The Broad Ax
Saturday, March 18, 1916
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
The White and Colored Republican Politicians or Would Be Statesmen in the Second Ward or the First Congressional District Are Enjoying a Good Old Fashioned Scrap Among Themselves, Lawyer Augustus L. Williams Feels That He Is "Nosing" to the Front in His Contest for Delegate to the Republican National Convention
ALDERMAN OSCAR DE PRIEST, WILL BE THE GRAND COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE UNITED FORCES WHO WILL MARCH UNDER THE BANNER OF CONGRESSMAN MARTIN B. MADDEN WHO FEEL THAT THEY WILL OVERCOME THE FOLLOWERS OF GEORGE H. JACKSON WHO IS ENDEAVORING TO SNATCH THE SECOND WARD COMMITTEEESHIP FROM MR. MADDEN.
JAMES T. BREWINGTON, JAMES HALE PORTER AND ADOLPH MARKS, TWO COLORED AND ONE WHITE ARE STRIVING TO BECOME A MEMBER OF THE REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE OF ILLINOIS AND THEY WILL FIGHT EACH OTHER LIKE DEMONS TO WIN OR GAIN THAT HONOR.
"HABEAS-CORPUS," WILLIAM G. ANDERSON AND HIS FRIENDS AND BACKERS CONTEND THAT IN HIS RACE AS AN INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR ALDERMAN OF THE SECOND WARD THAT HE IS RUNNING THROUGH IT LIKE A STREAK OF WILD FIRE; THAT HE WILL MAKE IT MIGHTY INTERESTING FOR ALDERMAN HIGH NORRIS AND HARRY HILDRETH, JR., FROM NOW UNTIL THE ALDERMANIC POLLS CLOSE TUESDAY EVENING APRIL 4.
Vol. XXI.
The White
States
District
Thems
Is "Nos
Republic
ALDERMAN OSCAR DE PRIEST, W
IN CHIEF OF THE UNITED F
THE BANNER OF CONGRESSM
THAT THEY WILL OVERCOM
JACKSON WHO IS ENDEAVOR
COMMITTEESHIP FROM MR.
JAMES T. BREWINGTON, JAMES H
TWO COLORED AND ONE WH
MEMBER OF THE REPUBLIC
AND THEY WILL FIGHT EACH
GAIN THAT HONOR.
"HABEAS-CORPUS," WILLIAM G.
BACKERS CONTEND THAT IN
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
THAT HE IS RUNNING THRO
FIRE; THAT HE WILL MAKE
DERMAN HIGH NORRIS AND
UNTIL THE ALDERMANIC F
APRIL 4.
Before the year of 1916, draws to a close it will produce more statesmen or would-be statesmen than can be counted in many a day, this is already true in the second ward or in the First Congressional District of Illinois for in that district the White and Colored Republican politicians or so-called statesmen are engaged in going at or after each other for dear life and if all signs do not fail many a mix up will occur between them between now and Tuesday April 11, for many years it seems that in that district that a small faction of the Colored voters residing in it have always bitterly fought against permitting the White politicians or statesmen to represent them on all political occasions and this year as a further protest in that direction, Lawyer Augustus L. Williams finally decided after many other Colored men of political prominence had backed back and refused to enter the fray, to wade in and fight to the bitter end to win the contest for delegate to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois.
It must be said to the credit of Mr. Williams whether he wins out or not in his fight for national delegate, that he is no political tramp, that he has resided on the south side in this city for many years, that he possesses a sufficient amount of legal or business ability to enable him to own or manage good income property in his own name the taxes on which amounts to more than four hundred dollars per year and that sum of money for taxes he digs up out of his law business, which is conclusive proof that he is no political tramp nor carpet bagger and that he has the moral right to trail or run after the political honors he is seeking in that congressional district.
BROKER FLEES WITH DAUGHTER.
Evansville, Ind., (Special)—Clifton Yatorough, the wealthy grain broker of Pulaski, Tenn., who made an attempt in the Circuit Court here recently to have Eugenia Murray, a Mulatto girl, aged 17 years, adopted, saying that he was the girl's father, has disappeared, and the officials here do not know where he is.
The Murray girl, who came here with her mother, Alice Murray, a Colored woman, on February 7, is also missing, and the supposition is that she has gone with her self-confessed
urally become the commander in chief of the solid or the united forces of Congressman Martin B. Madden who will arrive in this city shortly to assist to direct the fight and those who will march under his banner feel that they already have the Hon. George H. Jackson and his scattered forces on the dead run, on the other hand Mr. Jackson and those who have faith in him and are willing to follow his leadership feel that he will be able to snatch or grab the second ward committeeship away from the Hon. Martin B. Madden Tuesday, April 11.
James T. Brewington, James Hale Porter and Lawyer Adolph Marks—two of those distinguished gentlemen being Colored and one White are fighting among themselves like maddened demons to win or gain the honor of being elected a member of the Republican state committee of Illinois and Mr. Brewington loudly states from the corners of the streets and other places in that district that if Col. James Hale Porter, would only step aside in favor of him that he would be able to out run the White man, and Mr. Porter claims that if Mr. Brewington would only pull out in his favor that he could do the same thing so there you are as the old Colored man said once upon a time while he was engaged in addressing a very important political meeting: "Habeas-corpus" William G. Anderson, Independent Republican candidate for alderman of the second ward, see announcement in another column of this paper, and his friends and backers content that he is in the running in dead earnest, that he will rush through that ward like a streak of chain lightening or wild fire; that he will make it mighty interesting from now on until the aldermanic polls close Tuesday, April 4, for Alderman Hugh Norris and Harry Hildreth, Jr.
White father. It is believed that Yarbrough has taken the girl into some other state and will make another effort to adopt her.
Another theory is that Yarbrough has taken the girl to Nashville, Tenn., to place her again in Fisk University, a school for Colored girls. It is understood the girl spent more than a year in this school.
The mother of Miss Murray is still in the city, but she refuses to talk about the disappearance of Yarborough and the girl.
CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916
CATHOLICS AND NEGROES.
The Attitude of the Catholic Church Toward Us.
To Bring About Complete Emancipation—Six Negro Priests in America—Cathedral in Panama Built by Negro.
Los Angeles, Cal.—"The Church and the Negro" is the caption of an article written by Walter F. McEntire, one of the ablest and most prominent attorneys of this city, and published in "The Tidings," the magazine published as the official organ of the Catholic diocese of Los Angeles.
The attitude of the Catholic Church toward the Negro is treated by Mr. McEntire in an exhaustive manner, and he cites many facts of interest concerning the race's relation with that church in the United States. The article advances the opinion that the mission of the Catholic Church embraces the complete emancipation of the Negro and the giving to him of his place and standing in the human family. One of the factors in the church for the carrying out of this idea is the Catholic Board for Mission Work Among the Colored People of which His Eminence, James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore, is honorary president and the Rt. Rev. Mgr. John E. Burke of New York is director general.
Mr. McEntire has been and still is engaged in making an investigation as to Negro priests in the church, and brings out the fact that the Rt. Rev. Francisco Javier Luna Victoria y Castro, bishop of Panama in 1751, afterwards transferred to Trujillo, Peru, was the first Negro native-born bishop on this continent. In 1902, he states, the late Pope Leo XIII restored the diocese of Marianna, Amazon, Brazil, with a population of 2,000,000 souls, designated a Negro, the Rt. Rev. Silvera Gomez Pimentar as its bishop. The cathedral now standing in Panama was built by the first-named bishop with funds from his private purse.
"THE PAPERS AND THE BOOKS."
There are many papers and books published in the United States each year; all of them in their own way tell or sing the same old thing, to-wit: The White man's unlawful, unjust and unwarranted treatment of the Black man. The Crisis being the most conspicuous in telling to the world the crimes that are daily perpetrated upon the people of African descent in the United States. The world knows that what they say is true, but the world is looking and waiting for the remedy. The remedy must come from the race or people that needs it. The lack of practical steps taken on the part of the black is a manifestation that he is satisfied with his treatment and present condition. There is a remedy. Read the Pioneer and act accordingly—The African Pioneer, March 1.
The Times does not see the conditions as above expressed by the Pioneer. It is the opinion of The Times that many of the wrongs upon our people in certain parts of the United States are due more to the fact of not enough of political and financial power among our people to be used in opposition, as it has been shown that many of the crimes, injustices, etc., against us have been by hatred and
United States Senator from Illinois, who through the untiring efforts of Mr. Edward J. Brundage, stands a splendid chance of securing the nomination for President of the United States, at the hands of the Republican National Convention which meets in this city Tuesday, June 7.
conspiracies to discourage the race's progress. Then, with such facts and others. The Times thinks the Colored people have been greatly benefitted by having all such publications telling of the many injustices, etc., for their position has won thousands and thousands of White people, who have come to our side. Things are bad enough in parts of this country against the Colored people, but had it not been for the sentiment of the race publications things would be a great deal worse. Because Colored citizens don't get up on the housetops and yell against every mean act or outrage against them as a race is not sufficient or broad enough reason for belief they are satisfied, as many of them have a boiling spirit, but for the lack of power they make the best of the conditions and go on working and praying, hoping for better. To just read the Pioneer and act accordingly. The Times don't agree, because that suggestion is selfish and will not give the remedy no more than to just read the New York Age, the Indianapolis Freeman. Dallas Express, the Texas Freeman, San Antonio (Texas) Inquirer, Chicago Broad Ax, the Bee of Washington, D. C., the New Idea, the Amsterdam News of New York, or any one of the many other papers of the race, nor even the Crisis Magazine of New York, the Lincolnian Magazine of Covington, Ky., but to read them all and others would add more to the uplift of the masses of the race.—The Times, Galveston, Texas, March 11, 1916.
HON. LAWRENCE Y. SHERMAN.
ator from Illinois, who through the un- undage, stands a splendid chance of sec- of the United States, at the hands of- which meets in this city Tuesday, Ju
LEADERS OF BAR PRONOUNCE BRANDEIS UNFIT FOR BENCH.
Taft and Six Other Former Heads of American Association Send Protest to Senate.
Washington, D. C., (Special)—Former President Taft and six other former presidents of the American Bar Association have protested to the senate judiciary subcommittee against confirmation of the nomination of Louis D. Brandeis for the Supreme Court. The others were Simeon E. Baldwin, Francis Rawle, Joseph H. Choate, Elihu Root, Moorfield Story, and Peter W. Meldrim.
The first six sent a letter stating that they felt "under the painful duty to say to you that, in their opinion, taking into view the reputation, character, and professional career of Mr. Louis D. Brandeis, he is not a fit person to be a member of the Supreme Court of the United States."
COLORED MEN CANNOT USE
SHRINERS' NAME.
Atlanta, Ga., (Special)—The State Supreme Court has upheld a temporary injunction granted in Fulton Superior Court on behalf of the Arab Temple of the "Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine," a Masonic organization using the name "Ancient Egyptian, Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine of North and South America." The case now is to go before a Fulton County petit jury for decision of the facts.
No.26
Would Be Regressional Map Among Us That He Gate to the
iniring efforts of Mr. carrying the nomination of the Republican Na- ne 7.
CATHOLIC CHURCH'S STAND ON COLOR IN THE SOUTH.
"The extent to which the Catholic Church softens race prejudices was forcefully illustrated in New Orleans, La., a few days ago. At the funeral of a priest who had belonged to an old Louisiana family and who had devoted his life to work among Colored Catholics, a Negro Priest was celebrant of the mass, while the deacon and subdeacon were White priests. What other religious body could have dared thus to ignore the fierce prejudices that obtains south of Mason and Dixon's Line."
THE PHYLLIS WHEATLY HOME SUCCEEDED IN RAISING $1,000 IN ITS RECENT FINANCIAL CAMPAIGN.
It will be recalled that in the issue of this paper of February 26, the aims and objects of the Phyllis Wheatly Home, 3256 Rhodes avenue, and its origin was fully set forth in these columns.
It was also announced that $1000 was badly needed to make a payment on the home which would reduce its indebtedness down to $6,500 and through the appeal made in these columns and the untiring efforts of Mrs. Clara Studymire, Mrs. J. Snowden-Porter, Mrs. Jessie Johnson and its other active members, the $1,000 has been raised and paid over to the owner who held the equity in the property and there is much rejoicing among the friends of the Phyllis Wheatly Home.
PAGE TWO
A PRINCESS' LOT
The Grand Duchess of Luxemburg Is Closely Guarded.
REPORTED TO BE ENGAGED.
Barely Twenty-one Years Old, the Youngest Ruler In Europe, Marie Adelaide Is Practically a Prisoner In Her Own Palace.
It is reported that the young Grand Duchess of Luxemburg will marry soon, but the name of the fortunate bridegroom to be is withheld.
Marie Adelaide is one of the most pathetic as well as one of the most romantic figures in the world today.
This pretty young girl, barely twenty-one years old, was adored by her prosperous little country before the war broke out. Today she is practically a
6.
MARIE ADELAIDE OF LUXEMBURG.
prisoner in her own palace. Unable to get out without a military escort and forced to look from her prison windows upon a people starving, terrified and forced to live upon charity, she has striven bravely to assert her rights and those of her people in the face of the overwhelming power of the German empire, but the struggle is naturally a hopeless one.
To complete her misery great pressure has been brought to bear upon her to marry a German prince, but this she has refused to do, as she bitterly resents the German invasion of her country. For more than a year the kaiser's agents have worked hard to persuade the youngest ruler in Europe to become the bride of a German prince, the object being to insure the future control of Luxemburg. So strong did this pressure become that the spirted young duchess revolted against it and, stamping her foot on the floor of her palace, exclaimed:
"I really must be left alone. If I cannot find peace in my own palace I shall soon be forced to seek it in a convent."
The grand duchess is the oldest of six sisters. Her family is a branch of the house of Orange, which rules in Holland. When Wilhelmina became queen of Holland she could not succeed to Luxemburg because of the Salle law. A cousin of Wilhelmina's became Grand Duke of Luxemburg. When he died in 1912, leaving only girl children, the Luxemburg parliament passed a new law making his daughters eligible to the throne.
Colors For Middle Age
It is safe to say that few women of middle age can wear brown successfully. When the hair is turning white or gray it is particularly unbecoming, as the gray and brown do not harmonize in the least. Brown seems to bring out all the unbecoming yellow qualities in gray hair. Dark blue, on the other hand, lends it a blush white tinge that is soft and particularly lovely. If your face is sallow never wear green. If, however, your hair is turning gray, but your skin is white and clear, with a soft pink flush in the cheeks, take to green kindly, as it will be most becoming. Lavender and purple are really beautiful on most middle aged women, while black and gray are equally successful. White, however, seldom looks well unless the skin is almost flawless.
Cream of Beet Soup
Materials: One cupful of beets well cooked, one pint of mutton stock, two teaspoonfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of butter, one pint of milk, salt and pepper.
Utensils: Two saucepans, fine sieve, spoon and cup.
Directions: Cut the beets fine and simmer in the mutton stock fifteen minutes. Rub through sieve. Mix the butter and flour and add to the mutton stock and beet purée. Heat thoroughly, stirring constantly, and add to a pint of hot milk: season with salt and pepper.
Cinnamon Apples
Core and wash six good sized tart apples. Mix together three rounding tablespoonfuls of sugar with one teaspoonful of cinnamon. Place the apples in a baking pan with three tablespoonfuls of water. Sprinkle over the prepared sugar and bake in a hot oven until tender. Serve hot or cold with thick sweet cream.
Style Tips About This Revived, Popular Garment.
The separate skirt is in for an excellent season. Always the outing period is favorable to the skirt of skirt linen, velveteen, corduroy and kindred fabrics. To these has been added recently an exceedingly fine silk jersey with a satin finish, which may be considered the skirt de luxe of the season. If one chooses a velveteen skirt it must be of a pastel color. To wear a skirt of black velveteen for sporting purposes is to advertise oneself behind the times. The models of delicate blue, pale pink, violet, canary, nile green and rose are exceedingly modish. To be sure, the white velveteen is also listed. It must be remembered that the velveteen is newer and smarter than the corduroy.
Should velvetteen be considered too delicate or lacking in serviceable qualities there is the linen alternative in heavy weave and in the so called pastel or rainbow nuances. There is little attempt to drape these skirts, but the lines are very full, and many of them have pocket accessories.
For dressy purposes there are separate skirts of striped taffeta, principally in the black and white combination, or of shot taffeta, made with plaitings or ruches to go with the separate blouse of georgette crape, which may be garnished with bead embroideries or applique motifs. The black taffeta skirt will always find a place in the sartorial affections of the practical woman, and now it is much more dressy in its lines and trimmings than during the past few seasons.
One cannot omit mention of the broadly striped linens and heavy cotton fabrics that are offered in the new skirts. To say that they are striking is to put it mildly. Anything less than an inch wide for the stripe is regarded as too mild and unobtrusive to be worthy of a place on fashion's schedule. Black and white stripes come in for approbation, but they by no means have the field to themselves.
FOR SPRING BRIDES
Early Weddings Will Require This as One Accessory. One of the daintest emblems of the Easter wedding is a bride's bouquet of illies of the valley. The one pictured is exquisitely set in a sheaf of
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UP THE AISLE
leaves, the stems wrapped with wide
white satin ribbon, while the flowing
streamers with knotted ends are of a
narrow matching ribbon.
Spring Housecleaning.
Shake curtains free from dust; double each curtain and baste the ends together, using strong thread and short stitches; soak in cold water, wash and starch; loosen one end of clothesline (one free from kinks) and slip it through all the curtains; replace line and pin hemmed ends straight. Do not sprinkle when dry, but press with hot iron before taking out basting. Do not boil ecru curtains, but add coffee to last rinse water. Curtains wear better if the ends are reversed occasionally.
New China Book Ends.
Book ends are always interesting, and unusual ones are sought after as gifts for all occasions. There is a new set in china which is particularly pretty. The design shows one book lying flat, its covers of dark gray, with yellow edged leaves, and another book, standing upright on the lower book, is partly open. The ends are quite heavy enough for all purposes, and the coloring of the china is particularly attractive.
Freshen Baby's Coach.
Quite often the upholstery of a baby carriage becomes faded, worn or soiled, but a new cover can be made easily. Cut a paper pattern the size and shape of back and sides of the carriage, and make a cover to fit out of white plique or a natural colored linen. Bind with a wash braid and make button-holes along the edge. On the upholstery of the carriage sew pearl buttons and button the cover on.
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
FOR THE CHILDREN
Many Things of Interest to the Small Folk.
TWO PRACTICAL PATRIOTS.
How a Brother and Sister In Oklahoma Provided a School Flag—Why the Ancient Romans Revered the Candle. A Winsome Lady at Play.
In Oklahoma a brother and sister of ten and thirteen years, respectively, got the idea from reading that the district country school ought to have a flag. A mention of the need seemed to call forth little enthusiasm, and so, keeping their purpose secret, they begged some red, white and blue material, cut and sewed diligently at spare times, formed a correctly proportioned banner a yard wide and four feet long, and working one night by moonlight until after 12 o'clock, without consent of the directors they cut, trimmed, dragged and planted upright a slender pole nearly thirty feet tall and from it unfurled the flag on a halfyard line to the morning wind. The teacher and scholars gathered later and sang "The Star Spangled Banner," and the flagmakers received a substantial remuneration as a surprise in turn from the whole community.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Birds In the United States.
There are 500,000,000 birds in the United States, according to an estimate made a little while ago by the government. This means that there are about five birds to every man, woman and child in this wide country. Bird lovers in every part of the United States assisted in taking this count. The census was taken by acres, and the most scientific methods were used. Those districts in which no count was possible were sized up by the results obtained from nearby places where the census had been thoroughly conducted. The final estimate is said to be reasonably near the actual figure.
Romans and the Candle.
According to Plutarch, the ancient Romans would not extinguish a candle, letting it burn out instead. The reason, he states, was that they considered fire an animal, for it needs nourishment, moves itself, grows with added food and when extinguished gives a gasp as if slain. The Romans were opposed to ending the life of so auscult a creature. Probably they changed their minds quickly respecting this when a house got afire.
Wash Day.
When mammy does her washin'
I wash my dolly's cloe's.
I how low my git so grimy
De land er goodness knows.
I gops 'on in de water,
Dean swishes roun' de suds,
An' it now I gets 'em iron
Deyll 'to look like bran' new duds.
But 'twent be long, I reckon,
Deyll 'to stay no ice' an smart.
De way dat chile gets mussy
Jes 'breaks her muddur's heart.
But maybe when I hugs her
An' squeezes her so tight
Deyll 'run--ma says it do,
An' my mat's allus right.
-St. Nicholas.
Miss Thaw on the Beach.
The smiling young girl in the picture sees a little girl and somewhat pleased at the camera man who caught her as she was walking among the bathhouses at Palm Beach. Fla. What
THE CHILDREN'S WEEKLY NEWS
she carries in the pall is unknown, but it is safe to say that it is either sand or water. There are plenty of both at the noted southern winter resort. Here the fashionable folks who do not like the cold breezes of the north spend their time in bathing, fishing, golfing and other warm weather sports. The little girl with the pall is Miss Virginia Thaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Thaw 3d of Pittsburgh.
Spring Model of a Soldierly Cape For House Wear.
King's blue meteor satin develops this original frock with winged panels on the sides of the skirt, which is shirr-
[Illustration of a woman wearing a long black dress with a high collar and a decorative emblem on the back.]
DRESSED FOR AFTERNOONS.
ed three times across the back. A
charming feature of the bodice is the
beaded cape, done in different shades
of blue beads. The high collar takes
the line of the cape in the back.
THE FIVE O'CLOCK.
Goodies For the Tea Table at the Height of Its Season.
There are many tempting ways of serving dates besides plain and as a sweet. Use them as a filling for sandwiches. Take two cups of dates, put them through a meat chopper, then add a cup of peanut butter and blend them together. Then spread the paste between slices of white bread.
Another woman also uses dates in baked custard, in tapioca and as filling for cookies, pies and cakes. Mixed with apples celery and nuts they make a delicious salad. To use dates as a pudding cooked with rice, add to a quart of milk a cup of stoned dates and a quarter of a cup of rice. Sweeten and bake in a slow oven.
Cook keeps in her cold closet an assortment of pastes and butters that are used so much in preparing relishes for the tea, after dinner suppers and bridge parties. She has them ready in small, labeled glass jars and tidbits and sauces can be made at a moment's notice. Here are a few of her best recipes:
Sardine Butter.—Rub skinned and boned sardines to a paste and then gradually blend. A little lemon juice may be added to butter to give it very desirable sandwich flavors. Orange butter for afternoon tea sandwiches can be mixed with chopped nuts and figs or any other sweet filling. Grated orange rind may flavor the butter.
Olives may be ground in a vegetable chopper, mashed to a paste and creamed into butter. Capers are chopped and creamed with butter, and either of these can be used on broiled chops or beefsteaks, as sandwich butters or on green peas or string beans to improve the flavor.
Make Your Own Fernery.
You can have success with grapefruit seeds by taking a few precautions. When planting these seeds do not keep any that have been cut. Then, before planting, the seeds should be soaked for one day or at least half a day. Fill the receptacle up to within three-quarters of an inch of the toy with dirt mixed with a little sand, on which place the seeds so thickly that no soil can be seen. Then cover with dirt and keep in a warm, sunny place, wetting with warm water, but not too wet. The seeds sprout in about five weeks. They are both beautiful and hardy and need practically no attention.
Prune Gelatin.
One heaping tablespoonful of powdered gelatin, two cupfuls of water, half a pound of good prunes, three tablespoonfuls of sugar and the strained juice of one orange are required for this dish. Take the stones out of the prunes after soaking them. Cut the prunes in halves, put them into a saucepan with the water and sugar and cook very slowly until soft; then add the gelatin, first dissolving it in hot water, and the orange juice. Pour into a wet ring mold. When set serve with whipped and sweetened cream in the center. Decorate with lady fingers.
EXPERTS IN HOMES
What Does Household "Efficiency" Mean to You?
MOSTLY INDIVIDUAL VIEWPOINT
Is It Running a Home Well or Inexpensively or Easily, or is It, Rather, the Mental Attitude Women Maintain Toward Their Special Work?
What is your idea of household efficiency? To every woman the phrase means something different.
perfect efficiency cannot be entirely a matter of book accounts, of time and labor saving devices—in fact, of physical work. Efficiency is as much a matter of mental attitude as anything else. Does this seem absurd to you on first thoughts? Think it over a little further, and the more you think into it the less absurd it will seem.
It has often been said that every single thing in the universe has first been built in mind before it has taken visible shape. The buildings have been planned in architects' minds; the streets have been all thought out by contractors; books, painting, music—all have had birth in mind first. So it is with every one of our successes, it is said. The success is thought of long before it actually arrives.
Now let us go back to this question of household efficiency being a mental attitude first and fo:emost. You may bring up in argument that a housewife may think efficiently as much as she likes, but if she has had no practice in running her home along the most approved lines she cannot very well put her thoughts into demonstration. You may say in proof that the girl who has spent her time in a business office cannot be as practical a housewife as the girl trained in domestic science no matter how efficient a mind the former may have.
Your theory, if you follow this line of reasoning, as so many women do, has some good points, but, on the whole, is without backbone. As a matter of fact, the business girl very often makes a much better housewife than the girl trained in all the homely arts. The business girl brings business methods to bear on the running of her home. She has an efficient mind and she uses it. For instance, she is quick to detect that many steps are lost in going from icebox to stove or from sink to china closet, and she seeks a remedy at once, whereas the home girl takes such things as a few extra steps here and there quite as a matter of course and would never think of trying to change things.
The woman of another type looks on housekeeping as the most stupid thing, to be hurried through and got rid of as quickly as possible. Still another type is fond of one particular branch of housework and neglects the rest of the work for its sake.
Now, how can such women run a well organized home? They may have all the practical knowledge on earth, but their attitude toward housekeeping is so very wrong that their homes will never be efficiently managed until they change their attitudes. When they have learned to look on housekeeping as an all engrossing, scientific study which requires all concentration and interest they will begin to show efficient results, not before.
A FETCHING MOTOR CAP.
Of Lace, Insertion, Rosebuds and Ribbon Is This Helmet. This attractive boudolr cap is designed like an aviator's helmet, the material being a fine white net picked
THE DAINTIEST ONE
out with lace and pink rosebuds. The
model is so simple that any clever girl
can make one for herself and any number
for Easter brides.
Styles In Sleeves
All the new tight bodices have long tight sleeves, but on the picture blouses there are sleeves which recall the lego-mutton outline and also sleeves finished off with voluminous frills of fine lace or embroidered tulle. For morning blouses the simple bishop sleeve holds its own bravely. For washing blouses this is the best of all sleeves. It is as practical as it is becoming.
Potatoes Stuffed With Sausage
Potatoes Stuffed With Sausage.
Potatoes bercy are raw potatoes tunneled with an apple corer and with the cavity filled with sausage. Pare the potatoes, brush them with butter and bake. Serve with chops, steak or as an accompaniment to cold meat for supper or luncheon.
A MODEL TOPCOAT.
One of the Newest Designs For Spring Utility.
All the latest dictates of fashion are observed by this topcoat of deep buff broadcloth cut with a cape and all fullness shirred at the hips. Please ob
ROSE
serve how plain the front and back hang. The novelty buttons match the smart buckle on the collar, and the trim brown turban takes a little bunch of crab apples in front.
STYLE TIPS.
About Capes, Frills, Scarfs, Ribbons and Other Frivolities.
Skirts are to be longer, if we are to believe a certain rumor which comes from Paris—not very long, but not quite so abbreviated as they have been for some time. Some of the evening gowns, on the other hand, are closely draped and clinging, falling in at the feet with narrow pointed trains, and as different as possible from the fluffy skirted creations which we are now wearing.
Then the new lingerie is very fascinating, but not a single scrap of lace is to be used for decorating it by those who wish to be really up to date. Silk, ninon and crepe de chine have taken the place of lawn and cambric and are simply ornamented with very fine hemstitching or silk embroidery and rows of handwork in faggot or chain stitch or buttonholed slots for inserting ribbon. Flesh pink is still the most popular color or an exquisite shade of pale parma violet mauve.
For afternoon frocks there is a distinct tendency to copy old fashioned modes, such as the styles of 1830 and the latter part of the eighteenth century. Silk gowns are made with panners very much looped up at the sides and back over contrasting underskirts. The sleeves will be close fitting for afternoon frocks, with a little puff at the top, while for evening dresses they are made with a tiny puff all by itself.
Tailor mades are completed with little capes across the shoulders or falling down the center of the back as far as the waist line. Most fascinating of all perhaps are the quaint neck ruffles in velvet or taffetas that make such a pretty frame to the face. These will be designed to suit the particular gown and will have a tiny bunch of flowers or a bow of colored ribbon in one of the old fashioned shades, such as sevres blue or vielle rose, attached to one side.
Long nimon or taffeta scarfs are also designed to match the various frocks, often in black, lined with a contrasting shade and bordered with a narrow ribbon ruching or embroidered with sprays and wreaths of small flowers in silks and ribbon work. Anything, indeed, that gives a suggestion of the days of long ago is a feature of the newest design.
Copper Dishcloth
Among the cleaning agents there are two recent additions to the list that are well worth while. One is the copper wire dishcloth, which comes in three sizes, for the cleaning of pots and pans and is much more effective than the chain cloth, as it does not chip or crack the enamel. The other is steel wool; this comes in a roll, and a little bit pulled off, which has the feeling of a bunch of horsehair and looks not unlike it, will clean enamel ware perfectly simply by rubbing it over the surface. It may also be used for brasses and glassware. Use with it a nonalkal soap, if any, and always rinse the article and polish with a dry cloth after it is cleaned.
PRI OR a
A CUBERNATORIAL
Ambassador to Run For Goy-
ernor of New York,
‘As a result of informal conferences
among Democratic leaders of New
York state it is likely that James W.
Gerard, ambassador to Germany, will
be made the Democratic nominee for
governor of New York next fall.
According to reports received from
abroad, Ambassador Gerard’s return
to this country is expected before long
It has also been reported that he is to
make speeches for President Wilson
throughout the country in the national
it is not thought that the views of
either Mr. Gerard or the Democratic
Jeaders at Washington have been ob-
tained resurding the plan ‘to have Mr.
Gerard run, which as yet is said to
fs Hy | "
4 i
be purely tentative and likely to re-
main in that stage until he arrives here
and can give his assent to the program.
Among the several American diplo-
matists who have been made conspic-
uous since the beginning of the Buro-
pean war James Watson Gerard has
beyond comparison held the most try-
ing position. It has been asserted with
some degree of reason for many years
that in these days of instantaneous
communication foreign representatives
of the state department at Washing-
ton are superfluous and that all com-
munications and negotiations could
better be carried on direct between
that department and any of the foreign
offices. It is patent now that in this
crisis of affairs, in which the United
States is so intimately concerned, this
would be impossible. Ambassador
Gerard bas many times been given
merely the initiative by his government
and has conducted further conferences
on some of the most delicate ques-
tions, according to his appreciation of
conditions at the court where he is the
American representative. consulting
his own judgment, and with a knowl-
edge of those conditions which could
hardly be gained at Washington.
‘The ambassador was born in Gene-
seo, N. Y.. in 1867 and is one of the
most youthful diplomatists who ever
served the United States in times of
critical international controversy at a
foreizn court. He is a well equipped
lawyer and resigned as a justice of the
supreme court of New York to take
the foreign post which he is so ably
filling,
While Mr, Gerard has been one of
the most welcomed figures in social
and club life, he has been pre-eminent
ly democratic in the broad meaning of
the word. Aside from his official ac
tivities Mr. Gerard has held many hon-
orary appointments, one of which was
that of conmuissioner to Mexico at the
time of the celebration of the one hun-
redih anniversary of the declaration
of Mexican independence.
WOMEN MUNITION WORKERS.
Frenchwomen Are Taking the Place of
Men In Ammunition Factories.
1 fighting about Verdun
has eansedd French munition workers
te speed ap in their work. ‘The amount
of ammenition use has been unprece
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Vooto by American Press Association.
WON AT WORK IN FRENCH MUNITION
FACTORY.
Geto, ud ay most ablebodied French
mes cre in the ramks and trenches
Sooo u of France sare doing much of
the ork i munition making. ‘The
Hbscration shows women at work ty
the Seat French Schneider works at
Cham; aznecar- Seine,
SIRES AND SONS.
J.D. Shoop. new Chicago superin-
fendent of schools. a few years ago
was a farm hand. :
Lord ‘Selborne is England's most
notable agriculturist and also the best
Judge of dairy cattle in Britain.
Honus Wazner says that Rube Wad-
dell, Kid Nichols, Clark Griffith, Chris.
ty Mathewson, Grover Cleveland Alex-
ander and Jack Taylor were the six
greatest pitchers he ever faced.
Major George N. Evans during thir-
ty-two years as disbursing officer, de-
partment of the interior, Washington,
has handled $400,000,000 without error
or loss either to the government or
himself.
‘The Duke of Norfolk is the shabbiest
of England's peers. At Gladstone's
funeral he was taken for the abbey
verger and quite recently was mistak-
en for the applicant for a job ata shop
in Portsmouth.
Sir Hiram Maxim, whose machine
gun is a big factor in the present war,
Was a barefooted lad in the backwoods
of New England sixty years ago. As
@ lad he worked a jathe in a coach
builder's shop, the machinery of which
‘was turned by a water wheel.
Frank A. Vanderlip, president of the
National City bank of New York, has
taken on $00.000 more life insurance
and {s now i what insurance circles
call the “million and a half class,” as
his policies written by several of the
old line life insurance companies
amount to that figure approximately.
Laundry Lines.
Be sure to iron garments with the
straight of the zoods and thus prevent
stretching of the biax seams.
It is best to give linens a long soak-
ing before washing. If this method
is followed stains wll wash out easily.
To remove ink spots from linen or
cotton, dip the xpots in pure melted
tallow. Wash out the tallow and the
ink will come out with it.
Do not stretch the round centerpiece
on the bias before ironing, but treat
it as though it were square. Stretch
first with the warp, then with the woof
of the materia! and iron in the same
way. The result will be a perfectly
smooth, round surface.
Woman’s World.
According to the ceusus, Pennsylva-
nia last year had 7.000 woman farmers,
the majority of whom owned the land
they worked.
In Georgia during the past three
years the number of woman farmers
has more than doubled. The majority
of the women zo in for raising hogs,
cattle and foodstuffs, leaving cotton
planting to the men.
The women of Des Moines, Ia., are
eredited with being responsible for the
establishment of a municipal court in
their city. A majority of the male
voters went against it, but the major-
ity of the women voters was so heavy
that they won the day.
Animal Oddities.
Kingfishers make their nets of fisb-
bones.
Man eating tigers are the exception
rather than the rule.
Alligators do not attain full size an-
til they are nearly 100 years old.
When a lion is frightened it trots
away slowly until it thinks it is out of
sight, and then bounds off like a grey-
hound.
When a lobster is about to shed its
shell the litter splits down the back
and drops off in two equal parts. Then
the tail slips out of the shell like a fin-
ger out of a glove.
SHORT AND SHARP.
The more company a dollar has the
smaller it looks
‘The snores of many men drown the
knock of opportunity.
It is never tov late to realize that it
4s never too late to mend.
It's easy to tind reasons why others
don’t do the foolish things we do.
‘The more you talk about your trou-
bles the more you magnify them,
You are not apt to catch many fish
if you allow the other fellow to bait
your hook.
He who is always singing his own
praises will never hear any one praise
his singing.
Yawn and the world yawns with you
—for there's always something to
yawn about.
No matter what form of government
Chiga secks to adopt, the result ts al
together informal.
The very appearance of some men is
convincinz proof that they have been
the architects of their own fortunes,
A trade war is feared, As the world
ig already having about every other
kind, perhaps it would be useless to
strive for an exception,
Science docsn't seem to be able to
improve a particle on nature when It
comes to the neck and neck race be-
tween the constrnetive and the destruc-
tive.
An English scientist claims to bave
counted 3.000.000 stars. And now
somebody will jump up and prove that
if he had counted day and night for
years and yours he couldn't do tt.
THE BROAD ‘AX, CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
Se
inate! wee
ANOTHER REVOLT | “=e
Marie Cher, the author, has x
been to a moving picture show.
NOW IN MEXICO Katharine Susannah Prichard ts
haps the only English writer who
born in the Fiji islands.
wore Captain Ian Hay Beith, the
iy Ni known Scottish novelist, has jus
Felix Diaz Has a Finger In| ceirca tis °sinare coos
. Some years ago Arnold Bennett
the Disturbed Pie, this formula for success at wri
NHAPPY Mexico is adding
still another uprising to com-
plicate the present troubled
condition in that land of
rapid revolutions and of bandit raids.
Landing secretly at Vera Cruz a little
while ago, Brigadier General Felix
Diaz, nephew of Porfirlo Diaz, for
more than a quarter of a century the
ruler of Mexico, is reported to be en-
gaged in heading the revolt in progress
in Oaxaca, which has assumed seri:
rious proportions.
For some time it has been known
that the inhabitants of Oaxaca have
been in open revolt against the rule of
General Carranza. It is reported that
all the state troops of Oaxaca have
been turned over to General Diaz, act-
ing under the command of Governor
General Jose Inez Davila.
‘The orizin of the revolt against the
“first chief.” as General Carranza is
known, appears to be shrouded in mys-
tery.
In connection with the preparatione
for the revolt. it is stated that General
Diaz has three vessels, well prepared
to transport war munition to his bases
of supplies.
‘The manifesto of General Diaz, at
drawn up by himself in conjunction
with his subordinate generals, has beer
made public. In it he reviews the con
ditions of Mexico, declaring that “it is
impossible to contemplate for a longer
pe 4
: of
|
NRL eS:
Photo by American Press Association.
GENERAL VELIX DIAZ AND SOME OF BIS
FOLLOWERS.
time this sad spectacle without rising
in arms and going to aid the groups of
Patriots who for months have sus:
tained with indefatigable constancy
throughout the territory the flag of or
der, justice and peace.” It is stated
that the army will be known as the
National leorganization army. The
Tesolution contains twenty-one para
graphs and takes up the questions
‘Which impelled the revolution. In clos
ing General Diaz makes a personal ap
peal to the Mexicans to aid him in
“saving our ex!siusted and agonized
country, which is now on the verge of
succumbin:.
It is reported that the Diaz move
ment has te support of Estrada Ca
brera, the presklent and dictator of
Guatemala. Cx! rera’s action in favor
ing the Diaz movement srew out of re
cent activities of Carranza to foment
a Guatematin revolution. When Car
ranza gave ail to Guatemalan exiles in
arming an expedition which crossed
the Guatemalin border from Mexico
and launched a revolt Estrada Cabre
ra saw in Carranza an enemy to the
peace of Guatemala. He was approach
ed by Diaz xzents soon afterward and
aligned himself secretly with the Diaz
cause. Guatemala was thrown open
to Diaz for the landing of munitions of
war. There is strong proof to support
the assertion that General Blanguet.
when he recently went to Guatemala
to put munitions of war into Mexico.
saw the Guatemalan president in Gua
temala City.
‘American business men who have
large interests in Mexico and who ar-
conversant with the Mexican situation
saw in the Diaz movement the hasten
ing of American intervention. They
are positive that General Diaz cannot
obtain the support of the Washington
government, without which he cannot
maintain power in Mexico City for any
length of time. They assert that if
Felix Diaz is not immediately captured
and shot by Carranza he probably will
overthrow the de facto government.
Many of them prefer Diaz to Carranza.
but they declare that conditions in
Mexico have reached the state where
no Mexican can handle them and where
nothing other than a strong foreign
power can establish peace throughout
the land and adequately handle the
problems which will grow out of the
rebabilitation of the country and the
reorganization of its government.
THE WRITERS.
Marie Cher, the author, has never
been to a moving picture show.
Katharine Susannah Prichard {s per-
haps the only English writer who was
born in the Fiji islands.
Captain Ian Hay Beith, the well
known Scottish novelist, has just re-
ceived the military cross.
Some years ago Arnold Bennett gave
‘this formula for success at writing:
“Regular hours of work—detachment—
concentration.”
At fourteen Sara Ware Bassett, the
author, actually had the temerity to
write a novel of fifty chapters, which
she illustrated with pictures cut from
Magazines.
Mrs. Havelock Ellis, the English
‘writer and suffragist, says “one of the
Sweetest meméries of my married life
is that of seeing my husband mend his
own shirt.”
Miss Celeste J. Miller, the Illinois
writer, has been a traveler since she
was a mere girl. Her remarkable
achievements have included a trip
around the world five times and a visit
to many remote islands, scattered all
over the earth.
Train and Track.
A railroad is projected for Finnish
Lapland in order to make available de-
Posits of iron ore in that region.
8. T. Shulenberg tells New Yorkers
that sleeping car service will some day
by and by be running between New
York and Petrograd.
A large eastern railroad is instruct
ing its signal erectors and testing its
engineers’ knowledge of signals by
means of motion pictures shown in a
car which travels over its lines.
Siam's new railway, the Siamese
Southern, now has 389 miles of railway
open to traffic, of which 120 were open
ed during the past year. The total
length of the line, including branches
will be 740 miles, leaving 351 miles stil
to be built.
PITH AND POINT.
Undeserved praise is but a momenta-
ry stimulant.
One touch of scandal makes the
whole world chin.
If we should all love our enemies we
wouldn't have any.
‘The world is beginning to long for a
Uttle monotony in its way of living.
‘The broad road has more toll gates
than the straight and narrow path.
Europe must be getting to the point
where it would like a change of venue.
‘The man who is so very particular in
picking his company often has to travel
alone.
A thick union suit has stood between
many a modern fashion slave and the
fool killer.
Half the world doesn't understand
how the other half gets along on its
foolish ideas.
It begins to look as though the war
would continue until Europe ran en-
tirely out of die stuff.
Ten years from now will nations be
writing notes to each other about the
arming of merchant airships?
After the parting between a fool and
his money the fool does not get any
more bouquets from bis friends.
New York's Metropolitan museum fs
now declared to be the greatest on the
continent. But where's its diplodocus’
‘An opportunity is a good deal like a
wasp—it takes a lot of experience to
know how to grasp it without getting
stung.
The Royal Box.
Queen Wilhelmina of Holland is a
total abstainer.
Louis XVIIL of France was called
“king of slops.”
King Nicholas of Montenegro has a
fortune estimated at $20,000,000.
It is said that the income of the czar
of Russia works out at over $80 a
minute.
Queen Mary of England never wears
the same pair of gloves two days in
succession. Her majesty keeps a doz
en pair of sioves in use.
Three Reels.
Moving picture shows are said to be
the most popular form of indoor
amusement in Spain.
Motion pictures for the blind are the
invention of a French doctor, an elec
trie motor causing a series of reliefs
to pass under their fingers.
‘The only cinematograph theater in
‘Teheran, Persia, has a seating capacity
of 200, is open each day from 8 a. m
to 9:30 p. m. and is well patronized.
British Briefs.
On an averaze, the fog nuisance costs
London about £5,000,000 a year,
St. Kilda ts the only place in Great
Britain where wild sheep exist.
Only an average of one person in
every 350,000 is killed by lightning tn
the British isles every year.
Inhabitants of the United Kingdom
in normal times consume an average
of about thirty gallons of beer each
fear.
Proposes to Fly to New York
at Close of War.
‘It has been reported that Count Fer-
@inand von Zeppelin has set his mind
upon making a trip to New York city
im one of his own airships whenever
the cessation of hostilities will give
him an opportunity. In his opinion
the Zeppelin airship will soon be quite
able to make the journey in view of the
improvements that have been made.
Nearly all men of inventive genius
have to suffer periods of disappoint-
ment, failure and distrust before real
success is obtained. Ferdinand von
Zeppelin has at last brought his work
to such triumphant completion that the
4 a »
f a
e rs
Na een
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as, eee
kaiser has called him the greatest Ger.
man of the century. For twenty years
he had nothing but failures.
‘The Zeppelin airship is today a won-
der of the world, but the count knows
right well its limitations. But he be-
Heves that it will develop into one of
the most remarkable and practical
conveyances of the near future. The
Zeppelins are the terror of the Ger.
man enemy in this war, with their
searchlights, wireless outfits, machine
guns and bombs. The count, who is
seventy-seven, was a military attache
with the Union army during our civil
war.
‘The civil war inspired Count Zeppe-
In with the idea of coming to this
country, and he served as second lieu
tenant with several of the Union gen:
erals, and Grant gave him a special
permit to go anywhere within the Fed:
eral lines.
He has always said that his first idea
of the value of an airship and the pos.
sibility of its construction came from
the constant ascents he was allowed
to make in Lowe's captive balloon.
from which observations were made
on the Confederate lines.
SHAKESPEARE’S GLOVES.
Relics of the Poet Among the Treasures
of the Furness Library.
‘The only personal belongings of Wil-
lam Shakespeare in this country are a
pair of gloves which belonged to the
Poet and which were presented by
Fanny Kemble to the late Horace
Howard Furness, editor of the great
variorum edition of Shakespeare. Fan-
ny Kemble received these gloves as a
precious legacy from her aunt, Mrs.
Siddons, to whom they were given by
‘Mrs. David Garrick, wife of the fa-
mous actor.
‘The gloves are preserved in a glass
case in the great Shakespeare library
which Dr. Furness collected during
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@ long and studious life at Linden
shade, his country home at Walling
ford, Pa. Besides a number of early
folios and rare editions of Shakespeare
and his commentators, there are many
relics in the library pertaining to great
interpreters of Shakespeare, such ax
Garrick, Keen, Macready, Booth and
Irving, but the gloves are the only
actually personal belongings of the
great poet.
In some respects the Furness lbrary
and collection is the most remarkable
in the world. Its only rival is the
Shakespearean brary and museum at
Stratford on Avon. During the great
Shakespeare celebration culminating on
April 23 next, the three hundredth an-
niversary of Shakespeare's death, the
Furness library and collection have a
peculiar interest for those who revere
the memory of the greatest bard of all
time.
PAGE THRER
“~~~” BRIGHT BRIEFS.
‘The paths of glory lead but to The
Hague. (ash
Our mistakes may add to the wisdom
of others.
Love makes the heart light and the
sitting room dark.
‘The most patient of humans can en-
dure a little kindness.
Human nature tends to make man
the hero of his own story.
Frequently experience is what you
get after the other fellow has the
— —
Our navy has at least punch enough
to smash an oceasional world’s record
in gunnery.
When hoping for the smile of for-
tune we sometimes encounter only a
ghastly leer.
People are beginning to wonder when
there is going to be an open season for
the Panama canal.
Arabic figures were not invented by
the Arabs, but by Indians.
Hearing is not an active sense until
three or four days after birth.
‘There are 4,660 American civil war
pensioners living in foreign countries.
Government meat inspection costs
each resident of the country 4 cents a
year.
More than half of Sweden is covered
by forests, only Finland having a
greater proportionate area of timber.
Locusts, grasshoppers and crickets
are eaten in the east, velng dried, salt-
ed, ground into a powder and made
into cakes.
Servia is sald to lead in centenarians.
with Ireland in second place. Switzer-
Jand, with all its reputed healthfulness,
is away down on the lst.
State Lines.
Oklahoma produced 80,000,000 bar-
rels of oil last year.
Nebraska's 803 state banks contain
$114,487,652.98, belonging to 382,222 de-
Positors.
As a deer hunting state Vermont
now rivals Maine, with 6,000 deer kill-
ed in 1915, compared with from 8,000
to 10,000 in the Maine wilderness.
Careful estimates place the Califor
nia gold output for 1915 at fully $2,200.-
000 more than the previous year, when
the total output was $20,653,496. The
yield will easily be the largest in thir-
ty-two years and, with one exception.
the largest in fifty-one years. So Cali-
fornia still remains the premier gold
producing state in the Union.
Recent Inventions.
Clothing made of pressed feathers as
a substitute for wool has been invent-
ed by an Italian priest.
‘To lessen the labor of threading nee-
dies there has been invented a mag-
nifying glass with a spring clip to hold
it on a needle.
Bostonians using a new invention.
the oscillograph, were the other day
able to hear the waves of the Pacific
beating on the San Francisco shore.
An Illinois inventor has patented «
roadside signboard that is intended to
show all the roads in the vicinity and
other information of value to strau-
gers by a map.
Dress Hints.
Green is an ill becoming color for
brunettes to wear.
White gloves can be tanned by soak-
ing them in saffron solution until the
required tint has been obtained.
Always sew on buttons before wear-
ing new gloves; otherwise at a critical
moment a button will drop off, spoilins
the appearance of the best glove.
To make rubbers last longer put a
half inch layer of crushed tissue paper
in the heel of the rubbers. The paper
will form a soft cushion for the hard
heel of the shoe and lessen the wear ou
the rubber.
Household Helps.
‘To cut butter in small even squares
for the table use a coarse wet thread.
as this leaves no ragged edges.
It is a waste of gas to allow the
flames to blaze up the sides of a ket:
tle or saucepan. This does not cause
the contents to boil any more quickly.
Wooden ware which has any odor of
the food which has been in it—and
‘wood absorbs odors quickly—should be
soaked in hot water in which soda is
dissolved in the proportion of one ta-
Dlespoonful of soda to four quarts of
water.
Agents and Correspondents Wanted to Handle THE BROAD AX. Liberal Commissions to Live Agents. Address, Julius F.Taylor, 6532 St. Lawrence Av., Chicago
Agents a BRO Addre
SPECIAL NOTICE PHONE CHANGED
THE EMANUEL JACKSON UN-
DEBTAKING COMPANY, 2959-2961
State St., begs to inform its patrons
and friends, that our "Telephone" has
been changed to "CALUMET 6164."
Automatic remains same—71-629
Prompt service day or night.
DAN M. JACKSON, Pres.
GEORGE T. KERSEY, See
CITY AIR.
City air is always more or less bad. As a rule, more bad than less bad. This is due to the fact that all large cities have many kinds of industrial plants and these plants with very few exceptions contribute to bad outdoor conditions, either through dust or smoke or vapors, or all these agencies. One of the important sanitary problems connected with city life is that of reducing to a minimum the pollution of outdoor air. And as people must have outdoor aid to breathe in their homes, shops and workplaces, it follows that if the outdoor air is contaminated by any of the agencies mentioned, the indoor air will also be made impure and unwholesome.
A frequent and almost constant source of pollution of outdoor air is that caused by dust from many sources. The dust that is swept up from the streets by the prevailing winds and carried in every direction. The dust that comes from many industrial establishments, that is allowed to escape through windows into the outside air. Dust that is caused by the beating of rugs and carpets in back yards and on vacant lots. Dust that is caused by shaking and beating of rugs on the back porches, where it floats through the open windows of adjoining tenants and causes annoyance and is a frequent source of complaint to the Department of Health.
Recently the Department has received several complaints against the coal companies of Chicago, delivering coal on the streets in both resident and business sections, without being dampened and shoveled from a coal wagon into the street and again shoveled into wheel-barrows, or other receptacles, and conveyed into basements. This causes an immense amount of dust that floats through open windows into homes, spoils the family washing on the lines, fills people's lungs with a substance that should not be there and in a general way causes great annoyance and discomfort.
The Department of Health would urge upon all coal dealers throughout the city that they dampen their coal before delivering, not before weighing, but after the wagon has been loaded and driven off the scale, so that when it is delivered at homes or other places it will not be the cause of nuisance and complaint. While there is no ordinance requiring that this be done, it is so clearly a recommendation along health lines, that the Commissioner of Health feels sure that coal dealers generally will be glad to comply with this suggestion. Coal dealers, like other merchants, desire the good will of their patrons and certainly in no other way perhaps, might they so easily advance themselves in public favor, than by doing all in their power to mitigate this character of nuisance which is so frequently the source of complaint to the Department of Health.
"By their amusements shall ye know them" may be said of a people. Those that recreate and refresh are good; those that exhaust and depress are bad. Two-thirds of juvenile delinquency is easily traced to faulty recreation conditions.
Caution in what you eat, good judgment in what you drink and wear are as essential to good health as alertness in side-stepping automobiles or falling bricks.
One may not run an elevator safely and do something else at the same time; but he can be courteous, cheerful and keep his shoulders squared.
POLICE TRIAL BOARD FINES 2
DISMISSES 2.
Fred Schober, a patrolman at the South Chicago station, who was accused by investigators for the Hyde Park Protective Association of immoral conduct and drinking on duty, was fined three days' pay yesterday by the police trial board. Lieutenant J. J. Miller was penalized fourteen days' pay for being absent without permission.
John J. D. Onthank, a motorcycle policeman was dismissed from the force on charges of having taken money from auto speeders to let them
go. Patrolman C. E. Lund was exonerated of a similar charge. Detective Sergeant J. B. Tucker, a Negro, was dismissed from the force on the charge of having attacked a young Negro girl.
TUBERCULOSIS DEATH RATE DE
CLINES TWENTY-FIVE P&R CENT.
Ten year drop due in large part to ac
activities of anti-tuberculosis societies.
While the latest report of the Bureau of the Census shows that in 1914 tuberculosis caused over 10.5 per cent. of all deaths in the registration area of the United States. The National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis points out in a statement issued today that the death-rate from this disease is steadily decreasing, having declined from 200.7 per 100,000 population in 1904 to 146.8 in 1914. This would indicate the Association claims, that the anti-tuberculosis movement organized in the last ten years is having a marked effect on the mortality of tuberculosis, especially since the death-rate from this disease seems to be declining more rapidly than the general death-rate from all causes.
Commenting on this decrease in the rate from tuberculosis, the Bureau of the Census says: "As a result of a more general understanding of the laws of health, the importance of fresh air, etc., due in part, no doubt, to the efforts of the various societies for the prevention of tuberculosis, there has been a most marked and gratifying decrease during recent years, in the mortality from this scourge of civilization. In only a decade—from 1904 to 1914—the death-rate from tuberculosis in all its forms fell from 200.7 to 146.8 per 100,000, the decline being continuous from year to year. This is a drop of more than 25 per cent."
As an indication of the growth of the campaign against tuberculosis, The National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis shows that in 1905, when the campaign was definitely started, there were in the United States only thirty-nine anti-tuberculosis associations, 115 sanatoria and hospitals, twenty special clinics, no open air schools, and not more than 5,000 people actively interested in the prevention of this disease. At the close of the year 1915 there were over 1,500 anti-tuberculosis associations, 600 sanatoria and hospitals, 450 dispensaries, 800 open air schools, and over 100,000 people actively interested in the prevention of tuberculosis. Besides this the fundamental truths that tuberculosis is a communicable, preventable and curable disease have been carried into almost every village and hamlet and to millions of men, women and children in a great variety of ways. The National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 105 East 22nd Street, New York City, will gladly send literature on tuberculosis to those who wish it.
ATTACKS RIGHT OF BRYAN TO
CALL SLEE A DEMOCRAT
Omaha Man Questions Propriety of Nebraskan's Petition to be Candidate for Convention Delegate.
Lincoln, Neb., March—(Special)—R. W. Whited of Omaha has filed a protest against W. J. Bryan and Charles W. Bryan using the word "Democrat" in connection with their nomination petitions filed with the secretary of state, one as a candidate for delegate at large to the Democratic national convention and the other as a candidate for governor.
Mr. Whited says in his protest that he desires to be heard in person in his effort to convince the secretary of state that W. J. Bryan is not entitled to use the word Democrat in connection with his filing for delegate.
Secretary of State Pool says he believes under the law he is required to hear the protest in so far as it concerns W. J. Bryan, so he has set next Saturday as the day for hearing. No hearing will be held in regard to C. W. Bryan's petition because the protest was not received within five days after the filings. Mr. Whited does not state specifically the basis for his charge that the Bryans are not Democrats.
Madame Byron, sister of Miss Nellie Callaway, 3300 Rhodes avenue; who spent most of her time abroad until the breaking out of the European War expects to fill several important singing engagements out of the city in the near future.
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
WILLIAM G. ANDERSON
The famous Habeas-corpus Lawyer and Alderman of the Second Ward, who man Hugh Norris and Harry Hildre
The famous Habeas-corpus Lawyer and Independent Republican candidate for Alderman of the Second Ward, who figures that he will outrun both Alderman Hugh Norris and Harry Hildreth, Jr.
ATTORNEY WILLIAM G. ANDERSON INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR ALDERMAN OF THE SECOND WARD IS MAKING A SPLENDID FIGHT FOR ELECTION.
Hundreds of his old time friends and former clients are rallying to his support. Mr. Anderson possesses the great fortune of being extremely popular with the masses,—the “boys” of State street, Dearborn and Wabash Ave., while at the same time he has friends by the score east of Wabash Ave., who are helping him to win the great fight.
As an illustration of Mr. Anderson's great popularity with the "boys" a straw vote was taken on State street last Wednesday evening. Thirty-seven men, all voters, were assembled; each one was asked to express his opinion between Norris, Anderson, and Hildreth, and every one voted to put Anderson in as Alderman. The same is true in the Eastern end of the Ward. Mr. Anderson will open up Headquarters on State street near 33rd on Saturday.
COLORED BAND BOYS WANTED.
Wanted Colored boys who can play cornet, trombone and drum. Apply 3918 So. State St., between 8 & 9 P. M.
REV. E. D. JONAS WILL SPEAK
SUNDAY AFTERNOON ON THE
SUBJECT
VILLA AND MEXICO
at
3918 So. State St.
M. B.
HON. JOSEPH S. LABUY.
One of the straightforward Judges of to the Common people and who w of the Superior Court at the judicia
One of the straightforward Judges of the Municipal Court who stands close to the Common people and who would make a dandy candidate for Judge of the Superior Court at the judicial election this coming June.
Independent Republican candidate for
figures that he will outrun both Alder-
th, Jr.
In our next edition a complete sketch
of Attorney Anderson's life and a histo-
ry of some of the great cases won by
him, together with his platform, will
be given to our readers.
An account of a Mammouth Mass
Meeting to be followed by a ball schedu-
led to take place at the Eighth Regi-
ment Armory, will be given to our
readers. Ten thousand copies are to
be printed for free distribution among
the Second Ward voters. Be sure to
get one.
It looks as if Mr. Anderson is a winner by several thousand majority.
KATE ADAMS CASE APPEALED.
Mary O'Brien who was recently found guilty in the Municipal Court, and given three months imprisonment in the House of Correction under the Kate Adams Law, has appealed her case to the Supreme Court of Illinois. W. G. Anderson, her attorney, Candidate for Alderman, 2nd Ward, contends that the law is unconstitutional and that it will be so declared by the Supreme Court in April, when attorney Anderson is to argue the case—(M)
NOTES OF THE PEELESS CLUB
By Carl L. Cotton, Cor. Sec'y.
Mr. Chas. Worthington highly entertained the Peerless Club, Monday evening at his residence. Many members were present. The meeting was very interesting and several addresses were delivered. The next meeting shall be held Tuesday, March 21st, at the home of the corresponding secretary, 3561 Prairie Ave.
in the Municipal Court who stands close should make a dandy candidate for Judge and election this coming June.
It seems that the sword of grim death hath been unfurled among us. And has called from time to reward several of our citizens in the past week. The Broad Ax extends its sympathy to all of the bereaved ones who are so effected.
---
Mrs. Loyd of 55th street died from the effects of an operation performed upon against the advice of her many friends.
---
The funeral of Mrs. Sykes of 5039 Lake Park Ave., was held at 10:30 A. M. at the Hyde Park A. M. E. Church. The Pastor Rev. W. H. Griffin preached the funeral sermon. Mrs. Sykes who has been ailing for over a year was a first class dressmaker, a member of the church and a worthy citizen of long standing. Her loss is felt both by the church, a daughter, and a host of friends.
On Monday morning the sudden death of Mr. Theodore Tyler was made known to his associates. The family consisting of two sisters, a niece, one brother and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Manning, Miss Tyler, his brother Ralph and Miss Catherine Manning feel his loss very effectively. May his death be a reminder young men. Watch carefully your steps. You can shorten your days.
...
Hannibal Washington of 5465 Kimbark Ave., although losing several days from High School on the account of the loss of a joint of his thumb was highly complimented by his Latin Instructor on being able to keep abreast of his class. His highest average before the accident was 96—upon his return he received 100 which caused his teacher to say to him "Hannibal you are not very much credit to your teacher, for you can teach yourself. And to the class "you had better look out, Hannibal is here." These remarks were not made as statements of inefficiency, but rather to the contrary for being proficient and comes from a worthy instructor to a worthy pupil, for he did not allow his misfortune accident keep him from his studies at home. He loves to study which accounts for his efficiency.
Mrs. Steena Davis of
was entertained last Monday
evening by the many friends she has
made since living in Hyde Park. Those
present were the Rev. J. T. Merritt
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Mosby, Mr.
and Mrs. Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Black,
Mr. and Mrs. French, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis, the Newly wed, Mrs. Nettie
Merritt, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Merritt,
Mrs. Baker, Mr. Norman, Mr. Davis,
Mr. King Jones, Miss Carson, Mr. Wm.
Gunn. Repast was served with the
delicacies of the season, while the
hostess and the guests were highly
entertained with musical selections by
Mrs. Fannie Moseley.
Mrs. Merriman of 5210 Lake Park
Ave., is on the sick list.
Little Earnest McCauley departed this life last week and was buried from Jackson's Undertaker's Establishment Tuesday.
ST PATRICK'S DAY CELEBRATION
The following program was rendered at the St. Patrick's day banquet of the Irish Fellowship club at the Hotel La Salle, last evening.
Toastmaster, Patrick H. O'Donnell, president of the club.
Address—The Rev. George W. Mundelein, archbishop of Chicago.
Address—The Rev. Thomas F. Burke, pastor of St. Mary's Roman Catholic church, Paulist Fathers.
Reading—Miss Josephine McGarry; an original poem written for the occasion by Miss Mary Synon, entitled "The Strong."
Songs by Miss Genevieve Barry, Mrs. Lillian Solon Carroll, Miss Florence French, John F. Cahill, and the Columbian quartet.
WHITE GUEST MAKES ATTACK
ON HOTEL MAID.
St. Louis, Mo.-Only her determined resistance, coupled with the timely arrival of John Hoffman, the hotel clerk who was attracted by her screams, saved Mrs. Cora Winfield, employed as a chambermaid at the Colonial Hotel, 809 Grand avenue, from criminal assault by John B. Cole-
man, a White salesman, who was stopping at the hotel. Mrs. Winfield was cleaning up the room occupied by Coleman, when he evidently turned the key in the lock and attempted to carry out his hellish intentions. She screamed and fought, and Hoffman, hearing the screams, rushed up and unlocked the door, forcing the brute to release the struggling woman. Coleman was released on bond. A few weeks ago a Colored barber at this same hotel was charged with attempting to kiss a White girl. He was locked up in jail, and only released after paying $130.
CHIPS
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Flynn, have removed from 6544 Harvard avenue to 6532 Harvard avenue where they are ready to receive their many friends.
Prof. J. Fenton Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Johnson, 3026 Vernon avenue, has returned to New York City after a short visit with his parents and many friends in Chicago.
Mrs. George W. Ellis, 3262 Vernon avenue, was on Monday evening removed from her home to Wesley Hospital, where she underwent an operation for a complication of several diseases from which she has been suffering.
R. M. Leach, the up-to-date and progressive owner of Leach's Storage Warehouse 4430 S. State street, has made good from the very first day, that he started in business in this city in a small way, some twelve or fifteen years ago. Aside from owning his large warehouse, he owns a nice flat building in the 43rd street block on Forestville avenue.
Miss Nellie Callaway, 3300 Rhodes avenue, who worked very hard one year ago for the election of Oscar DePriest, for Alderman of the Second Ward; this year will put forth her best efforts for the success of Harry Hildreth, Jr., for Alderman of that Ward. Miss Callaway, is well liked and can do Mr. Hildreth a world of good in rallying many of the Colored women to his support.
William Porter, one of the Democratic politicians of the second ward, permitted a lady to come near unto him Monday evening while he was on Wabash avenue near 32nd Street, and he claims that the lady was so light fingered; that she extracted $50 out of his hip pocket, which he had tied up in a pocket handkerchief, which he had collected in for other parties and when he discovered his loss, he tore out at breakneck speed after the lady, but she being fleet of foot, she made her getaway to a dark hallway in one of the apartment buildings in that neighborhood and in seeking for her he ran into a flat of a lady who claimed she was sick and she promptly summoned the police and had Mr. Porter arrested for disorderly conduct. He was fined $10 and cost, at the Clark street Police Station on Tuesday morning, his fine being remitted, but so far, he has failed to connect up with the $50.
Ups and Downs.
Lady (who was on a visit to her native town)—How is Mrs. Gabble? I haven't seen her for a long time? Hostess—She is having her usual ups and downs. Lady Visitor—And what may that be, I pray? Hostess—Oh, running up bills and running down her neighbors—Buffalo News.
A Rise.
"The automatic force of inanimate objects is sometimes a wonderful thing," said the professor.
"Yes," agreed the impecunious man "even the humble cake of yeast can always raise the dough"—New York Mail.
His Wisdom.
Judge—How long have you owned a car? Motorist (charged with speeding)—One week, your honor. Judge—Um; then you can still afford to pay a fine. Twenty dollars!—Puck.
Not What He Meant
Diner (in swell cafe)—I suppose people who dine here carry off quite a lot of silver. Walter—Yes, sir; we can't get all their loose change—Boston Transcript.
The very best way to get ability is to do thoroughly whatever you do. Master every detail of work that falls to your lot—Selected
[Name]
hood into parts, it seems to the writer that it is best to say rich and poor. Since the Jew of all religionists is the greatest enemy to the terrible demon Poverty and has the record of the lowest mortality from tuberculosis universally, let us give the Hebrews a closer scrutiny and take some more lessons from the great law givers who produced Moses, the unprejudiced Solomon, the wise and rich king who married the Queen of Sheba, that swarthy Ethiopian damsel and the warrior king David.
Segregation means more poverty; more tuberculosis, more misery and more stagnation as well as more unsanitary environment and more dark close alley residences. Let all persons with a love of justice and who stand on broad humanitarian grounds cry out for better wages and better living conditions for EVERYBODY EVERYWHERE.
THE RICH MAN IS NOT ABSOLUTELY SAFE FROM THE CALAMITIES THAT ARE THRUST UPON HIS LESS FORTUNATE CONTEMPORARY BROTHER.
Let us all educate and agitate against poverty and its companion TUBERCULOSIS.
Overwork, insufficient nourishment, excessive or long hours of service, poorly ventilated houses that have windows that cannot be opened, houses that have no bath, dark rooms, the use of patient medicines and the reliance on the gratuitous and unscientific counter prescribing druggist are concomitants of poverty. BETTER WAGES ARE NEEDED and the EMPLOYERS should do their part to rid us of that which spreads tuberculosis more than anything else; it is SMALL WAGES.
I am no priest of crooks and creeds,
For human wants and human needs
Are more to me than prophets' deeds;
And human tears and human cares
Affect me more than human prayers.
Go, cease your wail, lugubrious saint!
You fret high heaven with your plaint;
Is this the "Christian joy" you paint?
Is this the Christian's boasted bliss?
Avails your faith no more than this?
Take up your arms, come out with me,
Let heaven alone; humanity
Needs more, and heaven less from thee;
With pity for mankind look 'round;
Help them to rise and heaven is found.
—Paul Laurence Dunbar.
RAIDS BANK: GETS $1,600.
St. Joseph, Mo., (Special)—A Colored man entered the Mechanics' State Bank here on Monday, and forced the cashier and two clerks into the vault and obtained $1,600. He escaped.
That Colored man is fast becoming highly civilized just like his White fellow citizens—Editor.
BROWN CHRISTIAN
CHARLES THE LORD OF THE WEST
M.
MR. AUGUSTUS L. WILLIAMS
Lawyer and Republican Candidate for Delegate to the Convention from the First Congressional District
For Delegate to the Republican National Congressional District of Illinois.
Lawyer and Republican Candidate for Delegate to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois.
Talks on
HEALTH,
CLEANLINESS,
PROPER LIVING,
SANITATION, ETC.
BY
Dr. W. A. DRIVER
3300 So. State Street
Phode,Douglas: 3617
PROGRESS AND POVERTY OR PREVENTION OF THE SPREAD OF TUBERCULOSIS.
"In the world's broad field of battle,
In the bivouac of life,
Be not like dumb driven cattle,
Be a hero in the strife!"
Longfellow.
To prevent the spread of the commonest, the most widespread and the most serious of all human maladies there must be a multitude of heroes and reiteration of the causes, prevention and the treatment of tuberculosis.
A DISEASE OF THE POOR
In his book Practice of Medicine Osler says of the conditions favoring the spread of tuberculosis or conditions influencing infection page 292, "Environment is an all important predisposing factor." He also states in the same paragraph that * * * * "In imperfectly ventilated dwellings and work shops, and in close, dark alleys, and in tenment houses the liability to infection is very much increased." Osler also says on page 285, "The Jews everywhere have a low mortality from consumption—about one-half that of Christians—which Fishberg attributes to their adaption to city life for the past two thousand years." Representative William Kent of California in a letter "To the medical profession of the United States:" says * * * * "It is now recognized that tuberculosis is peculiarly a disease of poverty and malnutrition * * *."
If we must unscramble eggs or divide theoretically the homogeneous and (paradoxically though it may seem) heterogeneous brotherhood and sister-
THE NEGRO FELLOWSHIP LEAGUE
"Resolved that the United States has a Right to Invade Mexico" is the subject for debate before the Negro Fellowship League Sunday, March 19, at 4 P. M. This question is to be debated by Mr. Frank Stevens and Mr. C. A. Barnett. All organizations are requested to send delegates who will also take part in the discussion.
Last Sunday Mr. F. L. Barnett deals exclusively with the Campbell case which was thoroughly discussed by a large number present. By motion the chairman was authorized to appoint a committee to co-operate with him for further raising of funds for the purpose of carrying the case to the Supreme Court.
JOHN E. HUGHES,
Secretary.
Mrs. Carrie Warner, 5223 S. Dearborn street, who conducts fine manicure parlors at 182 S. State street; has been confined to her home the past week with illness. She expects to be able to resume her duties at her place of business the first of this coming week.
"RELIGION"
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
Charles E. Stump Has Wended His Way from St. Louis, Missouri to Kansas City and Other Western Points to Meridian, Mississippi; From There He Will Continue His Journey on South to New Orleans, Louisiana
Meridian, Miss.—I jumped so far and so fast that I did not get to send you a letter last week. If you will remember I was in Kansas City, when I took my pen in hand to write you a few lines last week, and you will see where I am today, and I will not be here when this letter reaches you in a few days.
I have been trying to study the White man, but I find it impossible for me to reach him and understand his case, so I am going to give it up as soon as I can do so. I will turn him over to God, and then I think God will understand him here or the devil will understand some of them yonder. I am not joking about this, and must tell you all about it. The Lord hath been good to me. He will take care of me in trouble.
I told you in my last letter that I would reserve the right to say a word about Evanston in another letter, and I think I will here exercise my rights, and if I fail you will not think it was because I failed to try. Rev. I. A. Thomas, pastor of the Second Baptist church invited me out to see his church and to meet the people of Evanston. He thought it would be a good thing to have a real Kansas farmer to come out and see a real church. I hesitated at first, but made up my mind to go. I went and I was well paid for going.
I wonder if you are acquainted with Dr. Thomas. He is a man and a well trained man at that. He has made it for himself and for his race. He was born way down in Georgia, got his education down there in the public school, in Central City College, Macon, Ga., and Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga. It was in these institutions where he pushed his way to the front, and where he became a man of education. He taught in the Central City College for some time and resigned to go to another part of the world. He resigned from there to go to a church, and then to take up some special work in the University of Chicago. It was while studying that the people up there got to know him. When Dr. Gayles resigned they called Rev. Thomas, and he heard the call and went out there. He found that little frame building which had stood by the side of the ark. A small membership.
Now you want to know what happened? He took up his coat rolled up his sleeves and said "Brothers and sisters work must be done here in this zion." It was done too, for the old building was torn down, and a new one started. Many people stood off and looked and declared it could never be completed. Dr. Thomas said it would be. So many predicted failure, but he predicted in his own mind success, and success did come to him. Soon the building was down, the new one up, and they tell me that in three years these people raised $35,000. They have some valuable property right in the heart of Evanston. It is worth having.
I met a loyal set of hard church working people. They were serving supper, and invited me to eat. I did eat. I looked at that fine church, and went right off to shouting without any particular sermon, but this church is sermon enough to make any one shout. The people think that I must be going crazy, but I am not. I feel happy at times. I must speak right out when the spirit strikes me. You must not keep back the spirit. It must come out, and I am willing to let it out. I want to congratulate these people. They deserve credit. The membership has been increased under Dr. Thomas, and it is hard to tell where he will stop. He is a worker.
I left there as I told you and went on to Alton, St. Louis, Kansas City. I found the people busy getting ready for the National Negro Business League. We farmers are going to have a hand in this big meeting. I met Mr. and Mrs. Fortune I. Weaver, and
they called the Local Business League together and gave me a banquet. It was where we sat down to a big table and had some eating and then some talking. Mrs. Tilford Davis went there with me, and I did not eat too much. I enjoyed it so very much. I would suggest that you get ready to take your vacation just at the time the National Negro Business League is to meet and you go to Kansas City. You will have the time of your natural born life. I am going to be there myself. I shall say more about it in another letter.
I returned to St. Louis, after I got all my business straight about the farm. Went to court and saw them send that man to the workhouse for thirty days for stealing that machine I had bought, and then left, after talking with Dr. W. Sampson Brooks about his general conference affairs, for the place where I am. I got on the L. & N. train, for the extreme south. This is one of the best roads.
I knew that I would have to change to that special when I crossed into Kentucky, so I just went in there in St. Louis, and had it all alone until I reached Henderson, and those who had been in the other car marched into join me. One woman who was born down home, and had lived there until a few years ago, showed herself right out. "Is this what you call a Jim Crow car?" she asked the man who was taking up the tickets. I think they called him a "Corn Doctor," or something like that. "No madam," he replied, "but this is the car for Colored people provided under the law of Kentucky."
"It is just horrible, and I will not sit down here," she said. She stood and stood for an hour and then eased down in the seat and went to sleep snoring "Jim Crow car, Jim crow car." She got off in Nashville, and I continued down to Birmingham, where I spent a night with Rev. J. S. Jackson, of the A. M. E. Zion church, and will tell you about him later. Sunday was spent in Bessemer, Ala., with Dr. E. J. Gregg, one of the leading physicians in the south, saying nothing about race or color. Bessemer is just out from this Birmingham about 12 miles. I was delighted to see so many things there, and enjoyed myself to the highest.
It is interesting to be with Dr. Gregg, because he is a man every inch of him, and then he is doing things. He is making things happen right in town. He enjoys the confidence of the people. His clerk was as busy as could be. I met her in Chicago last fall, Miss Minnie Spencer: The people were very kind to me, and I forgot that I was in the south. When you get down here and get among your own people you forget that you are in the south. The treatment is always fine. I am now in the state of Senator Vardaman.
THE SIXTEENTH PLEASANT SUN
DAY AFTERNOON AT BETHEL
CHURCH.
This coming Sunday afternoon, March 19th, at 3 P. M., the Sixteenth pleasant Sunday afternoon will be held at Bethel Church, 30th and Dearborn streets; Rev. W. D. Cook, pastor.
Piano forte lecture—recital "Folks Songs and dances of many peoples" will be given by Henry Purmort Eames, director piano department, Cosmetropolitan School of music and dramatic art. James A. Mundy, conductor. Miss Lillian Hunt, accompanist. Mr. Walter P. Gossette, accompanist. Grand chorus of one hundred voices. Silver offering will be lifted at the door.
Mr. Eames' appearance, courtesy to Mr. Mundy.
Losing a Situation.
In the American Magazine is an article on getting and holding a job by Hugh S. Fullerton, in which he says to men who have been discharged from their positions:
"Don't try to tell me. 'Some one had it in for me,' or. 'The boss didn't like me,' or that So-and-so 'had a pull.' If you are an office man it cost the firm from $200 to $250 to find out you would not do, and if you are a shop worker it cost about $00. And it will cost the firm that much more to try out each person until it finds one that fits and can hold the job. No matter whether it likes you or not, no firm or corporation wants to throw away $00 or $250 in time and money.
"The firm wanted to hire you and was disappointed because it could not. Every one was 'pulling' for you to make good' and was disappointed when you failed. The bosses hoped to find you fit for promotion and were a bit discouraged when they discovered they could not promote you."
Leadership In a Democracy.
Leadership in a Democracy.
There was a day when the absolute monarch seemed the ideal of human greatness. The names of such are scattered throughout time. But their age has vanished. The masses below have surged to the surface—the will not be denied. The age before us is the age of the free and aspiring many. In such an age the strong man is the leader of thought. He wins following by the constraint of a powerful mind and a virile character. He appeals to reason and to the higher emotions. He looks far into the future, and his constructive imagination is a lens through which the people may see clearly things as they are and as they are to be. His qualities must be higher than those of a despot. The freely followed leader of a free people is greater far than emperor or king.-Harry Pratt Judson, President of the University of Chicago.
Insect Life.
In a report to the Smithsonian institution James Buckland says few persons realize how enormous is the number of insect species or how amazing is their power of multiplication. The number of insect species is greater by far than that of the species of all other living creatures combined. Although 300,000 have been described, probably twice that number remain to be examined. Virtually all living animals, as well as most plants, supply food for these incomputable hordes. The fecundity of certain insect forms is astounding. Professor Riley once computed that the progeny of the hop aphis, which sees thirteen generations born to it in a single year, would, if unchecked to the end of the twelfth generation, multiply to the inconceivable number of ten sextillions of individuals.
Subtle Advertising
A successful hotel manager pointed to the advertisement of a hotel at a fashionable resort. This advertisement read: "Special rates to single men." "The proprietor of that hotel." said he, "deserves to succeed. He lays in his advertisement a subtle trap for mothers with marriageable daughters. They read the advertisement, and they conclude that, given lower rates at this hotel, single men will be plentiful. They therefore decide that there is the place undoubtedly to take their daughters." Then, laughing, he concluded: "These mothers quite correctly believe that as far as their daughters' chances of matrimony are concerned the more the marryer."—Exchange.
Military Skaters.
In the Norwegian army there is a corps of infantry every man of which is an expert skater. On skates this corps can perform a day's march of eighty miles, which equals the performances of the best trained cavalry in Europe. The evolutions of the corps are confined to the great flords which indent the coast of Norway, these flords being frozen over during the long winter season.
Whole Hog or None.
The old saying "Whole hog or none" refers to Mohammed allowing his followers to eat all except one portion of a pig, but failing to mention what the portion was, so that if a Mohammedan did not leave pork strictly alone he might as well consume the whole hog as risk eating any part of it.
Drives Him to Drink
"I'm so sorry about it, but my husband actually hates music."
"How strange!"
"Isn't it? His prejudice is so strong that he has to jump up and leave the theater whenever the orchestra is playing an ent'acte."—Cleveland Leader.
Rust.
Nothing can rust unless it has iron in it. Rust is made by iron touching molst air. The oxygen in the molst air acts on the iron and forms what we call "oxide of iron," or rust, which crumbles away and spolls the iron—Exchange.
Chaperon.
The word "chaperon" comes from the name of a mantle worn by Spanish duennas, with which they are supposed to cover and shield the young girls under their care.
In the Laboratory.
"That final analysis you've heard so much about," answered the chemist—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Slight not what's near through aiming at what's far.—Euripides.
PAGE FIVE
THE BROAD AX
PUBLISHED WEEKLY.
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the Office of Chicago, Illinois,
under A. M. of Chicago.
AUTHORIZED AGENTS AND CORRESPONDENTS FOR THE BROAD AX.
L. W. Washington, 5465 Kimbark avenue.
B. W. Fitts, 3315 S. State street. Phone Douglas 4049.
The Broad Ax can be found on sale at the last named place and news items and advertisements left there will find their way into these columns.
Household Hints.
Dipping in a solution of alum will fireproof paper candle or lamp shades.
Keep tacks in bottles; it saves opening many boxes to find a particular kind.
Salt thrown on the fire once a day prevents the accumulation of soot in the flues.
A pail of boiling salted water should be poured down the kitchen sink every week to prevent its becoming stopped.
Cotton gloves to wear in doing housework are better in every way than old kid gloves. If bought especially for this purpose get a size larger than usually worn.
Sparks of Fire.
To protect wood against fire, silicate of soda is the most effective remedy. There are traces of an organization for the extinction of fire as far back as 2,000 years B. C. There is no doubt that the original method of finding fire was by the friction of two pieces of wood. No Greek or Roman army crossed a frontier without carrying an altar on which a sacred fire always burned. The origin of fire varies, according to old time fables. The Greeks held that Prometheus brought to earth the torch he had lighted at the sun, and hence there was fire.
Leap Year Musings.
During the glad leap year a woman also has the last word first.—Washington Post. The question is whether in a leap year wedding the bridegroom shouldn't promise to obey.—Pittsburgh Chronicle. One woman explains that the only difference in leap year is that the men then know that the women are proposing.—Boston Herald. With Mr. Bernard Shaw's revelation that woman does the proposing in nearly all cases anyway. leap year lost much of its significance.—Chicago Herald.
BRIGHT BRIEFS.
After a rough life has been polished it is called hypocrisy.
Can't is a longer word than can, but it seems easier to use.
The road to success is full of the ruts of other men's failures.
Speed the day when they will beat the war stocks into plowshares.
What has become of the old fashioned steer that grew the cheaper cuts?
Remember that the money you intend to save doesn't draw any interest.
Every man was born at a very early age, but some of them never seem to get over it.
The man who is too poor to lend money to his friends will never have many enemies.
If the price keeps going up one may soon have to mortgage the car to buy gasoline for it. ____
A pint pot that knows its own measure is worth more than a quart that thinks it's a gallon.
“paGE BIX
is Grafty Red Squirrels,
‘The red squirrel is as crafty as he
fs quick. He'll select three or four
Places to store nuts, so if one is dis-
covered he has reserve supplies, And
the never makes a mistake and put
away worm eaten nuts. The red
squirrel knows a wormy nut as soon
as he picks it up and revolves it in his
paws.
Byer see him eat a hickory nut?
He sits up on his hind legs with bis
tall curved over his back, holding the
nut in his forepaws. First he drills a
Iittle hole in the shell with his sharp
teeth, breaking away the shell a Uttle
at a time until he can get at the ker-
cet: z
If the red squirrel limited his dlet
to nuts he would have more friends.
But sometimes he adds a store of the
farmer's corn to his underground nest.
He's a robber of birds’ nests, too, and
you'll see him perched on a limb eating
an egg as innocently as though he
were cracking a walnut—Philadelphia
North American.
Dencerous Learning.
A little learning is a dangerous thing,
but a little too much learning Is still
more dangerous. To have too much
learning sets you so far above your
fellow mortals and fills you with such
contempt for them that you cannot be
comfortable in their presence nor they
in yours. Beyond a certain point
learning ceases to be of use and be
comes a burden, because nobody can
comprehend what you are talking
about. Thus it happens that men are
so learned sometimes that the only
way society can live with them is to
shut them away in some asylum.
So, then, follow Pope's advice,
“Drink deep or taste not the Pierian
spring,” but don't drink too deep.
Which is much the same as saying
that a happy medium in the matter of
Jearning is just as happy as any other
happy medium.—Life.
Qur Debt to the Plensere.
I love to think of the bold, adven-
turous men who blazed the pathway
of civilization across the continent to
the shores of the peaceful ocean. They,
and not the politicians of this era,
made this a world power. We owe
them a debt of gratitude which we can
never repay except by being model cit-
izens. They had nono of the ordinary
incentives to high endeavor. They act-
ed their parts in a rude age, upon an
obscure stage, far from the teeming
centers of population and publicity,
with no Boswell to follow at their
heels to record their words, with no
newspaper correspondents to blazon
thelr deeds. No trumpet of fame
sounded in their ears, cheering them
on in their onerous, hazardous, self ap-
Pointed task, but they wrought nobly
for thelr country and thelr kind—
Champ Clark.
Alone In a Great City.
“Alone—alone in a great city!”
‘The words burst like heart tearing
sobs from the lips of the wretched
looking man at the street corner, and
passersby eyed him in silent sympathy.
“Alone in a great city!” he sobbed
again. Then over his careworn face
flashed a sudden look of hope as he
added, “Ab, that gives me an idea!”
‘Taking from the pocket of his shab-
by waistcoat his real silver watch, he
turned quickly into a side alley over
which hung the sign of the three gold-
en balls. A few minutes later he re-
turned, pushing a little ticket into his
now empty pocket and jingling some
coins gayly.
“A loan,” he muttered in happy, care
free tones—‘‘a loan in a great city!”—
London Mail.
Thackeray and Dickens.
‘Thackeray was much taller than
Dickens. His form, indeed, approach-
ef the gigantic in its proportions. He
looked far older, although the two men
‘Were much about the same age. His
immense head, his broad forehead and
his prematurely white hair gave him
an appearance of authority and even
of severity, which one might have
thought would prove intimidating to a
stranger. Yet I at least never felt it
so. He seemed to me to be less self
assertive, less conscious of his superi-
ority, than Dickens appeared to be.—
Tustin McCarthy's Reminiscences.
Back to Her Tender Years.
Boarder—This beef is very tough. It
4s evidently from an old cow. Mrs.
Hashieigh—Let me tell you, sir, that
the tenderest beef I ever ate was from
@ cow fifteen or twenty years old.
Boarder—That's easily explained, The
cow was so old she was childish—
Boston ‘Transcript.
Encouragement.
Collector (warmly)—I’ve been here a
dozen times, sir, and I positively won’t
call again.
Mr. Poorpay (cheerfally)—Oh, come
now, my man. Don't be so supersti-
tious about making the thirteenth call.
Nothing will happen, I assure you.
ae ang
‘Customer—Have you the papers for
a week back? Newsboy—Fer a weak
back? Yer don't want papers; yer
‘wants a porous plaster.—Exchange.
Desten the Benseement
Patience—So Peggy is putting off her
marriage as long as possible? Patrice
Oh, yes; she loves attention, you
kknow.—Yonkers Statesman.
eee
High Aspiration.
Peter—It's a fine castle in the air
you've built How do you propose to
{got into it—by airship? James—No; by
betress!
To effect a quick cure mix cheerful-
ness with your medicines.
% Pure Drinking Water. ~
‘The geologic resource of greatest
value to the health of communities is a
supply of pure drinking water. It is
generally recognized that a number of
diseases, prominent among which are
typhoid fever and amoebic dysentery—
a disease more common in tropical clt-
mates, but found also in the United
States—are contracted through contam-
inated water or contaminated food.
Therefore a supply of pure water will
eliminate one of the sources of such
infection.
2t is highly desirable to obtain sup-
plies of domestic water from sources
other than the shallow wells, some of
them open, that are found near many
houses. The water obtained from deep
‘wells has percolated through sands and
other material for so great a distance
that its impurities have been removed
by filtration, and it possesses a sant-
tary value that cannot well be overes-
timated, for such water is free from
the bacteria causing typhoid fever and
‘the protozoa causing amoebic dysen-
tery, and its use obviates the necessity
for shallow wells that may serve as a
breeding place for Anopheles, the mos-
quito to which malarial infections is
due.—Geological Survey Bulletin.
Weshinaton at Night.
Night life comes on swiftly when &
gets really started. Night in Washing-
ton is a beautiful girl drawing a black
velvet, jewel bespangled cloak over
white shoulders, The streets are light
ed with dull bronze, rather low lamps;
artistically perfect lamps that hold dull
white, glowing globes. The lamps are
very close together. They are the
pearls that the girl winds about her
throat and in her dusky hair.
‘The White House stands out, glim-
mering boldly against the black of the
foliage, its lighted windows dimmed
with tightly drawn curtains. What of
national portent may not have hap-
Pened behind those same curtained
windows! Perhaps fear has grappled
with bravery behind the shelter of the
friexidly walls; perhaps hatred and love
have clashed. Perhaps cowards have
become strong, and surely strong
have wept. Characters and homes and
nations have been molded behind those
friendly blinds.—Margaret HB Sang
ster, Jr., in Christian Herald.
RR ee Re ae
It was in the Angel Camp bar that
Mark Twain beard from an er-ptiot
called Ben Coon the jumping frog
story. Clemens related it to Artemus
‘Ward, who urged him to write tt, to be
included in a book that Ward was pub-
Ushing. Clemens dallied and sent it
to the publishers too late, but they
handed it over to a dying paper called
the Saturday Press, which gladly gave
it pride of place in its columns on
Nov. 18, 1865. Professor Sidgwick
synopsized it in Greek form for bis
book “Greek Prose Composition,” and
thus arose the legend that the jump-
ing frog story originated in ancient
Greece, a legend in which Clemens him-
self believed till Professor Sidgwick
undeceived him in 1800 by telling him
that the Greek version was merely 8
translation of Clemens’ own work.
How Jefferson Dressed.
In dress President Jefferson was gov
erned by comfort rather than by ele
gance. “Pride costs more than bun
ger, thirst and cold,” he used to say.
and as he lived in an epoch that wit
nessed a mighty revolution in men's
clothing as well as in men's govern:
ment, monarchy’s queues and velvet:
giving way to short hair and the useful
ungainly pantaloon, only the watchful
ness of his body servant saved him
from unbelievable anachronisms of cos
tume. Indeed, in later life at Monti
cello, where this democrat ruled abso
lute king, he often wore the garment:
of several different periods together
like superimposed geological strata o1
the historic remains in the Roman
forum.—Century.
Bazaars In Asia.
Streets in the bazaar districts o'
Asiatic cities are only eight to ten fee
wide. The larger shops are eight b;
ten and the smaller ones five by st3
feet, with one side giving directly or
the street. In each bazaar is a khan
for every ten or twelve shops. These
khans are two stories high, with an
‘open court in the center and rooms on
the four sides, all opening into the
court. A door leads from the open
court into the street. Rooms are let to
different storekeepers for storage pur
Doses.
‘nididien weiss iee
‘Husband—When I see all these bills
1am tired of life. Do you think the
time will ever come when we shall be
out of debt? Wife (cheerfully}—Why
not, darling? You know that you are
carrying an exceptionally large life tn-
surance
Left Handed Revenge.
Oficer—Your honor, this chauffeur
ran his car into th’ show windy av a
millinery store. Judge—What millinery
store? Officer—Mme. de Stickum’s
‘Judge—Discharged. That's where my
wife buys her hats.—Philadelphia Bul-
letin.
Considerate,
“The most considerate wife I ever
heard of,” said the philosopher, “was
‘© Woman who used to date all her let-
ters a week or so ahead to allow her
Rusband time to post them.”
tiie:
First Senior—I'm going to marry a
poor girl and settle down. Second
Senior—Better marry a rich git! and
settle up.—Yale Record.
Oft expectation fafls and most oft
there where most tt promises Shake
‘Sspeare.
- ee Aimee Ae Aiarn Wit _ 4
‘THE BROAD AX, OHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916_
> =
“Tennyson's Birds. A Shabby Royal Palac
Ge: elt the posts Teanyoon: was the | Tbe Persian royal palace ©
sanet exact tp. hia rendering of! th | “Datezactive piace. The cout
songs or calls of birds. A young lady ed with painted figures of cast
was present when he was reading kind of operatic Romeo's cost
“Maud.” When he came to the pas- with boys of gilt tron offering
caak whlch says, “Tarte tn: Sn age | Coe ements: She ake
ball garden cry, "Mand, Maud, Mandi'= | nant and shabby. the garden
he suddenly consed reading’ andl ankea | ©2. Tbe rooms are Resin
her abruptly what the birds were. ‘one of those monuments of |
Tap bitoted end hastinted wad Caan | “one savatentecen: tee wale
said: ered with mirrors, and a d
“Nightingales, 1 suppose.” made of small pieces of mirr
‘The poet turned away with the one | *l#borate patterns, the effect
word “Rooks!” ing one of a wedding cake.
Tia. glenn sash) the womad sigue | uiare ms witnest exception 2
Grint GOUAE he better (an “tab-mnana | SOme Suen ae wee om
i efoves” and “Whit, whit, whitr |! not a single one of those
cbirruped the nightingale?” works of Persian art which i
Toon Tinnets, ‘robine and thrashes | 1ctions of Barope arouse ox
“pipe” in his pages, the woodpecker —not so much as a fine carpet
ctanghe" and “mocks,” the lak and | ‘6 famous peacock, thrones
the Plover “whistle,” the jay “scritch. |foueously thought to be the
oa” ten parsed “weruazen” the pencens | Sr tne ne seeueel 28 |
“squalls,” the blackbird “warbles,” the | Nadir Shah—nor any of the J
conan fowl “shriek” and the engie |O0W cxbibited. Local gossip
“yelps.” ‘He may well ask in one of | ‘Rem to bare been broken up
‘the daintiest of bis lullabies, “What in Europe by the present gov
‘does little birdie say?” He knows, and | —“=T°™ Moscow to the Persi
he lets his readers know too.—London ——————
Answers. A Case of Identificatio
—— “Js that the officer who
Sey ee you?” bis honor inquired of M
‘The new pastor of a certain country
parish is likely to lose the confidence
of his flock unless he changes bis ways
During his sermon one Sunday morn:
Ing not long back he stopped abruptls
and asked:
“How many of those here are dill
gent students of their Bible?”
Fifty hands went up.
“Good!” said the pastor. “Now, how
many of you have read the second
chapter of Jude?” -
‘Twenty-five hands went up.
A wan smile overspread the divine’s
face.
“That's also good, but when you go
home read that chapter again, and you
will doubtless learn something to your
interest.”
Reader, the, point of this story lies
in the fact that the book of Jude con-
sists of one chapter only.
Ciiceiin Ceenmie
You often hear of people with money
to burn, but so far none has ever at:
tempted to burn his diamonds. The
reason why perhaps is because they
‘will burn beautifully. “A great many
people imagine that diamonds are in-
destructible.” said a jeweler, who was
placing a load of gems in his safe for
the night. “but as a matter of fact, a
Gre of diamonds would be the briskest,
prettiest thing in the world. Diamonds
are nothing: but coal carbon. Put a
handfol of diamonds on a plate and
set a light to them. They will burn
with a hard, gemlike flame till nothing
is left. There will be no smoke, no
soot, and at the end the plate will be
as clear as though just washed. Not
the slightest particle, even of ash, will
remain.”—Pittsburgh Press
oe eee
| Among the Somalis of Africa there
fs a legend that when God first made
‘them, a man and a woman, he wrote
down in a book the law they were tc
follow. They were promised that as
long as they carefully preserved this
book they should continue great and
powerful, but if they lost it thelr
greatness would depart from them
One day the book was carelessly left
lying outside a tent, where a bullock
found and devoured it’ From that fa
tal day their decadence set in, and tc
the present time whenever an ox dies
of disease or is killed his entrails are
religiously examined to see if any
trace of the book can be found. If
found they believe they should recover
thetr lost power.
The Two Versions.
‘The editor was trying to placate an
indignant statesman.
“All we said about you in the paper,
Mr. Krakajack,” be assured him, “was
that you seemed to hiave an inadequate
sense of proportion.” .
“Not by a blamed sight!” roared the
caller, “What you said about me was
that I seemed to have an inadequate
Proportion of sense!”—Chicago Trib-
une.
a a
When Kansas wus first organized as
& territory in 1854 {ts area included
part of the present state of Colorado,
extending as far west as the crest of
the Rocky mountains. Denver, Lead-
ville, Pueblo and Colorado Springs are
now located on former Kansas soll.
One of Her Necessities.
Maud—Jack said when he proposed
that he could give me only the necessi-
tles of life. Ethel—And what did you
say? Maud—I told him that one of the
necessities of my life was a husband
who could supply me with the lux-
urles.—Exchange.
Olives and Bread.
Pound for pound, ripe olives, so far
as total value of heat unit is concern-
ed, contain almost as much food value
as bread, and in the case of very large
olives the value may be increased to
approximately the same as that of
bread.
Strong One at That.
‘The very young man says, “The
world ts my oyster,” then discovers it
takes an oyster knife to open the
thing.—Florida Times-Union.
A Carcet.
_ One hundred and seventy-seven years
‘ago the word “carpet” was defined in
‘an English dictionary as “a covering
for a table.”
| Discouragement selzes us only when
we can no longer count on chance—
George Sand.
TT a oe ial
A Shabby Royal Palace.
‘The Persian royal palace is a most
unattractive place. The courts are Sil
ed with painted figures of cast fron in
‘kind of operatic Romeo's costume, and
‘with boys of gilt iron offering vermilion
‘cups to gilt eagles. The tanks are stag-
nant and shabby, the gardens neglect-
ed. The rooms are horrible even for
‘one of those monuments of bad taste
called royal palaces; the walls are cov-
ered with mirrors, and a decoration
made of small pleces of mirror set in
elaborate patterns, the effect remind-
ing one of a wedding cake. The fur
niture is without exception European.
of poor quality and worse taste; there
is not a single one of those exquisite
works of Persian art which in the col
lections of Europe arouse enthusiasm
—not so much as a fine carpet. Neither
the famous peacock throne—so long er
roneously thought to be the one built
‘for the great moghal and looted by
Nadir Shah—nor any of the jewels are
now exhibited. Local gossip believes
them to bave been broken up and sold
in Europe by the present government.
| —“From Moscow to the Persian Gulf.”
A Case of Identification.
“Is that the officer who arrested
you?” his honor inquired of Mose Han-
bel, an old negro whitewash artist, ar
rested for assault.
“I can't rekerlect,” answered the pris
oner. i
“Sure, I arrested him, judge,” put in
the policeman, with indignation. “He
knows it too.”
“Take a good look at him, Moses,”
insisted the judge. “Isn't that face fa
miliar?”
‘The darky squinted long and scowl
ingly at bis accuser.
“Now dat I uses mo’ keer, jedge,” he
said, “’peers like dey is somethin’ fa
milyus erbout dat face, but dis yere
worl’ is so full ob nacherally ugly
folks jes’ an ordinary man kain’t al
ways tell de diffunce betwix ‘em. Dat's
him, jedge, dat’s him. * * * But be
ez easy ez yo’ kin on him, kaze he go!
a wife and fo’ chillun.”—Case an¢
Comment.
eecitieiniame ale tie ie
The making of a big gun involves as
much intricate work as the putting to-
gether of a locomotive or a giant crane.
A twelve inch gun on board a battle
ship is fifty feet in length and has an
extreme range of twenty-five miles and
an effective range of twelve miles.
There is a vast amount of intricate
and delicate, trained workmanship
wanted in the finish of a giant cannon.
For example, says a writer in the Mill-
gate Monthly. the breech block bas to
undergo eighteen or twenty machin-
ings. And all the medley of mechan:
ism necessary to enable the ponderous
mass of ordnance to move to the right
or left or up or down at a touch from
the naval gunners is being built up to-
gether at the same time as the work
Proceeds on the gun itself. For some
of the smaller guns no fewer than 550
machinings on 280 parts are necessary
before the weapon is ready for use.
‘The Finest Street In the World.
“Truly, New York is the unbelieva-
ble city, as I have called it,” sald Jos
eph Pennell, the famous etcher. “Down
Broadway there are endless new sub-
Jects. Stand. for instance, at the up-
‘per side of City Hall square on Broad-
“way and look south Now, I know all
of old Europe. the parts that are left
and the parts that are gone, and there
fs nothing, there was nothing, to com-
pare in grandeur and majesty with
this vista down Broadway. Were it
somewhere in Europe every one would
be staring at it. ogling it, patronizing
it, saying the correct things in the
guidebook about it. Here the guide.
ook says nothing. Broadway, to those
who can see, is the finest street in the
world.”—New York World.
A Country of Earthquakes.
Japan fs pectillarly the victim of ele-
mental forces. ‘The only satisfaction
its people can derive from living in
country which contains fifty-one active
volcanoes and has an average of about
500 earthquake shocks yearly is that
in all probability Japan would never
have existed but for the seismic and
volcanic agency which has elevated
whole districts above the ocean by
means of repeated eruptions.
ae
In the classic mythology Ceres is
the goddess of the harvest, or, to be
more specific, of the cereals. Accord-
ing to Ovid, Meta.. book 5, Ceres first
taught men to plow the fields and also
to have fixed laws, the meaning of
which ts that laws originated with the
settled state known as agriculture.
A Hard Question.
Modern Maiden—I wish advice. Ola
Lady—Certainly, my dear. What ts it?
Modern Maiden—Shall I marry a man
whose tastes are the opposite of mine
and quarrel with him, or shall I marry
'@ man whose tastes are the same as
mine and tire of him?
Laws.
‘The laws of a country must be lke
‘a large river and not like a small
itch. Men do not fall in a river be
‘cause it is remarkably wide and deep,
while they often fall into a ditch be-
cause ft is so narrow and shallow.—
Kyuso.
Bad Arguments.
‘The best way of answering a bad ar-
gament is not to stop it, but let it go
on {ts course until it overlaps the
boundaries of common sense—Sydney
Smith.
in betes
Soulful Youth (at the plano)—Do you
sing “Forever and Forever?” Matter
of Fact Maiden—No: I stop for meals.
Exchange.
Music In Shakespeare's Time.
Shakespeare's time was an age of
music. “Catches” were sung by gen-
tles as well as by weavers and tinkers
Late, cithern or virginals were in ev-
‘ery barber's shop for the diversion of
customers, * * * Thomas Morley may
be using the blessed argument of a
music teacher when he tells us that 8
gentleman was counted but a boor if
he could not play the lute or sing 8
part in a madrigal, but there is no get
ting over the craggy fact that over
eighty collections of madrigals, ayres
and songs were printed and published
between 1587 and 1690, in addition to
which vast collections of early music
still remain in manuscript. With an
aristocracy fond of music and sccus
tomed to play and listen to musle and
‘song, music in the theater was almost
‘as inevitable in England as in Italy,
says the London Musical Record. It
was considered a manly accomplish:
ment to play the hunting horn. Every
gentleman who kept hounds could wind
ft. A punctilious etiquette fixed the
correct set of notes for each operation
of the chase. Usually a play had ai
least one song.
wich Exhibit Emotions.
We are accustomed to think that
only we humans become pallid with
fear or agitated with joy, but some ex-
periments with perch in the artificial
pond show that when their repose is
suddenly disturbed by tapping on the
glass the sh visibly tremble, and the
bars which are characteristic of this
species actually disappear for the time
being, only to reappear ’when the dis
turbance is removed and the equantm-
ity of the fish is restored.
‘Sometimes a pike that is rapidly ad-
vancing on bis prey becomes suspicious
about the Jatter’s character. The pur
suer will suddenly stop in an attitude
of doubt, bis back will arch, and he
will remain suspended as though
studying the cause of his suspicions.
Only when he is thoroughly reassured
does he become rigid, to advance to the
final attack; if his suspicion is not al
layed he drops to the bottom of the
pond or swims off in disappointment—
Popular Science Monthly.
Gass
“One night at Lady Jeune’s house
Joseph Chamberlain said to me that
he believed any man of even moderate
endowment could attain any given aim
which he set before bim with unre-
mitting effort and ‘enduring to the
end.’ To my question, “Why, then, do
so many men fall short of their ambt-
tions? he answered: “They come to the
place where they turn back. They
may have killed the dragon at the first
bridge and at the second, perhaps even
at the third. But the dragons are al-
ways more formidable the farther we
go. Many turn back disheartened, and
very few will meet the monsters to
the end. Almost none {s willing to
have a try with the demon at the last
bridge, but if he does he has won for-
ever.’"—Princess Lazarovich in Cen:
tary.
a ee a eas
Very interesting are the phrases used
by the various people of the world to
express “I love you.” Wherever there
are human beings declarations of love
are made, and there are a thousand
languages in which the tender passion
may be expressed. The Chinese say
“Uo ugai ni.” the Armenian expresses
his love with “Se siren as hez,” the
Arab is content with the short “Ne
habbek,” while the Turk murmurs
“Sidi seveiorum.” In India “Main
syne ka pisar karim” is the declara.
tion. But the Greenlander holds ‘the
palm for the word love. When he does
not stammer it has fifteen syllables and
has been recorded phonetically thus:
“Unifgracerndlainalerfironajunguarrig-
ujakt”
An Ancient Guild.
The Cutlers’ company had probably
existed long before the grant of the
first charter by Henry V. Early in the
previous century a ferce quarrel is re-
corded between the Cutlers and the
Sheathers. who were accused of hav
ing discredited the Cutlers by supply
ing them with unworkmanlike sheaths
for knives. daggers and swords, to
which the Sheathers cruelly retorted
that the Cutlers disgraced the sheaths
by selling inferior foreign blades for
English.—London. Spectator.
ree
Cyprus was an extremely popular re-
| sort for Britishers for a year or so aft-
ter the announcement, in 1878, that it
had become a British protectorate, but
| as the coast could not provide harbors
to compete with those of Malta the
‘Vogue of the island receded as quick
ly as it had sprung up.—London Globe
: a
Worms Used In Medicine.
The earthworm, or the common fish-
worm, was utilized by the medical
Practitioners in Europe two and three
hundred years ago. The worms were
for interna! administration and some
times made into an ointment or em-
brocation for external use—Pittsburgh
Dispatch.
Marengo.
In the battle of Marengo 58,000 men
Participated. and of that number 18,
000 were killed or wounded, about 22
Der cent. Napoleon thought Marengo
his greatest victory. He always kept
throughout life the uniform he wore
on that day.
Information Wanted,
Most of the stock phrases of every
day life are intelligible to us, and we
know a jot. but we wish somebody
would tell us what a tittle is—Colum.
Dia State. |
‘Life without pursuit is a vague
geld Gite-Rens: ane
He Bee ook.“ Notes of 0 Busy tala
Joseph Henson Foraker. writing of ty
Repabllean national couvention of tay
says: “The intellectual feature ‘we
the famous speech of Robert G. Inger
soll nominating Mr. Blaine 1 tay
many times seen popular orate
arouse great enthusiasm, put 1 hare
never seen before or since anything
equal to the effect of his eloquent ang
telling sentences. Some one preceding
him had suid to make sure of the elet
tion we must nominate a man accept,
able to Massachusetts. This nettieg
Ingersoll. He rebuked it in his fe
sentences, saying if any man who hag
been mentioned at that convention as
a possible candidate should be nome
nated and could not carry that state by
75,000 majority, Massachusetts shouig
tear down Bunker Hill monument ang
sell Faneuil Hall for Democratic head.
quarters. His speech throuzhout faip
ly bristled with sharp. jazzed point
and smashing, bludgeon-like blows tha
thrilled his audience, aroused their en,
thusiasm and brought forth round aft,
er round of applause. and the climax
was reached when he likened Blaine
toa plumed kuight with shining lance
smiting traitors in congress full tm th
face”
Ghia: Meets
Walking is the best exercise, Do
some of it every day Next to walk.
ing comes bowling You can't throw
@ bowling ball without stooping clear
to the floor. and every stoop stimulates
the liver and exercises the intestines
Fifty per ceut of the sickness in the
world would be eliminated if every.
ody bowled. Walk or bowl every
@ay. And at wight le flat on your
back and raise your lexs above your
head slowly as many times as you ean
without fatigue Then, anchoring your
toes under a weight of <ome sort, raise
and lower the bedy These two exer-
cises repeated fifteen or twenty times
night and morning will do a lot for
you. And you'll be surprised to find
how quickly you develop endurance
Start with five times and Increase
each day or two until you reach twen-
ty—Woman's Home Companion,
Ginette Mien
We don't get very high in this world
unless we have something to step on
Tat ts why we put risers in stairs
and rounds in ladders.
‘When we were boys if we could
stick our toenails into a crevice in the
bark of a tree, be it ever so shallow,
we could sbin up to the top all right
‘When we got to the lowest branch we
were all right After that we could
pull ourselves up easier. But it did
seem a long ways to the lower limbs
sometimes.
‘That is the story of all life—getting
the feet on something and then spring:
ing up
Life is fine. or It is a tragedy, just
according to whether we see the mean-
ing of the experiences which come to
us and use them to climb up by—
Farm Life.
‘Sicis nen Cheam,
_ Mrs. B.—I wonder why Miss Single
ton refused the curate when he pro
Posed to her? Mrs. D.—All a mistake.
my dear, a sad mistake. You know,
she has grown a little deaf, and she did
mot suspect ke was at all “gone” on
her. She actually thought he was
asking ber to subscribe to the new or
gan fund. so she told him she was sor
ry, but she had promised all ber money
in another direction Mrs. B—Then
‘what happened? Mrs. D.—The curate
felt himself insulted and departed in
dudgeon, and she’s lost the only chance
she ever had.—London Telegraph.
Sandy Was Willing.
An old farmer and his wife were
Paying a visit to an exbibition in Glas
gow and were deeply interested in the
Wonders which they saw. Overcome
at the sights, the old woman dropped
into a chair and exclaimed:
“Ob, Sandy, this is just splendid! 1
could sit here a’ me days.”
“Aweel.” said the farmer, “fist sit
still, Jeanie. wumman. I'll no grudge
the shilling”
Boots In Russia.
| All Russians bave a weakness fF
handsome footwear, and the result 1s
that there are more pairs of showy
boots worn in the ezar’s empire than
anywhere else on earth. This pref
‘erence extends to the women as well
as to the men.
Pleased.
“You may say what you like about
that new play of mine, but you've sot
to admit that It sends the andience
away in good humor.”
“That's very true. Most of them
‘seemed to be glad it was over.”—Pitte
burgh Press.
Freshly Defined.
“What's the honeymoon, pa?”
“The honeymoon, my son, is the only
Period in a man’s life during which be
considers it funny to come home and
find that his dear little wife hasn't dix
mer ready on time.”—Boston Tram
SAR
Preposterous!
Officer — Why do you think be
‘wouldn’t make a good corporal? Set
geant (indicating sentry)—'Im 2 Cor
‘Doral! Lor’ lumme! Why, ‘is name'®
Eee Punch.
} ae 3
‘Theodosia—What do you think ©
my friend? Theodore—The only thing
he had in his head was a cigarette
and that was going out—Princeto> T*
wer.
He is no wise man that will quit
certainty for an uncertainty.—Samoe
hte.
PIANO in room alone with dust-proof cover on each one. Household goods in private room, each piece burlapped before putting away. We guarantee your furniture to come out of storage in just as good condition as it went in, whether it be one month or one year.
Storage Warehouse
State St. All Phones Oakland 3784
Leach's Storage Warehouse
Main Office 4430 So. State St. All Phones Oakland 3784
QUINADE
BROWS HAIR
MOVES DANDRUFF
SEND FOR SAMPLE
QUINASOAP
IDEAL SHAMPOO 50AP
DOUGHLY CLEANSES THE SCALP
QUINACOMB
HAIR. STRAIGHTENER
SHAMPOO DRYER
25¢ QUINACOMB50¢ QUINASOAP 25¢
AT ALL DRUGGISTS
COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. N.Y.
SANITARY
SHIP CANAL
32 Miles
22 Feet
162 to 290 Feet
OFFERS:
Locations, Dock Facil-
Transportation, Rail-
ections, Electric Power,
building Material.
Connection with St. Louis
Mississippi River and Direct
with the Gulf via the
Mississippi Rivers.
Energy Created from
power for the Modern
Means Efficiency and
MYTH, - President
EN, - Chief Clerk
Y, - Comptroller
en Building
gan Ave., CHICAGO
QUINADE
GROWS HAIR
REMOVES DANDRUFF
SEND FOR SAMPLE
QUINASOAP
THE IDEAL SHAMPOO SOAP
THOROUGHLY CLEANSSES THE SCALP
QUINACOMB
HAIR, STRAIGHTENER
SHAMPOO DRYER
QUINADE 25¢ QUINACOMB 50¢ QUINASOAP 25¢
AT ALL DRUGGISTS
SEEBY DRUG COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
THE SANITARY and SHIP CANAL
Length - - - - - 32 Miles
Depth - - - - - 22 Feet
Width - - - 162 to 290 Feet
THE CANAL OFFERS:
Industrial Locations, Dock Facilities, Water Transportation, Railroad Connections, Electric Power, Concrete Building Material. Direct Connection with St. Louis via the Illinois River and Direct Connection with the Gulf via the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers. Electric Energy Created from Water Power for the Modern Factory Means Efficiency and Economy.
THOMAS A. SMYTH, - President
JOHN McGILLEN, - - Chief Clerk
F. D. CONNERY, - - Comptroller
Karpen Building
900 So. Michigan Ave., CHICAGO
---
SPECIAL
of Hous
For
W
FI
PIANE
each pi
guarant
just as s
one more
Leach's Stora
Main Office 4430 So. State St.
1
QUINA
GROWS
REMOVES
SEND FOR
QUINA
THE IDEAL
THOROUGHLY CO
QUINA
HAIR ST
SHAM
QUINADE 25¢ QUINADE
AT ALL
SEEBY DRUG COMPANY
THE SA
and SHIP
Length - - -
Depth - - -
Width - - -
THE CANADA
Industrial Locat
ities, Water Tran
road Connection
Concrete Building
Direct Connection
via the Illinois
Connection with
Illinois and Missi
Electric Energy
Water Power
Factory Means
Economy.
THOMAS A. SMYTH
JOHN McGILLEN,
F. D. CONNERY,
Karpen
900 So. Michigan
It is different in Argentina. The presidential election is due in three months, and there is not a candidate in sight.
The Audubon society having declared that the dove is a fighter, it may yet be necessary to nominate the English sparrow as the emblem of peace.
With the boys' colleges doing away with class fights and the girls' colleges abolishing daisy chains there is less and less inducement to leave home.
SPECIAL RATES ON STORAGE of Household Goods, Pianos and Trunks
For the next thirty days to fill our New Warehouse we are giving Special Rates FIRST MONTH STORAGE FREE
PHONE DOUGLAS 6626
GABRIEL FRANCHERE, Jr.
SHOES
FOR LADIES, MEN AND CHILDREN
SHORT VAMP SPECIALTIES
3109 S. State St. Chicago
The Royal Box.
The Archduke Francis Joseph of Austria has fifteen Christian names.
Queen Alexandrine of Denmark is probably the least known of European queens.
Prince Albert of England, who recently celebrated his twentieth birthday, has been a middy in the royal navy since 1913.
King George's sister, Queen Maud of Norway, has many accomplishments. She has mastered Norwegian perfectly, writes charming verses and is an adept at wood carving.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
It is well known that shopkeepers make pounds by ignoring farthings or by giving something for them that is worth far less than a farthing, but where shopkeepers make the pounds banks and the English government make their hundreds of pounds. If a farthing is due from you in taxes you are charged onepence. On the other hand, you are never paid onepence for a farthing.
The same principle is applied to fractions of pounds. Banks in reckoning interest for themselves call any part of £1 a full pound, whereas in reckoning interest for you odd shillings are left out of account. Thus for a deposit of £99 9s. 11d, you would receive interest on £99 only.
It is amazing how the state profits by not paying fractions of pence.
The government has a special fund in which are placed the fractions of pence withheld in paying dividends on government stock. This fund amounted to more than £150,000 in ten years before being used for other purposes. As far as the government is concerned; farthings mean a lot.—London Answers.
His Little Lot.
There were some interesting episodes in the life of Sir Charles Euan-Smith. Once in the market place of an Afghanistan town he was fired at by a native. He lodged a complaint with the ameer, who appeared to take no notice of the incident, merely remarking, "That's all right." Sir Charles complained again and met with the same reply. He still thought that the ameer was treating a serious matter with less consideration than it deserved, but thought it advisable to say no more on the subject. About a week afterward he was invited by the ameer to ride with him. They rode for some distance outside the town, and they passed gibbet after gibbet. At length Sir Charles said, "Your highness has been busy of late." "Oh, no," replied the ameer; "they are your little lot." He had seized all the members of the would be assassin's family and hanged every one of them.
Be Natural.
Holmes says that there are six people present whenever two meet in conversation—the real A, the real B, A as he sees himself, B as he sees himself, A as B sees him and B as A sees him. The remark comes back when one goes out upon the street and considers himself and the other people who pass, particularly those who see on the slippery road to success. It is not they themselves who go by; it is what they would have other people think them. If they are young and inexperienced they must tighten up their faces with an artificial solemnity; if they are getting on in years they must affect an artificial snappiness. They wear their outward aspects like clothes.
One feels like crying in the ears of young men: "Be natural. Live or die, sink or swim, survive or perish, but be yourselves."—New York Globe.
The Primrose.
The primrose has suffered injustice from the poets, who seem to regard it as a floral weakling. Shakespeare wrote of "pale primroses" that die "hey they can behold Phoebus in his strength;" Spencer regrets "so far a flower" should perish through "untimely tempest;" Milton lambes the "rathe primrose that forsaken, dies," and many later poets have written of it in similar strain. Why? For the primrose is a hardy plant and will be found where few other flowers can exist, on the mountain heights of Europe and Asia and even on the highest ranges of the Himalayas. And Disraeli recognized its color in the fried eggs upon his breakfast table.—London Notes and Queries.
He Was Right.
A man rushed to the entrance of a lunatic asylum in the middle of the night and yelled to the keeper to let him in.
"Let me in!" he cried. "I have suddenly gone insane."
The keeper woke up, thrust his head out of a first story window and bellowed down in a rage:
"What? Come here at this time of night? Man, you must be crazy!"—Brooklyn Eagle.
The Unexpected.
Amateur Photographer (touring in the country)—Pardon me, sir, but would you object to my taking your daughter just as she is? Farmer Green—Well, this is sudden; but take her, and be happy. Keep yer eyes on him, Sal, till I scoot round for the parson.—London Mail.
Just a Suggestion.
"I'm still waiting for you to pay me that $5 you owe me, Dubson."
"Oh, don't let that worry you."
"That's what I'm trying to do, but I would feel greatly encouraged if you would let it worry you occasionally."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Curious Fishing Plant
There is a strange vegetable growth under the sea called the fishing plant, which opens and shuts periodically, like a big mouth. When fishes are near enough to this wonderful plant, all of a sudden it closes its "mouth" and swallows them.
The Best Hour:
"Bobby, why aren't you playing with your cousin Ethel?" "Gee whiz, mother! Don't I get an hour off at noon?"-Puck.
Poor Experience.
"Experience is do best teacher," said Uncle Eben, "but gittin' arrested all so way to study law."—Washington $tar.
Geography.
Geography is the sum total of all the places in the map that we don't know about. Geography is made up of boundary lines, river lines, dots and dashes like a telegraph system and shaded places which represent the high spots. It is also colored to suit the taste and in such a manner that it takes a bacteriologist to make you know the difference between the sea and the dry land. Historical geography is ordinary geography with whatever you don't know about history added to it. Historical geography consists of migrations, ceddings and other flora and fauna to suit. To make a historical geography get a few races and distribute them according to your fancy over a pink area in various shades to show how they spread out. As a matter of fact, they did nothing of the sort. But that makes the historical geography all the more interesting. In the hands of schoolteachers geographies are frequently believed in for years by confiding pupils.—Life.
Ballads as Newspapers.
The ballad, or that form of it which is associated with the broadside, was one predecessor of the newspaper as a commentator on events. It was written for the people and sold to the people. Printed on poor paper and passed from hand to hand, copies of early ballads were seldom preserved. Fortunately several men of the seventeenth century began to make collections of ballads, and the copies of broadsides printed before 1700 that are now in existence are supposed to number about 10,000. Soon after 1700 the printed form of the ballad was changed, the "black letter" disappearing, but the ballad continued as a chronicler of happenings and a commentator on political, military and other public events until the middle of the nineteenth century and in the United States as well as England. The "topical" song of today perpetuates the satirical function of the ballad.—Springfield Republican.
Belgian Kongo.
Belgian Kongo, founded thirty years ago, is still in the early stage of development. So far practically no manufacturing industries have yet been established, and, aside from the important copper mines in the Katanga district, the only large industrial enterprises are the railways and river transportation services. It may be said that all business activities in the colony are devoted to the collection of tropical products—rubber, ivory, gum copal, palm oil and kernels, cacao, etc.—and the railway and river services are in reality only accessories to these activities, having been established primarily to aid in the transportation of these products to the seaports. The gathering of rubber in Kongo has never recovered its former activity, and in all probability will never again be so rich a source of income to the colony as it was previous to 1912.
Ship Money.
Charles I. was badly in need of money, and his attorney general in the course of his antiquarian researches discovered that in the dim ages of the past the crown had issued writs to the cities and towns on the coast requiring them to provide vessels for the royal needs, and he suggested that this ancient right might be brought into use again. Instead of the actual vessels a money contribution might be exacted instead. Thus the king would be able to tax a larger part of the realm while theoretically observing the laws. Writes for ship money were accordingly issued, but the patriot John Hampden declared that they were illegal and raised such a protest against them that they were practically nullified.
Weed Pests.
Of the 200 species of ferns native to this country a few have become more or less serious weed pests. The most troublesome are the hay scented fern and the brake. According to a bulletin of the department of agriculture, cutting off the tops close to the soil surface twice a year for two years will kill out nearly all ferns. The best times to do the cutting are just previous to sporing, or about the middle of June, and the middle of August.
Life In Bermuda
A feature of life in Bermuda which always impresses the stranger is the apparent prosperity of the natives, white and colored allike. Distressing poverty is unknown, and even the poorest families can boast of a stone house and a garden.--Argonaut.
The Twins.
We have heard of several cases wherein twins have borne a remarkable likeness to each other. But the most curious was the case of twin sisters who had to be told everything together because it was impossible to tell them apart.
Corrected.
"My husband tells me that he was out late last night with your husband." "That last is not. I want you to understand that my husband was out with your husband."—Detroit Free Press.
Put Out
"Why do writers always talk of angry flames?"
"Because, if you notice, flames are usually put out."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat
Calendar Time.
Mr. Bacon—What are you doing with that old, faded calendar? Mra. Bacon—Oh, I just like to look into the dim and distant past!—Yonkers Statesman.
A trick is at the best but a mean thing—Le Sage.
LINCOLN STATE BANK OF CHICAGO
CAPITAL, $200,000.00
NICKELS
CENTS
This Registering Home Bank FREE to our Savings Depositors; will start you saving and keep you at it. A Savings Account is the first step to wealth. OPEN one with US.
PHONES: OFFICE, MAIN 4153
AUTOMATIC 33-736
RESIDENCE, DREXEL 7990
Walter M. Farmer
ATTORNEY AT LAW
SUITE 708, 184 WASHINGTON ST.
NOTARYPUBLIC CHICAGO
Office Phones: Ree. 5133 So. Wahash Ave.
Oakland 4662, Auto. 73-058 Phone Drexel 18815
Dr. Theo. R. Mozee
DENTIST
4709 S. STATE STREET
CHICAGO
Hours 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., 7 P. M. to 9 P. M.
Sundays by Appointment
Phone Main 2017 Automatic 32-395
A. L. WILLIAMS
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW
Suite 706 Firmenich Bldg.
184 W. Washington St.
Residence 5548 Jefferson Av.
Phone Midway 5515 Chicago
New Acquaintances.
If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advances through life he will soon find himself left alone. A man should keep his friendship in constant repair.-Johnson.
An Artist
Mr. Banks—Don't you think my wife paints very nicely? Miss Millburn—Charming! It makes her look so much younger. I think.—London Telegraph.
God sends a new duty to conquer each new pain.—Adelita Procter.
THE BROAD AX CAN BE FOUND ON SALE AT THE FOLLOWING NEWS STANDS:
From on and after this date The Broad Ax, can be found on sale at the following news stands:
N. C. Chalmers, cigars, tobacco, notion store and news stand, 5012 S. State street.
L. E. Chilton, news stand, S. E. corner 51st and State streets.
S. Berenbaum, Cigars, Notions and News Stand; 31 W. 51 Street, near Dearborn.
E. H. Faulkner, news agency; 3109 S. State street.
George I Martin, maker of fine cigars and news stand, 18 W. 31st St., near State.
R. E. Harvey's barber shop and news stand, 3924 State street.
W. M. Maxwell, notions, cigars, tobacco, confections and news stand, 5244 State St.
Edward Felix, notions, cigars and news stand, 52 W. 30th St.
F. Bishop, cigars, tobacco and news stand, 3 W. 27th St., near State.
Sylvester McGloffin, news stand and laundry office, 4122 State St.
William Gaughan, laundry office cigars, tobacco and news stand, 2636 State St.
E. M. Oliver, notions, cigars and news stand, 15 W. 36th Street, near State.
A. D. Hayes, cigars, tobacco, notions, stationery and news stand, 3640 S. State St.
George McFaro, shee shining parlors and news stand, 3800½ State street.
---
PAGE SEVEN
BANK OF CHICAGO
STATE SUPERVISION
TH STATE STREET
CHICAGO, ILL.
Auglas 200
SURPLUS, $20,000.00
Commercial Banking
Savings and Checking Accounts
Foreign Exchange
Safety Deposit Vaults
Mortgages and Bonds
3 Per Cent Interest on Savings Deposits Your Patronage Solicited
Depository and Corresponde t,
Continental & Commercial
National Bank of Chicago,
Illinois.
A. D. GASH
ATTORNEY AT LAW
118 North La Salle St., Chicago
Suite 615 to 616
PHONE MAIN 2214
Residence 1262 Macalister Place
Telephone Monroe 2714
MILES J. DEVINE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 313-329 Reaper Block
Clark & Washington Sts.
Phones Central 239
Auto. 41-916 CHICAGO
Franklin A. Denison
ATTORNEY AT LAW
36 West Randolph St., Chicago
Suite 708 Delaware Building
Tel. Central 3142
Phone Res. 508 E. 36th St.
FRANKLIN 2727 Phone Douglas 4397
AUTO. 41-543
J. GRAY LUCAS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
25 N. Dearborn St.
Union Bank Building
Suite 311 CHICAGO
FRANK DUNN
J. B. McCAHEY Trustees Established 1877
TEL. OAKLAND 1550, 1551, 1552
JOHN J. DUNN
WHOLESALE COAL RETAIL
Fifty-First and Armour Avenue
RAILYARDS
51st St. and L. S. & M. S.
51st St. and Armour Ave.
CHICAGO
T. B. Hall, Laundry office, cigars,
tobacco and news stand. 3618 South
State street.
Fred M. Waterfield, cigars, tobacco,
notions and news stand, 5202 South
State street.
Coleman & Glanton, cigars, tobacco
and news stand, 3342 S. State street.
Miss E. M. McClain, hair dressing parlor and news stand. 30 W. 39th street.
F. M. Diffay, cigars, tobacco, notions and news stand. 3605 State street.
Nothing but an American.
When I look back on the shifting scenes of my life, if I am not that altogether deplorable creature, a man without a country, I am, when it comes to pull and prestige, almost equally bereft, as I am a man without a state. I was born in Indiana, I grew up in Illinois, I was educated in Rhode Island, and it is no blame to that scholarly community that I know so little. I learned my law in Springfield and my politics in Washington, my diplomacy in Europe, Asia and Africa. I have a farm in New Hampshire and desk room in the District of Columbia.
When I look to the springs from which my blood descends the first ancestors I ever heard of were a Scotch man who was half English and a German woman who was half French. Of my immediate progenitors my mother was from New England and my father was from the south. In this bewilderment of origin and experience I can only put on an aspect of deep humility in any gathering of favorite sons and confess that I am nothing but an American.—From "The Life and Letters of John Hay" in Harper's Magazine.
TEENAN JONES' PL
3445 SOUTH STATE STREET
Telephone Douglas 4591
The finest and most BUFFET and CAR Side. First-Class E HENRY "TEENAN"
A. F. CODOZOE,
J. H. WHISTON, Proprietors
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager
The Elite AND BU
3030 STATE STREET
JOHN BLOCKI, President
JOHN BLOCKI PERFUME
GO TO
C. E. KREYSSEN
5057 South St
NOT ON THE
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUG
MEDICINAL PRE
All Prescriptions Caref
ALSO CARRY A F
BLOCKI'S IDEAL & B IN BOTTLE P
The finest and most UP-TO-DATE BUFFET and CAFE on the South Side. First-Class Entertainers. HENRY "TEENAN" JONES. Proprietor.
A. F. CODOZOE, DOUGLAS 5971
J. H. WHISTON, Proprietors Phones DOUGLAS 3256
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager 'AUTO. 72-379
The Elite Cafe
AND BUFFET
3030 STATE STREET CHICAGO
5057 South State Street
NOT ON THE CORNER
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
All Prescriptions Carefully Compounded
ALSO CARRY A FULL LINE OF
BLOCKI'S IDEAL & BLOCKI'S FLOWER
IN BOTTLE PERFUMES
All Eye Trouble
SEE
DR. LOUIE USSELMAN
The Practical Optician
THE MOST COMPLETE OPTICAL ROOMS IN THE CITY
BEST GOODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES
Consultation or examination
FREE. We have 28 different
ways of testing the eyes and
guarantee to give satisfaction.
3150 S. STATE ST
Phone Douglas 5308
CHICAGO
When you talk of maintaining a principle be sure that it is not a prejudice.
The man that feels like being kicked seldom allows another the pleasure of doing it.
Unless all signs fail, this year will be a record breaker in the making of world history.
Next June will give both Chicago and St. Louis new opportunities to pose as summer resorts.
Everything can be overdone. Many a fellow has been fired with enthusiasm by his boss.
The drug shortage is so acute now in England that many chronic invalids are rapidly becoming convalescent.
If every man who was "a little odd" had to be arrested there wouldn't be enough man at liberty to enforce the law.
Saying the right thing at the right time is equivalent to keeping your mouth shut when you have nothing to say.
In another year the nation will again be giving earnest thought to the question of whether there is going to be any inaugural ball.
It couldn't have been the landlord class that agitated the war as some would have us think. People in Europe are many millions of dollars behind in their rent.
Political Quips.
No lack of preparedness anywhere for presidential nominations.—Atlanta Constitution.
Politically speaking, the rising temperature bulletin is already out for next June.—Washington Star.
Some of the presidential candidates now in the race won't get much for their run except the exercise.—Philadelphia Press.
It is wonderful how clearly a public officer can see what ought to be done—after his term of office is over.—Pittsburgh Post.
Ohio has six native sons in the United States senate, not to mention the long waiting list for the presidency.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Dr.
and most UP-TO-DATE
CAFE on the South
as Entertainers.
N" JONES, Proprietor.
DOUGLAS 5971
Phones DOUGLAS 3256
'AUTO. 72-379
lite Cafe
BUFFET
ET CHICAGO
F. W. BLOCKI, Treasurer
BLOCKI & SON
PERFUMERS
GO TO
SSLER, Druggist
North State Street
THE CORNER
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
PREPARATIONS
Carefully Compounded
ERY A FULL LINE OF
& BLOCKI'S FLOWER
LE PERFUMES
All Eye Trouble
SEE
Dr. LOUIE USSELMANN
The Practical Optician
OPTICAL ROOMS IN THE CITY
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
3150 S. STATE ST.
Phone Douglas 5308
CHICAGO
In sunny Spain etiquette is so very restrictive in the matter of courtship that it is a wonder that young people ever manage to get married at all. Even when, after many difficulties, the engagement is accomplished, the parents have a deciding voice in fixing the date, and, as they prefer long engagements, the wedding day is usually fixed somewhere in the dim future. The best man and maid of honor are expected not only to fulfill the usual duties, but to contribute—sometimes very substantially—to the expenses of the wedding feast. Wedding cake is unknown, but instead packets of sugared almonds are distributed among the guests and sent by post to those who are unable to be present.—Kansas City Star.
A Tiger Story.
There is a story current at Kuloang, central China, about a tiger which gave trouble in that quarter. A missionary and his wife had been worried by the tiger prowling nightly around their home. They determined to be rid of it and one night tied a cow up in the back yard and a dog at the front of the house. Then they armed themselves with guns and kept watch. The tiger appeared. The missionary fired and killed the cow. The wife rushed to see what had happened, and in her absence the tiger ate the dog—Exchange.
Lazy Idleness.
Beware of lazy idleness. It will have its effect on your whole system. It brings on degeneration of the muscles and the internal organs, sometimes resulting in an unhealthy accumulation of fat and sometimes in internal adhesion. In some constitutions it results in shrinkage and premature old age.
Within Reason.
Mistress—Jane, didn't you hear the doorbell? New Servant—Yes, mum. Mistress—Then why don't you go to the door? New Servant—Deed, mum. I can't expectin' nobody to call on me. It must be somebody to see yourself. mum.—Passing Show.
Evil Enough.
There is evil enough in man, God knows, but it is not the mission of every young man and woman to detail and report it all. Keep the atmosphere as pure as possible and fragrant with gentleness and charity. Dr. John Hall.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, MARCH 18, 1916.
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The sycamore tree bears fruit after twenty years' growth.
It has been found that the olive will live longer under water than any other tree.
Flowering plants should never be watered with cold water. It chills the plants.
The cactus and other desert plants have thick stems instead of leaves in order to reduce the loss of water by evaporation to a minimum.
Nicotine is found in only one plant besides tobacco—a large shrub known to botanists as Duboisia hopwoodii, which is native to the interior of Australia.
PITH AND POINT.
A temptation well resisted is the best tonic a man could have.
Many a good reputation has been stabbed by a pointed tongue.
As nearly as can be figured out, a savant is a scientist on foreign soil.
It is better for the drowning man to clutch a life preserver than a straw.
Even persons who never tried it will tell you that honesty is the best policy.
Many a man who prides himself on his physical strength cannot even hold his tongue.
Aren't there enough peace palaces? A common sense palace seems to be the great need.
Copper is the one basic necessity of the war, making it a copper bottomed war, so to speak.
If the New York restaurants only charge extra for it the horse meat supply won't equal the demand.
The high cost of living ceases to command attention when the high cost of destroying life is computed.
There is one don't in this grip business worth all the others—that is, the war.
It's all well enough to warn us about getting the grip, but the trouble is that we never know we've got it until it's got us.
Breathe through the nose and keep the mouth shut, says a doctor, giving advice on the subject of health. Lots of people owe a ripe old age to keeping the mouth shut.
The Royal Box.
Princess Henry of Battenberg, governor of the Isle of Wight, is the only British woman ruler.
King Peter of Servia is not a military man at heart. Rather he is a scholar and philosopher, as is shown by his admiration of John Stuart Mill, whose works he has anonymously translated into Servian.
King Gustav of Sweden is a teetotaler, and he and the entire royal family of Sweden are at the head of the temperance movement in Sweden. His mother for over forty years devoted her time and money and influence to the cause of temperance.
Flippant Flings.
France forbids the export of nuts We show a welcome disposition to encourage it.-Wall Street Journal. Judging from the number of generals Joffre has retired, one would say he was bent on a general cleaning up.-Chicago Herald. Horse meat has been placed on the New York bill of fare by the health board. A saddle of colt ought to be palatable.-Detroit Journal. New York warehouses are full of cold storage food for Europe. If anything can make them quit fighting this prospect ought to.-Pittsburgh Dispatch.
Fashion Frills.
Women don't object to old fashioned things if they are in style.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Hoslery manufacturers, it is said, are making tremendous profits, and nowadays it is easy to see where our earnings go.—Baltimore American.
The news that women are wearing the farthingale doesn't distress us in the least. It's so much better than boops.—New York Sun.
January Clearing Sale
All goods must be sold at cost price
Nemo Corsets
$1.89 and $2.89
Ruttenberg's Dry Goods Store
3534 STATE STREET
Phone Douglas 2824
he Cranford Apartment Building. 3600. Wabas
finest building ever opened to Colored t
at, electric light, tile baths, marble entr
The Cranford Apartment Building. 3600. Wabash Ave.
THE BROADWAY
The finest building ever opened to Colored tenants in Chicago. Steam heat, electric light, tile baths, marble entrance.
J. W. Casey, Agent,
74 W. WASHINGTON STREET.
Phone Randolph 803
---
CHICAGO
still uses a candle and flat flame burner to test the gas she now burns in 450,000 gas ranges.
CONSIDERING Gas as a Cooking Fuel—Chicago might just as well test it with a spoon and a tin can, as with a candle and flat-flame burner for the "candle power" of gas has nothing whatever to do with the efficiency of a gas range.
If you are at all puzzled about the relation and "heat units," ask our experts about the new line of Composite ranges—at a or our big salesroom downtown. The r fifty shapes and styles, for as many d
The Peoples Gas Light
Peoples Gas Building
about the relation of "candle power" or experts about it when you inspect the ranges-at any of our branch stores downtown. The new line includes some for as many different requirements. Gas Light & Coke Co. Telephone Wabash 6000
If you are at all puzzled about the relation of "candle power" and "heat units," ask our experts about it when you inspect the new line of Composite ranges—at any of our branch stores or our big salesroom downtown. The new line includes some fifty shapes and styles, for as many different requirements. The Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co. Peoples Gas Building Telephone Wabash 6000
Open Evenings
NOTARY PUBLIC Chicago, Ill.
If it takes two to make a quarrel it
also takes both sides to keep the peace.
A good many fellows can grasp an
idea without being able to hang on
to it.
It is better to lose than have the
fruits of victory leave a bad taste in
one's mouth.
Some folks are so used to looking for
trouble they don't recognize joy when
they meet it.
Europe has long been noted for cheapness. Now she has made human life
the cheapest thing.
Even Norway has borrowed $5,000,
000 in New York. Pretty soon everybody
will be owing us.
Occasionally the charity that begins at home never gets through warming its shins at the radiator.
Nearly all of us do without things we actually need in order to be able to afford a luxury now and then.
Prince Firman Firma is the new Persian premier. There should be nothing unstable about his government.
Under present conditions Europe sees nothing paradoxical in the simultaneous promotion of a war loan and a moratorium.
A German has invented an instrument which measures the ten-millionth of a second. The trouble is that after it is measured it is too much of a back number to be useful.
sti
fla
she
ga
C
test
Colored Help Employed
rd Apartment
3600. Wabash Ave.
opened to Colored tenants in Chicago
paths, marble entrance.
J. W. Casey, Agent,
74 W. WASHINGTON STREET.
The woman who cooks on your Composite range wants gas that will make a hot fire—the hotter the better.
Chicago tests the"candle power" of the gas she uses in her ranges, because an ordinance says she must. The ordinance is a back number—a relic of the days when we lighted our streets with flat-flame burners.
Today this ordinance is standing in the way of progress. It is a big obstacle to any plan towards the manufacture of cheaper and more efficient gas for the purpose that gas is now used.
if "candle power" when you inspect your branch stores one includes some but requirements.
Coke Co.
ne Wabash 6000
Nemo
Nº326
LASTICURVE-BACK
SELF-REDUCING