The Rising Son
Friday, September 4, 1903
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
Harris Missing
It Pays to Advertise in the Rising Son for It Reaches More Homes of Colored Peop,e than any other Paper in the State.
BENNETT
Venuson
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
ECHOES OF THE FAMOUS ROOSEVELT-WASHINGTON DINNER.
Theodore Roosevelt is President of the United States.
He is President of all the people.
He is a true American.
He stands for all colors, creeds and social conditions.
He is an influential factor in his own administration.
Marquis Ito is a Japanese.
He dined with President Roosevelt.
INDEPENDENCE NEWS.
The tent meeting which has been going on here for the past week has been largely attended every night. Many of the most prominent ministers of this section have been here and preached. It will continue for another week, closing Sunday, Aug. 30. The Macedonia Baptist church and U. B. F.'s will give a picnic September 5th. The outing under the auspices of the A. M. E. church, which was postponed on account of rain, will be given at Hughes's Grove on September 3rd. Come and spend a day's outing. Rev. J. J. Clark's wife and children of Topeka, are here visiting the Rev. and attending the Tent meeting. Miss Maud Oldham, one of the popular teachers of Kansas City, is here visiting Miss Effe Fisher.
Miss Reed of Kansas City is spending her vacation at Blue Springs, the guest of Miss Minerva Rhodes.
Mrs. Missouri Stanton, Princess of the S. M. T.'s, together with Mrs. Kyle and Mrs. Richardson, attended the Grand Session of the U. B. F.'s and S. M. T.'s at Macon last week. They report as having had a very pleasant session and the order as being in a flourishing condition.
A large delegation from Wellington attended the Tent Meeting here Sunday.
Miss Minnie Tucker returned from Lamar las tweek, where she had been visiting her sister.
Mr. Walter Colley of Lexington passed through the city last week on his way to Kansas City to accept a position in the Pullman Car service
Miss Tucker has returned from Denver, where she spent the summer.
Prof. W. T. Vernon and wife spent last Sunday and Monday in this city the guest of Mrs. Caldwell.
Miss Fannie Griggs left last week for Colorado Springs, where she will remain until October.
Mrs. Emma Jackson, who has been visiting her mother, expects to leave this week for her home in Denver.
Rev. J. R. Ransom of Topeka spent
VOLUME VIH.
Marquis Ito is a Japanese.
So did Booker T. Washington.
Marquis Ito is not lighter in hue than Mr. Washington, nor does he represent more of intellect, culture and personal worth than the "Wizard of Tuskegee.
Nobody thought anything wrong about a Japanese dining at the White House.
Let us have a big Roosevelt day at the Emancipation Celebration on the 22d of September.
two days in our city last week and preached at the Tent Thursday night. It was indeed an able sermon and every one was helped.
Bradler Braxton and wife, of Kansas City, Kan., visited here last week, accompanied by friends from Omaha, Lincoln and Hannibal.
Revs. J. T. Kapper of Liberty and J. W. Jacobs, of Kansas City, prescheed excellent discourses at the Tent last week.
Mrs. Price, of Lawrence, Kansas, is here, visitin gher mother, Mrs. Overstreet.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodgers, of Lees Summit, spent last Sunday here with her mother, Mrs. Rodgers.
Revs. Abbott, Collins, Overton, and Hawkins, delivered strong discourses, plain, practical and inspiring, at the Tent last week. Every one appreciated them.
Rev. A. A. Gilbert held his 4th quarterly meeting Sunday. The last quarter for this conference year.
Mr. A. W. Walker and Mrs. Jane Bell left Monday morning to attend the Grand Lodge of the U. B. F.'s and the S. M. T.'s at Macon, Mo.
Quite a number of delegates passed through, going to the Grand Lodge.
Miss Maggie Johnson returned home Monday evening after a few days visit in Kansas City and Independence.
Mrs. Mollie Perry of Higginsville was the guest of Rev. Mrs. Young Sunday.
The members of the 2nd Baptist church had their lawn social Friday night and was a financial success. The amount raised was $60.
The members of the St. John's M. E. church also had financial success Monday night at Mr. George Robinson's.
Mrs. John Johnson accompanied her daughter to Kansas City Sunday, and she returned home Sunday evening.
Born to the wife of Mr. Henry Hancock, a girl.
Mrs. Prof. G. H. Green is still on the sick list.
The Grand Chapter Order of the Eastern Star, will give a picnic at Field's Grove, August 29th, opposite of A. W. Walker's house. Come once and have a good time.
---
LEXINGTON NEWS.
KANSAS CITY MO.. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1903.
THE PROBLEM FROM A NEGRO'S STANDPOINT.
The all absorbing question agitating the public mind to-day, and which has been agitating the public mind nearly half a century, is "What shall we do with our brother in black?"
Having carefully read Rev. Dixon's views on this subject, also having read the symposium recently published in the Chicago Tribune, on the same subject, the thought came to me, the public has this question sufficiently brought before them from the white man's standpoint. Now let us look at it from a Negro's standpoint. The Negro came not to these shores by his own free will, nor for love of the country. Let us go back to 1620, to that period when African slavery grew from the landing of a cargo of Negroes in Jamestown, the same year that the Mayflower anchored in Boston harbor, with a cargo of exiles seeking religious liberty. The Negroes were quickly purchased and slavery became a permanent institution. The introduction of Negroes was an undertaking for the white man's gain and profit. He brought us here and made us a part of the American soil. It is impossible to annihilate us. We are here and to stay. The Negro, as a whole, is docile, forgiving and too willing to overlook the outrages heaped upon him. From 1620 until 1903, it has been the white man's privilege and pleasure to domineer and ostracize the Negro. 1865 found the Negro but a little more civilized than when the first sale put him on the market. In that condition freed and thrown upon their own resources, without even so much as a hoe given them whereby to eke out a livelihood; the ballot waik placed in his hands, a part of the step which had to be taken to save the Union. The South could not be depended on to ratify the amendment to the Constitution. The North, for their own aggrandizement pushed the matter and gave ta be Negroes, all un fitted at that time, the franchise. He surprised and disappointed the white man because he did not exercise the privilege rightly. Sold it, as the white man does; at another time exercised it for his party's sake, as the white man does. Untaught how to use it, and unprotected in the use of it, does it appear that he should use the tool with skill?
It was through those Christian Associations, such as the American Missionary, the United Presbyterian and other Christian associations that light was first given the Negro. Then the South came forward nobly and made provision for public schools for white and black alike. After having given thirty-five years of my life to my own people in the South, I can say with all honesty and truth, that the better class of white people in the South are the best friends the Negroes have.
It was my privilege to be among the first sent South by the American Missionary Association as a teacher. We followed as soon as the soldiers made an opening.
At that time, in the early sixties, the South was devastated, homes were broken, the Negroes thrown upon their own resources, without anything, some without names. No one that has looked upon the progress made by the Negro since emancipation can say that the Negro has not done well, except he look with the eyes of prejudice. Alone and unaided we have struggled, and to-day, we own no small proportion of real estate, churches, school houses and colleges, and we have our bank accounts. We have, it is true, not so many as have our Anglo-Saxon brother, who have for an inheritance the wealth of three hundred years of the labor, artisans, lawyers, doctors artists, sculptors, dressmakers and teachers, with many cultured divines. We are proud that we have done so well in so short a space, and we know
that you are also proud. The "Jim Crow car" law could be easily adjusted by the use of first and second or even third class cars, for we are no more willing to ride or associate with some of the whites, than are some of the whites to ride or associate with us. It is owing to no fault of ours. We look upon it as a burning shame and disgrace to our race, when frequently conductors are puzzled to know whether they are forcing white or colored people into the Jim Crow cars.
Some states have taken the ballot from the Negro. I would to God that all Negroes would refuse to use the ballot, for some time, at least. If education is to be the test, how sad to disfranchise so many worthy, loyal, white young men of the Mountain districts.
Prof Du Bois of Atlanta University, has made a careful study of the condition of the Negro in all phases. He says: "On the whole this study of a phase of the vast economic development of the Negro race but emphasizes the primal and emphatic need of intelligence."
Definitely guided with larger wisdom of men and deeper benevolence of great hearts, an outcome of good cannot be doubted. Muddled and sordid interests, and all the evils of the industrial history may be repeated in the South.
There are a few things the Negro wants. He wants an education in all departments, he wants understanding and wisdom, and he should have a chance, and then he should work out his own problem with God as his helper.
AT EXCELSIOR SPRINGS.
During the month of August, Excelsior Springs was visited by a number of people from Kansas City, Mo., Kansas City, Kas., and other points that made one of the most congenial parties ever seen at the health resort. The party consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Branch of Kansas City, Kas., Mr. and Mrs. Bonsfield, Mr. and Mrs. Buffins, Dr. and Mrs. Chapman, Mrs. Nellie Nichols, Mrs. L. N. Jackson and Mrs. Robert Simpson, all of Kansas City, Mo. and Mr. H. L. Stewart of Chicago, Mr. Lewis Woods of the Rising Son was also present. They all stopped at the Wilson House, where they were cared for by the proprietors, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson. Anyone visiting the Springs for rest and recreation will find good accommodations at the Wilson House.
How She Signed the Check
"I sometimes think that if I had my way in the matter I would make it a law that women should not have bank books," said the tired-looking cashier. "Some of their mistakes would put a sensible schoolboy to shame. Among the checks handed in to me to-day was one for quite a large amount which the woman who drew it out had signed 'Your loving Carrie.'"
Before Rome Was Founded
In one of the tombs recently excavated in the Roman Forum a vase was discovered, the inscriptions on which show that it belongs to the twelfth century before Christ, or 400 years before the reputed date of the toounding of Rome. Signor Boni, the director of the excavations, Believes the tomb to be a relic of a city which existed and had disappeared before Rome was founded.
Lots of Work for Idle Hands
Lots of Work for the Trades.
Loud and urgent are the calls from western farms and orchards for scores of thousands of wage earners for the harvesting of the crops and the garnering of the fruits. But too many idlers, tramps and beggars in our cities, and in the country regions also, turn deaf ears to such appeals and refuse tempting opportunities to earn honest and comfortable livings. The vagrant spirit, the "dead-beak" desire to get along without working, is too conspicuous everywhere.—New York Tribune.
M. B.
The newly elected Grand Master of Grand United Order of Odd Fellows of Missouri.
The subject of the above sketch was elected Grand Master at the 23rd annual session of the order held at Fulton, Mo., Aug. 4, 5, and 6, 1903.
He was born at Platte City, Mo., Sept 21st, 1867, coming to Kansas City in June, 1885, from Cheyenne, Wyoming, where he served two years as clerk under C. E. Wurtell, Superintendent of Wyoming Division of Union Pacific Railway, having worked up to that position from janitor. In May 1891 he entered the employ of United States Government as letter carrier, under Post Master Nofsinger, and is at present in that capacity, having served one route continually on the West side since his appointment as a regular carrier, September 12th, 1893. He is also a member of Branch No. 36.
National Association of Letter Carriers'.
In Odd Fellow circles he is permanent Secretary of Gate City Lodge No. 4679, a member of Queen House hold of Ruth, No. 1332, and Past Grand Master of Council No. 113.
He was the Delegate from his lodgeto the N. B. M. C. at New Haver Comm., in October, 1902.
He is also quite prominent in Masonic Circles. Being Senior Warden of Green Pasture Lodge, No. 128.
P. S. Keystone Chapter No. 24, F. A. M. A member of Lone Star Chapter No. 1, Order of Eastern Star (of ladies). Captain General of Far West Commandment No. 3, Knights Templar. A member of K. C. Consistory No. 7 and Allah Temple No. 8, A. A. C. Nobles of Mystic Shrine.
AMANDA CROUCH OF BUTLER. MO
WANTS INFORMATION.
Mrs. Amanda Crouch of Butter, Mo. desires to know what has become of the Colored Peoples Charity Association of Kansas City, Mo., at the Old Folks Home. She claims to have collected a considerable amount of money which she will send to the association soon. She states that there will be a celebration in Butter on the 22nd of September, which will be addressed by Prof. Vernon of Quindare and Prof. Billings of the G. R. Smith college of Sedalia. Committee of arangements consists of D. J. Crouch, John Mills, W. W. Kirby, Jack Walker, Amanda Crouch, Mrs. Walker, S Crouch and C. Crouch and others.
SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF JERU SALEM.
The Grand Lodge of the Ancient Sons and Daughters of Jerusalem met at Fayette, Mo., last week, and elected officers for the ensuing year. The session was attended by harmony and much important wark was done. The following grand officers were elected:
James Gordon, Supreme Grand King; R. H. Jordan, Vice Supreme Grand King; Mrs. Robinson of Omaha, Supreme Grand Queen and Katie Speers of this city, Vice Supreme Grand Queen; T. B. J. Robinson, Supreme Grand Marshal. Those of the Royal Grand Palace are: Chas. Lewis, M. E. G. King; Frank Williams, Vice M. E. G. King; Maggie E. Brown, of Omaha, M. E. G. Queen. The order is one of the largest in the West. The next grand session will open at Ft. Scott, Kansas.
After studying and photographing more than 40,000 pairs of ears of persons, including those of 2,000 insane and 800 criminals, and those of 300 animals, an English criminologist is forced to conclude that the ear gives no clew to personal traits.
No Personality in Ears
S. LEWIS.
Grand United Order of Odd Fellows
Missouri.
EDW. S. LEWIS.
National Association of Letter Carriers'.
In Odd Fellow circles he is permanent Secretary of Gate City Lodge No. 4679, a member of Queen Household of Ruth, No. 1332, and Past Grand Master of Council No. 113.
He was the Delegate from his lodge to the N. B. M. C. at New Haven, Comm., in October, 1962.
He is also quite prominent in Masonic Circles. Being Senior Warden of Green Pasture Lodge, No. 128.
P. S.—Keystone Chapter No. 24, R. A. M. A member of Lone Star Chapter No. 1, Order of Eastern Star (of ladies). Captain General of Far West Commandery No. 3, Knights Templar. A member of K. C. Consistory No. 7 and Allah Temple No. 8, A. A. O. Nobles of Mystic Shrine.
THE BRAIN IN DELIRIUM
Strange Cases That Have Conne Under Physician's Observation.
Medical records in the various hospitals of New York city show that though quite forgetful of recent happenings, aged persons recall long past events in correct order, and even lie again amid scenes passed utterly out of recollection before the disease of senility appeared.
A woman of 79, delirious from pleurio-pneumonia, repeated poetry in Hindustani. It developed lated on that up to the age of four she knew only that language, but afterward had forgotten that she ever spoke it. Another peculiar case on record is that of an illiterate maid servant who while in the delirium of fever, recited Greek and Hebrew for hours, although when in health she knew no word of either language, her ravings being due to the brain impressions left by the readings heardd many years before of a learned rabbi whose servant she had been.
BUTLER MISSOURI NOTES
Rev. Gordon has been absent from town ten days visiting Jefferson City, Lexington and other points.
Rev. Mitchell has been absent three weeks attending the camp meeting at St. Joseph.
The son of Rev. Leonard has been very sick, but is now improving.
High Prices for Antiques
Old furniture collectors in this city have lately been driving prices higher and higher. The rare for Chipendale and Sheraton patterns of the finer lines is greater than ever. Chairs especially fetch astonishing prices. Even dealers are paying in some cases as much as $50 for a single Chipendale chair of rare pattern, though it be out of repair. A collector in this city paid the other day $775 for a Chipendale armchair, Chairs of less unusual pattern are sold every day for $40, $50 and $100.—New York letter.
The only way to get rid of some people is to lend them money.
NUMBER 24
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rd fi bey shoe I\S ——_—
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A A aX |
Gown of sik patie, | NOARAYT AIRS f= |
Gown of dotted ecru silk hatiste, Wats” again of equally filmy silken char
satiate, and with nartow ruffles of | in the form of flowers, butterftes and
he material, bordered with fine | having deep cuffs of embroidery, | leaves. |
Ingerie tucks, The | In fact, the whole thing is a sym- Oaatare eae .
skirt has a plain, | Phony in tucks, whieh also form the Jersey Again In Favor,
aw narrow panel, the] Soke of the skirt, The artistic] For the river and lake we have:
rest of it is gath-| touch which denotes French work-| mot back the useful and becoming
A Gig cred at top and | manship Is noticeable in the girdle | jersey of other days. ‘These gar
RLF N, is trimmed with |of black taffeta and the stock to| ments, of stockinette, are, of course,
(ese fea threo groups at | maten, both of which display odd | elastic, so that they fit most comfort
“ EN rhe narrow ruffles, | little appliques of reseda or apple | ably as well as becomingly to a good
ott WS! three in each | green fixure. They are now worn pouched
‘ANN group For traveling costumes especially | over a belt in front and provided with
ee The bolero and | those selected with a view to ocean | one of the various fashionable ver
bebe its short sleeves | voyages, the flocked tweeds and | sions of the full sleeve,
renet are bordered with | heather mixtures so much favored by. ————-
ELEM the rumes, ond the | our English sisters ean be adopted Wiis Couena Whee
Sept N) former is trimmea | with advantage, They are extremely ;
a iround the neck | serviceable, do not stretch out of | Blouse of white loutsine, made with
F | 5 tox and down each | shave and afford good protection from | @ Wide shaped box plait In the middle
sp haar, side of the front | cnis and unpleasant weather, of the front, on
at with a band of | | each side of which a
skirt has a plain,
a narrow panel, the
< rest of it is gath
Mg cred at top and
br er is trimmed with
A San three groups of
eM ihe narrow rues,
P ACFihree in eweh
‘Wt group
fy \is The bolero and
pe its short sleeves
PReee ure bordered with
EimiGes iirina cai
Q at) former is trimmea
GET T EASY trond, the neck
R eX und down each
ER oe tie front
with a band of
the embroidered batiste, the ends
finished with fringe or pendants,
Stra,s of this embroidery extend
over the shoulders and down the
sleeves, the fall, draped undersleeves
are of the dotted batiste, shirred on
the inside aud finished with deep lace
cuts,
The plaited blonse is of plain ecru
linen of the same shade as the gown,
with cravat of the same, The girdle
fs heliotrope taffeta, fastened with a
gold buckle.—Chic Parisien,
TE.
te =
¢SWELEDRESSED
A? Gia nf 7”
UG Vico
ay Wey
~— —
Buttercup yellow is among the new
faces.
Everything tends to the long and
‘The flower collar and belt to mateh
jee prety lee
Tine Vanda of satin atitehed are
used a grvat deal
Wreaths of rosoa aro scattered over
thin summer fabrics,
Bmart new leather belts are three
and (eur inched Wide
Tiny recon cays of pearls are worn
at Parisian theaters,
Plaited boleros are wonderfully be
coming to slender forms
Momiels one of ho smartest tab
lea because It Hangs well
Light, amooth cloths are’ more. nt
uicie cratne atest tiau tony ar
Nearly all smart gowns are finished
with a sash In some form or other,
Charm of Print Dresses.
Print possesses much simplicity
and charm when applied to the sum
mer dress, The white print dress:
with red spots upon it, or the white
print dress with narrow black lines
upon it, may be converted into a thing
of signal stylishness. ‘The skirt
should be plainly fashtoned, bearing
two very large teks npon the hem:
and by the way the very large tek,
known as the lingerie tuck, appears
on many of the most elaborate
dresses
‘The simple gathered bodice to that
print dress might have a very deep
yoke cut with a long shoulder seam
made of Irish lace, and. the waist
would he encircled by a scarlet
Teather belt
This is the time of year when
cherries and currants and things to
et, find their place upon hats, re
calling perhaps the habits and. eus-
toms of the Neapolitan, but yet by
no means lacking prettiness,
Girl’s Frock.
Russian styles are always becoming
to young girls, and are greatly in
Vorie at the present time, The
tylish little design shown here has
many attractive
features, The
waist, with its
opening at the
side, discloses a
pointed yore effect
in both front and
hack, ‘The waist
and skirt are in
one piece, Every
mother knows the
partiontar advan
tone of this style
ress. Sew up the
houider and) arm
eams—and the
dress is put. to-
gether, A pretty
little coneeit is the
pretty little sleeve
Gm teutures. The
GSR tin
/ opening at the
BeBe pointed yore effect
G Hoaisdcront aa
PR inchs The waist
{ Jone pies, very
e mother knows the
oon iain
¥ oy houlder and arm
ty ams-and the
ee rat Lie
aether. A" pretty
rretiy Wile steeve
caps muuch, by (he way, Is goin te
be worn a grvat deul. “The movtel te
&. Bond one to follew for any. kind
of material and will make a very. ser-
Meeable aint attractive school dress
Ac aslly aavelonmene. woul, beth
Blain of sirlcd line, slag. bine
Rares inaterial in wits
embroidery for ration. Or make
very pretty and yet Inexpensive
Embroidery of Linen.
Beauties eentinue te multiply
among the embroidered linens, A
very handsome imported gown of this
material 1s trimmed with brederie
Anglaise, blending cera aad white,
Neadless to say, it has a blouse, the
yoke of which is composed on very
tiny perpendicntar tucks, the bishop
Sleeves bring tucked to match and
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A Novel Poulard Gown for Dark Days Designed for Mra George Gould.
having deep cuffs of embroidery.
In fact, the whole thing is a sym-
phony In tucks, whieh also form the
yoke of the skirt, The artistic
touch which denotes French work.
manship is noticeable in the girdle
of black taffeta and the stock to
match, beth of which display odd
Iitle appliques of reseda or apple
For traveling costumes. especially
thoae selected with a view to ocean
voyages, the flecked tweeda and
ont Bnalish sisters ean be adopted
with advantage, ‘They are extremely
refvicoable, ao tot sitétch out ot
shave and afford good protection from
Chis > and unpleasant weather
oar
a SAA
G 4g x Ee —,
he te ptitchen
NS Fp
If you want to keep meat tender be
careful not to prick it when cooking.
If a fork is used in turning it the
juice is sure to run out,
Parsiey, if kept in a cool place in
am airtight jar, will retain its fresh-
nese much longer than if kept in
water
A little gum arabie mixed with com-
mon starch will give a glossy surface
to linen
‘The oder of onion may be removed
from a knife by rubbing it in coarse
salt,
Concert or Theatre Waist.
Blouse of kreen liberty mousseline,
forming a bolero gathered at the top
re Oo, aa
trimmed with
bands of English
embroidery in a
marguerite design
over white taffeta,
also with squares
of black chantilly.
‘The cravat anc
the corslet girdle
are of green panne,
the former fin.
ished with pen
dants. The unlined
sleeves: are of Hib-
erty .mousseline
gathered at the
top and trimmed
with the embrold-
hog “Wane eee
and bottom, and
re, trimmed ow ith
x bands of English
B embroidery in a
marguerite design
. over white taffeta,
yy Abe also with squares
FEARPMEP of black chantilly.
fe GAR The cravat anc
ALANA the corsiet. xinite
ARERR are of ereen panne,
igre the former — fin:
Se weo)\ sed with pen
ry, QE tins. The vnttnea
AY FAQ sieovos: aco ot ibe
! if gathered at the
i ! top and trimmed
WW with the embroid-
ery, Each sleeve
is finished with two full ruffies edged
with the marguerite alone, without
the taffeta bands,—Neueste Blousen,
Points in Style.
Fringes are, it is said, to be more
popular than ever in the autumn, A
narrow raveled fringe of silk used
with a piping of the same silk is
o new fancy, and a ent fringe of
cloth trims some of the new cloth
xowns and mantels,
Some new stockings of filmiest silk
gauze are appliqued with lace motifs
or hand embroidered in leu of the
once open-work decoration. Others
Jersey Again In Favor,
For the river and lake we have
rot back the useful and becoming
jersey of other days, These gar
ments, of stockinette, are, of course,
elastic, so that they fit most comfort
ably a8 well as becomingly to @ good
figure. They are now worn pouched
over a belt in front and provided with
one of the various fashionable ver
sions of the full sleeve.
White Louisine Waist.
Blouse of white lonisine, made with
‘a wide shaped box plait in the middle
of the front, on
each side of which
are two side plaits. ee
The front is trim: ey,
med with a band:
some mo 'f of ap: a
plique guipure, of tf oN
which the yoke, or Re) -\
shoulder collar, 1s APORIA Bs x
also made, r y
In the latter ts Mf ial
run roxe satin rib> fl oe
bon, knotted on ff
the shoulders and Quist TE o |
‘on cach side of the WARS NX
front. The sleeves Wy ae"
a4 anihed wh:
each side of which
are two side plaits. ae
The front is trim: ws)
med with a hand: +
some mo 'f of ap: a
plique guipure, Of gfe
which the yoke, or Gey 8
shoulder collar, is AChR Ye
also made. ° \'
In the latter ts J data
run rose satin rtb- ff te
bon, knotted on ff a
the shoulders and (Ruma
on cach side of the SAIgR N
front. The sleeves Wy ae"
are finished with
frilla of lace, headed by the ribbon
The girdle 1s also of ribbon,—Neueste
Blousen,
French Wrist Bags.
“Parisian women are rately Bort
without thelr “sac"—it makes vers
little difference where—elther at the
races, shopping, opera or at the after
noon teas, The sac is nothing lest
than @ wrist bag, of generous size, 0!
antelope, in either black or gray, say's
the St. Louis Republic, Sometimes it
is studded with steci points.
ae je
HOUSEHOLD ¥& j A]
TALKS be ab pA
Mud stains on dresses may be re
moved by rubbing with a cut raw po
tato,
To remove rust from knitting nee
dies rub them up and down with a
cinder.
Matting used as floor covering will
lie more smoothly when sewn to
gether like carpet than when nalled
down,
To make a low rocm look higher
Jet the curtains hang to the floor,
Short curtains make the room look
lower than It fs.
Japanese trays may easly be
cleaned by rubbing them with a cloth
moistened with a few drops of oil and
polishing it off with a soft duster.
To keep a fruit or reed cake moist
placo it in an airtight tin with @
good, sound apple, renewing the ap
ple if it become in the least decayed
The lid of a teapot should always
‘be left so that the air may get im
This prevents mustiness, The same
| rule, of course, applies to a coffee pot
MAIDENS OF MUSCLE
MODERN GIRL NOT OF THE
CLINGING VINE VARIETY.
Robust, Independent and Fearless,
She Can Row a Boat or Figure in
Athletic Games After the Men ef
Her Set Give Up.
‘The clinging ivy and the sturdy oak
{dea has received its quietus. The
fragile woman, much adored and
courted by men, is a thing of the past,
Much to the regret of the men, per-
haps, has all this happened. It may
be that they long for a return of the
Rt) a
Uy y s
a a7
Ao
gentle maiden who had to be shielded
from the sun, whose most arduous
exercise was riding in a victoria, who
was so essentially feminine.
There ts no chance for a modern
Sir Walter Raleigh to spread his cloak
over @ mud puddle for a modern
queen, The queen would jump the
puddle. It ts distressing for the men,
who, for the sake of self-respect, must
be stronger and sturdier than the
women, They must be the sturdy
oaks even if the ivy refuses to ling.
Their only hope is in developing in-
to Samsons. As soon as this has been
realized thoroughly they may be de-
pended on to rush for the physical
culturists, the gymnasiums, and the
turnyereins, The American girl will
force the American man to hustle for
muscle, Then everybody will have bl-
ceps which stand out like knotted
hawsers, and America will be the ath-
letic wonder of the world,
“A girl cook in a cap and gown op
a yacht? Why, it’s outlandish!”
‘That's what a man said, and a man
usually knows about things yachting,
but for once this gentleman with the
massive brain has been mistaken, It
isn't outlandish in the least. Who-
ever found anything that a common
girl might do outlandish, and if they
did, who would dare say so?
A yacht doesn’t necessarily mean &
floating palace. Persons of moderate
fortune may indulge in the pleasures
of a small and comfortable yacht
without undue extravagance, and
there 1s no place where a girl may
have a more restful or entertaining
time than aboard a yacht. To ex:
change the blinding sands of a hot
beach for a boat rocking over the cool
waves is too enticing an opportunity
eG
\. it a |
A *
Ys es ey
A All Ready
for
zB Morning Dip.
cased
for the average summer girl to resist
it It comes to her. If she likes to
“mess around” with cooking and that
sort of thing she will find it excellent
fun to go into the galley, put out the
cook in cap and coat and get up a
luncheon or @ dinner.
‘The sweet, pale, clinging woman
has disappeared, She who screamed
and fainted on the slightest provoca:
tion has gone. In her place stands a
woman who is robust, independent
and fearless, and nono the less beau:
tiful because sho is strong.
She is as great a devotce of ontot.
door games as the men of her fam:
lly. She can go into any sport with-
‘out being stigmatized by Mme. Grun-
‘dy as vulgar. She can carry a riffe
‘on her shoulder without being called
mannish. She knows how to use a
fishing rod.
‘The golf girl leads in outdoor lite.
In short skirt and shirt waist sleeves
pushed above her elbows, hatless and
coliarless, she is regardless’ of sun
and wind, She cares nothing for a
few freckles and an extra coat of tan,
200
\ PES
»
we:
=e
Golf is the mort Beinating game
aut the world— was
The latter {s gotten rid of all too
easily, A few weeks of enforced in-
door life will accomplish that,
The tennis girl is still a familiar
figure on the lawns of her country
heme, for the game is as popular as
it was when ft began the athletic girl's
career.
‘The modern athletic girl swime,
paddies her canoe and rows. Old men
look at her with wonder.
“In our days,” they say as her boat
skims along, “if a woman ventured
on the water at all it was in a fiat
bottomed boat. And if that should
tip the least bit there were screams
and requests to be taken ashore im-
mediately, This new girl can row
as well as wo can.”
“Really,” said one healthy looking
‘girl to another not long ago, “the men
‘are getting positively rude nowadays.
If you ask one to go rowing he will
seat himself in the stern and natu-
rally expect you to do all the pull-
ing.”
“You shouldn't row so well, then,”
sald a masculine auditor,
‘The majority of girl athletes pre-
fer the surf bathing to a fresh water
dip, for, as one girl expressed it,
there 1s more credit attached to swim-
ming In the breakers than to the same
exercise In still water. She no longer
takes her perfunctory dip in the surf,
but swims out some distance and then
comes swimming back with long,
steady strokes, which bring admira-
tion from the observers,
When she reaches the shore she ts
not in the least tired and is quite
willing to accept a challenge of any
of her male friends for a race, in
which, {f she does not come in first,
she is always a close second.
She is not averse to taking off her
shoes and stockings once in @ while
and dabbling her feet in the water
when no one {s looking. That, again,
shows how she has broken away from
the bounds which once confined her.
When the weather prevents out-of-
door exercise the modern girl does
not mope in the house and read nov-
els. She has her gymnastic outfit and
billiard table.
‘When fall comes and the out-of-door
pa oh AR AN :
ar
bee ol
lh — ia
nl
The Delights eae |
. | a
of p
Canoeing, 5
=e
summer sports have gone, then the
modern girl arises early in the morn-
ing and sets out on her long tramps.
Sho may carry a shotgun and go un-
attended by her dogs to a well-known
covert where birds may be found, and
there she tries her skill as a marks-
man,
She seldom fails to bring home the
trophies of her skill, while the glow
on her cheeks attests to the healtht-
ness of the sport, and a healthy appe-
tite is another of the advantages. —
New York World,
IT’S A COBBLESTONE CHURCH.
An Unusual Edifice Put Up by the
Baptists of Elmhurst, L. 1.
Built of cobblestones and on lines
suggested by an old monastery of
feudal times the new Baptist Church
at Elmhurst, L, I, is one of the most
novel bits of church architecture on
Long Island, The church stands on
Whitney avenue and ever since its
picturesque walls began to take shape
it has attracted attention. Thousands
of passengers traveling to and fro by
trolley and railroad have wondered at
the quaint structure,
It is fifty years since a Baptist con
gregation existed In the vicinity of
Elmhurst, which was formerly the old
village of Newtown, Following the
close of the civil war the Baptist So:
ciety in that village dissolved and
two years ago the Rev. William J.
TE af
fo tare Se
Kegs
sine te aes
SR ee coe
Sea Bae
HES ah y
RE SA
Ae ne EN
BiRRe ToS estate |
Bint Raa thts “|
he eter ee
PAE Sessa ae +
Bec re
Le Efe aaa eee
feta) os soe a
Basa eel
ee ae
Noble, a graduate of Brown univer
sity organized a new society and se
about tho erection of the preset
church.—New York Sun.
A Cosmopolitan Thoroughfare.
A Japanese family have opened ¢
pretty log cabin near Magnolia, Mass
for the sale of their waves, Rish:
across is the Indian store and not fa
away a Spanish tea house. Close by
too, Is an exhibit of oriental tapestrie
and jeweled trinkets, while a He
brew tailor who presses pants all da
long completes a cosmopolitan grou
of storekeepers.
Lightning Moves Heavy Bed.
Lightning entered a — Springfield
Mass, house one day last week, an:
by a curlous freak ft moved a heavy
bed, which was pushed against the
wall, well ont into the middle ef th
room, but did not injure it in the least.
hh the Little Old Town.
arnt 41] o£. én fhe
Si i ay ,
ie Fond IY
cot.
wee
U PAN the attic where mother goes
Ine trunk in'a shadowed nook=
A trunk—and ite Id she will oft unclose
‘Asif it were a precious book.
She kneels at its side on the attte boards
‘And tenderly, soft and slow,
Sho counts all’ the treasures she fondly
hoards
‘The things of the long ago.
A yellowing dress, once the sheerest
‘white,
‘That shimmered in Joyous pride—
She looks at Iu now with the girls delight
“That waa hers when she stood a bride,
‘There ts a ribbon of faded blue
She keeps with the satin. gown:
Buckles and lace—and a little shoes
‘Sadly ae lays that down,
One tock of hair that is golden stitt
With the gold of the morning sun:
Yen, and a dollle with frock and {tllle
Ste lifts them all, one by one,
She lifts them ait to her gentle lips,
Up there In the afternoon;
Sometimes the rain from the eave trough
‘drips
‘Tears with her quavered cron,
Up In the attle where mother goos
Tea trunk in'a shadowed piace—
A trunk-—with the ‘scent of withered
rose
On the matin and shoe and tace,
None of us touches tts battered 1d,
Tut safe in ita niche it stays
Sacred to all that her heart has hid~
ald of tks green Gace,
3 Ss a
oe
—W. D. N., in Chicago Tribune,
Gea Serpent Chased Him.
Grover Wehnes, the ie son
of President Conrad Wehnes of the
Geneva, N. Y., common council, is
telling of an experience he had a few
days ago with a Seneca lake sea
serpent,
He says he was sailing his yacht
near Kashong Point, when the boat
was slowed down by an obstruction,
He lifted the centerboard, and as
the boat went ahead he says he saw
the serpent astern, It was as big as
a shark, round in body and had great
yellow eyes. It kept up with the
yacht for half a mile, when it sank.
“I wouldn't take that trip again for
$500," he said—New York World.
Drawn by Famous Imptesario.
ap,
Wik
iS ABS ti
aN
if i
ii
W
4 te
i
Curse Seems to Hold Good.
A recent. drowning at Biddeford,
Me, reealls the old legend of the
‘urse put upon the Saco river by the
ndian squaw whose papoose was
hrown from one of the cliffs in “The
sarrows,” by white men who wanted
» see if it could swim, That curse
‘as, as the legend has it, that no year
honld pass without at least three
hite victims of the river. There
save already been two this summer,
Could Not Stand the Silence.
A seryant girl who was taken by @
amily into a quiet country place for
ie summer last week, after a few
ays announced to her mistress that
he didn't Hke it, and “would be goin’
ome the next day.” On being ques
‘oned as to the causes for her dislike
he said, “Well, | have to pull the
delothes about my head and ears to
hut out the dead silence of the night,
nd I can't stand it any longer,”
Gates on Norway Roads.
Gates at frequent intgryels bar the
ountry roads in Sori ad are a
tisance to traveler have to
ave their vehicles and @penl the bar-
ers, These obstruetiom® mark the
undaries of farms, OF s@parate the
uitivated sections fam the waste
ands,
Effective Coon Trappina.
Aubdon Phillips of Glover, Vt, re
cently sent away over thirty hand-
‘ome coon skins, most of them of ‘his
ywn trapping. with am order to meke
them into a coat.
IMMENSE TRACT OF LAND IN AFRICA
OFFERED TO JEWS FOR COLONIZATION.
etocececetecescceneccecoecoeeoneceseseeeeeeteeenees
= be eS
Ra Sf rd FPR
Kean oom BY
cago (ins nae remne /
Fas f consgorne . oy
Wale ne PRI TI SA
i oe On et 1. Sugore >
Asie om 2B BP yee FRI Sadish
W/rtesats Ken ANAS n 9
Nan rp tea Se nl
! . RO pocsee Wigehako NE vate
EC ye
pam TE Peete Menende
, tae, 0 \ahiiia
‘American Jews indorse the plan of
Great Britain to give their people a
vast tract of land in East Africa for
colonization, The offer was made at
the opening of the sixth Zionist con-
gress, which is now in session at
Basel, Switzerland. If the Jews ac-
cept the offer Great Britain pledges it-
self to grant an autonomous govern-
ment, subject only to British suzer-
errr
FARMER OUTWITS SHARPERS.
Gets Five Dollars from Confidence
dhan kh Gives Tham the Laue:
men ane Vives tnem ene ave
A. I. Voorhees, a farmer living near
‘Trenton, N. J., turned a trick on @
brace of confidence men. Early in the
morning a well-groomed stranger
drove up to the Voorhees residence
and asked if the Voorhees property
was for sale. Voorhees told him that
the farm could be bought, and the
stranger was shown through the house
and a tour was made of the farm.
‘The prospective purchaser seemed
to be pleased with the lay of the
land and was going over the details
of a bargain when a man coming down
the road stopped them and asked the
way to New Brunswick. He claimed
to be from Alabama and said that he
had lost his way. The fellow pre-
tended to be insane and pulled a roll
of greenbacks and a pack of cards out
of his pocket.
At the sight of the cards Voorhees
‘became suspicious. The man with the
roll said he wanted to get rid of the
money, but could find nobody to take
it, He handed each of the men in the
carriage a fivedollar bill. Voorhees
stuck the greenback in his vest pocket
and, jumping out of the carriage, bade
the men good-bye, telling them that
the game was too old for that locality.
‘The man from Alabama suddenly re-
covered his reason and, leaping into
the carriage, he was rapidly driven
in the direction of Princeton, swear.
ing a blue streak as he went.
CAREER OF GENERAL WRIGHT.
New Governor of the Philippines a
Well-Known Lawyer.
Gen, Luke E, Wright, who is to suc-
ceed Gov. Taft as governor general of
the Philippines when Taft goes into
the cabinet as secretary of war to suc:
ceed Secetary Root, is a native of
‘Tennessee and is 53 years old. He
fe a son of the late Judge Archibald
‘Wright, formerly chief justice of the
Supreme court of Tennessee, and serv-
ed eight years as attorney general of
i} my
iy oe NI
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iy
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wa
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. re
che state. He js one of the foremost
lawyers of the Memphis bar and has
always taken a prominent part in the
politics of the state, In politics he
‘was a gold democrat.
85.000 After Forty Years.
#aniel Prime of Easton, Pa,, a col-
ored man, has received a letter from
Charles Smith, an attorney of Jack-
son, Mich., stating that Prime is a
logatee to the amount of $5,000 under
the will of Jonathan Moore of that
place.
In the civil war Prime was a ser-
geant in company H, Fifty-fourth
(colored) Massachusetts regiment.
Jonothan Moore was a first lieutenant
in the Eleventh Michigan. In opera:
tlons near Charleston Lieutenant
Moore was wounded in the leg. Prime
took off his own blouse and wrapped
ft around the leg to stop the flow of
dlood, and carried the lieutenant to
the rear, The men never met again,
but Moore learned the name of the
map who had saved bis life
Ainty. This means that the Jews, for
the first time since the days of the
Roman conqueror, would have a coun-
try, a ruler and a flag of their own,
with a government of their own choos-
ing. The offer was presented through
Dr. Theodore Herzl, president of the
Zionist congress, and in his opinion
Africa is much the preferable place
for the colonization of the Jews,
rns
LIQUOR ONE CENTURY OLD.
Celebrities Invited to Visit Kentucky
and Help Drink it.
Col. Dick Alexander of Bell's Ford,
on Salt river, Kentucky,’ has a three
gallon jug of whisky that was dis-
tilled by his grandfather on Sept. 20,
1803, the day his only daughter mar-
ried. On the same day that it was
made it was placed in the jug, sealed
and dated, and has been handed down
with the understanding that it was
not to be opened for 100 years. Those
who have handled the jug say that it
appears from the shaking as if about
half of the liquor had evaporated and
that the remainder is about as thick
as sugar-tree molasses,
Alexander also has ten jars of
peach preserves that were put up
fifty-three years ago. On'the 20th of
September the seal of the jug will be
broken and two jars of the peaches
opened. The old gentleman has in-
vited a number of friends to break
bread with him on that day.
die. that ak Blk:
Special Watchman W. H. P. Winey
heard strange sounds coming from
within the Brick Presbyterian church
early this morning, says an Bast Or.
ange, N. J., dispatch, and summoned
Patrolmen Hector and Winter. The
three found all the windows and doors
fast; so they sent for the sexton.
When the door was opened they found
a man sitting contentedly in a pew.
“This is the best joke on me that
ever happened,” remarked the in
truder.
The policemen couldn't see it and
were about to arrest the man when
‘the sexton recognized him as a prom:
inent Brick Church business man
He had been walking around, he sald
to find his hat, and awoke in the
church. He was greatly amused be
cause he is an avowed infidel and
doesn’t attend, It is thought the man
wandered into the church during choir
rehearsal and fell asleep, His hat
wasn't found,
Vatua of Water Routes,
Sir William Van Horne, who fs @
practical and experienced railroad
manager, takes no stock in the prop-
osition that by building all-Canadian
lines of railway from Quebec to Van-
couver the grain trade of the North-
west can be diverted away from wat-
er routes. He says: “Never will
grain of the canadian West be hauled
to the Atlantic seaboard voluntarily
by any Canadian railway by rail route
alone, No railway will do it unless
forced to do #0, No all-rail route, um
legs forced by strenuous conditions ex.
plieitly understood, can afford to des-
pise or to dispense with the water
route provided by the great lakes.”
broke Long Silence to Quarrel.
For seven years “Ark” Fletcher and
his wife Martha lived in the same
house, says a Cleveland, Ohio, dis
patch, and yet the man never in ail
those years spoke to her. This 1s the
declaration set up in the wife's pett
tion for divorce. And then, when the
seven years’ silence was at last
broken, she says, It was in a quarrel
She wants the courts .o dissolve the
marital tles.
‘They were married in Sandusky tn
1869, Seven children have been born
to them, five of whom are now living.
‘The eldest is thirty years old and
youngest nineteen,
eaten) Micemnil ties
Dr. Francis MeNarmara tells of ¢
complaint made by a patient to whom
he submitted a bill,
“I charged him two dollars for the
visit as usual, but the man refused
to pay. I had been summoned to at
tend a child who had swallowed a
fifty.cent piece and was about to
choke. I got the coin and saved the
child,
“But the man refused to pay the
bill, He declared that two dollars for
recovering 50 cents was a bigger
charge than he had any idea of pay
ing. His logio sounded reasonable
didn't it?"—New York Tinea.
WANTED—A SYMPATHETIC STRIKE.
qin 67>
; ST 6 MgS
ci oN gh ig
Fl = ee Dia om oy Nag
i N= WALL tHe Nanps {| AS oo
Fra PL EMPLOYED INTHESE | \S\SZeeeune
us SaHM) INDUSTRIES ARE || Weg ae
i = ff} onveRED on a i
eta <a) “SYMPATH i .
H mee :
ae = a MOR. DY ORDER oF Pe —
he i af wan RAY th eX
a | Ez (Ea fly Tova
Ne Horst eee |
VEN 2 _ ~
FREE TRADE PLAINT
FAULT FOUND WITH BUREAU OF
STATISTICS.
Vet the Figures Sent Out by the De
partment of Commerce and Labor
Simply Show Real Conditions of the
Country’s Industrial Progress.
The Springfleld Republican Is great-
ly exercised over the bulletins sent
cut by the Bureau of Statistics, which
has now been transferred from the
Treasury department to the Depart-
ment of Commerce and Labor. The
Republican does not attempt to im-
pugn the accuracy or trath of the In-
formation sent out, its only objection
being, apparently, that the bulletins
help the cause of protection by chron:
{cling the prosperous condition of the
country, as shown in both our foreign
and home commerce. It says: “These
government specials to the news:
papers average two or three a week,
and as high tariff preachments they
are not excelled by anything the
American Protective Tariff League is
doing.” That is both high praise for
the department and in itself the full-
‘st possible vindication of the wisdom
of the framers of the Dingley law.
The articles sent out once or twice
a week by Mr. Austin are summaries
for the most part of our foreign com-
merce and our internal trade. They
are generally actual figures, with once
in a while the figures for a single
month estimated, but always very
conservatively, Almost since the very
beginning’ of the government it has
been thought a matter of wisdom to
give to the country the fullest pos-
sible statistics concerning our trade,
particularly our foreign trade. For
the past half century have these fig-
ures been given out quite in detail,
and there is no one but the most hope-
less pessimist who will not acknowl-
edge that such information is not only
instructive but aimost invaluable. If,
then, such figures are worth while to
collect and print once a year, as 1s
done in the “Statistical Abstract,” or
‘once a month, as is done in the “Sum
mary of Commerce and Finance."
then surely a weekly or even a daily
gathering of similar figures must be
both interesting and of value to ail
those concerned.
As regards the “promotion of the
high tariff propaganda,” the honest
figures of the country’s industrial ad
vance during the last five years must
tend to that very end. Mr. Austin
does not manufacture his figures or
his facts; he simply compiles and re
ports them, as he finds them on the of
ficial or authoritative records. As the
Republican says: “These figures are
spread out in spectally prepared arti
cles and mailed to the press for pub:
lication on a specified day.” This Is
true, and a large portion of the press
of the country feel deeply indebted
to Mr. Austin and his associates for
this work, The busy editor has neither
the means nor the time to collect
these figures and present them to
his readers as he would like to. The
Bureau of Statistics is intended for
the very purpose, and the result of its
work 1s the property of the public.
The disloyal papers which do not
want to publish anything reflecting
credit upon their country will leave
them alone; the papers who are
proud of their country’s record in in
dustry as well as war publish them,
or a part of them, as they see fit
Evidently the Republican man ts
mad clear through because the coun
try did not go to the demnition bow
wows during the late decline in
stocks. He no doubt had hin famous
editorial, “I told you so,” all ready.
and being left high and dry by a flurry
instead of a panic, he, of course, must
ket even somewhere, and so he gov
for Mr. Austin and the “high tarif
propaganda.” A newspaper that finds
fault with the publications of honest
facts and figures calling attention to
the progress of the country, either in
its foreign or domestic trade, no mat
ter from what sources or for what pur
pose the figures emanate and are pro:
mulgated, 1s not to be appeased by
‘anything short of absolute free trade
and the most panicky of panics that
could possibly follow. The figures
sent out from Washington to the
newspapers aro not like the weather
reports, which are purely guess work:
or the crop reports, which are not ab
solute, but simply estimates founded
upon certain conditions. On the eon-
trary, these figures of trade and com
merce are actual reports of secom
Plishment, and for that reason canno!
be considered in any way as promot
ing any fiscal policy, When our bal
ance of trade Is six hundred millions
we are told so, and when It falls below
four hundred millions we are told
that. We are simply told the truth fr
€ach and every case, no matter what
it 1s or what brought it about or wha\
will be its effect, and every impartial
honest editor in the country, as wel
as every loyal reader, has ‘nothing
but thanks to express to the depart
ment and to the statistician who fur
nishes us with these interesting fig
ures and facts concerning our {p
dustrial progress,
WOULD DESTROY CONFIDENCE
Cuban Reciprocity Treaty Would Af
fect Michigan Prosperity.
Congressman Fordney writes to the
American Economist as follows:
Saginaw, West Side, Mich., July 25
1903. Editor American Economist
New York. Dear Sir: Apropos tc
your strenuous fight for protection
‘and incidentally against the propose:
Cuban reciprocity measure, | inclose
a clipping from a local paper which
foes to show what the Americar
sugar beet and beet sugar Industries
iaay develop into if given the same
chance in the future which they have
had in the past. What is true of
Michigan, will in time be true of
other states, if confidence in the
business Is not destroyed by harmfu
legislation, I* may be urged that
& 20 per cent cut will not destroy the
industry, That might be true, but it
certainly will destroy confidence ft
the industry and retard its develop
ment, to say the least, And ts at
American congress going to. strike
this all important enterprise, as wel
as others, a body blow, simply to as
sist the Cuban farmer, on the surface
rusts Respectlully,
J. W. FORDNEY.
The newspaper clipping to. which
Congressman Fordney alludes is from
the Courier-Herald of Saginaw, Mich.
an Important. center of the sugar beet
and beet sugar factories. ‘Tho article
is headed “Don't Monkey With the
Sugar Beet,” and is intended to show
the vital importance of sugar beet cul:
ture in that part of Michigan as af.
fecting the prosperity alike of the
farmers and the wage earners who
find employment in the beet fields.
For example, two girls, both under
thirteen years of age, last week re
colved $13.69 apiece for weeding sugar
beets, This one item ix pointed out
as an inkling of tho reason why the
agricultural interest of this section
of the state stands so solidly against
anything proposed at Washington that
hears any menace to the beet sugar
industry; and also why Congressman
Fordney last fall had the good will
of the people of the country” districts
of the Bight Congressional district
vithout regard to thelr party connec:
tions, The Courier-Herald closes by
aying:
“The sugar beet has been @ potent
and large factor in the prosparity of
this section of Michigan. And any
one who approaches it around here
with intent to minimize its influence
will run up against trouble.
Seece aaa fnust
A letter to the Boston Transerip
from London says “the tide seems
running swiftly in Chamberlain's
favor.” The free traders are no longer
able to draw about them the man
tle of Cobden, but are compelled td
meet arguments, ‘Things have roach
ed such a stage in England that a
man may now express the opinion
that there is something else to. be
said on the subject of tarif than the
drivel about the cheap loaf, It ts be
ginning to be seen that no matter
how cheap the loaf may be, it ts too
Jear for the British people when 30
per cont of them are admitted to be
hovering within the border line of
aetual starvation. ‘The question now
raised {s, How ean work be had for
these starving millions, and not how
dear will bread be?—San Francisco
Chronicle,
Chamberlain's Position.
‘The free traders, made up of the
Liberals and Unionists of the old
school, are rallying a new English
party. Chamberlain will be in at-
tendance with the protectlonist eolo-
nies and the manufacturers, among
others, at his back.—Boston Journal
Missouri Notes
young man, has secured @ position as
instructor ‘in sctence in a French
school down in Chile, 5
‘The wonderful success of that mytat+
cal hospital In St, Joseph demonstrated,
the efficiency of newspaper advertis-
Ing, anyway x
Accordiag to the Jack Pot man ot
the St, Joseph News the plumber who
digs in the street without a permit
should be compelled to dig in police
court.
‘The negro Chautanqua at Carthage
lost the promoters Just $25. But just
think of the trouble that might have
arisen over the gains, had there been
any.
Evidently the editor of the Nevada
Post has been short in “favors re:
caved” recently, Monday he said
“If the Lord loveth a cheerful giver
there are a great many people that
He has little use for.”
When in Spain Walter Wiltiams
jounrnal to explain the press parti
Iment of the World's fair, and asked
[im to sive the aubject a notice, “The
Inext day Mr. Williams read the fol
lowing: “Mr. Walker Williams of
the United States has purchased the
state of Louisiana, and next year will
Ixive a celebration to which he invites
his fellow journalists of Europe.” Mr.
Williams and the American const
Inext day succeeded in convinelng the
editor that a correction was necessary.
The result. was the following terse
statement; “Governor Francis of
Missouri has purchased a large tract
of land in the great American desert
and Mr, Walker Williams is here to in
Vite the journalists of Spain to a show
Which the governor will give nevt
year.”
Mrs. Polly Cand of Vernon is cut
ting a second set of baby teeth at the
age of 95,
‘A Joplin man bids for fame by as
serting that he ean pick ot a good
cantaloupe every time,
‘The St. Joseph Press was one year
old Saturday, It is still in the arms
of its parents.
‘The motto of the Norborne Leader
Jeffersonian is: “LE kiow not what the
truth may be; 1 tell it as ‘twas told
to me."
Clarence K, Dow of Pierce City has
bought the Monett Basle, ft migh
be said he has taken a flyer in th
newspaper business,
It has heen discovered that smal
boys have been making a practice o
swimming i the South st, Josept
standpipe, Boll the water,
‘The physiclans of Livingstone coun
ty have organized to drive out th
“fake” doctors, It looks as thoust
the “quacks” will have to duck
La Grange has scored, as usual. 4
[resident of that town claims to owt
a dray horse that is a half sister to
J second eusin of Low Dillon
J} it looks as though the Cashos are
missing something by not ruaning 4
column of “Reflections” tn the Marcel
/ ine Mirror
| Mrs. Namoni Weight, in. the enjoy
ment of almost perfect. health, ha:
Just celebrated her ninety-ninth birth
day in Ten Mile township, neat
| Macon, Five generations assembles
| to do her honor and the roll call show
| 2a five children, thirty-four eran
J children, ninety greatgrandehildre
and two great greatgrasdehildren, He
Holdest son is 79 With her hushan
| she came to Missouri in a) wago
H. ©. Patton, the newspaper, ma
J who eloped from Centerviow and wa
married in Warrensburg recently, pre
! bably took this course to help his pa
| per out with a goad story,
| tn the Columbia Herald Priday, tn
| mediately under a poom by a Colum
| bia young woman named May-belle
| was an “ad” concerning a medicin
| “guaranteed to prevent suicide.”
| The Meadville physician who wa
| fined for violating the liquor law he
cause he wrote 301 prescriptions: 1
| three days might have known that m
such a record would go in health
| old Missourt
| Why." asks the Pee Dee Patria
| “don't some of the antitnadte expo:
Jure organs that are fighting Mol
J come right out and declare for 7
Butler for governor? ‘They have al
but done it already.”
J] Leeton has five men with a tots
| weight of 1.225 pounds, and five itt
| men, whose combined woight fs bi
] 615 pounds:
| “ve lived In old Missouri nigh ont
J fifty years." was the first tine of |
poem written for the Richiond Mi
| sonrian by a Nebraskan and printe
| Thursday
| Speaking of thin people, the War
| ronsburg Journal-Democrat says a bo
was Injured at Tone Jack the otne
day by falling through a crack in
| merry-go-round,
Wise rag aloes geo) dea. |
OF THE DA
Sallte-and Willie.
*Willle, why is 4 man unitke @
hen?”
“Giveitup.”
“He can lay an egg on a hot stove
Without burning his fect and the hen
can't"
“Muh! Fanny, ten't it? Now you
tell me, Sallie, of what use are an
kles?”
“Ankles? Why, I don't know, Wie
te."
“To keep the calves from the corm.”
Roller Monthiy
| But He Didn't Catch On,
RR A OE 9 RS
i page ; wee
SP OG
ee Ge Tare
we ao Ye
fa i Bi aS
‘ vay eis
2 ‘ wee
4 4 i
sth CeO Re
ce ee.
ee So ARS
Pe eee
Aubrey—Youah daughtah has con-
sented to mawy me, and—er—I'd lke
to know if there is any insanity in
youah family?
Old Gentleman (emphatically)—
There must be!
Beina Time.
“There goes old Skinaer, He te
beginning to look aged.”
“Yes--he is ol in years and older
fn sin. All his life he has beem
doing others, and now he is even
trying to do Father Timo.”
“If he had had his deserts he would
have been doing time long age.”
A Narrow Escape.
She—Of course he bored me awfully,
bot T don’t think [ showed it. Every
time T yawned 1 just hid it with my
hand.
He (trying to be galtant)—Really, 1
don't see how a hand so small could
er—hide—that is--beastly weather
we're having isn’t it?
How It Ended.
Askem=What became of the newly
organized Honest Suffrage leaguo?
Newitt—Well, you seo, the president
of the league found out that he had
been mistaken, and that he really
stood some show for a publle office
after nil. So ho resigned and the aw
ganization disbanded
mien ile Gunes.
Harry—-T want to discard that girl
and don't know how to do tt,
Walter—-Why don't you start tm
Arinking heavily and she will be *%
kusted.
Harry—Oh; no. She'd want to marry
me to reform me.
No Good.
A
[|
or
Rertie—Did you bear my rich uncle
was dead?
Gussie—No, What did be leave
you?
Hertle— Nothing!
Gussie Well, what's the good of
hia being dead?
‘Rauah ion Ramunce,.
Romanee and chivalry are not what
they were, alas; Once the hero, have
ing rescued the maiden from the
tower, paused In his flight to exclaim:
“Hark! ‘The hoof-beats of pure
suers!"
But now:
“Smell! ‘The odor of thy father's
motorear!"—-Stray Btories,
Knew Several Ways to Use It.
Julius—Would you like to live your
life over again?
Edgar—No, but I'd like to spend
over again all the money I've speat.
THE RISING SON.
LEWIS WOODS,..... Business Manager.
Published Every Week
RISING SON PUBLISHING CO
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
All news matter intended for pub-
lization should reach our office not
later than Tuesday, of each week and
must be signed by the writer not for
publication, but as guarantee of auth-
enticity.
OFFICE: No. 117 West Sixth St.
Kansas City, Mo.
Advertising Rules.
For one inch, one insertion . . . 8.00
For one inch, each subsequent insertion .20
For two inches, three month . . . 8.00
For two inches, six month . . . 8.00
For two inches, nine months . . . 10.00
For two inches twelve months . . . 15.00
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.
Kansas City, Mo., March 3, 1903.
Office of the Postmaster,
Publishers, Rising Son,
Kansas City, Mo.
Sirs:
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.
Negroes, get homes and get money.
Get business along all lines, and self respect. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, and the race problem will solve itself.
The time for the opening of the schools of Kansas City is fast ap proaching. As yet we know of no disposition on the part of the School board to better the facilities for the colored schools in the way of improvements on the buildings, etc. We trust that the matter is not going to be over looked.
The question has been asked: "Which is he greater necessity, the raising of the teacher's salaries or the erection of one or two decent buildings for the Negro school children?"
THEOPORE SMITH
The only pharmacy in this city owned and conducted by a colored man is that of Theodore Smith, Pharmaceutical Doctor, at 908 East Twelfth street. Dr. Smith is a graduate of Howard university and is registered in three states. He employs three clerks who are also registered. His business consists largely of filling prescriptions which come to him personally or by 'phone from the ten colored physicians of the city. An errand boy is employed whose principal duties are to deliver these prescriptions to all parts of the city. The store is well supplied with all that goes to make up a first-class drug store, including a soda fountain in charge of a clerk whose sole duty is to wait upon the thirsty public. Inquiry has developed the fact that the business is rapidly increasing and prosperous. The commercial agents speak well of the proprietor and rate him as a substantial business man in good credit and standing at bank and with the trade—Kansas City World.
"He sure that our sins will find us out." A few days ago Sheriff Mendenhall of Wyandotte county, Kas., went to Musgooge, L. T., and brought back to Kansas City, Kas., one Henry P. Ewing, who at one time was the Manager of the Kansas City Embalming and Casket Company. He is charged with embezzling $100 from a poor widow woman, in the person of Mrs. Mollie Julias, whose residence is on Freeman street near Ninth street. We are informed that there are many more similar charges against this man. He has long been known as "Tatoe" King of the Kaw Valley.
The special election for municipal bonds will come off shortly. The bonds are to be voted upon for the improvement of the parks, city hospital, water works, etc. The most important of these is the water works, which proposition should carry without fail. It is time that Kansas City should be placed in a position of safety from water famine and fire.
Colonel Milton Moore, of the School Board, says that the Board of Education is spending the funds realized from the bond measure too fast and that it must call a halt. The Negro school patrons and taxpayers have said, one to the other: "I wonder if the School Board is going to spend the entire million dollars realized from the recent bond elections without fulfilling a single one of the many promises it made the Negroes when their votes in favor of the measure were asked for. Yes, they were promised a manual training school and ought to have it. They were promised better school-houses and ought to have them. The Son can point out several Negro school-houses that are not as good as an ordinary barn. But the negroes are powerless and must rely upon the integrity and honor of the members of the board.
President Roosevelt's advice to the people on the question of mob violence and the brutal burning of Negroes should be upheld by all conscientious and liberty loving people of the United States. His idea upon the subject is right, fair and impartial.
The Rev. Dr. Babbitt, a Christian gentleman of Brooklyn, N. Y., who believes that the majesty of the law of this country should be upheld by all true Americans, has answered Mr. Graves of Georgia by saying: "Lynchers are brutal, savage murderers." He assumes that more morality, less prejudice, stricter law quickly applied, fair play to the negro and the white man alike would reduce the danger of the race question and the mob problem. Another good man, thank God.
L. W. Carter, President; W. W. Yates, 1st Vive President; W. W. Waters, 2nd Vice President; Dr. T. C. Unthanks, Secretary; Theo. H. Clay, Treasurer; F. L. Lewis, Corresponding Secretary; Frank Wilson, Sergeants atarm.
Art Forgeries.
The Anglo-Saxon is the natural prey of the art forgery-monger, and the modern antiques which are manufactured for him constitute the livelihood of the whole countrysides on the Arno, and the Tiber, on the Nile, and on the Jordan. Innocent peasant-looking people dig up these antiques before the eyes of the unsuspecting tripper! And when the fool goes off with his folly, the simple, guileless peasant quietly buries another example of the same object in the same hole for the benefit of the next tourist who may come along.—Magazine of Art.
BRIEF TRAILERS
There are misers of more things than money.
The selfish man does not even enjoy his own company.
A family name stands only as a recommendation to whom it may concern.
When a man's spirits are on the ebb he says he hasn't the ghost of a show.
The willing horse is not ignorant of the fact that it is frequently overloaded.
When you hear a man barking in a barroom, you can tell that he is going to the dogs.
People of the least capacity usually undertake the greatest number of intricate studies.
"They say" is the convenient, much quoted and wholly unreliable neighborhood authority.
If every man got all that he thinks is coming to him, there wouldn't be anything left to divide among the rest.
Some people will blow in a dollar and a half for a theater ticket, and then kiss a cent three times before they drop it on the collection plate at church.
TOLD IN FIGURES.
About 20,000 automobiles are in use in the United States.
The lowest priced vehicle at the New York automobile show was $500; the highest $1,800.
American tourists annually spend abroad an average of $75,000,000 and foreign tourists leave about $20,000,000 here.
Americans bought in Paris last year $25,000 worth of goose liver pie, $28,000 worth of human hair, and $120,000 worth of mushrooms.
The highest point to which a man has ever climbed is 23,080 feet to the summit of the Andean peak, Aconcagua. The feat was accomplished by two men sent out by the Royal Geographical society.
W. B. RAYMOND
Licensed Funeral Furnisher and Embalmer.
No Extra Charge For Work In
Kansas City, Missouri.
431 MINNESOTA AVE.
Tel. 32 West. Kansas City, Kansas
Look at Surface's advertisement
next week for school books.
Ah, drink if ye will to a sweetheart true
And a wife of faith undaunted;
That is a sweetheart true.
And drink in the praise of their fetching ways.
To charms that have long been vaunted.
And drink to the eyes and drink to the lips.
Ah, drink if ye will to one whose faith
Can last through years untroubled;
And drink to the trust that is never
murdered.
Though a man's deceit be doubled;
And drink to the songs and drink to the
sighs
To the girl the women love.
Aye, drink to the lass who can praise the charms
That would steal her love, could they save him;
And drink to the lass who will snub a man
When she has no right to please him;
And drink to her great, warm, honest son!
When They Lived "100 Years Ago"
Elinor glanced roguishly at the young man sitting dejectedly beside her on the sand at Milton point.
"You may have as many minutes as this sand takes to run through my fingers," she said, taking up a handful of warm, white sand from the beach. "And then if you continue to be disagreeable and cross, I'll—well, never mind, you'll regret it, Mr. Jack Robinson."
She let the soft sand trickle slowly through her sun-burned fingers like a minute glass as she hummed carelessly, softly, "If I But Knew."
The young man turned impatiently and looked out across the broad expanse of water. How easily the white-winged yachts skimmed over the water. He wished his little craft of love would run so smoothly.
"Elinor," he said turning to her, "will you stop singing that song?"
"When your present fit of ill temper blows over," she retorted, watching the last few grains of sand fall from her fingers. "If I but knew your heart was true," she hummed on, ignornig him.
"See here, what can I do to prove to you that I am sincere?" He watched her dust the sand from her pretty palm.
"Do? You make me feel like a princess of 'ye olden time.' Then brave knights won fair ladies by acts of courage, but now—"
"Yes, now?" he said, looking up at her eagerly.
"O now we don't even take a man's word for anything." And Ellinor laughed, a merry, captivating laugh, which chased away the frowns from Jack's brow. He could never be angry with her for long.
"Suppose we play we are living 100 years ago," she said, after a minute.
"I'll play anything you like."
"And do an thing I like?" she asked, looking at him dubiously. Her tone was half-serial, half-playful.
"Anything," he replied, firmly. That is provided you'll accept that as proof that I love you. I've said all I can to no avail."
Elinor did not reply nor look up; she was tracing her name in the sand—thinking. She had tried to believe Jack, but, somehow, at times, she doubted that he really meant all he said.
"He was such a serious sort of a fellow, and she—O, she was frivolous and scatter-brained, according to her own estimate of herself. Why should he love her? And yet, why should he say so if he did not?
At last she covered the sand letters over and looked up. "Jack," she said, "would you really do anything for me? Even if it was silly and—and awfully dangerous—just to prove to me that you like me?" "Not to prove that I like you, but
M. W.
She Let the Soft Sand Trickle Slowly
Through Hes Sunburned, Fingers
Through Her Sunburned Fingers.
that I love you—yes." He laughed a little at her serious face.
"Do you see that big rock out there?" She pointed to a large rock just in the edge of the now low tide.
"I do."
"You know when the tide is high it is a long distance from the shore? The water almost covers it and splashes around it and makes a terrible noise."
"Does it?" he asked. amused.
"Yes, and unless one is a very good
swimmer one cannot possibly get me until the tide goes out again, if one is caught out there. It would be awful to stay there all night."
Elinor shivered at the very thought of it. Should she go on?
"And what then? Who ever stayed out there all night?" he asked, knowing well what was coming.
"Why—why, nobody," she hesitated. "Would you do it?"
"Do you ask me to?" He looked at her intently. She was building a pyramid of sand.
"I—I'd believe you if you did." she said at length, and looked into his eyes to see how he would receive the suggestion.
"And you'd like to believe me, Ellinor? Tell me that—but, no, don't; I'll do it. Are we not living a hundred years ago?"
Elinor wished now that he had promised to do it, that she had not asked it. Suppose a storm should come up and the waves would dash over the rock and sweep him off and—and he was not able to swim far enough to reach the shore.
"Jack," she said, a little nervously, "let's move forward a hundred years; I don't like it way back here. I—I might believe you."
But Jack would not pass over the century so quickly. He would do as she had asked him; he would spend
A woman is sitting in a boat, holding a paddle. She is wearing a white shirt and a black collar. The background is a dark, cloudy sky.
Stroke by Stroke She Pulled Out Toward the Big Rock.
the night on the big rock and then she might believe him.
Elinor sat in the window of their summer cottage on the shore and watched the tide come in, wave by wave. One by one the shadows fell and the figure out on the rock became less and less distinct. At last she had to go out to the beach to see it at all.
Higher and higher grew the water mark about the rock and yet the figure did not move; it sat on the topmost point, looking out over the sound.
At last it was too dark to see the figure on the rock and Elinor walked up and down the beach in front of the cottage. She was supposed to have retired, but somehow it seemed to useless to pretend to sleep.
She wondered if the ladies in the centuries long ago slept on as usual while their knights were in danger. O, she wished tomorrow would come when she might live again in the twentieth century.
The searchlight of a sound steamer was thrown on the rock, and by its light she could see the waves break and smash about the ragged edges.
Running close to the water's edge, she looked up and down for a skiff, one of the old flat boats she and Jack so often fished in. Finding one far up on the shore, she dragged it down to the water and jumped in.
Stroke by stroke she pulled out toward the big rock, but the tide was strong and the boat heavy. It seemed hours before she came anywhere near it.
"Jack, Jack!" she called. "I'm—O it's such hard pulling."
"Ellnor," was all Jack said as he took hold of the rope with one hand and hers with the other. The place was not nearly so rough as it had looked from a distance.
"Jump in," she said.
"But the night hasn't begun yet," he replied, still standing on the rock.
"What," she almost gasped.
"I thought it must surely be morning and that it was never going to get light."
"It's only 11—and that wasn't late 100 years ago."
"Get in, Jack," she said, impatiently. She hoped no one was on the shore to see.
"I would, 'if I but knew,'" he said, meaningly.
"Then know, Jack, and do come."
As Jack walked home from the little cottage that night he thought 100 years was the shortest space of time imaginable. He broke into a happy whistle: "If I but knew—if I but knew!"—Ruby Douglas in Boston Globe.
Work a Watch Does.
Everybody carries a watch nowadays—men, women, girls and boys. Prices range from $1 to as many thousands as one cares to expend in jeweled settings. The $1 watch often keeps just as good time as the $5,000 one. Did you ever consider the amount of labor performed by a good watch in its lifetime of fifty years? The balance vibrates 18,000 times an hour, 432,000 times a day, or 157,600,000 times a year. The hairspring makes an equal number of vibrations and there is the same number of ticks from the escapement. Multiply 157,600,000 by fifty and you have 7,884,000,000 pulsations. Yet the watch is in good condition at the end of half a century of labor.
we have recently added to our already complete line of LADIES CHILDREN'S & BOY'S SHOE STOCK. Will be glad to receive a call from all his patrons and show them the most
DAVID T. BREALS, President.
FERNANDO P. NEAL, Vice-Presst.
Union Nat'l
KANSAS
Statement as made to the Com-
close of business
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts..... U. S. Bonds, at par..... Municipal Bonds at par..... Cash and Sigat Exchange..... Total......
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock..... Surplus Fund..... Undivided profits..... Unearned interest..... National Bank Notes Outstanding
Deposits..... DIRECT
National NSAS CITY, the Comptroller of business Feb.
Union National Bank KANSAS CITY, MO.
Statement as made to the Comptroller of the Currency at the close of business Feb. 6, 1903.
1.....
..... $ 523,4
par..... 827,
change..... 4,180
.....
....
Loans and discounts ..... $5,981,798.56.
U. S. Bonds, at par ..... $ 523,000.00
Municipal Bonds at par ..... 327,441.14
Cash and Sigat Exchange ..... 4,180,685.29 5,081,126.48
..... .....
..... .....
In Outstanding .....
..... ....
Capital Stock ..... $ 600,000.00
Surplus Fund ..... 200,000.00
Undivided profits ..... 78,771.60
Unearned interest ..... 94,993.00
National Bank Notes Outstanding ..... 428,000.00
Deposits ..... 9,516,170.17
$11,012,924.79
DIRECTORS.
When VNEEDA
Shave or Hair Cut or Shampoo
GO TO
C. A. Evans' Barber Shop
For first class work.
CREWS @ CAMPBELL
806 and 808 East 12th St.
Barber Shop and
Pool Hall.
All the choice brands of cigars and tobacco.
London Cleaners and Dyers
714 E. 12TH ST.
SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $100
Coats, 50c Vests 25c Pants 25
Overcoats $1.00 Suits Dyed $2.00
Ladies Garments Cleaned, Dyed & Pressed
SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $100
Costs, 50c Vents 25c Pants 25
Overcoats $1.00 Suits Dyed $2.00
Ladies Garments Cleaned, Dyed & Pressed
Repairing and Alterations
Goods Called for and | Satisfaction Guaranteed
delivered same day | Your patronage solicited
Tel. 2643 Walnut. Kansas City, Mo
Quick and
Pleasant
FRISCO
SYSTEM
Excellent Service
to points in
Missouri,
Arkansas,
Tennessee,
Alabama,
Mississippi,
Florida
And the Southeast, and to
Kansas, Oklahoma,
Indian Territory,
Texas
And the Southwest.
Detailed information as to excursion dates,
rates, train service, etc., furnished upon appli-
cation to
James Donohue,
Assistant General Passenger Agent,
Kansas City, Mo.
MRS. BETTIE JORDEN can be found on her old stand
Dressmaking and Plain Sewing.
Old clothes made over.
---
David T. Beals.
Geo. R. Barse.
Edward George.
Hot and Cold Baths.
1505 E. 17th St.,
National Bank
CITY, MO.
Controller of the Currency at the
Feb. 6, 1903.
ACCES.
$5,981,798.86.
$ 528,000.00
327,441.14
4,180,685.29 5,081,126.48
$11,012,924.79
TITIES.
$ 600,000.00
800,000.00
78,771.60
94,998.00
428,000.00
9,516,170.17
$11,012,924.79
ORS.
Get Your Picture Taken 15 cents.
H. D. SIMMONS,
116 Campbell St., Kansas City, Me.
Everything Pertaining to Music.
PIANO
KNOWLEDGE.
How much do you know about
the qualities of a Piano or other
Musical Instrument?
Couldn't you be deceived easily
in that matter?
Nine out of ten people can be,
and therefore trust to the honesty
of the dealer.
How important then, that you
buy from a house with a reputation
of many years behind it.
This is the oldest and largest
music house in the West.
arl Hoffman
MUSIC COMPANY
1033 N. MALINUT ST. KANSAS CITY, MO
Telephone 2101.
WONDERFUL
DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
76 Wabush Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.
L. W. SUMPTER & SON,
UNDERTAKERS, EMBALMERS
Tel. 261 Main. 609 Main St.
RESOURCES
LIABILITIES.
Reasonable Price.
W. H. SKIGER, 2nd Vice-Pres
CHAS. H. V. L LEWEN, Cashier
Fer nando P. Nee
W. E. Thorne
Feix L. La Force
G. W. Lovejoy.
Geo. W. Jones.
Geo. D. Ford.
E. W. Zea.
Sicatures Enlarged and View Work a SPECIALty
NEWS & GOSSIP
Wm. Fairfax, Society Reporetr.
A. W. Walker, Agent, Lexington, Mo.
Remember please—
it's the little bits we collect here an there
That enables us to run from year to year."
LOCALS.
Mrs. Rhodes is on the sick list.
Mrs. James Brown of Chicago is visiting in the city.
D. W. Langston who has been ill, is convalescent.
Mrs. M. Arnold is doing a big business. Call and see her.
Go to Mrs. K. Cummings for early meals and first class service.
Look out for the Grand Rally at Allen Chapel.
See Surface's ad for next week for school books.
Mrs. John Hill was at home to the ladies and class Wednesday morning.
Prof. O. Coffin has returned from a visit in Texas.
Mrs. Fanie Brinkley has returned to Kansas City much improved.
The Art Class met with Mrs. Francis Jackson last week.
Miss Rucker of Wichita, Kan., is visiting on Brooklyn avenue.
Mrs. Hemengway, of Memphis, Tenn., is visiting Mrs. Henry Countee.
Miss Josie Foster of Houston, Tex., is visiting her uncle, Dr. J. E. Dibble.
Look at Surface's advertisement next week for school books.
Mr. Ed Gibbs who has been ill, is able to be out again.
Mrs. Judge Bradley, of Kansas City, Kansas, was at home to the Art Class Wednesday morning, two weeks ago.
The Art Class met Wednesday morning at Mrs. Emma Tillman's, 17th and Lydia avenue.
Mrs. Estella Fairfax of St. Joseph has returned from a visit to her sister Mrs. D. J. Runnels of St. Louis.
Mrs. Ella Anderson, wife of Dr. Anderson of St. Louis, is in the city, the guest of Mrs. J. F. Cole.
J. E. Carbunter and Tile Louis were quietly married last Sunday at their home.
Mrs. Robert Willey will return today from a month's visit at Lake Minnetonka.
Mrs. Alexander, who has been ill, is rapidly improving. We hope to see her out soon.
The many friends of Mr. B. L. Thompson, hope for his permanent recovery.
Mrs. Sallie Fishback of Kirkwood, Mo., is visiting Mrs. Chas. Blanton on the west side.
Miss Vallie Bowman and Corene White are at home at 1322 East 14th street, after spending the summer at Ft. Madison, Iowa.
Miss Lulu Williams of Ft. Madison, Iowa, and Miss Vivian Rhodes of Bonner Springs are in the city this week for the examination of teachers.
Mr. J. G. Hamlet of Brooklyn, N. Y. will be at home to friends with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Dean, 1627 Park avenue.
Mrs. K. Cummings, 610 East Twelfth street has first class rooms and board for laborers or anyone wishing early meals. Call and get rates.
Miss Portia, Miss Ruth Knox and the Master's Edmund Hederson and Lon Tillman will all attend the Lincoln Institute this year.
Messrs. George Anderson and James Johnson have opened the Monogram Buffet, 801 East Twelfth street. Choice wines, liquors, cigars and pool hall. Give them a call.
Anyone knowing the whereabouts of one Mr. Seymour of St. Joseph, Mo. will please communicate with Mrs. M. J. Seymour of 705 S. Sixteenth St., St. Joseph. She is anxious to know what has happened to him.
The Wilson House, at Excelsior Springs, will close October 1st for repairs. It will open next March for business.
Mr. Lewis Woods of the Son spent ten days at Excelsior Springs in quest of health. He has returned much improved and is ready for business.
The publishers of the Son has been out of the city in search of health which fact accounts for the tardiness of the Rising Son.
Mr. Sam Chandler is again in the hotel business at the same old stand. He wants all his old friends and new friends to call.
Mrs. G. H. Anderson of St. Louis, Mo. left for her home last week, after spending ten days in the city attending to business matters.
Mrs. W. W. Yates and Miss Josephine and Master Blydon Yates all left last Thursday for Jefferson City, where they will enter the Lincoln Institute.
Prof. Monten who has been spending a few weeks in Kansas City, returned to Jefferson City Monday to be at his post of duty next Monday morning at the opening of Lincoln Institute.
Mrs. Fidella Mitchell of 1925 Vine street, left over the Wabash last Friday morning, for St. Louis, Mo. and Springfield, Illinois, where she will visit friends and relatives for two weeks.
Mr. and Mr. W. L. Beatty of 3128 Kensington avenue recently celebrated their wooden wedding. Over a hundred guests were present. Various presents to the value of $200 were received.
Mr. Thomas Garrett and Miss Eva Taylor were married at the home of the bride, 1624 Cottage avenue, on the 26th inst. Rev. J. M. Harris performed the ceremony.
Mr. L. L. Thompson, after many years of faithful service with the Hoffman Music Co., has resigned his position with the firm, to enter the restaurant business which he is conducting at his home, 318 West 6th street.
The Burnes Literary Society is progressing rapidly under the leadership of Mr. I. E. Whaley of the Geo. R. Smith college. The society meets every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock.
Call up the Arnold Cafe, Telephone 2874 Walnut, for special parties and night lunches, special meals and short orders. Call and see me. Mrs M. Arnold, successor to Arnold & Robison, 1221 Baltimore, City.
Mrs. D. N. Crosthwait gave a very pretty party Wednesday night in honor of Mrs. Granger Harris, who will leave shortly for her home in Galveston, and Mrs. Ruby Bradshaw, who will soon leave for St. Louis, to take up Kintergarten work.
I need young women between the ages of 20 and 38 to take the nurse training in Douglass Hospital and Training School for Nurses, located at 312 Washington avenue, Kansas City, Kansas. For full particulars, apply to L. Ashton Woods, SuperIntendent.
Miss Lucy Jones of 1713 Lydia entertained a large number of friends at her home August 19th, in honor of Miss J. Craig of Higginsville, Mo., who has spent the summer with her. Miss Craig left last Saturday for home in order to prepare for her school work.
Mrs. Sidney Grear died on the 19th inst. at her home $610\%$ Cottage Lane. The funeral was preached by Rev. Ewing of the Vine Street Baptist church. She is survived by a husband and one child, and an army of dear friends.
two of our most popular young men have opened a saloon on the north-west corner of 18th and Lydia. They are both hustlers and will no doubt do well. The Soa wishes them success.
Mrs. Caroline Codden, of this city, died last Monday evening and was taken back to Columbia last Tuesday in car of her son, James Codden and wife, and Mrs. A. Lile, her daughter, and Caro Codden. Many friends mourn her loss as well as relations.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mott of 1405 Vine street entertained a few friends at whist on the 14th ult. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Will Owens, Mr. and Mrs. Doughtry, Mr. Osborn Powell and company and Mr. James Runnells and company. Refreshments were served in abundance and enjoyment was manifested by all present.
The Vendome Dancing Academy, 1734 Grand avenue, Kansas City, Mo. The only first class dancing academy in the city. Equipped with electric fans and soda fountain. Ice cream soda and all soft drinks are served. John D. West's orchestra furnishes music. Dancing every Monday and Thursday evenings. Admission 15c. D. A. WILLIS, Manager.
Dr. J. E. Perry, who has practiced in Columbia, Mo., for eight years with a flattering success, has recently located in Kansas City. The doctor has purchased a house at 1214 Vine street. This he expects to occupy in a very few days. His office is located at 704 East 12th street. Office phone 1211 Grand. Residence phone 69 East.
WANTED—SEVERAL PERSONS of character and good reputation in each state (one in this county required) to represent and advertise old established wealthy business house of solid financial standing. Salary 21.00 weekly with expenses additional, all payable in cash direct each Wednesday from head office. Horse and carriage furnished when necessary. References. Enclose selfaddressed envelope. Colonial, 332 Dearborn St., Chicago.
NO MONEY IN TRANSLATION.
Little Demand for the Best Works of Foreign Authors.
"Translating is an art," said an instructor at the university. "Carlyle translated some fairy tales from the German, and these tales from Tleck and Musaeus are examples of English prose as beautiful as the heart could desire. Swinburne translated Villon, and so did Rossetti, who gave us, furthermore, paraphrases of the Italian poets that equal the originals in charm. That is the test of translation—that it shall equal in beauty the original—and I think there should be a law requiring every great writer to translate at least one great book. But our good men can't afford to make translations; the pay is too miserable. It is impossible to get for translating a novel of 125,000 words more than about $250. There is only $2 per 1,000 words, and there is no living in it at such figures."—Philadelphia Record.
A. VETERAN BAILROAD MAN.
A VETERAN RAILROAD MAN
Mr. H. L. Stewart of Chicago, spent three weeks at Excelsor Springs, during the month of August. Mr. Stewart is a veteran railroad man, having been in the Pullman service nineteen years. No man in the service is entitled to credit more than Mr. Stewart, because he has always attached the same importance to his work as a professional man would to his profession. Mr. Stewart has been very successful. He is a good debater and is well posted on the issues of the day.
NOTICE
AND REMEMBER
That on Thursday evening, September 10, the Waiters have decided to give their grand ball at Turner's Hall, corner Twelfth and Oak streets, Kansas City, Mo. Music will be furnished by Prof. John D. West's Orchestra, and supper will be served by Mother Arnold.—A. L. Hopkins. Pres.; W. H. Nolen. Secy.; D. A. Willis, Treas.; Sanford Blake, Floor Manager.
APHORISMS.
He who flatters you is your enemy. —Cardan.
He who lives but for himself lives but for a little thing.—Barjand.
The more honest a man is the less he affects the air of a saint.—Lavater.
We cannot always oblige, but we can always speak obligingly.—Voltaire.
He is the happiest man who renders the greatest number happy.—Desmalus.
Strong thoughts are iron nails driven in the mind, that nothing can draw out.—Dlderot.
The most completely lost of all days is the one on which we have not laughed.—Chamfort.
Experience is a keen knife that hurts, while it extracts the cataract that binds.—De Finod.
To forgive a fault in another is more sublime than to be fruitless one's self.—George Sand.
AS A WOMAN SEES IT.
What a shock it would be to some men if their offers of marriage were accepted.
The man who will allow a woman to do the courting will allow her to do the supporting.
It is the engaged man who feels free to tell every girl that woman's proper sphere is marriage.
Men avoid the fashionable summer resorts because it costs so much to take the chaperons about.
A man never seems to realize that it is the woman who wears a No. 3A who cannot keep her shoelaces tied.
Ambition should be called the yeast of life, and every child taught how to use the correct amount to obtain the desired effect.
A man will laugh at a sentimental woman, yet sleep with her handkerchief under his pillow.--New York Herald.
Pressure of Grape Sap
The pressure of sap rising from a grape vine root has been found equal to sustaining a column of mercury three and a half feet high.
MISS WARD RECEIVES AN OFFER
FROM AN OPERA CO.
Miss Marguerite Ward who filled a two years engagement with the Blind Boone company and who won a high reputation as a singer, has received an offer from a large Opera company in the East to go on the stage as a vocal artist. At the present time Miss Ward is taking voice culture and will perhaps avail herself of the offer made by the Opera company. During her engagement with the Blind Boone Co., whose employ she left to attain the acme of ability in her chosen profession, she was spoken of by the press in glowing terms, and as being one of the best contralto singers in the West, Miss Ward is a lady of culture and education and is admired for her ability and worth. At present Miss Ward is living at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cook, at 3116 East 9th street.
BY OUR OWN SAGE
Never draw a sight draft on a blind man.
Too many quarrels are picked before they are ripe.
You can't convince a brunette that all is fair in love.
Prejudice roosts on a perch from which facts are barred.
It's safer to learn from your enemies than it is to instruct your friends.
Men never know as much about anything as women know about dress.
There's nothing like leather—with the possible exception of a Welsh rare-bit.
There may be a lot of credit due a man's wife, but she usually demands cash.
Every man's house is his castle until he makes an assignment—then it's his wife's.
The smoker who has a good cigar and nothing to light it with knows what matchless misery really is.
It was so cold in Chicago recently that a pickpocket who happened to touch a $10 gold piece immediately froze to it.
Had Diogenes visited this country while on his famous still hunt some get-rich-quick promoter would have swiped his lantern.
WITH THE SAGES.
Know thyself and do thine own work, says Plato; and each includes the other and covers the whole duty of man.—Montaigne.
Truth, justice and reason lose all their force, and all their lustre, when they are not accompanied with agreeable manners.—Thomson.
The best rules to form a young man are—to talk little, to hear much, to reflect alone upon what has passed in company, to distrust one's own opinion, and value others that deserve it.—Sir William Temple.
Duty's path always opens for us as we go on; not before we start, but as we obey and move forward. The difficulties and obstacles may be made stepping stones by which we shall rise to higher things.—J. R. Miller.
When in the company of sensible men, we ought to be doubly conscious of talking too much, lest we lose two good things—their good opinion and our own improvement! for what we have to say we know, but what they have to say we know not—Colton.
The covetous man heaps up riches, not to enjoy, but to have them; he starves himself in the midst of plenty; cheats and makes a hard shift to be as poor and robs himself of that which is his own, miserable with a great estate as any man can be without it—Tillotson.
"Old Wine" Theory Exploded.
There is hardly a man who does not believe that the old wine is the best wine, yet a short time ago some cases of claret were sold in London at $25 a bottle, of the famous "Comet" vintage of 1811, and the wine was found to be utterly worthless. It was simply worn out with age. Wine experts and wealthy connoisseurs had come from great distances to buy the wine at any price, and were edified upon opening it to find it was as flat as soda water. In the same way, not long since, a quantity of hock from the cellars of a country house, of the year preceding Napoleon's retreat from Moscow, fetched $20 per bottle, and was found to have lost everything except color.
Buenos Avres' Great Docks.
The first thing that strikes you on landing at Buenos Aires is its docks, which extend for five miles along the river front, says St. Nicholas. They were built by an English firm, and were completed in 1897. They are most solidly constructed, supplied with numerous modern steam cranes and are brilliantly lighted with electricity at night. They cost the city and nation seven million pounds sterling, or $35,000,000. So great is the amount of shipping, however, that not the docks alone, but the small river Riachuelo is crowded with vessels. Indeed, one wonders how a ship, once entered, can ever manage to get out.
STOVE REPAIRS
The WILSON HOUSE
EXCELSIOR
SPRINGS MO
The above cut represents the Wilson House at Excelsior Springs, Mo. It is located within access to all the springs and its management gives good accommodations. It is the place to go when you visit the Springs.
M. B.
ELI HARRIS.
Mr. Eli Harris who has been succeeded by Mr. E. S. Lewis as Grand Master of the United Order of Odd Fellows of the State of Missouri, filled that important station many years with great credit to the order and to himself. He was known as an ardent champion and hard worker among the Odd Fellows, which resulted in a material growth of the order in this state. His faithful devotion in that station as in others which he has filled with ability, has received the appreciation of his followers. Mr. Harris is a man of progressive ideas and a hard church worker.
The United Sons of Allen met last Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Brice, 410 East 11th St. A splendid program was rendered. Dr. Key made the welcoming address. Miss Stafford and Mr. Crump rendered an instrumental solo. Paper by Mr. Heims, Selection by Miss Maybelle Lucas, solos by Miss Doyle, Miss Taylor, Mr. B. Allen Morris and Mr. H. Bean.
HENRIETTA HOUSEHOLD of RUTH
ENTERTAINS.
Henrietta Household of Ruth, No. 160, entertained in elegant style, Wednesday afternoon at Odd Fellows hall. In honor of Ex-Grand Master Ell Harris, the newly elected Grand Master Edw. S. Lewis, the newly elected R. M. , N. G. of District Household, Mrs. Lucy Page and Mrs. P. Leona Blackwell delegates to last session of District Household.
Other distinguished guests present were members of Queen Household No. 1332, Mrs. Leona McCampbell, delegate to last session of National Grand Household and Mrs. Mamie Lewis, Worthy Grand Shepherd of National Grand Lodge.
An excellent program was rendered and a few short speeches were made by the Grand Master, Sister Lucy Page and Sister Blackwell. After which all prepared to baskett at the table where an elegant repast was held. The table being handsomely decorated with flowers and potted plants. Peace, Happiness and Prosperity reigned supreme during the afternoon and every one seemed to feel they had been benefited by such a gathering; and express a desire that they should meet oftener in a similar capacity. Bro. Eli Harris Ex-Grand Master was unable to attend on account of business.
Henrietta No. 160, is the largest Household of Ruth in the state. Mrs Cornellia Craig is Most Noble Governor and Mrs. Lucy Page. Worthy Recorder.
USED IN 1858.
Way back in the year 1858 the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow was used by colored people in the Nortn and is now used all over the country from Maine to Texas and Oregon to Florida. The continued use of the preparation for such a long period of time is a positive proof that it gives perfect satisfaction to all. It makes kinky or curly hair straight, soft and beautiful. Stops falling hair, cures dandruff and makes the hair grow. Never fails. Warranted harmless. Only 50 cents a bottle. Get it from your dealer or send us 50 cents and we will ship you a bottle express paid. Address Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 76 Wabash ave., Chicago, Ill.
Buy and sell both, and exchange, right down at Glick's, 612 Main street. The boys and girls will all look for the old reliable store. Here is the place to get your books for school. We treat you right, and our prices are right. B. GLICK, 612 Mala St. The following visitors were entertained by Mr. Al Sheed on Monday evening, to look over his Monte Carlo. He has in the past few weeks added a new invention to his most wonderful place, known as the Monte Carlo of the West. By starting the machinery he can tell you men any thing you want to know. The large wheel is equipped with electric lights, makes it a wonder to look upon.
Miss Luh Gibbs, Miss Emma Booker, Miss Nettie Lofe, Mr. Richard Maning, Mr. H. Rollins, Miss Sarab Rucker, Miss Nora Hall, Mr. R. Hall, Miss S. Ellington, Mr. G. L. Middleton, Miss Mable Parker.
Boys'
School
Clothes!
Get your boy ready for school.
We can sell you a boys' Good School Suit
$1.50 up
Nebraska Clothing Co.
813 AZING MAIN ST.
THE GREAT SOUHERN HAIR POMADE.
THE GREAT HAIR GROWER AND STRAIGHTENER.
PRICE 25c.
Fill out this blank and send it with $1.00 and you will receive by express $2.00 worth of the Pomade and terms to agents.
F. J. NOTT, PARIS, MO.
Encouond pleased P. O. Money Order for $1.00, for which send meas per your offer, $2.00 worth of the Great Southern Hair Pomade and terms to agents.
Name
Street
Town or City
County
State
Express Office
Date of this order
SEND ALS ORDERS TO
F. J. NOTT, Box 81, Paris, Mo.
REPAIRS
ges and Furnaces.
ETZNER 304 West Sixth Street,
KANSAS CITY, MO.
The
WILSON
HOUSE
EXCELSIOR
SPRINGS, MO
So ca ha ane oR
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Miss Pringle came into her parior
at the Overmont with her head high in
air—sure sign with her of a perturbed
spirit and an aroused temper
Who do you sipose is here, Clin
47” sho: néhod, explosively
Why can't guess,” replied the
girl, slowly, “Is it anyone 1 know?”
Anyone you know! Humpht 1
should think yon ought to know him:
you've seen bim often enough this last
year to know him!
Not—" heean Celinda, the pink
Toses sitdeniy blooming in the garden
of her pretty cheek.
“Yes, ‘tis, toot” snapped her aunt,
“Roger Lyon! Now what d'ye think:
of that for downright impndence?*
“LU don't really sea how it 18 exactly
Ampudence, auntio”
"Yes, It is imputenca, and you know
{t ist” replied that Indy, testily. “Here
he has been traipsin’ after me all win-
ter—me or ny money, the Lord only
knows which—and no sooner do I get
rettied down for a quiet summer than
he bobs up to spoil everything. If
that ain't impudence, Vd like to know
what you'd call itt T wonder how be
founid out where 1 was?”
Did the roses deepen in hue in that
sweet garden? If they did, Miss Prin-
le didn't notice, for the shapely head
was bent low
“Perhaps he didn’t know: he may
just have happened to come here. You
Know Overmont is getting to be quite
@ fashionable resort nowadays.”
“Happened your grandmother!" was
the forcible, If not sirletly elegant or
entirely intelligthle retort. “He knew
1 wits here, all right, ‘Tye Idea of his
thinking that T want him! Why, he's
nothing but a boy! Not a day over
twents one, if he's that.”
And Miss Pringle, who confessed to
thirty years, but was coyly reticent
concerning the other ten whieh the
family bible generously set to her
credit, tossed her head in fine scorn
“Lut there's just one thing that Mr,
Roser Lyon has got to learn, and that
fn very short order,” she continued.
“Lm not goin’ to have him snoopin’
‘round me any longer, and T want you
to tell him so, with my compliments.”
“L-L-tell lim so?” gasped the girl
The roses In that garden were white,
ghastly white, now,
*Yes, yout Why not, Md lke to
Know? Somebody's got to do it, and
of course [ean’t; so yon must.”
Why, auntie, Pt couldn't do itt
It’s tmpossitlet Don’t ask me, Oh,
indeed —1—"
“Come in!” called the older woman,
as a knock sounded at the door.
“Gen'leman in Parlor A, mum,” sald
the bell boy. presenting a card,
“Humph! ‘Talk abont—you know
who. and you begin to smell brim:
stone. Here is Roser Lyon's card, Now
you go right down and excuse me,
and ive him to understand once for
all that 1 want him to let me atone
Oh, T don't know what you shall say,"
raising deprecatory hands against the
storm of Celinda’s remonstrances,
“Say anything. Be polite, of course
bu make it plain that 1 won't have
anything to do with him."
And she fairly thrust the girl from
the room.
. . . . .
It was a very flushed and em
Darrassed young lady who appeared a
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the door of Parlor Aa few minutes
later, and an equally embarrassed but
eager young man who sprang to mee’
ber.
“Why, Celinda,” he stammered, “I'r
so giad! I hardly dared—1I hoped—'
“Yes,” she replied demurely, “
know that you wanted w see auntie
but she was—was busy, so she sen
me with a—a message—"
“But it was you that I wanted to
see." he protested, “You must bave
known that; only—"
"My aunt's message, Mr, Lyon, ts
this: she wishes me to say that you
must—that is, that you must not—oh,
dear! Iam making a mess of it! Ff
don't know how to say it; only you
musn't any more, you know. There!”
“Mustn’t what?” he inquired gree +
ly, “I don't quite understand.”
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VERY PUSHED AND EBUILD
A Ae th a aS tt MD at
tell yout”
“I fear that 1 must insist upon your
trying,” he said. “This is a matter
of the greatest Importance to me.”
“Well, i’s—it's about your—your
following her about so much, She is
is angry because you have come!
here. She can't lo—can’t feel toward
you in the way you wish, and your—
attentions annoy her!"
“1 we,” said the man, thonghtfally.
Miss Pringle does me the honor to
suppose that Lam a suitor for ber
hand, Is that it?"
“Yes,” very softly.
‘And finding me ineligible she wieh-
es me to withdraw my claims and my
presence. Am 1 still right?”
“Yes,” as before.
“Herm! Of course you told her bet-
ter?”
812 Why—why—how could 1? How
did T know?”
Very rosy the face now, Sich deep:
‘tinted blossoms, in such a fair garden!
"Oh, Celinda, you must have
known!" he ried passtonately, "I
“was sure that you understood; that
you knew that’ when I sought your
/annt it was you whom T was seeking:
“that T haunted her presence that I
inight be near you! Didn't you know
it?) And would It have made any dit.
ference if yon had? Dear, I love you,
and you only! Will you come to me?"
Whatever the answer, it must have
heen eminently satisfactory; for after
a little a much tumbled head of hatr
was lifted from its pillow on a manly
| shoulder, and a happy voice sald,
| “Oh, Roger, what a goose you were
| to court one woman when you wanted
another.”
“And what a goose you were not to
| know that you were being courted!”
Was the gay rejoinder,
And Miss Pringle, just then looking
|1n at a partly opened door, came to
| sudden enlightenment, and stole softly
away, muttering to herself:
“And what a goose 1 vas to think
that [was bein’ courted when 1
wasn't! It seems that there are three
| of @ kind of us, and that I'm the big
| gest goose of the three!" ‘
She Was Too Enthusiastic.
There is a woman in West Philadek
pnia who is the owner of a few houses
which she rents, but which are much
of the time vacant, She Is a thorough-
ly good woman, a prominent worker‘in
the W. ©. 'T. U, and the church, and so
enthusiastic 1s she on the temperance
question that she places the Union be
fore the chureh.
‘The other day a man, whose work
keeps him out of doors, and whose
complexion shows it, went to her ta
rent one of her tenements. She looked
Nim over and said: “I suppose you
dvink.”
“Yes, madam."
“Hard?”
“Yes, I do drink a good deal this hot
weather,”
“Whisky, I suppose.”
ones
“Then I suppose it’s vile beer.”
“No”
“Well, what do yoo drink?”
“Water—I have been « total abstain
‘er all my life.”
RAT STORY FROM MANILA,
How the Transport Sherman Wat
Cleared of 950.000 Rodents.
When the United States military
transport Sherman arrived at Manila
recently she was, as is the case with
‘most other ships that arrive from or
touch @t Hong Kong on the way to
“Manila, detained for inspection to see
if she had any rats on board. When
the big transport dropped anchor in
Manila bay, therefore, the offictal rat
inspector went on board to see what
was dofng in the way of rodents, In
less than fifteen minutes he hurriedly
left the ship, and, going ashore, re-
ported that there was on board the
Sherman, according to the patent rat
enumerator in use at Manila, no fewer
than 950,000 rats,
‘The Sherman was tmmediately or-
dered to the quarantine station at
Mariveles, as no ship on which the
disease carrying rodents are found is
allowed to dock at Manila until they
ave exterminated, Accordingly the
Sherman steamed back to Mariveles.
When she arrived there her hatehes
had been opened up and enough sul-
phur carried below: to kill millions. of
tats. As soon as the anchor was
dropped the sulphur fires were started
in the hold, and in a few minutes the
work of the fumes became apparent,
Out of the hatehes there poured
such @ stream of rats as was never
before seen in the Orient. First by
the hundreds, and then by the thou-
sands, they appeared at the hatches,
and then leaped into the water, Every
one tried to swim ashore, but the dis
tance was far too great for any rat to
swim, and soon the great black line
of paddling rodents began to thin out.
Some of them reached a point about
300 yards off the ship, but none got
auy farther, After the fumes had
been working for about an hour the
rats stopped appearing, An inspection
of the ship was made and not a rat
diseovered. ‘The Sherman then
entered Manila and discharged hee
cargo.—Manila American.
WE SMASHED LIKE MOSES.
Ohio Mayor Willing to Break a Few
Laws to Defeat the Goa) Trust.
While the price of coal was soaring
during the dead of last winter Mayor
Hellmoyer of Bellevue, Ohio, took
Vigorous methods to relieve the situa-
tion, With the consent of the coun-
ceils he had a riot call sounded on the
fire bell
There was an immediate response
of ¢itivens. From these a brigade of
sovelers was organized and marched
to the railroad. Six car loads of
coal, lying on the tracks, were ordered
confiseated by the mayor, ‘The needy
people were then relieved by the
coal distribution, which was made in
ton lots
This action naturally brought re:
monstrances from certain sensitive
citizens, but remained unheeded by
the determined mayor,
“It is wrong, sir, entirely wrong, to
thus take the law into your own
hands.” said a remonstrant.
“Hut T have a bibical example for
my action,” protested Billmeyer.
What! for stealing coal?”
| °No: for taking the law in my own
hands,” said the mayor. “You recollect
that when Moses came down the
ncn he smashed the ten com,
‘mandments on seeing the people kneel
| before: the golden calf. Well, sir, the
coal barons may worship the golden
valf, but Pl smash a few laws while
they are doing it.”
When Hiram Couche.
Ween Pram coughs the kittens mew,
The dog the kitelien door strides thro
‘The blinds fly back, the windows shake
As if the glass in them would break—
When Hiram coughs,
When Hiram coughs folks look around
For some big opening In the ground;
‘he terror in their faces show
An earthquake is at work below—
When Hiram coughs,
When Hiram coughs he throws his arms
And all his deareat friends alarms;
In fear they move about the place
Because he turns black in the face—
When Hiram coughs,
When Hiram coughs! Men sane, discreet
Claim it must come up thro’ his feet—
While other folks, not over brave,
Think it a voice from out the grave—
When Hiram coughs,
A thousand things—drugs. nostrums, pills
thonght to relieve such human ile—
He has tried, and they have his curse,
For cogstantly hls case grams worse
And Biram eguehs.
I trust he soon may get relief,
Hecause it ie my firm bellet,
Unies he does, that frightful cough
WII very shortly: take him off—
Bill Hirai coughs
~Thoinas FB. Porter in Hoston Journal
Ate tlia Wass.
Southeastern Virginia is scarred
with deep ditehes that give the farm-
ers great trouble. Last spring a poor
farmer logt his wife and only horso
just as the plowing season opened, De-
termined to have his flelds in readi-
ness, he harnessed himself to a light
plow and bade his daughter drive,
All went well for a dozen or so of
furrows, but just as he prepared for
a trip through the turnip beds he
sipped and went down Into the mire
at the twelvefoot bottom of one of
the ditches.
Scrambling out, wet, muddy and
angry, he was in no mood to answer
properly his daughter's gentle in-
auiry:
“{ hope you're not hurt, father?"
"No, gosh darn it,” he spluttered;
“but it ‘twasn’t your fault T wasn't
kite Why don’t you attend to your
work! Why the devil didn't you say
*Whoa'?”
Silk From Wood.
‘The threads of-silk made from wood
tn Germany have eighteen strands, @
single one of which is hardly visible
'to the naked eye, Real silk is twor
thisds stronger,
BURIED 20,000 YEARS
PREHISTORIC MONSTER UN.
EARTHED IN SIBERA.
Expedition Sent Out by St Peters-
burg Academy of Sciences Returns
With Skeleton of the Only Mam-
moth Ever Found,
Writing in the New York Press,
Otto Herz, leader of the Russian mam-
moth expedition, says:
~The expedition sent out by the Im-
perlal Academy of Sciences in Bt.
Potersburg to dig out and carry home
the frozen cadaver of a prehistoric
mammoth discovered on the shores
of the little Beresowka river, in
Northeastern Siberia, managed to se-
cure the remains in excellent condi-
tion, The mammoth has now been
set up in the zoological museum of
the society, reconstructed exactly, as
was made possible by the large
amount of material,
The preservation of the remains is
vest shown by the fact that the skin
waved by us weighed 800 pounds alone.
Only a part of the skin over the back
of the skull and the trunk were miss-
ing. These had been destroyed most-
ly by wild animals. The skin over
the skull was easy to reproduce, as
we knew exactly what it had been
like, But the trunk has not been re-
constructed entirely, because we are
still In the dark as to the true ap-
pearance of its extremity.
As there was a great deal of bair
left on the parts of the mighty body,
we have been able to mount the beast
so as to show how heavily this ele
phant was furred, It was easy to wn-
derstand how the creature managed
to survive even extreme cold weather
and to bear it in comfort.
This mammoth, which has been ly-
ing frozen in the earth for 20,000
years, according to the estimate of
our geologists, has been stuffed in the
exact position in which we found ft
in the place of its death, Even the
surroundings have been reproduced
SS
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THE STUSTED MAMMOTH IN POSTION:
LDMACTIY as lT was rouno ww SIBERIA
minutely, 89 that the beholder can see
just how the excavations were made
to bring the creature to the light of
ay, The expedition carried back
with it large quantities of earth, in
order to make the whole exhibit an
exact picture.
The skeleton has been mounted
feparately and in a standing posture.
Only a few ribs and the right tusk are
missing. The tail proves to be de
cidedly shorter than that of the ele-
‘phant of today. It has only twenty-
two vertebrae, whereas the ele-
‘phant’s tail contains thirty and more.
‘The hair of the tail was well pre:
served by the ice and almost twenty
inches long, very bushy and coal-
black in color,
The appearance of the body led
us to conclude that the beast had been
Killed suddenly through a fall from
the heights above its grave, a number
of fractures in the bones pointing
to the same conclusion, Whatever it
was that happened, the colossus cer-
tainly made one last effort to arise.
Its left forefoot still was bent and
raised, evidently reaching for higher
ground, while the right one was
braced against the earth. The hind
legs were bent under the body.
Earth evidently hurtled down from
above the dying beast, and probably
buried it almost completely. ‘The
dead body must have frozen {mme-
diately, for a great part of the meat
was preserved perfectly. It had a
dark, red, blood color, but the ex-
posure caused it to send out such an
odor that none of us had the nerve
to taste it,
The fat was well preserved and
easy to cut. It felt spongy to the
touch and was as thick as three
inches in places, proving that the
mammoth had plenty of food in its
cold home.
‘The stomach was complete and con-
tained a great mass of food that re-
mained undigested. This food has hot
been examined scientifically as yet,
War
wey
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AN psi”
Lowte SAW Witt THETONGUE
but it is determined that the mam-
moth fed only on grasses and similar
matter. Remnants of pine needles
were found in the stomach. The
tongue was in equally fine condition
and has been preserved in alcohol,
That the mammoth died almost at
once after falling ts shown by: the
fact that between the tongue and the
left grinder we found food which the
animal had been chewing. Evidently
it died before it could swallow this
last mouthful,
The greatest amount of halr was
found on the left forefoot. It is
short, extremely thick woolly hair, un-
derneath, and a stiff upper coat of
yelowish brown hair about seven
inches long, a fur coat such as few
other animals carry.
In the territory where the mam-
moth was found mighty masses of
earth topple into the rivers each
spring, and it was through such a
landslide that the first sign of the
buried monster appeared. It was a
tusk which @ wandering Lamute
found while searching for fossi!
{vory, of which there 1s enough in
this region to make a profitable bus:
iness for the nomads of Siberia .
He sold the tusk in the nearest
town and told of the mammoth whese
body he had seen protruding from
the frozen earth. The police in
Crea Ree ie
fA
ry | | NA
Srdne-Kolymsk sent a message to the
xovernor of Irkutzk, and he notified
the society.
When we reached the spot it was
winter and everything was frozen so
hard that it was quite impossible to
do anything in the open air. So we
built a hut over the body and kept {t
heated day and night. Thus we suc-
ceeded in cutting it up.
As each piece was cut off it was
wrapped in grass, bandaged and then
stitched Into hides.
As we had to make our way for
many hundreds of miles through
trackless tundras to get back to a
settlement of any kind, we could not
think of transporting pieces greater
in weight than 200 pounds or 50,
and even as it was we had immense
difficulty in carrying the invaluable
find safely over the thousands of
miles of waste to Russian territory.
We had to go by water and land,
on foot, with horses and with rein-
deer in various stages of the journey,
and it was with a vast relief that we
finally delivered the remnants intact
to the civilized world,
CHURCH MANY CENTURIES OLD.
‘One of Few Ancient Edifices Remain-
‘tan in Qaaland:
‘The Church of the Holy Sepulchre
is one of the four round churches still
remaining in England, the others be-
ing the Temple Church, London; the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Cam:
bridge; and the Church of St. John
of Jerusalem, Little Maplestead. The
earliest portions of the present build-
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ing were probably built about 2100
by St. Simoa de St. Liz, Earl of North-
ampton. No extensive change was
made In the church for a century,
but between 1375 and 1400 great
works were undertaken, The upper
portion of the Round was taken down
and re-erected as it now appears, The
massive tower and spire were built
at the west of the Round, and are of
fine proportions. The south aisle, the
old east end, and the south porch
were erected at the same _ period.
From the Reformation until 1851 the
church grew more and more dilapl-
dated, until {t became a disgrace to
the town. In that year, however, a
strong committee was formed, funds
were collected and the work of resto.
ration was begun in 1860, Another
bay was added to the nave, a second
aisle on the north, a new choir with
a chapel on each side, vestry and apse
at the east end,
‘Baney Bese Clear a Street.
A swarm of bees collided with an
electric car at Fort Wayne, Ind., a
few days ago and became panic-
stricken and scattered. The windows
of the motorman’s apartment were
open and the bees flew into the car,
causing consternation among the
passengers, several of whom were
stung. The bees took possession of
the street, and when bicycle riders
and wagon drivers suddenly found
themselves stung by angry bees,
there were many strenuous flights to
safety.
Labor on Persian Rugs.
The best rugs of Persia represent
patience, taste and prolonged labor.
‘On each square foot of surface a
weaver works about twenty-three
days, A rug 12x12 feet would there-
fore require the labor of one man for
9,812 days, or over ten years, not
eounting Sundays
‘THR REAL BAKED BEANS.
ae In Boston Paper *Telle How
They Should Be Cooked.
Without beans the great timber for.
ests, of Maine could certainly never
have been cut and sent down the riv-
‘ers to tho mills, says a writer in the
‘Boston Journal, Every one knows
that, of course, And the first thing
that was attended to at the cite of
‘& new camp, either fot choppers or
drivers, was the bean hole. Of course
@ great many cocks liked one bean
hole so well that they used to carry
{t with them until it was all full of
other holes and worn out. Occasion
ally, now, away up in the Maino
woods, where the witherlicks roam
and fight the sidehill loungers, you
will find old bean holes tattered and
torn and thrown aside.
Occasionally some New York sports-
man in these days will patch up one
of those old holes and use it in the
woods, But if they have a Maine
guide along he will make a brand
new hole just off at one side of the
camp.
He will dig it about two feet deep
and big enough to hold a bushel bas-
ket, if he wanted to put a basket
there. Then on the bottom he will
pile dry limbs and pine cones, cob-
pile fashion, and will set fire to them.
And for an hour or more he will feed
that fire, throwing in more fuel and
occasionally tossing @ round rock
down into the hole, And at last, well
Into the edge of the evening, the hole
will be pretty well filled with ruddy
embers and glowing stones.
‘Then in the iron camp kettle he
will pack the soaked beans that have
been parbolling in the fresh lake
water, With them there'll be pork
and mustard and an onion, and then
he'll dig a round hole down into
those embers and set that seething
kettle there. He will tell the gaping
sportsmen to stand back and then
he'll rake the coals all over the top
of the kettle and tramp down around
it the glowing stones, and over all he
will heap the dirt and tho sods,
‘That's all till morning!
Then the guide will scrape away
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the dirt and stick a hooked pole un
der that kettle bail and boost it out
of that hole. And he'll run with
wabbling legs, tugging it to the camp
table and he'll dump the contents
into @ big pan and those sportsmen—
but say, what's the use of going on
and harrowing up all the finer feel-
ings of the Boston Bean Patriot who
is fully 200 miles from a Maine bean
hole and has had his vacation this
season? .
Antarctic Eccentricities.
Some of the seamen returned to
New Zealand from the Discovery, who
have ha¢ experience of both the Arc-
tie and Antarctic, say that the cold
In the latter is less severe and the
atmosphere drier. A curious phe-
nomenon they did not expect, and
cannot explain, is the fact that the
cold winds in the Antarctic were
usually north, while the comparative:
ly warm winds were southerly, They
saw {icebergs of the most fantastic
shapes, resembling houses, churches
and steamers. The sledge dogs
struck work repeatedly, and the men
had to do quite as much pulling as
the animals, In the western sledge
Journey an tce-slide was descended
in one minute ten seconds. It took
three days to ascend the same slide
on the return journey, the sledges be-
ing hauled up by block and pulley.
A Rich Diet
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aa eg fal.
“Tis @ fact,” said this Jersey mos
queet,
“That you soon become like what you
eat.
Now I make It my pride
To alight on the hide
Of only the very elite.”
A Natural Curlosity.
A Brunswick, Me., man displays @
curious growth found by him on a tree
in that town which, thus far, no one
has been able to classify. It consists
of a hoVow, egg-shaped plece of wood
about the size of a football and of
wood one fourth of an inch thick. Its
formaticr on a tree in such a peculiar
shape is a matter of much comment
by all who have seen it,
‘iaeian Ganead tan Baakienlan
No woman has entered the convent
of St. Catherine, on Mt. Sinai, for
1.400 years.
$100 Reward, $100,
The routers, of this Jil be pleased to tear
SR ee es
Wah sti Shyraeaet an
Einar hare Gara nae? Eats
Sal Satiees tance e cies
eat sa ies ten tie
See cratersvanewainee ae
Sueaatcotedicns etnaear atta
Broan Sitceapatt tase
sets faaracoe a ramen ete
BEC aietetaecth, beacon nr se
Bobctieutalieyamautate ate
Line ty tlineny « 00, toes 0
:
SOTO ue
The fellow who complains that he
leads @ dog's life naturally growls
about it.
Don't you know that Defiance
Starch besides being absolutely supe
rior to any other, is put up 16 ounces
in package and sells at same price
as 12-0unce packages of other kinds?
A good deal of your time Is taken
up in listening to “pointers” given
you by friends, Ever use one?
$1.00 BIG 500-POUND STEEL
Ress RANGE OFFER.
snge made in the World, and are willing to have
[tplaced ia your own home on three monthe' free
Poeiee cbs tae ee wend to SEARS,
ebticx 4 Co. Coase, and you mil rreutve
freo by return thall big picture of the aoe
Fange and mauiy other “cooking and heating
Stoves, you will kino receive the mout worden
‘ful 01.00 ster] tunge offer, an offer that eae
the bese sted ‘ranire or he. ting stove fa the
home of any family. such an offerthat no family
fn the land: no mavier what thelr elreumstancen
Bar bev of how mall their income, ned be
‘without the best cooklay oF heating stove muda,
How's the tramp business?” was
asked a tramp to-day. “Bum,” he re-
plied.
DOWT SOIT, YOUR CLOTHES,
Use Red Cross Ball Blue anc keep them
‘white as snow. All grovers. 5c. a package,
No, Maude, dear; it isn't necessary
for a dry goods store to deliver stock-
ings in a hose cart.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and supertor quality of De-
fiance Starch is fast taking place of
all other brands. Others say, they
cannot sell any other starch.
‘There is seldom much profit in
prophecies.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Byrap.'
For chiluren teething: softens the rem cedscen 1
Gxininetion,alluys pals, cures wind “ollc,’2Sc s botue-
‘When a woman really loves her hus-
band the first evidence of it is a state-
‘ment that he is overworked,
Tae eee Cte Se terre Renee
Sangin une of Vrs Kline's cireat Neve: Kestoree
Bs OE EREE S00 ran Youle aoa raion
TBH, KLIN, Lice 91 ave St, Phlladalp bia, Pes
Many theories are excellent until
you try to reduce them to practice.
Dealers say that as soon as a cus-
tomer tries Defiance Starch it {s im-
possible to sell them any other cold
water starch. It can be used cold
or boiled,
Men seldom pay taxes on what they
are reputed to be worth. ‘
THE K, C. &. ALMANAC FOR 1908
‘The Kansas City Southern Railway's
Almanac for 3903 tn now ready for dis-
tribution. ‘Farmers, _ stock-ratsers,
fruit-growers, truck gardeners, manu:
facturers, merchants and others seek-
ing a new fied of action or a new
home at the very lowest prices, can ob-
tain reliable information concerning
Southwestern Missouri, the Cherokee
and Choctaw Natious'in the Indian
Territory, Western Arkansas, Eastern
‘Texas, Northwesteru Louisiana and the
Coast'country, and of the business op-
portunities offered therein.
Write for a copy of the KC. 8, Al-
manac and address, 8, G. Warner, G.
P. A, K. C.8. Ry. Kansas City, Mo,
‘When people see specks it’s time for
them to wear spectacles.
Pretty Tooth In a Good Mouth
Sees as
Standard,
BEST vz TEETH
g 4
Put your fins
ger on our
trade mark. Tell your
dealer you want the best
starch your money can buy.
Insist on having the best,
DEFIANCE,
It Is 16 ounces for 10 cents:
No premiums, but one
pound of the very best
starch made. We put all
our money in the starch.
It needs no cooking, 5
It is absolutely pure.
It gives satisfaction or
money back.
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO,
Omaha, Neb,
Cause for Joy.
“My darling! What delights you
fo? What fs it that fills your eyes
with the glad ight of happiness,
and—?" “O, Theobald, just think,
Cook is going to remain with us,
after all! Mrs. Goodparty, for whom.
she was going to work, dropped dead
last night. ©, wasn’t it just too sweet
of her, and, you know, I bad always
fancied she disliked me!"—Town
Topics,
Group of New Hypnotice,
Two Berlin chemists have discow
ered a whole group of new hypnotics,
which enable a doctor to induce: a
sleep as deep and as long as he de
sires. One of the group is called ver-
onal, and while more potent than any
other soporific, {t is sald to be per
fectly harmless,
Women Biiliardists,
Of late years the game of billiards
has been growing in popularity among
American women, especially in the
East. Many New York society leaders
‘are experts with the cue.
Not the Dog's Fault.
Mankind should not be blamed tot
its failure to come up to dogkind’s
standard of decency. Dogkind has no
Idea of money.—New Orleans Times-
Democrat.
Overlooked Vital Points.
People who wonder at the present
prevalence of the mosquito apparently
have failed to notice the present pre-
valence of openwork,
Gs te deta:
“To the last syllable of recorded
time” has been changed “To the last
click of the typewriter.’—Brooklyn
Eagle.
Germany's Steamship Traffic,
Hamburg and Bremen together have
84 per cent (55 and 29) of Germany's
steamship traffic.
Women Wear Monocles.
Wearing monocles, the latest fash: |
fon for ladies, a craze recently started
in Paris by ladies of the Servian col
ony, is extending to London,
G0OD HOUSEKEEPERS
Use the best. That's why they buy Red
Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers. 5 cents.
In buying cantaloupes you hardly
ever get a good one. Same way with
every thing else,
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are
fast to light and washing.
Lots of things are done well that
are not worth doing at all.
Stopa the Cough and
‘Works Off the Cold
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabiets. Price 26a,
‘The man who wants the earth is the
very one the earth can get along with-
out.
Gensible Housekeepers
will have Defiance Starch, not alone
because they get one-third more for
the same money, but also because of
superior quality.
Live Stock Transportation.
The percentage of loss in ocean
transit of live stock in 1902 was 0.13
for cattle, 0.89 for sheep and 0.65 for
horses, which was considerably less
than for the preceding year.
Russian Land Owners.
Of the land in Russia, as shown by
the government report, the nobility
own 181,000,000 acres and the mer-
chants 36,000,000, while the peasants
‘own but 35,000,000 acres,
Use Immense Amount of Leather.
‘Twelve million pounds’ worth of
Jeather is required every year to pro-
vide boots and shoes for the inhabl-
tants of Great Britain.
To Abolish Lotteries,
State lotteries in Holland are to be
gradually diminished during the next
eighteen years, when they will be abol-
ished entirely.
Cuban Sugar for England.
For the first time in twenty-five
years cane sugar {s being exported
from Cuba to England,
Breed Rare Pigeons
The Belgians are great pigeon
breeders, and one of the choicest birds
of this Kind Js the true Antwerp car
rier, which 1s comparatively rare,
Tha. Bla aren,
Staunton, Ark. Aug. 31st—News
comes from Duff, Searcy ‘Co. this
state, that Mr, T. E, Reeves, a justice
of the Peace at that place, has writ-
ten a letter recommending Dodd's
Kidney Pills in which he says:
“I think Dodd's Kidney Pills can't
be beat for Kidney Trouble, and I
wish them every success.”
‘The local J. P. Mr, E, B, Cox agrees
with his brother Justice on this point
for he says:
“Thad a bad ease of Kidney Trou-
ble and was not able to do a day's
work without great distress. I bought
six boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills and
after I had used three boxes I was all
right, Iam as well as ever, and T
cannot praise Dodd’s Kidney Pills too
highly.
“I have given the other three boxes
to some friends of mine who had
found out what it was that had cured
me so satisfactorily and quickly and
they all speak highly of Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills.”
No ono disputes this unanimous
verdict.
Nothing in this world is quite at
cheerful a8 @ lodge organizer's “good
morning.”
MEETING OF FAMOUS MEN.
Reeult of ‘Mutual Introduction In ¢
Smoking Car.
‘The unknown man welked down the
‘aisle of the smoking car and stopped
where another unknown man sat read
Ing voraciousiy,
‘May I sit by yout” he asked
meekly.
“Certainly,” replied the occupant,
without looking up. “May as well be
sociable. Rice is my name.”
“And Freeman is mine. May I ast
what you are reading?”
“Certainly.”
“Well, what are you reading?”
“Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage
vatch.’"
“Pure trash. I have my wife's wor
for it.”
“Who's your wife?” inquired th
original occupant, beginning to betra}
wns of interest.
‘My wife is Mrs. Freeman,” wit!
some signs of pique.
“Never heard of her, Literary
shark, is she? My wife's strong fo
Mrs. Wiggs. You see-er, why, sh
wrote it.”
“My dear sir,” shouted the quon
dam critic, “there seems to be a fata
misunderstanding somewhere. Let mi
Introduce myself again as Mr, Mar
E. Wilkins Freeman.”
“And I,” grinned the man with th
book, “am Mr. Alice Caldwell Hega
Rice, of course. Why didn't we d
this before? Happy to know you.”
Princeton Tiger.
HE KNEW HIS PLACE.
Story Containing a Moral for Many
Marcied Men,
| John R. Proctor, president of the
‘etvil service commission, was in for
mer years state geologist of Ken
tucky, and he had traveled all over
the mountain sections of that state
He was talking about the peculiar
people of that remote country not
long ago in a conversation on the re:
cent disturbances in Breathitt county,
“I see,” he said, “that Senator
Blackburn says they are the most in-
comprehensible people in the world,
and maybe they are, in general, But
one day I met one who wasn't at all
so. I had been riding over some
mighty rough roadway, and was tired
and hungry, when I came to a farm-
house of the usual mountain type.
Pottering away at a woodpile near the
gate was a man about forty years old
Jong and lanky and with the mountain
sallow, but his face was bright and @
quaint littie smile seemed to be dod:
ging in and out of it as he looked up
on my approach.
“Good morning,’ I said, reining in
my horse. ‘I'd like to see the man of
the house.’
“Thar ain't none,’ he replied very
gravely. ‘The party you wanter see {s
my wife, I reckon.’"—New York
Times,
A Ruined Life.
(These beautiful lines were written by
a man who committed sulcide not man
years ago. within a Scottish. privon.
breathes the saddest aspect. of @ hope
Wsaly ruined Ife)
Night, and the voyage done, no. pio
walling
‘To take me o'er the bar:
Alone I've sailed, alone Lteet the cordage
No help from near nor far:
And tho' across the sea a wind ts blow
ant ine
That naught of peace doth tert
Yet In the silent Nurbor where I'm goln
My sou! shail sleep—aleey. well
Ye battleships that crush your wretche:
victims
In nevercending war,
Roll out your guns upon the great broa¢
Ye cannot cross the bar:
And little do T reek of those who censure
‘Or pity or abhor:
“Tis ail too, Inte: "tis all so very useless,
Not worth the waiting. for,
Nor night nor day is any pleasure bring
fn
‘To brain Alteased and sore:
Tonly hear the moantig ef the ocean
Chon the rockegirt. shore
And #0 T wait not for thy tardy coming,
Telight and evening stars
With helm gone. I haste to ret the cor
‘ange
Within the harbor bar
Fasting Schoolgirl.
Miss Reba Benjamin, a 16-year-old
pupil of a high school at Coloradc
Springs, recently concluded a twenty
five days’ fast which she undertook
“for fun.” She only lost ten pounds.
and did her accustomed household
work during the fast. She is now
Aiving on fruit Juices, fruits and nuis
jabstains from a set meat, and has
abolished breakfast entirely.
| Egg Preservative,
Serman papers say that it ts poset
ble to keep eges fresh for any length
‘of time by simply immersing them 1
a 10 per cent solution of silicate ot
soda, commonly called liquid glass
Eggs preserved in this way will hateh
‘@ year afterward,
Greenland Glaciers.
‘The tee in Greenland 1s melting
more rapidly than it is formed, Com
parison of the descriptions of the Ja:
obshaven glacier shows that its edi
has receded eight miles since 185
and {t has lost twenty to thirty feet
tn depth.
cco esa clan |
Mrs, Strongmind—"Our society has
appointed me chairmea of a commit
tee whose object ts to try to bring &
reduction in rents.”
Strongmind—"I'm glad to hear tt
say dear, You can begin at once ou
my trousers.”
On the Wrong Trail.
fom—"My tallor called with bis It
tle bill yesterday.”
Jack- "I know how that ts, old
man, You have my sympathy.”
‘Tom—"Oh, don't waste your sym:
pathy on me, Sympathize with the
tailor.”
CATARRH DESTROYS THE KIDNEYS
es ee ae Up or Walk---
CL»
Bees 2 Ses
| GS 5 wn
Wed CEE 5 = SN \
Fh aA
; ied
} WLAN Sy)
A Us Wy
QZ IY !
= dl
ES .._ poser —
fare ns far ahead of the oid fashioned Dyes ag electricity ts of a Rush licht candle. Putnam Fadeless Dyes are cleanly, aw they neither stain the
Banta por spot the Ketilc, “One icc package colors either silit, Weol GF cotton equally weil. atid Iawuurunceed 1o.4iNe perieet results. “Putnam
Fauriess Dyes are for sale by il root druggists everswuere, oF matied direct at Wem yarki MONROE DRUG CO,, Unionville, Mo.
Climate Is Deadly. ’ nd gborke rout meter ape
There are Ton women niesonaries [DON'T STOP_TOBAGGO SUDDENLY‘ #iGi Giitioy:..
fn Africa because of the deadly na lense King anchewing radually, Thee beara guaranteed ture dhe woratsaan or ene
ture of the climate and the social |bymai—3 bors $2.50. EUREKA CHEMICAL CO. La’ Croase. Wie.
conditions of vast territories thet). —<—<—<—#<— —<——————eeeee
MaSsachusetts is free from the re
peated murder trial farces of New
York, There is only one appeal pos
sible there—from the jury's verdict
straight to the highest court
The new mines pumping scheme
for South Staffordshire, England, te
designed to release and render avatl-
fable for mining 40,000,000 tons of coal
now under water.
Wouldn't Surprise Them.
A traveling man boarded the train
at Mexico early one morning, en route
to Jefferson City, only a few bouss’
run, and complained about the slow
time the train was making. With a
look that would crack ice the conduc
tor said: “You had hetter get off and
‘walk if the speed of this train does not
suit you." The traveling man said be
would, but his folks didn’t expect: him
‘until (rain time.—Kansas City Star,
Butterfly Farms,
Up to within a year or two a butter:
fy farm establishment at Eastbourne,
‘England, by William Watkins, an en-
tomologist, was the only one of ite
‘mind, ‘Today, however, there exist
several such farms in France, ‘Theo
butterflies are reared in tho Interest
“ot the silkworm industry and also rare
specimens are grown to be sold a
“bigh prices to museums of natural
| bistory in all parts of the world.
Tt Is by change of diet that one can
get fairly on the road to health after
years of sickness, for most Il health
comes from improper feeding,
What a boon it is to shake off cot
fee sickness and nervous headaches
as some can if determined
Ono woman accomplished It In this
way: “A few years ago 1 suffered
terribly from sick and nervous head:
aches being frequently confined to my
bed two or three days at a time, the
attacks coming on from one to four
times in every month, I tried
medicines of — all kinds but
could Ket no real relief until my par:
ents finally persuaded me to quit the
use of coffee altogether and try Pos:
tum Food Coffee, It had come to a
point where I was so utterly miser
able that 1 was willing to make any
reasonable trial
“A person couldn't believe what fol
Jowed but the results speak for them:
selves; that was two and a half years
ago and I have never tasted coffer
‘since. T use Postum not only for its
deltaions flavor but more for the good
Mt has dono me, All of my: troubles
dlaappoarcsd ax if by magic and 1 have
for the past two years been doing all
‘the work for my family of six. 1
‘eeldpm have even a slight headache
and I would not give up my Postum
and go back to coftee now unless |
deliberately intended to comtnit sul
“elie.
“All of my neighbors it seems to me
now use Postum in place of coffee and
some of them have deen doing sd
for several years with splendid re
sults from the health point of view."
Name given by Postum Co, Battle
Creek, Mich,
Look in each package for a copy of
the famous little book, “The Road t
Wellville.””
Many Persons Have
Catarrh and Don't
Know it.
Mr, James M, Powell, 633
Troost street, Kansas City,
Mo., Vice Grand of 1. 0.
0. F., of Cherryville, Kans.,
“About four years ago I
suffered with a severe ca-
tarch of the bladder, which
caused continued Irritation
and pain. Iwas miserable
and could aot stand up or
walk for any lengih of
time without extreme
weariness and pain. 1 be-
gan Lei! Peruna and it
greatly relieved me, and In
eleven weeks I was com-
pletely cured and felt like
@ new man,!’--James M.
Powell.
Hundreds of Dollars Spent in
Vain,
Mr, Cyrus Hershman,
Sheridan, Ind., writes
“Two years ago I was 1
sick man. Catarrh had set
tled in the pelvic organs
making life a burden and
ei ctaa bath Saati: Gasean ae tka
covery. I spent hundreds of dollars in
medicine which did me no good. I was
persuaded by a friend to try Peruna, 1
took it two weeks without much improve-
ment, but I kept on with it and soon began
to get well and strong very fast. Within
two months I was cured, and have been
well ever since, Iam a strong advocate of
Peruna.""—C, Hershman.
Peruana cures catarch of the kidneys,
liver and other pelvic organs, simply be:
i TCA RRR: Weave sokahal:
Climate Is Deadly.
Tam sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ago Mra. 0s. ROBBING
Maple Street, Norwiah, N. ¥., wb. 17, 1900.
Good Massachusetts Law.
‘To Mine Coal Under Water.
Wouldn't Surprise Them.
Butterfly Farms.
A NEW ROUTE.
‘The Road to Wellville.
er STOP_ TOBACCO SUDDENLY *™' ging’: GURO:::
Poland, AVE sgepter your breath EKA CHEMICAL CO. La Greece: Wi
No other systemic catarrh remedy has as
yet been devised, Insist upon having Pe-
runa. There are no medicines that can be
substituted,
If yon do not derive prompt_and satisfac:
tory results from the use of Peruna, write
at once to Dr, Hartman, giving a full state:
ment of your case and he will be pleased tc
give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr, Hartman, President of The
Sastman Seohbolan: Columbus, Obi.
—S or
= FI STREN
AK - a
a, ;
HEA
If you rR
happen Rn
to be.
cost those soo un: ell >
forvuuates- a ran MRR
down, worn out, thin on,
and emaciatel — who iii
have doctors’ for ao
pel peeet (bay rey
ight thing, ent one
It’s Your Stomach
‘To rogain your Strength and Health, take
Dr. Caldwell’s
(Laxative)
Syrup Pepsin
{All oak to that yoa soot us yout name
Ail stomech, liver and. kidney allizente,
foe wd 41.0 bot
All Druggists.
PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Monticello, Ills.
Woman in Public Position.
| Viennese prejudice against’ women
being given public positions ty again
undermined by the appointment of Dr,
Margarethe Farchb to be assistant at
the chemical laboratory in that city
ALTON RESUMES FAST ST. LOUIS
TRAIN SERVICE.
Parsengers destined to St. Lonte
‘and points east should go via the Kan
eas City gateway, thereby securing
the advantage of the Chivago & Alton's
fast night train, leaying Kansas City
at 9 p.m, arriving In St Louis at 7:08
a.m, Chate cars free of extra charge,
es nt sleeping cars The Ale
ton keeps thei light a’shining Juat
ahead of the rest. Write to LD.
Cooper, Traveling Passenger Agent,
Chicago & Aiton Kallway, Kansas City,
'Mo., for lowest rates.
| Wheat Harvest of Australia,
The average yield of the wheat har
vest of South Anstralia is six bushels
per acre, and the surplus available
for export 10,530 tons.
Fine Bloodietters,
The toy pistol in South Amoriea
would make thove evolutionists far
more dangerous than they are. —Phil-
Adelphia Press,
Rllidate Automobiles:
Automobiles mate for the Germen
army haul from five to eight toa loads
throngh hilly country
Btorekeepere report that the extra
quantity, together with the superior
quality of Defiance Starch makos tt
next to impossible to well any other
brand.
When We have tings our way
elderiy men will hecome gray headed
‘Instead of bald hesded.
EDUCATIONAL,”
AARNE CORAM
BE 22 2s, Sa
dion tars ie) ioe
potion See |
ek igen foes eae oar)
Fat * eee
ana en eS
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
FULL, coUREES IN Clatten Leiter, Peo
pamhaed Maer Hounatn, Meee
Prcteeort [etn dournatom Art sige
Geattlaa tes Arvumsciers
eerste Peparsiery act Conmmerc
cae
Teeca Free to all stutena who have com
pusatms wos rene er eamteuer ae a
Gee eee etre ora
Sbiarh ent
TISSUE TLAT modaene.eharey to saan
istered Cunnwenats nae
CAGE EG CILIA
Me ar er ci cea tt
| Sobseeda arte toer ch TR CaS ogy,
ceiaiog ice, "Ahdtecs Wigton aks
ogues Free, Address BQ. Hox 283.
ST.MARY 'S ACADEMY
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA
One mio wan ay nes fae Vater
Win ena oun uta ei
Wii he PLP ant Rea:
vanced Ghematry and Pharmare. Regular’ Gol
Bas fea ape bad
alcal Laboratery weil mjuityed, en UTS
THON er at tats
| the Diroctress of ST. MARY'S ACADEMY,
Wise ame, tastunes
When Answering Advertisements —
| Kindly Mention This Paper.
wi N. U., KANSAS CITY, NO. 36, 1903
CHAMPION TRUSS S3ERwitkT Coarse:
PRELUDE ANG cee ae
ase ee.
Aircriif asin tige>
AW SIRES — sennans CFV WO
FREE TO WOMEN!
RSE gicinclnas rower oe Mating
RPMI sic achie
Ma Th eee cee Paces
| ES | Ret ere wer enue
iI Women a)l ever the country
ST | gitie itn Sortie
TLS Aiearnesiutaurtenenralsala ty anes
bis septate ister nitrate Or nee
Sula CARTON Cu Nowton, absse;
aie Seen Ae
W. L. DOUCLAS
| *3.°2 2 *3 SHOES ii!
You cnn save from $3 to tO yourly by
2GS Onn eve Srom 99 to Bo yeeriy! bY:
alee Salen Nan ee
Mat have heen east.
tig von fron S400
to $800 Phe tin.
tense ele of W. Te
Donigias sli proven
their superiority over
all sther makes:
Soll by retail shoo
dealers “everywhere,
Took for najan and
pelew on batt
That Donelas uses Core
onaColt proves there. te
value in alae shoes,
Corina is the highest
Biade Pat. Leather made
¢
Loe.
At"
Pe nf ie?
Our $4 Git Ede Line: annot be equatied at any price.
cite RRS ace it ed
im
OR»
GM
WAT | a <D
| \ABS Seals)
L/D SPS
Ul 7 se \\ih SF
I pacenen gig ]) Ee
WATEROCE segue |).
TOIED CLOTHING “anny C=) *
| Mader sk or selon fr alinds| YQ if)
Vlof et wrk Onoake everywhere | A /
[Teor Si ofthe Bhan AAA
| te pane TOWER on the ttors [7/0/7)| co
[lrencrease eer ratte AN / 8). ]
"xt CHEL p,
ee
Lyp sain®
cua |
Wee SINGLE
Lewis BINDER
STFMGHGFCIOAR atvars RELABLE
Acre
| Ferct et ya 2 sal By
J... WILLIAMS,
—GENERAL—
Blacksmithing, Horseshoeing and Wagon Repair
Shop. Good Material and First-Class
Workmanship guaranteed.
707 Independence Ave. Kansas City, Mo.
Only First Class Colored Shop in the City.
The Very Lowest Prices.
Residence 416 Laurel. Telephone 1052 Red.
RELIABLE DENTISTRY]
No Delay--Satisfaction Guaranteed--Teeth Examined Free
| oldest practice in the city, Our success is due to the wnifermly high
grade work done by gentlemanly operators of middle ages; no youths
| We Guarantee to Please. % Our Reliability is Unquestioned.
‘This tem is backed by a wealthy corporation, and is therefore thor-
Full Se Teeth $2.00.
Sse Wa resin Les ea
R Gilt Crowns 22k... $2.65 a
Hridge Work, per tooth .$2.65
Platinum tilings... 50c
Ce cas Si ei vue Wena eye
NEW YORK DENTAL CO
ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS,
1029 Main St. ScUMbsiee Hntenag gm Me, Steers ty
If itis galore affoct you sore
And pains beset you more and more,
Then do not stop; run, skip or hop
Vo SMITH'S Apothocary Shop
With drops and pills hell cure your
And 1 IGE" will bring sround the
bitis,
Be Sure to Patronize SMITH The DRUGGIST,
Fa SHA SO GS
liv will deliver your goods free of charge if you will eall
0908 E. 12th St. Phone 120 Grand.
x
\ WARIS
\, \ . .
WAU e)] Daily Trains
Kansas City to St. Louis.
Unsurpassed service, smooth track, fast time. All
trains on the Wabash run directly through the World’s
Fair grounds, St. Louis, in full view of all the magnifi-
cent buildings the Wabash is the only line that does it.
Wabash Train No 8.
Leaving Kansas City 6:15 p. m., arrives Niagra Falls
and Buffalo nest evening, aud New York and Boston
second morning, saving aday's travel. Through ser-
vice. Wabash is the only line that does it.
L. S. McCLELLAN,
Western Passenger Agent. Kansas City, Mo.
SAMUEL DIGGS,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
J U N K.
—— CASH PAID FOR———
Scrap Iron, Rags, Bottles and Metals.
Our business transaction will convince you of
our honest weights and fair dealings. &
PHONE 126 HICKORY.
OricEawatriotseuis Ww oe Kansas City, Mo.
SSSA Ai ee a NI GG ES ee ale
STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS
seeTB THs
CIMURY Dining Room
1923 Market Street,
ST. LOUIS, MO,
MEALS AT ALL HOURS,
Oysters in any Style, Services strtotly
first-class. Ladies and Gents dine up
stair, 2, T. JOBDAN, Manager
Fancy & Staple Groceries
ane:
Table Luxuries
Vegetables in Season,
Fresh & Salt Meats,
Teas & Coffees,
eo. JONES,
€ 17th St, Kansas City, Me,
el tee Sil: alla ll i a en
QUINDARO KANSAS.
For the Moral, Intellectual and Industrial Training of our Youth.
ie ei,
Depariments.
‘Theological, Classical, Normal, Preparatory, State Industrial.
Courses.
Theological, Classical, Normal, Preparatory, Carpentry and Archi-
teoture, Printing and Book-making, Dressmaking and Plain Sewing,
Tailoring, Business Course and Stenography, Farming, Stock raising
and Truck Gardening, Cooking and Laundering.
Advantnges.
Good Buildings, Healthy Moral ‘Tone, A Faculty of Twelve Col«
lege-bred and Industrially Trained Teachers.
Terms $7.50 Per Month. \e¢ — School Opens Sept. 14th.
For Illustrated Catalogue Just Out Write to
WILEIAM T. VERNON, A. M., D. D., Prest., Quindaro, Kas.
A. WEBER, MERCHANT TAILOR,
If you want a suit to order here is the place to
go and save money. Why? Because we pay
norent. ot ‘ Come and sec us.
Style, Fit and Finish Up-to-Date.
2825 S. W. Bivd. Kansas City, Mo
NEGRO ENTERPRISE.
Smoke a
Paul Laurence Dunbar Cigar.
PRICE 8s CENTS,
‘This cigar is made exclusively of high grade imported Havana Fil-
ler Tobacco, with a Sumatra wrapper, and a better cigar cannot be
bought, even ata cost of twenty-five cents each,
COLORED-AMERICAN CIGAR CO.,
Main omce Chicagy, mm. AN Overton, Mapaker extern, Diviion,
Is This Really True?
S IS Keally 1rues
Yes! Some of the choicest qualities and
prettiest designs in Watches and Jewelry
are in the show window of : : : :
yey .
Kansas City's Pioneer Negro Jeweler,
J. A. WILSON,
le16 W. sth St., KANSAS City, MO.
Mr. Wilson in soliciting the patronage of his friends
and the public either in buying his goods or in repair-
ing of watches and jewelry (which is a specialty)
assures nothing less than complete satisfaction.
Bargains in diamond rings, engagement and wedding rings,
baby rings, Indies’ gold guards, etc., can always be obtained,
SAVED BY A SONG, Reason for Left-Handedness.
peal A scientist has recently published
Familiar Tune the Means of alk brochure on the subject of right
Veith: team Bincaea ‘and left handedness. ‘The explanarion
A remarkable incident is that of
a Scottish youth who had learned at
home to sing the old psalms that were
then as household wards to them in
the kirk and by the fireside, When
he grew up he wandered away from
his native country, was taken captive
by the Turks. and made a slave in one
of the Barbary states, But he never
forgot the songs of Zion, although he
sung them in a strange land and to
heathen ears One night he was
solacing himself in this manner, when
the attention of some sailors on board
of an English manofwar was direct
ed to the familiar tune, “Old Hun
dred,” as it came foating over the
Moonlit waves. At once they surmis
ed the trail that one of their country
Men was lanzuishing away his lite
as a captive. Quickly > arming them:
selves, they manned a boat, and lost
ho time in eveeting bly release, What
a joy to him, after eighteen long
years passed in slavery,
Benaar’e Succesful Plea.
The best known of the penny beg:
gars is loose in Hroadway again after
along absence, He is a gray-bearded
old man who glides up to you in the
street and sayx in x wheezy voice
“Hoss. will you give me a penny? {
want to set a cup of caffe, 1 have
four.” As an evidence of truthtul
nese he holds ont four pennies tn his
dirty palm. His modest request ts
usually complied with unlest he is
known. He hax been doing the pene
hy-beuing stint for several. years
now and seoms to be satisfied with
the results New York Sun,
Attend the poultry shows and study
the fowls. ‘This will take time, but
It ts worth time. ‘Talk with the ‘most
successful breeders and adopt. thelr
‘heat mathode
Reason for Left-Handedness.
A scientist has recently published
a Inochure on the subject of right
and lett handedness. ‘The explanation
for the puenomena in any person is
traced to the pressure of the blood
in the two halves of his brain, He
concludes that for right-handed sub-
Jects there Is ea excess of pressure
in the left half of the brain, accom:
panied by an excess of excitability
and of vitality in all those parts of
‘the beily dependent on the left brain,
For left-handed peuple the reverse Ip
‘true.
Old-Time Business Methods.
Church White, of Atchison, regrets
that the merchants of the present day
do not do business as they did at
Hainesvillo, Mo, where he was rear
ed. ‘The custom there was to settle
with the store once « year( on the
1st of January, Once White's father
went into MeCrary’s store to settle,
“What's my bill?" he asked of Me:
Crory. “Well, George,” said MeCro
ry, “pay what you think Is right; I
ain't kept_no account,”
bieaatoane doo Gil Shain
“Honey, when's you gwine ter git
mertied?” ‘The engagemert had not
been announced, so the young woman
replied: “Why, | don’t know, auntie:
Tam not even engaged. What do you
dhink of that?” ‘The old colored wom-
an raid; “Lawsadne! but that suttin:
ly am a pity, But, Miss Naney, they
do say Hal ole maids is tne happiest
orltels there ts, once they quits strug:
«lin’,-Harper’s Magazine,
ST" ram Engines
| The sixty-horse power traction en-
gines used on western ranches will
pull simultaneously seventeen plows,
plowing forty to sixty acres a day, or
will plow, drill and harrow, all at one
time, with properly arranged tools,
from thirty-five to fifty acres a day.
Ghe Stoeltzing Stowe and Hardware Co.
a
Hest Stoves Made.
a Largest Stock In City.
pioneer Prices the Lowest.
Sana ten Wholesele ond Retail Peninsular
ar cee eee eee
“E Fans Steel Ranges, Stee! Oven Cook Stoves, Base Bur
(es ee a | ners, Furnaces, and all goods made by the..
" Peninsular Stove Co.
ee Gorman Heater, Soft Coal Baseheater, Cole's Hot
a nae Blast, Alr Tight for Coal and Wood, Clermont
me ‘Onk Stoves, Schill tee! Ranges and’ Furnaces.
Th oaLts aes | TIN WORK @ Specialty.
aed Weaeeieaa Hl eit,
| f Hl | Window and Door Soreens and Refrigerators
eee ESS "Phone 1451.
ance 1329 Grand Ave.
= HE new, non-failing and infallible com-
3 bined éreatment for. ge buman Hatr,
OZONO and CEDROLINE, used con*
fointly. cannot tail to lend t¢ the Halr
loncthy utro. lite, and Denuty® One Year
ayo tue airectorsof che BOSTON CHEMICAL,
., with the sole purpose and intention to
RON produce an “absolutely perfect and reliable
a Hho Sumy ot ghiso for thie purpose
: C thls purpose
Blone, ‘Phe services of thres of the
eo World's most noted chomiste were so-
7) faveeturation and comtiy experiments,
AM have sucoeusfully formulated a treat,
Tent #0 potent and powerful, yet ao
harmless and funocont, that its immediate
eerie upon fhe Hair border upon the
fuiraculous,. This treatment can be used
En ail faith and confidence: as ft is certain
Produce results most gratitying, causiny
the Tair to. grow long and. fixuriant,
Straight, and of » most delicate and pliabie
feature. It provents the tendency of the
) Hair to arawup,contract.curl.and tangle,
thus making {¢ easy to dress the Hair in
Any style desired. It causes the Hair to
“BZ Brpr cuton alibald spots, scant parting,
§ orem pin places, and bare temples It is sure to
1 ‘wm provent the Hair from falling, breaking
are Bat and aplietig' af te ends nie erent
" SB combined treaimentis now the most wonderful remedy
WG) rescue forthe Hair in tho whole wide world, <
a ans ‘The most generous offer ever made by any Arm
f on earth. Cut out this advertisement, and bend to us,
CALS, with oniyeisbo, and. immediately upon receitt of same, wa
‘Ost Will send to you # full and complete treatment, consisting oF
0%” two extra larke boxes of OZ0NO. Ring ofall Hair'Fonies, worth:
® Yh $310; also two large vottien of CEDROLINE. the lightning
I Halr Grower, worth 2.007 also one large package of our latest dis
i covery, POWDERED EGU SHAMPOO, worth Se. ; also one bar of
‘ Sur colovented and renowned, PURITY SCALE ROAD, worth 25¢, am
She I bing package of ANTI-ODOR, the’ moxt wonderful. flict
‘ Spectaity of fie day, worth sc. ‘This grand collection, worth in all
$5.00, will be sent on receipt of @1.50 and your name and address, with full, plain.
and ‘complete directions, together with our beautiful Souvenir Catalogue, justly
Called tig toilet educator of the day.
+ NOTE,—To all who have ever bought OZONO we will send this great bargain
offer for Guy @4.00. our word wil be sumiclent, simplyell us whien and whiero
Zou bought Te.’‘this uberal omor ts made wieh ts object of wecturihi wood Avent,
who can'simriy coin money selling our preparations. ‘No mattgr wliere You ive, wo
can get our goods safely to you, Do wot delay; order to-day. Address <
BOSTON CHEMICAL CO., 310 E. Broad Street, Richmond, Va.
FAST MAIL SERVICE
| A GOOD THING
! 5 ,
iis
— a
rity
PUSH IT ALONG
™ a Paik to Missouri
|The’ four“flyers” that Teave Kansas
City Union depot daily for St. Louls
jand all points Hast—note the leeving
time: 9:50 a, m., 1:10 p, m, 9:15 p. m.
and 10:45 p.m, No other line from
Kansas City offers to the traveling
Puplic such train service via St. Louis.
Note the new departure of the fast
mail at 1:10 p. m, arives in St. Louls
at 10 p. m.; close coanections in St.
Louis with tho Grand Union stations
with Ecetern and — South-eastern
trains, ‘The only 1:- tenving Kansas
City after the Operas, . ~dge meetings
and Sunday night Chiirw ~arvice, at
10:45 p. m. and e-riving in wt. Louis
st 7:20 a. m., in ware for all Eastern
connections.
9:55 p. m.—10:60 a, m.: Omaha & St.
Pent Express.
Elegant equipment. Pullman Sleep-
ers and Compartment cars; Reclining
Cheir cars, (all seats free). For all
information and tickets call at
Union Depot and 901 Main St., City Offic.
E, 8. JEWETT, Pass. & Ticket Agent.
"784 _..0.... Telephone .... .. 4178
WALL’S
Laundry Co.,
First-Class Work & Prompt Deliyery.
708 E,12th 8t., Kansas City, Me
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AND SECRET LODGES.
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Cosmay «| tan Lodge No, #35. G.U.0.0f 0.8.
Tererrcinpein’ench month, mek clocks,
Bevieria, Nd": WOR. Pattstenn PS
BiHette, NG. WR, Patterson PB
wire Wridaye tp cnc woosth melon Grane
‘prenue, [ihurhier. Lulu Bowsley’ i. B.
atiehter Mary Finley, Sosothen:
&. Halyard Tabernacle No. 7 meeta firytand
TOM Tech aM Rte BCT NTeAp
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Sister ANMto: Pyles Bocotiewe, =“
fave No. .O.of O. F
Bey eee Bich piri every Stee and
veal OES. LRWIB, P. 8,
“St Jon's Chapel, on Beli St, Between
Sta and Be: Loute ave, Kev, N.C. Buren
Pastor. ‘Sunday services iam and
$3,b; m. Bunday wehogt at 30", m,
Prayer meeting Wednesday’ evening” ati
Teachers" meeting ‘Thursday’ eventha,
Vine Street Baptist church, T. H.
Bring: peter. ret services lla
m@. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday school, 2:30
Prayer meeting Friday evening.
Ebenezer A. M. E. Church, cor. 2a
and Holmes. Rev. A. A. ie 4
tor. Sunday services, 11 a. m. and 7:38
p.m. Sunday school, 3:30 p. m.
Pritchard Lodge No. 42, A. F. and
A. M,, meets second and fourth Mon-
day evenings in the month. J. W.
Crowe, W. at ._H. J. Spigener, Sec’y,
Allen Chapel, south-eastcorner 10th.
and Charlotte streets Rev. O. J. W.
Beott, pastor, Sunday services 11 am,
and 7:30 p.m. Sunday School, 2:30 p.m,
Clase Meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m. Praye.
Wednesday, 8 p.m. Choir practice
Monday eveniny.
~ Second Baptist. c.urch, corner Teato
Second Baptist c..urch. corner Teato
and Charlotte. S. W. Bacote, D. D.,
pastor. Sunday services: Preaching,
1a. in, and 7:15 p. m.; Sunday school,
2 p.m. Weekly meetings, Monday B.
Y. P, U. meeting, 8 p. m. Wedaesday
night, prayer meeting.
Highland Arenue Baptist church
Sunday services, 11 a, mand 8 p. m
Preaching, Wednesday evening, 8 p.m
Praise meetings Monday evening B. ¥
P.U. Sunday schoo! 2 p.m.
G. W. Boyp. Pastor.
Mrs. A. 8. Cummings, Clerk,
Pleasant Valley Baptist church,
Rosedale, Kansas, Surday services;
Prenching 11 a.m. and 8p. m.; Sunday
echool, 9:30 a. m.; B. Y. P.U.. 7 p. m.:
v7, HF. and M. Society, Thursday
evening praise meeting.
Rev. H. E. SrRiCKLAND, Pastor
Tocken, Clerk.
Pleasant Green Baptist church, In-
dependence and Tracy’ ave. Sunday
school, 9:30 a. m. Preaching, 11 a. m.
and 8 p.m. B. Y. P. U., 6:30 p. m.
Weekly services—Prayermeetings and
missionary, Wednesday evenings at $
o'clock p. m, Young People’s Literary
and Progressive Club, Thursday even-
ings. Church meeting, Friday before
the second Sunday in each month.
E. M. WILSON, Pastor.
Residence 1603 East 13th st.
Burns Chapel, M. E. Church.
Sunday School, 9:30 a, m.
Preaching, 11:00 a. m.
Cass Meeting, 2:30 p. m.
Epworth League, 7:00 p. m.
Preaching, 7:45 p. m.
Literary Tuesdays 8:00 p. m,
Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 8:00
» m
Class Meeting, Thursdays 8:00 p. m.
Corner 11th and Highland, J. M.
darris, Pastor.