Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, April 2, 1910
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT
ELEVENTH YEAR
Masons W
Lay Co
SUNDAY,
Grand Master Coll
Marks A New Ep
Colored Society
Mayor Chas. L
Deliver An
AN IMPORT
ALL ARE
One of the most important events in the hostory of the colored people of Wichita will be the corner stone laying of the new hall of Arkansas Valley lodge No.21, A.F.A.M. which is being erected on their lot at 615 N.Main St. This corner stone laying marks the accomplishment of one of the aims of the
J. W. Thompson
Chairman Trustee Board
members of this lodge for the past ten years. The corner stone will be laid with Masonic Rites at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon April 3rd with Grand Master C. H. Milton Collins, of Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Kansas as Master of ceremonies. Mayor Chas. L. Davidson will deliver a short address, J. W. Thompson Chairman of the Trustee Board, will be Marshall of the day, Rev. Jas. T. Smith, pastor of the A. M. E. Church will be chaplin, and H. W. Marshall Grand Orator. The choir of the A M. E. Church and the choir of the 2nd Baptist church will join and furnish the music. A quartett from the Y. M. C. A. will render some select songs. The occassion promises to be one of much note and marks
---
M. B. B.
a new era in the work and history of Negro Societies of Wichita Every one is cordially invited to come out at 4 o'clock next Sunday, April 3rd and witness this greatest of all great events, the laying of the corner stone of the Masonic lodge hall at 615 North Main Street.
HISTORY OF THE BUILDING About ten years ago when the Arkansas Vally lodge No. 21, A. F. A. M. had to give up their palatial meeting place at Elm and Main it for the first time seriously dawned upon the members of the need of owning a hall of their own. The lodge secured a temporary place of meeting in the Dr. Oldham building, 1st and Main and later moved to the hall at the rear of the Getto building. These frequent moves all tended to keep up a lively discussion among the members on the proposition of the hall. These discussions were frequent and finally culminated in this motion made by J. W. Thompson, which was seconed by W. N. Miller, who was at that time Secretary of the lodge, the motion was "It is hereby motioned and made the
sense of this lodge that the lodge elect a Board of five Trustees who shall investigate the possibility of devising ways and mean to secure a lodge hall and report to this lodge for their action "this motion prevailed and the following Board of Trustees were duly elected:- G. H Young J. T. Chinneth, W. N. Miller, J. W. Thompson and Dudly Johnson. This board met from time to time and it was this Board who entered into the contract with Prof. Sanford the Bandman and purchased the present lot where the building is now being erected This board as composed above also presented to Arkansas Valley lodge worked to pay for the lot so easily. On account of sickness W. N. Miller retired from the Board and the death of brother G. H. Young made another vacancy and the present splendid Board was chosen.
The Board as constituted now is composed of the following:- J. W. Thompson, chairman, J. T. Chinneth, Secretary, Dudly Johnson Treasurer, Joshia Walker, A. M. Morris, W. H. Jones, Dr. G. G. Brown. To this board is dur the credit for the plan of the building and its success up till now. It is unneccessary to say that it has been a hard and long struggle from the time the lodge moved from Elm and Main ten years ago to this time when they look forward to soon going into their own building. But it must be said in credit to the tait hful members of Arkansas Vally lodge No. 21, A. F. A. M. that during all these years, with the many things with which the lodge naturally came in contact with, the members, as a rule, have remained loyal and held up the cause of Masonry in a true-hearted manner. Durini these ten years the following Master Masons have served as Worshipful
Master of Arkansas Valley lodge No, 21, A. F. A. M. Joseph Fne, Jeff S. Fauver, W. H. A. Clark, Glover L. Scott, Juluis G. Gaines and the present Master, Henry W. James. The corner-stone laying and the erection of this building is, indeed, a fact that brings new inspiration to the heart of every Master Mason who is a member of this lodge. It is hoped that every one will join hands with the Masons Sunday in helping to make this day a memorable one long to be remembered in the Annuals of the colored people of this city.
APRIL 2 1910.
About Some Wichitans.
That a real man can and will succeed, in the very face of obstacles and draw-backs, is very forebly brought to light in pointing out the remarkable success of Benjamin J. Topp, of Wichita most substantial and worthy of citizens. A few years ago, Mr. Topp came to this city from the good cold state of Tennesse from near Memphis. Like thousands of colored men who came to Ks. about that time from the South Mr. Topp's capital consisted only in an ambition to work. Here he found ample opportunity to use his ambition to work to good advantage and this he did without the loss of any time. He worked, saved his money and purchased the valuable property corner of 9th and Wichita Street where he now resides. Some six or eight years ago Mr, Topp lost his wite and has had other misfortune which would have been the ruin of a less ambitious and determined man. But he has held his own and stands today as one of our leading men. Quiet, unassuming, industrious and progressing he is chisseling his name among the men of mark in our community. He has an interest-family of one son and two daughters. About two years ago he caught the progressive idea and built a neat, modern, five room cottage on his property there of which is a credit. This he rents out. We do not wish to be quoted when we say to the ladies that Mr. Topp is a most fancinating widower and some lady would do well to add his name to her own. He is a splendid mark for Mr. Cupid to practice with.
If a man's worth is to be estimated by his usefulness to the community in which he lives; then all agree that the worth of Louis H. White is of the highest standing. Mr. White is one those men who have progress and property as his watchhood. He is energetic; thrifty; industrious and economizing. He knows the worth of a dollar as the modern, comfortable and palatial home which he owns at 1459 N Washington Ave. will affirm. He is an Odd Fellow of the highest rank and has held every office in a subordinate Odd Fellow Lodge. He has also been elected delegate
several times to the Grand New Hope Baptist Church. He is one of those men of whom any race or community may well to feel proud. He is a hustler and may well be taken as an example of progressiveness.
There is no man in Wichita who, in a quiet, telling and last-inp way is making himself more substantially felt for good than is Charles I. Burns. Mr. Burns has always been and is by his very nature a good, whole-soul man, but in more recent years he has spread himself, settled down and is daily proving the real of good metal of which he is made. By trade or profession, he is a cook, one of the best cooks that ever graced a kitchen. He makes friends easily and holds them as firmly. He has that get-up-and-go spirit which is the badge of the man who does things and succeeds. About two years ago he made one of Wichita's best young ladies and they bought a nice home and have setled down at 1218 So. Washington. He is also a member of the New Hope Baptist Church.
SUMYTT-MORRIS MARRIAGE The many friends of E. Thaddens Summytt, one of our former Wichita young men, will be pleased to learn of his marriage to Miss. Arline Morris, of Omaha, Neb, which was solemnized in Wichita Monday evening March 28th. 1910. Mr. Summytt came to Wichita Saturday and met his bride who had preceded him to this city two weeks ago. A marriage license was procured Monday and the ceremony performed Mr. Summytt is a graduate in pharmacy of the Creighton College of Pharmacy of Omaha Neb and has accepted a place with Mr. Wm. McDonald in the new Drug Store which he will open in Ft. Worth Texas. The many acquaintances of young Mr. Summytt are much pleased with his continued rise in the scale of life and wish him much success in his married life and also in his new position in Texas.
SPLENDID YEAR OF WORK
Rev. G. T. Wooten, pastor of
The M. E. Church Rounded
Out A Marvelous success
Is Returned To Wichita
On Sunday, March 20th. Rev.
G. T, Wooten, pastor of Methodist Episcopal Church, 15th and Wabash. held his closing services preparatory to attend the An-
NO.52
nual Conference which met in Topeka, Kansas on March 22nd 23rd. and 24th. Rev. Wooten had accomplishments during that time are simply marvelous and wonderful and these closing services were one of great moment to pastor, members, - friends Rev. Jesse Uhler preached for them at 11 a. m He delivered a powerful, practical sermons. At 3 p. m. Rev. J. T. Smith pastor of St. Paul A. M. E. Church preached one of his masterly sermons which were filled with the good, wholesome thought. At 8 p. m the pastor filled the pulpit and at the close of his sermon read his report for the year. Collection for the day $37.00 The report of the pastor showed that the lot had been purchased and a modern, spacious and beautiful church edefice erected and dedicated to God during the year. A summary of the report follows:—Value church property $1600.00. Paid $800.00. Full members 43; Probationers - 18; Total members 61; Baptised — children 18. All conference claims paid. This is, indeed, a most encouraging report and places Rev Wooten in the front ranks of Gospel heroes. All are proud that Rev Wooten has been returned for another year to continue the good work already begun.
Golden Tabernacle No.1 met on Saturday 26th. in peace and harmony. Every member present expressed themselves as highly pleaed. Sister Anna Oweds was given the third degree. Daughter of Tabor who visit in Iola and desire to visit us will find us located in the G. A. R. Hall. We meet the 2nd and 4th. Saturday afternoon of each month.
The Easter program at the A. M. E. Church was a great success. The church will have grand rally on the 4th Sunday in April and will make an effort to raise $570.00. Everybody has a welcomed invitation to rally with us.
LAWRENCE KANSAS
St. Marie No.10 meet in peace and harmony. Our Tabernacle is growing rapidly as we have five new members. We have two very sick daughters at present. We are getting a long fine in our Tabernacle with exception of our sickness. Dt. Ida Wallace C. R. Dtr. Laura Adcox V. R.
ARMOUR SAYS IT'S THE FARMER
PACKERS NOT IN COMBINE BUT FARMERS ARE.
Farmers' Trust Control Prices of Stock and Packers Are Helpless in Their Hands.
Galveston, Texas.—"If the farmers would bring the price of cattle and hogs down to reason able figures there would be no cry of high cost of living" remarked J. Ogden Armour, the Chicago packer, who is sojourning in Texas.
"Complaint is made of me and other packers of combinations by packers and others when as a matter of fact the farmers and stock raises absolutely control the market and are organized into unions and leagues and are starving the people. The packers would cut prices in half if the stock raises and farmers would sell cattle and hogs at reasonable profits. We are paying now more for these than ever in the history of the country and we are willing to admit that the cost of putting the finished product on the market is no more to the packers now than it was a decade ago. When we are compelled to pay double the price for sheep, cattle and hogs, we necessarily are compelled to advance our prices.
"Nobody appears to realize that the farmers have organized and combined interests and are putting the prices of meat up to their own figures. The packing houses do not raise bees and sheep, hogs, but buy them and pay the prices the farmers' trust puts upon them. We go into the market and are at the mercy of these people but the consumers point to the packers and charge us with running prices higher and squeezing the life out of the eaters of meat. I am not worried over the indictment and have no fear of conviction for myself or associates We have violated no law and hence have no fear of being punished for operating a trust. Investigate the trust of men who sell cattle and hogs."
ANNUAL EGG-ROLLING CONTEST
Washington Children Swarmed Over the White House Lawn as Usual This Year.
Washington, D. C. — The Easter Monday egg rolling on the lawns of the White House presented the usual picture of youthful joyousness. The day was warm and bright. Mrs. Taft had a number of callers during the day and spent the greater part of the time on the rear portico watching the children at play.
Children of the rich and the poor were admitted and had the run of the place for their games and picnics. The White House fountain was playing for the first time this season. In the afternoon the United States Engineers' band gave a concert.
EXPLODING GUN KILLS EIGHT
Report of Accident on the Charleston Confirmed—A Breech Block Brew Out.
Manila, P. I—The report that a fatal accident had taken place on the United States cruiser, Charleston, has been confirmed. Eight men were killed and several others slightly injured. At practice at sea off Clongapo, the breech block of a three-inch gun blow out and in its flight across the deck cut through a steel stanchion and mowed down the men. Seven of the victims were almost instantly killed while an eighth died as the Charleston was hurrying to Cavite.
LIVE STOCK SHIPMENTS BEGUN
The Santa Prepared to Handle 8,000 Cars From New Mexico and Texas to Kansas.
Wellington, Kansas—The stock shipments have begun on the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe road through here from New Mexico and Texas, and the railroad officials have arranged for 8,000 cars, or 250 trains, of stock between now and May 1. The stock is being shipped to grazing lands in Greenwood, Chase and Butler counties Kansas. The stock is said to be in fine condition for this time of the year.
DISAGREE WITH ROOSEVELT
Egyptian Students Make a Demonstration in Front of His Hotel in Cairo.
Cairo, Egypt.—Two hundred students from the University of Egypt made a demonstration in front of Sheheard's hotel, where Col. Roosevelt is stopping. The students carried an Egyptian flag and, as they paraded past the hostelry, shouted:
"Long live the constitution and the liberty of Egypt."
The shouting was interspersed with handclapping.
Sails for Home June 10.
Sails For Home June 10.
London, England — Theodore Roosevelt will sail from Southampton for home on June 10. Passage has been angaged.
A $100,000 Oil Field Fire.
Tulsa, Oklahoma. — Property valued at $100,000 was destroyed by fire in the Glenn Pool oil field. Twenty-five oil rigs and twenty tanks were burned. The fire started on the prairie near the oil field.
Prairie Fire Burned a Child
Abilene, Kansas.—While playing in the yard of her home at Banner City the six-year-old daughter of Jacob Fiedley was caught by a prairie fire driven before a high wind and burned to death.
OH, THE NOISE AND UPROAR OF THE CITY! IT'S HEAVENLY TO GET MONEY!
POOR DEAR!
NOW, METTER THE PORTTESSING!
CHICAGO DAILY NEWS
JUDGE D. J. BREWER IS DEAD
WAS ASSOCIATE JUSTICE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT.
Dropped Dead in Bath Room of His Home—Was Appointed From Kansas in 1889.
Washington, D. C.—David Josiah Brewer, associated justice of the supreme court of the United States dropped dead in the bath room of his home, No. 1923 Sixteenth street, a few minutes after 11 o'clock last night.
Heart disease is believed to have been the cause of death.
Justice Brewer was apparently in the best of health. He was 73 years old and had been a member of the supreme court since December, 1889. He was born in Smyrna, Asia Minor, where his parents were residing as missionaries. He was a graduate of Yale college. He was appointed to the supreme bench from Kansas.
He had gone into the bath room to prepare his bath after having devoted the night to study. A few minutes later Mrs. Brewer, second wife of the justice, heard him feebly calling for ald. When she reached him he had become unconscious. He died before the physician, Dr. H. A. Taylor, who was summoned, arrived.
A VICTORY FOR UNION LABOR
Principle in Famous Buck Stove case Applicable to Blacklisting Union Employes.
New York, N. Y.—A victory of wide spread importance to labor all over the United States was won by Clarence J. Shearn, who secured from supreme court Justice Fitzgerald an opinion which in layman's language means that if it is unlawful for labor unions to blacklist employees as in the famous Buck Stove company case it is just as unlawful for employees to black list employees. The decision was rendered by Judge Fitzgerald in making permanent the injunction of the Enterprise Association of Steam Fitters of which Mr. Shearn is counsel against the Building Trades Employers' association.
ANOTHER EXPRESS HEAD GONE
Col. Levi C. Weir President of Adams Company is Dead—The Fourth in Six Months.
New York, N. Y.—Col. Levi C. Weir, president of the Adams Express company died at his apartments in the Plaza hotel. His death forges another link in the chain of remarkable deaths of presidents of big express companies within the past six months.
The others who died were M. J. O'Brien, president of the Southern Express company; Thomas C. Platt president of the United States Express company and Col. Dudley Evans president of Wells Fargo company.
RAISED $1,000,000 FOR BOATS
Kansas City has Successfully Financed the Plan to Put Missouri River on the Map.
Kansas City, Missouri.—Kansas City has raised that million!
Four days before the time set for the closing of the campaign the total amount subscribed amounted to $1,052,998—and there is more to come!
When the various committee met in navigation headquarters in the Midland building at noon and began turning in their reports, it soon became apparent that the million mark had not only been reached, but passed.
A Day for Crow Killing.
Jefferson City, Missouri—D. R. Austin of Nevada, Mo., has asked Gov Hadley to issue a proclamation setting aside the first Wednesday in April as "crow day," upon which day the men and boys of the state are to arm themselves and kill all the crows they can.
A. Telephone Merger in Wichita.
Topeka, Kansas.—Gov. Stubbs and Fred S. Jackson, attorney general, are being urged to investigate the merger of the Independent and Bell Telephone companies at Wichita.
A Cozy Evening in the Flat.
FATHER AND CHILDREN KILLED
They were Shot While in a Motor Boat on River Near Scandia, Kansas.
Scandia, Kansas.—A motor boat bearing a ghastly freight drifted to the shore of the Republican river near here. The boat was one Alexander Lindhal, a wealthy farmer, had purchased for pleasure riding on the stream which flows past his farm.
In the boat were the bodies of Lindhal's two children, a boy of eight and a girl of ten years. Both had been killed by charges of buckshot fired from a shotgun. Evidently they had been shot several times as they were badly mutilated. In addition to the bullet wounds the boy had been struck with a club or the butt of the gun.
The battered bodies of the children were in the boat. A short distance away the body of the father was discovered amid some brush. He evidently had gone ashore to fight his assailant in an effort to save the children's lives. The three bodies had been clubbed repeatedly after the victims had been shot several times. The unknown assailant evidently had laid in wait for Lindhal and his children behind the pile of brush where the farmer's body was found and had shot at them as they were about to step ashore.
SENATOR ALLDS FOUND GUILTY
Charges Preferred by Conger Against New York Legislator Sustained—Allds Resigned Before Verdict.
Albany, New York—State Senator Jotham P. Allds of Chenango county was found guilty by a vote of 40 to nine, in the senate of accepting a $1,000 bribe from the bridge interests in 1901. The verdict followed his resignation from the senate and marks the end of the hearing of the charge, preferred by Senator Benjamin Conger which has extended over seven weeks, revealing many slidelights of a startling character on the condition in the legislature nine years ago.
TOTAL PROHIBITION IS COMING
Gov. Stubbs Thinks That in Ten Years it Will Be Universally Adopted
Topeka, Kansas.—Gov. Stubbs expects to see prohibition throughout the country within the next ten years. He returned from Chicago where he made three or four prohibition speeches Saturday and Monday.
"Total prohibition is coming and it is coming rapidly," the governor said. "Two years ago prohibition in Chicago would not have been dreamed of. Chicago has no prohibition now, but it is my opinion that it will have within a year.
HOUSE FAVORS POPULAR VOTE
A Resolution by Lloyd of Missouri Favorably Reported by a Committee.
Washington, D. C.—A resolution offered by Representative Lloyd of Missouri, providing for the election of senators by popular vote, was reported to the house favorably by the committee to which it had been referred. It proposes an amendment to the constitution.
Ohio Potteries Shut Down.
East Liverpool, Ohio.—Three thousand employees were thrown out of work when a dozen of the largest potteries in this city and across the river in West Virginia shut down.
Kansas Gains an Educator
Ann Arbor, Mich.-Charles Hughes Johnson, junior professor of education at the University of Michigan for three years past, will resign and accept the position of dean of the school of education in the University of Kansas.
Alexander Agassiz Dead.
Cambridge, Massachusetts—Alexander Agassiz, the eminent naturalist and president of the Calumet and Hecla Mining copied, died on the steamer Adriane southampton for New York.
TELLS STORY OF BALLINGER
Collier's Article Seriously Reflects on His Professional Conduct While an Attorney.
New York, N. Y.—Collier's in the current issue continues its crusade against Secretary of the Interior Ballinger with an article entitled "Ballinger—Shyster," in which C. P. Connolly tells a tory that on the face of it reflects on Mr. Ballinger's professional conduct when he was practicing law in Port Townsend, Wash.
The story concerns Ballinger's relations with the Scandinavian-American bank and the shipbuilding firm of Heckman & Hanson, and tends to show that Baainger, after acting as attorney for Heckman & Hanson and acquiring a knowledge of their business affairs, accepted antagonistic employment from the bank. The matter resulted in two attempts to have Ballinger and other lawyers disbarred, which failed.
BLACKMARWOULDSTOPSTRIKES
Professor of Sociology at Kansas University Wants the Public Protected by Law.
Topeka, Kansas.—F. W. Blackmar, professor of sociology at Kansas university, has started an agitation for a law to prevent strikes. The threatened coal strike has caused him to get busy.
In anticipation of the strike, the railroads are piling up coal along their tracks and industrial enterprises are laying in extra supplies. It is predicted by coal men that many factories will have to close down for lack of fuel.
Prof. Blackmar cannot hope to influence the impending strike by his agitation, but he wants to get the matter started so that the Kansas legislature next winter will pass some kind of a law on the subject. Later he will carry his fight to congress.
RIVER BILL WINS ONCE MORE
Senate Committee Favorably Reported the $1,000,000 Appropriation for Missouri River.
Washington, D. C.-The senate committee on commerce voted to report favorably that section of the river and harbors bill which provides for the appropriation of $1,000,000 for the Missouri river. The money is to be used for improvements between Kansas City and the mouth of the river.
The matter had been a cause of anxiety to the Missouri senators because of the opposition of Senator Burton of Ohio, but when the item was reached there was very little discussion.
Senator Burton expressed his objections to the appropriation briefly, but the committee voted to let the section stand exactly as it came from the house.
WIDOW OF GOV. MORRIL DEAD
End Comes to Kansas Woman at Home of Her Daughter in Kansas City.
Kansas City, Missouri—Mrs. Caroline J. Morrill, widow of Edmond Needham Morrill, governor of Kansas in 1895-6, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Cornelia Baker, 3820 Baltimore avenue.
Mrs. Morrill had been making her home with her daughter since the death of Mr. Morrill last March. She was 76 years old and had been an invalid for the last two years, although it was not until two weeks ago she was confined to her bed.
A NOVEL COURT FOR ALASKA
It is Proposed to Patrol the Coast With Fully Equipped Court on Revenue Cutter.
Washington, D. C.-Gov. Clark of Alaska has arranged a novel court of justice. Treasury officials have promised him to put a revenue cutter at the service of one of the judges of Alaska this summer. The judge with the cutter will visit 2,000 miles of Alaska shore, stopping at points where there are no judges to administer the law. The judge will have with him a deputy marshal, and assistant United States attorney and grand petit juries.
THE LARGEST COW IN KANSAS
Was Marketed at Salina and Weighed
1,860 Pounds — Brought $102.30.
at Five and One Half Cents.
Salina, Kansas.—What is believed
to be the largest cow in the state was
marketed at the packing plant here.
The cow was raised on the farm of
Henry Nelson in this county and
weighed 1,860 pounds. At five and a
half cents a pound the animal brought
$102.30. The cow is five feet eight
inches high and 14 feet long. She
measures 12 feet six inches around the
girth and her front legs are 22 inches
long above the knees.
JUDGE LANDIS GOES THE LIMIT
Fined Man Who Evaded a Federal Law $15,000 and Six Years in Jail.
Chicago, Ill. — That Federal Judge Landis proposes to "go the limit," in the punishment of men convicted of selling "moonshine" oleomargarine was indicated when he Samuel Dreisbach, convicted of evading the federal oleo law, to six years in the Fort Leavenworth penitentiary, in addition he was fined $15,000.
WOMEN MAKE CLEVER SPIES
Are Regularly Employed by European Countries to Secure Each Other's Secrets.
It may be remembered that a short time ago some valuable admiralty plans disappeared from Chatham, says London Tit-Bits. Mr. McKenna, the first lord of the admiralty, admitted that they had been stolen, but a mystery surrounded their disappearance. It is now suggested that a well-known international woman spy, who is ever ready to sell her services to the highest bidder, be it the Russian, German or French government, was responsible for the disappearance of those plans. It is known that she was in this country for some weeks prior to the incident and it is supposed that during that time she engineered the plot which resulted in the vanishing of the important papers.
Whatever truth there may be in the story it is a very feasible one, for it is usually women who prove the most successful spies. "When it comes to trickery and cunning," said a well-known detective to the writer on one occasion, "there is no match for a clever woman. If she is pretty into the bargain, I would back her to beat the cleverest men at Scotland yard nine times out of ten." And, judging from the success of women in secret service work, it would seem that the tribute is in no way exaggerated.
It is only a short time ago that a beautiful and fashionably dressed teacher of languages, Fraulein Peterson, about 25 years of age, was arrested at Kiel, in Germany, on suspicion of being a French spy. She was said to have entered into a love affair deliberately with a noncommissioned officer named Dietrich, of the explosives department, for the purpose of inducing him to divulge important German naval secrets.
Dietrich, flattered by the attention of such a beautiful woman, could deny her nothing, and at the time of the arrest was said to have been supplying her with the formula for the manufacture of the German smokeless powder (one of the most effective yet invented) and the situation of the port mines. To disguise her true occupation she posed as a teacher of languages. Suspicion was directed against her on account of the ample funds with which she was always provided and of her fear of giving the police the customary notice of her frequent changes of address.
A Comic Tragedy.
The people on Broadway, New York, were startled one night recently by hearing the screams of a child coming apparently from a dress-suit case which a dark, smooth-shaven man was carrying uptown. So piercing were the cries that the man was watched with increasing suspicion, and in time a crowd surrounded him and insisted on his opening the bag. He kept his lips tight shut, and continued to walk up Broadway, clinging to his dress-suit case, from which the screams apparently continued to come. Eventually a constable put him under arrest, and hurriedly opened the bag. He expected to find a baby doubled up in it, but instead he found a grinning stone image called a mankin. The prisoner proved to be a ventilroquist engaged in a Broadway concert hall, who had adopted this unique method of cheap advertisement.
Prank Had Tragic Ending.
An extraordinary affair is reported from La Amora. Eighty fierce Spanish bulls were penned in the station awaiting to be conveyed to various parts of the country for bull-fighting purposes. A party of carnival revelers bent on mischievous fun threw some explosives among the animals, causing them to stampede. The infuriated beasts broke down the frail wooden fence and bottled out of the station, making for the town, about a mile distant. The townsfolk heard the trampling of the approaching herd, and as many as could made for shelter. The beasts rushed through the town like a whirlwind, knocking down and killing three persons, and more or less seriously injuring 18 others. A force of the civil guard was sent out to scour the country with orders to shoot the bulls on sight.
Fogs Made to Order.
Among the means of protecting fruit trees against frost practiced in California is the production of fog by a generator in the form of a wagon. The wagon carries a sheetiron tank, the upper part of which is filled with wet straw or similar material, kept moist by the automatic injection of water from a cask, while near the bottom is a grate upon which tar is burned, a blast, operated by a revolving fan, serving to maintain the combustion. All the heat is compelled to pass through the wet straw before reaching the air and in consequence the wagon is buried in a dense fog, and as it passes between the rows of low trees it envelopes them in a mist so thick that the driver is frequently compelled to lead the horses.
May Demolish Heligoland.
A strange proposal has been made in Germany with regard to the island of Heliogland, which, despite vast expenditure, still continues to crumble away. The proposal is—unless some scheme of preserving it can be found—to blow up the entire island. Apparently the idea is, in the event of war, Heliogland would need to be very strongly defended, lest it should be seized and used as an advance base of operations against Germany. The trouble does not lie with the risk of its being seized so much as with the strain of having to defend it.
WELL KIDNEYS KEEP THE BODY WELL.
When the kidneys do their duty, the blood is filtered clear of uric acid and
other waste. Weak kidneys do not filter off all the bad matter. This is the cause of rheumatic pains, backache and urinary disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills cure weak kidneys
Every Picture Tells a Story
Rev. A bram Weaver, Georgetown, Tex., former editor Baptist Herald, says: "At a Baptist conference at Jackson, Tex. I fell from a platform and hurt my back. I was soon over the injury, but the kidneys were badly disordered, passages painful and often bloody. Doan's Kidney Pills cured this trouble completely."
Remember the name—Doan's. Sold by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y. 50 cents a box.
OLD BIRD.
Mrs. Justwed—I want a chicken that I can fry, roast, stew or fix up any way I want.
Dealer—Here's one, lady, you can do anything you like with and not hurt it.
NO HEALTHY SKIN LEFT
My little son, a boy of five, broke out with an itching rash. Three doctors prescribed for him, but he kept getting worse until we could not dress him any more. They finally advised me to try a certain medical college, but its treatment did no good. At the time I was induced to try Cuticura he was so bad that I had to cut his hair off and put the Cuticura Ointment on him on bandages, as it was impossible to touch him with the bare hand. There was not one square inch of skin on his whole body that was not affected. He was one mass of sores. The bandages used to stick to his skin and in removing them it used to take the skin off with them, and the screams from the poor child were heartbreaking. I began to think that he would never get well, but after the second application of Cuticura Ointment I began to see signs of improvement, and with the third and fourth applications the sores commenced to dry up. His skin peeled off twenty times, but it finally yielded to the treatment. Now I can say that he is entirely cured, and a stronger and healthier boy you never saw than he is to-day, twelve years or more since the cure was effected. Robert Wattam, 1148 Forty-eighth St., Chicago, Ill., Oct. 9, 1909."
Futile Dissension
"So you and your husband are always quarreling?" said the family lawyer.
"Yes," answered the young woman. "What do you quarrel about?" "I forget the subject of the first quarrel. But we have been quarrelling ever since over who was to blame for it."
Bringing Up.
"They're bringing the baby up to be a mollycoddle."
"How so?"
"They have the nurse take it out in a go-cart, instead of giving it an automobile."
DONT NEGLECT THAT COUGH
It certainly racks your system and may run into something serious. Allen's Lang Balam will check it quickly and permanently. For sale at all druggists.
Vanity is due to a leak in one's wisdom tank.
Stomach Ills May Seem Trifles
At the start, but that is when you want to take the matter in hand. Neglect can only result the one way—sickness. The stemach is largely responsible for one's health and strength and as such it needs to be kept in a normal condition. If it becomes weak, the food remains undigested, ferments, and causes untold suffering. Thus you lose the strength-giving properties of your food and you become weak and run down. This is very noticeable at the beginning of Spring when the system is overloaded with Winter impurities, the bowels clogged and the blood thick. No wonder you have the "Spring Fever." Commence taking Hostetter's Stomach Bitters this very day and cleanse the entire system. Then your Stomach Ills will also vanish. It is for Sick Headache, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Spring Fever, General Debility and Malaria.
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 14-1910.
The American Home
WILLIAM A.
RADFORD
Editor
THE HOME OF THE MAYFIELD MUSEUM
Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of building for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he will be able to verify on all these subjects. Address all inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 184 Fifth Ave., Chicago, Ill., and only enclose two-cent stamp for reply.
The accompanying illustrations show a house design especially adapted to the needs of suburban or country building. The requirements for a dwelling house for such a location are different in a good many respects from those in a city. More attention should be paid to the matter of making the house as nearly fireproof as possible; for in the country, as well as in our smaller towns and suburbs, there is no fire protection. Accordingly, if a building once takes fire, nothing can be done except to watch it burn. Of course, the fire risk from adjoining buildings is much greater in thickly settled communities, but the fire-fighting apparatus which is quickly available more than makes up for this extra hazard.
The only wise and logical thing for a man to do when he plans to invest a large amount of money in a suburban or country home is to build it fireproof. With the modern building materials now available it is very easy to do this and the cost, although considerably more than for frame, is certainly not excessive when the fire protection, enduring character of the house, etc., are taken into consideration.
For the accompanying design a thoroughly fireproof construction is employed. The beauty and homelike atmosphere of this house makes an expenditure, however large, seem worth while that will make it absolutely safe and enduring, no matter where it is built.
The walls of this house are formed
THE HOME OF THE MAYFIELD MUSEUM
of 2x6 studding well braced, but they are covered both inside and out with expanded metal lath. The outside is plastered with cement plaster applied in three coats; thus there is fully one inch of nature's most fire-resisting material—cement—on the outside of this house, completely surrounding the steel reinforcing, thus protecting it against rust. The inside of the walls, as well as all the interior partitions, are composed of one coat of cement plaster on expended metal lath and then a finishing coat of hard wall plaster.
The floors of this house are formed of hollow terra cotta tile made in narrow flat panels between reinforced
PORCH
KITCHEN
12 014 6
LODS
14 014 6
DINING ROOM
MALL
8 014 6
PORCH
PARLOR
12 014 6
MOOR
First Floor Plan.
concrete beams. The concrete beams are four inches square, reinforced with twisted steel rods. On top of this concrete and terra cotta floor a one-inch coat of cinder concrete is laid in which 2x2 nailing strips are imbedded; the wood flooring is laid on these, being nailed down securely. For the ceiling finish the wall plaster is applied directly to the underside of the concrete beams and the tiles. This makes a floor that is thoroughly fireproof, very warm and not excessively heavy. The roof of this house may be constructed in a number of ways, yet it should be made fireproof, since the root is really the most vulnerable part of the house. Green slate would be very appropriate and would make a beautiful contrast with the cement walls. The roof in this design is rath-
This design is futuristic.
er prominent, and all things considered, slate would probably be most satisfactory. One of the newer forms of roof construction, which might be used, consists of corrugated steel sheets which rest on a light steel frame work. The corrugations are deep enough to prevent any bending of the sheets between supports. Waterproofed cement plaster is spread on over the sheets in a coat about one inch thick, completely filling the corrugations. This method would certainly make a fireproof roof, and the cement plaster
Second Floor Plan.
could be easily colored to make an effective contrast with the side walls.
Native squared stone is used to very good purpose in this design for the large chimney and for the porch piers and arch. This stone work gives the house an added appearance of stability.
The arrangement of the house leaves little to be desired. The floor plans show a large parlor, or living room, dining-room, kitchen and reception hall on the first floor. Upstairs there are four bedrooms and a bathroom.
The cost of this house is estimated at $4,000, using a good grade of materials and most thorough construc
terials and most thorough conserve
tion. The size of this house, 34 feet six inches wide by 35 feet six inches, makes it very suitable for the ordinary suburban 50-foot lot.
Beautifying Orphans
"The hard luck of that little boy who couldn't get anybody to adopt him because he had freckles has called out a queer kind of correspondence," said the matron of an orphanage. "Beauty doctors write asking for the job of making over our homely children. They put the proposition partly on a philanthropic basis. For one-tenth the money they get for beautifying adults they offer to clear children's complexions, straighten noses, and make straight hair curly. They argue that it would pay in the long run to patronize them, because the orphans would be taken off our hands so much sooner.
"They present their arguments so plausibly that I am more than half convinced. The very homely child who wants to be adopted is terribly handicapped, and I really believe that if I were a philanthropist with a pile of money to give away I would set aside a certain sum for the beautifying of ugly orphans."
Youth Rules
It is every woman's duty to keep young as long as possible, but, unfortunately, she does not always know the best way to live up to that duty. Avoid worry, hurry and getting flushed. Learn self-control. Anger is a rapid wrinkle-bringer. Be temperate. Moderation does not only refer to the stomach. Overdoing in any way makes for premature age. Love the open air. Fresh air is not a fad, it is a necessity if one would keep young. Get plenty of sleep. Nothing fines the face like nights of wakefulness. Keep mentally alert. An intellectual back number adds years to her seeming age. Nothing makes for youth like a young mind, save perhaps a young heart.
Don't let yourself get sluggish and indifferent. Here is where the benefit of massage, physical and a vital interest in life comes in
Bettina's Ambiguous Message
By MABEL CLAIRE SMITH
Bettina was a sociable little soul, with an impulsive heart that two years of married life had not tamed. Her girlhood had been spent among a host of friends and relatives, and until she married Frank Allerton, a struggling young architect, and came to live in a tiny cottage in a lonely suburb, she had not known what it was to be for hours at a time without anybody to speak to. The last month had been especially trying, for all the people whom she knew had gone away from their suburban homes for the summer.
One evening, in the middle of July, Bettina sat up until after midnight, waiting to speak to her late-arriving husband. He had been doing extra work at the office all the past month, and rarely reached home before 12 at night. As he had to go to the city on an early train the next morning. Bettina's only glimpse of him had been from behind the coffee—not at the breakfast table.
"I'm sorry I worry you, Frank," Bettina tearfully said, when her husband returned and had given her a severe lecture on the folly of her sitting up for him. "I truly think I might just as well not have married, for all that I see of you. I should not mind the days, if only you could get home early in the evenings. I don't want you to work so hard, Frank. I'd rather be poor than rich."
"Tut, tut!" said Frank, with a smile. "Little girls shouldn't tell stories. Don't I know your eyes dance at sight of a pretty hat or frilly dress? Money is a good thing. Bettina. I mean to be rich one of these days, give you pretty clothes and folderols. Until then, little lady, I must work and you must wait. Don't tease me any more, now. I am dead tired tonight." And with a sleepy stretch of his long arms he turned out the light and went to bed. Just before he fell asleep, he bethought himself of what Bettina had said about her loneliness, and asked:
"Hasn't Jack Carlton been here since I brought him to tea last Sunday. He's a good-hearted chap, and not half bad at entertaining. I rather hoped he'd keep you from being so lonely."
"Oh, yes, he has been here every evening," said Bettina, slowly. "He has some new music which he wants me to learn to play. He is a nice boy. I like nim very well."
Time passed, and Frank was still detained late at the office. Bettina, however, no longer ventured to earn his displeasure by sitting up until his return. Just how many seconds before his return she had been asleep was entirely ner own concern.
One morning as he hurried through breakfast, he inquired whether she had been well entertained the night before. Bettina smiled enigmatically and replied that Mr. Carlton was a pleasant talker.
That very evening Frank returned home at five o'clock for the first time in two years of his married life. He had received an offer for a better salaried position without the disadvantage of night work, and he was eager to tell the good news to Bettina. Springing up the steps two at a time, he entered the hall and joyously called Bettina. She did not respond, and, in some wonher, he went from room to room in search of her.
On the threshold of their room he stopped and shivered with a vague premonition. The room was in disorder, evidences of hasty packing plainly apparent. As his startled gaze turned slowly about from one article to another, a scrap of paper pinned to the dresser scarf at his right drew his attention. Picking up the hastily scribbed note, he read it through. Twice he read it, and then with a pale and quivering face, tore the note into pieces and thrust the bits in his coat pocket. Going to the closet, he took down a small valise and hastily flung into it a few clothes. Pausing a few minutes at his desk in the adjoining room, he rapidly penned a few lines to the firm stating his inability to accept the position offered him that day as important private business demanded his immediate attention, and would necessitate his absence from the city for an indefinite time.
Going from the house, he locked the door after him. On his way to the depot he dropped the letter in the slot of a corner box.
Boarding a south-bound train, he started on a series of journeys, the object of which he told no one.
One morning in early September, six weeks after Bettina's departure and the beginning of Frank's mysterious travels, two passenger trains collided at a curve near a small river. The engines were reduced to a heap of twisted steel and iron, half buried in the earth, the cars of both trains were derailed and more or less crushed. Though the only life lost was that of the engineer who had made the blunder, many persons were badly cut and bruised. As speedily as possible the able-bodied men helped their fellow passengers into safety through the windows of the overturned coaches.
Frank Allerton worked with might and main, his sore heart finding solace in helping the groaning, terrified prisoners. Pinned down by a heavy beam in a car of the other train was the unconscious form of a girl. Her face was covered with blood, and her fair hair was streaked with it. Bits of broken glass from the sash above her
head lay over and about her, explaining the injury.
With ready hands Frank lifted the beam from the quiet figure and then carried the girl to a grassy spot nearby. His next act was to wet his handkerchief in the cool water of the river and seek to wipe the blood from the girl's face.
Scarcely had he passed the dripping handkerchief over the impassive countenance when he gave a hoarse cry and fell weakly back against a nearby bowlder. One long minute he remained staring fixedly at the girl's face. Then, with shaking hands he took up the handkerchief and completed his task.
Just as he wiped away the last stain from her soft hair, the girl's long lashes quivered and rose. A look of wondering, yet pleased, recognition came into her dark eyes and she softly exclaimed:
"Why, Frank, dear! Were you coming to meet me? Oh, are you hurt?" With much concern she held her hands toward him.
The man trembled, his face flushed darkly, and with blazing eyes he glared at her. "I have come to meet you—oh, yes!" he said, with a harsh laugh. "Am I hurt?" he queried, leaning suddenly forward and gripping her hands as with a vise. "You dare ask that of me? Hurt! Merciful heavens! You little know how you have wounded me, fair, false woman! An outward injury soon heals. An inward—where is the cure for that? Where is the villain who took you from me? The base knave—the false friend—the snake in the grass? Tell me! I will know!"
The girl struggled to a sitting posture and looked with frightened, dilated eyes at the furious man before her.
"I don't know what you mean, Frank," she said, tremulously. "Are you sure you are well, dear? Wouldn't you like me to bathe your head with some cold water? It must be a fever or something equally dreadful that's making you act so queerly. Do let me bathe your head, dear."
"Answer me!" he panted, shaking her fiercely. "Don't attempt to shield him! I will not rest until I have shot Jack Carlton!"
"Oh!" gasped the girl, horrified understanding in her eyes. "Oh, heavens! How—oh, how could you think me so vile! I—your wife! Oh, what an insult to your friend and to me! Frank, Frank! what has made you like this? I have been staying with father and mother at their cottage on the beach ever since I went away. They wrote me to join them at the depot as they passed through the city, and as you had told me shortly before that I might go to visit them, I saw no reason for declining their invitation. I intended to tell you over the telephone where I was going, but Mr. Carlton happened along just as I was starting for the drug store, and at his suggestion I just pinned a note to the dresser scarf, instead. Mr. Carlton took me to the train in his motor and boarded a northern-bound train just as father whisked me aboard the southern-bound one. I was coming back to you to-day. Oh, how could you think such horrible things of me, Frank? And when—I wrote—you—every day, too! Oh, de-ar!" And the tears rolled swiftly down her cheeks.
Frank gave a sharp exclamation, struck his forehead with his hand, drew her suddenly to him and pressed his cheek to hers. Don't cry, darling —please don't!" he begged, humbly. "I've been a bat-blind, money-making, jealous brute, and I ought to be taken out and shot! I left home that night, Bettina, so I never got even one of your letters—all I know of your intentions was gleaned from that ambiguous message you left for me. How was I to know your destination was your father's house when you wrote that Jack was waiting and you were leaving me to peace and solitude? Dearest, I have hurt you horribly. I know, by my unjust suspicions. But I have suffered agonies in entertaining them. I love you dearly, dearly! Speak, Bettina, though it is only to tell me how you despise me!"
"Oh, Frank, I do not despise you! Indeed, dear, I honor you all the more for the course you have taken! I should have worded my message with greater care. Poor boy, I am so, so sorry for the pain and worry I have caused you! Still, dear, I think you should have known your little wife too well to doubt her!" said Bettina, gently patting the worn face so near her own.
"I'll never doubt you again, dear," he answered, gravely.
"And you will not leave me alone so many evenings any more, wl! you, dear? You will not doubt me when I say that I love you better than wealth!" she questioned, wistfully.
"Please God I've learned that there is something better worth having than money," he replied, with quiet earnestness. Then, helping her to her feet, he led her with tender care toward the waiting relief train. "My little Bettina! he added, a world of love shining in his eyes and vibrating in his deep tones. "My dear little wife!"
Not Altogether.
"So that jilted young fellow's life is all dark, is it?"
"Not altogether. He's just got a job on a lightship."
Not Altogether.
The KITCHEN CABINET
E WHO goes down into the battle of life giving a smile for every frown; a cheery word for every cross one, and lending a helping hand to the unfortunate, is after all, the best of missionaries."
Keeping Down the Grocery Bills.
penses and clothe herself and children on a small portion of the salary he receives, while he is lavish in his spending for high-class cigars and fine raiment for himself.
Or it may be the generous man turns over the bulk of his earnings to the lap of a woman who is so seated centered and untrained that he suffers for the common necessities, while she wastes his substance in riotous clothing.
This is a subject which is of vital interest to every head of the household and should be to the housekeeper. The buying of foods is one that needs careful planning.
It is unwise to economize by using a poor grade of flour, but the cheaper meats are every bit as satisfactory, if prepared by long, slow cooking on days when the fire is used for other things. A fireless cooker is almost indispensable in the well planned home.
One may be made of any box, candy pail or trunk that will hold tightly covered utensils of any desired size.
Line the box or pail with asbestos paper, then a layer of hay, mineral wool or paper pounded in around the utensil so that a firm nest will be made. Make a cushion to place over the top, then with the lid in place one may have a good working cooker.
In buying breakfast foods one of course likes variety, but do not buy more than will be used in a reasonable length of time as they become rancid and infested with insects unless tightly covered.
Have a small garden where many of the staple vegetables may be grown. It will save the bills, give the children and grown-ups healthy exercise, and another interest in life. One might do as the woman did who believed in specialization, and taught each of her five children to recognize one kind of weed, then she sat on the porch and rocked while the boys and girls each pulled his own variety of weed in the garden.
If we keep down our bills we must choose in our buying that food which spends well.
Strawberries in February may be a great treat, but if we eat them often out of season our keen enjoyment is gone when they arrive in profusion. Of course as a nutritive food strawberries have little value; the flavor and salts which they contain with the water, make them most appetizing, and so, valuable
In buying macaroni, the better brands are the cheapest as the poorer grades of flour are used in making the less expensive kind and the macaroni does not cook up nor combine as well with other foods
N MEN whom men condemn as ill
I find so much of goodness
I find so much of goodness
still;
In men whom men pronounce divine
I find so much of sin and blot,
I hesitate to draw the line
Between the two where God has not "
Between the two, where God has not."
Serving of Chicken.
A chicken that one pays 75 cents for in these days, when the family is small, must be made to pay for itself by appearing several times on the table.
It is surprising what one can do with a chicken if real thought is put upon the subject.
For one meal serve the wings, legs and second joints, cooked tender and browned. Serve with a brown sauce and vegetables, one or two as the purse allows. To eke out the amount of chicken so that the servings need not be large, serve a cream soup of some kind for the first course, and the amount of meat will seem sufficient.
The breast meat of the chicken may be used in a white sauce, served on toast or with baked potatoes for another meal. The gliblets may be chopped, seasoned and used for sandwich filling, or as hash with potato, or in a brown sauce to accompany croquettes.
The bones of course, are reserved to make chicken broth, so that the history of a 75-cent chicken may be spread out over several meals.
The bits of meat left from the bones may be seasoned, molded and served with rice. Even the feet, if skinned after pouring boiling water on them, add their quota to the food value when put with the bones into the soup. Anybody may serve good things if the pocketbook is large, but real genius presides in the home where dainty, wholesome meals are provided on small means; the expense is the brain cells of the housekeeper.
Waste
The old couplet: "Waste not, not want, is a maxim I would teach. Let your motto be dispatch. And practice what you preach." is more needed today perhaps than ever in the history of man.
If the high prices of food will bring the housekeeper and the householder as well, to realize the value of careful saving and to watch the little leaks in the household accounts, it will be a blessing of far reaching value.
It is a good deal to expect of an inexperienced woman who has had little to do with bookkeeping and no training in domestic economy, to run a house and make ends meet.
In many homes the husband expects his wife to meet the household ex-
penses and clothe herself and children on a small portion of the salary he receives, while he is lavish in his spending for high-class cigars and fine raiment for himself. Or it may be the generous man turns over the bulk of his earnings into the lap of a woman who is so self-centered and untrained that he suffers for the common necessities, while she wastes his substance in riotous clothing. Either extreme is bad, for unless both are united in the one purpose of mutual helpfulness and unselfishness, there is constant friction. Dr. Harrison Smalley of the University of Michigan says that the untrained housekeeper wastes one-fifth of the income of her husband. He maintains that a woman should be as efficient a purchasing agent as if employed in a business house, and is it not reasonable?
What more important business can a woman give her time in study to than the problem of home making? Yet we are supposed to know things by intuition, as the birds do the nest building. When women study these things as they do a business course for the commercial value it will mean to them, then can we hope to have something of efficiency. Until then we must blunder along, making mistakes and learning by sad experience what should be a part of every woman's education.
ET the howlers howl,
And the growlers growl,
And the growlers prowl
And the gee-gaws go it
Behind the night
And things are all right
And I know it."
Ventilation in the Home.
Pure air is one of our most valuable possessions, yet we are prone to neglect getting all we need to purify these bodies of ours and keep them in fit condition to do good work. We are familiar with the quotation of Shakespeare, "How far that little candle throws its light," etc, but are we equally wise as to how far that little candle uses up the oxygen in the air of our rooms?
A candle burning, say our scientists, uses a little less oxygen than a man needs in breathing.
Remember this when leaving the lamp burning all night in the sleeping room.
It is hard for us to realize that we need quantities of fresh air all the time to keep up the purification of the blood.
The study of hygiene is almost a dead letter in many of our schools and it must be revived before we become as a people all we should be physically.
The practice of opening the window and covering the head by the bedding, sleeping under the clothes and rebreathing the air there, is as bad or worse than sleeping in a closed room.
The most approved methods now used in ventilation is the bringing of fresh air into the room near the top and letting out the foul air at the lower part of the room. When windows are the only means of ventilation, opening them a little at the top and bottom is the best one can do to keep the air fresh. When one has become accustomed to fresh air and lots of it, as people have who have slept outdoors for weeks, it seems stuffy to one such to sleep in a room, however well aired and open to fresh air it may be.
The treatment given now to typhoid patients in some sanitariums is sleeping in the open air, getting all the oxygen into the lungs possible to renew the blood and repair the waste issues. For tuberculosis this is a well-tried and approved treatment. More pure air lovers will make healthier, stronger bodies. It is easier to prevent disease than to cure it.
HE tender waffle hearts are set upon
Is either crisp or soggy, and
anon
Like maple sirup made of corn and cobs
Lasts but a scant five minutes, and in gone."
-Olive Green.
Nellie Maxwell.
Worse Off Than In America.
The life of a newspaper man in Russia continues to be far from pleasant, according to a Moscow editor. The old censorship has been abolished, but the change has not been beneficial to newspaper proprietors. Matter which, under the old system, might be expunged by the czar before the paper was sold and without loss to the proprietor, may now be the means of forcing him to pay heavy fines or damages, and possibly causing his imprisonment. The newspapers in Russia are not very profitable, owing to the enormous proportion of the people who are illiterate. The largest paper in Moscow—a city of about $1\frac{1}{2}$ million population—does not have a circulation of much more than twenty thousand in the city and about as much in the provinces.
Entered at the Postoffice at Wichita,
Kansas, as Second-Class
Mail Matter.
published Every Saturday at 634 N.
Water Street.
All matters addressed to The
Searchlight for publication must be
signed by the party or parties writing
All matters for publication must
reach this office not later than Thursday
noon to reach publication in the
current issue.
RULES OF THIS OFFICE:
First. All subscriptions must be paid in advance. Agents take notice.
Second. Communications received after Thursday noon will not be published in the current issue.
Third. In asking to change your paper from one address or postoffice to another, give both the new and the old.
Fourth. No new name will be placed on our books unless the money accompanies the name. Write plain.
Fifth. Address all matter for publication to The Wichita Searchlight, 634 N. Water street, Wichita, Kansas.
Sixth. Any erroneous reflection on the character, standing or reputation of any person which may appear in this paper will be gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the editor.
SEND YOUR NEWS IN EARLIER
WILL ELECT OFFICERS
The members of Mt. Hope Tabernacle No. 3 are hereby notified that the annual election ef officers will take place at the next regular meeting, Friday afternoon April 1st. 1910,eAll members will take due noticed and be governed accordingly. Dtr, Celia Tillman, H, P. The members of Wichita Tabernacle No. 34 will hold the annual election of their officers on Thurs day afternoon, April 7th, 1910.
All members take due notice.
Dr. Sallie Hall, H. P.
The Annual election of the officers of Mt. Nebo Temple No. 7 will be held, Tuesday night April 5th. 1910. All members take note
S. S. Washington, C. M.
Taborian Temple No. 11 will hold the annual election of their officers on Thursday night, April 7th. 1910. All members will take due notice.
Sir. Wm. Frazier C. M.
A merchants "add" in a Negro newspaper is a sign that the merchant will appreciate the trade of the members of that race. Go there and trade.
MONDAY NIGHT—APRIL 4th.
On next Monday night, April 4th, Moses Dickson-Tent No. 5 will give an entertainment at the A. M. E. chruch. The Tent is the children's department of the Knights and Daughters of Tabor, and it is doing good work for the children of the race. A short program will be rendered. Plenty of refreshments for all. Every one is cordially invited to be present at the A. M. E. church Monday night and help the little children.
THE RESUME OF THIS WEEK
Send your news notes and local happenings to 601 Beech Main Street.
Pay up! — Pay up!! — Pay up!!!
Miss. Grace Price; is improving
Mrs. J. Howard is reported ill at her home 859 Eagle St.
Mrs. Mary Clark has returned from a visit to Garden Plain.
Mrs Doc Kelley and Mrs Mary Ivry are both on the mend.
Mrs. Josie Grayson of Chicago is visiting with friends in the city
Robt. Mallary of Enid, Okla. was a visitor in the city last week.
Mrs. N. Howard came up from Hutchinson to sprnd Easter Sunday in the city.
Chas. L. Kiner will open up a hotel and restaurant at 630 N. Main Street.
The two year old baby of John Cash and wife 1037 N. Mead died Wednesday March 30th.
Mrs. Nanie Howard, of Hutchinson and Mrs. Josie Grayson are the guests of Stewart Waters and wife, 231 So. Laura.
Dr. A. K. Lawrence reports a fine daughter at the home of Mr. Alfred Yates 26th and Washington arrived Wednesday Dec, 22,
E. Thaddens Summytt and wife left Wednesday afternoon for Ft. Worth Texas where he assumes charge of a Drug Store in that city.
STIRLING CLOTHES
MADE IN WICHITA
Material Fit Style Workmanship
GUARANTEED
:-: YOUR TRADE SOLICITED :-:
we only tailored for a few dozen men, we would have to charge each an exorbitant price. We would have to take large profits from the few, instead of a very small one from each of our mang customers.
This is why we can put into a suit for you at $15.00 to $35. what the other fellows charges you from $25.00 to $60.00 for.
Stirling Woolen Mills Co
TAILORS
215 N. Main St Wichita, Kas
Look out for the A. M. E. Crusaders"!!! They are out for business. Every Captain is a wosker and the members of each Crusad band is determined to win, Keep clear of their track.
Attend the Masonic cornerstone layina at 615 N. Main on next Sunday, April 3rd.
Peerless Steam Laundry
Wichita's Oldest, Most Be
Hable and Best Laundry
BEST LAUNDRY WORK IN THE CITY
All Work Guaranteed
SHOVER & BONS, Prep.
Phone 232 245 N. Market
W. S. HENRION
DRUGGIST
601 M. Main St.
Wichita, Kansas
Carefulness
in filling Prescriptions and the use of only the best and purest Drugs and Chemicals in correct propotions, has made this department successful Bring us your prescription
Oscar R. Bissantz
Prescription Druggist
811 N. Main Wichita, Kan
Subscribe and pay for the Wichita Searchlight. It is only $1. for a whole year. Try it.
The Cantata 'Lost and Saved' rendered by 2nd. Baptist Choir at Garfield Hall on Thursday March 17th, was a success In every way, the choir deserves great credit for the time and energy displayed in producing such a grand musical entertainment. Many have been the favorable comments from those who were fortunate enough to present at this production by home talent, which demonstrates again that the Negroes of Wichita have a plenty of talent, all they want is chance to show it. The production of such entertainments should be encouraged among our people since much of our talent and energy is wasted in jurolous ways which do not elevate us in any way, but cause us to lose interest in the creditable accomplishments which we already have. The lesson taught in this Cantata was timely and wholesome and deserves futthur thought by the members of both races. The entertainment netted the neat sum of $47.00 which has been applied on the debt of the Church
DOCTOR G. G. BROWN,
Pays particular attention to all sick
people-day or night. Call him.
Mr. and Mrs. P. R. Perrie entertained with a three course 6 o'clock dinner at their palatial home 1015 Cherry St last Sunday. The guests were: Blmer Johnson and wife, O. T. Taylor and wife and A. Paul. All report a splendid time.
A. J, Brizill, of Muskogee Okla. father of Sam Brizell and Coleman Sunderson and wife of Salina, Kansas, are in the city the guests of Sam Brazill and wife, 24th and Fairview.
Miss Marguerite Sanford has developed into a classical pianist. Her executions have that higher touch which is convincing of the born musician.
Dr.J.E. Farmer,
Physician and Surgeon
—Diseases of—
Women and Children
A Specialty
Bell Phone 2186
Office 703 N. Main St.
Office Phones
517 Bell1537
N. Main St. Ind. 1557
DISEASES OF MEN, WOMEN AND
CHILDREN A SPECIALTY
F. O. Miller M.D.
Physici'n & Surgeon
Office Hours Bell Phone
9 to 11 2999
2 to 5 Wichita
7 to 8 Kansas.
513 N. Main St.
All calls answered promptly Day
or Night. Obstetrics and Diseases
of women A Specialty
Send your news in earlier
Ketzler Hardwre
DEALERS IN
Hardware, Hot Air Furnaces,
Tin Work, Roofing, Guttering,
Copper and Galvanized Iron
Work. Repairing and Painting
Tin Roofs A Specialty.
For Everything in
Building Material SEE
SEE
BOTH
PHONE 496
J.H. TURNER
WICHTA, KANS.
J33 TO J47 WEST DOUGLAS
METZ'S LUMBER IS IT?
Largest yard under shed in the state.
Best grade of lumber to select from.
Choicest finishings, posts, shingles and everything in the lumber line.
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT
Low and Easy to Meet. Let us figure next Lumber Bill. Yards and Office 3rd and Main Streets.
A. G. MUELLER
UNDERTAKER
BOTH PHONES 325 WICHITA KANS.
142-144 N. MARKET
Sample Copies
If you happen not to be a subscriber to the Searchlight and a copy of the Searchlight is left at your house, take it and read it with our compliments.
It is one of our sample copies and costs you nothing. Read it.
Its the man who "sticks-to-it" who wins.
Four Per Cent Interest
On all Savings Deposits we pay Four Per Cent interest compounded January 1st and July 1st All Deposits Guaranteed Interest bearing Certificates issued payable on demand, bearing 3 per cent interest per annum for each full month from date.
Open Saturday nights from 7 to 9 to receive deposits
Gold State Savings Bank
FIKST AND MARKET
H. W. Lewis, President P. K. Lewis Cashier,
Paid Up Capital $25,000.00
IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL FLOUR
GRAHAM - CORN MEAL - BREAKFAST FOOD
CULP'S MEAT MARKET
241 N.MAIN ST.
t Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Talls, Chin
Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterlings,
Bish Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon. Fresh
ship Oysters. Heinz Pickles, and Baked Beans
F. T. CULP, Prop.
. Main St. Both Phone
Thebest Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Tails, Chin Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterlings. Fresh Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon. Fresh Sealship Oysters. Heinz Pickles, and Baked Beans F. T. CULP, Prop. 241 N. Main St. Both Phone
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Grocery Department
WE SELL FLOUR
WE SELL MEAL
WE SELL MEAT
WE SELL POTATOES
fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class
grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU?
Makin Eye Drug Co.
N. Main St. — Wichita, Kan — Bell Phone 239
ECOND TO NONE"
In fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class Grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU?
Makin Eye Drug Co. 517 N. Main St. - Wichita, Kan - Bell Phone 239
PLEASE ALL
IT IS AS WHITE AS SNOW — TRY IT
THE OTTO WEISS ALFALFA STOCK and POULTRY FOOD
are all guaranteed under the United States
Law, Serial No. 13415 and under the Kana-
das State Law, Register No. 1.
The Cheapest and Best Food on the Market
THE OTTO WEISS ALFALFA STOCK and POULTRY FOOD are all guaranteed under the United States Law,Serial No.13415 and under the Kansas State Law, Register No.1.
First-Class Making of Men's Garments
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing A Specialty
Prompt Service Courteous Attention Your Trade Solicited
Bell* Phone, 3055 Wichita, Kansas.
Excellence Counts
THEN USE
"U-KNEAD-IT"
FLOUR
It exctls in every respect, — color, flavor and
pounds of bread per barrel. MADR BY
WATSON MILL CO.
WICHITA KANSAS
High Class Surgery Special Attention Given to a Specialty Canine Practice All Calls Promptly Answered-Day or Night Dr. C. R. Wildes.
The Finest Equipped Hospital In the City
Both Phones Office and Hospital
1730 236 K. Market St., Wichita, Ks.
Corner MAIN and CENTRAL
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
Full Line of Groceries —
Bell Phone 4163 FRED C. LOVE, Proprietor
HILL-ENGSTROM
LUMBER COMPANY
For good grades of Lumber at Low Prices. An assort ed stock of Bungalow Doors carried in stock.
318 West Douglas Ave., Both Phones
COULTER'S CAFE
354 North Main St.
NINEST AND BEST IN THE STATE OF
— Meals — Fish and Game in Seas
m much needed business in Wichita. Now
what you have a place that isa credit to
to let all join in and help push success
—Ice Cre
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Coulter. Proprietor
OLDEN'S HOTEL
N. Wichita St Wichita, Kan
—Class in every respect. Newly Furnished
and Lodging $3.75 and $4.00 per week
Lodging 50c and $1.00 per night
At a Specialty. Special Rates to Opera Troupes
Only Regular Meals Served.
Heated — Well Lighted — Well Ventilated
Best Accommodations — Prompt Service
James J. OLDEN, Prop.
THE FINEST AND BEST IN THE STATE
Short Orders — Meals — Fish and Game in Season
A much needed business in Wichita. Now
that you have a place that is a credit to
us let all join in and help push success
Soft Drinks— —Ice Cream
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Coulter. Proprietor
527-9 N. Wichita St Wichita, Kan First-Class in every respect. Newly Furnished Board and Lodging $3.75 and $4.00 per week Lodging 50c and $1.00 per night Transient a Specialty. Special Rates to Opera Troupes Only Regular Meals Served. Well Heated — Well Lighted — Well Ventilated Best Accommodations — Prompt Service James J. OLDEN, Prop.
It not merely sustains life, it strengthens it. PEERLESS PRINCESS FLOUR is guaranteed stains nothing but the kernels of selected wheat or conditions of perfect cleanliness. Try a sack. Howard Mills
kind of nutrition. It not merely sustains life, it strengthens and energizes it. PEERLESS PRINCESS FLOUR is guaranteed pure. It contains nothing but the kernels of selected wheat ground under conditions of perfect cleanliness. Try a sack.
Howard Mills
Vertical Mills
G. R. VOLLINTINE, Proprietor
Binding and Corn Shelling cur Specialty - Prompt Delivery
Main Wichita, Kansas
G. R. VOLLINTINE, Proprietor
custom Grinding and Corn Shelling cur Specialty — Prompt Delivery
814 North Main Wichita, Kansas
THE FINES
Short Orders —
A much
that you
us let all
Soft Drinks—
Mr. and
OLD
527-9 N. W.
First-Class
Board and Lodge
Lodge
Transient a Special
On
Well Heated
Best Accor
GOOD
FLOUR
PURE
kind of nutrition.
and energizes it. n
pure. It contains n
ground under con
How
Dealers in All Kinds of
HAY, GRAIN, FEED
POULTRY SUPPLIES
V
G. I.
custom Grinding and
814 North Main
THE STATION
and Game in Se-
tta. Now
credit to
success
—Ice C
oprietor
HOTEL
Wichita, Kan
Furnished
or week
night
Opera Troupes
L.
Ventilated
at Service
Mother and child
will both be the stronger and healthier for the use of PEERLESS PRINCESS FLOUR. Bread baked from it supplies the best. It not merely sustains life, it strengthens PEERLESS PRINCESS FLOUR is guaranteed nothing but the kernels of selected wheat litions of perfect cleanliness. Try a sack.
ward Mills
Phones
INDEPENDENT 690
BELL 2135
ls
vietor
7 — Prompt Delive
Wichita, K
Summer will soon be here and you want your summer clothing put in first-class shape; so they will be ready to put on when the summer days come. Come! we will put that old Suit, Dress, or Hat in the best of shape at a Price that will Surprise you.
THE KANSAS V
Special Attention To Ladie
The Only Aut
110 S. Emporia Ave.
Palme
507 North
REGULAR MEALS
::
Rooms by the night
Openat all hour
Your Patron
DEAM ABS
NORTH-WEST
COURT
Bonded A
WESTERN
THE KANSAS WILL KLEAN IT
Attention To Ladies' Work
The Only Automobile Delivery in W
Emporia Ave. C. C. Guye
Palmer's Café
507 North Main Street
REGULAR MEALS :—: SHORT ORDERS
::: ::: :::
Rooms by the night or week
Open at all hours of the Day and Night
Your Patronage Solicited
M ABSTRACT
NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE
COURT HOUSE
Bonded Abstractors
EASTERN UNIVERS
Palmer's Cafe
507 North Main Street
REGULAR MEALS :—: SHORT ORDERS
::: :—: :-:
DEAM ABSTRACT NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE COURT HOUSE Bonded Abstractors
WESTERN UNIVERSITY
The Leading Educational Institute For Negroes In The West
A faculty of eighteen the
from the leading In
MAGNIFICEN
Steam Heated and
DEPART
Theological, Classical, Ne
cal, State Industrial, emh
tecture, Carpentry, Mech
Book-binding, Tailoring,
making, Millinery, Cooking
Thorough discipline
careful supervision
Fine Military Bait
For full particulars write
Prof. Shelta
Of Western
QUINDA
Residence Phone No. 15
ulty of eighteen thoroughly equipped tea from the leading Institutes in America. MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS Steam Heated and Electric Lighted
MCCOY
A faculty of eighteen thoroughly equipped teachers from the leading Institutes in America. MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS Steam Heated and Electric Lighted
DEPARTMENTS
Biological, Classical, Normal, Sub-Normal, Public State Industrial, embracing courses in Art, Fine Arts, Carpentry, Mechanical Drawing, Printing, Binding, Tailoring, Business Courses, Millinery, Cooking, Laundering and Fashion Thorough discipline, Christian influence careful supervision Fine Military Band and Orchestra for full particulars write to
Prof. Shelton French.
ACTING PRESIDI
Of Western University
QUINDARO, KS
ence Phone No. 15 Office Phone
Theological, Classical, Normal, Sub-Normal, Musical, State Industrial, embracing courses in Architecture, Carpentry, Mechanical Drawing, Printing, Book-binding, Tailoring, Business Courses, Dress making, Millinery, Cooking, Laundering and Farming. Thorough discipline, Christian influence careful supervision Fine Military Band and Orchestra
Prof. Shelton French, ACTING PRESIDENT
QUINDARO, KS
Residence Phone No. 15 Office Phone 1423
Groceries, Meats GENERAL MERCHANDISE We carry a full, fresh line of Staple and Fancy Groceries and Choicest Fresh and Salt Meats Our Stock of Dry Goods Men, Women and Children's Shoes cannot be excelled in quality or in price. Free Delivery.
Tapp & Hanshaw
Mrs. U. G. Brown of Denver, Colo., is in the city, having been summoned to attend the funeral of her sister, Mrs. S. E. Johnson. She will visit several days in the city with her mother before returning to Denver.
Mrs. Lizzie Madison is reported quite ill at her home, 1621 Sherwood avenue.
---
Ind. Phone 638
WILL KLEAN IT
s's Work
Automobile Delivery in Wichita
C. C. Guyer Prop.
r's Cafe
Main Street
SHORT ORDERS
for week
s of the Day and Night
age Solicited
TRACT Co.
CORNER OF THE
HOUSE
abstractors
UNIVERSITY
roughly equipped teachers
institutes in America.
T BUILDINGS
and Electric Lighted
TMENTS——
Normal, Sub-Normal, Musi-
racing courses in Archi-
canical Drawing, Printing,
Business Courses, Dress
and Laundering and Farming.
Christian influence
and Orchestra
ate to
Bon French,
ACTING PRESIDENT
University
ARO, KS
Office Phone 1423
Use
Use
Murray's Reliable Nerve Balm
Murray's Reliable Antiseptic Salv
Murray's Reliable Extracts
Murray's Reliable Perfumes
Murray's Reliable Pure Spices
These Goods Have No Epual
They are pleasing hundreds of people and will please you.
J. H. MURRAY, Sole Prop.
808 South Hydraulic Avenue
New Phone 985
Wiehita - - - Kansas
The Searchlight is the "growingness" enterprise in town. It keeps place with progress. Subscribe for it - Read it - Pay for it.
---
L S. Naftsger, President, W. R. Tucker, Vice-President, J. M. Moore, Vice President, C. W. Brown. Vice President, V. H. Branch, Cashier.
Fourth National Bank
Capital $200,000 Surplus $125,000
Dirrectors: W. R. Tucker, W. E. Jett,
R. L. Holmes, S. B. "Amidon, J. M.
Moore, L. S. Nafesger, H. W. Darling,
A. G. Houston, G. Sheldon, C. V.
Brown, J. W. Metz, E. T. Battin, Henry
Lassen, V. H. Braneh.
Ford's Hair Pomare
Fifty years of success have proved the merits of this preparation.
What is more attractive than a beautiful head of hair? It has been the ambition of women in all ages. The use of Ford's Hair Pomade makes stubborn, harsh, kin_y or curly hair softer, more pliable and glossy. It is designed consistent with its length, as long as the Pomade remains in the hair. This result may be obtained by one the cough application according to directions. Two to four applications a month will keep the hair in satisfactory condition, and to four bottles, regular size are usually sufficient for a year. Directions with every bottle.
Ford's Hair Pomade
removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp and keeps it from getting harsh and it prevents the hair from falling out or breaking off life and vigor. Absolutely harmless. Used with splendid results even on children and infants. Delicately perfumed, its use is a constant pleasure. A most satisfactory toil-eration for ladies, gentlemen and children.
GOLME
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
329 East Center
SALINA, BANSAO
SPECIAL
NOTICE
If you need anything in New or Second Hand Household Goods we have the best goods and lowest prices in the city. Cash paid for Second Hand Goods.
LAFE CARTER,
— Bell Phone 4088 —
537 N. Main St Wichita, Ks
James Balance was called to Kansas City, Mo., Tuesday night, March 22nd, on account of the death of his elder brother, Frank Balance. The deceased was 55 years old and formerly made his home in Sedalia, Mo. Funeral was held in Kansas City, Sunday, March 27th. The deceased left a wife and four boys. James returned to Wichita Monday.
The many friends of Rev, and Mrs. E. T. Fishback regret very much to learn of the continued serious illness of Mrs. Fishback at their home 827 Wabash. All join in hoping for her early recovery.
REFRIGORATORS
A
The above is the cut out of twenty-five different patterns of refrigerators carried in my stock. I bought a car load of them at right prices and will sell them cheap.
Before you buy a Refrigerator come and see my stock and get my low prices.
Alo have a complete line of New and Second Hand Furniture, Rugs, Carpets Mattings, Stoves, etc, and carry a general line Household Goods. CASH : OR : EASY PAYMENTS
E. D. SQUIRE
Bell Phone 1837 Ind. 1837 Green
245-247 N. Main Wichita, Ks
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY.
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for County Attorney, subject to the Republican primary, August 2nd 1910. I will appreciate your aid.
AUSTIN J. ADAMS
I desire to announce that I am a can candidate for the office of clerk of the District Court of Sedgwick county, Kansas, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary in August. CHAS. D. FAZEL.
FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for re-election to the office of Register of Deeds of, Sedgwick County subject to the approval of the Republican primaries.
JOSEPH BOWMAN.
Satisfaction
IN EVERY POUND OF
"wichita's Best "Four
POENISCH BROS., Agents.
622 N. Main Street
We also carry a complete stock
of Hay, Grain, Feed and Coal.
530 - Both Phones - 530
CENTRAL SEED CO.
WRITE, PHONE OR CALL for our new 1910 Garden, Flower, Field and Seed Catalogue. We handle seeds GROWN ONLY BY RELIABLE GROWERS. We are manufacturers' agents for Mandy Lee, Petaluma, Old Trusty and Clyde Hatch Incubators. We pay freight to your station and sell at factory prices. See us for Poultry Remedies. Both Phones. 243 North Main St., Wichita, Kansas.
KANSAS PIONEER DEAD.
KANSAS PIONEER DEAD.
Mr. Wm. M. Thomas, who came to Kansas in the early 60s and was one of the colored men who helped to settle the West, died at the home of his son, Edward F. Thomas, 425 N. Santa Fe street, on Thursday, March 24th, 1910, of a lingering illness. Nine weeks ago Mr. Thomas was brought to Wichita from his home at Anadarko, Okla., and placed in St. Francis hospital for treatment. For a time it seemed as though he would recover, when a sudden change for the worse came on and he was moved to the home of his son, Ed, where he died. Mr. Thomas was born in Louisville, Ky., October 25, 1850, and came to Kansas in the 60s, moving to Wichita in 1893, where he lived till 1904, when he moved on a farm. He was a Master Mason and a member of the Second Baptist church. Funeral services were held Wednesday, March 30th, at the Second Baptist church under the auspices of the Masons. He leaves a wife and seven children.
Fred Madison, one of our former Wichitans, now residing in Topeka, made a flying trip to Wichita Thursday and spent the day visiting among relatives and friends.
HE early history of Texas was
) J written in blood and fire. Her
counties preserve the names of
her martyrs. Parker, Coleman,
Crockett, Fannin, Travis, Bowie
and a hundred others have the
map for their monument; their
names are given daily utterance
== by those for whom their deeds
os
femmes by those for whom their deeds
have little meaning.
In the beginning, after the Indian tribes—
friendly at first—became hostile, the warfare
was almost solely with the savages. For a
full half-century every seitler who built his
campfire on the frontier did so at the risk of
his property and his scalp. Those who estab-
Ushed homes and settlements must have been
@ daring race indeed, for raids upon horses
and herds were always imminent and massa-
eres Were as regular as the seasons.
The mother of Chief Quanah Parker (still
living) for whom the town of Quanah,Tex., was
named, was Cynthia Ann Parker, a little white
girl ‘captured by the Tehaucano Indians, during
@ raid on what was known as the Austin col-
‘ony, in 1836. A brief story of that raid will
serve as an example of a thousand others of a
similar sort. The Austin colony settled in
what is now Grimes couuty and consisted of
something more than a score of persons, in-
cluding women and children. The Indians
who dwelt in the neighborhood seemed friend-
ly enough until a small party of unknown set-
tlers came along and attempted’ to steal their
horses. Immediate trouble was the result and
the loss of Tehaucano friendship for the entire
settlement. When the reader considers what
follows, I believe I shall be forgiven for hoping
that those newcomers who stirred up the first
trouble received the sort of a reward which
only an Indian would know how to confer.
As the Austin colony consisted chiefly of
the Parker family, a rude fortification which
they erected was called Fort Parker, a name
that to-day still euggests something of shud-
dering horror to those who have heard its his-
tory.
|, It was a fair May morning when that his-
tory was made. ‘he early risers noticed that
@ body of restless Indians had collected within
about 400 yards of the fort. A white flag was
hoisted by the savages to signify their peace-
able intentions and a warrior approached as
4f for conference. Benjamin Parker, com-
mander of the fort, went out to meet him. He
came back presently with the word that he
Delieved the Indians intended to fight. He re-
turned, however, to the hostile camp, where
he was at once set upon and literally chopped
to pieces by the savages, who then with wild
yells and blood-curdiing warwhoops charged
‘on the fort. Some of the inmates had already
Jeft the stockade. Others were trying to
escape. John Parker and wife and a Mrs.
Kellogg were overtaken a mile away. Parker
was killed and scalped; his wife was spared
and Mrs. Kellogg was made captive. Other
members of the colony were butchered right
and left and mutilated in the barbarous fash-
fon which seems to give an Indian joy. Silas
Parker was brutally killed and his two chil-
dren, one of whom was the little girl, Cynthia
Ann, were carried away. A Mrs. Plummer—
daughter of Rev. James W. Parker—attempted
‘to escape, carrying her little son in her arms,
‘A huge painted savage, begrimed with dust
and blood, overtook her, felled her with a hoe,
‘and seizing her by the hair dragged her, still
-clinging to her child, back amid the butchery
tand torture of her friends, She and the others
who were living were beaten with clubs and
Mashed with rawhide thongs. That night such
of the captives as remained alive, and theso
jincluded three children, were flung face down
in the dust, their hands bound behind their
backs, while the Indians, waving bloody scalps
and shrieking, danced about them and beat
them with thelr bows until the prisoners were
etrangling with their own blood. Later they
took the infant child of Mrs. Plummer and
slowly choked it before her eyes. When it was
‘mot quite dead they flung ft again and again
“into the air and let it fall on the stones and
earth. Then they tied a rope around its neck
and threw its naked body into the hedges of
prickly pear, from which they would jerk it
flercely with demoniacal yells. Finally they
fastened the rope attached to its neck to the
pommel of a saddle and rode round and round
in a circle until the body of the child was lit-
erally in shreds. The poor fragments were
then thrown Into the mother’s lap. For some
reason the little girl, Cynthia Ann Parker, re-
ceived better treatment, and lived. She grew
‘up an Indian, forgot her own race and tongue,
married a chief and became the mother of an-
other chief, Quanah, surnamed Parker, to-day
fa friend of the white race.
It was the massacre of Fort Parker and
events of a similar nature that resulted in the
organization of the Texas Rangers. The
‘Rangers were at first a semi-official body,
Jocally enlisted and commanded, with regula-
tions and duties not very clearly defined.
‘Their purpose, however, was not in doubt. It
was to defend life and property, and their
chief qualifications were to be able to ride and
shoot and stand up against the warfare of
Dloodthirsty savages.
’ «pxterminate the Indians” became a watch-
word in those days and the warfare that en-
gued and continued for 40 years can be com-
pared with nothing in history unless it be
with the fierce feuds of the ancient Scottish
clans
Barly in 1836 Texas fought for and gained
her independence, the only state in the Union
to achieve such a triumph. In the following
year the Texas congress recognized the Ran-
ger movement and authorized several persons
to raise Ranger companies to scour the coun-
try and annihilate marauding bands. Indians
‘and low class Mexicans (“greasers”) often
-eongorted and the work, desperate and bloody,
‘continued along the ever widening and wester-
Fog
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fenders but sometimes with the very people
whom they were hoping to protect. This made
the work hard and discouraging, as work al-
Ways is hard and discouraging when it is done
amid enemies who wear the guise of friends.
For this kind of service Capt. Bill McDon-
ald was eminently qualified. Already he had
been appointed a special Ranger in Company
B, commanded by Capt. S. A. McMurray, but
his duties as U. S. deputy marshal in No-Man’s
Land and in the Cherokee strip had been his
chief work. Nevertheless he had, on occasion,
engaged in bandit hunting in his own state,
during this period, either alone or in company
with other officials, usually with good results.
Events of this sort kept Bill McDonald's
name fresh in the Texans’ minds and made
him seem peculiarly eligible for regular ser-
vice. The resignation of Capt. S. A. McMur-
ray, who had long and bravely commanded
Company B, became his opportunity and he
burried to Austin to try for that command.
His old friend, James Hogg, was now gov-
ernor of the state. Since the ‘settlement of
their differences so long before there had been
no discord of any kind and each had admired
the other’s career, proud to remember the
friendship. Arriving at the capital now, Me-
Donald was shown in to the governor's room.
Greeting him, he said:
“Well, I hardly know what to call you, since
you got to be governor. I don’t know whether
to call you ‘Jim’ or ‘Mister.’ I'll have to call
you ‘Governor,’ I gueys, as I want to get a
place.”
They shook hands cordially. Gov. Hogg
said:
“What Is it, Bill? What can I do for you?”
“Why.” said McDonald, “I came down to
get to be Ranger captain—to take McMurray’s
place in Company B.”
Hogg looked at him reprovingly.
“Why didn't you let me know sooner?” he
said. “There are two other applications for
the place, both from good men, with long pe-
titions and fine indorsements.”
‘The applicant for position forgot his old
friend’s title. i
“Why, Jam, I never thought of it until a day
or two ago. I didn’t have time to get indorse-
ments, but I can get ‘em, if you want them. I
have been working mostly in No-Man’s Land
and the Territory lately, but have done work
in Texas too, and I can get about any kind of
indorsement you want.”
Hogg laughed. He bad a robust sense of
humor.
“That's all right, Bill,” he said; “you have
already got the best indorsement I ever saw.”
McDonald looked puzzled.
“I don’t understand,” he said, “I didn’t
know anybody knew I wanted the place.”
“All the same you have got the indorse
ments,” insisted Hogg.
He turned to his desk and got out a bundle
of letters.
“Look over these,” he said. “You probably
know some of the writers.”
McDonald took the letters and read them
one after another. They were from well-mown
criminals, their lawyers, their friends and their
associétes. They had been received by Hogg
while he was attorney general and each was a
official, whose chief recreation was hounding
good citizens for the sake of revenge or glory,
and adding that it was not unusual for him to
put the said citizens in jail or in box cars,
declaring further that he sometimes hitched
them to posts with chains and that he was a
menace to legitimate settlement and society
in general.
McDonald looked over some of these docv-
ments and grinned.
“That's so, Jim,” he said, “I do put ‘em
4n box cars when there ain't a jail; the way
I used to do back in Mincola—you recollect,
when the jail was full—and I lariat ‘em out
with a chain and a post when there ain't a
box car handy; but I don't reckon they're in-
nocent none.”
Hogg nodded.
“Those indorsements are good enough for
me,” he said. “They carry the flavor of con-
vietion, [ appoint you Ranger captain on the
strength of them.”
McDonald returned to Quanah with his ap-
pointment as captain of “Company B, Frontier
battalion.” ‘The headquarters of the company
were then at Amarillo, in the southern part of
Potter county, near the Randall county line.
‘This was almost the exact center of the Pan-
handle and in a locality sparsely settled, un-
tamed and lawless.
Since the early days of “Ranging” there
had not been much change in Ranger regula-
tions and equipment. The character of the
work, however, had changed and the force
had been reduced in numbers. Company B
now consisted of only eight members all told.
‘These were supposed to range over all that
vast section known as the Panhandle and were
subject to orders that might take them to any
other portion of the state where their assist-
ance was needed.
It was in January, 1891, that Bill McDonald
received his appointment as Ranger captain
and his first official service was not long de-
layed. He arrived at Amarillo about midnight
and was received with congratulations, for the
news had traveled ahead of him. He was tired,
however, and the hour was late, so he pres-
ently slipped away to bed. He had hardly
fallen asleep when he was rudely awakened
and handed a telegram which stated that the
Indians had made a raid across the border
and were killing and robbing in Hall county,
near Salisbury.
Capt. McDonald read the telegram and
laughed. There had been no Indian troubles
in Texas for a number of years. White rene-
gades there were in plenty, but Indian out-
breaks had long since ceased.
“I guess the boys are trying to have some
fun with me on my first night,” be said, and
turned in once more to sleep. But a few min-
utes later another telegram came; and an-
other; this time from the superintendent of
the railroad company—a Mr. Good, whom Mc-
Donald knew as a man not given to practical
joking.
‘The Ranger captain dressed himself, hur-
ried over to the telegraph office and got the
operator there to talk over the wire to the
operator where the scare had originated. He
learned that it seemed to be genuine and that
everybody was leaving the neighborhood. ~~
Still Capt. Bill could not believe it a gem
uine Indian incursion. Hall county was in
the second tier from the Territory line and
the Indians would have had to cross Childress
county to get to it. He did not believe that
they would undertake to do this or that they
could have undertaken it without previous
alarms. Still it was his duty to investigate.
He got a special train, loaded in men, horses
and pack mules, and set out on a hunt for In-
dians. It was about a hundred miles to Salis
bury and they reached there early in the day.
Not a soul was in sight anywhere, The in-
habitants were hidden, some in dugouts, some
in haystacks, some in the tall grass. Here and
there, as the train pulled in, McDonald saw a
head stick out from a sod house far out on
the prairie, then suddenly disappear, like a
prairie dog dropping into his hole. He set out
to interview some of these wary settlers and
learned that the Indian alarm bad been given
by a man—a new settler just arrived in the
country—who had ridden his horse to death
and lost one of his children—having left him
far behind somewhere—in his wild eagerness
to escape the savages who, he declared, were
burning and scalping not far away. Capt. Bill
found this man and after a little talk with him
was convinced that what he had seen was
nothing more nor less than some cowboys on
a round-up, disporting themselves around their
campfire at night, as cowboys will—dancing
and capering in the mad manner of young
plainsmen whose ideas of amusement are ele-
mental and whose opportunities for social di-
versions are few. The man and the neighbor.
hood remained unconvinced, so it was decided
to visit the scene of the disturbance.
Horses, men and pack mules unloaded
themselves from the freight car and went re
cing over the prairie, the pack mules, as usual,
plunging and braying with tail in air, their
tinware clattering in a manner calculated to
put a whole tribe of Indians into a panic and
send them capering across the eastern hori-
zon into their own domain. But there were no
Indians. It was as Capt. Bill had thought; a
gang of cowboys, the night before, had round-
ed up some cattle, killed a beef, carried it to
their camp nearby, where they had built a
great fire and roasted it, doing a wild war
dance of celebration and shooting off their six-
shooters in their prodigal expression of joy.
Viewed from a little distance, through a sort
of mirage condition which had exaggerated
the whole effect, the scene to the newcomers
was a horrifying picture of savages about a
burning home, with the inhabitants fleeing for
their lives.
‘The man who had just moved in had stam-
peded for his own safety and started a gen-
eral alarm, which did not subside even when
the cowboys themselves came in and testified
to the truth. The panic spread throughout
that section of the country and other reports
of Indian outbreaks were circulated, becoming
magnified until it was believed that the In-
dians had broken out and were making a gen-
eral raid on the Panhandle. The inhabitants
of one town, south of Amarillo, threw up
breastworks, got behind them, and put out
pickets in preparation for the arrival of the
Indians. Every man seen loping across the
prairie was reported as an Indian, and all this
happened as late as 1891, when there had
been no Indian outbreaks for years and when
there was scarcely a possibility of anything of
the sort. It was a big joke, of course, after
ward, but it seemed no joke at the time and
it was Bill McDonald’s initiation as captain.
HAS BEEN DEFINITELY LOCATED
ON JEBEL JUDI.
Discovery Moves Washington Writer
to Dissertation on the Life and
Works of the Famous
Old-Timer.
A tremendous weight of sorrow wit!
be lifted from the hearts of a lonz
suffering world, we fancy, when it b«
comes generally known that the grays
of Noah has been definitely located by
a certain scientific gentleman given
strenuously to knocking round and
about the earth and sticking his nose
{nto the haunts of the quaint and curi.
ous of the long ago. Noah sleeps the
last sleep, it seems, in the summit of
Jebel Judi, near by and overlooking
the plains of Mesopotamia,
Noah was a most picturesque indi
vidual. He was an exceedingly wise
man in his generation, for he had
sense enough to get in out of the rain
when, according to the record, getting
fn out of the rain was all but uni.
versally considered extremely foolish
and ill-advised. Nevertheless, had he
not shown his surpassing wisdom by
acting faithfully upon it, he would not
have come to be known subsequently
as the real, genuinely authenticated
world’s champion oldest inhabitant
and the final appeal in all matters of
ancient history.
Noah—who surely must have been
in the original edition the Hon. Noah
or Col. Noah—probably may safely be
set down as Exhibit A among prohibi-
tionists. If congress had been invent
ed during or before Noah’s day doubt-
less he would have been a member
and a shrewd and result-getting mem-
ber at that. He knew how to play
both ends against the middle most suc-
cessfully—a sure sign of the intuitive
and practical politician. He built and
personally c®nducted the greatest
water-wagon expedition of all time,
and yet it was known to Noah’s closer
friends and associates that he did not
hesitate to laugh it to scorn on occa:
stons and refuse to ride upon it quite
frequently. Astute old Noah! Amid
a world of wetness, he alone was able
to find a place to get off!
Of course some of the spicter tales
told concerning Noah may have had
no real foundation in fact. They may
have been circulated by the oppositiof,
afterward duly and truly swamped at
the psychological moment, righteously
enough, it is to be hoped. It must be
remembered that Noah held an undis.
puted monopoly of the earth’s trans-
portation business for a time, and
probably was, in consequence, a par-
ticularly engaging target for the
muckrakers and malcontents of the
day.
Anyway, whatever may have been
Noah's shortcomings or virtues, and
waiving the possible preponderance
either way for the moment, his was a
compelling personality, and inspires
solemn contemplation and speculation
even at this late hour. Rest his bones
over there on Jebel Judi! He played
a stirring part in an exciting dma of
considerably more than tank dimen-
sions.—Washington Herald.
Had to Pay the Interest.
Because he was shy $10 he couldn't
possibly account for the convivial
young man pawned his new spring
sult. The ticket had been filled out,
the money paid over and the suit
folded ready to put away when the
young man was inspired to go through
the pockets. In a coat pocket he
found the $10 that had so mysteriously
disappeared,
“I guess we'll just call this deal
off,” he said.
He refolded the suit and returned
the ticket and the $10.
“Thirty cents more, if you please,”
sald the broker. “Interest on $10 for
a month or a fraction thereof.”
“Interest!” exclamled the young
man, “Great Scott! I haven't beea
in here five minutes.”
“That's a fraction of a month,” said
the imperturbable pawnbroker. “You
have put me to just as much trouble
as if your suit had been here a
month.”
ee ea
There came to a Birmingham (Eng.)
hospital the other day a man named
Morgan Field, who is afficted by a
disease which gives him the appear:
ance of a living corpse. His skin has
become marble white, devoid of ex
pression, the natural line having been
obliterated, feeling stony cold to the
touch, and looking like the skin of a
dead man. The skin has become so
tight’ around the joints that he is un.
able to bend them, and he can only
partially open his mouth with diffi
culty. So far the case has defied the
resources of medical science, and
specialists can only guess that the
man’s conditions is due to an obstruc
tion in the arteries, veins, or lymph
vessels, caused by some disturbance
in the nervous center governing the
blood supply.
A Mean Advantage.
Crabbe—He is the meanest fellow
T ever met.
Goodley—At any rate he’s succes
ful. He has taken advantage of bis
opportunities.
Grabbe—Yes, and I guess his oppor-
tumities were small, which is another
sign-of his meaness.
‘es tie Blawwrielite’. Club.
Member (to friend whom he has
not seen in some time)—And wheo
was the ‘last appearance of your
piece?”
“On the first might"—Fiiegends
Blatter.
HE KNEW.
Bings—This is a hard, hard, old world.
Bangs—So you've been thrown out
at an automobile too, eh?
Undesirable Acquisition.
A scientist who lost his pet dog put a little notice in the paper headed, "Warning," which charitably described the animal as having "strayed," and added: "It is of no value, not even to the owner; but, having been experimented upon for scientific purposes with many virulent poisons, a lick from its tongue—and it is very affectionate—would probably prove fatal." The dog came back next day.
Worn Through.
"Mummy, look! The Smiths have got a new chaufeur."
"Yes, dear, the last one could not be repaired any more."
Pettit's Eye Salve First Sold in 1807 100 years ago, sales increase yearly, wonderful remedy; cured millions weak eyes. All druggists or Wured Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
Light to Banish Sorrow.
Sorrow dwells longest where the sun is shut out.—Florida Times-Union.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS.
Use the best. That's why they buy Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers 5 cents.
Laughter is one of the very privileges of reason, being confined to the human species.—Leigh Hunt.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
FOR RHEUMATISM
BRIGHTS DISEASE
DIABETES.BACKACH
1875 "Guarantee"
Make the Liver Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly compel a lazy liver to do its duty.
Cures Constipation, Indigestion, Sick
Headache, and Distress after Eating.
Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price
GENUINE must bear signature:
RHEUMATISM
COPPER
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Cured by Electropodes
New Electric Treatment. Metal insoles—worn inside shoes. Body becomes magnet—nerves the muscles. Backache. Kidney and Lymphatics. Varicose veins. Backache. Kidney and Lymphatics. Plains. Only $10. pair. Guarantee signed with each shoe. $10. pair. Money received. Not at your Drugs'店. send us $1.00. We will see you are supplied. WESTERN ELECTROPODE CO. 247 Los Angeles St., Los Angeles, Cal.
MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN,
A Cotain Relief for Feverishness,
and for the Nymphomachic Troubles. Teething
Disorders, and Digestive Wormm. They may be painful
in 24 hours. All Drugs, 20 oz.
Sample mailed FREE. Addres.
A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N. Y.
A Remarkable Invention
NO STROPPING NO HONING
Gillette
KNOWN THE WORLD OVER
If afflicted with more area, use Thompson's Eye Water
NEW IN FLAVORING
SOMETHING A LITTLE OUT OF
THE ORDINARY.
Ideas Evolved Always Worth Remembering as a Change From Old-fashioned Servings-Chopped Walnuts Best for Salad.
Frequently in making some familiar dish a good cook will discover some clever little variation in the way of flavoring, new ingredients or serving which add to the appearance and taste of the dish and tune the palate for it anew.
Thus, one clever woman in preparing salads composed of celery and walnuts, or celery, nuts and apples, discovered that if the nuts were first passed through the meat chopper and reduced to the consistency of coarse meal the flavor was greatly improved and the mastication process made easy.
She shreds the celery rather fine and arranges the minced nuts into a little mound on each portion, finishing with a spoonful of thick mayonnaise.
Women who are on the alert for novelties now vary the croutons served with soup by making them of rye bread instead of from the wheaten loaf. The crusts are trimmed away from a thick slice of the bread, the surface of which is then rubbed ever so lightly with a clove of garlic cut in half. After being cut into the conventional squares or triangles they are transferred to a baking dish and browned delicately in a quick oven.
Others vary the grape fruit salad now and then by the addition of stuffed Malaga or hothouse grapes. To prepare it this way seed the grapes and in each, replacing the seeds, put a blanched hazel nut. Mix with the grape fruit and serve on white lettuce hearts with French dressing. The juice of the shaddock, by the way, should be used instead of vinegar in the French dressing. This makes a salad attractive to the eye as well as delicious.
When other ideas for sandwiches fail, try the unusual and tasty ones made of baked beans. The tinned beans can be used, although the home product is preferable. Mash the beans through a wire sieve and work into a soft paste, using a few drops of warm water if necessary. Spread on tiny oblongs of buttered white bread and press together.
Or press through the sieve in the same way and moisten a little with any favorite condiment, spread on small, thin slices of rye bread and form into sandwiches as before. The latter recipe makes a "hot" and substantial sandwich for buffets, stag functions, etc.
One woman who, her friends think, has inspirations for cookery, never makes stuffing for poultry without including in it a little chopped sausage. Usually the sausage is cooked, but of late she has discovered that the raw porcine product is even better. This makes a rich and very "filling" stuffing for either turkey or chicken, one which will meet with favor among folk of hearty appetite—and strong digestion.
For an old-fashioned treat which is so old that it will be new to many of the present generation, make five cornmeal griddle cakes the size of a breakfast plate and put one upon the other with shaved maple sugar and plenty of butter between. Cut in triangular shape like pie and serve thus. When something out of the usual run is desired for a home luncheonry creamed hazelnuts. Shell the nuts, blanch and boil until soft, then cover with cream sauce flavored delicately with sherry. This dainty can be served in individual ramekins or in paper cases. The flavor is new and appetizing.
Serve pineapple ice cream or water or water ice in "surprise style" for the next guest luncheon, for which novel touches are in order. This is done by cutting the top carefully away, including the green spray itself, and scooping out the pulp with a spoon. Fill with water ice or frozen pineapple made from the pulp, replace the top and bring to table flaunting its green top as before.
Or, instead of the water ice for the filling, use a delicate cream made by this formula: Stew the pulp of the pineapple, sweeten well, strain through a press, add juice of one lemon and freeze. When partly frozen stir in a cup of whipped cream and freeze again until stiff.
Squash Biscuit.
One cup of sifted squash, one small half-cup of sugar, two tablespoons melted butter, one level teaspoon of salt, half cake compressed yeast, dissolved in one eight cup warm water; knead in as much flour as the mixture will hold. No water required other than what the yeast cake is dissolved in; let rise till very light, then mound into small biscuits; let rise again, and bake in a rather slow oven.
Keeping Bread Board Clean.
The ideal meat and bread board is a marble slab, but when wood must be used care should be taken to keep it in a sanitary condition. It should be scrubbed with hot water each time after using, and once a day should be rubbed off with the surface of a cut lemon, then rinsed thoroughly in cold water. This keeps the surface white and removes grease.
Scorched Linen.
For a scorch, wet the spot, rub with soap, and bleach in the sun.
Editor—You can't write verse.
Poet—I can; I've got a poetic license.
Somewhat Disappointing.
Somewhat Disappointing.
He was a doctor and was patiently waiting for his first patient. Thought he: "If the mountain will not come to Mohammed, Mohammed must go to the mountain. And as patients will not seek me out I must needs seek them out." He strolled through the cheap market and presently saw a man buy six nice cucumbers. "Here's a chance!" said he, and followed him home. Patiently he waited for four long and lonely hours and about midnight the front door quickly opened, and the man dashed down the steps. He seized him by the arm and cried earnestly: "Do you want a doctor?" "No!" replied the man roughly. "Want more cucumbers!"
Goaded.
Saving became a passion with the man and the woman. No privation was too great, if so be by it they might add to their accumulations. And they labored jointly. The woman's sacrifice was in every respect equal to that of the man.
But when they had amassed $10,000 the man, because he had the power, took the money and purchased with it, not the automobile which he had led his faithful wife to expect, but a home.
"Brute!" she cried, and when next a mob of suffragettes came that way she joined them. Who could blame her?—Puck.
The Innocent Victim
"I believe," said the blunt individual, "in speaking my mind and calling a spade a spade."
"Yes," replied Miss Cayenne. "Many are that way. The tendency is what corrupts the vocabularies of so many parrots."
Don't Risk Your Life
By neglecting Constipation. It leads to autotoxia. There is just one right remedy for Constipation, that is NATURES REMEDY (NR tablets). It's different from all others because it is thorough, it corrects the entire digestive system and helps,neys Dyspepsia and Rhoeas malaria. It helps Dyspepsia and Rhoeas malaria. One tonight--you'll feel better in the morning. Get a 25c Box. All Druggists. The A. H. Lewis Medicine Co., St. Louis.
Satisfactory to Her.
"Woman," observed the epigrammatic boarder, "is a puzzle without an answer."
"Huh!" snorted old Grumpley. "I never saw a woman without one yet."
—Stray Stories.
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
Charles P. Petitkin
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Sometimes.
Miss Blithely (interested in science)
—Can one get a shock from a telephone?
The Professor—That depends, my dear young lady, on who is talking at the other end.—M. A. P.
Distemper
In all its forms, among all ages of horses and dogs, cured and others in the same stable prevented from having the disease with Spoina's Distemper Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold last year. $.50 and $1.00. Good druggists, for manufacturers. Agents wanted. Write for free book. Spoina Med. Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
An Ungentlemanly Reply.
"Once you called me the light of your existence."
"Yes, I know it. That was before I had any idea you were going to become the dead weight of it."
Takers of the United States Census will use Waterman's ideal Fountain Pen because it is always ready and sure.
An empty human heart is an abyss earth's depths cannot match. Annie C. Lynch.
DAVIS PAINKILLER
has no substitute. No other remedy is so effective for rheumatism, lumbago, stiffness, numbness or cold of any sort. Put up in 2c, 3c, 5c and 8c bottles.
Philosophy and Religion.
The idea of philosophy is truth; the idea of religion is life—Bayne.
ONLY ONE "BROMO QUININE."
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day, 2c.
No, Cordelia, it isn't called "common sense" because it is so common.
DONT SPOIL YOUR CLOTHES.
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. All grocers, 5c a package.
Give truth a square deal and it will not be crushed to earth.
Golden Medical Discovery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak lungs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on the recognition of the fundamental truth that "Golden Medical Discovery" supplies Nature with body-building, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in condensed and concentrated form. With this help Nature supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" re-establishes the digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves—in short establishes sound vigorous health.
If your dealer offers something "just as good," it is probably better FOR HIM—it pays better. But you are thinking of the cure not his greater profit, so there's nothing "just as good" for you. Say so.
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Medicine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing only. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
ANY WOMAN CAN HAVE BEAUTIFUL HAIR.
(From French Beauty Monthly.)
"No woman should use water upon her hair oftener than once in two months," says M. Fournier, the noted French scientist. "Dry powder only should be used. Moisture causes the hair to lose its color and in time become thin.
"Any woman desiring abundant, lustrous hair should use a dry shampoo every two or three days. Mix four ounces of powdered arris root with four ounces of therox. Sprinkle about a tablespoonful of this mixture upon the head; then brush the powder thoroughly through the hair. This will keep it light and fluffy, and beautifully lustrous. You will soon see new hair starting to grow. This treatment is the only thing that I am sure will produce a growth of hair.
"While plain orris root is used as a dry shampoo by many women, still, no such results can be obtained as by using the formula I have given."
Marriage.
A game of chance in which the chances are about even. The man leads at first, but after leaving the altar he usually follows breathlessly in his wife's trail. The rules are very confusing. If a masked player holds you up some night at the end of a long gun, it is called "robbery" and entitles you to telephone the police; but if your wife holds you up for a much larger amount the next morning at the end of a long hug, it is termed "diplomacy" and counts in her favor. In this, as in other games of life, wives are usually allowed more privileges than other outlaws.—Judge
The Right Spirit.
Apropos of Valentine day a passenger on the Bermudian said:
"Mark Twain once told us, in a little Valentine day speech on this boat, of an Irish wooer who had the right valentine spirit. Acceptance or rejection he could take with equal grace.
"No,' she replied. 'I am another's.' "He heaved a sigh and said: "Shure, thin, darlin', I wish ye was twins, so that I could have at laste the half of ye."
How's This?
An Inward Conviction.
Tommy, having disposed of three helpings of sausages and doughnuts sat mournfully regarding his empty plate.
Observing his pensive expression, Aunt Sarah kindly asked: "Tommy, won't you have some more doughnuts?"
"No!m!" the poor lad replied, with feeling emphasis, "I don't want them I got now!"—Harper's Magazine.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OUNTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 500.
A man seldom has enough spare time to convince a woman that she's mistaken.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gum, reduces inflammation, alings pain, cures wind colic. 200 a bottle.
And the man who kills time will discover that sooner or later it will come back and haunt him.
Lewis' Single Binder cigar. Original Tin Foil Smoker Package, 5c straight.
A man reaps what he sows—and rips what his wife sews.
Pass Along The Good Word
That Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is to-day and has, for over 40 years, been the standard Blood-purifier, Stomach Strengthener and Liver Invigorator sold by druggists. It's not a secret nostrum but a medicine of known composition — a medicine so good that the best physicians prescribe it knowing that its ingredients, which are printed on its outside wrappers and attested under oath, are the best known to medical science for the diseases for which it is advised.
The great success of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery in curing weak lungs, and obstinate and lingering oignition of the fundamental truth thatery" supplies Nature with body-building making materials, in condensed and cone help Nature supplies the necessary street gest food, build up the body and there stinate coughs. The "Discovery" ree-nutritive organs in sound health, purifi and nourishes the nerves—in short establish
If your dealer offers something "juably better FOR HIM—it pays better of the cure not his greater profit, it as good" for you. Say so.
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to co bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce
The best people on earth are your wife's folks—so she thinks.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is made to satisfy the smoker.
When a fool gets angry he furnishes the proof of his foolishness.
Look Prem
see ugly, grizzly, gray haires. Use "LA CRES
Have You Tried?
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? We can furnish positive proof that it has made many remarkable cures after all other means had failed.
Women who are suffering with some form of female illness should consider this.
As such evidence read these two unsolicited testimonial letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest statements of facts.
Cresson, Pa.—"Five years ago I had a bad fall, and hurt myself inwardly. I was under a doctor's care for nine weeks, and when I stopped I grew worse again. I sent for a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, took it as directed, and now I am a stout, hearty woman."—Mrs. Ella E. Aikey, Cresson, Pa.
Baird, Wash.—"A year ago I was sick with kidney and bladder troubles and female weakness. The doctors gave me up. All they could do was to just let me go as casly as possible. I was advised by friends to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier. I am completely cured of my ills, and I am nearly sixty years old."—Mrs. Sarah Leighton, Baird, Wash.
Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the derangements of the female organism which breed all kinds of miserable feelings and which ordinary practice does not cure, are the very disorders that give way to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Women who are afflicted with similar troubles, after reading two such letters as the above, should be encouraged to try this wonderfully helpful remedy.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.
MICA
AXLEY is the turn in wear and a box. Ever STAND
Looking Ahead.
Josephine, aged ten, has a decided lisp. She also is very fond of attending the matinee. The other day she was giving a spirited story of the play to Marion, who was aged nine.
"My mamma says it isn't good for little girls to go to the theater," said Marion with an air of self-righteousness, "I'm not ever going till I'm 18."
"Humph," retorted Josephine without any hesitation, "th-pose you die when you're theventeen, then you'll be tthung!"—Woman's Companion.
It is easy for the man who never wore a dress suit in his life to blame all the discreditable things he hears on polite society.
A
weak stomachs, wasted bodies,
ferring coughs, is based on the rec-
t h that "Golden Medical Discov-
building, tissue-repairing, muscle-
and concentrated form. With this
very strength to the stomach to di-
thereby throw off lingering ob-
re-establishes the digestive and
purifies and enriches the blood,
establishes sound vigorous health.
"just as good," it is prob-
better. But you are thinking
profit, so there's nothing "just
Adviser, In Plain English; or, Medicine
actions, newly revised up-to-date Edition,
is, to cover cost of mailing only. Cloth-
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleaners and beautifies the hair
Promotes a luxurious growth.
Hairwash Palms to Baskin-Gray
Hairs to its Youthful Colour.
Cures scalp disease & hair taling.
80s, and $1.00 at Druggies
maturely
CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. PRICE, $
is the turning-point to economy in wear and tear of wagons. Try a box. Everydealer, everywhere
WESTERN CANADA
Improved Quick and Easy Rising Steam,
Electric and Hand
Power Safety
ELEVATORS
and Dumb Watters
Automatic Hatch Cates
Send for Circulars
KIMBALL BROS. GO., Council Bluffs, Ia.
KANSAS CITY OFFICE. 717 Commerce Bldg.
Down
in the dumps
—from over-eating, drinking—
bad liver and constipation get
many a one, but there's a way out
—Cascarets relieve and cure
quickly. Take one to-night and
feel ever so much better in the
morning.
Cascarets-100 box-week's treat-
ment. All drugstores. Biggest seller
in the world—million boxes a month.
PATENT
your ideas 36-page book and
artist portfolio. WWW.PATENT.BUCKS.COM
Washington, D.C.
y Old E, $1.00, retail.
LYDA E FINKMAN
UNITED
NORTH
MIDDLE
EAST
FREE
protection or two will be the provision of homes for its sufficient for them. The days of our prominence country are gone. Canada the great wheat country.
This great railroad magistrate, a major advantage of the situation, tenative railway building of Western Canada.
Upwards of 125 Million Bushels of Wheat were harvested in 1609. Average acres of bushels planted in Saskatchewan and Manitoba will be upwards of 23 bushels per acre, and adjoining pre-emptions of 160 acres (at $3 per acre), are to be applied. Schools convenient, climate excellent, soil the very best, lumber cheap, fuel easy to transport, water easily procured; mixed farming a success. Write as to the low railway rates, descriptive illustrated, east Best West (sent free to Canada), to Supt of Immigration, to Supt of Immigration, the Canadian Government Agent.
J. S. CRAWFORD
No. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Mo.
(Use address nearest you).
SEEDS
Write or call for our new 1910 bulk. garden, flower seed catalogue. New stock just in. We handle seed reliable growers only: that has been tested and show good tion. Choice selection of all leading varieties of Seed ing good germation. Onion Sets, white, red, yellow, go Just Received a Car of
010 bulk. garden, flower and field. We handle seed grown by reen tested and show good germaing varieties of Seed corn show- white. red, yellow, good stock. Car of
Write or call for our new 1910 bulk. garden, flower and field seed catalogue. New stock just in. We handle seed grown by reliable growers only: that has been tested and show good germation. Choice selection of all leading varieties of Seed corn showing good germation. Onion Sets, white, red, yellow, good stock.
Just Received a Car of
Red River Early Minnesota
SEED POTATOES
Best quality shipped in car lots by us direct
SEED CORN — All leading varieties which show mation.
White, Red and Yellow Onion Sets. — A complete small seeds, just received a complete new stock of Butter and Field Seed grown by reliable growers. Choice Eat toes 80c per bushel.
Our Mixed Chicken Feed and egg producer. If you us a trial you will be our customer. Our Balanced Food chicks is made from the best ingredients and will give isfaction: charcoal, oyster shells, crystal grit, beef sc meal and ground bone.
Drinking Fountains for little and big chicks. Leaf zone and Egg Maker should be used.
We Are Manufacturers Agents For Paterson, Mandy Lee, Old Trusty, Cyclic INCUBATORS AND BROODERS.
Mr. D. A. Stoner who has been a judge in state poultry for years, is handling our Incubators and will be glad a demonstration. We will ship these Incubaters to our customers freight free and at factory prices.
Do not forget to write for our catalog. We handle first-class goods and at reasonable price as they can.
CENTRAL SEED
Bell Phone 543; Ind. 1048 243 N
“MODERN CLEANING and DYE WORKS
Dry and Steam Cleaning. Dyeing, Pressing, Repair and Alterations. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. Ladies work a Specialty. Suits Pressed 50 C
C. G. Hanson, Pro
Independent Phone 1286 Red Bell Phone 2
110 St. Francis Ave., Wichita,
ing varieties which shows the ger
ion Sets. — A complete stock of
plete new stock of Bulk Flower
growers. Choice Eating Pota-
and egg producer. If you will give
er. Our Balanced Food for little
ingredients and will give entire sat
crystal grit, beef scrap, blood
tle and big chicks. Lee's Germa-
ased.
Featured Agents For
Old Trusty, Cycle Hatch
AND BROODERS
When a judge in state poultry shows
factors and will be glad to give you
these Incubaters to out-of-town
factory prices.
Catalog. We handle nothing but
table price as they can be sold for
SEED CO
243 N. Main
DERN"
DYE WORKS
Dyeing, Pressing, Repairing,
sized and Blocked. Ladies' fine
Pressed 50 Cents
son, Prop.
Bell Phone 2735
Wichita, Kansas
THIS SPACE
Announcement
Program of the
Convention"
even at the -
PE BAPTIST
SOON
777
Directory
Daughters
ABOR
SKA JURISDICTION
SEED CORN — All leading varieties which shows the germation.
White. Red and Yellow Onion Sets. — A complete stock of small seeds, just received a complete new stock of Bulk Flower and Field Seed grown by reliable growers. Choice Eating Potatoes 80c per bushel.
Our Mixed Chicken Feed and egg producer. If you will give us a trial you will be our customer. Our Balanced Food for little chicks is made from the best ingredients and will give entire sat isfaction: charcoal, oyster shells, crystal grit, beef scrap, blood meal and ground bone.
Drinking Fountains for little and big chicks. Lee's Germazone and Egg Maker should be used.
We Are Manufacturers Agents For Pataluma, Mandy Lee, Old Trusty, Cycle Hatch INCUBATORS AND BROODERS
Mr. D. A. Stoner who has been a judge in state poultry shows for years, is handling our Incubators and will be glad to give you a demonstration. We will ship these Incubaters to out-of-town customers freight free and at factory prices.
Do not forget to write for our catalog. We handle nothing but first-class goods and at reasonable price as they can be sold for CENTRAL SEED CO
CLEANING and DYE WORKS
Dry and Steam Cleaning. Dyeing, Pressing, Repairing,
and Alterations. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. Ladies' fine
work a Specialty. Suits Pressed 50 Cents
C. G. Hanson, Prop.
Independent Phone 1286 Red Bell Phone 2735
110 St. Francis Ave., Wichita, Kansas
For Final Announcement and Program of the "Slab-Town Convention To be Given at the New Hope Baptist Church Soon
Knights & Daughters OF TABOR KANSAS—NEBRASKA JURISDICTI
Knights & Daughter
7 Sunbeam, Salina, Kan., Mrs. R. Parker, 502 N. 6th.
8 Rebecca May, Coffeyville, Kan., Mrs. L. Smith, 308 E. 11th.
9 Western Sun, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. Luly Delley, 120 Kansas
10 St. Maria, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. I. Wallace, R. R. No. 5.
11 Saba Meroe, K. C., Kan., P. Woodford, 823 Freeman.
2 Golden Rule, K. C., Kan., Mrs. B. Johnson, 211 Stewart.
4 Candace, Pittsburg, Kan., Mrs. M. Beasley, 109 W. Washington.
5 America Davis, Weir, Kan., Mrs. E. Lee, Box 25.
6 Silver Leaf, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. L. Morton, 1208 Washington.
7 Western Queen, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. A. Masir, 1817 Wan.
8 St. Maria, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. C. Wade, 22 N. 16th.
9 Maria, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. P. Johnson, 501 Hyman.
24 Charity Rose, Coffeville, Kan., Mrs. A. Garner, 704 E. 12th.
28 Modern, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. A. Ray, 1412 E. Clark.
29 Crystal, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. L. Woods, 935 Cherokee.
30 Victoria, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. 74 Fifth.
32 Emma Gaines, B. Lee, Mont., Mrs. Saline Easter, 334 Dakota St.
34 Wichita, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. Saly St. 1024 Ohio.
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333
Official
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REV. FRANK WILSON, C. G. M.
Taborian Home—Route 8, Topeka, Ks
MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. G. P.
1170 Filmore avenue, Topeka, Kes
A. W. HOPKINS, C. G. S.
521 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.,
460 Horton, Ft. Scott, Kan.
J. 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. O.
210 E West, Hutchison, Kan
TABERNACLES.
TABERNACLES.
Chief Preceptresses.
1 Queen of the West, K. C., Kan.
Mrs. M. Wilson, 945 Everett.
2 Golden, Iola, Kan., Mrs. S. Crisp,
615 So. Walnut.
3 Mt. Hope, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. C
Tillman, 802 E. 18th.
4 Helping Hand, Cherryvale, Kan.
Mrs. S. Campbell, 616 W. 1st.
5 Cresent, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. C
Brown, 920 N. 10th.
6 Rebecca Ann, Ottawa, Kan., Mrs
Eva Clayborne, 716 Cypress.
15 Golden Rule, S. Omaha, Neb., Mrs.
Jones, 819 N. 27th.
17 Eutevator, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. M.
Gosby, 108 N. 3rd.
18 Covenant, Weir, Kan., Mrs. L. K.
Taylor, Box 1174.
19 Deborah, Abelline, Kan., Mrs. A.
Tibson, 411 S. 1st.
20 Mt. Maria, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. S.
Ware, 807 N. Y.
23 Fair West, K. C., Kan., Mrs. K.
Saunders, 734 N. J.
27 Pearly Rose, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. E.
Brien, 1180 Buchanan.
28 Magadalene, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. F.
Hardiman, 1801 Kansas.
91 Golden Sheaf, Omaha, Neb., Mrs.
L. Rountrec, 1125 N. 19th.
92 St. Annis, Lincoln, Neb., Mrs.
B. E. Alton, 2215 Pacific.
92 St. Annis, Lincoln, Neb, Mrs. Lucy
Davis, 1029 Ross
93 Macedonia, N. Topeka, Kan., Mrs.
Sylvia Brown, 803 E. 11th St.
TEMPLES.
Chief Mentors
1 A. H. Richardson, Weir, Kar
M. Burns, Box 31.
2 R. H. Cane, Atchison, Kan., Wm
Cook, 215 E. Kearney.
3 Evening Star, Omaha, Neb., S. R.
Jackson, care Frye Shoe Store.
5 St. Luke, N. Topeka, Kan., J
Walker, 1220 W. Norris.
7 Mt. Nebo, Wichita, Kan., Rev. S.
B. Washington, 1524 N. Washington.
8 St. Peters, Ft. Scott, Kan., A. J.
Bean, 307 Lowman
0 Mt. Horeb, Leavenworth, Kan., J
H. McKinnis, 21 Sherman.
1 Taborian, Wichita, Kan., Wm. Frz
zier, 708 N. Water.
12 Moses Dickson, Parsons, Kan, Wm
Shakespeare, 1112 Main
15 Sliver Leaf, Salina, Kan., J. C.
Brown, 246 S. Phillips.
17 Golden Gate, Coffeyville, Kan.
Rev. A. Garner, 704 E. 12th.
19 Mt. Tabor, Lawrence, Kan., J. E.
Hughes, 1220 N. J.
22 Barak, Oswego, Kan., L. R. Wilson.
24 Jas. Bedford, Cherryvale, Kan.
Rev. J. W. Warren, 218 E. 7th.
25 Washington, K. C. Kan., J. H.
Downs, 422 Haskell.
29 Sunny Side, Topeka, Kan., U. A
Graham, 704 West.
60 Jeffersonian, Topeka, Kan., J. S.
Grant, 1813 W. 6th.
72 Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb., J. G
Wright, First National Bank
OFFICIAL ORGAN—The Wichita Searchlight, W. N. Miller, Editor, 634 N. Water St., Wichita, Kan.
TENTS.
1 Golden Leaf, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. L. Hardin, 900 Fifth
2 Frank Wilson, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. F. Goodall, 610 Barbee.
5 Moses Dickson, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. B. Davis, 1135 Washington.
7 Lone Star, Yale, Mrs. C. Lewis.
9 J. Bruce, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. M. Scott, 1516 Jones.
11 Golden, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. E. Penn, 718 Q.
11 Viola, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. M.
11 Alice Tucker, So. Omaha, Neb.
Mrs. I. M. Faulkner, 169 So. 31st E. Brown, 325 Miss.
14 Busy Bee, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. A. Stone, 823 Main.
15 Louisa May, Cherryvale, Kan., Mrs. M. E. Holt, 517 W. Main.
16 Pearl, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. A. Jones, 631 N. Wicnita.
17 Star of West, Salina, Kan., Mrs. A. G. Murrell, 451 So. 4th.
17 Castle Rock, Weir, Kan., Mrs. H. Adams.
20 John Wilson, K. C., Kan., Mrs. D. Dalton, 1228 Barnett.
21 Crysai, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. E. McKinnis, 217 Sherman.
23 Clinging Rose, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. A. King, 722 N. Y.
25 Silver Star, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. A. Porter, 2017 Morton.
28 20th Century, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. M. A. Tiggs, 2314 Morgan.
—Pride of Topeka, Nanie Marshan, 200 N. Topeka avenue.
3 Pansy Blossom, Atchison, Kansas, Jennie McAdoo, 1501 Logan
4 Orange Rose, K. C., Kan., Mrs. Henderson, 312 Washington.
5 Mayflower, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. H. Herroid, Sherman Flats.
NOTICE TABORS
If your Tabernacle, Temple or Tent is not in this Directory, or if there is any error, please notify me at once.
W. N. MILLER, Editor.
NEXT PLACE OF METTING—The Grand Temple and Tabernacle Kansas Nebraska Jurisdiction, will hold its next Session (the 19th annual in Omaha, Neb., on the 2nd Tuesday
WHY NOT PAY what you owe to the Searchlight? It is only a small sum. Call at our office 634 N Water and save us from bothering you with a collector.
If you want a good, heartyaugh, just wait and attend the "Slab-Town" convention to be given at the New Hope Baptist Church soon. It is a sure cure for the blues and will remove that tired feeling. Hand-bills, programs and announcements soon. Watch for them.
A nice front room, furnished, for rent.
The ladies of the W. T. Vernon Club celebrated their Fourth Anniversary Monday evening, at the home of Mrs. A. Bluett. Their was fifty present to enjoy this delightful occasion. A short program was rendered by the ladies Remarks was made by pres Mrs L. H. White, Rev. S. S. Washing ton amp Prof. Higgins, Dr. A. K. Lawrence rendered a clarinet solo which was highly enjoyed as was the piono and other musical selections. A guessing contest was one of the pleasant features Those receiving the prizes were: Mrs. G. W. Smith and Dr. G. G. Brown. A delightful luncheon was served. Each guest was presented with a tiny gold spoon tied with the Club coiors. The guests departed declaring the ladies of the W. T. Vernon Club royal entertainers.
The Billiken Club composed of a number of the young men gave their initial reception at Young's hall Tues Eve. The decorations were beautiful with palms, and flowers. There was psent fifty or more guests who enjoyed this delightful affair.
Patronize the Merchants and Business Houses that solicit your trade through "ads" in the columns of your race paper. Why trade with any other?
W. N. Miller
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Office 634 North Water Street
Practices in all the Courts
Of Kansas and Missouri
Residence Phone · Bell 1641
LOOK
If you are going to Build or Remodel = WHY not let me develop your plans? . . .
Now Is The Time to have your Electric and Gas fixtures put in
See BYNUM He is the man
811 N. Wichita St. Wichita, Ks
J. Ed Allen
HARNESS MAKER
426 North Main St.
New and 2nd Hand Harness
Harness bought, sold,
repaired and exchanged
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank our friends for their kindness shown us during the illness and at the recent death of our beloved father, Wm. M. Thomas. We especially wish to thank the Masons for their brotherly acts.
MRS. SARAH THOMAS,
ED F. THOMAS,
ARTHUR THOMAS,
BERT THOMAS,
MARTHA THOMAS,
WILL THOMAS,
FLORA THOMAS,
MRS. LAURA WILLIAMS.
YOU TAKE NO CHANCES
By sending your
Clotbes, Hats. Plumes and Gloves
To Be
DRY CLEANED, PRESSED and REP
at the
DRY CLEANED, PRESSED and REPAIR
at the
People's Cleaning
and Dye Works
Largest and best equipped plant in Kansas. A
$50,000.00 investment devoted to this one specialt
Largest and best equipped plant in Kansas. A 50,000.00 investment devoted to this one specialt . Phone 178 Bell Phone
Largest and best equipped plant in Kansas. A $50,000.00 investment devoted to this one specialty.
Ind. Phone 178 Bell Phone
Present Location 131 N. Lawrence
After May 1st located at 211 S. Lawrence
SEED PO
It is the time to arrange
Red River of Minnesota, ea
Potatoes, direct from grow
you are familiar with the ea
country grown in this cou
purchase their seed potato
sell contains the same exce
If you are looking for e
and inspect
Ross Brother
SEED POTATOES
It is the time to arrange for your supply. We feed River of Minnesota, early Ohio and Bliss Trium potatoes, direct from grower to us. A great man you are familiar with the excellent cryps grown in country grown in this country by those people purchase their seed potatoes from us. Everything it contains the same excellent quality.
If you are looking for quality come to our store and inspect our stock.
Ross Brothers Seed House
SEED POTATOES
It is the time to arrange for your supply. We sell Red River of Minnesota, early Ohio and Bliss Triumph Potatoes, direct from grower to us. A great many of you are familiar with the excellent cryps grown in this country grown in this country by those people who purchase their seed potatoes from us. Everything we sell contains the same excellent quality.
If you are looking for quality come to our store and inspect our stock.
309 East Douglas Avenue
COURT HOU
COURT HOUSE GROCERY
J. C. LUDES, PROP.
539 North Main Street
The following are a few
3 Bars of Lenox Soap
3 Bars of White Rusc
6 Bars Crystal White
Eggs — —
6 Bars Flake White
2 Cans Standard To
Corn Meal — —
3 Cans Apples
1 Can Pie Peaches
The following are a few of our regular prices
3 Bars of Lenox Soap — — 10c
3 Bars of White Russian Soap — — 10c
6 Bars Crystal White Soap — — 25c
Eggs — — per dozen 18c
6 Bars Flake White Soap — — 25c
2 Cans Standard Tomatoes — — 15c
Corn Meal — — per sack — 20c
3 Cans Apples — — 25c
1 Can Pie Peaches — — 10c
The following are a few of our regular prices
3 Bars of Lenox Soap — — 10c
3 Bars of White Russian Soap — 10c
6 Bars Crystal White Soap — 25c
Eggs — — per dozen 18c
6 Bars Flake White Soap — 25c
2 Cans Standard Tomatoes — 15c
Corn Meal — — per sack — 20c
3 Cans Apples — — 25c
1 Can Pie Peaches — — 10c
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John H. Jones and Wm L. Herman were lay delegates to the M. E. conference which met in Topeka last week. Each of them report a splendid session of the conference. Wichita was chosen as the next place of meeting in 1911.
The Mother's Aid Club gave their initial reception at the cozy residence of Mrs. Robt. Davis, 23rd and Lucy Ave. Tuesday at night March 29th--1910. Many guests were present and a royal good time was had. The house was daintily decorated in delicat club colors and cut flowers and potted plants had their place.
A short program was rendered in which songs, recitations and short addresses were made. After the program a deliciobs, toothsome luncheon was served. All were highly pleased and pronounced the Mothers Aid Club delightful entertainers.
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SSED and REPAIRED the
ed plant in Kansas. A noted to this one specialty.
Bell Phone 175
OTATOES
age for your supply. We sell
early Ohio and Bliss Triumph
over to us. A great many of
excellent cryps grown in this
country by those people who
comes from us. Everything we
enlent quality.
quality come to our store
our stock.
Seed House
SE GROCERY
v of our regular prices
up — — 10c
Asian Soap — 10c
ve Soap — 25c
per dozen 18c
Soap — 25c
tomatoes — 15c
per sack — 20c
— — 25c
— — 10c
WELL PRESENTED.
The play, "Under the Laurels," which was presented at Garfield hall. Thursday night, was well played to a fair sized house. Each of the participants did good work. The work of Mrs. Mary E. Carr as "Mrs. Milford," Mrs. Ida Clark as "Rose Milford," and Mr. Ora T. Taylor as "Kyle Brantford," the villain, each deserve special mention. However, for an amateur company, each and every one of those who took part made a very favorable and creditable showing.
Mrs. Alice Prichard who has been spending several days in the city returned to her home in Medicine Lodge Tuesday.
Mrs. Matt. Lowe, died Wednesday night, March 30th at her late home 1036 N. Washington. Her body was taken to Mueller's Undertaking parlors to be prepared for burial. Funeral is not yet announced.
Easter exercises in all the colored churches of our city were very timely and appropriate. It showed a most encourage ing progres of our people along these lines.
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