The Rising Son
Friday, November 18, 1904
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
Rising Son
It Pays to Advertise in the Rising Son for it Reaches More Homes of Colored Peop.e than any other Paper in the State.
VOLUME IX.
ODD FELLOWS ENTERTAINMENT.
The affair given at he Convention hall last Friday by the Odd Fellows' fraternity was a grand success in every way. The idea was conceived by Mr. Ell Harris, who with the members of the various committees worked hard and accomplished the good. The committee on arrangements were as follows:
Edw, S. Lewis, chairman.
Eli Harris, vice chairman.
Jas. Lue treasurer.
W. E. Randolph, secretary.
Prominent on the committee were
H. R. Edwards.
Frank L. White.
Moses Ricketts.
B. T. Lewis.
Robt. Hill.
Jas. Hill.
D. M. Johnson
Thos. Harris.
A. E. Estes.
D. Griffin.
C. E. Dennis.
G. W. Gooch.
C. L. Wilson.
Manna Oden.
The Metropolitan band of 25 pieces furnished an excellent program previous to the beginning of the exercises. Arthur E. Estes, manager; D. E. Blackburn, director.
The Ladies of H. H. of Ruth, who furnished the refreshments, were managed by the following cocommittee:
Mrs. H. R. Edwards, chairman.
Mrs. Mattie Tolliver, vice chairman.
Mrs. C. W. Yoakum, secretary.
Mrs. H. Williams, treasurer.
WILLIAMS AND WALKER COM
PANY BANQUETED.
Kansas City's "400" were out in full dress Thursday evening to see the performance of Williams and Walker at the Grand, and after the show a banquet was tendered the members of the company at 915 Baltimore avenue. This is the fifth year that this company has ben banqueted in Kansas City, with Mr. Bennie McClure as manager and the banquet was unexcelled by any previous ones tendered.
Mr. Williams was attired in the new Haymarket cut and Mrs. Walker wore a white broad cloth with ecru and diamond buttons as trimmnigs. The other ladies wore elegant silk and lace costumes.
Dr. T. C. Unthank was toastmaster.
Mr. Lewis Woods gave a toast or address of welcome to the honored guests.
Addresses in response were also made by Messrs. Williams and Walker, Dr. Keys, R. C. Martin and Stage Manager Shipp.
The banquet table was beautifully decorated and supper served in couses. After the sumptuous feast and formal reception, tables were cleared and all who desired delighted themselves in the chase of the "light fantastic toe." Manager Judah and en Rosenthal of the Grand, dressed in their dress suits, were also guests at the banquet; also the manager of the Williams and Walker Company.
LEXINGTON NEWS
Quarterly meeting was held at Zion A. M. E. church Sunday, Presiding Elder Boxdale preached an excellent sacrament sermon at 3 o'clock. He left Monday morning for Kansas City. He held his quarterly conference Friday night. Rev. Mrs. Madison, of St. Louis, is here on business and will return in a few days. Mrs. Kate Colley of Independence was in the city Sunday. Prof. G. H. Green's mother died on the 12th and was taken to Macon City for burial Monday. She leaves two children and one sister. We exend
heartfelt sympathy to the family. She was about 84 years old. She died in the full triumph of faith, also a member of the A. M. E. church and had been for a number of years.
A gentleman from Versailles, Mo., is here visiting Rev. R. H. Young. We are unable to learn his name.
Born to the wife of Mr. Wm, Hayden, Nov. 10, a girl.
The election here passed off quietly. The colored people voted the straight Republican ticket with a few exceptions, and they scratched the ticket, which they ought not have done. This is our second freedom. If the Democrats had been elected the negroes would have been disfranchised. I think that President Roosevelt is one of the greatest men that lives, he is a young American, and he was just in time to help the negro and settles the labor question, which concerns the negro more than any other people. The reason is we are all laborers.
Miss Tildia Parker, who is teaching in Dover, was here Sunday.
Miss Daisy Goodwin of Lexington Junction was here Sunday.
Mr. George Parker subscribed for the Rising Son for six months. We hope to have others do likewise. You that owe for two years and a year and not so long, please pay up your subscription. You that have quit taking it and owed, why look for me, for I am coming to see you. Laughing in my face does not pay for papers, and neither does promises. It takes money to run a newspaper.
Miss Maude Harvey, who has been in Kansas City for a few weeks, returned home Sunday night.
Mr. Eugene Conway will spend several days in Kansas City this week.
Mr. Wm. Hunter is still in the restaurant and groceries business. Call and see him.
Mr. and Mrs. White has a restaurant and ice cream parlor. Call and see them, they will treat you right. There are some things going on in this city that are entirely wrong and injurious to the race, and if you don't want to be exposed, why you'd better quit. A hint to the wise is sufficient.
The bridge committee has very nearly enough money to build the bridge, and as soon as they get it, Mr. Hearle will commence business. He generally does what he says. It will be a big thing for Lexington. You that haven't subscribed, do so, and you that have, double your subscription. Colored people must take a part in every enterprise of this kind. Try to have something like other races, because we are American citizens one more time, Thank God.
WEDDING ANNIVERSARY.
Mr. and Mrs. John Barnes Davis of 1609 Lydia avenue celebrated their twentieth wedding anniversary Saturday afternoon and evening. November 12. The host and hostess were the recipients of many handsome presents from in and out of town. Their residence was superbly decorated. Ferns and Southern smilax adorned the parlor in which Mr. and Mrs. Davis received their friends and the mantle was covered with ferns and yellow chrysanthemums. A large yellow pumpkin filled with fruit and yellow chrysanthemums stood in the center of a round oak table with candles shaded with green. This combination produced a lovely effect. The house was decorated throughout with Southern smilax, yellow and white chrysanthemums. Punch was served by Misses Luda Bruce and Stella Cole on the front porch, which was enclosed with canvas and heated with oil stoves. An elaborate menu was served. The following ladies assisted
Of the Fifth Episcopal Diocese. Bishop Grant is one of the most noted divines in the A. M. E. connection. On last Sunday he preached a very wholesome and eloquent sermon at the Ebenezer chapel. His text was taken, from the 14th chapter, 21st verse, of John: "If you love me you will serve me and keep my commandments." The Bishop appealed to the moral persuasion of the Negro race. Upon hearing a complaint made of the place of worship, the Bishop re-
in receiving: Mrs. Laws, grandmother of Mrs. Davis, Mr. and Mrs S. H. Burnett, Mr. and Mrs J. W. Baldwin, Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Phenix of Independence, Mo., Mrs W. F. Fairfax, Ms'N John Rone, Mrs. Theo. Clay, Mrs. Wm. Bell, Mrs. Wm. Garrett, Mrs. Jas. Brice, Mrs. Jno. Wheeler, Mrs. Geo. Purnell, Mrs. Jos. Knox, Mrs L. Mc Kinsey, Mrs. Dan Willis, Mrs. Wm. Blunk, Mrs. Minnie Brown, Mrs. Wm. Jones, Mrs. A. V. Mulholland, Miss Troutman, of Denver, Colo., and Miss Towers of Brookfield, Mo. Everybody had a'delightful time.
LINCOLN INSTITUTE NOTES
Among recent visitors who have received a hearty welcome, and who have expressed themselves as very much pleased with what they have witnessed, we note Professor C. G. Williams and wife, of Boonville. Miss Estelle Williams, their daughter, is a member of the sub-normal department, and a valuable addition to the Sunshine Circle.
Echoes of the Farmers' Convention are still in the air. In the valuable paper prepared by Professor Damel of the Department of Agriculture and Biology, he emphasized the necessity of combining the scientific and the practical phases of agriculture, if one would become a successful farmer; the importance of the ownership of land by the men who till the soil; and become the great, central, rallying point for educational work along agricultural lines, as well as in other branches, or departments, already established here. November 10, in Kansas City, Kan., the Western University eleven was defeated by the Lincoln Institute
marked that out of a large number of church buildings in the A. M. E. organization, fifteen hundred of them were in a worse condition than the Ebenezer church. He gave his audience to understand that the churches must remain where they can do the most good. The Bishop also signified the fact that he stood opposed to people building so many great church edifices, which results in such large debts. "When you are in doubt and trouble," said the Bishop, "you must refer to Paul." His discourse awakened his audience to great enthusiasm.
"Tigers." The game was Missouri against Kansas, and ended with the score. Lincoln, 11, Western 0.
November 11, the Tigers with little difficulty defeated the St. Joseph High school team on their own field, by a score of 23 to 0; and now the Lincoln boys bid fair to become the champions of the West. "Rah for Lincoln Institute!"
"The Record," the institution school paper, is out. Send for several copies, five cents each.
TO OUR READERS:
Beginning November 1st, the several collectors for The Son will make their rounds. We respectfully request all our readers whose subscriptions are due, to be prepared to meet our collector in a way that will bring a smile on his face. Please do not treat this notice with unconcern, because we must meet our obligations and in order to do so must urge our readers to be prompt in paying our collectors.
THE NEW WAY.
No more pulling, laboring, worrying and sweating out your clothing, but in a mechanical way I will teach you the waltz, two-step and schottische in one fourth the usual time, complete, for $3.
Private lessons 50 cents.
Regular class every Wednesday evening. Lessons 25 cents.
At the Vendome, 1734 Grand avenue.
D. A. WILLIS, Mgr.
The annex to the John Taylor Dry Goods Co. supplies a long felt want in the big retail district. This makes the John Taylor Dry Goods Co. one of the largest and best concerns in the west.
When Bettors Should Quit.
When Bettors Should Quit.
The London Sketch says a professional betting man should go out of business when 50 years old. After that age a man makes mistakes. Between 50 and 65 he stands to lose 75 per cent of what he accumulated before 50.
Many Buried in One Grave
many Buried in one Grave.
While making excavations for the enlargement of a church at Roggett, Monmouthshire, Eng., the other day, about a hundred skeletons were also covered. The bodies had apparently been buried in one grave. They are supposed to be the remains of victims of the plague, or of men who fell in a border raid. The skeletons have been reinterred.
Kiss Once a Religious Observance.
The kiss has been common among English speaking people for uncounted centuries. It was known even to those mystical, half-forgotten persons, the Druids, who appear to have made it in some way a very important part of their religious observances. The Christian kiss under the mistletoe comes down from them, and is thought to have had in years long past a sacred significance.
The Devil Grows Clumsy.
A Malden woman whose sprained knee was made well by faith alone, two days after she fell from her bicycle, explains the accident "Satan had a special spite against my bicycle, because it was dedicated to God before I ever mounted it." Yet the bicycle did not suffer. The devil is growing clumsy—Boston Advertiser.
Sage Fixes Wedding Date.
No Korean couple would think of marrying without consulting the sage, who fixes the happy day for them. This he does simply by adding the bride's age to the bridegroom's and after determining which star rules the destiny of their united ages, he decrees that the wedding shall take place upon the day sacred to that star.
Origin of Phrases:
The London Daily News has discovered what a good many Americans may have forgotten—that the popular phrase "the man in the street" comes from Emerson. It occurs in "The Conduct of Life," in the section on "Worship." Speaking of the movement to repeal the corn laws in England, Emerson goes on: "Well,' says the man in the street, 'Cobden got a stipend out of it.'"
Savages First to Use Mortar.
Mortar was made by the people of Tahiti when our ancestors were shivering in holes in the rocks. They dived into the sea, brought up great bumps of coral, burned them in pits, using wood as fuel, and mixed the lime they got in this fashion with sharp sand and water. With this mixture the ingenious savage plastered the walls and floor of Lis house, and a better mortar could not be obtained.
Discomfited Lawyer.
During the last session of the Clip court in a small town in southern Wisconsin a well-known Badger lawyer came to grief by being just a little too sharp. According to his habit, he was browbeating one of the witnesses, "Now, Mr. Jones," said he, "you can answer that question a little more clearly. You are not as green as you look." "Yes," drawled the witness, in reply, "I am a butcher by profession and not a lawyer."
Invention of Panama Indians:
We should never have had the Panama hat but for the quick-fingered Indians of the Isthmus of Panama. Even to day their secret process for seasoning the grass blades used in weaving these hats remains unrivaled. Basketmakers of the same region make baskets which will hold water without leaking—another invention which is quite beyond us.
Lanland's Chief Crime
In Lapland, the crime which is punished most severely, next to murder, is the marrying of a girl against the express wish of her parents.
NUMBER 33.
The annual meeting of the patrons of Douglas school, corner of Twenty-seventh and West. Prospect streets, was held at the school building Friday. October 4. The meeting was large and enthusiastic. Prof. R. W. Foster, the principal, presided and in a few well chosen words stated the object of the meeting was to secure the co-operation of home in the development of the child along the lines that will enable him to successfully meet the demands of his environment. Rev. Scott of the Christian church delivered an address emphasizing the vital principles of education on broad and liberal lines. Short talks by parents attested the sincerity of their interest, after which refreshments were served by the teachers.
A Contented Husband
No, my wife's not educated, and when she tries to talk upon the topics of the day, you're apt to get a shock. She isn't up in music, and she never went to dances, yet when old enough to marry, she had a dozen chancs. No, she isn't very handsome, but then she takes the cake when it comes to making biscuit like mother used to make — Cincinnati! Enquirer.
Product of the American Cow
Product of the American Cow:
The American cow is an institution of huge dimensions. She produces annually 8,000,000,000 gallons of milk, 1,500,000,000 pounds of butter, and 300,000,000 pounds of cheese, not to mention hides, leather, glue, hair, horns, and other by-products. Her total dairy crop is worth over $500,000,000 a year.
Turkeys Destroy Caterpillars
Dr. G. W. Field, of the biological farm in Sharon, Mass., instructs his young turkeys to find and eat caterpillars and in this way gets rid of the pests. He takes a turkey chick under his arm and, passing along the young cabbage plants, shows the caterpillar to the bird, and the former sees his finish. The young chicks are apt pupils and soon can go it alone.
"Linen" Garden Party.
A "linen" garden party was recently given by the lord mayor of Belfast. The most attractive costumes worm by the ladies were entirely of linen, and the men wore linen waistcoats. The idea originated in the very successful "all linen" ball at Belfast last year, which was given to aid the staple industry of Ulster.
Disinfect Railway Carriages
On the Bavarian state railways the passenger carriages are regularly disinfected with formaldehyde. The method adopted is to close the windows and doors tightly, and on the floor of the car is placed a pan which contains metal weights heated to a dull red color. A 20 per cent solution of formaldehyde is then poured into the pan. After having been left for about seven hours the carriage is then thoroughly ventilated.
Two Ways of Competing
There are two ways by which the man that is entering butter in a contest can make his butter. One way is to select the cream and make sure that all conditions are perfect. This way of making his butter is not the ordinary one and the only good that can come from the competition is that he may make a few dollars or get a medal. The real object of butter contests is to improve the conditions under which butter is made. To get any real good the butternaker must make his butter as he makes it every day and out of the cream that is an average of that he every day handles. Then he will find out what the butter judges think of his work. In this way he can make real progress and bring up his business. The information he gets from the butter judges is of far more consequence to him than would be any amount of prize money and medals.
Religious Thought
Prayer and Faith.
Prayer wings its way beyond the skies,
And reaches the eternal throne;
On faith's strong pinions swift it tides,
And as sweet incense there is known.
Each supplant cry and forwent plea.
Each inward groan and strong desire,
And tear and wrestling agony,
Rise as the sacrificial fire.
And God is moved. He loves to grant
What we request, things great or
small;
He satisfies our real want.
Our real needs. He meets them all.
We ask for bread—He feedeth us;
For strength—we through Him mighty
are;
For courage life's rough sea to cross—
He gives us grace all tils to bear.
Each pure desire to heaven's high court,
Whatever concern us, we may bring;
For bath not Christ so plainly taught
We may in prayer bring everything?
If this be so, then let us cease
Life's burdens previously to bear.
For supplant faith will bring release
From every sorrow, every Comes Page.
The Possible Place.
"An example that ye should follow his steps." — Peter, cf. 21.
"Strike a gait that will not kill your horses and will bring your men in at the week's end in good fighting trim," was the parting order of the commanding coloned to an expedition starting out in hot pursuit of the maudling Indians.
So when entering upon the campaign of life it is of first importance to take a stride you can maintain; the pursuit is long and the way often rough and weary. When choosing a calling, venturing into place in the social and domestic world, setting up moral ideals and planning the religious belief, character and work, beware of the false gait; it may be the lagging shamble of failure or the impossible dash that must end in disappointment and defeat.
Every man has his own gait, his own peculiarities, that we call individualisms. For this very reason the athlete goes into training that he may standardize himself physically, and most men, by observing the laws of the state and of good society, standardize themselves civically and morally, yet without destroying their individuality.
It is the high office of the "Captain of our salvation" both to direct us to the discovery of ourselves and our individual gifts and to set the marching steps for us. His steps mark the course to be followed, measure the rate of progress, standardize character and shape ideals for all noble ambitions. He would stir, stimulate, help and train our feet to follow in His own blood stained tracks. First, His is the pace possible. He has adapted it to all the race; it is neither too high nor too low, too hard nor too easy. It is spoken of as "the upward way of God" or the "high calling"—the lofty walk. Strenuous, yes! But the native nobility in us delights in such a chalenge as this. Difficulty, burden and glorious struggle make life worth living and men worth saving. The pity and grief come only with failure, and failure comes too often from the false pace.
The wise and loving apostle calls us to submit to the divine example and to establish our steps by His, and to follow on the golden mean that is made surely possible to all the serious and noble.
Again, His is a pace progressive, He ever leads—even along the higher levels of thought, development and endeavor. He is ever calling us on and on and upward.
And His is a pace that arrives. One who follows in His steps meets duty with preparedness and halls opportunity with readiness, fights his last battle with increasing strength and strides along the last march with hope and joy unabated and a faith triumphant.
In all the maze of systems and creeds Christianity is the only practical religion. It is workable in every human situation. It gets there in every dark problem and splendid enterprise if properly employed. When fine schemes have failed, and devoted, weary feet halt by the way or go far afield, this golden course offers a way out and on to success.
Taking leave of his sons, an old Virginian said: "I have no estate to leave you, my dear boys, but a good name. Remember that behind you stand seven generations of honest men and as many generations of good women. Be worthy of them, and go out in the world and do something worth while."
Behind us are fifty generations of the faithful who, by following His steps, "have fought a good fight, finished their course and kept the faith." Let us try to be worthy of them and of the Master whose disciples they were, and let us go out into life and do the things we can best do. These are things worth while.
when walking with Jesus you've nothing to fear. — C.O. Wright.
The Battles in Life
Dean Stanley said, "There is always the wine-press to be trodden before we drink the juice of the grapes—there is always the battle to be fought before the victory is ours." And after all our rebellion we know that it is better so. Would you wipe from your memory the victories you have gained over self, over the world, ever temptations that tried you to the limit of endurance? Do you remember the feeling of strength that succeeded the time of doubt and uncertainty while the question, "What shall I do?" bung in the balance? You
were not left alone to settle it. The Father kept before you the right solution, but your human nature cried out for a different one, and so the warfare went on until the divinity within you overcame and the victory was yours. The next battle was not so hard because you had won the conqueror's wreath at the close of the greater struggle. Would you be as strong today if you had never met a foe worthy your greatest efforts to overcome? The best things in character are not the accidents of birth—the things that are born with us and are a part of our nature, no matter how noble they may be. They are only the helps that will be needed to brace up the structure when the earthquakes come that will shake it to its foundation. We can thank God for them and take courage in our equipment, but the best things are those, that, not having naturally, we labor for until they are ours by conquest. Our very struggle to obtain them makes them priceless, and, knowing so well what life was before they were a part of it, we wonder how another can abuse what has cost us so much to acquire.
Every victory is a beacon light that shines forward on the way we must go and lights up the battlefields of the future so that we can go forward in the confidence of a strength that has overcome even greater foes than those awaiting us.
Grace Sufficient.
It can never be preached too often nor be too much magnified—the grace of God—but we need to emphasize much more than we do the all-sufficiency of that grace. There are many—not too many—gracious people in the world, but the trouble is they lack power to make their graciousness effective. Now, it is not so with the Lord. He is merciful and loving, but he is also able to do exceeding abundantly above all we can think or ask. He can do all that he wants to do. It is the conviction of this truth that gives moral fiber, and courage to stand in the hour of trial, and faith to endure when all things seems to be passing away. It was this which made Spurgeon great, not his ability as an orator. He tells us of one of his experiences: "I was riding home, very weary with a long week's work, when there came to my mind this text: 'My grace is sufficient for thee,' but it came with the emphasis 'laid upon two words: 'My grace is sufficient for thee.' My soul said: 'Doubtless it is.' Surely the grace of the infinite God is more than sufficient for such a mere insect as I am; and I laughed and laughed again, to think how far the supply exceeded all my needs. It seemed to me as though I were a little fish in the sea, and in my thirst I said: 'Alas! I shall drink up the ocean.' Then the fathers of the waters lifted up his head sublime and, smiling, replied: 'Little fish, the boundless main is sufficient for thee.'"
Unanswered Prayers.
It would be a calamity to have all prayers answered; and if God did not love you He could, no doubt, always send to you that for which you pray. But, while He hears all your prayers, as a loving Father He answers only those that will be best for you. Would you take the matter out of His hands? You do not know what is best for your life; you cannot see a step beyond the present, so thick are your tears and so little do you know of what lies beyond. But God is infinite in knowledge and infinite in His love. Therefore, while you pray for that which you most desire, fail not to add, "If it by Thy will." God loves you. Whatever else you forget, still remember this. You are precious in His sight. You are His child, and that which is best for you He will do, and here you may rest your soul. We read in the Apocalypse of golden vases "full of odors which are the prayers of the saints," and perhaps all our prayers in some way are kept in heaven until we shall arrive there; and it may be that God will permit us to review them in the light of the better land, in order that we might see why some were answered and others were not; and then no doubt we shall be satisfied that all was done just as we should have wanted could we have seen the end from the beginning.
For Every Separate Need.
As there comes a warm sunbeam into every cottage window, so comes a lovebeam of God's care and pity for every separate need.
The power which moves the world is hope. An anxious, doubtful, timid man can accomplish little. Fear nereus us. Hope inspires us. To cultivate and strengthen our hope we must increase our faith in goodness and in a God of love.—Hawthorne.
The Diving Carpenter.
We are all placed in this world to do a work very like that which the Lord did. If we would live a religious life, we are to follow the Lord in the regeneration. Thus we are to be spiritual carpenters as he was the Divine Carpenter. We are, with the Lord's help—help that He will so gladly give us—to rear up a life, to form a character, in which He can dwell with us. And in the building of this life, this truly religious life, we must always carry with us the Divine Carpenter's rule, the rule that is brought down to our hands in the two great commands and to our very finger ends in the ten commandments.—Rev. William H. Mayhew.
GERMAN COURTHOUSE BUILT ALONG AMERICAN LINES
[Illustration of a large, multi-story building with a tower and a clock tower, surrounded by trees and a river. The building has a large entrance and several windows. The sky is dark, suggesting it might be evening or night.]
The new courthouse (rathaus) at Leipzig, Germany, is among the first buildings in Europe to be constructed according to modern American methods—that is, its component parts are principally of steel, or, as one German magazine calls it, "Chicago construction." The plans were furnished by the noted architect, Hugo Licht, who
Famous Kansas Editor the Victim of Heart Disease.
Col. D. R. Anthony, the noted editor of the Leavenworth Times and brother of Miss Susan B. Anthony, the woman suffragist, died at his home at Leavenworth, Kan., Nov. 12, of heart disease. He was 80 years old. He had served both as mayor and postmaster of Leavenworth, as a member of the Kansas, legislature, and in 1886 was made a government director of the Union Pacific railroad.
Col. Anthony had a noteworthy career filled with stirring incident. His body was covered with scars, traces of wounds received in combat with his enemies, for Col. Anthony was as much at home with the revolver as with the pen. He was the hero of a hundred battles during the early days of the state, when Kansas was on the frontier and men held life at little value. Col. Anthony went to Leavenworth in 1853. Almost on the day of his arrival he attended a "Free Soil" meeting, and made an address that astounded the followers of John Brown and the men engaged in fighting the border ruffians. An attempt was made to kill him that night, but the young easterner returned the fire with such interest that one of his assailants nearly lost his life.
On May 10, 1875, a rival editor, angered at Col. Anthony's merger schemas, confronted him as he was entering the opera house and fired on him at close range. One of the bullets entered Col. Anthony's body near the heart, and his recovery was considered marvelous. In the civil war Col. Anthony helped to raise and was made a lieutenant in the First Kansas Cavalry. He was promoted by degrees to colonel, and distinguished himself in the
S.
Colonel D. R. Anthony.
battle of the Little Blue. When he was mayor of Leavenworth during the stirring days of the border wars his life was sought several times by irate Missourians, but his quickness with the pistol saved him. He was married Jan. 21, 1864, to Miss Annie E. Osborn of Edgartown, Mass. They had several children.
Artificial Butterflies.
The preparation of artificial butterflies mainly consists in spreading with a camel's hair brush very thin mucilage or paste over the wings of ordinary butterflies and then sprinkling over this certain delicate metallic powders of various colors. By this process a very common butterfly can be transformed into one that is extremely rare. The fraud came to light, says the Liverpool Post, through an alleged specimen of a red admiral, the fly so widely noted for its brilliant red and white hues.
has produced what is called a fine example of the German and English renaissance, combined with modern treatment. The building, which cost $2,500,000, contains a number of spacious halls, notably the "ratsplenarsaal," and a festival hall. Leipzig which is the center of the German book trade, has a population of 500,000.
WOMAN ACTIVE IN POLITICS.
Mrs. Sarah Foster Stumped Entire State of Idaho.
No campaigning done by women anywhere this fall—and mighty little done by men—compares with the record made in Idaho by Mrs. Sarah Foster, president of the Woman's National Republican association. In a canvas-covered prairie wagon she plunged across the country by day or night—it mattered not to her—stumping the state for Roosevelt. From one mining town to another she went, speaking fifteen minutes here or twenty minutes there, as the case might me. Then she was on the road again. Sometimes Mrs. Foster enjoyed the luxury of a real bed in a real house, but more often it was a pine board in a miner's shack, where a curtain was strung up to divide the men's and woman's uarters. One morning she held a bit of mirror for the party candidate for assembly to shave by, after which he in turn held it for her to do up her hair.
The Sport of Killing.
The present revulsion from the killing of animals for sport is an indication of the increasing delicacy of the sensibility of the time. The thought of inflicting needless pain on any living creature as a means of obtaining pleasurable excitement has become horrible. The animal has risen to a new place of dignity. It has become a creature to which more consideration is given. Besides, the whole tone of modern society is of a keener sensibility. Pain in itself shocks the nerves of the observer of it. A little bird struggling in the agony caused by a sportsman's bullet is likely to stir in him a feeling of pity which turns pleasure-seeking into mournful self-accusation.
Prince Captured by Cupid.
The prince of Annam, Ham N'gi, formerly emperor and king of Annam, who was captured by the French sixteen years ago and detained a captive in Algiers, has fallen in love with a French girl, Mlle. Laloe, daughter of Judge Laloe of Algiers, whom he met frequently at dinner at her father's. He arrived in Paris some time ago for permission of the French government, when consent of the minister was obtained. He will become a Frenchman and give up all his pretensions to the throne of Annam. He is quite an artist and devotes much time to painting. He has an interesting studio in hisilla.
Electricity in Agriculture.
The application of electricity to general agriculture has been successfully made in southern France and has been followed in Germany on an even greater scale. Power is provided from a central plant, and motors for thrashing grain, grinding of flour, pumping of water, etc., are rented to proprietors, who find that the work can be more quickly and cheaply done than by the use of horses. The application of electricity to growing seeds has been found exceedingly advantageous, such use of the subtle agent having been first made by the experiment station at Amherst, Mass.—Cleveland Leader.
Famous Educator to Retire.
Rev. Dr. Edmond Ware, D. D., who has just announced his intention of retiring next summer from the post of head master of Eton, is one of the most famous and popular pedagogues in Great Britain, and is regarded with reverence by pupils who have distinguished themselves all over the world. For more than forty years he has played a prominent part among the educational forces of Eton, having been one of the most successful assistant masters long before he was selected to be head.
Volcano's Crater to be a Public Park.
A most original thing is to be done to the famous Diamond Head crater by the local government. The park commission desires the place for use as a public park. To convert the crater of a volcano into a public park is highly original, but old Diamond Head possesses such peculiar and unusual features that a beautiful park could be made out of it.
Diamond Head is one of the most picturesque sights in this island. It stands about 1,000 feet in height at the highest point, but consists only of an outside rim, for inside is the crater about a mile and a half in circumference. If the place is turned over to a park commission a road will probably be built around the crater, running on the crest. Inside the place could be made into a park. High on the cliffs are some ancient burial caves of the Hawaiian chiefs and these places would add interest to Diamond Head as a park.
The selection of Diamond Head for a park possesses for the Honolulu resident nothing of the uncanniness that such a place might inspire in the minds of others less familiar with the crater. The volcano has been extinct for hundreds of years. It was one of the earlier of the Hawaiian volcanoes to become extinct, and only in a dim tradition among the ancient lore of the Hawaiians is there any reference to the time that Diamond Head hurled forth fire and lava.
Fertile Cuba.
The soil of Cuba is extremely fruitful. Cabbages there are so large that heads weighing twenty pounds each are common. All vegetables do well. Radishes may be eaten from fourteen to eighteen days after sowing, lettuce in five weeks after sowing, while corn produces three crops per year. Sweet potatoes grow all the year.
Quick is the succession of human events. The cares of to-day are seldom the cares of to-morrow, and when we le down at night we may safely say to most of our troubles: "We have done your worst, and we shall meet no more."—Cowper.
An Honest Opinion:
Mineral, Idaho, Nov. 14th.—(Special.)—That a sure cure has been discovered for those scilatic pains that make so many lives miserable, is the firm opinion of Mr. D. S. Colson, a well known resident of this place, and he does not hesitate to say that cure is Dodd's Kidney Pills. The reason Mr. Colson is so firm in his opinion is that he had those terrible pains and is cured. Speaking of the matter he says:
"I am only too happy to say Dodd's Kidney Pills have done me lots of good. I had awful pains in my hip so I could hardly walk. Dodd's Kidney Pills stopped it entirely. I think they are a grand medicine."
All sciatic and Rheumatism pains are caused by Uric Acid in the blood. Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy Kidneys, and healthy Kidneys strain all the Uric Acid out of the blood. With the cause removed there can be no Rheumatism or Sciatica.
Black Fridays.
The American Black Friday was September 24, 1869, when Jay Gould and James Fiske, Jr., attempted to create a corner in the gold market. The whole country was in a ferment for several days, but the day was saved b y the report that Secretary Boutwell had thrown $4,000,000 on the market. The English Black Fridays are two-one the Friday on which the news reached London that the young pretender, Charles Edward, had arrived at Derby; the second, May 11, 1866, when the failure of Overend, Gurney & Co., London, the day before was followed by widespread financial ruin.
Mrs. Roosevelt's Secretary.
Miss Isabel Hagner, private secretary of Mrs. Roosevelt, has a fortune ample for all the frivolities of Newport and Tuxedo or fo辽颁 of her life between Fifth Avenue and Belgrave square, but she prefers to follow the useful career she mapped out for herself when, with a thinner purse, she entered public life. When Miss Hagner came into ahandsome inheritance recently she gave no sign of intention to leave her present post.
FOR SALE.
Horses, Mules, Harness; One and Two-Horse Baggage Wagons; Landaus, Berlins, Hansom and Four-Wheel Cabs, Victorias, Ten-Seated Passenger Coaches, at reasonable prices for cash. This is surplus equipment purchased on account of the World's Fair. Address D. Jamison, Superintendent Passenger and Baggage Department, St. Louis Transfer Company, Broadway and Spruce street, St. Louis, Mo.
Quick Lunch Unhealthful.
Sir William McEwen, a professor of Glasgow university, is a late authority for the view that "the quick lunch" is a health destroyer. In an address to the Charing Cross Medical school of London, he said that people seemed to act as though "food should be thrown into the stomach as a sandwich into the pocket." He complains that "mastication is not taught in schools," and says it is time that "certificates should be given in schools for sound digestion. Instead of doing that, we appoint royal commissions to inquire into the causes of physical deterioration of the race."
A soft berth is always hard to find. The pawnbroker leads a lonely existence.
Mayor J. H. Powell of Henderson, Ky., in issuing his characteristic annual Thanksgiving proclamation, among other things, says: "Let us be thankful that our colonels are not so full of corn as our corn is full of kernels. Though the surrounding soil, tickled with a hoe, is laughing with a harvest, poor folks are still with us. From thin soup and cold potatoes, good Lord, deliver them. Oh, Christian men and women, astonish the stomach of the starving sufferer with oysters, turkey and mince pie. Adorn the ragged pauper with comfortable clothing. An ounce of practice is worth a pound of preaching.
"Dearly beloved, let us play upon a harp of a thousand strings a new song of praise, give thanks unto the Lord for the most charming crop of beautiful babes ever born in the old town since creation dawned and the morning stars sang together. Sweet, dainty, darling ones, like sunbeams in shady places, kick up your little heels and make of earth a heaven.
"With charity unto all and malice toward none, I do hereunto subscribe my official signature to the words that have been written this fourth day of November."
A Little Free With the Judge.
Congressman Bankhead, of Alabama, has a weakness for gambling stories. One that he tells is of a time when a spasmodic attempt was being made to drive gamesters out of Mobile. A witness was on the stand testifying for the defense, it being well known that the judge was a skillful poker player. The witness talked of "going blind," "raising," "passing" and so on, and finally his honor said, gravely: "Mr. Jackson, you are using a good many of what I presume are technical terms. Will you be good enough to explain some of them?" The witness, with equal gravity, replied: "I shall be pleased to do so, your honor, if you will kindly let me have your poker deck for a few moments."
Mme. Bernhardt's Recreation.
Here is a sample of Mme. Bernhardt's breezy, easy style of writing, from a letter written to a friend from her fort on Belle isle, in Brittany: "You want to know what I do at Belle isle. I rest. I rest by fatiguing myself. I lead a paradoxical life at Paris, as you know. One must breathe, nevertheless. The same destiny which has made me the servant of an art in which the brain, heart, sensibility, intelligence alone work has given me a taste, a need, a mania for physical movement. How do I reconcile these two? I do not, but I go to Belle isle. I see you laugh: 'What! Belle isle for nature so insatiable? It is so little—Belle isle.'"
Marries a iTger.
A curious custom obtains among the Coorgs. When one of them kills a tiger or a panther, he is married to the dead animal. Propped upon a framework on wood or bamboo the animal is carried in procession and the marriage ritual is strictly observed, while lavish hospitality is dispensed.
Many People But Few Houses.
Italy and Spain have fewer houses in proportion to their population than any other country in the world. The Argentine Republic and Uruguay have the most.
TILL NOON.
The Simple Dish That Keepa Cne Vigorous and Well Fed.
When the doctor takes his own medicine and the grocer eats the food he recommends some confidence comes to the observer.
A Grocer of Ossian, Ind., had a practical experience with food worth anyone's attention.
He says: "Six years ago I became so weak from stomach and bowel trouble that I was finally compelled to give up all work in my store, and in fact all sorts of work, for about four years. The last year I was confined to the bed nearly all of the time, and much of the time unable to retain food of any sort on my stomach. My bowels were badly constipated continually and I lost in weight from 160 pounds down to 88 pounds.
"When at the bottom of the ladder I changed treatment entirely and started in on Grape-Nuts and cream for nourishment. I used absolutely nothing but this for about three months. I slowly improved until I got out of bed and began to move about.
"I have been improving regularly and now in the past two years have been working about fifteen hours a day in the store and never felt better in my life.
"During these two years . have never missed a breakfast of Grape-Nuts and cream, and often have it two meals a day, but the entire breakfast is always made of Grape-Nuts and cream alone.
"Since commencing the use of Grape-Nuts I have never used anything to stimulate the action of the bowels, a thing I had to do for years, but this food keeps me regular and is fine shape, and I am growing stronger and heavier every day.
"My customers, naturally, have been interested and I am compelled to answer a great many questions about Grape-Nuts.
"Some people would think that a simple dish of Grape-Nuts and cream would not carry one through to the noonday meal, but it will and in the most vigorous fashion."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Look in each pkg. for the famous little book. "The Road to Wallville."
Show us the way to see the good
That comes into our lives each day.
The blessings dimly understood
That gives us clarity the way.
Give us content with gold and gear—
Though much or little we possess—
Let us be glad for what is here
On this, our day of thankfulness.
But broaden, too, the soul and mind
So that our thanks will not be found
By custom's rule and rate confined
Winter the one day's narrow bound.
Let us be glad for this end.
Give us the heart to understand
The graciousness of spreading trees;
The charm of some wisely chanted.
The storm and sunshine—all of these
For all the brightness of the dawn.
And cheerfulness of noon and night;
And that joy shines brightly.
Give us the grace to see aright.
Let us remember each kind word
By weight of goodly feeling blest—
Each gentle thing we've said or heard—
And blot from memory the rest.
Give us the grace to see and know
The benefit along the way—
The many things that help us so
Let us be thankful every day.
WHY
THE CLOSEL
WAS
THANKFUL
It was short-waisted and voluminous of skirt. When Miss Mary lifted it from the old nail-studded hair trunk a faint perfume of lavender filled the garret room. The silk was still as fresh and bright as when she had last worn it, and yet how many years had passed since then.
She had liked the gown. Now she passed her delicate hand over the soft surface, as if it was some old and treasured memory she was caressing.
She heard a rustle from between the folds as her fingers passed across the silk, and she looked to see its cause. A yellowed card, a dance program it was.
"R. B."—That stood for Ransom Beasant—killed at Getsburg in Pickett's charge.
"Morgan"—She could not remember him—a visitor to the county probably.
"C. C."—How many "C. C.'s" were scattered down that card! Curtis Chamberlain had had almost every other dance that night. He had taken her to that dance, she remembered now, and he had told her that she never looked so pretty. What had they quarreled about—she and Curtis Chamberlain? She could hardly remember now—a word misunderstood, a look misinterpreted. She had been unforgiving and he proud, and the little rift had widened to a chasm.
Now he was "old Col. Chamberlain," and she Miss Mary Tullock, with rather a queer sense of loneliness at her heart.
Wizard
"I was to meet my youth."
To-morrow would be Thanksgiving—and what had she to be thankful for? To-morrow there would be family gatherings at all the old homesteads—and she would sit alone at her dinner table, waited on by old Aunt Sally as she did every day in the year.
If she and Curtis Chamberlain had married perhaps—she blushed softly at the thought—perhaps the old house might have rung with happy laughter on these holidays. She, too, might have been looking eagerly for the returning faces of those she loved—if she and Curtis had not quarreled.
She looked across at the Chamberlain house. How cheerless it was—how homeless. And there was the colonel coming out now, gray-haired, white-mustached, but erect and soldierly as ever and with the courtly grace of a by-gone generation.
She watched the colonel down the street and then a little smile came into her face. She ran down the stairs almost like a girl to the little spindle-legged secretary, where she wrote a hurried note. Then she summoned Sally from the back kitchen. "I want you to carry this note over to Col. Chamberlain's right away, Sally," she said. It was a pretty figure which the colonel saw entering the drawing room Thanksgiving night. Some dainty miniature had stepped delicately forth from its frame. Miss Mary had kept a certain youthfulness in age of which this old gown, with its reminder of her girlhood, seemed but the perfect expres-
slon. It had grown old with her, or she stayed young with it.
She gave him both hands in welcome, and the colonel bowed and raised them to his lips in courtly fashion.
"You did not tell me I was to meet my youth," he said, looking down at her.
"Do you recognize it after so many years?" she answered.
"I have never forgotten it, and you—your youth has never left you. I lost the best of my life back yonder where we took divided paths. Tonight I find it again—find that you hold it in your hands. Won't you give it back to me again, with yourself?
The soft hands he took in his own trembled slightly, but they made no movement to release themselves.
"And you really want this faded, bygone relie of the past," she said.
"I sure do," said the colonel.
"Then—I don't know—but I think I'll give it you. I reckon I just kept it all these years for that," assured Miss Mary.
Five minutes later Sally opened the door. "Miss Mary!" she cried. "The cun'l and yo' better be comin' along to yore dinner. I done rung dat bell an' rung—"
She stopped and looked at her mistress and at the collar seated beside her.
"Marse Curtis," she said with dignity, "de dinner is served an' fo' what you are' bout to receive may de good Lawd make you truly thankful."
"Carving the Turkey"
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THIS is the innocent diagram.
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THIS is the man who is very wise at carving the turkey before your eyes—he got up the innocent diagram.
THIS is the fork and the carving knife, that soon are to fill him with thoughts of strife, when after a smile and a jolly word, he tackles the toothsome and roasted bird—the forl and the knife for the foolish man who got up the turkey carving plan, outlined in the innocent diagram.
X
THIS is the way that the knife will slip right out of the gentieman's frenzied grip, and clash in its vigor against the plate when he tries to follow the lines so straight—the lines that he drew on the leg and breast to show where the carver could do his best at slicing the beautiful, roasted fowl that now makes him mutter and frown and growl, because of the innocent diagram.
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THIS is the face of the nearest guest who came to the dinner all gayly dressed, and now has the gravity upon his vest, and inwardly curses like all possessed because of the mishap unfortunate that landed the carving knife upon the plate and scattered the turkey and all its juice in all directions, for it was loose; and fostered the wrath of the bragging host who made that foolish, untimely boast about the innocent diagram.
A
HIS is the remnant and scraps and wreck of turkey dressing and breast and neck that show how skillfully has the host made good his bluster and brag and boast about how easy it is to slice a turkey into the portions nice for guests who wait till they're nearly starved until all desperately he's carved and hacked and haggled the bird to bits, and acted like he has lost his wits because of the innocent diagram—the helpful and plainly drawn diagram which shows him exactly the way to cut—and O, how his wife murmured low "tut, tut!" when he, with a blank and a dash and a slam got rid of the innocent diagram!—W. D. N., in Chicago Tribune.
图
Table Decoration.
Scarlet ribbons lend themselves admirably to almost any form of table decoration, particularly if chrysanthemums and wheat are the chief decorations. A cornucopia of wheat, filled with grapes and lying on a mat of mountain ashberries or small red apples, is exceedingly pretty, and long stalks of wheat tied with ribbon the shade of the mat should be placed diagonally across the ends of the table. If the table is round the centerpiece is sufficient.
HOUSE = HOLD TALKS
The habit coat which will accompany the walking skirt bids fair to be plain, and the sleeves, like those in most garments, will be moderate. An effective model of light weight mustard brown cloth is trimmed with passementerle braid. The skirt is hung in small box plaits, with the exception of the front breadth, and attached just about the knees with little clusters of braid loops. The bottom of the skirt is trimmed with rather an elaborate pattern done in the braid, but at this point the plaits are left free. The bolero has reversible fronts faced with silk in the same tons and embroidered with the passementerle, the coat fastening with passementerle loops and buttons. The sleeves are gathered into the cuff by means of a row of small box plaits taken in the material half way between the shoulder and elbow. The cuff about the hand is trimmed with passementerle
Shoe Lore
Slippers run to gayety and high heels. Some of the new ones have eight straps.
Cuban heels are more fashionable for walking than French heels.
Many women are wearing a plain-vamped shoe without a tip.
Dull kids will be more fashionable this season than for some time.
Patent leather is the thing for dress occasions, but is not durable for hard wear.
It seems true that toes are becoming more pointed than for several years past.
In high dress shoes cloth uppers are in good taste.
Bronze slippers, buttoned with a strap across the instep and worked with bronze beads, are modish.
As for stockings, extreme open-stitch styles are demode, and a fine but plain woven hose is the correct thing.
Joy of the Boudoir.
One woman who uses a costumer in her room says that it is the joy of her life. A costumer always needs explanation, for no one is quite sure of it by its proper name. It is the clothes hanger with a central pole and prongs or one kind or another at the top. The woman who uses them says that she keeps her outdoor wraps, which she is constantly using, on the costumer, has them always at hand, and does not have a remorseful conscience because they are not tucked away in the closet. Anything she wishes to have conveniently at hand she puts on the costumer, including the clothes which she removes when she retires at night. One of these in the bent wood costs $5. It can be finished in enamel to match chamber sets if desired.
Misses' Tucked Coat.
Tucked coats worn with belts that confine them at the back and sides are exceedingly becoming to young girls and are among the latest and most attractive models shown. This very excellent example is adapted both to the costume and to the general wrap and to the many materials of the season, but is shown in a mixed brown cheviot trimmed with brown velvet edged with fancy braid. The long lines of the front, provided by the tucks which pass over the belt, add greatly to the style and make a specially noteworthy feature. The
10
sleeves are the new ones that are full at the shoulders and are finished with roll-over cuffs.
The coat is made with front, back and under-arm gores and is finished at the neck with a simple roll-over collar. The sleeves are full and are plaited into bands that are concealed by the cuffs. The belt is adjusted over the back and fronts to the center tucks, where it passes through openings left for the purpose and is closed invisibly.
The quantity of material required for the medium size is 5 yards 27 inches wide, $2\frac{3}{4}$ yards 44 inches wide or $2\frac{1}{4}$ yards 52 inches wide, with $1\frac{2}{4}$ yard of velvet and $1\frac{3}{4}$ yards of braid to trim as illustrated.
Ivory in Fashion Again.
Ivory toilet sets have once more come into fashion after years of neglect, during which time silver-backed brushes have been in vogue, which have been superseded by gold ones.
and again by tortoise-shell sets punched in gold, at present the apex of extravagance and fashion.
Some people say it is the interest we feel in the Japanese at this moment that has brought back the ivory toilet sets into favor, but others declare it is simply the moment for ivory. A jeweler says that there is another cause, and that is that ivory is not quite so expensive as it was. It is being used either plain or carved, and sometimes delicately colored with art nouveau tints and designs.
Blouse or Shirt Waist
Plain shirt waists always are in demand and always fill a need. This one shows the new sleeves that are full at inches wide, 7 yards 44 inches wide box plait at the center front. The model is made of Russian blue silk Ian mohair, stitched with cortexfelt silk, and is worn with a belt and tie of black taffeta. All waisting materials are, however, appropriate, the many mercerized cottons, as well as wool and silk. The waist consists of the fitted lining, which is optional, fronts and back
1
The back is plain across the shoulders, drawn down in gathers at the waist line, but the fronts are gathered at their upper edges, also, so forming becoming folds. The sleeves are in shirt style, gathered into straight cuffs, and at the neck is a regulation stock.
The quantity of material required for the medium size is $3\%$ yards 2 inches wide, $31\%$ yards 27 inches wide or 2 yards 44 inches wide.
Novelty From Paris.
"Tillou' is the name Parisians apply to the greenish yellow or yellowish pale green called after the linder tree. It is seen in the smart broocader which imitate old fashioned colors chiefly seen now in scraps of hoarded satin or brocaded velvet, or in some hereditary garment handed down by a long-pedigreed colonial dame. One cannot say tillou' is strictly becoming to the majority of women, out a pronounced brunette, with a clear, high color, may safely venture upon wearing this fashionable new shade near her face without the aid of a lace assistance. It is seen in the narrow waistcoats of dressy broadcloth costumes.
About Muffs.
Muffs are a very important item in the fashionable girl's winter outfit; and the new ones are just as quaint and cid-timey as are the smart effects they accompany. There are the familiar flat pouch shape, the round pillow, bigger than ever; and nowadays they term the Victorian what used to be called the granny muff.
A very fascinating novelty combines a handbag and muff; the bag is mounted invisibly in the top of the muff, just a jeweled clasp peeping out to indicate its whereabouts. Others in the same style show merely a purse, but either form is in the height of fashion.
Beautiful Irish Lace.
The newest thing in Irish lace might better be called French-Irish. It has the beauty of the work of Irish crochet, treated after the wonderful fanches of the French. It's a wonderful combination. For the Irish work only a few patterns—the shamrock predominating—and make them over and over; while Paris indulges in marvelous, daring flights, and illumines everything she touches with radiant changes.
Cloth Collars.
One sees a few cloth collars in the shops, handsomely embroidered by hand and applied with curious little motifs. They come in white, black and a few colors, and make a lovely accessory to the cloth gown of similar shade.
Deeper than these is a white cloth collar that reaches the proportion of a shoulder cape, embroidered with handsome padded Easter lilies.
A New Ead in Ties.
Grass-green tape ties in white canvas golf and tennis oxfordes are a late summer fad at the country clubs, links and tennis courts. Both men and woman have taken to wearing them.
CHANT ROYAL OF THE TURKEY
Farmer Cuisine's Turkeys
**Bird of all birds!** No one can thee deride;
**Bird of two meats, the salient brown, the white;**
**O democratic gird, our Nation's pride, In thee might prince and potentate deceive;**
**Hall to thy bosom, plump and brown and fair;**
**Hall to thy drumsticks and thy side-hoes ear;**
**Hall to thy heart and liver-rich morceaux;**
**Hall to thy wishbone and thy bishop's nose!**
**All hall again!** Accept this votive lay, **O bird that comes with coming of the snow;**
**The sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day.**
**Ye gods.** To sniff the juices as they slide
**Aowny thy breast!** To mark with eyes grown bright
**Each movement of the knife and fork**
Around thee in a sacrificial rite;
The incense of thy stuffing fills the air.
And holds the senses in its fragrant
snare;
Rich lech from thy rosied body blows.
That could tempt one in dyspepsia's throes;
Not now shall pneumogastric lils delay.
Where thou art art we barnish all such eel
Thou sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day.
Let others chant of capons, grilled or fried.
Of partridge baked with truffles, which unite
their squid flavors and become allied
In tibbits fair to agustatory sight;
Let others prate of pickled peach and
ear.
Let those who will by cakes and pud-
dings sweat.
Or who, like Omar, praise the wine and
rose—
"Chacun a son gout," as the proverb
gives.
And yet were Vatel-or the great
Dupre—
Alive, they, too, would praise thee in
rondeaux.
Farmer Cuis
It all came about through Farmer Cuisine's reprehensible habit of discussing his affairs with all the world and his wife. It was natural that Cuisine should swell with pride as he viewed his flock of Thanksgiving turkeys. They were birds. Fat and feathery, with a strut like the foreign nobleman of cheap melodrama, they basked in the sunshine of local popularity and were rightly voted the finest in the county. So far all was well and the goose hung high in the Cuisine household. But fate, at the eleventh hour, a favorite time with fate, brought the turkey farmer in juxtaposition with his undoing, and so kindly provided this story for the edification of the public.
Hercetofore it has been the belief of most people that turkeys are born to be fattened, killed and eaten. "The expression, 'He hasn't got sense enough to come in out of the rain,' was coined, it is believed, on a turkey farm, for this species of domestic fowl will stay out in the wet until washed away unless its owner intervenes in his own interests. But it seems the turkey has been much maligned. He is in reality a sensible bird, as this story will prove.
Cuisine made the mistake of underrating turkey intelligence when he held forth one day to an admiring audience of friends and relatives on the astonishing success of his efforts at turkey breeding.
"Look at that big fellow," said Cuts line, pointing at a gobbler, who stalked disdainfully past with tall feathers elevated. "I have been fattening him especially for the table of President Roosevelt. He's bigger than anything around here, and I'm going to have him weighed and sent to the White House for Thanksgiving. The news paper fellers will get a hold of it and my name will be in print from New York to the Golden Gate. I shall kill him in a day or two from now. The others are all booked to go this week. I expect to do right well with 'em all."
Thus thought Farmer Cuisine, with an eye to the shekels after the killing. It never occurred to him the gobbler might be listening. Nor did he dream for a moment that turkeys were intelligent fowl and would just as soon continue to strut the earth as be trussed for the table. Had he understood the birds better, or had he attended a mass meeting of gobblers called that evening on the stone fence behind the barn, he might have refrained thereafter from taking the domestic fowl into his confidence when discussing his plans.
The meeting was called to order by the gobbler already referred to—he of the disdainful stalk. In a few well-chosen gobbles he retailed to the silent audience the story of their fate, repeating mournfully the remarks made by Cuisine concerning his plans. For them the speaker, or rather gobbler, explained the days were numbered. The glorious season of unlimited corn was drawing to a close. He pierced the haze of the future and there behold the terrible apparition of a headless turkey, trussed and stuffed and garnished, borne aloft like a sacrifice while a hungry multitude applauded expectantly. He looked closer at the apparition, and to! it was his own image that he beheld
---
Thou sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day.
Of old the poets praised the browner's side.
The haunch of half-dressed steers, the rump of bear,
The palmate, backin, and the spitted hare,
The palmate of venison, the hearts of does,
The sturgeon and the pies of peacocks' toes;
The wasgall bowl, the mead, the sack,
the thief;
But the thief praised not or in rhyme or prose.
Thou sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day.
Bird of our chill and bleak November-tide.
Unknown to thee the joys of migrant flight.
Thou thayward bird, thy virtues far and wide.
Are betaled in homely phrases trite;
Hall to thy carcass, hail! A last En-
Hall to thy bones that to the soup repair;
Hall to thy kickshaws rich in gastric
Hall to the hash wherein thou shalt repose;
Such is the fate of all that are of clay-
Hall and farewell! 'Tis all that life be-
Thou sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day.
ENVOY
Friend, you may journey far, or here or there!
All menus try, essay all bills of fare.
Dine with the Germans or the Eskimos.
And as a sybarite or gourmond pose;
But in the end you will return and say,
As I do now at this chant royal's close
"Thouso sovereign bird of our Thanksgiving Day."
—New York Times.
ine's Turkeys
there, headless, trussed, and stuffed, and garnished. The gobbler gulped with emotion as he followed the picture to its finish. A shoulder run through the audience, and feathers trembled like the leaves of the forest when a storm approaches. Each turkey saw his finish, too.
Farmer Cuisine will never know bow narrowly he escaped death himself that night. It was actually proposed by some of the younger and more excitable birds that the flock unitedly set upon their confessed enemy and beat him to earth with claw and beak and wings. But, as some one has said, "Calmer counsels prevailed," and the unanimous decision of the meeting was that safety could best be found in flight. From that point the discussion was carried on in turkey whippers.
"The meeting stands adjourned," finally gobbled the forensic fowl, as one by one the turks trooped away. The rest of the story is almost too distressing to be told, but an extract from one of the morning papers, published the day after the mass meeting, may be here reprinted. It ran: "Last night a band of skillful rascals completely cleaned out Farmer Cuisine's turkey house. So cleverly was the robbery effected that not a single feather remained on the ground, and not a sound was heard to disturb the farmer or his family. Some persons in this vicinity are sure of a turkey dinner on Thanksgiving day. From the wholesale nature of the steal it seems likely that the thieves contemplated supplying an entire township with Thanksgiving dinners. There is no clew to the robbers.
"Later—Some wag caused much merriment by relating a circumstantial story of seeing the Cuisine flock of turkeys, led by one solemn looking gobbler, walking, in single file down the main street, in the dead of night. He watched them, said the wag, and could swear that they all marched on until they reached the edge of the woods, where they separated with a chorus of glectual gobbles and disappeared in the bushes. It was a good little story, well told, and the teller's stock rose appreciably in the community. He repeated it with such gravity and apparent conviction of its truth that the listeners were convulsed."
But that didn't bring back Farmer Cuisine's turkeys, and he is still inconsolable. He has given up raising turkeys, and says he intends to raise turkey rubarb instead.
A Thanksgiving Song.
A Thanksgiving Song.
It's comin' on—Thanksgiving! in the fullness.
If we were thankful, we're a livin'—well,
that's just a sayin' all!
If that much we can say—
A Journeyin' on the way
It matters that something like
a glad Thanksgiving day!
It's comin' on—Thanksgiving! or the time
for glin' thanks
We're somewhere on the sunny side of
Jordain's stormy banks!
If but much we can say
What matters the May.
It means that life's had something like
a glad Thanksgiving day!
It's comin' on—Thanksgiving!—life had
sorrows-life had signs.
But still we read our title to them man-
hood!
If that much we can say
Neath bloomy skies or gray.
It means that life's had something like
a glad Thanksgiving day!
—Fiona L. Stanton in Atlanta Constit
---
THE RISING SON.
EEWID WOODS... Burinces Manager.
Published Every Week
RISING SON PUBLISHING CO
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end town in this state. Write us.
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ter than Tuesday, of each week and
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enticity.
WRIOKI—No. 117 West Sixth 8t.,
Kansas City, Mo.
ee
Advertising Rates,
yf ome iech, ons fasertion oe
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CLDEST NEGRO JOURNAL
+ + IN KANSAS CITY,
TWICE ALL
THE REST. *
The paid circulation
of THE Risinc Son
is more than double
the combined circu-
lation of all the other
Kansas City Golored
weekly newspapers.
CBS SSSS—
Roosevelt will continue to do bust
ness at the old stand
Roossveltism suits the people of the
United States
Texan woul have gone: itepubilean
too. if the President had dined with
another Negro
Next Thursday has been set apart
as the day of Thanksgiving, We have
much indeed to be thankful for, so let
According to the Way the electoral
Vote of Missouri was cast, the casual
observer thinks that the women must
have voted
Any of the following party men
would make ood senatorial timber:
Col ROC. Kerens, Major Warner, C.
P. Walbridee, Gardiner Lathrop and
Chairman Neidringhaus
Of course the people of the state of
Missouri are rejoicing over the signal
and unusual vietory achieved last Tue:
day, But had the vietory been more
complete. the rejoicing would have
orn more intense
If the Filipinos think they would en
Joy liberty under a Democratic admin
istration they are very much mis:
taken, Let some of the brown peo:
ple come to the United States and
travel throuh the South and they
would be consigned to Jim Crow cars
and Subjected to all sorts of unjust
discriminations.
Th omay be true, as the New York
World says, that the sweeping Demo
cratic defeat was due in part to the
foolish attempt to make an issue of
the Booker Washington dinner; but is
due in greater part to the wieked at
tempt of the World and Judge Parker
to Dlacken the character of the Presi
dent of the United tSates,
The Williams and Walker show at
the Grand is the crowning link in
the profession, Bert Williams and
George W. Walker and the stars. of
the show hold their own and stand
among the best and most noted, Some
ew features have been added to the
show that are commendable and in
teresting, The costumes are more gor-
geous and appropriate than hereto:
fore, The company played before a
crowded house each day ditring the
week,
IT STRAIGHTENED HER HAIR.
Dear Sirs:—I inclose fifty cents for
‘one botle of Oxonized Ox Marrow. 1
have tried it and it is so wonderful for
straightening kinky hair, T recommend
it to all my friends.” The above let-
ter was written by Mrs, Ennis Colbert,
Vanderbilt, Pa, June 22nd, 1904, Ox-
onized Ox Marrowwill straighten your
hair, too, no matter how kinky it Is.
It also cures dandruff, stops hair fall-
ing and makes the hair grow, Never
fails, Warranted harmless, Send us
fifty cents and we will mail you a bot-
tle postpaid, Address, Oxonized Ox
Marrow Co,, Wabash Avenue, Chicago,
Is,
Physique Outranks Intellect.
An English naval cadet who took
eloven first prizes on his training ship
and in the first examination gained
97.6 per cent of the possible marks,
has been rejected on medical exam-
ination for the navy, owing to a small
defect In one litte toe,
EFFECT OF MODERN GUN FIRE.
Intense Discomfort, if Nothing Worse,
Produced by Sound.
It is @ disputed question whether
the men on modern warships serving
the big guns inside the casement or
those serving the gun on the upper
deck suffer the more from the effect
of the firing, Two distinct factors are
to be taken Into account—the effect
of the explosion at the muzzle of the
gun, commonly known as the blast,
and secondly the violent shock whieh
is transmitted from the gun, This
shock, although producing —distinet
action on the skull, the spinal column
and the larger Joints, giving rise to
general shock, probably does not dai
age the drum of the esr. The blast
has far reaching consequences, OM
cers say that in addition to violent
shock @ feeling of great depression
at the pit of the stomach is experi-
enced. The ear suffers more damage
from big gun fire than any other part
of the body. When the ear is injured
the surgeon generally looks for @
rupture of the membrana tympani, or
for a permanent deafness. The first,
if attended to at once, Is curable, but
deafness is irreparable.
HAS GAME, BUT NO SNAKES.
Newfoundland a Country of Great In:
terest to the Traveler,”
The American who happens into
Newfoundland will find innumerable
causes for interest and surprise, ‘The
interior of the islind ix a wilderness
primitive and practically unexplored,
A quaint, slow, uncertain. railway
traverses the heart of the island, but
for 500 miles of travel over mountains,
through dense forests and by the mar:
gins of salt water bays and estuaries
hot a town ix to be seen, Herds of
caribou, as tame as barnvard cattle,
stand staring at the passing train
From the bosom of lake and river
trout and salmon are forever leaping,
Brant, geese, wild ducks, grouse and
many wild birds that mixrate thither
in the summer can be found all over
the island. Here thes mate and
breed, and their goslings and chicks
make the woods and waters vocal all
simmer long. Newfoundland. Uke [re
jand, Is innocent of snakes and rep
tiles,
The Wind ene Gea.
The sea ts a jovial comrade
He loughe Wherever de aos:
Mis mertiment shinee ie die dimpting
That wrinkle Dis hate repo
He lave” himscit dowie at the fect of the
Anil shikes all over with tee
Aid the broad-hicked billows fall faint
on the share
Ty the mitt ot the mighty: sea
Hut the wind i sad and restos
And coursed with sah hiwittd paint
You mae hark as seu wil by walley oF
Mal
But Solr Near him: stil complain,
THe 'walls'on the oatren mountains,
‘And sheteke on the wintry. seat
He sone Tn the caabie uand inouahs dn the
ine
| And!’sttidders ott over the aspen tree,
Welcame are both thelr votes.
Andit know net whitch te best
The Taghter Oe shiis from the eccan's
hi
Or the comfortioss wind'« unrest
here's n° pune. nv wll rejutetnng
Ajay inthe We ot ut pain
And the Wind Chit suddetis, the sea that
lade
Are singiig: the self-same straint
Tivard “Payton,
Ants Good to Eat.
Ants, writes Ernest Thompson Se
ton in Country Life in America, are
available for food when one is’ lost
in the North woods. ‘They are usually
to be found dormant In dead and hol
low trees, sometimes in great num+
bers. Hears and fMekers eat them in
quantities, and T have met win men
who claim to have done so, but I
never tried them myself and suspect
they are unpleasantly acid. Prof. B.
B. Southwick. however, says: “In my
early days, when chopping wood 4
have often eaten the frozen. black
ants, ‘The formic acid in them made
an agreeable relish to the pork and
bread sandwich that formed my
lunch.”
Remedy for Burns.
For a dry burn, carron oil, Shake
the bottle, saturate a soft cloth with
the mixture and lay over the burn,
Then cover closely with cotton batting
or flannel to keep out every bit of
air and secnre the whole with a light
bandage. Burns may also be treated
by a thick application of any. bland
Oil, Vaseline, sweet ofl, castor ofl, bute
ter, cold cream or any fat not rancid,
excepting glycerine, which is too irr
tating. Soft powders may also be
dusted on, flour, laundry or corn
starch, For a burn by scald or steam
‘apply a dressing of saturated soda.
Nicknames Grown to Honor.
Many religious sects are now known
by what were originally nicknames,
‘These epithets, coined in derision,
have “appreciated” and grown into
honorable epithets, “Methodism” was
@ nickname originally, an undergrad:
uate nickname, applied to Wesley and
his friends becauses they lived by rule
and method. Every one knows what
it is now. So people use the word
quaker without any contemptuous
connotation, and even a word like ran-
ter was on the way toward respecta:
bility when ranting seemed to fall ont
of fashion
Ancients Loved Mixed Drinks.
Mixed drinks were common among
the ancients, who were chaotic not
Jalone in this. The cellars of the Ros
man consuls were generously stocked
wih amphorae bearing clearly the
}mark of the date and place of vin-
tage, but the Roman always watered
his wine or made of it a concoction
of wine, water and honey flavored
with spice served hot. All honses
|were equipped with small furnaces
jfor the purpose of heating these mix.
iehen
DIAMOND PAINT CO. (DEVOE.)
PAINT, VARNISH, BRUSHES.
Cc. A. CAMPBELL, Mgr. Tel. 946. 3214 GRAND AVENUE.
ARNETT, The French Dry Cleaner
» LADIES FINE WEARING APPAREL
y A Specialty.
CEG, Mail Orders Promptly Attended To.
TW ye Express Paid Both Ways.
Afr phe Mowe ene Mais 1282, Beta, WaLner 2628.
Gy PN KS 1640 Penn Street,
| C8 MENEZ KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI,
——-A NEW——
Wabash Train |
TO |
| ST. LOUIS |
| COMMENCING JUNE 5, 1904. |
| Leave KANSAS CITY, 8 ®. 11:30 p. m. Daily
_ Arrive WORLD'S FAIR STATION, - 7:00am “ |
| Arrive ST. LOUIS (Union Station), - 7:15 a.m “ |
EQUIPMENT---Pullman Sleepers, Free Reclining Chair
| Cars and Coaches, Sleepers and Coaches open at
10:00 p. m. for occupancy. |
Wabash is the only line to WORLD'S FAIR Main Gate.
| Return Train leaves St. Louis 11:45 p,m, for Kansas City.
| Ask your Agent for Tickets over the Wabash. |
MW. ©. eMtELOS, ~~ k. @. MCCLELLAN, |
| AMIR R cen napwr, Me Suttons acer,
(003 MAIN STREET, KANSAS CITY, MO.
JULEP 18 OF ANCIENT ORIGIN.
Fragrant Concoction Can Be Traced
Back Many Centuries.
Julep is of very ancient origin, re-
viving visions of the great Haroun al
Raschid, who quaffed from his golden
bow! a distillation of gul—as, 1. e.,
gul, a roxe—ab, from a@ distillation of
rose water which, after its transition
through Latin countries is met again
in France as juleppe; then later, de-
prived of its double p and e by the
Saxon, ever Impatient of unnecessary
Ingeage, it becomes plain fulep, @ con-
coction of brandy and water flavored
with pungent herbs, Although mint
julep has become peculiarly an Amer-
ican patronymic, it must have come
from England. Some twenty-five years
ago an Englishman near a Western
city in whose nostrils lingered the
memory of mint and julep, sent back
to the xarden of bis boyhood for roots
from his old mint bed in Essex, and
soon had its rival flourishing about
his cistern where by family law it
received all the refuse water from
libations for thirsty drinkers, The
reminiscences inspired by this exotic
combined with good old Kentucky
bourbon or rye were hardly eclipsed
by the mint julep of Virginia's Sambo.
TWO SAMPLES OF PRAYER.
Appeal for Needed Assistance and a
Petition in Person.
At a prayer meeting in Mississippt
during the civil war, a brother of
fered this prayer
“O Lord, we thank Thee for all Thy
doundless goodness; for this rich and
beautiful land of ours; for our brave
women and valiant men, We think
Thee that we are fully able to take
care of ourselves on land; but, O
Lord, we do most humbly inplore Thy
assistance when the yankees send
those infernal gunboats to destroy us.”
A prominent southern lawyer who
had just repented of his wild ways
and joined the church was called upon
in © religious meeting to pray. He
started off very well, but did not know
how to stop. After asking the Divine
blessing on everything he could think
of, he finally, with a determined effort,
ended with these words: “Yours
truly, P. Q. Mason."—Harper’s Week-
ly.
Nature's Defense.
How are children so often able
without injury to swallow such sharp
things as pins, needles, tacks and bits
of glass? The secret, as disclosed by
Dr. Albert Exner of Vienna, les in
the fact that, when a pointed or sharp-
edged body comes in contact with the
lining of the stomach or intestines,
the part touched contracts and puck:
ers so as to thicken itself in that
place. At the same time it withdraws
Itself in such a manner as to form a
Mitle pocket and gradually twists the
object around so as to turn the edge
or point away, pushing the thing
along.
Effective Rat Trap. Q
“There were a lot of rats in the
storage room of my stable,” writes @
citizen of Johannesberg, South Africa,
“and we had great difficulty in getting
at them. They were shy of all traps,
find did @ tremendous lot of damage
at night, lying quiet all day. At
length I put in the room a square tin-
Mined box, about two feet deep, and in
it placed some vurned cheese, — The
rats immediately got Interested in the
cheese, climbed up the outside of the
box, and, having got Inside, could not
ascend the slippery tin lining. In this
way we killed a great many.”
THE COLORED BROTHER AT
WORK.
Saturday wil be a “banner day” in this thrifty department. Read about
the bargains:
WOMEN’S UNION 8UITS, of fleece lined cotton, natural gray; buttoned
down the front, sizes 4, 5 and 6; worth 50e, suit 39¢,
KNITTED SHAWLS, large size, all colors and blacks; 50c to 75c values;
Saturday, each 29c,
KNIT UNDERSKIRTS; such a warm garment; some cotton mixtures,
others all wool; solid colors; also faney bordered style; worth in the regu-
lar way 50c to $1.00; sale price 39¢ and 49c,
KNIT TOQUES, for children; worth 35¢ to 50e each—many pretty com-
binations of colors, price, each 25c.
WOMEN’S HOSE, of black cotton; worth 15¢; on sale Saturday for,
CORSETS; worth from 50c to 75c; all sizes, Saturday only, 10c,
MEN'S SHIRTS; unlaundered; all white; sizes 14, 143, 168, 17, 178, 18
and 19; bosoms, collar band and cuffs made of the finest 2,100 linen; worth
T5e and $1; each 25e.
WARM FURS, large Fox Boas; full 60 inches; long, very fluffy; fin-
ished with brush tail and claws; worth $7.00 and $8.00; price $5.98.
FOX BOAS; about 50 inches long, with brush tails, chain ornament
and claws; worth $4.50; price $2.98,
HANDKERCHIEFS, for men and children; large and serviceable, each
3 cents, s
(Walnut Street Floor.)
‘Successors to Riliens mocks, mane @ co.
The time is past when the only
carcers in life open to a negro were
to pick cotton, make up berths in a
Pullman car, or wait on a table. ‘The
study of the negro population of the
United States recently published by
the Census Bureau discloses some
facts that show very clearly that the
colored race is steadily developing a
complete social and industrial system
of its own, There is hardly any
‘branch of industry in which negroes
‘are unrepresented, and that statement
includes the women as well as the
men,
A large city could be formed with-
out a single white man in it, and yet
lack for no trade or profession. There
are 21,268 negro teachers and college
professors in the United States, and
15,530 clergymen. The negroes could
finance a railroad through their eigh-
ty-two bankers and brokers, lay it out
with their 120 civil engineers and sur-
veyors, condemn the right of way with
their 728 lawyers, make the rails with
their 12,327 iron and steel workers,
build the road with their 545,980 labor-
ers, construct its telegraph system
with their 185 electricians and their
529 linemen, and operate it with thelr
55,827 railway employees,
Colored people complain that they
have to sit in the galleries in white
theatres, but their 2,043 actors and
showmen might give them theatres of
their own in which they could occupy
the boxes in solitary grandeur, They
have fifty two architects, designers
and draftsmen, 236 artists and teach-
ers of art, 1,734 physicians and sur-
Keons, 212 dentists, 210 journalists,
3.921 musicians and teachers of music,
and ninety-nine literary and scientific
persons, The colored baby can be in-
troduced to the world by negro phy-
sicians and nurses, Instructed in every
accomplishment by negro teachers,
supplied with every requisite of life by
hegto merchants, housed by negro
builders, and buried by a negro under-
taker.
There are negro bookkeepers and
accountants, clerks and copyists, com-
mercial travelers, merchants, sales:
men, stenographers and telegraph op
erators. Negroes are in every manual
trade—carpenters, masons, painters,
paperhangers, plasterers, plumbers,
steam fitters, chemical workers, mar-
ble-cutters, glass-workers, fishermen,
bakers, butchers, confectioners, mill-
ers, shoemakers, tanners, watchmak-
ers, gold and silver smiths, book-
binders, engravers, printers, tailors,
engineers, photographers, _glovemak-
ers—everything that statisticians
think it worth while to count, And
the curious thing is that in whatever
line a negro man is at work there
also is @ negro Woman. The only oc-
cupations which the colored women
have allowed their men-folk to mo-
nopolize are those of the architect, the
banker and broker, the telegraph and
telephone lineman, the boilermaker,
th trunkmaker and the patternmaker.
Every one has his vanity card to
ie | a eet ee ee ee eee Te Ree eee) ee ee es
Big Sale at Retail
at the Large Wholesale House.
All our $5 Street Hats, 290
All_ our $1.50 Street
a Hats sere ceeese nnn eh BO
WW 500 Children’s Caps,
| Yi WOE 50C ove sien PEO
by Our Large Stock of
aN Plumes
ok will be sold at the wholesale
TN prices
| ey 32-inch Plumes, 25¢
rh ha S4-inch Plumes, 48¢
REE 16-inch Plumes, 75¢
OP. Savey etal EAGLE TRIMMED HAT CO. 304. otnat.
+f-O4-O0404-0404-04040404040404040404-0404-0+4 040404040404040
DR. T. C. CHAPMAN |
125-127 West Eighth Street.
ee
Between Delaware and Wyandotte Streets,
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI.
100000080808080808080808080808080808:
THEODORE SMITFi.,
DRUGGIST.
Two Stores: 908 E. TWELFTH STREET, 805 INDEPENDENCE AVENUE
Puones |Horiat Grand PHONES | Hell'Si70 bain”
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Dealer in Drugs, Toilet articles, School Supplies, Stationery, Etc.
Give us an Order by Phone and Bee if We are not there with the Goods.
Ghe Stoeltzing Stove and Hardware Co.
——————pesooneeeoee —
Best Stoves Made.
Aine foreeee”
ac aaa Wholeseleand Retell Peninsular
eos Has Steel Ranges, Steel Oven Cook Stoves, Base Bur
Re § Nal ay | ners, Furnaces, and all goods made by the.
pe! %; ina Neg i\ Peninsular Stove Ce.
ee Sema icr tet crn mnie crete
ES ove Oak Stoves, Schill Bteel Ranges aud’ Faruneee,
ne aia 1 TIN WORK @ Speoiaity.
eC hoe d | pene er
OS eee Window and Door Soreens and Refrigerators
hsaey BCU ‘Phone 1451.
Rep cen 1329 Grand Ave,
_——
THE RISING SON.
A Bhan 02-65
7 ld\Gal
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Sari Ne
if pene I
een
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bf? SaGm vi
Laem
"A. W. Walker, Agent, Lexington, Mo.
G. H. JONES,
612 Jersey avenue.
Remember please—
It's tne Ite bite we collect here and there
That enables us to run from year tu year.”
LOCALS.
Rey. A. G. Wilkerson, son-in-law of
1. L. Thompson, will arrive in the
etly Sunday. 2319 Highland,
J. H. Doughtry of Chicago was a
caller at our office this week and re-
newed his subscription. He wishes to
extend his respects to his many
friends and expressed the same wishes
for Mrs, Doughtry.
Clarence Brown of Chicago was in
the city this week. He informed us
that he and Miss Jennie Watts of this
city were married last week.
Rey. B. F. Watson preached at Al-
len chapel last week and Bishop M. A.
Grant preached last Sunday morning.
Robt. Woods of Chicago, brother of
Lewis Woods, was a visitor in the city
last week.
Mr, and Mrs, R. J. Stewart have pur-
chased a home at 1293 Bluff street,
where they are now located.
Mrs. Alice Howard of 613 Cottage
Lane, who took seriously il] six weeks
ago, is slowly improving.
Miss Annie Runnels, who has been
in Topeka, Kan,, visiting her father,
Charles Runnels, who was injured in
a run-away, has returned to the city.
Mr. Tom Claypool has returned to
the city after spending the summer in
St. Louis.
Mr, John Thirkles and son of Lex-
ington, Mo., are visiting in Kansas
City this week,
Miss Sadie Moore will take a run
up to Lawrence, to be present at the
reception to Williams and Walker.
Mrs, Christian, of Baltimore avenue,
has left for St. Louis, where she will
view the many sights of the World's
Fair.
Miss Annie Stone of Denver, Colo.,
who is stopping at 561 Campbell St,
with her aunt, Mrs. M. Moore, has
been on the sick list ever since her ar-
rival in the city.
Mr. P. Moody, of Topeka, Kan, en
route from the World's Fair, is spend-
ing a few days in the city.
Miss Mamie Brent leaves for her
home in Sedalia, Mo,, after an extend:
ed visit with Mrs. Lizie Lewis, 577
Troost avenue.
Mrs, Sadie Baker of 1117 Indepen:
dence avenue, is able to be out again.
Mrs, Berdie Kennedy is convales:
cing.
Mr. Tom Bass of Topeka, Kan., is
In Kansas City, where he expects to
stay during the winter.
Mrs, Martha Cooper of 566 Troost
avenue is on the sick list.
Miss Lula Robinson, of Missouri
City, is visiting relatives in this city.
‘Those who have donations for the
Home will save themselves trouble by
calling up ‘phone East 607.
Call up Bell "phone East 607, when
you have something to donate to the
Old Folks and Orphans’ Home.
One elegantly furnished tront room
up stairs, to rent for $2.50 a week.
No objection to a room mate. Apply
after 5 o'clock, 2421 Flora avenue.
Get the habit of going to MeCamp:
bell & Houston's durg store for what
you want in the line of drugs, per-
fumes, candies ,sationery, cigars and
tobacco,
NOTICE! Do you remember what
delicious ice cream soda MeCampbell
& Houston served this summer? Well,
they promise to maintain the same de-
gree of excellence with their hot soda
this winter,
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO.
‘The good people who wish to visit
the springs, will find first class accom.
modations at Fred F. Elliot's, Rates
reasonable and service good,
lee ele ieee aaa
Dr. Theo Smith, our Twelfth street
druggist has opened a first class drug
store at 805 Independence avenue, un
der Dr. MeCray’s office, with a full
line of drugs and toilet articles. Give
him a call,
‘Mrs. Mamie Durant Vincent has now
opened her dressmaking parlors and
ladies’ tatloring school at her resi-
dence, 1228 Walnut street, for the
benefit of our girls and ladies,
J. T, McCampbell, our enterprising
young druggist has installed a fine
new soda fountain of the very latest
make in his already thoroughly mod-
ern drug store, at 2804 Vine street.
The Moore undertaking establish-
ment has expended over $800 in im-
provements. Since remodeling the
place and establishing a sample par-
lor in neat arrangement, it is the fin-
est in the West. The firm invites the
public to inspect its parlors,
COTTAGE FOR SALE.
[have for sale near 26th and Vine,
nice cottage, with about four rooms,
offered at the low price of $1,000;
$100 cash, the remainder at $15
monthly at 6 per cent.; best bargain
of its kind in the city; get further
particulars of
W. J. RATCLIFF,
613 Mass. Bldg.
WANTED.—Colored lady to use
leisure time soliciting. Expertence un:
necessary. Very profitable, Call 205
Wales Bldg, corner of Sixth and Dela:
ware.
Mr. H. Patton {s the proprietor of
a restaurant for ladies and gentlemen
at 924 Wyandotte street. Dinner Is
served from 11:30 to 2 p.m, Short
orders are served at all hours between
6:30 a, m, and 12:30 at night. Good
service.
Hot creme de menthe, claret phos-
phate, coffee, chocolate, root beer, beef
tea, Roman punch, Jamaica ginger,
English Breakfast tea, clam and to:
mato bouillon, are some of the leaders
at McCampbell & Houston's Hot Soda
Perininin.
CASH IS THE WAY.
Reading notices and announcements
will always be rated as advertise-
ments, and when such is sent in to
our office cash must accompany it.
AGENTS WANTED.—$50 per week
and expenses easily made selling com-
bination policies for a big sick and ac-
cident company. Write to-day. Ad:
dress U. 8, Protective Society, Salis-
bury, Mo. ,
If you desire one of the Magnetic
Hair Straighteners or some Ozone we
have it in stock at the Rising Son
office and all other preparauuns from
the Boston Chemical Co.
Solo Mandolins, John Hobbs, ‘Thas.
N, Grant; Second Mandolin, J. E.
Johnson; Guitars, Fred Spence, Wm.
Williams. Gate City Mandolin Club,
Music for parties ete. Bell ‘Phone
2655 Main, Fred Spence, 1007 Walnut
stret, Kansas City, Mo.
I stayed in Missouri until 1 made it
Ko Republican satisfied.
ie Ald Bhateenue:
Old stair carpet can be turned to
goo account as follows: First shake
it well and cut away the bad parts
and with the best of it make pads for
doubling short lengths and tacking
them at the edge of each step where
the tread comes before laying the new
carpet. This will make a new carpet
wear twice as long and also make it
very soft to walk upon, says the
Brooklyn Times.
Quells Hunger and Thirst.
In Peru is found a singular plant,
capable of quelling hunger or thirst
for several days. It !s named erythox:
yolon coca, A decoction of one hun-
dred grains of this plant produces
this effect for forty-eight hours, the
muscular energy being preserved.
The plant appears to narcotize the
nerves of the stomach and suspend
the digestive functions, without af
fording nutriment,
Sindinsina bo Aamhtant.
The French department of Lot and
Garonne has made a remarkable in-
novation. There are 126 doctors in
the department, and a contract has
been made with them to look after
the health of the poor people in the
district for an annual payment of $10,
000. ‘The doctors engage to give thelr
services irrespective of the number of
people who desire them.
Priest-Ridden People.
Six million people in Thibet have to
support an army of 430,000 priests,
who produce nothing but beautiful
Mluminated copies of the sacred writ.
ings. They hold all the public offices.
Saves Hand From Amputation.
A London doctor, by grafting the
aclatic nerve from a live spaniel into
&@ man’s lacerated wrist, is said to
have saved the hand from amputa-
tion.
GAMBLED WITH DUKES MONEY.
Dishonesty of Servant Taught Wel-
tington a Lesson.
Even the “iron” duke of Wellington
had his difficulties with the servant
question. Chaplain George R. Gleig
wrote of the great soldier: “As to
his table, It was in every respect such
as became his position. His wines
were excellent, though his cellars con-
tained but a scanty supply at any giv-
en time. The oldest could not have
been more than a couple of months in
his possession. Of his reasons for
thus acting he made no secret. ‘At
one time,’ he said, ‘I used to do as
others do—gave my orders to the
house steward and handed him the
money to pay the bills as he presented
them to me. ‘This went on for a year
or more, when to my surprise and dis-
gust I got letters from tradesmen
humbly begging that I would settle
their accounts, which had been long
standing. 1 found on inquiry that the
feliow had been gambling with my
money, leaving my creditors unpald,
From that day to this I have made
{t a point to pay my own bills, and
to keep my accounts with tradesmen
as short as possible.’ ”
ACCOUNTED FOR THE GULLS.
Artist's Explanation Easily Su‘iced
for SimpleMinded Kina.
George Chambers, an artist, was
once commissioned by King William
IV. of England to paint a pteture of
the attack on a fortress on the Span-
ish coast by a frigate commanded by
his majesty, who was then the duke
of Clarence. The attack took place
at night, Chambers completed a beau-
tiful picture from some — rough
sketches that were in the king's pos:
session, and when submitted for ap-
Proval his majesty was delighted with
it, but Chambers had taken an artist's
liberty with the picture and for the
purpose of relieving the somber veil
of night had introduced some sea gills
skimming the waves, “Hallo, hallo,
Chambers!" said his majesty. “This
will never do to have the birds flying
about at night. They were all gone
to roost." “So they were, your majes
ty.” replied Chambers, “but you gave
such a rousing broadside with your
guns that they all woke up and flew
about." “Ah, so I did; so I did, Cham
bers. I forgot that. Very good! Very
good!”
Lette: Alahates.
Our alphabet is derived from the
primitive alphabet of Italy, which be
longed to the Western Greek type.
As early probably as the ninth cen-
tury B, C. it was carried by the Chal.
cidians of Euboea, an island of
Greece, to Cumae, near Naples, Italy.
It became the parent of five lucal
Italic alphabets—the Oscan, the Etrus-
can, the Umbrian, the Falisean and
the Latin. Owing to the political su-
premacy of Rome the Latin ultimately
displaced the other national scripts
of Italy, and became the alphabet of
the Roman empire, and afterwards of
Latin Christendom, thus spreading
over Western Europe, America and
Australia until it became the domt
nant alphabet of the world.
Relic of War of 1711.
At Pointe Les Monts, in the Gulf
of St. Lawrence, is a lighthouse, the
Keeper of which recently turned out
of the sand an old-style sword bearing
on its blade the date "1711." It is
undoubtedly a relic of the illfated ex-
pedition of Admiral Walker, who left
England in 1711 with 11,000 men and
a large fleet to take Quebee and Mon:
treal. When he got off Seven Islands
he was overtaken by a dense fog and
a great storm arose. He refused to
take the advice of a French pilot and
as a result the British ships were
dashed to pieces on the rocks off Keg
island and next spring 900. bodies
were lying there.
Red-Haired People Sought.
Students of red-hairology say that
a woman adorned with bright red
tresses is brighter, more deceptive and
more ambitions than a woman having
other colored hair. Whatever truth
there may be in this, it is @ fact that
red-haired women have a strange fas
cination for most men, and red-head
ed old maids are almost unknown.
Red-haired men are equally in demand
in the matrimonial market, for they
are said to make the most devoted of
husbands. Hence the reason of a club
of girls In Dresden, members of which
pledge themselves to die old maids
rather than marry any but young men
with red hair.
Patria.
T would not even ask my heart to sa
TE T'could Jove another land ax well),
Ax thee, my’ country, had 't felt) the
Of Tally" at birth, or learned to obey
The charm of ‘France. or” England’
mighty sway
1 would hot be so much an Infidel
As once 10 dream, Or fashion words to
tel
What land could hold my love from thee
away’
For like a law of nature in my blond
T'telt thy: Aweet and wecret Roverehgnty,
Ana ike" birthmark’ on my soul thy
tin
My tite le but a wave. and thou the flood:
f sam a"teat ‘and thot the mother ten
Nie Menouia "Tye at ‘all, "were Ent
thine
Henry Van Dyke in Collier's,
Queer Funerals of Korea.
‘The Koreans have a curious dread
of the spirits of their ancestors and
of demons, which leads to all kinds
of precautions and propitiations, Most
elaboraic and expensive graves. are
made for the dead, generally on a ter
race scooped out of & hillside, with a
mound end railings, @ grove of trees:
and a shrine with an avenue of
strange carved stone figures of men
and beasts, The amount of land kept
out of cultivation by these burial
places is sald to be almost Inercdible,
A. CG. HOWARD
Ir now ready to fill your orders for coal and feed in Jarge or small
ugantitic
Home Phone 1605 Main Streot mumber Vis Pacitie
C. COLLINS
Merchant, Desires to thank his
many friends for their past pat-
ronage, and extends to them a
hearty invitation to inspect his
fall supply of Thanksgiving and
Xmas goods.
C. COLLINS,
18th and Flora.
FECUNDITY OF FINNY TRIBE.
No Danger That Any Important Fish
Will Become Extinct.
Th a chapter on the artificial eultt-
vation of sea fish, contributed by R.
B. Marston to Aflalo's “British Salt
Water Fishes,” {t is stated that there
need be no fear that such important
fish as the cod and the herring can
ever become extinct or even reduced
fn numbers by man, except locally.
A cod of ten pounds has a million
eggs. On July 26, 1895, Prof. Hensen
calculated that there must be over
278,000,000,000 of impregnated cod
eggs In each square Norwegian geo:
graphical mile of the surface of the
Skagerrak. Consequently the three or
four hundred millions of eggs arti.
cially hatched and turned in annually
from Norwegian hatchery are only
& crop in the ocean,
Th America, however, codfish cul
ture has had beneficial results in es:
tablishing lucrative fisheries in in:
shore waters of New England that had
entirely depleted or had not contained
Any great stock of them previous to
the operations of the fish commission.
Still more splendid have been the re.
sults frem the culture of shad, once a
luxury obtainable only by @ few, but
now plentiful and comparatively
cheap.
COULD NOT WORRY DISRAELI.
Public Posting of His Debts in No
Way Affected Coming Premier.
Benjamin Disraeli, Lord Beacons:
field, premier of England, was noted
for his nonchalance and what would
be called in American slang “nerve.”
One time when he was still a young
man he was driving with Sir Philip
Rose to Shrewsbury, where, at the
keneral election, he had been nomi
nated as the conservative candidate
for parliament. As they neared the
borough Sir Philip noticed a large
poster, stopped the carriage and, call:
Ing his friend's attention to it, re:
marked: “It is something about you."
Disraeli read the words printed in
large letters: “Judgment debts of
Benjamin Disrreli, tory candidate for
Shrewsbury.” Underneath was a list
4 debts upon which judgment bad
been signed. ‘This he perused care-
fully, Then he turned to Sir Philip
and said placidiy: “How accurate it
is! Now let us go on or we shall be
late.” He won the election
The Fall Fever.
Gomehow when the fall comes on,
And ‘the leaves tien atid come down
Rect ike thvowine ge my. tate
Feel ike getting, out of tow
Want to ramble in dhe woods
Want to hear’ the eras wind Mow
Want (0 heat the chupper's ake
Want 10 hear the cattle tow
Want to trudge crocs the eld
When “the night ie dhawine nich,
To dhe home fun whieh the sinoke
Rises to the yellowing sky
Want to sit down by the tre
Tn the evening tn the Tall,
Write he hee! trom the tows
Throw their shadows on tien wall,
Want to tle dawn tn the mignt
Want to fecha test of hain
That comes ons when ‘ane hears
On"tne Hot Ghe fall OF rain e
Want to go to steep and rest
othe patter that eames dawn
On the hinges tn thee tall
OF he old Mtise! nut og town
SFrank Ho brooks "in New" York Herald
Little Thines of Life;
Dr. Johnson Wisely said: “He who
waits to do a great deal of good at
once will never do anything.” Life #
made up of little things. It is but
once in an age that occasion is. of
fered for a great deed. ‘True great:
ness exists in being great in litte
things. We should be willing to do a
little good ata time and never walt
to do a great deal of good at once.
If we would do much good in the
world we must be willing to do good
in little things, litle acts one after
another speaking a word here, give
ing help there, and setting a good ex.
ample at all times; we must do the
first good thing we ean, and then the
hext, and se keep on doing.
4443 and 1315 Main St.
AT IT EVERY Day
'S FALL CLOTHING
MEN’S FALL CLOTHING.
What a world of worry and waiting
it kaves to get your Sult or Top Coat
ready made.
Almost every man would be glad to,
buy it that way, they say, IF the style
and fit could be depended upon, O,
that “if; how it has made the manu
facturer serateh his head to make
clothing that would pass inspection
for this store, and to be good enough
in every way that we allow our label
to be placed upon them. They must
he correct in every detail, made just
as good As the merchant tailor's
clothes at half his price
We want to say to you that Nebraska
Clothing is good clothing, correctly
construeted and correctly priced
MEN'S O° COATS
Includes all the new things up to date
at
$5.75 and up to $21.00
STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS
CEMTURY Dining Room
1923 Market Street,
| ST. LOUIS, MO.
MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
Oysters in any Style. Services strictly
Gret-class, Ladies and Gents dine up
tains, ZT. JORDAN, Masager
@oro THe
BE,
— Barber Shop
| UNEEDA SHAVE AND HA'R CUT.
| Cc. A, EVANS.
‘107 East (4th, Kansas City, Mo
EPS Te ere: Seetroneny en reenme
“1 wouldn't give much for a man
that hasn't temper,” says D. 1. Moody,
“Steel isn't good for anything if it
hasn't got temper. But when tempor
gets the mastery over me, tam. its
slave and it is a sonree of weakness,
Ho may be made a great power for
ood all through my life and help me;
or it may become my greatest enemy
from within and rob me of power,
‘The enrrent in’ some rivers isso
strong as to make them useless for
navigation.”
The Camera Fiend.
Tle took the house, he took the bar,
ne Garon tele tay
He took dhe dogg. the tok thi ent,
And" Dubin Neth and Gray
Ae. took the pretty. parton tate
A lowtnettg Wan tie Bute
Aud hced me With e htke and vowed
The picuite Sms) grew
Ile took Hiiseltta fay wavs
Tetons and ont of dows
(lived Priacllin ever since
Shin “Hang ine pinafureet
Te "took hbinwell alas tie steatth
Cave might withatet dle
Bat On he Mtdened misereant!
He Wak 'Wriseitia. ton
Minne Tete in Laypinentt« Magaaine
Way te Onen to All.
A platform is not necessary to the
performance of «duty, A gallery ts
hot requisite, Patrick Henry's honor
And fearlessness of personal conse
quences in the performance of the
work that lay before him have inserih
ed bis name on the roll of fame. te is
open to all of us to be honest and
honorable, brave in the tasks that
fate places in our way.— Exchange.
Wome Tol. 6226 Main, Lady Attendant,
A. T. MOORE
UNDERTAKING Co.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND LICENSED
EMBALMERS, courrtovs riearweer
Parlore 1820 E. 18th St., Kansas City.
THE TRAIN SERVICE OF THE MIS-
SOURI PACIFIC.
PSs
ne
aor l A =
eo IY a AY zi
‘The four flyers that leave Kansas
City Union depot daily for St. Louis
and all points East—note the leaving
time: 10:10 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
public sueh train service via St. Louis
Note the new departure of the fast
mail at 1:10 p.m, arrives in St, Louis
a 10 p.m; close connections in St
Lonis with the Grand Union stations
with Eastern and Southeastern trains.
The only line leaving Kansas City af
ter the Operas, Lodge meetings and
Sunday night Chureh service, at 10:45
p.m, and arriving in St. Louis at 7:20
a.m. in time for all Eastern connec
thas,
10:20 p. m—10:59 a, m.; Omaha &
St. Paul Express,
Flegant equipment. Pullman Sleep.
er sand Compartment ears; Reelining
Chair cars, Gill seats free), For all
information and tickets call at
Union Depot and 901 Main St., City
Office.
FE. 8. JEWETT, Pass. & Ticket Agent
Be eer ee
: WONDERFUL:
| DISCOVERY }
$ Curly Hair Made Straight By $
ie,
‘. ws EF
. oa 3
; %
. b Ws _8
Ay Vay: lt teat
2 VEORE AM APUNNG TREATIES. e
; ORIGINAL 3
$ OZONIZED OX MARROW i
B This wondertel uate nomad tho any ate
Bi ea ti te
ghee aha aang
Buse cma te AS
B ieristoumen ring ieaent tr el Rate &
Sie 2 it that healthy, Nhe tke apicar @
Se beta on AMIR ean
Bye tes aeheathat a aaa
Sire e ator cust hare
B fain til area eatin mle
gi hai maetciar 8
g ,OLONTZED OX MAMKOW CO. §
Bo Acris wanted everywhere. @
UNEXCELLED SERVICE f
VIA
—)
» iad is
Nore
TO POINTS IN
Missouri,
Arkansas,
Tennessee,
Alabama,
Mississippi,
Ceorgia,
Florida
AND THE SOUTHEAST, AND TO
Kansas, Oklahoma,
Indian Territory,
Texas
AND THE SOUTHWEST.
The Famous Health and Pleasure Resorts,
EUREKA SPRINCS
AND HOT SPRINGS,
ARKANSAS,
Reached most conveniently by this Route.
Hound Trip Homencekers? Tickets at
rate nt ONE. PARE pion $2; on aale first
Aut thisd Tuesday of exch inomthe
rin aii re
Kanaan City, Mo
WALL’S
Laundry Co.,
*ret-Class Work & Prompt Delivery,
708 FE, 12th St., Kanras Oity, Me
Christmas Presents
When the girl had gathered all her gifts in her boudoir on Christmas night and closed the door, she picked up a silky object, surveyed it for a moment, then put it back on the table with a pat.
"And I really like you best of all," she whispered, "because mother's love went into the making of you."
That is a common feeling. A homemade Christmas present has more value and is more appreciated than any article purchased in a shop; in
every stitch is a loving thought for the one who is fortunate enough to receive it.
It is amazing how beautiful an object can be made with a yard of linen, a few skeins of embroidery silk, and an attractive design. Here are a few hints for the woman who always makes it a point to put love into her gifts to family and dearest friends:
An Attractive Veil Case.
In this are of many veils a convenient and dainty receptacle for their safe keeping becomes almost a necessity. This extremely pretty one is practical as well as ornamental, and can be made from a number of materials. The peculiar and essential feature is the arrangement of the ribbons on the inside. These are four in number and each should be an inch in width. The ends of each piece are attached to different sides of the case; that is to say, the two ribbons that are crossed at the center are attached to the outer edge of the upper section of the cover and to the inner edge of the lower section, and the ribbons that are placed straight in exactly the opposite manner, or to the inner edge of the upper section and to the outer edge of the lower. By this arrangement the case is made to open at both sides, and the simple act of closing and opening it
causes a veil, laid flat on either side, to be held fast beneath the ribbons, which are transferable.
The outside of the case can be of linen, silk, suede or leather, decorated with painting or needlework; or, again, it may be of brocade or flowered silk and left without further ornamentation. In any case the inside should be padded and perfumed and covered with some soft silk.
The foundation for the case is two pieces of cardboard of equal size. Each of these must be covered inside and out and completely finished before the ribbons are attached. When this first step is taken the two are held together, but a ribbon tied neatly about the whole makes an attractive finish.
Group of Novelties.
Pinchshions, photograph frames and pretty bags always find a welcome, no matter how many already may be possessed.
The convenience of a pincushion, which can be hung at the side of a mirror or in some similar position, is self-evident. A novel and useful one can be made from a large size doll's parasol. To get the best results one of some bright colored silk should be used. It must be closed and the cover tacked to the stick at each rib; then each of the sections becomes separated from every other and can
be fitted at the top and stuffed either with bran or wool wadding picked into bits. When the cushions are slipped into place they can be tacked firmly to position and the parasol further ornamented with bows of ribbon tied on wherever fancy indicates. To
Butcher's Wonderful Family.
Mrs. Barron was one of the new "summer folk" and not acquainted with the vernacular. Consequently, she was somewhat surprised upon sending in an order for a roast of lamb to the nearest butcher, to receive the following note in reply: "Dear Mam. I am sorry I have not killed myself this week, but I can get you a good leg off my brother (the butcher at the farther end of the town). He's full up of what you want. I seen him last night with five legs. Yours respectful. George Gunton."—Youth's Companion.
make the best foundation the parasol should have a hooked handle, by which, it can be hung, but should such not be obtainable a ribbon loop can be attached to a handle of any sort. Novel Photograph Frame. The demand for photograph frames knows no limit. Any slightly novel sort meets with as hearty an approval as if it were the first of its kind. A really charming novelty can be evolved from a bit of chamois skin left in its original shape. The charm lies in the irregularity of the edges, which should not be trimmed. The opening is cut round, square or oblong, as preferred, and is supplied with four brass paper holders, the points of which are pressed through the leather and turned back against the skin until needed. When the photograph is put in place one point of each holder is turned down against the back, where the other remains,
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as already placed, thus holding the picture firmly. The lower edge of the skin is slashed into narrow strips to form a fringe, and its surface is decorated with painting or fire etching, as preferred. The upper edge is turned under to form a hem, and into this hem is slipped a little brass rod, which keeps the frame in shape. To the ends of this rod is attached the ribbon hanger, which terminates in big bows or rosettes.
Gifts Made of Handkerchiefs.—Handkerchiefs seem ever to be serving some new use. One of the latest is the making of dainty bags for fancy work and the like. A particularly pretty bag of this sort requires two handkerchiefs, the size used by men, or small mufflers. They should be of fine linen. The upper handkerchief, embroidered with a border of forget-me-nots within the hem, is cut at the center to form a circular opening, the edge of which is faced to form a casing, in which is inserted an ordinary
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wooden embroidery ring as narrow as obtainable. The embroidered handkerchief is then laid over the plain one, and the two are stitched together on the line of the hem. Ribbon bows are attached to each of the four corners, and a ribbon hanger to the edge at the opening, with full bows at each end.
Another equally charming gift that can be made from handkerchiefs is a bureau cover. For this three or four are required, according to size, and they can be as simple or elaborate as desired. While embroidered kerchiefs are always dainty, yet there are also many novelties in color that can be utilized with good effect. But to get the best results the edges should be plain.
Whatever the number and whatever the style, each handkerchief should
Kill Game Out of Season.
Reports of the wholesale slaughter of deer and game birds out of season come to Duluth from the ranges. It is claimed that scores of men are engaged at hunting to supply camps and individuals in the towns with venison and partridge. The rate at which game is being killed, it is claimed, will make serious inroads on deer and partridge this year. The season for partridge opened on Oct. 15, but the young birds have been full grown for a month. The deer season does not open till Nov. 10.-2. Paul Pioneer Press.
have lace insertion at the ends, and then all be joined together to form a strip by means of beading. Around the entire edge of the cover is a frill of lace, which forms a finish.
A still further decorative effect can be gained by threading all the beading with colored ribbon, terminating in bows of many loops. Fine plain handkerchiefs, with embroidery of small flowers in color, are exceedingly dainty and attractive, and many other variations can be made.
Some Useful Trifles.—The gift that combines utility with beauty is often the most welcome of all. Catch-alls can never be too numerous. The simple three-cornered form is by no means new, but becomes novel when made from unfamiliar materials. Such a one consists of a square of plain Japanese or Chinese fine quality of matting, painted in a bold yet simple design. It is then folded and bound two edges together and two separately, and is finished with ribbons and a hanger.
When painting is beyond the skill of the maker, embroidery in crewels can be substituted, or, again, the square can be of denim or heavy linen, lined with the same and interlined with stiffening, and the decoration, painting or embroidery, as preferred. Poppies painted in bold strokes on the dark blue of the denim are singularly effective, and many other novel designs will suggest themselves.
The problem of how to care for the necktie is ever present to the masculine mind, and any practical device for its safekeeping becomes a boon. It was long ago conceded that hanging
is the best and really only desirable method provided for its preservation.
To make an ornamental hanger, obtain a level board, half an inch thick, oblong in shape, and as long as desired and cover it with embroidered linen, or with some handsome bit of brocade. Then complete the board with a brass rod, attached at each end by means of protruding rests, after the manner of a miniature towel rack. Supply the upper edge with brass screw rings, by which it can be hung against the wall, and the rack will be complete. Amateur photography has become so general an accomplishment that it is quite safe to offer an attractive receptacle for views and the like to any friend. A novel one is made with a number of gray mounts. covered and held together by means of silk cords, passed through holes made near one edge.
The mounts, as many in number as may be desired, are laid one over the other. Then two covers of the exact size are made and placed one beneath and one on top of the pile. The holes are carefully drilled through each one, and the cords are threaded in and out, through the entire number, binding them together, and terminate in knots and ends.
The covers can be of leather, fire-etched; of linen, embroidered; of velveten, fire-etched; of handsome brocade, or of any one of a dozen materials.
Game Birds Killed by Storm.
It is seldom that a hurricane and thunderstorm brings in its train a deluge of game birds. This singular spectacle, however, was witnessed in the Tarbes district recently. The storm broke over the district in the evening, and when the gale was at its height, about 10 o'clock, large flocks of quail, which must have been migrating at an invisible height, were beaten to the ground, the plain around the city being thickly strewn with their bodies. In the grounds of the Hotel de Paris the birds were picked up in dozens.—Jandon Globe
TERRIBLE SUFFERING
TERRIBLE SUFFERING
THIS YOUNG WOMAN APPRAILED IN
VAIN FOR HELP.
When Hope had Almost Settled Into Utter Despair Relief Came from an Unexpected Source.
Mrs. Emma Heidebreder, of No. 1828 Joy street, Burlington, Iowa, whose husband is an employee of the Rand Lumber Co., tells a story of pitiful suffering:
"For about five years," she says, "I had a host of physical illies that kept me unvalid and puzzled the doctors. Some of them thought I was going into consumption. At times I was so weak that I could not comb my hair or even wash my face. Then excruciating pains ran suddenly up my hair and I had to be carried to bed screening in my agony. I could no longer do my work and the drain upon my husband's purse was very heavy. I craved food but what I ate only gave me discomfort. My liver was torpid, and often I had to be carried to the door for air to save me from suffocating.
"The worst was the pain which seemed as if my thigh were being pushed out of my body. The best doctors could do was to deaden it by narcotics. Once they thought I could not live for more than two days. In one of my worst attacks, a friend said: 'Why don't you try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills? They are the only thing that ever helped my rheuma-ism.'
"I took his advice. After using one box I felt better, and I continued to use the pills for three or four months with steady improvement until I was well. For four years I have been able to do all my household work, and no longer have so take medicine for any serious trouble. I gave one box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to a man on crutches because of rheumatism and advised my market woman to buy a box when she was complaining of the same trouble. I heard that he was soon able to throw his crutches away, and she told me she had got rid of the rheumatism by the use of one box and could not thank me too much." Testimony multiplies as to the magnificent curative powers of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People in cases of rheumatism, neuralgia, nervous headache, palpitation of the heart and all forms of weakness in either male or female. They are sold by all druggists throughout the world.
Science Had No Remedy.
Congressman Hemenway of Iowa cells with unholy glee how an eminent scientist was discomfited while lecturing in an interior town of the Hawkeye state. The scientific party, at the conclusion of a lecture which he had been delivering, announced that he should be glad to answer any question in order to elucidate such points as might need clearing up. In the audience was an inveterate joker—a tall, gaunt man with an anxious, careworn look. The joker arose and in solemn tones announced that he had a question. The lecturer bowed. "I shall be only too happy to reply to it, sir," said he. The tall man cleared his throat, and then, in a loud voice said: "I would take it as a considerable favor if you would tell me whether this science has produced any remedy for warts."
Paper Clothing.
A London wholesale haberdashery concern has introduced a species of paper undersuits and hosiery, samples of which are now being shown in the New York markets. These goods are offered at popular prices and save laundry bills. Japanese paper handkerchiefs are selling more freely than formerly. A specially constructed "wallet" is on sale to go with them. Separate divisions are provided for clean and soiled kerchiefs, the latter being burned.
Emperor William on his Mediterranean cruise abstained from all strong drink. Orange juice and mineral water were his favorite tipples.
President Roca of Argentine, in his annual message, proclaimed his country prosperous and at peace with all the world.
The longest span of telegraph wire in the world is 6,000 feet in length. It runs over the River Keitnah in India.
Why It Is the Beat
is because made by an entirely different process. Defiance Starch is unlike any other, better and one-third more for 10 cents.
It is a sad weakness in us, after all, that the thought of a man's death halows him anew to us; as if life were not sacred, too.—George Elliot.
Mira, J. H. Giles, Everett, Pa., Suffered years with kidney and gravel trouble. Cured by Dr. David Kennedy's favorite Remedy, Rondout, N.Y. 8110.
A woman never doubts what her husband says when he gets home late. She is determined to remain convinced that he is lying.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure. J. W. O'BRIEN, 322 Third Ave. Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
Some men are born great, some achieve greatness and some very successfully parry the thrusts of greatness.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children learning, softens the gums, reduces
inflammation, always pain, cures what colic. 250 a bottle.
Jewels of the marquis of Anglesey
brought $114,940 at public auction in
London.
Write MURINE EYE REMEDY Co., Chicago, if
pear eyes are sore or inflamed, and gel catar
device and free sample MURINE. It courses all eye-ills.
The entire German possessions in
Africa aggregate an area of 1,924,698
square miles.
900 DROPS
CASTORIA
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS & CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Dr. SANCTUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed -
Alk. Straw -
Rohde Salad -
American Seed -
Peggyment -
Di Carbonate Salad -
Wine Seed -
Cypress Bungue -
Wintergreen Bungue
A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Charles H. Hitchner
NEW YORK.
A 16 months old
35 Doses - 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Charles H. Hitchner.
In Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE GENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
Where the Torpedo Falls.
A remarkable fact about this ingenuious and now most accurate weapon is that down to the present war in the Orient there had been no instance of a ship under way being struck by a torpedo. All its victims had been caught at anchor, or were otherwise stationary. Now the question arises: If the torpedo boat, which has power to catch the hare, cannot cook him, how is the cooking to be done by the submarine which can neither see him nor catch him? The design certainly is to use the submarine against ships under way to replace the torpedo boat, which cannot act in daylight. And it is an open question, which experience alone can decide, whether it will be easier for a submarine to catch the hare by day than it has hitherto proved for the torpedo boat to catch him by night. Certainly enthusiasts will be by no means satisfied if the submarine proves capable merely of attack on ships at anchor.
Japs Have No Alphabet.
The Japanese, like the Chinese, have no alphabet in the ordinary sense, every word in their written language being represented by a separate character. In telegraphing in these languages, therefore, about 10,000 words are selected, and figures ranging from 1 up to 9,999 are allotted to each word. Each word of a message to be transmitted by telegraph in these languages is then first given its proper number by the telegraph clerk, by means of a dictionary which has been prepared under the authority of the government. These numbers are then transmitted by the Morse alphabet, and, when received, the message is translated back into the Chinese or Japanese characters by reference to a corresponding dictionary.
Highest Price for Real Estate
Highest Price for Real Estate.
The highest priced real estate in London is near the Bank of England. Lad sells there at the rate of $375 per square foot—$16,250,000 an acre. From this center the price diminishes in a receding tide rising again in the Strand to a price of from $60 to $100 a square foot. In Bond street, in the West End, a still higher price of $175 per square foot, or more than $7,500,000 an acre, has been reached.
One Thousand Words a Minute
One Thousand Words a Minute.
A recent mechanical wonder is a telegraphic instrument that sends 1,000 words a minute 1,000 miles in length. A human operator can transmit fifty words a minute.
900 DROPS
CASTORIA
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANIS CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion. Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Dr. SANUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed -
Alk Sweet -
Rhubarb Sweet -
Amarine Sweet -
Pineapple -
Dr. Carburetine Sweet -
Mint Sweet -
Cherry Sweet -
Whiskey Sweet
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and Loss of SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Charles Pitcher
NEW YORK.
At 6 months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
A curious tree grows in Malabar, India. It is called the tallow tree, from the fact that its seeds, when boiled, produce a tallow which makes excellent candles.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they don't keep Defiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 oz. in a package, which they can be able to sell fruit. Defiance starch contains 16 oz. for the same money.
Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 oz. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking.
Norway's coast line—1,700 miles in a straight line—becomes 12,000 miles if followed around the fjords. In these fjords are over 150,000 islands.
Mother Grav's Sweet Powders for Children
Successfully used by Mother Grav, nurse in the Children's Home in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE Address A S Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
"I suppose you have made it a rule in politics never to forget a friend." "Theres' no danger of that," answered Senator Sorghum; "if a man has done anything friendly for you in politics, he never lets you forget it."
---
LEGION
is the name of the woman who points with honest pride to Woodbury's Facial Soap, as the promoter and protector of her fair complexion.
The skin of a maiden, growing up in the country, is often prone to roughness and undue redness.
JOHN H. WOODBURY'S
FACIAL SOAP
TRADE
FOR
THE
SKIN
MARL
SCALP
AND
Creaminess
WOODBURY'S FINGAL SOAP.
Softens and soothes while cleansing, and used in conjunction with Woodbury's Facial Cream, produces the fine texture and white firmness nature aims to bestow.
SPECIAL OFFER.
In case your dealer cannot supply you we will send prepaid, to any address for $1.00 the following toilet requisites.
1 Cake Woodbury's Facial Soap.
1 Tube " Facial Cream.
1 " Dental Cream.
1 Box " Face Powder.
Together with our readable booklet Beauty's Masque, a careful treatise on the care of the "outer self".
THE ANDREW JERGENS CO.,
CINOINNATI, O.
Wiggle Stick
WASH BLUE
Costs 10 cents and equals 20 cents worth of any other kind of bluing. Won't Freeze, Spill, Break Nor Spot Clothes DIRECTIONS FOR USES Wiggle=Stick around in the water. At all wise Grocers.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Chas. H. Hitchens.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE OENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
Vienna telephone call boxes are provided with napkins and the inscription: "Wipe, if you pleas."
Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in ¾-pound packages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chemicals. If your grocery tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large letters and figures "16 oz." Demand Defiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron sticking. Defiance never sticks.
The themperor of Japan has never been out, like his own country.
Defiance Starch
should be in every household, none so good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water starch.
Food for thought doesn't satisfy an empty stomach
PS
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A prominent Southern lady, Mrs.
Blanchard, of Nashville, Tenn, tells how
she was cured of backache, dizziness, pains
ful and irregular periods by the use of
t,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
“Dear Mas. Pinknam:— Gratitude gomrels me to acknowledge the
great merit of your Nera Compound. Ihave suffered for four years
‘with irregular and painful menstruation, also dizziness, pains in the back
and lower limbs, and fitful sleep. I dreaded the time to come which
‘would only mean suffering to me.
<Bettar health is all wanted, and euro if poseble Lydia E. Pinks
Bam's Vegetable Compound brought mo health and happiness in
few short months, I feel like another person now. My aches and pains
have left me. Life seems new and sweet to me, and everything seems
Pleasant and easy.
“Six bottles brought me health, and was worth more than months
under the doctor’s care, which really did not benefit me atall. Iam sate
isfied there is no medicine 80 good for sick women as your Vegetable
Compound, and I advocate it to my lady friends in need of medical
help.”— Mrs. B.A, Buaxcuanp, 422 Broad St. Nashville, Tenn.
‘When women are troubled with irregular, su} pressed or painful menstrua-
tion, weakness, leucorrhea, displacement or loses tien of the womb, that
bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloatin, (or
flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset
. ‘with such symptoms as Aiciness, faintness, las:
a situde, excitability, irritability, nervousness,
(Ct ti IED sleeplessness, niclancholy ‘“all-gone” and
4 hod “*want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues and
hopelessness, they should remember there is one
tried and true remedy. Lydia E, Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound at once removes sugh
D> EWp troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for
J you need the best. ;
ASevere Case of Womb Trouble Cured !
in Philadelphia.
“Dean Mrs, Prnxnam:—I have been
. : cured of ‘severe female troubles by
" the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
, \ 7 Vegetable Compound, I was
aS nearly ready to give up, but seeing
your advertisement I purchase ‘one bottle
of your medicine, and it did me so much
fred, that I purchased another, and the result’ was so satisfactory that I
ught six more bottles, and am now feeling like a new woman, "I shall
mover be without it. I hope that my testimonial will convince women
that your Vegetable Compound is the greatest medicine in the world
for falling of the womb or any other female complaints.”—Mns. Mat
Copy, 2660 Birch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
* Remember, every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs.
Pinkham if there is anything about her symptoms she does not
‘Understand. Her address is Lynn, Mass., her advice is free and
cheerfully given to every ailing woman who asks for it.
HANDY BLUEING BOOK.
tm shects of PURE ANILINE BLUS, No bottles. Xo addion No waste, Given ho same
Perret et HESS Tue aed Neatrsaoy Ak pore grocer {oe Var send Joi for 6 wok mi lbetag
The Handy Blueing Book Co., 87 E. Lake St., Chicago, Ill.
fcr nea eR
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 27 JEARS ESTABLISHED,
Fst (HEE ed ola Zaurus gh il aed Daten he
‘Roctum; also 103-page live, treatise on Diseases of Women, Of the thousands cured by
Corres Cater eet leu Suet tee teas ane ease te ent,
DRS, THORNTON & MINOR, 222 uote Ft .°8ls, Be
eeeaienseneeeasnanannne maeemaninncenamiear enter ae
Geni E WANT YOURN AME od pit cond yon OroePINE.
and full particulars of NINE
SUCCESSFUL GOLD, SILVER, COPPER, LEAD, ZINC AND QUICKSILVER
Mining Companies it you willsend usyour name and address, Mining Maps Free,
ARBUCKLE-GOODE COMMISSION CO., 325 Olive Street, St. Louls, Me
7 SES About one-half of the drinking s%
"ALL SIGHS FAIL IN ADRY TIME: } Jicons in London are owned by one
firm, This trust, since 1t came into
HE SIGN OF THE FISH NEVER FAI existence, has caused a deterioration in
_- [NAWEI TIME tho beverages it sells, and the British
te ay, WHY DON'T YoUNEAR:| | Workman growls in consequence,
xy iy "4 ‘Ask Your Druggist for Alien’s Foot-Ease,
RRM SHOWER SS || tet toy Orne fx sie Foot te,
yA Ay, and have just bought enother supply. It
Ves WA i BT liteeticres ey ores taainnen became
Vs WNW \p y sid Ktchingstanaton in my foe which waa
almost unbearable, and 1 would uot be with-
VOL Ti Pasi wns | | Sorter eal east nie
| YY WSLICKER NJ.” Gold by all Draggists, 20,
AULD, henna It was probably some married man
erZ/, AND KEEP BRY?] | who first discovered that troubles
BARR of wuTaTiOns. yooa fon wove TaADE Huth | | uever come singly.
Sdich BAR aa aE oP ot ste er
c. DIAN 00., 144... Toronto, Oan. Kabo Corsets Get Grand Prize.
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
is a yositive cure for Piles,
Ee
RIDDEN S Pacrices sisi, Asthima,
STOWELL &00., Mfrs, Unahesiown, Mass,
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper,
on Ne Merion Ths eae
'W.N. U., KANSAS CITY, NO. 47, 1904
see? aE Fea nx
: Pray :
About one-half of the drinking sa
loons in London are owned by one
firm. This trust, since {t came into
existence, has caused a deterioration tn
the beverages it sells, and the British
acess (ron in omsoaitace
ak Your Druggist for Allen's Foot-Ease,
| “1 tried ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE recent
Ay, and have just bought snother aupply. It
bas cured my corns, and the hot, burning
end itching sensation in my feet which was
almost unbearable, and | would not be with-
out it now.—Mre. W. J Walker, Camden,
(N.d." Sold by all Draggists, 250.
It was probably some married man
who first discovered that troubles
uever come singly.
Kabo Corsets Get Grand Prize.
Bt. Louis, Oct. 16.—It has been ane
nounced that Kabo Corsets, made by
the Kabo Corset Co, Chicago, have
been given the Grand Prize and high-
est award by the board of judges at
the Louisiana Purchase Exposition.
Perhaps some people are descended
from monkeys, Wnile others merely
dress differently.
Lewis’ ‘‘Ringle Binder” straight fo
cigar, The highest pace 5e cigar to the
Gealer and the highest’ quality for the
cecie Lewis’ Garaees, Teavle tie
Total cost of German federal tele
phone system, up to date, is $60,000,
000,
All Upto-Date Housekeepers
ase Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-
cause it is better, and 4 om more of if
for same money.
Moves in the upper circles—~Tie
gallery 04.
HOEK. F the
A D7 Te te
FUG? eb pared, A
AR EN to
RSS TN TR
2 Ba Bh pend)
Bin View a\0< &
Sea ey
Had Learned to Save.
Father—Halloa, where did you get
all those toys?
Son—I bought ‘em with the money
rea pve me.
Fathor—But I gave you that money
to teach you how to save.
Son—Yes, pa; I keut it for three
weeks, until I learned all about sav:
ing, and now I am learning kow to
shop.—Stray Stories,
Sarcaem.
“Why, John,” said Subbubs, return
ing from a month's vacation, “the
lawn fs all dried up.”
Can't understand it, sir.” replied
the lazy caretaker; “I worked hard
on it all the time you was gone,”
“Ah! You shouldn't work so hard.
You probably ran the lawn mower
over {t so vigorously that you
scorched it.”
Couldn't Touch Him.
ar CPS
> OR
)
oats or!
oo y Ls 9
4 e
et fo aa
~ oN
= ert
—— Fee
‘A Once
ka
The Golfer—Are you laughing at
me, boy, because I missed the ball
again.
The Caddy—No, I was just thinkin’
what a cinch it would be to be your
bad little boy.—Philadelphia Tele
graph.
Sizing Him Up.
“Pon my honor!" complained H)
Tragerdy, with an air of great dis
gust, “that railroad 1s positively atro-
cious, It took me thirty-two hours to
come from Chicago.”
“What are you talking about?" de-
manded Lowe Comerdy, “That's
mighty good time for a freight train.”
Laid It to the Sermon.
Rip Van Winkle wakened rather
flustered from his twenty years’
sleep.
“Yes—yes,” he muttered hastily,
“the sermon was very fine.
Perceiving, however, that he wat
not in church in time, he tottered
down the hill.
Some Relief in the Situation.
“Don't you sometimes feel discour
aged about our political system?”
“No,” answered Farmer Corntossel
“L kind o' like it. It’s a great reliet
to have a man come around shakin
your hand an’ tellin’ you stories with
out tryin’ to sell you books or lightnin
rods.”
A False Alarm.
TTT
rey | |!!!)
——1 6 | | g
4 ly i IN : ]
MA Weel) °
eawtes| ||| ->-
OS a
eeese | Tee
pane aaa A
eee | ry) cs]
ER fcr 7
ay “
Baten ia Gi
a A
bay Wi
Nt Ni es t
as
og —_ if
Hotel Guest—What's that, boy?
Bell Boy—A clean towel, sir.
Hotel Guest—Oh! all right. 1
thought {t was some reporter sending
up his card.
Before and After Taking.
Askitt—Say, do you believe It 1s
possible for two people to live as
cheaply as one?
Knoitt—After reading all the stails-
tics I could find on the subject before
I married I was convinced that they
could, but—
Askitt—Well?
Knoltt—After 1 had been married
three months I lost atl faith in statis:
‘tes.
How He Got Even.
She had just worked the “I'll-bew
sister-to-you” degree on him,
“Exeuse me, Miss Chillington," he
sald, “but as Tam already well sup;
plied with elder sisters, would you
mind being a grandmother to me Ip:
stead?”
A Bachelor's Guess.
“There 8 a boy in London who ean
anderstand three different languages.”
“What are the> baby tack, grandma
entk, and English?”
Russian Jews to Be Protected,
Congressman Henry M. Goldfoste
bas received a letter from Sir Stewart
M. Samuel, M. P., indicating that Rus.
Bia Will soon make great reforms in
her treatment of the Jews, incident
Qily abolishing the diserimination
which has hitherto been exercised
Qgainet Jews bearing American pass:
ports, Sir Stewart is the nephew of
Bir Samuel Montague, who, when a
Member of the English parliament
went into Russia and was driven out
because he was a Jew, He writes that
It is “highly probable that a relaxa
Hon in or abolition of the antiJdewist
Fegulations will xeon take place.”
| Population of Snain.
According to the census of 1900, the
Population of Spain was 18,891,571, of
which 9,087,821 were males and 9,803,
763 females. The number unable to
read and write, including children, 18
Given at 11,000,000, ‘That the number
of illiterates is being slowly reduced
Is evidenced by the facts that in 1860
only 19.97 per cent of the population
outa read and write; in 1877 the pro:
portion had increased to 2148 per
cent, ten years later to 2849 per
cent, and in 108 to 3845 per cent.
The populations of the largest cities
fre given as follows: Madrid, 539,
$25; Barcelona, 535,000; Valencia, 213,
660; Seville, 148.315,
Woman Suffrage in Australia.
“We are one ahead of you, we let
the women vote,” said an Australian
to. an American reporter recently, “and
my word, they do it, too, They take
Just as much interest in polities as the
men do, and join politieal clubs and
attend political meetings and diseuss
the situations and conditions asin:
telligently as the men. It is only the
last year or so that they have voted In
federal elections, but they have had
suffrage in colonial politics for years.”
Raitea ak Armeatie,
Bir Charles Dilke's wife, who died
recently, was the granddaughter of a
man named Strong, who was foced to
leave Savannah in the American revo:
lution because 0 this royalist sym
pathies, and she was the grand-niece
of a man whe was tarred and feath-
ered by cur Revolutionary sires for
the same reason, In view of Lady
Dilke’s keen sympathy with her hus
Saud'y republic aud radical views
it may be that she entertained no
feecount of those cid family scores,
ANOTHER LIFE SAVED,
Mrs. G. W. Fooks, of Salisbury, Md,
wife of G. W. Fooks, Sheriff of Wico-
_ mico County,
Sl faye: “T gut
\ pe fered with kid.
ney complaint
nA for eight years,
oy yy Mt came on me
ts gradually I
¢ felt Ured and
; weak, was
ot short of breath
and was. trou
bled with
Dioating after
mathe GHA iy
.— PE near D:
Stl euye: “I ut
\ a fered with kid:
ney complaint
g for cight years
ay It came on me
fi, gradually, 1
4 felt red and
rT. weak, was
aI short of breath
and was trou
bled with
Uloating after
cating, and my
fimbs were badly awollen. One doctor
told me it would finally turn to
Bright's disease, 1 was laid up at
fone Ume for three weeks. Thad not
‘tanen Dean's Kidney Pills more than
‘three days when the distressing. ach:
fug across my back disappeared, and
For sale by all dealers, Price 50
eents. Foster Milturn Co, Rnffalo.N.¥
| Runaway horses are unknown tn
Russia, No one erives there without
having a thin cord with running
Hnoose around the neek of the animal
When an animal starts the cord 4
pulled and the horse stops as soor
as it feels the pressure om the wind
“pipe.
| $100 Reward. $100.
7 pe Fenders oF CMe Hapnr will be pleserd te 168.8
that there teat least itr iiivadit Glatase (hatwctenen
See eee'ahie'un care ta ail ta icwee- aid Goat tb
Catarrhe Matis’ Catstett Cure i’ the emmy peat
Serer Eiuiem koi ineaicalfrateraliy? Covert
felow'aTemadtitiona disewseteqsten. eval
Uiomei Areananent ite Catarc ura ie taken tn
tertaligccting Mires ty ante bid andtrwacn
Ferrets Se Miet ayaitn toate diate th
Eatiniet of the Siusand. stteteinge tne patient
Siecuuti Py futiing uyrthe tonssitutton and asia
Cee Cine ehatn, oae pruprctere iene
tulorach fath'tu te Cara ive pierre Gat they omer
Sie Hien Plane ter oe case chat ie faa to
eee ee dainter testunontal
‘Aiaroae' EO CHE @ chs Toledo, ©
AN AN trupate, oo
Fake Halve Vatny Vile tor constipation,
A good many poor poople have faith:
fuly followed the Injunction, “Be good
4nd you'll be banpy
vi ap
3 ” Wi, Oe R
: oy fy
3 A Marvel of Relief
8 e
St.Jacobs Oil
+ Lumbago
3 and 6
3 Sciatica
hereto ie
BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH
SYRUP cures coughs and colds,
THOUSANDS AVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT
je irre i oe
“ | ‘ HET Hah ale
Pic | ep weae |] 5 7H ce
ORE Oe ar : < Be ae
Ram 7 ye en a
i NN > Ste 5
os n oF ~“ 4 aw a eS
ER \y FF Jes
f pa gl Ay) Ee
L aa QS ia
| Ka << ie < ae Rs alg /
eal 58 F * re S ei ud |
ee ee WL hes Ba ay 1 Ni
ie Bete ES csfaie best A
ate tthe ail a
To Prove what Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy,
Will Do for YOU. Every Reader of this paper May
Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail.
Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for more
sickness and sufering than any other disease, therefore, when
through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to
continue, fatal results are sure to follow,
Your other organs may need attention —but your kidneys most,
because they do most and need attention first.
If you are sick or “feel badly,” begin taking Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because
as soon ay your kidneys begin to get better they will help all the
other organs to health. A trial will convinces anyone,
e e
Going i World’s Fair?
the
2 Take the Wabash
4 5 ‘ 2
Vs Right “to the Gates’
b KRIS No trouble. No Crowding.
TS No Confusion.
All Wabash Trains stop at
“Follow the Flag” the main entranoe.
Uniformed employes to name reason
able private boarding hounes.
All railroads connect with the day and night trains on the Wabsesl
Pell local agent to route you via the Wabash. ‘Ihe Wabash bas the a
track tothe World's Far, Awple rest aud eating rove,
LS. McCLELLAN, H. C. SHIELDS,
Western Passenger Agent, ‘Traveling Paseoger Agel)
903 MAIN STREET,
KANSAS CITY, MO.
The mild and immediate effect of
Swamp Root the great kidney and
Dladder remedy is soon realized, Tt
stands the highest fur its wonderful
cures of the ‘Tost distressing cases,
Swamp: Root will set your whole system
right, and the best proof of this isi trial
Si COPTAGKE St, MELMOSR, Mass
Dean Ste: eo UNM Tithe Lt
Sever since Twas tn the Armes Pout mate ee
Joss Kidney teomuble, abl Within the point Nae dt
became so severe aialeaniphisated (ath
Siftered eveerytivinye wt Wye tmiteh alarms my
Btreneth andl powcr Wars fest fea ge nie staw
An aivertiseminnt of Swatnp toot Wnt Wrst
Uskitae for caivice 1 bevan tiie tse of thin
Medicine anid. voted w decked. tiijres nent
After talciny sswatap Root wily a short time
T continued tte wes wil ain Toast to say
that Lam ontire’y ‘cuivd ant strong. In oriee
tobe very aureubout thw t had a dioctor extn
fiesome ot my water ti day wat he pronounced
Wo Fhant atl in sient eat oe
Tknow thet sour sian Rot ts purely vee.
tublounda snot contain any hart) ves
‘Thanking! vont for Ms eimginte Rvoweay al
recommending. Swany Rost tw all wuflorees
Tam," Very traty.vonrs
1 TGOaRpsoN,
Swamp Root is not reconmnensted for
everything but it promptly cureskidney,
EDITORIAL NOTE.—In order to
Prove the wonderful merits of Swamp,
Root yon may: lave a sample hottie ani
A book of valuable informution, both
sent absolutely free hy mail, Phe book
contains many of the thonsends upon
thonsands of testimonial letters ra
ceived from men anid women enred
The value ani siecess af Sivanp Root
are so well known that one readers are
advised to send fora sample battle. In
sending: your itehtiess to De. Kilmer &
Co. Hinghamton, N.Y, be sure to say
you read this yenervus oer in this
v yy
i a NEW \
WABASH TRAIN
ro |
St. Louis |
COMMENCING JUNE 5th, 1904 ||
Lonvewaneas ciry, = 209m. Oay ||
Aone womberalistarion, "7208. |
MMe Situ linensaues Tee "||
VQUIVMENT. Pullman Sinvpers, Bree Re |
GUAUM RATT al a cuertiest Bltaars
ee ee eet pen ariuip cu cor aeeuunee |
Wabsen Is tie only. finn to WORLD'S
he peata st ie, Sy aie, hte even
HOREHS BS OU caaoenietane
Fe Seema ethewabsen
Trav. Pans Agent, Weetern Pans, Agel.
| "een ain sence, eanane cir, mo.”
Elentio @tockings, Bio.
TRUSSES Fiivell, Maatia
Aamir ~!"! Thompson's Eye Water
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
liver and bladder trombles, the aymp:
toms of which are—obliged to pass your
water frequently night and day, start:
ing or ievitation in passing, brickdust
or sediment in the urine, headache,
Tackaehe, Lame duel, dizziness, poor
digestion, sleeplessness, merwoustess,
heart disturbance due to bad kidne
{eoubte, akin eruptions ftean DAG Mont,
neuralgia, rheumatisnn diabetes, bloat?
ine, irritability, worneut feeling, lack
of ambition, loss af flesh, sallow coms
plesion, ov Tbrijeht's disease
Tf your water, when allowed to te
main undisturbed ina glass or bottle
fortiventy four hours. forms a sediment
orsettlinge or has a clondy appearanee,it
is evidence that vonr kidneys and binds
der need immediate attention,
Swannp Hoot is pleasant to take and
is for sale at deayestores the world over
in bottles of two sizes andl tive prives
fifty cents aud one dollar Kemember
the mame, Swamp Root, Dro Kilmer
Swamp Rot, ain the tuddress, Binge
chanton, N.Y, om every bottle.
paper. ‘Phe jromiineness of this offer is
gtaranteed.
COUPON.
Phoase write or fil tn this coupon with sour
tie wit auhirest and ie Aetliet Aces aL
Sev Kee Sainpte (atthe of Swany Rook,
the reat kidney Remedy.
Name . : Toes
Steand No, sraveeceaeasraseanosteenreet
Clty ortown os Uarerserese
State tase
Mention this paper
A Better Lye NY]
than you cantell
,
jenny Wa
powot ft LYE®
\ The Best CleanerSv%
\ Soap Maker Kil (NX
Se ‘7
Re, ea
A Beautiful
ebereeeusme tied
“The Girl whoccen tellthe Beat Lye"
oa RM Cine
AZTECS AS MEDICAL MEN.
Ancient Race Believed to Have Been
Advanced in Healing Art.
According to a recent medical
writer the ancient Agtee race of Mext-
co was far advanced in te practice
of medicine The native Mexicans
practiced massaze, splints were used
in the dressing of fractured bones, tn:
flame! gums were lanced with obst
dian knives, aching teeth were ex
tracted, salt Was tised as an antisep
tle, wid eround obsidian as a dusting
: {by weat bath,
wont wie human
, applied
th i
tin aa or Cade 4
fut
MATCH FOR HIS LANDLORD.
One Who Objected to Childron Is
Cleverly Outwittes.
Landlords ta Paris ae eeoming
day by day more absurt in the ree
Strictions they put on their tenants,
Some will not allow a dog to be hepty
others will rot permit any pet what.
ever and some even will not allow
children to be in the house,
A clever individual bas just mane
aged, hawever, to overcome this last
objection. He had seen an apartment
he liked and weil knowing that the
landlord objected to children, le sata
nothing of the exisiones of lis only
child. a hoy of (wo years, bat sinply
had the tense made out in the noant’s
name, When he came with bis fam
fly te take possesaton the proprictor
Hew inte a passion and objected most
strangely to the etiitd
Pardon me,” salt the aette dip
Jomatist, “bat if is my ehh and not
myself who fits hired the apartment.
You have made no objection te his
asking his parents to stay with im,
So here wo are!
Gourk: Gadien Olahoneak
Mme, de Creqny ta her memotrs
hats a ood deal to say about te want
ef common honesty displayed by the
creat ladles of the elt amt tusuriows
French court in the matter of relies
The Duchess de Noalles, a very ssreat
lady indeodt, was asad offender tn this
respect, “Onee she annexed part of
the arm of St Jeanne de Chantal,
Which she Mt berrowed from the
mine of the Visitation, and whieh sho
Vad vetusod to sive back. Tt wns dit
covered Mat she had eansed 1 to be
pounded iy a mortar and mixed with
ame dime tor her sen, the Due
Haven, who was suffering trom the
mension, Twins quite true she hind
stolen a pieee of the trie eros, for
she told the arehbishop that a stolen
nelle was always more etfieacions.”
ae Elghtheusec
Neath aeanepe at night 1
Sticnebe ie Mahe pootral, ue
Hit tn every innoea
The the weather foul or fate |
Tar its teacone show
re the ward vin allows where
Tererishite neat stp ae u
And the pilot howd and sal et
iy ite die att qian #
EA ARR Nitto, Gnaee
Tale stan aban int
So the Union towers whit mt
Bon lee bearete shin Len
ea liataanerititne tietniant cele
With i steam benign onde
And the stately nations: all
Bailing fast ut tat
Sen Devon thee sec mists tall
Preneton's tniding stay
efi Bvitistan ns) Tetomachua and
OU Boon
Telephonic Fences.
Barbed wire fences are being utilize
ed for telephonic — communication
among the farmers in the neighbor:
hood of Woodland, California, — The
kreater part of the lines consist of
wire fenees running along the sides
of the roads or dividing the farms,
poles and elevated wires being sup.
plied Wherever necessary. Hranches
or loops are added extending to the
residences of the farmers living along
the route, The undertaking has prove
ed so sttecessful that the original: pro:
motors have induced others to. join
them, and the line is to be greatly ex:
aaa
Bull Fighter Made Much Money.
‘The emoluments of a Spanish mata:
dor of the first rank appear te be
quite equal to those of an English
Jockey of equal prominenee, ‘The far
mous matador, Louis Mazzantini, re
tired from the bull ring after a profes:
sional career of OWenty-three years,
His total profits, without Including
living expenses, amounted to £160.
400, Lut he lost £80,000 in unlucky
speculations, He looks forward, how
ever, (o enjoying his otium eum digni-
tate on the €S0,000 remaining. —Alto=
gether Mazzantint has killed In the
Hing $,500 bulls.Landon Globe,
Poacher’s Shrewd Trick.
A poacher, writing in the Country
Gentleman of London, says: “When 4
left home at night to go poaching I
always left an end of a candle burn-
ing in a saucer of water in my bed:
room; this was arranged so that it
would splutter out about 10 o'clock,
just as if 1 had extinguished tt and
retired for the night, This 1 did be:
cause 1 discovered that the keepers
were given to watching my house for
signs of my leaving, and It was @ long
time before they found that a candle
could go out without human agency.”
WATER A PLANT COPIOUSLY.
HEALTH IS WEALTH..
If has would gain health and wish to retain the same
remember the necessity of reliable prescription compounding,
which we make a specialty of giving the most eatelit atten-
tion.—We fill prescriptions just as the doctor writes them,
| Our motto is TO PLEASE; PRICES RIGHT,
Save time and Sauce by buying PRE
your Patent Medicines and drug 5) pres
nese at attractive prices. ee aa
Mf you are constantly suffering with headache
A Large Line Saree Anat” See Ss
| Perfumes, Toilet ariicles, eos
| Bromo Ammonia for that cold
| Tooth brushes, Combs +a cold today, pnemonia to-
! and Brushes, Fountain} morrow.
Syringes and Hot water The Century Marvel Corn Sheller
sa sure cure or money re-
bottles at funded. Painful walking made
gratifying prices.| «¢asy.
Remember its the
‘RELIABLE PRESCRIPTION
| A M ACY $. W. Corner Sth and Broadway.
PH. R Phone Home 1626 Main. uu
| Call inxndseeus. Open all night.
EXPOSITION,
November 26 to December 3.
A big show ina big town by big breeders
of cattle, horses, sheep and swine.
| A liberal education for the stockman and
farmer, demonstrating methods of feeding and
results in the bank account.
That's what the International Live Stock
Exposition for 1904 will be.
Incidentally, there are the attractions of
large stores, theatres, concertsand busy streets
of the great city.
Of course you are going over the Rock
Island. Reduced rate will be made.
The Rock Island Agent will tell you about it
y JAS. A. STEWART,
Rock Island
cs NaI General Agent,
N Kansas City, ee
Sprinkling Every Day Not the Beat
Way to Get Results.
Improper watering is often the
cause of failure with plants. The
usual plan is to sprinkle a small quan:
tity of water daily in each pot cone
taining a plant, If those who water
plants in this manner, as most bor
eitiners do, could see the florist water
his plants they might fear the plants
wore being drowned, but they would
learn a lesson in plant entture that
would he of mueh benetit
The florist waters his plants (with
few exceptions) cither daily, every
or doy or twiee a week, secording
the weather, and when the water:
< done the soil about the plant ts
turated. ‘The pot being
edat) the bottom with
‘ material—ustally broken
1 of pots the surplas water
tin yot the soil is so wet that
the can absorb from tt all the
ame ryguired for the best devel:
(Pees wktonioa at Ula) Win: Weel
will do vastly more goo! to the planta
‘than the daily sprinkling so generally
| practiond
| TRAIN BIRDS AND FISH.
Marvelous Skill Displayed by Japa
| hate 2hE Karen Bhowman.
Japanese and Korean showmen, tn
addition to their shill as jugglers and
acrobats, display a trity marvelous
skill fn teaching animals tricks, They
not only exhibit edueated bears, spans
fels, monkeys and goats, but also
trained birds and, what is the most
astonishing of all, trick fish, One of
the most curious examples of patient
training: is an exhibit: by an old Kor
rean boatman of a dozen drilled tore
tolves. Directed by bis songs and a
small metal drum, they maret in line,
execute various evolutions, and. eon:
elude by climbing upon a low table,
the larger ones forming of their own
aceord a bridge for the smaller, to
which the feat would otherwise. be
impossible. When they have all
momuted they dispose themselves: in
three or four piles, lke so many
‘Watou:
ST reveryveuevere rT yyy Trlr e
> ° e @
Lincoln Institute?
: INCOIN Institute 3
= —————————EEEEEEeee e
$ MISSOURI STATE SCHOOL FOR COLORED YOUTH $
. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, A. M. President. .
© DEPARTMENTS: @
$ connnce, NORMAL, PREPARATORY, IN- 3
® DUSTRIAL AND DOMESTIC. oe
e« ES: Cinssicnt, College Preparatory, Normal, Sub-Norma
® Dewwing. (Fine Arts and Mechanica!) Carpentry, Woodwork: @
eae ay
Laundering.
: ADVANTAGES! (ool Location, Free Tuition, New Dormitories :
ome el A rece |
belt aananieacenn olen
of good moral character, For further information write to
@ @
© BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, A.M.,L.L.D., Pres, ©
>< JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI, <
OOS SS SESS SCSESESE ESS EES OOO
Co-Operative Hand Laundry
579 Troost Avenue.
GIVE US A TRIAL.
All Work First Class. Strictly Hand Work
| SYLVESTER VAUGHN, Manager.
1 Walked Alone.
Towalked atone tu the twitieht aisle
Porras pte aah ate ie
Whee aahint Aiek ind sighed, and
Ty sciinese Kin to mine
Aeros the path the can had east
A yilorant auton shite
Wor nitions athie oar tieely passed
Ai atrewsit list Ioasems teres
Atounit the Tily poot 1 atrotted
Auk met, the wutdeneent
Wan a ee weenie Oe pluming gold
Sunn Hifted from the woth
‘he asters, white and amettivat
Hooked tp Wide caved ty sor
Te Na ied apphoe i thet mtat
Cr green sets know: Men tree,
ee
Tiwuked alone at tit and then,
AM Suddteniy. 1 knew
tine spitite of the wood and glen
Wert there alt there But Sou
1 searched the orchard and the wood,
Your Valen secined even near
And then nt lath tetstoad
Vou were means be omy doar
Channatt TrHbune,
J. RICH. B. RICH.
THE GREAT
Atlantic Pants Co.
«TWO STORES, 16 EAST 7TH ST., AND 2825 SOUTHWEST BOULEVARD...
Sults to Order $17.50. Pants to Order $3.50
RICH BROS., Props.
atistaotion Gus ranteed o Money Refunded. KANSAS CITY, MO.
C. H. Countee. W. B. Countec.
yi UNDERTAKERS AND
Countee Erothers, «Licensed Embalmers..
4 East 12th St, (Phone 780 Grand, Carriages Furmshed for. ‘All Qocasions. KANSAS CITY, MO
How the Frenchman Read His Bonk
The Woodman Shoe
nl aay so
i 13a)
| , a Unusual Style
Unusual Comfort
Unusual Value
A Shoe That Deserves
Your Fullest Confidence. ane S F)
ernie co. 4 y
a SHOE C0., f gy
[ie 105 Main St. —
“A curios way to read a book was
what [saw the other day coming up
from New Orleans.” sald J. ‘T. Simp.
son of Chieaze, “It was in a: Pulls
man sleeping ear, and we had a pret.
ty good crowd of northbound tourists,
Amon them was a qneer looking
Frenchman; at least, I judged he was
such, On his seat F noticed a dozen
paper back novels, — Shortly after
breakfast he bean reading one of
these at the open window by his
seat. As Soon ax he finished a page
he tore it of neatly and threw it out
the window, The books were all in
French, and before we got to Atlanta
he had read three and scattered: the
French printed paxes for hundreds of
| miles,”"—Atlanta Constitution,
i ere
No Delay--Satisfaction Guaranteed--Teeth Examined Free
We are the mest reliable dentists in the city, We have the largest and
oldest practice in the city, Our success is due to the unifermly high
grade work done by gentlemanly operators of middle ages; no youths
We Guarantee to Please. % Our Re.iability is Unquestioned.
This firm is backed by a wealthy corporation, and is therefore thor-
oughly responsible, All work is guaranteed for 15 years.
Full Set ¥ Teeth $2.00.
Sot S.S, White Teeth....$4.00 Reta
Gold Crowns 22-k.+ees+++6 $2.68
Hridge Work, per tooth .$2.65
Platinum fillingsssseeee+++ 500
Cleaning .....1ssesseeeess -500 We do as we advertise—
‘Teeth extracted without pain FREE. We are here to stay.
ESTABLISHED 20 YEAKS,
1029 Main St Ston'paige” Nuun ei Os ‘Sandys tO toa
To Stop Sneezing,
“There are times when to sneeze Is
to be embarrassed,” said a_ society
man; “at a dinner table, a soclal tune:
tion of some sort, or in the theater,
for example; but most people cons
sole themselves with the thought Uhat
it is something that can't be prevent.
ed. ‘They are mistaken In this be
Hef, however, for it ean be prevented,
and by a very simple expedient. When
fone feels the premonitory symptoms
of a sneeze coming on, 1 he will Just
press firmly down on the lip on either
side of and a little below the nostrils,
the symptoms will gt. .ually die off
amd the sneeze will be ayoided."--Lon:
‘don Answers
Bewkave in cased Gate:
Get the Habit
Of Trading at———"-—_
y
McCampbell & Houston’s
Prescription Drug Store.
2304 VINE ST. TEES. | Hone Sash Main
WE CUT THE RATES.
Peruna, . - 15c Bell Pine Tar Honey, 20¢
Mennen’s Talcum Powder, {5c Liquozone (large) - 85c
Laxative Bromo Quinine, 20c Liquozone [small] - 45c
All $1.00 Preparations 85c or Less.
All 50c Preparations 45c or Less.
ANY QUANTITY OF MEDICINE DELIVERED TO ALL
PARTS OF CITY FREE OF CHARGE.
The few cowboys left in the West
are taking to laced boots, There was
@ time, in the heyday of the cow
country, Where a special grade of
fine, highheeled, thin-soled boot was
manufactured solely for the cowboy
trade, since cowboys were always
very Vain about thoir footwear, But
with decadence of their trade the cat
tlemen have lost their small vant
ties, and a full half of them ride in
the more comfortable laced boots. So
{8 the old top boot, onee worn by
most city men, vanquished in its Last
stronghold.—-New York Sun.
KELLEY 5S} FLOUR
_ —
Paes ote.
; —— eats all the Rest.
IGH PATE Kelley Miling Co
Stove Repairs
How “Negus” Originated.
Negus, as much enjoyed in tho
army as grog is In the navy, attains
{ts name from a Jovial colonel in the
days of George I. This Col, Negus
was accustomed to drink the mild
elixir of the ancient Roman, wine and
water, and made himself so famous tn
the habit of avoiding imminent quar
rels or cooling hot debates among his
Junior officers by saying in his hearty,
contagious tones, “Come, boys, let's
drink some of my liquor,” till Negus
became the sobriquet of wine diluted
with water—as the cup of truce.