman, for it is the boast of our profession that no man is so humble, or even so base, that he is not entitled to have the best aspect of his case presented to a court for judgment; and that no human being is so low in the scale of human rights or political consideration, that the highest court in the land should turn a deaf ear to his prayer for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
I took their case, knowing full well the unreasoning and brutal prejudice my actions would excite. How could I doubt this would be so, when I recalled that my father's life-long service to the state did not protect his gray hairs from villainous aspersions when he defended Calhoun in the mayoralty contest in Virginia in the seventies.
If ills galore affect you sore
And pains beset you more and more,
Then do not stop; run, skip or hop
To SMITH'S Apothocary Shop.
With drops and pills he'll cure your
ills
And "PIGE" will bring around the
bills.
Be Sure to Patronize SMITH The DRUGGIST.
He will deliver your goods free of charge if you will call
TELEPHONE 1211 GRAND.
MILLET AND CANE
BLUE GRASS
LANDRETH'S Garden
CLOVER, TIMOTHY
WILL PLAY GAME TO FINISH.
I have undertaken the task of bringing these galants to book, and we will play this game to a finish. It may end in the courts, or it may end in congress, or it may end in some other way, but if they think it is ended or that it is even fairly begun, they are reckoning without their host and woefully deluding themselves. It is too large a game to be decided by one throw of loaded dice. They are playing for political power.
But my clients, a strong of 100,000 of God's creatures, who have been taught to think they are men and promised manhood by their state and nation, are not playing; they are praying and struggling and antagonizing in the inquiry whether they are freemen or sefrs and chattails.
At the end we shall know who is right and who is wrong; and, whatever that end may be, I know I am on the side of the weak against the strong; of humanity against bigotry and prejudice; of advancement and progress against obstruction and negation; of good faith against broken pledges of honor; of popular rights against unscrupulous usurpation; of experience and enlightened civilization against the besoted prejudices of the ex-slave-owner and the provincial jealousy of a lower type; upon the side of God against man's injustice and the heartless, selfish trickery of small politicians.
In all my life I never had a cause in the justice of which I felt more confidence, or advocated a measure which I felt was more surely for the benefit of all the people concerned. Thus feeling, I am unaffected by adverse criticism and more and more resolved to go on with the good work.
And the time will come when everybody—friend and opponent—will see, that I was right—right as God's precept—"Do unto others as ye would they should do unto you."
Let this be my answer to all that has been said. I trust to time for my vindication, and in the meantime am just as well, just as prosperous, and as happy as if the heathen did not rage furiously against me.
No man is absolutely truthful when it comes to repeating the bright things that his children sayp.
Clothing Cleaned, Pressed and Repaired in Good Order
PRICES REASONABLE,
AARON TOLBERT,
123 E. 6th Street.
via the Burlington Route Cheap Rates All Summer.
Denver,
Colorado Springs
and Pueblo.
on certain dates.
Two Fast Trains Leave Daily at
10:40 a. m., and 9:35 p. m.
Ticket Office, 823 Main St. & Union Depot.
JOHN S. WISE.
T. LEE ADAMS
412 Walnut Street,
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Garden Tools,
Poultry Supplies.
———_———
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LAO een ba
‘Wm. Fairfax, Society Reporetr.
A. W. Walker, Agent, Lexington, Mo
Remember pleaso—
Us thelletle bite we collect herewn ths
That enables us to run from year to year.”
Dr. Coombs was @ caller this week
Prof. 8, R. Bailey was a caller thi
week,
Mrs, John Rone spent a few days ir
Independence last week,
Mr, James Allen is ill at his home or
the Dies,
Bernard Nesbitt has been on the
sick list this week,
‘Mrs. Wade B, Smith has been very
ill at her home, White Church, Kas.
‘Mrs. Holly has been suffering with
lagrippe.
You should have your friends and
neighbors read the Rising Son,
Pete Kiele, Kansas City’s old relia
ble jollier, 1s still alive,
Mrs, Wm. Gordon is visiting friends
at Belton, Mo.
Mr. Wm. Spalding of Chicago is
visiting friends in our city.
Mrs. Mattie Casway is on the mend
after a week's illness, “
Hattie New—Robert Ross is a jolly
fellow.
Watch the Son closely, you maj
miss something,
Frank Neal can tell more stories
than any of the boys,
Walter Fisher is as good in his
position as Tim Gross,
J. F. Cole of the postoffice depart:
ment, has been ailing for a few days.
Mrs, Oxley, state deputy of the G.
F. of T. R,, is an earnest worker,
See T. Lee Adams for all garden
seeds and tools.
‘Mr, John Marshall is all smiles these
days. John Hill leads them all,
W. F. Adams is home from Alliance
to visit his sick mother,
Miss Allie Lewis, who was shot last
week, is not improving very fast.
Hon, I. B, Blackburn of Kansas City
Kas., paid our office a visit.
See the Jackson Boys for extra
copies of the Son,
G. M. Edwards of the Baltimore, who
has been sick, is convalescent,
Hand your locals to Wm, Fairfax,
‘our society reporter.
‘The Waiters’ club has a telephone.
Call up 3302 Black, 2 rings,
Albert Fleming, after a week's visit
to his mother, has returned much im-
proved in health.
Jas, Runnels will have a full supply
of Ozona Toilet articles. See him for
these valuable preparations,
‘Tho K, C, Juvenile Band gave a sup-
per at 593 Troost avenue. These boys
should be encouraged. They want to
raise money to get uniforms.
Miss Lulu Rogers, who has been
sick quite awhile, is able to be out
again,
Call on Smith for pure drugs and
toilet articles,
Ice cream soda and soda, all flavors.
James Runnels ts prepared to accept
a captaincy when the worst comes to
be bad.
\D. Wi Langston is able to be out
again, He will be glad to meet. his
friends at his old stand, 718 E. 8th,
Prof, J. B, Hereford of Chillicothe,
paid our office a pleasant call while
in town,
Mr, Diggs, the junk man, is pegging
Away solving the problem by doing
business,
Dr. T, C, Unthank is now located
at 1223 Michigan avenue, Mrs, Un:
thank thinks moving is an awful job.
Mr, and Mrs, Garnes have went to
the Unthank house on Michigan ay-
enue,
Prof. H. R. Graham has sold his
printing outfit and it will be moved
across he Kaw,
Mr, R. H. Anderson of St, Paul,
‘Minn., will visit Wm. Fairfax about the
10th of this month,
|, Mrs. Ralley, 812 Charlotte street,
has been confined to her home for
the past six weeks with a paralytic
stroke.
| ‘The Silver Leat club will not have
‘any more club dances until aften len-
ton season,
| Mr. Jesse Lytle of Topeka Is in
town visiting his old friend, James
‘Runnels,
| John A. Coombs of 1751 W. Prospect,
who hase been confined to his home
with the rheumatism, {s able to be out.
Cassius Ripley was buried from As
Dury chapel last Sunday by the Ma-
sons,
‘The Pligrim Baptist church and its
pastor is in trouble, Investigation is
in order. The people want a clean
pulpit,
Mrs. Mary Arnold's, 706 Locust
street, is a popular resort for meals
and to meet a jolly lot of hotel boys.
F, L. Lewis is the right man in the
right place, Rey, E. M, Wilson knows
his worth,
W. H. Williams was in to see us.
He {s enthusiastic for Senator Hanna,
and ex-slave pension bill,
‘The initiation of fifteen 8. and D, of
Jerusalem last Thursday was very in-
teresting,
Mise Bertie Brown, who has been ill
for the last week, was able to attend
school this week,
The reception and ball given by
some of the members of the Silver
Leaf club was @ social success,
Dr. and Mrs, Buch are thinking of
moving into their new home on Gar-
field avenue. ‘
Every one should read Dr. Coffin's
reply to Dr. Leroy Dibble in last Sun-
day's Star.
Furnished front room with bath and
gas, for rent to a gentleman. Apply
1411 Brooklyn avenue.
Father Harper will have quite a
large confirmation class to present
to the Rey. Bishop Atwell at Easter
time,
8, G. K. J. R. Gordon has summoned
all members of the Grand Palace to
meet him next Saturday night March
14th.
‘Mrs, Alice Craig of Slater, Mo., and
Mrs, Maggie Franklin of Ft. Scott,
Kas., prominent members of the 8.
and D. of J., is visiting the members.
FOR RENT.—A nice 6 room house
at 834 Freeman avenue, good well
water; the house is in good repair,
See 1. B. Blackburn, 825 Walker av-
enue, Kansas City, Kas,
Our people are anxious for the Son.
‘We hope to merit the confidence and
consideration of the people because we
expect them to pay for it. The Ris-
ing Son is $1.50 per year.
Willis Jackson has returned from
Leavenworth where he went to attend
the funeral of his father who was 80
years old,
Mr, James Runnels has been engaged
as reporter and solicitor, Any favors
shown him will be appreciated by the
Rising Son,
‘The Ladies’ Art class met with Mrs,
I. F. Bradley, Kansas City, Kan.,
Wednesday afternoon. It will meet
with Mrs. John Lang, 912 Park avenue,
The motto of the Geo, B. Peck Dry
Goods Co, is “Satisfaction.” This of
itself is an Inspiration to a buyer, Mr,
Peck has demonstrated his great busi-
ness worth to the people of Kansas
City, and his ability to conduct a huge
business,
Mrs, Bessie Evans is quite sick and
her sister, Mrs. F, Jessie Peck is dan-
gerously ill at her home in Denver.
‘Their sister, Mrs, Allen, of St, Joseph,
has been called to the bedside of Mrs,
Peck.
The big bullding accupied by the
Jones Dry Goods Co. is always crowd-
ed with anxious buyers, The manage-
ment spares neither expense nor pains
in its effort to render comfort to the
buying public,
The chorus rehearsing for the can-
tata Ruth, under the management of
Miss Carnie Cross and Mrs, Jos, Brice
is progressing nicely and promises to
kive the public @ rare treat in the near
future,
The Oviatt Shoe Company is one of
the best and most reliable firms of its
kind in the West. The treatment ac-
corded its patrons is such that it is a
pleasure always to. return, The
|store carries tha best and leading
l grades and makes of shoes.
_ Mr. and Mrs. Peery have moved to
Trenton, Mo., Where they will engage
in farming with Mrs. Peery's father,
Who owns a farm of six hundred acres
Mr, and Mrs. Peery were members of
the Silver Leaf Club and the Ladies’
Whist Club, Who wishes them much
success in their new undertaking.
Dr. 0. W. J. Scott, Editor, Lewis
Woods and Prof, J. Silas will te sent
to Washington to urge congress to
make provisions for a Negro exhibit
at St. Louis during the World’s Fair.
WEDDING BELLS.
‘There was a nice quict wedding at
the desidence of Rev. J. E. Roberts at
1022 Michigan avenue Sunday March
1 at 5 p.m. The contracting partles
being Mr. Gepree W. Greelee and
Miss Stella Duncan, both of Kansas
City, Mo. A (delicious repast was
served to a few very warm friends
who after the usual congratulatory
method, went to their several homes
feeling the better because society {8
increasing and better conditions pre-
vailing. The happy couple left for
their home in Osawatomie, Kas. Rev.
Roberts officiated.
The Nebraska Clothing Co. of this
city, under its present management, Is
realizing a rapid and steady growth
in trade, Its method of business has
always been a source of pleasure to
its many patrons, all of whom are treat:
ed with great courtesy and their wants
receive the strictest attention,
YMC. A. NOTES.
In last Sunday's meeting the topic
“Sowing Seed” was discussed in ar
Interesting and profitable manner.
‘There {s room for more in the night
School. Join a class. Be progressive
One of the attractions in the near
future will be a confidential medical
talk to men only by Dr. T. C, Unthank
There are still some vacant chair
in the Sunday afternoon meeting
Don't be afraid to fill them,
PENN SCHOOL SEWING CLASS.
Tt may not be generally known that
at the schoo! located In the xoutherr
part of the city there is a large sew.
ing class, composed of all the pupils
of the school and conducted by a num
ber of wealthy white ladies living in
‘that section of the city. The object
of this class is to better fit our young
people for some of the duties tha
fall upon them by and by. Girls at
tending the high school are admitted
and instructed along with pupils of the
grades. Much interest is manifested
in the work by both pupils and teach
ers.
Principal Harris is hopeful that thls
may be the means of enrolling so large
a number of pupils that the Board o
‘Education will build a new school in
‘stead of the old shack now in tse,
Little Joyee Dorsey entertained a
large number of her friends Monday
afternoon February 23rd, at her home
1227 Highland avenue. “A number of
handsome presents were received.
Games of different kinds were induls.
ed in, after which light refreshments
were served, The following isthe list
of those present, with their gifts:
Lewis Benford, 3 handkerchiefs;
Marion Harris, 2 handkerchiefs; Mas:
ters Ralph and Spencer Seals, 2 hand:
kerehiefs; Carrie Wright, 2 handker.
chiefs; Dorothy Hill, turquoise beads;
Edward Hill, hair bow: Lucion Carter,
pocket book and money; Vernon Page,
after dinner coffee cup and saucer;
W. D. Seals, chocolate cup and saucer;
Vere Honholland, cup, saucer and
plate; Berenice Hollingsworth, individ:
ual creamer and sugar; Edna Herndon,
powder box; M, Deza Birch, oat meal
bowl; Beatrice and Clarence Lee, cup.
saucer and plate; Cleopatra Barlow,
oat meal howl; Eloise Coles, toy dog:
Marie Moore, Bow! and pitcher; Jes-
sle Coles, patton iron; Clara Holland,
cup and saucer; Master Nix and Elsic
Nix, after dinner dress; Ruby and
Claud Conway, after dinner cups and
saucers; Gerone Reed, after dinner ep
and saucer; Willie Lauwrence, bell;
Wilbern Johnson, ice eream plate
Huston Jackman, eup and saucer; Mr
and Mrs. MeColly of Grand Junction
Colo. white silk dress; Mrs, Jobnson
and Mayme Barker, cup, saucer and
plate; Mrs, D, W, Willis, white apron;
Miss Amy Jackson, after dinner choc:
olate cup; Miss Vallle Bowman, hair
ribbon; Ophelia. Watts, 2 handker
chiefs; H, W. Warfield, money; Mrs
James Johnson. flowers.
The big store of Emery, Bird, Thay
er Dry Goods Co, is Sometimes termed
the Western Emporium of Merchan:
dise, The management of the com
pany {s regarded as being the best ob
tainable,
. W, Archer was in to see us.
PASSING GLIMPSES.
The Colombian truce has been ex.
tended. Are they counting the votes,
or filling the cartridges?
To-day the prophet wags his head
and people heed him; to-morrow, ah,
to-morrow, “None so poor to do him
reverence.”
More than Christmas, or New
Year's, or a man’s birthday, election
day 1s the day for turning over a new
leaf; also of making good.
Americans are going to put up
seven thousand miles of barbed wire
fence. No, it will not be around the
Philippines; 4t will inclose one little
cattle ranch,
An assaulted critic has sued a
theater for damages. Egad! The
time may come when the assaulted
actor will sue the grocer and the
tomato dealer,
With the diseppearance of his alr
ship a French aeronaut is sald to have
gone on @ mysterious voyage. It may
be that mysterious voyage from which
ho one ever returns,
Care of Bunker Hill Monument.
A proposition to turn over the cus
tody of Bunker Hill monument from
the Monument association to the state
of Massachusetts has been lately cot
sidered by the judiciary committe
of the House of Representatives of
that state, but It found few advocates
in its favor, ‘The care of the monu
ment is now largely provided for by
fees, which could not be charged if it
should be state property.
WITH THE SAGES.
Trony is an insult conveyed in the
form of @ compliment.—E. P. Whip-
ple.
Simplicity of character is the nat-
ural result of profound thought—Wil-
Mam Hazlitt.
‘The shortest life is long enough if
it lead to a better, and the longest
‘Iife is chort {f it do not—Colton.
Do not wait for extraordinary cir-
cumstances to do good actions; try
to use ordinary situations—Richter.
Justice is the insurance we have on
our lives and property, and obedience
is the premium we pay for it.—Penn.
Tae slightest sorrow for sin is suf:
ficient if it produce amendment, and
the greatest insufficient if it do not—
Colton,
We are haunted by an ideal life,
and it is because we have within us
the beginning and the possibility of it
—Phillips Brooks,
This ts the law of benefits between
Men: the one ought to forget at once
what he has given, and the other
never to forget what he has received.
Seneca,
There is no action of man in this
Mfe which is not the beginning of 80
long @ chain of consequences, as that
no human providence can tell what
the end will be.—Thomas of Malmes
bury,
The words that a father speaks to
his children in the privacy of home
are not heard by the World, but, as in
whispering galleries, they are clearly
heard at the end, and by posterity. —
Richter,
Let us be thankful that our sorrow
lives in us as an indestructible force,
only changing its form and passing
from pain into sympathy—the one
word which includes all our best {n-
sight and our best love.—George Eliot.
There cannot be a more glorious ob-
Ject In creation than a human. being
replete with benevolence, meditating
in what manner he may render him:
self most acceptable to the Creator by
doing good to His creatures.—Field:
ing.
Never did any soul do good, but tt
came readier to do the same again,
with more enjoyment. Never was
love, or gratitude, or bounty practiced
but with Increasing joy, which made
the practicer still more In love with
the falr act—Shaftesbury,
We often magnify troubles and dif
ficulties and look at them tll thes
seem much greater than they reall)
fre, Some of our troubles, no doubt
are real enough, but yet are not evils
Foresight Is very wise, but foresor
row fs very foolish; and castles are
at any rate better than dungeons, tt
the air—Lord Avebury,
BITS OF PHILOSOPHY.
The veinest hopes are generally the
most roseate.
Incongruous theories are often mis:
taken for great principles,
The has beens are bad enough. The
might have beens are worse,
It Is not always so much what a
man has, as how it pleases him,
Charity never excuses a wrong; at
most it only seeks to palliate it.
For every rose there is a thorn,
uniess you know how to avoid it,
The worst form of selfishness Is to
destroy the enjoyment of others.
Few people, indeed, ever come te
Delieve that they have a sufficiency.
Love, we are told, finds out every:
thing, And at that it is often disap:
pointed,
It is well enough to be hopeful, but
hope, like faith, must be backed up
with works.
Men who pursue tmpossibilities en
Joy the activities of life and none of
its rewards,
In a majority of cases people who
rise from penury to opulence forget all
the journey except the last stages,
CAREFULLY THOUGHT OUT.
Job was one of the boilers that did
not explode. t
After praying for goodness some
People forget to be good,
Sometimes men blow out the gas
after olowing in all their monay.
It Is reported that a St, Louis boy
ate so much honey he was attacked
by Lives,
Every man has bis particular bent
especially after he gets in te rheu-
matic class.
When @ man begins to go down
ik he mects a lot of peopte with
their noses turned up.
When a woman wants to say any-
thing mean pertaining to men in gen-
eral sho says they are all alike
Fame is a glorious thing, but a
small regular Income is much more
satisfactory to the average mao.
Don't tell your troubles, It doesn’t
do any good, and besides It takes up
the over fellow’s time who wants to
tell you his.
WHAT ONE WOMAN OBSERVES.
When fidelity becomes obligatory,
life holds but few pleasures,
How easy it is to blame people for
not being patient under aMiction.
Nothing reaches a woman's heart
80 qitickly as a man’s desire to con
fide in hee
We may all prate of moral strength,
bat when Cemptation comes along one
fs apt to fall down flat
While her whole nature may revolt
at a union, woman's tender heart oft-
fumes prevents a rupture,
We cannot bid love stay or depart
The litte god ts totally oblivious to
hospitality or the lack of tt,
Love, like the rose, is so sweet that
one always tries to pluck it despite
the thorns, says the Philadelphia In-
“quirer.
The Woodman Shoe
HS RES TAN [Styles--All Leathers |” ”
=——$3.50.—— ,
Ie ‘ _. You will be “pleased
H (3°) with your first invest-—
E ment in this grand line
ely for the value will be a
U v revelation to you to see
si what persistent work
" Fan i has done for this popu-
Gases < lar price.
Ovie Ss © Style like cut a new fav-
NANEW <<) teiand ill auke trend
4 at a glance.
STYLE
OVIATT SHOE Co.,
1105 Main.
We are Showing for the First Gime
°
The Iris Corsets,
A new model, made and designed especially for us and not
to be found elsewhere, in two styles, as follows:
Tris No. 1.
A distinct and exclusive model, [found only here, made of
White Batiste, full bias, cut gored, short hipped, softly
boned, no side steels, lace and ribboned trimmed top and bot-
tom; hose supporter tabs especially adapted
jabeiee fierce id a pre Ak oa
.
[eas tris No. 2.
Made of White Batiste, new Princess hip, full bias cut, low
bust, lace ‘and ribboned trimmed top, hose supporters on
front and hips; one of the newest effects, especially adapted
tothe medium full figure, where the corset lines are dis-
squised through clinging gowns; worn for 2.00
ane and summer; sizes 19 to 26; price e
— . Third Floor.
=
°
Emery, Bird, Thayer @ Co.
NEGRO ENTERPRISE.
Smoke a
Paul Laurence Dunbar Cigar.
PRICE 8 CENTS,
This clgar is made exclusively of high grade imported Havana Fil
Houglits even Mt a amt of twenty-five cents cach
COLORED-AMERICAN CIGAR CO.,
main office Chicago, Ht, SMM Ny MO
Depew Tells Old Joke. |
A visitor in Washington heard
Senator Depew deliver a speech the
other day. The New York states:
man made a joke about pressing the
hand of a fair Mormon widow, the
widow numbering seventeen. The
remark provoked a@ good deal of
laughter, but it sounded familiar to
the man in the gallery. Later he
found that Mr. Depew tad borrowed
the joke from a skit written by Arte-
mus Ward some forty cr fifty years
ago.
Progression in Scotland.
Mrs. Jane Boyes, M. D., a graduate
of the Edinburgh University, has been
appointed government physician of the
island of Coll, Argylshire. This is said
to be the first instance of a woman
doctor receiving a government ap-
polntmeut in Scotland,
Ghe CURVE SALOON
M, COHN, Proprietor.
Iinporter of and Dealer in
Pennsylvania Ryes and
Kentucky Bourbon,
Fine Wines, Gins, Cordials & Cigars.
543 Grand Avenue.
N. E.kCor, Independence nnd Grand
Family botile trade promptly attended to.
& ELITE
| RESTAVRANT
Mesid perartncta None wad tre
899 STATE AVE. KANSAS CITY, KANS
Fancy & Staple Groceries
| +++ AND...
Table Luxuries
Vegetables in Season,
Fresh & Salt Meats,
Teas & Coffees.
oe. JONES,
ie 17th St, Kansas City, Mo.
“Evérsthing Pertaining to Muste
y
Points
Of excellence recom-
mend The Emerson
Piano to music lovers,
but one of its strongest
features is its great
durability. The Em-
erson is built to last.
We guarantee it. A
reasonable price and
easy terms, buys it.
For sale by
arf Hoffman
MUSIC COMPANY
= Sul
SN MMtWUT 51 KAnEAS
Langston’s Shaving Parlor,
wita ie eure
Agency for Steam Laundry.
718 E 8th St., Kansas City, Mo.
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The Anarchist's Failure
The long, narrow room, the only entrance to which was by a tortuous passage behind old Lecop's tobacco shop, was but dimly lighted by the flaring blaze of the filthy candles set into a three-pronged candlestick in the middle of the table. But although the light only vaguely outlined the figures of fourteen men about the board, it shone full upon our faces, and showed each his neighbor's countenance in the palid yellow glow.
At the head of the table sat Pulsaski, his burly form making the rickety chair in which he sat creak and groan. His stature seemed almost gantic beside that of the others, for we were all of sunny France but he.
And now the fatal hour had come. We had chosen our sacrifice. He was hated of the people and must die. He had done much against the cause of liberty, and we all echoed Pulaski's force declaration that he must suffer for his crimes.
"We are all here," said Pulaski, raising his massive head, and his deep voice filling the room. "He must die. Are we all agreed?"
A hoarse "Aye!" rose from the group about the table.
From the drawer at his end of the table he produced a handful of small, white beans, thirteen of which he counted out upon the table in our sight. Then from another compartment in the same drawer he brought forth one black one, and placed it with the white.
"There are fourteen," he said again. A hat served in want of a better receptacle, and into it the fourteen beans were dripped. Pulaski shook them together, and passed the hat to the man at his right hand. It was too dark in the room to see the color of the beans in the hat, had one wished; but the first man looked straight ahead as he plunged his hand within and brought it slowly forth again, closed tightly over the bean he had selected. His hand remained closed as he passed the hat to his neighbor, and thus it went down the table.
Then the hat was passed to me.
Before my fingers clutched the little bean I had been terrified by a certain knowledge that I should draw the fatal lot. When it was firmly in my clasp, however, and I had passed the hat along the board, that feeling left me. I felt relieved—almost happy; the terrible odeal was over, and I was impressed now so strangely by a feeling of exultant relief—so great a reaction from my previous morbid fear—that I was willing to swear that I had been lucky, and that the fatal lot had fallen, or would fall, to some other. I should not have to die! Ah, I was young and life was sweet to me then.
Then the hat came back to Pulaski, and almost feverishly he seized it and clutched the remaining bean, turning the hat upside down upon the table.
A
Then I Opened My Hand.
and rapping it smartly to show that it was empty. Then Pulaski opened his palm outward that we might see, and displayed a white bean. Suddenly, with the amazement that a peal of thunder from a clear sky might cause one, I saw that the eyes of them all were bent on me! I glanced swiftly about the table; each
hand lay open, and in the palms thus
displayed were the thirteen white
beans! It took a minute, perhaps, for
the full significance of this fact to
dawn upon me.
Then I opened my own hand.
"The lot has been drawn."
Pulaski's deep voice reached my
car faintly, as though from a great
distance. I still sat at the dirty
table; the pale, set faces of my com-
rades were all about me. But I had
lived over my whole life again, and
its end was now at hand.
"According to our agreement," our
A
"One Barrel for Him!" I Shouted,
"This for You!"
leader said, more distinctly than before, "the messenger of death is to take this weapon"—he drew a pistol from the table drawer and laid it before him—and with it do his work. It is loaded with two bullets; one is for his heart, the other for the messenger himself. It is understood?
I bowed mechanically and received the pistol.
"One barrel for him, the other for you!" repeated Pulsak. "for it is agreed that he shall die."
Then, one by one my friends came and embraced me and went out; but Pulsak passed me without a word. Only his fierce glance seemed to burn into my very soul.
"One barrel for him, one barrel for me!" I muttered. Staggering to my feet, I hid the pistol in my bosom and walked through the passage into the tobaccoist's shop.
It was dark when I made my way into the garden. It was a beautiful garden, but gardens are only for the rich. A great wall was built all about it, that the poor might not even see its beauty. All things are denied the poor but labor; that they have in plenty.
He was in the habit of walking in his garden early in the morning. We all knew what; everybody knew it, in fact, so I concealed myself beside the path and waited. The pistol was in my bosom—my hand was upon it. I could not fail to hit the mark, for he would pass within a yard of me.
"One barrel for him, the other for me!" I kept repeating, and thus the night wore away and the gray dawn broke at last.
At last I saw him come from the hall and pass down the marble steps into the garden. He was a handsome, imposing old man, and hearty looking, as though he had yet many years of life before him. I alone knew that he had but a few moments. I would let him enjoy the sweet morning air for a little while, and then—— "One barrel for him, the other for you!" Suddenly there was an eager, childish shout from the villa, and a little figure dashed out over the portal and down the path with a cry of "Grand'pere!" Such a lovely, fairy-like creature as she was! She was like my little sister, and he swung her up into his arms and kissed her just as I had often kissed Joan ere she died.
And while she prattled on, and he listened, and I watched the two, a sudden tumult arose outside the garden. There were hoarse cries, and the tramping of many feet, and into the garden (the gate of which the porter had left open) all covered with foam
and dust, and with the froth driveling from his savage jaws, dashed a huge, shaggy brute, and rushed up the path toward those two on the seat.
"Mon Dieul!" he cried, and put her quickly behind him, facing the maddened beast empty handed as he was.
"For her sake!" I muttered, and rising from the covert I fired the first barrel of the pistol. The brute sprang high into the air, and then fell back to the dust, dead.
While the people crowded in, I escaped. There was still a little money in my purse, and I left Paris and hastened to Havre, there to take passage for America. I crept about the dark streets at night until I could find an opportunity to embark from my native land, and there Pulaski found me.
I knew he would come. I had seen it in his cruel eyes when he left me that day in the room behind the tobaccoon's. I had not been a traitor, but the child had sheltered him with her innocence.
Pulaski sprang upon me in a lonely place—perhaps he had been dogging me for days; I know not.
"I have found you," he said, in his deep rumbling voice. "Traitor! You were the chosen messenger of death; you drew the lot; why did you not keep your oath?"
I could say naught.
"Self accused, you die by my hand!"
he hissed, and I saw the flash of the steel above my head; but I had the pistol still.
"One barrel for him," I shouted,
"this for you!"
I fired, and as I ran from the spot I looked back and saw his huge body sway forward, and fall, a dead thing, upon the pavement.
Then I came to America. I am an old man now, but can I ever forget?
—Boston Journal.
HIS CHARACTERS FROM LIFE.
Where Charles Lever Got His Rollleek Irish Stories.
Whence did Charles Lever get his rolleicing Irishman? Prof. Oman in his preface to the reissue of William Grattan's "Adventures With the Connaught Rangers" discloses the secret. It was clearly, he avows, from the domestic annals of the old Eighty-eighth Foot in Peninsular days that Lever drew the greater part of the good stories which made the fortunes of "Charles O'Malley." Many of the characters in that romance appear in the flesh in Grattan's reminiscences. Notably:
"The eccentric surgeon, Maurice Quill, whose fame was so great throughout the British army that the novelist did not even take the trouble to change his name. His colleague, Dr. O'Relly, was almost as great an original. Many of the humors of "Micky Free seem to be drawn from the doings of Grattan's servant, Dan Carsons."
"Comparing the 'real thing,'" Mr. Oman goes on, "with the work of fiction, one is driven to conclude that much of what was regarded as rollicking invention on Lever's part was only a photographic reproduction of anecdotes that he had heard from old soldiers of the Connaught Rangers."
"Just as It Used to Be."
I wish I were a boy again.
That are were but a dream.
That things would change from what they are
To what they used to seem;
That I were but a little boy,
And from my mother's knee
Could find that dear old fairyland,
Just as it used to be.
If wishes only were a horse,
How fast away I'd ride
Across the plains of yesterday,
Bold comrades by my side;
Once more I'd rescue captive maids;
Ah! doughty deeds you'd see,
If I were but a hero bold,
Just as I used to be.
With bean-stalk Jack I'd sally forth
To giants kill galore;
In savage league boote I'd stride away
To that enchanted shore
Where ogres dwell, in castles huge,
And mermaids swarm the sea;
Oh how I'd love to find them all
Just as they used to be.
My little boy says I'm all wrong—
That nothing's changed at all.
That he can show me ogres fierce,
And giants more than tall;
Then clasping his dear hand in mine,
He leaves me to see—
Years drop as leaves; I'm young again,
Just as I used to be.
-Frederick Mitchell Munroe in Town and Country.
Child Study of the Bible
The sting of our loss, writes Rolle Ogden in his study of "The Literary Loss of the Bible," in the February Century, lies in the perishing of the young associations which used to be entwined about the felicities and majesty of biblical phraseology. The mature and preoccupied mind will in vain seek deliberately to assimilate the purely literary charm and power of the Bible. Later and colder studies cannot give what must be drawn in almost with mother's milk. The accumulated impressions of childhood, the familiarity with sounding phrases before they are understood, the play of young imagination, of awe, and even superstition, about the sacred page, together with the daily repetition and use of the rich English of the King James version, seem necessary to the surest and most enduring grasp on the Bible merely as a great writing. There is a certain disillusionment in studying the Bible in too cold and dry a light of reason, and though it may be a critical gain it is a literary loss.
Such Is Life.
Farmer Hayrix (looking over paper) —"Skitrem, the druggist, is closing out his entire stock uv patent medicines at half-price."
Mrs. Hayrix—"That's jist our peskq luck! They hain't a thing the matter with any uv the hull fambly."
Old Story of President Jackson.
Dr. Edward Everett Hale denies the story that Mrs. Jackson, wife of "Old Hickory," explaining the origin of her Just illness, said: "The general kicked this kiverlet off and I kotched cold." It seems to be true, however, that at a dinner party in the white house, when the lights were dim, President Jackson remarked: "The chanticleer does not burn well."
A Mixed-Up Engineer
A Missouri Pacific engineer of Sedalia reports that the record of his birth is lost, and he is in doubt about his age. Then, too, he has "made up" so much time on his trips between St. Louis and Kansas City that he is probably a r or two ahead of Father Time anyway, and he's all mixed up about it.—Kansas City Star.
BUSINESS QUANTITY
The M. K. & T. Ry. has a well-established Industrial Department, aiding in the selection of sites and locations for industries of all kinds along its lines. Write if you are interested. We will send book, "Business Chances," and any other information wanted. Address James Barker, Gen'l Pass Agent, M. K. & T. Ry., 204 Wainwright Bldg., St. Louis.
Plants Under the Ban
The Pennsylvania House of Representatives has before it a bill providing that the war of extermination already waged against the Canada thistle shall be extended to include golden rod, ox-eyed daisies, milkweed, wild carrots and sorrel, all of which are considered pestiferous plants.
Southerners Invite Roosevelt.
President Roosevelt has been invited to attend the unveiling of the monument to be erected at Orchard Knob, on the Chickamauga battlefield, in commemoration of the services of Maryland's soldiers, union and confederate, in the civil war. The unveiling will take place on July 22.
Tin Soldiers and Others
Kruger's grandson screamed with rage and threw his box of tin soldiers into the street when he discovered that they were English, whereas his grandfather had a fit when he found out that the English soldiers were not tin.—Toronto (Ontario) Mall and Empire.
Quorum in House of Lords.
There can be no quorum of the House of Lords without the presence of an archbishop, two peers and a prelate being needed to constitute a House of Lords for the transaction of business.
South Carolina's Tobacco Industry. The growth of the tobacco industry in South Carolina has been phenomenal. The Darlington market alone reports sales of more than 7,000,000 pounds of the 1902 crop.
To Force Flowering Plants:
Flowering plants may be forced to blossom at any time by exposing them to ether fumes for two days twice, with an interval of two days between, and then placing for two weeks in a hot house.
Venezuela's Chief Product.
Coffee has been cultivated in Venezuela only since 1879, and yet it is now the much-talked-of country's chief commercial product.
British Trade Slightly Increased.
British trade returns for 1802, show an increase in exports of £3,517,600 and in imports of £,870,086.
Expensive Oranges
Oranges were sold at one shilling a pound in one of the London street markets the other day.
Locomotive to Burn Peat.
The managers of the Swedish state railway have ordered a locomotive built especially for burning peat in the generation of steam.
Johannesburg Filling Up
Johannesburg's present population is estimated at 109,452, including 44,122 natives and 3,550 Asiatics.
Large Savings Bank Deposits.
The savings bank deposits of the United States equal the national debt multiplied by three.
A LAYMAN
Gave Doctor a Hint About Coffee.
Speaking of coffee a doctor of Decaturville, Ohio, says: "We used to analyze coffee at the medical college and in spite of our laboratory tests which showed it to contain caffeine, an active poison, I continued to use the drink, and later on found myself affected with serious stomach trouble, indigestion, headaches, etc.
The headaches came on so regularly and oppressed me so that I found it difficult to attend to my regular duties. One day last November I met a friend whom I had known to be similarly afflicted. His marked improvement in appearance caused me to inquire what he had been doing. He announced that he had, some time ago, quit coffee and was using Postum Food Coffee. To this change he attributed the change in his health.
I took the hint, even from a layman, and made the same change myself. The first week I noticed a little difference, but not much. The third week the change was almost magical. I have continue 1 with the Postum and now my digestion is perfect, the nervous headaches have entirely disappeared, and I am well. My own analysis of the Postum Food Coffee shows it to be a pure food drink of strong character, which is a marked contrast to the old-fashioned coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Unfortunate Turkish Official.
M. Zinovieff, the Russian minister, recently procured the dismissal of the captain of a Turkish guardship for omitting to fire the customary salute on the "name day" of the czar of Russia. The unfortunate captain gave as his excuse the fact that his powder was wet. The sultan sent his foreign minister to apologize and the salute was fired in due form next day.
WILL Accelerate Fire-Fighting
A telescope ladder capable of being extended to a length of 85 feet and worked by means of compressed air was tested recently in Pittsburg. The ladder can be directed at a particular window in a burning building; a fireman lashed to the end of the ladder is shot up with it, and rescued persons need not clamber down, but the ladder can be quickly lowered with them on it.
Must Be Pet of Providence
It is told as a true story that John Chapman of Galena, Kan., fell down a twenty-foot tramway at the Blind Tiger mine and dislocated his shoulder. He went home and stumbled down the cellar steps and in falling his shoulder was thrown back into place. He took a drink and returned to work.
Influenza Among Diplomatists
Influenza, now epidemic in Paris, claims M. Delcasse, the minister of foreign affairs; Prince Von Radolin, the German ambassador; the Marquis Del Muni, the Spanish ambassador, and Count Von Wolkenstein-Trotzburg of the German embassy. It has been humorously suggested that Mr. Delcasse inoculated the entire diplomatic corps.
Through and Through
New Bedford, Mass., March 2d—At 655 First street, this city, lives a very happy man. His name is Ulric Levasseur and he certainly has good reason to feel glad and proud.
Mr. Levasseur has been sick for a long time with general weakness and a sore pain in his back. At the last he got so very bad that he could not walk without great misery. Now he is well, and in speaking of this wonderful change in him he says:
"I believe it to be my duty to tell everybody how I was cured. I was so weak that I could not stoop. In fact, I was unable to walk without great pain. I began taking Dodd's Kidney Pills and after a two months' treatment I am well and sound again.
"Dodd's Kidney Pills are a God-sent remedy. I will always praise them for their wonderful cure of my case. They cured me through and through. I am as strong and able a man now as I ever was."
Some people regard a clear conscience more as a luxury than a necessity.
A woman may be fair as to complexion and unfair in other ways.
YELLOW CLOTHES ARE UNSIGHTLY.
Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2 oz. package, 5 cents.
Nothing so forcibly reminds a man of life's brevity as a thirty day note.
To the house-wife who has not yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market and who is reasonably satisfied with the old, we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold Water Starch be made at once. Not alone because it is guaranteed by the manufacturers to be superior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 16 czs., while all the other kinds contain but 12 ozs. it is safe to say that the lady who once uses Defiance Starch will use no other. Quality and quantity must win.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil of yesterday.
Try me just once and I am sure to come again. Defiance Starch.
The sculptor does his best to bust his patrons.
Prelate's Witty Remark
Many anecdotes are going the rounds about the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Davidson. Once, as a party of clergy were streaming in to dinner one of the company plously exclaimed, "Now, put a bridle upon our appetites." Dr. Davidson replied with swift retort, "Now, to put a bit between my teeth."
Theodore Gier of Oakland, Cal., has received from the German emperor word of his election as a member of the Order of the Crown. The decoration is in recognition of Gler's services to the officers of German warships in San Francisco bay at the time of the "boxer" troubles in China.
Public:Spirited Ohio Citizen.
Benjamin Waddell, a wealthy and public-spirited farmer of Marlon county, Ohio, who some time since gave a $50,000 home for children to the town of Marlon, is about to expend at least $60,000 in building a home for ol ladies in the same time.
A tract of 20,000 acres in western Kansas has been bought by Indiana and Ohio capitalists for raising Polled Angus cattle.
Profit in Municipal Ownership.
Liverpool expects a profit of $350,000 on last year's working of its municipal tramway system.
One Cause of Pneumonia.
"Street car colds" are principally responsible for the increased mortality from pneumonia.
STRIKES YOU ANY TIME
Never know when or where backache pains will strike you.
THE LADY
The kidneys will go wrong, and when they do the first warning is generally through the back. Do not fail to help the kidneys when they're sick. Neglect means many serious lils. 'Tis only a short step from common backache to Rheumatic pains, Urinary disorders, Dropsy, Diabetes, Bright's Disease. Doan's Kidney Pills cure all lils of the kidneys and bladder. Read this testimony; it tells of a cure that lasts.
Mr. A. W. Lutz, carriage wood worker, of 109 17th avenue, Sterling, Ill., says: "After procuring Doan's Kidney Pills in the month of November, 1897, I took a course of the treatment which cured me of backache and other annoyances due to over-excited or weakened kidneys. During the three years which have elapsed, I have had no occasion to retract one word of my statement. I unhesitatingly and emphatically reindorse the claims made for Doan's Kidney Pills.
A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Lutz will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box.
There is no time like the present for doing things we don't have to.
THOUSANDS OF AMERICANS FOR WESTERN CANADA
"There will be thousands of Americans coming up here in the spring," was the remark made by a farmer from the vicinity of Langdon, North Dakota, when he arrived in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the capital of Western Canada, a few days since. He was the advance guard of a large body who are following him, and he has already invested in several farming sections for himself and others and purposes to take up his permanent abode in this country. He went on to say: "Hundreds are coming from my district alone. I know this to be a fact for many of them are neighbors of mine. The chief topic of conversation with the farmers is the coming immigration in the spring.
"The impression general in the part of Dakota where I live that farmers can get from 10 to 15 cents more a bushel for wheat on the American side of the line than on the Canadian has not prevented people from turning their eyes to Canada as a place to live in. They know they can get land in this country which is every bit as fertile as that in Dakota at about one-quarter the price. It is safe to say that the exodus from Dakota into Canada this year will exceed the expectations of all Canadians."
The government has established agencies at St. Paul, Minn.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Chicago, Ill.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Millwaukee, Wis.; Wausau, Wis.; Detroit, Sault Ste. Marie, and Marquette, Mich.; Toledo, Ohio; Watertown, S. Dakota; Grand Forks, N. Dakota, and Great Falls, Mont., and the suggestion is made that by addressing any of these, who are the authorized agents of the government, it will be to the advantage of the reader, who will be given the fullest and most authentic information regarding the results of mixed farming, dalrying, ranching and grain-raising, and also supply information as to freight and passenger rates, etc. etc.
It requires same nerve to have the courage of another man's convictions.
W.L.DOUGLAS
SHOES $3.50
UNION MADE
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men's Goodbye Walt (Hand-Sewed Process) shoes than any other manufacturer in the world.
$25,000 REWARD
will be paid to anyone who
O
who it
has
replied
a
on-
und
can disprove this statement.
Because W. L. Douglas
lests the largest manufacturer
he can buy cheaper and
produce his shoes at a
price, which enables him
corns, which enables him
to sell shoes for $3.50 and
$3.00 equal in every
way to those sold else-
where for $4 and $5.00.
Poulinas secret pro-
duits. The products are pro-
duits lately pure leather; more flexible and will wear
more than tannery leather worldwide.
The sales have more than four
years, which proves its superiority. Why not
Notice Increase (1999 Sales: $2,903,881,811
in Business); 1992 Sales: $5,853,840,800
A grain of 9.89, 40.59, 45.49 in Four Years.
W. L. DOUGLAS 4.00 GILT EDGE LINE,
Worth $5.00 Compared with Other Makes.
Patent Calf, Box 1, Box 2, Box 3, Box 4,
Patent Calf, Box 4, Box 5, Box 6, Vicil Kid, Coron
Colt, and National Kangaroo, Fast Color Eyetits.
The genuine have W. L. DOUGLAS
bottom. Shoes by mail, 36-cre. Illus. Catalogue
W. L. DOUGLAS, 36-cre. Illus. Catalogue
210 Kinds for 16c.
It is a fact that these seeds are found in more gardens and on more hills than any other in America. There is reason for it. We own and operate a collection of our choice seeds. 1. order to induce you to try them we make a dedicated offer
For 16 Genes Postpaid
2. sorts wonderful onions
2. sorts elegant cabbage,
2. sorts more difficult cabbage,
2. sorts rare sunflower, radish,
2. sorts gloriously beautiful flower seeds,
in all 210 kinds positively furnishing both of choice vegetables and of choice vegetables, together of our great catalogue telling about Maconian Wheat, Bellar about Grana, Tootieh, Bromus, Spelt, and all of only 18c. in stamps and this matter.
Onion seed at 60c a pound.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
L Croese, Wife.
LEWIS'S SINGLE BINDER
THE BEST QUALITY
STRAIGHT 16CIGAR ALWAYS RELIABLE
“win,
Cr
nig s p
eal ie Laat doctors do
not recognize tl symptoms
of derangement of the female
organs until too late.
“1 had terrible pains along m;
spinal cord for two gare and eckerss
freadfully, I was given different
medicines, wore plasters; none of
these things helped me, Tending of
the cures that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
‘Vegetable Compound has brought
about, I somehow felt that it was
what I needed and bought a bottle to
take. How glad 1 am that I did #03
two bottles brought me immense re-
lief, and after using three bottles more
I felt new life and blood surging
through my veins It scemed | ae
though there had been a regular house
leaning through my system, that all
the sickness and poison had been taken
out and new life given me instead. I
have advised dozens of my friends to use
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. Good health is indis-
enuble, to complete happiness, and
[ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
‘Compound has secured this to me.”
—Mrs, Lavra L. Breen, Crown
Point, Indiana, Secretary Ladies Relic
‘orp. —, felt If 0
fae eee teas es
Every sick woman who does not
understand her ailment should
write Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn,
Mass. Her advice is tree and
always helpful.
LOOK inYOUR
Whatwould you
i give tobe rid of
those pimples
S24 and blackheads,
(iy that sallowcom-
aes plezions those
f ustreless eyes?
No doubt you
AE) would ge 60
centstobecured
of constipation,
liver troubles, lediestice and
dyspepsia! Get rid of these
troubles and fen complexion
will clear up fike an April day
after a shower, Take
.
Dr.Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin
ary Tao, 298 Mehga, Ave
eee ae
fern tuna p Gayater eeteele
Basics brea bef. ats bam hee
sab are bel mc a cat
Falacesieatrnaine are
iat and arn 80 af Ta One Beatie dae ore
Ree ume ter eented tes
Riyseft compietaly care Aly ain fe witte and
See eee
Mi
tA Bont Benet You
PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Monticello, IM,
71
Lah)
IVZS. ONE
wiv
JY DOLLAR
m om hh tad BU BLES TO
S10 Wee
SRS ates e es raha.
WESTERN CANADA
mmm | Pa Reaee wae feces
SSE es Ae
Bi, a gt
UALANUMAB =:
THE WESTERN INVESTMENT |
YAY coven eva
DRi Y oieerranaeaeeee nt
pate Brkcuvuy Sates age
W. N, U. KANSAS CITY, NO, 16, 1903
POR ao
CHE a
Boat ee ae OB
~*~ CONSUMPTION ¥
America's Venice,
‘When the mud thins out a tittle
Pittsburg’s strects will be nearly as
pavigable as the recent rains have
made her rivers—Pittsburg Gazette.
140 not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption
teas an equal for coughs and colds.—Joun F
Bom, Trisity Springs, Ind, Fob. 18, 100,
The family horse is beginning te
“shed,” @ sure sign of spring,
‘THOSE WHO HAVE TRIED re
Fiarct haw no equa tn Guaauy or Qua
Ayai6 a s
seta Sa eee.
An old bachelor says that marriage
1s a herole cure for love.
AF YOU USE BALL BLUE,
Get Red Cross Ball Biue, the bert Ball Blas,
Large of. package only 5 cents,
His satanic majesty expects to pave
several miles of new streets this year,
EXUS Tete ay es Riincs rat herve Nenoren
BEAL TRRE S00" al Soul Sea eae
‘ai, Kitsas Leccoot arch 6, Vouscsigia, Pe
Actors may be prompt at rehersals,
but there is always one prompter,
For chitirta weerhioge tatters ine nem, pedices fe
Sxtusation, allay pas, cures wind Sule Soca bute
‘Look yourself over; is your safety
valve in good working order?
Superior quality and extra quantity
‘must win. This is why Defiance Starch
1s taking the place of all others.
Half the marriages are failures and
half are not successes,
Stops the Cough and
Works Of the Cold
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price %o.
Tho church {dea of sport ts when a
member rides to service in a carriage,
Economy 1s the road to wealth.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYE Is the
road to economy.
Where Morgan Recuperates.
J. Plerpont Morgan has one of his
country homes situated in wilds so re
mote that deer from the adjoining
forest nibble the honeysuckle decora-
ting its veranda,
ALTON RESUMES FAST ST. LOUIS
‘TRAIN SERVICE.
Passengers destined to St. Louts
and points east should go via the Kan-
fas City gateway, thereby securing
the advantage of the Chicago & Alton’s
fast night train, leaving Kansas City
at 9 p. m., arriving In St, Louis at 7:08
& m, Chair cars free of extra charge
Compartment sleeping cars. ‘The Al-
ton keeps their light a'shining just
ahead of the rest, Write to L. D.
Looper, Traveling Passenger Agent,
Chicago & Alton Railway, Kansas City,
Mo., for lowest rates,
The fellows who shave themselves
are not the only ones who get ir
scrapes,
Deatnews Cannot Be Cured
by oval aphiteaons as they cannot roneh the
Ufoenred portion of the ear. There is only one
way tovurecentuens aud that ts by const
futlonal rerneties, ontneas is caused by 9a
Iiflame condition of the mucus 1ining of the
Eustachian Tobe. When this tubs ts fnfamed
Pa inseyramling wou or finperfoct hears
foc, and when it entirely closed deathens tx
the'restit ad unless the inflammation ean be
taken out amd this tubw restored to its normal
comiition, hearing will-be deatroyed forcver:
hie cases out of tn, ark éuiwed by entarehy
tyiven te motting vut an Inamed condition
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case
of Dentness (caused by ‘eatarri) that cannon
Boredrad Uy Haire Catarrh Cure. ‘Send for
uiats fi J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo, O
Sold-vy Dricklats, oe
HAit2 Family Plils are the best,
There Is no such thing as an {dle
rumor, It 1s always industrious,
| INSIST ON GETTING IT.
Sean ld, te copra oh a
gene chee
Lots of fellows wear themselves out
In an effort to have a good time.
a The Genuine TOWER'S
Pai POMMEL
be ; \\ SLICKER
7 wd HAS BEEN ADVERTISED |
\ SS AND SOLD FOR A
N QUARTER OF A CENTURY
iN LIKE ALL
QBN Saez, YartoooF
NG icy ees! CLOTING
Ear fetes,
Ye teheitiencepie?
STICK TO THE
SIGN OF THE FISH.
MGAIAPIAN,CO. mera 4, Tower co. » |
Y ————
‘Over 2,000,000 people are now buy-
Ing goods from us at wholesale
prices saving 18 to 40 per cent on every
thing they use, You can do tt too.
Why not ask us to send you our 1,000
page catalogue St tells the story. Send
Th eonts for it today.
a CHICAGO
‘The house that tells the truth.
POTATOES «x.
ASH se Varta ecetn ares:
aaa
Ssatkikaestieer Dore
‘Whoever jstands still loses ground
OF THE DA
We Never Given Away.
“Pa,” sald Johnny, who is a persist:
ent knowledge seeker, “what is a law:
giver?”
“There isn't any such thing, Jim-
my,” replied the old gentleman, who
had been involved in considerable Itt
gation in his time.
“But this book says that somebody
was a great laweiver,” persisted the
youngster.
“Then it’s a mistake,” rejoined his
father. “Law is never given, It's re-
tailed in very small quantities at very
high figures."—Stray Stories.
"The Brute Carries His Point
“Madame,” he said, during a lull in
their quarrel. “I propose to know,
once and for all, if you are going to
mind me—"
“Mind you, indeed!" cried his wife.
*You are beneath my notice.”
“Thanks. I was going to ask if
you'd mind me smoking in the parlor,
‘Dut since you won't mind, here goes.”
‘The Villaint |
«
ff
\ IS Kt
Te
Mrs. Snitcher—Oh, you scoundrel!
Wasn't it bad enough that my poor
dear mother should be adjudged in
sane without your testifying that tn
your opinfon she was just as sano as
she ever was!
Miendlsh Ravenna,
The burglar softly opened the door
of the suburbanite’s sleeping apart
ment, slipped inside and searched the
room ‘thoroughly, but found nothing
worth stealing.
“Darn him!” he soliloquized. “I'l
get some satisfaction out of him, any:
way!”
‘Thereupon he set the alarm clock
‘on the bureau for the hour of 3 and
softly departed.
Knew His Nephew.
Old Peterby is rich and stingy. I2
the event of his death his nephow it
to inherit his property. A friend o!
the family said to the old gentleman:
“I hear your nephew is going te
marry. On that occasion you ought
to do something to make him happy.*
“1 will,” said Mr, Peterby, “I'll pre
tend that I am dangerously ill.”
Noble Effort Toward Atonement.
Jinks—Why do you suppose men Ile
80 terribly In devising the epitaphs of
their friends?
Winks—Don't know, I'm sure; but
there's this to be said in extenuatior
of their conduct; they invariably de
their utmost to set the matter stralgh\
dy their conversation afterwards.—
Town and Country,
‘hn i kin atiien Ghana.
‘Tom (who has been away)—Dtd you
‘and that girl you were engaged to las!
summer get married?
Jack—Yes; but we are not living
together.
Tom—Why? What's the trouble?
Jack—Oh, no trouble at all. She
married another man and I married
another girl.
Last Link,
“How ts this?” exclaimed the con
victed murderer, “I thought yor
promised to get me scot free!”
“I did,” replied his attorney, as he
looked over the last evidence of the
state; “but circumstances, my deal
sir, halter cases.”
ut
{i i EN }
AA wi
3 | aa ¥ aA
Eee
a Aa
i 4 :
ie Wy et
hie 4 ad
! " ¢ "3
> -
Cea daa
7TH SY
“The Widow's Third.”
‘The Thing to Be Found.
Mistress—"Julia, where's my dia
mond comb? I left ft in my hair.”
Julia—"Yes, ma'am; but [ don't
aoe where Goan sakes
Not Always Practical,
Knickor—Lord Charles Beresfora
Says battleships are cheaper than war.
Henpekt—I know, but how ts a man
to afford a battleship?
THE MEN AND WOMEN
4 — ed a See:
Universally SA
Accepted ae
Family peer S$ Dn
i hist? Nog aif «a
Laxative ie eh
se oe x)
SYRUP OF FIGS ya 3
4 Recommended by ac 7 y
i Many Millions | ot
i a 2a
y¥ The Well-Informed 9. @
Throughout the World— | uff
Manufactured by LAVAS oe
ATTFSRNIAFIGNYRUP(®
mime oo Pe eee
Who Enjoy the Choicest Products
of the World’s Commerce,
Kaowledge of What Is Best More Ime
portant Than Wealth With-
oat ft
Tt must be apparent to every one that
qualities of the highest order are neces-
sary to enable the best of the products of
Modern commerce to attain permanently
to universal acceptance. However loudly
heralded, they may not hope for world-wide
preeminence unless they meet with the
eneral approval, not of individuals only,
but of the many who have the happy
faculty of selecting, enjoying and learn
ing the real worth of the choicest prod-
ucts. ‘Their commendation, consequently,
becomes important to others, since to
meet the requirements of the well ine
formed of all countries the method of
Manufacture must be of the most per-
fect order and the combination the most
excellent of Its kind. ‘The above is true
not of food products only, but is expe-
cially applicable to medicinal agents and
After nearly a quarter of a century of
Growth and general use the excellent
Temedy, Syrup of Figs, ts everywhere
accepted, throughout the world, as the
best of family laxatives, Its quality ts
due not only to the excellence of the
‘combination of the laxative and carmin-
ative principles of plants known to act
most beneficially on the system and pre-
sented In the form of a pleasant and re-
freshing Hquid, but also to the method
of manufacture of the California Vig
Syrup Co., which ensures that uniformi-
ty and purity essential In a remedy in-
tended for family use. Ask any. physi
clan Who t# weil informed and he will
Answer at once that tt is an exceflent
laxative, If at ale eminent In his pro-
fession and has made a special study of
laxatives and their effects upon the ays-
tem he will tell you that It is the best
of family laxatives, because It 4s sim-
ple and wholesome and cleanses and
sweetens the system effectually, when
@ laxative ts needed, without any un=
Pleasant after-eceets, Every well-ine
forncd druggist of reputable standing
Knows that Syrup of Pigs is an excel-
Tent laxative and is glad to sell it, at
the regular price of fifty cents per bot-
tle, because it gives general sattstace
ton, but one should remember that tw
onter to get the beneflclal effects of
Syrup of Piss it Is necessary to buy the
enuine, which is sold in original pack
Ages only; the name of the remedy—
Syrup of Figs and also the full name of
the Company—Callfornia Fig Syrup Co,
printed on the front of every package.
” ay
[ ee | “THE FOOD THAT TELLS. 3
THE WORLD'S iam FOR
GREATEST FLESH AND | 4 Y Ce ee 4 o CATTLE, HORSES,
MILK PRODUCER. cea ek. ae HOCS AND SHEEP.
a MAKES YOUR STOCK nay tia Dh, | a a a
Digestive Do WELL. hae Begone Ag | crownc | riesw | stocx
FOOD LOOK WELL. SELL WELL. a ~ aire gat FooD PRODUCER | CONDITIONER
20 Feeds Maken one Pound.
twenticth century, and the old style of selling stock forls through traveling agents at an enormous expense, shoul give
way to the more tnodern plan of being sold by the mail order methial ata lows expense
Did you ever stop to think what makes the ordinary stock forts cost what they do to you? If not, we will try to
explain. Agents selling stock foods to the farmers direct, through the country with a team, receive a commission of 33
to 50 per cent on all sales, and in addition to this there are other expenses, such as salary to block salesmen, state
managers, and the cost of large lithographs, issued by some stock food people. All this expense is added to the cost of
the food which the farmer is expected to pay. It causes an expense of $75.00 to $80.00 per ton to sell stock food by the
old methods
When nn ngont tries to Interest you in stock foods you have to take his word in regard to the merits of the food,
Why is not the word of a responsible firm, in writing, much better than the verbal contract generally made with a
{taveling agent. By dealing direct with us you will save this expense that fs mdiled to the cont of tho foo that te pur
chased through canvassers, By cutting down this expense we are able to give you a food the quality of which is much
Superior to the ordinary run of sock fools which, if wold under the old mothuxls, could not be sold at waywhere near the
Piloe we are now offering it to you for mail orders
OLIVE-FOOD js superior and entirely different to the ordinary run of stock foods, and is guaranteed to be free
from Antimony, Nux-Vomica, Saltpeter, Copperas and all other injurious ingredients that are so often used
Tp any chemist In the United States who can find any trace
WE WILL GIVE $1,000.00 IN GOLD tithe reeits Wasi UT Nite or Cars,
or Meeting Olivectoad vo hou tee to remove worms, 1 vee fourth of the A '
Bapevees a caver esciceeraanatern cencauiimaratn ba mee al teu aes cane ert Gauk wil oe ion Ake gona pat lng hen
Eaiesromi
‘50 Pound Drums, To Per Pound Delivered at your railway station in the | qe BENT STOCK FOOD MADE
ae gcse Sree aiiencatae Sonninestan at | AN THE WORLD AND Ar THKE
s . & “y _ tage | LOWEST PRICE, ONDER TO-DAY,
MS es YE PAY THE ERWIOHTIAND GUAR. | SoM GeNT OF FOR. CASI,
THE OLIVE-FOOD Co.,""i""
ey IOWA,
fs The Triangular Non-Dilution
ng ‘CREAM SEPARATOR
SEEN srvtrce en morescreem try singe
BRR Sisto inatry'on pines Ang
ed macnn a is
eae Ren Pi Rich pees tebe
Bae A ese! nd farrier” fortis ie”
RUS CWERCANTILE se hDIOk Ts
ae Dopt. ¥. Kannne City, Mo.
Do tet ed ne ete ee TO
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UMN SY INCHESTER
rl TAKE DOWN REPEATING SHOTGUNS B
} he
Re as A Winchester Take-Down Repeating Shotgun, with
ae xy a strong shooting, full choked barrel, suitable for
ay) “\ trap or duck shooting, and an extra interchangeable
¥ | modified choke oreylinder bore barrel, for field shoot-
i ing, tists at only $42.00, Dealers. sell them for
! \; fess. This makes a serviceable all round gun within
BUN Y/R reach of everybody's pocket hook. Winchester
WTA Shotguns outshoot and outlast the most expensive
iy doubie barrel guns and are just as reliable besides,
amc ee WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., » NEW HAVEN, CONN,
ba . eo
You seldom find a dentist on his
uppers, although he frequently oper.
ates cn other people's
THE K. C. S, ALMANAC FOR 1903.
‘The Kansas City Southern Ratlway's
Almanac for 1903 is now ready for dis-
tribution, Farmers, stock-ralsers,
frult-growers, truck gardeners, manu-
facturers, merchants and others seek-
ing a new field of aetion or a new
home at the very lowest prices, can ob-
tain reliable information concerning
Southwestern Missouri, the Cherokee
and Choctaw Nations in the Indian
‘Territory, Western Arkansas, Eastern
Texas, Northwestern Louisiana and the
Coast’ country, aud of the business op-
portunities offered therein,
Write for a copy of the K. ©, 8. Al-
mana’ and address, 5. G. Warner, G.
P. A. K. C.& Ry., Kansas City, Mo.
START A STEAM LAUNDRY (20 °).0222322
Write us, Paradox Machinery Co., 181 E. Division St, Chicago.