The Broad Ax
Saturday, January 20, 1900
Chicago, Illinois
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THE BROAD AX
VOL. V.
Towards the close of James K. Polk's administration, David Wilmot, of Pa., who was an unyielding and unbending Democrat formulated and introduced into the Lower House of Congress his more than memorable Proviso for the interdiction of slavery in all territories belonging to the United States at that time and which were likely to come into its possession, and the Wilmot Proviso or measure received the hearty support of a large majority of Democrats from the free states.
It is worth while to note in passing that Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia favored the Wilmot Proviso, and when the "Clayton Compromise," which passed the Senate submitting the whole question of slavery in all our Territories to the Supreme Court of the United States, he assisted in defeating that proposition. When it reached the House of Representatives, he voted to lay it on the table. He also voted for and favored the proposition or the bill, granting Oregon a territorial form of government, which excluded slavery. Thus showing that as a southern man, whose influence could not be measured, he had the courage to separate himself from the great body of the leading men of the South.
No other legislation was attempted or proposed in reference to slavery and as the Presidential election of,1848 was approaching the Thirtieth Congress adjourned, much to the gratification of the leaders of both parties.
The Wilmot Proviso caused many of the ablest statesmen of that day to completely change fronts respecting the immediate annexation of Texas. The followers of ex-President Martin Van Buren were not in favor of it for Mr. Van Buren was earnestly in favor of seeing freedom triumph in the organization and government of our Mexican acquisitions. This question tested the virtue and courage of the politicians and in many states old leaders who could not stand the test were relegated to the rear, and in many instances new and younger men were thrust into prominence.
Speaking against the Wilmot Proviso Daniel Webster uttered these words: "Did I not commit myself to that in the year 1838, fully. I do not consent that more recent discoverers shall take out a patent for the discovery. Allow me to say, sir, it is not their thunder." "Free soil is a distinctive Whig doctrine, and the gentlemen who have joined this new party, from among the Whigs, pretend that they are greater lovers of liberty and greater haters of slavery than those they leave behind them. I do not admit it. I do not admit any such thing. I think we are as good Free Soil men as they are."
On another occasion Mr. Webster, the great leader of the Whig party, who had fixed his heart on being elected president of the United States, said while referring to the higher law. "It is an absurdity. What is the higher law?" Said he, "how high is it? Is it higher than the Blue Ridges? Higher than the Allegheny Mountains?" He violently denounced David Wilmot, the abclitionists and the leaders of the anti-slavery party and declared them a "rub-a-dub" party, and it is fair to assume that he and the others who shaped or controlled the policy of the Whig Party were men heartily in favor of extending slavery into all the territories, and maintaining it by all means where it existed.
(To be continued.)
There was not a very large attendance at the regular Wednesday meeting of the Phyllis Wheatley Club, but the program was a most instructive and interesting one. President L. A. Davis read a very admirable paper on the subject, "Lend a Helping Hand," Mrs. Dr. Daniel H. Williams gave a very instructive talk on how to instruct the children of the sewing school in a more systematic and methodical way and showed the ladies samples of the work done in the sewing schools of Washington, D. C. Mrs. T. Cooper spoke most interestingly on "What Constitutes a True and Noble Woman," Miss Amelia Scott favored the ladies with a very fine piano solo, and Miss Clara Green read her spicy Chronicle.
THE SOCIETY FOR ETHICAL CULTURE. For many years we have been a firm believer in the ideas and principles advocated and promulgated by the Ethical Culture Societies, which are attracting the attention of the brightest minds and the greatest humanitarians in the various parts of this country and Europe.
Its aims and objects comparatively speaking are unknown to the unreading and the unthinking public, but they are the highest and most ennobling. They teach brotherly love and the brotherhood of all mankind.
The society which holds services every Sunday morning at the Athenaeum Building, 17 East Van Buren street. is conducted by some of the best known people of Chicago. T. B. Tobey, of the Tobey Furniture Company, is its president; J. F. Turner, treasurer; J. W. Allinson, recording secretary; G. Packard, Esq., secretary; C. S. Schoenmann, F. A. Winslow, H. C. Seymon, Miss Mira Booth, and others are members of the Board of Directors. W. H. Winslow, H. C. Lytton, proprietor of "The Hub," outfitters for all mankind, A. H. Wittstein, vice presidents. Joseph W. Arrant, the well known attorney, superintendent of Sunday school.
The lectures delivered by Prof. Wm. M. Salter are gems of the very highest and purest order, and it is well worth any one's time to attend and listen to his brilliant and edifying lectures.
Some of our readers may be curious to learn something about the aims and objects of the Ethical Culture Society or movement. They are (1) to interpret morality in the light of science, to give it reverence and devotion, and to make it a ruling influence in the lives of men. (2) We recognize the truth that the well-being of the state in which our interests are so vitally concerned is intimately bound up with the well-doing of its individual members. We wish in every possible way to strengthen and deepen the foundations of virtue in the private heart. (3) We consider just and rational views of our relation to the universe in which we are placed, to be obviously essential to the proper comprehension of our duty. Having constantly before us the spectacle of debasement and misery resulting from the violation of the general physical life through ignorance and realizing how inadequate the methods heretofore employed to remedy or to cure these evils we feel that a sacred duty rests upon us, while we seek to correct our own lives in whatever may be amiss, to do all in our power to help the suffering about us and to lift society to higher levels.
"With these convictions we heartily envoke the co-operation of all who earnestly feel and think with us, sincerely trusting that our union may become an instrument of lasting good in the community in which we live and may at all times faithfully serve the best interests of mankind."
Believing as we do that the old superstitions and religious ideas have outgrown their usefulnes inasmuch as they have utterly failed to inculcate the true principles of morality and benevolence, therefore, if we had the power, we would turn all the orthodox theologicians out to grass and transform their churches into Ethical Culture society halls, where the children could be instructed in all that is beautiful, grand and elevating—where they could learn the first rudiments of moral philosophy—where they could be taught to be more considerate and humane in dealing with every species of the animal kingdom, and by a long process of education in this direction, they will learn to love and adore their fellow creatures as themselves, and that happy day will surely dawn upon us, through the efforts and teachings of the Ethical Culture Society.
E. E. Hazen, Treasurer of the Castoria Company, 531 Wabash avenue, was one of our friends while he resided in the Northwest, and he is one of the strongest Republicans in Chicago. Therefore, he could not be induced to subscribe for any other paper than The Broad Ax. Mr. Hazen and his associates are meeting with great success in the manufacture of Castoria, and they are shipping it to wholesale dealers in all parts of the country.
HEW TO THE LINE.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. Sunday afternoon, Jan. 14, Prof. Booker T. Washington, head of the great industrial and training school of Tuskegee, Ala., lectured at Bethel church. He was warmly greeted by a vast audience, partly composed of the best brain and the best thought of both races.
Professor Washington's talk was devoid of all oratorical flights, but plain, practical, timely, logical and very sensible and just the kind of talk the race at large is sadly in need of, and we believe his presence here will be productive of much good to the race in general. His recital of the many hopeful signs and indications of a peaceful solution of the strained relations which has and is still existing to a considerable extent between the two races of the South, were glad tidings to his hearers, and while he was dwelling on that point he emphatically declared that "many of the best and bravest Democrats throughout the entire South are boldly standing up in favor of the equality of all men before the law, and are fearlessly expressing their bitter condemnation and opposition to the cruel treatment which has been accorded the Negro."
Mr. Washington has raised himself in our estimation a thousand fold, and we are thoroughly convinced that he possesses the key which will unlock the solution of the problem which confronts the white man and the black man, not only of the South, but also of the North, and his philosophy is sound. He referred to the fact that in the North the school doors fly open to our colored boys and girls, but after they graduate with all the highest honors and seek honorable employment in stores, banks or factories, with few exceptions the doors are slammed in their faces. He deprecated this fact and reminded the whites of the North that they were lacking in many ways in discharging their full duties to the blacks whom they profess to love so well.
The advice of the Wizard of Tuskegee to the parents of children was worth its weight in gold. He admonished them to keep close to their children and keep strict watch over their boys and girls every hour in the day and in the night, and prevent them from keeping company with the vile and vicious associates—prevent them from roaming the streets at all hours of the day and night—keep them out of saloons, gambling hells and brothels; where from there is only one step into jails and penitentiaries. He said that "it is an admitted truth that more vice and crime surrounds our race in the large centers of population in the North than in the South, and that doctors state that owing to their dissipation and criminal practices they are dying off more rapidly than the whites."
The Afro-Americans were likened unto crabs by the Professor. He related a story in connection with a lot of crabs which he observed in a tub of water and whenever any of the crabs succeeded in climbing up near the top, the other crabs would jump up and catch them by the legs and pull them back in the water, and Mr. Washington cautioned his hearers, and especially the Negroes, that in the future they must cease from acting like crabs and whenever they saw one of their number ascending upward, ten thousand, or a hundred thousand or ten million must not catch him by the coat tails and pull him down, but must assist him in every way to ascend on upward.
He pleaded and urged us to have more confidence in each other and to encourage and support with our money every worthy institution or enterprise conducted for the benefit and the upbuilding of the race.
A society that levels all barriers of race and proclaims that art knows no nationality has just been formed in London under the name of the International Society of Sculptors, Painters, and Gravers. Its first exhibition, now open, is one of the most interesting in the art world, for the works of the artists of the day are there seen, and the finest specimens of the painter's and sculptor's talent that dazzle the eyes of the visitors.—Ex.
Jesse Sherwood, of Greer, Mills & Co., live stock commission merchants, Union Stock Yards, is a Missourian by birth, and when the Civil War broke out, Mr. Sherwood enlisted in the Union army, where he served very creditably for four years, and several years after he returned home.
He was the first Democrat in many years to be elected Mayor of his native city, and he frankly admits that the colored voters rallied to his support and enabled him to defeat his Republican opponent. At the present time Mr. Sherwood is a member of the Board of Education, and he is well known and well liked by all the Afro-American residents of the Town of Lake and the South Side. Through his efforts recently extra facilities were provided for them at the Harvard School.
If Mr. Sherwood should decide to accept the nomination for drainage trustee or commissioner, he can rest assured that many colored voters would cast their ballots for him. For the race has no better friend than Jesse Sherwood.
RAG-TIME MUSIC AND CAKE WALKS.
The two above named past-times are disgusting—ridiculously disgusting! It is the great way of entertaining and being entertained in some section of the country. Why mothers of refinement and proper training allow their young,pliable, easily impressed daughters to indulge in any such devilment and monkey shines, is a mystery to the writer, who would far prefer washing her daughter's face and following her to the cemetery to see her going to hell, in dancing cake-walks, indulgin rag-time music, and other such deviltry.
We delight in good music of the right sort and approve quadrilles, germans, schottisches and the like; but this bowing, bending and the like from them—good Lord deliver us! The Ship, Bristol, Va.
CHIPS
Col. B. F. Moseley, has returned from Jacksonville, Ill., where he was engaged four or five days in legal business. The German-American Democratic Club of the 30th Ward, at its meeting last Sunday declared in favor of the renomination and re-election of Alderman Chas. J. Boyd. C. J. Buhmann, superintendent of the bureau of maps does not believe in codfish aristocracy, but he is a plain everyday Democrat, who is affable to all he comes in contact with.
County Commissioner Edward H. Wright, has fully decided to seek the renomination for commissioner, and as he generally gets what he goes after, it is reasonably certain that he will outstrip all his rivals. Tom Harris, (colored) on trial in Colsicana, Texas, for rape, the alleged victim being Miss Lee Rodgers, a young white woman, has been given his liberty. No evidence upon which to hold him was adduced.—Ex.
There will be a mother's meeting at the home of Mrs. Eliza Harris, 4764 Armour avenue, Monday afternoon, Jan. 22, at 2 o'clock. All who are interested are invited to attend. Good speaking and music will be a feature of the meeting. United States Senator Joseph L. Rawlins, of Utah, has favored The Broad Ax, with President McKinley's message and we desire to extend our thanks to the Senator for all past favors and for those he may have in store for us in the future.
M. J. Butler: "When you first began publishing your paper, I was under the impression it would only appear once or twice and then fizzle out. But I am glad that you are meeting with success and I am willing to assist you in your efforts in behalf of Democracy."
George F. Mulligan, of Dillon & Mulligan, attorneys-at-law, Ashland block, is not only well equipped to ply his profession, but he is also a thorough student in every other way. It is a source of extreme pleasure to converse with him on the various economic subjects and historical events.
John Long, Esq., President of the Gaffney and Long Construction Co.,
Contractors, feels confident that his company will come out with flying colors and that the investigation which Alderman Fowler has been urging against some of the work performed by the company for the city will go up in smoke.
Mrs. Booker T. Washington has recently made a valuable gift to the reading room of Fisk University, her Alma Mater. The gift consists of sixty volumes of histories of various countries. Mrs. Washington was formerly Miss Maggie Murray and graduated from the college department at Fisk in '89.—Colored American.
The colored republicans of Atchison, Kansas, are "in a frame of mind" because the newly-selected Sheriff William: Kiff secured a solid Negro vote on the assurance that Eugene Bell would be named as a deputy, and thus far he has failed to keep his word and shows no disposition to do so. The usual threats are made.—Ex.
Clark Hampton, the wonderful young colored artist, has placed a life size picture, "The Pointers," on exhibition in the Circuit court at Cincinnati. The judges were so impressed with the picture that they offered to have it hung in their private room. The late Miss Christine Sullivan said, two years ago, when Hampton but nineteen, that he did not have an equal in the West. Ex.
From now on the contest in the 30th ward between Alderman Boyd and Frederick A. Hart to control the primaries will wax hotter and hotter and some of the big guns who claim to be on the inside are willing to bet $100 to $30, that when the final round up and shake down occurs that F. A. Hart will be the big Injun and that Alderman Boyd will not be in it nor renominated.
St. Louis has two very wealthy colored people, Mrs. Amanda Larbadie pays taxes on $100,000, and Alfred White, a caterer and confectioner, has made $75,000 at his business.—Ex. Slavery and polygamy are again sheltered by a solemn compact by our republic. Well is it for William McKinley that the pen of William Lloyd Garrison has been dropped and the voice of Wendell Phillips hushed forever!—Ex.
While Mrs. Taylor and ourself were engaged in conversation with Prof. Booker T. Washington during his visit to the city, he expressed his highest approval of The Broad Ax, and stated that he carefully read it each week, when at home. It may not be inappropriate to say here, that ever since May, 1896, we have contributed ten to fifteen copies of The Broad Ax each week to Mr. Washington's institution, and it is always on file in the library of Tuskegee.
The Negro newspaper is the black man's only forum where an impartial hearing is guaranteed. It is not a luxury, but one of the most pressing necessities of this age. The Negro who refuses to sustain an honest race journal is blind to his best interests.—Col. American.
More than that, Brother Cooper. A Negro who refuses to sustain an honest race journal is, more often than otherwise, not only blind to his best interests, but so prejudiced and chock full of cussedness that, even if he sees the good in a Negro journal, he pretends that he doesn't see it, and is never so happy as when engaged in the nefarious work of crippling the influence of the paper and speaking ill of the men who make sacrifices that the race may have this most effective champion of the rights and liberties of a long oppressed and proscripted people.—The Progress.
NOTICE.
All friends and readers of The Broad Ax, who have relatives or friends visiting them, or if you give or attend social functions either at home or abroad. If you journey to other towns or cities on business or pleasure. If you know or hear of a marriage, birth or death. Or in short, if you know anything of interest pertaining to the doings or the movements of the people adduce such facts and figures as briefly as possible on postal cards or letters, and address them to The Broad Ax, and all such news items will find their way into its columns. But do
not send us anything in reference to cake walks or Jim Crowism. If you give swell parties and receptions and desire that the same should receive mention, send invitations or tickets and a representative of The Broad Ax will endeavor to be on hand, otherwise no one should, marvel, if they fail to observe a notice in The Broad Ax.
LETTERS OF COMMENDATION.
Chicago, Sept. 16, 1899.
Mr. Julius F. Taylor, Editor Broad Ax.
Dear Sir-I am glad to learn of the work that is being done by your paper in behalf of Chicago platform principles. That platform stands for such a government as Jefferson and Lincoln favored, namely, a government of the people, for the people and by the people, and I believe that such a government will prove a blessing to the great majority of the people.
Yours truly,
W. J. Bryan.
July 15th, 1899.
Julius F. Taylor, who comes to this city well recommended, has begun the publication of "The Broad Ax," which, I am informed, will disseminate Democratic principles and contend for the higher intellectual development of the Afro-American race and mankind in general. While he is thus engaged I bespeak for him the hearty support of all loyal and true friends of Democracy. Respectfully.
Headquarters of Democratic State Central Committee of Illinois, Sherman House, Chicago, Oct. 5th, 1899. To whom it may concern: This is to certify that Mr. Julius F. Taylor, editor of The Broad Ax—a publication of this city devoted to the interests of the democratic party, and an able exponent of democratic principles—comes to us highly recommended, and I therefore take pleasure in commending him to the favorable consideration of democrats with whom he may come in business contact.
Chairman Democratic State Central Committee of Illinois.
OF INTEREST TO WOMEN.
Flatirons, when new, must be heated very slowly, or they may crack.
New York spent $200,000 last year in inspecting and cleaning bakeries.
All fruits are better if sugar is added when they are first put on to cook.
Milkmaids get more money in Switzerland if they have musical voices.
A patent glove-buttoner is bringing $5,000 a year to its woman inventor.
Lamp chimneys are better if cleaned with alcohol instead of soap and water.
In France the long rubber tubes to infants' feeding bottles are prohibited.
To restore frozen vegetables place them in cold water for an hour or two.
Vinegar left over from pickles may be used for flavoring stews and hashes.
Scientists say that wheat is as nearly the perfect food as any one article can be.
Good crabs and lobsters are heavy and stiff. If light or limp they are stale.
Never scrub linoleum. Instead wash it with soap and water and dry with a cloth.
If you want a good complexion eat plenty of fruit and take plenty of exercise.
France employs 5,000 women in her civil service, telephone, and telegraph offices.
Beattle, Kan., has a municipal government of women, including a woman mayor.
Good meat is elastic to the touch. If wet and flabby it should be discarded.
The annual production of cheese in this country is about 280,000,000 pounds.
If a woman has a tendency toward a double chin, she should sleep without a pillow.
Blonde women need a little borax to keep their locks golden; brunettes ammonia.
There's a double sugar bowl, designed for holding both powdered and lump sugar.
A man's handwriting changes with his character, and character changes with age. This fact induces some banks to require depositors to sign their names every time their pass books are balanced.
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CURRENT TOPICS
SOUTH AFRICA.
Almost the only news allowed to
come regularly from Ladysmith
through British sources relates to the
ravages of enteric fever, the intestinal
@isease that follows a defective food
supply and insanitary conditions. Ac-
cording to the bulletin the deaths from
the disease in Gen. White's force for
the six days preceding the battle of
last Saturday were thirty-three, and
on the latest day reported numbered
ten. When the British public finds the
war office bulletining this news and
nothing else they are warranted in
taking it as an admission of the grave
if not desperate situation of Gen.
White’s army. No doubt hundreds of
his men are down with the fever, and
all must be reduced in health by the
siege, which has now lasted fifty-five
days. The strain throughout has been
far more severe than ordinary service
at the front. Indifference may be bred
as to the frequent rain of shells, but
the utmost vigilance is necessary, es-
Pecially at night. Much of the time
mast be spent in trenches or burrows.
Rations lack variety and freshness, for
mothing comes from the outside.
Long ago the men ran out of tobacco,
which, next to food, is a necessity to
the soldier. He can exist without it,
byt in a state of constant discomfort.
ROFR SINNED OF WAR,
Active recruiting for the Boer army
in various parts of the world, as well
as the presence at the front of numer-
ous educated soldiers of various na-
tionalities, indicates that the Trans-
vaal war chest is well filled. Two
classes of men outside can be secured
‘by the Boers. These are the adventur-
ous spirits ready to accept a bonus for
any sort of dangerous service, and the
others are the haters of England. The
question is how are they to reach the
burgher lines, and the English are kept
busy watching the different avenues.
Once tne two republics in South Africa
were poor. But of late years few gov-
ernments have been as well supplied
with revenue. The most productive
gold mines in the world are in the
‘Transvaal republic, and the greatest
existing diamond mines just beyond
the western border of fhe Orange Free
State. These have attracted a large
population. The two little republics
control ali the details of taxation, and
have secured an ample share of the
extraordinary stream of nature’s treas-
ure.
OUR Navy.
W. R. Hearst, the former editor of
the New York Journal, has written an
able editorial designed to show the
meed of a large navy. He assumes that
‘we cannot avoid raising a navy to
equal to whip Great Britain. He makes
a specialty of our lake cities. He thinks
some 300 gunboats and torpedo boats
could be sent into the lakes through
‘Canadian canals before we were up in
the morning, to demolish Chicago and
other lake cities. This is somewhat
feverish. It supposes that we must be
taken by surprise. It presumes we are
of no account along our borders, for
preparation or retaliation. What
would such a fleet do with our forces
occupying. any of the riparian Cana-
dian borders? Great Britain does not
throw away fleets that way, certainly
mot all she has of any one class.
DOMESTIC SCIEXCE.
‘The Illinois Asssociation of Domestic
Science was organized two years ago,
and now extends to fifty counties in
that state. It was organized “to meet
the domestic needs of women on the
farm.” The association meets from
time to time at various places and
opens a school for a few days. Each
county has the privilege of sending
one girl to study cooking and other
items of domestic economy under the
instruction of experts. These young
‘women are supposed to carry the light
back to their homes and neighbor-
hoods. Besides these are subsidiary
‘clubs in counties and townships, where
further instruction is given. The
praiseworthy feature in this seems to
be. not the domestic science taught,
but the social life obtained in the
clubs. EIS
RUSSIA'S MENACK TO EXGLAND.
. ‘The movement of a Russian army
corps from Tifi.s to Koshk, which gets
Russia a little nearer to Afghanistan
than she has hitherto: been in force,
is naturally attracting a great deal of
mttention throughout Europe, especial-
ly in England. England promptiy de-
manded the reason of the movement,
and Russia suavely but promptly de-
clared it was for the purpose of .test-
ing the capacity of its new railroad,
and the result, as the diplomats of that
country say, has fully equaled all ex-
pectations as to the value of that road
@» means of conveyance. This is
Russian answer with a vengeance,
BUN WORSHIP AND SACRIFICE
Forbid the Latter.
“I think,” said Raja Sivaprasad {p
the Nineteenth Century, “that cun
worship was the original worship o:
both the Persians and the Hindus. 1
have even seen animals as the sun
rises gaze on it with awe, which is per-
haps the first beginning of this feeling
of reverence for the source of light.
The Vedas are full of sun worship
But the priests of the Hindus gave ut
the simple, direct worship of the sun.
and brought in by way of sun offer-
ings animal sacrifices consumed ~ by
fire, for they looked upon fire as part
of the sun. In course of time people
began to think and to question with
regard to this sacrificial worship. Then
came Buddha, and Buddha, being a
good and great man, when he saw the
animals’ throats cut, thought: ‘How
can good possibly come of doing evil?’
And the first thing he did was to for-
bid sacrifice and say: ‘Not hurt any
creature is the best virtue.’ Buddha
went out from his home and medi-
tated. Then he came back to Benares,
and at Sarnath argued with the Brah-
mans, who justified their sacrifices on
the authority of the Vedas. But Bud-
dha said: ‘What are the Vedas but the
work of munis and rishis? There is
nothing supernatural about them.’
And so the great schism arose, Bud-
dha against the Brahmans and the
Brahmans against him. Many of the
rajas and maharajas came and heard
him and were converted, till at last
Buddhism was in the ascendant, for we
have in India a saying, ‘As is the king,
so are the people.’ Then came King
Vikramaditya, in whose honor a new
era was founded, reckoning by which
we are now [this was in 1892] in the
year 1949. King Vikramaditya was a
Kshatriya, and believed in Brahman-
ism, and with his reign Brahmanism
and Vedic religion began to revive.
After many centuries appeared Sanka-
Tacharya, a Brahman, who undertook
to persecute and drive out the Bud-
dhists. He said: ‘These people do not
believe in a Creator. How can they
possibly be tolerated?’ And he drove)
them out, and re-established the Vedic |
religion. By this time the disapproval
of animal sacrifice had become firmly
rooted. And as sacrifices were enjoined
in the Vedas, Sankaracharya got over
the difficulty by saying that it was
only in the golden age, when the ani-
mals slaughtered could be restored to
life, that sacrifices were required;
there was no need to sacrifice now.
To this day animal sacrifice is dis-
pensed with among the majority of the
Hindus, although not so among the
Kshatriyas and among many of the
Sudras.”
Catting.
The law court is the modern substt-
tute for the tournament, and a pretty
good substitute it proves when a bat-
tle is on between rival lawyers quick-
witted and outspoken. The late Col
John Atkinson was opposed in an im-
Portant case by another able lawyer,
James H. Pound, and they were fight-
ing like giants for every point of ad-
vantage. Pound had won a majority
of the jousts; the colonel was nettled,
and was lying low for a chance to de-
liver a swinging blow. “It came,” said
the judge, “when I decided a point
against Pound. It had been fiercely
argued by both attorneys, and in de-
ciding it as I did, I stated my reasons
at length, giving authorities. I saw
Pound sbake his head at one of my
conclusions; his lips moved, and I
suppose be made some comment, sec
when I concluded my decision, I asked:
“What did you say, Mr. Pound?’ Quick
as shot, and in his most cutting tones
of intense sarcasm, the colonel replied:
“Mr. Pound did not speak, your honor.
He merely shook his head. There is
nothing in it.’”
Fatal Consequences.
“Be careful how you invoke a force
that may destroy you,” says a writer,
“whether it be the force of electricity,
the force of habit or of appetite.” For-
ward tells of two chickens who in-
voked a power unconsciously. The
other night all the electric lights in
& certain city suddenly went out, and
after a minute came on again. Pretty
soon an odor like that of an over
cooked dinner filled the power-house,
and on examination it was found that
a couple of chickens had stolen in and
gone to roost on the main wires. All
went well with them until Chanticleer,
who was perched on one wire reached
across to give a good-night kiss to his
dear Biddy, on the other. The moment
their bills touched the current of thou-
sands of volts was short-circuited
through their bodies, and the kiss end-
ed in a lightning flash and burnt
feathers.
A Fish Story,
Here is a chap from lowa who goes
the Rod and Gun contributors one bet-
ter and raises the limit on fish stories:
“We wet our lines in Shell Rock river,
a few miles below Cedar Fails, and
caught a catfish weighing 190 pounds
Being without fish, fiesh or fowl at the
camp.we put a poie through its gills
and shouldered it a half-mile for din-
ner. On opening it we found it had
swallowed a smaller cat that weighed
about fifteen pounds, so we said we'd
eat the latter for dinner instead of the
big fellow, as it was perfectly fresh.
But when we opened No. 2, there was
@ still smaller cat im his gullet, one
that weighed five pounds, and as the
party consisted of only three, we made
a dinner on that. I have abundant
witnesses.”—New York Press.
Wreee Gece’ in
Finnegan—It's a wonder Clancy
don't get killed, the way he lets his
tongue run on. Morilarity—He would,
begorrah. only the way he lets his lege
run of.—Judge.
$300,000,000 IN GOLD.
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN
FROM OUR SHORES.
Another Chapter in Our Fisancial His-
tory That Shows Futility of Mata-
taining General Prosperity and the
Gold Standard at th: Same Time.
The Louisville Courier-Journal, in
its issue of Dec. 22, ult., brushes aside
as a mere bagatelle our shipments of
gold to England. “The gold reserve
in the treasury,” it says, “was $241,-
423,427 yesterday, and the total amount
of coin and bullion was but a little un-
der $400,000,000." This, with $141,000,-
000 in the banks and about $500,000,-
000 in the country, in circulation, is as-
sumed to be a splendid showing, and
to elevate the United States to the
front rank as a gold country. But now
comes a circular from the directors of
the mint to the manufacturers of jew-
elry, gold leaf supply houses, and all
dealers and manufacturers who use the
precious metal in their work. The
Chicago Tribune gives the substance of
the circular in the following succinct
language:
“Lost or strayed—$300,000,000 in
American gold coin. Any person who
has information of its whereabouts will
please communicate with the director
of the mint.” The truth is cropping
out that we are short of our gold cir-
culating medium the enormous sum of
$300,000,000; it is lost. Not from the
treasury, but from the circulation
among the people. This means that
there are $300,000,000 short in our mon-
ey, and when we add to this shortage
the sum of $241,423,427 in coin in the
treasury, and the bullion to make up
$400,000,000, we have a shortage of
$700,000,000 of gold coin on our total
stock of gold coin. It appears that
Prof. Faulkner doubted whether the
stock of coin outside the treasury was
what it was assumed to be, and the
director of the mint has been so im-
Pressed by the professor's statements
that he is going to try to find out.
The treasury department knows how
much money the treasury contains, and
the banks certainly know how much
money they hold, but all our officials
have been going upon the theory that
our gold coin in genera! circulation is
exactly the difference between the
amounts in the treasury and in the
banks, and the public have been fed
with that idea until they have been al-
most made to believe that we have
plenty of gold coin. Even the Courier-
Journal, usually so careful in its cal-
culations, has been deceived by offi-
cial reports. Under these circum-
stances, therefore, it does not make a
vast difference to the public welfare
whether we ship gold coin to
England or not. It may transpire that
we are not so heavily laden with cir-
culating medium as we have been as-
suming; indeed, the recent stringency
appears to demonstrate the fact that
we are short, and short $300,000,000.
From this may be deduced the actual
fact of the necessity of using billions
of make-shift money, usually termed
“industrials,” but all speculative, and
the further fact of the positive recur-
rence of panics accompanied by the
demands upon the United States treas-
ury to rush to the aid of the market.
We do not believe that Director Rob-
erts can ascertain the whereabouts of
this lost money, for it does not exist,
except in imagination, unless it be in
old stockings and teapots.
FALSE PRETENCES.
_ It is beginning to be made clear that
‘William McKinley owed his election to
his pledge of international bimetallism,
which held enough silver Republicans
in line to insure his election. In his
recent annual message he comes out
for the absoiute gold standard, thus
manifesting his deceit and duplicity in
1896. Congressiaan Champ Clark of
Missouri, in the debate on the currency
bill, said:
“He not only recommends it, but he
urgently recommends. The chances are
a thousand to one that had he uttered
that sentiment in the campaign of 1896
he would not now be in position to
send a message to congress and there
would be no gold standard congress to
receive it. It was the pledge in the St.
Louis platform to secure bimetallism
by international agreement that landed
him in the White house. So says Hon.
John M. Thurston, Republican senator
from Nebraska. The pledge of an inter-
national bimetallism held enough sil-
ver Republicans in line to give the
election to Mr. McKinley.”
By what subterfuge Mr. McKinley
expects to be re-elected in 1900 nobody
seems to know, but even the devil has
persuasive way of quoting scripture
which deceives the children of light,
and it is presumable that some great
fraud, or fake, will be dressed up in
attractive colors like circus posters to
draw the crowd. Forestalling an evil
is better than repenting for its exist-
ence, and a political evil must be fore~
stalled. This is an occasion when the
Personnel of Mr. McKinley is invoived,
and he is too much mixed up with
grievances that go to the destruction
of the public welfare to make a
desirable candidate on any
He would betray every plank & he
were told to do so, and his is
of that suspicious character that s
pels one to hold his nose while ig his
presence. It is corrupt, and not
be its own master if it wished for
it is in che power of British |
ciers.
STATISTICAL LiEs.
The ordinary weapons formerly used
by the father of lies to entrap mankind
are effete and childish. He has, how-
ever, invented a new device, which op-
erates upon men like fiy-paper on flies
—it catches them every time. In “sta-
tistics” modern man will find his down-
fall, particularly in that branch of sta-
tistics known as “financial.” The dev-
il scatters them in our midst, and we
struggle and grasp after them like
drowning men at straws, and every
man seizes upon the wrong fact, and,
of course, makes a wrong application
of it. Anent this new disposition to
get wrong and then stick to ‘t in spite
of the truth, the Louisviile Courier-
Journal is a living example and a
warning.
“During the past twenty-nine months
there has been an international trade
balance in our favor upon the mer-
chandise and gold movement of $1,-
190,000,000, or about $492,000,000. To
this must be added silver exports of
$25,000,000 yearly. This produces a net
apparent value of considerably over
$1,200,000,000, but this is subject to the
invisible movement of exchange in-
volved in the payment of interest
abroad, freight charges, travelers’ ex-
penses, and so on.
“How much of this has been settled
by the return of our securities from
abroad we cannot say. The amount
is large, but it cannot be figured out
with precision. Beyond question the
debt to us is large, and as we are in-
creasing our merchandise exports and
only moderately adding to our im-
ports, there is no chance that we shall
become embarrassed even by the loss
of $40,000,009 or $50,000,000 on this
movement.” |
The vinegar in the molasses, the
trap, the pitfall and death blow to the
statistics is labeled with “How much
of this has been settled by the return
of our securities from abroad we can-
not say.” The truth is, our tremen-
dous balance of trade has been wiped
out by the return of»“our securities,”
and instead of being a creditor nation,
we are a debtor, and paying our debts
in gold. Moreover. our debts are al-
ways increasing. We are worse off
than the little Argentine republic,
which actually receives its balance of
trade in cash and not wind, and what
is paid her in gold is recouped by
drawing on us. We are the scape-
goats, the holders of the sack which
the whole world draws from and gives
us back “our securities.”
THEY WILL NOT FORGET.
“The voters of this country will not
forget the multitudinous scandals and
violations of platform pledges, the in-
credible incredse in public expenses,
and the peril in the tendency of af-
fairs,” says the Helena Independent.
“They will keep their wits about them
from this time forth. There never was
a time when so many voters knew so
much about the history of their coun-
try, and so much of the science of
political economy; every year the
number grows. These voters will
know, most of them know already, that
“booms” are ephemeral affairs, and
that over-capitalization of trusts and
monopolies must react upon somebody,
and they know full well that the work-
ingmen will be the “somebody” upon
whom the reaction will fall.
“Not a voter will go to the polls
next November without having studied
the question of the menace of militar-
ism in a free country, the deception
and treachery practiced by the admin-
istration toward silver, the violation of
the pledge to improve the civil service,
the departure from the teachings of
Washington and the fathers on the
subject of foreign entanglements, the
operations of Gage and the United
States treasury at the demand of stock
gemblers and a favorite money clique.
“Panics have been coming so fast
as a result of Republican legislation
that temporary conditions of boom will
not convince the intelligent voter that
reaction will never come. They will
not forget.”
REASON FOR SUSPICION.
There appears to be grave reason
for the suspicions of the Kansas City
Times in referring to the great
bank, the National City bank,
which is to receive all of the govern-
ment’s internal revenue receipts, mak-
ing a clear profit of about $18,000,000
out of the fund. Added to it is the
other suspicion anent Mr. Gage resign-
ing his present office as treasurer of
the United States and taking upon
himself the presidency of that ner
bank in which are Hanna, Rockefeller,
Morgan, Sloane, McCall, Schiff and
others. “Yet,” says the Times, “why
should not Gage, at the beck of the
president, afford them the opportunity
of manipulating the millions of reve-
nue taxes, wrung from the people for
the purpose of promoting the growth
of militarism and pro:ecuting the plan
of imperialism now in process of de-
velopment in the Philippines? Have
not these men given freely of their
money to the Hanna slush fund, by
whose potent hocus-pocus William L
(of Asia and America was chosen to sit
on the throne? And, shall our noble
executive be recreant to the trusts
which elevated him? Shall he prove
ungrateful to his benefactors? Shall
be not so distribute his favors that no
worthy and contributing plutocrat
shall ever become impoverished?
“This bread which he now commands
his secretary of the treasury to cast
upon the waters will return to him be-
fore many days, when the presidential
campaign begins to warm up. Then
will the coal off trust and its moneyed
following throw into Hanna’s slush
fund a liberal percentage of the mil-
Mons that Gage’s philanthropy has de-
livered into the vaults of the big bank-
ing institution owned by the Standard
Oil magnates, trust monarchs and rail-
way barons, who are the main bene-
ficiaries and chief owners of Republi-
cam prosperity and sole proprietors of
prosperity’s advance agent.”
NO CAUSE FOR GRIEF.
Se the trusts are on the point of
moving intoCanada? That fs the report,
and it bears the impress of truth from
the statement of a representative of
the dominion government, who reeent-
ly went to New York to confer with
several trusts having their main offices
in that city. Broadly stated, the rea-
son given is: “Proposed anti-trust
legislation and the rapid spread of the
anti-trust spirit.”
“We despair,” say the aggrieved
benefactors of the public, “of obtaining
favorable treatment through the en-
actment of federal laws, for the rea-
son that it would be necessary to
amend the constitution of the United
States before this could be done.”
This is certainly a deplorable condi-
tion, but if the trusts will possess their
souls in patience, Mr. MtKinley, should
he be re-elected, will at least attempt
to secure an amendment to the con-
stitution which will give the trusts
more latitude. At present he is doing
everything in his power to accommo-
date the trusts by overstepping the
constitution. But the downtrodden
trusts go on with their declaration of
grievances.
“We are harassed and subjected to
petty annoyances in various states,
and by obtaining national charters
from the Canadian government we
would free ourselves from state in-
terference, and could be sued in thts
country only in the United States
courts.”
Here is a threat that unless the peo-
ple of the United States totally sur-
render to the grasping monopolies they
will go to Canada and put themselves
beyond the reach of any interference. |
What a commentary upon the servility |
of the federal judiciary! What an apt
illustration of the encroachments of
McKinleyism, which is another name
for American imperialism! It is the
same subterfuge, a deception and a de-
lusion, as McKinley's attitude in favor
of silver. In a short time the Repub-
Hean press will be dampened |
tears at the wicked trusts, and holding
up the good and benevolent trusts for
our worship and to get votes. Does |
any one suppose that a single trust
will move to Canada to avoid the anti-
trust spirit? Not as long as McKinley
is president and Mark Hanna his chief
counselor. The more one thinks the |
matter over, the more he is persuaded
that it is one of Mark Twain's witti- |
cisms.
American Feudalism.
Napoleon destroyed the old feudal-
ism, which was the slavery of the ten-
ant to the owner of the soil. Then he
established in its place a military
aristocracy and the feudality of the
sword. Our Napoleon has discovered
a new feudalism which the Los An-
geles Herald thus defines:
“It may with equal truth be said
that, to the aspiration in this country
for equal opportunities to earn a live-
lihood and a comfortable competency,
capital has replied by creating cor-
Porations, syndicates, trusts and mo-
nopoly, to shut the door to competi-
tion and to hold a position through
which the class of dependents can be
enlarged and the labor of the masses
exploited. Instead of feudalifm based
upon land ownership, the country is
rapidly becoming subjected to the feu-
dalism of money. °
“The policies of the government, un-
observed by the masses, but not the
less surely, have promoted the growth
and maintenance of capitalistic feudal-
ism. Unless the trend in that direc-
tion is speedily checked the system will
become absolute and irremovable.
Through the increase of dependents
and of political corruption capitalism
seeks to become the feudal lord of the
nation.”
Senator Aldrich, in discussing the
gold standard bill from the Republican
standpoint, uttered the following re-
markable thought:
“No sane man believed for an in-
stant that the opening of our mints to
the free coinage of silver at the ration
of 16 to 1 would raise the value of sil-
ver bullion from its current commer-
cial price to its mint price.”
When it comes to “value,” there is
no intrinsic value of any kind of bul-
lion converted into money, not even
gold. In trust circles the “value” of
a thing is the price that can be ob-
tained for it. So the wuole of the
senator’s argument amounts to the cu-
rious supposition that, with silver bul-
lion raised to $1.29 per ounce at the
mint, people would still sell their silver
bullion at 60 cents. This is what the
silver producer is now woing, and it
is what the Democratic party protests
against. If it be insanity to desire an
advance in the price of our most*val-
uable product, then the sooner we all
become insane the better for the coun-
try.
The professions and Practices of the
president have become so mixed that
the average citizen can hardly tell
whether he is speaking politically,
morally, or just for effect. In his an-
nual message he proclaims the fact
that we are at peace with the whole
world, and then he wants a large
standing army. At the last session of
congress Senator Cockrell stood up like
@ true American citizen and declared
that no such undemocratic statute
should be engrafted upon our legis-
lature to shame our institutions, bur-
ved weStoes png ge menace the
perpetuity of our of government,
if he could prevent it by the exercise
Clon ertmge mate resource of opposi-
tion wit power. The senator
hes again beclered bi, Ghnrasnaatt
to set his face against the schemes of
the imperialists, and, with his strong
Personnel and dogged determination,
something will have to yield
cece TO EVERYBODY.
The microscope and chemical analy.
sis have proved beyond the question of
a doubt the presence of disease germs
in the bicod, differing in shape and
appearance, according to the nature ot
the disease. Anything relating to
their presence, or, better still, their
‘removal is consequently of interest to
our readers and we therefore call! at-
tention to a very interesting little
book, recently published by M. R.
Zaegel & Company, in which the au-
thor clearly demonstrates the cause
of these little enemies of mankfnd, ang
gives a practical home treatment by
which, without impairing the health of
the smallest child, they can be re-
moved from the system. As this book-
let will be mailed free to any reader
of this paper, tcgether with a free
sample of enough roots and herbs for
two weeks’ home treatment, we advise
all to make application at once by
writing to M. R. Zaegel & Co., P.O. Box
831, Sheboygan, Wis., enclosing in their
letter one two-cent stamp to pay the
postage on the free sample. Following
the rules of health laid down in this
book, and using the roots and herbs
as directed, means the eradication of
disease germs from the blood, the
presence of which cause rheumatism,
headache, stomach, liver, kidney and
bowel complaints.
| Our Modest Presidents
It is rather curious that while every
president to whom the project of add-
ing to the white house has been men-
tioned has been favorable to such a
thing, not one has given his consent to
the introduction of a bill for that pur-
pose. President McKinley has recent-
ly requested Senator Cullom to re-
nounce his intention of fathering such
a bill.
There Is a Class of People.
Who are injured by the use of coffee.
Receatly there has been placed in all
the grocery stores a new preparation
called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains,
that takes the place of coffee. The most
delicate stomach receives it without
distress, and but few can tell it from
coffee. It does not cost over one-fourth
as much. Children may drink it with
great benefit. 15 cents ami 25 cents
per package. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.
Several hundred thousands of Amer-
ieans find the American Monthly Re-
view of Reviews very useful and help-
ful reading. In the political year it
becomes fairly necessary. In no presi-
dential year will this be more true
than in 1900, with the many import-
ant problems created by the country’s
new colonial duties. In Dr. Shaw's
editorial survey of the month, in the
timely contributed features, in the de-
partments reviewing the other maga-
zines of the world, the alert reader
finds each month a full and accurate
presentation of the political news,
with able discussions of the economic
and social questions which are inter-
esting everybody. The authoritative
character-sketches of the presidential
candidates and other notable figures
appear at the hour when public inter-
est is greatest in these subjects. The
Portrayal of current history in the best
caricatures of each month is not the
least attractive of these many helps
to a right understanding of one’s own
times, and one’s own public duties.
Each number is illustrated with nearly
a hundred timely pictures.
The new theatre which Messrs. Hay-
man and Davis are now erecting in
Jackson boulevard will be called The
Illinois. After many names had been
Proposed and their suitability thor-
oughly considered, The Illinois was de-
cided on by a majority of those inter-
ested in this new theatre for Chicago.
From every point in the state, as well
as from prominent people in the city
of Chicago, Manager Wil! J. Davis has
received congratulations upon the hap-
py selection of the name Those who
at first objected to the name have,
after consideration, come to view it
with favor, and it is now almost be-
yond the question of a doubt that the
beautiful structure will be known
throughout its existence as the Illinois
Theatre.
Mr. Francis Wilson has met every-
where he has presented “Cyrano,” his
mew comic opera by Victor Herbert
and Harry B. Smith, with his custom-
ary success. Since it was produced
at the Knickerbocker Theatre in New
York, it has been entirely rewritten
and now it is classed with Mr. Wilson’s
greatest successes. Reports come from
Philadelphia, Boston and Washington
that Mr. Wilson has been greeted by
the largest audiences that he has ever
played to. The advent of the opera
and Mr. Wilson’s forthcoming engage-
ment in the Columbia Theatre, Janu-
ary 28, his first engagement in this
house, is one of the features of the sea-
son’s attractions,
pores ee
Improvements on Nataecs
Celery is derived from smallage.
Fiiberts, etc., are improvements of the
hazelnut.
ne.
% De Seen
Sucesaan tess See
Teltiebaum, Treasurer, East Las Vegas, N.M.
ert
The trip by motor car from Cairo to
the pyramids is made in fourteen min-
utes.
—$——___
THE GRIP CURE THAT DOES CURE.
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets removes
the cause that produces La Gri; w.
Grove's signature is on each Dom Se
catatonia eee
It is estimated that the population
of Italy includes about 50,000 Jews.
“A Miss is As :
s
Good as a Mile.
J you are not entirely evell, you aré il.
Biness does not mean death's dew. gs
& sense of weariness, a“ tired feeling” a
to aor nameless pain and sffer
ing. cases the blood is to blame.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is Nature’s '
3 foods Sa Remember
A New Sea Port
There is a lusty young city growing up down in Texas which is attracting widespread attention. It is La Porte, located at the head of Galveston Bay. It is being made the great seaport of the Gulf of Mexico, the meeting place of rail and water ways for the vast commerce of the west. The saving to western shippers via this export outlet will run into millions annually. The city has the most magnificent natural port on the southern coast of the United States and one of the best in the world. The U. S. government is completing a deep water channel through the bay to the gulf, which will soon bring the largest ocean liners to La Porte docks and wharfs.
Winter Excursions.
The Southern Pacific Company and its connections operate the best first and second-class service to California, Arizona, Texas and Mexico. Through Pullman Palace Sleepers and Tourist Sleepers from all principal eastern points. Personally conducted Tourist Excursions from Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Des Moines, Omaha, Kansas City. etc. For particulars and descriptive literature write W. G. Neimyer, Gen'l Western Agent, 238 Clark St., Chicago; W. H. Connor, Com'l Agent, Chamber Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio, or W. J. Berg, Trav. Pass Agt., 220 Ellicott Sq., Buffalo, N. Y.
Florida, West Indies and Central America
The facilities of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad for handling tourists and travelers destined for all points in Florida, Cuba, Porto Rico, Central America, or for Nassau, are unsurpassed. Double daily lines of sleeping cars are run from Cincinnati, Louisville, Chicago and St. Louis through Jacksonville to interior Florida points, and to Miami, Tampa and New Orleans, the ports of embarkation for the countries mentioned. For folders, etc., write J. K. Ridgely, N. W. P. A., Chicago, Ill.
The Land of Bread and Butter
is the title of a new illustrated pamphlet just issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, relating more especially to the land along the new line it is now building through Bon Homme and Charles Mix counties in South Dakota. It will be found very interesting reading. A copy will be mailed free on receipt of 2-cent stamp for postage. Address Geo. H. Heafford, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Ill.
Neck of the House.
The husband said: "I'm the authority—the head of the house."
"I'm the neck," replied his wife. "I can turn the head any way I please."
Lane's Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.
If we would have that charity of which St. Paul speaks, we must come very near to our Divine Lord.—Rev. Father York.
I am Past 80 and Not a Gray Hair
"I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a great many years, and although I am past eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head." — Geo. Yel-lott, Towson, Md., Aug. 3, 1899.
Have You Lost It?
We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have. But there is no need of mourning over it, for you can find it again. Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color to gray hair. We know exactly what we are saying when we use that word "always."
It makes the hair grow heavy and long, too: takes out every bit of dandruff, and stops falling of the hair. Keep it on your dressing table and use it every day. $1.69 a bottle. All druggists.
Write the Doctor
If you do not obtain all the benefits you desire from the use of the Vicor, write the Doctor about it. He will tell you just the right thing to do, and will send you his book on the Hair and Scalp if you request it. Address. Dr. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass.
THE MILLION DOLLAR POTATO
Most talked of potato on earth! Our
Catalog tells—so also about Salzer's Earliest Six Weeks' Potato. Largest farm and vegetable seed growers in U.S. Potatoes, $1.20 and up a bbl. Send this method and so. stamp for Big Casing. was
JOHN A. SALZER SEED GLA CROSSEWIS
PISO'S CURE FOR
FIRST WORK ALL THE FILL.
Best Orugh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in Hue. Sold by Grumpitt.
CONSUMPTION
SAN FRANCISCO CHINAMEN HAVE A NEWSPAPER.
The Best Evidence That the Celestial Is Becoming an American-It Is Called the Oriental and Occidental Yat Po Which Means the Daily News.
The Chinaman has worked his way into a prominent place in the life of the Pacific coast and is no longer regarded with the intolerance which marked the days of Dennis Kearney. The intervening years since the man Kearney waved a hangman's noose before a savagely-delighted army of malcontents and preached the doctrine of Chinese extirpation, and the present day may be called the period of reconstruction of the outraged law, and great has been the transformation. In deference to popular will, lawfully expressed, national legislation has shut off Chinese immigration in a large measure, and time has shown the wisdom of the act. But the 100,000 Chinese then and now within the state of California have, by the laws of absorption and amalgamation, as they apply to commerce and trade, gradually merged their interests with those of leading American houses, and their world-wide reputation for business honesty and sagacity has won for them fast business friendships which all the demagogues on earth could not break or make. Steamship lines and brokerage and banking are largely in Chinese hands, and the stated clearing houses of San Francisco passes upon such a volume of Chinese commercial paper as to surprise those who do not keep pace with the wonderful progress of this people. Having such great interests in financial circles, the Chinese merchant needs a daily adviser and counselor, just as his Caucasian neighbor does, and so the great innovation of the nineteenth century follows—a Chinese daily newspaper in San Francisco. The new paper is called Chung Sai Yat Po, which means Oriental and Occidental Daily News. It is a four-page, six-column sheet, and is the only Chinese daily in the world outside the Celestial empire. The promoter and editor of the paper is Rev. Ng Poon Chew, pastor of the Presbyterian Chinese church, and his staff of writers embraces some eminent Americans. The common enemy of civilization among Chinese is superstition. The existing weekly papers pander to this weakness in the common horde and thus perpetuate hatreds and racial prejudices which often find utterance in the bludgeon or pistol of the highbinder. To wipe out this cause of trouble will be one task of the Ching Sai Yat Po, and all the Christianized energies and learning of its reverend promoter will be turned into this needy channel. News and comment will be up to date and a faithful transcript of what the Associated Press furnishes for morning readers. It may surprise many to learn that Chinamen follow great national subjects closely. The recent Jeffries-Sharkey fight was as eagerly watched from a Chinese bulletin board as from those of the leading American dailies, and as many dol-
A.
Hanging Rees in Pennsylvania.
More men are under sentence of death in Pennsylvania than at any prior period in its history, and the probability is that 1900 will be the banner year for executions in the nineteenth century. So far Gov. Stone has in his possession documents indicating the conviction of fourteen murderers, the date of whose execution he is required to name. To these must be added the names of Michael Baronsky, Andrew Coress, Anthony Machulas, Joseph Sachinsky, Peter Stenkewicz, Andrew Stenkewicz and John Stenkewicz, of Schuylkill county, who were found guilty of the murder of Joseph Rutkowski. This is the greatest number of men ever found guilty in this state for the murder of a single person, and probably the largest in the United States. If they are made to pay the extreme penalty of the law they will constitute the greatest number ever executed in the state at one time for the same offense. The nearest to this was a former trial in Schuylkill county, when five men were found guilty and executed for the murder of Policeman Yost of Tamaqua in 1877.
The Germs of Cancer.
Dr. Behla, a member of the sanitary council of Luckau, Prussia, has discovered that man can take the germs of cancer by eating vegetables growing in a soil watered by a sewer. The garden truck that grows in the suburbs of that city is watered from a ditch that gets its supply of water from a sewer. The folk in this city eat their parseley, cucumbers, peas, onions, garlic and strawberries raw, in which state the germs seem to be carried easily.
MAYOR OF BOSTON.
The victory in Boston, which makes Thomas N. Hart mayor, was a surprise. Boston is nominally Democratic, the party's nominee for governor at the last election having carried the city by 6,000. The candidate for mayor was Gen. Patrick A. Collins, the distinguished lawyer and intimate friend of Grover Cleveland, who was consul general to London during the latter's last administration. This was deemed a strong nomination and so poor was the outlook for Republican success that the men who run the machinery of the G. O. P. gave the nomination to Thomas N. Hart, whom they disliked because of his independence during previous incumbency of the position. They thought Hart would be beaten, but Hart stands well with the taxpayers and this fact, together with a split in the Democratic ranks, gave him a majority of nearly 2,000. The disaffection among the Democrats was due to the defeat of John R. Murphy, by Gen. Collins, in the nominating convention, and Murphy's friends retaliated. It was alleged against Gen. Collins that he was
J.
THOMAS N. HART. not in accord with the Chicago platform. Hart served as mayor some ten years ago.
OUR KINSMEN. THE BOERS.
There Is a Tie Between Them and Our Country's Early Settlers.
Reminded incessantly of their kinship with the English, Americans are not often asked to remember their kinship with the Boers. And yet the tie is a close one. The Boer is a transplanted Dutchman, and the influence of Holland in shaping the destiny of this country is ranked by historians as second only to that of Great Britain. In contemplating the Transvaal war it is well not to forget what the Dutch did for America. The Pilgrim Fathers, having been driven out of England, found a refuge in Holland, until they sailed for the New World. Holland was in that age the cradle of religious liberty. It was one of the world's great states, and its people had won greater freedom than those of England. During their sojourn there the refugees learned to admire and love many Dutch institutions, and they carried these feelings with them across the Atlantic. In the very foundation of the American commonwealth there was a stratum of the elements that are present in the fighting Boers. Hendrik Hudson, when he sailed his boat, the Half Moon, through the Narrows, in 1609, was, though English himself, in the service of the Dutch East India company To Holland, therefore, belongs the honor of the discovery of the Hudson river and what is now the port of New York. England claimed all the territory on the Atlantic coast from the bay of Fundy to Florida, but did not oppose the colonization of the territory discovered by Hudson. Hudson named the region New Netherland and established trading posts on Manhattan island and at what is now Albany. The first Dutch colonists arrived in 1623 and settled on Manhattan island, which they named New Amsterdam. Holland claimed all the territory from the Delaware to the Connecticut. To stimulate colonization the Dutch West India company offered a tract 10 miles along one bank of any river or eight miles along both banks to anybody who would transport fifty colonists from the old country. Among these brave pioneers were the forefathers of many who now look upon themselves as the aristocracy of New York. In just this way did the Dutch colonize South Africa and found the nation that is now fighting desperately for its freedom. So that there is cousinship of race between many in the Four Hundred and the stern farmers who obey Oom Paul. But intermarriage on this side has modified the original type, whereas the Boers in their jealous isolation have preserved the pure, strong, rugged race.
A Noted French Woman.
The Duchess D'Uzes, who has indignantly repudiated the statement that she is backing the Boer recruiting movement in this country, with which her name has been associated, is one of the wealthiest aristocrats of France and one of the noblest. She is the owner of the famous vineyard and champagne plant of Cliquot, which she inherited from her maternal grandmother. She maintains several immense establishments, the most important of which is that in the old ultra-fashionable quarter of the Faubourg St. Germain. Her great hunting estate, with its chateau, at Bonhelles, near the forest of Rambouillet, is one of the most magnificent properties of its kind in France. The duchess is a daughter of the family of Rochehouart-Mortemart. She was married at 19 to the Duc d'Uzes, one of the most celebrated statesmen of his time
30 FEET OF BOWELS
5 4 3 1 2
9 10
11
6
1
12
7
8
13
14
THE ALIMENTARY CANAL. 1. Lower end of esophagus (meat-pipe) which conveys the food from the throat to the stomach; 2. Cardiac end of stomach; 3. Pyloric end of stomach; 4. Duodenum; 5. Gall bladder; 6. 6. 6. Small intestines; 7. Cecum; 8. Vermiform appendix; 9. Ascending colon; 10. Transverse colon; 11. Descending colon; 12. Sigmoid flexure; 13. Rectum; 14. Anus. The duodenum is continuous with the small intestines. The small intestine empties into the large intestine or colon at the cecum. The arrows indicate the direction of the bowels must take in waste through the alimentary canal.
Made CLEAN and STRONG by Cascarets
Get the genuine if you want results! Tablet is marked "CCC." Cascarets are never sold in bulk, but only and always in the light blue metal box with the long-tailed "C." Look for the trade-mark—the C with a long tail—on the lid!
BEST FOR THE BOWELS
10c.
25c. 50c.
ALL DRUGGISTS
CCC
This is the genuine tablet, never sold in bulk.
To any needy mortal, who can't afford to buy, we will mail a box free.
Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York.
AN APPEAL TO HUMANITY GENERALLY.
We need your assistance in announcing to the world the greatest remedy that Science has ever produced, and you need our assistance to secure relief for yourself and friends through Swanson's "5-DROPS."
A REMEDY SUPREME.
As surely as the American Navy has conquered and will conquer all that opposes it, so will "5-DROPS" unfallingly conquer all disease like Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Kidney Troubles, Lumbago, Catarrh of all kinds, Asthma, Dyspepsia, Backache, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Heart-Weakness, Toothache, Earache, Creeping Numbness, Bronchitis, etc., or any disease for which we recommend it. "5-DROPS" is the name and the dose. Trial bottles 25c. Large bottles, containing 300 doses, $1.00 prepaid by mail or express. Six bottles for $5.00. Why suffer pain and agony when for such small amount you can obtain the relief for which you have been so long waiting? Don't wait! Write now, and the Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., 164 Lake St., Chicago, Ill., will immediately give your order attention.
The Black Cat Fad.
The latest idea in the way of a portebonheur is to carry a tiny puss of wondrous goldsmith's work swinging as a pendant from the end of your lorgnette chain. The cat is made of black enamel upon metal. Its eyes have a metallic green gleam. Are they not tiny catseyes? The sapient puss wears a collar of brilliants set close about her furry neck. This, it seems, is the very "latest."
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
O.; Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price
75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Latest in Stews
A cadaverous looking man went into a restaurant and took a seat at a table He coughed feebly out of a hollow chest and beckoned to the waiter. "Bring me a little milk toast," he said in a husky voice. "Graveyard stew," yelled the waiter back to the kitchen.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
An Universal Language.
At a recent meeting of the Russian Academy of Sciences Professor Dills advocated the use of English as a universal language for men of science.
Coughing Leads to Consumption
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
When a man is engaged to a woman he thinks of her half the time he doesn't see her. After they get married he thinks of her half the time he sees her.
The professional picture-hanger is now a regular adjunct of art stores in large cities.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is the best of all cough cures.—George W. Lotz, Fabucher, La., August 26, 1895.
Think well of no young man whom the old men do not find polite.
When All Else Falls. Try Yi-Kl.
Cures Corns and Bunions without pain. Never falls.
Drug stores or mall 15c. Yi-Kl Co., Crawfordsville, Ind.
A woman never knows what it is to have a wife.
The Largest in the World.
Walter Baker & Co. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass., and the largest Mirs. of Cocoa and Chocolate in the world.
Suspense is the most trying of all emotions.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, always pain, cures wind colic. 20c a bottle
Coe's Cough Balsam
is the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it.
When we love it is the heart that judges.
If you had rather be sick than well, don't use N. K. Brown's Iron and Quinine Bitters.
MILLIONS
of acres of choice agricultural LANDS now opened for settlement in Western Canada. Here is grown the celebrated NO. 1 HARD WHEAT, which brings the highest price in the markets of the world; thousands of cattle are fattened for market without being fed grain and without a day's shelter. Send for information and secure a free home in Western Canada. Write the Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, or address the undersigned, who will mail you atlases, pamphlets, etc., free of cost. C. J. Broughton. 1223 Monad ock Block, Chicago, Ill., or Everett & Kantz. Fort Wayne, Ind.
LAPORTE
Situated on Galveston Bay, is destined to be the
TEXAS
NOST PROSPEROUS CITY on the Gulf of Mexico It possesses unexcelled NATURAL advantages which coupled with the BACKING of wealthy and influential men assures a brilliant future. The U. S. Government is now spending a large amount of money in Harbor improvements. La Porte is the natural seaport for the products of the entire Middle, Northern and Western States and for Houston, the great railroad center of Texas. Excursions at reduced rates will be run twice a month. Write for FREE NAPS, DESCRIPTIVE LITERATURE and full particulars to
AMERICAN LAND CO.,
188 Madison St., CHICAGO
DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH
CURES COUGHS AND COLDS.
PREVENTS CONSUMPTION.
All Druggists, #5e.
KILLER
CARTER'S INK
Has the endorsement of the
U. S. Government and all
the Leading Railroads.
PENSION JOHN W. MOBRIS,
Washington, D.C.
Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau.
3 yrs in civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since.
DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS treatment TURK. DR. H. H. GRANKEN'S SONS. Box K. Atlanta, Ga.
---
are packed away in your in order and doing business. It's a long way, with the refuse and clog the cleaned out every day. When this long can trouble—furred tongue, b yellow spots, pimples and b food after eating—an all-ar
are packed away in your insides and must be kept clean, in order and doing business. It's a long way, with many turns and pitfalls to catch the refuse and clog the channel if not most carefully cleaned out every day. When this long canal is blockaded, look out for trouble—furred tongue, bad breath, belching of gases, yellow spots, pimples and boils, headaches, spitting up of food after eating—an all-around disgusting nuisance.
Violent pill poisons or gripping salts are dangerous to use for cleaning out the bowels. They force out the obstruction by causing violent spasms of the bowels, but they leave the intestines weak and even less able to keep up regular movements than before, and make a larger dose necessary next time.
Then you have the pill he than the morphine and whi
The only safe, gentle b sweet, fragrant CASCAR out the foecal matter with w the whole 30 feet of bowel and restore healthy, natural (Look out for imitations and results. Cascarets are never trade-mark, the long-tailed find that in an entirely nat promptly and permanently must take in
de CLEAN and STRO
Then you have the pill habit, which kills more people than the morphine and whiskey habits combined. The only safe, gentle but certain bowel cleansers are sweet, fragrant CASCARETS, because they don't force out the foecal matter with violence, but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles and restore healthy, natural action. Buy and try them! (Look out for imitations and substitutes or you can't get results. Cascarets are never sold in bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the long-tailed "C" on the box.) You will find that in an entirely natural way your bowels will be promptly and permanently
Wind is not wisdom.
WESTERN CANADA
SALZER'S 3 EARED CORN
This new, earliest, corn will revolutionize corn growing, yielding in 1800, in Minnesota, 400 bus. per acre.
BIG FOUR OATS
yields 121 bus. per acre, and you can beat that!
SPELTZ
60 bus. per acre. Greatest grain and hay food this side of the earl BARLEY, BEARDLESS, yields 121 bus. in N.Y. Wonderful
RAPE 25c. A TON
Given rich, green food for cattle, sheep, swine, poultry, etc., at 12a. a ton. We sell nine-tenths of the Rape seed used in the U.S.
BROMUS INERMUS
Greatest grass on earth. Grows to perfection in America everywhere. Salzer warrants it!
THE MILLION DOLLAR potato is the most talked of potato on earth, and Salzer Six Weeks; both will make you rich. Largest grower of Potatoes and Farm Seeds in the world.
VEGETABLE SEEDS
Largest, choicest list in U. S. Onion Seed, 80c. 1b. Everything warranted to grow. 35 pkgs earlest vegetables, postpaid, $1.00.
FOR 10c. STAMPS
and this notice, we mall great Seed Catalog and 10 pkgs Farm Seed Novelties. Catalog alone, 5c. postage. www.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
LA CROSSE WIS.
Personally Conducted California Excursions
Via the Santa Fe Route.
Three times a week from Chicago and Kansas City.
Twice a week from St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Once a week from St. Louis and Boston.
In improved wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist sleeping cars. Better than ever before, at lowest possible rates. Experienced excursion conductors. Also daily service between Chicago and California. Correspondence solicited. T. A. GRADY, Manager California Tourist Service, The Atchison. Topeka & Santa Fe Railway, 109 Adams Street, CHICAGO.
ASTHMA
POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
Gives relief in FIVE minutes. Send
for a FREE trial package. Sold by
Druggists. One Box sent postpaid
on receipt of $1.00. Six boxes $6.00.
Address THOR, POPHAM, PRILLA, Pa.
OSTEOPATHY is a method of treating disease,
without drugs, by manipulation,
the result of which is to restore the normal con-
tion of nerve control and blood supply to every organ
of the body. Examination free. Write for Booklet.
Columbian Institute of Osteopathy,
84 Adams Street, Suite 73 Dexter Building, Chicago.
If afflicted with
sore eyes, use
Thompson's Eye Water
W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 3, 1900.
When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper.
Slocum's ANTI-DYSPEPTIC WORM CAKES
For the expulsion of all kinds of worms, excepting the Tape Worm (for which we have a special remedy), and without the use of other medicines, giving health and vitality to the disordered stomach and bowels. They are pleasant to take; acting as a mild cathar ic, they cleanse the stomach, giving tone and vigor to the system. Price 25c. at all druggists.
Sole Proprietors.
FINNEY & SLOCUM
CHICAGO AND NEW YORK.
OWELS insides and must be kept clean, many turns and pitfalls to catch channel if not most carefully al is blockaded, look out for bad breath, belching of gases, boils, headaches, spitting up of around disgusting nuisance.
habit, which kills more people
diskey habits combined.
but certain bowel cleansers are
ETS, because they don't force
violence, but act as a tonic on
el wall, strengthen the muscles
al action. Buy and try them!
and substitutes or you can't get
er sold in bulk. Look for the
("C" on the box.) You will
natural way your bowels will be
<>
SS
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1900.
ODDS AND ENDS.
Columbia; S. C., bas an ordinance
which requires that gates should swing
inward. .
Stain of 4anana juice is almost In-
delibie. It does not proceed from the
stalk or plant. but exists in the green
fruit as well.
Many comets will be seen during the
twentieth century. The most interest-
fing is Halley’s—last seen in 1835. It
‘Ys due in 1910 or 1911.
A clever rascal recently succeeded in
selling to the peasants of a remote
town in Russia tickets which purport-
ed to admit them to Paradise.
Congress will be asked to establish
@ national park“in the southern Alle-
ganies, probably in the Blue Ridge or
Smoky mountains, western North Car-
orina.
The latest ban-le charm worn in
Paris ie a ufan’s little battered-in tall
hbat—a not particularly creditable sou-
venir of the Longehamps-Loubet inci-
dent.—Paris Letter.
Freddie—“There is one thing I'd like
to know.” Cobwigger—“Well?” Fred-
die—“Why is there no use asking San-
ta Claus for the things you don’t want
me to have?”"—Judge.
The state forestry commissioners of
New York have just purchased 40,000
acres of land in the Catskill moun-
tains, making the holdings of the state
in that region aggregate 300,000 acres.
Sailors’ trousers, or “trombone
pants,” as they have sometimes been
called, expand in beil-shape at the
bottom so as to be the more easily
kicked off in case of the wearer's fall-
ing into the water.
Seventy-seven per cent of the men
enlisting in the army during the past
year were native-born Americans. Five
years ago our soldiers were principally
men of foreign birth,Irish and Ger-
mans predominating.
SCIENTIFIC NOTES.
An immense inverted syphon, six
feet in diameter and 1.780 feet long.
takes water from one side of a river in
Idaho and discharges it on the oppo-
site side of the river. The difference
in elevation between intake and dis-
charge is 35 feet.
Jersey City will build a dam 100 feet
high to flood 852 acres, for a supply of
7,000,000,000 gallons of water. it will
be reached by two miles of tunnel,three
and one-half miles of masonry aque-
~duct and sevénteen miles of steel pipe
‘capable of delivering 50,000,000 gallons
a day.
An ingenvous Frenchman, M. Albert
Jagot, has constructed a perpetual! cal-
endar, which indicates automatically
without any attention save winding
the day of the Week, the date and the
month. It shows the 29th of Febru-
ary every four years, besides suppress-
ing it in the continuing ycars that are
not leap years and showing it in those
that are.
A German doctor has devised a plan
for massaging rheumatic joints. He
takes the patient’s hand and puts it
in a Geep glass which is two-thirds
full of quicksilver. The mercury ex-
erts an equal pressure on every por-
tion of the fingers and the pressure
increases rapidly as the fingers sink
further into it. The hand is alter-
nately plunged and raised about twen-
ty or thirty times at each treatment,
and after a second visit there is a
marked diminution of the swelling.
SHORT SERMONS.
There are critical moments in every
life when we must act and act quick-
ly,—Rev. D. C. Garrett.
God stands at the beginning of life,
the first, simplest, sweetest of all
knowabie things—love—Rev. Frank
‘Crane.
If we wou'd have that charity of
which St. Paul speaks, we must come
very meat to our Divine Lord.—Rev.
Father York. <
We need patience in building charac-
ter according to the patterns of right-
‘eousness as it is in Jesus Christ —Rev.
John R. Shannon. :
Life is a pearl of great price. No
man who has ever lived has been rich
enough to buy a square inch of it—
Rev. Ira Biliman.
“The church is the home of mutual
soul culture, and an organization of all
sorts and conditions of servants of
humanity—Rev. A. McGaffin.
-. Abiding in Christ fs to be in fel-
Jowship ‘with Him and to have the
‘word in ts is to study it, feed upon it,
‘be nourished by it, live it—Rev. 0. C.
-Thave known men to take refuge in
Fitualism or rigid orthodoxy on the
ciple of not letting the left hand
} what the right one doeth —Rev.
re a. of God’s mind
and ind. They gain in ‘charm
and b end-pathority by this fact.
S POINTED PARAGRAPHS,
- ‘The fore fault a man looks for the
‘more he finds. 3
‘Beauty ‘may be only skin deep, but it
te nearly always effective.
“Contentment may be betic: than
eee Gane 40 go tog +ther.
_ Nat after making man, found she
"The contents of = bald man's head
ay hevaluable even though he bas
8 See te ee}
HOME-MADE PHILOSOPHY.
‘Wotever condishun the “best peepul”
want, thay encourage the other peepul
too demand.
A good wife iz like a full purse; a
bad wife iz worse than a pocket with
a hole in it.
A onest man will alerze foller the
dicktates ov hiz conschence—prowidin
he kin do so and still hold hiz job.
Man goze out with a lite hart too
wurk; with a desperate hart too plun-
der, and with a heavy hart too beg.
It duzzent make mutch oddz wot
relygyun a man professes, so long az
he haz got the love ov yoomanity in hiz
hart.
The troothfull man iz respected even
by the boss liar ov the town, wile the
boss liar iz a disgust too even hiz own
fambly.
Bizness, like a game of poker, makes
@ man ware a lie on hiz face; but only
the big corporashuns are drawin cards
jis now.
Nashuns are made up ov indiwid-
yooals, and whether thay are wurkerze,
plundererze, or beggarze, iz wot makes
thare karackter.
The man hoo belongs to a perlitickal
party, like the dog that belongs too a
thief, will defend hiz master even wen
starvashun looks in at the winder.
Angels will hardly work on earth
so long az they must hold up their
robes to keep them frum trailing in
politickel corrupshun and yooman
blud.
Sivilized tretchery iz jist az mean
and contemptibull az heathen -tretch-
ery. A villain in the garb ov a king,
iz no better than a villain in the rags
ov a beggar.
He must be a noble man hoo trize
too reform a bad wife, for wen wunst
convinced that his wife iz bad, he must
be a saint too retain love anuff too
tackle the job.
Wen the poor man patronizes the
nooze paper az well az he duz the bar,
and drinks nollege instead ov beer,
he'll then begin too bild printin offices
insted ov saloons.
Man tempers religyun to the con-
dishuns he finds in hiz locality. In a
land ov peace, God iz love, but in a
Jand ov rebelyus slaves, God iz the
God of war and biudshed.
THINGS HERE AND THERE.
_ It is estimated that the population
of Italy includes about 50,000 Jews.
| The trip by motor car from Cairo te
the pyramids is made in fourteen min-
utes.
_ It is said that worry kills more peo-
ple than work—probably because more
people worry than work.
Chicago, in addition to other dis-
tinctions, has that of possessing the
only professional teacher of parrots in
the country.
A fifteen-year-old English girl tried
to drown herself in a Wimbledon pond
because her mother insisted on her
wearing corsets.
The largest library of smgli books
in the world belongs to a Frenchman,
who boasts that he can pack 700 of his
pocket editions in a single portman-
teau.
An entire new glass covering has
been ordered for the roof of the Crys-
tal Palace, in London. The total glass
area to be covered is about fifteen
acres.
_ (Chicago makes provision for its deaf
children in the public schools. There
are eleven schools at present scattered
through the city, and they contain
about 200 children.
John J. Johnson. who died in Flu-
Yanna county, Va., the other day, was
one of the litter bearers who carried
‘Stonewall Jackson from the field when
that general was mortally wounded at
Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863.
A medical enthusiast on the subject
of automobiles says the banishment of
horses from cities, with the resulting
cleaner streets, will greatly reduce the
number of cases. of lock-jaw, typhoid
fever, influenza, choleraic diseases and
blood poisoning from wounds.
There is a man in western Massa-
chusetts over sixty years old who lives
on the line of the Boston & Albany
Toad; he has been in the service of
that company for over forty years, and
could ride free on its cars whenever
he chose to do so; yet he has never
visited this city—Boston Transcript.
WHAT THE LAW. DECIDES.
Constitutionality of attorney's fees
allowed by statute for the successful
establishment and enforcement of a
mechanic's lien is sustained in Dell vs.
Marvin (Fia.), 45 L. R. A. 201, on the
ground that such claims may be made
a class by themselves for such pur-
Pose.
Exclusion of citizens of other states
from the right to dig claims for sale
on certain flats, by a regulation re-
stricting the right to residents of the
town, is held, in Com. vs. Hilton
(Mass.),"45 L. R. A. 475, not to be in
violation of the constitutional privi-
leges or immunities of citizens.
Determination of a commissioner ‘ap-
pointed by the governor to ascertain
en te eee ee ee
amendments is held, in State
ex rel.-Bott vs. Wruts (N. J.), 45 L. R.
A. 251, to be reviewable by certiorari,
Botwithstanding a proclamation of the
governor, based on their determina-
tion, declaring the amendment adopted.
A statute compelling the resignation
ofall herds of cattle of persons sell-
towns and and prohibiting the
sale and shipment of mili fm such
places from unsanitary premises, is
held, fu-State vs. Brosdbelt (Md.), 45
LR. A. 483, to bea. valid exercise of
the police power, and not r
ee ee Lo
CANDY...)
Tiy the inimitable fine and pure
candies, the be-tin the city for
lie., We. and 40. per pound,
All put up in beautiful boxes,
== suitable for presents. -
GUNTHERS CONFECTIONERY
212 STATE STREET. ~~
ALBERT B. GEORGE
LAW YER.
423 Ashland Block, Chicago.
— Tel. M. 2625.——
WW. JOHNSON,
LAWYER,
125 Clark Street, - Chicago.
ow-Room 53...... *
Tel. Wentworth 516 « Office Hours:
8304. m.to8j0p.m
BEAUREGARD F. MOSELY
LAWYER
Bankruptcy ProcerDINcs A SPECIALTY.
Sourre 1 anp2
6296 HaLstep Streer CHICAGO
Gor. Hatstep & 63RD Sts. ry
| MRS. LAURA DAILEY.
| FURNISHED ROOMS
FORSTRANGERS & TRAVELERS
THEATRICAL HEADQUARTERS.
Cheap rates and gcod accommodations.
= St., 2d floor, Chieage, Ill
| Room 28.
|
P. J. FLYNN
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
HARD and SOFT COAL
WOOD AND KINDLING
YARDS, Cor. 47th and Wabash
R. R. 67th and Eastern II. R.R.
Branch Offi:e, 5301 Wentworth av.
TeLersoxe 813 YaRps.
DR. JOSEPH JEFFREY,
Physician and Surgeon,
4858 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO.
Hours: $410 a. m., 2-4, 68 p. m.
DR. WM. H. DAVIS, Chiropidist,
TREATMENT PAINLESS.
Promp Attention given to Calls at Your
Residence or Place of Business.
6012 Fifth Avenue, Chicago
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.
Forty acre chicken farm, 27 miles
from Chicago, %mile from railroad
stations. Fine grove 15 acres surround-
ing buildings, which consist of 8-room
hous, frame, 2 barns, chicken house and
poultry yard. Fine hog house and
other outbuildings. 25 acres in crop
this year. Hay. corn, oats, potatoés
and beans. Price clear of incumbrance
$4,000, Buildings alone cost $2,500.
Will exchange for clear property in
Chicago.
If you have anything to offer, call
or address The Broad Ax, 5040 Armour
avenue.
94 ACRE FARM FOR SALE.
Three miles from Geneva Junctioca,
six miles from Lake Geneva.
9 acres in Walworth county, lies all
in cultivation, good house, barn and
outbiidings. 20 head miich cows. 20
head hogs. 5006 chickens, 100 turkeys,
50 ducks, 3 hear horses, all farming
tools and this years crops.
Price $75 per acre. Crops last year
over $1,200 net. Crop this year over
$1,500. Sell cream $5 per day now.
If you desire to purchase this ele-
gant farm so indicate by addressing
The Broad Ax.
FOR SALE.
A lovely six-room cottage, modern
improvements, lot 25 by 125, located
on Elizabeth street, near Sixty-Seventh.
Price, $1,200. $150 cash, balance to
suit purchaser. This is a bargain.
Any one desiring to secure a cosy
little home should avail themselves of
this opportunity. For further informa-
tion address Julius F. Taylor, 5040
Armour avenue.
AGENTS WANTED.
The Broad Ax desires to secure active
agemts and correspondents in all sec-
tions of the country. Liberal commis-
sions will be paid. For terms and
further particulars address The Broad
Ax, 5040 Armour ayenuo, Chicago.
It ts always so much easier to find a
mame for your neighbor's baby than it
‘ts to select one for your own.
the same stone twice. When he
ponent that way the coond Cime t
| Pelephone Yards 72 ——-=stablished 1877
JOHN J. DUNN,
ee
Goal - and - Wood,
Sist Street and
Armour Avenue...
mee sh Ps
eee
J. F. Knorr, 5553 Green St. ‘Tol. Yards eas
KENNY & CO.,
Undertakers and Livery,
toa Acoma:
5438 SOUTH HALSTED ST.
es
SeucasTersamees «Creve attention
Cc.J.BOYD,
Practical Plumber and Gas-itter
Seaaus ue tone Sees
Telephone Yards 914.
709 WEST 47TH STREET.
‘Telephone Yards 79! Residence, 113 Garfield B4
JOHN FITZGERALD
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE:
4787 S. HALSTED STREET,
one CHICAGO
M. C. McINTOSH,
cooK
COUNTY
JUSTICE...
OFFICE, ROOM 616, ASHLAND BLOCK,
Telephone Main 2711.
HARDWARE, STOVES
and FURNITURE - ---
2511-2519 ARCHER AVENUE,
ONE BLOCK WEST OF HALSTED ST.
JOBBING A SPECIALTY.
TELEPHONE SOUTH 382
ae
THE FALSE STAR.
The agitation of the Mormon ques-
tion has naturally aroused some inter-
est in the minds of all classes of people
throughout the United States, and much
has been written lately, both pro and
con, on Utah and the Mormons. The
latest literary contribution in that di-
Re) es
Pea toes eee
Ras Dat
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Mabdd SEO DOs cy
ee 2th ena
Rae St
i exe emerson cgi
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rection is “The False Star,” by A. D.
Gash, which deals with Mormonism in
all of its ramifications.
We will send this wonderful book,
which is printed by the W. B. Conkey
Company, and sells for $1.25, and The
Broad Ax for one year to any address
in the United States, for $2.50. Agents
wanted everywhere. Address all com-
-munications to Julius F. Taylor, Editor
and Publisher of The Broad Ax, 5040
Armour avenue, Chicago, Ill.
GOLD WATCi FREE.
Anyone sending us ten yearly sub-
scribers to The Broad Ax, or 20 sub-
scribers for six months, we will pre-
sent them with this beautiful gold-
filled watch, fitted with New York
standard movement, and warranted
for five years, either ladies” or gents”.
FEL AWS
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ed
SA IAN
LORDS cee tS
a ee ¥ Be! ea Led Rae
. ey ce . er i
Bene = Re
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rm yd] - xT i > = ‘
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Zev re*4
This is a splendid opportunity to~
catch on if you desire to obtain a gold
watch free. In all cases the cash must
accompany the list of subscribers. Send
for sample copies of The Broad Ax,
go to work and earn a watch. Address
The Broad Ax, 5040 Armour sve., Chi-
ago, Th
Hon. W. J. Bryan’s Book
ee ¢
ALLL who are interested in furthering the sale of Hon.
W. J. Bryan’s new book should correspond im-
mediately with the publishers. The work will contain
An account of his campaign tour. . .
His most important speeches ....
F } The results of the campaign of 1896.
: A review of the political situation . .
> AGENTS WANTED <=
Mr. Bryan has announced his intention of devoting
one-half of all royalties to furthering the cause of
bimetallism. There are already indications of an enor
mous sale. Address
~ W. B. CONKEY COMPANY, Publishers, ¢
341.251 Raarhaen St....crwricn
IF
YOU
snclnge tou toenlly Gaageutiea © 50
DON’T ADVERTISE
OTHERS
DO!
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that this office is fully prepared at all times to turn out
on the shortest notice, in the most artistic and
workmanlike manner, all kinds of . . .
b 3 ®
---- Job Printing
such as letter heads, bill heads, posters,
programmes, invitations, announcements, bills
of fare, pamphlets, and anything in the line of job work.
See Our Samples==s« our prices
UY LIRECT [ROM THE [ACTORY-
SS —_ HONEST AACHINES AT HONEST PRICES
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pes”) CHICAGO SEWING MACHINE 6.
: A Business Proposition
“ . Dunpesreceeeees oe
| 3 nay Breve & paying investment for :
WONDERFUL
DISCOVERY
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