The Broad Ax
Saturday, December 23, 1916
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
Charles E. Stump, the Kansas Farmer Newspaper Correspondent, Recently Visited Many Points in Arkansas, Oklahoma and the Sunflower State, and Was Royally Entertained by the Leading Citizens Everywhere
Vol. XXII.
Charles E. Kansas Fa paper Co Recently Points in Oklahoma Sunflower Was Roy tained by Citizens Ev
Topeka, Kans.—While I have been trying to write to the newspaper, and have gotten away for a long time, yet I am not going to divorce myself from the farm, and you are wrong if you have ever thought anything like that. I have been riding and riding, and have been to various parts of the world, yet, I am right back in Kansas this week, as you will see, and I am here to study the farm life, and to here and there see what I can see and what I can learn about farming. I am here this week mingling with my own people as you will be able to see before I am through with my letter.
When I wrote to you last I was down in Crossett, Ark., the town of one man, but now I am far from there. I left there and went out to Montrose, Ark., where I spent a few hours and when I was through with that part of the world, I went to Dermott, where I spent Sunday. When I stepped off of the wagon there I found a committee waiting for me, headed by Prof. T. J. Walker, who is grand keeper of records and seal for the grand lodge of Knights of Pythias of Arkansas. They tell me he is one of the finest in the country. We were soon in an automobile on our way to his home.
We were not there long before they had me in the A. M. E. church, and a church full of men for me to talk to about farming or anything else I saw fit to talk about, and believe, me honey, I did some talking to those men, and they just put money down on the table for me when I was through talking and invited me to come to them again, and I think I shall do so. I want to go to see them as soon as I can make it convenient. As soon as I was through talking to the men, then I had to go to another church and talk to the women, and then I called to see Dr. Parker, and found he was sick in bed Then to the Baptist church at night, and back to the home of Mr. Walker. His wife was away to conference, and he cooked supper after church. We got on the outside of all of it, and then I left about 2:30 for Little Rock. I am not going to talk about Little Rock. But I went to Morrilton, after spending a day and night in the capital city, and there I met many people. Now from Morrilton, I went to Fort Smith, Ark., and then to Wagooer, Oklahoma, where I spent a day with Rev. M. B. Brookins. I am not going to talk about it now, but must turn my attention to the next place Nowata, Okla. I was there the guest for one day of the public school and the teachers. I looked wise all the time and had them believing that I was some educator man. Of course I threw out some big met by Dr. Jones, and he escorted me over to the school building. When he
HEW TO THE LINE; LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY
presented me to Prof. J. Oscar Spencer. I said to him "Gladerbus, meeteriobus, Professoribus." Now, that Professor just looked at me, and his children smiled as if they thought I was the greatest educated man in the world. But when I said almost in the same breath, "Is you a grameraterbus from this schoolus," the children changed the expression on their faces, and still when I said "I are here for today, only," then they did do some looking. The teachers in the school in addition to the professor just named were: Prof. Horace Hughes, Miss Carrie I. Booker, Miss Julia A. Elliot, Miss Bernice O. Ellis. The boys and girls looked at me and I looked at them. I talked with the teachers using every big sound I could get together. I was soon called upon to speak to them, and it was some speaking believe me, honey.
Now at noon, each one who had brought some lunch, brought it into the domestic science room, and put it together and I joined them in the eating of it. All day was spent in the school. Miss Carrie I. Booker indeed is some music player, and Miss Ellis is some singer, and then Miss Elliot is some cooker. A fine combination in a school-room, and them fessors are just educators. After school we went to the home of Mrs. Homer Flake where we had some she 'nuf dinner, and you put it down that I got on the outside of it. Mrs. Flake is some cooker also, and a fine housekeeper.
Next found me at 10 o'clock that night headed for Wichita, Kans. I took my seat in the special and remained there until I reached Coffey-ville and then I went back in the chair car. I took my seat just opposite a White woman from "Redneckville," and she looked at me, and then asked the conductor in these words, "I wish you would have that nigger move out of this car, because I am not used to riding with niggers." The conductor told her that she would have to return to Oklahoma, Texas, or some other outlandish place. I had the devil in me as big as a mountain, but kept my mouth and said not a word.
I am not going to tell you all the things that took place in Wichita, but I was there three days. It was a nice stay. I had the pleasure of seeing Rev. S. B. Butler, one of the best preachers we have, pull off a real rally. The people just walked up and put on the table in less than ten minutes, $537. Then they turned around and gave me $17.36 for preaching for them in a collection. Now you see I am tempted to get away from the farm. The money was put down in the following order. A. Washington, $53.58; Mrs. Carrie Anderson, $51.37; Mrs. Margaret Giles, $53.68; Mrs. Etta Barnes, $47.85; Mrs. Ernest
M.
Strong and influential member of the State Senate from the First Senatorial District of Illinois, millionaire real estate owner, who would make a top candidate for treasurer of Cook county in 1918.
Strong and influential member of the State Senate from the First Senatorial District of Illinois, millionaire real estate owner, who would make a top candidate for treasurer of Cook county in 1918.
Moore, 56.65; Miss Georgia Triplett, $16.70; Mrs. Mayme Strother, $21.45; Mrs. Emma Dunson, $44.65; Miss Estella Turner, $103.16; A. L. Case, $6.50; morning collection, $10; a friend, $1. Now this was good. They are going to put up a new building next spring.
When I left Wichita, Kansas, I was accompanied by my niece, Miss Mabel Overstreet, who is going to visit Chicago. We left over the Rock Island, and were met at the stable in Topeka by Mr. Green in his automobile and President Carter of the Industrial and Educational Institute, which is known as "Western Tuskegee," in this section of the country. Prof. Carter is some educator and a man who is doing things, yet he was not too big to come down on a cold day and meet a common farmer like me. I knew he was president of a college, hence I put on extra airs, and started to use big sounds, but he told me that he was a busy man and did not have time to use his dictionary, and would rather me to get them words down to their lowest terms, so I just talked plain United States to him, and I understood myself better what I was saving.
Reaching the building, we went to the school or the dormitory occupied by girls, and I was greeted by Mrs. M. L. Matthews, who was in charge, and when I started to greet her like I was educated, I was reminded that I had met her before at Tuskegee Institute and it was not necessary. Then over to the office and there I met Miss C. V. Carter, who is the stenographer and writer on a writing machine.
I looked at her fingers dance over the keys like the Highland fling dance, or the fox trot. Her fingers did do some dancing, swinging corners and balancing all or something else. I wanted to compliment her and said to her: "Thinkererus, you intus writeripulutis, and I am tulos yourus shorthanditum." That young lady looked wise at me without saying a word. Now just a word or so about the school.
Without a doubt this is one of the finest schools in the work for our people, and it is the work of Dr. Carter. He had an idea born into his head and used it to a queen's taste and fret, believe me. The buildings are all of stone blasted out of the ground where the school is. This is an institution that furnished its own material for buildings. They have five of them on the camp ground. They called it campus. This is the time for the meeting
of the Sunflower State Agricultural Association, which is a state-wide organization composed of us farmers. I was glad to get among my own, and I want to thank Dr. Carter myself for organizing us 10 years ago, although this is the first time I have been at a meeting and I do not care to miss another meeting. I am going to be on hand every time they sound the gavel that I am able to travel.
Dr. Carter knows just what we need and he does not hesitate to give it to us, and we are using it to who shall last the longest. We are making good use of these things. I wish you could have just heard what we said. I am sure you have heard of W. W. Russell, that man who lives here in Topeka and knows so much about bringing up chickens, ducks and other things like that. He told us about the diseases of fowls, and offered some good remedies. Some of the remedies he offered are just as common, and he told how he had gotten results himself. That was worth all it cost me to get here.
There were experts in other branches who spoke, and I will tell you all about them in my next letter. Will have to close for this time, but look for me next week.
NEGRO'S HOME DYNAMITED, HE
GETS $42,500 DAMAGES.
Tennessee Jury Holds "Man's Home His Castle" in. Suit Following Posse's Raid.
Memphis, Tenn., Special-Upholding the contention that "a man's home is his castle and he has a right to defend it," which Judge John E. McCall emphasized in his charge, a jury in federal court here awarded Matthew Harris, a Negro, $22,500 compensatory and $20,000 punitive damages in his suit against John A. Riechman, former sheriff of Shelby-county, and members of a sheriff's posse.
Harris, who sued for $100,000 was seriously injured when his home was dynamited in an attempt to dislodge him after he fired on the posse, which was searching for one of his relatives. Harris testified that he was not aware of the identity of the possemen when he resisted their efforts to search his home.
Riechman was exempted from the verdict for punitive damages, as it was shown that he was not actually a member of the posse.
The Seventh Annual Essay Contest Was Attended by More Than Fifteen Hundred People at Bethel Church; the Two Prizes Awarded to the Lucky Contestants Were Contributed by Dr. Louie Usselmann, the Popular Jeweler at 3150 S. State Street
Last Sunday afternoon the seventh annual essay contest was held at Bethel Church, 30th and Dearborn street and more than fifteen hundred people crowded into it to enjoy the highly interesting program, including the reading of the essays by the various contestants, the subject been "Why Is It That the Negro of the United States Is Not a Power in the Industrial, Political and Commercial World." The contents of all the papers were well delivered with the possible exception of one or two and the majority of them contained much food for thought, which was worthy of serious consideration.
For example, Mrs. A. George, who was one of the representatives of St. Mark's Lyceum, who in the end won the ladies' diamond brooch, uttered the whole truth and nothing but the truth when she declared, during the reading of her essay, that "the Negro never will be a factor in politics in this country as long as the politicians can tell just how he is going to vote, simply by the color of his skin or by the texture of his hair" that statement on her part was worth its weight in gold and seemingly not one of the other speakers or readers on that occasion had the
COLORED CATHOLIC PRIEST
BE HONORED.
Baltimore, Md., Special — Roman Catholic and other prominent citizens are planning a big testimonial reception to Rev. C. Randolph Uncles on January 8th, the twenty-fifth anniversary of his elevation to the priesthood. He was the first Colored man to be elevated to the priesthood of the Roman Catholic church in this country, and Roman Catholics of both races as well as members of other denominations will join in the celebration. It is planned to present him a testimonial gift of $2,000 on the night of the reception.
On the morning of the celebration a solemn high mass will be celebrated at St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church at which time Cardinal Gibbons and other notables are expected to be present. Benediction services will take place at St. Peter Claver's Church.
Father Uncles is a native of Maryland. Before entering St. Hyacinth's College, Canada, to get his scholastic training for the priesthood he taught school in Baltimore county. He received his theological training at St. Mary's Seminary in this city, where Cardinal Gibbons was also educated. He has been an instructor at Epiphym
No.14
courage to give expression to similar views and in all honesty it must be admitted that for more than fifty years the Negro from the highest to the lowest has been nothing more than an abject political slave.
That has retarded his progress in the Industrial, Political and in the Commercial world and the further fact that he is rather inclined to be dishonest in business affairs, more than all other agencies combined.
Mr. M. C. B. Mason, also representing St. Mark Lyceum, without much trouble won the other prize, a gent's diamond ring and next year the essay contest will be held at St. Mark Church, 50th and South Wabash ave.
For the past seven years all the prizes for the essay contests have been contributed by Dr. Louie Usselmann, the popular jeweler at 3150 South State street, who has thousands of friends among the Colored people in every direction and the reason that the majority of the Colored people feel at home in trading at his extensive store is that they know that they will always be treated right and that they can at all times buy the best goods for the least money.
Apostolic College, Walbrook for a number of years.
FORMER ALDERMAN FRANK I. BENNETT BECOMES COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC WORKS.
Mayor William Hale Thompson deserves to be highly commended for selecting former Alderman Frank I. Bennett, as Commissioner of Public Works. For in every way he is highly qualified to discharge all the exacting duties of that office.
For some years Mr. Bennett was the able Chairman of the Finance Committee of the City Council. He is a successful real estate dealer well and favorably known to the people of Chicago and undoubtedly he will reflect much credit on the present administration in the city affairs.
CHRISTMAS TIDE THE HAPPIEST SEASON OF THE YEAR.
Once more the people throughout the civilized world are engaged in celebrating Christmas tide and in the midst of the holiday season the indications are that the vast majority of them will enjoy themselves to the full, and for our part we wish one and all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
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A Pe Aisa ee Wace a ae ec
THE TWENTY-SECOND ANNUAL
RECEPTION
and BALL ~—
Given by the
8th Regiment, Ill. N. G.
Monday, January 1, 1917
EIGHTH REGIMENT ARMORY
. 35th Street and Forest Ave.
MUSIC BY EIGHTH REGIMENT
FULL BAND
Admission s 3 & 3 s 50 Cents
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
AND CHRISTMAS TREE
FIRST REGIMENT, UNIFORM RANK
Music by First Regiment K. of P. Band
Christmas Night
Monday, December 25th, 1916
7th REGIMENT ARMORY
ADMISSION - - - - - FIFTY CENTS
THE SOLACE BILLIARD ACADEMY
“THE MODERN SCHOOL” - CLEAN AND RELIABLE
+ TERREVOUS L. DOUGLAS, Prop.
CIGARS—WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
BOX TRADE A SPECIALTY :
3556 South State Street Chicago
PAGE TWO
Young, but Wise.
“But mamma thinks I am too young
to marry.”
“Why should she think that? You're
much older than she was when she got
married, aren't you?”
“Yes, but father was drawing a much
larger salary at the time than you're
getting.”—Chicago Herald.
A Friendly Tip.
Sapleigh—Would you—er—advise me
to—er—marry a beautiful girl or a sen-
sible girl? Hammersley—I'm afraid
you'll never be able to marry either,
old man. Sapleigh—Why not? Ham-
mersley—Well, a beautiful girl could
do better and a sensible girl would
know better. —Exchange.
ee a
“So the Jibways separated?”
“Last week.”
“What was the trouble?”
“Mr. Jibway's first wife wrote him a
Jong birthday letter every year, and I
‘think it finally got on the second Mrs.
‘ibway's nerves.”—Savannah Press,
Disillusioned.
“Did your husband used to write you
Doetry before you were married?”
“No, but he used to write me what
‘We both thought was poetry.”—Hous-
‘Two men were once talking over
their respective sons’ careers at col-
lege, and one remarked:
“Well, I sometimes feel like saying.
as did Aaron in the wilderness, ‘Be-
hold, I poured in the gold and there
came out this calf.’”"—New York Amer-
tean.
Prudent Man.
“Had any luck in the stock market
lately?”
“The best ever.”
“How much did you clean-up?”
“Not a cent. I listened to a still
small voice and stayed out.”—Birming-
ham Age-Herald.
Distance Lends Enchantment.
She—Do you think {t will be all right
for us after we are married to settle a
couple of squares away from my fami-
ly? He—I was going to say a couple
of states.—New York Times.
Optimiam.
Wife—John, you'll have to take that
ball away from baby. He hit sister
on the head with it, John—Yes, dear,
but you should have seen the curve the
Uttle cuss had on it—Puck.
‘True glory consists in so living as to
make the world happier and better for
our living.—Piiny.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, DECEMBER 23, 1916.
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION | OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
eran cpa camera rcie Hs lig — oe aga Be
Insurance Company of New York, in the
State of New York, on the Sist day of
December, 1915, “made to the “Insurance
Superintendent ‘of, the State of Illinois,
pursuant to law.
CAPITAL.
Amount of capital stock paid
up Ih cash-....---+-+-+-8 1,000,000.00
INCOME.
Premiums received during the,
aleve ins ‘wid ‘dividends’ “IStLoRat
Profit on sale or, maturity of
ledger sects "------+- <= 708.63
From all ‘other sources: : 11! 528.33
Total Income .........--$ 3625,722.27
DISBURSEMENTS.
Losses paid during the year.$ 1,484,845.08
Expenses of adjustment and an
settlement Of losses....... 84,43
Interest or dividends to stock:
holders -..--.-..-.+.--+- 200,000.00
Commision ‘or brokerage. =:° 641,369.49
Salaries, fees and all other
charges of officers, clerks,
agents and employees..... 377,506.28
MRE seks eres LIOR
Advertising, printing and sta-
loners, postage, lete.-- 40,015.87
Legal ‘expenses, furmitur’, ti a 9,
“fures an Saeed 500.
Underwriters’ board, "fie
‘department and. salvage
corps, fees, ett.....------ 29,821.97
Inspection and ‘wcrveys:-<22- 61,080.54
Repairs, expenses and taxes
‘On Teal estate.,.---.....- 29,651.36
State ‘Insurance “departments,
taxes and fees.---------- 88,710.52
Other licenses, fees and taxes 35,402.75
Loss on sale or maturity of
ledger assets o--ec.--<; 15,491.54
Decrease “in book’ ‘value of
Hedger amet i og SETHE
Agents" balances charged off. x
AWMother disbursements..... 12,067.63
Total Disbursements ...$ 3,163,464.20
LEDGER ASSETS.
Book value of real estate...$ 738,968.02
Mortgage loans on real estate 720,250.00
Book value of bonds and
Blocks sas-se-2-ceoc+-+-- 5,75%560.22
Cashin office ‘and ‘bank: ::: "570,272.68
‘Kgents" balances...--...--- 588,785.89
‘Total Ledger Assets.....-$ 8,371,981.81
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest accrued .......----8 51,850.50
Other non-ledger ‘assets: .:.." 15,896.03
Gross Assets .........+--$ 8,489,178.94
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
‘Agents’ balances
‘over three,
months due.$ 9,378.49
Book value real
‘estate, bonds
and stocks z
over market :
Value Js... 362,333.47
Special deposits
‘fo secure lia-
Manitities tn
Georgia Vir-
inl, Canada, E
NCarolina’, 37,814.54
ca z 814.
409,526.50
‘Total Admitted Asscts....$ 8,099,651.84
LIABILITIES.
Losses adjusted,
‘and unpaid..$ 170,508.67
Losses “in. pro-
cess of ‘ad
Sustment oF
in” suspense. 148,480.29
Losses resisted 55,725.00
Total ......$ 374,713.96
Deduet rein-
Surance =... 108,786.21
Net amount of yapald losses.$ , 265,927.75
Total unearned’ premiums... 3,558,971.56
Salaries, rents, ‘bills, taxes,
Me eee || TARE
Commissions and brokerage.. 26,066.66
Other liabilities .2s-.----s< 1919.13
Total Liabilities .......--$ 9:920,295.68
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS.
‘Total risks taken during the 5
FORE rs sencssaoacns 2,882,005 84100
Total premiums ‘daring | the
Year eceeecessseseacez-. SOQ408.7A
‘Total losses’ Incurred” during
Whe Year = seve ser ecccces 169,789.05
Gixo.' i. EDWAnDs,
President.
GUSTAV KEHR,
Secretary.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
goth day of January, 1916,
‘AUGUST C. WAITERLING,
[SEAL] Notary Pubile.
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Annual statement of the German Alliance
Insurance Company of New York, in the
State of New York, on the Sist day of
December, 1915, made to the Tnsurance
Superintendent of the State of Titinols, pur
suant to 1aw.
Amount of enpitai stock ald
mount of capita ry
up in eash-:!s-.s.--++++-8 400,000.00
INCOME.
Premiums recelved during the,
AE coecsscecseaccacea-$ 61242141
Inierests, rents and dividends) 81,232.18
Profit on sale or maturity of
ledger assets ..---------- 2,097.83
‘Total Income ....--...++-8 605,750.92
DISBURSEMENTS.
Tosses paid during the year.$ 19,319.79
Expenses. of adjustment and
Settlement of losses...... 7,228.47
Interest or dividends to stock:
Holders <sseessezsccs--== ,@0,000.00
Commissions or Trokeraze::: 155,710.80
Salaries, fees and all. other
‘charges of officers, clerks,
agents and employees... 2.490,00
Postage, ote. ceseereeecsec 2:20
Legal expenses 220020200.22 25:00
Fire department’ and salvage
Corps, fees, CC. nne nn nss 3,006.04
State insurance departments,
faxes and fees.c.--.--.-- 14,019.64
Other Iicenses, fees and taxes 15,499.13
Yous onsale of maturity of
edger assets ......----+ 26,984.43
Atl other disbursements: : 222 1100.00
Total Disbursements .....$ 605,775.90
LEDGER ASSETS.
Rook value “of, bonds and
SHOCKS wes ssa! sceresceee=8 1,957.104.68
Cashin office’ and ‘bani: !!.° ” 42°761.07
Agents” balances ...--..5. 109,061.48
‘Total Ledger Assets......$ 2,109,827.23
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest accrued ...----+-++ 11,117.00
Gross Assets ............8 2,120,044.23
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Book valne real estate, bonds
wand” stocks. over. market,
Walne wesesesececeeeceseoS 170,236.68
Total Admitted Assets. ../$ 1,941,707.55
LIABILITIES.
Losses adjusted
‘and unpaid..$ 68,391.49
Losses ‘in pro
‘cess of nde
jostment, Jor
‘suspense. 288.923.00
Losses resisted, 35,030.00
Total ......8 342,348.49
Deduct rein-
Surance .... 282,510.00
Net amount of unpald losses 109,824.49
Total wocarsed premiumeest B0R42130
Salaries, rents, ‘bills, taxes,
Me Sa ccecccesasenetcees S0O0RO8
Total Liabilities .........8 625,258.79
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS.
Total risks taken daring te, 6 105 724.00
Total premivina “daring the 69
WILLIAM N. KREMBE,
EDWIN M. CRAGIN
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
25th day of January. 1916.
S"Howiee REED,
(SEAL) "Notary Public,
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Annual statement of the German Amer-
fean Fire pee of Baltimore,
in the State of on the 3ist day
of December, 1915, made to the Insurance
Buperintendcae o¢' the State of loos
Amount of ace
Up iD Cash.s......2-++-=-$ 500,000.00
Prem ved daring the,
ams rece
YOOr veeeeeeeecesseeeee.$ 215,610.73
Interests, rents and dividends 63,311.35
Brod on sale or maturity of
edger ansctscrsssres sce 1,110.25
Incresse int book "value "of
ledger assets .....6..... 12,139.00
Total Income ...........$ 292,171.33
Losses paid turing the $104,794.44
The yearss$ 104.
Eaponsts ‘ot adjustment aid
element closes. 7. 2,804.89
Interest oF dividends to stock-
bolders<cviesnerceceen, 50,000.00
Commissions or brokerage... 49,661.77
Salaries fees" and. all ther
charges of officers, ce
Sgents and employees-<-” 17,303.61
Rents ssitiae cade, || 2
Tener bectagy eens SA8R78
Legal ifs and, apa td
Uitierwhters’ boaras, tre e- 7
‘partment and salvaige corps, an
Repalte, “expanses “and taxes TT“?
va tal‘enatecnerst nee 1.24051
state insurance departuacats,
tates and fecseesccrsees, 8,584.65
Other licenses, fees and taxes $800.89
Bectease in "book ‘value "ot
ledger assets ............ 4,826.00
Agents’ balances charged off... 10.00
‘Total Disbursements .....$ 251,012.69
LEDGER. ASSETS.
Book value of real estates 77, 58,288.34
Mortgage loans on real estate 719,794.39
Loans secured by pledge of
bonds, stocks or other col-
Intersect $2,783.25
Book value “of” “banda "and
SOickS ee escreecessnrs 381,668.00
Cash in office and bank..... 29,708.24
(Peon ee 42,144.75
Other ledger assets......... 200.00
Total Ledger Assets......$ 1,264,716.97
: NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest_tid' rents. due “aba
secre sect ceeccnes$ , 12,992.26
Gross Assets ............% 1t7649.23
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents’ balances over" tnree,
Routh, due ses. ees %:890.01
‘Total Admitted Assets....$ 1,274,259.22
omen tm prtTABILITIBS.
cess of ad- :
in'Suepense.'$ 9,948.00
Lomes“resistsi® —€:300.00
Total ......$ 16,448.00,
Deduct re-in-
insurance .. 4,372.62
Net amount of unpaid losses.$ 12,075.38
Total unearned premiums... . 243,622.79
Rmount reelatiped oa per
salaries, ents lita) iazes, | 120°
Cees 8,000.00
Commtssionis anid ‘brokerages: __3:900-00
‘Total Liabilities .........$ 265,321.17
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS.
Total risks taken duriag the
Fen nee nen ene Ug 4,287,112.00
Total” einidins’ “daring” the
yet ce: | AERIS
Tolat losses “incurred” during
te ger ee ne agaer os
SALTIN SakvEMDUCHL
President.
R. W, MACDONALD,
Ase, Secretary.
Subscribed and sworn to betore me this
gist day of January 1O16.
HOWARD S. SHELDS.
(Sean) ae eae:
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Annual statement of the German Amer-
feat Insurance Company of New York, in
the State of New York, on the Bist day_of
December, 1915, made to the Insurance Su-
Perintendent of the State of Illinois, pur-
Suant to law.
CAPITAL.
Amount of capital stock paid
up in cash............++-$ 2,000,000.00
INCOME.
Premiums received during the,
YOAr ns sveeecceseessse+2+$ 9,037,801,97
Interests, rents and dividends 1,122'103.89
Profit on sale or maturity of
ledger assets ...... 222+. 4,137.72
From all other sources...... 15,355.99
From all other sources...... 15,355.99
‘Total income ..........$10,179,800.57
DISBURSEMENTS.
Losses paid during the Year.§ 4,876,580.75
Expenses. of adjustment and
Settlement of losses....... 127,033.03
Interest or” dividends to
‘stockholders -.'..--.-...- _ 600,000.00
Commissions or brokerage.:: 1,731,070.02
Salaries, fees and. ail -other
charges of officers, clerks,
agents and employces..... 979,435.65,
Rete ecae cers COOOL
Advertising. printing ‘and sta-
tionery, postage, etc...... 167,895.58
Legal expenses, furniture, f-
tures and maps.......-... 35,770.81
Underwriters’ boards," fire de-
iment and salvage corps,
Fee testnressecsecsene, 186,327.83
Inspection and surveys:..1:. 67,330.92
Repairs, expenses and taxes
‘On Feal estate............ 118,283.13
State insurance “departments,
taxes and fees....----- 201,461.05,
Other licenses, fees and@axes. —91/555.46
Loss on sale or maturity of
Tedger assets -..---2-e.++ 243,376.01
Agents’ balances charged off:. ~ 3,820.30
‘AMlother disbursements... 26,130.17
‘Total disbursements... ..$ 9/530,640.01
LEDGER ASSETS.
Book value ‘of real estate. ..§ 2,682,385.69
Mortgage loans on real estate 53,190.00
Book™ value of bonds and
SHOCKS soc sev scecnsceeess 18,508,082.42
Cash in office and banie:*222 “977,080.14
Agents" balances....--.200..° 1,730:374.91
Bills receivable... ..22.2.11__ "36,0908
Total Ledger Assets. ....$24,051,164.05
NON-LEDGERy ASSETS. |
Interest accrued .....2---..8 | 15233152
Other non-ledger assets..1111" 6,242.23
Gross Assets RO escciancn
eR ee
Agents’ bal-
ances over
ther ee, =
months, dues$ 30,883.25
Bilis. recely:
able and
foams on
personal e-
Purity.) 1,925.13
Book value
eal “estate,
Bonds and
stocks over
market value 1,746,586.11
Special de-
posite to te.
fare Habit:
ties in Can
ada, Georgia,
Ni." stereo,
ON. Carolina,
and Vite
Binia ..-.s. 68,717.00
———= $ 1,816,111.49
‘Total Admitted Assets. $22,364,626.31
LIABILITIES. |
Losses ad.
fusted and |
| unpaid ....8 194,156.00
Losses In |
Process of
adjustment
or in wus:
Dense... 1,012,753.00
Losses re-
sisted ..... 162,531.00
‘Total .. . .$1,369,440.00
Deduct rete
surance .... 440,414.88
‘Net amount of unpaid losses.$ 929,025.12
‘Total unearned premiums.... 9,036,192.28
Salaries, rents, bills, taxes,
Cotttatesions ‘and’ brokerages “401-48
Gther iisbiities esreees Lode
‘Total Liabilities........$10,146,941.38
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS.
‘Total risks taken during the
ae
pee ee
Gipw homeeomeientepionao
WiLdiiii NS! Keeaten,
* Deesdent.
EDWIN M. CRAGIN,
Secretary,
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
2th day of January. 1016,
THOSE REED,
(SEAL) Notary Public.
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Annual statement of the German Amer-
tan Insurance Company of Pittsubrgh. in
the State of Pennsylvania, on the 3ist day
of December, 1915, made to the Insurance
Superintendent of the State of Iilinols, pur-
suant to law.
CAPITAL.
Amount of capital stock paid
up in cash...........+++-$ 200,000.00
INCOME.
Premiums received during the
FORE one eeeeses one. $ 362,300.45
Interests, rents and dividends "40,757.29
Profit on sale or maturity of
ledger assets .........0..+ 108.00
Total Income ..........$ 403,255.74
: DISBURSEMENTS.
Losses paid during the year..$ 205,120.82
Expenses of adjustment and
‘settlement of losses....... 5,595.56
Interest. or dividends to
Stockholders -............ 26,000.00
Commissions or brokerage.-: 109,448.70
Salaries, fees and all other
charges of officers, clerks,
agents and employees..... 19,369.11
Advertising, printing and sta-
tonery, postage, etc...... 4,963.31
Legal expenses, furniture, fix-
tures and maps... ........ 2,018.60
Underwriters’ boards, fire de-
partment and salvage
corps, fees, etc.....----+- 6,151.58
Inspection and surveys. 393.77
on Teal ‘estates; srs ccses 1,810.88
State insurance departments,
taxes and fees...........- 6,109.48,
Other licenses, fees and taxes 3,518.07
Agents’ balances charged off. 98.01
All other disbursements... 759.98
‘Total Disbursements.....§ 95,142.85
LEDGER ASSETS.
Book value of real estate....$ 46,527.47
Mortgage loans on real estate’ 521,025.00
“pond stocks or other colt
‘stocks or other col-
lateral .....2.ecseceeee- 15,750.00
Book value of” bonds’ “and
BLOCKS 2 oes. eeeseeeees 78,684.00
Cash in office and bank: +222 7,385.79
Agents’ balances .........1. 67,083.51
Bilis recetvable 222212111! 1,835.53
‘Total Ledger Assets.....$ 809,191,30
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and
acerued ....--.......-...8 11,381.00
Market vaiue ‘of ‘real’ estate,
bonds and stocks over book
NAIM cSecceecacescaatsa 57416
Gross Assets ..........3 82632646
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents’ balances over three
months, due ..............$ - 561248
‘Total Admitted Assets...§ $20,713.98
LIABILITIES.
Losses adjusted
‘and unpaid. ...$ 9,646.41
Losses in process
Of adjustment
or in suspense. 51,316.52
Losses resisted... "5,575.00
Total ...... $66,537.03
Deduct — re-insur- .
ANCE eee. 9,007.55
Net amount of unpaid losses.$ 57,530.28
Total unearned premiums... 315,139.78
Salaries, rents, bills, taxes,
cot naisns ana’ biGketage’ = 5,150.00
ions “an erage. | i
Other liabilities... nesses 36.00
‘Total Liabilities........$ 378,445.00
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS.
‘Total risks taken during the
JOE oon eeseeceesee ees .$ L8S7,156.00
Total premiums’ “during “the
FORE ccc ceceeccccscsis, SA TOESE
Total losses’ incurred’ during
the years... eee ceceee 14,951.59
Ww. J. PATTERSON,
President.
F. P. NIEBAUM,
Secretary.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
‘ist day of January, 1916.
WALTER C. MORRIS,
[SEAL} Notary Public.
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
orien Tree nement of the Girard Fire and
Marine Insurance Company of Philadelphia,
inthe. State of Pennurivania, on the Siat
day" of ‘December, 1918. made to ‘the In
Strance Superintendent of the State of Tk
mols, pursuant t0 laws
CAPITAL.
Amount of capital stock patd
Up In cake nn es 500,000.00
INcomE.
Premiums received during the
Demi acta ce see’ T#BATOA2
posit” preimlaais “on “perpet-
Mal THES cress ceeseees, 8682.20
Interests, rents and dividends 110°90330
Profit onsale of maturity of
edger ameter fz 0803
Increase in book value of ied
mer ameter 2 a4o.29
From all other sources...... = S037
‘Total Income ..........8 880,168,60
DISRURSEMENTS.
Losses pald during the year.8 374,407.31
Expenses of “ndjustiaent and
settlement of tosses. g.one.4s
Deponit premiums retarncd:. 1'61al0
Paderest Por ateisende ta
stockholders “itis .'° 100,000.00
Commissions’ or brokerage...” 190:780.08
Salaries, fers ‘and sail sther
charge of dior clerks
Seents and employees” ga.n14
Reiki | Seameen
Advertising. printing sad sta:
loner. potage eters 11,602.33
‘Legal expenses, furniture, fix-
fares and maps 5,800.19
Underweiters’ boerda, fire &e:
partment, and’ salvage
corpe, fees, ete..:........ 19,014.74
Inspection and survesas./.2) “Rae
Repairn, expenses, aad” taxes
pan maletinte yes, 782025
tate surance “departsncais,
farer and fees ny a7.a1845
Other licenses, fees and taxes 11,027.27
Lows" on nate of maturity ot
ledger assets ............ ‘21.90
Decrease fn book’ vais of ied
er Atte 1aeeas
Agents’ balances ‘charged ‘of inetd
Alother disbursemente:.-") 2.30048
‘Total Disbursements....$ 868,426.76
LEDGER ASSETS.
Book value of real estate...8 211,497.22
Mortgage loans on real estate 235,900.00
Loans secured by pledge of
onder stocks ‘or ther” col”
Book value’ étboada’ ana 2200000
ai
Cash in office and bank..... ‘87,215.47
Gther edger evecta: 22202222 S12:80
‘Total Ledger Assets... 2.579.769.40
NON-LEDG! =
Interest and. rented ASSET.
Market. value’ of” Kal omy,
Donde und stocks ores i :
Other non-ledger assets! "7" Sty
Gree Asc... FRG
DEDUCT ASSETS ¥
Agents’ balances, ‘OF AbuITTEy,
the 0e.°$ 1.394
‘mont <$ 1.30.x
Book value reai i
state," bonds
and stocks
Over market
Wale ewes 175,053.10
Special deposits
Pte ecure. ae
bilities in
Georgia “and
Virgiaia 8" go6zxs
seer
Total Admitted Assets tay
LIABILITIES,
‘god unpaid" 1,305.00
‘and. unpaid.-$ 1.305.00
‘Losses in process
of adjustment
for in suspense 57.c00.00
Leases resisted. S30.)
Total .....§ 64,854.00
Deduct reinsiir=
fmce tenes =. 19,357.00
Net amount of unpaid iosses.$ 45,
‘Total unearned premiums... _ ere
eee —— ‘on per. aim
[ lee cee
salaries, ‘rents, bilia, “iacs, "S808
Total Linbites ....... atame
BUSINESS IN ILLINOIS,
Total risks taken during tie
pea ee ae
‘Total premitimas’ “daring thc’ "SN
otal sees incurred” during MMS
Ge ere ci yagi
= HENRY M. GRATZ,
EDWARD 3. THOMASON
Subseribed and sworn to before ae hy
ath day of January, 1016.
JOSEPH KLAPP NICHOL,
{Sean} ‘Notary Publ
Leaves of the Poison ivy.
No doubt just a picture of pele
ivy is enough to cause some folks »
shudder and remember the time th
face and body became scarlet w
swollen from contact with the lam
How it itched and burned! Yet tom
it was only to make matters wore
A curious fact is that some perm
are immune from this polson, vii
others must not even breathe the pa
len of the plant. It is often confom4
ed with the Virginia creeper, slthiag
the difference between this is disine
‘The leaves of the latter are dirisd
into five leaflets, while those of t
former have but three, a fact
worth remembering.
Strange enough, the witch hazel pm
4s sometimes found growing clo y
the poison ivy. As witch hazel ering
4g one of the best remedies for tp
poisoning it would seem nature ws
holding out disease in one hand au
remedy in another.
Heat at the Persian Gulf.
‘The Persian gulf and its coast m
in summer about the hottest plava
earth’s surface, # temperature olf
degrees in the shade being not ®
common, while a black bulb solar tie
mometer has registered 1S7 degrest
the sun.
‘When one remembers that the bt
test room in a Turkish bath is wail
kept at about 160 degrees the appli
nature of this Persian heat wil ®
better realized.
The greatest heat ever know 8
England was on Aug. 18, 1503, whet
shade temperature of 95 degrees
registered. But on this day the =
temperature did not quite equal tt
of July 28, 1885, when 162 dems
F, was registered In the sun.
‘When you consider facts lke te
ft is difficult to believe that our pt
receives only one two-thousandab
Uonth part of the rays flung out by
sun.—London Telegraph.
‘Odd Titles of Newspapers.
In Columbus, says the Dispated. 1
fs a man whose chief joy is in s ole
tion of newspaper titles.
There are Headlights, Fissblisi
Bees, Eagles, Owls, Mirrors and New
Letters, but when it comes to Derr
Meddlers, Telescopes, Flags ad 8
Deams the class 1s limited In Bé
Springs there is published the Amu
sas Thomas Cat, and other title 1
as unusual are the Sleize Hames
the Irrepressible, the Silent Wait
and Gall.
Frequently it 1s possible to tell
the title of a newspaper the state?
which ft is published. For sta
the Chieftain is in Oklahoma, the Be
tler and the Lariat are in Tess
Hole Breezes in Montana sod
Roundup in Wyoming.
Attractive Automobiles
“So you are in the market
automobile?”
“Yes,” answered the man we
to attract attention.
“Any particular make?”
“No; 1 merely want one tit
make people turn rotind ands
me when I pass.”
“Ob, you don’t need a sredal
for that. Get the ordinary
exceed the speed limit”
Age-Herald.
Careful Hubby i,
“Does your husband sus" sf
theory that kissing transmits 5%
“No; he thinks that germs *% i“
ly transmitted by moves 0% 8%
careful not to hand me #25"
City Journal.
peer oo
a on porated saw
operated st!
felis more trees in an eisht MS,
than thirty woodmen. It ¥%%,
to the ground and leave yt
standing.—Popular Scien?
eee ae
Just In Time
Plaintift’s Lawyer! 6%
Defendant's Ditto—You or)
pretty weak.—New York
«qj THOUSAND VOICES IN~
CHORUS CHRISTMAS EVE
8° ‘Supplemented by Soloist and
orchestra of Seventy Pieces.
York.-The New York Commu-
SC" jorus, under the direction of
ay Barubart, will try to have al
Beran New York sing on Christmas
‘There will be Christmas songs
ed ‘the Christmas tree in Madison
fe, and later the chorus and as
pos otter people as the place can
7 wil 6! Madison Square Garden
sing Handel's “Messiah.”
pe chorus probably will contain be-
pea 1500 and 2,000 persons, who
Gre been Practicing the oratorio for
fr months. They will be supple-
Sed by a soloist and an orchestra
Zeerenty pieces.
“yr Barnhart, Who, with Arthur Far-
ei, the composer; W. Kirkpatrick
fe the treasurer, and Claude Brag.
fe, the architect and the creator of
Si stignt” hale of “Song and Light,”
impressed first by the national in-
ggisde for music. When listening to
Sand concert in @ park at Rochester
}ssidenls was struck by the idea
fst the mute and enchanted crowd
quid be glad to sing if they had*only
peopportunity and training.
‘fo fill this need he organized a cbm-
gaity chorus In Rochester and later
Fosaller one at Lyons, N. ¥. It was
fy in January of 1916 that the New
Yok Comunity chorus was attempt.
fg bot since then its ranks bave been
qanding rapidly until ft now is neces.
to transfer it from the auditorium
be Witt Clinton high school to Mad.
$o Square Garden for the Christmas
pebration.
SHEN THOUSAND MILE
VOYAGE IS MADE BY TUG
fistaken a Dozen Times For Sub-
marine In Trip Across
Atlantic.
New York.—A remarkable sea voy-
we of 7,000 miles, from Dordrecht,
foland, to Tampico, Mexico, in a tug-
int but sixty feet in length, with a
anft of three feet, has just been com-
pel by a crew of men under the
aiership of Captain H. Waltaker.
(azin Waltaker and his crew, of
vinm one was BE. M. Eden, a young
tis’ of Amsterdam, who made the
tip to satisfy a longing for adventure,
farted home on the steamship Nieuw
Jssterdam.
Me voyage required eighty-four days
fee and was made doubly hazardous
ite fact that the tug could carry
ey twenty-seven tons of coal. Fre-
gat attempts to stop passing vessels
torplenish the bunkers failed. Each
time the presence of the small boat in
ftepath of a steamship would send the
veel gigzagging away in the belief
tht the tug might be a disguised sub-
aioe,
“We were taken for a submarine a
tm times during the trip,” said Mr.
Yea, “and each time the vessel took
t»fight and we could not catch her,
hough we were badly in need of
tal and provisions.”
Tee tug was the Fuerta, built by the
(oona Oil company in its shipyards
Holland for use in towing oil barges
the Panuco river. In ordinary cir-
tastances the tug would have been
tunsported lashed to a ship's deck, but
tefreight rate demanded was deemed
cmtitant, and Captain Waltaker was
Seted to make the voyage witb the
tender her Geen eee:
COLONEL OFFERS A REWARD.
enebody Cut Down Mr. Roosevelt's
Sassafras Tree at Sagamore.
Orster Bay, N. ¥.—Colonel Roosevelt
fs the trail of malignant malefac-
fwsezain. This time it is one or more
‘titid woodsmen who, unknown to
Mn, sowed down a large sassafras tree
{the colonct's estate, Sagamore Hill.
Colonel Roosevelt offered $25 reward
frIsformation leading to the “discov-
®Y of the individual who maliciously
8i feloniously entered my land and
Nita crosscut saw felled a. large and
Mluble sassifras tree, which by its
‘Ul partly destroyed an even more
Nalutble beech tree.”
Itthere are any trees to come down
bemere Hill the colonel wants to
the chopping himself.
PA TREE TWENTY HOURS.
me Clothes and Climbs.
NY
i ont male oi
meee Tordoff was rescued by
fs “Te was arrested suffering
& telsim tremens and sent to the
=~ at Viola instead of to jail,
matt be tried to eject the inmates
Be wPed in a straitjacket.
Segganel and wandered through
There rae mountains to Ladentown,
threw away his clothes and
ated
yet. He was about famish-
fount by the hunters and
Metrert fricemen and may dle.
i$ painter.
eC.
Tartine In U.S. Supreme Court.
wae t8on.—Dsnamos, motors and
Ying Gel apparatus whizzed and
WR! the supreme court chamber
Ay wieton when the justices view-
eg tite mining plant tn full op-
& moe demonstration, unique in
Ne was held to give
&n actual view of a min-
} wey tt operation, one used in
sats and attacked as {p-
Tecently reargued.
‘Site Pastis Cicteneen: em.
A writer in the Technical World
Magazine, describing the immense
Ught on Pikes peak, says:
“The venerable head of that most fa-
mous of mountains, Pikes peak, has
been given an enormous eye. In Den-
ver, seventy-five miles. away, this eye
can be seen flashing to and fro on
clear nights, and in Colorado Springs,
fifteen miles away, the ‘company’ on
the frent porch is likely to be shown
up In a bright light at any moment by
the cog railway's searchlight. *
“The giant light is 14,172 feet above
sea level and is capable of flashing
signals over most of central Colorado.
It has been placed on a platform twen-
ty-five feet above the summit house.
Current is supplied by the turbines
that convert the power of the peak
streams into electricity. The search-
light 1s attached to a semaphore that
‘the operator moves at will, searching
out the dark beauty spots-throughout
the region or touching upon sections of
Colorado Springs and even Denver and
Pueblo when the great banks of cloud
do not blanket the cities far below.”
Loet Skill of Ancients.
From the earliest periods of which
we have historical records one of
man’s greatest problems has been to
lift heavy loads rapidly and efficiently.
Some of the greatest monuments of
antiquity were built under conditions
that involved lifting of heavy pieces of
building material to great heights, but
how it was done we do not know to
this day. The manner in which the
great stones were raised in Egypt has
always been a mystery and probably
always will be. It is certain, however,
that the builders of these wonderful
monuments were possessed of mechan-
ical contrivances that were lost in the
dark ages intervening between their
time and ours or they possessed pa-
tience to a more remarkable dezree
than is exhibited in any race of men
at the present time.—Engineering Mag-
azine.
a ae
It used to puzzle all thinking people
why ponds and rivers do not freeze
beyond e certain depth. This depends
on a most curious fact—namely, that
water is at its heaviest when it reach-
es 40 degrees F.—that is, 8 degrees
above freezing point. On a frosty
night as each top layer of water falls
to 40 degrees it sinks to the bottom.
‘Therefore the whole pond has to drop
to 40 degrees before any of it can
freeze. Af last it is all cooled to this
point, and then ice begins to form.
But ice is a very bad conductor of
heat. Therefore it shuts off the freez-
ing air from the big body of compara-
tively warm water underneath. The
thicker it gets the more perfectly does
it act as a great coat, and that is why
even the Arctic ocean never freezes be-
yond a few feet in thickness.
Undernaid Pastace.
Insufficient postage on letters is a
serious handicap to American business
abroad, reports our acting vice consul
at Genoa, Italy. A letter from the
United States to Italy bearing a two
cent stamp entails upon the recipient
a payment of at least 6 cents as a
penalty. “The poor impression upon
Italian firms created by short paid let-
ters,” says the report, “becomes, final-
ly, by repetition, very great. Special
care in affixing the proper postage
would bring ample returns by remov-
ing a cause of complaint which has ex-
erted an unfavorable influence in for-
eign business.”
Force of Habit.
He was an old merchant who had
built up a big business by advertising.
“John,” said his wife, “what do you
‘want on your tombstone?”
“Ob,” he answered, “it isn’t very
important what the text is so long as
it gets good space and is well dis-
played.”—London Telegraph.
Salt In the Sea.
The volume of the saline matter in
the ocean is a little more than 4,800,-
000 cubic miles, or, according to the
United States geological survey, de-
partment of the interior, enough to
cover the entire surface of the United
States to a depth of 8,500 feet.
Two Views.
“Life,” said the optimist, “1s one
grand sweet song.”
“Say, rather, a rasping graphophone
record,” growled the pessimist—Louis-
ville Courier-Journal.
Pinheads.
“Pa, when is a man a pinhead?”
“When his head stops the point of
a thing from going any farther, my
son.”—Baltimore American.
SE ESE SE AE SE SE OE NE A SE NE NE ES EE
a *
%€ PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Tee aes SEC Lege res LOU TU Cec Dae STR an
s€ A liberal allowance of fat 1s %
S€ needful for perfecting the shape %
% of the body. Fat gives form and %
% roundness to the body. Fat is %
%€ needed to help maintain and reg- ¥%
%€ ulate the body heat. Fat people %
8€ do not feel uncomfortable from %&
$€ the chilling blasts of winter, as %
%€ do their less favored lean and %
%€ lank brothers. Fat acts asa re-
#€ serve substance which the body %
M can draw upon for nutrition in %
s€ case of emergency too. If one %#
% fs inclined to grumble about his 1
% weight let him think what it
# would mean to him to be depriv- i
# ed of his useful protective cover-
sé ing of fat. Deterioration in %
#€ health usually results when there
M€ is a marked loss of fat from the %
s€ body. x
ad *
CELE Eee eee Se
. THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, DECEMBER 23, 1916.
CHINESE HAVE PLAN TO “LEFT PRISON A REFORME
RID HOUSE OF GHOSTS Quinian, |. W. w. Leader, Told of f
TT. He Found as a Convict.
Urge Novel Method of Taking Haunt/ Paterson, N. J.—Patrick Quinlan
From American Legation. L W. W. leader, -who was rele
Washington—A legend has gone
around Peking that the American le-
gation is hatinted; that the shade of an
Officer who lost his life during the
Boxer massacres of white men in 1900
i in the habit of occasionally visiting
his old quarters in the legation, greatly
to the discomfort of the occupants,
This aroused considerable interest
among the Chinese in Peking. Their
own spooks, being daily or rather night-
ly companions, do not excite much at-
tention. But a foreign ghost is quite 2
new thing. A Chinese gentleman named
Hsu Nai Hsuan has taken the matter
seriously to heart and has felt moved
to write to the American minister ex-
pressing his sympathy for the affliction
which the legation is undergoing in the
matter of a haunted room.
He says that experience has shown
in China that the way to rid a house
of ghosts is to remove the roof of the
building, leaving the interior of the
Toom exposed to the sun and air for
some tens of days, after which the
roof may be restored and the ghost will
no longer frequent the place. Mr. Hsu
said that he humbly offered this sug-
gestion, “as foreisners may not be fa-
miliar with the proper method of ban-
dling ghosts in China.”
If congress, says the Tokyo Adver-
tiser, is asked to appropriate a sum for
the reroofing of the lezation at Peking
the American people will now under-
stand what it is all about.
FINDS HIDDEN ROOMS
IN HOUSE OF MYSTERY
Carpenter Work on Old Place Re-
veals Apartments None
Knew About.
Chicago.—At 3624 Ellis Park is an old
three story frame buiding that was a
home when Ellis park was a woodland.
For the lust eizht or nine years, in a
remodeled form, it has been an apart-
ment building.
‘A few days ago a carpenter, tearing
away old planking to build a porch,
broke through a wall and made discov-
eries which made 3624 Ellis Park a
house of mystery.
Between the second and third floors
he found a hidden apartment, of which
not even Join Chamales, new owner of
the building, knew. Carefully Frank
‘Wilder, the carpenter, entered through
the hole he bad made in the wall.
He found a complete set of rooms
running from the front to the rear of
the building. The walls and ceiling
were unfinished. ‘There were no win-
dows and no visible means of exit.
‘There was a small table in one corner
With a few dishes on it aud an old cop-
per lamp. [ust covered, but with a
frying pan of ancient days still om it,
there was a stove. Some straw in a
comer seemed to indicate where the
mysterious occupant of the mystery
chamber had slept.
A piece of wire between two walls
served as a hanger for an old coat.
Over everything was a thick layer of
dust.
In hunting for an exit Wilder came
‘upon a panel in the wall fastened with
a hinge, two big iron hooks and a bar
that fitted into iron clasps. It opened
upon the staircase and so matched the
paneling that it was invisible from the
eanitilin:
SAYS HE BURIED GOLD.
Old Man on Way to English Workhouse
Tells of It.
Corning, Cal—Mrs. T. L. Barkle of
Newlyn, England, in a letter to her
son, the Rev. T. J. Barkle of this city,
states an old man named Kempe, who
came from California less than a dozen
years ago, was found on the verge of
starvation and taken to the workhouse.
Among the old man’s effects was found
nearly $5.00. This was all made in
California, and on the way to the
workhouse Kempe said he had buried
about $2,000 in California in a hole
five feet deep, but never could find it.
Little is known of Kempe except that
he was a miner in California and re-
turned to England eleven or twelve
‘years ago.
Somewhere in the mining district of
California a bag containing $2,000 is
buried.
PRIZE DOG SAVES MASTER.
Barks an Alarm When Auto Pins Dr.
Hair Against Garage Wall.
Bridgeport, Conn—Dr. James E.
Hair, widely known in this country
and Canada as a dog expert, probably
‘was saved from death by one of his
prize pets when the automobile he was
cranking shot forward and pinned bim
against the wall of the garage.
‘The barking of the dog brought
neighbors, who found Dr. Hair uncon-
aclous. He was severely bruised in the
abdomen, but is expected to recover.
Appareutly he had thought the engine
neutral and had started it without set-
ting the brake.
Shot at Movie Picture.
Hammond, Ind.—Patrons of the
Lyric theater were thrown into a panic
here when Jobn Sebastian, a foreigner.
whipped out a revolver and killed the
villain, who was choking the beautiful
heroine in the movie. The shot punc-
tured the arch fiend’s breast. “He was
choking ‘the lady,” said John, as « po
Béemen led him away.
“LEFT PRISON A REFORMER.
| meet Renee en rer ee are en ree cree
He Found as a Convict.
Paterson, N. J.—Patrick Quinlan, the
LW. W. leader, -who was released
from the New Jersey state prison after
serving time for inciting riot, told an
‘audience of 1,000 persons in Turn hall
that he was going into prison reform
work. He said that he wauld have a
conference in Newark with Thomas
‘Mott Osborne, former warden of Sing
Sing, and several other leaders in
prison reform. Quinlan was in the
‘Trenton’ prison for a year and a half.
In his recent campaign against con-
ditions in New York prisons Mr. Os-
borne often spoke of bad conditions in
the New Jersey prison.
Quinlan said he was well treated by
the prison authorities, but that the
Physical condition of the prison was
bad. He said that the bathing facilities
were all right in summer, but that the
bathtubs were not used in winter, the
prisoners getting only pails of water
with which to take baths, He said that
250 men were in a condemned section
of the prison and complained that the
inmates were allowed to write only
one letter a month and that the letters
were censored going and coming. He
declared that a letter written to him
had been given to reporters before he
had seen it.
SQUIRREL ATTACKS COP.
Makes Flying Leap, Burying Teeth In
‘Thumb and Forefinger.
New York.—A gray squirrel that had
been making a somewhat hopeless
hunt for nuts in Morningside park,
mear One Hundred and Twentieth
street, suddenly showed renewed inter-
est in its work as Patrolman Karl M.
Huber of the West One Hundred and
Twenty-fifth street police station came
along a winding path. With a screech
in the squirrel tongue that sounded
like a long drawn out “fureka!” the
squirrel made a flying leap at the cop.
‘This at least is the version of the
squirrel's attack on the cop told by
some witnesses. Patrolman Huber.
whose version of the incident also
should be listened to, says that while
he was trying to drive off a squirrel
which had alighted on the shoulder of
a frightened small boy the squirrel
grabbed Huber and tried to crack him.
Dr. M. K. Smith of St. Luke's hospi-
tal looked at the policeman’s right
band and found that Huber had not
come nearer to death than some squir-
rel tooth marks on the thumb and fore.
finger.
CAN OF MONEY FOUND.
Cents’ Worth of Candy.
San Francisco, Cal.—Three small
boys, whose aggregate age is twenty
fea playing near San Francisco's
w City and County hospital, yn-
earthed the “end of the rainbow” in
the tangible form of a tomato can
stuffed with real money.
Five thousand dollars in five dollar
notes—federal reserve be of the issue
of 1914—the boys pulled forth and
then began an onslaught upon neigh-
boring candy stores. They did not count
the money, but exchanged sheaves of
the bills for bags of candy.
In all they passed out $3,000 for 50
cents’ worth of sweets before they were
observed by a police officer, who took
the remaining $2,000 in charge.
In the opinion of the police the money
was buried by a thief. The money will
be returned to the boys if it is not
claimed and identified.
GIRL FIGHTS THIEF; $530 SAFE
Miss Bessie Schlieff, Attacked by Ban-
dit, Keeps Payroll.
New York. — Although repeatedly
struck in the face by a highwayman,
Miss Bessie Schlieff, twenty-one years
ld, a bookkeeper employed by M. Sum-
mergrade, a bedding manufacturer,
‘managed to hold on to the payroll she
was carrying and finally beat off her
assailant.
The girl received the money, amount-
ing to $530, at the State bank. As she
passed a coal yard on her way back to
the office a younggman tried to grab
the envelope containing the cash. Sey-
eral loungers in the coal yard heard
the girl’s cries, but did not interfere.
Finally the bandit fled, after Miss
Sehlieff had fought him.
FILM SAFE CRACKERS BANNED
Board of Censors Also Bars Heroines
Tied to Railroad Tracks.
Harrisburg, Pa.—Films showing safe
crackers at’ work, tramps stealing
watches and persons taking drugs are
to be eliminated from moving picture
exhibitions in Pennsylvania, according
to a bulletin issued by the state board
of censors. A long list of film plays,
some of them thrillers with heroines
tled to railroad tracks, is forbidden,
Scores of films in series are enumer-
ated as condemned, including about
sixty on the subject of white slavery
and twenty-five on Mexican scenes
whose manufacturers the censors have
been unable to locate. Prizefighting
films also have been put under the ban.
Skeleton of Indian Giant.
Oakland, Cal.—A skeleton, believed
to be that of an Indian chief, was dis-
covered by two working men engaged
in digging gravel on the Frank Wil-
Hams ranch, a mile and a half west of
San Leandro. The bones have been
taken in charge by Deputy Coroner
Robert Morgan, who declares that from
the size of the thigh bone it is evident
thap the skeleton is that of a man at
least eight fect tall. ‘The skeleton is
to be sent to the anthropological de-
partment of the University of Call-
fornia.
That May Happen at End of
Great War. ~
ALL AVAILABLE LAND GONE.
Commissioner of Immigration Howe
Predicts That United States Wil! Be-
come an Emigrant Rather Than an
Immigrant Nation at the End of Hos-
tilities In Europe.
New York.—A prediction that the
United States would become an “emi-
grant” rather than an “immigrant” na-
tion at the close of the war was made
by Commissioner of Immigration Fred-
erle C. Howe at the Sunday evening
forum of the Free synagogue.
Mr. Howe took the stand that immi-
gration was purely an economle ques-
tion and declared that it had been
such from the beginning. He said that
those who opposed immigration did so
because they desired to limit the com-
Petition of unskilled foreign labor;
those who favored the wide open door
did so because it made labor cheap.
He said the immigrant no longer
went to the farm because all the avail-
able land of the country had been tak-
en up, hundreds of millions of acres
being held for purely speculative pur-
poses.
“The immigration problem never ex-
feted so long as the land was free for
the asking,” said Mr. Howe, “and it ts
this searceness of land which makes
immigration an economic question.
“It is a matter of freeing labor on
one hand from the competition of the
incoming labor groups from Europe
and of insuring to the immigrant an
opportunity to work for himself rather
than for an employer interested in se-
curing his services at the lowest pos-
sible cost.
“I keep more or less in touch with
the centers to which go most of the
men who pass through Ellis island. I
am told that everywhere the men now
employed in our shops and factories
who at home worked as farmers are
saving their money to return to the
old country. They have always wished
to own their own farms—they came
here for that purpose—aad they figure
that after the war land will be cheap
in the countries overseas. ‘This senti-
ment, spreading among our workers,
will result in a serious crisis in our
industrial life.”
Mr. Howe also discussed the servant
‘question. He said that since the war
there had been practically no servant
girls coming to this country and that
many of those who were in service had
left it to enter munition factories and
offices, while others had married or
died.
‘To regulate the tide of oriental im-
migration and, in fact, to check in some
measure immigration from any land
Dr. Sydney L. Gulick, an authority on
Japan, sugzested that, for example, it
‘a thousand Syrians came to this coun-
try in 1900 and ten years later all bad
taken out American citizenship then
another thousand might be admitted.
If, however, only 300 had applied for
naturalization papers the decision of
the remaining 700 to still be Syrians
automatically would keep an equal
number of their fellow countrymen in
Syria.
RABBITS TO BE “HOT DOGS.”
Texas Plant Soon to Make Animals
Into Sausage.
Austin, Tex.—A plant for the manu-
facture of sausage from the meat of
the Texas jackrabbit is to be erected
soon and put into operation in west
‘Texas, according to an announcement
made by Fred W. Davis, state commis-
sioner of agriculture. Promoters of the
Plant expect to handle most of the an-
nual rabbit crop in their mill.
The Texas state department of agri-
culture has decided to attempt to ere-
‘ate a country wide demand for rabbit
meat.
It is expected that not less than a
million rabbits, Texas born and reared,
will be shipped to New England and
eastern markets during the next few
months. Commissioner Davis says the
rabbits are quoted in some cities at a
higher price than turkey or chicken.
NEW COINS ARE HELD UP.
Until First of Year.
Washington.—Issue of the new half
dollar designed by Adolph A. Wein-
man, creator of the new dime, and the
new quarter, designed by Herman A.
MacNeil, both considered by experts
coins of great beauty, was ordered de-
ferred by the treasury department un-
til the beginning of 1917.
'The extraordinary demand for small
coins—cents, nickels and dimes—is tax-
ing the facilities of the mints, and offi-
clals believed calls for the new quarter
and half dollar would swamp the mints
if they were issued now.
Wedding Party; No Bride.
Allentown, Pa.—Andrew Mireck the
other evening bunted up Arthur
Koenig, Allentown's license clerk, and
returned a license which, he said, was
no longer any good. The day before
Mireck and Mary Novatns, a comely
girl, had appeared arm in arm and ob-
tained the license. The next day she
left him waiting at the chureb, priest,
attendants, guests and all. After wait-
ing several hours the guests disappear-
ed in disappointment, and when Mi-
reck got home for dinner there was a
telegram from the girl in which she
stated she had changed ber mind and
‘would not marry him.
‘PaGE THREE
————————
r= Sans
John Adams Was 2 Poor Loser.
Jobn Adams, second president of the
‘United Staves, was not a good loser.
He wanted another term and worked
hard for it. None of the candidates
Teeelved a majority of the electoral
Votes, and the election was thrown into
the house of representatives, But Ad-
‘ams had no chance there, for he was
third in the race, and only the two
having the highest number of electoral
votes could be voted for. Thus the
choice lay between Jefferson and Burr,
and Jefferson won. Adams was very
much disgruntled and did everything
in his power to make things unpleas-
ant for his successor. He filled every
om office he could lay his hands on,
as to leave as little patronage as
possible for Jefferson. Not only so.
but in the closing hours of his admin-
istration he and his party associates
created twenty-three new judgeships,
for which there was no necessity, and
worked till the stroke of midnight on
March 3 filling out and signing com-
missions for these “midnight judges,”
as they were called. —Argonaut.
The Hydra Ie Its Own Doctor.
A tiny marine anima] which consists
merely of @ stomach and a mouth sur-
rounded by tentacles and which is ca-
pable of turning itself inside out iq
called the hydra. Sometimes the by-
dra’s mouth becomes overstretched
through its taking in too much food.
‘The animal promptly turns itself in-
side out, ejects the supertiuous food
and then returns to its normal condi-
tion. If it turns itself inside out and
can’t get back again it eventually dies.
‘The hydra fs its own physician and
Performs miracles of healing. If a
tentacle is cut off a complete animal
will be formed out of it. If the body
4s cut in half and the pieces placed to-
gether they will grow together again:
if not, two entire animals will be form-
ed, and any part of one animal will
grow on to the cut surface of another.
‘Sie Giceatoe
A story came from Switzerland some
years ago of a mountain guide whose
name was not preserved. He,. with
two others, was leading a party over
‘one of the most precipitous passes of
the higher Alps. The men, as is usual,
were tied to each other by a long rope.
As they Scaled the wall of ice they
slipped on the edge of a frightful
chasm. This man was at the end of
the rope. Without his weight there
‘was a chance for the others to regain
their footing: with it there was none.
He cast a glance down at the dark
abyss, filled with fathomless snows,
then drew his knife from his belt, say-
ing quietly to the man next him:
“Tell mother how it was, Jose.”
He cut the rope and fell, never to be
seen of mortal man again.
‘The Mistake.
In his biography of Alexandre Du-
mas Harry A. Spurr says that the im-
provident French author, who hated
avarice, was once waiting in line for
his cloak at a soiree when he saw a
millionaire give a tip of 50 centimes (10
cents) to the servant who handed out
his paletot. Dumas, getting his cloak,
threw down a 100 franc note. “Par-
don, sir; you have made a mistake, I
think,” said the man, offering to re-
turn the note. “No, no, friend,” an-
swered Dumas, casting a disdainful
glance at the millionaire, “it is the
other gentleman who has made the
mistake.”
Ready For Her.
“Who are those husky gentlemen?
I never saw them at one of your mu-
sieales before.”
“Oh, they're all right.”
“Do they sing?”
“No, but they'll come in handy. Mme.
Squalierina always wants the plano
moved.”—Pittsburgh Post.
‘One Mystery Solved.
He—You say these biscuits are exact-
ly like those your mother used to
make? She—Exactly. He—Then that
explains why your father paid a phy-
siclan $50 to say that biscuits of any
sort would be absolutely fatal to him.
—Richmond Times-Dispatch.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Wisdate ant Gama:
s¢ = Fainting spells or light states #
%€ of unconsciousness are frequent- i
%€ ly encountered and are brought i
s# about by lack of a sufficient S
%€ blood supply for the brain. When
3 @ person begins to feel faint he #
S€ should sit in a char and hold
%€ his bead by clasping the hands
$€ behind it and forcing tt down- 1
s¢ ward. If he fs not able to do i
S€ this he should be laid flat on bis
%€ back with his feet elevated. A i
% few whiffs of aromatic ammonia i
%€ or a half teaspoonful in a wine-
% glassful of cold water is a good
% reme@, but to have the head i
% low, the feet bigh, the clothing 1
% loosened and plenty of fresh air 1
%@ are the most important meas-
8 ures. P
% Slight cuts may be bathed with ¥
% peroxide of hydrogen, but lac- #
% erated wounds, especially if dirt 1
%€ has got into the wounds, should s#
% be cleansed as soon as possible €
%€ with gasoline or turpentine and %€
% then painted with iodine. If %
Mf earth has been forced into the w
s€ wounds they should be made to
% bleed freely and the services of M
Ma physician secured for advice #
% against tetanus or lockjaw. As
M to burns in a mild degree, a sim-
W ple dusting powder of borated #
M talcum or ordinary baking soda
M is sufficient. Olly orsticky dress- 1
M ings should not be encouraged. #
On ed
[Name]
[Image of a man with a bald head, a mustache, and a suit with a tie].
MR. JOHN McGILLEN
The proficient and painstaking Chief C and the Trustees of that district general much good by retaining hi
The proficient and painstaking Chief Clerk of the Sanitary District of Chicago and the Trustees of that district would do themselves and the people in general much good by retaining him in his present position.
The proficient and painstaking Chief Clerk of the Sanitary District of Chicago and the Trustees of that district would do themselves and the people in general much good by retaining him in his present position.
PUSHING AHEAD "THE BIRTH OF A RACE." THE WORK ON THE BIG PHOTOPLAY WILL MOVE FAST AFTER THE HOLIDAYS.
Immediately after January 1st, the work on "The Birth of a Race" will be pushed as fast as possible.
During these Christmas-days plans are being completed for nation-wide campaign of publicity, that everybody everywhere may know all about this big and important photoplay.
The month of December shows more stock sold in "The Birth of a Race" than during any other month since the company was incorporated. The bulk of these sales were made to White men and women, who look upon the photoplay as a good investment.
As an illustration, one White man, a famous architect, bought a large block of stock. This architect has been all over the world, knows Africa better than most of us know Chicago, and is sure that "The Birth of a Race" will be a great success in Europe, South America, the Orient, and elsewhere, as well as here at home.
The financial worth of "The Birth of a Race" is illustrated by the fact that four big brokers have been anxious to take over the entire issue of stock, and sell the bulk of it to a select list of White investors. Much of the stock has been taken by a leading brokerage firm, with offices in a number of cities. This means that all the stock will be sold within a short time. When this is done there will be no more stock for anybody at any price.
The scenario—the working story—of "The Birth of a Race" is nearing completion. As soon as it is finished, the actual making of the picture will be pushed very fast. While some scenes are being taken in Africa, others will be taken in America. Agents are now on the lookout for an old slave ship, for other things of historical interest, and for locations for the various exterior scenes. The interior scenes will be produced at the Selig studios in both Chicago and California.
William N. Selig, president of the Selig Polyscope Company, who will help produce and exhibit "The Birth of a Race," is taking a great personal interest in this photoplay. His long experience convinces him that this will be the greatest motion picture ever made. Edwin L. Barker, president of the Birth of a Race Photoplay Corporation, and who has supervision of the picture, is just as enthusiastic as Mr. Selig.
Mr. Barker has had a varied experience, and as a result occupies a unique position in the motion picture world. He has never produced a picture that did not, in addition to its entertainment qualities, possess some educational value. As an illustration, when he was with Kinemacolor Company of America, which produced motion pictures in all the colors of Nature, in "The Note in the Shirt," their first successful story picture, Mr. Barker developed an experiment into a real success. He claimed that colors could be used in such a way as to produce either laughter or tears, and as Kinemacolor reproduced every tint and shade exposed to the camera he put his claim to the test.
So far as is known this was the first time that an audience ever roared with laughter simply on account of seeing a color.
It may be of interest to know how this was done, and so just one scene
PAGE FOUR
erk of the Sanitary District of Chicago would do themselves and the people in him in his present position.
from Mr. Barker's "The Note in the Shirt" will tell the story. The shirt fell into the hands of a cowboy. In removing his everyday shirt in order to put on the new one, his red flannel undershirt was exposed to view, and this red flannel undershirt always provoked a roar of laughter.
Mr. Barker's most talked of picture, "The Dawn of Plenty," which he made for the International Harvester Company, is an entertaining story of the part plenty of wheat and cheap bread have played in the progress and civilization of the world.
It was because of Mr. Barker's peculiar fitness for a picture like "The Birth of a Race," that Booker T. Washington suggested that he have charge of it. This insures the proper spirit.
HEALTH NOTES
Sow good habits and reap good health.
* * *
Just as fish cannot live in foul water, so human beings cannot live and thrive in foul air.
* * *
No one need have small pox. Vaccination is a certain preventive. Then, why not try vaccination instead of procrastination?
A person with a bad cold is unfit for business. Most bad colds are due to infections spread from person to person. There are many varieties of germs that produce colds; those of pneumonia, influenza, pus microbes, and those that cause measles, whooping cough, scarlet fever and diphtheria, are common amongst us. Body secretions communicated by sneezing, coughing, spitting and careless use of handkerchiefs contain these germs. Colds from germs are spread most readily where people congregate in closed spaces. The Fall, Winter and Spring are, therefore, seasons when contagious colds are most prevalent.
Why We Are Sick.—Overheated, bee-hive buildings, flats and houses; overdry air of indoor artificial heat; dust and dirt carried into living rooms on shoes and clothing; minimum sunlight of city architecture; imperfect regulation of clothing; much eating and little exercise in the open; crowding together of humans in Winter quarters, where they squeeze, cough and talk their mouth and nasal secretions, into each others' faces at close range—the are the factors that make infections; and especially contagious, infectious diseases, multiply and spread during the closed house season. These are the conditions that bring sickness and death to our people.
In answer, let each citizen take account of these conditions and fight to bring about their opposites.
Headache powders, patent medicine fakes and the liver pill habit are dangerous and disappointing substitutes for medical advice, adequate exercise, fresh air, proper methods of eating, a proper diet, proper correction of eye strain and nasal obstruction. They are not to be compared as remedies with free, natural elimination of waste and of worry.
Better wear glasses than wear out your nerves, grow grouchy, suffer pain and lose your grip on things worth while.
Whiskey never was a good medicine
---
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO. DECEMBER 23. 1916
"MODEL FLATS" FOR COLORED FAMILIES
DESIGN FOR APARTMENT BUILDING AT NORTHEAST CORNER OF VERNON AVENUE AND EAST 32D STREET, TO BE READY FOR OCCUPANCY MAY 1.
THE ABOVE MODERN FLATS WILL BE CONSTRUCTED BY MR. JULIUS ROSENWALD, PRESIDENT OF SEARS BOBUCK AND COMPANY, WHO IS ONE OF THE BEST AND MOST PRACTICAL FRIENDS OF THE AFO-AMERICAN BACE IN THE WORLD.
for anybody. It is a narcotic poison,
not a tonic.
* * *
What gets that job, the hang dog exp
pression?
A shifty eye A hollow chest A
slouchy walk?
A sallow complexion; a bleary eye?
Dirty, decayed teeth?
A whiskey breath The cigarette
cough?
PRESIDENT WILSON URGES SALE
OF RED CROSS SEALS.
Commends Tuberculosis Movement—Secretary Baker Helps—$325,000,000 on Sale.
"I am interested to learn of the success of the sale of the Red Cross Christmas Seal," says President Woodrow Wilson in a letter to the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis made public today.
"I note with genuine interest and satisfaction," he says, "of the growth and increasing success of the work of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis and hope that the devotion and enthusiasm of its active members may be crowned with still greater success during the present year.
"I am interested to learn of the success of the sale of the Red Cross Christmas Seals as a means of raising funds for the work, and I hope that the people of the country will avail themselves of that ready and easy means of showing their interest in a work which is of so universal importance." Secretary of War Baker is another Red Cross Seal enthusiast. He says in a letter ordering his supply of Red Cross Seals for himself and his children, Betty, Jack and Peggy, "No other one thing means so much to the life, health and happiness of the people of Cleveland as the fight against Tuberculosis."
Seals to the number of 325,000,000 are now on sale in every state and territory of the United States, even in the Canal Zone, the Philippines, Hawaii and Porto Rico.
WILLIAM F. BRENNAN IS DEAD
Contractor, Formerly Alderman and
City Official, Passes Away.
William Francis Brennan, president of the Brennan Electric Construction Company, partner of Fred W. Blocki in the Blocki & Brennan Construction Company and the Blocki-Brennan Refining Company, and former alderman of the 12th ward, died at 7 a. m. Thursday in St. Anthony's hospital, as a result of blood poisoning. He had been ill for nearly two months and for some six weeks had been delirious and in pain. An old hurt—an ankle broken years ago and rebroken recently—was aggravated and brought on blood poisoning. An operation failed to save him. He leaves a widow and four daughters, several brothers and other near relatives.
Mr. Brennan was engaged in railroad construction from 1876 to 1894, when he became general manager of the Chicago General Railway Company. He was alderman from the 12th ward from 1902 to 1904, and since has been in the contracting business. At one time he was deputy commissioner of public works under Mayor Carter H. Harrison.
"He gave much to charity," said Mr. Blocki, his partner. "He was a man with a big heart. He leaves enough to care for his family, but no immense estate. He leaves a host of friends rather than an estate."
The funeral party will leave the family residence at 1936 South Turner avenue Sunday at noon for the Blessed Sacrament church. Central Park avenue an West 22nd street, where services will be held. Interment will be at Mount Carmel.
YOUNG PEOPLE'S LYCEUM SUN
DAY AT GRACE CHURCH.
The last meeting of the Young People's Lyceum of Grace Presbyterian Church for the year 1916, will be held Sunday, Dec. 24, Christmas eve, at 5 o'clock. Dr. George L. Robinson, Ph.D., of the McCormick Theological Seminary will be the speaker and his subject will be "The Christmas City." He will use slides in his talk which he made while at the head of the American School of Archeology, Palestine. Dr. Robinson assisted in revising the English edition of the Bible in 1881 and the American edition in 1901. The master of ceremonies of the day will be the treasurer, Mr. C. R. Winthrop, a student of McCormick Seminary; Mr. M. Webb, bass and Mr. Hugh Buchan, tenor, will sing. Dr. Robinson has given these addresses in New York, Boston, Washington and on the north side, but it is the first time on the south side. A special Christmas offering will be taken. The letter from Mr. Emmett J. Scott, Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Secretary of the Booker Washington Memorial Fund, thanking the Lyceum for $25.00 will be read. The officers for the ensuing year are Miss Bertha Moseley, Pres.; Dr. Julian Lewis, Seey; Miss Maude J. Roberts, Chr. Program Com.; C. R. Winthrop, Treas.; Cary B Lewis, Chr. Speakers and Publicity Comm.
JANUARY • CHAMPION FAR SUR
PASSES FORMER ISSUES.
Articles by Wm. H. Ferris, Mary B Talbert, and Geo. W. Harris, of National Interest.
The January issue of THE CHAMPION MAGAZINE, the new Chicago publication, edited by the poet and writer, Fenton Johnson, has just come from the press. In appearance and material it far surpasses any of the preceding issues.
Wm. H. Ferris' article, "Colored Business Men I Have Known," is, in a few words, a life-like reproduction of some of the country's most successful business men, past and present. Of vital interest to women and women's clubs is Mary B. Talbert's "Appeal to Save the Douglass Home." An illustration of the old home of Frederick Douglass accompanies this article. Then, too, there is a humorous short story, "That Auto of Mine" by Melton Wade. Every Colored citizen of the United States should read Geo. W. Harris' article, "The Clarion To Arms."
ELECTIONS AND PRIMARIES FOR 1917.
Two primaries, two elections and three registration days constitute the election calendar for the city of Chicago for the year 1917 as compiled by the election board. The dates, including those for filing primary petitions, follow Jan. 29—First day for filing primary petitions for aldermen, city clerk and city treasurer with city clerk. Feb. 6—Preprimary registration day. Feb. 7—Last day for filing primary petitions with city clerk. Feb. 27—Municipal primary. March 13—Pre-election registration day. April 3—Municipal election. Aug. 22—Preprimary registration day. Sept. 12—Judicial primary. Nov. 6—Election of ten judges of the Superior Court.
The registration days during the coming year are only for those who have moved since the biennial new registration days in October, or who move in the future.
PETER H.
DR. LOUIE USSELMANN
FOR SEVEN YEARS PAST ALL THE
WON IN THE ANNUAL ESSAY
UTED BY DR. LOUIE USSELM
3150 SOUTH STATE STREET.
FOR SEVEN YEARS PAST ALL THE COSTLY AND BEAUTIFUL PRIZES
WON IN THE ANNUAL ESSAY CONTEST HAVE BEEN CONTRI-
UTED BY DR. LOUIE USSELMANN, THE POPULAR JEWELER AT
3150 SOUTH STATE STREET.
FORD S. BLACK'S BLUE BOOK
SHOULD BE IN THE HOME OF
EVERY COLORED PERSON
THROUGHOUT CHICAGO FOR IT
IS FULL OF MUCH VALUABLE
INFORMATION.
Ford S. Black's Blue Book, for 1917,
has recently come from the press and
it far surpasses his previous efforts in
that direction.
It is chuck full of very valuable information respecting the various lines of business conducted by Colored people in all parts of this city and that class of Colored people who are always standing around and whining; that because they are not doing nothing and have no aims or objects in life; that all other Colored men and women are in the same boat with them should read Black's Blue Book, for it may be the means of causing the heavy scales to disappear from their bat like eyes which will in the end do them much good.
It can be obtained for the small sum of 25 cents from the author and publisher, 6446 St. Lawrence avenue or at the various Colored Book Stores and News Stands.
ELKS SUE NEGRO LODGE
Order Seeks to Restrain Alleged Imitators Who Use All Emblems.
Chicago lodge, No. 4, of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, a corporation, has filed suit asking that Great Lakes Lodge, No. 43, Improved Benevolent Order of Elks of the World, a corporation, composed of Negroes, be enjoined from conducting its affairs or using the name of Elks. The bill asserts there is no connection between the two orders, but that the defendant is imitating the original order, even to the use of its badges and emblems, including the elk's head and antlers and the elk's tooth.
It is said that some years ago that a Colored railroad man fell into the possession of a little red book which belonged to a White Elk, that the little red book contained all the signs, grips and the other secrets and so on of that order—hence the Colored Elks of the World.—Editor.
THE KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS AND
EIGHTH REGIMENT BALLS.
Monday evening December 25th, Christmas, the Knights of Pythias will give one more of its famous and pleasant balls at the 7th Regiment Armory, 34th Street and Wentworth avenue. Admission 50 cents. Music by the K. P. Band. Col. H. H. Biggs, Major Robert R. Jackson and many other big Sir Knights will be on hand to extend a Merry Christmas to all comers.
The Eighth Regiment Illinois National Guard will give its 22nd Annual ball and reception at the Eighth Regiment Armory, 35th Street and Forest Avenue on New Years evening, Monday, January 1st, 1917. Admission 50 cents. Music by the far famed Eighth Regiment Band, under the leadership of Capt. William E. Berry. Col. Franklin A. Denison, commanding. See ad in another column of this paper.
PLEASANT MEETING OF THE
PEERLESS CLUB
The Peerless Club held their regular meeting at the residence of Mr. Robert Pearman's 3751 Forest Ave. This being a very interesting meeting and much business accomplished. The Club is now planning some new achievements for the coming year of 1917. The Club was honored with seven lady visitors from the Elite-Social and Charity Club, dancing being one of the features of the evening. Next meeting at the residence of Mr. Ben Cornelius, 5743 Lafayette Ave.
Raymond Green, Reporter.
THE COSTLY AND BEAUTIFUL PRIZES
BY CONTEST HAVE BEEN CONTRIED
ANN, THE POPULAR JEWELER AT
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY CLUB
NOTES.
The Phyllis Wheatley Club held its
regular business meeting last Wed.
Miss Naomi Parks, chairman of the
music section, gave a delightful recital
on Wednesday, Dec. 20 at the Home,
3256 Rhodes ave.
The Club is growing in interest and
enthusiasm. New members are
enrolled at each meeting.
Visitors are welcome the third Wednesday in each month.
ASK CASH FOR WORK OF FIRE
UNIVERSITY.
A plea for funds to carry on the work of the Fisk University for Colored persons at Nashville, Teen, was made by Dr. Isaac Fisher, Colored connected with the university, at the weekly meeting of the Methodist ministers in the First Methodist Episcopal Church last Monday.
ONE ELECTORAL VOTE IN WEST
VIRGINIA FOR PRESIDENT WIL
SON.
President Wilson will receive one electoral vote from West Virginia, although Hughes carried the state. Colin S. A. Scott, the republican elector, who was placed on the ticket following the resignation of J. W. Dawson, was defeated, receiving a smaller vote than Orlando Depue, democratic elector.
HONOR CHARLES E. HUGHES
Named for Presidency of New York State Bar Association by Nominating Committee.
Albany, N. Y.—Charles E. Hughes has been named for the presidency of the New York State Bar Association by the nominating committee of that organization, it was announced by the secretary, Frederick E. Wadhams of this city.
GARY EXPELS BROTHER OF JACK
JOHNSON.
Gary, Ind., Special.-William Johnson, said by the Chicago detective bureau to be a brother of Jack Johnson, the pugilist, was ordered out of town by the Gary police. Johnson was arrested as a suspect and his case referred to the Chicago bureau, which announced after an investigation he was not wanted.
DYER PROPOSES MONUMENT T
NEGROES.
Washington. — Representative Dyer of St. Louis has introduced a bill providing for the erection in Washington of a $100,000 monument to the dead Negro soldiers and sailors who lost their lives in the service of their country.
CHIPS.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lindsay Davis will leave the city Saturday with her brother Mr. Wm. T. Lindsay, her sister, Mrs. Cinthia B. Yocum and her nieces Mrs. Eugenia Tyler and Mrs. Edna Haitburn to attend the Annual reunion of the Lindsay family at Peoria on Christmas Day.
The wives of the members of the Appomattox Club and the single ladies as well are looking forward with much pleasure to the ushering in of the reign of Col. James H. Johnson as president of the club, for they expect that his dutiful wife Mrs. Johnson will heartily assist to make it socially pleasant for all the ladies who will visit the club on various social occasions.
Elizabeth L. Davis, Pres.
Irene Goins, Cor. Sec.
2
CHIPS
peALTH,
cLEANLINESS,
pROPER LIVING,
sANITATION, ETC.
By
Dr. W. A. Driver
3300 So. State Street
Phone Douglas 3617
ETH AND MOUTH POISONS.
sere is probably no greater oppor-
pity 19 sow the value of small
fees than to observe the results of
jy action of germs. ‘The above state-
fat oss its value, for the moment,
you remember the first effort you
jpie to use tobacco or its product,
jg, The violent suffering of the to-
feo beginnet is the best argument
pint this world-wide habit, but the
yganer learns, his vital forees con-
ise to receive the poisons; the narcot-
ydfect of the same is to benumb the
jeury nerve and intense warnings are
fin suspense. The action of germs
jas at the first concrete evidence of
je and resistance to the destructive
enactivity begins at the same time.
furthat reason, We fail to get the vio-
jt shock that follows the sudden in-
rduetion of bodily poisons. Evidence
jserertheless plentiful that germs are
‘gece the smallest and most powerful
guaterial forces.
fhetfoul odor that comes from decay
sm evidence of the action of germ
i The germs that produce foul
sigs are called putrefactive bacteria;
ey also produce poisons called toxins.
‘Betorins are the waste material from
fe bodies of the micro-organisms and
a able to produce symptoms of all
tye; from mild to severe, or ‘even
dai, death of a part or the whole of
fie body. When germs locate in a de-
aed tooth or 2 wound of any kind,
tier produce disease by sending in
fir toxins and the distress produced
jsalled by various names, according to
tie tame of the part of the body that
tas the brunt of the attack and the
sfty of the bombardment, The se
iis of the disease depends upon the
witanee of the patient, eare an¢
tetment. Beeause it is caused by
tnins it is called always a toxemia
‘Toxins are poisons in the same sense as
isliés, such as nieotine and mor
‘Aine are poisons. Expert chemist
av tot always able to differentiate be
tween toxins and alkaloidal poisons
Tir actions on the body are ofter
‘atical, making diagnosis diffieul!
asi often impossible.
The patient who does not use alka
CHIPS
Xn. Martha B. Anderson, 6450 Cham-
‘hit avenue, celebrated her umpteenth
tty the first of this week.
Mbdam M. Callaway, 3300 Rhodes
Wate, gave a successful recital in
Beenington, Ill., last week, where she
"s rell received by its best people.
A.B Lancin, who for quite a while
"8 quite popular with the younger
‘tm the south side, has lately been
‘Sto his many friends in this city,
fe they have heen unable so far to
Mite bis whereabouts.
Th. Theo, R. Mozee, 4709 8. State
‘Stet, is proving himself to be one of
fe bet and most popular dentists in
Se. At almost all hours of the
“rang evening his offices are crowded
"it Tattons, in short, Dr. Mozee is an
mer to his chosen profession.
Ass Sandy W. ‘Triee and the fol-
‘owing lies witt reeeive New Years
4: Mr. Enna Hackley, Mrs. Elnora
Ceti, Mrs. Chas, Love, Mra. Clara
Met Mrs. Alice Roberts, Mrs. Ella
Wr Min. Funnio Artis at her home
© Dertadt avenue. Will receive
Stl 19 p. M.
Xara Studymire, 445 E. 32nd
Sw Chiimman of the Board of Di-
— ®f the Phyllis Wheatley Home,
tits avenne, was conveyed to
test Hospital on Tuesday evening
= has undergone an operation
< ™any friends pray and hope
ty, “ely recovery and restora-
% health,
oi tax A. Denison has bought
in home of ex-alderman
ea Dixon, at 3132 Calumet ave-
uot tan investment as he doce
a i peste in it with bie
Ween? Ore of the largest an
Retin homes owned by an
teas in Chicago.
a es
ee
. =
—
2 mE
ee
—
Ny a of
* : 4 re
loidal poisons habitually is safer from
every standpoint, save the antisoxic
power of the habit-forming alkaloid.
If he has no toxins to counteract, the
alkaloids will prove to be toxic. It is
possible that even his germs and their
products will not be acted upon by his
alkaloid. His alkaloid is then a waste.
‘The mouth is portal of entry for all
nourishment and common sense requires
that it be kept clean. Unelean teeth
show neglect just as decay in a tooth
shows it. If the mouth is thoroughly
cleansed before and after meals, many
of our diseases, mental and physical,
‘will be cured and prevented. The gum
chewing habit has (4) good points at
least; (1) it takes food particles from
between the teeth, the seat of most be
ginning decay, (2) it sweetens the
breath, (3) makes a pleasant taste and
(4) hence—a pleasant disposition.
Teeth and mouth poisons show so many
different symptoms in different individu
als and even in the same individual at
different times that it is a gigantic task
to enumerate them. Some are mental
‘and some are physical; some acute and
others are chronic; they may be toc
mild to attract attention and they may
be severe enough to produce death of
‘tissue, the ulceration of cancer or ever
the dissolution of the body.
It is significant that cancer of vari
ous parts of the body occurs most fre
quently after the age that teeth shov
the effects of lack or proper daily care
‘We speak of the cancer susceptibility
in persons.
Teeth and mouth poisons may enter
the body and never cause pain, yet it
is possible for their toxins to caus:
palpitation of the heart and even sud
den heart failure. Insanity and vary
ing degrees of mental deterioration ha:
been traced to defective teeth. Com
mon symptoms of tooth and mouth poi
sons are socalled rheumatism, neural
gia, wry neck (torticollis), headache
nervousness, loss of appetite, disease
of organs far from the focus in thi
mouth.
Much of the bad temper that i
shown is due to a pathology which ca
be cured by proper teeth and moutl
care and treatment.
Lang diseases follow oftener fron
that source than is supposed.
Old Tronsides.
O14 Ironsides fs such a cherished na-
tonal treasure now that it seems in-
credible that it was once proposed in
all seriousness to tear it to pleces for
what little value could be got out of
the material, remarks the Boston Post.
Holmes was a law student at Harvard
at the time, He was only a month
more than twenty-one years old. He
wrote his immortal poem with a lead
pencil on a stray scrap of paper, yet
tt has been said:
“This probably is the only case in
which a government policy was chang:
ed by the verses of a college student.”
Originally Old Ironsides was one of
four sister frigates, the Constitution.
the Constellation, the United States
and the President. Of the other three.
alas, only memories remain. The Con-
stellation was broken up, as they in.
tended to break up Old Ironsides. One
of the others rotted away at a British
4ock, and the fourth was lost at sea.
Curtously enough, the story of these
four sister frigates is one of the least
known chapters in American history.
Yet it is well worth reading up—Cbl-
cago News.
06 Mien a Sie
Most persons who talk about them-
selves are bores. A writer in the
American Magazine says:
“One of the most companionable wo-
men I ever knew was so completely
transformed by an operation that she
unconsciously became a bore to her
friends and to her family by tedious
repetitions of her hospital experience.
Her idea of its importance was 80 ex-
aggerated that she lost all sense of
proportion. Truly her ‘operation’ be-
came the alpha and omega of her ex-
istence. From it all events in her life
history dated. It was her sole topic
of conversation. No matter how skill
fully one might steer the conversation-
al bark away from the dreaded tople,
she adroitly brought it back. As a re-
sult she became self centered, intro-
spective and a bore to her friends. Her
efforts to entertain merely annoyed.
‘Where she hoped to arouse admiration
she created disgust, and where she
sought sympathy she received only in-
difference.”
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, DECEMBER 23, 1916.
—__—_—_——
aaa OS
OTs 0 A WEEK waste", Set
ir nationalit
Girl Gave Up Stenography to Take In| Tes according to, thely national
Otetnes: s ier consists of stchee, something
Norristown, Pa—Quitting herpost- | tween a gruel and a soup, the chiet
tlon as stenographer to go to the wash- | gredients of which are cabbage, p
tab, Miss Georgiana Cuthbert is mak- | toes, oatmeal and fat meat, prefers
ing $68 Week, and she handles ofly | pork. ‘These fre bolled together, ¥
five washes to-do it, according to Ber | sait and other seasoning, the result
testimony in the equity action in which | ing ‘a thick, nourishing and by
she ts defendant and Mrs. Marie Lus- | Sa. unpalatable dick,
tn, bee neighbor, pinnae, ‘The Italian soldiers, who are sp
Miss Cuthbert informed Judge Swarts | aiq'inarchers, live largely on @ fer
that one family alone paid her $30, an- | ceoug dict—macaroni, spaghett! an
other $12, two $0 and a fifth $8 a week. | Sr trhey are also very partial to fi
She gets the business, she says, be-| hich is issued, together with ¥
cause she does not use bleach or acids | Ta°cigare, as pare of thelr’ rat
aa ciemeine ee | whenever possible,
“None of the clothing I handle 18 | “No German soldier considers his
waliod, only meaaeed wae eee, | ly menu complete without a sausag
Here rect waecting a Teatdey in | Some kind oF other, and the “stron
Miss Cuthbert erecting a laundry in | its avor the better. A nutritious
the rear of her lot in Ardmore, Pa. | soup is also a staple of the army rat
‘Mrs. Lusson says that a laundry there | “The mainstay of the French sol
would be undesirable, unhealthy and | .onsists of his beloved “soup,” a
in violation of building restrictions. | calts it. It is really a thick, now
Tn the testimony experts said a laun- | SS Sy Tnane of cncat, potatoes
Gry would be unobjectionable; that | Yrrioug cther vegetables
there would be no dirt, no nolse, no | "no ‘nelich “Tommy” 1s om!
smell and, in fact, no reason why this | ous but the things he loves above
woman should not be permitted to pro- | aise are bacon and jam.—Youth’s C
ceed with the laundry. ae
PAY FARES AFTER 20 YEARS.
Charity Finally Took $1 That Railway
Official Refused to Accept.
ene Serene eee ee
Findlay, 0.—Philosophers for cen-
turies have attempted to ‘analyze the
conscience of the human race and what
prompts it, but have been unsuccessful.
‘That such a thing does really exist,
Charles F. Smith, general manager of
the Toledo, Bowling Green and South-
ern railway,@an now testify.
Recently he was sitting in his office
when two men walked. in and each
threw a fifty cent piece on his desk, ex-
plaining that twenty years ago they
had ridden from the north side to the
Tangent depot without paying fare.
‘That was because they were compelled
to stand most of the way. During all
‘this time their consciences, they said
‘bad troubled them and they got no rest
until they had returned the money
with interest.
| Mr. Smith refused to take the money.
but Dr. J. P. Baker, head of the As
sociated charities, who happened in
‘Smith’s office at the time, confiscated
the money for that purpose.
DEER ATTACKS POSTMAN.
nia Town.
Huntington, Pa—Clark Smith, the
oldest rural route agent attached to the
Huntington postoffice, met with a spir-
ited attack from a big buck deer while
on his return trip a few evenings ago
‘within three miles of this place.
‘A herd of six does, led by a large
buck, had been feeding in a mountain
meadow and were about to emerge into
the open highway just as Smith was
driving leisurely past.
His horse, a calico colored bronco,
seemed to have aroused the fre of the
buck, which leaped a fence and at-
tacked the bronco by rearing up and
endeavoring to strike it with its fore-
feet. Mr. Smith used his whip vigor-
ously on the deer. The bronco took
fright and finally drew itself and
driver to a place of safety.
‘A herd of ten deer, including one elk,
has been seen by a farmer at the
further end of Smith's route.
DREAMED ABOUT SNAKES.
‘Then He Woke Up to Find a Three Foot
Rattler In His Room.
Altoona, Pa. — George Meritts of
Franklinville, Huntingdon county, toss-
ed in the throes of a frightful night-
mare-and dreamed of rattlesnakes. In
bed with Merits was Samuel Alley of
the same place.
‘When Meritts came to himself he still
believed himself dreaming, -for a hid-
eous rattle sounded in his ears. Alley
also heard it.
‘The frightful whirr maintained a
steady cadence, and both men were
then aware that a rattlesnake was in
their room. Having no light handy,
the men were imprisoned in their bed
for some time.
Finally a match and lantern were
procured. The’snake, more than three
feet long, with seven rattles and a but-
ton, was coiled in the center of the
floor. It was killed.
WANTS TO GET OUT OF JAIL.
|_Amandus Kessler’s Plea to Join Marine
Corps Likely to Go Unheeded.
New York.—Because he is a good
porch climber, rifle shooter and has
other marked accomplishments, Aman-
dus Kessler wants to get out of jail at
Easton, Pa., and become a fighter for
‘Uncle Sam in the ranks of the United
States marine corps, according to an
appealing letter addressed to the ma
rine recruiting station in this city.
Amandus wrote several pages in his
patriotic outburst and promised to use
his influence to awaken his fellow pris
oners to the call of the flag if the ma-
ines would only come and get him out
Although the young man claims to be
& good, “healthy feller,” unfortunately
his morals are not in the same flourish-
ing condition, so Amandus and his pals
must languish in prison while the ma.
rine corps remains heartless but un-
contaminated.
Scholars Read Original Poems.
‘Westmont, N. J.—Eighteen grade pu
pllg in the public schools read original
Poems during the afternoon session,
creating considerable amusement and
uncovering some latent literary talent.
Recently each pupil in this grade was
required to make a five minute address
without manuscript.
~~” What the Soldiers Eat.
‘The food of soldiers in the fleld va-
ries according to their nationalities.
‘The principal meal of the Russian sol.
ier consists of stchee, something be-
tween a gruel and a soup, the chief in.
gredients of which are cabbage, pota.
toes, oatmeal and fat meat, preferably
pork. These Are boiled together, with
salt and other seasoning, the result be
ing a thick, nourishing and by no
means unpalatable dish.
‘The Italian soldiers, who are splen-
id marchers, live largely on a farina
ceous diet—macaroni, spaghetti and so
on. They are also very partial to fruit
which 1s issued, together with wine
and cigars, as part of thelr ration:
whenever possible,
No German soldier considers his dat
ly menu complete without a sausage ot
some kind or other, and the “stronger”
its flavor the better. A nutritious pes
soup is also a staple of the army ration
The mainstay of the French soldie
consists of his beloved “soup,” as he
calls it. It is really a thick, nourish
ing stew, made of meat, potatoes and
various other vegetables.
‘The English “Tommy” is omnivor
ous, but the things he loves above al
else are bacon and jam.—Youth’s Com
panion.
Maine’s Gum Industry.
Gathering spruce gum has long since
become one of the steady minor indus-
tries of Maine, where every year about
15,000 tons of crude gum, valued at a
third of a million dollars, are harvested,
‘The crude article is formed as the re-
sult of injury to red and black spruce
trees. Hedgehogs feed upon the inner
bark of trees, and the injuries they
cause, known as “hog cuts,” are frult-
ful sources of gum. Lightning scars,
frost cracks, old blazes and the abra-
sions caused by falling trees and even
sap sucker drills are other occasions
for gum formation. Around the edges
of such wounds Uttle nodules appear
and gradually develop into lumps or
teats. A wide scar heals slowly and
may produce gum around the entire
wounded area, while a narrow seam
closes so quickly that only a single row
of these “nuggets” is possible—Argo-
naut.
‘Transformed Mine.
An old abandoned mine near Saal-
feld, in the Thuringian forest, which
in the time of Luther was worked for
silver, copper, alum and vitriol, has
been discovered by a Berlin geologist
to have developed into one of the most
beauriful caverns. In the course of
centuries the water percolating through
the minerals has built up throughout
the mine a wonderful labyrinth of stal-
actites and stalagmites, thrown to
gether with a profusion and brilliance
of color which is said to be without
parallel. Deep greens, vivid blues, the
purest white, yellows of all shades—in
fact, the entire scale of color is repro
duced over and over again, and yet
the colors me!t into each other so
gently that nowhere is the impression
of disagreeable contrast produced.
Why Is it?
_ Why is it that when there are two
‘swinging doors 75 per cent of the peo-
ple open the left hand door? Why don't
they open the right hand one?
“Why is it that 60 per cent of the peo-
ple walk on the wrong side or in the
middle of the sidewalk? Why don’t
they walk on the right side?
‘Why is it that 50 per cent of the peo-
ple don’t know how to turn a corner or
enter a store?. Why is it that they
keep close to the building when they
ought to be on the outside edge of the
sidewalk to enter‘as they should?
Why 1s it that people will stand like
this .. :on the sidewalk and talk. Why
is it the will not stand like this...
Thereby taking up one-balf as much
space. Why is it?—Boston Post.
Very Free Verse. .
Vers libre is certainly taking hold.
Much might be said in this connection
of its form, its content and whether
proficiency in it is innate or acquired.
Let it suffice for the moment to record
what happened when a music teacher
asked her pupils to make up little
verses and then make melodies to ac-
company them. One little boy said he
never had made up verses.
“Just a little verse,” said the teacher.
“Well,” said the boy, dreamily:
Sometimes the sky at night
‘Looks like a spotted egg.
—New York Post.
Due Caution.
“Prisoner at the bar, will you be
tried by jury or by the court?”
“By jury, your honor, by jury.”
“Humph!. Why—er—haven't I seen
you before somewhere?”
“Yes, your honor. I sell you ice in
summer and do your plumbing in win-
ter."—Richmond Times-Dispatch.
la Soke: Either.
“Isn't it awful the way prices have
gone up?”
“It surely is. Just think, my bus-
band will have to work three weeks to
get money enough to pay for this sim-
ple little gown I have on.”—Detroit
Free Press.
Diplomacy In the Home.
Every now and then wife urges hus-
band to buy some new clothes for bim-
self, but if he is a pretty good talker
he can get out of it without making
her mad.—Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Very Active.
Bing—He's very active in Snancial
matters, isn’t he?_Bang—You bet! He
owes me $10, and every time he sees
me he dodges me.—Town Topics.
Honorable industry always travels
the same road with enjoyment and
duty, and progress is altogether im-
possible without it—Sgmuel Smiles.
“_~ Our First Theater.
In 1752 the first theater in the Unit-
ed States was opened in the colony of
Virginia at old Williamsburg. The
originator was an English actor, Wil-
lam Hallam, Sr., who brought his own
company from overseas and presented
“The Merchant of Venice” as the in-
itial performance. The {dea spread
rapidly, and soon New York, Phi'adel-
phia and the other leading communi-
ties of colonial America each had its
theater. While the Virginia playhouse
was the first in the United States, ac-
tors had played in the colonies before
this date. The fifst is said to have
been the English strolling player An-
thony Aston, who was known as Mat
Medley. The actor and his art of that
day were generally despised by the
Puritantcal colonists. The Massachu-
setts legislature passed a law shortly
after amateurs had given “The Or
phans” at the Coffee House in Boston
fn 1749 which forbade such perform
ances, prescribing a penalty for ac
tors and spectators alike of $25 each.
—Exchange.
ie aes
In her book, “My Siberian Year,”
Miss M. A. Czaplacka, speaking of the
social habits of the Siberiaks, says:
“The celebrant of the fortnightly rite
of the bath fills the banya with a dense
cloud of steam by sluicing water into
a kind of open mouthed oven in the
wall of the stove and sits on a dais
over against this, dabbing himself all
over with water he has taken from the
cistern and tempered to a just endur-
able heat in a tin basin with colder
water from a barrel in the corner.
Having put himself into a state border-
ing on suffocation and raised bis own
temperature several degrees above fe-
ver point, he pulls open the door, rushes
naked into the open alr, rolls over and
over in the snow, covers himself with
{t and les there till the heat of his
body has made a pool of water under
him. Then he runs back to the banya
and flagellates himself with a bunch
of twigs as he stands surrounded by
a fresh cloud of steam from the oven.”
Stensste Getneasdinann.
A traveler writing in an Italian mag-
azine says that the Swiss canton of
Ticino is inhabited by the most honest
folk it is possible to imagine. In most
of the Ticinese villages, the writer
says, the oldest inhabitants do not re-
member any case of thieving, however
petty, within a lifetime. Lost objects
when found must never be taken
away. They must be left where they
were dropped or placed in a conspicu-
‘ous position, so that the rightful own-
er can find his property more easily.
‘The case is cited of an American wom-
‘an tourist who lost her purse on an
excursion in the Val Capriasca. ‘The
purse contained gold coin and a jew-
eled watch. Upon returning from her
trip she found the purse with its con-
tents intact on a little heap of leaves,
so placed that it could not fall to at
‘tract her attention. _
SS eer eee
_ The highest salaried man in Japan
oes not receive enough money in that
form to pay for the gasoline used by
his automobile, for salaries of the man-
agers of business corporations are in-
significantly small, says the Japan
Times. Salaries, however, are not the
total income of business men. Under
the Japanese custom there is a liberal
bonus system, and the bonus amounts
to 300 or 400 times the monthly sal-
ary in some cases.
‘The Mitsui company is regarded as
the biggest corporatiow in Japan, and
its directors are noted for their large
incomes. Each director 1s said to re-
ceive in the form of a bonus about
$100,000 a year, although his salary
may be only $250 a month.
Legal Wit
A lawyer was walking into court re.
cently with his length of arm taxed
to hold a pile of law books.
To him said a friend, pointing to his
books:
“Why, I thought you carried all that
stuff in your head.”
“So I do,” quickly replied the learned
counsel, with a knowing wink. “These
are for the judges.”
Fine Luck.
Mrs. Exe—So you've got a new gown
after all. I thought you said you
couldn't afford one this season? Mrs.
‘Wye—So I did. But you see my hus-
‘band had a streaK\ of luck recently.
‘He broke his leg the next day after
taking out an accident policy that pays
$50 a week.—Boston Transcript.
Struck the Wrong Spot.
A man lost his wife and his cow
both in the same week. His neighbors
‘tried to console him by hinting that
‘they would see that he got another
wife.
“Yes; you're willing to get me an-
‘other wife,” said he, “but none of you
offers to get me another cow.”
. In the Barber Shop.
“Your hair,” said the aggravating
barber to the slightly bald man, “is
coming out on top.”
“Good!” cried the sensitive victim.
“I knew ft was in me. Now, for good-
ness’ sake, don’t talk to it or it’ crawl
back again.”—London Telegraph.
His View of It.
Wife—That girl in the opposite flat
1s quite a promising singer. Hub—
‘Well, get her to promise that she won't
sing any more.—Boston Transcript.
Verv Unruly.
Miss Paul—Grace doesn’t obey any-
ody. Miss Pry—No; she doesn't even
mind her own business.—Town Topics.
Consult duty, not events. — Walter
Savage Landor. ,
PaGE FIVE
“Hew They Are Saicted”
Salute to the national flag, the presi-
ent and ex-president of the United
States and the presidents or sovereigns
of forelim states, twenty-one guns;
¥ice president of the United States and
foreign ambassadors, nineteen guns:
the president of the senate, speaker of
the house of representatives, cabinet
officers, chief justice, governors within
their respective stztes or territories,
governors general of foreign states,
‘civil governors of the Philippine Is
lands, general of the arms, admiral of
the navy and same ranks in foreign ar-
mies and navies, seventeen guns; Unit-
ed States and foreizn ministers pleni-
potentiary. vice xovernor of the Philip-
Pine Islands, assistant secretaries of
war or navy, lieutenant general or ma-
Jor general commanding the army and
corresponding ranks in the navies, Af-
teen guns; ministers resident, major
generals, rear admirals and correspond.
ing ranks in foreizn armies and navies,
thirteen guns: charze d'affaires, briga-
dier generals and corresponding ranks
in foreign armies and navies, eleven
guns: consuls genera!. nine guns.
| Dawn and the Darkest Hour,
“The darkest hour is just before
dawn,” is an old English proverb which
—— more poetically the homelier
adages, “When things are at their
worst they soonest mend,” “When gale
is highest boat is nighest.” “The long-
est day will have an end,” “After a
storm comes a calm,” and finds an
equivalent in other languages, as in
French, “By dint of going wrong all
will come right,” in Italian, “IN is the
eve of well;” in Persian, “It is at the
narrowest part of the defile that the
valley begins to open,” and in Hebrew,
“When the tale of bricks 1s doubled
‘Moses comes.” .
‘That the nights, as a rule, are dark.
est just before dawn is doubtless true,
for the moon has then reached far on
to the western horizon, while the sun
4s still below the eastern horizon.
‘icant Wie
Selence says that the loudness of
sounds varies inversely as the square
of the distance. This is merely another
way of saying that if you walk three
times as far away from the source of
the sound as you were before its loud-
ness will not be a third what it was,
but a ninth of what it was, for nine is
the square of three.
On the other band, the density of the
medium which conveys sound is very
important. On a frosty night the air
fs dense. One consequence of this 1s
that an automobile runs better be-
cause the engine gets larger supplies
of oxygen. Another result is that
sounds are heard more loudly. How-
ever, the report of a gun high up in
the mountains is like the scund of an
exploded firecracker.
Sistas al Beitate Dicken:
‘The first English bard to attain last-
ing fame was Geoffrey Chaucer, who
was born in London about 1340. “The
father of English poetry” was the
son of a vintner named John Chau-
cer and in his youth served the king
as a soldier and was taken prisoner by
the French. The English king paid
$80 for his ransom, which was quite a
high price for a poet. Chaucer's most
celebrated work, “The Canterbury
Tales,” was written between 1373 and
1400. It consists of a series of tales
supposed to have been told by a com-
pany of pilgrims to the shrine of St.
‘Thomas a Becket at Canterbury, and
in its pages we get such pictures of
English life and ways of thought as
are found nowhere else.
Brevity.
Robert Louis Stevenson was a close
student of style and has left more than
one interesting discussion of the tech-
nique of writing. In a letter to R. A.
‘M. Stevenson, dated October, 1883, he
says:
“There is but one art—to omit! Ob,
it I knew how to omit I would ask no
other knowledge! A man who knew
how to omit would make an ‘Iliad’ of
& daily paper.”
| Witten Decaien Oe
Always press silk under a piece of
muslin to prevent the silk from be
coming hard and crackly. First damp-
en the muslin and use a moderately
hot fron till the muslin is quite dry.
Forgetful.
“Is Bronson as forgetful as ever?”
“More so. Why, that fellow has to
look himself up in the directory every
night before he goes home from busi-
ness. Forgets his address.”
000000000,000000000
° °
> PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. ©
° — °
a tices: e
© In these modern times a head-
© ache is just as necessary and
© useful as a fire alarm. It isa
© warning that something 1s wrong
© and that somebody had better
© get on the job instanter and
© alter conditions.
© What is the commonest cause
© of headache? There are a hun-
© dred or more different causes.
© Overfatigue, not enough sleep.
© sleeping in a stuffy room, over-
© eating or eating something that
© disagrees with the stomach, some
© slight eye defect, an infection or
© congestion of the nasal passage
© caused by cold—any of these
© and many more things bring on
© headaches. Chronic inflamma-
© tion within the nose itself and
© also within the bony’ cavities of
© the skull which open into the
© nose will cause intense head-
© aches at times. Persistent head-
© aches are danger signals that
© warn you to consult a physician.
°
JAHN OLA
THE BROAD AX
Published Weekly
In this city since July 15th, 1899,
without missing one single issue, Republians, Democrats, Catholies, Protestants, single Taxers, Priesta, infidels or anyone else can have their say as long as their language is proper and responsibility is fixed.
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Local communications will receive attention. Write only on one side of the paper.
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THE BROAD AX
6418 Champlain Ave., Chicago, Ill
PHONE WENTWORTH 2507.
JULIUS P. TAYLOR, Editor and Publisher.
Entered as Second-Class Matter Aug. 19, 1902, at the Post Office at Chicago, Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
Locality.
"Some expert says that it takes fully fifteen minutes to shear a sheep by hand."
"Not if the operation is performed in Wall street."-Baltimore American.
Quite Different.
Miss Oldgirl (simpering)—That nice young man said I was quite a mural decoration of the occasion. Miss Pert—He meant you were a wallflower, all right—Baltimore American.
Forgetful.
Caretaker—Sir Walter Scott spent a night in this room. 'Ere we 'ave a complete set of 'is works. Intelligent Sightsee—Left 'em be'ind, I suppose?—Passing Show.
"Cut it out," interposed the young lady. "It's bad form to talk about a girl you had."—Louisville Courier-Journal.
What is experience? A poor little hut constructed from the ruins of the palace of gold and marble called our illusions.
Cautious.
"I've discovered a system by which my employer could get all the work in his office done with half the force he employs now."
"Why don't you tell him about it and earn his undying gratitude?"
"I don't dare to. He might decide that I am one of the men he could do without."-St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Portugal's Big Diamond.
It is claimed for the Braganza, which formed part of the Portuguese crown jewels, that it is the biggest diamond in the world, weighing 1,860 carats. Some doubt exists, however, as to whether it is a real diamond, as no official testing can be authenticated. It was found in Brazil in 1741.-London Telegraph.
Night Scenes in Yokohama.
In most oriental countries sunset brings quiet to the streets and there is little night life. But on Theater street, Yokohama, 11 o'clock at night sees the great crowds leaving the movies, which are close together, and the resulting scene is one never to be forgotten. Humanity packed too close for comfort surges in an unbroken tide from one end of the street to the other. Add to this mass of many hued forms the taking down of the highly colored banners and you have a scene that makes the dropping of the big top at home look like a side show.
Sometimes the lights on the water produce an effect-almost Venetian in charm, but the bulky canal boat lacks the artistic lines of the gondola, and the water sends forth a scent which might be called by a plainer name. The newspaper boy rushes through the narrow streets hurling the sheets to right and left as he runs and ringing the bells at his waist to announce his arrival.—Christian Herald.
Burdette and the Towel.
The story of how Bob Burdette began to write for publication is rather interesting. His wife was an invalid, and most of his verse and short stuff were written solely for her entertainment. One day he was talking to Frank Hatton, who later became postmaster general under Arthur. Hatton was then editing the Burlington Hawkeye. "Bob," said Hatton, "when you get through reading your stuff to your wife hand it over to me and I'll print it."
One of the first things he turned over was his famous ode to the printing office towel. This is part of it:
Over and under was blacker than thunder and daily 'put on a more inkler hue Until one windy morning without any warning It fell on the floor and was broken in two.
—Charles B. Lewis (M. Quad) in New York Sun.
DIG UP BIG TOOTH OF PREHISTORIC MASTODON
Well Preserved, Though Found Far Below Surface of the Ground.
Cottonwood Falls, Kan.—A big tooth which is supposed to have come from the jaw of some mastodon of prehistoric ages, has been unearthed by T. E. Nichols of this city by men employed in making a deep, cut on Diamond creek, a mile and a half northeast of Elmdale. The trench had been sunk to a depth of fifty-three feet and had passed through an eight foot gravel strata when the big tooth was found. A soapstone formation was encountered just beneath it.
The tooth is well preserved. It weighs over three pounds, measures a foot and three inches in circumference around its base and is three inches in height from its base to the points of the tooth. It is oblong in shape, its width being three and a half inches. There are six flanges or points to the tooth, which extend upward in regular pairs. The tooth has two large roots, there being about three or four inches of the root intact, but the lower parts are broken off. It is believed the tooth belonged to a carnivorous, or flesh eating, animal because of the flanges or sharp points. After finding the tooth another bone only a few feet away was uncovered by another workman. It is a large flat, round shaped bone, which resembles a kneecap.
FAITHFUL DOG'S BARKING CALLS FATHER TO CHILD
FAITHFUL DOG'S BARKING CALLS FATHER TO CHILD
Little One, Playing In Pasture, Where It Strayed, Kicked by Horses.
Wheatland, Wyo.—G. F. Harold's little son, Alvin, two and a half years old, was kicked in the head by a horse the other day, his skull was fractured and other severe wounds, seemingly sufficient to cause death, were sustained.
The father's attention was called to the child by the frantic barking of the farm dog, and upon investigating he found that the dog was guarding the insensible form of the little boy from a bunch of horses in the pasture where the little fellow had wandered in his play.
The child's forehead was crushed, the nose broken and the eye laid open by the flesh being all torn from it. As he was still alive he was rushed to a hospital with all possible speed. The surgeon performed a very delicate operation, lifting the broken bones into position and sewing the torn skin around the eye back into place, and at present writing the little fellow is getting along nicely and gives promise of complete recovery.
That he was not instantly killed is probably due to the fact that the horse's hoof struck a glanding blow, and that he lives at all is because there was a skillful surgeon available.
SISTERS EARN $2,400.
Set New Agricultural Record Raising Cabbages.
Greensburg, Pa. — Four Westmoreland county young women, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Smith, near Ruffsdale, have established a new agricultural record in the yield and profits to be derived from a two acre plot of cabbage.
The Misses Smith, the eldest of whom is eighteen, now have a bank account of $000, with accounts due from Pittsburgh commission men amounting to $900, and a quarter of their cabbage yet remains to be cut and marketed. Buyers estimate the value of the entire field at about $2,400.
Early last spring Smith turned the two acre plot over to his daughters, telling them to make any use of it they desired. The girls, after closely scanning the market reports for weeks, decided to grow cabbages. They set about 18,000 plants.
KILL WHITE FACED IBIS.
Kansas Hunters Were Puzzled, but Professor Solved the Problem.
Topeka, Kan.-A party of hunters were near Stafford when a long legged bird, which looked like a crane and flew like a duck, suddenly rose and started toward Oklahoma.
Six guns spoke at the same time. The bird gave up the southern trip. The men did not know what they had killed. They guessed everything from a mud hen to a wild turkey.
George Stansfield made a secret trip to Lawrence and conferred with some of the professors. They labeled the kill a white faced glossy ibis, a species of waterfowl very rare in Kansas. The coloring is very delicate and changes continually. It is one of the snipe family, but is unfit for food.
Long Trip of Bible.
Mays Landing, N. J.-It will take fifty years of traveling, during which time 100,000 miles will be covered, for a "traveling Bible," now in the lodge quarters of P. O. S. of A. camp, No. 108, to fulfill its mission. The Bible is to be taken from one camp to another in each county until every county in the state has been covered, then it will go to every camp in each county, remaining three weeks with each.
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO. DECEMBER 23. 1916.
MAY FLY TO PARIS
Transatlantic Aeroplane Line Is Possible. Says Woodhouse.
Great Britain Is Spending $250,000,000 In Military Aeronautics This Year—In Half a Dozen Countries Number of Aviators Ranges Between 2,000 and 10,000.
New York.—"A transatlantic aeroplane line is now quite possible owing to improved motors," Henry Woodhouse, member of the board of governors of the Aero club, told 250 members of the Rotary club here.
"The aspect of things in aeronautics," he said, "has been changed. Nowadays the motor can outlast the aviator. Aeroplanes equipped with from two to six motors and carrying up to thirty people can be built for commercial purposes. The largest aeroplane at present has a carrying capacity of fifteen tons, but plans are ready for an aeroplane capable of lifting thirty tons. American aeroplanes and motors are so efficient that a flight of over a thousand miles a day is possible.
"There are 25,000 aeroplanes in use in the world, and the reason why there are not more is that they cannot be supplied fast enough to replace those that are put out of action or worn out."
"Great Britain is spending $250,000,000 in military aeronautics this year. Five hundred thousand people are producing and operating air craft and aeronautic supplies. The American aeronautic industry has orders and pending contracts amounting to $50,000,000.
"In half a dozen countries the number of aviators ranges between 2,000 and 10,000. The United States army and navy have together about a hundred. The European countries have thousands of observation balloons and hundreds of dirigibles. The United States army and navy together have only four observation balloons ordered and one small dirigible."
MAN FIGHTS JELLYFISH
Swimmer Sent to a Hospital After a Life and Death Struggle.
Santa Barbara, Cal.—G. H. Wilson was sent to the Cottage hospital here in a critical condition recently. He had a life and death struggle with a huge jellyfish. Four hundred feet from shore, off Serena, Wilson was suddenly attacked.
He saw before him what he later said looked like a huge sheet of butter and eggs. Suddenly the strips of yellow and white began to separate from the mass and extend toward him. He turned to swim out of reach when the creature threw its tentacles about him, and the mad fight was on. In the struggle Wilson broke the mass into fragments, but reached the shore exhausted and his face and shoulders stinging as though from scalds.
At the hospital it was said that the patient would recover. His pain at times was so intense that morphine had to be administered. His shoulders and face resemble one mass of poison oak burns.
HE'S A GIANT SUPERMAN.
Never Used Meat, Pepper, Alcohol, Tea, Tobacco—Still Single.
Clinton, Mo.-Dusty and travel worn, but with his long strides retaining the vigor of all his eighteen years of backwoods life, Clarence Barton trudged into town after covering 130 miles from Turner, Mo. He came in the heat and dust over the miles of hills affoot to attend the Missouri conferences of the Seventh Day Adventists. And this youth has lived a strange life in the very modern and up to date state of Missouri.
In all his eighteen years he never tasted a mouthful of meat. Never has a drink of tea or coffee passed his lips. His meager fare of daily food has never been seasoned with pepper. He never has tasted a drop of alcohol in any form and does not know the tang of tobacco smoke. And he is a perfect specimen—a young backwoods giant. Barton excelled in all the sports of the camp.
SHAD SIGN OF MILD WINTER
Caught in Lower Hudson For First Time In Thirty Years.
Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.—Shad were caught in the Hudson river for the first time in thirty years at this season of the year. The fishing experts say that it is an infallible sign of an open winter.
John H. Lange, professional fisherman, caught the shad in the gill nets he had set in the running tideway for striped bass. Lavinas D. Hill, a recognized authority on fishing, said that shad usually went south to warmer waters in the fall, and when caught in the lower Hudson thirty years ago the weather was so mild that the river was open for navigation all through the winter.
Busy Man Offers $1,000 For Wife
Busy Man Offers 40 Words
New York. Too busy to play the role of sutor himself, Albert F. Shore, a business man, has commissioned a friend to find him a wife. If the friend succeeds before Christmas in discovering a girl about twenty-four years old, either blond or brunette, but studious and not a social butterfly, he will receive $1,000. And if he has not succeeded at that time then any person may earn the $1,000 by producing a suitable bride. Shore is thirty-four years old. He is of medium height, dark complexion and dark curly hair.
Teaching Birds Tricks.
A professor of natural history refutes the statement so frequently made that teaching a bird to draw water needs apparatus and that the learning is cruelty to the bird.
"The following experience of mine," he says, "proves that it is not so by any means. We bought a young bird last January, so wild that on our approach it flew madly round the cage. We hung the cage low and by patience, induced it to take groundsel, first held at stem's length, then between the fingers, finally from the lips. We used to let him out freely, and he would perch on the loaf next me at breakfast. His perch projected through the wires, and here was his favorite seat when at liberty. Then I tried hanging a bit of groundsel by a short string to the projecting stick. After inspection he pulled it up with his beak. On lengthening the string with a fresh bit of his preferred weed I had the pleasure and interest of seeing him pull up the string with his beak till the flower head was within reach, catching the slack after each pull with one foot and then transferring it to the other, so that the coils were quite neat."—London Globe.
Water Pressure.
As early as 1648 a Frenchman of science named Pascal experimented with pressures applied to liquids and discovered the following law: A pressure applied to any part of the surface of a liquid is transmitted unchanged in amount in every direction through the liquid.
Perhaps the most familiar application of Pascal's law is the hydraulic press. In that machine a pump having a small piston drives water into a large cylinder and thereby forces upward a large piston, which compresses whatever is placed between the platform of the piston and the fixed crossbeam at the top of the press. If the area of the larger piston is 100 times that of the smaller a downward force of one pound exerted on the smaller piston will create an upward force of 100 pounds upon the larger piston.
Home Ground Flour.
Grinding wheat to make flour may be done at home as easily as the grinding of coffee. Thus a family may have whole wheat flour, freshly ground, a thing that is usually difficult to obtain. The New York Medical Journal advises its readers to buy their wheat from seedmen rather than from grocers or feed stores because it will be cheaper and more efficient. The grinder can be used also for cracking wheat. corn, barley, oats, rye and other grains for use as breakfast cereals. And the cereals will need chewing, which will not only strengthen the muscles of the chewers' jaws, but will keep their teeth from decay—that is, if they begin as children. Homemade cereals need long cooking, so a fireless cooker is almost indispensable.
Greek Fire Gunpowder?
M. Zenghelis told the Academie des Sciences in Paris recently that he had been studying the "Greek fire" used in war by the Byzantines. The descriptions of this say that it was hurled from a copper tube with a sound like thunder and with a great cloud of smoke. From this he concluded that the Byzantine Greeks had real cannon in which they used explosive mixtures with nitrate as a base. Therefore the honor of the discovery of gunpowder must be given to the engineer Callicus of Heilopolis, who first used it, destroying a Saracen fleet with it in 670 A.D.
The Silent Moon.
Dead silence reigns on the moon. A thousand cannons might be fired and a thousand drums beaten upon that alright world, but no sound could come from them. Lips might quiver and tongues essay to speak, but no action of theirs could break the utter silence of the lunar scene.
Roundabout Way.
"I see where an aviator contrived to have the last word with his wife."
"How on earth did he do it?"
"He didn't exactly do it on earth." No? "He rose 1,000 feet in the air and dropped her a message."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
"She threatens to sue for divorce."
"What's he say to that?"
"Nothing. When their quarrels get to that point he always keeps still. He's learned from experience that the next move will be a flood of tears."—Detroit Free Press.
Two Sorrows.
The sorrow of the woman who cries out her grief on the kitchen towel somehow seems more sincere than that of the woman who puts on a pretty gown, arranges the sofa cushions and turns the lights low before she begins. —Exchange.
Fussy.
Bank Manager—Now please understand. Miss Jones, you must make the books balance. Miss Jones—Oh, Mr. Brown, how fussy you are!-London Punch.
Sound and Sound.
"That young Hercules over there is a great musical composer."
"A sound mind in a sound body, eh?"—St. Louis Star.
It is generally more profitable to reckon up our defects than to boast of our attainment.—Carlyle.
When the late President Laconte of Haiti set about to reduce the size of his army a few years ago many of the generals whom he mustered out of the service were put to breaking rock on the street. At one time there were more officers than men in the Haitian army, according to apparently authentic statements. In former times the pay of a Haitian soldier was small at best, nothing at worst and at all times insufficient to keep the warrior fed decently. The days for loading coffee on departing ships were great days in Haiti. They were days when the army got a square meal, thanks to the stevdore wages which the men were able to earn, says the National Geographic Magazine. The army officers of Haiti were as fond of gold lace as a mountain girl of bright colors. Small wonder, then, that the regalia of a field marshal was everywhere in evidence. Feeding the Haitian armies in the days before the American "big brother" movement was not a difficult job. Garrison rations consisted of a sugar cane stalk two or three feet long and whatever else the soldier could beg, borrow or steal.
Rocking Chairs.
Rocking chairs are an American institution, although they are to be found today pretty much all over the civilized world. In England they are invariably referred to as "American rockers," and indeed this application is not confined to that country. Here and there on the continent you will hear of them in the same category. Authorities are widely at variance as to the time and place of the very first rocker. But that the first one was turned out more than 200 years ago there is little room for doubt. It is fair to assume that it was the invention of a New Englander who loved his ease. He probably invented it to offset the discomforts of the severely straight backed chairs of our early colonial days—Exchange.
Boumanian Peasant Diversions.
Roumanian Peasant Diversions.
"Many hands make light work" is a proverb of the Roumanian peasant often put into practice. Almost every night there is a neighborhood gathering like the old fashioned apple cutting or apple butter boiling in early American rural history. The houses have their turns at these parties, and there is always a kettle of cornmeal mush and baked pumpkin and potatoes and popcorn ready for the occasion. All hands join in the evening program of combing, carding and spinning the household supply of wool or flax, while the neighborhood gossip passes current among the elders and occasional words of love or childish jest among the more youthful members of the party.—National Geographic Magazine.
Donkeys Are Haiti's Food Trains. Nearly all the produce for the feeding of the population of Port au Prince, Haiti, a city of some 60,000 people, is brought in on the backs of donkeys. The public squares are converted into open air market places, and here the buying and selling goes on from early morning until 4 or 5 o'clock in the afternoon, when the caravans begin their toilsome journey homeward. Situated in a region famous for its fine fish, among them the delectable and plentiful "red snapper," the Haitians eat quantities of salt cod imported from Massachusetts waters. And the quality of this imported staple is such as would not find favor in American markets. - National Geographic Magazine.
First "Outsiders."
Until the nomination of Franklin Pierce for the presidency of the United States the word "outsider" was unknown. The committee on credentials came in to make its report and could not get into the hall because of the crowd of people who were not members of the convention. The chairman of the convention asked if the chairman of the committee was ready to report, and the chairman answered, "Yes, Mr. Chairman, but the committee is unable to get inside on account of the crowd and the pressure of the outsiders." The newspaper reporters took up the word and used it.
Pilloried.
"You druggists have to stand for a good many jokes."
"Yes."
"A drug store is sometimes facetiously alluded to as a pillory."
"About right, too," said the druggist. "Keeps you penned up most of the time."—Louisville Courler-Journal.
Reassuring.
Irate Gentleman (to his gardener)—
What do you mean, sir, by telling people in the village that I'm a stingy master? Gardener—No fear o' me a-doin' the likes o' that, guv'nor. I allus keeps my thoughts to myself—
London Punch.
Transmutation:
"Do you think you can turn the baser metals into gold?"
"Undoubtedly—if you can guess which way the steel market is going."
—Washington Star
Turn About.
Stella—When you are engaged you tell him that he must economize. Bella—And after you are married he tells you that you must—Puck.
Finished.
"Jack got through college in three years."
"What of it? I got through in one."
—Harvard Lampoon.
It is better to find excuses for others than for ourselves.
Close by the great rock of Gibraltar is Catlin bay, where is to be found a colony so queer that it stands out almost as a tribe distinct in itself. Many generations ago during a storm a fleet of Genoese fishermen put into the sheltered spot and so escaped the fury of the sea. In the boats, so history has it, were many women, and they became so enamored of the spot that huts were built, and they remained. Hundreds of years have passed, and the little tribe still lingers on. The government has given them a grant of land, and a village now clusters in the shelter of the bay. Strangest of all, it is said the population dare not increase for fear it will overstep its boundary, and marriage is allowed only in rotation. No marriage, so it is claimed, may take place in the village until a way has been made for it by a death. The people are squat and only look amazingly like one another. It is a little colony of cousins, dwelling apart in the shadow of a great rock and going down to the sea in ships to earn a hard won livelihood—Exchange.
Weakness of the Pilchard
Very similar to the herring, a quintessential method of distinguishing the pilchard exists in Cornwall, the home of the pilchard fisheries. The difference between the fish lies in their center of gravity, for if one holds a pilchard by the back fin it will remain horizontal while a herring tips downward. One seldom sees the fish in the London markets, however, and in order to gain its due share of appreciation the pilchard has to journey to Italy and the Mediterranean. Many factories exist in southern England for the express purpose of salting and packing the fish in tins for exportation, the method used being similar to that used for sardines. Pilchards, too, resemble sardines, though their flavor is somewhat stronger. Years ago an attempt was made to smoke pilchards—like herrings—for home consumption, but the experiment proved useless, for the weight of the body broke the neck and the fish fell into the fires.—London Answers.
Vegetable Lamb.
One of the most remarkable natural fetishes in the world is the Chinese kouchi, called by some people "the vegetable lamb." It is regarded by the natives of China as something supernatural. They believe it to be part vegetable and part animal. The plant certainly bears a resemblance to an animal, although it might be taken for a pig as readily as a lamb. Kouchi is composed principally of the plant part known as rhizome and springs from seed. After attaining its height roots and tendrils spring from the fiber and grow downward until they enter the earth. It is this peculiar formation which has caused it to be regarded with so much awe. The Chinese claim that after it has reached its full size it ceases to be vegetable and turns animal, feeding upon the tender shoots of plants which grow near it.
It Depends on the Dog
Two Broadway business men met before a bar. They were good friends. "I'm worried a little," said one. "My chauffeur ran over a dog today and killed it." "Oh, I wouldn't worry about a little thing like that," said the other. "The dog probably got in the way. These dogs are a pest."
"But it was your dog."
but it was you.
"What!" came from the second. "My dog? I'm sorry, but that will cost you $100. That chauffeur of yours is to careless. I insist on the hundred, understand." - New York Telegraph.
So 'Twould.
"How would you like to take a trip in a submarine?"
"I shouldn't care for that," replied the society bud.
"Why not?"
"Oh, deah! Must I really tell you? An ocean voyage would be frightfully boring, you know, if there were no place to dawnce."—Birmingham Age Herald.
Rack Rents.
A "rack rent" is a "rent that is equivalent to the full net annual value of the real property out of which it issues or approximately so." By statute in England today rack rent is defined as "not less than two-thirds of the full net annual value of the lands out of which it grises."
Name of the Collis
The collie's name appears to be shrouded in mystery, but there seems to be a fairly reasonable foundation for supposing that it is from "collar" or "collar," on account of the broad white mark round the neck which is seen in the majority of these dogs. - Exchange
Ancient Candles
Candles used by the Romans were composed of string surrounded by elfter wax or pitch. Splinters of wood covered with fat were used by the English poorer classes about 1300.
What the Trouble Was
What the Trouble
Mills—I notice that you and Brown
ley don't speak? Grimm—Well, we
had a few words over money, that's
all. Grimm—Oh, I suppose he owes you
some? Grimm—No; he wanted to.
The Minimum:
The Minimum
Mrs. Hoover—Could you give me a little money, dear? Mr. Hoover—Certainly, darling. About how little? Exchange.
Without the spiritual world the material world is a disheartening enigma.
—Joubert.
Four Passengers Are Hurt, and Then the Car Burns Up.
Mineola, N. Y.—A dog which trotted along the Fulton roadway in the path of auto traffic on the Hempstead plains indirectly caused the loss of a large touring car and the injury of its four occupants, Dr. Henry N. Read and Mrs. Read and their two sons, Lewis A. Edmund.
and Emund Read, acting as chauffeur, came upon the dog at a turn off in the read and attempted to turn aslide, but the auto skidded and turned completely over twice after the physician and his family had been thrown clear of the revolving body of the car. A. C. Vandewater called an ambulance from the Nassau hospital. Dr. Read, seventy years old, and his wife, aged sixty, were in serious condition from shock, and their sons were cut and bruised. All were taken to the hospital. Shortly after the accident, which occurred about a mile east of Hempstead, the dry grass of the Hempstead plains became ignited from some unknown cause, and despite the efforts of persons living near by to extinguish the flames or to rescue the auto, the fire reached the gasoline tank and exploded it. The car, which lay bottom up in a ditch, was consumed to the steel framework.
SANTA CLAUS BANS WAR TOYS FOR THE KIDDIES
Everything Else For the Children Being Made In Great Kensington Plants
Philadelphia.—Santa Claus sat in his workshop. "Twas nearing the middle of December—the children's own month—and Santa was wondering what they'd like in their stockings.
"Haven't you been reading the papers? quered his first assistant. "War—nothing but war! Give 'em soldiers this year. Tin soldiers with medals on their breasts, and muskets and cannon and block fortresses and real submarine ships that will sink and war aeros that will fly! Give the babies the war to play with."
But Santa gazed with sad eyes. "Peace on earth," he said softly. "Men say each other, but the children of men mustn't cherish thoughts of murder. We'll give them their dolls and their toy animals to teach them love, and pray through them it may rule all men."
That's what Santa Claus said. He gave orders that never a cannon nor a soldier was to be made in his workshop. And he sent out word to all his assistant workshops up and down the world that he didn't care to drive his reindeer along setups this year for the purpose of dropping war toys down chimneys. At the big toy factories in Kensington the word that Santa Claus sent down from the north pole was received joyfully. The factories never did make many war toys. This year they'll make almost none.
But dolls are there—dolls and dolls. There are "roly dollies," designed for children so tiny that their toys must sort of take care of themselves. Then there are dolls that nearly approach old fashioned, too handsome French dolls; golden curls, blood red smiles, fixed, starry eyes and ruffled gowns. And best of all, there are character dolls—modeled after real, live, breathing boys and girls. They wear their straight, soft looking hair bobbed; their cheeks are only pink as regular children's cheeks are pink; their little gingham dresses were designed and made by a dressmaker who for years was a children's dressmaker.
LOSES SUIT; SHOOTS JUDGE.
Three Persons Wounded as They Enter Courtroom.
Hammond, Ind. — Judge Charles E. Greenwald of the superior court here was shot in the right arm and side, but not fatally; Louis De Doww, his bailiff, was wounded fatally, and George Robbins, a juror in a case before the judge, was shot in the head by Michael Unik, who is said to have harbored a grudge against the courts for many years.
Unik, supposedly unbalanced, was defeated in a damage suit against the Standard Oil company twenty years ago for an injury to his arm. He approached the judge as the latter, followed by the bailiff and the juror, was entering the courtroom. He asked the judge to help him renew his suit, but the judge hurried on. Unik then opened fire. De Doww and Robbins were shot when they went to the rescue. Unik is under arrest.
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New York. After an absence of three days in hospital Michael Addison reached home in time to halt his own funeral. He got to his house as the undertakers brought in a pine box from the same hospital he had been in. Just then the mourners began to arrive. Addison's daughter fainted. The pine box contained another Michael Addison, and the mourning was transferred to another part of the city.
FIND INDIAN RELICS.
Members of a New Historical Association Get a Load of Them.
Klamath Falls, Cal.—Loaded down with newly found Indian relics, including pipes, stone war hammers, dishes, grinders, seventy-five arrow heads, ten spear heads, several knives, eleven mortars and more than 100 pestles, J. C. Rutenic, A. C. Yaden, Floyd Brandenburg and George Snyder, members of the recently organized Klamath Historical association, returned recently from a ten days' research expedition through the lava beds.
These beds, lying just across the California line in Modoc county, were the seat of the Modoc Indian war and have furnished many valuable relics during the last few years.
Most of those found on the present trip were gathered along the receding shore of Tule lake, which is being drained at the hands of the United States reclamation service by diverting Lost river, which formerly flowed into it.
ATTACKED BY PET BUCK.
Hatchery Superintendent and Wife Set Upon While Feeding Pet Deer.
Auburn, Me.-John F. Stanley, seventy-six, superintendent of the Maine fish hatchery grounds, and his wife, seventy-one, were nearly killed by a pet buck which suddenly became enraged. Stanley was feeding the animal, which charged on him, breaking several ribs and cutting and bruising him. Mrs. Stanley was awakened by the noise and, clad only in her nightgown, rushed to the inclosure to aid her husband. The buck charged her, too, and would have killed her but for a collie, which set upon the deer and drove him away.
Mrs. Stanley crawled to the telephone, gave the alarm and then fainted. Her husband was found half submerged in a brook and helpless. The buck was killed by order of the state authorities.
PAN-AMERICAN SCHOOL PLAN
Argentina's Envoy Suggests Interchange of Letters by Pupils.
Washington.—Plans for establishing a system of correspondence between the high schools of Argentina and the United States were discussed at a conference between Ambassador Naon of Argentina and a representative of the Washington bureau of the American Peace society.
"I have already dispatched to one of the Buenos Aires schools letters written by students of the Proctor academy of Andover, N. H.," said the ambassador.
"In due time I shall receive from the principal of the Argentine school a long letter written by the students there, which will be translated and sent on To Andover. Thus the plan may be considered to be definitely under way."
CAT'S BITE CAUSES DEATH.
Brooklyn Pier Watchman Is Stricken With Hydrophobia.
New York.—Hans Jurgensen, fifty years old, of Brooklyn, a watchman on pier 38, Atlantic docks, died in the Long Island College hospital of hydrophobia caused by the bite of his pet cat. Jurgensen's hand, which was bitten, gave him a little trouble during the first six weeks following the bite, but it was only a few days ago that the hand and arm began to swell. Dr. William M. Ennils of 81 First place, Brooklyn, who was called in, diagnosed it as hydrophobia and caused Jurgensen's removal to the Long Island College hospital, where the diagnosis was verified by physicians from the department of health before his death.
HE DYNAMITED HIMSELF.
Dug a Hole, Packed Explosive In, Lit a Fuse and Dived In to Die.
New York.—This is the way Leon David Rose, forty-five, a foreman blaster of Stony Point, Rockland county, proved to his incredulous friends that he had meant what he had said when he told them that he was going to blow himself up.
He dug a bole about three feet deep in a hillside. He packed sticks of dynamite—there is no way of telling how many—into the hole. Attaching a long fuse to the explosive, he touched a match to the end of it. Then he dived into the hole and, resting on the dynamite, walted.
Fragments of his body were found afterward.
POOR GIRL SPURNS RICHES.
Tires of $10,000 Bargain That Kept Her
In the Country.
Amboy, Ill.-Mary Smith, a poor Chicago girl, who was adopted by James Pankhurst, a wealthy farmer, and his wife on Aug. 13, 1915, with the understanding she was to remain single and act as companion to the aged couple and receive $10,000 upon their death, has grown tired of the bargain and returned to Chicago.
"Money isn't in this world," she said. "I want the right to live as I please. I simply find that I do not like to live in the country."
TREES FOR BROADWAY.
Foresters Want to Co-operate With Park Department.
New York.-Foresters employed by the Broadway association will ask to be allowed to co-operate with the park department in placing trees on upper Broadway, it was announced. Difficulty had been experienced in getting trees which would thrive in the city.
The association has found that the oriental plane tree does well in the streets, and it is planned to plant these.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, DECEMBER 23, 1916
GIRL JILTS ARE FALSE,
SAYS PROFESSOR SHAW
Don't Believe Her When She Says
She'll Be Your Friend.
New York.—"When a girl says, 'I cannot be your wife, but I'll be your friend,' she tries to speak the truth, but butters a psychological falsehood," declared Professor Charles Gray Shaw, head of the philosophy department of the New York university, in a lecture at the institution.
Professor Shaw argued that no woman could be a friend to men or to women, because a friend requires a clear cut personality and a disinterested outlook on life. Both of these, he asserted, women lack. He also declared that friendships between men were passing from the earth.
"Woman cannot be a friend because she is never an individual, for to be an individual one must stand alone," he said. "Only those who stand alone can come together."
Professor Shaw said that woman was like a planet—well adapted to revolve about some center, "but not organized in such a way as to stand alone." "Unfortunately, masculine friendships are just passing from the earth, and in the course of time friends will be found only in museums, along with other aboriginal products. This melancholy situation is due to the fact that modern life tends to destroy personality and a philosophic view of the world. Man is bound to man not by ties of friendship, but by bonds of professionalism which are usually of a commercial character."
INDIAN TRIBES USE
WHISTLING LANGUAGE
Able to Express Their Thoughts Perfectly by Its Use, Says Mining Engineer.
Carlisle, Pa.—That entire tribes of Indians in Mexico carry on long conversations by means of whistling is asserted by Harold T. Mapes, mining engineer, who was for twelve years in Mexico, but now lives in Carlisle.
Mapes declares that the Indians have a whistling language and are able to express their thoughts perfectly by its use. He says it is not a series of signs or calls signifying danger, love, fear, peace, war, etc., but a regular language, by which the most subtle shades of thought may be expressed.
Like people in other parts of the world, the Mexican Indians occasionally whistle for their dinners, only they are able to explain by their whistles exactly what kind of a dinner they want—either a simple meal of tortillas and frioles or a more elaborate feast of enchiladas and mole guajalote, with cervezor vino.
Mapes says that he understands that the whistling language has been handed down from generation to generation from the time of the Toltecs and Aztecs and that Indian lovers can put a world of tenderness and passion into their whistled declarations of love or stir their fellows to heroic deeds by the fierceness with which they whistle a call to arms.
A whistling language has been used from time immemorial by the Swiss mountaineers, and Neapolitan sailors converse frequently by means of whistling. Convicts in the big jails in Naples converse freely by means of whistling, and there is apparently no limit to their whistling vocabulary.
BIRD DOG WEARS GLASSES.
Georgia Setter Does Good Work After Visit to Oculist.
Moultrie, Ga.-Fanny, a thoroughbred setter, wears spectacles. She was fitted with glasses by an oculist, who found that she had astigmatism.
For years Fanny has been known as one of the best hunting dogs in this section. Before the opening of the quall season this year she went to the fields by herself and on returning showed evidence of bad falls. Fanny could not help falling into ditches and running into trees. Then it was discovered that her eyes had become affected.
It is believed the glasses will correct the trouble. At least Fanny now is doing her work as well as usual.
HE KNEW.
Austrian Tells Who It Is That Elects a President.
Hammond, Ind.—Jorn Bosovich, late of Austria, applied to the federal court for citizenship papers. Clerk Hemstock put the questions and got these answers:
"Who is president of the United States?"
"Mr. Wilson."
"Who makes the laws?"
"The congress."
"Who elects the president?"
"California."
He got the papers.
Scranton, Pa.—A letter with $5 inclosed has been received by the Pine Brook bank. The letter said that the writer held up the teller and took the money at the point of a revolver. "I am taking the first opportunity to pay it back," said the letter, which was postmarked Moscow, Pa. The bank officials will have the missive framed. The robber entered the bank and pointing a revolver at the teller, George Browning, demanded $25. Browning handed out $5, which satisfied him.
FEW SMALL COINS
FEW SMALL COINS
Directors of Mints Hold Conference to Solve Problem.
INDICATION OF PROSPERITY.
People Among Whom Nickels, Dimes and Quarters Circulate Have More Than Ever Before—Engraving Department Reports Enormous Demand For One and Two Dollar Bills.
New York.—An unprecedented demand for small coins—quarters, dimes, nickels and cents—a demand that is daily straining the resources of the United States treasury department, brought F. H. J. Van Engelken, director of the mint, to New York to see if something could be done to relieve the scarcity. He met officials of all mints here for a conference to devise ways and means of turning out enough small coins to meet the demand.
At the conference were T. W. H. Shanahan, superintendent of the San Francisco mint; Thomas W. Annear, superintendent of the Denver mint; E. D. Hawkhs, chief clerk of the San Francisco mint, and Vernon Boyle, superintendent of the New York assay office.
"We never before have been confronted by such an emergency," said Mr. Van Engelken, "and I doubt that we will be able to materially increase the production. Our two large mints now are working twenty-four hours a day, while the smallest is on a sixteen hour shift. They are all at maximum capacity, and their energies are being concentrated on the coins of which we are so short.
"Our idea in holding the conference was to discuss the operation of the mints, probably adopting at all of them suggestions that have proved of benefit in one mint. We are now at capacity. Therefore by the team work which we believe this conference will produce we expect to be able to speed up our production of small coins. The problem is growing more perplexing every day." "What is the reason for the shortage in small coins?" the director of the mint was asked. "There is only one answer," he said. "The people among whom the small coins circulate have more of them than ever before. It is the result of the tremendous prosperity that is getting down to the people who use coins of small denominations.
"I talked recently with the head of the engraving department in Washington. He tells me there is a similar tremendous demand for the dollar and two dollar bills and that this demand is increasing as the holiday season approaches. None of them is returned. They are worn out. Bankers say they are having great difficulty in meeting the demand."
DANCED OFF DIET GAINS.
Net Loss of One and a Half Pounds In Chicago Squad Due to a Ball.
Chicago. — Dancing and dieting are not in harmony.
The "weighing in" figures of the "diet squad," which demonstrated that 40 cents' worth of food a day is enough for the average individual showed a loss of seventeen and a half pounds when compared with figures of the day before. The answer seems to be that most of them attended the annual dance of the health department.
Only two members of the squad showed a gain. Each gained half a pound. Comparing weights with those taken when the test started, seven members gained ten and a half pounds, but the other five members lost twelve pounds—net loss a pound and a half, and all because of the dance.
LOTS OF MONEY IN KANSAS
Hat Passed For $1,500 Brings Back $2,029.
Smith Center, Kan.—There is a lot of money in Kansas—enough to buy the minister a motorcar merely by passing the hat in a crowd.
So comes the report from Harlan, Kan., where fancy priced hogs, cattle, wheat and corn are the means of sustenance for farmers.
The other day, says J. W. Patlee of this town, a $5,000 church was being dedicated, and the finance committee announced the fund to put the church out of debt lacked $1,500.
"Pass the hat," yelled some one.
The hat contained $2,029 in cash and checks when it got back.
FACES DEATH FOR THEFT.
Old Sea Law Puts Indiana Prisoner In Bad Fix.
Gary, Ind.—Death penalty under an old sea law faces C. A. Shillinger if he is convicted of stealing a compass from a United States Steel company's ore ship.
Under a law passed in 1790, Shillinger, if found guilty, must either be freed or hanged from the yard arm of the ship in Gary harbor. The prisoner will be tried in the United States district court at Indianapolis.
Spanking Replaces Moral Suasion.
New York.—Whatever educators may say of the advantages of moral suasion over the rod, superintendents and trustees for New York's dependent orphans have concluded to the contrary. Good, old fashioned spankings work wonders, they declare. Thirty of them met at the Russell Sage foundation and agreed that the 10,000 orphans under their care were more amenable to spanking than to other forms of reproof.
GALLONS OF HONEY IN CLOSED UP FIREPLACE
Owner Finds Four Years' Work of Bees Too Heavy to Move.
Montclair, N. J.—A. P. Boehm, vice president of B. Altman & Co., New York, closed up a big open fireplace at his residence, 221 Midland avenue, Montclair, four years ago for two reasons. He did not care to use the fireplace, for one thing, and bees in the chimney frequently went down into his dining room. Recently Mr. Boehm decided to use the open fireplace, but found it impossible to lift the sheet of iron he had placed over the outlet to keep out the bees. Believing some bricks from the chimney had fallen down, he set a man to work making the clearance. Operations from the roof stirred up a fuss among the bees, which still inhabited the chimney.
The workman decided to chloroform the bees and, placing a saturated rag upon the end of a long pole, went about the task. When the stick was pulled up again, however, the rag was dripping with honey, the weight of which had made impossible the easy removal of the sheet iron.
The next thing was the boring of a hole in the iron to allow the honey to run out, a big tin pail being used to catch it. That quickly filled up, and another pail was procured. This vessel also filled up, and some kitchen pans and kettles were used. There was no diminution in the flow, and a wash boiler was next used to catch the honey. This also was filled. Before the honey had all run out a dozen vessels, large and small, were sitting around the room, all filled with delicious honey.
CATTLE KING BEGAN AS HELPER IN MARKET
Romantic Rise of Butcher Boy Who Died Leaving an Estate of $20,000,000.
Oakland, Cal.-The romantic rise of a young German butcher boy, once the butt of jokes at Washington market, in New York, for his inability to speak English, to the position of cattle king of the west and probably the largest single land owner in the country has been revealed by a legal controversy over the administration of his estate in California.
Three years before he died in Oakland, Henry Miller deeded his entire $20,000,000 estate to his daughter, Mrs. J. Leroy Nickel of San Francisco, to avoid the inheritance tax collectors of the state. The collectors now are attempting to find a way in which they can collect the tax.
Miller came to this country from Wurttenberg, Germany, in 1847. He worked for a time in a small downtown hotel in New York as a porter. Finally he obtained work in Washington market as a apprentice, where he was known as "Potsdam." He saved his money and in December, 1850, joined the gold rush to California. He arrived too late to get to the gold fields and got a job as a second butcher in San Francisco. In ten months he had saved enough to set up for himself. Then the miners who had found the gold came back and, spending their money recklessly, made fortunes for the merchants of the town.
Miller later became associated with Charles Lux, a cattleman, and together they bought hundreds of thousands of acres of grazing land in California, Oregon, Nevada and other western states. They went into the cattle raising business and at one time owned 80,000 head of cattle and 100,000 sheep.
DEER WRECKS AN AUTOMOBILE
Dazzled by Headlight, It Plunges Into Draper Car.
Cold Spring. N. Y.-Game Warden James Barry was called to Peekskill to take charge of the carcass of a big male deer which plunged into an automobile in the darkness before daybreak and wrecked it near Peekskill village.
The automobile, driven by Algernon Draper of Closter, N. J., was bowling along the Oscawanna road when the buck, emerging from the brush, got in front of the car. The searchlights must have dazzled it, for it plunged headforemost into the machine and was dragged underneath the engine.
Penny a Day Scheme For Church.
Westmont, N. J.-The Aid society of the Episcopal mission, in order to raise funds for a new church, have put a penny a day scheme into operation. A census of all residents will be made, probably in conjunction with the other churches, to ascertain the denomination of every person in town.
Riverside, N. J.—A tin can man
trap devised by Joseph Grimmer
at a grocery store is said to have
caught a victim in one Thomas
Jones, a negro. Missing hams
from the storage room, Grimmer
attached a slik thread to a huge
ham and ran the other end out
into the store and attached it to
a tin can. A few days later the
tin can rattled across the floor.
The negro is held for the grand
jury.
PAGE SEVEN
Liquid Fire In War.
Liquid fire as a war weapon is thus described in an English journal:
In the earliest models the combustible liquid was propelled by a gas condenser out of a portable or fixed reservoir and was lighted by some automatic device as it escaped from the nozzle of the projecting instrument.
Later a double barreled liquid gun was devised, having the upper barrel much smaller than the lower and pivoted so as to turn independently. The fluid is shot from the two barrels simultaneously, but only that from the upper one ignites automatically.
This small, burning stream is so directed that it unites with the larger nonburning one at any desired point and then, of course, ignites the larger jet. The small stream is then shut off, the large one continuing to flow.
The flames do not spread backward along the jet toward the nozzle, but are carried forward to the target and, striking the ground, form a veritable sheet of fire, which continues to ignite the fluid as fast and as long as it falls.
The Making of Chipped Glass
Sheets of glass that are covered with a shell-like raised pattern are in use for screens, partitions, electric light fixtures and other purposes. This chipped glass, for the pattern is often really chipped out of the surface, involves a process that is interesting. The sheet of glass to be treated is placed under a sand blast in order to give it a grain. This ground surface is next treated with a solution of good glue, and the glass is placed in a drying room on a rack, where it remains for some hours. Next the sheets of glass are removed to the chipping room, where they are placed on edge back to back, with the coated surfaces outward. This room is heated by steam colls, and when the heat is turned on the glue reaches its utmost degree of desiccation and curls off the glass in pieces from the size of a dime to that of a silver dollar, but it adheres so closely to the glass that in its effort to get free it tears a piece off the surface, the result being a beautiful pattern.
Why the Baby Cries.
Now we know why the baby cries. For a long time the cause was velled in obscurity. It might be an inaccessible pln, or it might be the helpless discrepancy betwixt the heavenly kingdom and this world, or it might be a plain case of colic, called by what newfanged term you please. It has remained for an advertising expert to discover that the baby cries in order to advertise. It is the baby's effective announcement in the imperative mood that he wants to be up and petted or he wants the moon or he wants something else, and "he won't be happy till he gets it." There is no denying that for an infant industry the baby's advertising is a great success. Nearly every time he gets results, and the most astute and alert professional solicitor cannot show a higher percentage of success.-Philadelphia Ledger.
Only a "Slip of a Boy."
One night while Mme. Sarah Bernhardt and her company were playing "L'Alglon" in Montreal a very angry man left the auditorium and clamored at the box office for the return of his money. The manager naturally wanted to know why.
"I paid to see Mme. Bernhardt act," the man stormed, "and she's not acting."
"Mme. Bernhardt is acting," replied the astonished manager.
"No, she is not," retorted the man.
"She does not take the part of the empress, and the only other characters are a man and the slip of a boy who plays the young duke."
It took ever so long to convince him that the "slip of a boy" was Bernhardt herself.—All Around Magazine.
His Magnificent Memory.
"Children." squeaked the ancient man, "I can remember just as well as if it was yesterday when I was a boy and beefsteak and potatoes were so cheap that we had 'em at our house most every day and were always permitted to eat all we wanted of 'em. Oh.I tell ye I've got a wonderful—hee, hee—memory!"
Later the children said among themselves: "Truly, Uncle Gulliver has an amazing memory. He can recollect things that could not possibly have happened."—Kansas City Star.
Dispatching Business.
Counsel For the Defense—Your honor, you neglected to ask the prisoner if she had anything to say as to why sentence should not be pronounced. Judge—Inasnuch as the prisoner is a woman, we will omit that formality in order to dispose of the case in some reasonable time—Pittsburgh Press.
Stage Name.
"Yes, I am going on the stage."
"Well, I hope you succeed in making a name for yourself."
"That has already been attended to, my dear. I picked a really beautiful one out of a romantic novel."—Louisville Courier Journal.
A Real Defender
"Big" brother is reasonably good about defending little sister, but the real serious trouble comes when "big" sister sees some one imposing on little brother--Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Omar—Miss Aimee certainly has a lovely complexion, hasn't she? Hazel—Yes; and the stingy thing won't tell me what brand she uses.—Exchange.
The man who pays an ounce of principle for a pound of popularity gets badly cheated.
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Dont Shoot It
There’s a Better Way
It’s guilty, all right, and at stands con-
victed of the crime of wasting your good
money. The death penalty is mild.
* The temptation to shoot it at sundown is great.
But you must have another light to put in its place.
For this reason the “better way” is to call
“Wabash 6000’’—tell us how many “flat flame
criminals” you want executed, and order us to
remove them all and replace each one with—
A Modern Mantle Gas Light
Mantle Lights give ever so much more light
than flat flame burners and use less gas. They save
“regular money”—money you can use for pan-
cake flour and movie tickets. So take another
good look—a farewell look—at your flat flame
burners and phone now—
Wabash 6000
Ask for the
Mantle Light Department .
We have all kinds of mantle lights to meet all
requirements and suit all pocketbooks. Get one
NOW.
The Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.
Peoples Gas Building
TEENAN JONES’ PLACE
3445 SOUTH STATE STREET]
Telephone Douglas #4591
The finest and most UP-TO-DATE
BUFFET and CAFE on the South
Side. First-Class Entertainers.
HENRY “TEENAN” JONES, Proprietor.
Residence 1262 Macalister Place
‘Telephone Monroe 2714
MILES J. DEVINE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Seite 313.320 Reaper Bleck
Clark & Washington Sts.
Phones Suterai-oie cmicaco
PHONES: OFFICE. MAM <188
"AUTOMATIC 33-736
RESIDENCE, DREXEL 7990
Walter M. Farmer
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
SUITE 708, 184 WASHINGTON ST.
NOTARY PUBLIC CHICAGO
Franklin A. Denison
ATTORNEY AT LAW
36 West Randolph St., Chicage
Suite 708 Delaware Ballding
Tel. Central 3142
PRE DINS |p omaed
TEL OAKLAND 1880, 1881, 1552
JOHN J. DUNN
youu OO Lf we
Pitty-Firet end Armeer Avence
nanvancs
Ss St ots LS
auimaece
‘Office Phones: Res. S139 Se. Wabash Ave.
uss on has tna Passe toe is
Dr. Theo. R. Mozee
DENTIST
4709 S. STATE STREET
| CHICAGO
Bowe 0 A.M tS. 7P. ert
pale eit
Phone Main 2017 Antomatie 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 Chieaso
A. D. GASH
ATTORNEY AT LAW
118 North La Salle St., Chicago
Suite 615 te 61?
PHONE MAIN 2216
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, DECEMBER 23, 1916.
As Near As Your Telephone
F DISTANCE IMMATERIAL
JN Metopotitan Cty ofthis size, death knocks every
* thirty minutes at some door. Too often that death
not obly brings somow, but misfortune ax well. Let the
eo seen bay fora foeeal be al boemt pecpeocioaand
on you will benefit by it in service, quality and cost to you
j Trdabers end cents, The reat of my” campsiga fa
buit for me one of the Iagest and most magulicen!
WB establishments in the world. ost
A visit will convince you. fa
Consult me, Ican save you Worry, Time and Money. 4g °
Shipping to all parts of the Country and Automobile (a
Funerals a Specialty. Central Display Rooms and \
Chapel. Call promptly answered day or night. =
Ernest H. Williamson, Past
KENWOOD AUTOMATIC pee ES
"182°" Undertaker “Scr FR
5028 and 5030S. StateSt, - - - - Chicago, Ill
— “Plants That Give Feat. ~~
We do not, as a rule, think of plants
as giving out heat, yet at certain times
some flowers show an astonishing rise
of temperature. Most remarkable in
this respect are certain kinds of Arum.
Just at the opening of the flower in
these cases there is a great liberation
of heat, This s due to the fact that
the respiration, or breathing, is at
such times very vigorous. Some very
interesting experiments have been car.
ried out in connection with these
Arums by means of placing a ther-
mometer just inside the spathe. One
of the most remarkable cases was that
of a species growing on the Mediter-
ranean coast and known as Arum
Italicum. The temperature of the air
was 60 degrees at the time of the ex-
periment. That inside the spathe was
110 degrees. At that time the blos-
soms, which when expanded are prac-
tically scentless, gave out a fragrance
suggestive of wine. It is said that
plants of this type are particularly
common in Mexico.—St. Nicholas.
Prefeste ta Framen
Mayors are appointed in France in
much the same way as in England
Dut the prefect’ 1s a permanent gov
ernment official, with infinitely greater
Power and of much more importance
He is the supreme head of a depart
ment—of which there are eighty-six
and ft {s his duty to see that the laws
Passed in Paris are carried out prop
erly in every commune of his depart-
ment. He has control over the po
Uce and even over the military should
their services be required in an indus
trial or political dispute. He sees that
the taxes are collected, and every pub
Me improvement scheme s submitted
to him in order that he may decide
by whom the cost should be borne.
The post of prefect is well paid and
often leads to higher things. For in-
stance, M. Paul Cambon held three
prefectures before he was given a dip:
lomatic post.—London Spectator.
“A Thief of Health.”
“The man who coughs or sneezes in
your presence without covering his
‘mouth with a handkerchief is a thief,”
the bulletin of the St. Louis health de-
partment says.
“He is a thief of health and com-
fort,” continues the bulletin. “Of
course he does not know it, and he
oes not mean to injure his friends
and companions, but he does that very
thing every time he coughs or sneezes
without protecting his mouth and nose
with his handkerchief.
“Watch the people who are afilicted
and take note of how few persons use
a handkerchlef when sneezing or cough-
ing. They scatter grip germs in of-
fices, workshops, stores, and within
twenty-four to forty-eight hours thou-
sands of persons are infected. Nobody
seems to think it worth while to use
a handkerchief.”
Pa a
On one occasion Herr Steinitz, the
famous chess master, was discussing
political economy with a distinguished
Professor in England, and the Mal-
thustan theory came up. After the
usual arguments the veteran chess
player thus wound up the controversy:
“It’s all nonsense what they say.
‘You tell me a poor man has no right
to have a large family. You say his
| otng 80 ts not honest, is a positive in-
fury to his country and to humanity. I
tell you you are wrong, and I'll prove
it, My father was a poor man—a vers
Poor man. My father was an honest
man—a very honest man. Well, he had
thirteen children, and I, Wilhelm
Steinitz. the chess champion of the
world. I am the thirteenth!”
Gamest Fighters.
Sparrows are proverblally pugna.
cious. Sometimes a tree will be ®
sparrow battleground, and for ten min-
utes tt will he as lively as a dog fight.
Probably the finest fighter in the
world, quadruped or biped, is the game-
cock, He is a match for anything his
size in the world if he gets a fair fleld
and no favor. He fs as quick asa flash
of lightning, and his spurs are terrible
Weapons, quite as effective as a pair of
bayonets, and used much more sclen-
tifcally and forcefully.—London Tele
graph.
John Adams’ inauguration.
John Adams, the second president,
saw more persons weeping at his inaw-
guration than he had ever seen at any
funeral and said of it:
“Whether it was because of the loss
of a beloved president or the accession
of an unpopular one, I cannot say.”
Pues Ear SS awe
‘The transformations that take place
in a name as it passes through differ
ent languages can only be accounted
for by carelessness in transmission.
One would searcely expect the name of
Emeric, the name of a pious Hun-
garian prince of the eleventh century,
who was made a saint, to take the
form of Amerigo in Italian and of
Amory and Emery in English. The
name in German, but little changed
from tho original, is Emmerich. This
‘obscure Hungarian saint has been a
Person of consequence in this world,
for from his name has come that of
this great continent. In the fifteenth
century, in the Itallan form of Amert-
go, it was bestowed upon an Italian
navigator surnamed Vespucci, and this
continent, by a still further mutilation
of the name, came to be known as
America. When King Stephen of Hun.
gary was choosing a name for his son
he could scarcely have imagined that
the name chosen was to be the parent
of the word America and that poor old
Christopher Columbus was thereby to
be despoiled of a recognition that is
far from being compensated for by the
term Columbia.—Indianapolis News.
‘ical is Oa
it was in Cleveland, and the day
was hot. The Mastodons had just fin-
ished their parade, and Charles Froh-
man, perspiring and wearing the ab-
horred silk hat, entered the box office
of the opera house on Cleveland ave-
nue. Sitting in the treasurer's seat he
saw a sturdy lad fingering a pile of
silver dollars. He slipped them in and
out with amazing dexterity. Hearing
a noise, he looked up and beheld young
Frohman with the tile tilted back on
his head. The boys’ eyes met. Into
each came a wistful look.
“I wish I had that silk hat of yours,”
said the boy at the window.
“I wish I could do what you are do
ing with that money,” was the re-
sponse of the envied one.
Such was the meeting of two men
who afterward became dominant fig-
tres in the theatrical world. The boy
with the dollars was A. L. Erlanger.
—“Charies Frohman, Manager and
Man.”
Milkmaide In London.
At one time it was a common thing
to see milkmaids in Fleet street. Lon.
don milkmaids of past days were
usually strongly built Irish or Welsh
girls, mostly Welsh, but how lang ago
it 1z since one yodeled in Fleet street
it fs difficult to say. Yet only a few
years ago a milkmaid actually prac-
ticed her calling in the open In central
London. Two cows were attached to
the “Milk fair” in St, James’ park,
near Spring gardens, and a tumblerful
of milk “fresh from the cow” was a
Popular beverage. The “fair,” which
was held by a family descended from
the original holders of an old privilege
granted by royalty, was abolished by
order of thé office of works.—London
Chronicle.
Not Drastic.
Of the unconscious humor of wit-
nesses the following 8 not a bad ex-
ample:
‘Magistrate—1 understand, then, that
after heckling the candidate the de-
fendant became very violent and abu-
sive?
Constable—Yes, sir,
“And so,” continued the magistrate,
“you used drastic measures to remove
him?”
Constable—No, sir; I used my club.
Creased Ribhonc
| Crushed ribbons should not be tron-
ed; it makes them shiny. Dampen
them and then fold them smoothly and
tightly around a rolling pin or empty
Dottle. This will remove slight creases.
‘There is nothing for very bad creases
but to fron them.
‘The Difference In Dogs.
You can keep a real fine dog in food
at an expense of about $19 a month,
while a real sorry dog can get out and
make a living for himself.—Fort Worth
Star-Telegram.
No Initiative Wanted.
Rich Man—My daughter, sir, has nev.
er wanted for anything. Poor Suitor—
‘Then for heaven's sake don’t make her
begin now! She wants me!—Philadel-
phia Bulletin.
Mockine Hin
“Fortune will smile on you some day,
my boy.”
“Maybe so, dad, but just at present
she’s giving me the laugh.”"—Detroit
Deco Poem,
. = =o a
@F2 > JESSE BING
2) BAN
“ en a 8. E. Gor, State and 36th Place, Chg
Telephone Douglas 1565
GENERAL
BANEING
3 per cent allowed on Savings Accounts
Safety Deposit Vaults, $3.00 per Year
REAL ESTATE DEPARTMENT
Asagent buy and sell Real Estatt on commission, manages estates for ont
dents, including payment of taxes and locking after assessments. Money ig
‘mn Chicago Real Estate.
Especially Invites the patronage of Chicago business men.
“The Cranford Apartmet
Building, 3600. Wabash Ave
Bore v5, nt IN Soyer eG a eee
BR ae ee
fs <-. on aetna eh Sea
: aie te = =
‘az a , 3
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2a eee
; : 4 es |
i tases = Fi
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BES ESS a ae eee
The finest building ever opened to Colored tenants in Chicas
Steam heat, electric light, tile baths, marble entrance.
J. W. Casey,’ Agent,
‘Phone Randolph 803 74 W. WAS*ANGTON STREET.
| All Eye Trouble
| SEE
Dp. Lovie UsseLMan
The Practical O tician
TMi MOST COMPLETE OPTICAL ROOMS IN THE CITY
. BEST GOODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES 2
Consultation or examination | 3150 S. STATE ST.
Cae whip | Phone Douglas 5308
guarantee to give satisfaction. CHICAGO
JOHN BLOCKI & SON
PERFUMERS
——— G0 10
C. E. KREYSSLER, Druggist
5057 South State Street
NOT ON THE CORNER
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
All Prescriptions Carefully Compounded
BLOCKI'’S IDEAL " BLOCKI'S FLOWER
IN BOTTLE PERFUMES °*
A. F.copozoE, pouatas $97)
J. HWHISTON. Proprietors Phones DOUGLAS 2295
CHAS. HARRIS, Manager auto. 72°
(Roce occ 0S OCR OCEEEIOCY
e §
| The Elite Cafe
AND BUFFET
3030 STATE STREET CHICAGO