Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, January 5, 1907
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WRITTEN
SEARCHLIGHT
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY TRADING WITH THE MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER
EIGTHTH YEAR.
Practical C
Speech Delivered
At Inter-State
Last W
TO THE
Mr. President, Members of the Inter-
state Literary Association, Ladies
and Gentlemen:
Since we are living in the most enlightened age of this civilized era; since the convolutions of the Negro's brain are coping with the most enlightened brains the world. This question within itself arise in my mind:
Is it possible for the Negro to bring the realization of his true manliness to light, scattered as we are throughout his United States?
Is it possible for us to accomplish that I believe is in store for us, as long as we remain apart from each other? All of this and more presents itself to me when I think of the real worth of the Negro.
according to my inferior judgment, leaders of our race should organize colonies and form throughout this country a plan, introduced to every citizen of America as Negro Colonization. There are five major casuses for colonization, namely, progression, education, citizenship, manhood, business quality, and to condemn criminality. Since the closing of the civil war the progress of the Negro has been rapidly increasing and, regardless of his diverse circumstances, it seems that God has willed it, Providence decrees. Fate dooms it, and Destiny has failed his success. According to the number of years we have been free, we can cope with my race in the civilized world in application. We do not want to appear egotistic but we don't want so reality but we as a race must lead business equality.
Any colonization of the Negro is a key which will unlock the door to the true citizenship of the Negroes and thereby carry out the wording of the Fifteenth Amendment.
"The right of citizens of the Unit-States to vote, shall not be deed or abridged by the United States any state on account of race, color or previous condition of servile."
While our colonization is not to be compared with the English colonization in general because this is not a new country, but comparatively speaking we are new in the way of
I conscien- usly believe and hist- orically know that the Negro's suc-cess and salva- tion lies wholly in local colonizati- on, where he can, with the aid of his fellow-man, learn the first lessons of combined effort. We shall m- ot take up the colonies of primitive men; first to be consider-
ed, is that with the hardships of his day, and the encroachments of enemies of gigantic size, primitive man gave us the colonies found on the banks of the Nile, the home of civilization. This is the first account that man gives of his doings; though he left the history of his colonies, he said nothing of his ancestors; but it is conclusive as the poet says, "We run the same course our fathers have run."
Again, these people became so numerous that they formed bands and began colonizing in the countries unknown to them; to prove this true, Moses led the children of Israel to the land of promise—the ten lost tribes crossed Behring Isthmus before it was cut loose; Hence, the American Indian; and the white man did find them in tribes or colonies, which is true 'till this day. The colonization idea has always been the theme of every people but the American Negro.
To get at the subject better, let's ask a few questions; First, what causes men to go together? Is it not for some common good? Second, Why do people leave their native homes? Is is not oppression of some kind? Now, why is it the American Negro doesn't get together? Is it because he is not oppressed? No, it is because he lacks confidence, and dislikes responsibility.
Now, we shall leave the Nile Colonies and see what became of those who left; some under wise leaders, as Romulus, founded empires far superior to their fathers. This kind of evolution kept up 'till an of Europe was colonized; but oppression never ceased. The civilization at this stage was not perfect; the difference was religious opinion, and invariably, the strong would oppress the weak. The oppressed banded together under wise leaders and sought the wilderness of America; they founded thirteen separate colonies; their oppression was becoming more intolerable; but by concentrated effort they wiped all tears away, and today, forty-six states and many territories with a stable government, stand as firm as the Rock of Gibralter or the pyramids of Egypt to mark the valor of these heroes. The government may perish, but their memories will survive.
We take again, the over-taxed and unjustly represented Boers of Southern Africa, unity caused the mother country, Great Britain, the Monarch of the sea and land, to bow her haughty head and yield, and today their representative is heard with favor in the hills of Parliament.
Another noteworthy instance, is the slum German Colonies of South America; the first two hundred came in 1861, now their bank at Buenos Ayres has a capital stock of $100,000,000. I should call this concentrated effort.
We have in our midst today, German colonies, whose German American banks have over a billion dollars surplus; Polish colonies, Swede colonies and Italian colonies, whose combined savings far exceed the billion mark; we have the sluggish Chinese, and the enterprising Jap, whose united strength may be felt on the Pacific coast of California, and the rice farms of southern Texas.
From the foregoing conclusions the following may be appropriately asked: Why do these peoples succeed? It is because they are pursuing the course laid bare by the successful, hence, "In union there is strength."
Now, if these achievements shall serve as guide posts, the Negro may well join Copernicus and say: "If the other planets move, the earth is no exception." So throw your shoulder to the wheel and your heart with your burden till every foe has been vanquished and Christ is Lord indeed.
PEABODY, KAN.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson of Hennessy, Oklahoma, returned to their home Saturday after a few days visit with their aunt, Mrs. John Powell.
Mr. James Hall and family attended the Patterson and Holder wedding at Florence Tuesday.
Thomas Rains and cousin Miss Mabel Hall spent a few hours with their aunt, Mrs. Dell Sunday.
Geo. Dell is on the sick list this week.
Mrs. James Hall and daughter Mable are contemplating a trip to Emporia soon.
LeRoy Young was in Wichita last week.
Willard Bush is at Newton now.
Mr. Thomas and Willie Hall are on the sick list this week.
Raymond Patterson of Florence was the guest of Willie Hall last week.
Nate Anderson and Jacob Perkins of Newton were in the city on business last week.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hall entertained a number of young people Friday evening in honor of their daughter Mabel's 17th birthday. A delightful two course supper was served and afterwards the young people were seated in the parlor where they enjoyed a Christmas tree from which they received childish presents such as dolls, goats and rattle boxes. Mabel received some valuable presents. Those present were: Misses Callie Anderson, Lena Rolland, Messrs Lee Frame, Oscar Rickman, George Brown, Robert Brown, Eugene Rolland, Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. House and Mr. and Mrs. Alex Ridley of Newton, Mr. Radmore Ashurst and Miss Stella Law of El-Dorado, Miss Sattle Bush, Ethel Winson, Murl Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Geo, Dell and Mr. Thomas Rains. All report a delightful time.
Anyone who tries to get superior results from inferior methods, from cheapness in quality of material or service, deludes himself.
Negro Soldiers Are Exonorated Eye-witnessess Say Colored Soldier Are Wrongfully Charged In El Reno, Okla.
The news now comes from El Reno, Okla., that the many assaults and crimes alleged to have been committed in that city recently and charged to the discharged Negro soldiers of the brave 25th infantry were not committed by these colored men at all.
A prominent white citizen of that town comes forth with the voluntary statement that it was not a colored soldier who was alleged to have pushed a white woman from the sidewalk, over which alleged incident much noise was made. He goes farther and says that neither of the ladies in question were pushed off the sidewalk. He says in regard to the incident that a Negro Pullman car porter alighted from his car when it had just arrived and hurried for a nearby restaurant. Two ladies were walking leisurely up the narrow walk and as it was very muddy from the recent rains the Pullman porter edged his way by the ladies to prevent stepping in the mud. The porter was in full Pullman uniform—he hurried to the restaurant, soon came out with a lunch in his hand and with something in a paper sack—rushed to his train, which soon left. Some evil inclined person started the rumor that a Negro soldier had pushed a white lady from the sidewalk—the newspapers got it and away it went.
Comes also the statement from Ching Lee, the Chinaman whom it was alleged a Negro soldier had shot, that it was not a soldier with whom he had trouble—but with a saloon porter, who worked in a nearby saloon. It is said that the Chinaman was not shot but the trouble was of the ordinary kind so frequent in Chinamen laundries over checks, "No checkee, No washee," often brings trouble to the Chinaman—especially when his customer identifies his clothes, is willing to pay the bill and needs the goods very bad.
So it seems that one by one these alleged crimes laid at the door of the Negro soldier to get public sentiment against him and against the race are gradually and surely falling to pieces and the truth is coming forth that after all the Negro soldier and the Negro race are not so miserably bad people and extreme criminals after all.
The many scare-crow articles of the white press are sent broad-cast to injure the race among those who would befriend them, and they do the race more good than harm. For be it remembered that the Negro race is not a new and untried personage in this country, but on the other hand he has been here for centuries and has been most severely tried in the fire and has not yet been found wanting in honesty, loyalty and as a serene law-abiding people. The greatest law-abiding and law respecting people on this globe today.
While these accusations to say the least are xenatious and blood-curdling and are enough to cite a people to most everything and anything, the Negro has broad, manly shoulders and will bear them and await his season and his time.
We still believe "Truth crushed to earth shall rise again," and the Negro will yet be fully and honorably exonerated.
iliers
xonorated
by Colored Soldier
fully Charged
eno, Okla.
IS THE WHITE SOUTH FALLING
DOWN?
Is the white South falling down on
the supreme matter of respect for
their womankind?
A very short time ago a white woman in good standing, in Atlanta, shot her sister to death because, she alleged, she was intimate with her husband and had alienated his affections. Only last week, in Atlanta, a respectable white woman, engaged in selling articles from house to house, was assaulted by a white man when she entered his home.
Then came the case of Mrs. Bird-song, in Mississippi, who shot Dr. Butler to death because, she alleged, he had scandalized her good name and reputation. A jury of her peers did not agree with her and found her guilty, and the unfeeling judge sentenced her to serve a term of five years in the penitentiary. She is a relative of United States Senator McLaurin of Mississippi, and everything possible was done to save her from the consequences of her act.
And then came the highly sensational mix-up of the Strothers and Bywaters, white people of high social standing in Virginia; the facts of the mix-up being that Mr. Bywaters, who had been paying attentions to Miss Viola Strother, got her in trouble, and in the effort to get the matter straight went to Washington with her, where she underwent a criminal operation. The facts were suspected by the brothers of the young woman, and they insisted that Bywaters should marry her. This he did in the sick room. After marrying her, Bywaters considered that he had done all that could be expected of him and desired to leave the house. When he undertook to do so the Strothers opened fire on him. Eleven shots were fired, and Bywaters got ten of them in his body. He fell out of the window, through which he had attempted to make his escape, and was allowed to lie there for a half hour, while he slowly died in agony. And these things, and others of their character justify us in asking, is the white South falling down on the supreme matter of respect for their womankind?—Age, N. Y.
NEWTON NEWS.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Dell were in the city last week visiting relatives and report a lovely time.
Hebna Perkins and Sherly Lucas were in the city this week.
Mrs. Chas. Miller has returned from Pueblo, where she was visiting her mother and reports a lovely time.
Mrs. A. J. Tandy made a flying trip to Hutchinson to attend the funeral of a friend Thursday evening.
Mrs. Ophelia Radley is on the sick list this week.
Mrs. G. A. Fray is on the sick list.
Miss Callie Anderson left Monday for Wichita to visit Miss Erma Clark.
Mrs. John McCain is on the sick list.
Mrs. Cora Hilman is on the sick list.
Mrs. Jno. Anderson, Miss Callie Anderson, Mrs. Frank House, Mr. and Mrs. E. Ridley, Robert Brown and George Brown, Oscar Rickman, Lee Frame, Eugene Rowland and Miss Lena Rowland were the guests of Miss Mabel Hall of Peabody on her 17th birthday.
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THE SEARCHLIGHT,
W. N. MILLER.....Editor
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GREAT SCOTT! TILLMAN AGREES
WITH FORAKER.
Marion, Ohio—In an interview here sick and has been for several months. Senator Tillman, who spoke tonight on the race problem, upheld Senator Foraker in his stand against the President in the Brownville affair.
Asked what he thought of Foraker's latest speech on the subject, Tillman replied:
"Well, Foraker and I are of the same opinion. I don't believe President Roosevelt can punish an innocent man, whether black or white. Roosevelt wants to be the National Government. He overrode the law in discharging the Negro troops, but he has gone outside the Constitution before."
The Senator would not acknowledge Foraker as a Presidential possibility,
The ladies of the G. L. O. Club entertained in a most delightful manner a number of their friends on New Year's eve at Young's hall, which was most tastefully decorated. A pleasing feature of the occasion was the two guessing contests. The first was a tie between the Misses G. Baker, L. Covington and Mr. F. Hill and E. K. Bowers. A decision was made by the drawing of straws and was won by Mr. Bowers. The second was a tie between Miss Covington and Rev. J. Taylor, who withdrew in favor of the latter, who received the next prize. Dainty boxes of bon bons were passed to each guest. An elegant repast was served.
NOBODY RIDES BUT FATHER.
Theodore Willing Gulick, who has made himself prominent by advertising Muskogee as secretary of that city's commercial club, has been heard to hum the following, with the approach of the new year:
Everybody walks but father,
He rides 'round all day;
Big mogul on the railroad,
He don't have to pay.
Little Johnny's walking,
Also brother Will;
So's the whole d—— family
Since Hepburn passed his bill.
The B. T. W. Club held a very enjoyable meeting with Mrs. Sam Collins at the residence of Mrs. Thos. Glover on Thursday afternoon. Mrs. E. J. Alexander who represented the club at the annual meeting of the Inter-state, made a creditable report of the proceedings to the club. After the general routine of business a delicious luncheon was served by the hostess. The club then adjourned to meet with Mrs. Geo. Daniels, 426 N. Wichita street.
Some people never get out of the world of penniles into the world of dollars.
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Send your news notes and local happenings to 601 North Main Street.
LITERARY ELECTS.
The Literary Society held a very interesting meeting Wednesday night. After the rendition of their program they went into the election of officers. The following were the officers elected for the ensuing year: B. M. Crowford, president; Miss B. Alexander, vice-president; Miss Irma Clark, Secretary; Mrs. B. McBride, Treasurer; Rev. Chas. G. Cole, Chaplain; Program committee, H. W. Marshall, Prof. A. M. Wilson, Chas. Price; Executive Board, H. W. Marshall, W. A. Bettis, Chas. Price.
MOTTO.
"It is no benefit to have given me something, but it is a benefit to have enabled me to obtain something for myself."—Emerson.
MRS. COLEMAN DEAD.
The many friends of Mrs. Oscar Coleman will regret to learn of the death of Mrs. Coleman, his faithful wife, who died in Fredonia, Kansas on December 27th. One glorious thought is that she was an ardent Christian lady. He has the sympathy of his many warm friends.
HELD OPEN DOOR.
One of the most elaborate functions ever witnessed in Wichita was the open-door reception maintained by Miss Lula Covington, Miss Grace Baker, Miss Winnie Ray and Miss Marie Whitted at the handsome of Mr. and Mrs. Sam W. Jones, 501 N. Water, New Year day from 2 to 5 p. m. All four young ladies were neatly dressed in the season's most fashionable, and stood in the beautifully decorated parlor and received the guests as they came at the door in the vestibule stood Master John D. and Morris Jones, who received the wraps from the guests, and Miss Della Gaines who received the cards. In the sitting-room was-Miss Pansy Cox, who was seated at the piano and enlivened the occasion with a flow of classic, up-to-date and sweet-sounding music. The dining-room was handsomely decorated and at the four corners of the table stood as many colored candles, connected with tiny silk ribbon. In the center of the parlor on the electric light chandelier, hung a mistletoe.
Mrs. V. Covington, Mrs. S. W. Jones, Mrs. J. G. Gaines and Mrs. H. T. Baker served the guests, assisted by seven young ladies. This was conceded by all who attended to have been one of the swellest functions ever given among Wichita colored people.
The following persons presented cards: Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Young, Mr. and Mrs. A. Paul, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Reed, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Gaines, Mr. and Mrs. A. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Coffeeey, Mr. and Mrs. Theo, Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. A. Griggs, Mr. and Mrs. S. Griggs, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Glover, Mesdames L. Finis, L. Gibbs, R. Watson, B. McClellan, W. H. Jones, L. Thomas, J. W. Thompson, J. L. Harper, Thos. Cox, L. C. Carr, S. Miller, L. Robison, J. M. Smith, E. K. Bowers, W. O. Bettis, B. Waters, N. Howard, W. Baker, C. H. Anderson, W. M. Bowers, Ed Miller, Misses A. Thompson, L. Thompson, L. Williams, B. Miller, B. Alexander, M. Flemings, P. Hackely, Panzy Cox, F. Phelps, L. Whitted, D. Gaines, Messrs R. Hupp, R. Floyd, Chas. Floyd, E. R. Whitted, Jas. Whitted, B. Bell, W. H. Neely, H. Wells, Ora Taylor, J. Rucker, and Rev. J. F. C. Taylor.
Do You Want Long Hair?
IF SO, SEE
Mrs. Geo. McDonald,
Sole Agent For
MME. C. J. WALKER'S
Wonderful Hair Grower
Mrs. McDonald is the Sole
Agent and uses the same
process which Mme. Walker uses in making the
hair grow. Office at
634 North Wabash Ave.,
Elmer Johnson who formerly live at 312 N. Mead, has purchased a beautiful six room cottage and four lots on South Topeka Ave.
Miss Lulu Parks spent the holidays in Wichita from Ft. Scott.
TO DO MUCH WORK.
The official board of St. Paul A. M.
E. church held their final meeting for
906 at the parsonage Monday night
at 8 p. m. After winding up the work
of the old year the board took up, discussed and decided on plans for the new year.
TO RAISE.
They decided on passing out cards and giving a series of house socials by each member of the Steward and Trustee Board once each week, and all the money raised to be evenly divided between these two departments of the church. Their object is to raise money with which to pay all debts against the church.
NOTED WOMAN
Mrs. E. E. Whitfield,
Woman's National
vention
NEW HOPE BAPT
SUNDAY, JANU
The people of Wick golden opportunity to most noted colored America at New Hope next Sunday, Jan. 6th,
FIRST SOCIAL
The first house-social will be given by Steward Will C. Neely at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jones, 522 N. Water, Wednesday night, January 9th. He will serve the following:
Oyster Soup
Turkey with Dressing.
Cranberry Sauce
Baked Chicken
Celery
Coffee Cake Ice Cream
Every member of the church and every friend is very cordially asked to attend these socials as all the money raised will go to the church.
BUY LUMBER FROM METZ.
We call the attention of our many readers who desire to buy lumber to the Metz Lumber Co., 3rd and Main. They want your trade, will treat you right, give you bargains and serve you like people. Buy your lumber from them. Both phones 126.
Nolley's
Grand Rapids Furniture
Greatest
Christmas Sale
Something Suitable
For A Gift For Ev-
ery one. And
PRICES TO PLEASE ALL
Come early and get your selection before the rush. Rockers $1.25 up. Children Rockers 25c. Dining Chairs 75c.
PRICES LESS
118-120 North Main Street
Chas, H. Floyd came up from Kingman, Saturday and spent New Year in Wichita among friends. He left Wednesday for his home.
Miss Nellie Banks was come to Wichita with her sister, Miss Florence Banks, both of Pretty Prairie, was taken very il Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walker. She is now much improved and will soon be able to return to her home again.
Youwant the best, don't you? Then Buy
RED STAR
FLOUR
Purest, Whitest, Sweetest, Best Ask your grocer for it Made in Wichita RED STAR MILL & ELEVATDR CO.,
A 14-room house and two corner lots for sale at a big bargain. Write Mrs Henrietta Simpson, Watonga, Okla.
Watch meeting was held at all the churches in Wichita, Monday night. All the services were very impressive bidding the old year 1906 "fare-the-well" and the new year, 1907, "thou art welcome."
The new year came in with a cold, sloppy rain lasting all day.
The ladies of the Court Heroines of Jericho entertained Mrs. E. Bell at the residence of Mrs. Phillip Hyde, 217 New York Ave., last week. Those present were: Rev. W. H. Tillman, Rev. Joseph Wilson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Young, Mr. and Mrs. Neely, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Gaines, Mr. and Mrs. P. Hyde, Mr. and Mrs. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Patterson, Mrs. Agnes, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. E. Neely, Mrs. E. Bell, Misses Winnle Ray, Della Gaines and Viola Brown.
Hear Mrs. Whitfield at New Hope Baptist church Sunday night.
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TO RAISE
NOTED WOMAN COMING.
Mrs. E. E. Whitfield, Field Secretary Woman's National Baptist Convention.
NEW HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH,
SUNDAY, JANUARY 6TH.
The people of Wichita will have a golden opportunity to hear one of the most noted colored lady speakers in America at New Hope Baptist church next Sunday, Jan. 6th, 1907.
This lady is Mrs. E. E. Whitfield, who is one of the most noted colored lady speakers in America today. Her work in the Woman's Department of the Baptist church is one of great importance. She is a powerful, eloquent and logical speaker. Go down to hear her next Sunday at 3 p. m.
W. M. Dunson,
Painter and Paper Hanger,
All Work Guaranteed
302 W. Murdock Ave., Wichita
IF IT EVER HAPPENED
YOU'LL FIND IT IN
THE SEARCHLIGHT.
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Household Ruth had an initiation on
Wednesday night.
Miss Bernice Cox daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. A. A. Cox is very sick with
pneumonia at the home of her par-
ents, 423 N. Water.
Chas. H. Floyd after spending several days in the city visiting among friends left Wednesday morning for his home in Kingman.
J. W. Owens Shoe Repairing
WORK DONE WHILE YOU WAIT
2nd Shoes Bought and Sold
332 H. Main Street
Wichita, Kan.
J. C. Coffee made a trip to Salina
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Isler were the welcome guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Miller Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Mary Sherrills is very ill at her home, 311 W. Murdock.
Rev. J. F. C. Taylor, pastor of the A. M. E., church has returned from a very pleasant visit with his family in Colorado Springs.
Mrs. J. A. Martin has returned from Memphis, Tenn., where she has been for the past two months.
Mrs. W. N. Miller and Mrs. Lillian Madison were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Underwood Monday. They had a very pleasant time.
The Household Ruth held an initiation at their hall Wednesday evening.
The House Club met with Mr. and Mrs. J. Wheeler, 1054 N. Santa Fe Ave., Friday night. A splendid time was had in games and muisc, after which a delicate three course luncheon was served. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Stradford, Mr. and Mrs. S. Griggs, Mrs. B. McClellan, Mrs. M. Turner.
The House Club met with Mr. and Mrs. S. Griggs at their home, 825 N. Wichita street, Wednesday night and a most enjoyable time was had and before retiring the merry guests were served with a dainty repast. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. M. Robison, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. P. Stratford, Mr. and Mrs. F. Banks and Mrs. B. McClellan.
Lee Johnson, age 49 years, died at his home, 510 Heyleman, Monday afternoon. He was sick only one week with pneumonia. For years he drove a transfer team and was known by every one. He leaves a wife and sister to mourn his loss. The funeral was held New Year's day at Shiloh Baptist church.
Mrs. Hickman and her eldest daughter, Miss Nancy, are reported very
4 Supplement to
THE SEARCHLIGHT
WieHITA, 2 ee KANSAS,
According to Sir Lauder Brunton,
writing in the Lancet, the average
length of life has rapidly become
greater. “There has been a contin-
uous increase in the expectation of
life from a little under 40 years in
Sof to @ trifle less than 48 years in
yuo.” A gain of eight years in haif
4 veutury appears tremendous, but
the figures could be, of course, more
significant still if we applied the com-
patison to two periods separated by
several centuries. Here is a rather
intangible, but certainly important
eement, that should enter into all our
aiompts at formulating historical
poispeetives, However unconsclous
the average mediaeval man may have
teen of What his worth as am insur-
aoe risk was at any particular time,
iis acts and thoughts must have been
protoundly influenced by the fact that
he had om an average 15 years less to
ive than his suecessor of the nine-
teenth eentry, says New York Pox.
The violence of primitive civilization
may be due to the ‘nstinetive desire
for getting as mucl. satisfaction as
possible ont of a briex existence. Pos-
sivly, we do not lire longer in the
twentieth century because we fight
less; but we quarrel less because we
live longer. Leisure is necessary for
altruism. Just so people step on each
ovirr’s toes and scowl during the
halfhour's expiation in the subway,
nut are polite and form lasting friend-
ships on the comrauter's train to and
thum New Brunswick.
Ennilsh: Siubeta (aaeetaciam:
‘The British nobleman responds to
the demands of imperial patriotism
when they are called to his attention.
‘The duke of Westminster is the latest
of them to use his immense wealth
tn assisting to make the distant pos-
sessions of the empire British in fact
4s well as in name. Two or three
years ago his interest in South Africa
was aroused by persons who thought
that more Englishmen ought to be at-
tracted to that part of the world. The
duke bought 19,000 acres of land in
the Orange River Colony, built 18
farmhouses and the necessary farm
buildings upon it, erected scho8l-
houses and other public buildings,
und sent out all the machinery and
tools needed to till the land and to
prepare the crops for consumption.
Exghteen famiJies have been put in
the houses, and are now. cultivating
the soil and attempting to establish
a center of British influence and the
nucleus of a large British settlement.
If the enterprise proves successful the
@uke does not expect to net more
than two per cent, interest on his fn-
vestment. But when the Orange Rtv-
¢r Colony is thickly settled the new
district of Westminster—it Is named
after the duke—will yield large re
carte teciinre dakes:
" vr, Morrison, the well-known cor-
respoudent of the London Times at
Pekin, went to sce the recent manev-
vers of the modernized Chinese army
in the neighborhood of Changtefu.
He describes inem as a repetition of
the performance of last year -a set-
piece carefully prepared long before
hand by a number of Japanese
advisers. The general opinion formed
by the military attaches was not, he
says, unfavorable, though many years’
work without official jobbery will be
needed before the troops can com.
pare with those of more advanced na
tions. The inefficiency of the officers
is still conspicuous, and the field
training of the men inadequate, but
the material is good. Dr. Morrison
hints pretty plainly that, without the
Japanese to direct affairs, the con-
tending armies would have been little
Ybetter than a rabble.
‘The development of Alaska ts con-
Jeinuing at e phenomenal rate. wirect
proof of this Is furnished by the re.
pom showing the operations of the
government telegraph system in the
territory. Receipts during the last
few months have ranged from 60 to
100 per cent. more than last year, and
the facilities are so inadequate that
additions are imperatively needed.
The system includes more than 3,000
miles of cable and land lines, supple-
mented by wireless apparatus which
bridges a gap of more than a hundred
miles. The lines are being extended
in various directions, and before a
great while will form a network
which will bring all the habitable
portions of the “Seward purchase”
{nto touch with the rest of the world.
Japan is planning to send a squad:
ron of warships across the Pacific
early next year to visit the western
ports of the United States, on their
Way round the world, This will be
the first Japanese squadron to make
#0 long @ voyage and the first to carry
the Japanese flag on a warship into
many harbors,
E A St. jouis man who bas married
na “dare” and now wants a divorce
“has decided that he was “game” after
pall, for some one else.
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8,500 WERE INLINE
The President’s New Year’s Recep-
* tion at the White House Was ‘
a Brilliant Function.
HE SHOOK HANDS WITH ALL
Warm Weather With Bright Sunshine
Made It Pleasant for Those Who,
Stood in Line—Edward
Everett Hale There.
Washington, Jan, 2—President and
Mrs. Roosevelt’s New Year's reception
at the White house Tuesday was a bril-
Mant function and was attended by
about 8,500 persons. The members of
the diplomatic corps, officers of the
army and navy and representatives of
the national and district governments
and of the citizen public attended:
President Roosevelt gave each of his
vallers @ cordial shake of the hand.
After the diplomatists had been re-
ceived, Secretary and Mrs. Root left
the line in the blue room and one by
‘one the members of the cabinet and
‘their wives deserted the president in
order to hold receptions at their own
‘homes. At 1 o'clock Mrs. Roosevelt
‘left her husband’s side and only the
military and naval aides and Seere-
tary Wilson remained with him until
the last person in the great throng
had passed through the blue room,
It was a perfect day. The sun shone
“brightly and the air was so warm that
the thousands who stood in line for
hours suffered no discomforts because
of the weather, It was generally re-
marked that the proportion of negroes
in the line was smaller than in pre-
vious years, but a number of negro
Civil war veterans and Spanish war
veterans joined with military and pa-
triotle societies in extending greet:
ings to the president,
‘There was an uousually large num-
ber of children in line and all were
greeted cordially by the president,
One of the most amusing figures in
the line was a 10-year-old boy with
soiled hands and clothes who earried
a pair of roller skates thrown over
his shoulder, The president laughed
heartily as he wished the little fellow
a happy New Year.
‘A pretty girl carried a great white
Teddy bear past the receiving party
and provoked a hearty laugh from the
erowd gathered in the blue room,
Mrs. Longworth and the other ehit-
dren of -the president were at the
White house for the reception and
with their young friends moyed con-
stantly through the crowd. Miss athel
Roosevelt was prettily gowned in pink
and was much admired. Rear Admiral
Cowles and Mrs. Cowles, the prest-
dent’s sister, were also with the mem-
bers of the presideny’s family during
the reception,
Only three wives of ambassadors
attended the reception, the. Baroness
Sternberg, wife of the German ambas-
sador, the Baroness Rosen, wife of
the Russian ambassador, and the Vis.
countess Aoki, Wife of the Japanese
ambassador.
Included in the number invited to
assist in the blue room were Miss
Mary Harriman, Mrs, and Miss For-
aker, Mrs. Hobson, Mrs. Whitelaw
Reld, Miss Pauline Morton and Mme.
De Littiniere.
Edward Everett Hale, the vener-
‘able chaplain of the senate, was a
“noticeable figure at the reception.
He had with him Herbert Dudley Hale,
of New York City, a relative whom he
introduced to the president, Dr. Hale
sald his first appearance at a White
house New Year's reception was 62
years ago when Tyler was president.
Mexican Conductors’ Salary Raised.
El Paso, Tex., Jan. 2—The Mexi-
can Central railroad conductors an-
nounce that the road has granted the
increase in wages which they demand-
ed which is equal to the pay of the
conductors in the United States, and
there will be no strike. The increase
amounts to abcut 15 per cent.
Former Senator Caffery Dead.
New Orleans, Jan. 1.—Former
United States Senator Donelson L.
Cattery died Sunday night. The body
will be taken to his home in Franklin,
Laon a special. train.
The Baroness Burdett-Coutts/Passead
Away at 92 Years.
She Long Outlived Her Generation
But Her Reputation Never Dim-
med—Spent Fortune in Charity.
London, Jan. 1.—Baroness Burdett
Coutts, who has been ill at her resi-
‘dence here since Christmas eve is
dead. ‘The death of Baroness Burdett-
Coutts, occurring at the age of 92
| years, besides depriving the country of
one of its greatest and most famous
| philanthropists, removes from London
a unique personality and an interest-
ing social figure. As a link with the
almost forgotten past, her life begin:
ning during the reign of the Emperor
[Nepoleou, she lived uring the rolans
}of five British sovereigns, On her in:
heriting an immense fortune, she su
used it as to die beloved by the whole
nation,
‘Twenty-five years ago the baroness
Burdett-Coutts became the wife of
William Ashmead Bartlett, then a
some man in the diplomatic service
and at present a member of parlia-
‘ment for Westminister. He was born
‘at Plymouth, Mass., and upon becom-
‘ing the husband of the baroness Bur-
‘dett-Coutts assumed by royal license
‘the surname of Burdett-Coutts,
‘The baroness Burdett-Coutis had a
‘remarkable history. To have known
William TV, to have been present at
Queen Victoria’s coronation, to «ve
been intimately associated with
‘Charles Dickens and to have spent
over 1,000,000 pounds in charity form
a unique chapter of experiences in
‘this woman's life. King Edward orce
said that after his own mother, the
baroness was the niost remarkatle
woman in England and unquestionably
“the second lady in the land”
‘The baroness Burdett-Joutts who
was 92-years-old, was one of the fore:
most of English women. She was an
intimate and life long friend of the late
Queen Victoria and was one of tae
richest women in England. Her
wealth was used principally to eorry
on her work to improve the condition
of the poor and as a philanthropist
her name was world-wide. The baron-
ess, who was a British peerzi3 m her
own right, had never retixed in hes
charitable wor’: and her nama ia eon.
nection witn piilanthropi? e:forts nas
always heen « hallmark of success.
There fs scarcely a por distrvet In
London that is without some promi.
nent mark: of the baroness® phiian
thropic interest.
Thirty Injured on Street Car:
Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 31—At least
20 persons were injured, one of whom
has since died, in the wreck of a runa-
way electric car on the Warsaw avenue
hill In this city. Tne motorman dis-
covered at the top of the hill that he
had lost control of the car and tried
to use the emergency brake, but it fail-
ed and the car got away for a distance
of five biocks. The car struck a tele-
graph pole and turned turtle, the pae-
sengers beinng thrown in a heap in the
mud beside the track.
fess
A. J. Cassatt Dead.
Philadelphia, Dec, 29, — Alexan-
der Johnston Cassatt, President of the
Pennsylvania Railroad company, and
one of the foremost railroad men and
financiers in the country, died sudden-
ly at his residence in this city Friday
of heart disease. He was a victim of
an attack known professionally as
“the Stokes-Adams Synbrome.” Mr,
Cassatt was 67 years old.
| Gets More Standard Oil Money,
Chicago, Jan. 2.—A New Years gitt
of nearly $2,000,000 was presented by
John D. Rockefeller to the University
of Chicago Monday. This fs the larg-
est contribution of Mr. Rockefeller’s
to the institution and brings his total
benefactions to the university up to
$19 416.992.
Cleveland Has Indigestion.
Princeton, N. J., Dec. 30.—Former
President Grover ‘Cleveland Is con-
fined to his house here suffering from
an attack of acute” indigestion. His
physician says the attack was brought
on through lack of exercise. His con-
dition is not serious,
pesca sj sie ae oe:
HRANSAS ITEMS
: SUMMARY OF WEEH’S HAPPENINGS
on Christmas day. Besides this
they gave away 3,000 garments,
His Seventeeth Annual Dinner.—
Thomas Shaw, the Wichita music
man, gave his seventcenth annual
dinner to the bootblacks and news-
boys of the city on Christmas day.
It was attended by about seventy-
five of “his boys.”
Kaiser Sent Him a Calendar. —
Charles Walkenwitz, a citizen of
Leavenworth, who twenty-five years
ago was a body guard of Kaiser Wil-
helm of Germany, received from the
emperor a German calendar as a
Christmas present.
Musical Director Dead.—Frank N.
Hair, for thirteen years in charge
of the musical department of the
Baker university, at Baldwin, died
suddenly at Excelsior Springs: He
and his wife went to that resort for
the benefit of Mr. Hair's health, 5
Wants $7,000 Damaces.—W. H. Me-
Kiernan has begun suit in the dis-
trict court at Iola against the Kan-
sas Portland Cemer' Company ask-
ing for damages in the sum of $7,000.
He was a workman at the plant and
was injured in an accident while at
work at one of the Griffin mills,
There Should Be More.—The Uni-
ted States government has made an
investigation of Kansas highways
antl finds we have 101,196 mifles of
public road. Of this 158 miles are
surfaced with gravel, 111 miles with
stone and three miles with shells,
making only 272 miles of improved
road in the stata.
* Arrested at Prison Door. — C. C.
Hutchinson, wanted in Logan coun-
ay, Oklahoma. for murder, was ar
rested as he was ieaving the feder-
al penitentiary at Leavenworth,
where he had just finished a term
for larceny under the name of Tun
nell. Hutchinson is accused of kill
ing a German farmer,
In Presence of Family, — Frank
Stewart, azed 46, a carpenter, com-
mitted suicide at his ho:ae In Ga-
Iona by drinking three ounces of
carbolie adi. Stewart dranic the
acid in the presence of his wife and
two children who had. just returned
to their home from town. Excessive
dritking was the cause of the sui-
cide,
Bank Robber-in Prison. — Joseph
S. Kern, the Great Bend bank rob-
ber, has been taken to the atite
penitentiary to serve a sentence of
from ten to twenty-one years. Kern
also confessed to having robbed the
bank at Newton and he may be tried
for that crime after ne has nished
his sentence for the Great Bend rob:
bery.
Hospitable Pratt. — A young man
landed in Pratt recently broke and
entertaining a bad case of tuber-
culosis. The free-hearted fellows of
Pratt made uy a small collection
and sent the poor fellow on to Buek-
In. ‘There he waited for his train
in a waiting room without any fire,
and when his train arrived he stas-
gered on and went to Dodge. He
fall dead there in the depot imme
diately after arriving.
Shot by Train Porter—Two young
men claiming to be from St. Joe
were put off the Rock Island Golden
Gate Limited at Galva and claim that
after they had been prt off the negro
porter opened fire on them with a re-
volver with the result that one was
shot through the knee. The bullet
cut its way throvgh the Joint and the
doctors think an amputation will be
necessary.
Big Car of Cement. — The loia
Portland Cement Company recently
shipped ont what is believed to be
the largest car of cement ever sent
from lola. The car contained 285
barrels, or 1,140 sacks, or 108,300
pounds of cement. The cement was
sold to the government and was
shipped to the west. The car in
which the cement was shipped was
one of the new cirs — longer and
deeper than the vid regulation car.
McNees Was Probably Murdered.—
The coroner's jury at Lawrence in-
vestigating the death of Houston M2
Nees, concluded its work at No. 10
school house by finding that the Ce-
ceased came to his death by + bullet
wound inflicted by John Lewis ard
young Anderson. No one seems to
know what the fight really was
about. It was an old grudge that
cropped out. At first the various
parties threw rocks at each other
and John MéNees was so seriously
hurt that it is still feared that he
may die. Lewis is in jail but Ander-
son has mad~ his escape. The offi
cers will iocate him if possible.
vad dektae | iain teeta aa aie ie ic
formatory at Hutchinson, No action
was taken on the resignation, which
will become effective January 7. The
place pays a salary of $1,000 a year,
with traveling expenses,
Amateur Horse Thief Captured. —
Claude Barker, 22 years old, stole a
horse from W. G, Moyer, of Wetmore,
and a mare from J. F, Howe, of Whit-
ing. He was arrested at Atchison
and turned over to the sherift of
Jackson county, who took him to
Holton. He confessed to the steal-
ing to Sherif Smith. Barker is an
amateur at the business,
Prison For Amasa Thomas. —
Amasa Thomas, who killed Charles
McEwen st Winfieid last May, has
been xentenced by the district court
‘© serve ten years in the penitenti-
wy, the lowest *penalty for the
crime which was murder in the sec-
ond degree, The killing occurred In
a drunken cuarrel, the weapon being
a heavy club,
Marking Santa Fe Trail.—The four
boulders which are to mark the
route of the old Santa Fe trail
through Finney county have arrived
at Garden City and will be placed
soon, with appropriate exercises,
conducted by the school children.
One wili go in at Pierceville, anoth-
er at Sherlock and the two Temain-
ing ones at Garden City, the trail
having passed quite close to Garden
City.
Obliged to Enforce Quarantine. —
There is much anxiety at Jamestown
over the presence of several cases of
a malignant type of diphtheria, Two
deaths have occurred in one famliy
and- two children in another are
very low. ‘These two families, it 1s
claimed, refused to obey the orders
of the county health officers as re-
gards to a quarantine and it was
necessary to send the sheriff there
to enforee the law. Further spread
of the disease {3 feared.
Taft Not Going to Ottawa. — A
reply has just been received by the
Ottawa Chautauqua assembly to the
invitation to Secretary of War Taft
to address the assembly at Ottawa
next summer, extended by Senators
Benson and Long and Congressman
Scott, Secretary Taft writes that it
will be impossible for him to come,
ag he will he-‘making a'trip to the
Philippines later in the summer, and
does not want to take the time to
cross the country twice.
Would Create New Office. — At a
meeting of the board of directors of
the Kansas Traveling Association it
was decided to ask the legislature
for an increased appropriation for
the work of extending the traveiing
library field. The legislature will be
asked to ereate the office of travel-
ing library commissioner, The du-
ties of the officer will be to organize
libraries in the smaller communities
of the state and to assist the smaller
libraries in getting under headway.
Funds Are Exhausted. — The con:
tingent find of the state board of
control is exhausted and for several
weeks past the members of the board
have been compelled to dig down in-
to their vrivate purses to pay postage
on official correspondence, express
and telegrams and’ other incidemal
office expenses. The board of con-
trol was given a contingent fund of
$800 by the last legislature and a
good part of the uppropriation for
this year was used in the purchase
of an adding machine needed for the
office. The traveling fund of $1,500
has so far been ample to meet the
demands upon it.
Soldiers Get Gay. — Several mem:
bers of the Ninth cavalry, negroes,
stationed at Fort Leavenworth,
While intoxicated, created a dis-
turbance on a Fort Leavenworth
electrie car, They Kicked all the
windows ont, beat the conductor and
the motorman, locked them in and
raced with the car to Fort Leaven-
worth, where the rioters were plac-
ed in the guard house. Several
white women were on the car dur-
ing the trouble and some of them
leaped off, but none was injured,
Anti-Trust Meeting at Salina, — A
grent anti-trust meeting will be held
at Salina, January 16, under the
auspices of the Farmers; Merchants
and Shippers Club, whose headquart-
ers is at Pratt. As every other in-
terest 1s thoroughly organized there
is no other course open to the farm-
ers; they must organize and this
they will do in 1907. Every farmers’
organization of any kind is invited
to send delegates. W. R. Stubbs,
Carr Taylor, D. W. Blaine and other
‘able speakers will address this meet
ing.
Fg or ee de GR SOM IS > JaROD
Lightning Struck Twice,
Dr. J. G. Keith, formerly of St
Louis, who was struck by lightning
Several years ago, went to Leadville,
Col., for his health, and was agalu hit
by a bolt. About 11 years ago the
doctor, while walking on the street,
was struck by-a thunder bolt. His
left side was partially paralyzed He
went to Colorado for his health and
last spring while on the street he was
again hit by lightning. This second
bolt practically rendered Dr. Keith
helpless as far as his left side is com
cerned.
FACTS ABOUT FIGURE NINE.
Professor of the Occult Has Added a
New Wrinkle.
Mathematicians have juggled with
the mystic figures 3, 7 and 9 for ages,
and now comes a foreign “professcr”
of the occult science to tell fortune
by “the force in a simple numeral”—
the’ 9. He reminds his victims that if
they multiply any number, short of a
decimal, by 9 the two figures of the
product added together will make 9.
‘Thus: Nine times 2 are 18, aud 8 and
l are 9; 9 times 3 are 27, and 7 and 3
are 9; 9 times 5 are 4”, and 5 and 4
are 9; 9 times 6 are 54, and 4 and &
are 9; 9 times 7 are 63, and 3 and’ é
are 9; 9 times 8 are 72, and 2 and 7
are 9; 9 time 9 are 81, and 1 and 8 are
9. Me might have added that any
number in the hundreds of thousands
multiplied by 9 will give a product
the sum of whose digits is.a multiple
of 9. Take at random—9 times 545
are 4,905, the sum of which is 18, and
9 into 18 goes 2 times, Take, 7,352
multiplied by 9 equais 66,168; the sum
ofsthe digits is 27; 9 into 27 goes
3 times. Oh, there is an immense
amount of fun in 9.
MADE THEM ALL LAUGH.
Book Must Have Been Funny, but No
One Knew What Is Was.
It must have been a very. funny
story! The type looked funny from
across the aisle of the car, the pie-
tures looked funny, and the young
lady who was reading it doubled up:
in fits of stifled laughter every few
minutes. The young man in the seat
with her could not help stealing a
glance at the pages of the book which
was evidently so funny, but whose:
cover was carefully doubled back out
of sight, and soon he began to laugh.
as he undlushingly followed the story
page after page, shaking with sup-
pressed merriment.
‘The woman in the seat at right an-
gles became interested and looked
over the girl’s shoulder. Presently
her face broadened into a grin and
soon she was convulsively shaking.
The man in the seat across smiled at.
the scene. A boy a few seats down
the aisle grinned sympathetically. A
darky still further down showed all
his white tecth. The contagion spread:
until the car was nearly on the verge-
of hysterics, when the fair reader got
up to leave the train, yet no one but
the girl herself had any idea as te
what the book was.
VAST WEALTH OF THE SOUTH.
In Natural Resources That Section Iw
‘Supreme.
To its coal supply, more than twice-
as great as the combined coal area
of Great Britain, Germany and’ Penn-
sylvinia; to its vast stores of oll and
natural gas as supplementary sources
power of water powers for utilization
of power and heat and light the South
adds at least 3,000,000 available horse:
power of water powers for utilization
for electrical transmission, also for
power, heat and ight. The develop-
ment of this vast water power poten-
tiality will eventuaily employ $250,
000,000 to $30,000,000 and be equal in.
working capacity to 6,000,000 men, It
will make possible construction of
thousands of miles of interurban elec-
tric roads, it will furnish cheap power
and light for mines and factories, and
create, as in Switzerland, the highest
forms of skilled mechanical work in
the mountains of the South, where
climatic conditions are unsurpassed.
by any other section of the world. In.
counting up the riches of the South al-
ways bear in mind its wealth of ever-
running streams, where nature fur-
nishes the power without price except
for the cost of development—Manu-
facturers’ Record.
POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD.
Guarantee On Their Products.
We warrant and guarantee that
an packages of Postum Cereal, Grape-
Nutsand Hiijab’s Manna hereafter sole
by any jobber or retailer, comply wsthy
the provisions of the National Pure
Food Law, and are not and shall not
pe adulterated Or mis-branded within
jhe meaning gf said Act of Congress
approved June 30, 1906, and entitled,
“Aan act for preventing the manufac-
ture, sale or transportation of adul-
terated or mis-branded or poisonous oF
deleterious foods, drugs, medicines,
liquors, and for regulating traflle there
in for other purposes.”
Postuat Cenrat Co., Lip.
C. W. Post, Chairman,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Dec. 12, 1906.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 15th day of December, 1906.
Bexgaain F. Rem,
Notary Public.
My commission expires July 1, 1907.
Our goods are pure, they always
have been and always will be, they are
not mis-branded. We have always
since’ the beginuing of our business,
printed @ truthful statement on” the
packages of the ingredients contained
therem and we stand back of every
package. - we
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| TORTURED WITH GRAVEL. THE PROGRESS OF THE CANA-| Perfectly simple and sinoly. perfect ip Monarchs as Lingulsts.
P os DIAN WEST. gong with PUTNAM ELESS | Monarchs must know more than one
ince Using Doan's Kidney Pills Not ut —— FEBS. M60 "per “packsae- language. King Edward, who trav- E i
E> Single Stone Has Formed. Nearly 200,000 of an Increase In Cana-| some men get as tired of being mar- | eled so much, speaks French better
S. pies Ga Sia Stata See da’s Immigration in 1906, ried as some women do of not being. | than -— Reais: wet also ee SING
r . 8. T ; — man, The czar of Russia speaks |
| Camp, U. C. V, Roanoke, Va, says: | TRAINS RUNNING AT HIGH) on, progress of a new country can-|_ PILES CUREDINGT014DAX8. | French as well as his native tongue | LE
: eae “T suffered a long, | SPEED MEET AT HILL BASE. | not be better ascertained than by not- | PAZ. OINTMENT: euarameed tocure ans case | and knows the numerous dialects. | BINDER
a FES, long time with my ing the increase of railroad mileage in | 6114 days or money refunded. eo | Emperor William of Germany speaks | STRALGHT BECIGAR
4 2 back, and felt Sere its transportation system, and, judged | ay . | French and English correctly, and is | rl
fs Ps f draxey: -and «let by this standard, the Canadian West | | Experiments made by Father Joseph | ais well versed in Latin. The king ees se
. "my tess and tired all | PASSENGERS ARE BURNED ALIVE | teas ai the countries in the woria | Mursas. of Wilkeshams, Pa. event? | of Spain, the youngest of all, speaks eerey see
Bp pyc’ J tho time. I lost Guring the current year. Thirty years | tht wireless telegraphy can be cat | German ‘with ease and also. French | for Cigars
ae Bet vx trom my usual StS ago there was not one hundred miles | "ed on through the Se well #3 | and English, Because of his marriage Not 90 Good,
GPRS weient, 225, to of railroad west of the Great, Lakes, | ‘hrourh the alr, if deep shafts or Nelle he now practices the latter. ‘The king | RACE WIA Paria, 1)
- cals NW 170. Urinary pas | many Buried Under Wreckage Slow- | and very little prospect of a trans- | 876 SUNK [Or the sending and receiving | ¢ portugal speaks French, English, |
. coy Hage eases were too continental route for many years to | SPparatus s | German and Spanish. The king of ;—— ce
2 4 B50 Beaune so a ly Consumed— Most All Mexicans | come, but by the end of 1885 the | Tbe extraordinary popularity of fine| Italy is a master of French and Ger
Z have bad t0 Ket | Operator Blamed — Claims He | Canadian Pactfic Rallway was within | white goods this summer makes the | "#2 and Is also well verzed tn the va- EE
: a oP ction at niente ata measurable distance of completion, | choice of Starch a matter of great im- | Tous Italian dialects. i gen
* hei " Dieobeyed. Orders. gtk teak” Geavucketanten waeivs Balaban |e ee eee pea. ek ea ol fr nameline
Ais» long time with my
back, and felt
py avasey and ist:
pp lesa and tired all
ae
SNe eer ~%, rom my usual
CREA S weient, 225, to
Be ee Bree! 110. Urinary pas
f sages were too
a’ PFew, trequent and 1
; /s have had to get
Age, vp otten at night.
rf) 1 had headaches
and dizzy spells also, but my worst
Suffering was from renal colic. After
J began using Doan's Kidney Pills 1
passed a gravel stono as big as a
bean. Since then I linve never had
an attack of gravel, and have picked
up to my former health and weight. 1
&m a well man, and give Doan’s Kid
ney Pills cvedit for it.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents @ box
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y.
‘A woman who has applied to the
Lambeth Guardians for reliet says she
4s @ button-hole maker, is paid two
pence a dozen and that it takes an
‘hour and Mhalf to make them. Evi
dently there are still people who sing
he song of the shirt—London Globe.
Important to Mothers.
Fedton carraly every tle of CASTOTUA,
ieee corcteany fer tnlnars ane lao
tt noo that
Bears the -
sigutare ot Lar ff Thad
{In Use For Over 30 Years,
Tho Kind You Have Aiways Bought.
Strangely Mounted.
The strangest military body in the
‘world is a band of cavalry at Saint de
Moorvay, a province on the east coast
of Africa, which is under the rule of
the French governor general at Mada
gascar. These soldiers go about thelr
‘military operations on oxen. The ant
‘mals are lean creatures, and it is said
whey move with surprising rapidity.
Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine
‘wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in @
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickering
‘the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
father’s Good Advice.
4 young man from Pittsburg went
to New York to “make good” in his
chosen profession, says a New York
letter. ‘The other night he stood fn
the lobby of a hotel and a friend asked
him what he thought of New York.
“I have only been here two days,” he
replied, “so I have not seen the city
very thoroughly. My father’s parting
words to me when I left home were:
‘My son, you are going to a great city.
‘There is much good and much evil to
be found in New York. Keep to the
etraight and narrow path as closely
as possible, avoid Wall street and,
above all, beware of the monkey
house.’ "
a ei
While the Bank of England makes
{t a pot never under any circum-
stances to relinquish the prosecution
‘Of those who have defrauded it in the
slightest degree, being willing, if need
‘be, to spend thousands of pounds to
capture and prosecute people wbo
have robbed it of even a few shillings,
the Rothschilds make it a rule never
to appeal to the courts or to the police
in such matters. Of course, they are,
like every other banker, occasionally
the victims of dishonesty, but neither
the police nor the public ever hear
‘about the matter. This has always
been a principle of the heads of the
house, who take the ground that it is
better to bear the loss in silence than
to disturb popular confidence in the
safety of the concern by allowing it
to be seen that its treasures are not
‘adequately safeguarded.
Carew Ene,
‘Nervous Woman Stopped Coffee and
Quit Other Things.
No better practical proot that coffee
4s a drug can be required than to note
how the nerves become unstrung in
‘women who habitually drink it.
‘The stomach, too, rebels at being
continually drugged with coffee and
tea—they both contain the drug—
caffeine. Ask your doctor.
An Ia. woman tells the old story
thus:
“I had used coffee for six years and
was troubled with headaches, nervous
ness and dizziness. In the morning
upon rising I used to belch up a sour
fluld regularly.
“Often I got so nervous and miser.
‘able I would cry without the least rea-
son, and I noticed my eyesight was
getting poor.
“After using Postum a while, I ob-
served the headaches left me and soon
the belching of sour fluid stopped (wa-
ter brash from dyspepsia). I feel de-
eldedly different now, and I am con
¥inced that it is because I stopped
“coffee and began to use Postum. Ican
see better now, my eyes are stronger.
“A friend of mine did not like
-Postum but when I told her to make it
“like it said on the package, she liked
“ft all right.” Name given by Postum
_Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Always boil
Postum well and it will surprise you.
- Read the little book, “The Road te
»Wellville” in pkga, “There's a ree
eae,
ae ARs HORAOR
PASSENGERS ARE BURNED ALIVE
Many Buried Under Wreckage Slow-
ly Consumed — Most All Mexicans
—Operator Blamed — Claims He
Disobeyed Orders.
| Topeka, Kan., Jan, 4.—In the semi-
‘darkness of an early morning two
through passenger trains on the Chi-
eago, Rock Island and Pacific rail-
road, running at a high rate of speel,
met in a head-on collision on a
curve five miles west of Volland,
Kan., about 5:10 o'clock yesterday
morning. The deafening sound of
the impact was immediately answer-
ed by the heartrendering cries of
tue injured. While the frenzied cries
were awakening the ueighborhood
for miles around, another danger was
threatening the helpless victims.
Slow but sure a fire that had been
ignited by overturned lamps and hot
coals from the demolisaed engines
was eating up the wreesage debris
under which many were either wholly
Lor partially buried,
The list of dead to date includes
four white men, a negro porter and
over thirty Mexican laborers. The
injured number 55,
‘The officials of the company piace
the blame on John Lynes, the 1%
year-old telegraph operator at Vol-
land, who failed to stop train No. 29
fat his station after receiving orders
to hold it there until No. 30 had pass-
ed. Lynes is being held by the au-
thorilies of Waubaunsee county at
Alma, for investigation.
‘The wreck was one of the most
disastrous in the history of the Rock
Island. The brant of the collision
was sustained by train No. 29, which
was heavily laden with passengers.
The cars on this train went into the
diteh and several of them caught
fire and were consumed. Close &
thirty persons, mostly Mexican la
borers, in the smoking car on No. 29,
many of them pinioned in the wreck
age, were burned to death and only
their ashes remain. Twelve of the
injured were seriously hurt and it is
believed that half of dhese wili die
But few persons on train No, 3
were seriously injured. The cars or
this train were not badly damaged.
The engineers and firemen of botl
trains and most. of the _ trainmer
jumed in time to save themselves
‘The express messenger on No. 28
is missing.
‘An interpreter for the Mexicans
was questioned as he lay slowly burn
ing to death under the wreekage, He
said there were 25 Mexicans in thei
party going from Kansas City to El
Paso to work, and the most of them
were burning to death like himself.
John Lynes, the operator at Vol
land, who is yow in jail, telis the fol
lowing story of the cause of the
wreck:
He says he was sent a message tc
have train No. 14 pass No. 29 at Vol
land, No, 29 to take the siding. This
they did. Immediately after No. 1
passed, No, 29 backed cut on the
main line and passed the station a
terrific speed. He tried to flag the
train with lanterns, but both wen}
out. He claims he had no ofders t
hold No, 29 for No. 30 until No, 2
got on the main line, and then i
was too late. Lynes fled to the
country, but afterwards gave himsel:
up.
“Superintendent Rourke, now a
the wreck, states that 35 peopie were
killed, ten bodies having been recov
ered. Nearly all of the killed wer
Mexicans or other foreign laborer:
who were riding in the smoking ca
gt tha rca hana tin
TO INVESTIGATE DISCHARGE.
Belief Prevalent of Immediate Ac-
tion,
Washington, Jan, 4—There is Ilt
tle doubt that the sonate will order
an immediate investigation of the
discharge of the negro troops of the
Twenty-Afth infantry on account of
their “alleged participation in the
“shooting up” of the town of Browns:
ville, Tex. Senator Foraker, whose
resolution authorizing the commit
tee on military affairs to make an
inquiry is pending, today expressed
the hope that the resolution would
be adopted oon after the re-conyen
ing tomorrow.
Dry Farming Congress.
Denver, Colo; Jan, 1. —"Gov, Me
Donald has issued a call for the firs
general convention of those visibl3
interested in the reclamation of the
semi-arid regions of the Uuitec
States by systems of scientific tarm
ing to meet in the city of Deaver
Colorado, on January 244th and 25th
3907.
‘The value of this movement is ap
parent to all who have been closely
Watching the development of agri
cultural production under both irri
NO CHINESE FOR CANAL.
Chairman Shonts Says They Will
Not Be ake
Washington, Jam. 4. — Chairman
Shonts of the isthmian canal com-
mission sald today, concerning the
dispatch from Panama announcing
that Chinese labor would not be used
fon the canal: “No decision has been
reached as to what sort of iaborers
will be employed in the canal zone.
It is impossible to arrive at any de-
cision until after the canal comtract
has been disposed. of.”
Saale
THE PROGRESS OF THE CANA.
DIAN WEST.
Nearly 200,000 of an Increase in Cana-
da’s Immigration in 1906,
‘The progress of a new country can-
not be better ascertained than by not-
ing the increase of railroad mileage in
its transportation system, and, judged
by this standard, the Canadian West
Jeads all the countries in the world
during the current year. Thirty years
ago there was not one hundred miles
of railroad west of the Great, Lakes,
and very little prospect of a trans-
continental route for many years to
come, but by the end of 1885 the
‘Canadian Pacific Railway was within
measurable distance of completion,
‘and last year—twenty years later—
over 6,000 miles of railroad traversed
the provinces of Manitoba, Sas-
katehewan and Alberta,
In the past year tho work of rail-
road construction has been vigorously
prosecuted, and by the end of 1906,
some 5,000 miles of completed railroad
has been added, making a total of
fully 11,000 miles in the three great
grain producing provinces of Canada.
Such an increase in the transportation
facilities of the country is bound to
make good times not only in the dis-
triets wliere the railroads are being
built, but throughout the entire west.
Allowing $20,000 a mile for construe-
tion, the sum of $100,000,000 will be
put in circulation, and this in itselt
should cause good times to prevail in
a land where work is plentiful, wages
are high, and the cost of living 1s mod-
erate.
But the building of new railroads
through Western Canada means a
greater benefit to the country than
merely the money put in circulation
by the cost of construction, Addition-
al railway building means the opening
of new agricultural districts and an
additional area under crops; a largely
ixfcreased output of grain to foreign
markets with consequent financial re-
turns; the erection of elevators and
the growth of villages, towns and cit-
fes; and everything else that makes
for the progress of national life, and
the opening up of additional thousands
of free homesteads, so extensively ad-
vertised by the Canadian government
agent, whose address appears else
where.
It was stated on the floor of the
Canadian Parliament recently by a
prominent representative that ten
years from now would see the bulk of
the population of Canada residing
west of the Great Lakes, and if the
work of railway building during the
present year is any criterion, the
prophecy made by the Canadian states:
man may be easily fulfilled inside of
the time stated. During the present
year no less than 189,064 persons have
found homes in the Canadian west,
of whom 57,796 were Americans who
have seen the great possibilities of
this new West, and have decided to
cast In their lot with it. Certainly,
our neighbor north of the 49th parallel
is making a great record, and deserves
the success that appears to be coming
its way:
Peru Claims Kurokt.
Gen. Kuroki, the famous Japanese
soldier, has been variously described
as of Polish, Russian and German ex-
traction, Another interesting chap-
ter has been added to this genealogical
symposium by an official publication
in the Official Gazette, of Lima, Peru,
which makes the claim, and submits
a plausible statement of facts to prove
it, that Kuroki’s father was a Peruvian
patriot whose name was Transito
Charroqui. It is also declared that
the general's father was a descendant
‘of the Incas, who themselves are be-
lieved to have been descendants of an
Asiatic race, so Kuroki is an atavism
and has come into his own in the land
of his fathers.
cian Sine aie ice:
No one can be happy, light-hearted
and healthy with a body full of blood
that cannot do its duty to every part
because of its impurity; therefore, the
first and most important work in hand
is to purify the blood so that every
organ will get the full benefit of a
healthy circulation. There is no rem-
edy so good as that old family rem-
edy, Brandreth’s Pills. Hach pill con-
tains one grain of the solid extract of
sarsaparilla blended with two grains
of a combination of pure and mild
vegetable products, making it a blood
purifier unexcelled in character. One
or two taken every night for awhile
will produce surprising results.
Brandreth’s Pills have been in use
for over a century, and are for sale
everywhere, plain or sugar-coated.
World’s Largest Pin Factory.
Birmingham, Eng., boasts the
largest pin factory in the world, where
37,000,000 pins are manufactured every
working day.
em a ea es tia a ae
ovens coe amees ge EE
SRV na ee
Fear of the future is worse than
one’s present lot.-—Quintilian.
Garfield Tea is made of herbs~a great
point in its favor! Take it for constipa-
tion, indigestion and liver disturbances.
‘They are countless roads on all
sides to the grave.—Cicero.
aire, Winstows Ssothing fra
rat eee ee
Nothing is more annoying than a
tardy friend.—Plautus.
dyeing Mite SUES AM Ebi bss
‘Some men get as tired of being mar-
ried as some women do of not being.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAXS.
SAVicninn lina, Bieedug or Prpteuding Piles ta
G19 ld days or money refunded. 600
Experiments made by Father Joseph
Murgas, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., indicate
that wireless telegraphy can be car-
ried on through the ground as well as
through the air, if deep shafts or wells
are sunk for the sending and receiving
apparatus.
The extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great sm-
portance. Deflance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on fine
fabrics. Its great strength as a stiff-
ener makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with the result of
perfect finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
Pchturae Aa tudtantal..
. Marle Pierre Feliux Janet, profes-
sor of experimental psychology in the
University of Paris, who is now tra-
veling and lecturing in the United
States, figures in the public mind as
a hypnotist. As a matter of fact, this
is only incidentally, but he is trying
to demonstrate that the victim of hys-
teria is at the same time two different
persons, =
The Language of Commerce.
Great Britain and her colonies and
the United States represent tozether
the fabuluous total of 111,000,000
English-speaking persons, figures
which leave all competitors hopeless-
ly in the rear. Germany and Russia
oceupy second place with 75,020,000
apiece, and France, Spain, Italy and
Portugal follow, with 61,000,000, 43,-
000,000, 33,000,000 and 13,000,000 re-
spectively, according to The Atlas of
the World's Commerce.
$100 Reward, $100.
tant fatto eacYeast ousting diosa tue cleats
abe Gh ediee oer eee
Surelavi known fo tus medical fraternity”, Cwcarra
Selag'a consdeadionaldiseaas, roquiras'& consti
th trentment, Hal's Cauda Gre te (aken to
Terai stg directs upea Dog and co
irtaced ot the syste, thereby destroying. the
{Sanatioa of the diseare, aad giving tbe patient
ferongih by balding up the comiicadon, wad assist
ingmature ia dotngitca work. ‘The propriotors have
‘oh atth In tes curative powerd that they offer
One Hundred Dollar for oy case tat 1t falls to
Sire, Suid for lat of ceatliontaly
‘Alarone ff CHENEY & CO. Toledo, 0.
Sold iy al Druga, fs;
See ee tthe.
Horses Still In Demand.
Happily the horse has a faculty for
upsetting the gloomy predictions that
he is fated to be put out of business
bythe automobile. The horse business
has kept right on developing in spite
of the fact that the automobile indus-
try has been engaged in similar un-
dertaking. The demand for horses {s
still great. ‘The supply -of some
classes of them {s inadequate. The
prices are high. ‘The automobile may
Ecare the horse into the ditch, but
it isn’t likely to crowd him to the wall.
‘There will always be a field for the
horse, as there will always be a field
for the automobile—Hartford Times.
ELEVEN YEARS OF ECZEMA,
Hands Cracked and Bleeding—Nai!
Came Off of Finger—Cuticura Rem-
edies Brought Prompt Relief.
“I had eczema on my hands for
about eleven years. The hands crack-
ed open in many places and bled. One
of my fingers was so bad that the
nail came off. I had often heard of
cures by the Cuticura Remedies, but
had no confidence in them as I had
tried so many remedies, and they all
had failed to cure me. I had seen
three doctors, but got uo relief. Final-
ly my husband said that we would
try the Cuticura Remedies, so we got
a cake of Cuticura Soap, a box of
Cuticura Ointment, and two bottles
of Cuticura Resolvent Pills. Of course
I keep Cuticura Soap all the time for
my hands, but the one cake of Soap
and half a box of Cuticura Ointment
cured them. It is surely a blessing
for me to have my hands well, and I
am very proud of having tried Cutl-
cura Remedies, and recommend them
to all suffering with eczema, Mrs.
Eliza A. Wiley, R. F. D. No. 2, Lis-
comb, Iowa, Oct. 18, 1906.”
JAP YOUTH ON SCHOOLSHIP.
‘Will Get Thorough Training on an
American Boat.
The first Japanese youth to be ad-
mitted to the crew of the schoolship
St. Mary’s is Katzern Artyoshi. Art-
yoshi, who is 17 years old, has been
in the revenue cutter service on the
Pacific for the last three years.
As it is necessary for all foreigners
whe wish to become members of the
schoelship’s crew to have a guardian,
Artyoshi was forced to get one before
he could be admitted to the crew. He
succeeded in getting Capt. Osborn to
act in thet capacity. Capt. Osborn
will coach the boy slong and help him
over the hard points in his lessons.
Artyoshi has not made up his mind
yet whether he will remain in this
country or go home to Japan after he
has been graduated from the school-
ship. A term on the schoolship fits
a boy for service in the merchant ma-
rine. Artyoshi says he likes the
‘United States and may stay here, but
if Japan ever goes to war he will re-
turn home quickly as possible to take
part in it.
eh el otek pee Rm enn om aS nd) eh ee
This Is What (6222 p
Catches Me! [JERIANCE y,
aoe, f bg iA
160z.—One-Thira More starch. [| oe, y
been» |r
oe / eed,
ST xf 7
Uj ay K. VF ae
\\\\\\ Wa Ya FULL
ie LA POUND
hi iP for 10
yy 7 No premiums, but one-third
Sy ys Vv, more starch than you get of
Wy Mi l jj, other brands, Try it now, for
Ma 7 hot or cold starching it has no
WT ree 111777 equal and will notstick to the iron,
lt Yo ea
call % 7
Paid for the’ proot of any misrepresentsr
$1,000.00 REWARD! fen. iroumuncsct ar
inte OAST COUNTRY IN SOUTH TEXAS, O27 Farmers mate “ote erogs of
feos te toonce yor ate, ana imdor inves stopsageer BUCEICIENT RAINE REL” BRODUGT
FIVE SOILS. ARTESIAN WELLS. HEALTHFUL CLIMATE. No Blinds ta cor toons
licen the Pan handle, ‘Land sells NOW a¢_$14.00 10. 425.00 Det acre, on easy torneo” WRITS A
DAV Tor ERER LITERATORE and LATEST TEXAS NAP Assit ere
FALFURRIAS IMMIGRATION COMPANY KANSAS CITY, MO. LET'S SHOW You.
SHO MONEY TILL CURED -iot.ca recente meas
DRS. THORNTON & MiNOR-103! OAK St. KANSAS CITY, MO. (aeanch ortict AY St Lous.
Monarchs as Linguists.
Monarchs must know more than one
language. King Edward, who trav-
eled so much, speaks French better
than some Frenchmen, and also Ger
man. The czar of Russia speaks
French as well as his native tongue
and knows the numerous dialects.
Emperor William of Germany speaks
French and Bnglish correctly, and is
also well versed in Latin. The king
‘of Spain, the youngest of all, speaks
German with ease and also French
and English. Because of his marriage
he now practices the latter. The king
‘of Portugal speaks French, English,
German and Spanish. The king of
Italy is a master of French and Ger-
man and is also well versed in the va-
rious Italian dialects.
Lived and Died Together.
Martha R. Howe and Mary J. Howe,
twins of Glastonbury, Conn., were to-
gether almost *every minute of their
74 years of life. The former’died re-
cently and the shock of parting ended
the life of Mary exactly 12 hours later.
‘They were buried in the same grave.
aos SN
= DODDS.
Ft tee
Cae
a Rae
gS Sri 1a ore
BS ee oe
bey ie
cS Sin Pang,
ia The ol Sal a
able seg
CARTERS] “ic tsoreure ns
CV eee
PBS. aca
i Tongue, Pain in the Side,
ITORPID LIVER, ‘They
regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable,
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,
Genuine Must Bear
CARTERS Fac-Simile Signature
MEE | (Lewd Goo:
PILLS. Looe!
: REFUSE SUBSTITUTES,
APositive fs
CURE FOR ‘casa BALM
facie Uaes ONO)
GATARRY Arcs 235
NY-FEVER 5) Me
Ely’s Cream Balm @ Ss
a
is quickly absorbed. RE
Gives Retief at Once. Lea
It cleanses, soothes, ieee
hieals and” protects
the diseas:d membrane. It cures Catarrh
and drivesaway «Cold in the Head quickly.
Restores the Senses of Taste and Smeil.
Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail;
‘Trial size 10 cts. by mail.
‘ly Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New Yor:
PEWS
SINGLE
BINDER
STRAGHT ESSCIGAR
You Pay 100,
for Cigars
Not so Good,
(eee >
raat’
ALY py
STOVE POLISH
SAIS EP Rb oc Sel?
Canadian Government
TET
Fpeean Free Farms
ist Fpllg ix mata
WE ANG ota
brrecenyemrrs ds fh oth as
MILLION BUSHELS
iad ged apg nro abie ah
Soe
tensa te ineraton etree exer
pee fee 125 W. Ninth Street,
| LIVE sroce AnD
; MISCELLANEOUS
Electrotypes
IN GREAT VARIETY
cea
" A.N.KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO,
p
| NO PATE OUR SERVIGES
|] seattortookiet, Ito B, STEVENS & CO,
sorter Wanton Dc Benacnes otf
aes, Giovetand Sed betvie Eatat ce
PROTECT YOUR IDEAS
DEFIANGE STARCH i. occurs
| other starches only 12 ounces—same price and
SDEFIANCE™ IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
W.N. Us WICHITA, NO. 1, 1907.
LUMBER
AT METZ'S Corner Of 3rd & Main
IF IT EVER HAPPENED YOU'LL FIND IT IN THE SEARCHLIGHT. WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE?
Banner Mills
CUSTOM GRINDING
CUSTOM GRINDING
A Specialty
ALL KINDS OF COAL & FEED
FROENICH BROS, PROPS.
N. Main St. Photos
PEERLESS
STEAM
LAUNDRY
Best Laundry In The City
Phone 232
REFLOVER & SUNS. Prpa
W. S. MENRION
DRUGGIST
801 N. Main St.
Wichita, Kans.
W M Dunson
Music Teacher
—Of—
Mandolin and Guitar
Lessons At Reasonable Prices
302 West Murdock Ave
Send the children --
Hours 6 to 9 p. m.
G. J. Jones,
REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE and LOANS
CHATTLE : MORTGAGES
429 Kansas Avenue
TOPEKA, KANSAS
60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS & C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is not patented. Communications strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Limits taken through. Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest citation on any security not public. Limits taken through. $1. Sold by new dealers.
MUNN & Co. 361 Broadway, New York
Branch Office, 6% F St. Washington D.C.
Use
Use
Murray's Reliable Nerve Balm
Murray's Reliable Antiseptic Salve
Murray's Reliable Extracts
Murray's Reliable Perfumes
Murray's Reliable Pure Spices
These Goods Have No Epual
They are pleasing hundreds of people and will please you.
J. H. MURRAY, Sole Prop.
803 South Hydraulic Avenue
New Phone 985
Vichita! - - - Kansas
Why not subscribe and pay for the Whitia Searchlight. It is more honorable than "spunging" on your neighbor. We will send you a copy to your door every week for only $1.00 per year. Do say and get what the race is doing.
The W. M. S. met with Miss Leda Woods on the 27th, after doing considerable work. Lunch was served by Miss Woods, assisted by Mrs. M. Meens.
Miss B. Burks is spending the holidays at Carbondale with friends.
The Misses Harris and McLean went to Emporia on Xmas.
C. N. Dell and family went to Newton on the 24th.
Mrs. Ella Burks and Emma Morris attended the socia at Emporia on the 27th.
Mrs. Anna Woods went to Topeka on the 24th.
Mrs. A. Pennington and family of Hymer were spending Xmas with home folks.
Mrs. Byrd of Council Grove, is visiting with Mrs. Meens.
Both churches rendered fine programs at their Xmas exercises.
A party of young people gathered at the residence of Mrs. R. Pattison, on the evening of the 29th, ult., and proceeded to the Blackwell's home to surprise Miss Maria Gary of Abilene, who is visitin gwith Misses Cornelia and Lulu Blackwell. Many games were played by the company, after which refreshments were served. Those attending reported a grand time.
The many friends of Mrs. E. Burks are sorry to earn of her illness, and wish her a speedy recovery.
Mt. Hermon Lodge, No. 4652, G. U. O, o' O. F. eected its officers as follows: F. G. Boyd, N. G.; M. L. Pennington, V. G.; W. M. Kattler, W. Treas.; N. Pennington, W. C.; C. H. Johnston, P. S All the other officers were re-elected.
Miss Maria Gary left for home today.
Come again little lady for you have
won the hearts of many of us.
IF IT EVER HAPPENED
YOU'LL FIND IT IN
THE SEARCHLIGHT.
WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE?
COFFEYVILLE NOTES.
The funeral of Anthony Thurman, who was shot and killed Saturday night, December 22, by Jim Roberts, both colored, was preached Wednesday, December 26, at Sardis Baptist Church, at 2 o'clock by Rev. Joseph Smith, the pastor. Elder Smith delivered an appropriate discourse, dwelling upon the importance of good citizens getting together against dens of vice that dreed crime. He said that it was not alone the man who pulled the trigger that hurled into eternity the soul that went unprepared to meet his God, but that morally, as lawabiding citizens, and Christians, we were all equally responsible for permitting such places to exist in the city. We are preparing to celebrate Emancipation Proclamation, Monday, Tuesday evening, January 1, 1907, with elaborate program.
Rev. H. R. Pinckney, of Tulsa, I. T., for the past few days was the guest of Rev. Joseph Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Duncan, corner of Santa Fe and Fifth street, entertained at dinner Sunday, December 30th, the following guests, Rev. Joseph Smith and wife, Rev. P. D. Skinner, wife and daughter, Rev. H. R. Pinckney, of Tulsa, I. T., Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Henry and children, and Mrs. Simpson.
Rebecca May, Tabernacle Knights of Tabor, is getting along nicely. There was considerable illness awhile back, but everything is all right now.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleaver of South McAlester, were recent visitors in our city. Mrs. Cleaver is the sister of Anthony Thurman who was recently shot.
PRATT, KANS. ITEMS.
G. W. Walker of Pratt made a visit to see his sweetheart out in the country southwest of Pratt last Sunday evening and returned home Monday evening.
Rev. Lee and family have been out in the Cullison neighborhood visiting for the last week.
David Jones of Stevens county arrived in Pratt county Thursday morning to see his intended, Mrs. Sarah Greene. We extend great sympathy to Mr. G. W. Walker.
It seems as though J. T. Russell intends to go into the fine hog business. He has purchased 10 head of brood sows, thoroughbreds, at $23 a head. We wish him great success in his business.
Jethro Peoples and also Mr. Brown all of Gray county, spent Christmas visiting friends in Pratt.
William Peoples purchased a thoroughbred hog of John Fleming for $20 which he expects to take back to Gray county with him.
George Williams returned home from Kansas City Saturday night. He reports a fine time.
Last Friday eve these was a grand entertainment given at the home of Yed Bright in honor of their daughter Miss Hortense Bright. Refreshments of all kinds were served and everybody had a fine time.
THE WICH TA SEARCHLIGHT
Henry Buckner has gone back on the railroad again to work.
Will Graves of Chicago is here visiting his mother Grandma Graves.
The Christmas tree at the A. M. E. church and entertainment were grand.
It seems as though Mr. Roy Green has got to be quite interesting here of late. Why we don't know.
Mrs. America James and her escort were out buggy riding last Sunday evening.
NEWS OF GREAT BEND.
Mrs. Jake Perkins and Miss Josephine Perkins returned to Newton last Friday.
Mrs. John Brown is in El Reno spending the holidays with her parents and friends.
Mrs. Hannah Hockins returned to Wichita after a pleasant visit with her daughter Mrs. N. Harding.
Messrs Will and John Gordon left Friday morning for a visit with their sister Mrs. Ella Rosemond of Salina. Sam Brown is spending the holidays with his parents of the South Sire.
with his parents of the South Side.
Miss Elsie Rieley is visiting a few days with Miss Irene Sellers.
George Kendall left for Hutchinson to attend the funeral of his uncle, Mr. Joe Garthord.
Miss Mary Pirey of Larned was in the city last week.
The First Baptist Sunday school rendered a well prepared program on Wednesday evening at the A. O. U. W. hall. A large crowd was present and all enjoyed the entertainment.
Queen Esther Circle met at the parsonage Friday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Jennie Armstrong and Mrs. Gertrude Wells acting as hostesses. Nearly all the members were present. After the usual transaction of business the visitors were introduced to the Circle by the president. The visitors present were: Mrs. Hannah Hockins of Wichita, Mrs. N. Harding of this city, Mrs. Hockins addressed the Circle most beautifully. She impressed on the mind of the ladies the necessity of the Foreign and Home Missions and the thoughts left by her will be long remembered. We hope to have Sister Hockins to visit us again. Brother Moses Johnson also commended the Circle for their good work. He also acknowledged that the brethren are very negligent in mission work and without the sisters' helping hand it would fail. Rev. J. H. Raimey also addressed the Circle, presenting a most beautiful plan for accumulating funds for the Foreign Mission work. Rev. Raimey has not only won the hearts of the people but is adding constantly to the church both spiritually and financially. At the close of the remarks of Rev. Raimey the Circle was interrupted by the beautiful strains of "Nearer My God to Thee," played by Mr. Eddie Rucker, accompanied by Mr. Johnnie Sellers. The hostess opened the door and presented these young gentlemen to the president who then introduced them to the circle. Mr. Rucker and Mr. Selers rendered the circle a few choice selections which were highly appreciated by all those present. These young men are study-ing music at the Western University at Quindario, and are home on a short visit. They both being reared in Great Bend makes us feel proud to see them strive to make a mark in the world for good. The president then led in repeating the Lord's prayer after which the hostess served the ladies and gentlemen with a two course luncheon.
The H. H. of Ruth gave a social entertainment Thursday evening at their hall on the corner of Kansas and Lakin avenue. All report a social time.
Mrs. Henry Sellers gave a large supper last Tuesday night. All that attended reported a royal time.
James Wheeler is on the sick list.
Sunday being Mison day Queen Esther rendered a very appropriate program. Two very interesting papers were read. Subject, Complaint, Rev. Mrs. Rainey and Mission, by Mrs. Laura Smith.
Rev. A. Cox of Saima, spent a few days with us and preached at the First Baptist church.
Mrs. Henry Sellers, Jr., entertained a number of young folks at her home at 1108 Killiams avenue, in honor of Johnie Selers and Eddie Rucker. All reported a good time. After luncheon was served they went to the watch meeting at the First Baptist church. The band boys will give a recital in Moses' hall Wednesday evening, January 2.
ARKANSAS CITY ITEMS.
The entertainment given by K. of P. the evening of the 25th was a financial success.
Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Andrews are spending a week with relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kemp were given a surprise party Wednesday evening by about twenty people. A very enjoyable evening was spent.
A few of the members of the Twentieth Century Club: Mrs. Oliver, Mrs.
Hill, Miss Myrtle Delano, Mrs. G. H. Drumgould entertained the Olive Leaf Club at the home of the latter Thursday evening. The evening was highly enjoyed by all present.
Mrs. Cella Brown entertained a number of young people at her home Thursday night.
At the Pyrimia hall Friday night, the Olive Leaf ladies, their husbands and a large number of friends. An excellent short program was rendered, after which the evening was given up to social enjoyment until about eleven o'clock after which a sumptuous luncheon was served.
The Misses Jones entertained a number of young friends at their home Friday evening.
Willis West entertained a number of young people Saturday evening. Mrs. Wm. West gave a party for a large number of children at her home three miles northwest of the city on Monday afternoon. Mrs. Gertle Williams is visiting in Caldwell, Kansas. Mr. Thomas Johnson is spending the holidays in Colorado Springs.
The party Monday evening at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Alston was a pleasant affair.
Miss May Colwell and Miss Cora Carpenter spent Sunday in Winfield.
Mrs. Reeves of Winfield is visiting relatives here.
Mrs. Campbell spent Sunday here visiting friends.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Young Friday, Dec. 28, a daughter.
FT. SCOTT (KAN.) NEWS
The O. N. O. club gave a grand ball Christmas Eve at Eagle Claw hall. It was the most pleasing social event of the season. The hall was crowded and the dancing continued until an early hour Christmas morning.
There was a fine program rendered at Shiloh Baptist church Christmas Eve, after which the tree was undressed. A good crowd attended and reported a fine time.
The A. M. E. church had a fine program Christmas Eve and the tree was loaded with presents. There was quite a large crowd present and a glorious time was reported.
Christmas night the Mt. Zion gave a fine entertainment. The program was of small children:
Recitation.....Mabel Dudley
Declamation.....Octavia Harris
Recitation.....Chester Dudley
Declamation.....Wilda Johnson
Song, "Walk in the Light"..Audience
Recitation.....Dwight Dudley
Recitation.....Harold Tuller
Recitation.....William Copeland
Recitation.....Orasious Edward
Song.....Audience
Dialogue (six children)—Octavia Harris, Otelee Harris, Maurice Copeland, William Copeland, Mabel Dudley and Clinton Copeland.
The tree was then undressed by three young ladies, Miss Minnie Loveman, Miss Ruth Johnson and Miss Ethel Copeland. The church was crowded from pulpit to back. After the tree was undressed, cream, cakes, pop, peanuts and popcorn were served; also oranges, candies and nuts. Everybody reported an extra good time. Rev. J. L. Dudley, pastor.
There was a masquerade entertainment at Eagle Claw hall Tuesday night, January 1st, by the Sunset club of the A. M. E church, which is composed of young people. One represented Queen Elizabeth, cowboy girl, etc. A fine program was rendered and a prize was rendered and a prize was given to the ugly one.
CLEARWATER, KAN., NEWS.
Mrs. Leonard Biggers of 634 N. Wichita street has been down visiting her daughter Mrs. C. R. Willey the past week and returned to her home today reporting a fine time. Miss Ethel Barton is home visiting her parents near Millerton, Kan. Mr. and Mrs. A. White were in Clearwater shopping yesterday.
on Mr. Geo. Barton's Sunday. John Bank was seen in Clearwater yesterday buying New Year's gifts for John.
C. R. Wilfley is on the sick list, but not down.
The youngest daughter died in October and they have been sick every since. Miss Mamie Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Loveman, who has been visiting her parents and friends, has returned to her home in Des Moines, Iowa. Her two little daughters will remain here until school is out.
Miss Callie Anderson of Newton is in the city the guest of Miss Irma Clark this week.
Excellence Counts.....
DEAM ABSTRACT IN NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE COURT HOUSE Bonded Abstractors
JOB WORK IS OUR HOBBY Let us try your next order
In The
Grocery Line
Your wants need careful attention and our store is the place to get it. We handle the best of Fancy and Staple Groceries and our prices are right. Orders given prompt attention.
Kernan & Co.,
102 E. Douglas Pone 35'
L. S. NAFTGER, W. R. TUCKER,
President Vice President
J. M. MOORE, Cashier
Fourth National Bank
Directors—W. R. Tucker, W. E. Jett, R.
L Hoimes, S. B. Amidon, B. F. Me
Lean, J. M. Moore, L. S. Naftger, E
H. Middlekauff, O. Z. Smith.
General Banking Business Transected
CHITA NSAS
Dr.J.E. Farmer,
Physician and Surgeon
—Diseases of—
Women and Children
A Specialty
New Phone 936
Office 517 N. Main St
HOUCK
Hardware store
First Class Goods at
Lowest Price
116 East Douglas Avenue
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
Formerly known as
"OZONIZED OX MARROW"
so
STRAIGHTENS
*KINNY* or CURLY HAIR that it can be padded
*any style* desired consistent with its
length.
length.
It's Hair Pomade was formerly known as "OZIZONIZ OX MARROW" and is the only safe preparation known to us that can be shown above. Its use makes the most stubborn, harsh, kinky or curly hair soft, may be obtained from one treatment; 2 to 4 bottles are usually sufficient for a 2 oz. OZIZONIZ OX MARROW) removes and prevents dandruff from the hair from falling out or breaking off, makes it grow and, by nourishing the roots, perfumed and harmless, it is a soil necessity for ladies, gentlemen and children. OZIZONIZ OX MARROW) has been made and sold continually since about 1888, and label. It is the United States Patent Office, in 1874. In all that long period of time there has never been a bottle sweet and effective, no matter how long it has been made, FORD'S HAIR POMADE remains sweet and effective, no matter how long it has been made, FORD'S HAIR STRAIGHT SOFT, and makes the hair STRAIGHT SOFT, and that Ford's Hair Pomade ("OZIZONIZ OX MARROW") is put up only in 50 ct. size, and is made with the signature, Charles Ford. Presst on each package. Refuse all others. Full driest or drugless and dealers. If your drugist or dealer can not supply you, he can buy 50 cts. for one bottle postpaid, or send us 50 cts. for three bottles postpaid, or $1.40 for three bottles postpaid, or express charges to all points in U. S. A. When ordering send postpaid paper. Write your name and address plainly to
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
"None genuine without my signature"
Charles Ford Great
78 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Agents wanted everywhere.
H. Wells and J. Rucker of Topeka
are in the city.
Red Front
RACKET
The People's Economy Store
Sample Shoes
We have just received a large invoice of Men's, Work Shoes,
Men's Dress Shoes, Ladies' and
Miss' Fine Shoes, Oxfords and
Slippers all styles and kinds.
AT WHOLESALE PRICES
Tapp & Hanshaw
Phone 257 255-257 N. Main
CRMS
Sir D. L. Taylor
329 East Center
SALINA, KANSAS
Designer and Builder of Tent
Houses. Prices in reach of all.
Write for particulars TO-DAY.
R
A FOOL
and his money are soon paated. The man who pays out his good money for inferior building material is foolish. Buy the BEST. We sell it. Have you seen the latest building material? It is our Cement Building Stone. The longer it wears, the harder it gets. PHONE 496- J.H. TURNER WICHITA, KANS. 533 to 547 WEST DOUGLAS
777—IN SOLO DEO SALUS—333.
NOTICE PALATIUMS.
Rev. Paul L. Giles, P. P. of Light
of the West Palatium No. 1, and also
G. P. P., is doing good work in his
Palatium and is sending letters to all
C. M., advising them to organize Pal-
atiums in their cities. Address,
REV. PAUL L. GILES,
148 W. Pierce,
Council Bluffs, Iowa.
Where you can get your Silk Waist Woolen Skirt or Coat or Husband's Suit cleaned and pressed, or your faded goods Dyed, and get the best work done by improved appliances and skilled workmen.
THE OLD & CLEANING WORKS
Fine
Dry
Cleaning
Steam
Cleaning
Steam
Dyeing &
Repairing.
White
Plumes
Cleaned
Properly
Bleached
and
Curled.
O. K. DYE
Stock of Ladies' and Gents second hand Clothing for sale very cheap, at retail or in job lots. Goods called for and delivered promptly
E. G. HANSON, Prop.,
330 N. Main Street. Phone 2003.
NEW YORK—Establishments having in their windows the legend, "Tipping prohibited," are epidemic in East Twenty-third street, in the short block from Madison to Fourth avenues. A restaurant proprietor started the idea and then a barber shop in the same building, which is that of a large life insurance company, followed suit. Another "tonsorial parlor" on the ground floor of a skyscraper opposite, to meet competition, put up a sign: "No tips here." A second restaurant man is thinking of putting a stop to all gratuities, and a knight of the razor in Fourth avenue is gravely considering joining the procession.
"How does it work?" exclaimed the pioneer restaurant man. "Well, I've been here a year and a half now and all my waiters have been with me ever since and not one of them is dissatisfied. I give them about two dollars more wages than they would be able to get in other places of the same kind where tips are permitted. If anybody passes a dime or a quarter to them their actions depend on circumstances. If the man who offers it has apparently not seen the sign and they think it would insult him to refuse they let the coin be where he put it and say: 'Thank you.' I let them take it later, but with the distinct understanding that I do not sanction tipping. The second time that customer comes in he has seen the sign and has taken a hint.
"Occasionally a man asks if I would object if he gave one of the boys a little encouragement, to which I reply that I would prefer that he would not. The waiters who work for me are never 'broke,' which is more than can be said of many a waiter in the high-class restaurants who get anywhere from two dollars to six dollars in tips a day. The waiter who gets tips on a large scale, and I know of some of them who receive $40 to $50 a week in this way, find that their money comes easy and they let it go the same way.
"Objection on the part of the waiters to the non-tipping system, as it is applied here, is practically nothing and they rather like the idea of being sure of getting definite wages. At the time the public likes the innovation, and where the waiter is not all the time hanging around for a tip the customers get just as good service. Once or twice a week I dine out at some other man's restaurant, just for a change, and I give tips there myself because it is the custom of the house. I think though that the idea is spreading for I now see 'no tipping' signs in Sixth avenue. I have no doubt that the number of restaurants where there are no gratuities permitted will be greatly increased."
To this enormous wealth the state is adding $500,000,000 a year, or almost the valuation of a Baltimore. It is a wonderful showing of material prosperity, one that gives a prouder claim to the title of empire state. Within this single commonwealth is now contained more than double the wealth of the entire nation half a century ago and its annual increase more than exceeds the total value of our export trade when Grant was president.
Proof against all the din of street and river is the sound proof shelter deep in the foundations of the villa of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac L. Rice, at No. 170 Riverside drive. The Rices are the successful leaders of a campaign against the superfluous whistling of the craft which ply in the Hudson and are also the pioneers of a movement which is to bring into being the Society for the Suppression of Unnecessary Noises.
Mr. Rice is one of the best-known patrons of the game of chess in the United States and the inventor of a gambit which has given him a high place among the experts who move knights and bishops over the checkered board. Chess is a game which requires quiet and contemplation. When Mr. Rice invited his friends to tournaments he found that the caterwauling of the sirens of the steam tugs which went up and down the river exerted a disturbing influence. He would have had to give up playing the game entirely perhaps had it not occurred to him that in the foundations of his house was a space which could be readily utilized as a sound proof refuge. It is literally a chamber blasted and hewn out of the living rock.
Despite its walls of rock, unpierced by windows except at the back, this room has a free circulation of air and is one of the most cosy and comfortable apartments imaginable. Only once in awhile, on very foggy nights, is the sound of the steam sirens heard, and then it comes only as a faint and far off echo. The room is 22 feet square and there is abundant space for six tables and numerous leather upholstered chairs.
HERO OF ROMANCE RECEIVES STORY OF ELOPEMENT.
A year or so later the bridegroom received a package of printed matter by mail. On opening it he found it contained several pages of a book, with the title carefully removed from the top. The pages contained an accurate account of the bicycle wedding, including many amusing features, one of them a wait under a shed for a shower to pass; another an encounter with a bunch of staid residents returning from church—it was Sunday morning—who gazed scandalized at the bride when her divided skirts flew back, revealing neat knickerbockers
RESTAURANT
NO
TIPS
ever since and not one of them is dissatisfied. I more wages than they would be able to get in or where tips are permitted. If anybody passes at their actions depend on circumstances. If the reently not seen the sign and they think it would the coin be where he put it and say: 'Thank you but with the distinct understanding that I do no end time that customer comes in he has seen the "Occasionally a man asks if I would object little encouragement, to which I reply that I wow The waiters who work for me are never 'broke, sald of many a waiter in the high-class restaurants two dollars to six dollars in tips a day. The war scale, and I know of some of them who receive way, find that their money comes easy and they "Objection on the part of the waiters to the applied here, is practically nothing and they require of getting definite wages. At the time the and where the waiter is not all the time hangi toms get just as good service. Once or twice other man's restaurant, just for a change, and I cause it is the custom of the house. I think the ing for I now see 'no tipping' signs in Sixth avail the number of restaurants where there are no greatly increased."
WEALTH OF THE EMPIRE STATE.
By the computation of the census bureau the wealth of the state of New York comprised in farms and other real property, factories, railroads, telegraphs, canals, machinery, gold and silver etc., is $14,769,042,207. This is approximately one seventh of the national total of $107,000,000,000 It exceeds Italy's wealth by nearly $2,000,000,000 and is about equal to the combined national resources of Spain, Portugal, Switzerland and the Netherlands. It ranks New York among the financial great powers, with a standing just below that of Austria-Hungary. A per capita division of the state's wealth would give $2,000 to every man, woman and child as compared with the national average of $1,326 It represents the aggregate possession of 15,000 plain millionaires, 50 Carnegies or 20 Rockefeller roads in the United States. To this enormous wealth the state is adding the valuation of a Baltimore. It is a wonderf perity, one that gives a prouder claim to the title single commonwealth is now contained more the entire nation half a century ago and its annual the total value of our export trade when Grant w
By the computation of the census bureau the wealth of the state of New York comprised in farms and other real property, factories, railroads, telegraphs, canals, machinery, gold and silver, etc., is $14,769,042,207. This is approximately one-seventh of the national total of $107,000,000,000. It exceeds Italy's wealth by nearly $2,000,000,000 and is about equal to the combined national resources of Spain, Portugal, Switzerland and the Netherlands. It ranks New York among the financial great powers, with a standing just below that of Austria-Hungary.
A per capita division of the state's wealth would give $2,000 to every man, woman and child, as compared with the national average of $1.320. It represents the aggregate possession of 15,000 plain millionaires, 50 Carnegies or 20 Rockefellers roads in the United States.
GOTHAMITE SUCCEEDS IN DEFYING NOISE.
Proof against all the sound proof shelf of the villa of Mr. and 170 Riverside drive. ful leaders of a camp whistling of the crab and are also the plon to bring into being a vision of Unnecessary
Mr. Rice is one of the game of chess in inventor of a gambit place among the exp bishops over the ch game which require When Mr. Rice invite he found that the c
exerted a disturbing influence. He would have game entirely perhaps had it not occurred to hi his house was a space which could be readily refuge. It is literally a chamber blasted and he Despite its walls of rock, unplierced by wind room has a free circulation of air and is one of able apurements imaginable. Only once in aw the sound of the steam sirens heard, and then far off echo. The room is 22 feet square and six tables and numerous leather upholstered cha
There is a funny little story of a New York man who has been put into a book and can't find out what book it is. A few years ago this man, who is prominent in his own particular line, eloped with a pretty young woman. He and his fiancee rode on bicycles one morning up to the old Sleepy Hollow church, the Washington Irving church, where they were married. The church had not been opened for a service for years before, and has not been opened since; but the bridegroom's father was an antiquarian who had made a study of the Irving region, and on this account the use of the church was secured. The elopers were accompanied by a friend of the bridegroom
MILAN
It would buy all the rail-
000,000,000 a year, or almost
showing of material prose-
empire state. Within this
double the wealth of the
increase more than exceeds
president.
the din of street and river is
deep in the foundations
Mrs. Isaac L. Rice, at No.
The Rices are the success-
sign against the superfluous
which ply in the Hudson
ars of a movement which is
the Society for the Suppres-
oises.
the best-known patrons of
the United States and the
which has given him a highs
who move knights and
skered board. Chess is a
quiet and contemplation.
his friends to tournaments
rewapling of the sirens of
event up and down the river
and to give up playing the
that in the foundations of
utilized as a sound proof
out of the living rock.
ows except at the back, this
the most cosy and comfort-
, on very foggy nights, is
comes only as a faint and
here is abundant space for
s.
OPEMENT.
A
package of printed matter
eral pages of a book, with
ages contained an accurate
amusing features, one of
another an encounter with
it was Sunday morning-
ed skirts flew back, reveal
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT
KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS OF QUEEN MOTHER
TABOR. KAN
Tabernacies.
REV. FRANK WILSON, C. G. M.
943 Everett, Kansas City, Kas.
MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. G. P.
1170 Filmore avenue, Topeka, Kas.
Miss Jennie Alexander, G. Q. M.
918 Penn. St., Lawrence, Kansas
1. Mrs. S. Williams, 1309 N 10th St.,
Kansas City, Kansas.
2. Mrs. Sarah Crisp, 615 South
Chestnut St., Iola, Kan.
3. Mrs. Carrie Douglass, 1722 Sixth
avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa.
4. Mrs. Laura Williams, 625 4th St.,
Cherryvale, Kansas.
5. Mrs. Mary Burdett, 819 N. 1st.
street, Atchison, Kansas.
6. Mrs. Addie Glaspie, 128 Mulberry
street, Ottowa, Kansas.
7. Mrs. Lillian Shobe, 336 Santa Fe street, Salina, Kansas.
8. Mrs. Nancy Fax, 505 N. Santa Fe St., Foffeyville, Kansas.
9. Mrs. Sarah H. Harrison, 1321 Van Buren, st., Topeka, Kansas.
10. Mrs. Ida Wallace, 446 Arkansas street, Lawrence, Kansas.
11. Mrs. Paulina Woodfork, 823 Freeman Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.
12. Mrs. C. March, 515 Nebraska Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.
14. Mrs. May R. Freeman, 105 S. Locust St., Pittsburg, Kansas.
15. Mrs. S. S. Furlough, box 405, Weir City, Kansas.
16. Mrs. Hattie Collins, 1001 S. Forest, avenue; Parsons, Kansas.
17. Mrs. A. Masie, 615 Barbee, Ft. Scott Ken.
20. Mrs. Bessie Hall, 406 Horton, Ft Scott, Kansas.
28 Mrs. Della Dorsey, 716 S. 15th St.,
Parsons, Kansas.
29 Mrs. Percilia Lee, 720 Cheyenne
St., Leavenworth, Kansas.
30 Mrs. Eliza Scott, 3rd ave. south,
Leavenworth, Kansas.
32 Mrs. Adda Birthright, 114 West
Broadwav, Butte, Montana.
33 Mrs. Phannie Corneal, Box 384,
Alliance, Neb.
34 Mrs. Mattie Miller, 335 West
15th, Wichita, Kan.
35 Mrs. Adah Lewis, 1603 Archer Av.,
South Omaha, Nebraska.
37 Mrs. Mary Robinson, 104 South
2nd street, Aichison, Kansas.
38 Mrs. Laura Lee, Weir City, Kan.
52 Mrs. Cora Yeager, 928 Main, Law-
rence, Kansas.
63 Mrs. Lizzie Stone, 1147 Ann ave.,
Kansas City, Kansas.
77 Mrs. A. Pickeng, 259 E. 15th, Topeka, Kan.
85. Mrs. Francis Hardeman, 1801 Kansas avenue, Topeka, Kans.
89. Mrs. Blanche E. Alston, 2215 Pacific, Omaha, Neb.
91 Mrs. Ella Golden, 310 North 12th St., Omaha, Nebraska.
92. Mrs. Alice Grant, 401 South 8th street, Lincoln, Nebraska.
93 Mrs. Ida M. Jordan, 903 Western Ave., N. Topeka, Kan.
777 C. M'S ADDRESSES 333.
TEMPIES.
1 William M. Watkins, box 2062
Weir City, Kansas.
4 Andrew Herrold, Sherman Flats
Omaha, Neb
8. Rev. M. Wooten, 416 W. Third st.
Ft. Scott, Kansas.
10 Frank Smith, 420 3rd Ave., Leavenworth, Kansas.
15. E. W. Garvice, North 1st street, Salina, Kansas.
16 Richard Clark, 420 N. 25th St. S. Omaha, Neo. Coffeyville, Kansas.
17. Rev, Allen Garner, 704 E. 12th st.
18 James Thomas, 218 W 1st, South St, Salt Lake City, Utah.
19. C. Paris, 948 Penn. street, Lawrence, Kansas.
25 Edward Henderson, 1917 N. 3rd St., Kansas City, Kan.
59 S. W. Pasker, 1156 Buchanan Tcepeka, Kan.
536 Albert Graves, 90 Charles St. Deadwood, South Dakota.
NOTICE—Send your news in the early part of the week, which will insure its publication. The earlier the better. Editor.
Let the colored people get together and stay together for their own material good.
FOR SALE-Furnished rooming house, in Kansas City, fine location. For particulars see Mrs. M. Ivory, 132 South Mosely avenue, Wichita, Kan.
QUEEN MOTHERS OF TENTS IN KANSAS.
Miss Jannie Alexander, G. Q. M., 948 Penn., Lawrence, Kansas.
Lillie Lind, 006 South Fifth avenue, N. Topeka, Kansas.
Hester Cornish, 911 Western avenue, N. Topeka, Kansas.
Jennie Sellers, 1438 N. Eighteenth street, Omaha, Neb.
Eliza Robinson, 1801 Kansas avenue, Topeka, Kansas.
Mollie Spencer, 502 V street, Atchison, Kansas.
Maggie Robinson, 911 Everett avenue, Kansas City, Kansas.
Louise Verder, 813 Jersey, Lawrence, Kansas.
Mary Bison, 325 Miss., Lawrence, Kansas.
Charlotte Dalton, 1228 Barnett, Kansas City, Kansas.
A. O. Murrell, 451 S. Fourth street, Salina, Kansas.
Mary Hopkins, 903 West B, North Topeka, Kansas.
H. H. Adkins, Weir City, Kansas.
Lettie Hill, 429 N. Wichita street, Wichita, Kansas.
Amy Lane, 1422 E. Appleton street, Parsons, Kansas.
Annie Edwards, 944 Everett, Kansas City, Kansas.
Laura Smith, 308 E. Eleventh, Coffeyville, Kansas.
enworth, Kansas.
Ada Gilbert, 405 N. Santa Fe, Cof- Ella McKinnie, 217 Sherman, Leav-
A NEGRO'S VIEW.
Rev. C. O. Smith, Himself an Ex-Soldier. Makes Statement.
Editor Searchlight: The colored people of this vicinity have not as yet forgotten that it has only been a few months since language was inadequate to express our love and appreciation for President Roosevelt, and while we deplore his drastic action taken in the Brownville case, yet we cannot, with justice to the president, say that he has been partial or unfair in his dealing heretofore with the colored man. We believe that Ben Tillman, the United States Senator, who boasts in the halls of the congress of these United States of his murderous conduct, associated with Vardiman, Jeff Davis, Thomas Dixon and other southern demagogues, has made some very ungentlemanly and untimely remarks about our noble president, Theodore Roosevelt with whom he discerned a mighty stream of superiority over any one of the above named. We cannot afford in justice to W. T. Vernon, an educator and a Negro of whom all Kansas is proud, to assault by words, deeds or actions the Republican party or its gallant leader, a party that has always been loyal to the Negro for a single mistake, (if indeed it is a mistake?)
W. J. Bryan in an interview respecting the discharged troops said that the men were not all guilty but the regiment should have been discharged. He said that he did not care to pass judgment until some of the facts were available. Think of that judgment already passed, compare his attitude with that of President Roosevelt! Bryan wants to disband a regiment consisting of twelve companies, or quite 1,200 men for what seven or eight men could have or may have done in a battalion consisting of three companies or 300 men.
If any man or body of men of the gallant 25th infantry after a fair and impartial investigation be found guilty of committing the atrocious crime they are now charged with, we invite the extent of the law and justice, we see nothing in this case that would justify any abusive attitude toward the Republican party of its leader, for if you fly to the uttermost part of the South, you will find rebels there; if to the North, you will find some Democrats there and if we miss the Kingdom of God and go to the greedy jaws of hell we will find Ben Tillman there, or he will be on the way. Thus if we turn our face from the men of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, pray tell me, whither shall we go?
Late First Sergeant B Troop, Tenth United States Cavalry.
A New York publication tells How a Collar is Made. To see how it is worn out look in the side window of a laundry—Buffalo Express.
A New York man imagines he is a monkey, and quite a number of New York monkeys imagine they are men.
During the nineteenth century 52 new islands rose from the sea by volcanic action and 16 disappeared.
Learn to say No, and it will be of more use to you than to be able to read Latin.—Spurgeon.
Destroy Much Shoe Leather.
Every day the inhabitants of the United Kingdom wear away $1,000,000 worth of shoe leather.
Monkey Men.
Good Advice.
On the American Plan.
On a Recharting Cruise.
LIBRARY TO RUN IN THIS WAY
AT WU CHANG.
Missionary Returns to This Country
to Fit Herself to Carry Out the
During the past year or two there have been many indications that China was awakening to western ideas and progress, and this fact is emphasized by the action of the orientals at Wu Chang, China, who want a library run on the American plan, and which when it is started will be the first of its kind in the Celestial kingdom.
In furtherance of the plans, Miss Elizabeth Wood has come back to this country and become a student in the library school at Pratt institute to fit herself to become director of the proposed library. Miss Wood has been granted a year's leave of absence by the board of Episcopal missions, with which she has been connected for seven years, and has left her classes in the mission school there, in order to learn how to put her little beginning of a library into good shape for her Chinese pupils. In time it is the hope of the Americans in Wu Chang to start a public library, but for the present it will be connected with Boone college, which is a part of the mission there.
The city of Wu Chang is a phenomenal one on account of the great strides it has taken along the lines of education. It is known as the "Boston of China," and is the center of western learning in that country. In fact, it is the most Americanized of all the Chinese cities. It is situated in the central part of the country, near Han Kow, the great tea port, and Han Yang, the trading center. In the last two cities there are comparatively few foreigners, but in all three there are over a million inhabitants. Wu Chang can boast of 10,000 students who daily go to the great schools there to learn what the west has to teach to the east. There is little of the old eastern learning taught. Twenty thousand soldiers are also among the citizens of Wu Chang.
Miss Wood, in speaking of her work the other day, said:
"I came to Pratt in September in order to put our own library on a more systematic basis. It probably will not be necessary for me to take the entire course, as I had had some experience in this line before I went to China, in my house in this state; so during the last part of my year I hope to be able to spend my time in trying to interest the people in
BRIGANTINE GALILEE TO ENCIRCLE THE GLOBE.
Extensive Voyage Planned for Insulated Ship During Which New Charts Will Be Made and Magnetics Studied.
The brigantine Galilee is a peculiar ship and has a peculiar mission.
NORTH
JAPAN
OCEAN
RILLI TO OCEAN
MA
JAPAN
13
TONGA
OCEAN
JAPAN
13
FUJI
13
Course of the Galilee Over the Pa-
cific.
She is so constructed as to be what is called an insulated ship, and she has before her one of the most extensive voyages ever planned for a ship of her size and tonnage, and this following a seven months' cruise from which she has just returned to San Diego, Cal. During that time the quartette of scientists on board has made hundreds of magnetic observations, and practically rechatted the Pacific ocean. She was sent out by the Carnegie Institute of Science at Washington. The Galliee is especially adapted for the taking of magnetic observations under the most favorable conditions. In so far as was possible all metallic substances have been removed, all the steel rigging taken off and old-fashioned hemp substituted. Brass railings are replaced by wood.
IMMORTALITY.
Shakespeare's shade was perusing one of our theatrical programs.
our library. Our idea is ultimately to found a public library.
"Our books at present are all English, but we hope to get some Chinese books before long. We are now teaching the Chinese boys how to use a library. As yet they do not seem to know exactly what it means. But they are very much interested, and are adopting our American methods very readily. There is great excitement when the boxes of books come, and the boys, although not enthusiastic by nature, show a very good imitation of it at these momentous occasions.
"Strange to say, they like the histories, the biographies and the sciences better than fiction, which is
W. J. JEERS
Group of Chinese Students. slightly different, I believe, from the little story loving American children. This is perhaps because their own fiction is so bad; they cannot seem to think that any literature of this kind can possibly be good. We have a very nicely fitted up reading room, where most of the American and English magazines are on hand for them. We really have to urge them to read the fiction, and they do not care for the poetry, either.
Last summer, during the vacation, the librarians allowed the boys to take home 300 books, and all were returned in good condition at the beginning of the fall term. There is also a traveling library, on a small scale, by which the students who have gone far into the country to small mission stations may be supplied with western literature. They are sent, too, to the foreign missionaries who are located among the mountains. Not long ago a load of books was carried six miles straight up a mountain by coolies to these book-hungry workers."
en ones or covered with insulating material. Even screw and nail heads are covered with putty and varnish, and the cabin stove was so fenced in with asbestos and other non-conducting substances as to render it quite unrecognizable. On a bridge elevated some 20 feet above the deck and electrically insulated from the remalder, of the ship are placed the delicate magnetic instruments by means of which the observations are taken. Only two previous attempts have been made to obtain anything like systematic or accurate magnetic data of the Pacific, and these were made under conditions which greatly handicapped their success.
The course taken during the recent cruise may best be described in the words of Mr. Peters as a "slackwise spiral," of which the first turn included San Diego, Fanning island the Samoan, Fiji and Ladrone islands and Japan, returning by the "great circle track" used by oriental steamship lines to and from the North Pacific coast. Succeeding turns of the spiral were made within the first or other one, gradually decreasing until the entire area had been covered with coils about 300 miles apart.
Every two or three days at sea the vessel was swung and slowly turned completely around, while observations were being made to determine the three elements of magnetic force.
The Gaillee is to start this month on the longest and most important voyage she has yet attempted. Her course will be around Cape Horn to Washington, thence across the Atlantic, taking observations en route, to Gibraltar; through Suez canal via the Mediterranean sea and to the Indian ocean, where observations will be taken to a considerable extent. From the Indian ocean the course will lie back to San Diego, completing the circle of the globe. The voyage will occupy two years.
"Interpolated coon songs by Will Shakespeare."
Disappointed and remorseful, he relapsed into spooky silence.—N. Y. Times.
The office-boy had piled the first page by dropping the form down two flights of stairs. "I wish," murmured the gentle editor, "that you had broken the news more gently."—Judge