The Broad Ax
Saturday, January 20, 1906
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
Has Turned His Back On The Afro-American Office Holders In The South.
in The Future Only White Ex Rebels Will Be Permitted To Occupy Seats At The Pie Counter In That Section Of The Country.
Vol. XI
PRESIDENT
Has Turned His
Afro-American
In The South.
in The Future
Rebels Will H
Occupy Seats
Counter In T
The Country.
The Sunday after the great Presidential election in 1904 came to a close, the vast majority of the Afro-Americans, assembled in their various churches throughout the country and offered up long prayers to their imaginary God for permitting Theodore Roosevelt, or as some called him, Roosenvelt, to become President of the United States, the burden of the refrain of all the orators on that occasion was "that within a short time after the new President was installed in office, he would restore the ballot to the disfranchised Afro-American in the South—teach his white brethren in that section of the country that his colored brother was in the possession of some rights which they must respect; that with both his big feet he would stand squarely on the Republican Platform of 1904, which pledged the Grand Old Party of bloated millionaires to enforce the XIV. Amendment to the Federal Constitution, and reduce Southern representation in Congress on account of the suppression of the Afro-American vote."
At that time, in summing up the result of the Presidential election in these columns, the following sentiments were expressed by the writer: "President Roosevelt's victory is complete, and his party will have one hundred and ten majority in the Lower House of Congress, and twenty-four or twenty-six majority in the Senate, which will enable the newly elected President and his Republican colleagues to enact any legislation for the benefit of the Negro which they may feel disposed to fasten on to the national statute books without consulting the likes or the wishes of any Democratic member in either branch of Congress.
"So if the Negro falls to receive a 'square deal' in the house of his friends he has no moral right to do any kicking
"With these tremendous majorities in the Republican column in every state north of the Mason and Dixon line, and four states in the South at the back of the Republican party, we fear it means the undoing of the Negro as an important factor in American politics for many years to come, for without the aid of his vote to any great extent the Republican party will be enabled to ride over the rights of the people, and permanently rivet Alexander Hamilton's high protective tariff measures and his theory of the inequality of the races on them, 'and that the capitalistic classes will place their golden-shod feet on the necks of the masses, thereby assisting to eliminate the Negro from American politics."
Time has proven that we were right in our ocitation, for since the election of Mr. Roosevelt to the Presidency he has not made the slightest pretention to adhere to that section of the Republican Platform of 1904 in reference to restoring the ballot to the Negro, and protecting him in his civil and political rights. Neither did President Roosevelt have one word to say in his last long message
---
to Congres in relation to that famous suffrage plank which he stood on in 1904, which he and the other leaders of his party only used or referred to for the sole purpose of catching the Negro vote. As stated before in these columns that "the President in his last message touched upon a thousand and one things, many of them unimportant, but when it came down to referring to the disfranchisement of the Negro in the South, not on account of his ignorance, but on account of the color of his skin, which is a live question, which can never be settled in this country until it is settled right, he was as silent or as dead as the grave.
Is not this sufficient to prove that President Roosevelt is a dishonest milk-and-water politician; that aside from appointing a few Negroes to office for policy's sake, he is not particularly interested in the civil or the political welfare of the great mass of Afro-Americans, and that he has appointed more Negro-hating ex-repoles to offices in the South than all the other Presidents combined since the days of President R. B. Hayes?
Lately the following interview with President Roosevelt has been flashed over the country by the press dispatches as to the radical change as to his Southern policy in dealing with the Negro, and it backs up our ocention:
"President Roosevelt has radically amended his policy in the matter of choosing federal officeholders in Southern states. He will no longer appoint Negroes as postmasters, collectors of customs and internal revenue and marshals. Every Negro who now holds an office will at the end of his term be succeeded by a white man. The President is desirous that there shall be no misunderstanding regarding his change of attitude, and therefore will permit Negroes whose terms have not expired to continue to hold office until the necessity for appointing their successors arises. His recent tour of the South, which was marked by great outpourings of the people and manifestations of popular approval, is understood to have convinced the President of the utter futility of elevating or improving the Negro by appointing him to public office. The President observed and learned a great deal upon that trip.
"The change will be brought about gradually and as quietly as possible. Most of the Negroes who are slated to lose their places owed their appointments to the late Senator Hanna. They are political creations of the Roosevelt regime. The President's new policy, if it can be so characterized, is simply an evolution. The Southern Negro for several years past has been losing his place in the march of progress.
"The Crum episode will not be repeated during the administration of the President. A Negro will be appointed to the office of registrar of the treasury, which is now held by Judson W. Lyons, but only because the traditions of both parties support the selection of a black man."
CHICAGO, JANUARY 20. 1906
T
"Cecil Lyon, Republican national committeeman of Texas, who recently spent several days in Washington, was probably the first person to whom President Roosevelt communicated his purpose to change his policy concerning the appointment of Negroes to office. Mr. Lyon expressed both approval and gratitude and assured the President that when the South understood his change of programme the Republican party of that section would be immeasurably strengthened."
This news as to the change of the President's "Nigger" policy in the South will be very pleasing to the mossbacks in that section of the country, and it should be discomforting to his Afro-American supporters in the North, who look upon him as being greater than God Almighty Himself.
CHIEF JOHN M. COLLINS AND THE AFRO-AMERICAN POLICEMEN.
An effort was made by several of secure Afro-American newspaper editors in this city, shortly after John M. Collins became its General Superintendent of Police, to show "that he was a Negro hater from way back and that he was so full of race prejudice against the Colored people that he was not above resorting to any mean trick or underhand method for the purpose of causing the removal of every Afro-American officer from the police force."
This false impression was retaliated among the Afro-Americans until the most ignorant ones really believed it, and in order to satisfy ourselves as to Chief Collins' attitude toward the Colored policemen and as to what they think of him, within the last two
THE SUDDEN DEATH OF MRS. S.
S. PAUL.
At 10:10 o'clock Thursday morning, at Provident Hospital, Mrs. Paul, beloved wife of Samuel S. Paul, departed this life.
But few people knew of Mrs. Paul's illness, caused by appendicitis, for which she was operated upon about a week ago by Dr. Daniel H. Williams, consequently the news of her death was a surprise and a shock to many of her most intimate friends. While not popularly known by Chicagoans, Mrs. Paul wielded considerable influence for good among the local element of the race, which stands for "social intercourse" of a morally uplifting nature. Her membership in the Woman's Aid Society afforded her the opportunity to do considerable charity for the race.
As a member of one of the "select whist" clubs, her beautiful home at 3605 Forest avenue was the scene of many pleasant social functions where her friends were welcomed and greeted in the good old Philadelphia style; for she was a Philadelphia by birth, and although she has lived in our city for over ten years, she has ever lived the quiet, active, and pleasant life so noticeable in the matrons of that city. After reading the Episcopal services at the home of the deceased Friday evening, the remains were carried to Philadelphia for burial, accompanied by Mrs. J. McCarthy, a sister of the deceased, and Mr. S. S. Paul, her husband. Undertaker Jackson had charge of the remains in Chicago.—"C."
Edward M. Lahif, who has been indisposed for the past two months, left the city Wednesday with his family for Petersburg, Florida, where they will spend the rest of the winter.
CHIEF JOHN M. COLLINS AND THE AFRO-AMERICAN POLICEMEN.
An effort was made by several obscure Afro-American newspaper editors in this city, shortly after John M. Collins became its General Superintendent of Police, to show "that he was a Negro hater from way back, and that he was so full of race prejudice against the Colored people that he was not above resorting to any mean trick or underhand method for the purpose of causing the removal of every Afro-American officer from the police force."
This false impression was retalled among the Afro-Americans until the most ignorant ones really believed it, and in order to satisfy ourselves as to Chief Collins' attitude toward the Colored policemen and as to what they think of him, within the last two months we have conversed with Officers John W. Hardy, W. J. De Lacy, Wilson Jones, Budd Green, Philip Green, William Hall, Anderson and Smith and many others, and each and every one of these officers say that Chief John M. Collins is O. K.; that he knows no man by the color of his skin or nationality; that he wants and expects every officer to do his duty without fear or favor, and when he does that no man can get his star. Within the past two weeks Chief Collins has selected William Hall and Wilson Jones, two of the best and the bravest officers in this city, as members of his detective force, and it is the first time in many years that men of the Colored race have served in suffic a capacity.
This is further evidence that Chief Collins is not swayed nor controlled by race prejudice, and we believe that if he is provided with a sufficient number of officers and given full sway, that he will lessen the reign of crime in Chicago.
Marshall Field, the greatest and the wealthiest dry goods prince in the world, breathed his last in New York City the first of the week, surrounded by his wife and numerous friends. His body was transported from that city to his late home, 1905 Pralle avenue, and on Friday the simplest and plainest ceremonies were held over his remains at the First Presbyterian church, Twenty-first and Indiana avenue, and his earthly remains were laid to rest in Graceland. In the death of Marshall Field Chicago has lost its foremost and most enterprising citizen.
Dr. A. B. McKissack, of 33rd and State streets, has been on the sick list for the past week.
AN ELOQUENT ORATION
Delivered In The House of Representative by Hon. William Sulzer.
On Russia's Unspeakable Crimes Against A Common Humanity.
Recently Congressman Sulzer, of New York City, introduced the following resolution in the House of Representatives, and after it was read by the clerk he delivered the following eloquent oration on the massacre and slaughter of the Jewish People by the Russian Government:
"Whereas the people of the United States, animated by the sympathy of a common humanity, view with deep sorrow, heartfelt commiseration, and polignant regret the deplorable condition of the people in Russia, and especially condemn and exceedingly deplore the cruel outrages, the unspeakable brutalities, and the unwarranted and wholesale assassinations of Russia's Jewish citizens; and
Whereas, it is solemnly alleged, and there is a widespread and prevalent feeling throughout the world that it is true, that these terrible crimes, these brutal atrocities, and these willful murders of the Jews in Russia are connived at by the Russian Government, and have been incited by the Russian ruling classes, and are instigated directly or indirectly by high officials In Russia for political purposes, and have continued for a long time in all parts of Russia to such an extent that they have aroused the sympathies and shocked the moral sensibilities of the civilized world: Therefore, be it
"Resolved, That the House of Representatives of the United States, voicing the humanitarian sentiments of the American people, deplores the terrible crimes, the brutal outrages, and the uncalled for and wanton murders of the Jews in Russia, and hereby condemns and denounces these awful outrages, these shocking assassinations, and these appalling atrocities as great international crimes aganist a common humanity that must be stopped, and stopped quickly, by the Russian Government; otherwise Russia, in the opinion of mankind, will and must stand indicted before the judgment bar of the world as beyond the pale of its civilization."
"MR. SULZER. Mr. Chairman, that resolution expresses my sentiments in regard to the terrible crimes against the Jews in Russia; and, if I mistake not, it expresses the sentiments of most of the Members of this House of Representatives, and the heartfelt and sympathetic opinion of the Rumane and liberty-loving citizens of our country, who are shocked and grieved and outraged by the inhuman barbarities and appalling atrocities which have been going on for the past two years in Russia. During this short time, I am reliably informed by those most competent to testify, that more than 100,000 helpless Jews—men and women and children—absolutely defenseless and guilty of no wrong, have been cruelly inhumanely, pitilessly, and barbarously murdered and butchered to make a Russian holiday. There has been nothing like it in all the history of the world, not even during
INT ORATION
the House of Rep-
y Hon. William
Unspeakable
ainst A Com-
humanity.
"Call the roll of the earth's illustrious dead and at least one name in every five will be the immortal name of a distinguished Jew who has stamped his indelible impress on the brightest pages of the world's history"
the horrors of the Dark Ages, and humanity stands to-day aghast stunned and grieved and horrified. It is simply impossible to describe the outrages on the Jews in Russia. Whole communities have been destroyed by fire and sword. No calamity of such magnitude has ever befallen Israel. All the horrors of the Inquisition, all the persecutions of the Middle Ages pale into insignificance in comparison with these stupendous crimes and appalling atrocities. The terrible bloody work is too frightful to contemplate; and yet we only know but a fragment of the awful truth. What a spectacle Russia presents at the dawn of the twentieth century!
"Mr. Chairman, I feel deeply on this question. Only a few weeks ago 125,000 Jewish people, at the least calculation, relatives of the thousands and thousands of murdered Jews in Russia, marched through the streets in my Congressional district, clothed in somber black and crape, in a great mourning funeral procession for the martyred dead in Israel. It was one of the most impressive, one of the most striking, and one of the most pathetic scenes in all, the history of the city of New York. Sadness and misery were written on every face. Bystanders took off their hats, bowed their heads in sympathy, and shed tears of sorrow. Nothing like it ever occurred before—Israel weeping and mourning for her dead—and I hope nothing like it will ever occur again in this land or any other.
"But the murders go on. A veritable reign of terror exists. The black hand of ignorant fanaticism, race hatred, and religious bigotry has been raised throughout Russia against the law-abiding, peaceable, and defenseless Jews, and the barbaric work of rapine plunder, outrage, and assassination continues and increases until even the heartless and hardened and superstitious Cossack is sickened by the bloody and ruthless scenes. Thousands and thousands of helpless men, women, and children are being slaughtered before the very eyes of civilization, and not a power lifts its voice in protest or raises a hand in condemnation. The facts—such we get—are blood curdling and the numbers of the dead are appalling. Nothing like it ever occurred before in all the annals of time. It is a big, blood-red page in human history—a gigantic crime against a common humanity—and Russia must be forced to stop it. How, do you ask? I answer. How were the butcheries in Armenia stopped? How were the cruelties in Cuba ended? What did the powers do in China? Russia can, if Russia wants to do it, end these atrocities in a day. They must be stopped. The red reign of the Romanoffs must end. We can look no longer without taking some decisive action. These crimes are great international crimes. The victims appeal to mankind, to the
(Continued on page 2.)
‘THE BROAD AX.
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CHrPs
Mrs. John Jacobs, of 3329 State
street, has been on the sick list for
the past week.
Lelut. John BE Hawkins was called
east on business; he will remain in
‘New York State for about ten days.
Mrs, Malvina Lively has returned,
after a very pleasant visit to her son
and friends in Baltimore, Md.
Miss Rachel Denby of Carthage,
Obio, is visiting her parents at 6452
Champlain avenue.
Mr. Paul Laurence Dunbar, the Ne-
gro poet, is so ill at his Dayton home
that he is not expected to live through
the week.
Announcements tell us that Mr.
Sylvester Roberts and Miss Maggie
Fite are to be married January 31,
1908.
Mr. A.B. Perrigo, the popular un-
Gertaker at 30th and State streets, is
slated for alderman on the Democratic
ticket of the 24 ward.
Mr. Sam Moore, better known as
Brother Gardner, was judged insane
in the Detention Hospital Thursday
morning.
Mr. Alexander Wiliams of 3000 State
street, will leave for Oakland, Cal.,
this week, where he will spend the
winter.
Mr. Don Wormley of Washington,
D. C., who has been wsiting this city
for the past month, leaves the city
Saturday for New York..
Former Alderman Michae] Melner-
ney is booming John A. Haney for al-
derman of the 30th ward, but accord-
ing to our way of thnking, Haney is
poltiically a dead cock in the pit.
Mr. Wm. Simmons and Wm. Mc-
Cullah have opened The “Club,” for-
merly run by Geo. Woods at 2959
State street. It will be known as
“The Hatian Club.”
Mr. and Mrs. Will Allen of Portland,
Ore., who have been visiting in Nash-
ville, Tenn, will arrive in Chicago
te first of the week on thelr way
home.
Daniel M. Jackson departed Tues-—
day for bis post of duty in Mexico,
where for the next four years he will
serve this country as its commercial
agent. :
John E. Owens, can, if he desires,
secure the nomination for Congress
and make the race against Congress-
man William Lorimer in the 6th Con-
gressoinal District.
Mr. George Henderson's paper on
‘The Associated Press—read before the
Bethel Literary last Sunday was very
instructive to all interested in news-
Paper work.
‘Mrs. Carrie Sheeves, who has been
evry ill at St. Luke's Hospital, is tm-
Proving. She will not, however, be
able to leave tlie hospital for some
time yet.
‘Harry R. Gibbons’ boom for Sheriff
‘of Cook County seems to be spread-
ing all over the city, and each day
he is growing in popularity with the
leaders of his party and the hosts of
Democracy.
‘The Tenth Anniversary number of
‘The Broad Ax, was a gem, an honor
to the race, and a great credit to that
brave and fearless editor Julius F.
‘Taylor—The Advocate, Portland, Ore.
gon.
‘Hon. George P. Foster, who has
‘Very creditably served three terms in
~ Congress, will again be nominated and
‘elected to that body by the leaders of
‘the Domocracy in the Fourth Con-
gressional District.
_ More than one hundred members of
thé Cook County. Democracy, in full
" dresg uniform, under the leadership of
Its president, Thomas Gallagher and
pes soceitety, Mabeet i. Buti, bendes.
_ by ita famous band ttt the elty Tors
day . fp to
Se eee cee
ne eS ae Se
‘Council from the 30th ward.
George H. Snowden has lately beer
chosen as messenger in the sub-treas
ury department in the new Federal
Building. His selection is pleasing
to his friends.
Mr. Charles Henderson, one of Chi
cago’s old boys now living in St. Paul,
spent a few days in the city last week
‘Dr. D. H. Anderson was called to
St. Louis by the illness of his sister-
in-law.
The fear of not being able to craw!
through that Biblical “eye of a nee
die” into heaven does not prevent the
clergy from living on the fat of the
land and accumulating riches. Does
it?—Ex.
Mrs. Bert Williams of New York is
visiting Chicago, stopping at 5516
Grove avenue. Mrs. Wiliams was
called to Chicago on the account of
the illness of her sister, Mrs. C.
Sheeves.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Smiley enter-
tained at their home on 22nd street
last Friday evening, a large number
of friends in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Baloy, 6446 Evans avenue. A
tencourse dinner was highly enjoyed
by all present.
Sixty good fellows will give a ban-
qut in honor of Robert T. Motts, at
2511 Wabash avenue, Friday evening,
January 26th. Mr. Motts Is the orig-
inator of the first Negro theatre in
America and he intends to build a
new one in the near future.
Eéward Carroll, Thomas Moran,
Edward Healy, Robert McKinley, and
Messrs. Gurtten and McCarthy, are
among the numerow aldermanc can-
didates in the Sist ward, and Alder-
man P. J. O'Connell stands ready and
willing to support the winner at the
primaries. *
Frank Jansen, who is the right
hand man for Alderman H. L. Fick,
38 West 12th street, left Tuesday
evening for Los Angeles, Calif,
where he will spend one month in
coaching or training his two race
horses, while feasting on sweet or-
anges and other fruit.
Alderman Michael D. Dougherty,
who is working very hard on the graft
investigating committee which is un-
earthing the crooked transactions of
he members of the contractors’ ring,
which has defrauded the city out of
many million dollars, will be re-nomt-
pated and re-electnd to the City
Counell from the 22nd ward.
Henry L. Dickson, the constant and
evoted husband of Mrs. Gertrude
Hart-Dickson, 3236 Wabash avenue,
ieparted this Ife Wednesday, Jan.
jth. He was only sick a very short
ime. Typhoid fever was the cause
of his death. Funeral services were
neld over fis remains at Grace Pres-
pyterian church last Friday. Inter-
ment at Oakhill Cemetery. Mr. and
Mirs. Dickson were only married three
znd a half years, and their wedded
ife was a happy one in every respect.
He was a model or an ideal husband,
nd his greatest aim in life was to
.dminister to the happiness of his
oving wife, who sadly mourns his
jeath. , a
The young people of “The Douglass
Senter Lyceum” have elected the fol-
owing named officers for the ensuing
erm: Mr. Geo. R. Arthur, president;
Mr. Wim. Bell, 1st vice-president; diss
Mary Ferguson, 2nd vice-president;
Miss Lizzie Johnston, secretary. This
organization is doing excellent work
slong educational lines for our young
men and women who set aside one
evening a month to discuss interest-
ng and beneficial subjects, to ms
membership which is made up prin-
sipally of our high school and college
attendants holders of unusual posi-
fons. Its president is secretary to
the master of transportation of one of
he large railway express companys.
The 1st vice-president is about to
graduate from the Armour Institute
of Technology. The 2nd vice-presi-
ent will finish at an early date a
pourse in the Illinois State Normal,
while the secretary, Miss Jounston, is
serving as correspondent and secre-
ne a nT, a
‘Two Nicely Furnished Rooms To
Rent.
‘Two elegantly furnished rooms,
steam heat and bath, to rent to single
gentleman. Phone Douglas 2472.
‘Second fiat, 2022 Indiana avenue.
Furnished Room To Rent.
‘Modern furnished front room to
rent. Steam heat, Telephone service.
3634 Calumet ave.
“CONGRESSMAN. SULZER’S ORA-
TION ON THE CRIMES IN RUSSIA,
(Concluded from page 1.)
brotherhood of men, to the justice of
the world. The massacres of Lodz ané
Odessa and Kisineff cry out to high
heaven, and the time has come when
the civilized world must tell Russia
in no uncertain tones that these
wholesale crimes against the Jews
must cease, now and forever, or the
civilizatoin of this day will stand dis
graced in the eyes of future genera.
tons. (Applause.)
Now, sir, I stand in my place on this
floor, and charge on my responsibility
as a Member of Congress, that it Is
solemnly alleged, and not denied, and
there is a widespread and prevalent
feeling throughout the world that it
is true, that these terrible crimes of
rapine and pillage and devastatoin,
that these brutal atrocities, and that
these monstrous murders of the help
‘less Jews in Russia, are secretly con.
nived at by the Russian Government;
that they have been incited by the
Russian ruling classes—the grand
dukes—and that they are instigated,
directly or indirectly, by high officials
1m Russia for relgious and political
purposes. What a fearful indictment
of Russia! Is it true? We will know
some day. It is not for me to say
now, however, whether these fearful
charges implicating the Russian Gov-
ernment with direct responsibility for
these atrocities on the Jews 1m ner Go.
mains are true or not, impartial .s-
tory, sooner or later, will reveal the
truth and the whole truth, and I leave
that awful charge to unerring Time.
But I do stand here today and I do
say that any nation that will permit,
or that does permit, or that has per-
mitted, these terrible assassinations
to go on and continue, and makes no
effort to check them, deserves the con-
demnation of the civilized world; and
that we, the representatives of the
American people, have the right, true
to our traditions, voicing the sent!-
ments of our constituencies and a
common humanity, to ery out against
these wholesale and willful crimes
against a persecuted race, and de-
nounce these barbarous outrages upon
the Jews, and to notify Russia that,
in our opinion, unless she stops, and
stops immediately, these assassina-
tions of the Jews, she will place her-
self, in the judgment of mankind, be-
yond the pale of cvilization. That is
the position I take now, and that is
the position this House should take,
and we should take it at once.
“Mr. Chairman, I arraign Russia
before the bar of civilization for great
crimes against a common humanity.
The Russian Government is responsi-
ble for these outrages on the Jews.
She can not avoid the awful and tre-
mendous responsibility. I belleve that
Russia could stop these murders if
Russia wanted to stop them. These
great crimes, sir, against an oppressed
race, on account of race, are not local
crimes; they go beyond States lines;
they are great international crimes;
they are butcheries of innocent men
and women and children, and in the
eyes of the Master these innocent vic-
tims are our brothers and our sisters,
and we would be false to ourselves,
to all that we revere and hol dear,
and to every dictate of humanity, if
we did not denounce and cry out
against them with all the vehemence
of our righteous American indignation.
If we do not, ours will be the shame
and ours the blame. We can not
evade our responsibility by asking ‘Am
I my brother's keeper?”
“Oh, yes, Mr. Chairman, I know it
is sald by those who speak for tne
Administration that our Government
can do nothing; that the President
and the Secretary of State can not
act and have no power, acording to
iuternational law, to intervene or to
tnterfere in the internal affairs of Rus-
sia, That may or may not be true,
but one thing is certain—it has been
done in Turkey and in Cuba and in
China; and another thing is sure, and
that is, that we, the Representatives
in Congress of the American people,
have the right to raise our voice in
protest against the plundering and the
massacre, week in and week out, of
thousands and thousands of poor,
helpless, defenseless men, women, and
children in Russia. We can do that
massacres. That right we have; let
us exercise it. It will be a declara
tion to Russia, to the Czar, and to the
grand dukes, who are directly or in-
directly responsible for these crimes,
that the American people and the
House of Representatives of the
‘United States sympathize with the
Russian Jews the rame as we would
with any other outraged and down-
trodden and oppressed people, and
that we are opposed to these race
crimes and that the ruthless exter-
mination of the Jews in Russia must
cease. If this is all we can do, let
us do it, and do it quickly; and I be-
Meve that if we do our protest, our
condemnation, and our denunciation
will be heard in St. Petersburg and
that the Russian Government will
quekly see to it that the wholesale
butchery of Jewish communities 1s
stopped. We can not ignore these
crimes against humanity. We can not
escape our duty and our responsibil-
ity. These innocent victims are our
brothers and our sisters—mankind
throughout the world are one. A great
and continuing crime against one race
is the concern of all the other races.
Can anyone who believes in the
Fatherhood of God and the brother-
hood of man successfully deny it?
“For mankind are one in spirit, and
one instinct bears along,
Round the earth's electric circle, the
swift flash of right or wrong;
‘Whether conscious or unconscious.
yet humanity's vast frame =~
Through {ts ocean-sundered fibres
feels the gush of joy or shame—
In the gain or loss of one race all
the rest have equal claim.
(Applause.)
“Mr. Chairman, I have sald that we
@o not know one-half of the truth
regarding the terribe crimes against
the Jews in Russia. The facts at
present are unobtainable. Russia
supprésses them. In the dying throes
of their official power, the cruel and
heartless rulers of Russia have sense
enough to preclude the world from
‘knowing the awful trath of the un-
‘precedented barbarities that are tak-
ing place within their dominions. To
their credit be it said that they have
decency enough to be ashamed to let
the light of publicity beat on their
cruel infamies and their infamous
butcheries. But murder will out, and
sooner or later the bright light of in-
vestigation, searching for truth, will
beat upon them more fiercely than
ever. Then, and not till then, will
the awful calamity of the Jews in
Russia be known, and when it is
known I predict the revelation will
‘be the most frightful in the annals of
time, and the blackest page in all his
tory.
Mr. Chairman, my heart goes out
to the ravished and plundered and op-
pressed Jews in Russia. I grieve with
those who grieve for the dead. I sym-
pathize with the living and the ter-
ror stricken. I have enlisted with all
my soul in thelr cause, and in Con-
gress and out of Congress I shall do
all that I can to aid them to amelio-
rate their condition. I am not a bigot.
I care naught for creed. I have no
race prejudice. I stand for human-
ity, and a man is a man, for all that,
to me. I have struggled all my life
to help those who needed help, to
do something to better the conditions
of the poor and the humble, to ald
oppressed humanity in every land and
in every clime, and to raise the lowly
and downtroddei to a higher plane
and push them forward a step fur-
ther in the grand vuarch of human
progress. I shali continue my work
along my own Tines. I shall never
turn back. I know wy duty to my
fellow-man, and it makes no differ-
ence to me whether he lives in the
Orient or the Occident—whether he
be Jew or Gentile. In the battle for
the right I can not go far wrong.
There is nothing right but justice.
T appeal for justice for the Jew, and
I say to all the world that these out-
rages on the Jews in Russia must
stop. I tell you that we can do our
share tp stop them. This resolution
I offer is only a beginning. Let us
pass it. Let us condemn and de-
nounce the massacres of the helpless
Sines Ci ie eek OR ei et |
higher pedestal, and a great race of
grateful people will forever call him
blessed.
“Mr. Chairman, let me say to this
House that I have the honor to repre-
sent In the heart of the city of New
York one of the largest Jewish con-
stituencies In the United States, and
most of these people, or their pa-
rents, have come to our shores from
Russia and southeastern Europe, and
1 want to say here, knowing them as
I do, living among them, believing in
them as I do, and respecting them as
I do, that there are no better, no
more loyal and no more patriotic citi.
zens in the United States. They are
honest, sober, thrifty, industrious,
Uberty loving, and intelligent. They
have come to our free land to eseape
the ostracism and the persecution of
governments like Russia and taking
advantage of the opportunities vouch-
safed them here, by frugality and in-
dustry, by perseverance and sobriety,
by hope and tenacity of purpose, they
have forged rapidly to the front in
every line of endeavor, and they are
to.day as good citizens as any other
class of people in all our country.
(Applause.) If anyone here will go
over the densely populated great East
Side of New York, where I live, and
where these people live, and where
there are more people to the block
than in any other Iike space on earth,
he will be convinced of all I say re-
garding the Jew, and he will find
among the throngs cf school children
in the publie schoois that the Jew-
ish boys and the Jewish girls are
among the brightest, the neatest, the
aptest, the smartest, and the most in-
telligent. I know well these people;
they know me, and have always been
my friends: and I would be false to
myself, false to my convictions, and
false to every impulse of my nature,
if I did not sympath?ee with them and
do my best to comfort and ald them
fn the day of their greatest sadness
and affiction and calamity. (AD-
‘plause.)
“Mr. Chairman, just a word of truth
for the Jew and I will conclude, It
is, however, unnecessary for me, or
any other man, to eulogize the intre-
pid sons and the virtuous daughters
of Israel. The Jew needs no eulogy.
All he asks is justce. All he demanas
is equal opportunity and equality be-
fore the law. The record of his race
from the dawn of time down to the
Present day is the history of the
march of humanity along the high-
ways of progress and the avenues of
civilization. In all ages of the world
the ostracized ang persecuted Jew
has done his share for his fellow-man,
for enlightenment, for liberty, for
freedom, for progress, and for civiu-
zation—and he has done it all in the
face of intense adverse circumstan-
ces. In science and in art, in litera-
ture and philanthropy, the Jew, in all
lands and in all times, has written
his name high in the temple of bu-
man fame. In statesmanship and dl-
plomacy, in law and in medicine, in
ethics and philosophy, in research and
discovery, the greatness of the Jew
is and ever has been unchallenged.
In commerce and in trade, in industry
and husbandry, overcoming forces
that would deter another, he has held
bis own in the vanguard of progress.
Persecuted for thousands of years he
has surmounted all obstacles; |
shunned for centuries he has kept in
the very front of the higher and the
better civilization. In trial and in’
triumph, in tempest and in sunshitle,
fn war and in peace, on land and
sea, In all eras and in all places, the
Jewish race has written its enduring
name and its eternal fame all over
the pages of human history. Cviliza-
tion owes much to the Jew; Chris-
tianity owes more. Neither debt can
ever be paid. Destroy what Israel has
done for the human race and you
leave a vold that can not be filled—
an abyss which can not be bridged.
Call the roll of the earth’s lulstrous
dead and at least one name in every
five will be the immortal name of a
distinguished Jew who has stamped
his indelble impress on the brightest
Pages of the world’s history. (Pro-
longed applause.)
FELIX F. WEIR WHO 18 BECOMING
NOTED AS AN EXPERT
VIOLINIST.
Is wel Iknown to the old-time Chi-
cagoans, for he is to the manner
born, and when eleven years of age
he attracted considerable attention by
his playing on the violin. After
studying for some ttme under various
instructors he finahy entered the Chi.
cago Musical College, where he dill.
gently pursued his studies, which
bore fruit in 1905, for in that year he
won the college diamond medal, in
the teachers certificate class, against
26 ‘students who entered this class,
and he was the first Afro-Amercan
‘student to win such high honors.
In the three years he studied in the
college referred to, he also won two
gold medals.
Possessing such an abundance of
musteal ability, Mr. Welr is striving
to resume his studies at the Leipsic
Conservatory of Music, Germany,
within the next year, and with that
object in view, Jackson Gordon, who
is well known in this city, will in the
near future arrange a number of high
"class concerts in which the best mu-
sical talent of the race will partici-
pate, and the money realized there-
from will be utilized to help to defray
the expenses of Mr. Weir while pur-
suing his studies abroad.
Resisting Disease.
“First, last and all the time, if you
you wish to avoid catching cold,” says
& writer in a medical journal, “keep
your strength at the maximum. When-
ever the vitality is lowered by over-
work, poor food, worry or by any oth-
er cause, your power of resistance is
impaired and an opening is made for
the thousand and one agencies of dis-
ease which are continually seeking to
break in.”
Gen’ Stand Enctlish.
‘The Calcutta Bengalee evidently
sonsiderably worked up over some-
thing, for it remarks editorially: “We
cannot, even with all the blasting in-
fluences of passive resistance, stand
against the corroding action of Brit-
Ish domination and save ourselves
from the pounding operation of polit-
Ico-confmercial administration.”
Long Wireless Message.
Commander Beebler, of the Key
‘West naval station, has officially re-
ported the receipt at the wireless sta-
tion at that point of an eight-word
message from Colon, s distance of
1,000 nautical miles. The achieve-
ment is particularly interesting, as
the island of Cuba directly intervenes
between the two points.
Look to the Sneeze.
A doctor remarks: “What strikes
one most at a Bengal hospital is the
lack of sense of proportion in the es-
timation of diseases. A man is grave
ly perturbed because he has not
sneezed for three months, but he is
comparatively indifferent to the fact
that he exhibits the early signs of
leprosy.”
Witkk “Soucezers.”
| Evidences of the influences of the
Anglo-Japanese treaty multiply. A
Tokio journal issued a special number
commemorating the war. In the ad-
vertisement of a milk dealer, under
@ cut representing cows assembled at
the milking hour, we have: “The
squeeze-out place of the milk deal-
a
Ancient Clock.
‘The oldest working clock in Great
Britain is that of Peterborough ca
thedral, which dates from 1320, and is
conceded to have been made by a mon-
astic clockmaker. It is the only on®
now known that is wound up over an
old wooden wheel.
Jews as Drinkers.
In applying to a London magistrate
for a transfer of bis license, a saloon
keeper said that he wanted to move
because the district in which he then
was had become a “New Jerusalem,”
and Jews did not drink as much as
Christians.
Zawest Your Mener.
‘The day for turning over a new leaf
4s at hand. Head the new page witha
resolution to invest your surplus, in-
stead of wasting it, and you will have
stepped on the threshold of your for-
tune, for the waste of the thoughtless
would make him rich—Cent per Cent.
Good Dog.
‘William Easton, a hospital steward
at the Mare Island navy yard, fell into
San Pablo bay from a boat and would
have drowned but for his hunting dog,
which seized a drifting oar at his mas-
ter’s command and brought {t to him.
Odd Ornaments.
‘The men of the Naga tribe, in Cen-
tral Africa, stick wads of cotton wool
Into their cars. These wads are spread
cut on a frame into a fan shape sev-
tral inches deep on each side of the
face.
‘The Very Kind.
‘The Sunday-school teacher asked
the class: “What kind of boys go to
heaven?” And one little urchin
yelled out: “Dead _boys!"—Lippin-
cott's Magazine.
‘Small Start
MayorElect Tracy, of Taunton,
‘Mass., started out in life as a boot-
black, and now is a self-educated law-
yer, with a practice of $12,000 a year.
In the Raising.
‘Teacher—What do you have nap-
Kins for?
Ciass (in unison)—For company—
Grewsome Gift.
A French explorer has found in the
interior of Borneo « singular and
‘grewsome wedding gift. It was the
‘Skull of a Negrito -Papon, carved by the
‘Dayaks.
‘The Pure Stuf.
“Is this pure milk?” asked the inquis-
itive lady customer.
“Yes,” replied the milkman, “we sell
the cream separately.”—Detroit Free
This useful little garment may be worked in almost any kind of wool, but Andalusian or three-ply vest wool will usually be of sufficient thickness, and of which about three ounces and a No. 8 bone hook will be needed. Work a chain of eight inches, turn and work a double crochet in each stitch, turn with one chain. Second row: A double crochet in the back thread of each stitch, turn with one chain, and work back again (back thread only to be used throughout), turn with one chain. Third row: A double crochet in each stitch of previous row, then work three chain, turn and pass the nearest, a double crochet in each of the other two, and finish the row as before. Fourth row: A double crochet in each double crochet of previous row, and one into the turning chain, three chain, turt, and work back as before. Fifth to eleventh rows: Same as last. (Another row or two may be
NICE PRESENT FOR BABY. added here should a longer leg be required. Twelfth to twenty-fourth rows: Some length as 11.
Twenty-fifth row: Decrease by leaving the last two stitches unworked and passing over the last made double crochet when turning, instead of making a chain, thus decreasing three stitches. Continue decreasing each row until the row is of the same length as the first one. Work another row same as last, and repeat from row 2. Join the last row to the foundation chain with single crochet, place the sides of the legs together, and join with single crochet.
Commence from the seam and work one double crochet with one chain between into each rib (or row) round the ankle.
Second row: One double crochet into each stitch all round.
Third row: One double crochet in each stitch half way round, 11 chain, turn and work a double crochet in each chain, and then work round the other half the leg like the first; work a double crochet in each stitch (back thread) all round for ten times; passing over one stitch at heel and toe in each of the last two rows; join on wrong side with single crochet.
The round the ankle with chain and tassels of the wool.
For the Top.—A double treble with one chain between in each row all round; a single crochet through both threads of each stitch all round; thread the double trebles with a chain of wool and tie at one side.
A New Game of Authors
This is a new version of the old game of authors, and will delight those who are well acquainted with books. All the questions must be answered by the name of an author.
1. A kind of linen.—Holland.
2. A name that means such fiery things, one can't describe its pains and stings.—Burns.
3. Kind of a bonnet.—Hood.
6. What a host said when the meat was tough.—Chaucer.
7. Something hard to bear.—Payne.
8. A kind of bread and a preposition.—Ruskin.
9. An artisan.—Either Goldsmith or Cooper.
10. What Oliver Twist called for.—Moore.
11. A breakfast dish.—Bacon.
12. A domestic animal and a contented noise.—Cowper.
13. A dress huling.—Wiggin.
14. An obstruction to navigation.—Barr.
15. Something on a foot.—Bunyan.
16. A blossom.—Hawthorne.
17. A game and a preposition.—Tennyson.
18. An adjective.—Grand.
19. A fraction of currency and a heavy weight.—Milton.
20. Badly wounded.—Alcott.
21. What the fox dreads.—Hunt.
22. That which is more than a sandy shore.—Shelley.
23. The name of a river.—Poe.
24. The way we will look after this mental strain.—Haggard.
The prize for this contest should be a framed photograph of some author. Candy boxes may be be used to represent books, and could be used as favors.
Tucks Fashionable
A noticeable feature of the winter's skirts is the prevalence of the tuck. Most of the circular skirts are fitted with tiny tucks at the top, and some styles have tucks at the bottom, running around. Sometimes the tucks are wide, and again they are not more than half an inch deep. In some skirts they are grouped close at the foot, and in others they are wide apart, one at the hem, another at about knee length, with a third between.
LAST CARGO OF SLAVES.
Were Landed on the Coast of Geor
gin Some Thirty-Five
Years Ago.
"The very last vessel to bring a cargo of African slaves into this country landed on the coast of Georgia in 1860," said Col. William Youngblood, of Atlanta, according to the Washington Post.
"The vessel, whose name I do not recall, was operated by two southern men, Corrie and Lamar. I think Corrie was from Charleston and his partner was from Savannah, and a member of the celebrated Lamar family. They brought over between 500 and 600 negroes from the shores of Africa, and proceeded up the Savannah river to Augusta before attempting to get rid of the slaves. There was lively bidding for the blacks by the planters of Georgia and South Carolina, and they sold like hot cakes at prices ranging from $300 to $800. Gen. Dearing, a prominent citizen of Edgefield county, South Carolina, bought 20 of them.
"At that time I was going, to school in South Carolina, and happened to pay a visit to the home of Mrs. Tillman, the mother of the present United States senator from that state, who also lived in Edgefield county. It seems that Mrs. Tillman had been a purchaser at the sale of Corrie and Lamar, and I have a distinct recollection of being shown one of the young Senegambians that she had bought of them. He was black as midnight, and when spoken to could only grin and gesticulate. He had not learned a word of English."
REGENERATION OF RUBBER
Process by Which Resilience and Body Are Restored to Old Material.
A European process for regenerating old rubber has for its principle the separation of the caoutchout proper contained in vulcanized rubber from the mineral and other matters which have been incorporated into it, such as sulphur, etc. The first operation, says the Scientific American, consists in dissolving the vulcanized rubber in one of the usual solvents, using petroleum preferably either alone or with benzine added to it. After treating for a certain time the insoluble matter is separated by filtering under pressure, or by a centrifugal machine. The solution when separated from the insoluble matter is evaporated to the consistence of syrup under a reduced pressure and is then taken up by acetone. The liquid which is thus obtained is first boiled and then decanted off and the rubber is again taken up by an alcoholic soda solution. After boiling and pouring off a second time, the rubber is treated with boiling alcohol. After the alcohol is taken off, the rubber is washed with water and then dried by superheated steam, which removes the last trace of alcohol and water it may contain.
PILES BURST INTO FLAME.
A remarkable case of spontaneous ignition that recently occurred in erecting the walls of the new Rotterdam quay is related by the Technische Rundschau.
Rams had been used there for some time, which by 180 or 200 strokes per minute caused a steady advance of the piles. The foundation was such that the pillars had to be driven through the quicksand down to the solid ground.
On withdrawing some piles, the points of the latter were found, owing to the enormous friction, to have been charred entirely and heated to such a point as to begin burning spontaneously on coming in contact with the air; nor could iron shoes prevent this spontaneous ignition.
When leaving the piles in the ground this ignition would not result in any damage, the charring remaining confined to the surface, and the heat rapidly carried away in the moist surroundings.
MASSACHUSETTS MAYORS.
All Sorts of Occupations Represented by the Rulers of Her Cities
Massachusetts elects its mayors on the second Tuesday in December, and elects them largely on issues not connected with national politics, says the New York Sun. Each mayor of Massachusetts is expected to be engaged in "some gainful occupation."
Thus, the new mayor of Gloucester is a telegrapher; the mayor of Woburn, a heel manufacturer; the mayor of Springfield, an undertaker; the mayor of Chelsea, agent for the sale of wall paper; the mayor of Haverhill, auctioneer; the mayor of Worcester, a physician; the mayor of Malden, a manufacturer of spring mattresses; the mayor of Medford, a plumber; the mayor of Lowell, a bookkeeper; the mayor of Brockton, a foreman in a shoe factory, and the mayor of Salem, a tin roofer.
The mayor-elect of Marlborough is a native of New York city—an unusual thing in a Massachusetts mayor.
Pocket Savings Banks
Every hired girl in Germany has a little blank book, wherein is pasted every week a stamp worth about five cents, the gift of her mistress, says Everybody's Magazine. The government, the all-doing government, will redeem these stamps at their face value. If the hired girl falls ill her stamp book will help pay her expenses. Or she can keep it as a provision for her old age.
KEEP YOUTH AND BEAUTY.
Relaxation Urged on the Weary and the Lazy Equally Urged to Go
• Out and Walk.
Is not your youth, your beauty (and this means your health) worth keeping?
Can you with complaisance look forward to being faded, haggard or peevish and alling at 30 or 35?
Will you not be frank with yourself—now before it is too late—and so plan your life that a rest period may be yours each day? Take a time to call your own, when, closed in your own pretty boudor and clad in a loose, warm dressing gown, you may fling up your windows, indulge in a dozen deep restful breaths, lifting the chest and head high, and then after taking a few gentle trunk turnings to right and left—bending and twisting in all directions to keep the waist line supple and the figure youthful—fling the arms up over the head and make great sweeping circles with them to help the circulation at important nerve centers.
After indulging in a few deep knee bendings and half a dozen more deep breaths as a finish, throw yourself on your couch—relaxing every muscle and driving all thoughts and worries from your brain—simply rest mind and body. You may even sleep, if you will, for 20 minutes to an hour.
This relaxed rest will do you more good than two hours' sleep taken under different circumstances, declares Mme Hebe, in the Chicago Inter Ocean.
But see to it that your window is open a little both top and bottom during your rest and that you have a light warm covering thrown over you, as you must avoid chill after exercise and during the rest period.
Again, you who are sick, do not always order your carriage when you have but six or seven blocks to go, for a brisk walk in the open air will help keep you young and is often actually necessary to your health.
I believe it to be a fact that the so-called rich often fall into dangerously lazy habits through the conveniences and luxuries that their wealth surrounds them with.
And so to the girl who is forced to walk from six to ten blocks daily, I say, be thankful, and do not waste your time in envying your wealthy neighbor. Fate decrees that you must take this life-giving, health-retaining exercise each day.
When fatigued after a "trying" day or tired out from social duties, throw yourself upon a bed or couch and remain in the first position for five full minutes without removing hand or foot. The body is suddenly relaxed and a sense of complete rest takes the place of the strain that results from being too long upon the feet. Perfect repose may be gained by lying on the flat of the back for half an hour at a time, with hands out-stretched. Let the head rest upon a pillow that is not too high. If you cannot sleep, close your eyes and put body and mind in a quiescent state. For an afternoon sieba treatment of this sort is a good restorer of overworked nerves.
TIE END: POINT LACE.
Pattern Suitable for a Narrow Tie of Silk or Muslin and May Be Otherwise Used.
This is a pretty finish to a narrow tie of hem-stitched silk or muslin. The design may also be used as an applique for trimming dresses, blouses, etc.
Materials required for a pair of
A LOVELY DESIGN.
ends: Two yards braid, one skein of thread, one yard purl edge.
The stitches are not difficult, the work can easily be accomplished by one at all skilled in this kind of needlework.
Boric Acid.
Every housekeeper should have on hand a supply of boric acid, which is a very useful antiseptic. For burns it is unusually excellent. Drop two ounces of the boric crystals in a glass quart jar and fill with water. This makes a saturate solution. Take a piece of gauze or cheesecloth and saturate with the solution and lay on the burn. Apply very moist, covering with absorbent cotton and then with oilied silk. This will keep moist for 12 hours, for the oiled silk will prevent evaporation. If you haven't the boric acid use a solution of bicarbonate of soda, which is nearly as good.
Ugly Nails.
The ugliest nails can be improved by taking the trouble daily to push back the hard skin that grows at the base of the nails. This should be done after the hands have been washed in warm soap and water and are still moist. A soft towel is the best thing to use for the purpose, or an ivory or bone implement such as is sold in manicure sets.
Pipe Was Short and It Had to Be Elevated to Reach the Roof.
During the college days of ex-Mayor Bessom, of Lynn, he had two of the professors of the college as guests at a hunting camp in the Maine woods, relates the Boston Herald. When they entered the camp their attention was attracted to the unusual position of the stove, which was set on posts about four feet high.
One of the professors began to comment upon the knowledge woodmen gain by observation. "Now," said he, "this man has discovered that the heat radiating from the stove strikes the roof and the circulation is so quickened that the camp is warmed in much less time than would be required if the stove was in its regular place on the floor."
The other professor was of the opinion that the stove was elevated to be above the window, in order that cool and pure air could be had at night.
Mr. Bessom, being more practical, contended that the stove was elevated in order that a good supply of green wood could be placed beneath it to dry. After considerable argument, each man placed a dollar bill upon the table, and it was agreed talt the one whose opinion was nearest the guide's reason for elevating the stove should take the pool. The guide was called and asked why the stove was placed in such an unusual position.
"Well," said he, "when I brought the stove up the river I lost most of the stovepipe overboard and had to set the stove up there so as to have the pipe reach through the roof." He got the money.
REFRESHING HIS MEMORY.
When the Clerk Heard That Smith Had Money He Remembered Him.
At ten o'clock a traveling man stepped up to the clerk's desk at the Hillman, relates the Birmingham (Ala.) Herald, and with some agitation said to Clerk Graves:
"Mr. Graves, I have just come from a man who says he is one of your old schoolmates. He told me you and he were old friends. His name is John Smith, and he used to live at Pumpkinville. Do you know him?"
"Smith! Smith!" sald Graves wonderingly. "John Smith, of Pumpkinville, I don't recall him just now. What's the matter with him? Is he in jail?"
"In jail!" exclaimed the traveling man. "Why, no. He's just home from Alaska, where he made $200,000 digging gold in the Klondike and he's coming back to Alabama to spend the money."
"Oh, yes, to be sure!" sald Graves. "Why, what was I thinking about! Smith—Johnny Smith, of Pumpkinville, three miles from Sassafras? Why, I should say I do know him! Johnny and I used to fish together in the creek for minnows and hang our clothes on the same stump when we went in swimming. Say, if you see Johnny, give him my love, and tell him I'm coming round to see him when I get off in the morning."
USE MADE OF OLD SHOES.
Worked Up Into Imitation Leather Novelties of Various Descriptions.
Janitors collect the shoes cast away by tenants and send them to auction rooms, where they are sorted into plies marked "Men," "Women," "Children." Several poor people made fair bids, relates the Shoe Retailer, but the auctioneer did not seem eager to sell. Finally, a red-faced man pushed his way through the crowd and offered ten cents apiece for the whole lot. His bid was successful.
"I was killing time with talk waiting for that fellow," said the auctioneer afterward. "He always pays high for these shoes, and he does not want them for wearing, either. He wants to beat them out for the leather in them. He gets what material there is, puts it through a process and makes stamped imitation leather novelties, such as picture frames, bags, pocketbooks, penknife holders, and even chair backs and seats. He finds a ready sale for these novelties and gets a good price for them."
Moved Up a Peg.
A naval officer, according to the Buffalo Commercial, told of the trials of a colleague in marrying off his many daughters. In the same family was a son, an observant lad of ten years. Toward the close of the winter the officer informed his son that he was going to lose his sister, Ethel, who was engaged to wed a young lieutenant. "I'm sorry to hear that, dad," said the youngster, "because I'm awfully fond of Ethel. Still, we'll have Alice and Eva and Maud and Susie, won't we?" Then, after a moment's reflection, he added: "By the way, dad, this arrangement will advance Alice a number, won't it?"
Not Cordial.
"Your new boss isn't very sociable, is he?" asked Crumley.
"Yes, he has shaken nearly all the old hands who were in the shop when he took charge."—Catholic Standard and Times.
Linguistic Parrot.
A parrot which can talk in two languages and which has 17 phrases has been added to the London zoological gardens. It is a native of northern India.
American Brick Co.
American Brick Co.
President and Treasurer, THOMAS CAREY.
Vice-President, JOHN SHELHAMER,
Secretary, WILLIAM SULLIVAN.
MANUFATURERS OF
Output of Winter Yards ..... 1,400 per day
Output of Summer Yards ..... 30,000 per day
Douglas Club Dancing School,
Yourself and friends are cordially invited to attend the fashionable Douglas Club Dancing School, 3516 Ellis ave.
Every Friday evening for the purpose of learning The New Three Step Miss Daisie Hoggett and Prof. Thomas Russel will see that all of our patrons are properly taught.
A private place where you may meet with your friends to enjoy a social few hours. All respectable people.
Full orchestra. Mrs. N. C. Smith,
Manager; Prof. N. C. Smith, Musical Director.
AGENTS AND CORRESPONDENTS WANTED.
The Broad Ax desires to engage Agents and regular Correspondents in all the leading cities and towns throughout the country. The highest commissions paid to live hustlers. Sample copies furnished free. For further information, address Julius F. Taylor, 5049 Armour avenue, Chicago.
THE BROAD AX.
Is for sale at the following news stands:
The Afro-American News Office,
3104 State Street.
A. F. Tervalon, 2826 State street,
Cigar Store and News Stand.
Richard Webb, 2642 1-2 State St.
Mrs. Nellie Phelps, Cigars, Notions and News Stand, 131 W. 51st street.
Richard Pinn, 4836 State street.
T. B. Hall's Cigar Store and Laundry office, 281 29th St.
W. S. Williams, Tonsorial Parlor, 399 31st st.
J. R. Peters Cigars, Tobacco and News Stand, 338 E. 27th street.
Mrs. A. E. Baker, Notions and News Stand, 419, 36th street.
J. H. Harris, cigars, tobacco and news stand, 2508½ State St.
W. P. Johnson, Notion Store and News Stand 3704 State st.
Turner Williams' Shaving Parlor and News Stand, 2903 Armour ave.
Mrs. B. Williams, Cigars, Notions and News Stand, 486½ State street.
B. Davis, cigars, tobacco, and confectionery, 533 State st.
Whitley Bros. 2724 State St, Gent's furnishings and new stand.
The Stationery, 2970 State street.
Cigars, Tobacco and News stand.
The Afro-American News Co., 439 W. 35th St, New York City, N. Y.
The Informer News Co., 188 Randolph St, Detroit, Mich.
News items and advertisements left at these places will find their way into the columns of The Broad Az.
PHONES { Office, Main 1157
Rea. Brown 42
Room 813, 115 Dearborn Street.
CHICAGO
McCALL PATTERNS
10
15
NONE MORE
McCALL'S MAGAZINE
50
YEAR
INCLUDING A FREE PATTERN
There are more McCall Patterns sold in the United
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Lady Agara Wanted. Handmade premium or
fibral cord cash commission. Pattern Catalogue of de-
sign and Fabric Catalogue of design and premium
address THE McCALL CO. New York
Established 1877. Phone Oakland 1250-1351
John J. Dunn
COAL &
WOOD
Wholesale
and Retail
Dealer in..
Fifty-First St. and Armour Ave.
RAIL YARDS: {151st St. & L. S. & M. S. RY.
152nd St. and Armour Ave.
CHICAGO
J. H. COLEMAN & CO. Express & Van Moving
F. A. Rawlins
The Modern Embalmer
UNDERTAKER AND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
When his work is finished
you have no displeasure.
4834 State St., CHICAGO
Phone Douglas 1550
The Eureka Club and Cafe
OPEN UP STAIRS
2940 STATE STREET
ALL NEWLY FURNISHED.
Home Cooking: Meals, Lunch and
Short Orders served from 5 p. m.
till 2 A. M.
OYSTERS IN SEASON
Good Music and Entertaining.
CHAS. GASKIN, Gen'l Mgr.
Phone 1550 Douglas.
J. GARNER
Tel. Douglas 3256
THE ELITE BUFFET
FINE WINES, LIQUORS
AND CIGARS
3030 State Street CHICAGO
Randel Woodfolk
CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CI-
GARS—POOL TABLE.
HOT LUNCH SERVED EACH DAY.
4920 STATE ST., CHICAGO.
Telephone Oakland 964.
COOKS
JACKETS' AND LINEN because they have found by experience that they are the most satisfactory and economical goods on the market.
Our Complete Catalogue—a correct guide to proper dress in the Dining Room, Kitchen, or Bar will be sent free on application.
tions how to order.
Marcus Ruben (Inc.), 390 State St., Chicago
Brick Co. -
THOMAS CAREY.
JOHN SHELHAMER,
by, WILLIAM SULLIVAN.
URERS OF
Sewer Brick
Venturesome Women.
In the North Borneo Herald it is recorded that two Englishwomen, Mrs. McEnroe and Mrs. Darby, recently paid a visit to the lonely island of Tagannac. Among other adventures there the two sat up one night to watch for turtles, and at midnight saw a large one come out of the sea on to the sands. When it was returned to the water first, Darby and then Mrs. McEnroe mounted on its back and rode for some distance.
Distant Target.
While attempting to shoot the sky full of holes Saturday night so the rain could fall easily, says the Wilburton, L. L., Journal, Louie Goolbasin, a Russian, was reported by some folks who didn't have umbrellas with them. Some say Louie's experiment cost him about $60 besides the three days' ammunition he wasted. Shootemupski gotenupski!
Bringing It Home
"The beauty doctor has got the parson beat when it comes to curin' ladies of the liquor habit," remarked the Polhick philosopher.
"How's that?"
"The parson tells 'em it's bad for the soul, but the beauty doctor tells 'em it's bad for the complexion."—Lewisville Courier-Journal.
He Got the Job.
On December 6, 1877, a young French doctor sent in an application for a small post under the government and heard nothing more of the matter till a few days ago, when he was required to fill up a blank in order to get a nomination for the position he had applied for nearly 28 years before.
Quoting an Ancestor
Lord Shaftesbury was sharpenning a pencil one day, the lead of which continually broke. At about the tenth failure he remarked: "D— the pencil!" Perceiving one of his sons to be present, he saved the situation by adding: "As your poor grandfather would have said."-London Globe.
Didn't Know His Name.
Subeditor—Here's another letter from the man who signs himself "Vox Populi."
Editor—What's he want now?
"He wants to know if we will kindly inform him what 'vox populi' means."—N. Y. Mail.
Tip to Song Writers
The insurance investigation in New York should suggest a new line of titles to our popular song writers. There would not be much the matter with "The Man Up the River," "The Little Yearly Roll" or "The Rantankerous Friend."-Chicago Inter Ocean.
Jews in Africa.
The first Jewish services ever held in British East Africa were held on Yom Kippur at the Masonic hall, of Nalrobl, and resulted in the formation of a congregation. There are about 30 Jews in the protectorate, most of them engaged in dairy farming.
Policy Versus Principle
"Honesty is the best policy," did you say? Honesty that is merely a policy would scuttle the ship if that paid better than sailing it. Only the honesty that is a principle will save the cargo at all hazards of personal loss.—Cent per Cent.
All for Himself
"Of course," said the political reformer, "you believe in the greatest good to the greatest number." "Oh, sure," replied the politician, "and with me the 'greatest number' is always number one."—Philadelphia Press
Confirmed in Pairs
In a class of 14 confirmed by Bishop Spalding on his first visitation to St. James', Meeker, Col., a town of 800 people, there were five pairs of brothers and one pair of sisters.
Built on Canes.
In Lima, Peru, there are still many buildings which on account of earthquakes are constructed of canes set upright and liberally plastered with clay, then painted over.
Loguacious
Lawson—What did your wife say to you when you got last night? Dawson—Say? She said an 18-volume encyclopedia.—Somerville Journal.
Just a Few.
"All men make fools of themselves a number of times in this life."
"Oh, I don't know; some men love but once."—Houston Post.
Watch Works.
An ordinary watch contains about 150 pieces, but complicated repeaters, chromographs, etc., as many as 800, and in one case 975 pieces.
Unnecessary.
We'd think a good deal better of some people if they didn't think so well of themselves as to make it unnecessary.—Puck.
Six pounds per person per annum is the average consumption of soap in France. The average is ten pounds in our country.
Living Easy.
John Jacob Astor's income is estimated at $30,000 a day.
3
British East India.
The British East Indies comprise 1,766,597 square miles, with a population of 294,000,000, almost 41,000,000 more than 20 years ago. This population lives in 2,148 cities and 728,605 villages, with 55,841,315 dwellings. Two hundred and sixty-five million live in the country and of these 192,000,000 support themselves entirely by agricultural pursuits. Of the population 207,000,000 are Hindus and 62,000,000 Mohammedans. The total number of Christians is 2,923,241, of whom 2,600,000 are natives, an increase of 700,000 in ten years.
Cheap Gauntletz.
The other day one or two furnishing goods men at Butte, Mont., after a fierce rate war of some days' duration, marked buckskin gauntlets down to one cent a pair. The other then placarded his gauntlets at five pairs for one cent. Thereupon No. 1 threw five cases of gauntlets into the street to be scrambled for. A little later the police reserves proceeded to quell a riot and disperse a mob.
Gruesome Gifts
Prince Lanilo of Montenegro sent his father the head of a notorious bandit as a birthday present. A king of Naples, whose life had been attempted several times, had each assailant put to death. From their skins he had made pocketbooks, cigar cases and other articles, which he was accustomed to send to other rulers as birthday presents.
Laving Blame on the Tailor.
Mrs. Young—John, dear, I wish you'd get another tailor.
Mr. Young—Why, dearest?
"The one you have is so dreadfully careless about sewing on the buttons. This is the fourth time I've had to sew this same button on for you."—Cleveland Leader.
Hint to Women:
No woman is so beautiful as our half-satisfied image of her . . .
and I look forward to the day when some stage princess, wiser than her sister shall win a matchless reputation for mysterious beauty by never allowing herself quite to be seen.—English Review.
"Cooked" the Cook.
A cook has been going around a station in the south of India with the following "character," and is somewhat surprised he is not engaged: "Abdul has been my cook for about three months; it seems much longer. He leaves on account of ill-health—my ill-health."
Homes in Texas.
Of 6,000,000 acres put on the market by the state of Texas in September, homemakers have already taken about 1,000,000 acres, at prices ranging from five to ten times the minimum of a dollar an acre, fixed by the state land commission.
Couldn't Stand Anything Vulgar.
Mr. Nuritch—I think I'll take this watch. You are sure it's made of refined gold?
Jeweler—It is.
"Because I detest anything that ain't refined."—Stray Stories.
Free Dwellings.
The practice of providing free dwellings for workingmen and their families is quite common in Austria. Where this is done the wages are a little lower, but there is a decided saving for the laborer.
Paradise for Girl Students
Switzerland is the paradise of women students at universities, so far as Europe is concerned. There are at present about 5,000 of them, making 23.7 per cent of the total number of students.
Narrow Squeeze
With a narrow margin of six feet, the steamer Ayrshire passed through the Manchester ship-canal, being the largest vessel that has navigated the canal and locks.
An Easy One.
There are lucky Nicholases and unlucky Nicholases. Here's an easy one—which is the lucky one, the czar or Longworth?—N. Y. Mall.
To Protect Elephants.
"Friends of the Elephant" is the title of a society just formed in Paris to combat the gradual extinction of the animal by hunters.
Liquors Barred.
The government of Honduras has prohibited the importation of whisky, rum and anisado in barrels, casks or demijohns.
The Wrong Angle.
"Did the critics sit through your play?"
"No. They sat on it."—Detroit Free Press.
Keep the Plunder.
The modern version seems to be that when thieves fall out they still hang on to the goods.—Life.
Difficult Task.
It is often easier to serve two masters than to master two servants.—Philadelphia Record.
The Germans give worn-out horses a tonic of roasted coffee beans mixed with honey.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS CENTER.
3032 Wabash Ave.
Last Friday the Douglass Center
Woman's Club held a meeting of unusual interest. Mrs. Ida B. Wells-
Barnett presided and led the topic
for discussion—Motherhood. Mrs.
Freer followed speaking from the artist's standpoint. Rev. D. H. Harris
spoke from the minister's, Dr. Trice
from the physician's, and Mr. L. B.
Anderson from the legal. Miss Edith
Wyatt read some beautiful poems.
Refreshments were served.
Sunday, 3 p. m., the meeting will be devoted to the discussion of a vacation school to be located at Keith. Prof. Bogan, superintendent of the Manual Training School at 26th and Wabash avenue will lead. He will be followed by Prof. Tear of Keith. Mr. E. H. Wright, Dr. Mary Waring and Mr. W. Allison Sweeney. Mr. B. E. Johnson will play one of S. Coleridge Taylor's selectors. Music under the direction of Prof. N. Clark Smith.
Monday, 8 p. m., the Douglass Center Forum will meet Subject, The new City Charter. Speakers, Mr. Robert McMurdy and Dr. D. R. Wilkins.
Thursday at 2 p. m. the I. B. W. Club holds its regular meeting. These meetings are very interesting. All ladies are invited.
At 8 p. m. the class in sociology meets. The calss is growing in numbers. Mr. Barnett led the class at its last meeting in the absence of Mrs. Woolley.
Saturday, 10 a. m., sewing class meets.
Saturday, 8 p. m., the new class in English will begin a study course. Mr. W. H. A. Moore will conduct the work in this department. The course will include a review of the functions of grammar, the study of the elements of good expression, and a further study of the history of English literature.—"D."
TO CHURCH OR BIBLE BELIEVING PEOPLE.
Admitting the Bible is true, we read in the first chapter of Matthew: "Mary was found to be with child." There is nothing in that. Mary was a woman and the ghost was a man. Mary's baby was no more than any other woman's baby under the same treatment. It had nothing to do with God, no more than other babies have. Heathen Christian, open your eyes. Come, now, be honest and reason. The talk about that little baby is causing more people to go insane than all the rest of the Bible. You preachers are the cause of most of the people being sent to the insane asylums. Those people are killing children and wives and causing suicides. Come out, you that pretend to be Christians. You can find something that will suit you. Better fight for knowledge; that is better.—John S. Holman, Pontiac, Ill., in The People's Press.
W. H. A. Moore, will on March 31 publish a five hundred de luxe subscription edition of his poems. The book is to be done on genuine handmade Japanese vellum in gold, red and peacock blue, at the printing of Rogers and Company. It will be bound in undressed, limp brown leather and gold satin, at the famous bookshop bindery of Frank P. Morris, 171 Madison street.
A. B. SCHULTZ, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
2719 State Street
Hours: 9 to 12 A. M.
CHICAGO
All that is best in whiskey you will find in
Old Underoof Rye
It is thoroughly matured, soft and rich.
CHAS. DENNEHY & COMPANY Chicago.
Phone 194 South
J. A. O'Donnell, H. D. Coghlin,
O'Donnell & Coghlin
Attorneys at Law
Phone 264 Main Metropolitan Block
N. W. Cor. LaSalle & Randolph Sts.
GRAY & MORAN
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Suite 1114 Ashland Block, Clark and
Randolph Sts. Tel. Central 569.
CHICAGO.
Residence 57 Macallister Place
Telephone Ashland 383
Office Telephones
Central 1239 Automatic 5940
MILES J. DEVINE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 318-320 Reaper Block
CLARK AND WASHINGTON STS.
CHICAGO.
A. D. GASH
Attorney at Law,
84-86 La Salle Street, Chicago.
Suite 615 to 619.
Telephone Main 3077.
JOHN E. OWENS
ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR
AT LAW
323 ASHLAND BLOCK
TELEPHONE CENTNAL 998 CHICAGO
Telephone Yards 6016.
John Fitzgerald
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
4737 SOUTH HALSTED STREET.
Residence
113 W. GarBeld Boul. CHICAGO
J. GRAY LUCAS
Attorney at Law
Suite 611 167 Dearborn St., Cor. Monroe.
Chicago.
Tel. Cent. 5763. Res. Tel. Went. 4539.
Captain 8th L. N. G.
Regimental Quartermaster
JAMES S. NELSON
LAWYER
Residence
3852 WABASH AVE.
Tel. 6242 Douglas
SUITE 611, 167 DEARBORN STREET
Tel. 5763 Central
W.Kemper Harreld
TEACHER OF
VIOLIN
6626 CHAMPLAIN AVE.
Tel. Went. 2821.
Hall's Laundry
2975-77 STATE ST.
Phone, Douglas 1235
CHICAGO
& COMPANY,
go.
Chicago
HILLMAN'S STATE & WASHINGTON STS. Chicago's Most Modern, Most Complete and Most Convenient Department Store
Jacob Feinberg
MARKET AND GROCERY TELEPHONE DOUGLAS 565 81st and State Streets
BRADLEY
REAL EST
AND IN
4709 S. Halsted Street
Theodor
JUSTICE OF
Mortgages, Deeds, Notes
and Acknowledged.
BADLEY & FIELD
REAL ESTATE, LOANS
AND INSURANCE
Listed Street
neodore C. Ma
ICE OF THE P
Gages, Deeds, Notes and Legal Documents
Acknowledged. Room 22, 27 North
BRADLEY & FIELDS REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND INSURANCE
Theodore C. Mayer
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Mortgages, Deeds, Notes and Legal Documents Drawn
and Acknowledged. Room 22, 27 North Clark Street.
POLICE MAGISTRATE RESIDENCE
East Chicago Ave. Police Court 337 Burling Street
C. H. Smiley, Pres. and Treas.
76 E. TWENTY
Two Phones, South 584.
Phone D
SANDY W. TR
INCORPORATED UNDER
2918 STATE S
Now is your chance.
The Company will open a Depar-
State St. Namely Sandy W. Trice
complete line of Men and Womens E
tions. Shares ten dollars. A limit
Company's Sec'y. office.
CHICAGO
y, Pres. and Treas.
J. Hockley
S
Smith Cal
76 E. TWENTY-SECOND STREET,
4, South 584.
C. H. Smiley, Pres. and Treas. J. Hockley Smiley, See'y.
Smiley
Caterer
76 E. TWENTY-SECOND STREET,
Two Phones, South 584.
CHICAGO.
Phone Douglas 6581.
DY W. TRICE & COMP
CORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF ILLINOIS
2918 STATE STREET, CHICAGO.
is your chance. A joint stock com
ny will open a Department Store in the near
lumely Sandy W. Trice & Company. The compa
sion of Men and Womens Furnishing Goods Shoes,
is ten dollars. A limited number of shares are
rec'y. office.
SANDY W. TRICE & COMPANY
INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF ILLINOIS.
2918 STATE STREET, CHICAGO.
Now is your chance. A joint stock company.
The Company will open a Department Store in the near future at 2918 State St. Namely Sandy W. Trice & Company. The company will carry a complete line of Men and Womens Furnishing Goods Shoes, Hats and Notions. Shares ten dollars. A limited number of shares are on sale at the Company's Sec'y. office.
DIRECTORS:
Sandy W. Trice, Pres.
Milton J. Trice, Vice Pres.
A. T. Henry, 2nd Vice Pres.
R. R. Wright, 3rd Vice Pres.
Dee Parker, Trustee.
A. J. Carey, D. D., Treas.
3151 Forest Ave.
A. W. Williams, M. D.
Sec'y Office 2840 State St. Phone South 1023, Chicago.
NOIS BRICK
ILLINOIS BRICK CO.
WILLIAM C. KUESTER
SUPERINTENDENT.
1994 N. Western Ave., CH
1994 N. Western Ave., CH
Telephone Lake View 270.
Telephone Yards: 718
Junk's Brew
Telephone Yards 718
M. JUNK, Proprietor JOS. P. JUNK, Manager 3700-3710 South Halsted Street and 897 to 929 Thirtyseventh Street CHICAGO
J. J. Bradley
FIELDS
LOANS
NCE
Mayer
E PEACE
Documents Drawn
02,27 North Clark Street.
J. Hockley Smiley, See'y.
Smiley
Caterer
STREET,
CHICAGO.
COMPANY
OF ILLINOIS.
CHICAGO.
stock company.
In the near future at 2918
The company will carry a
goods Shoes, Hats and No-
f shares are on sale at the
A. J. Carey, D. D., Treas.
3151 Forest Ave.
A W. Williams, M. D.
Sec'y Office 2840 State
St. Phone South 1022,
Chicago.
e., Chicago.
ow 270.
ls 718
ewery
Telephone Yards 693
J. M. Fields
CHICAGO
RESIDENCE
337 Burling Street