The Broad Ax
Saturday, October 24, 1903
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
The Religions or the Teachings of JESUS AND MAHOMET Compared.
Vol. VIII.
The Relig
the Tea
JESUS AND
Comp
It has been asserted and maintained by the adherents, the devotes, and the followers of the meek and lowly Jesus, that he never uttered or gave expression to one word or sentiment which was intended to wound the feelings of those whom he came in contact with. That he entertained the greatest respect for the religious opinions of others, "but as we proceed, we will endeavor to prove beyond the peradventure of a doubt that such was not the case and that Jesus was swayed and controlled by the same passions and prejudices which have always controlled the actions of those who have endeavored to establish a new system of religion or to reform the system which had become implanted in the minds of the people.
Jesus was not unlike the other Jewish Prophets, for he and they were most extraordinary beings. They would speak like angles, but acted entirely different. For instance Isaiah walked in a nude condition through the streets of his village. Jeremiah and Hosea conducted themselves like wild beasts and they were very much depraved in their moral habits, but they pronounced curses upon all who dared to dispute their authority.
As Jesus progressed in his work or mission he did not differ in temperment or in character from those we have referred to. He preached as they did. He poured forth invectives against the rulers and the rich as they did. He believed in all the current fancies respecting the approaching destruction of the world. The conquest of the evil spirit or power or the reign of his God, the same as the Prophets of old. He was carried away with these ideas and labored under the impression that he was the only true son of God, who would be sent to prepare this world for his kingdom, that he would be appointed for the special purpose of judging the souls of men and to reign over them on earth.
These ideas followed him to his grave. It was his belief that God reigned in heaven and Satan ruled on earth. He pronounced eternal punishment on all who refused to join him and upon those who accomplished anything to merit the esteem of their fellowmen. He did not hesitate in consigning them to hell-fire. Said he: "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be "damned." He pronounced his condemnation upon a 4g tree because it bore no fruit although it was out of season for fruit. He retorted to those who accused him of breaking the Sabbath that he was above the Sabbath. He was extremely ungallant to his mother. On one occasion when she approached him he exclaimed, "Woman what have I to do with thee!"
It is an undisputable fact, that he completely failed in making any impression upon the people of Jerusalem and he abused his successful rivals, the Pharisees. He called the learned doctors a generation of vipers, whited sepulchers and serpents, he declared that they should not escape the torments of hell, because they would not accept his teachings. He informed his disciples that whoever spoke against the Holy Ghost it would not be forgiven him, either in this world or in the world to come. He taught his devotes or followers that they must forsake their fathers, mothers, wives, sisters, and brethren and trample all family ties under foot if they desired to march under his banner, or if they wished to inherit a
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seat in his kingdom, for according to his teachings, very narrow and crooked is the road which leads to heaven, but broad and very smooth is the road which leads to damnation or destruction. His religion or the religion of the cross is unlike the religion of Mahomet, for wherever the latter prevails, drunkenness, licentiousness and all forms of vice disappear, but wherever the religion of the former prevails there licentiousness, drunkenness, slavery, dishonesty and vice of every kind has always flourished.
Mahomet, who was as modest as a beautiful maiden, was a poor boy and a mule driver, but today many hundred million people believe in his teachings for he rendered greater service to mankind than any other religious teacher. Mahomet taught that "God had no daughters, for how can God have daughters when he has no spouse?" But the adherents of Jesus teach us that their God traveled millions and millions of miles from his abode in the unknown world to this earth, in order to form the acquaintance of Mary, the wife of Joseph, who gave birth to two or three other children after she brought forth Jesus.
Mahomet never frequented the wine shop, neither did he taste wine or whisky, nor look at the dancing girls. He was very kind to little children. He visited the sick, the poor or the needy, and was very humble. He admonished his followers to administer to the widows and the orphans—to show mercy to dumb animals, to have no depraved thoughts, to abstain from the use of wine or whisky and to refrain from gambling. He exclaimed that "when a man dies people will ask how much property has he left behind?" But the angels in heaven will ask what good deeds has he sent before him? He never struck any one in his life, and he was opposed to the enslavement of his fellowmen, when he was asked to curse some one he said, "I have not been sent to curse but to show mercy to mankind." He always waited on himself, mending his own clothes and milking his own goats. But Jesus had women to wash his feet and turned water into wine so that his followers might eat, drink and be merry.
He proclaimed that the "Gods will not reward those who do good from the fear of being deprived of sharing in the glory of the next world." This great teacher impressed the idea upon the minds of his hearers that "the Ghosts or the souls of men will not be condemned to eternal misery nor exalted to everlasting bliss, but as the tree falls, so shall it lie."
That man was not sent upon this earth to trample all of its beauty and grandeur under his feet while vainly striving to save his undefineable little soul, so that he can migrate with it to some unknown world located somewhere in space billions and billions of miles beyond the starry firmament, but it is his true mission to subdue it—to cultivate or prepare it as a fit habitation for all the sons of men.
Therefore we must conclude that Mahomet possessed more rational or practical ideas pertaining to religion than Jesus, for he enjoined upon his followers that they must sever all their family ties and give up everything which is dear to them in order to follow him, and if they fall to do so they will be punished or tortured throughout eternity.
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HEW TO THE LINE.
[Name]
P. J. O'Keeffe, Whose Great Legal Talent Has Won for Him a Lasting Reputation at the Bar of this Cosmopolitan City. Many of its Most Substantial and Wealthiest Citizens, are numbered among his clients and They Would Feel Highly Honored of Having the Pleasure to Work and Vote for Mr. O'Keeffe, for State's Attorney
Last week Messrs William M. Trotter, editor of the Boston Guardian, Granville Martin and Bernard Charles, after a hotly contested trial, the latter was acquitted, but the jury found the other two men guilty of disturbing or assisting in disturbing a meeting last July in which Booker T. Washington was addressing. While we, living at this distance, do not know the real facts, neither do we wish to enter either side, but the disturbance was to be much regretted yet we think in a free country like ours any man has a right to ask questions or even disagree and express his thoughts without censure. The questions that they wished to ask that night are as follows: So read them and judge for yourself.
1. In your letter to Montgomery Advertiser Nov. 27, you said: "Every revised constitution throughout the southern states has put a premium upon intelligence, ownership of property, thrift and character." Did you not thereby indorse the disfranchisement of our race?
2. In your speech before the Century Club here in March you said: "Those are most truly free who have passed the most discipline." Are you not actually upholding oppressing our race as a good thing for us, advocating peonage?
3. Again you say: "Black men must distinguish between the freedom that is the result of struggle and self-sacrifice." Do you mean that the Negro should expect less from his freedom than the white man from his?
4. When you said: "It was not so important whether the Negro was in the inferior car as whether there was in that car a superior man not a beast," did you not minimize the outrage of the insulting Jim-Crow car discrimination and justify it by the "bestiality" of the Negro?
5. In an interview with the Washington Post, June 25, as to whether the Negro should insist on his ballot, you are quoted as saying: "As is well known I hold that no people in the same economic and educational condition as the masses of the black people of the south should make politics a matter of the first importance in connection with their development." Do you not know that the ballot is the only self-protection for any class of people in the country?
But, according to the published testimony, Messrs Trotter, Martin and Charles did not ask Prof. Washington any questions nor join in disturbing his political meeting; nevertheless Booker T. Washington was willing to spend thousands of dollars of the money he begs from the people for the purpose of sending Editor Trotter to jail, for, disguise it as you may, Booker T. Washington hates newspaper criticism. This shows that Prof. Washington is a piggy instead of being a great leader of ten million people, for if he is not a piggy he would not object to answering the above questions, which are of vast importance to the Afro-American race at this particular time.
Brother Thompson, it behooves you to take a bold stand on the side of right and justice, for the time may come when Booker T. Washington will send you to jail if you fail to laud him to the skies.
Bible Bellevers Help Him Out. "Will some of our readers take it upon themselves to do us a favor? It is this: Go thru your Bible, and prepare a list of all the texts where the Lord kills or massacres men, women and children, stating the figures, if they are given. We mean by "kills," such instances as Uzza; and, by massacre, cases like fifty thousand three score and ten men for looking in a box; and his order to Moses to slay the married women and boys, and to save the girls alive for concubines. Our eyes are poor, and it will be a great help to us to have this synopsis besides, it may influence some good man or woman to abandon this awful supersition; to cease blessing in a myth what he curses in humanity. The Examiner.
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A Greenville, S. C., white jury has convicted a white man of criminal assault upon a Negro woman.
Rev. Mrs. I. N. Daniels, 909 Hamlin St., Evanston, Ill., returned home last Friday after spending one month with her many friends in Iowa.
The Electa Chapter No. 1. O. E. S.. held a prize Bonnêt social at the home of Mrs. Foster, 5018 Armour Ave., Wednesday evening. It was well attended.
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Watts have opened up private Dinning Rooms. with home cooking, at 2032 Armour Ave., and they are doing a rushing business.
Al. F. Gorman, Ex-Supervisor of the Town of Lake, has forsaken his bachlor ways, has took unto himself a lovely wife and Mr. and Mrs. Gorman have gone to house keeping at 1016 Garfield Blvd. Rev. Vaughan, Covington, Ky., is in the city stopping at the home of Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Robinson, 4752 Armour avenue. Rev. Vaughan is conducting a revival meeting at St. Mark's Church, 47th and State Sts.
J. A. Scott, who is one of the keenest Afro-American politicians in this big town, and is as straight as a string, would find The Broad Ax on his side if he should decide to become candidate for county commissioner. It is reported that Arthur McLaughlin, 731 Garfield Blvd., who has for many years been one of the timekeepers for Armour & Company, will in the spring time lead one of the charming belles of the town of Lake to the altar.
The Sunday Forum for the first time this season met at the Institutional Church last Sunday afternoon. A paper was read by W. H. A. Moore, and each Sunday hereafter its members and friends will meet at the same place at 4 p. m.
Frederick Douglass once said: "Truth has no color, Right is of no sex and all men are brothers." We wish this statement could be given wide spread circulation so that it might be inculcated in the minds of the enemies of the colored people.
Mrs. Walter Hill, 203 1-2 21st st., have been quite sick for the past two weeks, but at the present writing she is improving and if she does not have a set back it will not be long until she can superintend the running of her well-paying cafe at the above number.
Mrs. Joseph Jackson, 528 West 56th St., is a substantial supporter of The Broad Ax, and she always saves enough money out of her pin money to pay the subscription for it. Mr and Mrs. Jackson are worthy members of the race and they reside in a nice home of their own.
Mrs. Lizzie White, 5147 Grove Ave.. is one of the loyal spporters of The Broad Ax; not with her empty mouth, but with her hard earned money. Mrs. White is an industrious woman and she delights to devote her spare time to reading newspapers and instructive books.
Rev. Archibald James Carey, who wants to become general financial secretary of the A. M. E. church, gave a grand banquet to the bishops and the small fry preachers at his Forest avenue home, Wednesday afternoon. In the evening he repeated the same thing at Quinn Chapel. Bishops Grant. Arnett, Shafter, Smith, Dr. George C. Hall, and Rev. or Elder D. R. Wilkins, were the leading speakers.
Robert L. Taylor, 3632 Dearborn St., has resumed his labors with the board of election commissioners, after spending two months in hunting and fishing in the northwest. Mr. Taylor was as far west as Seattle, Wash., and he says "he met many persons on his trip through that section of the country who inquired after the health of the writer."
Attorney Jeremiah B. O'Connell, of the strong law arm of Devine .... O'Connell, Reaper Block, would make an ideal Judge of the Superior Court of Cook County, and if he expressed a desire to sit upon the bench many of
No.52.
his friends are willing to go forth and secure the nomination for him next year.
Grace Presbyterian Sunday school will observe "Rally Day" Oct. 25th, from 12:30 to 2 p. m. A fine program will be rendered at that time. Come early to secure a seat.
A. B. GEORGE, Supt.,
MRS. C. E. JONES,
MRS. W. W. ALLEN,
MRS. J. D. BRYANT.
Rev. Abraham Lincoln Murray who is the prettiest Afro-American he man in town, was seen to butt out rear end of one of the sisters homes who resides on Dearborn St., not so far from 30th St., early one morning last week, and when the Rev. gentleman ran into several persons who knew him he looked and acted like a big sheep killing dog.
Rev. I. N. Daniels, the up-to-date pastor of the A. M. E. church, Evanson, Ill., who has a clean record behind him, says it seemed to him that "every preacher who attended the late A. M. E. Conference at Des Moines, Iowa, had a copy of The Broad Ax sticking out of his hip pocket." Rev. Daniels is positive that the fight this paper has made on bad preachers will have its effect in the long run.
Hon. D. J. Hogan, Geneva, Ill., was in town Wednesday, and while in conversation with him he informed us that on "Monday, November 2, the colored man and woman whom the officers arrested at the time Rev. Abraham Lincoln Murray and his crowd of toughs held their Sunday school picnic in that neck of the woods, will have their day in court.
The recent census reported the following Negro artisans in the United States: Carpenters, 22,739; barbers 19,212; saw mill operators, 17,510; miners, 16,280; tobacco employees, 17,012; blacksmiths, 12,004; masons, 9,220; engineers and firemen, 8,322; dressmakers, 7,240; iron and steel workers, 6,190; shoemakers, 6,930; painters, 5,128; plasterers, 4,960; quarrymen, 3,840; coopers, 3,290; butchers, 3,008; wood workers, 2,016, tailors, 1,880; stone cutters, 1,920; leather curriers, 1,670.
Mrs. C—— W——, who lives at the corner of 52nd and Grove Ave., has stated many times that she "hates the very ground that white men walk on" but last Friday evening shortly after six o'clock, this same colored lady passed the corner of State and Monroe Sts. leaning on the arm of a cheap white man who runs an elevator in a building on State St., near Madison, and they were headed towards the bad lands, or the "Red Light District."
Master Willie Curtis, 2628 Wabash Ave., is exceptionally bright for a lad of his age. He graduated from the eighth grade of the Ferrand school, 51st St., and Wabash Ave., last spring, at the age of 12 and all the time he managed to stand at the head of all his classes in all his studies. He entered the South Division High school, 26th and Wabash Ave., last September. He is now in his 13th year and so far at each examination he has averaged eighty in all his studies. This shows that there are no flies on Willie Curtis, that when it comes to drinking in knowledge there are mighty few white boys that can out-strip him.
Francis O'Neill, the efficient and hard working chief of Police of the city of Chicago, is putting the finishing touches on his great musical work or book, which contains more than six hundred Irish songs and ballads in their original dialects and melodies. Chief O'Neill spent many years and much money in collecting these songs together and he performed all the labor incident to classification and arranging them for publication. Each night at his elegant home, 5448 Drexel Boulevard, after performing his duties in connection with the police affairs of this city. The book consists of over six hundred pages. It is artistically and elaborately finished in every way, and it will ever stand as a monument to his great ability as a composer of Irish songs and ballads in their original dialects and melodies.
Fe
Eee AUD CHEERS, .
SSE ee
Vasyaete ee
Bubseriptions must be paid in edvanee.
Silene
ieadom_7~<.
THE BROAD AX
2 8040 Armour Avenue, Ohtoago.
JULIUS F. TAYLOR, Réttor and Publisher.
Batered at the Post Office at Chicago,
, HL, as Second-class Matter.
A Cheanmge for the Better.
“Farewell, them,” he cried, melodra-
matically, “you will regret your retusa:
of my proffered love. I shall take to
“Oh, don’t say that!” the fair girl
pleaded.
“T am resolved,” be sald. “I shall not
change my plans unless—" s
“Ob, change them just « little f
Should bate to think I Grove you to
Grink; try suicide frst."—Philadelphia
Ledger.
‘The Way of the Worls.
First Tramp—Wéary Willie stole an
auto an’ run overs man an‘ killed him!
Second Tramp—Wot did dey do to
‘Weary?
First Tramp—Fined him ten dollars
fer killin’ de man: ai‘ give him ten years
fer stealin’ deauto.—Judge.
A Gunting Expegition.
Although be got no game at all,
‘Be felt quite lucky in the end.
ee a ae he ean
—Washington Stsr. .
| Mr. Parwest—There was a feller
the board of trade iast night with the
Gurndest ideas anybody ever heard of.
| Wife—What was the meeting about?
“To devise ways an’ means to boom
the town.” >
_ “Well, what did the stranger pro-
poser” ,
» “The foolishest thing! You'd never
wuess. He got up qnd said, says he:
“The best way to boom 2 town,’ says he,
‘is to make it ft to live in’"—N. ¥.
‘Weekly.
“Tia me -
“This,” smiled the fond young wife
“as she passed a plate of dessert to her
husband, “is cottage pudding. I made it
myself.”
‘The man tasted of it.
“Td known it was cottage pudding,”
he asserted.
_“You would?” she asked, delighted.
“Yes. I can taste the plaster and the
‘wall papet. What did you do with the
‘shingles and the bricks for the chimney
vain. = ce |
“Lo. u»
‘Ym ft some folks want toc
ure that yon bevetheus?
~ HM yousboulkd chance too them,
—Jodge. ‘
‘The Size of It.
{ Little Elmer.—Papa, what is executive
. Prof. Broadhead—The faculty of earn-
ng your bread by the sweat of other peo-
‘Ble's brows, myson—Puck. -
2 -& Geed. Ghusecter
* Bho Ladies—What sort of a person
is-Mrs. Newcome, Mr. Hopper?
‘The General Dealer—She’s a perfect
iady—doesn’t know one brand o' goods
from another—Judge. :
Deseribea.
: “What sort of 2 woman is she?”
| “Well, every time I see her I fee! like
congratulating the man whose proposa)
“of marriage is rejected."—N. Y. Times.
Pe Seen.
“If honesty policy—
| Ween” z
“Why, then, most politicians ain't
‘Aitic.”—Chicago Post. e
e Different Opinions.
“So young Robinson wants to marry
Ciyay. ave! Teter bel
Wh ‘shows
fet ital Amer
Ps a en it
tad ‘hat Mrs. Talim
“another woman.—Brooklyn Life. .s
5 matt oot in
5 gota her eye,
Se
Sak ne ee one thing oubt.”
a ‘wobbed the mala “You may
“5 < Pomibiy. You Have.
— “Have you ever noticed,” inquired the
“thousheral theorist, “that the rich man
‘who says there's nc happiness in wealth
caine
i ea et Gast
ms pte "made anything om the
oe __ 1 went out to the track one day
‘with 10 that I intended to det and
@an'."—Ch Sinaia tua
~-Jack—The.chump! He bas sent her
= icago Daily News, -
_ “Wes eo eee oe
em: write,” 23 — Eugae
‘WOMEN LAWYERS IN FRANCE,
Admission vf Uadies to Bar Hae Had
Good Recelts on Manners of
Oppesing Advocates.
_ Binee the Paris bar has been open to
ee ee ey ee
sex have -aivantage of the new
privilege accorded to them to plead at
‘the Palsis “Ge Justice, says an ex
; ‘The pioneer in this direction was
‘Mlle. Chauvin, whose debut as “advo-
tate” ‘excited a great deal of attention,
ina “whose presence in the cap and
gown made a great sehsation at the
name the Soak ented
effect among
Rerttenses of ‘wearing the white cravat
of the French lawyers. “Mile.
‘Chauvin's debut In 1899 curiosity has
died out to a great extent, and no bed
effects of the law have been noticed. It
is even possible that, if the good re-
suits could have been anticipated, the
law would have passed the chambers by
® unanimous vote, instead of by 319 to
1%. As a rule, women lawyers have
bed men as their opponents at the bar,
and one could imagine himself in a
sort of judicial salon, if compliments
and gallant speeches were the criterion.
But the other day two women law-
yers found themselves antagonists in a
case. It was funny ‘to see the embar-
Tassment of the judges, for each lawyer
@id ber best to captivate the bench.
Unhappily the bench could not get out
of the scrape by awarding the victory to
both sides, so the chivalrous judges took
refuge under a well-known formula and
reserved their decision for a fortnight.
~ SCOTLAND'S GREAT CANAL.
Undertaking Wil! Save Hundreds of
Miles and Cost 850,000,000— Big:
Begineering Feat.
As was recently stated in a cable dis-
patch, the plans for the construction of
@ ship canal between the Firth of Forth,
on the east of Scotland, across to the
‘River Clyde, on the west, have been
‘definitely arranged. The canal will cost
$56,000,000, but powerful support is ex-
pécted from the British government.
One of the great engineering features
of the scheme will be the carrying of the
canal near the Loch Lomond end. Fre-
quent passing places will be made.
An indication of the saving in dis-
tance that would be effected by the
canal, says an exchange, will be gained
from the following figures: From the
Ciyde to ports on the east coast of Scot-
land, northeast of England, and north-
west of Europe the distance saved
‘would be from 523 miles to 238 miles.
From the Firth of Forth to ports on the
West coast of Scotland, northwest of
England, Ireland, America and the Med-
iterranean the distance saved would be
from 487 to 141 miles. From Tyne
Ports to the St. Lawrence river the dis-
tance saved would be 150 miles. From
the west of Britsin and northeast
of Ireland to middle western ports of
the continent the distance saved would
be from 377 to 98 miles.
RECORD-BREAKING RUN.
Encineer Was Offered Pifty Dollars
@ Minuste for Every Minute Gained
Qver the Schedule.
There is a little story connected with
the record-breaking run of the Lowe
special over the Santa Fe, Chicago to
Los Angeles, in less than 63 ‘hours,
which is not generally known.
Jt ia related that Mr. Lowe offered
the engineer who hauled the train from
San Bernardino to Los Angeles—on the
home-stretch of 60 miles—the sum of
$60 @ minute for every minute gained
over the schedule. Engineer Warboy
turned the wheels at a 50-second clip for
each mile to Pasadena, but had to slow
Gown in the suburbs of Los Angeles. He
pulled into La Grande station, Los An-
geles, just 62 minutes after leaving San
Bernardino, gaining nine minutes on the
whirlwind schedule and thereby earn-
ing $450 extra pin money.
‘The Santa Fe passenger department
will soon publish a pamphiet giving full
details of the swift fight of the Lowe
special, which im several instances ex-
ceeded 90 infles an hour. An average of
nearly 43 miles an hour was maintained,
in the face of having to cross four high
ranges of the Rockies, and with little
previous selection of engines or crews.
MENACE OF THE FOREST.
——— ,
Continent WU Dry Up tf Present De-
structive Processes Continuc—
| Bxperience of O14 World.
‘The climatic history of the old worlt
‘will repeat itself in America, says the
National “Magazine. If forest destrac-
tion, at its present rate of recklessness,
‘skould continue much longer, our cont!-
nent -will have to dry up. So will an
orator who should venture to urge that
fact upon & boodie legislature, in this
era of lumber trusts. But the fact re-
mains, and its significance may be in-
ferred from the experience of the Medi-
terranean coast lands, where thousands
of god gardens have been turned into
Gehennas of wretchedness and desola-
Son. By tree destruction slone.a terri-
tory of 4,500,000 square miles has been
our planet. physical history
eastern hemisphere is the history of a
desert that originated somewhere | ir
OW 8 the west const af
2 _ warning eaes:
wis fat outto seaward. =
‘The price of sugar in France has te.
ently been reduced “by jess than half,
and the consumption has been
Sobtied. Pormeriy sugar was a iuxury
Whieb rarely reeched the. homes ai
he ee ee ee eee
. A Changed Man. ig
a eee cee ee
taking that anti-fat medicine he
changed wonderfully. He ‘dosen't
pes torig chaps Aas 8 =
Chicago Tribune. - |
‘Taxation’s Triumph.
‘The-Count—What think of ze pro-
‘position to tax bachelors? wae
‘The Beron—It do not interest me,
my friend. Bot I think it woulébe «
very good thing to tax ze unmarried
helresses!—Puck. =
Wet Very Complimentary, -
“Tt only a week since I met yon,
Miss Mabel, yet I fe:] as if T'd known.
you for years and years and years.”
“Well, you needin’ pile the years on
so thick. I'm only 19."—Chicago Amer
ican. a
Alderman Wm. H. Ehemann, of the
24th ward, who was united in marriage
to Miss Mamie Christ, by Rev. George
Thomas, of St Alphonsus church,
Lincoln and Southport a\enues, Thurs
day afternoon. The Alderman—his
lovely, popular and wealthy bride, wili
be kept busy for the next month in
receiving the congratulations of their
numerous friends.
Rather.
“Do you believe in luck, Mr. Piinple
ton?”
“Don’t make me smile! You ses Mrs.
Crushley over yonder?”
“Do you mean that fat, red-faced,
busky-voiced, vulgar, over-bearing
‘woman in blue and yellow, drinking bot-
‘ted stout at the refreshment bar?”
“The same, sir. Well, 20 years ago 1
asked that woman to be my wife—and
she refused! Do I believe in luck, in-
deed! Do I believe in daylight!”"—Ally
Sloper.
in Pleasant Piclds. ~
“Yes,” mused the person-who lets
out an occasional audible thought, “he
certainly makes ‘hay while the sun
shines.”
“What haymaker do you refer to?”
asked his friend, who was afflicted with
the rubber habit.
“Why, the man who marries a grass
widow,” replied he of the clamorous
thoughts. —Cincinnati Enquirer.
Yea. Vertir.
‘The world is tike an appie barrel,
oh Gye oe Set re
~ ze siwaye tound en tp. ;
His Chance.
“Before marriage,” asserted the soft-
spoken, epigrammatic lectur :r, “womas
isan ideal; after marriage #1¢ is a fact.”
At this point there was an interruption
by Henry Penhecker, who had been com-
pelied to attend the lecture in com~any
‘with his intellectual wife. Mr. Pen-
hecker, realizing that he was safe in
a crowd, jumped to his feet and cried:
“And facts are stubborn things!”—
Judge.
‘Zhe All Poewerfal Het.
“Now, my dear,” said the indulgent
husband, “I have managed to save up
enough money to justify us in building
& new home. But, first, I am going to
‘give you a choice between that arid the
Rew fall hat you so much desire.”
“Well,” said the keautiful wife, “you
‘know I can't wear thc house on my
head.”—Millinery Trade Review.
? ‘The One Meant.
Cholly—I wonder if I-have any show
of winning Miss Roxie Uppisch?
Miss Peppery—From a remark I heard
her make I think you're her choice.
Cholly—Ah! my gwacious! Whatdid
she say?
Mies Pepprey—She said nobody was
good enough to be her husband.—Phila-
delphia Press.
‘What Would Harcen,
“What would happen to-day,” said the
thoughtful citizen, “if Diogenes were to
Go through one of our great cities with
® lantern looking for an honest man?”
“That's easy,” answered the Chicago
man. “Some one would steal his jan-
tern before he had gone three blocks.”
Washington Star.
As the World Does.
‘Mrs. Bender—John, you are too much
Of & rounder for a married man.
Mr. Bender—Martha, didn’t you say
Eee earast Sarai? -
Bender—Yes.
Mr. Beiider—Well. then, if I'm all the
world you mustn't object to my going
around —Chiezg0 Daily News. |
Ant" sighed Miss Antigne, with
Jenguishiing glance in the direction of Mr.
aimee
a Sieaice b auairiad
bald spot on the tp of hie bead, “rou
Jdeastiaicd.
" “Feminine figures lie, you know.”
~ “But yonder figure in dimity, surely
a eeet on be what is called
ciate tees Betios Wt
att c= Sears Sal
See oe -
THE LAW LAID DOWN.
Beene ed @ishonor of a promissory
ee | tn Oakley vs, Carr (Neb.), 60
‘'L. R.A. 431, to be sufficient if sent to the
‘inst indoreer by the first mail of the day
' following dishonor, even though such tn-
is an agent for collection merely.
Since the nationat bankruptcy law con-
tains no provisions for involuntary pro-
ceedings against persons engaged chiefly
fh the tillage of the soil, it is held, in Old
Town bank vs, McCormick (Md.), 60 L.
‘R.A. 577, that It does not supersede the
‘provision of the state law authorizing
such proceedings.
‘The mere separation of jurors impan-
‘@led to try a capital case from their fel-
lows without the attendance of an officer,
although an irregularity, is held, in Gam-
‘Die ve. State (Fie), 60 L. R. A. 547, not to
be a sufficient cause for setting aside the
verdict if the court is satisfied that the
Prisoner haz not sustained any injury
from such separation.
‘The attempt of a street railway com-
pany to operate {ts cars during a strike
of tts employes is held, in Fewings vs.
Mendenball (Minn.), 60 L. R. A. 601, not
to be negligence so as to make ft liable
for an injury to a passenger struck by a
stone thrown from the street into a car
by a strike sympathizer In no way under
the control or direction of the company.
The right to the custody and to decide
apon the place of burial of the body of a
deceased unmarried person is held, in
McEntee vs. Bonacum (Neb.}, 60L. R.A.
440, to reside ordinarily in ‘his next of
kin; and it fs held that the courts will not
treat this right as having been waived or
relinquished except upon clear and sat-
isfactory evidence of conduct indicative
of a free and voluntary intent and pur-
pose to that end.
BREVITIES OF SCIENCE.
It ts reported that a hot spring has
‘deen struck in the workings of the
Simplon tunnel, and the increased heat
‘is unbearable. About two miles remains
to be bored. .
4 small specimen of radium was re-
cently put on exhibition at the American
Museum of Natural history, and has at-
attracted wide attention. The speci-
men weighs about two grains, and was
‘shown in the gem room on the fourth
floor of the building. The two grains
cost about $300.
Dr. Frank Snow, with a small party of
Kansas university students, has been
bug-catching fm southwest Arizona.
They brought back 15,000 specimens, all
pinned and labeled, of which some 100
are new to science. Of these 5,430 are
dettles, 4,500 are files, 1,926 are butter-
files and moths, and the rest run the list
of bees, wasps, bugs and insects. The
butterfiies and moths were collected at
night by spreading on a tree near the
camp & mixture of beer and molasses.
Henri Moissan has succeeded in reduc-_
ing tantalum acid in the electric furnace
with powdered carbon and has obtained
tantalum in a fused state. Hitherto the
metal had been known only as a more or
leas pure powder with a density of 10.50.
Scars
and & denelty of
12.79. It is very hard, easily scratching
andis unfusible oxyhydrogen
blowpipe. Certain reactions class it
with the metalloids rather than with
the metals proper.
ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS.
Bacalyptus gum is the agent in a new
quick-tanning process, said to be a great
Success, in Victoria, Australia It in-
creases the rapidity of the work by 40
per cent.
A Pittsburg man whose old home had
to be moved to make way for a railroad
line, has undertaken the unusual task of
raising the house bodily to the top of a
steep hill, 150 high.
Three summer homes for working
girls are conducted by Miss Emily M.
Morgan, the author and philanthropist.
Two of these are in Connecticut; the
third, at Blandford, Mass., in an old
farmhouse, which accommodates 20
young women, the charges being but two
dollars a week.
A cowboy for 12 years, head of a big
rice plantation for three years, and at
the age of 30 elected president of a rail-
way corporation representing a capital
of $8,000,000 and 200 miles of track, is
the record of Ross L. Clark, recently
elected president of the Rice Belt Rail-
way company, of Texas, giving him the
distinguished honor of being the young-
est chief excentive of a railway in the
United States. Though but 30 years of
age, and starting with but few advant-
ages, Clark has forged to the front until
he now represents a rice growing com-
pany with 6,000 acres under cultivation.
ALL SORTS.
/. Japan's army in time of peace includes
3,135 officers and $4,241 privates.
In several Russian trains second-class
sleeping carriages are now provided.
| & motable result of the recent cen-
‘sus of church attendance in London is
the discovery that prayer meetings,
Which were once regarded as tho vital
‘breath of the life of the church, have
simost ceased to exist. —
There are three waters in the state
of Indians which actually impart mag-
metic powers to needies, knife biades
mad the lfke. -Any considerable quan-
‘tity of one of these waters will deflect
the needle of the compass.
‘But: 83 per cent. of the German
‘Dorn mslgs in the United States have
filed to become naturalized, while 13
‘Dertent. of the English. 35 per cent. of
tue Russians, 53-per cent. of the [tal-
‘inms,and $0 per cent. of the Japanese
iim weit 2 sis sitar atk a
ens Loerie set Sats
DAP ye ge ers Se :
of all the wo crs ot wi wart.
Simin nemo
JOHN A ORB, ; ential sige
President. Vice Pres. & Treas.
‘WEST SIDE
BREWERY _
COMPANY,
CHICAGO, U. S. A. 7
CORNER AUGUSTA AND PAULINA STREETS, |
Monroe 1567——T E L B PH O N EB S—Monroe 1573. :
Mt50S666606b040 504 hk LUC
It’s the Only Place
AFRO-AMERICAN NEWS STORE
8104 State Street
cal
A Full Line of Stationery, 6 gars and Tobacco
FR Pa SI nae
AFRO-AMERICAN NEWS STORE
E. H. FAULKNER. Manager
Jas. J. McCormick, __
SAMPLE ROOM
Bis Prediction. -
"Yes," he said, “it will rain next
‘Thursday evening.”
“Do you set yourself up as a2 in-
fallible weather prophet?” some one
asked.
“Certainly not,” he replied.
“Yet you speak confidently of. what
the weather will be four or five days
from now.”
“Ob, well, there are some signs that
never fail, and my wife bas planned @
garden party for that evening.”—Chi-
eago Post.
A Practical Dramatict.
Friend—Why do you kill off so many
people in every act?
Dramatist—The company is small, and
‘that fs the only way I can work in all the
characters.—N. Y. Weekly.
Slow to Answer.
Mrs. Myles—Does your new girl an-
ewer all your purposes?
Mrs. Stylee—No; she doesn’t even an-
ewer the bell half the time.—Yonkers
Gateomen .
Stays There,
Stelia—Did he get down on his
knees when he proposed?
_ Bella—Yes; but paps won't set him
on bis feet.—Puck. Ss
Genuine Euvr. :
“Why, Johnnie, what's the matter?”
“Boohoo! Willie Simpkins has more
warts than me.”—Chicago American.
AGENTS FOR THE BROAD ax.
From on and after this cate The
Broad Ax can be found on sate at tne
tollowing places:
The Afro-American News Office,
2104 State Street.
The Gem Shoe Shining Parlor, 336
30th, near State street.
A. F. Tervaions Cigar tiore ana
News Stand, 2526 State street
Edward Felix'’s Cigar Store, 358
30th street, N. E. Corner Armour Ave.
T. B. Hall's Cigar Store and
Laundry office, 281 zyth St.
Turner Wilham'’s Cigar and News
Stand, 2903 Armour Ave.
M. H. Watts, dealer in cigars and to-
bacco, $742 State street.
The Stationery, 2970 State street.
4. C. Campbell, 146 W. 47th street,
Cigars, Tobacco, Staple Groceries.
Wm. H. Monroe, cigar and news
stand, 486 State street.
Official figures put the present popula-
tion of Norway at 2,263,010. 5
In England and Wales from 16 to 17
per cent. of the women do not marry.
In London the percentage is 20. s
Fifty years ago the population of
England and Wales was divided equal-
ly between city and country; now 77 per
cent. of it is urban.
In Russia 2,810 men in every million
ere annually called into the army; in
Germany 4,120; in France, 5,620. To
get so large a number of Frenchmen
weaklings have tobe taken. This makes
the mortality in the French army 3%
times that of the German army.
J. New 131 W..Sist street, cigars,
tobaceo and confectionaric:
C. EB. Hunter, 4503 Wentworth ave,
cigars, tobacco, news stan::
- T. J. Bll, cigars and stationery
store,, 5220 Lake Ave.
Wm. Dixon 2638 State Street
cigars, tobacco, and news stand.
Isidor Jacobson, cigars, togacco and
stationery, 3149 State St
Joseph Haywond,. 29601-2 State
street, new stand, and confectionary
store.
‘Wm. Goetz, News Stand and Laun-
dry Office, 411 EB. 36th st.
News items and advertisements ieft
at these piacés will fina their way
tmto the columns of The Broad Ax.
By W. E. B. DuBois
REMARKABLE BOOK that is provoking
Atnch discussion because of the
wonderful ee with which the
author pleads for right and justice to
his people. In these days of increasing
agitation over the “negro problem”
this passionate human document can
neither be overlooked por ignored. Aside
from its remarkable presentation of
facts it holds the reader—prejudiced or
not—by its fascination of style and
overpowering pathos.
Some of the Chapter Headings follow :
OF OUR SPIRITUAL STRIVINGS.
OF THE DAWS OF FREEDOM
OF MR. WASHINGTON AND OTHERS.
OF THE MEANING OF PROGRESS.
OF THE TRAINING OF BLACK MEX. 5
OF THE BLACK BELT.
OP THESONS OF MASTER AND MAN.
OF THE PAITA OF THE FATHERS.
OF THE PASSING OF THE ¥IRST-BORN.
OF ALEXANDER CRUMMELL.
OF THE COMING OF JORN.
OF THE SORROW SONGS.
3d Edition $1.20 met Published by
A.C. McClurg & Co.,Chicago
Net Lambiike.
“I understand that your husband was
one of the lambs in Wall street,” said the.
woman who likes to talk thingsover.
“Whoever said that doesn’t know any-
thing about Charley's disposition,” said
young Mrs. Torkins. “He was more like
@ raging lion than « lamb.”—Washing-
ton Star.
After the Summer Campaign.
Jones—Where Go you go from New-
Thin Suelo ines 1 2
hasn't decides
whether to send me to a hospital or s
sanitarium.—Town Topics.
s Sereae Drawing Gasé.
= en EE ce Ts
Bookkeeper | mg Uhals telephos
out all over the city. ‘They say they
don’t pay. BYES ae is
must be Gone. Write an Stem for the
newspapers, saying that by ettaching
telephone wires to the water pipes it is
possible to hear what is being said tn
the next house —N. 'Y. Weekly.
~ Destruction of Property. —
“Look at Jinks! What's be all Ban-
@aged up for?”
“Didn't you know? He's been writ-
ing a funny column for the newspa-
pers.”
“But what sent him to the hos-
pital?”
“His friends caught him im the act,
and swore they'd crack every joke in
his bedy."—Cincinnati Commercial-
‘Tribune.
semen ipieinday
‘Keep Buasy_
“Make bay while the sun shines"—
That's the proper tune;
Pyet meke ft By thesmons? :
ALL THAT WAS FECESSARY.
ae : iS Ti
ATT Pe y
NT
RS ret ES
wT
i
“Charley never thinks of playing the
races any more,” said young Mrs. Tor-
kins.
“T’m giad to hear it,” said the friend.
“How did you persuade him to quit?”
“T didn’t persuade him at all. lL accepted
it in a spirit of patient resignation and
told him that if he lost any more I was
going to do the cooking myself.” —Waah-
ington Star.
‘The Shark:
‘The shark enjoys 's respect,
‘And doesn't wish to claim it-eet
It may be said for him that he
"neater ae
Pertectly Delighttal.
“Do you,” said the jearned counsel,
“swear that you will tell the truth, the
whole truth, ané—" -
“Ob, how lovely!” the fair witpese in-
Se ee ‘to
all the afternoon if I wanttof"—Tit-
Bits.
‘Giese at Gt Se F
“You talk,” ssid the tiresome optim-
ist, “as if you thought the world wasn't
‘ed enough for you.” ~ .
“No,” replied the depressing president,
“I merely try to avoid acting as if I
owned the earth."—Chicago Record-
Herald.
‘What He Thought.
“T'm going to tell him what I think of
him,” said theangry man. “What doyou
think of it?” :
“T think,” was the reply, “that he must.
be a smaller man than youareor else you
think pretty well of him.”—Chicago Post.
A Test of Strength. ~~ |
“Say, pa,” queried little Johnny Bum-
pernickle, “was Samson the strongest
man that everlived?”
“I don’t know, my-soz,” teplied the old
man. “I never heard of his trying to ift
@ mortgage.”—Cincinnati Enquirer.
. ~ tees icles eens, /
“Mamma told me tc buy some break-
fast food, but I can’t remember the name
of it.”
“That's all-right. Fl send up some-
thing and she can eall it anything she
likes.”"—-Chicago American.
Two of = Kind.
She—Who is that man you just
‘bowed to? ¥
‘He—Oh, he’s an artist. * =
She—Annd who is theone with him? -
He—He hasn't any money either—
Journal Amusant. é
> me Indieation.
-“Do you know whether that stranger
‘who ts going to settle down in this block
has a large family.or not?” — gy
“Tam quite surehehas. Hehasrented
the smallest house in the neigaborhood.”
le the Bear Seiaxe.
“And ts it true that your ancestors were
nce poo=?” toe =
“Yes, comparatively,” frankly replied
the young quadmillionsire. “My great
grandfather was.merely a millionaire.”—
Philadelphia Presa.
Rather Unusval. 2
She—Have you noticed that young
Shortleigh is paying a good deal of at-
tention to Miss Gotrox? :
He—Yes; and it's the first time I ever
knew him to pay anything. —Cincinnagi
- > Endiiweetiy. a
sary to mind the baby ocensionally? . -
Peckhate-—¥—yex, =. that is, F Bnd it
‘Recestary to ‘mind my wife when
‘Enquirer. —_ Spite. Betas vate
BOE ac ea ranaey oi Sag
~ Phyllis—i want you to know that #
Mon't stand On ttifies. “==
Hivira (glancing at her feet)—No,
ear; I see you don't—Cincinnati Ha-
SALARIES IN STAGELAND.
ae = ~ ee ieee sary ot $501
<_bibel Barrymore, ‘who during her
“first years ite
inta for only $80 a week, now bas a
salary of $300 and a smail percentage.
_ Robert Hilliard earns so much more
than in the reguiar thea-
tere that he plays in it most of the year.
ee tee nny remain srotee-
_ tons is $200, but he fs not often engaged
tn this Kind of work,
| ine ne never
Gleared less than $50,000 a year since
her first season in “The Little Minis-
ter.” By her contract with Charles
Frohman she gets a fixed salary of $500
“R week and about 60 per cent of the
Profits, And any other manager would
‘be giad to take the contract off Mr. Froh-
man's hands.
Mrs. Carter gets from David Belasco
$1,0 a week and a share of the profits
—naturally no large share, as her man-
ager takes on himeelf the financial bur-
@en of the performances in which she
appears. The Carter plays have been
“80 successful during the past four sea-
sons that even a small share of the
‘profits represents a large weekly in-
‘come.
Lawrence 4’Orsay, who is the star of
“The Earl of Pawtucket” if ever an
‘actor was star of a play, had the usual
experience of being a full-fledged star
Of the most popular play in New York
‘wt a salary of $75 a week. He was re-
ceiving that salary from Charles Froh-
man when Kirke La Shelle borrowed
him for the part of the earl. Miss Tyree
‘was getting $250 a week, and D’Orsay,
‘who was the star, got $75 until the
slose of the season. Now, of course, he
has an equable contract by whcih he
Sets $250 a week and a share. |
Viola Allen, when she became a star
with the Liebler company, was not |
looked upon by other managers as an
especially promising proposition. She
had larger degree of confidence in
hbereelf than the managers hac in her,
for ‘by ‘her contract with the Lieblers
she arranged for a salary of only $100
& week, but she got a very large per-
centage of the profits. Every play she
Bppeared in was a success, and out of
“The Christian” alone she earned more
than $150,000. “In the Palace.of the
King.” “The Eternal City” and “The
Hunchback” were all immensely proft-
able for her.
CAMPUS AND CLASSROOM.
Towa Wesleyan college is now free
from debt.
Rey. Dr. RB. B. Miller, of Boston, has
‘accepted the chair of Biblical literature
fm the Red River Valley university.
North Dakota.
‘Prof. V. K. Chestnut has been selected
for the chair of chemistry in the Mon-
tana agricultural college at Bozeman te
fill the vacancy caused by the resignation
of Dr. F. W. Traphagen.
Postmaster Arthur, of Bryn Mawr, Pa..
‘bas sent four wagonloads of mail for
the girls at Bryn Mawr college. It was
second and third class matter thet had
‘arrived at Bryn Mawr during the sum-
mer, when the college was closed.
‘The first Boer student whoever entered
‘Corhell university, and one of the first
ree ee
universities of South Africa, taken
‘ap graduate work at the Ithaca institu-
tion. His name is Leopold Reinecke and
‘he hails from Wellington, Cape Colony.
Ge is of Dutch descent, with a slight ad-
mixture of German blood, and has spent
all bis life so far in South Africa. Until
this year nostudent from that region has
ever entered an American university.
DOCTORS AND SCIENTISTS.
A French physician has been success-
ful with a much larger percentage o!
vaccinations on the leg than on the arm.
The Louisiana leper colony will be
moved from Indian Camp, which is 80
miles above New Orleans, to a point near
that city.
In the London Lanest Dr. Atkinson,
of. Hong-Kong, gives an account of six
cases of bubonic plague treated success-
fully by large doses of carbolic acid given
internally.
Dr. Belisario Sasa, a prominent sur-
geon of Lima, Peru, has started for New
York to study the latest advances in med-
icine and surgery and then report his
observations. _ >
‘M. Sotiriades, the archaeologist, who
is excavating in the old province of
Actolia, Greece, has discovered some
tombs containing various artistic -ob-
jects, gold and silver coins and rings, as
well as mythological figures.
It is fecalled’ since Sir Michael Her-
gert’s Geath that his eldest brother, the
imate earl of Pembroke, also died of cou-
sumption, baving traveled for years in
afl parts of the world in his steam yacht
tm the endeavor to escape it. "
PIGSKIN PARAGRAPHS.
‘Fhe college boy is thinking more of
pigskin than sheepskin these days.—
Washington Post.
‘The football field of the Chicago uni-
versity and the hospital adjoin. No re-
marks. —Cincinnati Times-Star.
And even now numerous long-haired
muscle-men of the gridiron are prepar-
ing to bashi-bazouk the half-backs. —At-
fants Journal. _ ek
‘There Is a-cortein fitness in the con-
temporaneous appearance of the football
poiffure and the chrysanthemum.—Des
oo ers
Si ereethpr, 15 toptbali ceaches-—Detrott
hee eh
= ae «be vaiediawuriant ate”
PRODEm paver be mn Per ee a
as Pe gr
MIRACLE OF CONSTRUCTION.
Greys Rafiroad in Peru Cost $311,504
Per Mile—Obdstacies That Had
to Be Overceme.
‘The two Americans who construct-
ed the Oroyo road, Messrs. Meiges and
Rerine, Tae, wouident “see
It. was: necessary to carry the toad-
ged for miles through galleries cst in
‘the solid fece of the rock, and the
Workmen engaged in cutting the gal-
Jeries were in many cases lowered in
‘Cages from the cliffs above. More than
‘@ tunnels had to be cut in the course of
construction, one the famous Galera
tunnel, one and one-half miles tn length,
the highest engineering project of its
kind on earth.
It is on this road that the signal
achievement of constructing a lofty steel
bridge connecting two tunnels was ac-
complished. In building this bridge,
which spans a crevice 575 feet wide and
hundreds of feet deep, it was necessary
to lower all material from the top of
the cliffs by wire cables. The whole
stupendous task was made possibie only
by the liberal use of the “V switch” or
“switchback.” In one instance of the
Peruvian raflroad it was found neces-
sary to construct a switchback In the
side of the mountain, the train heading
in on the lower level and backing out
through an upper tunnel almost exact~
ly above. The cost of the Oroya rail-
road, when completed, was $43,000,000,
Or $311,594 a mile, making it oneof the
most costly roads in the world. .
PUZZLES THE WISEST MEN.
‘Why the Intestines Do Not Digest
‘Themeelves Is a Problem—Con-
elustons of One Scientist. ~
‘The digestive tube is filled with fer
ments capable of attacking, of destroy-
ing and of transforming the food with
‘which they come in contact, but these
ferments attack neither the walls of the
intestines nor the parasites which often
live in abundance on these walls, says
Public Opinion. What causes this con-
dition? The question has often been
discussed and now the researches of M.
B.Weinland on the tryptic, ferment
again bring the matterforward. ~
In 1891 Frenzel stated that he believed
the protection enjoyed by the intes-
tines was due to the antiferments which
are secreted by the living tissues. An
experiment of M. Weinland along this
line is very interesting. A mixture was
made of fibrine and of trypsine or of
pepsin and the whole was placed to di-
gest after a little juice of ascaris was
added. No digestion occurred. The ex-
periment may be prolonged indefinitely,
but the ferment does not attack the
fibrine when the anti-ferment is pres-
ent. Thus it is not the living tissues
which resist digestion, but the juices
which impregnate them and which they
secrete. *
BREW IDEAS ON SUNSTROKE.
After-Dinuer Work tn Staguant Heat
Prodaces Exbaustion—Women
Ave the Worst Safferers.
|. “Btagmant indoor heat is more op-
‘pressive than outdoor heat,” writes Dr.
‘F. L. Oswald, in the Home Science Maga-
‘zine. “Indoor warmth, intensified by
‘stove fires, often approaches the horrors
of the Calcutta blackhole, or the swelter
den of Dante's ‘Inferno;’ and to that com-
bination of discomforts civilized men
doom their sisters and mothers. In
midsummer the sunstroke wards of New
England hospitals are crowded with male
patients, who often bave worked only on
the shady side of the streets, and witha
still larger number ef women, who can-
not plead guilty to outdoor imprudence
of any kind. They have been overcome
by the heat, and in nine out of ten cases
by the afternoon heat of ill ventilated
kitchens and washrooms, dining-rooms
‘and nurseries, by vitiated.air cooperat-
ing with the exhausting effects of a high
temperature, at a time when the resist-
ing ability of the system was impaired
by the exigencies of digestion. In other
‘words, sunstrokes and all their pre-
monitory symptoms are the effects of
hard after-dinner work in warm weath-
on
NO MORE BLACK DIAMONDS.
Supply Sti Exits, But Blectrically
Manafactured Article Has Ea-
E tirely Replaced Them.
The trade in carbonado, or Brazilian
black diamonds, which, so late as hve
years ago, was worth nearly $4,000,000
& year, is at present practically dead.
These stones, first discovered in 1843,
ere a kind of black, opaque and imper-
fectly crystallized diamond, found only
im Brazil. They are less dense-than
the white diamond, but actually harder,
and were found of immense value for
mounting in the steel crowns of rock-
doring drills. .
It was the electric furnace, worked by
the tremendous water power of Niagara,
‘which put an end to the carbonado trade,
says Stray Stories. A mixture of sand,
coke, sawdust and salt melted together
im this amazing heat resulted in the
formation of masses of beautiful crys-
tals, ranging from blood-red to pale-
These have been named earborun-
dam. They are siniost as hard as the
diamond, ee eee
Jess than a quarter of carbonado, and so
Little Pietinesm Left.
The $2,142,207 worth of platinum ex-
tracted in the Gorotjagodatski district
of Russia last year is practically the
‘world’s supply of that metal. i
Ceciows ifem im War Budget. _
According to 4m official report, the
ep powder puis. - pa ames
AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
| The correct way to pronounce the
pa ee te the Belgian au-
| thor ‘@ramatist, is Mabteriinck.
abbi Glazier, of Des Moines, Is,
je aynagogus is the oldest west of
c is compiling a history of the
in Iowa.
> & firm has been engaged to compile
| print the old English records refer-
ting to the history of the city of New
York under British rule. The cost will
“Italy is soon to celebrate at Asti and
: ‘the centenary of a great tragic
— He is buried at Florence.
: marrowly escaped being guillo-
‘Gmed in Paris during the revolution.
Gohn Morley has just completed his
‘Bfe of Gladstone and gone to Scotland
‘for a rest. Mr. Morley was on intimate
“Werms, personally and politically, with
the great commoner for many years and
tm regarded as the fittest man in Eng-
and to write a biography of the de-
ceased statesman.
Dr. George Wyld, in his “Notes of
“My. Life,” gives a charming sketch of
Prof. Blackie, of whom he writes that
mentally his popularity was due to his
affectionate, loving and perfectly truth-
ful nature, his free and outspoken, but
never bitter, speech, and his habit of
frequently bursting igto song, a custom
somewhat alarming on occasions.
Dickens’ old publishers, Messrs. Chap-
man & Hall, have lately got out a curi-
Gus edition of “Barnaby Rudge.” The
volumes are bound in old oak, which
formed the door at Newgate attacked
by the Gordon rioters. When the prison
‘was demolished recently, this door was
purchased by a lover of Dickens, who
remembered that the story of the at-
tack upon ft it had been told in “Barna-
by Rudge.”
‘When the project of erecting a monu-
Ment to the poet Shelley in Italy was
Giscussed, Gabriele D’Annunzio, Ed-
mund De Amicis and other prominent
Ttajian men of letters gave their ap-
Proval. None of them, however, at-
tended the unveiling of the monument
at Viareggio on September 15. The
Speeches were of a political rather than
8 literary character. Eighty-one years
have elapsed since Shelley was drowned
at Viareecio.
MEN KNOWN ABROAD.
In trying to obtain an interview on
South African matters with Lord Milner,
& Viennese journalist only got the fol-
lowing sentence: “For six years anda
half I have worked like a slave.”
Menotti Garibaldi, who died the other
day, resembled his illustrious father in
everything—in physiognomy, build and
constitution. He had also the same moral
attributes, the same simplicity, frugality,
modesty and love for the most humble
Door. In his family he was all peace and
‘work.
Prof. Koch, of Heidelberg, is the only
instructor at any German university who
Jectares on journalism. He has forseveral
Fears delivered lectures on this subject
at that university, and has now been in-
vited to repeat his course on the “History,
Nature and Significance of Public Opin-
fon, the Preés and Journalism in Ger-
many,” at Cologne.
Paul Loubet, son of the French prest-
dent, lives in the Elysee, where-he acts
as private secretary to his father. He fs
rarely heard of, being a quiet, retiring,
though tactful man, with no particular
fondness for public life. His admiration
for his sturdy father amounts almost to
worship and when, in the troubled Drey-
fus days, President Loubet was hooted
and insulted by the nationalists, it was
the son who was the more indignant.
NATURAL HISTORY NOTES.
A wild elephant has a keen sense of
smell, Ata distance of 1,000 yards it can
scent an enemy.
The condor keeps its young longer in
the mest than any other bird. Fully 12
months elapse before the young condors
can fy.
Spiders always come out of their holes
shortly before rain, being advised by
their instinct that insects then fly low
and are easily taken.
it is @ curious fact that the wildest
members of the anima! kingdom general-
ly make the tamest pets, and vice versa.
The curlew, for instance, is one of the
wildest of birds, but in captivity few
creatures are tamer. The sparrow, on
the other hand, is an exceedingly difi-
cult bird to tame.
‘Asecond specimen of the African quad-
ruped known as the okapi, discovered by
Sir William Johnston, has been secured
by Mr. Walter Rothschild for his exten-
sive zoological museum at Tring, Eng-
land. A special expedition was organ-
ized- in Central Africa to secure a speci-
men from Congo Forest, dead or alive.
That which has been received by Mr.
Retin fe ten skis Sad kell of 29
okapl /
f SOME BOYS—
‘Take on absurd airs if a woman treats
them as men.
‘Regard early rising as one of the great-
est trials of life.
Talk to girls in s-manner that indi-
cates want of respect.
“Boast about What they do in a way
that indicates fatrication.
siete ocndone
out regard to conditions.
of im the evening.
i much noise that their ab-
ence woul be considered a favor.
_ Opprate on the theory that no one else
nas righ ich they are compelled to
apes 3 : es
thioogh they were the ea eon
We
- Show asad | ck of tact : >
cee ree them in position. —
Se
“THE FATHER OF THE BANJO.”
Frank B. Converse Made That Instre-
ment Popular But Lived to
See Its Decline.
The man who made the banjo pop-
‘ular and who lived to see it decline in
favor died the other day in New York
city. He was Frank B. Converse, and
he was known as “the father of the
Danjo,” says the New York Sun.
Mr. Converse was born at Westfield,
Masa, in 1837. He came of a musical
family. His brother, Charles Converse,
has written many hymn tunes and an-
thems. <
The family moved to Elmira when
Mr. Converse was a boy, and there he
was educated. At 16 he left his home
to become a musician. He drifted into
& minstrel company, traveled over the
country and appeared later in London
with Pony Moore and the Christy com-
pany.
It was as @ performer on the banjo
that Mr. Converse was known princi-
pally, and he composed for the instru-
ment and wrote for it. He continued
to teach the instrument after he retired
from the stage a quarter of a century
ago, and most of the noted old-time
Players were his pupils.
The banjo was @ very simple contri-
vance when he began to use it in his
minstrel turns, and he did much to de-
velop it into what {t is to-day.
Mr. Converse’s widow is Harriet
Maxwell Converse, the author, lectur-
er and authority on Inaian lore.
The decline of the banjo followed
soon after the public interest in min-
strel performances began to decrease.
Tt is rarely heard onthe stage now,
even in vaudeville performances, and
even the college clubs have lost their
old enthusiasm for it. Now it is not
even used to tie ribbons on.
| WOMEN GOOD WORKERS.
Many Drive Wagons Over Lonely Ru-
ral Mail Routes—Hold Other Posi-
| tlens im Peetal Service.
The largest number of women em-
ployes in any line of work are employed
in the United States postal service.
Some of the highest salaried women in
the world are employed thus. More than
one-third of them are past middle age,
and many are past 70 years, says the
Chicago Tribune. .
Many of the women are mail wagon
drivers, having long and lonesome trips
in uninhabited parts of the country. In
great numbers they are employed ‘n the
rural free delivery.
Nearly all the experts in the dead
letter office are women. They have to
perform tasks which to the average per-
son would seem impossible. It is their
duty to take charge of the 6,000 pieces
of mail which go astray every year, and
they must see that these waifs get to
their proper destinations, if possible,
and if not they are returned to the
senders.
Many of the rural post offices are filled
by women. The reasons why a large
number of these rural post offices are in-
trusted to women are not hard to find.
The work is usually light and is such as
can be handled by a woman. It is the
general opinion that women in such po-
sitions have given the best work to the
department_
GREATEST CHEESE MARKET.
Alkmaar, Holland, Holds Werld’s
Record in Quantity of Cleese
Shipped to Other Points.
Alkmaar is not only the greatest
cheese market of Holland, but also of
the world, says What to Eat. From this
town yearly 10,000,000 pounds of cheese
are sent out, yet the visitor, even on
market Friday, finds no amount of bust-
ness commensurate with these figures
going on in the quiet town of 10,000 in-
habitants. The reason is that the cheese
is made in the dairies in the country
round about Alkmaar, and only
brought into town td be shipped away.
On market day the peasants from the
surrounding country begin to flock into
town very early, bringing with them
loads of red and yellow balls of cheese.
The high, clumsy carts with long curv-
ing tongues, on one side of which the
horse is hitched, are quite as picturesque
as the peasants themselves in gala at-
tire. After unhitching and caring for
their horses, unloading the cheese and
piling it in an orderly pile in the open’
square, they wander about visiting with
their neighbors, while they wait their
turn in the weigh house.
Southern Ports Are Gaining.
Compared with 1901, the exports
from North Atlantic ports have de-
creased heavily. Boston lost $55,000,-
000; New York, $24,000,000; Pniladel-
phia, $6,000,000; Baltimore, $25,000,000;
Newport News, $7,000,000, and at Nor-
folk the loss was nearly $2,000,000.
All ports further south gained. The
increase at Washington, N. C., was
$2,000,000; at Savannah, $3,000,000, and
Galveston, $8,000,000. Exports across
the Mex‘can border have increased $5,-
000,000; from Pacific ports, $10,000,000,
and from the northern border and lake
ports the increase has been $18,006,000.
In imports, however, the Atlantic sa-
board is increasing its commanding
Jead. In the year 1903, out of the total
imports into the United States of $1,-
025,000,900, $0 per cent came in
through the Atlantic ports.
——$__—
- Wiecintion af the Ax.
The ax had ite beginning In 8 pound-
ing implement of rough stone. It grad-
wally developed into's tool with an edge
for backing and a pole for pounding.
Hts efficiency was finally increased by
the addition of a handle It has re-
mained s combined pounding and -cut-
ting Implement up to the time of the
mamufacture .of--the double-bitted
ote % Z
In the Jars 1884 ta 1590 the
'fe of Englishmen fnereased about foar
Singular and Unexpected Method of
Enforcing the Game Laws ia
New Hampshire.
A young New York fisherman who
went into northern New Hampshire to
try his luck early last summer ran
across & new way of enforcing game
laws. The New Hampshire statutes
make ft an offense to have im one's pos-
session @ trout under six inches in
length, but the New Yorker didn’t know
this, says the Sun.
He was returning by train from a good
Gay's sport, when the conductor, after
taking up his ticket, strolled back and
started a conversation. He asked the
fisherman what luck he’d had, and finally
asked to see the catch.
The conductor looked long and care-
fully at the fish. Wigally he said:
Sere cigpardpuiad A ont me
this state, an’ some o’ them fish are
under size. I'll have to measure them.”
And measure them he did, finding that
five were under length. It cost the young-
ster $25 and costs to settle the bill with
the state, and « part of that sum went
to the game warden conductor.
The fisherman didn’t know the trick
of the native, who, when he hauls out a
trout that’s under length, cuts off the
tail and defies the warden to tell how
long it was when caught.
NOVEL MILITARY RIDE.
Condition of the Horses to Count
More Than Speed in New
Contest.
~ Sir Evelyn Wood has invented a mili-
tary ride under new conditions, which
are to be tested over Salisbury plain,
reports Country Life.
The conditions are 25 miles of dis-
tance to be covered, the riders steering
by compass, and horses to be brought
in in such good condition as to show no
spur marks and be able to eat a feed
of corn within half an hour of coming
to the winning post.
Among the most important of the
minor conditions attached to this ride
is that which provides that the horse
ridden shall have been the property of
his rider for at least a fortnight, or if
he be a government horse shall have
been ridden regularly by the man who
mounts him in the competition for a
previous fortnight.
In order to give competitors no ad-
vantage from local knowledge, the ride
4s to be over a course that will be indi-
cated to the riders by the markers post-
ed at different places along its devious
line, and each marker will indicate to
the rider only so much of the course as
will suffice to take him to the next of
these living signal posta
THE POWER OF RADIUM.
An Ounce Would Drive a 50-Horse-
Power Motor Car Around
the World.
‘The consular reports published by
the department of commerce quote
from the Anglo-Indian Review, “and in-
teresting and illuminating account” of
the possible future applications of
radium. The report says:
“The area where success is practical-
ly assured is at present not very large,
but fm the medical field it is already
fairly extensive. In the working of X-
rays and in the marvelous results
achieved in the treatment of cancer and
blindness we have every hope for great
and universally benefiting results. In
its industrial application we are some-
what restricted by the extremely lim-
ited supply of radium available, but it
is stated that a email fraction of an
ounce, properly employed, would prob-
ably provide a good light sufficient for
several rooms and would not require re-
newal during the present century. It
has been caiculated that the energy
stored up in one gram of radium is suf-
ficent to raise 500 tons weight a mile
high. An ounce would, therefore, suf-
fice to drive a 50 horse-power motor car
at the rate of 30 miles an hour around
the world.”
COSTLIEST OF ALL KNIVES.
Piece of Cutlery Made in Shemeld,
England, Said to Be
Werth $4,500.
‘The most valuable knife im the
world is to be seen in the collection of
a famous firm of cutlers in Sheffield,
reports London Answers. It is large
enough to fit the pocket of none but a
giant and contains 75 blades, which
can close up like those of an ordinary
knife. Each of the larger blades is
elaborately engraved and among the
Subjects of these strange pictures ara
views of Sheffield college, the city of
York, Windsor castle, Arundel castle
and a score of other famous scenes,
The hafts are of mother-of-pearl,
carved with great skill. On one side
the artist has depicted 9 stag hunt
and on the other a boar hunt. When
asked as to the valué of this knife, the
firm replied: “Well, we calculated it
up to £920, but that was before it was
finished, and then we ceased to esti-
mate what it had cost.”
Pearis in Indian Territory.
Pearls of great value have been dis
covered recently in Elk creek, near
Muskogee. There is much reason to
Delieve that pearl fisheries similar to
thoge which have been developed in
Arkansas will be found extensively in
Indian -territory. In many of” the
streaws of the territory are immense
beds of musseln, which authorities say
are of the peati-bearing variety. ~
Lesses to Italian Fishermen.
ores of Lane Laguno: have, scdered
shores of
serious iment owing 3 i seme
which has already 4 at least “a
spat ws ees eee
EE ete i ee
“preacher who one time ran a one-
‘4s stil! living in the house on Dearborn
“street, not far from 32nd street, wiih
the short or the Kinky haired widow.
A Witle bird tnmformed us that there
is only one bed in the house; that the
old side whiskered preacher, who is
becoming as hot after the sisters as
Rev./Abraham Lincoln Murray, sleeps
om the floor nedr the bed which is
occupied by the widow.
¥ St
Bonnie Scotch Tweed ‘Suits. to Order
$15. Any Style.
WM. A. KIRCHBERGER & CO,
$89 Go. Clark Gt, - macon
“Tn the last issue of the Old Churel
‘Organ “uncle Rube” says if “be
‘wants ‘to ‘he will write sbout Dan R
‘Wilkins, of Ky. If “Uncle Rube” will
promise to write and publish in the
‘columns of the Ojd Church Organ the
record of Elder D. R. Wilkins while
he was engaged in running a church
at Jacksonville, Il, we will present
“Uncle Rube with a brand new twenty
@ollar overcoat. Will you do it
“Uncle Rube?” We pause for s
reply! -
Ex-Alderman Fred Hart, and Joseph
P. Junk, of the 29th ward, it is said,
‘will spend ten thousand dollars next
spring to help prevent the return of
Alderman Thomas Carey to the city
council The populer ex-Alderman is
making. lots of money in his various
business enterprisés and Joseph Junk
the wealthy brewer, has money to burn
and they can well afford to spen¢
twenty thousand doljars in the inter-
est of a good German-Americ=n, whom
they will support for Aldermen of the
29th Ward.
Col or Elder D. R. Wilkins, of
he Old Church Organ and his hand
‘some side whiskers, are holding down
& Job in the office of the County Clerk
It was thought that many of the tin-
‘horn politicians that Col. ot Elder Wil-
kins was making so much money in
Fanning his Old Church Organ and
white-washing jackleg and whisky
@rniking preachers that he would be
above splitting his ministerial or
‘woman's mouth from ear to ear in
order to induce his white or biack
political master to permit him to pick
up a few crumbs in the office of the
County Clerk.
Genuine Home Spun Suiting to Order,
$18, Fit Guaranteed.
WM. A. KIRCHBERGER 4 CO.,
109 So. Clark St, - Chicago, Ill.
Mrs. Harry J. Rogers, 5303 Prince
ton Ave, whose husband is one of our
idest Chicago friends, is one of the
a@eany lady admirers of this paper.
While calling at their cosy home
last Saturday evening, Mrs. Rogers,
‘who is a nest or an excellent house-
keeper, declared “that she greatly
enjoys persuing the spicy contents of
‘The Broad Ax, as well as her hus
band.’ Mrs. Rogers ie completing a
fancy bed spread, which she very
Kindly permitted us to inspect, and
‘when it is finished it will be ever so
lovely or exquisite and worth well on
to one hundred dollars.
‘Thursday -evening, October 29th
® silver jubilee for the benefit of the
building fund of St. Thomas church,
‘will ‘be given by the Triangle and In-
mer Circle Clubs, at the First Regt
‘Ment Armory, 16th street and Mich-
igan-evenue. It will consist of music
‘and oratory. This interesting feature
“Will begin at.8:30 to 10:30 p.m. At
‘that time the floor will be turned over
‘to Mr. or Prof. Noah D. Thompson
floor manager of the clubs, and danc-
ing ‘will be in order until 2:30 a m.
‘Tickets of admission to the silver
fabilee and the dance are selling for
the small sum of Fifty Cents. |
Dan Macon, 2435 Armour Ave., who
is connected with the Pittsburg
‘Plate Glass Company, and who is an
old time newspaper man himself, says
“that The Broad Ax is the only news-
paper published in the interests of
the Afro-American that he ever thinks
‘about resding..That he likes it be-
ent of ‘the race ‘and ts bitterly op
‘posed to bad or immoral preachers
Staggering im and out their pulpits,
Selves and the entire race” Mr.
‘Macon, like thousands of the best
‘snd the brightest Afro-Americans all
ae oe * ‘knows « good
i a re
oe ald Secretary of the
ee aoe Calon ‘sas tant
Eawert eeainnt the Beart of He-
i eee acetal
watown district and
large revennes in
. Mahe tn a owe:
‘why all churches or religious socities
of whatever denomination should not
pay their just proportion of taxes on
their real estate holdings.
All Woo! Scotch Suits Tailor Made,
Unealied-for, $8.50.
WM. A. KIRCHBERGER 4 CO.
789 So, Clark St, - ‘Chicago, tl.
eee cae tena
its first annual meeting at Bethel
church, Sunday evening. It was ad
dressed by Col Edward H. Morris.
attorney for “The Gamblers’ Trust”
who was never known to spend one
dollar of his money for the advance.
ment or for the improvement of the
Afro-American race, Major Franklin
A. Denison, and Doctor Charles E.
Bentley. The church was crowded,
but the speakers or no one else seemed
tobe familiar with the aim or the
Object of the meeting. Col. or Eider
D. R. Wilkins, who at one time ran
@ church at Jacksonville, Tl, Hon
John G. Jones, and many citisens
equally as prominent occupied con-
spicuous seats In the pulpit.
CURIOUS OBSERVATIONS. |
A bare foot—i2 inches,
Standing well in the eyes—tears.
nny ee ey © beace woot mae
Never sought for, but often reached
old age.
To have a good ear for the drum one
‘wants a good drum for the ear.
A left-handed man is often right, but
@ right-handed man is oftener left.
When single you have your own way.
‘When married you halve your own way
—perhaps.
Prodigious strength makes the race
horse all the harder to pass; not so with
the butter. -
| & Georgia paper made mention of a
megress 99 years old and referred to her
as Aunty Belle. In another column it
mentioned a negro, Elijah Houston, 100
years.old, and referred to him as ante-
bellum.—N. Y. Herald.
HOVELTIES IN TEWELRY.
Gatpins having hand-painted china
heads are seen. .
. Enameled mandolins, guitars, tennis
rackets and other like things are seen
among the belt buckle designs.
A beautifal brooch is in the form of a
Hzard and is made of small diamonds.
Down the center of the back is a row of
emeralds and the eyes are rubies.
A pretty piece of jewelry is a large
bowknot of diamonds, with the long
ends and loops drooping downward and
having ateach end a large solitaire.
‘To hang on the long chains are small
spheres about as large as an English
walnut, which come in gold, silver or
gun metal. These small balls unscrew
and display hidden in their centers lit-
tle powder puffs.
ile i
> “It must hurt a man's credit to wips
out his debts by going through bank-
Tuptey.”
“Ob, it may tm some cases, but the
‘wise man doesn’t go through bankruptcy
until be has worked his credit to the
limit."—Chicago Post.
Hard Cenditions.
“Don't yes open yer mout’, Flana-
gn, or Of! bate yer head aff, an’ if
yes kape sittin’ there t'inkin’ evil
oughts av me an’ sayin’ niver a
wur-rd, it’s a uppercut in th’ jaw O1'll
let yes hov.”—N. Y. Times.
The Lesser Evil.
‘The Danghter—But, mamma, if I
marry for money, I am afraid I will get
eens s font ae.
‘The Mother—But that isn’t balf so
‘bad a8 marrying some one you do like
bees gate emo
Seietiog Mee Ben’.
/ apt. Peed succeed in concealing
ber for = long while,” remarked
the observer of events and things, “bu!
when she gets her first engagement ring
she's always willing to show her hand.”
—Yonkers Statesman.
~ Dead Giveaway.
“Uncle Henry,” said little Robert, “do
you absorb water?”
“How absurd!” replied Uncle Heary.
“Do you think I am a towel?”
“No, but pa said you were a sponge.”—
Chicago Daily News.
| Some People Did.
‘Skids—Did your friend, Chesterius
MeRanter, the tragedian, enjoy his va-
cation?
_ Beads—tI can't say as to whether he
enjoyed it or not, but the public did —
Boston Journal.
; ee ce See ee ee
Ward Heeler—Do you hate the oppo-
site party?
Zealous Voter—Hate it! I bate it al-
most as badly as I do the other fac-
tion of my own party.—Baltimore
American.
Doctor—Well, Pat, did you take the
box of pills I sent you? ‘
Pat—I did that, yer honor, but I don’t
feel any betther; I expect the lid haven't
come off yet.—Ally Sloper, ~
- inside bis watch
‘He carried sate
of bis sweetheart’s face,
aoe sore
“A great big, able-codied man Like you
ought to be ashamed to ask a stronger
for money,” said the well-to-do citizen.
“I know I ought,” answered Meander-
ing Mike. “But, mister, Pm jac’ natural-
ly ‘00 kin@-bearted to tep ‘im on de
beaé ané teke it away from him
Washington Star.
A, D. GASH
Aittomney at Taw,
a mere
Telephones Main 3077.
FREDERICK W. JOB
ATCOMEEY at una
“amnteead” CHICAGO
ni
FEDERICO M. BARRIOS
Attorney & Counsellor at Law
Saite 501 Firmentch Bldg.
EnsaEesme _ Chicago.
LAWYER
Rem 402 Reaper Bh, = GBA
II rn wwe er
Puones {2m Mgt
STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS
LAWYER
Suite 200. 123 125 L& Salle Street
CHICaGO
Gateghows Yards SG fechas 4 So steed ie
JOHN FITZGERALD
WSTICE OF. THE PEACE:
6701S HALSTED STRMNT.
—UBICL@O
d. GRAY LUCAS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Suite 412 Real Estate Board Bidg
{9 Dearborn St. Cor. Randelph
_ @HICAGO.
Phone Reséelph 55
J. J. HENNESSY, -
Justice-ofthe-Peace,
6301 S. Halsted St. <
WILLIAM TREXLER. CLERK.
TELEPHONE WENTWORTH 4403.
Police Magistrate Englewood Police
Court.
Telephone Main 3558.
P. J. O’SHEA
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 1444 Unity Building
79 Dearborn &t. Chicago.
Notary Public. 5072 Central.
EDWARD G ALEXANDER
ATTORNEY AT Law.
agp Kheacborn fitment, : _ CHICAGO.
Rebert M. Mitchell
| Attorney at Law
- Suite 9, Ne. 77 South Clark $0.
cmcaco
WILLIAM RITCHIE
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR.
(Bute Nd-e88 Ortere Bubting
84 LASALLE ST., cHtIcago
‘Tatesmone Mat: 1644
# J.E. JONES #
| LAWYER
= 79 Clark Street
ee Chicago
S. A. McELWEE
| eoLAWYER...
36 S. Clark St., CHICAGO,
Room 706 Ogden Suticing
| batdenes, 5168 Fersstar.
ALBERT 8. GEORGE
LAW YER.
423 Ashiand Biook, Chicage.
Sek Sons.
eteeesineaticeesieeeenteneianasinieemesiaeses
pe T. 4, AUNTER.
Dealer in-ls@ies’ and gent’s cloth-
ing. Private salesrooms, 3149 State
St. Phone, Dougias 2961.
we BRICK CO.
JohnJ. Dunn
WwooD
Fifty-First St. and Armour Ave.
Rate Vanne:| SS AOS
| . CHICAGO
Phenix Oil & Mineral Co.
$200,000 CAPITAL
eevee er
Soe eee
THE BAVIES (AVESTMERT COWPAIY
614 First Nat onal Baok Bldg., Chicago
HOHENADEL BROS.
“=or" UNIFORM CAPS
JACOB FEINBERG.
Market and Grocery
Telephone 565 South
81st and State Sts. CHICAGO
pray PUBLIC. Office Phone, M, 751
Residence Phone. Blue 5835.
W. G. ANDERSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAw.
J.Q. GRANT& CO.
Colfections, Loans and in«urance,
SUITE 61,119 LASALLE
Residence, 3232 Wabash Avenue,
CHICs GO.
John J. Bradley
Real Estate, Insurance and Loans
Property managed. Abstracts examined. Renting. Legal papers prepared.
4709 South Halsted Street Bee oe Chicago
Theodore C. Mayer |
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Fieckgnmes, hecie| Nadew anit agai Wacieasinne tiles
and Acknowledged. Room 22, 27 North Clark Street.
ese’ ‘Chirage Avs. Potce Court 37 Durteg Strect
WONDERFUL
DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
MARROW
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Seana
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8 s : Mason and
UM Higginbothan ==
Sa ees
| 226 East 25th Stret - - - CHICAGO.
F. W. BOYD —seacex mm —
~ COAL, WOOD AND ICE
All Orders Promptly Attended to Cash on Delivery
hkveee = 4656 Armour Avenue, CHICAGO.
If Brewer
M. JUNE, Propristor J
JOS. P. JUNK, Manager
3700-3710 South Halsted Street
_ and 897 to 929 Thirtyseventh Street
Mrs. Anna L. Newby.
First class furnished rooms, for rent
to gentleman and iadies, with bath
and gas. 2628 Wabash avenue.
~- American Brick Co. -
% MANUFACTURERS OF
Gommor and Sewer Brick
Office and Yards:
45th and Robey Sts.
__ sii ees apron Wal jes
Ope of Somme Ya: a, lee ae
Telephone Yards 128. -
MRS, T. P. HILL:
Richly furnished rooms to rent to
married couples and singie gentlemen;
gas, bath, and steam heat; 3017 and
3126 Wabash avenue.
Rooms for Rent. ‘
Elegantly furnished rooms for rent |
with bath and gas at $232 Wabash
srenue.
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