The Broad Ax
Saturday, September 30, 1916
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS THE BROAD AX WILL BE SENT TO ANY ADDRESS IN THE UNITED STATES FOR ONE YEAR FOR ONE DOLLAR The BROAD AX
Mme. M. Callaway-Byron Completely Captivated the Appreciative Audience which Greeted Her with Warm Applause at Quinn Chapel on Monday Evening
ME BAN THE ENTIRE MUSICAL SCALE OR RANGE RUNNING ON UP TO E FLAT BEYOND HIGH C WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE AND APPARENTLY WITHOUT THE LEAST EFFORT ON HER PART, WHICH PLACES HER ALMOST IN A DISTINCT CLASS BY HERSELF.
FOR THERE IS NOT ANOTHER SONGSTRESS IN THE UNITED STATES BELONGING TO THE AFRO-AMERICAN RACE THAT CAN APPROACH HER IN THE SLIGHTEST DEGREE AND THERE ARE VERY FEW SOPRANO SINGERS RESIDING IN ANY PART OF THE WORLD THAT ARE HER EQUALS OR THAT CAN COME WITHIN A THOUSAND MILES OF SURPASSING HER IN THE HIGH ART OF CLASSICAL SINGING.
FOR SHE CAN THRILL AND THRILL LIKE UNTO THE MORNING LARK, HAVING PERFECT CONTROL OVER HER VOICE, HER POISE AND STAGE DEPORTMENT IS ABSOLUTELY PERFECT. SHE IS PLEASING AND EXTREMELY CHARMING IN HER MANNER AND HER STRIKING FIGURE DAZZLES THE EYES AND BEWITCHES THOSE WHO GAZE UPON HER.
MANY PROMINENT WHITE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN WERE PRESENT AT QUINN CHAPEL ON MONDAY EVENING, INCLUDING MADAME SCHUMANN-HEINK, THE NOTED AND POPULAR GERMAN-AMERICAN SINGER, WHO WERE ALL GREATLY DELIGHTED WITH THE SINGING ON THE PART OF MME. BYRON.
THE LEADING AFRO-AMERICANS OF THIS CITY SHOULD AT ONCE START A SUBSCRIPT FUND AND MAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR SUCH TALENTED AND FINISHED ARTISTS AS MME. BYRON, TO HOLD OR TO GIVE TWO HIGH CLASS RECITALS OR CONCERTS AT ORCHESTRA HALL, TWICE EACH YEAR.
FOR IT MUST BE DISTINCTLY UNDERSTOOD THAT ANY RACE OF PEOPLE WHICH FAILS TO ENCOURAGE THE CULTIVATION OF ART, MUSIC AND LITERATURE—THAT RACE OF PEOPLE WILL NEVER LEAVE ANYTHING BEHIND IT TO SHOW THAT IT EVER EXISTED ON THE SURFACE OF THE BROAD GREEN EARTH.
Vol. XXII.
Mme. M
Complete
Appreci
Greeted
plause
Monday
SHE RAN THE ENTIRE MUSICAL
TO E FLAT BEYOND HIGH C
APPARENTLY WITHOUT THE
WHICH PLACES HER ALMOST
FOR THERE IS NOT ANOTHER SO
BELONGING TO THE AFRO-
PROACH HER IN THE SLIGHTT
FEW SOPRANO SINGERS RESID
THAT ARE HER EQUALS OR
SAND MILES OF SURPASSING
ICAL SINGING.
FOR SHE CAN THRILL AND THRILL
HAVING PERFECT CONTROL,
STAGE DEPORTMENT IS ABSO
ING AND EXTREMELY CHAR
STRIKING FIGURE DAZZLES
WHO GAZE UPON HER.
MANY PROMINENT WHITE LADIE
ENT AT QUINN CHAPEL OF
MADAME SCHUMANN-HEINK,
MAN-AMERICAN SINGER, WH
WITH THE SINGING ON THE E
THE LEADING AFRO-AMERICANS
START A SUBSCRIPTION FUL
SUCH TALENTED AND FINISH
HOLD OR TO GIVE TWO HIGH
ORCHESTRA HALL, TWICE EAG
FOR IT MUST BE DISTINCTLY U
PEOPLE WHICH FAILS TO BE
ART, MUSIC AND LITERATURE
NEVER LEAVE ANYTHING BE
EXISTED ON THE SURFACE O
Never in the history of this city has it been possible for its citizens—those who dearly love high class music to enjoy such a rare musical treat as was presented to them last Monday evening at Quinn Chapel, which was well filled but it should have been filled to overflowing, for those who failed to hear Mme. M. Callaway-Byron, on that most auspicious occasion will not hear any one to compare with her singing for many years to come for in all history it can be truthfully stated that there is as much difference between her singing and the singing of those so-called singers who are singing around this city in churches for twenty-five cents a night or for anything that they can pick up, as there is between the smallest ant and the very largest elephant and even the so-called celebrated songbird who boastingly claims that she is a star of the first magnitude will have to go away back and learn all over again just how to sing before she will
LITTLE MISS HORTENSE HALL DELIGHTS TO READ THE BROAD AX.
Little Miss Hortense Hall, daughter of Doctor and Mrs. George C. Hall, 3408 South Park avenue; always delights to read The Broad Ax.
She was greatly overjoyed when she beheld the picture of her lovely home in the columns of the 21st anniversary edition of The Broad Ax, and it pleased her so very much; that she could not refrain from telling all of her little play or school mates all about it.
She feels it her duty every Saturday to watch for the mailman as she wants to be the first one to receive The Broad Ax, when it is delivered at their home.
HEW TO THE LINE; LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY
ever be able to stand shoulder to shoulder in any way with Mme. Byron. The following was the program rendered on that more than delightful occasion which will go down in the history of this city as the Lososors concert or the Byron recital.
Solo Pianoforte—Finale from Sonata, Greig—T. Theo. Taylor; Air des bijoux (Jewel Song) (Faust); Gounod—Madame Manitza Losos; A. E lucevan le Stelle (Tosca), Puccini, B. I attempt from Love's Sickness to Fly, Henry Purcell—W. Henry Hackney; Arie aus der Aper: "Der Zweikampf, (Le "Preaux-Clercs")", F. Herold—Madame Manitza Losos; (Accompanied by T. Theo. Taylor). (Violin obligato—Mons. Antoine C. Elgar.); A. Organ Solo Postine in E Flat, Abernepky—B. Even Song, Kinder—Walter E. Gossette; A. Teera's Garden—The Mountains of Allah, Henry Gechl—B. Depuis le Jour, Charpentier—C. Boheme, Alfred Gross—D. Vissi d'arte e d'amore (Love and
She keeps up with her studies in school; being very bright, alert, loving and dutiful and she is one of our best little girl friends in Chicago.
THE TWENTY-FIRST ANNIVER-
SARY EDITION OF THE BROAD
AX.
Without doubt The Broad Ax of Chicago last week was THE LEADING paper of the entire publication by Colored folks in the United States. Even the great Defender of Chicago had to step aside and give the right of way to The Broad Ax. We are truly proud of its work and commend every feature column and page. That kind of work on paper is uplighting, upholding and inspiring and doing real service for the whole country.-From the Post, Los Angeles, Cal., September 23, 1916.
CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30. 1916
Music) (Tosca), Puecini—Mme. Losoros Mr. Gosette, Mr. Taylor and M. Elgar; Aria, Ritorna Vincitor (Aida), Verdi—Mme Losoros; Accompanists—T. Theo Taylor and little Nellie Eura Byron.
Before she made her grand and most dashing entree on the stage or platform she introduced an entirely new novelty, which caused all the other singers who were out in full force to open their eyes real wide and her pleasing new novelty was simply, softly and very sweetly singing at a distance out of sight, "Home Sweet Home, be it ever so humble there is no place like home", to say the least with one full bound she completely captivated the highly appreciative audience, when she finally emerged on the stage or platform in all her beauty, radiant smiles and splendor.
In the past twenty-five or thirty years it has been our pleasure to listen to all the most far famed singers in this country and we do not hesitate in saying that none of them have or can surpass Mme. Byron, for she ran the whole or the entire musical scale or range running on up to E flat beyond high C with the greatest ease and apparently without the least effort on her part, which places her almost in a distinct class by herself, for really and truly she is a most wonderful singer and any civilized race of people in the world would be very proud of her and her rare accomplishments and feel its self highly honored to claim her as their own, for there is not another songstress in the United States belonging to the Afro-American race that can approach her in the slightest degree and there are very few soprano singers residing in any part of the world that are her equals or that can come within one thousand miles (as it were) of surpassing her in the high or perfect art of classical singing.
With no trouble on her part she can thrill and thrill like unto the golden on the silver voiced morning lark having perfect control over her enchanting voice, her poise and stage deportment is absolutely perfect, she is pleasing and extremely charming and her striking figure dazzles the eyes and bewitches those who gaze upon her.
At the end of several numbers she very gracefully bowed herself from the stage and when she re-appeared she was attired in a new costume which
NINTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE LOUISE JUVENILE HOME FOR COLORED BOYS AND THE THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF THE LOUISE TRAINING SCHOOL FOR COLORED BOYS.
Friday evening, October 6th, the ninth anniversary of the Louise Juvenile Home for Colored boys and the third anniversary of the Louise Training School for Colored boys, will be held at the home, 6130 S. Ada street; from 3:30 P. M. until 11:30 the same evening.
An interesting program, of singing and speaking will be rendered. Judge Victor P. Arnold, of the Juvenile Court and Charles Virden, of the State Board of Administration will be among the speakers.
The celebrated and unapproachable golden-throated nightingale soprano song stress who has had the honor to appear with the Philharmonic Orchestra in Dresden and Munich, Germany. She is destined to become one of the most famous operatic stars of the present age.
was more beautiful and elegant in every way than the one she had discarded which was another very pleasing feature of her high class and artistic recital. Mme. Byron was born in Tenn., educated at the Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn., for the past sixteen years she has resided abroad for ten years of that time she received instructions from three of the best and greatest teachers of voice culture and music in the old world, she successfully studied in Berlin, Germany; Rome, Italy and Paris, France. It was in Paris that she was prepared for the Opera.
Her daughter little Nellie Etura Byron, was born in Berlin, Germany, came to this country two years ago a refugee from Europe, she, like her mother has understanding about musical terms that is astounding and she is bound to make a capable pianist.
Mme. Byron who is a songstress of world wide fame has prior to the breaking out of the war in the old world, appeared in every large city in Europe.
CHICAGO SOLDIER DROWNS
Austin, Texas, Sept. 27.—John Wyatt, a sergeant in Company A, Eighth (Colored) Illinois infantry, was drowned today while swimming in the Colorado River. The body was recovered.
OFFICER GROWLEY IS BACK ON
HIS JOB.
Officer Crowley, who has been on duty in the city council committee rooms for some years, who is very popular with all the city daddies, returned a few days ago from his vacation trip to Excelsior Springs, Mo., and he feels his oats and he is looking as fine as a new fiddle.
and with the Philharmonic Orchestra of Dresden and Munich, Germany, received a letter of thanks from the Duchess of Sutherland and flattering compliments from the King and Queen of England.
Many prominent White ladies and gentlemen attended the recital, including Madam Schumann-Heink, the noted and popular German-American singer and they were all greatly delighted and very much charmed with the singing on the part of Mme. Byron.
Mr. W. H. Hackney, who sang exceedingly well himself deserves to be highly commended for making it possible for the music loving people of Chicago to enjoy the rare treat of listening to the artistic singing of Mme. Byron.
Dr. George C. Hall, Mr. Jesse Binga, Major Robert R. Jackson, Mr. George T. Kersey, Mr. Dan M. Jackson, Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams, Col. John R. Marshall, Col. Franklin A. Denison, Dr. Daniel H. Williams, Dr. W. F. Garnett, of Evanston, III, Mr. S. A. T. Watkins.
DUNNE PROLONGS A LIFE.
Convicted Murderer's Execution Is Put Off Until Dec. 15.
Springfield, Ill., Sept. 27.—Governor Edward F. Dunne today granted a further reprieve to Elston Scott, convicted of the murder of his sister in-law, Clara Dalton, and sentenced to hang. The stay gives Scott until Dec. 15 to live.
EIGHTH REGIMENT, ILLINOIS NATIONAL GUARD, WILL RETURN HOME IN A VERY SHORT TIME.
Orders have gone forth from the War Department at Washington, D. C., ordering the Eighth Regiment, Illinois National Guard, from doing service on the borders of Mexico.
No. 2
Mr. John N. Blackshear, Alderman Oscar De Priest, Dr. M. J. Brown, Mr. B. F. Moseley, Mr. F. L. Barnett, Mr. Frank L. Hamilton, Mr. Richard Hill Jr., Mr. James A. Scott, Mr. William H. Clark, Mr. Elijah H. Johnson, Mrs. Carrie Warner, Mr. Louis B. Anderson, Dr. W. A. Driver, Mr. James E. White, Dr. W. H. Marshall, Mr. Albert B. George, Mr. Edward D. Green, and other leading Afro-American citizens of this city, should at once start a substantial subscription fund; thereby making it possible for talented and highly accomplished artists as Mme. Byron, to hold or to give, two high class recitals or concerts at Orchestra Hall, twice each year.
For it must be distinctly remembered or understood that any race of people which fails to encourage the cultivation of art, music and literature—that race of people will never leave anything behind it, to show that it has ever existed on the face of the broad green earth.
The regiment will entrain at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, the latter part of this present week. It will possibly reach Camp Lincoln, Springfield, Ill., to be mustered out of the Federal service about the middle of October.
HYDE PARK NEWS.
The tennis contest between the Chicago Beach—Windermere Tennis Club will play their final game Saturday afternoon, Sept. 30th, at 3 o'clock, at 51 East End Park. Chicago Beach Mgr.—Mr. O. Harris. Players—Buckner, Grant. Windermere Mgr.—Mr. J. Gunn. Players—Riekmond, Patton. This will be the last match game of the season and a double prize will be awarded to the winners.
All are welcome to attend.
PAGE TWO
ABETROTHED LADY
The Daughter of the Former Mary Leiter, Chicago.
HER MARRIAGE A LOVE MATCH
Still In Her Teens, Lady Irene Resembles Her American Mother and Is Said to Be Devoted to the United States.
The marriage of Lord Curzon's eldest daughter, Lady Irene Curzon, to Mr. Guy Benson will be a love match, and the engagement has astonished a great many people, who took it for granted that Lord Curzon would in-
A
LADY IRENE CURZON.
sist upon his daughter marrying a man connected with one of the great houses of the peerage. Lady Irene will, however, inherit her father's barony and become Baroness Ravensdale after his death, in case he does not marry again himself and have a son to assume all of his titles—Earl Curzon, Viscount Scarsdale and Baron Ravensdale. Only the last can descend through the female line. Lord Curzon, in marrying the former Mary Leiter of Chicago, made a romantic marriage, in spite of the bride possessing an enormous fortune. The two were deeply in love, and when separated by the Atlantic ocean during the engagement—Curzon being compelled to leave America and return to London—the exchanged cablegrams of greeting every day. Lady Irene is very like her mother in appearance, being tall and graceful, and she is credited with having a good deal of her father's strength of character.
The prospective groom is one of three sons of Robert Henry Benson, a very wealthy Londoner, who is a trustee of the British National gallery and a member of council of the Victoria and Albert museum and of the Royal College of Music, all in London. Both Lady Irene and Mr. Benson are still in their teens.
WHEN SWEEPING.
Practical Hints About How to Perform This Household Rite.
To find the necessary coverings on sweeping days has often sent the maid scurrying about for old aprons, sheets, towels and anything else she could lay her hands on to use for this purpose.
One housewife has solved the difficulty in this way: She purchased a quantity of gray cambric and made from it a large sheet, with which to cover the beds and sideboard. Smaller covers for dressers and toilet tables were made, and still others in suitable shapes were designed to put over lamps, mantels and the like. She also made from the cambric a bag to keep the covers in. This was hung in the broom closet.
While light, the cambric formed a perfect protection against dust, and a simple shaking when the sweeping was finished freed the covers from all dust that had settled upon them, so that they required washing but once a month. The use of these dust covers saved much valuable time and extra work. The cost of such a set is moderate, and it does not take long to make them.
Fall Silks.
It is always interesting to know the materials from which the new frocks are to be made. The silk frock will not abate in favor, and silk will be used for afternoon and evening wraps. Striped silks and chiffons are exceptionally good. A striped chiffon with the stripe of satin is printed with clusters of rich roses. A heavy satin for evening wraps is designed with groups of two wide stripes separated by two narrow white stripes. This comes in royal purple and fuchsia. Flowered silks on dark grounds for afternoon wear are unusual. There is also a new ponge crape for afternoon frocks. It comes in many colors printed with Turkish designs of rings and dots.
A. Luncheon Dish.
Mix a large cupful of well shredded, cooked, cold fish with a half cupful of milk, a tablespoonful of flour and a well beaten egg. Place in a saucepan and cook until it thickens. Let the mixture cool. Roll it in bread or cracker crumbs and fry in deep fat like doughnuts.
-
HOMEMADE NIGHTGOWNS.
Tips About the Newest Ways of Making Such Robes.
The day when a homemade nightgown necessarily indicated weeks of hand embroidery or else a few hours' stitching on stiff, thick muslin has gone by. And now we can make a nightgown in a few hours, with only a saving touch of hand work, and yet produce something that is charmingly dainty.
Sheer materials, of course, which are always used nowadays for nightgowns, have much to do with this change. The fact, too, that nightgown patterns now almost invariably show short sleeves and open necks also has much to do with their daintiness.
The nightgown with an empire waist line is a favorite just now, and is deservedly so, for the long, full lines of the skirt are most becoming. Some sort of wide-collar, too, is always becoming, but it wrinkles very easily in a nightgown. Reveres at the front are shown in some of the newer patterns, and those give softness and fulness and are not so easily wrinkled as a collar. Much variety can be given by the use of slashed and puffed sleeves, and the use of cuffs of various sorts is also worth trying. Batiste is a very good material for nightgowns, especially in colors. The pale pink and blue shades of this material, which can be had for about 20 cents a yard, are especially attractive. Nainsook in a soft quality is also a good material. Figured dimity, too, can be used, and this season much figured cotton crape of soft quality and dainty design has been used for pretty and durable nightgowns.
The use of much entre deux in the seams of fine nightgowns is a dainty touch, and especially in the nightgown which shows much hand work is this method of finishing seams advisable.
Hand embroidery can also be set into a nightgown with entre deux. In this way fine hand embroidered yokes and panels can be used.
The rolled hem that is so much seen nowadays—in handkerchiefs and fine blouses—can be utilized in the nightgown. The hem is finely rolled and is then whipped with thread of color, first in one direction and then in the other, forming a sort of cross stitch finish.
A pretty finish for a white night-gown is a binding of colored blas folds of muslin. This folded bias finish can be bought both in plain colors and in stripes and plaids. Sleeves and neck can both be bound in this way and a band of the colored fold can be placed at the line of an empire waist line. to have ribbon run under it.
In the same manner chiffon or georgette crape underwear can be finished with ribbon used as binding.
SONNY BOY'S GARB.
Small Men Delight In This Masculine
Attire.
Over a shirt of white silk, linen or
poplin is this suspender suit of blue lin-
en cut on loose lines. The jumper top is
THE WORKINGMAN.
buttoned on to the trousers with large white pearl buttons and conspicuous buttonholes. Side pockets for treasures are a feature.
Fall Styles For Children.
The question of fashion in garments for the tots is largely one of becomingness. But, of course, every item of apparel planned for the small citizen should wash.
Some of the smart little simple dresses for children shown this fall are plaited from shoulder to hem; some are in Russian blouse effect with plaited skirts. Suspended dresses with washable waists and little frocks equipped with washable gulmpes are also in favor.
Tub fabrics are unquestionably first choice, or should be, for the very young children. But plain and plaid serge and velveten dresses for girls of eight to ten and twelve years are smart. For school wear bright colors and cuffs are used on dark color frocks, and detachable collars and cuffs of linen, plique, etc., are also used very effectively on some of the school frocks.
Serge Frocks.
The separate frock of navy serge will not lose any of its popularity. It is to be found mostly in princess styles or made on lines that give the shoulder to hem effect. Jumper frocks of serge to be worn with separate blouses of georgette crape are very handsome. One buttons down the back with black bone buttons. It has a guipa of terra cotta georgette crape, and stiff flaps extend outward over the hips, heavily embroidered with terra cotta silk. The corsetlet effect is gained by pointed yokes on these serge frocks which point upward on the blouse and downward on the full circular skirt.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916.
FOR YOUNG FOLKS
FOR YOUNG FOLKS
Sleepy Time Story About Some Interesting Little People.
LEGEND OF LONG GONE DAYS.
Strange Thing That Happened to a Good Natured Farmer and His Wife. Fairies Show Gratitude For a Kindly Act—Things of Interest to Children.
Tonight, said Uncle Ben to little Ned and Polly Ann, I am going to tell you about the
LITTLE HILL MEN.
In the district of Erslev stands a fine farm which is known all over the country as the "Mound Garden," or, as some would say, "Hill Garden," and this is why it is so named.
Near the farm is a beautiful green mound or hill in which dwell many little Bergmen or Hill people.
When the farmhouse was built Jon, the farmer, wanted for his garden some fresh green sod. So, going to the Mound, he carefully cut the green-sward from it and carried it to his farm yard.
In the evening Jon's wife, Thyra, went to the kitchen to light the lamp and prepare supper, but to her great surprise she could not enter.
"This is very strange!" she thought.
"The place seems crowded. I can't find room even across the threshold."
Thyra began to feel frightened and called loudly for her husband:
"Jon, Jon, come quick; I cannot get into our own kitchen!"
Jon came at once. "You must be out of your mind," he said. "Why don't you make a light?"
"I cannot get near the lamp," answered Thyra.
"I'll go and do it," announced the farmer.
But, lo, when Jon tried to enter the kitchen he found it so crowded that he could not enter either, push as he might.
"Who is here? Who is here crowding up my kitchen?" he demanded. Immediately there was a chorus of replies.
"We others, we others, who live in the Mound!"
"And what do you want in our kitchen?" cried Jon.
"You have taken the roof off our home; all the greenens has been cut away; so 'we others' have come to your kitchen!" was the reply.
"I did not know it was your roof," said Jon.
"It was," declared the Hill people. "And now it is raining hard and the rain comes down into our very dining hall. We do not want to get wet, so we have come to your kitchen to keep dry and warm."
"Very well," repiled Jon; "stay where you are until the rain is over and to tomorrow I'll put back every bit of sod I took away. I am sorry I have given you so much trouble."
So the farmer and his wife allowed "we others" to remain in the comfortable kitchen, and next morning when the rain had ceased to fall Jon carried back all the grassy sods and replaced them carefully on the Mound.
Back to it then trooped all the Bergmen or Hill people, and from that day Jon prospered and nothing ever went amiss on the farm. He had the richest fields of grain, the finest crops in the countryside, for, of course, having gained the friendship of the Bergmen, they were always working for him and alding him in every way they could possibly devise. So no wonder Jon and Thyra prospered in everything they undertook.-Philadelphia Record.
Beauty and the Beast.
This justly proud young lady is very happy because her Boston terrier won a blue ribbon at a dog show held on Long Island. Lots of young folks own dogs and are very fond of them even
A
Photo by American Press Association.
MISS ALICE BEATRICE TAMTER.
if they are not prize winners. Many
of the most intelligent dogs have no
pedigrees and are just plain dogs.
Training and good care will do much
to make animals a source of pleasure
to their owners.
AGAIN SERGE.
One Afternoon Frock For Early Fall Looks Like This.
Navy blue serge combined with navy satin gives this attractive juvenile ralment. Wing drapes on the sides of the skirt are a graceful touch. What give
1
NEW MODEL
the gown distinction, however, are the dashes of metal embroidery around the knees and a triangular patch on the bodice.
FASHIONABLE HAIRDRESSING.
How to Dress Your Crowning Glory In Good Form.
The hair continues to be worn high or low, though the high dressing predominates to accord with the fashionable gown. The style of hat worn large or small, high or low crowned, has much to do with the choice. The larger the hat the greater the amount of hair used, and as the large hat with high crown is coming the use of puffs and curls will be more general.
One style shows the use of three good sized puffs artistically arranged on the top of the head with just a suggestion of a part on the right side.
The side hair is waved, with a few graceful curls falling over the forehead and ears.
In another style the hair is waved across the forehead and the rest of the hair is waved and combed high toward the back.
An extremely high dressing shows the front hair held perfectly flat with a band, tortoise shell for day wear and brillants or other rich effects for evening. Across the front is a bang of curls and on either side over the ear are three decided curls. The back hair is waved and taken straight up. Hair ornaments are used in a variety of shapes, styles and sizes, both plain and jewel studded. Many combs and pins are inlaid with gold, silver or brillants. Some for evening wear are in a bowknot design mounted on a flat head band of tulle.
The Flaring Brim
The flaring brim is the feature of the newest hats and bids fair to be popular after the long reign of the straight sailor.
One model seen on a smartly dressed woman suggests the Napoleon period. It is made of black velvet and has a white felt crown which stands out in strong contrast. The brim is turned up abruptly in front in two points, each one mounted with a scrawny but effective fancy.
Another model has its brim flaring at the back. A rich combination of colors is used—citron for the top and purple for the facing. Both are felt. Copper spangles dangle around the crown.
The flare can be brought out pleasingly on small as well as large shapes. A peanut shell colored felt turban has a brim which flares at every point. At the back it is wider than at any other place. A bluebird is perched directly in front. A black velvet hat, very picturesque in line, flares bravely at the left side.
Draped Bonnets.
Draped effects are very prominent on the latest hats of velvet and soft satin. One model of dark blue velvet has the material piled quite high. It is void of trimming except in the extreme front, where a white satin rectangular band is embroidered in blue wool.
Another model of black satin has the material brought up to a central point on top and gathered about one little satin covered button. It reminds one of the bouffant skirt of the old time pincushion. This bonnet, however, boasts of a shallow brim, which droops in a coy manner over the forehead. Two curved stick ornaments project from the front.
Suggestive of a sliding board, dear to the child's heart, is a purple velvet turban which is built high at the back and gradually decreases in height as it nears the front.
STAFF OF LIFE.
How to Make Use of All Stale Breads and Crumbs.
TIPS FOR MRS. NEWLYWED.
With Food Prices Rising and High Cost of Living a Permanent Problem, Ways of Turning Crusts Into Palatable Dishes Are Worth Heeding.
Of all the leftover remnants of food from the kitchen bread is the most common perhaps, and many pieces are daily thrown away which a little thought would turn to excellent use.
If the leftover pieces are not utilized the same day an excellent plan is to wrap them in pieces of waxed paper and store them in a stone jar. They will keep well for a week in this way.
Dried crumbs for stuffing and meat frying: Put the crusts and small pieces in a baking pan and dry in the oven without burning. They may then be put through the food chopper and stored in clean glass jars until wanted. They may be used as a basis for meat croquettes, poultry stuffing and other things.
French toast may be made from the whole slices of leftover bread. It is an excellent luncheon pickup dish. Beat an egg and add a little milk. Dip the slices of bread in this and fry a nice brown in hot drippings. Serve with butter, jelly or marmalade.
Bread custard pudding: Cut the bread in dainty shapes and butter liberally. Make a plain custard of eggs, milk and sugar. Put in baking dish and float the buttered bread on top. Sprinkle with grated nutmeg and bake in a quick oven until brown. This is excellent.
To make croutons for the various soups so much relished in summer cut the bread in cubes and fry in butter or dripping just before serving with the soup. Add five or six to each plate of soup. These are delicious with almost any soup.
Bread jelly for invalids: Scald the stale bread freed from crusts. Mash to a paste until of mushlike consistency. Add a little sugar and flavoring, mold, chill and serve with cream.
Sterilized breadcrumbs are especially valuable for the young children in the household. A jar should be kept filled with these. They may be heated when wanted and sprinkled in soft eggs, soups, milk, fruit juices and indeed anything eaten by very young children where fresh bread is often actually dangerous.
Dried bread is also valuable for mixing with various other foods for feeding the household pets.
THIS NEW ONE.
Paris Sent Over This Turban In the First Shipment. Taupe velvet, with a high band and two wings that take the outlines of the gray eaglet in front, gives this
A
THE AIRSHIP.
chic turban. Draped models are also a fall hallmark, and quilts are thrusting themselves forward, as ever, as pliant trimming.
From Ribbon
You can make the smartest kind of a little tam from a very wide grosgrain ribbon. A band of buckram to act as a foundation is first covered with the ribbon, and then the ribbon is folded in half and plaited in wide box plaits to a central point at the top of the crown. The plaiting is covered with a motif of wool flowers embroidered on scrim. A chic bow of the ribbon is tied and secured at one side. You cannot imagine anything pretier than this tam, and, what is better still, it lies within the power of any clever girl to make one herself. If the ribbon is not stiff enough to stand upright after it has been attached to the buckram band, it might be well to line it with a layer of flat buckram, though the soft effect of the ribbon by itself is preferable.
A Smart Collar
The neck line is, like the waist line, no longer a stationary thing. From Paris comes a high collar of black taffeta tied in the back with a flaring bow and falling over it in a circular collar of white organdy—the whole a smart little conceit which is especially becoming to the tall, slender woman. High collars are not easy to wear, but they are smart.
HER FALL SUIT.
Longer Coats and Longer Skirts Are a New Mark.
This youthful suit is put up in plum gaberdine, a skirt cut walking length and a long coat on which seams are
A
WELL PLEASED.
accentuated with stitching. Hand embroidery adds much to the hip pockets,
while squirrel collar and cuffs give a smart finish.
THE JUVENILE MODE
What Children Will Wear All This Autumn.
Clothes for children ape those of their elders very closely this season. Especially is this so in materials. Wool velour for coats, with plenty of fur trimming; velvet and satin for frocks, are the rule rather than the exception. Dark colors lead, navy blue, dark brown and hunter's green being favored. Trimmings of Roman stripes, bright plaids and checks or plain silks, as red, empire green, Hague blue and gold, are used to liven up the somberness of the darker materials.
Gabardines, serges, broadcloths, plain and novelty taffetas and velvets are employed for afternoon frocks. Fur, braid and ruchings trim these.
Party frocks of chiffon, net, crepe de chine or pastel colored taffeta reach the acme of youthful daintiness.
Ripple effects are noticeable in coats, Cape, sailor, military and draped collars are largely used. More than often they are entirely of fur. Belts and sashes are featured to a great degree.
Little girls will wear small, snug fitting toques of fur over their curls this winter. Handmade trimmings, such as velvet fruit and flowers, trim the poke bonnet of silk or velvet.
Cutlets In Mint Aspic
Lamb cutlets in mint aspic make a novel dish. Either braise or roast the best end of a neck of lamb, and when cold trim into daintily shaped cutlets, not too thick. Have ready a pint of stiff aspic jelly, flavored, a little sugar and some French vinegar, besides the ordinary flavoring, and when it is strained, but still liquid, mix into it four tablespoonfuls of finely chopped mint. Pour a thin layer of this jelly, not more than the tenth of an inch deep, into a flat, shallow tin, and when it is thoroughly set place the cutlets thereon and pour more of the liquid mint jelly on them, so as to just cover them. When it is set and stiff pass a sharp knife around the edge of each cutlet so as to cut it out from the surrounding jelly.
Pass a cloth wrung out in warm water lightly under the bottom of the tin and the cutlets will be easily detached, each neatly masked with jelly on both sides. Dish them in a wreath of peas and mayonnaise.
Let There Be No Lack of Sleep.
Let There Be No Lack of Sleep.
Lack of sleep ages a woman possibly more than anything else. Most women who are inclined to be nervous require from eight to nine hours. Sizes and seven hours of rest suffice for others. The hours before midnight contain the magic wherein beauty is dispensed freely. One hour before 12 will do more good than two afterward. Sleep without pillows if possible or a very small one of couch size. The feet should be higher than the head. This makes the flow of blood over the heart even. Sleep on your right side, with the limbs outstretched and the arms down at the side rather than over the head, which, 'tis said, encourages bad dreams.
Potatoes au Gratin
Cut cold boiled potatoes in silice Place in a buttered baking dish and cover with a white sauce made from one and one-quarter cupfuls of milk two tablespoonfuls flour and two tablespoonfuls of butter. Mix equal parts of grated cheese and fine breadcrumbs and sprinkle over the top Bake in a moderate oven fifteen minutes or until brown.
faW INVENTIONS.
warconi Finds Nothing Notable
Has Been Perfected During'War.
sé OF POISONOUS GASES OLD
Big Lesson of Conflict In Europe le One
of Organization and Transportation.
At Work on Signal System Which
will Render Far More Difficult Sub-
marine Warfare.
Rome.—No notable scientific discov-
eres or inventions are growing out of
ie great War, in the opinion of Wil-
jam Marconi, the wireless inventor.
Ine recent interview he declaréd:
“gs for war inventions, on the whole
there have been no great ones that oc-
car to me. Most of them bave been
minor ones or applications of knowl
edge previously at our disposal,-as in
‘ge case of poison gases, if these may
| |i oa
Bg |
WEAN MAROON CE WAR 20 Saune-
be named at all. In ms own field
there has been some advance in practi-
al wireless by which we are now able
to direct the artillery fire of a ship by
signals from aervplanes, which has
been made possible largely through
the big improvements In wir craft.
“The bigslesson in Europe bas been
eae of organization of the physical
handling of big material problems by
the armies. 1 doubt if any one before
this war ever realized the meaning
and value of railroad transportation
a a large scale, as it is practiced in
the United States. Europe. too, bas
learned how to do big industrial jobs
evernight, to assemble raw materials
and turn out needed factory products.
“I refuse to play the prophet role, so
I would rather not say how many of
these war products will be of use to
ws when peace comes.”
Since the beginning of the war Mr.
Marconi has bad unusual opportuni-
ty for observing the practical side of
the war, having early put bis scientific
knowledge at the service of bis coun-
try. As a senator of the kingdom he
hus visited England, Belgium, France
and other countries and introduced in-
dustrial and shipping reforms. In bis
capacity as military officer he has
come into close relation with army
and navy and given the benefit of his
science and business organization
knowledge to munition factories. _
LOST DOLLAR HAS CLAIMANT.
Writer States Money Belonged to a
Friend Who Was Killed.
Paterson, N. J.—The dollar bill on
which someboay wrote, “The last of
ten thousand.” and which was found
fa the pay envelope of a street sweeper
has found a claimant. City Treasurer
Harry Corwin of Paterson has received
a letter written fn a woman's band and
sézued “I, A. Gibbs.” It came from
Fond du Lac, Wis. and the writer
asked Mr. Corwin to send the bill to
‘that address, i
The writer said she or be thought the
bul had belonged to a friend who bad
met death in an accident April 22 last
after spending thousands of dollars.
Mr. Corwin sent on the bill. as re-
ested. The writer sald she or he had
Fecently read of the discovery of the
note.
PAID TO REMAIN WIDOWER.
Weekly—Leeves $100,000.
New York.—GeorgeGetzgar of Sheeps-
head Ray will get $25 a week from bis
wife's estate so long as he remains a
Widower. This will was Gled with the
surrogate of Kings county. Mrs. Getz
Far died Aug. 7, leaving $100,000.
The greater part of ber estate goes
to St. Peter's Lutheran church of
Brooklyn and the Wartburg Orphans’
Farm school at Mount Vernon. Her
on, Henry Glelstein. inherits ber jew-
elry and household goods and the in-
come from the recidue of the estate.
On his death one-quarter of the resi-
ue will be divided among relatives.
her husband If he survives participat-
fag in the division.
British Casualtios In One Week 27,591.
London.—For the first week In Sep-
tember the total casualties of all ranks
fe all the British armies were 27,501.
the war office announced. Of these 901
ere officers, 240 of whom were killed.
There were 5,238 men killed out of 26.
‘0 casualties. The total killed was
‘§468 officers and men.
" _ Coney Island's Start.
‘The first man torealize the great
possibilities of Coney Island as a sum-
mer resort was Austin Corbin, a bank-
er aud railway official, From the be-
gining of the last century the beach
at Coney Island was frequented by
many New Yorkers, but it remathed
for Corbin to initiate the movement
which has made “Coney” a synonym
for a certain kind of amusement. Cor.
bin started his financial career at Dav-
enport, Ia., but in 1865 he opened a
banking house in New York, and in
1873 he purchased the eastern part of
Coney Island. There he created the
great resort known as Manhattan
Beach. He also became president of
the Long Island railroad and played a
big part in the development of all the
summer resorts on Long Island. In
the last forty years Coney Island has
become the greatest popular summer
resort in the world, and in addition to
the millions of transient visitors from
the city: who go there for the day
many thousands are regular summer
residents of the botels and cottages
which line its shores.—New York
World.
‘cinaeis Gineks Cui Meek
By the time that Mark Twain had
finally succeeded in paying off the bur-
den of debt that had fallen upon him
with the failure of his publishing ven-
ture he found himself one of the best
paid authors in the world. He refused
many offers of money that did not
agree with his literary conscience. He
declined $10,000 for a tobacco indorse
nent. though he liked the tobacco well
nough. He declined $10.000 a year
‘or five years to lend his name as ed-
or to a humorous periodical. He de
lined another $10,000 for ten lectures
ind another for fifty lectures at the
same rate—that is, $1,000 a night. And
he wax offered $1 a word for his writ
ng. which he also declined. making a
tinal arrangement with bis regular pub.
lishers that they should print whatever
he wrote. the payment being 20 (later
30) cents a word.—“Boys' Life of Mark
Twain” in St. Nichoias’.
pee a ee ey ee
Regarding the Persian language, we
all have a few words from that source
in our vocabularies. although we may
not be aware of our indebtedness.
There are about a dozen words in the
English dictionary which trace to Per.
sla, the most common being perbaps
“orange.” although this was thought
by some to be derived from the Latin
“qurum” (gold). “Sash.” meaning
ribbon or band (the “sash” of a win
dow is the Latin ~capsa”), “shawl”
and “taffeta” are other Persian words
which have become thoroughly ac-
climatized, as have “chess?” “caravan,”
“Vilac.” “dervish” and “lac.” while
“emerald” snd “indigo.” “azure.” “ba.
zaar.” “jackal.” “musk.” “paradise”
and “scimitar” have also been traced
to the same source.—London Opinion.
@umnation With Meters.
“Tis an evidence of how directly we
are related to nature that we more or
less sympathize with the weather and
take on the color of the day. Goethe
said he worked easiest on a high ba-
rometer. One is like a chimney that
draws well some days and won't draw
at all on others. and the secret is
mainly in the condition of the atmos:
phere. Anything positive and decided
with the weather is a good omen. A
pouring rain muy be more auspicious
than a sleeping sunshine. When the
stove draws well the fogs and fumes
will leave your mind. — Jobn Bur
roughs.
Teeth as Sentinels.
“When thou sittest to eat with a
ruler consider diligently bim that is
before thee.” says the Hebrew prov.
erb, warning a king’s guest to regulate
his appetite by his host's temper. Bos:
well, Dr. Johnson's biographer, gives
in his notebook a modern paraphrase
of the old Jewish proverb: “I said of
a rich man who entertained us luxuri
ously that, although he was exceeding
ly ridiculous. we restrained ourselves
from talking of him as we might do
lest we should lose his feasts. ‘He
makes our teeth sentinels on out
tongues,” said I.”
a aR asi
In Persia the wedding service is read
in front of a fre. In Nicaragua the
priest, taking the couple each by the
little Gngers, leads them to an apart-
ment where a fire is lighted and there
instructs the bride in her duties, extin-
guishing the fire by way of conclusion.
In Japan the woman kindles a torch
and the bridegroom lights one from It,
the playthings of the wife being then
burned.
A Record In Governors.
Mrs, Richard Manning of South Car-
olina had the distinction of being the
only woman on record who was the
wife of a governor, the sister of a gov-
ernor, the niece of a governor, the
mother of a governor and the aunt and
foster mother of a governor.
Accounted For.
Aunt—My goodness, Eddie! Why did
you take the biggest apple in the dish?
‘Bédie—I was afraid some one else
‘would get it —Chicago Herald.
Cotton Seed.
It ts estimated that one seed of cot-
ton, given the application of all possi-
ble care and skill, would produce 40.-
(000,000,000 seeds in six years.
; ‘tate te
Kathrrn—I hear that you said I was
@ouble faved. Kitye-T never did. |
mere! 1id you were double chinned
Exe bane.
Conscience is harder than our ene-
‘mies, knows more, accuses with more
nicety.—George Bliot.
THE BROAD CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 191
P|.
=e Famous Aztec Runners. ”
D Communication (among the A:
Was maintained with the rem
parts of the country by means o!
ea = Posthouses were establish
" = the great roads, about two league
Country Wide Investigation Plan-| tant trom each other. The co
i Dearing his dispatches in the for
ned by Department of Justice. | {siSeiypnical painting. raw
——— them to the first station, where
tak
BREAD AND MILK ARE HIGHER] "orsu tormesa te the mest ae
—e ‘till they reached the capital. ‘
Producers Declare That Whole Subject | Ciuriets, tained from childhood,
of Transportation of Milk Should Be or five leagues an hour, as a
Brought Before the Interstate Com- chronicler would make us believe
merce Commission to Get « Reporton | with such speed that dispatches
Existing Conditions. carried from 100 to 200 miles a
Washington.—Agents of the depart-| yout sh w ol eg at
ment of justice are watcbing efforts hours from the time it had been ‘
to raise the price of bread and milk. in the gulf of Mexico, 200 miles
While they entertain the private opin- the capital. In this way intelliger
fon that there is some justification for the movements of the royal a
the rise in the price of milk, they eX-| wag rapidly brought to court, an
press doubt that the rise would be jus- dress of the courier denoting b
tifled in the case of bread, despite re- | color that of his tidings, spreadin
Ports from Chicago, Memphis. Blr-| or consternation in the towns th
mingham and other cities in which the which he passed—From Pres
Brices bave been raised. “History of the Conquest of Mexi
A committee representing milk pro- -<iciiecmmibabciais
ducers asked Carl S. Vrooman, acting i
secretary of usricuiture. to investigate |‘ __—==sPicardy Names,
LFS
ae al
. e ioe J r
SP fe
TF >
are
the situation in regard to the milk
supply for Washington and other large
cities, with the purpose of ascertain-
ing a reasonable basis for adjusting
prices in summer and winter.
Complaint also was made of trans-
portation charges. The practice of the
Toads coming into Washington is not
uniform, but a majority charge 2%
cents a gallon or 25 cents for a ten
gallon can, uo matter what the length
of the haul may be up to fifty miles.
When milk is 16 cents u gallon the
producer, it was xaid. paid 16 per cent
to the railroad company for taking his
product into the city. ‘The claim was
‘also made that the farmer has to stand
the cost and upkeep of containers and
himself load the milk on the car, while
the dealer takes it off
‘The producers say that the whole
subject of transportation of milk
should be brought before the interstate
commerce commission and regulated.
Mr. Vrooman axsured the producers
‘that the department of agriculture
‘would make a country wide investiga-
tion of the milk industry and designat-
ed W. J. Spillman. chief of the farm
management division, and B. H
Rawle, chief of the dairy division, to
conduct such an inquiry and report on
existing conditions.
SCHOOL ON WHEELS.
SO aN EE Ne CNRS ert ae
Being Educated.
Salt Lake, Utah.—A school on wheels
4s operated on the rails of the Southern
Pacific company.
In an extra section gang under Fore-
man Taft, who has a crew of fifty men
on Superintendent Whalen's Los An-
geles division, there are twenty-five or
more children who are being taught
daily in a box car which has been 6t-
ted up with benches
They have a teacher who Instructs
them daily in English and Spanish and
in primary work. The results thus far
have not only been satisfactory, but
the class of men in the gang remains
high. As the gang moves along from
place to place so does the school car.
‘and the children never have to miss 2
day's attendance.
PAINTED HEN TO TRACE IT.
Mrs. O’Hare Saw Artifically Spotted
et tn Ancther Verd.
Paterson, N. J. When sbe saw a
green spotted chicken wandering for
lornly about the sard of Alexander
Miller, Mrs. Nellie O'Hare called a
policeman and had the man arrested
on a charge of purloining ber hens.
Mrs. O'Hare does not raise fowls
decorated in a green polka dot pattern.
but so many of ber feathered charges
had disappeared these moonlit nights
that she had taken a paint can and
brush and decorated them in the hope
ot tracing them.
Git In Wires Rescues Kitten.
Los Angeles. Cal—Daring death bs
electrocution in a network of high volt
age wires, Miss Gertrude Hemingway.
a pretty Venice girl. rescued # tins
Kitten by climbing « Gfty foot tele
graph pole. The kitten bad been
perched on the pole for two days when
Miss Hemingway performed the rescue.
Miss Hemingway lives on Washington
doulevard and said that she could net
find a man brave enough to scale the
pole.
“~~ Famous Aztec Runners. ~
Communication (among the Astecs)
Was maintained with the remotest
arts of the country by means of cou-
Hers, Posthouses were established on
the great roads, about two leagues dis-
tant from each other. The courier,
bearing bis dispatches in the form of
&.hlerogiyphical painting. ran with
them to the first station, where they
Were taken by another messenger and
carried forward to the next, and so on
till they reached the capital. These
couriers, trained from childhood, trav-
eled with incredible swiftness; not four
or five leagues an hour, as an old
chronicler would make us believe, but
with such speed that dispatches were
carried from 100 to 200 miles a day.
Fresh fish was frequently served at
Montezuma’s table in twenty-four
hours from the time it had been taken
in the gulf of Mexico, 200 miles from
the capital. In this way intelligence of
the movements of the royal armies
‘was rapidly brought to court, and the
dress of the courier denoting by its
color that of his tidings, spreading Joy
or consternation in the towns through
which he passed—From Prescott's
“History of the Conquest of Mexico.”
’ Picardy Names.
‘Whence come the names of the Picar-
dy villages, strange even in France?
Among the names of places are Bray,
which 1s of Celtic origin and signifies
a swamp or morass. Fay is from the
Latin “agus.” meaning a beech tree.
Hem is a home or habitation. Estree
is from the Latin “strata.” meaning
route. Fins is from “Snis,” signifying
the limits. Combles means vales or
valleys. The termination “oy” is ap-
plied to a plantation—Quesnoy, Tilloy,
Autnoy, Rosoy. The name of “Bois
des Trones” is simply “the wood of the
thrones.” ‘The name of the city of Al-
bert was formerly the same as the
Rame of the stream, Ancre. It was
changed when the lordship passed to
the house of Albert de Lyne of the
family Alberti, originally of Florence.
Peronne, noted because of the captiv-
ity of King Louis XI. at that place.
was for a long time called La Pucelle,
“the maiden.”—Indianapolis News,
Hard to Kill.
An alligator’s tenacity of life is re-
markable. “I remember one time,”
says an English traveler in India, “I
was with a shooting party on the
Ganges when the natives brought in
a six foot alligator. ‘They hoped some
one would want to buy it. but no one
did, so it was determined to kill the
creature. It was hauled out of the
tank and tied to a tree. Bullets from
a small rifle or an ordinary twelve bore
gun seemed only to irritate the sau-
Tian, and he did not seem to care very
much when a native thrust a spear
down his throat. Finally they were
obliged to get axes and chop of its
head. Even then the tail thrashed
around, and the body was almost cut
to pieces before all movement ceased.”
A Brassy Cheek.
“You,” exclaimed the indignant old
gentleman—“you want to marry my
daughter! Why, sir, it is only a few
years ago that you were caddying for
za
“Yes, sir.” said the young man, “but
I don't Intend to let that stand in the
way. I hope I am philosopher enough
to realize that a very bad golfer may
make a fairly good father-in-law.”—
Boston Transcript.
Vititns Qenckn te Olen
White specks in butter are some-
times simply fine particles of milk
curd, resulting from lack of care in
skimming. Sometimes they are small
specks of dried cream, having been
scraped from the sides of the pan and
being too dry to thoroughly soften and
mix with the rest.
Lost and Found—a Heart.
Nothing seems so hopelessly lost,
when it is lost, as a heart, yet nothing,
when it is lost, is by the experience of
the centuries so absolutely certain of
Tecovery.—Puck.
As It Will Be. .
‘The New Woman—I'm going to the
club, Algernon. Algernon—Very well,
but I've done all I could to make the
bome attractive.—Philadelphia Ledger.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Brancr Eatine.
% Eating is important to every }
M one. It is a matter that calls }
M for thought, for eating anything ¥
M and everything without thought ¥
4 is certain to breed disease. Good
M€ health is necessary to our bappl- !
Mé ness, and health depends largely»
% on the food we eat, its quality !
M and quantity and the regularity
% of our meals. Quality includes
% the cooking. There are some }
WM who, as the Scotch say. “dig
% their graves with their teeth.” »
% Louis Corano some bundreds of
% years ago wrote discourses on }
% how to acquire and keep good
% health. The chief thing, accord- 3
% ing to Corano, was to eat simple 3
% foods in moderation and lead a 3
% temperate life. His theories are }
% quite as good today as in bis 3
% time. Cicero said, “Eat to live. 3
% not live to eat.” William Penn $
M gave advice, “Always rise from 3
Mi the table with an appetite and 3
you will never sit down without 5
% one.” Overeating, eating with- 3
% out regard to digestion. is the ¥
% cause of a large proportion of 3
%§ our sickness. Gluttony kills 3
% more men than the sword. “Who 3
% minds not his stomach will soon
- mind little else.” §
‘
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QUINACOMB »
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“a yp bes Zea epee s t's fs
Seesy, Dave Company, New York City. N.Y.
Giant Grotto.
‘The immense cavern known as the
Giant grotto is sitiated near Trieste.
Austria, and is said to be the largest
known to exist. It consists of one vast
chamber, 787 feet long, 433 feet broad
and 452 feet high. There are three en-
trances, two in the roof and one at the
‘edge of the roof, which bas been pro-
vided with ladders with steps, so that
visitors can safely descend into the
grotto. Once on the bottom, progress
{s easy. ‘The cavern contains remark-
able groups of stalactites, some of them
of gigantic size and others of bizarre
shapes. The tallest stalactite has a
length of little more than thirty-nine
feet. No side or underlying caverns
have yet been discovered. The bottom
of the grotto is 525 feet below the sur-
face of the ground forming the top
of the roof, which in turn is about
1,580 feet above sea level.—Pearson’s
Weekly.
(C0 Gee Oe
Among the legends of Greece it is
told that the father of Pythagorus, the
famous Greek philosopher, was a cele
brated engraver of gems, and, accord.
ing to classical history, both Helen of
“Troy and Ulysses of Greece wore en-
graved rings.
Engraving on stones that were partly
precious was an art at a very remote
age. The British museum proudly
boasts the possession of a smal] square
of yellow jasper bearing the figure of
‘© horse and the name and titles of
Amenophis IL, believed to date back
to about the year 1450 B. C. The very
finest specimen of engraved gem now
in existence 1s a head of Nero carved
on a first water diamond by the broth-
ers Castanzi in the year 1790 A. D.—St.
‘James’ Gazette.
Cited thar Citas
‘There's method in some people's seem-
ing miserliness, although the reason for
‘80 much privation does not strike ordi.
nary folk as sufficient. A Swiss village
owes its fine peal of bells to this sort of
self sacrifice.
About ten years ago a widow who
had lived in great misery for no less
than fifty years went to the commune
and presented {t with over $4.000 for a
peal of bells for the old church. She
bad saved the amount penny by penny,
dressing like a beggar and starving
herself. She sald she had gained the
object of her life.
Breaking a Looking Glass.
‘The breaking of a looking glass su-
perstition is a very old one. Hundreds
of years ago it used to be a common
belief that those who wished to barm
others could do so by getting pictures
or making images of their enemies and
destroying them. The destruction of
the picture would be followed by the
death of its original. Even the vic
tim's reflection in a mirror was enough
for the purpose, provided the mirror
was promptly broken.
An In.
Friend—1 was just in the art gallery
admiring your “Napoleon After Wa-
terloo.” The Sdelity of expression on
Bonaparte’s face is positively wonder-
fal. Where did you get it? Mr. Dob
ber—From life. I got my wife to pose
for me the morning after she gave ber
Grst reception.—Puck.
An Old Smallpox Cure.
The following primitive “cure” for
smallpox was discovered by the Ley-
tonshire (England) guardians tn one of
thelr registers for the year 1700: “Take
thirty to forty live toads and buro
them to cinders in a new pot. then
crush Into a fine black powder. Dose
for smallpox, three ounces.”
A Matter of Distance.
Aesop was asked bow far {t was to
@ certain place. “Let me see you
walk." replied Aesop. The man pro-
tested that he wished a civil answer
“You foolish person!” said Aesop
“How can I tell bow far It Is to that
town until 1 see at what pace you
travel?”
i ai
An Italian drommer erplains in the
Milan Domencia del Corriere that “in
the Grst class the passengers abuse
the trainmen, in the third class the
trainmen are rude to the passengers.
fm the second class the passengers in
sult each otber.”
Muffled.
“They tell me Jimson is over his ears
Im debt”
“Yes; 20 much so that be can’t hear
the doorbell when his creditors call."—
Brchange
‘It ts not every man that can afford
te weer a sbabby coat—Colton
PAGE THREE
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aa qj
iad
sale te fe
hia 1a ne a a
Old Enalish Furniture.
‘That fine old furniture is yet found
im Great Britain in many unexpected
Dlaces ts said to be largely due to the
stirring up of the country that was
given by the grea® exhibition at Lon-
don of 1851. This was soon after the
development of the railway system in
England, and there flocked to London
a large number of squires and their
wives. A new world had opened to the
country dames. The new things had a
wonderful fascination for them. On
returning home they got rid of much of
thelr old furniture and bought new.
Much of the old furniture found its
way to secondhand shops and was
“sold to poor folk who could not afford
to buy new. This accounts for the
finding today of much good old furnt-
tare in small houses in provincial towns
and among country people.—Indianapo-
Us News.
Napoleon Obeyed the Mob.
In “The Corsican—A Diary of Napo-
leon's Life In His Own Words.” Bons-
arte tells how as an obscure soldier
he witnessed some of the opening
scenes of the revolution: “I lodged at
Bue du Mail, Place des Victories. At
the sound of the tocsin and the news
that the Tuileries were attacked I
started for the Carousel. Before I had
got there in the Rue des Petits Champs
I was passed by a mob of horrible look-
ing fellows parading a head stuck on a
pike. Thinking I looked too much of a
gentleman, they wanted me to shout
‘Vive la nation!’ which I did promptly,
as may easily be imagined.”
Just Used Him.
‘They met again at Atlantic City. Tbe
young man asked the girl:
“Now that you have become eugage¢
to George why bave you flirted with
me so long and let me take you motor-
ing, golfing and theater going? Why
did you encourage me so long when
you intended to accept George?”
‘The girl blushed a little and sighed.
“I wanted,” she said softly, “to test my
love for George.”—Pittsburgh Chroni-
cle-Telegraph.
She Wan the Trick.
“Oh, George. dear.” she whispered
when he slipped the engagement ring
on her tapering Gnger. “how sweet of
you to remember just the sort of stone
I preferred! None of the others was
ever so thoughtful.”
George was staggered but for a mo-
ment. Then he came back with: “Not
‘at all, dear. You overrate me. This
fs the one I've always used.”
She was Inconsistent enough to cry
about it.
Retort Caustic.
Artist's Friend (patronizingly) — 1
think those thistles in your foreground
are superbly realistic, old chap: "Pon
my word, they actually seem to be
nodding tn the breeze. don't you
know! Ungrateful Artist—Yes. I bave
had one or two people tell me they
would almost deceive an ass!
A Perfect Being.
Once upon a time there was a bo-
man being who never made a mistake,
And his neat little tombstone records
the fact that be was one day old when
he died.—Springfield Union.
Perfect Fit.
Clara—Is she satisfied with her di-
vorce suit? Bella—Yes: she wouldn't
have ft altered for the world —Chicago
Herald.
© PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
° —
° Bran as a Medicine.
© Bread or muffins made from |
© bran make a nutritious break- |
© fast fool Because of Its coarse:
© ness and bolk bran is highly lax-
© ative. Persons of sedentary bab-
© its and those who eat much meat |
© Invariably suffer from constipa- |
© ton. Uncooked bran makes a |
© more active laxative for such |
© cases. It should be eaten once a |
© day—two or three tablespuonfuls
© of sterilized bran mixed In with |
© the breakfast cereal or stewed |
© fruit or taken with a pinch of :
© salt and milk or cream over tt :
© A warm preparation of ancook- |
© ed bran can be bad by stirring tt |
© into sup. ‘
© _ The aged enjoy the bran bread ‘
© for breakfast, dinner and sup ‘
© per. It does away with the need
© for a cereal at breakfast for ‘
© them. Digestive disturbances are
© apt to result from a too steady
© ict of cereals, and bran prepa- |
© rations prevent and correct die ‘
© orders of digestion. P
e ‘
PAGE FOUR
HON. GIFFORD PINCHOT OF MIL.
FORD, PIKE COUNTY, PA., SETS
FORTH HIS VIEWS ON CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
Philadelphia, September 20, 1916
Mr. Julius F. Taylor,
Editor, The Broad Ax,
Chicago, Ill.
My Dear Mr. Taylor:—
The Conservation of natural resources has become one of the largest issues of our time. In the campaign of 1912, it formed one of the chief planks in the Democratic platform, and was often endorsed in Mr. Wilson's speeches. His inaugural address committed him fully to support it.
For these reasons it is important to know what the Wilson Administration has done. As one man deeply interested in Conservation and familiar with the record, I am writing to lay it briefly before you.
When he took office, Mr. Wilson ceased to say much on Conservation, preferring to let the members of his Cabinet speak for him. After his inauguration, the friends of Conservation, regardless of partisanship, offered him their help in putting the Conservation policies through. The opportunity invited action. The fight to save Alaska from the Guggenheims had created a living body of public opinion which lacked only official leadership to save what resources still remained in public hands. It seemed at first that President Wilson would lead.
At the outset of the work of the Wilson Administration in Conservation was good. Congress passed, and Mr. Wilson signed, the Alaska Railroad Bill and the bill which assured Government control of coal lands in Alaska. These measures were excellent, and President Wilson deserves praise for their enactment. So he does for his veto of a bill to give away National Forest lands.
Unfortunately these creditable instances form but little of the record. Politics came into control. Thus a bill seeking to turn the natural resources of Alaska over to a political commission was repeatedly recommended by the Administration through the mouth of the Secretary of the Interior. If passed it would have thrown Alaska into the hands of the special interests and established a policy almost certain to destroy the National control of natural resources everywhere else as well. This measure we were fortunately able to stop.
When Wilson became President, the Reclamation Service, in its great work of irrigating the arid lands of the West, was wholly free from politics. By the mouth of his Secretary of the Interior Wilson advocated, and later signed, a bill which leaves the choice of lands to be reclaimed to a Committee of Congress, and so makes politics dominate the Service.
Director Newell was the man who created the Reclamation Service. He made and kept it one of the most efficient Bureaus under the Government. The Secretary of the Interior forced him out, and replaced him by a Commission in which politicians control'.
The Newlands bill is a Conservation measure which proposes to develop all the resources of our inland waterways—waterpower, navigation, irrigation, and domestic supply;—for the public benefit. Although Wilson strongly endorsed it during his campaign, as President he let it drop, and instead has signed two waterway bills of the old pork-barrel type, which are everything the Newlands bill is not.
Waterpower is the most valuable resource still in public lands. There is undeveloped waterpower in our navigable streams equal to twice the power of every kind now used in the United States. It is a huge prize. For years the waterpower interests have been fighting to seize it, and the Conservationists to save it for the people.
A waterpower measure, the Adamson Bill, came before the House in 1914. It favored monopoly, and gave the special interests, for nothing, the public waterpower on navigable streams. Nevertheless Wilson endorsed it.
On its way through the House, the bad parts of the Adamson bill were stricken out, and the public rights were secured. Thereupon Wilson reversed his previous stand, and endorsed the amended bill. This good bill then went to the Senate, where it was shelved, and the indefensible Shields bill was reported in its place. The Shields bill gives away the public waterpowers forever and for nothing. Both Roosevelt and Taft vetoed bills drawn on the same principle. Yet, by another reversal, the Wilson Administration got behind it, and when a widely circulated public appeal was made to the President for his help to defeat it, he refused.
As to waterpower on the public lands, there is but one reversal instead of two. Wilson first, by the mouth of a member of his Cabinet, endorsed the Ferris bill, which was mainly good. It was replaced in the Senate by the Myers bill, which is thoroughly bad. Among other things this bill actually throws the Grand Canyon, the greatest natural wonder of America, wide open to individual appropriation. Nev-
ertheless, Wilson reversed himself in order to give it in the same way his endorsement. Both as to waterpowers on navigable streams and on public lands, the last reversals leave the Administration standing with the special interests against the people.
The Phelan oil land measure, would hand over to private individuals who have no legal rights the valuable oil lands set. aside as reserves for the Navy. The Navy Department has made public announcement that the mere threat of the Phelan bill's passage has caused it "to seriously consider the advisability of abandoning" the policy of constructing oil burning ships. Only oil burning ships can develop and maintain the high speeds required in modern war, and without them no Navy can be even second class. The Secretary of the Interior actively supported this surrender of National safety to private greed. The Secretary of the Navy and the Attorney General opposed it. Wilson remained neutral and did nothing.
Because Wilson refused to take sides, or took the wrong side, the question whether the people or the interests shall win or lose in the Shields and Myers waterpower bills and the Phelan oil bill is still unsettled. These bills are still before Congress, and will pass or fail at the coming session. The public waterpowers and the efficiency of the Navy are at stake. There can be no compromise between the men who could grab the public resources for private profit, and those who would conserve them for the use of all the people. Either the interests will get them or the people will keep them. There is no middle ground.
To sum up, as in many other matters the promise made was not performed. Instead of progress in conserving our resources, the last two years we have seen a bitter and often a losing fight to hold what we had. Wilson talked well, began to act well, and then, yielding to the political pressure of the special interests, went back on Conservation.
Sincerely yours,
GIFFORD PINCHOT
NATIONAL NEWS NOTES
Brief Bits of News and Comment On Men and Women.
Washington, District of Columbia.—The cabin which was Lincoln's first home, now standing on its original site near Hodgensville, Ky., became the other day the property of the nation. A man who sees it, and later sees the completed great marble memorial to Lincoln on the bank of the Potomac at Washington, will have seen typical edifices of the most symbolic career yet known to the republic. The one is ten logs high on a side; is plastered with soil, and has an outer chimney of logs, sticks and mud. The other is to cost millions; be made and adorned by artists of distinction; and become, next to Mt. Vernon, the home of Washington, the most frequented of all American civic temples.
What enduring monuments these are, not only to Lincoln, but to the 10,000,000 Black men and women and children in America—it was because of the Emancipation Proclamation that Lincoln will longest be remembered.
DR. LYMAN ABBOTT ON TEMPER- ANCE.
New York, N. Y.-Dr. Lyman Abbott, who succeeded Henry Ward Beecher as Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, and present editor of The Outlook Magazine, New York City, in an article which was printed in the Ladies Home Journal, writes:
"Are not the temperance folks, unconsciously perhaps, to blame for a very general interpretation of the word temperance as applied only to alcoholic indulgence? It is such a beautiful word, temperance." Can you not tell folks that it applies to all things in life and that the reverse, intemperance, is just as true of religion as of drink!
"We have robbed the word 'temperance' of its noble significance by applying it only to alcoholic drinks, as we have robbed the word 'charity' of much of its significance by applying it only to gifts of money. I should not, however, say that it was a good use of language to speak of one as being intemperate in religion. Temperance means self-control, and generally is applied to the control of the body and its appetites and passions by the intelligence and the will. A physician in one of our great hospitals in New York, who is himself a practical if not an absolute total abstainer, once told me that tea inebriacy is a common vice among the working women of New York, and that it was a fair question if as much injury were not done by intemperate use of tea as by intemperate use of beer. No man has a right to call himself temperate who has not attained the power of self-control."
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916.
1930
LITTLE MISS NELLIE ETURA BYRON
With much skill and rare art she accompanied her mother on Losoros Concert or recital at Quinn Chapel, Monday
PUBLIC HEALTH PURCHASABLE rich and only one-te and keep well.
With much skill and rare art she accompanied her mother on the piano in the Lososor Concert or recital at Quinn Chapel, Monday evening.
A committee of the American Association of Labor Legislation has estimated that each one of the 30,000,000 wage earners in the United States annually loses nine days through sickness, as an average. This is a total of 270,000,000 days lost to production. If only one individual could be the goat, and were willing to gather into his own tissues all the pain, anguish and hardship which these figures represent, that individual would be the greatest benefactor imaginable and would be at the job over 750,000 years. The financial loss to the worker for medical care in these 270,000,000 sick days has been put at six dollars per capita.
The proper remedy lies not so much in sickness insurance, for somebody has to pay that, but in improved methods and better conditions of living, so that each of the 30,000,000 may cut down the sick days to a minimum. This can come only through more uniform intelligence regarding the foes of health, more interest in the means for fighting them and better actual practice of the laws when they are known.
If the 2,500,000 people in Chicago would resolve to tax themselves at a total average annual rate of one dollar each, for maintaining community health through the effort of their Department of Health, they would go a long way toward saving the six dollars per capita loss sustained by the wage earning class of the community $ _{2} $ which is the most important part of that community. This is a good business proposition.
The City of Buffalo does better; it devotes one dollar and eleven cents per capita annually to its health conservation. Chicago had only thirty-seven cents per capita during 1915 for this purpose. Is it possible that Buffalo is more intelligent, more public-spirited and more progressive and up-to-date than Chicago with its motto, "I WILL?" * * *
Too many men in Chicago are spending nine-tenths of their energy to get
M. H. H.
William H.
HON. JOHN W. ECKHART.
The extensive wholesale flour merchant Board of Education of Chicago, and Committee for the State of Illinois
The extensive wholesale flour merchant and manufacturer, vice president of the Board of Education of Chicago, and member of Woodrow Wilson's Finance Committee for the State of Illinois.
* * *
rich and only one-tenth to enjoy life
and keep well.
* * *
Dirty hands are dangerous.
* * *
Clean garbage cans are a credit to
any community.
* * *
Walk erect and look happy. The man
with confidence in his bearing and a
smile on his face will win where others
fail.
* * *
The homeless, uncared for dog is a
menace to any community. Family pets
are also dangerous, as a careful tabulation
of the number of children who are
bitten, maimed and mangled by “the
family pet” each year in Chicago will
show.
MAJOR ROBERT R. JACKSON
WRITES FROM AUSTIN, TEXAS,
STATING THAT THE EIGHTH
REGIMENT HAS MADE GOOD IN
ITS MARCH FROM SAN ANTONIO
TO THE FIRST NAMED PLACE,
ONE HUNDRED AND TEN MILES
WITHOUT THE LOSS OF ONE
SINGLE MAN.
The Following Letter Speaks For It self.
Autin, Tex., 9/24/16.
My Dear Julius:
The famous Eighth, (12th Division) is now camped in Camp Mabry, Austin, Texas, having arrived here yesterday noon. The boys stepped 110 miles without the loss of a man and the officers were in the saddle 7 days. We arrived in Austin in fine shape and as fresh as daisies. The boys were whistling and singing when they marched into camp and the people along the line of march in the city of Austin cheered them for the first time in the history of this great southern city, because it is entirely out of the question down here to cheer the Colored brother for anything and at any time. We made a great record on the
STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC.
REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912.
Of THE BROAD AX, published weekly at Chicago, Cook County, Illinois,
(Insert title of publication.) (State frequency of issue.) (Name of post-office
and State.) (State whether for April 1 or October 1.)
for October first. 1916.
Before me, a Notary Public, in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Julius F. Taylor, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the Editor of The Broad Ax (State whether editor, publisher, business manager, or owner.) (Insert title of publication.) and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit:
1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are:
Name of— Post office address—
Publisher, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue, Chicago.
Editor, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue, Chicago.
Managing Editor, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue, Chicago.
Business Manager, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue, Chicago.
(If there are none, so state)
2. That the owners are: (Give names and addresses of individual owners, or, if a corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of stock.)
Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue, Chicago.
3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: (If there are none, so state.)
None.
4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as so stated by him.
5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is..... (This information is required from daily publications only.)
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 25th day of September, 1916. VIOLETTE N. ANDERSON. Notary Public.
State of Illinois, ss.
County of Cook,
Before me, a Notary Public, in and for personally appeared Julius F. Taylor, who, by law, deposes and says that he is (State whether editor, publisher, business manager, or and that the following is, to the best of his benefit of the ownership, management (and in etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embark and Regulations, printed on the reverse of the
1. That the names and addresses of the editor, and business managers are:
Name of—
Publisher, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Editor, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Managing Editor, Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Business Manager, Julius F. Taylor, 6418
(If there are none, or if a corporation, give its name and the name or holding 1 per cent or more of the Julius F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Avenue.
3. That the known bondholders, mortgaging 1 per cent or more of total amount securities are: (If there are none, so state).
None.
4. That the two paragraphs next above stockholders, and security holders, if any, or holders and security holders as they appear but also, in cases where the stockholder or books of the company as trustee or in any of the person or corporation for whom such that the said two paragraphs contain state knowledge and belief as to the circumstance stockholders and security holders who do not company as trustees, hold stock and security of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no person, association, or corporation has any said stock, bonds, or other securities than as
5. That the average number of copies sold or distributed, through the mails or other the six months preceding the date shown as (This information is required from daily press.
(Signature of editor.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this.
(Seal.)
(My commission expires August 1, 1917.
march and picked up many a poor White soldier who had fallen by the wayside. We averaged about 15 miles a day and put up fresh camps each night. We have lived in the hills and mountains for a week and have had bacon and beans and beans and bacon every day for a week. The conduct of the men was excellent, but we suffered some for water, which is very scarce in this part of Texas. Sorry I cannot write you a long letter today. We are busy getting camp in shape and cleaning up for Sunday. Love to all.
Yours,
MAJOR R. R. JACKSON.
COLORED DEMOCRATS CRITICIZE
WILSON.
Meet at Buffalo and Condemn Segregation and Failure to Appoint Negroes to Office.
Buffalo, N. Y.—The anti-Negro policy of President Wilson and the Democratic Administration at Washington was strongly denounced at a meeting of Colored Democrats held here last week. Resolutions were passed condemning the segregation of Negroes in Governmental departments and the failure of President Wilson to appoint competent Colored men to prominent positions.
Although the meeting was well attended, representatives being present from the various sections of the State, there was no enthusiasm. Everybody admitted that President Wilson's unfriendly attitude toward the Negro had not made him supporters among the Colored voters of the country. Despite the discouraging prospects ahead, however, the Colored Democrats of New York State plan to conduct a vigorous campaign this fall.
At last week's meeting an organization was formed, to be known as the Colored Democratic League of New York State, and the following officers were chosen to serve for two years: James A. Ross, Buffalo, chairman; the Rev. J. R. White, New York, vice-chairman; John Morris, New York, treasurer; E. W. Duke, Buffalo, secretary; John McNeil, New York, assistant secretary; F. C. Morton, New York, chairman Advisory Committee; Rufus L. Perry, Brooklyn, chairman Executive Committee; W. Derror, Buffalo, chairman of Committee on Organization; W. F. White, Rochester, chairman of Field Agents; S. Lark, Brooklyn, chairman Speakers' Bureau; Charles W. Lett, New York, sergeant-at-arms.
The speakers openly confessed that prospects for a Democratic victory were net as bright as four years ago, and that hundreds of Colored voters who were enthusiastic Wilson men in 1912 are today opposed to his election.
JULIUS F. TAYLOR,
editor, publisher, business manager, or owner.)
this 25th day of September, 1916.
VIOLETTE N. ANDERSON,
Notary Public.
1917.
THE IOWA A. M. E. CONFERENCE
COMES TO AN END.
Monday evening, the Iowa A. M. E. Conference under the guidance of Bishop L. J. Coppin, wound up its sessions at Institutional church. Rev. W. D. Cook, who received $1.000 in dollar money for his Lord and Master, was returned to Bethel church. Rev. J. C. Anderson will still be on guard at Quinn Chapel, for his Lord and Master. Rev. I. N. Daniels will for the coming year hold forth at St. John's church in Englewood and all of the other A. M. E. preachers were returned to their respective charges.
COLONEL MAY, FRIEND OF LIN
COLN, IS DEAD.
Camden, N. J., September 27th.—Colonel Caesar Rodney May, for twenty years a resident of this city, died to-day in Cooper Hospital. He was seventy-five years old. He was born in Illinois and as a boy was a friend of Abraham Lincoln. At the start of the Civil War he carried this letter to Secretary of War Stanton:
"Dear Stanton: Appoint my young friend May a captain.
"A. LINCOLN."
Canada's River of Mud.
What is perhaps the most wonderful river in the whole world and one which is certainly unique of its kind was discovered by a party of prospectors exploring what is known as the "Smoky river region" in northern Alberta, Canada. Briefly, it is a river of mud—that is to say, although its course is well marked, with banks clearly defined, as in an ordinary river, its bed contains not water, but thick liquid mud of the consistency of molasses.
The mud river flows, as does a water river, but, of course, much more slowly. In fact, its progress during the time the party were observing it more nearly resembled that of a glacier. Unlike a glacier, however, there is no terminal moraine. A glacier at its foot melts and flows away, leaving an accumulation of rocks, but any heavy masses that may be in this river of mud must settle to the bottom and remain concealed by the mud itself. This mud river debouches on a plain, spreading out fanlike and forming a morass of unknown depth and extent.-London Mall.
Shape No Object
Butcher—Will you have a round steak. ma'am? Mrs. Youngbride—don't care what shape it is, so it's tender. Boston Transcript.
Solid Goods.
"What became of that cake I baked for you?" demanded the fiancee.
"I sent it downtown to have my monogram engraved on it," replied the fiancee—Kansas City Journal.
The Same Girl.
Young Husband—When I used to kiss you, you slapped me. Young Wife—Well, you won't get slapped now unless you forget to kiss me—Illustrated Bits.
Talks on
HEALTH,
CLEANLINESS,
PROPER LIVING,
SANITATION, ETC.
BY
Dr. W. A. DRIVER
3300 So. State Street
Phode Douglas 3617
FEMALE DISEASES.
Women must be taught that they can be free from so called "female troubles" only by consultation, examination and treatment conducted by a physician. Any other procedure will fail for reasons any intelligent person can supply. When a woman or a girl has any new condition of the body, she should for the sake of health consult a doctor, not another woman, unless the other is a physician. On account of an unreasonable and hence false modesty, many of the gentler sex suffer in silence the agonies of the damned. Some of these hint of their troubles to others who know little or nothing of the anatomy, physiology and pathology of the female genitalia. Many of the persons appealed to do not know and the unfortunate truth is, they do not know that they do not know. Hence they give advice that is worse than useless, because it delays proper treatment until the millions and millions of disease producing germs have traveled far into the vital processes. As a re-
INTEREST REVIVED IN WASHING-
TON MEMORIAL FUND.
Cotton Prices Cause Response From Rural Schools—Mass Meetings Arranged in Cities—Baptist Convention Urges Support To Fund.
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., September 25.—With the coming of fall and the passing of hot weather, the country is settling down to hard work. Schools are crowded to capacity and business houses are looking forward to a year of prosperity. This is election year and cotton is selling at sixteen cents.
Loyal men and women of the race are, as a consequence of these conditions, again turning their attention to the Booker T. Washington Memorial Fund. Voluntary letters are beginning to come in pledging contributions and outlining arrangements for mass meetings which are to be held in various parts of the country this fall.
Quite a number of rural schools which closed last spring before April 5th, the day set aside for school children to give to the Fund, have asked to be permitted to raise collections this fall. These teachers are faithfully keeping their promises and have written to say that they will send in larger sums than they first thought possible because of the generally better conditions which prevail now in the country districts as against those of the early spring, when there was so much panicky talk of hard times. It is hoped that other teachers of city and rural schools who for one reason or another failed to lift collections from school children last spring will not fail to do so this fall.
The Memorial Fund Committees in various cities which held over their mass meetings and active campaigns until fall are in many instances getting effective work done in arousing the Colored people to the duty of responding to this appeal for one-eighth of the Two-Million-Dollar Memorial Fund to perpetuate the work of the late Booker T. Washington—that is, $250,000. Of the sum which the White people were asked to give to this Fund they have given more than half, while the Colored people have not yet given one-fifth of the amount they were asked to give.
The Colored people of Baltimore, Maryland, have pledged themselves to raise ONE PERCENT OF THE AMOUNT TO BE GIVEN BY THE COLORED PEOPLE. This will be $2,500. Deciding upon a definite amount to be raised is one of the important things, because it outlines for the people just the amount of work they have before them. Besides it gives poise and dignity to the campaign in a city and affords better opportunity for organizing. At the monster mass meeting which they will have in Baltimore on November 18th, there will be an excellent program and on that date the churches, schools, fraternal organizations, and the clubs and societies of various sorts will make their returns, following a whirlwind campaign of the city. Mr. Harry T. Pratt, Dean William Pickens and other prominent Baltimore citizens have written most encouraging letters to Tuskegee Institute regarding the outlook for a successful effort.
[Name]
sult the distressing symptoms finally arrive and the physician alone can realize the gravity of the condition.
Some of the women become invalids, few, a very few, recover with full physiological capability, and many of them die in spite of the earnest efforts of medical science that was called too late. In the first place it is a shame that we have so much ignorance abroad in the land on the sex question as to permit the distress and destruction of humanity by these "social" or sexual pathogenic germs. It is because we have been silent on this very important matter. But the new era is here. The only way to protect is to educate. Teach the women that they should not have female troubles, that they should not have aches and pains and abnormal issues. See a doctor, insist on a thorough examination. Pain is not natural. Even childbirth is now conducted with little or no pain by the average physician.
Be wise and be safe from disease by the grace of the knowledge acquired by the medical profession.
In his annual address before the National Baptist Convention which met at Savannah, Georgia, during the week of September 4th, Dr. E. C. Morris, the president, called upon the members of the convention and the prominent men and women of the race to help raise this $250,000 from among the Colored people. Dr. Morris said: "The National Baptist Convention will greatly honor itself if the hundreds of prominent leaders who are gathered here will throw the full weight of their influence into the efforts now being made to raise our part of the Two-Million-Dollar Memorial Fund to perpetuate the work founded by Dr. Booker T. Washington, the greatest man of his time." With such support from the Baptist denomination, of which Dr. Washington was a member, and with the support of the Memorial Fund Committees in cities and teachers in rural communities, we shall hope to raise, by Thanksgiving Day, a very large part of our share of this Fund. WE SHOULD RAISE $100,000 BY THANKSGIVING DAY.
MESSENGER FOR FORTY-NINE YEARS.
Washington, D. C., (Special).—Shepherd A. Harris, since 1867 employed as messenger for the Washington Bureau of the New York Times, was buried from his home, 995 Florida' avenue, Monday, the funeral taking place from the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, of which he was a member for many years.
Mr. Harris was sixty-seven years old, and was one of the best known men in Washington, and highly respected by all. He had a wide acquaintance among newspaper and political men, and was well liked by all with whom he came in contact. He came to Washington, immediately after the war, having served as an attendant upon a captain of a Pennsylvania regiment, and took up the position as messenger in the New York Times office, where he remained until his death.
MEMORIAL TO MRS. STOWE
Jacksonville, Fla.—A beautiful memorial window has been placed in the Church of Our Savior, at Mandarin, and dedicated to Harriett Beecher Stowe and Prof. Calvin E. Stowe.
Among these giving subscriptions toward the memorial to the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin were several Colored people.
Whites residing here have started a movement to place a window for Thomas Dixon, author of books aimed at the Negro. They want Dixon clad as a night-rider in the Ku-Klux Klan, a striking contrast to the Stowe memorial.
MAN DIES SAME AS BEAST.
For that which befallthe the son of man befallthe beasts; even one thing befallthe them; as the one diest so diest the other; Yea they have all one breath; so that a man hath no prominence above a beast; for all is vanity. Ex. III, 19. For the living knows that they shall die, but the dead knows not anything neither have they any more a reward. Ecc. IX, 5.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916
Charles E. Stump, the Smart Farmer Newspaper Correspondent from Kansas, After His Steamboat Trip up the St. James River in Old Virginia, Again Finds Himself in the State Where You Have to Show Me---Missouri
Mexico, Mo.—Perhaps this is a world that will stand the test of worlds. I have been here for a long time and I am not ready to leave, because it has been my lot in the past year to see so many places since I have been trying to write for the paper. The people are getting acquainted with me, and I am getting acquainted with them, and then I have had some one to tell me that I was smart, and that has given me the big head which may lead to my death.
I have not sent you a letter for a long time and it would take me almost as long to tell you all I have seen and what I have been doing. But then I will try to say just a few things to you.
I told you about my trip up the James River and the visit to Jamestown, Va. Well when I got through there I found my way to Petersburg, Raleigh, N. C., Atlanta, Ga., Jacksonville, Fla., and then to Savannah, Ga., to attend the session of the National Baptist Convention which was one of the greatest in the history of the organization, and it was well attended. People were there by the thousands, and I did not count myself in getting at the number. There were enough without counting me, but if you want me to do so, then put it down so many thousands and one, or I will make the one. Then they raised some money there. It was all reported, and then the Board made the proper appropriations.
I have been going to conventions for years, but I have not been to a Baptist convention where there were so many free social functions. They were there just the same. I got more free eatings, and while the people were paying a dollar a day, the place where I stopped declared that they felt more like paying me a dollar a day for staying there and would not accept a cent of my money. So you see it was free doings for me all the way through.
Rev. E. C. Morris, of Helena, Ark, was elected president; Dr. W. G. Parks, of Philadelphia, vice president; Prof. R. B. Hudson, of Selma, Ala., secretary; Dr. A. J. Stokes, Montgomery, treasurer; Prof. M. M. Rodger, Dallas, Texas, auditor; Rev. C. H. Parrish, Louisville, Ky., statistical secretary; W. J. Latham, of Jackson, Miss., and T. G. Ewing of Nashville were elected the attorneys. Now there were assistant secretaries and other officers that I will not mention, but they put me on the staff of reporters. Muskogee, Okla., was selected as the next annual session.
I went from there to Washington, D. C., to attend the B. M. C. and it was a great big meeting. I want to here congratulate Hon. E. H. Morris, of Chicago, upon his ability as a presiding officer. He is one more president, or grand master as he is called in the B. M. C., and so well is he into the hearts of the people that they would just keep him all of, his life if he will stay, and James F. Needham, in the position of secretary.
But there was something sad connected with that big meeting. You see Dr. E. P. Jones, was some pumkins in Boston, and had his eye on the grand mastership, and thought that soon he would land. In Boston he was placed in the office of the sub-committee of management, and attended all the meetings. But in his zeal to push his Baptist convention, he got mixed up in the affairs in Georgia, and his head fell in the waste basket in Washington, and perhaps he will never see the big position. He came within the sight of the land of promise, but will pass on without ever getting there. He has my sympathy. The Rev. Dr. W. H. Mixon, also had to pick his head out of the waste basket.
It is strange that two preachers should fall from office in the Odd Fellows, but perhaps God wants them to
go about His business for He may be getting ready to bring this world to a sudden stop still.
While in Washington I had the pleasure of being the guest of the Rev. Dr. B. F. Watson, and went to see Editor John E. Murphy of the Afro-American. I visited Philadelphia, Chester, Pa., Wilmington, Del., New York City, New Haven, Conn., Chicago, Ill., St. Louis, Mo.
While in St. Louis, I went to that place where you get your heads put in order, and learn how to fix them up in fine shape. Where they teach you how to make hair grow but I wanted a remedy to stop mine from growing so as to cut down the barbershop bill. To that end I have worked. I went to the Poro college. They met me at the door, and ushered me up to the parlors of Prof. and Mrs. A. E. Malone, and Mr. Malone was soon shaking my lily black hand and telling me to be at home. He carried me down in the business office where I was commanded to be at home. He then told me that they did not work on heads, but taught them how to grow hair.
Soon Mrs. Malone, a modest little woman, who had invested in the hair-growing, came in, and shook hands like she was shaking hands with her own brother. She told me something about her life, and gave me an introduction to all the young women in the office, and believe me they have a host of them there. It is the Poro College. I am proud that Mrs. Malone is able to give employment to so many of our young people. It means so much to have them doing business in this manner. The individual who can bring into life anything that will furnish employment for people is worth something to the world in these times.
I went out to see some other friends, talked with Dr. W. Sampson Brooks, and then got myself together for this place. I came here to spend Sunday the guest of Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Wright, Prof. and Mrs. A. E. Bodine, and all the other people in town who would permit me to be their guest while there. Rev. Wright, as pastor of the Baptist church, and his wife is right by his side.
But now let me tell you about this Prof. Bodine. He is some musician. He can play the violin like that great artist whose name I do not remember. Then when it comes to singing, he goes way up in the air in what you call tenor or something like that. I don't know all the singing voices, but I do know that he is much in demand on account of the wonderful music which comes from his voice. They are calling for him in every direction to give recitals, and at times he answers the calls. But not all of them because he is a planter in this town and is kept busy planting. He is a planter of human bodies after the life has left. So much for that.
I spoke of Mrs. Corine Bodine. You see she is some pumpkins in the Knights and Daughters of Tabor of the state, and holds the position of chief grand recorder. This is a writing position, and she knows how to write. For a long time she was a teacher, but resigned this winter to be at home with her husband. The Lord may bless them with more work to do at the same time. A home is a great thing with an heir.
I think I will bring this letter to a close for this week. I am going to Kansas to clear up the crops, and then get out again soon. I hope to stay clear of the army while there.
SEEK NEGRO IN SLAYING
George White, Negro, is being sought by the police for the fatal shooting of Ollie Small, twenty-six years old, 3151 Federal street, a Negro, who died in the County Hospital Monday.
Black Maria.
Some years ago a writer in the English Notes and Queries, writing about the name "Black Maria" as applied to prison vans, quoted from a periodical, presumably English, named the Million, as follows:
"During the old colonial days Maria Lee, a negress, kept a sailors' boarding house in Boston. She was a woman of gigantic size and prodigious strength and was of great assistance to the authorities in keeping the peace, as the entire lawless element of that locality stood in awe of her. Whenever an unusually troublesome person was to be taken to the station house the services of Black Maria, as she was called, were likely to be required. It is said that she once took at one time and without assistance three riotous sailors to the lockup. So frequently was her help required that the expression 'Send for Black Maria' came to mean 'Take the disorderly person to jail.' It is easy to see how the name became fixed to the prison van."
Our Medal of Honor
The medal of honor of the United States, given for bravery on the field of battle, was first instituted in 1862 by a law approved July 12 of that year. It is a five pointed star of bronze tipped with trefoil, each point containing a crown of laurel and oak. In the middle, within a circle of thirty-four stars, America, personified as Minerva, stands with her left hand resting on the fasces, while her right, in which she holds a shield emblazoned with the American arms, she repulses Discord, represented with two snakes in each hand, the whole suspended by a trophy of two crossed cannon balls and a sword surmounted by the American eagle, which is united by a ribbon of thirteen stripes, palewise, gules and argent and a chief azure, to a clasp composed of two cornucopias and the American arms.
Size of the Roman Empire.
According to the historian Gibbon, the Roman empire "was above 2,000 miles in breadth, from the wall of Antoninus and the northern limits of Docia to Mount Atlas and the Tropic of Cancer; that it extended in length more than 3,000 miles, from the western ocean to the Euphrates; that it was situated in the finest part of the temperate zone, and that it was supposed to contain above 1,600,000 square miles." According to this, the Roman empire was considerably smaller than the United States, the area of which (leaving out Alaska and the islands) is nearly 3,000,000 square miles, or almost twice as big as was the empire of the Caesars.
Airships and Altitude
There are two ways of measuring altitude in a flying machine. One is by triangulation from the ground, which is an involved operation, requiring the services of several trained experts in the calculation of angles from different points on a measured distance on the earth's surface. The second and usual way is by means of a barograph, which is a form of aneroid barometer that records altitude by means of atmospheric pressure. The latter method is not as exact as the former, but is more expeditionous and is approximately correct.
End of the Story:
"Oh, if I were only beautiful," she sighed artfully.
"I wouldn't care if I were you." he said. "You are very intellectual and you have a sweet disposition. Besides, you are nice to your mother, and all that is much better than being beautiful."
And he was never invited to see her again—Pall Mall Gazette.
Happy Boys.
"The Smithers twins are so much alike that their own mother can't tell them apart."
"That must be rather confusing."
"It is, but the boys don't mind it. Their mother never dares to whip either of them for fear it might be the wrong one."—Exchange.
Important.
"My dear, what shall I buy you for your birthday?"
"Consult our jeweler. He knows pretty well what my tastes are."
"And did you tell him anything about the state of my finances?"—Kansas City Journal.
Her Tact.
Howard—Did she refuse you, old man? Coward—Well, in a delicate, indirect way. She told me she never wanted anything she could get easily.
---
The Inattentive Child.
Never scold a child who is dull or heedless nor one who seems to refuse to pay attention. Take such a child to a physician for an examination, for many times there will be found explanations for his conduct—his ears may be diseased or filled with impacted wax, which dulls or prevents his hearing. His eyesight may be so defective as to keep him from fixing his gaze upon anything. Children who are normal and well are bright, alert, attentive and responsive. Those who are ill or suffering from disease of the nervous system, some defect of hearing or vision, are unable to do anything as it should be done and deserve pity and never blame.
Origin of Felt.
Many centuries ago a poor monk was compelled to travel upon a long and arduous journey. His road was rocky, his sandals were worn, and he suffered agonies as he trudged grimly upon his holy errand. One day as he sat by the wayside resting a sheep came up to him, bleating in the most friendly fashion. The good monk peted the sheep and was grateful for its dumb friendliness, when suddenly he had an inspiration. He took out his sheath knife, sheared two handfuls of wool from the sheep and placed one in the heel of either sandal. That afternoon as he trudged along his feet seemed light, his step springy. The wool took the jar from his spine, the impact of the stony road from his aching, swollen feet.
The next morning as he started out he thought to rearrange the wool padding and discovered that the friction and the movement of his feet in the sandals had reduced the wool to a sort of a cloth. Thus was discovered felt, which to this day is one of the most effective substances ever discovered for padding purposes.
How Saccharin Was Discovered.
How Saccharin Was Discovered.
Saccharin is the most valuable substitute for sugar we know. Yet it, like many other present day inventions, had a rather unlikely beginning. It can be taken with impunity by diabetic patients, to whom ordinary sugar is death, and it is many times sweeter than that commodity. And, strangely enough, it has only been known to science since 1887.
That year Dr. Fahlberg was employed upon the all important subject of coal tar derivatives at the Johns Hopkins university. Sitting one evening at tea, he was surprised to find how sweet his bread and butter tasted. He traced the sweetness to his fingers, then to his coat sleeves and finally to one of the bowls of derivatives in his laboratory. Experiments upon himself and animals proved allike the harmlessness of the compound and its extreme sweetness. And saccharin was "discovered."—Exchange
Marines and Their Fingers.
Men with long, tapering "plane" fingers are apt to desert after short service, while those having stubby digits, denoting stability of character and utter lack of the artistic temperament, usually stand by their oaths and make the best marines, according to finger print experts at headquarters of the United States marine corps. Although desertions from the corps are light at all times, it has been found that actors, sign writers and, strange to say, waiters furnish the largest number of deserters. Records, including finger prints, of all men enlisted in the marine corps are kept at headquarters for purposes of identification, and there are cases on record where bodies with finger tips intact have been positively identified through the finger print medium.
Quite Common.
"It's strange what interest: small boys and girls take in boasting about the possessions of themselves and their families.
Mollie, aged nine, and Nancy, a year younger, were trying to outmatch each other at this game, and Mollie was several points ahead in the contest.
"Oh, you should see my mother's fan!" she boasted, thinking to make her victory complete. "It's lovely—all hand painted."
Nancy tossed a scornful head.
"Pooh!" she retorted. "That's nothing. So's our garden fence."
Bold Court Fool.
Ferdinand 11. was a man of very uncertain moods and would allow his jester to take liberties with him one hour while resenting any familiarity the next. One day he turned round on Jonas, his favorite fool, and thundered: "Fellow, be silent! 1 never stoop to talk to a fool!" "Never mind that," answered Jonas. "I do. So please listen to me in your turn."
To Make Sure:
"Won't you please leave the light burning in the hall, mother?" pleaded little Robert as he was being put to bed.
"Nonsense, Bobbie," was the reply.
"Surely you know there isn't anything to be afraid of in the dark."
"Yes, I know, but can't you leave a teeny weeny light so I can see there isn't anything there?" - Exchange.
Bob Burdette's Aside.
When Bob Burdette was addressing the graduating class of a large eastern college for women he began his remarks with the usual salutation, "Young ladies of '97." Then in a horrified aside he added, "That's an awful are for a girl!"
Envelopes.
Envelopes were practically unknown before 1725. About that time one was seen semi-occasionally. As late as 1850 letters were often sent folded and sent ed. Envelopes may be said to have come into use shortly after 1844.—Ex change.
Badly Timed.
Nephew—I tried to get a raise today.
aunt, but the boss refused it. Mrs.
Blunderby—Too bad. Dicky! Perhaps
you didn't approach him at the zoological moment.—Boston Transcript.
Atlas Reipices.
Atlas bore the world on his shoulders. "It is much easier than having it on your conscience." he explained—New York Sun.
The virtue of justice consists in moderation as regulated by wisdom.—Aristotle.
PAGE six
~~~ Stagestruck Women,
William A. Paze, the Chicago eric
and publicity writer. says in the Wo-
man's Home Companion in an article
about stazestruck women:
“And what becomes of them? Caught
fm the eddies of frivolity, many of
them temporarily abandon their stage
ambitions in the kaleidoscopic life of
Broadway. Others live in hall bed.
rooms, boil eggs over a gas jet and
waste thelr young lives in the fruit-
Jess pursuit of a rainbow which they
never find, only sooner or later to re-
turn home sadly and settle down to
forget their stage ambitions. Others
study, economize, sincerely strive for
engagements, possibly get small roles
‘with some obscure company and start
in on a career which will be filled with
many, many disappointments. And of
the thousands who came so bravely to
the front last year how many still re-
main in the lists? Not counting those
who may have gone into musical com
edy, perhaps a score still cherish the
shrine of Marlowe and of Adams. For
‘the rest, oblivion.”
Gheaw Didn't Like Himself.
“Many years ago in a house in Ash
ley Gardens,” writes G. Bernard Shaw
fm the New Witness. “I was walking
along a corridor with other guests at
‘@ musical evening when | saw coming
toward me a man who produced ap
extraordinarily dixnzreeable impres
sion on me. a tall young man in even
ing dress, with a blond beard and, ax
it seemed to me. a hateful expression.
“Be was coming straizbt at me. 1
moved aside to avoid lim. and he
moved, too. apparently to get into my
way again. An impulse of rage at
this insult was checked just in time
by the discovery that instead of walk-
ing along 2 corridor 1 was crossing a
square landing and that the detestable
apparition who bad chilled my vers
soul with his abominable aspect was
@ reflection of myself in the wall. of
mirror which the tenant of the Ashley
Gardens flat had put up to give his
cramped dwelling an appearance of
spacious magnificence.”
fo la i
- Along with the formation of the sug-
ar, and caused in part by Its accumu-
lation, there develop within the mi-
nute cells of the blueberry plants enor-
‘mous osmotic pressures. which enable
the plant to push its buds open, F. V.
Coville writes in the National Geo-
graphic Magazine.
These pressures «ire {reqnently as
high as seven atmospheres or more
than 100 pounds to the square inch—a
Pressure that would start a leak in a
low pressure steam engine. ‘The pres:
gure may become ax hizh as thirty at
mospheres or 45) pounds to the square
inch—a force sutficient to blow the eyi-
inder head off of « thousand horse-
power Corliss enzine. ‘The reason the
plant does not explode is because it ix
broken up into many extremely small
and strongly built cells instead of bav-
ing one biz interior cxvity. ‘These mi-
nute chambers are «tien as thick walled
proportion:tely as au urtillery shell.
‘A Famous War Horse.
Bucephalus, the charger that carried
Alexander the Great through all his
campaigns, received bis name from
the fact_that. althouzl white, be bad
‘@ black mark resembling an ox’s bead
‘on his forebead.
‘A Thessalonian had offered the horse
for sale to Philip of Macedon, but as
none of the mon:rch's attendants could
manage him the king er:tered his own-
er to take bim away. Mexazder, who
was present. expressed ix regret at
losing so fine an animal, and Philip re-
plied that he would bny the borse if
his son could ride him. ‘The offer was
accepted by Alexander. who succeeded
inthe attempt. Bucepliatus would nev-
er suffer any other person to mount
him.
Airing a Room.
In airing a room there are two things
to be remembered first, that the im
pure alr must he allowed to escape
and, secondly. that fresh air must be
admitted. Impure air in room fs al-
ways warm and will therefore rise to-
ward the ceiling, when it will escape
{f the window Ix opened at the top.
while cold fresh air will enter through
the lower part of the window when
opened.
A Grand Ceayon Sunrice.
A sunrise in the Grand canyon lasts
‘as long as you please. Each bour is
a sunrise for some cavern deeper than
the last, and. in fact, there are many
where it has yet to rise for the frst
time since the canyon was made by
those ages of running water.
His Ashes.
“So you prefer to be cremated when
you die?”
“I certainly do.”
“why?”
“So that my remains may be mingled
with the ashes of the grate.”—London
‘Telegraph.
Parental Care.
“Did your bride’s father give ber
away?”
“No, he didn't. He left me to find
out a few things about her for my-
self.”"—Baltimore American.
Causes.
Bix—A physician says that yawning
is caused by a lack of oxygen in the
Dlood. Dix—Or a lack of pep in the
conversation.—Boston Transcript.
‘The Comeback.
‘Skinffint—1 have no money, but I will
give you a little advice. Beggar—Well.
if yer ain't got no money ser advice
can't be very valuable,
Booner or later the world comes
around to see the truth and do the
right.—BWiurd.
BALDHEADED ALASKAN BEARS
Volcanic Ash Brings Hardship to Bruin
‘on Kadiak Island.
Seward, Alaska.—It will take more
than two or three years of enforced
diet of straight meat and fish and a
loss of hair to seriously set back the
bear population of Kadiak island, ac-
cording to D. Winn of the United
States bureau of fisheries.
Kadiak island, says Mr. Winn, in
1912 was covered with volcanic ash at
no point at a depth less than eleven
inches. ‘The ash killed all vegetation.
and as all bears are fond of a mixed
diet of meat, fish and vegetables, they
found 1913 and 1914 unpleasant from
a dietary standpoint.
Another effect of the fall of ash, ac.
cording to Mr. Winn, was the havoc it
created with the furry coats of the an
fmals. Bald headed bears are now a:
common on Kadiak island as bald
headed men in the front row of a
musical comedy. The ash sifted down
on to the skins of the animals as it
fell, and the first rain turned it to lye.
which had the effect of almost tanning
the skins of the bears while yet a part
of their personal effects.
WHITTLES VIOLIN FINGERS.
Player Hopes to Increase His Pro-
Sciency by Sucaery.
Wichita, Kan.—In order to become
a more proficient violin artist Mark
Sandfort. » member of an orchestra
bere, had a piece of flesh taken from
each of his six fingers. The incisions
were drawn *ogether and sewn witb
horsehair. The cperation was perform-
ed by Dr. H. S. Hickok. and Sandfort
will be abie to remove the bandages
soon.
Sandfort has won a reputation as a
violinist. However, bis execution of
musical selections was not as good as
he desired it to be He bit upon @
plan. He would bave bis fingers whit-
tled down. He waited until the season
closed and bad the operation per
formed.
According to physicians, this is the
first time that an operation of thix
kind bas been performed.
BOY FALLS; SERVICE STOPS.
Pastor and Congregation See Lad Hit
by Electric Current.
Little Rock. Ark.—Kenueth McEwen.
eleven years of aze. was electrocuted
thirty feet in the air on a lighting tow-
er in view of the congregation of a
church that was holding services on
the church lawn because of the heat.
‘The boy was knocking the wire that
supplied current to the lights on the
tower against the steel frame to pro-
duce sparks. Snddenly a fiash of blue
flames enveloped him, and be plunged
downward, fracturing bis skull on the
pavement below. He died in a hospital
a few minutes later.
‘The pastor of the church. the Rev. E.
P. Aldredze, was preaching a specia!
sermon to boys. He rushed over, aided
in placing the dying Ind in an ambu
lance and then resumed bis sermon.
using the accident as a warning to the
boys.
GIRL’S PROFIT IN HOGS.
Raising Swine Not a Finishing Schoo!
For Debutantes.
Holtville, Cal.— Raising hogs for
pleasure and profit is the occupation of
Miss Josie Fuller. seventeen, the youns-
est and best all around feminine pork
producer in the Imperial valley.
It is her ambition to become the best
expert on hogs in her district. Her
herd numbers fifty strong and fs in-
creasing. “Pig culture isn't aesthetic
work, of course.” said Miss Fuller. “It
can't be considered a finishing school
for debutantes, but there’s money in it.”
She has established a record of de
veloping her porkers for the market at
8 cost of 314 cents a pound.
“Women may not admire bogs, but if
they don't it’s because they know so
little about them. Once interested thes
become just as capable as men in ban
dling swine.”
TWO DEATHS IN ONE HOME.
Sees Mother-in-law Stricken With
Heart Failure, Then Dies.
Philadelphia — Stricken with beart
failure just after she bad called her
son to dinner at noon, Mrs. Rebecca
‘Thomas, seventy-three years old, a sis-
ter of Jesse Pratt, former mayor of
Camden, fell dead in the dining room
of her Camden home.
Mrs. Madeline Thomas, her daugh-
ter-in-law, who was in an adjoining
room, ran to her assistance and was
leaning over her. trying to lift ber
form to a couch, when she, too, col
lapsed and fell lifeless.
ANOTHER QUITS SING SING.
Officials Think Prisoner Swam to
Liberty.
Ossining, N. Y.—“I'm going into the
garden to get some tomatoes for break.
fast,” said Elmer Schultz. a prisoner
at Sing Sing, as he walked out of the
power house. where be was doing duty
as a fireman. Some hours later the
big whistle tooted the message that
another prisoner bad escaped.
Prison officials had then found two
tron pickets had been pulled apart and
concluded that Schultz went through
the opening. dived into the Hudson
and swam to liberty.
Leet Don Returned Home.
New York.—After a year's absence s
beagle belonging to Louls W. Well of
Flushing, N. ¥.. returned home. Mr.
Well went on a bunting trip a year
ago and took the beagle along. He
lost the dog. The dog seemed to en-
Joy its homecoming, and the Well fam-
fly showed its delight in a way that
tickled the dog’s palate.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916.
EE
REWARDS FRIENDS| “ino tee cen
WHO LEAVE GERMA
Retired Manufacturer Remem- Eoonned Poe peer
bers Couple Who Aided Him. ae
eee care wares =~ i
y way of Warnemuent
MAKES BEQUEST OF $25,000| Denmark is stripped. Ears, nse. t
and toes are examined to see that
information or plans for the enemy
Had Fled Menace of Zeppelins In His | being carried out. Reichstag memb
Own Country—in His Will He De- | wives of officials, correspondents |
clared That Money Was Left Because | ‘borers are treated the same.
ee aie coe | When travelers leave the train t
Philadelphia.—Kindness pays; usual-
ly it pays only with happiness.
Kindness means doing your best
without hope of gain.
Show kindness to the stranger; he
may be a disguised angel.
But be kind to him anyway; he may
need your help.
Each opportunity to do a kindness
comes but once; don’t let one slip.
Fortune came to Mr, and Mrs. Cyrus
Jared Gray. *
Tt came to their home in this etty tu
guise of a stranger who lingered a cou.
ple of days and died. But be left them
$25,000 or property approximating that
amount, He was Adolph Geyer, retired
London manufacturer, who fled the
menace of Zeppelins in his own coun
try. In his will he said the money was
left so because of “unusual kindness.”
“But we only did what we could for
‘a fellow being in distress,” Mrs. Gray
‘sald. “We had no idea of compensa
‘tion, He seemed Just friendless and ill.
“The frst I saw of him was when a
taxi stopped in front of the house. The
‘driver didn't seem to know where to
go, and I went out and asked if 1
could help. Then I saw that Mr. Geyer
wasn't able to go any further.”
It was early last June that the taxi
stopped in Walnut street. The Gray
home is one of a row of apartments,
old fashioned and unpretentious. But
‘it is pleasant, with vines over the door
and porch set with cushioned chairs
It was here that Geyer came after he
bad found hotels full because of the
‘ad. men's convention.
“I keep boarders, and one room hap
pened to be unoccupied,” Mrs. Gray
explained. “He bad stopped the ma-
chine and asked the driver to go to the
nearest doctor. He'd been taken ill on
the train from New York and rapidly
grew worse. We carried him into the
house and to bed. The physician we
called soon saw there was no help for
him.”
In the will he made just before bis
death Geyer said that he bad no next
af thn on velatives.
RADIO BETWEEN AEROPLANES
Message Sent and Received When Ma-
dhines Were in Flight
San Diego, Cal—What is said to be
an important advance in the field
of aeronautical radiotelegraphy was
achieved here when a wireless message
was sent from one aeroplane in flight
to another,
Captain C. C. Culver in an army ma-
chine piloted by Lieutenant Herbert
Dargue recelved the message, which
was transmitted a distance of several
miles by Lieutenant W. A. Robertson.
who was in another machine guided by
A.D. Smith, The message, which read,
“National aviation field sets new
world’s records,” was received distinct-
ly by Captain Culver.
According to Captain Culver, this ts
the first time on record in this country
‘and perhaps in the world that a wire
less message has been received by one
aeroplane from another while both ma-
chines were in flight.
BABY SERVED IN A LAWSUIT.
One-year-old Heir to Share In Million
Dollar Estate Summoned.
Bridgeport, Conn.—A one-year-old
baby was served with papers in a law-
suit when Deputy Sheriff Cunningham
went to Riverside and found little
Helen Green at the palatial summer
home of her father, Harold Rumsey
Green.
The baby is one of twenty heirs of
James Green, who died in St. Louis in
1914, leaving an estate of $1,000,000.
‘Two of the heirs, Laura C. Littlebrant
and Marian C. Littlebrant of St. Louis.
have brought suit to have the will set
‘aside on the ground that Green was in-
competent.
Cow Mothers Young Pigs.
Milton, Del.—Because his cow bad
been milked dry every evening and bis
family had been compelled to do with-
out milk or butter John Henderson of
Broadkiln Neck sat up with a gun the
other night in the hope of catching the
thief. He was astonished to find that
the cow was a willing victim of bis
young pigs, who took turns sucking
milk while the old cow lay on the
ground for their better provision. The
cow is now pasturing within a hog
tight fence.
Eats Ecol That Nearly Drowned Him.
Rochester, N. Y. — While County
Clerk William S. Cornwell of Pena
Yan was in swimming he cried for
help, and when rescuers brought bim
to shore a five pound eel was found
fastened to his right foot. ‘The eel was
Killed and dressed, and in the evening
Cornwell and his friends dined off the
Gish that nearly drowned him.
Big Pélican Killed.
Middlesboro, Ky.—A beautiful pelt
can was killed on a farm near Ar
thur, Tenn., recently. It was a large
bird, white with black tips on the
wings, which measured seven feet
from tip to tip. Its bill measured
twelve inches in length, and it stood
five feet high.
ad ane af
AREFULLY SEARCH ALL
WHO LEAVE GERMANY
Ears, Nose, Testh and Toes Are Closely
Examined For Information.
Copenbazen.—Every one who leaves
Germany by way of Waruemuende for
Denmark is stripped. Ears, nose. teeth
and toes are ex:mined to see that no
information or plans for the enemy are
being carried out. Reichstag members.
wives of officials, correspondents and
laborers are treated the same.
When travelers leave the train they
enter a small wooden shed, resembling
‘a temporary bathhouse at an Ameri
can beach. Here the passports are
taken away and examined. The hold-
ers are given numbers.
When the passport of a traveler is
inspected he 1s called into another
room, where he is questioned about the
object of his journey. From here the
wayfarer goes into a large room where
baggage is examined, while detectives
stand in front and back to see that
nothing is slipped by.
Every scrap of paper or cardboard Is
taken away, even wrappings and paper
Uning to boxes. Cotton is removed
from medicine bottles. Cigars are ex-
amined, some are cut open: chocolate
tn sealed packages 1s opened, the wrap
Ding destroyed and half the chocolate
is broken up into hits to see that noth
ing ts hidden.
Shoes with new half soles are open
ed. The searcher feels everything, ex
amines canes to see if they are hol-
low, opens umbrellas and holds every
collar up to the light to see that noth
ing ig written on the lining.
FRANCE PLANNING FOR
TUNNEL TO ENGLAND
Passageway Would Cost $80,-
000,000, Half to Be Borne
by Each Country.
Paris.—France has taken all neces
sary steps to enter Into negotiations
with England to build Jointly a tunnel
under the English channel to connect
the two countries, the long talked of
project, which ‘the war has revived be
cause it has demonstrated as nothing
else could the value of the tube to both
countries.
Had the tunnel been in existence in
the present contlict it could have been
of immeasurable value to England and
France for the trausportation of troops
and supplies and would have liberated
French and British war vessels from
one of their biggest tasks.
‘The plans were outlined by M. Sar-
tlaux, chief engineer of the Nord Rail
way company, Who is one of the strong
est advocates of the project. He sald:
“The tunnel would cost $80,000,000.
half of which would be borne by Eng:
land and half by France. Each coun.
try would build one-half of the tunnel
Britain is spending Just now $30,000,000
a day and France $20,000,000. so that
two days’ war time expenditure of both
countries would more than cover the
cost of making the tunnel.
“It is proposed to make two tunnels~
one for traffic from France to England.
another for traffic from England to
France. Some people seem to think a
cross channel tunnel might be a danger
because it might fall into the hands of
the enemy. To capture the French end
would not be an easy task. The mouth
of the tunnel on French soil «ould be
ten miles from the coast, and in order
to reach it the enemy would have to
capture Calaix and negotiate three in.
tervening hills of an average height of
150 feet.”
MAYOR LEADS IN BIRD WAR.
Poughkeepsie’s Executive Gets Hunters
to Shoot Starlings.
Poughkeepsie. — To exterminate a
flock of blackbirds and starlings which
have disturbed the morning repose of
the wealthy residents Mayor Daniel
W. Wilbur led a band of twelve bunt-
ers against the birds at sundown.
Armed with shotguns and rifles they
attracted several thousand persons.
and the police reserves were called out
to keep the spectators at a safe dis-
tance.
“Colonel Roosevelt bas nothing on
us when it comes to bunting, | guess,”
said Mayor Wiibar, standing in bis
auto directing the attack. “There is
no law protecting blackbirds and star-
lings, and the war will be continued
until the last bird is killed.”
Soon after the firing began one of
the hunters killed two robins. The
hunter was deprived of his license on
the spot and wili be prosecuted by the
local game protector.
KRAFT $500,000 WILL FILED.
“Old Tanner” of Bronxville Left Piano
Secret to Sons.
White Plains, N. ¥.—The will of the
late Frederick W. Kraft. known as
the “old tanner” of Bronxville, who
left an estate estimated to be worth
close to $500,000, was filed for probate
with Surrogate Sawyer at White
Plains.
Mr. Kraft. who was eighty-one. held
the secret process for the manufacture
of high grade leather. which is used
in plano keys. The secret was impart
ed to bis sons. William F. and Jobn
Kraft, before bis death. and after
leaving them the bulk of bis fortune
he requests them to continue the
leather business in Bronxville. After
leaving bis grandson, William . Dins-
more Kraft, his gold watch and all
his valuable diamonds. the decedent
bequeaths $2.000 to Frank Gallow. de
scribed as “the young man I raised.”
~*~ Barly Panama, ~
‘The first permanent settlement in
the new world was established at Pan-
ama Aug. 15, 1519, by Pedrarias, the
Spanish governor. In exploring the
Pacific coast along the isthmus the
Spanish adventurers found a small
fishing village called Panama, and on
the date given above the governor es-
tablished his capital there. Two years
later, by royal decree, Panama was
made a city and the seat of a bishop.
Panama became the center for Span-
ish explorations in North and South
America, and many expeditions were
sent out from there in search of gold.
It was from Panama, in 1524, that
Pizarro began the voyage which end-
ed in the discovery of Peru. After
that a highway was established across
the isthmus, following much the same
route as the Panama canal, and over
this the wealth of Peru was transport-
ed to the Spanish treasure ships in the
Atlantic. To this day small sections
of paved road are to be seen as relics
of the olf Spanish highway over which
so much treasure was carried.
imcen Met ten Clie Ohare
‘The people of Fitchburg in the eight
een thirties resented Joseph Palmer's
beard. He was the only bearded man
in that part of the country, and he
was persecuted for it, When he re-
sisted the attack of several neighbors
‘who proposed to shave him he was put
in jail on a charge of unprovoked as-
sault. He far outstayed his sentence.
said his son, because he bad to pay for
all his food, drink and coal for heating.
and he considered they cheated him, so
he refused to go. The sheriff and jail-
er, tired of having him there, begged
him to leave. Even bis mother wrote
to him “not to be so set.” But nothing
could move him. He said that they
had put him in there and they would
have to take him out, as he would not
walk out. They finally carried him out
in his chair and placed it on the side-
walk, ‘The neighbors were irritated.
not only by Joseph Palmer's beard, but
by his general attitude of mind—he
was “so set.”—Atlantic Monthly.
When Chocolate Was Denounced.
Strong passions were roused in the
seventeenth century among those who
thought chocolate was an invention of
the devil. A formidable treatise was
written in order to denounce the use
of the beverage by monks. ‘The trea-
tise appeared in 1624, but the monks
saw to it, by destroying every copy
that came their way, that its circula-
tion was small and brief. Chocolate
houses succeeded coffee Rouses in Lon-
don as centers of a supposed greater
refinement, although Roger North de-
scribed them as centers for the benefit
of “rooks and cullies of quality, where
gaming is added to all the rest” and
where plots against the state were
hatched by idle fellows. — London
Graphic.
Shorthand Pioneer.
‘That the ancients were thoroughly
conversant with shorthand is an up-
disputed fact. It subsequently became
a lost art until revived or rediscovered
toward the end of the sixteenth cen-
tury. At this time there lived William
Lawrence. who died in 1621 and was
buried in the cloister of Westminster
abbey. There the visitor may read his
epitaph, which includes the following
lines:
Shorthand he wrote. His flower in prime
did fade,
‘And hasty death short hand of him hath
made.
—London Standard.
Crust of French Bread.
There is one precious quality which
distinguishes French bread from all
the other breads in the world, the
quality, namely, of an extraordinarily
thick crust.
French bread bas a thick, crisp, ap-
petizing crust because it is baked with
a fuel composed of poplar branches.
‘The light poplar wood gives an intense
heat, which for some reason makes
crust as no other fuel will do—Ex-
change.
A Novelty.
“When I went home the other night,”
said Mr. Meekton, “Henrietta mistook
me for a burglar.”
“It must have been an unpleasant
experience.”
“I rather enjoyed it. It was the first
time in my life Henrietta was ever
afraid of me.”—Washington Star.
Eager to Practice.
“My boy, you want to practice
thrift.”
“I know, dad, but I haven't got the
tools.”
“What do you mean by wage
“If you'll iet me have the $5 I need
Tl see how long I can make it last.”"—
Detroit Free Press.
Bed Habit
“I'm going out. Maria, to get a little
ozone in my system.”
“I do wish, James; you would stop
taking them dangerous drugs.”—Balt!-
more American.
England’s Army Rifle.
The English rifle, the Lee-Enfeld,
fires thirty-four shots a minute. It is
made in ninety-four parts, involving
over a thousand operations.
Could Help Her.
Fussy Lady Patient—1 was suffering
80 much, doctor, that 1 wanted to die.
Doctor—You did right to call me in,
dear lady.—London Opinion.
Directly Over It.
Bacon—What is that watchmaker do-
ing at his bench at night? Egbert—
Oh, he's working over time—Yonkers
Statesman.
“Time ts money”—yet lots of people
with plenty of time on band try to
borrow money.
SNAKE CHARMERS HAVE ~
VARIETY OF REPTILEs
Kansas Boys Have Produced New Sen.
sation In Vicinity of Home.
Salina, Kan.—Two small boys, Willie
and Robert Shorl, the elder of whom
fs but fourteen, have produced a new
sensation in the vicinity of their home
at Five Mile. where they have a big
cage full of writhing, twisting snakes
of many varieties. They play with
these reptiles without the least sign of
fear, going through with all the stunts
of professional snake charmers.
‘The snakes coil themselves about
the boys’ necks and bodies. The lads
look in the eyes of their pets steadily
‘as they play with them, and they
handle them with the skill of a pro-
fessional.
‘The collection consists of black
snakes. blue racers, chicken snakes
and three ugly looking “rattlers.” On
Saturday they usually go down on
Snake Branch and hunt for more rep-
tiles. However, these new reptiles
are not placed with thelr “pets.” but
are kept in a separate cage and are
usually shipped to owners of small
shows and museums, from whom they
get from $3 to $5 for each snake.
Neither of the boys has ever been
bitten. The older boy gave a lecture
on snakes before the pupils of the
Shoal Creek school. He astonished
teacher and pupils alike by his classi
fication of reptiles, giving their Latin
names and discussing the harmless or
dangerous varieties, taking each from
@ box as be explained its varied hab-
its.
ASKS THAT ALL HOLIDAYS
BE CELEBRATED SATURDAY
Montclair Banker Inaugurates
National Movement For Dates
at Week End.
Montclair, N. J. — A holiday that
would be celebrated over the entire
North American continent north of the
Rio Grande is one of the possibilities
of the Saturday full holiday national
movement that has been started here
by Alfred N. Chandler, a banker, at 54
Gates avenue. The movement fs to be
of wide scope. and headquarters, in
charge of Mr. Chandler, are to be
opened in Newark. The object of the
movement is to have the present “tix-
ed date” holidays. except Christmas
and New Year's days, shifted to speci-
fied Saturdays nearest the dates of
their present observance, and as an
equivalent offset in annual holiday
hours thns gained. the adoption of
eight Saturday full holidays in the
summer time. including Independence
and Labor days.
Whether Washington was born on the
twenty-second calendar day of Febru-
ary or on the third Saturday of Feb-
ruary: whether Lincoln was born on
the twelfth calendar day of February
or on the second Saturday of Febru-
ary: whether the Declaration of In-
dependence was adopted on the fourth
calendar day of July or on the first
Saturday of July: whether Columbus
discovered the western hemisphere on
the twelfth calendar day of October
or on the second Saturday of October—
none of these precise dates of the cal-
endar is of paramount importance
when compared with the spirit of the
event commemorated in the minds of
those who are bebind the Saturdas
fall holiday national movement.
“The business and professional man
in these days begins the week's work
‘on Monday mornings keyed up in spirit
for five or five and a half days of con-
tinued and uninterrupted effort,” said
Mr. Chandler in speaking of the move:
ment. “but on the average in every
sixth week there comes with a bank
a legal holiday in the middle of the
week. At such times it becomes diftl-
cult to throw off the pressure, to re-
Jax, to get the holiday spirit.”
DRILLED, MERCURY AT 130.
Japanese Troops Wore Anything They
lad ths Maruman:
Tokyo.—American militiamen drill-
ing on the Mexican border in tertitic
heat may cool off when they hear that
2,000 Japanese soldiers marched and
maneuvered twelve days in Formosa
with the mercury as high as 130 de
grees F. And only three cases of sun-
stroke were reported in the entire
period.
The first nine days were spent in
constant marching. the troops covering
100 miles. Because of the heat the
soldiers were permitted to wear ans
clothing they pleased. Some wore hel
mets, some straw hats. some knitted
underskirts or a thin kimono.
Falls Forty Feet on Man's Back.
Chester. Pa.-"See a pin and pick It
up all that day you'll have good Inck.”
murmured Thomas Delaney as he sto?
ped to pick up a pin at the foot of =
scaffold. Then Joseph Gest. azed six.
teen. came tumbling from the top of
the scaffold and alighted on the for
mer’s back. Gest’s tumble was over
forty feet, and, while be was severely
injured, he will recover, physicians #8.
Delaney was only slightly jarred and
continued at work.
Riedictiiul Gintecunne-ald Gon:
Camden. N. J.— William Brun. ap
dutiful son of some sixty summers, ¥#*
sentenced tv twenty days in the count
jail by City Magistrate Stackhouse bere
for disorderly conduct. William bad
been Intoxicated and had talked beck
when bis ninety-yearold father reed
him an anti-alcobot lecture and thee
hed resisted punishment.
CITIZENS' CHANCE TO END TAX EVILS
End Tax Conditions In Illinois Due to Constitutional Uniform Tax Requirements—To Be Voted On.
MUST HAVE MAJORITY NOV. 7
Escape of Intangible Property Values From Taxation and Increased Tax Burden on Real Estate. Caused by the Uniformity Rule.
Citizens of Illinois will have the opportunity at the November election to change the basis of the present tax system and make possible modern and just tax laws.
The last general assembly in response to widespread popular demand submitted an amendment to the revenue article of the constitution and thus put responsibility for tax reform squarely up to the voters.
Taxpayers in Illinois have long been aware that the Illinois system was imperfect. They have known that it was not a good revenue producer. At the same time, in too many instances, they have realized that it is unfair—resulting in injustice—and the spectacle of laws defied. Very often, in fact, generally, our laws are just and practical, and when not enforced the failure arises from official neglect. But our tax laws are not of the enforceable class. This is due to the fact that since they were enacted the property conditions they were intended to act upon have been transformed by economic changes.
In 1840 the total full value of all kinds of property in the state was less than $60,000,000. The state tax rate was 20 cents on each $100 valuation. At the present time the full valuation of all kinds of property in the state is about $8,000,000,000. The increase has been more than a hundred times. And the tax rate is two or three times as great as it was in 1840. The total receipts of the state treasury for 1840 was a little more than $300,000. Now they are nearly one hundred times as much.
1916 Taxes on 1818 Basis.
The constitutional requirements in relation to the assessment and taxation of property now are the same as they were in 1840. In fact, they are the same as they were in 1818, when the total revenues of the state were only about $20,000 a year. When our taxation system was adopted there was little or nothing in the state except lands and the visible personal property of the agriculturist. The constitution and laws were built upon the supposition that all property was visible and that it would remain so. In fact, our constitution is a tangible property tax constitution—and the courts in interpreting it have tended to make it even more so.
In the economic development of Illinois new forms of property have arisen. These are known as intangible values. They are made up of secondary forms of value. There are mortgages, money and credits, bonds, stocks of out-of-state corporations, notes and other evidences of interest or debts. Practically none of these is taxed. And as a class they constitute the intangible values which have developed as the state has grown from about a quarter of a million of taxable values in the 50's to nearly eight billions.
Intangible Property Hard to Tax.
The law makes it the duty of the assessor to discover and assess these values. The very fact that they cannot be seen—like lands, railroads, factories—makes it impossible to discover and assess them by the same clerical methods. Drastic inquisitorial methods would have to be employed. All citizens would have to be hailed before the assessor and made to tell everything—as persons of taxable incomes now have to submit to questionary by federal inspectors. And if this were done what would be the result? More taxes? By no means. The person assessed once on his intangibles would simply move them to another state, where taxes on them would not be confiscatory of a third or more of the income, as they are in Illinois.
The pending amendment will make it possible for the legislature to enact laws providing assessing and taxing methods for intangibles that will be as reasonable as other states have adopted. By this means intangible values will be retained in the state, will be induced to present themselves for taxation, the revenue will be increased and the assessing and taxing machinery made simple and workable. Necessity of voting for the amendment, because it must have a majority of all the votes cast November 7. is urged.
Tax Amendment Committee.
A complete organization for educational work promotive of a full understanding of the amendment and the need for it has been effected. This committee is the agency through which all other organizations are acting and has prepared the reading matter necessary for the campaign. Literature or specific information may be obtained from Illinois Tax Amendment Committee: Frank I. Mann. Chairman, Gillman, Illinois; S. B Montgomery, Vice-Chairman, Quincy. Illinois; Douglas Sutherland, Secretary, 804 The Temple, Chicago, Illinois.
TAX LAWS PERMIT ESCAPE OF WEALTH
Secretary of State and Attorney General Issue Official Statement as to Proposed Change. NEEDED REVISION POSSIBLE.
Amendment Would Permit "Suitable Rates and Methods for Just and Sure Taxation, Instead of Present Method Which Allows Millions to Escape."
There is no good reason why any person—even although he is not generally a student of such matters—should not fully understand the pending tax amendment to the Illinois constitution. It is simple, and, in fact, interesting and worthy of study.
The amendment is printed below, in full. As will be seen it does not insert into the constitution anything unusual or revolutionary. It merely takes out of the constitution the requirement that the general assembly shall observe the rule of uniformity in taxation. That is to say, the legislature cannot classify the different kinds of property according to kind and put a different rate on each class. The pending amendment simply removes this restriction from the constitution, but only as to personal property. It does not affect real estate. The amendment follows:
Text of the Amendment
Article IX, Sec. 14.—From and after the date when this section shall be in force the powers of the general assembly over the subject matter of the taxation of personal property shall be as complete and unrestricted as they would be if sections one, three, nine and ten of this article of the constitution did not exist; provided, however, that any tax levied upon personal property must be uniform as to persons and property of the same class within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same, and all exemptions from taxation shall be by general law, and shall be revocable by the general assembly at any time.
The secretary of state, in compliance with law, has sent to county clerks throughout the state a statement-approved by Attorney General Lucey-for use in election notices, explaining the amendment. After quoting the sections of the constitution to be affected the statement says:
"The only basis upon which taxes may be levied is that of the valuation of property. If the proposed amendment should be adopted, said section 1 of article 9 would be changed by the amendment so as to permit the legislature to enact laws which would substitute different and suitable rates and methods for the just and sure taxation of each of the various classes of personal property, instead of the present so-called "uniform" method, which results in the escape of millions from taxation.
Improved Tax System Possible.
"Laws passed pursuant to said amendment may provide for the assessment of intangible property at a lower rate than other forms of property, it being a matter of common knowledge that a comparatively large part of the intangible property of this state escapes taxation. Therefore, tangible property, such as real estate and various forms of personal property must bear d'proportionate burdens.
"The proposed amendment would affect section 3, to the extent that laws may be passed by the legislature, classifying the personal property which may or may not be exempted by the general assembly, provided that an exemption made must be by general and not special law, and shall not be contractual but revocable at any time.
"Under the proposed amendment sections 9 and 10, would be affected by the amendment to the extent that laws may be passed by the general assembly permitting municipal corporations to levy taxes on personal property according to classes, in such manner as the general assembly may provide by law as it may elect.
"The general assembly may provide by law a different rate of tax on different classes of personal property which the general assembly, as it sees fit, shall provide for by law, but the tax rate shall be uniform as to all property in each class."
Practically there is no opposition to the amendment—certainly none that is likely to be actively effective. But, in this there is danger, for the reason that the amendment may be beaten, even though it have more votes cast for it than are cast against it. This is because the constitution provides that the amendment must receive a majority of the votes of all the electors voting at the election at which the amendment is submitted.
The Illinois Constitution says: "The General Assembly shall have no power to propose amendments * * * to the same article oftener than once in four years." The pending amendment to article IX—Revenue, whether adopted or rejected, prevents the submission of any other tax amendment until 1920. It is recognized in Illinois, as in other states, that needed tax reforms relate almost, if not, entirely to personal property, tax rates and methods of assessment. The amendment entrusts the work of remodeling our personal property tax system to the General Assembly, and, to whom else can it be entrusted?
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO. SEPTEMBER 30. 1916.
OUR PROSPERITY.
PROMINENT MILLIONAIRE MAGNATES
LABORERS GOING TO WORK
ALDERMEN OFFICE HOLDERS, ETC
SOCIETY LEADERS
If we believe the statistics of our enormous national wealth.
PROMINENT MILLIONAIRE MAGNATES
ALDERMEN, OFFICE HOLDERS, ETC
SOCIETY LEADERS
LABORERS GOING TO WORK
If we believe the personal property tax returns
AMENDMENT HISTORY
Hard Work Has Been Done For Many Years.
Pending Amendment Recommended by Tax Commission Appointed by Governor Deneen in 1910.
The pending amendment to the constitution, to be voted upon November 7, is not the result of a sudden caprice on the part of the legislature. For a decade at least Illinois publicists, tax officials and newspapers have been aware that solution of the problem of Illinois was obstructed by the state constitution. The interfering feature of the constitution was the provision which requires that all taxable property shall be assessed and taxed uniformly. Other states, having similar constitutions, have amended them—or are moving to do so—so that their legislatures can legislate with intelligence and greater freedom in tax matters.
The present movement for the amendment began to take effective form in 1910. In that year the Illinois special tax commission drafted the amendment now pending. This commission was appointed by Governor Deneen under authority of the Fort-sixth general assembly, 1909. The commission was made up of well-known publicists and students of tax problems in Illinois. They were: Messrs. John P. Wilson, Chicago, chairman; Edmund J. James, Urbana, secretary; Ben F. Caldwell, Springfield; A. M. Craig, since dead, Galesburg; A. P. Grout, Winchester; Harrison B. Rlley and B. L. Winchell, Chicago.
This commission investigated the causes of the many evils in the Illinois assessment system and reported its recommendations for remedies to the Forty-seventh general assembly, recommended the submission by the general assembly and adoption by the voters of a new section to the revenue article of the constitution as a necessary first-step to any adequate revision of taxation laws in this state. This proposed new section is the amendment to be voted on November 7.
In 1911 the commission prepared a voluminous report detailing its observations and conclusions concerning the tax condition in Illinois. Among other things is said:
"The most serious difficulties appear in the assessment of personal intangible property, such as moneys and credits, mortgages, bonds and stocks. The assessment of such holdings on the same basis as tangible property appears to be impossible; while, if possible, the result would be highly unjust and inequitable.
"Our study of the tax systems of other states shows clearly that other methods of taxation than the general property tax are both more equitable and, at the same time, more successful as means of raising public revenue from intangible property. But no such methods can be introduced in Illinois under the present constitutional restrictions requiring the taxation of all classes of property on an absolutely uniform basis. It therefore becomes necessary for any adequate change in the system of taxation, that the constitutional provisions should be amended."
The Forty-ninth general assembly in session during the winter and spring of 1915, by a two-thirds vote in each house adopted a joint resolution submitting the proposed amendment to the voters at the election November 7, 1916. With a majority of all the votes cast at that election the amendment will become a part of the state organic law and the legislature, next winter, will have authority to take up the revision of our tax system, so far as personal property is concerned, and enact laws which will become operative July 1, 1917. However, far-reaching investigations of new tax methods employed in other states may require final action in another session.
TAXES GROW HEAVIER
TAXES GROW HEAVIER
Demands For New Public Service Require More Funds.
Revenues From Now-Untaxed Values Necessary to Secure Relief for Burdened Taxpayers.
In considering the pending amendment to the constitution it is pointed out that larger public revenues are more and more required. For the most part this is due to improvement of public service demanded by the people and to extensions of public service. There was a time when we had no health service—and no tax for that purpose. In the same way there was a time when the insane poor were left on the hands of their relatives at large, a menace to the public. If they were paupers they were confined in the county poorhouse. Now they are housed in state institutions. Mothers' pensions are being utilized to preserve homes for dependent children instead of sending them into public institutions at public expense. Contagious diseases are segregated, tuberculosis is being stamped out. Educational institutions have been improved and extended and compulsory education is being enforced. Factory and tenement house inspection is being made more and more efficient. In cities, parks, bathing beaches and playgrounds are being increased and improved. In the country good roads are being extended in every direction. Primary elections and better election and ballot laws safeguard the efforts of the people to express their wishes and rule. The effect of all these and other items of government service has been to increase the revenue requirements of all governments—everywhere. Illinois is not an exception. It is not ahead of the procession.
The conclusion from these facts is that larger revenues, instead of less, have got to be provided for the future. This means greatly increased taxation on real property, unless there is an extension of taxes to other values that now are practically untaxed.
Under the existing Illinois revenue system all kinds of property—not exempt—are taxable at the same rate. This means that the mortgage is taxable at the same rate as the farm. But, as a matter of fact most nearly all mortgages escape taxation entirely. And it is the same way with bonds, stocks, credits, money in bank and all kinds of wealth other than tangible, visible things. That this failure to tax exists is due to intangibles—they cannot be discovered by the assessor. And likewise to tax many of them on full value at full tax rates would be to confiscate a large proportion of their incomes. However, it is recognized, even by the owners of them that they should be taxed in proportion to their ability to bear taxation.
And all of this points directly toward the constitutional amendment to be voted for November 7. which will make it possible to derive public revenues from intangible value taxes. And the voter who wishes to reorder our chaotic tax system and provide adequate incomes for our growing public needs should work for and vote for the amendment. To adopt it requires a majority of all the voters voting at the election.
Increasing Public Expenditures
A writer in the New York Times, Annalist calls attention to the fact that public expenditures are outrunning the growth of population. Commenting on this article the Literary Digest says: "So far there being any mystery attending this increase, it is a thing that may be easily understood, once taxpayers consider what they have been getting for their money. There are better roads, better schools, better hospitals, because more money has been spent for them and the spending of this increase of money has made taxes higher." Better tax systems also are more and more demanded.
---
Illinois Press Comment.
Springfield News-Record: The present system overburdens land and other visible property. It permits intangible property to escape.
Edwardsville Intelligence: Popular willingness to give state legislatures the necessary authority to meet modern and advancing economic conditions, especially in states like New York and Maryland, where the vote was taken on a basis of actual experience, may be reflected in Illinois when the amendment is voted upon.
Illinois State Journal: In all these years no one has raised his voice in defense of the existing scheme.
Chicago Herald: If adopted by the people, as it will be, it (the amendment), will empower the general assembly to enact laws that will take note of the fact that income-producing power as well as market value, must be considered in any fair taxation system.
Troy Call: The pending amendment will not of itself make any change in existing laws.
Watseka Republican: Other states have dealt with the tax problem with considerable success.
Milan Independent: Years of effort have been spent by honesty-loving legislators in getting such an amendment through as we now have to vote upon.
The Farmers' Review: Under the present system, which has been in vogue in Illinois since 1848, greater burdens are constantly heaped upon real property.
Stroctor Free Press: The action of the legislature with reference to the taxing of Illinois is eminently timely.
Galesburg Mail: There is nothing to lead us to believe that the people's verdict will not favor new tax laws.
Elgin News: If all the property in Elgin were actually taxed, the revenue derived therefrom at the present rate would be more than ample. But it never has been and never will be under the present law.
Kewanee Courier: Injustice and inequity should give way to fairness in our Illinois system of taxing and this action of the legislature (submission of the amendment) is a step in the right direction.
Belleville News-Democrat: Other states, similar in character to Illinois, by modern and scientific methods, have made tax-dodging a rare offense, instead of a common habit, and have devised means for taxing effectively and justly those classes of property which largely escape in Illinois.
Dixon Telegraph: In eastern states where the power of centralized wealth in great cities is greater than in Illinois, we see no tendency to exempt this vast (intangible) wealth, but rather the effective taxation of it on a basis, having some regard for the income and character of the property taxed.
Monmouth Review: Let anyone invest his or her savings in bonds, stocks or mortgages, or let anyone put a sum in a savings bank, and Illinois demands annually half or two-thirds of the income from such securities or deposits.
AFFLUENT STATE:
BAD TAX SYSTEM
The states rank as to population: New York, first; Pennsylvania, second; Illinois, third. The great cities of the world, in the order of population are: London, New York, Paris (before the war), Chicago. It is not unlikely that Chicago is now the third city in population. Chicago by far is the second city in the United States—values considered—in manufacturing, and, in point of importance of industrial products, it is generally conceded to be the first. It is the greatest transportation center in the world, and, next to New York, the greatest financial center of the United States. It is a part of Illinois and Illinois is part and parcel of Chicago.
In recent years Illinois has produced cereal crops 20 per cent greater in value than the next highest state. It is second in the production of bituminous coal and fifth as to petroleum and natural gas, third in the value of industrial products and fourth in the number of wage workers—probably first in the number of adult male workers. Measured by the best economic tests Illinois is the most important state in the Union. No state could be dispensed with less easily.
The Illinoisan who sits in the background politically, producing these economic results, has sometimes found fault that closer attention is not given to state policies and better results secured. The pending amendment to the state constitution is a response to his requirements so far as taxation matters go. It will enable the legislature to enact laws that will give business enterprises of all sorts more encouragement, assuring them that they will not be driven from the state by the enforcement of tax policies which have been discarded by other states—especially states which rival and compete with Illinois for first place in material welfare. The amendment will make possible as low rates for farm, industrial and commercial loans as are possible anywhere. And, this will give added impetus to the development of the state. The amendment will be voted on November 7, and must have a majority of all the votes cast at the election to insure its adoption.
PAGE SEVEN
Illinois Press Comment.
Rockford Star: The present system is iniquitous. No one attempts to defend it, for it cannot be defended.
Olney Daily Mail: A constitutional amendment is offered to voters at the November election which will give unmistakable power to the legislature to afford relief.
Shawnetown Democrat: Even if the voter does not mark his ballot it will count as a vote against the amendment, because the amendment must be voted for by a majority of all those who vote for members of the general assembly in order to make it a part of the constitution.
Freeport Standard: No modern revision of our antiquated and unjust personal property tax laws will be possible if the amendment falls. It would be a bad waste of effort if this amendment should fall because of a lack of information or because a few citizens merely forgot about it.
Freeport Bulletin: While taxes are a dry subject, and their discussion in the abstract is not always of compelling interest, there is a personal concern of practically all of us in the matter of taxes.
Decatur Review: The tax amendment can be helped along materially by action taken by campaign committees of the different parties.
Plainfield Enterprise: The present law places a premium on lying and dishonesty. It is hardly to be wondered at that the man who has a modest saving account in bank falls to schedule it for taxation.
Galesburg Republican Register: It is important that the attention of all be centered on this amendment to the end that it may receive the necessary vote to adopt it.
Rockford Register Gazette: The present Illinois system exempts illegally a vast amount of wealth of certain kinds and taxes other property doubly and trebly.
Canton Register: The proposed amendment will give the legislature power to adjust the taxing system to present needs. Without doubt practically all who vote on the amendment will vote for it. There is almost no opposition. The danger is in indifference. Unless the people are sufficiently interested to mark the little ballot the amendment will fall.
Danville Commercial News: The idea of the tax amendment is to pass a law which will enable the collection of taxes from intangible property owners, who at present evade taxation, because the rate is so high they cannot pay it.
Piano News: The Illinois tax system is a school for dishonesty, with the state for teacher. For that reason every voter in the state should post himself on the amendment that is to be voted on November 7.
Paris Beacon: The approval of a majority of the male vote of the state will be necessary to make this amendment a part of our constitution.
The Prairie Farmer: Of most direct interest to farmers, of course, is the double taxation of mortgaged land.
Chicago Tribune: Give the voters the fact, the truth, and they will vote emphatically to abolish the impossible general property tax.
Chicago Examiner: There can be no excuse for a failure to give Illinois the very best tax system pointed out by the research and experience of our sister states.
DOUBLE TAXATION
FAULT OF SYSTEM
Undue Taxation of Evidences of Indebtedness Makes Debtor Pay Twice.
A conspicuous injustice which the constitutional amendment, to be voted on November 7, will make it possible to remedy, is double taxation.
The taxation of mortgaged property and of mortgages as well as some other forms of intangible value occasions frequent complaint of "double taxation." Most farms and most homes in Illinois today are bought on the part-payment plan, a little cash and a note secured by mortgage being given by the purchaser.
A mortgage on land is taxable. And in effect is double taxation. Two tax values have been created where only one before existed. In paying the interest the mortgagor must pay all or part of the tax which the mortgagee is obligated to pay. The fact that the mortgage evades taxation generally does not benefit the mortgagor. Mortgaged land is land burdened with double taxation.
Suppose that a man sells a horse for say $200 and takes a note for it, the note becomes taxable. Suppose, furthur, that the buyer sells the horse to another man for another note, this second note becomes taxable. This same horse may be sold indefinitely on credit creating a taxable value each time that it is sold.
Many other examples might be cited. The merchant who buys a stock of goods on credit may have in bank on assessment day the money to pay his debt. In that case, the money, the goods and the credit are all three subject to taxation and the merchant cannot, now, offset his debt against his money in bank nor the goods on his shelves.
Modern laws regard mortgages and kindred values as differing in character from other property and tax them according to ability to bear the tax. Greater justice and a better basis for revenue result.
TEENAN JO
TEENAN JONES' PLACE
3445 SOUTH STATE STREET
Telephone Douglas 4591
The finest and most UP-TO BUFFET and CAFE on the Side. First-Class Entertainer
HENRY "TEENAN" JONES, Prop
The finest and most UP-TO-DATE BUFFET and CAFE on the South Side. First-Class Entertainers. HENRY "TEENAN" JONES. Proprietor.
Phone Randolph 4758
Residence, 2802 S. Tripp Ave.
Phone Lawndale 7055
C. J. Waring
Attorney and Counselor at Law
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143 North Dearborn Street
CHICAGO
Franklin A. Denison
ATTORNEY AT LAW
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ON I O A C C
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Entered as Second-Class Matter Aug. 19, 1902, at the Post Office at Chicago, Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
The chief office of silence is to bury all that is evil, and the chief office of speech is to disclose and disseminate all that is good. Let this be done with sincerity and earnestness, for its ultimate benefit to character and to conduct is established beyond a doubt.
Teacher—Willie, you may name three personal pronouns. Willie—He, she and it. Teacher—To what would all three apply? Willie—To a husband, wife and baby.—Exchange.
How They Love Each Other!
Agnes (yawning)-Oh. dear! I feel today as if I were thirty years old. Marie-Why, what have you been doing to rejuvenate yourself?- Boston Transcript.
"Can you tell me what a smile is?" asked a gentleman of a little girl. "Yes, sir. It's the whisper of a laugh."—London Answers.
Patience — What did you think of Bob's mustache? Patrice—Oh, it tickled me immensely.—Yonkers Statesman.
Neither hew down the whole forest nor come home without wood.—Servian Proverb.
PAGE EIGHT
Published Weekly
Silence and Speech.
Classified.
Her Definition
Oh. Did It?
EDWARD FELIX
CIGARS
TOBACCO
CANDIES
NOTIONS
LIGHT GROCERIES
3002 Dearborn Street
Office Hours Office Phones
2 to 4 P. M. Douglas 3522
7 to 8:30 P. M. Auto. 71-777
Sundays 2 to 4 P. M.
EDWARD S. MILLER, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
3101 South State Street
Residence
3247 Wabash Avenue
Phone Douglas 2903 Auto 71-867 Chicago
PHONES: OFFICE. MAIN 4183
AUTOMATIC 33-736
RESIDENCE. DREXEL 7990
Walter M. Farmer
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
SUITE 708, 184 WASHINGTON ST.
NOTARYPUBLIC CHICAGO
Office Phones: Res. 5133 Ss. Wabash Ave.
Oakland 4662, Auto. 73-658 Phone Drexel 18815
Dr. Theo. R. Mozee
DENTIST
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CHICAGO
Hours 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., 7 P. M. to 9 P. M.
Sundays by Appointment
Phone Main 2017
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
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
Phones Central 239
Auto. 41-916
CHICAGO
From New York harbor and immediate approaches alone 268 beacon lights to navigation are required, including forty-six shore lights, two light vessels and thirty-eight lighted buoys; there are 192 buoys of all classes and thirty-seven for signals, including sounding buoys.
The Unsafe Safe.
Willis (ready for school)—Mamma,
they are hoisting a safe down the
street. Mother—Well, be careful not
to walk on the safe side.—Boston
Transcript.
thing."
"Ah! I often speak to my husband about the time when we had to."—Puck.
"She's calling for nectar at the soda fountain too."—Kansas City Journal.
"She does. She opens the proposals."
—Kansas City Journal.
An honorable defeat is better than a mean victory, and no one is really worse for being beaten unless he loses heart—Sr John Lubbock.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916.
Consult me, I can save you
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Tels.
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FAULKNER & COOP
General Brokers
Estate and Insurance
NOTARY PUBLIC
8603 So. State Street, Chicago, Illinois
Tels. Douglas 6759; Auto. 77-086
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NOTARY PUBLIC
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Tels. Douglas 6759; Auto. 77-086
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As agent buy and sell Real Estate on commission, manages estates for non-residents, including payment of taxes and locking after assessments. Money to loan on Chicago Real Estate.
JOHN BLOCKI, President
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5057 S
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A. F. CODOZOE, DOUGLAS 5971
J. H. WHISTON, Proprietors Phones DOUGLAS 3256
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager AUTO. 72-379
The Elite Cafe
AND BUFFET
3030 STATE STREET CHICAGO
PETER H. HARRIS
Geo. W. Faulkner
W. S. SMITH
As Near As Your Telephone DISTANCE IMMETERIAL
In a Metropolitan City of this size, death knocks every thirty minutes at some door. Too often that death not only brings sorrow, but misfortune as well. Let the price you pay for a funeral be a business proposition and you will benefit by it in service, quality and cost to you in dollars and cents. The result of my campaign has built for me one of the largest and most magnificent establishments in the world. A visit will convince you.
John T. Cook M. E. Wimes
Renting & Insurance Dept-
John T. Cook M. E. Wimes
Renting & Insurance Dept.
KNER & COOK
General Brokers
State and Insurance
UNTARY PUBLIC
State Street, Chicago, Illinois
Douglas 6759; Auto. 77-086
A LOT
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Down and Five Dollars per Month
JESSE BINGA
BANKER
S. E. Cor. State and 36th Place, Chicago Telephone Douglas 1565
owed on Savings Accounts
at Vaults, $3.00 per Year
ESTATE DEPARTMENT
State on commission, manages estates for non-resi-
tates and locking after assessments. Money to loan
LAUREL
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F. D. CONNERY, - - Comptroller
Karpen Building
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Phones { Calumet 6247
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