The Broad Ax

Saturday, June 29, 1901

Chicago, Illinois

4 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page text (machine-generated)
W. H. CLARK PROMISED THE COURT TO REFRAIN FROM SHOOTING OFF HIS MOUTH SO LOUD. When W. H. Clark was brought face to face with Justice John C. Everett Tuesday he felt uncomfortable and he was not in favor of permitting Justice Everett to try his cases for Clark knew that he had lied on the Justice and was fearful that the Judge would sock it to him. So Clark's cases were transferred to Justice John Richardson and Clark coughed up some more of the long-green for bonds. Frank L. Childs whose head was chopped off by Mayor Harrisons little ax a few weeks ago defended Clark, and he thought it was an outrage to have such a high toned (?) gentleman as Clark brought into court for calling us a "bastard, a hyena and a son of a b—." Justice Richardson did not get at Clark's case until Thursday afternoon. Clark brought himself—his grandpa Ham Carter and a big bundle of Broad Ax's and in his testimony he said that he had subscribed to The Broad Ax to help it along. Clark paid us three dollars as subscription to The Broad Ax from July 15th 1899 to May 1st 1901. Then we cut his name from our mailing list without him requesting us to do so, but during that time L. A. Newby paid us fifteen dollars for his write up. J. N. Blackshear contributed fourteen dollars to aid The Broad Ax in its effort in behalf of Democracy. A little over one year ago we ran Mr. Edward H. Wrights cut in The Broad Ax and he sent his check as his appreciation of F. Moseley in the last two years has wrote out checks to The Broad Ax to the extent of twenty dollars. Even ex-Senator T. T. Allain has paid us more money as subscriptions to The Broad Ax than Clark, and if Clark wants his little three dollars back he can have it if he will send us a note stating and we will return it to him forthwith. MISCEGNATION IN NEW YORK Increasing Number of Unions Between Whites and Negroes. During the past five years there has been a decided increase in the number of marriages in New York between white and colored people. In 1895 there were 729 such marriages, 369 Negroes having married white women and 360 colored women having been married to white men. Last year there were 1,846, in which 920 Negro women were married to white men and 926 Negroes married white women. One man whose position has enabled him to make continued and thorough observations of conditions in the lives of the other half of New York's population has this to say on the subject: "I have met scores of these mixed couples and so far as the principles are concerned I do not believe that they are as a rule, either more happy or more miserable than their neighbors who have wedded like with like. They have as few squabbles and as few divorces proportionately as couples that are wholly white or wholly black. "The children, however, are not so fortunate. It is difficult for the little tots to place themselves. They are outcasts from both white and colored flocks and when members of the same family are ranged on different sides of the color line, as is frequently the case, their situation is the more pitiable. "My observation has further taught me that a colored man makes a better husband for a white woman than a white man for a colored woman. The reason of this is not far to seek. The former seems to feel that he has been honored beyond measure by being accepted by a white woman and he will willingly work his fingers to the bone to support her and her children in good style. "The white man, on the other hand, figures that he has degraded himself by marrying a colored woman and he vents his displeasure over the situation by letting his wife bear the burden of supporting the entire family. It is such despicable fellows as these that are at the root of the trouble whenever the woes arising from a mixed marriage are aired in court. "So far as I can find out nineteenths of these mixed marriages result from coemployment of the races. The selection of servants without regard to racial characteristics is common in most city families and public houses, and men and women of all shades of black and white are thus thrown together. If this close acquaintance reveals congeniality of temper the question of color is eliminated from the matrimonial discussions, and for the time, at least, each appears to lose sight of the other's complexion. "Another thing worth noting is that the white partner in these combinations is usually a foreigner. People from other countries have not the same aversion to the Negro that is implanted in the American breast, and the man and the woman new to our customs see nothing out of the way in a union with a person with a swarthy skin. If you come down to statistics you will see that the number of English people married to colored people in New York exceeds any other nationality two to one. "As to the residences of these hybrid families, they are scattered around all over town. There is one little colony of them over on West Thirty-sixth and Thirty-seventh streets and another up on the east side. To speak of their social life is not easy because it is something that they have very little of. Still they manage to get as much enjoyment out of living as most other people in their environment, and were it not for the uncertain status of the children I should not be prepared to say that mixed marriages are at all a bad institution."—Ex. A little bird informed us Friday that "the big colored man who runs the corporation counsel's office called at the States Attorney's office the first of the past week to look after Ham Carter's libel suit. HEW TO THE LINE. The greatest fact of all time is the control of the policy of every nation of Europe and America by the one house known as the Rothschilds. The iron hand of that house covered with a velvet glove may be detected in all great enterprises. It owns all the gold stock of the world and of late it has been embarrassed by great discoveries of silver and gold lest a too great product will reduce the value of gold. The monopoly of quicksilver was made worthless by the cheap cyanide process. So long as they can hold the nations to the gold standard they are masters of the world. Silver or greenback legal tender adopted by ane state rescues it from the control of this house. The Boer war was made by them to get control of the largest gold mine known. No doubt the Chinese trouble was stirred up by them in order to force that nation under their golden yoke—for China had no foreign debt to speak of and her sole legal tender is the little brass copic with a square hole in it. From now on China is under the yoke. MISS VAUGHAN WON THE SCHOLARSHIP PRIZE. Much interested was manifested among the young ladies of the Lake High School over the contest for the scholarship for a free course at the Chicago University, and the coveted prize was won by Miss Catherine J. Vaughan who is just 16 years of age, and this young lady will embrace this rare opportunity of acquiring a classical education. Miss Vaughan is extremely bright for one so tender in years, she is an adept in drawing, and one of her drawings took the first premium at Sprinfield last year, and it now hangs on the wall in one of the large rooms in the Town of Lake High School building. Within the next few days miss Vaughan will leave for Lafayette, Ind. where she will visit with friends for two weeks. Miss Vaughan entertains the highest admeration for Mrs. M. Wilcox and all her other teachers including Prof. E. F. Stearns, who is one of the best instructors in Chicago. B. A. LEWIS IS OPPOSED TO HAM CARTER & CO. This short letter speak for itself: Chicago, Ill., June 22, 1901. Mr. Julius F. Taylor. Dear Sir: As one of the many readers of The Broad Ax permit me to say that I am with you in your fight against that most corruptable ring of selfstyled or so-called leaders of Negro Democracy. With their old antiquated methods of running politics, for it seems that corruption and missrule is the general order of the day with these would-be leaders of Negro Democracy. I did not attend the last meeting of the Cook County Colored Democracy and I understand it proved to be nothing more than a hindrance to the progress which has so far been made along the lines of Democracy with our race. In conclusion I want to say that I hope you will continue the fight as I feel safe in saying that you are sure to win. NOTICE. Last Thursday morning the postman bought us a long rich and racey letter concerning the doings of W. H. Clark, and we are free to confess that its contents are mighty interesting reading and they would not look well in print, but we cannot publish the letter until the writer of it sends his or her name and address, for we must have the names and the address of the writers of all letters and articles for self protection. So if the writer will forward their name and address the letter will appear in the next issue of The Broad Ax. State Chairman John P. Hopkins left for New York City Sunday night. He will return home Monday. Maj. E. B. Tolman, who made such a splendid run for judicial honors the past year can now be found in his new law office in the Ashland Block. Miss Amelia M. Scott and Miss Josephine C. Pryor, two very bright Afro-American young women of the Town of Lake graduated Wednesday night from the Lake High School with flying colors and high honors. County Commissioner R. B. Organ will more than likely head the ticket next fall for sheriff of Cook County. His selection for that office would meet with the highest approval of the vast majority of all the people of this city, and county, for R. B. Organ is clean and honest and he would make a good sheriff. Dr. L. M. Fernwick held every member of the South End Club with rapt attention during the reading of his paper before it last Sunday. His talk on "Social Evil, or Essence of Ethics" was full of good sound advice to both the old and the young. L. A. Meeks this Sunday, June 30, speaks on "The Spirit of Iconoclasm." Hon. Wm. C. Legner drainage trustee and manager of the West Side Brewery always possesses sense enough to treat everybody with decency, and it make no difference to Mr. Legner whether they are black or white and for this reason Mr. Legner has many warm friends among the colored people. Lawyer Geo. W. W. Lytle will not down and he can't be kept down, for lately he opened up new law offices in the Grand Opera House 87 & 89 S. Clark St. and up to the present Attorney Lytle feels highly elated over the way business is rolling into his law mill. Mr. Lytle is a good lawyer and the Broad Ax wants to see him succeed. The Buffalo social given by the members of the Phyllis Wheatly club at the home of Mrs. Coats, 3329 State street Wednesday night was well attended and quite a neat sum was realized which will be used in helping to defray the expenses of president L. A. Davis and Mrs. Rev. Wm. Gray who will represent the club at Buffalo next month. First assistant fire chief William H. Musham was on last Monday night made chief of the fire department of Chicago. Chief Denis J. Sweenie retiring after faithfully serving in that capacity for many years. Mayor Carter H. Harrison acted very wise in placing chief Sweenie's mantel upon the shoulders of Mr. Musham, who is in every way qualified for his new duties. It seems to be a foregone conclusion that commissioners Joseph E. Flanagan, Michael Irrmann, James E. Daley and Jacob B. Thielen will be called upon by the leaders of the party to stand for re-nominations as County commissioner the second time, for they have all performed their work well and it is no more than proper that they should be re-chosen to further serve the people. Mr. & Mrs John H. Murphy of Baltimore, Md., informally announce the engagement of their daughter, Lillye B., to Mr. Noah D. Thompson of this city. The wedding will take place in the fall. Mr. Thompson is one of the high priests of Chicago's four hundred and many of our young butterflies commonly called young ladies, will regret to learn that Mr. Thompson will take unto himself a wife in the sweet by and by. Alderman Joseph Strauss, 15th ward is one of the best business men in Chicago. He is interested in the Great Northern Sale and Exchange Stables, 1157 Milwaukee avenue, and Alderman Strauss constantly has on hand some of the finest and fastest steppers in this state. He is regarded as being a first class judge of horseflesh. But aside from his business relations Alderman Strauss finds the time to see that the people residing in his ward get a fair shake-down for their money. Simpelton Watkins who will never make a first class lawyer if he lives a thousand years is wasting much time which belong to the city by runnig up to every person he meets and informing them that it is his "great legal (?) opinion that he himself and his gang will not experience any trouble in landing Julius F. Taylor in the penitentiary." For Watkins who does not know enough law to represent himself nor the city at the 35th police station thinks that he has got us up against it. Sunday afternoon June 30th at 4 p.m. sharp the Umbrian Glee Club will give a "Sacred Silver offering" at Quinn Chaple, Wabash Ave. and 24th St. The proceeds from this affair will be used in helping to pay the Hon. W. S. Elliott, who will defend Mrs. Hudgens when she is put on trail for killing the Jewish pedlar last April. Prof. Wm. Charleton will conduct the concert which promises to be interesting from start to finish and he will be assisted by I. Jackson, A. A. Brown and Charles F. White. At the time that Harvey A. Thompson, "Billie" Piper, George J. Terrell, S. Watkins, Jim Miller, W. H. Clark, and several other members of the firm of Ham Carter & Co. waited upon Mr. R. E. Burke and the executive committee to enter their solemn protest against W. K. Crampton, W. A. Johnson, B. A. Lewis, James N. Simms, L. A. Newby, M. Shepperd, R. B. Cabbell and several others as not being representatives of Negro Democracy. Mr. Burke replied to the protests of the first named lot of gentlemen by branding them as four flushers, and we would give one big red poker chip to assert the state of Mr. Burke's mind at the present time respecting those gentlemen whom he designated as four flushers. For years Ham Carter has insisted upon being introduced whenever he intended to address a political meeting as Capt. H. C. Carter, ex-secretary of State of Mississippi, but as a matter of fact he was never elected to that office and he only served six weeks as such, He was used by Governors Alcorn and Ames as a "cafspaw" to sign state and school bonds and it required Ham about six weeks to sign those bonds and after he did so Gov. Alcorn and Mr. Ames, who was Gen. B. F. Butler's son-in-law, took the bonds to New York and Boston and sold them and put the money in their pockets which means that they plundered every honest white and black man in the State of Mississippi, and Ham Carter delights to walk around and blow about his connections with that transaction. An Elizabethian cup, parcel gilt, of the year 1577, eight inches high, was sold in London lately for $3,687, or at the rate of $295 an ounce. At the same time an old Irish potato ring, 7½ inches in diameter, was sold for $167, and a William III. plain tankard for $821. Among the features of Japan's military system is the fact that on the army pay rolls are 2,000 tailors, 1,000 shoemakers, 10,000 grooms, and 1,500 attendants, says the Washington Times. The medical staff is one of the most complete in either Europe or Asia. All officers holding only temporary commissioned rank are included in the list of petty officers. Investments in horse-flesh are proverbially uncertain, but a city board of health found an ample return for the fifteen dollars expended in the purchase of a horse. The animal was used in producing antitoxin, and yielded many thousand vials, valued at thousands of dollars. Having done his work and been turned out to grass, he now enjoys a well-deserved rest. It is said that the Bank of France has an invisible studio in a gallery behind the cashlers, so that at a given signal from one of them any suspected customer can instantly have his photograph taken without his knowledge. The camera has also become very useful in the detection of frauds, a word or figure that to the eye seemed completely erased being clearly reproduced in photographs of the document that had been tampered with. NO. 36. The Russian empire is possibly the greatest contributor to the world's supply of fur. Russian and Siberian hunters destroy annually 3,000,000 ermines, 16,000,000 marmots and 25,000,000 squirrels. The experiments are for the purpose of improving and perfecting bombs that are now made for the purpose of exposing the position of an enemy at night, and to reveal the character of defenses to be attacked. These projectiles explode on impact, liberating a flaming compound. One compound, consisting of sulphur, saltpetre, and hydrocarbon, is a blue light mixture. The illumination lasts as long as the saltpetre supplies oxygen to maintain combustion. In electing Henry P. Davison to the presidency of the Liberty National bank in New York last week the stockholders of that institution placed in control of their property a man who is today the youngest bank president in the metropolis. Mr. Davison, at the age of thirty-three, ranks not only as president of a national bank in the financial center of the continent, but also as the secretary of the New York clearing house, the organization of the banking interests. According to correspondence issued by the London foreign office, 98 per cent of the slaves of Zanzibar and Pemba prefer to remain slaves. Fewer slaves applied for freedom in 1900 than in 1899, because, the British commissioner avers, most of the slaves know they are not likely to gain much present advantage, seeing that those who were thrown on their own resources have a difficult time to make a living. The masters have been kinder since the slave legislation was enacted, and seek to make their services more attractive. Both the United States weather Bureau and the Navy Department are doing much to establish the reputation of the wireless telegraphy. An extension of the government's wireless system between Governor's Island and Fort Wadsworth is planned for the coming summer. It is now proposed to establish the system at all forts around New York and also at the Brooklyn navy yard. Homing pigeons are now used by the Navy Department for coast operations, and a board has recommended the substitution of wireless telegraphy. Russia has decided that it wants the American bicycle, having tired of the more clumsy English and German article. Such are the comforting reports received by the managers of the American Bicycle company, which does much of the exporting of American machines. Russia finds more popular use for the machine at a moderate price than it has found heretofore, and the many American-made machines that travelers about Europe have seen have convinced them of the superiority of our machines over those of European make. So there is an unusual demand this year, a fact which pleases the American maker who finds the demand here falling off as compared with that which existed when all America was bicycle mad. "Threatened men live long," sometimes—when, for instance, they chance to be criminals whose counsel are anxious to make a record. Almost ten years ago a man in the state of Washington was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to be hanged. That sentence has been thrice reaffirmed, but the man has not been hanged yet. The state supreme court and the United States Supreme court have had the case before them, in the form of exceptions and objections, during these ten years, and the condemned man's attorney declares that he has still "many cards to play." Such attempts to "cheat the gallows" have the evil effect of arousing against a convict a sentiment which is not easily to be distinguished from vindictiveness. Few persons know that the United States government derives an income from some of the largest bathing establishments in America, if not in the world. The hot springs of Arkansas, which have been a resort for invalids for many years, are owned by Uncle Sam, and he extracts a payment of $30 a tub for the use of the medicated water. As there are 534 tubs, the spring brings him an income from that source of $16,020 a year. The various hot springs, which are said to number seventy-three, issuing from the west side and the base of Hot Springs mountain, and which are now obscured from view, have been converged in many instances from several different issues into one outlet by development work done on the reservation under the supervision of the various superintendents. wat = Sere comemgsicg il bere stents Sel Doane _ The Russian empire is possibly the Sreatest contributor to the world’s sup- ply of tur. Russian and Siberian hunt- ers destroy annually 3,000,000 ermines, > id a oe ates cna _ Among the features of Japan’s mili- tary system is che fact that on the army pay rolis are 2,000 tailors, 1,000 Shoemakers, 10,000 grooms, and 1,500 attendants, says the Washington ‘Times. The. medical staff is one of the most complete in either Europe or Asia. .All officers holding only tempo- Fary commissioned rank are included im the list of petty officers. _ Investments in horse-fiesh are pro- ‘Verbially uncertain, but @ city board -of, health found an ample return for the fifteen dollars expended in the pur- chase of a horse. The animal was used in . producing antitoxin, and yielded many thousand vials, valued at thous- ‘ands of dollars. Having done his work and been turned out to grass, he Bow enjoys a well-deserved rest. Tt is said that the Bank of France has an invisible studio in a gallery be- hind the cashiers, so that-at a given signal rrom one of them any suspected customer can instantly have his pho- tograph taken without his knowledge. The camera has also become very use- ful in the detection of frauds, a word ‘Or figure that to the eye seemed com- pletely eraved being clearly reproduced im photograpus of the document that had been tampered with. Daughters of the Confederacy throughout the country are interested in a movement which has been started to buy the old home of Gen. Stone- wall Jackson at Lexington, Va. The matter has been under consideration dy 2 local chapter of the daughters at Zexington, and Mrs. Jackson. She ‘wishes to dispose of the property as she cannot afford to keep it, and the daughters are considering the advisa- Dility of buying it and turning it to hospital purposes. ' ']. J. J. See of the Naval Observatory bas announced the results of new ‘measurements of Saturn and its rings, ‘which differ somewhat from older de- ‘terminations, He makes the exterior @iameter of the rings about 173,226 miles, the equatorial diameter of Sat- urn 74,990 miles, and the polar diam- eter 67,395, the difference between the two diameters being 7,595, miles al- most equal to the entire diameter of the earth. Mr. See’s measures make the @iameter of Titan, the largest of Sat- ‘urn’s moons, 2,092 miles. It had pre- ‘viously been estimated as high as 3,- 500 miles. At a recent woman's meeting where parliamentary points were getting tan- a feelings embittered, Mrs. Tod Helmuth begged that tthe ladies heed the rules of the Pil- ‘@rims: “Touch no state matters; pick mo quarrels; reveal no secrets; main- tain ‘no ‘ill opinions; make no com- parisons; lay no wagers.” These max- ims have since been known in that circle as “Fanny's recipe for club elections.” Oddly enough, King Ed- cward recently discovered an old black letter manuscript bearing the same rules, which he has caused to be framed and posted in Windsor Castle. ‘They may be recommended to per- sons who are not habitues of clubs or castles. ‘The summer camp for schoolboys is @ Tecognized tustitution in certain parts of the country. Al its advan- tages may be seen in a new applica- tion of the camp idea which has just jbeet made by members of the Inter- collegiate Young Men's Christian As- ociation. In this second summer of ‘their enterprise sixty boyspreparing for ‘cOllege are to gather at a spot on the New England coast where the best fa- <ilities for all land and water sports bound. Besides the boys there will fhe fifteen “leaders,” young men still Ta pane geetay ee eaeatryae identified with more serious pects of college life, as well as with 3 Indeed, a fair proportion of oan wear a “varsity” initial on directes from Washington. which have een going on for several months, there ate about 275 reported cases of leprosy im the United States. It is thought probable that the real number may be mearer 1,000. For various reasons physicians who have cases of thie dis- so . them. Settee tle num Pel crssiad bs inaniaig ice sees ‘easton some alarm. Seventy-four of the Khown cases are in New Orleans, Mint oa Reet mostly Bs te ng in the rural ttlements. ‘There are 15 carte in egies ioe ee 4 ase re ae See eee” peters SA ryt tee STANDARD Time: Tk. 3) se ees ee ‘The difficulty of appreciating the dif. ference in time that prevails between different countries is very general, and the following list is printed for the purpose of a ready reference guide by ‘which to calculate the time of any 0c- currence in’ another country. All na- tons, excepting Spain, Portugal and Bassia, calculate their time from the meridian of Greenwich, accepting as standerd some even-hour meridian, east or west of Greenwich. For in- stance: = Western European time, or that of the meridian of Greenwich, {s legal in England, Belgium, Holland and Lar- emburg. Lire Central European time, or one hour east of Greenwich, is ‘legal in Ger- many, Austria-Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Congo Free State, ‘Denmark, Italy, Servia, Sweden, Nor ‘way and Switzerland. - -‘Mastern European time, or two hours east of Greenwich, is adopted by Bul garia, Roumania, Natal and Turkey in Burope. Bight hours east of Greenwich ap- plies to the Philippines. Nine hours east ef Greenwich is adopted by Centra] Australia and Ja pan. ‘Ten hours east of Greenwich is off- eal in Victoria, Queensland and Tas mania. Bieven and a half hours east has 2 bya ualirt owe: rowed United States, Canada and Mex- ico have adopted the fifth, sixth, sew enth and eighth hours west of Green jwich. ‘The Hawaiian Islands adopt the me Fidian of ten and a half hours west. In Spain the meredian of Madrid, fourteen minutes forty-five seconds west of Greenwich, is legal; in Portu- gal, that of Lisbon, or thirty-six min- utes thirty-nine seconds west, and in Russia that of St. Petersburg, or two hours one minute and thirteen seconds east of Greenwich. ' WORDS OF WISDOM. ‘A good man does good merely by liv. ing.—Bulwer. The public is wiser than the wisest eritic.—Bancroft. Cheerfulness is the best promoter of health.—Addison. ~ Shame is nature’s hasty conscience. Maria Edgeworth. The infinitely little nave a pride inf- nitely great.—Voltaire. ‘The sure way to miss success is te miss the opportunity.—Chasles, If thou desire to be wise, be so wise as to hold thy tongue.—Lavater. The accents of love are all that is left of the language of paradise. —Bulb wer. The choicest pleasures of life le within the ring of moderation. —Tup- per. > Candor looks with equal fairness at Doth sides of a subject—Noah Web ster. ‘The most unhappy of all men is he who believes himself to be so.—Henry ‘Home. Excellence when concealed differs but little from buried worthlessness.— Horace. ‘ Sow good services; sweet remem brances will grow from them.—Mma, De Stael. ‘Tact comes as much from goodness of beart as from fineness of taste-— Endymion. Some will never learn anything be cause they understand everything too soon.—Blount. . Narrow minds think nothing right that is above their own capacity— Bochefoucauld. Prejudice, which sees what 2 Dleases, cannot see what is pisin— Aubrey De Vere. | Hasten slowly, and without losing Deart put your work twenty times, upon the anvil—Boileau. An Eighteen-Hour Recitation, Professor Arlini, of Naples, has just performed a remarkable feat. Some time ago he offered to make a bet that be could recite the whole of Dante's “Divine Comedy” by heart. His abil ‘ity to do this was doubted, and his ‘Wager was taken up. A select au dience was invited to hear the profes gor, who deciaimed from 8 o'clock in the evening until 2 o'clock the next af- ternoon, The reciter stopped occa- sionally, but it was not because he had forgotten the poem. It was sim- ply to moisten bistongue with sugared water. He won his wager, for the au- @ience bad to confess that he got through the 15,000 verses, more or lesa, of which the poem is composed, with- cut the least difficulty. ‘Wales a Picncer ic Irene Trade. Byron wrote in his “Childe Harold” that he “stood in Venice, on the Bridge of Sighs, a palace and a prison on each band.” Merthyr has got something al most as famous, according to the “His tery.of the Iron Trade of Wales.” Penydarran works have been cleared away to the last orick, and now on one ‘Side stands the electrical power-gener- ating station, and on the other # pros- perous theatre. From this spot went sway the frst rail that was ever made 4m Wales—that for the Liverpool and Manchester Raliway, the cable for the bridge thet spaus the Menai, and from it started the first locomotive engine — Cardiff Western Mail. & French farmer at St. Briewc bas yast made an interesting find op one of bis Rskis. Ina cavity im the clay be Giscovered 180 bronze axes. They. ievsd by loci eatignarions-Se, have to have been the stock of = Ocltle merchant tz the brome age, 7 SEVEN TIMES SAVED P REMARKABLE APPEALS TO PROLONG eae sae Seven times tried for murder seven times sentenced and seven times Sayed; 10 years in the shadow of the death as ever, is the record of Charles ‘W. Nordstrom, who is now confined ta the jail at Sesttie, Wash., still with the sentence of hanging resting on him. In 1891 Nordstrom was tried for the murder of William Mason and con- victed on circvmstantial evidence. His lawyer, ex-Congressman James Hamil- ton Lewis, at once inaugurated @ 6c- wo alle amarante diy oF ent time have put a barrier Nordstrom and the fate to whieh he had been sentenced. Noréstrom’s Crime ‘The crime of which Nordstrom is @harged took place in the fall of 1891 at the farm of William Mason, at th: simmit of Cedar mountain. A <is- pute over wages had angered No-<d- rom at his employer and he had threatened him, saying that he would ‘Kill olf man Mason. A few days later he went to Seattle and bought a ‘Winchester rife. Three nights later William Mason, while sitting near the ‘Window in the d'nng room, was shot. 4 shot was hearo outsde and the en- tire family hurried out in search of the assassin. No one was in sight, bat boot tracks showed that the mur- Gerer had come close to the window. The night Was too dark for.the pur- guers to see any great distance, but all night long they could see the light burning in Nordstrom's cabin. The wext day his house was found to be empty. Then all the neighbors joined fe the bunt. At last two deputy sher- ifs saw Nordstrom walking along the railroad track near Gilman, with his rife over his shoulder on his way north to Canada. The deputies, concealing their weap- ons, waited for him and engaged him im conversation. Then suddenly selz- ing his rifie, they made him their pris- ener after a severe struggle. He was taken to Kings county jail and in De- eember tried and convicted of the murder of Mason. A Long Legs Fight Then came the long fight of his lawyer, “Ham” Lewis, for his life. Ap- peal No. 1 was made on the ground that the prisoner had been made to tmcriminate himself. Nordstrom hav- img been compelled by the court to fit en a pair of boots, which had been found near the scene of the murder. ten,» | f a ie ie ‘es OE mE i Pek Le i he ey " & ss 1 3 " j , j Soe Riya 7 ee 5 PAX, : LY, ig oF, j bak: eee. - CHARLES W. NORDSTROM. : : : NEW YORK’S SPITE HOUSE. One of the Most Curious Erected in the Universe Tt is reported in New York that the famous “spite” house erected several years ago by a man named Richard- son is to be offered for sale, together with its furniture and interior decora- tions. There is not in the whole world a stranger house than this one, nor any that has a more curious history. The man whe built the house “out of spite” is now dead, but his name still clings to the place, and it is unlikely that it will ever be known by any other name them the “Richardson Spite House.” Richardson was a millionaire and be was also a miser. He began Mfe as .a brickinyer, esencmized and saved money. In time his savings were invested tm Souses and land. Tie land upon which Richardson duit his “spite house” was the property of his wife. It was an ab- surd little strip of land extending 104 feet along Lexington avenue and only five fest on the side street. Highteen Years ago one Heyman Sarner,e fer, wished to builé a block of apart ment houses on the side street, adjoin- ing the little strip of land owned by on avenue approaching Richardsors offered $1,000 for the er-shaped bit of iand. One ea cae aan en we ce oD it was not worth a cent ” Garner declined to pay more than his or offer and said he'd mated _ frontage. = hea made plans for “setting oven. that land even if tt were le, just so he could keep the light neath tes 4 a a ee oc ix Fd hacaaet ae ee lay. Tha hs after dist, The Sa era Soares le dela ath ie fut threo | ou the «i Seen Be ero! sixty incb: s wi e Eo ee dete a oe ee a This appeal failed. Appeal No, 2 was am application for a writ ef babebas corpus om the ground that the verdict of the jury was “guilty, as proved” and as the presentment was murder im the first, second, third and fourth degrees, Nordstrom could not be helé for more than the lowest degree. This adroit plea was ineffectual, but it served {ts purpose of adding another 12 months to the prisoner's life. Appeal No. 3 was taken on the ground that Nordstrom was a Swedish citizen and, therefore, entitled to a trial before a grand jury. Lewis se cured a stay of execution, but the Su- Preme court, after another 12 months’ deliberation, took the stand that this appeal might be made by the Swedish government with hope of success, ‘though not by the prisoner’s counsel. fasanity Plead. Appeal No, 4 was a declaration that the prisoner had become insane and therefore could not legally be put to death. A delegation of physicians was sent by the state to examine Nord- strom, and they pronounced him sane. By this time the local court had be- come angered at the devices of Lewis and ordered Nordstrom to be hanged in 10 days. Appeal No..5 was put forward on the ground that the prisoner’s sanity should have been decided by a jury. Lewis rushed across the continent to Narragansett pier and obtained a stay of execution from Justice McKenna. This put the whole matter back to the Supreme court and gave another year and a half of life to the mur- derer. Appeal No. 6 was made to the Unit- ed States Circuit court, Lewis main- taining that the prisoner should be discharged because a review had been denied him by the State Supreme court. Lewis claims that new evi- dence has been discovered, which proves that the “murder” was noth- ing more than an accident. And so there has come an end to the most extraordinary fight for life ever made by a lawyer on behalf of a client. Nordstrom had neither prop- erty nor wealthy friends. Previous to the trial he hed never seen James Hamilton Lewis. His prolonged de- fense has been due simply to the in- domitable perseverance and pugnacity of his lawyer. Nordstrom’s last appeal to the Unit- ed States Supreme court was refused by that tribunal on Tuesday last, and | he will soon be executed. ‘Uttle casement-like rooms, with furni- ‘ture built especially for the pygmy apartments. The stairways are as cramped as one can possible imagine. It is impossible for two persons to pass tm the halls. To accomplish such a passing one of the two must step into one of the rooms on the side. The table im the dining room is eighteen inches wide and the rest of the furniture is built in proportion. —a APPEALS TO FATHERLAND. Convicted Marderer, Claiming Citises- ship Hopes to Esenpe Necse, Frank Miller, in jail awaiting exe- eution at Birmingham, Ala, June 23, and who is alleged to be one of the Most noted robbers in America, has appealed tc the German government to save him from the gallows. He was sentenced for the murder of Policeman J. W. Adams, who, with Policeman G. W. Kirkley, was shot to death a year ago by Miller and his pal, Frank Dun- ean. Miller claims to be a German citizen. The case was referred to B Holaburn, German- consul at Mobile, who wired s Birmingham firm to in- Yestigate. Miller refused to state the town of his nativity in Germany or to tell where his parents now are. He claimed that his disgrace would kill them. Some time ago Miller induced Sister Xavier of 2 New York convent to start an endless chain in his behalf to raise funds for a new trial. He re- alized a goodly sum, but the supreme Remau solders’ Pisin Food. i The Roman soldiers who built such 7 wonderful roads and carried a weight of armor and luggage that would crush ‘ the average farm hand lived on coarse } brown bread and sour wina They ; ‘Were tamperate in diet and regular and ‘ constant in exercise. The Spanich P peasant ‘works every day and dances | , Balf the night, yet eats only his biack | ; bread, onion and watermelon, The Smyrna porter eats only o little fruit a Ss id cm Sanne | : costie, eas Sok Ge at nin 7 @ndure more than the negro fed on Smet Se = ‘ Py ee GRE oe is Ba Ss ied thle Sod 2 5 a ae *: - ei Shee SUCCESS IN SELF-POSSESSION, Go Says Walter Damresch, and He Suret) ‘Ought t Know. ‘The man who makes public appear ances must have self-possession, says ‘Walter Damrosch. I have learned by great experience that this quality fe all-important There have been times when the slightest pertarbation on my part would have made my or- chestra play out of time and out of tune. The musicians in an orchestra place just as much faith in their con- @uctor as do soldiers in their general. ‘The best example of this quality I ever witnessed was aboard an Atlan- the liner. The second day we ran into vio- lent weather. The propeller shaft broke, and we were drifting helpless ly. The waves ran high and a gen- eral scafe ensued. Hysterical women ran hither and thither and the men were pale and nervous. The officers, not knowing what had happened, at first, were obviously frightened, A pandemonium seemed imminent, In the midst of it all a young man whom I remember by the name of Stone, who was making his first voyage, came out of his stateroom in an immaculate yachting sult; he was cool. and collected. A man who had been racing up and Gown, clad in one or two scanty gar- ‘ments, selzed him by the shoulders, jammed him against the rail, and fran- tically said: | “For heaven’s sake what is the mat- ter? What is the matter?” “Go and ask the captain, please,” replied Stone. eee ee te ee ee oD Stone pulled out his watch, looked at it and sald, as he puffed a cigar: “I suppose it is something that bap- pens every Tuesday morning. This is my first trip over, and I'm not running the ship this time.” In five minutes order was restored, because other excited passengers be- came calm at the self-possession of the young man.—Success. on ae) Az Extraordinary Tree. | In the Congo region there is @ most remarkable tree, of which Europeans bad often heard, but of which they had ‘never seen a picture until a few days ago, when several photographs of it, which were taken by order of the Con- go Government, arrived in Paris, Ber- lin and London. The tree is known as the baobab of Kinschassa, and, it is believed to oe the largest tree of its kind im all Africa. Kinschassa is on the Congo railroad, about an hour and a half's ride from Leopoldville, and is a flourishing place, having several yactories and an Eng- lish mission. ‘The banks of the Stan- ley Pool are low at this point and sev- eral huge bavbabs grow on them., The BRatives call tnese monsters “monkey's bread trees,” and their scientific name is “Adansonia digitata.” The monarch of them all, which has just been photographed, is over thirty feet in circumference, yet, strange to say, it is hardly thirty feet in height. Its gigantic branches are leafless and withered, and the trunk itself has for many years shown signs of decay. In- deed, it is quite hollow on one side, and it is evident that it cannot survive much longer. At the foot its growth bas been abundant, as can be seen from the great breadth and solidity, not only of the main trunk, but also of its numerous offshoots. The Csar’s Little Joke. ‘The history of medaeval times is re- Plete with instances of the merry pranks played by the Court jester on the day sacred to the rule of the cap and bells. It is sald that Peter the Great was much struck by the manner in which All Fools’ day was celebrated ip France, Holland and England during his sojourn in those countries, and op bis return to his own dominions he im troduced the April fool custom quite forcibly among his people by erecting on the Sist day of March, 1719, in the open square in front of bis palace in St. Petersburg, a gigantic pile of wood, garnished with tar andother infamma- ble materials. To this he set fire dur- ee ey metnteg- been ot Agee ‘The fames shot high up tn the air, and it looked from a distance as if the palace and the whole city were afire. People came from all sides, some trav- eling for miles to help put out the fire. When they finally arrived at the con- fiagration troops formed around the square cried out: “Fools and donkies, fall back! By order of the Czar fall back? The little father has fooled you. It is the ist of April to-day.” American Nervousness. 4 man of good habits and regular Rife, taking a judicious amount of rest and recreation, need be none the worse mentally and physically for a rather intense concentration upon the work of bis life, while that work is going on. Some of the world’s greatest thinkers, tm ines where the most perfect con- centration and specialization were fe- quired, have been men of perfect ‘Bealth and nerves and of long and Vigorous life. But they have not in- not undertaken to compass the whole Geld of human effort, and they have Kept their lives free from excesses i all directions. Poe tele gaed gedeemed yd and worry that harm, rather than the work and wor ry im themselves. In a measure, thls is tree; but many persons work for that which does them no goud ana worry about that which is of no 2¢ count. If they are made nervous, we Se er Sar 6 Sea chews be aan r In this respect they are— uncivilized —New Sa aten ieee he BeRlin canta are ape liquid dentifrice for the Teeth end Mouth siooserremarowber ac DAC At all Stores, or by Mail for the price, HALLG RUCKEL, New York, RICHEST NATION ON EARTH. New Commonweaith im the Antipode Can Boast the Distinction. It will surprise many to learn that the new commonwealth of Australia is per capita, the richest nation on the face of the globe, except the republic of Switzerland. But per capita wealth is not real wealth. Last year the total value of the products of the colonies forming the Australian commonwealth amounted to fully $550,000,000, of which their pastoral industries repre- sented $150,000,000, their agricultural] $140,000,000, their mineral products fully $100,000,060 and their manufac- turingand other industriesthe remain- ing $160,000,000. The worl alcne from the 120,000,000 sheep raised in 1900 was worth $100,000,000. The mineral resources of Australia cannot even be guessed at. In the last forty-eight years the country has produced gold to the value of $1,800,000,000, in the last twenty silver to the value of $150,- 000,000. Diamonds are found in one district, rubies in another. There is at least one emerald mine in New South Wales, and opals equal to any in the world are found in Queensland, while the pearl fisheries of the northwestern coast produce a considerable portion of the most valuable pearls of com- merce. Ambrose MeKayv's Case. Rockbridge, Mo., June 24th:—The neighborhood and particularly the members of Rockbridge Lodge, No. 435, A. FP. & A. M., are feeling very much pleased over the recovery of Mr. Ambrose McKay, a prominent citizen and an honored member of the Mason- ie Fraternity. Mr. McKay had been suffering for years with Diabetes and Rheumatism, which recently threatened to end his days. His limbs were so filled with pain that he could not sleep. He was very bad. Just then, someone suggested a new remedy—Dodds Kidney Pills—which brs been much advertised recently, as a cure for Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble. After Mr. McKay had used a few doses he commenced to improve. His pain all left him, and he is almost a3 well as ever. He says Dodd’s Kidney Pills are worth much more than they cost. They are certainly getting a great reputation in Missouri, and many very startling cures are being reported. Rearal Womes Bead and Debate. The Daughters of Ceres is a society im Iowa comprised of women who live on farms, but who have the prevailing “Jining” instinct. Some of the wives and daughters of the farmers are said to drive over twelve miles to attend the meetings, which are held semi- monthly. A system of traveling libra- ries among the various branches has been founded, and debates on social am economic questions, with their es- pecial relation to a rural population, are frequently held. ee ee rt them tea or coffee, were tein the now food drink called -OT So eeeeee sat See ee ee Se ————— ‘The more re children the more health you through their systems. Grain-O is made of nsten’ like the choice grades of oxfen, but like choice grades of coffee, but costs about 3¢ as much. All grocers sell it 150 and Mc. Sir Arthur Power Palmer, K. C. B., the new commander-in-chief in India, is one of the big men of the British army. He is six foot four in hight, and is nicknamed “Long P.” Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs —Wm ©. Expaizr, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, 1900, Of the 196,500,000 Mohammedans in the world, only 18,000,000 live in Tur- key. Dyeing Long Live the King! The King is Wizard Oil; pain his enemies, whom he conquers. He who knows, and knows not that be knows, is asleep; wake him. os Greet Nave Ratoret. Sim essceaee Ontario produced 30,186,000 bushels of wheat last year. A BA BY WA en bib hn A Sed AaGE Reise See COMANCHE LAND OPENING 2EUEO geree Tor intonation and nape wre Eee cE = ¥ . eB? ‘ | i ar i , 4 FUGITIVE 17 YEARS. a es tema eon poe Bigh Up in Federal Service—Sentenceg on, ee = Recently Served “President Every county-Im North Carolina ts in suspense to knew the outcome of an spplication now:-in the hands of Gov- ercor Charles B, Aycock of that state for the pardon of ‘Waightstil! Avery Anderson, who 16° years ago was con- victed of murder and sentenced tobe banged, and since then has been a fugitive from the grasp of the law, It is supposed that the federal adminis- tration will exertam influence in An- derson’s behalf, for though branded asa murderer he has since showed himself to be-a Valuable’ citizen, hav- ing, during many occasions, been en- trusted with offices of great responsi- bility. The deed Of which Anderson is charged is the killing of a man named Ed Horton, near Asheville, N. C., dur- ing a quarrel Over @ mine. That An- Gerson committed the deed is a fact, be having confessed to that effect, but according to his story it was done in self-defense. The trouble @rose in 1884 from a violent dispute between Edward Ray, a brother-in-law: of Anderson's, and a man named Bailey, over their respec- tive claims to a valuable mica mine in Mitchell county. Bailey and his friends were in possession. Ray, bit- terly set against yielding, attempted to smoke the Bailey men out of the mine. Unsuccessful in this, he next ap- pealed to his brother-in-law, Anderson, then @ young man of 25, a deputy col- lector of internal revenue and greatly dreaded by the moonshiners. It was decided to force the issue in person, and the young men started for the mine armed. ‘The Bailey men, who awaited them st the entrance to the mine, were simi- larly equipped. A desperate scuffle fol- lowed, during which Ray and his com- batant, Cebon Miller, fell down a shaft. At the bottem, with renewed ferocity, Ray attacked his opponent, and in five minutes Miller was dead. Meanwhile Anderson had bees attacked at the top of the mine by one of the Bailey clan. Ed Horton. Their encounter was brief,, unseen. All that is known of it is that Horton was killed. Knowing that they would suffer im- mediate expiation at the hands of the enraged men in the mine, if caught, the two lingered not an instant, but made good their escape. They kept vA a WY Y) GOVERNOR AYCOCK. quieted Gown and then te J gave themselves up, OD pou that the deeds were committed self-defense. ‘They were indicted f murder and tried im a hostile county, ‘here public feeling was against them. The jury brought in a verdict of mur- der in the first degree in Anderson's case, ang of manslaughter in Ray's. The sentences were hanging end 20 Tears’ imprisonment, respectively. The sian te Once began plan them. Corina, aston, <a BENS time before —— } to hanged, a band 500 strong surrounded the jail at Asheville, where the men Were confined.) 99 Se Sata ae eo TS ae . Since that alght sone but Ander Tite and « few friends has known bis i aving North Caro- sumed a new name, und mia ae i er ee the strugsies ‘of the family which they hav Sbiie aaa heh aneeena trend tarongh abe tafinence 4 Senator Pritel t Mrs. Anderson * -~ -“ SS —., ana ee ee and has thus been te ber three <chiliren, nt BO Mecuwhile, Anderson has become ‘high sheriff of the county in teh he lives, in & state not fer from the Rockies. For a good part-of the time he has also been in the secret service of the United States, still under his gold cata ume. When $20,000,000 of ‘kegs was taken from San Francisco, Cal, to Washington, D. C., Sho ao aden ee t,he 92 me who so faithfully guarded it. During the Spanish-American war, when the ‘White House was more. carefully guarded than before, Anderson could have again been seen. Also at Chica- there at the laying of the cornerstone of the new postoffice building, Ander- son was in evidence. All during the inauguration day Anderson was the one seen nesrest the President. As for Edward Ray, he was long thought to be dead. His wife secured ® divorce and married the young at- torney, who is now Senator Pritchard. that Site ee thet Ray is Mexico, having amassed a fortune in mining. Antics ef o Black Bear. The antics of a big black bear cre- ‘ated quite a panic in the town of Oran, Algeria, not long ago. The animal was attached toa menagerie hailing from Russia, and which was about to leave the place, after delighting the inhabitants with its performances. Bruin contrived, somehow, to slip out of his cage, and as fate would have it, be bounded into the road at the very moment when a funeral procession was passing along. While the mourners fied in every direction, the driver of the hearse whipped up his horses, which sped off at a gallop. As the bear, ‘which, it may be assumed, was quite innocent of any malicious intent, took his course through the most frequent- ed streets, he spread terror along his path. People fiew into shops with wild shrieks, doors were closed and berred, and the town soon wore a deserted ap- pearance. Finally Bruin betoock him- self in his ramble to an open square on which a company of Zouaves was drilling. The soldiers immediately fixed bayonets and surrounded the bear, which surrendered at discretion, and was promptly conducted to the po- lice station. Later on the animal's keeper appeared and took the runaway in charge. There was no difficulty ex- perienced in inducing Bruin to return te the menagerie, but the panic his escapade created will be talked of in the town for days to come. Deecerted the OF4 Boil For mauy years Father Boyle was one of the most prominent and popular Catholic clergymen in Washington, where he had a great reputation as wit. Many of his most intimate friends were Protestants and mecabers of the Protestant clergy. A few months before his death he erected a mission- ary chapel down by the navy yard and bought at a junk shop an old bell which had been discarded by one of the ‘Presbyterian churches. He sent the ‘bell to a foundry in Georgetown and ‘had several inches of metal pared off the rim. Having thus got rid of a@ erack the harsh and discordant tones of the bell became short and sweet. ‘Meeting a Presbyterian parson not Jong after Father Boyle calied his at- ‘tention to the change and the latter ‘could scarcely believe it was the same ‘bell. “What in the world did you do with that bell,” inquired the Presbyte- ‘rian pastor, “to cause such a change in the tone?” “We blessed it and Diessed it and Dlessed it until we got the Presuyterian devil out of ft.” re- ‘torted Father Boyle, “and then it sounded all right.” —- ee a as ee eee The Porto Rican newspapers record the fact that the girls in the. school on the Plata Colon at San Juan have been kept in. Keeping school girls gt work after the usual hour for obstrep- erous conduct in lesson time is a sam- ple of American notions that bas as- tonished the easy-going Porto Ricans. They don't do things that way there. “When the news traveled around that ‘the teacher was keeping the girls at lessons 8s a punishment, parents ‘crowded to the school and demanded to sve their children: released. The “principal declined to do any such thing and the parents stood around aad talk- See acre a ‘gn hour, or 80, the girls Joan is still talking shout. eae Journel. . Sead Fat penéd in 1760 in the city. of New ; York. : . eee ao oa ise “NIAGARA TO Tue Sea © fare ee eninitiated this may seen fesirous of Knowing something of the Sty an te continent ween — will Chet na nn Cnlatio Reriastion ee of Montreal, thai De aust landed to Serture Coa illustrated booklet and folders descrip- tive of the trip, which embraces 2 sail on their steamers through Lake Onta- tio thence to the St. Lawrence river through the picturesque scenery of the 1,000 Islands (America’s Venice), the €xeiting descent of the marvelous rapids to Montreal, where connection is made with the Richeliea Company's palatial steamers for a trip to quaint old Quebec. After a night's sail and on the approach to Quebec in the morning, a magnificent panorama may be seen by the tourist from the decks of the steamers. The rugged and steep cliffs, made famous by General Wolfe’s historic climb during the struggle be- tween France and Britain for the pos- session of the key to Canada first comes into view, and at the very pin- nacle of these cliffs the antique, but majestic forts ‘crown the heights, then as the steamer approaches the land- ing, many quaint and curious buildings fairly reveling tn historic association are to be seen. On landing at Quebec transfer is im- mediately made for trip down the low- er St. Lawrence to Murray Bay and Tadousac, at which point two magnifi- cent hotels have been erected for the convenience and comfort of the Ameri- can tourists, these hotels are owned and opersted by the Richelieu and On- tario Navigation Company and are luxurious in all their appointments and are very popular with tourists from all parts of United States and Canada. The steamer then proceeds up tne famous Saguenay river, whose magnificent capes amongst which are “Trinity” and “Eternity” together with falls, mountains, etc., and peculiar at- mosphere (which is a combination of mountain and sea air) for the restora- tion of health has no equal, make this one of the most delightful trips with- in the reach of the tourist on this con- tinent. On the return journey one may have the pleasure of exploring the many in- teresting places in the cities of Quebec and Montreal before returning to their homes. A banquet at the University Club is Buffalo, given in honor of Mark Ben- nitt, chief of the bureau of publicity of the Pan-American Exposition, was s fitting tribute to the genius of the maz who has so successfully exploited the merits of the exposition. Mr, Bennitt stands foremost among Rewspaper men in the United States today, having within the past year proved his masterly grasp of the re- quirements of such an important posi- tion. He not only knows what mate rial is required, but be knows how to get it and where and when to send it. His work is known and appreciated by every editor in the United States and Canada. He brought to the exposition an ex- perierce of twenty years in every branch of newspaper work, reaching all the way from the Crossroads Week- ly, to the Metropolitan Dally. He pos- sesses not only ability to do things himself but the still more necessary qualifications of being able to select a capable staff and to inspire the mem- bers thereof with his own zeal. Must Not “arry Kutves. A decree bas been issued by the gov- ernor-general of Moscow, forbidding the inhabitants to carry knives, with the exception of those whose vocations require it. Persons transgressing this regulation are liable to a fine not ex- ceeding 500 roubles or three months’ imprisonment. ‘Try Grain-ot sad gage a pints o olin oes sro ee be ninoe ot eeemaes wade all who try it like, GRALN-O has Bima fas pore gion usd ew tress. the price of coffee. soma toon pan Sold by all grocers. < Would Attract Sinfal Tourists. Geneva is trying to attack sinful tourists. It is announced that baccarat may be played for unlimited stakes im the Kur Saal hereafter. The Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Railway has got out a neat booklet descriptive of the beautiful guramer resorts at Spirit an¢ Okoboji Lakes in Northwestern lowa. Free copies will be mailed upon application to Jno. G. Farmer, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Cedar Rapids, la. Servant girls are becoming scares im Berlin because of the great popu- larity of factory labor. ‘Three new British pinassd tor thie year will eomt Sica 000 each. Hsifs Catarrh Cure : = fs a constitutional cure. Price, Tia ‘There is consent in a emile, while 2 laugh is often 2 refusal. cae or RyRy pe Firm language is used in a conver sation between partners. ro Laer, It in a wise doctor who knows when te quit calling around. at pn snes ares Se “ <A ripple of laughter is worth after - . oat ot Substitute, Js i. rf é | a ee | , ( p) PRL ; A . : vi, Wea ¥ ays i cures i (& 3d ATARRE WY ih | OF THE ' oe |Gia THROAT. LU Geom SMACH, | {NCQA | ae KIDNEYS, ae i 4, “a i iF ORGAN 4 IN 2 ac Peary | i «és J} 1s whe greatest discovery of the ERSWEAT?” 223 =o=2= . permanent cure for tender, sore and sweating feet and all odorous perspiration. Full directions accompany each package wh'ch will be sent postpaid to any sddress for % cents. Your money refunded if you are not entirely satisfied with the benefits you will derive from using this wonderful remedy. Order todap “NEVER SWEAT” is prepared and sold only by A. J. KROLL, New Era Bidg., CHICAGO. 7 = Causes bilious head-ache, back-ache | Ee LN VA) snd all kinds of body aches. Spring AL ae () is here and you want to get this bile Saat poison out tem, i. | re Jo VS salty eal andin. CRSCARETS {I< SIS are just what you want; they never Ye CA PSs ef ree te vee ae H 4 We while you sleep. Some, sees NZ } f a pie ieee Oe pees 8 better 7 Zpucd oe adie oes pill —s 4G an ts teen . ce tees wre ani cinaioas alae Yn ANC LY) BE aes as ae ==" for the bowels are sweet, fragrant \ laminin CASCARETS. —Tiey don't force but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles and restore healthy, natural action—buy them and try them. You will find in an entirely natural way bowels will be promptly sacedasiotild Ged dacaoed cules tor the Garleg and Seamer oerkc , CURED BY | ¢ ‘wy 4 Fe) 0 eee Zc. 50c, “Sale Fa OR he = : NEVER Or Sass rresess uty} TEED Sastes Ges NE Sees eee | DUANANILLY Seer | aeace Sea cteee nes | epee eee eee Sg "oats aes eet pees ee SS eae cs | SOZODONT Tooth Powder 25c f Do You: it ta yocanteremert ties ‘Weshington.b-O.tor Free Handbook on Patents] DO YOU THINK Zamins Bitsbore? Irsosend your asioe and address, and we will forward large list of lands, with prices and full forte wre wri ane gan sin had gn encbange for sat thing. CARSON & JONES, Albany, Fox and Wolf Hounds in America; 35 years’ experi- epee in breeding these fine dogs for my own sport. I now offer them forsale. Send stamp for circular, T. B. HUDSPETH, SIBLEY, Jackson Co., Mo. | pa YEAP com be soouret will take the | $1,000 trouble "to investigate, our | Epeme: Se Straighttorward ‘business Proposition. THE JUMIAPA CO., 614-615 Fullerton Bldg. ST. LOUIS, MO. DR. 0. PHELPS BROWN’S | gia, Weak Back, Sorains, PRECIOUS | somes HERBAL _ |Site = If be does not sell tt sead OINTMENT | os oo Se .Cures Through the Pores Sond Yous Trial FCB, Address Pe.0.P. Brown, 00 B'way, Newburgh, ¥. cea ahadaieaapiaiereteresegeed ay | Additional home- Stead rights have OLDIERS Sa S perfect and buy them. HEIRS ENTITLED. ‘The Collins Land Co., Atlantic Bidg..Washington.D.C. ) UMMER. AUNTERINGS FoR ENSIBLE OULS. | Comsalt tho . Canadian Pacific Rallway Defore deciding on your summer outing. ‘Tourleta bave & choices of the Rocky ‘ ‘Mountains; the Great Lakes; Temagaming, the Aleooquin Paradise; Niagare Palle; | ‘Thousand Islands of the St. Lawrence « Biver; the Saguenay River; Land of Evam- | geline; the White Mountains ané, in fact, ail of the Best Gummer Resorts of North . America, Best trout ana bass fshing waters tm | America, and lands where the large game « ef the continent abound. : A. C, SHAW, ; Gen. Agent, Pass. Department, 28 Sosth | Clark Street, Chicago, FFF FFF 56606565 FOF FO. wore MA Gu Gf land, witht 318 Jereect the Beatty Well, welch, sold secensty Sr sad drilling will begia as soot’ as'the machinery ar. Fives, It is almost the same as buying: shares in. Sic cia times ss much ser our wall comes Names of the officers guarantee, this is an honest, Surveyor ot Jefersoa County certiges to the location par valee 9.40 for ashore time caly ste cea THE PARAGON OIL CO., Beaumont, Tox. AN INDE SORG GE ASS VS noms in Western Came Dig irae [Ag come wealthy in grow. information as to reduced railway rates can be bad on ication to the Superintendent of Tamigratton yo interior. Ottawe, ortoc. J. Se. 1233 Monadnock Block, Chicago, or E. T. es, Room 6, “Big Four” Bldg , Indianapolis. Inc 0 [ me sceciat sori sein es ment a THOMPSON, No. American Bidg., Philadeiphia,Pa. DO YOU WISH TOSETTLE IN FLORIDA It so,I cam fursish you pate 2 eee oF Sanur parmsens downs bansese ox times St tony Samp of interest. Wilt exchange for vod unincummered Have a aoe foeation fore colony, Wise pressed ocomtS. GRIFFIN, Windsor, Florida. FARMS FOR SALE Sonn "Gsctea Parpses farms Hamilton Co.,Il,, the best county in the“ Southr ere Iiltnois fruit belt.” 168 acre sod 240 acre farms, Saline Cos" X choice se sere farm. Pulaakt Oo. Uk Farms in Atkansas, Missouri, Nebrasta, sia weit. C/G. CLOUD. McLeansbore, TL WANTED— ist sand oan copyag ores at their homes; we need people in every a belp us advertise; $5 to $12 weekly working eves gee raed TISING CO. Detroft, Mich. —_—KX—<—<$&#_L_L—L—E—PE]|=E])“)“™___=_==> W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 26, 1901. Whea Answering Advertisemests Kindly Meation This Taper. Always flour cake with flour or cornstarch before spreading the icing on. To prevent stoves and grates from rusting during the summer, apply kerosene oil to them. The luster of morocco is restored by varnishing with the white of an egg. Apply with a sponge. Roses will occasionally revive if placed in ice-water—always with the ends of the stems previously cut. Mix a little carbonate of soda with water, and it will preserve flowers for a fortnight. Common saltpeter is also a very good preservative. Strawberry Fritters—Make a plain fritter batter, add a tablespoonful of sugar and a quart of berries. Fry in boiling fat, drain, sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve while hot. To clean chased brass ornaments, the following formula is recommended: Wash in hot soap and water and dry thoroughly. Cut a lemon in half and with it rub the brass. When it looks clean, rinse in warm water, dry, and then polish well with chamois. Chased work should never be cleaned with any kind of powder. Strawberry Ice Cream-One quart of cream; one and one-half quarts of berries; one pound of sugar. Put half the sugar and half the cream on to boil; when the sugar is dissolved, stand aside to cool. Add the remaining half of the sugar to the berries, mash and stand aside one hour, then strain through a fine muslin. Add the remaining half of the cream to the sweetened cream and freeze. When frozen, stir in the fruit juice, beat thoroughly, freeze. The following recipe for spiced apples will be found useful at this time of season when the preserve closet is at its lowest ebb: Make a sirup of equal parts of sugar, water and vinegar, adding a few whole cloves and a few pieces of stick cinnamon. When scalding hot put in firm, tart apples, peeled and quartered, and cook gently until tender, but not broken. Remove with a skimmer, boil the sirup until it thickens, and pour over the apples. Canned apples may be treated in the same way quite as successfully as fresh ones. AS TRUE AS GOSPEL Not wealth nor ancestry, but honorable conduct and a noble disposition make men great. The high lights of existence are dazzling, but the shadows are more agreeable in the long run. Nothing brings more substantial joy than a day's work well and honorably and successfully done. There are things the world cannot give; and the finest temperaments are apt to have dissatisfactions lie at the root of them. Every person is responsible for all the good within the scope of his abilities, and for no more, and none can tell whose sphere is the largest. To grow old nicely is a great art, and old people are quite mistaken in imagining that they must necessarily be bores to the young, though some elderly people are certainly trying. Nothing is gained by deprecating the difficulties of any undertaking. To look them in the face courageously, and to estimate them fairly, will generally enable us to overcome them; while, if they are hidden or ignored, they will, all unconsciously to ourselves, bar the way to success. No one who is not a good listener can possibly become a good conversationalist. It was said of Margaret Fuller that she had the rare gift of bringing out the best thoughts of those with whom she conversed, and one who frequently talked with her used to say that he always astonished himself while in her society. WISE OR OTHERWISE. Enterprise is a sprout that is pruned by experience. Charity's argument is short, but it has a long reach. Begin to educate your grandchildren When some people feel for the poor they forget to feel in their pockets. Many a man would starve if he had nothing to live on but his reputation. Many a man conducts his bride to the altar and then resigns the leadership. The average man is an economist when he has to buy anything for his wife. Many a man who knows his own mind has a somewhat limited acquaintance. To mind your own business and do the square thing by your neighbors is an extremely high order of patriotism. If every man were to do this, flags, governments, powers, domination and thrones might all take an indefinite vacation. The man who does not steal sheep is not necessarily less a patriot than the man who takes off his hat when the hand plays "The Star-Spangled Banner."—Puck. Edward Yero, who succeeds Alexis El Frye as superintendent of schools in Cuba, is said by the Havana Post to be one of the best educated men in the island. Two ladies contended for precedence in the court of Charles V. They appealed to the monarch, who, like Solomon, awarded: "Let the eldest go first." Such a dispute was never known afterward. Henry J. Bryon, one of the wittlest of English playwrights of a score of years ago, remarked on one occasion, "A play is like a cigar. If it's good, everybody wants a box. If it's bad, all the pushing in the world won't make it go." A young man who had just entered the office of Jeremiah Mason, the great New Hampshire legal luminarv, to study law, asked him where old begin. Mason, pointing to on the library shelves, a conically: "Anywh John Lawrence To popular low comedian on his day, once gave a supper to eighty of his friends, and wrote a note to each of them privately beforehand, asking him whether he would be so good as to say grace, as no clergyman would be present. It is said that the faces of those eighty men as they rose in a body when Toole tapped on the table, as a signal for grace, was a sight which will never be forgotten. It is related of Horace Greeley, whose handwriting was notoriously illegible, that on one occasion an editorial of his fell into the hands of a new compositor, who made a fearful bungle of it. As he set it the bit of copy made sense, but it was not the meaning Mr. Greley intended to convey. The following evening Mr. Greeley reached the office in no enviable mood, and lost little time in tramping up to the composing room on the floor above. Here he encountered the night foreman and the air was blue with the chief's imprecations. As soon as it became possible to make one's self heard above this verbal tempest Mr. Greeley was informed of the circumstances, and that it was not really the fault of the compositor, who had done the best he could, but that the blame would rest on the assistant foreman, whose carelessness was the cause of the new man's getting the "copy" from the "hook." As the argument appealed to Mr. Greeley's intelligence, and he suddenly realized that in giving way to his passion he was making a spectacle of himself, he called out in his squeaky treble, "Won't somebody please kick me downstairs?" and shuffled out of the room. STAGE WHISPERS. H. Reeves Smith has a play called "A Brace of Partridges." Theodore Roberts will play with James K. Hackett in the autumn. James K. Hackett is going to produce "Don Caesar's Return" next season. Sir Henry Irving is going to revive "Louis VI" and "The Lyons Mail." "The Girl We Love" is a new romantic comedy by Henry White and Charles Dickson. A new romantic comedy by Walker Whiteside, which has been very successful, is called "Heart and Sword." The new Princess Regent theater, or Richard Wagner Festival Playhouse in Munich, is nearing completion. Audran is completing the score of a new opera, the libretto of which is by Augustus Moore, a London journalist. Chauncey Olcott's new play is called "Garret O'Magh' and is said to be one of the prettiest Irish omedies ever seen on the stage. Edwin Stevens, now leading character man with Charles Frohman's Empire Theater Stock Company, has made a distinct hit as Baron Stein in the revival of "Diplomacy" at the Empire theater, New York. THINGS WORTH KNOWING. Crude petroleum both cleans and polishes oiled floors. To remove paint from the hands, wash them in turpentine and afterward in warm suds. In preparing milk porridge, gravies, etc., the salt should not be added until the dish is prepared as it is apt to curdle the milk. Bread will keep best in a tin box, but should be looked over twice a week as one piece of moldy bread will spoil several fresh loaves. Gold ornaments may be thoroughly cleaned by dipping them for a few seconds in a weak solution of ammonia. Then wash with soap and water. Cauliflower should be thoroughly cleaned before cooking. Let it stand head downward half an hour in cold salted water, using a tablespoonful of salt to a quart of water. Gum camphor kept with silverware will tend to prevent tarnishing. Melt with a pound of fresh lard three ounces of resin, and cover iron and steel utensils with this mixture and they will not rust. NEWSY NUGGETS. In many parts of Europe river and canal routes are legally regarded as highways. Telephone Yards 798. Established 1877 JOHN J. DUNN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In..... Coal - and - Wood, 51st Street and Armour Avenue..... Residence, 5045 Michigan Boul., CHICAGO. NOTARYPUBLIC Tealphone Wentworth 67 OTTO V. MUELLER Real Estate, Renting, Loans ... Insurance ... 910 W. 63d st. (near Halsted) CHICAGO. RENFROE BROS. Dealers in WOOD, COAL, FEED AND ICE. 137 West Forty-Seventh St. CHICAGO. DR. H. C. FAULKNER, Physician and Surgeon, OFFICE: 6258 HALSTED STREET, CHICAGO. Office Hours: Phone 818 Went. 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m 6 to 7:30 p. m. TELEPHONE EXPRESS 472. PROF. W. E. DORSEY, 1968 La Salle St. Leader and Manager K. P. Military Band and Orchestra Music Furnished for Balls and Receptions. Prices Reasonable. Call and see me. Estimates and Specifications Pursued . . . Prompt Attention Given to Jobbing C. J. BOYD, Practical Plumber and Gas-fitter Steam and Hot Water Heating, Iron and Tile Drainage . . . Telephone Yards NL. 709 WEST 47TH STREET. DR. JOSEPH JEFFREY, Physician and Surgeon, 4868 Dearborn Street. CHICAGO. Hours: 8-10 a. m., 3-4, 6-8 p. m. WANTED. A colored man and wife with no children want the janitorship of a flat building. Can furnish good references. For further information, address The Broad Ax, 5040 Armour ave. If your nearest druggest does not have the Original Ozonized Ox-Marrow he can get it for you from any wholesale druggist in the city. It straightens kinky hair. Warranted harmless. Only 50 cents a bottle. The Ozonized Ox-Marrow Co., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill. HIGH PRICE FOR LOGS. There Is More Money in Pulp Than There Is in Timber. Maine is now the state of pulp, not of timber. At least one-half of the logs cut in this state will be consumed by grinders instead of by saw. The pulp men are able to pay more than the lumbermen for the logs because a thousand feet of logs will yield more value in pulp than in timber, and thus the pulp men are masters of the job market. When prices of timber are high, the sawmill men can afford to pay good prices, but the timber market is subject to violent fluctuations, and this spring timber is selling at low figures, while the great demand for logs to feed the pulp mills has sent the price of logs to the highest pitch on record. Few of the sawmill men own any timberland on the Penobscot, and so they are compelled to buy all their logs and the prices this spring have ranged from $14.50 to $15, while the small lots now remaining unsold are held at the heretofore unheard-of price of $16.50 a thousand feet. At the same time the price of spruce timber in New York ranges from $16 to $18.50 a thousand feet for the various widths at random, while the price in Bangor is $12.50 to $15, or less than the price of the logs. The only thing that makes sawing possible in these conditions is the fact that logs and lumber are measured by different scales, a thousand feet of logs yielding from 1,150 to 1,250 feet of timber. This overrun and the money received for the waste, which now goes to the pulp mills, enable the timber manufacturers to come out about even, or possibly to make a small profit when all conditions are favorable and there are no losses. It is said that the pulp men can pay $20 a thousand feet for spruce logs and still make a good profit.—Lewiston (Me.) Journal. John and Mary Burkett, of Kokomo, Ind., began marrying each other about forty years ago, and have kept it up at intervals ever since. They have had three divorces and four weddings, neither having wedded another in the meantime. Kokomo also reports another couple, Henry and Myrtle Mohn, who have been married to each other three times, and are now living happily. A. D. GASH, Attorney at Law. 64 and 86 La Salle St., Suite 615 to 619. Telephone, Main 8077. Chicago. JOHN E. OWENS Attorney at Law, SUITE 621 ASHLAND BLOCK, 50 S. Clark Street, CHICAGO TEL. MARRISON 51. Thomas F. Soully, Attorney at Law, 70 Clark Street, . . . CHICAGO. Room 14. JOSEPH A. McINERNEY LAWYER SUITE 706-708 CHICAGO OPERA HOUSE CHICAGO LAWYER. Practice in all Courts. Main Office 6256 Halsted St, Down Town Office 260 S. Clark St., Room 421 Hours from 12 to 2 P. M. Phone: 2533 Harrison. Telephone Yard 197 Residence, 119 Gurfield Bd. JOHN FITZGERALD JUSTICE OF THE PEACE 4787 S. HALSTED STREET, .....CHICAGO ALBERT B. GEORGE LAWYER. 423 Ashland Block, Chicago. Tel. M. 2025. EDWARD H. WRIGHT LAWYER Suite 421, 200 S. Clark St. Telephone, Harrison 2533. CHICAGO. GEO. W. W. LYTLE, Attorney and Counselor at Law Telephone Central 3558. Suite 60, Grand Opera House. Notary Public 87 & 89 S. Clark St. Chicago. BANDERSON, 924 Turner Ave. Lawrence M. Ennis, Advocate and Counselor at Law, Suits 726 Opera House Block. S. W. Corner Clark and Washington Sts. TELEPHONE MAIN 1762. G. E. EVANS. Dealer in All Kinds of HARD AND SOFT COAL, Wood, Charcoal, Coke and Ice, Expressing and Moving a Specialty. 332 29th St. - Chicago, Ill. Read and subscribe for The Broad Ax, the only newspaper in Chicago which "hews to the Line." DIVIDED VERSES, Amusing and Instructive Game Devised by a Young Woman. An amusing and more or less instructive game has been devised by a young woman, who once a week entertains a company of boys and girls for the afternoon. She writes on sheets of paper several stanzas of good poetry, leaving a wide space between the lines. She then cuts up the sheets, leaving one line on each strip. After that she hides the strips in many different places in the two rooms in which she is to entertain her guests, reserving the first line of each verse. These reserved strips she distributes among the girls and boys, and each one proceeds to hunt for the rest of his stanza. The hostess usually selects stanzas from different poems, so that the variations in rhythm and metre may help her young guests to select the lines that belong to them; but sometimes, to make the test more difficult, she chooses several stanzas from the same poem. The number of lines in a stanza is indicated on the slips reserved for distribution. Sometimes amusing misplacements of lines are made, but the hostess is pleased to notice that as the weeks go on her guests are growing more and more clever in seizing upon what belongs to them. When all the lines have been collected each one reads his stanza, and to her delight the hostess finds that the interest of the search, and the constant repetition of a line to see what will fit next to it has often made a boy or girl so familiar with a stanza that it can be recited without a glance at the slips. Nest in a Horseshoe Thirteen old horseshoes were hanging one day on the back of a garden wall close to an old boiler which workmen were removing and replacing by a new one, a very noisy piece of work, when, in no wise deterred by this, a pair of wrens built their nest in the midst of the cluster of horse shoes and then brought up their young. The mother bird having been found one day drowned in a pail of water standing near, her mate tended and cared for the young until they were fledged and down. The horseshoes containing the nest still hang on the wall at Everthorpe hall, East Yorkshire, England. ```markdown ``` HEAVY MACHINERY. Smoke Stacks, Cupolas and Monuments Erected. Hoisting and Placing of all kinds. of Beams and Girders for architectural work. Office, 31 South Canal St.. Chicago TELEPHONE MAIN 4928 ...The Mutual Reserve Fund Life or New York... OVER $41,000,000 PAID IN LOSSES. Insurance for the Protection of the family at actual cost E. P. BAREY, M'g'r. JULIUS F. TAYLOR, Special Agt. 410 Roanoke Bldg., 145 La Salle St. 5040 Armor Ava. Citizens Brewing COMPANY ARCHER AVE. AND MAIN STREET. CHICAGO Telephone Canal 372 POOL AND BILLIARDS BRAXTON'S ....PLACE SAMPLE ROOM Fine Wines and Liquors Imported and Domestic Cigars 260 West Lake St. JIM GEORGE Jas. J. McCormick, SAMPLE ROOM IMPORTED AND DOMESTIG WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS 8462 SOUTH HALSTED STREET, CHICAGO. Driving, Draft and General Business Horses Always on Hand 1197 Milwaukee Ave. Near Robey St. Telephone West, 1028. OHI PULLED OVERBOARD BY FISH. Senate Doorkeeper Escapes Drowning and Lands Big Stargain When the sturgeon fishing season opened at Bayside, N. J., John A. Denn was one of the first men to come here from his home in Penns Grove and join in the fishing colony. Denn is one of the best known men in the country, and at the last session of the legislature he was doorkeeper of the senate. The fishermen have had very poor luck this season and many of them have given up in disgust and returned to their homes. Denn and his partner, however, decided to stick it out and trust to luck to make them whole. They were out in the bay trying once more to land something of value yesterday. Their net had been out for hours, and they were about to pull ashore in despair when they saw the big floats suddenly swish around under the impetus of a heavy body. They knew at once that they had made a strike, and no small one at that, and they began to pull in with renewed hope and energy. Denn was at the front hauling on the net and trying to suppress his excitement while he toiled on the lines and whistled for luck. He was gradually drawing the big fish to the boat when it gave an extra heavy lunge and started off to reach deep water and liberty again. The pull was too much for Denn. He tugged with all his might, but the fish tugged hardest, and over into the river went fisherman, net and all. Leaving the boat to care for itself, Denn's hardy partner sprang nimbly to the rescue, and after a deal of effort finally succeeded in getting a hook fast in the net and a line out to Denn. The two men then worked together and landed the biggest sturgeon of the season. It weighed 300 pounds and besides the flesh, yielded a full keg of caviar, worth $70 a keg.—Philadelphia Record. Baron Benvenuto d'Alessandro, an Italian, has invented a means of checking the force of waves by means of nets made of waterproof hemp. One recently tried with success at Havre was 360 feet long and fifty feet wide, with meshes eleven inches apart. The nets will break the waves at sea, and will also be a bulwark for hydraulic works against heavy surf. NORTHERN CHANGE STABLE. General Business Horses on Hand IN TABLE. rses OHICAGO, III. CURLY HAIR MADE STRAIGHT BY THE TAKEN FROM LIFE. DEFORE AND AFTER TREATMENT. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY ORIGINAL OZONIZED OX MARROW [CORRIZED.] Will straighten your hair, quickly and easily so that you can do it yourself at home no matter how kinky or curly it is. This wonderful hair pomade has been made and sold many years giving perfect satisfaction to everybody. It is the only safe preparation in the world that straightens kinky hair as shown above. Nourishes the scalp, cures dandruff, prevents falling, and makes hair grow old over forty years. Warranted harmlessness. Testimonials from request. It was the first preparation ever sold for straightening kinky hair. Beware of imitations. Get the Original Ozized Ox Marrow as the genuine never fails to keep the hair pliable and beautiful. Elegantly performed, giving to its superior and lasting quality it is the most economical. It is not possible for anybody to produce a preparation equal to it. Full directions with every bottle. Only $0 cents. Sold by dealers or we will ship you express paid one bottle for $8 cents or three for $1.40. Send postal or express money order, as we do not send goods C. O. D. Write your name and address plainly to OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, IL. NEWSPAPER LAW. Any person who takes the paper regularly from the postoffice, whether he is a subscriber or not, is responsible for the pay. The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers and periodicals from the postoffice, or removing and leaving them unscalled for is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud. The Broad Ax desires to engage the services of one or two popular young women as collectors, subscription and advertising solicitors. Good salary paid to active workers. Call or address JULIUS F. TAYLOR, 6040 Armour avenue. ```markdown ``` ---