The Broad Ax

Saturday, November 2, 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)
THE BROAD AX HEW TO THE LINE. PRESIDENT THEO. ROOSEVELT AND PROF. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. Since the simple and unimportant incident of President Roosevelt and Professor Washington dining together at the White House, we have become more fully convinced than ever that the great mass of the American people both white and black, are perfectly ignorant of the history of this republic; that they have no taste for reading solid literature; that their reading consists largely of the Police Gazette and other sensational and trashy newspapers and books. For if they were familiar with the affairs of this country or with the works and writings of its great historians, they would or could learn that Thomas Jefferson was the first President of the United States to invite a member of the African race to dine at the White House with him. Benjamin Banneka, author and publisher of the first American almanac, and one of the most profound scholars, astronomers and mathematicians, was the Negro who had the pleasure of enjoying a repast with President Jefferson. Thomas Jefferson did not only eat with Mr. Banneka, while serving as Presiden of the whole people, but he wrote that distinguished Negro a letter, wherein the third President thanked him for a copy of his almanac, which he sent to the Academy of Sciences at Paris. Mr. Jefferson concluded his letter to Mr. Banneka by saying: "Nobody wishes more than I do, to see such proofs as you exhibit, that nature has given to our black brethren talents equal to those of the other colors of men, and that the appearance of a want of them is owing only to the degraded condition of their existence, both in Africa and America. I can add, with truth, that no one wishes more ardently to see a good system commenced for raising the condition, both of their body and mind, to what it ought to be." Benjamin Banneka assisted the commissioners to survey and lay out the District of Columbia; his reputation as a student of history extended all over the world; he could speak five different languages; he was master of the arts and the sciences, and when he passed away his death was greatly mourned throughout America and Europe. President Grant was the next to invite a Negro to eat with him at the White House, and J. Milton Turner was thus honored. President Hayes had Fred. Douglass at his private dinner table once or twice; but it remained for the last great Democratic President, Grover Cleveland, to brush all formalities aside and invite Fredrick Douglass and his white wife to a diplomatic dinner at the White House, which was attended by all the foreign ministers, and the high dignitaries of this country, and Mr. and Mrs. Douglass mingled with President and Mrs. Cleveland and their distinguished guests with the greatest ease and freedom. President Cleveland did not attempt to sneak Mr. and Mrs. Douglas into the White House through the side door, like President Roosevelt did with Professor Washington, and entertain them privately, but on the contrary they were on the same level with all the rest of his guests. But it is entirely immaterial to us whether Prof. Booker T. Washington was the first or the only Negro to dine with President Roosevelt or with any other President. The great, or we might say, the question which overshadows all other questions is: What does President Roosevelt propose doing towards improving and bettering the condition of the American Negro? That is the great question. Will he speak out against those who joined in the race riot which occurred down in Louisiana a few days ago! We fear not. Will he, as President of the whole people, say to the Southern people that they shall not, nor they must not continue to disfranchise the Negro, and permit ignorant white men to vote? No. President Roosevelt is a wily politician of the first water and he does not propose to say one word or do one thing which would tend to disabuse the minds of the whites of the South of the prejudicial ideas that they entertain in relation to permitting --- the Negro to have a voice in the affairs of this government. To all intents and purposes President Roosevelt even after he has dined with Professor Washington, will adhere to President McKinley's Southern policy, namely, to crush out, distranchise, brutalize and throw overboard the Negroes of the South, and hold or retain the Negro voters of the North. As the great champion of industrial education we entertain the highest respect for Prof. Booker T. Washington, but as the great and only leader of the Afro-American race, we think he is a failure; he is unlike Toussaint L'Ouverture, who found his race in fetters and chains when he appeared on earth, but before Toussaint L'Ouverture left it he secured absolute freedom for his people and founded a government for them which has stood for one hundred years. When Prof. Booker T. Washington assumed the leadership of the Negro race he found them voting in all the states, but if he is not very careful and if he fails to thunder forth against the unspeakable and villainous outrages and wrongs heaped upon the Negro, he will leave them disfranchised by all the states throughout the Union. RECONSTRUCTION SURE. The great tragedies that find publicity through the press, and which electrify the nation, are not the only great nor most momentous tragedies in life. In every city of the land the mourners are going about the streets, a solemn, silent protest against the inhumanity of the age, which robs many of all that is lovely, needful and theirs of right in a land of liberty, and, lacking which, makes of life a tragedy. To keep soul and body together, hundreds of thousands of children are compelled to toil for mere pittances. They may be seen morn and night, in any metropolis, wearily wending their way to and from the juggernaut of all-but-unrequited labor, which, day by day, slowly crushes the fettered spirit and wastes as surely the fragile frame. These, indeed, are tragedies. Every novel of the slums, moreover, is a medieval horror. Indeed, the dark ages produced effulgence in comparison to the gloom of despair that exists there. The slums contain tragedy coalescent, tragedy conglomerate. Hope has fled; virtue is fleeting; crime is industry. But there is also the tragedy of success, of greed, of tyranny. The system which makes misery, want and ruin the portion of many, is the greatest tragedy of "civilization." The moneypower creates more tyrants than saints; and when it usurps the functions of government, it transforms citizens into serfs. In our own country, the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is slowly vanishing. Republicanism is becoming capitalism. War is banishing the spirit of peace. But through all the disquieting clouds that darken the national horizon, there is a ray of hope that comes to cheer each patriot heart. The fundamental principles of our government are imperishable. A brighter, better and stronger Democracy is taking collossal form, and the common people, of which it is composed, will arise and drive out the money-changers from the temple of liberty, re-inaugurate a government of, for and by the people, and build an economic system upon the broad foundations the fathers laid, more closely cognizant of the needs of the age, demolishing the barriers which exist between class and class, guaranteeing "equal rights to all, special privileges to none," and removing the causes which make of life a tragedy for thousands and a saturnalia for a few. This is the destiny to which this land was set apart. Its attainment is as sure as the word of Omnipotence.—The Free Press, Manti, Utah. NO NEGROES INVITED TO DINE. It is noticeable that while most of our leading Republican politicians are warm in their declarations that they would gladly entertain a Negro at dinner none of them point to any occasion on which they have done so.—Indianaapolis Sentinel. HON. JOHN E. TRAEGER. United States Senator William E. Mason will preside at the meeting of the United Irish Societies which will be held at the Auditorium Tuesday evening, Nov. 24. HON. JOHN The Popular and Efficient Coroner of the Democratic Party, and Member Tilden Democracy. "It is significant that Mr. Booker T. Washington should suggest a refutation of some of the remarks credited to him in his interview with the President at the White House on Southern appointments and a denial by his private secretary of any reported interview anent the Roosevelt dinner that might to sent out by ambitious but unauthorized newspaper correspondents. We say significant because when Mr. Washington was in Chicago, during the meeting of the members of the National Negro Business Men's League, he positively refused, though beseeched by newswriters, to express an opinion on the Pierce City (Mo.) outrage, lest the meaning he might wish to convey be misconstrued in the public prints. Why Walter Wellman, perhaps the most reliable newspaper correspondent in America, should make Mr. Washington appear in the dirty garb of a politician, we cannot understand, and are at a loss of words for explanation." —Indianapolis World. It must be remembered that Prof. Booker T. Washington was a delegate to the Republican National Convention held at St. Louis in 1896, that during the proceedings of the convention he was slated to second the nomination of Thomas B. Reed, but Mark Hanna bought up most of the colored delegates who came up from the South shouting for Reed, and free silver, and the result was that Reed's presidential boom collapsed and Prof. Washington was not called upon to second his nomination, but after Major McKinley's election to the presidency, T. Thomas Fortune, who is the bosom friend of Prof. Washington says that "Prof. Washington was very anxious to become a member of President McKinley's cabinet," and from that time to the present Prof. Washington has assumed the responsibility of advising the President how to shape his Southern policy, how to fill the appointive offices in the South, etc. Yet Prof. Washington would like to make the ignorant people believe that he is not in politics. But it appears to us that Prof. Washington is endeavoring to accomplish the audacious feat of riding two separate and distinct political horses in opposite directions at the same time. He may possess diplomacy enough to do so, but we doubt it. Alderman Henry L. Fick, whose big heart is generally always in the right place, will have no opposition or trouble in being returned to the ity council from the Ninth Ward next spring. ```markdown ``` Hon. Samuel Alschuler can have the nomination for Sheriff of Cook County if he will accept it. He carried Cook County and Chicago last fall, and he can carry this city and county in 1902. E. TRAEGER. Cook Country; Influential Leader of Member of the Executive Committee of the CAPITALISM AND RACE HATRED. What was "the most damnable outrage ever perpetrated by an American citizen?" The assassination of President McKinley? Not at all. The "most damnable outrage" was the act of President Roosevelt in "sending an invitation to a Negro, Booker T. Washington." to dine at his private table in the White House. At least that is the opinion of a Tennessee newspaper, the "Memphis Scimitar." The "Scimitar" is not an anarchistic publication by any means. It s thoroughly orthodox in its capitalism so far as its lights permit. In Booker T. Washington it can now see only a "nigger," but that is a deficiency of education, which time will remedy. When it discovers that an educated "nigger" can be made extremely useful to the capitalist class as a decoy duck, to keep the colored race in line as a bulwark for present conditions, the "Scimitar" will trans form the "damnable outrage" into a somewhat disagreeable but necessary expedient, and the development of modern industry in the South will become the most potent factor in causing the "Scimitar" to modify its expressions on such matters. The Southern capitalist may at present despise and hate the "nigger," but when he is confronted with a rebellious workingclass and a growing socialist movement which is always a result of modern industry, he will feel more and more inclined to swallow his pride and admit that concessions to a "nigger" like Booker T. Washington, may become at times exceedingly appropriate and expedient.-The Workers Call, Chicago. Leon F. Czolgoss was electrocuted in Auburn Prison Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, for murdering President McKinley, and by putting him to death the curtain in the last act or scene of the national drama was rung down. Czolgoss was a hero to the very last. He would not repent of his crime, he did not want the priests or preachers, nor no one else to pray and sing for him: he met his fate like a brave and courageous stoic. We greatly admire men of the stamp of Czolgoss, for he possessed the bravery and the manhood to cling to his honest convictions while he stood on the brink of eternity. Alderman Charles Martin intends giving up the ghost in the Fifth Ward and he will retire from the citycouncil in the springtide, and it now looks as though ex-Alderman James J. McCormick, will again button on his large aldermanic diamond star after next April. GEORGE J. TERRELL, KING OF THE GAMBLERS AND BLACKLEGS, ASSAULTED JULIUS F. TAYLOR. Wednesday morning last, while passing along on 47th street, near the corner of Armour avenue, George J. Terrell, the cheap gambler and the low crap-shooter, who is apparently backed up by S. A. T. Watkins, and all the dead-beats and the other tough element residing in that vicinity, caught hold of our right arm and attempted to prevent us from going about our business, but we freed our arm from his grasp and warned him not to put his big, dirty hands on us. Then this king of the gamblers and head pusher of those who hang out in bawdy houses, picked up a large brickstine, which are being used for paving 47th street, and Terrel, who wants to make the cheap little white politicians of the 30th Ward believe that he totes all the "niggers" around in his hip pocket, raised the brick above his rattle-brained and empty head as though he would hit us in the face with it. But the bully and coward was afraid to do so. In the meantime we have placed our account against this nameless creature in the hands of County Constable Robert T. Sims, for collection, and dead-beat Terrell may hear something drop before long. CHIPS. The colored man or woman who reads race journals can get the pure unadulterated gospel of true racial elevation. William C. Lawson, who is in the swim around the Criminal Court building, is freely mentioned for treasurer of Cook County. William Still, author of "The Underground Railroad," and the last surviving colored member of the Anti-Slavery Society in Philadelphia, celebrated his eightieth birthday anniversary this month. O'Gara, King & Co., Baker Brothers, and William Kuecken & Co., have been awarded the contract for supplying all the coal for the institutions of Cook County. O'Gara, King & Co. received the largest slice of the cake. Many of the politicians are in favor of Ernest Hummel, the prince of the German-American Democrats, for County Treasurer. Mr. Hummel, if nominated, could be elected, for he is a good mixer and popular with all classes. The political party that avoids declaring itself in plain terms on public questions through fear of losing votes is no more to be depended upon than the man who refrains from stealing only when he is afraid of being detected in the act.—The Commoner. Lawyer S. A. McElwee, late of Nashville, Tenn., and his family, are now settled down to housekeeping at 3153 Forest avenue, where they will be delighted to receive their friends. Mr. McElwee's law offices are in the Ogden Building, 36 South Clark street. There is much talk going on among all the leading politicians in favor of James A. Quinn, City Sealer of Chicago, for secretary of the new Democratic County Central Committee. Mr. Quinn's selection for that position would be eminently satisfactory to all factions. If the Negro preacher would not preach so much about Daniel in the lion's den and the three Hebrew boys, but preach more plain and practical sermons to the people and tell them to do unto others as they wish to be done by, we would have a better people and a better race.—Ex. Mr. John Kunz, the present chief Deputy Sheriff of Cook County, has a very strong following among the German-Americans and other nationalities who are urging him to make the race for sheriff, and it is said that Mr. Kunz will become an active candidate for that office. Last Saturday night the Tilden Democracy perfected permanent organizations in all the wards of the city, and Mr. Walter S. Bogle, chairman of its city central committee feels cocksure that the Tilden Democracy will win out in the city and county at the next primaries. n Attorney William Peacock, who made such a grand run for Congress last year is entitled to have the same honor conferred upon him next year, and it is our opinion that in case Mr. Peacock was re-nominated for Congress, that he would come out far ahead under the wires. President Roosevelt has broken bread with a Negro, and the Southern white aristocracy has had a fit. As the President has not invoked a coal miner or a bricklayer to dine the White House the Northern capitalists are inclined to view the incident with some degree of complacency.—Ex. Ex-Judge A. A. Goodrich attended a meeting of the Tilden Democracy held in the Sixth Ward last Thursday night, and the next morning Mayor Harrison demanded his resignation as one of the inspectors at the Bridewell. From now on the fight between the city hall forces and the Tildenites promises to be mighty hot and very bitter. The Negroes of the twentieth century must be men and women in the fullest sense of the word. The multitude of public schools and the many opportunities for acquiring education renders reference to an unfortunate bondage of grand parents more than an extension. The Negro must get himself into the spirit of the age.—Ex. The grand jury reindicted Robert H. Burke, the ex-city oil inspector. It also threw the hooks into Max Prager, who has been Mr. Burke's chief assistant, and he will have to stand trial along with his late boss for conspiracy. Lieutenant Peter J. Joyce walked out of Judge Ball's court a free man on Thursday, and he owes his good luck to his able attorney, Col. A. D. Gash. One more Negro was sent to the great beyond on Thursday, at Hodgenville, Ky., by a mob of respectable white citizens. These honorable citizens hung Silas Easters, the Negro, riddled his body with bullets, not because he had outraged a white woman, but they committed that crime against Easters, and against the law, simply because he had had a dispute or some trouble with a white man. Congressman John J. Feely, president of the Tilden Democracy, who re-nominated Mayor Carter H. Harrison in the last city convention, and his honor, the mayor, have crossed swords through the columns of the public press this week, and while Mayor Harrison is no novice when it comes to slinging mud at those who manifest a disposition not to holler and shout for him and Mr. Boss Burke; but Mayor Harrison is no match for Congressman Feely, and all hands are free to confess that his honor came out of the scrap considerably worsted, that the boy congressman is too much for the present mayor of Chicago. Next Tuesday elections will be held in Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Kentucky, Virginia and New York. Owing to this fact United States Senator Joseph Benson Foraker, who thought President Grover Cleveland was a traitor to his country for wanting to return the old flags to the exrebels, but in his opinion President McKinley was a saint worthy to be canonized for doing the same thing, declared on the political stump in Ohio the other day, that President Roosevelt was a great statesman because he eat dinner with Prof. Booker T. Washington, or words to that effect. At the time President Roosevelt and Professor Washington chewed and drank together we had forgotten about the state elections, but now we are able to see through the scheme. President Roosevelt, who claimed that Negro soldiers are no good unless they are officered by small-brained white men and that they would not do their duty until he threatened to blow the tops of their heads off with his big pistols, labors under the impression that he can whip all the independent Negroes back into line for Grand Old Lily White Parade of disfranchisement by throwing a cent lunch into Prof. Booker T. Washington's belly. , Crass ic 5 ae asta == igbyawala lt 7 pence: Ae . 5 Se Angvortising tates made known os appllaniies, cEdveer af eaassacieatran $3 TEE mROFD ax, '0 Anwous AVEweE, Oxrsscs. FOLIUS ¥. TAYLOR, Bdiser and Publishes at Taylor’é Falis, Minn. Yobn Bmesy found «shell in the river which contained a large pearl perfectly votnd and of that peculiar luster which makes it very valuablc. Those who claim te know say it is the finest ever found in the west and is worth at least $2,000. Outbreaks of typhoid and diphtheria of @ most serious character have oc- ‘surred at Belfast. In-ten days 98 cases Bf typhoid, all of a severe type, were admitted to the hospital, the total un- tier treatment Deing 254; while 19 cases of diphtheria had been admicted in two Gays. One nurse has died of ty- ghoid and several others are ailing. The number of doctors and nurses is to be increased. . ‘Thé singing of the favorite hymns of the Inte president was perhaps the most remarkabje feature of the serv- ices held in memory of him, across the “Aflantic as well as in -his own land, ‘tm synagogue as well as in church. The circumstance shows that “Nearer, my God, to Thee’ ‘and “Lead, Kindly ‘Light’ express emotions that are felt ‘tn -every ‘religious heart, be the body that encloses it Jew or Gentile. “ There was quite a sensation in Ret- innd square, Dublin, recently, when a ‘Boer flag was found floating from the T0of of the Orange Hall. How it got there is somewhat a mystery, it is -strmised that some of the members, Temiembering that their~ patron of “glorious, pious and immortal” mem- ‘ory.came of the same stock as the Boers, took this method of showing their sympathy with the burghers who ‘gre still in the field. ~Qwing to the incessant rains the iver Judrio, ‘which fiows ‘along the Dorders of Italy, Austria, and the dis- trict of the Friuli, overfiowed its banks one night recently, inundating all the land, the surrounding towns of Romans, Medea and Vatse. Alarm ‘belis'were kept ringing, and the coun- “try people fied in haste to the towns, but eleven ‘persons are reported to have been drowned, and much damage has been done te property and crops. "Sven Hedin has discovered a second ‘Dead Sex in the Highlands of Thibet— & vast ‘lake so impregnated with salt that indigenous life is out of the ques- thon. It was impossible for him to g¢t his boat close to the shore, so that he and his companious had to wade out ‘two boat lengths before she would float and this was sufficient to coat their jegs and clothes thickly with salt. The satire bed of the lake appeared to con- sist of salt, and the density of the life- less water was, of course, very high. Jorevin de Rochefort, who published in Paris in 1671 an account:of his trav- is im England, tells the following: “While we were walking about the town ‘{Worcester) he asked me if ft owas the custom in France as in Eng- land that when the children went to echeol they carried in their satche! ‘with their books a pipe of tobacco, ‘which their mother took care to fill early in the morning, it-serving them ‘instead of breakfast, and that at the his book to light his pipe, the master smoking with them and teaching “hem how to hold their pipes and draw in the tobacco.” “2 . Iai Madison, who was to have been hanged st . Parkersburg, W. Ve., for murder recently, has been respited by Gor., White for sixty days. Madison claims that he has already been legally executed, and that it is not lawtul to bang & man twice for the same offense. ‘Two years ago be was sentenced to be ‘hanged, but'a stay of execution waz granted, and the state supreme court granted him an sppeal. Through ac ‘@rror, the records of the court in which he was colivicted showed that he was executed instead of respited. Madison's lawyers claim that, according to the ‘Fecords, Madison ts dead and cannct be (gr saab ne ent At 2 regular meeting of Magnaila Lodge, Knights of Pythias of Sharpe- ‘burg, M¢., resolutions were adopted de- mouncing United States Genator Wel- lington of Maryland, a member of the order, for the remarks he iz alleged to have made in regard to the assassina- tion of President McKinley, who was aiso & member of the Knights of Pythi- remarks made by Senator Weilington ee ae Jonge" a member. They con- {née by demanting the seustor' er- " -2OEy lodge, Knights of Pythias of ae Sait eae POISON IN SILK STOCKINGS. Ye es ims pagers marx: nga Seroniy | pessoas med rear a ee ne ea ae eine of ten ts-re by Bp mance Ror een ae cee en ee ee om Srosous eet ant hetnieiainetihahdns Stacnin Seen tne aia casiaieatt ou ahs pyeperts a te - aanaa4 4 _ oe at Eyscm vite Seen Sorat Sagi SF PI go ‘ett o the stik—and silk ‘ ‘Many troubles. ‘Colored ‘stockings often have been ac- cused of causing poisoning. Not only = cause eruptions on the legs, but In wome casts poisonous ms- tem.’ Arsenic, which im the early days of aniline dyes was often present, used ‘to be the imcr-micated .metal. This, however, is a mode of arsentcal poison- ing of which very little has been heard for many years, Now it is tin which is arraigned... A case ts reported from ‘Vienna of a woman who suffered from attacks of partial paralysis in the low- er extrometies, with anacsthesia, a sense of coldness and ataxic gait. She bad noticed that whenever these symp- ‘toms Were most pronounced her feet ‘were colored yellow, aud it was found ‘that this staining was derived from the light yellow silk stockings which she wore. On analysing these they were found to contain quantities of tin. -Careful chemical examination of the excreta showed that they also con- tained tin, so that whatever may bave been the cause of the symptoms there could be no doabt that the patient had tin in ber system. The moral seems to be that persons who perspire should ‘mot wear pretty silks next to their ekin unless they cam be sure that they are not dyed with colors ‘mordanted with tin, Possibly there may be fn this case have been some carelessness, ‘and it may not have been the meta? combined with the color, but rather ‘the excess, which had mot been_prop- erly removed, that did the mischief. This, however, will not afford much ‘conbfort to the Iaiies who buy silk ‘Stockings, for how are they to tell whether any particular color is safe or ‘Rot? It is unfortunate, but it seems to ‘be the fact that in many instances col- ors which are “fast” enough in relation to ordinary washirg are by no means incapable of solution in perspiration, especialiy when this natural secretion has been modified by the various fer- mentive changes which it is apt to un- éergo—The Hospital DISCOVERED BY ACCIDENT. How the Paving Value of Asphalt Was , ‘Brought to Notice. All forms of bituminous pavements, whether manufactured from natural or artificial asphalt, are im fact artificial stone pavements. The industry started with -the use of the natural rock as- phalt from the mines in the Val de ‘Travers, Canton Neufchatel, Switzer- land. The mines were. discovered in 1721, but It- was in 1849 that its utility as a road covering was first noticed. ‘The rock was then being mined for the purpose of extracting the bitumen con- tained tn it for its-use in medicine and the arts. It is a limestone found im- pregnated with bitumen, of which it yields, on analysis, from 8 to 14 per cent. It was observed that pieces of Tock which fell from a wagon were crushed by the wheels,-and under the combined influence of the traffic and heat of the sun a good road surface ‘was produced. A macadam read of asphalt rock was then made, which gave very good results, and finally, in 1854, a portion of the Rue Bergere was Jaid in Paris of. compressed asphalt os @ concrete foundation. In 1858 a still larger sample was lid, and from that ‘time it has been laid year by year in Paris. From Parts it extended to Lon- don, being laid on ‘Threadneedle street in 1869°anéd Cheapside in 1870, and is successive years on other streets. Teimecinative. The impression has been general that the Latin races are peculiarly im- aginative. Mr. Marion Crawford holds an opposite view. According to his experience, people. of very temperate climates are the reverse of imagina- tive. It is only in the extreme. north and in the south thst this quality of the mind is highty developed. Crawford aséerts that the Italian people have lit- tie imagination, and cites as proof of this the Italian custom of presenting the story of Bethlehem on Christmas day with figures of various sizes, He thinks the use of these figures to aid the ‘imaginative proves the imagins- tion defective. Fairy stories and ghost stories are practica.ly unknown among the Italians, whe are incapable of ée- te draw these pictures for them. To ee ae anak tae ily in Palermo and’ ‘ Biclly, to see the itinerant story-teller with his back to aay awe he ‘great crowd of interest Sea I the hotr, it seems then, Gat f many. fine qualities, but was deficie was borrowed mie Stee A Giittertag Sultan — Arrayed in’ all bis state clothes, the sultan of Jobore is a glittering curios- it}. He wears gems worth $12,009,000. epaciettes, tm Bis gioaie, ae te a : ia eufla—Chicago Journal. Shooting Timber Slides. he | MT a : ie elas mes" Se pr Py Pt Se, PE Ae taro oe | i _ iia 7 SS one a: F Ail yl Rae ie ext See Ga ee mommaeectere Mae PRIS AS as . Te, AR [purrxce 2 ae P= Seer Le AF 3 A “Uy; —— * St 7 Ve [ee ee ‘ pjsu Ser “es. : —— ey (rp ra) —_——" Sa ee a \ ———a gry 9 6 4 jp 7 ~ = ea ae ge LM fb phhs ee = <= ae eS LZ - a = ROYAL PARTY SHOOTING TIMBER SLIDES ON THE CHAUDIERE. vat the & a 2 by the hetr to the : ; ‘his tour - is sald by ge honor at Ottawa, OM. = was the most delightful episode of die téur mot only because of its pieturesque and individual character, Dat because it was an “undress” affair, By the request of the duke the order of the day was pidin ¢élothes and plainly given out that he was satlated wan fussing Sis ages On okt Sate ‘The four or five hours that the affair lasted were cramuied with incident, but they were redolent of local color, infused with rare autumn sunlight un- der the fresh smell of Canadian pines, with the exhilarating breezes of val- ‘Jeys and uplands, that are more buoy- ‘nt im their effect than champagne. The duke and duchess learned what Canada really means, what the life of its voyageurs, the sports that are most Rational, the appearance of its every- Gay folk. To summarize the- day's events, the @uke and duchess shot the timber slide, traveled in canoes, just as Cham- plain did three centuries ago, saw voy- ageurs in water sports, presided over the finish of a great race of war ca- noes, ate a lumberman's meal in & shanty and cookhouse, saw tree cut- ting and logging as it is done in the ‘bush, the strange dances of the woods- men, heard the “chanson populatre” sung by the lumvermen, and finally a typical speech from a habitant, fore- ‘man that sounded like a page from Dr. Drummond. The latter came’as a cli- max, and left the duke doubled up ‘with laughter and a good fellow with the crowd, enthusiastic over the whole programme. The war canoes on which the royal party and its retinue were conveyed te the scene of events were manned by Indians from the upper Gatinean and ‘Temiscamingue. ee ee An Exciting Trip. Shortly after 10 o'clock the royal party. was conveyed to Booth’s lum- ber yards on a trolley car of sump- tuous finish, especially built for the oceasion. They walked down an ave- nue flanked by towering piles of odor- ous pine boards to ine head of the tim- ber slides above Chaudiere falls. Here six cribs, the units of the great rafts which are towed down the St. Law- rencé, were in waiting, manned by brilliant-clad river men. The voyag- eurs wore the scarlet shirts they love, with blue ‘trousers, braced by sashes as Ddrilliant as Joseph's coat of many colors. Some.of them wore the Egyp- tian medal on their breasts and had taken part in the Nile expedition un- Ger the late Lieut.-Col. Fred Denison. “The bronzed faces, the lithe, museu- lar bodies of the mén, some of them gray-haired and some of'them youtas, added to the picturesqueness of the scene. “ The crib on which the duke and parted fiew the royal standard, and was third in the procession. ‘That containing Sir Wilfrid Laurier and his earee Salowpel immediately after. ‘With many characteristic gesticula- tions and shouts by the rivermen, the procession was under way, The slides constructed to overcome the Chau- Alere falls and accomplish a drop of forty-five feet in 4 quarter of a mile ‘The water is very low at the present ‘time, “but, nevertheless, the. run. was ‘aR exhilerating one with water up and splashing before the |ipet' of tho.travelers. = * Pe eer cas ootege eri , e ; fee a are ee ee e awe oes = ronan, snd he comes chara to | me wy a tale 4 > took | place at the foot 2 a Ge ppteokans ee oo, oe i © Parliament Bill, © ‘What Doub of Ink Did. Se ae te canae B way Of appesring in the composing Hs press rooms at the most unexpect- ‘ea times, and as his visits often re- Sulted in a general “shake-up” of the ! fianes: ot 8s ree ar ree with fear and trembling by ‘employes. One time one of the preas- Bests Rent SAS EL Beis. ¢. ae Eee s i pas Pai a tS er ee ae li : er eS men, an “feellent workman, who had ‘been there for many yeurs, but was guilty of a lapse of sobriety, black eye and was In a quandary ‘td what excuse he should offer if the proprietor should notice it. By s easton inapiration he seized an tuk oller-and daubed some ink on his tace, quite coverimg the discoloration. ‘Presently the governor came in, and, with tie foreman, went through the foom, commenting on every detail and ‘ooking very sharply at every work- ‘man. When about to leave he sud- ‘@enly pointed to the inky pressman ‘and said: “What ts that man's name?” “The man quaked in bis shoos, until he ‘continued; slowly: “I want you to give ‘that man a dollar 4 week more wages. He is the only man in the room who Jooks as if he had been working.” Deraieies Ficctda Everctadcs. Acanal has been cut into the Dismal ‘swamp and anothér into the Okeefino- ‘kee. There remains but the Florida ‘Everglades, long unknown merely be- ‘cause of the terrors surrounding it to ‘the imagination, though it was never deadly nor dangerous to the Indian or ‘the hunter. Now the Everglades will ‘goon become one of the richest por- tions of & rapidly developing state that allows nothing to stand idle. A com- pany has been charatered which will Probable drain it by cutting a ship canal, and another incorporated to cross it with a railroad and telegraph ‘ine from the gulf to the Atlantic. Therefore the visitor of a few years hence will find a new scenic route opened for exploitation. Leaving Jacksonville -he can sweep acfoss the state in a grand circle and return at his leisure to wonder how and why it ‘was supposed the southern end of our state was once considered uninhabit- able as well as uninhabited. We have already prophesied the existence of the greatest sugar plantation the world knows along a line of road from Miam! to Tampa. It may be that some now living will see it. Whr He Chose the Pansies. A very pretty story concerning Pres- ident McKinley is told by the Wash- ington correspondent of the Philadel- phia Record. In the course of a year many autograph albums were sent to the president for his signature, and the request was almost invariably granted. One album iaid before the contained the picture of a. on every page, with a little si jent be- neath. In this case the aid not follow his usual his mame on the first was expected to do, but ‘over the leaves until. he came, ‘of pansies in the middle of ok T pansy is Mrs. McKinley's » and the president smiled when -he saw un- der the picture this sentiment: “You cannot guess the power Of a little simple flower.” He took his pen and wrote under it, “William McKinley,” and sent the al- bum back to the owner. . Yacht Talk. “It seems like such funny talk, and yet I suppose it does mean something. Now, right here it says that the Sham- rock yawed. How do you yaw, George?” “I don’t. And I don’t care to learn.” “And then-.right afterward it says she fluffed. isn’t that a funny word? Is offing anything like yawing, George?” “You may search me, my love...Luffing and yawing may be the ysame thing for all I know.” “And ‘then she came up in the wind, George. Do you suppose she was sunk before she came up?” “No,.I don’t think so, my love. It’s some sort of a technical term, I fancy.” “Not technical, George. It's nautical. And then, see here. Here St says that she went about in stays. What do you suppose that means?” “That's easy, my love. It means that she had ntislaid her waist.”—Cleveland Cmptured a Bottle Nese. In. Dublin Bay smaller fich have lately bad a hard life owing to av merous sharks. One, a “bottle nose,” bas been taught, and it measured 5% feet long. Another, measuring § fect, proved tog strong for the line, which had to be cut. : “Phe fashionable woman does not ‘consider her collection of silver com- without some pieces of Dutch sil- Ao Ee s Se ga koe Nc re y Pe ght 6 ters ps Bc: 7 er TE STERN GS 10 GRANDE WE2*>2 5 Gey COLORADO SPRINGS, PUEBLO, CRIPPLE CREEK. LEADVILLE, GLENWOOD SPRINGS, ASPEN, -GRAND JUNCTION, SALT LAKE CITY, OGDEN, BUTTE, HELENA, SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES, PORTLAND, TACOMA, SEATTLE. .e ~< ‘e€ << << REAGES ALL THE PRINCPAL TOWNS AND MIMING CAMPS IN COLORADO, UTAH AND NEW NEXIO, . THE TOURIST’S FAVORITE ROUTE TO ALL MOUNTAIN RESORTS The Only Line Passing Through Salt Lake City Enroute to the Pacific Coast. ‘ THROUGH] <-> DENVER — CRIPPLE CREEK SALT LAKE CITY LEADVILLE _ OGDEN GRAND JUNCTION SAN FRANCISCO CHICAGO, ST, LOUIS AND SAM FRANCISCO ‘PpIIMA OAbe EVAL. SS) DINING BARS 28 Ais ee 2. JEFFERY, President, 20 mee gear sateen, - — * A, & MUGHES, Ger! Trafic Manager, " & BABOREE. heat Ge Sete emma, & proposal is on foot for holding an fnteornational naval and military ex- Aibition in Brussels next year. Hither- to no such enterprise bas been at- tempted on the continent, and the al- most unfversal intertst taken in naval and military mattersby every European power; it is thought, showld ‘lead to a very latge-attendance from ll parts. Such an exhibition could only take place ina neutral country, and Bel- gium_as a central resort for tourists is the most suitable locality for car- rying out the undertaking. , 8 ee eee eee says: “Walter Baker & Co., of Dor- chester, Mass, U. 5S. A. have given years of study to the skilful prepara- Won of cocoa and chocolate, and have Mevised machinery*and systems pe- tuliar to their methods of treatment. whereby the purity, palatability, and highest nutrient characteristics are re- tained. Their preya ations are known the world ver and have received the highest indorsements from the medical practitioner, the nurse, and the intel- ligent housekeeper and caterer.” Sick Citizens Can Vote. In Victoria a sick voter can record his vote by post; it has been enacted that he can obtain bis ballot paper through the local postmaster from the returning officer, fill it up in the pres- ence of the policeman, who must not look at the name he is writing, and post it. Care of the Compiexica Many persons with delicate skin suffer greatly in winter from chapping. Fre- quently the trouble arises from the use of impure soap and cheap selves. The face and hands should be washed only in clear, hot water with Ivory Soap. A lit- tle. mutton tallow or almond of! may be used after the bath to soften the skin. ELIZA R. PARKER. ' ‘Hat dealers buy principally from the English and Italian markets. Eng- land furnisbes stiff and Italy soft hats. ' We Gare Ecseme. ‘Peortasis, or any skin disease. no matter what your Fowrsescre ier? F. Remedy Co, sake 167 Dearborn *t.. Chicago. ————— Private golf links over two miles in extent have been laid out for the King at Windsor. : Mrs. Austin's Famous Buckwheat makes the finest Buckwheat cakes. Ready in a moment. Ask for Mra. Austin’s Buck- wheat. Refuse substitutes. About 200.000 miles of railroads are operated in the United States. Yam sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved wy life three years ago.—Mrs. THos. RoBBINS. Maple Street, Norwich, N. ¥.. Feb. 17, 1900. What is cheapest to you now Is likely to prove dearest in the enu.—Ruskin. « — PUTNAM FADELESS DYES -color silk,yrool or cotton perfectly at one boil- ing. Sold by druggists, Ive. per package. Kansas wants 160 acres cf St. Louis fair space for an alfalfa exhibit. gO Seemssentty Comet. Doteerar eas. owt anys wo of De. Keaas Great, Eerve, Bemores. Sere Chane, Lessor arch St huaseipnin, Pe The New York banks keep nearly $300,000,000 loaned out. If everyone knew how good a remedy was Hamlin’s Wizard Oil its sales would double in a day. London alone reduces to ashes a mil- lion cigars a week. AGENTS wanted; first 690 catft free; agents, SS sarearce Air oe ‘The fairest land is where live those we love. sil Pk, FQ ESS Dg) Sea ne nts CLOUSS & STANM, Chemists, = 8 Grate Beton, a, ee eer ae So cure eon : oan re the “ oo Ee Ss - ay te pos Nascred dollars for any core vocure see TS oe, SGU }iile Pilla are tho best To Preserve Fiewers. Several methods of preserving the natural color of pressed. Sowers have been suggested, but the Bept, it is said, is that used in the New York botanical garden. After the specimens have been under pressure for a day er two they are laid in papers hedted Im the sun, and this is repeated until the drying is completed. ‘his, it is sald, preserves the colors perfectly. oe ee eee a With the construction of two short gaps, one from a point in North Dako- ta to Miles City and the other from Biflings, Mont., to same place, there will be a telephone line from ocean: to ocean via Boston, New York, Chicago, Helena, Mont, Portland and Los An- geles, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrep.’ Echsation, ulnye pull, cares Wind Got Boa pote Our deeds hurry before us to open or to bar the way. eee MRS. H. F. ROBERTS a ee Pinkham 8 Chance, Know She Can Help You as She Did Me.” “Draw es ae world praises great lormers; their names and fames are in the ears of everybody, end the publis poms helps sprent Se ee mong them all Lydia Pinkham's name goes to_posterit _S -—- H uN 3 | % = Hl \\ \ (tae H \ XN sf, i NS Sa =~ yA Se aa HE. F. ROBE Na with s softl: ‘breathed blessing from the lips of thouzands upon thousands of women who have been restored to their families when life hung by ® thread, and by thousands of others whose + aching limbs have Suickased cad whet pains you have taken away, * I know whereof I speak, for I have received much valuable bepeit myself SSD vagatah Clntpomesyn for years I have known dozens of wo- men who have suffered with displace- ment, ovarian troubles, ulcerations and inflammation who are strong and well to-day, simply through, the use of oe ee Yo twrite to Mra. Fink ham. She will understand your case Ee and will treat you with Her advice is free, and the address is Lynn, Mass 3 oi Paes saat OINTMENT 1 eee argu ne dafatiy |\Meamese OLD BOOKS WANTED . CONNELL'S a iN THE Forty Amerteans Mitied “ny the Ful pines in the Terrible Gonflict—The Pacificee Gaunel be Trasted. As the American campaign against Sioux of the northwest bad its Lit- Big Horn ‘aassacre, that of the that of the British also againss the iat ite Buluwayo, so the ‘con- ict in the Philippines has its massa- which will pass into history—that Balangiga. When the assurances of H im authority that the rebellion the natives was over were most con- it, along ¢omes the report of 9 rut Broclamation of two years ‘ contemptuous foes and ponse Uy eareless, is surprised and 1 comes to two store American For some time the Ninth regiment, hich covered itself with glory in Cuba in the Filipino campaign, had been statio on the island of Samar, the insurgents are eaid to have n more active than in ay other part of the archipelago. While at cfast Company C was surprised-by of the insurgents whom they had elieved friendly, with the result that of the mem and three officers were killed. Before the insurgerts could get the Americans killed 140 of them. One of the victims was Thomas W. Connell, captain of Company C, a resi- mt of New York, who had seen gal- Nant service with the Ninth during all its campaigns. Capt. Connell was 23 5 of age. It would appear from the reports that more activity on the part of the mericans ig necessary to suppress the insurrectic An officer of the Ninth SN J" s : AN - a Aaa SY wr of e | ae i ey eo / ALL ‘ Uy J Wy: MM) & ; KX Ni Y On ee CAPT. THOMAS W. CONNELL. (Commanding officer of. “Conipany C, who was killed in the massacre ‘Wao Was Aiee 38 toc magacre ~~ of -Balangiga) = writing from Samar some time ‘ago, said: “Do not’ believe” all you hear nearly pacified and complete peace being a matter of a comparatively short time. If the American govern- ment does not'very soon discover its sae anj edie rand cies here and sending Jarge’ of troops home to the United States, as is now being done, it will find out its grave error later. It is part of the Filipino character to be deceptive, and thou- sands of so-called ‘pacificos,’ who for- merly fought against the American troops, are only waiting for what they consider a good. opportunity to renew their warfare against those whom they regard as their conquerors, for the ay- erage Filipino will not believe that we are only anxious to treat them fairly and aid im the development of their country. Their hatred. is constantly slumbering, and their professed friend- ship for Americans is, in the majority of instances, only skin deep.” McKinley Lived and Died Poor. President McKinley was @ poor man when he died. Mrs. McKinley is and was the owner of the McKinley Block in Canton and of other - property, amounting in all-to perhaps $100,000. Mr. McKinley himself was always poor. When he was in Congress he was al- ‘ways compelled to berrow to pay cam- paign expenses and these loans he paid out of his salary. He was worth prac- tically nothing when. elected to the presidency. Though for over fout years as chief executive of the nation he drew a salary of $60,000, he was able to save in all only about $40,000: He carried $67,000 ‘al however, So taot bas eaten Uae ig WN eB sot"ane gibi sake Kinley on 2 comfortable financial ba- sis. Wee & grwoii oe Skyscrapers Miniature Villeges. The skyscraper, aside from its mas- siveness, may not be s dréami of archi- tectural beauty, but it is the best de- velopment of successful utilitarianism mentee ere ‘time: Safety convenience were the first things considered. However, they warmed, well aired, and aré supplied swith all modern’ convenfences—run- ‘ning water, Gectric lights, serviceable service, while 2 of them are How great are the possibilities “of #iawali as o fruit end vegetable grow- eae sinesiry. OUR Be medeeot Some ‘tatoos have been produced in twelve menths. Hadishes become gible in ten Gaye efter sowing, Strewberry ‘Ze Make Fur Leok Mew. “be-used in a room that-has artif. San es Axle grease, tar paint and pitch may be removed by Sano be cleaned with Sine cedar or mahog- any sawdust which bc: been heated ‘im oven, “Alaska sable, seal, electric seal, fox, ete, should be beaten with @ switch ‘until froe from dust, ther jaid with the fur side up and the hot ‘sawdust rubbed im" Be iavish with rubbing. “After this place the gar- Ment upon feather pillows with the furry side down, and beat well unti! all traces of the’ sawdust Dave disap- peared. Then ‘hang out in a shady place. White furs may be cleaned in the sime way, using white cornmeal instead of the sawdust, or if only slightly soiled, by rubbing well with magnesia in cakes. Wet furs should mever be dried near the fire, but shaken and hung away in @ cold room and then brushed—Ladies’ Home Jeurnal. “whe Teachers Wife Clarissa, Minn. Oct. 2$th.—Mrs. Clara. Keys wife of Charles Keys. *chool ‘teacher of this. place, tells a wonderful story. For years her life was one of mis- ery. Her back ached all the time; her head ached all the time; neuralgia ‘pains drove her to desperation. She used much medicine, but failed to get any-Telief till she tried Dodd’s Kidney Pills. She says: “Very soon after I began using Dodd’s Kidney Pills ali my aches and pains vanished like the morning dew. I consider this remedy a God-send to suffering womanhood.” Encouraged by their success in her own case, Mrs. Keys induced her mother, an old lady of 74 years, to use Dodd's Kidney Pills for ber many aches and pains. Now both mother and daughter rejoice in perfect free- dom from illmess or suffering which is something weither had enjoyed for years before. . Two Notable Exceptions. their gallantry than for their wit, and on_example of this virtue is found in the case of an frish judge who pre- _ sided at-a trial in which the plaintiffs were a lady and her daughter. In ‘Summing up tle case, the judge thus gallantly began: “Gentlemen of the Jury, everything in this case seems plain—except Mrs. O'Toole and her charming daughter.” Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green’s - Sens, of Atlanta,Ga. ‘ihe greatest drop<y specialists inthe world. Read their aiver- tisement in another column of this pepér. The largest insect known is the ele- phant beetle of Venezuela. One has ‘Deen found that weighed seven dunces. Mrs. Austin's oS is the real buckwheat favor. pam hme genuine. - “This is regular three-p weather,” says a Kansas rural exchange—‘paw- paw, persimmon and ‘possum.” Do You PRK IN THE WE ee THE ORIGINAL, ] Sea \ ERD figes i RS 2 Nie he Ip oBesine Be SURE PROTECTION bad 8 Soop RPLASE FOR es Bh CO BOSTON AAAS . “VANS” BUCKWHEAT g mm SOW READY. BUY! vars MAKE! = Easter to S97 & Beat: = = Buy = Pack- FLoun ese TO-DAY ee SAN AT ALL “ GROCERS. PATENTS FREE! Pee Stet offer: ga Sag Rae. Meshing tp the 5.9. Fepeet. Bene ‘eferences furnishec in HOW MET Ali KINDS FOR in The Worl f]— 9 ALL PURPOSES LEE ED : “4 a cee. sit STERN Ba t2-22 takes. BORDEN & SELLECK CO. cHICAcO S100 McG, Fee ee ; - tm tock of ‘COmpaDy. OWN Pu acres of See ‘prospectus explaing the @ou'ous : ‘ef thet mber to dumd [2 to anyune on i ounserraitve. Aad reme oes’ tie 4 "S CURE: FOR a es ee, ace bot Do be: | tee | Sis Lars: THE STORY OF SOME WONDERFUL MINES IN COLORADO. ‘When gold was first found near Central City, in Colorado, there was a rush from all of the Eastern States to the gold diggings of the Rocky Mountains. Fortunes were quickly made, the Greggory-Bobtail producing $10,000,000.00 in an incredibly short time, and many other mines producing vast sums of money. Very soon people began prospecting the higher peaks, going up as far as the main range or back-bone of the Rockies. On one of these high mountains was found some very rich ore carrying gold, lead and silver, and a number of assays of this o:v gave an average value of $827.48 per ton. This produced such aa excitement that soon the entire mountain was covered with prospectors staking off claims. The result was that a large number of claims were located, each man securing only a smal] piece of ground, in fact so small that no owner could afford to work his property at any great depth, hence only the surface of these rich ore bodies has ever been mined. One ofthese mines discovered in 1866, called the Stevens, produced nearly $2,000,000 in its first thousand feet, being the only ore body worked at any depth. The other mines were worked to a depth of from 100 to 400 feet anf the work stopped be- cause each owner had so little territory it. would not justify placing heavy machinery on it to prosecute work. Near this territory and in the same belt of veins were located other mines, and one compan¥ sechring a large group was justified in working at great depth, consequently making enormous sums of money. The Dives-Pellican, now down 2,200 feet, has proved the perpetuity of our fissure veins, and has produced more than $i2,000,000.00 and the Colo- rado Central $5,000,000.00, and many other fortunes were made. And yet the richest ground and the largest surface ore bodies were those that have never been worked more than the 100 to 400 feet in depth. For a dozen years past one man has been buying up all of these mines and grouping them into one immense combination. The Stevens group repre- sents now 28 patented mines and mill sites, cover- ing 117 acres, and the Independence group nearly the sane amount of territory, while the Waldorf group covers about 400 acres of the richest mineral terri- tory of the whole Rocky Mountain region. The Wal- dorf company has now purchased. the Stevens and Independence groups, practically owning today all of this old and rich mineral ground. When these mines were originally found and worked there was no railway or market within 700 miles for the ore, while all of the mining supplies, powder, candles, tools, provisions, furniture, were freighted from the Missour! River in ox teams at the enormous cost of 25..cents per pound. Notwithstanding such condi- Reasons Why You Should Buy Some Waldorf Mining Stock. First — Yor hare sared a little money which you eannot invest safely and get any reasonable profit. Second—You cannot lose money in this stock and you will safely make 50 per cent per annum on your investment, with the chances in your favor of even much larger profit. “Third—The management of the company is eco- nomical, experienced, honest, and always succeeds, and has the strongest banking and other indorse- ments. ; Fourth.—The ordinary risks of mining are elimi- mated from this enterprise because we own nearly 200 mines and the three large tunnels which de- Penis necgak ant: gant ix spetes sxe Nave tien palgge areca Bepaw with our own money be- fore suggesting any person else should buy. stock.. The risks are all past and we are now in fine ore and constantly opening more. Sixth This stock is full paid and non-assessable and carries’ no individual responsibility. Seventh —We will begin paying dividends within er ae ee eee fee ee the ‘possibly three or four times. Bighth.—Because our proposition is the only min- ing enterprise in Colorado that has the indorsemeat ae ee aan a ae County and many other eminent authori- “Ninth_—There is no safer bank in the world than a» offering most remarkable ee ee oe See ese ement ad : - ISN ee ira cere ee Te AOS ee a Se ar ee ager oD ee OS, aetieg? or expert reports and for full information about the company and its property address the Salk foo conaottr, Sat Sor SUL GERMS howe > Ode SoU Trifling that Costs. Sciatica and Lambago Sa = op — F Cinmahel Pain } Price, 25c and goc. ~ ; fra mane VA. FARMS $3 sy ysceo” oa GEO. B. CRAWFORD = Richmond. Va. reopen Re ae ie 4 ae: apibere tet ge pe ee ee iy Bree Pr GS ee a Wee a’ Teer ses pe wax Ai a ye ee mete oe Menor egee aS ere eye SERS BA Sth <rer See 4 i deans red RE bot ta Ps RI tee oa Po eared ES ae Be ree NSA ED es ane seas oa rie knee Oates ok Sk OT Oe ST ES GS Reo AB Doe = HUDSON’S ; EXTRACT OF eee = AND EXTRACT OF BEEF . “TRE OnE BEST TOMIC” oS Bye aes ee c Dike Itand order again. pa Sa ao pa TTY Xe Gou't Mott, ssnd h beck end monay wilh ve refunded. 4, T. HUBSON & CO., 465 26th SL, CHICAGO hy Hy 2 - Ay oo '" AY ! , 4, nN | Bee ts Just What Every Farmer Reeds. For 1,2 ov 4 horses. Any boy can set it up fl and rua it. Easly folded out of the way when met te een. Guaranteed in every way. Send § ite winia Fiana ed Sear | w Frantes, etc. SMITH & POMEROY, SFRS., Kalamazoe, Mich. make moath MOENTS So cos hes he Taine us Gookun Co. Dox 0 st, Springdeld, Otie- TAQ) sere rctetts ocnce oases. orchard, 600 pas tare; rieB soll; school and R.R near. Usty BS ‘ecre. List freg. 2005 C. Maks. Bedeensbers, WE. DOUGLAS por) ates SHOES3224 seers sl Peaeee ee eS | = ; po je a & FD wo ah that the wearer 4 ‘ ee ; WW: Few aa re NE ee oe? ee. ee aN CIR See ey ck ee tions these ore bodies were so large and rich that they paid splendid profits to their owners until they struck water and were compelled to stop work until expensive machinery could be obtained. The Ste- vens group, FS ee ee eae has nearly two and one-half miles‘of drifts ard tunnels, making about one and one-half miles of ore in the various levels. The Independence group has about one and one-half miles of work and the original Waldorf group the same. The Waldorf company, now owning all of these mines, covers with its ter- riwory fully one hundred mines or ore bodies, mak- ing the largest combination of mines owned by one company in the State of Colorado. The stock of this company last January was only 8 cents per share, now it is 25 cents per share, showing an in- Mie Seay thee the cack Gi We akc oeae little doubt that the stock will be worth $1.00 per share in twelve months more. The company is now running three large tunnels from three sides of the mountain, which will open these mines at a depth of 2,000 feet, and which will undoubtedly give the greatest ore reserves in the history of mining. On the Mendham mine one man has produced $1,000 per month. On the Commonwealth one man has produced as high as $1,600.00 per month. ; The Johnson mine has produced $350,000.00 in about 350 feet in depth. The Independence mine has been the largest pro- ducer in the group. The Tobin tunnel! is run on the Independence vein, and three weeks ago we opened a fine body of high- grace ore which will greatly increase our output during 1902. . The ores of the company run from $40.00 per ton to $1,900.00 per ton. The average of all ore from our district last year was $109.00 per ton. The Independence group has been worked only from 100 to 400 feet in depth and yet has produced nearly $1,000,000.00. The company now owns territory about 3,000 feet in width by 9,000 feet in length, covering the entire en ee ae welt of veins at their most points, and 2.80 Owns tae large tannels which’ are developing these mines at a great depth. There is no other enterprise in the East or West which offers so safe and profitable investment, and there never was a time when Eastern people had a better opportunity to make comfortable fortunes out of ema)l investments. they have decided to sell a limited amount of stock on eazy payments at 20 cents per share. . 100 shares, $ 4.00 cash, $ 3.00 per mo. for 7 mos. 200 shares, 8.00 cash, 6.00 per mo. for 7 mos. 500 shares, 15.00 cash, 10.00 per mo. for 11 mos, 1,000 shares, 30.00 cash, 20,00 per mo. for 11 mos, 2,000 shares, 50.00 cash, 30.00 per mo. for 15 mos, 5,000 saares, 160.00 cash, 56.0v per mo. for 20 mos, Write for cash discount. ee eee 7 Dna San Speaking an experience of twenty years in Clear Creek County. and ating been acquainted with Argentine Geese fr ust snd iia Tconerder inoue ot the best Mine gr district known to soe for the amount of development, Work. fold” “wreck with ow methods and reduced pres for 120 teat ins Seen eoes i Resin sot rion Gemeente arta oe be rewarded with od ote Youre =, ck ‘Treasurer. Maieribete: geo Se F. A Mooas. Esq. ; oP eeaday tact Taare ecu grt Me tae Es ra teen? ioe Gases ees a ee en can | | Ladies Wanted To seu nour CS. Petti- ee gtree. Our; iss Gidect’ Creek oe ASCENT S ister. ra ee ae ty eel aE Pos.ise NG COMPANY, SS Offce of eck oe Cotorado. : Gsorcgtows, Coto., J ceca i — speaking from an experience 0 Tphiric for uhes lengua of time, eine miver in i681 and T consider it one Era Suren treg ries a done, s very satalonnaeat thar eies okt Bred, Whos. show know to Des very co ctoux and ete I therefore bave no besiianey whatever in recor Se ee oe —_ James F. Tucker, President =e games ©. Set _£ THREE STAGES OF NBLE’S LIFEN By W.C. Gannets evo- [eee bac ga eee | B. 173 Dearborn ceRcago. a LADY, independ. ONE Se ee _W.N, U. CHICAGO, NO. 44, 1901. When Aaswering Advertisements Miadly Meatios This Paper. CHIPS. Baa ae “ foately take the mAtier pint 5 aa >. SeQReeiene P Shaan Peon ee ee catande for lew end © en eee ee cme eee oo. . Neds ee the ainerd a0! es wine he’ ys! ber ot Congress his voice was alw | ine? five men, three womes. and orig chia, were "ROrderea im “a Finpirlot at Battows. La, the tat ot PES leek. ‘Ome or two ir alse ates ones wile “Bloody racial conflicts indicate that the time wfit come in the South when: hu- “gin blood wil! flow as free as water, “and that ¢ new, Negro may slay one “thous tes with EES YBUD Morris, a Negro, Was buraedat: joe. stake near Balltown, La, Inst “week. -He-was charged with robbing. ‘end. assaulting Mrs. John Ball, ‘white, ;juasband ran the store. Morrie Sen on “gib-the report Morris did not attempt ‘to rape Mrs Ball, which is very 2 “for the whites of the South ‘ eal maintained that they only. . wed Negroes at the stake for raping © Last'March Col. A. D. Gash tramped iL over this city in order to deliver : sim behalf of the camdidacy “(et Mayor Carter H. Harrison, but now. “Colonel Gesh and Mayor Harrison de ‘hot speak as they pass by, and at the present time the colonel thinks that “Mayor Harrison's presidential boom pas been Inid in the cold-cold political re ce ey “Will hold the remains of the fat boss Jn leaving the Hyde Park police “pourt last Saturday morning after Jus- ise M: J. Quinn held Daz. Brown over ‘Gp the grand jury for robbing Mr. and “Mrs. John H. Coppage. George J. ‘Ter- 3 i the gall to want to walk along ied her, but she very politely ‘Weformed crapcbooting Terrell” to ‘bensh | eS ee « ‘with him; that his room_was better than bie company. ° iw \ a long article on. Pres- “The “Baterprise, of Sheveport, La, “¥en, noble white men of the South, “Gone ‘muek: for us: yeas . es s elevating us »- S@uca- that we ean become honest,.Jaw-abid- dng citizeris. Devise means to prevent Mbst -process Of “bleaching” thatthe: “Negro is under in the dark sha- pow tt , nd we are satisfied ‘Biaia thet the Negro is eccking social BERNONe (TES. Weare living in an age when even ecawe et can, ie *. Dr. formed, New York City. \_ Not to expend our endowments on the great work of life wil! insute ev- 3 gayneeinngp Dr. Moore, Meth- -We determine our lite by material- istic stapdards of success. Our god is : jer. ca . ©. C. Morrison, Univers Thicago, 111. | Where shall we jook for standerds 1y Which we: <b govern? We ‘should look 's word. Rev. G. lory: Wo.each age of the ee ee is the only true evolution of doc Mee Meee When a man finds ih the Sess Be See a i Christ, he a Epo ~pStavly x ance as to wha : shareh “does teach—-Rev. J. Ee- oe ae a mA Sea a Sa eee Dee yobe bs oe revelation. Tt is & posse nd a sais 3a Saiee ines aaa * ‘ond ae a oe ‘mah “ee y mnultipty LORD KELVIN AS DAMOCLES. ae ee tere See x8 a oe Was Pie = Fa erst 0 pre Bex add es eee ee eee 4 Py uation ball instes< By he ad " Pring tan ag ees ne Sn ae wave ss high | Sag ae > their ere a: Seer - ee ena Ee ee i a po Uz mvensens Or 5 pert ea a be a rae ore eat sal ie reat for is Seotind. Thee who kagy tim sre | whi wa e work. “When %ec- turing he used to become so absc rbed nd the oe eriments he gonducting Yant be couis s¢arcely -wait for the egults. Disdainiy: the services of an assistant; he scuried ee ea ae 16> the students Hked to say that they never saw bim cross his laboratory except at a run. The ry)- ing passion of Lord Kelyin, who is a methber of half the learned societies of Europe, and who has been decorated by the emperor of Germany, the presi- dent of France and the King of Bel- | sium, is his absolute faith in figures, ‘and it 1s this reling passion which ted lto his experiment as 8 Damocies, When \he has once solved a problem in math- | ematirs he is willing to stake upon its |worrectness not only his reputation, fn if necessary, his life. Taking an immensely heavy caanon ball, he cal- culated with the utmost accuracy the size of the smallest wire which would bear the weight of the lesd.of iron. He then procured a length of wire of Just the requisite . strength, and, to prove the truth of his figuring, had tho cannon bal! suspended over his lectur- ing platform at the:very spot where it would be most iikely to strike and crush nim should the wire give way, and {t remained there for weeks.—Lon- don Mail. MORGAN'S ONE “INTERVIEW.” The Story of Jt, Gs “Told vy the Multt- millenalre Himseif. The Interviews disturbs J. Pierpont rf > He males his boast that he level kel ier toettone one ae clares that in the last seven yoars but one interviewer ever has been able to approach him. .The stery of this one ‘ he yesterday told to Bich- Potter and Doane, On a recent trip to Burope a representative of the London Times would not take no for his answer, “Tell the Times man my time is worth £10 4 minute,” at last ssid Morgan. “The Times man says he'll take two minutes. at that,” came heck the reply. “He handed me £20,” said Mr. Morgan, “talked just two minutes by both our watches, did all the talking himsesf,-and rose to go on the indtant. “Why do you" want to seevme?” 1 asked'in curiosity. “Ob, IL wagered £100 that I would interview personally, that's all,’ was his re- ply. 1 congratulated him on his enter- prise and dismissed bim within the ‘third siinute of bis call.” “Did, you keep his £207" dryly asked Bishop Potter, ac Mr. Morgan ended. “Yes, J haven't carned money in a long time that gave me. the satisfaction ‘that £20 did."—San Francisco Exam- A flight Mintake. ‘The prospect of a dinner will gener- ally Keep a hungry man awake, But the victim of - absent-mindedness Pt at times unable to distinguish between what to eat and what te leave. This was the case with the man who went inte a London restaurant, ‘tallied for a newspaper, and, only when roused from his reading by a waiter, ordered eoffee and a ham sandwich. The waiter executed the order and de- posited with the homely fare a large pasteboard check. The absent-minded ‘one went on reading his paper. . Some quarter of an hour after the waiter re- ‘turned. “Anything more, sir?” be said. “Yes,” snapped the man, “get-me. 2 sandwich; -the one you brought @e was a8 dry as a bone.” The walter Jooked down and gasped. “Lor?” “he exclaimed, “here's the sindwich 1 ‘bropght! You've eaten the check!” aa French Giants Materialiss: Every now and then another giant cecps turning up at Rouen, anxious to convince the executors of the Comte ¢e Pierrecourt that be ls the biggest man in France, and therefore entitled to @ half-portion of the-count’s £4009 legacy. ‘The Ple-recourt heirs fiave al- ready. begun suit to have the “giant couple” ciguse ia the count's will set ees oe et eee as ct ied tm r 5 Auge of r < : 5 ener een on —- that thes va ae {"Seatal of chines Sa the whew SF meee : The Colorado Cliff Dwelling Associa- don ic endeavoring to preserve . the wun which He.ow.the Mena Verds, iA he southwestern cormer of Colorado. dere are tore than three hendred cliff 2alnce” All of themafe.in the Ute néias nd “s ten years” ‘or Chat of the state can contro! In- jan lands. ‘The association is how in barge of the ruinsand, proposes to ails aa- part payives| 8 -Fe reat. Dalephone Tarde To. | stabbed aT eTOHN I. DUNN, Goel - and - Won, an Boy CHARLES KLEIN, General ease Merchandise, 47th and Stete Stree -CHICAGO. RLEX 1 WYATT, - JEWELER 48° OPTICIAN * Menefsctorer of 98 E. Madison St., seer Deerbers Chicago - JOHN ‘HH. COPPAGE, > +. Dealer in bie ; COAL AND WOOD EXPRESRING AND MCVING, 4656 Armour Ave, . - ‘CHICAGO c.J. BOYD, Practical Plumber and Gas-fitter’ ‘Telephone Yards M4 709 WEST 47TH STREET. BERNARD J. MAGUIRE, Burs TT. _ BSDSTATE $T., Cor Polk, {MPORTED WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS A SPECIALTY, TEL. 903 Harrisca, ORICAGO. DR. RUFUS G, COLLINS PHYSICL\E AND SURGEON Offcs, 5059 State St, CHICAGO. Residence, 5139 Wabash Ave. MOURS.—8 9AM. 12.20 to 2 ned 6.20 0.8 P.M. TELE HONE OAK 996 . ET DOSWELL Sno 140 Mlevt 8100 Brest. Chieege. a Read and subscribe for The Broad Ax, the enly newspaper in Chicage which “news to the Lima” NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTIONS. Laws Concerning Them. The decisions of the United tates Court on these subjects are interest- ing. , 3; Subseribers who do Rot give ex- press notice to the contrary are com- sidered ag wishing to renew their sub- scriptions. 2: If Sabscribers order the discon- tinuanc? of thetr periodicals, the pub- Jisher may continue to send them until all errearages are paid. - 3 It subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals trom the post- office to Which they are directed, they are responsible until they have settled their bills. and ordered them discon- tinued. 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publish- ‘er, and the papers are sent to the for- mer address, they are held respousible. <The courts have decided that re- ‘Yusitig to teke periodicals from the office or removing end leaving them ‘whealled for, is prima facie evidence of intentional! fraud. - 6 If etibecribers pay in advance they are bound to,give notice at the end of the time if they do not wish ‘to continue. teking it; otherwise the Ee eee eee ee aes pane ee Don't imagine thet all hair prepara- tions are alike, Quite the costrary. Some never do what-is claimed for them. The Original Ozonised Ox Mar- Tow has been on the market fdr so jong thet there is no doubt it will do everything we claim for it It is the most genteel preparation that any one ean use on their hair, It is most. deli- rubbed into the scalp and well brushed through, the hair it cansot fail to cure scalp producing new growth and stops ees ted States. Drugs eee Seek Ween at A : Ge CESS te ie ee | Me D. GABE, “Shand 98 Le Cotte B2., Saite OS to OER Putephoos, Mais 57. Chien as ee ee ee ee ™ Attorney at Law, ‘Sorre 621 Asutanp BLocg, Be BS. Clerk Street, - - CHICAGO ~ WILLfAM L. GAHAN, ne ATTORNEY AT LAW. } Suite 1422, 106 Waibington St. Phone Central, St CHICAGO. _§OSEPH A. ‘McINERNEY - | 3 LAWYER » Borers 7— 78 Oato.c0 Ormns House ~—ORTCART Beauregard F. Moseley, LAWYER, ee Practice in all oarts. Main Office 6256 Halsted St, ene eee : Potees teas Barvison: ‘aphene Tarte 01 Residomes 138 Gurtahd BA, - §OHR FITZGERALD USTICE OF THE PEACE: 6787 8. HALSTED STREET, William Howard FitzSerald ‘LAWYER Room 402 Reaper Bick, - CHKCAGO S. A. MCELWEE “LAWYER... | 36 S. Clark St., CHICAGO. “RISERT 6. GEORGE LAWYER. 428 Ashland Block, Chicage. — Tel M 2625. — EDWARD H. WRIGHT . LAWYER Suite 421, 280 8. Clark St. ‘Telephone, Harrison 2553. CHICAGO, ‘Tas. Maszason si. ‘Thomas F. Soully, Attorney at Law, TO Cask Grex, - - - CHICAGO. Room is - GEO. W. W. LYTLE, Attorney and Counselor at Law ; Telephone Castral S554. me Say hie rams. cart Se. eam Lawrence M. Ennis, Advocate and Counselor at Lav, Suite 728 Opers Hows: Block. & WV. Corner Clark end Washingen Su. ‘Tegarmes Mace 1782 co... HVAMNS. Desier in Ail Kinds of HARD AND SOFT COAL, Wood, Charcoal, Coke and loe, Expressing and Moving a Speciaity. 38220 St - Ohicago, til. ‘WONDERFUL: DISCOVERY : {Curly Hair Made Straight By} fe i ttm SOZONIZED OX MARROW} =e eee } Ferase Sraitonar can resets coer feteeentotae Lat ating qasits ole oe Soe ee ee thetr own Saree Pay, ee are Dafiding war vessele in France, ~ emg eae “oad ae House and Fire Wrecking. "MOVER of All. Kinds of | HEAVY MACHINERY. Smoke Stacks, Cupolas and Monuments . Erected. Hoisting and Placing of all kinds of Beams and Girders for Office, 31 South Canal St.. Chicago eS. TELEPHONE MAIN 4928. SAVE MONEY BY BUYING—= <= YOUR PROVISIONS FROM A. E. HANSEN, fee Dealer inooant. Staple and Fancy Croceries, Meats Best Brands of Flour, Teas, Coffees Baking Powder, Spices, Butter Eggs, and Canned Goods, Etc. All Goods Guaranteed to be Fresh, 5060 DEARBORN ST., COR. 51ST ST. CHICAGO. gee ee sss es cae = Jas. J. McCormick, SAMPLE ROOM geen A J0SEPE JOSEPH STRAUSS | GREAT NORTHAAD - SALE AND EXCHANGE STABLE. Driving, Draft and General Business Horses Always on Hand 1197 eens Wen eaee CHICAGO, 11 es GEO. C. CALLAHAN & CO. PRODUGE COMMISSION . Butter, Poultry, Eggs, Game, Veal, Eto. (217: SOUTH WATER STREET, - - - CHICAGO. WILLIAM LOEFFLER Provision Dealer 3ist and Stete aks Roe CHICAGO SNES Et cE GEE YOU CAN SAVE MONEY Bitset SiS Soe Made te your mesure in Any Style. Guaranteed to Fit snd Setiaty You, Better Grades up to $25 Pantaloons from $4.00 Up! ‘Hshimemt in'Chicage Our Fall Line ts Now Complete. The Best in the City. © THE MOSSLER BROS_ sawed tat ore es er cat more aS a fan eit eu ‘actos eat: Fora, firet-class shave or hair-cut eal an@ seg C. B. Doswell, the univer- sity barber, 118 West Slat sirect. Agent ter The Colored American Magazine,