Kansas City Observer. (Kansas City, Mo.), Vol. 4, No. 36, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 27, 1900 Page: 3 of 4
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flB CONSDMPTION1
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of l-** ftvlM, lev Torn
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|C ,b,ttn*»**• *»*■ <31*<,Ter®d "
- «rte® of msdlelo*) to my r»»J»r
n* -— oh eat, throat and las#
thousand* of
(W^V, MMoaptto" and *U pulmonary
■»<*'•<0 _j to leaks It* *r*»* merit*
•^TwiU**•• bo^~ <*•
w-** ®* ^ _ nf —^Mnal ta ut miu
^ roruuniptioa.
sgsssr- „
tidf new "•cleatJflo coan. of
p«:-B*nently car*! th
""-ntlT bop«;e» case®
"f^Lden- it hU wliglou* flu«y-e fluty
!* w« to humanity—to donate his ln-
l^bto*" w
|}0V* npirt from lt« inhere*
L2S *• com»~* "• -? r~*
I i3rtW*et confidence of tho p«a>ft>a
P _.vin* the offer.
KS oior«a coemption to baa curable
I * beyond toy doubt
•J" wil tw no aiistak* 1b senfi'.n*—th*
I 2Se ln °v*rlook,n* **»• Doctor#
loTitmaoa. He has ewj nifin aK
mti European laboratories then*
♦j {<ftu>onlai« of exparlanca from tho**
^tn»Uf»rt8ofthe world.
•^.T. »r* dsd*erous; mall your addreaa to
|{%!t*un> ». 0- 1» Pearl straat. New
ri
IP^OISXBTIB, E»nias City, M«x
t mi wi.eo writing the Doctor, pie;
reading this article in the Kacua
If sir Cut, l50-
ItiDpooing, 13a.
Shaving, 10a,
6ea Foam, 10ft
BEN McRAY, Prop.
L1B0ET5® MKS'l IIBADQI"ARTSM,
[JPOOIC-* ZH^CD^^32^v«C
SHAVING
4ND PARLOR.
||I5»nd 819 Independence Ave.,
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Their Strike Fund too Lar^e.
Indianapolis.—The joint conference
of tho United Mine Workers and the
coal workers of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois
and Pennsylvania, is not accomplish-
ing1 much. Operators say the Illinois
miners have too larjre a strike fund
on hand to be reasonable.
Professor Hazan Dead.
Washington.—Henry A. Hazsn, one
of the chief forecasters of the weather
bureau, died here as the result of the
injuries received by a bicycle collision
witn a negro pedestrian.
Mr®. Mcitsf Mason Greely is a w»
man at fine literary attainments; nh«
took a course at the SSorbonne In Parla,
•nd Is now studying at Barnard coll*
a#*. She is s person of advanced but
*ot aggressive. Ideas, and 1b womanly
tnd charming.
Subscribe for the "Observ-
er/' a choice and newsy week-
ly, devoted to the progress
and interest of the Colored
Race.
WANTED.
Race Agents. Good com-
mission to the right parties.
STYLES.
Durable, elegant shoes are
soli here at 50 Cents to
$1.50 a pair less than else-
where.
lELLET, 913 Main St.
ICOUNTEE BOYS,
[idertakers, Embalmers, and
(antral Directors,
1015 East 12 th Streetp
|fi!ephone27S3. Kansas CITY, MO*
snthony Hope, the author of "The
IPrisoner of Zenda," has been engaged
ISc deliver readings in this country un-
|l(r the direction of Major J. B. Pond.
Men you know the temptations cf
IJlayerB, their emotional nature and
I tor general lack of sound sense, th<
limber of decent folk on the stage
perns surprising.
Beautiful Maud Hoffman will return
Ibm England as Mr. Willard's leading
|My, in Henry Arthur Jones' "The
jPiysician." She will play the role
l*Mch Mary Moore created in support
I'! Charles Wyndham.
Eiien Terry's daughter, Edith Craig,
lias been appearing in the one-act play,
1 Journeys End in Lovers' Meetings,"
I- which her mother was seen during
l'»« last tour of the Irving company in
|'*e United States.
^8 editor of a Russian paper has
Isked Count Tolstoi his opinion about
jfe music of Richard Wagner. "Wag-
jX; Tolstoi replied, "is a decadent
['-0 replaces imagination and ispir»-
te with scientific tricks."
fcia Arthur has a play by Robert
"Chan an called "A Nine Days'
jfceen," which is founded on an inci-
I*-. in the life of Lady Jane Grey.
Ip will use it in case Mrs. Burnett**
"ALady of Quality" does not succeed
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
s worn-out pes*
A Mi epigram, like
|£. has no point to It.
Compliments on a tombstone might
|"'properly termed epi-taffy.
Marriafe is an eye salve that ro«
"■« the sight of blind lovers.
Converging with a man who always
^ees with you is about as
fa
« talking
tT-e girl whe
4 Miotic, but
,!r? Entering just
monoton-
:o an echo.
tries to imitate a man
the imitation is often
the same.
CARIOSITIES IN HAIR.
1iTe is a well-authenticated stoff
/■oniersetshire girl whose hair waul
** IWq 4«ft „
ti« r, ."'Cererit colors; on the right
fet i' "er head it was jet black; OB
"• Without color.
i "?"3 k
t!plri, ano'ner condition known
te rn^.r*, a^!cism- which shows itself
it a v.e" ^ 'ays- A single lock of whitt
ftrow ,of black hair has descended
jE ne;ght generations.
vFrench family a lock oi
inile*it^r Ve tbe
each
U • 200 years
^Sae;t in ' really due to want or
^Eesa Les? v^rious structure^
tauT53 In
forehead has been
generation for up-
having been bom?,
individuals durinj
M ^t^hlonrt ^ eye be7ag Bimpll
nebaf, cir°ulating at the bacl
True a:
Asbnry Chapel, M. & chtsr^h, l9tT%
and Cherry. Preaching at XI s to. ancC
et 8 p. m. Sundays. Sunday school, 1:38
p. m. Glass meeting at 3 p. m. eaoJ|
Sunday. Rev. CL Abbott, pastor. \
I Presbyterian church. Grove streeV
Servioes at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Snrrt
days. Sunday school at 8 o'clock.
Prayer meeting Wednesday. Rev, liar
Cooper, pastor. - t * '
ft
Seoond Baptist Church, Tentjji an)
Charlotte streets. Services—Preach*
,lz»st at 11 a. m. Sunday and at ft p. m*
' sharp Sunday night. Sunday school
fat 3 o'clock. Toon^ people's meeting
«Monday night. Prayer meeting oa
Wednesday night.
^ _ r. W. BAcot*. Pastotfc.
BOYCE'S BIG WEEKLIES.
The
Saturday Blade
FOR HOME AND WOMEN
IMPORTED STREET GOWN,
ITEMS OF INTEREST FOR MAIDS
AND MATRONS.
Imported Street Gowna—Dainty Home
Bodice—Tlie Right Kind of Wife
She Is the Companion of Her Husband
—Our Cooking: School.
The Love Knnt,
Tying her bonnet under her ttiln.
She tied* her raven ringlets in;
But not alone in the silken snare
D.id she catch her lovely floating hair.
For, tying her bonnet under her chin.
She tied a young man's heart within.
They were strolling together up the hill,
Where the wind comes blowing merry
and chill;
And it blew the curls, a frolicsome race,
All over the happy, peach-colored face.
Till, scolding and laughing, she tied them
in,
Vnder her beautiful dimpled chin.
And it blew a color, bright as the bloom
Of the pinkest fuchsia's tossing plume.
All over the cheeks of the prettiest girl
That ever imprisoned a romping curl.
Or, tying her bonnet under her chin.
Tied a young man's heart within.
Steeper and steeper grew the hill;
Madder, merrier, chillier still
The western wind blew down, and played
The wildest tricks with the little maid,
As, tying her bonnet under her chin.
She tied a young man's heart within.
O western wind, do you think it was fair
To play such tricks with her floating
hair?
To gladly, gleefully do your best
To blow her against the young man's
breast.
Where he as gladly folded her in.
And kissed her mouth and her dimpled
chin?
Ah! Ellery Van, you little thought
An hour ago, when you besought
This country lass to walk with you,
After the sun had dried the dew,
What perilous danger you'd be in.
As she tied her bonnet under her chin.
—Nora Perry.
Aud
Chicago Ledger,
Have been heard from again. Th®
Enterprising publishers of these pa-
pers have recently "gone into eolol
tvork"—that is, they have added to
their immense establishment in Chi*
feago a complete outfit of machinery,
apparatus, etc., for the production of
colored pictures, such as have made
several New York dailies famous.
The Boyce company are constantly
studying how to please the 2,500,000
readers of their weeklies, and this re-
cent effort has cost them upward of
030,000. If this is not enterprise, then
we are not familiar with the defi.nl*
tion.
The Saturday Blade
2s now sixteen pages in size. The old
Blade is there intact, folded inside an
eight-pasre supplement containing
three full-page colored illustrations,
original in design and of the highest
artistic development.
The Saturday Blade
Is a newspaper, magazine, and comie
Illustrated weekly, all in one.
Each issue of the
Chicago Ledger
Contains the best stories of adven-
ture, fiction, history, biography,
househcld receipts and miscellaneous
reading matter that is for time, money,
or experience to get.
The Ledger
The Right Kind of Wife.
Many persons unable to read that
most interesting book, "The Romance
of Isabel, Lady Burton," may like to
see the rules she wrote upon her mar-
riage in her diary for her own guid-
ance in the new relation—rules to
whose observance she believed much
of her subsequent happiness was due:
First—Iiet your husband find in you
a companion, friend and adviser and
confidante, that he may miss nothing
at home. Second—Be a careful nurse
when he is ailing, that he may never
be in low spirits about his health with-
out a serious cause. Third—Make his
home snug. If it be ever so small
and poor, there can always be a certain
chic about it. Men are always asham-
ed of a poverty-stricken home, and,
therefore, prefer the club. Attend
much to his creature comforts; allow
smoking or anything else, for if you
do not somebody else will. Make it
yourself cheerful and attractive, and
draw relations and intimates about
him, and the style of society (literati)
that suits him. Fourth—Improve and
educate yourself in every way, that
you may enter into his pursuits and
keep pace with the times. Fifth—Be
prepared at any moment to follow him
at an hour's notice and rough it like a
man. Sixth—Do not try to hide your
affections from him, but let him see
and feel it in every action. Never re-
fuse him anything he asks. Observe
a certain amount of reserve and deli-
cacy before him. Keep up the honey-
moon romance, whether at home or
in the desert. At the same time do
not make prudish bothers, which only
disgust, and are not trv i modesty. Do
not make the mistake of neglecting
your personal appearance, but try to
look and dress well to please his eye
Seventh—Perpetually work up his in-
terest with the world, whether for pub-
lishing or for appointments. Let him
feel when he has to go away that he
leaves a second self in charge of his
affairs at home, so that if sometimes
he is obliged to leave you behind he
may have nothing of anxiety on his
mind. Take an interest in everything
that interests him. To be companion-
able a woman must learn what inter-
ests her husband, and, if it is only
planting turnips, she must try to un-
derstand turnips.—-Philadelphia Times.
Is profusely illustrated, some of ths
illustrations being1 in bright colors,
the like of which has never been
offered to lovers of good and inter-
esting reading matter.
The Ledger
Is the greatest of all weekly family
•tory papers, containing 24 pages, in-
eluding the Young Folks' department,
edited in the interests of the juvenile
population. The Chicago Ledger is
safely the leading Family Story Paper
of America.
Boyce's Bisr Weeklies are Oor sale by
newsboys and at news stands.
Memphis Route.
Kansas city, Ft. Scott & Meijlls E. R.
The best line to Kansas City, the
West and Northwest. P»lace Sleep-
ing Cars and Reclining Chair Cars
(seats free) on all through trains. En-
tire equipment first class. Close con-
nections at Union Depot, Kansas City,
The only line with through service
from the West to the South and South-
east. Entire train runs through from
Kansas City to Birmingham, Ala.
Vestibuled Sleeping Car to Jackson-
ville, Fla., and to New Orleans. Send
for map and time-table folder. Wiite
for illustrated papers and pamphlets,
with county map, descriptive of Mis-
souri. Kansas and Arkansas, mailed
free. Address J. E. Lockwood,
G. P. A., Kansas City.
j. J. Flktchee, Traffic Manager,
JKaaasas City.
SO YEARS*
EXPERIENCE.
Patents
TRADE MARKS*
designs.
COPYRICHTS AO
Anyone sending a sketch and description mat
.fluickly ascertain, free, whether ma invention i»
Brobably patentable. Communications strtctlj
confidential. Oldest agency for secunng patents
.In America. We have a Washington office.
{■stents taken through Mann & Co. recslvs
special notice in the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
Illustrated, largest circulation of
'fn.ie alMniano
munn 4 co..
JVH ftraadw<ut Vvm
1
CC^.
\
u
A Koland Tor an Oliver.
John Hare celebrated the two hun-
dredth performance of "The Gay Lord
Quex" by giving a supper at the Oar-
rick club, at which some bright
speeches were made. Corayns Carr,
now the head and front of the Lyceum
management, remarked in the course
of his speech that dramatic critics
should be shot as they came out of a
theater on the first night of a new
play, but Joseph Knight, a critic of
distinction, scored a peat hit when he
said in reply that, for his part, he often
had to witness new plays that causea
him to wish he had been shot before he
had entered the theater.
How N.itai Got Its Name.
South America was discovered by
the Portuguese, who were searching
for an ocean road to India. Bartholo-
mew Dias w«/s the commander of the
two litle ships that formed the expedi-
tion, in 148G. Eleven years later De
Gama took another Portuguese fleet
south. He discovered Natal on Christ*
mas day, and thus named it in conse-
quence.
Crocodiles for the 'inames.
That much maligned reptile, the
crocodile, is, in fact, a friend of man,
though he tries—generally with suc-
cess—to hide a sentiment of which,
perhaps-, he is ashamed as a weakness.
He is an active sanitarian, his special
line being the purification of rivers and
lakes. With, such a certificate of char-
acter before them, perhaps some of our
river conservancies may be stimulated
to secure the services of a few vigor-
ous crocodiles. With these in our riv-
ers, and >. sufficient supply of eels in
our reservoirs and cisterns, ttie difficult
problem of water purification might be
finally solved.—British Medical Jour-
nal.
Proper Heating of the House.
Seventy degrees Fahrenheit is a
good temperature in which to keep
the house If the ventilation is so ar-
ranged that the impure air passes out,
and there is a proper Siipply of pure
air, all the healthy members of the
family will feel comfortably warm.
It is a mistake to make one or two
rooms hot and keep the rest of the
house at a lower temperature; no bet-
ter sj'stem could be devised for pro<
ducing colds.
/„ Cap* Town's lOwr Ks«*
Following the old feudal custom ot
presenting a town or oorporatlpij wlW
a macs ss an ensign of authority, t2\s
people of London are about to present
the colonists of Cap# Town, Sooth Af-
rica, Vith aa expensive alive? m*oe.
The design follows the fon» of the fin-
est maces tteitf b use in England. The
head* 3fcf«nounted by an imperial
crown. Is divided into four panels by
flguret of mermaids, typifying th* mar*
itime iiiaructer of the city. The front
one ic filled by tfte eoat-of-arms of the
city, t&e reverse by those of the col-
ony. The whole of the metal work,
which is of silver and riehly gilt, was
designed and executed by a Arm of sil-
versmiths i* Birmingham. The macs
is said t/3 fee among the handsomest
in th* World.
Anotner Weatiiar Cycle
Statistics are presented in a recent
number of Nsture which tend to sup-
port the conclusions of Dr. Bruckner
that there is a regular eyele, of about
thirty-fir* years, in the cors* oj
which the earth experiences a change
of weather from a ootd and wet pe-
riod,' through a hot and dry period,
back to a oold and wet period again.
According to thes* statistics we are
now in one of the comparatively dry:
periods, but early in the twentieth cen-
tury the condition of things will be
reversed, and the wet years will out-
number the dry onea.
Cost of Klootrle Cobs.
It costs about $1,000 to build an elec-
tric cab of the kind now in use in
Paris.
~""".CHAS. HElftflu
-PULU XS—
Made of mastic Venetian cloth over
linings of the same shade. The deco-
ration is composed of brown mohair
braid. Heavy ecru lace and white
ject of vision, to be replaced occasion-
ally with a fresh one.
Danger in Hot Water.
The hot water relaxes the muscles
of the face too much; in fact, it does
of the body also, and the person who
uses hot water on the face and does
not sponge it off with cold, will find
that the years produce a fiabbiness
which she bewails. The wrinkles will
begin around the ears, then they will
go about the mouth, and finally the
wrinkles grow into furrows and the
skin becomes soft and flabby and falls
into lines. It is then usual for peo-
ple to say, "What a lot of trouble that
woman must have had in her life!"
What should really be said is, "How
careless that woman has been of her
complexion." Any woman using proper
methods and taking it in time, can
keep her face as smooth and lineless
and fresh as a young girl's.
cloth. The turban
made of cara-
cule, writh a huge rosette of pale blue
chiffon for decoration.
points. It was covered all over with
appliques of black velvet forming discs
an inch and a half in diameter. These
■were ornamented with steel threads,
which formed also little dots between
the discs. The short basques of the
blouses were formed by overlapping
Vandyke points of the cashmere bor-
dered with a narrow bias fold of black
velvet. The velvet bordered also the
points on the upper part of the blouse,
and those that fell over the tops of
the sleeves. The high collar was of
black velvet.
Dainty Home Bodice.
A Room 'I'llat Is Original.
The brown earthenware jugs that
certain brands of whiskies and cor-
dials are put up in have been made
into very effective mantel and side-
board ornaments by a young woman
with artistic instincts. The labels
have been washed off and the
jugs splashed with yeliow oil paint
They tone in with the oak 'woodwork
of the dining room. There is no com-
bination prettier than blue and yellow,
and as the walls are blue there is a
dash of this shade in some of the jugs.
At any department store or china shop
the flower stoppers can be found. That
is a Dresden china flower on a large
cork, which is to be utilized when the
cork of a bottle is drawn. It is very
rare that the cork that comes in the
bottle can be used after it is pierced
with the corkscrew. In the yellow jugs
the stoppers are yellow chrysanthe-
mums and blue morning glories. They
give to the room that touch of origin-
ality and individuality that every wo-
man strives for. The curtains are
white net appliqued with lace bow
knots and are looped back with rib-
bons, upon which are embroidered in
chenille chrysanthemums and morn-
ing glories. In one corner of the room
hangs a gilt canary cage occupied by
a sweet voiced bit of yellow fluff. To
protect the walls from being splashed
when Mr. Canary takes his morning
dip the lower part of the cage is drap-
ed by a gathered curtain of the net,
which is drawn under the cage and
tied with ribbon that matches that on
the curtains.
In gray chiffon, with lace and velvet
applique, and purple chiffon rosettes
and di'apery.
Caring: for Veils,
The beauty and freshness of a veil
can be preserved for a long time if it
is properly cared for. After wearing
it should be smoothed out carefully
and rolled between paper or over a
rod. A piece of broomstock makes an
excellent roller, says the Cincinnati
Enquirer. A veil which has become
limp can be freshened by dipping it
in weak, gum water, and pulling it
straight before it dries.
^Candies an<3
Notions.
? .w*
900 Independence Au&htisS ^
MRS. RREEMAhi
—DEAL EH IN—
Plinery, Notions
L i Ladies' Fancy Goods.
C
603 independence AVfe
Kansas City, M
our cooking school.
Sponge Marguerite*.
Cut a thin sheet of sponge cake into
rounds, by means of a small cookie
cutter; spread each round with frost-
ing made of confectioner's sugar, a few
drops of vanila, and hot water to make
of the consistency to spread. Then use
almonds that have been browned in
the oven, for the petals, and put a drop
of the frosting in the center.
A New Killing tor Lajar Cake.
Boil a cup of sugar and one-third cup
of water without stirring, until the
syrup threads. Pour in a fine stream
onto the white of an egg, which has
been beaten until foamy, but not stiff;
add one-fourth pound figs finely chop-
ped and cooked in one-fourth cup of
water; then add half a cup of walnuts
finely chopped. Beat until cold
enough to spread.
Coffee Cream.
This is a delightful addition to "a
little supper" table, and is well worth
the trouble it entails: You must boil
a calf's head till it comes down to a
pint of jelly. This you must clear
from the sediment. Make a cup of
good strong coffee (the berry is better
for the purpose than the essence), and
clear it with isinglass. Pour it on to
the jelly, add a pint of cream, and
sweeten to taste; give one boil up,
and when slightly cooled off, pour into
a glass mold, and turn out when set.
Stewed Ox Tongue.
Where an ox tongue is to be eaten
hot, this is the best way in which to
cook it: Having washed it, rub it well
with coarse salt and a little saltpetre;
let it lie for three days, and then boil
until the skin can easily be removed.
Now put it into a saucepan with a
pint of good stock and about haJf a
pint of the water in which it was first
boiled; season with black and Jamaica
pepper, two cloves, a tablespoonful of
mushroom ketchup, a tablespoonful of
lemon-pickle, or if not, lemon juice.
Stir, without boiling, until perfectly
tender; take up the tongue, strain and
thicken the sauce with flour and but-
ter, and pour it over—serving at once.
Expedients in the Sick Room.
Where no regular system of ventila-
tion exists the windows may be raised
several inches,resting r>n a board made
to fit the window, thus forcing an in-
direct draft over the top of the sash.
An adjoining room may be well ven-
tilated, and then the doors opened into
the sick room. In warm weather a
screen may keep the draft from the
•ned, and plenty of air be admitted.
When a sick person begins to count
the pictures on the wall paper, follow-
ing the designs with eye or finger, it
will waste the flagging energy as al-
most nothing else will do, says the
Woman's Home Companion. It is time
then to cover the wall with a curtain
or cheese cloth, or even a sheet, hang-
ing a favorite pictu?« for a central ob-
The Practical Honse Gown.
Few women realize the comfort that
can be gotten out of a practical little
house gown. Of course I am not al-
luding to the luxurious tea gowns or
to the dressy gowns woman dons on
her at-home day. The house gown is
essentially an every day affair. With
just ever so little pains it can be made
a charming toilet dress, combining a
rare amount of chic with a certain
dainty picturesqueness, says the Phila-
delphia Times. How often a last
year's tailor made skirt and a passe
silk blouse usurp the place of this
pleasing little cashmere house gown.
But the makeshift cannot bring the
peace of mind that possesses a woman
who is becomingly gowned, no matter
at what hour the pop caller descends
on her. A gown of periwinkle blue
cashmere illustrated so well the won-
ders that are wrought by a novel trim-
ming of velvet. The skirt was made
with a double tunic suit in Vandyke
points around the bottom and edged
with a narrow bias fold of black vel-
vet. It was close fitting over the hips
with the flare commencing just half
way down. The corsage was a blouse
of the cashmere fastening at the left
sldw f*~ a slanting line of Vandyfea
It Let Him Oat.
The British workman hates to "lose
a quarter," but there are occasions
whes even he is prone to fall.
It so happened to a horny-handed
son of toil who persisted in turning up
late in the mornings, and was duly
taken to task by his employer.
"Here you are again," said Mr. Boss;
"late once more. WThat's the reason?"
'Very sorry," replied the man, "but
I didn't wake up in time. I overslept
myself."
"Anyhow," said his master, "you will
have to get here earlier."
"Why!" ejaculated the man in
amazement, "what's the good of ma
coming when I'm asleep?"—Ally Slo-
pes
The Old Indian Herb
Medicine Man.
Greatest Healer of the
Sick on Earth.
616 X. Eataw St.,
Baltimore, Md
"VTrlte Old Indian Herb Medi-
cine .vfon, 616 X. Eutaw St.. Balti-
more, Mil. Enclose stamp for re-
ply. The Old Indian Herb Medi-
cine Man cures the following
diseases, or no charge; no one
need faar: Heart Disease, Con- {
sumption. Blood, Kidney, Bladder,
stricture. Piles in any form. Ver-
tigo, Quinsy, Sore Throat. Lung,
Dyspepsia. Indigestion, Constipa-
tion, Rheumatism in any form.
Pains and Aches of any kind, Ca-
tarrh of the Stomach, Head, Kid-
ney. Bladder or Stomach, or Com-
plaints of any kind, Colds, Sore
Throat. Bronchial Troubles, Sores,
Skin Diseases, all Itching sensa-
tions, all "Female Complaints, La
Orippe or Pneumonia, Ulcers, Car-
buncles, Boils, Eczema, Pimples on
face and body. Diabetes of Xldneya
or Bright's Disease of the Kid-
neys. I cure any disease, no mat-
ter of what nature.
I have been in Baltimore for six
years past, and have thousands of
the most influential people to hack
me in my assertions every way. I
have served two years in the Mex-
ican war, in 3846 and '47. and four
years in the rebellion, from 1861 to
1865, and had the greatest expert,
once amongst the sick and wound
ed soldiers, and in the Mexican
war also. The Old Indian, 616 N.
Eutaw St.. Baltimore. Md. Refer
to the following Baltimore papers.
Herald. American and World. Call
or write to the Old Indian Herb
Medicine Man. 616 N. Eutaw St.,
Baltimore. Md. Enclose two-cent
stamp for full particulars. *
J. P. KERR.
WE WANT YQU
MI to Know
ME FREEMAN.
A National
Negro News-
»paper. It is
conceded to be the leading Newspaper pub-
ashed by the race in the world. No expense is
•IS INDIANAPOLIS, is
ideal home journal. More special contributors
than any two other Negro papers. We want ^n
active agent in every town and city 1 AS
in the United States. Write fo? terms I M f -
Add. TL>e Freeman, Indianapolis, lit Ws
•*<initerated Food in franco.
Prance certainly knows how to pro*
tect the lesser rights of her people.
Any one who doubts the genuineness of
|en article of food that he has purchased
Ifrom a Parisian tradesman may take it
to the municipal laboratory for analy-
sis. It will cost him nothing to have
it analysed and the fact determined
■whether it is unadulterated or adulter-
ated, and, if the latter, the iaw deals
with the offender without further ac
tion on the part of the purchaser. The
shopkeeper is deprived of the few civil
rights he is supposed to be otherwise
entitled to, and has to display conspic-
uously in his show window or on hie
door for a year, a large placard bearing
the words "Convicted of Adulteration."
Cinderella's Sister.
j She wore a pique gown of immacu-
late white, a white straw sailor hat
and tan Oxford ties. She limped
^lightly as she walked aboard tha Ho-
boken ferryboat Bergen. She sat in
e corner seat nearest the door. In a
ew moments she stooped, felt under
fier skirts for a few seconds and sat up
rtraight again with a little sigh of re-
lief. The toe of only one shoe peeped
from under the hem of her Bklrt.—New
Jfork Commercial Advertiser.
Mitm, Cufik ul Strife
,
In th. city, anfl sella then JuMna
cm time payment* than mbwh»eeee>
do !n cash. CalFand get be yi tn
Corner 12th and McGee Streei
Stewart &Beaifc
Fresh and Salt Meatem
Tobacco and Cigars,
Comer I Oth and Cai
iMMM
NrlV
4Ta&Ie*.«t - —- - ^
vl1
J"
»str &
Tele ipitotfti 463. ,
fiiai Mctjte*
Jdrs G W- LEE*
GRAYON, INDIA INK, PASTED
& WATER OOLOR artist.
Lessons— Taught
,622 Cherrj St„ K. a, K«t
&
Studv^sss-
IUU ■ eocBprtent Instructor*.
B Tfckea »pnre time onto.
I aw si'sssraSsrs
bull Oppgrraai^ » hotter y
yrarco^tTtl.
IT pmm. Btu
(raintM <
Home^lb
•dspted to every eoe.
Economical.
An Irishman once went into a hard-
ware store to buy a stove. The clerfc
showed him some, but the Irishman
was not satisfied with any of them.
Then, coming to a high-priced store,
the clerk said:
"Now, sir, there is a stove that will
save one-half of your coal."
The Irishman promptly said:
"I'll take two."—Short Storing.
1-YOUR FORTUNE TOLD.
REMARKABLE SCIENTIFIC AND
WONDERFUL SCIENCE. V
"SOLAR BIOLOGY*'*
THE ONLY TRUE SCIENCE Br WHICH TQU+-FUTURE CAM TBULT AND ACCURATELY BE FORETOLD.
T*RATT. th. vorld-mowud Egypfisa Artrolofer, wbo has bean ill iHiiii SMb I
tosfehment Bnzop« ft* <b« put St. 7«w% vffl a trutbAd. unhM,
jiicnet hartaeop. at jrmx 1Ut. MM will st*. yoor pumtl utawM. Ms. i
pcwitien. chMindtat. *bUity, tone, ptobakl. taagtb of liifc, jnartU* MciiWnts, .ilriw sad
mgestioiu on lor* im», nanism frifcaflj. wnwnl.*, bMtoes a>sl*^% Ste.
B1CBES TDK M HOT TO IE. jgfeSSrtflC
a single
Send 10
trathfol borasaop. I
yjl. ntfrnr ft, ft tSSt
; ZARAHtHo ASTROLOGER, look
FB3S3:—" Zwtk Cm Ammoen U oert*lalj I
% np.n ladUpsuU. ul nl—tlftn In a
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Williams, L. C. Kansas City Observer. (Kansas City, Mo.), Vol. 4, No. 36, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 27, 1900, newspaper, January 27, 1900; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth523676/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .