Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, February 25, 1911
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT
The Grand Arabian Drill Contest and Musical Festival To Be Given By Emith Temple No.30 At GARFIELD HALL
Wednesday Night, March 15. Will Be Fine. Don't Miss This Event
TWELTH YEAR
BIG COMIN
The Grand Arabian
Musical Festival
Emith Temp
GARFIELD
Wednesday Nig
Will Be Fine. Don
Some Shriner Digr
Ill. Dr. F. O'Hara Miller, 32°
Illustrious Potentate
Emith Temple No. 30
On Wednesday night. March 1st一一one of the most pleasing and entirely new creations of the season will de put on at Garfield hall by the "Camel-ite fellers" of Emith Temple No.30, Mystic Shriners and the daughters of Isis. This event will be the big Arabian Drill contest between the Arabs of the Temple and the daugdters.
Ill. J. W. Thompson, 33°
Commander - in - Chief
Western Star Consistory No. 18
III. J. W. Thompson, 33°
Commander - in - Chief
Western Star Consistory No. 18
In costumes, drill tictacs, and
in speech and in silence, in walk
and in run, in habits of all kinds,
good, no bad an indiferent—
in all of these—and then some
—this drill will cap "the lid"
off the clima(x)te.
The Arabs—who have been
especially moulded for this occasion—will be under command of
the big Arabian Chet, Jones
Samuel—who comes to the front
—not the rear—for this special purpose. The faite daughters of the Orient of Arabia will be directed by that match—less—and tooth—pick—less giant of "lady trainers"—the Chief of the Orient—Sayles John. Every ond who comes to Garfield hall on Wednesday night, March 1st—will feel more than satisfied with the progrom and
Ill. Capt Sam W. Jomes, 32°
Trainer of the Arabians.
Ill. Capt Sam W. Jones, $ 32^{\circ} $ Trainer of the Arabians.
events of theevening. This is all-there will be other features too numerous to mention and the only way way in which one can appreciate the many things of the that night will be to be present at this occasion. There is one thing that can be said to the credit of the Arabs of Emith Temple—and that is—the
Ill. J. H. Scott, 32°
Ponca City, Okla.
A True-Blue Desert Traveler
are sparing neither money or pains to make this event a grand success. The program will be short and sweet and to the point and will be enjoyed by all. You
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1911.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
THE WORLD'S FIRST BLACK WOMAN
Ill. J. H. Sayles, 32°
The Famous Lady Tamer and Trainer
Who Will Drill The Daughters of Isis.
have a cordial invitation to attend this event, bring your family and bring yourself. The admission fee is only 25c to the men and a quarter to the women. Be sure to be present Meh 1st.
"Young people delight until 1 o'clock a. m."
interest.
The incident arose with extension made by Senator Ration to the Borah n The New York senate national government
South Hard Hit Sanator Root of New York Serves Notice
WASHINGTGN-Through the injection of the race question into the hitherto comparatively common place dismission in the senate of the resolution providing for the election of senators by direct vote, Senator Root of New York and Senator Bacon of Georgia fitted that controversy to a plane of almost sensational
Ill. Dr. H. Truman Bolden, 32°
A Shriner Who Extracts
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The incident arose in connection with extended remarks made by Senator Root in opposition to the Borah resolution.
The New York senator said the national goverment could not af
Ilt. Dr. A. K. Lawrence, $ 33^{\circ} $ One of the Shrine Bunch.
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and Festival
Auspices of Emith Temple No. 30
Garfield Hall
Wednesday Night,
March 1st. 1911
The Daughters of Isis, to be, will put on an exhibition drill. Sometimes entirely new.
The Nobles of the Mystic Shrine will drill against the Daughters of Isis.
Do Not Miss This Contest
Grand Musical Program
Under Direction of Ill. Geo. W. White
The young people will be allowed to remain
until 1 a. m. and enjoy themselves to their
heart's content. Everybody is welcome.
The following are the two drill teams
Daughters of Isis - J. H. Sayles, Captain
Daughters of Isl. J. H. Sayles, Captain Mesdames - Sam Jones, N. D. Briley, J. T. Chinneth, H T Bolden, G Ewing, O T Taylor, G White, J H Sayles, Miss. - R Whitted, - Wade, L. Fauver, Covington and H Hurst.
ord to barter away the privilege of supervising sedatorial election in the South, if need should arise for such supervision. Also in speaking of the observance of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the constitution he said that from time to time "things happen" in the Southern states which should not be permitted by the states and which
A. H.
Shiner who holds the Spondulix should be corrected, if not by the states themselves, then by the national goverment. Later he took occasion to emphasize this statement INTEREST INTENSE. When first made the declaration caused a visible stir on the Democoatle side of the chamber
and the feeling was intensified by the reparction. It at once be came manifest that if anything was lacking to insure opposition by the Southern senators to the resoulations, it had been supplied by Mr.Root. Senator Borah, who has char-
ge of the measure, declared that the race question had been dragged into the case for the purpose of alienating the imority. When Mr. Root concluded his speech about 3 o'clock he left the chamber Mr. Bacon immediately expressed a desire for specifications regarding the things which the New York senator had said "happened in the South," which ought to call for federal intervention, but the demand did not
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[7 7 HEN one looks upon the gigantic
work that is in progress of the
Isthmus of Panama and beholds
CW .] the hills and the mountains giv-
W ing way before the onward
march of modern machinery—
sees steam, electricity, alr and
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i <a do the bidding of man, he can
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i (Hi question: What is the propel-
VO a4} ling power back of this great
= undertaking?
And the question comes to him in re
doubled force as he remembers that the spot
on which all this great work is in progress
was only recently regarded as the death-hole
of the world—but now, when he beholds a
Jand freed from the fearful ravages of the dis-
eases that had for centuries taken thelr toll
ef human life by the tens of thousands, he is
constrained to ask again: What has wrought
this wonderful change?
And the answer comes back to him from
far down the rugged road that is filled with
the fumes of the mfdnight ofl that has been
burned by students and men of science of
past and present times: O, fellow-toller, over
and above end around and directing this
great enterprise, upon which the eyes of the
world are centered today, is the irresistible
pawer of well-trained, cultured intellect.
It is remarkable the number of people one
finds who are of the opinion that the idea of
a canal across the Isthmus of Panama is some-
thing of recent origin, when the fact is, it is
» matter that has engaged the attention of the
civilized world for nearly five hundred years.
Many unsuccessful attempts have been made
to accomplish the object in the past, and it
1s good to realize that the dreams and designs
of the Spanish adventurers of the fifteenth
century are about to be brought to pass by
American engineers of the twentieth century.
Spain, Portugal, England and France have
each in turn made a failure in their attempts
to pierce the Isthmus with a canal.
Columbus was the first to propose a water
highway from Europe to Asia, westward, by
way of the Atlantic. It was such a highway
he sought, and not the new world, which he
really found. He landed on the Isthmus of
Panama, near the present site of Colon, in the
year 1502, but {t was a Spanish engineer
mamed Saavedra, one of Balboa’s followers,
who first advocated the construction of a
canal across Panama. Thiggwas in 1517, and
after studying the Giestint Yor a Goren Joare,
he submitted his plans to Charles V., king of
Spain, Surveys of the isthmus were made,
Dut the work of cutting a canal was reported
to be impracticable. After the death of
Charles V. his successor, Philip Il, in 1657,
ent an engineer to survey the Nicaraguan
route, who likewise made an adverse report.
The question was then abandoned for 200
years, after which time {t was again opened,
and has been before the public ever since.
In the year 1880 the French people, headed
by Count Ferdinand de Lesseps, who had
gained both fame and fortune by the succegs-
ful completion of the Suez canal, téok up the
moatter of constructing the Panama canal, and
went vigorously to work to connect the two
oceans. The great engineer thought he had
really an easier undertaking before him than
he had recently been successful in accom-
plishing—that is, the cutting of the Suez ca-
nal—but he was vastly mistaken. As work
progressed on the canal with seeming suc-
cess, glowing reports were wafted back to
France of what was being done, and the fame
of de Lesseps rose to the point of hero wor
ship. In 1884 he was elected to the French
academy, and was saluted by Gambetta as
“the Grand Old Frenchman.” In 1885 he was
seated among the Immortals—Victor Hugo,
the great French novelist, being his sponsor,
and Renan, that other brilliant French writer,
delivered the valedictory.
But the dark clouds were gathering behind
all this fantastic show, and in a few more
years the crisis came. The expenditure of
money that had been contributed mostly by
the poorer people of France was something
awful—the amount being placed as high as
'$§00,000,000 in eight years; and then the crash
carne, burying beneath the wreck the hopes
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and expectations of the great engineer, and
carrying sorrow and want to the homes of
thousands upon thousands of French people
who had contributed their little all toward
forwarding the great enterprise. The nation
was brought to the very verge of revolution.
Judicial proceedings were instituted, and trials
were had, extending over a period of five
years. There was disclosed to the horrified
world such an orgy of corruption as history
had never before recorded. A hundred French
senators and deputies were accused of having
taken btibes, and the police department was
under the same charge.
Count de Lesseps never recovered from the
shock—and went down to his grave in 1894—
only 16 years ago—a broken-hearted old man—
but his fame will remain immortal despite
the sad ending of his career.
In 1903 the United States purchased the
interests and belongings of the French com-
pany on the Isthmus of Panama, paying there-
for the sum of $40,000,000—the assets consist-
ing of valuable surveys, implements of all
kinds, many thousand houses, railroads, land;
and also paid the Republic of Panama $10,-
000,000 for the Canal Zone—a strip of land in
said Republic of Panama ten miles wide and
practically 60 miles long—extending from Co-
Jon on the Atlantic side to Panama City on
the Pacific. Through the center of this ten-
mile strip the cansl is being constructed. At
present there is an army of nearly 40,000 men
engaged in the gigantic undertaking of build-
ing this great water highway from ocean to
ocean.
‘The first party of Americans went to Pana-
ma in 1904 to begin work, but they found the
country infested with diseases of the most
fatal kinds, and the year 1904 was practically
spent in improving health conditions. This
work has been under the supervision of Col.
W. C. Gorgas, and so effective have been the
methods pursued by him and his able assist
ants in the Canal Zone of the Isthmus of
Panama that the health conditions of that
tropical country are about as good today as
those of the southern states of America.
Contrary to the general belief, the United
States is not digging a “big ditch” across the
Isthmus of Panama. When the canal is fin-
ished and ships are steaming across Panama
from the Atlantic to the Pacific, or vice versa,
the waters of the two oceans will still be at
least forty miles apart. They will never meet
at all. A sea-level canal, which would have
allowed the waters of the Atlantic and the
Pacific to come together, is not being dug; but
an 86-foot lock canal is being constructed. As
to the relative merits of the sea-level and the
Jock canal it ts not within the province of this
article to discuss.
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‘The 85-foot lock canal which is being con-
structed consists of a sea-level entrance chan-
nel 7 miles long, 500 feet wide and 41 feet
deep on the Atlantic side to the foot of Gatun
(pronounced “Gatoon”) locks. On the Pacific
side there {s a corresponding sea-level chan-
nel to Miraflores locks, about 8 miles long,
500 feet wide and 45 feet deep.
At Gatun the 86-foot lake level is obtained
by a great dam about a mile and a half long,
and nearly half a mile thick at the bottom or
base. The dam rests on impermeable material
of sufficient supporting power, and fills the
openings between the hills at Gatun, through
which the Chagres (pronounced “Shaggers”)
river flows to the sea. This river crosses the
channel of the canal no less than fifteen times
in {ts serpentine course and is one of the
most turbulent streams known during high
water, though it looks peaceful enough during
the dry season. It was one of the great ob-
structions to the possibility of digging a sea-
level canal, but this enemy has been converted
into a friend, and will be made to supply the
greater portion of the water for filling the
great artificial lake.
‘The great Gatun dam—upon the successful
completion of which depends the success of
the canal—consists of a water-tight center or
core composed of clay and sand mixed in
proper proportions. These materials were
adopted after consultation with the best ex-
perts in the world, who came to the conclusion
that clay and sand were the most tmpervious
materials that could be used. This material,
after being properly mixed, is deposited hy-
draulically—that is, by being pumped in by
dredges. This center core is confined by a
rock wall on each side, the rock so used
being taken from Culebra cut. At the bot-
tom this impermeable core of clay and sand
has a width of about 860 feet, and gradually
tapers upward until a minimum thickness of
400 feet will be had at the water level of the
lake. The dam will rise to a height of 115
feet, or a distance of 30 feet above the level
of the lake. The artificial lake—waich will
be known as Lake Gatun—will cover an area
of 164 square miles, or over 100,000 acres. The
entire navy of the United States can find safe
anchorage therein.
‘The greatest obstacle that has stood in the
way of the engineers for the past 600 years
in constructing a canal across Panama has
been the mountain range known as the Cor-
dilleras—the backbone of the continent. It
was here that the French people wasted and
squandered such a great amount of money
that the picture shown above is called “Gold
hill”"—it being asserted that they spent enough
in their endeavor to cut through the moun-
tain at this point that the money used would
UF — SHOWING GOLD HILL
Rave covered the sides of the excavation with
solid gold. The cut through these mountains
{s known as Culebra cut, and is nine miles in
Jength—through solid rock. The cut begins
at Bas Obispo and ends at Pedro Miguel locks.
‘The question is often asked, What be-
comes of the vast quantities of dirt, rock,
etc, that are taken from the canal? It is
loaded on trains by means of the steam shov-
els and hauled off—a portion being placed on
Gatun dam, a portion is taken to the Atlantic
and a portion to the Pacific oceans and placed
on the great breakwaters that are building
there, and yet other trains are busily engaged
in hauling the excavations to the railroad
tracks that will skirt the northern edge of the
canal, and which will have a solid rock bed
the entire distance. They find use for every
particle of It. Getting rid of these excavations
has caused the Canal Zone to become the
busiest railroad center in the world. It is
said that 900 trains pass a given point near
the town of Culebra in a day, hauling out the
rock from the cut.
‘The United States is constructing a lock
canal, as before stated. These locks are in
pairs, each having a width of 110 feet and a
length of 1,000 feet. Each lock consists of a
chamber, with walls of concrete, and with
water-tight gates at the ends. The level of
water 1s to be regulated through openings in
the bottom by the operation of valves in the
side and center walls, which will permit the
water to flow into and out of the locks by
gravity. It is estimated that it will require
eight minutes to fill one of them. The locks
are the largest that have ever been designed
in the history of the world. The gates con-
sist of two leaves and are massive steel struc-
tures 7 feet thick, 65 feet long and from 47
to 82 feet high. Highty-four leaves will be
required for the entire canal, and their total
weight will be 86,000,000 pounds, and will cost
nearly $6,000,000.
‘When the canal is completed—which Colonel
George W. Goethals, who is in charge of the
great work, says will be some time during the
year 1913—here is the manner in which a ves
sel from the Atlantic side will get to the Pacific:
It will enter the sea-level channel at Colon and
go a distance of seven miles to the foot of Ga-
tun locks; there it will be lifted by means of
these locks a height of 85 feet above the sea
level to the surface of Gatun lake; the gates
of the lock will be opened and it will steam
out on this lake and go a distance of 23 miles
to the beginning of the great Culebra cut, and
carefully proceeding through this cut a dis-
tance of nine miles, it will check up at Pedro
Miguel locks, where it will enter the lock and
be lowered a distance of 28 1-8 feet to the level
of Miraflores lake, and then it will steam a
distance of three miles across this lake to
Miraflores locks, where it will be lowered by
two flights a distance of 66 2-3 feet to sea
level; and then it will enter the Pacific chan-
nel of the canal and go a distance of eight
miles out to deep water of the ocean. It will
require from ten to twelve hours for a vessel
to make the passage from one ocean to the
other—thus saving many thoueands of miles
of travel, and many days of time in a journey
to any of the ports on the Pacific side of
the Americas and also to the Orient,
Colonel Goethals states most positively
that the cost of the canal will not be over
$875,000,000; and in this amount {s included
the purchase of the French company's be-
longings—$40,000,000—and the $10,000,000 paid
for the Canal Zone, and also the cost of the
sanitary department, which of course has been
@ considerable amount.
In order to get some idea of what the
cost of the canal means—$375,000,000—and put
it so the mind can in some measure grasp the
figures, we make the following statement:
There are in the world nine principal canals,
to wit: The Suez, the Kiel, the Manchester,
the United States Ste. Marie, the Canadian
Ste. Marle, the Amsterdam, Corinth, Cron-
stadt and the Erie-Ontario canal. The total
cost of all nine of these canals was $264,000,-
000, which is less by $111,000,000 than the
Panama canal alone will cost at the lowest
estimate, But even if this amount is doubled,
the United States will complete it. The pride
and reputation of the nation are at stake, and
she cannot afford to make a failure as all the
Base countrier bave done that have gone be
fore.
HAD A REASON FOR BEING
Carnegie Elicted Information Askeg
For, but It Is Doubtful if He
Appreciated It.
At the recent dinner given by An
drew Carnegie, an eminent lawyer,
seated half-way down the table, was
deeply immersed in conversation with
his neighbor when the host opened
up the subject of the Pritish coinage
system, and showed signs of wishing
undivided attention.
“Every other civilized nation,” he
4eclaimed, “has the de-imal system,
while England adheres o the absurd
and cumberous table of pounds, shiil-
ings and pence.” Rap-rap-rap.
‘The raps were for the lawyer, who
remained absorbed in his own conven
sation. “And even farthings,” con-
tinued the fron-master. “Is there any.
thing else in finance so ridiculous as
the farthing?” Rap-rap.
The lawyer glanced around some
what impatiently.
“Judge G—,”: Mr. Carnegie calle
out, “why do the British continue
their coinage of farthings?"
“To enable the Scotch to practice
benevolence, Mr. Carnegie,” returned
the Inwyer.
OATS—259 Bu. Per Acre.
That is the sworn to yield of Theodor
Harmes, Lewis Co.,Wash., had. from
Salzer's Rejavenated White Honanza cts
and won « handsome 8) acre farm. Other
big yielda are 141 bus., 119 bus. 108 busy
ete,, had by farmers scattered throughout
the’t'S.
Salzer’s Pedigree Barley, Flax, Cor
Oats, Wheat, Potatoes, Grasses and Cort
ers are famous the world over for thei
Buty and tremendous yielding qualities
are easily the largest growers of fara
seeds in the world.
Our eatalog bristling with seed truths
frep'for the Raking, on-ren iin ctimpe
and receive 10 packages of farm seed nove
elties and rarities, inchiding above mare
Telous onte, together with. bit. ea‘slog,
John ‘A. Salzer Seed Co., 182 South Sth Se,
La Crosse, Wis.
On Her Side.
“I didn't know you had any {dea of
marrying her.”
“I didn't. ‘The idea was hers.”—
Lippincott’s Magazine.
LADIES CAN WEAR SHOES
gpe alte smaller after using allen’s Soot Eas
So Entiseptie poder to be ahaten tas
soea Henke ght gener aes fen say
ae
Ceianiuias Mae.
Father—I think the baby looks like
you.
Mother—Yees, it shuts its eyes to an
awful lot.
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated,
easy to take as candy, regulate and invig-
orate stomach, liver and bowels and cure
constipation.
He who cannot do kindness without
a@ brass band is not so scrupulous
about his other dealings.
Garfield Tea cannot but commend itself
to those desiring a laxative, simple, pure,
mild, potent and health-giving.
‘The recording angel may take more
interest in your day book than in
your hymn book.
Clear white clothes are a sign that, the
housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue.
Large 2 02. package, 5 cents,
When you find excess of speech look
for shortage on sight.
By Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Ottumwa, lowa.—‘For years I was
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OPT, |weakness, alzxiness,
i 4 fiidepression, an
x iy pre as that was
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RA \) NA \States, but TydlaE.
NAMA YPinikham’s Vereta-
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AS i ceressica se
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ONS eer fhe Uittea
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{ feel it my duty to tell you these
facts, My heart js ful of gratitude to
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aatrLEn, 524 §, Ransom Street,
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Consider This Advice.
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Until shehas given Lydia B-Pinkhan's
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Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass
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PATENT Pe
SEEAE LR vaem ee
MAY VOTE ON RECIPROCITY
AN AGREEMENT WILL PREVENT
EXTRA SESSION.
Arrangement Seems Satisfactory as
no Party Faction Wants to
Come Back.
Washington, D. C.—Developments in congress indicate that a vote on the Canadian reciprocity agreement will be taken and that the necessity for an extra session will be avoided. The adoption of the rule by which appropriation bills can be passed after a brief debate was followed by a statement from Senator Bailey of Texas and other Democrats in the senate that they would content themselves by merely voting against reciprocity and not filibuster against the agreement. This, apparently, assures a vote on the Canadian pact at this session, the thing President Taft has insisted upon. Nearly everybody concerned now appears satisfied with the situation.
The standpatters do not want an extra session, which would lead to certain success for reciprocity and possible revision of several tariff schedules. The insurgents also are averse to an extra session and the Democrats do not exactly desire to be pushed into a tariff session with the responsibility on their shoulders before they were ready for it. More than this, the old guard of the house was willing to have a rule for the last two weeks of the session that would allow some business to be done. The Democrats were willing to permit it so long as they would have a veto advantage under a two-third vote. The action of the house has greatly stimulated the expectation that the reciprocity bill will pass the senate before adjournment.
JAPANESE TREATY TO SENATE
Makes No Mention of Immigration Restriction Which is Left to Diplomatic Action.
Washington, D. C.—President Taft has transmitted to the senate the proposed new treaty with Japan.
The distinctive feature of the document is that it omits all reference to the restrictions now imposed by the United States on the admittance of Japanese immigrants to these shores.
The understanding is that this all important question is left to the national honor of the Japanese government, which is expected to enforce at her home ports, the limitations which are now enforced under the Root-Aoki agreement in the matter of her subjects who seek entrance to the United States.
FOR THE KILLING OF SAM WOODS
Twenty Years After the Crime Was Committed Oklahoma Man Has Been Arrested.
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.—Twenty years after crime was committed Governor Cruce has granted the requisition of James Bremen, a wealthy farmer of Kiowa county, Oklahoma, to be returned to Kansas to stand trial for the killing of Sam Woods, the founder of Woodsdale, Kan., and a pioneer of Stevens county, that state. The killing formed a sensational chapter in an early day county seat war. The fight was between Hugo and Woodsdale. Bremen was in bed ill when he was arrested.
FOR THE MISSOURI $600,000
Conference Committee Adopts the Stone Amendment Making a Six-Foot Channel Possible.
Washington, D. C.—Action by the conference committee in charge of the river and harbor bill assures the appropriation of $600,000 for the Missouri. The members of the committee unanimously adopted the amendment offered by Senator Stone and agreed to by the senate making that amount available for the improvement of the river "with a view to obtaining a permanent 6-foot channel between Kansas City and the mouth of the river."
The Elimination of Coulds
New York, N. Y.-The absolute elimination of George J. Gould and his family from American financial affairs was the keynote of a definite report in Wall street to the effect that a syndicate was being organized to take over practically all of the Gould holdings in railroad stocks.
No Plague Victims Recover
Washington, D. C.—That none of the plague stricken people of China recovers, the lungs being infected, followed by death in a few hours, was reported to the American National Red Cross society in a telegram received from American Consul General Wilder at Shanghai.
Italian Workmen Starving
Human Workmen Starving. Rome. Italy.-Government relief measures were put under way for thousands of idle workmen throughout Italy. The families of workmen are on the verge of starvation and many of them have been evicted from their homes.
Seven Drowned in Oregon
Portland. Ore. — The gasoline
schooner Oshkosh turned turtle
at the mouth of the Columbia river.
The captain was saved, but seven of
the crew were lost.
A CURIOSITY
"The only man what wasn't disfranchised after last election is about to cast his vote."
As It May Be in Some of the Vote-Selling Districts by the Time Another Election Rolls Around.
CLIP WINGS OF WHITE PLAGUE
GOV. HADLEY SENDS SPECIAL
MESSAGE TO LEGISLATURE.
Transmits Report of Tuberculosis
Commission Containing Recommendations for Cure.
Jefferson City, Missouri.—Between 5,000 and 5,500 persons die of consumption in Missouri every year. The economic loss to the state by reason of the ravages of the disease is placed by the commission which investigated the subject at $31,000,000. The commission estimates that there are always between 25,000 and 35,000 persons in the state who are partly of wholly incapacitated because of the disease and, it says in its report, transmitted to the legislature by Gov. Hadley, that a large percentage of these people could be saved if the state would prescribe the necessary sanitary precautions and provide treatment for them.
In his message, the governor says: "The report itself consists of a document of several hundred pages, which contains the most complete detailed information as to the existence of the cause of this disease and possible measures for its prevention and cure that has ever been prepared by any public or professional commission in this state, and will unquestionably be of great value in dealing with this important problem."
The report shows that two out of every 1,000 persons die of consumption, that the disease causes one in every ten deaths, and that the death rate, strange to say, is higher in the small towns and in the country than in the large cities. And while the economic loss to the state is placed at $31,000,000 a year because of the expense attendant on the illness, the commission finds that less than 1 per cent of this amount is spent to check it. The state, the commission says, should spend at least 2 per cent of the loss, approximately $600,000 a year, for the prevention and cure of the disease. Intelligently expended, the report says it is probable that this amount of money would, within a few years, completely eradicate the disease.
Limit the Birth Rate. He Says.
Cambridge, Massachusetts—Prof. T. N. Carver, the Harvard economist and sociologist, is in favor of small families and advocates more restrictions on the birth rate. In a statement he said the family exists to control the number of children and insuring adequate support for those that are born, and that no one should have more children than he can support decently.
Census Returns Inaccurate:
Washington, D. C. After careful investigation of the returns and schedules by experts clerks in the census bureau, it was found necessary to correct the population figures for 23 cities of the United States.
Cars Overturn. Then Burn.
Adairville, Tenn.—Twenty-one persons were injured and the lives of three score imperiled when two coaches burned after being turned over in a railroad wreck here.
Snow Follows Oklahoma Rain
Guthrie, Oklahoma. — From April showers to a January Blizzard was the quick weather change here. A norther has been blowing all day accompanied by snow and sleet.
For Agriculture $16,980,196.
Washington, D. C.—The agriculture appropriation bill was reported to the senate. It carries $16,980,196, an increase of $256,685 over the amount of the bill as it was passed by the house.
Oklahoma Bank Law Stands
Washington, D. C.—A rehearing in the case involving the constitutionality of the Oklahoma bank guaranty law of 1907 was denied by the supreme court of the United States. The court recently held that the law was constitutional.
An Earthquake in Turkey.
Constantinople, Turkey.—A violent earthquake was experienced at Monastir and elsewhere throughout the vilayet of Monastir. There was some loss of life.
SETTLE GRANDFATHER CLAUSE
The Test Case Now Being Tried in Oklahoma Will Be Appealed to Supreme Court.
Guthrie, Oklahoma.—Arguments in the test cases brought to prevent the disfranchisement of the negro voter in Oklahoma were begun here before Judge John H. Cotteral in the United States district court. The defendants are precinct election officers indicted for depriving negro voters of their suffrage at the last general election. The officers were proceeding under Oklahoma's grandfather election law. The punishment for violating the federal statute is a fine, or imprisonment, or both. The case will be appealed to the United States supreme court, whatever the outcome in the lower court.
Oklahoma Republicans are seeking to get an opinion from the United States supreme court squarely on the issue. Lawyers have been employed at the expense of the state to represent the defendants.
CHINA'S REPLY UNSATISFACTORY
That is the Information Received by Cable at the State Department.
Washington, D. C.-Cables from St. Petersburg and London to the state department bring the information that China's reply to Russia's demand for adjustments of claims in lil province and the treaty of 1881 is entirely unsatisfactory. Russia, it is declared, is getting ready to press at once her military demonstration. This means nothing less than initiation of a move to occupy the province and hold it.
The Supreme Court Decides That Newspapers May Not Pay in Advertising.
Washington, D. C.-Only money and not advertising can be accepted by interstate railroads in payment for transportation, according to an interpretation announced by the supreme court of the United States of the Hepburn rate law of 1906. The decision involves a large number of contracts between the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railroad company and various publishers.
Life Imprisonment
Georgetown, Kentucky.-Under the habitual criminal act, Caswell McCatten, a negro was sentenced to life imprisonment in the penitentiary here for stealing a turkey. The fowl was taken about Christmas and owing to the high price of fowls at that time the court held the theft a penitentiary offense.
Will Quit When Pay Stops.
Oklahoma City, Ok.—The present session of the legislature will close at the end of the 60 days, which is the constitutional limit of time during which members may draw $6 per day. Both houses passed concurrent resolution providing for sine die adjournment on March 4 at midnight.
China Conciliates Russia.
St. Petersburg, Russia.—The government considers the tone of the Chinese reply to the Russian note demanding a closer adherence to the provisions of the treaty of 1881 affecting Mongolia and Chinese Turkestan, most conciliatory and satisfactory.
Drifts Tie Up Trains.
Dalhart, Texas.-Five Rock Island passenger trains are reported tied up by a snow blockade at Santa Rosa, New Mexico. Relief trains have been sent out.
The Opium Crusade Ended:
Washington, D. C.—After more than 50 raids and the seizure of smuggled opium having a commercial value of $100,000, agents of the customs service have reported that their work is about finished.
Russians Invade Turkestan.
London, England.—A special dispatch from St. Petersburg says a rumor is current that a whole army corps of 36,000 men is preparing to reoccupy Kulja, a district of Chinese Turkestan.
ARMOURS TO QUIT MISSOURI
But Attorney General Major Says Packers Must Stay—Charged With Violating Anti-Trust Laws.
Jefferson City, Mo.—Qharles W. Armour of Kansas City, president, and James W. Murray, secretary of the Armour Packing company, attempted to withdraw the business of that company from Missouri. To do that it is necessary to surrender the license to do business and that is what the company sought to do, but Elliott W. Major, attorney general, instructed the secretary of state not to accept the surrender. The company must stay in the state and face prosecution for violating the anti-trust laws, Mr. Major said.
The Armours have no slaughter houses in Missouri, but have plants in East St. Louis, Ill., and Kansas City, Kan. At St. Joseph the Armour Packing company has a big distributing plant under the management of M. E. Linville and "coolers" for storage of dressed meats, etc., in nearly all of the larger cities. On that account when he brought the anti-trust proceeding the attorney general, made the Armour Packing company the only Armour concern that is a defendant.
Now, when he thinks he has proved a clear violation of the anti-trust law he says he does not propose to let the principal offender slip through his fingers and avoid paying the penalty. It is the company that is in court and subject to whatever penalty may be imposed. No other Armour company can be reached. The record filed shows that the corporation had decided on January 16 to quit business in Missouri. The record is attested by Fred T. Grissom of Kansas City, February 10, 1911. It revokes Linville's authority as agent.
TWO WEEKS FOR CHINA TO ACT
The Russian Government Does Not Propose to Send Troops to Enforce Demands at Once.
St. Petersburg, Russia.—The Novoe Vremya, in discussing the announced purpose of Russian to make a military demonstration in Lil Province, in Chinese Turkestan, describes the note presented at Pekin by Minister Korotoxitx as a semi-ultimatum, as it does not specify the time within which China must comply with the demands of St. Petersburg.
The paper adds, however, that if the Chinese government falls to act in a fortnight the semi-ultimatum will be amplified.
HEARING FROM THE FARMERS
Head of National Grange Objects to Passage of Canadian Reciprocity —6,000,000 Behind Him.
Washington, D. C.—Protests, said to come from farmers, against the Canadian reciprocity agreement were heard by the senate committee on finance.
Ex-Governor N. J. Bachelder of New Hampshire, master of the National Grange, asserted that 6,000,000 farmers were united in opposition to the agreement and he said he voiced their protests against free trade in farm products while protection was continued on manufactured articles which the farmers are compelled to buy.
FRIGHTENED THE FILIPINOS
The First Aviation Flight in the Orient Made by Mars at Manila.
Manila.—The first aviation flight in the Orient was made here at the opening of the annual carnival. J. C. (Bud) Mars, the American aeronaut, made a circling flight over the city, thrilling thousands of spectators and throwing many natives into a panic of fear at the strange sight. Aviator Baldwin, in a biplane, also made a flight. Thousands of visitors flocked in from the provincial districts for the carnival and some came from as far as China and Japan.
Iowa Damage Law Upheld.
Washington, D. C.—The constitutionality of the law of Iowa passed in 1898 enabling an employee of the operating department of a railroad to sue a railroad for injuries, notwithstanding the fact that he had received injury benefits from a relief department supported partly by the railroad, was upheld by the supreme court of the United States.
Missouri "Navy" Forgotten.
Jefferson City, Mo.—The Missouri "navy," one squadron of which has been located at Kansas City, has been left out of the contingent appropriation bill and probably will have to disband. The prospects of the bill being amended to include the $5,000 a year asked for the naval reserves are extremely slim.
Dies While in Barber Chair.
Kansas City, Mo.—While sitting in a barber chair waiting for a shave Patrick Dooley, a Kansas City pioneer, 3218 Lexington avenue, succumbed to the infirmities of his 83 years and died.
Marriage of Minors Holds.
Kansas City, Mo.-Parents cannot successfully try to annul, in Missouri courts, the marriage of boys over 14 and girls over 12. Judge James E. Goodrich so held in the circuit court, looking over supreme court decisions.
WINNiPEG, MANITOBA THE GREATEST WHEAT MARKET ON THE CON TINENT
WINNiPEG, MANITOBA THE GREATEST WHEAT MARKET ON THE CON TINENT
REMARKABLE YIELDS OF WHEAT, OATS, BARLEY AND FLAX IN WESTERN CANADA LAST YEAR.
Figures recently issued show that the wheat receipts at Winnipeg last year were 88,269,330 bushels, as compared with the Minneapolis receipts of 81,111,410 bushels, this placing Winnipeg at the head of the wheat receiving markets of the continent. Following up this information it is found that the yields throughout the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, as given the writer by agents of the Canadian Government stationed in different parts of the States, have been splendid. A few of the instances are given:
On the Experimental Farm at Indian Head, wheat has gone below 40 bushels, while several, such as the Marquis and the Preston, have gone as high as 54 bushels to the acre. At Elstow, Sask., the quantity of wheat to the acre ran, on the average, from 26 right up to 40 bushels per acre, while oats in some cases yielded a return of 70 to 80 bushels per acre, with flax giving 13 to 14 bushels per acre.
W. C. Carnell had a yield of 42 bushels per acre from six acres of breaking. Neil Callahan, two miles northwest of Strome, had a yield of 42 bushels of wheat per acre. Wm. Lindsay, two miles east of Strome, had 1,104 bushels of Regenerated Abundance oats from ten acres. Joseph Scheelar, 11 miles south of Strome, had 12,000 bushels of wheat and oats from 180 acres. Part of the oats yielded 85 bushels to the acre, and the wheat averaged about 40 bushels. Spohn Bros., four miles southwest of Strome, had a splendid grain yield of excellent quality wheat, grading No. 2. A. S. McCulloch, one mile northwest of Strome, had some wheat that went 40 bushels to the acre. J. Blaser, a few miles southwest of Strome, threshed 353 bushels of wheat from 7 acres. Among the good grain yields at Macklin, Alberta, reported are: D. N. Tweedle, 22 bushels to the acre; John Currin, 24 bushels wheat to the acre; Sam Fletcher, 20 bushels to the acre.
At Craven, Sask, Albert Clark threshed from 60 acres of stubble 1,890 bushels; from 20 acres of fallow 900 bushels of red fife wheat that weighed 65 pounds to the bushel. Charles Keith threshed 40 bushels to the acre from 40 acres. Albert Young, of Stony Beach, southwest of Lumsden, threshed 52 bushels per acre from summer fallow, and George Young 5,000 bushels from 130 acres of stubble and fallow, or an average of 3812 bushels to the acre. Arch Morton got 5,600 bushels of red fife from 160 acres. James Russell got 8,700 bushels from stubble and late breaking, an average of $23\frac{1}{2}$ bushels.
At Rosthern Jacob Friesen had 27 bushels per acre from 80 acres on new land and an average over his whole farm of $21\frac{1}{2}$ bushels of wheat. John Schultz threshed 4,400 bushels from 100 acres, or 44 bushels to the acre. John Lepp had 37 bushels per acre from 200 acres. A. B. Dirk had 42 bushels per acre from 25 acres. Robert Roe of Grand Coulee threshed 45 bushels to the acre from 420 acres.
Sedley, Sask., is still another district that has cause to be proud of the yields of both wheat and flax. J. Cleveland got 30 bushels of wheat per acre on 100 acres and 18 bushels of flax on 140 acres. T. Dundas, southeast of Sedley, 40 bushels per acre on 30 acres; M. E. Miller, 34 bushels per acre on 170 acres of stubble, and 35 bushels per acre on 250 acres fallow; W. A. Day had 32 bushels per acre on 200 acres of stubble, and 35 bushels on 250 acres of fallow; J. O. Scott had 30 bushels of wheat per acre on 200 acres, and 18 bush-
els of flax per acre on 300 acres; James Bullick averaged 29 bushels of wheat; A. Allen 30 bushels; Jos. Runions, 40; Alex Ferguson, 38; W. R. Thompson, 35, all on large acreages. The flax crop of J. Cleveland is rather a wonder, as his land has yielded him $60 per acre in two years with one ploughing. Russell, Man., farmers threshed 30 bushels of wheat and 60 to 80 bushels of oats. A. D. Stenhouse, near Melford, Sask., had an average yield on $13\frac{1}{2} acres of new land, $63\frac{1}{2} bushels of Preston wheat to the acre. Hector W. Swanston, a farmer near Welwyn, Sask., had 5,150 bushels of wheat from one quarter section of land. John McLean, who owns two sections, threshed 12,860 bushels of wheat.
His Head Was Hard.
It is a common belief that the negro's head is hard, capable of withstanding almost any blow.
The following story told by a prominent young dentist of Danville, ill, would seem to indicate something of the kind anyhow. Two negro men were employed on tearing down a three-story brick building. One negro was on top of the building taking off the bricks and sliding them down a narrow wooden chute to the ground, some thirty feet below, where the other was picking them up and piling them.
When this latter negro was stooping over to pick up a brick the former accidentally let one fall, striking him directly on the head.
Instead of its killing him, he merely looked up, without rising, and said, "What you doin' thar, nigger, you make me bite my tongue."—The Circle.
A Dry Wash.
Representative Livingston of Georgia, who, disgusted at the bath-tub debate in the house recently, proposed that a little money might be made by renting the bath tubs out, said recently, apropos of this subject:
"We are now a good deal like Bill Spriggins on a zero morning.
"Bill's valet entered his bedroom one January morning and said with a shiver:
"Will you take your bath hot or cold, sir?"
"Thank you,' said Bill; 'I'll take it for granted.'"
The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great importance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new.
Ready With Proof
An earnest preacher in Georgia, who has a custom of telling the Lord all the news in his prayers, recently began a petition for help against the progress of wickedness in his town with the statement:
"O thou great Jehovah, crime is on the increase. It is becoming more prevalent daily. I can prove it to you by statistics."—Everybody's Magazine;
Important to Mothers
Important to mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
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infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
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The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Hard Luck.
The big stone had rolled to the bottom of the hill again, and the bystanders were jeering at Sisyphus.
"Boys," he groaned, tackling it once more, "if you can't boost, don't knock!"
Tightness across the chest means a cold on the lungs. That's the danger signal. Cure that cold with Hamilis Wizard Oil before it runs into Consumption or Pneumonia.
True pleasure consists in clear thoughts, sedate affections, sweet reflections, a mind even and stayed, and true to itself.—Hopkins.
To correct disorders of the liver, take Garfield Tea, the Herb Laxative.
Love does not depend for its strength on concentration.
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before it becomes serious—do it right now. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is the quickest and surest medicine for you to take. Thousands have proven it. Start today. It is for Heartburn, Poor Appetite, Indigestion, Colds and Malaria.
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WE SEARCHLIGHT
Established in 1898.
W. N. MILLER, Editor.
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SEND YOUR NEWS IN EARLIER.
The Mother's Aid club will meet Friday afternoon March 3. with Mrs. Mollie Miller,1929 S. Mosley Ave. All members are urged to be present:
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foss a fine baby bay, Feb. 8th. Dr. F. O: Miller in attendance. Mother and son during nicely.
Attentions Tabors. !!!
Taborian Temple No. 11 will hold their regular monthly meeting on Thursday March 2nd.
There is some very important business to be care for and it is hoped that every member will be present. Cone on time.
Miss Millie G. Dennis of Austin Ark. is in the city visiting with her aunt, Mrs.H H. Neely, at the Neely home 1447 So. River St.
Anthony Hookett it able to be out again after two weeks spell of illness which forced him from his work and take to his bed. Although at work, he is by no means well and is still under the care of his physician. His many friends hope for his early complete recovery.
Rev. J. H. Van Leu, State Missionary, arrived in the city Wednesday for a few days rest from his work.
John W. Davis of Kansrs City, arrived in the city Tuesday to spend several days visiting with his brother Robt. Davis.
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They'll Treat You Right
LOCALS
Send your gifts notes and leased
houses to CGI Bank Main Street.
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right
The Optinate club met at the residence of Mr. Samuel Gary 1520 E. Eleventh St. Mjss Wade of Omaha, was a visitor. All left agreeing that the Gary's are grand entertainers.
Y. M. C. A. NOTES.
The Guines and Ganders two basket ball teams of the the colored Y. M. C. A. played a fast game of basket ball Thursday eveing Feb. 16.
The Guineas winning by the score of 14 to 13. Matthew Belle referred the game and gave_satisfaction. The Guineas made the Ganders look like Gooses.
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Frame and son, Lee Frame, entertained Sunday, Feb. 5th, at their pleasant home east of the city, Ex.- Congressman Geo. W. Murray and wife; Attorney R. B. McWilliams and wife; Dr. F. Miller aud wife; and Mrs. W. H. Jones. Everyone enjoyed the time in a pleasing manner. The following was the
MENU
Fried Chicken Mashed Potato
Creamed Gravy
Peas on Lettuce Fruit Salad
Cheese Macoroni
Escolled Sweet Potatoes
Dark Cake Fruit Black Coffee
Programme.
AT GARFIELD HALL
Wednesday night, March 1st.
PROGRAM
Part I
1 Overture Clark-Chinneth Orchestra
2 Address Illustrious Potentate, Dr. Fr O. Miller
3 Quartett Patton-Harper, Hicks-Perry
4 A a few "Sandy" caricatures, Ill. Dr G. G. Brown
5 Selections from Verdi's II Trovature
[a] solo by Mrs. Potton
[b] cornet duet Lawrence-Bell
[c] chorus, Gypsies with anvils
GRAND ARABIAN DRILL
By the Daughters of Isis and the
Emith Patrol. See them drill.
Memorial Services.
Thh pastor officers and members of St. Paul A. M. E. church will hold memorial services at the churah, Sunday night, Feb. 26th in honor of the memory of the late Bishop Abram Grant who died in Kansas City, Kan. Sunday, Jan. 22nd 1911. The following is the program arranged for the occasion. Everyone is cordially invited to come out and pay respect to the memory of this great church man and race leader.
IN MEMORIAM
BISHOP ABRAM GRANT, D. D.
BORN 1848 — DIED 1911
1 Hymn "Servant of God, Welcome" Cong.
2 Invocation
3 Hymn "Asleep in Jesus" Choir
4 Scripture Lesson Pastor
5 Anthem Choir
6 Obituary W. N. Miller
7 Solo "Lead Kindly Light" Milton Perry
8 Bishop Grant—Leader of Men J. T. Chineth
9 Bishop Grant—The Church Man Mrs. L. Hill
10 Solo Mrs. T. W. Fi
11 Select Reading "The Burial of Moses"
Mrs. C. C. Clayton
12 Bishop Grant—The Friend Mrs. F. O. Miller
13 Solo Mrs. Lela Davis
14 RESOLUTIONS
Committee:— Thos. Glover, Ed Landrum, W
C. Neeley, J. W. Thompson, J. H. Jones, F. S.
Wilkins and Dr. H. T. Bolden.
J. E. Edwards, pastor
Prof. Geo. W. White, chorister
Mrs. S. Collins spent several days in the city last week, returning Monday to her home in Hutchinson.
WOODWARD & BUTLER, PROPS.
— SEE THEM —
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They'll Treat You Right
A Big Quarterly Meeting.
The Stewards and Stewardess of the A. M. E. church are making great preparations to make Sunday, March 12th, the best and biggest quarterly meeting day in the his of their church. Presiding Elder M. Wooten, will be in the city and aside from special features during the day the services will close at night with an excellent seared program Every member and friend will be asked to assist this department in making the collection of the day a record breaker.
Political Announcements
The gentlemen whose name appear in this column between now and primary day are safe men to vote for. —Editor
FOR MAYOR
I hereby announce myself as a candidate for the office of Mayor of Wichita, subject to the primary March 27th. 1911. Your support solicited.
FOR CITY COMMISSIONER
I hereby announce myself a candidate for City
Commissioner, subject to the primary, March 27th
1911. I will appreciate your support.
I am a candidate for City Commissioner, subject to the primary, March 27th. 1911. I will appreciate your vote. GEO. E. HARRIS
I hereby announce that I am a candidate for City Commissioner, subject to the primary, March 27th. 1911. Your vote will be applauded.
Rev. W. R. Boone filled the pulpit on last Sunday eve. at the A. M. E. church. He has in tho city for several days represeoting the Noxubee Industrial Institute McLead, Miss.
Notice to Friends.
We wish to inform the friends in the city who promised to help us care for the delegates to the Ninth Session of the Lincoln Annual Conference, that the Conference will be held at Cabbell's Chapel, M. E. church, 15th and Wabash, March 9-10-11 and 12. Yours For Christ Geo, T. Wooten, pastor M. C. B. Mason, D. D.
The members of the G, L. A. club will hold their next meeting Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. L. Harper.
Mrs. Thos. Fines left Monday, for Cleyborn Texas in response to a telegram announcing the death of her father.
Mrs. Mary Butler was in the city on business trip from Hutch inson, Saturday.
Mrs. Katie Kiner is quite ill at her home on N. Water.
Took Precautions.
"You ran into this man at 30 miles an hour and knocked him 40 feet," said the court.
"That, or a little better, I suppose," answered the chauffeur.
"Why didn't you slow down?"
"Mere precaution, your honor. Once I shut off speed and hit a man so gently that he was able to climb into the machine and give me a lossing."
J. H. Depriest was in the city Wednesday enroute to Hutchinson.
Mrs. L. H. White has been quite indisposed for several days
Do you trade with one of our advertisers?
Dr. A. K. Lawrence
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office Phones
517 N. Main St. Bell4634
DISEASES OF MEN, WOMEN AND
CHILDREN A SPECIALTY?
Dr. F. O. Miller Physici'n & Surgeon
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All calls answered promptly Day
or Night. Obstetrics and Diseases
of women A Specialty
Dr. H. T. Bolden
IS E-Z ON YOUR TEETH
AND E-Z-ON YOUR POCKET BOOK
Bridge Teeth $4.00
All Work Guaranteed
Bell Phone 517 N. Main St. over
4634 Mahin Eye Drug Store.
Send your news in earlier A. G. MUELLER
UNDERTAKER
BOTH PHONES 325 WICHITA KANS
142 N. MARKET
For Everything In Building Material SEE
JH TURNER
525 TO 549 WEST DOUGLAS
W. S. Henrion
Druggist
501 North Main Street
Wichita - - - - Kansas
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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.
Attend the Monday night dancing academy.
Services at the Tabernacle Baptist Church for Sunday March
11:00 a. m. Preaching, Subject;
1:00 p. m. Sunday school
6:30 p. m. B. Y. P. U.
8:00 p. m. Preaching by pastor
Subject:-
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They'll Treat You Right
CULP'S MEAT MARKET
241 N.MAIN ST.
Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Tail
Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterlings,
Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon.
Nip Oysters, Heinz Pickles, and Baked Beef.
F. T. CULP, Prop.
Main St. Both F
ade with our Advertise
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 P. T. CULP, Prop. 241 N. Main St. Both Phone
Trade with our Advertisers
Grocery Department
WE SELL FLOUR
WE SELL MEAL
WE SELL LARD
WE SELL MEAT
WE SELL POTATOES
fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class
grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU
In fact, we seMeverything kept in a First-Class Grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU?
Makin Eye Drug Co.
N. Main St. - Wichita, Kan - Bell Phone
BEN'S IMPERIAL FLOOR
RAM - CORN MEAL - BREAKFAST FOOD
With thirty-five years MILLING EXPERIENCE in Wichita, our products are the best that can be produced.
Made from the best selected grain only, put up in Special Packages.
OUR GROCER: See that you get IMPERIAL IMBODEN MILLING CO.
Wichita, Kansas
PROCERIES, MEATS
and General Merchandise
carry a full, fresh line of Staple and Fancy饼食 and the choicest Fresh and Salt Meats.
Our stock of Dry Goods, Men, Women and Children's Shoes cannot be excelled in quality at price.
Free Deliver
517 N. Main St. — Wichita, Kan — Bell Phone 239
IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL FLOUR
GRAHAM - CORN MEAL - BREAKFAST FOOD
With thirty-five years MILLING EXPERIENCE in Wichita, our products are the best that can be produced.
Made from the best selected grain only, put up in Special Packages.
ASK YOUR GROCER: See that you get IMPERIAL
THE IMBODEN MILLING CO.
Wichita, Kansas
---
GROCERIES, MEATS
We carry a full, fresh line of Staple and Fancy Groceries and the choicest Fresh and Salt Meat Our stock of Dry Goods, Men, Women and Children's Shoes cannot be excelled in quality or in price. Free Delivery
Tapp & Hanshaw
A. E. Albrigh
A. E. Albright
741 North Main St.
Dealer In
and Second-Hand Furniture, All k
ins and Coal stoves both for cooking
ing. Also Tables, Cabinets and a
of Furniture.
New and Second-Hand Furniture, All kinds of Gas and Coal stoves both for cooking and Heating. Also Tables, Cabinets and a full line of Furniture.
Groceries and Meats Fresh Fish Every Friday and Saturday
It exctls in every respect, - color, flavor and pounds of bread per barrel. MADE BY WATSON MILL CO.
High Class Surgery Special Attention Given to
a Specialty Canine Practice
All Calls Promptly Answered-Day or Night
The Finest Equipped Hospital In the City
Both Phones Office and Hospital
1730 236 K. Market St., Wichita, Ks.
---
"SECOND TO NONE"
GOOD BREAD MAKERS
— AND WILL PLEASE YOU —
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 Kansas
State Law, Register No. 1.
It Is The Cheapest and Best Food on the Market
First-Class Making of Men's Garments. Cleaning, Pressing, and Reparing A Specialty Courteous Attention Bell Phone 3055
For Clean Beds and Good Meals, Call at
The BEE Hotel
507 North Main St.
Short Orders Filled At All House
Good Service is Guaranteed
Mrs. Mary Bates, Prop.
B. F. McLean, President W. B. Tucker, Vice President
J. M. Moore, Vice Pres. C. W. Brown, Vice Pres.
V. H. Branch, Cashier
United States Depository
Capital $200,000.00 Surplus $125,000.00
Directors: W R Tucker, W E Jett, R L Holmes, S B Amidon, J M Moore
B. F. McLean, A. C. Houston, C. W. Brown, J. W. Metz, E. T. Battin
Henry Lassen, V. H. Branch.
A General Banking Business Transacted
SEEDS
Now is the time to get them. Ours are tested and the very best.
We have a full line of the best kind. See them before buying.
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR
KINKY OR CURLY HAIR. IT'S USE MAKES
STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE
PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COMB AND
PUT UP IN ANY THE LENGTH WILL
PERMIT. WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING
HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES
SHORT, KINKY HAIR GROW LONG AND
WAVY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET
FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP
AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE
GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25* AND 50* BOTTLES
WITH CHARLES FORD'S
NAME ON EVERY_PACKAGE.
• SOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
• IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY
YOU, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT
AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED
BOTTLE, 25* LARGE SIZED BOTTLE, 50*
THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
216 LAKE ST., DEPT. 132 CHICAGO, ILL.
• AGENTS WANTED.
USE
Murray's Reliable Nerve Balm
Murray's Reliable Antiseptic Salve
Murray,s Reliable Perfumes
These Goods Have No Equal They are pleasing hundreds of people and will please you.
J. H. MURRAY & CO.
Sold by Dealers
Wichita — — Kansas
STIRLING
CLOTHES
MADE IN WICHITA
Material Fit Style Workmanship
GUARANTEED
If 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 or 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.
Peerless Steam Laundry
Wichita's Oldest, Most Reliable and Best Laundry BEST LAUNDRY IN THE CITY Satisfaction Guaranteed Laundry Work Called and Delivered Phones 232 SELOVER & SONS, Props. 245 N. Market St Wichita, Kan
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They'll Treat You Right
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS
They'll Treat You Right
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right reach Mr. Root until after senator Beveridge han made a formal reply to the New York senator's speech and the senate was prepared to adjorn.
BACON ASKS QUESTIONS. Just before 6 o'clock Mr. Bacon revived the Southern question. Repeating the remarks of the New Yorker, Mr. Bacon addressed himself directly to Mr. Root and asked. "What are the things the senator reters?"
Mr. Root, response was in no wise evasive or indirect. Recalling the substance of his previous remares he said that he had had reference to the voluntary surrender by the goverment of the power to enforce the protection of the suffrage priveleges of the Southern negroes.
Facing Senator Bacon and speaking with great deliberation M. Root enmerated the pernage system,the lynching of negroes and disfranchisement provisions such as grandiathers clauses in the constitutions of many of the Southern states as some of the things calculated to deprive the black man of that equal protection which the constitution guarantees.
ROOTS WARNING
"The people of the United States are willing to fold her hands and wish the Southern penple Godspeed in working out their decliate problem so long as they do so in kindness; but if there should be such oppression as to call for the exercise of the power of the United States to enforce the amendments that power will be exercised ane it ought to be," he said.
Mr. Bacon replied that such questions as lynching and peonage were in no wise cognate to the subject under consideration.
He accounted for lynching on the grounds of severe provocation, which he said deprived men of their reason and made demons of them. He found one cause for them in the scarcity of population and to show that this crime is confined to no one part of the country, said there had been a lynching in New York in which the victim was burn to death. As for the charge of peonage, he declared there was no practice in the South worthy of that name.
BACON AGAIN QUERIES.
Indicating doubts as to Mr.
Roots having had such offenses in mind, Mr. Bacon said he was sure the New York senator was really 'inveighing against supposed offenses against the franch ise.
"Am I correct?" questioned Mr. Bacon, Perfectly responded Mr. Root, Then he added:
"If the constitution should be so amended as to provide for the election of senators by direct vote, the national government must retain the power to make those elections free and unhampered. Without this privilege the government of the United
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RHEUMATISM
THEIRD
15 ROSE
Munyon's Rheumatism Remedy relieves pains in the legs, arms, back, stiff or swollen joints. Contains no morphine, or opioids, or alcohol to relieve pain. It neutralizes the acid and drives out all rheumatic poisons from the system. It also punches Munyon, Sd and Jefferson Site, Phila, Ft., for medical advice, absolutely free.
WHO IS Women as well as men are made miserable by kidney and bladder trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root is the great kidney remedy needed at drugists in fifty cent and dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet telling all about it.
At druggists in fifty cent and dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet telling all about it. Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. PISO'S is the name to remember when you need a remedy for COUGHS and COLLRS
QUITE SO
Philip—These motorists seem to think the ordinary pedestrians are beneath them.
Philip—These motorists seem to think the ordinary pedestrians are beneath them.
Harry—Well, they often are.
A Fairly Wet World.
The Pacific ocean covers 68,800,000 miles, the Atlantic 30,000,000 and the Indian, Arctic and Antarctic 42,000,000. To stow away the contents of the Pacific it would be necessary to fill a tank one mile long, one mile wide at one mile deep every day for 440 years. Put in figures, the Pacific holds in weight 948,000,000,000,000,000 tons. The Atlantic averages a depth of not quite three miles. Its water weighs 325,000,000,000,000,000 tons, and a tank to contain it would have each of its sides 43 miles long. The figures of the other oceans are in the same startling proportions. It would take all the sea water in the world 2,000,000 years to flow over Niagara.
Simple, Rather.
He—You are the only woman I ever loved.
She—Do you expect me to believe that?
He—I do. I swear it is true.
She—Then I believe you. Any man who would expect a woman to believe that cannot have been much in the company of women.
The character of Rebecca, in Scott's "Ivanhoe" was taken from a beautiful Jewess, Miss Rebecca Gratz of Philadelphia. Her steadfastness to Judaism, when related by Washington Irving to Scott, won his admiration and caused the creation of one of his finest characters.
IT'S FOOD
That Restores and Makes Health Possible.
There are stomach specialists as well as eye and ear and other specialists.
One of these told a young lady, of New Brunswick, N. J., to quit medicines and eat Grape-Nuts. She says: "For about 12 months I suffered severely with gastritis. I was unable to retain much of anything on my stomach, and consequently was compelled to give up my occupation.
"I took quantities of medicine, and had an idea I was dieting, but I continued to suffer, and soon lost 15 pounds in weight. I was depressed in spirits and lost interest in everything generally. My mind was so affected that it was impossible to become interested in even the lightest reading matter.
"After suffering for months I decided to go to a stomach specialist. He put me on Grape-Nuts and my health began to improve immediately. It was the keynote of a new life.
"I found that I had been eating too much starchy food which I did not digest, and that the cereals which I had tried had been too heavy. I soon proved that it is not the quantity of food that one eats, but the quality.
"In a few weeks I was able to go back to my old business of doing culinary work. I have continued to eat Grape-Nuts for both the morning and evening meal. I wake in the morning with a clear mind and feel rested. I regained my lost weight in a short time. I am well and happy again and owe it to Grape-Nuts." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Read "The Road to Wellville," in plgs. "There's a Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.
Jerry's Faithfulness
By ELEANOR H. PORTER
The letter was addressed to "Miss Marion Hartley" and not for five years had Mrs. William Saybrook been that. She was at the old Hartley homestead on a visit to her brother and his wife when the letter came and the postman smiled broadley as he placed the missive in her hand.
"Yess'm that's all; but I guess that belongs to you all right, Mrs. Saybrook, even if you haven't been seeing much of that name lately, eh?" he bantered jovially.
"It can't be—but it is—Jerry!" she breathed. "And he doesn't know—I'm married!"
With a dismayed cry she tore open the envelope. The letter, in an entirely different handwriting from that on the envelope, began: "Jerry Hapgood, who asks me to write you this letter, feels too ill to do more than superscribe it, but he requests me to say—"
Mrs. Saybrook continued to read, her eyes widening and her cheeks paling. At the end she crumpled the letter in her hand and hurried down stairs to the living room where her sister-in-law sat sewing.
"Kate, what shall I do?" she burst out. "Jerry Hapgood is sick—I mean he's better and he's coming back—for me!"
"And who may Jerry Hapgood be?" smiled Kate, tranquilly. "Surely, not a kidnaper?"
"Worse than that. He's a lover—my lover. Kate, what shall I do?"
Even the placid Kate was stirred now.
"Your lover! Why, Marion, what are you talking about?"
"About Jerry Hapgood," cried the younger woman, feverish, sinking into a low chair. "It's awful, Kate, perfectly awful, and you must help me out. You see it was ages ogo. I wasn't but 18; and he—well, there was—an understanding, I am afraid. Then he went away—way off, west or south, or somewhere, and we—wrote. Well, that went on for a year or two, then all of a sudden his letters stopped right off short. And how was I to know? I thought he'd died or forgotten me, or found somebody else, of course, and naturally I didn't want to be found wearing the weeping willow, so I—well, William came along about then, anyway, and I—I couldn't help myself."
"But, Kate, listen; this is the awful part. Jerry didn't die, or forget, or anything. It's a dreadful story, all shipwrecks and wars and imprisonments and sickness. The doctor—my letter was from a doctor—just told me a little of that, but he said that Jerry was gaining fast and would soon come and tell me himself—himself. Kate! He's coming here and he expects to find me 'Marion Hartley,' waiting for him. Kate, what shall I do?" "Do? Why, go right along the even tenor of your way, of course. When he comes—if he does come—he'll find out very quickly that you aren't Miss Hartley and that you aren't waiting for him." "But think of him—how he'll feel!" "Nonsense, Marion! After all these years I fancy he'll survive."
Marion uplifted her chin with an alr of wounded dignity.
You don't know Jerry Hapgood, Kate. If you did you wouldn't say that in that tone of voice. Besides—why, Kate, they were simply awful—those letters," she wailed suddenly; "both his and mine. They were forever raving of truth and love and loyalty and high ideals. And he—he was the kind that—that never gets over things. And he thinks now that I—I have been true, too—as true as he's been!
Mrs. William Saybrook did not mention Jerry Hapgood's name again for some days, but that did not mean that she had forgotten him. She trembled at every knock and held her breath every time the door bell rang. In spite of her angry remonstrance with herself she found, too, that she could not don a gown nor arrange her hair that she did not have a thought for the possible effect on eyes that had seen her last as an 18-year-old girl. She was shocked and shamed by all this. She told herself that she was actually becoming disloyal to William — William, at about this time, began to wonder mildly at the length and warmth and frequency of his wife's letters.
But as the days passed and no Jerry appeared Mrs. Saybrook began to breathe with less apprehension. Then, one day, it happened. She met the man face to face in the woods near the town. She knew him at once. She noticed that he changed color as their eyes met. One hand sought his hat, the other extended itself hesitatingly. "You are—it is—Miss Hartley—Mar
"You are—it is—Miss Hartley—Marion," he stammered. He was plainly embarrassed and his embarrassment was contagious. Before Mrs. William Saybrook knew just what she was doing she found herself blushing and stammering, too. "M-Marion, y-yes," she nodded. She realized then, suddenly, that he had said "Miss Hartley," and that her "yes" would be taken as an assent to that. With a frightened little gesture she tried to set matters right. She noted with relief that some children were gathering nuts near them—he would not, then, attempt to kiss her. But she had not begun to speak when the man blurted out jerkly:
"Of course not."
"I came right over across lots from the station, you know. I—wanted to see you first. Things have changed a lot around here. I didn't see a soul I knew at the station."
Mrs. Saybrook wet her lips. Her knees were shaking, and her fingers had grown cold. Under her breath she was iterating: "It must be settled—it must be settled! Why can't I make him see?"
"It's more than I deserve that you should even speak to me, after all those years of silence," the man hurried on. "But when I explain—" He hesitated, and she plunged at once into the pause.
"But you don't need to explain. Don't you see? It is I, just as much—that is, more. Er—I didn't write, either."
He shook his head and smiled sadly, as if brushing this aside.
"And when I think of all those years," he resumed, "and see you now—and know that year after you you've been right here, and—and haven't forgotten, I—"
"But I haven't been right here, I did forget," broke in Mrs. William Saybrook, frenziedly. "It's all a mistake! You don't understand. I'm not Miss Hartley, at all!"
Jerry Hapgood stopped short. His face grew white, then red.
"You mean that you're—married?" he burst out.
"Yes, yes; don't look like that, please! It was so long, and I was so young, and you didn't write," she rushed on childishly, not realizing what she was saying. "And I don't think you ought to blame me. I saw William—that is, he saw me first, of course—not that I mean that I'm sorry he did see me; but—Jerry, why don't you say something? Can't you understand?"
"But you—I called you Miss Hartley at the first, and you—you—" He stopped helplessly.
"Yes, yes, I know I did," she moaned, keeping her eyes resolutely turned from his face. "I was taken by surprise, and didn't think. But since then, all the time I've been trying to tell you."
"But, Marlon—"
"No, no, not a word, please, if you ever cared for me, go now! I tell you she knows who you are—who you were. Please, go!" And Jerry Hangood went.
For a week Mrs. William Saybrook wore the air of gentle gloom that belongs to those who, through no fault of her own, have sorely wounded a much-loved friend. Then, one day, in a letter from her husband in New York, she found these words:
"I heard such a good story the other day that I'm going to pass it on to you. I ran across a fellow that I met down in Panama, and saw quite a little of that year before I came north and found you. It was he who told the story. He said 'twas such a good joke that he'd just got to tell some one—only he hadn't quite made up his mind yet whether the joke was on him or the girl."
"It seems that years ago he'd had the most romantic sort of a love affair with an eighteen-year-old miss somewhere up here in New England. They had vowed undying love and loyalty after the fashion of impetuous youth, and had then parted, he to seek his fortune in the wide, wide world, she to watch and wait.
"Well, it seems that he traversed the wide, wide world before he got through with it, and, youth-like, his vision of the eighteen-year-old male grew dim, aided by a particularly exciting series of adventures, including wars and shipwrecks, not to mention imprisonment and serious illness. It was the last that was his undoing; for it was while he lay tossing with fever that his new love—a beautiful girl whom he had been ardently courting for a year or so—found out about the old. She got enough from his ravings and from a letter she found (while hunting for some friend's name to write to of his illness) to make her suspicious; and when he got better she put him through a merciless catechism. It was all up with him then. The girl refused utterly to have another thing to do with him, and peremptiously ordered him to go back and marry his boyhood sweetheart, who—in the letter—had promised faithfully to wait for him—forever, if need be.
"Well, he went. He got the doctor to write first, and sort of break the ice; then he followed the letter. He owned up to me that he was ashamed of himself and meant to make the best of things. Girl Number Two had opened his eyes to what a rascal he'd been to Number One, and he came back with a determined resolution that he'd make good. Indeed, he worked himself up into really a very virtuous state of martyrdom by the time he arrived here duly prepared to reward the long, dreary watch of the faithful maid of eighteen.
"Then came the joke—the girl hadn't waited. She'd married. They had one romantic meeting 'neath the green spreading trees, then parted to meet no more. The fun of it is, they were interrupted, or something, and he didn't even have a chance to find out the name of the chap who had cut him out, or to explain to the girl that he wasn't quite so broken-hearted, after all. He left the town on the next train and there the matter ended except that he's gone back to bliss and Number Two.
WORTH KEEPING IN MEMORY
Cleaning Hints That, Some Time or Another, Are Sure to Be Found of Value.
Cover marble with a paste made by mixing French chalk with alcohol, and allow the figure to become perfectly dry. Then brush the powder away. If the result is not satisfactory wipe over with a rag dipped in javelie water. This is a mild bleach.
In cleaning oil cloth little water should be used, because if any gets underneath each time it is washed the oil cloth will rot.
A little kerosene added to the water will brighten oil cloth unless it is much worn or has been washed with water so hot that the varnish has been removed during the process.
In this case, only a thin transparent varnish will remedy matters.
To remove the green from brass mix one teaspoonful of oxalic acid with one cupful of water, and with a clean rag rub the article to be cleaned thoroughly.
Wash off with hot soap and water, removing all the oxalic acid, and then polish with any of the good preparations that are on the market for cleaning brass.
STEAM AS AID IN COOKING
Simple Improvement That Is Said to Produce the Best of Results.
By a very simple improvement in the familiar cooker, it is claimed that the preparation of food is greatly facilitated. The cooker consists of two pans, one nested within the other, and the improvement referred to lies sim-
1. Place the pot on the stove.
ply in the making of a number of perforations along the edge of the inner receptacle, which is the one designed to contain the food to be treated. The lid fits over both pans in such a way that the steam from the water in the lower receptacle passes up to the interior of the chamber containing the food. Because of the additional heat the cooking is accomplished in less time and the moisture supplied by the steam prevents the food from becoming too dry.
Flemish Soup.
Cut an equal quantity of carrots, onions and turnips into small pieces and put them into a saucepan with a head of lettuce, two leeks, a head of endive and a lump of butter. Add half a pint of broth and gently until tender, stirring occasionally. Then pour in two quarts of boiling broth, seasoned to taste with salt, pepper and half a teaspoonful of sugar. Let simmer for two hours, and just before serving beat the yolks of three eggs with half a pint of cream. Stir into the soup and serve with snippets of toast.
New Dish For Luncheon.
An attractive way of serving chicken salad is to place it in a ring of ham jelly. Two cupfuls of the salad should be poured in the hole of the ring after the jelly is turned out on the platter. To make the dish attractive the jelly should rest on lettuce or watercress. To make the ham jelly, while one-half pint of thick cream until stiff, stir in a cupful of aspic jelly, cool, not, set, and add a jar of potted ham. A few drops of fruit syrup will make the jelly pink.
Six Don'ts.
Don't try to broil over a slow fire.
Don't try to broil over a smoky fire.
Don't leave the kitchen door open when you are broiling meat.
Don't put coal on the fire just before you wish to use the broiler.
Don't leave the kitchen while you are broiling.
Don't forget that it is better to broil on a hot, dry frying pan than over a poor fire.
Home-Made Quilts
One of the latest aids to the housewife comes in the form of large sheets of cotton wadding for use in making quilts and comfortables. Instead of the ordinary roll of cotton batting, three widths of which must be used in one wide quilt, the wadding comes in specially prepared widths to fit single or double beds; it can be found at all the larger stores
Peach Surprise.
Turn out a can of peaches and chop the fruit fine. Add to the peach liquor an equal quantity of cold water, the chopped peacher and sugar to taste. When the sugar is dissolved stir in the whites (unbeaten) of four eggs, and turn into the freezer. Grind until stiff. The grinding will beat the whole mass to a delicious froth
BETTER FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN
SALTS, OR PILLS, AS IT SWEETENS AND CLEANSES THE SYS
IS FAR MORE PLEASANT TO TA
SYRUPof FIGSand ELIX
BETTER FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN THAN CASTOR OIL
SALTS, OR PILLS, AS IT SWEETENES AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM MORE EFFICIENTLY AND
IS FAR MORE PLEASANT TO TAKE
NOTE THE NAME
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
in the Circle,
on every Package of the Genuine.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS,NEAR THE BOTTOM, AND IN
THE CIRCLE,NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE,OF THE
GENUINE. ONE SIZE ONLY, FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING
DRUGGISTS. REGULAR PRICE $50 PER BOTTLE.
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELKIR OF SENNA IS THE ONLY
BECAUSE IT IS THE ONE REMEDY WHICH ACTS IN A NAT
AND CLEANS THE SYSTEM, WITHOUT UNPLEASANT AF
BRITATING, DEBILITATING OR GRIPING, AND THEREFORE D
WAY WITH BUSINESS OR PLEASURE. IT IS RECOMMENDED
INFORMED FAMILIES, WHO KNOW OF ITS VALUE FROM
BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE, MANUFA
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELKIR OF SENNA IS THE ONLY PERFECT FAMILY LAKATIVE
BECAUSE IT IS THE ONE REMEDY WHICH ACTS IN A NATURAL, STRENGTHENING WAY
AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, WITHOUT UNPLEASANT AFTER-EFFECTS AND WITHOUT
IRRITATING, DEBILITATING OR GRIPING, AND THEREFORE DOES NOT INTERFERE IN ANY
WAY WITH BUSINESS OR PLEASURE. IT IS RECOMMENDED BY MILLIONS OF WELL-
INFORMED FAMILIES, WHO KNOW OF ITS VALUE FROM PERSONAL USE. TO GET ITS
BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GENUING; MANUFACTURED BY THE
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
"For been a from time, lons of ments with b I was less.
and used it with such satisfactory results that I sent for two large bottles, and I have up to this time used about half a 50 cent bottle with splendid success." — JAMES HYDE, Beebe, White County, Ark.
and used it with such satisfactory results that I and I have up to this time used about half a 50 success." — JAMES HYDE, Beebe, White Count
Got Ease in Less Than Ten
MR. JAMES E. ALEXANDER, of North Harps a horseshoe and subject to many strains in my brought on rheumatism in the sciatic nerve. when sitting in my chair, that I had to jump o at once applied your
SLOA
Got Ease in Less Than Ten Minutes.
MR. JAMES E. ALEXANDER, of North Harpswell, Me., writes: — "I am a horseshoe and subject to many strains in my back and hips which has brought on rheumatism in the sciatic nerve. I had it so bad one night when sitting in my chair, that I had to jump on my feet to get relief. I at once applied your
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
to the affected part and in less than ten minutes it was perfectly easy. I think it is the best of all Liniments."
Sloan's Liniment does not need any rubbing. It's a powerful penetrant. Try it for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Sprains, Chest Pains, and Sore Throat. It gives almost instant relief.
Price 25c., 50c., and $1.00 at All Dealers.
Send for Sloan's Free Book on Horses. Address
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
Woman as Bank Cashier.
Miss Ethel Boynton is cashier of the National Bank of Bayside, L. L.
the only woman in the state holding such a position. She says that to be trustworthy a man or woman must first be kind, then he cannot find it in his heart to betray the trust that is reposed in him.
The Test of Intellect.
"I wonder why Mrs. Flimgilt regards her husband as stupid. He has been very successful in business."
"Perhaps," replied Mr. Meekton, "he's like so many of the rest of us who can't possibly learn to keep the score of a bridge game."
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM
Take the Old Standard GROVES TASTELESS and know that you are taking the formula is plainly known, which we are showing it is simply Quinine and iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out the malaria and to build up a system. Sold by all dealers for 90 price. Price 50 cents
Didn't Care.
Hewitt—I guess you don't know who I am.
Jewett—No, and I haven't any woman's curiosity about it.
No harmful drugs in Garfield Tea, Nature's laxative it is composed wholly of clean, sweet, health-giving Herbs!
Preaching produces so little practice because people look on it as a performance.
PILES CURED EN 6 TO 14 DAYS four drugstores will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Iching. Blind bleeding or Prettifying Piles in 14 to 14 days. 600.
Difficulties are often the barnacles that grow on delayed duties.
IS THE IDEAL FAMILY LAXATIVE, AS IT GIVES SATISFACTION TO ALL, IS ALWAYS BENEFICIAL IN ITS EFFECTS AND PERFECTLY SAFE AT ALL TIMES.
ALL RELIABLE DRUGGISTS SELL THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE WHEN CALLED FOR, ALTHOUGH THEY COULD MAKE A LARGER PROFIT BY SELLING INFERior PREPARATIONS, YET THEY PREFER TO SELL THE GENUINE, BECAUSE IT IS RIGHT TO DO SO AND FOR THE GOOD OF THEIR CUSTOMERS. WHEN IN NEED OF MEDICINES, SUCH DRUGGISTS ARE THE ONES TO DEAL WITH, AS YOUR LIFE OR HEALTH MAY AT SOME TIME DEPEND UPON THEIR SKILL AND RELIABILITY
WHEN BUYING
Sticky Sweating Palms
Sticky Sweating Palms
after taking salts or cathartic waters—did you ever notice that weary all gone feeling—the palms of your hands sweat—and rotten taste in your mouth—Cathartics only move by sweating your bowels—Do a lot of hurt—Try a CASCARET and see how much easier the job is done—how much better you feel.
CASCARETS roe a box for a week's treatment, all during a stingier in the world. Million boxes a month.
BROOM CORN
I interested, write—night away.
COYNE BROTHERS
IGO South Water Street, CHICAGO
Selling Agents Here American Society of Equity
WANTED Men to learn the few weeks completed, practical instructions, unlimited practice, book donations, furnished guaranteed, fixtures furnished for shop, reduced tuition price, wages, while learning diploma granted, Schwarze System of Barber Colleges, HSE, Longhua Ave., Wake Forest, at 11 K 6th St, Topella, Kan.
New York, New York, Riverwalk Ave., near $288 St., West
A Country School for Girls
IN NEW YORK CITY. Best features of country and city life. Out-of-door sports on campus, and on river. Academic Course Primary Classes on Music and Art. MISS BANGS and MISS WHITON
CHILDREN THAN CASTOR OIL USES THE SYSTEM MORE EFFICIENTLY AND ASANT TO TAKE ELIXIR of SENNA
CALIFORNIA PIG SYRUP CO.
SAN ANTONIO, CALIFORNIA
SYRUP
OF
HIGS
and FLAXIR
SENNA
CONTAINS SIX PER
CENT. OF ALCOHOL
MUST BE SOLD BY BOX
OR BY MAIL
MANITUAL CONSTITUTION,
IN THE FORM OF SUPPLEMENT
NUMER'S LIVER - BOWLS.
CALIFORNIA PIG SYRUP CO.
MINIATURE PICTURE
OF PACKAGE
THE ONLY PERFECT FAMILY LAXATIVE
ITS IN A NATURAL, STRENGTHENING WAY
PLEASANT AFTER-EFFECTS AND WITHOUT
THEREFORE DOES NOT INTERFERE IN ANY
RECOMMENDED BY MILLIONS OF WELL-
VALUE FROM PERSONAL USE. TO GET ITS
ING; MANUFACTURED BY THE
G SYRUP CO.
"It Cured My Back"
"For twenty-nine years I have been at intervals a great sufferer from rheumatism. During that time, no telling how many gallons of the various kinds of liniments and oils I have used and with but little relief. Recently, I was confined to my bed helpless. I tried Sloan's Liniment
results that I sent for two large bottles, it half a 50 cent bottle with splendid white County, Ark.
Than Ten Minutes.
North Harpswell, Me., writes: — "I am trains in my back and hips which has c nerve. I had it so bad one night to jump on my feet to get relief. I
AN'S
MENT
in ten minutes it was perfectly easy.
not need any
ful penetrant.
n, Sciatica,
Sore Throat.
relief.
At All Dealers.
Horses. Address
BOSTON, MASS.
Doctors Said Health Gone
Suffered with Throat Trouble
1
Mr. B. W.
B. D. Barnes
ex - Sheriff of
Warren
County
Tennessee
in a letter
from Mc
Minnville
Tennessee
writes:
"I had
throat
trouble
and had
three
doctors treating
me. All
failed to do
me good, and
promounced
my health
gone. I con-
cluded to
gone. I com-
cluded to
try Peruna, and after using four bott-
ties can say I was entirely cured."
Unable to Work.
Mr. Gustav Himmelreich, Hochheim,
Texas, writes:
"For a number of years I suffered
whenever I took cold, with severe
attacks of asthma, which usually yielded
to the common home remedies.
"Last year, however, I suffered for
eight months without interruption so
that I could not do any work at all.
The various medicines that were pres-
cribed brought me no relief.
"After taking six bottles of Peruna,
two of Lacupia and two of Manalin,
I am free of my trouble so that I can do
all my farm work again. I can heart-
ly recommend this medicine to any
one who suffers with this annoying
complaint and believe that they will
obtain good results."
WHERE IT WAS LACKING
She—You puckered up your lips so then that I thought you were going to kiss me.
He—No; I got some grit in my mouth.
She—Well, for goodness' sake swale low it! You need it in your system!
And It Was All Imagination.
"I wonder how much imagination governs some persons' senses?" remarked a visitor at the St. Regis yesterday. "For a Christmas present I sent to a young woman of my acquaintance one of the most elaborate sachet cases I could find. It was such a beautiful thing that I didn't put perfume in it, for some women prefer to use a certain kind all the time, and I thought I would leave it to the recipient to put her own particular sachet powder in the case. You may imagine I was somewhat amazed to read this in her enthusiastic letter of thanks: 'It's perfume has pervaded the whole room.'"—New York Press.
There's Many a Slip.
"What is the name of the song the lady is singing?"
"Meet Me in Heaven."
"Don't you think she's taking a great deal for granted?"
They say the pretty Boston girl is a good pick. I wonder what kind of a pick she is?"
"Ice pick, I suppose."
Women Appreciate
Step-savers and Time-savers.
Post Toasties
is fully cooked, ready to serve direct from the package with cream or milk, and is a deliciously good part of any meal.
A trial package usually establishes it as a favorite breakfast cereal.
POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
ELIJAH MEETS
AHAB
Sunday School Lesson for Feb. 26, 1911
Specially Arranged for This Paper
LESSON TEXT—I Kings 21. Memory
verses 17-18.
GOLDEN TEXT—"Take heed, and be-
ware of covetousness."Luke 12:15.
TIME—Four or five years after the last
lesson. Prof. Beecher puts this story in
the 20th year of Ahab, B. C. 906 (or 863,
Assyrian) between his Syrian campaign,
King 20 and the war described in I
Kings 22.
PLACE—Ahab's house in Samaria, and
Naboth's vineyard in Jezreel, 20 miles to
the north.
For four or five years Ellijah seems to have retired from public life. He was practicing the lesson he had learned on Horeb. He was at work, but in a different way. His stormy work was not in vain. That plowed the ground, and now was the time for sowing the seed. The seven thousand hidden believers were permitted to come into the open. Persecution had ceased. Others came out and joined them. The prophets had no longer to be hidden in a cave by Obadiah.
Elijah encouraged and was at the head of the organized communities or schools of the prophets which existed as far back as Samuel. In his last journey he visited the "sons of the prophets" at Bethel and Jericho, and is spoken of as their head master. From these centers and from the schools at Gilgal, Ramah and Gibeah they exerted a strong influence and their appearance at any particular spot was often the signal for the outbreak of a contagious religious fervor. These settlements may be described as training schools for religious purposes. Elijah was thus educating the people in the true religious life. He was working in accordance with the still small voice of God.
Elijah's success was in finding and training Ellisha to be prophet in his stead, training under these newer influences and methods. The great prophet, so lonely hitherto, had found a friend. If there was one thing Elliah needed to mellow him, it was that! Naboth, a native of Jezreel, had for his vineyard an ancestral possession. We learn that Naboth was a worshiper of Jehovah, and in spite of the persecution of the prophets did not shrink from making it known to the king by his language. Here was an example of one who had not bowed the knee nor given a kiss to Baal. Jezebel coveted this vineyard.
Jezebel said to Ahab, Arise, take possession of the vineyard. And Ahab went. The Septuagint adds that he rent his clothes and put on sackcloth, as though shocked at his crime and anxious to prove his innocence to his own conscience and to the people. But the hypocrisy of the act was shown by his willingness to accept the fruits of the crime. This mourning for the means but acceptance of the fact would not be in disaccord with Ahab's moral weakness.
Covetousness is "a root of all kinds of evil." It is the desire, the motive that lies in the heart, "the prolific mother of all sins, the cockatrice's egg from which breaks forth the viper and the fiery flying serpent." It is not an awful thought that the deadly sin of Judas and of Ananias sprang from greed? "Still as of old, man by himself is priced; for thirty pieces Judas sold himself—not Christ!"
Much of the sin and danger to our land springs from covetousness. The graft, the dishonesty, the liquor selling, the bribery, the fraud of every kind.
A clear vision of the evil covetousness works in the covetous man's own character and destiny. How it degrades him, shuts him up in a narrowing prison like one described among the tortures of the inquisition, where the walls drew nearer together by one notch each day. The doors of opportunity are gradually shut against him, and his part in the blessing of the great world.
The one essential cure is a change of heart that leads to a change of character. It is to give your heart to God, to consecrate your whole being to him, to love and obey him, to strive with the whole soul to build up his kingdom. Love is the cure of covetousness; love to God and love to man.
Use every opportunity of giving and serving others. Don't complain of so many calls, but rejoice in the opportunity; search for opportunities as for hid treasure. God loves the wholesouled hilarious giver. Even the poorest can give. They can say, as Peter said to the lame man at the Beautiful gate of the temple, "such as I have give I thee." There is much more to give than mere money; sympathy, work, time, aid in sickness, feeding the hungry, shelter, care and a multitude of other things.
Elijah confronted the king in his ill-gotten property. The word of the Lord came to Elijah. In what form we do not know, any more than we know all the ways in which one spirit influences another. But that it was God's word is a fact. "It is implied that Elijah found Ahab—strode into his presence—in the vineyard.
Ahab walks around his newly gotten vineyard. He admires trellis and cluster. Suddenly Elijah stands before him. He had not seen Elijah for five years. And Ahab said to Elijah, Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? And he answered, I have found thee: because thou hast sold thyself to work evil in the sight of the Lord. His sin had found him out. Then Elijah spoke to him his doom. The dogs should lick his blood in the very spot where they licked Naboth's blood. His sons should be slain, his wife, Jezebel, perish miserably, his whole dynasty come to an end.
You Look Prematurely Old
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray haires. Use "LA CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING. PRICE, $1.00, retall.
Hubby—Have you noticed how much better I rest after a day's fishing?
Wifey—No; but I've noticed how much easier you lie after a day's fishing than upon other days.
SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT OF
PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS
A speedy and economical treatment for disfiguring pimples is the following: Gently smear the face, with Cuticura Ointment, but do not rub. Wash off the ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water and bathe freely for some minutes. Repeat morning and evening. At other times use hot water and Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agreeable. Cuticura soap and ointment are equally successful for itching, burning, scaly and crusted humors of the skin and scalp, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, usually affording instant relief, when all else fails. Send to Potter Drug & Chem, Corp., Boston, Mass., for the latest Cuticura book on the care and treatment of the skin and scalp.
NOT ACCORDING TO PROGRAM
Practical Joker Meant to Astonish His Wife, and Doubtless He Did.
When the first shipment of frozen eggs arrived from Australia their extreme hardness astonished the brokers.
One man, calling at a broker's office, was amazed to see him taking alm at the wall with an egg.
"What the dickens are you at?" he said.
But the broker let drive, the only result being a slight dent in the wall.
The thing being explained, the man took a couple of the eggs, put them in his pocket, and left to startle his wife. Arriving home, he waited till the family was assembled for dinner, and then banged an egg at the new dado.
But the smile quickly faded from his face. The egg had thawed.—London Tit-Bits.
Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually necessary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wearing quality of the goods. This trouble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its greater strength than other makes.
Queen Mary's Trousseau.
Queen Mary is following the example set by her mother, the duchess of Teck, who at the time of her daughter's wedding with the present king declared that for the trousseau "not a yard of cambric or linen, of flannel or tweed, of lace or ribbon, should be bought outside the kingdom," and who kept to her word. Queen Mary is having her coronation robes and gowns for court functions as well as the opening of parliament gown made by a British firm or all British material. She has ordered eight dresses so far, and work on them has commenced.—London correspondent New York Sun.
Crutches or Biers
Richard Croker, at a dinner at New York, expressed a distrust for aeroplanes.
"There's nothing underneath them," he said. "If the least thing goes wrong, down they drop.
"I said to a Londoner the other day: 'How is your son getting on since he bought a flying machine?'
"On crutches, like the rest of them,' the Londoner replied."
It is unquestionably true that wealth produces wants, but it is a still more important truth that wants produce wealth. - Malthus.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Drugs retain money if it fails to cure. E.W. GROVES' signature is on each box. 22c.
A man may go up when you kick him, but you cannot claim credit for kindness.
Taking Garfield Tea will prevent the recurrence of sick-headache, indigestion and bilious attacks. All druggists.
Afflictions mark the difference between iron and steel.
BLOOD HUMORS
It is important that you should now rid your blood of those impure, poisonous, effete matters that have accumulated in it during the winter. The secret of the unequaled and really wonderful success of
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Hood's Sarsaparilla
as a remedy for Blood Humors is the fact that it combines, not simply sarsaparilla, but the utmost remedial values of more than twenty ingredients—Roots, Barks and Herbs—known to have extraordinary efficacy in purifying the blood and building up the whole system.
There is no real substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla, no "just as good" medicine. Get Hood's today, in liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs.
Cures the skin and acts as a preventive for others. I liquid given on the tongue. Safe for broa mates and others. Best inexpensive; cured 80 cents; used in other cases. Used in horse and horse goods houses, or sent express paid, by the manufacturer.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHEN INDIANA
If Frazier's Distemper Cure falls as a cure in any case of Distemper, Epizootic Influenza, Coughs, Colds and all affections of the Nose and Throat, ask for your money back. Safe for Children. Infectious Disease. Safe for Horse Booklet. 1.0 bottle contains three times the quantity of the 50 cent size. Sold by all druglists, or prepaid from BINKLE MEDICAL COMPANY, Den't A. NAPPANNE. IND.
MIGHT HAVE COME EARLIER
Admirer of Musician Must Have Felt Truth of the Answer He Received.
Signor Puccini, although celebrated all over the world for his operas, is still a young man. On the subject of his early success the Italian composer said recently in New York:
"I have been very lucky. Recognition for artistic work comes so often after one is too old to enjoy it.
"I remember one of my countrymen, a centenarian, who, had he died before seventy, would never have seen any of his operas produced. Luckily he lived to so great an age that he received for many years the admiration he deserved. Naturally enough, though, this splendid artist regretted his years of obscurity and neglect, and he frequently spoke bitterly of his bad fortune.
"Once, at the very end of his long life, an Englishman entered his box at the opera in Rome, and said respectfully:
SPOHN'S
DIST TEMPER CURE
"I have traveled all the way from London to see the author of my favorite opera."
"The veteran composer, with a malicious smile, replied:
"Well, my friend, I have given you plenty of time to get here."
W.
ESTAB.
1876
Sheer white goods. In fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beauty. Home laundering would be equally satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work.
Merchant (to widow)—I am willing to buy your husband's working business and good-will for $5,000.
Cheap Form of Fuel.
A Welsh rabbit may be cooked on an electrical chafing dish at an expense of $1 \frac{1}{2}$ cents for current.
Widow—Well, but I happen to be part of the working business. Merchant—Then I'll take only the good-will—Fliegende Blaetter.
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS FREE.
Send 2c stamp for five samples of our
very best Gold Embossed, Good Luck,
Flower and Motto Post Cards; beautiful
colors and loveliest designs. Art Post Card
Club, 731 Jackson St., Topeka, Kan.
DO YOUR CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW!
them white as snow, 2 oz. package 5 cent
sizes
No man has come to true greatness who has not felt in some degree that his life belongs to his race.—Phillips Brooks.
Keeping Oil Fire From Spreading. Milk will quench a fire caused by an exploding lamp, water only spreading the oil.
Take Garfield Tea to arouse a sluggish liver—all druggists sell it.
Your working power depends upon your health! Garfield Tea corrects disorders of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels.
Magnify your personal rights and you are sure to create some social wrongs.
A good home is the best exposition of heaven.
t, through the kept sweeping rate of seven our bodies without good, run smooth-study in the Pierce found her, the blood general break-act of certain
The Human Heart
The Human Heart
The heart is a wonderful double pump, through the action of which the blood stream is kept sweeping round and round through the body at the rate of seven miles an hour. "Remember this, that our bodies will not stand the strain of over-work without good, pure blood any more than the engine can run smoothly without oil." After many years of study in the active practice of medicine, Dr. R. V. Pierce found that when the stomach was out of order, the blood impure and there were symptoms of general breakdown, a tonic made of the glyceric extract of certain roots was the best corrective. This he called
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
Being made without alcohol, this "Medical Discovery" helps the stomach to assimilate the food, thereby curing dyspepsia. It is especially adapted to diseases attended with excessive tissue waste, notably in convalescence from various fevers, for thin-blooded people and those who are always "catching cold."
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps for the French cloth-bound book of 1008 pages. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Go West This Spring
Decide now, to go out in the Great Northwest where there is room to grow—where the climate is healthful and where the big crops of wheat, grain and fruit are making people prosperous and independent.
The cheap logged-off lands in Minnesota, the fertile prairies of North Dakota, the millions of acres of Free Homestead Lands in Montana and Oregon and the rich productive fruit valleys of Washington need men of brain, brawn and energy to develop them. Go this Spring. Take advantage of the Great Northern's one-way
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
Being made without alcohol, this "Medical Discovery" helps the stomach to assimilate the food, thereby curing dyspepsia. It is especially adapted to diseases attended with excessive tissue waste, notably in convalescence from various fevers, for thin-blooded people and those who are always "catching cold." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps for the French cloth-bound book of 1008 pages. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Go West This Spring
Decide now, to go out in the Great Northwest where there is room to grow—where the climate is healthful and where the big crops of wheat, grain and fruit are making people prosperous and independent. The cheap logged-off lands in Minnesota, the fertile prairies of North Dakota, the millions of acres of Free Homestead Lands in Montana and Oregon and the rich productive fruit valleys of Washington need men of brain, brawn and energy to develop them. Go this Spring. Take advantage of the Great Northern's one-way
Special Colonist Fares
Daily March 10 to April 10, 1911
To points in Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia; good for stopover and good in Tourist Sleeping Cars on payment of berth fare.
Very low "Settlers" fares to points in North Dakota and many points in Montana—March 14, 21, 28 and April 4, 11, 18, 1911.
To points in Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia; good for stopover and good in Tourist Sleeping Cars on payment of berth fare.
Very low "Settlers" fares to points in North Dakota and many points in Montana—March 14, 21, 28 and April 4, 11, 1911.
Daily Tourist Cars
Through from Chicago, Kansas City and S Electric lighted, leather upholstered, equipped with all conveniences so that passengers can prepare their own meals. Send for free book on the state in which you are interested. Send for full information about fares from your town.
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY
E. C. LEEDY
Gen'l Immigration Agent
St. Paul, Minn.
F. T. HOLMES
Traveling Pass. Agt.
823 Main Street
Kansas City, Mo.
F. T. HOLMES
Traveling Pass. Agy
223 Main Street
Kansas City, Mo
E. C. LEEDY
Gen'l Immigration Agent
St. Paul, Minn.
SISTIG FRAZIERS
TEMPER CURE
The Breed.
Stella—Is her coat Persian lamb?
Bella—No; Podunk mutton—Judge.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, Scs a bottle.
One might fight a lie and still not follow the truth.
Look Premature Use ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use "LA CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING. PRICE
DISTEMPER
CATARRHAL FEVER
AND ALL NOSE
AND THROAT DISEASES
JOHN H. BURTON
LEWIS
SINGLE
BINDER
STRAIGHT 5¢ CIGAR
You Pay 10c.
for Cigars
Not so Good.
F.P. LEWIS Peoria, Ill
Why Rent a Farm
and be compelled to pay to your landlord most
of your hard-secured profits? Own your own
farm. Secure a Free Homestead in
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, or
to your landlord most rofts! Own your own
home. Own your own land. Own
Saskatchewan or
Alberta, or purchase
land in one of these
districts and bank a
loan of $12.00 an acre
every year.
WESTERN CANADA
Land purchased 3
years ago at $10.00 an
ently changed
changed $25.00 an acre. The
crops grown on these
lands warrant the
by cattle raising, dairying, mixed
Arableable grazing, farming
in the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Free homestead and pre-
amended lease, short write land
held by railway and land com-
panies, will provide homes
for millions.
Arableable soil, healthful
climate, splendid schools
and churches, good railways.
For settlers' rates, descriptive
literature, and other help
to reach the country and other
particulars, write to Supt. of Immig-
ration Ottawa, Canada, or to the
Canadian Government Agent.
CANADIAN GOVERNMENT AGENT
No. 125 W. Ninth Street
Kansas City, Mo.
(Use address nearest you.) 88
Buy a Florida Farm
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PENSACOLA REALITY COMPANY, Pensacola, Florida
5 Fine POST CARDS
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Capital Card Co., Dept. 79, Topeka, Kan.
W. N. W. WIGTIA, No. 8-1911.
KANSAS—NEBRASKA JURISDICTION
1910—GRAND OFFICERS—1911
REV. FRANK WILSON, C. G. M.
Taborian Home, Route 8, Topeka, Kan
SIR D. L. TAYLOR, V. G. M.
329 E. Center, Salina, Kan.
MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. G. P.
1170 Filmore, Topeka, Kansas.
MRS. LAURA LEE, V. G. P.
SIR A. W. HOPKIN, C. G. S.
321 Dakota, Leavenworth, Kan.
MRS. SARAH W. FORBES, C. G. R.
717 "C" St., Lincoln, Neb.
SIR WILLIAM CORE, C. G. T.
1120 Lane, Topeka, Kan.
MRS. BESSIE HALL, G. Q. M.
460 Horton, Ft. Scott, Kan.
SIR C. M. JOHNSON, G. P. P.
3330 Maple, Omaha, Neb.
REV. M. WOOTEN, C. G. O.
210 E. West, Hutchinson, Kan.
MRS. PAULINE WOODFORK, C.G.Pr.
823 Freeman, Kansas City, Kan.
SIR W. N. MILLER, General Attorney
630 N. Main St., Wichita, Kansas.
TEMPLES.
Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M.
1—A. H. Richardson, Welr, Kan., Sir
W. M. Watkins; 1-3 Fri.
3—R. H. Cane, Atchison, Kan., Sir
Jno. N. Davis, 521 "L"; 1-3
Fri.
4—Evening Star, Omaha, Neb., Sir
S. R. Jackson, care Frye Shoe
Store; 1-3 Mon.
5—St. Luke, N. Topeka, Kan., Sir Joe
Walker, 1220 West (north); 1-3
Thurs.
6—Humphrey, Omaha, Neb., Sir W.
H. Jackson, 2515 N. 17th.
7—Mt. Nebo, Wichita, Kan., Sir Rev.
S. S. Washington, 1524 N.
Washington; 1-3 Fri.
8—St. Peters, Ft. Scott, Kan., Sir
A. J. Bean, 309 Lowman; 1-3
Tues.
10—Mt. Horeb, Leavenworth, Kan.
Sir Geo. Walker, 417 Kickapoo.
11—Taborlan, Wichita, Kan., Sir W.
N. Miller, 630 N. Main; 1-3
Thurs.
12—Moses Dickson, Parsons, Kan., Sir
W. N. Williams, 220 Corning;
1-3 Thurs.
15—Silver Leaf, Salina, Kan., Sir J.
C. Brown, 246 S. Phillips; 1-3
Thurs.
17—Golden Gate, Coffeyville, Kan.
Sir G. W. Roberts.
19—Mt. Tabor, Lawrence, Kan., Sir
J. E. Hughes; 1313 N. J.
22—Barak, Oswego, Kan., Sir L. R.
Wilson; 2-4 Mon.
24—Jas. H Bedford, Cherryvale, Kan.
Sir Rev. J. W. Warren, 218 E.
7th.
25—Washington, Kansas City, Kan.
Sir J. H. Downs, 422 Haskell;
every Friday.
59—Sunnyside, Topeka, Kan., Sir
Peter Davis, 1008 Washburn;
1-3 Thurs.
60—Jeffersonlan, Topeka, Kan., Sir U.
S. Grant, 120 Kansas; 1-3 Mon.
72—Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb., Sir E.
D. Weaver, 1125 Saratoga.
4. Weir, Kansas.
5. HOPKINS, C. G. S.
6. a, Leavenworth, Kan.
7. W. FORBES, C. G. R.
8. St., Lincoln, Neb.
9. AM CORE, C. G. T.
10. Jane, Topeka, Kan.
11. SIE HALL, G. Q. M.
12. Ft. Scott, Kan.
13. JOHNSON, G. P. P.
14. Apple, Omaha, Neb.
15. Dorsey.
16. 29—Crystal, Leavenworth
17. H. La Tand, 407
18. Tue.
19. 30—Victoria, Leavenwort
20. R. Rivers, 607 Seco
21. 34—Wichita, Wichita,
22. Klie Hall, 1024 Oh
23. 35—Golden Rule, So.
24. Mrs. Sadie Jones,
25. 1-3 Thurs.
in, Kansas City, Kan.
ILLER, General Attorney,
St., Wichita, Kansas.
TEMPLES.
K Wilson, C. G. M.
Hardson, Weir, Kan., Sir
Watkins; 1-3 Fri.
Nee, Atchison, Kan., Sir
Davis, 521 "L,"; 1-3
Star, Omaha, Neb., Sir
Jackson, care Frye Shoe
1-3 Mon.
N. Topeka, Kan., Sir Joe
1220 West (north); 1-3
O, Omaha, Neb., Sir W.
38—Covenant, Weir, Kan.
Taylor, Box 394; 2-5
52—Mt. Maria, Lawrence
Josie Wear, 807 N.
63—Fair West, Kansas
Mrs. Rosa Saunde
1-3 Fri.
77—Pearly Rose, Topeka
Susie O'Brien, 11
1-3 Wed.
85—Magdalene, Topeka,
Hardiman, 1801
Wed.
91—Golden Sheaf, Omaha
Lula Rountree; 1-3
92—St. Annis, Lincoln,
D. Davis, 1029 Ro
Bob, Leavenworth, Kan.,
Walker, 417 Kickapoo.
Wichita, Kan., Sir W.
Mer, 630 N. Main; 1-3
Kelson, Parsons, Kan., Sir
Williams, 220 Corning;
Saf, Salina, Kan., Sir J.
n., 246 S. Phillips; 1-3
State, Coffeyville, Kan.
W. Roberts.
Lawrence, Kan., Sir
Hughes, 1313 N. J.
wego, Kan., Sir L. R.
2-4 Mon.
Fordd, Cherryvale, Kan.
J. W. Warren, 218 E.
An, Kansas City, Kan.
M. Downs, 422 Haskell.
Friday.
Toneka, Kan; 1-3
TENTS.
Rev. Frank Wilson,
Mrs. Bessie Hall, O.
1-Golden Leaf, Leaven
Mrs. Jennie Nicho
4th Sat.
2-Frank Wilson, Fo.
Miss Emma Maxie, 4
3-Moses Dickson, Wit
Mrs. B. Davis, 113
ton, 1-3 Sat.
7-Lone Star, Yale, Ka
Lewis.
11-Golden, Atchison, K
rie Brown, 920 N. 10.
11-Alice Tucker, So.
Mrs. I. M. Faul
31st; 1-3 Sat.
11-Viola, Lawrence, Ka
Brown, 325 Miss;
14-Busy Bee, Atchison
Aria Stone, 823 Ma.
15-Louisa Mae, Cherr
Mrs. M. E. Holt
Main.
120 Kansas, 1-3 Mon.
Lincoln, Neb., Str E.
er, 1125 Saratoga.
18—Star of West, Salina
Murrell.
20—John Wilson, K. C.,
D. Dalton, 1228 Bar
TABERNACLES
TABERNACLES.
Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M.
Mrs. Emma Gaines, C. G. P.
1—Queen of the West, Kansas City,
Kan., Mrs. Marit Wilson, 945
Everett, 1-2 Wed.
2—Golden, Iola, Kan., Mrs. Sarah
Crisp, 615 S. Chestnut; 2-4 Sat.
3—Mt. Hope, Wichita, Kan., Mrs.
Mary Goss, 2423 Jewett 1-3
Fri.
4—Helping Hand, Cherryvale, Kan.
Mrs. Sadie Campbell, 616 W.
1st; 1-3 Thurs.
5—Crescent, Atchison, Kan., Mrs.
Hattle Mqntgomery, 115 N.
5th; 2-4 Fri.
6—Rebecca Ann, Ottawa, Kan., Mrs.
Catherine Glaspie, 128 N. Wabash; 1-3 Thurs.
7—Sunbeam, Saline, Kan., Mrs. Lillian Shobe, 437 S. 12th; 1-4 Fri.
8—Rebecca May, Coffeyville, Kan.
Mrs. Laura Dennell, 410 E. 5th; 2-4 Fri.
9—Western Sun, Topeka, Kan., Mrs.
Lulu Delley, 120 Kansas Ave; 1-3
Fri.
10—St. Maria, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs.
P. Henderson, 820 N. Y.; 1-3
Wed.
11—Saba Meroe, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. P. WoodJork, 823 Freeman;
1-3 Mon.
12—Golden Rule, Kansas City, Kansas,
Mrs. B. Johnson, 211 Stewar;
1-3 Thurs.
15—America Davis, Welr, Kan., Mrs.
Maggie Stewart, Box 14; 2-4
Mon
16—Silver Leaf, Parsons, Kan., Mrs.
Lizzie Morton, 1308 Washington;
1-3 Wed
17—Western Queen, Ft. Scott, Kan.
Mrs. A. Masler, 817 E. Wall;
second Tuesday in July, 1911.
```markdown
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18-St. Marie, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. E.
W. Graham, 2112 Nicholas; 2-4
Thurs.
19—Amelia Levels, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Ella Golden, 2302 N. 25th.
20—Maria, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. P. Johnson, 501 Hyannan; 1:? Fri
24—Charity Rose, Coffeyville, Kan.; Mrs. A. Garner, 704 E. 12th; 1:3 Wed.
28—Modern, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. D. Dorsey.
29—Crystal, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. H. La Tand, 407 Kickapoo; 1:3 Tue.
30—Victoria, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. R. Rivers, 607 Second; 1:3 Fri.
34—Wichita, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. Sallie Hall, 1024 Ohio; 1:3 Thurs.
35—Golden Rule, So. Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Sadie Jones, 819 N. 27th; 1:3 Thurs.
37—Eutevator, Atchison, Kan., Mrs.
Mary Grosby, 119 Commercial;
1-3 Fri.
38—Covenant, Weir, Kan., Mrs. L. F.
Taylor, Box 394; 2-4 Wed.
52—Mt. Maria, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs.
Josie Wear, 807 N. Y., 2-4 Thurs.
63—Fair West, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. Rosa Saunders, 610 N. J.
1-3 Fri.
77—Pearly Rose, Topeka, Kan., Mrs.
Susie O'Brien, 1180 Buchanan;
1-3 Wed.
85—Magdalene, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. F.
Hardiman, 1801 Kansas; 2-4
Wed.
91—Golden Sheaf, Omaha, Neb., Mrs.
Lula Rountree; 112 N. 19th.
92—St. Annis, Lincoln, Neb., Mrs. L.
D. Davis, 1029 Rose.
93—Macedonia, N. Topeka, Kan., Mrs.
S. A. Brown, 715 E. 11th; 1-3
Thurs.
TENTS.
Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M.
Mrs. Bessie Hall, G. Q. M.
1—Golden Leaf, Leavenworth, Kan,
Mrs. Jennie Nichols, 418 Third;
4th Sat.
2—Frank Wilson, F. Scott, Kan,
Miss Emma Maxie, 411 Ransom.
3—Moses Dickson, Wichita, Kan,
Mrs. B. Davis, 1135 N. Washington,
1-3 Sat.
7—Lone Star, Yale, Kan., Mrs. Calie
Lewis.
11—Golden, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. Carrie
Brown, 920 N. 10th; 2-4 Sat.
11—Alice Tucker, So. Omaha, Neb,
Mrs. I. M. Faulkner, 169 N.
31st; 1-3 Sat.
11—Viola, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. Mary
Brown, 325 Miss; 2-4 Sat.
14—Busy Bee, Atchison, Kan., Mrs.
Aria Stone, 823 Main; 1-3 Sat.
15—Louisa Mae, Cherryvale, Kan,
Mrs. M. E. Holt, 517 West
Main.
16—Pearl, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. Anna Jones, 625 N. Wichita; 2-4 Sat.
17—Castle Rock, Weir, Kan., Mrs. H. H. Askins, Box 25.
18—Star of West, Salina, Kan., O. A. Murrell.
20—John Wilson, K. C., Kan., Mr. C. D. Dalton, 1228 Barnett; 2-4 Sat.
21—Crystal, Leavenworth, Kan.; Mrs. Ella McKennish, 217 Sherman, 2-4 Sat.
23—Clinging Rose, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. Ada King, 722 N. Y., 3 sat.
26—Pride of Topeka, N. Topeka, Kan., Mrs. Nannia Shaw, 905 N. Taylor.
27—Pansy Blossom, Topeka, aKn., Mrs. Jennie McAdoo, 1501 N. Logan; 1-3 Sat.
45—Orange Rose, Kansas City, Kan.,
Mrs. P. Henderson, 312 Washington;
1-3 Sat.
46—Mayflower, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. L.
Herrold, 2205 N. 25th ;1-3 Sat.
44—Rising Sun, Atchison, Kan., Mrs.
Mary Delley, 120 Kansas.
8—Golden Eagle, Iola, Kan., Mrs.
Sarah Mayes, 20 Campbell.
5—New Hope, Coffeyville, Mrs. Ada
Gilbert, 405 Santa Fe., 2-4 Wed.
PALATIUMS.
Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M.
Sir C. M. Johnson, G. P. P
TENTS.
DIRECTORY OF COLORED WOMAN'S CLUBS OF WICHITA, KAS.
The Mother's Aid Club.
Meets every Friday at 1 p. m.
Ladies invited to meet with us.
Mrs. W. N. Miller, Pres.
Mrs. P. Johnson, Sec.
CHITTERLINGS, Catfish, Hamburger and am Sandwiches for sale at Harry Walker's Cafe, 957 N. Mead every Saturday. Anyone desiring these atables are requested to call.
Tapp & Hanshaw
CASH STORE.
255-257 North Main Street. Phone Bell
53.
19 lbs. Granulated Sugar (cane or
beet) ..... $1.00
All Best Grades Flour ..... 1.20
Northern Potatoes, peck ..... .25
Northern Potatoes, bu ..... .90
2 lbs. 3-Crown Raisins ..... .15
3 Cans Good Corn ..... .25
3 Cans Scotch Pumpkin ..... .25
Spanish Onions lb ..... .05
Sweet Potatoes peck ..... .25
Cabbage, a head ..... .02/2
3-lb. Cns Tomatoes ..... .25
7 bars White Russian Soap ..... .25
7 Bars Lenox Soap ..... .25
Large pkg. Gold Dust ..... .20
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables.
Fresh and Cured Meats.
All kinds of Dry Goods, Boots and
Shoes.
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REMARKABLE IN THE DOG LINE.
Proud Owners of Pets, Listen to This from Flatbush, N. Y.
Zip, a son of Bluff, the big bull terrier, is the most respected dog in Flatbush, N. Y., says a correspondent. He requires every other dog within 40 blocks to walk a chalk line and bow to him as he passes by. He can lick everything on four feet up to twice his size, yet is as mild as Devery-at-the Pump. His master attributes Zip's prowess to his fondness for the pipe. Like Old King Cole:
He calls for his fiddlers three.
"That is the most remarkable dog in the world," says his master. "He takes my pipe out of my mouth and smokes it, standing on his hind feet. See! The stem is all chewed up! If the tobacco doesn't burn well, Zip will get down on his fours and chase all over the house to create a draught. When the fire is well started again he finishes his smoke and returns me the pipe. Strong? He ought to be named Samson. Why, we have a piano that weighs 600 pounds. Tie Zip to it with a rope and he will pull it all over the room."
BAD NOTES EASILY DETECTED
Almost Impossible to Impose Open Handlers of Money.
Incidentally it is interesting to note that the skill which enables one to detect a counterfeit comes not from a study of counterfeits, but from a thorough and unconscious familiarity with the genuine. If a man were pointed out to you and you were told that some day another who much resembled him would try to impose upon you, you would be pretty apt to fix his features in your mind; you would not spend any time looking at other people who looked something like him, would you? And the moment the impostor appeared you would note that in this, that or the other particular he failed to meet the details of the other man's face and figure. Just so it is in the detection of counterfeits. A skillful teller in a bank, counting money rapidly, will involuntarily throw out a note which in the slightest degree departs from the well-known pattern which is so strongly impressed on his mental vision. That involuntary act will nearly always prove to have been justified, for the bill in 19 cases out of 20 will prove to be a counterfeit. It is because of this fact that when a request is received from some one to loan him a collection of counterfeits for the instruction of his cashiers, he is advised to have the young men study the genuine carefully, and there will be no trouble in detecting the bad notes.-National Magazine.
A Monster Loaf
Bakers in Germany are fond of making odd experiments, the following being reported from Duisburg, 'n West phalia. At a children's party recently held in that town there was exhibited, and afterwards and afterwards and distributed among the young, and present, a bread twist which for she at least has surely rarely been equal. Weighing no less than 180 pounds, it had a breadth of six feet and a length of ten feet, and was thus found sufficient to supply a satisfactory afternoon collation to as many as 500 boys and girls.
When Tower Loomed.
It was while Charlemagne Tower was ambassador to Russia that a New York city newspaper "spread itself upon a fete held at St. Petersburg. A green copy-reader produced this result:
"As pleasing to the eye as was all this decoration there was additional pleasure in the sight, as one stood at the head of the Prospekt Nevska, of Charlemagne Tower, brilliantly illuminated, looming grand and imposing against the winter sky."—Success Magazine.
HUTCHINSON KANSAS.
The Concert given by the Blind Boone Jubilee Co. at the opera house was well attended.
Mrs. C. O. Smith royally a number of guests Friday eve in honor of Miss Murray of Denver Colo. All declared they had a fine time.
Miss Furley of Chicago has been in the city for the past few days in the interest of the hospital there.
Tom Banks of Wichita is a visitor in our city.
Charles Banks of this city and Miss Charity Frazier of Garden City are the newly wed this week.
Has Entered Race
G. T. Whitlock, former council man from the First ward has anounced himself as a candidate for City Commissioner. Mr. Whitlock made a splendid record for business and fair play as a member of the Council and who will do his who duty as a Commissioner. His name will appear on the primary bellot ticket.
BOY ROSE TO THE SITUATION.
Quick Wit and Intelligence Displayed by Youngster.
His parents are convinced that Clarence will be a great man; the only doubt is whether it will be as a statesman or scientist. He is only four years old, and their confidence is based largely on one incident. The boy never told of it, and it would have been lost to history if a neighbor had not been a chance. Clarence lives in suburbs, and has a cat and kittens. One day he went into the yard next door with one of the little ones to play. There was a big pile of brushwood here, and he shoved his pet into a hole in this. She crawled so far back that all his efforts to get her out were vain.
Had he been a man he would have pulled the pile of brush apart, but lacking strength for this he resorted to cunning. Running home, he soon returned with the mother cat. He shoved her into the hole after her offspring, and she soon came out with the little one between her teeth. Clarence bore them both home in triumph.
The Quaint Belfuga.
Caviare can be made of the roe of any fish; but the principal supply comes from the sturgeon and the belluga. The latter is about the most curious fish in the world. It weighs up to 1,000 pounds and innabits the waters of the swift-flowing Volga. It is so abundant that the natives of Astracan throw away the flesh—which is whiter than veal and very甘ynty—and preserve only the spawn, of which they sometimes take as much as 200 pounds out of one fish. This belluga lies on the bottom of the river at certain seasons and swallows many large pebbles of great weight to ballast itself against the force of the stream; that is, the pebbles act as an anchor. When the flood subsides and the waters are less violent the belluga disgorges itself; that is, it unballasts, hauls in its anchor and swims about for provender.
TOOK UMBRAGE AT ASPERSION.
Citizens Resented Being Voted for as Town's "Meanest Man."
Old Scrooge might be a philanthropic Carnegie alongside certain tightwads in Mount Vernon, but William Friedberg has no license to determine publicly who are the men who would squeeze a dollar until the eagle yelled: "Help! I'm melting!" For conducting a voting contest to determine the meanest man in Mount Vernon Friedberg, who keeps a cigar store there, was fined five dollars by Judge Platt here. A warning went with the fine.
Friedberg lives in Astoria, but does business in Mount Vernon. He placed in his window a placard: "Come in and vote for the meanest man in Mount Vernon!" This was followed by a list of names. Consplucous in the lot were the mayor and chief of police. Then came many solid and stald citizens. After every name was a number signifying the votes the owner of the name had received so far. Great was the wrath of the so-called "meanest men." Friedberg was ordered to take the sign out of the window, but he refused to do so. His indictment for libel followed. In court he pleaded guilty, but asserted he did not know he was violating any law. White Plains Cor. New York Sun.
---
States surreuder the power of it own preservation."
Does the senator contend for the power of congress to annul laws now on the statute books of the states such as the grand father's clauses?" asked Mr. Bacon.
"Without the slighest doubt" said the New Yorker.
PUT ON MOTICE.
"Well," returned the Georgian "the senator has certainly put us on notice."
"I meant to put you and also the country on notice" replied Mr. Root speaking with force.
Simmons For Commissioner.
Chas. W. Simmous former sheriff of Sedgwich county and one of the most prominent men in our city has at the earnest solicitation of his many friends entered the race for City Commissioner. Mr.Simmons is well for the place he seeks and believe in a square deal for every man.
John Mitchell, Jr. President of the Mechanics Savings Bank of Riehmond, Virginia enjoys this distinction. He regvlarly attends the annual meetings of the Association and is always courteously treated by the white bankers. At the last session of the Association which met recently in Los Angeles, California, Mr.-Mitchell distributed booklehs describing the Mechanics Savings Bank. This was the first time that many of the bankers had heard that there was a Negro Bank.
Harris A Candidate.
Geo. E. Harrss, first mayor of Wichita, is a candidate for City Commissioner. No man in Wichita better or more favorably known than is Geo. E. Harris; and no man has done more to build up Wichita and make it a good place to live in, more than he. His wide expence and knowledge of the needs of this city at once make him acceptable to all.
Dr. A. W. Smith, Jacksonville, Florida, is one of the South's leading colored physicans. He is a graduate of the Long Island Medical College and has in addition studied in the great hospitals of London and Paris.
He keeps his library filled with the best and latest medical literature. He possesses an X-ray machine ann a full equipment of the best surgical instruments. He is also one of Jacksonville's wealthest citizene. He is a partner in the Imperial Pharmacy which is so situated that it receives a large patronage from all over the city. He is the sole owner of the Sub-way Drug Store which is located in one of the thickly populated suburks.
He owns a beautiful residence and hus mach other real estate.
Send for the S. P. C. C.
A "Young Mother" asks our opinion of "the alleged injurious effects of rocking on babies."
We must frankly say that we consider it a brutal practice. As the father of a great many babies, of all ages, we never rocked on any of them intentionally, and we would probably be arrested if we expressed our full opinion of any woman who would presume to do so.—Lippincott's Magazine
MAN HAS NO RIGHT TO SCOFF
Not so Many, Years Ago He Was Crazy Over Dress Himself.
No, brother, men have not always been so indifferent to dress as they are today. Their raiment, as compared with the darnfoolishness of woman, hasn't always been above reproach.
Consider, if you will, the days when our respected forefathers would draw on their lavender-colored pants with a shoe horn, using a little slippery powder, maybe, to help things along, until people looked at their feet and wondered if the pants hadn't been sewed up after the feet got through
Consider their tight boots—made so tight that they caused the most excruciating agony. And remember that the dandles of that day would carefully polish these burning, blasting, pinching, agonizing boots and then step carefully with the toes in a mud puddle so that the mud drying on the lower part would make the feet seem small. O, yes, they did it. And of course you know that a bootjack wasn't used merely because the boots might soil the hands, but because nobody had invented a stump-puller in those days and applied it to the removal of tight boots.
And remember the bell-crowned hats, and the dingbats and jimcracks they hung on their watch fobs. And the fancy waistcoats and the frilled shirts.
And going even further back, consider what historical drawings give us of information as to ancient dress—the knee breeches with gorgeous rosettes—the brilliant buckles on the shoes—the cream-colored cloaks with mauve satin linings. And the white silk stockings that the exclusion would show through. Think of the bepowdered and becurled wigs when you rave at rats on women's heads and repent of your scoffing words.
Face powder? Perfumes and scents? Sure they had 'em. Patches on their complexion—yes, and rouge. They sure were pretty men those days.
And going back to the Indian—think of his war paint, of his gaudy blanket, his stained arrows, his painted pony, his bear-oiled hair and his colored feathers.
But what's the use? He's not so pretty now. Only he really hadn't ougheter scoff so much at hobble skirts and peach-basket hats and Chinese hair switches and things. He really hadn't ougheter.
As a Buncher.
We is one of the most bothersome words in the language. It is responsible for more misunderstandings than any other ten words put together. An editor will start out conscientiously to give his opinions. He will begin by saying "We think," meaning himself. A latter later he will say "we," meaning his advertisers. A few lines farther down he will use the word again, meaning the class of people who read his paper. Then his heart will soften and expand. He will become eloquent with the use of "we," meaning the whole community or the entire human race. Then suddenly he will bethink himself and reflect that his is a party organ and "we," the party, is paramount after all. Whereupon he will divest himself of opinions in which the people at large have no interest, or at least no profit.
All this is very confusing. The unsuspecting reader struggles along trying in vain to separate the we-goats from the we-sheep. Sometimes that's exactly what the editor is striving for and sometimes he is the most confused of all.
We was invented to conceal thought. Life.
Kaiser's Insult to a Courtier
An incident very reminiscent of such pettiness was told to Tip the other day by an American just returned from Berlin. It seems one of the Kaiser's suite, a noble of high rank, had incurred the imperial displeasure. The Kaiser did not wish to lose this gentleman's services, but apparently desired to humiliate him for the real or fancied offense. All of the state dinners shortly afterward, the noble was seated half a dozen places from his ruler. Beside him sat a woman of title, whom he had known from the time both could walk. The two conversed animatedly. Suddenly his imperial majesty leaned forward and exclaimed in a harsh voice: "Prince, it is not etiquette toirt at my table." The man thus addressed rose to his feet and bowed low. The next day he resigned and retired to his country estate, although it is well known he received a personal letter of apology from Wilhelm II.
Not to Be Fooled.
Proudly young Tomkins displayed the sights of London to his uncle, fresh from the verdant country. They visited St. Paul and the Embankment and the National Gallery and all the places they could get in free, and, as an especial treat, they visited a music hall, where a trombone solo was in progress when they entered.
With rapt attention the old man watched the instrumentalist's facial contortions. At the close the audience applauded thunderously, but the old man sat mute.
"Well," said young Tomkina, "didn't you like it?"
"Verra good, verra good, no doubt," nodded the old man, "but we country folk canna be taken in so easy as all that; I knew all the time he wasn't a-swallowin' of it!"—Answers