Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, May 6, 1911
Wichita, Kansas
Page text (machine-generated)
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY TRADING WITH THE MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER
RACE PROGRESS
As Reported By The National Negro Business League
FOURTEENTH YEAR
The life and career of of Berry O'Kelley of North Carolina should be an inspiration to the youth of his race. His home is at Method, a community of colored people mostly, three miles west of Raleigh. He was born in slavery; but being bereft of his parents at an early age, he was cared for by and aunt and her husband. Under their fostering guardianship, Mr. O'Kelly laid the foundation for a successful career, which has made him one of notable characters of the race. In prgportion as he gave close attention to business and studied the laws that underlle successful commercial enterprises he prospered as the village grew He is postmaster of the place, his commission dating back as far as 1890. He is also the rail road agent, chairman of the school committee and conducts one of the largest general stores of any man in the state. Mr. O Kelly owns a number of highly cultivated farms and is an extensive operator in real estate.
He owns much valuable property in the city of Raleigh being at the head of a company that has recently purchased for $10,000 on the main street of the capital. property formerly used at the office building of the News and observer. This will be overhauled and enlarged into States for Negroes, the girl outnumbers the boy almost 3 to 1.
The boy of today varies greatly from those of yesterday. He is no longer the chaste and almost underfield being of the past but his senses have turned (just a few good ones) to rowdines bad associates, unclean habits that are shortening his life, ruin a splendid building with up-to-date appointments. He is also a member of the Raleigh Shoe Store Company and Millinery Store, which is now one of the principal mercantile houses in the city.
Mr. O'Kelly by devoting himself almost wholly to business pursuits, has by square dealing prompt attention to obligations rounded out a measureiof succes, rarely attained by few men of the race. His note is good any day for $50,000 in any baulk in
the city of Raleigh.
Then there is the people's Mercantile Company, capitalized at $5,000.00 but which is now on the eve of expanding the capital to $20.090 on account of the growing demand of the trade. The firm does a general mercantile business, carrying a high grade of commodities in the grocery, hardware and dry goods lines. The stack of goods appeals as much to their white patrons as to the blacks, so that it is necessary to employ five cleeks, besides the general manager who is Mr James Gibson.
The incorporators of the firm are easily worth $60,000 and the two story brick building in which they do business was erected at a cost of $10,000 including the lot on which it is built. The Eddy High school is located here and has the reputation of being the center of educational facilities in Middle Georgia. The curriculum of the school comprises five different courses of study. Seven college graduates make up the faculty with A. B. Cooper A. B. as principal.
A few years ago, Messrs. R. L. and J. L. Williams started in the business of manufacturing cigars as the field and opportunity seemed inviting. Now, after four years of experience they have become fixtures in the business life of the city of Tampa, Florida. Their output is not only large, but the brands are of such superior quality as to cause the firm to be well known throughoet the country. J. Andrew Williams is the manager.
New York real estate dealers, among whom are Messrs. Nail and Parker, take high rank in the business world. The other day this enterprising firm closed a deal involving $1,070,000 opening ten modern apartments houses to colored people. A feature of the deal is that all parties to it are colored—the selling end being St. Phillips Church, the richest of Negro corporations in the country. Mr. Parker is a
North Carolina boy who heard Booker T. Washington some years ago talk about "the samples of the race," and decided that he would be one of the samples. tion was college to Prof. W. Gregg be temates, coln Neb
The Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company of Durham N. C., recently purchased a splendid brick building on Orange Street. The company and as storerooms The sum paid was large, but the property is considered a very desirable investment. The company, also purchased two other valuable pieces of property in other parts of the city, all of which go to prove that they have faith in Durham "dirt." The company now has 55,000 members and nearly 300 agents with 25 branch offices throughout the state R. B. Fitzgerald is president, G. W. Powell general manager.
Milledgeville, Ga., can boast of some as refined, intelligent and thrifty members of the race, as may be found in any place of its size, or even much larger, in the country. The colored people not only own nice comfortable homes, the fruit of their industry and frugality, but they also have "an eye" for business opportunities, when in sight. Among the largest and most prosperous of the latter is the colored drug store, which compares favorably in stock and management with the best in the city. It is under the control of Dr. Lee and Mr. Frederick Davis.
Splendid Meeting.
The electoral college, met in Lawrence Kansas, last Wednesday and selected lay delegates to the General Conference of the A. M. E. church which will meet in Kansas City, Mo., in May 1912. The session of the College was held in beautiful Saint James A. M. E. church, Kev. J. L. Craw, pastor. They organized by electing D. H. Hill of Cherryvale, Kansas, as temporary president and W. N. Miller of Wichita Kansas, as temporary secretary. The following Committee on Credentials were appointed: Geo. Fitzpatrick, D. W. Gross and B. B. Bryant.
An adjournment was then taken till 2:30 p.m.at which hour the credential committee report ed. The 'temporary organiza-
tion was made permanent. The college then elected as delegates Prof. W. W. Fisher and G. A. Gregg both of Quindaro as alternates, S. Z. Westerfield of Lincoln Neb. and W. N. Miller of Wichita. Everyone who attended declared this session the grand est ever held in the history of the church and all were loud in their praise of Rev. J. L. Craw and his members in the excellent manner in which the cared for the delegates and visitors.
At night the church and the young people presented a fine musical number which was listened to by a large crowed of people. The electoral college meeting goes down as the largest attended with more delegates and
more visitors.
The following delegates were present: Benj. English, Oskaloosa, Kan.; Sandy Peterson, Lawrence; H. D Hill, Cherryvale; Geo. Fitzpatrick, Coffeyville; D. W. Gross, Ottawa; G. A. Gregg, Quindaro; Jaseph Vanderford, Independence; Matthew Wilson, Tonganoxie; S. Z. Westfield, Lincoln, Neb.; W. W. Fisher, Kansas City, Kan.; C. W. Erwin, Great Bend; J. C. Henderson, Lawrence; D. Mallory, Topeka; T. H. Johnson, Eudora Circuit; James Daniels, Iola; D. B. Bryant, Topeka; R. S. Christian, Topeka; Edward Lewis, Rock Valley; W. N. Miller, Wichita; John Baldwin, Argentine; T. E. Davis, Junction City; Chas. Chenault, Manhattan; Wm. Brown, Rosedale; Nelson C. Hunt, Atchison.
Presiding Elders J. R Ranson, and H. W. King and Rev. Jas. T. Smith, J. E. Nichols, P. D. Davis, J. L. Crow, J. Houseley together with many members both men and women were visitors.
Where Are Our Girls
On hearing a speech made by one of the prominent colored doctors of this city, my mind has been haunted by those facts he uttered ever since. He spoke on the scarcity of Negro husband for Negro girls and brought out some interesting and acute facts that should be given due and just consideration by every Negro boy and girl. The doctor exemplified the refined wife with the unpolished husbands, the all of interest taken by you men in social affairs, where the intermingling of the two sexes were required. Also, he spoke of the girl who is classed high, that associates with the young man who has been ostracised rom society circles for some immoral act, then being an associate of our best girls. The doctor made some timely remarks
The girl on a whole is being educated and trained for the various essentials of lite, while the with the same chances, is neglect
To Get Husbancs?
ing his. In the many colleges and public schools of the United ing him morally, mentally and physically. What sort of a husband would one of these insert, insignificant beings make for a busband for one of our best girls This grave question stares every one in the face.
Today we see boys who should be school, lounging around sa loons, pool halls, roving the slums and attaching themselves to the very worst habits. What sort of husbands will they be?
There should be as much interest taken in the boy as there is in the girl, for in their union the outcome may be regretted. We should use evero effort in persuading the young man to toe the mark, socially with the girl, for social interminging will be one of the primary actors in aiding the young man to realize the required quality to enter upon marrage life. It does not take the seer to see the outcome of this murky social condition that is now existing. We must spring a remedy or the worst will remain at hand. —Palestine(Tex)
Some big Negro demand the poor half fed Negro newspaper man to preach, teach and even oster race pride enterprises while they sit back with their hands on their pockets books and look wise. They won't pay one cent in a year in a Negro newspaper, Just let that fellow have enough rope. Either some friend will call, or a near relative will get sick, maybe some die or something will cause him to come around and see the Negro newspaper man. Then get yours.
Poor Dog.
So often we call a man a dog when we wish to reproach him.
And yet a dog
Doesn't lie,
Doesn't swear,
Doesn't cheat,
Doesn't drink,
Doesn't smoke,
Doesn't swinele,
Doesn't flirt
Doesn't borrow,
Doesn't pretend,
And wouldn't even resent it if you call it a man.—Life.
IN SESSION NOW.
Western Stor Consistory No. 18 and its co-ordinate branches are holding their spring re-union in Wichita this week. We are unable to give an account of it this week but will have it in full in our next issue. Watch for it.
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NO. 4
Fuller-Chambers Nuptial.
Mr. Dewitt Fuller age 21 was united in marriage last Sunday afternoon to Miss Minnie Chambers age 18 of Bartlesville Okla. at the residence of the groom's parents, Mr and Mrs A. A Fuller 539 N. Water St. The affairs was a pretty and very quite home function only relatives and immediate friends being present. The ceremony was performed by J. E. Edwards pastor of the A M E church. After the cermony the contracting parties received the congratulations of all those present and many hand some and valuable presents. A two course lunchion was served Will make their home at 539 N. Water where they will be proud to receive their friends.
WICHITA TABERNACLE NO. 34.
Dtr. Sallie Hall, H. P., Dtr. H. Bell,
V. P., Dtr. L. Heck, C. R., Dtr. R.
Carroll, V. R., Dtr. J. C. Coffee, C. T,
Dtr. Ella Gibbs, Hirego, Dtrs, W.
Clark, W. Collins, B. Wallace, Sirene
Board, Dtrs. Mary Bates, L. Washington,
S. Wright, Hesper Board, Dtrs.
Lizzie Madison, F. Lockudge, Georgia
Branson, Meroes, Dtr. L. McBride, O.
S., Dtr. C. Martin, I. S.
LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS.
Mt. Horeb Temple No. 10 held the annual election of their officers with the following results: Sir Geo. Walker, C. M., re-elected; Sir N. W. James, V. M.; Sir A. Alexander, C. S.; Sir C. S. Wilson, A. S.; Sir S. T. Smith, C. T.; Sir W. O. Jannery, C. O.; Sir John Gross, D. M.; Sir D. Bradford, C. B.; Sirs Osa Evans, W. Williams, J. Robinsons, C. G.; Sir Geo. Fields, C. St.
On June 1st the Drill Team from Kansas City, Kans., will give an exhibition drill in our city.
Wants Your Receipts.
All persons holding receipts for that "Race Book" that was to have been published by Rev. G W Smith are asked to bring their receipts to Richard Watson 404 E. 18th St. or at 2nd Baptist church and your receipts will be taken up.
Richard Watson
404 E 18th St.
Cabbell's Chapel M. E.
Rev J. J. Cabbell Dist. Supt. of the Wichita District of the M. E church held his first quarterly meeting of the present conference year at Cabdell's Chapel Saturday and Sunday, April 22nd and 23rd. The reports from the various departments showed the church to be in good shape in each department, Dist. Supt. Cabbell preached two able sermons—at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. In the afternoon Rev A B Hest wood pastor of Trinity M. E church preached at 3 o'clock to a crowed house. Rev J. E. Edwards pastor of St. Paul A. M.E church and Rev J. L. Anderson pastor of College Hill M. E church administered the sacrement to forty persons. The full claim of the District Superintendent was raised. Additions five Collection $15.00
Rev, G. T. Wooten, pastor.
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William Acquires Wisdom
By STACY E. BAKER
(Copyright 1911, by Associated Literary Press.)
Although William Gaylord had a penchant for producing none-too-clever short stories and halt-and-lame verse, no one in Toddytown knew this except pretty Mamie Montclair, a girl who secrets from confidential admirers only to give them freely to the world. Gaylord — the serious, angular, spectacled William—had long traveled conspicuously in the train of Mamie's admirers, and although she deigned him barely more than a curt nod and pleasant salutation on any occasion, there were those who averred that she cared more for him than for all the others.
The Montcalair damsel was a thorn in the sides of the envious feminine contingent of the town. When Mamie, a gawky girl in pigtails, had been thrust upon a train and sent to Mrs. Gentry's finishing school at Savannah there was no one to prophesy the mighty change that was to take place in her during her two seasons with the famous southern beauty maker.
Mrs. Gentry deplored Mamie's diminutiveness, but she marveled much over the maid's complexion, and astutely saw great possibilities in her dark but clumsy braids.
There had been no beavies of men admirers in those days. Willie Gaylord had peered mistily at the departing one through thick and ugly glasses—and he had been all! His hand had gripped hers in a tight clasp, and after several attempts he had convulsively spoken a formal goodby, and hurried away. Mamie was young, but she had understood. Now it was different. Willie was only an humble one in the group of fluttering male moths around the flame of Mamie's personality. At least this seemed to be the existing condition to the denser brains of the men who watched. With the women it was different. They could see the trend of Mamie's thought.
Much of the Montclair currency—the family coffers were kept replenished from the profits of a factory manufacturing popular hand soap—was spent upon Mamie. She was given trips abroad, seasons in the metropolis; yachts and automobiles were at her disposal, and, in fact, anything for which she wished was laid at her little feet. She ran the gamut of innocent pleasures. She sounded the depths of every man's effection—that is, every man except the slim, narrow-chested William. Serenely he watched her trimphs, but his lips remained mute.
In these days William had begun to destroy much good white paper, and with two fingers he was laboriously, painfully, learning the intricacies of the typewriter.
His attempts at fiction were crude, his unskilled pencil generally building a stick for a hero and a frump for a heroine. His stuff was unreal, lifeless. His effusions hastened promptly back when submitted to the magazines.
It was well that the Gaylord fortune was large—ample enough to allow the attenuated youth to favor his profitless fad. There was no money in the production of fiction for William.
Just before Mamie had taken leave of Toddytown on another suddenschemed, mother-chaperoned trip across the seas she had given the youth a whole afternoon.
William had not wholly improved his opportunities. He had not spoken a word of love.
He had, however, broken into the crypt of his heart to parade his ambitious secret to her.
Mamle Montclair had listened so renely to the budding genius.
"Have you sold any of your stories?" she asked, deftly arranging a dark curl.
"Not yet," acknowledged William bravely; "but I have received two letters from editors—outside of the regular run of refusal slips, you know—asking me to submit more of my work."
"Keep it up," encouraged the girl.
"I—I am sure you can win, if—if only you will believe in yourself. You haven't enough self-confidence." She blushed at some subtle thought not plain to the admiring Gaylord, who was now watching her with admiring eyes.
"I believe I can do much—if you want me to," he said simply, and this was as near sentiment as he approached during the afternoon, although the forelock of opportunity dangled temptingly time and again before his fingers.
After Mamie had been gone for some time, there came back to Gaylord a letter bearing a foreign stamp. Willie recognized the handwriting.
"From her," he murmured, and as there was no one there to see, he pressed his lips to the envelope.
Mamie, it seemed, was interested in Willie's ambition to become one of the producers of popular fiction. She wished to keep in touch with him, to learn of his triumphs, to condole with him over his failures, to encourage him. Some of this was implied; some boldly told him in frank sentences. Through the letter, however, ran a thread of romance, not wholly agreeable to the youth.
"I have met a perfect dear of a man here," the girl wrote. "He is a duke or a count or something, and
he is just too sweet! He shows me marked attention." Several other allusions were made to this scolon of nobility; so many, in fact, that William felt impelled to answer promptly—and he gave much space in his effusion to the "national duty of an American girl, viz., to marry an American." In a tardy answer to this she spoke again of the count—it now seemed that he hore this title—and assured her old Toddytown friend that he was different from the usual run of small fry lordlings. This count, said Mamie, was a perfect gentleman. In a timid sentence she confessed that the count was even then with them—he had joined her party. They were in France.
Latent personality developed in William Gaylord. He wrote angrily and demanded that the girl scan the scores of alliances contracted between American dollars and continental blue blood and write him if she found a truly successful one. He bluntly—and brutally—insisted that her count was thinking only of her money in his wooing and not of her personal charms.
Between letters he savagely dashed off a story with an American girl as heroine, a messaillance as motif, and a lover literally beat the corneted husband to a pulp and dragged the girl-wife away to an American divorce colony.
An editor bought this promptly and sent the cynic a substantial check.
Gaylord was the frenzied recipient of just one more teasing letter—and then Mamle came home.
"Well," roared William—a strong-jawed, harsh-featured William, with cold gray knobs of polished steel in lieu of eyes scintillating behind the thick glasses. "I suppose you brought that idiot along with you."
Mamie stared.
"If you mean the count," she answered meekly, "I didn't. You seemed so—so set against it that I didn't dare." She lowered her eyes.
They were on the vine-covered veranda of the Montclair mansion—and alone.
"Say! I've sold a story!"
In his elation Gaylord abruptly changed the subject.
"I—I am glad," whispered the girl. She still stood before him, a diminutive goddess of beauty with eyes lowered.
"I—I told you you could win—if you would."
Gaylord came resolutely up and closed fierce arms about her.
"I'm going to marry you," he said loudly. "And—and no darned count can butt in." Such was the manner of Gaylord's wooing.
Nightcaps Coming Back.
Nightcaps, the solace of our fathers and our grandfathers, have gone out of fashion. No one—or but few—wear these cosy overalls for bald heads that were considered indispensable a generation ago or so.
A gentleman who likes to sleep with his bedroom window open, but who cannot because he catches cold in his bald pate, sought all over New York for nightcaps lately. In one big department store he found them. He was in inquiry for "children's caps made of stockinette or something of that sort." The saleswoman cross-examined him so rigidly that he consciously lifted his hat. "Oh, you mean nightcaps," she exclaimed. "We're the only store in New York that keeps 'em. They're coming into use again. Where we sold a dozen last year we're selling a hundred now. Fresh air. That's the answer."—New York Sun.
Exporting Walnut Trees.
Walnut trees are becoming scarcer from year to year in eastern Pennsylvania, owing to the high prices they command. Exporters make systematic tours through the rural regions, buying up all the walnut trees that can be had. They pay $50 to $100 a tree, or even more if the specimen is particularly attractive. A big walnut tree on the Hutchinson estate, in Cheltenham, has just been cut down and the timber will be shipped abroad. A Willington exporter of walnut logs bought this and other trees in the vicinity. These logs, it is said, are to be manufacturer into gun stocks in France. Formerly walnut timber was in demand in Europe, principally for use in making veneer for furniture.
How the Ostrich Travels.
Ordinarily two feet is the stride of the ostrich, but when the bird is frightened it is known to have run 30 miles an hour. When it runs it takes both feet off the ground at every stride; its progress being made in a series of jumps so rapidly performed that it seems one foot is on the ground while the other is placed. Birds of lesser leg length usually cover four or five feet of ground at every normal step.
"My little boy can give a perfect imitation of a phonograph."
"Why don't you send him out on the vaudeville circuit?"
"Do you think he would make a hit?"
"No, but anything is better than having him around the house."
A. Suggestion.
THE KITCHEN CABINET
E was warned against the woman
She was warned against the man.
And if that won't make a wedding
Why there's nothing else that can.
sour pickles. If the pickle is not sour add a tablespoon of vinegar. Spread the sauce over chops or fish.
Cucumber Sauce.
This is a sauce especially nice with broiled fish. Pare two cucumbers and cut lengthwise in quarters. Cut of the edge containing the seeds if they are large, then chop fine, and squeeze quite dry through a cheese cloth.
Mushrooms.
During the month of May our first mushrooms appear and with a little study and a good teacher one may become proficient in telling the edible varieties in a short time. They are so delicious, digestible and dainty that it seems a shame that so many pounds of the delectable vegetable should go to waste from indifference and lack of knowledge.
When they are carefully picked and cleaned before putting into the basket they need never be touched with water to cleanse them. Water soaks and spoils their delicate texture and flavor.
Take a dozen large fresh mushrooms, sprinkle with salt after peeling the caps and broil over a clear fire. Add bits of butter to the cups and arrange on pieces of buttered toast. Saute in two tablespoonfuls of butter, one cup of chopped mushrooms, season with salt and pepper and add a fourth of a cup of heavy cream. Reheat and pour over the mushrooms and toast.
Baked Mushrooms
Peel the caps of 12 large mushrooms, sprinkle with pepper and salt. Remove the stems, cook in a little butter, add a cup of chicken stock or cream, simmer 15 minutes. Place on rounds of bread on a buttered platter, cover and cook 15 minutes, basting with melted butter once during the cooking. A few gratings of nutmeg is an improvement.
Mushrooms With Tomatoes.
Prepare half a pound of mushrooms, break in small pieces and saute in butter for five minutes.
Slice six tomatoes after removing the skins and arrange them in layers in ramekins or a buttered baking dish with the mushrooms. Cover with a tomato sauce seasoned with onion. Sprinkle with buttered crumbs and bake until the crumbs are brown.
Deviled Mushrooms.
Mix one teaspoonful of mustard, a few grains of cayenne, one teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce and half a teaspoonful of paprika. Cover broiled mushrooms with this mixture and serve on slices of bread.
HE purest altar from which prayers ever ascended to heav-
HE purest altar from which prayers ever ascended to heaven is a mother's knee. The strongest enemy is a bird's beak a man to his God is a wife's devotion.
Economical Suggestions.
There are so many rich and attractive dishes which we would like to afford; but the cost is in the way.
The rich steamed pudding which is such a favorite can seldom be served in homes of moderate means because of its expense. The following is a recipe that is especially good and one quite inexpensive.
Steamed Pudding.
Take one and a half cups of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder sifted well, a cupful each of suet, brown sugar, raisins, currants or chopped prunes, grated carrot, grated potato, half a cup of orange peel, half a grated nutmeg, one lemon peel grated, half a teaspoon of cloves and a teaspoon of cinnamon. Steam three hours. This pudding can be re-heated and is good as long as it lasts.
When oranges are reasonable in price, orange marmalade is not an extravagance as it is used only in small quantities as a delicacy, yet an economical rule for making a marmalade which will take its place acceptably is the following:
American Marmalade.
Shave very thin one orange, one grape fruit and one lemon. Peel and core two small greening apples. Measure the fruit and add three times the amount of water. Let stand over night; in the morning boil ten minutes. Let stand another night. Add an equal quantity of sugar and cook very slowly until it jellies. Stir as little as possible.
HE love of praise is not the
HE love of praise is not the lowest motive that can move the human soul. The outside of man is of so much surface after all: the gentleman is a lover of men, and seeks not to charm but only to serve them.
Meat Sauces.
There are a few common sauces which are well known, such as tomato, white sauce and the brown sauce. A sauce, if well prepared and served, will change the character of a dish on which it is passed, and as the following are not so commonly served, they may prove acceptable.
Pickle Sauce.
Rub an ounce of butter (two tablespoonfuls) to a cream, add half a teaspoonful of salt, a speck of cayenne and one tablespoon of finely chopped
sour pickles. If the pickle is not sour add a tablespoon of vinegar. Spread the sauce over chops or fish.
Cucumber Sauce.
This is a sauce especially nice with broiled fish. Pare two cucumbers and cut lengthwise in quarters. Cut off the edge containing the seeds if they are large, then chop fine, and squeeze quite dry through a cheese cloth. Season with salt, paprika and vinegar and stir in one-half cup of thick cream whipped stiff.
Hollandaise Sauce.
Hollandaise sauce.
Cream a fourth of a cup of butter, beat the yolks of two eggs in a saucepan, add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and one-fourth of a cup of hot water, a few grains of salt and cayenne. Place the saucepan over the fire and stir constantly until it is quite thick. Then quickly stir in the creamed butter and serve at once.
Bread Sauce.
Cook one-half cup of style bread crumbs, a slice of onion and three cloves, in one and a half cups of milk 30 minutes. Rub through a strainer if the crumbs are large. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter, one-half teaspoonful of salt and speck of paprika. If too thick add a little more milk. Serve with eggs and game. Garnish with one-half cup of coarse bread crumbs browned in butter.
Horse Radish Sauce.
Take three tablespoonfuls of grated horse radish, one tablespoonful of vinegar, a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne and four tablespoonfuls of heavy cream beaten stiff. Serve in a pretty glass dish.
ONG do we live upon the
ONG do we live upon the husks of corn.
While 'neath untasted lie the kernels still.
Milk besides being a food is a most useful liquid in the household. It will take out ink spots of long standing.
A little put into cooked starch gives it a gloss.
It will remove discoloration from gilt mirrors and picture frames.
Used with bluing for lace curtains it will make them look as fresh as new.
When washing fine laces instead of using starch to stiffen them, a little milk will answer the purpose and make them creamy in color if so desired.
If a window is desired, clouded, apply a strong solution of epsom salts mixed with vinegar. This gives a beautiful frosted appearance and will be permanent if varnished with a white varnish.
Use a little vaseline to rub over the shoes to keep them soft and water-proof.
When there are several pieces of cheese too dry to serve, try toasting them. It changes the flavor and makes a dainty way to serve cheese.
A little grated cheese added to escaloped potatoes adds flavor and changes an otherwise common dish into a new one.
The Uses of Cheese.
Cheese is such a concentrated food that a little of it is valuable in the bill of fare. There should never be a crumb of cheese wasted as there are so many dishes that are improved by a tablespoonful of grated cheese. Served as it commonly is in cubes or slices as an accompaniment to the dessert, or as dessert itself with crackers it needs no recommendation. Cheese alone or in combination makes a fine filling for sandwiches. Take equal parts of the grated cheese and walnuts pounded to a meal, moisten with thick cream and season to taste with salt. Spread between thin slices of buttered bread. A little grated cheese added to a white sauce which may be served with eggs or toast is a nice breakfast or luncheon dish. A plain omelet served with grated cheese sprinkled over it just before folding, changes the omelet into a fancy dish.
Tomatoes and Rice.
Prepare tomatoes for stewing and add when boiling two tablespoonfuls of rice to a cup of tomato. Cover and cook slowly, then season with salt, pepper and a little butter and sugar.
Rice with cheese makes a very acceptable escalloped dish.
Rice croquettes may be served with any preferred sauce.
Bolled rice may be served in the place of potato in the Fatherland Loaf, lining the baking pan with a layer of rice, then put in the meat and cover with rice.
Mock Angel Food.
Sift together one cupful of sugar, a cupful of flour and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a pinch of salt, five times, then beat into this mixture a cup of bolling hot milk; when smooth flavor and cut and fold in the whites of two eggs. Bake in gem pans or layers for a change. Small cakes baked rather thin and frosted are now the popular cake. A variety of frostings may be used, a filling may be laid on top of the small cakes and carefully covered with boiled frosting.
Sunday School Lesson for May 7, 1911
Specially Arranged for This Paper
LESSON TEXT-2 Chronicles 26. Memory Verses 18, 20.
GOLDEN TEXT—"Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall."—Prov. 16:18.
TIME—Uzziah's reign extended (Beecher) from B. C. 806 to B. C. 755; (Hastings) B. C. 801 to 749. Uzziah may have become a aaper about B. C. 768. Jotham being the reagent from that time.
PLACE—The Temple in Jerusalem.
KINGS—In Israel, Jeroboam II. In Assyria, Shalmanezer III.
PROPHETS—Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, the Zechariah of our lesson.
On the murder of King Joash he was succeeded by his eldest son, Amaziah, a man of piety and force, who slew the murderers of his father, sparing their sons, and then turned upon the enemies of his country, the Edomites south of the Dead Sea, who had been ravaging southern Judea. He hired thousands of mercenaries from the Northern Kingdom, to aid him in the war. When a prophet rebuked him for thus involving himself with an idolatrous nation he dismissed the mercenaries, who on their way home, plundered the cities of Judah. Amaziah went on, however, and with his own troops conquered the Edomites in the Valley of Salt south of the Dead Sea, and thoroughly subdued the cruel nation.
He brought home with him some of the Edomite idols and worshiped them, thus dishonoring Jehovah, who had so signally helped him, in favor of gods who had proved their own powerlessness! A courageous prophet rebuked him, but we are told what the effect was.
In his pride of success, and perhaps to avenge the towns which the Israeliteh mercenaries had plundered, he sent a boastful message to Joash king of Israel, challenging him to fight. Joash promptly accepted the challenge, completely worsted Amaziah, captured Jerusalem, and went away with all the treasure of the Temple and royal palace, and with many of the citizens as hostages. Amaziah continued to reign for fifteen years, but his subjects never were contented, and at last they rose in revolt and murdered him.
The son of Amaziah, Uzziah, a lad of sixteen, was chosen by the people. He continued his father's conquest of the Edomites by fortifying Eloth, an important city at the head of the eastern branch of the Red Sea, thus putting Judah in a position to renew the rich commerce with India which Solomon had established.
Uzziah's was a religious life. He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord. He followed Amaziah in the better part of his life, and not in his idolatry. There is no better preparation for the eyes of the world than to be conscious ever of God's eyes upon us.
The period of Uzziah and Jeroboam was the golden age of Israel. As a result of conquest and of commercial enterprise the accumulation of wealth was greater than had ever been known before. The rich lived in palaces of hewn stone and of ivory. They reposed on couches with damask coverings. They lay upon beds of ivory, and stretched themselves upon sofas. They ate lams selected out of the flocks, and calves fattened in the stall. They sang to the accompaniment of harps songs that they thought as fine as those of David. They drank beakers of rare wine, and anointed themselves with precious ointments. This prosperity, however, was restricted to the upper classes. While the nobles flourished, the poor grew constantly poorer. The peasant proprietors were crowded cut, and all the land came into the hands of a few great nobles. The free-born Israelites sank to the position of serfs. Prosperity has more perils than adversity, and pride is one of them. Dressed, according to Josephus, in priestly attire, and perhaps on the celebration of some high national feast, Uzziah presumed to enter the Holy Place, which it was death for any but a priest to enter, and to offer incense upon the sacred altar. Uzziah appears to have desired to become supreme pontiff as well as king, and to exercise the same dual functions as the Egyptian Pharaohs were wont to do. He had to disregard the direct command of Jehovah that the priests alone should burn incense on his altar; he had to despise the history of his people, to defy the holy name by which he himself was called. Thus a reign of fifty-two years was spoiled in an hour.
What terrible punishment came to Uzziiah? The infliction of that most loathsome, incurable disease, leprosy. Thus Miriam had been punished, and Gehazi. According to Josephus, it was at this very moment that the famous earthquake of Uzziiah's reign occurred. For the rest of his life he lived in a separate house. It was perhaps some place in the country to which the king confined himself. We are not told whether he repented of the sin that he had committed; but we may perhaps assume that he did so.
The story of Ahaz reinforces the warning that comes to us from the story of Uzziah. The pride of Ahaz was pride of opinion; that of Uzziah was pride in accomplishment. Pride may spring from good looks, fine clothes, plenty of money, a keen intellect, distinguished social position. A boy may be vain of his ball-playing and a girl of her white hands. What ever may be the source of it, pride is always a terrible danger.
$3.50 RECIPE CURES WEAK KIDNEYS, FREE
RELIEVES URINARY AND KIDNEY
TROUBLES, BACKACHE, STRAIN-
ING, SWELLING, ETC.
Stops Pain In the Bladder, Kidneys
and Back.
Wouldn't it be nice within a week or so
to begin to say goodbye forever to the
scald, dribbling, straining, or too
frequent passage of urine; the forehead and
the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches
and pains in the back; the growing mus-
cle weakness; spots before the eyes; yellow skin; sluggish bowels; swollen eyelids or ankles; leg cramps; unnatural short breath; sleeplessness and the dispondency?
I have a recipe for these troubles that you can depend on, and if you want to make a QUICK RECOVERY, you ought to write and get a copy of it. Many a doctor would charge you $3.50 just for writing this prescription, but I have it and will be glad to send it to you entirely free. Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson, K-288 Luck Building, Detroit, Mich., and I will send it by return mail in a plain envelope. As you will see when you get it, this recipe contains only pure, harmless remedies, but it has great healing and pain-conquering power. It will quickly show its power once you use it, so I think you had better see what it is without delay. I will send you a copy free—you can use it and cure yourself at home.
ANXIETY WAS FOR THE KEG
Overcharge a Small Matter, but Customer Did Hate to See Good Material Hurt.
Every nail-keg in the store had its occupant, the checker-board was working overtime, and mittens and muffiers were stuffed in bulgy pockets, as their owners drew closer round the big, rusty stove.
The door opened noisily, letting in a blast of the storm raging outside, and in its wake followed Rufe Blevins, a giant wood-chopper, whose good nature and ready wit made him a welcome addition to the store circle.
The loafers moved a little closer together to make room for Rufe on a soap-box, but he marched past the friendly circle, plumped an empty molasses-keg down on the counter, and drew a stained bill from his pocket, which he held out to the proprietor of the store.
An expectant grin went round the circle, for Storekeeper Jones had the reputation of never wronging himself by overweighing or undercharging. The merchant adjusted his glasses and looked expectantly from the bill to the wood-chopper.
"Notice you charged me for five gallons o' molasses last time I had this four-gallon keg filled," drawled Rufe. "I don't mind payin' for the extra gallon, Mr. Jones, but I do kinder hate to have a good keg strained to pieces."
—Youth's Companion.
A Missionary Tree
A missionary, during a Lenten tea, said, pointedly:
"I have established missionary trees all over the country. But perhaps you don't know what a missionary tree is? A missionary tree is one whose profit goes entirely to missions.
"A Roxborough farmer has in his apple orchard a golden pippin tree that helps to support the Chinese mission. A Florida woman has an orange tree that helps to uplift the cannibals of New Guinea. A California nut farmer devotes a walnut tree to the spread of the faith in Zanzibar.
"Missionary trees," the speaker ended, "are very good things, but the principle that underlies them need not be confined to farms and farmers."
A Herford Bon Mat
Oliver Herford and a friend were strolling through a section of town that was plentifully strung with pulley lines on which many a family "wash" was waving in the wind. Mr. Herford's companion called attention to the manner in which these garments shut out the sky and otherwise disfigured the landscape. Mr. Herford gazed at them thoughtfully and then gently murmured: "The short and simple flannels of the poor."
Hér Way
Mrs. Woggs—So you keep your husband home evenings? I suppose you put his slippers where he can find 'em?
Mrs. Boggs—No; I put his overshoes where he can't—Puck.
A REAL DIGESTIVE HELP
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d eranging
invthe
5 lightest
degree the
o rdinary
routine at
the war de-
p artment
hh ea dquar-
ters in
Washington
is a tribute,
first of all,
of course,
to the re.
PRET RRC
army with its general staff or board of direc-
tors, but in even greater degree is it evidence
of the value of that comparatively new insti-
tution, the U.S. Army War College. The news-
paper-reading public has been told repeatedly
these past few years that it is the special prov-
ince of the officers detailed to duty in the great
red brick building, overlooking the Potomac
in Washington, to have on hand and to keep
constantly up to date detailed plans of cam-
paign for use in the event of war with any
cther nation. However, the present instance
affords the country at large its first real ex-
amplification of the practical value of the in-
formation that is kept under such close guard
in the plan vault and the map rooms of the
War College.
Tt was shown by the rapidity with which or-
ders were formulated and issued for this sud-
den movement of the largest body of troops
that has been handled at any one time since
the Spanish war that the War College has de-
pendable information as to just what can be
expected of the railroads in| an emergency.
This showed, too, the wisdom of Uncle Sam's
policy of keeping his war plays up to the min-
ute by revising them everytime there is a
change of railroad schedules for, in this in-
stance, most of the troops traveled by regular
trains instead of by special trains and the lat-
ter would presumably be resorted to only in
the case of extreme emergency.
Another feature of the plans forthe army in
action for which the big trek to Texas has
proven a most beneficial dress rehearsal is that
which contemplates reliance upon the tele-
graph system of the country in the movement
of troops. The use of the network of wires
covering the continent, in the event of war,
has been the subject of study on the part of
the military experts that has gone hand in
hand with the investigation as to how the rail-
road arrangements could be made to promote
the mobility of the military force. This work-
ed out just as anticipated the day orders were
issued for the advance to Texas and there
poured into the department a continual stream
of telegrams that kept the officials advised in
detail as to the movement of every body of
troops headed for the rendezvous in the Loue
Star State.
It may be a trifle early to talk about the les-
sons to be drawn from this taste of war but
one is already apparent. It emphasizes that
the field artillery yet has a very important
place in our military paraphernalia. There has
been a disposition on the part of some people,
of late years, to regard any considerable
amount of field artilery as not the most useful
equipment for the American army. Such advo-
cates took the view that Uncle Sam ought to
put his money into heavy coast defense guns
just as he is concentrating his naval expendi-
ture upon battleships of the heaviest class.
However, the unexpected call to Texas, empha-
sizing as it did, vistas of trouble that had been
completely overlooked in cpnteripletion of fe
“yellow peril,” called attention to the possible
sore need for ample field artillery under cer-
all over the country at widely separated mili-
tary posts,
Exireme mobility, which in the case of the
American army has oeen so strikingly put to
be test by the double quick advance on the
Rio Grande, is the one attribute above all
others for which our military experts have
wen working ever since the Spanish-American,
war. The United States needs a mobile
armed force as does no other nation on the
Zobe. Indeed, it is absolutely imperative.
The explanation is found, of course, in the
immense extent of the republic and our far-
fung coast ine. To protect so extensive a
territory needs an armed force that can move
with extreme rapidity from place to place. The
fact that broad oceans separate us from the
tations that, in the event of trouble, would
bwve our most formidable foes, presumably
‘insures us reasonable warning of dttempted
favasion but even with this leeway it needs
quick moving soldiery to rush at short notice
to any threatened point of attack.
The circumstance that the rushing of troops
‘o our southern boundary left the Atlantic
coast virtually unprotected is belng made an
‘asument for a larger regular army by the
Mdvocates of such an organization. However,
our military experts have not waited upon @
larger army to perfect a state of military pre-
Paredness,
But whatever the merits of this question of
4 large standing army the military experts
have not waited upon its solution. They have
Ene right ahead, bending every energy to
hake a force of considerably less than 100,000
men equal in emergency to a body of soldiery
‘everal times as numerous. To that end Uncle
Sam's soldiery, with due acknowledgement of
the modern tendency of specialization, have
teen rendered as versatile as possible In the
tris of warfare. And, best of all, there has
teen cultivated the “fire alarm” propensity to
cut and run for a scene of trouble at the
Stovest warning. In their part of the pre-
Patatlons, too, the administrative officials in
‘ey branch of the army have kept constant-
'y {a ound this aim and purpose.
Of all the preparations for war which have
Sne forward under a clear sky perhaps the
Host wonderful have had to do with the trans-
rtation arrangements, Our military experts
lave awakened to the fact that the United
Sates is the greatest railroad country in the
fold aod that even in the event of the most
PLUS conflict it is unlikely that many of
uf? communteative lines would be seriously
| Eerfored with, Why not then, make these
iulbllators of time and space @ military as-
ES Indeed tt is imperative to do so if the
a 's to be rendered a mobile force, for no
ty lit can serve as the twentteth cen-
or ygultitute for the forced marches of oth:
ton’*:, Consequently, whereas European na-
ta. htt their circumseribed areas and per-
milftvays have been experimenting with
yar 42, Sutomobiles and other innovations our
sin c’tTsuent officials have been wrestling
Ging “A? Problems of the make-up and han-
Hie,” {007 trains, and designing special
Tho tre, tS and hospital cars and the like.
frie st “out of the plans that have been
fn gon MtiMS these past dozen years has come
Teg, “OS® Of the recent hurried advance to
a chance visitor could have been in Wash-
aii tye {ue early days of the Spanish war
tte Guin {z*it_when the recent hurry call to
b inp O’St Was given he could not fail to
204 cond With the contrast,—the turmoll,
Cialgg MUSlon of 1908 with the wellolled pre-
Plane Sy present execution of prearranged
Latce of sa 20.000 men could be moved a dis-
Aiterey; OUSandS of miles along a score of
Stteries of traffic without apparently
a a a ct te
: Uke a 8
Cg Cee ee ate
Le CT
tain condi-
tions. And
Incidently it
© onveyed
the hint
that the
m ountain
batteries, in
which guns
and ammu-
nition are
“packed” on
winia hick.
might prove as invaluable in the mountains of
Mexico as they have under somewhat similar
conditions in the Philippines,
Similarly the conditions existing at the scene
of the present campaign are such as to empha-
size the fact that there is yet a very important
sphere for the cavalry in the army.
It as though the crisis in this unexpected quar-
ter were a providential answer to the argu-
ments of those persons in and out of official
life who have been urging in recent years
that the foot-soldier should be practically the
whole thing in our military complement. It
must be apparent to everybody who Is even
casually conversant with geographical condi-
tions that if Uncle Sam is to keep peace “From
the Canal to Canada” he will have need of a
considerable cavalry force and a force pro-
vided with the best possible class of mounts.
There are mountainous localities in the region
to the south of us where only cavalry could
operate successfully. Neither automobiles nor
yet aeroplanes would serve as a substitute.
And incidentally it may be noted that conditions
on the Mexican border have afforded an op-
portunity much earlier than was anticipated to
test the practical military value of the airship.
‘The servicability of the sky craft for scouting
operations ought to be pretty well attested ere
the troops return to their home stations.
No better theater of war, real or mimic, than
the southwest could be chosen for demon-
strating the progress made during the past few
years, both in the methods and equipment of
the U. 8. Signal corps. The general public,
with its craving for the spectacular, has heard
most regarding the introduction of the aero-
plane as a utensil of warfare but as a matter
of fact the Signal Corps has recently tmtro-
duced innovations far more important from a
military standpoint than the aerial scouts, and
these communicative utilities and novelties for
day and night signaling would obviously prove
especially valuable in rough country where
there are few existing telephone or telegraph
wires and where the erection of such lines
would be difficult and expensive. The Signal
Corps is fully abreast of the times (and of the
military establishment of any other nation) in
its experiments with wireless telegrapby and
wireless telephony and it has developed some
yery ingenious expedients for the use of rap-
idly moving forces in the field,—as for Instance,
the autotelegraph car or telephone and tele-
graph station on wheels and the apparatus
which enables a mounted trooper to lay or reel
in a telephone wire automatically while his
horse is at full gallop, the rider meanwhile con-
tinuing telephone conversation over this elastic
wire.
It is expected that when the joint operations
of the army and navy in the south have passed
into history the record of operations will af-
ford argument one way or another as to what
shall be done with the U. S. Marine Corps.
Our readers will recall that this force, the “sol-
diers of the navy” has been for some time past
a bone of contention in service and official cir-
cles. Many persons have contended for years
past that this body of sea soldiers who are pre-
sumably no longer needed on our warships as
they were in the days when most of the sailors
were foreigners, should be transferred to the
army. Some time ago all the marines were ta-
ken off the warships, but Iater by order of con-
gress they had to be restored. Now that hun-
dreds of the marines are scheduled to partict-
pate in extensive land operations,—either inde-
pendently or in conjunction with the soldiery of
the regular army—it is hoped that evidence will
be forthcoming as to whether or not they would
render better service if actually enrolled on the
army roster,
‘The “team work” of tue army and navy which
is a consistent policy with Uncle Sam is being
followed along with other up-to-date ideas in the
operations on the Gulf coast. Co-operation be-
tween military and naval forces is, of course, an
axiom with all the great powers of the world,
but many of the European nations which have
no very extensive sea coasts have not given the
attention to thin that has been bestowed in the
United States. It will be remembered that:in
most recent war games on the Atlantic coast
there was joint responsibility between the two
arms of the service. However many persons had
litle expectation that such concerted action
would be advisable when planning operations not
in reference to a foe from overseas, but rela-
tive to possible disturbance In a neighbor repub-
le on our own continent. In this respect the
present activity has proven somethiag of a rey-
elation, But {t has been realized that not only
can the warshipe render a service by a patrol of
the Gulf coast but are also a factor in that they
can land for shore service thousands of seamen,
trained by regular small arms practice for serv-
ice as infantrymen and light artillerymen.
One of the marvels of the recent quick work
in the southwest is found in the very creditable
manner in which the commissary department
has met the respopstbilities suddenly thrust up-
on it, Here again there has been most gratify-
ing contrast to the conditions of the Spanish
war period, but it must be remembered that
Uncle Sam has made very tangible progress
these past few years in the very vital provlems
of subsisting troops in the field. The army has
made most advantageous use of fireless cooking
by means of fireless cookers on wheels, designed
to cook the food while the military force to
which the equipment is attached fs on the march
and to have the meal, piping hot and ready to
serve the minute the force halts for the noon-
day respite or to pitch camp at night.
There has been plenty of work too, for the en-
gineer corps of the army in this “Texas cam-
paign” for there have been big camps to lay
out and to lay out such sites in various sizes up
to a divisional camp covering 800 acres means
an immense amount of work for the surveying
corps and the map makers in the field. The en-
gineers are also likely to find some opportunity
for their searchlight work,—including that with
their new portable searchlights conveyed by au-
tomiobile trucks and ere the “war game” is con-
cluded they are likely to have more or less prac-
tice in bridge building. And finally the opera-
tions of 20,000 soldiers in the field cannot fail
to afford its share of work for the hospital corps
—the more so by reason of the effect upon the
health of many of the officers and mem of so
sudden a change from a cold to a warm climate.
And the best part of all this practical try-out
of our military preparedness is that not only
will the rank and file get experience but the
higher officers of the service from Gen. Leonard
Wood, down, will personally direct or observe
the important movements, thereby learning at
first band the tactical and strategic lessons tm
volved.
FRENCH METHODS OF COOKING
These Two Ideas in Serving Potatoes
May Be of Interest to American
Housewives.
Pommes Hollandaise——For a family
of four boll six good-sized white pota-
toes; peel and cut them into quarters;
put them in a porcelain-lined pan with
a tablespoonful of butter and a pinch
of finely chopped parsley; season with
salt and white pepper and warm them
thoroughly without browning. Servo
on a hot dish.
Potato Quennelles or Croquettes.—
Peel, wash and drain six medium-sized
mealy potatoes; cut them in quarters,
put them in a saucepan, cover them
with water, add a little salt, cook for
30 minutes and drain. Then beat the
potatoes up in a bowl or mortar with
an ounce of fresh butter, and when
they are well mashed add the yolks of
three eggs. Season with salt, pepper
and a tiny bit of grated nutmeg; mix
all well and then divide into 12 or
more parts, shaping each round or like
a cork, Dip the croquettes separately
into raw beaten egg; roll in finely
Powdered bread crumbs, and fry a
golden color\in boiling olive ofl for
three or more minutes, Serve on a
folded napkin with mashed sprigs of
parsley alongside.
USEFUL HINTS FOR THE COOK
Small Thinge, but They Mean Much
In the Preparation of Really
Successful Meal.
When cooking eggs always break
them separately in a cup, for one bad
egg will spoil all that have been
broken before, For poaching or fry-
ing, it is better to break them singly
in a saucer, from which they can be
easily slipped into the pan without
breaking the yolk. |
A tablespoon of “vinegar, and a
little salt should be added to each
pint of boiling water used for poach-
ing eggs,
‘There {s much nourishment, also
medicinal properties, in fish, and as a
Tule it is cheaper than meat. If fresh
fish cannot be obtained, salt fish, it
properly cooked, {s quite as nutritious.
Too much cannot be said about the
nutritive qualities of cornmeal, which
ought to be used more than it is in
every household.
| Dried peas and beans also rank
jtigh among the cheapest and most
nutritious foods. Beans that are old
require longer soaking than last year's
crop. Never fall to add 9 little salt
In the water in which they are put to
fe
Sago and Currant Pudding.
A quarter of a pound of sago, a
quarter of a pound of cleaned cur
rants, slx good cooking apples, ‘one
heaping tablespoonful of butter, two
tablespoonfuls of sugar, . half of a
lemon. Put the sago into a saucepan
with four cupfuls of cold water, and
boil until the sago becomes trans-
parent, stirring all the time; next add
the thin rind of the half lemon, the
currants, and the sugar. Butter a
pudding dish, put in the apples (pre-
viously peeled, cored and sliced), and
pour over these the sago preparation.
Put the butter in small pleces on the
top, and bake until the apples are ten-
jer. Serve with a good custard sauce.
Walnut Catsup.
There are various recipes for ma
king this relish. The following will
be found a good one: Select fine firm
nuts; they are best when fresh and,
soft. Pound them well, reducing them
to a pulp, then put to soak in vinegar
enough to well cover. Add to this
after two hours two tablespoonfuls
of salt, one teaspoonful of horserad-
Ish, one teacupful of mustard seed and
garlic, two ounces of allspice, two
ounces of cloves, two ounces of nut-
meg, one ounce of black pepper and
two ounces of celery seed. Boll all for
an hour. Then strain through a hair
sieve and bottle, sealing the covers.
| If a pan is burned or blackened,
rub the inside of {t with a hard crust
of bread dipped in salt and afterward!
wash it with hot soda and water.
‘Add a little soda to the water im
which you wash your plates and
dishes. The soda loosens the grease.
‘on them and gives the china a good,
shiny surface.
Be very careful to keep the lids of
‘saucepans clean, for the flavor of one
dish may cling to a lid which has ‘not
‘been washed and spoil a second dish
which is prepared in the same pan.
Wash a saucepan in plenty of hot
water; but never wash cake tins or
frying pans. Wipe them well with a
piece of paper, which is afterward
burned, and polish them with a dry
cloth.
Here are a few rules it would be
well to cut out and paste in your
kitchen. They are hints about wash-
ing, and will give much success in the
affairs of that very {mportant region.
of the home.
Pudding cloths, jelly bags and so
on should be well washed, scalded
and hung up to dry. It is not neces-
sary to fron them, but they should be
smoothed and folded before they are
replaced in the drawer.
Stand saucepans, fish kettles, etc.
in front of the fire for a few minutes:
after washing them, so that they may
be thoroughly dried inside. This
makes them, last longer and helps to
‘Keep them in good condition.
W. N. MILLER, Editor.
Residence 1401 West 23d Street.
Office: 630 N. Main Street.
Residence Phone, Market 1641.
Office Phone, Market 2434
Phone your news items to us.
"To Live and Let Live" is Our Motto.
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Strictly in Advance.
One Year (by mail) .....$1.00
Six Months (by mail) ......75
Three Months (by mail) ......50
Advertising Rates made known on application.
Liberal commission paid to agents.
Entered at the Postoffice at Wichita,
Kansas, as Second-Class
Mall Matter.
Published Every Saturday at 630 N.
Main Street.
All matters addressed to The
Searchlight for publication must be
signed b ythe party or parties writing.
All matters for publication must
reach this office not later than Thurs-
day noon to reach publication in the
current issue.
RULES OF THIS OFFICE:
First. All subscriptions must be paid in advance. Agents take notice.
Second. Communications received after Thursday noon will not be published in the current issue.
Third. In asking to change your paper from one address or postoffice to another, give both the new and the old.
Fourth. No new name will be placed on our books unless the money accompanies the name. Write plain.
Fifth. Address all matter for publication into The Wichita Searchlight.
630 N. Main street, Wichita, Kansas.
Sixth. Any erroneous reflection on the character, standing or reputation of any person which may appear in this paper will be gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the editor.
SEND YOUR NEWS IN EARLIER.
In Fine Style.
The ladies of the Mother's Aid club celebrated their first anniversary in and elaborate style at the beautiful home of Mr and Mrs L C Case, 1104 N. Wichita St. Jon Friday evening April 28. The house was handsomely decorated in the club colors pink and green. Mr Milton Kenoly of Lebanon Mo sent a beautiful bouquet of carnations to Mrs. Case to be presented to the Mother's Aid club. Mrs. W. N. Miller president of the Mother's Aid club was mistress of the ceremony. The follow program was rendered..
Inst Solo Miss Flossie Madison
Paper "A Mother's Love"
Mrs. P. Johnson
Inst Solo Miss Irma Clark
Timely remarks were made by
the following guest:—Rev R. L.
Butler, pastor of 2nd Baptist
church; Rev J. E. Edwards pasto
oa St. Paul A. M. E. chureh; Mrs
M E Carr of the G. L. A. club:—
Mrs. W. H. Jones of the Home
Cooking club:—Mr J G Wiley,
Secretary Y. M. C. A.—Mrs. Dr.
H. I. Bolden of the B. T. W.
club:—all of which were received
with loud applause.
LUNCH
Ham Sandwiches Salmon Salad
Ice cream with strawberries
Coffee Spiced Ribbon Cake
Those present were: Rev. J. E. Edwards and wife; Rev. R. L. Butler and wife; J. G. Wiley, J. T. Sanford and wife, J. H. Jones and wife, Dr. H. T. Balden and wife, M. E. McKelley and wife, George A. Wallace and wife, Dr. G. G. Brown and wife, A. L. Case and wife, M. W. Madison and wife, Misses Irma Clark, Grace Berry, Elsie Steph
ens, Jennie Wheeler, Stella Turner, Flossie Madison; Mesdames I. J. Porter, T. H. Yancy, J. Bell, M. Richards, Will H. Jones, M. E. Carr, Robert Davis, Molie Miller, M. Heck, A. Jones, Jessie Howard, Mattie Miller. Mr. and Mrs. A. Pinkney, Will Stephens, J. Alfred, P. Johnson. Every one present declared the Mothers' Aid Club exceptional entertainers in every way.
LOCALS
THE RESUME OF THIS WEEK
Send your nice notes and local happenings to CBI North Main Street.
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.
WANTED DRESS MAKING
All work guaranteed, Ladies
Silk and Wool Suits a specialty.
Mrs. M. W. Trimble
355 N. Market.
FOR RENT—Three nice rooms at
1053 N Main street. Furnished or
unfurnished; also rear of a hall. Inquire
of W. M. Dent, 1053 N Main.
SEE the Christian Educational Scenery exhibits at St. Paul A.M. E. chureh Monday and Tuesday nights May 8th and 9th 19 11.
Attend the Ball every Monday night given by the Wichita Pase-Ball club at Masonic Hall.
The Searchlight is still doing business at the same old stand, 630 N. Main St. Come up.
DONT FORGET the grand program and bazaar to be given at Masonic hall soon by the W. T Vernon club. Watch for the date
SEE the Christian Educational
Senery exhibits at St. Paul A.M.
E. church Monday and Tuesday
nights May 8th and 9th 1911.
Admission
Adult 15c Children 10c
The City Federation of Women's Clubs will meet at Second Baptist church, Wednesday 10th at 3 p.m. prompt. A full atten dance is requested. Henrietta Harper, Pres. Eddie Bowers, Sec.
FOR RENT Two (2) nice rooms at 1015 N. Wichita St. Inquire of W. N. Dent, 1053 N. Main
FOR RENT Three (3) rooms cot
tage-Vacant Monday May 8th.
Inquire W. Starnes 1149 Piatt
Phone Market 839 j
W. N. Miller and wife and Robt. Davis and wife tendered a two o'clock dinner at the Miller suburban home "Pleasant Hour" on West 23rd last Saturday afternoon in honor of Rev. Frank Wilson of Topeka, C. G. M. and Mrs. Emma Gaines of Topeka, C. G. P. who were in the city on their annual visit. Those present: Mrs. Mary Goss, H. P. of Mt. Hope Tabernacle No. 3; Mrs Anna Jones, Q. M. Pearl Tent No 16; Mrs. Beatty Davis, Q. M. Moses Dickson Tent No. 5; Hon J. G. Wiley Sehretary Colored Y. M. C. A., Miss Verna Hall.
Rev. Frank Wilson and Mrs. Emma Gaines left Saturday night for tteil home in Topeka.
Mrs. V Covington is still on the sick list on N Water
ROWLEE'S
Hardware Store
Stoves, Ranges, Garden Hose, Lawn Mowers, Refrigorators, and a full line of Hardware, Machanic Tools and Builder's Hard ware. Give our store a call. Phone, Market 546 823 N. Main St. FOR RENT-A good 3 room cottage 22nd and Grace. Plenty of ground for garden and fine place to raise chickens. Rents for $6 per month.
W. N. Miller
630 N. Main St.
Phone Market 1641
R. B.
MCWILLIAMS
Attorney at Law
Practices in all Courts
Phone Market 1537
Office 601 N, Main St.
Wichita, Kansas
W. N. Miller
Attorney -at-Law
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Office 630 North Main Street
Practices in all the Courts
Of Kansas and Missouri
Office Phone, Market 2458
Residence Phone, Market, 1641
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS
They'll fire t You Right
A Big Snap.
I have an eight (8) room house and 50 ft. of ground which I can sell on easy payments. $100 Down and $20 per month.
Here is your chance to get a good home like finding it. This place will only be on market a few days on these terms if not sold. Call see me.
W. N. Miller
630N. Main St
Remember the spring re-union of Western Star Consistory No.
18 will open May 3rd 1911. Be on hand.
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS
They'll Treat You Right
SEE the Christion Educational
Scenery exhibits at St. Paul A.M.
E. church Monday and Tuesday
nights May 8th and 9th 1911.
Admission
Adults 15c Children 10c
W. N. Miller left Tuesday
night over the Santa Fe for
Lawrence where he went to
attend the Electorial college of the
A. M. E. church as the duly
elected pelegates from St. Paul A.
M. E. church of this city.
He returned Thursday morning.
Mrs. Lee Anderson was in the city last week enroute from her home in Topeka to Texas where she goes to pay a visit to her husband.
Will Make His Reports.
W N Miller who returned Thursday morning from Lawrence, Kansas where he went as a delegate to the Electoral College will read his written reports at St Paul A M E church Sunday morning May 7th immediately after the morning services This report will be very interesting and every one should be present to hear it
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right
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
Office Hours Bell Phone
9 to 11 2099
2 to 5 Wichita
7 to 8 Kansas.
513 N. Main St.
All calls answered promptly Day
or Night. Obstetrics and Diseases
of women A Specialty
Dr. H. T. Bolden DENTIST
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
BOTH PHONES 496
J.H. TURNER
WICHITA, MANS
533 to 547 WEST DOUGLAS
W. S. Henrion
Druggist
501 North Main Street
Wichita - - - - Kansas
Subscribe and pay for the
Wichita Searchlight. It is only
$1. for a whole year Try it.
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 Stroots.
Services at the Tabernacle Baptist Church for Sunday May 7,
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:-
All are cordially invited to attend the services.
Mother's Day: Sunday May 7th at the A M E church Attend these services
CULP'S MEAT MARKET
241 N.MAIN ST.
At Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chittered Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon Oysters, Heinz Pickles, and Beef P. T. CULP, Prop.
Main St.
trade with our Adv
Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Tail
Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterflugs.
Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon. Fr
rip Oysters, Heinz Pickles, and Baked Bea
P. T. CULP, Prop.
Main St. Both P
made with our Advertis
Thebest Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Tails, Cain 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 Phones
Trade with our Advertisers
Grocery Department
WE SELL FLOUR
WE SELL MEN
WE SELL
WE SELL
WE SELL
a fact, we sell every
grocery. WHY CAN
Makin Eye
N. Main St. - Wichita
HODEN'S IMPRO
RAM — CORN MEAT
With thirty-five y
RIENCE in Wichita
the best that can
Made from the
only, put up in Sp
OUR GROCER:
IMBODEN
Wichita
ROCERI
WE SELL MEAL
WE SELL LARD
WE SELL MEAT
Fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class
grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU?
Makin Eye Drug Co.
Y. Main St. — Wichita, Kan — Bell Phone
GEN'S IMPERIAL FLO
M — CORN MEAL — BREAKFAST F
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 IMPODEN MILLING CO.
Wichita, Kansas
PROCERIES, MEATS
In fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class Grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU?
Makin Eye Drug Co.
517 N. Main St. - Wichita, Kan - Bell Phone 239
IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL FLOUR
GRAHAM - CORN MEAL - BREAKFAST FOOD
With thirty-five years MILLING EXPE-
RIENCE 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
and General Merchandise
we carry a full, fresh
doceries and the choice
Our stock of Dry Go
children's Shoes cann
in price.
Tapp &
5-257 North Main
carry a full, fresh line of Staple and Fand
series and the choicest Fresh and Salt Mea
our stock of Dry Goods, Men, Women and
children's Shoes cannot be excelled in quality
a price. Free Deliver
Tapp & Hanshaw
- 257 North Main Phones 25
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
255-257 North Main Phones 257
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
WE SELL POTATOES
It exctls in every respect, — color, flavor and pounds of bread per barrel. MADE BY WATSON MILL CO.
MY NEW STORE
245 No
I have open m
where I will c
New and 2
245 North Main Street have open my new store at the above number where I will carry a full line of new and 2nd Hand Furniture
I have open my new store at the above number where I will carry a full line of New and 2nd Hand Furniture YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL E. D. SQUIRE
E. D. SQUIRE
245 North Main Street
"SECOND
PARK
GOOD IN
IT IS AS
THE OTTO WEIS
are all guard
Law, Serial
sas State L
It Is The Cheap
Chas
Merci
605 N
First-Class
Cleaning, Pre
Courteous Attention
For Clean B
Little
Restaur
Meals 20c
5 0 7
Short Or
Good S
HILL-
LUMP
318 West Doug
Dealers in
at the lower
Let
SECOND TO NONE"
PLEASES ALL
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 Kans-
as State Law, Register No. 1.
Is The Cheapest and Best Food on the Market
Chas. B. PATTON
Merchant Tailor
605 North Main Street
First-Class Making of Men's Garments,
Cleaning, Pressing, and Reparing A Specialty
Famous Attention
Bell Phone 305
For Clean Beds and Good Meals, Call at
THE
Little Wonder
Restaurant and Hotel
Meals 20c — Short Order at all Hours
5 0 7 North Main St.
Short Orders Filled At All House
Good Service is Guaranteed
A. J. Cousar, Prop.
HILL-ENGSTROM
LUMBER COMPANY
West Douglas
Phone, Market 4980
Dealers in the best grades of Lumber
at the lowest prices.
Let us estimate your bills
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.
* In The Cheapest and Best Food on the Market
Chas. B. PATTON
Merchant Tailor
605 North Main Street
First-Class Making of Men's Garments.
Cleaning, Pressing, and Reparing A Specialty
Courteous Attention Bell Phone 3055
Restaurant and Hotel Meals 20c - Short Order at all Hours 507 North Main St. Short Orders Filled At All House Good Service is Guaranteed A. J. Cousar, Prop.
HILL-ENGSTROM
LUMBER COMPANY
318 West Douglas Phone, Market 4980
Dealers in the best grades of Lumber
at the lowest prices.
Let us estimate your bills
SEEDS
INCUBATE
Also Seed, Po
Poultry supplies
PET STOCK:— W
P
— SEN
so Seed, Potatoes, Seed Corn, Seed Oats
ltry supplies.
STOCK:— We have a line of Canaries, Guinea
Pigs, Rabbits and Dog Ferrets.
— SEND FOR CATALOGUE —
Also Seed, Potatoes, Seed Corn, Seed Oats Poultry supplies.
PET STOCK:- We have a line of Canaries, Guinea Pigs, Rabbits and Dog Ferrets.
- SEND FOK CATALOGUE -
Central Seed Co.
N. Main Wichita, Kan
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 STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT. WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP AND PALLING 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
:-: YOUR TRADE SOLICITED :-:
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
```markdown
```
They'll Treat You Right
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS
They'll Treat You Right
TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right
The big Tabor Prize contest of the Searchlight will Saturday April 1st. This is the first time in the history of the Order of Twelve in this jurisdiction that so elaborate a Cash prize has been offered.
It is to be hoped that each member will take an interest and make this contest worth the while. Every Temple, Tent or Tabernacle in Kansas-Nebraska Jurisdiction is eligible to enter this conquest. This contest will close Tuesday, July 4th at 6 p. m. and the prize will be awarded at the next Grand Session to be held in Coffyville Kan. in July.
Publication Notice
( First Publication in The Wichita Searchlight, Saturday, April 15th, 1911. )
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF SEDGWICK COUNTY, KANSAS
John Grundy, Plaintiff vs NOTICE
Lula Grundy, Defendant
STATE OF KANSAS.
88
SEDGWICK COUNTY
The State of Kansas
To Lula Grundv, Greeting:
You are hereby notified that the above named Plaintiff has, this 15th day of April, A. D. 1911, commenced his action in said petition filed by a divorce from you. And you are further notified that unless you appear and answer said petition filed by the plaintiff on or before the 28th, day of May, A. D. 1911, the allegations of said petition will be taken as true and judgment rendered accordingly against you and for said Plaintiff divorcing him from you and such other and further relief that the Court might deem just and proper.
R. B. McWilliams, Atty for Plaintiff
Attested
Chas. D. Fazel, Cierk
By J. L. Gilchrist, Deputy
PUBLICATION NOTICE
[ First publication in the Wichita Searchlight
Saturday, April 22nd, 1911. [
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF SEDGWICK
COUNTY, KANSAS
Emma Troutt, Plaintiff
To the said Defendant, E. W. Troutt;—
You are hereby notified that on the 21st day of April, A. D., 1911, the said plaintiff filed her petition against you in the above Court, praying for a divorce and the costs of this suit; and that you must answer the said petition on or before the 5th day of June, A. D., 1911, or the same will be taken as true and judgment rendered against you accordingly for a divorce and the costs of this action.
Emma Troutt, Plaintiff
R. B. McWilliams, Atty for Plaintiff
Attested
Chas. D. Fazel, Clerk
By J. L. Glichrist, Deputy
PUBLICATION NOTICE
( First published in the Wichita Searchlight April 29th. A. D. 1911. )
IN THE CITY COURT, WICHITA, KANSAS
Ada Coulter, Plaintiff
State of Kansas to James Taylor, Greeting:-
You are hereby notified that you have been sued in the above named Court by the above named Plaintiff for the sum of $33.50 for board and room and she has filed her BILL OF PARTICULARS in said case and by said Court duly attached property belonging to said defendant in the possession of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and that sagainishee duly answered upon the 18th day of April 1911, that they held $61.50 in their possession belonging to you; subject to a prior garnishment for $19.45, wherein James E. Farmer is plaintiff against you is this Court; that unless you the said BILL OF PARTICULARS filed by this plaintiff against you or appear herein on or before the 1st day of June 1911, the allegations therein contained will be taken as true and judgment rendered against you in favor of said plaintiff for the sum of $33.50, and all costs of this action, together with all the costs of the garnishee proceeding proceeding arising herein.
Ada Coulter, Plaintiff
R. B. McWilliams, Atty. for Plaintiff
Attested
J. B. Fishback, Clerk City Court
---
The Qualnt Belluga.
Cavira 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 vernality—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.
---
TABOR CASH PRIZES
$15. To Be Given Away $15 ABSOLUTELY FREE To Temples, Tabernacles, or Tents. Kans.-Neb. Jurisdiction Begins Saturday, April 1st. Ends Tuesday, July 4th. 6 pm. Read Our Prize Contest Offer
WE WANT 1000 New Subscribers To The SEARCHLIGHT
Will You Help Us Get Them?
Beginning Saturday, April 1st, 1911, and positively ending Tuesday, July 4th., 1911, at 6 p.m., we will offer three [3] CASH PRIZES to the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent that sends us the greatest number of paid subscribers to The Wichita Searchlight.
THREE CASH PRIZES
$10.00 — First Prize — To the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent that sends us the greatest number of paid subscriptions for one year each, [ not less than ten ] we will pay Ten Dollars in GOLD
$3.00 — Second Prize — To the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent that sends us the next greatest number of paid subscribers for one year each, [ not less than five ] we pay Three Dollars in SILVER
$2.00 — Third Prize — To the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent that sends us the third greatest number of paid subscribers for one year each [ not less than three ] we will pay a Two Dollar Bill.
All Subscriptions Are Strictly
$1. = Per Year in Advance = $1.
WHO WILL BE THE WINNERS?
Read Carefully Our Conditions
This Contest will be conducted under the following Rules and Conditions. Read!!!
First — This Contest is open to any Temple, Tabernacle or Tent in the Kansas-Nebraska Jurisdiction
Second — Any member of any Temple, Tabernacle or Tent can send in subscriptions with the name, number of your Temple, Tabernacle or Tent and it will be duly credited.
Third — Solicitations of subscribers is not to be confined to members of the order alone, but may accept the subscription of any person, whether they are members of the Order or not and your Temple, Tabernacle or Tent will receive due credit itor said name.
Fourth — In sending in subscription please write a plain, legible hand and give the name, address and town or city of the new subscriber; together with your name and the address and the name and number of your Temple, Tabernacle or Tent,
Fifth — In this contest absolutely no name will be credited unless the money accompanies the name.
Sixth — A true and accurate account will be kept of each subscription and upon receipt of the same we will forward you a receipt bearing the name of subscriber, amount paid and the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent to be credited. Keep this receipt
Seventh — This list will be submitted to a disinterested committee of three persons to be chosen later. Every Temple, Tabernacle and Tent should get interested in this contest.
The prizes of this contest will be awarded to the winners at the next session of the Grand Temple and Tabernacle to be held in Coffeyville, Kansas in July.
Address all communications to
W. N. MILLER, Editor
630 N. Main St., Wichita, Kan.
Agents wanted everywhere
TEACHERS' TRAIN WRECKED
ELEVEN WERE KILLED NEAR EASTON, PA.
The Train Carried 168 Persons—Of the Ten in Hospitals Three May Die.
Easton, Pa.—Eleven persons lost their lives in the school teachers' special excursion train that was derailed and burned on the Pennsylvania railroad at Martin's Creek.
Three of the dead have been identified. The bodies of six others are in the morgue and two male passengers are missing. It is expected that their bones will be found in the debris. Three of the ten injured in the Easton hospital probably will die.
Officials of the Pennsylvania railroad who declined to give the exact cause of the wreck, declared that it was almost miraculous that more of the 168 excursionists did not lose their lives. A. P. Gest, division superintendent, said that in his opinion the fire that swept the entire train was caused by the simultaneous bursting of the gas tanks on the cars and instant ignition from friction. There was no oil tank near the train.
The accident was probably due to a weak track and the high speed of the excursion train In rounding a curve. The roadbed was soft at this point and the rails and ties appear to have been old. When the swift express train struck this part of the track the rails gave way.
BUT 1910 NICKELS ARE GOOD
Some One Caused a Lot of Trouble by Starting a Rumor That None Were Coined That Year.
Washington.—Some joker in the Middle West has caused the banks, treasury, the secret service and a lot of other folk much trouble by spreading a story that the government coined no nickels in 1910 and that every five-cent piece in circulation bearing that date must therefore be counterfeit.
The fact is that the mints coined 30,169,953 nickels in 1910 and about $1,000,000 worth of those coins are in circulation. For the last two days the mint bureau and the secret service have been besieged with calls for help from banks of the Middle West. Many of the genuine coins have been sent to Washington as counterfeit.
RAILROADS REBATED $1,413,000
That is the Amount Commerce Commission Investigators Allege Was Returned at Cleveland.
Washington, D. C. — Preliminary figures have been compiled by the interstate commerce commission's investigators showing the amounts which the government alleges have been illegally rebated in the recent cases at Cleveland.
Between April 1, 1908, and July 31, 1909, it is alleged $480,000 was rebated by the Pennsylvania railroad to shippers of which $133,000 is said to have been paid subsidiaries of the United States Steel corporation.
Between January 1, 1908, and June 30, 1909, it is alleged, more than $798,000 was rebated to the Carnegie Steel company by the Bessemer & Lake Erie railroad.
QUICK REPORT ON RECIPROCITY
The Intention is Announced to Push the Measure and Get it to the Senate as Soon as Possible.
Washington, D. C.—"It is the intention of the finance committee to press the reciprocity measure to a speedy report. There is a general desire to get it into the senate at the earliest possible moment, and we are working hard to accomplish that result. There is no good reason why there should be any delay and I certainly am not in favor of holding the bill in committee."
The foregoing was the statement made, following the first session of the finance committee, by Senator Penrose, the new chairman.
No Immunity Baths.
Columbus, Ohio.—Ohio legislators who hoped by testifying before the grand jury now investigating alleged bribery in the assembly to escape conviction by means of an immunity bath, were disappointed when Prosecuting Attorney Turner and Attorney General Hogan refused to accept their testimony.
Bankers Like Aldrich Plan.
Nashville, Tennessee.—The executive council of the American Bankers' association, which is in session here, admittedly favors the Aldrich plan of monetary reform. It is expected the council will adopt a resolution commending it.
Iola, Kansas.—Patrick J. Desmond,
a salesman representing a Kansas
City liquor house, was sentenced to
serve 60 days in jail and to pay a fine
of $200 in the district court on
chearges of contracting the sales of
intoxicants.
Ice Cream Cones Destroyed.
Kansas City, Mo.—Two hundred
thousand ice cream cones that contained acid and substitute sweetening were destroyed by Dr. J. S. Barbee, pure food inspector.
CRUEL AND INHUMAN
No you might hurt your pitching arm.
The Idea of Making a Star Pit
Hurry fellers!
all their men
have come!
No you might
hurt your
pitching
arm.
Chicago Evening Post
The Idea of Making a Star Pitcher Cut Grass in the Afternoon.
MR. BORAH GOT QUICK ACTION
POPULAR ELECTION OF SENATORS BEFORE SENATE.
Judiciary Committee Made a Favorable Report in Record Time—Is Now Unfinished Business.
Washington, D. C.—A marked victory for popular election of senators was achieved by Senator Borah in record time, when the proposed constitutional amendment was favorably reported by the committee judiciary. The measure now takes its place at the head of the senate calendar.
The action of the committee came as a surprise, even to the most sanguine friends of this great reform. When the committee met, not even Mr. Borah thought it would be possible to pry out the resolution until after it had taken the usual committee course.
Senators Root, Dillingham, and Clark were prompt to ask for delay. They insisted that the matter ought to take its natural course. The resolution was not new to senators. Mr. Borah pointed out. It had been debated long and exhaustively during the last session and he insisted that the committee act at once. Somewhat to his own surprise he had his way about it. When the vote was taken the committee was recorded as follows:
In favor—Bacon, Chilton, Culberson and Overman, Democrats; Borah, Brown and Cummins, Republicans.
Against reporting the resolution—Clark of Wyoming, Brandegee, Dillingham, Root and Sutherland all Republicans.
FOR THE McNAMARA DEFENSE
The American Federation of Labor Will Take an Active Part in Defending Accused Men. Indianapolis. After a lengthy conference of labor leaders at the offices of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, 222 East Michigan street, it was announced that the American Federation of Labor would take an active part in the defense of J. J. McNamara and his brother, James, who are under arrest in California, charged with complicity in a number of dynamiting outrages.
Peaches and Strawberries Safe.
Kansas City, Mo—According to information received by Kansas City southern officials, the strawberry crop in southwest Missouri did not suffer from the frost. The frost, according to the road's weather bulletins, did not extend south of Pittsburg, Kan. The indications are that the peach crop also was uninjured. A heavier yield than ever before known is expected from the Ozark region and northern Arkansas.
Railroads Get the Cash
New York, N. Y.—Railroads representing probably two-thirds of the total mileage of the country have borrowed since the first of the year the enormous amount of $427,410,000. Add to this the $100,000,000 the Missouri Pacific system is arranging to borrow in order to finance the extensive improvements and the grand total for the year will exceed that of any similar period for more than a decade.
Banks for Postal Plan
Washington, D. C.—Though banking interests in many places have objected to the establishment of postal savings banks, the postoffice department received a joint request from the association banks and clearing houses of Stockton, Cal., for the establishment of a depository there.
New Postal Banks Each Month.
Washington, D. C.—Assured of the success of the postal savings system, Postmaster General Hitchcock has decided to designate from 50 to 100 additional postal savings banks monthly, until the system has been generally established through the United States
Foreigners Safe at Canton
Hongkong, China.—Advices from Canton, where the revolutionary movement originated, indicate that the foreigners have escaped harm.
Hurry fellers!
all their men
have come!
Chicago Evening Post
her Cut Grass in the Afternoon.
OHIO LEGISLATURE UNDER FIRE
Forty Members Charged With Bribery
—Lobbyists Must Tell What They
Know of Wrong Doing.
Columbus, Ohio. — The Franklin county grand jury met to consider the wholesale charges of bribery involving about 40 members of the Ohio legislature. The matter was taken before the grand jury instead of a legislative committee on the advice of Governor Harmon and others in order to prevent any accused members from escaping punishment by an "immunity bath." Scores of witnesses have been summoned and it is said the jury may make a partial report some time soon.
Officers of state organizations interested in legislation before this assembly have been summoned to tell what they know of efforts to hold them up by members. They include officers of such bodies as the state board of commerce, the Anti-Saloon league, the Personal Liberty league and heads of large corporations.
DECISION ON FOREST RESERVES
State Laws Do Not Govern and Stockmen Must Have Permits to Use Lands.
Washington, D. C.-By holding that the federal government without consent of the state affected may set aside vast areas of public lands as a forest reserve and that such reserve is not subject to the state fencing laws, the supreme court of the United States settled two burning Western issues.
Stockmen of the West lost a hard fought contest when the supreme court also decided that indictments be brought against persons grazing stock on forest reserve without permits.
The First Installment of Democratic Employes Begin Work at the Capitol.
Washington—Climbing the long stairs of the capitol with reluctant feet Saturday, the advance guard of the deposed office holders wended their gloomy way out to the cold world. Twenty-five policemen, janitors and elevator conductors were replaced by loyal Democrats who have been fighting madly for the favored places. Fifty more will go today and fifty each day thereafter until all the Republicans have left.
BANGOR ME. PARTLY BURNED
At Last Reports $6,000,000 Worth of Property Had Been Destroyed—Dynamite Failed to Stop It.
Bangor, Me.—Property valued at upwards of $6,000,000 was destroyed, hundreds of persons made homeless and almost the entire business section of the city devastated in the first five hours of a fire which, at last reports, firemen were getting under control, although it still burned fiercely in places. One life is known to have been lost, an unidentified man who was killed by a falling wall.
Oldest Military Company
Savannah, Georgia.—Members of the Chatham artillery, the oldest active volunteer military company in the United States, and one of the Nation's most historic batteries, celebrated their 125th anniversary as an organization with a banquet.
Canton Outbreak Serious.
Hongkong, China.—Rebellion, brigandage and anarchy are stalking through the western half of Kwang Tung Province. The rebels are murdering, pillaging and burning.
Nebraska Bank Robbers Got $1,500.
Hastings, Nebraska.—The Bank of Rosemond was entered by robbers and the safe was blown after the third explosion. The robbers got $1,500 and escaped without leaving any clew as to their identity.
Washington, D. C.—Protection and free trade were the themes of debate in the house over the Democratic bill to put agricultural implements, certain food products and manufactured articles on the free list.
PUT SENATORS TO A TEST
President Taft Is Making the Reciprocity Bill a Party Measure—Squarely Up to Senate.
Washington.—The administration is marshaling its forces in the senate for the Canadian treaty bfh. The president will known finally when the measure comes up for passage what reliance may be paced in the friendship of the senators who have assumed the guardianship of the administration's interests in the past. For it is recognized here in Washington that having made the treaty an administration issue and called the extra session for its passage, failure in the house of the administration's friends would be fatal to the prospects of the party under his leadership. So there will be no compromise and no sidestepping the question.
The Democratic house having accepted the bill as it came from the president, without, as was declared in the house debate, "the dotting of an I" or the crossing of a "t," the responsibility is checked up to the senate direct and plain. The Reputicans either must pass the bill or humiliate the administration.
MEXICO CITY IS THREATENED
If Peace Negotiations Fail Insurrectos Will Make an Effort to Take the Capital.
Mexico City, Mexico. While peace negotiations are pending between Gen. Madero and President Diaz in the mountains of northern Chihuahua armies of the insurrectors are almost within striking distance of the Mexican capital. The latest and boldest strike was the capture of the city of Durango, capital of Durango state. It was reported to Gen. Cosio, the war minister, that the rebels are now concentrating about Cuernayaca. Should they capture that strategic point they would be practically at the gates of Mexico City. There are now less than 3,000 federal soldiers to defend the national capital and the rebel forces are so scattered and so well entrenched that it is practically impossible to move additional reinforcements into the city.
THE PRESIDENT COMING WEST
He Plans to Visit Kansas City September 25 on His Way to
Kansas City, Missouri—President William Taft has accepted an invitation to stop in Kansas City September 25 on his way to Hutchinson, Kan., to visit the state fair. The invitation came from an organization here which calls itself the Kansas City Press club.
A dispatch from Washington said that so far as arranged the president will spend the entire day in Kansas City, although Secretary Hilles had not completed the dates for the president's trip. It is possible that the arrangements to 'be made later will change the order as to the Kansas City visit, but the president will spend at least a part of the day here.
SENT WARSHIPS TO CHINA
The Revolution is Spreading and They Go to Protect Americans.
Washington, D. C.—Dispatches from China say the anti-Manchu revolution has extended from Kwang Tung province, in which Hong Kong and Canton, to the Fukien province, in which is the city of Amoy. These provinces are the closest of any part of China to the Philippine islands.
United States warships already are on the way to Canton to protect Americans, and the state department at Washington cabled Rear Admiral Hubbard, commander-in-chief of the Asiatic fleet, to send more vessels if they are needed.
BIG TRUST CASES MAY GO OVER
Unless Decisions Are Announced May 15 or May 29 They Must Wait Until October.
Washington, D. C.-The supreme court of the United States did not announce a decision in either Standard Oil or the Tobacco suits arising under the Sherman anti-trust law.
Only two more decision days remain in the present term. These fall on May 15 and May 29. Unless the decisions are announced on either one of these dates the trust cases will go over until the court convenes next October.
Naponee. Neh.-Four robbers rode into this place in a motor car, blew up the vault of the Naponee State bank and escaped with $2,000 in cash.
Says Road Carried Quail.
Oklahoma City, Ok.-Civil suit has been instituted by State Game and Fish Warden Doolin against the Rock Island railroad in Blaine county for the alleged carrying of an illegal shipment of quail.
Plumbers Want More Pay.
Toledo, O.-One hundred plumbers went on strike when their employers refused to grant an increase of 25 per cent in wages. The men have been getting $4 a day. They asked for $5.
CALUMET
BAKING POWDER
The wonder of baking powders—Calumet.
Wonderful in its raising powers—its uniformity, its never failing results, its purity.
Wonderful in its economy.
It costs less than the high-price trust brands, but it is worth as much. It costs a trifle more than the cheap and big can kinds—it is worth more. But proves its real economy in the baking.
Use CALUMET—the Modern Baking Powder.
At all Grocers.
Received
Highest
Award
World's Pure
Food
Exposition
Churches and Tuberculosis.
Statistics showing how serious a problem tuberculosis is to the ordinary church congregation have been issued by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. From reports received from over 725 churches, with a membership of over 312,000 communicants of twenty denominations, and from 208 cities and towns in 12 states in vari-7,000 deaths in 1910, over 700 or 10 per cent, were caused by tuberculosis. This means 2.24 deaths for every thousand members or communicants. While the percentage of deaths from tuberculosis compared with other diseases is not higher in the churches, according to these figures, than in the country at large, the tuberculosis death rate, as shown by the church returns, is higher per thousand communicants than that for the general population in the registration area of the United States, which the census bureau gave as 1.67 in 1909.
Not Exactly Patriotic.
He was, let us say, Irish, was among several men of other nationalities, and had imbbed several beverages. He was extremely anxious, moreover, to uphold the glories of Erin, but was not quite so sure of what was going on about him. A foreigner near him remarked:
"An honest man is the noblest work of God!"
The Hibernian didn't quite catch what was said.
"Get out!—an Irishman is!" he roared.
ALL RUN DOWN.
A Typical Case of Kidney Trouble and How It Was Cured.
A. J. Adams, 242 Rose St., Roseburg, Ore., says: "My back ached fiercely for hours and then eased up only to leave me so weak I could hardly move.
Kidney secretions contained heavy sediment and burned awfully in passage. Everything seemed to be gradually giving way; my limbs ached, sight became poor and blood circulation was so impaired that I reeled
Kidney secretions contained heavy sediment and burned awfully in passage. Everything seemed to be gradually giving way; my limbs ached, sight became poor and blood circulation was so impaired that I reeled and had to clutch something to keep from falling. I grew worse and for weeks was unable to work. One thing after another I tried without relief and then I began with Doan's Kidney Pills. I now feel like a different person."
Remember the name—Doan's.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Not a Singer.
"Johnny," the teacher said, "here is a book. Now, stand up straight and sing like a little man."
The song was "Nearer, My God." No sooner had the school commenced to sing than a little girl waved her hand frantically. Stopping the singing, the teacher inquired the cause.
"Please, teacher, I think Johnny will get nearer if he whistles."
If thou art a master, be sometimes blind; if a servant, sometimes deaf.—Buller.
A man is seldom arrested for striking an attitude.
ARE YOU FREE FROM
Headaches, Colds, Indigestion, Pains, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Dizziness? If you are not, the most effective, prompt and pleasant method of getting rid of them is to take, now and then, a desertspoonful of the ever refreshing and truly beneficial laxative remedy—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It is well known throughout the world as the best of family laxative remedies, because it acts so gently and strengthens naturally without irritating the system in any way.
To get its beneficial effects it is always necessary to buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., bearing the name of the Company, plainly printed on the front of every package.
DIDN'T CARE TO BE DONE.
Howell—He does everything in his power—
Powell—Then I'm glad that I'm not in his power.
THE TRUTH ABOUT BLUING.
Avoid liquid bluing. Every drop of water is adulteration. Half a cent's worth of blue in a large bottle filled with water is sold for 5 cents or 10 cents in many places.
Always use RED CROSS BALL BLUE, the blue that's all blue. A large two-oz. package, all blue, sells for 5 cents or 4-oz. for 10 cents. Delights the laudress. AT ALL GOOD GROCERS.
Subject to Restrictions
"I was cleanin' fo' a new lady las' week an' de dirt in her kitchen was a sight, po' thing," said Rose, Mrs. Frazer's dark-skinned charwoman.
"But why did she let it get like that?" asked the lady.
"I dunno, ma'm. Guess she never seen it. Some cooks, you know, is mighty part'lar 'bout' lowin' de madam in de kitchen. Dey Jos' take dere orders from her upstairs an' she don't have no call to go into de kitchen at all."
Self-possession implies the capacity for self-restraint, self-compulsion, and self-direction.—W. H. Thomson.
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated easy to take as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels and cure constipation.
Ambition is a longing that makes some men near-great.
Oh! That Awful Gas
Did you hear it? How embarrassing. Theestomach noisesmake you wish you could sink through the floor. You imagine everyone hears them. Keep a box of CASCARETS in your purse or pocket and take a part of one after eating. It will relieve the stomach of gas.
CASCARETS 10c a box for a week's treatment. Alldruggists. Biggest seller in the world-million boxes a month.
WANTED Men to learn the few weeks complete, practice, instructions, and practice; tools donated; positions guaranteed; flatted; on-site shop reduced price; wages while learning, diploma granted; college of Bakers College, 718 E. Longest Ave., Wichita, Kan. 111 E. 6th St., Topper, Kan.
WANTED Mnt learn to train
the five week course briar trade
instructions; unlimited practice;
tools donated; limited practice;
for shop; reduced infusion price;
for school; reduced price;
Schwab system; Barboree College; KIKE brand;
6th St., Topeka, Kan.
图