Wichita Searchlight

Saturday, June 3, 1911

Wichita, Kansas

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THE WICHITA SEARCHLIGHT YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY TRADING WITH THE MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER. FOURTEENTH YEAR A Few of I take especial pleasure in making of the above cut, Dr. H. T. Belden, our popular dentist. Dr. Belden is a graduate of Mehany Dental College, located at Nashville, He is the son of Rev. H. T. Bolden, Missouri. Rev. Bolden took great to fit him for the vicisitudes of life, ing him from Lincoln Institute, the After finishing his professional the hand of Miss Wertie Harris, one go with him through life. tion to begin the practice of his pro Princess of the Plains. Arriving gle at 517 North Main street. He has come to stay with us and ing recently bought a beautiful home of his friends will receive a hearty wife. ciates the patronage of his people in as he pays railroad fare for all out of June will clean teeth at half price. call and see Dr. Boldn, 517 North Main ronage and whose motto is "Satisfac R. B. McWilliams, Attorney-at-Law The above is a cut of o Lawyers at the bar, who Williams is a gratuate of School, and has been pro revolutionized things[in are sought for througho "He has the goods." putting your legal matf OFFICE 601 N..Main St. The above is a cut of one of Wichita's formost Lawyers at the bar, who is making good. Mr. Mc. Williams is a graduate of Kansas University Law School, and has been practicing 15 years. He has revolutionized things in Wichita. His services are sought for throughout the Southwest because "He has the goods." You make no mistake by putting your legal matter in his hands OFFICE 601 N., Main St. Phone Mkt. 1537 Trade with our advertisers they will treat you right. A Few of Our Professional & Business Men of Wichita. a pioneer minister of the state of pains in educating his son in order in this he was successful in graduat-state normal of Missouri, class '04. course Young Bolden sought and won of Nashville's popular young ladies, to He then cast about him for a locafession, and after visiting many cities August 3, 1908, and hung out his shin I can truthfully say that Dr. Bolden Wichita and also with our neighboring number of patients. his success is due to the fact of havat 635 North Water street, where all welcome, by him and his excellent I felt assured that the doctor appre- Wichita and from neighboring towns, town patients, and during the month And when in need of dental service street, who will appreciate your patition or no poy." SATURDAY, JUNE, 3, 1911, Professional & Business J. H. Sayles THE MERRY MEN FOR THE YOUNG PEOPLE WICHITA Enough MEN'S CHRISTIAN (COLORED BRANCH) Main Membership $1 per year Face in Wichita where men and boys which is free from demoralizing influence department is supervised by competent directed by fifteen of the best-known themselves personally responsible for PHYSICAL DEPARTMENT Dr. N. D. Briley, Chm. Basket-Ball, Base-Ball, Volley-Ball, Cycling Exercise. RELIGIOUS DEPARTMENT J. T. Chinneth, Chm. Sunday Men's Meetings, Good Music Education DEPARTMENT Geo. W. White, Chm. Library. Night Classes will be Orchestra. MUSICAL DEPARTMENT Dr. A. K. Lawrence, Chm. Band. Orchestra. Glee Club. Capt. N. Clark Smith, Directed Music FURNISHED FOR ALL OCCASIONS, for boys 12 to 18 years of immature boys. HiKing Scoutcraft, Life-Saving Aid to Injured. James G. Wiley THE FOLLOWING PHOTOGRAPH IS A PHOTO OF A MAN WHO WAS A FOLLOWING PHOTOGRAPH. THE MAN IS SEATED IN A SINGLE SEAT, WEARING A TUXEDO AND A BOW TIE. HE IS SQUARE-HEADED AND HIS HANDS ARE PRESSED ON THE SIDE. THE MAN IS STANDING WITH A STANDING FOOT. THE PHOTOGRAPH IS A BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPH. THE MERRY MAKER FOR THE YOUNG PEOPLE IN WICHITA YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOC. (COLORED BRANCH) Only place in Wichita where men and boys congregate in large numbers, which is free from demoralizing influences. Each department is supervised by competent men. The whole institution is directed by fifteen of the best-known men of the city who hold themselves personally responsible for the conduct of all departments. Bible Class, Sunday Men's Meetings, Good Music, Good Speakers. EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT. Boy Sceuts, for boys 12 to 18 years of age. Make little men out of immature boys. HiKing--Fishing - and Swimming- Scoutcraft, Life-Saving. First Aid to Injured. Patriotism. James G. Wiley, Scout Master. BARBER SHOP Cutting Shaving and Masoge, Hair Satisfaction Guarenteed W. L n St. 611 N. Main St. PALACE P W. M. Majors Prop. Wichita, Kansas. 605 North Main Street First-Class Making of Men's Garments. Cleaning, Pressing, and Reparing A Specialty Courteous Attention Bell Phone 3055 A. Dr. F. O. Miller, The above is a splendid picture of Fracis O'Hara Miller, M. D., who is one of the best physicians in this city and state. He is progressive and believes in doing. He has a suite of rooms at 513 North Main. With all the modern appliances, and management of this paper can say for sure that he has made good. Gee! Go ahead. Doctor, we are with you. Since we know you are right. He has a large and growing practice, and says he believes in "doing things." His watch word is "Watch Wichita Win." He owns a nice modern cottage at 1312 North Indiana. I tell you, "Doc" is going some. The Little Wonder Open Day and Night. Ladies Dining Room and Lunch at all hours. When you are hungry stop at the LITTLE WONDER When you are sleepy stop at the LITTLE WONDER for a good bed. 507-509 N. Main St. A. J. Cousar Prop. Dr. G. G. Brown, came to Wichita three pears ago-- during which time he has a comfortable practice. He has an office at 601 North Main St. and a beautiful residence at 937 Indiana Avenue--Phones No. Market 1537 and 3259. Go and call on him he will make you well again. NO.8 The subject of this sketch was born in Columbus, Ohio, was educated in the public schools of that city, graduated in Pharmacy at the Ohio State University, served in the Ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry during the Spanish-American war as hospital steward, having the care of the health of 440 men of that organization. He came to Kansas City, Kan., in 1899, as managing pharmacist for the Wyandotte Drug Co., which position he filled with credit for four years, he then took up the study of medicine and surgery at Howard University, in Washington, D.C., and graduated from the Ohio Medical University in 1907. The doctor has been in Wichita since August, 190, enjoying a lucrative practice which is increasing each month. His office at 517 North Main street is equipped with microscope electrical apparatus, and he is ready to treat patients along the latest improved medical and surgical lines. Calls answered night and day. Phone, Market 4634. Dr. A. K. Lawrence. The doctor is affiliated with all the negro fraternal orders, except one, He is commander in chief of the Western Star Consistory a 33d degree Mason and officer of the Imperial Council A. E. O. Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. He is also active in musical lines being chorister of the Second Baptist church choir, and director of the Y. M. C. A. band. May his shadow never grow less. Dr. G. G. Brown. “SPEEDWAY KING” GREAT - INDIANPOLIS 500-MILE RACE WON BY PENNSYLVA- NIA DRIVER, IN RECORD TIME OF 6:41:08 Mulford and Bruce Brown Finish Close—Mechanican Dickson Kill- ed and Two Drivers, and Six Mechanicans Injured, is the Toll of the Day. Motor Speedway, Indianapolis, Ind. —One life was sacrificed and several men were injured today in the first 500 mile race on a speedway, won by Ray Horroun, driving a Marmon car, in 6 hours, 41 minutes and § seconds. Closely pressing Harroun for victory were Ralph Mulford, with a Lozier, who finished second, and David Bruce- Brown, in a Fiat, a good third. Seventy-seven thousand persons shouted encouragement to the forty pilots who started the race at 10 o'clock this morning and with unflag- ging enthusiasm cheered the leaders in the last laps and watched the field pound around the course in division of lesser honors. In the most serious accident of the day, 8. P. Dickson of Chicago, me- coanican for Arthur Greiner, driving an Amplex, lost his life in an upset on the back stretch, The race had been on but a few minutes and the Amplex was in its thirtieth mile, when. the rim of one of the front wheels flew off. The car twisted on the tvack,-hurk ing Greiner and Dickson from their seats. Dickson was thrown againsta fence twenty feet away and was ter- ribly mangled. He was killed in- stantly. Greiner was unconscious when pick- ed up, and it was feared he had a concussion of the brain, but when re- found his only injury was a fractured arm. Succeeding accidents thrilled the immense crowd which, with nerves at high tension, watched the cars flash by the grand stand and momentarily expected a carnival of death. The cars at times swept around the course in groups at terrific speed. Men injured in the mishaps were: Dave-Lewis, mechanican for Teddy Tetzlaff (Lozier), right leg broken near hip. “Harry E. Knight, driver of Westcott, breast bruised and possible internal injuries. John T. Glover, Knight's mechani- can, body bruises, Bob Evans, mechanican’ for Jack Tower (Jackson), body bruised when he leaped from car in panic. John Wood, mechanical for Joe Jargerburger (Case), run over and badly bruised, The crowd was too large to be con- trolled by the militia and the hun dreds of special policemen posted about the grounds. The spectators swarmed across the infield when Dickson was killed and pressed close about his body and that of the uncon- scious Greiner. Soldiers fought to clear a space for the surgeons when the ambulance arrived. The throng was wild with excite ment after the first accident and Tushed back and forth over the field when other accidents were reported. In the stand men and women were on their feet for hours, cheering their favorite and groaning with appre- hension when cars crashed into care or ran off the inner edge of the track. ‘The cars began to cast their tires, burned out by the fierce grind over the speedway’s brick pavement. Steering gears began to give way. Directly in front of the grand stand Joe Jargersburger's Case car got way from him and switched back and forth across the track. Wood, the mechanican, leaped out and fell and the car passed over him. He lay in a path of death, for others swerved safely by as he rose and staggered from the track, with the exception of Harry Knight’s Westcott, which plunged into the inner fence, threw out Knight and Glover and careened against Herbert Lyttle's Ap- person, turning it over. In the earlier part of the race the track was so filled with the whirling cars of the contestants that the race seemed but an exhibition of speeding automobiles. The winner was hidden in the mass. At the 150 miles Bruce Brown had set a new record, regard- Jess of classification. His time was 1:59:12, as against Dawson's old mark of 2:01:09, When Harroun took the lead in the 190th mile the race took form and then the crowd's interest was heightened and divided between the contest and catastrophes that were momentarily impending. KAWS RECEIVING ANNUITY. Over Eleven Thousand Paid Out by Indian Agent. Guthrie, Okla—The regular Kaw Indian annuity payment is being made by A. R. Miller, Indian agent at Kaw City. The amount paid to the Indians was $11,462. Of this sum about $7,500 is distributed among resident Indians of Washunga, The minor Indians’ money is placed in different banks and held in trust by the government to be used for their maintenance and gunvort. THE GREAT RACE TO HARROUN He Drove His Car 500 Miles at a Greater Speed Than Any Man Ever Before Attained. Indianapolis, Indina.—Nearly 100, 000 persons from every state in the Union saw 40 of the most intrepid automobile drivers in the eounfty. Court death onvthe A. A. U. saucer shaped Indianapolis speedway. After all it was Harroun, the quiet, self contained little man who rarely has a word to say, who really de- served the victory that was his atver six hours, 41 minutes and 8 seconds of racing. He drove a masterly race. His car was shaped like a wasp and was painted the colors of a wasp— black and yellow. Harroun carried no mechanican with him. He drove the entire race with the exception of 80 miles. Then he was relieved. He has the satisfaction of knowing that he went more miles at a high rate of speed than any human being has ever traveled any where in any kind of a mechanical contrivance. Railroad trains have never sustained a speed of 75 miles an hour for 000 miles; neither have aeroplanes. The auto- mobile is the only thing made by the hand of man that has. . POSTOFFICE SELF SUPPORTING Starting With a Deficit of $17,500,000 There Is Now a Surplus of $1,090,000. Washington-—It is officially an- nounced that the postoffice depart- ment is now self supporting for the first time in 30 years. The postal service not having need of the $3,000,000 set aside trom public funds, the department has returned that sum to the treasury. The official statement given out says in part: “At the present time there is a postal surplus of more than $1,000,000 and unless the expenses during the next month should prove extraordi- nary the surplus will be still greater for the year. “This condition is little less than remarkable when it is considered that the present administration inherited a deficit of more than $17,500,000, the largest in the history of the postal service.” WILL CAUCUS ON A TRUST LAW Democrats of the House Will Meet to Decide on Action at an Early Date. Washington, D. C.—Effective leg- {slation to meet the decision of the supreme court in the Standard Oil ease will be made a part of the legis- lative program of the house Demo- crats. The bill that will be supported by the Democrats will be agreed upon at a caucus of the majority to be held as soon as the woolen schedule has been disposed of. ‘The call for the caucus was circu: lated by Representative Smith of Texas, a member ot the committee on interstate and foreign commerce. It was signed by nearly all of the Demo- erats, including the leaders of the party in the house. GERMANY ALSO WANTS PEACE Count Von Bernstorff Has Asked Secretary Knox for a Copy of Arbitration Treaty. Washington, D. C.—Germany has expressed its Willingness to enter in- to negotiations with the United States for a general arbitration treaty along the lines laid down by Secretary of State Knox in the tentative draft of the government’s proposal now in the hands of Great Britain and France. Count von Bernstorff, the German am- bassador at Washington, conveyed this information to Secretary Knox and asked for a copy of the basic proposition of the United States. Five Killed in a Collision, Los Angeles.—Jerry Kauffmann, of Long Beach, three members of his family, and W. S. Hollingsworth, of Denver, were killed when a city- bowid Pacifie Blectric car from Whittier dashed into their auto as it attempted to cross the tracks near that town. May Indict the Lumbermen, Chicago, Il—The federal grand fury, under orders from Attorney General Wickersham, will take up an investigation of the alleged lumber trust June 5, with a view to indieting concerns and members of concerns individually for alleged violations of the anti-trust laws. More Topedo Boat Destrovers. ‘Washington, D. C.—That naval ex- perts consider the torpedo boat de- stroyer one of the most effective in- struments in modern naval warfare is shown by the announcement that the navy department will open bids August 7 for elght of those vessels, Twenty Injured at Ball Game. Granite City, IlL—Twenty persons were’ seriously injured, one or two fatally, in the Madison county base- ball park by a tornado which blew over the grandstand. Thirteen of the injured are members of the opposing ball teams. Burlington Wreck Kills Fourteen. McCook, Nebraska.—-Two Burling- ton trains met head-on two miles west of Indianola and 14 are dead and 22 injured as a result. Physicians say the death list will be increased. Hi THERE! THAT’LL DO FOR MAY! At i H itt | ol Fy | Ke i i me a ee : ‘e H aX Ebel Bs hee i BES e~ B® CM Zz E eee) ees, a pe a) =» Y S in @ eS ee WY ee) “LR \" ee / SSR f SN — ESS ah pS aa Sine aS Si RIE oe Pg sei oT trim. A TOBACCO TRUST DECISION THE COMPANY IS DECLARED A MONOPOLY UNDER THE LAW. The Case is Remanded Back to Lower Court and Company is Ordered Dissolved Within Six/ Months. Washington, D. C,—Judgment against the Tobacco Trust was sus- tained by the supreme court in a de- cision that the attorneys on either side may twist into a victory accord- ing to their point of view. The trust is adjudged a monopoly within the meaning of the Sherman law and its dissolution is ordered within six months. But the case is remanded back to the circuit court for “the purpose of ascertaining and determining upon some plan or meth- od of dissolving the combination and of creating out of the lements now composing it a new condition that shall be honestly in harmony with and not epugnant to the law.” Here, then it is believed, a nucleus is at last ‘secured for a definite and positive basis upon which big busi- ness may operate. Working in con- junction with counsel for the Tobacco ‘Trust, it is suggested that the attor- vneys for the Standard Ofl may frame ‘with the cooperation of the circuit court at New York—to which the case is remanded—a plan of combination, ‘reasonable and conforming to the de: cision of the supreme court, upon ‘which business may proceed within ‘the law’ and without further inter- ‘ruption or molestation. | This is the favorable view of the ‘decision. ‘The other side is that by ‘this decision of the supreme court, nothing is definitely decided inasmuch as any plan that is agreed upon by the circuit court must finally be ‘passed upon and sustained by the su- preme court before it becomes effec- tive. | Wherefore it will be observed that the entire issue is merely postponed, set over for another hearing as it were, nothing definite decided except that the Tobacco Trust, Ike Stand- ard Oil is a combination in violation of the sherman law and that it must therefore be dissolved in accordance with the manner described. Chief Justice Edward Marshall White redd the decision, which is shared by all save Associate Justice Harlan, who again dissented and in a manner more caustic, more dramatic, more sensational even than his dis- sension opinion in the Standard Oil case. Stole Preacher's Typewriter. Kansas City, May 29.—For the sec- ond time in the last few months the Budd Park Christian church, St. John and Brighton avenues, was visited by thieves. They broke out windows and battered down a door to reach the study of the pastor and carried off a number of articles. Among the booty was an Underwood typewriter, on which Mr. Wray writes his ser- mons. Applauds Harlan’s Opinion. Chicago, Il—Congressman = Mur- dock of Kansas in an address before the Atlas club predicted that Justice Harlan’s recent dissenting opinion in the Standard Oil case would survive as the ultimate law of the land long after the majority decision of the supreme court had been forgotten. Taft Named an Arkansan Judge. Washington, D. C.—President Taft appointed Frank A. Youmans of Fort Smith, Ark. United States district fudge for the western district of Arkansas. Mr. Youmans was assist- ant United States district attorney for eight years. Firty More Postal Banks. Washington, D. C.— Postmaster General Hitchcock designated 50 ad- ditional postal savings depositories. Before July 1 more than 300 will be im operation. OUR PRESENT LAWS OUTWORN Theodore Roosevelt Said They Were Good in the Flintlock Period But Bad Now. New York, N. Y.—Theodore Roose: velt in his address in Newark, in which he presented to the city the bronze statue of Abraham Lincoln the gift of Amos H. Van Horn, de- clared the laws of the land outworn, “They were excellent laws) for the fintlock period,” he asserted. “But they do not apply to present day con- ditions, Little you soldiers could have done with flint locks in the war days. The laws must keep up with changed conditions, retaining the spirit of liberty and justice, curbing the greed of the conscienceless rich and banishing anarchy. It is a poor thing to praise the deeds of the sol- diers or the deeds of Lincoln if we do not emulate them in legislation. We must have clean politics and clean government and we must respect the rights of labor. BRYAN OPPOSED TO REVISION He Criticised the Program of the House Democrats on Wool and Woolen Goods. Washington, D. C.—William Jen- nings Bryan took exception to the program of his party in the house and criticised sharply the majority of the Democrats who have agreed to sup- port the revised tariff schedule on wool and woolen goods. The critcism was contained in a statement made public through Representative Harri- son of New York. Chairman Underwood of the ways and means committee contented him- self with the declaration that despite Mr, Bryan's stand the revised tariff would go through the Democratic caucus with a two-thirds majority. A PURE FOOD LAW DECISION Supreme Court Holds That Labels on Packages Need Not State Purity ‘of the Contents. Washington, D. C.—The federal pure food law received an interpreta- tion by the United States supreme court which decided that the labels on food products under the law should only be statements of the con- tents of the packages and not state- ments of the pureness or healthful- ness of the ingredients. Justice Holmes gave the decision. Justice Hughes dissented, declaring that the labels ought to bear information con- cerning the contents whether harm: ful or not. Hours of Service Law Upheld. Washington, D. C.—“The hours of service law for railroad employes” passed by congress in 1907, was up- held as constitutional by the supreme court of the United States. This de- cision was announced by Justice Hughes in the test case instituted by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad com- pany. The decision of the court was unanimous. Burman Drives Fastest Mile. Indianapolis, Indiana—Bob Burman, driving his 200-horsepower Blitzen car, established new speedway rec- ords. He drove a mile in 35:35; the Kilometer in 21:10; the half mile in 16:83, and tne quarter mile in 8:16 The previous mile record was 35:63. For a Jersey Bull, $15,000, ' Allentown, Pennsylvania—Fifteen thousand dollars was paid at a Jersey cattle sale at Coopersburg for a bull, Noble of Oaklands and $7,000 for his dam; Lady Viola, the highest prices ever paid at auction for animals of this breed, Died at the Throttle. Marshalltown, Iowa.—Al Eads, an Towa Central engineer, died in the cab of his locomotive while the train was traveling at high speed. His hand was on the throttle, END TRUSTS SAID MADISON THE SUPREME COURT WAS TOO LENIENT WITH LAWBREAKERS. The Decision Finds Officers Guilty and Attcrney General Should Begin Prosecutions. Washington, D. C.—Seize every pound of tobacco and every gallon of oil that gets into interstate com- merce. That is the way to break up the tobacco and the oil trusts, E. H. ‘Madison, representative from the Sev- eneh Kansas district, said, and such a procedure is possible. Discussing the two recent decisions cf the su- preme court, Judge Madison said: “The things which friends of the en- forcement of the Sherman anti-trust law will most regret about the Stand- ard Oil and tobacco trust decisions is the failure of the supreme court to hand down a decree effectually and at once ending the combinations which it denounces as unlawful in unmeas- ured terms. The court in effect, so far as the exercise of its injunctive powers is concerned, practically licenses those combinations to con- tinue their unlawful combination for six months. Such a judgment will not discourage them, but simply lend hope that in that period they may devise schemes that will enable them to evade the law for another long period. That particularly will apply to the Standard Oil company, j1pon which the serveilance of the court is removed during this pete The cir- cuit court ordered the dissolution of the trust in 30 days and until dis- solved it was enjoined from engaging in interstate commerce. That sort ot decree had real teeth in ft. If it had been upheld oy the supreme court the dissolution would have occurred by now and the trust would have un- derstood -. was really under the con- demnation of the law. Dealing with trust by gentle taps on the wrist will accomplish nothing. “There is a great opportunity be- fore Attorney General Wickersham, the greatest that has come to any at- torney general since the enactment of the Sherman law. The highest court in the land has held that the actions of John D, and William Rockefeller and their associates and H. B. Duke, T. E. Ryan and their associates were clearly in violation of law. Those Still alive can be and should be prose- cuted.” A PLOT AGAINST MADERO An Attempt Has Been Made to Hire Rebel Leaders to Start New Revolution. El Paso, Texas—What is regarded by Francisco I, Madero as a well laid plot to prevent his reaching the City of Mexico, to overthrow his leader- ship and to start a counter revolution against him, was revealed in the ar- rest here of Daniel De Villieres of the City of Mexico. W. F. Dunn, an American, according to a telegram re- ceived by Madero's chief miliary ad- viser, has been arrested in Monterey, Mexico, by a detective who had trail- ed him from El Paso. The alleged plot involves money which was to have bees paid out to Madero’s military leaders. Madero, according to the details given out by him, was fully advised to the scheme and allowed it to be encouraged until evidence was secured. PAYING THE REBEL FORCES Those Who Served in Insurrecto Forces Will be Mustered as From the Regular Army. City of Mexico.—Measures for the ultimate disposition of the insurrecto army and for payment of the costs of the war were the first matters to which President DeLaBarra devoted his official attention. ‘The president purposes to dissolve at once the revolutionary forces, using a portion of them to augment the ranks of the rurales. The re- mainder will be given assistance to get employment or to return to their homes, and all will be paid off as jbough having been mustered out of the regular army. OKLAHOMA CITY GETS CAPITAL United State Supreme Court De clined to Hold Removal Act to be Unconstitutional. washington, D. C.—The capital of Oklahoma will remain at Okla- homa City so far as the supreme court of the United States is concerned. That tribunal declined to hold that the Oklahoma statute enacted last December to remove the capital from Guthrie was unconstitutional. Dr. Grant Found Guilty. Atlantic City, New Jersey.—The Judicial committee of the general Presbyterian association returned a verdict finding Dr. W. D. Grant of Northumberland, Pa., guilty of heresy, Taught One School 54 Years. Quincy, Massachusetts.—Miss Julia Underwood, who claims the country’s teaching record, has resigned after completing 56 years of service in the local public schools. Miss Underwood taught in one school 54 years, A Place for Gen. Reyes’ Son. Mexico City, Mexico. — Rodolfo Reyes son of Gen. Bernardo Reyes, ‘was appointed sub-secretary of the de- partment of justice. This looked up- on as a move to keep ehe elder Reyes pacified until after the election. « The ome That Makes the Caking Better Failures are almost impossibie ‘Calumet. a ‘We know that it will give you beice remus "Wolknow that the baking wil be puree —tiore wholesome: We know that it will be more eveaiy raned “And we know that Calumet is more ecdnomical; both ints use aid ‘We know these things because’ we havo put the quality tuto ites ESSe God oat ts’ every. way $354 how ia mations OF Becies ba Sales are growing day. ie ss Stodert baling powder. E Have you tried it Gatamet is highest a. quatity— moderatsin price. | Received Highest Award— Ff World's Pure Food Exposition. NOT MADE By THE TRYST [ALUN] is oa i oalig pt Qcxignco In some London slang has a slort Ufe, the street sayings current for a time pass away even more quickly. Most of these, such as “Has yout mother gold her mangle?" “Who shot the dog?” and “How are you off for soap?” survive only in the pases of contemporary novelists. Some, however, have a long life. “Does your mother know you're out?” has been traced back to 1810 and may possibly have been current before then. Others are revived, with stixht alterations. ‘Ten years ago rude little boys would shout, “Where did you get that hat?” when thelr grant: fathers would exclaim, “What! the same old hat!” And the expression of dissent emphasized nowalays by “Not in these trousers!” used to bs conveyed thirty years ago by the tag, “Not in these boots!"—London Chrow fele. GRIMINAL NEGLECT OF SKIN AND HAIR Cuticura Soap and Ointment do so much for poor complexions, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and fall ing hair, and cost so little that it is almost criminal not to use them. Think of the suffering entailed by neglected skin troubles—mental be cause of disfiguration—physical be cause of pain. Think of the pleasure of a clear skin, soft white hands and good hair. These blessings are oftea only a matter of a little thoughtful, timely care, viz.:—warm baths with Cuticura Soap, assisted when veces sary by gentle anointings with Cutk cura Ointment. The latest Cuticura book, an invaluable guide to skin and hair health, will be mailed free, 00 application to the Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Boston, Mass. Like the Other Chicks. Charles T. Rose, equally well know? in Masonic work and banking circles of Cleveland, is a great chicken {0m cier, Rhode Island Reds being bis favorite breed. Walking throvugl bis incubator house he discovers! that Helen, the three-year-old dauslite. had followed him. “Come here, little chickabids,” called to her. And when she 1 up to him to be tossed up and doe she asked: “Papa, which was my it eubator?” Clean Sanitary Floors. Varnish, which is commonly ressrt ed only as a beautifier, is an efticient sanitary agent. Varnished surfaces ‘2 be cleaned by wiping, and the microbe laden dust is thus kept out of the alt, A varnished floor is therefore not o=!7 up to date, beautiful and easily clea™ ed, but is wholesome. The Nationdl Association of Varnish Manufacturer 636 The Bourse, Philadelphia, Pen; {fe distributing free a bookie: entitled ‘Modern Floors,” which tells how floors may be made and kept whole some and attractive. Send for 04 Varnish is cheaper than carvet #4 far more satisfactory. There's nothing disappoints « "°F an more than not to be disap! when she expects to be. If your skin is marred by pimples #04 liver’ marks, take Garfield Tea. 1 oy regulate the liver, cleanse the =)s!*# purify the blood. Many a man's idea of veins 7 dressed is a noisy necktic. A Lack of Temperament BY M. J. PHILLIPS (Copyright, 1911, by Associated Literary Press.) "Faith, Langstroth, we were lucky to get that girl," nodded Junius Brutus Fitzmaurice, They were standing in the wings of the Butteville opera house, the manager of the Singing Princess company, who also did "heavy," and Billy Langstroth, the comedian. There was a rehearsal on. The opera house, of course, was cold. Both men wore the hallmark of regularity and prosperity among "troupers"—long overcoats with fur collars. The most important wandering life was from Jerry Valentt old Arcadia. Jerry's vague, long he might drop in was frequently relied really exciting. J good friend—a very back home. They had been road and were loo the east when Jerry Despite his round, cheruble face and the upward quirk at the corners of his comical mouth, Billy Langstroth was, like most comedians, an incorrigible pessimist. Now he thrust a pudge thumb into each pocket of his fancy waistcoat and replied gloomily: "I don't think so, Junle." "And why?" rumbled Fitzmaurice, in his deepest chest tones. "Look at her now, facing the footlights like a Bernnardt. She makes up well; doesn't know what stage fright is. Trixie MacGowan made a pretty picture on the stage of the dim, cold theater. She spoke her lines clearly and correctly, without tremor and without boldness—quite in keeping with the character of the girlish princess. The orchestra struck up the preliminary bars and she launched into the "Welcome Song." Tritie MacGowan did not have a great voice, but she did have a good one. It was clear and full and flexible. Langstroth listened with grudging admiration until she had finished, then he trotted out to yammer through his "business" with the juvenile and trotted back out of the way of the chorus. He took up the conversation with the manager just where he had left off. "What you say is true, Junle," he agreed, "but—she's an amateur." Fatal words on the stage! But they did not disconcert Fitzmaurice. He pinched his gaunt upper lip reflectively between thumb and forefinger, and nodded slowly. "True, Langstroth, an amateur, yes. But an amateur with traditions. She is a cousin of Jennie McHenry, you know." "Being Jennie's cousin don't make her one of us, Junie," returned the comedian, stubbornly. "She hasn't the artistic temperament." "Tush, tush, William!" Fitzmaurice dropped to his chest tones again. "With such a voice, and the stage sense she has displayed, and Jennie McHenry her cousin! Tush, tush!" "Well, look at her now! You never saw that smile on the face of one of our people. You'd think she'd just wandered in from out front. She knows the company's mad and jealous because you went outside for a princess when Madeline Macauley was taken sick. The women, from the last chorus girl up to Toinetta, gave her a dab with their claws every chance they get. "She doesn't dab back, Junie. It's part of the show to her. She's one of the audience still. They can't make her angry, because she feels she's above them. She's not one of us. She's an outsider." "I faith, William, you're the wet blanket!" Fitzmaurice smiled, benignly. "You are but giving a sop to fate. You feel we were too lucky in getting such a girl." "She won't finish the season with us," persisted Langstroth. "She hasn't the temperament, I tell you." "And that newspaper chap from her home town will be along some day to carry her off. He made me give him our route. She writes to him every day." "Tush, William," smiled the manager again. "Bet you five dollars a week on my salary she leaves before the season is over!" challenged the comedian. "You pay me five more from now on if she goes; you cut me five if she stays." "Done!" boomed Fitzmaurice. Trixie MacGowan went on her serene way with "The Singing Princess." That she should jump from private life to the lead in a good second-class road company was not a matter of marvelling, though she knew many chorus girls and minor actresses had slaved for years without attaining such eminence. That was as it should be; they couldn't all be Trixie MacGowan. They had not been the prettiest girls in their home towns; they did not have a good soprano voice. Leading roles in amateur theatricals had come to Trixie as a matter of course ever since she was in pinafores. So a regular lead on the real stage was nothing to cause comment or undue excitement. She regarded actors as queer and nunsmoking people. In her mind the Singing Princess company was always "they"—never "we." The men were egotistical posseurs, most diverting when they tried to make love to her; the women loudly dressed cats whose jealousy was childishly impotent. "Trouping" was a lark, like camping out in summer. She made light of the poor beds, the indifferent meals and the early trains, as she had made light of camp discomforts. Stage door "Johnles," who formed so large a part of the lives and thoughts of the other girls, were to her merely ridiculous incidents. The most important thing in this wandering life was the daily letter from Jerry Valentine, back in dear old Arcadia. Jerry's vague, mysterious hint that he might drop in on her some night was frequently reiterated and proved really exciting. Jerry had been a good friend—a very good friend—back home. They had been a month on the road and were looping back toward the east when Jerry came. It was a mild, starlit night in spring. Trixie's blood was stirring expectantly when she strolled to the theater. She knew the cause of that delightful unrest when the curtain went up. Jerry was in the right hand lower box. Trixie never did better than she did that night in Mellonsburg. They all admitted it afterward. There was a soft, suppressed fire in her acting and singing which brought the audience forward in their seats and caused that little, breathless hush, so dear to the heart of the actor, between her closing notes and the thunderous volleys of applause. There was the usual crowd of "Johnnies" about the stage door when it was all over. Jerry was among them, standing modestly back near the arc that lighted the brick-paved court. His eyes quickened at sight of her. A man stepped out of the smirking throng. He was in evening dress. The other mashers shrank back. He took Trixie by the arm. "Oh, you kid!" he said, with thick gemality. "Come on fr a time with yer Uncle Dud. Muh car's out here." Anger and dislike were mirrored in her face as she twisted out of his grasp. "Let me alone!" she said, trembling. The masterful masher regarded her a moment in ugly silence. Then he said, deliberately, with an oath: "Say, kid, yuh can't put anything over on me! Cut it out, an' come along. Why, you ain't nothin' but an actress!" "Jerry!" she called, faintly. "Oh, Jerry!" Jerry was already there. He whirled the big young man around with his left hand. The nails of his right hand were cutting into the palm. "An actorine friend, eh?" sneered the big man. Jerry, swinging viciously, struck him in the mouth. A policeman sauntered out of the shadow when the fight was over, and laid a friendly hand on Jerry's shoulder. "Better beat it, sport," he murmured. "That guy," he nodded to where the masher, half-unconscious, slumped against the wall, "is the brother of the chief of police. You ought t' have a vote of thanks for trimmin' him, but they'll coak you if you don't make a getaway." "Our train leaves for Pierceville in half an hour," volunteered Fitzmaurice, who had been, like his company, a witness of the battle. "Take Miss Trixie, young sir, and hurry to the station. We'll look after her baggage." "We're not going to Pierceville," panted Jerry. "No more such stunts as his. We're going back to Arcadia—to get married. Come on, dearie!" He drew the girl's hand through his arm and turned away. "Ch, Jerry!" they heard her say, in heartbroken accents, a world of shame in her voice, "did you hear him? He said I was nothing but—but an actress!" Billy Langstroth loooed significantly at the manager. "I told you she didn't have the temperament, Junnie!" he crowed. Parental Authority. At the International Congress of Child Welfare, held in Washington a short time ago, one of the speakers said the fault of letting a child do as it pleases is responsible for corruption, dishonesty, vice and the low standards of citizenship that prevail in many quarters. Parental authority is taking a back seat these days. And what has taken its place? Just look at the blandishments around. They have pushed the parent aside—the shows, the sports, the street corners, the flashy novels, the cigarette and the obscene picture and story. Wouldn't it be well, while we are figuring on great reforms, that parental authority be one of them? That is just as important as fresh air, the playground or the individual drinking cups. In fact, when parental authority goes, everything goes. We must not make a mistake as to what parental authority is. It is not a club or a straitjacket. It is the child's moral and emotional activities, trained in the right direction by the love and association of the parent. It is the salvation of both parent and child.—Ohio State Journal. "Polter's whole life appears to be governed by system." "I should think that would be a good way." "But it has grown so strong that it masters him. He always takes a seat in a street car now, if possible behind a person who is reading newspapers." System. THE KITCHEN CABINET ECAUSE you cannot pluck the flower. You pass a sweet scent by; Because you cannot, have the stars. You will not see the sky. FIRELESS COOKER RECIPES. An ideal way of cooking ham is to let it come to a boil in the kettle, then put it into the cooker and let it stand six hours. If yours is a home-made cooker you may have to take it out and reheat once during the time. Then remove from the water, cut off the rind, stick a few dozen cloves in it, and bake an hour in a moderate oven. If a cup of sweet cider is added to the water just before putting into the cooker it will add greatly to the flavor. Chicken Soup.—Save the water in which the chicken has been stewed. The next day crack the bones of the fowl, add any of the bits of meat left, a slice of onion and four tablespoonfuls of sage. Bring to the boiling point and place in the cooker three or four hours. Strain and reheat, adding a well-beaten egg and the seasoning just before serving. There is no manner of cooking cereal so perfectly as in a fireless cooker. As a rule, the directions on the package of cereal gives too short a time for cooking. The fireless cooker cooks every grain, rendering them soft and digestible. In cooking grains and cereals it is better to set the dish into another, double boiler fashion, having the heat in the water in the two dishes. This hastens the cooking. Old-Fashioned Oatmeal.—Take one cup of oatmeal and three and a half cups of water. Drop the oatmeal into the boiling salted water and boll for ten minutes, then put into the cooker for four or five hours, or this may be put to cook at night and reheated for breakfast. One has always to bear in mind that there is no evaporation in the cooker, so less water is needed to cook any food. Rice is a cereal that is beautifully cooked in a cooker. Heat a quart of milk to the boiling point, add a cup of rice, salt, cinnamon and sugar to taste and boil for ten minutes, then place in the cooker for three hours. Every grain will be distinct and thoroughly soft. LIGHT supper, a good night's rest and a fine morning have often made a hero of the same man who, by indigestion, a restless night and a rainy morning would have proved a coward. —Lord Chesterfield. USES FOR SOUR CREAM. Sour cream may take the place of sweet cream in many cases, in making salad dressings, using less of vinegar and lemon juice in the salad. Graham Gems.—Two tablespoonfuls of sour cream is added to one tablespoonful of sugar; add one cup of sweet milk, one cupful of sour milk, one cupful of white flour, sifted with one teaspoonful of soda, salt and baking powder. Add a well-beaten egg. Bake in hot gem pans. Cream Biscuit.—Take one quart of flour with one teaspoonful each of soda, salt and baking powder sifted several times; then add two large tablespoonfuls of thick sour cream and milk enough to roll out very soft. Mix lightly and bake in a hot oven. Horseradish Sauce.—This sauce is usually made using the sweet cream, but the sour cream, a half cup beaten with a little salt and sugar, added to half a cup of freshly grated horseradish makes a sauce equally as good. Hermits.—Take a cupful of thick sour cream, two cupfuls of brown sugar, one cupful of chopped ralins, two-thirds of a cup of butter, two beaten eggs, one teaspoonful each of soda, cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg. Add flour enough to make as stiff as can be stirred, then drop by teaspoonfuls on a well-buttered pan. Bake in a medium oven. Carrot Pie.—This is not a common recipe, but one that is highly satisfactory. Take a cup of sour cream, one cup of sugar, a cup of grated carrot, the yolks of two eggs, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg to taste. Bake in one crust and cover with a meringue, using the whites of the eggs and four tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. ETTER a cheap coffin and a plain funeral, after a useful, unselfish than a grand procession and a marble mausoleum after a loveless, selfish life. DONT'S FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER. Don't use a good broom to scrub with when a poor one will do as well. Don't open half a dozen canes of Don't leave corks and stoppers out of bottles. Don't forget to wipe the boiler before hanging it away, or put any uten sils away without thoroughly drying them. Don't leave the table linen with its stains to go into the tubs. Don't throw away paper bags and wrapping paper; they are often very useful. Don't use silver knives and spoons in the kitchen. Don't let soap lie in dish water or the scrub pall to waste. Don't use dish towels for pot holders or napkins for dishtowels. Don't cut more bread or cake than is necessary, to dry and be wasted. Roll and keep all crumbs. Those of cake may be used in steamed brown bread. Don't use good sheets on the ironing board. Don't leave the broom standing on the broom end; hang them or stand upside down. Don't burn the heater with all the draughts carrying the heat up the chimney. Don't leave a little gasoline or oil in the can each time it goes to be filled. It is the little leaks which sink a great ship. Uses for Sand Paper. When the pans and tins become rough, use a little sandpaper to smooth them. Sometimes the handle of a broom is rough; a few strokes of sandpaper will remedy the difficulty. Use sandpaper to scrape a burned kettle and save fingers and utensil. Sandpaper is a good polisher for irons. Keep a piece near the gas stove to strike matches on. HE has beauty enough to make HE has beauty enough to make many a man think so, and complaisance enough not to contradict him who shall tell her so. In trouble, to be troubled is to have your trouble doubled. FOR THE FIRST PICNIC. Why not be the first to entertain a picnic and relieve yourself from some of those social debts that have been hanging over you? The picnic is an ideal way of pleasing one's friends. It may be a porch party, a lawn fete, a garden party or just a picnic, according to the environment, means and desire of the hostess. The entertainment may be determined by the taste of the people invited. A delightful morning or afternoon may be spent by asking the guests to bring their fancy work or sewing while one of the number reads aloud. The reading may be followed by discussion. For those who like contests those treating of flowers, birds or fruits are appropriate. For refreshments, the punch bow may dispense refreshment during the afternoon, and later sandwiches salads, cakes, ices and coffees are served. Sponge Cake.—Try this delicious cake, to serve with ice cream and crushed strawberries: To seven egg take half a pound of flour and three quarters of a pound of sugar, the juice and rind of a lemon. Pour over the sugar a half cup of boiling water and let it boll. Beat the whites and the yolks together, beating the whole until it is thick and light. Stir in the flour lightly, add a dash of salt and the lemon last of all. Bake in a slow oven. If properly made this cake will be wonderfully light and delicate. Plimento Cheese.—The cream cheese which we buy in the markets put up in jars is so well liked for sandwich fillings, and may be prepared at home. Take rich cheese grated, and add an equal quantity of cream cheese; moisten with the liquor which comes over the canned red peppers, season with salt and cayenne and then add as much of the chopped red pepper as one's taste demands. This cheese is very pretty made into individual balls, decorated with a slice of stuffed olives. Nellie Maxwell. Sava Exercise Is Harmful. "Office workers should not take exercise after their day's work," said Dr. E. A. Walker of Boston, who is at the Arlington. "The root reason is that though headwork is not exercise in the sense that it develops the body, it most decidedly is exercise in that it induces fag and physical lassitude. So it is almost pathetic for a man to expect any good to come from taking more exercise when the exercise involved in the day's work has already tired him out. "One takes it that young people have had sufficient outdoor exercise reasonably to develop their frames before beginning office work. So when once they have started in the office in earnest, it is much better for them to realize at once that their days of hard physical strain are over and that henceforth they must confine these efforts to week ends and holidays. "The body and system easily attune themselves to circumstances, even to over-civilized and consequently rather unnatural circumstances, and indoor headworkers will soon find that a good state of health can be maintained with little or no exercise."—Washington Herald. Sunday School Lesson for June 4, 1911 Specially Arranged for This Paper LESSON TEXT—Hosea 14. MEMORY VERSES—4-6. GOLDEN TEXT—"Thou Art a God. Ready to Pardon, Gracious and Merciful, Slow to Anger."—Neh. 9:17. TIME—Hosea began to prophesy toward the close of the reign of Jeroboam II. Iraq. Inara was closed. B. C. 729 (Beecher), or 763 (Hastings). His prophetic life extended into the days of Hesekiah, king of Judah, who came to the throne (Beecher), B. C. 723 (Hastings), 727. PLACE—Hosea was a prophet of the northern kingdom. PROPHETS—Isalah and Micah; perhaps Amos. What was the iniquity of Israel from which Hosea exhorted her to return unto the Lord? The degradation of religion into a sensual and revolting worship of idols, and the foolish and weakening separation from the Southern Kingdom. The period was one of frightful violence and confusion; all ties of social life were loosened; immorality, irreligion, superstition, panic and despair contributed to the common misery and ruin; it hardly needed prophetic insight to foresee the inevitable end in the total dissolution of the state. Their reliance upon Assyria for salvation instead of upon Jehovah; their reliance upon Egypt, the land of horses; their reliance upon idols, the work of their own hands. All the inner woes of the nation sprung from its idolatry, and all its woes from without sprung from the mischievous foreign alliances against which the prophets continually protested. Note that this is more than a confession; it is a promise of amendment, a vow of total abstinence from these sins. God promises to the repentant nation, promises for the past, forgiveness. I will heal their backsliding, that horrible disease of apostasy from the Father's love; for the present, love; I will love them freely, "without money and without price," for what price could pay for this inestimable blessing? for the future, ever-increasing progress and blessedness; God will be to his restored people an enriching, stimulating, reviving dew, causing them to throw out new branches, strike new roots deeper into the soil, blossom in beauty and fragrance, and bring forth fruit in abundance. What is the significance of the three comparisons used of the restored people? 1. They are to be like the lily, in its purity and beauty. 2. They are to be like Lebanon, rooted deep in the earth, with its foothills stretching forth like roots; or perhaps the reference is to the firmly rooted cedars of Lebanon; at any rate the comparison signifies strength, which is to be added to beauty. 3. They are to be like the olive tree, which is not lovely as the lily but is gnarled and ugly; nor strong and imposing like the mountain and its great cedars, but feeble and insignificant to the eye; but it is green when other trees are bare, and it brings forth abundance of rich fruit. The confident statement (whether made by Jehovah, or, as some commentators and both authorized and revised versions hold, by Ephraim himself) that Ephraim (that is, Israel, the leading tribe being put for the entire Northern Kingdom) has nothing more to do with idols; he is through with them; they are laid away with his unhappy past. This actually happened after the exile; the returned Jews had had enough of idolatry, and never again lapsed into that sin. Hosea certainly did not mean, as he is so often misunderstood to mean, that Israel was so firmly fixed in idolatry that the nation could never be moved from that iniquity. The prophet was addressing Judah, the Southern Kingdom, and bidding her hold aloof from her idolatrous neighbor and let him alone, lest she herself contract the foul disease. The sum of wisdom, according to Hosea, is that wisdom consists of three things: Understanding, knowing the things that Hosea had been setting forth, namely, God's dealings with his children. Understanding that God's ways are always right, straight, alike when they spread themselves out in an unbroken level for the pluses, and when they oppose themselves in rocky stumbling-blocks to the ungodly. Hosea began his warnings at the point where we feel the most pride. Our nation is proud of its wealth and power, but these two things lead to worldiness, which is our greatest peril. What would be the substance of Hosea's message to the nation and to each one of us? "Take with you words, and return unto the Lord." Our sins must be acknowledged, humbly before God and frankly before every one who should hear the confession for any reason. Then we are simply, in Christ's strength, to obey Sam Jones' oft-repeated injunction, "Quit your meanness!" We are to "cease to do evil, learn to do well." There is a story of an ancient king who lighted a lamp and had it hung in his palace; he then sent heralds forth to bring into his presence every criminal and rebel, that they might obtain pardon. Those that came while the lamp was burning were set free; but those that delayed till the lamp had gone out, or altogether neglected the invitation, met with a terrible death. Unlike this, God forever holds forth his offer of mercy, and his loving heart always years after the sinner; but with each wilful delay we harden our hearts till at last they are fixed in the ways of sin. ONE GREAT ENGLISH DOCTOR Some Hitherto Unrecorded Facts About Discoverer of the Circulation of the Blood. It has been said that Shakespeare, Newton, who discovered and proved the attraction of gravitation, and Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, are the three greatest Englishmen. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, in a recently delivered lecture, presented many new and interesting facts in the life of Harvey, whose private life is almost as little known as that of Shakespeare. Harvey was born on April 1, 333 years ago. It was many years after Harvey conceived the idea of the orderly circulation of the blood before he permitted his observations to be printed. He lectured to his students on this subject as early as 1619, but it was not until 1628 that his work on the circulation of the blood, a quarto of 72 pages, in Latin, was published at Frankfort. There were vivisectionists in that day, and his experiments, conducted on living dogs and in a day long preceding anaesthetics probably did not go unreubaked. He was loyal to his royal master and patient, Charles L., and for that reason did not escape the vindictiveness of the Cromwellians. They ransacked his house and destroyed many of his manuscripts that represented years of labor. Doctor Mitchell said that Harvey, while traveling in Italy, had forgotten to bring with him a certificate stating that he had not been in a plague-infested town. "Failure to produce the certificate was the cause of his enforced quarantine for three weeks, in an open field, on a litter of straw. One can picture the plight of the gouty Englishman, the physician of kings and the ward of princes, appealing in vain for release from a cruel quarantine imposed by a panic-stricken community." Doctor Mitchell read extracts from Harvey's letters, written in Italy at that time, which show that when thoroughly angry Harvey wrote abominable English, and that the pangs of sciatica were not conducive to that elegance of literary style which Harvey showed on other occasions. His Bluff Called The greatest bluffer in the state of Minnesota, says Senator Nelson, was an Indian up in the lumber regions, who took great delight in walking up to people and saying: "Uh; me heap big Injun. You scared o' me!" And as he was an Indian of considerable stature, with a face about as pleasant as a gargoyle's, nearly everybody admitted to him that he was indeed a big Indian and that they were sure enough scared of him. This nearly tickled him to death, and he kept up his habit of putting his stock question to everybody who came along, until one day he walked up to a tall, raw boned lumberjack, who had just come out of the woods after six months of log rolling. "Me heap big Injun," said the big bluff. "You scared o' me!" The lumberjack replied by hitting the interrogator a lick between the eyes that set him splining for a moment like one of those new-fangled revolving barber poles. "That's how scared I am of you," remarked the lumberjack, as he bit off a fresh chew of tobacco, "you blamed bow-and-arrow sun-of-a-gun!" Marie Dressler's Wit. Ive Bogan who is now sedately engaged in the insurance business with Barr Hook and Noble Eaton used to sow wild oats in company with Charley Clark of Burlingame before that sion of wealth became a married man. One night several years ago the two young men were dining with two women at the Havlin hotel in Cincinnati. The two girls were members of Miss Marie Dressler's company and Miss Marie Dressler herself happened to be dining at the next table. As the party of four arose after dinner Clark's sleeve brushed a wine glass from the table and it was shattered to bits on the marble floor. With a twinkle in her expressive eyes Miss Dressler leaned toward him and said: "I beg your pardon, you've dropped the stone out of your ring."—Town Talk. Wages and Service in India. Wages are not high in India. A native switchman on a railway and the native servant in a private family receive seven rupees, or about $1.90 a month. The farm hand receives much less, or about four rupees, or $1.98 a month. Of course, wages vary in different sections, and there is a some what upward tendency in prices now. However, the missionaries told me that you paid about as much for labor in India as you do in America; that one man in America would do as much as a whole company in India—Christian Intelligencer. His Wlt Failed. The house dated from the fifteenth century, and visitors were permitted to go over it for sixpence a head. Of course Queen Elizabeth had slept there, and the boy in buttons who conducted the party mentioned this three times in the sacred bedchamber. Most of the furniture had a look of the period, though there were a few doubtful embroideries. "And where," one of the visitors asked, "is the bed in which Queen Elizabeth slept?" The boy in buttons hesitated for a moment, and then said, "That's being made, sir." Disadvantages of Contigulty. Knicker—The trouble with a flat is that you hear the people under you quarreling. Bocker—Same way with the United States. Established in 1898. Residence 1401 West 23d Street. Office: 630 N. Main Street. Residence Phone, Marke 1641. Office Phone, Market 2428 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).....7.5 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 Mail Matter. Published Every Saturday at 630 N. Main Street. All matters addressed to The Searchlight for publication must be signed by the party or parties writing. All matters for publication must reach this office not later than Thursday noon to reach publication in the current issue. RULES OF THIS OFFICE: First. All subscriptions must be paid in advance. Agents take notice. Second. Communications received after Thursday noon will not be published in the current issue. Third. In asking to change your paper from one address or postoffice to another, give both the new and the old. Fourth. No new name will be placed on our books unless the money accompanies the name. Write plain. Fifth. Address all matter for publicatio nto 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. Houses For Rent FOR RENT:— A 3 room house at 15th. and Rochester. $8.00 Phone Market 1641 or call at 630 N. Main St. Three room house rents for $8 per month. Phone Market 839j W. Starnes, 1149 Piatt Ave. For Sale:- 8 lots on corner of Mosley and 18th. West front, will sell for a $1000,00 dollars $200 cash. Call at 929 St Francis LOST A linen jacket at St. Paul A. M. E. Church return to Ella R. Ewing. The U. B. F. and S. M. T. had their Annual Thanksgiving Sermon at the 2nd. Baptist Church last Sunday May 28th. And the affair was Grand, the attendance was large. The Rev. Geo. McNeal the State Grand Master preached the Sermon and made a very deep impression on Wichita for the U. B. F. and M. S. T's. The order is rapidly rising. TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right LOCALS THE RESUME OF THIS WEEK Send your news notes and local happiness to 630 North Main Street. Prof. N. Clark Smith has returned home from Tuskegee Institute, where he will spend the summer. Mrs. Loyd has returned from the Tuskegee Ala. where she taken in the Commencment. Will Miller of Atechison Kans. is spending a few days with his brother Elmer Johnson 1650 S. Topeka Ave. Mrs. Hill of Salt Lake City he two daughters are in the city and will make Wichita their future home. Robert Hill will join them soon. Mrs. Robert Hill Misses. Lois Hill, Vivian Glover, Hairriet Chinneth was centertained by Mrs. J. H. Sayles at the Country Club, Saturday after noon. Th ladies expressed themselves having a fine time. Mrs. R. Hill is spending the week with her sister Mrs. J. H. Sayles. The danghters are also with her at the Country Club. Senia Court No. 18 danghters of Iisis will meet Wed. June 8th. All daughters requested to be present. E. R. Ewing Ill. Com Peter Capers is in the city from Guthrie Okiahoma and will make Wiohita his home. Mr. Capers is a man of many trades, recomended as a good trustworthy man We all hope Mr. Capers much success and are glad to welcome him in our city. The Mother Aid Club will meet at Mrs. Jessie Howard 855 Eagl St Friday June 9th Mrs. P Johnson will serve, meeting open at 1 p. m. All members argued to be present. A WORTHY BROTHER PASSED AWAY. Where it has pleased the Alwise Providence, the Great Architect of the universe, to remove from our midst our beloved brother and knight, Joseph Phillips, who died at his residence, 231 South Laura, in this city May 30. We the members of Taos Lodge, No. 10, Knights of Pythias do mourn the loss of our beloved brother, but bow our heads in meek submission to the will of God. Whereas this lodge has lost a worthy brother and Christian knight, our loss is his gain. Be it resolved that it is the sense of this lodge that we extend our heart-felt sympathy to his bereaved wife, father and other relatives of the deceased. Our brother will be greatly missed from our deliberations, as he was loved by all being ongenial, and kind hearted, having been well known all over the community. Be it further resolved, that Taos LoLdge, No. 10 Knights of Pythia, do extend to the Elks of this city their thanks, for the kindness shown to the widow of the deceased in this, her sorrow. It is also resolved that a copy of these resolutions be handed to his widow, also to our daily paper and the Searchlight, and that they be spread on the minutes of Taos Lodge, Knights of Pythias, No. 10. Respectfully submitted, SIR KNIGHT W. H. JONES, SIR KNIGHT WM. FLEMMING, SIR KNIGHT H. T. BELDEN. Committee. 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 $8.00 — 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. WHO WILL BE THE WINNERS? Read Carefully Our Conditions This Contest will be conducted under the following Rules and Conditions. Read!!! — This Contest is open to any Temple, Tabernacle or Tent in the Kansas-Nebraska Jurisdiction — Any member of any Temple, Tabernacle Tent can send in subscriptions with the number of your Temple, Tabernacle or Tent it will be duly credited. — Solicitations of subscribers is not to be defined to members of the order alone, but to accept the subscription of any person, who they are members of the Order or not and of Temple, Tabernacle or Tent will receive due it or said name. — In sending in subscription please write plain, legible hand and give the name, age and town or city of the new subscriber; to with with your name and the address and name and number of your Temple, Tabernacle Tent. — In this contest absolutely no name will be bited unless the money accompanies the name. — A true and accurate account will be kept each subscription and upon receipt of the we will forward you a receipt bearing the number of subscriber, amount paid and the Temple, Tabernacle or Tent to be credited. Keep this record. — This list will be submitted to a disinterested committee of three persons to be chosen later. Every Temple, Tabernacle and Tent should be interested in this contest. The prizes of this contest will be awarded to winners at the next session of the Grand Tent and Tabernacle to be held in Coffeyville, Kentucky in July. 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 tor 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 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 CULP'S MEAT MARKET 241 N.MAIN ST. At Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Tail Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterlings. On Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon. F ship Oysters, Heinz Pickles, and Baked Beef P. T. CULP, Prop. Mein St. Both F trade with our Advertise Thebest Beef, Pork, Lamb, Mutson, Veal Pig Taila, Cat Bones, Fresh Pigs Feet and Chitterlings. Fresh Fish, Cat Fish, Halibut and Salmon. Fresh Sealship Oysters, Heinz Pickles, and Baked Beans P. T. CULP, Prop. 241 N. Main St. Both Phone Trade with our Advertisers Grocery Department WE SELL FLOUR WE SELL MEAL WE SELL LARD WE SELL MEAT WE SELL POTATOES a fact, we sell everything kept in a First-Class grocery. WHY CAN'T WE SELL TO YOU 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 289 IMBODEN'S IMPERIAL FLOUR GRAHAM - CORN MEAL - BREAKFAST FOOD With thirty-five years MILLING EXPERIENCE in Wichita, our products are the best that can be produced. I Made from the best selected grain only, put up in Special Packages. ASK YOUR GROCER : See that you get IMPERIAL THE IMBODEN MILLING CO. Wichita, Kansas --- GROCERIES, MEATS We carry a full, fresh line of Staple and Fancy Groceries and the choicest Fresh and Salt Meat Our stock of Dry Goods, Men, Women and Children's Shoes cannot be excelled in quality or in price. Free Delivery Tapp & Hanshaw 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 PAGE FIVE SEN STEWART THE GOVERNO NOW SEN STEWARTWOULD MAKE THE GOVERNOR THAT KANSAS NOW NEEDS Right now, at this tims, when there is so much being said and so much "milling" being done to center on the right man for Governor of Kansas, Sedgwick country stands ready to present the name of Sen, Jas. H. Stewart for that office. Sen. Stewart has every fitness requisite for the next governor of this common wealth. Well experienced in business, with a wide knowledge of state affairs, absolutely honest. A man who every day deals on the square with his fellow-man and one who is deeply interested in making Kansas occupy that place among her sister states to which she is entitled. Sen. James H. Stewart is most precinctently the man for next Governor of Kansas. In Sen. Stewart the colored voters will find a friend — he is not a "political campaign" friend of the race or a man who goes out during a campaign and tickles the colored voters under the colored voters under the chin to get their vote — but Sen Stewart is a warm, praetical, consistent and sincere friend to our race 393 days out of every year. MY NEW STORE 245 North I have open my new store where I will carry a full New and 2nd H 245 North Main Street I have open my new store at the above number where I will carry a full line cf YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL E. D. SQUIRE 245 North Main Street "SECOND T PLEASE GOOD BREAK — AND WILL F IT IS AS WHITE AS THE OTTO WEISS ALFALFA are all guaranteed un Law, Serial No. 13415 sas State Law, Regist It Is The Cheapest and B For Clean Beds and THE Little V Restaurant Meals 20c — Sho 507 North Short Orders Fin Good Service 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. Little Wonder Restaurant and Hotel Meals 200 - Short Order at all Hours 507 North Main St. Short Orders Filled At All House Good Service is Guaranteed A. J. Cousar, Prop. LONT FORGET the grand pro gram and bazaar to be given at Masonic hall soon by the W. T. Vernon club. Watch for thedate The laboring men will find in Sen. Stewart a friend indeed. Looking the field over there is no man in Kansas who is more logically equipped to fill this office of next Governor of Kansas and mnke the kind of Governor that Kausas now needs more so than is Sen. James Stewart of Sedgwick. Sen. Stewart has not entered the race for Governor—but pressure is being brought to bear on him from admires in prasticully euery county in Kansas urging and insisting on him that he become a candidate and pledging him sudport. Wright Him A Letter. Sen Stewart is the right man for next Governor of Kansas—and every interest in the state—especially the laboring man and the colored people—should urge Sen. Stewart to enter this race. Write him to enter the race for Governor of Kansas. You will never regret it. Thus in presenting the name of her favored son Sedgwick country feels that she present a man who—if nominated and electd if nominated and elected—will make a Governor of whom all the people of this State will be proud. Main Street are at the above number line of and Furniture TED TO CALL QUIRE TO NONE" SES ALL BREAD MAKERS PLEASE YOU - IN SNOW - TRY IT STOCK and POULTRY FOOD under the United States and under the Kan- der No. 1. Best Food on the Market Good Meals, Call at THE Wonder at and Hotel Art Order at all Hours Main St. Called At All House as Guaranteed J. Cousar, Prop. D, K. Echols will help to assist in forming a business league of Wichita, Kans. to visit a national league. which meets August 12-18, 1911 at Little Rock Ark 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 $60,00 for. Stirling Woolen Mills Co. TAILORS 215 N. Main St. Wichita, Kas. Peerless Steam Laundry Wichita's Oldest, Most Reliable and Best Laundry BEST LAUNDRY IN THE CITY Satisfaction Guaranteed Laundry Work Called and Delivered Phones 232 SELOVER & SONS, Props. 245 N. Market St Wichita, Kan --- They'll Treat You Right TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISERS They'll Treat You Right TRADE WITH OUR ADVERTISER$ They'll Treat You Right Our Big Cash Prize Contest 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 contest. 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. 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. PERSONAL PICKUPS. The Mothers Aid Club will give a Moonlight Social. Watch for the date. The Editor of Wichita Searchlight who went to Colorada Springs for his health is now in Mamton Springs is slowly improving. Rev. Butler, pastor of the 2nd. Baptist Church is doing a great work with his members is looking forward for a successful financial Rally. The Searchlight is still doing business at the same old stand, 630 N. Main St. Come up. Simply Do Your Duty A Negro editor has a hard time trying to satisfy all the people. We are doing our best in this office to fulfil our obligations to publish the news. We should not be expected to publish advertisements FREE. The Editor of this paper will be more than highly grateful for any job of printing-big or little which you may take to Searchlight office, 630 N. Main, during his absence in search of a better health. Any job will be acceptable- prices always right. If you want to be the whole thing, you must attend the Monday night dancing academy every Monday night. Managed by Prof. J. H. Sayles. CARD OE THANKS. We wish to thank the many kind frienks who so nobly assisted us during the sickness and death of our beloved husband and father also for the many beautiful floral offering. Mrs. Katie Anderson. Mr. Thomas Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Lee Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Syl Anderson Mr. and Mrs Burel Anderson Mrs A Adams. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Will Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Anderson W. N. Miller Attorny -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 W. S. Henrion Wichita - - - - Kansas Subscribe and pay for the Wichita Searchlight. It is only $1. for a whole year Try it. Dr. A. K. Lawrence Office Phones 517 N. Main St. Bell4634 DISEASES OF MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN A SPECIALTY The National Negro Business League Negro Agricultural Carnival and Merchant Display will Convene at Little Rock Ark. August 12-18,1911. Which will make this one of the largest gatherings ever in the history of the race. D. K. ECHOLS, is getting a write up of the Wichita business and proffesional men which he will put into the READY REFERENCE GUIDE, of Okla. Negroes. Newton Items. Newton Kansas June 1. Mrs. Geo. Dickerson died May 20., at 3:30 at Bethel Hospital of the Brights deseas. She was 26 yrs. of age. She leaves a husband and two children, to mourn her loss. Funeral was held at 2nd Baptist Church, conducted by Rev. Perkins of Arkansas City Sunday at 4 p. m. remains laid to rest in City Cemetery. Rev. R. N. Rivers Ex pastor of the C. M. E. Church here, but is now in the Evangalistic work in Guthrie Okla, stopped over on his way home in Leavenworth, and preached a soul stirring sermon, Sunday, and left for home Monday where his youngest son will gratuate in a few days. He will then return on his way to Okla. and hold a tent meeting here a few days. The G. U. O. F. of Ameriea celebrated the 68th anniversary in this country May 14, the Flower of the West Lodge No. 3005 and the Household of Ruth of Newton Kansas, and Household of RuthHutchinson, Ks Rev. B. R. Ross of Arkansas City, preached the Sermon at C. M. E. Church, at 3 p.m. he is a P. N. F. The church was crowded. Bro. A. J. Tandy spoke in behalf of the Odd Fellows Mack Harrison D. D. M. delivered an oration, Miss. Elcy Underwood of Newton spoke in behalf of the Ruth, Mrs. Cuningham of Hutchinson also deliveran address, Master of Seremony, S. Dickinson. Collection $22.00. 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 Everything In Building Material SEE BOTH PHONES 496-- J.H. TURNER NICHITA, KANS J33 TO 547 WEST DOUGLAS D. K. ECHOLS. D. K. ECHOLS. Omaha Nebraska Golden Sheaf Tabernacle No. 91 held their Installation and Rally at Ostaffs Hall Wednesday evening May 3rd. It was a decided success having cleared up to date 148.88 and some money yet to be collected. We desire to thank the Sir Knights and Daughters who responded to our call also the Queen Mothers and the maids and pages and to friends who by their presence helped to make our rally a success. We have purchased a lot 48 ft. by 130 ft on 24th. and Patrick Ave. at a cost of $1600 and it will take the combined effort of every member of Golden Sheaf Tabernacle No 91 and the friend and make their payments promptly. The officers were Installed as follows Dt. Lulu Rounttee H. P. Dtr. Janie Cook V. P. Dtr. Matilda Starnes C. P. Dtr. Edith Carry C. R. Dtr Lenora Grey Asst. R. Dtr. Ella Reed S. R. Dt. De Anna Johnson O. S. R B. McWILLIAMS Attorney at Law Practices in all Courts Phone Market 1537 Office 601 N. Main St. Wichita, Kansas METZ'S LUMBER IS IT? Largest yard under shed in the state. Best grade of lumber to select from. Choicest finishings, posts, shingles and everything in the lumber line. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT Low and Easy to Meet. Let us figure next Lumber Bill. Yards and Office 3rd and Main Streets. A.G. MUELLER UNDERTAKER BOTH PHONES 325 WICHITA KANS 142 N. N. D re Pee —S> Zs TIN OREN ee Cee SS 4 ) s WM WEN Anke os oe aad MAA ( ROR a OME FY P eo) WG ae ote ol oo a en) Air id Die | H 4 a alter i Sah oy Yn 1 bl i 4 a ed ee F af ea id ‘ et le ee ee te aA = fl = eek SSS Ay Ee — oe ogee oh ow Be ae SES — Oe See ae wel sie a ste : FE i Oe Ox EY secs 3 5 NEE —*"»Leg AGES 43 (ee hE N EFFOKY 1s to be made to have : ONES = ei Ge EV Z — the mew congress take up the pro J Vee ae Nain pemmek << |/rounr vernon MA posal that means be devised where: [os AA Ua eps SV ae Pe Sa | 2228485 TODAY by the United States government J 3 a a? SOLE Wi rhs ii Bee", “ Be aig the maces oe acd Gemme ee Ed Fiate oe oaks akon the management of Mount Vernon, | 4 | aN a a egy ene ae Cot oe shee Cans ome isutues, s | amnala ey Cie | Mama Ne Sag) 8 ms tomb of George Washington, It et i Bw ne 3 : rs a eatin ne was only becaiise the last congress Suey Pe i ic, | ee See ‘at the session which closed a few months ago cS tos ie 23 UL Pomear: Btn sm oe a .% cidius eee fe aa took definite action in the matter that there (a i eee Rie ee aed eee on tales was halted a project to profane the historic le CE ed ee Bere pater iy 5 ee anther? modern jprecinets of Mount Vernon by the location of a |S eh, = er ee i enetnee modern ‘eformatory in the vicinity and it ts being ar [HSU a email atiorees a. ios see ne gued that {f congress has to bestow such foster- fi 3 2 0 ae ea re Pe eee fing care upon the famous mansion and estate [Pages a re ae ae S eisld area why Rot have the whole management of tho | jig jlaaiag | ee te tae Be cee tat institution (which really belongs to the whole \WIWMM eer <7 at | ee os Tail toe Nowsenold people) vested in the elective body closest to See NS BO fee ee Seana fan ek sist aa i eee OD wie as 5 : dentally it may be Several unsuccessful attempts have been Cs z 5 pee , ee dentally it may be a a a Pe eee. a Se eS OE BO Ne | erm Ul ese areS “2 a Ma ae aie “2s ive on He «<X aa L i l Ef i 5 aa Ge Sa all Pe cere per ett RE = ee ereaerreer eeneenrrrenrinns RN Ee | _ . gh eae pes A < ies ay ye ohne a whe eo BN Ne NR faq > al wh Me lk ee yitin er ee NV se oo —— a cae ) A DRIVEWAY — SHOWING OWE OF THE LATELY re RESUVENATELO BRICK WALLS \t eee er Sheer ee ods which obtain in the conduct of this tourist mecca. The procedure complained of is the charging of an admission fee for entrance to the grounds and the sale of postal cards, guide books and other commodities. Unfavor- able sentiment is attributable especially to the circumstance that most of the money making enterprises conducted at Mount Vernon are on the monopolistic order. Only an approved Drand of guide book can be purchased on the grounds and so on through the whole list of articles for sale, even to the circumstance that _ a single line of steamers on the Potomac river has the exclusive privilege of landing tourists at Mount Vernon. | However, whatever may have been the mis- takes of the association of women who have control of Mount Vernon, or of the superin- tendent who for twenty-five years has had the authority of general manager of Mount Ver- on, there is no denying that they have ac- kcomplished much in the restoration and main- ‘tenace of the manor house and the most inter- esting part of the famous Virginia plantation. Only recently has there been completed an important undertaking in landscape architec- ture which is especially notable because it supplies the final feature needed to restore the actual conditions of George Washington’s day at the country seat which the Father of His Country loved so well and wiere he lived and died. This final restoration has been the re- placing of the lawn and garden walls which in colonial times played an important part in the rroundings of Mount Vernon, as they did in ie case of almost every mansion of its type. ‘The original walls on the Mount Vernon state, most of which were constructed under \e supervision of Washington himself, were an excellent state of preservation when he ldied, but successive heirs to the estate al- owed them to fall into decay until there was ‘naught left but the foundations. These walls, lwhich add so much to the appearance of the bint Vernon estate, would have been re- stored years ago had it been merely a matter of expense, for the whole work cost only about $1,500. However, a more serious stumbling lock delayed operations—namely, a desire to secure brick that would be duplicates of those originally employed and which would conse- quently enable adherence to the policy of hav- ing everything historically correct to the most ‘minute detail. After a quest that had continued for more than a score of years the long-sought bricks were recently obtained when there was demol- ‘ished an old colonial mansion known as So- ciety Hill, located in King George county, Vir- ginia. ‘This structure, which was built by Colonel, Thornton, a close friend of George ‘Washington—and which by coincidence later passed into the possession of a member of the ‘Washington family—was constructed of bricks brought from England. The bricks in the So- clety Hill mansion, when cleaned, proved to be fdentical in size and color with the bricks found in the ruined foundations of the original gardon: walls at Mount Vernon. Accordingly the walls were restored in accordance with the original drawings and enough of the origi- nal Washington bricks were rescued from the ‘old foundations to provide a coping for the walls, the bricks obtained from the King George county site furnishing the remainder ‘of the material needed. REAR OF MOLINT VERNON MANSION SHOWING THE NEW. ROOK, COLQMPADES, ETC. made in the past to have our national legislature take some action in this matter, There is, however, constant agitation on the subject and a continual fnerease in the number of people who look upon it as a public shame that our greatest _ patriotic shrine should be in other hands than Uncle Sam's. This resentment is due in great measure to what the eritics are pleased to dub The most extensive of the restored walls are the “screen walls,” the function of which was to hide from the sight of Washington's guests seated on the lawn the inevitable do- mestic activities that were carried on around such outbuildings as the kitchen, the smoke house, the spinning house, etc.—adjuncts of the mansion which it was not desired to have btrude themselves upon the notice of visit- ors. Almost as interesting as the screen walls, however, are the “Ha Ha” walls, which are depressed below the level of the sloping lawn and are consequently unobservable from the portice of the mansion, but which in Washington’s day performed’ an important function by preventing the stock from wan- dering on the lawn in front of the house. The name “Ha Ha” as applied to such walls origi- nated in England and 1s attributed to cross- country riders who were surprised into mak- ing the ejaculation when they suddenly and unexpectedly came upon such @ hidden wall in their chase of a fox. ‘The restored walls, although the most im- portant of recent improvements at Mount Ver- non, are by no means the only ones that may be noted by the sightseers and tourists who now visit this historic spot in throngs that ag- gregate 100,000 a year. A new roof has been placed on the mansion house and the public probably has little conception of how much time and labor was required to obtain the de- NO PLACE FOR FATHER ' The English home with its lack of “proper” Repay ate aye sea eatrale ee ata bathtubs is no more a marvel to the American woman than the American home is to the English woman. The latter freely admits that the conveniences of the American home are beyond compare, but there is one serious defect that is always commented on. ‘This is set forth by Mary Mortimer Maxwell in the National Review (London). There is no place for father. Surely there must be some truth in this, for so many British women have called attention to the fact that we have no privacy in our homes, and have pointed to the shortcomings of pretty strands of beads serving as doors, and to the fact that the bathroom fs the only sanctuary, the Indianapolis News remarks. This is borne out by observations in many cities. A former official in Indiana {s well read in history. He also has a family. He freely admits that he absorbed his history lying with pillow in the bathtub, safe beyond the reach of the growing children. This is just what Mary Mortimer Maxwell is speaking about when she says: * But the member of the American family to whom my thoughts turn in greatest sympa- thy in regard to the lack of privacy and the denial of the opportunity for the cultivation g VY NV by Va = EY eS 3 oe 2 Re : iy a RK 8 ! so Se eee Ate : a A e Te, bled ¥ Tp = TD Seer : EES IN Dh vy : : FRY 4 ih : a eo EE / See eee a Oe eS CN “< Re : : ee colle AK oe Se @ [Se Bid | tt > NY ES - nm «sS wes oN : = pe Ban @ — ; fon NY as DS = ee eo ear esre e | oe meer re es oe ee ee ee THLE OLD KITCHEN AT SIOUNT VERNON SHOWING THE “SCREEN WAL2** THE LAK WALLS JUST COMPLETED AP MOUNT VERNON ESTATE LGN RE papa ss Mea ye ON \ fx Pee rt YY Nel ak Ne i ek ie co Sas | : ee ee See JAE OUT BUILDINGS AT IOLNT VERNON in ited material for this roof, just as it was no nt end of trouble to find the bricks for the walls m. Sdove referred to. About 50,000 cypress shin- Ng Bles were needed for the new roof, but they yt must needs be “rived” shingles because Wash- s* ington had that kind and it seemed impossible to find any rived shingles, because nowadays i, Shingles are not made that way, sawing being ni uch easier than splitting. Finally a lumber firm in South Carolina undertook to supply shingles that would duplicate those of Wash- m- ington’s day, but they charged almost a cent sr- apiece for the singles, which made the roof a ay pretty expensive one. ho Mount Vernon mansion now has one of the - _ most perfect heating systems to be found in en any American residence. It was designed es- Me pecially to prevent danger from fire—and in ch this connection it may be mentioned that le Washington’s old home {s not built of brick or RAR RAR nner LACE FOR F kk Only Place in Which Famlly Head of individuality is the father—he who pays for everything, buys the house with his own earnings or hires it, and yet generally has not so much as a corner that is his very own. It is called ‘his house’ It has many rooms. There are the drawing room, the living room, the library. There are numerous bedrooms and dressing rooms, but if he really desires solitude, there would seem to be nothing for him but to lock himself up in the bathroom. Sometimes you hear the members of an Ameri- can family speak of ‘father’s den,’ to be sure. ‘Why, just before I left America a New York friend, when she was showing me through her new house, said to me, ‘This is my hus- band's den,’ showing me into the sunniest and brightest room in the house. My eyes rested upon antimacassars and tea costes, a copy of ‘Poems of Passion, an embroidery frame, a train of ‘choo-choo cars," and a box of such American confections as my soul delights in and which no manly man could possibly be seen eating. I looked about for rows of curious pipes, for a horribly dusty and disordered writing table, a lounging jacket—out at el- bows, but, oh, so comfortable after the work- aday coat—a copy or two of a sporting paper; but not a sign of such mute witnesses to masculine ownerhip of that room did I se2. ical and steam en- gines for fighting the flames, should this destructive agent ever menace the mansion—a re mote chance, it would seem, for all the rooms in the house and all the exterior walls have been treated with a fire-resisting paint. For all that elec- tricity is employed to pump water and perform certain other chores on the Mount Vernon es: tate, the magic cur- rent ig not allowed in the precious mansion and the manor house is lighted as it was in the days of yore, solely by candles, ‘There has been another notable undertak- ing at Mount Vernon in the form ot the con- struction of drainage works which control forces of nature that threatened to play havoc on the famous estate. This new system of sanitary drainage has, first of all, served to reclaim the bogs and swamps which at one time gave the place a reputation for unhealth- fulness. Equally serious in possible results were the threatened landslides near the man- sion and in the vicinity of the old tomb of Washington, from which, however, the body ot Washington wgs removed some years ago to the new tomb. These slides have been averted for all time by the construction at considerable cost of a tunnel which pierces the hill on which the mansion stands. RR nnn —————— il | flay Find Privacy - | = “I have been shown through other American homes where the husbands had their ‘own’ dressing rooms, their ‘own’ hanging cup boards, and have noted with surprise the com- plexion balms, bodkins with pink bebe ribbon ready for running through lace, bonnet whisks and cut glass powder boxes lying upon the chiffonter along with military brushes and safety razors. ‘I do believe in separating dressing rooms and separate dressing tables,’ the fond wife would gush, and then she would show me her husband's ‘own hanging cup. board,’ which, being fitted up with a new kind of patent trouser stretcher which she found exactly the thing for keeping her skirts in nicest order, she had taken possession of up to the farthest and darkest corner, whére a pathetic and lonely greatcoat might hang on a solitary peg.” Does this thing, after all, make the path to the divoree courts popular? Our British critics sometimes think so. Men ure brutish folk at the best, and sometimes do like to be alone, GOOD WORK WELL SUPPORTED | People Are Liberal in Their Contripy | tlons to Young Men's Christian . Associations. This year Young Men's Christian ay soelations are Ikely, it is sid, tg break all records in amount «+ sone, raised for new buildings. ‘The sca at Philadelphia, when $1,090,000 yay secured in twelve days, has give stimulus both to Young Men's ang Young Women’s associations. Aicg to tt was the $2,000,000 campaicn top buildings in foreign capitals. roo lyn women, with the aid of a te men, have just secured $415.00). ay Tanta men, $600,000; Reading ;2i7, 000; Elyria, Obio, $127,000, wicre 14g committee asked for but $1)9,0nn- Charleston, S. C., 150,000; Racist, N. C., $75,000; Walla Walls, Wash $48,000, and Ishpeming, Mich. $29 3)9, Association leaders say threo thingy help them in getting these large sums: Christan unity, a short ang public appeal, and real resu!ts aco plished in buildings already ¢ryctaj WELCOMED BY MEN WHo SMOKE Particular men who smoke realizg aow offensive to people of reiinement is a strong tobacco breath, and how ‘objectionable to themselves is that “dark brown taste” in the mouth after smoking. Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic is worth Yts weight in gold for this purpose alone. Just a little in a glass of water —rinse the mouth and brush the teoth, The mouth {s thoroughly deodorized, the breath becomes pure and swost and a delightful sense of mouth clean liness replaces that dark brown to bacco taste. Paxtine is far superior to liquid an tiseptics and Peroxide for all toilet and hygienfe uses and may be obtain ed at any drug store 25 and Sle a box or sent postpaid upon receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co, Boston, Mass. Send for a free sample, Fitting. “Did you nephew make a suitable marriage?” “Yes,” replied the man who babitw ally thinks along erratic lines. “He has curly blond hair, and has never done anything more herculean thaa to pick flaws on a guitar, and—well, he married a female baseball player” —Puck. THE TRUTH ABOUT BLUING Talk No. 5. Avoid liquid bluing. In every city there is an Accumulation of junk bot tles which are gathered up and filled with a weak solution called bluing. Don't buy water for bluing. Buy RED CROSS BALL BLUE; 4 B-cent package equals 20 cents’ worth of liquid blue. Makes clothes whiter than snow. AT ALL GOOD GRO CERS. eer Thompson—Wouldn’t you hate to haye death staring you in the face? Johnson—No. If you'd seen my wife's stare, you'd realize that death's ier dh taaace® to ene—-HMarper’s: Bazar. UPorFIG aaa gN mop Alteaa) aE Cleanses the System effectually; Dispels colds and Headaches, dve to constipation. Best for men, women and children; young and old. To get its Beneficial effects, always note the name of the Company. AuroRNIA Fic SyauP@ plainly printed on the front he every package of the Genuine ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE Shake Into Your Shoes @ Allens Hoot Hes: the aancireptle Beads ma, 2p Sat et ecea sed pasta Ten the Wise Grentest comfers. discovers of Be} tae GF Sew stows tou! « on Cie; certain relief for ineroriPe, © = BM Behera tine THY Ve TO-DAY: Soa ee : fe a Rot necept any ‘pubstitutes a Sa? pACKAG! "gk FREE 22th! AIO THELE GIEANS SWEET inapincn, PORE ce i wes Mien’ mene, eet cae Feectases PiMGPaaCrerRre, 40! ALLEN S OLMerrD. Tatoo Materia or Plies, em Meee. cote Bowels, ‘Dumb Ague, Sour ‘stora:? 2 Belching lt your food does not assists * You have no appetite, i it i ills will cure these troubles. Price, 25 <e0t% KIDNEY 18,0500. thousands have :: 324 TROUBLE %* ©" fos ys want good resulis gy can, make no mistake by usize, De So mer’s Swamp-Root, the great k\ "4 - rier* RY Grageiats in ACC cost 204 cy far sizes. Sample bottle by M4! Sat fiso pamphlet telling you now t0 £0 ff you have kidney trouble. uh ‘Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingbsxo% x Libby's Sliced Dried Beef Old Hickory Smoked Highest Quality Finest Flavor In sealed glass jars at your grocers Ask for Libby's Libby's Sliced Dried Beef That Liberal Congress. "Washington has asked for one hundred additional policemen." "What about it?" "Congress wants to give them that many new laws, instead." A Wily Judge. At an assize court, according to the London Times, a juror claimed exemption from serving on the ground that he was deaf. The judge held a conversation with the clerk of arraigns on the subject, and then, turning to the man, at whom he looked intently, he asked in a whisper: "Are you very deaf?" "Very." was the unguarded reply. "So I perceive," was the rejoinder of the judge, "but not whisper deaf. You had better go into the box. The witness shall speak low."—Case and Comment. Head on Crooked. Little Paul had always been taught by his mother that God had made him and that he ought to be thankful that he had been made so perfect; eyes, ears, feet, hands and all complete. His mother had bought a new cook stove and Paulie was examining it. He lifted the reservoir lid and looked in. There was his picture, as natural as life, in the water, but he was sorely troubled, while looking at it. When asked, by his mother, what the trouble was, he said: "Dod might o' made me persect, but he put my head on trooked." HADN'T MUCH BRAIN. He—That fellow has got more more than brains. She—That so? He—Yes; I lent him a ten spot this morning. MENTAL ACCURACY Greatly Improved by Leaving Off Coffee The manager of an extensive creamery in Wis. states that while a regular coffee drinker, he found it injurious to his health and a hindrance to the performance of his business duties. "It impaired my digestion, gave me a distressing sense of fullness in the region of the stomach., causing a most painful and disquieting palpitation of the heart, and what is worse, it muddled my mental faculties so as to seriously injure my business efficiency. "I finally concluded that something would have to be done. I quit the use of coffee, short off, and began to drink Postum. The cook didn't make it right at first. She didn't boil it long enough, and I did not find it palatable and quit using it and went back to coffee and to the stomach trouble again." "Then my wife took the matter in hand, and by following the directions on the box, faithfully," she had me drinking Postum for several days before I knew it. "When I heard to remark that I was feeling much better than I had for a long time, she told me that I and been drinking Postum, and that accounted for it. Now we have no coffee on our table." "My digestion has been restored, and with this improvement has come relief from the oppressive sense offulness and palpitation of the heart that used to bother me so. I note such a gain in mental strength and acuteness that I can attend to my office work with ease and pleasure and without making the mistakes that were so annoying to me while I was using coffee. "Postum is the greatest table drink of the times, in my humble estimation." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Welville," in piks. "There's a reason." Ever read the above letter? A new dawn appears from time to time, with are untrue, true, and full of humps ALL IN THE COOKING MUCH CARE NEEDED IN PREPARATION OF ASPARAGUS. Asparagus is one of the dishes which cooking can make or mar. It has always been esteemed a great delicacy. It was the favorite vegetable of the ancient Romans and was introduced by them into Britain. It is much more generally used in France and England than here. Fashion has decreed during the past few years that asparagus must be served cold at up-to-date social functions, but on the home table hct asparagus cooked en branche or cut up in a cream sauce will never go a-beging. By most people the simplest way of cooking asparagus is considered best, says the Delineator. Cut off the toughest ends of the stalk where it is white and woody, and bind the remainder of the stalks together with a strip of muslin. Immere the stalks in boiling salted water, with the tips projecting two inches above the water. In this way they will steam tender, while the rest of the stalk is cooking. Boil until tender, but not mushy, and serve with white sauce, drawn butter, mayonnaise bechamel or Hollandaise sauce as preferred. A French woman eating asparagus takes a stalk at a time in her fingers, dips the head in the cream sauce, and daintily nibbles her way down the stalk as far as it seems tender. In this country it is usually served on buttered toast, each slice being dipped in the asparagus liquid. For those who would cling to asparagus cooked as mother used to cook it, the directions are simple. Cut the tender portions of the stalks into half-inch lengths. Simmer in boiling salted water, only just enough to cover, until tender; then season asparagus, liquid and all, with milk or cream, butter, salt and pepper, and serve on toast or in deep saucers. In this way the whole delicate and distinctive flavor of the asparagus is preserved. Canapes of asparagus make a dainty entree, and, though adopted from the French, find increasing popularity here. The foundation of the canape is the same, no matter what the filling may be. Take slices of bread about two inches thick and stamp them out into neat rounds with a biscuit cutter. With a smaller cutter mark a circle in the center of each round and scoop out the crumbs to the depth of an inch, taking care to leave the sides and bottom quite firm. Arrange these in a shallow dish and pour over them a half-pint of milk, to which a beaten egg has been added. Then take up very carefully and slip into a kettle of boiling fat. They will brown almost immediately and must be removed when a pale golden brown. Some cooks prefer to drop them at once into the hot fat without the milk-and-egg bath. Drain on soft paper. Quail or Squab on Toast. Take as many birds as required, pick, draw, wash thoroughly and dry. Set giblets in boiling water until needed. Rub each quail or squab thoroughly with salt and pepper, have good piece of butter melting in deep stewpan, put birds in and brown nicely on all sides, then add enough sherry wine to keep from burning, then your giblets, a small onion, clove of garlic, and some dry mushrooms all cut very fine with a dash of mace. Cover tight and set on slow fire; test with fork and when nice and tender put quail on a platter with toast cut V shape, add more sherry and water (half and half); thicken slightly, cook for five minutes, pour over birds and toast and send to the table. Sauted Green Tomatoes. Select smooth tomatoes, not quite half ripe, wash and cut into slices about half inch in thickness; drain, dry and dust with salt and pepper, egg, and crumb the slices; put three tablespoons of oil or drippings with a bit of butter for flavor in a frying pan, turn and brown the other side. Remove from pan with cake turner to retain shape, place on neated dish and serve with Hollandale sauce. Spinach Salad. Take one-half peek of fresh, crisp spinach, wash thoroughly in several waters, put in steamer and steam for about 10 minutes; turn into a colander and drain; then chop fine, season with salt, pepper and two tablespoonfuls of melted butter; mix well and press into small molds or cups. When cold place each form on lettuce leaf and put one spoonful of good salad dressing on each. Cup Custards. A pint of milk should make half a dozen small cups, and three eggs should be enough; beat the eggs with three tablespoonfuls of sugar until light and creamy; add the milk slowly, stirring well; fill the cups about three-quarters full, grate a little nutmeg on top, first flavoring with a teaspoonful of vanilla or almond or lemon or rose—anything best liked. To Remove Iron Rust. Lemon juice and salt mixed together may be spread upon the spots and the article laid in the sun. Repeat the operation if necessary. Starch may be spread on the article instead of salt. When dry wash out in clear water. DOCTORS FAILED TO HELP HER Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Pound, Wis.—"I am glad to an- nounce that I have been cured of dys- tic troubles by your medicine. I had been troubled with both for fourteen years and consulted different doctors, but failed to get any relief. After using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier I can say I am a well woman. Please troubles by your medicine. I had been troubled with both for fourteen years and consulted different doctors, but failed to get any relief. After using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier I can say I am a well woman. I can't find words to express my thanks for the good your medicine has done me. You may publish this if you wish. —Mrs. Herman Sieeth, Pound, Wis. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. For thirty years Lyda E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills, and suffering women owe it to themselves to at least give this medicine a trial. Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of others, and why should it not cure you? If you want special advice write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it. It is free and always helpful. Natalie—Yes, he was paying attention to her quite a long time. Estelle—Perhaps he hadn't the courage to propose. Natalie—Oh, I don't know. Perhaps he had the courage not to propose. Her Offering. A young lady boarder in a country household lamented the absence of letter. Catching little Melba, the pet of the household, up in her arms, she said: "Precious, nobody loves me; I guess I'll go out in the garden and eat worms." The next day Miss Alice was interrupted by a low knocking at the door. In answer to her summons, Melba entered grasping a large chip carefully in both hands, the child said: "Miss Alice, bad old postman not bring you any letter; here's free big worms. Now you won't have to go out in the garden." TO QUENCH A SUMMER THIRST. Don't pour a lot of ice water into you in order to quench the thirst for the moment—not only does it not produce the desired result, but it is bad for you. There is just one beverage that fits all conditions of heat and thirst—COCA-COLA. Next time you're hot, tired or thirsty drink a glass or a bottle of this one best beverage—delicious, refreshing, thirst-quenching. At soda-fountains or carbonated in bottles—5c everywhere. Write to the COCA-COLA CO., Atlanta, Ga., for a copy of their booklet, "The Truth About COCA-COLA"—you will find it interesting. Baseball Anecdote: "Curious episode, this. Seems a young fellow got excited at the ball game and hugged the young lady next to him, a perfect stranger. She had him arrested, but he told the judge that any man might do the same thing, and his claim was upheld by expert testimony." "And what was the sequel?" "Well, the sequel is rather interesting. The next day there were 5,000 giris at the ball game." Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, ques wind colic, 25c a bottle. There is no fool like the peacemaker who interferes between husband and wife. Or a little water from the human system when thoroughly tested by the chief chemist at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., tells the story of impoverished blood—nervous exhaustion or some kidney trouble. Such examinations are made without cost and is only a small part of the work of the staff of physicians and surgeons under the direction of Dr. R. V. Pierce giving the best medical advice possible without cost to those who wish to write and make a full statement of symptoms. An imitation of natures method of restoring waste of tissue and impoverishment of the blood and nervous force is used when you take an alternative and glyceric extract of roots, without the use of alcohol, such as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi Which makes the stomach strong, promotes the stores the lost appetite, makes assimilation perfurifies and enriches the blood. It is the greas and restorative nerve tonic. It makes men stu and cool in judgment. Get what you ask for! Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Which makes the stomach strong, promotes the flow of digestive juices, restores the lost appetite, makes assimilation perfect, invigorates the liver and purifies and enriches the blood. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder and restorative nerve tonic. It makes men strong in body, active in mind and cool in judgment. Get what you ask for! Look Prem use ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use "LA CREOLE Edith—What would you do if I attempted to run away and leave you here in the parlor alone? Ernest—Why, I—er—would try to catch and hold you. Edith—Well, get ready then, I'm going to attempt it. The Passing of the Wife We have known for some time that the wife would have to go. We have held off as long as possible the inevitable moment, but it might just as well be over with at once. The wife was a very desirable article while she lasted. She mended the hose and did the housework when necessary and sat up patiently and waited for hubby's return. A useful person certainly—one to love, to honor and obey. Now the suffragette age is upon us and the wife is rapidly becoming extinct, says Life. In a few more years she will be exhibited in museums. Adieu, madam! We respect your memory! Rembrandt and Michael Angelo were playing checkers under a spreading tree in the golden sunlight of the Elysian Fields. The famous Italian looked up. "Remmy," he said, "did you notice the price somebody has just paid for that 'Mill' of yours?" "I heard about it." "Well?" "Well, I'm glad I had enough money when I painted that picture to buy a good quality of canvas. It's your move, Mike." And the game went on.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. A TRAIN LOAD OF TOBACCO Twenty-four Carloads Purchased for Lewis' Single Binder Cigar Factory. What is probably the biggest lot of all fancy grade tobacco held by any factory in the United States has just been purchased by Frank P. Lewis, of Peoria, for the manufacture of Lewis' Single Binder Cigars. The lot will make twenty-four carloads, and is selected from what is considered by experts to be the finest crop raised in many years. The purchase of tobacco is sufficient to last the factory more than two years. An extra price was paid for the selection. Smokers of Lewis' Single Binder Cigars will appreciate this tobacco. - Peoria Star, January 16, 1909. New Fishing Industry. Albicore fishing in Nova Scotian waters has become interesting, but for financial reasons. These first frequently weigh over 500 pounds and are known as horse mackerel. A number were shipped to Boston last season. The average price there is three and one-half cents per pound. Formerly these fish were considered a nuisance to the fishermen. TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM Take the Old Standard GROVES TASTELESS FISH. For this purpose the formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out the malaria and the iron builds up the system. Sold by all dealers for 30 years. Price 50 cents. Certainly Teacher—What happened when the army fell into the ambush? Little Willie—Why, they were all scratched up. A Drop of Blood A man can lead any woman to talk, but he can't always make her say what he wants to hear. Garfield Tea overcomes constipation. Some men look upon laws as things merely to be broken. 900 DROPS CASTORIA ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of INFANTS CHILDREN Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC Recipe of Old Dr SAMUEL PITCHER Pumpkin Seed - Alx Senna - Rochelle Salts - Antirrhea Seed Peppermint - Bi-Carbonate Soda - Worm Seed - Chelated Sugar Winkgreen Flavor A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of Cha H. Pitcher THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK. At 6 months old 35 Doses - 35 CENTS Guaranteed under the Foodand Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Cha H. Pitcher. In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. SURELY DESERVES A MEDAL Record Act of Bravery That Is Set to Credit of Intrepid New York Man. The bravest man in New York made his appearance in a Broadway store last week. He carried an enormous bandbox which contained an enormous hat on which the man wanted what he considered an enormous amount of money refunded. The man was pretty mad and while looking for some one who had the authority to negotiate the transaction he talked loud enough for everybody to hear. "My wife bought this hat," he said. "She doesn't need it. She has already bought three hats this spring. She paid $35 for this one. She has never worn it. It just came home last night. I can't afford to throw all that money away and I want you to take the hat back. She wouldn't bring it down, so I undertook the job myself." "By the side of that man Napoleon was a cringing coward," said the young woman who had made the sale. "Imagine his flouncing into a Parisian millinery shop with a hat that he didn't want Josephine to buy. He couldn't have done it. Very few men can. Once in a long while some poor New Yorker with the courage of desperation in his heart returns merchandise which he cannot afford to buy for his wife and his audacity upsets the whole store for a month." It sometimes happens that a woman marries a man because she is sorry for him. But is not that a poor way to show her sympathy? Garfield Tea will regulate the liver, giving freedom from sick-headache and bilious attacks. It overcomes constipation. Anyway, there is nothing monotonous about the weather. 900 DROPS CASTORIA ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of INFANTS. CHILDREN Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC Recipe of Old Dr. SANUEL PITCHER Pumpkin Seed - Alx Suna - Rockell Salts - Anix Seed - Pharmine - Ol'Corpinate Soda - Worm Seed - Clorified Sugar - Winkergren Flavor Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fat Simile Signature of Charles Pitcher. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK. At 6 months old 35 DOSES - 35 CENTS Guaranteed under the Food and Exact Copy of Wrapper. Plumber—Why do you go on using this old well with an old-fashioned hoisting apparatus, when for a few dollars you could get city water put in your house? Housekeeper—Because when this apparatus gets out of order I can get it fixed by a carpenter. system when must at Dr. tells the exhaustion nations are part of the seasons under the best to those statement of method of ishment of when you of roots, Medical Discovery remotes the flow of digestive juices, rela- tion perfect, invigorates the liver and the great blood-maker, flesh-builder men strong in body, active in mind ask for! DAISY FLY KILLER DAISY FLY KILLER placed anywhere, any place. Nest, clean. Net, clean. Cheap. Cheap. Cheap. Knaps all pots. Can't paint. Can't paint. Can't injure anything. Can't injure anything. All of deals on pots. All of deals on pots. HOLD SOMER'S HOLD SOMER'S Brooklyn, N. Y. BROOKLYN, N. Y. maturel CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING. PRICE **Plain Words** "What do you look like her figure?" "it looks to me like a frame-up." HOW IS YOUR LIVER? ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH SICK HEADACHE BILIOUSNESS CRAMPS INDIGESTION DYSPEPSIA MALARIA TRY Hostetter's Stomach Bitters For 58 years it has given satisfaction in such cases and you'll find it just the medicine you need. ECLIPSE CEMENT BLOCK MACHIN The Western Iron & Fdry. Manufacturers, Wichita, Kan Steel and Iron Material for Buildin ECLIPSE CEMENT BLOCK MACHINE The Western Iron & Ferry, Co. Manufacturers, Wichita, Kansas Steel and Iron Material for Buildings QUICK TRADER—$2,000 Suburban Home; want a new home in Wichita, Kansas. ranch. $2,000 Residence; want automobile. Maps complete description. C. L. JURY, GAS CITY, KANSAS. PATENTS Fortunes are made in patents. Protect your ideas. Quire page back. Fitzgerald & Co. Washington, D.C. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Chas. H. Hitchens. In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE GENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. 44 Bu. to the Acre is a heavy yield, but that's what John Kennedy of Edmonton, Alberta, Western Canada, got from 44 acres of Spring Wheat in 1809. Reports 60 ACRE FARMS IN WESTERN CANADA FREE its exhibit of grains, grasses and vegetables. Reports of excellent yields for 1901 come also from Mantecón in Manitoba in Western Canada. Schools convenient, cli- very best, railways close at hand, building lumber reasonable in price, water easily procured, mixed farming a success settlement, settlers' low railway settlement, descriptive illustrated application) and other informa- tion (immigration, Ottawa, Canada, the Canada Government Agent. (50) J. W. ROGERS 125 W. Ninth St., Kansas City, Mo. to treat the agent nearest you We want immediately, first class representative. Permanent; liberal compensation. Selling experience W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 22-1911. y Old e, $1.00, retail. Knights & Daughters PAGE EIGHT 833 Official Knights & Da OF TAB KANSAS—NEBRASKA J KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS OF 18—S TABOR. 833 ```markdown ``` 1910—GRAND OFFICERS—1911 REV. FRANK WILSON, C. G. M. Taborian Home, Route 8, Topeka, Kan SIR D. L. TAYLOR, V. G. M. 329 E. Center, Salina, Kan. MRS. EMMA GAINES, C. G. P. 1170 Filmore, Topeka, Kansas. MRS. LAURA LEE, V. G. P. Box 394, Weir, Kansas. SIR A. W. HOPKINS, C. G. S. 321 Dakota, Leavenworth, Kan. MRS. SARAH W. FORBES, C. G. R. 717 "C" St., Lincoln, Neb. SIR WILLIAM CORE, C. G. T. 1120 Lane, Topeka, Kan. MRS. BESSIE HALL, G. Q. M. 460 Horton, Ft. Scott, Kan. SIR C. M. JOHNSON, G. P. P. 3330 Maple, Omaha, Neb. REV. M. WOOTEN, C. G. O. 222 Ave. E. W. Hutchinson, Kans. MRS. PAULINE WOODFORK, C.G.Pr. 823 Freeman, Kansas City, Kan. SIR W. M. MILLER, General Attorney, 430 N. Main St., Wichita, Kansas. TEMPLES. Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M. 1—A. H. Richardson, Weir, Kan., Sir W. M. Watkins; 1-3 Fri. 3—R. H. Cane, Atchison, Kan., Sir Jno. N. Davis, 521 "L,"; 1-3 Fri. TEMPLES. 4—Evening Star, Omaha, Neb., Slr S. R. Jackson, care Frye Shoe Store; 1-3 Mon. 5—St. Luke, N. Topeka, Kan., Sir Joe Walker, 1220 West (north); 1-3 Thurs. 6—Humphrey, Omaha, Neb., Sir W. H. Jackson, 2515 N. 17th. 7—Mt. Nebo, Wichita, Kan., Sir Rev. S. S. Washington, 1524 N. Washington; 1-3 Fri. 8—St. Peters, Ft. Scott, Kan., Sir A. J. Bean, 309 Lowman; 1-3 Tues. 10—Mt. Horeb, Leavenworth, Kan., Sir Geo. Walker, 417 Kickapoo. 11—Taborian, Wichita, Kan., Sir W. N. Miller, 630 N. Main; 1-3 Thurs. 12—Moses Dickson, Parsons, Kan., Sir W. N. Williams, 220 Corning; 1-3 Thurs. 15—Silver Leaf, Salina, Kan., Sir J. C. Brown, 246 S. Phillips; 1-3 Thurs. 17—Golden Gate, Coffeyville, Kan., Sir G. W. Roberts. 19—Mt. Tabor, Lawrence, Kan., Sir J. E. Hughes, 1313 N. J. 22—Barak, Oswego, Kan., Sir L. R. Wilson; 2-4 Mon. 24—Jas. H. Bedford, Cherryvale, Kan., Sir Rev. J. W. Warren, 218 E. 7th. 25—Washington, Kansas City, Kan., Sir J. H. Downs, 422 Haskell; every Friday. 59—Sunnside, Topeka, Kan., Sir Peter Davis, 1008 Washburn; 1-3 Thurs. 60—Jeffersonian, Topeka, Kan., Sir U. S. Grant, 120 Kansas; 1-3 Mon. 72—Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb., Sir E. D. Weaver, 1125 Saratoga. 91—G 92—S 93—M T R 1—G 2—F M 3—M 7—L 11—G ri 11—A 11—V 14—B 15—L 16—P 17—C 18—S 20—J D TABERNACLES. Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M. Mrs. Emma Gaines, C. G. P. 1—Queen of the West, Kansas City, Kan., Mrs. Marit Wilson, 945 Everett, 1-2 Wed. 2—Golden, Iola, Kan., Mrs. Sarah Crisp, 615 S. Chestnut, 2-4 Sat. 3—Mt. Hope, Wychita, Kan., Mrs. Mary Goss, 2423 Jewett 1-3 Fri. 4—Helping Hand, Cherryvale, Kan., Mrs. Sadie Campbell, 616 W. 1st; 1-3 Thurs. 5—Crescent, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. Hattie Mntgomery, 115 N. 5th; 2-4 Fri. 6—Rebecca Ann, Ottawa, Kan., Mrs. Catherine Glaspie, 128 N. Wabash; 1-3 Thurs. 7—Sunbeam, Saline, Kan., Mrs. Lillian Shobe, 437 S. 12th; 1-4 Fri. 8—Rebecca May, Coffeyville, Kan., Mrs. Laura Donnell, 410 E. 5th; 2-4 Fri. 9—Western Sun, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. Lulu Delley, 120 Kansas Ave; 1-3 Fri. 10—St. Marla, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. P. Henderson, 820 N. Y.; 1-3 Wed. 11—Saba Veroe, Kansas City, Kan., Mrs. P. Woodlork, 823 Freeman; 1-3 Mon. 12—Goluen Rule, Kansas City, Kansas, Mrs. Br. Johnson, 211 Stewart; 1-3 Thurs. 15—America Davis, Weir, Kan., Mrs. Maggie Stewart, Box 14; 2-4 Mon. 16—Silver Leaf, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. Lizzie Morton, 1308 Washington; 1-3 Wed. 17—Western Queen, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. Marianne 817 E. Walt Mrs. A. Masler, 817 E. Van, 18—St. Marie, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. E. W. Graham, 2112 Nicholas; 2-4 Thurs. 19—Amelia Levels, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Ella Golden, 2302 N. 25th. 20—Maria, Ft. Scott, Kan., Mrs. P Johnson, 501 Hyman; 1.2 Fri. 24—Charity Rose, Coffeyville, Kan.; Mrs. A. Garner, 704 E. 12th; 1-3 Wed. 28—Modern, Parsons, Kan., Mrs. D. Dorsey. 29—Crystal, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. H. La Tand, 407 Kickapoo; 1-3 Tue. 30—Victoria, Leavenworth, Kan., Mrs. R. Rivers, 607 Second; 1-3 Fri. 34—Wichita, Wichita, Kan., Mrs. Salie Hall, 1024 Ohio; 1-3 Thurs. 35—Golden Rule, So. Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Sadie Jones, 819 N. 27th; 1-3 Thurs. 37—Eutevator, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. Mary Grosby, 119 Commercial; 1-3 Fri. 38—Covenant, Weir, Kan., Mrs. L. F Taylor, Box 394; 2-4 Wed. 52—Mt. Maria, Lawrence, Kan., Mrs. Josie Wear, 807 N. Y., 2-4 Thurs. 63—Fair West, Kansas City, Kan., Mrs. Rosa Saunders, 610 N. J.; 1-3 Fri. 77—Pearly Rose, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. Susie O'Brien, 1180 Buchanan; 1-3 Wed. 85—Magdalene, Topeka, Kan., Mrs. F. Hardiman, 1801 Kansas; 2-4 Wed. 91—Golden Sheaf, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Lula Rountree; 112 N. 19th. 92—St. Annis, Lincoln, Neb., Mrs. L. D. Davis, 1029 Rose. 93—Macedonia, N. Topeka, Kan., Mrs. S. A. Brown, 715 E. 11th; 1-3 Thurs. TENTS. Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M. Mrs. Bessie Hall, G. Q. M. 1—Golden Leaf, Leavenworth, Kan, Mrs. Jennie Nichols, 413 Third; 4th Sat. 2—Frank Wilson, Fa Scott, Kan, Miss Emma Maxie, 411 Ransom. 3—Moses Dickson, Wichita, Kan, Mrs. B. Davis, 1135 N. Washington, 1-3 Sat. 7—Lone Star, Yale, Kan, Mrs. Calie Lewis. 11—Golden, Atchison, Kan, Mrs. Carrie Brown, 920 N. 10th; 2-4 Sat. 11—Alice Tucker, So. Omaha, Neb, Mrs. I. M. Faulkner, 169 N. 31st; 1-3 Sat. 11—Viola, Lawrence, Kan, Mrs. Mary Brown, 325 Miss; 2-4 Sat. 14—Busy Bee, Atchison, Kan, Mrs. Aria Stone, 823 Main; 1-3 Sat. 15—Louisa Mae, Cherryvale, Kan, Mrs. M. E. Holt, 517 West Main. 16—Pearl, Wichita, Kan, Mrs. Anna Jones, 625 N. Wichita; 2-4 Sat. 17—Castle Rock, Weir, Kan, Mrs. H. H. Askins, Box 25. 18—Star of West, Salina, Kan, O. A. Murrell. 20—John Wilson, K. C., Kan, Mr. C. D. Dalton, 1228 Barnett; 2-4 Sat. 21—Crystal, Leavenworth, Kan.; Mrs. Ella McKennis, 217 Sherman, 2-4 Sat. 23—Clinging Rose, Lawrence, Kan, Mrs. Ada King, 722 N. Y., 3 sat. 36—Pride of Topeka, N. Topeka, Kan, Mrs. Nannia Shaw, 905 N. Taylor. 37—Pansy Blossom, Topeka, aKn, Mrs. Jennie McAdoon, 1501 N. Logan; 1-3 Sat. 45—Orange Rose, Kansas City, Kan, Mrs. P. Henderson, 312 Washington; 1-3 Sat. 46—Mayflower, Omaha, Neb., Mrs. L. Herrold, 2205 N. 25th; 1-3 Sat. 44—Rising Sun, Atchison, Kan., Mrs. Mary Delley, 120 Kansas. 8—Golden Eagle, Iola, Kan, Mrs. Sarah Mayes, 20 Campbell. 5—New Hope, Coffeyville, Mrs. Ada Gilbert, 405 Santa Fe, 2-4 Wed. TENTS. PALATIUMS. Rev. Frank Wilson, C. G. M. Sir C. M. Johnson, G. P. P. 1—Light of the West, Omaha, Neb, Fred D. Early; 24 Fri. 2—Evening Star, Topeka, Kan., Ransom Taylor, 4th Thrus. 3—Moses Dickson, Ackfson, Kan. W. H. Barnes, 4th Mon. 4—Queen City, Parsons, Kan., Lea Haliday. 5—Jewell Wilson, Lawrence, aK. Chas. H. Kuntz. 6—Queen of Kansas, K. C., Kan. Milton Washington; 1-4 Thurs. OFFICIAL ORGAN. The Wichita Searchlight, 630 N. Main St., Wichita, Kan. Only $1.00 per year. NEXT PLACE MEETING. The Grand Temple and Tabernacle, ansas-Nebraska jurisdiction, will meet next in Coffeyville, Kansas on the second Tuesday in July, 1911. You have tried the rest Now try the best THE PEOPLE'T AND Dry Cleaners, D Largest and Best Equ Market 175 Phone 211 South Lawrence DEAM Abs IN NORTH-WEST COURT Bonded A — FOR BREAD A "Wichita's" Kansas Mill WICHITA Wm. D. Paper Hand A Also the latest Picture Fram Lowest Prices — Pictu 517 N. Main St. High Class Surgery A Specialty All Calls Promptly An Dr. C. R. Veterinary Surg The Finest Equipped Phone Market 1730 THE PEOPLE'S CLEANING AND DYE WORKS Dry Cleaners, Dyers and Hatters Largest and Best Equipped Plant in Kansas DEAM ABSTRACT IN NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE COURT HOUSE Bonded Abstractors — FOR BREAD AND BISCUITS — "Wichita's Best" Flour Kansas Milling Company WICHITA, KANSAS Wm. Dunson Paper Hanger AND PAINTER Also the latest Picture Framing Machine. Best Work Lowest Prices - Picture Framing A Specialty 517 N. Main St. Phone Market 239 High Class Surgery Special Attention Given A Specialty To Canine Practice All Calls Promptly Answered -- Day or Night Dr. C. R. Wildes Veterinary Surgeon & Dentist The Finest Equipped Hospital In the City Phone Market Office and Hospital 1730 230 N. Market St., Wichita WHAT I KNOW Conceiving Brother Andersons Demonstrations and religious views I know but little. A man professions are not always the fairest judgment of his character of faith, judging him from his life and works. The atmosphere of his daily living. He most fairly represented the true spirit and teachings of the great master—that spirit of chairity for all man kind, which sufferth long and is kind, which thinketh not of himself, but of the welfare and happiness of others, the unselfishnes which shines like a star in the heavens, and makes true spirit of Ctristinn living. He sae in judgment on no man he imputed evil to noue, he was a possessor of those great virtus which adorn the christian name such love has lifted the world up to the great plane of brotherhood. We are present at the funial now with bhwed heads, and will follow his remains to the last resting place. He has left as the creed the follows of love, and charity scattered all along his pathway of life, men and women even the little children came and gave tribute and gentle Benedictions of there tears. The world is better for his having lived in it Rev. Geo. T. Wooten Pastor of Cabbell M. E. Church. Do you trade with one of our advertisers? S CLEANING AND DYE WORKS Dyers and Hatters Clipped Plant in Kansas Douglas 17 Wichita, Kansas TRACT Co. CORNER OF THE HOUSE Abstractors AND BISCUITS — Best "Flour Baking Company , KANSAS Dunson Ger AND PAINTER Mining Machine. Best Work are Framing A Specialty Phone Market 239 Special Attention Given To Canine Practice answered — Day or Night Wildes Neon & Dentist Hospital In the City Office and Hospital 230 N. Market St., Wichita C. L. KINER When Looking For A Room Call at 630 N. Main Phone Market 2458 GOING FORWARD Never before in history of the Princess Chapter No. 12. O. E. S. held a glorious meet in Thursday night May 25. The following ladies were conducted throu the Eastern Star degrees: Mrs. Myrtle Letcher, Mrs. Elizabeth Humphrey, Rabena Reeves Auberia Thompson, Sena Ralston, Maria Price, Emma McKelly, Melinda Howard, Misses. Irma Clark. Bessie Whitted, Mabelle Griffin. After the work was finished, the candidates servad an elaborate lunch. Princess Chapter No. 12 is progressing in every way, and the future outlook is very bright indeed, we have another class soon to take the degrees soon, under the leadership of Mrs. W. N. Miller as the worthy Matron and Mrs. Grace Taylor Sect. Dr. F. O. Miller Physici'n & Surgeon Office Hours Bell Phone 9 to 11 2999 2 to 5 Wichita 7 to 8 Kansas. 513 N. Main St. All calls answered promptly Day or Night. Obstetrics and Diseases of women A Specialty -OLDFOLKSCONCERT- Come and Guess What It Is A CONEENDRUM TEA PARTY. AT ST. PAUL A. M. E. CHURCH. Tues. Eve. June 6th. Under the Auspices of the Stewards and Stewardes of the Church. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO BE PRESENT LOTS OF FUN FOR ALL. --Two benutiful prizes for ladies and gentlemen-- A SPLENDID PROGRAM WILL BE, AT 8:00 P.M. Don't Miss This Splendid Event. SEEDS Now is the time to get them. Ours are tested and the very best. INCUBATORS We have a full line of the best kind. See them before buying. 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. 243 N. Main Wichita, Kan 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 If You Are In Love With A Lady That Is Your Business. If She Is In Love With You. That Is Her Business. But If You Want to get Your Hair Cut and Face Shaved, That Is My Business FATTIES BARBERS 108 W. Elm St. Subscribe For Published Every Week Only $1.00 PER YEAR Only