Wichita Searchlight

Saturday, July 24, 1909

Wichita, Kansas

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YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY TRADING WITH THE MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER IT'S GREATEST SUCCESS was One of the Most Important In History of the Order ELEVENTH YEAR IT'S GREAT was One of the History of The eighteenth annual session of the Grand Temple and Tabernacle, Knights and Daughters of Tabor, Kansas-Nebraska Jurisdiction which was held in Topeka, Kansas, July 13-17, was one of the best, finiancially, numerically ever held in the history of the Order. The session was held in the Masonic hall, 404 Kansas Ave. and every delegate was filled with enthusiasm over the splendid reports made by the Order's unexcelled Grand officers which showed a most remarkable progress. TUESDAY SESSION The 18th grand session was called to order at 10 a.m. by Rev. Sir Frank Wilson, the Chief Grand Mentor. The morning session was devoted to routine business of opening. In the afternoon the Grand session listened to an able Welcome "Address" delivered by Dtr Ada Upshaw, a gratuates of the Topeka High School At the conclusion of her address Dtr. Upshaw was loudly applauded. The welcome address was responded to by Dtr. Lulu Rount tr.e, of Omaha. Neb. in a most pleasing manner. Dtr. Rountree recieved splendid aplause for her able response. After the welcome address and response tue Grand Temple and Tabernacle then listened to the 18'h annual message of Rev. Sir. Frank Wilson, C. G. M. As the Chief read his message which showed the remarkable progrrss which the Order of 12, had made during the past year, he was again and again applauded. Chief Mentor Wilson's Report The following is an extract of the splendid report of Rev. Frank Wilson, he said in part:- 'It pleases him, who rules the destiny of nations, to bring us together in this, our eighteenth grand session We meet to shape the destiny of our order. We feel with the tokens of truth, faith and love in our hearts, we can make the order a greater benefit to its mem- bers, and cause others to gain us in this work for the uplift of the human race. Kind words, acts and deeds will bring men, women and children to our temples, Tabernacles and tents. TABORIAN HOME Referring to the Taborian Home recently purched by the Order in this city the report said: "Some are aware of the tact that for the last twenty-three years I have advocated the Home for our indigent members and orphans of the Order. Heretofore the Home has been on paper only, but today it is a fixed reality. We own an acre of ground and a twelve room house. This should give a new life and encouragement to our members. Rev. Wilson recommended in his report that the endowment be raised from $100.00 to $110.00 at the death of member. His report showed that there had been 28 deaths during the year as follows- Knights 7 Daughters 16, Pages 4, Maids1. BENEFITS The report of the Chief Grand bought out the following figures of the benefits paid out by the order for the past year. Endowment paid $2430.00 Sick Benefit 1450,00 Burial expenses $1200. Total paid during the vr. 5080. 50 Benefits paid from April 30th 1891 to June 12th 1900 Endowment pd $27,680. Sick Benefit pd 15,753 Burial Expenses 13,550 Grand Totat paid $56983.00. PROPERTY The following is the property owned by the Order Value Kans City Kans. one hall $4500 Salina Kansas ,, ,, 3500.00 N. Topeka Kans. ,, ,, 3500.00 S. Topeka Kans. ,, ,, 3500.00 Lawrence Kans. ,, ,, 4500.00 Ft. Scott Kans. ,, ,, 4500.00 Atchison Kans. ,, ,, 4500.00 one lot 1500.00 JULY 24 1909, Total Value property $43500 00 At the conclusion of the ready of his report by Rev. Frank Wilson so well pleased were the members with it that by unaoimous vote the rules were suspended and Rev. Frank Wilson was reelected for the 19th. consecurive time. GRAND RECEPTION Tuesday evening the delegates and visitors were tendered of a rousing reception by the members of the local numbers. Wednesday morning was devoted to the report of the Grand Officers. Dtr. Emma Gaines, Chief Grand Preceptress, read her seventeenth annual report which was grand. At the conclusion of her report the rules were superseded and Dtr. Gaines was unanimously re-elected. Sir Wm.Core C. G. T. made his sixteenth annual report which was received with loud applause. After the reading of this splendid report of the treasurer the whole session was one of enthusiasm and as if by one mind there was a score of delegates on their feet seeking to ask that the rules be superseded and Sir Wm. Core re-elected treasurer which was done. The next report was that of Dtr. Sarah Forbes, C. G. R. who made her sixteenth annual report which was heartily received and at its conclusion Dtr. Forbes was re-elected by acclamation. Then came the report of Sir A, W Hopkins. C. G. S. who made his eighteenth annual report which was fine and at ist conclusion Sir A. W. Hopkins was unanimously rr-elected C. G. S. for his 19th term. One of the agreeable reports of the session was that of Sir C. M. Johnson, G. P. P. It was agreed by all that the report by Sir Johnson was the best ever made by a Grand Presiding Prince. The delegates showed their appreciation by re-electing Sir Johnson by acclamation. Dtr. Bessie Hall, G. Q. M. did herself credit in the splendid report which she made of her work for the year. The rules were superseded and Dtr. Hall was re-elected by acclamation. The Board of Grand Curations then submitted their report which was adoptes. The Board selected Rev. Frank Wilson as Superintendent of the Home and this selection will meet with the approval of the members of the jurisdiction as it GRAND RECEPTION met the approval of all the delegates. GRAND TENT SESSION Immediately after the noon recess the Grand Temple and Tabernacle gave way to a meeting of the Tent department with Dtr. Bessie Hall Grand Queen Mother, presiding. The Tents made an excellent showing and listened to short talks by Rev. Frank Wilson C. G. M'Dtr. Emma Gaines, C. G. P. Rev. M. Wooten, C. G. O and others. Dtr. Bessie Hall made a few remarks explaining the work of the Tent department. GRAND ANNUAL SERMON. The Annual Grand Sermon was preached at the large and spacious Auditorium. The Knights met at their hall 404 Kansas Ave., and led by Jackson's Military Band, they marched to the Auditorium under direction of Slr A. M Harrold, G. D. M., with other Knights as his aides. At the Auditorium the Knights were joined by the Daughters and this large number of Knights and Daughters filled in the Auditorium. On the rostrum were Rev. Frank Wilson C. G. M., Dtr. Emma Gaine G. C. P., Dtr. Bessie Hall, G. Q. M. Sir Rev. M. Wooten, C. G. O. Rev. Sir J- R. Ransom, Rev. A. Garner, Rev. J. Banks, and an escort of uniformed Knights, Sir D. L. Taylor, Sir Lee Holiday and Sir J. H. Downs. After the opening services Rev. Frank Wilson introduced Rev. M. Wooten C. G. O. as the speaker of the evening. Rev- Wooten then preached one of the most wonderful, spiritual, inspiring, and historical sermons ever delivered before the Grand Session. He acquitted himself with credit and honor and fully set forth the Order of Twelve its working, teaching, objects and accomplishments. Every one were in one accord in giving him due credit. A large collection was raised. THURSDAY SESSION THURSDAY SESSION The first hours of the morning session were devoted to committee reports and a completion of the election of officers. Rev. M. Wooten was re-elected C. G. O. by acclamation. Sir J. W. Burdett was re-elected Vice Grand Mentor. Dtr. Ella McKinnie was re-elected Vice Grand Preceptress and Dtr. Maggie Robinson was unanimously re-elected Grand Intersentinal. Dtr. Paulin Woodfork was re-elected C. G. Pr. by acclamation. After the election the Grand Temple and Tabernacle resolved itself in memory of the deceased Knights Daughters, Maids and Pages of Honor. This was truly a Christian lover fease and spiritual meeting It was, indeed, a free spiritual feast. OFFICIAL ORGAN The Searchlight was unanimously chosen as the official organi tor the Knights and Daughters of Tabor Kansas- Nebraska Jurisdiction for another yeat. Friday morning at 11 o'clock the Knights and Daughters began to form their line in front of the hall in Kansas Ave. With the Daughters and Grand officers in carrages and the Knights in full regalia with their shinny swords, bright buttons and plum med helmets on foot, and led by bands of music, the parade was one of grander; spectacular and imposing grandness. In the lines of march was the full Palatine guards from Parsons, Atchison, and Kansas City Kansas comprising the three crack drill teams of the Kansas- Nebraska Juris- PURITY No matter how accutan ceipt is filled it is of no v the Drugs used are not f pure in quality. One can manding "Pure Drugs." PRESCR We try to always have bought of this precaution with extreme care in fill and receipts should be a endeavor to win your Then again, Substitbtion guard against. We gaura and receipt that leaves o actly as it is written. No matter how accutant a prescription or receipt is filled it is of no value to the patient if the Drugs used are not fresh, well selected, and pure in quality. One cannot be to careful in demanding "Pure Drugs." PRESCRIPSIONS We try to always have the best that can be bought of this precaution on our part, coupled with extreme care in filling your prescriptions and receipts should be a great drawing card in endeavor to win your confidence and trade. Then again, "Substibition" is a great evil to guard against. We gaurantee every prescription and receipt that leaves our store, to be filled exactly as it is written. Cost Is Essential The charge is reasonable always "Quanity First. vice is a great accomma- your disposal. Quality Always Besides filling prescripti carry a full equipped Dr ines, of all kinds, Soap Candy, Etc. Your patro- and we feel assured that customer, always a cust The charge is reasonable pure to all considering always "Quanity First." Our free delivery service is a great accommodation, is always at your disposal. Quality Always Foremost Besides filling prescriptions and receipts, we carry a full equipped Drug line, Patent Medicines, of all kinds, Soaps, Saunders, Cigars, Candy, Etc. Your patronage will be appreciated and we feel assured that we can say, "Once a customer, always a customer. Oscar R. Bissantz diction. The parade coveaed the principal streets and ended at ended at the Park where everyone had an enjoyable time. INSTALLATION Friday night the Knights and Daughters returnen to their hall where the Grand officers were installed for the ensuring year by Sir John W. Wilson, Deputy International Chief Grand Mentor. Saturday Morning Everyone met fresh at the closing meeting Saturday and to select the next place of meeting. Omaha, Neb. was chosen as the next place of meeting on the 2nd Tuesday in July 1910. CONSERTATION NEEDED By Both Racial Presses It is an admitted fact that the public press is one of the most powerful - if not the most powerful factor in moulding and crystalizing public sentiment known to modern civilizations. The great advance of civilization, of governments and of sciences owes their remarkableness to the onward and imiate power of the press. The spirit of the public press is a true index of the people among whom it holds sway. It is the press that moulds makes and it Continued on page five at a prescription or re- value to the patient if fresh, well selected, and not be to careful in de- IPSIONS is the best that can be on our part, coupled ing your prescriptions great drawing card in confidence and trade. "on" is a great evil to antee every prescription our store, to be filled ex- pure to all considering Our free delivery ser- dation, is always at ays Foremost ions and receipts, we bug line, Patent Medic- ips, Saunders, Cigars, image will be appreciated we can say, "Once a customer. NO.17 How Condy Dhu Raised the Devil baving now, in the evening of his life, settled down with Nancy, in a com- Jortable cottage in Cornakelly, rent- ad at no less than sixpence a week, ‘was looked up to as an authority of auch weight on all subjects that topped up in our local debates, from Hivinity and medicine down to cock- Mighting. He nightly expounded the aw and the prophets to an interested and admiring audience of good Corn- akelly folk, and when weightier sub- fects flagged and the temper of his audience required it he entertained them to a wonderful tale drawn from nis inexhaustible store of personal teminiscences—be the same truthful 2r otherwise. And we loved to listen fo him. This is one of the tales he ‘ased to tell: “Well, I suppose it’s now near about let me see, five, or maybe I might say, six, an’ thirty years ago that I was one night belated on me thravels {m the County Managhan, in a purty sonely counthry about half-a-score fuiles from the place they call Car rickmacross. I pushed on an’ on, strikin’ up a whistle for company sake, an’ I thraveled on an’ on, naith- ef meetin’ luck nor a likely place, till tors’t 12 o'clock, when I dhrew on a fight that I saw about ten parches off the road, makin’ up me mind « go wo farther that night, even if I had to sleep in a byre. When I got close to it the stream of light from the open door showed me a horse ready sad- qlled standin’ by, when out comes an elderly man. Meself remained in the shade of the hedge till he passed, an’ 4hen I lifted the latch an’ walked into the house. “‘Sakes alive!’ says the girl, start- ‘4m’; ‘who are ye, or where did ye come from, or what do ye want?’ “Well,” says I, ‘ye'll excuse me, 1 xnow, answerin’ all yer questions at nce. But regardin’ the first, I'm Condy Haraghey to the rest of the world an’ Condy Dhu to my aiquals. { come from as good a county as is to be found in Ireland—if not betther— the Coanty of Dinnygal. An’ as to where I'm goin’, I can't give ye a straight answer, for 1 lost me way an’ am wandherin’ about for the past two hours with more turns an’ twists than dhrimin dhun’s tail on a hot day. But I hope I'll be able, with yer kind permission, to set meself down in a ‘orner here an’ wait for mornin’.’ “ “But she ratsed such a roolye- oolye, an’ commenced makin’ such a sore lament, that meself hoists me pack on mé back in the divil of a fine humor, an’ wishin’ her pleasant ‘dhreams—from me teeth out—I left the house an’ commenced pokin’ about Jor a byre or barn where I could keep ‘@ corner of the floor warm till morn- in’. But, avic, I wasn’t scarcely cut as long as the routin’ of a cow when 1 found a knock at the door, an’ it was opened by the girl, an’ there I saw a fine young fella at it, with the appearance of a sarvint boy. “Both of them retired inside, an’ they closed the door; an’ I know it was wrong, but I couldn't resist it— 1 stole to the window at the other end of the house to watch the proceedin’s. She first hauled ont a kilt goose from where it was hid undher some straw, an’ both of them took to the pluckin’ of it for life an’ death, an’ they put it in the pot over a roarin’ fire till they give it a good plump of a boil. An’ when it was done she put ft on the table, an’ beside it a big loaf, an’ yeside that he put a black bottle of a very respectable size that he had in ais pocket, an’ I tell you it wathered me teeth to watch the two of them sittin’ down to the feed. “But maybe it wasn’t the delight to me to hear, afore the two wratches had rigtt begun to enjoy their feed, the thramp of the horse comin’ back to the house—an’ this nearly as good ‘as an hour afore his time. In another minnit I saw that they heerd it, too. “‘Run for yer life,’ sez she. ~ He'll meet me if I go out,’ sez he *Melie murther!’ “‘Undher that heap of straw with ye, for Hiven’s sake,’ says she, “Under a heap of straw beside the door he got, an’ she had only just got the black bottle hid up the chimbly, an’ the leaf under a tin basin on the dhresser, an’ the goose undher a creel, when in walks the man of the house; an’ meself didn’t wait for him to be 4m long till I walks in afther him with the pack on me back, He turned an’ the looked at me. “who are ye, or wherc ar: ve go 4n’?’ says he. “Isn't it the grand night entirely, Lord be thankit,’ says I. layin’ down me pack coolly in the corner an’ Abrawin’ forrit a chair to the fire. “Well, that’s what I call deuced cool,’ says he, lookin’ hard at meself. “Where do ye come from?” “‘Dinnygal,’ says J. “Freemasons there? says he. By SEUMAS MacMANUS Se ER Ncopehant bed. E. Eatpincett Co) Fee ener eee report to this effect in the supreme _“‘'m sore ‘afeerd ye're denyin’ me ‘meat,’ says I, ‘an’ I'll soon tell ye whether or no.’ : “So, gettin’ up off me chair I picked up a riddle was lyin’ behind the door. “‘Can ye give me about two yards of a string?’ says I. -"He gave me the string, an’ though Maury’s face was a-goin’ again fit to frighten a sinner, I tled the riddle up to'a hook in the middle of the kitchen cellin’, an then gave it a good twirl, “Well,” says he when I done that, ‘what do ye make out now?’ abe le ont are a8 tame Maury a hard look—'I make {t out,’ says I, ‘that if ye'll look under a tin basin on the dhresser ye'll find a large loat with a very small fadge cut off it.’ “‘T'm thinkin’, says he, startin’ for the dhresser, ‘that if I find ye playin’ any purtensions on me ye'll go out while ye'd be sayin’ Jack-hop, an’ yer pacK on top of ye.’ An’ maybe he wasn’t flusthered when he lifted the basin an‘ seen the loaf just as I de- seribed it! “‘So far so good,’ says I; ‘we'll thry the riddle again; who knows but maybe.we'd get somethin’ to wash Fahd i TRL SS 0 rH nNOS rr Cy eer Ses Eis Se ae: her meh “Ae, “I Stole to the te at the Other End of the House.” down the ivaf with? So I gave the riddle another twirl. “ Well,’ says he. “If ye put yer hand into a cranny up the chimbly,’ says I, ‘ye'll be afther findin’ a black bottle three parts full of somethin’ tastier nor wather.” “By the good daylight,’ says he, haulin’ down the bottle an’ tastin’ it, ‘yer right again.” “If the Whisky's good,’ says I, ‘a loaf of bread is but poor aitin' to it, afther all, Let us see if wg can't fod betther in the house.’ “A third time I twirled the riddle. “Well, what's the luck?” says he. “Good luck,’ says I, ‘as Murty Cur- ran said when he buried his third wife. If ye look under the creel be- low, ye'll find a cooked goose wantin’ both legs” “An’ sure enough, out he hauls tt. “Well, that bates the wee wheel that ground the millstone,’ says he. An’ if we didn’t do them Justice call me a magisthrate. The bottle made me friend's tongue as loose as Mickey Hanney’s waistcoat, an’ he talked like a counsellor an’ lied like a lawyer; an’ at length begun tryin’ to find out the Freemason saicrets from me, an’ how I was able to do these tricks atvall, at all. “ah, says I then, ‘that's nothin’ at all to what I could do if I thried.’ ““T know one thing ye couldn't do,’ says he, © “What's that?” says I. “Raise the divil’ says he, ‘No Freemason can do that, though they purtend they can.’ “Would ye be prépared to venture a small bait (bet) on it? says I. “TL wager ye a crown,’ says he. ‘Well an’ good,’ says I, settin’ about sthringin’ up the riddle again, “{ thought now that Maury would go into a faint, but I never minded her. 1 twirled the riddle again an’ watched it till it settled. “Ready?” says I, grippin’ the flail. “Ready, says he, with a mock laugh on his countenance. ““Stand,’ says I, ‘atween that heap of straw an’ the door an’ watch me thrashin’.” “He got atween it an’ the door. I dhrew the flail with what ability [ could an’ come down a soundin’ whack, an’ there was a sereech from the straw,like a pig astickin’. Up wees; the sthraw in the center, an’ out jumps a man just in time to get the second whack of the dlafl fairly on the ribs, knockin’ him right over atop of the dumfoundhered good man of the house, both of them fallin’ flat, with the moroder on top. There came one screech from the moroder, an’ another screech from the man undher him, an’ a third screech from Maury, who fell over in a faiat. The schoun- dhrel was up an’ disappeared througr the door in a jiffy. “When I got masther an’ maid back to life again I would get anything in the house if I'd only consept to go me ways; but I wouldn't move till daylight, an’ then went off with me crown in me pocket, an’ five an’ thirty shillin’s besides for the makin's of a woyen all-wool suit made of pressed rags that cdst six an’ ninepence Pk ae ene ae c of thoee srizziv. gray hall Ur LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER,®. CE, $1.00, retail. } - SERVANT OF THE GOVERNMENT MOST RUDELY USED. But Then, a8 He Explained, Such In- cidents Were One of thé Pen- alties of Occupying an Elevated Position. | In the postofice Simon Muldraugh, |postmaster, was oponing the daily | nail sack. The train that had brought jit had haughtily declined to stop or jeven slacken speed at a town so | small, and those at the depot saw the nail clerk disdainfully kick the limp | gray pouch out the déor as the train | whizzed past. |__Now the crowd had followed Jimmy Miller, the assistant-station agent, to |-he little postoffice, and was waiting ‘to see if by any chance a letter or zard or circular had come, “Anything for me, Simon?” inquired sid man Davis from the Buck Creek -egion, thrusting his whiskered face ‘Into the little window. The postmaster looked at him cold- ly, as befitted a government servant "engaged in an important duty, and made no reply. The crowd laughed and old man Davis became red under “his tobacco-stained whiskers, “Huh,” he said. “Jest because some people kin hand out half a dozen let- ters a day they think they’re some- thing.” He turned to the window ‘again, 2 / “Lookye here, you little bald-head- ed runt,” he said. “You gimme my ‘niatl, if there’s any. I'm in a hurry.” ‘The postmaster swelled visibly, Such | talk to an employe of the government was unbearable. “Do you know who you're talkin’ tor” he demanded, thrusting his face into the window from within. “When | I get ready r'll—” | Then it was that the people assem- bled saw an astounding and awful ‘thing. A plain farmer from up Buck creek had! the postmaster by the back of his neck and was pulling him through the window. Getting him outside he shook him as though he were a sack from which it was desired to shake the bran, “You measley little, no-count, fat- headed = whipper-snapper!” he chor- tled, pouncing him up and down. “Last winter your family was starv- in’ because you were too blasted lazy to work, and I fed ‘em. Now you sit up here and act funny with me. Next thing like that I see I'll duck you in the horse trough. Git!” He threw the postmaster into his partitioned cor- ner and stalked out. ‘The postmaster straightened his collar, brushed his breeches and ran a curved finger across his moist fore- head. “That,” he said to the silent crowd, “that was the penalty of greatness.” —Galveston News. The Man Women Like. Im a recent novel there occurs this discussion of “the mystery of the man who is successful with women:” “Here, for example, stands me a natural good fellow, seemingly; frank and brave, a man’s man, and, what is more, a leader of men, in whom, for some reason inexplicable, women see naught, with whom the good and the bad of the sex will have nothing to say or todo. And, here again, stands his counterpart, a man whom men instinctively distrust, a little _con- temptible, shuffling rat of a fellow, say—or just poor ‘so-and-so,’ or, say, again, a strapping, presuming mass of manhood, with a manner objection- able to his kind; all’s one, big or lit- tle, he has sorcery, the touch incom- municable, and women, old and young, gentle and simple, good and bad alike, are sensible of the charm, both those Who resist and those who yield must admit the mystic drawing.” Woman Champion. Miss Lillian Smith, the champion long distance woman swimmer, is said to be responsible for the popularity of swimming among London women this season. The Bath club, a fash: jonable resort in London, has almost doubled its membership in the last few. weeks, and a new club, the City of London Ladies’ Amateur Swim- ming club, has been formed to ac commodate business women living in the city.- = According to Miss Smith, swimming is the very best exercise for women, both stout and thin. “The woman with too much flesh can reduce her weight, and the thin girl can develop muscles which she never dreamed of before,” declares Miss Smith. “The best swimming costume is the tight fitting university dress. Skirts look well on land, but they are not satis factory in the water.” ‘The Real Work. Some people have an idea that a humorist must be bubbling over with fun all the time, which idea is incor rect, of odurse, because a humorist cannot afford to, crack jokes or tell funny stories when he needs the money they might bring to him when sold. Instead of appearing funny therefore, he is a lugubrious sort of wretch, with big ears, However, sometimes a humorous re mark will fall from his lips—but he always sells it later on, if he’s lucky. John Kendrick Bangs was greeted by a gushing young lady not long ago: “Oh, I'm so glad to meet you,” she told him. “I have wanted to ask you if it is hard work to write jokes.” “Hard work to write them?” he murmured; “not at all. The real hard work comes when one tries to think them into being.” Women Court By HELEN OLDFIELD. ROM time immemorial all the tradition’ of her sex have for- bidden # woman to sue; nevertheless that she may and does woo the man of her choice, and frequently with success, is a fact which none can dispute nor deny. Most of us know men whom to-the best of our knowledge and belief never could Have mustered courage to propose to their wives unless those wives had made the task so easy that, as the small boy said of his peccadillo, “It just did itself.” ‘ As with many other things the secret of success lies in BR a ren kate Soe. Ek nlamae. teammate wae hemi ell hor hate See ee See een pee. eee Me eee Poe Sk eet te teries to bear upon the object of her desire, but each and every one of those batteries will be masked with greatest, care. The woman who, as the saying is, runs after the men, usually is the woman from whom men flee, and the quarry whom she eventually captures is, in most cases, not worth the trouble of the chase. Among the levers which move humanity there are few more powerful than that of wounded vanity. Besides, the code of polite society exacts that all well-bred women shall make themselves agreeable and entertain- ring to all men as well as to all women whom they meet in social inter- course, such courtesy by no means being the least part of their duty to their neighbor. “He (and still more she) who would have friends must show himself friendly.” : She who wishes to attract a man must be chaining in order to charm; those who wish to be loved mist show themselves lovable, must think of other people rather than of themselves. There is no greater obstacle to social success, given a fulcrum, than that of overweening self-conscious- ness. | When a woman sees the dearest fellow in the world drifting just a little out of reach, may she not stretch out her hand to hold him back? “Mast she let him go and make no sign? It all depends upon whether or no he iis reluctant to go. She may hold out her hand, yes, if he holds cut his, but she must not beckon, still less must she call him to her or cling, The woman whom a man, even for a little while, has loved ought to be able to make it impossible for him to leave her. How shall she do this? Not by cloying of sweets, not by a surfeit of her society. It is a sad truth, but to most women love comes too easily. ‘Vhey\are go afraid that it will pass them by that they snatch at whatever pretty counterfeit comes their way. Which is a mis- take. However excellent a man may be, he essentially g is human, and for him the sweetest fruit is that which (ge henge heh: i ily injury, no confinement in dark, noisome, foully smelling cells, no starv- ing until exhaustion drives the suspect to confess. It is nothing but a merciless, persistent, insistent questioning, interspersed with forceful argu- ments that in the long run. if the man be guilty, rarely fail to accom- plish their purpose. Whatever third degree methods are employed in my department I employ myself. I usually see the suspect alone in my office, or, at the most, with one other policeman present. There is no display of dazzling uniforms to impress him; instead, we are usually in civilian dress. Seated opposite the suspect I usually study him for some time. It is absolutely necesfary that I know with what I have to contend. If the man be surly and sullen I must use methods very different from those I use if he be quick, alert and inteliectual. It is forme first of all to learn what the peculiarities of this man may be, what his individuality may be. If tere be any third degree in our detective bureau to-day, that is what it is. It is simply pitting a stronger will against a weaker one. We do, however, seek out the weak spots in the armor of lies and deceit, with which crooks surround themselves, and once we find it we pound away at it until they break down and confess. ai all this is quite apart from valid proof of immortality. I can see nothing in our wider knowledge of dual consciousness that points in that direction I ought to say here that I do not feel myself sufficiently in possession of the facts to make my opinion of any value, but speaking from my in sufficient knowledge, none of the manifestations so far reported by the society for psychical research seem to me to warrant the conclusion that they, are anything but manifestations, more or less direct, of the sublimi nal consciousness. Pe at Bd min “Third Degree” As a Battle of Wits By Inspector James S. McCafferty Gal aen iawn ee Abysmal Depths of Personality May Woo Man of Her Choice with Fitness ‘The third degree+the spéctacular, blood- curdling, terrifying third degree that the magazine and melodrama writers like to talk about—is a myth. There never has been any such soul-trying experience in store for the wrongdoer who falls into the hands of the authorities since the days of the Spanish inquisition. ; ‘The third degree to-day is a duel of wits—a matching of will and power, with the detective or inquisitor pitting his strength of wili and force of argument against that of the suspect. No physical force is used. no intimidation throuch bod- Although a believer in immortality, I do not find a warrant for that belief in any of the late developments of psychical re- search, startling as they appear to be. All these manifestations seems to me to have a very important bearing on what we are gradually evolving concerning the “abysmal depths of personality.” We are making great progress in: ow apprehension of dual consciousness; and, largely through psychical research, we arc now able to detect the workings of the sub- liminal mind and to realize its tremendous influence over our conscious processes. Bui lid proof of immortality, I can see nothing 1 consciousness that points in that direction L do not feel myself sufficiently in possession ion of any value, but speaking from my in the manifestations so far reported by the seem to me to warrant the conclusion that stations, more or Jess direct, of the sublimi Cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md.—“For four years my life wasa misery to me. | sufered from ~ irregulari- Pn ae ties, terrible drag- Fs sl ging sensations, Feu Bees extreme nervous. a ness, and that all SL ogey gone feeling in my Fd stomach. I had re given up hope of ime fever being well Re when I began to . oe) {take Lyilia F. Pink. Pe ge fham’s Vegetable b eee Then I fe! It as though Bae tine tn ee ulari~ Fes ered ties, terrible drag. F, Bem@eeing sensations, es pegextreme nervous. v4 ness, and that all Lone gone feeling in my 4 Homach, I had eo iven up hope of ee Ge fever being well ee when I began to fee | | takeLyiiab Pink. Pe gee [ham’s Vegetable p) Compound. | Then I felt as ‘though mat new life had been given me, and I am recommending it all my friends.”—Mrs. W. 8. Fonp, 198¢ Lansdowne St., Baltimore, Md. ‘The most suecessful remedy in this country for the cure of all forms of female: Se is Lydia E. Pink. ham’s Vegetable Compound. It has stood the test of years and to-day is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. Ithas cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflam- mation, oon Aifen tumors, ir- regularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means had failed. If youare suflering from. any of these ailments, don’t give up hope until you have given Pyle iE. Binkbam's Vago. table Compound a trial. ‘If you would like special advice Yite to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. for it. She has guid thousands to health, free of charge. ANEW “FEAT.” eat a er | apathy a J y Pree. LBW, @ bE § av, Bey Y Ny e gS fs he “Mummy! Mummy! look, here's baby walking on his lind legs.” Use your little hammer for nailing lies, but don't be a knocker. oe YOU tee EAeE aur, Get Red Cross Ball Blue, the best Bald Blue. Large 2 oz. pavkage only 5 cent iia fils without ween as sues <be battle within. Sa x poops N As IDNEY £ Nitta Ss 4 MOOS SEY NRIs 9h ey Famous English Detective Tries to Catch the French Gentleman Criminal Arséne Lupin is bold. He aznounces beforehand in the papers what his next move is going to be. “His story begins in the August number of Short Stories The first instalment is “No. 514~ Series 28." Iti a story that will hold your interest. ‘The French Police iinally give up in their attempt to trap the wily Lupir nd send to Englanc. “or Heriot Sacintes. ‘Then follows a battle of wits. ‘The clever French rogue against the keen reasoning English detective. Send us $1.50 for a year’s’ subscription to “Short Stories” and follow the fascinat- ing, amusing Lupin. Every month, to, there are numbers cf good, crisp, shott stores printed in big, clear type. Every news Eisen tunic yarkibenptnn, Shoct Stories Corupany, Lid. 125 East T6th Street New York Cito in your mouth removed while you wait—that’s true. A Cas- caret taken when the tongue is thick-costed with the nasty squeamish ieeling in stomach, brings relief. It’s easy, natura’ way tc help nature help you. *° CASCAXETS—t00 box—week's treat- yoen:. Al-drggiste. Biggest seller tp the world. Million boxes a mouth. : Saves Time—Saves Money NO STROPPIIG NO HONING | ANOWN THE WORLD OVEF Lara er EAR ae guitarra tise! oes iss henlihtal, Chin ergata eae THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY HAS PROCLAIMED CROWN PRINCE, peposed Ruler Takes Refuge in Rus- ‘sian Legation Under Russian and British Protection. ’ reheran.—The national assembly, composed of the chief Mujtehids and she leaders of the Natiohaust forces, jas proclaimed the crown prince, Sul » \nmed Mirza, Shah of Persia, in tiv presence of an immense crowd in parliamentary square. Azad Ul Mulk bed of the Kajar family was made fe 3 s:, Petersburg, Russla—The Rus- sian foreign office received a dis- poh from M, Sabelin, charge D'af- ‘os, at Teheran, which was filed at nom, Saying that the shah had taken at the Russian summer lega- von at Zerzende. The shah was ac- companied by his wife and’ one of his jos and @ Small party of loyal ad- events, and hi action was in ac- jance with an arrangement. previ- worked out by the Russlan and Briv'sh legations! \i. Sabelin immediately informea the British diplomatie representative of the shah’s arrival and a convoy of Sepoys was forthwith dispatched to zermende. During the shah’s stay at that place protection will be furnish- ed by a joint detachment of Cossacks and Sepoys. BUT STILL HENEY’S PAY GOES ON The Special Counsel Has Performed No Work But Has Drawn $69,000 in Three Years. Washington, D. C.—That Francis J. Heney, special counsel ofthe de- partment of justice and also assistant prosecutor in the so-called graft cases in San Francisco, received from this government last year $23,000 for which he performed no service, was the frank admission of Chairman ‘Tawney of the appropriations commit- tee in the house, “How much did Heney receive dur- ing the year 19082" demanded Mr. Murphy (Dem., Mo.), “and what ser- vice did he perform?” Mr, Tawney—"He received $23,000 apil performed no service for the gov- etmment whatever during that year.” Subsequently, Mr. Tawney said: “As a matter of fact Mr. Heney has not performed any active service for the last three years. He was appoint- ‘d November 7, 1903, and his active service continued for about three ears and for whieh he received in all $69,000. SOLDIER SHOT GIRL AT THE FORT Charles O'Neil Fired Four Times Standing at Front Door of Cap- tain’s Residence, Leavenworth, Kansas. — Private Charles O'Neil, a soldier in the mili tor prison guard, killed Miss Min- nie Scharbora, a young woman em- ployed at the home of Capt. Charles N. Murphy on Grant avenue, at Fort Leavenworth. O'Neil shot the girl in the front doorway of Capt, Murphy’s residence in the presence of Mrs. Murphy, Lieut, Russell C. Hand, of- ficer of the day, and two members of the guard. O'Neil was crazed by jealousy and fired four times at the girl before he was overpowered, ‘The shooting caused considerable excitement at the post, as it took place on the fashionable avenue, where a number of officers and their families were sitting on the front porches. Enjoined Railroad Board. ‘Topeka, Kansas. —Judge A, W. Dana of the Shawnee county district court, has granted a temporary restraining order, enjoining the state board of railroad commissioners from putting into effect the new schedule of rates on cream recently adopted by the board. The centralizing creamery ompanies lost in the hearing before »e board, the new rates ordered into effect being such as to favor the small- r creamesial Dates for Land Drawing. Spokane, Washington,—Superintend- nt James Witten announced the ‘lowing dates when the drawing will ovcur for the three Indian. reserva tions, the lucky applicants names to > drawn by lot by three little girls: vor the Coer d'Alene reserve, August and 10; for the Flathead. reserve August 12 and 18; for the Spokane wserve August 16 and 17. Lightning Strikes Grand Stand, Lead, S. D—White watching a ball ‘ame between the Deadwood and the «i teams, Weston Fry and Thomas ‘bovison were killed, and eight others viously hurt by being struck by a oll of lightning from a passing thun- storm £. H. Harriman Much Improved, Gartein, Austria,—E, H. Harriman’s vealth is much improved. He makes S walking tours daily. His chil- ven who are now on the way to join heir father, are expected to reach ere ihe: Felling Building Caught Thirty-Two. Philadelphia, Pa—In one of the Siest sections of the city aiid at a we when thousands of pedestrains were passing the five story _ brick Duilding collapsed burying or pinning ‘Deneath the, ruins 32 persons. THE BREAD LINE. Aes 1s gl ing to maturity, agcording to indications in the July report of the Depart: ment of Agriculture. A gain of 722,000,000 bushels in ail grains over the totals of 1908 is promised and the record yield of 1906 will be exceeded. The value of the 1909 crop to the farmer is estimated at $2,750,000,000.— THE DEMOCRATS ARE HOPEFUL CANNOT FORCE ARBITRATION _— Could Not Compel Company to Reem: ploy Strikers but Was Ready to HAVE ALREADY ORGANIZED FOR Enjoin Laborers. NEXT ELECTION. % aah Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.—The first eflort ever made in the United States The Tariff Situation Has Given Them | to stop a strike by enjoining both the Encouragement—Have Started principals and the commonwéalth fail. Gna Year dnvadvanca: ed when Judges Ford and, Brown of Washington, D. C.—Taking ad- vantage of tHe present situation de- veloped by the tariff, the Democratic congressional committee, one year in advance of the usual time for such ac- tion, met, elected officers and mapped out the course it will follow in its fight to capture the house in the next congressional elections. Representa- tive James F, Lloyd of Missouri, was re-elected chairman by the unanimous vote of the 37 members of the com- mittee. The plan of campaign was outlined with complete harmony, it was said. Chairman Lioyd took this as an omen of what may be expected in the next campaign. He asserted that informa- tion he has received from all parts of the country indicated that the Demo- erats are more hopeful of electing a Democratic house than they have been for many years.’ Mr. Lloyd said that the committee had agreed to “get busy” immediately, and that with the appointment of the principal working committees, the Democratic end of the next campaign would be fairly under way. The com- mittee, he said, would proceed in a businesslike manner and was equip- ped to give the opposition the most stubborn fight in its history. po oem eee rea es ‘Topeka, Kansas..-Word was re ceived here by the state board of control that Sheriff S. N. Manaugh of Rooks county, Kansas, is in jail at Nebraska City, Nebraska, and will be released when a satisfactory bond for $500 is given. Sheriff-Manaugh took an insane pauper to Nebraska City, ihe man’s home. It is understood he is charged with violating a Nebraska law for doing this, He was acting under instructions from the state board of control. Taft Will Come West in August. Denver, Colorado—A message from Representative Edward T. Taylor an- nounced that President Taft had form- ally accepted the invitation to attend the Trans-Mississippi Commercial con- gress here August 16.—The president will spend four days in Colorado and will visit the Gunnison tunnel reclama- tion project during that time. The Deficiency Bill Passed. Washington, D. C.—The urgent deficiency Dill was passed by the house after four days of tempestuous debate. ‘The amount carried by it is $454,809, or $20,408 more than the original sum, and includes the $25,000 traveling expenses for the president. Settled Pennsylvania Strike. Butler, Peunsylvania.—The strike which for four days has tied up the Standard Steel Car company’s works has been settled. The 3,500 employes of the plant have returned to work. Both sides yielded points in an effort to reach an understanding. San Francisco, California—Patrick Calhoun, president of the United Rail- roads is again on trial in this city on a charge of offering a bribe to-a pub- lic official to gain a privilege for his corporation. The jury disagreed at the first trial. _- A New Spanish Pretender, Hadid Spain.—Don Jaime «will be proclaimed pretender niné days after the funeral of Don Carlos, which all the prominent Carlists in Navarre will attend. Puthaun On orlal Acain, CANNOT FORCE ARBITRATION Could Not Compe! Company to Reem- ploy Strikers but Was Ready to s Enjoin Laborers. Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.—The first eflort ever made in the United States to stop a strike by enjoining both the principals and the commonwéalth fail- ed when Judges Ford and, Brown of the common pleas court sustained the demurrer of the Pressed Steel Car company to the petition for injunction made by the Public Defense associa tion of Pittsburg against the company, the striking employes and the sheriff of Allegheny county. For the strikers, who admitted the conditions as set forth by the petition and who joined in the demands of the Defense association that the court en- force arbitration upon the part of the company’s officials it was argued that it was high time for the courts to in- tervene. For the Defense association it was argued that the strike is cost: ing the tax payers much money and much uneasiness. For the company it was argued that as the petitioners are not injured personally and that as the corporation is not one of public ser- vice, but a private corporation, the eourts canrot interfere. WAR ON TRUSTS BY THE ARMY Unlawful Combination Hereafter Will Not Supply Uncle Sam’s Soldiers, Washington, D. C.—Neither trust. fed, trust-clothed nor trust-armed will the American regular soldier be if Sec- retary Dickinson of the war depart- ment can preveitt, The secretary has just issued a new rule for the purchase of supplies for the army. He directed Brig.-Gen. Henry G. Sharps, commissary man, to enter into no direct contract with any corporation which Is a party to a trust or combination in restraint of trade. He has also directed that no dealings be had by the department with any agent or m{ddleman who may be a rep- resentative of such a concern. Kansas to Get $12,000 Excise Revenue. Topeka, Kansas.—Kansas will re- ceive a little more than $12,000 as ex- cise taxes from the express companies operating in Kansas this year. A year ago the total receipts from this tax was $4,000. Each express company is required to pay a certain percentage of its gross income in the state. In addition to this the companies are re- quired to pay taxes on the property actually owned in Kansas. Fair at Kansas City This Fall. Kansas City, Mo.—The Missouri Valley Fair association has secure? Slectric Park at Kansas City for its interstate fair this fall, This gives the fair finer grounds and _ build. ings-than some of the big state fairs and expositions. The grounds, and buildings are in fine condition and lighted by thousands of electric lights Salina Men Back From Hawaii. Salina, Kansas.—H. D. Lee and J. F. Merrill, Salina business men, have just returned from Honolulu. They report the {islands in a most prosperous con- dition. Mr, Lee contemplated a trip around the world for his health, but improvement in health changed his mind. Colossal Buet of Jot Wil New York, N. Y.—A bronze bust of James J. Hill has been completed in Brooklyn and will be shipped at once to'the Seattle exposition, where’ It will be unveiled, on August 3, Min- nesota Day. The bust is said to be the largest of its kind in the world, weighing 1,700 pounds, It will rest on a pedestal 16 feet heigh, and is itself six feet high. There will be four tablets, representing a steamship, a railroad train, the coat of arms of the state of Washington and the state of Minnesota. The bust cost $8,200, BT a AIRSHIP FELL INTO THE SEA From the Tép of Chalk Clif at Sangatta He Salled More Than Hal¥ Way to English Shore. Calais—Herbert Latham, the French aviator, made a daring but unsuceess- ful attempt to cross the English Chan- nel in his monoplane. He got away splendidly under perfect conditions, from the top of the chalk cliff at San- fatta and had covered more than half the distance at an average height of 500 feet when the motor sloweé down and he was obliged to descend. The air space of the wings, how- ever, kept the machine. afloat and the monoplane, lying like a wounded bird, was stretched out on the water when the French torpedo boat destroyer, Harpoon, which had kept abreast throughout the journey, came along- side and picked up the aviator, M. Latham was not wet and still sat on the saddle, which is above the wings and behind the motor, calmly smoking a cigarette. He immediately announced that he was not descour- aged by the failure and would try again as soon as the machine was repaired. The injuries to the mono- plane were slight, the principal dam- age being caused when it was hauled aboard the torpedo boat destroyers, The motor is intact DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS SEVERED Argentine Government sent Bolivian Minister His Passports and Or- dered Him to Leave. Buenos, Ayres.—The Argentine gov- ernment has sent his passports to the Bolivian minister here, ordering him to leave Buenos Ayres within 24 hours. The government has also telegraph- ed Senor Fonseca, Argentine minister to Bolivia, to leave LaPaz immediate ly. 5 LaPaz, Balivia—The Bolivian gov- ernment has ordered the Bolivian min- ister at Buenos Ayres to return to La Paz, and has further instructed him to leave the archives with. either the American, Cuilean or Brazilian lega- tion, It was officially comfirmed that the rupture between Bolivia and the Ar gentine republic is complete, diplo- matic relations having been broken off. WRIGHT MACHINE DOES BETTER Two Flights Were Made at Fort Myer Lasting Almost One Hour —Under Perfect Control, Washington, D. C.—Showing more confidence in himself than he has ex- hibited before thls season Orville Wright made two successful fights in the Wright aeroplane at Fort Myer. The first flight began shortly after 6:30 p. m., and lasted 25 minutes and 18 seconds, during which time the aylator circled the parade grounds 25% times. The second, which con- tinued until darkness prevented Mr. Wright from remaining longer in the air, was for half an hour's duration and 29% circles were made. China Will Accept Crane. Peking, China—Qharles R. Crane, of Chicago, whose selection as minis- ter of China by President Taft, was announced recently is persona gr wa to the Chinese government, ‘he gra-d council has authorized the foreign board to inform the United States gov- ernment that China will gladly receive Mr. Crane. Bullets in Southern Town. Union, Mississippi—an sid cow which would not have brought $50 on the market caused a bloody revolver fight in the streets of this little towa It resulted in the killing of two men, the probable fatal injury of two more and the dangerous wounding of au- other. Union Pacific Sells Stock. ~' New York, N. ¥.—Kuhn, Loeb & Company have bought from the Union Pacific Railroad company all or practi- cally all of the $10,000,000 Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe preferred stock which the Union Pacific purchased in 1908. S Writing A Book in Africa. i Naivasha, British East Africa—Col. Roosevelt, whose party is hunting on the South Shore of Lake Naivasha from the ranch of Capt. Richard At- tenboroueh, has done no shooting since last Thursday, but instead has remained at the camp writing ‘a book. Exceeds the Dingley Bill. Washington, D. C—The book of comparisons issued by the bureau of statistics, comparing in detail the tariff bill as it passed the senate with the Dingley law, shows that the sen- ate bill is about five and seven-teaths per cent higher than the Dingley act Nite Reet: Winks ated otie New York, July 21.—Women pbyst- cians from all parts of the United States met here to discuss, plans for assisting in a national movement, launched recently by the Americau Medical association for the education of the public in the’ prevention ‘of dis- ease. Mayor Busse Has Recovered. Chicago, Illinois—Mayor Busse, who recetftly was operated on for appendi- citis, has been discharged from the hospital. 10 PEOPLE WASHED INTO BOILING WATER SEA WALL AT GALVESTON SAVES THE CITY. Fortified City Passes Safely Through Fury of Tropical Storm. Unprotected Part of Is- land, Overflows. eo number of iives lost as far as is known in the hurricahe which swept over the Gulf of Mexico and ruck Galveston, While the city of Galveston was held safe against the fury of the storm by the government's two million dollar sea wall, far out in the gulf on Tarpon Island, seven. miles from the city, where the storm whipped over the jetty into the bay, ten persons were washed from the rocky promonitories into the gulf. Boats are searching the bay for the bodies, but so far havé been unsue- ! cessful. Man’s strength and skill were pitted against the fury of the elements and man won, when the city of Galveston, ‘safely entrenched behind her sevén- ‘teen foot sea wall, built since the tidal "wave and hurricane which destroyed @ great part of the city on September 8, 1900, withstood an attack by wind and wave equal in force to that of nearly nine years ago. In Galveston and vicinity not @ sin- gle life is believed to have been sac- rificed, but the material loss is thought to be quite extensive. Communication with outside points “was resumed at 9 o'clock last night. “The city, its great business inter- ests and its people have safely passed through a most severe hurricane; the sea wall proved a complete ‘success; the city’s great wharves and shipping interests suffered no damage, and not a life was lost,” is the concluding staterhent of a proclamation issued by Mayor Lewis Fisher and a committee of business men, _ From other cities in the affected area come tales of narrow escapes and much destruction of property. The only anxiety expressed now ‘is for the smaller towns, villages and summer resorts with which the gulf coast 1s so thickly settled. The entire gulf coast is very low and offers absolutely no pfotection from the storm of waves. Galveston Prepared. Sweeping westward, the tropical storm, which had been central over the gulf for twenty-four hours or more, struck Galveston shortly after eleven o'clock. The wind attained a velocity of sixty-eight miles an hour and shift- ed to the northeast, heaving the wa- ters of Galveston bay up against the fsland and flooding that section which has not been raised. A hurricane for East Texas was forecasted at the district weather bu- reau at New Orleans in the morning and warnings sent out. When the wind and rain in all intensity arrived several hours later, they found Gal- veston prepared. The inhabitants of the few scattered houses in the island had already sought safety and the vessels which had cleared and pre- pared to sail were riding at anchor in the bay. So short was the duration of the storm here that the Mallory Ine steamer, which was booked to sail for New York shortly after the noon hour, left on schedule time. Cable Wires Part. A heavy dredge torn from her moor- ings, had been blown against the sin- gle bridge which connects Galveston island with the mainland, however, and the telegraph cables had been parted. As a result all manner of ru- mors were soon rife throughout the country. It is impossible at present to place anything like an accurate estimate on ‘the damage which was done.. Few ‘buildings were blown down, but it is believed that many warehouses were flooded and that goods on the bottom floors of these buildings were ruined. Consequently it will require several days to ascertain what was damaged and to what extent. The storm cov- ered a wide area along the gulf coast, some glight damage being reported as far south as Matagorde bay, and as far east as the parish of Cameron in Louisiana. One fishing pler seven miles from the city was demolished by the wind and waves. Thirty or forty people who were enjoying the day there were rescued by a pilot and brought to Galveston. Oklahoma City.—Texas fever is raging among cattle in eastern Okla- homa. In the vicinity of, Muskogee thirty-five dairy cows have died. Towns Under Water. Beaumont, Tex.—There are 400 to 500 people, mostly women and child- ren, of this city living in hotels, tents and cottages along the Gulf’ shore be- yond High island and on to Bolivar. No word has been received from them since the storm. Tugboats brought 200 people, prac- tically the entire population of Se- bine and Sabine Pass, to Port Arthur. Both places are under water. There was no loss of life or property. Tood 4 Products | Libby’s Cooked Corned Beef ‘There's a marked distinc- tion «between Mbhy’s @eocked Oorned Beef and cven:the best that’s sold in bulk. Evenly and mildly cured and scientifically cooked in Libhy’s Groat White KKtohen, 21 the natural flavor of the fresh, prime beef is retained. It is pure wholesome, delicious and ready to serve at meal time, Saves work and worry in summer. Other Libby “Healthful”* | Meal-Time-Hints, all ready to serve, are: | Peerless Dried Boof Vienna Sausage Veal Loaf Evaporated Mitk Baked Beans Ohow Ohow | Mixed Pioktes “Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand”. Write for free Booklet, — “How to make Good Things to Eat”. as Insist on in ——en| Libtiy’s at ~ Dey your gtocers. a as 8] ie a i) LUbby, monet? i ees l & Libby +} S 9 | Chioage LS =——_— “s J THAT FROZE HIM. x SAN TaN ES ANE. DR a “I suppose,” he sald, ingratiatingly, “you often get spoken to by men?™ “Yes,” she replied, “and by monke eys. But tonight there don’t seem te be any men about!” Laymen Combat White Plague. According to recent figures pub lished by the National Associatiom for the Study and Prevention of Tu berculosis, nearly 50 per cent. of those enlisted in the active campaign against consumption are laymen, andi the percentage of laymen has tripled fn the last four years. wie: Flowers have an expression of coum tenance as much as men or animale; some seem to smile; some have a saf expression; some are pensive ané diffident; others, again, are plain, hom est and upright like the broad-faceé Ward Beecher. Nothing causes a young widow te sit up and take notice quicker tham the discovery that another widow is on {te trail of the man she has spotted for No. 2. Keenest A Delights | of Appetite and Anticipation are realized in the first taste of de licious Toasties and Cream ‘The golden-brown bits are sub- stantial enough to take up the cream; crisp enough to make crushing them in the mouth am exquisite pleasure; and the fla- vor—that ‘belongs only t Posti Toaaties— a “The Tdste Lingers’”’ This. dainty, tempting food is» made of peatiy white corn, cooked, rolled and toasted into ‘‘Toasties.’* . Popular pkg; 10c; Large Family size sge Mase by POSTYM CEREAL CO., LTD., | Battle Creek, Mich. The leading educational institute for Negroes in the west MIDDLE SCHOOL FOR YOUNG PERSONS A faculty of eighteen thoroughly equipped teachers from the leading Institutes in America. MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS Steam Heated and Electric Lighted DEPARTMENTS Biological, Classical, Normal, Snb-Normal, State Industrial, embracing courses in Nature, Carpentry, Mechanical Drawing, Prick-binding, Tailorlng, Business Courses, Eng, Millinery, Cooking, Laundering and Thorough discipline, Christian influence, careful supervision Fine Military Band and Orchestra for full particulars write to Prof. Shelton French ACTING PRESIDENT Of Western University QUINDARO, KS Evidence Phone No. 15 Office Phone Excellence Counts.... THEN USE U·KNEAD·IT'T FLOUR belts in every respect,—color, flavor, and barrel. MADE BY Watson Mill Co. WICHITA, KANSAS MESSERVE'S FAMOUS AND CELEBRATED ICE CREAM WHOLESALE AND RETAIL For Parties, Picnics, Socials and Church Orders delivered to any part of the city BON-TON & KANDY AKERY E. B. MESSERVE, Prop, Main St. AM ABSTRACT Theological, Classical, Normal, Snb-Normal, Musical, State Industrial, embracing courses in Architecture, Carpentry, Mechanical Drawing, Printing, Book-binding, Tailorling, Business Courses, Dress making, Millinery, Cooking, Laundering and Farming. Thorough discipline, Christian influence careful supervision Fine Military Band and Orchestra For full particulars write to Prof. Shelton French, ACTING PRESIDENT 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 BAKERY & KITCHEN E. B. MESSERVE, Prop. 146 N. Main St. Phone 152 NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE COURT HOUSE Bonded Abstractors Johnston's House CHITA 507 N. Main St. K Everything first-class. Electric Lighti, Electr Transient Trade — Restaurant in Connect R. Johnston, Proprietor Johnston's House A 507 N. Main St. K thing first-class. Electric Lighti, Electric Transient Trade — Restaurant in Connect R. Johnston, Proprietor CHITA 507 N. Main St. KANSAS Everything first-class. Electric Lighti, Electric Fans Transient Trade - Restaurant in Connection R. Johnston, Proprietor L. S. Naftsger, President, W. R. Tucker, Vice-President, J. M. Moore, Vice President, V. H. Brown, Vice President, V. H. Branch, Cashier. Fourth National Bank WICHITA, KANSAS United States Depository Capital $200,000 Surplus $125,000 National Bank TA, KANSAS 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, Henry Lassen, V. H. Branch. A General Banking Business Transacted --- n's Hotel Main St. KANSAS Electric Lighti, Electric Fans restaurant in Connection Proprietor Its the man who "sticks-to-it" who wins. W. S. MENRION DRUGGIST 801 A. Main St. Wichita, Kans. "I see that a New York professor reforms bad boys with piano music." "I hope he begins in mind that some pianos need reforming quite as much as bad boys do." Straighten Your Hair DEAR SIBS: I have used only one bottle of your pomade and now I would not be without it for it makes my hair soft and straight and easy to comb and wash. MISS W. F. W. Falkman, Sia. I-Harriman, Teen. Formerly known as Ozonized Ox Marrow. Fifty years of success has proved its merit. Its use makes the hair straight, glossy, soft and pliable, so you can comb it and arrange it in any style you wish consistent with its length. It helps to keep the hair out of the scalp, stops the hair from falling out or breaking off and gives it new life and vigor. Absolutely harmless—used with splendid re spend results even on the youngest children. Dedicatedly perform, its use is a pleasure, as these children do. ladies of refinement ever where declare. Ford's Hair Pomade has imitators. Don't buy it until you see it. If you want the best results, buy the best Pomade—it will pay you. Look for this name on every package. If your druggist sends you with the genuine send us, express or postal money order and we will send you a bottle of bottle and give us your druggist's name and address forward to boutique poep to any point in U. S. A. by request. The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co, 133 East Konzle St. Oklahoma, Ill. FORDS HAIR POMADE is made only in Chil- egy by the above firm. Agents Wanted Everywhere. For Everything in Building Material SEE SEE BOTH PHONES 496 J.H. TURNER J33 TO J47 WEST DOUGLAS 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 Use Herman's Made from the best material. Lasts longer, wears better and more durable than any other Cement Stone on the market. Prices Reasonable. PRICES 11c each laid in wall 8c each delivered 7c each in the yard Rock Face 8c each Plain Face 7c each Manufactured By W. L. HERMAN, 527 Ohio Ave., New Phone 1127 W. L. Herman CONTRACTING : PLASTERER 856 Eagle St., Wichita, Kan. 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 684 North Water St. Use Murray's Reliable Nerve Ba Murray's Reliable Antiseptic S Murray's Reliable Extracts Murray's Reliable Perfumes Murray's Reliable Pure Spice They are pleasing hundreds of people and will please you. J. H. MURRAY, Sole Prop 988 South Hydraulic Avenu New Phone 985 Real Estate 5 room house and 50 x 500 ft on Sher- wero $600 00 2 vacant lots on Sherwood $300.00 6 vacant lots on Ohio Ave $1500.00 8 lots on Burns Ave $680.00 8 room two story house 2 lots $1500.00 5 vacant lots ($100.00) each $500.00 9 lots ou Wabash ($125.00) each $112500 The Wichita Land and Investment Co. James J. Olden Pres. 612½ N. Main St. Wichita Kans. Send your news in earlier The editor of the Searchlight wishes to thank the worshipful Master and members of Arkans Valley lodge No. 21 A. F. A. M for their much appreciated financial remembrance of him during his present illness. The Wichita delegation to the Tabor grand session in Topeka last week composed of Sirs Rev. S. S. Washington, W. N. Miller, W. Frazier and J. C. Coffee Dtrs Joana Jones, Celia Tillman, Beattrace Davis, Ella Kyles and W. Martin have returned. They each speak in loud words of praise of the splendid session. All enjoyed themselves. Hard Life of Arctic Sealer. The Arctic sealer endures a hard life. Sealing does not consist only of hurried scrambling over ice, and fierce breathless battling afterwards. There are many hardships to endure. The most common type of Arctic weather is a dense, lung clogging fog, with a rasp of cold that is enough to freeze a glowing furnace. This fog may be diversified with cruel blizzards of petting snow, borne on the wings of the constant gales. Once the snow passes come sleet and rain—rain that is as cold as ice. Miffery prevails greatly among the crews of Arctic sealers, for the dampness and the cold soon sap the stoutest constitutions. PATENT TO NEGRO DENTIST Washington. - Patents have been issued to J. H. Smith of Little Rock on a machine for stonin fruit, J. H. Smith, to whom the patent for a machine for stoning peaches was issued, is a Neg oodentist residing in Little Rock. The article on which he secures a patent is a machine to extract the stones from clingstone peaches, The contrivance weighs about ten pounds. Smith says that it will "stone" the peachel as fast as they are placed in it. He ex short time so that it will be automatic. Peculiar African Race. There is a peculiar sort of people living in northwest Rhodesia. These natives are small of stature, with large horns on their heads. The horn springs from the scalp, consists of the native's hair mixed with fat and filth, and is sometimes as much as 18 inches long. For the most part these Kaffirs live on the great open flats to be found on both sides of the Kafue river. They build their huts on the great an heaps which appear like hills scattered over the flats. When the Kafue is in flood and the flats are changed into great lakes these people are safe in their huts on the ant heaps. Their cattle also take refuge on the ant heaps on which corn and measles are likewise grown. Mid Summer Rally of the M. E. church will take place Sunday July 25th, at there of worship on the corner of Murdock and Santafe. We purpose to raise $400.00 to purchase a sight on which to erect a church. The pastors of the city and there congregation are invited. In the afternoon at 2:30 p. m. short addresses will be made by each the pastors and visiting layman. G. T. Wooten Pastor. A HAPPY WEDDING The large circle of friends and acquaintance of Mr. Buc Lee and Miss Maria Whitted will be very pleased and agreeably surprised to learn of their quiet wedding Sunday night July 18th, at the residence of Rev. W. H. Tillman 8)2 E. 18th St. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Tillman in the presence of a friends. Bud Lee is one of Wichita's exception ally, progressive young men and is in the employ of the Howard Milling Co. Miss Whitted is recognized as one of our most foremost young ladies. After the wedding the happy couple went to the home which Mr. Bud Lee had already bought paid for and furnished for his bride at 1801 so. Mosley. All wish them future success. LAWRENCE KANS Mrs. C. C. James served at her cozy home a wholesome Sunday dinner, July 18th in honor of Mrs Addie Adams of Wichita. Those present were Mesdamed Addie Adams, J. Bryant, Kate Crouch George Hunter, and Wife Misses Dora Anderson, Serdinand A. Scotting D. Saunders of Oklaho. The table was ladyned with a choice eatable that the market could afford, all had an enjopable time. Anthony Hockett, Henry Williams Wesley Rowles, Ford Neely and J. Aunden were given the 1st degree in Masonary Tuesday at night by Arkansas Vally lodge No.21. When Tower Loomed. It was while Charlemagne Towel was ambassador to Russia that a New York city newspaper "spread itself upon a fete held at St. Petersburg. A green copy-reader produced this result: "As pleasing to the eye as was all this decoration there was additional pleasure in the sight, as one stood at the head of the Prospekt Newska, of Charlemagne Tower, brilliantly illuminated, looming grand and imposing against the winter sky."—Success Magazine. BOY ROSE TO THE SITUATION. Quick Wit and Intelligence Displayed by Youngster. His parents are convinced that Clarence will be a great man; the only doubt is whether it will be as a statesman or scientist. He is only four years old, and their confidence is based largely on one incident. The boy never told of it, and it would have been lost to history if a neighbor had not been a chance witness. Clarence lives in the suburbs, and has a cat and kittens. One day he went into the yard next door with one of the little ones to play. There was a big pile of brushwood here, and he shoved his pet into a hole in this. She crawled so far back that all his efforts to get her out were gain. Had he been a man he would have pulled the pile of brush apart, but lacking strength for this he resorted to cunning. Running home, he soon returned with the mother cat. He shoved her into the hole after her offspring, and she soon came out with the little one between her teeth. Clarence bore them both home in triumph. NOTES OF SESSION Quite a number of delegates and visitors were sick during the session. Dtr. Ella McKinns, V. G. P. of Leavenworth was able to attend the session but one day on account of having been sick. Sir U. A. Graham aschairman of the arrangement committee did valiant service in making the Session pleasant and agreeable to all. Sir. Graham is a hustling young man and has a great future before him. Sir Lee Holiday of Parsons made a reputation for himself as Grand Outer Sentinel. W. N. Miller, editor of Searchlight was sick during the entire session in Topeka with a touch of typhoid fever. Continued from page one maintains the good, fair, impartial and honest community state nation or race; and it is likewise the press that moulds, makes a maintains the bad unfair, partial and dishonest community, state nation or race. In the publi: press would dare take a stand and maintain it for fair & square dealing between man and man race and race it would not be long until all over wholesome relation between all would exist. The white press and the Negro press should take the conservative, up-right position on public matters and questions and cease to longer permit their powerful influences to be used in tuther enearging the already dangerous gulf that is now so detrimental to all classes and rgces today. The horryfying racial conflicts, the disastrous labor disturbance the unsettled public under-current which in the past and at the present are so unpleasant in our national, state and local affairs can be easily traced to the fact that our public press are too radical and do not give these important matters that conservative consideration which their great public importance should demand. Until that time shall have come when the public press shall take a more conservative view of public xucstions whether racial, financial, labor or otherwis we cannot hope to see that serenity of public opinion exist which would be so very conduce to public peace and tranquility. Rats: A captain on an ocean liner tells the following story: Coming from the old country was a very nervous old lady who complained that she was sure there was a rat in her stateroom. "Keep it there, madam," said the captain. "But do you like rats?" asked she. "I've got a nest in my cabin," retorted the brusque seaman, "and I never disturb them. When they leave the ship I do." "Why, you must be superstitious," urged the dame. "No, ma'am," wound up the captain. "I'm not, but the rats are." A Monster Loaf. Bakers in Germany are fond of making odd experiments, the following being reported from Duisburg, in Westphalia. At a children's party recently held in that town there was exhibited, and afterwards cut up and distributed among the youngsters present, a bread twist which for size at least has surely rarely been equaled. Weighing no less than 180 pounds, it had a breadth of six feet and a length of ten feet, and was thus found sufficient to supply a satisfactory afternoon collation to as many as 500 boys and girls. The Midnight Crime By Dr. George F. Butler and Herbert Ilsley Dr. Furnivall's Psychometric-Deductive Solution of a Perplexing Case "Do you know 'em well? How long have they been with you?" "They have been here two weeks only, and I scarcely know them at all. They said that they had been married a year, and that their name was Truo. They seemed to have plenty of money, and were very pleasant, the handsomest couple I ever saw in my life, and were wholly wrapped up in each other." "What was the man's business?" "I don't think he had any business. I think he had plenty of money. He always paid his bills promptly, anyway." "Yes—for two weeks. Good judgment!" grunted the sergeant, cynically, "Well," he continued, "who do they know—who calls on them?" "I can't say whom they know, but in all the time they have been here only one person has come to see them, and that was a woman." At this moment the wounded man groaned, and the physician who was caring for his hurt put his ear to the lips which were moaning some scarcely intelligible words. "Coward! Oh, coward, coward!" the doctor thought he said. "Can he talk?" the sergeant asked, eagerly, coming nearer. "Coward! coward! coward!" the patient groaned again, this time in a stronger tone, the syllables sounding distinctly. "Ask him who shot him?" whispered the officer to the medical examiner. The groaning man suddenly opened his eyes and looked at the sergeant. "What are you here for—what has happened?" he asked, faintly. "Here, take this," said the doctor, putting a restorative to the pale lips. He gulped it painfully, the doctor holding his head. Then he closed his eyes wearily. "Can't you tell who shot you?" the sergeant insisted, speaking in a low voice, but with a trace of command in it. The eyes flew open again, the man attempted to raise his body and look toward the bed, but the effort was too much for him. He sank back, stammering one word: "Sh—sh—she?" The doctor laid a soothing hand on his. The patient looked pitifully into his eyes and understood. "Oh, God! Coward! coward! coward!" he cried, with bitter energy. "But who was he?" said the sergeant, advancing still nearer and looking down into the handsome eyes. "But how did he get in here? Mrs. Philpots saw him slide out—he was in here all right. He didn't fire through the winder, or this door. Did you see him at all? Tell us how it was." With great difficulty, and making many pauses for breath, he succeeded in informing them that in the night he had been suddenly awakened by a noise in his room, and saw a man at the pocketes of his trousers which hung on hooks near the foot of the bed. The weather being extremely hot the windows were open, and the shades, raised to their full height, allowed enough moonlight to enter to enable him to see that the figure was that of a man, and that was about all. His face was undiscernible. He could not tell how the intruder was dressed. Immediately he made a movement to spring from bed and grapple with the thief, but his wife, who must have been awake, threw herself upon him, whispering: "Let him take what there is and go. Don't risk your life, dear. He has a pistol!" At that instant the burglar fired, the wife receiving the shot. The husband sprang to the floor and rushed upon the man, who then fired again and ran from the room, pursued by the victim only as far as the sofa, where he collapsed. He supposed the villain had gained entrance through the window. It was some common thief, who wanted money and, being detected, had shot them in order to escape. "You called him a coward because he shot a woman, then, and not because you knew him?" the sergeant asked. "Certainly. A thousand times yes. How could I be supposed to know a common thief?" Two of the policemen, who had been searching the premises for evidence, approached the sergeant with a man attired only in a shirt and trousers. He was one of the several lodgers who had crept down from their rooms to the parlor to see what the trouble was, but had been excluded by the officers. "This feller says he seen a woman come up the steps," said one of the policemen. "A woman!" the sergeant exclaimed. The official was a big, bluff, choleric appealing personage, and he regarded the new witness with belligerent eyes. But the newcomer similed amiably. "My room is two flights up, over this one," he said. "The night was so hot that I put my head out of the window for air, and I saw a woman come down the street and up our front steps. I listened, but didn't hear her come in. Pretty soon I heard a shot, and after that an awful screaming." "But that must have been Mrs. Philpots that screamed-long afterwards. And how could you tell it was a wom- Special Master E. V. McKeever filed report to this effect in the supreme RS. PHIL POTS started up and leaned forward in bed suddenly, every sense strained to a painful degree of acuteness. Some kind of an ominous sound, apparently coming M from a point near by, in her own house, had startled her out of her midnight slumber. Occupying the back parlor, the door of which she had left open invitingly for such stray breaths of air as might be enticed that way on the stifling hot night, she had an unobstructed view of the hall as, with wide eyes and pounding pulses, she remained rigged properly upon her elbow. The sound came again—it was a pistolshot! There could be no doubt this time. And almost on the instant she saw a shadowy form spring out from the front parlor, wrench open the hall door, and slamming it violently, disappear in the direction of the street. For a long moment she could not credit her senses. That such actions as this sight and sound implied could occur in her own select boarding house was unbelievable, and effort on her part was required to adjust her bewildered mind to the situation. But she was a woman of executive ability in her way, and with comparatively little loss of time she sprang from her bed, threw on a wrapper and ran along the hall. The door of the front parlor was open, and, the shades being raised, she could discern through the flitful moonlight a shape dimly outlined on the sofa. "Who is there?" she asked in a strained whisper. No answer came, and she repeated the question. Still the form neither moved nor spoke. Groping until she found a match she hastily lighted the gas, and then she recognized the figure as that of Mr. Truo, who, with his wife, occupied the room. Dressed in pajamas solely, as if he had been preparing for bed, or had recently risen from it, he was huddled against the arm and back of the sofa, head rolling, legs relaxed, and from some hidden part of his body a thin stream of blood dripped. No pistol appeared in sight, but little wreaths of blue smoke hung over the table, and there was a pungent tang in the dead air, speaking witnesses to the nature of what had occurred. Shivering as if with the ague, yet managing to repress the exclamation of horror that rose to her lips, she looked with dreading eyes in the direction of the bed. There lay the wife almost hidden by the clothes, which were piled upon her in twisted heaps, as if the husband jumping suddenly up had thrown this share of the covering hastily to that side. Her face was white, the eyes staring; and Mrs. Philpots, no longer able, try as she might for her house's sake, to restrain her emotion, uttered scream on scream and fled to her room, shutting and locking the door after her. But the sight of the telephone which was installed there directed her energies in some degree, and after a moment of effort at collecting her faculties she hastened to it and summoned the police. When the officers and the assistant medical examiner arrived they found that the man, though wounded seriously in the region of the heart, was alive, but the woman's eyes were already fixed in the stare of death. She had been shot through the heart. Both bullets, the one which had found the wife, and that which had entered the husband, had been aimed to kill, the one unerringly, the other a finger's breadth to the right, missing as by a miracle a vital spot. "Who done it—how did it happen?" the sergeant of police asked, excitedly, of Mrs. Philipots, who, reassured in a degree by the presence of living human beings, had regained sufficient courage to come back to the room of tragedy, after admitting the officers. "I heard two shots and saw a man run out of here into the street," she answered in an awed voice, "and that is all I know—" "Did you ever see the man before—what did he look like?" "It was dark, and I was lying in bed. I could not see distinctly at all. But I should say he was a small man. He had on a derby hat, of that I am sure. He had a revolver in his hand, too. In his excitement he seemed not to think of throwing it down, but worked away at the door lock still holding on to it, and it bothered him. I did not think of this at the moment, but as I look back, that is the way it seems to me." "You oughther told us this when you 'phoned us,' the sergeant grumbled." "Then we could be on the lookout for him on the way here. He's had time enough to scoot into the next county now." "I was frightened. I scarcely knew what I was doing." The sergeant hastened to tho telephone and warned his station of the escape of the assassin. Then he returned to Mrs. Philpots. "Who are these people?" he asked. "I don't know," he answered. World's Most Curious Road Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use "LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. $1.00, retail. an?" demanded the sergeant, sharply. "It was dark, wasn't it? The moon was behind the clouds. And you was way up there from the steps—come here and let me look at you!" he added, suddenly. He took the man by the arm and turned him around so that the light from the dimly burning gas jet fell squarely upon his face. "H'm! You're in a nice condition to give evidence, you are!" the sergeant grunted. "You'd call a hoss a woman—or an alligator!" In fact it was evident that the witness' eyes were in a state popularly supposed to be more favorable to double sight than to nice distinction of facts; and, it transpiring presently that he was a young college alumnus who had only shortly before returned to his room from his class banquet, the sergeant was about to order him back to bed when Mrs. Philpots spoke up. "I didn't think of it before," she said, hastily, "but it might have been a woman I saw, after all. The light was indistinct, as I said, and of course I never dreamed of its being a woman." The sergeant scowled. This young man was probably a good boarder, whom she liked, and she would not stand tamely by and see him discredited. That was all the stock he took in her evidence. He turned to the wounded man. "You saw that it was a man, you said. Are you sure of that?" "I thought of course that it was a man—I would not take my oath on it," he answered. "But," the sergeant growled at Mrs. Philpots: "You said this person that you saw had on a derby hat. Does women wear derby hats?" "Yes, they do," she said, defiantly. "They wear all kinds of hats that they can get to wear—that are becoming." She eyed the officer, and he realized that he had made the mistake of rousing her hostility by his manner. She would say nothing now, he felt sure. "A nice bunch of witnesses we've got!" he whispered, disgusted to the doctor. "One's drunk and one's mad and one's hurt so he can't think. And none of 'em knows a woman from a man when they see 'em!" Then he addressed Mrs. Philpots, his tone somewhat softened from its former gruffness: "You say a woman called on these people once—did you know her?" The boarding mistress hesitated, glancing at the wounded man who, the sergeant thought, flashed a warning to her with his eye. He waited grimly for the answer to his question. "No, I didn't know her," Mrs. Philpots said, finally. He regarded her cynically a moment, and then asked the man on the sofa: "Who was she? You must know." "Certainly," he answered at once. "She was my wife's laundress who came—" "That is enough!" exclaimed Mrs. Philpots, sharply, to him. "I wasn't sure what I'd better say until I heard your explanation, and if you are going to lie about it—!" She turned to the sergeant with restrained indignation in her face. "That woman was no laundress," she said. "She was a lady, or looked like one, and in all but one thing acted like one. I saw him with China May Rightly Lay Claim to Line That Is Unique Among Earth's Railroads. The most curious railroad in the world is in China, and it was built and financed solely by Chinese. It is also operated by Chinamen. It is known as the Sunning railway, and its terminus is at Kung Yik port, 120 miles southwest of Canton. At present there are 32 miles in operation, and there are four miles under construction, and four miles more proposed, making a total of 40 miles when the whole enterprise is finished. The idea of building this railroad originated with Mr. Chin Gee Hie, who was then in the United States, and some subscriptions for stock were secured from other Chinese residents of the United States. The majority of the stock, however, is now owned by residents of the Province of Kwang tung. When the road was surveyed the villagers were very much opposed to it and refused to sell land to the company to be used for railroad purposes, but after meeting all these obstructions for a considerable time with great patience the projectors finally obtained their consent to and co-operation in its construction. The line is being constructed entirely by non-scientific Chinese. No person of any nationality other than Chinese has ever been connected in any way with the building of this road. It is being built under the direction of Mr. Chin, president of the railway, who returned to China from the United States after 40 years' experience there, some of which was as a railroad foreman and contractor. He has no engineering or railroad knowledge other than the experience gained while in the United States. He has the help of about 100 Chinese fore- her, and he—he—well, she was crying in his arms. And he knows I saw them together. He gave her money, too—" "Will you keep quiet!" almost screamed the wounded man. It was the last effort of which he was capable, and immediately he relapsed into unconsciousness. "We can't have any more of this," said the doctor, sternly, to the sergeant, as he hastened to the patient's aid. "We must rush this poor fellow to the hospital and try for the bullet he has in him. You should not have attempted to conduct an examination here, with him in this state and that body on the bed. It was indecent." "You put your side of the job through and I'll manage to worry mine along without any help," the sergeant growled, belligerently. "There's a phony streak somewhere in this mixed up murder and burgle, and it's my duty to dig it out. And," he added, slowly and significantly, eying Mrs. Philpcts, "I'm a-goin' to dig it out!" "Dr. Furnivall," said Mrs. Philpcts, "I requested you to call here in order that I might ask you to find the real criminal in this awful case, and thus protect me from the police, who are doing all in their power to make my house notorious and mix me up in this dreadful crime. That sergeant has accrued a grudge against me for some reason or other. See the crowd at my door—owing to the publicity he has given the affair. And this officer right here in my own hall! It is scandalous." "The sergeant is merely doing his duty as he sees it," the doctor responded. "Your contradictory evidence justifies him in his action." "But how could I be sure whether or not it was a woman, in the uncertain light? I said in the first place that it was a man because the idea of a woman doing such a thing never entered my head. Even now it seems preposterous. I took it for granted that it was a man. But the instant one of my boarders testified that he saw a woman come up the steps the thought of that woman who called on Mr. Truro occurred to me, and I hesitated. Their interview was so strange! I became less sure that the person I saw was a man. Indeed, if I could only have had time to choose my words in the first place I should have said 'person,' not 'man,' and not 'woman.' That would have been the real truth." "This woman, you say, visited Mr. Truro. Was Mrs. Truro away?" "She was in the kitchen with me, doing some ironing. She knew the lady was there, but seemed to wish not to meet her. I think that, knowing she was coming, she made an excuse to go down stairs in order to avoid her" "She said nothing about her?" "No; I judge from her actions. She was very sweet and gentle, and I am sure would never say anything against a person, no matter how much she should dislike him. But she would not return to her room until this woman had gone away. I could not help suspecting that she was some girl Mr. Truro had liked before he met his wife—something of that sort. And she was jealous. I thought how foolish she must be to feel that way, he so plainly loved her with all his heart. But as I came up the back stairs I saw in the mirror, their door being open, that this woman was in his arms weeping, as they stood near the center of the room, and he was soothing her. I was astounded. A roll of money lay on the table, where it did not lie a few minutes later when she had gone and Mr. Truro had come to the head of the stairs to call his wife, so I could only suppose she took it when she went. He was giving her money! Mr. and Mrs. Truro loved each other to the point of worship if men and laborers who came back from the Untied States, all with more or less experience in railroad construction. The construction work commenced in the middle of 1906 and part of the line was opened to traffic at the beginning of 1908. The whole road is provided with telephone lines for dispatching. Trains run three trips a day from each end, taking about two hours for the trip. The average daily receipts are from $225 to $250 on passenger traffic and from $40 to $50 on freight, with a daily expense of about $150. The capital of the railway is $1,350,000, divided into shares of $2.50 each, all of which are owned by Chinese, and pay good dividends to the stockholders. There are two loops, one at Kung Yik and one at Sunning. There are no turnstiles at present, but these will be put in at Kung Yik, Sunning, Chung Lau, and Au Shan. The head office is in Sunning city, 17 miles from Kung Yik port, where a printing office is established for printing the timetables, tariffs and advertising matter for the road. At Kung Yik there are an office, a storeroom, a machine shop, a blacksmith shop, a foundry. There are no overhead bridges or tunnels on the line. The road is sand, gravel and earth ballasted, standard gauge and single track, with a side track at every station. Of Two Evils Choose the Lesser. "Why do you / let your daughter play the piano all day while you and your wife do the work?" "Because." answered Farmer Corntosel, "it's better than havin' her play it in the evenn' when me an' ma is in the sittin' room trin' to rest." ever a couple did. It did not seem possible that any human being could be such a hypocrite as he appeared to be, and I concluded that she must be some poor relative in trouble, whom he was helping in some great sorrow against his wife's wishes. The money indicated that, and I could explain what I saw in no other way, so I said nothing, resolving to give him the benefit of the doubt. For he certainly seemed the nicest kind of a man I ever had here and I wanted to believe in him. Besides, he saw me in the mirror as I looked at them there in each other's arms, and as he made no explanation, I thought he felt that he had done no wrong, nothing that needed excuse. But now—I don't know what to think. If he really loved this other woman, and not his wife, and if it was a woman who came up those steps at dead of night—" She stopped, shuddering. Dr. Furni- vall rose briskly. "To begin at the right end of the case," he said, "I would first see the man, or the woman. But as he is at the hospital and I am here, while the woman remains unknown, I will look at the body and then examine the room." Shown by the boarding mistress to the scene of the tragedy he studied the face of the victim lying in the bed. The undertaker had not yet arrived, it being still early in the morning, and the body remained as the medical examiner had left it a few hours before. "A face that would be beautiful," he said to himself, "but for the predominance of sentiment over thought in it. That changes the adjective to 'pretty.' The sweetness which Mrs. Philpots saw is really mildness, gentleness, of the kind due to lack of force. The girl was weak. She was also good, and high-minded in her way; sensitive in the extreme. She lived in the air, in the clouds, not on the solid, practical earth. She was so young—not over 18—that the signs of the tragedy sure sooner or later to overtake such a character exist in her features only faintly, in hints, indirectness, possibilities, not as prophecies. That appearance would have developed later. But it is there—high tragedy! That a mere thief should act as the purveyor of fate to her is impossible. She was above the reach of a person on that plane. It was sentiment that killed her, not brute criminality. Therefore the indications so far point to that other woman, either as principal or accessory. There was no thief in the case. Yet Truro says that the murderer was at his trousers pockets. Did he recognize this person, and was that statement false, made to shield the guilty? It must be so. He knows who the criminal is. Otherwise he would not have tried to misdirect suspicion. This being granted, would he have applied the word 'coward' to a woman, as he certainly applied it to the criminal? In the excitement and bitterness of the moment he might have shot the epithet once, even at a woman, but he would not have reiterated it over and over, as he did, to anybody but a man. The murderer was therefore a man, and Truro knows what man. The next step is obvious." Having called up the city hospital on the telephone, however, he learned that, while the wounded husband was doing well, his case was precarious, and as he was sleeping now it would not do to disturb him. Therefore Dr. Furnival returned to the front parlor and began an examination of it. In a few minutes he turned to Mrs. Philpots. "I suppose the police have searched the room," he said. "Have they taken away any exhibits?" "I think not—nothing that I know of." "But the furnishings here all belong to the room, just as you always let it. That is evident. The couple brought nothing into it—no bric-a-brac, no ornaments of any kind. You say they had plenty of money—did they give any reason why they did not follow the custom, by adding that kind of thing to the adornment of their apartment?" "Oh, yes, that is all right! They were to be here only temporarily, were going to housekeeping in a few weeks, and all their goods were packed and in storage." Dr. Furnivall threw open the door of the single closet. "Was their wardrobe packed and in storage also?" he asked. She saw with dismay that the dresses which she supposed were crowding the closet to repletion were missing. There was practically nothing on the hooks. "I am sure they always appeared finely dressed, both of them," she said, blankly. "And they brought two great trunks. Here they are." The doctor raised the lids. The receptacles were empty. Without a word, and followed by the anxious gaze of the boarding house mistress, he pulled out the drawers of the bureau. They contained only the fewest possible necessities of the toilet. "It could not be that the thief—" Mrs. Philpots paused and interrogated the doctor with wide eyes. "You saw him go out, and he had nothing but a revolver in his hand, you thought," he answered to her unspoken question. "Then they were getting ready to leave clandestinely! They had taken their things away a few at a time, so as not to attract notice! Oh, I couldn't have believed it of such people, such very nice people! And they owed only a week's rent, due to-morrow!" The doctor made no rejoinder. He was examining a photograph which had fallen from behind one of the drawers as he pulled it out. "Who is this?" he asked her, holding it up. "It is Mr. Truo," she said, interestedly. "I never saw a picture of him before. It is a perfect likeness. And isn't he handsome?" Her woman'd delight in masculine beauty would crop out even in these grim circumstances. The doctor stood a moment in thought. His face was serious. "Madam," he said, at length, "let me tell you a short story. Once two very young people, a boy and girl, scarcely done being children, sentimental and high-strung, fell in love see the possibility of this thought in their faces, as you can in the faces of so many young enthusiasts. It was not an uncommon thought. So one night they lay down on their bed and he, putting the revolver to her heart, kissed her passionately, no doubt, and fired. The muzzle of the weapon was so close to the mark that the robe she wore was burned. She died instantly, without pain, a heavenly smile on her, pretty, trustful, young face. Then, trembling with terror at what he had done, the boy resolutely turned the pistol against himself, but missed a vital spot. The shock of the bullet added to his terror, and half insane, he sprang up, clapped on his hat through force of habit, and dashed from the house. "For some reason, perhaps because he saw persons approaching, or suddenly realizing the condition of his dress, or more likely because the open air of the wide world gave him a feeling of desolation greater than ever, now that she was no longer by his side, he turned almost immediately and rushed back to the house where the body of his loved one lay. He had no key, but the night being very hot the window was raised, and easily reaching it from the steps he crawled into his room, mechanically and married each other under difficulties of some kind. Probably the chief difficulty consisted in the fact that the youthful bridegroom's family objected utterly and with finality to the match, and cast him off for consummating it, for it was easily to be seen that the girl was of a social sphere very different from his. There was one relative, perhaps a sister, who pitied him, and visited him once bringing money, which his pride would not allow him to accept while his adored wife remained unrecognized, and so the relative, after weeping out her pity and affection in his arms, went away taking the rejected offering with her. And they needed it very much. Proud with inherited pride, with no money, no profession, no trade, unable to fight the world with any chance of success, through his youthful ignorance and sensitiveness, yet thinking it absolutely necessary to keep up appearances, he finally, after a year of failure, disappointment and perhaps some downright want, having pawned all their valuables, came to the agreement with her that it would be infinitely better for them to die together than to attempt to struggle any longer in the cold world with no happier prospects than theirs. It would be beautiful to die, both of them at the same instant, and remain in peace and great love together thereafter through all eternity. You could closing and fastening the sash behind him, and collapsed on the sofa. One of the boarders had seen him come up the steps, and on account of the loose-flowing pajamas had mistaken him for a woman. The same boarder had also in the excitement he was laboring under, placed the sound of the shots he heard after, instead of before the entrance of the person he had observed. The hemorrhage from the boy-husband's wound, being mostly internal, left only a few blood drops here and there, which escaped the eyes of the police; but one investigator discovered them at once by aid of a magnifying lens, on the steps and on the window-fastening where—" Mrs. Philpots, whose eyes had been growing wide with horror as understanding crept in upon her, exclaimed in a faint voice at this point and sank upon a chair. "B-but," she stammered, "he said a thief—and he called him a coward—" "Having no settled course of action, horrified by the realization of the crime he had committed, his sensitiveness, even more than his lack of brute courage, filled him with an awful fear of detection, he said whatever promised to send investigation astray. It seemed easy to charge the deed to an unknown thief. In reality he had nothing worth stealing but a bundle of pawn tickets in a bureau drawer. Despising himself for his failure to follow his wife at all costs, it was at his own head, not another's that he flung the epithet of coward." The boarding mistress sat weeping softly into her handkerchief. The ache at her heart was so great that she could not speak. "I have told you this story," continued Dr. Furnivall, "in order that I might ask your advice. It is a true story in all the essentials, you may rely on it. Now suppose that a woman anne' suffered persecution from the police on account of that foolish, very human boy-husband's crime? Would you, knowing the truth, advise that woman to send me to force a confession from him on what might be his death bed, in order to stop that temporary persecution? Mrs. Philpots flung her handkerchief to the floor with a tragic gesture, her eyes flashed, she sprang erect and stamped her foot. "Dr. Furnivall, if you dare—" she began in a blaze of rage. He smiled. The telephone bell was ringing, and he went in to it. In a moment he returned to her. "He is dead," he said, simply. "He is dead," he said, simply. (Copyright, 1969, by W. G. Chapman.) (Copyright in Great Britain.) Jacob Hysler of New York Has Shaved Five Presidents. Has Strict Rules on Subject of Conversation for His Men—Generous and Knowledgable Who New York.—To have shaved five presidents of the United States is no mean distinction. This honor belongs to Jacob Hysler, who started in business at Ninth street and Broadway just 52 years ago. Thirty-five years ago he followed the course of business and moved his establishment to the Windsor hotel, where he remained 23 years, and for the past 12 years has been at one of the biggest uptown hotels. For many years he had the barber shop in the United States hotel at Saratoga. Mr. Hysler is the sort of 'man who turns a trade into a profession and it is doubtless due to this fact that he has enjoyed an exceptionally distinguished patronage. He is a tall, well-built, genial man who carries his 75 years lightly, and whose face is adorned with silvery white mutton-torn whiskers. Mr. Hysler's establishment requires the assistance of 17 barbers, who have 300 men a day. He also employs a large number of manicures. "One of my strictest rules," Mr. Hysler said, "is that no barber in my employ shall enter into conversation with a customer unless the man in the chair shows a disposition to talk. If the customer is talkative, the barber who is attending to his wants is privileged to take part in the gabfest." The five presidents shaved by Mr. Hysler were Gen. Grant, Chester A. A. B. Jacob Hysler. Arthur, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt and William H. Taft. He has also shaved Vice-Presidents Fairbanks and Sherman and William J. Bryan and Alton B. Parker. Among other notable men who have submitted to Mr. Hysler's razors are Moses H. Grinnell, who backed Elisha Kent Kane's search for the nqrth pole; Sir Henry M. Stanley, the African explorer; Gens. Franklin Smith and Banks, and the present commander of the department of the lakes, Gen. Frederick D. Grant, also Gens. A. A. Chaffee, H. C. Corbin and Nelson A. Miles. His older customers included Pierre Lorillard, Cornelius Fellows, W. C. Whitney, Jay Gould, William H. Vanderbilt, Cornelius Vanderbilt; and their sons, Harry Payne Whitney, George Edwin, Frank and Howard Gould; Alfred, Cornelius, Reginald, Frederick, George W., William K. and Harold Vanderbilt continue to patronize him. The late John T. McCall of the New York Life Insurance Company, Paul Morton of the Mutual, and Henry M. Hyde of the Equitable, have sat in his chairs. Other distinguished patrons have been Mark Twain, Frank Munsey, James Gordon Bennett, William Randolph Hearst, William and John D. Rockefeller, John D. Archbold, Andrew Carnegie, Charles M. Schwab, George Westinghouse, Thomas Edison, Joseph M. Choate, Whitlaw Reid, Gen. Steward L. Woodford, J. Pierpont Morgan, George Perkins, Prince Auerpersg, who married Miss Hazard; Frank H. Hitchcock, George B. Cortelyou, the ate Bishop Henry C. Potter, Bishop Greer, Bishop McFall of Trenton, and Bishop Duane of Albany, Ogden Mills, A. H. Kissam, M. C. D. Borden, President Diaz of Mexico, Govs. Odell, Higgins, Flower and Hill of New York, and Douglas of Massachusetts. Speaking if tips, Mr. Hysler remarked that the men in his employ are treated generously by customers. "The average tip is ten cents. Sometimes they get a quarter. My barbers receive two dollars a day wages, and each averages with his tips a fairly good income. "One of the most generous men who came to me was W. C. Whitney, who, besides giving a present to his barber every month, presented him every summer with $100 for his vacation. Another very liberal man was H. H. Rogers, who, every Christmas gave a generous gift to each of the barbers and manicures." Seeks Funds for Indian College. Rev. Dr. William Carey, a great-grandson of the first Baptist foreign missionary to India, himself a British missionary to India, is in this country consulting with the American Baptist Missionary union concerning a plan to raise in this country $1,000,000 of a $10,000,000 endowment fund for Serapone college, in the province of Bengal. NOT THE BUTCHER'S FAULT. Mrs. Customer-That lamb you sent me, Mr. Stintwaite, was the largest and toughest I ever saw. Mr. Stintwaite-Tut, tut. It's that boy been loitering again. I assure you, when that joint left the shop it was the sweetest little leg of lamb you could set eyes on, and I gave him strict orders to deliver it at once because you wanted it young. TOLD TO USE CUTICURA. After Specialist Failed to Cure Her Intense Itching Eczema—Had Been Tortured and Disfigured But Was Soon Cured of Dread Humor. "I contracted eczema and suffered intensely for about ten months. At times I thought I would scratch myself to pieces. My face and arms were covered with large red patches, so that I was ashamed to go out. I was advised to go to a doctor who was a specialist in skin diseases, but I received very little relief. I tried every known remedy, with the same results. I thought I would never get better until a friend of mine told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. So I tried them, and after four or five applications of Cuticura Ointment I was relieved of my unbearable itching. I used two sets of the Cuticura Remedies, and I am completely cured. Miss Barbara Kral, Highlandtown, Md., Jan. 9, '08." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, Boston. No Need of Interference. The two neighbors who were passing the little cottage heard sounds as of a terrific conflict inside and stopped to listen. Presently they heard a loud thump, as if somebody had fallen to the floor. "Grogan is beating his wife again!" they said. Bursting the door open they rushed into the house. "What's the trouble here?" they demanded. "Ther' ain't no trouble, gentlemen," calmly answered Mrs. Grogan, who had her husband down and was sitting on his head, "Gwan!" Exchanging Solemn Thoughts. "Ah," says the man with the parted whiskers, "when one stands alone in the night and contemplates the wonders of creation, how futile, how puny man seems! How vain, how puerile his hopes and longings, when he is surrounded by the eternal silence of the universe! Has this ever occurred to you?" "You bet!" answers the man with the big scarf pin. "He feels just as punk as he does when he misses the owl car and has to stand on the corner an hour for another one."—Chicago Post. Fully Realized. He frowned in perplexity on hearing she was out again. "I wonder, Jimmy, if your sister realizes," he said bitterly, "that I have treated her to three taxi rides and four open-air concerts this month?" "You bet she realizes it," said the small boy, 'grinning. "That's why she's keepin' her engagement to Joe Johnson a secret." Where Trouble Is Found. Wigwag—I never knew such a fellow as Bjones! He is always looking for trouble." Henpeckks—Then, why doesn't he get婚ckes?—Philadelphia Record. HOME TESTING To decide the all important question of coffee, whether or not it is really the hidden cause of physical ails and approaching fixed diseases, one should make a test of ten days by leaving off coffee entirely and using well-made Posium. If relief follows you may know to a certainty that coffee has been your vicious enemy. Of course you can take it back to your heart again, if you like to keep sick. A lady says: "I had suffered with stomach trouble, nervousness and terrible sick headaches ever since I was a little child, for my people were always great coffee drinkers and let us children have all we wanted. I got so I thought I could not live without coffee, but I would not acknowledge that it caused my suffering. "Then I read so many articles about Postum that I decided to give it a fair trial. I had not used it two weeks in place of coffee until I began to feel like a different person. The headache and nervousness disappeared and whereas I used to be sick two or three days out of a week while drinking coffee I am now well and strong and sturdy seven days a week, thanks to Postum. "I had been using Postum three months and had never been sick a day when I thought I would experiment and see if it really was coffee that caused the trouble, so I began to drink coffee again and inside of a week I had a sick spell. I was so ill I was soon convinced that coffee was the cause of all my misery and I went back to Postum with the result that I was soon well and strong again and determined to stick to Postum and leave coffee alone in the future." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason" Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are delicate, true, and full of human interest. WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. Too often the kidneys are the cause and the sufferer is not aware of it. Sick kidneys bring backache and side pains, lameness and stiffness, dizziness, headaches, tired feeling, urinary troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills cure the cause. Mrs. N. E. Graves, Villisca, Iowa, says: "I suffered from kidney trouble for years. The secretions were disordered, there troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills cure the cause. Mrs. N. E. Graves, Villisca, Iowa, says: "I suffered from kidney trouble for years. The secretions were disordered, there were pains in my back and swellings of the ankles. Often I had smothering spells. I had to be helped about. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me five years ago and I have been well since. They saved my life." Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y. Shortcake. The strawberry shortcake, I love it, I love it! I prize it more highly than tongue to dare tell! no sherbet or pudding or pie is above it; there's nothing in pastry I like half so well. Just give me a section as large as a platter, with freshly crushed berries spread over the lot, and I am contented and happy, no matter what aliment or trouble or sorrows I've got. Ho, bring on the shortcake, the strawberry shortcake, and always and ever I'm Jack-on-the-spot!—Los Angeles Express. 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. Position Had Drawbacks. Poet (to his practical friend)—Is there anything more beautiful than to see those magnificent swans float upon the lake's silver surface? How I would love to be like them!" "What! Go around with one's stomach on that cold water all the day? Not for me, thank you." One Cause of Neck Boils. Neck boils come with the sweaty season. Many people have large hair pores on the back of the neck. The sweaty starched collar rim is good culture soil for boil and carbuncle germs, which get rubbed into the large hair follicles or sacks, producing a painful, sometimes dangerous spreading crop. Rough on Rats, unbeatable exterminator Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 25c. Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25c. Rough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25. Rough on Roaches, Pow'd, 15c, Liq'd, 25c. Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. Rough on Skeeters, agreeable to use, 25c. E. S. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. Passed Mammoth Iceberg An iceberg described as $2 \frac{1}{2}$ miles long and 500 feet high—presumably not so high for the whole $2 \frac{1}{2}$ miles—was passed about 1,200 miles from New York recently by the French line /freighter Mexico. It was in latitude 42:20, longitude 46:70—New York Sun. Serial No. 701. When Uncle Sam went out after fake drugs and patent medicines, Dr. Mitchell's Eye Salve with never a change in formula or label at once registered and received Serial No. 701. The influence of Dr. Mitchell's Eye Salve has ever spread through honest merit. Failing cure for sore, weak and inflamed eyes. Price 25 cents. Spectacular Oil Fire. The most spectacular fire ever witnessed in the oil industry was at one of the Des Bocas wells in Mexico. About 60,000 barrels of oil were burned up daily for nearly two months. The flames rose to heights of 800 to 1,400 feet. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Encouraging. "Tell me frankly, sir, what do you think of my daughter's voice?" "Well, madam, I think she may have a brilliant future in water-color painting." A Rare Good Thing "Am using ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, and can truly say I would not have been with you. I would give my aching feet. I think it a rare good thing for anyone having sore feet. Matilda Holtwert, Providence, R. L." Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Ask to-day. "Yes, but if you say that again, I will make it much warmer for you." That time is the worst employed which we give up to regrets, unless we learn from them lessons for the future.—Duc de Levis. PERRY DAVIS' RAINKILLER For a child shall be sold (for a killer) use Paintkiller, for coloide diarrhea and summer complaint this medicine never fails. 25c. 35c or 56c bottles. Every one has his place and vocation on this earth.—Gladstone. $1000.00 SOLID GOLD & SILVER AWARD For the Best Ear of Corn To be Known as the W. K. Kellogg National Corn Trophy To be Awarded at the National Corn Exposition, Omaha, December 6 to 18, 1909. Over one hundred thousand million (100,000,000,000) ears of corn were grown in the United States last year. Over a billion dollars were paid for them. More than a million and a quarter extra dollars went into the pockets of the farmers for corn this year than they received for the previous year's crop. The reason for this may be found in the fact that the people of the United States are beginning to learn how delicious corn is and to realize its full food value. Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes has placed corn among the indispensable items of daily fare. The makers, therefore, are interested in the development of the King of Cereals, and have decided to award a beautiful trophy for the man, woman or child who can produce the best ear of corn in two different seasons. Professor Hakee of the Iowa State College, the present authority on corn, will award the prize at the National Corn Exposition, to be held at Omaha, Neb. December 6th to 18th, 1900. Two single rules will govern the plan, and they are: that you send your best ear of corn to the National Corn Exposition, Omaha, Neb., before November 27, 1900; and that you are a member of the National Corn Association. Full particulars regarding which can be had by writing to National Corn Exposition, Omaha, Neb. For a tax securely to your specimen and word it. For the Kellogg Trophy Contest, and write your name and address plainly. If yours is judged the best you will get the trophy for 1910. If you succeed again next year or the year following, the trophy will become your property for all time. In other words, you must produce the best ear of corn two different years. There will be no restrictions. Any man, woman or child belonging to the Association can enter. It will be open to every state in the Union. Professor Holden will judge the corn particularly on the basis of quality. The growing of more corn per acre is one object of the award, but the main purpose of the founder of the trophy is for Increasing the Quality of Corn Used in Making Kellogg's TOASTED CORN FLAKES Many people think we have reached the point of perfection in Toasted Corn Flakes as it now is. Perhaps we have. If you haven't tried it, begin your education in "good things to eat" today. All grocers have it. KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO., Battle Creek, Mich. W. K. Kellogg Williams (shaking his fountain pen)—You have no idea how easily these pens run! His Neighbor (applying a blotter to his trousers)—Oh, I have an inkling. LEWIS' "SINGLE BINDER." A hand-made cigar fresh from the table, wrapped in foil, thus keeping fresh until smoked. A fresh cigar made of good tobacco is the ideal smoke. The old, well cured tobacco used are so rich in quality that many who formerly smoked 10c cigars now smoke Lewis' Single Binder Straight 5c. Lewis' Single Binder costs the dealer some more than other 5c cigars, but the higher price enables this factory to use extra quality tobacco. There are many imitations; don't be fooled. There is no substitute! Tell the dealer you want a Lewis "Single Binder." A Gentle Aspersion. Among the prisoners brought before a Chicago police magistrate one Monday morning was one, a beggar, whose face was by no means an unfamiliar one to the judge. "I am informed that you have again been found begging in the public streets," said his Honor, sternly, "and yet you carried in your pocket over ten dollars in currency." "Yes, your Honor," proudly returned the mendicant. "I may not be as industrious as some, but sir, I am no spendthrift."-Harper's Weekly. Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beauty. Home laundering would be equally satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work. A Probable Theory. "Truth," remarked the philosopher, sententiously, "lies at the bottom of a well." "That accounts," said the sync, dryly, "for the fact that so much of the well water is contaminated." In Spain. "I wonder if raising bulls for fights is profitable?" "I guess it is a toss-up." YELLOW CLOTHES ARE UNSIGHTLY. Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. A good life is the readiest way to secure a good name.—Whicheot. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oz a bottle. Only a putty life is afraid of being worn out. USE FAULTLESS THE BEST STARCH FOR LAUNDRY WORK FOR SHIRTS COLLARS CUFFS AND FINE LINEN LOW FARES EAST Via New York Central Lines LAKE SHORE MICHIGAN CENTRAL BIG FOUR ROUTE Extraordinarily low fares are being made this year by above routes to New York, Boston, Niagara Falls, resorts on the Sea Coast, at the Thousand Islands and in the Adirondack Mountains. Tickets are on sale every day during July, August and September, good returning within 30 days; give liberal stop-over privileges at Niagara Falls and other points and are good on boats on Great Lakes and Hudson River, in either direction, without extra charge. For fares from your station and other detailed information address HAMLINS WIZARD OIL GREAT FOR THE OIL THAT PENETRATES PAIN They also relieve Dizziness from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Heavy Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Sleep, and Tongue Tugging. Pain in the Side, TORFID LIVER They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. CARTERS LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature Great Good REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. DAISY FLY KILLER placed anywhere and attacks and kills. New, clean, ornamental, convenient, cheap, laundry, dishwasher, not spill or tip or ornamental. Guaranteed effect in the kitchen, or sent prepaid for 20c. Harold Senner, 1100 W. 12th St. Brooklyn, New York. DAISY Fu Kuigai MADE IN CHINA PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleavers and beautifies the hair. Never Falls to Restore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure Curls. To and $0.00 at Druggist. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies hair. Protects hair from breakage. Nevor Falls to Restore Gray Cures scalp diseases & hair falling. 20c and 1.80 at Druggist W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 30-1909. USE FAULT THE BEST STAR FOR SHIRTS COLLARS CUFF LOW FARE Via New York Center LAKE SH MICHIGAN C BIG FOUR Extraordinarily low fares are being routes to New York, Boston, Niagara Coast, at the Thousand Islands and in the Tickets are on sale every day during ber, good returning within 30 days; g ileges at Niagara Falls and other points Great Lakes and Hudson River, in either charge. For fares from your station an NEWYORK CENTRAL LINES WARREN J. LYNCH Passenger Traffic Manager HAMLINS WIZARD THE OIL THAT PEN Paxtine TOILET ANTISEPTIC NOTHING LIKE IT FOR THE TEETH Paxtine excels any dentifrice in cleansing, whitening and removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying all germs of decay and disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. THE MOUTH Paxtine used as a mouth-wash disinfects the mouth and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, bad teeth, bad breath, gripe, and much sickness. THE EYES when inflamed, tired, ache and burn, may be instantly relieved and strengthened by Paxtine. CATARRH Paxtine will destroy the germs that cause catarrh, heal the inflammation and stop the discharge. It is a sure remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxine is a harmless yet powerful germicide, disinfectant and deodorizer. Used in bathing it destroys odors and leaves the body antiseptically clean. FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES, SOC. PAXTINE OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! THE PANTON TOILET @QQ If afflicted with} sore eyes, use Thompson's Eye Water TLESS ARCH FOR LAUNDRY WORK CUFFS AND FINE LINEN RES EAST Central Lines SHORE CENTRAL R ROUTE being made this year by above Niagara Falls, resorts on the Sea and in the Adirondack Mountains. During July, August and Septem-ays; give liberal stop-over privi-oints and are good on boats on in either direction, without extra ion and other detailed informa- ROOM 457 La Salle Street Station Chicago RD OIL GREAT FOR PAIN T PENETRATES VISITS WITH @ UNCLE BY Tho Old, Old Story Lag Se fae ee alia eee he ee Ee yee Ree eee i) pele She came to work for um one day, To wash and cook and things like tle She could not speak our tongue at all, ‘But she could iron linen fiat. me aid not ask a queenly wagon ‘Six doliars and her keep was all. ‘We taugit her how to bake and hrew® She asked eight dollars in the fall, By spring she knew the way te wed Upon e table fairly well, And:she could doa dozen thingy . ‘That daily to her lot befell. "Twas then she asked four eve aing? out An/ thought a dollar more would do~ ‘The next thing wa» aer Sun@eys-off ‘AS boon 43 morning ‘work was threug) / And when the summer time was near, ‘A fellow came to eall one day. ‘The visit caused us mich alarm— ‘She struck at once for higher pay! ‘We granted this acd helped her learn Until we knew we had a gem— And now, confound it, £ must go And duy a wedding gift for thea! 0-2-9 By the Way. ~ A telephone girl will accept a ring from any old man, aw tr Being honest pays a man’s mother mcre than 100 per cent. aa Thirst drives some men to drink but hunger will drive a poet to ink. wit ww It is not = sign of good luck to find the horseshoe on your own dead horse raer When two swelled heads get to gether, each is sur2 that the other be- fongs to a foci. tok we I. is almost tine for the great daily papers to beg calling negligent Christmas shoppers tight wads. were When Little Willle gives his pickle to his sister, it is not always a siga of great heartedness. Willie may have the mumps. aren ‘Tha average business man who has kept the present business pace for 26 or 30 years, doesn’t look upon death with any great amount of fear and, trembling. ss ; It@ politician ould kick up as gmuch moise on & campaign tour as ‘ene small boy can raise with a new drum, he would stavd some show of being elscted. et A Texas newspaper is responsible dor the statement that a farmér of his xounty when asked how much core Ye raised this year, replied he had raised a powerful lot, sold a heap and ad a right smart left yet. The ques on is, “Ho¥ much did he raise?” wt 7 ‘When it exmes to real humor, you find ‘t in the country. A resident of & certain town being in the chicken wand egg business, the local paper fays: “BHl Imet is still doing business mt the old stand. Bring in your aicient settin’ hens and patriarchs roosters.” P-O-O . Willie's Primer. “Is the man ¢1ad?” “No, the.man (s not dead!” “Whas ist? Wid the man hit an au tymo-bubble-bubble-bubble?” “No, the man did not hit an auto mo-bubble-bubbie-bubble; he ts sa cd stor and he has his eye out for men he ‘ewes, ain't it?” “Did a prizefighter find the editor?” “No, a man came in and paid bx subscription for ten years in advunce and the editor withered!” ~Then he is not dead?” -No!” “Nor sleeping?” “No!” “Whas ist?” “Only paralyzed!” “Poor man! Why do people alway: do things to editors?” “Curly Locks, I cannot say, only tt ‘must be nice for an editor to be para iveed!” ooo No Danger. ‘arly one morning terribly seasicr passenger, pale anf Iillow eyed, cam Gut of bis stateroom. and ran into + Jody, who was coming along the pas wageway, clad in the scantiest raiment Bhe screamed and started to rut “Don't be alarmed, madam; I sha aver live to tull ft —Glrard ql) Ay bmecial Master &. V. McKeever lied ie a SUBSCRIBE FOR.. pee ae - THE WICHITA - One of the Oldest and Best Negro Newspapers © In the west : ESTABLSHED 1N 1898 Published Every week Fresh, Reliable Race News ee eee i hea ae Conservative in policy | Firm in defense of our race cE Se ea rea Our policy of ‘“‘ The Higher Grade of News ” has_ built or the Searchlight the reputation of being distinctly a “Family Newspaper ”. No slang, trashy or questiona- ble items are found in the columns of the Searchlight. e pgs eee ee We make no “ grand-stand plays” but maintain one even, sane, reliable and solid course in our work of “ race up-lift ” in dealing with those vital race issues. RG ei sa Se ] F YO U are in any-wise interested in the Ne- gro race and in aiding in help solving the great questions which to-day confront the, Ameri- can Negro—we solicit-your subscription, your patron- age, to the Searchlight in our effort for the highest intellectual, christian, moral, financial and physical standard for our race. Your patronage solicited, ; | TO-DAY isthe sax TO SUBSCRIBE, Our next issue may contain some infor- mation or news item of Vital Interest to you. Our sub- scription rate-one dollar per year-is within the reach of all. You will never have reasons to regret it. AGENTS WANTED - We want active, wide-awake hustling men, women, boys and girls as Agents for the Searchlight in every city, town village and community. a GOOD MONEY can be realized by the right persons as Agents and Correspondents of the Searchlight. | SS ‘838° aay ul C7 Official Ss Directory Knights & Daughters. OF TABOR KANSAS_NEBRASKA JURISDICTION RNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS 4F ' TABOR. | REV. FRANK WILSON, C. @ M. ‘Taborian Home, R. F. D. No. 8, | ‘Topeka, Kansas. MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. @. P. 170 Filmore avenue, Topeka, Kas A. W. HOPKINS, C, G. S. ’ 221 Dakota, Leavenworth, Kans. MRS SARAH FORBES, C. G. R. 717 “C” St, Lincoln, Neb. WM. CORE, C. G. T. 1210 Lane, Topeka, Kans. MRS. BESSIE HALL, G. Q. M., ; 400 Horton. Ft. Scott, Kans. Cc. M. JONHSON, G. P. P., 1832 N 23rd, Omaha, Neb. , MRS. PAULINE WOODFORD, C. G. PR. 823 Freeman, K. C., Kan, REV. M. WOOTEN, C. G. 0. 416 E. 8rd, 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 next Session (the 18th annual) in Topeka, Kans., on the 2nd Tuesday in July, 1909. Number, 2 Mrs. Lottie Williams, 1308 N. 10th, ‘Kansas City, Kan., 1-8 Wed. (A) 2 Mrs. Addie Williams, 90¢ S. Walnut Tola, Kan. 2-4 Sat. (A) % hrs. Mary Goss, Station 1, Wichita, Kan, 1-8 Pri. (A) 4 Mrs. H. ‘Tyler, 520 B 9th ‘Cherryvale, Kan., 1-3 Thur. (A) 5 Mrs Carrie Brown, 925 N. 10th, Atebison, Kan,, 2-4 Fri. (A) -@ Mrs, Eva Clayborne, 118 So. Mul- verry, Ottawa, Kan., 1-8 Thur. « 7 Mrs. Alice Perry, 344 N. 5th, Salina, Kan, 2-8 Fri. (A) 8 Mrs. Laura Smith, 308 E. 11th, Coffeyville, Kan,, 1-8 Tues. (A) 9 Mrs. Katle Thomas, 117 B Laurett, Topeka, Kansas, 10 Mrs, Ida Wallace, 446 Ark, Law- rence, Kan, 2-4 Wed. (A) 11 Mrs. Pauline Woodfork. 823 Free- man, Kansas Clty, Kansas, 1-8 Mon. (A) 19 Mra. Betty Johnson, 211 Stewart, Kansas City, Kan, 1-3 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, 1-8 Wed. (A) 7 Mrs. A. Masler, 615 So, Barber, Ft. Scott, Kan., 1-3 Sat, (A) 18 Mrs. Jennie Sellers, 2202 So, 9th, Omahe, Neb., 1-3 Thur. (A) 20 Mrs. Bessie Hall, 406 Horton, Ft. Scott, Kan. 24 Mrs. Angle Garner, 704 B. 12th, Coffeyville, Kan. 1-8 Wed. (A) 28 Mrs. Della Dorsey, 714 So. 14th Par- sons Ken.. 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. LE Ss IN EACH TOWN | CR WANTED-—A RIDER AGENT 2223: Alt sigs RAND asec onan Gat We Jer fel arta and Saleferdone Ban FR PDR No MOneR REQUIRED antiyocrecirg an sporve al your cyl Weshi AINA WAY sewsiarisasePsiste aint ace erase ec 7ecee oh K\ i QIN Rees See fa eh scale ear feat gaat sort meme TRL PAYG EACTORY PRICES 2 ncaa ctf tb Cason! Cet ono snes WHAM MIMBSEY to $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturer's guar. NST RAUIAD sessed ven boc, be NON BUY a bicycle or pair of tires from aayo RCN gS vimartnd sors creer agen” me ‘itr ANH” WILE YOU, WILL BE ASTONISHED Hsp ros srs s,s canine IB rsdrins we canceake von ta vec, We ul ts eter eae ictntatlos oes / IN piceeLie BEATERS, you ca cas wel she et a a ae |} feoeteksveato hr aheaelemplanapea UP) wxsaly Wave number on hang ter in trad by out Chicago rea dogs’ These we lest romptly at prices ranging, from 83 to $8 or $10. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. GCOASTER-BRAKES, couStnent of al kinds at hai the noma! refed prey Poot Part Mepaice $q@p50 HEDGETHORNePUNCTURE-PROOF Sa 8 SELF-HEALING TIRES 4 S4Mote 2412 TO INTRODUCE, ONLY The regular retail price of these tires is B50 fer pair, but fo introduc, 0 i ————— sell youasample pair for $4.80\cash with order $4.55). fama = WO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES wel Rier, NAILS, Tacks or Glass will not let the Ee ee eae | a outlet thous alr aid ist ent f \ ‘Over two hundred thousand pairs now in use. ie —— oy DESCRIPTION: Made inall sizes. Itislivel i aidan fair tableund aetna wily y j pel quay raver which sever becomes ae J See tgik ces op seal peoriaces enc alee eather Sescpe We mre undredslieucratvom uty QM) Noten the hick rebber fiedcustomers stating that their tires haveonly been pum] 7A; Sad puncture stripe Spence ortwrice ina whole esson, They weighuomoretnan and “D,""also rim strip «2 stlordiaary tire, the puncture resisting qualltcsbeing given to prevent rim cutting. 1 by several layers of thin, specially prepared fabricon the mannan ees tread. The regular price of these tires: fs gco ‘per pair, but for make-SOFT, 1c advertising purposes we are making a special ‘price to EASY RIDING. the bce aly ete per pale All otdere shipped sume dey iter ig receive. We ship C.0.D ‘approval. You do not pay a cent until you have examined aad found them strictly us represented PE rati iw a soak dincgans ef s'pet cont (rcey makes ee mie BATA ei send FULL Cait WATE ORDEAL od tacks tele naerhatneedt yee a ee 2 sickel plated brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they ai siete Pistery on ecemaatinn, "We are Deticaly wellable und aioy at os een rekeas in See scene ot ames ances ola tat teak et SAT ke aes ee es rear better, lat longer and look Guer than any tire you have ever used or seen ‘at any price. We sent Nealt pleased teat whee yon wens disie : We Tatts wal mse ial erat core Cencelas remecuass arth Oe IF YOU NEED TIRES scigetica Puncture 0 Gos oo Toutes as a ‘he special itroductory price quoted above or writ for oar big Fic and Sunkry Catalogue w aad quotes al takes end Kinds of ire at about half the ueaal pies DO NOT WAIT crs pave of tits trom anyone until you ‘or gienew Cp eae offerswe are making. It only costs @ postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. e a. J. C MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL. TABERNACLES. Chief Preceptresses. 34 Mrs. Joana Jones, 1135 N. Wash- ington, Wichita, Kan, 1-3 Thurs. (A.) 36 Mrs. Adah Lewis, 1408 Archer Av., South Omaha, Nebraska. 37. Mrs, Mary Robinson, 108 N 3rd Atchison, Ken, 1-2 Fri. (A) 38 Mrs, Ella Young, Box 1173, Weir City, Kan, #9 Mrs. Hulda Patterson, 8th and Elm, Abilene, Kan. 52 Mrs. Ada King, 722, N. Y Lawrence Kan., 2-4 Thur. (A) $8 Mrs. Lille Robinett, 1286 Barnett, Kansas City, Kan, 1-3 Fri (A) 77 Mrs; Sarah Weddington, 634 Spruce Topeka, Kan., 1-8 Wed. (A) ita, Kan., Fridays, 85 Mrs. Francis Hardaman, 1802 Kansas Ave., Topeka, Kan. 89 Mrs. B. E, Alton, 2215 Pacific, Omaha, Neb. 1-8 Wed. (A) 91 Mrs. Lulu Rountree, 1125 N. 19th. . Omaha, Neb, 1-3 Thur, (A) 92 Mrs, A. Grant, 461 So. 8th, Lin- coin, Neb, 9-4 Fri, (A) 98 Mrs. Ida M.YJordan, 903 N. West- ern, N. Topeka, Kan, 1-2 Thur. a Chief Mentors. : Fred M. Harris, Box 1178, Wet 2 Rev. Jos. Smith, 308 B. 11th, Cof feyville, Kans., 1-8 Tues. City, Kan, 1-8 Fri, 3 J. G. Rurdett, 819 N. 1st, Atchison Kan, 1-8 Fri. 4 F. D. Barly, Sherman Flats, Omahs Neb., 2-4 Mon, & Robt. M. Jordan, 908 N. Western N. Topeka, Kan., 1-3 Thur. 7 Dr. G G Brown, 517 N. Main Wichita, Kans., 1-3 Tues. @ A.J. Beam, 409 Osborne, Ft. Bott Kan, 1-8 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 Holiday, 723 So. 20th, Parsons, Xan, 1-3 Thur. 46 Ed Finch, 614 N. 4th, Salina, Kan, 1-3 Tue. 16 Richard Clark, 420 N. 26th, Sout Omaha, Nebr. 17 Rev. Allen Garner, 704 B. 12th Coffeyville, Kannas. 13. Jas. Thomas, 218 W. Ir, Salt Lake City, Utah. 19 W. M. Hughes, 1023 N. J. Law- tence, Kan,, 2-4 Thur. 22 B. @. Easter, Box 156, Oswego Kans, 2-4 Tues. 24 J. W. Warren, 218 E. 7th, Cherry- vale, Kans., 1-3 Tues. 25 J. H. Downs, 422 Haskell, Kanses City, Kansas, Fridays, 59 U. A. Graham, 1160 West, Topeka, Kensas, 1-8 Thur. 60 HE. C. Sqires, 1813 Jefferson, To- peka, Kans., 1-3, Mon. 72 J. M. Wright, 1125 Saratoga, Lin- coin, Neb. TENTS. % Queen Mothers. 1° Lillie Harden, 900 Fifth St, Leav enworth, Kan, 4 Sat. (A) 2 Susan Daniels, 216 W. Wail, FR Scott, Kan, 2-4 Sat (A) oma an ane 21 Of eetalt. ‘& Lizzie Weaver 112% Sarators, Ln, otn, Neb, 2 Wri. (A) 4 Laura Washington, 914 Wali, Kansas City, Kan, 1-8 3at, Morn 5 Ada Gtert, 405 M. Santa Fe, Cor. feyville, Kan, >. Wed. (A) % Ida Stovall, 706 80. Walnut, tom, Kan, 2-4 fat (4) ® Flora Patterson, 311 W. 27th, Oma- har Neb, 1-3 Set. (4) 10 Maggte™ Robinson, 911 Everetz, Kansas City, Kan, 1-3 sat. (ay 31 Mary Brown, 225 Misa, Lawrence * Kan, 2-4 Sat. (a) 11 Ethel Pemn, 718 “” st. Atchison, : Ks., 2-4 Sat. (4) 14 Arle Stone, 823 dain, Atchison an., 1-3 Sat. (a) AT HH. Adkins, Weir city, Ks, 21 f Wed., (A) 18 A. O. Murrell, 451 So. sth, Sanne Kan., 1-3 Sat. (A) 't9 Lizzie Herrold, Sherman Fiay Omaha, Neb. 2-4 Sat. (A) 20 Susle Wills, 2108 Grand, Parsoaa Kan. 1-3 Sat. (A) 25 Gertrude Taylor, 1310 E. Clark, Parsons, Kans., 2-4 Sat 28 EA. Tiggs, 2814 Morgan, Parsong Kans., 1-3 Sat. <2 Charlot Dalton, 1228 Barrett, Kan. sas City, Kon, 2-4 Bat. (A) 21° Bila McKinnis, 317 Saerman Leavenworth, Kan, 1-3 Thur. (a) 38 Louise Verier, 813 N. J., Lawrence, Kan, 1-3 Gat. (A) 3 Hester Cornish, 911 Western, wy. ‘Topeka, Kan, 1-8 Sat. (A) 87 Jannie McAdoo, 1318 N. Madison, ‘Topeka, Kan, 1-3 Bat (A) 46° Cynthia Henderson, 312 ‘Washing. ton, Kansas City, Kan, 1-2 Sat NOTICE TABORS. | If your Tabernacle, Temle or Teat iz not in this Directory, or if .3sre ‘&ny error, please notify me at once W. N. MILLER, Béitor. ! Tt {s noticeable that the German papers have made no outcry over the fact that King Edward has person. ally written to Andrew Carnegie. eee ‘There is a bank cterk in Elyria, 0. who never has any difficulty in strik- ing a balance. His father was a slack-rope walker, and his mother was & trick bicycle rider. Were the Mrs. Gilman brand of so- clology to come into vogue there ‘would soon be no society for sociology to operate upon and the exuders of suff would be among the unemployed. Miss Ross Becker has been appoint- ed a claim agent and United States pension attorney at Missourl. She has been known for years as one of the most successful women in St. Louis, being a notary public and an insurance agent. Massachusetts has a law to prevent recklessness and speeding in automo- biles, which law may be rendered ridiculous by its wrong punctuation, as it forbids! driving over roads “laid out under the authority of the law reck- lessly or while under the influence of liquor.” Boston, in consequence, is in rhetorical spasms. The secretary of the Colorado state bureau of child protection believes that a bad child gets its start from an illordered home or from parents whc possess evil traits of character, and wants a law passed making parents responsible for the misdoings of their minor children, But as bad traits of character are often inherited, what would the secretary do in case of an adopted child? — In a fire panic in a New York cheap theater, a so-called exit was found to be a veritable trap, barring in the flee- tng crowd instead of letting them find a way to safety. One would naturally suppose that the holocaust in Chicago would have prevented this ae practice for all time; but the lessons of catastrophes are quickly lost, espe- dally when they are followed by no retributory measures. There will naturally be much fem- {nine sympathy for the New Jersey oman who has appeared ia court to complain about her husband's cruel treatment, relates the Washington Star, and who says: “I am a grad uate of a cooking school. I make biscuits, ples, cake and all sorts of dainties to please him, and he calls ft all. ‘Indigestion fodder!’” The fudge adivsed the woman to cook evmned beef and cabbage occasionally, and she sald she would. A Minneapolis woman is suing the Western Union Telegraph Company for damages because when she tele graphed to her brother that “Pat,” her husband, was drinking, and “to come at once,” the message was made to read “Pat is dying,” and a horde of relatives, notified by her brotber, came from far and near to attend the wake, and she had the expenses ‘ pay. If Pat bad had anything to s27 n the matter he would probably have permitted them, to pay their own ¢x penses. Said an anxious mother to the fam fly doctor: “What shall I do with my daughter Mary? ‘She 1s simply candy crazy and, of course, eating nothing substantial makes her pale, if not downright yellow.” Said the wise pby- siclan to the anxious mother: “Put Mary into a sweet shop, and she'll soon abhor the stuff! It is herole treatment; but it will cure her appr tite for candy.” Poor Mary! says the Indianapolis Star, how much pleasure the fe going to lose for lack of little ‘self-denial.