The Broad Ax
Saturday, May 19, 1900
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
HEW TO THE LINE.
VOL. V.
THE POLITICAL PARTIES AND THE NEGRO.
Shortly before the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States, one by one the slaveholding states began to withdraw from the Union. But it must be remembered to the credit of President James Buchanan, that he denied their right to secede, and he insisted upon the right to enforce the execution of all the Laws in all the States, and he earnestly urged upon Congress the duty of arming him with the power to do this; but to its everlasting discredit it paid no attention to his wishes, requests or demands, but at the time Congress and the people even until this day never tire in condemning and upbraiding President Buchanan for his non-action in those dark and dismal hours.
It seemed that when the people residing in the Northern States observed that the movement in the South was something more than wind and bluster, they became alarmed and bewildered. The "New York Tribune," "The Albany Evening Journal" and many other leading Republican organs, East and West declared that "coercion, if it were possible, is out of the question, and they condemned it as "madness," they counseled conciliation and further concessions to the demands of slavery. The "New York Tribune" disowned it and even after the cotton States had formed their Confederacy and adopted a Provisional Government the Tribune emphatically declared that "whenever it shall be clear that the great body of the Southern people have become conclusively alienated from the Union and anxious to escape from it, we will do our best to forward their views, for we hope never to live in a republic whereof one section is pinned to the other by bayonets." In the meantime, great meetings were held in Philadelphia and New York, and those who attended them strongly condemned the Abolitionists, and urged the most extravagant additional concessions to slavery for the sake of peace.
On the 12th of January, 1861, William H. Seward, who became Mr. Lincoln's Secretary of State, made his great speech in the United States Senate, declaring that he could "afford to meet prejudice with conciliation, exaction with concession which surrenders no principle, and violence with the right hand of Peace." He was willing to give up Congressional prohibition of slavery in the Territories, enforce the Fugitive Slave law, and perpetuate slavery in the Republic by amending the Constitution for that purpose. The Crittenden compromise, which practically surrendered everything to those who were in favor of slavery, only failed in the Senate by one vote, and that was caused by several Southern Senators who refused to vote because they were so perfectly devil-bent upon destroying the Union that they would not listen to any terms of compromise or permit their adoption, but if they had it would have been much worse for the negro, and the chances are that our flag, the boasted emblem of liberty, would still be floating over slaves in every portion of the Republic.
The Peace Congress, assembled upon the eve of the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln for the purpose of devising some means of national pacification, and it agreed upon a series of measures covering substantially the same ground as the Crittenden compromise, while both houses of Congress agreed to a constitutional amendment denying any power to interfere with slavery "until every State in the Union, by its individual State action, shall consent to its exercise." To the very last, the old medicine of compromise and conciliation seemed to be the sovereign hope of the people of the free States, and although it had failed utterly, and every offer of friendship and peace had been spurned by the advocates of slavery, nevertheless the great majority of the people living in the North—in fact all of them outside of the real true friends of the negro, the Abolitionists—fervently hoped and prayed that there would be no civil war upon this continent on account of the negro, for they considered that he was not worth fighting over.
that with few exceptions the northern people cared nothing for the rights of the negro? and even today how many of them are perfectly willing to permit him to enjoy all the rights which they themselves enjoy? Yet at the very same time they loudly complain against the southern people for not according fair treatment to the negro; and does it not further clearly prove that the Republican party was not organized for the special purpose of interfering with slavery, and that neither it nor its leaders ever dreamed of liberating the negro?
(To be continued.)
OLD GLORY.
"O Liberty, what crimes," etc.
Teddy Roosevelt in a Century Magazine article would fain make us believe this is a government of equality, except, perhaps, in our big towns. Now, there is no nation on the earth where inequality has grown so rapidly as here. Everything favors the rich and well off at the expense of the poor and industrious. One class, the rich, can enjoy all the advantages of travel, growing cultured, refined and intelligent, and able to control all political movements at conventions and manage the legislation at State and national capitals, while the great masses are compelled to stay at home in one eternal round. And, bear in mind, these effects are cumulative in a kind of geometrical ratio—making the few more significant and powerful and the many weaker and more impotent. The railroad monopoly, by its enormous charges, has done more to divide us in two classes than all other influences combined. The average number of passengers carried and the receipts for the same show that the railroads receive about fifty cents per capita from each passenger, so that if the roads were to charge fifty cents per ticket, regardless of distance, say after the first thirty miles, they must have increased their receipts infinitely. It is evident, then, that the combine of rich railroad men has an object in preventing travel by the people. Many of them have openly declared their hostility to encouragement of travel among the people as tending to make them discontented. You see that already we have a governing class that affects to control us for our own good. This article of Teddy's reminds us of times before the war down South, where on Fourth of Julys at every village and crossroads liberty poles were put up, with "Freedom's banner floating o'er us," and every howling political demagogue boasted in roaring tones of our fair land of liberty and equal rights, and the loud cannons split the clouds, "bespeaking earthly thunder"—that, too, in regions where nine souls out of ten were slaves, bought, sold and driven like cattle, and full half of the one-tenth were degraded and brutalized by the slavery of the masses. Strange, wasn't it? Man is indeed a wonderful wild fowl. C.
WHO FOOTS THE BILL?
The argument for pensioning the disabled laborer has a thousand times more force in the eye of common sense than the argument for pensioning the soldier. Were the laborers in almost any department to abandon their places society must suffer and in some cases all traffic must cease. The daily supplies on which great cities depend would no longer be received and riots, arsons, robberies and murders would soon depopulate all the great centres of industry and populations. Yet the prospect to pension the laborer is laughed to scorn by the witless simpletons who eagerly favor such grants to those who enlist in armies. And now at last comes the proposition in Congress to pension the discharged civil servants on half pay—that is several hundred dollars per year, while even the war-worn veteran, crippled of a hand, gets barely two hundred and the ordinary pensioner barely one hundred dollars. This proposal comes from Mr. Boutell of Illinois, a man chosen by the people under our government of equality. The thing will be done in time. It is in the line of our march since our nation began. All is to be divided out among the idlers, while the millions who tail are to be kept down under military rule. Well, we deserve it for our tame submission. If you say this is going too far and people will
CHICAGO, MAY 19. 1900.
object it only shows how blind you have been as to what has been doing the past forty years. If you put a new set in power, do you believe they will begin in earnest to deprive themselves of all the good things their predecessors have prepared for the next party that comes in to enjoy? The heir presumptive may growl at the usurptions of the king, but if he himself shall ever come into power—"Oh, that is another thing, entirely."
Already great pensions and high privileges are granted by law to several hundred of our aristocracy. Who pays for it all? The man with the hoe and pick, et al.
THOMAS GALLAGHER.
Among the various gentlemen who have been mentioned or suggested as
THE HON. THOMAS
Vice-President of the Board of Education
and elected President of the Board
1
Vice-President of the Board of Education, who is likely to be nominated and elected President of the Board of Cook County Commissioners.
being eminently fitted to receive the nomination for president of the Board of County Commissioners, it is our candid opinion, that none of them are better equipped to serve or act in that capacity than the Hon. Thomas Gallagher, vice-president of the Board of Education, who is known throughout Chicago and Cook County.
Mr. Gallagher has a clean record. He has honorably served in the city council, but he was no grafter nor did he play the strong arm act upon the people, like some of the chuckle-heads and humbskulls who preceeded him and who now occupy seats in that body.
For many years Mr. Gallagher was engaged in the gent's furnishing business and by honest and square dealing he conducted an enormous business, and the name of Thomas Gallagher became familiar to every man, woman and child on the west side. As a first-class business man he succeeded in accumulating considerable means and we want to halt one moment and say, that no man is capable of conducting public affairs unless he knows how to manage his own affairs, and Mr. Gallagher has been successful in that direction, and that is the reason why The Broad Ax favors him for president of the Board of County Commissioners, and the further fact that he deports himself like a true gentleman.
No member of the Board of Education has done more to advance and improve the educational facilities this great city than Mr. Gallagher, and he is friendly to the Afro-Americans and is interested in their advancement and improvement, and thousands of them would support Thomas Gallagher for president of the Board of County Commissioners.
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THE APRON BAZAAR A GREAT SUCCESS.
It is no exaggeration to say, that the Apron Bazaar which was concluded last Wednesday night, under the auspices of the Phyllis Wheatly Club was the most successful of any similar bazaar ever held, not only in this city but in any other section of this broad land. Its success is attributed largely to the fact that women residing in all parts of the country, generously responded to the request of the club to prepare and forward their delicate and artistically made aprons for the occasion.
Through the great amount of energy displayed by Mrs. L. A. Davis, president of the club, and the untiring efforts put forth by her able assistants 175 aprons were collected and exhibited
MAS GALLAGHER,
tion, who is likely to be nominated
board of Cook County Commissioners.
and the proceeds derived from disposing of the aprons was $53.00. Each and every member of the club desire to extend their warmest thanks to the following ladies and all others who contributed to the success of the bazaar: Mrs. Brister, Baltimore, Md., Mrs. Miner, Fredrick, Md., Mrs. Geo. Pick, Milwaukee, Wis., Mrs. T. H. Lyles, St. Paul, Minn., Phyllis Wheatly Club, Nashville, Tenn., Mrs. Julia A. Gibson, Peoria, Ill., Miss Della Vance, New Albany, Ind., Mrs. Nellie Solberg, San Francisco, Cal., Woman's Improvement Club, Louisville, Ky., Mrs. Ella Harris, Kingfisher, O. T., Mrs. Louise Owens, Zion City, O. T., Mrs. Ed. Smith, Mr. Charles Smith, Evanston, Ill., Mrs Nancy Pieruarl, Mrs. George Lewere, Mrs. C. F. Johnson, Miss Fannie Alexander, Knoxyille, Tenn., Mrs. Harry Shepard, St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. W. P. Jones, Muchakinock, Iowa, Sadie Jones, Mason City, Iowa, Mrs. Paulina Spradling, Eminence, Ky., Mrs. Williams, Lexington, Ky., Miss Georgia Nugent, Louisville, Ky., Mrs. Hettie Irvine, Kingman, Ala., Mrs. H. L. Lewis, Cincinnati, O., Miss Susie M. King, Lexington, Ky., Mrs. Coles, Italy, Mrs. Fannie Kennett, Elgin, Ill., Mrs. Alice Robinson, Pittsburg, Pa., Misses Sweety and Effle Greenway, Muscatine, Iowa, Miss Martha Carter, Milwaukee, Wis., Miss Nora Motts, Washington, Iowa, Miss Martha Lee, Washington, D. C., Mrs. N. L. Black, Washington, Iowa, Mrs. Emma Gray and daughter, Haddock Station, Ga., Mrs. Lizzie Enty, Philadelphia, Pa., Mrs. Kate Jordan, Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. I. E. Williamson, Des Moines, Iowa, Miss Emma Johnson, Peoria, Ill., Mrs. N. Lee, Van Wert, O., Mrs. M. Starkes, president Peoria Woman's Club, Mrs. Had-
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HOLT.
ley, Kenilworth, Ill., and Mrs. Harris, Dwight, Ill.
The last night of the bazaar was greatly enjoyed by the large throng which attended it. Mrs. Eliza Harris deserves much commendation for entertaining the friends of the club with a select musical program which was participated in by Miss Virgie Gibson, piano solo; Geo. W. Henderson, vocal solo; Miss Gertie Randall, vocal solo; instrumental solo, Miss Josie Prior; recitation, Miss Clara Green.
Mrs. M. B. Jackson, Mrs. Anna Tucker, Mrs. Stella Collins, Mrs. Alice Flower and Mrs. Pearl Carlmore had charge of the refreshments and they performed their task to perfection, and all who attended the bazaar spoke of it in the highest terms and express the hope that it will not be long before they will have the pleasure of attending another apron bazaar for the benefit of the Phyllis Wheatly Club.
CHIPS
Dr. Morgan and wife, of Indianapolis, Ind., are visiting Prof. and Mrs. Emanuel, 6352 Rhodes avenue.
Since Mayor Harrison has declined to run for governor there is strong talk of ex-Governor John P. Altgeld becoming a candidate.
H. P. Williams, ex-secretary of war, of Libiria, will address the Men's Sunday Forum on "Life and Customs in Africa." Ladies invited.
George H. Kriete, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney of Chicago, is winning new laurels every day, and if he lives he has a bright prospect before him in the legal and political worlds.
Monday night the choir of Quinn Chapel and of Olivet entered into a singing contest at the first mentioned Church, and after a spirited contest the banner was awarded to the choir of Olivet.
Congressman George P. Foster, so it is said by the wise ones, is bound to be renominated and elected, and we want to say right now that Congressman Foster can have the unqualified support of the Broad-Ax.
The indications are that there will be a rough-and-tumble fight in the 30th Ward on the day of the primaries. Alderman Charles J. Boyd and B. H. Heide will rub up against M. P. Byrne and Justice John Fitzgerald, and we expect to see the wool and fur fly in every direction.
Memorial services were held Monday night at Bethel Church to commemorate the birth and death of John Brown, who gladly and heroically gave up his life to advance the cause of liberty and freedom. Mrs. Ida B. WellsBarnett presided, and short addresses were delivered by some of the admirers of John Brown.
John H. Cross, the saloonist of 222 West Lake street, knows a thing or two. He has long since learned that it is all nonsense for all Afro-Americans to belong to one political party, and he contends that if the negro is free he has a right to think for himself Therefore Mr. Cross marches under the banner of Democracy.
John Gray, brother of James J. Gray, by mistake took a dose of horse liniment instead of medicine to relieve a cold, and he died from the effect of the poison Tuesday night. His funeral was held Friday from the Church of the Immaculate Conception. The Broad Ax extends its sympathy to Mr. Gray over the loss of his sister and brother.
Quite a few weak-minded colored people have been foolish enough to believe that Rev. J. E. W. Bowen would be selected as one of the bishops by the white methodists. But we didn't. As The Broad Ax has stated before, There is no room in Heaven for black, yellow or gingerbread angels, hence the white brethren(?) refused to elect Rev. Bowen.
Hon. M. J. Butler and George E. Brennan will be pitted against each other by their numerous friends to see which one will walk away with the senatorial prize. Mr. Brennen's supporters feel confident that he will be successful, while the adherents of Representative Butler are resting on their oars, and they are equally certain that he will without a doubt receive the nomination.
NO. 30.
LAWRENCE A. NEWBY. The sentiment is growing very rapidly among the colored population of Chicago and Cook County and especially among those who affiliate with the Democratic party who Have in the past helped to fight its battles, and to win its victories, that the time has arrived in the history of Democracy when its leaders cannot perform any more graceful or befitting act, than to nominate a representative Afro-American Democrat for County Commissioner.
Mr. Newby, who has been a consistent Democrat for a number of years past, after surveying the ground thoroughly has decided to enter the contest, and from now on, to the day of the county convention, he will put forth his efforts in a manly way to persuade and convince the leaders of the party, that it would greatly add to the chances of the entire county ticket winning out at the polls, if the colored Democrats were given representation upon it.
This view is shared by many others who are not candidates and as there are ten County Commissioners to be selected from the city, it is the opinion of Mr. Newby, that the party managers would be acting the better part of wisdom by according this concession to the colored Democrats. Inasmuch as it would cause many colored men through race pride to vote the Democratic ticket, and it would be evident to all, that the leaders of the party are wide-awake and are willing to convince every one that they are as anxious and as eager to secure a portion of the Negro vote as well as the Republicans, who have for some years placed a colored man on their ticket for County Commissioner. Not only that. They always select one for the Legislature.
Now, if the leaders of the Democratic party are progressive, and if they expect to make permanent inroads into the Negro vote of this city and
state, it cannot be done in any better way than to select one for an elective office. As there is a disposition upon the part of the Negro, to break away from the old moorings of the Republican party and we believe it is the duty of the leaders of the Democratic party to encourage them to do so. This disposition was manifested at the last election of Mayor Harrison. The strong Republican wards and precincts wherein reside a great majority of the colored voters went strongly Democratic and it is estimated, that sixty-five per cent of the colored voters voted for Mayor Harrison, and we believe the same thing can be repeated if L. A. Newby is nominated for County Commissioner. He stands well with the race and holds a trusted position in the city water office and is in every way qualified to serve as County Commissioner.
John E. Owens, Assistant City Prosecuting Attorney and President of the 12th Ward Democratic Club, is bright, genial and very active in behalf of Democracy, and many of his friends have urged him to wade out into the political waters and seek the nomination for member of the lower house. But Mr. Owens stands on the banks and declares that he is willing to contribute to the success of the party every way within his power but much absorbed in his law but think about going to the Leg
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‘YHE BROAD AX.
ae _ PORLISHED WEEELT.
PSeepeacs Divers end voces
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Advertising rates made knows on application
‘Address al! communications io
THE BROAD 2x,
$040 Azmoun Avzwun, CzToaee,
JULIUS F. cazoR, Editor and Publisher.
Dignity always begins where boast-
‘tng ends, -
"~ & pessimist is a person who believes
that whatever is is wrong.
“When the state of Mississippi gets
caked she makes a thorough job of it
_ Aman wisely makes use of the pres-
“ent when he selis a duplicate wedding
an.
‘The womar who marries a biock-
“head doesn’t care to celebrate her
‘The employer who works harder
than his clerk evidently believes in
the force of example. ;
Naturally, the United States seriate
as in favor of electing itself in the
~ Grace will ever speak for itself and
be fruitful in well-doing; the sancti-
fied cross is a fruitful tree..
The Boers would be sure to regard
‘the recall of Buller as in the nature
of taking a mean advantage.
The South African war appears to
Rave got its “second wind;” at least
_ the generals down there are making
& windy time of it.
Affection is the confession of infe-
Tiority. It is an unnecessary proclam-
-ation that the individual is not living
‘the life he pretends to live.
Some idea of the American exports
to Australia can be gained from the
imventory of a cargo recently ship-
ped from New York. It contained
€000 packages of sewing machines,
1,100 tons of paper, many organs
and pianos, 8,000 cases of canned
‘meats, 111 trucks for trolley cars,
‘wagons, buggies, wheels, axles, barbed
~wire, typewriters, windmills, 1,100 tons
-of iron pipe, leather, shoes and dry
goods.
Pedro Paterno, head of the Filipine
national assembly, has been captured
‘by the American troops, and General
‘Otis’ dispatch thoughtfully adds that
he was too sick to escape when the
‘troops pursued him. Senor Paterno
‘should not go unrewarded for his con-
sideration in thus permitting himself
to be surrounded. If Aguinaldo would
‘be kind enough to break a leg or con-
tract a fever he might yet be captured,
but it.appears to be impossible for Gen-
eral Otis to overtake any of the Fil-
ipino leaders while they retain good
Dealth and active limbs.
* Among other features of the South
African war the new developments in
the use of the heliograph are worth
moticing. The idea of telegraphing by
means of flashes of sunlight first came
4mto prominence during the Franco-
Prussian war. The electric light was
at once suggested to make the system
independent of interference from
elouds, but the difficulty of getting
@lectricity in the field has thus far in-
terfered with a successful combination
of the two inventions. In the present
‘war the Britigh have made some use
oft the electric searchlights from their
‘ships for purposes of optical tele-
graphy, but sunlight is still their main
reliance. A writer in the Engineer-
ing Magazine for May states that the
‘ordinary rang of the heliograph is
fifty-five miles, but when the electric
‘are light is used the range can be ex-
‘tended to 400 miles. The success with
‘which the heliograph was used in
communicating with the besieged gar-
isons of-Lacysmith and Kimberley is
& good demonstration of the progress
qmade with this invention since 1870.
~ The engineering world of Europe bes
‘uot, it fs said, recovered from the sur-
prise over the remarkable performance
at Aatwerp of « big dredge-boat con-
_stracted in-Beigium for the Russian
government on plans prepared by an
American engineer, a Chicagoan. Un-
‘Ger the contract the boat was to have
2 of 1,800 cubic yards of
ar per hour. She recorded a
‘gapacity. of 1,800 yards on trial. So
tg was the interest m the trial
that most of thé foreign ambassadors
‘were present, the Seigian cabinet,
commissions from Australia, Indiz,
‘Germany, France, the Argentine Re-
publi and hundreds of engineers from
ft ret: Yates to accommodate the
resige, the most powerful in the world,
ning } Antwerp to carry visitors to
— a ‘bor. be
Pee a .
| Holloway at St Peters
See earn ge or
DEMOCRATIC LETTER.
REPUBLICAN POLITICIANS: ARE
‘They Seo the Signs of the Times ta
‘This Spring's Local Elections—Mich-
igam, Indisne and Minnesota Ave
(Washington Letter).
‘Goubt as to the prospects of Demo
eratic success next November those
Goubts were thoroughly removed by
the recent town elections in Indians
and Minnesota. The Democrats swept
the nae Soeke in.
Democratic were in-
creased; everywhere the Republican
‘vote fell off. Towns which have been
Teliably Republican for yeara were
engulfed by the Democratic tide.
Through the gas belt, which has been
& Republican stronghold, the Demo-
cratic gains were enormous. Ander-
Son, the home of the Republican can-
idate for governor, always a reliable
Republican city, was captured by the
Democrats after a fierce battle. All
the Indications are that Bryan wil!
sweep the state In November by the
largest Democratic majority since the
days of Hendricks and “Blue Jeans”
‘Williams. In Minnesota, the city of
St. Paul went Democratic by 1,500,
reversing the majority of over 5,000
which it gave McKinley in 1896. Min-
Reapolis elected a Democratic mayor
in 1898, making even 4 more marked
change from the vote of 1896. All
signs point to this state supporting
Bryan in November. In Michigan the
Republicans are panic stricken. At
their recent ‘state convention they en-
dor-ed McKinley in the most per-
functory manner and adjourned with
searcely a single issue presented in
their platform. A Hollander from
near Grand Rapids was made chair-
man of the Republican state commit-
tee in some faint hope of holding the
Dutch vote, which is very strong in
the state, in line with the party. This
will be impossible. The anti-Boer,
pro-British attitude of the administra-
tion has completely aiienated this pow-
erful vote as it has that of hundreds
of thousands of Amerians in every
‘walk of life.
Out of the many elements which
have led to this marked reversal of
opinion in favor of the Democrats,
two are especially noticeable at the
Present moment. First, the Coeur
@ Alene investigation, now in progress
in Washington, has shown the work-
ing men of the country the serious
dangers of military control. The fact
has been overwhelmingly demonstrat-
ed that neither the civil or military
authorities in the Coeur d'Alene dis-
trict had any desire to arrest, con-
vict and punish the men who blew
up the Bunker Hill mine. It was
proven that the mine owners had nu-
merous spies present at the time the
mine was blown up and on the spot.
‘Yet the criminals were allowed to es-
‘cape, because had they been arrested
and convicted the excuse of keeping
the military in control of the district
for over twelve months would have
‘disappeared. The military are still
‘in control, and the permit system
whereby a workman must secure per-
‘mission from en illegal authority be-
fore be can even seek work is still in
force. The other cause for the change
of public sentiment lately manifested
is the’ action of the administration in
regard to Porte Rico. Imperialism
cannot be a success unless a people
have been bred to accept the doctrine
of the Divine right of kings. That
doctrine holds to an extremely lim-
ited extent in the United States, and
the general public refuses to accept
it. McKinley too is already con-
fronted with the difficulties of occu-
pying an illegal and unconstitutional
position. No sooner had the Porto
Rican bill become a law than its am-
biguities and cradities began to ap-
pear. So serious are its defects that
the cabinet has been holding councils
to determine what shall be done ‘to
remedy them, and further legislation
appears to be imperative. Had a
Porto Rican legislature adopted so
crude a measure every administration
organ in the United States would have
pointed the finger of scorn and re-
marked that the Porto Ricans were
unfit for self-government, since they
‘were incapable of drafting a worka-
Die law.
But the tariff feature presents even
more Gifficulties. The treasury de-
partment has already issued a ruling
directly contrary to the spirit of that
law. It has ruled that goods export-
ed to Porto Rico are not exports, and
are therefore not entitled te “draw-
hacks” which are paid on certain
manufactures to covet the amount of
the duties originally paid on the im-
ported material used in their manu-
facture. Judge Lochren, of the United
‘States federal court, sitting at St
Paul, has made an even wider decis-
jon in which he holds that Porto Rico
fs a partof the United States and
therefore under the Constitution... He
‘went so far as to assert that had
Porto Rico not been under the Con-
stitution congress would have had no
power to legislate concerning it The
to the D of the punish-
ment of a Porto Rican native by a
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“I appeal from the President, drunk with the lust of empir3, to ano’her
and a better age.”—Senator George Frisbie Hoar, of Massac’.usetts, ‘n U. S.
Senate.—National Democrat.
portunities, and McKinley is caught
in the meshes of his own net.
General Otis is coming home from
the Philippines and another general
will try to complete the impossible
task which Otis has left behind him.
One hundred and fifty millions of dol-
lars have already been poured into
the morasses of the Philippines, and
thousands of lives and the health of
tens of thousanas have been expended
to carry out McKinley's fatuous pol-
icy of imperialism. This amount of
money would have constructed and
equipped the Nicaragua canal. It is
gone and can never be recovered.
Four years more of McKinley will
mean five hundred million dollars
more poured into the Philippine rat-
hole. That is more than it cost
France to change from a republic to
an empire, and to change Napoleon
from a successful general to an em-
Peror in exile. Emperors come high.
Students of history are comparing
McKinley with George III. They
have many characteristics in
common. George III. was prosy,
opinionated, a strenge combination of
weakness and obstinacy. He had a
marked capacity for surrounding
himself with the weakest statesman of
the kingdom. He was equally inac-
cessible with McKinley to the influ-
ence of public sentiment. He made a
marked pretext of religion. He had
no small vices. He finally went crazy.
Nearly all these characteristics are re-
peated in McKinley, and Daniel Web-
ster said in a speech delivered in
congress April 14, 1826, that any
statesman who should propose to at-
tach to the United States distant, un-
natural and unassimilable territory
would be a mad man.
JACKSON DAY.
ITS NAME DOESN'T SIGNIFY.
There were no insurgents in the
Qhio Republican -convention. That
fact was adequately demonstrated by
the wild and tumultuous cheering in-
4uilged in by the delegates—composed
largely of feeders at the administra-
tion pie counter, and of “those ‘as
*‘opes to be” to borrow from Mr.
‘Weller’s vocabulary—when the boss
appeared on the platform. And when
the leader of the Republican party
rose in response to the demands of
his boisterous parasites to make a
speech, there was no §brous growth
in bis voice to make him stutter in
his unqualified irdorsement of im-
Perialism and the trusts.
“I do not care whether you eal! it
imperialism or expansion,” be told his
henchmen. “The destiny of this coun-
try is written, and any party, or com-
Dimation of men, that attempts by
subterfuge or makeshifts in politics
te stop the power and progress of this
re ee oe ee ¥ eX on
Democratic party gone down.”
ee i Sila tt is ‘ante
ure of the phrase Sate or
makeshifts in politics,” as éf it indi-
sated highly immoral practices and
methods to the use of which a per-
ow oes send aati
anda =
og hang a
whether it ig called “imperialism” or
“expansion.” It is his policy and he
has determined to have it carried out
by electing Mr. McKinley, so that the
Process of “benevolent assimilation”
can be consummated for the enrich-
ment of the syndicates, for the fat-
tening of carpet-baggers, for the
slaughter of our soldiers by bullets
and disease, for the spoliation of the
tax payers, for the establishment of
large standing army, for the loot-
ing of the property and money of un-
consenting peoples, for the benefit of
the trusts, for the nullifying of the
constitution and the stamping out of
liberty in Porto Rico and the Philip-
Dines.—Kansas City Times.
WATCH YOUR CONGRESSMAN.
The late Mr. David A. Wells wrote
eight years ago a brief and vigorous
article on trusts, which first appeared
in the New England Almanac. No
one who has written upon the sub-
fect has grasped the situation with
more thorough comprehension or ex-
posed it more clearly than that wise
student of public affairs and fearless
champion of equal rights. He main-
tained then what has been proved
beyond question since, that the duties
were enacted or kept.on in order to
maintain and protect a host of trusts
in the United States which could
otherwise have no existence. And he
brought the question sharply forward,
“How did your representative in the
last congress vote?” That is the ques-
tion which voters should now be ask-
ing. Did he vote protective duties to
favor the trusts which have been
bleeding the American people, and
if he did, will the people trust him
again? Will a new candidate vote to
Temove those favors, and, if not, will
the people trust him at all?
Other questigns will enter into the
campaign, but in the election of con-
gressmen these are the test questions
which should never for a day be lost
sight of, for upon the answer to them
will depend whether the next congress
is to be the servant of the American
people or the slave of the trusts.—Kal-
amazoo Gazette-News.
‘The Nations! Debt Made Permanent.
“ In turning over the control of the pa-
per money to the bankers, the Repub-
licans have found it necessary to rivet
upon the nation a national debt, which
we were in a fair way to discharge. A
huge-éum of money is to be paid for
premiums on unmatured bonds so that
they may be canceled and 2 per cent
thirty-zear bonds issued in their
stead. Why extend for thirty years
a debt now almost payable and which
the nation is amply able to pay as it
matures? The Republicans tell us that
dt is done so as to furnish a basis for
bank-note circulation. That is to say
that a banker $25,000 worth of
thoes sow. "galleaGipems teem to tes
to lad St Sit gotes bor conten hs
to lend “He gets 2 per cent on his
bonds and from 6 to 10 per cent on his
notes, according to his locality and his
‘tock thin besevolent and that tho ae.
: |, Depev o that | 2a-
otal dete io be made permanent
THREE LIVING ISSUES.
“From present indications it seems
probable that three questions will be
specially prominent, the money ques-
tion, including both metal and paper
money; the trust question, and im-
Perialism, including the question of
militarism and entangling alliances.
There are other questions which will
cut some figure in the campaign, but
these three will demand the largest
ehare of public attention. Men differ
as to their relative importance, but
they are all important. The currency
bill, which is now a law, has revealed
the party’s love for the gold standard
and its hypocrisy in pretending to fa-
vor internationa] bimetallism. That
bill has also received the Republican
plan to retire the greenbacks and
turn over the control of the paper
money to the national banks. The
inaction of the administration on the
trust question shows that the Repub-
licans are insincere in their prom-
ises to destroy the trusts, while the
Porto Rican bill reveals the imperial-
istic purposes of the Republican lead-
ers. The Republicans do not now
dare to unfold their plans. The
Spooner resolution proposes that
when the war is over the president
shall establish a. government which
is to stand till congress acts in the
matter, but this ig superlatively un-
certain. It simply means that after an
indefinite continuation of the war, the
president will establish an indefinite
form of government, which shall last
for an indefinite time, and then con-
gress will substitute some kind of
government, we know not what
While this uncertainty lasts, soldiers
are dying in the Philippines or com-
ing back insane, the expenses are in-
creasing and the Declaration of In-
dependence is being treated by Re-
publicans_as an outworn document.
Against Republican uncertainty, the
Democrats will offer a plain, simple,
Patriotic plan of dealing with the
Philippine Islands, and that plan will
be an immediate announcement of the
nation’s purposes; first, to establish
a stable government; second, to give
the Filipinos independence, as we had
promised to give independence to
Cuba; third, to protect the Filipinos
from outside interference to work out
their own destiny, as we have protect-
ed the people of Central and South
America.”"—W. J. Bryan, Wichita,
Kansas, April 24, 1900.
A Change Needed.
Hanna, in his speech before the Ohio
State convention, referring to the ad-
ministration of himself and McKinley,
asked: “Do we want a change?” The
general consensus of opinion indicates
that we do; and the determination
stamped upon the face of the average
voter suggests that we will.—Spring-
field (Mo.) Democrat.
seneeecgegettaiiebao tints
» As ne Giaw Hease,
Secretary Root fears that European
greed for territory will make us aban-
don the Monroe doctrine or fight.
Speaking of land greed, isn’t Mr. Root
living in @ glass hofise?—New Yorb
A Blood .
Trouble
Ts that tired. — blood lacks vitality
sepa edie eo mas ee
CIE 208 cere it Tested at night,
Hood’s Sarsaparilia cure you becaun
it will restore to the blood the qualities it
needs to nourish, strengthen and sustain
the muscles, nerves and organs of the body.
It gives sweet, refreshing Sleep and impe__
mew life and vigor to every function.
Felt Tired—“ In the spring I would have
no appetite and would feel tired and with
out ambition. Took Hood’s Sarsaparilis
small I
Ssoesnsie suet Gheea feeling att tae con's
felt better In every way.” W. E. Baxra,
Bor 96, Milford, Obio.
Hood’s Sarsaparilia
Is the Best Medicine Money Can Buy. Pre
pared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
A Foreigner with Ability.
Phya, or Baron Prasiddhi, the new
minister from Siam, is one of the most
eminent of the Siamese king’s subjects,
chosen to represent his government at
‘Washington and at London because of
his high qualifications, his tact and
the knowledge he gained of their his-
tory, traditions ahd present condition
in a previous visit to the United States
and to Great Britain. The present
Siamese minister is some forty years
old and was intended while still a lad
for a military career, although he has
since shown marked ability in civil
lines.
Do Your Feet Ache and Barn?
Shake into your shocs Allen's Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and
Shoe Stores, 25e. Sample sent FREE.
Address Alien S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
Travelling Soeed of Sound.
Sound passes through the air at the
velocity of 1,142 feet per second;
through water, 4,900 feet; through
fron, 17,500 feet.
K Balsam n
emp’s will stop the cough
“one Go to your druggist to-day
and get a sample bottle free. Sold in
25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; de-
lays are dangerous.
‘We hear much more concerning the
chances successful men had than about
the opportunities those who are down
failed to take advantage of.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green’s
Sons, of Atlanta,Ga. The greatest dropsy
@pecialists in the world. Read their adver-
sement in another column of this paper.
Two hundred thousand acres in Chi-
huahua, Mex., have been bought for
400 colonists from Missouri.
i; PFO ENS Sze
Ny Go to your grocer to-day
\m and get a 15c. package of
WY 2
ye
é Grain=0
ANY
\ It takes the place of cof-
I, fee at } the cost.
Sy Made from pure grains it
is nourishing and health-
ful. .
Sitephes Camstica eevee GRAIN-O.
EARN A BICYCLE 2:4.5."sci0
By mailing 49 ORDERS Cotes,
Ten, Spies or wa he em
15 AD: ‘This isa geoe
Ine offer by a reliable firm. List of other
Promioms sunt; write tods7. Aaron Coffee Oe., Chicage.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter’s
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
(tea Fed
TCARTERS tac
in nema
PENSIONS fous ce
ZIESATE STARR, Sem sat
ieCertain Cora Care. Pre.5e
Eee
“aA ets ae re ver . Pe ea ae POE ee eS. Seen Ee ee Be Ea ee TRS Sore he ee ow ER ON
ae sh Sage Ag no aoe ia a eee er ee ane = Ps ae ee Fe Re OE ee Oa e Sees wat
— eee : ; ‘
Busian Empress and Children, = > Wants a... ees ; ; mae — — —
5: rw oe ; FOR ENGLAND'S ARMY, ‘THE LETTER WAS GENUINE | SHE HAD NOT YET DECIDED. eo ie:
her own among the splendidly > ——s eee I oe art tee “What Mustration, - Uncle
treet nant, cent gue Mas| PUPILS To wucEive Mnfrany| ts eecet Wome come nn” ee mee MM Mtl arowe= “ustration? Why, It i el fous
uisite taste and never looks to Shades. nv eps einer eae writing prose or verse that will fit a
per advantage Shen. Wan IR: Sree Sa A short tine since & latter appeai¥e with the fodore, sa be took a cat ber | Motare Somebody has already draws.”
gown. On the other Hand, the} go im these columns signed hy Mr. W, H. | side the man with the pale ‘The Wastingwoa Muvaai Mining Investment :
erial nurseries are conducted on 9. Four Million Troops te the | Fives or Al iwxin pale mustache | co, Mutual Life Bidg., Sestile, Washington, Ss
paratively simple scale, and to the “aaah Fighting Strength — The orm Canada, which that gentle- ~ah ashe = see aaew tents, snd equal parsistpation ts proats menos
On en ST nn amb Sneed ot the | man to receive a grant moams Incnirion [oot onud the latter. “Why, 1 thought | Some. cot ctrl esidvasion 2 prea made)
ttle grand Guchesses are not al-| !wentic Uadertaxing, west-et'them Gnvious to be ee lted Gare ee vantages to small investors. Write for cir onren
ed to wear any jewelry whatever, — letter was genuine. To a large num- yours um Cs Benen.
ugh even the commonest England is about taki: fedora. “Well, I was,” assented the Some people seem to ha’
aya gold. Se ee ne Shoat th meng an impor der of the | aquiries answers were sent, | 4, with the nale mastarha “Wa, | oe Deople seem to have a genius
Luxury and Poverty Meet, .
assia is curiously constituted, for
meet tn that country, and
diess luxury is seen side by side
a depth of poverty which would
be tolerated in any other elvilized
on earth. When a great Russian
le entertains Ris. emperor and em-
to even am informal affair, he
nothing of sending clear to the
era for $5,000 to $10,000 worth of
flowers to decorate the apart-
ts through which the sovereigns
pass, and before the splendors
a Russian court ball ‘the official
ctions of any other capital pale
insignificance.
Story of a Yeomaurr Office.
y are telling a delicious story in
burgh just now at the expense uf
in yeomanry Officer, an im-
ly popular man, whose one weak-
is is belief that the making of
t general lost when he went
the business of keeping a shop.
militia regiment garrisoning Edin-
Castle, in the absence of the Gor-
Highlanders, contains some choice
its, and the other day, after a lay-
together of heads among the offi-
a stripling rushed into the estab-
ent of the officer in question. “Oh,
el So-and-So!” he called, “have
heard the news? You are ordered
for active service immediately!”
Colonel started to his feet. “Great
wens!” he cried, “has Roberts been
led already?”—M. A. P.
Chermside’s Record.
Gen. Sir Herbert Chermside,
o succeeded General Gatacre in the
mand of the Third Givision in
th Africa, had been in command
the Fourteenth Brigade. He en-
the British army in 1868, and
in the Royal Engineers before
ing to South Africa. He was a
litary attache in the-Turko-Russian
in 1877-78, and again a military
he at the Turkish capital in 1896,
en he was appointed British com-
oner in Crete. For his services
Crete he was promoted a major-
eral. He has been much in the
id, having served with the Egyp-
expedition against Arabi in 1882
in the Soudan in 1884. He also
in the Egyptian army, being
ted for services at Saukin in
85 and at Sarras in 1887. _
. Pious Ideas.
From “Lighter Movements from the
jotebook of Bishop Walsham How”:
e duchess of B—— had an old Pres-
rian nurse, who was once per-
led to attend the beautiful church
had built. ‘The ducheps after-
asked her if it was not very
tiful amd she said:. “Oh, yes;
.” “And the singing?” said the
ess, “was pot that lovely?” “Yes,
r grace; it was lovely; but it’s an
’ way of spending the Sabbath.”
Scotch lady and her gardener used
Worship together, not agreeing with
y form of church doctrine. A friend
onstrated with her and asked: “Do
really think you and your garden-
are the only two real mémbers of
e true chureh on earth?” to which
e replied: “Weel, I'm nae sae sure
’ John.” A Scotch minister from a
e town once visited and,preached,
a rural parish and was asked to
y for rain. He di¢ so and the rain
ame in floods and destroyed some of
he crops, whereupon one elder re-
narked to another: “This comes o”
ntrusting sic a request. to. a meenister
rho isna acquentit wi" agriculture.”
Coulaént A@erd Tt.
An old gentleman who is well known
his benevolence had an amusing
xperience with a beggar not long ago,
ys the Philadelphia Times. He has
regular staff of “visitors,” to whom
gives alms acording to their needs
id his ability. ‘There is_one qld fel-
'w whose calls are as punctnal’as the
a. On a recent occasion this man
costed Mr. G——, as usnal, and re-
ived from him a shilling. The beg-
took it, thamked the donor and
ed toward the door. Before reach-
it, however, he seemed to be con-
dering a matter very seriously. He
esitated, stopped, and then turned to
*. G— again, saying: “Excuse me,
ir, but I would like to ask you a ques-
ou.” Wel, wie as BI anne
. 2S ee
ears past, you have given me half
wn, but today I edme and you give
only a shilling. How is that?”
Well, I'l telt you," said Mr..G—,
ling good-naturedly. “I have bad
e unusually heayy expenses this
onth. My oldest daughter got mar-
ied, and the outlay for her"trotsseau
compelled me to retrench in every,
tion.” “Ah. E.sce,” said thé
r. “But I really can’t afford to
tribute toward .your daughter *
Wedding expenses.” =—(<‘<; 2S W;‘(C‘(
BATTLEorMANILA
A eae ton of cree he
Ses cee
Saas
PRay of Manta ty tam be Tue poser as
=i 7 and complete devtrnction of
FOR ENGLAND'S ARMY,
: ee
PUPILS TO RECEIVE MILITARY
TRAINING.
WEI 444 Four Milton ‘Troop: te ths
Seg rete Strength — The
Encl of Meath at the Bena of the
Gigantic Undertaking,
Sugiand is about taking an impor-
tant step in preparing material for fu-
tare military service. it is proposed te
make every public school boy in the
land © semi-official adjunct of the Brit-
ish army, compelling him to take thor-
ough military training under govern-
ment inspection so long as he remains
4m the public schools, and providing for
the establishment of school boy mili-
tia im the shape of cadet corps and
battalions under the direct control of
the war office. The schools are to re-
celve therefrom $500,000 a year by way
of support.
Unless some unforeseen circumstance
comes up to change present arrange-
ments, the resolution will be presented
to Parliament within the next few
weeks. The new plan will affect about
4,000,000 boys in the United Kingdom.
They are those in what are called the
board schools—the schools supported
by government and attended by the
children of the middle and lower
classes, as distinquished from the pri-
vate schools patronized by “gentle-
men's” sons, with which the -Educa-
tion ‘Board has nothing to do. Most
| oe , (
Si ( f “¢ J
Up A \
Va =
"3
THE EARL OF MEATH.
of the boys who enter English board
schools do so at the age of 11 or 12,
and leave at 14 or 15. Following the
new plan, in these three years they
will have learned the manual of arms
thoroughly, as well as marching and
formation, using dummy guns. When
the boys leave school the cadet corps
will be ready to receive them, any-
where between the ages of 12 and 19.
They will then be armed with car-
bines, will drill once or twice a week,
practice marksmanship, go to camp for
2 month in summer; in fact, be simply
@ pocket edition of the volunteer regi-
ments that exist mow. After that their
natural destipation will be those regi-
ments—one of the great aims of. this
movement being to establish a reserve
for the volunteers exactly like that
which the army reserve and the militia
constitute in relation to the regular
army. The originator of the whole
big movement is the Earl of Meath,
and the man who has helped him most
to bring his dream to reality is one
Paul Kruger: for both Parliament and
the people it represents were never so
ready for just this sort of thing as
they are to-day.
Peleee-Tieped Arrow Heeds
Two chemists of the University of
Edinburgh have analyzed the stuff
used in Africa as a poison for arrow
heads and which never yet has been
examined chemically. This poison is
extracted by boiling the. roots and
stems of a plant called asocanthora
shimperi, and the poison is named aso-
cantherin. The plant belongs to a fam-
fly of poison plants called apocynum,
to which belong the oleander, stro-
phantes, dog cabbage and many other
varieties. The action of the arrow-
head poison is powerful to an extra-
ordinary degree, and immediately af-
fects theheart, which in strong doses
it quickly paralyzes. The chemists
experimented in inoculating animals
with the juice, and noticed that even
when the heart became the
cot hans emieess 4 ee
while longer. The poison, therefore,
affects the muscles, but not the nerves,
which explains that phenomenon of
frogs which were inoculated breath-
img after the heart had ceased its ac-
tion.—New York Press.
An Effort to Explain.
A gentleman who had engaged an
intelligent French maid was at work
im his Mbrary at one end of his house,
mben it struck him, from certain
sounds, that someth“ag must be wrong
4m the drawing room, at the other end
of the house. So he rang his bell, and
that I seem to hear in the direction of
the drawing room, Marie?” he asked.
“I @o not precisely know, monsieur,”
she answered. “At one time I sink
tt is madame who sing, and at anozser
time I am sute it is ze cat and se dog
who fight, monsieur!” E
——————
Dasettied.
"Can you tell me what sort of
weather we may expect next month?”
wrote a subscriber to an editor; and
seen eae Tepid ao Sano
terlan, the editor replied as S
“It is my belief that the weather mext
qmonth will be very much Ike your
subscription.” ‘The inquirer wondere¢
what the editor meant, till he -hap-
petied. to: think of the. word “naset-
THE LETTER WAS CENUINE
And Contsined Pacts—A Former Amer-
tenn Settled im Western Canada
Flooded with Lnquiries. ;
A short time since a letter appearta
im these columns signed by Mr,.W, H.
Kinkade of Alameda, Assinibola, West-
ern Canada, which caused that gentle-
man to receive a great many inquiries,
Most of them anxious to know if the
letter was genuine. To a large num-
Der of the inquiries answers were sent,
but it was impossible to reply to all.
We take plessure in submitting to our
readers a specimen of replies seat by
Mr. Kinkade:
“Yes, the letter dated December 22,
1899, supposed to have been written
by me, which you saw fn your local
Papers, was genuine and contained
facts. I will say of the information
received from the Canadian Govern-
ment Agents prior to coming here; I
G14 not find a single untrue statement.
The Canadian Government is honor-
able and its Agents dare not misrepre-
sent this country or they would lose
their jobs. There is quite a bit of
land for homesteading yet, a very lit-
tle close to market, but mainly from
6 to 20 miles from stations. The coun-
try, hereabouts is a prairie, nearly
level, slightly rolling, not a rough
country by any means. Homestead
entries cost $10: on land that has been
cancelled there is a $5 cancellation
fee extra and in some cases an inspec-
tion fee of $5 and where the former
occupant has made any substatitial
improvements there are smal] amounts
to pay for improvements. This is a
Door place for a poor man unless he
has brains and muscle and ‘git and
grit,’ but with these requisites he can
succeed. The population of this part
of Assiniaboia has doubled during the
past two years. There has been as
much prairie broken the past two
years as was already broken previous
to 1898. C. P. R. land (odd sections)
Joining homestead land sells at $3 per
acre. Improved quarters within four
to five miles of town sell at $1,000 this
spring. This is not a Garden of Eden
at all, no man need think he can come
here and get rich in a short time with-
out much labor, but if he will work
and be saving he can soon be an in-
dependent farmer tilling his own soil
and getting good returns for his labor.
“We burn coal, which costs us $1.85
per load at the mines, which are 20
miles southwest of us.
“People with stock and machinery
‘should come in May so as to have all
June to break in. Those who expect
to work for wages for the first year
or two should come by the end of July
to work through harvest and threshing
and then go to the coal fields and work
all winter and by spring he could be
ready to improve homestead.
“A quarter section of railway land
sells at $3 per acre. The interest is all
figured up and a man has about $71
to pay cash, and if he breaks at least
10 acres first breaking season his $21
interest for the first year is thrown
off and the second fal! following pur-
chase he has $60 tc pay and then $60
to pay for 8 more falls, which makes
a@ total of $611 the quarter costs him;
including all interest. Paying for a
quarter of land that way is like keep-
ing a life insurance policy paid, only
it does not take so long to do it. By
a man homesteading one quarter and
buying another quarter gives him a
chance to have a 320-acre farm all his
own and have it paid for in ten years,
and after that he is sure of an easy
living if he is any good at all.
“(Signed) W.H. KINKADE.”
IN THE LAKE COUNTRY
of Northern Illinois, Wisconsin, Min-
nesota and Michigan, there are hun-
dreds of the most charming Summer
Resorts awaiting the arrival of thou-
sands of tourists from the South and
East.
Among the list of near by places
are Fox Lake, Delavan, Lauderdale,
Waukesha, Oconomowoc, Palmyra,
The Dells at Kilbourn. Elkhart and
Madison, while a little further off are
Minocqua, Star Lake, Frontenac,
White Bear, Minnetonka and -Mar-
quette on Lake Superior.
For pamphlet of “Summer Homes
for 1900,” or for copy of our hand-
somely illustrated Summer book, en-
titled “In The Lake Country,” apply
to nearest ticket agent or address
with four cents in postage, Geo. H.
Heafford, General Passenger Agent,
Olé Colony Building, Chicago, Ill.
Deaches Boral Children.
- The Miss Winter who bas recently
been appointed governess to the young
children of the crown prince and
crown princess of Roumania, is the
same woman who had charge of the
education of the young Queen of Hol-
land.
7
‘The Shriners at Washington.
On May 19th, 20th and Zist the Big
Four, C. & O. will sell round trip ex-
cursion tickets to Washington at one
fare for round trip. For maps, rates,
ete., address J. C. Tucker, G. N. A. 234
Clark St., Chicago.
+ ‘Tre Industrices Man
& favorite way of doing a lot of
‘work is to lie in bed in the morning
| thinking about it—Atchison Globe.
~ The “Bienner Jacket” is the fad for
spring of 1900. Pattern of this and
60 other up-to-date costumes are sold
to Ledger Monthly readers at cost.
Send 5 cents for May magazine and get
pattern coupon. Robert Bonner’s
Sons, 100 Ledger building, New York.
One trouble with girls who will not
fing without being coaxed is that*they
always give in finally. :
aati
ode Race may be wor by a head, but
t's -ugually the legs that lend the
money. x a eke
SHE HAD NOT YET DECIDED.
Other Half of the Shetch Might Net
‘Waat to Move
“Going to move?” asked the man
with the fedora as he took a seat be-
side the man with, the pale mustache
fm the smoking car. “I don’t know
yet,” eaid the latter. “Why, I thought
you were always kicking about that
flat of yours?” said the man with the
fedora. “Well, I was,” assented the
man with the pale mustache. “You
told me the plumbing was all out of
whack and you were afraid the fam-
fly would be poisoned.” “Yes, that’s
a fact.” “And then I thought you sald
that flat was as dark as a pocket and
you had to use articficial light at din-
ner Sunday afternoon.” “That's right,
we do.” “And wasn’t it you who was
telling me about the fresh janitor who
was a cousin of the real estate agent
and couldn't be fired, that sassed your
wife?” “I'm the man,” meekly ad-
mitted the man with the pale mus-
tache. “Well, then, why in thunder
don’t you move?” asked the man with
the white fedora. “Well, my wife
basn’t made up her mind yet,” said
the little man, and that closed the in-
cident.—Chicago Chronicle.
FERTILE COLORADO.
The Denver & Rio Grande railroad
has just published a second edition of
“THE FERTILE LANDS OF COLO-
RADO,” which gives a concise descrip-
tion of the vast area of agricultural,
horticultural and grazing lands located
on {ts line-in the state of Colorado
and the Territory of New Mexico, and
full information as to the stock inter-
ests, the sugar beet industry and farm-
ing by irrigation. It is a truthful
representation of the numerous and
wonderful products of the soil in
that portion of the country and is
of especial interest to all who are in-
terested in agriculture or kindred pur-
suits.
Coples of this book will be sent free
on application to S. K. Hooper, G.P.A.,
D.&R.G. R R, Denver, Colo.,
or any official of the Denver & Rio
Grande railroad.
ONE NIGHT TO DENVER
Via Chicago, Union Pacific & North-
western line. “Colorado special” leaves
Chicago 10 every morning, arriving
Denver 1:20 the next afternoon, Col-
orado Springs and Manitou same ev-
ening. No change of cars. All meals
in dining cars. Another fast train at
10:30 p. m. daily. New book, “Color-
ado,” illustrated, mailed on receipt of
four cents postage. Ticket offices,
Chicago & Northwestern railway, 193
Clark street, and Wells street station.
Ahead of the Usual Lateness.
“How is the train this morning?”
asked the commuter at the Lonely-
ville station. “Head of time, this
morning,” replied the station agent;
“it'll be here in five minutes.” “What
are you talking about! Ahead of
time! It should have been here ten
minutes ago!” “Yes, but you must
remember it is usually half an hour
behind time.”—Yonkers Statesman.
Oh, Those Dear Girls.
“Poor fellow,!” she said. “He pro-
posed, but I had to refuse him.”
“Ah!” exclaimed her dearest friend.
“Then that explains it.” “Explains
what?” “Brother Tom said the men
at the club were all congratulating
him on something or other last night.”
Are You Using Allen's Foot-Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen,
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Jast o Trifing Drarback.
“I thought you were going to marry
Miss Smithkins?” “Well, I would if
it were not for one thing.” “What is
‘that?’ “She won't have me.”—Chi-
cago Post.
Lane's Family Medicine.
ste Sohne: Gia ape koe
mecessary. Acts
tly on the liverand kidneys. Cures
ek henteahe: Price 25 and 50c.
In the city of Bremen a tax is laid
on all incomes over $150 a year. It is
Bow proposed to raise the limit to in-
comes of over $225 a year.
1900 :
=
St. Jacobs Oil |
NEURALGIA )
__ LUMBAGO :
SCIATICA
Samar |
SURELY AND PROMPTLY
ALUMNUS ORAM SEY RAT ORS
cbur.s
= Spo €. Hands,
2 ee oo ohsone ee
that when I arose in the morning I frequently fell on the floor as soon as I left
my bed. ANNA BLUM.
This remarkable medicine, by removing disense germs from the blood, has an
action that affects the entire system. It tones up the stomach-and creates an
appetite; works on the liver and has a mild. continuous effect upon the bowels,
thus cleaning out the entire system. It makes new, rich blood, regulates the
heart and kidneys and rids the body of all waste matter. It also induces a
gentle perspiration, thus preventing fevers and congestion. Rheumatism, back-
ache and headache, biliousness and all nervous diseases are rapidly cured as
well as diseases pecu'iar to women.
Two WEEKS TREATMENT FREE!
No one need trouble thefhselves to doubt whether this remedy will do all
these things, as you can have a free trial package first and see what it does! for
you. Do not neglect to get in your application at once. The best way is to sit
down this minute, write a letter to M. R. Zaegel & Co.. Box No. 831, Sheboy-
gan, Wis., and say that you want a trial package of Swedish Essence of Life
This will be sent you by mail and is large enough to convince you of the merit
of this celebrated household remedy. A 2cent stamp should be enclosed in
your letter to pay the postage on this free sample. Write for it today.
MEN TO LEARN MOLER .
; BARBER TRADE | | Goue6t
BY MAIL OR AT COLLEGE 8 WEEKS TERM “ae
COMPLETES. POSITIONS WAITING FOR Wabash
GRADUATES AT #6022 MONTHLY IN CITY Ave.,
OR COUNTRY SHOPS, HOSPITALS, PULLMAN CARS,| cincaao,
STEAMSHIPS, ETC. Write for ad Specsal Offer. ... oa
Werks Both Wars.
“What is filustration, -Uncle An-
drew?" “Tilustration? Why, it is
writing prose or verse that will ft a
picture somebody has already drawn.”
‘The Washington Muvual Mining Investment
Co., Mutual Life Bidg., Sesttle, Washington,
guarantees 6 per cent interest on all invest
ments, and equal participation in profits made
oan. Highest references.
~ Same people seem to have a genius
for doing the right thing in the wrong
way. s
‘Cured. oF nervousness after
Sno “anys uss of De. Kitas’s reat Sarve, Mastorer
Send for FREE §2.00 trial bottle and treation
Da RH Kites, Lid. $01 arch St. Philadelphia, Pa,
It has been raining mud in Nebraska.
What! So early?—New York World.
ee AND ee
toagents household
tight. Write GH. Marshall & Go. Chicage,
To understand human nature in gen-
eral you have only to study yourself.
Io not believe Piso's Cure for Consuntptior
bas an equal for coughs and cokis—Joax F
Borax, Trin'ty Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900
For some people to make fools of
themselves is a very simple task.
Sara, Giinsiows Geathin~ Gene
brent pele atagg tin bs can, gD op
For childrem teething, soft ms, reduces
A married woman says that male is
only a mistake in spelling mule.
Hall's Catarrh Cure
is taken internally. Price, 7a
President Harper of Chicago is the
man to send to see the Sultan.
Coe’s Cough Balsam
shar tsetse
How would you like to be the man
with the whitewash brush?
When All Else Fat'é. ary TER
Cures Corns and Bunions + ithout: Never fafis.
Drug scores or mai! i3e. Y1-Ki Co. Crawfordsville Ind.
The best of Christians object to
wearing holey clothes.
Carter's Ink Is the Best Ink
made, but no dearer than the poorest; Has the
largest sale of any ink in the world.
The white woman's burden—the fam-
fly market basket.
Remove the causes that make your ha‘r lifeless
and gray with Parxen’s Har Batsax.
‘HIxDERoOaM's. the vest cure fur corns. I5cts.
Few men can pass a mirror without
looking into it.
Agects Wanted. Men, Women & Youth, to sell
Hears of Steel. Used in every House. St .re & Office.
Be. Sample i0c. 30 McVicker’s Bidg., Chicago.
The cushion is not to blame for be-
ing puffed up.
Send for “Choice ‘3
by Waner Beker Ge. bad, Dorcheter, Mam,
Life is a failure the way many per-
sons live it.
Manlove Self
Catalog free. Manlove Gate Co Kites, Indiana,
Some male hair dressers dye old
maids.
N. EK. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginger
is a household necessity. Always keep it.
Self-trust is the essence of heroism.
LagN
bam “ESSENCE i
Ce 6
ae ee
Fi t Cl M
St UldSS MUSIC,
50 PIECES. $2.
Por sixty days we will sond FiFTY PIECES
OF FIRST CLANS, FULL SIZED, high
grade, standard Veca!l and Instramestal
MUSIC, carefally selected, incladiag Solos,
Deets, Quartetts, Waltzes, Polkas, Operas,
Negre Melodies, Hyman, ete., ete., charges
prepaid by pest or express te any part of ihe
United states or Canada, upos receipt of two
doliar«i« cash, amps or money order. Tho
reguiac price of this music te $20. Address
FPRANCIN WAYLAND GLEN & CO,,
149 Broadway. New York City.
W. L. DOUCLAS
$3 & 3.50 SHOES pn'9
=
Wetaae
se
re See hake Ma of toons,
IW Se =
Serious
Jils of |
Worren
The derangements of
the female that
tress at kiede of troubte
dod dese ant tba, ore ene
ae
ham’s Vegetable Com-
pound.
Uterine and ovarian
troubles, kidney troubles,
nt kee & un-
aches and painful pertods
—these are the that
hang on and wreck health
and happiness and dis-
position.
Piya ©. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound |
has a wonderful record
of absolute cures of tirsse
troubles—a constant
thirty aon = Thoneands
of women vouch for this.
Their letters constantly
appear in this papers
y is a durable ana
ALABASTINE <==
{m5 Ib. paper peckages, made ready for use ip
white and fourteen beautiful tints by mixing
with cold water. It is a cement that goes
Stott anteeetcamerees
off its old coats ee
ALABASTINE #::::
different
fromall the
various kalsomines ou the market, being durable
and not stuck on the wall with glue. Alabastine
customers should insist on having the goods in
packages properly labeled. They should reject
allimitations. There is nothing “just es good.”
Prevents much sickness, particularly throat and
Tung difficulties, attributable to unsanitary
coatings on walls. It has been recommended
in a paper published by the Michigan State
— of Health on account of its sanitary
tures; which
Enlscentson” Alsbastios ent 06 teed ou either
plastered walls, wood iioas, ee orogens,
and any one can brush iton. It admits of radi-
Securing nt ieasvocble expense the latest aed
Asie Company of rad apis iin
and int booklet mailed
inatretis teresting free
DIZZY SPELLS.
a ee
No doubt you are surprised that I
have not written before, but 1 did not
wish to do so until I had giventhe free
sample that you so kindly sent me a
thorough trial.
J am now pleased to testify to the re-
markable effect your Swedish Essence
has had on ie. I feel like I have
not felt for years; my head is now
clear, no more dizzy spells, no more
headaches—your medicine has re-
stored strength and vigor to body and
mind. My dizzy spells were so bed
| IN 3 OR 4 YEARS
AM INDEPENDENCE ASSURED
| scone Sa
Gees
giving experiences
formers who rave be-
WEAN cain ew
information as to retue~d railwa: cues ante
a
Cenada. or to C. J. Pe 1223 Monadnock
Ind. or 30 Currie: Stovens Polos wa
LEWIS GAS ENGINES
Adapted for Al Purposes
SIMPLE...
Burasuss
Send for Cutalogue ang
ate Our power needs
waxtee NP SON A SONS ES Sis,
Rew O gives
DROP SY See
FESL DR MM GRRESS SOMD Sex %. Acteots. Oo
——{____=_=_="__E——
W. N.'U. CHICAGO, NO. 20, 1900,
ee
Aaswering Advertisemeats Kiadly
“ Mestion This Tac, ‘deine
S>-
~ , s-Gtr e
"an col Sask sto =
at Quinn afiernoou, to
listen to an annual sermon by Rev.
en = = he
~The - » delighte! to
see the Hons. John T. Keating or Jesse
Shérwood; ‘who are both miembers of
the Beard of Bducation seiected as
strength gu to the cage gd which in our
judgment will triampli in Novémber,
providing it is compdsed of reputable
Rollo B. Organ is highly spoken of
in connection with the nomination as
President Of the Board of County Com-
missigners. Mr. Organ is well and fa-
yorabiy known and is very popular
with the Afro-Américans. While he
was connected with the railroads he
succeeded in securing many positions
for them, and they will stand by Mr.
Orgom if he runs for County Commis-
sioner. *
The following candidates wif! be
voted for at the Men's Sunday Forum:
President, E. E. Wilsop; ist vice pres-
ident, ——————; 24 vice president.
L.. B. Anderson; secretary, W. H.
Davis; assistant secretary, B. B. John-
son; treasurer, W. L. Bowman; ser-
of Control: John G. Jones, SL. Wil-
Matis, HG. Parker, W. L. Martin,
8. J. Eyaiié, Robert Lacy, Jacob L.
Parks, A. W. Williams; seven mem-
bers of the board of contro! will be
elected.
The Judiciary Committee composed
of Republican Congressmen has rec-
ommended the a of a measure
to recompense persons who are
lynched by mobs, ing such per-
sons or victims foreigners. But
it will be void and of no effect what-
ever to native Americans. It is simply
intended to protect the foreigners from
mob violence, and not the Americans.
‘The Conservator of this city character-
izes this piece of legislation as very
brutal and a national shame. It seems.
to be greatly astonished to think that
a Republican Congress would ever
dream of such a thing. For it thinks
that if the Republican party can legis-
late to protect the foreigners “from
mobs it can do the same thing for the
negro. But possibly within the next
two hundred years the Conservator
and many others may learn that the
Republican party was not created for
the ‘special purpose of acting as the
sole guardian of the negro. Do you
see the point, Mr. Conservator?
Congressman J. M. Robinson of Indi-
ana has favored The Broad-Ax with a
copy of his speech which he delivered
in the House of Representatives lately
on “Labor in the Hawaiian Islands.”
The Congressman in his speech dwells
at great length upon the system of s'a-
very which is in existence in those isl-
ands at the present time, and which is
sanctioned and sustained by the na-
tional Republican administration. For
the life of us, it is beyond our compre-
hension to understand why such a sys-
tem of slayery should be permitted to
exist in this, the supposed noontide of
Christian civilization, and we are
thoroughly “Of the opinion that any
man who will vote to uphold the
of those who are in favor of tolerating
it are devoid of the finer instincts of
humanity. Congressmen Robinson’s
speech should have a wide circulation
and it should be extensively read, for
it will greatly assist in enlighten'ng
the minds of the American pepple to
the true. condition of affairs and the |
system of slavery in vogue in the Ha-
waiian Islands.
WHAT ONE WOMAN THINKS.
The white woman's burdem—the fam-
fly market basket.
~ How few kind words we ever think
to say to One another.
“$6me peuple seem to have a genius
for doing the right thing in the wrong
way.
No matter how cut up a man is, he
ought always to be willing to bury the
hatchet.
_. Giving a woman a bank book does
mot always put a check on her extrava-
gance.
‘The songs in the night the young
father hears are not the ones referred
to by David. :
> wresset et Waterice Rattic
Mrs..Moon, ninety years old, whose
photograph has been accepted by
Queen Victoria, had a military bring-
ing up. She was born at Gibraltar,
‘christened at Malta, and was present,
as a child in the baggage train, at the
‘Dattle of Waterloo, where her father,
& color sergeant of the Rifle brigade,
‘was wounded.
Cat Beth Ways
In an interval in the Grilling one o:
the volunteers belonging to a crack
‘to light 2 cigar from that of his of-
of the democratic spirit of freedom in
Amat sal. by -way of 2 bint:
. he segular.army you couldn't
tnave done this'to an officer, Brown.”
“Right soe seeeee oie en
rate,“ n the ir army you
Gadi not be an emcee Coblars
agit Qebin ES
and at all times uphold ¢** tre prin.
ciples of Democracy, bm. Catuolics,
sings tazers, Repebbona, Knights of
single taxers, i Knights of
Labor, or anyone else cin have their
say, as Jong as their language is prop-
er and respotisibflity is fixed. 2
‘The Broad Ax is a newspaper whose
platform is broad enough for all, ever
claiming the editorial right to speak
its own mind. e
Local communications will receive
attention. Write only on one side of
the paper.
Subscriptions must be paid in ad-
vance.
Advertising rates made known on
application. Address all communica-
tions fo
THE BROAD AX,
5040 Armour avenue. Chicago.
Julius F. Taylor Editor and Publisher.
Mrs. Julius F. Taylor,Assistant Editor.
(Entered at the postoffice, Chicago,
TL, as second class matter.)
LETTERS OF COMMENDATION.
. Chleago, 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
fm behalf of Chicago platform prin-
Gples. That platform stands for
guch a government af Jefferson and
Lincoln favored, namely, a government
ef the people, for the people and by
the people, and I believe that such
@ government will prove a blessing te
the great majority of the people.
z Yours truly,
Ww. J. Bryan
July 15th, 1899.
‘To whom it may concern:
Julfus F. Taylor, who comes to thi
eity 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
fm general. While he is thus engaged
I bespeak for him the hearty support
of all loyal and true friends of Democ-
facy. Respectfully,
Carter H. Harrisoa.
Headquarters of Democratic State Cen-
tral Committee of Illinois, Shermas
House, Chicago, Oct. 6th, 1899.
To whom it may concern:
This is to certify that Mr. Julius F
Taylor, editor of The Broad Ax—a pub-
lication of this city devoted to the in-
terests of the democratic party, and
an able exponent of democratic princi-
ples—comes to us highly recom-
mended, and I therefore take pleasure
im commending him to the favorable
consideration of democrats with whom
he may come in business contact.
Respectfully,
« Walter Watson.
Chairman Detcocratic State Central
Committee of Illinois.
ee
NOTICE.
All friends and readers of The Broad
Ax, who have relatives or friends vis-
iting 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 ail such news items will
find their way into its columns. But do
not send useanything 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 & 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.
Ladies of culture know that the
Original Ozonized Ox.Marrow is the
Purest and best remedy to straighten
the hair and make it pliable and beau-
tiful. Sold over forty years an@ has
never disappointed the most fastidi-
ous. Try a bottle and you will appre-
ciate its superiority. Only 50 cents
per bottle at druggists. Beware of
imitations. The genuine and original
is made only by Ozonized Ox Marrow
Co., 76 Wabash avenue, Chicago.
FOR SALE <
A lovely six-room cottage, modern
improvements, lot 25 by 125, locate?
on Elizabeth street, near Sixty-Seventh.
Price, $1,200. $150 cash, balance to
sult 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 svenue.
%; Te Dispel » Draught.
She—Don't you’ feel. a draught over
‘there by that window? He (timidly)—
Yes, I b-believe I do. Shall I p-pull
i eee
Seat eal ond nt ye
Chicago News. ee
‘Resblee, 65) Tuthée ave
‘Advocate and Counselor at Lav,
S W. Corner Clark and Washisigtea St.
‘Tevernnne MA 1782. «
Te. HARRISON $1.
Thomas F. Scully,
- Attorney at Law,
79 Clark Street, - - - CHICAGO.
Room 14. pili os!
JOHN E. OWENS
Attorney at Law,
| Surve 621 ASHLAND BLOcK,
59 S. Clark Street, - - OBICAGO.
ALBERT 8B. GEORGE
LAW YER.
423 Ashland Block, Chicago.
— Tel. M. 2625. —
Tetarnows 813 Yaavs.
DR. JOSEPH JEFFREY, ~
Physician and Surgeon,
4858 Dearborn Street. cimcago.
Hours: 810 a. m., 2-4, 6-8 p.m.
pr. WM. H. DAVIS, Chiropidist,
| TREATMENT PAINLESS.
Y
Promp senior, gixen » Calls at Your
6018 Fifth Avenue, Chicago
CANDY...
Try the inimitable fine and purée
candies, the best in the city for
lic., 25c. and 40c. per pound.
All put up in beautiful boxes,
suitable for presents.
GUNTHER'S CONFECTIONERY
212 STATE STREET. |
MRS. LAURA DAILEY.
FURNISHED ROOMS
FORSTRANGERS & TRAVELERS
THEATRICAL HEADQUARTERS.
‘Cheap rates and good accommodations.
606 State St., 2d floor, Chicago, 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 Ill. R.R.
Branch Office, 5301 Wentworth av.
__—_———
HORSES.
We pay the highest prices for
horses for killing purposes. Will
call. Telephone South 1005.
McDONALD,
3234 Wentworth ave.
FOR SALB OR EXCHANGE.
Forty acro chicken farm, 27 mijes
from Chicayp, %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, potatoes
and beans. Price clear of incumbrance
$4,000. Buildings alone cost $3,500.
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 Junctioa,
six miles from Lake Geneva.
94 acres in Walworth county, lies all
im cultivation, good house, barn and
outbiidings. 20 head mileh cows. 2¢
head hogs. 50 chickens, 100 turkeys,
60 ducks, 2 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.
2: AGENTS WANTED.
‘The Broad Ax desires to secure active
agents and correspondents in all sec-
tions of the country. Liberal commis-
sions will be paid. For terms and
further particulars address The Broad
Ax, 504 Armour avenue, Chicago.
‘When Boers Trex, “i
“I see,” announced. the lieutenant,
ee Se oe Se the
oa fis growral goping cant on toe
ed the gazing on
Balada “nnd cha abt a
they have left.”- sun.
eens tn tad <i eer
«JOHN J. DUNN,
wee os ;
Coal = and - Wood,
Bist Street and
ee,
J. ¥. Kmurr, 553 Green St. ‘Tel. Yards 6s
KENNY & CO.,
Undertakers and Livery,
2g Noete
5438 SOUTH HALSTED 8T-
Reiter ee
Cc. J.BOYD,
Practical Plumber and Gas-itter
ten anaTie Urebenge sss
Telephone Yards #14.
709 WEST 47TH STREET-
‘Pelepbone Yards 77 Residence, 113 Garfield Ba,
eisphons Yarde TV! Residence, 113 Garlleld BA,
JOHN FITZGERALD
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE:
4787 S. HALSTED STREET,
-. CHICAGO
—_—_——
M,C. MCINTOSH,
CcooK
COUNTY
JUSTICE...
CPPER, ROOM Oe, ETAT OCR.
HENRY STUCKART
HARDWARE, STOVES
and FURNITURE -¢ - - -
2511-2519 ARCHER AVENUE,
ONE BLOCK WEST OF HALSTED ST.
TOBBING A SPECIALTY.
. +.» TELEPHONE SOUTH 382..
LL eee
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 Mormona The
latest literary contribution in that di-
=e
eS
Po es
Meee
rt Bes cS os
ita ites Ress
pbs a ed
Bret eeartc eS
Pac Pas Gas he.
Peer, 3
Sree Aon =
hee ae
* ie gaa
Pier ett
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. Tayloz, Editor
and Publisher of The Broad Ax, 5040
Armour avenue, Chicago, Ill.
GOLD WATCii FREE.
Anyone sending us ten yearly sub-
seribers 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’.
g i :
os
SPER a
rae: KES ESS
Vv yee 4 So)
OO Sr
Res. Nae so ex A
er AM fe See a a
| 1 Ce ees Feo
ie PANG: PES RISE
F tan wae g by
(Bx Fe aes
at ee SLES eens
aii
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,
0 to work and earn a watch. Address
| age, Ti. se See
~ Se a . ‘ <oSs . .
Hon. W. J. Bryan’s Book
ALLL who are interested in furthering the sale of Hon,
mediately with the publishers. The work will conta,
2" An account of his campaign tour...
lis biography, written by his wife .,
The results of the campaign of 1896,
A review of the political situation . .
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