The Broad Ax
Saturday, April 21, 1917
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THE BROAD AX
An Humble Appeal to Hon. Woodrow Wilson, Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Navy of This Great Nation, and to the Congress of the United States to Immediately Abrogate All 'Jim Crow' Car Laws Other Discriminatory Measures and the Disfranchising Legislation Which Have Been Enacted by Some of the Southern States for the Sole Object or Purpose of Degrading and Humiliating More Than Ten Million Colored American Citizens Causing Them to Feel, at All Times, That They Are Nothing More Than Aliens and Criminals in a Strange Land
MR. PRESIDENT AND THE HONORABLE MEMBERS OF CONGRESS: FROM EVERY POINT OF VIEW, THE COLORED PEOPLE SHOULD BE PERMITTED TO ENJOY THEIR CIVIL OR POLITICAL OR THEIR NATURAL OR INHERENT RIGHTS IN THIS COUNTRY.
FOR THEY HAVE FREELY AND CHEERFULLY POURED OUT THEIR LOYAL AND PATRIOTIC BLOOD ON EVERY BATTLEFIELD, FROM THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, INCLUDING THE WAR OF 1812, THE MEXICAN WAR IN 1845; THE SLAVE HOLDERS WAR OF THE REBELLION FROM 1861 TO 1865; THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR AND THE LATE WAR WITH MEXICO.
IT WAS THE BRAVERY AND THE MEMORABLE DASH OF THE COL-
ORED SOLDIERS UP SAN JUAN HILL THAT SNATCHED VICTORY
FROM DEFEAT AND PREVENTED COL. THEOODORE ROOSEVELT
AND HIS ROUGH RIDERS FROM BEING TRAMPLED UNDER THE
FEET OF THE SPANISH SOLDIERS.
IN EVERY SENSE OF THE WORD THE COLORED PEOPLE HAVE HEROICALLY DEFENDED THE STARS AND THE STRIPES ON THE LAND AND ON THE SEA AND THEY HAVE NEVER PERMITTED OLD GLORY TO TRAIL IN THE DUST IN DISHONOR.
HEREFORE, MR. PRESIENT AND THE HONORED MEMBERS OF CONGRESS, I MOST HUMBLY IMPLORE YOU TO USE YOUR GREAT INFLUENCE TO ABOLISH ALL OF THE VICIOUS LAWS WHICH HAVE BEEN ENACTED TO RETARD THE PROGRESS OF THE COLORED PROPEL SO THAT THEY CAN FREELY BECOME A HOMOGENEOUS PART OF THIS GRAND AND GLORIOUS REPUBLIC.
Vol. XXII.
An Humbly in-Chief and the Abroad Measured for the Million. Are Now
MR. PRESIDENT AND THE HONOR FROM EVERY POINT OF VIEW PERMITTED TO ENJOY THE NATURAL OR INHERENT RIGHTS
FOR THEY HAVE FREELY AND LOYAL AND PATRIOTIC BLOOD THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, MEXICAN WAR IN 1845; THE BELLION FROM 1861 TO 1865; THE LATE WAR WITH MEXICAN
IT WAS THE BRAVERY AND THE ORED SOLDIERS UP SAN JUAN FROM DEFEAT AND PREVENED AND HIS ROUGH RIDERS FROM FEET OF THE SPANISH SOLDIERS
IN EVERY SENSE OF THE WORD I CALLY DEFENDED THE STAR AND ON THE SEA AND THE GLORY TO TRAIL IN THE DUSK
THEREFORE, MR. PRESIDENT AND GRESS, I MOST HUMBLY IMPLIFLE FLUENCE TO ABOLISH ALL OR BEEN ENACTED TO RETARD PEOPLE SO THAT THEY CAN PART OF THIS GRAND AND GREAT
An open letter or an humble appeal to the Hon. Woodrow Wilson, commander-in-chief of the army and the navy, and to the members of the United States congress.
Mr. President and Honorable Gentlemen:
The desinies of this great nation are being held in the hollow of your hands at the present time either for weal or for woe, and no one within the confines of the United States possesses any more profound respect for its early traditions and its established institutions which in the main are founded on human rights or that broad spirit of democracy; as further evidence of our true Americanism, the bones of many of our fore-parents still rest under the soil of the grand old commonwealth of Virginia, which has for many years been rightly known as the mother of presidents, and as many of the old traditions of the past pertaining to governmental affairs or policies are fast faking away and are becoming dim in the memories of men and as the white winged dove of a newer or broader democracy seems to be flapping its wings in a great effort to extend them to all parts of the civilized world so that this new twentieth century democracy will become universal in its scope and that men of all races will be able to come in contact with its magnetic touch and equally share in its blessings, marching under one flag for one world-wide country, ever singing as they march in one grand review that "We all are the sons and daughters of this newer or broader
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HEW TO THE LINE; LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY
democracy—that the hand that made us all is divine—that from henceforth there will be no north nor no south, no east nor no west, no high nor no low, no rich nor no poor, no white nor no black—that all mankind of whatever race or nationality stands ready and willing to be fused into one humanity forever."
These newer or broader ideas appear to be uppermost in the minds of all the people at the present time, and from the very bottom of my heart which is weighted down with great pain and sorrow when I permit myself to meditate upon the many heinous crimes and the horrible, outrageous wrongs which are constantly being heaped upon the law-abiding Colored people in all parts of this country which is supposed to be "the land of the free and the home of the brave."
I am forced as (it were) by some unseen power, Mr. President, to humbly appeal to you as the commander-in-chief of the army and the navy of this mighty nation and to the congress of the United States to immediately abrogate all "Jim Crow" car laws, all other discriminatory measures and the disfranchising legislation which have from time to time been enacted by some of the southern states for the sole purpose or object of wrongfully degrading and unlawfully humiliating more than ten million Colored American citizens, causing them at all times to very keenly feel that they are nothing more than aliens and criminals in a strange land. In all truthfulness it can be said, Mr.
CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917
President and the honorable members of congress, from every point of view the Colored people who are a tenth part of the population of these United States should freely be permitted to enjoy their civil or political or their natural or inherent rights throughout each and every part of this broad land, which should at all times be the best and the fairest on the face of the green earth; for the Colored people have freely poured out their blood on every battlefield from Bunker Hill, Lexington to Carrilish; they were well to the front in all the bloody conflicts and marched by the side of General George Washington and greatly assisted him to win his lasting victories during the Revolutionary War; they assisted to uphold the hands of General Andrew Jackson in the war of 1812, it was their strong black arms that fought and won the memorable battle for him at New Orleans; they fought like unto black demons in the Mexican war of 1845.
Mr. President and the honorable members of congress, it is almost needless to remind you that well on to two hundred thousand Colored soldiers fought in the slave-holder's war of the rebellion from 1861 to 1865; that almost forty thousand black men laid down their lives on four hundred and fifty battlefields for the preservation of the union; that they, the Colored soldiers, more than performed their part in the Spanish-American War and the late war with Mexico.
Mr. President and the honorable members of congress, it was the bravery and the wonderful and the memorable dash of the Colored soldiers up San Juan Hill that snatched victory from defeat, at the same time preventing Col. Theodore Roosevelt and his rough riders from being trampled under the feet of the Spanish soldiers.
With much pride it can be proclaimed from the highest mountain tops that in every sense of the word, Mr. President and the honorable members of congress, the Colored people have at all times more than heroically defended the stars and stripes on the land and on the sea and at no time nor place have they ever permitted Old Glory to trail in the dust in dishonor.
Therefore, Mr. President and the honorable members of congress, as an humble member of the Colored race I most humbly implore all of you honorable gentlemen to use the great power and the far-reaching influence which you possess and at once abolish all the vicious laws which have been enacted in the various parts of the country for the sole purpose of retarding the progress of the Colored people, so that they, too, will be able to heartily join in this new world-wide democracy and in fact as well as in name become an integral or a homogeneous part of this grand and glorious republic.
Mr. President and the honorable members of congress, I remain your most humble and obedient servant, Julius F. Taylor, Chicago, Illinois, April 30, 1917.
74 IPEU
The popular and efficient judge of the Probate Court of Cook County, who will be re-elected to his present honored position in 1918.
THE RE-OPENING OF THE ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE, IN THEOLD WOOD'S ACADEMY, 3800 VINCENNES AVENUE, REV. GEORGE HOWARD McDANIEL, POUNDER, PRESIDENT AND GENERAL FINANCIAL AGENT WILL BE ON HAND TO GREET ITS MANY FRIENDS.
This coming Sunday afternoon, April 22nd at 3 o'clock, The Enterprise Institute, located at 3800 Vincennes avenue, will begin the celebration of its tenth anniversary, and an interesting program will be rendered each afternoon and evening for one week.
The Enterprise Institute started in 1907 with five students, and up to date it has graduated five hundred and sixty students. Rev. George Howard McDaniel, who is well known in all parts of the Middle West, is the founder, president and general financial agent. Sunday afternoon, April 23, at 3 p.m. a massmeeting will be held in the large
efficient judge of the Probate Court of C elected to his present honored position
auditorium and three returned missionaries from Africa, who will also exhibit their curios. Mrs. C. D. Trice, Mrs. Hooper, and Mrs. Burgess will be among the local or home missionaries who will also address the meeting. Good singing will be furnished by some of the noted singers, including Miss Butler, the famous singer of Texas.
The Enterprise Institute will be already to enroll students on Monday morning and in every way resume all of its former activities. The building consists of twenty-one large rooms, besides two large auditoriums. Students of both sexes will be taught forty different trades in wood work, iron, dressmaking, hairdressing, domestic science, manicuring and many other industries.
The Enterprise Institute stands for the training of the head, heart and hand. A first class matron will be in charge and look after the young women students in every way. Many can live right in the building. Relig-
No.31
ious services will be conducted on the main floor auditorium each Sunday. The Enterprise Institute under the wise guidance of its far-seeing founder, Rev. G. H. McDaniel, is filling a long-felt want in that direction in this section of the country.
ATLANTA ALBINOES HAVE MORE DEFECTIVES THAN NEGRO. Report of Medical Director Great Surprise to the Citizens.
Atlanta, Ga. (Special).—The board of education received with great surprise last week at its meeting in the Chamber of Commerce assembly hall the information from the report of Dr. W. N. Atkins, former medical director of schools, that 74.6 per cent of the albino children in the city public schools were physically defective, and that only 36.6 per cent of the Negro children were lacking physically. Dr. Atkins' report was from September 1, 1916, to March 1, 1917.
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Fish Versus Mosquitoes
Myriads of mosquitoes used to infest the rice plantations of Madagascar. Dr. Legendre, a savant well known in scientific circles in Paris, conceived the idea of freeing the region of malarial trouble by the introduction into the watercourses of cyprin, or red fish, which are very fond of both mosquitoes and their eggs. Within five months 500 fish multiplied to 10,000, and these destroyed nearly all the mosquitoes. The fish besides being a malaria destroyer became very important as an addition to native food—London Telegraph.
Smiled the Wrong Way.
"Well, my boy," he asked cheerfully at the breakfast table the morning after Cholly had taken the leap, "how did things go last evening? Did she smile on your proposal?"
"No," said Cholly faintly, pushing away a breakfast roll. "She smiled at it"—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegram.
Compensation.
Life is compensatory to this extent: When a man reaches the point at which his wife is compelled to make the living for the family he has also reached the point at which the fact ceases to humilate him.—Topeka Capital.
What Every Woman Knows.
A woman always knows when a man is in love with her. A man often knows a woman is in love with him when she isn't—Exchange.
Skinny—What made the tower of
Pisa lean? Aver D. Pois—If I knew I'd
try it—Yale Record.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT
For acute articular rheumatism the following treatment is recommended by a writer in the Medical Adviser, quoted by the Medical Record: An ointment made of four drams each of ichthyol, methyl salicylate and oil of turpentine, mixed with four ounces of lanolin, is applied to the affected joints and covered with cotton and oiled silk. The patient is put to bed in flannel nightclothes and between blankets for absolute rest.
His diet must be liquid, preferably milk, together with fruit juices and plenty of water. Elimination through bowels, skin and kidneys must be attended to carefully. At the beginning of the treatment a dose of calomel and bicarbonate of soda is given and followed after four hours by rochelle salts or a sedilts powder. Rhubarb and soda may be given to advantage until the tongue is clean. Throughout convalescence the patient must abstain from all animal foods and alcohol.
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PAGE TWO
He Was Est.
Rheumatism.
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Bees and Fruit
An agricultural society of Florence Italy, has recently carried out a thorough investigation of the alleged injury of fruit by bees and has completely exonerated the latter. Bees are unable to perforate the skin of the fruit, and it is only incidentally that they suck the juices of fruits injured by other natural causes. The damage sometimes attributed to these insects is due to poultry, wild birds, wind and hall, and even more frequently to hornets, wasps, vine moths and other insects. Instead of being harmful to orchards and vineyards, bees perform the useful service of effecting the cross pollination of flowers, and hence the setting of fruit as well as the destruction of damaged fruits (especially grapes) by sucking the juice and pulp and thus preventing fermentation and rot extending to sound individuals. The orchards and vineyards frequented by bees give the most constant crops.—Scientific American.
Idolatry as It Is.
After months spent in idolatrous lands I have been unable to see much real worship in heathen shrines. The educated worship with their tongues in their cheeks and the ignorant with their hearts in their mouths. But the amount of real worship that exists in heathen temples is very small. Sometimes a bereaved mother will enter the temple and draw from her kimono the tiny bib of a departed little one and tie it to the statue of Jizo, the god of motherhood. Sometimes an old man or woman almost blind will enter the temple and rub the eyes of a wooden god and then rub his own in the hope that eternal darkness may not close in on his affrighted soul. In some places Buddhist services are as dignified, as well attended and as helpful as our own. In Hakodate I attended a Buddhist preaching service that smacked less of idolatry and more of morals than some ceremonials in our cruciform chapels.—Christian Herald.
The Arabic Language
Though the Arabs number less than the population of London, their language is one of the most widely spoken and influential in the world, for it is the language of the Koran. Seventy millions of people in Asia and north Africa speak some form of Arabic as their vernacular, and quite as many more know something of the language from the Koran, which in the original is a text book in the day schools of the Mohammedans from Turkey to Afghanistan and New Gulnea. Nor is Arabic unworthy of this extensive use. Renan, after expressing his surprise that such a language should spring from the desert regions of Arabia and reach perfection in nomadic camps, declares that it surpasses all its sister Semitic languages in richness of vocabulary, delicacy of expression and the logic of its grammatical construction.—London Chronicle.
Politics and Tobacco
Something like half a century ago a man named Dan Bradley started the custom in a little cigar store in Brooklyn of keeping a box of smoking tobacco on the counter, with a sign above it saying, "Fill your pipe." Partly on the strength of his popularity, due in no small degree to the free fillings for a pipe, Bradley ran independently for the state senate and was elected as against the regular candidate.
"Five thousand clay pipes did the trick for Dan" was a saying at the time.
"A man would have to give away automobiles to get elected to the senate nowadays," observed one of the new school of politicians.
"The days of the election cigar and tobacco are gone forever."—New York World.
Damascus Sword
Damascus swords, whose fame at one time made them almost one of the wonders of the world, were made of alternate layers of iron and steel, so finely tempered that the blade would bend to the hilt without breaking, with an edge so keen that no coat of mail could resist it and a surface so highly polished that when a Moslem wished to rearrange his turban he used his sword for a looking glass.
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THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917
The Transformation.
After the hero of seventeen looks at the heroine of fifteen she is a different person. Before he looks at her she likes the fine brick houses in the neighborhood. In fact, she sees many elegant houses in town that she thinks would make ideal homes. Unlike her mother, she even likes the house in which the family lives. But after the hero looks at her you couldn't give her a big brick house. To her such places look cold, and she hardly would take one of them as a gift. But she just worships every little four and five room cottage she sees. They look so cute and neat and dear and sweet and cozy and snug. Oh, if she could just have a house like that and a hero like him—he is the only one there is of his kind—she would be just too happy for anything! And she would make fudge and have a regular home, only it would be far happier than other homes.—Claude Callan in Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Tragedy of Being Dull.
In the Woman's Home Companion Arnold Bennett describes the tragedy of being dull:
"The man lacking imagination is the utterly matter of fact man. He is necessarily the man who never has and cannot have any point of view except his own. He is the Wordsworthian man to whom a primrose by the river's brim was strictly a yellow primrose instead of being a miracle. He is imprisoned in what to him is the actual, and he is always the exact center of the prison, which is of thickest iron. His tragedy is that he does not suspect and is incapable of suspecting that he is in prison at all and that the prison walls and floor and roof entirely prevent him from really 'getting at' any other human being whatsoever. He is always in his own place. This is the deep meaning of dullness, and this is the dull man's doom."
How a Bullet Falls
In order to solve the problem a special stand was erected in Germany, and experiments were carried on along the shores of a lake the surface of which was frozen. The ice was covered with strong planks. It was shown that an infantry bullet shot upward in a vertical direction passes downward in the same position in which it passed upward. In other words, it came back to the earth with its bottom first. Why was it not upset at its culmination point? The answer is that the propelling force ceases to act at the culmination point, but the twist has as yet not stopped, and therefore it starts its fall with a twist. Even on impact the twist has not stopped, as was indicated by the warping of the wood fibers in the planking on the ice.-Popular Science Monthly.
Where the Five Points Was
The Five Points, once a most dangerous part of the New York slums, is now the site of Paradise park. It is at the crossing of Worth, Baxter and Park streets, near the junction of Park row and the New Bowery and Chatham square and practically adjoining Mulberry bend. In 1740 fourteen negroes were burned here during the negro insurrection. Here the Dead Rabbits had their headquarters and fought the Bowery Boys. The Seventh regiment was called out July 3, 1857, to quell a riot here. The Five Points mission was incorporated in 1850.
Shrewd.
The manager, writing out the announcement of his show, ended with these words:
"The patronage of children under eighteen is not encouraged."
"That," he remarked shrewdly, "will appeal to the children over eighteen!"
—New York Post.
Hard on the Records
Freshman (in awed voice)—See that big fellow over there? He broke three records last week. Sweet Young Thing—Mercy, I wouldn't let him run the phonogram!- Penn State Froth.
Blindfolded.
If blindfolded, it is said, no person is able to stand five minutes without moving.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Restrain a Cough.
A patient German statistician has calculated that a patient who coughs once every quarter of an hour for ten hours expends energy equivalent to 250 units of heat, which may be translated as equivalent to the nourishment contained in three eggs or two glasses of milk. In normal respiration the air is expelled from the chest at the rate of four feet per second, whereas in violent coughing it may attain a velocity of 300 feet. This waste of energy is especially important because it occurs for the most part in persons whose assimilative functions are already working under difficulties; consequently the ingestion of the corresponding quantity of nourishment by no means compensates for the exertion. It follows that persistent cough is per se a cause of emaciation, though there are many other factors which tend in the same direction; hence the desirability of restraining cough within safe limits, especially when it is due to irritative reflexes, such as are excited by laryngitis and pharyngitis.—Medical Critic and Guide.
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Dreams May Be Overtime Work.
Dreams are a good test of the need of sleep and many times answer the question of workover or idleness, according to Dr. Percy G. Stiles, who lectured at the Harvard medical school on "Sleep."
"It is possible to judge by one's dreams whether one needs sleep," he said. "If the dreams are of a rambling variety, the kind that seem to pop from nowhere or anywhere, it is a pretty good sign that you are not overtired. On the other hand, if the dreams are a continuation of the day's worries the chances are that you are overtired. Dreams remote from the day's work are a vacation, but dreams connected with the day's work are overtired.
"To go to sleep get the body and mind comfortable. The body is easier to make comfortable than the mind. A rubdown, a bath and a little bit to eat help bring that about. To compose the mind read some familiar book or poetry. That soothes the mind, for no exertion is necessary to read it"—Boston Journal.
The Actor's Indifference
It is probable that the height of indifference is reached in the veteran actor. I saw one at the Press club recently who confirms this suspicion thoroughly.
He is in a good show, but has a small part, appearing only in the first act.
"How is the show?" I asked him.
"Can't say."
"How does it end?"
"Don't know."
"For goodness' sake," I asked,
"haven't you ever seen the play? You
are in it yourself?"
"No," he answered, with a look of
being bored. "Several times I have
thought of going around front to see
what it was all about; but, my dear
old chap, I have never seemed to get
around to it."—Washington Star.
Keeps Milk From Boiling Over
Keeps Milk From Bolling Over.
Among the various devices which are intended to prevent milk from bolling over we noticed one which solves the problem in a very simple way, says the Scientific American. It consists of a straight tube of say two or three inches in diameter at the top and expanding somewhat toward the bottom, where it is provided with a firing and cup shaped end of rather large diameter, the whole being somewhat of trumpet shape. Out of the lower part are cut, say four suitable openings, and we set the device upright in the vessel with the small end just out of the liquid. Should the milk tend to boll violently this action commences at the bottom, and the liquid is forced up the tube, then falls upon the surface again, so that the bolling action will continue in this way and the milk has no tendency to leave the vessel.
Submarine Torpedoes
Launching a torpedo from a submarine is simple. The torpedo fits closely in a tube or cylinder, with an opening at the rear made airtight when closed. At the desired moment there is a discharge of cordite and the torpedo is on its way.
When the torpedo is projected from a ship or boat into the water a lever is thrown back, admitting air into the engines, causing the propellers to revolve and drive the torpedo ahead. The torpedo travels under water at a high rate of speed. It carries a large charge of explosive, which is ignited on the torpedo striking any hard substance, such as the hull of a ship.
The distance the tube is submerged depends on the target, but the nearer the surface the more effective.
Shun "Tips" if You Play Stocks
"Whatever you do, don't go it alone," is the advice that Harold Howland gives to women investors in the Woman's Home Companion. "Shun the financial gossip of the uninformed, the cocksure counsel of the irresponsible, the glittering generalities or the more insidious particularities of the conceived ignoramus. Beware of rumors, 'tips' and 'inside information.' Base your transactions upon the firm ground of accurate information, sound judgment and disinterested advice. Don't try to 'get rich quick.'
His Modesty
"Yes," replied Mr. Cumrox, "although I should never speak of myself as such."
"Why not?"
"Because I'm not absolutely sure I know how to pronounce the word."—New York American.
A Matter of Protection
Actor—I say, old man, I wish you'd advance me $5 and take it out of my first week's salary. Manager—But my dear fellow, suppose it happened that I couldn't pay your first week's salary. Where would I be?—Boston Transcript.
Probably.
"Was that the time they said tried men's soles?" -Baltimore American.
Sharp
Jack—Do you know that Kitty is an awfully sharp girl? Percy—Yes; she cut me on the street the other day.—Cornell Widow.
Mara Photographs
The best photographs of the canals of Mars were taken through red and orange screens.
Perseverance always wins in the long run—usually in a walk.
What "Barrage Fire" Is.
What "Barrage Fire" is.
An interesting feature of artillery fire is the "curtain" or "barrage" fire. This means simply keeping up such a terrific fire on a certain area that an enemy cannot or will not cross it. When an infantry attack is launched a barrage on the ground beyond the enemy's front line prevents his re-enforcements coming up while the attacking infantry are having it out with the defenders of the trench. If the attack carries beyond the first line the artillery of the defense promptly interposes a barrage to prevent its reaching the second line. If the attack on the first line fails the defending artillery puts a barrage behind the attacker's line to prevent re-enforcements coming up to it and to enable the victorious defenders to counterattack and destroy the enemy in his own trenches. It is merely a wholesale development of a long established method of supporting the infantry.—Major E. D. Scott in National Service Magazine.
Mystery of a Fish.
In the economy of nature nothing is more remarkable than the metamorphosis of the flounder, which when young swims in an upright position, as do all other fish, but when maturity develops it becomes topeheavy, falls over on its side and its existence is passed as a flat fish.
That nature moves in a mysterious way is here freely illustrated, for when the flounder falls flat the two eyes, which originally were on either side of the head, are transposed to the upper side of the fish, where they always face the light.
The process by which this strange change is accomplished has never been discovered by scientists and is a marvelous instance of nature's operations, for while the fish usually rests upon bottom it can readily swim about in any depth of water.—New York Sun.
A Short Business Talk.
In a certain store the merchandise manager sent for the ready to wear and millinery buyers and said to them:
"You men are getting a bad accumulation of stock that is hard to move. Hereafter you will make a daily and weekly inventory and send the report to this office."
Both buyers declared this to be impossible, but the merchandise man told them to go and do it. Especially he wanted them to show the age of the goods in stock, the sizes and the colors.
After attempting to take some of these daily inventories the buyers decided that an easier way would be to get busy and sell the goods faster. This same plan has been used in many departments with fine results.
There is nothing like the spot light to engender selling activity in a store.—Philadelphia Record.
All In the Dialect:
A New Zealand man vouchs for the truth of the following story:
Dick Seddon was of Lancashire origin, and when he died the Lancastrian society in New Zealand sent a wreath with the following inscription: "I have gone whoam." The journalist who reported the funeral evidently did not come from Lancashire and consequently was somewhat puzzled by the wording and, after thinking hard, concluded that some one had blundered. His report read:
"The Lancastrian society sent a beautiful wreath bearing the inscription: "I have gone. Who am I?"
Destroying an Idol
"Charley, dear," said young Mrs. Torkins, "you can say anything you like nowadays about George Washington, can't you?" "Yes. The lid seems to be off." "Well, I never liked to mention it before, but I have my doubts about his being incapable of an effort to deceive. His pictures look to me as if the old gentleman wore a wig."—Washington Star.
Luxury and Labor
Alexander the Great, reflecting on his friends degenerating into sloth and luxury, told them that it was a most slavish thing to luxuriate and a most royal thing to labor—Barrow.
Happiness.
Happiness rarely is absent. It is that we know not of its presence. The greatest felicity avails us nothing if we know not that we are happy.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Diet and Health
In an article on "Taming the Liver" World's Work says that the daily meal of the average business man consisting of meat and potatoes and white bread is ideal for inducing constipation. Most of us should not eat more than once a day. Eat the shells of your baked potatoes and eat whole wheat bread or graham for the help that what we call "roughage" has in stimulating bowel action. And see to it that you take liberal portions of at least two kinds of vegetables at both luncheon and dinner, such vegetables as peas, beans, lettuce, parsnips, carrots, turnips, celery, oyster plant, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, tomatoes, salisfy, Spanish onions, asparagus and spinach. If you dislike these you will be able to substitute fruits that you do like. Eat the right things, get sufficient exercise and rest and you will have no need for habit forming laxatives which eventually may do you much harm.
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Vacations, according to the New York Medical Journal, are nature's safety valves for the relief of the high pressure resulting from efficiency. Efficiency demands that throughout working hours all the faculties be taxed to the utmost without waste of material or of energy, but if properly directed it alms at making an efficient man before an efficient product. Therefore production may not exact that the man speed up beyond his endurance.
The recent application of efficiency methods makes the vacation more than ever necessary. "The vacation," says the Medical Journal, "should be the nearest approach to the simple life. It is for this reason that the country, with all its many inconveniences, is so often chosen for the place of vacation. The vacation period allows for the absorption and elimination of the fatigue products from the system accumulated in the pressure period of the work. The longer the vacation, therefore, the better the subsequent work."
Plant For a Hanging Basket
Indoor gardeners will be interested in watching this plant grow. It follows the plan of the strawberry in sending out runners and starting new growths at the end of the stem. The strawberry, however, has the earth to establish its new growths. This indoor plant sends out the runners groping for earth where there is none. It's called the saxifrage.
It is a favorite plant for hanging baskets. A small tuft of leaves develops at the end of each vine. From this tuff other runners are sent out and these in turn develop more tufts. By this method the saxifrage keeps on expanding until the basket is covered with a network of vines and a blanket of leaves.
The leaves, shaped like those of the geranium, are a reddish olive color veined in white. It requires ordinary soil and a moderate amount of water and shade.—Philadelphia North American.
Real Democracy
Before Denmark consented to sell the Danish West Indies to the United States a plebiscite was held, and the electorate voted upon the question. The people of the United States, however, were never consulted as to whether they desired to make the purchase. The people of England vote directly on national questions whenever parliament is dissolved, and the government "goes to the country" on nearly every matter of really vital import. Many Americans fondly imagine that the United States is the only real democracy in the world. As a matter of fact, in Switzerland, Australia and New Zealand government is more directly responsible to the people than in the United States; Canada's government is at least equally representative as ours, while England, although nominally a constitutional monarchy, probably is more democratic than the United States.-St. Paul Dispatch.
Art and Nature
Art is the revelation of man, and not merely that, but likewise the revelation of nature speaking through man. Art pre-exists in nature, and nature is reproduced in art. As vapors from the ocean floating landward and dissolved in rain are carried back in rivers to the ocean, so thoughts and the semblances of things that fall upon the soul of man in showers flow out again in living streams of art and lose themselves in the great ocean, which is nature. Art and nature are not, then discordant, but ever harmoniously working in each other--Longfellow's "Hyperion."
What She Wanted
A woman was knocked down by a horse, but happily escaped with a few scratches.
A man rescued her and said, "Can I get you anything?"
She (much out of breath and gasping with excitement)—Oh—oh—can you kindly get me—
He—Some brandy?
She-No-not drink—some safety pins. I feel I'm failing all to pieces-Pittsburgh Chronicle.
Heard at the Club
"That's Fred Darling just come in
You know his wife made him."
"Well, I knew women did fancy work, but I never knew they did anything as fancy as that."—Exchange
On the Lookout
Friend—You are not going to run again? Congressman—No; It's too strenuous. I was sent down to Washington to look out for my constituents, and from the tone of their letters I've got to look out for them when I get home—Pnck.
Second Sight.
"Do you believe in second sight?
No, but my wife does. When I go shopping with her she always says to the assistant, 'I'll come in and look at these again.'"—London Telegraph.
Did Her Best
Teacher—Do you know the population of New York? Mamile Backrow-Not all of them, ma'am; but, then, we've only lived here two years—Puck.
The Champlon Lie.
Probably the unmitigated falsehood most frequently told year in and year out takes this form: We welcome honest criticism.—Ohio State Journal.
To fret and fume is undignified, suicidally foolish and theoretically unpardonable.—Robert Louis Stevenson.
ywiaTORS? SCHOOL
gilionaires Offer to Buy Camp
and Train Novices.
pLAN TO TEACH IN GROUPS
sores of Harvard, Princeton, Colum-
ee and other University Men Fil
Kevlcations With Aero Club of
jmeica Main Recruiting Station
Guard Will Assist Destroyers,
yer York.—A syndicate of New York
pimares, beaded by HL, P. Davison
HIP. Morsn & Co. and Lewis 8.
Soars. its notified the United
gates wavy department that it is ready
fraoqute the site and bear the entire
Foase of camp to de established
GSenhere on Long Island for tratn.
fein grour's of 100 each college men
Feriators 19 aid the navy in coast de.
joe and for any other Draneh of the
Sree desited. Rear Admiral Peary,
jadof the ational aerial coast patrol
Nonission, is acting advisor, and sev.
galcouferences with navy department
Beals have Ween had.
Yr, Davisn and his wife gave the
ow caste support which brought
Fai
i: 4
—_
ae
oS
pS
ae
eS a |
ee
this ty Amanat Prone Aemisation:
duct the organization of the Yale
ial unit last summer, and their two
ss, F, Trubee Davison and H. P.
Iurison, Jr, are ndw expert fliers,
ing with the Yale unit at West
fim Beach, Fla., which camp is
famed by Mr. Davison, Sr. The
na tere are under full military dis-
gine. Henry Woodhouse of the Aero
ub of America recently gave them
u tiplane gun and 2,000 rounds of
auuuition, in the use of which the
ymgiriators will receive instruction
tansral officers.
Te persounel of the Florida camp
besten increased since the arrival of
tte Isle unit. Besides the Davison
ys and Robert A, Lovett, son of
dbise Robert Lovett, president of the
Tim Pacific railroad, the members
gall of wealthy and socially prom-
‘eat families,
Sures of Harvard, Princeton, Colum-
tamd other university men are filing
wplications with the Aero Club of
4zerica, the main recruiting station.
The duties of the aerial coast guard
Mil be to locate and assist destroyers,
‘arlers and submarine chasers, to 1o-
te and assist trawlers in destroying
Umerzed mines, searching the coast
Fsubmarine bases, convey troop and
Exlant ships on coastwise trips, to
kml the coasts, holding up and in-
Yeting doubtful ships and convoying
Sa to csamining stations, attacking
‘tle shijss amd submarines with tor-
Res, bowls and guns; protecting
ps at sea and in port from attacks
submarines and battleships, com-
Bukatins to incoming ships informa-
Sa resirding the location of mines,
Riuariues aud the courses to follow
Sevoid mistakes, confusion and acci-
fa; servinss as ‘the “eyes” of mine
Kates, nivinaizing the time required
f wine pouting, and, defending and
eee baval bases from naval and
attacks
PURPLE CARNATIONS NOW.
trey Professor Produces One and
Values Cuttings at $100 Each.
Teuton, ». Governor Edge re-
S88 from tue State Agricultural col
Peete srs: jnunple carnation ever orig-
Sted. tt wns produced by Professor
Ma Biss iy artificial hybridization,
Sf cuttis: is valued at $100. It was
frock t0 tie executive offices by Dr.
LG Liman, director of the expert
Rat statin,
Puple is the color of the Northwest-
Caiversity of Minois, and that in-
tin asked for a cutting, but the
Petiueut station has decided first to
Samate cough stock to be distrib-
i tree to the florists of New Jersey.
SFINDS BULLET iN PILLOW
{ON HIS RETURN HOME
$a8etttk. N. 3. — When John
¢2etisrdt and his wite returned
$8 thir tome the other night
$8 found a bullet hole through
¢ Stealer of the pillow on which
* Barkhan sleeps. Some one had
f identy tinea through the win-
¢ (or inthe darknem’ and ‘Burke
QBN is thanking Bie lucky stars
¢ Ste was not at home,
Meoe...........
SUGGESTS WAR HONORS” ~~
FOR ARMY OF FARMERS
Recruit All Unfit For War Work For
Service In the Fields.
New York.—Joseph Hartigan, com-
missioner of weights and measures,
has laid before the council of national
defense a plan to remedy the shortage
of agricultural labor by the mobiliza-
tion and training by the government
of an agricultural army.
The scheme provides for enlisting
ablebodied men unfit for the army and
navy on account of minor defects, such
as weak vision, deafness, tooth trouble,
and so on, and also of conscientious
objectors.
“In view of the present food situa-
tion and the need for more food in fu-
ture,” said the commissioner, “the
farmer must have help in increasing
his crops. American agriculture has
‘suffered from the drift of farm labor to
munition factories, and when the na-
tion begins to raise an army there will
be further subtraction from farm 1a-
bor through enlistments, while the con-
sumption of food certainly will not de-
crease.
“Under the circumstances it seems
we ought to honor the man behind the
plow as well as the man behind the
gun. Each is serving the nation. Such
an army might easily number several
hundred thousand. It would be regu-
larly organized and officered, and its
men would wear uniforms, marking
them distinctly as engaged in the serv-
ice of the United States. After brief
training they could be distributed in
regiments or companies where needed,
‘according to crop seasons. These men
would be paid by the government, just
as soldiers are paid, and they might
‘Well receive the advantages after hon-
orable discharge that are given in some
Places by law to ex-soldiers. Farmers
who receive this aid from the govern-
ment could pay the wage rate current
in their neighborhoods.”
ALL PRIVATE WIRELESS
PLANTS DISMANTLED
Report of Sea Raider Off Coast
Moves Government to Speedy
Action.
New York.—Immediately on the dec-
Jaration of war against Germany the
police began executing the order that
all private wireless stations through-
out the city be dismantled. ‘The fed.
eral authorities have instructed them
that every apparatusjof this character
must come down, even those having
Permits from the department of com-
merce. Apparatus not removed by the
owner will be dismantled by a police
wrecking crew.
It is estimated there are 1,500 wire
less receiving stations in Greater New
York, most of which have been encour-
aged by the government because stu-
dent wireless operators must have
plants in which to practice.
One thing that moved the govern-
ment to take prompt steps against the
wireless was the report of a sea raider
off the coast. Particular attention is
being paid to automobiles driving along
the south shore of Long Island, be-
cause there is reason to believe that
‘many times during the war radio con-
nection has been established between
German spies in this city and sea
rovers. Apparatus powerful enough
to throw waves 1,000 miles can be car-
vied in the tonneau of a motorcar.
Secret service agents have picked up
messages supposedly sent in this way.
DISCUSS SHRAPNEL HELMETS
Great Quantities Can Be Turned Out In
‘Single Month if Needed.
Washington.—Oficials of the war de-
partment declared that, while the
army was not yet provided with the
shrapnel helmets found so indispensa-
ble in European military operations of
the last two years, the department had
already approved patterns for their
manufacture and that great quantities
could be turned out within a single
month in the event they were needed.
‘The war department has also accept.
-ed patterns for poison gas helmets and
trench guns, adequate supplies of which
also may be obtained on short notice,
it is said. The army has no plans at
present for the provision of liquid fire,
which the Germans introduced and
which the allies have since found so
useful in trench operations, but it is
stated that this, too, could be secured
in this country in case its use became
imperative. ~
‘The pattern of shrapnel helmet ac-
cepted by the war department is de-
scribed as unusually heavy, weighing
between three and four pounds. It
‘will not be worn except in active field
‘operations. ;
CAT FLOATS ON KEG.
Was Rescued.
Redondo Beach, Cal—Carl Hansen
and George Fitch returned from a fish-
ing trip the other day bringing with
them a large black cat which they
found riding an empty keg five miles
out at sea.
‘The cat was famished and had un-
oubtedly weathered a fierce storm
when the wind blew at a rate of fifty
miles an hour, but bad tenaciously
clung to the keg.
‘Ona brass plate attached to a leather
collar around the animal's neck was
the word “Utanica,” presumably the
name of the boat upon which the cat
‘was a mascot. |
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
———————— ee
Oe
M AKING: ‘ OFFICERS REPAIR” RECRUIT’S TEE
Twenty Thousand Members of De
eset Preparedness League Offer Ser,
M Washington.—Bad teeth need
lore 000 no one from offering his servi
a 20,000 Are Required the United States either as sold
For United States Army. sailor. The Preparedness Leag
—_— American Dentists, with a memb
of 20,000 throughout the United §
HOW TO OBTAIN COMMISSION] has organized and is ready to
aes defective teeth for any prospecti
cruit without charge, so that not |
Candidates Will Bo Grouped by Cities,| need be lost to the country on tl
and Examining Officers Will Be Sent | count.
to Conduct Examinations at Central ee New York unit - the leag
Points—First and Most Important| Offered its services to General Le
Requisite Is Military Training. Wood, who has accepted the offer
Washington.—The new army will re
quire more than 20,000 officers of the
line, including those of the regula
army and the reserve. In the next few
months, therefore, opportunities will
be open for thousands of capable young
men to enter the military service, The
method of obtaining a commission is
not what it has heretofore been it
times of emergency.
‘The applicant may send his applica
tion to the secretary of war or he may,
if he has acquaintance with his con
-gressman or senator, send it through
either of these. His application once
on-file in the war department, he will
be duly notified as to every step nec-
essary for him to take to qualify for
a commission. Naturally at this time,
when the increment necessary must be
crowded into a short period of time,
many requirements will be less rigor-
ously enforced than in ordinary times.
Candidates will be grouped by cities,
and examining officers will be sent to
conduct examinations at central points.
Examining officers will conduct ex-
aminations in a selective manner,
maintaining a ratio of one major to
five captains, five first lieutenants and
five or more second lieutenants. ‘The
first and most important requisite is
military training, but military train-
ing alone will not admit a man to the
officers’ reserve corps. He will be ex-
amined as to character and sobriety,
Personality, address and force, reputa-
tion and standing in his community,
power to command respect of officers
and men, and adequate education. Mil-
itary efficiency, however, will deter-
mine the grade to which he will be ap-
pointed.
In case of men who have had little
or no military training candidates will
be recommehded for appointment as
second lieutenants subject to the thir-
ty-second year age limit, provided they
are college graduates, or seniors in col-
lege, or clearly well educated men, or
have demonstrated ability in business,
athletics or other activity and possess
in a marked degree the ability to han-
le men. The war department expects
that it will be possible under this
standard to obtain from forty to fifty
good reserve officers of the line from
each congressional district.
Instructions to examining officers are
to hold the general examination as to
character and capability up to a high
standard.
Orders have gone out from the war
department to speed up examinations
and recommendations because it is rec-
ognized that it will require time to
make an army of even 500,000 men ef-
fective for service under the conditions
of fighting employed in the present
es
POWER BOAT TUITION.
Squadron Association Places Units at
Governssntte Glen,
Se ae ere ee eee
New York.—The United States Power
Squadron association took action to
place its resources, comprising twenty
squadron units in the principal Atlan.
tie and great lakes ports of the coun.
try, at the disposal of the government
Owing to the fact that of the thou
sands of motorboats owned in the
United States comparatively few are
of sufficient size and power to be used
in operations against submarines, the
association decided to place the hun-
dreds of vessels represented in its
fieets at the command of the navy de-
partment to be used as training ves-
sels for personnel while the larger
craft are being built.
‘Tlie proposition to utilize the motor.
boat fleets for training purposes was
transmitted to Assistant Secretary of
the Navy Roosevelt by Theodore I. Coe,
head of the Power Squadron associa-
tion,
‘The men who have been put in charge
in the various districts are C. N. Bur-
nall for Boston, H. M, Williams for
New York, Dr. E, P. Sweet for Provi-
dence, J. K. Murphy for New Haven,
L. P, Clepbane for Washington, H. H.
Hungerford for Chicago and Maurice
G. Belknap for Philadelphia.
CITIZEN SECRET SERVICE.
Organization For Seven States An-
nounced at San Francisco.
San Francisco—The intelligence of-
fice of the western department, United
States army, announced the organiza-
tion of a secret interstate citizens’ in-
telligence organization to be known as
the Nathan Hale volunteers. Any man
or Woman who is a citizen of the Unit-
ed States may hold membership. The
states of California, Oregon, Washing-
ton, Idaho, Nevada, Utah and Montana
will be covered by the organization.
The object will be to ald the govern-
ment in connection with anti-spy, pro-
German and anti-American activities.
Brigadier General B, G. Hunt of the
California national guard is chief of
the advisory board of the organization,
which is divided into ten divisions in
the western department.
‘The identity of the members will be
kept secret, and the men and women
selected to act under orders will be
furnished with identification creden-
tals, Lose =
REPAIR’ RECRUIT’S TEETH.
Twenty Thousand Members of Dentists
Preparedness League Offer Services.
‘Washington.—Bad teeth need deter
nO one from offering his services to
the United States either as‘ soldier or
sailor. The Preparedness League of
American Dentists, with a membership
of 20,000 throughout the United States,
has organized and is ready to repair
defective teeth for any prospective re-
eruit without charge, so that not a man
need be lost to the country on this ac-
count.
The New York unit of the league has
offered its services to General Leonard
Wood, who has accepted the offer. The
faculty of the New York College of
Dentistry and the New York College of
Dental and Oral Surgery, the clinics of
Bellevue and allied hospitals, Ortho-
Pedic hospital and the health depart-
ment dental clinics have been placed
at the disposal of the league.
‘The equipment comprises nearly 300
chairs, and a body of representative
men have volunteered to keep this
equipment in operation. It is expected
that dental supply concerns will aid
the patriotic work with free contribu-
tions of materials. Virtually every
dental college in the country will co-
operate in the movement.
CRIPPLED HERO ON RECORD.
Arm Gone, He Has Woman Sign Dec-
laration Backing Training Plan.
New York.—More than fifty years ago
William Neary gave the best years of
his life to his country. Recently he
paused on Broadway to listen to a
young woman who was urging the
crowd about her to sign a declaration
in support of universal military serv-
ice. William Neary pushed through
the crowd,
“Td like to sign that paper, young
woman,” he said, “but, you see, I
can't.” He pointed to the sleeve that
dangled where his right arm used to
‘bulge and drew a postal card from his
‘pocket,
“There's my name,” he said. “It's a
-eall to the meeting of my Grand Army
post. You see they call me ‘comrade.’”
Comrade Neary watched carefully
while the young woman transcribed
his name and address. His left hand
rose to his hat brim in salute.
“Young woman,” he said, “there
should be more like you. ‘The country
needs them.”
HAWK BREAKS WINDOW GLASS
Famishing Bird Attempts to Feast on
Passat,
Green Bay, Wis.—Polly, a parrot, the
companion of Mrs, William Anderson,
was preening herself in the sunshine
at the window of the front room when
a hawk, swooping down, crashed
through the window glass.
Before the bleeding bird of prey could
reach the parrot with its talons Polly
soared out through the same hole and
perched in an apple tree. Polly set up
a frightened chatter that brought her
mistress, who couldn't imagine how
she got out of the room. Mrs. Ander-
son hurried out and to the window,
where she saw the havoc and the great
hawk flopping about the floor, sprink-
ling blood all over her erstwhile im-
maculate parlor.
- When Mrs. Anderson and a neighbor
had pinned it down and chopped off its
head they found it three feet five
inches from tip to tip. ‘The bird was
thin and seemed nearly starved, prob-
ably, they thought, because of the deep
snow.
WARNS OF FOOD SHORTAGE.
Armour Favors Government Control of
‘cision sek Metes:
Chicazo.—“If immediate and radical
steps are not taken to increase and
conserve the food supply in the United
States,” said J, Ogden Armour, “this
country will find itself next fall and
winter in as bad a state so far as food
is concerned as any of the warring na-
tions of Europe.
“Our first duty, as I see it, is to make
certain that both our own people and
our allies have an abundant food sup-
pls. I favor government supervision
and control of food production and food
prices,
“Let the government, for instance,
fix the wholesale price of all meat
products. Let the government guaran-
tee to the farmer a minimum price of
$1.50 a bushel for all the wheat he can
raise.”
HIS LAST JUDGE A TRAIN.
Man Acquitted of Railway Murder Is
Killed on Same Road.
High Bridge, N. J.—Over a year ago
John Wesley Beam was acquitted of a
charge of murdering William Beam
(not a relative of John's) by pushing
him under a railroad train on New
Year's eve, 1915. ‘The case was tried
before Justice Parker of the supreme
court and Judge Salmon of the Morris
‘county court.
Recently John was killed by a train
on the same railroad. He had fallen
asleep on the High Bridge branch of
the Central Railroad of New Jersey.
His body was taken to his parents’
home at Bunnville.
WILL NOT MINGLE RACES.
War Department to Train Whites and
Blacks Separately.
Washington.—It was learned author-
itatively at the war department that
negro and white troops will not be
camped and trained together and that
the department does not contemplate
any action which would smack of of-
fending the south,
The problem has been solved in the
past, and a solution will be found dur-
ing the present war, it was said.
Golfers Will Raise Food Products
For Country.
F. U. ADAMS ORIGINATES PLAN
Idea of Well Known Author Has Been
Enthusiastically Received — Adopt
Motto “We Are Not Too Proud to
Hoe”—Expect to Realize Several Mil-
lion Dollars.
New York.—The golf players of the
‘United States will turn farmers and
raise on their links huge crops of pota-
toes and other food products for the
use of the United States and its allies. .
Such is the movement set on foot by
the Dunwoodie Country club at a spe-
cial meeting beld in its Youkers club-
house. The plan originated with Fred-
erick Upham Adams, author and
golfer.
‘The plan of operation is simple and
is declared to be practical. Dunwoodie,
zs 5
wen
SS a ee
| im common with all golf courses, has
several acres of tillable soil not used
for golfing purposes. ‘The club has set
this aside for cultivation. More than
a hundred of the members have al-
ready volunteered to do the work of
cultivation, and it is predicted that
this volunteer farming corps will soon
number fully 250 golfers who will try
to prove themselves as efficient with a
hoe as with a niblick. ‘These volun-
teers sign the following pledge:
“The Dunwoodie Country club has
‘the honor of taking the initiative in a
national campaign on the part of golf
clubs to aid in winning the war now
declared. We propose to set aside for
cultivation all of our land not abso-
elutely needed for golf purposes. We
propose that our members shall culti-
vate this land; that the club shall pur-
chase its product at a fair market
value and that members shall do the
same, and that the total cash proceeds
shall be devoted to the purchase of am-
bulance trucks and other necessaries
required in the successful prosecution
of war.
“The undersigned members of the
Dunwoodie Country club now volun-
teer their services in the Dunwoodie
volunteer garden corps and pledge
themselves to work in these gardens
for an average of two hours a week
for the twenty weeks which constitute
the season. We also agree to pay $1 as
initiation fee and further pledge our-
selves to obey the rules which will be
adopted to govern the execution of this
Patriotic duty.”
‘Two hours a week for twenty weeks
makes forty hours’ work for each mem-
ber, which means that a volunteer
corps of 250 members would perform
10,000 hours of farming labor. This
now has a market value of not less
than 30 cents an hour, an item of
$3,000, and the Dunwoodie farming ex-
perts predict that the muscle of their
golfers will create a product which
will sell for not less than $4,000, of
which the club will be chief patron.
‘Mr. Adams, President Austin L, Bab-
cock of the Dunwoodie Country club
and other originators of this movement
point to the fact that there are fully a
thousand golf clubs in the United
States and predict that several mil-
Hons of dollars will accrue for war
purposes from this campaign,
“The Dunwoodie plan” has the hearty
support of Howard F. Whitney, secre-
tary of the United States Golf easoeia-
‘The Dunwoodie Country club will at
once prepare a pamphlet containing
the details of “the Dunwoodie plan”
and will mail it to all of the golf clubs |
in the United States.
The motto adopted is “We are not
too proud to hoe,” and the popular an-
them for golfers this year will be.
“Way down yonder in the cornfield.” __
GYPSIES RIDE IN AUTOS.
Caravan de Luxe Attracts Much Atten
tien at Briarcliff Manor.
enn =n srantoneeSinemasenrayed
Briarcliff Manor, N. ¥.—A band of
about twenty gypsies, traveling de luxe
from Boston to San Francisco, camped
here. Three new high powered auto-
mobiles are used to carry the gypsies,
and three smaller cars carry their
goods. The men are plentifully sup-
plied with money.
‘The caravan attracted much atten-
tion as they passed through the village
and pitched thelr camp in a small
slump of woods at the foot of the hills.
PAGE THEE
WILSON AT SIXTY YEARS ~
LOOKS TO BE ONLY FORTY
President In Fine Trim to Handle Tre-
mendous War Problems.
Washington.—Facing the worries and
tremendous responsibilities of a war
the end of which cannot be foreseen,
President Wilson at the age of sixty
years is in perfect physical trim. He
looks and acts about forty.
‘Many thiigs contribute to the pres-
ident’s fine physical condition. He is
a stanch believer in outdoor exercises
—plenty of air. He takes both regu-
larly and in time of stress defies the
weather to keep him from the golf
links or a long walk with Mrs. Wilson.
“Relieve the mind by exposing it to
the sunshine,” appears to be the pres-
ident’s creed.
Whenever there has been a crisis it
fs the president's custom to attend
theater, and he plays golf usually after
his decision has been made.
Dr. Cary T. Grayson, the president's
private physician, has played a prom-
inent part in keeping him strong and
well. Whenever a danger signal is
flashed along the president's system
Grayson “catches” it. On those occa-
sions the president is sent to bed to
rest.
‘The president and Grayson may al-
ways be seen together when an inter-
national snarl is being dealt with.
They may either play golf together
or ride about the Washington drives
swapping stories.
By holding to simple rules of living
the president finds himself—a war
president—physically and mentally fit
to cope with the big prot’ -s ahead.
ARMY AND NAVY TAKE
___ FINGER PRINTS OF MEN
Hope by This Means to Identify
Recruits In Case of Death
or Illness,
Washington.—Because of the war
situation and the general unrest the
police are anxious to keep a watch on
criminals and take into custody such
as are at large. Crooks have often
been able to slip through the hands of
‘small town police forees which lacked
a finger print system.
‘The army and navy are now taking
finger prints of all men who enlist so
that in case of death or illness the vie-
tim may be identified. ‘The police de-
partment at one time aided the gov-
ernment in this work, but today the
army and navy have their own print
system.
“Any one,” Inspector Faurot of New
York said, “after a little instruction
and practice can take a person's finger
impressions successfully. To learn how
to classify them, however, is a differ-
ent matter. It requires a knowledze
of finger prints. Our department has
reached such efficiency that in four
‘minutes we can take a prisoner's im-
pressions, make a research for his for-
mer impressions and place his type-
written record before you.”
Inspector Faurot told of a prisoner
who was brought to headquarters.
When his assistants looked up the pris-
oner's record they discovered his prints
had been sent from Belgium, where
‘he was wanted in an $80,000 embezzle-
ment. Finger impressions of a man
arrested in Sydney, Australia, for the
shooting of a policeman there were
sent here. His impressions revealed
that he was wanted for murder in Bos.
ton.
Many employers of labor today have
finger prints taken of thelr employees
for identification. Laborers who work
in ditch gangs wander from one place
to another so that their identities tre-
quently become lost.
PANAMA TO DEFEND CANAL.
German Residents Will Be Interned if
Involved In Plots.
Panama—The president of the re-
public of Panama, Dr. Ramon Valdez,
signed a proclamation committing Pan-
ama unreservedly to the assistance of
the United States in defense of the ca-
nal,
‘The president also canceled the ex-
equaturs of all the German consuls in
Panama,
‘The proclamation declares: “Our in-
disputable duty in this tremendous
hour of history is of a common ally,
whose interests and existence as well
are linked indissolubly with the United
States,
“I therefore declare that the Pana-
man nation will lend emphatic co-oper-
ation to the United States against ene-
mies who execute or attempt to exe-
cute hostile acts against the territory
of the canal or in any manner affect or
tend to affect the common interests.”
It 1s announced that Germans resi-
dent in Panama will be interned it
they give any evidence of being in-
volved in plots,
» AN AUTOGRAPHED EGG
> GETS HOME TO ROOST
> ——
» Pittsburgh.—His name and the
> date, “July 15, 1916,” written on
® anegg, shocked Lawrence Kendall
> of Mansfield, O., when he emptied
> a case of “strictly fresh” at a
p hotel here. He remembered mark-
> ing the hen fruit while a packer
> last summer, but the shock oc-
> curred when the eggs, which left
> him at 21 cents, came back at
> 55 cents a dozen.
4
PAGE FOUR,
——————————
COMMITTEE OF AWARD, NA-
TIONAL NEGRO HEALTH WEEE,
SELECTED.
Tuskegee Institute, Ala, April 19
(Special) —The announcement of the
contest for the best clean-up work dur-
ing the National Negro Health Week
which.is to be observed April 22-28, has
elicited most favorable comments from
White and Colored people in all see-
tions of the south. Letters from vari-
ous committees organized to conduct
clean-up campaigns indicate that the
interest in this movement for better
health is unsurpassed by that of any
other similar movement condueted
among our people.
President J. C. Napier of the Na-
tional Negro Business League, spent
several days recently at Tuskegee In-
stitute in conference with Dr. Robert
R. Moton, principal, and Emmett J.
Scott, secretary, and it has been agreed
that the communities planning to repfrt
their clean-up activities for considera-
tion in connection with the silver cups
offered by the National Clean-up and
Paint-up Bureau, must make their re-
ports and mail them not later than
Saturday, May 12th. This will allow
two full weeks after the close of the
health week for the reports to be com-
piled and forwarded to Tuskegee Insti-
tute.
It is worth while to bear in mind
three ‘important conditions regarding
the contest. First, the reports should
not exeeed 700 words. Second, the re-
ports should all be typewritten. Third,
the reports should be mailed to the see-
retary, National Negro Business
League, Tuskegee Institute, Alabama.
‘The committee of award as selected are
announced as follows:
Suggested Committee to Award Cups in
Connection with Negro Health Week.
Dr. Robert E. Jones, editor South-
western Christian Advocate, New Or-
leans, Louisiana.
Dr. A. M. Curtis, physician and sur-
geon, former surgeon-in-chief Freed-
men’s Hospital, Washington, D. C.
Hon. J. C. Napier, president National
Negro Business League, Nashville, Ten-
nessee.
Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal Tus-
kegee Normal and Industrial Institute,
Tuskegee, Alabama.
Mr. Herman E. Perry, president
Standard Life Insurance Company, At-
lanta, Georgia.
Mr. C. C. Spaulding, North Carolina
‘Mutual and Provident Association, Dur-
ham, North Carolina.
‘Mr. M. N, Work, editor Negro Year
Book, Tuskegee Institute, Alabama.
Dr. D. W. Byrd, president National
Medical Association, Norfolk, Virginia.
‘Mrs. Mary B. Talbert, president Na-
tional Federation of Colored Women’s
Clubs, Buffalo, New York.
Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, principal
National Training School for Women
and Girls, Washington, D. C.
Mr. Eugene Kinckle Jones, executive
secretary National League on Urban
Conditions Among Negroes, New York
City.
Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams, physi-
cian and surgeon, health editor Chicago
Defender, Chieago, Illinois.
According to present plan, the above
committee will meet, eanvass the vari-
ous reports, and make presentation of
awards at the forthcoming meeting of
the National Negro Business Leagues,
to be held in Chattanooga, Tennessee,
August 15, 16 and 17, 1917.
PLAY BALL.
Season 1917 Opens at Schorling’s Park
—Alderman Louis B. Anderson
Pitches First Ball—Banquet to Play-
ers Saturday Night.
‘The American Giants, Chieago’s and
the country’s greatest aggregation of
baseball artists, will unfurl their 1916
championship banner to the breeze Sun-
day, April 22, 1917, at Schorling’s
Park, 39th street and Wentworth ave-
nue, where they commence their 1917
season with Jake Stalls, a cracker-jack
local White team, as opponents.
“«Rube’? Foster, the race’s best prod-
uct in baseball, has strengthened his
line-up and will present some new
faces. The day promises to be a gala
one, and standing room only is likely to
be the order. The Hon. Louis B. An-
Gerson, alderman-elect of the second
ward, will grace the piteher’s box and
throw the first ball across the plate,
opening the game. It. is not known
who will catch the alderman’s first
throw. The Hon. Beauregard F. Mose-
Jey would be a good man if it were not
for his height. The owner of the park
has made several improvements looking
towards the comfort of the patrons.
Saturday, at the Elite No. 2, Mr.
Henry Jones and Beauregard F. Mose-
ley will give to the players an im-
promptu banquet. All fans are ex-
pected to attend. The program will
consist of short talks by Alderman
Louis B, Anderson, Editor R. 8. Abbott
of the Defender, Mr. 8. B. Turner of
the Iinois Ides, Julius F, Taylor of
‘The Broad Ax, Mr. J. F. Sehorling and
other noted fans. The public is cor-
dially invited.
Miss E. G. Osby of Springfield, I.
has for the past two weeks been visit.
ing her sister and friends in this city.
HANNIBAL LODGE No. 6, KNIGHTS
| OF PYTHIAS CELEBRATED THE
TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY
| OB SILVER JUBILEE.
Grand Chancellor, Dr. Allen A. Wesley,
Presented with an Elegant K. of P.
Charm.
Tuesday evening, Hannibal Lodge,
No. 6, K. of P, celebrated its twenty-
fifth anniversary or silver, jubilee at
Masonic Hall, 3956 S. State street, com-
plimentary to its charter members and
the following honored guests of the
evening:
Charter members — Christopher L.
Makle, George R. Garner, Frank B.
Cranshaw, Henry C. Coombs, Charles
E, Jackson, James Walker.
Hannibal Lodge members—Officers
at the Grand Lodge—Grand Chaneel-
lor, Dr. Allen A. Wesley; G. K. of R.
& 8, Frank B, Waring; Grand Attor-
ney, Robert A. J. Shaw; Member Bene-
ficiary Board, Albert B. George.
At the conclusion of the following
program:
Music, Stewart’s Orchestra; Intro-
duction of Master of Ceremonies, C. C.,
Albert Clay; Remarks—Master of
Ceremonies, Bro. Bindley C. Cyrus;
Solo, Charles Settles; History of Han-
nibal Lodge, Bro. Albert B. George;
Music, Orchestra; The Progress of our
Order in Ilinois, G. C. Dr. Allen A.
Wesley; Sentiment—Our Order as a
Good Thing, Bro. John R. Auter, See’y
Beneficiary Board.
Large portraits of Frank B, Waring
and Albert B. George were presented
to the lodge and each one of the cliar-
ter members reeived valuable tokens
for the high esteem which they are
held in by its more than four hundred
members, for Hannibal Lodge is one of
the largest in the United States.
Dr. Allen A. Wesley, Grand Chan-
cellor for the Knights of Pythias for
Ilinois, who is also a member of Han-
nibal Lodge, was presented on that
same delightful occasion with an ele-
gant K. of P. charm and each lady
present, and they numbered more than
two hundred, consisting of the wives,
daughters and sweethearts and other
relatives of the members of the lodge,
all received souvenirs of dainty pieces
of jewelry and other trinkets, which
caused their faces to be wreathed in
smiles and feel real happy.
While the sumptuous banquet was
being served in the baleony of the hall,
and there was plenty to eat for evety
person present, the orchestra dis-
coursed dancing music and many en-
joyed that part of the evening enter-
tainment until it became their turn to
be served at the banquet tables.
The head officials of Hannibal Lodge
spared’ no money or expense in enter-
taining its members and friends in roy-
al style on its twenty-fifth anniversary
or silver jubilee.
The officers of Hannibal Lodge are:
as follows:
Chancellor Commander, Albert Clay;
Viee-Chan. Commander, Clarence H.
Matthews; Master of Work, Charles
Turner; Prelate, John W. Roberts; K.
of R. and S., Frank B. Waring; M. of
F., Albert B. George; M. of Ex,
Christopher L. Makle; M. at A.,
William MeCuteheon; I. G, William
Williams, O. G., Walter Robinson;
Trustees, Brooks Harris, Louis 0.
Baler, William C. Ricketts; Anniver-
sary Committee, Frank B. Waring,
George R. Garner, George G. Smith,
Christopher L. Makle, Earl F. Will-
iams.
THE COLORED PEOPLE ARE BE-
COMING GREATLY INTERESTED
IN THE COMMUNITY GARDENS
IN ALL PARTS OF THE CITY.
Frederick Douglass Community Gar.
den has been organized to plant and
cultivate in vegetables and cereals the
plat of ground at 33rd street and Wa-
bash avenue upon 2 co-operative basis.
‘The food shortage of the world makes
this one of the most beneficial efforts
that have been put forward by any one
among our people during the year.
Famine, with all the misery and dis.
comfort man can possibly stand as an
accompaniment, will pay our country a
visit this year if we are not prepared
to stay its onward march by a greater
production of eatables; hence the ery
has gone up all over the country to pre-
pare by gardening and producing on
every spot available something to eat.
Golf links are being torn up and sowed
in turnips, cabbages, lettuce and rad.
ishes. Tennis grounds are being planted
in potatoes. Flower gardens in corn
and hunting preserves in wheat.
‘Too much praise cannot be given Mr.
B. F. Moseley who has interested our
people in the establishment of the
Frederick Douglass Community Gar-
den at 33rd street and Wabash avenue.
‘The ground has already been plowed
and is now ready for planting. All
those who are interested in becoming 8
member of the garden committee should
address Miss Lena LeGrand Perry, 3748
Wabash avénue, and full information
will be given.—'C.?
| Frank L. Hamilton has been re
moved from St. Lake's Hospital tc
Provident Hospital, where he will be
glad to see his friends. He is still ex.
tremely ill
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
a 2 , aoe on
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ie eS
Be,
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nu Sp aden
THE LATE MISS BETTIOLA HELOISE FORTSON
aS eS 2 Sa ne ee
THE PASSING AWAY OF MISS|ored people residing in this city, 1
BETTIOLA HELOISE FORTSON—|Fortson has the honor of being on!
FUNERAL SERVICES WERE|the first Colored persons in this see
HELD OVER HER REMAINS)of the country to write and publis
TUESDAY MORNING FROM OLI-| book.
VET BAPTIST CHURCH—INTEE-| Miss Mamie Bady sang a solo, ‘
MENT AT MT. FOREST CEME-|is my friend;’’ Miss Pauline Lee :
TERY. “<He is the one;’? Madam Peyton +
Last Friday evening at 4:15 0’elock
‘Miss Bettiola Heloise Fortson very
quietly closed her eyes in death at het
home 3413 Prairie avenue after a long
spell of illness.
‘Miss Fortson was in her 27th yea
and died long before her time. Fu
neral services were held over her re
mains Tuesday morning at Olivet Bap
tist church, Rev. George Duncan, as
sistant pastor of Olivet, officiating
Charles 8. Jackson, funeral direetor, ir
charge. Interment at Mt. Forest eeme
tery.
The floral tributes from her many
friends and the various literary club:
or societies of which she was a prom
inent member, were indeed elaborate and
very beautiful. Her remains were en
cased in a beautiful pink plush casket
Resolutions were read from the Stand:
ard Literary Society of Olivet Baptist
ehureh, the University Society of which
she was one of the founders and served
as one of its presidents; the Pastors’
Aid of Olivet Baptist church, of which
she was a member; the City Federation
of Colored Women’s Clubs, of which
she was the organizer for more than
two years; the Alpha Suffrage Club, all
lamenting her untimely death. The last
named club was also ably represented
in person by Mrs. Ida B, Wells-Barnett,
who delivered short and timely remarks
in connection with the death of Miss
Fortson and her untiring efforts to en:
lighten the Colored people along liter-
ary lines.
It can well be stated right here that
notwithstanding the fact that there are
many wealthy and highly educated Col-
W. T. GAINES ROUGHLY AND BRU-
TALLY TREATED BY A BIG,
BURLY WHITE POLICEMAN,
On Tuesday last a police officer called
at the home of W. T. Gaines, the wel
known contractor and citizen, with a
summons to appear in court the follow:
ing morning, charged with keeping 4
vicious dog. Mr. Gaines has had this
dog for some years, keeping him locked
in his back yard to guard his barn
where he keeps all of his tools, ete.
Many attempts have been made to rok
this barn by breaking in from the rear.
The last attempt of this kind was made
about two weeks ago.
It is believed the party breaking in
was bitten by the dog, and in order
that the dog might be done away with,
proceeded to have the dog catchers call
for the dog on Tuesday afternoon.
The daughter of Mr. Gaines refused to
let the dog-eatchers have the dog,
whereupon complaint was made at the
police station (Stock Yards Station).
‘That night a rough, uncouth policeman
using profane language showed W. T.
Gaines the summons to appear in court,
and roughly demanded that he go over
to the station with him that night.
Mr. Gaines asked that he be permitted
to change his house shoes and put on
his overcoat. The policeman roughly
snatched him by the arm and demanded
that lig go at once, refusing to permit
him to lock up his house. H. B. Gaines,
one of the sons of W. T. Gaines, hap-
pened to be calling on his father at the
time and remonstrated with the officer
about his rough treatment of his father,
stating that he was no criminal, and
was a peaceful citizen, willing to ac-
‘company the officer without resistance.
Paying no attention to the younger
Gaines, this officer pulled W. T. Gaines
down the stairs into the street, down to
the corner, where he proceeded to ring
ored people residing in this city, Miss
Fortson has the honor of being one of
the first Colored persons in this section
of the country to write and publish a
book.
‘Miss Mamie Bady sang a solo, ‘He
is my friend;’? Miss Pauline Lee solo,
“He is the one;’? Madam Peyton solo,
‘His eyes are on the sparrow;’? Miss
Mattie Fisher read one of the poems
of Miss Fortson, ‘‘How Beautiful is
the House of God.’? She leaves her
mother, Mrs. William M. Stegall; two
brothers, James and R. V. Fortson; her
cousin, Madam Rosilee Tyler, other rel-
atives and hosts of friends to mourn
their loss.
On Saturday, April 7th, an article ap-
peared in these columns in relation to
her illness and our visit at her home,
and on that same Saturday evening,
April 7th, we again called on her and
presented her with a copy of the paper
containing the article and in a voice
searcely above a whisper she requested
us to draw a chair close up by the side
of her bed and read what we had said
for her, and after finishing it for her,
although she was suffering great pain
at the time and had been for many
months, she bestowed a very pleasant
smile on us, at the same time extending
her hand, she thanked us for the kindly
words which we had written in her be-
half.
‘The last words spoken to us by Miss
Fortson were that ‘“‘she had always
regarded us as one of her best and
truest friends; that she never would
permit any one to say anything against
us in her presence without defending
or standing up for us; that when she
was struggling so hard to raise the
money in order to get her little book
published that there were only two men
in Chicago who willingly extended a
helping hand to her and they were Rev.
John W. Robinson, pastor of St. Mark
church, and Julius F. Taylor.’?
| May she find favor in the sight of
God throughout eternity.
up a patrol wagon. H. B. Gaines told
his father that it was a shame for the
policeman to treat him in such a man-
ner, and without warning the police-
man dealt a terrifie blow to H. B.
Gaines, knocking him bleeding to the
sidewalk. He then placed the younger
man under arrest also, and took them
in a patrol to the Stock Yards Station,
where after long delay they were per-
mitted to sign each other’s bonds.
The ease will be heard May 3rd, in
room 1103 City Hall.
SEEMINGLY MADAM ANITI PAT.
TI BROWN IS FAST BECOMING
VERY UNPOPULAR THROUGH-
OUT THE SOUTHLAND.
Madim Brown’s engagement here
Monday was a brilliant success, artis
tically, but it was not what it was con.
templated financially. The gross re
ceipts aggregated $128.60, and the ex.
penses $97.15, waiving an advertising
claim of $15, payable to The Texas
Freeman, which was passed up and not
collected. That left a net balance of
$31.45 to be pro-rated fifty-fifty.
Her gross receipts at Galveston
amounted to $15 only.
Manager De Walt’s charges of $70
a day, paid in advance by Editor Love,
both on Mareh 2 and April 9, is a
rental charge that nobody else will
pay, and unless it is changed and re.
duced radically the fate of Lincoln
Theater is doomed.
Why Manager De Walt compelled
Editor Love. to pay $70 a day in ad.
vance, while churches, schools and
other parties get it for $10 a day, or
night, as the case may be, his pay
coming out of the receipts collected at
the ticket window, is something he has
yet to explain.
Madam Aniti Patti Brown and her
pianist, Miss Blanche C. Reed, passed
through the city Wednesday en rotte
to Prairie View from Galveston. They
were aceompanied to Houston by Rev.
A. Barbour, at whose ehureh they ap-
peared Tuesday night in the Island
City. From Prairie View they went to
Hempstead, and from Hempstead to
Brenham, and from Brenham to Aus-
tin—The Freeman, Houston, Texas,
April 14, 1917.
‘Tho above seems to indicate that
the people throughout the southland
are coldly turning their backs on
Madam Brown; that they are fast be-
coming very tired of her style of sing-
ing.—Editor.
ERNEST H. WILLIAMSON, THE
POPULAR FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
THANKS AND SOUNDS THE
PRAISES OF THE BROAD AX.
The following letter speaks for it:
self:
Chieago, IIL, April 16, 1917.
Julius F. Taylor,
Editor of The Broad Ax, City.
My Dear Sir:—I notice the compli-
mentary item in your valuable paper,
April 14, 1917, in reference to myself,
and desire to thank you for the same.
I certainly appreciate anything pub-
lished in The Broad Ax, because it cir-
culates among the people and is read
with much interest by all. Permit me
to say that at any time some of your
out of town friends call on you, and
you would like to show them the city,
and would like to use an automobile, do
not hesitate to call on me for a car,
and I will gladly furnish the same
without expense to you. Wishing you
unmeasured suecess in the publishing of
your paper, and that success may crown
your efforts in all of your business ef-
forts, I am yours very respectfully,
Ernest H. Williamson.
THE NEGRO FELLOWSHIP
LEAGUE.
“‘Real Estate Segregation’’ will be
the subject of discussion by the Negro
Fellowship League, 3005 State street,
‘Sunday, April 22, 4 p. m.
L. M. Smith and Louis T. Orr will
discuss the matter from the viewpoint
of the real estate board. Mr. G. W.
Faulkner, A. L, Williams and Eugene
‘Manns will discuss the matter from the
standpoint of the Colored real estate
dealers. You are invited.
Last Sunday the same subject was
discussed by Messrs. George H. Jack-
son, G. W. Faulkner, J. D. Green, H. T.
Wells and M. H. Watkins. It was a
most interesting necting and one of
the real estate men stated afterwards
that he felt that the real estate agents
would become organized as the result
of our meeting.
Ida B. W. Barnett, President.
CLUB NOTES.
Exchange Club.
Several energetic matrons have or-
ganized what is to be known as the
“<Exehange Club.’’ The unique object
of this club is to help each other by
exchanging and imparting to each
other useful training, such as sewing,
gardening, crocheting, ete. Mrs. Ma-
mie E. Clark has been elected presi-
dent. The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Clark, 5827 Went-
worth avenue, Thursday afternoon,
April 26th.
University Society.
‘The University Society is conducting
very interesting progzams every sec-
ond and fourth Sunday, ineluding lee-
tures from Dr. and Mrs, Edwin B,
Beckwith. Visitors are always weleome
to the club rooms, 5300 Wabash avenue.
H. B. Gaines, president. ¢
CARD OF THANKS.
The undersigned desire to express
their heartfelt thanks to all those who
in any way administered to the com-
fort of the late Miss Bettiola Heloise
Fortson during her long illness and
who comforted and aided the family
after her death. ‘They also wish to ex-
tend their thanks for the many rare
and beautiful floral tributes and to
those who assisted to conduet the fu-
neral services at Olivet Baptist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Stegall,
James and R. V. Fortson and Mrs.
Roealee Tyler, Chicago, April 19,
1917.
WOULD PREVENT SEGREGATION.
Harrisburg, Pa., April 19.—Represen-
tative Glass, of Philadelphia, has intro-
duced a bill in the state legislature pre-
venting places of public resort or
amusement from discriminating against
Persons on account of race or religion.
A penalty of from $100 to $500 is pro.
vided for violations to go to the ag-
grieved persons and a similar one to
the counties where the violations oceur.
The bill, if enacted, will strengthen the
civil rights law of 1887,
MATRON WANTED
A first class matron ean secure a
good position by calling on Mrs Eliza
beth MeDonald, superintendent of the
Louise Training School for Colored
Boys at 6130 S. Ada street. Phone,
Normal 3081.
LE
ORGANIZE TO Ficur p,, ~
SEGREGATIOy OND
Richmond, Va. (Special) ny,
groes of Richmond have oy, Ne
fight segregation, and th. Cre
provement League has ro, In.
strong protest against Kickmougee
regation ordinance. Sep
ATTORNEY BARCLAY 19
THE BETHEL TaTena
OrETY. : %
Attorney Martin 1. i. Bareigy
address the Bethel Literary ie
Sunday, the 22nd, at 4 p.m. Sabjee
“Reciprocity in Service.” la
Trice, president. 7¥
|
Miss Pearl Warner, 5225 s,
street, has been confined to Bae pa
the past two weeks with a severe ai
which she contracted by wearing jg
spring clothing.
Mr. James Campbell of Sonora, Yq
ico, gave an interesting talk on Thy,
day evening at 3226 Prairie avenue,»
ene “‘Economie and Industrial Opper
tunity Which that Country Often 4
the Present Time.’”
| Many thoughtful people are of ty
opinion that the anti-Negro sq
would weleome any belief in repr
‘of Negro disloyalty would be a
euse for White men there treating th
race with such acts of repression aj
violence as it did years ago, and is
ing, in some sections, now.
“President Wilson said German pp
ple were not consulted before extetg
the war. Were we?” is the way,
Philadelphia organization put it
writing to Senator La Follette in om
mendation of his stand in opposing ty
resolution making war upon Geram,
‘The Senator produced 15,000 leten
‘and telegrams endorsing his postin,
e yet the daily press of the comity
put it that ‘‘he represented no one int
himself.’
Henry James’ Adverbs,
Stevenson spotted the unconscious
repetition of certain adjectives
“Roderick Hudson,” but probably te
most marked characteristic of Hay
James’ style is his passion for advete
and adverbial clauses. He is theme
adverbial of English writers. You
find more adverbs to the page te
even in Meredith. And he had s quit
habit of putting the adverb beim
the verb, when most writers wai
put it after. One of his ladies (fora
amples are taken at random) “that
fally felt,” another “quite besuifaly
and tenderly smiled.” And “afters?
crops up all over the place. But ae
would not have these things atest
they were part of the man. One de
object to them, however, in his it
tators, who have learned the trik, bt
missed the spirit bebind it—Looia
Chronicle.
‘Gieuins Oe Grads Dn
About the first process rubler se
through on the way to becumes tie
or tube is mastication. after de
crude Para is washed it is ata
into lumps and tossed into the ex
ers. These are machines with bat
rollers, which take the rubber it
tween them and chew it Enteise
the masticating room of factor, 8
first impression is that there is «brs
fire burning or else there is dad
snakes at hand. ‘The rubber soaysssl
crackles like burning branches a
then hisses shudderinzly. The stuf
Kept at until it comes up in rele
sheets, very thin and looking tie
sort of cake dusted with crambs. T#
after thorough drying in vacuum ch
bers it is ready to be pat in with &
chemicals and other things that mi
up the compound.—New York Sam
A Hint For Young Romese
If the hero has no bad bal’
should acquire some or at least isl
her to believe that he bas one oF
Courtship isn't complete sinless
heroine can beg him to quit some
that is destroying bis sweet healt) ©
worse still, sometiiing that makes B3
almost a bold, bad man. Sbe wel
beg and beg us to quit gambing
‘a few years after the wedding she we
eruel enough to tell us that she I
all the time that we were not #
bler. She was just bumoring
Claude Callan in Fort Worth
Telegram.
An Irresistible Cale
Hulda, the Swedish male, Ue shes
her mistress faithfully for8 Je! "sg
one day sbe announced ber ie
of leaving.
“Why, Hulda, what is te mati
a a ark: wo ant OO
like your wages?
“De york he be all Hight *
vages he be, too, bot the wie
moost have me.”—Se
Chronicle.
eee
Warning.
ete anys 1 am the oaly Bt =
ever loved.”
“Ta beware of him”
Tank it dangerous © Ope
life ‘with a man who tee
thing that comes along.”-
Press.
: ie
_ a
po i
: —
we
| Se _
| ——— .
a \ £4.
a ace
oS a fC
ox of.
RN Li
DR. M. J. BROWN.
to adhere to the policy of waving all y
‘ala upon to look after the wants and comfc
—————sSSS
goues to adhere to the policy of waving all pleasure aside whenever he is
‘aled upon to look after the wants and comforts of his many patients.
————————————
~gAL ESTATE BARGAINS. |° & 5" “gocsone 1, Nude? Wok,
igst bargain in the City. Fine
, new baths, good light, eon-
vat to 35th St. Indiana surface and
cars—only $500 Cash down.
qr write H. E. Evans, 517 E.
‘% Phone Oakland 2726.
=
aND SIX ROOM FLATS FOR
SALE.
me Sale—Big bargain, 5 and 6 room
fats; all modern, 5931 and 5935
Typtie Ave, rented to Whites at
‘snd $25.00 0 fiat, Small cash
alanee $50.00 per month, in-
sag interest. Price $5000.00, worth
Neif. 21 N. La Salle St, Tele-
Franklin 3966.
MRENT in new Colored district,
ject 30th street. Beautiful modern
a decorated, light 5 and 6 room
i: txts, stove heat, large yard, con-
to “L” and 3 surface lines.
jqeace required. Flats shown by
sina, Rents, $24.00 and $27.00.
NEHF and NEHF,
21 N, La Salle Street.
Telephone Franklin 3966.
STORY BRICK RESIDENCE
W LANGLEY AVENUE, NORTH
@STH STREET FOR SALE FOR
{6100 ON EASY PAYMENTS.
Jareident, offers for sale a three
ie brick residenee, clear of all in-
jtineee, located on Langley avenue,
eof 38th street; for $3250.00 on
leyayments, Rental $30 per month.
tym desire a bargain, address T. L.
feef this paper or phone Wentworth
SALE FOR COLORED PEOPLE.
eatiful 2 fat buildings, brick and
lot water and furnace heat, 5,
ti 7 room flats. Located on the
Side, in one of the best districts.
tro blocks to the Wilson Ave.
Transton ‘L,’? and the Brosd-
Fars,
f& block to beautiful Sheridan
2 blocks to the new’ Clarendon
‘Beach. Convenient to theatres,
and churches. This neighbor-
fers great opportunity for em-
Meat, many positions being open
itors, porters, laundry work, ete.
Tange from $4,600.00 to $6,000.00.
‘ash payments, balanee like rent.
fe further information addrese—
F. Taylor, 6418 Champlain Ave.
Wentworth 2597..
HPPLICATION FOR PARDON.
lication for the pardon of Louise
» who was convieted before the
sl Court of Cook county of the
of murder, September term, 1913,
“sttenced to the Illinois State Pen-
* for fourteen years, will 8p-
F jttore the Board of Pardons at
ay term and ask for pardon.
R. R. JACKSON,
ARS. W, LAWSON,
Petitioners.
hot E. Owens, whose law
Ste on the fourteenth floor of the
7 Building, continues to be much
St for mayor of Chicago in 1919,
S2Y of the big politicians claim
‘eis the most logical candidate to
‘i denceratic hosts on to victory
Set election,
Sacrifice—Two Flat!
—only $3,850—
TO RENT.
Smoke Screens In Naval Warfare.
‘The smoke screen or smoke attack
that is so effective in naval warfare
originated in the United States navy,
being first used in our destroyer fleet
when it was under the command of
Captain Eberle.
‘The writer well remembers being
present at such an attack off Block
island several years ago, when five
groups of destroyers, twenty in all,
crossed the head of a column of bat-
tleships until they were in the wind-
ward position, and then, with the lead-
ing destroyers smoking heavily, swept
down the line of the enemy at a dis-
tance of about 1,300 yards. The pall
of dense smoke rojled down to lee-
ward, enveloping the enemy and
screening the destroyers from observa-
tion, but above the dense and low ly-
ing bank of shioke could be seen the
successive pairs of fighting tops of
the battleships, and had the maneuver
been an actual battle some of the cap-
ital ships would have been heavily tor-
pedoed.—Scientific American.
‘The New York zoological park, both
in point of area covered and the num-
ber of living creatures maintained
there, is the largest menagerie in the
world, and even the old established
institutions of the kind in Europe,
where there is no free admission, can
boast of no better buildings or more
splendid grounds.
At the New York zoological park
there are more than 5,000 specimens,
representing about 1,300 species, and
all of these have to be fed and well
fed. In fact, some of the specimens.
far removed from their native habitat,
must be supplied with certain dainties
which they would obtain but occasion-
ally in their native wilds, but which
help them to thrive here. Nowhere are
animals, birds and reptiles more care-
fully looked after, and the very few
deaths at this park long since estab-
lished it in a class by itself—New
York Telegram.
The following method, which ts
taught in nearly all English elemen-
tary schools in India, is the quickest
way of proving multiplication, and it
will be found that it is absolutely cor-
rect in every case.
Example—Multiply 84,689 by 5,214=
441,508,446. Add all the digits of the
multiplicand till one digit is obtained,
thus: 8+-44+648+9=35=3+45=8. Do
likewise with the multiplier, thus: 5+
2414+4=12=14+2=3. Multiply the
two results and add the digits till one
digit is obtained: 8x8=24—2+4—6.
Lastly, add the digits of the product till
one digit is obtained, thus: 4+4+1+5
4848444+4+6—12—44+2—6, and if
the result agrees with the result ob-
tained by adding the digits of the pre-
ceding sums the product is correct.
‘We get 6 in both cases. Hence the
product is correct.—Machinery.
sin ne i OB
Save any embroideries of doilies,
cushions, etc., after the material itself,
on which the embroidery is done, is so
worn out that the piece is of no further
use. The initials from handkerchiefs
and old lingerle can be put on new
Uingerle again. They are almost al-
ways as good as new. With the rest
of the embroideries charming Uttle
gifts can be made. ‘The pretty butter-
fies in colors on a wornout cushion
were set in the flaps of a child's white
apron. The trailing poppies of a cush-
fon were appliqued on a natural color
linen garden apron. Other uses occur
from time to time.
Examine your battery every other
‘week; fill it with water if necessary.
Examine the ofl level in your crank
case before each trip:
Keep out of the car tracks and rats.
Do not tinker with parts you know
nothing about.
‘Turn up the grease cups and fill the
oll holes without waiting for squeaks.
‘Test the inflation of your tires twice
& week and keep them pumped up.
Read the ‘instruction book you re-
ceived with your car.
Wash your car immediately after
every trip.
Sarcest Zoo in the World,
Dicken mee tt
Motorcar Suggestions.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
The Southern Cracker-
jack United States
Senators and Congress-
men Who Have Always
Been in Favor of Treat-
ing the Colored People
as Wild Animals, Are
Bitterly Opposed to
Universal Military
Training for Them
Washington (Special).—A fight
over the Negro race issue, such as has
not been seen in congress since the
days of the Civil War, came when the
proposal of President Wilson for com-
pulsory military service reached con-
gress.
It became known tat southern rep-
resentatives and senators have been
working quietly with President Wilson
and Secretary of War Baker for weeks
past to have Negroes exempted from
the general eall to arms.
Insist on Including Negroes.
On the other hand the universal
service plans so far presented have
proved uniformly for training Negroes
the same as the Whites. Representa-
tive Kahn, of California, ranking re-
publican on the military committee of
the house, declared that he will fight
for inclusion of Negroes, and senators
from the southern states, where the Ne-
gro is sharply drawn, have anticipated
the issue and are prepared to fight it.
“The universal military service bill
whieh I have prepared, includes Ne-
groes,’? said Representative Kahn, ‘‘I
have provided that they be trained in
separate units, but they would be called
to arms exactly the same as would the
White citizens.
“<There is no reason why they should
not be called to service. Nobody ques-
tions but they make good soldiers. Ne-
gro regiments of the regular army have
never faced an enemy without giving
a good account of themselves. They
served with particular bravery at San
Juan Hill and Carral.’?
South Fears Negro Menace.
Representative Richard S. Whaley, of
South Carolina, expressed the southern
view:
“We of the south cannot stand for
inclusion of Negroes in a universal
Wanted a Studious Air.
A certain widely known character of
the Rialto appeared on Broadway the
other day bearing a huge pair of tor-
toise shell glasses athwart his nose.
“Didn't know you wore glasses,” a
friend told him in surprise. “I never
have,” he answered, “but I think they
give me a studious air.” “But don't
they impair your sight?” persisted the
other. “Ob, no,” was the response.
“I can see as well as ever when I
look over the rims."—Exchange.
Doesn't Know How.
Albert, aged three and a half, bad
failed to respond to verbal reprimand,
and at last his mother said: “If you
don't behave you will have to be
spanked. You would not like that,
would you?”
“I wouldn't like daddy to spank me.”
was the quick response,
“Why not?”
“He doesn’t know how. He hurts.”
Life.
Restraint of Trade.
‘The Dentist—I'll have to charge you
$2.50 for pulling that tooth. The
Patient—I thought you charged 50
cents. The Dentist—Yes; but you
yelled so loud you scared four other
patients out of the place—New York
Times.
Tenacity.
“Grain has been found clutched in
the hands of an Egyptian mummy.”
“It beats all,” commented the Chicago
man, “how some of those speculators
‘will hold on.”—Washington Star.
A Pedestrian Once More.
“I see Brown riding on the street
cars. I thought he owned an auto.”
“He does, but he made the mistake
of teaching his wife to drive it"—De-
trolt Free Press.
Real Optimism.
Our idea of an optimist is a farmer
who thinks he could live happily in
town on $40 a month—Galveston
News,
Sincerity is the basis of all true
friendship. Without sincerity it is like
a. ship witbout ballast.
service plan. It would bring down on
the many districts of our states, where
Negroes far exceed the White in num
ber, a danger greater than any foreign
foe,’? said Mr. Whaley.
“The universal service plans, so far
prepared, propose following one year
of actual training the men would re
turn to their homes, carrying theit
guns and equipment with them, to re
main members of the reserve, subject
to a call to arms. That would accom-
plish the very thing which the south
has always fought against, the placing
of arms in the hands of a large number
of Negroes and the training of them to
work together in organized units. They
would be @ constant menace to the peo-
ple of the south.
“We have been working on this
phase ‘of the universal service question
for some time and we hope that the
members from the north can be made to
see the seriousness of the issue, as we
view it.”
| ‘Negroes Want to Enlist.
Southern members always have op-
posed the training of any considerable
number of Negro soldiers. It is due
‘to their opposition that recruiting of
Negroes for the regular army is strictly
limited and that even in the great eam.
paign for enlistments of the last two
years not an addition has been made to
the Negro quotas. The Negroes are
willing to enlist. The only units of the
army which are constantly filled to the
maximum limits of enlistments are the
Negro regular and national guard regi-
‘ments.
/ ‘The southerners even opposed the last
‘military bill, providing for training
‘camps throughout the country, because
of their fear Negroes would come to
these camps gnd claim their equal
sights as American citizens to training.
Gray Haire Can't Make You Old.
People do not grow old so fast as
they used to. Time was when the fa-
thers and the mothers seldom left
home. :
‘They would not think of taking part
in any sort of frivolous conversation.
Grandfather and father, too, went
around the house with a “dark as the
tomb” sort of face, and if the young
folk got too hilarious “Tut, tut,” you
would hear them say.
Now granddad enjoys a good play, a
football game, and @ baseball game
makes him as young as the next one.
Bravo! That is the right idea. Don't
give up to the gray hairs.
Silver threads should not absorb all
the golden hues from your life.
Keep abreast of the times. Read up
so you can converse with your chil-
dren on modern topics.
Interest yourself in their work and
their play. Help them play and you
will keep your heart young.—Los An-
geles Herald.
He Was Equal to It.
‘A student who could not sound the
letter “r” was given the following sen-
tence to read:
“Robert gave Richard a rap in the
ribs for roasting the rabbit so rare.”
He studied it in silence a minute,
then glibly rendered it as follows:
“Bobby gave Dicky a thump in the
side for cooking the bunny so little.”—
Albany Knickerbocker-Press.
Stories of a Buddhist Image.
Interesting stories are told of a Bud-
hist image in a temple in the suburbs
of Kioto. According to a record con-
tained inside the image it was carved
by a famous Buddhist priest, and it is
believed that worshipers of the image
will surely receive divine favor. At
‘one time when a fire broke out in the
temple, unknown to the caretaker, the
image awoke bim by calling “Fire!”
and thus saved the temple from de-
struction. Another story says that the
image was once stolen by a thief, who,
however, fell dead when he was run-
ning away. Still another report says
that no dust ever accumulates on the
head of the image.
HEALTH,
CLEANLINESS,
PROPER LIVING,
SANITATION, ETC.
By
Dr. W. A. Driver
3300 So. State Street
Phone Douglas 3617
CLEAN LIVING.
By clean living is meant the proper
use of soap and water at frequent in-
tervals on the floors, woodwork, cook-
ing utensils and other articles as well
as on the body. A clean environment
is essential to clean living. Work is
necessary to the production of clean
environment. The very excellent and
exceedingly necessary contribution of
the industrious housewife to the health
of the people is the very first factor in
the battle for clean living. As a cre-
ator of high ideals the clean, quiet, or-
derly home of pure type has no equal.
Personal cleanliness means more than
the judicious use of the bath. Clean
living indeed requires a love of soap
and water and use to prove that affee-
tion but clean associations must be in-
sisted upon. Clean personal habits are
2 magnet that give a charm called mag-
netism. Good habits and clean living
8
~~ “She Shoestring Republic. —~
Chile is as long as from New York to
San Francisco and as narrow as Lake
Erle. ‘Traly a “shoestring republic.”
She is squeezed tightly between the
mountain range and the coast. Her
cities look up to the hills and down to
the sea, with, as Arthur Ruhl puts it,
“the Andes hanging like a beautiful
drop curtain at the eastern end of
every street.” Chile contains twenty-
four provinces, and the largest prov:
ince is big enough to hold all Pennssl-
vania, Vermont, Rhode Island and
Massachusetts. The Chileans are the
Yankees of South America, aggressive.
keen, making fortunes from nitrate,
erecting a chain of wireless stations
from the near tropical north tip of the
Chilean shoestring to the Antarctic
south tip and preparing for Panama
trade by expending $12,000,000 on port
and dock improvements. Chile is el-
bowing her way in among the most
forward pushing nations of the twen-
tleth century.—World Outlook.
a oe
‘The ancient Japanese art of lacquer
ing is in danger of extinction, for the
supply of lacquer is threatening to
give out. Lacquer is made from the
Juice of the lacquer tree or varnish
tree. It forms a very hard surface
and stands heat to such an extent that
the Japanese use lacquered vessels for
hot drinks. They consume about 1,00
tons of lacquer every year for all sorts
of articles, both for export and home
use—work boxes, tables, fire screens,
trays, bread baskets, carriages and mu-
sical instruments. Three-fourths of
the-lacquer comes from China, but so
much has been used of late years that
the demand exceeds the supply.
‘The lacquer tree is something like
an ash and takes a good time to grow
to maturity. The method by which
the sap is handled is wasteful, it costs
a great deal to get the varnish to a
market and the native exporters have
the monopoly of it. These causes to-
gether account for the shortage of the
supply.—London Standard.
Only about one man im each 208 ex-
ceeds six feet in height.
ia aa.
“Sister is a very good child when she
fs asleep,” said Tom facetiously, hav-
ing heard some one else say the same
thing.
“I ain't dood when I’s asleep,” de-
clared sister. “I has bad dreams and
wake mamma up.” — Philadelphia
Ledger.
A Lot of Nothing.
An Englishman, leaving a fortune ‘of
over $200,000, provided for his wife
in the following terms: “I bequeath to
my once dear wife nothing. She left
me for nothing and wants for nothing,
and I have nothing more to say re-
specting her.”—Argonaut.
Do It Skillfully.
“You are lying so clumsily,” said the
observant judge to a litigant who was
making a dubious statement of his
case, “that I would advise you to get
@ lawyer.”"—San Francisco Star.
Fine Comparicon.
“Remember,” said Mowils, “that
tiches have wings.”
“Well,” replied Glimson, “the fact
that a botled chicken has wings doesn’t
Prevent me from enjoying it!”
Rest Manes.
A baby shouting for his morning
meal makes as good an example of
what a food riot really is as anything
we know of—Milwaukee Sentinel.
Nobody is thoroughly accomplished
unless he has the ability to mind his
own business.—New York Sun.
PAGE FIVE
ne Sa
_ eee
a
ee ae
are boon companions; bad habits and
failure are sure to follow unclean and
evil associations.
Clean living and sober thought give
security and attract the best associates.
Good associations lead to joy, ease and
satisfaction. The best companions sug-
gest improvement, and by that induce
‘constant growth toward the desirable,
‘the good, the pure, the clean.
‘There is no clean living that is striv-
ing for cleaner living. To be merely
clean outside is only half clean. Clean
mental habits are as much to be desired
as clean externas, Therein lies the
great meta-physical realm, that para-
dise of endless probability if not possi-
bility.
Let us now make earnest efforts to be
physically cleaner than custom demands.
‘Let us keep our teeth clean and stain-
less and our breaths as pure as when
we came from the kiss of God.
Bell With the Wail of a Child.
A queerly shaped gong which occu-
ples a position of honor in the center
of the city of Seoul, Korea, is said to
be one of the largest in the world and
is called “the bell with the wail of a
child in its voice.” When first cast
the bell sounded with a harsh and
cracked note, and the superstitious em-
peror, fearing an ill omen, consulted
with his magicians. These gentlemen
held a long confab and finally stated
that the bell would never sound right
until a live child was given to it. The
mass was then melted again, and a
live baby was thrown into the molten
metal. The wail of agony uttered by
the little tot as the bronze engulfed
it seemed to be repeated every time
the bell was tolled, and today the Ko-
reans still claim that the wall of a
child can be heard in the voice of the
metal.
Casati Da Cuttin,
The Vicomte Toussaint was former
ly a colonel in the French army and
mayor of Toulouse. He was a brave
man and a dashing officer. During
one of the hottest engagements of a
terrible year of war, noticing that his
troops were bending forward under a
galling fire to escape the bullets of
the enemy while he alone maintained
an erect position, he exclaimed, “Since
when, I should like to know, has s0
much politeness been shown to the
enemy?” ‘The sarcasm took instan-
taneous effect, for the soldiers rushed
forward and carried everything before
them.
Selenium Is Sensitive. ‘
By substituting a selenium cell for
the human eye at the telescope M.
Fournie d’Albe believes it would be
possible to detect stars five magni-
tudes fainter than any now observable,
thus enormously increasing the powers
of the greatest instruments. Theoreti-
cally a selenium cell of sixteen square
inches would register the light of a
twenty-eighth magnitude star, but this
would require longer exposure—several
days—than would be practicable.
Philip, father of Alexander, had a
servant whose sole business it was to
remind him that he was human. It
is said accordingly that he never went
from the house and, having returned,
never gave audience to any one.-with-
out first this servant saying td bim
three times in a loud volce, “Philip,
thou art but a man!”
“Have your millions enabled your
children to marry well?”
“Rather. My daughter married a
cabaret dancer and my son is engaged
to a prominent chorus girl. We're
headed for the best society now.”—
Pittsburgh Post.
“Your friend did not appear to be
enthusiastic when I spoke of a com-
ing wireless age.”
“No wonder. He is a wire walker
in a cireus.”—Baltimore American.
A Cumbersome Cure.
“Eat a gumdrop every time you want
a drink,” advises an exchange, but who
the dickens wants to go tagging around
with a water bucketful of gumdrops on
his arm?—Macon Telegraph.
Putting -His Foot In It.
She—Don’t be downhearted, Richard,
‘even if father does say you'll be young
enough to marry five years from now.
He—Oh, I don’t care for myself, but
bow about you?—Exchange.
God does not comfort us to make us
tomfortable, but to make us comfort-
os.—J. Jowett.
Ohne i
Bich? In lt ine
a i
PAUG OLA
THE BROAD AX
Published Weekly
In this city since July 15th, 1899,
without missing one single issue, Republicans, Democrats, Catholies, Protestants, single Taxers, Priests, infidels or anyone else can have their say as long as their language is proper and responsibility is fixed.
The Broad Ax is a newspaper whose platform is broad enough for all, even claiming the editorial right to speak its own mind.
Local communications will receive attention. Write only on one side of the paper.
Subscriptions must be paid in advance.
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Address all communications to
THE BROAD AX
6418 Champlain Ave., Chicago, Ill.
PHONE WENTWORTH 2597.
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.
with the British Armies in France, via London.—One of the most thrilling flying episodes of the war was recorded when the British observer in a two seated machine which had been damaged by German shell fire climbed out on one of the wings and steadied the airplane while the pilot brought it safely to earth.
Two young aviators were leading an offensive patrol when an anti air craft high explosive shell burst just behind the right lower wing of the airplane. The machine was completely riddled. Three of the stay booms were cut, one blade of the propeller was blown away and all the controls except the elevator were put out of action. The machine was further smashed by the broken propeller blade and became uncontrollable.
Realizing the situation, the observer did not hesitate, but climbed out three-quarters of the way on the right wing tip in order to balance the machine. The air craft continued to fall in spirals, however, until it was about 2,000 feet above the earth. Here the observer succeeded in balancing it, and the machine glided down evenly. When about 200 feet from the earth a slight movement by the man on the wing caused the machine to spin again, but the pilot was able to control it when just ten feet above the ground, and the air craft landed with neither man in-fured.
PLANS FOR TRAINING EASTERN CITIZENS
Plattsburg to Have Four Camps. Others at Portland and at Plum Island.
New York—Major General Wood, commander of the department of the east, announces that training camps for civilians in the department will be held this summer at Plattsburg, Plum Island and Portland. The Plattsburg camp will be for the senior division and the other two for the junior division. The senior camp contemplated at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., is still under consideration. There will be four camps at Plattsburg—June 2 to July 1, July 7 to Aug. 5, Aug. 11 to Sept. 9 and Sept. 15 to Oct. 14. Men between eighteen and forty-five are eligible. Applicants from forty-five to fifty-five must obtain special permits to attend and do so at their own expense.
The junior division for boys from fifteen to eighteen will hold two camps at Fort Terry. They will be from June 30 to July 29 and from Aug. 2 to Aug. 30. Two camps will also be held at Portland for the same periods. Plans are being made for a camp for negroes on Plattsburg lines. If 200 possessing the necessary qualifications apply for membership it is intended to begin instruction in June under the direction of regular army officers, assisted probably by noncommissioned officers from the crack negro regiments in the service.
WOMEN CROSS HUDSON ON ICE
Pive From Highland Falls Make Perilous Trip In Safety.
Albany, N. Y.-On a dare five young women, including Miss May Strebbing of Highland Falls, safely walked across the ice on the Hudson river recently, they jubilantly reported, from Highland Falls to Manitou, Putnam county.
Although the ice could be heard cracking and rumbling in places, they hurried across safely. Few men have crossed the river south of Newburgh this winter on the ice, and no such ventures have been made by women. With Miss Strebbing on the risky trip were Miss Nora Connors, Miss Annie O'Malley, Miss May Fuller and Mrs. Mary Cook of Highland Falls.
Madrid Is Not So Ancient
Madrid is not a city of great antiquity. Many efforts, it is true, have been made to trace its history back into classical times and even beyond, but the first authentic mention of the town occurs in the Arab chronicles, and this does not carry one back farther than the first half of the tenth century. The place was, of course, occupied by the Moors when they were the dominant power of Spain, but was finally taken from them by Alfonso VI. in 1083. Henry IV. used it as a hunting seat, but it did not attain any importance until the reign of Charles V., who made it a place of residence and was wont to visit it occasionally. It was in the reign of Philip II. that at last it attained to the dignity of a capital city. He created it his capital and unica corte, or only court, in 1560, and it has remained the capital of Spain ever since in spite of occasional efforts on the part of sundry kings to transfer the government to Valladolid and Seville.—National Geographic Society Bulletin.
Her "Hope Box."
Miss Helen, the daughter of the family in which jet black Maria Jackson occasionally worked by the day, had been given a beautiful cup and saucer of rare china. She showed it to Maria and said:
"I mean to put it away in my hope box. You know what that is, Aunt Maria? It's the box a girl puts things into in the hope that she will some day need them as a bride."
"Lawzy, chile, I knows all about dem hope boxes. I got one of my own, chile."
"Why, I thought you were already married."
"I is, chile, an' my hope box is one I is puttin' money into fas' as I kin until I has enough to pay fo' a divorcement from Pete Jackson. More'n one kind of hope box is mixed up with matrimony, Miss Helen."—New York Times.
Easy Jail Methods
The greatest lenency is shown to criminals in New Zealand. Thus in one jail at the end of the South island a prisoner may keep a race horse and is permitted to transact business concerning it. In the same jail well behaved prisoners are allowed an afternoon out occasionally. Prison authorities in New Zealand are believers in the moral effects of open air. In one of their institutions the newly arrived misdemeanant is allowed the choice of living in jail or outside it, tents being erected at the back. This system of sending people to jail by letting them live outside has, however, its disadvantages. In one case the "prisoners," resenting harsh treatment in the way of a "lockout," lifted up the "jail" and deposited it far away in the bush.
Klited Troops.
The Greek kilted troops, the Evzones, bear a variant of a name which was given to troops in the days of ancient Greece. Euzonol, meaning well girdled and so girt up for exercise as kilted men are, were light troops or even the heavily armed hoplital, but without their weighty shields. At first, however, the term, as in Homer, was used only regarding women, the "zone" being the lower girdle worn by them about the waist, but by an easy and natural transition this came to mean a man's belt. Then, as the belt supported the short skirts, kilted men were called well beited.
Use of Gas.
It is now a hundred years since gas was first used for illumination in this country, and this is supposed to be "the age of electricity," yet the amount of gas consumed is still increasing. There has indeed been a falling off in the amount used for lighting, but a great gain in the amount used for fuel. This is not only the age of electricity, but also the age of the gas burning cook house.
Signs of Reform.
"Is Binks as close tisted as he used to be?"
"Oh, no. Coming down to business in the morning he frequently buys a newspaper instead of trying to read that of the man in the next seat."—Richmond Times Dispatch.
So He Forged.
Judge—How came a man of your ability to stand here convicted of forgery? Prisoner—It is all owing to my taking good advice, your honor. When I left school my teacher told me with my talents to go on and forge ahead.—Baltimore American.
Mitigating Circumstances
"How did her friend break it to her gently that she had suddenly become a widow?"
"Told the dear creature she looked so stunning in mourning that it was lucky she had a chance to wear it."—Exchange.
Right Up to the Minute Methods.
"Is this an up to date city?"
"Very. Whenever we have an important place to fill we always go out of town to get the man for the job."—Detroit Free Press.
How to Smile All Day
"Keep a smile on your face till 10 o'clock and it will stay there all day," says Douglas Fairbanks in the Woman's Home Companion.
In College Towns.
"What is the rent of your room, Henry? I suppose they ask a lot for it."
"Yes, all the time."—Harvard Lampoon.
Justice without wisdom is impossible.—Froude.
THE BROAD AX. CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
SEEK MANY GIRLS
Thirty-five Hundred Disappear Yearly In New York.
ONE-HALF SEEM TO VANISH.
Recent Search For Ruth Cruger Recalls Case of Dorothy Arnold and Others Police Assign Among Reasons Family Troubles, Failure at Business, Disappointed Love.
New York.—B-z-z-z-z. It's the telephone on the lieutenant's desk at police headquarters.
"Hello, _____" "_____ is missing." The lieutenant jots down a few words, the description is flashed to every detective headquarters, and the search for "another missing person" is on.
Ruth Cruler, pretty high school girl, was sought by the police. Leaving her home, happy and contented, she was swallowed up in the swirl of the great city and no clews to her whereabouts had been unearthed. Because her family is of prominence and because of her father's insistence the case was widely discussed and given much publicity, but the case of Ruth Cruler was only one of hundreds.
Every year there are 3,500 missing persons in New York, according to police estimates. Most of the missing persons are girls—pretty, happy girls, youthful and of good home training. They are swallowed in the highways and byways of the mammoth city. Most of them never return, and the public hears of the disappearance of but very few.
Dorothy Arnold went shopping on Fifth avenue one afternoon in 1910. No one saw her leave a certain shop she entered, and the four corners of the globe have been searched for her. They still seek her.
Ruth Wheeler needed a job, and she answered an advertisement. Her battered little body was found days later, and a ne'er do well, Wolter, was later put to death for her murder.
The hacked up body of Anna Aumuler was found in the river. Hundreds of anxious mothers and fathers viewed her body, believing it might be their daughter. Her slayer was also executed.
These are but a few of the hundreds of missing. Why missing? Police answer-white slavery, lack of courage to face disgrace, failure at business, family troubles, broken faith, disappointed love, wanderlust and the lure of adventure.
Do they come back? Police say of the 3,500 or more who disappear each year perhaps a little more than half return or are found. The other half? They seem to vanish. The telephone bell of the lieutenant's desk at police headquarters buzzes—another addition to the hundreds of missing.
PITCAIRN ISLAND MAIL
First Dispatch From United States by Steamship Australplain.
Washington.—For the first time since its colonization in 1789 by mutineers of the British warship Bounty and Tahitian women Pitcairn island, a dot in the Pacific about midway between Panama and New Zealand, is to receive mail from the United States. The historic event is announced in the usual dry, formal mail notice as follows:
"Postmaster Morgan advises that the steamship Australplain will sail from New York on or about March 15, 1917, via the Panama canal for Pitcairn island, being due to arrive there within twenty-five days of the date of sailing.
He issues this notice in order that the patrons of the postal service may take advantage of this unusual opportunity for the expedition's dispatch of mail for the place named."
It is not likely that the mail to Pitcairn island will be a heavy one, since only one Pitcairn islander, Miss Emily McCoy, has ever visited the United States to make friends here. Miss McCoy left the island about fifteen years ago to study nursing. Probably she will be the only person in the United States to whom the mail service to Pitcairn island will be of interest. There are about 170 men, women and children on the island.
INDIANS FORCED TO WED.
Young Chippewas Rush to Judge to Avoid Arrest.
Deer River, Minn.—This village was visited by a large delegation of young Chippewas Indians from the Bowstring country, who came to be married by Justice Cahill, in accordance with the ruling he made that he would give them a week in which to get married subsequent to many arrests by the sheriff of Itasca county on complaint of the Indian agent at Bena.
It is not the intention of the department, it is said, to interfere with the marital rights of the older natives who married years ago under tribal laws, but it is the younger members and in most cases the well educated ones, some of whom have college educations, the department officers are watching.
Twins Run In the Family
Evansville, Ind.—The sixteenth birthday of Elsie and Ethel Brady, who are the second of three pairs of twins in one family, was celebrated at their home at 1 Randall street. The mother of the girls is a twin sister of Mrs. Isora Young of Rockport. The younger sisters of Mrs. Brady are the third twina.
$500,000 HOSPITAL IN TOKYO.
Japanese Contribute $75,000 to New Mission Structure. Tokyo.—Announcement is made that the fund of $500,000 for the construction in Tokyo of the new St. Luke's International hospital has been completed at a luncheon given by the Japanese advisory council. The Japanese contributed $75,000, including $25,000 from Emperor Yoshihito. The remainder has been either contributed or pledged in the United States.
The proposed hospital will replace the present St. Luke's hospital, which was founded by the American Episcopal mission many years ago and which has achieved a reputation throughout the far east. Dr. R. B. Teusler, its present director, will have charge of the enlarged institution, work upon which will be started as soon as a proper site is decided upon. The hospital will be international in scope. It is hoped later to add a training department for doctors and for nurses, and to that end an effort will be made to secure further assistance in the United States. The proposed hospital will probably be the most complete modern medical institution in the far east.
HOLD AN ODD FUNERAL
Salvation Army Takes Charge of Obsequies For Victim of Diphtheria.
Chicago.—A band of Salvation Army workers stood in the alley in the rear of a dilapidated house in the slums and sang "Lead, Kindly Light," "Nearer, My God, to Thee" and then knelt in the mud while the adjutant offered a prayer. Face pressed against the dingy window, stood a blind man and a tearful woman.
As the prayer ended the basement door opened and a little white casket was quickly carried out, placed in a hearse and hurried away, unescorted, to a cemetery.
Such was the unusual funeral accorded Josephine Tomaszewsky, six, diphtheria victim. Her parents' home was quarantined because her two little sisters and one brother were ill from the same disease. The mother insisted upon a funeral ceremony for Josephine, and the Salvation Army hit upon holding it in the alley as the way of overcoming orders of the board of health against entering the house.
RULING FAVORS TEACHERS.
Justice Levy Sets Basis of Pay "Docking" For Absence.
New York—Schoolteachers absent from work in the past have been "docked" one-twenty-fifth of a month's pay for each day lost. Justice Aaron J. Levy of the municipal court ruled that the proper basis is to deduct 1-365 of a year's pay for each day's absence. His decision was returned in the case of Mary A. Broughton, teacher in public school 198, who lost eleven days' work because of illness in October, 1915. The decision also holds the signing of a receipt for pay "in full" is no bar to action for recovery.
The battle is an old one which the teachers and principals have been waging against the board of education. Years ago they were "docked" only one-thirtieth of a month's pay for each day lost.
William G. Willcox, president of the board, pointed out that under the Levy ruling the teacher could be absent 190 days, a full school year, and still demand almost half a year's pay.
PHONES FUNERAL SERMON.
Preached at Long Distance Because Storm Held Up Railways.
Fond du Lac, Wis. — A funeral by long distance telephone was conducted the other day when the body of the Rev. Frank Millar of Oakfield was sent to its last resting place through the drifts about the village where Mr. Millar had been a pastor.
The storms tied up all railroads leading to Oakfield from here, a branch line of a few miles in length, and with the main line in trouble no effort was made to resume traffic. The country roads were also drifted so deep that the village and countryside adjoining had been isolated for half a month.
The Rev. Robert S. Ingraham of this city was to conduct the services over the body of his Methodist colleague, Ingraham being the district superintendent. Trying to reach Oakfield by road, he was stalled and worked his way back to the nearest farmhouse, where he arranged to read the service by wire. A listener at the Millar home took his words and repeated them to the mourners.
RICHEST VILLAGE TO BE CITY.
Glen Cove, N. Y., Votes to Incorporate in the Third Class.
New York.—First steps toward the incorporation of the richest little city in the United States were taken when residents of Glen Cove, N. Y., in a test voted to incorporate the village as a third class city. The vote was more than two to one in favor of incorporation, which will include a population of 10,000.
Glen Cove is considered the largest millionaire colony in Long Island. Among its residents are J. P. Morgan, J. T. Pratt, H. L. Pratt, G. D. Pratt, Captain J. R. De Lamar, Percy Chubb, H. W. Maxwell, Edward L. Young, Justice Townsend Scudder, F. W. Woolworth and Harvey S. Ladew.
$50,000 For Two Daughters.
Greensburg, Ind.-Issaac Sefton, one of Decatur county's wealthiest residents, presented each of his two daughters with valuable farm land as gifts. The gifts comprise 461 acres of land that is said to be valued at $50,000.
Doing It the Right Way.
For every right way to do a thing there are ninety-nine wrong ways.
Take the apparently single matter of loading sugar in cars or putting it in storage houses. The difference between any one of the ninety-nine wrong ways and the one right way is a sufficient reason for the world's biggest sugar company to issue a book about it.
An amateur wouldn't dream there could be so much science in rolling 150 barrels of sugar in a box car. But this little book, filled with diagrams, is a school of instruction for all employees. There they learn to do it the right way and to avoid the ninety-nine wrong ones. The fellow who learns to load sugar the right way soon finds out that the thing contains higher mathematics, chemistry and finance. The American people eat just about their own weight in sugar in a year, and even the tiniest saving on each pound achieved by this scientific handling is quite enough to pay all salaries and leave a snug margin to boot.—Girard in Philadelphia Ledger.
Paper From Wood Pulp.
The idea of making paper from wood originated in Germany in the early forties with Gottfried Keller, tradition having it that he in turn received his inspiration from a wasp's nest. Keller collaborated with a manufacturer of machinery, Heinrich Voelter, in whose name the patents were executed.
It was not until 1866 that the possibilities of this invention in this country were recognized, when Albrecht and Rudolf Pagenstecher induced their cousin, Alberto Pagenstecher, to build a mill in this country and financed the purchase of machinery and the building of a mill.
The choice of location fell to Curtisville, now Interlaken, Mass., where the outlet of Stockbridge bowl seemed to supply an adequate amount of power. The mill was built and on March 5, 1867, the first ground wood pulp was produced.—New York Globe.
A Nation With No Language.
The Swiss alone, of all the peoples of the world, may in a sense be said to possess no language, a fact that is the more surprising when we consider that there is no people showing a more intense patriotism.
The official languages of the little republic are French and German. The public documents are published in these tongues, both of which are spoken by many Swiss. Roughly speaking, however, about 75 per cent of the population speak German, while the remainder divide four other languages among them, mainly French and Italian. These tongues vary, as a rule, according to the proximity of the people to the country whose language they speak.
In the Swiss parliament members deliver their speeches either in French or German, for nearly all the members understand both tongues.
When "Old Women" Abounded.
In the eighteenth century women soon grew old, says an English writer. At the age of twenty-nine Marie Antoinette, the wife of Louis XVI, gravely discussed the question with her modiste, Rose Bertin. She would soon be thirty. Her idea was to change her manner of dress, which inclined too much to that of extreme youth. In consequence she should wear no more flowers or feathers. The glorious Georgiana, the duchess of Devonshire, complained to the French ambassador that she was already seven and twenty years old. "Consider," said the glorious one, "what an age that is!" to which the ungallant ambassador replied that "in France at seven and twenty a woman was considered elderly."
Homemade Cold Cream
Here is the recipe for a homemade cold cream, the kind always used by the famous Lillian Russell:
Pure lanolin, four ounces; sweet almond oil, four ounces; spermaceti, one-half ounce; white wax, one-half ounce; orange flower water, two ounces; tincture of benzoin, forty drops. Melt spermaceti and white wax in an enamel vessel, add almond oil, then lanolin. Beat constantly and add orange flower water little at a time; lastly, the benzoin, drop at a time. Beat hard till all is consistency of a light cream.
Making the Best of It.
"What would you do if a situation arose which compelled you to fire a gun?"
"I'd be nervous," confessed Mr. Bilgings, "and yet I'd be exceedingly thankful I was the man with the gun and not an innocent bystander."—Washington Star.
Reversed.
"Did you read about the man who spent twenty years in fall?"
"What about him?"
"I see he has had his case reopened and his sentence reversed."
"I suppose that gives him back those twenty years, eh?"—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Restful.
Laura—Alice Flitter is such a restful friend. Charles—Restful? She talks all the time. Laura—That's it. I never have to think about what to say when I'm with her.
Fuller's Earth:
Fuller's earth is now used in bleaching, clarifying or filtering vats and rarely for filling cloth, the purpose for which it was employed originally.
A man must be well off who is irritated by trifles, for in misfortune trifles are not felt.—Schopenhauer.
C. H. Livingstone Says Half Million Are Available For Various Duties.
Washington.—In the Boy Scouts of America the country has a well trained "peace army" of 202,000, backed by reserves of 350,000 "veterans," the former well qualified to take the place of police in guard duty, to give "first aid" and to do the work of older men in many things, and the latter particularly well qualified to serve their country in any capacity required of a citizen, according to Colin H. Livingstone, president of the national council of the Boy Scouts of America.
"The Boy Scouts of America is not a military organization," said Mr. Livingstone. "Primarily its aims are character building and citizen making. Our boys get an outdoor training, and with them it is a case of playing soldier in the field and camp, getting a handy training for the duties of citizenship, building up health and mind." "I told the boy scouts of Buffalo recently that they were part of a militia of service. In the event of war they will perform all the services that can normally be expected of them. For instance, they will be able to relieve the police of guard duty over waterworks, reservoirs, public buildings, bridges, and so on. They will look after families whose heads have gone to war and help relieve any suffering."
Medical Journal Tells of Qualities Needed In an Efficient Military Surgeon.
"If War Comes" is the heading under which the New York Medical Journal says editorially: "Modern warfare demands the complete mobilization of every resource of the countries involved. Defeat is the price paid for unpreparedness, and the conquered pays the bills for both sides. Therefore it pays to be prepared. Every war in which the United States has taken part has accentuated the necessity for and the deplorable lack of preliminary preparation. "Surgeon General Lovell in his report for the year 1817 says of the war of 1812: 'There could be little doubt that where one man had died from improper medical treatment man had been destroyed from want of a knowledge of the many duties peculiar to an army surgeon.' The same comment could have been made at the close of the civil war and of the war with Spain.
"In no direction is preparedness more important than in the medical departments of the army and the navy. The public and a large part of the medical profession erroneously assume that be cause a man is a qualified medical practitioner or surgeon he will therefore make an efficient medical officer. This is not true. The military surgeon is much more than an efficient surgeon on a competent practitioner. He must understand sanitary tactics; he must be familiar with the organization of the medical department and know how to handle men and material. Without this knowledge he cannot perform the full measure of his duties.
"Therefore every patriotic physician should at once enroll in the medical department of the reserve officers corps, where he can learn the tails of military medicine by devoting a few hours a week to home study without interfering with his practice. Then when the need comes he can serve his country acceptably and with credit to himself and his profession. Applications for enrollment in the corps should be addressed to the surgeon general of the army, Washington."
GIRL WOULD BE SOLDIER
Writes a Letter Asking to Enlist in the United States Army. Muncie, Ind.-The following letter has been received by Sergeant Joseph R. Finney of the local recruiting station:
Union City, Ind.
Captain Finney, Army Recruiting Office
Muncie, Ind.:
Dear Sir-I sent in my application to the
army recruiting office seven months ago.
and I was told to write you about it.
wish to join the States army.
I may see you may see it to use me.
I shall be willing to give you my
service. My present position is creating
a grocery store. Now, if it is a
way to use me let me know. If it is
on the firing line I am willing even to
be there. Hoping to hear from you soon.
am, sincerely yours,
MISS MINNIE HARMON
R. R. 2, Union City, Ind.
Sergeant Finney, after an investigation, said the young woman who asked the letter is a pretty girl who clerks in a country grocery near Union City and that she is in earnest about desiring to be a soldier or to enter the army in any capacity. Sergeant Finney has written to her that he has not the authority to enlist women for any pose, but that she might find army work with the Red Cross association.
White Negro Called a "Hood
Hot Springs, Ark—Claiming he is a
"hoodoo" and practices sclerosis, an old
negro was given five days to leave the
town of Earle, Ark. by three negroes
who recently beat him and pursued
him through the streets with brooms.
Their belief is said to be based on
the fact that the old man's skin has turned
white, except for a streak about the
eyes, giving him an uncanny look.
A Woman Becomes a Chief Yeoman In Our Navy.
Only Twenty Years Old, This Young Lady Passed Both Her Physical and Mental Examinations and Went Directly to Work as Recruiting Agent.
Miss Loretta Walsh, cousin of Dr. James J. Walsh, former dean of the faculty of medicine of Fordham university, has entered upon her duties as chief woman in the United States army, the first woman ever enrolled for service in the country's naval arm.
Miss Walsh, who is twenty years old, married her physical and mental ex-
MISS LORETTA WALSH.
minations and was immediately assigned to duty under Lieutenant Commander F. R. Payne of the United States Naval home, by whom she was worn in. The oath was administered at the home and was witnessed by a large number of women attached to the Navy league.
The young woman enlisted under the recent order of Secretary Daniels directing recruiting agents to accept the applications of women for enlistment in certain classes.
The ruling reads: "A limited number of women may be enrolled for clerical work to take care of increased correspondence in the various naval districts during a war. All reservists when in active service either have quarters and subsistence furnished by the government or a money allowance is paid them for this purpose. The pay of a nurse is $50 a month. The pay of a woman currolled for clerical work is $33."
Teeman Walsh has been furnished with a uniform and will take up her duties as a recruiting officer at the station as her home. She will pay particular attention to other women who wish to join the service, but also will use her influence to persuade men to take
KITCHEN HINTS.
For Mrs. Newlywed In Her
Struggles to Succeed.
Everybody does not know that food
in general should not be allowed to
be in tin, copper or iron. It must be
placed while hot in agate, china or
wolframed earthenware.
Green vegetables should be dropped
into boiling water, to which a pinch
of carbonate of soda has been added,
and in salt when the article is half
used.
If you have covered a pan in which
meat is to be roasted never open it to
take the meat. Keep it covered from
torn to finish. The idea is that the
meats are filled with steam, which
penetrates the fibers of the meat. If desir-
able to brown the outside leave the cover
for the first half hour in a quick
even.
the shank bones of mutton, of so lit-
tle general value, if well soaked, add to
the finess of gravies and soup stock.
When boiling haricot oil or dried
meat do not put in the salt until they
are nearly cooked; otherwise they are
split and come out of their skins.
They should be brought to the boiling
point, the water poured over and fresh
water poured over them.
Indian Ornaments
was to be supposed that when America grew enthusiastic about the musical novelties that were introduced from China and Japan some clever men would look up our Indian work and bring it out as a rival. There are now Indian beads from India used as trimming for hats and gowns, and the Indian embroidery, as well as the beaded work, tassels with queer Indian ornaments working together, and sweaters made of blank silk are among the things desired and accepted.
bead georgette crape stamp the
term to be beaded on to a piece of
very white writing paper, then baste
on to the cloth with little, fine
notes. The pattern can be very plain-
liness, and being on the stiff pa-
it is very easy to handle.
FASHION CUES.
Points About the Very Latest Spring Togs Are Here.
Despite all the rumors to the opposite effect, there is a strong directoire influence in some of the spring suits and frocks. Especially is this true of the Paris collection. In the suits this effect is obtained in the placing of the belt and in the size of the revers. As for the materials used, there is a quantity of satin and charmeuse besides figured and striped foulard and striped mousseline. Embroidered chiffon is used to drape over satin or charmeuse. There are seen both the barrel and the draped skirts, while the skirt for the suit is narrower and occasionally plaited. Jackets for the two pieces suits are short, for they reach to the waist, not even the conservative finger tip length that had been predicted for the early spring. These short jackets frequently show panels of accordion plaits and a combination of materials, but in a different order from that which we have been accustomed to—for instance, the skirts will be checked material and the jackets of plain.
At the southern resorts, for cycling, which is eminently southern sport, the suits are most attractive, the skirts short and the bloomers of the fitted riding type, and these of a striped, checked or blocked material, and the jacket of the predominating tone of the figured material. The material used for these sports clothes is home-spun, and this, by the way of a change, is quite acceptable and very attractive. The skirts as often as not are divided, and the knickers are, of course, of the same material.
On all sides we hear of the slip-over effect of suits and blouses and even wraps. Organdie and linen make a southern wear frock on this order.
Top coats come in all the bright new colors and are most attractive in design. Some have quite a directoire effect, while others show belts at the natural waist line. Velvet ribbon enters into the trimming of these as well as the dresser suit.
FULLY PREPARED.
For Play Is This Comfortable Two Piece.
Blue linen trousers strongly, obviously buttoned into a waist cut with a stylish twelfth century neck makes a
THE FIRST YEAR OF THE YOUNG
READY FOR ANYTHING.
very satisfactory uniform for small rogues to romp in. Short sleeves are best to punch things in.
A Tidy Linen Closet.
A linen closet that is tidy and neat is a delight not often met with. The linens may be placed in neat piles when the laundry comes home, but when searching for a particular sheet or pillowcase or towel the pile is apt to become disordered. If you will use bands and tie each pile you will find that the shelves will present a much better appearance. A band of linen about ten inches long and about three or four inches wide is scalloped in blue and the words "Sheets," "Pillowcases," or whatever the article may be, are worked in cross stitch. Tape strings are attached to each end.
Bindings Ready.
When making children's clothes have bias binding and facing ready to put on. Save pieces of lining lawn, colored linens and gay plaid gingham, and cut them into one inch bias strips and sew together and fold into neat rolls and put in the machine drawer, where they will be handy when needed. The linens and ginghams are excellent for pipings on contrasting materials for children's school dresses.
For Sweeping Day.
A common handled basket that sells for 8 or 10 cents will save more steps on sweeping day than one would think. Line with table oilcloth, make pockets all around to put in such things as tacks, string, soap; then in the basket proper put dblt brushes and cloth, bottle of furniture polish—all the other things one needs for cleaning. Try it and see how many trips to the kitchen it saves.
THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
ONE SPRING BRIDE
A Beautiful Design For the Youthful Betrothed.
THE WEDDING DRESS
THIS QUEEN.
White satin made short skirted with a corsetel effect for bodice and white net sleeves is also further beautified by a bem and shoulder straps of small pearls. The graceful white net veil is confined with conventional flowers and their foliage.
SUN BATHS.
Health Tips About This Popular Way of Getting Strength.
Prolonged exposure of the human body to bright sunlight in those not accustomed to its rays is dangerous. The damage is more than the sunburn which results, for physicians have shown that headache and symptoms of meningitis have developed after youths under their observation had been lying several hours in the sunlight with unprotected head and no clothing but bathing trunks.
The symptoms shown by these patients demonstrated that the sun's rays had evidently penetrated the skull, thus indicating that a sunstroke is the consequence of direct exposure to the sun.
Sun baths are most popular with anemic and nervous city indoor workers, but too much sun is most apt to harm the nerve system of nervous people.
Instead of being benefited by long exposure to the sun the nervous are rendered more nervous, and when the summer is over they are tanned, but otherwise in poorer condition than in spring.
No one welcomes more than the physician the "back to nature" tendency of recent years, but they are now being careful to warn against excesses and abuses in the "enjoyment of nature."
For Middle Aged Women.
Women who are middle aged and rather stout will find a cold bath every day with plenty of friction afterward an admirable fat reducer. If you can't take a cold bath have a cold sponge down after your warm bath and dry yourself vigorously with a rough towel. There is something very stimulating in the friction induced by thorough drying after a bath.
Plenty of fresh air is essential to health, and it is essential, too, to avoid much lolling about in easy chairs. This last induces that fatal habit of stooping, as a result of which there is formed, as we get on in years, an unsightly roll of fat between the shoulders, which hangs over the top of the corsets. Very often faulty corsets are responsible for the formation of this figure blemish, corsets which are laced so as to press the fat upward between the shoulders. To cure it in the first instance you will require to go through a course of scientific massage. Massage is also splendid for fat which forms beneath the waist line and for double chin.
Shoe Rack.
"I have found a shoe rack a very useful and convenient addition to my bedroom closet, as it saves space, keeps the shoes from getting scratched and keeps them in order," said a housekeeper the other day. "It is a six inch board as long as the width of closet placed on a forty-five degree angle at a desirable height. Fasten it to the sides of closet by means of cleats nalled or screwed. Nail a one inch strip full length of board on the top about one inch from upper edge to hook the heels over."
For the Guest Room.
An electric hand lamp in your guest room will prove the greatest convenience to your guest, saving him from stumbling about hunting for the light switch or matches should he wish to get up during the night.
FOR YOUNG FOLKS
Sleepy Time Story About a Beautiful Spring Blossom.
LEGEND FROM OLD GREECE
Quaint Tale of a Handsome, Golden Haired Lad Who Fell In Love With His Own Reflection—The Nymph In the Pool—Birth of a Flower.
When Uncle Ben came to see Little Ned and Polly Ann he had a bunch of yellow cup shaped flowers. He said: I will tell you the
STORY OF NARCISSUS.
The daffodils and the jonquils all belong to the narcissus family and are among the first flowers to bloom in our gardens in the springtime.
These, of course, I bought of a man who sells flowers. They were raised in a hothouse.
Daffodils do not grow wild in this country, though in some parts of southern Europe they do.
The name narcissus was given to the flowers by the Greeks.
They had a story about them which you may like to hear.
Long ago, the Greeks' story ran, there was a handsome lad named Narcissus. So beautiful was he that every one who saw admired him.
Most of his time was spent in wandering about the woods and fields alone. One day he went to the woods to hunt. Tired and thirsty near the middle of the day, he looked about for a place to get a drink.
Deep in the forest he found a beautiful clear, deep pool. It was shaded by tall green trees, and the violets that grew by the water were the most lovely and fragrant of their kind.
Narcissus knelt to drink from the pool, and lo, just beneath his own face looked up another, a face which he thought the most attractive he had ever seen.
There were no mirrors in those days save the polished silver ones that belonged to kings or the rich. The simple country youth did not know that it was his own face that he saw looking up at him out of the water.
Narcissus leaned down and the face in the water seemed to come closer, but though he dipped his in the pool he could not touch the other.
The foolish boy was happy, for he thought that what he saw in the water was the nymph or the fairy guardian of the pool.
But, though he begged the image to come out of the water and talk to him, of course it could make no reply. Day after day Narcissus came to the pool to gaze at himself in the water. He forgot to eat, to drink, to sleep and at last he faded away and died. But he did not really die, for from his body sprang a wonderful flower whose golden head hung over the pool as his head so often had done. The flower was called narcissus, and, though I would not have you believe this story true, yet it may help you to remember the name.
The Mayflower.
Trailing arbutus, or the mayflower, is to the northeastern part of North America the true harbinger of spring. In the pine woods of the north it makes its fight against the cold weather and wins. Through the long, bitter winter its leaves stay green, and its dainty little flower blossoms out in the coolest days of spring. Of all the flowers of the wildwood trailing arbutus is one of the wildest. It grows in profusion, carpeting the cool glades, its faint perfume sweetening the forest. But when taken to a garden it sickens and dies.
Baseball Season Has Begun.
All over the country the warm spring sun has wrought a transformation. Along with flowers and green leaves the game of baseball has appeared. Balls, bats, masks and mitts have tak-
Photo by American Press Association. WATCHING THE GAME.
en the places of marbles and tops. The American boy is the most enthusiastic of all baseball fans, and everywhere he is to be seen engaged in this favorite diversion. The group here pictured was snapped by the camera man on the side lines. They are watching a runner who had just made a hit.
What Boy Scouting Does
Moral courage is no less necessary in times of national peril than physical courage, and it is more largely a product of training. The boy scout leaders seek to develop both, but they put most emphasis on the moral element, believing that the other is likely to follow as a natural result.—Portland Oregonian.
THE CHAFING DISH
Why Not Polish It Up For Spring Breakfasts Now?
AS CHEAP AS GAS BILLS.
There Are Any Number of Menus That Small Families Enjoy Cooked Right on the Table—Besides, It's More Fun Than a Range.
Why in many homes is the chafing dish relegated to the sideboard as an almost useless ornament, dragged forth only for "company?"
If the chafing dish proves itself a useful and practical means of preparing a meal for guests, why is it not equally good to cook family meals, especially the lighter supper, tea and luncheon? Many a time when the hostess herself has to prepare meals she would save herself labor by using the chafing dish instead of cooking in the kitchen and trotting back and forth with the various foods. Perhaps, too, father would not complain so much that he "doesn't get a chance to talk to mother," because she has to spend so much time preparing a meal, if mother used the chafing dish and talked while she cooked.
the chafing dish is a habit which more women should acquire. Once accustomed to the idea of cooking on the table it becomes just as natural and easy as cooking in a special place like the kitchen. The points in favor of the chafing dish are that it obviates the necessity of the hostess rising, that the food can be served piping hot and that with its blazer and pan it is one of the most sanitary food vessels to use and clean.
Many articles used in family suppers, such as creamed chipped beef, oyster stew, broiled or panned chops, kidneys and many more of the dishes having a creamed sauce, can be prepared fully as well in the chafing dish as over any other kind of fuel. Why not use the chafing dish blazer instead of the ugly frying pan to cook the hamburg steak balls for tonight's supper? If the salad and dessert are already prepared the balls can be made ready, cooked in the dish at the table and served directly to each plate without even soiling the platter.
A breakfast of creamed codfish can be managed most effectively in the blazer, as can bacon, sausages and other morning dainties. Oysters can be sautéed, fried with bacon or made into a stew before our very eyes. The chafing dish burner does not smoke and make an odor, as does the kitchen range, and if used with a percolator or toaster there is no reason why an entire meal cannot be made and served vis-a-vis.
The "expense," some say. But we now have denatured alcohol at a low price, which is practically the same as gas at $1 a thousand. A small ten cent can of alcohol burns a long time—enough certainly for three breakfasts. The chafing dish itself is easier to wash than pots and pans, and it permits a most graceful accomplishment to be added to the hostess' repertoire—that of table cookery.
Polish up the chafing dish, install it on the side table instead of behind closed doors and use it every day in the week. Why allow an expensive piece of equipment to be used once a month? If you have current have connections and plug which will permit your chafing dish to be operated electrically. It will be more fun and cosier than getting breakfast all by yourself in the kitchen.
CAT TAILS FOR STYLE
A Sport Hat That Has All the Hallmarks. Mushrooms still lead for sport headgear. Yellow and black figured silk is the fabric of this one, and two smart
THE FILM MAKER
THE LATEST.
black silk cat tails accentuate the tall crown. Please note how the figure in the material is not unlike a cat tail itself.
Creamed Asparagus
Cook fresh, tender asparagus in salted water, barely covering with water. When done make a plain white sauce and pour over it. Sauce made of fresh cream, a little flour, salt and pepper. Arrange on a piece of nicely toasted bread and serve at once. For a variety omit white sauce, add butter, pepper and salt to asparagus, arrange on fresh hot toast and serve immediately.
PAGE SEVEN
A Beautiful Outfit For After Easter Social Events.
THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
THE REAL THING.
Smoke gray satin is fashioned into this simple costume of narrowish skirt and jumper top over long sleeves. A Paisley pattern is embroidered in silver threads, a very rich effect indeed. The stringy belt confines loosely the blouse, which is of graded length.
THE JOB HUNTER.
How to Face Work Without Any False Pride.
A very good piece of advice, which, however curious it may sound, should be impressed on all women who are trying to find employment is, "Do not be a lady."
There is a vast distinction between being a lady and being a gentlewoman. The word "lady" is most misused and in its present day application it stands greatly in the way of those who are seeking work and who, time after time, cling to this description of themselves, despite the failure to gain employment that its use entails. Remember that good, hard, honest work is never lowering. If you are a gentlewoman by birth and nature you will be as much a lady when you are scrubbing the floor as when you are receiving guests in the drawing room.
Numbers of women refuse good positions because they consider themselves too ladylike to undertake the work involved. The aim of hundreds of girls today is to be described as "young lady." To achieve this they prefer to work for long hours in a shop or typewriting office at rates of pay which only with a hard struggle provide food, lodging and clothes, rather than take a better paid and far more comfortable situation as a domestic, and all because they think that domestic work is beneath them.
The modern young woman in many cases will wait for weeks on the chance of finding a position as lady companion or lady housekeeper, and yet when it comes to hard facts she is serving her employer just as much in one situation as in the other. Whoever works for another is a servant, and from the highest to the lowest we all serve in some way or another.
If women would only take this matter to heart and cease struggling after a false social position they would find life much easier, and many of the serious problems of the labor market would be easily solved.
Keeping Wicker Clean.
Many a housekeeper has discovered the difficulty of dusting wicker chairs. No amount of careful rubbing or flickering of the feather duster can reach far into these crevices; there the dust collects and there it ordinarily stays. But not long ago a woman—and a very busy one at that—hit upon a new plan for cleaning her wicker chairs. One by one she carried them into the bathtub and turned the spray upon them. The penetrating stream of water pierced them through and through, and after the process was complete each chair fairly shone with freshness and cleanliness. "If housewives could know the amount of dirt and dust that I succeeded in washing out of my three chairs," said the woman in question, "they would not hesitate long to follow my example and pop them into the bathtub."
To Keep the Blankets Clean:
No matter how careful one is to cover cold creamed hands with gloves before retiring, the top of the blanket is quick to become soiled. But there is a way to check its progress along this line. Bind the blanket with a piece of heavy cheesecloth or with muslin a yard in width. This will allow eighteen inches on each side of the blanket. If the material is held on with slip stitches it can be easily removed when it is necessary to send it to the laundry.
Shrimp and Radish Salad
Drain a can of shrimps, plunge into cold water, drain again and add one bunch of radishes, cut in thin slices. Molsten with cooked salad dressing and serve on lettuce leaves.
_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 271
MILES J. DEVINE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Seite 313.329 Reaper Block
Clark & Washington Sts.
Phones Geet oie cmcaco
PHONES: OFFICE. MAIN «188
AUTOMATIC. 33-736
RESIDENCE. DREXEL 7000
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
Sete 708 Delaware Building
Tel. Central 3142
FEE EUN teen Soot or
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Silky, After using a few Gmes you ean tall
Sri bees protiy ent long Chat youn
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AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE,
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(EXELENTO MEDIOINE CO. Attn, Go.
Office Phones: Res. S133 Se. Wabash Ave.
acinar sae. |
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Dr. Theo. R. Mozee
DENTIST '
4709 S. STATE STREET
CHICAGO |
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unease
Phone Main 2017 Automatie 32-395
A. L. WILLIAMS
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW
Suite 706 Firmenich Bldg.
184 W. Washioston St
Residence 5548 Jefferson Av.
=" Phane Midway 5515 Chicago
A. D. GASH
ATTORNEY AT LAW
118 North La Salle St., Chicage
Suite istete
Se
“ THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, APRIL 21, 1917.
Ee
ee eee
—"* Swimmitig With a Cold. When Lebas Dared Dest!
In an adaress before the leadiag eat-| Im 1876 the granite obelisk ths
nose and throat specialists of the couD- sentinel before the palace of R
try Dr. Hill Hastings of Los Angeles | IIL, at Luxor, for more than
recently called attention to the danger centuries was taken to Paris. I
of a person's swimming, and particu- | tion in the Place de la Concor
larly diving, when he has a cold in the | marked by a fine example of civ
head. Comparatively few persons rea-| age. It had been brought from
lize that it is dangerous, and many | by the engineer Lebas in a riv.
even believe that when they have re-| especially constructed at Tou
covered from a cold and are still a?-| navigate the Nile and the Sein
noyed by excessive thick secretions in| boat was towed through the se
the nose they can find relief by diving | warship. When the cables used
or pinging the head under water. The | ing the obelisk in its position i
purulent matter washed out is not only | were strained almost to break!
‘a danger to others, says Dr. Hastings, | bas placed himself at once unt
but the diver himself runs a risk of | enormous stone as it began to
forcing some of the pus into his middle | 1¢ » single cable had broken all
ear. Most specialists have observed. have been over with the engines
that cases of mastoid abscess are com: | plaining his hardihood, Lebas
mon every summer during the swim-| was to show the crowd of on
ming senson. At the large ear, nose | that he was sure of his calcu
and throat hospitals it is recosnized | 4 single error and he would ba’
that the swimming season invariably | crushed, and he preferred a trai
brings on “a crop of mastoids.” Th¢ | to dishonor. “This,” said Le
advice to keep out of the water until @| Paris, “was before our day of
“head cold” is entirely cleared up ca0- | views, and Lebas occupied only
not'be too strongly emphasized. lines in the Constitutionel, io m
ar less than the periodical advent
ee the sea serpent.”
The gift of imagination appears to
be the peculiar privilege of man. ‘The
architecture of the beaver is clever
and ingenious, but the work of one
beaver differs only from that of his
fellow in the shape and nature of the
wood at their respective command.
The cells of a honeycomb, beautiful
and mathematically correct as they
are, differ in uo particular from those
in every other bee's construction.
Every village boy knows that one
thrush’ nest is repeated character for
character in that of another. With
you it is different: each one of you can
put something of himself into his
work, and unless he does so he be-
comes a mere copyist, an echo and not
a sound, a purveyor of “white robed
innocence” and “flower bespanzled
meads.”—Samuel Johnson.
How War Comes.
The precedents of history show that
the great majority of the world’s con
fiicts have been begun before formal
declarations of war were made. Ac
cording to authorities on international
law, a condition of war arises in three
ways:
First.—Declaration of war.
Second.—A proclamation or manifes
to declaring that a state of war ex
ists.
Third.—Through the commission of
hostile acts of force.
‘One authority on international law.
describing ways in which hostilities
may begin without formal declaration,
says, “Acts of force by way of reprisals
or during a pacific blockade or during
an intervention might be forcibly re
sisted, * * * hostilities breaking out
in this way.”—New York World.
Sins Gia:
“It is difficult without a map to give
the reader any idea of how far away
northeast Siberia is.” says an English
magazine. “The European imagination
travels slowly beyond the Ural moun-
tains into that great frozen plain which
embraces nearly the whole of northern
Asia and ends at the Pacific ocean
Russia in Europe is vast, but the area
of her Asiatic dominions exceeds that
of the whole of Europe by more than
a million square miles, though this
enormous tract of country’ contains
fewer inhabitants than half the popu-
lation of London.”
Giant Spider Crab.
The giant Japarese spider crab ts
the ugliest looking shellfish in the
world. Its body measures about one
foot across, and the claws have a
“spread” now and then of over twelve
feet. These spider crabs inhabit the
Japan sea and often live 2,000 feet be-
low the surface of the waves.
Bobby’s Reason.
“Why did you spell ‘bank’ with a cap-
ital, Bobby?”
“‘Cause pa says a bank ought al-
ways to have a good big capital.”—
Boston ‘Transcript.
‘Wen: Beieed.
Blobbs—The average wife tells her
husband everything she hears. Slobbs
—And a lot she doesn’t—Philadelphia
Record.
O9 99 SH SHHOHHHHOOOO
e @
@ PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. ©
® — °
® Citernted denies. @
© The most common form of ¢
@ jaundice is that known as ca- ¢
@ tarrhal jaundice because it is ¢
© caused by an inflammation of
© the mucous membrane of the
© bile ducts. That affection is ¢
© usually the result of some indis- ¢
@ cretion of diet or of exposure to ¢
@ inclement weather. Sometimes ¢
© the symptoms are very slight. ¢
© The patient merely feels a little ¢
@ out of sorts or bilious; he loses @
@ his appetite, his tongue is fur- ¢
© red, there is perhaps a little nau- ¢
@ sea, and his bowels are sluggish. ¢
@ He hanily regards himself as ¢
@ sick and is quite surprised to be ¢
@ told that he hes grown yellow. ¢
@ The yellow color affects the ¢
© whites of the eyes as well as the @
@ skin, and sometimes it is almost ¢
@ entirely confined to the eyes. @
© _ The treatment of this form of ¢
© jaundice is simple. A light diet, @
@ a bive pill or a dose of salts and ¢
© rest in bed for a day or two will @
usually suffice. If the symptoms ¢
persist consult a physician, for
© they may be the first indication ¢
of some grave liver trouble. In-
© deed, it is safer to consult a ¢
© physician at once and let him ©
@ take charze of the case from the ©
very start °
e a
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As Near As YourT,
™ DISTANCE IMMATERiA
< JN.2 Metropolitan City ofthis size, dex
ey =r minutes at some door. Too Tet
= not brings somow, but misfortune ay ya a
pee price you pay for a funeral be a business yo Ley
you will benefit by it in service, quality spa
: in dollars and cents. The result of my n4°% Oy
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establishments in the world. thee
A vit wil convince you. Vy,
Time . @
Rectal; pape |
Funerals a Specialy, Cental Diplay Rooms and WS
Chapel. Call promptly, answered day or night VAS
Ernest H. Williamson, 7
yoo Undertaker “72'ssr Higa
5028 and 5030S. StateSt, - - - - Chany
In 1876 the granite obelisk that stood
sentinel before the palace of Rameses
IIL, at Luxor, for more than thirty
centuries was taken to Paris. Its erec-
tion in the Place de la Concorde was
marked by a fine example of civic cour-
age. It had been brought from Egypt
by the engineer Lebas in a river boat
especially constructed at Toulon to
navigate the Nile and the Seine. This
boat was towed through the sea by a
warship. When the cables used in rais-
ing the obelisk in its position in Paris
were strained almost to breaking Le-
bas placed himself at once under the
enormous stone as it begam to move.
If a single cable had broken all would
have been over with the engineer. Ex-
plaining his hardihood, Lebas said it
was to show the crowd of onlookers
that he was sure of his calculations.
A single error and he would have been
crushed, and he preferred a tragic end
to dishonor. “This,” said Le Cri de
Paris, “was before our day of inter-
views, and Lebas occupied only a few
lines in the Constitutionel, no more, no
less than the periodical adventures of
the sea serpent.”
The- Cranford Apartmeit
Puilding. 3600. Wabash Av;
‘The Graham Bread Myth.
Most people suppose they are getting
more nutrition in graham or whole
wheat. bread than they get in white
bread, Another mistake, says the Kan-
sas City Star. This isn't a matter of
guesswork, for there are elaborate ta-
bles worked out after the most thor-
ough experimentation in laboratories
and published, for instance, in Dr. E.
A. Locke’s book on “Food Values.”
Roughly, food is valued in accord-
ance with {ts fuel contents, which is
figured in calories. A pound of brown
bread contains about 1,050 calories, a
pound of rye bread 1,180, a pound of
gluten bread 1,160, a pound of graham
bread 1,210, a pound of whole wheat
bread 1,140 and a pound of ordinary
white bread 1,215. The white bread
has more nourishment to the pound
than any other kind. The notion that
milling deprives it of its nutriment is
fiction,
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Fine Art In Candle Making.
‘The making of candles is not ordina
rily considered a fine art, but the Ital
ians have made it such. ‘The distine
tively Italian votive taper is made by
hand. The materials are pure bees
wax, which is kneaded and tempered
and mixed with a secret ingredient tc
retard combustion and which has spe
lal Egyptian cotton for wicks. The
cotton, too,’ is treated with chemicals
to keep it from feeding too fast. Smal
candles are molded. Large ones ar¢
made by rolling up sheets of wax.
‘That gives the candle great strength
and enables it to stand erect when «
molded candle would bend under the
heat. After the candle is fashioned {
goes to the decorators, men who are
skilled in the use of the brush, and
‘when it leaves their hands it is a work
ot art.
The finest building ever opened to Colored tenants in Chica
Steam heat, electric lights, tile baths, marble entrance.
J. W. Casey, Agent
Phone Main 263 133 W. Washington Si.
_ |
Dishes and Divorce.
If, as one clever writer avers, most
divorces start over the breakfast cups
how very important is the selection
of one’s china. For, despite the time
honored legend that would have us be-
Meve the way to a man’s heart 1s
through his stomach, it is quite certain
that beauty of the eyes goes as far
toward promoting happiness as does
digestion. Often they are one and the
same thing. So in providing pretty
tableware one never knows what dire
calamities may be averted.
“Living up” to a fine bit of china, a
good picture or piece of rare old silver
has its advantages, not the least of
which is the lasting pleasure of own-
ing something really beautiful—Moth-
er’s Magazine.
All Eye Trouble |
SEE
Dp. Louie Usse.mun
The Practical O tician
Mesidieomet tie
‘TMA MOST COMPLETE OPTICAL ROOMS IN THE CITY
e BEST GOODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES aa
| Consultation ex examination | 3150 S, STATE ST.
| Phsoe Don 3
| guarantee to give satisfaction. CHICAGO
_ersates te restart CHICAGO
The Chestnut Blight.
The chestuut blight has already done
damage estimated as close to $50,000,
000. ‘The disease attacks both Ameri-
can and European species, but does
Uttle damage to those from Japan and
China, Plant breeders by crossing
Japanese chestnut and native chingua-
pin have produced resistant trees.
Some of the Chinese chestnuts are said
to grow 100 feet high in their home
forests.—Tree Talk.
youn moon, President F. W. BLOCK, Tress
JOHN BLOCKI & SON
PERFUMERS
= GO 10 =
C. E. KREYSSLER, Druggit
5057 South State Street
NOT ON THE CORNER
FOR HIGH GRADE DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
All Preseriptions Carefully Compounded
ALSO CARRY A FULL LINE OF
BLOCKI'S IDEAL & BLOCKI'S FLOWER
IN BOTTLE PERFUMES
Mighty Arcturus.
Arcturus is one of the most brilliant
stars that we can see in the heavens.
Its diameter is 62,000,000 miles, The
light that comes to us from it is over
200 years old when it enters our eyes.
The sun is distant 93,000,000 miles.
Just compare the eight or nine min-
utes it takes for the sun’s light to
reach us with 200'years.
His Opportunity.
“Scientists say that blonds will dis-
appear in a few years.”
‘This gave the golden haired girl her
opportunity.
“Well, if you want one,” said she
sweetly, “you'd better speak up now.”
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Easier. s
‘The Landlady—At our table, Mr.
Bjinks, it is customary to return
thanks at each meal. The New Board-
er—That's fine. I like it lots better
than paying cash—New York Journal.
Sean el eee
A. F. Copoz: oe
oR
The Elite Cafe
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3030 STATE ‘STREET cHicad®
She—Do you really think I married
you for your money? He—Well, the
‘way my money has been going it looks
suspicious.—Boston Transcript.
Misunderstood.
_ Marcella—Did I understand you to
say Gerty Giddigad won't take you se-
riously? Waverly—Not exactly. I
said seriously, she won't take me at all.
—Youngstown Telegram.
I will listen to any one’s convictions,
but pray keep your doubts to yourself.
I have plenty of my own.—Goethe.