The Broad Ax
Saturday, April 8, 1916
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
One of the most astute and shrewdest political generals in Illinois, whose bright star of hope is rising higher and higher each day above the horizon, who feels sure that he will be re-elected Ward Committeeman of the Thirty-first Ward, Tuesday, April 11; at the same time he will be selected as one of the delegates to the Republican National Convention from the Third Congressional District of Illinois.
M.
Millionaire real estate owner, State Senator from the first Senatorial District who will on Tuesday, April 11, be elected one of the delegates to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois.
Vol. XXI.
HON. CHARLES S. DENEEN
and shrewdest political generals rising higher and higher each day he will be re-elected Ward Committee April 11; at the same time he will the Republican National Convention of Illinois.
HON. GEORGE F. HARDING.
Owner, State Senator from the fist
Fry, April 11, be elected one of the 6
Convention from the First Congressio
HEW TO THE LINE; LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY-
CHICAGO, APRIL 8, 1916
STATE SENATOR GEOBGE F. HARDING
In 1905, after a very bitter and rough and tumble fight Hon. George F. Harding, candidate for delegate to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois, was for the first time elected to the city council from the old Second Ward. The Broad Ax being the only newspaper on the south side which warmly and loyally supported him at that time from start to finish and from that time to the present he has been one of its greatest admirers and for the past eleven years this paper has always stood by him in all of his political fights or contests. The ten years that he honorably served the people residing in the Second Ward in the City Council, he was one of its hardest working members, voting and working for the very best measures which would be to the benefit of all people throughout this great city. Senator Harding is a true blue Chicagoan for he was born in this city
HON. JOHN WILLIAM ECKHART
Hon. John William Eckhart, the more than prosperous flour merchant and miller, head of John W. Eckart and Co., whose extensive flour mills are located at 311 North Carpenter street, who is one of the candidates for Delegates-at-large to the Democratic National Convention, to be voted for at the state wide presidential primaries, Tuesday, April 11th, was born in West Bend, Wis., November 20, 1855, his sturdy and highly respected parents being Jacob and Eva (Root) Eckhart. As he approached manhood he graduated from the high school of Vioqua, Wis. He has been one of the honored and most prominent business men of this great city since April 3, 1873, for that was the time that he landed in Chicago. From that time to the present he has been actively interested in all public
NEGRO BOY SENTENCED FOR IN-
SULT TO THE FLAG.
Des Moines, Iowa. Special—Because of refusal to salute the flag, Hubert Eaves, the Colored boy, eleven years old, of the "Sanctified Cult" was ousted from the public schools of the city and sentenced to nine years in the reformatory by District Judge C. A. Dudley.
The Court suspended sentence and paroled the boy to his parents on their promise that he would be placed in a private school.
It seems that under the Laws of Iowa, Chapter 144, Laws of the 35th General Assembly of that state a certain drill requires that all school children must salute the American flag, Mr. and Mrs. Eaves, the shortsighted parents of Hubert Eaves should feel by this time that they have fastened a great crime or wrong upon their son by instilling or pumping into his undeveloped mind a hatred and a contempt for the flag of this mighty nation, for the next nine years except at stated times they will greatly miss their son from around their fireside.—Editor.
P. A. NASH, MEMBER OF THE BOARD OF ASSESSORS OF COOK COUNTY WILL BE ELECTED DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEEMAN OF THE FOURTEENTH WARD.
Mr. P. A. Nash, who is one of the well known west side politicians and a warm friend and supporter of Alderman Joseph Higgins Smith and Hon. Roger C. Sullivan, who is serving as one of the members of the Board of Assessors of Cook county, will on Tuesday, April 11, be re-elected Democratic Committeeman of the Fourteenth Ward with both hands down and at the primaries this coming September.
If Mr. Nash lives, he will be nominated and elected to the present position which he holds as one of the members of the Board of Assessors.
ROBERT E. BURKE CANDIDATE FOR DELEGATE AT LARGE TO THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION TO BE VOTED FOR AT THE STATE WIDE PRIMARIES, TUESDAY, APRIL 11.
Robert E. Burke, who served as City Oil Inspector, under Mayor Carter H. Harrison, some fifteen or eighteen years ago and who was for a long time his chief political manager, has become one of the candidates for delegate at large to the Democratic Na
and still resides in his beautiful home where he first saw the light of day at 2536 Indiana Ave., and the doors on his lovely home always swings both ways for his army of friends.
Senator Harding never conduits himself in a swaggering manner for at all times he will bestow the proper amount of consideration upon all those who approach him and it makes not the slightest difference to him whether they are of high or low degree, rich or poor, Black or White and that is one reason why he is so extremely popular with all classes of his fellow citizens.
He is a graduate of Harvard College, also of the Phillips Exter of New Hampshire and that fact alone largely accounts for his splendid intellectual attainments.
In conclusion it goes without saying that on Tuesday, April 11, that Senator Harding will be elected one of the delegates to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois.
affairs which would be even of the slightest benefit to all of its citizens. He has served with distinction as President of the Chicago Public Library Board, from 1900 to 1907; he is past president of the Iroquois Club; he is a member of the Chicago Cavalry, and member of the C. A. A. Lake Beulah County.
Being free from Race prejudice and at all times treating each and every person with consideration, has caused Mr. Eckhart to be held in the highest esteem by all classes of his fellow citizens and thousands of his warm friends would be highly delighted to see him make the race for State Treasurer of Illinois this coming fall.
Mr. and Mrs. Eckhart and the rest of their family reside in a beautiful home at 1903 West Monroe st.
tional Convention which meets in St. Louis, Missouri, June 14, to be voted for at the state wide primaries, Tuesday, April 11.
Mr. Burke has many friends in all parts of Illinois who would like to see him win out as one of the National delegates.
SUPREME COURT DISBARS TWO
CHICAGO LAWYERS.
Names of Miles S. Macon and Mason Bamborough Ordered Stricken from Roll of Attorneys.
Miles S. Macon and Mason Bamborough, two Chicago attorneys, were disbarred by the Supreme Court of Illinois and their names ordered stricken from the roll of attorneys yesterday. The decision ended an unsuccessful fight of three years on the part of both attorneys to retain their professional standing.
Both lawyers were charged by the Chicago Bar Association with unprofessional conduct. There were five counts against Macon, two of which were those of withholding money belonging to a client. A similar charge was preferred against Bamborough.
It will be recalled that Miles S. Macon, who hails from somewhere behind the sun away down in the rotten state of Georgia, presided at the Ben Tillman meeting the last time he spoke at Orchestra Hall i nthis city, the latter part of November, in 1906, and it is an old saying that chickens will come to roost.
Mr. and Mrs. George T. Kersey, have removed from their lovely home, 6908 Cornell avenue to 2966 Vernon avenue so that Mr. Kersey will be much closer to his place of business, the Emanuel Jackson undertaking establishment, 2959 S. State street.
A mass meeting was held in the interest of Y. W. C. A. last Sunday afternoon at Bethel Church. Dr. A. Corwin, Prof. E. B. Johnson, Miss Maude Roberts, Mr. Hugh Buchanan, Mrs. Eva Jenifer, Rev. W. D. Cook and Mr. Chas. Elgar, participated in the program. Mrs. Hattie Arrant was manager of the affair and R. E. Moore master of ceremonies.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Clark and their family have removed from 319 East 99th Place to 3149 Forest Ave.
M. H. H.
HON. JOHN WILLIAM ECKHART
The prosperous flour merchant and mills whose extensive flour mills are lo-resident of the Board of Education candidate for State Treasurer of large to the Democratic National wide presidential primaries, Tuesd
merchant and miller, head of John four mills are located at 311 N. Ga Board of Education of Chicago, who state Treasurer of Illinois, and candidocratic National Convention; to be vial primaries, Tuesday, April 11th.
The prosperous flour merchant and miller, head of John W. Eckhart and Co., whose extensive flour mills are located at 311 N. Carpenter street; vice-president of the Board of Education of Chicago, who would make an ideal candidate for State Treasurer of Illinois, and candidate for delegate-at-large to the Democratic National Convention; to be voted for at the State wide presidential primaries, Tuesday, April 11th.
BARBECUE AND MASS MEETING WILL BE HELD AT THE OLD SKATING RINK, 5324 S. STATE STREET, IN THE INTEREST OF THOMAS J. HEALY FOR COMMITTEEMAN OF THE THIRTIETH WARD.
the interest of the re-election of Hon. Thomas J. Healy for Ward Committeeman of the Thirtieth Ward.
There will be plenty of good things on hand to eat, free of charge.
Hon. Charles S. Deneen, Col. Franklin A. Denison, commanding the Illi-
Hon. Charles S. Deneen, Col. Franklin
A. Denison, Attorney B. F. Moseley,
Rev. W. S. Braddan, Hon. Thomas J.
Healy, Will Be the Leading Speakers.
This evening a grand mass meeting
and barbgecue will be held at the old
skating rink, 5324 S. State street.
1
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[Name]
HON. MARTIN B. MADDEN
The uncompromising champion of the rights of the candidate for re-election for Committeeman of the Senate for delegate to the Republican National Congressional District of Illinois, Alderman Oscar A. Ettelson, Alderman Hugh Norris, and many of the Congressman Madden, all predict that it will be his favor, Tuesday, April 11; that he will be an comer, and that the honour which he is seeking fully bestowed upon him by the vast majority of Aboveground the Second Ward and his Congressions
champion of the rights of the commi-
ction for Committeeman of the Second
de to the Republican National Conven-
trict of Illinois, Alderman Oscar De-
Derman Hugh Norris, and many of the et-
tle Madden, all predict that it will be a
day, April 11; that he will be an easy
the honors which he is seeking will be
upon him by the vast majority of the
Second Ward and his Congressional De
The uncompromising champion of the rights of the common people, and candidate for re-election for Committeeman of the Second Ward and candidate for delegate to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois. Alderman Oscar DePriest, Hon. Samuel A. Ettelson, Alderman Hugh Norris, and many of the other steadfast friends of Congressman Madden, all predict that it will be a four-to-one shot, in his favor, Tuesday, April 11; that he will be an easy winner against all comers, and that the honors which he is seeking will be readily and cheerfully bestowed upon him by the vast majority of the Republican voters throughout the Second Ward and his Congressional District.
ier, head of John W. Eckhart and Co., cated at 311 N. Carpenter street; vice- of Chicago, who would make an ideal Illinois, and candidate for delegate-at-convention; to be voted for at the State day, April 11th.
the interest of the re-election of Hon. Thomas J. Healy for Ward Committeeman of the Thirtieth Ward.
There will be plenty of good things on hand to eat, free of charge.
Hon. Charles S. Deneen, Col. Franklin A. Denison, commanding the Illinois National Guards, Rev. W. S. Bradan, the eloquent pastor of Berean Baptist Church, Lawyer B. F. Moseley and Hon. Thomas J. Healy will be the leading speakers.
Mr. Healy and his host of friends and supporters feel that it is all over right now with him but the shouting and without any question about it, he will succeed himself as the Republican Committeeman of the Thirtieth Ward.
1910
rights of the common people, and can-
seman of the Second Ward and candi-
national Convention from the First
Alderman Oscar DePriest. Hon. Samuel
and many of the other steadfast friends
that it will be a four-to-one shot, in
the will be an easy winner against all
he is seeking will be readily and cheer-
est majority of the Republican voters
in Congressional District.
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MB. PATRICK J. CAEB
One of the active and hustling Trustees of the Sanitary
who stands close to the people, and Democratic cand
mitteeman of the Fifth Ward, to be voted for Tues
One of the active and hustling Trustees of the Sanitary District of Chicago
‘who stands close to the people, and Democratic candidate for Ward Com
mitteeman of the Fifth Ward, to be voted for Tuesday, April 11th.
THE BROAD AX
‘Wan preasigate and ot all thmes upheld
the ue prinstpios of Bumowreey, bet
Cettatics, ‘Protestants, Puteste, Intdels
Mngt Ferers, Beyebiiaems, or anyone cise
eam bere hate ony, os long a0 their lew
cenge ie proper and seapenstbiiity 1s Sxed
The Breed Ax te a mowspaper whoes
stettem 1s beend enough for cll, ove
Gatatng the olitertal sight to speak it
own in,
Leent commantentions will seesive atten
(teas Write only om one side of the paper.
Subscriptions mast be paid in edvance
Advertising rates made known on epplt
cation.
‘Address all sommenientions to
THE BROAD AX
4018 ST. LAWRENOE AVE, CHICAGO, ILL.
MONE WENTWORTH 2597.
JULIUS F. TAYLOR, Béiter ang Publisher
a
Matered a2 Sesend-Clase Matter Aug. 18
190%, af the Pest Qflee at Chicage, Tlinels,
ender Ast of March &, 1879.
AUTHORIZED AGENTS AND COE-
RESPONDENTS FOR THE BEOAD
ax.
L. W. Washington, 5465 Kimbark
avenue.
B. W. Fitts, 3315 8. State strect.
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.
2 story brick cottage, cement base-
ment, ‘steam heat, large enclosed rear
porch. Terms. 6528 St. Lawrence Ave.
a
ez
‘
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ALDERMAN JOSEPH HIGGINS SMITH.
Re-elected to the City Council in an Easy Walk from the Fourteenth Ward.
PaGE TWO
FOR SALE.
NOTES ON RACIAL PROGRESS.
Compiled by the National Negro Busi-
ness League.
The Atlanta Mutual Insurance Asso-
ciation, with home office in Atlanta,
Georgia, has been admitted into the
State of Arkansas. The chief officers
of the Association are A. F. Herndon,
President, and T. K. Gibson, Secretary.
The Nashville Negro Trade Boosters
of Nashville, Tennessee, are making
elaborate preparations for their spring
‘Trade Week Campaign in the interest
of Negro business enterprises. The
campaign is to be conducted during the
week of May Ist.
In accordance with the suggestion
offered in Business League Talk No. 3,
entitled ‘Co-operative Competition,”?
the Colored business men of Pensacols,
Florida, have organized a Merchants’
Association, in connection with the
League work, for the purpose of regu-
lating credits, and extending their
business among the Colored people.
Already they have adopted the system
of giving prize coupons for increasing
patronage. A Merchants’ Association
has also been organized by the Colored
business men of Durham, North Caro-
Tina.
A movement has been started in
Augusta, Georgia, for the purpose of
organizing a Local Negro Business
League. Mr. E. G. Spaulding, Branch
Manager of the North Carolina Mutual
Association of Durham, North Caro
lina, is taking the leading part
Hon. Nat Washer, a prominent white
business man of San Antonio, Texas,
was the principal speaker at the mass
meeting held in that city on Mareb
28th by the San Antonio Local Negro
Business League. Mr. Washer’s re
marks dealt with Business Develop:
ment. -
‘The St. Luke Hospital of Columbia,
South Carolina, of which Dx, Matilda
Evans is owner and chief physician,
has been compelled to move into s
larger building recently purchased. Dr.
Evans gives employment to more than
a dozen young men and women of the
acaa
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 8, 1916.
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‘The Nashville Negro Board of Trsde|~~ Old Time Witch«
of which Mr. A. N. Johnson is the| Jane Wenham was ini
president has been designated by the| Hertfordshire assizes on 3
city authorities and the White Com- Se with ie
mercial Club as the organization to dis-| form of a cat,” under
tcibete oupstles and fends to the Cel-| (be act of 1604, repented
ered people who ware rendered home-| DTCwcitor® Wie oo Oo
less following the disastrous fire in that} harm of Ann Thorn, a sei
city a short while ago. The Nashville| teen years old, but this
Globe has donated paid-up subserip-} towed. although evidence
tions to all of its subscribers who were| at the trial to show wh:
fire sufferers. been done the victim 1
gente crooked pins and by plac!
cats’ hair in Ann Thorn
‘At the last meeting of the National} how the prisoner-had cau
Negro Press Association, the members| of some cattle simply
of this organization endorsed the cam- trcteosinipabogy
‘paign for. the Booker T. Washington) jie Powell passed
‘Memorial Fund and pledged their sup-| jeath, but took steps to q
port to those who are in charge of the| gict. Wenham's prosecut
campaign among the Colored people. ‘an account of the case, b
ASKS INDICTMENT OF CLOVER
ON RISK FRAUD CHARGES.
State Contends Widows and Shopgirls
Lost Savings in Defunct Insurance
Firm
The April grand jury began an in-
vestigation Wednesday into the affairs
of the bankrupt Royal Life Insurance
company, the stockholders of Whieh are
said to be shy something in the neigh-
borhood of $200,000.
Assistant State’s Attorney William
H. Duval asked the jurors to return in-
dictments against Alfred Clover, -presi-
dent of the concern, and John W. Sin-
gleton, his secretary. Clover, said to
be known also as Alexander de Cloger,
is the man who told his associates that
he started a few years ago as an or-
phan newsboy, started the insurance
company on a shoestring, and ‘got
away with it.’”
‘Washerwomen, shopgirls, and widows
are said to have been among those who
turned over their savings, most of
which, according to Mr. Duval, went
into the two officials’ pockets. Her
man Krumdick, alderman elect in the
Eleventh ward, was “‘stung”? for twen-
ty shares.
It is said that some $445,000 of stock
sales in the Royal Life Insurance Com
pany has meited sway in a mysterious
manner.
‘Many Colored men and women turned
over many thousands of dollars of their
hard earned money to President Clover,
0 that he would be able to blow it in
for high living, simply because he i
a White gentleman who blew into this
town from away down South who never
had any use for the Colored people
while residing in that section of the
country. —Editor.
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HON. PETER REINSBERG.
The most popular German-American
citizen in this city or Cook County;
president of the Board of County
Commissioners and candidate for del-
egate to the Democratic National
Convention, from the Tenth Congres
sional District of Ilinois.
FLY RULES.
Keep your own premises clear of fly-
breeding, decomposing animal or vege
table matter; have garbage cans care
fully covered and manure piles pro
tected, and all refuse frequently re
moved.
Keep an eye on your neighbor’s plac
‘and habits.
Sereen your house early in the season
and keep screens up until after fly
time.
Swat every fly in the house, especi
ally in the kitehen and dining room o
poison them with formaldehyde, on
drachm to a pint of water and milk.
Keep fies from all food and from
the sick room.
Keep your toilets and sewers in or
der.
Burn all refuse from the table.
Allow no waste paper or decaying
matter to accumulate about your house
Keep an eye on neighboring vacan
lots for dead animals.
Time now to begin to think abou
planting things. Did you have am;
flowers or vegetables last yeart If not
why not do a little back and front yar:
gardening this spring and summer? I
would be a fine thing if all the vacan
ground in Chicago, including many bac}
yards, could be planted with flowers
fruits and vegetables; flowers to beau
tity our homes and cheer our hearts
fruits and vegetables to feed and nour
ish our bodies; and finally, to give u
health afd strength as a result of wor!
‘and exercise in God's outdoors.
Old Time Witchoraft.
Jane Wenham was indicted at the
Hertfordshire assizes on March 4, 1712
for “conversing with the devil in the
form of a cat,” under the provisions of
the act of 1604, repealed in 1736. Her
prosecutors wished to have her also in
dicted for practicing witchcraft to the
barm of Ann Thorn, a servant girl six.
teen years old, but this was not al
Towed, although evidence was produced
at the trial to show what injury had
been done the victim by means of
crooked pins and by placing cakes and
cats’ hair in Ann Thorn’s pillow and
how the prisoner-had caused the deat
of some cattle simply by walking
through a turnip field.
The jury brought her in “guilty,” an¢
Justice Powell passed sentence of
death, but took steps to quash the ver
dict. Wenham’s prosecutors publishe<
‘an account of the case, but their argu
,ments were pulverized by scientific
men. Jane Wenham herself was liber
ated and taken under the protection of
Colonel Plummer, who gave her a cot
tage, and we are told by Dr. Hutchin
son that in 1720 the whole country was
Tully convinced of her innocence.—Lon
don Spectator.
‘Tee Giecen ot 0
“Life becomes, as the stolcs more
than once tell us, like a play which
{is acted or a game played with coun.
ters. Viewed from the outside, these
counters are valueless, but to those
engaged in the game their importance
is paramount. What really and ulti
mately matters is that the game shall
be played as it should be played. God.
the eternal dramatist, has cast you
for some part in his drama and hands
you the role. It may turn out tha
you are cast for a triumphant king
It may be for a slave who dies of tor
ture. What does that matter to the
good actor? He can play either part
His only business is to accept the role
given him and to perform it well. * * *
Success or failure is a thing he can de
termine without stirring a hand. It
hardly interests him. What interest:
him is that one thing which he cannot
determine—the action of your free and
conscious will.—Gilbert Murray.
Kines and Shevina.
‘The classic case of a king who knew
better than to let anybody else shave
him is that of Dionysius the elder, ty-
rant of Syracuse, who appears to have
been unable to shave himself, for he
is said to have resorted to the un-
comfortable device of singeing off his
beard with hot walnut shells, says the
London Chronicle. We may suspect
that Napoleon's was another case of
the kind. Rogers asked Talleyrand
whether Napoleon shaved himseif.
“Yes,” replied Talleyrand; “one born to
be a king has some one to shave him,
but they who acquire kingdoms shave
themselves.” That way of putting it
pleasantly emphasizes the practical su-
Periority of the parvenu to the help.
ess, spoiled child of heredity, but pru-
dence probably entered into the mat.
ter also, if Taileyrand’s statement was
correct.
ii ian
A male fish which hatches the young
of its mate is the Chromis paterfamil-
fas. It is found in the lake of Tiberias,
Palestine. Strange to say, this indus
trious fish hatches its young in its
mouth. When the female has spawned
im the sand the male approaches and
draws the eggs into bis gills, where
they remain until hatched, when they
struggle out of their confinement into
the parent's mouth. As many as 200
ferfect youn are sometimes found in
the mouth of un adult male. How the
fish manages to feed itself without
swallowing its young isa mystery. The
grown fish is about seven inches long
and one and three-quarters wide. Its
back is olive creen, shot with blue, and
‘the belly is silver white, marked with
green and blue.
Reason For Complaint.
_ SI keep the best bread,” said a cer.
tain baker the other dd} to a poor
fellow who complained of the inferior
quality of the article he had purchased
of him the day before.
“1 do not doubt it,” replied the cus-
tomer. |
“Then why do you complain?” asked
the baker.
“Because 1 would suggest that you
sell the best bread and keep the bad,”
‘was the reply.—Pittsburgh Telegraph.
eg
Some Evidence.
“Jou say that preparation will make
the hair grow?” asked the thin haired
man of the druggist.
“Why, say,” came from the drug
man, “I know a customer who took
the cork out of a bottle of that stuff
with his teeth. and now he’s got a hair
Up.”—Yonkers Statesman.
| een ies Cialis
“It is all right to pat yourself on
the back occasionally.” said the dis
penser of sage advice.
“Yes? said the player up.
“But don't forget to call yourself
@own when you need it, my boy.”—
Pittsburgh Post
in Wis tin De
“Ma,” queried the small daughter of
the boarding housekeeper, “what shall
I do with these basting threads?”
“Give them to me and I will stir them
tuto the frosting for the cocoanut
cake,” said her mother.—Youth’s Oom-
panton. So
Lively Cheese.
| John—I'll bring you a fork, sir. The
Customer—What for? Jobn—The ca-
membert, sir. The Customer—A fork’s
no good. Bring a revolver.—Exchange.
Bincerity’s own realm is one’s secret
ehamber; strong bere, man is strong
every where.—Saigo. 4
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ALDERMAN HUGH NORRIS.
Re-elected to the City Council for the Third Time from the Second Ward
Talks on
HEALTH,
_ CLEANLINESS,
PROPER LIVING,
SANITATION, ETC.
Dr. W. A. DRIVER
3300 So. State Street
Phode Douglas 3617
SAPETY FIRST.
To be safe follow nature. Nature
is @ good guide, the best guide, the
safest. When in doubt play trumps,
that ds to say when in doubt about
the proper course, follow nature
Natural law is the highest law, the
breaking of natural law will always
demand the penalty, sooner ot “later.
It is a simple matter of cause and
effect. There is no escape when na.
ture’s law has been broken. Escapes
‘are only apparent not real. The penal:
ty must be paid.
“In our present civilization there
seems to be a concerted effort to get
‘as far as possible from nature and the
law of nature. The result must be
deformity, abnormality of various de-
solution or death. Be natural to be
safe. It is natural to think much; it
is natural to act in aceord with care
fol and complete thought.
Nature gave air and water for ow
use. Be natural and use air and water
abundantly, if safety first is worth
while. The night air is as natural a:
the day air, therefore use it as yo
would the day air. In other words
keep the windows in the sleeping apart
ment open at the bottom and the toy
simultaneously night and day. The
fresh air_is the best tonic; it is na
‘ture’s tonic par excellence. Water is
SPECIAL NOTICE
PHONE CHANGED.
THE EMANUEL JAOKSON UN.
DERTAKING COMPANY, 2959-2961
State St., begs to inform its patrons
and friends, that our ‘‘Telephone”’
bas been changed to ‘‘CALUMET
6164.’ Automatic remains same—
71-629, Prompt service day or night.
DAN M. JACKSON, Pres.
GEORGE T. KERSEY, See.
Wax matches, so called; are made by
drawing strands of fine cotton thread,
twenty or thirty at a time, through
melted stearin with a small admixture
of paraffin. The wax hardens quickly
upon the threads, and the long ta-
pers thus produced are smoothed and
rounded by pulling them through fron
Plates perforated with holes of the de-
sired size. Finally the tapers are cut
into match lengths and dipped.
Social Distinctions.
“What train do you take coming into
town in the morning?”
“I used to take the Pinochle express
at 7:44, but since I became a member
of the firm I've been traveling on the
Bridge Whist limited, which leaves at
823."—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
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nature’s solvent; it is the best sol-
vent. It is the element indispensible;
it is the best climinant. It is abso-
lutely natural; it is safe. Bathe often,
bathe every day, the entire body. Be
safe. Cleanliness is best, safest. Re-
member safety first.
‘Many persons are in a hurry; they
consider it a light matter to interfere
with nature and nature’s processes.
Nature is the greatest power in the
known world. We do not lightly
“fool”? with power. Why fool with
nature, the greatest demonstrable pow-
er? Why not agree with so potent a
force? Why not agree and practice
safety first?
There has been too little co-opera-
tion with nature, hence there has been
too little practice of safety first. That
brings too much abnormality, misery,
ete. Interfering with nature means
often immediate sepsis, blood poison-
ing, hemorrhage, ultimately, it always
means disease of various type, prema-
ture decay, consumption and often tu-
bereulosis. Interruption of natural
processes is extremely dangerous. The
disorders that follow such a foolish
procedure are too numerous to men-
tion.
Obey the behests of nature and stick
to the policy of safety first. Follow
nature and retain your beauty and
health and live to enjoy three score
and ten years.
Explained.
“Our air mattresses,” said the deal-
er, “are filled in the months of April
and May. That accounts for their re-
markable resilient qualities.”
“Is the air of those months better
than others?”
“They are the spring months, you
know.”—Exchange.
Remembered Him.
Unele George—Come here, Willie.
Don’t you know who Iam? Willie—
You bet I do! You are ma’s brother.
who stayed here two months one time
and never offered to pay a cent for
board. Oh, yes; I've heard pa speak of
you often.—indianapolis News.
Argument Spoiled.
She—Too many men expect their
wives to run their homes on practically
nothing. They forget that no one can
make bricks without straw. He—My
wife does—out of flour.—Stray Stories.
Consoling Her.
Bess—I sometimes wish I might see
myself as others see me. Nell—Ob.
you poor dear! Why, you just coulln't
believe your eyes!—Browning’s Maza-
ohee.
— es a a ee — ee ee
ee EN ene E TS es ee = ; Se
a eg, re 8, 1916. PAGE THRER
SS oe
| pa es ans
SPENT FORTUNE | rar sme weoonce J] RULES FOR NAVY'S | [me onssy rose _] ABOUT GARNISHING | m= 22a,
TOTRAIN ORPHANS || =. srss-.x= |) CIVILIAN CRUISE!] sservsszzz":2c! || une o me soos Tat Mate eT
| nm I, Fashioned of white net ruffles and a Feed Ritractiee: st ap say, es oe
Washington Teacher Alded | s"so'u*sua's acne, = mer | Battleships Will B0 Used In|=Siorer:se'cs"ssix"as Set | THEY APPEAL TO THE: EVE.|‘Shect mesmo mae
Those Who Sought Education, | soosenoia” secctetnct™"s, tome of Summer Training, ae a enae eres eee
Sought =pone Sas _ #: Thyssen Stn pae
LIVED MODESTLY TO DO AGT] Sc!%,°*, m=27. ax entertainment | COURSE TO BE FOUR WEEKS Hon—Garnishing Often Turne a De- | niture te without exception European,
Used Income of High Schoo! Instruo-
tor In Moderate Manner, and With
Money He Earned by Writing He
Was Able to Educate Eighteen Stu-
dents.
Everett, Wash.—F, D. Mack, teacher
in the Central school, bas spent about
$40,000 in educating eighteen students,
seventeen boys and one girl, during the
last sixteen years, according to a story
he reluctantly told a newspaper repre.
sentative.
Living on his school salary in a mod-
est way both in Minnesota, his former
home, aud in Washington, he has earn-
ed the money to send students through
universities by writing short stories
and magazine articles. He has paid
‘out between $2.000 and $3,000 on each
of his “children.”
Some of the youngsters were or-
phans. and some bad one parent, but
all were eager to learn and were handi-
capped by lack of money.
‘The thirteen boys who are allve are
all actively engaged in the professions
in which Mr. Mack has educated them.
Two are druggists. one being in St
Paul and the other in Los Angeles.
Two are instructors in the University
of Minnesota, where they were grad-
uated. Que teaches mathematics, and
the other is an instructor in German.
This latter young man plans to be a
physician and in 1914 married a girl
who wished to go to Germany to get
her master’s degree, so he and his
bride sailed for Germany to continue
their studies. only to be turned back by
the beginning of the war.
Mr. Mack sent him through Normal
school, the University of Minnesota
and Harvard, where he received his
master’s degree,
A young man who chose to be a
broker received his education at the
University of Tilinois. He started out
to be an architect, but ebanged his
mind and took a commercial course.
He was graduated four years ago and
1s now in Minneapolis engaged in the
lumber brokerage business. He is the
best money maker of the “family.” In
his four years out of college he has
made $10,000.
A mining engineer who was educat-
ed at the University of Minnesota 1s
now working in a mine at Butte, Mont.
‘The banker received a thorough com-
mercial education, and then Mr. Mack
set him up in business In a bank in
Elzin, N. D. Mr. Mack says that if
any of his boys wants to start in busi-
ness he always gives them enough
money to begin. He recently bought
an eizhty acre farm for one of them.
A dentist lives in Chicago. He had
four years at the University of Val-
paraiso, Mr. Mack says this boy mar-
ried a rich unese.
One boy who studied to be a lawyer
jot his health after his graduation
from the Ueiversity of Minnesota law
school, so could not practice, and is
now emploved as chief of the Minne-
sora state fish and game commission.
uh headquarters at St. Paul.
Self educated and quiet, Mr. Mack
would not be thought responsible for
one of the most unusual philanthro-
Hes in the world.
NO PA'NTER’S COLIC FOR HIM.
ep Yor oo
Elwood, N. J—Robert W. Hunt, a 1e
Ured college instructor, received a let
fer recently from a neighboring town
containing a bill for 40 cents for “tint”
Purchased by “Mrs. Hunt.” Hunt is 8
good lookin hachelor with a steady in-
cone. and the inquisitive element of
Elwood at once interpreted the post-
office Intletin in terms of leap yeer
Possibilities,
i quiet the buzzing gossip, Hunt
hus issued the following statement:
“We have liad several offers of may-
tase, ad one or two ladies have as-
sumed we were engaged without mak-
inz uy offer, and it fs with fear and
trembling we pass each day of this
Fear. which is divisible by four. How:
eves, when Mrs Hunt does arrive she
shail as woiture painted ber, with
ere he heavens, with cheeks
Use the cose and with lips lke the
daicp of crushed strawberry. She shall
have vo geod of ‘tint’ When we want
& li oe don't propose to ‘mess
~ Bele et three conte of paint to
lace teen ieee ee
‘Ore ‘ity, Ore—Peter Brevio
feel io three, au Ttallan, was treed
With the ct of bloodhounds arrested
And browstt back to Oregon City and
commis) ty the State Hospital For
the Issue Lrevio Hyed'in a hollow
fee. sul his diet consisted ‘of roots,
bertics ov what food he could find
(und seizhboring farmhouses. He
Stole 0 ax from a farmhouse and
Passel such of his thme chopping
own 1 \ number of men of the
district ierermined to arrest Brevlo
Aud went to his tree home. ‘The Italian
TL away. Dogs were then put om his
trai,
FOR. SPRING WEDDINGS.
—————
One Attractive Way to
Give the Bride a Shower,
‘With spring already upon us, the
thought of spring weddings is now
im the air. This is the ripe season for
Bnen showers and other showers o!
household necessaries given te the
Bride by all her friends. The gixt whe
is to be married in April will be the
recipient of many an entertainment
before she 18 safely wedded, but she
‘Will enjoy nothing more than a shower
if her friends have any novel ideas or
the subject.
‘The chief point in a shower must al-
‘ways be its surprise; otherwise it
‘would not be a shower. If you are
{Binking of giving such an affair fo
some friend who is soon to be married
be sure that every detail is kept « se
‘qret from her. That is half the fan.
A novel idea for a linen shower car
be executed in the following way: In-
Yite the bride to be to spend an even-
fag at your home with a few old
‘frends. “See that she arrives the frst
and is comfortably seated and chat-
ting when the other guests begin te
arrive. Of course the latter are in the se-
ret or else there would be no shower.
Each guest must come in carrying an
umbrella. The bride may not notice
the first one, but she will certainly re-
mark before long that every one who
@nters carries an umbrella. She will
Brobably ask before the last one ar
Hives if it is raining, in which case the
guest questioned should answer, “No,
Dut it looks like a shower.”
When all the guests have arrived
each one must sin possession of her
own umbrella in case it has been laid
aside on her entrance. At a given
signal, which should be some such re
mark from the hostess as “Did you say
it looked lke a shower?" the guests
should all open their umbrellas with
the answer, “It certainly does.”
From the stec! ribs of each umbrella
should be suspended by a string the
Parcel holding the picce of linen which
the guest intends to give the bride.
Any big bundles, like a tablecloth, will
make the umbrella « bit bulky when
@osed, but in such case the guest
Will have to smux;!e her umbrella in
@mnoticed. But most linen pieces can
De done up in such small parcels that
they can easily be concealed in a closed
umbrella.
At the signal to open the parcels will
afl hang down Ly their strings. The
guests must then hold their umbrellas
over the bride-to-le's head. The host-
ess provides ler with scissors to eut
Gown her various bundles, and the
paint of the shower is made apparent.
AN UNUSUAL MODEL.
A Black Satin Hat to Go With Your
Spring Suit.
This smart hat with a close fitting
Brim has a flat crown topped with a
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Blackbird. ‘The lines are good, and the
tam effect is becoming to many types
@f women. The veil is a hexagonal
Mesh with « floral scroll pattern.
A Hygiene Note.
When a child begins with a cold tao-
Jate it from the other children in the
house and do not let it attend schoo!
until it is better. Not only is a cold
contagious in itself, but in chiléren a
old is often the beginning of @ eon-
tagious disease, and it Is not fatr to
ether children to let them come tm con-
tact with « cold until it is proved to
be nothing serious.
“There is no better gargle oF nose
@oucbe for a bezinning inflammation
than salt and water. Of course the s0-
Tution must be weaker for the nose.
Rose douches should be taken onky on
‘8 doctor’s advice, as the memorane of
the nose is very delicate and the treat-
ment must necessarily.vary with the
child. Never let the child go out of
@oors af'er spraying nose and throat.
Roxbury Cakes.
One-fourth cupful of butter, one-nall
‘eupful sour milk, one teaspoonful ein
Ramon, two ees, one-half cupful o'
raisins, onc-half cupful brown sugar
‘ene-half cup/ul corn sirup, one and one
half cup‘uis flour, one teaspoonful of
soda, on»half cupful English walnuts
Cream butter. add sugar and beaten
egg yolks. Mix and sift dry ingredients
and add to first mixture alternately
with the corn sirup and the sour milk.
Ada egg whites beaten dry, chopped
raisins a! nuts. Bake in small pans.
This wil’ make elzhteen to twenty lit-
fle cakec
RULES-FOR NAVY'S
CIVILIAN CRUISE
Battleships Will Be Used In
| Summer Training,
COURSE TO BE FOUR WEEKS
Those Enlisting For Trip Will Have
to Pay Traveling Expenses to Sea-
board and Deposit $30—Starting
Points Will Be at Coast Citiee—En-
roliments Close June 1.
Washington.—The navy's civilian
cruise, which is expected to do for thé
navy what the Plattsburg training
‘camp did for the army, will begin Aug.
15 and last until Sept. 12, according to
an announcement made by Secretary
Daniels’ department.
Battleships of the Atlantic reserve
fleet will be used for the cruise, it is
stated, and the starting points will be
Boston, Newport, New York, Philadel-
phia, Norfolk and possibly Charleston.
Civilians enlisting for the cruise will
have to pay their traveling expenses
to the seaboard and return and also a
Geposit of $30 to cover the expenses
of the cruise.
The detailed regulations issued by
the department, which will govern the
eruise, have been tentatively adopted
‘and in part follows:
“Recruits for the cruise to be eltt-
zens of the United States between the
ages of nineteen and forty-five, and
must be able to pass a prescribed physt-
¢al examination. They must be able
to demonstrate to the recruiting officer
that they possess some nautical knowl
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ans man
edge or have had some technical tratn-
ing which would fit them for service
in the navy.
“The applicants who qualify will be
required to sign an application blank
for enrollment. In this application the
Tecruit obligates himself to hold him-
self during the cruise subject to the
navy regulations, obey all authorized
orders aud perform such work on board
ship as regularly assigned.
“The objects of the training cratse
are to help equip properly equipped
men to act as reserves in time of war
or national emergency by giving them
‘& course of training on board warships
under naval officers and naval condi-
tions.
“The total expenses of the cruise,
‘outside of the cost of transportation to
the point of embarking and for return-
ing home, will be about $30. Upon re-
Porting on board the ship to which as-
signed each recruit will depostt $30.
which will cover the cost of his sub-
aistence and the necessary clothing
@utfit. Should the actual cost of sub-
aistence and clothing be less than this
amount the difference will be refunded.
“Upon reporting on board the civilian
elothing of recruits will be turned over
for storage, and they will be issued a
sufficient outfit of uniform clothing.
When all recriits are on board the
ahips will leave their respective naval
districts and cruise for a period of four
Weeks, during which time the recruits
‘will be given practical instruction tn
‘the duties required on board ship.
“A portion of each day will be given
to the study of special subjects, which
‘Will be largely optional, so that those
who have an aptitude for or knowledge
¢f such subjects as navigation, signal-
tng, radio work, steam or electrical en-
gineering, etc, may have an opportu-
nity to specialize. Boat drill will be
given and landings made, and recruits
will be taught the manugl of arms and
military formations.
“During the final week of the cruise
the ships will return to the naval dis-
tricts whence they came, and, in addi-
tion to the courses of instruction, re-
eruits will be given a general idea of
their own naval district and its defen-
sive problems. During the final week
‘also residents of the district who own
yachts or motorboats which would be
‘Tseful as auxiliaries in time of war
‘Will be given an opportunity to operate
fm conjunction with the ships.
“Enrollments will be closed on June
1, and no application will be recelv-
ed after that date. Application blanks
‘Will be furnished to all who desire
them by the navy recruiting officers
‘at the various recruiting stations
thronghont the country.”
THE DRESSY FROCK.
How Fussiness May Be Subdued
to Good Silhouette After All.
Fashioned of white net ruffles and a
scant piece of figured crepe de chine,
eernflower blue and white, this pretty
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PICTURESQE MODEL
spring gown may be easily copied. The
seven ruilles are edged with narrow
lace, and the peplum of the waist
folds into an elongated drape forming
front panel. A bertha collar finishes
the surplice. which takes a crushed
girdle of cornflower blue taffeta,
TABLE LINEN.
Hints About the Keeping of Your Fa-
~vorite Fad.
“Table lineh must be properly han-
led in the laundry if you would have
it retain its freshness,” says Marie.
Strong bleaches must never be used on
fine table linens. Of course the linen
4s often badly spotted and needs to be
‘leaned in some way, but boiling water
Temoves coffee spots, cold water re-
moves cocoa stains and sunshine re-
moves many more spots. When strong-
er agents must be used they should be
applied and removed by intelligent
hands.
They should be allowed to remain on
the spots just long enough to eradicate
them and then rinsed thoroughly out
with clear water, for if they remain
‘on too long they remove not only spots.
but pieces of the linen.
For ffuit stains pour boiling water
through them while the stains are
damp. if possible. If they dry on rab
them with lard and put through the
usual washing process. Some old fash-
foned housewives lave theft table Iin-
en dipped in buttermilk to white it
The linen is allowed to remain tn the
buttermilk for x day or two, if meces-
sary. and is then thoroughly rinsed in
cool, clear water and later in warm
water.
_ Always dry linen out of doors in
the sunshine! If possible have a little
bleaching green of grass. Table Mnen
must be quite damp when it is froned,
and it must be ironed until it is per-
fectly dry. Napkins should be froned
on both sides and a tablecloth, too, to
give it the hest appearance.
Physical Fitness Woman's Big Asset.
No woman nowadays can afford not
to be well.
Ill heaith—even mere “delicacy,” with
no positive manifestation of disease—
costs too much, There is the obvious,
direct expense of doctors’ bills and
medicines. But indirectly you pay a
much higher price for not being well.
If you are a waxe earner your lost
time and enery. due to a lack of phys-
{eal strenzth. must also be computed
in lost dollars.
Poor health will interfere constantly
with your so ial zood times. It will
mar whatever heauty you may possess
sooner tha any other cause. If you
are a wife and mother illness and
weakness will interfere with your du-
tles and the comfort of those dear to
you. Whatever your station in life
You will find that the role of invalid
‘and weakling is no longer fashionable
‘or popular. For awhile you will have
‘the sympathy of your friends, but the
best of them will be bored with you
sooner or later. They can't help it. A
worship of physical fitness is im the
air, and instead of whining and pitying
yourself yon must bend all your ener-
gles to the task of becoming well.
<7 Cinnamon Rolls.
When it ts desired to mold bread
for baking take one loaf on a molding
Doard. roll out to nearly a quarter of
an inch thick. spread quickly with but-
ter, brown sugar. white sugar and cin-
mamon. Rol! up and cut off one and a
half inch pieces. Have considerable
melted fat in a dripping pan and dip
the top of each piece into the fat. Al
low them to rise until after the rest of
the bread is baked, so that the rolls
may be very licht. They should be
baked from twenty minutes to half
an hour.
ABOUT GARNISHING
Some of Pe That Make
Food Attractive.
THEY APPEAL TO THE EYE.
‘There Are Two Sorts of Trimming,
‘One Fer Flavor and One For Decora-
tlon—Garnishing Often Turns = De-
‘epleed Dish Into a Favorite.
‘With spring spleeniness upon us, it is
weil for housewtves to bait appetites.
‘ery often a dish may be delicious to
taste, Dut unattractive to the eye, and
the eye judges it before the palate
Goes, So make it attractive to the eye
s¢ you woud have it successful dish
| are two sorts of garnishes—
‘those that add flavor as well as decora-
‘tion and those that are only decorative
and do not add flavor. Mushrooms, fo:
Mnstance, served with a ragout of meat,
‘2d to both appearance and taste. A
‘eign green leaf under half a musk-
melon adds only to appearance. This
‘second class of garnishes need not be
served when they are used on the
‘serving dish.
Parsley is perhaps the most usefu
garnish. In sprigs with cold meat,
minced with soup and vegetables and
salads, it is always fresh in color and
‘tempting in taste.
“Mushrooms are useful because, can
‘ned, they always can be kept on hand.
And so can peas. A mound of canned
peas served in the middle of an Irish
stew makes it far daintier than 3
mound of plain botled potatoes. Pota
toes, however, can be used for garnish.
tag. Scoop raw potatoes with a round
‘scoop and boil them. Serve them with
melted butter and parsley for a gar
mish, or force soft, mashed potatoe:
through a stiff paper cone and brown
fn the oven, or fry brown smal
rounds of potatoes, or use French fried
potatoes, and potato garnish is suitable
‘with cold meat.
Green and red peppers, too, can be
‘sed to garnish vegetables, meats and
salads. An egg salad is much im.
proved if it is dotted with bits of red
Depper. Minced green pepper or shred
ded green pepper adds both taste and
looks to potato and cabbage salad.
Beets and carrots can be cut in ring:
or stars, cooked tender very carefully
and then used to garnish substantia
meat dishes.
Barberries are one of the purely or
mamental garnishes. Holly, too, car
be used in season, and bits of ever
green can often be called on to helt
make a simple dish attractive.
Remember that the garnishing of «
dish will often change it from some
thing not liked to a favorite with the
family.
BEDROOM SLIPPERS.
Various Nether Comforts That May
Also Be Good Looking.
It is possible to have attractive bed:
room slippers which match your neg
ligee, or at least are in accord with it.
‘There are endless varieties of “mules”
in gay colored silk or satin, edged with
silk cord and decorated with tiny rose
buds. This is the kind of work that
the expert needlewoman enjoys, but be
sides such dainty trifles more sensible
everyday ones can be bought which do
not clash with one’s beauty loving
ideas.
Kid slippers, with low, comfortable
jReels, may be bought in pinks, blues
‘and browns. Very simflar to them are
the felt styles, whose instep is deco-
Fated with a cut out design of the felt
over a contrasting color. =
White kid well covered with a Japa-
nese embossed design are shown. Most
luxurious are the slippers of bright
‘quilted satin, whose ribbon rosettes
hold a tiny’ rhinestone.
/ Made with only a toe covering, but
minus the heels attached to “mules,”
‘are other models, some covered with
white flannel, decorated with a satin
bow; others, to be used en route to the
bath, are made of checked toweling,
the edges bound with corduroy and the
sole being very woolly.
NEW SILVERWARE.
‘Two Pieces Any Housewife Will Wel-
come In Her Dining Room.
‘This cake basket, which Is sterling.
bas a new feature in its graceful han-
@e. The pattern ts one easily kept
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bright and clean, matching the cas-
serole, which is of pretty blue ware.
For her who enjoys serving meats in
the dishes they are cooked in this cas-
serole will make an attractive wedding
att. eae ae
Matting.
| Bub every two or three months with
salt water, lukewarm, and Gry quickly
‘with a clean cloth.
‘A Shabby Royal Palace,
‘The Persian royal palace is & mest
Unattractive place. The courts are Sil
ed with painted figures of cast tron in a
kind of operatic Romeo's costume, and
with boys of gilt tron offering vermilion
cups to gilt eagles. The tanks are stag-
nant and shabby, the gardens negiect-
e@. The rooms are horrible even for
one of those monuments of bad taste
called royal palaces; the walls are eov-
ered with mirrors, and a decoration
made of small pieces of mirror set in
elaborate patterns, the effect remind
ing one of 2 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 Burope arouse enthusiasm
—not so much as a fine carpet. Neither
the famous peacock throne—so long er-
Toneously 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 have been broken up and sold
tm Europe by the present government
—"From Moscow to the Persian Gulf.”
Cena OR
“Is that the officer who arrested
you?” his honor inquired of Mose Ham-
fbel, an old negro whitewash artist, ar
Tested for assault.
“I can't rekerlect,” answered the pets-
oner.
“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. “Ian't that face fa-
miliar?”
‘The darky squinted long and scowt
ingly at his 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
x easy €2 yo’ kin on him, kaze he got
@ wife and fo’ chillun.”"—Case and
Comment.
Cotatenetion of Gin Guna.
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 bas an
extreme range of twenty-five miles and
an effective range of twelve miles.
‘There fs 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 has to
undergo eighteen or twenty machin-
ings. And all the medley of mechan-
fsm 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 fs 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 580
machinings on 280 parts are necessary
Defore the weapon fs ready for use,
‘The Finest Street In the World.
| “Truly. New York is the unbelieva-
ble city. as I have called it.” said 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
1s 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
ft, saying the correct things in the
guidebook about -it| Here the guide
book says nothing. Broadway, to those
who ‘can see. is the finest street im the
world.”—New York World.
A Country of Earthquakes.
Japan ts pecullarly the vietim of ele
mental forces. ‘The only satisfaction
its people cen derive from living in a
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 selsmie and
volcanic agency which has elevated
whole districts above the ocean by
means of repeated eruptions.
Cores.
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 flelds and also
to have fixed laws, the meaning of
which is that laws originated with the
settled state known as agriculture.
‘A Hard Question.
Modern Maiden—I wish advice. O14
Lady—Certainly, my dear. What is it?
Modern Maiden—Shall I marry a man
whose tastes are-the opposite of mine
and quarrel! with him, or shall I marry
a man whose tastes are the same as
mine and tire of him?
Laws,
‘The laws of a country must be Ike
a large river and not Ike a small
itch. Men do not fall in a river be
cause ft is remarkably wide and deep,
while they often fall into a ditch be-
cause it 18 so narrow and shallow.—
Kyuso.
Bad Arguments,
The best way of answering a bad ar
gument is not to stop it, but let tt go
on {ts course until ft overlaps the
boundaries of common sense.—Sytney
Smith.
Mot Eternal.
Soulful Youth (at the piano)—Do you
sing “Fotever ud Forever?" Matter
of Fact Maiden—No; I stop for meals.
—Erebange.
Many of the Wisest Politicians Contend that Mayor William Hale Thompson Come Out at the Little End of the Horn at the Aldermanic Contest or Election Last Tuesday
Many of the Hale Th
the Aldo
HUFIELD 82
HON. ISAAC NEWTON POWELL
Ex-City Treasurer of Chicago; successful banker and stock prominent leaders of the Republican party, warm from Americans, who will, on Tuesday, April 11th, be elec man of the 7th Ward.
Chicago; successful banker and stock
ers of the Republican party, warm fr
will, on Tuesday, April 11th, be elec
Ward.
Ex-City Treasurer of Chicago; successful banker and stock broker; one of the prominent leaders of the Republican party, warm friend of worthy Afro-Americans, who will, on Tuesday, April 11th, be elected Ward Committee-man of the 7th Ward.
HYDE PARK NEWS.
Mrs. Carrie Austin formerly of Hyde Park who lived at 3350 Vernon Ave., died on the first part of last week after a lingering illness. Mrs. Austin leaves a husband and five children to mourn her death. The Rev. John Robinson of St. Mark's M. E. Church preached the funeral sermon. She was intered at Oakwood. The 5th grade class of Kenwood sent a large Bouquet in sympathy of the bereavement of Louis Nathanial, one of their class who attended Kenwood school.
The stork visited Mrs. Hunt of 5526 Engleside Ave., Monday morning. Both mother and son are doing fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mauney have moved from 5218 Lake Park Ave., to Evans Ave.
Mr. Clifford Raymore we learn is on the sick list. We wish for him a speedy recovery.
[Picture of a man in a suit with a tie].
HON. OSCAR HEBEL
a German-American citizen, ex-member
of County, candidate for re-election as
ward, who may be selected later on
by on the Republican ticket.
Popular North Side German-American citizen, ex-member of the Board of Assessors of Cook County, candidate for re-election as Ward Committeeman of the 21st Ward, who may be selected later on to make the race for State's Attorney on the Republican ticket.
Popular North Side German-American citizen, ex-member of the Board of Assessors of Cook County, candidate for re-election as Ward Committeeman of the 21st Ward, who may be selected later on to make the race for State's Attorney on the Republican ticket.
PAGE FOUR
al banker and stock broker; one of the
un party, warm friend of worthy Afro-
April 11th, be elected Ward Committee
Miss Birdie Williams gave a reception in honor of her nephew's birthday. A number of invited guests were present.
Mrs. Merriman of 5210 Lake Park Ave. is very low at this writing.
It seems as if quite a number of political mendicants think and feel that they can with impunity insult the wives and children whenever they feel like it, but there are others who do not agree with them politically. The same fellows are political slaves, who can't think for themselves, neither can they produce an independent thought, of any value, neither can they conceive any proposition of merit, yet you will find these political trixters becoming private carriers or messengers of their meanness in the homes and families of their neighbors. Just to be a good fellow with the Boss they go so far as to try and keep a man from making a decent living.
[Name]
A citizen, ex-member of the Board of A
e for re-election as Ward Committeeman
selected later on to make the race for
an ticket.
THE BROAD AX; CHICAGO, APRIL 8, 1916.
ALDERMEN HUGH NOBRIS, JOSEPH HIGGINS SMITH, WILLIAM J. HEALEY, JOHN A. RICHERT, WILLIAM R. O'TOOLE, JOHN TOMAN AND THOMAS A. DOYLE, AS PREDICTED IN THESE COLUMNS LAST WEEK, WERE RE-ELECTED TO THE CITY COUNCIL FROM THEIR RESPECTIVE WARDS.
ALDERMAN HENBY P. BERGEN, MUCH TO THE REGRET OF HIS MANY FRIENDS, FELL BY THE WAYSIDE IN THE THIRTY-FIRST WARD, ROBEET R. PEGRAM, REPUBLICAN, SUCCEEDING HIM.
COL. WILLIAM G. ANDERSON, BEING LOADED DOWN WITH TOO MANY DEAD JONAHS, ONLY RECEIVED FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-FIVE VOTES FOR ALDERMAN OF THE SECOND WARD.
SINCE THE SMOKE OF THE BATTLE OF THE LATE ELECTION HAS CLEARED AWAY, EVERYTHING SEEMS TO CLEARLY INDICATE THAT HON. CHARLES S. DENEEN AND BOY O. WEST WILL SLIP ONE OVER ON MAYOR WILLIAM HALE THOMPSON IN THE STATE WIDE PRIMARY CONTEST, TUESDAY, APRIL 11th; THAT MR. WEST WILL RIDE RIGHT STRAIGHT OVER HIS HONOR, THE MAYOR, IN THEIR HAND-TO-HAND FIGHT FOR NATIONAL COMMITTEEMAN OF ILLINOIS.
ATTORNEY AUGUSTUS L. WILLIAMS AND HIS FRIENDS STILL ARE FIRMLY OF THE OPINION THAT HE HAS A GOOD FIGHTING CHANCE TO BE SELECTED AS ONE OF THE DELEGATES TO THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION FROM THE FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS.
IT SEEMS TO BE IN THE AIR AT THE PRESENT TIME THAT COL. THEODORE BOOSEVELT WILL RIDE BOUGH SHOD THROUGH THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION, TRAMPLING DOWN ALL OPPOSITION TO HIS ONWARD MARCH, AND WILL BE NOMINATED FOR PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
Many of the wise politicians who claim that they are able to see things in the very darkest hours of the night, are willing to admit that "Big Bill," Mayor William Hale Thompson, completely fell down on Tuesday, receiving some mighty hard jolts in the final wind up in the aldermanic contest or election—that he absolutely lost four wards which he was banking on carrying, thereby depriving or knocking him out of four aldermen whose aid and votes he greatly needed in the City Council.
As the late hot aldermanic fight or contest has now passed into history and all that has been said and done cannot be undone, so let us all fondly hope that the old and the new members of the City Council and Mayor Thompson will all solidly unite or stand together and work for the best interest of all the people residing in Chicago.
As it was predicted in the last issue of this paper that Aldermen Hugh Norris, Joseph Higgins Smith, William J. Healy, John A. Richert, William R. O'Toole, John Toman and Thomas A. Doyle would be re-elected to the City Council from their respective Wards, Alderman Henry P. Bergen being the only candidate supported by this paper who, much to the regret of his many friends, fell by the wayside, he being succeeded in the City Council by Robert R. Pegram, Republican, who is a first-class business man, who con-
MISS MARION H. DRAKE, PROGRESSIVE CANDIDATE FOR COMMITTEEMAN OF THE FIRST WARD.
Miss Marion H. Drake is a candidate for Progressive Ward Committeeman in the First Ward. She is opposed by a man who claims to be a Progressive, but he apparently does not believe in one of the big planks of the Progressive party, namely, Woman Suffrage, for when he filed his petition he at once went to the Election Commissioners and asked them to knock out Miss Drake's petition on the ground that she was a woman and as she could not vote for Ward Committeeman she could not be a candidate. Mr. Colin C. H. Fyffe, attorney for the Election Commissioners, advised the board that the position of Miss Drake's opponent was incorrect. Miss Drake argued before the Board that women could hold offices which they could not vote for, and cited many instances where such public of ficers had been upheld by strong legal opinions.
Miss Drake will be remembered in the First Ward as the woman who so bravely ran for Alderman two years ago. She has been Progressive Ward Committeeman for the past two years, and during that time has kept the Progressive Party in the First Ward from making entangling alliances with the Democrats. Can the same be said of the Republican Ward Committeeman
Miss Drake is also a candidate for Delegate to the Progressive National Convention, to be held in Chicago in June. This Convention is to be bigger than is generally known. The Progressive Party is very strong in many states of the Union and will have a full delegation when the Convention meets in the Auditorium. Seven floors of the LaSalle Hotel, various floors of other big hotels, quarters in the Blackstone, the Red Room of the LaSalle, the Florentine Room at the Con-
ducts three or four drug stores in the 31st Ward. Col. or Lawyer William G. Anderson, owing to the fact that he was loaded down with so many dead Jonahs, that he only received five hundred and thirty-five votes in his race for alderman of the Second Ward. Everything seems to clearly indicate, since the smoke of the battle from the aldermanic election has cleared away that the Hons. Charles S. Deneen and Roy O. West have got Mayor William Hale Thompson on the dead run and that they will be able to slip one over on him at the state wide presidential primary contest, Tuesday, April 11th; that Mr. West will successfully ride straight over His Honor, the Mayor, in their hand-to-hand fight for National Committeeman of Illinois.
Lawyer Augustus L. Williams and his many strong friends and supporters are still strongly of the opinion that he has more than a fighting chance of being chosen one of the delegates, Tuesday, April 11th, to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois. It would not be the least bit surprising to those who pretend to be familiar with National politics from the Grand Old Party point of view, to see Col. Theodore Roosevelt mounted on his famous white horse, ride rough shot through the Republican National Convention and be nominated to make the race for President of the United States
gress, and committee rooms in all the big hotels have been engaged. It looks to Miss Drake as if the Republicans will have to come to the Progressives to get a Presidential Candidate if they want a winner. She especially hopes that all Progressives of the First Ward and First District will recognize that they are to have a powerful voice, both independently and as Progressive-Republicans, this great Presidential year and get on the winning side.
Don't forget to go to the polls next Tuesday, April 11, 1916, and vote for Marion H. Drake!
HEALTH NOTES
For State Central Committeeman
First Congressional District, James
Hale Porter, 3rd on ballot.
For State Central Committeeman
First Congressional District, James
Hale Porter, 3rd on ballot.
Four per cent of the inhabitants of
certain sections of the South have
malaria.
* * *
The United States Public Health
Service has trapped 615,744 rodents in
New Orleans in the past eighteen
months.
* * *
The careless sneezer is the great grip
spreader.
Open air is the best spring tonic. Typhoid fever is a disease peculiar to man.
Measles kills over 11,000 American children annually.
There has not been a single case of yellow fever in the United States since 1905.
745423
HON. WILLIAM H. WEBER
Member of the Board of Assessors of
of the Republican party and can
National Convention from the Thir
of Assessors of Cook County; party and candidate for dela in from the Third Congressional
Member of the Board of Assessors of Cook County; one of the high priests of the Republican party and candidate for delegate to the Republican National Convention from the Third Congressional District of Illinois.
THE ALPHA SUFFRAGE CLUB.
Owing to mixing of dates, Mrs.
George W. Plummer was unable to be
present as guest of honor at the club
last meeting. A large number were
present and heard reports on the ecti-
ction, and the Wendell Phillips School
agitation, and passed resolutions deploring the undignified attacks made against the president of the Alpha Suffrage Club without an effort having been made to reach an understanding.
Mrs. Barnett stoutly denied that she was endeavouring to establish segregation in the effort to have the Colored children discuss conditions affecting their welfare.
The Alpha Suffrage Club continues to hold meetings every Wednesday evening at 3005 State St., to which all women are invited in the effort to develop civic welfare.
Ida B. Wells Barnett, President.
[Name]
[Name]
MR. JOHN McGILLEN
Military District of Chicago, who b
his city, and candidate for de
lon from the Ninth Congression
Chief Clerk of the Sanitary District of Chicago, who has a whole army of friends in all parts of this city, and candidate for delegate to the Democratic National Convention from the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois.
Chief Clerk of the Sanitary District of Chicago, who has a whole army of friends in all parts of this city, and candidate for delegate to the Democratic National Convention from the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois.
Cook County; one of the high priests candidate for delegate to the Republican and Congressional District of Illinois.
THE NEGRO FELLOWSHIP
LEAGUE.
The Negro Fellowship League will hold a students' conference Sunday, April 9, at the Reading Room, 3005 State St., at 4:00 P. M. All interested in the conference are invited to be present.
Last Sunday members and friends of the League heard Mr. George H. Jackson's address on his candidacy as Ward Committeeman. Reports were also made and correspondence with Judge Dudley of Des Moines, Iowa, who sentenced Herbert Eaves to the State Reform School because of his refusal to salute the flag, was read. After discussing the omission in the press and despatches from Mexico of any mention of the Tenth Cavalry, a motion was carried that the president write a letter of protest to the daily papers.
John E. Hughes, Secretary.
[Name]
Chicago, who has a whole army of friend candidate for delegate to the Democratic ninth Congressional District of Illinois.
107
HON. JOHN MAYNARD HARLAN.
Candidate for delegate at large to the voted for at the State wide Presid is strongly in favor of nominating President of the United States.
By John Maynard Harlan.
Candidate for delegate at large to the Republican National Convention to be voted for at the State wide Presidential primaries, Tuesday, April 11. He is strongly in favor of nominating and electing Col. Theodore Roosevelt President of the United States.
Candidate for delegate at large to the Republican National Convention to be voted for at the State wide Presidential primaries, Tuesday, April 11. He is strongly in favor of nominating and electing Col. Theodore Roosevelt President of the United States.
"Developing visibly and rapidly—so that one almost can see it grow," is the way one of the best-posted political observers in Illinois has just hit off the situation in this state as to Roosevelt sentiment. I am taking the liberty of using his statement as it indicates crisply my own view of the matter.
Many hundreds of Illinoisans have written me the last week to obtain a report on my effort to become a delegate at large to the Republican National Convention and I shall tell them briefly what I can and let the editors do with it as they see fit. If this has any news value, no doubt the wary and sensible editor will put the statement to good use.
I have already spoken in seventeen counties outside of Cook County. My pilgrimage has covered Illinois from Cairo at the South end almost to Freeport at the North and back and forth across the state from East to West. I have thus reached most of the centers of population.
There can be no doubt about a rising volume of Roosevelt sentiment. President Wilson's obvious bungling of the Mexican matter, his change of front and uncertainty, his lack of force and back-bone in dealing with certain European governments have
M. S. H.
MR. AUGUSTUS L. WILLIAMS
Lawyer and Republican Candidate for Delegate to the Republican National Convention from the First Congressional District of Illinois.
alienated thousands upon thousands from him in Illinois. Everywhere I am hearing, "Well, I voted for Wilson in 1912. I'm through. I want Teddy now." The people want Colonel Roosevelt just as you and I want a strong and resolute man, a man of experience and sagacity, at the helm of an institution, a corporation, or a nation when a serious crisis impends. If a bank in which all your savings are deposited is threatened with danger, you wish at the head of the bank a sane, sensible man of courage and astuteness. You don't want there a man of flabby resolution or one who doesn't quite know how to make up his mind.
As to the April 11 primary, I ask Illinois voters to mark that day. If you are on the farm prepare ahead to go to your polling place and cast a ballot for "Roosevelt and Safety." If you live in village or city, don't let any task interfere with your participation in this vital move for your country's welfare.
There are nine candidates for delegate at large on the Republican ticket. Eight are on the ballot pledged to Senator L. Y. Sherman. I am the other candidate, the candidate who, while running with technically "no preference" for President, have publicly pledged myself to work and vote for
the nomination of Theodore Roosevelt. Vote for me alone and register Illinois emphatically as a Roosevelt state. As in 1912, when the Roosevelt cyclone began on the Illinois primaries and swept the nation, cause the state of Lincoln once more to assert herself and to raise her voice unmistakably for the one man who measures up to the exigency.
SHORE INTERESTING HISTORY
THE FORMATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF QUIL
PEL.
"How dear to my heart scenes of my childhood." It must be that these fam ran through the thoughts of H. Hudlun as he wended his Van Buren Street recently.
Ask all your friends to "plump a vote for Harlan alone" and get them to refuse to vote for any other candidate for delegate at large. That will multiply my vote and give me a majority over any and all Sherman delegates, will wholly offset the Sherman preferential primary vote, and will demonstrate to the entire country that Illinois beyond a doubt is for Roosevelt.
April 11 is the date. Republicans, Progressives, Independents—all Americans and patriotic Illinoisans—give this serious, conscientious thought. We need Roosevelt. Let us draft him into the service!
TEACHING TREASON
Hubert Eaves, a Colored boy 11 years old, at Des Moines, Iowa has several times refused to salute the American flag at the Clarkson public school, which he attends and has been arrested by the truant officer. He says: "America is a white man's country, I have no country." It is said that he was instructed to do this by his parents and if true they are not only making fools of themselves, but are guilty of treason when they teach their son to refuse to salute the stars and stripes. They have done the boy a great wrong by endeavoring to instill such pernicious ideas into his mind and they are teaching him a falsehood.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States specifically states: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subjects to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. That covers the case of the Eaves family. Both parents and the boy were born here and are citizens by right of birth, and this country is as much their country as it is the country of any other persons who were born here.
Vardaman, Tillman and some other more or less notorious sons of the South have announced that this is a "White man's country" and no doubt they would be greatly pleased if the Colored people would accept that view of the matter and get off the earth or at least out of the country; in fact some of these "statesmen" have suggested the deportation of all Colored citizens.
The average American knows that this is the Colored man's country as well as the White man's country and history tells us that the Colored man is worthy of the citizenship.
In many things the country is unjust to its Colored citizens. Both public opinion and legislative enactments are in many cases un-American, but that does not change the basic fact that all persons born here are Americans and people who teach their children that this is a "white man's country" and advise them not to salute the flag, are traitors to the land of their birth—The Appeal, St. Paul, Minn., April 1, 1916.
Brother Adams, your editorial contains so much truth that we could not refrain from reproducing it in full—Editor.
JAMES W. BREEN, ASSISTANT CORPORATION COUNSEL OF CHICAGO, CONTINUES TO WAGE A STIFF FIGHT TO BE ELECTED REPUBLICAN COMMITTEEMAN OF THE 30TH WARD.
Big Mass Meeting to Be Held at Old St. Mary's Church, 4928 S. Dearborn Street. Mayor William Hale Thompson Will Be One of the Speakers.
Mr. James W. Breen, who put up a stiff fight to be elected Republican Committeeman of the 30th Ward in 1914, is back on the job again.
Mr. Breen, who is one of the Assistant Corporation Counsels of Chicago, states that he "will be sure enough winner in the coming contest with his opponent, Tuesday, April 11; that he will carry forty out of the 49 precincts in the 30th Ward; that he will be elected without the slightest doubt." This Saturday evening he will hold a great mass meeting in the old St. Mary's Church, 4928 S. Dearborn street. Just before the meeting begins, six hundred men will form a torch-light procession and will march through all the principal streets of the 30th Ward with their lights brightly burning, their colors flying, the band playing and the men shouting for Breen, for Committeeman of the 30th Ward.
Mayor William Hale Thompson, Alderman Oscar DePriest, Hon. Edward D. Green, Hon. F. L. Barnett, Capt. Louis B. Anderson, Edward H. Wright and Mr. Breen will be the principal speakers. It will be a record breaking meeting and with the aid of Mayor Thompson and his assistants, Mr. Breen confidently feels that he has a splendid or more than a fighting chance of being put over the plate.
SHORT INTERESTING HISTORY OF THE FORMATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF QUINN CHAPEL.
"How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood."
It must be that these familiar lines ran through the thoughts of Joseph H. Hudlun as he wended his way along Van Buren Street recently, for Mr. Hudlun is an old-timer in Chicago, and his attention was attracted by the razing of one of the old landmarks of this city, a building which used to be the House of Worship for the cream of the Colored folk of Chicago.
Quinn Chapel, for a number of years was located on Fourth Avenue, south of Van Buren Street, close to the business center of this great city, and with the demolition of this building, goes about the last of the old, old landmarks of the Colored people as well.
Away back in 1844, that eventful year in which people began to examine if they were in the Faith, the year when men in all parts of the world rose up simultaneously, to preach a new yet world old theology, here in Chicago the Colored people began to meet from house to house to worship and "speak often one to another." These people formed what has ever since been known as Quinn's Chapel, and was among the very first A. M. E. Churehes in this country.
The names of the founders should be household names for the race and held always in reverence and loving memory. They were John and Mary Collins, Frederick and Maria Parker, Caroline Parker, Clement Johnson, Isom and Rebecca Isaacs, William and Delilah Lucas, Rev. A. T. Hall and wife Joanna, Brother and Sister Gordon, Brother Day, Brother Sparrow, Sister Sublett and Sister Bowman. They carried on their house to house worship for a period of three years under the leadership of John Collins, father of Mrs. J. Q. (Rachel) Grant, Mrs. Grant now being the oldest living member of Quinn Chapel in Chicago.
In 1847 they began worshiping in their first church edifice with Rev. A. T. Hall, now of Batavia, Ill., Pastor, where they remained until routed by the great fire of 1871, when they went south on Fourth Avenue to Taylor Street and remained until again routed by the fire of 1874. Taking up their abode temporarily in Union Hall at Monroe and Clark Sts., and later on Third Ave., near Van Buren in a Store, they finally built the above mentioned edifice under the pastorage of Reverend Jioner and continued in it from 1876 until the growing business of Chicago forced them to move further south to their present abode, 24th and Wabash Ave.
One can readily see how Quinn Chapel, the Mother of the Colored Churches in Chicago, drawing to it as it did, the oldest families, having watchcare over generation after generation of our Colored population, would attract the attention of the son of one of the pioneer families, for the Hudluns, the McIntoshes, the Collins, the Fultons, the Randalls, the Halls, the Platts, the Grays, the Moodys, Jones, Knightens, Berrys, Atkinsons, Thomases and a number too numerous to mention here made up the substantial early settlement of Chicago's Negro population.
Through Mr. Porter, his brother-in-law, Mr. Hudlun was able to arrange with the Contractor, Mr. Anderson for procuring the Box deposited at the laying of the Cornerstone and he had invited a Committee of ladies whom he felt would have a peculiar interest, to be present and secure the box and contents. Mrs. Dessie Sublett, Mrs. Clara Ellison, Mrs. Woodard, Mrs. Townsend, Deaconesses of Quinn Chapel, together with Mrs. E. Stevens, Mother Brown and Mrs. J. S. Porter, his sister, were of that Committee, but delays in reaching the Stone and its sudden acquirement, made it impossible to reach them all at the desired moment which was much regretted.
The Hymn Book which was found in the Cornerstone has the name of Rachel Collins inscribed on the fly leaf and belonged to Mrs. J. Q. Grant. Mr. Anderson, the Contractor is a collector of rare coins and had reserved the right to keep any if found in the box, but he has promised to turn over to Mr. Hudlun the collection of coins which he got from the box, at an early date.
THE BETHEL LITERARY CLUB
Announces that
Dr. J. W. McDowell will address them
on Sunday afternoon, April 9, 1916,
four o'clock. Subject: "The Flag
and the Negro."
Mr. Samuel Henry will address them
on Sunday afternoon, April 30, 1916,
four o'clock. Subject: "The best so-
lution of the Race question."
SANDY W. TRICE,
President.
GEORGE T. KERSEY,
Chairman of Program Committee.
For State Central Committeeman First Congressional District, James Hale Porter, 3rd on ballot.
2 TPEU
MR. ROBERT R. LEVY
Candidate for Republican Ward Committeeman of the Third Ward, who is one of the best and truest friends of the Afro-American race on the South Side, to be voted for at the primary election, Tuesday, April 11th. Polls open from 6 A. M. to 5 P. M.
Robert R. Levy, candidate for Republican Ward Committeeman of the Third Ward, has been a member of the Regular Third Ward Republican Club, by which he is endorsed, for over twenty years and always an active worker for Republican success. He is familiar with the duties of the office of Ward Committeeman.
To the everlasting credit of Mr. Levy he has always been very friendly to the Colored people. For more than twenty-two years he has given employment to several Colored men in his fine drug store, also employing them at other places of business in which he is interested. F. S. Delany, who is now one of the young Colored lawyers
Mr. Levy was born in New Orleans, La., December, 1873. Came to Chicago in 1875 and has been a resident of this city since that time. He is the proprietor of the 47th Street Drug Co., southwest corner 47th street and Calumet avenue, and has been located at the present address for the past twenty years. He is married, is the father of two sons, and resides at 4639 Prairie avenue. He is president of the Revelry Theatre Company, 342 E. 47th street, and has been engaged with associates in the erection and sale of apartment buildings in Hyde Park for the past twelve years.
He is a member of the Chicago Retail Druggists' Association, Masonic Fraternities, B. P. O. Elks, Knights of Pythias, Independent Order of B'Nai B'rith, North American Union, Royal Arcanum, National Union, Hamilton Club, and the Illinois Athletic Club.
Vote to Re-elect
THOMAS J. HEALY
For Ward Committeeman
of the Thirtieth Ward
THE REGULAR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
The Primary Election
Tuesday, April 11th
Polls open from 6 a. m. to 5 p. m.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
mitteeman of the Third Ward, who is of the Afro-American race on the South ry election, Tuesday, April 11th. Polls
To the everlasting credit of Mr. Levy he has always been very friendly to the Colored people. For more than twenty-two years he has given employment to several Colored men in his fine drug store, also employing them at other places of business in which he is interested. F. S. Delany, who is now one of the young Colored lawyers of this city was practically raised at the home of Mr. Levy, who regards him as his brother.
It can be truthfully stated that like Lawyer Delany, the great majority of the better class of Colored people residing in the Third Ward will on Tuesday, April 11th, record their votes in favor of re-electing Mr. Levy Republican Committeeman of that Ward. Aside from the almost solid vote which he will receive from the Colored people, it is the duty of the other earnest Republicans in the 3rd Ward to consider the question carefully and to go to the polls and cast their vote for the candidate who, in their judgment, is best fitted by character, training, experience, and association to represent this great Republican Ward in the councils of the party—and that man is Robert R. Levy.
Re-elect
PAGE FIVE
PAGE SIX
A CABINET LADY.
Wife of New Secretary of War, Newton D. Baker.
The Newest Member of the President's Cabinet Brings a Wife and Three Charming Children to Grace Social Circles at Our Capital.
Once the wife of the mayor of Cleveland, Mrs. Baker is now presented to the cabinet ladies at Washington. Born Miss Elizabeth Wells Leopold, daughter of Howard Leopold, a retired merchant of Pottstown, Pa., Mrs. Baker was for several years an instructor in music at Wilson college.
© 87M
MRS. NEWTON D. BAKER.
Chambersburg, Pa., of which she is a graduate. She married Mr. Baker July 3, 1902.
As well as being a talented soprano singer and pianist, Mrs. Baker is also the mother of three interesting children—Betty, the oldest; Newton D. Baker 3d, alias "Junior," and Peggy, the baby.
Politically, then, intellectually and artistically, Mrs. Baker is well fitted to assume the responsibilities of her position in the social life to which our new secretary of war brings her.
VARIOUS INITIALS.
Hints About Marking Child's Garments So They Won't Mix.
One can buy in the various stores initials by the yard, worked in red or blue outline stitch on narrow strips of linen tape, three-eighths or a half inch wide.
These letters are used for marking plain underclothing, etc. They are of great use to the mother with a large family, who has neither money nor time to spare on embroidery and who finds it necessary to have some distinguishing mark on the clothing, especially when there are two children the same size.
The letters are cut off from the strip when needed and overcast on the inside of the garment, any place where it will be invisible when worn.
When this system is used even stockings are easily paired. Sew each child's initial at the top of the stocking on the inside; then put a cross stitch in red under the letter on each stocking of the first pair. Use a blue cross stitch on the second, yellow on the third, etc.
It is an easy matter to sort even a large pile of stockings, two M's with red crosses being a pair of Mary's stockings, two M's with green crosses another pair, while two J's with blue crosses are a pair of stockings belonging to Jack.
If two children have the same initial use the blue letters for one and red for the other.
Street and Motor Coats.
The ripple coat for spring is made in both cloth and silk. Belts are placed at the normal waist line, at slightly higher than normal or a few inches below the point. Some are short waisted in the front and long waisted in the back. Both styles are liked.
Many coats have high collars and button up to the throat. They are made so that they can be worn open or closed. Oblong sailor collars, draped collars, ruche effect collars, cape collars and simple notched collars are approved. The cape collar is made detachable, being fastened with clasps or with buttons.
Sleeves are dressy, both in cut and by means of fancy cuffs. Motor coats are in plain colors, stripes, checks, plaids and mixtures.
Your New Vell.
If you would preserve that new novelty veil of yours and get from it the greatest possible wear do not fold it when putting it away. Instead take a piece of cardboard, around which you may roll it without creases, cover it with tissue paper and keep it in the box with your hat, and it will always be in the best condition and ready for wear.
Child's Cereal Set
Nowadays there are many American
wares of rather coarse clay finished in
beautiful colors and made in pretty
shapes. A child's set, consisting of a
plate, bowl and milk jug—a cereal set
—is yellow, and around the top of the
jug and bowl and around the edge of
the plate is a decoration of white duck-
lings.
TO SCHOOL ON SKIS.
Then Crawl Down to the Deer Through a Hole In the Snow.
Ellenburg, Wash.-Coming to school on snowshoes and skis, sliding over the schoolhouse roof and climbing down to the door through twelve feet of snow is the experience of children at the school at Meadow Creek. Mrs. Mary Boedcher, county superintendent, has received a number of letters which tell the children's idea of the situation.
"Our schoolhouse is about twelve feet high on the outside," writes one boy, "but the snow is so deep that a person can walk right over and not know that there is a building there. We have to crawl down eight steps through a hole in the snowbank to get into it."
"We live in a tant," says a twelve-year-old girl in the seventh grade. "The roof is covered with large pieces of bark. All that you can see of the house is the very frent, where you go out. I went halfway to school on the skis and crawled a little way so as not to go in so deep." Mrs. Beach, the teacher, in her report to Mrs. Boedcher, said that in spite of the snow school kept up every day and that only two absentees were noted during the severe weather.
SHE TRAVELS FAR TO BE MRS.
Young Woman Popped by Mall, Bought Ring and License.
Des Molnes.—After traveling over 600 miles Miss Augusta Knies of Lansing, Mich., became the first leap year bride of this city by leading Harley Decker of 1299 East Twenty-sixth street to the altar.
She managed the whole affair. She popped the question, named the wedding day, paid her railroad fare, purchased the marriage license and bought the ring.
Miss Knies, who is twenty-five, was strolling along the streets of Detroit with a girl friend last June. Her companion greeted a young man, and fifteen seconds later she was introduced to her future husband. It was Decker, then employed in a Detroit automobile factory.
He was called back to Des Molnes by the illness of a sister in February. Three weeks ago Miss Kles popped the question by mall, and Decker, who is twenty-nine years old, accepted. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Frank W. Mutchler of the Great Park Church of Christ.
PREFERRED CAVE TO LIFE IN A SOD HOUSE Unique Home of Pioneer and Family Brought to Light.
Garber, Okla.-The falling of five feet of cement porch of a farmhouse a half mile north of Garber brings to light the unique home of a pioneer of this section.
Under this porch was a cave. The cave was dug in 1894. At a point along a little ravine a sandstone ledge cropped out, and there S. H. Peters tunneled under and excavated two large rooms, with a sandstone ledge about three feet thick for a roof. The rooms extended sixty feet under the ground, and at the deepest place there was perhaps eight feet of dirt on top. To the back room a skylight 3 by 5 feet was opened.
The rooms were plastered and white-coated, and the rock roof was white-washed, making it light enough for one to read newspapers in any part of the cave. It was very dry at that time, and coffee kept in the cave ground easily. S. H. Peters and his family lived there many months before he built a home above ground.
The stovepipe ran up the skylight, and to persons passing along the road the smoke coming out of the ground was a novel sight. Hundreds of persons visited this cave home, and all wondered why the roof didn't fall in, as it was not supported by timbers.
When the wet years came a little spring in the cave which furnished all the water for the family overflowed the rooms at times, and in recent years when the drain became clogged the cave filled with water. The pioneer later built a house almost over the cave.
S. H. Peters was but little longer digging the cave home than was required to build a sod house of the same size. Sod houses were the first homes of most of the ploneers. The plaster was the only expense to the cave home. Today this section has the finest country homes in the state and is in the wheat belt.
Fifty-seven Years Without Vacation. Bridgeport, O.—After being on the job for fifty-seven years as toll collector at the Bridgeport end of the Wheeling-Bridgeport bridge, John Richardson will retire. He had worked fifty-seven years without a vacation or illness, but a few days ago he became ill and was forced to abandon his post. He says he enjoyed his "vacation" so much that he will make it permanent.
Pneumonia Swiffer Than Bullet.
Passalc, N. J.-Charles Uhlermann of Clifton, who attempted suicide recently, is dead from pneumonia. The boy wrote a note to his parents telling them they "soon would know the reason" for his act, then shot himself. The wound was not serious, but pneumonia developed soon afterward.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 8, 1916.
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 pupila—Life.
Ballads as Newspapers.
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. Writs 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 Paste.
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 isn't so. I want you to understand that my husband was out with your husband."—Detroit Free Press.
"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? Mrs. 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.
RETURNED BABY'S BANK.
Thief Robbed the House, but Brought That Back.
Sierra Vista, Cal.-A thief with a conscience recently entered the home of Clark Rubido here and after decamping with valuables amounting to $100 returned to the burglarized house and deposited a child's bank containing $2 in pennies, which had been part of the loot, on the front porch.
The Rubido family visited friends in Los Angeles that day, and about noon a neighbor, Mrs. Caroline Martin, saw a well dressed young man carrying a suit case walk up to the front door of the Rubido home, fumble with the lock a moment and walk in.
Mrs. Martin thought the stranger was probably a friend of the Rubidos, and when the young man reappeared some time after, still carrying the suit case, she told him that the Rubido family was passing the day in the city. The young man thanked her and hurried on.
Half an hour later Mrs. Martin saw the young man come back and deposit something on the front porch of the house.
When the Rubidos returned they found that the pleasant faced young man had carried away all their silver, several articles of jewelry and $30. The baby's penny bank, which had been returned, was about the only movable valuable not taken.
SOAP BRINGS REUNION.
Brothers Meet For First Time In Thirteen Years by Accident.
St. Paul.-Charles McKee of Ray, N. D., was sent to room 322 when he registered at the Hotel Sherman. Desiring to shave, he unpacked his grip. But his shaving stick was missing.
"Have you got any shaving soap?" he asked a man who was issuing from room 324.
"Sure," was the answer. They entered room 324 and turned on the light to look for the shaving soap. McKee looked at the other man critically.
"What's your name?" he asked.
R. E. McKee of Shakopee, Minn." was the answer.
"I'm your brother Charley," the North Dakota said.
The two had not seen each other for thirteen years. They were reared in St. Paul and separated after their parents died. Charles went to North Dakota, where he owns a half section of land. R. E. McKee went to Shakopee, where he owns a section.
In the last thirteen years they had not corresponded. Unknown to each other, each had amassed a fortune.
SOUTH SEA ISLAND COLONY IN AMERICA Strange Community Is Discovered In Utah.
Salt Lake City. — Discovered—the strangest community in the United States.
It is a community of south sea islanders. A thousand in number, they are now settled in the Skull valley in Utah, between the Great Salt lake and the Nevada line.
There are Maoris, Samoans and Hawaiians living and farming in perfect harmony, intermarrying and raising children.
Twenty-five or thirty years ago the older men of this strange colony came from across the Pacific, some as sailors, some as stowaways.
They wandered in small groups about California, and some of them came across the Sierras into Idaho and Utah. They were starving when a group of business men decided to help them.
They secured 15,000 acres of land in the Skull valley, collected all the south sea natives that they could find and established them in a colony which they call Ioseppa.
An American farmer was selected as superintendent. Each man was paid good wages at the start, and as soon as they were capable they were allowed to buy half acre lots and cottages at actual cost.
Now there is a new generation growing up. Some of the boys have gone from the grade school and taken full courses at the State Agricultural college. Several of the girls have become stenographers in Salt Lake City. A number have graduated from the University of Utah.
DRAW LOTS TO PREACH.
White Plains Pastors Try New Way of Exchanging Pulpits.
White Plains, N. Y.—"We had the time of our lives," said the Rev. William Dana Street, pastor of the Ridgeview Avenue Congregational church and one of the six ministers here who filled pulpits that were assigned to them by drawing lots. Sealed envelopes containing the names of the churches were put in a hat, and each minister drew one.
"None of us knew which church he had drawn," said Mr. Street, "until a couple of days after when we opened the envelopes."
The Rev. Chaellis E. Nichols, pastor of the First Baptist church, exchanged with the Rev. Ernest L. Wals, pastor of the Chatterton Hill Congregational church; the Rev. Herbert E. Wright, pastor of the Memorial M. E. church, the largest Protestant church here, exchanged with the Rev. David W. De Forest of St. Paul's M. E. Protestant church, one of the smallest churches.
A Quaint Gown For Her Who Does Her Own Housework.
This simple frock is made of buff gingham striped with blue. One piece frocks for housework have long been
1
VARIATION OF THE ONE PIECE
popular. This is cut loose, belted,
short sleeved, while shapely in lines.
A bit of embroidery finishes the buttoned front, the collar edge and the cuffs.
For Spring Brides
A dainty and acceptable gift to tuck into the bride's traveling bag as a little surprise to her when her destination is reached is a boudoir set of cap and ribbon slippers. The whole output may be folded very small in its tissue paper wrapping and will take up scarcely any room at all in the bag—not as much as the handful of rice which is sometimes slipped in by a mischievous bridesmaid. The cap is an ordinary boudoir cap of white point d'esprit, filled with fine white lace and trimmed with the best quality satin ribbon in pale blue or pink shade. A bow of the ribbon is caught against the cap with a tiny rhinestone buckle.
The slippers have very flexible soles, cut from pale blue or pink goldenrod satin; two layers of satin for each sole, and a thin layer of cotton batting may be slipped between if one fancies a little thicker sole. Two inch blue or pink satin ribbon is sewed around the edge of the sole and fastened together at the back. About two inches of the ribbon are gathered along the upper edge over cord elastic to hold the slipper on the heel.
Ragged Sailors.
Materials.-Two cupfuls flour, two teaspoonfuls baking powder, one-half cupful sugar, an egg, one-half teaspoonful salt, three tablespoonfuls butter, one-half cupful chopped nuts, two-thirds cupful milk.
Directions.-Sift the flour, salt and baking powder, rub the butter in; then add sugar and nuts. Mix to a soft dough with the egg and milk, roll out thin and sprinkle with sugar. Roll up with the sugar inside, cut in slices three-quarters of an inch thick, place on a greased baking tin, brush over with beaten egg and bake about fifteen minutes.
Attractive Suits.
Every woman who can possibly afford it will invest in one of the attractive suits of 'pongue, poplin or silk homespun. They are a delightful combination of style and utility and, though rather high priced, are well worth the cost. They are to be had in white, cream and oyster white, tan, brown and biscuit Dutch, navy and gray blue, besides different tones of green and gray.
Now It's a Book Wagon.
Now we have little wagons to use in the library. Their rubber tired wheels move noiselessly over even hardwood floors, and their top is edged by a framework high enough to hold books, while two lower shelves contain the two different sizes of the magazines of the moment. These book wagons do not take up much space in the library.
Satin For Blouses
A new blouse of white satin shows a delightful touch of color in the lining of primrose yellow taffeta that appears in turnover points of the high collar and the jabot-like frill on the front and in the lower side of the frills that finish the long sleeves.
EX-KING MANUEL TAKES LIFE EASY
Plays Golf While Portugal Prepares For War.
Former Ruler Apparently is Not Worried Over Course Republic is Pursuing—Germany Has Formally Declared War on Portugal, Although a State of War Has Existed.
London.--While former King Manuel of Portugal is playing golf and taking life easy in England, the little republic of Portugal, once his domain, is completing preparations for war on the side of the allies. Germany has formally declared war on Portugal, although a state of war has practically existed between the two countries since the German troops invaded Portuguese Africa in 1914.
Soon after this invasion Portugal sent re-enforcements to her African possessions, and there have been a number of clashes between the German and Portugal colonial troops.
The total war strength of the Portuguese army is 260,000 men. It is estimated that fully 100,000 soldiers have
J. B.
Photo by American Press Association.
EX-KING MANUEL:
been mobilized for some months to be ready for the conflict. It is over a year since the Portuguese government decided to co-operate with the allies whenever the step seemed necessary. While Portugal has been preparing for war for some time, internal political conditions have delayed matters. A peace party has made its strength felt in that republic, but with Germany's declaration of war party lines will be obliterated.
Portugal has an alliance with Great Britain dating from 1703 that requires the Portuguese government to furnish Great Britain with 10,000 soldiers when the latter is at war. While these troops have not been put at the disposal of Great Britain in the European theater of war, the Portuguese have been cooperating with the troops of the allies in Africa.
While the peace strength of the Portuguese army is only 30,000, with 8,103 more men in the colonial army, the government has 230,000 reserves and 871,476 available men for war purposes. The navy of the republic, however, is one of the smallest in the world. It consists of one second class cruiser, four third class cruisers, fifteen gunboats, five destroyers, four torpedo boats and one submarine.
Most of these vessels are of an antiquated type. The Vasco da Gama, the star ship of the navy, has been in service since 1878. It cost $600,000 and is of 3,030 tons displacement. It is equipped with two eight-inch guns, one six-inch, one twelve-pounder and eight three-pounders. The Vasco da Gama has a complement of 259 officers and men.
Portugal, with the Azores and Madeira island, has a population of 5,997,985 and an area of 35,490 square miles. The population of the republic's colonial possessions in Africa is 8,300,000 and these colonies have an area of 823,834 square miles. The colonies in Asia have an area of 8,933 square miles and a population of 950,000. Portuguese Africa is made up of Angola, the Kongo, Guinea, East Africa and some islands.
Many Portuguese have been bitter toward Germany for many years. They have felt that the kalser's government has had designs on the Azores and Angola. The war party in the republic has long been enthusiastic to enter the contest on the side of the allies not only on account of the treaty with Great Britain, but on account of the long standing grievance against Germany.
The wealth of Portugal is estimated at $2,500,000,000. The national debt amounts to $947,603,000. The revenue of the country is $81,966,000 a year, with an additional yearly revenue of $17,188,000 from the colonies.
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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
State Lines.
Oklahoma produced 80,000,000 barrels of oil last year.
Nebraska's 803 state banks contain $114,877,652.98, belonging to 382,222 depositors.
As a deer hunting state Vermont now rivals Maine, with 6,000 deer killed in 1915, compared with from 8,000 to 10,000 in the Maine wilderness.
Careful estimates place the California gold output for 1915 at fully $2,200,600 more than the previous year, when the total output was $20,653,496. The yield will easily be the largest in thirty-two years and, with one exception, the largest in fifty-one years. So California still remains the premier gold producing state in the Union.
Recent Inventions.
Clothing made of pressed feathers as a substitute for wool has been invented by an Italian priest.
To lessen the labor of threading needles there has been invented a magnifying 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 a round signboard that is intended to show all the roads in the vicinity and other information of value to strangers by a man.
Dress Hints.
Green is an ill becoming color for brunettes to wear.
White gloves can be tanned by soaking them in saffron solution until the required tint has been obtained.
Always sew on buttons before wearing new gloves; otherwise at a critical moment a button will drop off, spoiling 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 on the rubber.
Laundry Lines.
Be sure to iron garments with the straight of the goods and thus prevent stretching of the bias seams. It is best to give linens a long soaking before washing. If this method is followed stains will wash out easily. To remove ink spots from linen or cotton, dip the spots 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 wool of the material and iron in the same way. The result will be a perfectly smooth, round surface.
Woman's World.
According to the census, Pennsylvania 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 go in for raising hogs, cattle and foodstuffs, leaving cotton planting to the men.
The women of Des Molines, Ia., are credited with being responsible for the establishment of a municipal court in their city. A majority of the male voters went against it, but the majority of the women voters was so heavy that they won the day.
Animal Oddities.
Kingfishers make their nets of fishbones.
Man eating tigers are the exception rather than the rule.
Alligators do not attain full size until 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 greyhound.
When a lobster is about to shed its shell the latter splits down the back and drops off in two equal parts. Then the tail slips out of the shell like a finger out of a glove.
Fortunes In Farthings.
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.
FOR THE CHILD
Some Interesting Information
Boys and Girls.
BIRDS AND THE WEAK
Our Little Feathered Friends
Wise as We Give Them Cre
Being—Making the Most of
unity—Portrait of a Little Gi
That birds are not such good
prophets, as they are generally y
to be is one of the assertions o
M. Champen, the well-known
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 Ans
Hle 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 seem 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 "they can behold bold Phoebus in his strength;" Spencer regrets "so fair a flower" should perish through "untimely tempest;" Milton lamentes 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 Mall.
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
"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 so way to study law."—Washington $tar.
FOR THE CHILDREN
Some Interesting Information For Boys and Girls.
BIRDS AND THE WEATHER.
Our Little Feathered Friends Not So Wise as We Give Them Credit For Being—Making the Most of Opportunity—Portrait of a Little Girl.
That birds are not such good weather prophets as they are generally believed to be is one of the assertions of Frank M. Chapman, the well known ornithologist, in an article on "Birds as Travelers" in St. Nicholas. Birds make as serious miscalculations as the rest of us, according to Mr. Chapman. "Sometimes," he says, "encouraged by an unusually mild period, birds come so far ahead of their usual time that they are trapped by the sudden return of cold weather. Then if they do not retreat they may suffer for lack of food. I have seen geese on the coast of Texas migrating northward in large numbers, urged onward by a warm wave. The next day, to my surprise, they all came flying back. But the day following that a severe 'norther' suddenly arrived. The geese had evidently encountered this storm and were driven back by it."
Make the Most of Opportunity
make the most of Opportunity.
Don't wait for your opportunity—make it, as Lincoln made his in the log cabin in the wilderness. Make it, as Henry Wilson made his during his evenings on a farm, when he read a thousand volumes while other boys of the neighborhood wasted their evenings. Make it, as the shepherd boy Ferguson made his when he calculated the distance of the stars with a handful of beads on a string. Make it, as George Stephenson made his when he mastered the rules of mathematics with a bit of chalk on the sides of the coal wagons in the mines. Make it, as Douglass made his when he learned to read from scraps of paper and posters. Make it, as Napoleon made his in a hundred important situations. Make it, as the deaf and blind Helen Keller has made hers. Make it, as every man must who would accomplish anything worth the effort. Golden opportunities are nothing to laziness, and the greatest advantage will make you ridiculous if you are not prepared for it.—Philadelphia Ledger.
The Stars In the Sky.
Man may never know how many stars there are. The best we can do is to figure on the number that can be seen with the largest telescopes that have been invented, for you know there must be many millions of them which to us are invisible.
We have counted the stars so far as we can see them, or, rather, so far as we can photograph them. Astronomers have found that a photographic plate exposed to the stars will show more of them than can be seen with the naked eye. By this method, the "Book of Wonders" tells us, man has been able in a way to count the stars he can see. It adds up to more than a hundred million of them. Astronomers found this out by taking photographs of the heavens at night, devoting one picture to each section until the entire heavens had been covered and then counting all the stars shown in the pictures.
A Care Free Little Girl.
Quite undisturbed by the great events of the day is Miss Betty Gerard, whose portrait was snapped by a photographer at Palm Beach, Fla. Little Miss Betty has almost nothing to do but en-
A
Photo by American Press Association
MISS BETTY GERARD.
joy herself, and, judging from her hap
py expression, she finds that an easy
and pleasant occupation.
Betty was caught among the palms,
where she and a number of her little
friends were at play. She is a member
of a prominent New York family, and
this is her first winter at the famous
winter resort.
3105-07 SOUTH STATE STREET CHICAGO, ILL. Douglas 200
CAPITAL, $200,000.00
BOLLARD BACK BANK
A WORLD FAMOUS COIN
NICHELS
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: Res. 5133 So. Wabash Ave.
Oakland 4062. Ante. Tde-658 Phone Drusel 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.
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 such new pain.—Adelaide 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. M. 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 McGlofin, 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 McFare, shee shining parlers and news stand, 3800½ State street.
---
An Artist
PAGE SEVEN
BANK OF CHICAGO
ATE SUPER VISION
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 Correspondent 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 Roaper 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 Trustees Established 1877
J. B. McCAHEY
TEL. OAKLAND 1550, 1551, 1552
JOHN J. DUNN
WHOLESALE GOAL 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 Scotchman 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_JON
TEENAN JONES' PLACE
3445 SOUTH STATE STREET Telephone Douglas 4591
The finest and most BUFFET and CAFE Side. First-Class Entrance HENRY "TEENAN" J
A. F. CODOZOE,
J. H. WHISTON, Proprietors
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager
The Elite AND BUFFET
3030 STATE STREET
JOHN BLOCKI, President
JOHN BLOCKI
PERFUME
GO TO
C. E. KREYSSI
5057 South St
NOT ON THE
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUG
MEDICINAL PREMIUM
All Prescriptions Caref
ALSO CARRY A FU
BLOCKI'S IDEAL & 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,
J. H. WHISTON, Proprietors
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager
DOUGLAS 8971
Phones DOUGLAS 8286
AUTO. 72-379
The Elite Cafe
AND BUFFET
3030 STATE STREET
CHICAGO
C. E. KREYSSLER, Druggist
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
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
Some Exercise.
Walking is the best exercise. Do some of it every day. Next to walking comes bowling. You can't throw a bowling ball without stooping clear to the floor, and every stoop stimulates the liver and exercises the intestines. Fifty per cent of the sickness in the world would be eliminated if everybody bowled. Walk or bowl every day. And at night lie flat on your back and raise your legs above your head slowly as many times as you can without fatigue. Then, anchoring your toes under a weight of some sort, raise and lower the body. These two exercises 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 twenty.—Woman's Home Companion.
Something to Step On.
We don't get very high in this world unless we have something to step on. That is 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 shin 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 springing up.
Life is fine, or it is a tragedy, just according to whether we see the meaning of the experiences which come to us and use them to climb up by.—Farm Life.
Her Lost Chance
Mrs. B.—I wonder why Miss Singleton refused the curate when he proposed to her? Mrs. D.—All a mistake, my dear, a sad mistake. You know, she has grown a little deaf, and she did not suspect he was at all "gone" on her. She actually thought he was asking her to subscribe to the new organ fund, so she told him she was sorry, but she had promised all her 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.
most UP-TO-DATE
CAFE on the South
s Entertainers.
N" JONES, Proprietor.
DOUGLAS 6971
Phones DOUGLAS 3288
AUTO. 72-379
ite 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
BY A FULL LINE OF
& BLOCKI'S FLOWER
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
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 ugal 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 seveliorum." In India "Main syne ka pisar karim" is the declaration. 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: "Unifgraeerndlainalerfironajunguarrigulak."
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 fierce quarrel is recorded between the Cutlers and the Sheathers, who were accused of having discredited the Cutlers by supplying 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.
Cyprus was an extremely popular resort for Britishers for a year or so after 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 quickly as it had sprung up.—London Globe
Worms Used In Medicine.
The earthworm, or the common fishworm, was utilized by the medical practitioners in Europe two and three hundred years ago. The worms were for internal administration and sometimes made into an ointment or embroration 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 per cent. Napoleon thought Marengo his greatest victory. He always kept throughout life the uniform he wore on that day.
"I Love You."
Cyprus.
Marengo.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 8, 1916.
SIRES AND SONS.
J. D. Shoop, new Chicago superintendent of schools, a few years ago was a farm hand. Lord Selborpe is England's most notable agriculturist and also the best judge of dairy cattle in Britain. Honus Wagner says that Rube Waddell, Kid Nichols, Clark Griffith, Christy Mathewson, Grover Cleveland Alexander and Jack Taylor were the six greatest pitchers he ever faced. Major George N. Evans during thirty-two years as disbursing officer, department 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 shabblest of England's peers. At Gladstone's funeral he was taken for the abbey verger and quite recently was mistaken for the applicant for a job at a shop in Portsmouth.
Sir Hiram Maxim, whose machine gun is a big factor in the present war, was a barefoot lad in the backwoods of New England sixty years ago. As a lad he worked a lathe 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 $000,000 more life insurance and is now in 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.
Music In Shakespeare's Time.
Shakespeare's time was an age of music. "Catches" were sung by gentiles as well as by weavers and tinkers. Lute, citheron or virginals were in every 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 a gentleman was counted but a boor if he could not play the lute or sing a part in a madrigal, but there is no getting over the craggy fact that over eighty collections of madrigals, ayres and songs were printed and published between 1587 and 1630, in addition to which vast collections of early music still remain in manuscript. With an aristocracy fond of music and accustomed to play and listen to music 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 accomplishment to play the hunting horn. Every gentleman who kept hounds could wind it. A punctilous etiquette fixed the correct set of notes for each operation of the chase. Usually a play had at least one song.
Fish Exhibit Emotions.
We are accustomed to think that only we humans become pallid with fear or agitated with joy, but some experiments with perch in the artificial pond show that when their repose is suddenly disturbed by tapping on the glass the fish visibly tremble, and the bars which are characteristic of this species actually disappear for the time being, only to reappear when the disturbance is removed and the equanimity of the fish is restored.
Sometimes a pike that is rapidly advancing on his prey becomes suspicious about the latter's character. The pursuer will suddenly stop in an attitude of doubt, his 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 allayed he drops to the bottom of the pond or swims off in disappointment—Popular Science Monthly.
Success.
"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 him with unremitting effort and 'enduring to the end.' To my question, 'Why, then, do so many men fall short of their ambitions?' 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 always more formidable the farther we go. Many turn back disheartened, and very few will meet the monsters to the end. Almost none is willing to have a try with the demon at the last bridge, but if he does he has won forever."—Princess Lazarovich in Century.
BETTOM JEWEL
$2.50 at Time of Order. $2.50 First Payment.
$1.00 per month for 20 months, with your gas bill.
Delivered and connected free.
Never before has a Gas Range like this been offered on these terms.
Twenty-five dollars in all, for the very latest up-to-date gas range model on the market. It embodies all modern improvements, including:
White enamel porcelain door panels, burner tray and broiling pan.
Large room top plate—all burners can be used without crowding.
Automatic lighter for top plate burners, does away with use of matches.
Right or left ovens to suit every light, or location.
It is large enough for the average family and small enough for the average kitchen.
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 kettle 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 tablespoonful of soda to four quarts of water.
Ingersoll's Eloquence.
In his book, "Notes of a Busy Life," Joseph Benson Foraker, writing of the Republican national convention of 1876, says: "The intellectual feature was the famous speech of Robert G. Ingersoll nonfitting Mr. Blaine. I have many times seen popular orators arouse great enthusiasm, but I have never seen before or since anything equal to the effect of his eloquent and telling sentences. Some one preceding him had said to make sure of the election we must nominate a man acceptable to Massachusetts. This nettled Ingersoll. He rebuked it in his first sentences, saying if any man who had been mentioned at that convention as a possible candidate should be nominated and could not carry that state by 75,000 majority, Massachusetts should tear down Bunker Hill monument and sell Faneuil Hall for Democratic headquarters. His speech throughout fairly bristled with sharp, jagged points and smashing, bludgeon-like blows that thrilled his audience, aroused their enthusiasm and brought forth round after round of applause, and the climax was reached when he likened Blaine to a plumed knight with shining lance smitting traitors in congress full in the face."
BROOKLYN MUSEUM
GENERAL BANKING
3 per cent allow
Safety Deposit
REAL
As agent buy and sell Real Estate
dents, including payment of tax
on Chicago Real Estate.
Especially Invites
The Crane
Building
The finest building e
Steam heat, electric light
3 per cent allowed on Savings Accounts Safety Deposit Vaults, $3.00 per Year
As agent buy and sell Real Estate on commission, manages estates for non-residents, including payment of taxes and looking after assessments. Money to loan on Chicago Real Estate.
The Cranford Apartment Building. 3600. Wabash Ave.
Ed FLC
The finest building ever opened to Colored tenants in Chicago. Steam heat, electric light, tile baths, marble entrance.
J. W. Casey, Agent,
'Phone Randolph 803 74 W. WASHINGTON STREET.
The Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.