The Rising Son
Thursday, October 11, 1906
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
Rising Son
It Pays to Advertise in the Rising Son for It Reaches More Homes of Colored People than any other Paper in the State. VOLUME XI. KANSAS CITY, MO., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906. NUMBER
THE MISSOURI CONFERENCE.
The 52nd annual session of the Missouri conference of the African M. E. church is being held in this city at Allen chapel, and is presided over by that remarkable leader of his race. Bishop Abram Grant, D. D., of Kansas City, Kans. It is composed of a fine body of representative men, and the addresses, and reports have been of a high order, accomplishing much for the people.
The conference opened Wednesday morning, and the choir was on hand and furnished the music. "All Hall the Power of Jesus' Name" was the opening hymn, and the Rev. Mr. Collins, made the opening prayer. Bishop A. Grant, read scripture lesson and the Rev. Dr. H. Blanton Parks, former pastor of Allen chapel, but who is now serving as Missionary Secretary, being now on his third term conducted the ritual services. Dr. Parks, is now on his way to the bishopric. "Must Jesus Bear the Cross Alone," was the hymn used before the administration of Holy Communion by Bishop Grant, Mrs. Ophella Jackson presided at the organ.
Roll was called, at the conclusion of which the following transfers were announced: Toney Perry, from the Illinois conference; F. L. Scott, from Colorado conference; J. B. Holmes, from California conference; C. L. Holly, from Kansas conference. Following this Rev. Charles Williams was elected chief secretary; L. P. Dukes, recording secretary; J. T. Smith, statistical secretary; Charles Stewart, official reporter; W. D. Cook, D. D., reporter for the Christian Recorder, Philadelphia; J. W. Wiley, to the Volce of Missions, New York; S. L. Bean, to the Southern Christian Recorder, Columbus, Ga.; L. H. Harris, W. Christian Recorder, Kansas City.
The hours of meeting and closing were fixed, the conference coundary, and G. W. Pettigrew, Chas. Cummins, and F. J. Everett, were elected marshals, and advised to "let none pass or repress without permission from the presiding officer."
A list of committees were appointed, and following this Bishop Grant introduced the following visitors: J. R. Ransom, D. D., J. W. Braxton, D. D., W. W. Fisher, L. W. McCormack, H. W. King, from the Kansas conference; G. W. Guy, D. W. Oakes, C. R. Runyon, J. R. Monroe, from North Missouri conference; W. T. Biggers, Lincoln, Neb., J. F. Sage, Parsons, Kans., H. Blanton Parks, New York; W. A. Lewis, D. D., Memphis, Tenn.; secretary of People's Benefit Association; W. H. Heard, D. D., of Atlanta, Ga., secretary of the Connectional Preachers' Aid Association; W. W. Allen, of the Southern Christian Recorder, Columbus, Ga.; Mrs. Ruth M. Collett, of Philadelphia, representing the A. M. E. Book Concern; Miss E. Marle Carter, of New Orleans, La., representing the A. M. E. Church Review; R. H. Hackley, Washington, Iowa.
Bishop A. Grant, D. D., after giving the conference a recess of 8 minutes delivered an address. He was proud to see the ministers present at the opening, and felt sure that much good would be accomplished during the week. He said in part:
"I have been very busy since August 2. I have been required to travel a few thousand miles in order to get over my district. The Puget Sound conference was indeed a success. It was one of the most beneficial sessions ever held in the history of the conference. Many souls were reported saved and the increase in dollar money was $136 over the previous year.
"We thought that the California conference would fall behind but the men were there on time looking hopeful. Bethel church, San Francisco, which cost $9,000 was destroyed, but it was the first congregation to rebuild, and one session of the conference was held in the temporary building. The increase in that conference was $146.35. The Colorado conference is always up, and this year was no exception. The conference reported $1.15 for each member in it. The increase was one hundred dollars. The Kansas conference increased in membership 768, and dollar money $180. North Missouri conference which was held last week rolled up an increase in members 656 and $201 increase in dollar money. There are great possibilities out West.
"Our people are making wonderful progress in the West, and they are going out there. I believe that every man owes it to himself to live in that part of the world where life and property are safe. Where he can exercise the rights given by the country unmolested. Where he can cast a ballot and
KANSAS CITY, MO., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906.
have it counted. Feel that if he should be so unfortunate as to get into trouble, justice will be met out to him. We owe it to ourselves, to our church, and to our God, to be true to each.
"Any man who will stir up bad blood in either race, or who will deliver speeches which will tend to stir up bad blood will do his race untold harm. At the same time any man who advises our people to arm themselves and fight, is no friend to the race, for to attempt to fight would mean complete annihilation. What can 10,000,000 do with 60,000,000 the latter having all the guns and ammunition and the army and navy in their hands. I plead with you my brethren to preach the gospel of peace." Hold up to the people the cross of Christ."
At this point the conference joined in singing "When the Mists Have Rolled Away."
Bishop Grant announced the death of Bishop B. W. Arnett, and spoke of him as one of the greatest men of his race. He touchingly referred to the work of Bishop Arnett, and appointed a committee to arrange a program for memorial services which took place Thursday at noon. After singing "Shall We Meet Beyond the River?" The pastors proceeded to report the result of their years labor and to pay in their conference claims.
Promptly at noon the conference took a recess for dinner.
The afternoon was spent in hearing reports of pastors. A feature of the session was the arrival of Rev. J. I. Lowe, D. D., of Pine Bluff, Ark. Dr. Lowe was given an ovation, and business was suspended to introduce him to the conference. He made a few remarks.
Among the prominent members of the conference who is taking an active part and who is on some of the most important committees on the conference is Rev. W. T. Vernon, D. D., register of the United States treasury. Dr. Vernon's elevation to the position which he occupies in the government did not take him away from his duty to his church. He is mingling with his brethren and assisting them as he did during his presidency of Western University. He is the same W. T. Vernon, having a friendly feeling for his fellowmen. Such a man is a leader, and is worthy of any position in the gift of church or state.
The citizens of Kansas City turned out in large numbers Wednesday to extend a cordial welcome to the Bishop, general officers, and members of the Missouri conference. Bishop A. Grant presided, and seated by his side was Rev. H. Blanton Parks, who will no doubt make one of the successors to the able prelate. He is now in line of promotion.
The exercises opened with music by the choir. There is much credit due Miss Marie Lucas, for the excellent music rendered by the choir. Mrs. Ophelia Jackson presided at the organ.
Rev. F. Jesse Peck, D. D., the able pastor of Allen chapel had arranged to entertain his guests and he is a royal entertainer. Some day the general church will recognize his worth and ability by appointing or electing him to a higher place.
Dr. W. Thompkins rendered a solo, and the Rev. J. Frank McDonald delivered an eloquent address of welcome for the ministers, and Rev. J. M. Harris, of the M. E. church, said that he would extend a welcome to the ministers of the conference as men. The conference was charmed by the address delivered by Miss Ida M. Godfrey, of the public schools. Solo by James J. Craw, and the matchless orator, Nelson C. Crews, delivered an address of welcome.
The presence of Prof. W. T. Vernon, of the treasury department of the National government, and Prof. Shelton French, of Western university, was the occasion of an outbust of applause.
Dr. H. Blanton Parks is an active worker in the conference and is making many friends. Be it remembered that ten years ago Dr. Parks was pastor of Allen chapel, and was elected from this church to his present position, Secretary of Missions. He has made many friends throughout the country and nation. He is a fine orator, and as editor of the Voice of Missions his ability is also shown, and the people of Missouri will hall with delight "Bishop" H. B. Parks.
Rev. J. D. Barksdale, presiding elder of the St. Louis district showed that he had been faithful in the discharge of his duty. He is an able minister and a leader of men. Rev. M. Collins, D. D., and N. C. Buren, presiding elders also made a good showing. They are men of ability.
A large amount of business was transacted in the morning session, (Thursday.) Bishop Grant made a short address in which he commended the work of Gov. Folk in seeing that the law was put into execution and the closing of the saloons on Sunday.
The representatives of the general church departments made short addresses.
Rev. J. H. Allen preached the annual sermon Thursday morning.
At noon memorial services were held in respect to Bishop B. W. Arnett, D. D. Bishop Grant, who was elected at the same time. Bishop Arentt was presided. The services were sad, and while the addresses were being delivered and the music rendered by the choir many of the men and women wejt. The following program was rendered:
Music by the choir; prayer, Rev. B. W. Stewart; music by the choir; "Arnett as a Bishop," H. B. Parks; "As a General Officer," Rev. N. C. Buren; music by the choir; "As a Humanitarian," Rev. M. S. Bryant; "As a Statesman," Rev. J. R. Ransom; solo, "My Jesus as Thou Wilt," Rev. J. E. Edwards; "As a Historian," Rev. W. M. Heard; remarks by Bishop Grant.
The afternoon on Thursday was spent in routine business. A missionary mass meeting was held Thursday night. Rev. H, B. Parks, D. D., missionary secretary made the address.
Missionary Mass Meeting.
Thursday night Allen chapel was crowded from altar to door. The missionary mass meeting was presided over by Bishop Grant. The missionary committee made an able report and addresses were delivered by Rev. H. B. Parks, L. H. Harris, W. D. Cook, D. D., and J. L. Lowe, D. D., of Pine Bluff, Ark.
Friday morning, promptly at 9 o'clock, Bishop Grant called the conference to order, and after impressive song and prayer service the journal was read and approved.
The disciplinary questions were asked and answered. In answer to the question, "Where shall our next conference be held?" St. Paul A. M. E. church, St. Louis was selected.
A number of committees reported during the morning session. At night the educational mass meeting of the conference was held, Bishop Grant presided. He said in his opening remarks, "That the biggest battle the American people had to fight was ignorance." He urged the ministers to prepare for their work and to spend their idle time in study instead of sitting around on street corners.
NUMBER 12
Addresses were delivered by Rev. W. T. Vernon, D. D., of Washington, D. C., Prof. Shelton French and others.
Friday afternoon the conference visited Western university, in a body, and a session was held out there. The committee on the state of the country reported at this session.
The appointments will be made Monday. The people will be very much disappointed if Dr. Peck is not returned to Allen chapel. Bishop Grant refused to discuss the matter with a reporter for THE RISING SON.
"I never discuss my appointments before they are made," he said, "and I am sorry that I cannot let you know in advance. All the churches of the city will receive as their pastors the best men I have, or at least some of them. We have a strong set of men in our conference now."
"Have you had a good session?"
"I am highly pleased with the result. The public will be invited to our closing."
Bishop Grant will preach Sunday morning. He is an able speaker and the church should be crowded to hear him.
Rev. A. A. Gilbert is among his friends here once more. There is no minister of the Gospel with more loyal friends and supporters than Rev. Gilbert. Twenty-four years of his life ing him as a delegate to the last general conference and he holds the cue for a successful candidacy for the next one. Rev. Gilbert has pastored the church in Lexington, Mo., 4 years, where he
have been spent in the ministry in the Missouri conference, 10 of them here among us, where he successfully pastored Ebenezar Chapel, bringing her from a fourth rate charge to a first class one. His brothers ministers attested their faith and loyalty by send-
has won the love and confidence of his people to such an extent that they are desirious of having him return for another year. Rev. Gilbert is a firm, true, honest, upright man and deserves all the honors his church and race can give him. greater financial and spiritual gain than in previous years.
Reverned F. Jesse Peck, is nearing the close of his eighth year of successful work as pastor of Allen chapel. This noble man's work
Considering all his adversities, Rev. Peck has made a remarkably tremendous stride to place Allen chapel in the front ranks. The citizens of Kansas City, including both races, are very proud of his achievements toward the uplifting of humanity, and of his great and good influence upon the young people.
M. B.
Particularly at this period of development, Allen chapel, the foremost power among us, can not afford to take one step backward. It seems the hue and cry of all the people, as well as the congregations plea, that Dr. Peck be returned for another year.
To Vote You Must Be Registered.
stands for itself in results too great to be overlooked by anyone. He rebuilt Allen chapel, which today stands among others, he has erected for his denomination, in this section. The services at Allen chapel now excel any of past years. The work has improved, in every respect and shows
If you are not registered from the place you now live at you must register on next Tuesday, October 16, 1906, between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m.
STRANGEST COLONY on the FACE of the EARTH
Tulipson
°
Kabakon is the new Eden.
Nassau is the new bishop.
The Order of the Sun has established there the strangest colony on the face of the earth; a colony in which all go naked, all admit the sun the source of all life, and all subsist upon cocoanuts—for they say the cocoanut is the sun's representative on earth, the life-giver, the healer—the spirit of Sol. The cocoa palm is the mother of humanity; the sun is its creator.
In the Palm Theater of Pure Natural Life is the seat of government of the International Colonial Empire of Fruitarianism, founded by the Order of the Sun, and there the naked hosts, Christians, who until a few months ago wore clothes, worship the sun, not as a god, but as the giver of all life and the healer of the sick.
Tropical Fruit in Rich
Profusion on the Island
The island of Kabakon is in German New Guinea and belongs to the New Lauenburg group, which is situated in the Bismarck archipelago, between New Pommern and New Mecklenburg. It is one mile from Herbertshoehe, the seat of the government, and half a mile from Miko, where there are many large warehouses filled with many bad goods from all the world around for many big and little people who have not yet adopted the simple life and coconuts of Kabakon. Coconuts are defined by Mr. Engelhardt as the idea, the spirit of the sun constituted in plant form, and they are the Get par excellence for the members of the Order of the Sun. Kabakon yields many coconuts and many other sweets of nature. It is a big coconut, banana and papaya plantation of 7,000 trees, 165 acres in size, with extraordinary fertility, and bearing incidentally all the other famous tropical fruits, mangoes, breadstuffs, pineapples, oranges, lemons, and has a good annual crop of sweet potatoes, too, yams, taron, sugar cane, tallia nuts, gallip, and other tropical oddities.
"Let us join together in the tropics," eries August Engelhardt, founder of the Order of the Sun, of the International Colonial Empire of Fruitarianism, and of the Palm Temple of Pure Natural Life, and purchaser and sole
Johnson 2006
proprietor of the lovely island of Kabakon.
"If we do truth we shall get true and come nearer and nearer to God, who is truth and life. To live in the cool and dark Europe, the friend of the icy winter, in caves called houses and towns, in rags called clothes, is a slow, sure empoisonment, suicide. Let us go back to the source of all life, of all mind and strength, to the sun, who is nothing else but the visibility of the most ingenious and most lovable being we can look upon with our eyes! The delivery of mankind from sickness and death is equivalent to their return to the sun in every respect. You ask how you can in all respects serve mankind best. Serve the sun, O. friend, you will then become sun to mankind."
The members of the sun order consider this fair and teeming little land an Eden, a happy valley, a paradise. Herr Max Luetzow, musical director of one of the Berlin theaters, and one of the first of the Kabakon colonists, cannot conceive 'better conditions for an ideal life. There are few files, and there absolutely is no dust. Serpents and dangerous animals do not exist here, but we have peace loving natives; no cannibalism. There is a magnificent panorama on every side, mountains over 6,000 feet high, with tropical vegetation; it is more beautiful than Ceylon. Four boats offer opportunities for visiting with neighboring islands. We have friendly relations with neighboring firms. The
---
total area which we can reach with our boats covers many thousand miles.
Colonists Work Only When They Are So
"The climate is not changeable. A large, well selected library is at our disposal. We always are naked, therefore the heat does not affect us. Besides, uncooked foods do not produce thirst, especially when one has the opportunity of sea bathing at any time. Mr. Engelhardt is most tolerant toward those who hold different opinions. Physical work is not compulsory. We work when we feel inclined. The rest of the time we superintend the operations of the natives and do mental work. Our lives are characterized by the absence of the hurry and worry of civilization. Our colony is conducted on communistic lines; each colonist becomes part proprietor."
The conditions for admission to the sun order are, first, recommendations of two "respectable, credible" persons who are to be "approbated by the leader of the sun order;" secondly, a payment of about $250 for such as are able to pay, "for less wealthy people, corresponding to their property, for poor fruit eaters nothing. In the first line the sun order wants men of noble, excellent character;" thirdly, the disposition of about $150 with the imperial government at Herbertshoebe in case of their quitting the colony of having need of the money in emergency; fourth, every colonist must be fruitarian, that is, he must live on nuts and fruit; fifth, a biographical sketch and photograph are required.
Hope Is to Bring Forth
a Perfect Race of Men.
"All fruit eaters," observes Mr. Enghardt, "can live a permanent naked life like myself, join nature in every respect. Magnificent sea and sand baths complete the continual sun and air baths in the best manner." It has been thought by some of the uninitiated public that marriage is forbidden at Kabakon; but, on the contrary, family life is encouraged, and it is the hope of the colony to furnish a nucleus to the world of sane, honorable, healthy and pure
```markdown
```
minded men. Married men with their families are hence accorded an especial welcome.
The sun order derives its fair name from the fact that its members venerate the sun as the source of all life, "as the visibility of an everlasting being of love and wisdom. We do not worship the sun after the manner of the Parsees, who live in clothes and at sunrise fall prostrate on their knees on carpets and lift up their voices to heaven. We worship the sun by our daily life, by a clothesless existence in the full light and life of the tropical sun, nourished by the fruits that are enriched by the vitality of the sunshine, the sacred cocoa nuts. The sun, the cocoanut and the man simply are different manifestations of the same life."
Invalid in Civilization;
Has Become Strong Man
The ultra-modern conclusions whereat Mr. Engelhardt has arrived regarding human modes of living, he declares, are not the result of speculation, but of experiment. He himself has been an invalid, and an invalid he remained until he foresook house and town, coat and shoe, and assumed the airy fashions of primitive mankind, and adopted the diet of the Darwinian ancestors of men, the merry monkeys, who banquet off cocanuts and banyans.
Mr. Engelhardt was born in Nuremberg, Bavaria. His father was a manufacturer, and a most excellent man. His mother was a fine woman. She gave him careful training. He attended the Latin school and gymnasium
---
at Nuremberg and afterward studied mathematics and science at Munich. Then he lived a number of years at Nuremberg, occupying himself as an author. About the year 1900 he became a vegetarian. From childhood up he had been weakly of constitution, and ever since 1894 he had busied himself with medicine and physicians in hopes of gaining strength. He tried all sorts of dietaries and after vegetarianism took to a pure fruit regimen, and then milk and cream.
Cocoanut Declared the Proper Food for Mankind
"Just as mother's milk is the one proper and natural food of the suckling babe so the coconut is the one natural and proper food for the man. The coconut palm is his mother, it is his kitchen and his cellar. In its fruits it bestows upon him a nutriment whereby alone the greatest and highest of his bodily and spiritual powers may be awakened." Mr Engelhardt made experiments with the other fruits and nuts, but from none received the satisfactory results which inspired his foundation of the coconut colony.
It was in November, 1901, that the founder of the Order of the Sun left Germany in search of a tropical residence, thinking it might be Ceylon, and it was in 1902 that he landed upon the happy isle of Kabakon. A year later, on the 3d of March, 1903, he "proclaimed Kabakon an open fruit garden and sungrove. I will settle it with fruit eaters."
While comparatively few persons, in Mr. Engelhardt's judgment, now may be prepared for such a life as the idealities of Kabakon offer, as these become better and better known everywhere his ideas will be popularized and more and more will desire to put them into practical execution.
WITH A MIND OF HIS OWN.
The Sort of Man That Mr. Stiggy
Fancies Here Set Forth.
"I like a man with a mind of his own," said Mr. Stiggy. "Right or wrong, I like a man who knows what he thinks, and who is not afraid to speak it.
"Now, there's Jones. I say to
```markdown
```
Jones, on a lowery morning:
"What do you think, Jonesy? Think I'd better take an umbrella?
"And Jones says:
"Take an umbrella? Why, within 22 minutes it'll be raining blue, green and purple pitchforks; and if you haven't got a boiler iron umbrella with I-beam ribs you'll be speared to death and then drowned. Sure you want an umbrella."
"Or suppose it had happened to be Robinson I asked; another man who knows what he thinks, and Robinson says:
"Umbrella? Foolish! In 20 minutes it'll be clear as a bell. All blue sky."
"Now, of course, Jones and Robinson couldn't both be right, but I would rather lug an umbrella uselessly, following Jones, or get drenched following Robinson—be led by a man who had a mind of his own, and wasn't afraid to speak it—than to hear what I would get from Snibby if I asked him:
"Better take an umbrella, hadn't it? I say to Snibbly, to hear him saying:
"Yeas, I suppose it would be safer."
"Snibbly doesn't know what he thinks about the weather, or about anything else; and if he does know what he thinks, he doesn't say it. He sides with me; he thinks it would be safer!
"I like the man with a mind of his own, and he is, everywhere, the man that makes the wheels go round."
---
TIRED BACKS.
The kidneys have a great work to do in keeping the blood pure. When
they get out of order it causes backache, headaches, dizziness, languor and distressing urinary troubles. Keep the kidneys well and all these sufferings will be saved you. Mrs. S. A. Moore, proprietor of a res
they get out of order it causes backache, headaches, dizziness, languor and distressing urinary troubles. Keep the kidneys well and all these sufferings will be saved you. Mrs. S. A. Moore, proprietor of a restaurant at Waterville, Mo., says: "Before using Doan's Kidsn Pills I suffered everything from kidney troubles for a year and a half. I had pain in the back and head, and almost continuous in the loins and felt weary all the time. A few doses of Doan's Kidsn Pills brought great relief, and I kept on taking them until in a short time I was cured. I think Doan's Kidsn Pills are wonderful."
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y.
HAD IT ALL FIGURED OUT.
Couple Not Only We're Going to Live,
But Become Rich.
Lord Sholto Douglas, who was arrested recently in Maine through an error, was congratulated at a Portland hotel on the courtesy he has shown in pardoning the erring Maine police.
"Why shouldn't I pardon them?" said Lord Douglas, laughing. "They did their duty. Their calculations were wrong, that is all.
"I admit that their calculations were absurdly wrong. They reminded me of a young lady I used to know when I lived in the west.
"This young lady, whose family was well to do, announced to her father one night that she was going to marry a penniless man.
"If you marry him,' her father grumbled, 'how on earth will you live?' "Oh,' said the girl, confidently, 'we have figured that all out and it is very simple. You know that black hen I bought last week?'
"Well, I have consulted the best poultry circulars, and they all agree that a good hen will raise 20 chicks a year. That means that next season I shall have 21 hens. These at the season's end, each having raised her 20 young, will give me 420 in all. The next season there will be 8,400, the next 168,000, and the next 3,360,000. Just think of that! With chickens at 50 cents apiece we will then be worth $1,685,000. So you see, papa, you needn't worry about us."
NO REST NIGHT OR DAY.
With Irritating Skin Humor—Hain Began to Fall Out—Wonderful Result from Cuticura Remedies.
"About the latter part of July my whole body began to itch. I did not take much notice of it at first, but it began to get worse all the time, and then I began to get uneasy and tried all kinds of baths and other remedies that were recommended for skin humors; but I became worse all the time. My hair began to fall out and my scalp itched all the time. Especially at night, just as soon as I would get in bed and get warm, my whole body would begin to itch and my finger nails would keep it irritated, and it was not long before I could not rest night or day. A friend asked me to try the Cuticura Remedies, and I old, and the first application helped me wonderfully. For about four weeks I would take a hot bath every night and then apply the Cuticura Ointment to my whole body; and I kept getting better, and by the time I used four boxes of Cuticura I was entirely cured, and my hair stopped falling out. D. E. Blankenship, 319 N. Del. St., Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 27, 1905."
Chandler's Joke on Conkling.
Chandler's Joke on Conkling.
Conkoeling Conkley was a capital boxer and quite proud of his skill. One evening after considerable banter he induced Senator Chandler to "put on the gloves" with him. He played with Chandler for a few rounds, much to the discomfiture of the downeaster. The latter bided his time and some time later quietly brought a professional pugilist to dinner where Conkling was a guest. In the course of the evening "Mr. Smith" was induced to engage in a boxing bout with Mr. Conkling. The professional danced around the senator, landing when and where he wished, playing with him as he would with a punching bag. The elegant New York senator was dazed, overwhelmed, humiliated, crushed. When he surrendered and called enough, as he did at last, Senator Chandler smiled blandly and presented the pugilist in his true colors.
With a smooth iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your shirt-walst just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the iron.
New Use for Gramophone.
Drilling native Malay levies by word of command emitted from a gramophone is the latest instance of modern ingenuity. Even the Zulu can now hear his own native songs and war dances from records made by a London company, who have sold more than 20 machines to swarthy warrior chiefs in South Africa. Folk-songs of the Pygmies were recently procured, and a machine has been dispatched to Lapland for the purpose, if possible, of procuring Eskimo folk-songs.
Rich Crown Has Disappeared.
A richly jeweled crown, which cost £20,000, has disappeared from the church at Mont. St. Michael, Rouen.
One version is that it has been stolen, another that it has been hidden by the priests to save it from confiscation by the government.
$100 Reward. $100.
WHO SH
SKETCH OF THE LIFE
And a True Story of How
Had Its Birth and How
it to be Offered for Pu
WHO SHE WAS
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of'73" Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
This remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became known as a woman of an alert
Yours for Health
Lydia C. Pinkham
and investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa-
thetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies—calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and experience many of them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvestfields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies expressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medicines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combination of the choiceest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar to the female sex, and Lyda E. Pinkham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them.
All this so far was done freely, without money and without price, as a labor of love.
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centennial year dawned it found their property swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to
NO MORE MUSTARD FOR
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN
CAPIS
VASE
EXTRACT OF THE CAT
A QUICK, SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS
15c-IN COLLAPSIBLE TUSES-AT
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN
TILL THE PAIN COMES
A substitute for and superior to must
blister the most delicate skin. The
phe the article are wonderful. It will st
Headache and Sciatica. We recomme
counter-irritant known, also as an ex
and stomach and all Rheumatic. Neu
will prove what we claim for it, and
household and for children. Once u
people say "it is the best of all your
of vaseline unless the same carries o
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH W
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER. THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IKRITANT. CAPISICUM VASELINE
A QUICK. SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN-PRICE 15c. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT TILL THE PAIN COMES-KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Headache and Sotiatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine.
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE-LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY
Remarkable Double Wedding.
A remarkable double wedding has been celebrated in a Viennese church.
A manufacturer named Muller married a widow, while at the same time his son married the widow's daughter.
Thus the father becomes the father-in-law of his own son, and the mother also the mother-in-law of her daughter.
By following the directions, which are plainly printed on each package of Defance Starch, Men's Collars and Cuffs can be made just as stiff as desired, with either gloss or domestic finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by all good grocers.
Ghastly Foreign Pun.
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, the noted American clubwoman, has been received abroad by royalty, and some of the foreign papers have the temerity to declare that she has a proverbial right to look at a king.
HE WAS OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM the Vegetable Compound by the "Panic of '73" Caused public Sale in Drug Stores.
restore the family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for the women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles, Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the demand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, until today Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used annually in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have done it herself.
During her long and eventful experience she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to preserve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice—and there were thousands—received careful study, and the details, including symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collaboration of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in the world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. She was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its originator passed away. For nearly twenty-five years she has continued it, and nothing in the work shows when the first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large family, took it up. *With women assistants, some as capable as herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work, and probably from the office of no other person have so many women been advised how to regain health. Sick women, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; made from simple roots and herbs; the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noble woman whose name it bears.
PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
IN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
MISCUM
DELINE
LAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
WAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN—PRICE
ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR
POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT
S—KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
Stard or any other plaster, and will not
pain-allaying and curative qualities of
top-the toothache at once, and relieve
mend it as the best and safest external
external remedy for pains in the chest
curalgic and Gouty complaints. A trial
it will be found to be invaluable in the
used no family will be without it. Many
preparations." Accept no preparation
your label, as other se it is not genuine.
WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE-
VILL INTEREST YOU.
---
Many are Freebooters and Cut-Throats Eager for the Opportunity of Plunder.
THE TROPICAL WATER
Kind of Country in Which the Freebooter Thrives
A significant word from Cuba since Secretary Taft went there in effort to bring about amicable settlement of the revolution is that in many cases the insurgents are becoming restless, the discipline is bad and many are breaking up into bands for the purpose of independent movement with view to plunder. The fact of the matter is that many of the revolutionists are what might be called freebooters and cut-throats, and have welcomed the present state of disaffection in Cuba as affording them an opportunity for their lawless deeds, such as they enjoyed in the "good old days" under Spanish rule when murder and rapine were events of every day occurrence.
From its earliest history there has existed in Cuba such lawless class of people. At one time a few generations ago, they infested the coast as pirates, swooping down with their little sloops or schooners upon all unarmed vessels which chanced their way, and as such they were only finally suppressed by the British, who as late as the '30s, drew a cordon around the island outside of the three-mile limit, which with little hesitation they reduced to suit their convenience when it came to the matter of pursuing a suspicious craft. These crafts
Kind of Country in Whic
were chased into some one of the numerous coves or bays which indent the coast of Cuba, and when their crews were captured they were taken to Jamaica for trial, where it was a short shift between there and the hangman's noose. Frequently the vessels were driven ashore by the English cruisers, and the crews of the pirate ships, making their escape, became pirates on land like the old-time buccaneers of Hispaniola, with the difference that they rarely made war upon the country people, who almost invariably stood in with them. The remnants of these pirates, or freebooters, have existed in Cuba to
J. L.
A Type of the Cuban Freebooter.
the present day, their ranks having been recruited from time to time by the country people who, finding themselves in some difficulty with the authorities, preferred the free, careless life of the freebooter to going to prison. It can scarcely be claimed, except in rare instances, that the present day semi-lawless set in Cuba is formed of the descendants of the original pirates, although their methods and manner of living are about the same. Occasionally an individual may be found who will tell you unblushing that his father or grandfather was one of the pirates. As a rule these people are without religion, laws, or sacred traditions, and when the op
---
portunity has occurred they have committed deeds of shocking ferocity, scarcely equaled by those of the savage Indians on our frontier when they were upon the warpath in their most palmy days. In some respects they are worse than our savages, for the Indians made war only upon their enemies and were always true to each other, being bound together by their own laws and traditions. But it is not so with these Cuban freebooters, and it was owing to their treacherous methods, which multiplied with each fresh outbreak of an insurrection, that inspired the Spaniards to commit many of the cruel deeds attributed to them during their struggle to maintain their grasp upon the island.
The Spanishards called these outlaws "bandidos" and always pursued them with more or less relentless vigor, but their buccaneering methods were such that neither the Spanish Guardia Civil nor the Spanish infantryman was very effective against them. They, like the buccaneers of old, lived off the country, and the country supplied all their immediate necessities, whether their depredations were carried on in organized bands or by roaming individuals.
As a rule the most law abiding and
h the Freebooter Thrives.
peaceably inclined peasants stood in with them to the extent of covering up their trails when pursued and accepting a share of their booty, while on the other hand the peaceably appearing peasant, inhabiting some thatched bohlo on the edge of a clearing with his wife and children, might possibly be the very robber whose daring exploit had recently aroused a whole town and sent the soldiers out on his trail. The Spanish soldiers never could tell.
In the fertile tropical land of Cuba the life of these freeboctors is comparatively easy. As a matter of fact, after these Cuban gentry have tasted of it, it is hard for them to relinquish it. They live in a land of eternal summer, where in normal times cattle, honey and sweet potatoes abound. Why should they work when God has given them so much? The peaceful farmer of the interior, no matter how little he labors in the field, produces a great deal more than he can consume, and he is ever ready to share it with whomsoever comes along, and consequently the roving freebooter, who would be a simple tramp elsewhere, finds subsistence easy.
He may be a fugitive from justice, and then he learns to look upon all those who are rich or in government service, either as civilians or soldiers, as his enemies, and he only awaits the opportune moment when a leader steps forth to organize him and others like him into a formidable band.
After the insurrection was over and the brief war with Spain had been fought out the country was so completely devastated that such of these ex-freebooters as remained were obliged to come into the towns and cities, where they posed as patriots and came in for their share of loot in the way of Red Cross supplies issued to starving reconcentrados. Then there was that pay which the Americans ceded to Gomez to pay his soldiers, when as a matter of fact his so-called army had been practically exterminated before the beginning of the war with Spain. They came in for some of that.
The supplies and soldiers' pay quieted the turbulent spirit of those former outlaws for a time, although during the occupation of the islands there were many examples of their capabilities.
---
THE WOMAN'S CORNER
Tots Wearing False Curls
6. A color Quakers like? MADAME MERRI
LATEST IDEA FOR SMALL GIRL'S ADORNMENT.
Natural Hair Matched with Braids Warranted to "Stay Put"—Hard to Get Shades That Exactly Correspond.
The hot, moist days of summer developed a new class of victims of the false hair habit. One of these was seen the other day seated in front of a large mirror in a fashionable hair-dressing establishment, patiently watching the selection of just the right shade of hair to match her own golden locks, says the New York Times. The clerk and a fond mamma were superintending the matching process, and the owner of the little golden head looked tired and sleepy. She was not over five or six years old, which any one will admit is really a trifle too young to be vitally interested in such a grown-up question as the matching of false hair.
Investigation revealed the fact that such a youthful victim is not at all an unusual sight at fashionable hair dressers. The modern mama does
A pretty scheme for an October 31st party is to cover a door entrance with jet black muslin, ornamented with gilt stars of paper. In this curtain, which must be stretched, tight, cut a round hole about the size of a silver dollar. In an unopened room produce thunder by rattling strips of sheet tin, and lightning by flashing a dark lantern.
Announce to the guests that the "oracle" will receive questions, and answer them by passing slips of paper through the opening. A clever person behind the curtain can make this very interesting.
Picture fortune telling may be made another attractive feature. In a basket place a number of pictures cut from magazines and advertisements, let each guest draw a picture. Each picture is taken to the "fortune teller," who has a copy of what each picture is supposed to represent, for instance, a ship illustrates that the holder will marry a naval officer or take a journey to a foreign country. A small house, signifies "love in a cottage," a diamond ring means an engagement, a teapot or cat indicates single blessedness, etc. It will readily be seen how fortunes can be made to suit any entertainment.
In addition to the regular Halloween of nuts, apples, popcorn, elder, etc., have individual pumpkin pies, baked in gem pans, doughnuts and coffee.
A. Bird Contest.
The answers to these questions are all specimens of the feathery tribe, and the programmes may be ornamented with pen-and-ink or sepia drawings of birds.
QUESTIONS.
1. A jolly outdoor time?
2. What hunters sometimes do?
3. A quaint, old-fashioned name?
4. Used in decorations.
5. From whom do you buy meat?
6. A color Quakers like?
2233
A very pretty border this, worked entirely in cross-stitch. It is suitable for ornamenting various articles such as linen or canvas tablecovers, towelcovers, sideboard or dinner-wagon cloths, etc., and may be worked with mercerised cotton, flax thread, or washing-silk as preferred.
not accept with folded hands and meek submission the fact that her darling's hair has a wilted appearance on a sticky day. Resignation is one of the old-time virtues. Instead of accepting the fact gracefully the modern mother looks for a remedy, with the result that the poor child is dragged to the hairdresser's end has her natural hair matched to a couple of curls warranted to stay in a distinctly spiral outline regardless of the humidity of the atmosphere.
According to the testimony of those who know, many mothers are now purchasing false curls for their small children, and many a topknot bow of bright-hued ribbon conceals the dividing line 'twixt a little tot's own hair and a couple of store curls. Those experienced in the business of matching hair say that it is almost impossible to get just the right shades to correspond perfectly with the tints of childhood. They are very different from the usual shades bought in false hair, and matching a child's hair perfectly is considered the work of an expert—so say the authorities in this branch of business.
THE HOSTESS.
days for the Entertainment of contest--Pretty Table nation.
7. An unsteady light?
8. Material for summer trousers?
9. A stupid fellow?
10. A boy's name?
11. What friends do?
12. Never seen in summer?
13. An amusement for children?
14. What farmers need in harvest?
1. A meadow lark.
2. Kildeer.
3. Phoebe.
4. Bunting.
5. Butcher bird.
6. Dove.
7. Flickers.
8. Duck.
9. Booby.
10. Bob White.
11. Chat.
12. Snow.
13. Teeter.
14. Thrasher.
A Table Decoration.
A table decoration that elicited much favorable comment from the guests was the star flower in the center of the table, the place cards were star-shaped, bearing apopriate quotations, such as:
"Look; how the floor of heaven Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold."
"Who can count the stars of heaven. Who sing their influence on this lower world."
"Silently, one by one, in the infinite meadows of heaven Blossoms the lovely stars, the forget-me-nots of the angels."
"Ye stars, which are the poetry of heaven."
The ices and cakes were both heart-shaped, and the hostess wore a beautiful jeweled star in her hair.
PROPER THING IN GLOVES.
Winter Style Is Not to Be Unduly Extravagant.
The woman who is fearfully anticipating the extravagance of the coming winter made necessary by the prophesied continuance of the elbow glove may take heart of grace when she remembers that there are to be two distinct styles of dress, equally fashionable.
For ordinary street wear, business, shopping and all like non-social purposes the tailored coat with a long plain sleeve is to be as much worn as ever.
It is only for dress occasions and social festivities that the elbow sleeve will continue through the winter. When a woman carries a muff, and possibly rides in a carriage this abbreviated style of sleeve is not sensical. But it would be a very foolish woman who adopted it for morning or business wear.
One dress costume with short sleeved jacket and long gloves will see the average woman through. For the rest, she can still be adequately gowned in a long-sleeved coat and the usual and less costly short street gloves.
Bronze and Marble Monument to be Erected on the Banks of Hudson Where First Steamboat Was Run.
THE STAIRS
Proposed Design of the Fulton Memorial Monument.
Just 100 years ago next August, Robert Fulton, after many years of effort, succeeded in making his trip on the Hudson in his famous steam-driven ship, the Clermont. The story of the birth of steamboat navigation is one filled with the rivalries and jealousies of inventors who had for years been struggling with the problem of the application of steam to navigation of ships, and the controversy as to who was the original inventor of steam navigation has been thrashed over and over from that time to this.
But however strong the claims of Rumsey, who tried a steam-driven vessel upon the Potomac, in 1785, or John Fitch, or Patrick Millar, or Nathan Read, or even Robert L. Stevens, who navigated a paddle-wheel steamer on the Hudson only a few days after the successful trip of Fulton, it has been practically conceded that Robert Fulton is entitled to the credit for the first practical application of steam as a propelling power for vessels. That the memory of the great inventor may be perpetuated, the Robert Fulton Monument association proposes to erect on the banks of the Hudson a marble and bronze monument to cost $600,000. The clay model of the monument has been completed and approved, and now all that remains to be done is to raise the
Proposed Design of the
necessary money. The design embodies the broadest ideas of the results of Fulton's invention, the idea being that all industries have been developed with more or less rapidity through the application of steam to navigation, and that through the same agency the four quarters of the earth have been brought together in commerce and intercourse.
The design shows a heroic figure of Fulton contemplating a model of the Clermont, surmounting a shaft in which is supposed to be a winding stairway to the observation landing. At the base of the shaft are symbolized the various spheres of human industry, and the corners of the base are ornamented with ethnological groups depicting the four races of men, or, in other words, the four corners of the globe. The materials to
Y
Cornelius Vanderbilt, President of Fulton Monument Association.
he used in its construction are white marble and bronze.
The story of Robert Fulton's struggle with the problem of steer navigation is an interesting one, his earlier attempts proving failures, as did those of numerous other inventors at work on the same problem.
As a boy Fulton was filled with the idea of boats and boat propulsion, and at the age of 13 he had constructed paddle-wheels which he applied with success to a fishing boat. He had a strong artistic bent, and several years of his young manhood were spent in painting miniature portraits, landscapes, etc., besides making mechanical and architectural drawings. At the age of 21 he went to London, where he practiced his art, and it was there that he began his experiments in mechanics under the patronage of various wealthy persons with whom
---
his art work had brought him in touch. He patented a mill for sawing marble, and later made plans for the construction of cast iron aqueducts, and a great work of this kind was built across the river Dee.
He also patented in England a machine for spinning flax, a dredging machine, a market or passage boat, a dispatch boat, and a trader, amphibious boat, as it was called, to be used on canals. His treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation, written about this time, received wide circulation, and a copy was sent to the president of the United States by the author.
It may not be generally known that Fulton was interested in submarines, which of late years have occupied so much attention, and have achieved such marked success, but while in France, in 1801, he began experiments on the Seine with a boat for submarine navigation, and later conducted some experiments at Brest in behalf of the French government, but when he failed to blow up the British vessels that sailed along the coast, the French officials became disgusted with the novel craft.
England, aroused by these efforts secured the services of the inventor, and after testing decided the submarine was impracticable, but considered his torpedo of some value.
Fulton Memorial Monument.
which at a test blew up a 200-ton brig.
Soon after this Fulton returned to the United States and continued his experiments with torpedoes, and the government appropriated $5,000 for the testing of his torpedoes and submarine explosives.
As early as 1793 Fulton had turned his attention to steam navigation, but it was not until ten years later that his efforts took any tangible shape. Then with the financial assistance of Chancellor Livingston, he launched a steamboat on the Seine, which, owing to faulty construction of the frame, immediately sank. Another boat was built, with the old machinery, and a trial trip was made, but no great speed was attained.
However, encouraged by this partial success, Fulton ordered an engine to be sent to the United States, and returned to this country to continue his experiments. Early in the spring of 1807 the boat which was to navigate the Hudson, and especially the system of steam navigation, was completed at a ship yard on the East river. The engine was put in later, and on August 11, of that year, the Clermont steamed up the Hudson to Albany, the voyage occupying 32 hours. Thus was the world given the first steamboat of practical value, and the credit and honor for the great achievement are undoubtedly due to Robert Fulton.
For this reason it seems fitting that the centennial of that notable achievement should be marked by the erection of a monument to the great inventor. At the Jamestown exposition next year it is planned to observe Robert Fulton day, when the navies of the world will be represented in Hampton Roads, and a naval review surpassing anything yet seen will be witnessed. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who is the president of the monument association, will sail at the head of the ships of war in his yacht.
The design of the Fulton monument is by Leopold Bracony, and it is proposed to raise the sum necessary to its creation in marble and bronze in small subscriptions, and to place the names of all donors of ten dollars or more upon bronze tablets with which the inner walls of the tomb, where the remains of the inventor will rest, are to be lined.
Burglar In Hard Luck.
Burglars who broke into a house at Chard, England, achieved the magnificent haul of a box of pills and sevenpence. They recall the burglars who, engaged on a similar mission, discovered a litter of kittens and a German sausage, which enraged them so much that they drowned the lot.
—THE RISING SON.
2 pen as
laa
a 7 "1
Mi SB
Hy y] }
|
i f VE Ud
qt (8
W. T. Washington......Asst. Editor.
Remember please—
‘It's the little bite we collect here ana} sere
hat enables us to 2 "ee year to year.”
Williams and Walker, with their
company appear at the Grand next
week,
National Printing Co. has moved
from 6th and Delaware to 1311 Inde-
pendence avenue.
Nicely Furnished Rooms, 1228 and
1230 Baltimore, Inquire of Mrs. M.
Steel, at 1228 Baltimore.
Miss Josie Wickliffe of Hudson,
Kansas, is in the city. She is stop-
ping at 1910 Woodland avenue.
Monday and Thursday night, danc-
ing at the Arlington Hall. Class,
Wednesday night. Hall, $15 per night.
For plano and furniture moving and
express, call Geo, Jones,-Home phone,
5185 Main, Packing, Soipping and
svorage,
WANTED.—Fifty more comedians,
dancers or singers for the Great Un-
bleached Minstrel show. Call Home
East 2610.
Mrs. T. B. Carter of Jefferson City,
is visiting in the city this week and
will attend conference, as the guest of
Mrs. Watts.
Phone your news to the Rising Son,
with an order for a year's subscrip:
tion, Bell Phone 4713X Main; Home
Phone 58 Main.
WATCH, WATCH, WATCH,
for bills and tickets to the Great Un:
bleached Minstrels at Convention hall,
November 9th.
It will seem quite natural to the
old Kansas Cityan to see the steam
Doat and hear the whistles on the
Missouri river once more.
Use Chowley’s Antl-Sweat Powder.
For bad odor it has no equal. Price
25e by mail, 5113 Dearborn street,
Chicago, Ill, Agents wanted.
‘The Birch Flats are a commendable
enterprise of Kansas City. When you
wish a neat, modern, up-todate flat;
call out on Vine and see them.
This elegantly furnished room for
rent at 406 E, Gth street, Bath, gas,
and telephone, 2081 Home. Newly
furnished. Call and investigate.
Mr. Frank Bryant of Osceola, Iowa,
and Miss Zana Williams and brother
Vernon Williams are the guests of
Miss Sossie Peniston of 1408 Vine.
‘When you want the best news con-
cerning the Negro, place your name
on the svbscription list of the “Son”
and thus have it delivered to your
door.
HEAR. HEAR. HEAR.
Kansas City’s best Negro talent in
their own melodies, scintilating wit
and happy humor at Convention hall,
November 9th.
Mr. Henry Compton has succeeded
Bom McRay in the hotel venture at
721 Charlotte street. No man Is bet-
ter fitted to take charge of this piace
than Mr. Compton,
The new addition to Douglas hos-
pital has been finished, several of
the room have been taken by socities
and individuals, a few are left which
the board managers ,will only be too
glad to have taken.
Dr. B. F. Watson, financial secreta-
ry, arrived in the city, Tuesday to at-
tend the Missouri conference, which
convenes in this city, but left the same
evening to attend the funeral of Bishop
Arnett, which will be held at his old
home, Wilberforce, ‘0.
Jas. Harrison Crews died last Satur:
day night at 8:05 o'clock, He was the
oldest son of Jas. Crews, a mail car
rier of this city, who resides at 2420
Wabash ave. Everyone regrets the
death of the young man. He was
well raised, well behaved, a staunch
member of Allen Chapel, and was 4
member of the Sophomore class of
Western university. His funeral was
preached at Allen Chapel, Tuesday
evening and the remains carried to
Chillicothe, where they were interred
last Wednesday, Dr. F. J, Peck was
the officiating minister.
Mrs. Lucy Capps of Liberty, Mo.,
was visiting her friend, Mrs. Duncan
Oath of 411 East 10th a few days last
week,
Dr. Wm. J. Thompkins, recently of
the staff of physicians and surgeons
of Freedman's hospital, Washington,
D. C., wishes to announce his office
at 704 Bast 12th street; residence,
Compton hotel. Both phones.
The death of Tom Gross last Sat:
urday was a sad blow to his friends
and associates. He was a member of
the Lily Lodge No. 8, K. of P., and a
member of the McRay P. T. A. He
was also a member of the Elks. His
remains was carried to Lawrence last
Sunday, his old home, by many
friends,
Negroes are not the first people
‘that have been scourged for unfaith:
fulness. The Israelites had a hard
‘time of It, before they learned to cast
‘away their {dols and seek protection
from the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, and we must make our chureh:
es something stronger and holier than
‘mere money exchanges or meeting
places to vie with each other in
showy clothing and give invitations
2 parties and dances.
We must demand more of those
whom we allow to pose as leaders,
and especially of those who teach ou
young. It is high time that on:
school teachers felt the responsibility
of their positions enough to cause
them to seek out good families in
which to find homes, and so conduct
themselves as not as to bring re
proach upon no one, What can we
expect of children who daily discuss
the moral life"of their teacher?
| LINCOLN INSTITUTE NOTES.
For the first time in the history of
the institute, it has become necessary
to use the gallery of the auditorium to
seat the students when they assemble
in the morning for devotional exer-
cises and it now looks as if this also
‘would soon be overflowing.
| It will soon be t'me for the annual
‘Farmers’ Convention at Lincoln Insti.
tute and we hope many, who may be
Interested in farms and farming will
be present, Every event of the pres-
ent, as it affects the negro, indicates
the necessity of his securing a per
petual lease upon as much of the fer-
‘tile soll of America as possible, if he
fs to retain any rights as an Ameri
can citizen,
One of the most enjosab‘e features
of the past week was the private bar-
becue and garden party, given by Pro-
fessor J, W. Daniel, i honor of the
president and faculty, at his beautiful
home on Fairview Boulevard. The del
icacieg of tne season were dispensed
in abundance and all present had a
most enjoyable time,
Women are like men in one re-
spect; some are good and some are
Mat: me
| Unsanitary Graveyard,
Sanitary caution is not new, though
foubtless it has grown. An elght-
tenth century rector was burying one
of his parishioners in the churchyard,
when he was interrupted by a woman
who demanded immediate speech with
aim. “You must wait until [ have fin-
shed,” sald he. “No, sir, [1 must
speak at once.” “Well, then, what's
the matter?” he inquired, “Why, str,”
txelalmed the poor woman, “you are
ourying a man who died of the small-
ox next my poor husband, who never
aad it."—N. Y. Tribune,
Spread of Contract System.
The contract system of supply, the
Condon Mail remarks, is being ex-
iended to every branch of the public's
aecessities. A London firm, for $100
& year, received in installments, if de-
|stred, will supply one dress suit, one
lounge suit, one morning suit, one
flannel suit, one frock coat suit, two
svercoats, one winter, one summer. A
Manchester firm supplies other cloth-
l1ng, hosiery. shirts, gloves, etc., for s
ee quartely sum.
Wiseian Miinaed Gartine.
Tt Is estimated that from 400,000 to
500,000 natives have died in Africa of
aleeping sickness in the last ten years,
The disease is, moreover, spreading
with alarming rapidity, yet nothing
1s done to check it. The weight of
‘opinion is that no person once infect
ed ever recovers, Despite its name,
‘sleep is not an imporiant symptom,
as It occurs only toward the end of
the disease in a small number of
ficial
| Why all this toll for triumpis of an
bour?—Young.
Life's a short summer—man is but
| & flower.—Dr. Johnson.
By turns we catch the fatal breath
and die.—Pope.
| The cradle and the tomb, alas! how
| oigh!—Prior,
To be Is better far than not to be.—
| Sewell,
| Though all man’s life may seem a
tragedy.—Spencer,
But light cares speak when ofghty
griefs are dumb—Daniel
‘The bottom ts but shallow whence
| they come—Sir Walter Raleigh
Men’s Suits and
Overcoats, $17.50 e?
9 ° ef
Is it an object to you to save from hl
$2.50 to $5.00? Ve
eee
We are making aspecial feature this WHO
week of Men's Suits, Overcoats, and AA hos
also Raincoats in the well and favor: 4 In.)
ably known Kuppenbeimer and other \ a
makes of a high order. To do this, 1 4
both manufacturer and we ourselves ‘ Aa
have sacrificed enough of our legiti- bh Pa 4
mate profit to save purchasers from i Wg
£2.50 to $5.00 on Suit, Overcoat or Rain- : | ee
coat, 4 4
The Suits are made of fancy woolen (weeds f eed
Aud. worniede: wise ‘uavy: bide server aid a4 ‘
Binck' thibete: overconts: are in binck aud 4
Rew gray effects and in both fall and wiater ay ‘ie
Welghts; raincoats are pinta black and kray 4 Ea
herringbone and tn other effect: ench gai Me xe
meat is pew; in this season's wy Je: a_wide 2 BA 4
chopserenth cen eee GLT50 MSY %
Chestarfeld Suits and Overcoats Bye Ea
Priced up to $50.00 eee. See a
Mg.
‘ 7 es ‘
Young Men’s Suits, $15 A
¢
Garments that are clever and diatinctive:
Scotel tweedayptre worntednin club check,
Gverplaie aud airiped eMtetealeo navy
siege from 14to 9) yen 8. Price. 919400 Ot
Grand Avenue Floor i
BIW Copyright 1906, by The
+f (4 House of Kuppenheimer
Smuny, Bind DRoyerBo-
: Ho! For Cold Weather
eee And for warmly-clad and
6 S stylishly-clad feet !!
» ‘Dour Fall and Winter Showing of Styles in
2 St Dorothy Codd, the Faultiess Fitting Shoe
are by far the prettiest we have ever had
wane All styles and execs 99 ANd $3,50
Men! Here are to be ,
Found Your STRONG &
. GARFIELD
Favorite Shoes!! *oF'g ,
on a more complete showing of f 4
proper Fall and Winter Styles in such >
well-known and dependable makes as. rl
/BOSTONIANS and STRONG &
GARFIELD’S FINE SHOES FOR ea
MEN YOU'VE NOT SEEN. — Te ae
Come down and inspect them. _
OVIATT SHOE CO.
1105 Main Street, Kansas City.
, LADIES’
BBeraie Henry Patton’s | stores
POLISHED.
MASSAGE
FOR BARBER CIGARS
LADIES SHOP AND
; AND ‘TOBACCO.
{GENTLEMEN 928 Wyandotte Street, Lady Cashier
| A SPECIALTY KANSAS CITY, MO. in attendance.
ei Phone 2170 Main Home Phone 5646 Main.
DR. E. C. BUNCH, Dentist.
Office Hours
seo Vea 805 Independence Avenue.
Sunday by Appointment. KANSAS CITY, MO.
Home or Bell Phones 253 West. Prompt Service.
EMPLOYMENT OFFIGE
COLORED HELP A SPECIALTY
MALE AND FEMALE
MRS. EMMA STOVALL
1014 North 5th St., Kansas City, Kansas.
| ¥ FOR ALL STOVES AND RANGES.
‘an S. A. METZNER 7 sri. Cis, me”
In Times of Perplexity.
Which way is forward, is a question
which Is liable to occur to one under
certain circumstances in life, ard yet
fs not always easily answered. A per-
son walking in the forest or in a dense
fog, may easily mistake backward for
forward, and move in the direction of
the point whence he started, rather
than fa the opposite direction. The
same dimfculty often presents itself tn
the moral and spiritual life. There
may be times when it will be exceed:
‘ingly difficult to say which way is for-
ward. But we may be helped by re.
‘membering that nearer to Christ {s
always forward, and that the office
‘of the Spirit 18 to afford illumination
‘im gust such circumstapces,
~°
The Word of Appreciation.
Suppose the word of appreciation {a
never said to you, suppose your life of
relfdenial is accepted merely as a
duty—then what shall you do? It
seems like cold comfort, but you must
try and be as brave as you can ana
keep on doing that which is right.
The knowing that one is doing the
est that one can for those who need
help ts, after all, a great reward, ‘The
knowledge that somebody else is a
ttle warmer, has @ little better foo,
or that a younger brother or sister s
oeing trained to be helpful—this ts
fine, even if the word of commenda.
tion never comes in this world, and
with it to feel in your heart that God
approves.
It fs a question of where you tur as to what you got in Pianos of
lower price. The record of our past is your best protection, For more
than a quarter of a century we have been selling in Kansas City the Lest
Pianos in the world in cach class. We have built up here the greatest
Piano business in the West and have done it by fair, square dealing . We
shall continue to travel that road We shall stick to one price to all alike.
We do not pay commissions to anyone for bringing or sending piano cus:
tomers to us Our price is so low we cannot do It
We sell $175 Pianos for $125. We sell $250 Pianos for $190. We se!l
$300 Pianos for $210
Any of our Pianos may be paid for in cash, or part cash, $10 or more
down, and $6 or more a month. The price is the same whether you pay.
cash or buy on time. There is no increase for time payments, only in-
terest at 6 per cent per annum for such time as you actually take-—a
very small item indeed.
We carry over 500 Pianos in stock, Come and see, Count them your
self—one, two, three, four, ete.
J. W. Jenkins’ Sons Music C
. W. Jenkins Sons Music Uo.
1013-1015 WALNUT STREET
S. W. Agents for the Mctrostyle Pianola, Best Place to Buy a Piano.
Home Phone 5225 Main. Lady Attendant,
Bel! Phone East 538 X.
Che
| A. T. Moore Undertaking Co.
Funeral Directors and Embatmers.
Parlors 1820 East '8 h St., KANSAS CITY, MO.
The Best Paying Business
For the Least Amount of Money Invested
sal.
Having a Billiard and Pool Room
No Bad Debts.
Cash in the Drawer Every Night
We can fit you out with a complete Hall
for very Little money.
Ghe K. C. Billiard Table Mig. Co.,
MAKERS OF GOOD TABLES AT LOW PRICES
132i Main Stroct.
Home ‘Phone 5478 Main a hee Bell ‘Phone 3136 Main
P.L. PRATT.
CEOS
REAL ESTATE RENTAL
And INSURANCE.
Flouses For Sale
On Easy Terms, Like Rent.
127 Weet Bth Street
KANSAS CiTy, MISSOURI.
#2 aa 48
I SAMUEL DIGGS, a member of McKinley Lodge
9 No. 21, am engaged in the undertaking business,
and wish your lodge and brethren to give me a call
whenever you need anything in my line. It is my
aim in this great highway as a business man of the
race to give first class accommodation and quick
service. Will be pleased to have cach and all of the
brethren to pay my place a call at any time.
Yours fraternally,
SAMUEL DIGGS,
Undertaker, Embalmer and
Funeral Director.
1012 North Third St., Kansas City, Kan. |
Home Phone, 905 West; Bell Phone, 1094 West.“ |
NS label i Ricotta Lice
cs 7
COMP TON’S HOTEL
7a! Charlotte Street, Kenees city, Mo.
STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS ACCOMMODATIONS
Beli Phone 20 5 Main A. COMPTON, Mar
{N HIGH POSITION.
WOMEN IN aovemimnne SERV:
ICE AY WASHINGTON.
Rhalsh Newapaper Somewhat Aston
ished by the Confidence Placed in
the Fair Sex by Authorities at
the National Capital.
aaa bela ial iittala
Most people are aware that women
are a great power in the United States,
particularly fem a_soctal standpoint,
says the Pat] Mall Gazette of London.
Mut iC is by no means so generatty
Known that af the headquarters of the
American government in Washington
there are a number of highly paid
women who are a standing contradic:
tion of the old gibe that women can
never keep a secret
At any rate, the services of these
wonten are so highly appreciated that
tt 1s unlikely their brethren will ever
oust them from these hightly pald of-
fices. To us a youthful and pretty
woman diplomat, recognized as such
by the goverument, ts unthinkable.
Yet such a person Is Miss Margaret
Hanna, who ts permanent assistant to
the permanent secretary of state, This
fatter official carries on all the delicate
negotiations between the United
States and foreign powers and so con:
duets an immense correspondence.
All this most secret and sacred cor:
respondence fs under the charge of
Miss Hanna, who ts so well versed tn
Uncle Sam's relations with the ontside
world that she could undoubtedly act
4s assistant secretary of state herself
#f the occasion arose
A still more remarkable position Is
at held by Miss Clara Gravcen, legal
viviser to the treasury department
Here azain we find a young blonde not
vet 28, who a few years azo came to
Washington as an ordinary typewriter
‘nthe comptroller’s office. At that
me hor work was taking down dicta
Hon relating to lestl “opinions” about
Inims against the treasury. Miss
Graccen gradually developed a taste
for law so that on one occasion the
comptroller asked her to prepare an
opinion” of her own on a minor ease.
Thereafter the clever and ambitious
ail studied law with feverish energy
at a night school in the diplomatic
capital, and so brilliant were her tal
ents that when the position of law
stork of the treasury fell vacant. she
epplied for it and got it, even against
« number of capable lawyers.
You might think that these Amert:
can blue stockings were frampish and
dowdy tn appearanee. Vastly other
wise would be your opinion in the
Hresence of Miss Estelle Reel, super
ntendent of all the Indian schools
throughout America, Miss Reel is a
strikingly handsome woman of distin:
snished mien and not much over 30.
Mer headquarters ts at the Indian bu-
roan in Washington, but for the most
part she spends her time in traveling
throughout the states inspecting the
‘dueational methods adopted in day
and boarding schools, kindergartens
and other institutions kept up by the
foderal government for the little
aborigines. In her own department
Miss Reel's power is absolute and her
vay is $600 a year besides her travel:
ing expenses.
Thousands of women are employed
tn the treasury, department, for it 1s
found that they’ are quicker and more
accurate than men in counting money.
Nor must one omit to say they are
found far more honest. Out from
among the ruck of these women stand:
Mrs. Willa Leonard, probably the fast
ast “teller” of money alive as well as
the most astonishingly accurate. Mrs
Teonard is besides a wondrous expert
in detecting counterfeit notes. One
must bear In mind that practically the
whole eurreney of America except
amall change is paper money.
Another woman expert of the treas
ury at Washington is Mrs. 8. F. Fitz
gerald, who for nearly a quarter of ¢
century has been mending mutilated
bank bills and also identifying money
that has been partially destroyed. S¢
expert is she that often when nothing
vomatns of the money but a serap o
paper smaller than a sixpence and
chat containing no name of bank, de
nomination or number, Mrs. Fitzgeral:
will fasten upon a serap of engraver
desiem and then pour forth a volume
of information about the destroye
note which would surely give points te
Sherlock Holmes.
Question of Location.
in looking over a pamphlet entitied
“Uistoric Points of Interest,” prepared
tor use during the inaugural ceremon:
ses," said a district official, “1 noticed
that Point No, 102 is marked ‘William
J. Bryan resided in this house!’ The
juration arose in my mind as to
whether in permanently marking his:
‘oric spots in Washington, which work
ts to be begun under an appropriation
ot $500 made for the purpose by the
{ast congress, the tablet with this in-
ceription will be pliced at the location
siven in the pamphlet or whether it
will be reserved to be placed on the
grounds of the executive mansion.”
Too Many Officers Absent.
‘Tho “absence habit” ts a menace to
the United States army. ‘This is the
statement made by Brig. Geu, Bubb,
commanding the department of Dako
ca, in his annual report, He calls at-
vention to the great number of officers
now absent from their regiments and
says that the number is steadily tn:
creasing from year to year and ts
greatly impairing the efficiency and
discipline of the various organizations
of the army,
‘Rakica Wauakt ta Sain,
fn Samou nearly all bables are
taught to swim before they are two
years old.
FEW REWARDS FOR CLERKS.
Government Service 1s At No Time a
Sinecure.
‘The arrest of a young woman em-
ployed in the agricultural department
satis attention to a fact that has been
potnted out many times. ‘This is that
jan ordinary government clerkship {a
fot worth having, The young woman
in question explained that the $600 a
year sh» recolved would hardly pay
her laundry bills, so she committed
lorgery. “I've been on the rocks for
“a couple of years,” explained the pris-
mer, “and Eneeded the money to
keep up my end.”
| There will be no sympathy aroused
for the prisoner, who scems to be
‘Mppant in addition to being criminal,
‘says the Philadelphia Ledger, Many
/more worthy persons doing similar
work for the government avoid the
expenditure for laundry by — washing
their owa linen, and evidently do not
Indulge In so large a number of freah
waists, ‘The clerk of elther sex who
goes to Washington under the impres-
|sion that there hs an end ‘to be held
up" 18 making a serious mistake. ‘The
Fone who can live simply and decently
on the income allowed is an excellent
Jimanager, ‘The chances of running
[hopelessly Into debt for the seeming
[necessaries of life are many and po
tent. Any attempt to “put on style"
is ruin
‘Phe government clerk Is part of 8
vast wiichine, At best no great re
lwards awalt. ‘The positions that are
| onen to capable men and women ar
I such that really capable men and wo
/men with any pride or any particula
| hone for the future would refuse te
accept. ‘The scramble for them {s
jduc to a lack of knowledge, The
| young man or woman successful ft
Faccuring onc is to be commiserated
for the faithful performance of dut3
Heads nowhere, and after a while the
| individual is fixed ina rut, lacking the
courage and at last the ability to get
‘out of it
| Comparatively few clerks “gk
“wrong.” As a rule, they aecept con
‘ditions as they find them and make
the best of it, Of course the gir
who needs $600 a year to meet he
laundry bills has no business in a de
partment. A wiser course for hei
| would be to marry a rich man, Whil
| the positions are aumble and the pa
| small there are many girls who woul’
Lhe had to get tho salary, deeming i
[better than nothing toward keepins
| ui family expenses, which fs about al
that can be said of ft, and such girl
| would have no temptation to piece ou
\ Siaheciticoties: by. recoursecto: forbery’
REPAIRS TO WHITE HOUSE.
Months Have Been Spent in Much
‘Needed! Renovation:
For a second time within as many
years workmen have spent months in
renovating and repairing the White
House, Although a large sum was
appropriated by congress for extra:
ordinary repairs, care has been taken
not to make any alterations in the
external or internal appearance of the
house, possibly as a result of the out-
cry which grected President Roose:
yelt’s former changes. Col. Charles
8. Bromwell, U. S. A., superintendent
of public buildings and grounds, who
has the White Honse in charge, says:
« "it was deemed essential In treating
the appointments and decorations of
those rooms that are shown to the
public that care should be exercised
to prevent hostile criticism by visitors
to the White House, Unlike any
other official or private residence in
this country, these rooms cannot be
shut up to prevent the entrance of
[air and sunshine, but they must al-
ways be kept open and ready for in:
| eeetion by critical housekeepers
from this country and abroad. If such
erities found carpets and draperies
faded or worn, they would not hes.
tate to condemn apparent niggardli-
| news on the part of those whose duty
it is to recommend and expend appro:
priations, People have been accus-
tomed to hear of the blue, green and
| red parlors, and they wouldn't take
| kindly to any changes in the fittings
| and furnishings of these apartments
jat variance with the tints which have
thus far characterized the interior ar
| couremeat and decorations of the
White House."
In the east room, which is the great
| reception room of the mansion, the
prevailing tint on the walls and ceil
ing is an ivory white. The only ple
tures found in the state apartments
are those of former masters and mis
tresses of the mansion, the latest ac
| quisttion being that of President
Re ee.
; Secretary Taft's Travels.
Secretary Taft has traveled 100,000
miles or four tmes the distance
around the worid at the equator, since
May 24, 1900, wher he beeame gov-
ernor general of the Philippines. In
the five and a half years since his eal
from the federal beach he has spent
260 days on the ocean, or almost one
year, He has passed six weeks on rail
road trains. Most of this has come in
his three trips to the Philippines, one
of them by way of Rome, and his two
trips to the isthmus. These facts,
which came out in a recent personal
conversation, show something of the
comand of a public position in this
age of America as a world power,
| Honesty Personified.
Congressman J. Adam ede was
consulting with President Roosevelt
about a minor federal appointment in
the Minnesota district which he rep-
rosented. After making several in:
quiries abont the man the president
| sald abruptly: “Is he an honest man?"
| "An honest man?” returned Mr. Bede.
“Why, see here, Mr. President, that
faun Wouldn't rob a railway company
| —not if he had the chance,”
Lee Pn ete Mery ay eae D en IY oa ane
fp THE 2S HISTORYor
POLIGRYEANTLYNN *
Y 03 ¢ WHSUE SS AN O0Cee
HE STOPS AN AUTOMOBILE.
“Whoa!” cried Policeman Flyna.
“Whoa, I tell ye! Shtop!”
The man with the automobile slowed
up, and finally came to a full stop.
“What's the matter?” he asked.
“Matther!" ejaculated Policeman
Flynn. “D'ye think this is a speedin’-
tra-ack? Ha-ave ye th’ ideo that th’
people on th’ cross-walks ts hur-rdles,
an’ that 't Is f'r you to show th’ kind tv
1 jockey ye are? Are ye iv th’ opinion
that ye're doin’ th’ cha-arge ty th’ Light
Brigade all be yo-ersiif? T'il ha-ave no
autymobils goin’ out afther th’ record
where I'm wearin’ a po-lis ba-adge.””
“This isn't an automobile,” asserted
the man who had been stopped. “can't
afford anything so aristocratic as that.
This is only a horscless carriage.”
“May-be ‘t is so," returned Policeman
Flynn; “but ‘t is wr-rong ye are if yo
think this ts a copless boolvar; an’ if ye
persist in vi'atin’ th’ la-aw, I'll r-run
yein, I will that.”
“'m violating no law,” replied the
man, in a quiet tone,
“Oho! ye think ye're smar-rt, don't
| ye?” exclaimed Policeman Flynn. “Ye'd
|x0 to shplittin’ hairs with a po-lisman
| an’ thryin’ to come over him with th ol
|Joke. Iv coorse ye're vi'latin’ no la-aw
|oow. Fr why? F'r because I shtopped
| ye. "Tis not th’ ikes iv you that ean
| throw down Barney Flynn on that gag.”
Yt Sh ae RAT ace
iy | Ue | al i TNRD Ze
pr Ly & " ATs .
oR Til 8 Ce i i
Reta 2 = +
Pe : ZO ;
ei Si’ We 56 Fe
“Whoa! I tell ye! Shtop!”
Mags UIRANT TE eat
law," Insisted the man.
“Ye ha-aven't!" cried Policeman
Flynn, his breath fairly taken away by
the calm assertion, “Yeha-aven't! Oh,
no, Iv coorse yo hu-aven’t, Yo've only
been cr-reepin’ along like ye was pushin’
a ba-aby's go-cart, Why, ye gasyleen
Injineer, ye've been makin’ twinty miles
an hour.”
“What of it?” asked the man,
“There's no law against tt.”
“Sa-ay,” cautioned Pollceman Flynn,
with a solemn shake of his head, “a
Joke's a joke, an’ I can ta-ake wan with
th’ nex’ ma-an, but don’t be afther push-
in’ me too far, or I'll ha-ave ye before th’
po-lis coort, I will 80.”
“On what charge?” demanded the
man.
“Fa-ast dhrivin’,” answered Police-
man Flynn.
“{ haven't been driving fast,” asserted
the man, “I haven't been driving at
all, The law says ‘riding or driving any
horse or horses or other animals,’ and
that doesn't affect me.”
Policeman Flynn scratched his head.
He wasn't sure that the ordinance was
correctly qugted, but neither was he
prepared to deny It. It certainly sound-
ed right.
“Luk at that, now!” he sald at last,
“Tis like thim gazabos that makes th
lu-aw f'r to lave acha-ance f'r th’ ma-an
that vi'lates It to skin out iy it. Here
Tam thryin’ to do me juty, an’ no
cha-ance fr anything but th’ wor-rat
Hy tt, whativer I do. ‘Th’ la-aw is made
f'r th’ good people, but 't Is r-read be th
‘coorts {'r th’ other wans, If they’s a
| hole in it, th’ lawyer shticks a crow
| ba-ar in, an’ th’ judge gives a bit iv help
| an’ bechune th’ two they ma-ako th’
|op'nin’ big enongh f'r to put a locomo-
tive injine through, If iver T had th’
| ma-akin’ ty th’ aw ['d ha-ave first iy
| all in th’ big Sook a sintence r-readin
like this: “Th’ la-aws herein mane wha\
i Maine, an! wet week they eect
‘Tis th’ only wa-ay, fr now whin
| ma-an dhraws up a Ii-aw he knows
| what he’s afther, an’ fverybody {ise
knows what he's afther, but th’ coort
| takes two fa-alls out iv It, an’ he gets
what he doesn’t want, or fise th'la-av
| is broke into sma-all bits.”
| “yell,” remarked the man with the
aes aa
i; OS Or
oe oe
PS vf
PM NNW
Ro & fon A i
FOr eee a
A FO is
‘Keep ye-er na-ands off, I'll not ave
‘ye do it,
automobile, “if you're through talking
to yourself I'll move along.”
“Not so fa-ast,” interposed Police:
jman Fiyna, “¥e may bo r-right an’ ye
may be wr-rong, but they’s wan p'int I
want settled. D'ye intind to keep down
to th’ la-awful shpeed ?”
“There 1s no lawful speed for me,"
answered the man deflantly. “I can go
as fast us I want to,”
“M-m-m, now,” sald Policeman Flynn
to himself, as he drew his hand thought-
fully across his chin, “I wisht I ha-ad th
good woman here f'r to tell me what to
do, 'Tis a mighty puzzlin’ thing; but,"
be added, addressing the man with the
automobile, “if ye're goin’ to ma-ake th"
pe-desthrians give exhibitions iv
gr-round an’ lofty tumblin’, I'll take thy
chanst an’ r-run ye {n,”
“Come on,” retursed the man, make
{ng room for the officer cu the seat be
side him,
Policeman Flynn hesitated for a mo-
ment, and then climbed up.
“Go shlow,” he cautioned, “or ‘twill
be th’ wor-rse f'r ye.”
“You don’t suppose I'm going to take
myself to the station, do you?” retorted
the man. “You'll have to take me.”
“Iv coorse I'll take ye," said Polico-
man Flynn, “'Tis f'r that I'm here.
G'wan, now.”
| “Go on yourself,” answered the man.
“I'm in the hands of the law, and so is
the automobile. Let the Jaw run it.”
“tye heard iv th’ machin'ry tv th’
la-aw,” commented Policeman Flynn,
“but 't is th’ fir-rst time [ was iver up
ferninst it. D'ye think I’m goin’ to r-run
th’ autymobil?”
“Certainly.”
“If L laid me ha-ands on thim handles
we'd be climbin’ th’ tiligraft-poles an
| jumpin’ ovér houses an’ lots.”*
“That's your lookout.” «
“I'll not touch thim. I ha-nve a wit
to support, an’ 't w'u'd be a sha-ame f':
me to ta-ake me x life. An’ it luks
‘to me,” went on tHe patrolman, begin-
ning to show signs of anger, “like ye was
thryin’ to ma-ake a monkey tv me.”
“Oh, well, I'll do it,” replied the man,
concillatorily, “but I want to caution you
about one thing. You musn’t touch ma
or interfere with me in any way when L
get my hand on the levers, If you do
We're likely to go salling through the
side of a house."”
“I must ave ye alone?”
“Absolutely.”
“Thin don’t ye put ye-er ha-ands on
thim things, or I'll bat ye over th’ head!"
exclaimed Policeman Flynn. “How do
I know where ye'll la-and me?”
“You don't.”
“Ye might r-run me miles awa-ay."
“1 might.”
“Keep ye-er ha-ands off. T'll not I'ave
ye doit.”
“If you won't run {t and you won't lot
me, what are we going to do?"
It was a hard problem, and Policeman
Flynn looked puzzled,
“{ wisht th’ good woman was here,”
he sighed. “Tis a fine thing I've been
doin’ to mesilf, an’ me an ol man on th!
foorce. M-m-m, well, I'll take ye withe
out th’ autymobil.”
“Somebody may run away with It,"
‘protested the man, in alarm.
/_“L' ta-ake th’ r-risk," said Policeman
‘Flynn, “G'wan, now! Out ye go!”
“Say,” returned the man, weakening,
“just call {t all off, and I'll promise to
“keep within the lawful rate of speed for
horses.”
“Ye will?”
| “sure.”
| “Give me ye-er ca-urd, so's I'll know
where to find ye if ye're lyin’ to me.”
‘The man handed over a card, and Pos
Hceman Flynn jumped to the ground.
“G'wan, now,” he sald, and when the
| man had turned a corner Fo drew a long
| breath and muttered to himself: “Ho
| had me worrled, he did that. Ohot
|'tis a fine picture I'd make ma-archin’
him off an’ layin’ th’ autymobil t'r th’
jaa to pla-ay with! "Twas a gr-reat
bluff I put up, but, thank Hivin! it
| la-anded him.”
| (Copyright, 16%, by Jose: B. Howtos
CWouerieit Wertke Conic Coe
A SPEED CHASTENER.
& a.
HE gh =
Be hia o\
Cag Oe
Ss — NT
et. 2, OFF
Co
a A
— i
) Az Dea |
Cee aR)
\abdaeeclliterce ea
Emergency brake and chauffeur
chute by which an owner can reduce
Speec and remove chauffeur without
injury to machine or guests.--N. ¥,
Herald.
Landlady (knocking at his door)-=
Mr. Jobbles, its time to get up, "He
that would thrive must rise at five.”
Sleepy Boarder—That’s all right,
Mrs. Irons, “He that hath thrives
may He till seven.” I've thriven.
proposed to Miss Rullion last night
aad wan senented: e
Didn't Avole.
6A SMALL THING”
-_ Do you believe in progress? Do you
believe that all the wonderful achieve
ments of the nineteenth century—the
railroad, the telegraph, the telephone,
electric light, kerosenc, sewing ma
chine, agricultural machinery, steam-
ships, trolley cars, ete—have made
life easier and better worth living? 1
do. I velleve that a man who lives
40 years under modern conditions has
experienced more life and better life
than Methusalom, though he had lived
20 centuries of his time.
The triumphs of the nineteeath cen-
tury were triumphs of human service
—the placing of knowledge and the
fruits of knowledge within the reach
of the common man, Eyery man’s
Ife is better, happler, more secure be:
cause of them, We Ive more comfort:
able, more sociable lives in better and
more comfortable houses because of
them, Even the hopeless dweller !n
the worst clty slums {s more com:
fortable in his phystcal conditions than
the middle-class citizen of the days of
George Washington.
In little things as in great, comfort
‘and convenience have been the legacy
of the “Century of Improvement.”
Paint, in a certain sense, is a minor
matter, yat it gives beauty, healthful-
ness and durability to our dwellings
Fifty years ago painting was a serious
proposition, a luxury for the owners
of stately mansions who could afford
the expense of frequent renewals. . To-
day ready mixed paint is so cheap, so
good, and so universal that no house
owner has an excuse for not keeping
his property well painted,
A small thing, indeed; yet several
hundred large factories, employing
thousands of chemists and skilled
workmen, are running every day in
the year to keep our houses fresh,
clean and wholesome,
A small thing, yet a can of good
ready mixed paint, such as one may
buy from any reputable dealer, em:
bodies the study of generations of
skilled chemists, the toll of a thou
sand workmen in mill, laboratory and
factory, and the product of a tong
series of special machinery Invented
and designed just to make that car
of paint and to furnish us an Infinite
variety of tints, colors and shades.
It was a wonderful century, that
nineteenth of our era, and not: the
least of its wonderful gifts was that
same commonplace can of paint.
LP.
Anecdote of Robert R. Hitt,
‘The late Robert R. Hitt hada knowl-
edge of stenography which was of
great value to him in debate. He has
been known to rise with his hand full
of shorthand notes of a speech just
delivered to which he was about to
reply and woe to the man who ac-
cused Mr. Hitt of misquoting him, He
was the patron saint of the stenog-
raphers of the house. Not long ago
political influence was about to dis-
place from the lne of promotion a
young expert writer of shorthand from
Michigan whose work Mr. Hitt had
occasion to admire. Mr. Hitt went to
Speaker Cannon. “This will never do,
Joe,” said the shorthand authority of
the house, “We can't do without this
man, The house must have him.” “All
right, Hitt,” replied Speaker Cannon.
“If anybody knows the sort of stenog-
raphers this house ought to have you
are the man.” That settled {band the
Michigan stencgrapher held his place.
Not What He Was Used To.
Ever since John D. Rockefeller be
came an honorary member of the
American Press Humorists’ associa
tion stories more or less apocryphal
have been afloat regarding him. It {s
beginning to be suspected that some
of them have been invented by his
fellow humortsts. One of the lates!
refers to an occasion last summer
when he entertained a lot of slum
‘children at his stock farm near Cleve
land. Mr. Rockefeller gave each of
them, among other things, some milk
to drink, part of it at least being the
product of a $2,000 prize cow. “How
io you like it?” he asked when they
had finished, “Gee, it’s fine!” re
sponded one little fellow, who added
after a thoughtful pause: “I wisht
our milkinan kep' a cow!”
LOOSE TEETH
Made Sound by Eating Grape-Nuts.
Proper food nourishes every part of
the body, because Nature selects the
different materials from the food we
eat, to build bone, nerve, brain, mus-
cle, teeth, ete.
All we need is to eat the right kind
of food slowly, chewing it well—our
digestive organs take it up into the
blood and the blood carries it all
through the body, to every ttle noolk
and corner.
If some one would ask you, “Is
Grape-Nuts good for loose teeth?"
you'd probably say, “No, I don’t seo
how it could be.” But a woman In
Ontario writes:
“For the past two years T have used
Grape-Nuts Food with most excellent
results, It seems to take the place
of medicine in many ways, biiilds up
the nerves and restores the health
generally.
“A little Grape-Nuts taken before re
tiring soothes my nerves and gives
sound sleep.” (Because it relieve tr
ritability of the stomach nerves, being
a predigested food.)
“Before L used Grape-Nuts my teeth
were loose in the gums. They were s0
bad I was afraid they would some day
‘all fall out, Since I have used Grape:
Nuts I haye not been bothered any
more with loose teeth.
“AML desire for pastry has disappear
ed and I have gained in heaith, weight
and happiness since I began to use
Grape-Nuts.” Name given by Postum
Qp., Battle Creek, Mich. Get the fa
mous Hittio book, “The Road to Well
ville.” in pkgs. “There's a reason.”
ESSENTIALS TO THE SUCCESS OF
THE BREW.
Care and Attention Necessary for the
Proper Preparation of the De-
stclous Beverage—The
Ideal Way.
Surely nothing ts better on @ cold,
blustery afternoon in the winter
months than a good, properly made
cup of tea, Nor can anything eo stim-
late jaded senses in the summer sea-
son than the same importation from
the east, served in any of several
ways, But there are a few essentials
to tho success the brew which
American womeff*fail to understand,
probably because the taste for the
drink, the solace and staff of English
households, 1s comparatively new to
this country. No tea is drinkable by
any one with the slightest claims to
taste unless it has been freshly brewed
within the last 15 minutes, for in-
stance. ‘The water must havo just
dolled for the first time, and only
bolled five minutes at longest. Tho
teapot must be hot, the tea Ceylon
or some other black’ mixture, not the
green or Oolong varieties, If the best
fs desired. English tea importers are
sald to have spent fortunes in trying
to induce Americans to buy the best
teas, only to be thwarted by our stub-
born preference for Inferior and less
delicate flavors, The ideal way to
have afternoon tea ts to serve it on
a large tray, on a low tea table hold-
ing only the cups and saucers, On
the tray are the teapot, preferably of
the Brown Betty variety, the kettle
over a spirit lamp with the water just
about to boll when it ts poured in,
the tea caddy, the cream jug, and
sugar basin, and @ plate of hot muf-
fins or thin buttered toast. The host-
ess heats the teapot, pours off tho
water, and, measuring a teaspoonful
of the tea to each person, with an-
other “for the pot,” she pours on
this the now briskly bolling water un-
til the pot is nearly full. Then a
[cosy hides the pot from sight for five
or six minutes, after which time
the Hquld is exactly right, and for-
tunate are those who can enjoy this
harmless and delictous beverage fresh
and hot, The quict pause in the
course of a busy afternoon soothes
the senses and puts off indefinitely
the wrinkles of care and haste, #0
often blemishing the brows of our
| stronucus dames of fashion,
TRY THESE CREAM SCONES.
Properly Made, They Are a Delicious
Luncheon Dish.
Beat two fresh eggs till quite light.
‘Then mix them with rather more than
a gill of single cream. Whisk well to-
gether.
Reserve, Place a pound of self-rals-
ing flour in a clean, deep basin, add to
it a good pinch of salt, then stir into
this the beaten egg and cream and
mix to a stiff dough (it may be need-
ful to add a little more cream, as
some flours require more motsture
than others). Have ready a well-
floured pastry board. Turn the dough
out on this and roll it out to about
three-quarters of an inch thick.
Stamp it out into rounds with the
top of a thick tumbler. Prick the top
with a fork.
Brush over quickly with new milk
and bake for a quarter of an hour in
a very hot oven, Split with a fork.
Butter well and serve at once. Do
not handle the paste more than is
necessary and finish and. put in the
oven as quickly as possible after add;
ing the liquid. Milk may be used in
place of cream if the latter fs too
costly.
Testing Flour.
‘There are several methods of testing:
flour, one of which at least should be
known to every purchaser of house-
hold provisions.
If flour is white with a yellowish
straw-color tint it 1s good, while If It
has a blush coat, or black specks In
It, it is the opposite.
Flour can also be tested by its ad:
hesiveness—wet and knead a little of
It between the fingers; if it works
soft and sticky it 1s poor.
If a little flour is thrown against a
dry, smooth surface and It falls like
powder you may know that ft 1s not
of the best quality.
If flour squeezed in the hand retains
the shape given it, when the hand is
relaxed, it is a good sign.
Coloring Straw.
Make a solution of hot water and
tannin, allow half an ounce of tannin
‘to one gallon of water nnd steep the
straw in this, solution for several
“hours.
Make another solution of hot water
aud glue, allowing an ounce. of white
| blue to one gallon of water and pass
the straw through this and dry it in
the open air slowly.
| When dry put through a weak ant
line dye several times.
Straw may also be colored by pass-
jing it through any thin, pale spirit
‘varnish while holding the desired col,
or In the solution.
Invisible Nets for the Hair.
A great help in keeping the hate in
perfect condition is the invisible nets,
which have again come into fastsion
The kind most preferred are quite im
visible, fastened with invisible halr
pins, They are pinned firmly, but not
tightly over the entire coiffure, so that
the hair loses none of {ts soft effect.
Yet the net will hold the hair in waves
in place in damp or fog long after the
hair would be straight without the
delicate covering.
To Launder White Silk Handkerchiefs.
Do not put white silk handkerchiefs in the ordinary wash, as they are easily laundered at home. Make a strong lather of Ivory Soap and water, but do not rub the soap on the handkerchief or use soda. Rinse and iron while damp with a moderately hot iron.
ELEANOR R. PARKER.
There is an altar society in Brooklyn composed of eight policemen. The members contribute a certain amount every month which pays for lights and flowers on an altar of perpetual adoration.
NERVOUS DEBILITY
A Scranton Woman Tells How Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Made Her Well and Strong.
Nervous debility is the common name for what the doctors term neurasthenia. It is characterized by mental depression, fits of the "blues," or melancholy, loss of energy and spirits. The patient's eyes become dull, the pink fades from the checks, the memory becomes defective so that it is difficult to recall dates and names at will. Some of these symptoms only may be present or all of them. The remedy lies in toning up the nervous system and there is no medicine better adapted for this purpose than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
Mrs. Jane J. Davies, of No. 814 Warren street, Scranton, Pa., says: "Some years ago I became greatly reduced in health and strength and my nervous system became so debilitated that I felt wretched. I could not rest or sleep well at night and woke up as weary and languid in the morning as I was when I went to bed. My head ached in the morning and often there was a pain in my right side which was worse when I sat down. My nerves were on edge all the time, the little noise bothered me and I was generally miserable. Then I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, as my husband had taken them with good results, and they did wonders for me. Now I have no more pain in my side, no more headaches, I sleep well and feel strong and able to do my work."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cured Mrs. Davies and they do just as much for other weak, pale, ailing men or women who are slipping into a hopeless decline. They strike straight at the root of all common diseases caused by poor and impoverished blood.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y.
LEWIS'
SINGLE
BINDER
STRAIGHT 5 CIGAR
You Pay 10c.
for Cigars
Not so Good.
F.P. LEWIS Peoria, Ill
He Knows
the kind of
Waterproof
Oiled Clothing
that stands the
hardest service
Do You Know?
TOWER'S
FISH BRAND
Made for all kinds
of wet work or sport
SOLD EVERYWHERE
A J TOWER GO BOSTON U.S.A.
TOWER CANADA CO. AT TORONTO CAN.
ELY'S CREAM BALM
DURING COLD
WARMTH
WORKOUT
NAY-FEVER
GRASSHUS
50 CTS.
MARSHMAL
ELY BROS
NEW YORK
Gives Resilient At Ones
Is cleanses, soothes,
heals and protects
the diseased membrane.
It cures Catarrh
and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly.
Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell.
Full size 50 cts, at Druggists or by mail-
Trial size 10 cts, by mail.
Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New York.
THE UNFAILING CURE
FOR ALL DISEASES OF
THE STOMACH AND
BOWELS
PAP-SI-CAP
DATA INFORM DISCOVERY.
CUBES
METAPHYSICAL GASTROINTEIN.
SOURCE STORAGE, WATER BEAUTY.
AND A SLEEP SUPPLEMENT.
Companies in Mumbai, Tamilnadu,
India, in New York, New York,
YUKATAN HEALTH CUP, Bombay City, India.
IN THE PUBLIC EYE
Gen. Fred Funston, who has gone to Cuba to advise with Secretary of War Taft, and who will command the American forces in Cuba, is well acquainted with conditions in the island, having joined the insurgents there in 1896 and fought 18 months against the Spaniards. Upon returning he was made colonel of the Twentieth Kansas volunteers and went to the Philippines, where for bravery he won a brigadier generalship of volunteers, and later distinguished himself by capturing Aguinaldo. In 1901 he was given the same grade in the regular army.
Gen. Funston was born in Ohio in 1865, and was taken to Kansas 12 years later by his parents. After studying in the Iola high school and Kansas State university he became a reporter, but soon abandoned the newspaper profession. Subsequently he was appointed commissioner by the agricultural department to report on Alaskan a winter in the Klondike country floated down the Then his military career began with the Cuban
flora, and after camping for a winter in the Klondike country floated down the Yukon alone in a canoe. Then his military career began with the Cuban rebels.
Funston, when a member of the insurgent forces in the days of Spanish rule, became acquainted with the leading spirits of the island. These men are now divided into contending forces, some supporting the government. The general's acquaintance, his knowledge of the country and his familiarity with all the by-ways renders him especially qualified to go out into the country and sound what may be termed public sentiment. His experience also eminently fits him for command, for he can place troops where they will do the most good.
BRITISH PEER AS WALL STREET BROKER
way Court—where he lived in baronial style. The present Virginia family home is Northampton, Prince George county, an estate of about 700 acres, being a part of the original Fairfax grant. Albert Kirby Fairfax was born there, as were his brother and three sisters.
He attended the coronation of King Edward by special invitation and was extensively entertained by the peerage. He bore the title of Lord Fairfax, but drops it on returning to America. Mr. Fairfax is 36 years of age, but looks younger. He will become a member of the firm of William P. Bonbright & Co. Wall street brokers.
THE POPE'S BRILLIANT DIPLOMAT
Cardinal Merry Del Val, papal secretary of state, whose course in the dispute with France is said to have so displeased that republic that a rumor that he is to be removed is greeted with satisfaction in Paris, is, at 40 years of age, one of the most celebrated diplomats of the world. Born in London, the son of a Spanish diplomat, and educated in England and Belgium, he is a thorough master of all the modern languages. His perfect command of English aided him to completely win the good will of the Canadians when he came in 1897 to settle the burning question of the Manitoba schools. It was on his reccommendation on his return to Rome that a permanent apostolic delegate was appointed.
He has spent 20 years in the greatest school of diplomacy in the world, the Vatican. Other sovereigns have armies to back up their emissaries but the pope must win through argument alone. Merry del Val is the first cardinal secretary of state who has been able to deal with Catholics of the Anglo-Saxon race in their own language. He is an indefatigable worker and a man of strong character. He has a temper kept well in control, which betrays itself sometimes by the appearance of an indignant flush on his face and by a flash from his dark eyes.
RISE OF A NEW YORK DEMOCRAT
Concerning John O'Brien's "past" his rivals say that "before he entered the more profitable field of New York, where Mayor McClellan gave him a big red automobile and a uniformed fireman to drive him to the race track every day and enabled him to lose $600 a day on a salary of $600 a month, John O'Brien was known chiefly as an unpretentious gambler in Buffalo.
"For three years before he left Buffalo he had no occupation. He made dollar bets in cheap poolrooms. He patronized the bucket shops. After a run of luck his account with Demary, Helntz & Lyman, brokers, was wiped out. When he finally left town it was noised about that his pathway was strewn with unredeemed "markers."
O'Brien went straight to New York. He became a worker for McClellan. In the devious ways of New York politicos he developed qualities which has rapidly forced him to the front.
MAN WHO DEFEATED CHURCHILL
Charles M. Floyd, farmer, clothier and manufacturer, of Manchester, N. H., made his campaign on a platform of "a business administration" as against Winston Churchill's battle cry of "down with railroad domination." He owes his victory, which was won by a margin of but 17 out of a total of 799 votes, to the combination of all the opposition to Churchill, when there were four candidates.
Floyd is regarded as one of the public-spirited men of the state. He is essentially a boomer for his home town of Manchester, where he is a mighty factor in politics, being especially popular with the young men. He is 45 years of age and was born on the farm which he now owns near Drury. When he was a mere boy he was compelled to go to work to support himself and secured a position in the shoe factory owned by the father of Rosecrans W. Pillbury, the latter being one of Floyd's opponents in the contest for the nomination. Later Floyd learned the clothing business with his brother in Haverhill and then he went to Manchester, where he established a clothing business which has now become the largest in the state.
Floyd's entry into politics was as a member of the Manchester school board in 1898. He was elected to the state senate in 1899. At present he is a member of the governor's council.
Floyd is a firm friend of young men whom he believes to be striving to better themselves and he has put at least three of these through law schools
U.S.
flora, and after camping for a winter in the Yukon alone in a canoe. Then his military rebels.
Funston, when a member of the insurrection rule, became acquainted with the lea-
men are now divided into contending forces. The general's acquaintance, his knowledge, with all the by-ways renders him especially try and sound what may be termed public eminently fits him for command, for he can the most good.
BRITISH PEER AS WALL
"A. K. Fairfax, New York," was the main lot of baggage which arrived in New York steamer from Liverpool, yet the owner is a descendent of one of the most famous hoo the British peerage, being none other the Rt. Hon. Albert, Lord Fairfax, twelfth of the of Fairfax.
The life history of Lord Fairfax is romantic. The house dates back to 1635, founder being the great Fairfax who was the few nobles who sided with Cromwell who held chief command at Marston Moor son was general-in-chief of the parliar forces and gained the great victory at When the king came to his own the Fair that day deemed it best to come to America about 1739 settled in Virginia, where he a tract of land comprising some 6,000,000 and erected two mansions—Brevoir and way Court—where he lived in baronial home is Northampton, Prince George coul being a part of the original Fairfax grand there, as were his brother and three sister.
He attended the coronation of King was extensively entertained by the peerage fax, but drops it on returning to America. looks younger. He will become a member & Co., Wall street brokers.
THE POPE'S BRILLI
"A. K. Fairfax, New York," was the mark on a lot of baggage which arrived in New York by steamer from Liverpool, yet the owner is a direct descendant of one of the most famous houses of the British peerage, being none other than the Rt. Hon. Albert, Lord Fairfax, twelfth of the line of Fairfax.
The life history of Lord Fairfax is most romantic. The house dates back to 1627, the founder being the great Fairfax who was one of the few nobles who sided with Cromwell, and who held chief command at Marston Moor. His son was general-in-chief of the parliamentary forces and gained the great victory at Naseby. When the king came to his own the Fairfax of that day deemed it best to come to America, and about 1739 settled in Virginia, where he bought a tract of land comprising some 6,000,000 acres, and erected two mansions—Brewoir and Green-
P.
alone. Merry del Val is the first cardi-
able to deal with Catholics of the Anglo-
He is an indefatigable worker and a man
per kept well in control, which betrays its
an indignant flush on his face and by a fla-
RISE OF A NEW YO
John H. O'Brien, fire commissioner of
York city through appointment by Mayor
lan, has had a most spectacular rise from
leged poolroom and bucket shop gambler in
to the real ruler of New York politics. A
McClellan's right hand man he has been
a whirlwind of criticism for the wholesa-
bling and corruption that were said to h
valled in the metropolis while the mayor
Europe.
John O'Brien first appeared as a for-
rival to the old leaders last winter when
McClellan gave him a banquet at Sherrry
was put forward as the mayor's candidate
Boss Murphy for the ruler of Tammany
Tim" and "Little Tim" Sullivan, Comptroll
Bird S. Coler and 50 other wiswam lea-
tended and started the campaign which he
reached the mud slinging stage.
Concerning John O'Brien's "past" his
the more profitable field of New York, w
big red automobile and a uniformed fire-
every day and enabled him to lose $600
John O'Brien was known chiefly as an un-
"For three years before he left Buffa-
dollar bets in cheap poolrooms. He pat-
run of luck his account with Demary, He
out. When he finally left town it was
strewn with unredeemed "markers."
O'Brien went straight to New York.
In the devious ways of New York politic-
rapidly forced him to the front.
MAN WHO DEFEAT
John H. O'Brien, fire commissioner of New York city through appointment by Mayor McClellan, has had a most spectacular rise from an alleged poolroom and bucket shop gambler in Buffalo to the real ruler of New York politics. As Mayor McClellan's right hand man he has been reaping a whirlwind of criticism for the wholesale gambling and corruption that were said to have prevailed in the metropolis while the mayor was in Europe.
John O'Brien first appeared as a formidable rival to the old leaders last winter when Mayor McClellan gave him a banquet at Sherry's. He was put forward as the mayor's candidate against Boss Murphy for the ruler of Tammany. "Big Tim" and "Little Tim" Sullivan, Comptroller Metz, Bird S. Coler and 50 other wigwam leaders attended and started the campaign which has now reached the mud slinging stage.
---
PETER H.
father of Rosie one of Floyd's opponents in the contest learned the clothing business with his bro to Manchester, where he established a clo come the largest in the state.
Floyd's entry into politics was as a board in 1898. He was elected to the sta a member of the governor's council.
Floyd is a firm friend of young men better themselves and he has put at least
J.
the present Virginia family, estate of about 700 acres, at Kirby Fairfax was born by special invitation and before the title of Lord Fairfax is 36 years of age, but form of William P. Bonbright
DIPLOMAT
Del Val, papal secretary of the dispute with France is caused that republic that a he removed is greeted with, at 40 years of age, one diplomat of the world, of a Spanish diplomat, and Belgium, he is a the modern languages, of English aided him to good will of the Canadians to settle the burning quest schools. It was on his rec return to Rome that a permit he was appointed.
years in the greatest school world, the Vatican. Other must to back up their emis must win through argumentary of state who has been place in their own language character. He has a tem ptimes by the appearance of this dark eyes.
EMOCRAT
BENNETH H.
may that "before he entered,oyer McClellan gave him a drive him to the race track a salary of $600 a month as gambler in Buffalo. and no occupation. He made the bucket shops. After a boyman, brokers, was wiped out that his pathway was one a worker for McClellan
NEVER TAKE POISON YOURSELF
And remember you have no right to give it to your WIFE AND LITTLE ONES
When you ask for medicine be sure that you take it pure and free from DANGER. In asking you to use OXIDINE in your home we do so because we know it will CURE CHILLS and FEVERS, BAD COLDS and LA GRIPPE, and because there never has been, there is not now, and there never will be the slightest particle of poison in it. If anyone tells you that this statement is untrue, point your finger to OUR GUARANTEE. We make this guarantee unconditional and open
OUR GUARANTEE We will give $1,000.00 IN GOLD to any chemist in the world who finds any ARSENIC, MORPHINE, STRYCHINE or other poisonous drugs in OXIDINE
Not only do we give the above guarantee as to its being free from Poison, but we go further and guarantee that
And if it fails to cure you your druggists give you back your money; in other words, OXIDINE is pure, contains no poison, and there is a GUAKANTEE TO CURE that goes with every bottle.
PUTNAM FADLESS DYES produce the brightest and fastest colors with less work and no muss.
Somehow it doesn't sound just right when a spinster asks for a match.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children beating, soffers the pains, reduces inflammation aids' pain, cures wind colds. So a bottle.
There was a time when the obese woman was the light of other days.
Hurt, Bruise or Sprain
St. Jacobs Oil relieves from pain.
When a bachelor wants to make a married man angry, all he has to do is whistle the wedding march.
For flexibility, smooth finish, stiffness and durability. Defiance Starch has no equal—10c for 16 oz.
Report Seeing Pure White Rook.
Haymakers at work on a farm at Little Burstead, Essex, England, have recently seen a pure white rook among a number of black ones.
To prevent that tired feeling on ironing day—Use Defiance Starch—saves time—saves labor—saves annoyance, will not stick to the iron. The big 16 oz. package for 10c, at your grocers.
Mountain Climber's Experience
The queen of mountaineers. Mrs. Bullock Workman, has added one more thrilling experience to her record of adventure by accompanying her husband on his great climb of 23,000 feet in Kashmir. Mrs. Workman has several times climbed over 21,000 feet—higher than any other woman in the world. The rarefied air at these great heights has considerable effect on her. She finds it distressing to sleep at night beyond an altitude of 18,000 feet. The diminished pressure shortens her breathing and she experiences severe headaches. But, curiously enough, the headache leaves her after 21,000 feet.
Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually necessary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wearing quality of the goods. This trouble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its greater strength than other makes.
What He Most Wished For.
John Fiske, the American historian, was an ardent lover of music and himself no mean musician. Furthermore, he was extremely corpulent and felt the hot weather painfully. He was once delivering a course of lectures at a summer school in a small city of the middle west. The heat was terrific and adjoining the house where the lecturer stayed was a church where an ill-matched but zealous "quartet" practiced and performed during all hours of the torrid afternoons and evenings. One evening, seeing the famous man sit for a time unoccupied and apparently oppressed by this combined affection, the young daughter of his hostess attempted to divert him by offering him a new novel, then just becoming popular. "I think 'The Choir Invisible' is perfectly splendid, Mr. Fiske," said she. "Wouldn't you like to read it?" The historian put the book aside. "My dear young lady," said he, "the only choir in the world in which I could feel any interest at this moment would be the choir inaudible."
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
CURS RHEUMATISM
BRIGHT'S DISEASE
DIABETES BACKACHE
will discontinue the use of enalapril
in patients with certain
cases of limitations, sold only in discretion.
9,000 DROPS
CASTORIA
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS / CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest, Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Dr. SARCEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed -
Alce, Sage -
Rosemary, Salvia -
Jasmine Seed -
Lemon Pepper -
Lilac Carbonsulfate -
Warm Seed -
Cinnamon Sugar
Mintygranine Extract
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fat Simile Signature of
Charles H. Hitchter.
NEW YORK.
At 6 months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Charles H. Hitchter.
In Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE GENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
PILES: NO MONEY TILL CURED. SEND FOR FREE ILLUS. TREATIES ON BRENTAL DUSKSHAKS, WITH MAKES OF PROMPTION CURED. DRS. THORNTON & MINOR. NO 30 OAK ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. (DRAWN OFFICE AT S. LOUIS)
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by these Little Pills.
They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPED LIVER. They
W. L. DOUGLAS
'3.50 &'3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.L. Douglas $4 Gift Edge line cannot be equalled at any price
To Shoe Dealers
We offer Jobbing House is the most complete in this country
Send for Kitatalog
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTERS
TITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear
Face-Simile Signature
Brew Good
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs, checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
THIS PAPER
IS ON FILE IN CHICAGO
NEWYORK AT THE OFFICES OF
A. N. KELLOGO NEWSPAPER CO.
W. L. DOUGLAS
'3.50 & '3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.L.Douglas $4 Gift Edge line
cannot be equalled at any price
To Shoe Bakery:
W. L. Douglas' Job-
bing House is the most
complete in the country
Safety State
SHOES
CHARLESTON
1076
CAPITAL
12300000
**SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL FRICES**
Men's shoes, $8 to $1.50. Bye's shoes, $8 to $1.25. Women's shoes, $4.00 to $1.50.
Misses' & Children's shoes, $3.50 to $1.00.
Tennis shoes, $1.25 and shoes and
Children's shoes; for style, fit and wear
they excel other makes.
If I could take you into my large faculties at Brockton, Mass, and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. His name and price is stamped on the bottom, which protects you against high temperatures and interlocking shoes. Take note to ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes and insist upon having them.
First Clear guests use your shoes not wear bras. Catalog of Full Style. W. L. DOUGHAUS, Dept. I, Brockton, Mass.
$25,000.00 FOR AGENTS. Please work among your friends to save large amounts of money for all Andrea Dept. B, 128 5th St, N.Y. City
REAL ESTATE.
VIRGINIA FARMS 10,600 acres at Stakecrest
Clamp, Southern Thacher & Land Co., Inc., Pittsburgh, Va.
YOUNG MEN Learn Telegraphy and R
Information. Write J. D. BROWN, Mgr., Solids, Mo.
W. N. U., Kansas City, No. 41, 1966
na
a
mS 5 ‘ed 109 a
ae i
‘S$. I, * 7
? H
ae ta oa t
ae ot atP RAS hy ne
= -— , ag ee ao =
oe. -f Se
et tose ara ae ~ oe
Bains? Ben eke Sidi nae. |
WILLIAMS AND WALKER
in “Abysinia.”
WILLIAMS AND WALKER.
The new musical oddity called “Aby
sina” which will be seen here at the
Grand for one week beginning Sun lay
Matinee, October 14, has been declare 1
to be the best musical play on the
New York stage this season, It is on
tong langh from the rise of the curtala
to the clos? of the piece, WILLIAMS
& WALKER, the famous colored co.
medians whose reputation as the
greatest finmnakers of the age has long
beon established on both sides of th
Atlant, will be seen in the best ve
hicle that they have so far had. The
play will be represented under the
management of Melville B. Raymond,
Whose name is a guarantee of the bes
that money and brains ean provide
One remarkable Cature of this pro
duction is that it is entirely the work
of colored people, ‘The book and ly
es were written by Jesse Shipp anc
Alex Rogers, ‘The musie was writer
by Wit Martin Cook and tue ineident
al music by Bert A. Williams and Jas
Viuighn, The plece was staged am
rehearsed by Aida Overton Walker
wite of Geo, Walker, The principe
und all other members of tie eospan.
ape colored, Mr. Raymond, the mat
et aan ieee eae eal ha ee RR |
2 yo
‘ an a
5 oan, £3
é Peery fas
5 Adi yi ead ies A
FS f. an Me , P 7
ae ca 7 eee P ay
Hy ‘ eee, ¢
ia cy \ BARON
ee a " BF
ae Cee: oi ee
A? coe SS ees
‘a ie Le 3 ohne 3
q p aes
AIDA OVERTON AND GEE WALKER
in “Abyssinia.”
New American Industry. | ‘When “Booking” M
‘The infant industry of raw siik pro] "\” railway clerk
duction gives promise of developing] »yaok" snp nassonge
into sturdy and vigorous manhood,| yriy when. he. had
oven though protective duties and the] trem, to welte thelr
Aid of state or national bounties be} jw would have. tho
denied it, The father of the present] sood day's work. ‘Th
lovement to establish ser-culture as] jas Geen enormous,
a permanent and profitable branch of| inventions, the teke
American industry is Louis Bortis Ma] qs tr was at frat. It
gid, a German by birth, an Italian by| and dated, as it was |
Hleseent and an Aniesican by eholee | chaires have been
and adoption. At Tallulah Fails, Ga..| words printed on
he owns 3,500 acres of land, on Which! gwers,
Ne has planted more than 209,900 mul | - -
berry trees, which are now from three | American Civili
to five years old, and which are de-| Owen Owen, a dry
signed for the feeding of iniitions of| 18 in a large way of |
ailk worms. The land will be subdi-| pool, tells in the Di
Vided Into many small farnis and) what he saw on ar
leused or sold to persona willing te) United States, He sp
engage In sk enlture, Mr, Magid | of the many attract
has proven that silk can be produced) ener American dry
as cheaply in America has in any oth-| nish for their castom
br country and thatthe $10,000,000) "One hardly ever hi
Or more expended annually fur foreign | "Thank you In an
Sik qitght just well be Kept at Without being actu
home for the benefit of American siatauts scem to lel
farmers, workmen and manufactusers, Ish which 18 expect
—Technical World. {this coutury.”
ager, being the only white peftson
identified with the enterprise.
In “Abyssinia” there are so many
ideas that are new to the musical com-
edy stage that it is difficult to pick
any one feature as the principal fea-
ture In the first place the country
choses by the authors for the locals of
the play, “Abyssinia” is one that has
so far escaped’ the pen of the play-
wright and one that is rch in story
and legend and one furthermore that
has ocenpied th thoughts of the na-
tions for years, but about whieh lit
ile is known by the average person,
The law and customs, carefully
's.udied by the authors who visited the
country to get local color for thelr
work, the newness of “Abyssinia” as
a sutbjeet for stage presentation, has
also permitted the intreduction — of
many novel songs, dances and “busi
n ss” and furnished scenic artists witt
rich material, None of the opportuni
lies have been neglected, and the re
sult is that the best musical, costume
und scenic as well as the funnies!
comic opera on the stage today.
In any production in’ whieh WIL
LIAMS & WALKER are Ident fied, i
is intended that they should be th
central fun making features,
{Rte seOsIng MOAN mean Nee
1 “A railway clerk will nowadays
f]eHapk” snd passengers an hour; for:
I} merly when he had really to book
el them, to write thelr names in a book,
Che would have thought the 8000 @
(good day's work. ‘The saving of labor
“| has been enormous, and, unlike most
f\ inventions, the teket remains much
M/s i) was at first, [tis still numbered
¥| and dated, as it was then, and its only
®} chanzes have been in color and the
| words printed on it—London Aw
bh) awers,
| ? =
e| American Civility Criticized.
» | Owen Owen, a dry goods man, who
| Is in a large way of business In Liver:
i-| pool, tells in the Draper's Record of
1] what he saw on a recent visit to the
¢| Vaited Stites, He speaics with wonder
fof the any attractions and convent:
1 onees Anierean dry goods men fur
1 nish for their customers, but remarks:
M SOne hardly over hears the phrase
1 ‘Thank yon’ in an American shop.
AC Without being aetualiy rude, the as
m1 fistants Acem to kick some of the pol
% ish Which fs expected from them ip
{ this coutury.”
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
, ‘Including Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutic Colleges.)
WASHINGTON, - - - D.C.
Thirty-Ninth Annual Session
Will begin Oct. 1, 1806, and continue Eight Months.
Students Matriculated for Day Instruction, Only.
Four Years’ graded course in Medicine,
Three Years’ graded course in Dental Surgery.
| Three Years’ graded course in Pharmacy.
Instruction is given by didactic lectures. quizzes, clinics, and practi-
cal laboratory demonstrations, well equipped labatories in all depart-
ments. Unexcelled hospital facilities,
All students must register before October 12, 1906,
For catalogue or further information, apply to
F. J. SHADD, M. D.,
Secretary, 901 R Street,
ieee aint inact a i iN
will entertain colored guests in search of
health and pleasure.
Centrally located, modern, electric lighted,
! large hall and verandas.
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford W. King, Props.
Home phone 10. For terms call or write. EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO.
Ghe Stoeltzing Stowe and Hardware Co.
—————geeeeeeeee88 °° —
Hest Stoves Made.
—— Largest Stock in City.
foetrrememeliaaes Prices the Lowest.
eee Whelssele and Reel Peninsular
ae BS ‘Stee! Ranges, Stee! Oven Cook Stoves, Base Bur
( ei eed | ners, Furnaces, and all goods made by the...
is ett i Peninsular Stove Ce
P oN rman r, Soft © seheater, Cole's Ho
SSS URN ITA atte eed, crn
arene ee Gal ores, Schill Stee! Hanges and Farneeee
fae tien TIN WORK e@ Specialty
RE eee Window and Door Soreens and Refrigerators
3 eee TescR RE "Phone 1458.
Meio: ae eenan
See Bee 1329 Grand Ave,
to ene C
$ Pacific Coast
e
Points
Daily to October 31.
: One-way, second-class tickets on sate via
Rock Island Lines every day until October
31, 1906. r
$25 from Kansas City and all points in
Kansas to Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Victoria, Van-
couver.
| The Rock Island runs Tourist Sleepers
daily on fast thru trains. Fine dining car
service.
a tay 2th Gholee of two excellent routes, Write ie
ay for illustrated Tourist folder, containing ful
SC ais and oe! ‘
A. T, Gen, Agent Pass. Dept.,
Guha
KELLEY FLOUR
_- rn
| BEST: Kelley’s Best
| Beats all the Rest.
HIGH PATENT. Kely Miling Co,
In his first success at Drury Lane,
Edmund Kean overheard a knot of old
stage carpenters discussing vigorously
the various players of Hamlet they
had seen in their day. “Well,” said
one, ‘you may talk of Henderson and
Kemble and this new man, but give
nw Hannister's Hamlet—he was al-
ways done 20 minutes sooner thas
any of ‘om
~ The American
4 ' Collection Agency
f Ee) No tee charged un-
(| fie }1¢-8 cottec:ton ia made
\ BF | We make collections
N Bee yin alt parts of the
Ww «@ United States
~ 413 Kansas Ave,
Anthony P. Wiltoa, Atty. Topeka. Kansas.
9a. Ff
NELSON S:—.
Hair Dressing
6 pene | se i —
Seen A === PROMOTES
HARSH) [a =f tHe
STUBBORN || ~ || GROWTH
HAIR te | ‘NELSON j OFTHE
i ||ynosessif| | ~HAIR
SOFT ie | Pe eicaitne PREVENTS
ar a il ys st ( IT FROM
PLIANT (i ||susasess" | | SPLITTING
NG J At
REMOVES | += BREAKING
DANDRUFF OFF
Not New or Experimental, but an Old, Reliable
Preparation of Proven Merit. |
ansflotoon’e Hts, Brnecing lige at at Pends, icouhae oo fens,
ee cram ae ea Ean, Lee ik Re OP S|
or Min Hale Grower recouite Nelecne fate Dreosing eco!
ieaahnabisei ite casmevaeattel Spite tiake cakes Sse
pudieleonte tats, Drosetd lay creat seuety fo at Mads of ap
Nelson’ jair Dressi: is delightfully perfumed; pnt up in ban
Nelson Manufacturing Co., Richmond, Va.
WE WANT GOOD AGENTS. ‘WRITE FOR PRICES, TERMS, ETC,
“ Sait?
Maine Anchor
SAM H. FINKELSTEIN, Prop.
All the Latest Fall Shapes in Stetson and No Name Hats.
Up-to-Date my
Fall Styles Shoes
Arriving Daily. ; and
No trouble Furnishing
toshow goods. Goods,
|
2 ERK) aut
“Gi my ONE PRICE SD
a ani “a
Ea BNSHERSSY 6
ae SHOES \
| see
l aoc
Our Motto: “YOUR MONEY’S WORTH”
eos Melp Street, : Kensas City MO
‘Hot Springs Special”
Long looked for improved Train Service between Kansas City
and Hot Springs, Arkansas, and return daily, is now provided for by
the
ss wpe 2
=3 er Sa
& ery
So & FIL e Lo
: Mallee if:
bat mn =
st Baer rT s3
ra a =
Leaving Kansas City at 11:00 a. m. 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 Care.
Thig train connects at Little Rock with the Iron Mountain Trains for
all Southeastern Points in Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas.
Hot ‘Springs Night Express 9:35 p.m. daily.
For Excursion Tickets, Sleeping Car Berths and all information,
call or address
E. S. JEWETT, Gen'l Agt. Passenger Dept.
901 Main Street, KANSAS CITY MO,
Home Telephone 6327 Main. Bell Telephone 740 Hickory
___Home Telephone 6327 Main. __Belll Telephone 740 Hickory
B1O1O101O1O1O1 0101 S101 O10191 01 O1O1O1 Oi O1O1O1O1O1er
M. Brancato @ Bre. |
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fresh and
Salt Meats, Oysters and Game in Season
Beat paan2gs5 ste" 7 211 W. 6th St.
eR ee oe ee Rt