The Broad Ax
Saturday, November 21, 1903
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE SPREAD OF THE MOHAMMEDAN RELIGION
Over the Ancient Eastern World. It is the most Philosophical of all of the Systems of Religion.
Our former article on the "Religions or the Teachings of Jesus and Mohamet" attracted widespread attention. It was highly commented upon except by the ignorant, or those who are entirely unfamiliar with the interesting career of Mohamet, who was born in the city of Mecca, in Arabia, four years after the death of Justinian, A.D. 569, who was the last and the greatest of all the emperors of the Byzantine Empire. As stated before Mohamet exerted or exercised the greatest or the most lasting influence upon the human race than any other individual who has so far appeared on the face of the earth.
It may be permissible at this juncture to state that of all the religious systems in existence in the world today none of them are as philosophical as the religious system founded or established by Mohamet and his immediate successors, who founded immense libraries, vast educational institutions for the cultivation of science and the study of medicine. The scientific knowledge which radiated from those great Arabian institutions of learning eventually prevented the inhabitants of Europe from reverting back into their former condition of savagery. They established the first hospitals in Europe, and continued to hold aloft the light or the torch of reason until finally the black cloud of ignorance and religious superstition was rolled back, which threatened to engulf the entire portion of the civilized world during the dark or the middle ages.
But, before proceeding further, let us return and review the stormy or the wonderful career of Mohamet, who did not begin to preach his doctrine on "the oneness or the unity of God" until he was well advanced in years. He was the original Unitarian. His bold declaration that there is but one God, who is not cut up nor divided up into three separate or distinct parts and Mohamet in his prophet or messenger, this simple declaration caused the multitude to rally to his support who were eager and willing to endure hardships of every kind in order to assist in propagating his religious teachings. It is true that when he first began to preach his converts were composed of slaves, for he never knew any one by the color of their skin nor by the curl or kink in their hair, for all those who believe in his religion sustain the same relation to his God. At first Mohamet's wife Chadizah, who was much older than himself did not believe in his teaching, but it is related that as they sat alone, one day a shadow entered the room. "Dost thou see aught?" said Chadizah, who after the manner of the Arabian matrons, wore her veil. "I do," said the prophet, whereupon she uncovered her face and said: "Dost thou see it now?" "I do not." "Glad tidings to thee, O Mohamet!" exclaimed Chadizah: "It is an angle, for he has respected my unveiled face; an evil spirit would not." "I" said his wife, "will be one of thy believers," then they knelt down in prayer together. Since that day over nine thousand millions of human beings have acknowledged him to be a true prophet of God.
Mohamet through his religious zeal wrought or effected many reforms throughout the Arabian Empire. He abolished the worship of idols. He put his seal of condemnation upon the institutions of slavery and polygamy. He preached against the practice of female infanticide, gambling and other evils or vices. He declared that "marriage is the natural state of
man." He enjoined upon his followers to be virtuous, clean, sober, to improve their social condition, to be liberal or charitable to the poor, and deal gently with the widow and the orphan. He enacted a law whereby his countrymen could not become divorced or repudiate their wives with out a just cause, and that the children of a slave girl by her master should be free. He was the author of the Koran, which is written in the most polished and elegant language. It contains nothing to shock the minds of sweet innocent little children, not to blunt the finer sensibilities of men and women. Like unto the Jewish Bible which teems with rapine, murder, debauchery or immorality. It is indeed astonishing how he succeeded in accomplishing so much for the everlasting benefit of humanity, for we must remember that almost single handed and alone he created the glory of his nation and spread his language over half the earth.
To the end of his life he was steadfast in his declaration of the unity of God, that "Paradise will be found in the shadow of the crossing of swords." On his last pilgrimage from Medina to Mecca, where he had been driven on account of his opposition to idolatry, he marched at the head of one hundred and fourteen thousand devotees. When he approached the Holy City, he exclaimed in Oriental eloquence: "Here am I in thy service, O God! Thou hast no companion. To thee alone belongest worship. Thine alone is the kingdom. There is none to share it with thee." He returned to Medina to die or to end his earthly career. In his farewell to his followers, he said: "Everything happens according to the will of God, and has its appointed time, which can neither be hsatened nor avoided. I return to him who sent me, and my last command to you is, that ye love, honor, and uphold each other, that ye exhort each other to faith and constancy in belief, and to the performance of plous deeds. My life has been for your good, and so will be my death."
In his dying agony, his head was reclined on the lap of his wife. From time to time he dipped his hand in a vase of water, and moistened his face. At last he ceased, and, gazing steadfastly upward, said in broken accents: "O God—forgive my sins—be it so, I come." Candor and fariness will not permit any one to speak of Mohamet in a sneering manner for his moral precepts have become the religious guide of one-third of the human race. Abubeker, the immediate successor of Mohamet, was scarcely seated in the Khalifate, when he put forth the following proclamation: "In the name of the most merciful God! Abu" to the rest of the true believers, health and happiness. The mercy and blessing of God be upon you. I praise the most high God. I pray for his prophet Mohamet. "This is to inform you that I intend to send the true believers into Syria, to take it out of the hands of the infidels. And I would have you know that the fighting for religion is an act of obedience to God." In a parting review he enjoined on his troops justice, mercy, and the observance of fidelity in their engagements. He commanded them to abstain from frivolous conversation and from wine, and vigorously to observe the hours of prayer; to be kind to the common people among whom they passed, but show no mercy to their priests."
Then his true believers or the Saracen army began its victorious march northward towards Damascus, the Capital City of Syria. A battle
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took place around the walls of that ancient city between the Roman army of seventy thousand, and the Scaracen army, the former was defeated and after an investment of seventy days Damascus surrendered. From Damascus the Mohammedan army marched in triumph to the Holy City of Jerusalem; its citizens fought for four months before they surrendered, then it was decided that the surrender of Jerusalem should take place in the presence of the Khalif himself, who journeyed from Medina for that purpose, riding a red camel, carrying a bag of corn, one of dates, a wooden dish, and a leathern water-bottle. He entered the Holy City riding by the side of the Christian patriarch, and the transference of the capital of Christianity to the followers of Mohamet was effected without tumult or outrage, having ordered that a mosque should be built on the site of the temple of Solomon, the Khalif returned to the tomb of the prophet at Medina.
With the fall of Jerusalem it was only a short time until the remaining portion of the ancient eastern world was conquered or subdued by the Mohamedans, and after a laps of more than one thousand years, Palestine, the birth place of Christianity, the Holy City of Jerusalem, eight of the other great capitals of Christianity and the sepulchre or the tomb of Jesus, still remain in the hands or under the control of the Mohammedans. It seems that in this case the forms of faith of the two religious sects was submitted to the judgment of God, and He very carelessly decided against the Christians, and in favor of the infidels or the Mohammedans.
No one conversant with the history of the past will dispute the fact that Mohammedanism, as left by its founder, was an anthropomorphic religion. Its God was only a gigantic man, its heaven a mansion of carnal pleasures, from these imperfect ideas its more intelligent classes very soon freed themselves, substituting for them others more correct or philosophical. As Al-Gazzall says: "A knowledge of God cannot be obtained by means of the knowledge a man has of himself, or of his own soul. The attributes of God cannot be determined from the attributes of man. His sovereignity and government can neither be compared nor measured."
Thus proving that the Mohammedan religion is the most philosophical of all the systems of religion.
Mrs. Dovie Joyce, 5021 Armour Ave., for the past two weeks has been confined to her bed with sickness. She is recovering and her new beau is happy.
Southern Negroes Question Booker. The Colored Press of the country is now teeming with condemnation of the jailing of reputable Colored men by Booker T. Washington for asking him to explain himself. Even young Pickens is being scorched for his method of attack on The Guardian. Some declare that those questions need answering and that jailing men will never answer them. One paper in Arkansas, the Fraternal Union, thinks that there should be more questioning. Under the caption, "Why Not Complain?" this paper has this to say:
"We have no reason for complaint. If we do not get on the fault is with us, not with the white man."—Booker T. Washington.
Thank God that we are not in Boston, where to question Mr. Washington about his public utterances is to merit a sentence in the county jail. Being out here in the southwest, out of the immediate reach of both Mr. Washington and Boston constabularly, we venture the following questions:
(1) What about the Jim crow laws, according to which we pay first-class fare and get third or fourth class accommodations?
(2) What about the courts of this country, in which Negroes are not allowed to sit as jurors, yet in which members of the race are daily condemned on the filmsiest kind of evidence?
(3) What about the general tendency of this country to curtail Negro education to the limit of the most elemental sort, at this, a time when he needs the very best trained minds and hearts to guide him amid the shoals of American prejudice?
(4) What about the disfranchising constitutions of the southern states, by the operation of which the Negroe is divested of his only power of redressing the wrongs perpetrated against him and of protecting himself against other injustices to which he is subjected?
To the Editor of The Broad Ax:
Dear Sir: I have noticed in some of the papers an article purporting to come from an individual who goes by the name of H. E. Burris of Rock Island, Illinois; and I have also been informed by other persons that this one H. E. Burris has been stating that the State Convention of Colored men that was held at Springfield, Illinois, Oct. 12th, 1903, by the Civil Rights Protective League of the State of Illinois, that it was a farce and that very few persons attended the meeting and that the convention was a failure in every particular.
As I am President of the Civil Rights Protective League of the State of Illinois and was present at the convention that was held at Springfield, Illinois, October 12th, 1903, I brand each and every statement made by the said H. E. Burris as a barefaced, malicious and wilful lie. I have attended a number of state conventions of Colored men in the State of Illinois heretofore; but this convention that was held at Springfield October 12th was the largest state convention of Colored men that was ever held hertofore in the State of Illinois.
There was present at the state convention over 200 delegates, coming from all parts of the state. Much important business was transacted at the convention for the benefit and in the interests of the colored people. I here give the names of some of the leading and most prominent colored men of the State of Illinois who were delegates and were at the convention:
Hon. Edward H. Morris, lawyer of Chicago and member of the legislature of the State of Illinois; Lawyer E. E. Wilson; Hon. Theodore W. Jones, ex-County Commissioner of Cook County; Louis B. Anderson, Assistant County Attorney of Cook County; Rev. Jordan Chavis. Assistant Grain Inspector; Dr. A. A. Wesley; B. D. Bagley, Manager of the Chicago Appeal; T. D. McFarland, State Factory Inspector of Illinois; Col. John R. Marshall, who is Colonel of the 8th Colored Regiment of Illinois and also Game Warden of the State of Illinois; Dr. W. T. Jefferson of Chicago, Illinois; A. R. Byrd, Fish Commissioner of the State of Illinois, of Quincy, Illinois; Dr. J. H. Magee, Clerk in the State Department; Otis B. Duncan, Clerk in the office of Public Instruction; Edward D. Green, State Weigher; Rev. T. L. Smith of Springfield, Illinois; Dr. Shepard, Peoria, Ill.; Major R. R. Jackson, Chicago, Ill.; Rev. T. C. Flemming, Braidwood, Ill.; Richard Blue, Jesse Hawkins, Bloomington, Ill.; Rev. H. H. DeWitt, Dr. McKennebrew, of Jacksonville, Ill.; J. B. McCrea, Editor of the Metropolis Gazette, R. C. Yancey, of Metropolis, Ill., and many other prominent men from various parts of the state, whose names I do not at this moment recall were delegates and present at the state convention.
So it will be seen at once that the statement coming from or made by this man H. E. Burris is a base fabrication from beginning to end, and for the truthfulness of any statements that he might make I would just as soon believe him over a spelling book as the bible. The next state convention of the League will be held at Springfield, Ill., September, 1904.
On Tuesday last when the Republican precinct elections were being held throughout the city and county, J. H. Shreve, president of the club of the 33rd precinct of the 2nd ward called the meeting to order promptly at 8 p.m., and after stating that the only business before the meeting was the election of club officers for the ensuing year, he arose, stepped aside and called the vice-president, Mr. Jos. F. Burns to the chair. Mr. Shreve then stated that the members present could select a chairman for the meeting other than Mr. Burns if they so desired, but all present appearing to be satisfied, the election of officers commenced immediately, and resulted in the re-election of the outgoing officers, Jos. H. Shreve, President; Jos. F. Burns, vicePresident; Paul E. VanValkenburg. Secretary. Just as the election was completed and the meeting was adjourned, Mr. A. Horn, who was a candidate for president, entered the place of meeting and demanded that the etlection be held again, but the members could not be induced to comply with his request.
Mr. Horn was very much enraged at the election having been held while he was absent hunting up voters, but he commenced too late, it being the time when he should have been at the meeting. He has probably learned a trick in politics which he should have known long ago.
Rev. fighting wet Holy Ghost Archibald James Carey, who declared while delivering a political speech at Carlo, Ill., in 1900, "that any Negro who would vote the Democratic ticket ought to be sent ten thousand miles into hell." Col. T. W. Jones, who rides to Booker Washington's Business League meetings on free passes, and who never gives up much money for the benefit of the race unless he can have his name read out in the church; S. Laing Williams, who really believes the world will surely come to an end if Prof. Washington should happen to die. W. Winston Taylor, whose wife and children have prayed for him to return to them in Washington, D. C., Col. Robert M. Mitchell and San B. Turner, held a Booker T. Washington meeting at Quinn Chapel Sunday night, but it was so frostv that the meeting did not last very long, for the people did not want to hear anything about Prof. Washington and his jimcrowism. Just before it wound up Col. Turner got as mad as a wet hen because the big fellows would not permit him to orate, and he swore he "would not have one word in his idea, respecting the meeting.
Mrs. Elizabeth McDonald, 3032 Dearborn street, appeared before the "graft investigating committee" Wednesday, and when she finished testifying as to the revolting sights she beheld while looking for a young girl in John Jennings notorious dive or saloon, 2722 State street. Mayor Harrison issued an order to revoke his license. It was her testimony which caused the committee to take immediate steps to close up the Ohio Hotel, 2635 State street, which was always full of young girls ranging in ages from 11 to 16 years, who were lead astray by men who should have been in better business. Mayor Harrison and his committee could well afford to donate several hundred dollars to Mrs. McDonald, to assist her to carry on her rescue or reform work in the "Red Light District."
Mrs. Julia Schaefer, French Lick, Ind., is in the city visiting at the elegant home of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Gordon, 4135 Berkley Ave. Mrs. Schaefer is having some improvements made in her new home 4542 Oakenwald Ave., which her husband recently bought, and after the first of next May she will become a resident of this city. She says "she is highly delighted to read The Broad Ax each week, that many of the other citizens of French Lick are in love with it, that it is the best newspaper published in the interests of the Afro-American race in the west, and that she will induce many of her friends residing there and in Louisville, Ky., to subscribe for it."
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Entered at the Post Office at Chicago, Ill., as Second-class Matter.
"It was a brave and manly act, young man," said the millionaire. "At the risk of your own life you rushed into the burning building and saved my only daughter from a horrible fate. How can I reward you?"
"Oh, I don't know," replied the hero. "Do you think a couple of dollars would be too much?"—Cincinnati Enquirer.
She Didn't Care.
Jack—My darling, I want to tell you something. I have deceived you. I am not rich. Will it make any difference to you?
Ethel—Not the slightest, Jack.
"I am so glad. Are you quite sure it will make no difference to you?"
"Quite sure; I can marry old Mr. Moneybags."—Tit-Bits.
Cut It Out.
If you have an evil thought,
Cut it out;
If to you some scandal's brought,
Cut it out;
Should you like this sort of verse,
If you think it's not "so worse"—Cut it out!
—Yonkers Statesman.
PEOPLE SHOULD BE CAREFUL.
Moths.
"There are no birds in last year's nests."
But many a closet shows
As a Matter of Form.
Mother—If you hadn't encouraged the young man he wouldn't have kissed you.
Daughter--O! mother, I told him to go away.
Mother—You did?
Daughter—Yes. I.sald, "now, you go 'way' every time.—Philadelphia Press.
A Disagreeable Habit.
Old Grumpps—Sure that girl loves you instead of your money?
Son—Absolutely. Why, she actually keeps count of the kisses I give her.
Old Grumpps—Hum! That's bad. She may keep it up after marriage.—N. Y. Weekly.
Confession.
"Mistah Pinkley," said Miss Miami Brown, "you sings jes' like you was a bird,"
"'Deed, Miss Miami,' was the rejoinder, "if I was a bird I reckon I wouldn't be able to sing. I'd be a chicken hawk."—Washington Star.
Mental Reservation.
Madge—It isn't long ago you told me you'd never again wear any but common sense shoes.
Dolly—But I didn't know then, my dear, that high heels would be in fashion again.—Town Topics.
"Yes; he disregarded the doctor's orders and is now in the hospital."
"Is, eh?"
"Yes; the doctor told him not to work so hard and the chump went on a vacation."—Puck.
In After Years.
"When you were courting me," said the annexed rib, "you said life was only a lovely-dream."
"Ah, yes," sighed the ex-dreamer,
"but what a rude awakening I had!"—Chicago Daily News.
Wanted to See the Stork.
Nurse—Tommy, dear, do you want to come with me and see the sweet little sister a stork has left for you?
Tommy—Naw. I don't want to see a sister—I want to see the stork.—Town Topics.
"Well, I should say so. Why, he doesn't hesitate to open a flirtation with any young widow he meets."—Chicago Post.
Comforting Conviction:
Bessle—What! Don't you ever take up any collections for the neathen at your church?
Kitty—No: we never have any heathens at our church.—Chicago Tribune.
Great Success.
He—Do you suppose their married life is a happy one?
She—Why, of course it is. Haven't they had the same cook now for over a year?—Syracuse Herald.
She—I don't think a man should smoke when he is with a lady.
He—And I don't think a lady should fume when she is with a man.—Yonkers Statesman.
Scholar—No-o-o, mam! I know my lessons to-day.—Chicago American.
She—And you haven't any mind urder yours.—Tit-Bits.
Ex-Convicts in England Who Can Afford to Ride in Carriages to Report Their Whereabouts.
A Stratford (England) magistrate says he knows ticket-of-leave men who drive up to the police station in carriages to report themselves, leaving the offices with smiling faces. The police, who should know, say they would like to see them.
"Most of these ex-convicts reporting their whereabouts to us come to the station wearing odd boots," said a city police officer. "They scarcely have the money to pay for a drink, much less a cab, while a carriage is out of the question."
While such cases may be uncommon, however, the fact remains that there are men who, leaving a penal establishment, return to enjoy ill-gotten wealth and to partake of the pleasures of idleness, says the London Mail. Three years ago a business man who had suffered imprisonment for serious charges of fraud drove up to a police station to report himself, leaving in a smart brougham outside his two well-dressed daughters, and wearing the tall hat and frock coat of respectability. He asked for the superintendent in the airiest of manners, saying he had to see him on "a matter of private business." Only the severe and gruff manager of the station sergeant, who recognized him, brought him to realize his position.
The man whom the Stratford magistrate sent to jail for his failure to report himself every month said that he had been turned away from his work and lodgings on two occasions when it was discovered that he had to call at the police station periodically. He could scarcely have known that with the home secretary's permission exconvicts are allowed to report themselves by letter.
AN ODD CASE.
This Man Learned to Spell Three Times and Can't Spell Now His Curious Story.
"Think of a man learning how to spell three times and then not being able to spell correctly," said an observant man who takes an interest in subjects of this sort, according to the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "and you will have my case summed up exactly. I am not what you would call a bad speller by any manner of means. But I stumble now and then, and stumble badly. Why is it? It is the simplest thing in the world. I grew up in the country, attended a country school, and my first spelling was under the rules of the old-time school teacher. I learned how to spell on my feet. It is a curious fact that for a long time I could not spell the simplest words unless I stood up. Standing I could spell anything, and, in fact, was always the winner in the spelling bee. No one could 'turn me down,' as we used to say in the country. Well, after this I learned how to spell with my pencil. All my spelling talent went into the pencil. My tongue forgot the art, and whether standing or sitting, I could not spell a word unless it belonged to the simpler kind without using my pencil. Now I began to use the typewriter, and consequently I had to learn how to spell again. Ask me how to spell a word now and I will have to go to the typewriter unless the word is a very simple one. My tongue won't spell it and my pencil will refuse to write it. So I have learned to spell three times, and as I said before I am not a good speller yet."
DESERT NOW A GARDEN.
Southwestern Colorado Redeemed by Irrigation—Fine Crops Raised on Land Once Barren.
The popular belief, dating back for 50 years, that the slopes of the Rockies and the intervening valleys were fit for nothing but mining enterprises and would never be of agricultural value would be severely shaken if the old-time pessimists could travel for a week through this portion of the San Juan country, says a Durango (Col.) dispatch. For many miles in all directions flourishing fields are literally blossoming like the summer rose. All of the cereals do well in the neighborhood and the root crops are of the finest quality. Irrigation, which has done so much for other sections of the formerly unproductive west, has worked wonders in this part of Colorado and the possibilities of irrigating ditches, fed by the inexhaustible snows of the mountains, are just beginning to be fully understood. Considerable capital will be invested in irrigating works in this country during the next two years.
Military Magpie
Emperor William has lately reviewed a feathered veteran of the German army. One of his regiments has a pet magpie, which is full of militarism and very proud of its parade step. When the kaiser visited the regimental quarters recently he asked for this accomplished bird. A French illustrated paper publishes a picture of the incident. There is the kaiser sitting sternly in the saddle and there is the magpie with its martial stride and there are the officers of the regiment with gingered anxiety and pride plainly marked on all their faces.
The novel house of Eugene Petit, a French architect, turns to the sun at the will of its occupants. It is mounted on a steel platform, which is rotated on ball bearings by a pinion geared in a circular set of teeth. An ordinary three-story dwelling can be turned by two men. Water, gas and electricity are brought in through a central passage and sewage finds its exit in a similar way. Houses of this kind, costing not more than ten per cent. above the ordinary, are required for the patients of Dr. Pellagrin, the advocate of hall-otherapy.
AMONG WELL-TO-DO PEOPLE.
The duchess of Westminster lately purchased a flexible ribbon of diamonds, paying $100,000 therefor.
Morris Williams, of Wilkesbarre, who has just been appointed president of the Pennsylvania Coal company, started his work about the mines as a breaker boy and has risen through all the grades of mining to his present position, where he controls millions of dollars' worth of property and commands 10,000 men.
Just to prove that her husband, Edwin D. Mooers, is fully able to pay $3,000 a year alimony, Mrs. Mooers had introduced in a New York city court the testimoney that his liquor bill alone amounts to $400 a month. The defendant is the son of a Texas millionaire and is sald to own mining stock valued at $700,000.
James Stillman, president of the National City bank of New York, is a man of few words, but he makes those few count. A famous tip that he is said to have given a friend two months ago has leaked out in Wall street. The friend in question wrote to him, asking for advice concerning the market. He had $500,000 and wanted to make it a million. Here is the reply of Mr. Stillman, written in lead pencil on a sheet of paper 3x4: "Polo ponies, steam yachts and Newport villas are the best short sales in the world."
What the Rothschilds are to Paris and London, so are the Bleichroeders to Berlin—that is, a power in the financial world. The ladies of the great financial families of Europe enjoy all the privileges and have none of the crushing responsibilities of royalty. Almost invariably they rise to the occasion and the charitable works organized by them may be said to be as limitless in number as they are in scope. This has always been as true of the wives and daughters belonging to the house of Bleichroeder as it is of the women who bear the honored names of Rothschild, of Goldsmid and of Mocatta.
Chauncey M. Depew recently said that one of the narrow escapes of his life was when he refused, some 30 years ago, to advance $10,000 to help Alexander Graham Bell and his father-in-law, the late Gardiner Hubbard, to develop the newly invented "talking telegraph." Mr. Depew was then counsel for the Harlem railroad and Mr. Hubbard a railway mail inspector. "Had I accepted the proposition," Mr. Depew said, "I would be worth to-day about $30,000,000, or my estate would, for with this vast wealth I should have had no incentive to healthy work, I should have deteriorated and should probably now be dead and forgotten."
WAY STATIONS
A scheme has been prepared for carrying out an underground railway in Manchester, England, with connections with the principal out-districts.
Our 200,000 miles of railway transport 600,000,000 tons of original freight, not including duplications, and pay 800,000 operatives, exclusive of officers, $650,-000,000.
Nottingham, England, a city of 250,-000, has owned its street railways for two years and at a fare of two cents a mile made a profit of 11 per cent. per annum on the capital invested.
There will be 36 tunnels on the route of the new Denver, Northwestern and Pacific railway within a distance of 26 miles, through the Rockies. It is estimated that it will require 600,000 pounds of powder to blast $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ miles of this route. Four-Track News. The Highland railway company of Great Britain announces that it has completed arrangements for telephonic communication between trains and stations on its line, thus not only greatly lessening the danger of wrecks on the road but also enabling its passengers to communicate with friends and business associates while traveling from place to place.
At the beginning of the last century the royal college of Bavarian physicians sought to forbid steam railway travel, because it would induce delirium furlosum among the passengers and drive the spectators crazy; while an English quarterly said that it would as soon expect the people to suffer themselves to be tled to one of Congreve's rockets as to trust themselves to the mercy of a locomotive going at the prodigious rate of 12 miles an hour.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Borrowed trouble commands the highest rate of interest. An absent-minded woman forgets everything—except herself. When the members of a woman's club quarrel they call it a debate.
Some theories are like gunpowder most useful when exploded.
No amateur play is satisfactory unless all the feminine parts are heroines.
The average girl believes the proper time to marry is the first time she's asked.
The dog is man's best friend. When a man has a cold the dog never tells him what to do for it.
It's as difficult to see how money makes the man as it is to see how some men make their money.—Chicago Daily News.
PROVERBS UP TO DATE
"Nothing comes of nothing," but you had best not quote this to the father of a worthless son.
"Let the shoemaker stick to his last," but he had best know something about collecting bills.
"Birds of a feather flock together," but a blond woman usually considers a brunette her best foil.
"The cracked pitcher goes most often to the well," and the prima donna's last public appearance is a big house filler.
"The eyes are the windows of the soul," yet a lover is satisfied as he gazes into the "dark depths" of my lady's eyes—N. Y. Herald.
Spokesman (of committee)—We want you to come to the meeting of our society to-morrow evening and give us an address about an hour long. Eminent Lecturer—To-morrow evening? That will not give me time to prepare myself. Spokesman—You'll not need any preparation. What we want you to talk about is "How Our Newspapers Ought to Be Conducted."—Chicago Tribune.
What He Meant.
"The ills that are easiest to bear," said the philosopher, "are—"
"I know, I know," interrupted the friend. "You mean to say that, when you get right down to it, the ills that are the easiest to bear are the real, rather than the imaginary ones that seem so great."
"On the contrary, I mean that the ills that are easiest to bear are the ills of other people."—Chicago Post.
The Deacon—I thought you intended to preach on the avils of profanity this morning. Why did you change your mind?
The Parson—Well, I dropped my collar button while dressing for church, and I didn't feel that I could do the subject justice.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Something Exceptional.
Tess—She's a remarkable woman; not like other women at all.
Jess—Why, I've never noticed it.
Tess—I have. I watched her making bread the other day, and all the time she had her hands in the dough she didn't have to scratch her nose at all.
—Philadelphia Press.
Good Advice.
"What am I going to do?" he cried as he emerged from the water. "A thief stole my clothes?" "Well," replied the stranger who happened along and naturally noted his condition, "I can't think of anything better than to go back in swimming again."—Chicago Post.
"He used to kiss me every time we passed through a tunnel before our marriage," said the little woman, with sad reflections.
"And does he do so now?" asked the bosom friend.
"No, he takes a drink."—Spare Moments.
Ought to Be.
"I don't understand," remarked Smithers, "what Peary wants to be always going after the north pole for. It must cost a lot to live up there."
"It does, generally speaking," replied Smuthers, "but just think how cheap ice must be!"—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
A shadow fell on Mildred's finely chiseled face. "Yes, but the more time, the fewer people," she replied vexedly.—Detroit Free Press.
Mrs. Coldphiz—Go on; this is interesting!
Weary Wilkins—Yes'm, an'd den I signed de pledge.—Cleveland Plain-dealer.
A Deliberate Insult.
Fred—I stole a kiss from Miss Peachly the other evening, and now she won't speak to me.
'Twas Ever Thus.
Alas! man's cup of sorrow
Is ever filled with woe;
When the ice man disappears
The coal man gets his dough.
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
TO BE QUITE EXACT.
14
The Sweet Maid—It must be awfully dangerous to go up in an airship.
The Inventor—Not half as dangerous as coming down.—Chicago Chronicle.
Needs the Dough.
Old Jones—Do you play cards for money?
Daughter's Lover—Y-yes, sir; but—Old Jones—Well, let's have a game. I'm about busted.—Judge.
Sure to Get It.
Higbee—All that Larks needs is experience.
Dyer—Well, he's just been married and has bought an auto, so I guess he'll get it.—Town Topics.
Still Grieving.
"So she lost her husband? Has she recovered from her grief yet?"
AGENTS FOR THE BROAD AX.
From on and after this date The Broad Ax can be found on sale at the following places:
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Turner William's Cigar and News Stand, 2903 Armour Ave.
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News items and advertisements left at these places will find their way into the columns of The Broad Ax.
-- American President and Treasurer, THE Vice-President, JO Secretary
American Brick Co. dent and Treasurer, THOMAS CAREY. Vice-President, JOHN SHELHAMER Secretary, WILLIAM SULL
-- American Brick Co. --
President and Treasurer, THOMAS CAREY. Vice-President, JOHN SHELHAMER, Secretary, WILLIAM SULLIVAN. MANUFACTURERS OF
Common and S
Office at
45th and I
Yards running winter
with the latest improv
Output of Winter Yards .....
Output of Summer Yards.....
Telephone
mon and Sewer B
Office and Yards:
h and Robey
Yards running winter and summer, equipped
with the latest improved Wolf Dryer.
Winter Yards ..... 14
Summer Yards..... 3
Telephone Yards 12
45th and Robey Sts.
Yards running winter and summer, equipped with the latest improved Wolf Dryer.
Output of Winter Yards ..... 140,000 per day
Output of Summer Yards..... 300,000 per day
Telephone Yards 128.
JOHN A ORB,
President.
WEST SIDE BREWERY COMPANY,
CHICAGO, U. S. A.
CORNER AUGUSTA AND PAULINA STREETS.
Monroe 1567—TELEPHONES—Monroe
It's the Only Pl
JUST LOOK WHAT YOU CAN FIND AT THE
AERO AMERICAN NEWS S
the Only Pl
JUST LOOK WHAT YOU CAN FIND AT THE
AMERICAN NEWS
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It's the Only Place
A Full Line of Stationery, Cigars and Tobacco
Papers sent by mail to any part of the country. Give us a call and see for yourself if we haven't what
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Jas. J. McCormick,
IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS 9463 SOUTH HALSTED STREET.
---
The Souls of Black Folk
By W. E. B. DuBois
A REMARKABLE BOOK that is provoking much discussion because of the wonderful eloquence 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 nor 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 OUR SPIRITUAL STRIVINGS.
OF THE DAWN OF FREEDOM.
OF MR. WASHINGTON AND OTHERS.
OF THE MEANING OF PROGRESS.
OF THE TRAINING OF BLACK MEN.
OF THE BLACK BELT.
OF THE SONS OF MASTER AND MAN.
OF THE FAITH OF THE FATHERS.
OF THE PASSING OF THE FIRST-BORN.
OF ALEXANDER CRUMMELL.
OF THE COMING OF JOHN.
OF THE SORROW SONGS.
3d Edition $1.20 net Published by
A.C. McClurg & Co.,Chicago
Brick Co. -
THOMAS CAREY.
HN SHELHAMER,
WILLIAM SULLIVAN.
Sewer Brick
Yards:
Robey Sts.
and summer, equipped
and Wolf Dryer.
140,00 per day
300,00 per day
Yards 128.
WILLIAM LEGNER,
Vice Pres. & Treas.
ONES—Monroe 1573. nly Place YOU CAN FIND AT THE NEWS STORE
: t :
Interesting Incidents of the Law-
Makers at National Capital.
THE END OF A HOUSE FEUD
‘How Speaker Cannen and Congress-
man Hepbera Settied a Quarrel
Youthful Members of the House
—The New British Minister.
‘Washington—Speaker Cannon and
“Pete” Hepburn have madeup. That
is about a3 grati-
= =——aoeees fying news as is
= likely to come out
PPS of congress this
= manly, breezy fel-
“44 | hating each other
= == pretty cordially
ee === for three or four
E yaa years back—all on
> \F account of words
unfitly spoken in
io debate.
: Since Reed went
o/ out of congress
= Cannon and Hep-
ih a oe ane oe
‘the laurels of debate between them.
‘There has been nobody else who could
Quite touch either of them; and they
‘were @ fairly even match. It was in-
evitable that the two should not clash;
and the row came in the heat of de-
bate. Hepburn thought Cannon made
oe
ceccemlien oe &ieaarnae ant on
for many months these republican
gladiators never spoke as they passed.
Tt looked as though the feud would
be a lasting one; but a year ago when
‘Cannon announced his candidacy for
speaker Hepburn, like the big-minded
fellow that he is, walked into Cannon's
headquarters one day, held out his
hand and exclaimed: “Joe, I'm going
to vote for you.” That was one of the
early things that wet the tide flowing
toward the Illinois man, and now that
congress is at work and he has
achieved the ambition of his life he
signalizes the reconciliation by asking
Hepburn to put him in nomination in
the house—which, of course, Hepburn
does cheerfully.
There was a significance in the inci-
dent that was not generally under-
stood, but it meant a great deal for
party harmony during these coming
two years. Hepburn will come -yery
close to being the republican leader on
the floor. He's a little outside the or-
ganization, just as Cannon was during
the Henderson regime; but Cannon
was the real leader then in spite of his
isolation.
Yeuthfal Congressman.
There are a good many youthful
members of the new house. One of
the most interest-
ing of hen is CS——!
Butler Ames, the =
grandson of Ben- ge
jamin F. Butler, E¥ ‘4
who represents F4 =
the same district EY —
the doughty old a J E
general represent- FS v=
ed for years just = f-4
after the war. He Fg AA
is mot only the P —
grandson of Gen.
Butler, but he is
the son of Adel- :
bert Ames, who i
Nee ey ey tin Muiec Seen
&
in the civil war, and was afterwards
provisional governor of Mississippi in
the reconstruction period and a United
States senator from that state.
Young Ames has just a shade of re-
semblance to his grandfather, and he
has the old general's faculty for at-
taching friends to himself. Young as
he is be bas a record in which he
ought to take a good deal of pride. He
-was.a lieutenant in the Massachusetts
militia when the war with Spain broke
out. He went to the front with his
regiment and came out of the Porto
Rico campaign a iieutenant colonel.
‘Then he went home and served three
years in the Jegislature, and now he is
in congress.
When Ames was stationed at Camp
Alger early in the spring of 1898 he
‘was engineer officer of the camp, and
im the course of his duties be had a
good many scraps, owing to the fact
that, though merely a lieutenant, he
sometimes had to give directions to
officers of regiments of much higher
fank. One of his troubles as with Rep-
colonel of an Ohio regiment. The two
ot when they to sit
Side by side in the street car leaving
the ol. ‘They maiched pennies for
the and made up for good.
The Rise of Bede.
J. Adam Bede, the new member from
Minnesota, promises’ to be one of the
striking figures in
——$===—$__—-4 the Fifty-eighth
—<——————7 congress. He is an
= Wi Obio farmer's boy
= aj in the beginning.
= 4 and he shows the
= 8 F—4 marks how of the
ae + bad to put up with
b ¢ bas run up against
% all sorts of ex-
; jf periences since
‘those days and he
knows the world
jnmcimeiiens §— He got his edu-
Jj the Fifty-eighth
————F congress. He is an
= ——4 Ohio farmer's boy
= kj in the beginning.
= 4 and he shows the
=U F=4 marks now of the
= P= hard knocks he
= ——# had to put up with
= we == on the farm. He
» a has run up against
¢, all ‘sorts of ex
\ periences since
those days and he
knows the world
=~ I —. ‘well now.
m= eda-
mes See Bove sation to antes
winters and working through the sum-
mer to support himself. He ijearned
$ ee ae ee
he type setting machine came 1s
‘eewepapet Ww a z to Wash-
ee bs
fmgton Im the course of his wander-
nd B ‘a8 & reporter on
‘® few ‘months he suddenly took it into
to strike again, and no-
Saat SANE tan comnts of 8
Mu “Bere of the eccentricity of a
person of the same name who. wishing
under Cleveland administration,
bad written his application on a piece
of birch bark. The novel petition was
granted, but Bede soon gave up the
job because he couldn't stand for the
‘Proposition that a government official
must. give up active interest in poll-
tics.
Bede was a democrat then of a pret-
ty stiff type. He resigned his place
and put a lot of beard work for
Soouk males: In 1896, when the Chi-
cago convention was captured by free
silver, he became a republican, and he
has been one ever since.
“Bede has one distinction for a new
member, He got a fine piece of pat-
ronage before he had warmed his seat
im the house. He was on deck when
the vacancy came on the civil service
commission through the resignation of
Commissioner Foulke, and he prompt-
ly secured the appointment of a con-
stituent of his to the vacancy.
r Place te Entertain.
Spexker Cannon is planning to
throw open the speaker’s lobby, which
few heer Baek 6.
—[— owes Sees ww
everybody except
members of the
house ever since
the Reed regime.
The marble
room, which cor-
responds in the
senate to the
speaker's lobby in
the house, has al-
ways been open to
favored _ visitors,
and senators have
received their
callers there; but
this privilege has
Sails)” Mince Ate
la
Ua ES]
0 th
aC
esse ee Spesker’s
corded in the" ™ =
house, except for a short time under
Speaker Reed. The privilege then was
abused so that the lobby had to be
closed again, but Speaker Cannon be-
Meves he tan restore the privilege un-
der restrictions which will make it
generally acceptable without abuse.
At present members of the house are
in an embarrassing position frequently
through the absence of any retiring
room where they can receive callers.
If one of them receives a card from
somebody whom he wishes greatly to
see he must go out into the public
corridor, where he is apt to be set
upon by dozens of individuals whom
he has been trying to avoid. There is
mo compromise. Either he must give
up the caller he wishes to see or else
take his chances with the crowé.
‘Speaker Cannon proposes that herea{-
ter when a member wishes to see a
‘friend he can invite his caller into the
speaker's lobby, where both can sit at
their ease, while the undesirables
storm and fret outside.
- Only a few days ago William Aléen
‘Smith received a card from a person
who was described to him as half seas
over. He sent out word that he could
mot be found. A little while later a
card came from a constituent whom he
Was anxious to see. He went out to
meet his caller and ran plump into the
arms of his drunken friend, who
promptly flashed a William Alden
Smith campaign button he had been
wearing fourteen years and proceeded
to borrow two dollars on the strength
of it. *
The British Minister.
There is great curiosity in Wash-
ington to see the new British ambas-
sador, who is ex-
_———— pected to arrive
————— «almost any day.
a Sir Mortimer
—F =—=4 Durand—for that
= == is the name—
= —4 seems to be a lit-
= { leet. tle different order
ie FF of diplomat from
= ——4 any other who
yf =] has been sent
ad/ here from the
court of St. James.
His predecessors
\YZ have all been what
are known as
: “foreign office
"Sir Mortimsr Durang men.” That is,
or - they had worked
‘their way up through service in the
Office at London, or in minor places
in legations. Sir Julian Pauncefote,
when he came to Washington, had
never held a-reai diplomatic post in his
life. He had grown gray as an under
secretary in the foreign office and was
stfictly an office man. Sir Michael
Herbert likewise, although he had
served as secretary of legation both in
Washington and Paris, had spent
‘years in the foreign office; and he had
never served cven as minister before
he came to Washington as an ambas-
‘sador. 3
Sir Mortimer, Durand, on the other
hand, has had a strictly diplomatic
career of the strenuous sort. He has
trained his mind and sharpened his
wits by conflict with the machiavellian
intellects of the Orient, and Washing-
ton is by far the most civilised post
that bas ever fallen to his lot.
Sir Mortimer comes from a family
generatiga, aud that” goxbdeas ac
Swe ces &
counts
Senter wie ens aos wr'eead ed
in W mow, for questions af-
‘and ‘to the front in Ameri-
can Se en -
a ee i
‘HEART DISEASE AND WORRY.
“wreresertion, Either Physical oF
Mental, Exéanugers Life in Case
ef Cardiac Treabie.
the~ no ”
im our everyday experiences. When
the organ ia healthy the palpitation is
the ordinary response to oe»
stimilus and is necessarily
in duration. In confirmed cardiac dis-
ease in which the valves are damaged
or the heart walls dilated and weak-
ened, there is oiten great danger to
life by overexertion, either physical
or mental. It is the degree and con-
tinuousness of excitement which thus
work so disastrously.
The young school-teacher of Green-
point who fell dead at the end of bis
first day's duty is a case in point, says
the New York Herald. He was evi-
dently overwrought with anxiety, and
bis crippled heart was unable to bear
the constant strain. Unlike mere
muscular exertion, the mental excit-
ability was beyond control, especially
when the new environment was the
persistent disturbing element. This
happens sometimes in the pulpit, on
the lecture platform, and even before
the footlights. Numerous examples
have been noted from time to time.
The preventives are in the line of
avoiding. all overexcitement and of
heeding all ominous warnings. This is
most difficult obviously with mental
emotions, as they are not always un-
der the control of the will. The man
with a weak heart who is running for
@ train is compelled to stop in time for
want of breath and thus remove the
exciting cause of his palpitation, but
continual and profound mental per-
turbation is, alas, too often beyond his
ken. Alas! there was no one near
the poor teacher to teil him not to
worry.
QUEER WEATHER STATION.
Shaped Like a Shell and Is Visible
from = Great Distance
Out at Sea.
| One of the sights of Atlantic City is
the peculiarly shaped structure at the
foot of Pennsylvania avenue, on the
ocean side of the Boardwalk, says the
Minneapolis Tribune. It is the new
weather station erected by the govern-
ment, and its plan is so odd that it is
regarded as a most attractive curiosity
by the countless number of visitors who
flock to the seaside during the warm
months.
It is said to be the most queerly con-
structed building ever erected by Uncle
Sam. It has been popularly named the
shell, on account of its likeness to the
growth of the sea so commonly found on
the sands. -
This oval structure, formed of steel
and galvanized iron, has been com-
pleted at a cost of $3,000. It shows the
colors so dear to the heart of an Amer-
ican, “Raving been’ painted te red. white
and blue. The exterior and the fancy
cornice are of blue, the interior is of
white and the ribs are of red.
The structure is so conspicuous that
it can be seen for many miles up and
down the coast, and is visible from a
great distance at sea.
A huge weather map, with glass front,
on which is traced daily the changes of
the weather, the direction and velocity
of the wind, the temperature, etc. as
reported to the central weather bureau
at Washington, and now telegraphed
daily to the state observatoty now lo-
cated at Atlantic City, has been in-
stalled. < %
Visitors will have the opportunity to
observe the weather at all times when-
ever they are in the neighborhood of the
“shell” station.
DEATH THAT IS -PAINLESS.
Many Tramps Who Take Their Last
Sleep on Burning Culm Banke
fe Penasyivania.
Death comes in many forms in the
anthracite mines of Pennsylvania, but
only one form is pulnless and pleasant,
and to only one the victims go uncon-
Bclously. It is the death of the burning
culm bank, says the New York Sun.
Many times during the year is such
a death recorded when one of these
great culm banks is burning. The fire
is not seen in the daytime, and at night
it shines only with a faint glow
through the layers of ashes which sep-
arate the live coals from the outer air.
To these burning banks tramps and
other unfortunates, forced to spend a
night in the open air, go when the nights
grow chilly. The warm breath of the
culm lures them on with a promise of a
warm bed for the night. and they lit
down to sleep in the comfortable atmos-
phere of the bank and never open their
eyes again. ,
The noxious gases emanating from the
bank waft over them so softly that ther
are soon asleep, and in many cases they
Sever awaken, being suffocated during
the night.
O44 Lawsuk
Some months ago the city fathers of
Marseilles, eager to beautify their an-
cent town, deliberated and concluded
that a good foundation to its “show”
street would not be amiss. In conse-
quence there came men with odorous
blocks and much tar and after many
weeks the work was over. And all the
citizens found it very good. Only one,
a confectioner, with rooms on the route,
is unappreciative. He has a grievance.
odor not only to his rooms, but to his
cakes, his ices and the other wonder-
ful creations of the French “patiasier.”
His clien’s first complained and then
went elsewhere and a new locality had
to be sought for the preparation of his
Gelicacies. It is for this reason that he
ia now seeking at, eee es. > tne
extent cl 900,000 trem city am
sult is arousing much 4
count of ite uniquemature. = sits
Negtected Ten-Year-Old Lad Could
Net Remember Ever Having Re-
etived the Tender Caress.
_ once made a tour of the almshouses
@f the state of New York, describing
them exactly as they were. Every emo-
that can be awakened by sorrow
felt during the trip, writes Jultus
‘Chambers tn the Reader Magazine. The
pathetic incident occurred at the
poorhouse of Essex county, located in
‘the hills beyond Whallonsburg, near
‘Lake Champlain. I should say that the
‘trip was made at the request of a state
‘edmmissioner of charities, who desired
‘that the truth should be told.
After inspecting the wards for the
‘aged women and insane, I walked across
&n open court, deep with mud, to visit
‘the children’s quarters. While there, s
‘email, red-faced, red-beaded lad attract-
ed my notice. I patted him on the
shoulder and asked his name. He gave
it promptly, told me he was ten years
old and that his father and mother
were dead. I felt deeply touched by the
child’s words. Soon after I left the mis-
‘erable shed in which these children were
herded together and started to recross
the yard. I felt a tug at my coat and
found my little friend behind me. His
eyes looked up into mine so pitifully
‘that I asked:
“What can I do for you, my boy?”
“I want you to kiss me.”
“Certainly; but why?”
“I never was kissed in my life!”
‘When I came to write that story for
Publication I developed its full pathos,
giving the name of the fatherless and
motheriess lad. As a result he was
adopted by a wealthy family near Sara-
toga; he has been well raised, given a
college education and is to-day heir toa
fortune.
AUTHOR’S ODD EXPERIENCE.
Emerson Hough, Who Wrote “The
Mississippi Babble,” Meets De-
scendgnt of Here of His Book.
Emerson Hough, who, by his strik-
ing characterization of John Law in
“The Mississippi Bubble,” has made
that picturesque gentleman alive for
all time, was surprised out of his usual
calm by the appearance at his office
@oor of a dignified and impressive
stranger who announced himself as
John Law. As soon as Mr. Hough real-
ized that the vision before him was
ccrporeal and not the cheating fancy
of his brain, he set out the easy chair
and bade the welcome gyeet tell him
the story of his life.
John H. Law lives in Chicago and is
the resident manager of a big insur-
ance company. He had read “The
Mississippi Bubble” and had called to
pay his respects to the man who had
given the world.an honest picture of his
great ancestor. Mr. Hough learned that
the family on coming to this country
settled first in Georgia, that one of its
members was a brigadier general in
the confederate army, and that after
the war the Laws moved to Cincinnati
where one of the brothers still lives in
® country place which he calls Lauris-
ton after the ancestral home in Scot-
land.
The author and the descendant rev-
eled in the family history for hours,
and when they parted to meet at dinner
the next night Hough said he felt as
though he had shaken hands with the
héro of his romance and had looked into
the face of the man who for one historic
moment had eeen al! Murnane at hic fact
RADIUM EMANATIONS.
Scientist Thinks the Wonderfal Sub-
stance Cam Be Used to Cure
Pulmonary Tubercalosis.
Frederick Soddy, who was Prof. Ruth-
erford, assistant at McGill university,
in Montreal, has suggested another use
for radium. He argues that as it has
been found to cure consumption of the
skin (lupus), it should also cure con-
sumption of the lungs, if its rays can be
brought to bear directly on the diseased
tung tissue, without any intervening
substances, such as the chest wall. At
first sight, says the Scientific American,
this seems rather a difficult thing to do,
as it is, of course, out of the question to
place any solid mass of radium within
the lungs themselves. But recent stud-
fes have shown that radium in a solution
gives off a gas and that this gas is itself
radio-active. So all that is necessary to
subject the internal lung tissue to the
direct action of radium rays is to breathe
a mixture of air and the radiumgas. By
this means Mr. Soddy believes a newand
valuable remedy for consumption will be
available to the pathologist. The rays
from radium have already proved use-
ful tn the treatment of several fornts of
skin disease, and it has been suggested
that the insertion of minute particles
of radium in the interior of a cancer is
worth trying. It should be remembered,
however, that even if radium proves val-
uable in the treatment of pulmonary tu-
berculosis, its cost is so high—several
hundred dollars a grain—that it could
not come into general use under present
conditions.
Birds That Blush.
An observer finds that some
birds kjush. He writes: “We have a
very fine specimen of the blue and yel-
Jow macaw which displays this trait—
Rot often, for he is remarkably good
tempered—and the ‘blush’ is an invari-
able sign of anger; so much so, that we
‘warn all friends that while his cheeks
remain white all attacks are feigned
and in play and can be dtsreggrded,
yet if the ‘danger signal’—red—shows,
to look out and keep out of reach.”
‘The owner of a blue and orange macaw
‘says that its white, parchment-like
ree eee ee ee eer
the peak, whenever it is angry
or exited.
BS, eget Sy
‘Relation Retw?ees « aca
Bilis and Its Commerce Shown
by Statistics.
Statistics have been collected to show
that the measure of the prosperity of
® country is the aniount of food con-
sumed by its inhabitants—in other
words, that diet and commerce go hand
im hand. The countries which consume
the largest amount of food and drink per
capita are the countries which have the
largest surplus for export wo other
lands; the countries which are abstemi-
ous or moderate in their consumption
of food ané drink hav® Tittle surplus to
send away, says the New York Sun.
The average cost of food per capita
in the United States is 60 cents a day;
the United States stands at the head of
exporting countries with an average of
$1,250,000,000 in a year.
The average consumption of food and
drink in England is 50 cents per capita,
and England stands second on the list
of exporting countries. Germany is the
third with an export trade of more than
$1,000,000,000, and 45 cents a Way the
average per capita spent for food and
drink (beer included).
France hat an export trade of $800,-
000,000 a year and the average expense
to each inhabitant for food and drink
is 40 cents a day. Russia, with an ex-
port trade of $375,000,000, expends 20
cents a day on food and drink per capita,
and Italy with $275,000,000 of annual
exports, spends 18 cents a day, in maco-
roni, wine and other articles of diet.
All of which convinces statisticians
who have unearthed this notion of the
relation of productiveness to diet that
“three meals a day for each inhabitant”
is the open door to world power in com-
merce, manufactures and the surplus
products of a fertile soil.
FOOTBALL ACCIDENT.
Emphasises Fact That Only the
Strongest and Physically Fit
Should Be Allowed to Play.
So many accidents have been laid to
the game of football and so many lads
have been crippled thereby that we sel-
dom hear of the injuries and deaths
that might have been avoided. The
death of a young medical student of
Baltimore during a contest, gut at a
time when the ball was not in play,
says the New York Herald, affords a
striking instance of an easily prevent-
ible accident.
The victim had been a sufferer from
heart disease for a long time and yet
was allowed to take active part in the
game. His condition should have
been, if it was not, known to his med-
ical associates.
There is no account of his having
received any injury previous to the
time he was strieken with collapse.
No better proof of his unfitness for any
extra physical exertion can be given
than the suddenness of his death while
the was merely resting. The lesson of
the sad story is emphatic and con-
vincing.
There is no game that requires more
careful and systematic training than
football and only the strongest are
capable of bearing the strain. If there
is any physical weakness in the can-
didate it becomes quickly manifest as
he goes on with his exercises, and why
such incapacity could not have been
discovered in time to have saved the
unfortunate youth is difficult to imag-
TOLD IN ENGLAND.
Lendoa Publication Again Resar-
reets the Mythical American
Who Toadies to Royalty.
A continental hotel keeper, says 2
writer in the London Truth, recently
confided the following story to a friend
of mine: Some years ago, after Queen
Victoria had been staying at a certain
hotel, a wealthy American called on th«
proprietor and signified his desire ta
sleep if it could be managed, in the same
apartments, the same bed, and if possi-
ble, the same bed clothes, as those which
had held the sacred person of her maj-
esty before they had been sent to the
wash. Money was no object to him.
What would it cost?
The hotel proprietor was equal to the
occasion. He thought it could be ar-
ranged for £20. A bargain was struck
on these terms. The millionaire duly
arrived, and retired to the royal couah.
No doubt he thoroughly enjoyed: his
night's rest, and the prospect of subse-
quently electrifying his friends with the
story of his regal experience. His pleas-
are must have been somewhat marred
when he discovered later on that her
Britannic majesty always traveled with
ber own bed and bedding.
Galilee and Urban VIII.
Galileo's wit got him into trouble
when he put into the mouth of Sim-
plicio, the foolish opponent of the
Copernican theory in his “Dialogues,”
an argument that Pope Urban VIIL
had himself devised, and insisted on
Galileo incorporating. in the work.
Galileo made Simplicio quote it as an
argument he had from a “very eminent
and learned personage.” The enemies
of Galileo persuaded Urban that he had
been “made game of.” and this was the
offense of which Galileo was guilty, It
was not for upholding the theory that
the sun stands stil] and the earth moves
that Galfleo was tried by the inquisition.
Urban himself had supported the
Copernican doctrines, both as cardinal
and as pope. e
Biggest Raisers of Hops.
more hops than any other country.
Of the world’s crop of 1,760,000 hun-
centeieleht: On Daal Sates, Senta
en hundredweight.
Insurance Slot Machines.
London has accident insurance slot
machines, The device defies fraud and
has the appearance of a clock.
‘Reformation of vagrants by longer
‘Imprisonment is under the eee
tion of the British authorities. =
eided to place shelters for consumptives
im one of the public parks. Protest
meetings are being held.
According to a report from St. Peters-
burg, the Russian government intends
to send 600,000 emigrants to Man-
ehuria. It is stated that they will be al-
lotted land along the route of the rail-
way.
A national pantheon is being erected
by the Mexican government in the City
of Mexico, the estimated cost being $5.-
000,000. It is to be at once a memorial
and a sepulcher for Mexico's great men.
M. Combes, who is about to write his
mame on the very short roll of French
republican premiers who have quit from
choice and not from necessity, is of
English ancestry, quick and alert in
tion, by profession a physician,
has been called “the best hated man
France.” He has astonished Europe
his masterful energy, but, being
years of age, he thinks he has
& Test.
“Chief dairy maid to the king” is th
official title of Miss Mary Childs,
pretty young woman who has just
installed in King Edward’s home
at Windsor. The position is by
means a sinecure, for the chief
must supervise the butter and cheese
making industry under royal patronage.
Her principal duty is to serve up for the
royal table two pounds of butter every
morning and supplies of cream cheese
and thick cream as needed.
ARMY AND NAVY.
A protest is raised against the pun-
ishment of military and naval prisoners
in Ireland.
Admiral Bowles is to receive $25,000
a year from the private ship building
concern with which he is to be con-
nected. As chief constructor of the navy
his salary was $5,500 a year.
/ Watchdogs are to be employed to
guard the German dockyards. A dog
1s to accompany each sentinel, and the
animal will be set upon any stranger
who fails to respond to the challenge.
The Russians are experimenting with
a “water-clad” battleship, which has
an upper deck of cork and a second deck
of armor. The space between the two
can be filled, with water; then the ship
floats a foot under the sea’s surface.
‘The new Belgian military system, es-
tablished on the basis of voluntary con-
scription, has already proved a failure.
Notwithstanding the active efforts of
the enlistment committee but few vol-
unteers have come forward during the
last year.
Gen. Joe Wheeler is an enthusiastic
believer in the value—the “incalculable
benefit” is his own phrase—of the army
maneuvers. “Many things,” he says,
“that are necessary in actual warfare
are being attempted now in these ex-
Periments, and when one side or anoth-
er fails the failure shows what may be
expected next time. In other words, to
learn why you have failed or succeeded
in a thing is just as important In war-
fare as in anything else.”
FINE POINTS. OF LAW.
Appropriation of cocsiderable quan-
tities of water in seasons when that may
be done without sensible injury to lower
owners is held, in Meng vs. Coffey
(Neb.), 60 L. R. A. 910, not to give a
prescriptive right to divert the whole
stream in dry seasons.
The financial returns which a water
plant can be made to bear are held in
Kennebec water district vs. Waterville
(Me.), 60 L. R. A. 856, to be necessarily
considered in determining the value of
the franchises of its owner when taken
by right of eminent domain.
Receiving the premium after the de-
struction of all the insured property, so
that nothing remains to which insurance
might attach, is held, in German Insa-
rance company vs. Shader (Neb.), 60 L.
R. A. 918, to waivea provision in a policy
that the insurer shall not be liable for
loss occurring before payment of the
premium. rs
An agent who is authorized dy his
principal to sell or exchange the prop-
erty of the latter upon specified prices
and termg is held, in Holmes vs. Cath-
cart (Minn.), 60 L. R. A. 734, tobe in duty
bound, upon learning that a more ad-
vantageous sale or exchange can be
made, the facts concerning which are
unknown to the principal, to communi-
cate the same to him before making the
sale as expressly authorized, and his
failure to do so held to amount to a
Qotnd to See.
SONG AND MELODY.
Prince Ludwig Ferdinand, of Bavaria,
has finished his music drama, “Gyges.”
Sarasate, the noted violinist, will be
60 next year. His curis, which 20 years
ago were black as a raven, are now as
white as carded wool. He is still a
bachelor, and his income from his work
averages £10,000 a year. t |
Mile. Deina, the finest contralto in
France, was discovered by Saint-Saens,
and he looks upon the day when he heard
the prima donna for the first time sing-
es neds Sa er elit ee
her dishes at a village inn near”
as the happiest one in his life.
Richard Strauss—now, since his recent
degree in philosophy from the Uni-
versity of Heidelberg, “Dr.” Richard
Strauss—is to be the editor of a new
magazine soon to make its
fn Berlin under the title of Die Maik.
It will be devoted to musical aesthetics
= ten Bee
great composer, is believed to be draw-
ing about & year in
SS esa
‘Tights in inany cities. From
‘grand opers alone her annual rece!
are sbout $20,000, and the
profits are close to $50,000 every year. —
Mrs. Carrie Warner, 5132 Grove avenue, will eat her Thanksgiving dinner in St. Louis, Mo., with her mother and sister.
Major John C. Buckner, who is the most popular Afro-American in Cook County, should be nominated for County Commissioner in 1904, and if he should, he would certainly be elected.
Judge Charles M. Walker can grasp a legal proposition as quick as lighting, and in the short space of a few months he has become one of the ablest and one of the fairest judges in Cook County.
Mrs. Tyler, 5021 Armour Ave., who lately moved to this city from St. Paul, Minn., with her husband, is a very pleasant lady to meet and she will soon become a factor in the social life in the town of Lake.
Mrs. Emma L. Stevens, 4844 Dearborn St., is a prominent member in the Order of Eastern Star. She is a neat housekeeper and at all times she is able to paddle her own canoe, for she earns her own living by hard work.
Miss Blanch Wright, who performs on the organ each Sunday at St. Thomas church, and who can talk much faster than a race horse can run, has resumed her duties as stneographer in the law office of J. Gray Lucas, 59 Dearborn St.
Col. Edward H. Morris, Attorney for the "Gamblers Trust," so they say, has become the head or the largest stockholder in the Old Church Organ, and that is the reason why his handsome mug appears in it every two or three weeks.
Sunday evening Rev. Abraham Lincoln Murray, who is the dead game sport of the A. M. E. preachers, and Mrs. Sarah Scott walked arm in arm ahead of Mrs. Murray and another lady and they all partook of supper at Stephens' Restaurant.
Paul Laurence Dunbar, the leading Afro-American Poet, gave a reading at Quinn Chapel Thursday evening from his own poems, and Joseph Douglass, of Washington, D. C., the greatest violinist of the race rendered some selections on his violin, they were greeted by a large audience.
Last Saturday evening, while out rounding up some of the readers of The Broad Ax, we called at the home of a certain married lady whose husband was out of town and we noticed the feet of a man sticking out from beneath a curtain in one of her bedrooms.
John G. Jones, 33, Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of A. F. & A. Masons of the State of Illinois, left last Sunday for Pittsburg, Pa., where he has been invited to deliver an address on the origin and legal status of masonry among colored men in the United States.
Mrs. T. J. Hunter, 3149 State St., and her sister, Miss Carrie Robinson, will leave the city shortly for Baltimore, Md., where Mrs. Hunter will spend the holiday season with her relatives and friends, and Miss Robinson will remain in the east for several years, much to regret of her many warm friends.
Mrs. Lucy Howard, 2960 Dearborn St., who is one of the deaconess of Bethel church, has had a 'phone put in her house so that she and Mrs. Jessie Mitchell can call Rev. Abraham Lincoln Murray up at any time and consult with him as to the best method to pursue in order to save their souls.
The past week several ladies have written us letters desiring to learn the name and the address of the dressmaker who made the fancy dress for Mrs. Minnie Howard, which she wore the night of the Knight Templers' ball. The dress was made by Madame Doyle, 92 E. 33rd St., and she is one of the most expert and up-to-date dressmakers in Chicago.
Mrs. Mae Blake, 4916 Armour Ave., as president of the Oak Leaf Club, gave a musical concert last Wednesday night at St. Mary's church, 50th and Dearborn St., and it was such a success that enough money was realized from it to buy a new carpet for the floor of the church, which will be quite an improvement over the bare floor.
Little slick headed W. W. Johnson, who claims to be a lawyer, and who beat us out of one dollar as subscription to The Broad Ax, has been blowing around for the past year "that he carried the 29th Precinct of the $1st Ward in his hip pocket, but when the election was held Tuesday night he only received or controlled 12 votes, as against 38 votes for N. A. Harbin, who was re-elected Captain of the Precinct.
J. Q. Grant, who is one of the oldest members of Quinn Chapel, and who negotiates more loans on first-class real estate than any other Afro-American in this city says that "he was very much surprised to hear the preacher relate how he was good and ready to shoot some one to death simply because they had been talking about some preacher, but didn't men-
tion his name." Mr. Grant is right and it does seem to us that the good or the saintly preacher, went off half cocked at the wrong time.
Col. Mushmouth Johnson, 464 State street, who compelled the Republican County Convention in 1902 to nominate his chum, Col. John R. Marshall, for County Commissioner, had his license revoked the first of the week, and he was forced to close up his famous dive. Rev. Archibald James Carey and his strong pull in other directions could not save him. Mayor Harrison is to be commended for turning against Col. Mushmouth Johnson, and all others who conduct disruptable dens similar to his gambling joint.
MATCH WOULD BE IDEAL.
Prince May Wed Princess of Cumberland.
Again is the gossip revived in Berlin that Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria has smoothed away the obstacles that have stood between the crown prince of Germany and Princess Alexandra of Cumberland, and that the Hanoverian girl has good prospects of becoming empress of Germany some day. The fact is that whereas the crown prince is now of marriageable age, the crop of princesses suited to him in years, health, religion and politics is extremely limited. Two or three English princesses are available and suitable, and rumor has repeatedly engaged him to one or the other of them, and Emperor William is understood to be rather in favor of such a match. But the emperor remembers the unpopularity of his mother in Germany, and the rooted objection of the German public to have an English empress. So it is that the name of Princess Alexandria comes up aghin.
If the crown prince of Germany marries Princess Alexandra of Cumberland it will be a romantic match, for there has been a bitter feud between the Hohenzollerns and the Guelphs of Hanover for the last 35 years. In the war of 1866 the king of Hanover, the grandfather of Princess Alexandra, was led by his warm friendship for Emperor Francis Joseph to take the losing side, with the result that when Prussia had crushed Austria he was dethroned and his dominions added to the Prussian crown. There is still a Guelph party in Hanover and every year on the duke of Cumberland's birthday a deputation comes to Gmunden to bring him the greeting of his "loyal subjects in Hanover." The Guelphian movement in Hanover, however, is suppressed with an iron hand by the most approved German police methods. Since the crash, the royal family has lived in Austria, at Penzing, near Vienna, and at Gmunden in upper Austria. The head of the family uses his English title, Cumberland, but keeps up all the state and ceremony of a king at his residences.
Princess Alexandra is a tall, pleasant looking girl, but not particularly beautiful. She is an enthusiastic yachtswoman and sails her own boat over the waters of the treacherous Gmunden lake. She has been much at the Austrian court where the Cumberlands take the precedence of every one and are treated as a reigning family. She is a Protestant and therefore religiously eligible to be the German crown prince's bride.
There is probably no defect which causes so much anguish of spirit and discomfort as shyness and blushing. Nobody who has not personally suffered from it can even begin to conceive what torture it may cause.
Shyness may proceed from one of two causes—the one physical, the other mental. It is often an affair of health. The nerves are out of order, and the will becomes weak. People shrink from their fellow-creatures, and are filled with an unreasonable horror of meeting or speaking to them. This is often the case after an illness, or when one has been overworking, and strained the physical powers too much. The best cure for this kind of shyness is fresh air, exercise and cheerful society.
But there is another shyness, and one harder to cure, which comes from mental causes. Its afflicted possessor may be in robust health and yet so tormented by this inward enemy that she finds all intercourse with other people positively alarming. To meet strangers causes her a severe struggle.
In either case, the root of the matter is self-consciousness, and it is only by losing that self-consciousness that self-possession and confidence can be gained. As long as one thinks about oneself at all, one will be liable to shyness. The only cure is to thrust all recollection of oneself into the background as much as possible, when one will gradually become natural, happy and at ease.
To overcome shyness and blushing there is nothing on earth like going a great deal into society, and every effort possible should be made to achieve this. This does not merely mean social life, but intercourse with one's fellow creatures. Force yourself to speak to every one you come in contact with, no matter what it costs you at first. Go on bravely; never mind how much you may blush and stammer. Persist in it, and it will grow easier and easier. Never shrink from putting yourself into positions which may draw attention upon you—N. Y. Journal.
STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS
LAWYER
Suite 200, 128-125 Lil Salle Street
CHICAGO
Telephone Tuxedo WV Residence, 129 Garfield DL
JOHN FITZGERALD
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
4107 S. MALGESTED STREET,
CHICAGO
J. GRAY LUCAS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Suite 412 Real Estate Board Bldg 79 Dearborn St. Cor. Randolph CHICAGO.
J. J. HENNESSY,
Justice of the Peace,
6301 S. Halsted St.
WILLIAM TREXLER, CLERK.
TELEPHONE WENTWORTH 4403.
Police Magistrate Englewood Police Court.
Telephone Main 355%.
P. J. O'SHEA
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 1444 Unity Building
79 Dearborn St. Chicago.
Notary Public. 5072 Central.
EDWARD G. ALEXANDER
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Suite 510,
130 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO.
Robert M. Mitchell
Attorney at Law
Suite 9, No. 77 South Clark St.
CHICAGO
WILLIAM RITCHIE
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR.
Suite 800-800 Oxford Building
84 LA SALLE ST., CHICAGO
Telephone Main 1644.
J. E. JONES
LAWYER
79 Clark Street
ALBERT B. GEORGE
LAWYER.
423 Ashland Blok, Chicago.
— Nov. 11, 2000. —
Telephone Blue 4632
Work Called for
and Delivered...
A. HOFFMAN,
CLEANER, DYER
AND PRESSER.
Suits Sponged and Pressed 35c
5125 State St.
Expert Workmanship
Moderate Prices.
ILLINOIS BRICK CO.
WILLIAM C. KUESTER. SUPERINTENDENT.
N. Western Ave., Ch
Telephone Lake View 270.
HOHENADEL BROS.
211-213 Madison Street
CHICAGO
Telephone Main 3300
John J. Bradley
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Mortgages, Deeds, Notes and Legal Documents Drawn and Acknowledged. Room 22, 27 North Clark Street.
Metropole Hall
FOR THE SEASON 1903-4
31st St. and 5th Ave.
Every Tuesday and Friday
Under New Management
Mr. Alex. Armant and
Mr. Horace Clinton
Every Tuesday and Friday Evenings
MUSIC BY ARMANT'S ORCHESTRA
PROF. HALL, Dancing Master.
Admission 25c.
Junk's Brewery
M. JUNK, Proprietor JOS. P. JUNK, Manager 3700-3710 South Halsted Street and 897 to 929 Thirtyseventh Street CHICAGO
F. W. BOYD DEALER IN COAL, WOOD AND ICE MOVING AND EXPRESSING All Orders Promptly Attended to Cash on Delivery Telephone Blue 26g 4656 Armour Avenue, CHICAGO.