Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, September 19, 1908
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY TRADING WITH THE MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER.
CLOSING SERVICES OF THE
Southwestern Baptist Association of
Kansas.
For five days Wichita had been blessed with a large number of Baptist derby and laymen attending the above named association, which was held at the Tabernacle Baptist church of this
REV. R. N. COUNTEE, D. D.
Founder and Pastor Emeritus of the
Tabernacle Baptist Church,
Wichita, Kas.
A THOROUGH RACE MAN.
Rev. R. N. Countee, D. D., pastor
charge.
The delegation was a large one,
mong the largest that has been in at-
tendance since the organization of the
body, and was remarkable for the
many women, who were in attendance
messengers to the Auxillaries of this
body.
Sermons, were preached by Rev's,
Peakland, Bacote, Fishback and others.
Recommendations from the various
committees were read and discussed,
especially those on Missions, educa-
tion and temperance.
The report on state of the country
is quite an elaborate one, but was not
generally discussed on account of
bustness of time.
The meeting was a success in every day, $470.71 was raised in this meeting and a like sum during the year, the quarterly Board meetings, making nearly $1,000 by this district alone. The state convention which will assemble in Archison, Kas., the second week in October, has divided the work districts; each of them having Sunday school, a Womans Mission, a L.Y.P. U. as auxiliaries to the church association department proper; if not of the districts raise in the neighborhood of a thousand dollars per year. The State Convention one and a half times as much, there ought to be something tangible to show to our people who contribute this money, but is being done with it.
The Old Folks Home located at Lawrence, Kans., is not enough. The artist of Kansas should have a first-grade paper. If it be an individual enspise it should have the moral import of every loyal Negro Baptist the state of Kansas and the Financial support of every Negro Baptist minister in the state. Nothing educates printers ink and we need to educate the men who handle the peoples they raised by these bodies to do great things for God and humanity in future generations may call them ensoced.
The Tabernacle Baptist is one among the smallest in the bounds of the Southwestern district, having a regular contributing membership of more than 30. They cared for the delegates of this convention for 5 days at a cost of over $1,000 a day and have succeeded in paying nearly every dollar of the expenses barely owing $10.00 at the adjournment of the association.
from 65 to seventy persons were fed three times a day, in a building rented especially for the occasion by the church. And every one went to their homes well pleased with Wichita, and hospitality accorded them; for both older and people did all in their power to please all who came. And from
the resolution of thanks unanimously voted them by the body feel that they succeeded in doing so.
The Association adjourned without completing their work and much important business was turned over to the executive board.
DEMOCRATIC INCONSISTENCY.
Democrats Disfranchise The Negro Where That Party Is In Power And Seek The Negro Vote Where The Republican Party Is In Power And Where The Negro Votes.
CANNOT FOOL THE NEGRO.
THEIR GAME TOO COURSE.
The Democrats this year are up against the real Waterloo and in their efforts to "catch votes" they are attempting to make an effort to get the Northern Negroes vote and in the same election deny the right to vote to the Negro of the South. Here is the problem—if the Democrats disfranchise the Negro in the South where they are in undoubted power what would "they do" to the Negro voter of the North if once they are in undoubted power as they are in the South? Answer "They would disfranchise the Negro of Course." With these facts standing out it is clear that the Negro of the North will be too wise to be caught in this Democratic net. As a sample of some of their tricks we here reproduce this speech of Hon. Edward L. Taylor made in Congress May 26, 1908. Read it carefully and consider every word and every comparison.
THE COLORED VOTE.
Speech of Hon. Edward L. Taylor, Jr. of Ohio in the House of Representatives Tuesday, May 26, 1908.
Mr. Taylor of Ohio said:
Mr. Taylor of Ohio said.
Mr. Speaker: In a speech in this house on the 13th of February last the gentleman from Illinois Mr. Rainey amused us by going into a political trance and uttering, prophecies. He promised the minority, hungry for power and office for so many years that rescue was at hand for the Democratic party by reason of the fact of the defection from the Republican party of the colored vote. The gentleman from Illinois seems to have been, for the time being, in a condition truly telepathic. He vibrated with the forlorn hope of his party throughout the country as the wireless apparatus responds to the distant call of another station. Casting about for the voting strength that is to pick up the fallen, battered minority, set it upon the symbolic donkey that serves for the fitting emblem. Democracy has picked upon the Negro, whom it has oppressed, abused, and disfranchised, to perform that office.
Democratic Estrangement.
Democratic Estranglement.
The Democratic party, like a man in his dotage, is searching among signs and omens for the promise of a future which the facts refuse. Battered and broken by the hard blows of successive defeats, barren of real issues, it turns its dim eyes toward the sky for signs, and portents, and hanging breathlessly over the greasy cards of the fortune teller, it feels excitement thrill it as it listens to the clairvoyant's tale of a dark man coming to cross its path and restore its lost success.
Democracy is enjoying a second childhood. We smile when the child seeks for the pot of gold at the rainbow's end, but it is pathetic to see grandmother, with equal faith, join in the search. Playing with dolls is childhood's prerogative, but old age clutching a rag baby to its breast, only inspires hope for a welcome release.
In twelve years Democracy has twice appealed for support on a promise to overthrow bussiness, and once the assurance that it had become safe and sane, and nominated a judge. The country rejected the revolution and disrusted the sudden conversion to sanity.
Now approaching a fourth national campaign, the "party of uncertainty" is quivering in a quagmire of doubts afears. Even the man who has made running for the Presidency a profitable livelihood—the perennial candidate of peerless rhetoric—is hanging from a cross of doubt and sweating anxiety under a crown of cruel suspicions. "An issue! An issue! The Commoner for an issue!" he cries. First he said the country must own and operae its railroads, but the country spoke up so sharply about it that a mirical was wrought. For almost ten days silence hung over Lincoln, Neb. To the chargin of many Members of this side of the House, this attack of lockjaw was a slight one. When he recovered his voice, however, this self-constituted Moses; of the Democratic tribes wandering in the wilderness was chary of handing down any more law. The tribes had lost faith in his inspiration. He has since then adopted the cautious plan of indorsing the policy and acts of a great Republican President.
Every expedient is being tried, Mr. Speaker, every new trick and every old one, to make the rusty, creaking, and groaning Democratic machine fit for a fight this fall. Like certain people who have been experimenting with flying machines, the Democratic leaders dare reject nothing and dare adopt nothing. The plan proposed may be the suggestion of a crank or a scientist; the only sure test is the attempt to fly; the first sign of failure is when the machine and operator hit the ground, and, sore from disastrous and repeated bumps, they dread that drop this fall.
With defeat staring it in the face, without a real and virile issue except those embodied in the "Peerless One." Democracy is preparing for the conflict in expectation of winning with the vote of the Negroes in the North and without the votes of the Negroes in the South. And this delusion, Mr. Speaker, is the crowning climax of political clowning. The Negroes disfranchised in the South by the Democratic party is expected to swing Republican states of the North into the power of his oppressors. From the days of its birth this party has not only halted its boasted Democracy at the color line, but bragged about it.
Is White Man's Party.
The gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey), who gave us his trance reading, woke up long enough to express his real sentiments and those of his side when he said:
"The Democratic party is the white man's party in this country, in the North as well as in the South."
And after this boast, in the Congressional Record, is written, "Applause on the Democratic side." The gentleman from Illinois added, after this applause had subsided:
"We have been able to make it a white man's party in the past, and we do not care how long it remains a white mans party."
Democratic Methods.
The methods by which the Democratic colleagues of the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey) have made their's "the white man's party" hold out a glowing future to the negroes of the North as a reward for voting for a Democratic national administration. Where the population is largely negroes the party of the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey) is so proud, has made not only the party white, but the law white. Citizens of the United States have been kept from the ballot box by methods peculiar to a party which has always quoted Thomas Jefferson on the equality of man—in the North—begged permission of labor to be its champion in the North—and generally cried out about the woes of the masses and the rights of the citizenship in the poorest and humblest—but always in the North.
In the district of the distinguished leader of the minority, the Eight Mississippi, Yazoo County, the home of this gentleman, has a population of which 77 per cent are Negroes. Hinds County has 75 per cent Negro population and Madison County 77.8 per cent.
These are three of fifty-five counties in the United States whose population was at the last census in 1906 at least 75 per cent Negro. As the average throughout Mississippi, according to the same census, shows 58.5 per cent of the population to be Negroes, the other two counties of the five composing the district are presumably of the same complexion. The exponent of a majority rule on the stump and a minority rule in the House does not permit the race which he hopes will materially aid in electing his presidential candidate to have a voice in his own Congressional campaigns. According to his modest autobiography in successive editions of the Congressional Directory he was elected by 1,433 votes to the Ffty-ninth Congress, and he modestly omits the elections returns of his last campaign, contenting himself with the statement that he was "re-elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving all the votes cast." Returns from this and other Mississippi districts, where they have been grudgingly made public, show that the votes cast cover a very select classification in this stronghold of a party that talks so much about the "peoples' rights."
The colleague of the distinguished minority leader from the Third Mississippi district (Mr. Humphreys) was elected by 1,540 votes to the present Congress. His district has a population of 232,174. The gentleman from the Third Mississippi district also notes in his Congressional Directory biography that he was elected "without opposition." This "without opposition" expression is used generally by members from this state in explanation of the small and scattered election returns which are their credentials of membership in this house. The election returns for the state of Mississippi show that there were cast in each district the following votes:
First..... 2,563
Second..... 2,567
Third..... 1,540
Fourth..... 2,536
Fifth..... 2,782
Sixth..... 4,250
Seventh..... 1,933
Eight. No returns.
Total.....18,171
We are therefore safe in estimating that the entire vote for all members of Congress from the state of Mississippi did not exceed 20,000. The smallest population of any of these districts is 158,643, in the Seventh district, and the largest 239,653, in the Second district. The explanation "without opposition," which is advanced by these gentlemen, does not altogether explain to the citizens of the North, where the qualified electors are permitted to exercise their suffrage, the small vote cast in the last Mississippi Congressional election. My distinguished colleague from the Thirty-first Ohio district (Mr. Burton) has been accorded the honor of re-election without opposition from the Democratic party in the Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses. Nevertheless, with a population of 255,510 in his district, he received 20,826 votes. The pro forma opposition from the Socialistic and Prohibition parties secured 1,596 votes, about as many as is sufficient to elect a Democratic member of Congress from the state of Mississippi.
Republican Party Respects Lawe.
It is not because his vote is so small as to be insignificant that the Negro in the North, where the Republican party is dominant, is permitted to exercise his constitutional rights as a citizen. It is because that party respects the constitution which has guaranteed those rights to the Negro, and he is entitled to use them in any way he pleases along the lines of good citizenship. Ohio has a Negro vote of more than 30,000, sufficient to turn the tide in many close-fought political battles in that state. There are several Ohio districts where the Negro vote is large enough to be counted the balance of power between closely drawn party lines.
Negro Entitled to Vote.
The Negro is entitled to use his right
of suffrage according to the distates of his own conscience, and his vote for or against any party or any candidate without let or hindrance. Fair treatment and an opportunity for education and advancement given to the Negro result in an intelligent use of that most sacred right granted to every citizen of the United States. The fact that the great majority of Negroes have at all times voted the Republican ticket is only another evidence of their good sense, judgment, and intelligence in recognizing in which direction their best interests lie.
The intelligent Negro of the North does not worship false gods. He is thoroughly familiar with the unfortunate condition of the colored man in the South. He knows that at heart the leaders of the Democratic party do not wish his association in politics, but only hope to use him and to disgruntle him against the Republican party in order that they may, without benefit to him, be elevated into power. It does not need the declaration of the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey) that the Democratic party is a "white man's party" to convince them that their interests and future welfare lie in the hands of the Republican party and its patriotic electors.
Who is this citizen whom Mr. Rainey and his colleagues find so obnoxious who is not permitted to vote in the South? Can they not for a moment cease in hunting isolated cases where criminal Negroes have committed grave outrages and look to the broad development of the Negro as a race? What has he done to earn his citizenship?
Negroes' Progress.
Education for the Negro began with the emancipation proclamation. The illiteracy of the whole race, which may be admitted to have been total at emancipation, has been reduced to 44.5 per cent when the last census was taken. In the ten years from 1890 to 1900 it had been reduced from 57.1 per cent to 44.5 per cent and in Ohio, where the first steps to educate the Negro were taken, there was but 17.9 per cent of Negro illiteracy when the last census was taken. Italy today has 38 per cent of illiteracy; Spain, 68 per cent, and Portugal, 79.2 per cent. These are white countris with centuries of civilization behind them. There are 40,000 students in higher institutions of learning, pursuing all branches from trade to classical and scientific courses. Forty thousand colored youths have graduated from secondary institutions of learning, and 4,000 from colleges. The race has developed 30,000 teachers, more than 16,000 clergymen, 4,000 musicians, more than 2,000 actors and showmen, more than 1,700 physicians and surgeons, about 1,000 lawyers, 300 journalists, 250 dentists, 236 artists and art teachers, 100 literary persons, 120 civil engineers and surveyors, 82 bankers and brokers, and 52 architects. It has about 200 institution for higher education in the United States. In 1904 it owned property amounting to $1,100,000,000. It operates 746,715 farms and owns 187,797 farms, or 25 per cent of the total. It rents 557,174 farms, or 74.6 per cent of the total. This is not a bad showing for a race which gentlemen of the minority have declared unfit to exercise its citizenship, and which they claim to be a purchasable quantity when it comes to exercise its suffrage.
NEGRO AS FARMERS.
In 1900 the farm property belonging to Negroes was valued at $200,000,000, almost $300 for each Negro family. In the State of Georgia in 1901 the Negro owned 1,200,000 acres of land, with an assessed valuation of $15,269.181. The auditor of the statco f Virginia, in his report for 1904, says that the colored people increased the value in that year of their total property $19,554,884. The average size of the Negroes farm is 51.8 acres, and of the total acreage over 66 per cent was improved. More than one-fourth of all the farms in the South are operated by Negroes.
It is an acknowledged fact that the real backbone of our country is agriculture. The Negro has recognized this
fact, and more than 2,000,000 are engaged in agricultural pursuits. Nearly 1,500,000 are engaged in domestic and personal service, 275,000 are engaged in manufacturing and mechanical pursuits, and 47,324 are engaged in professional pursuits. The Negro has 20,000 churches, valued at many millions of dollars.
A Comparison.
What is there in the progress of the Negro that gives rise to unfavorable comparison with the progress of any people similarly situated? He has, from the time he was given the right to use his talents according to his own bent, endeavored to be, and has been, self-supporting and progressive. Those who were endowed with the best talents have progressed to the higher branches of business and professional life. Those who were not so well endowed have sought agricultural and mechanical pursuits, and their progress has been steady in the direction of independence and good citizenship. No class of men where the right of suffrage has been given to it, has cherished more effectually that privilege or used it more patriotically. Compare the Negro with the Russian peasant, freed but a few years before, and his progress has been remarkable as compared to the down-trodden white serfs of the Russian Empire. With all, the Negro has never demanded that which he was not entitled to. He has asked that he be given an opportunity to develop and become a good citizen. Where that opportunity has been given him he has taken advantage of it and is a good citizen. There are bad Negroes by the same rule that there are bad white men. There are vicious Negroes for the same reason that there are vicious white men, but the great majority of both whites and Negroes are respectable and law-abiding. A creditabel showing, truly, particularly if we take into consideration that the Negro has had only a few score years of civil rights and the white man has always been free to develop his talents and advance his boasted civilization.
Democrats Taunt Foraker.
The gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey) in his speech on February 13 makes the following statement, referring to Senator Foraker:
Theer is only one man in the Republican party who is spoken of as a candidate who really represents anything, and he represents money and Negroes.
Further along he said:
You must take care of the Negro vote, and you cant do it when you turn down Foraker. If you turn him down, if you do not nominate him—and he is the only man who is making a real fight for anything except the nomination—it will be necessary for you to buy every Negro nbrth of the Mason and Dixon line in order to get them to vote the Republican ticket.
And further:
The Republican party making a campaign without money and without Negroes would present a pitilable spectacle in this country. (Applause on the Democratic side.)
Referring, for a moment, to that portion of the speech of the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rainey) in which he not only casts reflections upon the splendid character and purposes of the senior Senator from Ohio (Mr. Forawe) and in which he also characterizes every Negro north of the Mason and Dixon line as being a purchasable quantity, and glories in the fact that he belongs to the national Democratic party, because it is a "white mans party," and always will be, let me say that I am equally proud of the fact that the Republican party is not a "white man's party," but is a party composed of American citizens regardless of nationality or color. It is a party that believes that the principles of the constitution of the United States should be as potent south of the Mason and Dixon line as it is north of that imaginary line. It believes that every section of the constitution should be
Continued on page 3
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REPUBLICAN TICKET
Election, Tuesday, Nov. 3rd, 1908.
NATIONAL
For President
William H. Taft.....Ohio.
For Vice-President
James S. Sherman.....New York
STATE.
For United States Senator
J. L. Bristow.....Saline county
For Governor
W. R. Stubbs.....Douglas County
For Lieutenant-Governor
W. J. Fitzgerald.....Ford County
For Secretary of State
C. E. Denton.....Harper County
For Auditor of State.
J. M. Nation.....Neosho County
For Superintendent of Public Instruc-
tion
E. F. Fairchild.....Ellsworth County
For Attorney General
F. S. Jackson.....Greenwood County
For Treasurer of State
Mark Tully.....Montgomery County
For Superintendent of Insurance
Charles W. Barnes.....Osage County
For State Printer
T. A. McNeal.....Shawnee County
For Railroad Commissioners
C. A. Ryker.....Reno County
Geo. W. Kanavel.....Harvey County
Frank J. Ryan.....Leavenworth County
For Justice of Supreme Court
A. W. Benson.....Franklin County
Henry F. Mason.....Finney County
Clark A. Smith.....Mitchell County
CONGRESSIONAL.
Representative in Congress
Victor Murdock.....Wichita
COUNTY
State Senator.....J. H: Stewart
Rep. 71st District.....E. B: Jewett
Rep. 72 District.....Cliff Matson
Rep. 73d District.....N. Gensman
Co. Com. Second District. S. B: Kerman
Co. Com. Third District.....
.....A. M. Reichenberger
County Clerk.....J. L. Leland
County Treasurer.....O. W. Jones
Register of Deeds.....Joseph Bowman
County Attorney.....A. J. Adams
Probate Judge.....E. E. Enoch
Sheriff.....W. L. Appling
Coroner.....M. M. McCollister
County Superintendent. J. W. Swaney
Surveyor.....John K. Brown
District Judge.....Thomas C. Wilson
Clerk District Court.....W. C. Malone
Judge City Court.....James L. Dyer
Clerk City Court.....S. L. Barret
Marshall City Court.....C. W. Root
STUBBS THE NEXT GOVERNOR.
STUBBES THE NEXT GOVERNOR.
In the person of Hon. Walter Roscoe Stubbs, the republicans present the name of a man of push and force. Stubbs stands for something and as the next governor of Kansas will put the same vim and vigor in the affairs of Kansas as he has used in making his own affairs a success. He is no crank who has jumped from one political limb to another seeking office—but has stood flat-footed for a principle and has won. As the father and sponsor of several wholesome measures now made into good laws he has demonstrated the good qualities of his policies. Every republican can go to the
pools and vote for Hon. W. R. Stubbs knowing that he will make a safe, sound, careful and wise chief executive of the state of Kansas.
OUR COUNTY TICKET.
The Republicans of Sedgwick county presents a splendid ticket to the November election. It is composed of strong men and men in whom the public can have implicit confidence, that each is most admirably fitted to fill the position too which he aspires. From top to bottom the whole ticket is a good one calculated to pool the full party vote. A vote for each man is a vote in the right direction.
Secretary Blood went to Topeka Thursday to confer with State Chairman J. N. Dolley.
When the votes are counted after the election it will appear to John Atwood that the Democrats did not have "the price" "to purchase" the Negro vote.
Republican Headquarters are located on the second floor of the red Turner Building. Go up you are welcome there.
The Republicans have drawn "Blood" in their Headquarters—which is a pretty good sign of a winning fight this fall.
The John Atwood type of Democrats may think the Kansas Negro—"ignorant—vicious, etc.,—but one thing is certain, Brother Atwood—the Negro is no fool. You need not worry—the Kansas Negro is a long way from helping put your likes in power in this state—just be quiet.
With Rev. J. H. Van Lew on the county central committee every colored man may rest assured that the race will be well represented.
Stand for something—own something.
"Hot Air Days" are passed—so pay up what you owe the Searchlight. That counts.
We need more R. N., Countees—they would do the race good.
This is an age of "survival of the fittest" merit—if you do your part—you need not worry about the results. Merits will win.
NAMED COMMITTEEMAN.
Te Republican county central committee has named Rev. J. H. Van Leu as committeeman from the second precinct of the second ward to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Committeeman Ben H. Downing. The appointment of Rev. Van Leu gives general satisfaction to the people both colored and white. He will make a good member of the central committee.
REV. COUNTEE IS RIGHT.
Rev. R. N. Countee is right when he says, "we need broad-minded ministers, if you have a race enterprise of any kind in your town, speak of it once and awhile, it wont hurt you and may help the enterprise." Thats the thing needed. Most of our ministers forget about everybody's interest, but their own. Let all work together, it is so much more pleasant and helpful.
LOCALS
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WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE?
Vote for S. B. Kernan for County Commissioner from the First, Second and Third wards.
G. L. Scott has returned to his many Wichita friends after a pleasant extensive trip East and to Canada. Mr. Scott returns still a single man and speaks in highest praises of the many wonderful sights which he saw on his trip and the splendid people with whom he came in contact.
For good accommodations go to Johnston's hotel, 507 N. Main. WOMEN'S CLUB A concise statement
MAKING IMPROVEMENTS.
Mrs. Ada Coulter, proprietor of the Victoria hotel, 343 N. Maine st., is having the hotel repaired, remodeled and repainted. She has had two large rooms added on the rear and is having the interior and exterior both painted. When completed it will be an up-to-date place in every way. Mrs. Coulter deserves much credit for her fine business qualities. Coming to Wichita a few years ago a stranger, she has, by strict attention to business bought this property and is fast going to the front. The Wichita hotel is in one of the most prominent and ideal business locations in Wichita.
Rev. M. Wooten, presiding elder, was accompanied by his wife on his visit to Wichita this quarter. They remained in the city till Tuesday when Mrs. Wooten returned to her home in Ft. Scott, while Rev. Woaten went to Wellington. We welcome Mrs. Woaten again.
John E. Lewis is doorkeeper at the U. S. Court room, during the present session of that tribunal. This is quite a distinction.
Miss Beatty Jackson passed her grade and is now in her first year in the high school.
The fourth quarterly conference of St. Pauls A. M. E. church was held Sept. 14th by Presiding Elder M. Wooton. After devotional exercises the Presiding Elder addressed the conference briefly, stating, in the course of his remarks that the work was in excellent shape throughout the district.
The reports from the different departments were the best made since the creation of the Wichita district.
The trustees raised during the quarter $101.16 and reported the current indebtness of their department to be $40.00.
The Stewards department raised $305.30; paid the Presiding Elder in full, and owe the pastor $78.31 which will be paid before the end of the conference year. Fourteen persons were received into full membership and 14 persons joined on probaion during the quarter. The Presiding Elder made excellent remark under the leadership of sister Fine, they raised the entire Presiding Elder assessment. The reports of the Sunday school, and Allen Christian Endeavor League were fair. The Presiding Elder made a fine complimentary remark after which the congregation adjourned.
Mrs. Amanda Black of Springfield, Ill., mother of Mrs. Anderson Griggs arrived in the city over the Santa Fe Tuesday. She was accompanied by her grandmother, Mrs. Bert McClellan, who met her in Kansas City. She will make Wichita her future home.
Mrs. Chas. Miller, of Newton, was the guest of Mrs. E. Loudrum on last Sunday.
Mrs. E. J. Alexander entertained Mrs. Amanda Jones, of St. Joe, Mo. at tea on Saturday evening.
Mrs. S. Frame and daughter, Miss Bessie, of Newton, visited with Mrs. V. Covington last week.
Mrs. A. Hackley and daughter, Miss Pearl, have returned from a trip to Colorado.
The public schools of Wichita opened Monday with one of the largest enrollments in its history.
Mrs. Edith Kelm left Wednesday for Hot Springs. Ark., where she will spend several weeks.
One of the most delightful social functions of the season was the reception given by Mrs. S. W. Jones at her home 501 N. Water street Tuesday eve, in honor of her mother-in-law, Mrs. Amanda Jones of St. Joseph, Mo, who has been her guest the past month. The decorations were pretty and effective with the various colored electric lights. In the Merry Widow contest, prizes were won by Mrs. Jno. Rawles and Mrs. M. Bettis. In a guessing contest to Mrs. E. J. Alexander and Mrs. G. W. White was awarded the prizes. The favors were, dainty white and pink cards tied with pink and green ribbons. An elegant three course lunch was served and highly enjoyed,
WOMEN'S CLUB DIRECTORY.
A concise statement of the Clubs among the colored women of Wichita.
Hour of meeting 2:30 to 4:30 p. m.
Engaged in needle, charity and literary work.
Special 1908 course in typewriting.
Meets every Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Thos. Glover, president; Miss Sallie Rawles, Sec.
Engaged in the culinary art. Progressive ideas in fancy and home cooking. Meets 2nd and 4th Friday afternoons of each month. Mrs. Will H. Jones, President; Miss Jennie Wheeler, Secretary.
THE W. T. VERNON CLUB,
WICHITA, KAN.
Hour of meeting 2:30 p. m. Engaged in needle, charity and literary work. Meets every Thursday afternoon. Mrs. B. Hockett, president, Mrs. S. Griggs, secretary.
Office Hours 9 a.m to 6 p.m
Sundays by Appointment
Dr. H. T. Bolden
DENTIST
507 N. Main St Wichita, Kan and a royal good time was the expression of all those present. Among the invited were: Mesdames A. Jones, Mary Parks, H. Lewis, J.G. Gains, W. H. Jones, M. Price, B. Butler, Jno Rawles, M. Griggs, W. Barker, M. Greggs, L. Miskel, M. Miller, A. Adam, M. Hodges, D. Sanders, M. Coffey, S. Miller and W. N. Miller.
A Fall Festival will be held in the big tent which will be erected on lots north of the A. M. E. church during each evening of the week. Commencing Monday eve Sept. 21st. Everybody is invited to come out and enjoy the music Concerts and all see big balloon ascension.
Mrs. Amanda Jones who has been visiting Mrs. S. W. Jones for the past month, returned to her home in St. Joseph, Mo., Wednesday.
Mrs. R. E. Countee, daughter-in-law fo Rev. Dr. Countee and organist of the Second Baptist Church of Kansas, City Mo., was in this city during the Baptist association and assisted in the music of the same.
Mrs. Pinky Jones of Kansas City, Mo spent a week with us as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Young, of 601 N. Main street.
THE SEASONS SWSLLEST.
For exquisite daintiness, for completeness of entertaining, for propositionate and appropriate decorations, the one o'clock dinner served by Mrs. Geo. W. Orr, Sr., at the palacial Orr residence 808 E. 13th street Wednesday, Sept. 16th, was one which goes down as a record breaker. In honor of Mrs. J. Lambkin of Pawnee, Okla., and Mrs. H. T. Bolden. This swell feast was served in six distinct and separate courses to the invited. The time was spent in pleasant conversation. Those present were: Mrs. A. Price, Miss Ellen Roach, Mrs. J. Lambkin, of Pawnee, Okla., Mrs. D. H. T. Bolden, Mrs. S. W. Isler, Mrs. W. N. Miller, Mrs. A. Dixson, Mrs. L. H. White, Mrs. Grace Madison, Mrs. S. S. Washington, Mrs. Jas. Balance.
A SPLENDID GIFT.
Mr. Ike J. Porter, one of Wichita's expert hog raisers present Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Miller with a fine white Dorac baby girl pig. This little girl pig is to be raised as a benefit fund for the Searchlight in honor of the ten years publication of the Searchlight in this community. Mr. and Mrs. Porter were among the very first to subscribe for the Searchlight when we began ten years ago and have been one of the Searchlight's most staunch and prompt supporters, every day since. The editor of the Searchlight and his wife both feel deeply grateful to Mr. Porter for his very substantial gift of the little baby girl pig and will tenderly care for her till she gets grown and finds other baby pigs and we shall always and ever hold a warm place in our heartsfor Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Porter.
Pay what you owe to the Searchlight. Be honest.
... Drugs of all kinds, Cigars and Tobacco ... Your patronage solicited. + Once a customer, always a customer. Our store is Headquaaters for Colored people. 615 North Main st.
"Second to None"
PLEASES ALL Good Bread Makers It Is White As Snow—TRY IT The Otto Weiss Alfalfa Stock and Poultry Food are all guaranteed under the United States Law, Serial No. 13415 and under the Kansas State Law Register No. 1. It Is The Cheapest and BEST FOOD on the Market.
HOUCK
Hardware store
First Class Goods at
Lowest Prices
116 East Douglas Avenue
Dr.J.E. Farmer,
Physician and Surgeon
—Diseases of—
Women and Children
A Specialty
Office 703 N. Main St.
Use
Murray's Reliable Nerve Balm
Murray's Reliable Antiseptic Salv
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.
808 South Hydraulic Avenue
New Phone 985
Wichita - - - Kansas
W. S. MENRION
DRUGGIST
801 N. Main St.
Wichita, Kans.
For a Good Job of Lead and Oil. SUTTON PAINT CO.
Job Printing
We have installed a new line of JOB TYPE FACES and we would be pleased to use them on a job for you. Good Work--Low Prices to all 634 North Water St.
L. S. Naftsger, President, W. R. Tucker, Vice-President, J. M. Moore, Vice President, C. W. Brown, Vice President, V. H. Branch, Cashier.
Fourth National Bank
Capital $200,000 Surplus $25,000
Directors: W. R. Tucker, W. E. Jett,
R. L. Holmes, S. B. Amidon, J. M.
Moore, L. S. Naftsger, H. W. Darling,
A. G. Houston, E. C. Sheldon, C. W.
Brown, J. W. Metz, E. T. Battin, Heny
Lassen, V. H. Braneh.
A General Banking Business Transacted
YOUR GOODS SAFE if you store them with us.-Miller Storage Co. 624 N. Water.
Peerless Steam Laundry
Wlehita's Oldest, Most Reliable and Best Laundry
BEST LAUNDRY WORK IN THE CITY
All Work Guaranteed
SELOVER & BONS, Prep
Phone 232 245 N. Marke
ABWEBBER
Druggist
Free Delivery. We will call for an
Deliver Your Prescriptions
811 N. Main St. New Phone
STORAGE
We have a nice, dry, sanitary Storage Room..... Goods stored with us is safe. Rates the lowest MILLER STORAGE COMPAN 634 North Water St.
Dr. E. Harrison
Physician & Surgeon
-SURGERY A SPECIALTY-
Office Hours
9 to 11 a.m. Residence
2 to 5 p.m. 703 N. Main St
7 to 8 p.m.
OFFICE 601 N. MAIN ST
Phone 860 green
BUY
LUMBER
AT
METZ'S
Corner Of 3rd & Main
Groceries, Meat
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
We carry a full, fresh
line of Staple and Fancy
Groceries and Choicest
Fresh and Salt Meats
Our Stock of Dry Goods
Men, Women and Child-
ren's Shoes cannot be
excelled in quality or in
price. Free Delivery.
Tapp & HanshaW
255-257,N, Main St Phone 2
BOOST FOR WICHITA ENTERTAINMENT PRISES.
“Supplement te The
sEARCHLIGHT
wont, th ANS,
etalia: to eee
the slang phrase, “a good mixer,”
as « pecullar meaning whep applied
ja ron. It seems never to have
fren used as deseriptive of women.
jot why not? Some women smight
tar the tle with distinction, ak
how in a little different sense,
for sevevations Women have been en-
aged in “mixing” reluctant elements.
Flour end butter in their hands have
gombined into flaky biscuit; and un-
congenial cousins have made up an
ggweable family party, A woman at
the head of @ large household has
qed to be @ good mixer, says the
Youth's Companion, She may hava
free generations under her roof and
dependent upon her care, With the
quidsen she must be as a child; with
the grandmother she must see the
wisdom of age, even beneath its
feebleness; for the willful son she
nust mingle rea@y sympathy and frm
contro). Woman's service in village
or church is often that of welding to-
gether obstinate and diverse elements.
For there must be no Democrats or
Republicans, no Methodists or Cath-
olics, when she has in hand some
reasure for the common good. The
gade trees in a certain village are a
growing memorial to a certain woman
who got the Second Adventists and
the Congregationalists together, and
get them in pairs to digging the same
oles, instead of working on oppo-
site sides of the street. She was a
good mixer herself, and, like all of
‘that brotherhood, she was the cause
that good mixing should be in others.
In this world of strife and misunder-
standings and petty frictions, the
rarest and dearest of her sex is the
roman who goes her way—a smile on
ter lips and a gently persuasive spoon
in hand—measuring and mingling con-
trary tastes and dispositions and am-
titions, and adding to the combina.
tion that subtle one-knows-not-what of
yersonality which is the crowning
grace of a good mixer,
The New Shamrocic.
Sir Thomas Lipton’s new racing
sacht Shamrock bas been successfully
launched and is now being fitted out
n the Solent for the season's com-
yetitions. She is longer than last
jear's champion, White Heather, and
{sa good deal fuller in the midsbip
section class, More striking, still,
however, is the manner in which the
lines of the yacht are stretched out.
lustead of the comparatively short,
rounded ends of White Heather—a de.
velopment which was probably caused
by the operation of the new rule of rat-
fg—Shamrock Is drawn out in long,
graceful overhangs, The modeling
of the counter is particularly hand-
some. ‘The beam is carried aft well
{nto the counter, and, as this fs bal-
snced with good and fairly full shoul-
ters, it Is apparent that this vesset
Will have at least one of the elements
"hich helped Reliance to success—
ie, a long sailing side when hard
riven, although it goes practically un-
faxed in the measurement. ‘The free-
tard looks more than was expected,
bot the unfamiliar appearance of the
Feet top sides with the white boot-
op under may make this something
cf an optical delusion. At all events,
there is no bulwark to increase the
Wight of topside, the only foothold
for the crew being a light rail set
Yell in on the deck. From the out-
Yard appearance, the yacht is in all
Yespecls a racer of the thoroughbred
‘ype, end should give a good account
‘ol herself when pitted against other
; Yessels in the big class,
Edelweiss, “the fatal bloom,” has al
Rost disappeared from the Mont Blano
Mage in Switzerland, and an Irish
Qobleman, who is an expert mountain
timber, is now engaged for the sec-
‘td summer in planting the flower at
the hichest altitudes he can reach.
Tee self-imposed task, although ft
‘™nces a pleasing sentiment, does no-
‘oiy any particular good, If influen-
tel men of leisure would apply thelr
fathusiasm to the work of reforest-
e barven places at home, there would
tea dittorent story to tell.
A Queensland judge has decided
et oysters are wild beasts, A man
the pearl Industry had 100,000 oy-
Fes in the shell spread out at Fri-
& ‘sid and some Japs stole them.
The court solemnly held that both oy-
Rers pearls are wild animals, for
he stecting of which there is no pen-
*y. “The judge should lose no time
the world how he classifies
Mrapin
“the richest town in the world,
Eooktiie ought to be ashamed to
Se allowed @ historie elm tree, sal@
fb: tie largest tree in that town,
whien George Washington used to
een his horse, to be destroyed by
Me cimicat beetle,
| The wid tribesmen who are “‘pro-
"ed he shah are more exacting
- ‘he reformers, it seems, orm
re ill have no refuge aty-
*S and the safest thing for them
be constituticnal rule.
REPUBLICANS CARRY STATE BY
SMALLEST PLURALITY IN
MANY YEARS.
DEMOCRATS MAKE BIG GAINS
Fernald’s Plurality in the State About
8,000 Against 26,816 in Last
Presidential Year—Some
Comment:
Portland, Me., Sept. 16.—The Re-
publicans carried Maine Monday by
about 8,000 plurality, as against, 26,816
in the last presidential year and 8,064
in 1906. At midnight returns for gov-
ernor from 468 out of 519 cities,
towns and plantations, give Bert M.
Fernald (Republican) 72,117; Obadiah
Gardner (Democrat) 64,993. The
same places in 1904 gave Cobb (Re-
publican) 75,334; Davis (Democrat)
49,416. The remaining places in 1904
gave Cobb, 1.630; Davis, 730.
The bessocratic vote increased more
than 13,000 over that of 1904, while
the Republican vote fell off about
2,500, The Republican plurality is the
smallest recorded in a presidential
year in 25 years.
The two parties split even in the
20 cities, each capturing ten. The
voting was particularly heavy in the
rural districts where the Democrats,
largely through the popularity of Mr.
Gardner among the farmers, made
great gains,
The result showed not only the
warmth of the contest, but the popu-
larity of Mr. Gardner whose fame as
the head of the state grange patrons
of industry proved a great vote
gainer.
The Republicans strongly defended
the so-called Sturgis law and urged
the yoters to support its stringent
methods in the inforcement of the
cause of prohibition, Nearly 140,000
voters went to the polls, a number
which was within a few thousand of
the record for the state.
‘The Democrats gained over four
years ago in nearly every county and
city, although some of the munici-
palities which went Democratic two
years ago, returned to the Republican
fold Monday. Congressmen Allen,
Burleigh, John G. Swasey, Frank E.
Juernsey, Republicans, are elected.
The next legislature, from the re-
turns received Monday night, will un-
doubtedly be Republicans.
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 16—Upon bis
return from the Fifth regiment armory
Monday night, where he delivered a
political speech, William J. Bryan was
shown the Associated press bulletins
regarding the results of the Maine
election. He was elated over the great
Democratic gain and said:
“I am very much gratified at the
returns from Maine. They indicate
that the trend toward the Democratic
party extends over the whole country,
they encourage Democrats to believe
that victory in November is certain.”
Rochester, N. ¥., Sept. 16—The
early returns from the Maine election
were received by the Democratic lead-
ers here Monday night with much
gratification, National Chairman Mack
said:
“Maine has always been regarded as
a hide-bound Republican state and the
returns from there Monday night in-
dicate clearly that the sentiment of
the people is thoroughly aroused for
the cause of Democracy. What has
happened in Maine clearly forecasts
what will be the outcome in other
states at the coming election, and
now I am more confident than ever
that Mr. Bryan will be elected.”
Chicago, Sept. 16.—Advices received
by Chairman Hitchcock from Maine
Republican leaders at eleven o'clock
Monday night placed the Republican
plurality at from 8,000 to 10,000. This
was a few thousand less than had
been conservatively estimated, but the
figures proved very satisfactory to Mr.
Hitchcock. The campaign, he said,
was made entirely on local issues.
Portland, Me., Sept. 16.—Additional
and revised returns made early Tues-
day of the state election in Maine
Monday altered only slightly the re-
sult announced Monday night, the plu-
rality of Bert M. Fernald, the Repub-
lican candidate for governor, over
Obadiah Gardner, Democrat, remain-
ing at 7,329, with 25 small towns and
26 plantations still to report. A com-
plete poll of the vote is not expected
for several days.
‘The feature of the election was the
increase in the Democratic vote
througout the state. Every one of the
four congressional districts showed
gains, the increase over 1904 being
15,000 votes, and 4,000 over 1906.
‘These gains were made almost entire-
ly in the rural districts, showing clear-
ly the popularity of Mr, Gardner
among the farmers of the state,
‘The Republican vote also was great-
er by 3,000 more than in 1906, but it
fell 4,000 below the vote in 1904. The
Republicans also made very good
gains in the rural districts, and in ad-
dition regained six cities in the state
which left the municipalities evenly
divided between the two parties. All
the Republican candidates for con-
gress were elected.
‘The incoming legislature will be
strongly Republican in both branches.
‘The Hawaiian Republican territor-
jal convention has renominated Jonah
Kalanaianole congressional delegate.
A NEW RAILROAD SOCIETY
OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYES IN ONE
ASSOCIATION.
Meeting at Chicago Organizes “Amer-
ican Railroad Employes and
Investors Association.”
Chicago, Sept. 16.—At a meeting
held here Monday of prominent rail-
way officials and representatives of
labor organizations whose members
are employed on railways “the Amer-
ican Railroad Employes and Investors’
association” was formed.
The following statement of the
meeting was made public by P. H.
Morrissey, grand master of the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen:
“The purposes of the American
Railroad Employes and Investors’ as-
sociation shall be by all lawful meth-
ods, to cultivate nd maintain between
its members such a spirit of mutual
interest and such concern on the part
of all of them for the welfare and
Prosperity of American railroads as
Will best promote their successful and
profitable operation, for the benefit
alike of their employes. investors and
the public; to encourage by every
Proper method, cordial and friendly
feelings on the part of the public
toward American railroads and their
business; to publicly provide means
and methods for obtaining consider-
ation and hearing from all legislative
bodies and commissions empowered
to enact laws, rules and regulations
affecting the conduct and operation
of railroads; to do whatever lawful
things may be necessary in order to
secure a fair return alike to capital
and to labor interested in American
railroads, with due regard at all times
to efficient service, fair treatment and
safety to the public.
“This association shall at no time
be used for partisan political pur-
poses, nor shall it take part in any
controversy, if any, which may arise
between railroad employes and rail
road officials.”
Kansas Campaign to Open.
Independence, Kan., Sept. 16—
Everything is in readiness for the
opening of the Republican campaign
here and a big crowd is expected. The
committee has put up a guarantee for
special trains from various sections of
the state. Wednesday afternoon and
evening there will be speeches by
Speaker Cannon, Joseph L. Bristow,
Representative P. P. Campbell, Wal-
ter R. Stubbs and other men leading
in Republican politics, In the evening
2,000 men will carry flags and torches
in an old fashioned red fire parade.
Taft's Trip Arranged.
Chicago, Sept. 16.—Ten days of
traveling, with almost constant speak-
ing, has been arranged for William H.
Taft, the Republican candidate for
president. The trip will be made on a
special train starting from some Ili-
nois voint, probably Chicago, about
September 25. The tour will extend
as far north as Minneapolis, and Far-
go, S. D.; as far south as several
points in Kansas, and west to Denver,
Mr. Taft will be back to Chicago in
time to speak before the Deep Water-
ways'convention on October 7,
Raided Negro Gambling Houses.
Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 14.—Act-
ing under instructions from Prosecu-
tor Goldenberg representing Gov. Fort,
25 detectives Sunday raided several
negro gambling houses in the city,
capturing 60 inmates. The raids were
made over the head of Chief of Police
Woodruff and the city authorities who
knew nothing of the round-up until an
order was sent to city hall for the
police patrol.
Gov. Little Improving:
St. Joseph, Mo., Sept. 16.—Gov. John
S. Little of Arkansas who is in a pri-
vate sanitarium in St. Joseph, is re
ported to be slowly recovering, men-
tally and physically but physicians at
the sanitarium do not believe he will
be able to assume his official duties
before his successor, George W.
Donaghey, elected Monday, is inau-
gurated the first of the year.
Lacey to Oppose Cummins,
Des Moines, Ia., Sept, 16—Ex-Con-
gressman John F. Lacey was Tuesday
chosen by the bolting faction of stand-
patters to oppose Goy. Cummins as
United States senator to be voted
upon at the primary in November.
Lacey was selected on the second bal-
lot. E. E. Clark of Cedar Rapids,
member of the Interstate Commerce
commission, was considered.
Harriman to be There.
Abilene, Kan., Sept. 15—B. H. Har
riman, the railway magnate, has ac:
cepted an invitation to attend and ad-
dress the nineteenth annual session of
the Trans-Mississipp! Commercial Con-
gress, that meets in San Francisco
October 6-10, it was announced here
Sunday by President J. E. Case.
‘A Woman Balks a Jailbreak.
Olathe, Kan., Sept. 15.—Armed with
only a short club and a pair of hand-
cuffs the wife of Sheriff Speed went to
her husband’s assistance Saturday
night when six prisoners attacked him
at the door of the county jail and pre-
yented the escape of four.
Served His Time.
eLavenworth, Kan., Sept. 16.—Wil-
son L. Ollins, former cashier of a bank
at Elkhart, Ind, was released from
the federal prison here Tuesday morn-
ing after a six-year sentence for vio-
lation of the national banking laws,
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Will the Public Pay the Price He Ex pects?
DELEGATES ALREADY ARRIVING
IN WASHINGTON FOR TUBER-
CULOSIS CONGRESS. j
ALL NATIONS REPRESENTED
In Addition to Foreigners Every
State in the Union Will Have
Many Delegates on |
‘+taiied
Washington, Sept. 15.—By the end
of this week hundreds of delegates
will have arrived to attend the ses.
sions of the International congress on
tuberculosis, which opens Monday,
September 21. This fighting force of
the world, as regards the white
plague, will spend three weeks in
this city.
All sessions of the congress will
be heid in the new National Museum
building.
From every civilized country in the
world the delegates, or “congress.
ists,” as they are technically termed,
are coming. From every state in the
‘Union enough congressists are coming
to fili a volume with a list of their
names. Even California, the farthest
state, is sending 100 members, and
Virginia will have 200.
‘The burden of the preliminary work
falls upon the shoulders of Dr, John
S. Fulton and Dr. Henry G. Beyer.
The former is the secretary-general.
Dr. Beyer is chairman of the exhibi-
tion committee. The task of pre
senting the thousands of exhibits from
a thousand points in a scientific and
interesting manner has been keeping
him busy. There are many interest:
ing models of buildings, photographs,
instruments and every conceivable ob:
ject. used in combatting tuberculosis.
‘The international congress on tuber:
culosis is really seven congresses
rolled into one, for there are seven
sections.
Special days have been set aside for
various organizations and unorganized
laymen who have asked that they be
allowed to set into the working of the
great gathering. The days are: Sep-
tember 24, municipal and govern:
ment employes; September 26, wom-
ens clubs and kindred organiza
tions; September 27, fraternal organi-
zations; October 4, labor unions;
‘Detober 6, social and charity workers;
October 8, religious workers; October
10, school children and teachers,
‘The entire second floor of the
museum will be used for exhibition
purposes and the exhibit will be divid:
ed into three parts, foreign, United
States government and state exhibits.
The most complete of the foreign ex
hibits are those from Germany and
Switzerland.
The exhibit of the United States
government will be the largest. The
Indian office, the census bureau, the
war department and the navy depart
ment will all have exhibits, while the
department of agriculture will have
enough exhibits to form a section by
itself. To show exactly what the
ravages of consumption mean, an
electrical flashlight will operate con
tinuously showing a light for every
death from consumption, that is, it
will operate in accordance with fig
ures which have been prepared on the
subject.
A St. Louis Fireman Killed.
St. Louis, Sept. 16—Patrick Larkin,
who has been a member of the St.
Louis fire department for 27 years,
was instantly killed Tuesday night
when a truck on which he was riding
to a fire collided with a Bellefontaine
car at the intersection of Thirteenth
and Hebert streets. Larkin was hurled
from his seat and his neck was
broken.
Religious Journalists to Meet.
Portsmouth, N. H., Sept. 14.—Clergy-
men and editors of religious publica-
tions representing the Congregational,
Baptist, Methodist, Unitarian and
other denominations will unite in a
two days gathering of religious
journalism ir America.
i
FATAL MISSOURI EXPLOSION
FOUR KILLED AND MANY WOUND
ED AT WINDSOR,
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Depot To
tally Wrecked by Exploding
Cea Baa
Clinton, Mo., Sept. 16.—Telephone
messages from Windsor, this county
tell of a terrific explosion which oc
curred there Tuesday forenoon, caus
ing loss of life, the injury of 20 or
more persons and the destruction of
property. According to the reports re-
ceived here four persons are dead and
20 or more are injured, some of them
so dangerously that they will die.
‘The explosion occurred at the Mis-
souri, Kansas @ Texas depot, which
was wrecked, cutting off telegraphic
communication. Frederick Yake, the
depot agent, is among the dead. J. G.
Hall, an aged transfer man, a brake-
man and a tramp also are known to
have been killed. Frank Hall, son. of
J. G. Hall, a rural mail carrier, is very
dangerously injured. Clinton Sands
and Elmer Keach are not expected to
live.
‘There are conflicting reports as to
the cause of the explosion. The one
generally accepted is that giant pow-
der being unloaded from a freight
train near the depot exploded as it
was being unloaded. The Missouri,
Kansas & Texas road's report says
that the car contained dynamite.
Every person on the depot platform
and in the building was injured and
all the horses attached to delivery
wagons surrounding the platform were
killed.
‘The explosion broke most of the
window glass in the town and did
much damage to property in the im-
mediate neighborhood.
Saved a Passenger Train,
Wabash, Ind., Sept. 16—Several
hundred passengers on an east-bound
Wabash limited train were saved from
death or serious injury Tuesday after-
noon, when an unknown man, walking
on the track, discovered the railroad
bridge over Helen creek in flames and
flagged the flyer as it rounded a curve
toward the blazing structure. The
bridge is principally of wood and ir
about 50 feet above the water. The
fire-is believed to have been starte¢
from sparks from a locomotive. Wher
the train was stopped almost at the
edge of the bridge, many of the tie
and stringers were blazing.
Bitten by Mad Squirrel.
Springfield, Ill, Sept. 14.—Fre¢
Peterson, 45 years old, who was bit
ten by a mad squirrel that attackec
several persons in down town streetr
last week, died Sunday of carbolic
acid poisoning. Fearing hydrophobis
he is supposed to have swallowed the
acid with suicidal intent, as he re
marked, Saturday that he would rather
kill himself than die of rabies. Others
bitten by the squirrel are in Chicago
receiving treatment at the Pasteur in
stitute. ‘
eae a ea
Washington, Sept. 15.—The weather
burean late Sunday issued 9
special forecast as follows: The first
well defined disturbance of the pres-
ent season is approaching the north
Pacific coast and a west Indian storm
is advancing toward our southeastern
coast. This combination should pro
duce abundant rains in the drought
stricken districts of the north central
states before tte close of the present
week.
Northwestern Grain Moving.
St, Paul, Sept. 14.—According to the
general freight agents of the Northern
railroads which run through the
wheat belt of the Northwest, the
wheat crop movement has just start-
ed, and it is from two to three weeks
earlier than last year.
Alfonso to Visit Austria.
San Serastian, Sept. 15.—It is offi:
cially announced that King Alfonso
and Queen Victoria will shortly make
a visit to Munich, Dresden and Buda-
pest.
Bai a with
Night Sweats & Cough.
E. W. Walton, Condr. 8. P. Ry., 717
‘Van Ness 8t., San Antonio, Tex.,
writes: “During the summer and fall
of 1902, my annoyance from catarrh
reached that stage where it was actual
toms, such as a very deep-seated cough,
night sweats, and pains in the head and
chest. I experimented with several so-
called remedies Lefore I finally decided
to take thorough course of Peruna,
“Twoot my friends had gone so faras
to inform me that the thing forme to do
higher, more congenial climate, Every;
one thonght I had consumption and I
‘was not expected to live very long.
“Having procured some Peruna, I de+
cided to give it a thorough test and ap-
plied myself assiduously to the task of
taking it, as per instructions, in the
meantime.
“The effects were soon apparent, all
alarming symptoms disappeared and
my general health became fully as good
as it had ever been in my life.
“I have resorted to the use of Peruana
time to cure myself of bad colds.”
PLANT TRAMP BY INSTINCT, |!
California Cactus Blows Around the
Desert for Months,
Curtous among vegetable growths
and one which is seldom seen of men
is the rootless cactus of the California
desert, says the Techincal World.
This plant, a round, compact growth,
rolls about the level floor of the des-
ert for some elght or nine months of
the year, tossed hither and yon by
the winds which blow with fierceness
over all of California’s sand plat du
ing those months.
At the coming of the rains, or
rather the cloudbursts, which sweep
the desert in its springtime, this cac
tus takes root wherever it happens to
have been dropped by the last wind
of which it was the plaything and im-
mediately begins to put out all around
it small shoots, which in turn become
cacti, exactly like the parent plant.
These young growths increase im
size rapidly, sucking the moisture
both from the parent plant and from
the surrounding earth. The roots do
not penetrate the soil deeplyy but
spread often over a circle whose
radius is not less than ten feet. These
roots, too, are small, but practically
innumerable, and they get every bit
of moisture and plant food to be ha@®
in the territory they cover.
AN INGENIOUS BEGGAR.
eed ees
Brig se =
ORS f GY i
ey of, OK
ae 2s [ Jip
Calg | > a7
Pe. KR S
pp “Si zarye,
ii we SR
‘You Know Both,
‘There is a sort of man who is very
Polite to your face, but who talk»
about you after you are gone. There
is another kind of man who grumbles
about you to your face and lets yow
aloae when you are absent. The lat-
ter sort of a man will last longer, with
all bis faults, than the other man,
with all his politeness.—Newarle
News.
Considerate.
Borem—She wasn't at home when B
called, so I left my card—
Miss Pepprey—Yes, she was telling:
me she considered it so thoughtful of
you.
Borem—To leave my card?
Miss Pepprey—No; to call when she
wasn't at home.
“THE PALE GIRL.”
Did Not Know Coffee Was the Cause.
In cold weather some people think
a cup of hot coffee good to help keep
warm, So it is—for a short time but
the drug—caffeine—acts on the heart
to weaken the cirevlation and the re
action is to cause more chilliness.
There is a hot wholesome drink
which a Dak. girl found after a time,
makes the blood warm and the heart
strong,
She says:
“Having lived for five years in Ne
Dak., I have used considerable coffee
owing to the cold climate. As a re
sult I had a dull headache regularly,
suffered from indigestion, and had no
‘Aife’ in me.
“I was known as ‘the pale girl,’ an@
people thought I was just weakly.
After a time I had heart trouble and
became very nervous, never knew
what it was to be real well, Took med-
{cine but it never seemed to do any
good.
“Since being married my husband
and I both have thought coffee wast
harming us and we would quit, only to
begin again, although we felt it was
the same as poison to us.
“Then we got some Postum. Well
the effect was really wonderful. My
compjgxion is clear now, headache
gone, und I have a great deal of ew
ergy I had never known while drink
ing coffee.
“I haven't been troubled with indl-
gestion since using Postum, am not
nervous, and need no medicine. We
have a little girl and boy who both
love Postum and thrive on it and
GrapeNuts.”
““Dhere's a Reason.”
| ‘Name given by Postum Co, Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to Well-
ville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
fone appears from time to time, They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest.
THE SAFE WAY TO BUY PAINT.
Property owners will save a deal of trouble and expense in keeping their buildings properly painted, if they know how to protect themselves against misrepresentation and adulteration in paint materials. There's one sure and safe guide to a pure and thoroughly dependable White Lead—that's the "Dutch Box Painter" trade mark which the National Lead Company, the largest makers of genuine White Lead, place on every package of their product. This company sends a simple and sure little outfit for testing white lead, and a valuable paint book, free, to all who write for it. Their address is Woodbridge Bldg., New York City.
Marine Insurance.
Marine insurance is the oldest kind of modern insurance. Its principles were first employed in the fourteenth century by the merchants of Barcelona, in Spain, when that city was the capital of the kingdom of Catalonia and when its hardy mariners were second to none in the world. About the same time, and also at Barcelona, the famous code of maritime laws known as the "consulado del mar" was promulgated, which is the foundation of the present shipping laws of every country.
It Game O#.
The fair bather was in the greatest danger when the heroic rescuer seized her by the hair. It came off. Puffs and coils and waves and rats it strewed the shuddering sea. For a moment the rescuer was dazed. Then he grasped the tiny knob of real hair that remained on the lady's head and drew her into shallow water. Did she thank him for saving her life? She didn't—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually necessary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wearing quality of the goods. This trouble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its greater strength than other makes.
Bought Crusoe's Firelock.
Hulda B. White of Philadelphia has purchased the firelock used by Alexander Selkirk, Defoe's original Robinson Cruse on the island of Juan Fernandez, at a sale in Edinburgh. The relic has an authentic pedigree, and for a long time was in the possession of Selkirk's relatives in Fife-shire, Scotland. The price paid for the gun was $160.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarin Curse.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney of Hall's Catarin Curse to be capable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WARNING: Wholesale Drugs, Toledo, Hall's Catarin Curse is taken internally, acting directly with the manufacturer of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 25 cents per bottle. Sold by all Drugsellers.
A Revised Version.
A poet who has been known to tell the truth recounts this story of his little daughter:
Her mother overheard her expounding the origin of the sex to her family of dolls.
"You see, children," she said,
"Adam was a man all alone and was very lonely, so God put him to sleep, took his brains out and made a nice lady of them."—Illustrated Bits.
Starch, like everything else, is being constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the latest discovery—Defiance Starch—all injurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, invented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never approached by other brands.
Dark Subject
"I'm all in the dark about how these bills are to be paid," said Mr. Hardup to his wife.
"Well, Henry," said she, as she pulled out a colored one and laid it on the pile, "you will be if you don't pay that one, for it's the gas bill."
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS.
Use the best. That's why they buy Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers 5 cents.
Platonic love is a good deal like the gun we didn't know was loaded.—Smart Set.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill.
The only way some people know is the other way.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
GRP RHEUMATISM
BRIGHT'S DISEASE
DIABETES BACKHAIR
H375 "Guarantee"
GOV. HUGHES WON
RENOMINATED AS EXECUTIVE OF NEW YORK BY REPUBLI-CAN CONVENTION.
ONLY ONE BALLOT REQUIRED
Received 827 Votes Out of a Possible
1,009—Nomination Later Made
plete Ticket.
Saratoga, N. Y., Sept. 16.—Charles Evans Hughes of New York was nominated Tuesday by the Republican state convention by an overwhelming majority and on the first ballot to succeed himself as governor of the state of New York. He received 827 out of a possible 1,009, as against 151 for James W. Wadsworth, Jr., of Livingston county, speaker of the state assembly, and 31 for Former Congressman John K. Stewart of Montgomery. The nomination was made unanimous upon motion of State Committeeman William Barnes, Jr., of Albany, who has been perhaps the bitterest and most outspoken opponent of the governor's re-nomination.
The governor's re-nomination followed the utter failure of a desperate struggle on the part of a number of the county leaders who for four days have spared no effort to discover a candidate upon whom they could unite to defeat him. The balance of the ticket was made up in the "good old-fashioned way," an organization "slate" announced an hour or more before the session of the convention began by Timothy L. Woodruff, chairman of the state committee, after a conference of the local leaders.
Senator White, who was chosen as a candidate for lieutenant governor was "in the running" for the governorship until the early afternoon, when after a meeting of his delegation he requested his friends not to present his name.
Following is the complete ticket nominated:
For governor—Charles E. Hughes of New York (re-nominated.)
For lieutenant-governor, Horace White of Onondaga.
For secretary of state, Samuel S. Koenig of New York.
For attorney general, Edward R. O'Malley of Erie.
For comptroller, Charles H. Gaus of Albany.
For state treasurer, Thomas B. Dunn of Monroe.
For associate justice of the court of appeals, Albert Haight of Erie (re nominated.)
Rochester, N. Y., Sept. 16.—"I am deeply sensible of the honor conferred upon me. I wish to express my ap preciation of the confidence reposed in me by the Republican party."
Thus did Gov. Hughes make his first public statement after his notifi nothing, either as to his runningmate of New York state Tuesday evening Beyond that, the governor would say nothing, either as to his runningmate on the Republican ticket or his policies for the second term, should he be elected.
一
Cincinnati, O., Sept. 16.—Upon hearing of the nomination of Gov. Hughes by the New York Republicans Tuesday, Mr. Taft sent him the following telegram: "I sincerely congratulate you upon your well deserved renomination. It not only makes the state of New York safe in November, but it greatly strengthens the national ticket in every state in the Union. I hope that you will be able to give some of your time in the campaign to the west."
Mitchell and Gompers Testify.
Washington, Sept. 15.—John Mitchell, former president of the United Mine Workers who with President Gompers and Secretary Morrison of the American Federation of Labor, is charged with contempt of court in the injunction case against the officials for boycotting the Buck Stove & Range company, testified in his own defense Sunday before Albert Harper, examiner. Mr. Gompers also was on the stand several hours, much of his testimony being a reiteration of the points developed during the examination of Secretary Morrison Saturday.
Disciplining Government Employes.
Disciplining Government Employees. Washington, Sept. 16. The disciplining of several government employees because of political activity is announced in a statement given out by the civil service commission Monday, J. H. Rhinehart, a letter carrier in the Denver, Col., postoffice, has been reduced, and E. W. Hill and W. R. Phillips, clerks in the Goldsboro N. C., postoffice, have been warned that their political activity must cease, under penalty of dismissal.
He Will Oppose Cannon.
Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 16.—Congressman E. H. Hinshaw of the Fourth district Monday announced that he will oppose the re-election of J. G Cannon for speaker of the house of representatives in the Sixty-first congress, if he is elected this fall. His choice for the place is Charles Townsend of Michigan, he declared.
Yellow Fever in Yucatan
Mexico City, Sept. 15.—Reports from the City of Merida, capital of Yucatan, declare that two authenticated cases of yellow fever are in the pest house there, and that four suspected cases are under observation.
HIS SENTIMENTS APPLAUED.
British Labor Leader Talks to New York Workmen.
New York, Sept. 15.—Keir Hardle, one of the leading representatives of labor in the British parliament, was applauded during his address before the Central Federated Union Sunday afternoon, when he urged American workmen to go into politics.
"In England," he said, "We found we were equally neglected after the election whether we helped conservative or liberal with our votes and then we sent direct representatives into parliment with so many good results that I would tire you if I tried to enumerate them."
A reference to the presidential candidacy of Eugene V. Debs, on the Socialist ticket also brought applause and Mr. Hardie told his hearers that they should find a way, as had been done in England, to unite labor and Socialism.
"Soon then," he added, "the issue in your campaign would not be free trade nor protection, nor the trusts, but labor versus wealth, and to that it is bound to come in the end."
Bodies on Engine Pilot.
Kankakee, Ill., Sept. 16—Six men were killed late Tuesday when a Chicago and Eastern Illinois local train struck a handcar at Martindon, Ill., near here. The handcar had been switched to another track to allow a fast train to pass. All the men killed were section hands. The accident was not discovered by the train crew until they reached the next station a half mile distant, when parts of four bodies were found upon the pilot of the engine.
Watkins Speaks in Churches
Watkins Speaks in Churches.
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 15.—Aaron S. Watkins of Ohio, the vice presidental candidate of the National Phibibion party delivered three speeches here Sunday. At St. Marks Methodist Episcopal church in the morning Mr. Watkins discussed the issues of the campaign, delivered an address at the Reformed Presbyterian church in the afternoon and at night spoke at the Baptist Tabernacle.
Committee to Manage Booth Business.
Chicago, Sept. 16.—Creditors of A. Booth & Co., whose affairs were put in the hands of a receiver last week, met Tuesday at the Corn Exchange National bank and selected seven members of a committee of eight to act in connection with W. J. Chalmers, receiver, in the management of the company's business.
Attacked the Umpire.
St. Louis, Sept. 16.—Umpire Jack Sheridan of the American Baseball league was attacked by many baseball enthusiasts as he was leaving the American League park here Tuesday afternoon. One of the men struck Sheridan, who protected himself as best he could, until the police dispersed the crowd.
Receiver for St. Louis Firm.
St. Louis, Sept. 16.—Judge Sale of the St. Louis circuit court Tuesday appointed Louis Helm, receiver for the commission firm of Milliken & Spencer. The receivership is preliminary to the bringing of a suit against Thomas Akin for the recovery of $96,000, alleged to be due the firm.
Electrical Workers in St. Louis.
St. Louis, Sept. 16.—The convention of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers assembled here Tuesday and will probably be in session the rest of the week. About 300 delegates are present from the United States, Canada, Japan, Hawaii and the Philippines.
Delaware Democrats Nominate
Delaware Democratic Nominator
Dover, Del., Sept. 16—Dr. Rowland
D. Paynter of Sussex was nominated
for governor by the Democratic state
convention here Tuesday. A full state
ticket and presidential electors were
also named, while L. Irving Handy of
Wilmington received the nomination
for congress.
Gov. Cummins to Rest.
Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 16.—Gov. A. B. Cummins leaves the city Tuesday for a two weeks' vacation. He will return to the state September 28 and will deliver his first campaign speech at Fort Madison, September 29.
MARKET REPORTS.
Live Stock.
Kansas City, Sept. 16.—Cattle—Common steers, $3.000.4.95; heifers, $2.550.5.00; western stockers and feeders, $3.10@4.15; Hogs—Bulk of sales, $6.95@7.15. Sheep—Lambs, $4.25@5.50; good to choice wethers, $3.75@4.15; ewes, $3.40@4.00.
Chicago, Sept. 16.—Beef—Steers, $4.60@7.70; cows and heifers, $3.25@5.50; stockers and feeders, $2.80@4.40. Hogs—Bulk of sales, $7.00@7.35. Sheep—Natives, $3.50@4.35; lambs, $4.25@5.75. Lions, $4.00@4.15; Hogs—Steers, $3.00@4.00; stockers and feeders, $3.00@4.00; cows and heifers, $2.50@6.00; Texas steers, $3.75@5.25. Hogs—Pins and lights, $3.50@6.75. Sheep—Natives, $4.00@4.25; lambs, $4.25@5.50.
Grain.
Kansas City, Sept. 16. -Close: Wheat-
Sept. 93% c, Dec. 93% c, May. 96% c, Corn
-75% c, Dec. 60c, May. 60% c,
Chicago, Sept. 16. -Close: Wheat-Sept.
93% c, Dec. 99% c, May. 1.01% c,
Corn-Sept. 80% c, Dec. 68c, May. 66% c,
Oats-Sept. 48% c, Dec. 49% c, May. 52c,
St. Louis, Sept. 16. -Close: Wheat-
Firm; Track No. 2 red cash. $1.01@1.03%c,
No. 2 hard. $98@1.01%. Futures: December,
99% c, May. $1.02% c, Corn-Lower;
track No. 2 cash. $98@1.02% c, Nine
$11%@82c, December, 64% c;
May. 55% c, Oat-Lower; track No. 2 cash.
49c, May. 2 white. $52@21c, Futures:
December, 49% c, May. 51%@51%c.
Produce,
Kansas City, Sept. 16. -Eggs. 22c per
doz. Poultry-Hens, 9c; springs, 13c;
turkeys, 13c; Butter-Creamery, extra,
23c; packing stock, 16c. Potatoes, 60@70c.
Nursing Mothers and Malaria
The Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL, TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c.
TEN YEARS OF BACKACHE.
Thousands of Women Suffer in the Same Way.
Mrs. Thos. Dunn, 153 Vine St., Columbus, Ohio, says: "For more than ten years I was in misery with backache. The simplest housework completely exhausted me. I had no strength or ambition, was nervous and suffered headache and dizzy spells. After
than ten years I was in misery with backache. The simplest housework completely exhausted me. I had no strength or ambition, was nervous and suffered headache and dizzy spells. After these years of pain I was despairing of ever being cured when Doan's Kidney Pills came to my notice and their use brought quick relief and a permanent cure. I am very grateful." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
BATHING AN INDIAN IDOL.
Curious Ceremony Attended by Thousands of Devout Pilgrims.
Thousands of pilgrims from the various outlying villages and other parts of the Hooghly district poured in from an early hour in the morning to the temples of Jagernath, says the Calcutta Statesman.
The image of the god is placed on a cosmicous part of the temple, so that it can be viewed at an advantage by the immense crowd of pilgrims, and there at a certain fixed hour the bathing ceremony commences.
The most curious part of the festival is that water is not poured on the image of the god until a certain small bird is found sitting on the topmost banner of the temple. There is a popular belief that the bird comes from Puri, the famous place of Hindu pilgrimage, to Maheoh on the day of this festival, and his very presence is an indication that the ceremony should commence. Immediately after the bath the bird disappears.
EYESIGHT WAS IN DANGER
From Terrible Eczema—Baby's Head a Mass of Itching Rash and Sores —Disease Cured by Cuticura.
"Our little girl was two months old when she got a rash on her face and within five days her face and head were all one sore. We used different remedies but it got worse instead of better and we thought she would turn blind and that her ears would fall off. She suffered terribly, and would scratch until the blood came. This went on until she was five months old, then I had her under our family doctor's care, but she continued to grow worse. He said it was eczema. When she was seven months old I started to use the Cuticura Remedies and in two months our baby was a different girl. You could not see a sign of a sore and she was as fair as a newborn baby. She has not had a sign of the eczema since. Mrs. H. F. Budke, LeSueur, Minn., Apr. 15 and May 2, '07."
SO LOGICAL
Mrs. Sparker—Do you think she really prefers a horse to the motor car?
Mrs. Tyre—Well, any one must admit that a horse is more becoming to a woman with such hay-colored hair!
Important to Mothers
important to mother.
Exam. of CASTOK. a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
Chat H Petitke
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Cheerful! Anyhow.
"Hello, sport; I haven't seen you for 20 years. How are you getting on?" "Oh, I'm a multi-millionaire. And you?" "Oh, I'm a multi-failure."
DISTEMPER
In all its forms among all ages of horses, as well as dogs, cured and others in the same stable prevented from having the disease with SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold last year. $50 and $1.00. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Write for free book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
The Very Thing.
"Well, there's one thing about Nuritch, he's always ready to confess his faults."
"Nonsense! Why, he's forever bragging being self-made."
"Of course, that's just it."—Philadelphia Press.
By following the directions, which are plainly printed on each package of Defiance Starch, Men's Collars and Cuffs can be made just as stiff as desired, with either gloss or domestic finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by all good grocers.
Occasionally a woman fears death because she isn't altogether sure that her husband will wear a black necktie at her funeral.
Undaunted by Blindness.
Prof. E. D. Campbell, director of the chemical laboratories in the University of Michigan, lost his sight 18 years ago through an accident. In spite of his affliction he has taken a high place in education and has made original researches of much value, especially in the chemistry of iron and cement.
The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great importance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new.
The Real Test.
"Poor fellow, he died in poverty," said a man of a person lately deceased.
"That isn't anything," exclaimed a seedy bystander. "Dying in poverty is no hardship; it's living in poverty that puts the thunbscrews on a fellow."
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM. Take the Old Stained GROVEN TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, as are Olive and Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children, 56c.
The Sarcastic One.
"Air cut, sir?"
"No; I want it done up in a bun and fastened with a pink ribbon."—The Tatler.
SECOND ANNUAL
State Fair of Oklahoma at Oklahoma City, October 1st to 10th, 1908. Call at Office of County Clerk of your County or write to Secretary for Premium List.
Natural Error
"Halloa, Scudder; what are you building—a motor shed?"
"No; just a hat box for my wife."
Good for Sore Eyes
for 100 years PETITTS EYE SALVE has positively cured eye diseases everywhere. All druggists or Howard Bros..Buffalo, N. Y.
Most wild things are indigenous to the soil, yet lots of men waste time in sowing wild oats.
DON'T SPOIL YOUR CLOTHES.
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. All grocers, 5c a package.
There is no rest for the man who is pursued by bill collectors and a guilty conscience.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is good quality all the time. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill.
Don't hand your friends a lemon; treat them to lemonade.
If Your Foot Ache or Bum get a 2c package of Allen's Four-Eye. It gives quick relief. Two million packages sold yearly.
Anyway, the man who borrows trouble isn't asked to return it.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. Zoe's bottle.
The burglar also has his get-rich-quick scheme.
More proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound saves woman from surgical operations. Mrs. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner, Maine, writes:
"I was a great sufferer from female troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restored me to health in three months, after my physician declared that an operation was absolutely necessary."
Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Cleybourne Ave., Chicago, Ill., writes:
"I suffered from female troubles, a tumor and much inflammation. Two of the best doctors in Chicago decided that an operation was necessary to save my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound entirely cured me without an operation."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulence, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
It is the greatest manifestation of power to be calm. It is easy to be active. Let the reins go, and the horses will drag you down. Anyone can do that; but he who can stop the plunging horses is the strong man. Which requires the greater strength—letting go, or restraining? The man is not the man who is dull. You must not mistake calmness for dullness or laziness. Activity is the manifestation of the lower strength, calmness of the superior strength.—Swami Vivekananda
One of the Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a main fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of individuals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords.
One of the products of that class of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Fig and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manfactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, and for sale by all leading druggists.
SICK HEADACHE
CARTER'S
LITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
Positively cured by these Little Pills.
They also relieve stress from Dyspepsia, digestion and Too Bad Eating. A perfect remedy for Blessiness, Nausea, Drowning, Taste in the Mouth, Ced Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVELY.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTER'S
LITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature.
New Wood
REFUSE SUBSTITUTE.
DIARRHOEA
If you or some member of your family were taken suddenly to night with Dearhoa, Dysentery, Flux, Cholera Morpha or Cholera Infantum, would you be prepared to check it? Every home should have a supply of
Wakefield's Blackberry Balsam
It is a most reliable remedy for all loose
ditions of the bowels. All druggets still
LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS
IN GREAT VARIETY
FOR'S SALE AT THE
LOWEST PRICES BY
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION
Kansas City, Missouri
THE DUTCH
BOY PAINTER
STANDS FOR
PAINT QUALITY
IT IS FOUND ONLY ON
PURE WHITE LEAD
MADE BY
THE
OLD DUTCH
PROCESS.
of this paper des-
siring to buy
anything adver-
bler insist upon
(or, refusing all
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleansees and beautifies the hair
Promotes a luxurious look
Keeps hair shiny
Restores Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color
Cures scabbed hair
Hair 20cm and 30cm Drugs
DEFIANCE STARCH — 16 ounces in the package
other only staches 12 ounces — same price
"DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
If afflicted with
sore eyes, use
Thompson's Eye Water
DEFIANCE STARCH never article to the irons.
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 38, 1908.
Malaria
ties out Malaria and builds up the
printed on every bottle, showing it
. For adults and children. 50c.
---
Excellence Court
THE
"U·KNE
FLOR
It excels in every respect,
bread per barrel.
MAD
Watson
WICHITA
DEAM ABSOLUTE
IN NORTH-WEST
COURT
Bonded A
IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL
GRAHAM — CORN MEAL
With thirty-five years milli-
products are the best that the
best selected grain only and
Ask You
See that you get
THE IMBODEN
WICHITA
VERTICAL
814 NORTH
HAY, FEED, GRA
CUSTOM GRINDER
We sell Corn Chops, Bran-
ed Wheat, Kaffir Corn, Ste-
ORDERS TAKEN FOR COA
C. O. VARNER
KING
European
Newly Furnished. Nice, Clea-
Rooms $1.50 and
352 North
a
RESTAURANT
346 North
Good Home Cooking, Prompt S
Johnston
ICHITA 507 N.
Everything first-class. EU
Transient Trade — Re-
R. Johnston
THE Counts.....
THEN USE
BKNEAD - H
FLOUR
by respect,—color, flavor
MADE BY
Jason Mill Co.
VICHITA, KANSAS
ABSTRACT
NORTH-WEST CORNER OF
CURT HOUSE
held Abstract
IMPERIAL
CORN MEAL — BREAKING
years milling experience in
best that can be produced,
main only and put up in Spec.
Ask Your Grocer
that you get IMPERI
MODEN MILL
VICHITA, KANSAS
TICAL, M
14 NORTH MAIN
FED, GRAIN and
GRINDING A SPECIAL
ops, Bran, Hay, Oats, A
Corn, Stock Foods, Me
FOR COAL. We soli
O. VARNER, Proprietor
KINER'S
European H
Nice, Clean Beds 25c and
$1.50 and 2.50 per week
1352 North Main Street
and
STAURA
1346 North Main Street
Prompt Service — Me
Chas. L. K.
Boston's H
7 N. Main St.
-class. Electric Lighti,
grade — Restaurant in C
Johnston, Proprietor
Excellence Counts.....
WICHITA, KANSAS
DEAM ABSTRACT CO.
IN NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE
COURT HOUSE
Bonded Abstractors
IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL FLOUR
GRAHAM — CORN MEAL — BREAKFAST FOOD
With thirty-five years milling experience in Wichita our products are the best that can be produced. Made froffi best selected grain only and put up in Special Packages,
Ask Your Grocer
See that you get IMPERIAL
THE IMBODEN MILLING Co.
WICHITA, KANSAS
HAY, FEED, GRAIN and COAL
CUSTOM GRINDING A SPECIALTY
We sell Corn Chops, Bran, Hay, Oats, Alfalfa, Sceen ed Wheat, Kaffir Corn, Stock Foods, Meal and Flour ORDERS TAKEN FOR COAL. We solicit your trade
C. O. VARNER, Proprietor
Newly Furnished. Nice, Clean Beds 25c and 50c per night
Rooms $1.50 and2.50 per week
352 North Main Street
346 North Main Street
Good Home Cooking, Prompt Service Meals Short Orders
Chas. L. Kiner, Proprietor
Johnston's Hotel
CHITA 507 N. Main St. KANSAS Everything first-class. Electric Lighti, Electric Fans Transient Trade — Restaurant in Connection R. Johnston, Proprietor
Straighten Your Hair
Hair Pomade
I have used only one bottle of your hair, and would not be without it for it to be as light and easy to comb that a new growth.
M. W. F. WALKER, Sta. 1, Harriman, Tenn.
We are known as Ozonized Ox Marrow. Our success has proved its merit. We make the hair straight, glossy, soft, manageable, so your hair remains in it when you wish consistent with its length. We also prevent dandruff, invigorates the hair from falling out or off of it and new and vigor. We also harmlessly hardens with splendid resistance on the youngest children. As with perfumed, its use is a pleasure, as restoring it everywhere dearele. Don't Hair Pomade has its own. Don't else alleged to be "just as good." The best results, buy the best Pomade you will look. Look for this name
every package.
Drugstores will not supply you with the
medication us, express or postal money order.
Drugstores will size or $25 cents for small size
drugstores with drugstores manual address.
Drugstores give bottle prompt to any point in U.
return mail on receipt of price. Address:
Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.,
Kennedy St. Chicago, Ill.
HARR POMADE is made only in Chil-
dre above firm.
Agents Wanted Everywhere.
```markdown
```
ENTS.....
IN USE.....
READ·IT"
FOUR
color, flavor, and pounds of
BY
Mill Co.
KANSAS
STRACT Co.
CORNER OF THE
HOUSE
Abstractors
RIAL FLOUR
BREAKFAST FOOD
ing experience in Wichita our
can be produced. Made from
put up in Special Packages,
or Grocer
IMPERIAL
MILLING Co.
KANSAS
AL MILL
TH MAIN
MAIN and COAL
ING A SPECIALTY
Hay, Oats, Alfalfa, Sceen-
ck Foods, Meal and Flour
L. We solicit your trade
ER, Proprietor
ER'S
n Hotel
In Beds 25c and 50c per night
2.50 per week
Main Street
and
URANT
Main Street
Service — Meals — Short Orders
Chas. L. Kiner, Proprietor
n's Hotel
Main St. KANSAS
Electric Lighti, Electric Fans
restaurant in Connection
Proprietor
CGK
Sir D. L. Taylor
Designer and Builder of Tent houses, Tabernacle houses and Temple houses. Prices in reach of all. Send your order to-day 829 East Center SALINA, KANSAS
W. L. Herman
CONTRACTING : PLASTERER
856 Eagle St., Wichita, Kan.
ALL THINGS ARE WELL.
That ends well--so pay your subscription to the Searchlight and get good
A Smoke Talk At Home
With green wood in the stove or fire place isn't what its cracked up to be. We have lots of nice dry Wood cut in 16 inch and 2-foot lengths. Also plenty of GOOD COAL always on hand.
J.H. TURNER
WICHITA, KANS.
533 TO 547 WEST DOUGLAS
It Is Right
To Economize, Even In Small Matters. If You Trade At The
Economy
Grocery Store
you can always get fresh goods
at reasonable prices.
To trade with uswill convince you. "Once our customer, always our customer." We are at the corner of Pine and Water st
Call to see us
D. K. Mickleberry, Proprietor
Restaurant
339 N. Main St.
Meals 20c and 25c
Cigars, Tobacco, Lunch
Fish Game and Oysters in Season
Your Trade Wanted
J. W. Owens
SHOEMAKER
With The WICHITA SHOE CO.,
144 N. Main St.
Your Patronage Solicited
All Work Guaranteed
Use Herman's
Cement Stone
Made from the best material. Lasts longer,
wears better and more durable than any other
Cement Stone on the market. Prices Reasonable.
11c each laid in wall
8c each delivered
7c each in the yard
Manufactured By
W. L. HERMAN,
527 Ohio Ave., New Phone 1127
STRONG CITY SAYINGS.
Second Baptist church is progressing nicely with Rev. Harrison pastor. He was gone about a month on a visit. Now he has returned home again, we are proud of our pastor; he is a noble man. On Sunday morning he administered the Lords supper and at night he preached a wonderful sermon and in the sermon he proved that we were grass; come and hear him, he can learn you something.
Mrs. C. H. Williams returned home after a few days visit in Kansas City, visiting relatives and friends.
Mrs. Katie Taylor, daughter and granddaughter of Emporia, Kas., was the guests of Mrs. Annie Blackwell and family. They returned home, reporting an excellent time while in Strong.
Three of our young ladies left Monday morning for Quindaro, Kas., Miss Revena Blackwell, Etta Blackwell and Blanche Cannons, where they expect to learn how to be industrious. We wish them good luck and a fine success, hoping the girls will stay and learn. They are taking a course in music and dress-making.
Miss Mamie Lewell returned home, finding her mother on the sick list, but is some better now.
The lady who has been quilting has stopped for a rest, now. We are thinking seriously that we will noose one of our young ladies and the wedding bells will soon ring.
CLEARWATER, KANS. NEWS.
Mrs. Sarah Wilfley has moved to Clearwater, Kans., to make her future home with her son, C. R. Wilfley. C. R. Wilfley wife and son were in Wichita to see the Rinellin Bros. show.
Hickerson's
Westrn University
The leading educational institute for Negroes in the west
THE MIDDLE SCHOOL
A faculty of eighteen thoroughly equipped teachers from the leading Institutes in America. MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS Steam Heated and Electric Lighted
DEPARTMENTS
Theological, Classical, Normal, Snb-Normal, Musical, State Industrial, embracing courses in Architecture, Carpentry, Mechanical Drawing, Printing, Book-binding, Tailorlng, Business Courses, Dress making, Millinery, Cooking, Laundering and Farming. Thorough discipline, Christian influence careful supervision Fine Military Band and Orchestra
Prof. Shelton French,
ACTING PRESIDENT
Of Western University
QUINDARO, KS
Residence Phone No. 15 Office Phone 1423
MESSERVE'S
FAMOUS AND CELEBRATED
ICE CREAM
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
For Parties, Picnics, Socials and Churches
Orders delivered to any part of the city
BON-TON & KANDY
BAKERY
& KITCHEN
146 N. Main St. Phone 15
Mrs. Vina Bates was in Wichita last week to visit her grand daughter and many friends and to her surprise to find her daughter, Mrs. Rogers of Seonpaha, Okla.
Fred Homes was in to see the big show.
Mrs. Mary Carter of Medicine Lodge, Kans., was in Wichita to the district Baptist Association and visited over Sunday with Mother and Bro. C. R. Wilifley.
Miss Ethel Barton left for Juindaro, Kans. to attend the Western University.
Miss Ethel and Roy White has started to Clearwater High School.
KINGMAN NEWS.
A Fine Rain Fell In Kingman This Week.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Floyd was made happy September 7th by the arrival of a fine baby girl. Mother and daughter are both doing fine.
John Vaughn is reported on the sick list.
John Floyd has purchased a winchester and things and is getting ready to go on his claim in Stevens Co., which he purchased in April.
Mrs. Della Moore is very sick this week.
Chas. Floyd who has been suffering from his eyes for about six weeks is reported improving.
Miss Minnie Floyd is still visiting in Arkansas City.
A KANSAS DEMOCRAT.
Writes His Candid Views About The roes Are Lazy Vicious and Ignorant. ros Are Lazy Vicious And Ignorant.
WOULD DISFRANCHISE THEM.
Wants Negro Votes To Help Do It Too.
An Attack on Negross by John H. Atwood
We here reproduce a letter signed
to
Bon French,
ACTING PRESIDENT
University
RO, KS
Office Phone 1423
ERVE'S
CELEBRATED
REAM
AND RETAIL
Socials and Churches
any part of the city
K ANDY
ITCHEN
ERVE, Prop.
Phone 15
cratic Committeeman from Kansas by John H. Atwood, National Demopublished in the Kansas, City Post in which that Democratic leader proposes to give the views of Kansas Democrats about the Negro and tells what his party (The Democratic Party) would do for the Negro if they get into power. It is one of the most remarkable documents which has come to light during the present campaign, and one which should put it out of the power of the Democratic party to get any support from the Negro voters of Kansas, the statement published over the signature of John H. Atwood of Leavenworth, recommending the disfranchisement of the Negro voters in Kansas.
Mr. Atwood is the Democratic national committeeman from Kansas, and chairman of the Democratic national speaker's bureau. In his remarkable statement, Mr. Atwood declares that Negroes are a "social and political menace to the state." He declares that the people of Kansas are "more than weary" of the mixed schools. He says that the time has come for the says that the time has come for the people of Kansas to join with the people of Missouri in restricting Negro suffrage.
ATWOOD LETTER.
The Atwood statement was first published in the Kansas City Post, a Democratic newspaper. The statement follows:
"By one of those strange ironies of fate which sometimes overtake the benefactors of individuals, people or races, the state of Kansas, which has done more, perhaps, for the Negro than any other state in the union, is now suffering a grievous political wrong from the hands of the freedman and his descendants.
"William A. Harris would now be Governor of Kansas had it not been for the ignorant Negro vote, and there have been times in the past when the Democratic party could have elected its state ticket if it had not been for the ignorant black vote of Kansas City, Leavenworth, Atchison, Lawrence and Topeka.
Continued from page 1
involate and in no sense ignored. stands for human rights and insists that the guaranty of civil and political rights given to every male citizen of this country 21 years of age, shall apply to a Negro as well as to a white man. It is the party of Abraham Lincoln, of Grant, of Garfield, and McKinley, and just as they stood for human rights and political liberty, so will it continue to stand, and I prophesy that at no far distant time those states which deprive certain of their citizens of those rights will be compelled to recognize the fundamental and organic law of our land as it was meant to be recognized by the patriots who drafted it.
"There was a time when the Negro vote was not a considerable factor in Kansas politics, but that time has passed. The influx of Negroes from the South, the rapid multiplication of those native to Kansas soil, and the increasing insistencies of the Negro upon social equality, make the Kansas Negro not only a political factor, but a social and political menace.
"If the last general election be a criterion, the Negro now holds the balance of political power in Kansas as he does in Missouri. This kind ETA III does in Missouri. This in itself is bad enough, but in Kansas we have suffered for long years the outrage of mixed schools, fastened upon us by the Republican politician.
"Mixed schools lead the Negroes to aspire to a mixed society and this close contact of the races is productive of troubles from which Kansas would be free if the Negro had less political power and were not admitted to the same schools with the whites.
"Kansas has long been weary of the Negro politician and it is more than weary of the mixed school. Pattence has its limits, and I believe that the time has come when the people of Kansas will join with the people of Missouri is restricting Negro sufferage. "I do not advocate the disfranchisement of the Negro on the ground of his color. That idea is abhorrent to the principles of our free government and its execution would be in conflict with the constitution. "But our constitution will permit the disfranchisement of the ignorant, deprived, lazy, vicious and debauched negro and this disfranchisement should be accomplished to the end that our free institutions may not suffer.
"Democratic National Committeeman for Kansas."
Orange and Strawberry Salad.
Peel the oranges and remove the pulp neatly, and without having any of the white membrane left upon it; divide it into half-inch pieces, saving all the juice. Hull the berries, then cut into halves. Set the whole aside to become chilled. When ready to serve, mix the pieces of berry and orange with a little sugar. Put the orange juice in a glass dish with a glass of sherry and a tablespoonful of meraschino; put in the sweetened fruit, stir up with a fork and spoon, set on ice for half an hour, serve with whipped cream.
Rice Chocolate Pudding.
Scald a quart of milk with three ounces grated chocolate. Add one cupful hot boiled rice, a cup of sugar scant, and the yolks of four eggs well beaten. Bake until set, then draw to the mouth of the oven, which should be cooled down, and spread with a meringue made by whipping the whites of the egg stiff with four tablespoonfuls sugar. Flavor to taste. Let the meringues puff and color a golden brown, then set away to cool. When quite cold set in the ice box until ready to serve.
Baked Potpourri.
Add to two teaaupulfs of macroni left from dinner (when preparing it cook a little more than needed and lay aside) a cupful of tomato bisque and enough very thin slices to fill a small pudding dish. Stir in a table spoonful of butter; cover with bread crumbs and brown in oven.
Opium Users in New York.
There is evidently a large growth in the use of opium in New York city. It is estimated that at least 5,000 white persons *use the drug.*
Heavenly City.
Berlin is said to be the quietest city in Europe. Railway engines are not allowed to blow their whistles within the city limits. There is no loud bawling of hucksters, and a man whose wagon gearing is loose and rattling is subject to a fine. The courts have a large discretion as to fines for noise-making. Strangest of all, piano playing is regulated in Berlin. Before a certain hour in the day, and after a certain hour in the night the piano must be silent in that musical city. Even during the playing hours a fine is imposed for it were pounding on the piano.
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Recent photograph of the Republican Candidate for President and his
Youngest Sen, Master Charles, taken in their Washington Home.
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NATIONAL HOSPITAL NEEDED TO
CARE FOR THEM PROPERLY.
Two Recent Cases Call Attention to the
Existence of Plague, But No Pro-
vision for Adequate Treat-
ment and Isolation.
Washington, — The agitation in
Washington over the Karly leprosy
case and in Arizona over the case of
Mrs. Wardwell is expected by officials
of the public health and marine hos:
pital gervice to lead to a renewed ef.
fort. to obtain the establishment of a
national hospital for the isolation and
treatment of leprosy.
An effort to obtain legislation to
this end, which was supported by
many members of the medical fra-
ternity throughout the country, was
made by the public health and marine
hospital service in 1905, and a Dill for
such an institution received favorable
ceports in both houses of congress,
It failed of passage, however, largely
because of objections from localities in
which it was contetmplated thai the
leprosarium should be. ‘The Dill did
not name any state of territory, but
provided that an abandoned military
or nayal reservation should be used.
{t was understood, however, that the
authorities had New Mexico in mind
as the most desirable location, and
the delegate from that territory was
not slow in making known the opposi-
tion of his constituents.
When legislation is reached again
the health bureau will be ready. with
ail the statistics and arguments neces:
sary to win consideration for the bill.
‘The statistics, however, are not yery
DODGED AUTOS DURING LIFE.
So Jersey City Man Wills Fortune to
Build Airship.
New York.—Jeremiah Carihaune, a
Jersey City character who died of
heart failure a few weeks ago, had an
aversion to automobiles since one
nearly ran him down’ several years
ago. After that he made sure before
crossing a street that there was no
automobile in sight.
It was learned after his death that
he was insured for $500. An envelope
was found on the table of his room. It
was directed to the law firm of Hamill
& Egan. It contained his will, which
had been drawn by himself.
After directing that he be given a
modest funeral Carihanne asked that
the balance be used in the perfecting
of an airship. On this subject he
wrote: 2
“Knowing from bitter experience
what it means to be crippled from
rheumatism and be forced to flee
from the path of automobiles, T hereby
bestow what is left of the insurance
money on. some man who is trying to
perfect an airship, so that there will
ultimately be Jess running about the
streets and more flying through the
air. I hereby appoint my executor as
the man who will decide ‘who is to
get the money.” :
Edward R. Doyle is the executor and
fe seys he will endeavor to carry out
Sarihanne’s request. The amount he
fas in his possession is $350.
Ainek a Chnak ban “later.
Athol, Mass.—Athol residents have
long wanted to know the cause of the
ill-smelling, disagreeably tasting water
in the town mains. They found out
when the state board of health ex:
plained succinctly and incontrovert
ibly as follows:
“Aphanizomenon, one of the cyan.
‘ophycese, imparts odor and taste, but
harmless. To restore normal condi
tions, get rid of them.”
recent, as they do not approach any
nearer the present time. than 1901
In that year a commission composed
of surgeons connected with the bu:
reat made a thorough investigation of
leprosy in the United States, finding
that there were 278 cases in the coun:
try and that they were scattered
through 21 states. 3
Louisiana led the list with 155 cases.
or more than half the entire number.
California and Florida followed with
24 each, Minnesota with 20 and North
Dakota with 16. The remaining cases
were found in Georgia, Ilinols, Mary:
land, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Mis-
souri, Montana, Nevada, New York,
Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota,
Texas and Wisconsin.
Of all these cases only 72 were iso-
lated. The commission was of the
opinion that its report did not cover
all cases and the belief was expressed
that many of them were hidden.
In presenting its report the com-
mission included the general recom:
mendations of the international lep-
rosy conference for the isolation of
eases as the best method to prevent
the spread of the disease. It was rec-
ommended also that two institutions—
one in the north and the other in the
south, be established.
In the absence of Surgeon General
‘Wyman, no one connected with the
public health service will undertake
to say positively that the leprosarium
bill willbe reintroduced, but many in-
cline to the opinion that it wil! be
because of the necessity for protecting
the general public and for dealing
with leprosy victims in a humani-
arian way and also because of the
difficulties in having individual states
Care for:them:
| FIVE YEAR THIEF A SNAKE.
‘Monster Black Reptile with Fowl Is
| Shot by Farmer's Wife.
| York, Pa.—For the past five years
Jobn F, Arnold, a farmer of York.
‘New Salem, had been aware that he
‘was being preyed upon by a syste
‘matic chicken thief, but everything
from a man trap to a rat trap was
The honor of making the capture
has fallen to Mrs. Arnold, who discov.
ered the marauder, 2 blacksnake nine
feet and two inches in length, and
shot it. The reptile is the largest of
its kind ever known to have been actu
ally measured in the county.
Mrs. Arnold came upon the snake
in an unguarded moment, as it lay be
side a fence busily engaged in swal
lowing a young fowl. Getting her
husband's shotgun, she held it close
and discharged both barrels, with the
desired effect
‘iarcguke Gale tiueek
| Berne, Switzerland.—A Swiss en.
gineer, M. Hans Siegwari, has invent.
ed a new telegraph pole which is made
of concrete instead of wood or iron,
as at present used
PNA special machine is employed tc
form long, hollow concrete rods, which
withstand time and weather in such
a manner as to render them more
than twice as economical as wood or
fron poles.
The poles will probably be largely
used for electric tramways and over.
head telephone. lines.
A Commercial Criticism.
“How often you see artists of real
merit struggling for a livelihood!”
“It’s mostly their own fault,” an-
swered Mr. Cumrox. “I'd be willing
to give some of em a chance, but the
trouble with a real artist is that he
insists on painting pictures that don't
advertise anybody except himself.”—
‘Washington Star.
ICE IN MICHIGAN SAND DUNES.
Member of Summer Resort Colony
Makes a Valuable Discovery.
‘Traverse City, Mich—Over on the
Lake Michigan shore, along the sand
dune region, the iceman is in dis-
repute, He did not make regular de-
liveries and a colony of campers and
cotiagers near Ludington who did not
put theirs up in the winter were dis-
appointed aud disgusted,
ne day one of the colony was dig-
ging in a big saud dune, looking for
Indian relics. He found some inter-
esting things, such as a eopper hatchet
and some kitehen utensils, and kept
on digging until he was fifteen or
twenty feet in the sand. Then he dis-
covered that the place was exceeding-
ly cold and that, despite the heat of
the sun, his feet felt uncomfortable.
‘The man had read a story about a
glacier that had got lost in a cave and
had lain there thousands of years,
unul it was discovered by some one,
who subsequently became a million-
aire, so he continued his investiga.
tions, finally, as he expected, unearth-
ing a bed of ice.
‘The problem was solved, as the rest
was easy. Digging down into the
frozen sand a considerable distance,
he erected boards, to keep ihe hole
from caving in, fitted a ladder and
then made a cover. ‘The iceman was
foiled us effectually as though it were
December. The other campers and
cottagprs began mining in the sand on
their own account, and they soon had
icehouses without money and without
price.
These sand dunes have been produe-
tive of many mysteries, but this last
one is easiest to explain of all. The
water, seeping through the sand until
it reached the level of the lake, had
frozen the winter before. The drift.
ing sand had covered the ice complete
ly, and it had been preserved to do
duty in the summer, when it was
needed.
FIVE MONTHS IN PLASTER.
Baby with Double Pre-Natal Disloca
tion Made Perfect.
Chester, N. Y¥.—Mary Lascomb, three
years old, after undergoing one of the
most remarkable operations ever per-
formed in this country, will be dis:
charged from the Crozer hospital in a
few days. ‘The child was discovered
nearly a year ago by a local physician,
who ascertainet that she was suffer-
ing with a double congenital distoca-
tion of the hip joints, a serious pre-
natal condition, from which no child
has ever recovered thoroughly by oth-
er than surgical treatment, and this
fn many instances has failed, until
the famous bloodless method, as dem-
onstrated by Lorenz, beeame known.
‘The case of Mary Lascomb was
placed in the hands of Dr. D. P. Mad-
dox, who called into consultation Dr.
Herbert L, Northrop, dean of the
Hahnemann medical ‘college, Phila:
delphia, and it was decided to adopt
the Lorenz method.
The hips and legs were placed in
position and kept in a plaster cast
for five months, the cast being re-
moved from time to time. Now Mary
is able to romp along the concrete
floors of the hospital corridors, hav-
ing been transformed from a hopeless
cripple into an active child.
PROFITS FROM OUR FORESTS.
Government Experts Say They Will
Yield Bore Than Germany's.
Washington —American forests, ac
cording to the experts of the depart.
ment of agriculture, are capable of
yielding more wood to the acre, if
well handled, than the noted forests
of Germany, many of which net their
owners from $2.50 to $6 or more
per acre annually. Not only are our
native forests richer in valuable tim
ber trees, but ont elimate and soil com
ditions are more favorable. — The
trouble is not that our trees do not
grow fast enough, but that our is:
norance and carelessness have left our
woodlands poorly stocked.
The German forester sees to it that
his forest is uniform and dense. ‘To
grow a full crop of wood, as to. grow
a full crop of grass or corn, there
must be a full stand, Next in im-
portance is the rate of growth of the
trees,
The species most grown abroad are
Norway spruce, Scotch pine, and sil-
ver fir, for soft woods, and beech and
oak for hard woods. In German for:
ests of the first quality, Norway
spruce aitains in 60 years an average
diameter of nine and four-tenths
Seitag:
ARRESTED FOR EATING A DO3.
But Pretended “Wild Man" Soon
Proved Himself “Home Talent.”
Freeland, Pa,—Divested of his chains
and paint, John Wicharick, a local
character, appeared before Magistrate
Malloy and earnestly denied that he
had eaten the little pet dog of Mrs,
Michael Mollick.
‘The case was the result of a church
carnival under the auspices of St.
Ann's Catholic parish, One of the
“home talent” features was a “Wild
Man from Borneo.” very hairy and
loaded with chains. Mrs. Mollick at-
tended the carnival, and when she
missed her dog somebody informed
her as a joke that the “wild man” had
eaten the animal.
Mrs. Mollick took one good look at
the “wild man” and then hurried to
Squire Malloy and procured a war-
rant for the arrest of Daniel O'Don-
nell and James Gillespie, who were his
managers. Only when the “wild man”
was exposed as pure home talent wag
she satisfied that her charge was un
founded. ‘The case was dismissed.
833 SS 717
Official Directory
Knights & Daughtere
OF TABOR
KANSAS—NEBRASKA JURISDICTION
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f DAY sisotsarisie ies eter eae cee sane Deanne ME
TAN IAN Sse RR BAS! eit ite carseat ced Zen aed
"A Bint any tet you Wi AC you ae then ar pore abe or de nat aes is
A HAAN Hsezsteecrsc pst detg ctenc tl be Sne
i HAVA EACTORY PRICES 3 <cormt hs darhe ere Gepces 1 pombe to make
WEAN IREYM 20825 middlemen’s pronts by buying direct of us and have tie manulacterer's pone
II sic oe eas ene ects Sere ED gio ors ak ors ap arene
ee BN ge ae comarhde ta age hdc agen eased Sits
NN G7 WU YOU WILL BE ASTONISHED "52 29 tcsiv¢ our suite) catogue ana
NO RE ern can make vou ever. ese he Okie de ae Maren,
VIN Warstekcie Re PERG, reac tfenes.oet Susy mat slo faory a
double’ our prices.“ Orders filled the day received. = eet ee tee
11) Rooks Bx BieveLns,* WE ISN tertarty handle second and byes, bat
Gt iets bet on ha ken wade by Oo Cane ta ara Pad evs, ba
) is pes ah oy} oy Oh oy tb Dea al is maa ec
COASTER-BRAKES, exelent of all kinds at hay? te unl ral grits, Pam Pars eines and
SELF-HEALING TIRES 7 stncouce (cat?
TO INTRODUCE, ONLY
The regular rail price of ths tires 5 ge
$80 fer pair, but fo introduce ve i ——
sctlsonasamplebarfor S420 cach eon), Ee
NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES (ear el fh eg
NAILS, Tacks or Glass will not let the Bite hy gg)
alr out. sixty thousand pairs sold tact year. a | ff
Skertivo Rindred thouald parson oe kK
DESCRIPTION: Madcin all sizes, Itistively Q@Eueuua nnn Ee Py |
AERP THe caraican cts x ;
Spent quired athe ich cect ee a ¥
rgaed Suse closes ero pos oat or se aliowe
Fg theaistocscape. We have hundreds of iettersfrom sat fag Notice the thick rubber tread
sSScusomerstaing hat thelr Uresharconiybvecn pumped Qa) oA, sud puueturo stipe
uponce ortwice ina whole season, They weigh nomorethan {> prevent rim autting ‘This
Hhordinarytre,thefuncureresstingguaiticspeinggiven QM Provant rim outing. This
By Svea tycin of th spay pared faire ne QW) cy wit, outing anyother
Sad, meerranlar reset core eemmererme: Mf East gipniG.
the sider cf onty 4.20 per pair. ll orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship €.0-D:on
‘porn, oust fogs cent you har examined an ound Cw iy Se AGO oh
Reet ows cand digcount ot 'pr coat credy making ie pice "BAe oor ine,
send: FULL, CASH WITH ORDER ad cnclone thle advertocseht we eh nie eat oe
Sickel plated brase hand pump. “Tires to be returned at GUE exteuae if Yor Sereno yee
‘not satisfactory on examination. We are Perfectly reliable and money sent tous is assafeas in a
Dank. If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster;
eat ete? uot igngerand lok fier than any tive you have ever ied‘ Seca taj le WE
Enow that you will be so well pleased that when You want a bicycle you will give us your order,
Wemant youto Send wea alder at gce, ence tne omaretle eter. ew OW 6
IF YOU NEED TIRES ieicctnden boncture Ped Geen a Ton seed fora pair of
{Be special introductory pce quoted abe or write for aur Ug Tice and Gunlly Cataisyae Sick
Scscfbee and quotes all makes ang kinds of Gees at about Ralf te Senal prices.
(AIT ‘but write us a postal today. DO NOT T! OF BUYING a bicycia
DO MOT WAIT cr paic of iets fron anyone watt you eaow oe NES
offers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. e |
J.C MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL,
) ee WEE ’ y Melee
7,IN@sme 4.
KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS OF
TABOR.
REV. FRANK WILSON, C. G. M.
1718 Clark Ave.,
Parsons, Kan,
MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. G. P.
1170 Filmore avenue, Topeka, Kas.
A. W. HOPKINS, C.G.S. 0
921 Dakota, Leavenworth, Kans.
MRS SARAH FORBES, C. G. R.
717 “C" St, Lincomn, Neb,
WM. CORE, C. G. T.
1210 Lane, Topeka, Kans.
MRS. BESSIE HALL, G. Q. M.,
460 Horton, Ft. Scott, Kans
C. M. JONHSON, G. P. P.,
1882 N 28rd, Omaha, Neb.
MRS. PAULINE WOODFORD, Cc.
G. PR.
$23 Freeman, K. ©, Kan.
REV. M. WOOTEN, C. G. 0.
416 1. 3rd, Ft, Scott, Kans
OFFICIAL ORGAN—The Wichita
Searchlight, W. N. Miller, Editor, 634
N. Water St, Wichita, Kan.
NEXT PLACE MEETING— The
Grand Temple and Tabernacle Kansas-
Nebraska Jurisdiction, will hold its
hext Session (the 18th annual) in
‘Topeka, Kans., on the 2nd Tuesday in
July, 1909,
TABERNACLES.
Chief Preceptresses.
Number,
+ Mrs. Lottle Williams, 1309 N. 10th,
Kansas City, Kan. 1-3 Wed. (A)
2 Mrs, Addie Williams, 906 S. Walnut
Tola, Kan, 2-4 Sat, (A)
2 brs. Mary Goss, Station 1, Wichita,
Kan, 1-3 Fri, (A)
4°Mrs. H. Tyler, 520 E 9th
Cherryvale, Kan., 1-3 Thur. (A)
5 Mrs Carrie Brown, 924 N. 10th,
Atohison, Kan,, 9-4 Fri, (A)
@ Mrs. Eva Clayborne, 118 So, Mul-
berry, Ottawa, Kan, 1-3 Thur.
«a
7 Mrs. Alice Perry, 344 N. Sth,
Selina, Kan, 1-3 Fri. (A)
3 Mrs. Laure Smith, 308 B. 11th,
Coffeyville, Kan., 1-3 Tues. (A)
9 Mrs. Katie Thomas, 117 E Laurett,
‘Topeka, Kansas.
10 Mra. Ida Wallace, 446 Ark, Law-
renee, Kam, 2-4 Wed. (A)
11 Mrs. Pauline Woodfork, 828 Free-
man, Kansas Clty, Kansas, 1-3
‘Mon. (A)
12 Mrs. Betty Johnson, 211 Stewart,
Kansas City, Kan,, 1-8 Thur. (A)
14 Mrs. Hattie Warden, 124 N. Wash-
ington, Pittsburg, Kan, 2-4
‘Thur, (A)
15 Mrs. Ellen Lee, Box 25 Weir City,
Kan,
16 Mrs. Lizie Morton, 1308 Washing-
ton, Parsons, Kan., 1-3 Wed. (A)
17 Mrs. A. Masler, 615 So, Barber,
Ft, Scott, Kan., 1-3 Bat, (A)
18 Mrs. Jennie Sellers, 2202 So. 9th,
Omaha, Neb., 1-8 Thur. (A)
20 Mrs. Besse Hall, 406 Horton, Ft.
Soott, Kan,
2 Mrs. Angie Garner, 704 ©. 12th,
Coffeyville, Kan., 1-3 Wed. (A)
28 Mrs. Della Dorsey, 714 So. 14th Par-
sons, Kan,. 1-8 Thur. (A)
29 Mrs. Lulu Woods, 1027 Pottawat-
omie, Leavenworth, Kans, 1-3
Thurs
30 Mrs, Laura Bright, 203 Ohio
Leavenworth, Kan., 8 Sat,
= Te
Directory
Daughte rs
ARBOR
KA JURISDICTION
) $4 Mrs. Joana Jones, 1135 N. Wash-
ington, Wichita, Kan, 1-3
Thurs. (A.)
| 25 Mrs. Adah Lewis, 1503 Archer Av.,
South Omaha, Nebraska,
37 Mrs, Mary Robinson, 108 N 3rd
Atchison, Kan., 1-8 Fri. (A)
38 Mrs, Ella Young, Box 1178, Wetr
City, Kan.
#9 Mrs. Hulda Patterson, sth and
Elm, Abilene, Kan.
52 Mrs, Ada King, 722, N. ¥ Lawrence
Kan, 2-4 Thur. (A)
63. Mrs, Lille Robinett, 1236 Barnett,
Kansas City, Kan, 1-8 Fri. (A)
‘17 Mrs. Sarah Weddington, 634 Spruce
| ‘Topeka, Kan., 1-8 Wed. (A)
| ita, Kan, Fridays,
85 Mrs, Francis Hardaman, 1801
| Kansas Ave, Topeka, Kan,
89 Mrs. B, E, Alton, 2215 Pacific,
Omaha, Neb., 1-8 Wed. (A)
$1 Mrs, Lulu Rountree, 1125 N. 19th.
Omaha, Neb. 1-8 Thur. (A)
92 Mrs, A. Grant, 401 So. 8th, Lin-
coin, Neb. 2-4 Fri, (A)
98 Mrs. Ida M. Jordan, 903 N. West-
ern, N. Topeka, Kan, 1-3 Thur.
“|
TEMPLES.
Ciief Mentors.
i Fred M. Harris, Box 1178, Wels
2 Rev. Jos. Smith, 308 FE. 11th, Cof-
feyville, Kans., 1-2 Tues.
City, Kan, 1-3 Fri,
3 J. G. Purdett, 819 N, 1st, Atchison,
Kan, 1-3 Fri.
4. FP, D. Early, Sherman Flats, Omeha
Neb, 2-4 Mon.
5 Robt. M. Jordan, 908 N. Western,
N. Topeke, Kan., 1-8 Thur.
7 Dr. GG Brown, 517 N. Main,
Wichita, Kans,, 1-3 Tues.
2 A.J. Beam, 409 Osborne, Ft. Scott,
Kan, 1-3 Tue.
10 Geo, L. Craig, 906 Cherokee,
Leavenworth, Kan. Mondays,
11 C. W. Giles, 617 N. Water St.,
Wichita, Kans, 1-3-4 Thurs.
12 Lee Hollday, 728 So. 20th, Pursone,
Kan, 1-3 Thur.
18 Ba Finch, 514 N, 4th, Salina, Kan.,
1-8 Tue.
16 Richard Clark, 420 N. 26th, Soutd
Omahe, Nebr.
17 Rev. Allen Garner, 70 M 19th
Coffeyville, Kansas.
18 Jas. Thomas, 218 W. let, Salt Lake
City, Utah,
19 W. M. Hughes, 1028 N. J., Law-
rence, Kan., 2-4 Thur,
22 B. C. Easter, Box 156, Oswego
Kans, 2-4 Tues,
24 J. W. Warren, 218 E, 7th, Cherry-
vale, Kans,, 1-3 Tues,
36 J. H. Downs, 422 Haskell, Kansas
City, Kansas, Fridays.
59 U. A. Graham, 1160 West, Topeka,
Kansas, 1-3 Thur.
60 E. C. Salres, 1813 Jefferson. To-
peka, Kans., 1-3, Mon.
72 J. M. Wright, 1125 Saratoga, Lin-
coln, Neb.
TENTS.
Queen Mothers.
1 Lillle Harden, 900 Fifth St. Leav-
enworth, Kan., 4 Sat. (A)
2 Susan Daniels, 216 W. Wail, Ft
Scott, Kan. 2-4 Sat, (A)
IM EACH TOWN
and ditrien
PORODILIG PAGHONG Bf Scicusis:
ul gra adele one ag
ind ou ech in sett Sos cyl 9 We shin
eile aen aude eset Bae foals Mk
ERA ding wie tine you may eide hc hee and
Posie then ot pereedy ua or do nas
dem gr cape a ou ln by Sadness
ml he gies grat Hles post ts make
dll prt abeveaeonl etry cab Vos ES
Tring rector gaan hate Oe athe ge
OROn Eps wboclears mit Wes un ne
afer true agen” Oo SEE EZ
Sn You Fee our eau catalogue a
SHED cy bur eps oat ames a
rar, Wasa he hes gc lester sone
can atl gor bicyeles under Your own nae’ Pate ai
e do not larly ile second hand bicycl ;
¢ do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but
pa rene Wetier, 113 aura
coin, Neb, 2 Prt (4)
(4 Laura Washington, 94
Kanma City, Kan, 1.3 a1
/& Ads Gilbert, 05.8. saa y
feyville, Kan, 2: Wey, W
8 Ida Stovall, 705 so, Wag,
Kan, 2-4 Sat (4)
9 Flora Patterson, 11 w, ry,
ha, Neb, 1-2 Sat (4)
10 Maggie Robinson, gy
Kansas Clty, Ken, 14 gy
11 Mary Brown, 825 athe, ty
Kan, 2-4 Sat. (a)
M1 Bthel Penn, 715 “qr gy
Ks, 2-4 8
14 Arle Stone, 822 stain, 4,
. Kan, 1-3 Sat, (4)
ATH. H. Aakin Cling
Wea, (A)
18 A. 0. Murret, 451 80,4, gg
Kan, 1-3 Sat. (A)
(9 Ltsrle Herrold, sheman py
Omaha, Neb, 2-4 sat (4)
20 Suste Wills, 2103 Gran;
Kan., 1-3 Sar. (A) “—
25 Gertrude Taylor, 1310 §
Parsons, Kans, 24s
28 B.A. Tiggs, 2314 Moran, rg
Kans, 1-2 §:
£2 Charlot Dalton, 1278 Barnet y
sas City, Kan, 2-4 sat, 4)
1 Ella MeKinnis, 217 Shey
Leavenworth, Kan, 1-4 Tha
28 Loulse Verder, 813 N. 5, Lay
Kan, 1-3 Sat. (A)
3» Hester Cornish, 911 Westen,
‘Topeka, Kan., 1-2 Sat (4)
87 Jannle McAdoo, 1518 N. Mus
‘Topeka, Kan, 1-2 Sat, (4)
45° Cynthia Henderson, 312 Was
ton, Kansas City, Kan, 14)
NOTICE TABORS.
If your Tabernacte, Temele o
13 not tn this Directory, of it sq
any error, please notity me at
W.N. MILLER
Most Important Happenings of
Past Seven Days.
Interesting Items Gathered Fron
Parts of the World Condensed
Into Small Space for the Ber
efit of Our Readers,
Miioatianseus:
The Missouri Pacific Railroad q
any has filed an application wid
Kansas railroad commissioners
permission to haul seed wheat {re
farmers in the western par of
stale.
Editors representing 150 labor
pers recently met in Chicago (0
euss plans for unity in the ie
campaign.
The cities of Kansas got only 1}
cent of the 6,639 gain in the
population for 1908.
Six thousand persons are repor
be in actual need of clothing a0
| er supplies as the resul! of the
flood in Augusta, Ga
A shortage of more than $4
has been discovered in the jo
at Havana, Cuba. Ricario Rol
chiet of the supply bureau tos
peared.
The Franco-Americas int
commission has finishe,| iis hile
Paris.
The Baldwin dirigibie balloon "
was -ecently purchased by th
ment ror the army is to be on
attractions at the S!. J
military carnival.
Forest fires ar D sin
grove of big trees in Cs of
Cal.
Senator Daniel ani It
Vreeland and Overst
mittee of the Natio:
mission, have returt "
after a thorough stuly nel
French financial system 7
The crew of the racin
de Dieppe, which started 0% |
bus, O., attempted to i
storm at Niagara la T
men were badly shaken
narrow escape from i.
Whirlpool rapids.
Seven summer visitors 0
party of ten were drow in P
scot bay, off Deer isla the
sizing of a sloop in wile
out for a sail, The i»
posed entirely of easter’ )°
‘The Vermont election sill
victory for the Repubiic ve
plurality of 28.000 voi THe Es
lican vote fell off S pe
and the Democra 4
cent, aa
Official returns con iS
tary Coburn show *!
Kansas to be 1,050.7!
over last year of 6!
The McKinley :
absorbed the Caire
Traction company
company. .
All the coal mies v
have been closed owins 10 4 "7
ment between operaiors oul
About 8,000 men are aifecte’
Fred Proctor, a life con
Kansas penitentiary from Or,
dressed in a suit of clotlies %
to Frank Haskell, son of (ET
succeeded in making bis
other day.
George G. Perry, United SH
ahal of Alaska, tras bee? 1)
removed for disobedien®® 5
‘Mrs. Minerva Chapa ng
age, tried to end her le ty,
of her son-in-law nest
during a fit of meancdol® ~