Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, December 29, 1900
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
Fuel from mud and sewage.
Fuel is now being manufactured in London out of mud, street refuse and sewage, for sale to the poor. A chemical process has been invented by which this waste material is so treated that it is rendered combustible. Mud has been will-drawn from the Thames at Millwall, treated chemically and compressed in briquettes, that in appearance closely resemble blocks of mud elbow or bog oak. This mud has been proved to have a calorific value of 7.52 pounds. It burns rapidly, excludes a minimum of smoke, and leaves only 25 per cent of firm ash. The street sweepings are mixed with a small percentage of cheap chemicals, pressed into blocks, and sterilized by being subjected to an intense heat of about 400 degrees Fahrenheit. This material produces great heat, burns freely with little smoke and leaves very little ash. The sewage when subjected to this chemical process and pressed into briquettes looks like the best coal, deep and rich is its sable character. This last fuel can be manufactured at the low cost of two dollars per ton,
Pechin's FUR
Rockers, Bed Room Suits,
Springs, Mattresses, Couches,
Cloth, Tents, Wagon
312 N.Main St.
J.J.WF
Is Headquarters for First
.....At Le
Cali and See Us,V
Don't Forget the Number.
F.M.Jaqu
Special Prices made on Furniture
for Holiday trade. Either
Call in whether you buy or r
ing goods and g
F.M.Jaques & Co.,
MYRON
815 N.Main St.
Headquarters for Staple and
bers, Pants, Gloves, Stocking
S. FURNITURE STORES
In Room Suits, Go-Carts, Chairs,
Lesses, Couches, Stoves, Carpets,
Teats, Wagon Sheets, and Tables.
M. WRIGHT
Porters for First-Class Groceries.
...At Lowest Prices...
and See Us, We will Treat You
the Number.
M. Jaques &
made on Furniture, Stoves, Carpets
buy trade. Either cash or easy
after you buy or not. we take pleas
goods and giving you price
Co.,
RON A. DE
St.
for Staple and Fancy Groceries
Gloves, Stockings etc.
Rockers, Bed Room Suits, Go-Carts, Chairs, Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, Couches, Stoves, Carpets, Mattings, Oil Cloth, Teats, Wagon Sheets, and Tinware.
Special Prices made on Furniture, Stoves, Carpets, and Matting for Holiday trade. Either cash or easy payments.
Call in whether you buy or not. we take pleasure in showing goods and giving you prices.
F.M.Jaques & Co., 243 N.Main St.
MYRONA. DEAN,
815 N.Main St.
Headquarters for Staple and Fancy Groceries, Shoes, Rubb
bers,Pants,Gloves,Stockings.etc. 'Phone 101
H:FRANK
Merchand
The latest styles of Suiting
always on hand,
Strictly
307 East Douglas Ave.
Merchant Tailor
Sales of Suitings, Overcoats, and
Ayes on hand,at Lowest price
Strictly Guaranteed.
s Ave.
Merchant Tailor The latest styles of Suitings, Overcoats, and Pantaloons always on hand,at Lowest prices. Strictly Guaranteed. 307 East Douglas Ave. Wichita,Kansas.
137 N.Main St.
"The best and Cheapet."
50 per cents reduction to the
holiday trade.
TANNER'S
Book Store for
TOYS.
ForY
and is equal in every way to the cheaper coals. Licenses have been granted to manufacture the fuel from these hitherto waste materials, and works are shortly to be installed upon the river's banks at Barking.
Princess Buried as Pauper.
Princess Buried as Pauper.
The Princess Ludmilla Gorseszlow, once a famous Russian beauty, was buried recently at Budapest as a pauper. Although some of the noblest and wealthiest men in Russia were among the suitors for her hand, she depended with a handsome Hungarian adventurer. He maltreated and deserted her and at the age of thirty, her beauty gone, she had become a street beggar in Budapest. She died the other day, aged forty, from hunger, cold and neglect. No one followed the pauper's coffin to the grave.
Bernhardt Supports Her Relatives.
The London Chronicle states that Sarah Bernhardt is devoted to her family, and that fully half of the millions she has earned has gone to support her relative
FURNITURE AND STORAGE CO.
Go-Carts, Chairs, Iron Beds,
Stoves, Carpets, Mattings, Oil
Sheets, and Tinware.
Wichita, Kansas.
RIGHT'S
459 N.Main St.
Class Groceries and Meats.
Lowest Prices.....
We will Treat You Right.
es & Co.,
ure, Stoves, Carpets, and Matting
or cash or easy payments.
not. we take pleasure in show-
giving you prices.
243 N.Main St.
A. DEAN,
Fancy Groceries, Shoes, Rub-
gs.etc. 'Phone 101
Failor
s, Overcoats, and Pantaloons
at Lowest prices.
Guaranteed.
Wichita,Kansas.
J.E.Farrow,deputy register of deeds,has a word of comfort for the croup among children at this time of the year.He says:When our children begin to cough we give them one or two doses of Henrion's Tar Expectorant and it always relieves all danger.We have raised three children,and have never had a case of croup in the house.We attribute it to Tar Expectorant,which we consider the best cough remedy, ever made.Sold by W.S.Henrion West Side Drug Store, H. C. Ken drick,W.O.Goodin.
Heller's Market ForYourMeats.
WICHITA, KANSAS, DEC. 29, 1900.
SPECIAL SALE
Any patent leather or patent Kid shoes in the store, for the balance of December, will be sold at 25 per cent Discount. MORRIS SPEER WICHITA, KANS.
Jame A Jackson' of whom this is written,and whose likeness is here
M. H.
presented, was born in Taylar-ville, Christian co., Ill., June 20 th., 8963. He remained with his parents and attended school from 1870 to 1875. In 1875 his parents moved to the South, to the state of Tennessee. Young James being sensitiv of the way the South,refused to go,and resolved to remain in Illinois and battle in life for himself. And afterward made his way to Milwaukee and later to Springfield' Mo.,where in 1887 he met and married Mrs. Nannie Jarrett,and in 1888, moved to Wichita,and engaged in the hotel business,He has for years been constantly engaged in that business and is now proprietor of The Jackson House 343 N.Main.this city,he has made a grand successs in the same.james is a member of A.F. & A.M; Palesten Cammandery No12. and Mt.ZionChapter Mo 17.also a faithful member of the A. M. E church He has host of friends both white and Colored, and is one of the most prominent citizens of the city.
Searchlight $1.00
Non-Union Men Protected.
New York, Dec. 24.—The appelate division of the supreme court handed down a decision in the case of Samuel I. Davis and others against Nathan Rosenstein and others. The court affirmed the order continuing a temporary injunction restraining the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff's business through "picketing" against non-union men during business hours.
Belfast, Dec. 26.—Vere Foster, who has been engaged for the last fifty years in assisting the emigration of nearly 55,000 young women from the congested districts of the West of Ireland and in the building or furnishing of over 2,200 national schools in every part of Ireland, is dead. He was born in Copenhagen in 1819 and was formerly in the British diplomatic service in South America.
Kalamazoo, Mich. Dec. 27.—Hobart Clayberg, a 17-year-old boy whose father, John B. Clayberg, is a prominent citizen of Helena, Mont., was kidnapped in this city by two men. The boy was blindfolded and compelled to walk to Mattewan, a distance of 11 miles. It became so stormy that the kidnappers released young Clayberg at Mattewan, after robbing him of the small sum of money he had in his pockets. The boy telegraphed here for help and was brought home.
Washington Notes.
Washington, Dec. 24.—The senate committee on military affairs has referred the army reorganization bill to a sub-committee, consisting of Senator Harris of Kansas, and Senators Hawley, Proctor, Sewell and Cockrell.
Congressman Calderhead, will in all probability, be the only member of the delegation that will return to Kansas during the holiday recess of congress. Besides visiting Cuba during the recess, Congressman Bailey will investigate the conditions of Puerto Rico as well
The subject of this sketch and the person whose likeness hear in ap-pears Mr Joe Fines, is a native of
A. E.
the state of Kansas, having been born in in Lynn co, March 29 th '70 He remained in his native county till he was 15 years of age, when he went th the 'strip' and took up a claim;he remained there one year, sold his claim,and on March 1, '86 came to this city;where he has since remained.He is quite a Society leader,is a member of Arkansas Valley lodge No.21,in which he is Senior Deacon;is Captain of the Host in Palastine Commandery No.12, and Secretary of Mt. Zion Chapt.No.17
VOL. II. NO. 31
Brown's
Meat Market
Fresh and Salt Meat.
Game, Poultry and Oysters.
Xmas Turkeys Cheap.
Low prices on all meat.
Lee Brown, Proprietor.
217 N.Main St. Wichita, Ks.
Shaw's STORE GOODS. Anything in music, at Special Prices.
Thos. Shaw's
MUSIC STORE
Is the place for HOLIDAY GOODS. Anything i
Sewing Machines,or Bicycles,at Special Prices.
Is the place for HOLIDAY GOODS. Anything in music, Sewing Machines,or Bicycles, at Special Prices.
TURN THIS AROUND.
tells you to come to the d=i=tatobuyyour Xmas and other presents. We welcome you all to 350 N.Main.
It tells you the
Xmas Presents? The Cheapest
time,Come All!! Welcome,
HOLD FAIR.
N.Dailey,Prop.
Great Market
since meat of all kinds.
813 N.Main
Xmas Supplies.
Where you will find a Full
new dates,Oranges,Bananas,fresh
thing you may want.
Sturgeon.
Grocers.
It tells you to come to the Odd=i=tatobuyyour Xmas and other presents. We welcome you all to 350 N.Main.
Did You Know?
That the H
Fair was the Headquarters for Xmas Presents? The C
Place in the city. Come One,Come All!! We
THE HOUSEHOLD FA
That the Household Fair was the Headquarters for Xmas Presents? The Cheapest Place in the city. Come One,Come All!! Welcome,
Smith's Meat Market
Is the place to get choice meat of all kinds.
S.L.Smith,Prop. 813 N.Main
FOR YOUR XMAS SUPPLIES.
Come to our store
Where you will find a Full
line of Candies,Nuts of all kinds,New dates,Oranges,Bananas,fresh
Baltimore Oysters,Celery,in fact any thing you may want.
Longsdorf & Sturgeon.
& WALKER. later season on Comfortables reputation as retailer of trust- it almost unnecessary for us and an invitation to you to the least possible prices, at
CHAPMAN & WALKER.
with an entire new stock. Our reputation as retailer of trustworthy goods in these lines make it almost unnecessary for us to say anything except to extend an invitation to you to come and buy the best goods at the least possible prices, at which we sell them.
Jno.E.Lewis and Geo.Johnston will give an exhibition of their Moving pictures at New Hope on Thursday, Jan. 3rd. and at the 2nd.Baptist on Friday Jan.4th. Come out every body.
FOR LOWEST PRICES.
Don't forget the place in Millinery & Hair Goods
We will and must close out our fall stock.....
S.E.Klentz. 153 N. Main.
'Phsne 132
Blankets at
65c a pair
75c a pair
1.00 a pair
1.35 a pair
1.88 a pair
2.50 upwards
258 N.Main.
CURRENT KANSA'S FACTS.
Some Finney county farmers are talking of sugar beets. The M. E. church at Chanute received 100 new members at one time recently. Glen Elder will vote on the 7th of January on going in debt to build a city hall. There are now nearing completion in Columbus, a county high school and a new jail and sheriff's residence. The Santa Fe paid taxes in Franklin county, the other day, of $16,349. By paying all the rebate was $419,21. The Missouri & Kansas Telephone company has put up two long cables in Wichita, each having 100 wires. Thos. Hornby, of Morris county, brought back $75,000 more from the Klondike mines than he took there.
Andrew Baird, state secretary of the Y. M. C. A., has been re-elected to that position by the executive committee.
Bank note No. 1, issued by the National bank of Honolulu, was received on a freight bill at Parsons recently.
Dr. W. E. Middleton, one of the oldest settlers of Sumner county, died at his home in Oxford a short time since.
Burglars opened a safe at Solomon, securing valuable papers and about $100. The store was injured by the explosion.
A company has been organized in Franklin county who propose to make the run for land when the Kiowa country is opened. They are accumulating funds for the trip.
H. R. Irvine, general roadmaster of the Rock Island, is selected to have charge of the extension from Liberal. W. H. Davidson, a division engineer at Des Moines, will become general roadmaster.
The attorney general tells Warden Tomlinson, of the Kansas penitentiary, that he has the right to offer a reward for the capture of a convict who has been conditionally pardoned and has broken his parole.
C. W. Goodlander has written a history of Fort Scott, which is on sale at the Goodlander hotel, the Goodlander mill, the Goodlander bank, the Goodlander lumber yard and at Mayor Goodlander's office.
Mandamus from the federal court has been served upon the city of Medicine Lodge, to compel a levy to pay $3,700 of interest. The people say that it is not possible to secure such a sum by a special levy.
There is a movement to repeal the law providing for the organization of private banks. There are now 55 of them, and under the proposed legislation they will be compelled to incorporate as state or national banks.
There are now 5,565 books in the traveling library department of the state library. The scheme was started with 3,000 books. The case of 50 books has on the average 20 readers, giving a total number of readers of 16,800.
The cook of the Copeland hotel in Topeka refused to give a waiter a plate of corned beef hash for breakfast and all the waiters went on a strike. Dinner was somewhat delayed before the places of the waiters were all filled.
Ablene's business men, in meeting assembled, have, jointly with the city council, decided to continue to "regulate" the liquor business as has been done in the past. The council says that money must be raised some way.
Jerry Simpson's pension of $12 a month was given him in 1896.
Frank Rockefeller, the Standard Oil magnate, told friends in Wichita that he expected to spend his declining years on or near his ranch in Kiowa and Clark counties. He is in love with the climate of southern Kansas. His residence at the ranch is a large modern building, erected with comfort rather than luxury in view. It is supplied with hot and cold water, and with gas manufactured on the premises.
Austin W. Hall, of Trading Post, Linn county, is dead. Mr. Hall was the last survivor of the "Marias des Cygnes massacre," of May 19, 1858. The state of Kansas is erecting a monument at the scene of that May Day slaughter.
Auditor Cole is preparing an estimate of the expenditures of the state for the next two years; classifying them into those provided for by permanent and by temporary appropriations; for the legislature committees of Ways and Means.
The three national banks of Wichita have an aggregate of deposits of $2,487,027.08, on December 13, as shown by a statement that was made under the call from Washington for that date.
Michigan parties have commenced the work of drilling for gas at Mound City. They brought two carloads of drilling machinery.
J. W. Robison, of Ei Dorado, has received four Percheres, stallions which he purchased at $79 each, while attending the Paris excavation.
Caldwell wants that proposed new Mennonite college.
The new high school building at El Dorado is completed.
The Lutheran church of Abilene now has a $1,500 pipe organ.
Hunts for coyotes are the common thing in Sumner county these days.
Wm. Byrnes, of Belle Plaine, puts out 39,000 bunches of celery every year.
Kingman county has commenced agitating the question of new courthouse.
Miss Jessie Morrison's bond was not filed in time for her to spend Christmas at home.
H. U. Mudge, general superintendent of the Santa Fe, has purchased a home in Topeka.
General W. S. Metcalf, of the Twentieth Kansas, has opened a loan office in Lawrence.
A mutual burial association is a new organization in Wichita with 400 members already.
Dodge City reports a shortage of coal, extending to about all of the surrounding towns.
A Stevens county man has shipped 15,500 pounds of watermelon seed to an eastern seed house.
A. F. Casad, the new captain of the West Point foot ball team, was born and raised in Wichita.
There are only two members of the famous "Douglas House" who are in the present legislature.
Wichita women have arranged for iron watering troughs at twenty of the entrances to the city.
The two girls who tried to burn the Beloit reform school have been dismissed and sent home.
Superintendent of Machinery of the Santa Fe Player denies the statement that he intends to resign.
John Ryan, of Florence, lost 80 tons of hay by fire, started by a locomotive on the El Dorado branch.
During the past two years five Kansas banks have failed and all of them owe depositors only $7,800.
It is claimed that gold worth $7 was taken from a piece of rock the size of an egg, found near Mound City.
Increase of cattle thieving in Pawnee county has induced the organization of a local stock association.
A Belgian named Lambotte, who has lived in Salina 33 years, manufactures high grade violins for professional musicians.
W. Q. Hayes, of Johnson county, exhibits ears of corn weighing from five to six pounds. They are taken from a field that yielded 80 bushels to the acre.
The Fort Scott flax tow factory is now operating on full time, after being idle for four years. A large force is employed. The factory was idle from lack of straw but farmers have commenced raising it again in quantities to justify the reopening.
The state library association gave a public reception this week while the city is full of people from over the state to acquaint the people of the state with the magnificent library which is at their command. It now contains over 75,000 volumes and has stack room for 175,000. This can be increased nearly a third by adding another story to the book stack, which can easily be done.
John Player, superintendent of machinery on the Santa Fe system, has resigned and will be succeeded by Assistant Superintendent Sanderson, comparatively a new man on the Spinta Fe. Henry Alphin, aged 70 years, had the past season, 300 acres of wheat, the proceeds of which enabled him to buy another quarter section of land, fence it, construct a well and a wind mill, the best feed rack in the county, 45 feet long, a cattle shed 14 by 60 feet, and then have enough spending money to last until next harvest. It is asserted by school architects that there is more school room under the single roof of the Friends University in Wichita than can be found under any single roof in America.
Adna Treat, aged 103 years, died at Hays, Kansas recently. In 1824 he was master of the Masonic lodge in Troy, N. Y., which entertained Lafayette. Mr. Treat was intimate with Presidents Monroe and John Quincy Adams. He was a prominent officer in the ceremonies of dedicating the Erie canal. A Lawrence firm has been awarded the contract for grading about 50 miles of the Rock Island's extension from Liberal. The flax seed crop of Bourbon county averages returns of $15 to $18 an acre. There is no market for straw and it is used for feed.
Living southwest of Conway Springs are two brothers, sons of one of the Siamese twins. Formerly two sons of the other twin also lived in Sumner county, but it is not known there where they are now.
TALMAGE'S SERMON.
FOR THE WORLD'S DISEN-
THRALLMENT.
A Sermon Especially Appropriate for
the Christmas Season—The Mission of
the Saviour of the World—Proof That
God Is Love.
(Copyright, 1900, Louis Klopsch, N. Y.)
Washington, Dec. 23.—In this
discourse Dr. Talmage describes in a new
way the sacrifices made for the world's
disenchantment and deliverance. His
text is I. John iv. 16. "God is love."
Perilous undertaking would it be to attempt a comparison between the attributes of God. They are not like a mountain range, with here and there a higher peak, nor like the ocean, with here and there a profounder depth. We cannot measure infinities. We would not dare to say whether his omnipotence, or omniscience, or omnipresence, or immutability, or wisdom, or justice, or love is the greater attribute, but the one mentioned in my text makes deeper impression upon us than any other. It was evidently a very old man who wrote the chapter from which I take the text. John was not in his dotage, as Prof. Elichhor asserted, but you can tell by the repetitions in the epistle and the rambling style and that he called grown people "little children" that the author was probably an octogenarian. Yet Paul, in midlife mastering an audience of Athenian critics on Mars hill, said nothing stronger or more important than did the venerable John when he wrote the three words of my text, "God is love."
Indeed the older one gets the more he appreciates this attribute. The harshness and the combativeness and the severity have gone out of the old man, and he is more lenient and aware of his own faults, is more disposed to make excuses for the faults of others, and he frequently ejaculates, "Poor human nature!" The young minister preached three sermons on the justice of God and one on the love of God, but when he got old he preached three sermons on the love of God and one on the justice of God.
Christ's Descent to Earth.
If high intelligences looked down and saw what was going on, they must have prophesied extermination, complete extermination, of these offenders of Jehovah. But no! Who is that coming out of the throne room of heaven? Who is that coming out of the palaces of the eternal? It is the Son of the Emperor of the universe. Down the stairs of the high heavens he comes till he reaches the cold air of a December night in Palestine and amid the bleatings of sheep and the lowing of cattle and the moaning of camels and the banter of the herdsmen takes his first sleep on earth and for 33 years invites the wandering race to return to God and happiness and heaven. They were the longest 33 years ever known in heaven. Among many high intelligences, what impatience to get him back! The Infinite Father looked down and saw his Son slapped and spit on and supperless and homeless, and then, amid horrors that made the noonday heavens turn black in the face, his body and soul parted. And all for what? Why allow the Crown Prince to come on such an errand and endure such sorrows and die such a death? It was to invite the human race to put down its antipathies and resistance. It was because "God is love."
Now, there is nothing beautiful in a shipwreck. We go down to look at the battered and split hulk of an old ship on Long Island or New Jersey coast. It excites our interest. We wonder when and how it came ashore and whether it was the recklessness of a pilot or a storm before which nothing could bear up. Human nature wrecked may interest the inhabitants of other worlds as a curiosity, but there is nothing lovely in that which has foundered on the rocks of sin and sorrow. Yet it was in that condition of moral break up that heaven moved to the rescue. It was loveliness hovering over deformity. It was the lifeboat putting out into the surf that attempted its demolition. It was harmony pitying discord. It was a living God putting his arms around a recreant world.
Our World's Wickedness.
Our World's Wickedness.
But for this divine feeling I think our world would long ago have been demolished. Just think of the organized wickedness of the nations! See the abominations continental! Behold the false religions that hoist Mohammed and Buddha and Confucius! Look at the Koran and the Shastra and the Zend-Avesta that would crowd out of the world the Holy Scriptures! Look at war, digging its trenches for the dead across the hemispheres! See the great cities, with their holocaust of destroyed manhood and womanhood! What blasphemies assail the heavens! What butcheries sicken the centuries! What processions of crime and atrocity and woe encircle the globe! If justice had spoken, it would have said, "The world deserves annihilation, and let annihilation come." If immutability had spoken, it would have said: "I have always been opposed to wickedness and always will be opposed to it. The world is to me an affront infinite, and away with it." If omniscience had spoken, it would have said: "I have watched that planet with minute and all comprehensive inspection, and I cannot have the offense longer continued." If truth had spoken, it would have said, "I declare that they who offend the law must go down under the law." But divine love took a different view of the world's obeduency and pollution. It said: "I pity all those woes of the earth. I cannot stand here and see no assuagement of those
sufferings. I will go down and reform the world. I will medicate its wounds. I will calm its frenzy. I will wash off its pollution. I will become incarnated. I will take on my shoulders and upon my brow and into my heart the consequences of that world's misbehavior. I start now, and between my arrival at Bethlehem and my ascent from Olivet I will weep their tears and suffer their griefs and die their death. Farewell, my throne, my crown, my scepter, my angelic environment, my heaven, till I have 'finished the work and come back'!" God was never conquered but once, and that was when he was conquered by his own love. "God is love."
Christ the Comforter.
If one paragraph of the creed seems to take you, like a child, out of the arms of a father, let the next paragraph put you in the arms of a mother. "As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I comfort you." Oh, what a mother we have in God! And my text is the lullaby sung to us when we are ill, or when we are maltreated, or when we are weary, or when we are trying to do better, or when we are be-reft, or when we ourselves lie down to the last sleep. We feel the warm cheek of the mother against our cheek, and there sounds in it the hush of many mothers: "God is love."
This was the reason the Bible was written. The world needs no inspired page to tell it that God will chastise sin, for that is proved in the life of many an offender. You can look through the wicket of any prison and see the fact which the world understood thousands of years before Solomon wrote it—"The way of the transgressor is hard." The world needed no Bible to tell it that God is omnipotent, for any one who has seen Mont Blanc or Niagara or the Atlantic ocean in a cyclone knows that. The world needed no Bible to tell it of God's wisdom, for everything, from a spider's web to the upholstery of a summer's sunset, from the globe of dewdrop to the rounding of a world, declares that. But there was one secret about God that was wrapped up in a scroll of parchment, and it staid there until apostolic hand unrolled that scroll, and let out upon the world the startling fact, which it could never have surmised, never guessed, never expected, that he loved our human race so ardently that he will pardon sin and subdue the offender with a divine kiss and turn foaming malefactors into worshipers before the throne. Oh, I am so glad that the secret is out and that it can never again be beiled! Tell it to all the sinning, suffering, lying race; tell it in song and sermon, on canvas, and in marble, on arch and pillar; tell it all around the earth—"God is love."
The Domination of Fear.
Notice that the wisest men of the nations for thousands of years did not, amid their idolatries, make something to represent this feeling, this emotion. They had a Jove, representing might; Neptune, the god of the sea; Minerva, the goddess of wisdom; Venus, the goddess of base appetite; Ceres, the goddess of corn, and an Odin, an an Osiris, and a Titan, and a Juggernaut, and whole pantheons of gods and goddesses, but no shrine, no carved image, no sculptured form has suggested a god of pure love. That was beyond human brain. It took a God to think that, a God to project that, a God let down from heaven to achieve that.
Fear is the dominant thought in all false religions. For that the devotees cut themselves with lances and swing on iron hooks and fall under wheels and hold up the right arm so long that they cannot take it down. Fear, brutish fear! But love is the queen in our religion. For that we build temples. For that we kneel at our altars. For that we contribute our alms. For that martys suffered at Brussels marketplace and at Lucknow and Cawnpur and Pekin. That will yet bejewel the round earth and put it an emerald on the great, warm, throbbing heart of God.
Proof That God Is Love.
Do you want more proof that "God is love?" Yea, disinterested love. No compensation for its bestowal. No reward for its sacrifices. But I call that back. The world did pay him. It paid him on Calvary, paid him with brambles on the brow and four spikes, two for the hands and two for the feet, and one spear for the side near the heart; paid him in execution; paid him with straw pillow in a barn and a cross on a hill; paid him with a third of a century of maltreatment and hardship save one year—yea, is paying him yet in rejection of his mission of mercy. Having dethroned other kings, the world would like to dethrone the King of Kings. But he knew what he was coming to when he left the portals of pearl and the land where the sun never goes down. Yes, he knew the world, how cold it is, and knew pain, how sharp it is, and the night, how dark it is, and explation, how excruciating it is. Out of vast eternity he looked forward and saw Pilate's criminal courtroom, and the rocky bluff with three crosses, and the lacerated body in mortuary surroundings, and heard the thunders toll at the funeral of heaven's favorite, and understood that the palaces of eternity would hear the sorrow of a bereft God.
What do the Bible and the church Itturgies mean when they say, "He descended into hell?" They mean that his soul left his sacred body for awhile and went down into the poison of moral night, and swung back its great door, and lifted the chain of captivity, and felt the awful lash that would have come down on the world's back, and wept the tears of an eternal sacrifice, and took the bolt of divine indignation against sin into himself, and, having vanquished death and hell, came out and came up, having achieved an
eternal rescue if we will accept it. Read it slowly, read it solemnly, read it with tears, "He descended into hell." He knew what kind of pay he would get for exchanging celestial splendor for Bethlehem caravansary, and he dared all and came, the most illustrious example in all the ages of disin-
Echoing Back Divine Love
Echoing Back Divine Love.
Now, the only fair thing for human hearts to do is to echo back that sovereign love: You and I have stood in mountainous regious where, uttering one distinct word, the echoes would come back with a resonance startling and captivating, and from all our hearts there should sound unto the heavens responses glorious and long continued. Let the world change its style of payment for heavenly love. No more payment by lances, by hammers; no more payment by blows on the cheek and scourging on the back, and hooting of mobs, but payment in ardors of soul, in true surrender of heart and love to the God that made us, and the Christ who ransomed us, and the eternal spirit who by regenerating power makes us all over again.
Alexander the Great, with his host, was marching on Jerusalem to capture and plunder it. The inhabitants came out, clothed in white, led on by the high priest wearing a miter and glittering breast plate on which was emblazoned the name of God, and Alexander, seeing that word, bowed and halted his army, and the city was saved. And if we have the love of God written in all our hearts and on all our lives and on all our banners at the sight of it the hosts of temptation would fall back, and we would go on from victory unto victory, until we stand in Zion and before God.
Leander swam across the Hellespont guided by the light which Hero the fair held from one of her tower windows, and what Hellesponts of earthly struggle can we not breast as long as we can see the torch of divine love held out from the tower windows of the King! Let love of God to us and our love to God clas hands this minute. O ye dissatisfied and distressed souls, who roam the world over looking for happiness and finding none, why not try this love of God as a solace and inspiration and eternal satisfaction? When a king was crossing a desert in caravan, no water was to be found, and man and beast were perishing from thirst. Along the way were strenu the bones of caravans that had preceded. There were harts or reindeer in the king's procession, and some one knew their keen scent for water and cried out, "Lct loose the harts or reindeer!" It was done, and no sooner were these creatures loosened than they went scurrying in all directions looking for water and soon found it, and the king and his caravan were saved, and the king wrote on some tablets the words which he had read some time before. "As the hart panthet after the water brooks, so panthet my soul after thee, O God."
Some have compared the love of God to the ocean, but the comparison fails, for the ocean has a shore, and God's love is boundless. But if you insist on comparing the love of God to the ocean, put on that ocean four swift sailing craft, and let one sail to the north, and one to the south, and one to the east, and one to the west, and let them sail on a thousand years, and after that let them all return and some one hall the feet and ask them if they have found the shore of God's love, and their four voices would respond: "No shore! No shore to the ocean of God's mercy!"
FASTEST TRAINS.
America Leads the World in the Matter of Quick Transportation.
Statistics recently published reveal some interesting facts regarding the fastest regularly scheduled railroad trains in the leading countries of the world. The United States heads the list with four trains run from Philadelphia to Atlantic City. Two of these, running on the Philadelphia and Reading, attain a speed of 66.6 miles per hour for a distance of fifty-five and one-half miles, being the fastest regular runs in the world. The two other trains, on the Pennsylvania line, run at the rate of 64.3 miles per hour, the distance over its line being fifty-nine miles. The Midi of France, in a run from Morceaux to Bordeaux, a distance of sixty-seven and three-quarters miles, maintains a speed of 61.6 miles per hour. England brings up the rear with two trains, which are scheduled to make the run between Dorchester and Wareham, a distance of only fifteen miles, at the rate of 60.1 miles per hour. The fastest long-distance run is made over the Orleans and Mid railway, in France. The run is from Paris to Bayonne, a distance of 486¼ miles, and is made, including six stops, at the rate of 54.13 miles per hour. Then follows the New York Central's empire state express, running from New York to Buffalo, 440 miles, including four stops, at 53.33 miles per hour, and finally again England, with a train on the Great Northern, running between London and Edinburgh, 393½ miles, at 50.77 miles per hour.—Chicago Chronicle.
American Honored by Italian King.
General W. F. Draper of Milford,
Mass., has received from the king of
Italy the grand cordon of the Order of
SS. Maurice and Lazare as a token
of appreciation of the general's services
during his mission in Italy. The
grand cordon is one of the highest de-
corations conferred by that court.
Lord Rosebery's mother, the Duchess
of Cleveland, is 81 years old, but in
the best of health. She is one of the
most active "woman politicians" of
England.
Archbishop of Canterbury's House. The new residence of the archbishop of Canterbury probably will be completed before spring. The coat is being defrayed out of money realised from the sale of Addington Park.
Mustard from a Shrimp
spout.
Mustard, as usually served in cups or open pots, soon dries up. A German has invented an air-tight coat having a piston projecting through a top. On pressing the piston a cup or forces the mustard through a spout in the side of the cup.
An Expensive Request
The Portuguese government authorized the expenditure of over 500 rupees for the reception of Lord Ceyon, viceroy of India, on the occasion of his visit to Goa.
Fire a Shot 20 Miles
The United States will fire a dozen twenty miles, which will be a rover breaker for the distance. The from which it is to be fired will marvel of American ingenuity workmanship. Another marvel of American ingenuity is Hostetler Stombit Bittches. For fifty years it cured constipation, indigestion, pepsia and biliousness.
Nothing angers a woman more than a man who refuses to lose his temper.
Facetious Judge on Tramp Question
Peter J. Carolus, judge of a Louis police court, suggests a new way of solving the tramp problem. He gests that all vagrants be sent to a lonely island in the Pacific. They would get strict military instruction for six months, after which they should be sent to chase Aguinaldo the Philippine islands.
Fourteen Catskins for a Coat
Portraiture of Love Affairs.
Paul Heyse, who is noted among Germans for his portraiture of women and love affairs, explains in his cently published "Memoirs" that key to his love affairs is not to found in his personal experiences, had only three love affairs, the obj of the first, when he was a stud being a grandniece of Goethe's lotte von Stein. His other two were young women who subsumed became his first and second wife.
FOUR DOCTORS FAILED.
A Michigan Lady's Battle with B
and How It Was Won
Flushing, Mich., Dec. 22. —Special—One of the most active workers in the cause of Temperance and Social Reform in Michigan is Mrs. P. Passmore of this place. She is prominent and very enthusiastic in C. T. U. woman, and one who loses an opportunity to strike a blow against the demon of Intemperance Mrs. Passmore has suffered and bodily pain during the last three years through Kidney and Bladder Trouble. At times the pain was a most unbearable, and the good luck was very much distressed. She tried physician after physician, and in turn failed to relieve her, let also effect a cure. Home remedies assisted by anxious friends were a plied, but all to no purpose. At some one spoke of Dodd's Kidney Pills as a great remedy for all Kidney and Bladder Diseases, and Mrs. Passmore decided to try them. She did and is now a well woman. She has given the following statement for publication:
At different times in the past the years, I have suffered severely with Kidney and Bladder Trouble, and after trying four of the best physicians I could hear of, two of them living the state of New York, I found myself no better. I took any amount of home remedies suggested by his friends, with little or no relief from anything. I decided to try Daddy Kidney Pills. Less than one box I done me more good than all the old treatments combined. I am still using them, and can say from experience that they are an excellent remedy to Kidney and Bladder Trouble. I would heartily recommend them to all the suffering from these fills in like manners.
When physicians and all the methods of treatment have failed Dodd's Kidney Pills. What they do for Mrs. Passmore, they will do any one similarly afflicted. 50c. a box. All dealers. Necessity may bring a man in court but it knows no law.
Rich. Red Blood.
Morley's Sarasaparilla and Iron only purifies your blood but make new, rich, red blood. If you have an eruptions, boils, abscesses, rheumans or scrofa, or if you have a run-down tired-out feeling, try this remedy note the prompt results. $1.00 per bottle. Sold by agent in every town.
A thrifty baker always sells what kneads himself.
Best for the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, heathen to a cancer, you will never get up until your bowels are cure, nor without a gripe or pain, produce natural movements, cost you just cents to start getting your health CASCARETS Candy Cathartic genuine, put up in metal boxes, or tablet has C. C. stamped on it ware of imitations.
The man who is his own best friend has few others.
TURNING OVER A NEW LEAF
A NEW YEARS STORY
New Year's Eve, and at home. This is a cozy little den of mine, just as it books now, quite eclipses anything I ever see at the club; books, pipes, easy chairs, a cheerful fire in the grate; pictures, busts, my well-beloved etchings all about the walls.
What's the matter with you, old man, tonight? Why are you taking an inventory of these surroundings on this last night of the year? Everybody thinks you are tired of them, don't you know, for you spend very little time in their midst, says some provoking little voice. (Wonder if it's my con-
Dorothy is up stairs, the servants are out; as soon as she finishes the setting of a button on Johnnie's retractory trousers she will come down, she says, and watch the old year out, being evidently well pleased over the prospect of a club night of our own, a little "Home, Sweet Home" sort of an arrangement.
It seems that Johnnie is the only member of our family not a member of a club. Dorothy simply holds on to the little shaver by the collar, tied to her apron strings he is, and I am glad of it.
Can I ever forget the day when our
THIS IS A COZY LITTLE DEN.
neighborhood took on a sudden quiet? The question arose, where are those boys? Dorothy and I knew all about it, for were we not invited to become honorary members of their club, "The Ollapodida?" We helped to foot the bills and evinced an interest in the affairs of the club; we lent them ten cents to buy material to reheat an old worn-out chair; there was another item; twenty-five cents for lumber, etc., and last, but not least, and that which caused Dorothy much suffering, were sundry pieces of rope to be furnished with all the paraphernula of a trapeze arrangement, preparatory to meandering aloft, all of which caused a rush of blood to my head, as I thought of these venturesome boys, three of them at work daily, experimenting with the center of gravity, walking on their heads being the objective point apparently.
We are happily rejoicing these days, however, in a more recent occupant of the family cradle, who so far walks feet downward after the fashion of portals.
As time goes on, the children's youthful exploits, with the accompanying worries of their elders, fade into oblivion, as the more serious aspect confronts us.
The Olapodirria members of my family have taken unto themselves a few extra years; two of these aforesaid members are looking collegeward, and I seem to worry about them in a wonderful way quite unlike myself.
The bread and butter question confronts me? What profession will be theirs? Are they sufficiently strong in purpose to resist this or that?
The day will come when Dorothy and I cannot shield them or stand beneath them and the cold world; we won't be here to settle the little accounts or encounters, or watch the little coilitions they are going to have with the dwellers of this mundane sphere.
Then comes the question over again: "Well, old fellow, what's the matter now? Can't you let the boys alone, and let them fight it out just as you did?" Some truth in that, I answer. "I will wait until Dorothy comes and I'll ask her, just for curiosity, what she thinks of my past, and the general outlook."
In part I am going to turn over a new leaf.
be here I on the table; he is so human,
you know, and I will close my eyes,
open the book (a litte game of
chance, you see), and on the page
where my finger rests I will try if by
chance a word of comfort come to me,
this would hit my case.
I seem to have a case of the blues;
probably staying away from the club
on this convivial occasion is not agree-
ing with me.
"Shut your eyes, open the book,"
awes the little exhorter, that unseen
individual.
Presto—change—O, what meets my
eye? Will it be, some dire prophecy
or—? Here it is under my forefinger:
"A Shadow." It reads:
What would befall these children?
What would be
Their fate, who are now looking up to me
For help and furtherance? Their lives,
I said,
Would it be a volume wherein I have read
But the first chapters, and no longer see
To read the rest of their dear history
So full of beauty and so full of dread.
Be comforted; the world is very old,
And generations pass, as they have
passed,
A troop of shadows moving with the
sun;
Thousands of times has the old tale been told;
The world belongs to those who come the last.
They will find here and strength.
They will find hope and strength as we have done.
Was ever answer sent to a mortal man more clearly?
I think I'm sent for; there's something besides old Father Time after me, surely. Here is the very answer to my dismails as to those boys and their doings. But here comes Dorothy, singing, apparently in a very cheerful mood.
"This is perfectly lovely, George Augustus.
"Johnnie's trousers are all right for tomorrow, and I have been looking over my precious tin box, and I find such lovely bits of literature and all sorts; suppose we look them over tonight."
Perhaps Dorothy noticed an unusual expression on my manly countenance, for she paused and said: "What are you thinking about? What has this old year been saying to you? Are you having a retrospective sort of revival meeting all by yourself?"
"Only a few ideas have struck me, Dorothy. I rather like this den of mine, especially tonight, and one or two articles in these books here seem to have been written especially for me, and an uncomfortable little voice has been questioning me. A thought strikes me that we, you and I, have drifted apart rather more than I ever dreamed we could. There has been a sort of 'We fellows at the club' air and manner about me, that I really think now, as I sit here, has been a foolishness on my part that I shall endeavor to discontinue; a sort of desire to be 'in with the boys' and 'off with my wife.' I hope, Dorothy, that you do not think my past is really a dreadful one to look back upon."
"O, no." Dorothy replied, with something of a twinkle in her eyes; "but, then, you know, you might be more of a saint, if you tried dear."
"And perhaps, most noble and adorable (my temper rising) and twentieth century wife, if I should give up my Sunday evenings at the club, possibly you may be willing to sacrifice a few of those insufferable 'teas' and bring an appetite uncontaminated with such diet as sipping frappes, Russian teas and chocolate to a respectable, cozy dinner with your George Augustus; and," (pausing for breath) "don't be angry; couldn't you leave out that tiresome, quarrelsome card party and await my return with unruffled nerves, for instance, meet me at the door just
DOROTHY IS REALLY ELOQUENT. as you used to do, little wife?" (growing a little more tender).
"Why, whatever can be the matter with you, George Augustus? It is only a case of too many clubs in the family, that is all; easily remedied, you know. If this is to be a Home club tonight, let us invoke the spirit of the New Year here, right under this roof; let us stand here, and with the right hand uplifted vow that naught shall come between thee and me, George Augustus and Dorothy; we will reach that land of trust and confidence that requires no weapon, not even a club, to create or guell a disturbance." Dorothy is really eloquent.
"Bring down the tin box, Dorothy; "we are 'the Ollapodrida club' (the tin box, Dorothy and I) in memory of those boys who are trying another
sort of trapeze swinging high or low with the wings of ambition, up to greater heights."
By the way, Dorothy sketches and paints. I will give her a subject, earth, sky and water, the soft green turf, the blue ethereal, the hazy mountain top, while the lazy lapping waves touch the eager feet of the climbers yet in the valley as they stand on the shore twixt earth and sea, girded and armed for the steep ascent to the shrine on the distant heights.
Send them wings, O guardian angels, and give me sight.
I cannot read the all of their dear history
The New Year Spirit.
The return of New Year's day invites many people to the most somber reflections. Undoubtedly most of us can find abundant occasion for these, but there is such a thing as pushing self-examination and self-condemnation to the point of discouragement. The best temper with which we can enter upon the new year is that of faith, faith in God and faith in ourselves through His help. It is about as certain as anything can be that the new year will bring us new experiences. Our courage, our capacity for endurance, our steadiness of character and power of resistance is to be tested. At the end of the year we are going to be nobler men and women than we are today, or we shall have deteriorated morally, and forever afterward there will be narrowing opportunities. While we think of the latter alternative it is well to strengthen our hearts by the former. Let us believe that we are not going to fail and we have taken a long step towards success. When another New Year's day comes around we are going to be able to reckon solid gains in character won through the trials and temptations and emergencies of the year's experience—Boston Watchman.
PASSING OF
THE OLD
Good-bye, old year!
We've journeyed on together many
days.
And now behold the parting of our
ways
With thoughts of mingled gladness
and of dread,
I see the winding way that I must
tread
To Future Lands;
For thee awaits the realm of shadows
deep—
The Silent Land of years that lie
often
Good-bye, old year!
A few more steps ere we forever part—
A few more words that wake the
throbbing heart
To hope and fear;
A farewell smile, a lingering clasp of
hand.
Ere thou shalt lie within the shadow-
land
All silently;
The while I haste a glad new year to
greet.
The while I journey on with memories
sweet.
Old year, of thee.
Good-bye, old year!
Alas, not half I felt or knew till now
How kind and brave and true a friend
wert thou;
For ah, twice dear
A loved one seems when comes the
darkened day.
darkened day
When heart and lips all tremulous
must say
A last good-bye;
Yet, though thy friendly face no more
I see.
The memories sweet my heart has kept
of thee.
Tragic.
"I shall not see you till another year Has dawned," he said.
Oh, fickle maid! she turned not pale with fear—
She laughed instead.
This seems a tragic lay, till we remember
It occurred the thirty-first day of December.
—N. Y. Truth.
None to Gurn Over.
"I thought you were going to turn over a new leaf, John," she said.
"I was," he replied, "but I find I can't."
"Why not?"
"There won't be any new leaves until spring."—Chicago Post.
Love's harmonies flow toward him full and sweet;
Sin's wild, discordant cries are past him hurled.
With sad, glad heart and brave, reluctant feet.
He steps upon the threshold of the world.
A NEW YEAR'S EPISODE
"Well, well, so this is New Year's day," said Mr. Spooner. "Do you remember how we quarreled this day one year ago?" "Remember! I think I do!" cried his wife. "Why, the cards were ordered when it happened, and I didn't know whether I could have your name taken out and Dick's inserted, in case I changed my mind." "In case I changed my min$, you mean, dear. Strange that I never suspected how much poor Dora cared for me until that day." "I'm sure she had concealed it very well—the way she ran after Dick, as if he ever had eyes for anybody but me! He never told his love, but a woman's intuition was—"
"A synonym of vanity, dear. Of course, I couldn't help knowing that she cared for me when I met her in the boarding house parlor, with her eyes full of tears, on the very morning after you had told Marie, her dearest friend, that we were to be married in a month."
"Humph, that girl would cry about anything; I've known her to cry when the villain in the play was killed—as if a villain could expect anything in the last act. But as soon as I saw Dick that morning I knew that he knew it. Why, his necktie had slipped around under one ear and his voice, as he wished me a happy New Year, was so sad, that I felt guilty, though my conscience told me that I had not encouraged him."
"You've forgotten how you used to praise the shape of his head."
"As if that meant anything! A girl only praises the shape of a man's head when she can't find anything else to flatter him about. It—it means no more than it does when she tells a small man that he resembles Napoleon. But when I remembered that you had once gone down on the floor in your new trousers to pick up Dora's hand-kerchief I knew that I had been cruelly deceived. So when you reproached me about Dick, I—"
"I remember how badly I felt when she replied to my New Year's greeting with the remark that happiness for her was over forever. And before I could comfort her Miss Marie came in and I could only go sadly away without telling her that I should always be a brother to her."
The new leaf that very soldom gets turned over is the one in the diary.
Some men claim that they see the old year out and the new one in by getting so drunk that they can't see anything.
By New Year the silver plating wears off many a Christmas present.
A good beginning is half the battle except in the case of keeping a diary.
The new date is as hard to remember as the new leaf.
Even though the arctic explorer never discovers the north pole he deserves credit, for he always keeps a diary.
New Year gives us a chance to reciprocate to those who unexpectedly gave us a present at Christmas.
Seeing the old year out puts a man in a fit condition to swear off the next day.—N. Y. World.
The New Year's Greeting.
"You look worried, Brown," said Green.
"Worried! I should say I am, See those?" And he drew out of his overcoat pocket a great bundle of statements of accounts.
"Ha! ha!" laughed Green, "you will make Christmas present to your wife, will you, without counting the cost first?" The lines around Brown's eyes deepened and his mouth drooped sadly. "No," he said, "that's not it. These are not for presents I made my wife." "Why, what are they for, then?" asked Green, wonderingly. "For the presents my wife made me."
And the men shook hands in tender sympathy.-Detroit Free Press.
It is not wise to have so merry a Christmas that you cannot have a happy New Year.-Chicago Tribune.
"And poor Dick, I asked him if there was anything I could do for him; he replied: 'Yes,' but just then the maid came in with a note for him, and he said he must go at once—I think he wished to be alone with his sorrow. Then you came in, and, instead of sharing my pity for him, you accused me of flirting with him!"
"I—er—don't remember that. But wasn't it odd that before I left you forever, Miss Marie should come in and tell us that Dora and Dick were engaged! I've often wondered how it happened that they decided to console each other."
"And so have I. Why, here is Marie now—perhaps she can explain. Sit down, Marie, do. Tom and I are just going over old times. Do you remember last New Year's day, and—"
"Indeed I do. I've just been to see Dora, and she was talking about it. She and Dick quarreled last New Year's Eve about the date of their marriage, and almost parted forever.
A
"SHE AND DICK QUARRELED." They think you both must have guessed it. I remember that Tom was in the parlor with Dora when I ran in on New Year's morning to tell her of your engagement. She had been on the point of asking him to help her to make up with Dick. And when she told me about it, I wrote him a note telling him that I believed she would forgive him if he came at once. That note found him at your house, Irene, where he had gone to ask your aid as peacemaker. Odd, wasn't it?"
A Happy New Year.
A happy New Year!" How many people realize the meaning of the words as they go about with this familiar greeting upon their lips? "I wish you a happy New Year!" Does it not seem that the wish carries a blessing with it? And I believe it does when spoken by friends whose words are always true and sincere.
For the benefit of those thoughtless ones who never read between the lines, let us analyze this significant greeting.
In the first place we wish our friends happiness, and the next question which naturally suggests itself is, what constitutes happiness? A little friend of mine tells me that it is to eat all the candy he wants and not to go to bed until he wants to do so. Another friend of more mature years says that she would be perfectly happy if she had all the money she wanted to spend as she liked. Another desires fame, another social position. And so we might go on asking and finding out that almost every one has a different definition for happiness.
If the young lad were allowed to follow his own sweet will and surfeit himself with sweets and late hours, I think the result would be anything but happy. As for wealth, who can blame anyone for wishing for all that one cares to spend, and especially a woman to whom a separate income is the exception rather than the rule. It is the spending of it which decides the happiness or unhappiness of the possessor. I do not believe that any one was ever really happy who used wealth merely to gratify selfish ambitions.
Fame, too, is a good thing to possess, but how many who have gained this high pinnacle will tell you that it brings happiness Social position is also something after which there is much striving. Yet when the coveted place is reached it is so often found to be barren, and happiness has no resting place there. Social position brings heavy responsibilities with it, and social duties are hard and laborious without the happy results that follow labor in more worthy causes.
It seems, then, that there must be some special way to happiness not easily found. There is, but it is easy enough to be seen by all who care to follow its winding way. Wiser heads than mine found out long ago that only in trying to make others happy is real happiness ever gained for oneself.
So in wishing our friends a happy New Year, we really obligate ourselves to do all that we can to make the
wish come true; and for this reason the words should never be spoken idily, or used as a mere matter of form. On the other hand, to be sincere in the greeting and to do what the words imply, is certain to bring happiness to all.
And now, let us go on to the next word in the analysis, "new."
Everybody likes new things, unless an exception may be made to the so-called "new woman." New gowns, new bonnets, new personal belongings of all sorts appeal especially to women. While "clothes do not make the person," every one has learned that appearance in this world goes a long way toward success. Under the inspiration of knowing that one is well-dressed often one has done his best and the key note of success has been touched. It is human nature that womankind should love pretty new dresses, new bonnets and dainty surrounding, so let no one accuse her of vanity for desiring them.
New ideas are sought after by the philosopher; new conditions by the scientist; new inventions by the inventor. Editors eagerly examine new matter; and that which is truly original or opens a new field of thought is never found "unavailable" no matter how poorly it may be written.
There is a constant hunt going on for something new to further stimulate the energies, ambitions and desires of the world's people; and never was this craving so apparent as now when we are closing the nineteenth century. Everyone seems to feel that we are on the verge of a new era which in spite of the inventions of the past is to be the most wonder producing period in the world's progress. If the inhabitants of Mars continue to signal us, as has been stated, who knows but what some shrewd, enterprising Yankee will put on his thinking cap, build a flying machine that will overcome all atmospheric conditions and go sailing over to the planet one of these coming days? Perhaps the North Pole will be discovered in the same way, although why so many people will risk life and property to find a spot that is almost certain to contain nothing that will sustain life or hope, can only be laid to their insatiate greed for something new.
It is to be hoped, however, that while these greater things are going on, some one may invent an automatic servant that will get up in the morning without being called, never let the fires go out, wash our best china without breaking it, and, from the very nature of the invention, cannot "talk back" when we happen to go into the kitchen and scold a little—Household Realm.
The Annual Greeting.
"A Happy New Year to you!" This is the greeting which will be heard on every side as we cross the threshold of the new year. It has become a custom to repeat it. In many cases it has little meaning, and is nothing more than an empty compliment or an idle wish. How much do you mean by it? It is very easy to repeat the formula. It is a very simple matter to buy a New Year's card and enclose it in an envelope. But when you send this greeting, or speak it, do you regard it as a pledge or promise that you will do nothing to make the recipient of it unhappy, and that you will do all in your power to relieve his anxieties and bring gladness to his heart?—Baptist Union.
HERE NEW YEAR Crowned evermore in endless light she greets
Visions too grandly bright for mortal
gaze,
To her unfold
Blossoms each noble dead of earthly
days,
In beauty's mold.
The glory of our Lord her eyes have
seen,
With undimmed sight.
Safe in His presence dear, she dwells
serene
And knows no night.
She clasps the hands of loved ones
waiting there
On Heaven's shore.
With them she treads those streets so
wondrous fair,
In rapture o'er.
In glad surprise, joyous and pure and
free,
Her soul so blest.
Solves the deep mystery of eternity
And perfect rest.
—Isabel L. Boardman, in N. Y. (bserver.
Merely an Official Form.
He wished me a happy New Year;
The words would have tickled me,
but
I knew from his bearing austere
I was booked for a salary cut.
—Chicago Record.
THE SEARCHLIGHT WICHITA, KANSAS.
W. N. MILLER, Editor.
Entered at the Post-Office at Wichita Kansas, as Second Class Mail Matter.
Published every Saturday at No 239 North Main Street, up stairs
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If you fail to get your paper notify us once.
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What do they mean?
We have had a collector out for the past ten days collecting from city subscribers, and we must confess, we are really astonished and ashame of the tardiness of some to pay their bill. They say they want a Colored paper here, yet they neglect to pay, having first one excuse and then another. We are endeavoring to give this city a good paper, but how in the world do some expect it to be done, if they fail to do their part by paying up? It is no boast, but simply the truth, hhen we say, we have missed no issue, neither have we been 1 min, late in mailing our papers to our many readers and in doing so we have faithfully performed our duty.
Now thon,having done our duty, why not do yours?Its easy and simple.We are compelled to call a halt sometime,so on Jan,12tn.,we will drop from our roll all who h ave not paid up on or before that date; and will as soon as possible thereafter publish a full list of th o se dropped with the amount owed by each. All of our readers know our address,239 N. Main,up stairs, and all those on whom our collector ha$ called since Dec.15th. will do us the kindness to call there and pay. To those who have so willingly and promptly paid,we desire return our heart-felt thanks and appreciation,and hope that our relation in the future may be as pleasant as those in the past.
If you reach any high place in This world do not get the big head nor forget e h from wh ich you rose and do not desert the friends that helped you on the way.
If the Negro can manage to be a friend to himself his future is secure He must learn the value of time and moneo.To waste either is foolish.
If there be a Negro problem, the Negro is the best one to solve it. By industry,race pride,common sense, home,buying and home owning,coupled with morality,intelligence and honesty,the problem will be solved. Too often do we see men of families and responsibiliteies given over to frivolities and pleasures of life,wich are reprehensible in married young men.It is the boundenuty of the head of every family to do best toards providing proper support for that family.so ast o al-low the wife to stay at home and properly care for her children. If heaven has so blessed their union, and to attend those household dutie in cumbent upon the true wife and mother.
AHAPPY
Xmas Gifts.
The Pastor and wife of the A. M. E.church'wresmiling at the Xmas boat.He and Mrs. Terrill received $7.25 and a big fat goose as an Xmas present.
Mrs.Nannie Howard presented them a dollar a piece and Mr.Jno.
T.Chinneth and frieds put on the Christmas boat for them $5.25.Mrs
L.Crenshaw presented them a big goose for christmas dinner. The following are the donors:
Jno.T.Chinneth ..... 25
W.H.A.Clark ..... 25
Edward Landrum ..... 25
F.D.Andrews ..... 25
Dndley Johnson ..... 25
G.H.Young ..... 25
J.S.Favers ..... 25
Joseph Phillipps ..... 25
James Robinson ..... 25
J.S.Anderson ..... 25
James Jackson ..... 25
Robert Iodges ..... 25
G.L.Scott ..... 25
Joe Owens ..... 25
W.T.Southard ..... 25
A.T.Glover ..... 25
Allie Buford ..... 25
Lawrence Simpson ..... 25
Samuel Collins ..... 25
J.H.Dunson ..... 25
Wm.M.Knox ..... 25
Mr. Thomas Glover worked hard and with the aid of the ladies made the Christmas boat a success.
The friends have the Pastor and wife's many thanks.
Mrs.H.F.Frazier,wife of Rev. H. F.Frazier,pastor.of New Hope,has returned f.om an extendeu Aisit to her home.
Jno.E.Lewis and Geo. Johnston who have been touring the state with their moving picture exhibition,returned last Saturday.
Mrs.W.G. Bostwick is better.
J.W.Kimberly of the Indian Territory,is a new arrival in our city.He expects to remain.
Fred Goodwin and wife of K.C. are visitors in the city.
Rev.J.H.Vanlue,State Missionary,returned Monday from Parsons where he has been conducting a series of meetings at New Hope baptist church of that place. After his arrival the Reverend was seen with his arms full of Xmas presents.
Mrs.Nancy Johnston left Wednesday for Great Bend to visit her son,who is pastor there.
Mrs.Lon Brown of Lawrence arrived in the city Thursday.
Miss Mammie Wagner arrived in the city Thursday.
Samuel Abernathy Sr. will leave Sunday for Arkansas City and Wellington,returning Tussday. Mrs.Ike Miscole entertained Mrs Bradley and Miss Effie Bradley at her handsome home on N. Water. Those present; Mesdames Gaines and Smith.A nice time reported.
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29d. 1900
Christmas at the churches. The various churches in the city observed Ohristmas in a very appropriate manner.Each of them were well patronized.
New Hope.
The New Hope Sunday School rendered an excellent program which it was our pleasure to hear, and which we greatly enjoyed. The following is the program rendered- Opening Address, Mrs.H-F. Frazier What shall I give hm, Lonnie Green. Xmas comes once a year, Stella Slater. Xmas comes, Albertha Lewis. Xmas all the year, Ida Wilson. We're cheerfully singing, Dora Allen. Song, Lizzie Underwood, Clara Johnson, Dora Allen, Corine Henry. If you are good, Eliza Jackson. Instrumental Solo, Lizzie Underwood. Xmas Carrol, Jessie Bates. When father carves a duck, Bessie Dorsey. Xmas, Josie Duncrery. Little children, Albert Monmoth. In a far off country, L.Bates. An Xmas problem, Jessie Bates After the rendition of the above progaam every member of the Sunday echool was presented a nice and useful present.
A.M.F.
The A.M.E. church had an X mas boat that beautifully and artistically decorated,Supt.Chinneth of the Sunday school,was master ceremonies.Many handsome and valuable presents were received.
2nd Baptist.
The Second baptist church held their exercises at Garfield hall on Chrisamas night,Dec.25. They had an Xmas balloon which was decorated to a queen's taste;and the program rendered was something nice we tried hard to secure the program as arranged for publication but all our efforts were useless. The COncert given by the Miss Lula Covington at the Methodist church last Wednesday night was a Grand Success. $14.55 cleared.
Dr.Copeland,pastor of the 2nd. Baptist church and his members, have prepared a grand program to be rendered Sunday eve. 8 p.m. Go out and hear it. For full detail of the grand Masonic banquet last Thursday night see our next issue. Thos. Parks left for Oklahoma City to spend Xmax.
Are you a Subcriber to the Searchlight?
Miss Barker entertained the following guest at Tea last Friday, December 20th. Messers: John Dodson, Albert Buford, Wesley Rawles, Thomas Parks,
Mrs.C. Barker very pleasantly entertained at an elegant dinner Sunday,Rev.and Mrs.Terrill, Mrs F.A.Smith,Mrs. Craig and Dr. E. Harrison.
Mrs.H.McKinney and daughter, Fannie,were visitors from the country to spend the holidays.
Mrs.ssex Allen and children who have been visiting returned to their home in St Joe Saturday.
Trade with our advertisers.
A fine line of Holiday goods,Elegant pocket books for Ladies and Gentlemen,Fancy soaps and Toilet articles,Per fumes from all the leading perfume houses. An elegant line of Stationery.The leading brandr of Cigars in boxes of 10-13-25-50 and 100 at wholesale prices. Give us a call. Phone 253 601 E.Douglas Ave
Ladies New Medical Guide
P.P.AHERN.
A fine line of Holiday good
Ladies and Gentlemen, Fancy
fumes from all the leading
line of Stationery, The leading
of 10-13-25-50 and 100 at who
'Phone 253
Ladies New M
All newly
Agents price $2.50. O
Also New and Second-Hand
Rock-Island Book Exchange,
We present to you Mr. Stewart Waters,whose likeness we heret attache,Stewart N.Waters was born in Neshville,Tenn., Sept.15, 1876.
A. B.
He came with his parents to Topeka, Kansas, where he attended the public schools, remaining in that city 12 yrs. By profession, he is a musician and ballad singer. In both he has received promieut mention by the press. He came to Wichita in 1896, and has remained here since. On October 24,1900, he was united in marriage to Miss Birdie Howard, and their wedding was ode of the swellest of the year. He is a Master Mason, also a member of Prof. Fisher's Military Band. He quite a favorite among all who know him, and has a host ol friends
Rememberthe K. of P. Installation at Peerless hall Monday night.
OIL LEASES DEFERT TREATY.
Cherokee Think it is Waste of Time to Consider Treaty This Session.
Tahlequah, I. T., Dec. 27.—Leading members of the Cherokee tribe express the opinion that it will be merely a waste of time this winter for congress to consider and ratify the Cherokee treaty now pending before it. The Cherokeecs are dissatisfied with the treaty as they originally made it and with the amendments added by the Indian committees in congress it is now absolutely obnoxious to them. They will vote it down by an almost unanimous vote when it comes back for ratification providing congress ratifies it on the part of the government.
The most objectionable feature of the treaty as it now appears is the provision in relation to mineral and oil leases.
Congressman Charles Curtis, at the head of the house Indian committee has notified the leaders here that it will be knocked out in the senate. This oil lease provision is what has held up the treaty in congress so long, so the Indians say. Had that provision been knocked out and the treaty been ratified by congress immediately after it was presented, it would no doubt have been ratified by the Cherokees, so the leaders here say. But as time wore on the Cherokees themselves discovered many holes in the treaty and now none of them is satisfied with it.
Sues the Santa Fe.
Topeka, Dec. 26.—V. L. Lonegan, one of the Santa Fe telegraphers who went out on a strike recently is preparing to bring suit against the Santa Fe railroad company for alleged black list. When the telegraphers strike was ordered Lonegan walked out with the rest of the men. On December 19, he secured a position with the Western Union company and worked about six hours when he was dismissed. He claims Superintendent Sholes caused his dismissal. Superintendent Sholes says that at the time Lonegan was employed by the Western Union, the strike was still on and that the company was sending a good deal of business over the Western Union wires. He did not think Lonegan should be allowed to handle this business and that his removal was caused to protect the interests of the company.
---
No.12.
Wichita Kansas
J.T.Chinneth,
Enminent Commande
J.A.Roberson,
Generalissimo.
Phil Hyde,
Captain General
Joseph Fine Secretary.
Sylvester Anderson, Treas.
Meets the 2nd Monday night each month.
High Priest.
J.S.Fauver,
King.
Ben Wilson,
Grand United Order of Odd Fellows.
J.L.Harper, D.G.M, Wichita
W.M.Jackson, D.DG M, Topek
S P Johnson, D.G S, Emporia
M W Jackson D.G D, Kans City
At the A. M. E. church, 521 N. Water st
Preaching at 11 a.m, Sabbath school at 2 p.m.
Song service 6:40 p.m, Preaching 7.40 p.m
Rev.Dr.A.C.Terrill will preach both
moening and evening.
At the 2nd Baptist church, N.Wichita, st.
Preaching at 11 a.m., Sabbath school at 3 p.m
Preaching at 7.80 p.m
Rev.Dr.M.L.C. Copeland will preach both
moening and evening.
At the Tabernacle Baptist church.
Preaching at 11 am, Sabbath school at 3 p.m
Preaching at 7.40 p.m
Rev. R McTurner will preach both mo-
ning and evening
At the New Hope Baptist church.
North Mead
Preaching 11 a.m, Sabbath school at 3 p.m
Preaching 7.80 p.m
Rev H F Frazier will preach both mo-
ning and evening
```markdown
```
520 E. Douglas.
In Pekin Negotiations Has Been Turned.
PLEDGES LEFT FOR CONGRESS.
Washington. Dec. 27.—Secretary Hay has received a cablegram from Minister Conger, at Pekin, announcing that he had signed the agreement reached by the foreign ministers, but had done so with a written explanatory statement setting forth the exact position of his government. The text of the statement is not forwarded by Mr. Conger, but it is understood to be based upon the last instruction he received from the department, which, while disapproving the inclusion in the agreement of some of the more severe language, accepted it as the best arrangement that could be made at this time. It is believed that the United States also, while sanctioning the provisions of the agreement relative to the maintenance of permanent lines of communication, legation guards and prohibition of the importation of arms into China, indicates clearly that constitutional reasons prevent the executive from from making any pledge to take part in the execution of these plans.
The signature of the agreement by the ministers closes what is regarded here as the first, the most important and the most difficult phase of the negotiations as to China, for it is not doubted that the Chinese envoys will subscribe to the agreement without amendments. This conclusion has been marked by one of the most curious mistakes in the history of international exehange for, by a cipher error, the majority of the last signatories found to their amazement that they had contracted to do exactly what they did not intend, and, moreover, the error was irretrievable
The Joint Note is Signed.
Pekin, Dec. 26.—The last obstacle is removed, the joint note was signed by all the foreign ministers. The note will be delivered to Li Hung Chang and Prince Ching, the Chinese plenipotentiaries, as soon as the former shall have sufficiently recovered from his indisposition. The Chinese close to Li Hung Chang still prefer to believe, despite the signing of the note, which they did not believe would take place, that the principal negotiations must be carried on in Europe or in America.
Philippine Legislation
Manila, Dec. 24.—The Philippine commission has passed bills prescribing that English text shall be used in the construction of all laws enacted; authorizing the provost marshal to establish police and health regulations, with limited punishments for their violation, appropriating $75,000 for the immediate construction of a highway from Pozor rubric, province of Pangasian, to Baguio, in Benguet province, along the line and surveyed for a government railroad.
Colonist Tickets to be Abandoned.
Chicago, Dec. 24.—The northern Pacific and Soo roads have agreed to the Great Northern's proposition to abolish round trip colonist tickets west of St. Paul. Other western roads are considering the advisability of withdrawing the rate west of Missouri river gateway.
A Millionaire Brute.
Berlin, Dec. 24.—Sternberg, the millionaire banker, who has been on trial for a long time past, was found guilty of unnameable immoralities and was sentenced to two and a half years imprisonment with loss of citizenship for five years.
Surplus of $30,000.
surplus of $30,000.
St. Paul, Dec. 26.—Archbishop Ireland's principal object in visiting Washington had been to attend a meeting of the Lafayette Monument Association. "We found that after paying all the expenses of erecting the bronze statute in Paris," he said, "we still had on hand $30,000. We almost decided to duplicate the monumental statute in Washington or some other American city, provided an additional amount can be raised. The matter will be definitely settled at a meeting to be held in Chicago early in January."
Lodge Directory
Knights of Pythias.
Toas Lodge No.10
KnightsofPythia
Toas Lodge No.10
KnightsofPythias
WICHITA.KAN.
Castle Hall 338 North Main street
Regular Meetings Second and Fourth
Monday Night in Each Month.
Visting Knights in good standing Welcome
Bert Glover, Chan.Com.
S. W. Fleming, K.of R.& S.
ERIA COURT No.7.
Order of Calanthe.
Mrs. J.H. Phelps, W.C.
Miss Blencq Alexander, R.of D.
Mrs. Ida Martin, W.of R. of D.
Meets 1st. and 3rd. Monday each month.
Masonic Lodges.
ARKANSAS VALLEY
No.21.
A.F. & A.M.
Hopkins Abernathy, W.M.
W.H.A. Clark, Secretary.
Meets 1st, and 3rd. Tuesday each month.
All Master Masons in good standing as
"Cordially Invited."
PALESTINE COMMANDEY
MT.ZION CHAPTER No.17. W.H.A.Clark,
Scribe.
J.T. Chinneth, Secretary.
Grant Ewing, Treas.
Meets the 4th Monday night each month
PRINCESS CHAPTER No.12
O.of E.S.
Mrs. M. E. Banks, Royal Matron,
Miss Lizzie M. Burnham, Stetty
Meets 1st. and 3rd. Wednesday each month.
Mt. Olive Court No.9,H. of J.
Mrs Myrtle Glover, M A M
Mrs J E Lewis, Secretary
Mrs L Adams, Treasurer
Odd Fellow Lodges
ODD FELLOWS.
.....State Officers.....
Home of the West lodge No.1906
Wichita,Ka
HOUSEHOLD RUTH No.612
Mrs.Harriet Harper, M.N.G.
J.L.Harper, W.R.
Mrs.Mary Griggs, M.W.Treas.
Where to go Sunday.
The San Jose scale
The San Jose scale was first discovered by Prof. J. H. Cornstock, near San Jose, Cal., in 1879. It has been found in various parts of the world, and while the place of its origin has not yet been ascertained, it is conjectured to be Japan.
Forsaking all Others
LH PMRPREREAKAARARS SH DS
ee ee Ramp gee ee
tn truth poor Harvey, in many ways
a boy still, needed the comfort the
«man he adored alone could give; in
fer presence he was speedily cheered
and soothed.
‘oq’ an ugly story, darling,” she
aid, “but no one knows it. And the
Grmtion 1s substantially the same;
Soa are your grandfather's helr mor-
lly, if not legally, and surely your
nother will not let you suffer all your
ite for her fault—no woman in her
fosition could be so wicked.”
Harvey winced, Only the other day
Ye had thought that mother little
jower than the angels, Helen saw that
‘ewan she might speak too plainly, and
took another tone. But inwardly she
fejoiced that the woman she had felt
‘was her superior had not always lived
jhove reproach. ‘The knowledge prom-
jsed a certain hold upon her, and in
yer manner towatd Gladys when next
they met there was a hint of power
anja measure of contempt the latter
found it hard to bear.
Hervey's demeanor, too, had altered.
For days he looked pale and grave.
‘although perfectly respectable to his
jmother he spoke to her as seldom as
possible, addressing most of his re-
marks, when the little family met at
table, to his wife. Gladys sympathized
vith his mood, and waited patiently
for it to pass, She knew how galled
his proud spirit must be; still, as the
monotonous days eyawled by, bringing
no change, she began to feel very
lonely.
She would have consoled herseif
with the baby had she been allowed to
do so, but Helen had her own ideas,
wise ones, all of them, on the subject
of child rearing. It made an infant
precocious, she said, to notice them too
much; bis intellect should be allowed
to develop gradually. As for the in-
ane nongense called baby tallk, no child
of hers should listen to it. Good En-
giish was just as simple and far more
sensible, And Gladys, who would have
coved the sweet mother jargon by the
hour, all the world forgetting save the
smiling mite in her arms, knew that a
reproof was intended, and accepting it,
left Harvey's baby to Harvey's wife.
Had she been a strong-minded wom-
an she would have have risen above
her trials and found happiness im her
own occupations; but she was only @
gentle, clinging creature to whom leve
was as the breath of life. That gone,
nothing remained,
‘She wondered sometimes how Har-
vey, even though displeased, could neg-
lect ber go. In the past they had been
‘everything to each other. Now he eal-
dom gave her a thought; hi wife was
his all in all, Helen's coldness did act
hurt her; she was not of her bleod,
and she had no claim on her affection;
‘but she bad given her life te Harvey,
ead bis indifference was hard to bear.
Que cold, rainy day Phebe found her
‘ccying in her private parlor, which wes
divided from her sleeping and dressing
rooms by a wide hall. The curtaias
‘Vere drawn and the spacious apart-
ent usually so pretty im ite tints of
Sas and blue seemed - cold and
gloomy.
CHAPTER IV.
The housekeeper said not = -word,
but went to the window am@ ‘threw
back the curtains, them touched a
‘Match to the wood laid ‘ready in the
fsrate. The flames leaped forth as if
sid to escape from thelr resinous
Trisoo, making glittering reflections in
the polished tiles and filling every cor-
Ser with a rosy glow. Phebe relied her
mistress’ favorite chair to the hearth.
“Come and sit here, Miss Gladys,
While | get you a cup of coffee. It will
arm you up. The room és like a
vault.”
Gladys crushed back a sob and meek-
Wy did as she was bidden. She always
obeyed Phebe. She drank the coffee
when it was. brought and looked apolo-
Setically into the housekeeper’s kind if
im face.
“I miss Louise Leonard so much!”
she said. =
“I know all about it, Miss Gladys,
That reason will do as well as any
ether. When are you going to have
Mr. Walter Barr and his young wife
here to dinner? They've been married
three months now.”
‘I suppose 1 ought to invite them
“on,” said Gladys, brightening a lit-
te “But Mrs. Harvey so objects to
company —"
“And is the house to be kept like #
femb to please her? She has her hus-
tend and baby, and you have nobody,
Reems. It's little I ever thought to
we Mr. Harvey a womans fool! She
‘Wiss him around her finger, and the
Set booby doesn't know it. Well,
Rel. U won't say any more, but you're
‘Sng moped to death, and I'm not £o-
‘0g to stand by and see you fade away
‘tore my eyes, Rouse yourself, my
(erie, You'll be a different creature if
700 s¢¢ living people once more.”
Gladys looked thoughtfully into the
te fora space,
“I think you are right, Phebe,” she
Sod said with an air of decision.
do as you say.”
Ste dressed herself with unusual
Er dinner. She was resolved to
Ruz ter sulky boy into good humor.
itt iust taken his place at the table
este entered, a charming vision ia
Wit bitk and white, and he smiled in-
Tluntarity,
“Why, how lovely we are this even-
SE” be szclatmed.
vetta carted at him @ disapproving
but the pleasant wards had es-
Helen the head of the table. She cov-
eted it, and Harvey was pleased to see
her there, and she herself cared noth-
ing for petty distinctions.
‘The conversation moved on pleasant-
ly, if a trifle haltingly, and presently
Gladys announced her intention of in-
viting Mr. and Mrs. Barr and one or
two other friends to dinner.
“I had thought of next Tuesday, Har-
vey, if you and Helen are disengaged
for that evening,” she said.
| _ “We are, ae fer as I know,” he an-
swered, glancing at his wite,
Helen did not respond. She was dis-
pleased that Mrs. Atherton should con-
template entertaining company at all,
and doubly so that she had addressed
her question to Harvey instead of to
herself, and went on eating her dinner
in her usual deliberate way. She had
| A fine appetite, and took excellent care
of her digestion, as a wise young wom-
! an should.
| “Then we'll say Tuesday evening,”
said Gladys, all unconscious of what
| was passing in Helen’s mind, and mis-
taking her silence for acquiescence,
she regarded the matter as settled.
| It was not until the very day of the
| dinner that she discovered her error.
| By this time she and Harvey were on
| their old terms again, the coolness be-
tween them apparently forgotten.
| Helen’s manner never relaxed; she had
| her own grievances and resented them
in her own way. Gladys, however,
gave no evidence that she observed
anything amiss.
| “I am sure you will like Mrs. Barr,
| Helen,” she said at breakfast on Tues-
| day, hoping to draw the younger
| Woman into conversation, for her per-
| sistent lack of interest in any talk in
| which she was not directly included
| was irksome. “She is a girl after your
| own style—an excellent daughter, now
@ capable wife. I hope you will be-
| come friends.”
| “Thank you,” said Helen, in wintry
tones. “I am not a believer in married
| women’s friendships. My husband and
my child suffice for me. A woman's
home should be her kingdom.”
She glanced at Harvey for the ap-
proving smile with which he always
applauded her borrowed phrases, as
though every word were a nugget of
wisdom fresh from the mime, and add-
ed a triffe less deliberately: 7
“I dislike strangers, and care noth-
ing for social pleasures, so I can not
truthfully say I am sorry I shall not
meet Mrs. Barr this evening.”
“What do you meaa, Nell? Have you
forgotten she is to come here to din-
ner?”
“No; but you amd I are to dine at
father's. I promised him tea days
ago.”
Helen spoke ealmiy, though her coler
flickered as she encountered Harvey's
astonished stare. Gladys, too, looked
surprised.
“My dear girl” Harvey burst oxt
“why in the world did you not tell the
mater so when ¢he was making ar-
rangements for her dinner?”
“Because she @id not consult me. She
addressed you, and took it for granted
I had no engagements. I never eifer
unsolicited information.”
Gladys saw an ominous look in Har-
vey's eyes, and rose hastily. She ha¢
no desire to witness a matrimenial
squabble.
“It is not of the least consequence
Harvey. I shauld like Helen to meet
Mrs. Barr, who has a great deal of
social influence, but there will be
plenty of oppertunities for her to do
so in the future, as I intend te opeu
the house to my friends again. I have
been living too quietly of late” She
looked full at Helen, and there was 2
touch of defiance in the manner of
both. “Do not give this little misun-
derstanding a thought. I shall not;
for it isn’t worth it.”
She had left the room before the last
word was uttered, and ran lightly
down the piazza steps to the garden.
“What a woman!” she thought
“What a hard, agrrow, revengeful, sul:
len woman! Pror Harvey! I hope he
may continue blind to the end. it ie
his only chance for happiness.”
She need not have been concerned
for Harvey. Already Helen, her arms
about his neck, her voice broken with
emotion, was making her cause good;
and although he could not see exactly
where Gladys had erred, he was soon
convinced that his wife had been wan-
tonly insulted, and was grievously hurt
in consequence. Nothing could have
been further from the truth than
either convietion; but gazing into se-
ductive eyes, tear drenched, pressing
warm, red lips. quivering with sobs
Yew men are wise enough to discrim-
imate between the chastening dews o!
sorrow and the bitter waters of spite
or envy.
Gladys’ dinner was a success. She felt
Helen's absence to be a relief. I
seemed pleasant to have the house to
| herself again, and to sit at the head
of her own table. She, threw off hei
| sadness and became the charming
OE a St ee ay ee ae
‘THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT,SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29d 1900
while resenting his injustice was hurt
by it. She could retain his favor only
by submitting to his wife's caprices, it
seemed. Her long years of devotion
counted for nothing; all was forgot-
ten when this woman, between kisses,
accused Ler of some petty meanness of
which she was incapable, How dared
he listen to charges so unjust?
Before the meal was half over she
rose from the table with a sudden hot
anger that dismayed her, for she hai
never felt anything like it before. She
realized that she should end by hating
Helen and despising Harvey; a ma-
terial love that crushes out all purer
affections degrades a man; not even
the sacrament of marriage can render
it holy.
She rode further than usual that day,
and was overtaken by one of the vio-
lent thunder storms peculiar to the
season. She came home drenched and
shivering with cold. Phebe, who was
waiting for her on a side veranda with
a thick shawl, almost carried her to
jher room, and without ceremony un-
dressed and put her to bed.
“We shall have you down with a
fever next,” she grumbled. “You were
about ready for it before.”
Gladys, strangely inert, languidly
opened her eyes,
“it I am ill, Phebe, and I fear I am
going to be, no one must wait on me
but you. I may be delirious and talk.
Keep Harvey out of the room at all
hazards. Poor boy! If he should
learn the truth —"
“It would put him just where he de-
serves to be put,” said Phebe, her
smouldering anger against the mar-
ried couple kindled into a flame by
Gladys’ condition. “But don't fret,
dearie; I'll do as you say. Shall I
give the keys to Mrs. Harvey?” she
added, feeling that her mistress was
very ill already,
“Yes; it will keep her out of your
way,” said Gladys with a faint smile.
‘Then her eyes closed again and she
sank into a troubled sleep.”
Next morning she was tossing with
fever, and for three months knew
nothing of what was going on arouné
her. One bright October day she op-
ened her eyes and looked searchingly
into Phebe’s face. The faithful woman,
wearied by her long vigils, was nod-
ding in her chair by the bedside.
“Why, Phebe, how thin you are!” she
exclaimed in a weak voice.
Phebe started up with a stifled cry,
“Oh, my lamb, my lamb, thank God
you've come back to us again!” she
said, tears streaming from her eyes.
“Why, haw long have I bean here?”
Gladys asked.
“Fourteen weeks.”
“Fourteen weeks!" She lay thinking
the wonderful fact over, then turne¢
to Phebe with her own merry smile
“And haven't you given me anythin
to eat in all that time, you cruel wom
aa? I am famishing.”
e (To be continued.)
THE HAIR HARVEST.
‘@ver 12,000,000 Bounds of Maman Hote
‘Used Anwually.
Perhaps there is no staple article
about which leas is knowa by the ay-
erge person than human hair as an
article of commerce. It will doubtless
surprise many when it is stated that
the dealers im human hair goods do
mot depend om chance elippings here
and there, but that there is 9 regular
hady harvost that can always be relied
upon. It is estimated that over 13,-
000,000 pounds of human hair are used
annually in the civilized world for
adorning the heads of women, says a
writer in the Toledo Courier, Two-
‘thirds of the ladies nowadays use false
hair, more or less, The decree of
fashion or the desire to conceal a de-
‘feot or heighten a charm is the reason,
of course. One woman, for instance,
hes a high forehead and wishes to re-
duce it in appearance. Another has
worn off the front hair by continued
frizzing, and would like to eonceal the
fact. Both make use of front or top
piece, with a choice of many styles.
Ladies’ wigs cost from $20 to $100,
Half wigs, top pieces and switches,
from $6 to $50, according to quality.
‘The rarest supply of hair comes
from Switzerland, Germany and the
French provinces, There is a human
hair market in Merlans, in the depart-
ment of the lower Pyrenees, held ev-
ery Friday. Hundreds of hair traders
walk up and down the one street of
the village, their shears dangling
from their belts, and inspect the
braids which the peasant girls, stand-
ing on the steps of the houses, let
down for inspection. if a bargain is
struck the hair is cut and the money
paid on the spot, the price varying
from fifty cents to $5 in our money,
Our Sun ® Third-Rate One,
Our sun is a third-rate sun, situated
in the milky way, one of myriads of
stars, and the milky way is itself one
of myriads of sectional star accumu-
lations, for these seem to be count-
leas, and to be spread over infinity. At
some period of thelr existence each of
these suns had planets circling around
it, which, after untold ages, are fit for
some sort of human beings to inhabit
them for a compartively brief period,
after which they still continue for
years to circle around without atmos-
phere, vegetation or inhabitants, as
the moon does around our planet.
There is nothing so calculated to take’
the conceit out of an individual who
thinks himself an important unit in
the universe as astronomy. It teaches
that we are less, compared with the
universe, than a colony of ants is to
us, and that the difference between
men is less than that between one ant
and another.—London Truth,
_ “But the world never forgives,” ob-
serves one of the characters in a pop-
ular novel, “It is only God and ow
mothers that ean do that.”
Mr. James Jackson,
Dear Friend:
Tarrived in San Francisco on
Dec.7th, at 7oc, and went out to
the camp Saturday morning; the
camp is only two miles from town.
Precedio is only a small town but
the people are very sociable, I am
in avery good state of health, I
think I will sail on 16th, of the
month.Tell Ed Hathman to send
me a piece of his wedding cake.
Say Jack,I saw all kinds of game,
geese and ducks by the thousands
I mean wild ones,and right along
the rail road all bunched together,
| Eugene Whittec and the other
two boys sailed on tne Ist., so I
did not get to see them; but John
Robinson is till here.Jack write at
once,there is so much crow di n g
and talking around here that one
= write with ady effect. When
I get on the Island I will write a
Jong letter.You people must write
often,so to keep a fellow in good
‘cheer.Senp me “ The Searchlight ”
so I cun havesomething to rea”
| I will close, From your frien”
Henry Robinson
25th.U.S.Infantry.
Arkansas City.
Loe Toms whs has been ill for
the last three weeks with smail—
pox,is improving nicely-
MrsC. J. Will iams is up from
Newkirk to spend the holidays.
Quite a number of strangers are
expected for the Pythian ball.
Miss.Mary Taylor of cherry vale-
Kan is in the city visiting her
mother Mrs.Clay.
YOU
orn}
eS
eee See
BOOK ON PATENTS eessat3ceze
™*@, A. SNOW & GO.
Patent Lawyers. WASHINGTON, D.C.
aie cscs c
London, Dee. %4.—Eight hundred
soldiers go this week to Africa, Two
cavalry regiments have been ordered
to leave as soon as the transports are
ready. The colonial police will be
increased to 10,000. Detachments of
cavalry will leave as soon as they are
formed. Further drafts of cavalry
will be dispatched at once. Australia
and New Zealand have been invited to
send farther contingents. Thzee thou-
sand extra horses have been contract-
ed for.
Killed by His Own Explosives.
Lima, 0., Dee. 26.—William, Reddick
of Findlay, president of the Producers’
Explosive company, was blown to
atoms by an explosive of nitro-glycer-
ine inthe magazine $f the company’s
factory near here. The explosion
shattered hundreds of window panes
in the city. The factory was closed
for the holidays and Mr. Reddick had
gone out to put a padlock on the door.
etre hdkinad buses es ee
Parsons, Ks., Dee. 27.—According te
a letter from a Parsons boy, who is in
the Philippines, a-cablegram announe-
cing the election of McKinley was
received at Manila 39 minutes after it
was filed in Washington, the operators
relaying it nine times, He says extras
were printed and on the streets of
Manila in two hours and forty minuten
after the messa,e left New York.
Prince Tuan Arrested.
London, Dee. 27.—'The Shanghai cor-
respendent of the Standard says: The
government has arrested Prince Tuan
and Prince Chung on the borders of
the Shansi and Shensi provinces. Yu
Hsien has been ordered to return to
Sianfu forthwith to be executed it ir
supposed. It is inferred from these
reports that the imperial authorities
are preparing to concede the demands
ot the joint note for the punishment of
the ‘ustigators of the trouble in China.
annie, weer gee
St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 26,—Archbishop
Ireland denies the statements recently
telegraphed from Duluth that he was
to visit Cuba and Puerto Rico as a
special commissioner to settle the dis-
putes in regard to church property.
“There is nothing whatever in the
story,” said he. “Sneh a taing was
not mentioned by the president nor by
any one on behalf of the government.
‘If I should visit the islands—and J
have no present intention of doing so—
it would be purely om my own ae
‘eoent.”.
De St
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| KING OF ALL HAIR DRESSINGS. j
i o a “ 5
: eo ERS f
|Z ae. Geen | 2 fF
1. 2 = ; Gat OY
7 Nw Sy ae =
Hy O 4 Pr Gy oO §
t 5 ‘BEFORE * £FTER r
fq] An Honest Guaranteed Remedy—Money Refunded if You are Dissatistied
BY Pentre Kaglty, Nonpy_ Kinky, Trowlmome, Rarectory Tate.
| coeereie eemacomrmarie |
Hy Apri ae. a box. Foss boxes does tbe work. Ozonocaanot tal fy
id “Oc Geno OPPEe:—Cut oat fils edvertisemest oad amd ue witt One Datar, fi
If ene tr var tttesictely cond you four boxset Ozona and one bow Skin Katioer”
EY jvarantesd to make rough akin soft and black skin bright; aleo one bottle Sita Food, fF
Ty Syarentend ta Paes pecnaen emsoves Weiation, Preches, Moth Patches, Tan, Liver [i
é Spois, and alt Facies Blowtehes; aloo one packare Apth-Oder, remo ail odors ret %
HY i20thnenren body sents Wein Disease, ee ituesonnonaeee A
HH evilems for 98. hie grant ote a eepreceiciic, Forde wn 0) wll
jij areeaivetour tote. 2OSTOM CHEMICAL CO., 310 E. Broad St, Richmond, Va. *
Ra dos = da kh Cee ese
Jas. Hudspeth was born at Lock-
hart,Texas.Jan 22nd. 1867; be re-
maiued with his parents till 1883
Branching out,he began life for
nimseif.His first stop was San An
toino,'Texas,then to Austin, th e
Capitol of thestateand worked
there three years for D,W. Weaver.
Remaining in Austin till April
16,1893;going from there to St.
Louis,Mo.,from there to Chicago,
thence to St.Joe,Mich.,Milwaukee,
a
t me
pa Yer |
ke |
he |
|e ZI. |
| LG aE
| D2 2 ees
| Bees so OMS fs oe
ea? igaee
eke fe
Wie.,St Paul,Minn,,ard went west
(o Denver,Colo. in 1894,remaining
in Denver till April 5,1897, when
he went to K.C,,Mo,there ke learn
ed the piano trade.From this place
he went to Dennicon,lo wa, and
joined the United States Army.
During his eulistment he served
as Corporal and was mustered ont
at Macon,Ga.,Feb.28th.1899; going
from there to his old home Lock-
att, Texas to visit;{tom here he went
to Old Mexico and a‘terwards to
New Mexico, where he worked on
the Eipaso & Northwestern railway
He next went to Gurthrie, 0, T.
where he remained till Oct.12th,99
when he went to Kingfisher. Since
coming to Wichita he has establist
ed himecif iu businese.On June 11
1900 he married Miss Ella Kyle o}
Kingfisher,0.T.By trade Mr.Huds
peth is a carpenter, blacksmith anc
piano maker.His place of busines:
is 131 Tremont and ai his place are
seyeral handsome pieces of furni-
ture made by him.
Gold Currency Only.
Washington, Dec. 27.—President
Taft, of the Philippine commission, has
come forward with another suggestion
for the settlement of the Philippine
currency question, which is now press-
ing urgently for adjustment. He dis-
cards the two former plans of coining
something like a trade dollar and of
maintaining by the credit of the Uni-
ted States a fixed ratio between the
Mexican dollar and American gold,
and proposes teadopt gold money pure
and simple as the money of the Philip-
pines. He points ont that as radicai
as is that movement, it must be adopt-
ed sooner or later if the islands are to
remain under control of the United
States, and delay only serves to aggra-
vate the evils of the present confusion
of system.
i a ae
London, Dec. 27.—A representative
of the Associated press has been in-
formed at the British foreign office
that all the editorial comment in the
London Times and other English pa-
person the Nicaragua canal treaty is
entirely unauthorized and not inspired
by the foreign office. To use official
language, “England has too. many
irons in the fire to take up the Nicara-
gua canal matter at present. She has
received no official communication on
the subject nor has she given it any
official consideration.”
Rail Road Time Table,
Missourr Pactric Raruway.
Leave Wichita
Leave Wichita
For St.Louis 2,25 p.m Daily,
» _, Kansas City & St.Louis 10.06 p,m
+, Hntchinson, Lyons & Geneseo 7.15 a.m
»» Local Freight Hutchinson, Lyons and
Geneseo 8.55. a mEx. Sundy
+» Geneseo, Pueblo and Denver 5,20 p.m
+» Anthony and Kiowa 7.25 am
»» Anthony and Kiowa 6.30 pm
Arrive Wichita From
gi.Louis 1.05 p m
Kansas C:ty and StsLouis 6.30pm
Denver, Pueblo and Geneseo 11:10pm
Hutchinson 6.10 pm Ex.Sunday,
Geneseo and Hutchiuson 9.40 pm
Kiowaand Anthony 11.15 a.m
Ktowa and Anthony 5.10y m
For Tickets, Time Tables, Maps, Reser
Books,and further Mnformation, call on
E.E.Bleckley,
Passenger and Ticket Agent,
114 North Main st.
FRISCO LINE.
109 For Monett, Sprinafield, St. Louis and
all points East,daily 1.20 p.m
102 ,. Pittsburg,Joplin, Galeno, Webb City
and Carthage, daily 1,20 pm
107 ,, Burrton, Ellsworth aud all points
West,darly 340 pm
lo2,, Pittshurg, Girard, Joplin Carthage, Vi-
ita and Sapulpa 10.0 p m
loz ,, Monett,Fayetieville,Fort Smith and
intermediate poiuts,daily 10. pm
1o2 , , Eureka Springs,Springfield,St Louis
andall points Esst,daily 10. p m
For Sleeping Berths and Through Tickets
toallpoints,and particular infermation, see
B F.Dunn, Dist. Pass, Agent.
100 Douglas Avenue.
L.R.Delaney, Ticket Avent,
Union Depot.
ATCHISON, TOPFKA and SANTA FE.
North Bouud.
Arrives Leave
Kansas City and east 11,50am 110m
Freight,except Sund’y 2.20pm 3 45pm
Denver and Cal daily Bou pm
Wellington acco ex Sun 6 4opm 6 50pm
Cal !well accomo ex Sun 6 40 p m 650 pm
Kanses City andeast_ 1035 pm Jo35 pm
South Bound.
Oklahoma and Texas 6 45am 650am
Wellington accom daily $15am 30am
Caldwell accomex Sun$ 15am 83¢am
Freight,except Sunday 11 50 a m 12 45 pm
Passeufier,daily, 11opm
Texas Expressdaily, 4 50pm 455 pm
Freight,Mou and Friday 780 pm 825 pm
Daily trains except Sunday Arrive
‘Tuesday, Fhursday and Saturday. Depart,
Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
LR DELANEY, Agent
GHICAGO,ROCK-ISLAND and PACIFIC
eae
No 1 Texas Vestibuled Exe. 6.48 p.m B
No.8 Texas Fast Fxpress. 6.85 a.m.D.
No.85, 3.10 p-m.E,
Local Freight. 4.55 p.m.E
East Bound,
No.2 Chieage Vestibuled Ex, 9.45 a.m.D7
No.4 K,C, and Eastem Ex, 9,00 pm D
No86 1.80 p.m, Ey
- Locel Frotght. 9.450 mE,
| ‘The Rock Toland has established a rep:
tation of having the very best dining-car
service in the worldjand on their express
trains between Kansas City and Chicago
meals are served a la carfe, These trains are
equipped with new library = bufict cars
which have ali the advantages of a clnb
supplied with all the latest periodicals, illus.
trated papers,and a chcice library of books,
The Rock Island depot in Chicago. is in
the heart of the city,opposite the Board of
Trace building,conveuient to all the large
and best hotels,and is the only depot locat-
ad on the Elevated Loop, which affords con
venient and rapid transportation to all part
of the city.
D.Daily. E.Except Sunday.
E.DRAKE, District Passenger Agen
‘dill alae ie: iii
In New Zealand there exists a brass
band whose mefibers ate wholly
mounted on bicycles. This band con-
sists of ten laytry,ehd these not
merely ride their bicycles to practice,
but fulfill thetr engggements on the
wheel, _ ate sae
ARMY REORGANIZATION BILL
Secretary Of War Root States The
Situation Plainly.
RISK OF NATIONAL DISGRACE,
Washington, Dec. 26.—At the last
meeting cf the senate committee on
military affairs Secretary Root made a
strong presentation of the necessity
for immediate necessity for the regula-
tion of the army. He stated broadly
that if congress did not at once indorse
the army bill in substantial accordance
with the recommendations of the war
department the United States would
be obliged to abandon a large portion
of the Philippine islands where civil
government is established. If the
present garrisons are withdrawn from
certam portions of the islands the
municipal officers, mostly Filipinos,
will be left defenseless, with every
Prospect of being deprived of their
lives and property, and at the same
time the United States will be dis-
graced, the secretary said, for having
proved faithless to its solemn obliga-
tions. The secretary argued that it
was necessary to pass the department
bill as a whole in order to properly ad-
just the military organization to the
new conditions created by the increase
of numbers.
“We do not any of us,” he said, “ex-
pect that for any considerable period
an army of 100,000 men will be main-
tained, and for an army of 60,000 men
the provisions made (by the committee)
are sufficient.”
Heavy Mall from Europe.
New York, Dee. 24.—The North Ger-
man Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wilhelm
der Grosse has arrived with 690 cabin
and 641 steerage passengers and an
unusually heavy mail. The postal
clerks on board report that the num-
ber of letters handled during the voy-
age was 275,000. There were 5,829
registered letters, making 2,276 sacks
of mail. ‘The postage on abont 40,000
letters was insuficiently prepaid. ‘The
receiving, checking and opening of this
amount of mail, together with the sep-
arating and registering required the
constant work of four clerks and two
assistants for eleven hours each day of
the steamer’s voyage.
Non-Union Men Protected.
New York, Dec. 24.—The appelate
division of the supreme court handed
down a decision in the case of Samuel
1. Davis and others against Nathan
Rosenstein and others. ‘The court
affirmed the order continuing a tem-
porary injunction restraining the de-
fendants from interfering with the
plaintiff's business through “pieket-
ing” against non-union men during
business hours.
‘tiene teeta en ines ek
Fort Worth, Tex., Dec. 22.—The cat
Ue trade in this section is¢onsiderably
interested in the report that John D.
Rockefeller is behind a syndicatewvhich
is said to be dickering for the famous
XIT ranch, the largest one on earth.
‘The two states of Rhode Island and
Delaware combined are not as large as
this ranch. It contains over 3,000,000
acres, or 5,000 square miles.
‘A Unefal Life Ends.
Belfast, Dee. 26.—Vere Foster, who
has been engaged for the last fifty
years in assisting the emigration of
nearly 25,000 young women from the
congested districts of the West of Ire-
land and in the building or furnishing
of over 2,200 national schools in every
part of Ireland, is dead. He was born
in Copenhagen in 1819 and was former-
ly in the British diplomatic service in
South America.
‘whibdetne Raeistaten,
Manila, Dee. 24.—The Philippine
commission has passed bills prescribing
that English text shall be used in the
construction of all laws enacted; au-
thorizing the provost marshal to estab-
lish police and health regulations,
with limited punishments for their
violation, appropriating $75,000 for the
immediate construction of a highway
from Pozorrubie, province of Pangas-
inan, to Baguio, in: Benguet” province,
along the line.and surveyed for a gor-
ernment railroad.
Cape Colony in Revolt.
London, Dec. °4.—“We understand
that private reliable advices have been
received in London,” says the London
Daily Mail, ‘‘to the effect that virtually
all the districts of Cape Colony in the
vicinity of the Orange river are in more
or less open revolt and that there is
likely to be sharp firing on a rather
large seale before the invasion is erush-
ed. The tactics of the Boers in rally-
ing as many 2s possible of the Dutch
in the back country to their cause are
proving successful.”
ila ge ea,
Philadelphia, Dee. 26.—Every nation
that was represented at the Paris ex-
position has contributed a portion of
its exhibit to the Philadelphia com-
mercial spuseum, and several countries
have presented their entire exhibit.
Dr. William P. Wilson, director of the
museum, has returned from Paris,
where he went in October to obtain
donations. The city has appro-
priated $20,000 to pay the freight of
the contributions from Paris to this
country.
FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS,
Adjourament ‘Taken for tho Holldayr
to January Third.
vounremrrn Day.
‘The senate extonded the time for the ratin-
gation of ‘cortain treatios pending with certamh
Sout American states and also tho agreoment
ith Basland. supplements’ to. the Haye.
Pauncefote treaty itself. The latter was agreed
to without a dissentinye vote, which relioved
those avorine the treaty.
Senators Foraker and Morzan defended the
polley of making the canal neutral.
‘The house has passed Ar. Pipnn's bill for
‘moré money for allotments and. xing tne vote
ot opening of Kiowa-Comanche Jands on Aug.
6,190.
Mr. Flynn has introdiiced a DU providing
that beiore the opening of the Widhite and
other Indian jandx manne the president shoud
Subdivide the same inte counties and designate
A place for, the ‘county seat of each to contain
S20 geres. "hat these lauds, in advance of the
‘opening be platted and the iovs sola at auction
stland atter the opening: the receipts from the
fale to be used in Duliding county buildings,
Bridges, roads and other pubile’ improvements,
gd to foaintala ho, county government unt
taxes are collected. Tae bill provides for two
T'S" Iona districts to be established when the
Jand is proclaimed open for setttemeat.
‘PLYTRENTH DAY.
Senate committee reports a substitute forthe
army reorganization bil, with many. chances,
among them oho ‘allowin beer only to. be
sold fu army canteens, “Chaplains are reduced
tojone for each regiment, with no post chap-
Jains. “The Neterinary corpe fs strlekon gut
‘Tho iaaximum strength St the army is. xed at
{00,000 men. Blistment of Fiipin’s is author-
{ei to the number of 13,000; also a native rea
iment in Puerto Rico,
“The senate passed tk house bill authorizing
the president to appoint Representative. Bou
telle of Maine, a captain of the navy on the e-
‘The sciiate passed the urgency, deciency bil
that carries fr Piyne's legistation coueoraing
the aew tedium taal cpeaing
My. Long is at work for an appropriation for
.8itef00 pubile building at Muteninson, ‘Kane
sas,
‘The house rivers and harbors committee has
‘desided "to. make "a Jum " appropristion of
Bou. oF the improvement of the, Stissourk
‘Fiver, to be expended under the atrection of
ar department. “Me iit would abolish the
“‘Miscouri river commission.
‘Phe house passed ‘ils requiring the Pens
sylvanla und the Baltimore & Onio ratlroads to
alter their routes into Washington and. build
ew stations "‘The bill appropriates’ 8.500.001
tovover the outlay. ‘Tatts, to pay the’ roads
fordoing what itis to thelr iater‘et to do.
SIXTEENTH DAY.
“The senate ratified the treaty with Great
Britain which was signed on ‘February 5, 1000,
by ecretary Hay ‘and Lord Pauncetote, alter
adopting all of the amendments proposed by
the cominittee on foreign relationsand rejecting
all amendments offered by opposing senators.
‘The house passed the Indian Dill and the mil-
{tary academy appropriation bill. ‘Mr. Cannon
made comparisons of past and. present cost of
educating Indians, showing that appropriations
have trebied in 13 years, and it now costs nearly
five times as much per capita to educate Ine
dan pupits az" it does’ those of the District of
Columbia. Mr. Curtis expiained that indian
[pupils were also Doared aint clothed.” ‘The In-
Han bill fxes the pay of court clerks in Indian
‘Territory to sult them.
SEVENTEENTH DAY.
Senator Cullom reported from the committee
‘on foreign relations two bills to refund to Mex=
ico sums patd on American claims whieh, the
supreme court has decided were procured by
fraud.
Mr. Sutherland (Neb) Introduced a bill for
the appointment of a committee of seven to Ine
Yestigate government ownership of raliroads in
Europ, and in this couatry. for use in future
legisintion.
SEAy SEEN ation UL at Nericite eee
az tion. bill authorizing the prese
Ident toncivet two volunteer brigadier generals
for retirement resardiess of ages
‘There was a luck ofa quorum in elther house,
‘The river and harbor bill has been completed
fn committee, with a total of about #80, ON,
‘This {< exceeded only by the act of 1807 which
was 672275004,
‘Congress adjourned vztil January 3, 101.
Fraudulent Divorce Bureau,
New York, Dec. 24.—Recorder Goff
has sentenced: Henry Zimmer, one of
the heads of a fraudulent divorce bu-
reau, to ten years in state's prison, and
James Holden, alias Frank Wilson, a
professional correspondent, to three
years in the state's prison, Mrs.
Byrde Herrick and Mary Thompson,
who said they had testified falsely in
divorce cases were allowed to go under
suspension of sentence.
Guieulss Siskdle to be Abuadonads
Chicago, Dec. 2%4.—The northern
Pacific and Soo roads have agreed to
the Great Northern's proposition to
abolish round trip colonist tickets west
of St. Paul. Other western roads are
considering the advisability of with-
drawing the rate west of Missouri
river gateway.
‘Two Hundred Christians Killed.
London, Dee. 22.—A dispatch to the
Daily Express from Vienna reports re-
cent Moslem excesses against the Chris
tian population in the central pro-
vinces of Turkey, where 200 Christians
have been killed.
Christians Colebrate Century:
New York, Dec. 26.—Plans are per-
fected to hold a monster religions
revival to usher in thes twentieth cen-
tury. This revival isto be the fruition
of the plan evolved by the late Dwight
L. Moody, which his friends took up
and have enlisted in its support the
most prominent Christian workers of
the country. It is to be national in
scope, with New York as the center.
It is to be absolutely undenomina-
tional in character and “Christ and the
| Bible” is the only battle ery.
boom sg
Chieago, Dec. 24.—Fifty thousand
dollars in gold is to be distributed by
the American Express company among
its employes,.as..Christmas remem-
brances. Every man. who has been in
the-employ of the company for one
year. will receive a $5 gold piece on
Christmas eve. It is estimated that
there are over 10,000 employes in the
United States, Canada and Europe,
who will be remembered in this way.
There are many of them in Kansas
and the two territories.
Loyal Fillpino Leaders.
Manila, Dec. 26.—The recently or-
ganized -antonomy party was launched
atameeting attended by virtually ail
the loyal Filipino leaders’ in Manila.
The declaration of principles was read,
and@iafter some discussion adopted by «
vote of 123, less than half a dozen de-
clining to vote. | All signed an indorse-
ment of the platform, including Senor
Paterne, one of the. most influential
of the former insurgent leaders, whose
real attitude toward American author
die had dese tiesch Guestionsd.
Griggs to Retire
; ee ee ——-
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APOSTLE OF ANARCHY
MAN OF WEALTH PROPOSES TO
AID THE CAUSE.
George Do Lion Will Devote His Riches
to Spreading Mis Doctrine—Will Par-
chase Large Tract of Land and Ex-
periment.
The richest anarchist in’ the world
is George De Lion, of Dawson City,
Alaska. Two years ago De Lion was
living in California and did not have
a cent to his name. To-day he Is
worth up in the hundreds of thousands
of dollars and by spring it is said his
fortune will reach the million-dollar
mark.
When De Lion struck Dawson in
1898 he had one nickel in his pocket
and that was given to him by a man
to buy a postage stamp to post a let-
ter to his folks in Los Angeles. De
Lion started out to dig for gold, but
changed his mind and resolved to let
others do the digging while he profited
through business channels. Now he
"ev d
Asi
Dig |
al 4 eld
we
owns several large structures and
much land in Dawson and vicinity.
De Lion will establish an anarchistic
colony in southern California, He
says of the project:
“My plan is to purchase 100,000 acres
of land, which I think can be done at
a cheap figure in the southern part of
this state, and then to locate upon
{t 1,000 families who shall be found
to be congenial.” Each family is to
have its hundred acres of land, share
and share alike, and for each family
I shall have a house built, and each
I shall eupply with tools and seed. 1
shall take no more land and no less
than any other:member. In this way
we shall all be on an absolute equality
and when no one is superior to an-
other there can be no dictatorship.
Other than the mere incorporation into
a company to satisfy the legal require-
Feng Se tale aaa no
the teat sige ob coveremnehee Thi,
however, shall not preclude e0-opera-
tion, so long as co-operation may be
perfectly voluntary,
“To insure a true solidarity it will
‘be necessary to get only those families
While it is probable that most of
President McKinley's official’ family
will remain with him when he begins
his second administration, it is. certain
that there will be some changes. One
cabinet officer whose retirement is a
certainty ‘and whose services will be
missed by the President is Attorney-
General John W. Griggs. Mr. Griggs
entered the cabinet at the solicitation
of Vice-President Hobart, when Judge
MoKenna left the legal department to
become a member of the Supreme
Court. The Vice-President and Mr.
Griggs were neighbors and_{atimate
friends at Paterson, N. J., and the for-
mer believed that the brilliancy antl
profound legal knowledge that had
made Mr, Griggs a power in New Jer-
sey affairs would contribute to the suc
cezs of the McKinley administration,
‘Mr. HoBart’s predictions have been
more than justified by Mr. Griges’
conduct of the legal depattment, ee
‘that willbe congenial: To this end
Ivshall employ expert phrenologists
and physiognomists to examine all ap-
plicants for admission to the: colony.
“Once established in the colony, it
is expected that each member will re-
spect the fullest freedom in every other
and carry out the spirit of Proudhon’s
paradox: ‘Property is robbery.’”
pak ats ae emetic de ie eae
‘The plague which recently visited
Sydney, New South Wales, and made
evident all the hideous defects of its
sanitary systems has caused the civic
authorities to wake up, and, like Rip
Van Winkle, to formulate stringent
sanitary regulations. Noxious sub-
stances must be conveyed through the
city between midnight and 6 a. m., and
in water-tight buckets. Unhealthy
premises are to be made healthy by
proper system of connection; no live
‘poultry wiil be allowed in the city un-
der conditions dangerous or injurious
to health. The manufacture of any
matter intended for human consump-
tion must be carried on under sanitary
conditions, and the smoke nuisance
from factories must be abated by the
consumption of smoke in the chim-
neys, Marine stores, which, as a rule,
are most unsavory, have a special pro-
vision regulating their control. Baths
‘are made compulsory adjuncts to all
dwelling houses; lodging houses must
register and be licensed, and further
general provisions have been issued
regulating other matters likely to at-
fect the well-being and health of the
community.—J. Hunter Stephenson in
Chicago Record.
Gites Create,
The most remarkable phenomenon
of modern Europe is the growth of
Germany since the Franco-Prussiar
war. The treaty of peace was signed
in 1871, and since that time Germany
has not. extended her territory by a
single acre of the continent of Europe
with possibly the exception of Heli-
goland, but she has increased her pop:
ulation by 16,000,000. The Germans
numbered 40,000,000 in 1871; they
number 56,000,000 now, and _ yet,
though there are so many mouths to
feed the Germans are better fed, bet-
ter clothed, and in every way more
prosperous than they were then. This
is attributed to the fact that for 20
years Germany devoted herself to tha
elementary education of her people.
Stress on a Pause.
Mark Twain lays great stress on the
pause just before the point, in the use
of which he regards Artemus Ward
and James Whitcomb Riley as the
greatest adepts. For instance, Arte-
mus Ward would say eagerly, excited.
ly: “i once knew a man in New Zea-
land who hadn't a tooth in his head’
—here his animation would die out; a
silent, reflective pause would follow,
then he would say dreamily and as if
to himself—“and yet that man could
beat a drum better than any man |!
ever knew.”
German silver is not silver at all,
but an alloy of various of the baser
metals, which was invented in China
and used there for centuries.
The Attorney-General now finds
himself unable to remain. He is a
poor man and naturally has an ambi-
tion to acquire a fortune. His great
legal ability enabled him to make large
‘sums while engaged in the practice of
his profession, but he is a liberal man
and spent most of his income in, enter-
taining and educating his daughters,
It was a financial sacrifice when he
gave up his private practice and went
to Washington, but the earnest solici-
tation of President McKinley and
Vice-President Hobart and his keen
appreciation of the honor conferred
impelled him to lay aside money con-
siderations. It is a well-known fact,
of course, that a cabinet position re-
quires greater expenditures in the way
of entertainment than the salary
covers, and Mr. Griggs now feels that,
in justice to himself and his family,
he shoult’return to active work im his
ee z
[ln the Public Eve
Chicago's Municipal Campaign.
Chicago is getting ready for another
municipal election. The present May-
or Carter H. Harrison, who has been
twice elected, will again be the candi-
date of the Democrats, Graeme Stew-
art, Illinois’ member of the Republican
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GRAEME STEWART.
National Committee, is already in the
arena for his party's nomination, and
It looks as if he would be Harrison's
chief opponent. Like Harrison, he 1s
a.native of the city. He has long been
high in the councils of the party in
state and nation.
Boom for Oklahoma.
‘The Territory of Oklahoma is on the
verge of a new boom. Within a few
montis President McKinley will throw
open to settlers a former Indian reser-
vation, embracing no less than two
and a half million acres of land in the
extreme southern part of the ter-
oF nitory, bordered on
a Esyows| the south by Texas
| eh ie and on the east by
ene: << J the Chickasaw Na-
rT tion reservation.
be Of the land in the
Re | territory to be
SE LL ( opened 50,000 acres
[ moter 4 jwill be reserved as
‘a government res-
The Territory to :
he Phekon Gea, OrvVatios Ging
crv” 728 Bone
ees
er
[poe
The Territory to
be Thrown Open.
Se EN PE sn ie te tad ae pa
and nearly 500,000 acres of allot
ments to the Indians of the thrée
tribes who have- disposed of their
tribal holdings to the —govern-
ment. Of the remaining land only 80,-
000 acres are adapted to strictly agri-
cultural purposes, the remainder _be-
ing, however, good grazing territory.
‘The opening proclametion will be is-
sued 4s soon as the secretary of the fn-
terior has completed the work of allot-
ting to the individual Indians the 160-
acre plats to which each of them is
entitled under the agreement of pur-
chase.
Ware estes tee tek Oe are
“Mrs. Lillian M. N, Stevens, who has
just been re-elected president of the
‘Women’s Christian Temperance Union,
is a native of Dover, Me., and began
her work as a@ teacher in her own
state. At 21 she married Mr. Stevens
and went with her husband to his
home near Portland. Mrs, Stevens first
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MID. iS ae
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MRS. LILLIAN M. N. STEVENS.
met Miss Willard at Old Orchard in
the summer of 1875, and there assisted
in the organization of the Maine W. C.
‘TU, Her first office was that of treas-
urer of the state union. She next be-
came president’ and under her guid-
ance the Maine organization soon be-
came conspicuous in the national un-
jon and its president no less con-
spicuous among the ladies at work in
the temperance cause, Mrs, Steyens’
advance in the union was rapid. She
was elected vice president during the
life of Miss Willard and succeeded that
great reformer as president when Miss
‘Willard died.
A Curious Constitution,
‘The most remarkable of the three
complete drafts of the constitution
submitted to the Cuban constitutional
convention is the one submitted by
General Rivera,
It follows our constitution as to
form of government when once consti-
tuted, but differs very materially as to
the modes-of constituting it.” It pro-
vides for a congress of two houses and
@ president. Nothing is said aboyt a
Judicial branch in the summary’ at
hand; but undoubtedly that -is pro-
vided for. Hach of the provinces is to
have local government superficially
after the analogy of our state govern-
ments. But it appears that only the
representatives in congress and three
electors in each municipal district are
to be elected by direct vote of the peo-
ple. ‘The municipal electors are to
choose the members of the provincial
legislatures, and these legislatures are
to choose the provincial governors and
the national. senators, and all'-six of
them sitting together are to choose the
president of the republic, who must be
‘@ native Cuban,
| =RCQN;,
PURELY PERSONAL
Rear Admiral ww...
ere se ee at the United States np
were as fondly regarded by tna,
ordinates as Rear Admiral se
erick McNair, who died a: Wat
ington the other day. yr. MeNay
Was the ranking rear admiral ow
Bavy, standing next to Dewey. He ye
4m command of the Asiatic squsan
prior to Dewey's appointment ‘nf
would have reaped the honors tha
fell to Dewey at Manila hat not og
those changes which occur at regu
Intervals in the navy brougie yg
home just before the outbreak of ty
Spanish war. He was a man of tag
and courage, handsome in igure ws
Jovial in the social hours he eajgy
with his men. Since his return toy
Asiatic waters he has been on sh
‘duty, his last post being superisiap
= of the naval academy at Annuy
Ms.
MeNair was born in Pennsylvania)
1889 and entered the navy in 183,
1859 he was assigned to the steam ¢
gate Minnesota, of the East. Iai
Squadron, Early in the civil wer
went to the steam sloop Iroquois g
the West Gulf squadron, and pari
pated in the bombardment ot Fog
Jackson and St. Philip and ‘Chalmely
batteries, ‘The engagement at Gray
Galt the passage, both wars, oi
Vicksburg batteries, and the desim,
tion of the Confederate ram Arkansg
He served also in the war on the stg
‘sloop Juniata and Seminole, with ty
South Atlantic Blockading ‘squadrey
and participated in both attacks q
Fort Fisher,
May Enter the Cabinet,
Wayne MacVeagh, who is mention
as a possible successor to Attory
ea
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ee
ee
WAYNE MACVEAGH.
General Griggs in President McKie)
ley’s cabinet, is a Philadelphia larye|
ot ability and prominence, a!
he has been the recipient ¢
high honors from both the great je
litical parties. He was appointed tt
ed States attorney general by Pre:
dent Garfield in 1881, and resid
with’ the rest of the Garfield cabisé
upon the accession of President 4»
thur, In 1892 he supported Clevele!
for president, and in 1893 he was mal
ambassador to Italy, which post ®
held until 1897, Since that time
has practiced law in Philadelphi
though spending much of his time
Washington, where he now Js, a
where he ‘will spend the winter.
MacVeagh was born in Phoeniav‘lk
Pa,, on April 19,1833
Roosevelt Is Not Rich.
As vice president Mr, Roosevelt wi
occupy a rented house . Washingt
and his friends say it will not bea
expensive residence, for the Tea
that the vice president clect is not
rich man. The property which ti
father left to him in New York yids
him an annual income of $6,000 4
$10,000 a year. Hence it is that Mr
Roosevelt feels called upon to ensit
deeply and constantly in literary wer
next year to Increase his income, nt
withstanding that it will be $16,000
$18,000 a year anyhow.
$4.600 a Nisht.
While the American stage 15 sa |
be over-run with European tales
there is some consolation in th
fact that the European stage is né
shy on American talent of the firs
magnitude. In this connection the a
nouncement comes from London ‘that
a single night’s performance at the
ao oe
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i
Po aie ee he
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aa 5 se
Pe Bee
ee 4
Pea 4
pega 2
MaRIE GEORGE.
Strand theater, netted yarie Oi
the American actress, fhe nandsom
sum of: $4,600. There: not 547
pean Woman, seve, perh@ys, Yersiir
Whose nightly receipts ip this om"
anything like approach. those isu"
{Diseases of the Kidneys. .. 2"...
MORROW’S KID-NE-O1DS are for sale by all druggists or by mail
prepaid on receipt of 50 cents.
Morrow's Kid-ne-oids are made only by
JOHN MORROW & CO., cuemiszs, SPRINGFIELD, CHiO.
So
| UPRIGHT
. a
= ames
) BA cone
SF :
ae |
Mi sae
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ee
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Carter’s
Little Liver Pills.
Very omell and as easy
‘otake as auras,
Sq |FOR HEADACHES
CARTERS|ron vizziness.
Wiirrruc |FoR Biuiousuess,
IVER |Fo2 ToaPio uiver.
We FOR CONSTIPATION.
* |FoR SALLOW SKIN.
i |FOR THE COMPLEXION
GaRoa were
tfte | raveny Vopetabte,Ceorar Corot
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
ee
. relief for a,
ODERS PASTILLES, 4s one
ROR s,s
eraser An ce
For the Ladies, E
PRIESHEYER SH2=
—_——————— CO.
i SHOES THAT WEAR,
. Ask Your Dealer For Them.
src
Boogarian Government Atter Gypelem
The Hungarian government is about
to take steps to effectually put an end
to the wanderings of gypsies, who are
% frequeatly to be met in that coun-
uy. The stalwart Hungarian gypsy,
‘With his multi-colored cloak, bis dark-
ered, fortune-telling wife, and his
ovd of half-naked children, is one of
the mast picturesque figures in this
part of Europe.
Some cough remedies hide @ cough;
they drug it into silence, but the ir-
Nation stays in the Iungs to cause
troble, “Morley’s. Honey Pectoral
foes, heals, strengthens and cures
thoroughly. ‘The cough stops because
the cause Is removed. Price, 25 cents.
Sold by agent in every town.
Dens Cou
Since the assassination of King
Tunbert the Pope is said to have been
‘ey carefully guarded in the Vati-
2. It was his custom to take the
ally in the Vatiean gardens, at-
‘taded by two guards and one or more
Fejstes, but the number of guards has
%s been increased, and. the whole
Conesene is searched thrice dally.
§ QUGLAS
@) D
°
¥ ‘SHOES: $
1B UNION MADE
Poe real worth of We
Ebro eosin
Siem commerea| 2
Toss ees | ee
each Bicerine| fi
cette gated ‘at mM
grenade tbat)
: OZ
we ke SNE
SE \ol
ST cone DO PSE ssh antl
EreLeTs iia poet odeart
ine Sir
* ON MASS.
Meare the Iai makers of men’s 83
SSO shoes fetue wena Wovmnke
“St tno manaiactarere ie tke De
The peat we
Uist nsial et eT
Sia) Sear ts g.00
Scandal orale pee
Ue, ade es aattnee ee SHOE.
rs net ete Soa
ar ee Bolte
Sosy ceases
OSe a eLee: whe eeee S,
Take EN coe desler exclostve tale ta ench towne
ce aetactated ina aa
Re careers eee hares ee
Ser na ee ati Sette aes
Se ee
fies Zod geyengies cottons Pree
——
(sR aes
fn. CRSP RENE ALL LSE PAILS eH
By S7rep, ames Good Ure Fa
CONSUMPTION &
Four boxes rule the world—the car-
tridge box, the ballot ‘box, the jury
box and last, but not least, the femin-
ine hat box.
Bassball players; Golf players; all play-
ore chew Water ucatad whites playing.
Silence speatss much, words more and
actions most of all.
Cm, crabnree, Towa, wll, om. request
explain atl avout he Gladtator Gold Atinlng, Com
Sabyt attreialy ivarosting’ we me.
‘Some people never forget themselves
they couldn't if they tried.
soware of Olutments for Catarrh That
| Contain Mercury,
‘As mercury will surely destroy the sense ot
SEEM Sid Gomaplcssly derancetus whole stan
Sheu cacertap i tarot the imucous suaces
EUSE Stvicled should never be used except ot
Breer tio eo reputable picans he
Saage they will dom tenfold 10 the good. you
can posstiy derive trom them. Halts Catareh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Foledo"O: contaies: no mereany, an fa taked
haceniuly: sting “uireeuy ‘upon ie blood and
ecou Surlaced Of the epatem, in buying
Hatratatarth core bentroyougei ie genuine
itis taken tureruly,andmade Toledo, Obl,
by F. J. Cheney &Co. Testimonialsiree, Sold
BY Drageiats price te per bottle.
aie ats Biteate tne best
Honor follows those who precede it»
‘batdt fleeetéomn those who-pareee it.
Coughs tell you that there is come-
thing wrong in throat or lungs. It is
the cause, not the cough, that you
must look after. Morley’s Honey Pec-
toral searches out the cause of trouble,
it heals the inflamed surfaces, stops
the irritation, loosens the cough and
cures you thoroughly. Sold by agent
fa every town.
Carter's Ink has 001 deep color and {t does
motetrain the eres. “Cartere dosen't tate,
Piso's Cure for Consumption {s an tnfalltble
‘medicine for coughs aad cols. —N. W. SaMuEt,
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1000.
It is folly to draw a bill on a blind
man payable at sight.
Dyeing is as simple as washing when
you use PUTNAM FADELESS DYES,
Digger Indians seldom smile, ‘tis
‘aid. They must be grave Diecers.
U. S. SENATOR DAVIS DIES FROM
KIDNEY DISEASE. '
Senator. Daits made a prolonged and gallant
fight with disease.
The trouble, of which the kidney affection was
the fatal outcome, first. appeared about Sopt. 0.
a ae a ee
‘Trouble Stealthily Encroached.
‘Tho trouble had, however, steathily encroached
‘upon a vital organ, and on’ Noy. 11 examination
of the urino proved the presence of inflammation
of the kidneys.
Bott acute nephritis and dlabates made thelr
appearance, avd Dr. Murphy, of Chleago, was
suinmoned.” He agreed with Doctors Ssone and
Lankester as to the presence of these serious
ailiaonts in acute form, and, while pot making
any pablie statoment, he made known privately
to some of Senetor Davis" business associates
hls opinion that the ease was liopoless,
ae PASTS, ver ag
/_ ‘To those, however, who were familiar with the
symptoms of acuto idney troubles the bulletins
‘held ominous information, the rapid respiration,
fluctuating pulse, doliriom and approaching.
coma telling the story of death's nearness.
"St, Paul Dispatch.
Mr. J.C. Schoeh, of DuBols, Pa., convinced
beyond tho short of a doubt that Sorrows
Kidcne-otds cure ildnoy trues promplly and
| to stay cured.
“Kor about year I had a dull, heavy pain io
tho small of my back, whien would be tended
| ‘ Dy sharp, sting pain
Re hen feng or etooptog
a rer, "On account of
‘the pain in my back I
out not sleep and got
(BPE GY) proper rost- and word
F Y tn Y fool dulland tired when
Cad arising in the morning
instead of fresh and
£4 ‘Vigorous. When Mor-
A ied rors Kit-neosis were
\ PSI tie sdvercsea Vata
oe ee
Ga fer curative qualia,
but after seeing them
‘eoosmended torslere
Mr. J. O-schoch, symptoms like my own,
Z procured some a Vosbure’s drug sare aad
{ook them sccording to. élections. Tn 8 few
Gays the pain in iny back stopped. The Kid-ne-
ads have done away wrth tht il, ed foling
Sod Tam enjoying better heath than T have for
Yours." Mies Bahoehy lines at 137 Ove Ave,
MHedience Stmpiifies Lite.
Nothing simplifies life like obedi-
ence. We sometimes think we are be-
set by problems, that life is a very
difficult and complicated affair. It is
Rot really so, Ali life is simply do-
ing or bearing the will of God. There
is never more than one duty for one
moment—Rev. H. A. Bridgman,
‘Taboo Pets in War Times.
Animal fanciers in England say that
pet beasts have not been sought by
fashionable women’ since the war be-
gan. “Pet animals are not wanted in
time of war,” says Jamrach, the fa-
mous animal dealer of St. George's,
East. “People have far more serious
things to think about and spend their
money upon.”
Shiftiess Poor Increasing.
‘The Philadelphia Medical Journal de-
clares that “it requires no mathematt-
cian to discover that the ehiftless, the
thriftlees, the indigent poor—the class
which produces relatively the greatest
number of eriminals and paupers, if
not of the mentally deficient—is in-
creasing out of all proportion to the
thrifty, the well-to-do—the class which
produces relatively few of the paupers
and criminals.”
All the world’s a staircase on which
all men go either up or down.
+ To be always happy, use Red Cross
Ball Blue. Sc. Refuse imitations,
A man of means isn’t necessarily a
mean man,
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY,
‘Toke LAXATIVE Baono Quixmme TABLETS. All
Gruggiats refund the money If Tt falls. to eure,
E. W. Grove's signature ls dn the box. 256.
The more a smoker fumes the less he
frets.
Garfield Tea is the original herb tea
for the cure of constipation and sick
headache; ft is a specific for all disorders
of stomach and bowels,
Pride isthe fog that surrounds in
significance,
Over $2,000,000 worth of thorough-
bred stock was on exhibition at the
greatest fat stock show that was ever
held in any country, at Dexter Pa-
vilion, Chicago, Dec. 1-8, 1900. Neary
$100,000 was paid to exhibitors in
prizes. “Advance,” the champion fat
steer, was sold for $1.50 a pound, live
weight, and weighed on the Chicago
Scales Co.'s scales, the official: scales
of the show. This is the highest price
at which any animal was ever sold for
beef. is Re et
We get the professional beggar with
-a touch of winter.
‘Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. ~
For cbildren teething, softens the gains, reduces in=
Sacination, slays pala,enres wind colic‘Ssoabote.
An egotistical artist says the sun
gives him a sitting every evening.
Read the Advertisomonts.
You will enjoy this publication much
better if you will get in the habit of
reading the advertisements; they will
afford a most interesting study and
some excellent bargains. Our adver-
tisers are reliable and send what they
advertise.
‘One smile is worth a dozen frowns at
any stage of the game.
EERE TN Malis cae
A man’s character is often shown by
wkab be esnciders aushuble.
| Unless the whole mind is given to ¢
task it cannot be accomplished.
Faded hatr recovers tt» youthful color and soft
cas by the tse oF Eanes Hate Batra
Wixbunconre, tle Usa care for corse. Hieta,
Yearning for riches is the mother o
discontent,
Eire Peas at br Riven gat Nos dinar
SP Rs Sit as eee
An Irish politician says that half the
lies told about him are not true.
Ladies who take pride in clear, white
ciothes should ase Rea Gross Ball Blue
Don’t think a man’s a fool because
he doesn't think as you do. -
DuBoise,Pa.andis lways glad to say a good word
for that peerless kidney remedy—xXid-ne-olds,
Mrs. Gold Campman 48 River St., Sharon, Pa,
graphically deseribes her condition before and
after aho used Mortow's Kit-neoid, hoping by
s 60 doing she will help
x fome other woman to
Py ge My get rid of the debdilita-
fs ting backaches s0 eom-
‘moti to the femalo sex.
S a Sliaron, Pa., Nov. &
1900. John Morrow &
z Go. Dear Sirs:—"T take
Neos pleasure in recommend-
peo fing your medicine tothe
SBP § psvic in the hope that
ary ft may boneft others as
pp f) ithas me. Throe years
GP 2x0 in March I wasat-
ae tacked with a severe fe
Yer which left me Ina’
Mra. Gold Oampman. miserable, weak condi
ton. About one year ago, after my Kidneys be-
came affected, the pain in my back was so bad {
could not sit up or tle down. T sw Morrow's:
Kid-ne-olds highly recommended and procured
a box and took them eecording to directions,
which resulted in a eure, I have teken 10. ali
three boxes 2nd consider the medicine so good
for kidney troubles that I will take no other.”
‘Yours truly, Mrs. Gold Campman,
Graphic interview given our reporter by Mr.
D.8. Sterner, of Altoona, Pa., who sufferod for
‘years with kddney troubles,
“I suffered several years with kidney trouble
and did considerable doctoring. even colne to
ai . . ee SS ee ee ee oe
be debilita- eB ‘the hospital for atime,
es $0 com-| a Bs -u it seemed that tay
emalo sex. Sf Qo diseaso was incurable,
a. Nov. &| Af plies NO. My sunsring was ter
Morrow &| 4 BY, tte covey wit
s:—"Ttake| ff A my back, - Tsaw Mor
ecommend: BNE row's Kia.neoids ad-
Heine totho| E vertised and recom.
hope that| H [3 mended so bishily by
t others as| F) other persons’ whose
rhroe years| WA gail, J symptoms, wore aint.
h I was at- Beene" fy lar to my own that I
aseverote-| Qh FA ff decided to try them,
ft me Ina Tbogan to improve in
ak condi Ns” twoor three dayeattor
rianeys be: mat Teommenced to talce
assobadi| Mrs. D. 8. Sterner. them, and continued
; Morrow's | to improve until the pain in my’ back has all die
d procured | appeared. Thave felt like a now person since
Airections, | faking. Kid-no-lds and am only too glad to be
een 1a ali able to reeommond sick a valuable, medicine.”
ne s0 good | Mrs. Sterner rosides at 10187%h Ave., Altoona,Pa.
b are for sale by all druggists or
y Prepaid on receipt of 50 cents.
e made only by
SPRINGFIELD, Ct
‘Mortality Among War Correspondents.
Attention is called to the number of
casualties among newspaper represen.
tatives who went out to South Africs
to describe the Boer war. They scarce-
ly ran the same risks as the soldiers
but they appear to have suffered in 2
far higher degree. All told, they were
ninety in number, and only fifteen o!
them reached Pretoria. The mor-
tality was 15% per cent.—London Let-
ter New York Tribune.
‘hinte & End ot Semen.
Several of the European general
staffs are studying the feasibility of
organizing special corps something aft-
erthe Boer model. The principal dit-
ficulty lies in the: Imited supply ot
horses at the command of the vari-
ous governments, with the exception
of Russia, The last equine census in
that country is stated to have shown
considerably more than 10,000,000
horses fit for war purposes,
Heated Poker Controls Tigers
“When all other methods of control-
ling wild beaets fail, the keeper has
only to employ an iron rod which has
been made red-hot at one end,” says
an old circus man, Lions and tigers
will cringe bfore the heated poker, and
no matter how restless and fretful they
may hay been, the sight of the glow-
ing iromsimmediately brings them to
their beat of animal senses.”
Picaiciate. as Sac exccaaibakenn
» Among the papers read at the con-
vention of American ornithologists in
Cambridge, Mass, a tew days ago was
a most interesting little thing on “The
Pterylosis of Podargus, With Notes on
the Pterylography of the Caprimul-
gidae.”
A school teacher says he whips his
pupils to make then smart,
It is well to remember that GARFIELD
TEA cleanses the system, purifies the
blood, regulates the ilver and kidneys
and cures chrontc constipation,
The history of mankind is an im-
mense volume of errors.
‘Tho Dest Freseription for Chilis
and Fever is a bottle of Gnove’s TasTRLEss
Cunt Toxtc.. Itis simply iron und quinine in
‘tasteless form. No cufe-no pay, Prico, 5s.
A fellow who has a smiling coun-
tenance often has a red nose,
Most to Quantity, Hest in Qrality,
Morley’s Sersaparil!a and Iron is a
tonic, a blood purifier and a bloot
maker. It does not stop with merely
curing certain discases, Ike scrofula,
sores, abscesses, etc., but cleanses and
builds up the whole system. All who
havo tried {t say there is more cure
in one bottle of Morley’s Sarsaparilla
and Iron than in six of any other kind.
Sold by agent in every town.
The greatest favorites are not the
people who are always asking favors.
GOVERNOR OF OREGON
Uses Pe-ru-na [0 in His Family
_ For Golds ica and Grip.
a
CAPITOL BUILDING, SALEM, OREGON.
A Letter from the Executive Office of Oregon.
‘The Governor of Oregon is an ar- | tarrh out of fts victims.
dent admirer of Pe-ru-na. He keeps|only cures catarrh, |
it continually in the house. In a re-| Every household shoul
cent letter to Dr, Hartman he says: | with this great _remed
State or Oregon, colds and so forth.
Executive Department, It will be noticed that
‘Salem, May 9, 1898, says he has not had oc
The Pe-ru-na Medicine Co., Columbus, | Pe-ru-na for other ailme
‘Ohio: |son for this is, most <
Dear Sirs:—I have nad occasion to | begin with a cold. Usir
use your Pe-ru-na medicine in my | promptly cure colds, h
family for colds, and it proved to be|famiiy against other a
an excellent remedy. I have not had | is exactly what every o'
occasion to use it for other allments.| the United States shot
‘Yours very truly, ‘W. M. Lord. Pe-ru-na in the house
Any man who wishes perfect health | coughs, colds, la gripy
must be entirely free from catarrh. | climatic affections of wi!
Catarrh ts well-nigh universal; almost | will be no other ailment.
omnipresent, Pe-ru-na Is the only ab- | Such families should. p
solute safeguard known. .A cold is/|sclves with a copy of
‘the beginning of catarrh, To prevent free book, entitled “Wi
colds, to cure colds, is to cheat ca-| Address Dr. Hartman, (
FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER | pasSy Wikies
pierce, eiuoomtemtneanay | PPE wee ea
Pete Pet ochee Mivnie tne genutco ana | fl Sevcing Btachincs
eo cuca) (Ve is
BRE Giese | Pe Bees
BRO" teller Rig | Chega
i a eee | eee cn
ie Ser wes SNE es
Serer easdesia tata ition eacanioce a
SEARS, ROEGUGK & CO.. chicago. | DROPS Ys:
WITHOUT BEE | F888, DE. HW. 3 GREENS LONK. Box B, Atlanta, Ga
a
B ATENTS Bins Aeastption:| W.N.U. WICHITA—NO.--52—19¢
Diy. BLO Be SEPA Renee Whea Answering Advertisements Mind
goceocecs: searceoesoscoorezezoesooonce
8 FREE 3 WINCHESTER Winchester
SHOTGUNS Factory loaded
Our 160.page aa shotgun shells,
iMlustrated cata-@ FACTORY LOADED SHOTOUM SHELLS ® «NEW RIVAL,”
logue. ‘he winning combination ia the feld or at @ “LEADER, "and
the tmp. All dealers sell hem “REPEATER”
FREE 3 WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS C0, A til wil prove
tho Wincsizstax Ava., Naw Haven, Coun, @ their superiority,
eeeesooscecse:!
tarrh out of its victims. Pe-ru-na not
only cures catarrh, but prevents.
Every household should be supplied
with this great remedy for coughs,
colds and so forth.
It will be noticed that the Governor
says he has not had occesion to use
Pe-ru-na for other ailments. The rea-
[fon for tha ia, most other ailments
begin with a coid. Using Pe-ru-na to
promptly cure colds, he protects his
famliy against other ailments. This
is exactly what every other family in
the United States should do. Keep
Pe-ru-na in the house. Use it for
coughs, colds, la grippe, and other
climatic affections of winter, and there
will be no other ailments in the house.
Such families should provide them-
selves with a copy of Dr. Hartman's
free book, entitled “Winter Catarrh.”
Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, 0.
ey Wikies a Fos
FAA a rg aa as
i SevringStachinca, Viannm, Grae
R of (bees Bice saree: aot
Fae) Pasi satiaac ie
ges saiaaaaseatce ae
cde ‘Maraess, Sacdien, Wito Fencing
eRe Hema g Wainet
Cee a Premien, Wattn oe Stock
DROPSY osm es
ane sores
fi REWER in
W.N.U.WIGHITA—NO.--52—1900
When Answering Advertisements Kindly
{ Mention This Paper.
Choice ones 8 $ \frac{1}{2} $ lb.
Hand made Lard 8 $ \frac{1}{2} $ lb.
Pork Shoulders 7 $ \frac{1}{2} $ lb.
Whitlock Bros.
If You are Look
Bargains
In New or Second hand Furniture
It will pay you to call
J.R.Evertson 4
See Blakeman
For Your
Christmas Oy
BLUE POINTS A SPECIAL
Looking For
Mains
Furniture and Stoves.
You to call on
452N.Main
man Bros.
Your
s Oysters
A SPECIALTY.
In New or Second hand Furniture and Stoves. It will pay you to call on J.R.Evertson 452N.Main
'Phone 650
WICHITA ENGRAVING
For Plates of all Descrii
Half Tones& Zinc
Designing and Drawing.
Pract
McCOY BRO.
MURPHY & GO
New Music S
Is the place to buy all kinds of String In
Organs,and Sewing Machines. Lowest
507 East Douglas Ave.
GRAVING Co.,
All Descriptions
Zinc Etchings
Practical,Original Experien ce
203 N.Main.
GOFORTH'S
Music Store
Of String Instruments,Pianos,
Lowest prices in the city.
Wichita,Kansas.
WICHITA ENGRAVING Co.,
For Plates of all Descriptions
Half Tones& Zinc Etchings
Designing and Drawing.
Practical,Original Experien ce
McCOY BRO.
203 N.Main,
Is the place to buy all kinds of String Instruments, Pianos, Organs, and Sewing Machines. Lowest prices in the city. 507 East Douglas Ave. Wichita, Kansas.
BRAITSCH'S SHOE STORE
hoe Dealer. PECIALTY. Suitable for both rich and poor. Wichita Business Directory.
The Cash Shoe Dealer
FINE SHOES A PE
Fall and Winter Goods. Prices suitable for
FINE SHOES A PECIALTY.
Fall and Winter Goods. Prices suitable for both rich and poor.
Wichita Business Directory
Barnes & Newcom
Popular Music Hos
Pianos, Organs.Every thing kn
in music. Largest stock to se
from and Lowest Prices
Popular Music House. Pianos,Organs.Every thing known in music. Largest stock to select from and Lowest Prices. Latest Sheet Music and Books.
EYES TESTED FREE OF CHARGE.
W W PEARCE
JEWELER.
138 N.Main St. Wichita, Kas.
Jacob Bissantz,
DEALER IN
HARDWARE, STOVES,
Queensware, Brushes, Toys, Etc.
123 E.Douglas Ave. Wichita.Kas.
For Firs-Class Furnished
The Largest
line,the Lowest prices of
HOLIDAY GOODS at
My Racket,
204 N.Main St.
Senta Claus Headquarters.
(Cut this out for Reference.)
A. SOMMER,
Jeweler & Optician.
316 E.Douglas,
Wichita,Kas
For a Good,First-Class Shave GO TO
City Meat Market
Gus Suhm,Prop. 1028 E.Douglas.
Nevin's
Has the Finest Candies & Cakes.
'Phone 152 for Ice Cream.
Dunn & Dunn,
L0w Price Grocers.
728 N.Main st. Wichita,Kas.
H.C.Dunbar
UNDERTAKER
235 N Main St
'Phones
Office 308 Residence 362
---
Hand made Sausage 81c lb.
Fresh Side meat 81c lb.
Good Oysters 25c, Qt.
222 E.Douglas.
Barnes & Newcomb
ROOMS
Mrs V.Matthews 414 N.Water street.
Fisher's shop
Up to Date Hair Cut& Shampoos.
6381 E.Douglass Ave.,
Burl Fisher.Prop.
WANTED. 10,001 men, women,
and children to read The Wichita
Searchlight Only $1.00 per year.
Our Fall Styles.
Our Fall and Winter Stock of Imported and Domestic Woolens is complete and we can save you from 10 per cent np in fine Tailor Made Suits. Coats and Trousers.
First-Class workmanship,perfect fit and style absolutely guaranteed.
The PEERLESS
TAILOR & FURNISHER.
508 E Douglass Ave., Phone 511
120 E.Douglas
Trade at FULTON's-It pays. Clothin g,Hats&FurniShing Goods
C.R.Fulton
Wichita's Greates
For cheap Hardware, Stoves, Se
nition go to— The Wichi
H.C.Kendrick,
Pure DrugsLo
Miller & Hull,
Greatest Clothing Store. ...
Stoves, Sewing Machines, Guns and ammunition
Wichita Hardware Co., 223 E.Douglas.
S.W. Cor.Doug. & Lawrence
drugsLow Prices. —
Professional.
Dr.Claude G. Baker,
Wichita,
For cheap Hardware, Stoves, Sewing Machines, Guns and ammunition go to— The Wichita Hardware Co., 223 E.Douglas.
H.C.Kendrick, S.W. Cor.Doug. & Lawrence
Pure DrugsLow Prices.
Fine assortment of Holiday Furnishings for Gentlmen 152 N. Main.
When in need of Groceries do not forget that you can always get the Best at the Lowest prices at
I am after U For A Cus tomer.
If good goods and light prices will Do It.
ita,Kas. WN Miller,
W.D.Carney
600 E.Douglas, Wichita,Kas.
DEPARTMENT
Full of fine shoe and at money saving prices is what we call your attention to.Did you ever wear a Smith-Wallace shoe? If not, you hardly know what comfort is in the shoe line. Not comfort alone but wearing quality as well, is what those shoes are known for. You don't pay fancy store prices with us.We are able to buy at a bargain, and we give you the advantage.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By
KANSAS
SEMI-CENTENNIAL
EXPOSITION
TOPEKA
1904
Power of C. P. Huntington.
In buying out his associates in the Southern Pacific, Collis P. Huntington becomes sole and individual owner, manager and controller of a vast transportation system, embracing 7,600 miles of railroad, ferries, terminals, river and ocean lines extending from Portland, Ore., through California, to New Orleans, and representing $350,000,000 of securities and nearly $60,000,000 of annual gross earnings.
CONCERT.
e A.M.E.church.
night,Jan.1st.190l.
c. Come every body
WE WISH TO MAKE YOU A PRESENT
OF A VOLUME OF
"The Story of My Life and Work,"
BY BOOKER T. WABHINGTON,
Principal of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
and Recognized Leader of the Negro Race.
GRAND C
at the A.I
Tnesday night
Admission l0c.
GRAND CONCERT. at the A.M.E.church. Tnesday night,Jan.1St.190l. Admission 10c. Come every body
This valuable work is published in one large volume of over 400 pages, and beautifully illustrated with more than 50 original drawings and photo-engravings — size 6 by 8½ inches.
SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS. We want you to write us your name and address for the purpose of introducing it in your community. We also want agents in every county and district in the country to sell your work to each town. Write new and be sure to add one. Address:
Volcano or Coseguria
The most noted volcano in Nicaragua is Coseguria, which, after a long series of earthquakes along the Andes mountains and throughout the Central American states, in June, 1835, broke into violent eruption, scattering ashes over 1,500 miles of country.
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A SHOE
J. B.
DENTALPARLORS.
Up-Stairs Next to Eagle Office.
Dr E.Harrison,
Physician and Surgeon
138 North Main st.
Wichita, ..... Kansas
Attorney at Law.
NOTARY PUBLIC
Practices in all the Courts of
Kansas and Missouri.
No.239 N.Main street.
Wichita. ..... Kans.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
A. G. MUELLER
UNDERTAKER
AND
EMBALMER.
OFFICE PHONE 325
RES.PHONE 385
213 N.MAIN ST. WICHITA, KANS
TAKEN FROM LIFE:
This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinky hair appear as shown on fallout paintings. It proves to be a great hair pomade and makes it grow. Sold over 40 years and used by thousands. It is the first preparation ever sold for queen. It was the first preparation ever sold for queen. Get the Original Ozized Ox Marshmallow as the genuine never fails to keep the hair pliable and the hair soft. It is the greatest gentlemen. Meganly perfumed. The great advantage of this wonderful pomade is that by its Owing to its superior and lasting quality it is the economic benefit of preparing it to prepare it a preparation equal to a preparation with every bottle. Only 50 cents. Sold by Money Order for 5 bottles, express paid. Write your name and address plainly to
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.,
76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Litteracy in Romania.
Roumania would appear to be the most illiterate country in Europe. The last census shows that, in a population of nearly 6,000,000, nearly 4,000,000 can neither read nor write, and that only a little over 1,000,000 have any education at all.
Joe Stewart's Meat Market,
Headquarters For
All Kinds of First-Class Meat. Game and Poultry.
Joe Stewart. Prop. 239 N.Main St.
CHRISTMAS CANDIES
A specialty
A large assortment from the Cheapest to the Highest price.
Every thing our own make.
BISSANTZ
306 East Douglas. 'Phone 98.
Kansas Steam Laundry.
Opposite the Post Office.
The largest and most complete Laundry in the State.
....Clothes Cleaned and Pressed.....
All work guaranteed to be First - Class.
Cone & Cornell, Prop. Telephone 195.
Kansas Steam Laundry.
Opposite the Post Office.
The largest and most complete Laundry in the State.
....Clothes Cleaned and Pressed.....
All work guaranteed to be First - Class.
Cone & Cornell,Prop. Telephone 195.
REMEMBER
when in need of C FURNISHING Go the old reliable Star C Sign of Big Star, 117 E.Douglas ave.,
when in need of CLOTHING,HATS FURNISHING Goods,not to forget the old reliable Star Clothing House. Sign Of Big Star, Robt.Jacks, 117 E.Douglas ave., Man'g'r.
J.P.Massey,
SHOE-M
Second Hand Shoes Bought on
337 North Main st.....
CYCLE
Headquai
Holiday
224 E.Do
SHOE-MAKER.
Second Hand Shoes Bought & Sold. General Repairing.
339 North Main st.... Wichita,Kansas.
Headquarters For Holiday Goods. 224 E.Douglas Ave
I.L.Squire,
DEALER IN
Groceries, Flour & Feed.
Brooms at Wholesale
We have added a
New Meat Market
Under supervision of Litzenberg.
320 N.Main St.
J.H.WILDIN,
Ice Cream and Confectionery,
OYSTERS IN SEASON.
320 E.Douglas, Wichita,Kas
FAVORITE
MEAT MARKET,
W.H.Kelchner,Prop.
131 N. Main,
'Phone 294
T.W.Gill,
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
Office open day and night.
Office 327 E.Douglas Phone 182
Residence 241 N Emporia Phone 250
SANTA FE RESTAURANT.
Meals Ike at all hours.
Week board $2.50.
Calvin Quinn, Prop.
702 East Donglas Ave.
Banner Meat Market
504 East Douglas Ave.
Is the place to buy your
Frosh,Salt & Smoked Meats.
The Best always on hand.
Joe Dawson,Proprietor.
306 East Douglas.
'Phore 98.
B.F.McLean,
Lumber Dealer
Wichita,Kansas.
Yards at
Wichita,Kas.,Clearwater,Kas.,Peck
Kas.,Cheney,Kas,
Choiee Candies,
Pure, Sweet and cheap.
Fresh Every Day.
Wholesale prices to Sunday school
children. Come and see me before
buying.
Hagin Candy Bazar.
152 N.Main.
Peerless
when in need of a good Shave,
or Hair Cut.
344 North Main street
Tailor Made Suits, Pants, Coats and
Vests of J.A.Robinson, 807 N.
Wichita street. He is the only Colord man in the city who can furnish you in High Grade, Tailor
Made Clothing. Give him your next order. Remember the name.
J.A.Robinson, 807 N. Wichita st.