Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, January 9, 1904
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT
outhern Black Men and Crime
5TH YEAR.
for more than a quarter of a jury there has been a con-
tray to blacken the character the southern black man by the
tern white people. The blacking of his character has been
he to render him odious to the
ite people of the north. And is rendering him odious at the
th to better to undo the work
reconstruction, the better to
drive him of the right to vote.
southern newspapers and south
agents of the associated press
he dished up every morning for
only a generation sensational
parts of his misdeeds, of things
which he has only been accus-
He has been hunted down by
us on suspicion only and done
he! He has been shot, he
been hung, he has been tor-
he has been burned to death
account of crimes imputed to
merely, but not proven.
over the south he does not live under a government of its but of mobs, who hate him no other race was ever hated on the face of the earth. has been killed on suspicion of being a white man's horse, for ing imputent to white people, attempting to shield the honif his wife and daughter, for ing to hold office under the national government, teaching a red school, for stealing bibles asserting his rights as a citizen of the United States.
he has been represented as a good-for-nothing vagabond, occupied his days basking in not southern sun, and nights hine chicken roosts, as a 'burpurate' who puts in jeopardy honor of southern woe, who goes about the land in he is not stealing chickens, ing white women and chil- and committing on their per the 'usual crime'. Nothing been too bad to do for him. try lie which has been told in and on earth has been told the yellpw journals of the try against him. And where is concerned ne earlly all the spapers of the land are yel-journals:
ere is a real case of calling a bad name and killing him. used of so many atrociouses never committed by him, wonderful that this poored man should now and then mit some of the very crimes which he has been accused?
e and cry, a wicked, an inal false and wicked hue and has been raised against him the despoiler of white women children, is it uneer the cirstances surprising that oceally some white woman or does actually fall a victim? No such hue and cry were against him before the war during that long period is a single instance of such a recorded against him. No hue and cry is raised against by the white women of the teach among his homes, let who can point to a solitary tuple of one of those white hers from the north who has
been criminally assaulted by him, or who has been insulted by so much as an indecent proposal from him.
Is it a matter for exclamations of surprise and horror that this much malinned black man of the south, whose house is in constant danger from white libertines, whose wives and daughters are the objects of constant obscene and lascivious proposals on the part of the white rakes who marry white women and yet live in open concubinage with black ones at the same time. it is matter for exclamation of surprise and horror, we ask, that this weak and ignorant black man should occasionally take it into his head to imitate the vices of white men by discovering occasionally a "coveted desire for the white woman" of the south? Be fair, white men, if history is philosophy teaching by example, what then is crime in our every day life? What, pray, is the social evil of the south among woite men teaching to black men? Do you really wish, white women of the south, to protect your homes from the lusts of black men, then, do what? in you lies to render the homes of black women safe from the immoral invasion of your father, brothers, your husbands and sons. When the homes of the black women of the south are secure from the attack of the great majority of white men, the homes of the white women of the south will be equally secure from the attacks of an insignificant minority of the black men.
Remember that the danger to your homes arises from the unbridled lust of not more than 5-100 of the black men of the south, whereas the homes of black women are threatened by the unbridled lust of about 95-100 of the white men of the south. Get under control this large and dangerous class of white men who have a "coveted desire" for black women, and you will get under control very easily the small and dangerous class of black men who have a "covetei desire" for white women.—The Guardian, Boston, Mass.
SEARCHLIGHT $1. Per Year Send in your subscription today.
Country Place Is Gold.
Country Place is GOLD.
Cyrus W. Field's country place,
Ardsley, overlooking the Hudson river,
has been sold for $75,000. Many of
the most distinguished men of the nation
have been entertained there.
President Ellot declares that women should never attempt to put the shot. He is wasting time. The need of the hour is a warning against throwing the hammer.
Shaft to First Volunteer.
A statue of Col. Josias R. King of St. Paul, said to be the first volunteer in the civil war, surmounts the monument in Summit park, St. Paul.
Average American Wealth.
The average wealth for the general population of the United States is $1,236; that of the Osage Indians is $11,500 per capita.
WICHITA, KANSAS, JAN. 9, 1904.
---
Remember the place--Market at the Gate of Dold's Packing House.
TO BUILD UP YOUR LOCAL PATER.
Give public spirit to it. Take it home with you.
Tell your friends about it.
Bring your job work to it.
Remember it is your paper.
Bring your news items to it.
Try to induce others to take it.
When strangers come to town welcome them to it.
Don't call your own paper old, fraud and imposter.
Assiet your paper in doing the most good for the most people.
Build up your papers, churches and your schools. Look ahead of self when the interest of your paper is involved. Again, don't forget your local paper which is ever striving for the betterment of the town and its people.
KILLED BY A HORSE.—The five-year-old son of Ed Carlisle, of Arkansas City, was kicked to death by the family horse. The horse kicked at a dog, the full force of the blow striking the boy's head, causing instant death.
WELLINGTON BONDS.—A city election at Wellington upon issuing $134,000 in bonds brought out 524 votes for the bonds and 133 against. They are for three purposes: one of $15,000 for prospecting for gas, one of $30,000 for an electric light plant, and $89,000 for water service.
NEW TELEPHONE.—The Missouri & Kansas Telephone company are stringing a new copper circuit from Wellington to Harper to be used as a through circuit for their toll lines in Western Kansas and Oklahoma.
KANSAR GIRLS TAERE.—Jennie Colladay wrote to her father in Hutchinson that she would attend the fatal matinee at the Iroquois theater with Bertha and Nellie Flodine, also of Hutchinson. Telegrams to the three girls, who were attending school in Chicago, brought no responses.
FOUR IN JAIL.—Walter Jones is confined in jail at El Dorado pending an investigation of the mysterious murder of his brother William near Leon. This makes four persons that are being held in connection with the murder.
CO-OPERATIVE LAUNDRY.—A Topeka laundry has just paid its employees the regular annual dividend, amounting this year to about six weeks' full pay.
ABATED TAXES.—The total amount of the abatement of taxes for Shawnee county on account of the flood was $1,473. These are the figures which were given out by the county clerk.
INSANE MOVED.—Shawnee county is removing the insane from the Bedwell private asylum. The county has been paying $3 per week while the state allows the county $2 for their care.
CUT THEM OUT.
The following is a list of people you want to miss:
The man who "buts in."
The man who "knocks."
The man who always growls.
The man with the "hot air."
The man with an ax to grind.
The man with a woe to spring.
The man with a fault to find.
The man with a song to sing.
The man who forever Brags.
The man who is all self made.
The man with an ancient joke.
The man with the brightest
kip.
The man who can do it better.
The man who never advertises.
The man who never reads the
newspapers.
The man who says advertising
don't pay. - Checcta Enquirer.
Farming Mexico.
About 20 per cent of the agricultural implements and tools used in Mexico are modern; the other 80 per cent are on the crudest and most primitive type. Only the large farmers or haciendados employ modern agricultural implements, and those only within comparatively recent years.
775 ENGINEES.—Seven hundred and seventy-five engines were handled at the Missouri Pacific yards in Wiehita during December. The employees are kept on the run continuously at the yards.
Sixty-sixth REPORT.—The state printer has completed the sixty-sixth Kansas supreme court report. The volume begins with the January session 1903, and includes the record of all cases decided prior to the May session, 1903, and not heretofore reported.
WITH A LOCAL CIRCUIT.—The Missouri & Kansas Telephone company has connected the Ninnescah Valley Telephone company's system with their toll line at Belle Plaine. The Ninnescah Valley Telephone company have rural lines to Peck and Riverdale.
BOYS ATTEMPT MURDER.—Joe Thompson and Frank Harris, two young Hutchinson men, are in jail charged with aotempting to kill Simon Nusbaum, nine miles south of town. The boys went hunting and shot some of Nusbaum's chickens, and when he remonstrated with them they shot at him with a shotgun, barely missing him.
PRISONERS' PRESENTS.—Of the 1,040 prisoners in the federal prison at Leavenworth, 1,000 of them received Christmas presents by mail.
Sixty YEARS MARRIED—Mr. and Mrs. John Lester, of Ottawa, have celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary. The couple were married in Eastern New York on December 28, 1843, and have been residents of Ottawa for thirty-five years. Mr. Lester has been an active member of the Masonic lodge for more than sixty years and is the oldest Mason in Franklin county. B. & L. MEETING.—There will be a meeting of local building and loan secretaries and others interested in that line, at Topeka January 28, 1904.
OUR WORLD'S FAIR OFFER.
Elswhere in our paper we offer a free trip to the big World's Fair which will be held in St. Louis, Mo., this year.
Thir contest is open to any and all who may wish to enter. We are prompted to open this Worlds Fair contest in order to select someone to send to the Fair and at the close of this contest we will carry out to the very letter terms of our agreement. To the one sending in the most paid up yearly subscribers (not less than 75) we will pay their way to St. Louis. Mr., and return and their board and lodging for one week and admission to the fair, once each day. From the time the winner leaves his or her home to the time they return from the Fair his or her railroad fare, board and lodging will be paid by the Searchlight. The railroad tickets will be good for fifteen (15) days. The first seven (7) days of the fifteen will at our expense, but the person going can remain another week if they so desire. As any one can easily see the whole fair in good shape in one week, our offer only covers one week. This is a chance for some one to see the greatest Fair and the greatest world's exhibits ever collected by man. It is agreed by all that the present generation of humanity will never witness again such a stupendous undertaking by the hand of man as the one that can be seen at St-Louis this year. It will be worth a life of study and travel to witness the many marvelous and progressive exhibits from all parts of the world as will be shown in St, Louis at this greatest of great fairs.
Realizing that many would like to have an opportunity to see this great exposition we have made it possible for some energetic girl or boy, man or woman to see this wonderful display for practically nothing. By a little work on your part the prize is easily won. Just think of what an easy offer we make you—only seventy-five of your neighbors and friends to help you will do the work. We are not making this offer from a point of profit, but simply to select a representative. We intend to see to it that whoever may represent the Searchlight at the World's Fair in St. Louis will not have to take the back seat for any—ths best of everything that money can buy. We want to see who really would like to see this unparalleled wonderful Fair free of any cost for one solid week. Send in your name and begin to work to-day. The contest will be a heated and very interesting one in every respect the prize is worthy of the attempt to win.
MARCH 8TH.
It has been decided to hold the Republic in Congress 1 Convention a Wichita on March 8th Congressman Victor Murdock is endorsed for re-nomination.
" UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL. "
NO 33
Rev. Robert Collyer's reasons for his long life omits the principal one: Get yourself born healthy.
If you drink liquor on the isthmus you will not live a year; if you drink water you may survive for two weeks.
Booker Washington advises his race not to wear gaudy clothes. But isn't Mr. Washington getting rather exacting?
Nobody has yet suggested to boil the beer in the hope of heading off the germs that lurk in the stuff we drink.
Sir Thomas Lipton continues to talk about "the adorable American girl." But why doesn't Sir Thomas "make good?"
A whole week gone by and no massacres or elopements among Austrian royalty. But it is nearly the dead of winter.
The life prisoner who committed suicide down in Maine adopted the most effective means of shortening his sentence.
A Frenchman may pronounce "rut" "root" in Beirut, but you will never get any considerable number of Americans to do it.
In selecting cigars for your husband, fair reader, remember that the better the cigar the better it will keep bugs off the plants.
The world is overloaded with people who were just going to do something when somebody else got in ahead of them.
The star in "The Best of Friends" is suing her husband for divorce. In this case the play and not the name must be the thing.
Entomologists say that the boll weevil can jump twenty yards. It seems to be a sort of cross between the grasshopper and the flea.
If the novelists had any real spirit they would write a novel in which the heroine was named Abby Spruggs, instead of Violet Tremaine.
Cotton raisers of Texas are to hold another boll weevil convention. The boll weevils have held theirs and express a strong hope of carrying the state.
As Maine editors and fishermen always tell the truth, it is an established fact that a cod caught off Kittery Point had a six-pound flatiron in its midst.
The estimated population of the world is 1,547,423,000, and yet you occasionally hear a young man say that there's only one girl in the world for him.
It is stated that John Wanamaker "began life without a dollar in his pocket." There is also ground for the belief John began life without even a pocket.
The irritated and exasperated Japanese are now calling Russia "rokoku" and one doesn't need to know Japanese to see that it doesn't mean "you old darling."
Budd Doble says Lou Dillon will trot in 1:55 or less next season. If Oliver Wendell Holmes were still alive he would probably say Budd is talking through his nose.
The Toronto World warns Uncle Sam that in time Canada may think seriously of forbicly annexing territory stolen from her by the United States. This is alarming.
Marie Corelli has been awarded damages of half a cent in her libel suit against an English editor. As a matter of simple fairness Marie ought to use the money for advertising purposes.
Prof. Langley wants the world to understand that he hasn't been crushed, either by his bad luck with his aerodrome or by the newspapers. Here's hoping that he'll fly—by proxy—this time.
The thoughtful Burlington Hawkeye counsels its Sunday readers to "avoid pessimism in prayer." No matter how down-hearted you may be, don't give the Almighty any inking of your real feelings.
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Kansas, as Second-Class
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Tth Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of any per son which may appear in this paper, will be gladly corrected if brought to the Editor.
"To Live and Let Live," is OUR Motto.
Secret Societies.
In this era of the twentieth century it seems that we have, in a manner, lost sight of the main purposes for which secret societies were created among men. From the foundation of the world down to the present era secret societies had for their main object the solidifying of the mystic tie which bound man to man. In societies men were placed on an equal footing. Kings princes and potentates have only such rights and privileges as any other within the fold of secrecy—that is true today, if not wholly placed into practice.
In those days a member of secrecy was bound to his brother even unto death. In them it was a fraternal and brotherly consideration and a man in secrecy was protected. There was no such thing as a political combination in societies and spite work to carry out the evil designs of any one or two men, but all was in harmony within the realm of brotherhood, and may we add that it is just as impossible to nake a success of a secret society today where one or two men dominate for malice and spite work as it was in the days of old. Every secret society that may hope to rise above the wave of clamor and distrust must eradicate this 20th century evil—the "society boss" and the "spite worker." It may seem at first that all is in brightest sunshine, but the cloud of unrest will rise, and destruction is the result. Politics and personalities have no place within te sacred walls of a secret society and whenever and wherever it is tolerated prosperity cannot long linger. Such a society must turn back and read the rules which bear inspection but no alteration.
Persecutions of mankind belong to the vile and unitiated, bul not to those whose lessons are otherwise taught. Here and there you find the remnant of society scattered and torn and when the real facts are learned, the cause is found to be politics, persecutions, malice and spite work
have stealthily crept it. In this century societies are to be judged as individuals—by its misdeeds and by its good deeds for humanity.
Next Monday morning at 9 a.m. Judge Thos. C. Wilson will become district judge, taking the place to be made vacant by the expiration of the term of Judge D. M. Dale.
AT REST
JOHN WESLEY HALL IS DEAD BE DIED THURSDAY AFTERNOON After lingering for more than two weeks in intense pain at the Wichita Hospital suffering almost death itself, John W. Hall died on Thursday afternoon at about 1 o'c.
He had stood the dreadful and heart-sendering ordeal manfully; and many times since he had received the fatal injury the loving ones who eagerly watched at his bedside caught the move of every muse, and hoped that each move was a sign of some improvement. But alas!—fate had decreed that he should not get well and fate won. Time went on and as it flew, so did the eventuated life of that son, husband, father, brother and friend, John Wesley Hall, ebbing away soon to rest among those whom sorrow is unknown. Could we convey to th mind of others the worth of this one man as it was, then we should be satisfied, but we, alas! find words pen, pencil or ink inadequate to properly convey. He was a man, full of friendship, true as steel and worthy the same of friend. Shall we see him more, let us hope. Truly has it been said "man born of woman is of few days and full of trouble; he springeth up like a flower and is soon cut down."
In the fullness of his manhood, yes, in the day when seemed it was brightest, with the thought of a dear wife and sweet children and multitude of warm friends to cherish his mind and spur him on to higher and nobler aims in life—what! see the ghasly monster FATE as she plucks him and ere long he is no more. Manhood lost, wife, children and friends are left to mourn and wonder how soon he went. It seems but yesterday when his pleasing voice and familiar smile mingled with ours and his friends. Can it be true? Were we to write, write, write, we could more write of this friend who was like a brother.
With more than 22 years of close and intimate acquaintance who knew him better than we? who admired him more? None! but he is gone.
We can but extend to the bereaved wife, children, brothers and relatives our most sincere and certainly our heartfelt sympathies. We feel with them their loss.
BIOGRAPHICAL.
John Wesley Halt was born in Giles county, Tenn., March 5th, 1865. He lived there till about 22 years of age when he moved to Ft. Scott, Bourbon county, Kansas. In Ft. Scott he built up a large acquaintance where he was well known and liked by all, white and black. Feb. 26, 1890, he was married to Miss Sabie Parks by Rev. James W. Wilson in Ft. Scott. In 1892 he began work for the Missouri Pacific railway and remained its their employ till the time of his death. He leaves a wife, three children Bette, May, Mahon and three brothers and hosts of relatives and friends.
His body was taken to Ft. Scott, Friday, New Year day, by his dear wife and his brother Andrew Hall where it was tenderly land in its astre place. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Jas. W. Wilson at Ft. Scott in the same church where Rev. Wilson married them Feb. 26, 1890.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to very appreciatively thank the many friends who so willingly assisted me during the recent illness and death of my beloved husband I further wish to thank those who so kindly gave floral offerings Thanking all, I am Mrs. Jno. W. Hall.
Locals and Personals
Leap Year Party
The ladies' Auxiliary Board of the A. M. E. church will give a leap year party at the residence of Mrs. Emma Jones, 522 North Water st., on next Tuesday night, Jan 12th. Any lady bringing her own husband will be fined ten cents. An interesting program will be rendered. Mrs. Fannie Baker, Pres. Mrs. Josie Hathman, Sec.
TRY THE
BLUE SEAL
CIGAR
SOLD EVERYWHERE
INSTALLED OFFICERS.
Home of the West lodge No. 2609
held their quarterly installation of
officers last Tuesday evening. The
following officers were installed:
L. H. White, N. G.
Thos. Glover, N. F.
Arthur Webster, P. N. F.
Isaac Knox, Guardian.
Geo. Wallace, E. S.
Jas. L Harper, P. S.
Dan Furguson, V. G.
J. Williams Chaplain.
E. F. Thomas, Treas.
Robt. Braden, Advocate.
Wm. Harvey, Warden.
Dan Pryor, R, S. V. G.
D. Scottemeyer, R. S. N. G.
The Merchants who appreciate the trade of the colored people ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER. PATRONIZE THEM.
Messrs. E. Thaddeus Summytt and Monroe Street left the city on Monday. Mr. Street goes to St. Louis where he has a position as cook under his brother who is chef at one of the large St Louis hotels, while Mr. Summytt went to Kansas City where he will spend several days visiting. The boys miss both. Mr. Summytt will return in a few days.
Read about our big World's Fair offer. Now is the time to enter the contest. The contest is an easy one and will be hotly contested. Sehd in your name.
Arkansas Valley lodge No. 21, A. F. & A. M. met Tuesday night with Warshipful Joseph Fines presiding. There was a good attendance.
The city hall is undergoing a complete repainting and remodeling. The work is under the direction of officers A. M. Sutton and Lew Aspey. When completed it will present a new and strictly up-to-date appearance. Mr. Sutton is an expert painter and has that part of the work in charge.
The January term of the District Court will convene Monday morning at 9 a.m. Judge Thomas C. Wilson will begin his term as judge filling the place of Judge D. M. Dale who retires from the bench after eight years incumbency. Judge Dale leaves the bench with the whole bar of Sedgwick county as his stunch friend. The whole bar and court attaches had become much attached to Judge Dale and wish him abundant prosperity and a long and happy life.
J. E. ALLEN,
Successor to
A. M. Richards,
MONEY TO LOAN
ON
CHATTELS
151 N. MAIN WICHITA
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E. E. Enoch assumes the office of probate judge Monday morning. Captain J. B. Fishback and Ralph Millspaugh go in as deputies to Judge Enoch.
Wm. Thomas returned last week from the country where he did muen work.
A revival meeting has been begun at the 2nd Baptist church.
W. S. HENRION
DRUGGIST
501 N. Main St.
Wichita, Kans.
The leap-year party to be given at Mrs. Emma Jones Tuesday night promises to be an event of events.
The cake-walk at Dnnbas ball Monday night was a grand success. The first prize was won by Mr. Bethel Gibson and Miss Midge Allen and the second prize was won by Geo. Starnes and Miss Grace Johnson.
Mrs. J. McDougal is still bothered with a slight neryous fright which she received some weeks ago.
Mrs. Mattie Hill has been somewhat indisposed since Sunday.
J. S. Turner made a grip to Newton Satin day to visit his friend Geo Payne. He had a royal time and returned Monday morning feeling much refreshed by his trip.
Read our offer for a trip to the big St. Louis World's Fair. Enter early in the race,
Mrs. Masian Brown of Joplin, Mo., is in the city the guest of Mrs. Lee Anderson. She will spend a few days visiting here.
Mrs. Lee Anderson spent the holidays in Joplin, Mo.
Little Malon Hall is quite sick at his home 518 Water st. suffering f.om bronchitis.
SHOT IN A DIVE
A big shooting scrape took place in the notorious dive run by some colored men at 338 N. Main street, Tuesday night of this week. When the smoke had cleared away it was found that Will Battey was quite seriously and probably fatally shot. Much mystery surrounds the shooting and the true facts have not yet been learned. Tom Davy is under arrest charged with the deed but facts as to this has not been learned.
Since this dive was permitted to open a few weeks ago it said to have been the scene of numerous brawls and many fights; and it is said to have cropped out to be one of the most notorious dens in Kansas. Facts as to the cause of the shooting cannot be learned; all kinds of causes are assigned; some say it originated over a poker game, some say over a crap game, some say over a card game and others say over some woman so the real cause will probably have to be guessed at; however the cause might be the result is certainly bad. The colored people are justly wrought up over such a place being permitted in the main part of city as this den is.
Read our World's Fair contest offer.
FINE TRIP.
Eugene Smith made a pleasure trip to Kansas City Saturday with his friend Cal Cox. He found everything moving in fine shape. He says the colored people are coming to the front in that city in the way of securing homes and transacting business. He had a jovial good time with the boys and returned home Monday.
St. Louis, Mo.
1904
Beginning with this issue of T
SEARCHLIGHT, January 2nd 1904, we open a S
cription Contest and to the Winner in the
Contest we will furnish FREE TRANSP
TATION to St. Louis, Mo., and return, FRE
ADMISSION to the Big World's Fair and
(2) days Board and Lodging-ABSOLUTELY FRE
With this issue of THE
1904, we open a Sub
the Winner in this
FREE TRANSPOR-
, and return, FREE
World's Fair and two
g-ABSOLUTELY FREE!!
Beginning with this issue of THE SEARCHLIGHT, January 2nd 1904, we open a Subscription Contest and to the Winner in this Contest we will furnish FREE TRANSPORTATION to St. Louis, Mo., and return, FREE ADMISSION to the Big World's Fair and two (2) days Board and Lodging ABSOLUTELY FREE!!
-The Chance Of A Lifetime-
The conditions of this Contest are easy and everyone Contest. A positive GO. number of Paid Up Sub-Great Wichita Searchlight may offer.
Wichita, Sedgwick county miles of Wichita.
10 miles and within a les, we offer the same less than 100 on) is the date and time this greatest of Contests Wichita to St. Louis will Should the winner live the fare to Wichita.
Help You Win
Must Register
Coupon
is one of the World's les.
and bring or send it to US.
great and small can enter this Contest. A position
The one securing the greatest number of Paid
scribers (not less than 75) to The Great Wichita
will be furnished this extraordinary offer.
These condition are maintain in Wichita, Sedgwick
and within a radius of 100 miles of Wichita.
Outside of a radius of 100 miles and within
radius of 300 miles, we offer the same
conditions only not less than 100
June 15th. '04, (at noon) is the date and
when this greatest of Contestants will CLOSE; the start from Wichita to St. Louis
Wednesday, June 22nd. 1904. Should the winner
outside of Wichita we pay the fare to Wichita
Get Your Friends To Help You W
All Contestants Must Re
Registration Coupon
Editor Searchlight:
Please enter my name as one of the World
Fair Prize Trip Contestants.
Name ...
Residence......
Town or City......
State or Territory......
Fill out the above Coupon and bring or send
great and small can enter this Contest. A positive GO. The one securing the greatest number of Paid Up Subscribers ( not less than 75 ) to The Great Wichita Searchlight will be furnished this extraordinary offer.
These condition are maintain in Wichita, Sedgwick county and within a radius of 100 miles of Wichita.
Outside of a radius of 100 miles and within a radius of 300 miles, we offer the same conditions only not less than 100
June 15th. '04, (at noon) is the date and time when this greatest of Contests will CLOSE; the start from Wichita to St. Louis will Wednesday, June 22nd. 1904. Should the winner live outside of Wichita we pay the fare to Wichita.
Get Your Friends To Help You Win
Fill out the above Coupon and bring or send it to US.
The Searchlight
year of regular and uninterrupted publication. this entire space of time The Searchlight has new ed an issue. The management owns its own pl in gathering matters of News special attention to news pertaining to the Welfare and Progress Negro Race. Sample Copy FREE!!! Send to-day
ted publication. During searchlight has never missowns its own plant and special attention is given e and Progress of the EE!!! Send to-day.
year of regular and uninterrupted publication. During this entire space of time The Searchlight has never missed an issue. The management owns its own plant and in gathering matters of News special attention is given to news pertaining to the Welfare and Progress of the Negro Race. Sample Copy FREE!!! Send to-day.
For further particulars call on or address,
The Wichita Searchlig
110 N. Main St.
Searchlight,
ain St.
The Wichita Searchlight 110 N. Main St.
10
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Prescriptions Filled With Can
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Easy Conditions
MAKE YOUR SELECTION NOW
Select your FALL and WINTER SUIT, OVERCOATS and TROUSERS at the PEERLESS TAILOR'S. Our stock comprises the latest novelties in FOREIGN and DOMESTIC Woolens. See me before placing your order. The Peerless Tailor 508 E. Douglas Ave.
The Wichita SEARCHLIGHT is now in its 5th
B. F. McLEAN.
LUMBER
YARDS AT
Wichita, Clearwater, Peck,
and Cheney, Kansas.
MYRON A
Groceries, Fruits
and F
815 N- N
LUMBER = DEALER
YARDS AT Phone 134
Wichita, Clearwater, Peck,
and Cheney, Kansas. 408 W. Douglas
MYRON A. DEAN
Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables and Feed. 815 N. MAIN ST
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
TAKEN FROM LIFE
This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinks or curls on the scalp, prevents the hair from curling out or breaking off, cures dandruff and keeps forty years hardened and used by thousands. Warranted harmless. It was the first preparation ever implemented. Get the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow as the genuine never fails to work. It is the best superior and quiet quintessence that healthy, life-like appearance so much desired. A toilet necessity for ladies, gentlemen and elegans. It furnished it the best and most economical. It is not the only hair product with a high quality equal to any full-service with a premium bottle. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists or by a licensed hair salon or by $1.40 for three bottles. We pay all express charges. Send postal or express message, use the name name of this paper when ordering. Write your name and address plainly to
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.,
76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois.
Red Front Racket
The People's Economy Stone.
Sample Shoes
We have just received a large in voice of Men's Work Shoes, Men's Dress Shoes, Ladies and Misses Fine Dress Shoes, Oxford and Slippers, all styles and all kinds
AT WHOLESALE PRICES
You'll find an excellent line of "Colonials" the proper thing andatest fad, in our regular stock, at $2
TAPP BROTHERS & HANSHAW
Phone 257. 255-257 N. Main
USE
IMBODEN
1MP
USE
IMBODEN'S
IMPERIAL
FLOUR AND
BREAKFAST FOOD
—and you will Love good eating.—
AT YOUR GROCER3
IMBODEN MILLING CO.
OTTO WEISS, Agent.
DEALER
Phone 134
408 W. Douglas
A. DEAN
tis, Vegetables
eed.
MAIN ST
101-Both Phones - 101
ILLINOIS
MEAT MARKET
Fresh Salt Meats
J. T. FITZSIMONS. Prop.
Phone 1091 612 E. Douglas
L, S. NAFTSGER, W. R. TUCKER,
President Vice President
J. M. MOORE, Cashier.
The Fourth National Bank,
Capital $200,000.00
Surplus $25,000.00
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
DIRECTORS:
W. R. Tucker, J. M. Moore,
S. B. Amidon, R. L. Holmes,
W. E. Jett, L. S. Naftsger,
O. Z. Smith, C. W. Brown,
B. F. McLean.
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
TRANSACTED
Wichita Kansas
Thompson's Barber Shop
First Class Hair Cut and Shave
Your Patronage Solicited,
Jeff Thompson, Prop.
2431 North Main St.
Miss M. C. Hannibal,
÷FINE÷
MILLINERY
We solicit trabe on the basis of
Quality at the Lowest Prices.
135 N. Main St Wichita, Ks
MEN'S
ERIAL
FLOUR AND
Mrs. W. E. Jones has returned home from her visit to Salina, Kas.. she reports a fine time.
The W. T. V. club gave a swell entertainment last Wednesday evening, all report a swell time.
Mr. Tolbert of Ossawatomie is visiting in the city.
Mrs. W. Keller and daughter Nola have returned home from their visit to Ft. Scott.
Mrs. Blackwell is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Andrew.
Mr. Harry Jones is home from Wichita.
WINFIELD, KANS,
Mr. and Mrs. James Payne, son of Aron Payne arrived last Monday night from Benton county, Mississippi. They will live in the future.
Burel Dorsey, of Chanute, was in the city enroute home from Gurthrle where he spent the holiday.
S. S. Bandy was in Arkansas City last Thursday.
J. O. Fowler and wife spent several days in Arkansas City.
Mrs Carrie Banks and sister Miss Miss Daisy Dodge are visiting their parents in Newkirk, Oklahoma.
Geo. Williams is in Arkansas City visiting home folks.
John Lenox, one of Cowley county's prosperous farmers is in Arkansas City on a visit.
Sol North, the popular porter at the Boo Ton hotel was in the south part of the county last week.
The X-Ray club consisting of about five ladies entertained fifty guests at Aubright hall on Dec. 28.
It was one of the swellest affairs ever witnessed here. The program was begun with a grand march after which a fine lunch was served.
Thos Reeves and wife who spent the holidays with Mr. Reeves parents have returned to the city.
Miss Gertrude Noth is now a subscriber to The Searchlight. All the Winfield people welcome the Searchlight to their homes.
KINGMAN ITEMS.
M. E. Wood and daughter, Vera, [left Wednesday for Coff yville.
Misses Nellie and Florence Bank returned Saurday from Wichit, where they visited friends. They report having had a fine time.
L. Works and Mrs. Pettel, who have been visiting C. E. Floyd, returned to their home in Wellington Tuesday morning Mr. Floyd accompanied them to Wichita.
Mrs. Eli Martin and daughters who have been visiting in Prast, returned home Tuesday morning.
Mrs. M. E. Wood and son Fley and Minnie Floyd went hunting last Thursday. They report a fine time.
Geo. Floyd went to Pratt and spent a few days he returned Tuesday morning.
Fred Banks sold a bunch of fat hogs last week.
PUEBLO ITEMS
Ink has been discovered to be an effective relief in cases of burns. Such being the case of an Austrian girl who got fast and between a pipe of a radiator and wall at Union depot last week.
The home of Rey, and Mrs. W. R. Hardy was made happy over the arrival of a fine baby girl, Tuesday, Dec. 28tn. '03. Mother and laughter are both doing well and the proud father is happy.
Miss Nellie Baker returned to the city last Thursday.
Mrs. Crocket is sick this week.
Little Robt North is recovering from an attack of tonsilitis.
The home of Mrz. H. Rodgers was broken into by burglars one light last week.
The ent-rtainment given by the Masonic lodge at Board of Trade hall w a grand success.
Miss Breckenridge who received a severe tail at the Board of Trade hall last Thursday is recovering.
The business meeting of the Mission Circle met at the parsonage of the 8 h e t Bapt st church.
John Harvey died Thursday at his late residence on N. Mead of quick consumption.
CHURCH DIRECTORY
St. Paul A. M. E.
521 N. Water St.
11 am preaching.
4 pm Sunday school,
7 pm Song Service,
8 pm Preaching.
Rev. P. D. Yochn, Pastor,
Residence 521 N. Water.
New Hope Baptist,
North Mead ave.
11 am Preaching.
1 pm Sunday School.
8 pm Preaching.
Rev M. F. Frazier, Pastor
239 New York ave.
Second Baptist,
521 N. Wichita.
11 am Preaching,
3 pm Sunday School,
8 pm Preaching.
Rev. 8. M. Hall, Pastor
Tabernacle Baptist.
834 N. Water.
11 am Preaching,
1 pm Sunday School.
8 pm Preaching.
Rev. A. II. Mayo, Pastor
M. J. Starnes and Thomas Anderson feel greatly lost since their chums Messrs, E. Thoddeus Summytt and Monroe Street left the city. They have consolation in the fact that Mr. Summytt will soon eturn.
W. A. Wright leeks forward with great expectations for Feb. 29, 1904, when he will have his first birt day in eight years. They come seldon so they are highly appreciated by him. His birthday next month ill be the sixth which he has had since his birth in 1876.
Porter Berry received $7 worth of Christmas presents and $3 in money in his friends.
Joseph Fines received a fine gold watch and chain from his employer as a Xmas present, solid gold at that.
Miss Alice Thompson has recovered.
S. S. Turner left Wednesday for Newton where he will make his future.
Four couple were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pembleton Tuesday day eve among whom were: Mrs. Ida Gordon, Miss Madge Tochum and Mr. Kimberly. A fine time was had.
Mrs. Mary Perry, mother of Porter Perry will be in the city the latter part of this month to pay her son a pleasant visit. Mrs. Perry lives at Lynnville, Tenn.
Richard Fitzpatrick will leave soon for Colorado where he will make his home.
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. White, of 1454 Washington ave., presented their son Elmer with a fine up-to-date piano as a Xmas present. This very appreciable present is given Master White for the very nice progress which he has made in school. It is needless to say that Master Elmer feels proud.
The poultry show has been in progress all the week at 253 N. Many. Many fine fowls are on exhibition among them is several pens of extra fine cockre's, hens and pullets of Mr. O to Weiss. The show is quite a success.
MARCH 9TH.
The Republican state committee met in Topeka Tuesday and decided to hold the Republican State Convention in Wichita on March 9th. This will be a big affair.
J. F. Bellew & Co.,
Real Estate & Imigration Agts
Homes Sold On Installment Plan. Easy Terms.
Western Lands and RangesA Specialty. Dealers in Kansas, Oklahoma and Colorado Farms and Ranch Lakes.
Patronage Solicited-
Office 110 N. Main, wichita, Kansas.
Good Things to Eat
Bread
306East Douglas
J. W.
Lumber
( Successors
GENERAL LU
421 North Main Street
Special Rates
Christmas and N
First Douglas
Phone 196
J. W. MEE
Lumber Co
( Successors to Deal &
GENERAL LUMBER L
Main Street
Rates on A
as and New Y
J. W. METZ
Lumber Company
( Successors to Deal & Trent )
GENERAL LUMBER DEALERS
Special Rates on Account of Christmas and New Year Holidays
MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY
Tickets will be on sale December 24, 25
1904, good to return up to a.d. including
rates FOR THE ROUND TRIP
An open rate of fare and a third for the
ing rate of 50 cents and maximum selling
e on sale December 24, 25
turn up to a d including
THE ROUND TRIP
if fare and a third for the
cents and maximum selling
Tickets will be on sale December 24, 25, and 31 1903, and January 4, 1904, good to return up to and including January 4 1904, at the following rates FOR THE ROUND FRIP
An open rate of fare and a third for the round trip, with minimum selling rate of 50 cents and maximum selling rate of $3.50, between points within a distance of 100 miles. Rate of one fare plus 50c, for the sound trip outside of the 100 miles radius and within 200 miles radius.
E. E. BLECKLEY, T. P. A. I. R. SHERWIN, P. & T. A. Wichita, Kansas; Mo. Pac. Passenger Station, Douglas and Wichita Ste
COAL
ALL KINDS
Low Prices
Good Weights
J. H. TURNER,
533-543 W. Douglas
Phone 496
Homemade Bread, Pies, Cakes and all kinds of Pastries.
Our Home made Candies cannot be equalled anywhere.
They are made fresh every day.
Bissants
WICHTA KANSAS
is 4 hig
i-¢ = Cao
= EINK # b Van
_ AN
AGICUEFER!
How Mustard Robs Wheat.
The plant foods found in the sof!
consists of certain salts or mincrals
as common table salt, saltpeter, etc.
Certain of these salts are abundant
enough in the soil at any one time
to feed the erop for a season or
many seasons. Others, such as salt-
peter (nitric acid) are liberated, be
come available to the plant, or ,arc
rendered soluble, oly gradually—that
is, there may be enough of the salt-
Peter in the soil to Jast a crop only a
few weeks. As it is used, however,
more of this food is renfered soluble
S80 that it can be used by the plant.
We have this process going on in we
sojl during the growing season; the
numus or vegetable substance con-
stantly yields a certain quantity of
the saltpeter and the growing plants
are at the same time using a portion
of this, When the growing crop con-
tains weeds there are two classes of
plants drawing on this food substance.
Nearly all of the weeds begin flower
ing and ripening seeds long before
the wheat or flax or corn begins ma-
turing its seeds. Now, a plant that is
flowering and ripening seeds draws a
greater amount of nutriment or food
from the soil, proportionately, than
does a plant that is merely putting
forth green leaves. The demands of
the mustard or French Weed upon
the soil during June and a part of
July is* greater and more insistent
than an equal amount of wheat or
other crop and its demands must be
first supplied. In other words, the
French Weed or mustard is taking up
the excess of saltpeter as rapidly as
it is formed, leaving no surplus food
to be drawn upon by the wheat or
flax when its time comes to blossom
and produce seed. The case is some-
what similar to a farmer drawing
heavily on his moderate bank account
for a pleasure trip just before he
needs the money to harvest his crop.
‘The weeds draw on the bank account
in the soil for plant food that should
be saved for the whect or other crop.
—L. R Weldros.
Transpiration of Sap.
The leaves gives out not only the
oxygen derived from the éecomposi-
tion of carbonic acid gas taken from
the air and carbonic acid gas pro-
duced in breathing, but also great
quantities of water vapor, says Git-
ford Pinchot im a government bulletin.
The amount of water taken up by
the roots is very much larger than is
required to be combined with carbon
and the earthy constituents in the
leaves. In order that fresh supplies
of earthy constituents in solution may
reach tho leaves rapidly the water al-
réady in them must be got out of the
way. This is effected by transpira-
téen, which is the evaporation of water
from all parts of the tree above
ground, but principally from the
deaves, Even where the bark is very
Mick, 28 on the trunks of old oaks
and chestnuts, transpiration goes on
through the lenticels in the bottoms
of the deep cracks. It sometimes hap-
pens, especially in spring before the
Ieaves come out, that transpiration
gan not get rid of the water from the
roots as fast as it rises and that it
falis in drops from the buds, or later
on even from the leaves themselves,
Millet.
Of the two distinct types of millets,
the foxtails and the cattails, the for
mer is most generally grown because
‘of the better quality of hay secured.
To the foxtails belons the German,
Common, Hungarian, Japanese and
others, all of which make fair yields
wherever corn can be profitably
‘town. Light solfs are to be preferred
‘ng tho drainage should be good, as
tip, thillets aro easily affected by cold
and damp conditions. They should be
planted after all danger of frost, either
in drills or broadcast, preferably the
former method. The usual methods
of cultivating corn will answer for the
millots. The German variety of the
foxtails is the popular variety for
heavy soils and the common for light
soils in Texas. The cattail millets un-
der favorable conditions make a much
langer yield per acre than the foxtails,
but where such conditions exist it 1s
a problem to save the crop.—B. C.
Pittuck.
Sndsae Thtiy Gatteré:
From Farmers’ Review: The lily
requires somewhat different treat-
ment from the narcissus and tulip.
It will have two sets of roots under
proper culture—one from the base
of the bulb and one from the stalk
above the bulb. In order to provide
for the latter, set the bulbs low in the
pot. That is, fill it to about a third its
depth with soll, and then put in your
bulbs, using three ordinary sized ones
to an eight Inch pot. Then just cover
—no more—after which set the pot
away in dark room. When you bring
i to the light, ‘after base roots
ve formed, as the stalk reaches
upward, fill in about it with earth un-
til the pot is full, thus providing for
the proper development and support
of the stalk roots. This is an import-
‘ant item in Ifly culture.
If the ‘aphis or green plant louse
attacks your bulbs, as he often will,
get some sulpho-tobacco soap—any
dealer in plants or bulbs can furnish
it—and use as directed on the can
or wrapper. One or two applications
‘will put the aphides to rout—Eben E.
Rexford.
Bo sure of the effect before wasting
your time In searching for the cause,
D Ver
MnP
(AAD ee
Starved Orchards.
Where trees are growing on goof,
strong soil, and receiye good cultiva-
tion, they will produce good crops of
fruit for several years, perhaps with-
out the application of very much in
the way of fertilizer; but on light and
loamy soils they very scon show lack
of vigor and become stunted. There
are many orchards today that are
starving. When we consider that-or-
chards are seldom planied on a virgin
soll, but In nearly all cases on a soil
that has been crepped to grain, and
from which a large part of the potash
and phosphoric acid has been exhaust-
ed, and that the tree requires materia!
to build up wood tissue and an annual
crop of follage, and, later, of fruit, we
see the necessity of providing food for
the needs of the'iree, Nitrogen is re-
quired for the wood growth, potash for
{rnit, and phosphoric acid for seed.
The most economical way to supply
these elements is by plowing in clover
for nitrogen, and by supplying the oth-
er material by the application of hard
wood ashes. Where the trees are
large, sowing occasionally with rape
and pasturing it off with sheep will
help wonderfully in enriching the soll.
Large trees will not be injured by
sheep. When clover is grown for
fertilizing purposes, never cut it for
hay, but plow it all in when about half
in blossom, for you need humus in
the orchard, and lots of it, Old chip
yards and the cleanings from wood
sheds make a good material for this
purpose, and old rotten pea straw, or
anything that will furnish a humus
will be of benefit. Where ashes can-
not be got, potash in some other form
should be applied, and the phosphoric
acid by means of ground bone, but
these two elements are supplied most
cheaply in the form of ashes. Goad
unleached, hard wood ashes are cheap
for this purpose at from 15 cents to 20
cents per busbel. Forty bushels to an
acre, once in two years, for bearing
trees, with a crop of clover plowed In
once in two years, would be far better
treatment than the best of them are
getting now, and will give on ordinary
soils very good results, Stable ma-
nure is all right, providing you cam
get it, but as a rule the orchards get
very little —G. C, Castov.
The Development of Spraying.
One may explore our literature up
to 1870 in fruitless search of even the
mention of spraying or spraying ma-
chinery, and the nearest that he will
come thereto will be an occasional
mention of the dusting cf plants with
paris green or arsenic mixed with
flour, lime or ashes. The oldest patent
on record for a machine to apply liquid
poisons on a large scale, was the John-
son Spray Machine, patented Decem-
ber 16, 1873, by Judge Jehu W. John-
son of Columbus, Texas. This was
simply a tank mounted on a cart, with
a double acting force pump attached
to the top of the tank. It was about
this time that Mr. Gross of Ripon,
Wis., invented an instrument for
spraying potato vines with a mixture
of paris green and water to destroy
the potato beetle. It was not until
five years later that much was accom-
Plished, and not till 1880 that the mat-
ter of spraying with arsenical poisons
began to attract general attention, and
ever then largely as against tho cot-
ton worm and Colorado potato beetle,
and not as against orchard pests, ex-
cept, perhaps, the canker worm. In
1875, Mr. J. N. Dixon of Oskaloosa,
Towa, in spraying his orchard to de-
stroy canker worms, found in the fall
‘that whore he had applied a solution
‘of arsenic there was no injury from
codlin moth, and we had the first intl-
mation of what could be accomplished
in poisoning the larvae of that insect.
‘The matter was not generally brought
to public attention, however, until
1882, in @ prize essay presented at the
meeting of the Iowa State Horticul-
tural Society for that year. It was
about this time that agricultural ex-
periment stations were established,
and this gave opportunity for investi-
gation and experimentation, which in
turn directed the attention of manu-
facturers of pumps to this new de-
mand for particular machinery. Then
followed the improvement of spraying
machinery and nozzles, and here the
French have helped us out greatly
with their Bordeaux mixture and Ver-
morel nozzle.—Prof. F. M. Webster.
High Breeding Pays.
From the Farmers’ Review: I read
with great pleasure your article in
the November 25 issue on “Dairy
Bulls.” That article struck the right
spot with me. In choosing a herd
bull I selected a grandson of Exile of
St. Lambert, but not till I had milked
and tested some of his get. The re-
sults are that I have some of the
best things in the world. I have
put the price of service by this bull
low enough so that we have obtained
some good calves in this neighbor-
hood. Now, it is no trouble to get a
good price for his service. The
World’s Fair committee selected one
of my cows for the $0-day test, and
the committee said: “Ragsdale, you
have as fine a herd, especially of
young things, as there is in the
world.” That is the result of select:
ing a good dairy bull. That article
headed “Dairy Bulls” is worth money
to any man with a dairy herd.—Clar-
ence: Ragsdale, Proprietor Magic City
Stock Farm, Randolph County, Mis-
sourl, ~
af Gi cess
FEROS wae
OMe | py
ue .
SMA
Smee :
eS eo es are enna eee
From Farmers’ Review: The next
convention of the Mlinois Dairymen’s
Association will be interesting in that
it will call attention to a dairy sec-
tion of the state about which little is
known over the state and country gen-
erally. Dairying in southern Mlinois
bas the incentive to encourage it that
is found in a constantly growing and
already very large demand of the St.
Louis market for dairy products.
This demand has built up the milk
industry along all the lines of rail.
road entering St. Louis from Ilinois.
‘There are three big condensaries in
that section, many plants: engaged in
shipping milk and cream and the but-
termaking factories are rapidly grow-
ing in number. Dairying has brought
prosperity to that section where years
of corn growing hed worn out the
soil, and the success the farmers have
experienced from dairying bas filled
that section with interested dairymen
who are anxious to improve their
methods and increase their knowledge
of dairying.
Because there are so many inter-
ested dairymen in that section who
wish to learn, the state association de-
cided to hold its next convention there
and officers of the association have
every assurance of a large and inter-
esting convention. The meeting will
be held in Greenville, Jan. 5, 6 and 7.
Greenville is the county seat of Bond
county, a county that has been espe-
claily benefited by dairying, and the
benefit is recognized by towns people
as well as by the dairymen them-
selves, Sessions of the convention
will be held in the court house, and
there will be a store room for the dis-
play of dairy and creamety machines
and supplies.
The town has a combined creamery
and condensery and a large conden-
sery, the latter being one of the two
Jarge plants in that section of the
state of the Helvetia Milk Condensing
Company. This plant, built to use
40,000 poynds of milk daily, got 70,000
peitnds In the flush last summer and
is being enlarged to accommodate an
expected supply of 125,000 daily next
summer. The amount of milk re-
ceived by this plant alone gives an
idea of the amount of milk made in
that section and of the importance of
dairying as one of fts industries —
George Caven, secretary Ilinots State
Dairymen’s Association.
Municipal Milk Supply.
Conditions surrounding the milk
trade in American cities are bad
enough, but they appear to be still
worse in England. Most of our cities
have fairly effective laws against the
adulteration of milk and the use of
Preservatives in the same. But in
England the dealers have been al-
lowed to have their own way very
largely, and the result is seen in in-
creased mortality among infants. City
after city in England has taken up
the matter, especially regarding the
sale of milk for infants’ food. Now,
the city of Norwich is attempting to
manage the entire trade in all kinds
of milk. The infant mortality in the
large English towns averages 144 per
1,000, which is considered high. But
in Norwich the rate is 166 per 1,000.
But the people of Norwich have a
further grievance. They say that the
men that have really done the work
of distributing, the employes of the
big milk selling companies, have been
scandalously overworked and under-
paid. This has resulted in poor serv-
{ee to the consumers of milk, as well
as in hardships to the families of the
men actually doing the work. It is
proposed to establish depots for the
Pasteurizing of the milk, and the
payment of living wages to the men
that do the distributing. Many other
cities of England have taken steps in
the matter of either managing or con-
trolling the milk supply. This ts justi-
fled economfcally by the fact that milk
Is more intimately connected with the
health of the people than any other
article of food.
Russia as a Butter-Maker.
‘The Russian government is taking
very decided action in regard to the
buttermaking industry. If the author-
ities named continue to push matters
as eamestly as they are doing at
present it will not be many years be-
fore Denmark will find a powerful in-
fluence at work in an attempt to oust
her from the English butter market.
Russia {s not hesitating to spend her
money freely to gain her end. Begin-
ning with next year the government
will spend 90,500 roubles a year for
extending the dairy interests of Euro-
pean Russia. Siberia is to receive
72,500 roubles a year for the same
purpose. Next year 7,000 roubles are
to be spent in the organizing of butter-
making societies in Western Siberia.
The government is to establish this
coming year special testing labora-
tories for dairy work in European
Russia, and for this work 5,000 rou-
bies have already been appropriated.
The government is taking the right
course in the employing of special but-
ter experts and instructors. These
men, in addition to their other duties,
are organizing special courses of in-
struction in’ dairying. ‘The world is
about to have an illustration of what
a great nation can do when it sets
Itself a commercial task of this kind.
The Russians are evidently deter-
mined to make the most of their great
‘areas of cheap grazing lands,
Soils of light texture, especially if
somewhat calcareous, suit all root
crops, particularly those of rapid
growth, like carrots.
HOUCK
Hardware Store
‘The place to buy Good
Cook Stoves and Heat
ing Stoves at the
: Lowest Cash Prices
16 East Dongias Ave.
eeevevececeveccoooonceooss
PEERLESS
STEAM
LAUNDRY :
Best Laundry In The City
7 gee Phone 232
SELOVER & SONS, Props.
245-247 North Market St
vv ww YY Se san
ESE TSE EO SN STS RII
Ee RE BE Ey
JOB PRINTING
We Print
i INEM Tee IN, G
LETTER HEADS
NOTE HEADS
DNVELOPES
BUSINESS CARDS
CALLING CARDS
STATEMENTS
BILL HEADS !
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Janner Mills
¢ A /
Banner Mills
+ CUSTOM GRINDING +
seseenes A Specialty ...ce00e-
ALL KINDS OF COAL & FEED
PHOENISCH BROS, PROPS.
622 N. Main St. Phone 580
When in us7 of Groceries
to not forget that you can
always get the Best at the
Lowest prices t
KERNAN‘S
6108 B.Dow~'e-- Aye. "Phone 357
ee a eer er
i ——————____
We°Ate Now Prepared To Do All
Your Kinds Of Fincy, Upto Date
Work|| 0b Work. We Invite A Trial.
es ‘We Guarantee To Please You, Both
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eR a a’
Sk ee ee
The PRINTERS who Can PRINT
Disse: Deane ARBASEON.
ROWLEE
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S23 N. Maia St.
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pay no reat and have
light expenses ——— SBEN
SES
ser — CALL AT — i
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When You Want
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Always The Best, and Cooked Well
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408 N. Main St. Wichita, Kas:
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Diseases of Women and
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aL
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ee eee eee
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Get a Searchlight, if you want
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Pumps, Pipe, Hose, Windmills
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118 South Main St. Phone 643
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SUPPLEMENT TO
THE SEARCHLIGAT,
Wichita, Kansas, Saturday Jan. 9,04
How does ft happen thst all the
kicks on seg-egation come from the
girls?
The European prince or princess
who is not the subject of a scandal
must be lonesome.
Rev. Robert Collyer’s reasons for
his long life omits the principal one:
Get yourself born healthy.
If you drink liquor on the isthmus
you will not live a year; if you drink
water you may survive for two weeks.
Booker Washington advises his raco
not to wear gaudy clothes. But isn’t
Mr. Washington getting rather exact-
ing?
Nobody has yet suggested to boll
the beer in the hope of heading off
the germs that lurk in the stuff we
arink.
Sir Thomas Lipton continues to talk
avout “the adorable American girl.”
But why doesn’t Sir Thomas “make
good?”
A whole week gone by and no mas-
sacres or elopements among Austrian
royalty. But it is nearly the dead of
winter.
‘The Ife prisoner who committed
suicide down in Maine adopted the
most effective means of shortening his
sentence,
A Frenchman may pronounce “rut”
“root” in Beirut, but you will never
get any considerable number of Ameri-
cans to do itt
In selecting cigars for your husband,
fair reader, remember that the better
the cigar the better it will keep bugs
off the plants.
The world is overloaded with peo-
ple who were just going to do some-
thing when somebody else got in
ahead of them,
The star in “The Best of Friends”
is suing her husband for divorce. In
this case the play and not the name
must be the thing.
Entomologists say that the boll wee-
vil can jump twenty yards. It seems
to be a sort of cross between the
grasshopper and the flea.
If the novelists had any real spirit
they would write a novel in which
the heroine was named Abby Spruggs,
instead of Violet Tremaine.
Cotton raisers of Texas are to hold
another boll weevil convention. The
boll weevils have held theirs and ex-
press a strong hope of carrying the
state.
As Maine editors and fishermen
always tell the truth, it is an establish-
ed fact that a cod caught off Kittery
Point had a six-pound flatiron in its
midst,
The estimated population of the
world is 1,547,423,000,. and. yet you
oceasionally hear a Young man say
that there’s only one girl in the world
for him.
It is stated that John Wanamaker
“began life without a dollar in his
pocket.” ‘There is also ground for the
belief John began life without even
a pocket,
‘The irritated and exasperated Jap-
anese are now calling Russia “rokokn”
and one doesn't need to know Japan-
ese to see that it doesn’t mean “you
old darling.”
Budd Doble says Lou Dillon will trot
in 1:55 pr less next season. If Oliver
Wendell Holmes were still alive he
would probably say Budd is talking
through his nose.
Tke Toronto World warns Uncle
Sam that in time Canada may think
seriously of forcibly annexing terri-
tory stolen from her by the United
States. This fs alarming.
Marie Corelli has been awarded
samages of half a cent in her lbel
suit against an English editor. As a
‘matter of simple fairness Marie ought
to use the morey for advertising pur-
poses,
Prof, Langley wants the world to
vnderstand that he hasn't been
crushed, either by his bad luck with
his aerodrome or by the newspapers.
llere’s hoping that he'll fly—by proxy
~this time.
The thoughtful Burlington Hawk-
eye counsels its Sunday readers to
“avoid pessimism in prayer.” No mat-
‘er how down-hearted you may be,
Gon't give the Almighty any inkling
of your real feelings.
The Chicago physician who de
clares that we would be a healthier
people if we bathed with ‘water less
frequently apparently forgets that we
are not all comic opera prima donnas
ané can’t afford to bathe in milk.
If the Dowager Queen of Italy has
married an engineer she probably did
it because she liked him and not be-
cause he was the only fellow she
could get. Her. fortune amounts to
Several million dollars, and she might
even have had an Englisl lord if she
‘had wanted one.
uy aad mastitis
“ie _— V4
ae of
=a i
ep ig z hy
| if .. o ¥ ‘a BC yt :
=. ow ~ Fire oe
aca Al)
a
WHY THEY FAYOR IT
DEMOCRATIC FONDNESS FOR
COMPETITIVE RECIPROCITY.
It Is Regarded 2s an Important Step
in the Direction of Free Trade, a
Half Loaf That Is Much Better Than
No Bread.
Democratic leaders in Congress and
glsewhere are sitting up of nights to
advance the cause of something of
their own devising which they are
Pleased to call “reciprgcity.” They
Say it is the reciprocity mentioned as
an economic possibility by McKinley
and Blaine. In the first place no re-
Dublican of weight has ever suggested
reciprocity in any form that could
interfere, in the slightest degree, with
the protection of American wages,
Which are much the highest in the
world, or with fostering the wise de-
velopment of industries on our own
soll. No prominent republican has
ever proposed reciprocity in any ex-
cept non-competitive products, and not
specifically in regard to those. None
has ever touched on the subject save
as a generalization worthy of thought,
but secondary to republican protec:
tion, giving to that beneficent policy
the full party recognition it has
always had, and always will have, un-
less the party moves off its old founda-
tions. But what sort of reciprocity
are democratic managers urging upon
public attention, claining to have bor-
rowed it from eminent republicans?
It is a slash at all protection, an en-
tering wedge to rip up the Dingley
tariff in competitive or any other prod-
uets. It is simply a renewal of the
fight, on shifted ground, for democrat-
ic free trade.
Thus democrats in Congress are de-
claring that the Cuban tariff conces-
sion “is unquestionably a breach in
the wall of protection,” and that demo-
cratic votes will go to the measure
for that reason. Representative Wil-
liams, the Democratic leader in the
house, insists that the Cuban bill is
an example of reciprocity, and that
reciprocity is a concession to the
democratic demand for untrammeled
trade relations.” A democratic paper
remarks that while reciprocity is a
quibble and an anomaly, it should
be welcomed by Democrats as a step
‘toward a tariff for revenue only, and
‘on the ground that half a loaf is bet-
ter than none. President Roosevelt
recommended the Cuban concession
as a “unique” provision to assist a
new nation which this country created
and over which this country holds a
peculiar restraint. Few republicans
think that the United states is still
under fiscal obligations to Cuba, or
that any point of honor is involved in
the action of Congress yet to come. AS
far as the democratic party is con-
cerned, it is fighting protection, not
trying to benefit Cuba.
‘Thomas B. Reed’s last magazine ar-
ticle, published after his death, which
occurred less than a year ago, was a
powerful argument against reciprocity
es far as it had been defined within
his experience. “If you will examine
reciprocity in detail,” he wrote, “you
will find that, in nearly every case, the
national revenue is sacrificed for the
benefit of individuals.” Probably the
Cuban bill, if if goes through, will
work that way, no matter what senti-
ment of supposed honor or generosity
is felt by any of its advocates. Mr.
Reed opposed the Cuban tariff redue-
tion in these incisive words: “For
the republicans to desert the beet
sugar interest 18 to desert the farmer
in the one conspicuous and clear case
where his industry js fostered. Under
the tariff as it now is all the sugar
needed by this country can be made
by the people of this country. That is
in accord with our system. When we
throw our markets open to the world
in all things, then it will be time to
do it for sugar.’ Mr. Reed was a
statesman of long experience in Con-
gress. Senator Allison, with similar
training, said recently: “Reciprocity
is a beautiful theory, but Iam convine-
ed that it cannot be put into practice.”
Reciprocity has grown a little more
definite in one respect. It is demo-
cratic ammunition, and seized by
them with eagerness as a national
campaign draws near and finds them
without an issue. Republicans de
cline to hand them an issue on a reci-
procity free trade platter.—St. Louis
Globe Democrat.
Bad for Cuba,
As for the Cubans themselves, it
would almost be a crime against civ-
re Cae ™
ilization to tempt them to continue
their ruinous one-crop policy by spe-
Ciat inaucemenis for tue aumpage of
weir sugar. What Cuba needs is a
diversification of products, whereby
she may secure a varlety of customers.
It will be no advantage to Cuba to
make the American Sugar trust the
sole customer for her principal prod-
ucts. There is a deficiency in the
world’s cotten supply, and all conti-
nents are being ransacked for places
where that staple can be profitably
grown. There is evidence that there
is no better place than Cuba... The
mountainous districts of Cuba are
most valuable grazing lands, whose
owners are restocking them in the ex-
pectation of profit, properly assured
to them by the Cuban protective tar-
if. ‘The proposed treaty admits
American cattle into Cuba at 40 per
cent reduction from tariff rates, Do
the Cuban stockmen wish to thus buy
a market for the Cuban sugar grow-
ers? Let us stop our onslaught on
Cuban and American industries for
the benefit of the American Sugar
trust and its friends who have bought
sugar estates in Crba.—San Francisco
Chronicle.
WHY FARMERS OBJECT.
Sound Reasons for Their Opposition
to Free Trade in Agricultural Prod-
ucts.
It is casy to understand that Canada
would be glad to enter into a reciproc-
ity agreement with the United States
that should include natural products
only. Equally obvious is the reason
why she should decline to swap trade
privileges in manufactured products,
Her natural products seek a nearby
market, and it would be tremendously
to her advantage if she could sell her
surplus in the United States, instead
of skipping it to Europe. But in ir-
dustrial production she is only a be-
ginner. She is.trying to develop her
manufacturing industries, In the
event of free trade in natural products
Cana‘la would do all the selling and
none of the buying, while free trade
in manufacturers would swamp every
one of her youthful industries. The
American farmer objects to recipro-
city restricted to natural products
only, With good reason he objects to
having all of Canada’s surplus of grain
dumped on the American market. He
knows that to remove the protective
tarift from Canadian cereals would not
only be disadvantageous to his inter-
ests now but would in the near future
help to build up a competition over-
whelming in its magnitude.
Canada’s grain-produeing possibili-
ties are practically unlimited, The
total acreage of the lands in Manitoba
end thence west to the Rockies, and
ranning 600 or 700 miles north of the
woundary line is 2,230,000,000 acres.
Of this about 25,000,000 acres are be-
ing utilized or have been transferred
Ly the crown to railways, for home:
steads and other purposes of produe-
fon. Of these 25,000,000 this year
only 3,123,663 acres were under culti-
vation. The actual yield of grain of
all kinds this year was 110,060,000
over last year. ‘The wheat yield was
57,163,032 bushels, an increase of
about 4,000,000.
As rapidly as immigration can be in-
duéed and lands placed under cultiva-
tion these countless millions of acres
are to be added to the wheat-produc-
ing area of North America. It is the
ream of Canada to become the great
wheat-produeing country of the world.
Reciprocity in natural products would
sreatly hasten the realization of this
dream. Already large numbers of
farmers from the United States are
moving over to the Canadian North-
west and locating upon lands within
reach of railroad transportation.
There will be more railroads, more
accessible lands, more farmers rushing
over to take and till them, That is
what Canada wants. It is not, how-
ever, what the American farmer
wants. He prefers to retain as long as
possible the advantages which the
present tariff gives him in the matter
of a profitable market for his food
stuffs, Hence his opposition to reci-
procity in natural products.
Is it unreasonable or unnatural that
another great body of American farm-
ers should be unwilling to relinquish
the advantages which the Dingley tar-
iff gives them, and to surrender to for-
eign competitors the control of the
immense market for thelr sugar cane,
their sugar beets, their early fruits
and vegetables, their oranges, lemons
and pineapples, and their tobacco?
Some books are to be tasted, others
to be swallowed, and some few to be
chewed and digested.—Bacon,
S aE —
SAR)
As
ye
ANG)
> VETERARS
BA Pe
FW) ee
BRR ORS Se). ES eater tee ea ta
Medicated to the Kicker on Pensions.)
It's Glory and fame that follow
A fighting soldier's name—
But you can't fill up on glory
And you can’t exist on fame;
Ad I may be peculiar,
But I've said it oft before,
That the man who risks his life for us
Should have a dara sight more
Phan
‘Thirteen dollars a month,
And maybe you don't remember,
Or memory fails to suit,
How whe: re craft was on you went
ANd furnisived 4 subsiitutel
You Lome a-mah'n’ money
And safe from ‘uliets and swords—
He at the front with an. ofter—
‘he best that ile atforas—
‘Thirteen dollars a month,
You call him a government pauper,
With growls and grumbies and frets;
And kick away like un old bay steer
At the pension that he gets:
Right here 1 want to tell you,
And keep it wider your hat—
You ought to get six months in Jail
And twice a year at that,
Without
‘Thirteen dollars a month.
And you ought to live on hardtack
And ket an ‘elegant tit
Of the water the poor old fellow drank
Down at Andersonville,
And maybe, when your’ year was up
The, lesson ‘you were taught
Might show! you. why we. pension those
Old veterans’ who fought
for
‘Thirteen dollars a_ month.
Harry 8. Chester.
Charged by a Calf.
Fe OnE eae ee ee
Lincoln’s call for 75,000 men for three
months’ service Thomas Gibson, Jr.,
began recruiting a company from
Pittsburg. Jacob Colmer, the present
postmaster at Avalon, was the first
to place his name on the roll as a
volunteer. Mr. Colmer, by his loyal
service as a private, was advanced
from one office to another until, when
muster-out time came in ’65, his dis-
charge read “Lieutenant Colmer.”
Capt. Gazzam of Pittsburg also had
organized a company, but neither he
nor Capt. Gibson had succeeded in
enrolling more than fifty men. Time
after time they tried to enter the serv-
ice, but, not having the full comple-
ment of men, the companies were not
accepted by the governor.
Capt. Gibson’s company, nothing
daunted, determined to equip them-
selves and go as an independent or-
ganization. While arrangements to
that end were being made word was
received that troops were needed in
Wheeling, W. Va., to protect the
threatened border.
‘The company proceeded by boat to
that city, arriving at Camp Carlisle
in May. Capts. Gazzam and Gibson
came to an understarding by which
the two companies were consolidated,
and the following officers were elect-
ed: Captain, Thomas Gibson; first
Ieutenant, David Ecker; second lieu-
tenant, David D. Barclay. They fur-
nished themselves with a Zouave uni-
form and Springfield muskets.
Orders came that the company
moye to Clarksburg. Bushwhackers
had stopped several trains on that
route previously, so several of the
men (among them Mr. Colmer) rode
on the coweatcher, under the head-
light, so as to see and not be seen.
‘Arrived in Clarksburg, the company
went into camp with companies Cand
E to drill and prepare for active duty.
They formed part of the Second Vir-
ginia volunteer infantry, of which
companies A, D, F and G came from
Pittsburg. ‘This regiment was after-
ward known as the Fifth West Vir-
ginia cavalry.
One night some of the men of com:
pany D were out foreging. One of
them eaptured @ good-sized calf and
determined to take his prisoner back
to camp immediately. On the road
the captive became festive, and, being
the stronger calf of the two, began
pulling his captor along at a rather
lively gait. Past the sentry they
rushed, not stopping to answer his
challenge. The guns were stacked
and the companies were all asleep.
‘The calf, in its mad career, charged
into the guns, one of which was dis-
charged. Awakened from their sleep
the men came tumbling out of their
tents, half clothed, and hurriedly
formed in line of battle. Company C
had not received their guns, so they
came armed with picks, shovels, axes
and anything else that was handy.
The bugler (he is now editor of a
newspaper in Illinois) came to his
captain, an ax on his shoulder. He
was ready to fight, though his face
was pale. In a quavering voice he
said:
“Captain, if I should fall in this con-
flict, will you send word to my moth-
er?”
‘When the real cause of the disturb-
ance was discovered great was the
uproar. Needless to say, Bugler Cyrus
Hane never heard the last of his
“first conflict.”—Pittsburg Dispatch.
Fighting Hand to Hand,
“I had some doubts,” said the ser-
geant, “about hand-to-hand struggles
during the first year of the war. Our
regiment did good work at Shiloh, but
didn't come to close quarters with the
enemy. We made our mark at Perry-
ville, but not at close range, and I
wondered if any battle was fought in
which men strove against each other
within reach of bayonet or sword. At
Stone river we charged at a ran
against a rebel line. I expected the
old thing to happen and the enemy
to break, I shook from head to foot
as I saw the rebels start on a run and
at a charge bayonets to mect us. I
could see the hair and eyes and facial
expression of the rebels as they
rame steadily and swiftly toward us.
1 remember one fellow wore a red
neg
ie A
BO’
Zo
eH
BAA
ar
A
BS
comfort around his neck and that the
ends were flapping in a very ridicu-
lous way as he ran.
“I eould see a short man making
his legs do their best, and a long-
legged fellow in advance. I felt this
thing couldn't go on without bayonet
striking bayonet, and without the
lines crashing together. The crash
came sooner than I expected, and not
quite in the way I expected. About
half of our men went through or over
the rebel line, some of us coming
down on our heads and others on their
fect. It was undignified and confus-
ing, and when we turned we found
men in gray standing back to back
fighting both ways. There was little
or no shooting, but a giving and tak-
ing of hard blows, and a good deal of
rough-and-tumble scrapping. Finally
one of the rebels shouted: “What's
the use? Why in thunder don’t some
body ask us to surrender? Thereupon
all our fellows shouted ‘Surrender!’
and down went the muskets of the
rebels caught between our lines.
“There wasn’t an unbruised man fn
our company, and we felt like birds
when the rebels threw down their
guns and shed their cartridge boxes
and belts. They went to the rear, and
we went slam-bang into another rebel
line, which, yielding at first, rallied
and drove us back. Then we rushed
them and broke their line, and I never
felt happier in my life than when I
saw the men in gray scamper away
into the cedars. At Chickamauga we
waited for the rebs to charge, and
they broke us all up. Some of our
boys were so completely knocked out
that they ran a mile like scared
horses, in the belief that the whole
army had been routed and that the
only thing to do was to get off the
field. Then they slowed up, came to
their senses, turned and ran the other
way, and, falling in anywhere, fought
like wildcats to the end, crashing at
odd times into the rebel lines with the
devil-may-care insolence of football
players in a tussle.’—Chicago Inter
Ocean.
Maine's Proud Record.
In @ recent week more than $50,000
was paid in Bangor, Maine, and in
towns tributary to Bangor, in pensions
to survivors of the Civil War and to
their immediate kindred, a larger sum,
it is claimed, than is disbursed in
pensions in any other community of
equal population in the United States.
Maine's war record is not surpassed
Ly that of any other state. The old
First Maine heavy artillery, which
went out from Bangor as the Hight-
eenth Maine infantry and which had
nearly 1,900 men and officers, holds
the record of having lost a larger per
cent of men and officers in battle than
any other regiment in the war; and
the First Maine cavalry hes the 2ame
of more engagements inscribed upon
its flag than any other regiment in
the service.
All of the thirty-two regiments of
infantry, the two regiments of cav-
alry and ten batteries of light artil-
lery and the big contingent of sailor-
men who fouad service in the navy
were in the front of battle; and as
fast as the ranks were depleted by
sickness or death, new recruits were
hurried to the front, so the regimental
lists were kept full for the more than
four years of terrible conflict. After
the fighting was over and the surviv-
ors came back to resume their duties
as private citizens, Maine's delegation
in congress worked hard and long to
sectire pensions for every deserving
veteran,
Episode of Kenesaw.
“That confusion of horses at Kene
saw,” said the Mississippi captain,
(‘reminds me of a controversy over
horses at the battle of Franklin, Gen,
Pat Cleburne and Gen. John Adams
of the Confederate army were both
kilied at Franklin at the head of their
commands and close to: the Union
breastworks, One of them was killed
on top of the works, just as his horse
had plunged half over. Man and
horse were shot there, and the body
of the horse remained on top of the
works, with fore feet extended to the
Union side. It was said at the time
that the officer killed on top of the
works was Gen. Cleburne, and there
was among our own men a dispute as
to this.
“It_was known that Gen. John Ad-
ams of Loring’s division rode a bay
horse and that Cleburne did not. The
horse killed on top of the works in
front of the Sixty-fifth Illinois was a
bay, and Gen. Adams’ body was found
at the base of the works, just below
the horse. Cleburne’s body was found
fifty or sixty yards from the works.
Adams, according to the story of men
of the Sixty-fifth Mlinois, rode his
horse over the diteh and to the top
of the parapet and tried to tear the
flag from the hands of the color-bear-
er, At that instant he was shot.”
ius Mia Gwn Death Wareent.
Capt. W. G. Watkins of Clinton, Mo.,
has in his possession his own death
warrant, issued and signed by United
States officers during the civil war.
Capt. Watkins was sentenced to be
shot for recruiting Confederate sol-
diers inside the union lines. He es-
caped from Gratiot prison in St. Louis,
where he was confined, awaiting the
death penalty, and was never recap-
tured. Recently Capt. Watkins secur
ed the warrant for his own death, He
prizes the war relic highly.
COMPLETELY RESTORED.
Mrs. ¥. Brunzel, wife of P. Branzel,
Stock dealer, residence 3111 Grand
ave, Everett, Wash., says: “For fife
teen years I suffered
with terrible pain
in my back. J did
rot know what it
was to enjoy a
night's rest, and
arose in the morn-
ing feeling tired and
unrefreshed. My
suffering sometimes
was simply inde-
seribable. When I
finished the first box
of Doan's Kidney
Pills 1 felt like a
different woman. 1
Ee ee eee en
with terrible pain fi )
in my back. J did BR
rot know what it &
was to enjoy a bee oe
night's rest, and Deis
arose in the morn- &%'
tng feeling tired and Ege???
unrefreshed. My (@gNX>'>>4
suffering sometimes M*\\y's:
was simply inde Bigp> eh
sertbable. When I fatty \ "36
finished the first box [gg 2) a>
of Doan's Kidney Pap\?,?\% oH
Pills I felt ike a f Yop > apy >
dillerent woman. 1 Was
continued until I had taken five boxes.
Doan’s Kidney Pills act very effec:
tively, very promptly, relieve the ach-
ing pains and all other annoying difi-
culties.”
Foster-Milburn Co,, Buffalo, N. ¥.
For sale by all druggists, price 50
cents per box.
Land Ships.
Imitating the land ships now em-
ployed in sailing on the sands of the
Cailfornia and New Mexico deserts
and successfully used for pleasure on
the southern beaches and in many
other parts of the United States, a
London builder has made “sailing car
riages” for use in the Egyptian des
erts.
(iat Bis Cinema
A certain little 4-year-old who had
been taught to use her mind, was left
to play alone, as her elder sister had
gone to school. She was urged to go
next door and amuse herself with the
small son belonging to that house.
“Oh, no, mamma, I don't want to go
there; Tommy can’t play nicely at all.
Why, he digs a hole and don't call it
anything!"—Brooklyn Life.
10,000 Fiants for 166.
‘This is a remarkable offer the John
A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.,
makes. ‘They will send you their bie
plant and seed catalog, together with
enough seed to grow
1,000 fine, solid Cabbages.
2,000 delicious Carrots.
2/000 blanching, nutty Celery.
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce.
1,000 splendid Onions.
1,000 rare, luscious Radishes.
1,000 gloriously brilliant Flowers.
‘This great offer {s made in order to
induce you to try thelr warranted seeds
ror when you once plant them you
will grow no others, and
‘ALL For BUT 160 Posracr,
providing you will return this ‘notice,
And if you will send them 20c in post-
age, they will add to the above a pack-
age of the famous Berliner Caulitower.
CW. N. UL)
Uneducated Officers.
"The reorganization of the military
establishment found more than one-
third of the officers of the army des-
titute of any martial education except
the empirical sort they had picked up
in the field.
New Rifle for Soldiers.
Within three years the United
States army and militia will be armed
with the new Springfield magazine
rifle. The hundreds of thousands of
Krag-Jorgensen guns on hand will
eventually have to be broken up as
valueless.
French Naval Program.
The naval construction program of
the French admiralty for 1904 com-
prises seventy vessols. Of this huge
total, fifty-nine are to be torpedo
boats, which are to be constructed by
private shipbuilding firms. Sixteen
new submarine boats are to be built;
one armored cruiser, of 13,644 tons
and twenty-three knots speed, and
two torpedo boat destroyers, with oa
speed of thirty knots.
Moorish Water Clocks,
Among the curious features of To-
ledo which unfortunately remain no
longer, were water clocks, devised by
a Moorish genius named Az-Zarcal,
who placed them on the banks of the
Tagus so that the people couid read
the time, ‘They were run by water
power, and were so famous that Daniel
Merlac, an English astronomer, came
all the way from Oxford in 1185 to
study them.
a Sere
Doctor Was Fooled by His Own Case
for a Time.
It's easy to understand how ordi-
nary people get fooled by coffee when
doctors themselves sometimes forget
the facts.
A physician speaks of his own ex-
perience:
“{ had used coffee for years and
really did not exactly believe it was
injuring me although I had palpite-
tion of the heart every day.
“Finally one day a severe and al-
most fatal attack of heart trouble
frightened me and I gave up both
tea and coffee, using Postum instead,
and since that time I have had abso-
lutely no heart palpitation except on
one or two occasions when I tried a
small quantity of coffee which caused
severe irritation and proved to me I
must let it alone.
“When we began using Postum it
seemed. weak—that was because we
did not make it according to direc-
tions—but now we put a little bit of
butter in the pot when boiling and al-
low the Postum to boil full 15 minutes
which gives {t the proper rich flavor
and the deep brown color.
“I have advised a great many of
my friends and patients to leave off
coffee and drink Postum; in fact, 1
daily give this advice.” Name given
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Many thousands of physicians use
Postum in pldce of tea and coffee in
their own homes and prescvtbe it to
patients. “There's a reason.”
A remarkable little book “The Road
to Wellville” can be found in each
package. 6;
GOVERNOR OF OREGON
Uses Pe-ru-na in His Family
For Colds and Grip.
CAPITOL BUILDING, SALEM, OREGON.
Peruna is known from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Letters of congratulation and commendation testifying to the merits of Peruna as a catarrh remedy are pouring in from every State in the Union. Dr. Hartman is receiving hundreds of such letters daily. All classes write these letters, from the highest to the lowest.
The outdoor laborer, the indoor artisan, the clerk, the editor, the statesman, the preacher—all agree that Peruna is the catarrh remedy of the age. The stage and rostrum, recognizing catarrh as their greatest enemy, are especially enthusiastic in their praise and testimony.
Any man who wishes perfect health must be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh is well nigh universal; almost omnipresent. Peruna is the only absolute safeguard known. A cold is the beginning of catarrh.
To prevent colds, to cure colds, is to cheat catarrh out of its victims. Peruna not only cures catarrh, but prevents it. Every household should be supplied with this great remedy for coughs, colds and so forth.
The Governor of Oregon is an ardent admirer of Peruna. He keeps it continu-
Ask Your Druggist for a free Peruna Almanac for 1904.
THREE CARDINAL POINTS BLOOD HEALTH HAPPINESS
It is a fact that, with impoverished or unhealthy condition of the blood, suffering, ill health and unhappiness must result. Rich, Red, Radiant Blood means to the possessor splendid health, and health means happiness to the vast extent physical condition may exert its influence.
Do you suffer from nervousness, weakness, brain fag, loss of energy, a sluggish, tired body, with little, if any, ambition and vitality? Do you feel that you must have rest and are unequal to your daily tasks and responsibilities? Does your body ache and pain all over from lack of circulation and proper nutrition? Does your system need to be built up and held there? If these and similar conditions exist, speedy relief and permanent cure are within your reach.
EUPARILLA
Is a Blood Purifier and Tonic without equal. It will increase vital activity. It will give you the buoyant and happy feeling of youth renewed and health restored. You can purchase at your Druggists.
The McPike Drug Co.
1,000 NEWSPAPERS
Are now using our
International Type-High Plates
Sawed to
LABOR-SAVING LENGTHS.
They will save time in your composing room as they can be handled even quicker than type.
No extra charge is made for sawing plates to short lengths.
Sends a trial order to this office and be complained to.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,
WICHTA, KANSAS.
CAPSICUM VASELINE
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve the head ache and satiation. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatic, neuralgie and gouty conditions. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be in invulnerable in the household. Many people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Price covers all these conditions, or by sending this amount to us in postage stamps we will send you a tube by mail. No article should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our branded genuine. CHESSEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 State Street, New York City.
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
SYRUP cures coughs and colds.
ally in the house. In a recent letter to Dr. Hartman, he says:
STATE OF OREGON,
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.:
Dear Sirs—I have had occasion to use your Peruna medicine in my family for colds, and it proved to be an excellent remedy. I have not had occasion to use it for other ailments.
Yours very truly, W. M. Lord.
It will be noticed that the Governor says he has not had occasion to use Peruna for other ailments. The reason for this is, most other ailments begin with a cold. Using Peruna to promptly cure colds, he protects his family against other ailments. This is exactly what every other family in the United States should do. Keep Peruna in the house. Use it for coughs, colds, la gripe, and other climatic affections of winter, and there will be no other ailments in the house. Such families should provide themselves with a copy of Dr. Hartman's free book, entitled "Winter Catarrh." Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus Ohio.
MORE FLEXIBLE AND LASTING,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better results than possible with any other brand and one-third more for same money.
The average man is known as a good fellow until his money is all gone.
FITS permanently cured. No flair or serveness after treatment. Wide range of Dr. Kline's Great New Restorers. Send for FREE $2.00 trial bottle and treatment. Dr. R. H. Kline Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
There is more fun in the world than most of us have any idea of.
THOSE WHO HAVE TRIBED IT will use no other. Defiance Cold Water Starch has no equal in Quantity or Quality—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other rands contain only 12 oz.
The earth's gravity attracts, but the gravity of a man repels.
RED CROSS BALL BLUE
Should be in every home. Ask your grocer for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
Wheat may be cornered, but corn can't be wheaten.
INSIST ON GETTING IT.
Some grocers say they don't keep Defiance Starch because they have a st elc in hand of 12 oz. brands, which they know cannot be sold to a customer who has once used the 16 oz. pkg. Defiance Starch for same money.
Style doesn't count when it comes to the lining of a pocketbook.
IMMENSE TOBACCO PURCHASE.
Forty-Eight Thousand Dollars Paid for a Fancy Lot of Tobacco.
The biggest purchase of high grade tobacco ever made in the West by a cigar manufacturer was made last Wednesday by Frank P. Lewis, Peoria Ill., for his celebrated Single Binder cigar. A written guarantee was given that the entire amount was to be fancy selected tobacco. This, no doubt, makes the Lewis factory the largest holder in the United States of tobacco of so high a grading—Herald-Transcript, Dec. 21, 1902.
The milkman knows the full significance of a white lie.
Salzer's New National Oats yielded in 1903 in Mich., 240 bu., in Mo., 255 bu., in N. D., 310 bu., and in 30 other states from 150 to 300 bu. per acre. Now this Oat if generally grown in 1904, will add millions of bushels to the yield, and millions of dollars to the farmer's purse. Try it for 1904. Largest Seed Potato and Alfalfa Clover growers in America.
Salzer's Spelt, Beardless Barley, House-Builder Corn, Macaroni Wheat, Pea Oat, Billion Dollar Grass and Earliest Canes are money makers for you, Mr. Farmer.
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10c in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and receive in return their big catalog and lots of farm seed samples. (W. N. U.)
It takes a wise young man not to write a love letter.
50,000 AMERICANS
WERE WELCOMED TO
FARM ST.
WESTERN
CANADA
FREE
Western
Canada
DURING LAST YEAR.
They are settled and settling on the Grain and
Grazing Lands, and are prosperous and satisfied.
Sir Wilfred Laurier recently said: "A new star
has risen on the horizon, and it is toward it that
every immigrant who leaves the land of his acces-
sories to come and seek a home for himself now
turns his gaze"—Canada. There is
Room for Millions.
FREE Homesteads given away. Schools,
Churches, Railways, Markets, Climate,
everything to be desired.
For a descriptive Atlas and other information,
apply to Superintendent Immigration. Ottawa, Canada,
or authorized Canadian Government Agent—
J. S. Cramford, No. L2S W. Ninth Street, Kanns
City, Mo.
Millions In Cars.
KANSAS At St. Louis.-Kansas will get some good advertising out of the world's fair. Its state building is one of the most attractive on the grounds; its agricultural display will be larger than that of any other state; its mineral exhibit will equal that of any other state; its fruit display will rank next to Missouri's and its livestock display will have few equals. In addition to this a dozen or more palaces are built of Kansas cement. "Kansas will receive four times as much money for cement alone as its state exhibit building and all will cost it," said one of the building supervisors.
WEATHER BY PHONE.—The farmers living around Hiawatha now get the government weather report every morning by telephone. The weather report reaches town about 10 a. m., and it is immediately telephoned to "central." The farmers on the many toll lines have only to step to their 'phones and be given the prediction for the next twenty-four hours. The plan is a most popular and successful one.
GILLETT'S DEBTS.—A careful search of records in all the counties where Grant Gillett could have had mortgages recorded show that $600,000 will cover all his liabilities at the time of his disappearance. Some of these claims were partly pa'd when the creditors fought for the cattle and other assets Gillett left behind.
SUES FOR HIS FARM.—R. B. Robinson, a Lyon county farmer, who has just returned from the insane asylum, has entered suit in the district court at Emporia to recover a farm that was sold while he was in the asylum. His wife sold the farm for $700 and he alleges that it was worth $1,600.
:To HANDLE CATTLE.—Kansas stockmen are stirred up over the action of the Kansas City live stock exchange in joining the National live stock exchange, and have started a movement looking toward the organization of local associations to handle their own cattle.
CAPTAIN ROWAN'S WIFE.—Mrs. Ida Rowan, of captain A. S. Rowan, is dead at Atchison. Captain Rowan is distinguished as "the man who carried the message to Garcia" in the wilds of Cuba at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war.
HAS OIL LEASES.—J. O. Davidson of Wichita, has leases on thirty thousand acres of oil lands in Montgomery county alone, besides some valuable oil lands in other sections of the country.
SUICIDE IN ASYLUM.—Daniel Rich committed suicide at the Topeka insane asylum by choking himself with a stocking. He was a patient from Emporia about 60 years old.
A PIONEER GONE.—L. S. Herbert, a pioneer resident of Brown county and father of Ewing Herbert the well known Kansas editor, died at his home in Hiawatha aged 82 years.
HER 100TH BIRTH DAY.—Mrs. Christiana Burkhart, of Gypsum City, was born on New Year's day, 1804. She died on New Year's eve, 1904. She had lived in Kansas 33 years.
HE DIED.—John W. Hall, the Missouri Pacific porter who was injured at Yates Center some time ago by having his head crushed between two passenger coaches, is dead.
22 ELEVATORS.—C. Hoffman & Son, of Enterprise have bought 22 elevators of the A. J. Poor Co., for $75,000. The elevators are all in Kansas.
FIRE AT WAVERLY.—Bartlett's restaurant and Stafford's restaurant at Waverly, Kane., are destroyed by the same fire. Loss $5,000.
LEAVES KANSAS.—Ex-Senator W. A. Harris, of Kansas, is to leave Kansas and take up his residence, at least temporarily, in Chicago.
PRIVATE SLAUGHTER HOUSE.—Four Shawnee county farmers are constructing a slaughter house near Topeka to supply local butchers with beef in opposition to the beef trust. They have been killing a little stuff around at their farms recently and selling it to the butchers. They cannot supply the demand for meats. Several local butchers have agreed to buy of them exclusively.
SLEETY SNOW.—East Central Kansas was covered by an inch of sleety snow on January 2.
HE GAVE HIS MITE.—Jaues Gushwa, a cripple who makes his living in Concordia by selling popcorn, remembered the golden rule on Christmas day. He sent twenty-five pounds of freshly popped and buttered corn to the inmates of the county infirmary and twenty pounds to the unfortunates in the county jail.
INSULTED WHITE GIRL.—Eugene Dunn, a negro, was fined $500, the limit, by Judge Stanley of Wichita, for making insulting proposals to a 15-year old white girl.
AN OPEN SWITCH.—A Rock Island train struck an open switch at Lawrence. The train was running at full speed as it does not stop there. Five cars, including the sleeper, left the track and bumped along on the ties for 1,200 feet. No one was seriously injured. 775 ENGINES.—Seven hundred and seventy-five engines were handled at the Missouri Pacific yards in Wichita during December. The employees are kept on the run continuously at the yards.
HOLIDAY DECORATIONS
Christmas Trees, Holly, Mistletoe
and holiday decorations of all kinds,
for home, hall or church, can be had
in best quality at low prices from W.
H. Culp & Co., Florists, Withita, Kana
Send for special price list.
Money sometimes makes the mare go
in the also-ran class.
A man's merit isn't always up to his
reputation.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as
a cough cure. J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave.
N. Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
Don't exchange single bliss for a
matrimonial blister.
ALL UP-TO-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS
Use Red Gross Ball Blue. It makes clothes
clean and sweet as when new. All grocers.
If seeing is believing, a blind man
must be a hopeless skeptic.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 250 a bottle.
When the hoseman of a fire company retires he's an ex-spurt.
No muss or failures made with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES.
The successful stock raiser is the one who laughs and grows fat.
WHY IT IS THE BEST
WHY IT IS THE BEST
is because made by an entirely different
process. Defiance Starch is unlike
any other, better and one-third more
for 10 cents.
When a public speaker pauses for a
reply it breaks him all up if he gets it.
Stops the Cough and
Works Off the Cold
Lexative Bruna Quimine Tablets. Price 25c
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25c
When a man is going to the dogs he
usually meets the dogs about half way
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that is a common cause of cataracts. Cataract, Hall's Cataract Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Cataract is a serious but non-traumatic treatment. Hall's Cataract Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous membranes of the eye. It is based on the foundation of the disease, and gives the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting the patient in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Address of F. J. CHENY & CO., Toledo, O
Sold by druggers, 756.7
to the best.
Give Thanks.
Give thanks for something and you will find something to give thanks for. No one is so poor as not to be comparatively rich. Envy is the mother of poverty, charity the parent of wealth and contentment the open was to Heaven.—Universalist Leader.
A Typical Duel.
A typical duel is that reported from the town of Minsk, in Russia. Two old friends, lawyers had been to the theater together. Coming out, one accidentally knocked off the other hat. He apologized, but the other, very angry, called him names. The result was a duel in which one was killed. Neither had shot a pistol before.
Western Reserve Divorces.
One divorce to every eleven marriages is the statistical showing for the Western Reserve—a proportion greater than that of any state or nation on earth. This 6,250 square miles in northwestern Ohio was settled while a part of the Northwest Territory almost exclusively by Connecticut and Massachusetts folk, and its people are now the purest Puritan stock to be found west of the Hudson river.
Good News From Minnesota
Lakefield, Minn., Jan. 4.—Mr. William E. Gentry of this place is one of the best-known and most highly respected men in Jackson County. For 45 years he has suffered with Kidney Trouble and now at 77 years of age he has found a complete cure and is well. His cure is remarkable because of the length of time he had been suffering. Cases of 40 years' standing might be considered incurable, but the remedy that cured Mr. Gentry seems to know no limit to its curative power. Mr. Gentry says: "I have suffered with misery in my back tor about 45 years and had all the troublesome symptoms of Kidney and Urinary disease. I tried various kinds of remedies, but all to no effect until I tried Dodd's Kidney Pills. Now I have no pain in my back, and feel quite well in every way.
"I am 77 years of age and I feel better than I have for the last 40 years. I attribute it all to Dodd's Kinney Pills." _____
Many a man rushes frantically to his uncle after he has said farewell to his ante.
TRADE MARK.
At The Post
Up and doing, to live and help
to live, the old reliable
St. Jacobs Oil
Is an universal benefactor
in the cure of
Hurts, Sprains
and Bruises
Price, 25c. and 50c.
T.
Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of warning symptoms will soon prostrate a woman. She thinks woman's safeguard is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—Ignorance and neglect are, the cause of untold female suffering, not only with the laws of health but with the chance of a cure. I did not heed the warnings of headaches, organic pain, and general weariness, until I was well nigh prostrated. I knew I had to do something. Happily I did the right thing. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few weeks to find that my aches and pains appeared, and I again felt the glow of health through my body. Since I have been well I have been more careful, I have also advised a number of my sick friends to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and they have never had reason to be sorry. Yours very truly, Mrs. MAY FAIRBANKS, 216 South 7th St., Minneapolis, Minn." (Mrs. Fairbanks is one of the most successful and highest salaried travelling saleswomen in the West.)
When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, lencorrhea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, of the beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone" and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best.
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—For over two years I suffered more than tongue can express with kidney and bladder trouble. My physician pronounced my trouble catarrh of the bladder, caused by displacement of the womb. I had a frequent desire to urinate, and it was very painful, and lumps of blood would pass with the urine. Also had backache very often.
"D
I suffer
kidney
nouns
caused
frequ
ful, an
urine.
A
reply to
feel th
with ease
"After writing to you, and receiving your reply to my letter, I followed your advice, and feel that you and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have cured me. The medicine drew my womb into its proper place, and then I was well. I never feel any pain now, and can do my housework h case." — Mrs. ALICE LAMON, Kincaid, Miss.
for female ills in the world has received unqualified endorsement.
ites all sick women to write her for advice. tends to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of which will prove their absolute genuineness.
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
sekeeper appreciates nicely starched ions. No starch under the sun gives as Defiance Starch. It is absolutely icals which other starches contain. It the iron or causes the clothes to not rot them. For 10 cents you get the best starch that can be made.
No other medicine for female such widespread and unqualified Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick She has guided thousands to hear $5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthw above testimonials, which will provide Lydia
Every tidy housekeeper a clothes and linens. No so good a finish as Defiance free of the chemicals which never sticks to the iron break. It does not rot the 16 ounces of the best st Get Defiance.
or medicine for female ills in the world. Thread and unqualified endorsement.
Pinkham invites all sick women to write her needed thousands to health. Address, Lynn
MRFEIT If we cannot forthwith produce the original letters of testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness,
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.
tidy housekeeper appreciates nicely her and linens. No starch under the skin and a finish as Defiance Starch. It is all the chemicals which other starches coat sticks to the iron or causes the cling. It does not rot them. For 10 centsences of the best starch that can be Defiance.
No other medicine for femaleills in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write Lynn for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
$5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of above testimonials, which will provide evidence of Lynn's medical care.
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
A
Every tidy housekeeper appreciates nicely starched clothes and linens. No starch under the sun gives so good a finish as Defiance Starch. It is absolutely free of the chemicals which other starches contain. It never sticks to the iron or causes the clothes to break. It does not rot them. For 10 cents you get 16 ounces of the best starch that can be made. Get Defiance.
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA, NEB.
WHEN YOUR GROCER SAYS he does not have Defiance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep it until his stock of 12 oz packages are sold. Defiance Starch is not only better t han any other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16 oz. to the package and sells for same money as 12 oz brands.
Average Marriage Age.
The average age for men to marry is highest in Sweden, thirty-one years, and the lowest in the United States, twenty-six and one-half years.
---
---
When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper.
W. N. U.—WICHITA.—NO. 2, 1904
PISO'S CURE FOR
CUREMEN ALL KINDS FAIL
Best Cough Syrup, Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION