The Rising Son

Friday, January 6, 1905

Kansas City, Missouri

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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. M. H. VOLUME IX. The election of Colonel R. C. Kerens to the United States senate will mean much to the people of Missouri. He will need no intimidation to those who now have seats in the senate. Let SCHOOL OPENS. From (Salem, Mo.) Republican Headlight, September 9, 1904. Prof. Lynch opened his forty-second year of school yesterday morning. Many years has he presided here in Salem, and many who were his pupils 25 to 40 years ago were present to see their children started in their year's work. Several of the present members of the School Board received their education under his tutorship. The Salem Band was present and furnished music for the occasion. Numerous speeches were made by those present. G. W. Peck mentioned the fact that he went to Prof. Lynch 25 years ago. G. W. Powell, for many years a resident of Hawkins' Bank neighborhood attended Prof Lynch's school at Steelville soon after the close of the war. He made the remark that his sole object in coming to Salem was to place his children under the direction of his own former teacher. We have not space to enumerate the many who made appropriate remarks, but J. J. Cope hit the nail on the head when he told the pupils that a fine school house nor gifted professor would make men and women of them, but that they had got to work. That the professor loves his work is evidenced by the fact that he has refused an offer of $3,000 per year by an influential company to take up another line of work. The Professor has faith in his native section, and is one of the most prompt to boost anything that tends to the development of South Missouri. NEW YEAR'S EVE AT ALLEN CHAPEL. The sermon preached by Rev. Mr. Collins, presiding elder of the Fifth Episcopal district, was very suitable for the occasion—"Watch as Well as Pray." Gate Keeper Is Responsible. The gate keeper at a level crossing in France, who was held responsible for a railroad disaster, was sentenced to a year's imprisonment. us use every honorable means to further the cause of faithful service and good government through the election of Colonel Kerens. LEXINGTON NEWS. Prof. Jacobs and Mr. Smith of Richmond, Mo., the guests of Miss Carrie Wolfe, were here Monday. Miss Lutie Jackson, of Independence, Mo., and Miss E. Caves of Kansas City, are the guests of Miss Glover Hawkins this week. The U. B. F.'s and the S. M. T.'s entertainment and the drill of the camp was excellent. The captain, Charles Holmes, deserves much credit for the training of his men. Mrs. Sprawlining of Kansas City, is the guest of Mrs. John Jackson this week. Mr. Noble Green and Mr. Thomas Davis of St. Louls are here spending the holidays with their parents. Mr. George Web was taken to Kansas City, Kan., to St. Margaret's hospital Sunday morning, by Mr. James Jacobs. Miss Olethea Saunders returned home from G. R. Smith's college to spend a few days during the holidays, returned home Wednesday. Quarterly meeting will be held at the M. E. church Sunday, January 1st, the last quarter for this conference year. Rev. Young has done good work this year, and he invites every one to come out. Mr. A. W. Walker left Thursday and will be out of the city for the next 20 days. Mr. George Shelby is quite ill. Mrs. Estella Blackwell of Kirkwood has moved back here again. Mr. Hunter of Kansas City is here visiting his son, Mr. Wm. Hunter, proprietor of the restaurant. Peat in Sweden. The total quantity of peat in Sweden is estimated to equal a supply for two centuries of the present coal import to that country. No Doubt. "Spiders," says the Boston Globe, 'are passionately fond of music.' No doubt their favorite in the music line is a tarantelle.—Rochester Post-Express. THE OLD FOLKS AND ORPHANS HOME. This institution that is struggling so hard for existence should receive the hearty support of all the colored people of this city, for through it we can demonstrate our ability to maintain an institution, a thing that is being more and more questioned by our white citizens. They say we can start schemes, collect a few dollars to further these schemes, but we cannot stick to any one thing long enough or deny ourselves small pleasures to carry on what our friends give us the money to start. The ladies of the Phyllis Wheatley Art Club did a most timely thing when they gave a bazaar for the benefit of the home. They cleared $123.45, turned it over to the home with the request that it be paid upon the indebtedness on the property. This, with $25 from the Armour Packing Company and $5 from Mr. Gardiner Lathrop, enabled the managers to make a payment of $150. This reduces the whole indebtedness to $634.40, with all taxes and interest paid up to August 1, 1904. Rev. W. H. Wheeler had arranged to hold public services at the home last Sunday afternoon, but the serious illness of Miss Shepherd prevented the carrying out of this plan, which was to be the beginning of monthly services held by all of the colored churches, each in turn. A report of the Christmas donations will be given next week. THE SALVATION ARMY'S CHRIST MAS DINNER. The Salvation Army's Christmas feast was enjoyed by a large number of people. No color line was drawn. A great many of our people find fault with these practical Christians who are doing so much for the masses. They say Negroes do not get that hearty reception that is given the whites, but these fault-finders have never stopped to consider that the leaders of the Salvation Army are human beings. It has rather cooled their ardor to see so many well dressed Negroes pass by and never drop a penny or a nickel into the box at the street corner. Fair of Neaucalre. An unsuccessful effort has been made in France to revive the fair of Beaucaire on a scale comparable to that of the good old times. These fairs began in the thirteenth century, and gradually rose to such proportions that in 1790, for instance, the business transacted amounted to 40,000,000 francs. Before the middle of the last century the railway changed all this, and to-day the fair is a mere shadow of its former self. Great Country for Wheat. The delta of the Tigris and the Euphrates, now partially a desert and partially a swamp, contains over 5,000,000 acres of land. Perhaps no region of all the regions of the earth is more favored by nature for the production of cereals. It is claimed that wheat in its wild, uncultivated state has its home in the semiarid regions, and that from here it has been transported to every quarter of the globe. London's "Little Italy." Reporting upon the "Little Italy" of one of London's most crowded districts, the health officer of the district says that the Italians are "generally superior" to the English persons who are their neighbors, they also take more care of their children, among whom the death rate is low, and they are sober. Short Cut to Poorhouse. The proprietor of a suburban news paper brought up on a judgment summons at a London court, declared that "running a newspaper was only taking a short cut to the poorhouse." Peacemaker Is Stabbed. Seeing two men fighting in front of his house, M. Dujardin, of the Conservatoire of Music, Paris, took his violin and began to play in order to soothe the combatants by his music. But one of the men at once turned on him and stabbed him, and he was taken in a dying condition to a hospital. Independence Is Expensive. The people of Jersey, Channel islands, refused to carry out the provisions of the new British militia law, so the British government withdrew the regiment always hitherto stationed on the island. The islanders are out at least $550,000 a year thereby, and are inclined to regret their independent attitude. Study Prospective Bridegroom. $ ^{1} $ A would be bridegroom in Kanchelia has to serve some time in a mental position in his prospective father-in-law's household in order that the bride's family may have an opportunity of observing whether his habits and temperament are worthy of her. Has 158 Descendants. Mrs. Alice Simpson, a Stockport, England, nonagenarian, has five sons and three daughters living, seventy-one grandchildren, seventy-four great grandchildren, and five great great grandchildren, making a total of 158 descendants. At Least One: A South African constabulary commandery office wrote to a local troop officer asking if there were any donkeys in camp. The reply came, in the troop officer's handwriting: "Yes, one—R. H. Synes, Captain." Animals Foretell Weather. It has long been known that animals are able to foretell storm or fair weather with an instinct practically unknown to man. Many sayings are based on the actions of beasts, birds, fish and insects. Pointer for Statesman. If we were a statesman we never should begin an interview with: "My attention has been called to an article concerning." etc. We would not want people t6 think we didn't read the papers. Money. Money that talks does little else. Money that whispers reechoes where least expected. Money that acts might save many a broken heart from a sulcide's grave. Giraffe Unable to Swim The giraffe is the only animal which is unable to swim. This is on account of its long neck. Every other animal can, if put to it, manage to keep itself afloat. Canals in United States The number of canals in operation in the United States exceeds twenty thousand, and their combined length is not less than fifty thousand miles. Habit is a vunderful ding, but it nefer yet made a man look for der towel before he got der soap in his eyes.—Dinkelspiel. When Silence Is Golden. It is a blessing for the happy home that husbands and wives do not always know exactly what each thinks of the other. Mosquitoes in London. Apparently mosquitoes have come to London to stay, and they seem to be making their way into the country places. Not the Man—the Son: When a man has to support his grown-up son, his mother says he has an artistic temperament. -New York Press. Heaven on Earth. If husbands and wives were always sweethearts there would be no longings for another and better world. Source of Petroleum. Until recently it was almost universally believed that petroleum was, like coal, derived from fossil vegetation or possibly from animals or fishes of some long past age. Now it is asserted by many scientific men that it may not be of any organic origin, but may be due to subterranean chemical action. Popular Taste Changed Two generations ago an author could not make his heroine successful without constantly calling the slenderness of her waist to the attention of the reader. For certain small mercies let us be duly thankful. The eighteen-inch waist is no longer the basic motif of the popular novel. Virtues of the Amethyst The anymethyst, in days of chivalry, was believed to have great power for good in battles. The wearer was rendered brave, far seeing and honorable. The amethyst was also said to destroy the craving for liquor, which was as prevalent in those days as it is in this. Year of Ocean Disasters The worst year on record for tragedies of the deep was 188182, when the list of "missing" was swollen by the enormous addition of one hundred and forty-seven ships, with an aggregate tonnage of 41,977 tons; and the loss of life was terrible. Church on Mountain Top. It is proposed to build a small concrete church on the top of Crough Patrick, County Mayo, Ireland, for the celebration of the annual pilgrimage mass. The church will be almost 2,600 feet above the sea level. As a Rule. A New York ghost, after creating great excitement, proved to be merely the frolles of mice in a piano. When ghosts are finally discovered they are invariably so commonplace! -Buffalo Courier. True Friendship. The good friend is the friend that knows, not thinks, or fancies, or imagines, or hopes, but knows that he can tell us what he thinks and how he feels with perfect freedom and abandon. Law of Sacrifice. The law of sacrifice is this—that to those who win, to those who pay the price, the sacrifice is no sacrifice; that is to say, the element of pain is not present. They Know Better Very few men, although they talk so much about wanting to live again the happy days of childhood, would put in much of the time eating green apples. Steal Burglar Policy. Some burglar's not only stole the silver plate from a house in the suburbs of London, but carried off the owner's burglar insurance policy. Sage Advice Draw the curtain of night upon injuries, shut them up in the tower of oblivion, and let them be as though they had never been. Mistakes of Dress Reformers In dress reform, as in other reforms, the mistake is to attempt to substitute something not so handsome and less expensive. Read and Ponder You aren't really living if you aren't learning a little something every day and taking time to think.—Chicago Record Herald. Little Objection to Slavery. It may be better to be an old man's darling than a young man's slave—yet there are more slaves than darlings. Better Late Than Never After kissing a pretty girl for the first time a young man always regrets the opportunities he has wasted. NUMBER 38. PETER H. ABOUT MISSOURI BEATING KANSAS. Gardiner Lathrop of Kansas City, president of the board of curators, in an address to the students of Missouri University Thursday morning, made it plain that the board of curators is to uphold the policy of clean athletics at the University regardless of the effect it may have upon the result of the games with Kansas or any other institution. "There is something better in athletics than victory," said Mr. Lathrop. "Keep your athletics clean. We'd rather be beaten than resort to anything that savers of professionalism or anything unworthy of the true Missourian. General excellence in athletics among the whole student body is much to be preferred to a few men periodically successful upon the athletic field. The primary function of our being here is not to make foot ball players, but to make students and useful citizens." Character. The habit of industry can be acquired as easily as the habit of idleness. But it is always the man or boy of character who intrenches himself with good habits, and it is always the moral weakling, the characterless person, who becomes the slave of evil habits. Accompagnements are either helps or hindrances to genuine success. High qualities of character alone can make them worth while, mighty, and enduring. Man's Place in the Universe. What is man but the great muscian of the universe? The universe is a great organ with mighty pipes, Space, time, eternity, are like the throats of this great organ; and man, a little creature, puts his fingers on the keys, and wakes the universe to thunders of harmony, stirring up the whole creation to mightiest acclamations of praise.—Charles Spurgeon. Valuable Artificial Fall The Swiss engineers have worked out plans for tapping the Lake of Sils in the Engadine and letting the water drop down the mountain side, thus creating a fall that would yield 50,000 horse power. During the tourist season the lake would resume its normal appearance, owing to the necessity of storing the water. Snow Deer Hard to Capture. The snow deer, a beast nearly as big as the great wapiti, has seldom fallen to the gun of the European. No complete specimen has yet been sent to Europe. In England it is represented only by five skulls and horns in the British museum and as many more in different private collections. The horns are of great size, the record in the number of points, thirteen, is in the British museum. The spread between the tips of the horns is over ground. Little is known about the creature, but it is conjectured that this coloration is protective, harmonizing with patches of snow and black rocks among which it lives. More Valuable Than Diamonds Oriental rubles are worth, weight for weight, about twelve times as much as diamonds. Religious Thought All that the band can grasp we cast behind. In that last hour that brings us down to death. Yeah, the high wisdom of the soaring Grows poor and worthless with the failing breath. The postal is so narrow! What shall pass with the spirit when it Journeys forth? The gains it cherished are so little worth. Of so poor value all the wealth it has. This dear belonging is no longer dear. And that so needful once, is needless new. Ambitions crown falls from the dying brow. Oh some what keepest thou of thy sojourn here. Nay all thy treasures may be dropped, save one. For if then hast not faith, then goest forth alone! Madeline S. Bridges. The Garment of Praise. Fashions in dress change, and we are glad that they do. Some of them at first sight amuse and amaze us, but they would weary us if they long remained. We rejoice when the bulletin of modes decrees something different, for if it be better, so much the better, and if worse, the memory of the discarded becomes less unpleasant. The ingenuity of man must surely be taxed to produce some of civilized society's designs and patterns. Alas, that dress takes up so much of mortal thought, as though to be well dressed were to be well blessed. Amid the changing wardrobes of humanity from the early fig leaf aprons down to the latest demands of the Parisian costumers, I note some dresses that remain much the same in material and in style and cut. The rough, heavy garments of sackcloth, the habilitiments of mourning, have been known in all ages and worn by all classes. Few are the souls that have not at some time or other worn the weeds of woe. The scarlet robes of royalty have been for the few, but the sackcloth of sorrow has costumed the many. Rent garments have told their story of sorrow and affliction over and over again. If I mistake not, the race will not do away with all somber habiliments for some time to come. But there is a garment as beautiful as these are doleful, a garment which should be found in all wardrobes and which can be properly worn in all seasons and in all climes. The garment of praise befits the human form. There is no soul that may not wear it, with its frills of chant and song, and its furbelows or halledujah. There is no other robe so truly regal as this. It is the right privilege of every soul to praise God. There are elements enough in all lives out of which to fashion the praise garment, nor is there any proper occupation that can at all depreciate it or take from its beauty. Our temples of worship are the proper homes of praise, but God seeks worshipers everywhere, and would have every human habitation made a temple of praise. It is a good thing to give praise unto God. The effect of praise upon the grateful heart is stimulating and strengthening; it is at once restful and recuperative. It is high time with some sorrowful hearts that the garments of mourning and heaviness should be exchanged for this garment of praise. Tears have their victories, but songs boast more triumphs than do tears. The affairs of mortals may in one sense be of a lachrymose character, but the best use to which one can put tears is to look through them at the sun and see all the beautiful hues of the rainbow. The eyes were primarily intended to see with and not to weep with, and he who keeps his eyes busy looking for the bright things in life will see more causes for songs than for sighs. The eyes of such an observer will not be ever bedewed with drops that too often make them red. Even if weeping endured through the night, joy will be found at the door by morning's dawn. The garments of the saints in heaven are garments of praise, aye, and the garments of the redeemed universe will be of the same bright nature, for thus it is written, "And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea and all that are in them, board I saving, Blessing, and honor, and glory and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever." "There no tongue shall silent be But all shall join the harmony." In other words, the garment of praise will be universal—Henry Force. Power of Patience. Life at best is a struggle. The sea over which we sail to the "morning land" is swept by many a fierce storm. It is certain that each heart knoweth its own bitterness. There are stubborn enemies with which we have to contend; tempests of temptation that sweep our path with all but irresistible fury; nights of darkness, when every star is hidden from our longing eyes; times of shipwreck that leave us with empty hands on the sad shore. We must climb with weary feet many a rugged path. But in spite of all this life is not a losing fight to the soul that will have the victory. The text: "But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing." brings before us a great hope that shines like the north star in the darkest night. We may reach the perfect. If we will we may be "complete and entire" wanting nothing. Life is forever struggling to reach the perfect. Patience will have her perfect work when we are able to work on without worry or fret. It is friction that takes the power out of life. The mightiest forces are noiseless. There is soul friction as well as friction in any other realm. Wherever it is found it makes impossible the best. Patience can have her perfect work only when there is persistent endurance to the end. Patience, born of faith, ripened by endurance, working in calmness, looking forward with hope, mellowed by sacrifices, steadied by the touch of a divine hand will lead to the goal and sanctify life at the last.—Dr. P. H. Swift. The Glad Heart. If you want to do work easily, get a gay, glad heart. You know how hard it is to do anything, how the lessons drag, how the tasks seen to pile up, when you feel a little sad or unhappy. On the contrary, any of us can remember times when the work in hand fairly slow, because our hearts were so glad about something that the fingers had to keep time to their joyous beating. But my thought to day is as to the excellence of the work done, rather than the ease or rapidity of the performance. Good work is almost always joyous. Heart sunshine gets into the painter's colors and brightens all the dull, dead pigments. By and by people get to talking about it. The canvas glows and throbs with the life pulse of genius!" The life-pulse of love and happiness, rather. The painter has told nobody, but they found it out, those careless onlookers. They knew his heart was gay as he painted in that trudging berry picker, those sheep and cattle feeding in the meadows. Might he not have painted the same thing in a trouble-filled house, with new griefs knocking at the door? No, not the same thing. Something must have been lost out, some sad thing have crept in. Our mood gets into everything, whether it is shutting a door or making a picture or poem. So, then, for the sake of the good that we can do, let us shut the door on the whole sulking, frowning crew of ugly feelings, and call in the good little brownies of gladness and good will. We shall wake to find that happy thoughts have noiselessly cleared away our troubles overnight, and fresh light will seem to be poured on the old problems, "bright ideas," find some swift, sure way through all the tangles. Bright, clear, outlooking eyes see better than tear dimmed ones. Every sad and gloomy moment is a waste of power. But can anyone be always glad? He can always keep the attitude of gladness. He can hold his joy cup right side up, so as to catch any drop of gladness. Eyes and lips can learn to smile so easily that little pleasures move them. It is a matter of habit and training, quite as much as of natural temperament, or even of circumstances. That being the case, do not some of us need to make us other habits and start in on a new course of training? Not because we shall be happier, more peaceful, richer every way—that is all true, but it is not the reason. The real motive ought to be that we shall be stronger for our work in the world, whatever it is. "Be strong; be strong"—how the Bible echoes with the inspiring command! And it adds, also by way of explanation "The joy of the Lord is your strength."—Anna Frances Burnham. Obedience Through Suffering. Obedience Through Suffering. It is a happy thing if we can learn obedience by the things which we suffer. Weakness of body and heaviness of mind will, I trust, have this good effect upon you. The particular lesson which you have now to learn is to be faithful in comparatively little things, particularly in conversation. God bath given you a tongue. Why? That you may praise Him therewith; that all your conversation may be, for the time to come, "meet to minister grace to the hearers." Such conversation and private prayer exceedingly assist each other. By resolutely persisting, according to your little strength, in all works of plety and mercy, you are waiting on God in the old scriptural way. And therein he will come and save you. Do not thing he is after off. He is nigh that justifieth, that sanctifeth. Beware you do not thrust him away from you. Rather say: "My heart would now receive three Lord Come in, my Lord, come John Wesley A Prohibition Mining Camp. Great mining corporations are coming to realize what railroad companies have already learned—that sober men are the only employees to be fully trusted. The Troy-Manhattan company, operating at Troy, Arizona, is one of these. Two years ago, when they employed about 125 workmen, their camp included four saloons and on pay day was the scene of root and drunkenness. Although these men were making such improper use of their hard earned money, they asked for higher wages. The company saw an opportunity not only to better the men, but to secure better services, and offered an increase of fifty cents per day with Sunday for a holiday, if in local option election the miners would prohibit the sale of liquor. Not one miner in the camp voted for the saloon. There is not a saloon in that precinct now, and Troy is an enterprising, peaceful camp. Many a man has acquired a reputation for honesty by concealing the truth about his actions. GIVE THESE NEW FANGLED SPECTACLES A TRIAL PRO- TECTION TARIFF REVISION G. O. P. The glasses I already have are very satisfactory. By their aid I see business stability, employment for labor, prosperity and happiness for eighty millions of people. I have no idea of making a change just now. HOME TRADE FIRST COMMAND OF OUR OWN MARKET THE MAIN THING. Vice-President-elect Fairbanks Insists That the Policy of Protection Be Maintained and Defines the Real Republican Kind of Revision and Reciprocity. (Speech of Hon. C. W. Fairbanks at the Dinner of the Home Market club, Boston, Dec. 1, 1904.) We have sought to build up the home market first and thereafter secure a fair share of the markets abroad. We have believed that in order to command foreign markets we must have strength enough to control our own. We have witnessed its rapid increase under the stimulating effect of the protective policy enunciated in the platform adopted at Chicago forty-four years ago. We have seen the value of all manufactures in the United States increase from less than $2,000,000,000 to more than $13,000,000,000 in the period of thirty years preceding the last national census. We have observed our total manufactures rise until they are but little less than the manufactures of the United Kingdom, Germany and France combined. The expansion of our foreign commerce under Republican policy and Republican administration is conclusive evidence of the fact that Republican policies are not restrictive so far as our foreign trade is concerned. In 1860 our exports of manufactured products to other countries amounted to only $102,000,000, while last year they reached the enormous sum of $452,000,000. It would seem the part of wisdom to hold fast to those measures and that administration of public affairs under which such gratifying and unparalleled results have been accomplished. The Republican party has wisely devoted itself to the promotion of all those measures which tend to expand HAS NO USE GIVE NEW F SPEC ATRI PRO- TECTION TARIFF G. O. P.—The glasses I already ha aid I see business stability, employme ness for eighty millions of people. I now. our commerce. It has been liberal in making provision for the improvements of our harbors and rivers. It stands ready to make such further improvements as our national interests shall require. While the tariff question is an old one, it is of continual and vital interest. It must not be overthrown or surrendered either by ignorance or by prejudice; it must be maintained by education, by intelligent discussion. The Republican party has revised tariff schedules in the past, when revision was essential, and it will not hesitate in the future to subject them to careful scrutiny and alteration, so that our protective system may be just in its operation. Whenever change of schedules is essential in the public interest, the alteration will be made; it will be made advised, it will be made with full knowledge, not in response to mere sentiment, but agreeably to sound economic necessity. Any other policy is obviously unwise and disturbing in its tendency. The Republican party adheres to the doctrine of commercial reciprocity, that reciprocity which tends to expand our commerce and to develop American industry in the interest of American labor and American capital. It be<sup>1</sup> to that reciprocity which is the "handmaiden" of protection, but not to that which is but another form of free trade, and which is hostile to the protective system. President McKinley has been quoted by the enemies of protection as favoring the Democratic system of reciprocity. The text of his last great speech gives denial to such pretensions. His utterances were entirely free from ambiguity. No one could misunderstand them who did not desire to do so. He distinctly favored "sensible trade arrangements which will not interrupt our home production." "We should take from our customers," said he, "such of their products as we can use without harm to our industries and labor." And he further declared that, "If perchance some of our tariffs are no longer needed for revenue, or to encourage and protect our industries at home, why should they not be employed to extend and promote our markets abroad?" It will be observed that he kept well in mind the home market and protection to our industry and labor. --- There is in these observations no suggestion of the abandonment by him of the great policy for which he lived and wrought so well. There is to be found here no evidence of any purpose upon his part to yield the home market in the delusive hope of possessing foreign markets which would compensate for the loss. A great responsibility rests upon the Republican party. It is not overawed by it, yet fully realizes its significance. It has always had the courage and wisdom to meet the responsibility laid upon it by the American people. We realize that all of the great problems of government have not been solved; that there are many awaiting us in the future which will tax our patriotism and our capacity to govern. The Republican party faces the future with a full appreciation of all of this, and with a high resolve to meet present and future responsibility with the sole purpose to advance to the utmost degree the welfare, the honor and the glory of our countrymen and our common country. The result of the recent national election needs no interpreter. It plainly signifies that the people have unabated faith in the great principles for which the Republican party has wrought so well. It clearly indicates exceptional confidence in the soundness and conservatism of Republican administration. The power committed to us is to be used with prudence. We are to continue to adhere to and uphold the great policies which have so well served us in the past. They are not to be undermined or subverted; they are to be upheld and maintained with wisdom and resolution. Free Trade Dumpers. The free traders who have attempted to show that the practice of selling goods in a foreign market at less than they are sold to the domestic consumer is vicious, and due to the protective tariff, are getting into deep water. We find one prominent Cobdenite organ in New York city thus pooh-poohing Chamberlain's protest against "dumping": "It is not necessary to go abroad WE FOR THEM. WE THESE NEW FANGLED CONDUCTACLES MARIAL REVISION I have are very satisfactory. By their ment for labor, prosperity and happi- I have no idea of making a change just to find the first kind of dumping. Every grocer who sells sugar below cost in order to make custom for his other wares is a dumper. Where this practice in England is resorted to once by a foreign producer, it is practiced by Englishman against Englishman a hundred times." Thus it appears that the practice is not due to protective tariff laws; and it is only criminal when it is resorted to by an American manufacturer to get rid of a surplus or to escape the necessity of closing down his works at a loss. All others may engage in the unloading practice with propriety — San Francisco Chronicle. A Serious Blow to Our Farmers. George E. Foster, M. P., from Canada, who says reciprocity is a dead question there, also says that they have an inexhaustible lumber supply, and in ten years could not only supply their own and Great Britain's market with wheat, but have a large surplus for further export. Our farmers can well imagine that they would get for their own wheat if there was no duty of 25 cents a bushel to keep out the millions of bushels of Canadian wheat which can be raised and transported at a much less cost than our own. A reciprocity treaty with Canada repealing the duties on natural products would be a blow to the farmers of the United States too serious to contemplate. On Republican Lines Of course, the Republican administration will work along the lines laid down by the Republican party, for the good of the country and its people, supremely indifferent to the Democratic censure of all its acts which will be directed against it during the next four years, and which will be summed up and elaborated in 1908.—Wheeling Intelligence. No Tariff Tinkering Sentiment There is no well-founded sentiment for tariff reform or tariff tinkering, except in the minds of some people who have no deep-rooted conviction in the matter of a protective tariff, and who have no adequate conception of what a protective tariff means, in the broad sense.—Kalamazoo Telegraph. OUT OF THE ORDINARY My Dad and Me. Beams like everything I want ter do, My dad, he jes' don't want me to; My dad' runnin' when the feller's call. Dad's hair will dill' in the house. Is foolishness, an' that ter chase An' tear around an' climb an' yell Has jes' got ter be broke up a spell. Has jes' work, dad says, at ten. An' that's the thing. Things has changed some since those days. 'Cept dad's ideas, an' they jest stays. An' so somehow we can agree, An' not my dad. Bob Hunter's dad, he takes him out Through woods an' fields an' all about. An' shows him how ter show' an' fish, An' how ter swim. O. dear, I wish That dad would take me that a-way, That dad would take me that a-way, Bob Hunter, he jes' knows a pile His dad has showed him; guess you'd' tend smile Hear him tell o' birds an' things; Why be so afraid of the colin stubs; Jes' where to find the ole mustrat. An' lots o' queer things more n that. But dad, he don't, won't stand their noise. I guess that's why we can't agree. An' laughin' now at bumps, why, when We all grow up we won't mind much We'll laughin' now at bumps, like Of nature; Bob's dad say that mine Would fool an' talk that way; it's fine, Yer gilt ter know yer dad, an' he knows An'n't forget he was young too; But dad don't, so we don't agree, My dad an' me, — Montana Snakes with Eye-Glasses. Snakes may almost be said to have glass eyes, inasmuch as their eyes never close. They are without lids, and each is covered with a transparent scale much resembling glass. When the reptile casts its outer skin, the eye scales come off with the rest of the transparent envelope out of which the snake slips. This glassy eye-scale is so tough that it effectually protects the true eye from the twigs, sharp grass and others obstructions which the snake encounters in its travels, yet it is transparent enough to allow the most perfect vision. Thus, if the snake has not a glass eye, it may, at any rate, be said to wear eye-glasses. A similarly protected or cased eye which very nearly approaches a glass eye, or, at any rate, an eye of glass—is to be found in fish. From the character of the element in which they live and the subdued light that reaches them, fish have no need of eyelids, either to wash the eye or protect it from glare, and, therefore, eyelids are absent; but some of them need the protection of the transparent, horny, convex cases which defend their eyes without obstructing the sight. Got Runaway Husband's Money. A romantic story of a long lost husband and an unclaimed fortune comes from Melbourne, Australia. A London engineer, named Charles Arnold, who went to Melbourne in the fifties with his wife, left to inspect some mining claims at Bendigo, and was never seen again. His wife gave him up for dead, but it was afterwards found out that he had gone to America, married again, and died, leaving half a million dollars. This, by will, he bequeathed to his children by his American wife; but part of the property was in one of those states of the Union where the rights of a legitimate wife and children prevail over the provisions of a will. Having regard to this, the second family agreed to a settlement, and compromised for $60,000. The Australian claimants—Mrs. Arnold being dead, and the eldest of the four surviving children being nearly 60 years of age—have just divided this sum. Microscopic Detective. Ehrenberg, prince of microscopists, some years ago was employed by the Prussian government to investigate a case of smuggling. A cask had been opened, valuables extracted, and the case repacked and shipped onward to its destination. The only clue to the criminals was that the unpacking must have been done at some of the customs houses through which the goods had passed. To all appearances the microscope had a hopeless task. Ehrenberg took some of the sand which had been used in repacking, placed it under the microscope, looked through the tube, and behold, on the stand lay a peculiar specimen of foraminifera. That animal was found only at one place in the world, and told just where the crime had been committed. Son-in-law's Son-in-law. Fifty six-year old Sylvester Heath was recently married to his son-in-law's daughter, and thus becomes the son-in-law of his son-in-law, says a dispatch from Wilkesbarre. The bride, Sarah Hagenbuch, is 20 years old. She is her father's child by his first wife. Hagenbuch's second wife is a daughter of Heath, who when he went to visit his daughter and son-in-law, met Sarah, fell in love with her, proposed and was accepted. As she is under age, the father's consent was necessary, and it was given. Propriety of Civil Service When, in 1809, Richard Trevithick uttered the following worris, there were many who considered him an insane, dangerous person: "The present general will use canals, the next will prefer railroads with horses, but their more enlightened successors will employ steam carriages on railways as the perfection of the art of conveyance." THREE YEARS AFTER. Eugene E. Lario, of 751 Twentleth avenue, ticket seller in the Union Station. Denver, Col., says: "You are at Eugene E. Lario, of 751 avenue, ticket seller in the tion, Denver, Col., says: "liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers a bout Doan's Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of that remedy. I was subject to severe attacks of backache, always aggravated if I sat long at a desk. Doan's Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since." liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Doan's Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of that remedy. I was subject to severe attacks of backache, always aggravated if I sat long at a desk. Doan's Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since." Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists. Price 50 cents per box. Dont' Let the Years Count. Age will never succeed in retaining a youthful appearance and mentality until people make up their minds not to let the years count—until they cease to make the body old by the constant suggestions of the mind.—Success Magazine. Chinese Dress Colors." Any color or harmony of colors may be used in the Chinese costume except solid yellow. That color is reserved for the robes of royalty. White enters not at all into the Chinese dress, that is, in solid color, for it is Chinese mourning. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces examination, allays pain, cures wind cold. 200 ml bottle Criminality of Professions. A French professor has been inquiring into the comparative criminality of the professions. He finds that the convictions per 100,000 of each are as follows: Lawyers, 100; artists, 33; doctors, 25; lay teachers, 19; clerical teachers, 7; Catholic clergy, 4. Beautiful Old Age Roses are most beautiful just before the petals fail. So it is often with old age touched with kindliness and tender sympathy. FITS permanently cured. To file or nervousness after a fracture, call 800-222-2222. Read for WKK&K. OU 011肃油剂 and treatment. Call 800-222-2222. Cable Message Flashed Quickly. It takes but three seconds for a message to go from one end of the Atlantic cable to the other. Last year the Sure Hatch Incubator Co. of Clay Centre, Neb., shipped 600 incubators to Germany and several thousand to Australia, South Africa, and South America. Too Much Warmth: "Well, sah, w'en de preacher tol' Br'er Williams dar wuz a warm welcome waitin' fer him on de other side, you could a' hearn him hollerin' fer ice clean 'crost de settlement!"—Atlanta Constitution. Pain—A sensation experienced on receiving a Punch, particularly the London one. Sensible Housekeepers will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more for the same money, but also because of superior quality. Home of the Silk Hat The number of silk hats made annually in the United Kingdom is about 12,000,000. Oldest National Color The oldest existing national color is the red and white crossed flag of Denmark. The Best Results in Starching can be obtained only by using Defiance Starch, besides getting 4 oz. more for same money—no cooking required. Difficult Road Building. Thirty-three tunnels were blasted with dynamite in the construction of the circum-Balkal branch of the Transsiberian railway. The entire length of the line is only 152 miles. Its construction was begun in 1899. You can't make no man out of a Willie Boy by having him smoke cigars 'stead of cigarettes. A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES. Technic, Bison. Bleeding or Postnatal Piles. Your daughter will return money if FAO OMETES Ancient Ann Says: A woman always thinks it is her husband's duty to tack down the carpet, as he has such liberty of speech when he hits his finger instead of the tack.—Baltimore American. Bacon—Why does he call his dachshund "Procession"? Egbert—Because it takes him so long to pass a given point. Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces in a package, 10 cents. One-third more starch for the same money. Real Version of Bluebeard Story. Bluebeard had just told his wife not to go into the room. "My desk is in there," he said, and you'll be sure to want to straighten it out." Description of Persian Sheep. A traveler, giving an account of the Persian sheep in 1798, says: "The tails frequently weighed eight or ten pounds, and they have six or eight horns, some of which stood out horizontally and caused a great deal of bloodshed when the rams engaged with one another. Both the wool and flesh of these sheep were greatly valued." A woman is mighty truthful not to be suspicious about what makes a man swear off. y= 3 rw gus Sf PANCLERE Ee 7 | WORLD ©i\ WOMEN + + Evening silks were never so beautl- ful in design and coloring. Small fig- ‘ured brocades are shown in mixed and single colors, A beautiful pattern is shown in mingled colors, the mult: shaded floral sprays in exquisite tones Veing east upon a light, yet dull green satin background. — ‘They are so per fectly wrought as to seem just fresh from their stems, and beggar descrip- tion Another pattern ts shown In white peau de sole, with large bouquets of roses scattered at wide Intervals over the shining surface. The roses shade from faint rose to crimson, and the pattern is repeated hardly twice tn the whole length of silk. Another beautiful silk, not so gor: geous perhaps, but as effective as any, is a white peau de sole ground with simple sprays of maiden hair fern Jaid upon it, also widely apart, There are only the two colors in this silk, if any one may except the thready red of the tiny stems, but the tones shade with exquisite taste, and the design 1s sure to attract widespread admiration. Little Ghocolate Puddinas. While one pint of milk ts heating ina double cooker, beat two eggs until light, sift in two heaping tablespoon: fuis of grated chocolate, one-fourth of @ cupful of sugar, and add to the milk, Cook five minutes, then turn into small cups which have been dipped in cold water. Serve with the following custard: Into three cupfuls of slight- ly salted, boiling milk stir one beaten egg, one-half cupful of sugar, into which has been stirred one small tea- spoonful of corn starch, two teaspoon- fuls of vanilla, and cook until thick- ened and smooth. Set in a cold place until wanted, then slip each pudding ‘onto an individual dish, place a mac- aroon or sugar kiss upon each top, and surround the base with the va: nilla custard, Pretty Visiting Costume. This new and altogether pictur. esque vogue is of monse-colored vel: vet, featured with a surpliced waist eo Coes Bie oe " fer, 7 NG ee ti TN and a vest of white satin, with ruby buttons, ‘The shoulders are. shirred and the top of the sleeves gives @ poufant effect, For Home Dressmakers. In home dressmaking the long seams are often diflenlt (o get quite straight, As an aid in seaming pieces for the skirts of dresses, cloaks, ete, adopt the following plan: Place one piece of the material on a smooth deal table and the other above it, Smooth lightly into place, and at one end of the seam rin a tape measure to the stuf and through into the wood. Draw this down to the other end of the seam and again stick in a pin, Then with long thread tack by the edge of the tape measure, and in seaming use these stitches as guiding lines. Knit Jacket Useful. A sweater, or knit jacket, ts a ne- cessity to the Woman who indulges in out of door sport in cold weather. ‘They are also useful to wear under a cont otherwise too light ami nuy be found of value throughout the year. A single-breasted coat, knit In elose Hasket stitch, in warm, rich red, ts made with loose, straight fronts like a double breasted coat and is finished with scarlet collar and cuffs, also knitted. Spangled Jackets are to be had at all prices and some really beautiful ones may be purchased at $20. One at this price is shown in a close bolero made up of a design which alternates stripes and flowered bands, It ty seal- loped and then fringed. The Jap sleeves end at the elbow aad are very loose at the top. The one described is in iridescent blue, A smart hat, intended to be worn with a specially imported set of silver gray feathers, muff and stole, is made of beaver of the same shade, with its brim covered with silver gray lace and caught at the left with a large “gtay roxe, set in frosted foliage. Such a hat and stole would, of course, abso: lutely necessitate a costume entirely of the same shade of silver gray, In Soft White Taffeta. Despite the elaboration so general this year there are some gowns of quaint simplicity that cateh and hold the feminine eye in a way that speaks volumes for their beauty, A soft white taffeta is the material in one of these simple frocks, ‘The skirt of all-round length is sparingly gored and shirred into the band. Its only trimming 1s an old-fashioned puff, with double headings shirred over a fine feather. bone cord, and set just as the top of the twotnch hem, ‘The bebe walst has a little upstanding frill as a finish for the round neck, and at the waist: line many rows of s'vrring, shaped with a decided point in front, simu late a deep girdle. Little shirred tail pieces like postilions are set into the waistline in the back, and give the whole a very jaunty air, Medallions in repousse lace are disposed In Irregu lar fashion on the bodice, Phnaas Raaandial Dictate: The woman who wishes to appear fashionable this season must insis\ upon three small but essential points when choosing her winter costume She must demand width across the shoulders, a slender waist and nicels rounded hips, Nor is it necessary. t contract the waist to give it th Proper slim effect. ‘The breadth o shoulder accentuates the smallness 0 the Waist, and a good modiste cat accomplish both with little inconvent ence to her customer. Cerise Walking Dress. In cerise cloth, a walking dress { wintry and attractive. ‘The skirt i sun plaited over a separate lining, anc Just clears the ground. ‘The fulness | taken out about the hips, and th skirt swings ont prettily ‘about th fect, A short jacket has two rows o buttons and strapped sleeves, a littl full at the tops. The revers are cui bias and hang in folds from the collar A bat of white satin beaver turns uy a little all around, banked at the back with cerise tips. For Wrinkled Heme. If the lower hem of a frock wrinkles cut off or unpick it at the edge and put @ piping there of the material or of velvet binding to mateb. The piping should be a piece cut separately on the cross, Tack in the piping cord and place the two raw edges upon the top cit edge of the dress hemmed neatly Just above the piping under: neath, This method gives firmness and strength to the edge of the dress and takes away the wrinkled appear ance, Chenille Popular in Pacis. Chenille ts being much worn ft Paris, largely in pastilles—pastilies are flat while cabochons are convex— and also In the latter form, As it fs strong. it is used to advantage in em. brotdertes, and the finest is used in making shaded flowers and leaves ‘often with delightfal results, Strips of brown leather no wider than. the chenille are used with orange and yellow shades of the latter, and. the resulting galloons are exceedingly rich, ‘Senidlac: The most elaborate braiding Is seer and there is a tendency to make the designs classic and. striking rather than small and frregular, ‘The tiny and intricate little swirls are not usec as much as the great Greek key de signs and the wonderful figures whict indicate a study of the arehitecture and art of other days and other lands A Persian design showed a Persiar deity surrounded by tiny loops 0 braid of various colors, Pair of Kitchen Economies, There are two economies in whjct the average young housewife needs tc receive caution from her elders—one to put on her apron when she goes tc the kitchen to cook or to Ox up a dain ty: the other, not to use silver forkt and spoons for kitchen purposes Wood, iron and plated spoons for suet uses are cheap and better adapted te the work. Gray Is Much Worn, Gray 1s much worn this season bp the members of: New York's mos! fashionable set, Mrs. John Jacob As tor at the oper one evening wore & frock of gray chiffon and tulle spang led with silver, ‘The bodice was eit low and the sleeves were short puffs A curious wing shaped silvered hai ornament was placed in her high coif fure. CHURCH SCANDAL INVOLVES PRELATE AND OTHERS OF THE HIGHEST SOCIAL STANDING \ f V&z \ 9/4 ti WY 7 ibd Fen, \ Jy aN @ | YW ! \\ ‘ i) l yy 5) | HH \ i \N "Y Vptt{ ze SY ay SAM | f M$ 5 q x NYY 4 Z Se : W Bi * j Bi [om > ~ hy ' i yl i aN 1” (i ey f || \ y ay eee i" a’) | A ee AHA Yd Hl i PP 1 iW a Vi p a Y Z I [ fay \- | mi ee LEV Le INGLLT W LV IVE The charges on which influential clergymen and laymen of the Prot: estant Episcopal chureh are trying to bring to trial Right Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, bishop of central Pennsylva- nia, arc in brief as follows: Criminal libel, immorality, false statements, the cireulation of a false and mali cious and defamatory reports, falsity ing, breach of ordination and conse eration vows and conduet unbecoming a bishop. In a statement Herbert Noble, a New York lawyer, representing the presenters in the ehayge againyt Bish op Talbot, gave an outline of the conrse to be followed! by his elients In the hearing of the esse. Mr, Noble charged that Bishop Talbot “has pur. sted Dr, Irvine relentlessly,” and then quoted from a decision of the si preme court of Pennsylvania in a suit bronght by Dr. Irvine against Bishop Talbot and Mrs. ENiott to this effet “Undoubtedly defendants combined to prefer charges against Irvine in the church court and acted to support the charges. They wanted him de posed from the ministry. ‘That they also hated him, and by their course possibly gratified Jess worthy — mo tives than those which prompt a trie Christian to action, is of no moment except insofar ax It mixht have af fected their credibility as witnesses before the court which tried him.” Mr. Noble denied that Dr. Irvine was deposed for immorality, denied that for twenty years he was under the ban of ceclesiastical discipline and that he was ever suspended or inhibited ax charged in the Upjohn letter, Referring to a statement in the let ter that eight bishops had held charges against Dr. Irvine, Mr, Noble sald the presenters disagree with this and added that Dr. Irvine denies that Bishop Burgess ever made a charge of any kind against him, as alleged according to a copy of the Upjohn letter. It is made clear from the develop: ments that the names of several wom en will be brought Into the ease. Mr. Noble says Mrs. Elliott, over whose church standing the — whole controversy arose, had been pre: nounced “excommunicated” by Bishop Talbot “because she had married after having obtained a divorce from her husband on grounds other than adul tery." Continuing, Mr, Noble says that hay Ing deposed Levine from ofler, thi bishop wrote on Jan, 25, 102, the letter complained of to Rev. Dr. Sam uel Upjohn, and two years after it date sent a copy of this letter to Rev Dr. John Fulton, ‘The letter referred to as the letter to Dro Upjohn signed by °Eihelbert Talbot," and charged Dr. Irvine with immorality, Irvine Talks of the Case. “Can a bishop or ought a bishop write defamatory letters In seeret in order to injure any member of the ministry? ‘This is the question whieh will be decided at the meeting of the board of inquiry,” sald Dr. Irvine in discussing the charges which have been made agains! him “My reinstatement.” continued Dr. Irvine, “is of secondary consideration when contrasted with the above query eee Political Boss Left $3,000,000, ‘The late High MeLaneblin, so long Democratic boss of Brooklyn, left an estate valied at $2,000,000, which will he equally divided between his widow and his two daughters, Mrs. Laura Roch and Mrs. William Courtenay Mrs. MeLaushlin and William Courte nay have been appointed exeeutors of the estate. Mr. Mclaughlin left no will, It was his wish that bis wife ‘and children should share his fortune equally, The division will be made by mbtual aareoment. git Ws das JB pe aa Ip => LYijp ~~ ts — yl < Sa iN N coy N= Sow NS Par 8 te. Bx NN 100.\\ ee, (s af de Y a SO f L025 EPONA ELLIALT Of course To wish to have this unjust | deposition removed, but 1 wish, also, entirely without matics, to. be vindt ated In the sight of God and my Fiesta! Bishop May Not Be Tried. Every one of the six men who lve at Huntingdon. Pa. and who are pub: lished as having signed the present ment against Bishop Ethelbert Tal bot, resulting in Bishop Tuttle ealling: a conrt of inquiry, repudiates: his sis nature, This viliates the — present- ment, as the canons require that at least three of the presenters must live in the diocese of the accused bishop. Not only are signatures repndiated but two of the loading residents. of Huntingdon mentioned as presenters: John Langdon and James Deni thorne—are decidedly opposed to hay ing Hishop Talbot placed on trial In fact, they have much sympathy. for Bishop Talbot, although Mr. Langdon at least believes the trouble might have heen satisfactorily settled long ago had the bishop cooperated with the vestrymen of St John's ehureh Much surprise was expressed) by the six men whose names figure as presenters when they saw that they were published as being responsible for having Bishop Talbot threatened with trial before a court of inquiry Dr. Irvine at Quincy. tll. After twenty years the contents of the verdict in the diocesan trial of He Rey. Ingram NOW. Tevine, who was ther dean of the Cathedral of St, John in Quine, HL, hay been made public tn its entirety, althonsh it had remained piceanholod during all that Hime, because of an understanding faced on the condition that Irvine UME not appeal frem the court's de cision suspending him from the min ry for one year ‘The verdiet found Irvine euilty of en ont of twenty specifications wich were embraced Inthe general Harges of suggestion of what is false, vppression of trith, intention to de: colve, falsification of an etflelal dow ment, falschood, false swearing and Javelvions eonduct The specifications on whieh he was found guilty covered all of these gen oral charges, and Irvine was suspend od from the ministry for one year, He remained for several months after: ward in the eity, attempted to estab Heh an independent ehureh, and held a few meetings in the opera house, ON OO Aealawk: Macca: A London jeweler has made a col ection of ancient forks used in Eng: land, which show some little known {acs about the table manners of a fow centuries azo, ‘The forks, whieh sre of solid silver, diate trom che shxe feonth century. I many eases the designs in ail this time have seareely varind in any detail, and the forks took tike those which might be bought today. ‘The old forks were a great Iusury in their time and were only used by the aristocracy, performed a couple of marriages, and other priestly funetions in detianee of the decision of the diocesan court, but flinally ave up and went East ‘The most serious charge against It vine was made by Miss Maria W. Sea body. a young woman with whose family he had become acquainted in Long Island City, where Irvine was once connected with St. James’ chureh On Aug. 25, 1881, she was married to Jd. Milf, orsanist of the Cathe dral of St. Jobo in Quiney, Hh, and two weeks later told her husband of Irvine's alleged conduct toward her while in his home Miller eaused his wife to write a statement to the bist op. and this, coupled with other al loged reasons, eased Wim to ask Ir vine to leave the ministey, Trvine re fused and the trial followed AL the trial Mrs, Miller testifled at length, ‘The verdict af the aliecesan court found the following on the specification relative to alleged: “has civious conduct, Instful getions, and attempts,” covering a period from May 1, 1882, to duly, 1881: "Guilty as charged.” Mre, Elliott Defies Her Enemies. “Bishop Talbot is a good, honoratde man and Tam his friend. 1 want the work! to know the troth and nothing Dut the truth, TP oshall be pleased if the newspapers will eontradter the cred things that have heen published about my relations wih) the: bbshep, and will show, in his trie Hight. the man who has made sneh ontraeons insinnations.” Mrs Enna Desha Rllott in her Home at Huntingdon, Pie. amade: this Statement in referenes to ber conned tion with the controversy between Hishop Ethotbert Talbot and the Rey Dr LNW, Irvine “TE want te defend the bishop.” she continued. “Lam any a woman, and an ob} one at that Why, Leven stood AS godmother to the danehter af the man whe is now making my life one of misery. T have three grown np sons and they and the good people of Hunt Ingdon are ready to defend my honor, ’Conld one innocent of siete nn truths as have been laid at my door have a better and grander defense? My hnisband ts with me Pye every thing to make me strom and brave, Dut when seandal knocks at enes door it seams as if the workt were trom bling” Bataan Kt thba: Blitakt Mrs, Emma PD Elliott, one of the central figures in the ‘Tathot Levine sensation, Nas Nad a Varied social and matrimonial eareer, She ts #0 years fof ane. is the ditushier of Gen Tesha of Mabama and a halbsister af MPs Oliver HL P. Belmont. ‘Thirty five yours ago she was an achnowledsed belle of Newport and other society centers, anit later as the brilliant Mr Cochrane she reigned in the high se. ciety of Phihutelphia SHI date, a Mrs. Coolide, she was a weleame member of the New. York exclusive sot, I is sald that she was divorced from her first two husbands and that later ber lat husband, Alexander Bl Hott, was divorced from his: first wife Tt was this diveres, on the sronnds of desertion, that led to Me refusal of the communion to Mes Billet by the Rev. EN. Wo trvine and ta the reanial followine: Re Col. Greene Adds to Interests. Col, Wiliam ©. Green, president of tho Greene Consolidated Copper came pany aut other corporations. detier of the redouhtable Lawson of Boston and In bis carlior days hero of eneonnters With sundry Shad men” in the south wert, fx about to add to Nix prexcut manifold interests membershiy Ana New York Stock Exchange firm. His partner ix to he ind S Coler, wha is the Stock Exebanae member of the house of WN. Coler & Co. and one Of Col. Greene's closest friends, sa ae Sasi / N mai 2 Ne ieee cr RAIN The pitrogen of the sell is one of its most important constituents and a fer Hlizing element that eviekly disay pears, It volitizes raphily and one ot the chief agents of holding it in the soil is the Lumnus. When the hams weeomes exhitisted the nitrogen et ‘apes: with inereased rapidity. Bx yeriments with — continuous —¥ hea growing on the same soil have shows hat the aninal and vegerable matter nthe sail disappears very rapidly Phis causes the Tiheration af the nitro xen, As long as the nitrogen is ih combination with and forms a part of the Timms, or decaying animal and veaotable matter of the soil, it fs ina stable form; Dnt as soon’as the hime fecays the nitrogen is Mberated in various gases and — soluble forms whieh are easily Jost from the soil 1t 4 the statement of scientists thar there is no element that is so readily fost as nitrogen, [eis not possible tor he mineral forms of phint food, suet 18 potash and phosphoric avid, tobe converted Into gaseous and. solith forms by the ordinary — chemien changes that take place fn the soil ts in the ease of nitrowen, Witt them the principal loss is in thet removal from the soll as phint food Hut with humus it is diferent. Thore is a loss of course of the plant food by its being used by the erops, but Much additional is leached downwar by the soil water and some is sent off in the form of ras when the humus deeays. We have an fltustration of this in the decay of piles of manure and veeetable matter, We say” that we ean smell the ammonia risine from them; but that ammonia is the cas into which the nitrogen in the decaying mass is being changed ‘The loss of soil nitrogen can onts be prevented by keeping ap the hit mus inthe soil, In most countries rotation of erops alone is able to do this. Some men bras that thes have grown wheat year after sear or the same soil for a eeneration with out loss, Dat iwi he found that sitet wil was in the hesinning very viet nots. Hy all means rotate, and Include inthe rotation some of the liseli fete Winter-Grown Asparagus. Asparagus can be grown in the eet lar in winter wherever te owner Heats Wis Howse by means of a fur nace, ‘The natural conditions in suet A cellar are favorable to the foreiny of asparagns, ay the temperature at night usually hovers around 64 de cerees and In the day time runs fron fh degrees to 8H degrees, We do not Delieve that the amateur will find much profit in this, bat some of the professtonal gardeners da, and it may Interest some of our readers to try the eyporiment and have a few messes fof tender asparasns in winter Yo got the results named, roots are Anus up in the fall before the srounc Ie too hard frozen to make digeine thom ont possible. If the roots have Doon frozen, so mueh the better, ay they then respond more quickly te the forcing process. hey are places in boxes in the collar wear the fue nace, Two or three Inches of sel shonhd be tinder the roots amd five, 9 or more Inches of earth above, as he shoobs need to he protected fram ever the dine ett that is found Ina eet hur Light bs not needed to make the Toots produce abouts, as they produce them from the substance laid up in ‘he roots, but do not take anything from the soil Nevertheless, muet “moisture is needed, as thes shoots ean not develop without the help of rood deal of water A neglect in sup plying mobsture will sown remder the Hoobs unproductive Roots should bein to produce shoobs In abont twenty five days after Chelg placed im the cellar, At some fof the stations reets placed in the collar about the first of December Nave produced four er five good ent Hines before the middle of February When the roote are done prodneiis they have to be thrown away, as they will thenceforth be of no good for the developing of taps and wew roots Farmer's Review Potata Scab. ‘The potate tubers are offen rede rongh tnd seabhy by the growth at the diveaie on thelr surfaces hose Injuries vary frome a romgh or mixer A appearances to deep seals or avers That ereatly injure the apnearance of the potato, Sineulurly enonih, seat is more commen ty the best potate seu Hhan it hs in localities where the erop fs preearinns Sandy or gravelly sell ahen first brought under enttivation ffien give a hinge per cont of seably potatons. but atter one or more erop bf alfalia have been plowed under his tendenes ts partially corrected Michigan Parmer Nitrogen Costly. Nitrogen fx the most costly element in feeds for animals on tie farm, The hitrogenons or protein fools make tone, musele, har, wool, exits, mili, ote, and it be this clase of foods that |e most Jackin on most farms. Good Jairymen and breeders make up this tofeleney by. supply tie nitrogen and fave practically solved the question of profitable agsiculture which all the selontiots In the country have. this far failed to do throuh the depart. ment of aeriouiture, -Barnum’s Mids land Farmer. THE RISING SON, LEWIS WOODS,......Buriness Manager. Published Every Week RISING SON PUBLISHING CO GFSUBSCRIVTION RATES: een AM itnntaxieee) oe ym moaths Tani as care wonthe ee 6 ‘month ; ry} Burctly paid tn advance Matered at the Post Office at Kanaas (ity, as Second Class Matter. © Correspondents wanted tn every city and town in this state. Write ua. Alluews matter intended for pub- Moation should reach our office not Jas fer than Tuesday, of each week and dust be sigued by the writer not for publication, but as guarantee of auth- enticity, YFICE:—No. 117 Wost Sixtl. St, Kansas City, Mo. Advertising Rates, fone 19ch, one {asertion 1 Gor one Inch, earn autiacqiuend insertion | a Fortwo teaches, three tonttcsssrsecss ve, 800 Fortwo inches: att month ae) Bee iee testes: ue month 200 jor two lucas twelve woutha S180) 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. The Son agrees with) President Jesse. The Nexro needs education that will prepare him for every walk of life, An edueated farmer, carpen ter, blacksmith, shoemaker, needs not to seck for long for employment, In fact, all kinds of skilled labor are in demand. The commonest things are dlone now with skill. This sort of work must come from the sehools, The common schools are conducted not to produce artists or men with a genius for producing learned themes, but the people do pay taxes for their support in order to train good citizens, A good citizen is a man who respects the rights of his neighbor, who sup: ports and protects his family, andewho floes his duty to home, chureh and state, Work of any sort is good dis: cipline. We must work to live right and we must work aecording to the demand that the times make, ‘To the Jackson county Republicans: You have told the colored brother that if he proved loyal and you were suc: cessful, what a share of the plume he would receive, ‘The colored brother fook you at your word, You have car. vied the county, and you have carried the state, but thins far not a mother's son of us has yet received a thing in Jackson county. What kind of prayer and hymn do you propose to put up to the blaek man at the next election? We have been taught by the highest authority that he who is faithful shall be rewarded, What have you to of fer but a slap in the face? Year after year the ery has heen: °if the Ne xroes would only be loyal!’ Wherein is your loyalty to the loyal being dem onstrated? Thomas KB. Watson, late Populist candidate for president, recently told an audience at Crawfordsville, Ga., that Southern politicians keep the Ne: gro question alive simply to snstain their local politieal monopoly. It sub. serves the same purpose for them as the old “bloody shirt’ question used to perform for the Republican party of the North. As long as the whites ear be kept solidified by shouting nts ker.” it is not necessary to strain thei feeble intellect in. trying ta disenss really intellectual issues, Of eourse the alleged fear of “Negro domina tion” and social equality. is a mere pretense, What they are really afraic of is losing the honor and offices ‘The Freeman, The Son certainly agrees with this sentiment A.W. Lloyd, candidate for commis: sioner of public buildings and grounds at Jefferson City, Mo, is a member of the state committee, He is grand chancellor of the jurisdiction of Mis: souri, Ko of P. Mr. Lloyd ds a eitizen of St. Louis, a man of energy and abil: ity, ‘The Son is very desirous to see such a deserving man receive some of the recognition that hard work and faithfulness on the part of the best neRroes deserve. | ‘This is the beginning of a new year, Lot us one and all honestly come face to face with ourselves, view our faults and shortcomings and resolve to be hypocrites no longer, Let us. strive for a whole year to live up to those new resolutions for our own good here and our betterment hereafter, No weak people or nation can make itself stronger unless it has a sure foundation upon which to build, ‘That foundation must be morality, thrift and a united brotherhood, For years we have been meeting with different objects and listening to long papers full of good thoughts, but it has been fittle--very little—that has resulted from these profound thoughts, We believe that music has gone far enough, What we want now is doers, Let us put into action some of these great thoughts, We have had enough papers. In quo tations they are all about the same, Ti cannot be too strongly urged that our people should take a more active part in doing their duty as citizens The day has passed when the hand outstretched for favors will win re speet for us as men, or confidence in our ability to manage affairs for our: selves ‘The Republican party must follow the example set by the strong man in the White Honse, and learn to dis eriminate between the worthy and un worthy and to reward the reliable wherever they may be found, Fall in line with the American fdea of progress, get_a foothold and then show that you are a part of the coun: try that promotes law and order, John J. Shine will sueceed Colonel FE. S. Jewett as city ticket agent. Mr. Shine has had experience all along the Tine and is well fitted for the new po: sition, ‘The Son wishes him success, COLONEL E. 8. JEWETT. The Son is very glad of the reco nition given Colonel B.S. Jewett by the Missouri Pacific railway, His pro: motion comes as a direct reward for many years’ serview in this company, which he has helped to further from its beginning to its present prosper: ‘ous condition Me All who are interested in the wel fare of Kansas City ean but feel what Colonel Jewett’s integrity, generosity and general usefulness in this com: munity can never be too much appre: ciated, WAS A PARTY'S STRENGTH. Tt was the work of Mr. Kerens that brought the party up to the point Whore success was possible under well dirceted efforts, No maf#in Mis: souri, living or dead, has done more for the Republican party than the Hon, R. C. Kerens, who has been sur feited on empty honors only, He as sisted it when it) was wabbly and weak, the plaything of a powerful and overfed opposition; he nursed it when it was sick and in despair over bitter defeat, and ont of actual gloom he would fetch a ray of hope to cheer it for another battle; in its puny days he gave it nourishment, brought it health, strength and self-confidence, found it friends in other states, and brought it helpful attention from, national sources. His time and his eash and his influences have been given to it; so tit if actual work, and lots of it, counts anything, Mr. Kerens should He several laps ahead of anybody | Kingston, sereary. | STANDING UP FOR KERENS. Solon T. Gilmore, senator-eleet from the Fifth distriet, declared it his: pur: pose to vote for RL C. Kerens for sen- ator. “Lam influenced by two reasons,” said Mr. Gilmore, “The first is that his wide knowledge of public men and the influence, through traditions of his party and his vast business con- nections he will have in the senate, will allow more to be done for the state generally than any other candi: date seeking the honor, ’The second reason is founded on his fealty to the party when no re: ward could be paid him, 1 think his m rvices to the party, in combination with his standing and influence, make him the logical candidate of the Re: publican party.’—Kansas City World. The Son does not tuink the action on the part of the several colored physicians banding together to open a dirig store a very plausible step, while of course it Is their privilege to do so. We have two druggists in the com- minnity who shonld have been allowed to Ket on thelr feet, so to speak, We do not believe that it is right for pro: fessional men to act narrow and con: hiving and try to Kobble up all, It would look better for them to adopt the policy, “Live and let live.” ‘The veto of Mayor Neff on the gas franchise should be sustained by the public, The common council ought to remember that serious blunders have been made heretofore by giving away valuable franchises, which not only did not give to the city its share of profits, but which came in conflict with the wishes of the public, ax in the instance of the Metropolitan street railway franchise, The people have not as yet secured a square deal from that company. It has the fran chise and the monopoly. Now the people can “walk the floor,” Why have we not some creditable stores in Kansas City, We say educa: tion solves the problem . We have plenty of edueation—then why not de liver the goods? | It has been a long time since we 4 Hot Springs Special. Long looked for improved Train Service between Kansas City and Hot Springs, Arkansas, and return daily, is now provided for by eo z8 ese 8S & at a | 1|8 e 8% %e ra Siar Ss ae = = 3 se - Se = 4 ; zs eB 5 Leaving Kansas City at 12:01 noon daily. Arrive in Hot Springs to Breakfast. This train runs via Paola, Garnett, Neodesha, Indepen- dence (Kan.), Coffeyville, Ft. Smith and Little Rock. Through Sleepers and Chair Cars (all seats free) to Hot Springs. A special feature on this “Hot Springs Special” is the Elegant Dining Cars. This train connects at Little Rock with the Iron Mountain Trains for all Southeastern Points in Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas. For Excursion Tickets, Sleeping Car Berths and all information, E. S. JEWETT, Passenger and Ticket Agt. 901 Main Street. KANSAS CITY, MO. Telephone 740 Hickory, heard that song, “You may have all this world but give me Jesus." But the white folks got all the world before you quit singing and in such a way that you will get but very little of It. ‘There was a time when the Negro was unitel in chureh work, but he is getting split on that proposition now. Certain opponents of Mr, Kerens within the party press to question his loyalty to the president and attempt to make capital against him with as- sertions by innuendo that he is a per- sona non grata to the president, and that the latter will decline to recognize him in making federal appointments, even though elected, and this sort of a campaign is persistently maintained by aid of the Democratic press, notwith- standing the fact that the president has stated in unequivocal language that he will keep hands off in the sen- aorial contest and will be satisfied with whatever selection may be made by the Republicans of Missouri upon whom the responsibility rests.” The battle is over and victory is ours, The colored boys helped to bring it about and they desire to share the spoils. If they cannot get the plums they will come in for the leay- ings. Now the colored boys are in good humor, and it is in the power of the Republican organization to keep them in that mood, It may 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 wicked at- tempt of the World and Judge Parker to blacken the character of the Pres dint of the United (Sates, ‘The Son is still hollowing for Kerens for senator. We would rejoice to see the Hon, Gardiner Lathrop haye anything he wants. | eee 1 wonder if the time will ever come when he will see the wisdom of uniting his forces as other races of people do, for the good of the whole race? | ‘The Negro has only yet learned how | to bury one another, but how to raise one another in uniting for our mutual [enefit, the Negro has been near eich eal Does edueation mean to sit down and do nothing? In our community we have at least 35,000 and the best we can offer today is little restaurants, a barbershop, two little undertaking ¢s- tablishments and a one-horse paper, And yet some say we are progressing, What Japanese Trains Are Like, ‘The railway traveler in Japan buys fa first, second or third-class ticket; or, if he wishes to go cheaper still, de can get a ticket entitling him simp: ly to stand on the platform! Many of the cars can be exiered either from the side or the end. ‘The principal dif- ference between the first and second= ciass coaches 1s the color of the up. holstery, None of the cars are very clean, Many of the third-class coaches could serve, without much alteration, as ordinary. pigstys. This is all the more remarkable when the Incompar- able cleanliness of the Japanese home life, even of the humblest, 1s taken into consideration.—-Booklovers Magas ine. Another Frivolous One. “I suppose,” sald the frivolous pas fenger to the gloomy captain, “that you call it the donkey engine because it hasn't much horse power.” A. OC. HOWARD Tr now ready to fill your orders for coal and feed in large or small quantities, Home Phone 1695 Main, Street number 1025 Pacific, es yaeetiatteeetennateneereomas Jous P. TILLMOR, Eetablished isss. Wat. J. CAmPnens. ne TEL Or & CAMPBELL Mn RREGRen es Oar Bee ee TS, DIAMOND PAINT CO. (DEVOE.) PAINT, VARNISH, BRUSHES. C. A. CAMPBELL, Mgr. Tel. 946. 1214 GRAND AVENUE eye tila naan iia, At the Vendome Dancing Academy. 1734 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. DANCING EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY EVENING ADMISSION 200. Class Every Wednesday Evening, Thursday Afternoon and Saturday Evening. ADMISSION 250. MUSIC BY ITIPERIAL ORCHESTRA PROFESSOR VEFFREY BUSS, Instructor of Dancing. BD. A. WILLIS, Manager. Home Phone NEVER 6327 Main SLEEP Hotel New Port Neatly Furnished Rooms and Cafe Near Corner Eighteenth and Tracy, 1807 Tracy Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. MRS. V. L. NORTH, Prop. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. A Quiet Game. If mother has asked you not to get dirty after you have dressed for a drive, and you do not know just what to do to amuse yourself, get some one to play the following little game with you. It Is very simple, but will help the time to pass pleasantly: “I see a color you don't see,” says one. “What color may it be?” asks the other, “It may be pink (or some other col: or in the room.) says the first in: quirer, Then he begins the question. ing. Is it the paper? The ribbon on your hair? The pink in the dolt's dress? And so on, until happily the guesser mentions the exact article of pink that has been chosen. The sue. cessful guesser than taket her turn ut saying, “I Kee a color that you don't noe."-—Washington Star, i 9 oN hei nh, Dh) y ti Ae) “He is rich,” said Beau | \ iy uy Brummell, “‘who inherits a 4 | t 4— taste in dress.” : fc CF ys i T IS OUR FUNCTION to gratify that taste and todevelopit. Our Suits y and Overcoats are cut on the lines approved by fashion. Si2 to $30 For Holiday Gifts we show complete lines of Neck- wear, Gloves, Suspenders, Canes, Umbrellas, and everything of the best quality. Prices reasonable. Browning, King & Co. HENRY CASPER, Manager. 11th & Main Sts. Fruit Jar Battery. that somebody asked if | ever made a battery out of my mother’s preserve jars, 1 will answer, yes. First I obtained a few old dry bat- teries and took the carbons out of Fiat | if ; | CARB Se fziNe | ren CARBONE G— zine ag ‘ LAW AT : i le: Yy HWA IE ! ZAC He |B Ae : | tA | | | eee . them; at the store I obtained a num- ber of zincs (stick) sometimes called pencil zines, I then washed out a few jars and made pasteboard covers like Fig. 1. T then put the zine and carbon fn the cover, filled the Jar two-thirds full of sal ammoniac and put in egrbon and zine, my battery then being com- athte. THEODORE SMITFI,, DRUGGIST. Two Stores: 908 E. TWELFTH STREET, .805 INDEPENDENCE AVENUE. PHONES {Hontait Grand Puones{Jeraivo wala KANSAS CITY, MO. Dealer in Drugs, Toilet articles, School Supplies, Stationery, Etc. Give us an Order by Phone and See if We are not there with the Goods, Ghe Stoeltzing Stowe and Hardware Co. <= ~stretrests f Beat Stoves Made. perenne Putian an ge . ee Wholesale ond Real Peninsular : Ss Steel Ranges, Stee! Oven Cook Stoves, Gave Bur i os | ners, Furnaces, and all goods made by the... i Peninsular Stove Ce. essesses mnie ar <8 Oak Stoves, Hehill Bieel Ranges aad Farunces ny sil es I TIN WORK @ Speocieity. : 9) cl i i seeeecA mow line of....++ | (aa Window end Door Soreans end Retrigeratore | x i as I "Phone 145¢. iis 1329 Grand Ave, The Rat and the Dove. ‘There can be no donbt that strong attachments are formed between ant: mals, and that they are capable of emotions of pity and acts of generos- ity, not only toward their own kind, Dut even toward creatures of ancther gpecies. A gentleman who had a great num: ver of doves used to feed them near the barn, At such times not only chickens and sparrows, but also rats, were accustomed to come and share the meal. Ove day he saw a large rat fill its cheeks with kernels of corn and run to the coach house, repeating ‘this performance several times, On going over to investigate, he found a Jame dove eating the corn which the rat had bronght Such an action or the part of human beings would be looked upon as a charitable desire to relieve the necos sities of a helpless cripple—and we must also so consider it in the case of the rat Tada Gosden @ateh, This is a source of endless delight to a little girl just able to use her needle, ‘The necessary requisites are a small aquare of green art denim, some pret: ty remnants of flowered chintz, and a small box of tiny crystal beads, If the little one is able to sit and use her needle, she will take unlimited pleasure in clipping the flowers and foliage from the chints and transfer: ring them to her square of green in artistic and odd effects. The crystal Deads are a good substitute for dew, and with a little Ingenuity can be most effectively placed. When com: pleted the garden patch can be utilized for 8 pillow top, or can be made the nucleus of a quilt. CASH a cite: CREDIT. \\YAj gig FREE, est tees rast i> Bg. Bian Wat CMS ERG) ister RANTS) Bie, anna CX] NS {[V ‘Wagons. SOD, i wm, aan SAE NE ; RISING SON. YE _Ghiem Daf ee eed ies? Weir ie st H7 as ] } iN A) CR 59 A) | (i i labman A. W. Walker, Agent, Lexington, Mo G. H. JONES, 612 Jersey avenue, Remember please— It’s the little bits we collect here and there That enables us to run from yenr to year.” Mrs. Emily Price of Columbia, Mo., is visiting her sister, Mrs. John Lange, Mrs. John Hill received news a few days ago of the death of her niece, Mrs. Mattie Jacobs, formerly Mattie Clark, of Richmond, Mo. Miss Mattie Shepherd, matron of the Old Folks and Orphans’ home, has een lying at the point of death with pneumonia, Miss Gilmore, of Teen: worth, @ trained nurse, Is in attend: ance upon her. Mr. John Hill, who is suffering from a xecond stroke of paralysis and is hopelessly {I1, was confirmed by Bishop Atwill last week. Mrs. John Lange {s confined to her home from {IIness and is under med- ical treatment. ‘The manager of the Son will be out of the city for a few days after Janu- ary 10, and our city readers are re- quested to call at the office and pay up their subscriptions. A discount of 25 per cent will be allowed upon all bills paid before January 10, Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Perry gave a reception Friday evening, December 30, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stewart of Montreal, Canada. The marriage of Miss Josephine Haggard and Mr. Calvin Briscoe of ‘Topeka was performed Monday even- ing, December 26, at the home of the bride’s mother in Columbia, Mo, The presents were handsome and many. Among them were $100 in gold from her uncle, John Lange, and also $100. in gold from Blind Boone. The Son wishes them a happy and prosperous life. Miss Alberta Bailey of Oberlin Col- lege is visiting her parents. Mr and Mrs, Fred R, Clay of Brook field, Mo., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Davis, her sister, of 1609 Lydia avenue, during the holidays. They will return home for the New Year, and their stay in the city was a pleas- ant one, Miss Lula Robinson of Missouri City was visiting relatives in this city, She returned home Saturday. Mrs. Woodard of 1015 Charlotte street, entertained Saturday evening a number of her friends, Refreshments were served and Miss Lula Bradford was a star at the plano. Miss Aytchee Davis, formerly of this city, who has been residing in Ports: mouth, Washington, is in the city vis- iting her mother and sister, Mr, James Sragh is. visiting his cousin, Mrs, A, Lyle, 1025 Charlotte street, Miss Minnie Beecham of Liberty, Kansas, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Sarah Moore. We are glad to know that Rev. W, H. Wheeler of Asbury chapel called upon his congregation for a collection and took his offering to the citadel in time for it to be a help in the prep: aration of that Christmas feast. Every time a Negro does such an act he demonstrates his fitness to lead his people, ‘The fifth annual meeting of the; Missouri State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs met Friday morning in the A. M. E. church, Miss Anna H, Jones of this city read a very in- teresting paper. ‘There will be @ manual training school for our colored boys and girls next year OUR VISITORS. Miss Edmonia Hubbel is at home for the holidays, Pete Finney and his wife spent part of the holidays in Liberty, Mo, and were the guests of Rev, Mr. Bryant. Mrs, Frank Buffkins of St. Louis visited her mother and other relatives during the holidays, ‘The twentieth anniversary of the Negro Teachers’ Association met in Columbia December 27, 28 and 29 and held a very pleasant session, ‘The meeting was called to order at 1:20 p. m. ‘by the president, J, H, Ken: ner, The address of welcome was made by the mayor, Hon, F. W, Nied- ermeyer, and the response by J. W. ‘Daniel of Lincoin Institute. President B. F. Allen's paper on “Some of the Characteristics of Lin- coln Institute,” contained many good things. Mrs. J. 8, Yates read a very thoughtful paper on “Thought Power in Education.” Mrs. Alice Richardson of St. Louis presented kindergarten work in a most thorough manner, Prof. C. O. Coffin of Kansas City read a good paper, The people of Columbia received the visitors most cordially. They threw open their homes to them and enter tained them in a most hospitable man ner. W. T. Carrington, state superintend ent of education, visited the associ ation Thursday morning and made ¢ short address along the lines of edu cational advancement, in Missourl President Jesse of the Missour State University accepted an invita tion to be present. In his address h remarked that Lincoln Institute is no so great an institution as it should be It should be to Missouri what Tuske gee is to Alabama and what Hamptot is to Virginia, ‘This stirred up a ver itable hornet’s nest. Many rose t protest. The following officers were elected Prof, Charles H. Brown of St. Louis president; W. H. Harrison of Ind¢ pendence, vice president; Miss Mit .jnie Montgomery of St. Joseph, assis ant secretary; Prof. J. KE. Henifor editor, The association adjourned Thursda jevening to meet in Jefferson City D | ceraber 27 and 28, 1905, 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. Mrs. W, H. Owens, 2424 Flora has four large rooms to rent. Gas in every room and water in kitchen, $10 per month, John Titus Feterman, the brilliant author and reader, ix open for engage- ments, Will read and recite from his new book, (in press and out in a few days, “Tragedies and Comedies, or Joe and Jane's Adventures in Kansas City and St. Louis." His terms are very reasonable, Address 3021 East | 18th street. San Joe Sephus, Agt. Mrs. Mamie Durant Vincent has now opened her dressmaking parlors and ladies’ tailoring school at her resi- dence, 1228 Walnut street, for the benefit of our girls and ladies. | —— Flint, Ala., June 1th, 1900, Dear Sirs: I have used your Ozon- ized Ox Marrow only a short while and it has improved my hair wonderfully, ROTHA FRANCIES. When the collector comes to you for your subseription, why not pay him? Why tell him you want to see Woods? To my colored friends, I want the money, and they can see me any time. It does seem you ought to know when the year is out, I wish you all a merry Christmas and that you will live long and prosper. Many thanks to you for past favors. | Dr. Smith succeeds because he | knows his business and attends to it He contributes liberaly to churches and all charitable institutions, We | should always support @ man of this Kind, The editor wishes him continued Mianhan’ The Fan Tan club celebrated New Year's day by keeping open house at the homes of Miss Ella Lund and Mrs Amanda McAfee, Nos, 2108-2110 High land Ave, The houses were beautiful ly decorated with cut and potted flow: ers and plants, At Mrs, Lind's lunch: con was served and at Mrs, MeAfee's there was dancing and card playing A delightful feature was the singing of the W. C. quartette, consisting of Messrs, Leftridge, Roulette, Pleasant and Lambert, Among those present "were Mr. and Mrs, W. G, Mosely, Mr and Mrs, A, D, Parron, Mr, and Mrs Dayton, Mr, and Mrs. Goodwin, Mr and Mrs, Harmon, Mr, and Mrs. Win ston, Mr, and Mrs, Wilson, Mr, ani Mrs, Lemons, Miss Irene and Adi MeAfee, Mrs, Hattie Haynes, Misse: Mayes, Clark, Bruin, Walden, Wilson Dessie Johnson, Davis, Mrs, Emmi Jobnson, Mrs, Lynn, Ella Cole, Parks ROOMS FOR RENT—LIGHT HOUSE- KEEPING At 1816 Wedland avenue. Heat and gas furnished, Rooms $3.00 and $3.50. A desirable place for anyone wishing & room at a home-like place, Bath free. Mr. H, Patton is the proprietor of ‘@ 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 10:30 at night. Good service, Hot creme de menthe, claret phos: phate, coffee, chocolate, root beer, beet tea, Roman punch, Jamaica ginger, English Breakfast tea, clam and to mato bouillon, are some of the leaders at McCampbell & Houston's Hot Soda Fountain. To my friends and relatives of this city: 1 guess you are all wondering about the separation of Mr. Allen G. Samuels and Mrs, Rosa V, Samuels. It is all about Miss E. T. Harris of this city. When he met her he told her that he was not married and he lied, He has eleven children in Shreveport. The oldest one is 24 years old and the youngest one is 11, months old, He has forsaken his home for Miss EB, T. Harrison. He is ia Kansas City with her. When he was in the city of Shreveport he claimed to be @ great preacher, and he has Hed to the people and he had to leave. By the help of God I will raise my chil- dren in the way that they should go, and may they not go astray. So help mo God! MRS. ROSA V. SAMUELS. NOTICE. Dr. Smith, the druggist, has no in. terest in the “Stock Drug Company,” which is to be opened by some of the physicians of our city, but will con: tinue to do business at 908 EB, 12th street and 805 Independence avenue, Dr, Smith is serving up-to-date hot drinks. Give him a call. Gentlemen: Please send me two bot tles of the Ozonized Ox Marrow for the hair. Think it Is one of the best hait pomades made, MRS. JOHN GRAF. CASH IS THE WAY. Reading notices and announcements will always be rated as advertise ments, and when such is sent in te our office cash must accompany it. Bince Mother's Gone. Since mother's gone T miss the smile And gentle voice that used to cheer My'hosish heart day after day: And put to fhe each care and fear Which chanced to be along my. wis Nol more about the humble hume Tse her ply her dally. cave. Or hene her sing nome sacred song, Or, plead with God in fervent. pray t Tor right to trumph over wane T love to hear some sacred song Gr hallowed hivmn she used te sine Or pray. the praser she sed to tay “phat t to Kim may rnly cling Who! was her comfort day by day ‘The mem'ry of her holy lite Remainge to cheer me on my. way Rirengtiens my soul ated press ort Amd ites ik) from Mags th dis Too that aweet place where mule? kone HAMCN. Turner, in Washington Pe Fun with a Fly Seesaw. Here is an amusing little trici, ta! you will find lots of fun; Stick a lon Jead pencil in the end of a spool of thread so that it will stand upright Now get a piece of very stiff blotting paper and from it eut a strip tw Inches wide and abont a foot lone On each end of this put a drop of molasses or syrup. Now balance the strip of blotting paper, with the syrup side up, on the point of the pencil. You should have - Xg | See-Saw in Operation. two players, although one will do. Each player chooses an end of the paper. In a moment a fly will alish! on one end, attracted by the syrnp and that end of the paper will £9 down a trifle. Then another fly wil! light on the other end, or perhaps se eral will come there for the sweet and things will be reversed. As more flies come, alighting on th: ends, the paper will lean first th) way, then that, til it overbalance and falls to the tables. Then the player whose end grew so heavy as tv cause the tumble wins We would not advise you to try this in the house, but rather out of doors in the warm sunshine, where the flies will not bother any one. A HALL FOR RENT At 529 Grand Avenue, Just the Place for Lodges $25 per Month. FRANK OLENO CO. "itirg srry" Furnished Rooms : To Rent. Meals at All Hours. At 1005 E. {8th St. G. SMITH. Propr. emenneneneeeemeneienmmmmmeettn Tia LIGata DRAGER Not all of the delights of spring are for the country boy. We who live in the city have a host of them, and can see many a strange and pleasing sight If we keep our eyes open, A few days ago, while riding my bicycle down Madison avenue, I heard the twittering of sparrows, and, looking up, saw in the mouth of the stone lion ‘on the corner of the building of one of the city’s prominent clubs the re: mains of a last year's nest, and two sparrows getting ready to build a new one for this year. It was such a novel place for a bird to choose for housekeeping that I stopped and made a sketch of It. While standing on the opposite corner sketching, the policeman of that “peat” came over to talk with me. He scemed pleased that I should have noticed the birds. He sald that the sparrows had been keeping house there for several years He had often stopped to watch them Duild their nests, and later feed theit little ones, which later would play around the lion's head, sitting on his nose or eyebrows as saucily ax could be, as much as to say: “You may look fleree, but—wHo's afraid?”"—st Nicholas. Pindertoy. ee N ale wo 0° KO 9) 9Q Co bo ie Y AN ‘ ASO) f ia Ro This frolicsome frog needs only to be cut out and the three parts pierced through the dots with a pin, sticking the pin into a cork or stick to hold it firm. If pasted on an old visiting card it will have more body and last longer Queer Lakes. One of the most singular lakes in the world is the celebrated Pitch Lake of the Island of Trinidad. This lake spreads over an area of ninety-nine acres, and its surface is composed of ‘one great floating mass of asphaitum, seamed with veins of clear water, From it and a similar lake in Vene- auela, the world’s supply of asphalt is drawn, says the Washington Post, ‘The Pitch Lake ix a bideous place so far ax smelis are concerned, for the air all about it is heavy with nox: fous vapors, and from the center of the Jake gushes a fountain of liquid asphaltum, in which there float and break bubbles containing most hor rible gases The workmen go out on the surface of this lake and cut great slabs of asphaitum, which are carried away But the next morning the hole they left Is filled up again with the piteh, which has risen during the night, #0 that the supply seems to be inexhaust able. ‘This curious lake was discovered by Sir Walter Raleigh when be landed in Trinidad in 105, on bis way to the mouth of the Orineco in seareh of EL Dorado, Another strange lake is situated on fa peninenla which juts out into the Caspian Sea, The whole surface of this lake is covered with # ernst of salt so thick and strong that a man ean ride across it on horseback with afety, In Central Asia, near the Caspian Sea, is a lake of beantiful rose water while the banks are covered with salt crystals as white ax snow. From the waters of this lake there arises a flowertike odor, ‘The color and the odor are supposed to he eaused by vegetable matter in the depths There used to be a enrions lake on the top of the Voleano de Agua. in Guatemala, 14.000 fect above the level of the sea, He was net fed by springs nor by rivers, but was eaused hy ac cumulations of snow and rain in fet, was an immense reservoir I lasted for centuries, Then, one day, the side of the lake gave way, and down the waters rolled, dealing death and de stenetion, and digcing a great barray ca, or ravine, in the mountainside which ds still vicible No Daylight Weddings. ‘A Russian bride is not submitted to the trying ordeal of appearing in white satin and lace in cold, broad daylight. The wedding takes placo by candle light in @ drawing room. C. Hi. Countee. W. B. Countec, Countee Brothers, WEARERS AND z uLicensed Embalmers.. 4 East 12th St, ‘Phone 780 Grand, —Carrieges Furnished fer ‘WN Occasions. §=KANSAS CITY. MO R. E. SHRYOCK Real Estate & Loan Co. We wish all a Merry Christmas anda Haeey. New Year. To our friends and the public we extend thanks for past favors and re- spectfully solicit their future business. Telephone 1432 Main. Loans and Investment Securities. 705-6 Postal Telegraph Bldg. “Real Estate and Rentals. KANSAS CITY, MO. Bee eo eee Oe Oe eee ee eee sLincoln Institute? ° Lincoln Institute 3 @ MISSOURI STATE SCHOOL FOR COLORED YOUTH ¢ $ BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, A. M. President. $ © DEPARTMENTS: a : COLLEGE, NORMAL, PREPARATORY, IN- < e DUSTRIAL AND DOMESTIC, e > PoE Mitel Trajatuge Fehonts Mone. Cinsieumental’ aid Voea) 3 e DEMTing (Hine Aria andl Meshasionl)y Carpentry. Weollwark ae e ing, Macksmithing, Machinery, Shoe mating, arming and @® e Gardening, Printing, Typewriting, Sewing, Cooking and @ © Laundering. @ @ ADVANTAGES: (i001 Location, Free Tuition, New Dormitories @ 4 with Modern Improvements, Ruildings Heated by Steam, @® Reais ke Guate in ua eee e toearn their way. All applicants must present testimonials @ : of good moral character. For further information write to i © BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, A.M.,L.L.D., Pres, @ : JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI, s SSSOSSHSSSHSHSSSSSSOSOHSSOSOHSOOS KELLEY’S) FLOUR BEST €@ Kelty's Best | | Beats all the Rest. HIGH PATENTS Kelly Milling Co aT st ng Brenna | Pp | <> | Dept. 4036 cast St. Land a SWONDEREUT ¢ WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By . 4% y | 2 ie. AVG BVGS sr RE ee OZONIZED OX MARROW Eber rcni var : HSS eS By teat ara Toutajoneee Tteuembee that tie Oratin Uibaiiha Ox Barton mats r br sutae Ske ears ict ere FTEs Gigs And eae eretantcry eh ilad IE cere taraetsia ORONTZED OX NARROW CO, | § SP RRERER om annoy ee, | 87 Aeente wanted every nere i @o TO THE E. Z. Barber Shop UNEEDA SHAVE AND HA'R CUT. Cc. A, EVANS 107 East (4th, Kansas Clty, Mo UNEXCELLED SERVICE VIA Y aye a TO POINTS IN Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Ceorgia, Florida AND THE SOUTHEAST, AND TO Kansas, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas AND THE SouTrweEST, ‘The Famous Health and Pleasure Resorts, EUREKA SPRINCS AND HOT SPRINGS, ARKANSAS, Reached most conveniently by this Route. Hound Trip Homescekers’ Tickets at rate of ONE FARK plas $2; om aate first and (hind Tuesday Of each months agra ean, Baa lee raerin Sito UNEN sao, Ransae Cit, MO. STRICTLY FIRST-CLAS@ seesO THR. oe 4 CENTURY Dining Roo : 5923 Market Street, ST. LOUIS, MQ ' MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Oysters in any Style. Services striotigl first-class. Ladies and Gents dine up tains. ZT. JORDAN, Masagen ```markdown ``` Snapshot A swan and eyegrets, nothing more, Background of silver, reedy shore, Dim shapes of rounded trees, the high Effulgence of a summer sky. Only a snapshot. Just a flash, And it was fixed—the mimic wosh, The parent bird on soaring show, Her fussy little fleet in tow, The all-pervading salty haze, The white lights on the waterways— A secret that never was before A scene that will be—never more! Alas! for us. We look and wait, And labor but to imitate. In with for new effects we seek— Earth's briefest moment is unique! —Austin Dobson in Harper's Magazine. THE BENEFIT OF DOUBT BY KENNETT HARDS It was growing dark in the jury room and eleven of the twelve sworn to well and truly try the case of the State of Wyoming against Scotty Burrows looked at each other in gloomy silence. It was now the second day of their incarceration and little Sam Calloway still hung out for acquittal. Sam was the exception to the general gloom. He appeared quite cheerful as he sat tilted back in a chair with his feet on the window ledge, whistling a tune and staring out into the twilight. "You kin stop that derned whistlin' anyway," said one of the jurors savagely. "Jess as you say," said Calloway. "I know I ain't what youn call musical. I was doin' it jest to pass the time." Phil McMasters, the bulking red-bearded foreman of the jury, pushed J. H. "I'm goin' ter argy this out with Sammy." back his chair and went over and took a seat on the window sill. "See here, Sammy," he said, "are you any kin to this yer defendant, Scotty Burrows?" "No, sir," answered Calloway. "He ain't no kin o' mine." "Does he owe you money?" "Nary cent." "Then what are you so plague goned mule-headed about this for?" "I ain't mule-headed," said Calloway, "it's you men. If you'd come around to my way o' thinkin' we'd be out of here inside o' five minutes. I ain't in favor o' stayin' here any longer than I have to; $2 a day ain't no charms for me, but I ain't goin' to railroad Scotty just because I want a drink." "Didn't you hear the evidence?" "Sure thing." "Well, the yearling passed Hank Lamotte on the keen jump with his tail up and Scotty's brand smokin' on his side an' made straight for the Half Circle A cow, an' when Hank looked down in the cookie he seen Scotty stompin' out the fire. That evidence wasn't contradicted." "Sure thing it was. Didn't you hear Scotty call him a lying half breed pup right thar im court? What makes you so plum anxious ter convict?" "I ain't anxious," said the foreman, "but I want this cattle rustlin' stopped and I want ter go home an' tend to my business some time." "So do we," came the chorus. "Oh, let up, Sammy," cried a juror. "Thar ain't no sense in actin' this a way." "You leave him to me, now," said the foreman in a menacing tone; "you've had your say aplenty." He turned to the obstinate juryman. "Sammy," he resumed, "I'll give you a show. I'll draw straws with you to see whether we acquit or convict." "I never go against another man's game," said Calloway, "sides which, it's im' oral. See here, McMasters, I ain't tongue like you. You've been arglyn' ever sence we was close-herded in here an' when I've tried ter say authin' on Scotty's side o' the case you've bellered me down, same's you've bellered down the others. All the same, I know Scotty didn't brand that Half Circle A calf, an' I'll stay by that till there's a skatin' carnival on the brimstur lake." The foreman's brows knit in an ugly frown. Slowly and with his eyes fixed threateningly on Calloway he beaned to "Any of yer wife's kln?" "Nixie Bill." "Does he hew" "Nary cent." remove his cont. Then he rolled his shirt sleeves above his brawny, hairy elbows. Calloway turned pale. "Gents," said the foreman, "extrordinary cases sometimes require extrordinary arguments. I'm a goin' ter angry this out with Sammy an' I don't want none o' you mixin' in the debate. You might as well turn your faces to the wall. You can hear the points I make jest as well." One by one the ten turned their chairs about, laughing and joking as they did so, but obviously in unwholesome fear of the knotty fists of the forculous McMasters. "Better own up Phil's right, Sammy," called one. "I come from Missoura." drawled Calloway, rather tremulously. A sudden crash succeeded, then a volley of profanity from the foreman of the jury, and the noise of a lively scuffle. Another and a louder crash indicated that the table had overturned. The jurymen writhed in their chairs. A bang and a sound of rending wood. It was too much for flesh and blood to bear. The ten jurors turned as one man in time to see McMasters go down heavily before a blow from a chair leg wielded by the insignificant Calloway. With a bound the obstinate juryman was on top of his antagonist plying the improvised edgel about his head and defensive arms in a frenzy of fear lest he might arise. "Let up, you little devil," shouted McMasters. "Let up! I've had enough. I tell you!" "What do you think o' the case now?" demanded Calloway, bringing down the chair leg with unabated energy. "Let up!" roared McMasters. "Don't you think there's a reasonable doubt about Scotty brandin' that there calf?" panted Calloway. "Tell me, doggone you!" McMasters made a herculean effort to throw off his promiscuously active incubus, but the movement left his head unprotected and Calloway was quick to avail himself of his opportunity. "Yes," groaned the foreman, "there's a doubt, all right. Now quit." Calloway suffered him to rise. "That's all right then," he remarked, drawing the tattered remnants of his shirt about him, with one hand, but retaining his weapon in the other. "Now, fellers," he continued, turning with a new air of authority to his brethren. "straighten up that table an we'll proceed to torake another ballot." The command was executed in an awkward silence, that was broken by a loud knocking at the locked door. "What are you men playin' at in there?" demanded the voice of All M. "Oh, God bless you!" cried Scotty's wife. Williams, the sheriff's deputy. "Are you comin' to a disagreement or tryin' who can jump the farthest? It was McMasters who answered. "We'll call you when we want you, Al." he said gruffly. "We don't want you now." Then as the deputy's footfall died away on the stair he added, "What's took place in this yer jury room don't go out o' this jury room; that's your oaths. What I want to know is if them oaths is going to be keep? "S far's I'm concerned," said Calloway. "I guess the rest is goin' to keep her mouths shut. Our deliberations is to be kep' secret, the judge said. Only," he added, with a look at McMasters, "I'm a countin' on two votes for acquittal." Five minutes later the jury filed into the court room, where Scotty Burrows, in the custody of the sniiff, was gripping his chair arms with whitened knuckles and glancing nervously at his wife, who, pale and wideeyed, clamped her baby to her bosom and panted as the judge looked over his spectacles at the foreman. "Are you agreed upon your verdict?" asked the judge. "We are," answered the jury's foreman. "We find the prisoner, Scotty Burrows, not guilty." "Oh, God bless you!" cried Scotty's wife. LIFE INSURANCE BUSINESS VAST Assets of Companies in New York State Equal to $2,226,432,202. If the assets of all the life insurance companies engaged in business in the United States were distributed equally to all the population of the world, each man, woman and child of every continent and every country, from Africa to Labrador would receive $2 each, says a writer in the Era Magazine. There would be $2 for every human being on the globe. The assets of the life insurance companies of this country—that is, the actual property, real estate, bonds, stocks, etc., which they own—amount in the aggregate to more than $2,000,000,000. The companies doing business in New York state, and these include also practically all of the companies with headquarters in other states—had at the close of 1903, assets, in exact figures, equal in value to $2,226,423,202. Such is the magnitude of the institution of life insurance! If all the adult men in America, of every race and occupation, should contribute simultaneously $100 each toward a fund, that enormous sum would not equal the value of the property owned by the American life insurance companies. More than $500,000 of the money paid to the companies every year by policy holders goes to defray the expense of maintaining a spy system. After all the preliminary precautions have been taken the medical examination made, the references looked up—after the policy has been granted, detectives are employed to watch policy holders. Your money is paid to employ men to follow you through your daily walk, to track you into restaurants, to interview your servants, to use all the other low and contemptible means which these creeping shadowers employ. The spy system of the "combine" is interesting. Stickled for Etiquette Regular army officers say that volunteers are a trifle deficient in matters of military etiquette. As illustrative of their weakness in this respect, Major General Corbin tells an amusing story of a young lieutenant of militia who accompanied his fellow volunteers to the war game at Manassas recently. It appears that the young volunteer officer in question was conversing with regular army officers near Gen. Corbin's tent, when Gen. Grant and his staff passed. The regular officers arose and saluted, but the volunteer lieutenant sat still. "That was Gen. Grant," said one of the regulars to the lieutenant. "Why didn't you salute him?" "Oh," responded the volunteer, nonchalantly. "I've only been here a few days and we haven't been introduced."—Collier's. A woman's "no" had no dismay for me; I often, heard it said that it meant show, Although repeatedly she answered "No." "Mere coquery," I thought. "She wants to make Me think she is not to be lightly won. I like her, but she won't make her sake, or else it wouldn't be bit of a joke. She merely plays a part." I must say, though. She played it well. Much firmness in that "No." I humored her. I feigned a deep despair. I said she had ruined all life. I called her heartless, cruel, to live a fair; Again I begged her to become my wife. I did not think that this time she would throw Me down—but all the same she answered "No." Then I began to doubt, for when I tried To flirt with others she cared not a snap. To all appearances, and then beside she flirted also, with another chap. It was unexpected blow. When, for the fourth time, she answered "No." It was no wonder that I feared she meant In other truth my offer to decline. I 1. "What that is your intent; For the last time I'll ask her to be mine." That brought the confirmation of my feet. Poetry and Prose. The ablest writers in England have revived the Walt Whitman controversy. Several of them assert he was "beyond question the ablest man America has produced." Able thinker he was, versatile as a versifier, prodigious as a philanthropist, knowing as a student of woman and Bohemian to the marrow of his bones. Personally Whitman was a lovable character. I knew him intimately twelve years and was pall bearer at his grave, but a few names like Hawthorne, Holmes, Lowell and, last but not least, George Arnold find a warmer place in my heart. And, seriously, was anything ever said in verse that couldn't have been better told in prose? A few skeptics, like the writer, doubt it. Wants Rare French Stamps The Paris Gaulois states that Col. Delaucy, chairman of the French Philatelic Federation, has received a letter from Gen. Nogil, requesting a price list of rare French stamps. ENGLAND 184,400 U.S. 193,180 RUSSIA 112,730 GERMANY 103,976 FRANCE 87,800 TONNAGE OF BATTLESHIPS NOW BUILDING TONNAGE OF BATTLESHIPS NOW BUILDING PARIS RESUMES OLD GLORY. Session of North Sea Tribunal Re- Vives Its Diplomatic Prestige. The tribunal which is dealing with the controversy relating to Russia's sinking of English fishing craft in the North sea has just opened at the French capital. Paris is resuming its old glory as the world's political center. It was at Paris that the representatives of the United States and Spain met to settle the issues growing out of the war of 1898. It seemed just as appropriate a place for the United States and Spain to meet in that juncture as it did in 1856 for England, Russia, Prussia, Austria, Turkey and the rest of the European powers to deal with the issues growing out of the Crimean war. It was at a congress at Paris in 1783 that England recognized United States independence. Twenty years earlier a seventy war to an end. Between 1763 and 1904 more important international gatherings have been held at Paris than in all the rest of the world's capitals.—St. Louis Globe Democrat. TO THE LAND OF THE FREE. Table of Immigration Shows Arrival of Millions A recently published table shows that from 1821 to 1903 (both inclusive) the total number of immigrants was 21,265,723, of whom Europe furnished 93 per cent. Of the total immigration into the United States during eighty-five years Germany and the United Kingdom furnished 56 per cent, as follows: Germany, 24 per cent; Ireland, 19 per cent, and England, Scotland and Wales, 13 per cent. During the same period Austria-Hungary, Italy and Russia and Poland furnished 21 per cent, as follows: Austria-Hungary, 7 per cent; Italy, 8 per cent, and Russia and Poland, 6 per cent. Of the total immigration in 1903, Germany and the United Kingdom furnished only 12 per cent, while Austria-Hungary, Italy and Russia and Poland furnished 68 per cent. NEW COMMISSIONER OF LABOR. Charles P. Neill Soon to Succeed Carroll D. Wright. On Feb. 1 Charles P. Neill will succeed Carroll D. Wright as commissioner of labor. Mr. Neill has acquired a reputation as a statistician CHAS. P. NEILL and has the confidence of laboring men as well as the administration. Mr. Neill's home is at the capital. He is thoroughly familiar with the work of the bureau. Tuberculosis Infection Tuberculosis is a house infection. We don't pick it up on the streets as we may pneumonia or smallpox; we never inherit it; seldom is it contracted from diseased milk or meat. Occasional contact with a consumptive endangers no one; the disease is not contagious in that sense. But every house in which an ignorant or careless consumptive has lived and coughed up the deadly bacilli; every close and foul-aired workroom in which he has labored becomes a peril to those who live or work with him or follow after him.—McClure's. Railroader to Take High Office. Isaac Thomas Parker, who will soon be inducted into office as lieutenant governor of Delaware, is conductor of a passenger train running between Philadelphia and Delmar, Del. He is already quartermaster general on the staff of the present governor, but this is the first elective office of importance to which he has been chosen. Mr. Parker has no idea of resigning his position on the Pennsylvania railroad, but declares that as soon as the legislature adjourns he will be found on his old run as usual. World Waiting to See How Experiment Turns Out. Not much has been published of late concerning the employment of coolies in the South African mines. Presumably it did not prove a telling cause in English parliamentary elections, and there seems to be a general feeling that, now that the coolies have been imported, people should wait and see how the experiment turns out before making further attacks on it. Up to the 1st of December more than 19,300 Chinese had been landed in South Africa for work in the mines. The last shipment was of 2,243, 2,238 being landed, the remaining eleven having died on the voyage. That would appear to be a very large percentage of loss for coolies who are all carefully inspected before their shipment, and who are all men in the prime of life. Some of the tramp steamers that have been engaged in this work, while controlled by certain government regulations concerning the carrying of the coolies, must have, in bad weather, presented a scene below decks that was somewhat reminiscent of the old days of the middle passage.—Boston Herald. IN AND OUT OF CABINET. Sensations of Members Well Described by Senator Foster. Postmaster General Wynne, who used to be a newspaper man in Washington, bears his honors with becoming dignity, but does not in any way feel upish over his advancement. The president one day asked him: "How does it feel to attend a cabinet meeting after having spent so much time on the outside trying to find out what occurred at similar gatherings?" "Oh, it is not so much how he feels," said Secretary Wilson, "as how the rest of us feel." Wynne has Irish blood in his veins and ready wit at the tip of his tongue. He came back in this fashion: "That reminds me of what Secretary Foster said when he took charge of the treasury department. I was his private secretary. One day he remarked to me: 'Wynne, when I first came to Washington as a member of the cabinet I gazed in awe at the distinguished men who were my colleagues and wondered how I got there. After I had been in the cabinet three months I wondered how my colleagues got there.'" GET FOOD TO PORT ARTHUR How Chinese Junks Successfully Elude Blockaders The medium-sized northern Chinese junks make first-class blockade runners. They are built very low in the water, with the docks almost awash when loaded, so that only the bow and stern rise noticeably above the water line. They are strong, flat-bottomed and of unpainted, dirty wood, with no bright colors about them. Propelled by from ten to twenty oarsmen, if the saisons fail, they glide through the water with no noise of smoke, and are very difficult of detection. Dodging along the shore and among the numerous islets, which extend from the Shan-Tung peninsula across the mouth of Pe-Chee-Lee gulf, they closely resemble the low, brown rocks and during the past months hundreds of them have evaded the Japanese watchers and carried tons of fresh provisions and vegetables to the beleguered Port Arthur garrison. Simple Home of Rockefellers. In Mr. Rockefeller's home in New York little effort is made at pretentiousness. There are no elevators, no elaborate system of electric bells, no frills about anything. Mrs. Rockefeller laboriously climbs the stairs rather than have an elevator put in. Simplicity and economy sound the keynote. Mrs. Rockefeller's kitchen in her New York house would be considered extremely old-fashioned by the standard of her rich neighbors. She does not care much for the pleasures of the table. Plain cooking suits her best. Her husband, of course, is most careful of his diet. The list of dishes he is obliged to pass unnoticed would make a very large bill of fare. Mean Fling at Senator Depew. Senator Depew says that the meanest remark he ever heard about him self came from a passenger on a sightseeing automobile in Washington. The automobile was going past the senator's house in H street. "That tree in the yard, ladies and gentlemen," said the megaphone man, "was planted by Senator Depew himself almost six years ago." "Say," piped up a passenger on the back seat, loud enough to be heard by the senator and his wife, who were standing in front of the house. "I'll bet it's a chestnut." Calumet Baking Powder Perfect in quality. Moderate in price. Colors of Varying Warmth. Certain blind persons can tell the color of a flower by laying it against their cheek. Actual experiment shows that blossoms of certain colors are in reality warmer than those of other tints. A GREAT INSTITUTION It is unusual that a single institution in a city of 8,000 people will overshadow in importance every other interest, but such is the case with the American School of osteopathy, and A. T. Still Infirmary at Kirksville, Mo. The Kirksville is immediately impressed with the idea that the town sustained by this institution, in fact, Kirksville has been made what it is to day by Dr. Still and his famous School and Infirmary. It is the largest patronized undewored institution of its kind in the United States. Dr. Still's school enrolls over 700 students yearly and the student is required to attend four terms of five months or completing the course of study. There are over 2,000 graduates and they are practicing in every state and territory of the Union. About two-thirds of the states have passed special laws legalizing the science. This school teaches every branch taught in every college except "drugs" and osteopathy is substituted for orthochthosis is the teaching in anatomy that over one hundred human bodies are dissected yearly by the students. At the Infirmary, patients from every part of the country and with almost every form of disease are constantly under treatment. For the past fifteen years almost every new coming to the hospital has brought some new sufferer hoping to find relief by the science of Osteopathy. By the thousands who have left the institution benefited by the treatment, the science has been heralded to the world as a safe and rational method of cure. Several years ago a free clinic was established in connection with this new treatment and this is still in operation. Hundreds of the worthy poor, who are unable to pay for treatment, are treated every afternoon by the senior students free of charge. Some men seem to be such deep thinkers that their thoughts never get to the surface. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drugstore money it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 26. If you are going to have the world at your feet don't let your foot slip. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used . all or all infections of the throat and lungs—Wm. O. ENDSELEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1929. The Mountain Filipinos Secretary Taft made public recently a mail report received from Governor Wright in regard to the condition of affairs in Samar and other islands of the Philippine group. It is in part as follows: "The great bulk of the civilized Filipinos live on or not remote from the coast line, but there are scattered communities living in the mountains, who are little removed from savagery. It frequently happens that some enterprising man among them will obtain a considerable following and will perpetrate all sorts of outrages upon peaceful and inoffensive inhabitants. This cannot be changed at once. It therefore may be inferred that for several years to come there will be eruptions from this source and that they will make raids upon the civilized Filipinos living in the lowlands as heretofore. The commission, so far as its finances permit, is engaged in building roads to open up these remote sections of the interior and to make them accessible." Description cf Persian Sheep. A traveler, giving an account of the Persian sheep in 1798, says: "The tails frequently weighed eight or ten pounds, and they have six or eight horns, some of which stood out horizontally and caused a great deal of bloodshed when the rams engaged with one another. Both the wool and flesh of these sheep were greatly valued." HABIT'S CHAIN Certain Habits Unconciously Formed and Hard to Break. An ingenuous philosopher estimates that the amount of will power necessary to break a life-long habit would, if it could be transformed, lift a weight of many tons. It sometimes requires a higher degree of heroism to break the chains of a pernicious habit than to lead a forlorn hope in a bloody battle. A lady writes from an Indiana town: "From my earliest childhood I was a lover of coffee. Before I was out of my teens I was a miserable dyspeptic, suffering terribly at times with my stomach. "I was convinced that it was coffee that was causing the trouble and yet I could not deny myself a cup for breakfast. At the age of 36 I was in very poor health, indeed. My sister told me I was in danger of becoming a coffee drunkard. "But I never could give up drinking coffee for breakfast although it kept me constantly ill, until I tried Postum. I learned to make it properly according to directions, and now we can hardly do without Postum for breakfast and care nothing at all for coffee. "I am no longer troubled with dysperia, do not have spells of suffering with my stomach that used to trouble me so when I drank coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book. "The Road to Wellville." SISTERS OF CHARITY LENGTH OF PLATES AND pn WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE. Aguinaido at Home, ¥ — tndoreed by the Onlo @tate Grangere| The influonce which the a ret | Ceili: 9! ae eins ing doeta Alege Witand’ Weyend| Ue Zu omens laste Fillpiko: loader INI fosncenss even oe aan ; A ee sicigd Fe feal| The lave oranaee eroeasies. tard [WIN ChG Ueber elisa: cree courte | OD. Uses Pe-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Grip and) 822% Fey ote et oe ee aoa ener a iy cauutes Perro i: ’ er should the end plate be than the| Deputy Masters’ Association: Presi-|1ng. ‘The Filipinos present were all (a ‘ Catarrh—A Congressman s Letter, Sadat , | ben ity Be whelten, Colakiblina euuds| HIS GNMerore Ih ediontion: and ‘HraK he i) Fe 7 >= y La e we (gan e oe 2 (OL VY Pen gS} be oN UE. by Z i \ = YN . ty Yara) ' Every tidy housekeeper appreciates nicely starched clothes and linens. No starch under the sun gives 80 good a finish as Defiance Starch. It is absolutely free of the chemicals which other starches contain. It never sticks to the iron or causes the clothes to break. It does not rot them. For 10 cents you get 16 ounces of the best starch that can be made. Get Defiance. THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO., OMAHA, NEB. aes Winter Service 1904 and 1905 TATU G TRAINS DAILY M u SO cs To arn | pe as aa S ee pA Sane S T ouIs Pa rN s L s a8 Us | a For Omaba and Lincoln, 9a, m. and Jo iM a} 10:20 p.m. For Paola, Garnet, Neodesha, Tnde- pendence and Cottey ville 0:55 a, m.and To:t0 p.m. Also the New “HOT SPRINGS SPECIAL,” leaving at 12:01 Noon; arrive in Hot Springs to Breakfast. Through Sleepers, Diners and Chair Care to Ft. Smith, Little Rock and Hot Springs. For Pueblo, Denver and Pacific Coast Paints at 10:40 a, m. atid 6:30 p, m, For Joplin and Way Stations 2:25, 9:45 a. m. and 7:40 p. m. To Lexington, Sedalia and Way Stations, 5:45 a.m. and 5:00 p. m. Leavenworth, Atchison and St, Joseph, 5:45, 9:00, 10:50 a, m. and 6:00 p,m, For Kiowa, Wichita and Way Stations, 12:01, noon, and 10:30 p.m, For Local Coupon Tickets, Sleeping Car Berths and all information call at UNION DEPOT OR OFFICE, 901 MAIN STREET, 2S JEWETT, Passenger and Ticket Agent In every country of the civilized world Sisters of Charity are known. Not only do they minister to the sptr- ftual and intellectual needs of the charges committed to tueir care, but they also minister to their bodily needs. ‘With so many children to take care of and to protect from climate and disease, these wise and piudent Sis- ters have found Peruna a never fail- ing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United States. A recommend re- cently received from a Catholic insti- tution in Detroit, Mich, reads as fol- lows: Or. S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: Dear Sir: ‘The young girl who used the Peruna was suffering from laryn- gitls and loss of voice. The result of the treatment was most satisfactory. She found great rellef, and after further use of the medicine we hope to be able to say she is entirely cured.” Sisters of Charity. ‘The young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for catarrh of the throat with good results as the above letter testi- fies, Send to The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio, for a free book writ: ten by Dr. Hartman. The following letter is from Con- gressman Meekison, of Napoleon, Ohio: The Peruna Medicine Co., Colum- bus, O.: Gentlemen: “1 have used sev- eral bottles of! Peruna, and feel greatly beneftt- ed thereby from my catarrh of the head, and feel encouraged to believe that to, Delleve that] David Meekteun, Gentlemen: “I have used sev- eral bottles of! Peruna, and feel greatly beneftt- ed thereby from my catarrh of the head, and fool, encouraged to believe that ite cont! nto d L_David Meokteon, use will fully eradicate a disease of thirty years’ standing."—David Meek- ison. Dr. Hartman, one of the best known physicians and surgeons in the Unit- ed States, was the first man to form- ulate Pernna. It was through his genius and perseverance that it was introduced to the medical profession of this country, If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hart- man, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Colum bus, O. ‘LENGTH OF PLATES AND SILLS. Ceiling Joists Alone Extend Beyond the Wall. N. FB. McK.—For building 25 feet high and 30 feet wide, how much long: er should the end plate be than the ‘end sill? The plates and sills are of the same length. If the building has a cottage roof the ceiling joist should extend twenty inches, or two feet over the wall (according to the width of cor nice desired). The toe of each rafter sits on a plate spiked on the ends of the joist. The walls are built up above the ceiling joist with a plate on top for the rafters to sit on. This plate, and not the lower one, supports ‘the roof. (See plan.) If a gable or Wie, iP D La al DY 5 UZ / VTLS ¢ Vf : A, rafter; B, ceiling joist; C, wall; D, plates. ridge roof is required the sheeting extends over the ends of the building and a 2x4 inch scantling is nailed every three feet beneath the roof boards. When finished this forms the cornice, Ginseng Growing Industry. Can you give me any information about the culture of ginseng? Would it be likely to prove profitable? The culture of ginseng has been greatly advocated in some quarters in America during the past few years, and owing to the large prices said to have been paid for the roots and the enormous profits which it is claimed can be made by growing ginseng, quite a number of persons are trying to grow it. Ginseng is not, however, an easy crop to grow and requires a great deal of care, It also takes five vears before the roots are large enough to sell. Same persons are growing it successfully, and hope to make money out of the sale of the roots. It is thought by many disin: terested persons that more money Is being made out of the sale of the seeds and young plants to prospective growers than will ever be made by the growers themselves, as the mar: ket will probably become overstocked with ginseng and the prices reduced the market for ginseng ix China, as the roots are used by the Chinese as a drug. There are many surer in vestments for capital than the cul ture of ginseng, Ducks Dying of. ‘M. K.—Would you advise me regard ing my ducks, as they have been dy ing off lately? They seem to get on their feed for a day or so and ther become altogether helpless and can not walk, They have a large range and a running coulee to feed in, They are also fed on oats and wheat sercen ings. Dueks with a free run, such as de scribed, should be in the pink of con dition, It is quite possible that they ‘ave been fed too much grain, Ducks with neces to a stream of water gen orally supply themselves with all the animal and insect life necessary, EX ereise is of first importance in bring ing about strong. vigorous breeding stock, bnt care must be exercised in feeding them, If there is no grit ir the pasture it shonld be supplied. As no mention is made of age of ducks this is all that can be said—A. G. G Feeding a Milking Cow. R. KA four-searold cow will ealve In April. How long should she ge dry, and how should she be fed in the winter? If the cow Is in good condition, she may be milked until six weeks before she iy dne to ealve, — Her feed mi winter should consist of coarse fod der of good quality, a mixture of bray and chow and some succulent feo such as mancels or carrots, Her coarse fodder should consist of sued foods as elover nay and corn fodder or good oat straw, A mixture of these sould answer very well, She shout have all she will eat up clean thre Himes a day, One peck of roots twice: daily is considered fair feeding, | cow giving milk should get fou quarts ot a mixture of wheat bran and chopped oats, corn, barley or pea twiee daily, When she has dried of the grain feeding should be reduced! to three quarts once daily, A- cow fed in this way and watered twice daily should milk well during the pres ent season, produce a vigorous. off spring and again milk abundant) after she freshens, Wrapping Fruit. Wrapping fruit in issue, parchment paraffine or newspaper has been fous to protong the storage season. ef win ter apples and late-keeping pears, pre. serving their fresh appearance, pre venting aecumulation af mold op the stem or at the calyx, lessening the decay and — preventint evaporation from the fruit, Little difference was noticeable in the efficiency of the dit ferent wrappers. It is believed that sith all fancy fruit for long keeping wrapping is worthy of commeroie! consideration. American Fruits, WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE. Indorsed by the Ohio State Grangere maw OMisere Elected. The State Grange, in session here, elected the following officers for the Deputy Masters’ Association; —Presi- dent, HB, Shelton, Columbiana coun- ty; vice president, W. L., Nash, Starke county; lecturer, Mrs, Lavina Barrett; secretary-treasurer, J. B. Terman, Me: dina county, Resolutions were unani- mously adopted {ndorsing woman's suffrage. ‘They were introduced at the request of Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, National treasurer, of this city. The Currie good roads bill was in- dorsed. The treasurers’ report shows $17,211.80 tn the treasury.—Ex. The Two Infante. Representative “Nick’ Longworth, of Ohio, came to see the President. “Ah, good morning,” said Colonel Rosevelt, “and how 1s the baby Con- gressman this morning” “Fine,” flashed back Longworth, “and how is the baby President?" Whereupon honors were held to be cary. Giles—So you've got a place in that banking house? I suppose tt was be: cause you knew the president? Hare ris— Partly that, and partly because he didn't know me.--Boston ‘Tran- seript. When You Buy Starch Buy Defiance and get the best, 16 os. for 10 cents. Once used, always used. Much Waste of Coal. A square foot of uncovered pipe, filled with steam at 100 pound pres: sure, will radiate and dissipate in a year the heat put into 3,716 pounds of steam by the economic combustion of 398 pounds of coal, Thus ten square feet of bare pipe corresponds approx!- mately to the waste of two tons of coal per annum, BTATE OF, ONG, Cy OF TOLEDO, gy, Faxed) CHARNEY takes oath that he te eentor piciuetsod the’ Ren” ot ed “Chet et acon hg tinineae fy the Clty of Tolede tsuniy ‘ud Ware screeata and int ould iret pay the sum ot SSCNDIED'DOLLAHS for tach and every SELL SARMURM chnaoe Ue cured by the aoe o “ a “FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before ine and aubach bed ia ty pret nee. thie Gu day of December 81 ims mene AoW: ULEABON, jest Norany Pewita, Naji'e Catarsh, Cure te taken nteroaliy and acce firectiy cas the. Mod annd tie oun vurtacen of the Syed! “Senator ieetiniaty fee FUN CHENET & CO, Toiedo, 0. So1d by at Druaeteta, se Take hhalie Fatty Pils tor constipation, Home of the Silk Hat. ‘The number of silk hats made an- Dually in the United Kingdom {s about 12,000,000, Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORTA, f vafo and eure remedy for tufanta and children, man tet In Use For Over 30 Years, ‘The Kind You Have ‘ways Bought. Ancient Ann Says: A woman always thinks it 1s her husband's duty to tack down the car- pet, as he has such liberty of speech when he hits his finger instead of the CUTICURA SOAP ‘The World's Greatest Skin Soap—The Standard of Every Nation of the Earth. Millions of the world’s beat people use Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cutt cura Ointment, the purest and sweet: est of emolient skin cures, for presery- ing, purifying and beautifying the of falling hair, for softening, whiten ing and soothing red, rough and sore hands, for baby rashes, ftehings and The fellow who is going to do won: derful things tomorrow keeps quiet about what he did yesterday. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because tt never sticks to the fron, but because each pachage contains 16 67-—one full pound-—while all other Cold Water Starches are put np in 4 pound pack: fxes, and the price is the same, 10 J cents, ‘Then again Uecause Defiance | Stareh ds free from all injurious chem: foals, I your grocer tries to sell you @ Jor. package tt is because he has & stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Deflanee. “Ho knows that Deflanee Starch has “printed on every package In laree let: ‘tera and figures "is avs.” Demand Deflance and save much me and “inoney and the aunoyance of the iron “sticking. Deflanes never sticks. A woman is mighty truthful not to Yo suspicions about what makes a man ewear off Do Your ciothes Look Yellow? Then use Defiance Starch, it wil keep them white-I6 02 for 10 centa, When a woman is too angry to talk ber busband is in luck ‘dlcaa \alakiananis. A men brought up at St, Albans as an incorrigible rogue was proved to have married his aunt. His ehildren are, therefore, his first cousins and he is his own uncle, His grandmother and his motherintlaw are the same person. Apparently the judge sympa thized with him, for he was dis charged, Youth Kept From Temptation, No person under 16 years of age 1s permitted to enter @ theater or tavern wo Heligoland, HAVE YOU A HORSE? \ / WOULD YOU LIKE US To p ©) iota stilt SADDLE? ED ip SOR THE MOBT WONDERFUL SADDLE OFFER RVER HEARD aa |e ae oe Scighberitee” nhehertare, ceo, tne riceet saaele mnie i BING ona aN IS ae: ie ane eeu Sectat Beaute’ Catalogue, is 3 <s Ny Vig cra trations ofall Kinde ob ta NTS d Mon's, Womon's, Boye’ sé Girls’ Saddioce, Ai . iW Stock Baddion, Ranch and Range Saddles, rf OH ¢ am 1 Ube Mm T ft WAbSsian D | Hii Eisai Bate Ase Sentece | VM eee nt | OUR PRICES WILL ASTONISH AND PLEASE YOU. ' Atria) elu AA Toy ci get our Very Latent and Mast Astoniehingy Liveral onter you nin (RMA by SES estar esa ie auch emer tt (San A Serhan whats sou gee rairtuatleoe'ponncs Hen ooness, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.,cweaco. Fit} Cag [ih et BERR Bs ON ee al 4 “LEADER” AND “REPEATER” SHOTGUN SHELLS The proof of the shell is its shooting. Be- on cause they shoot so well, Winchester Factory if} Loaded “Leader” and “Repeater” Smoke- Kes less Powder Shotgun Shells have won almost Nes acy every important prize shot for in years. he ata Good shots shoot them because they give bet- AME ‘cr results, shoot stronger and more uniformly Nha WHE and are more reliable than any other make ALWAYS SPECIFY WINCHESTER MAKE OF SHELLS TODA OMNES G UNIS PUN Me oy AWAY MT TOUS ACNoa TONKS Ine NTN _ RUB IT IN Maca . : Aguinaido at Home. The influence which the discredited Filipino leader still possesses even with the upper class of his country men is as undoubted as it is surpris: ing. The Filipinos present were all his superiors in education, and prov: ably most of them were also his su periors in affairs, as the Western world understands it. Several of the company had at various times been his advisers, had devised for him his policy, and had executed his official acts. The, had been behind the scenes and understood the causes for his rise and fall knew bim as he real. ly was; yet all of them manifested a deference, as if for the mythical per sonality which the populace and peas- antry still credit, Gravely and quietly Aguinaldo ac- knowledged his reception. He spoke slowly and guardedly in a soft voice, more the thin, high-pitched voice of a child than of a man, He said littie, but his manners were gentle and, with his old friends, affectionate. The first impression whieh he created was a pleasant and dignified one, save for the expression of cautions cunning in his eves, and for the nes of the mouth, which showed a habit of ex- Aggerated repression, Ex. Irishman’s Shrewd Arrangement. Abraham Gruber tells a story of two Irishmen who were making an Agreement for @& meeting, One of them said: “If you get there first make a chalk mark on the sidewaix; if T get there first 1 will rub it out."— New York Times, Shouting Their Praises. Kirkland, Mi, Jan, 2nd.—-(Spectal) —Cured of the terrible Rheumatic pains that made him a cripple for years, Mr. Richard R. Greenton, an old and respected resident this place {s shouting the praise. of the remedy that cured him, Dodd's Kid: ney Pills, “L had tho rheumatism in my left limb so that I could not walk over ten to fifteen rods at a time, and that by the use of two canes,” Mr. Greenton says, “1 would have to sit or le down on the ground when I was out trying to walk and the sweat would run down my face, with so much pain. 1 could not sleep at night for about five or six weeks “L tried different doctors’ medicines, but they were all no good. ‘Then I sent for Dodd's Kidney Pills and almost from the firs. they brought relief. By the time I had taken four teen boxes of them my rheumatism was all gone and I can truly say I feel better than I have in the last twenty-five years.” Pain—-A_ sensation experienced on receiving a Punch, particularly the London one. TWENTY BUSHELS OF WHEAT SOON | TO THE ACRE ARM. eR Is the record on 51 pA tho Free Homo- we NA A sicad Lande of CA Taad Wosterneanada id for 1904, Fhe 161 tariers trom the Ualted Rates who crite tne Patt'soten Tears tave goe te Canes daritdjate Reade preeporty ‘The Vulted Btates ell s-on barome as importer ot ee eam ety Synstend or poreiase afer i Wettra aheder aad boson veut those who wii Bippreauecte reas Fopie tor tatormation to Ruperintendent of Ima peer ore cameee gt anita ta a Binth'sivee, aiowe Clay, aiseourt Se er eee rat baw ha SiTeHilesGbs W. N. U., KANSAS CITY, NO, 1, 1905 BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH SYRUP cures coughs and colds, a) yl ‘| ms a es ‘g aH m Seg Y fe ma (/ U ¥ fr SSN. GE The letter of Miss Merkley, whose picture is printed above, Proves beyond question that thousands of cases of inflamma- tion of the ovaries and womb are annually cured by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, “Dean Mra, Pryenaw:—Gradual loss of strength and nerve foree told me something was radically wrong with me, had severe shooting pains, through the pelvie organs, cramps and. extreme irritation compelled. ine. to seek medical advice. The doctor said that I bad ovarian trouble and ulcera- tion, and advised an operation. I strongly okiested to this and decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. | soon found that my judgment was correct, and that all the good things said about this medi- cine were true, and day by day I felt Jess pain and increased appetite. The ulceration soon healed, and the other complications disappeared, and in eleven weeks I was once more atrong: and vigorous and perfectly well. “My heartiest thanks are sent to you for the great good you have done. mme."— Sincerely youra, Misa MARGARET MeRuirr, 275 Third St, Milwaukee, Win.—5000 forfeit if origina! of above letter ipotetha peter eel ot: FREE Wises eeniesarsiaaye Uatu‘sstaracet Thompson's Eye Water _treiesent Thompson's Eyo Water SUPA YEAR: Fests. ta Say, seat Air erecte sen, certian mosey tatne Sealey alL. pelence mane eee RES Gees atksian cc Nelniee Satie teen tae cattdien taacrn ion price a areas Reviow Cor 300 Coca Vole Boting’ cuteeMy? eriew CoS oni Bing cues Ht LE G’SINGLE STRAIGHT H¢ CioAR BINDER “nt 'F,.OO0.000 £ Dears 510.00 | are, a! CU is Fore snes ts i reoly tooyarase. |. SURE.HACH INCUBA FOR I Beading eprtene: Noe cyensoineveebcenc etre Sense | Hime a0 Ware Vree Nats Raia ais Sn [ae ER aay | ePISO’S CURE'FOR Pad COREE MNCRE AML ELSE PATS heat tuatedytup tastercient ao pl Pe io tinue. bolt by drugainta, *” Bal “CONSUMPTION & Is the bewitching power that will control the tide of Holiday Gifts for Kansas City men. Beyond a doubt she will rely wholly on Richardson's as the one great establishment which caters exclusively to the male sex, and is, therefore, by far the most competent to judge what is best to supply their wants. This important young woman's attention is called to our mylads of BEAUTIFUL AND USEFUL GIFTS which appeal strongest to man's notion of luxury and comfort, and every garment and every article is guaranteed not only to be of the finest grade, but is offered at a lower figure than you can possibly buy it for elsewhere. Twelve different lines at $3.95 $5.00 values; browns, blues, gray plaids, etc.; new patterns, every one. Twelve different lines at $5.95 all good colors. Coats that you fit elsewhere at from $7.50 up to $9.9 and $10.00. $7.95, $8.95, $9.9 $10.95, $11.95. Watch Windows for Suggestions Chinese Marriage Law. Persons bearing the same surname, although they may not be related in any way, are forbidden to marry in China. Rabbits burrowing beneath the road near Althorpe, Northants, England, have caused a number of cycle accidents. 784 ... Telephone ... 4178 WALL'S Laundry Co., ARNETT First-Class Work & Prompt Delivery A Neckwear. Four-in-hands, the most popular the a man wears, made of silks, and patterns that usually sell for 50 dollars, propose to run as a holiday special for, each ..... 29c Fancy Vests, $1.50 to 85. Browns or grays, or black and white; in fact, all colors in this, the largest selection of Fancy Vests in Kansas Men's $15.00 Overcoats in Hundreds of Men's new Overcoats in foxords, black, blue and white mixtures; cut medium length full length, including the collar back Overcoat. for such values as others ask $9.98 $15 for one late at... How the Frenchman Read His Book How the Frenchman read His Book "A curious way to read a book was what I saw the other day coming up from New Orleans," said J. T. Simpson of Chicago. "It was in a Pullman sleeping car, and we had a pretty good crowd of northbound tourists. Among them was a queer looking Frenchman; at least, I judged he was such. On his seat I noticed a dozen paper back novels. Shortly after breakfast he began reading one of these at the open window by his seat. As soon as he finished a page he tore it off 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 pages for hundreds of miles."—Atlanta Constitution. To Stop Sneezing. "There are times when to sneeze is to be embarrassed," said a society man; "at a dinner table, a social function of some sort, or in the theater, for example; but most people console themselves with the thought that it is something that can't be prevented. They are mistaken in this belief, however, for it can be prevented, and by a very simple expedient. When one feels the premonitory symptoms of a sneeze coming on, if he will just press firmly down on the lip on either side of and a little below the nostrils, the symptoms will grisually die off and the sneeze will be avoided."—London Answers. Cowboys in Laced Boots. The few cowboys left in the West are taking to laced boots. There was a time, in the heyday of the cow country, where a special grade of fine, high-heeled, thin-soled boot was manufactured solely for the cowboy trade, since cowboys were always very vain about their footwear. But with decadence of their trade the cattlemen have lost their small vantiles, and a half full of them ride in the more comfortable laced boots. So is the old top boot, once worn by most city men, vanquished in its last stronghold—New York Sun. How "Negus" Originated. Negus, as much enjoyed in the army as grog is in the navy, attains its 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 in the habit of avoiding imminent quarrels 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. If it came right down to a choice most of us would prefer to have more money than brains. Unparalleled Offer in Men's Holiday Attire! SMOKING JACKETS Twelve different lines at $3.95; $5.00 values; browns, blues, grays, plaids, etc.; new patterns, every one. Twelve different lines at $5.95; all good colors. Coats that you find elsewhere at from $7.50 up to $9.00 and $10.00. $7.95, $8.95, $9.95, $10.95, $11.95. Men's Initial Handkerchiefs 65c for box of 1-2 dozen All initials, in pure white union Milton 1-2 inch hem. Men's 50c Fancy Silk Handkerchiefs, 25c Over 1000 sample handkerchiefs, picked up from the largest porter in the country, 50 burlap, your choice, each. 25c Full Dress Protectors. A popular Xmas Gift for a man because it is useful the Herber made of blake- land silk and lined with white satin, a popular muffler around town at $1.50; our special price. 95c Others at $2.50 and $2.95. ats at prices that continue to worry compre- day by day. Tomorrow and the balance of men's $18.00 Overcoats for. $11.00 Hundreds of men's style Overcoats—but and made from all the latest fabrics in the leading styles—all linen. regular $2.95; linen, go here at choice, choice, only. J. RICH. THE GREAT Atlantic Park ...TWO STORES, 16 EAST 7TH ST., AND 282 Suits to Order $17.50. Pant RICH BROS., atisfaction Gua ranteed or Money Refunded. ARNETT, The French Atlantic Pants Co. ...TWO STORES, 16 EAST 7TH ST., AND 2825 SOUTHWEST BOULEVARD... Suits to Order $17.50. Pants to Order $3.50 ARNETT, The French Dry Cleaner (2) ..HEALTH IS If you would gain health and we remember the necessity of reliable pro which we make a specialty of giving tion.—We fill prescriptions just as th Our motto is TO PLEASE; ..HEALTH IS WEALTH.. If you 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 careful attention. —We fill prescriptions just as the doctor writes them. Save time and carfare by buying your Patent Medicines and drug necessities at attractive prices. A Large Line Perfumes, Toilet articles, Tooth brushes, Combs and Brushes, Fountain Syringes and Hot water bottles at Dept. Bromo ---a mo The C ---a fun RELIABLE PRES PHARMACY S. W. C Phone Call in and see us. 3 Chinese Marriage Law. Rabbits Make Trouble. 708 E. 12th St., Kansas City, Mo. 12th & Main BERNHEIMERS 12th & Main A STORE FOR THE PEOPLE. This store contains a world of gifts for everybody. You may spend as much as you want, or as little as you want and go away feeling that you have gotten your moneys' worth. Below, we give you an incomplete list of the different things we carry. Women's Garments, Cloaks, Suits, Skirts, Waistles, Wrappers, Dressing Sacques, Kimonos, Muslin Underwear, Corsets. 2nd FLOOR Dolls, Books, Doll Buggies, Millinery. Shoes of all kinds. 1st FLOOR Men's and Women's Underwear, Hose, Men's Furnishings, Notions, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Gloves, Neckwear, Dress Goods, Silks. Bath Robes and Lounging Robes. A Special— We have about 25 beautiful Turkish toweling Robes in new patterns that are worth as high as $7.50 each. Your choice $4.95 while these few last..... Others at $7.45, $7.95 and up to $12.90. Silk Web Crown Suspenders. 75c and $1.00 values, 59c each; scores of good patterns in fine silk webs; made with kid ends; each pair put up in a beautiful holiday box..... 59c Oxford Mufflers. The new Silk Oxford Muffers in ..... 59c new patterns; 75 grade, each ..... on, and we continue to increase our sales the week that Men's Muffers are on Men's $20.00 Overcoats for ..... $14.98 Men's nobby Overcoats, cut in the very height of the fabric, the newest at fabrics, all lengths, each and every garment as good as you can buy elsewhere for $20.90 ..... $14.98 B. RICH. THE GREAT Pants Co. 6 EAST 7TH ST., AND 2825 SOUTHWEST BOULEVARD... Order $17.50. Pants to Order $3.50 ICH BROS., Props. Used or Money Refunded. KANSAS CITY, MO. The French Dry Cleaner LADIES FINE WEARING APPAREL A Specialty. Mail Orders Promptly Attended To. Express Paid Both Ways. HOME TEL. MAIN 1252. BELL. WALNUT 2823 1006 West Sixteenth Street, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI HEALTH IS WEALTH.. could gain health and wish to retain the same necessity of reliable prescription compounding, be a specialty of giving the most careful atten- prescriptions just as the doctor writes them. motto is TO PLEASE; PRICES RIGHT, 1006 West Sixteenth Street, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. Our motto is TO PLEASE; PRICES RIGHT. gratifying prices. Remember its the all in end see us. Open all night. B. RICH. If you are constantly suffering with headache get your eyes examined; it may be your eyes causes it.—The Rellable Optical Dept. Bromo Ammonia for that cold ---a cold today, pnemonia tomorrow. The Century Marvel Corn Sheller ---a sure cure or money refunded. Painful walking made easy. S. W. Corner 5th and Broadway. Phone Home 1626 Main. Kansas City. New York. Chicago. Corbett System OF TAILORING FINEST ON EARTH "Clothes That Gentlemen Wear" 1025 MAIN ST. KANSAS CITY MO. WE CARRY THE LARGEST line of London Woolens of any Tailoring establishment in the world and cater especially for the colored trade. LIABLE DENTISTRY Satisfaction Guaranteed--Teeth Examined Free first reliable dentists in the city. We have the largest and best in the city. Our success is due to the uniformly high one by gentlemanly operators of middle ages; no youths free to Please. Our Reliability is Unquestioned. acked by a wealthy corporation, and is therefore thor- sible. All work is guaranteed for 15 years. RELIABILITY No Delay--Satisfaction We are the most reliable den oldest practice in the city. grade work done by gentlemen We Guarantee to Please. This firm is backed by a wess oughly responsible. All wor RELIABLE DENTISTRY No Delay--Satisfaction Guaranteed--Teeth Examined Free We are the most reliable dentists in the city. We have the largest and oldest practice in the city. Our success is due to the uniformly high grade work done by gentlemanly operators of middle ages; no youths We Guarantee to Please. Our Reliability is Unquestioned. This firm is backed by a wealthy corporation, and is therefore thoroughly responsible. All work is guaranteed for 15 years. Full Set of Teeth $2.00. Set S. S. White Teeth.....$4.00 Gold Crowns 22-k.....$2.65 Bridge Work, per tooth.....$2.65 Platinum fillings.....$50c Cleaning.....$50c Teeth extracted without pain FREE Cleaning ..... 50c We do as we advertise— Teeth extracted without pain FREE. We are here to stay. NEW YOR ESTAB ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS. Get the Habit Of Trading at McCampb e Habit ding at Campbell & Houston's Prescription Drug Store. 2304 VINE ST. WE CU Peruna, Mennen's Talcum Powder, Laxative Bromo Quinine, WE CUT THE RATES. 75c Bell Pine Tar Honey, 20c 15c Liquozone [large] 85c 20c Liquozone [small] 45c Calum Powder. No Quinine, Peruna, - 75c Bell Pine Tar Honey, 20c Mennen's Talcum Powder. 15c 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. INITITY OF MEDICINE DELIVERED TO ALL PARTS OF CITY FREE OF CHARGE. ANY QUANTITY OF MEDICINE DELIVERED TO ALL PARTS OF CITY FREE OF CHARGE. S. H. FINKELSTEIN, Proprietor. SUITS MADE TO ORDER OUR SPECIALTY. "Maine" The ine" Anchor Hats, Shoes & Furnishing Goods There is no better place for you to trade than here. SHOES, BOOTS AND FURNISHING GOODS. HATS AND CAPS. ```markdown ``` M. B. H. 1029 Main St Give us a Call. TEETH WITHOUT PLATE Second Floor. Entrance on Main Street only. Open Daily. Night's till 9. Sundays 10 to 4 TELS. Bell 159 East. Home 2396 Main. See our Line of Neckwear, Vests and Hose. The