The Broad Ax
Saturday, August 24, 1901
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
HEW TO THE LINE.
MR. BOSS ROBERT E. BURKE AND HIS MAN FRIDAY, FRED E. ELDRED, FAILED TO RESPOND TO OUR LETTERS.
Monday, July 8, the writer called on Acting Chairman John J. Hayes, for the purpose of ascertaining if he had received a response from Mr. Burke, to our letter of June 26. Mr. Hayes states "that up to that time he had heard nothing from Mr. Burke." Then he asked us if "we had written to him." We rsponded in the negative, but at the same time informed him that it was our intention to communicate with Mr. Burke, and Mr. Eldred, within the next few days. So on July 10 the following letter was addressed to Mr. Burke:
Chicago, July 10, 1901. Robert E. Burke, Esq., 558 LaSalle avenue city.
My Dear Sir-At the request of Acting Chairman John J. Hayes, I furnished him with a letter detailing and covering the agreement and understanding which I had with the press committees prior to the re-election of Mayor Carter H. Harrison. Mr. Hayes informed me (Monday, July 8) that he had forwarded my letter to you, also one from himself, touching upon the matter. If you deem this matter worthy of your consideration I would esteem it a great favor if you would so indicate by conferring with Mr Fred E. Eldred, and I can call and see him in regard to it.
Ten thousand, yes ten million times do we regret to say that Mr. Burke treated our letter with utter and silent contempt. Possibly the reason why Mr. Burke failed to pay any attention to our letter was that he thought it was a gross insult to him to receive a letter from anyone belonging to the colored race, unless such person addressed him as Massa Burke, Czar of the Democratic Party of Cook County. Little did we think that Mr. Burke would treat our letter with so much indifference, for up to July 10 we had always entertained the very highest opinion of him in every respect, but we have now become thoroughly convinced that Mr. Burke has no use for colored people except in the capacity of servants, that he only wants to use the Negro voters and the newspapers published in the interest of the colored Democrats to pull chestnuts out the fire for him for nothing on the day of election, so that he can continue to grasp the Democracy of Cook County around the neck for the purpose of enabling him to grow much fatter, slicker and richer.
Coming on down to our last letter to Fred E. Eldred, who is supposed to be Mr. Burke's right or left hand man, but who in reality is nothing but a figure-head, the follcwing speaks for itself:
Fred E. Eldred, Esq., Times Building, city.
My Dear Sir—Several weeks ago I had a conversation with Acting Chairman John J. Hayes, respecting the conversation and the distinct understanding which I had with yourself, Mr. Hayes and Mr. Burke prior to the re-election of Mayor Carter H. Harrison. Mr. Hayes at that time requested me to write him a letter copering the ground and that he would forward my letter to Mr. R. E. Burke, and write him also, calling his attention to the matter. Acting Chairman Hayes also instructed me to write to Mr. Burke, and yourself. I have written Mr. Burke, and I now desire to inform you that there is no position that I want for any of my friends, so for the service rendered in writing the article os "Mayor Harrison and the Colored People." Inserting his cut in The Broad Ax, and for running off 2,000 extra copies of the issue of March 30, amounted to $75.00, and as you paid me ten dollars on account, March 28, there is still a balance of $65.00, due me. Hoping you will give this matter your immediate attention I remain.
Yours respectfully.
The same day we mailed a copy of the above letter to Mr. Eldred, we came in contact with him as we entered the City Hall, and we reminded him that we had just written him another letter, and requested him to respond to it, he promised us that he would do so, but he failed to keep his word with us, as we waited for an answer from him from July 15 to July 22, then on the morning of July 22 we arose bright and early, and made a bee line for Washington street and Fifth avenue, and stood in front of his office on the opposite side of the street from eight o'clock a. m. until one p. m. before we had the pleasure of beholding or gazing upon him.
Mr. Eldred seemed to be very much put out when he beheld us approaching him, and all at once he became very busy in talking to his brother, but we made up our mind that inasmuch as we had succeeded in treeing him that there was no way on earth for him to escape from his office without meeting us face to face. At last he came towards us, and we broke the thick ice between us by asking him if he had received our letter. He said "yes he had"; then we "wanted to know what he thought of it." He replied that "he did not think much of it," then we asked him what was the trouble with it. He came back at us by saying that "he could not compel Mayor Harrison to do as he wanted him to do, that the Mayor had appointed some crazy man to a position in the corporation counsel's office, who had died lately, that many other men were holding down good jobs who were not deserving of them or words of the same purport, therefore he was unable to do anything for us."
For a few moments without saying one word we looked Mr. Eldred right square in the eyes, then we very coolly said to him that "we were not responsible for the idiots and lunatics whom Mavor Harrison had appointed to office, that it was no concern of ours, that it put no butter on our bread, that that was one horse on us and with the last remark we withdrew from his presence.
THE NATIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS LEAGUE.
Wednesday morning the above mentioned league began its session at Handel Hall, and from beginning to end all its meetings were very interesting. Dr. Howard S. Taylor welcomed the delegates and the visitors to the city in behalf of Mayor Carter H. Harrison. The doctor paid a glowing tribute to the Negroes as to the progress they have made within the last 35 years. He put his foot down on Ben. Tillman and Tillmanism in good shape, and he was hearitly applauded by the vast audience which filled every seat throughout the hall.
Prof. Booker T. Washington's address was full of sound ideas and if Negroes would adhere to half of his advice they would be much better off. About one hundred and twenty-five delegates from the various sections of the country were present and many excellent papers were read by some of them.
The newly elected officers of the League are: President, Booker T. Washington; First Vice President, Giles B. Jackson, Richmond, Va.; Second Vice President, Mrs. D. R. Robinson St. Louis, Mo.; Third Vice President, Charles Banks, Clarksdale, Miss.; Recording Secretary.
Corresponding Secretary,
E. J. Scott, Tuskegee, Ala.; Treasurer, Gilbert C. Harris, Boston, Mass.; Compiler, S. Laing Williams, Chicago; Registrar, P. J. Smith, Boston, Mass.; T. Thomas Fortune, New York; Dr. S. E. Courtney, Massachusetts; T. W. Jones, Illinois; George Jones, Arkansas; N. T. Velar, Pennsylvania; W. L. Taylor, Virginia; T. A. Brown, California; M. M. Lawey, Florida, and J. C. Napler, Tennessee, compose the executive committee.
CHICAGO, AUGUST 24, 1901.
IS CHICAGO TO BE CROKERIZED?
With Robert E. Burke endeavoring to be a Boss Croker and Luke Colleran as a second Inspector Byrnes, what will become of the Democratic party of Cook County? That may be answered without the slightest fear of either ever occupying such positions as Messrs. Croker or Byrnes, and for the following reasons: After making a careful survey of the situation Boss Burke fully realizes his political fences are gradually being pulled down and a number of his once staunch friends are becoming lukewarm, politicians who have assisted him upon more than one occasion in piloting his ship safely over the turbulent waters of democracy, have taken to the lifeboats. Luke Colleran's recent implications with a set of "cheap grafters" which may encompass his downfall, as he has two honest public servants on his trail, Acting Mayor Walker and Chief of Police O'Neil. Chief O'Neil's plain face has honor and courage written upon every feature and the same applies to Mr. Walker. These gentlemen will not tolerate Colleran's cheap grafting methods for one instant, though he may be backed by Boss Burke, so the average politician can see at a glance that the tide is changing rapidly and it is only a question of time until these two individuals will be delighted to be termed plain citizens, though it looks rather doubtful for Colleran, who is implicated under a serious charge. As to Boss Burke, he will have to fight like a demon to even be a plain committeeman, he and Captain Farrell control seven delegates out of thirty in the 21st Ward, Jim Quinn controls the other 23, so Bob Burke will have to make all kinds of "goo-goo eyes" at Quinn to get a committeeship, notwithstanding Jim Quinn has gone on record by saying he would rather go to hell with Bob Burke than to the other place with Hopkins and his crowd. This clearly illustrates how small a representation Mr. Burke stands for in the County Central Committee at the present time, and how extremely weak his prospects are in the make up of the new committee. Bob Burke in his home is a good husband an in a sense a moral man, but as the chief executive of the Democratic party of Cook County doesn't fill all the qualifications of a capable, intelligent leader, though he has done remarkably well in building up a machine to further the ambitions of Carter H. Harrison, and the Mayor likes to be a dictator, he and Mr. Burke generally dictate in such a way that all the best trumps in the deck they keep for themselves, they also have the faculty of piling all the good apples in their corner, and so on, so you can see why "Grand Stander" Harrison and Boss Burke are both due to be stripped of their powers. The man of destiny will reach his political destination in about 15 months. The Croker of Cook County democracy, Robert Enumet Burke a few months sooner. Jump in the "band wagon" boys, old Tom Gahan has a whip you can hear crack a mile, and he's a poor one like many of his friends in handling the reins. Harrison and his crowd are light weight cans, only good fortune has continued them in power for the past four years.
One of the most discouraging things about the Negro race is that so many of the educated, or at least so-called educated, Negroes, feel themselves above reading papers, magazines and books edited and published by men and women of their own race; and this is not only true in the literary field, but a large class of the so-called educated Negroes are not patrons or encouragers of race enterprises. There can not possibly be but very little advancement made among the Negro race until we learn this most needed lesson of supporting and building up race enterprises. If we never learn the lesson, then we are not fit to be anything more than the hewers of wood and drawers of water for other people—The American Eagle, St. Louis, Mo.
OFFICIAL PROGRAM OF THE 11th BIENNIAL SESSION OF K. P. of N. A. S. A. E. A. A. and A.
Monday, August 26, at 8 o'clock p.m.: Public reception at Quinn Chapel, 24th street and Wabash avenue, to the Supreme Lodge officers, delegates and visitors. Addresses delivered by Gov. Richard Yates, Mayor Carter H. Harrison, John Mitchell, Jr., of Richmond, Va.; Supreme Chancellor Samuel W. Starks, of West Va. Music by K. of P. Military Band.
Tuesday, Aug. 29, at 9 o'clock a. m. Convening of the Supreme Lodge, 11th bienniel session at Lincoln Hall, 31st street and Michigan avenue. At 9 o'clock p. m.: Dramatic presentation of Damon and Pythias, at Freiburg's Opera House, 22nd and State streets, by the Amateur Dramatic Company. Admission. 50 cents.
Wednesday, Aug. 23, at 9 a. m. Convening of the Supreme Lodge, at Lincoln Hall, at 2:30 p. m.; inspecting of U. R. companies by Major-General R. R. Jackson and staff, at Camp Stark, 33d street and Wentworth avenue, at 7 p. m. Trolley party to the Supreme Lodge officers to Calumet Grove, trains leave South Park avenue and 63rd street from 7 to 9 o'clock. Round trip tickets, 35 cents.
Thursday, Aug. 29. Convening of the Supreme Lodge at 9 a.m. at Lincoln Hall. At 1 o'clock p. m. assembling of all U. R. companies, battalions, regments and brigades, Supreme and Grand Lodge officers, at Camp Stark, 33rd street and Wentworth avenue, to participate in the grand street parade. The following is the line of March: East on 33rd to Dearbor street; south to 29th street, east to Michigan avenue, north to Jackson boulevard, west to LaSalle street, north to Madison street, west to Fifth avenue, north to Washington, east to LaSalle, north to Randolph, east to Michigan avenue, south to 14th street, west to Wabash avenue to the Coliseum, where the great parade disbands. At 8 o'clock at the Coliseum, 14th street and Wabash avenue, a grand reception and competitive drill by visiting U. R. companies. Music by K. of P. Orchestra. Admission, 50 cents.
Friday, Aug. 30, at 9 a. m. Convening of the Supreme Lodge., election of officers and adjournment.
Mrs. George Whetsel, colored, of St. John, N. B., is a wholesale and retail ice dealer. She has accumulated a fortune, and at present she is spending the summer in England. All hands join in saying that the last issue of The Broad Ax was chuck full of "hot stuff," that it was the warmest baby that ever came down the Pyke.
James C. Ross, of Savannah, Ga., who is one of the highest K. P.'s in the United States, is in the city for the purpose of attending the session of his order which will hold forth here from August 26 to 30.
One of the leading educators of Boston, is a very colored women, who is principal of a school in which there is not a colored scholar. In Tammany-ridden Greater New York, there are a score of colored teachers in the mixed schools.
William Walsh, the policeman who filled up on shooting booze walked into the Victoria Hotel and blazed away at its manager, was only fined ten days pay for his offense. If Walsh had been a Negro he would have gone to jail for ten years.
It caused us to smile Wednesday to observe trickey Ed. Cooper, of Washington, D. C., who was never known to draw an honest breath, clap his paws together while several of the speakers used the word honesty, for what Cooper does not know about honesty would fill a big book. Mrs. Nellie Rankin has gained laurels as a needle worker and owns and controls an embroidery and stamping
establishment in Oakland, Cal. Her high class needle work has won her many prizes and blue ribbons at State and country fairs, and also at the recent Mechanics' fair held in that city. Capt. John J. and Mrs. Bradley, returned to their home, 817 West 47th street, the first of the week, after spending three weeks in rusticating and traveling through Colorado. Capt. Bradley is the choice of two thousand and eight railroad men for alderman of the 30th Ward.
A Negro by the name of Luke Hough was hanged at Wadesboro, N. C., on Wednesday. He was charged with assaulting Miss Lena Keith, a young white woman. After killing him the mob riddled his body with bullets. Let the curtain be rung down on one more dead Negro.
It was our pleasure this week to be presented to the Hon. Theodore N. Green, of Pekin, Ill., the newly elected Judge in the 10th Judicial District. Judge Green carried his district, which has been Republican, by a large Democratic majority, and he informed us that many hundred colored men recorded their votes for him.
Renfroe Bros. have recently opened up a very neat and clean grocery store and meat market at 137 West 47th street, and all Afro-Americans who live in the vicinity of 47th street, and Dearborn and Armour avenues, who possess any race pride, should buy their groceries and meats from Renfroe Bros.
The white citizens of Pierce City, Mo., have begun to drive all the Negroes out of that town at the points of bayonets. The Negro will yet learn that if he desires to live in this country like a free man he will be compelled to imbibe the spirit of Patrick Henry who exclaimed: "Give me liberty or give me death!"
S. A. T. Watkins, so it is said, had to follow George J. Terrell last Friday night for the purpose of preventing Terrell from knocking us in the head with a big hickory club. This shows that Terrell is a dishonest bully and a coward. He does not like to be reminded of the fact that he has not paid us the three ollars as subscription to The Broad Ax.
One more Negro was burned to death at the stake by many thousand white Christians, near Sherman, Texas, on Tuesday last. The Negro, Abe Wildner, was accused of outraging and murdering a white woman by the name of Mrs. Bessie Caldwell. So far almost one hundred Negroes have been mobbed and lynched since Jan. 1, 1901.
Many people have asked us if we ever expect to get our money from Meesrs. Burke and Eldred as long as we keep on roasting them? No we do not but this is not the first time that we have been robbed and cheated out of what justly belonged to us, but from henceforth Cols. Burke and Eldred will not have the further pleasure of throwing the hooks into us.
If the time has come when the Republican party dare not even seek to reveal the causes of so gross a usurpation of power and dislocation of government, the time has also come for that large, and we believe preponderant, portion of the Republican party not held together by the cohesive power of public plunder to disband. The New York Press.
The Grand United Order of True Reformers, with headquarters at Richmond, Va., has a membership of 45,000 and their bank at Richmond in the past twelve months did a business amounting to $1,030,000. Total deposits $265,000. The Grand Fountain has also a store in Richmond on the corner of Sixth and Clay streets and one in Washington, D. C., both doing a prosperous business.
Hheretofore the close political managers of Mayor Harrison have maintained right along that The Broad Ax was too small to aid in his presidential boom, but now these same gentlemen are in favor of suppressing the little "bigger" newspaper. Now, if The Broad Ax was too small to do Mayor Harrison any good, then it cannot do
NO. 44.
Messrs. Burke and Eldred any harm. Do you see the point?
Mr. James A. Quinn, City Sealer of Chicago, says: "There are many policemen on the North Side who levy blackmail upon the sporting women, gamblers and gambring houses located in the 21st Ward." This is further proof that the whole police force is rotten to the core, that it needs a general shaking up. Mr. Quinn, stand by your guns and clean the 21st Ward of grafting and blackmailing coppers.
Walter S. Bogle, chairman of the City Central Committee of the Tilden Democracy, selected the members of the executive committee the latter part of last week, which reads as follows: Walter S. Bogle, chairman, 25th Ward; Alderman Elward J. Novak, 10th Ward; Joseph A. O'Donnell, 17th Ward; S. S. Parks, 14th Ward; Coroner John E. Traeger, 29th Ward; William J. Graham, dealer in groceries and meats, 3656 State street, 3d Ward; State Senator Thomas J. Dawson, 26th Ward; Frank Kerz, 24th Ward; Thos. P. Flynn, 7th Ward. Chairman Bogle, has surrounded himself with some mighty good men and keen politicians, and they will make things hump between now and the idees of next March.
The scandal which has for the last two weeks enveloped the entire police department of the city of Chicago, does not speak very well for the reform wave which was billed to follow in the wake of Mayor Harrison's reelection. Captain L. P. Colleran, who is run and owned by the little fat statesman residing on the North Side has been accused of accepting ten dollars as his part of a seventy-five dollar bribe, other detectives and high officials are also mixed up in this great scandal, which means that Mayor Robert E. Burke, has not been very anxious to select angels or saints to manage the police or the detective force of Chicago. Let the electric light be turned on all these big rascals who are engaged in disgracing and robbing the honest taxpayers of this fair city.
"Future punishment? Let's not discuss the theological side of it just now," said the old clergyman, gently, to his hot-headed young parishioners. "But did you ever think of it from the domestic and family side? When these babies of yours begin to grow up, and you see them imitating your faults and hampered by your weaknesses, and know that you're to blame—ah, there's a kind of future punishment there can be no two opinions about!"
He began his trip on the Seine and he is now on the Marne. - He will sail down the Yohne, the Saone, the Rhone and its small branches flowing into the Mediterranean. Then he will go on the Lcire and end his voyage through France on the Rance, which will conduct him to St. Malo, where he will take a steamboat to Jersey. The name of his canoe is Oithona, and is so constructed that it can be wheeled on terra firma whenever its occupant gets tired of being on the water.
The Rochester Theolgical seminary may be removed to New York in the near future, plans to that end being under consideration by the president and trustees of the institution. The reasons for the proposed removal, as stated by President Strong, are that modern tendencies toward the great cities make it necessary for institutions of learning to seek large center because of the superior opportunities in reach of students, and also the fact that a large part of the support of the Rochester seminary comes from New York City.
The London Lancet, a high medical authority, says that the habit of selfdruggging has grown to be a source of untold mischief. The practice has been greatly assisted by the enormous improvements in pharmaceutical preparations. Treating symptoms without medical advice may be temporarily satisfactory, but what if the physical disturbance be the sign of fatal disease? A little knowledge, coupled with overconfidence, is a dangerous thing in dealing with the ailments which come in so many forms. Varying the adage, it may be said that a man who is his own doctor has a fool for a patient.
Will promulgate and at all times uphold the true principles of Democracy, but Farmers, Industrial, Protestante, Knights of Labor, Indians, Mormons, Republican, Priests, or any other can have their say, so long as their language is proper and responsibility is fixed.
The Broad Ax is a newspaper whose platform is broad enough for all, ever claiming the unlimited right to speak its own mind.
There are altogether in Yucatan seven cities, thirteen towns, sixty-two ruined cities, 143 villages, fifteen abandoned settlements, and 33 haciendas. Scarcely any of these places has as many as 10,000 inhabitants, the population of the great majority falling below 1,000.
American Roman Catholics contributed during 1900 for foreign missions $71,230, the amount being sent to the Central Council of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. The headquarters of the propaganda are in Paris, France; and from there the money is sent to support weak missions in all parts of the world. The American contribution is much larger than previous ones.
It isn't against the law in Minnesota to kill a gambler if he has been cheating, and will not return the money to his victim. At least, a case at Granite Falls has just been decided to that effect. Dr. Wintner pulled his pistol and shot a gambler with whom he was playing cards, because the gambler had oheated and refused to pay the money on demand. A jury declared upon oath that Dr. Wintner was not guilty of murder.
"Future punishment? Let's not discuss the theological side of it just now," said the old clergyman, gently, to his hot-headed young parishioners. "But did you ever think of it from the domestic and family side? When these babies of yours begin to grow up, and you see them imitating your faults and hampered by your weaknesses, and know that you're to blame—ah, there's a kind of future punishment there can be no two opinions about!"
He began his trip on the Seine and he is now on the Marne. He will sail down the Yohne, the Saone, the Rhone and its small branches flowing into the Mediterranean. Then he will go on the Loire and end his voyage through France on the Rance, which will conduct him to St. Malo, where he will take a steamboat to Jersey. The name of his canoe is Oithona, and is so constructed that it can be wheeled on terra firma whenever its occupant gets tired of being on the water.
The London Lancet, a high medical authority, says that the habit of selfdruggging has grown to be a source of untold mischief. The practice has been greatly assisted by the enormous improvements in pharmaceutical preparations. Treating symptoms without medical advice may be temporarily satisfactory, but what if the physical disturbance be the sign of fatal disease? A little knowledge, coupled with overconfidence, is a dangerous thing in dealing with the alliments which come in so many forms. Varying the adage, it may be said that a man who is his own doctor has a fool for a patient.
Some amusing letters find their way into the government archives. One federal officeholder recently made an appeal for screens for the building where he worked, saying that within a hundred yards were three livery stables, one mule boarding house, one horse sanitarium with operating table, and one fish morgue. He added that his handwriting had been spoiled by the constant endeavor to write and keep off files at the same time. He had pasted ten sheets of sticky flypaper, and while they carried off thousands of victims they seemed to occasion no vacancies in the ranks of the survivors. The pathetic appeal was in vain. "Uncle Sam is rich enough to give us all" screens, but he is too hard-hearted to do it.
During the famous Douglas and Lincoln debate and subsequent campaigns the point was frequently brought out by the supporters of "the Little Giant" that Mr. Lincoln had served only a single term in Congress, but that Senator Douglas had enjoyed for years a national reputation. This point, says a writer in Lippincott's, was urged in a heated discussion between an ardent supporter of Douglas and a German voter who favored Lincoln. Finally the former, thinking to overwhelm his opponent, said: "Who is this Lincoln, anyhow? Nobody ever heard of him until Senator Douglas brought him into notice by holding a joint debate with him. Senator Douglas, on the other hand, is a great statesman. Why, he has had his eye on the presidential chair for the last ten years!" "Vot is dot you say?" was the reply. "You say Meester Douglas have hat his eye on der president chair for ten years?" "Yes, that is just what I said." "Vell, you shoot tell Meester Douglas if he will keep his eye on dot chair shoot a leadle vile longer he will see old Abe Lincoln sitting down in it." This closed the debate, amid a roar of laughter from the bystanders.
Prof. W. J. McGee of the Ethnological Bureau at Washington, is authority for the statement that no such thing as human petrifaction has ever been discovered. He does not claim that it cannot exist, but simply states that all cases of petrified human beings up to the present time are nothing more or less than fakes.
Recently a letter forwarded to the bureau stated that the head of a man, reported to be petrified, had been discovered somewhere in the wilds of New Jersey. Later came the mysterious head, and a convocation of learned scientists gravely held council over it. They were disappointed. The head turned out to be a limestone boulder, curiously fashioned, it is true, into features very like a human being's, but a limestone boulder nevertheless.
Another case which at the time looked as though it would explode all of the old theories and prove to be the real things, was that of a body of a woman, which a company had been exhibiting throughout the West as the only petrified woman. She excited much attention and the notice of the scientists at the Ethnological Bureau was drawn to the case. "The only petrified woman" was forwarded to Washington and an investigation was held. The scene of the inquest was a gruesome affair. It was late on a winter afternoon, and one gas jet was lit. The body was laid out in the center of the room in its frame coffin, and Prof. McGee, with much gravity, proceeded to conduct the services. They consisted of taking from his pockets several little instruments and of boring a few inches into the foot. To the amazement of every onlooker, a small section of a gas pipe was struck. This ended the inquest. Mrs. Stone's reputation as a profesional was forever spoiled, and she no longer went galavanting around the country posing as "the one and only petrified woman ever discovered in the history of the world."
There is a factory in California which manufactures petrified human beings by the wholesale. They cause them to be buried in different parts of the country, then unearthed and sold for exhibition purposes. Every kind of a petrified human being, men, women and children, Indians, giants, and what-not, has been unearthed in remote parts of the United States, and their finding has resulted in a big sensation for the immediate locality, and a gold mine for the fellow who took it up for exhibition purposes. More frauds have been perpetrated in this way than even in the dime museums. The bureau has suppressed more of these frauds within recent years than it has stopped to count, and there is not a year without its good sensation in that office itself.
OIL FROM LAVENDER PLANT.
As four-fifths of the oil extracted from lavender is concealed in the bloom the harvest takes place just before the flower begins to fade at the end of August. The oil is distilled by means of steam, which is compelled to penetrate the closely packed lavender, afterward being drawn off in pipes that run through cold water. In this manner the steam is reconverted into water, but the process of passing through the lavender has extracted the oil, which floats on the surface of the water as it runs into glass jars down below. These jars have spouts in the center, thus enabling the water to run out while the oil collects above the level of the exit. In this the first stage the oil is of a brownish-blue tint, and it now has to be refined by passing once more through water. Thus all impurities are removed and the oil runs out white save for a very pale blue color similar to that observed in paraffin. The oil is put into bottles for exportation or made up into lavender water for home use. Three pounds of oil will make thirty gallons of the perfume. The majority of ladles would be surprised if they were informed that a bottle of lavender water contains but about a thimbleful of pure oil, for a larger proportion would not only render the water too strong for use but would burn holes through the handkerchie wherever the scent touched it.
Champ Clark Named Himself. Champ Clark, the genial congressman and writer of Missouri, had the novel distinction of naming himself and of choosing an unusual name at that. In his infancy his parents christened him James Beauchamp Clark; but Clark was a common surname in his part of the country, and James even commoner, so, as he cherished dreams of future glory, he knocked off the James Beau and became Champ Clark—easy to pronounce and easy to remember and distinctive in sound. He was admitted to the bar as Champ, married as Champ and elected as Champ. But every little while somebody who remembers him in early life and is careful of the proprieties, resuscitates the Beauchamp or James Beauchamp, and the air turns blue.
Maryland Takes Its Census. The state census of Maryland gives the population of that state as 1,178,700, a decrease of 11,350 from the figures of 1,190,050 returned by the Federal census. It increases the population of Baltimore and decreases the population of the state outside that city. In some of the counties of Maryland, errors in the taking of the Federal census of a year ago have been proved, and some of the enumerators responsible for them are now, after trial and conviction, under sentence. Except in Maryland, the accuracy of the 1900 census has been little disputed.
Passing of Loafing Place of GREAT MEN
SPRINGFIELD DRUG STORE IN WHICH LINCOLN DOUGLAS, TREAT, SHIELD AND OTHERS, WHITTLED STICKS AND SWAPPED YARNS
With the sale the other day of the old Diller drug store in Springfield, Ill., there retired from business a veteran merchant whose shop was the lounging place of some of the greatest men Illinois has produced, and the scene of many a boisterous exchange of witticisms, in which Lincoln and Douglas, and others of great, though lesser, note, were participants. A history of the old store is interesting.
In 1838, when Springfield was young and Abraham Lincoln was the idol of the Whig party in the General Assembly, there came out from Pennsylvania two young men, Dr. William S. Wallace and Jonathan Roland Diller, druggist. They started a drug store in
A
ABRAHAM LINCOLN WAS A CONSANT VISITOR. "Hoffman's Row," about four doors north from the corner of Fifth and Washington streets, on the west side of Fifth street.
When the "new state house," now the Sangamon county court house, was built in 1842, Wallace & Dillon bought the frame building that had been temporarily used as the state house and moved it to Sixth street, opposite the now remodeled court house. There they remained in the drug business until 1849, when the firm of Wallace & Diller was succeeded by Corneau & Diller, the Diller of the new firm being Roland W. Diller, a cousin of the first Diller.
The first Diller, J. Roland, was a noted Democrat. In 1848 Thomas Harris beat Stephen T. Logan for Congress. The night the result of the election was known Diller coated himself with phosphorous and went out on the street to celebrate. In his enthusiasm he caught fire and would have burned up alive had he not plunged into a horse trough at a corner of the square. In 1858 the building occupied by Corneau & Diller burned, and the present
```markdown
```
PLUNGED INTO A HORSE TROUGH. structure was erected. It was a fine affair in its day, and the workmanship on it was so good that the original fittings still remain intact, after nearly fifty years. After the death of Mr. Corneau in 1860, "Rolla" W. Diller conducted the business alone, until recently, when he was succeeded by his son, Isaac Diller.
The store was the chosen loafing place of the choicest wits of the day. Abraham Lincoln was a constant visitor, and many of his best stories were told there. At that time Lincoln used to carry his important law papers in his tall hat, and had a somewhat limited list of clients. Stephen A. Douglas was another illustrious loafer at the Diller store. And hobnobbing with these two great lights of history were many lesser lights, who have since illumined the annals of city, state and country. By the store often sat Col. E. D. Baker, who made a proud record as soldier, statesman, and orator, and who fell at the battle of Ball's Bluff. There, too, was often seen General James Shields, the distinguished Irish-American soldier, patriot, and statesman.
Major John T. Stuart, the only man who ever beat Douglas before the poo-
ple in a race for Congress, sat nightly among the choice spirits in Diller's store. John Calhoun was among them, likewise the first Richard Yates, afterwards the war governor of Illinois. Judge Stephen T. Logan, Mr. Lincoln's law partner, used to sit in an old chair, a favorite seat of Lincoln's, poking fun at "Abe" and whittling away at anything wooden that was near. One day Judge Logan was in the midst of a fire of raillery, busily engaged in slicing off chunks of the chair on which Lincoln was sitting. This was more than Mr. Diller could stand.
"Judge," said he, "there is a pine box in the back yard, and if it will do as well as that chair I wish you would whittle on it."
Judge Logan was so offended that he left the store, and for a week did not return. But, passing one day, he caught sight of a few friends inside, and, picking up a pine board, he walked in, and, seating himself in the arm chair, remarked: "Weli, Rolla, I guess I've been a fool long enough; I've brought a piece of that pine box with me."
Judge Samuel H. Treat, afterward circuit judge, judge of the Supreme
A
"IVE BROUGHT A PIECE OF THAT PINE BOX WITH ME."
"IVE BROUGHT A PIECE OF THAT PINE BOX WITH ME." Court, and United States District Judge, flashed his ready wit while seated on the counter in the Diller store. Captain Isaac R. Diller was there, too, a distinguished veteran of the Mexican war, who was chosen many times as clerk of the house in the general assembly.
William C. May, congressman; Thomas Campbell, secretary of state; Senator McDougal, who became United States senator from California, were also in the crowd around the prescription counter. Besides these men there were scores of others whose names are closely identified with the history of Springfield and of Illinois.
Virgil Hickox, the railroad promoter; Captain Isaac Keys, president of the Farmers' Bank; Colonel William F. Elkin, of Black Hawk war fame and member of the "Long Nine"; Andrew J. McCormack, first mayor of Springfield and another member of the "Long Nine" (the "Long Nine" were nine members of the general assembly, Lincoln being one of them, averaging six feet in height); John Reynolds, afterwards governor of Illinois; and Obed Lewis, but recently deceased, all swapped yarns and whittled shingles in the Diller store, amid wreaths of tobacco smoke that rose to the classic ceiling.
There, too, sat Charles H. Lanphier, formerly proprietor of the Illinois State Register, who is still living at Springfield; George L. Huntington.
ROLAND E. SHARP
once mayor of Springfield and always musician, scientist and artist; Colonel Dudley Wickersham, hero of the Mexican and civil wars; Charles Ryan, the popular physician; and many others of that coterie have finished their work and passed to their reward.
On Aug. 10, 1899, Mr. Roland W. Diller celebrated his golden anniversary, having been fifty years in business at the same stand.
Two weeks ago the store was sold by Mr. Diller, the firm of Hay & James
buying the "stock, good will and fixtures." The new owners are preparing to remodel the store, and the place as known to Abraham Lincoln and his friends will soon be a thing of the past. Springfield grieves to lose the Dillers from the historic building, whose walls have echoed the shouts of laughter produced by the wit of Lincoln and Douglas, and mourns the passing of the old landmark.—Chicago Tribune.
CLOTHING FROM THE SEA.
If all the land-grown materials out of which a man clothes himself should cease to grow he still could fit himself out from top to toe with a warm and comfortable suit, and even embellish himself with a watch and other ornaments. The sea will furnish him everything required. It would be an expensive outfit, but would wear for a long time, and, though at first it might have "an ancient and a fish-like smell," one would soon get used to that. His shoes he could make of porpoise hide or alligator skin, with laces of the same material. His socks and underclothing could be spun from the byssus or tufts of the pinna. The pinna is a sort of a mussel which lives in the waters of the Mediterranean and clings to the rocks by long tufts of siky fibre, which is woven into beautiful cloth by the Sicilians. For summer wear he could bring to his tailor the skins of a few burbot or ling, which the Russian Tartars use for making garments which are cool and waterproof. Salmon skin, which when tanned resembles wash leather, would do for a winter suit, and for an overcoat what could be better than sealskin? For thread there are the sinews of the walrus, or, if a finer thread were desired, one could easily be spun from the tufts of the Mediterranean mussel before mentioned. As for buttons, the ocean shop offers a large and varied assortment. It is a line of goods which is always on hand. Mother-of-pearl buttons cut from oyster shells vary in color from white through iridescent to black, and lovely ivory buttons could be made from the tusks of the walrus. If desired, these could be dyed purple with the murex which furnished the famous Tyrian dye. If neither of these materials suited the fastidious taste of the dandy he could have buttons of tortoise shell. An excellent imitation of a palmetto straw hat could be made from the funori, a seaweed which grows on the coast of Japan.—New York Press.
A. Mother-Cat's Lesson
Our pet cat had three kittens, of which she was particularly fond. One or them was unusually active and mischievous, and much given to climbing up fence posts, walls and trees. One morning I heard a pitiful little cat-cry up in a tall cherry-tree, and on examination, I found that the mischievous kitten was near the top of the tree, clinging to a branch, and its cries showed that it was frightened, and afraid to come down. Sitting on the ground a little distance off, was the mother-cat, looking as if she was thinking what she ought to do to get her kitten out of its trouble. Suddenly she seemed to have made up her mind, for she ran quickly up the tree to where the kitten was, and pausing there a moment, as if to fix the kitten's attention on what she was doing, she began to descend the tree slowly and carefully. She was showing the kitten the easiest way to get down. When she reached the ground, she sat down and looked up at the kitten, calling to it with soft, entreating cries, and the kitten, as if understanding exactly what was expected of it, came down just as the mother had done.
Another Enterprise.
"I've got a scheme," said the grafter, "that'll work like a clock. I'm going to put an ad. in the paper asking women to send their photographs and a $5 bill and I'll tell them how to become beautiful." "But how can you make them beautiful?" asked the chump. "Don't have to. I'll send back the photographs with letters something like this: 'Dear Miss—After seeing your photograph we are surprised that you desire to become more beautiful than you already are. It sometimes seems that the very ones upon whom God bestows his greatest favors are the least thankful. One so divinely endowed with such loveliness as you possess should be contented. Although we have added to the beauty of such women as Lily Langtry, Maxine Elliott and Lillian Russell, our honor as gentlemen and our reputation as an old-established firm compel us to inform you that you already possess beauty far beyond the possibilities of our system.'" But the $5?" asked the chump. "Oh, I guess a woman wouldn't make much of a howl over the $5," answered the grafter.—Indianapolis Sun.
Illegal Use of the Mall. Who taketh the name of the United States Government in vain is quite liable to get into trouble. The charge is made against the Twin City Rapid Transit Company, which runs cars between St. Paul and Minneapolis, that it seeks to protect its property by an improper use of the sign "U. S. Mail" upon its cars. It is true that this company does carry the United States mail between the two cities, but this does not give it the right to label with this magic signs cars not engaged in this traffic. This is what the company is charged with having done, despite the statute which imposes a fine of from $100 to $500 per car for such an offense. It is generally understood that the government sign is illegally used to intimidate labor unions in case of strikes, and the agitation at the present time is credited to the labor organizations.—Syracuse Evening Standard.
ARE WEGROWING RED
UNIVERSITY PROFFESSOR WHO SAYS WE ARE.
Prof. Frederick Starr of Chicago University Will Not Recede from the Startling Proposition that the White Race Is Slowly Dyling Out.
A rather startling statement was recently made by Prof. Frederic Starr, of the University of Chicago. It was to the effect that the white inhabitants of the United States are on the verge of becoming like Indians in complexion. Prof. Starr reaches this conclusion after lengthy scientific and practical investigations. He also states that the only thing which will divert the dire catastrophe which now threatens the American republic, lies in liberal immigration laws. Foreign blood, he declares, is the thing which stands between Americans and an Apache complexion.
For the purpose of study Prof. Starr has taken the German immigrants who have settled in Pennsylvania, New England and West Virginia, who hold most tenaciously to the characteristics of their countrymen. They usually settle in communities where they are preserve their language and their customs as they brought them from the Fatherland. They seldom intermarry with other nationalities, and for Prof. Starr's investigation present ideal conditions. After several years of close observation he has become convinced that the Germans are gradually assuming some of the characteristics of the North American Indian. Prof. Starr has also studied native Americans and found that similar peculiarities existed, only in a greater degree among them.
Several years ago Prof. Starr startled the scientific world by making the same statement, which at the time met with open ridicule. Now, however, the
J.
PROF. FREDERIC STARR.
professor declares that he has proof sufficient to convince the most skeptical that his contentions are correct.
professor declares that he has proof sufficient to convince the most skeptical that his contentions are correct.
Money Made in Garbage.
A problem that has engaged the attention of the legislative bodies of most American cities is what to do with the garbage—how to get rid of it at the least expense to the public. The city of Washington so disposes of its garbage that a profit is got out of it, while most other American cities—being less carefully governed—have to pay largely for its removal. There is a contract with a company which collects the garbage and disposes of it. The garbage is kept separate from ashes and other refuse. In iron tanks it is taken by rail thirty miles down the Potomac to the reduction works. Here it is sorted. Tin cans, bottles, etc., are removed. The rest is placed in a close iron vessel and subjected to steam pressure, after which it is pumped into tanks and allowed to settle. Oils and fats rise to the surface and, being skimmed off, are sold to soapmakers. Under pressure more oil is obtained, to go the same way. The caked garbage, after pressure, is pulverized and sold for fertilizer. Incidental profits arise from the sale of hides of horses and other animals and the manipulation of their carcasses along with the garbage. The horse hides make good russet leather. A good monthly profit is said to be realized.
War on Posterx.
The agitation in France against the disfigurement of country landscapes by flaring advertisements still proceeds, but it appears with doubtful success, owing to vested interests. The country people whose land lies alongside the lines of railway are readily tempted by the offers of the advertising contractors from whom some of them reap quite a respectable income from displaying posters which puff soup, chocolate, drinks, etc. It is said that an agent of one firm is now starting on a journey through 36,000 communes, in each of which he is to arrange for the erection of a painted board. This is to be done in time for the tourist season. The notice boards already arranged for and erected by this agent cost him no less than 14,000 francs a year.
Areas of States.
It appears from the geographical surveys accepted as a basis of the recent federal census that Texas is the largest state in the country. In the New England group the largest of the states is Maine, with nearly 30,000 square miles of land surface; none of the other New England states has as much as 10,000. Two states which are most nearly alike in area are New York and North Carolina. Two others which correspond very nearly are Iowa and Illinois. Arkansas and Alabama are of almost the same size and Ohio and Virginia differ by only a few square miles. The land area of each is about 40,000 square miles.
oe
IN; SEGEUSION © oF
MEXICAN: OUNTAINS.
» calttornte” 2iiieasine ena tne
gectttel Wits Whe Wigured ino
o — ae
(Special: tehen se
[he newspapers Of a few days ago
tte
, & ‘Califor-
one a ee
an absence Of four-years far up
the Sinaloa mountains of Mexico,
of entirely from the gay world in
they were Wont to move, The
of the parties mentioned to the
from which they’voluntarity ex-
themselves recalls a chapter in the
of Mrs. Bradbury that cansed her
to be mentioned far and wide.
incident cost @ human life
several reputations, destroyed
happiness and drove John Brad-
, who Was one of the most light-
of all the young mien of Los
into the deep seclusion of the
hills. The story is one of a
foolish infatuation, which led
A Works of Wee.
Jon Bradbury was one of the heirs
a great fortune which his father
taken from the Tajo mine, an
blanket veilm of gold and
, near Rosario, on the Gulf of
He and Lucy Banning were
together in Los Angeles. Her
was Gen. Phineas Banning.
of the island Of Santa Catalina
aman of great wealth, and she
one of the most beautiful girls in
California. The two grew up to-
and the attachment one felt for
other grew into love. One day
years ago they quietly Jeft Los
and stole away to Oakland,
s Gretna Green, and were
married. There Was mo reason
the elopement, as both of their
were In ‘every ‘way pleased
the match, but it suited their ro-
natures. They returned to Los
in due timé, set up a cozy
on one of the hills, purchased
ideal country home among the or-
groves at Duarte and to all ap-
i"
parance: 1 eee
sThey seemed especially to
ike husband was returning a
‘Rito the Tajo mine and was detained
ship in quarantine in San Francisco
the young wife smuggled herself
board the vessel at night, declaring
place was beside her husband. She
braved the dangers of yellow jack
h him, while she lightened the
hours by her besuty and vi-
smaity.
During this time there lived at Santa
PMimica, the seaside resort of Los An-
| W. Russell Ward, a handsome
vivacious young Englishman, who
pms fond of athfetics. He journeyed to
Milifornia with a party of Englishmen
Went there to develop a scheme
# waking paper from the pulp of the
tea palm, but the ‘scheme fell
th Ward married a California
rl one of the handsome daughters of
jiu Juan Bandini. It was # love
ch and the couple lived at the Ban-
‘Mal cottage, overlooking the Pacific
the Santa Monies bluffs. Ward
2 model husband, but spent
F at is tiene ae:
in heroic sports. 2
Mrs. Bradbury went to Santa Mon-
for the summer, ‘There Mrs Brad-
sw much of Ward. They were
® great deal into esch other's
ny. Suddenly came the start-
Cutssd Mr Beadbery Bad Elopet
They first went to @ wayside resort,
ce she sent her Jewels to the
shop and on the y s0 raised
fed to San ‘Bramelaoa, arriving
thet city they wen re and
in fall Mmm Bemdbury. was
Teleased, but vard we | held in
of $2,000. He, too, was relest
tev days later and told to get out of
country. ry Geclared he
never take ck his erring
Went to York rit
st bea be te a
er oe
Swat New Hoek na
Chicago and. giving. wp ail the
de, took his pretty wife back
wet hie wite to ae JooslyTaI0
be in the Mexieam mountain, there
» outa 2 . rorld
a er forestting - af
“wigh Ward's
after his ;
= and had th
Copement Mrs: Ward and her
‘Were on the ocean } ee
siveness Td London to seek tor.
from ‘his wife. and mother,
want's mind Gave way, and be tanee
inselt from a train in Nebrashe eee
‘Gied 4m lonely place heside the con
ree Metico Bradbury and his wite
Hons, ttt? Most affectionate rela-
erected a splendid mansion
Sear the Tajo mine and 4 ths
— years they were away lived in
Other houses, inthe wiaeseans, BO
vicinity of their
magnificent home. Mr. Bradbury's
Shiet amusement was the hunting ot
fators, While his wife's tad was
taxidermy. Fortune smiled upon them
and they have gone back to California
Ticher than ever. Whether they will
be restored to their old position as
Hinders of ‘society is a question that
the people of Los Angeles are debat.
ing in their minds.
NOT muCcH OF A FINANCIERr.
‘Queer Notions of Business Held ty an
Ex-Congressman,
Tt would not be fair to class James
Hamilton Lewis, former member of
Congress from Washington, with the
most eminent of financiers. He has
but & vague idea of business methods
nd according to his own statement
has not. greatly improved since the
‘Gays of his youth, of which he tells the
following story: “When T opened my
first bank account not so very many
years ago. I didn't have much idea of
how banks conducted business.
made a deposit of a few hundred dol-
lars, was given a bank book, which
showed the amount of money I had to
my credit and a check book. Upon
returning to my office I carefully
Placed the bank book in my desk and
forgot all about it. I carried the check
book in my pocket for convenience
sake. It was a new sensation for me
to draw checks. I was like a child
with a new toy. ‘When I needed mon-
€Y, Or anybody else wanted some, all I
had to do was to go down after the
check book. I was the proudest man
in all the state of Washington. I im-
agined that my bank account was as
long as that of J Pierpont Morgan or
John D. Rockefeller, or the moral law
itself, for that matter. Finally, how-
ever, I found that I had overplayed my
hand, as they say out west. One day
I received a notice from th: bank that
my account had been overdrawn to the
extent of $37.50. I didn’t really know
what it meant or what to do. What
do you suppose I did do. Weil, I'll tell
you. I walked into the bank with the
notice of overdraft, drew a check for
the amount, handed both to the pay-
ing teller and started out of the bank.
I was called back and matters were
explained to me, much to my humilia-
tion. Since then I have kept a little
closer tab on the stub end of my check
book.”
Seert tin the Arena.
ee te eS eS
The accident at the Nimes bull fight
some time ago, in which one man was
tossed and another gored to death,
draws attention to a most curious
game, which, as bull fighting steadily
gains ground in the south of France,
is becoming very popular among the
Meridionales. If it were not unhap-
pily merely the prelude to the gross
butchery of the real Spanish game, the
Jeu de la Cocarde would have much
to recommend it to a place on the list
of trials of strength, for it is essen-
tially an amateurs’ game, requiring
the highest daring and skill, while it
need involve no cruelty to the bull.
The cocarde is a little tuft of feathers
and ribbons. Two of these are fast-
ened to the bull's horns, and he is then
‘turned into the ring, where the play-
ers, all on foot, are awaiting him. The
game is now to excite the bull into
charging, and for this the usual red
cloths are used. But at the moment
that the bull dashes into the red rag
tne player steps deftly aside, and i»
stead of sticking a cruel banderillo
into the animal's neck tries to snatch
the cocarde from the bull's horns. The
game, of course, is won by the first to
pear off the little trophy, but the bull
usually manages to bear his plumes s
long time before being bereft of them.
Poem About = Era! Incident
Among the “Fresh-Air” children
who arrived at » farm near Pittsfield,
in the Berkshire bills of Massachu-
tts, one day last summer, Was & pOOT
Httle tot who, as she was lifted from
the wagon, caught sight of s field of
daisies. With a cry of delight she
darted to the rail-fence the moment
she was set down, and, scrambling un-
Ger it, threw berself, face downward,
among the besutiful white-and-gold
blossoms, clasping them in ber arms
‘and sobbing as if her ital | wee
breaking. She had never befote sass
growing. During her stay she
Sront all ber time among them. and
the moment came to pack her
wnesby little bag it was found to be
filled with flowers. 5 ee
about this pathetic inion,
‘child,” is published in the
Ladies’ Home Journal. :
: ———_. ror =~
_... were Poptart
The rage for perfumes noe <2
saght during the reign of Louis X¥-
pout the continent bis court
was known as the pear eeger 3 .
was then the custom when .
Tint entertainment for the hosters te
Ines 5 ber guests whst particular oft
be would use for — nae
rooms and each guest a
in aking her toilet. At court s
odor vertume was used for each
day of the week. ‘Much more attention
fas paid to the use of u
fo apap and water, and cleanliness
pase ee
Gun to alone 1s 2 <xowd SONS 208
One en nen one ot
Mira en the Omcer, -
Cupid will have a hard time soon
with Russian army officers, if one 1
to judge trom a recent regulation fix-
ing the conditions under which Rus-
Sian officers will be permitted to mar-
ry. In the first place the lady must
hare good manners and be well
brumght up; her soci) position will
also be taken into account. Then with
Tegard to the officer, he must be at
least 28 years of age, his pay and mess
allownznce must amount to at least $600
and he must bave either real estate
bringing in $150 or more per annum on
@ capital of $2,500 or more. If the cap-
ital does not exceed $2,500 no more
than $150, including interest, must be
@rawn in any one year.
Would Rather be Doctor Than King.
Little Prince Edward, eon of the
Duke of Cornwall and York and future
king of England, has his own ideas of
‘what he wants to be. Not long ago
the little fellow was given his first
book of English history. The volume
was full of illustrations, including one
of the unfortunate Charles I. on his
way to his execution. Immediately the
young prince wanted to know all about
it, and he was told the story at length.
On its conclusion he slammed the book
shut with a decided air and said: “Ob,
I don’t like that at all. I shan’t be a
king. I'm going to be a doctor.”—Mil-
Waukee Wisconsin.
‘Wabasha Hears Good News.
Wabasha, Minn, August 19th: —
George Huber of this town suffered
from Kidney Trouble and Back-Ache.
He was very bad. Dodd's Kidney Pills,
& new remedy, has cured him complete-
ly. He is now quite well and able to
work. He says Dodd's Kidney Pills are
worth their weight in gold.
News comes to hand almost every
day of wonderful cures by Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills, which, although but recently
introduced in this country, has already
made many warm friends by its splen-
did results in the most serious cases of
Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy,
Rheumatism, and Back-Ache.
A Mew Kind of Lean.
William H. Rogers, cashier of the
Nassau bank. and one of the best-
known men in banking circles in New
York city, tells the story of a custom-
er who came to the bank and said he
had just declined to make a “Kath-
leen Mavourneen” loan. In his long
experience in banking Mr. Rogers had
heard of many varieties of loans, but
Bever one of this genus. So he asked
,what kind of a loan a “Kathleen Ma-
vourneen” loan was. “One of the sort
that ‘may be for years and may be
\forever.’”
feterch Cannot Be Cored _
@ith LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
Tesch the seat of the disease Catarrh is a
blood or constitutional disease, and in order w
eure it you must take intermalremedies .
Caterrh Cure is taken internally, acts
er = Se dlood snd mucous surfaces.
Hall's Cure is not @ quack medicine
It was prescribed by one of the ae
eswa combined with tbe best biood purifiers,
acting Girectly on the mucous surfaces’ The
pertectoqmbination of She sve ingrogiente, fs
what produces such wonderful. in curing
Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & 0O.. Prope., Toledo, O.
Baits Family Pulls are the Dest.
British Cotambia’s Representative.
The Hon. J. H. Turner, formerly
Premier of British Columbia, is ex-
pected in London soon to take up the
post of adjutant general for that prov-
ince. The status of the position is to
be raised in view of the growing im-
portance of the province, and the offi-
cial representatives in London is to be
placed on a level with those from the
Australian states.
‘Writes Books on Hawall.
Professor William De Witt Alexan-
der, who recently resigned. from the
Hawaiian department of surveys and
‘accepted a place in the United States
coast and geodetic survey, is one of
the greatest authorities on everything
pertaining to the Hawalian islands
and has written several books on such
subjects.
Diverce in Another State.
Bona fide residence of the plaintiff
in a suit for divorce is held in Bell vs.
Bell, U. S. Adv. Sheets, 551, to be nec-
essary to give jurisdiction of a suit for
a divorce against a resident of another
state, and a recital of facts necessary
to give jurisdiction is held not to be
conclusive on the courts of another
state.
“A Princess of the H*"s,” by Mrs.
Burton Harrison is really Mrs. Har-
rison’s first serious attempt at fiction.
It is neither a society novel nor a
colonial story, but-is a strong and ef-
fective romance of an American héro
and an Italian heroine in the most
picturesque portion of the section of
‘the Italian Alps known as the Dolo-
mites. It is vigorous, artistic and
The paper money of,the first French
republic became more depreciated tnan
that of any other currency ever did.
A pair of boots cost $1,500 in paper
eS
Im a single year the French police
expel over 4000 foreigners from
France. Of these about 1,500 are
Spaniards, 1,300 Belgians and 500 Ger-
re
Friené—Do you permit your wife to
have ber own way? Husband (posi-
tively}—No, sir. She has it without
my permission = as
nts iat oe ve nt
ae
“Yok. - 4 sae
A FRONTIER EXPERIENCE.
Sey Sas te Pick Thole Wheat Over
‘Kervel by Kernel.
In narrating the frontier experiences
‘of “The First White Baby Porn in the
Northwest,” tm The Ladies’ Home
Journal, W. S. Harwood tells of a
queer experience that befell the family
im the first year after settling on a
farm far removed from the settle-
ments.“‘The winter bad been unusually
long and severe, and their store of pro-
visions ran low. It was a long dis-
'tanoe,to the mesrest ‘bese of supplies,
and communication with the outside
‘worlé had been cut off. Indians in
the neighborhood one night broke intc
the granary where the wheat was
stored and stole a quantity. In doing
this a large amount of broken glass
became mixed with the wheat which
the Indians left, so for many days
amidst much merry story-telling and
many & joke and laugh, in spite of thc
serious situation, the family gathered
about a large table in their living-
room and spent the short winter days
picking over the wheat, kernel by ker-
nel, In order to free it from the pieces
of glass. For this wheat stood between
them and starvation, and none of its
precious kernels must be lost. Thei:
stock of flour had long since wasted
away, as had most of their food sup-
plies, so they boiled and ate the
wheat without grinding. Relief reached
them just in time to prevent a sad
ending to the experience.”
Wicked Ankie Bug.
Cleveland is the ueld of activity
of an “ankle bug,” which promises to
rival the “kissing bug” in evil notori-
ety. It is partial to low shoes and
openwork hosiery, and its bite is said
to be so severe that the swelling
sometimes extends to the knee. In
some cases the victim has been crip-
pled for a week or more. The local
scientists have not yet discovered the
insect that does the misohief.
Have you seen Mrs. Austin’s new dress’
Oldest Congregationalist Minister.
Recently, on his ninety-first birth-
day, Rev. John Spurgeon, father of the
famous Charles Spurgeon, preacher,
laid the foundation stone of the South
Norwood Baptist church in England.
He is a Congregationalist and prob-
ably is the oldest living minister of
that denomination.
“Banana Shines.”
“Banana shines free for each cus-
tomer,” is the sign displayed by a New
York shoe dealer. He says that the
inside of a banana skin applied to
either patent leather, tan or russet
shoes gives them the desired polisb
and keeps the leather in the best of
condition.
“I can take 100 words a minute,”
said the shorthand writer. “I often
take more than that,” remarked the
other, in sorrowful accents; “but then
T have to. I’m married.”
Debt Collector—I called to collect
those bills which Mr. Snips, the tailor,
sent you. Mr. Squills—You are per-
fectly welcome to them. Here they
are, all in one packet.
Eleven thousand people are engaged
in making lamp chimneys throughout
the. United States.
Sno say's use of De. Riine's rest Sarve Restorer
Send for FREE ®2.00 trial bottle and treaties
Ne eee
A little pride is desirable, but ar-
rogance is hateful.
Have you seen Mrs. Austin’s new dress?
Last but not least—wisdom teeth.
Ze cies
Li . qOWER:s
We ie
SN See “75H pens
ee {[oueD cloranc
TZ fa eee" me
ADL) nveres beans
oops Fs Ber or enn a aS.
PREMIUM SCALES si WORLD
FOR HAY, GRAIK. STOCK, COAL, ETC.
Stoel Frame and Royal Scale Rack gy ef
=: aos s
[eo Se
2? Ea ee E
a = ee .
eS ee om
Pes ee Pate |
a me ee ~
ae "
ical Stuck Seats, ot World's Fei Chlcngs, 1883,
iso ai Trams Miealashyp! Exposition. Omaha.
‘Best and cheapest 8. scales made.
TT
san. th Re ten
EVERY FARMER AND POULTRY-MAN
SHOULD HAVE A
Fox Terrier Dog
| * tor
. ‘Se peeomngy sees 85 wert $25.
‘Bevada, Missouri
RERBAL SpeclalZase oS
QUETMIENT | 20 oon 7
ego frm Pone Sins Fat Eons Fee.
BOS BAIL, YOUR owe Price.
MADE STRONG AND WELL.
A Prominent Lady Raised From a Sick Bad by Pe-ru-na-—-
Entirely Gured in Two Weeks,
BN |
A Y; 2 |
Mrs. E. A. Crozier, Senior Vice Presi-
dent of the James Morgan Post, W. R.
C., the largest corps in Minnesota,
writes from “The Landour,” 9th and
Srna easel eae tanks :
“ on
behalf of Peruna, that wonderful med-
icine which raised me from a sick bed
and made a strong and well woman of
me in two weeks. I ean cents
bearing-down pains, backache and con-
tinual headache, and found no relief
satil I tried Peruna. It cured me com-
pletely, and I feel as young and well
as when 18. I wish Sa
knew the merits of the and
20 home would be without it.”"—Mrs.
E. A. Crozier.
Mrs. Wm. Henderson, Bordulac, N.
C., writes:
“Twas troubled with very serious
Only 70,000 British reside on the
continent, while 200,000 continentals
live in England.
It is within bounds to say that this
country spends at least $15,000,000 a
year on golf.
Hamlin’s Wizard Oil Co., Chicago,
sends song book and testimonials for
stamp. Get Wizard Oil from your
ng ee
To sign your name to another man's
note is considered a bad sign.
Iam sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
‘my life three years ago.—Mrs. Taos. RoBBINs.
Maple Street, Norwich, ¥.. Feb. 17, 1900
- Where the speech is corrupted, the
mind is also.—Seneca. -
Have you seen Mrs. Austin's new dress?
A dog with a bone knows no friend.
Sozopont
Tooth Powder
UMION MADE.
The of Dousiss $3.00
Pr io
Sar Paty, meecteec Gris Sooges
shoes have to give betier satisiaction
Shoes mast be matatained: whe standard
has always been placed so high that the
wearer receives more value for his
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50
*WiL. Douglas sells more $3.00 and 83.50
‘ J
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line
eqnnast be quuatied ot ane price.
Gk wy
‘aw. BY
Bea,
ae 25 and
Saeene
ee
: mth, 7
ae ciate oT
cveRT oieeer tee
pean een
O. E. DUFFY, Sisse ht
‘thyme Gaperience. byre apememiner ia U.6 Pat Coe
= =
RUPTURE ===
caine aan nade ee ee ee
een egtaaicl vaste Geant see
that exhausted me so that I feared
‘would lose my mind. I suffered un-
‘told agony with my back, the pain ex-
tending down my left leg. My pain
was so severe that I would have wel-
comed death at any moment—so no one
need wonder that I recommend Peruna
so highly, for it cured me entirely of
that. Not a sign of pain has returned,
and that will soon be two years now.
“T am glad that there is a way I can
speak, trusting that manya sufferer will
read my testimonial, and not only read
but believe.”—Mrs. Wm. Henderson.
FOR WOMEN ONLY.
Free Treatment During Hot Weather by
By the assistance of an experienced
staff of physicians, Dr. Hartman pro-
poses to direct the treatment of sev-
eral thousand women, who, for one
reason or another are ailing.
Each patient sends name, symp-
toms, and a short description of previ-
ous treatment, and are entered in the
doctor’s books as regular patients.
The treatment is directed from time
to time as may be found necessary
by the doctor, without charge Every
letter and name is held strictly conf-
dential, and in no case will any one
be published except by the express
wish of the patient herself.
These cases are treated with the
same care and fidelity as the private
patients of a regular family physician.
During the past year a large number of
cases have been cured. Every item of
the treatment is directed for which no
charge whatever is made. +
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium Columbus,
Ohio, for free treatment.
SOZODONT for the TEETH 25¢
SMUUN I IVrmes
PP LD PPP LLP LLP PPL PPP PPP PPP PP
A ee Re oe
2 _ et ca
= al Pe > — See
aio yo tige
Be ae ful Sa aa a
= = ent Kary Fie
Fs SS a Sy
esate) | she oT
i Cae Cf <—s
=. a
THE URIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
peoaet wyomresiictn, Art. Schanon
trical Engia-ering, Architecture. Thorougt
Preparatory and Commercial Courses.
Rooms Free to all students who have com
pleted the studies ee for admission inte
the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the Collegt
ete Courses.
Rooms to R-nt. moderate charges to student
over seventeen prepar ng for Collegiate Courses
A limited number of Candidates for thc Eocle
siastical state will be received at special rates
St. Edward's Mall, for boys’ under 13 years, is
nique Ss Gin compiomntns ot be ceraes
‘The S8th Year amen. 199,
Conategeee re a
|. A. MORRISSEY, C. S. C.. President
ST. MARY’S ACADEMY
Notre Dame, Indiana.
Conducted by the Sisters of the _
Eneiiah and Cheetiaad einuation Reg-
“i Pecan Renltinent students
Spee a cae toes
Sod Schotl of Ast. Gymnadlom wader
direction of graduate of Boston Normal
“"The 47th year will open Sept 5, 1901.
Address DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY,
St. Mary's Academy, Notre Dame. indiana,
.
Hinshaw School
OF
the anew oppercanktion to emBitions; ung pect
Bis desirous of joluing the stare, “Covers over
hich ail paptis take eee Fou Teetraccdous ta
tation, Waberap, Socuery. otc. Write for detatia.
HINSHAW SCHOOL OF OPERA AND DRAMA,
STEINWAY HALL, CHICAGO.
yore! COLLEGE, Hopedale, 0.; 4190.
DPEDALE Cot BE. BR. fare free; Sees
20 000 HARVEST
; HANDS
required to harvest ev ercts nen hk Sete
rp The most abund-
ay S ant yidieeo ine Cem
Pe J A that bs ey
| od boat ia Western
thirty bushels to the acre. Prices for farmn
help will be ——e poms Ranching
oo mertees om boone trees ot eee >
Denane & panes £6 coe Cae Foe Pees
Sana. Seow gs oem Se
= to the nearest one of ‘be fol.
Cc. J. nea, ae Monadnock =
Wea wistlig Beltalo, do ‘sot fal so
RD en ae a eh an at |
FOR SALE Three Hundred and Tweo-
meat: 100 soot inoon Wringeuamn ot
Sere
Ponte” Reasonable torts, 3 seeuny, Sarg, ©
SES ee.
W. M. U, CHICAGO, NO. 34, 1901,
when Aaswerieg Advertisements Kindly
Meatioa This Pager.
SO'S aN ae
‘ pt
Este
‘Leve and the Lev,
es Set. DANCASTERS ©
Copyright. 1801, by Datty Stery Pub. Co.)
Se ee ee manoe “his
Mitch and returned it to bie |
es & wot Interested ‘in the_pai
“be Bintshed whets Sanne
— = t these brief interatis-
on ‘a2 opportunity to look
since dai ght And ‘the oftener he
‘Wooked at it the better he liked it. In
“at it; during the forenoon shrugged
Wis Shoulders impatiently; but in the
‘stared at the dial.
~ “Phat a man of his staid, prossic
“have -upset al! his waking thoughts
- And wha. was the dream? Only 4
‘Waste of wild white waters, storm-
swept but glorious. In the foreground
@- towering wave curving inward,
" grandly crested, an ogre of the sea.
And he upon the cifff dashed with
‘Spray and beaten by the wind. A de-
Heious dream for a hot summer night;
small wonder that he liked to recall
it again and aguin through the stif-
fling day.
Hamlin. snappsi the watch for the
twenty-first time and took up his pen.
If his typewriter had been on band.
he would have knocked off work long
ago. He would have been driving in
the park €njoying the breeze instead
of sweltering here. He paused to pass
‘bis damp handkerchief over his beaded
brow and glanced. at the vacant chair.
“Sick,” he muttered. “Good Lord.
Sick ‘such weather as this!”
Almost as he spoke the door openzd
‘anc a woman in gray linen with emac-
ulate collar and cuffs and lean jaws
moved quietly toward the seat oppo-
site.
Hamlin raised his head and greeted
ber with his customary bow. She re-
turned the salutation silently, as she
guways did, and sat down to the type-
‘writer. It struck Hamlin that her
eyes and jaws looked more tired and
Jean than usual, but this was natural
since she had been ill.
With the silence that always reigned
between them, unless ‘broken by an
imperative necessity, he shoved the
batch of copying across to her and
deaned back. What a good thing it
Was to be able to pay somebody eise
te do one’s drudgery. The thought
brought a qualm of conscience. She
‘Was not well and it was so dashed hot.
“Shove me those mortgages, a pen
copy will do.”
“I intend to work after hours to
make up for lost time. I will be able
to finish it all,” the typewriter re-
sponded quietly.
Tom Hamlin got up impatiently and
began moving about. He had a sneak-
ing sensation of being somewhat in
awe of this silent, absoiutely upright
assistant. [It was after office hours
and he was free to enjoy the drive he
had been longing for. She had a key.
But Hamlin lounged against the win-
dow idly watching the swift fingers
flashing over the keys and fell to re-
viewing his dream again. So vivid had
it been that even now he could almost
feel the dashing of the spray. As for
that other sensation—that slight pres-
Sure against his sleeve, it had been
‘with him ever since he awoke. Oh,
well dreams are fantastic things. Ham-
tig looked for « jong moment at the
clear-cut profile turned toward him
and then abruptly took down a book.
Were her eyes always like that, he
‘wondered, tired as though she had
ot it? Was it over-work or some-_
|B
« SS ee
aus
SES
7 | :
i
“Shove me those mortgages.”
thing worse than work? If she should
lock in reality upoa thet glorious bit
of wild waters, would that jaded light
pass or would it deepen? Desh it all,
why couldn't be have dreamed 4 mo-
ment longe«.”
“Excuse me. is this corcect?”
Hamlin's quick giance met the tired
‘eyee then dropped so paper on which
her pencil tested. There in bis bold,
reckless hand her name smiled up at
ae He caught the pen-
‘ection while 2 dark Sush warmed his
oe
Pg ee ee
st Hican Se at os Choe Me Js
Sor Sosa to ig
fear than oan? ts wold he
Bd Beevers TS ae oat cee oe
oa Ss prc point ed ex
mM -any ‘passive apes. Thic
tn Sas >
ere ope
| “Please pats ‘me ‘the rest of those
sheets, I. seem to be determined to
‘mortgage all you possess.”
From time to time his pencil de
scended with a vicious dash and the
dark red on his brow deepened. At
fast, when he felt cooler, he shoved
the sheets across to her and glanced
‘carelessly at the thin face beat over
the machine. A moment later he was
‘standing in the ‘ali waiting impa-
tiently for his order.
“I wonder if she would die rather
than admit to me that she was a hu-
man being. This heat is killing her
and yet the only way to make her rest
‘would be to take her by the shoulders
and put her out of the office.” Then
his order came and he went back to
her. She was still rather white about
the mouth.
“Won't you try some?" he asked
placing a dewy glass at her elbow.
“Thank you.” .
a kale
Aye
+ I \
fy
“But I can't.” he returned.
“It is indeed,” she assented rather
absently.
Hamlin tried hard to think of some-
thing else. Her tea was vanishing
with a speed that bespoke more than
natural thirst.
“Like as not she has had fever on
her all the afternoon,” he reflected.
“T had a pleasant dream last night,”
he remarked as she put aside her
glass.
“Yes?” she returned politely.
“Dreamt we were standing on a cliff
watching a storm at sea, the spray,
and afl that. It was delicious. We
were standing together.”
“A strange dream for such a warm
night,” the typewriter remarked evi-
dently oblivious of his last words and
his ensuing consternation.
He got up and moved away to bow
@ blind and resume his restless walk.
‘What the dickens had he been think-
ing about all ais time! What an im-
possible position it was anyway. In
real life when a man puts his arm
‘around a woman she can't lean her
cheek against his sleeve But his arm
had not been around her. His hands
were in his pockets. It was as though
she had come to him like a tired child,
certain of support Why had he
waked before he could look into her
eyes? Common sense jarred him;
there was not much of the tired child
in that alert figure with its weary eyes
and preoccupied smile, but he set it
impatiently aside. Great Ned! What
had he been thinking of for the last
two years! Why, there were times
when he had barely been civil. And
now—now it might be too late.
“See here, I can’t get that idea of
the sea out of my head. Let's knock
off ork and make a dash for fresh
air. I can have my horse around in
& moment It’s only ten or fifteen
miles.”
“Why, it would kill the horse,” the
‘typewriter ejaculated, struck aghast at
the idea of teking a pampered animal
On such an expedition with the ther-
“mometer at one hundred in the shade.
- “Oh, no;” Hamlin insisted. “It is
getting cooler. We could take it easy
going out, watch the sun set in the
water and drive back by twilight.
Doesn't it souné pleasant?”
“Very pleasant.”
“Does that mean you will go?”
“Ne, thank you. 1 hed better fn-
ish this work.” -
“Oh, hang the work,” be exclaimed
impatiently.. “Haven't I devoted my-
ing in this ee tae ass
. lin thrust his into his
rena iva is es ae
enn egg bd am »now. We
= Ps now.
eee ener mine
2 t me | co that
Seren Fa aac eee .
x ps.on ee eee
* *Oh, wait,” ¢ ee
_ “But 1 can't.” | St “Don't
ae
ney over all a mah’s actions? If
cee eilcittinie co oun,
¢ em ea te een ee
2 sera ot oe
3 oe i ae Fee ae we
- rt vs | ran instact 1 é
P ee
‘Tetophane Tarde Ma ‘Retabiiebed 1877
JOHN J. DUNN,
fees
Goal - and - Wood,
Sist Street and
Armour A venue...
Residence, 5045 Michigan Boul.,
CHICAGO.
Se ee ese alate
ROTARY PUBLIC Tesiphoue Wentworth 6:
OTTO V. MUELLER
Real Estate, Renting, Loans
oe» Insurance...
910 W. 634 st. (near Halsted)
CHICAGO.
RENFROE BROS.
Dealers ia
WOOD, COAL, FEED AND IGE.
137 West Forty-Seventh St.
CHICAGO,
DR. H. C. FAULKNER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Orrice : 6258 Hatstep STREET,
CHICAGO.
Office Hours: Phoue 413 Went.
Wtolza.m., 2004p. m
6 to TO p.m.
Ta.erzonk Expness 472
DR. L. M. FENWICK.
(A.M. M.D. EB. M)
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
622 8. Halsted St.. 2nd Floor.
HOURS: Sto Wa. m., 12 to2p. m.,7 to 8 p. m.
. ‘Sunday, by appointment. *
Tel. Wentworth 627. CHICAGO, ILL.
eee Ee
Cc.J.BOYD,
Practical Plumber and Gasitter
cept ag te eee S
‘Telephone Yards m4
709 WEST 47TH STREET.
‘Smarsous G3 tsane
DR. JOSEPH JEFFREY,
Physician and Surgeon,
(Get Dearborn Street. CHICAGO
Hours: 10 o. m. 34,64. =.
JAMES T. CRAIG,
Coal, Wood & Ice
General Expressing and Moving.
5001 ARMOUR AVE. CHICAGO, HLL
—SESESEEEEe sss
WEWEePArPER LAW.
Any person wht lakes the paper
regularly from the postofilee, whether
be is a subscriber or not, is responsible
fer the pay.
The courts have decided that refus-
ing te take newspapers and periedicals
frem the pestoffice, er removing and
leaving them wnealied for is prima
facie evidenes of intentional frand.
FLOWERY KINGDOM'S COURT.
Mikado Rare'y Passes Beyond Limits of
Imperial Garden-s
The western world hears very little
of the distant and somewhat secret
court of the mikado. Yet it is inter-
esting ia more than one respect, for
the poetical charm of its traditions is
giving place gradually before the ad-
vent of the spirit of the times. The
Mikado Mutsuhito is regarded as one
_of the cleverest and at the same time
most modest rulers recorded in Jap-
anese history. When he overthrew the
“Shogun” in 1868 and restored his own
dynasty he won at once the admira-
tion and sympathy of his people by
abolishing a despotic form of govern-
ment in favor of a milder form. In
his own country he is known as “Ko-
teli,” but he is generally referred to
abroad as the “mikado,” or “the hon-
orable gate.”
The mikado is of comparatively
large stature, and his very majestic
bearing is increased by the general's
uniform which he usually wears. In
his daily walks he never passes beyond
the limits ‘of the imperial gardens, ex-
cept on the occasion of the opening of
Barliament and at rare intervals for
Purpose of attending military and
civic fewtivals. Unlike his predessors
the mikado is very frequently to be
seen Griving in his carriage, and when
‘be passes through the streets the Jap-
ae ase ee lenter. eeneees <a
the case In former days, either t6 dis-
appear from the line of route or to
ture their backs toward their ruler.
It 4s curious to learn that this attitude
pee 6 oe ee
the mikedo is approaching only frem
the shouts of the police: “The mikado;
Dia Net Get What He Wanted.
The late Rev. R. 8. Storrs was a very
hard man to interview, for he resented
the inquisitiveness of the pressand was
icy to its agents. One evening a re-
Porter attended a recepiion at bis
house and in the course of the evening
touched his arm end whispered: “Doc-
tor, I'm from the ——; I want the
Smee St Bees ant SB Oe Sasa
lars.” “Yes,” Dr. Storrs whispered in
return, “this wey, this way,” and, tak-
she ont dx an peta
; door and
‘ Chronicle. - .
& D. GASH,
Attomsy-at-Law.
Bh and £8 La Patte Bt, Sulte 61s bo 6m
es | see.
J0uH E. OWERS
Attorney at Law,
Sorre 621 ASHLAND BLocx,
we BS. Clark Street, - - CHICAGO
mos —~—
Thomas F. Soully,
- Attorney at Law,
79 Clark Sires, - - - CHICAGO.
Room 14.
JOSEPH A. McINERREY
LAWYER
Scrrs 706—708
cmesso Ores Some __cmcano
Beauregard F. Moseley,
LAWYER.
Practice in all Courts.
Main Office 6256 Halsted St,
Down Town Office 260 S. Clark St, Room 421
ite ito? P.M.
‘Pelepbane Yards TF! Resideses, 11) < “held Ba
JOHN FITZGERALD
WSTICE OF THE PEACE:
4787 6. HALSTED STEKET,
| ~~CHIOAGO
ALBERT B. GEORGE
LAWYER.
423 Ashiand Block. Chicago.
— Tel M 20e25.—
EDWARD H. WRIGHT
LAWYER
| Baite 421, 200 8. Clark St.
‘Telephone, Harrison 2533. CHICAGO.
GEO. W. W. LYTLE,
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Telephone Ceatral 3558.
Balle rary Peele st £805. Clark St.
Chicago.
Reeen.on, 954 Turner Ave.
Lawrence M. Ennis,
Aévocate and Counselor at Law,
Suite 726 Opera House Biook.
& W. Corner Clerk ead Washington Su.
Tevermeors Mam 1782.
Go. DB. DVANS.
Dealer te All Kinds of
HARD AND SOFT COAL,
Wood, Charcoal, Coke and Ice,
Expressing and Moving s Specialty.
832 290thSt - Chicago, ill.
PR RSRBARAVABAAABSAAAL AAMAS!
< z
6 Z
i WONDERFUL:
¢ ¥,
£ Z
2 y
| DISCOVERY :
Curly Hair Made Straight By?
4 ue
, y
4 a
4 4
a us
, y
, y
, y
, y
y a: 7 >= 7
B TAKEN FROM LIFB: 4
, BEFORE 4XD AFTER TREATMENT. y
A ORIGINAL ’
Z0ZONIZED OX MARROW 3
(Capyrighind.) 7
B This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe J
7 ‘ia the ‘that ‘or
SEs ts aper arose
A apeceaeciitanee wae
Awas the frst preversticn, over’ for ¥
eve |
: Rae
See ere
j fev Full ciceecione with © Saly 06g
B ns BO cents for one bustle o- ’
ame
fos EET EBON oe,
Lae ee ee eS eS eS OO OS
WANTED.
The Broad Ax desires to engage the
services of one or two popular young
women as collectors, subscription and
advertising solicitors. Geod salary
paid te astive workers. Call or address
JULIUS ¥. TAYLOR, 504 Armour
aveuue.
‘What Is Kething?
‘An old. farmer, being elect-
ed a member of the local school board,
ane oni
M Z ques-
4 ar yon te
ia? -
; + day for baidin’ yer horse!”
ee a Ci oe ke Se
_ BARNEY BENSON,
House and Fire Wrecking,
| MOVER of Al! Kinds of
HEAVY MACHINERY.
Smoke Stacks, Cupolas and Monuments
Erected. Hoisting and Placing of aij
kinds of Beams and Girders for
archi:ectural work.
Office. 31 South Canal St.. Chicco
Yates Gee ee ;
The Mutual Reserve
und Life or Hew Work...
OVER $41,000,000 PAID IN LOSSES.
Insurance for the Protection of the family at actual cost
E. P. Barer, M’g’r. Juxivs ¥. Tartor, Special Agt
490 Roanoke Bidg., 145 La Salle Ss. 6040 Armor Ave.
a |
saga on eras cee
| POOL AND BILLIARDS
| BRAXTON’S
| =-PLACE
| SAMPLE ROOM
Fine Wings and Liquors
Imported and Domestic Cigass
260 West Lake St.
| mM GEORGE
Jas. J. McCormick,
SAMPLE ROOM
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
4 JOSEPE a 2 eimai JOSEPH STRAUSS
SALE AND EXCHANGE STABLE.
"Driving, Draft and General Business Horses
Always on Hand
"eee OHIOAGO, IN.
B. F. RoGERS & ComPANyY
INSURANCE
LIGATRING’S CDD CAPIERS.
Vawerthy Lover Killed on Grave of
‘True Hearted Girt,
The romantic have found food for
contemplation in deaths by sudden
strokes of lightning, in which they
have conceived that a higher power
visited upon the heads of sinful mor-
tals a just punishment for offenses for
which the human code had no penalty
Provided. One of these was where a
few years ago a young girl descended
from the Indian race, educated at Car-
lisle, and of refined tastes and lovely
disposition fell in love with a young
missionary who had gone to her tribe's
Tesidence to preach the gospel. The
‘Deautiful girl was a member of his
congregation and he showed that he re-
clprocated her love, but it was devel-
oped that he considered the trace of
Indian blood in her veins a bar to
their marriage. The girl killed herself
and a few nights afterward there came
@ severe thunder-storm, at the aessa-
tion of which the young minister was
missing. Later his dead body was
found on the grave of the girl, where
he had been struck down by a bolt of
lightning. The collectors of the curi-
ous stories of the freaks of lightning
have preserved the account of the case
where what appeared to be a bali of
five was observed roiling along the
ground and finally into a shed where
‘several pigs were penned. With com-
ae ourmuing tts so far hace a
yb an a 4
i At a see on eS
Se ee ee Re ee ae ad
@ebeteds tex ee ee.
GAY AND LOUD WEDDING.
Ear-Splitting Music Accompanes the
Wedding Marches in Morocce
Weddings in Morocco are evening
functions, never take place in the
blaze of noon. A procession, the long-
er the better, is a sine qua non. The
lady is nearly enveloped in gauze and
muslin and packed into a trim Kittle
red box, just as if she were an auto-
matic doll or the newest thing in
hats, so that she can no more be seen
than a diamond wrapped up in wadding
and shut in a casket. The box is
fastened on the hack of a mule or 4
horse, and when these details are sat-
istactorily settled the procession start’
All her kith and kin, as well as the
relatives. and friends of her future
lord, ride in state or solemaly march
on foot to the sounds of weird music
which would madden a European. The
instruments are ear-splitting. But the
vocal sounds uttered by the women
folk, by way of wishing the couple
good Inck, are simply soul-seathing.
The l00-loo-ioo, lee-lee-lee shrieked
out with shrill voices are as terrible
as a women for the dead.
of what they ows thomenifex they 17
of what they owe the they are
not satisfied with even this, but invest
in gunpowder, and beep ‘firing all the
way to the bride n’s house.
If your mearest Graggest dees not
have the @rizinal Ozenized Ox-Marrow
he cam get it fer yeu trom aay whole-
sale druggist im the city. It straight-
ems kinky hair, Warranted harmless.
Only 5¢ comts’s bottle. The Ouonized
Oz-Marrew Ce., 16 Wabash Ave, Cul-
come, UL
Read ; ‘Broad Ax,
wet nema Cage