Chicago Defender

Saturday, September 3, 1910

Chicago, Illinois

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VOLUME V-NUMBER 36. HONORS FOR JOHN BROWN. Giliv War Marty is center of Celeb Roosevelt Roosevelt Will Dedicate a Park "SHOULD BE BORN KANSAN." Speaker Declares Ex-President Typi- cals State Insurgents; State insurgents on Hand. ROOSEVELT'S ITINERARY IN TRIP THROUGH WEST. Aug. 27- Deaches Chevonneau, Waco, and delivers set speech. Aug. 30- Deaches speech on conservat- vative Denver. Denver Aug. 31- Discusses important national problems at Osawatomie, Kane- town. 1- Delivers address at Kansas City. Sept. 3—Speaks at Stouw Falls, S. D. Sept. 4—Speaks at St. Paul. Sept. 6—Speaks at St. Paul. Sept. 7—Speaks at Milwaukee. Sept. 8—Speaks at Dollers address at Freeport, H. Sept. 8—(Evening)—Recognition and and under auspices of Franklin Club, under auspices of Franklin Club. Sept. 9—Arrives in Chinchinati. Sept. 10—Arrives in Pittsburgh. Sept. 11—Ends western tour in New York. Special to the Chicago Defender. Osawatomi, Kas. Sept. 2—On Aug. 15, today, eighty-four years ago when John Brown's men withstood ten times their number of Missouri guerrillas in the woods at the edge of town has Osawatomi been so excited. Today the celebration of the 150th anniversary began, stretching itself and holding thousands of visitors from all parts of the state. Perhaps twice today's crowd or at least 25,000 persons are expected here tomorrow at the second day of the celebration when Theodore Rose-ted to the make the address declaring to the people hillside where the battle was fought. The battlefield, for half a century a peaceful pasture where cattle grazed, today was inundated and its trumpet to the hardiness of pavement by loyal Kansans, who filled the maze and heard the speakers tell of the state's glory and praise its first hero. So much enthusiasm for John Brown has been awakened that a movement for a statue of the western abolitionist in the hall of fame at Washington was by resolution at the morning session. Eulogizes John Brown. It was here at Osawatonic that the incipient conditions that precipitated the civil war began. It was here that John Brown, who had come out from the organization his forces and began his war. That Kansas, since that time when she struggled with herself as to which side she should take in the fight which almost rent the union, alienated and mistaken in her views and ready to take her share of the responsibility in any national question, was the principal point emphasized by Joseph G. Waters of Topeka, the orator of the day. Mr. Waters even went so far as to say that it was Mr. Roosevelt's serious handicap that he was not born in Kansas. "He knew," he said, "an even greater audience than this will be addressed by an ex-president of the United States, illustrous, honored in all lands, and especially loved in Kansas. It is his own serious handicap that he has the genuine Kansas spirit. He has made the world respond to his He is an instrument of the world's peace. We glory in him as a citizen and a citizen of the nation and citizen. And tomorrow he will be honored by the great state that creates our birth and urs our ashes." Gumming up the career of John Brown, Mr. Waters said: "Measured by the little standards of men as he may have been insane, but he was giving himself up when he was the first instrument to right a wrong. With the torch of liberty held in his implacable and unrelient hand he was God's own incendary to purge the land with fire. John Brown sleeps shadowed by a great Brown Elder. He is a shrine. Misunderstood, reviled, and, despised, he lived a life apart from man, beyond their touch, possessed of one purpose, and died a martyr for its fulfillment. He is the addresses by N. E. Harmon of Wichita, commander of the Kansas, G. A. R., and Sarah E. Staplin, president of the Relief corps. NEGRO LEADER VISITS SLUMS Booker T. Washington Makes Tour of East End of London. Special to the Chicago Defender. London, Aug. 28.—Booker T. Washington, the educator, under the guidance of officials of the Anti-Slavery Abolitions' Protection Society, toured the Best Place to访 to observe the conditions existing among the poorer classes. He will visit Andrew Carnegie at Sklobe before proceeding to the continent. MASS MEETING AIDS FUGITIVE. Protection Demanded for Steve Green of Arkansas, Accused of Murder. A permanent organizations to save Steve Green, the fugitive from Arkansas, from mob violence in his home and to prevent him from being held at the Institutional Church, Thirty-ninth and Dearborn streets last Sunday evening. It was the consensus of opinion of the meeting that he should be given the right that Governor Deneen should not let Green leave the border of the state until it was thoroughly investigated and found him guilty of the act otherwise he should be given his freedom forthwith. "We wish it distinctly understood," said Rev. A. J. Carey, who presided at the meeting, "that we are making no efforts to shield Green from just punishment, but we know that he cannot secure a fair trial in Arkansas. This is evident from the statements of the Arkansas officers, who came to PEOPLE HAVE READ CHICAGO'S ONLY WEEKLY The Chicago Defender. take him back. Green was threatened by them both in the Harrison street station and at Peoria. At the latter place they told him that he would be the most popular man in Arkansas on his return and that a mob of 2,000 would come to become him. If Green is taken back it will fulfil he even reaches the courthouse alive. He is more likely to be burned by a mob." Dr. Cavey told how the committee of which he and E. D. Green were members, had received assurances from Governor Deneen when they saw him at Peoria Wednesday that he had the power to see that Green had fair treatment. They lated also how the prisoner had been taken from the Arkansas officers at Peoria on a writ of habeas corpus and returned to the county jail in Chicago, where he now is. Other speakers were former County Commissioner Wright, J. Gray Lucas and Commissioner John W. Lucas was made chairman of the permanent committee. Mr. Hamilton secretary and William R. Cowan, treasurer. NATIONAL POLITICS Col. Roosevelt Speeches in the West Beneficial to the Republican Party. NEW YORK STATE IN A DRIFT OF PROGRESSIVE INSURGENCY. The chimes and cymbals of the Grand Canyon Party was sounded late last week after the vault opened his initial tour of political reform speeches in the west. The gong of the Hearst internal machine which reaches from coast to coast, ennity, so daringly destined of personal ignorant people of the land, is it did when Colon. Roosevelt spoke in Europe, to no avail beyond that which appeals to the ordinary. The gallant Colonel Beives in pure government and in believing he recognizes no party distinction. He laid stress upon hunting out crooks in the party and all along the line in the west he reiterated his corporations and politicians. Every man the ex-President has met with the keen approval of the masses, the truth of his doctrines, and his unrelenting rebuke toward public wrongs, is all in his hands, hope than ever and a reflection of safety in a man who sees and knows concerning the future destiny of his country for the welfare of its people. Honored the Negro Race. Before leaving for his speaking tour Col. Roosevelt made his first formal speech before the Negro Business League at Palm Garden, New York city by inviting him to a Washington. While this is indeed an honor, the race, Mr. Roosevelt seeks no special credit nor did he deserve any especial criticism for doing as he pleased about his own social business. It was Roosevelt, to me American spirit of Roosevelt, to make the soldiers, if to the benefit of the white race or if he closed up a post office for the benefit of the black race, in sections of a country that is painfully with the white, with the true merit in Theodore Roosevelt that he seeks to pacify with words politically that serve only to worry the Negro representatives in politics to hold them in suspense until their punishment is defeated and slyly replaced by a white man; it is his brave outspoken square deal and honesty of purpose that makes him today the Man of the Hour and formost in American politics, like an editorial it is but a reflection of his national worth and its relationship to the next presidency. Scores in New York Sate. Grave dissensions which have ariened in New York State politics are still felt by the Rooseveltian insurgents, William Barnes, Jr., the Albany boss who hold the mercy seat of the chairman of the committee, will win the seat for Vice Pres. Sherrod lose it to ex-Pres. Roosevelt all depends upon the merits of tricksters. There is however much doubt as to whom the Colonel will accept of the seat or who he gets it, and if he does, it will only allow salvation of the party and its success the state and the results which generally follow in the presidential campaign as a visionary conclusion. The battle of progress insurgency has been great help to the Roosevelt faction which has succeeded have been made. Wadsworth prove an unworthy combatant and hard luck Timothy Woodruff, always in the process as a football player, will end up at the rear of the winning motion. Possibly by the help of Hughes, the undefeated Colonel will win. POPULAR LADY OF THE SIXTH WARD Makes Her Departure for a Three Months' Tour of the South. Mrs. Addle Owens, of 703 East 40th street, one of our earliest colored ladies of the Sixth Street, second Hettie Green, begins her real estate business, looking after her real estate business. She will make her departure over the Illinois Central Railroad on August 13, on the Dixie Flyer, and has engaged her in a Pullman drawing room for more than a Marie Morris, at Macon, G. On middle street and Pleasea Hill, will be awaiting her arrival at the station with an automobile to accompany her to her residence, which she will bequest for eight or ten days while after her real estate affairs. Mrs. Addle Owens is the most progressive and energetic colored women in the United States, and attends strictly to business. Mrs. Owens met the reporter of the Chicago Defender and gave him her that she would introduce the Chicago to her many friends while on her tour through the South. The Chicago Defender wishes her a successful trip. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1910 MOTHER MYER AT REST. Funeral Services Over the Remains of the Veteran Christian Worker Sunday the Third, Largest in Chicago. BETHEL CHURCH CROWDED TO ITS CAPACITY, HUNDREDS STAND OUTSIDE. Youth and Old Age Vie in Paying the Last Tribute of Respect to a Woman Known All Over the City for Her Unselfish Works "in His Name." MANY FLOWERS—MANY NOTED FLOWERS—VENABLE HUSBAND—NOTES. By J. Hockley Smiley Mrs. Jante Badger Harris of Athens, Ga., and Mrs. Marie Clay Hudk尔 will be the guests of Mrs. Frank Hudk尔 of New York city at the Studebaker, Monday evening. Mrs. Dr. E. A. Walker of Kansas City is visiting our city a few weeks. Mrs. Hattie Armstrong Coleman a teacher of Columbus, Miss., is the guest of Mrs. James Green 3145 Vernon avenue. Mrs. Conwell of Birmingham, Ala., returned home Tuesday evening after a very pleasant visit as the guest of Mrs. James Green 3145 Vernon avenue. Mrs. Conwell of Birmingham, Ala., returned home Tuesday evening after a very pleasant visit as the guest of Mrs. James Green 3145 Vernon avenue. Mrs. Conwell of Birmingham, Ala., returned home Tuesday evening after a very pleasant visit as the guest of Mrs. James Green 3145 Vernon avenue. In response to an invitation extended by Mrs. Anna Hudk尔. 15 West 51st street, quite a few ladies met at her home on Wednesday, Aug. 31, for the purpose of re-organizing the Bena raising of funds to place indictments applicants into the Home for Aged and Infrum Colored People. Another meeting to perfect the plans will be held at the same place, Wednesday the 7th of September. Mrs. Conwell cordially invited to be present. Funeral services over the remains of Mattie Belle Myers, who died after a short illness, August 23rd were afternoon noon following the morning service. The announcement that the funeral would take place, Sunday after the usual morning service, brought out many to the service who hoped to re-enact the story of thousands at the hour set whose only desire was for a last look at the face of the gentle little woman who "went about doing good in his name: 'Mother of the Church,'" she called her, but even one spoke with love or reverence. The Remains Arrive. "When the remains arrived shortly after 1 p. m. from her humble home across from the church it was with difficulty that the undertaker and his assistants and two policemen (friends and other sisters) were able to for the body and many relatives, and friends, so dense was the crowd. A hush fell upon the packed edifice as the procession entered. Headed by the pastor Rev. Roberts he reached the altar and the services began. The pastor Rev. Roberts and the former pastor Rev. Carey were the principal speakers, singing was an interesting part of the service, especially the full vested choir. The full vested choir. The several secret societies to which the deceased belonged all held their regular burial services and read eulogies resolutions. Another interesting and impressively marching through of the entire Sunday school singing a favorite hymn of the deceased. What the Pastor and Rev. Carey Said. Rev. Roberts said in part, "We are gathered here this afternoon to pay our last respects to one—who on going found it. She was faithful, better than she found it. She was faithful, better than she found it. When she was stricken she was full of active work. Even while she lay a corps a call came for her services. St. Paul says I fought a good fight, and I was faithful, better than she plains the Christian life of sister Mary Myers. Rev. A. J. Carey was the next speaker. Full of emotion he announced and led one of the favorite hymns of Mrs. Myers. "Then he told her long association with the church and termed her the "assistant pastor." the Iowa Conference as a Missionary. She was married to Wm. Myers, December 26th, 1863, by Rev. Orange survived by a daughter and two sisters. CITIZENS' PUBLIC RECEPTION. At Olivet Baptist Church, Tuesday to Friday, 10:30 a.m.—Compliment to Edward D. Green. Expressive of the public hearty appreciation of his splendid record in the last legislature, especially commending him for his introduction and successful advocacy of the Anti-Lynching bill and his treeless and effective support of all law and order legislation. Program. 1. Music. 2. Call to Order, Hon. Oscar Depriest. 3. Invocation, Rev. J. F. Fisher. 4. Introduction of the Chairman of the evening, Hon. E. H. Wright. 5. Music. 6. Our Representative in the Legislature, John C. Bassett. 7. Chairman of the Judgment and the Law, Rev. A. J. Carey. 8. Music. 9. Citizenship and Legislature, A. H. Roberts. 10. Anti-Lynch Law Statutes, Mrs. I. B. W. Barnett. 11. Presentation of Resolution on behalf of the Colored Citizens. 12. Presentation. Know all men by these present that we, the colored citizens of Chicago in mass meeting assembled, here and now express our hearty commendation of the splendid record made in the 4th General Assembly Hon. Edward D. Green. as Representative of the 1st Senatorial District of Illinois. We commend him for his aggressive, loyal and unswerving support of all legislation for the promotion of Civic righteousness and assure him that his distinguished services in this regard has won for him a high place in the community of an loving people, we especially commend him introducing the Anti-Mob Law and for the effective support which contributed so much to placing its wise and just provisions upon our state books. By that service he has caused the State of Illinois to take a leading place among those States of UM which guarantee to every man accused a fair and impartial trial. Thereby preserving our State from the infamy of lynch laws, commending him for his unselflessness, intelligent and valuable public service, we present him with our earnest wishes to him. This testimonial of our high regard adopted and presented at Olivet Baptist Church, September 28, 1905. MRS. J: H. HARRIS ROBBED Saturday evening, Mrs. Harris, 3224 Wabash avenue, who had a few Atlanta teachers went out to Riverview, Mrs. Harris was explaining all about Chicago to the ladies and how nice our parks and cafes were and how you don't have to make up fires on a cold morning in an unsightly fire place, where thieves and Santa Claus could come down and take things; returned that her house was robbed, and the rude thieves left her kitchen door wide open, when they saw that the ladies began to examine their trunks, and their hand bag left in their rooms, they were gone. Mrs. White had $7.50 in hers, Mrs. Cook had $5.50 in hers and Mrs. Lawson had $5.50 in hers and Mrs. Lawson had $3.50 in hers and a diamond locket; the saddest case the elite who lost his new overcoat and several suits, in other words he was cleaned. The three ladies said to Mrs. Harris, 'and this is Chicago, well we will leave here and go back to Atlanta like we have some sense.' Believe me they left on Monday morning on the 4:50 a.m. train. When our reporter called at the house to inform her of the doorway, she asked her why didn't she go in out of the cold, she said; 'deed I will never go in that house uncle of some of my roomers come home.' All of us were in the house, we have lost my money too if I had not put it in—I mean carried it with me. The police were called up at once. Two of us are watching for any suspicious persons which should put in their appearance. FOR INFORMATION OF THE CHI- CAGO DEFENDER Regarding Free Masonry Among the Colored People. Free Masonry has existed among the colored people of the United States during the entire period of the Nation's history. While the colored Masons are denied recognition by the white members of the Order and by their lodges, Grand and subordinate, the regularity of their organization and work is recognized by the foreign Grand lodges. The parent lodge was known as African Boston, and was opened in Boston, Mass., on March 6, 1775, when fifteen colored men in white attire as charter members. Prince Hall, which was named the list, was the first Worshipful Master. African Lodge received a warrant from the Grand Lodge of England in 1784, and upon this fact the lodge colored Masons base their claim to regularity. Theives of the Order in Massachusetts contain evidence indicating that Prince Hall regarded African Lodge as a Provincial Grand Lodge and him. The African Grand Lodge Master. The African Grand Lodge was organized as such in . . . 98. It is now known as the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, named in honor of the man who and in honor of the man who is regarded as the father of Free Masonry. Each lodge and each lodge night in the paper. MONTGOMERY ITS PEOPLE AND ITS BUSINESS The Young Men and Young Women Great Progress Along all Lines. The Farmers and other Business Men phones and Modern Conveniences. Special to the Chicago Defender Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 2. — Mrs. Katie Brothers is acting as a reporter from this city to The Chicago Defender. Brothers and Mitchell, only three months old and in this space of time have turned out over $900.00 worth of new tailored made suits and over $750 worth of cleaning, pressing and dyeing and has won the name as being the greatest house of its kind in the state. Mr. O. L. Campbell who has just returned from New York, attending the business league, found all eight of his barbers, doing a rushing business, this place is a beauty to nature's eye. Mr. C. B. Jewett who is still there visiting. Mr. C. B. Hutchison who is running a saloon until 2 years ago, but soft drink standard grocery store. He owns quite a deal of real estate. Rumor has it that Dr. Scott is the most popular doctor in the city. He is the owner of a own motor car here, besides his sent his wife with a handsome carriage as a gift. Miss Gertrude Watkins, who is the guest of Mrs. Polla Washington Pitman in Washington, D. C., will return in a few days. Dr. W. F. Watkins the fortune winner of Miss Annie Jones (one of the most talented musicians of our race), will move in their pretty home soon. Mr. and Dunge. Mr. Gentle Duncan, O. C. Glass, O. F. McCain and Mrs. Morgan are spending a while in Chicago. Miss Everline Wyman has been keeping books all winter for Dr. H. G. Williams of Pensacola, Fla., and is spilling out her parents, her parents now, but Dr. and Mrs. Wyman are sending special right along for the return. She is quite a drawing card to the store. The new residents of Mrs. Glass and Mr. Geo Geo, Dozier add to the beauty of the museum. Whatever Rev. Judkins, the pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church and "Editor" of the Colored Alabaman is glad to have his wife and son home again after an extensive trip out East. Dr. Judkins after studying at Freemans Hospital has joined his wife who is studying medicine in Chicago. They are the guests of Mrs. and Mrs. James Lowe, 2031 Fulton street, Chicago. The Northcross is at a loss without the Dr. and his wife. Mr. and Mrs. Wheat have increased their family, a son. MR. HORKNEY SINGS AT GRACE BSPYTERIAN CHURCH. Mr. W. H. Hackney, tenor, was the soloist at Grace Church last Sunday morning. His voice rang out clear, and he sang with intelligent conception, concise execution. Mr. Hackney's tone quality, citation and at the rest that makes singing enjoyable, appealed at once to the audience, so we account for this splendid singing, and yet as a plodding student, and as a finished artist. It is a regrettable fact that the young men and women rarely the young men and their leisure time in putting themselves into the role is not because they cannot because, nearly every avenue is opened to them, they are. They can, but they will not, they are without that kind of ambition. The 7th *precinct* Republican Boosters' Club of the 3rd Ward, has begun its campaign in earnest by holding its first open meeting on Aug. 30th last, and entered into a permanent organization, which organization after with unanimous votes chose B. W. Titts with unanimous votes for the candidate for commissaire him the 7th precinct of the 3rd Ward. Mr. Titts is a well known business man who can be seen daily working at his place of business. He also is a strong organization man being a member of the American Club, and staunch supporter of Compton Martin B. Madden. This organization is to remain as a permanent body, having elected Caroll Nelson chairman: P. B. Chapman. Sec'y., and Edw. Young, Treas. A committee has been formed to arrange arrangements for a mass meeting at 10 a.m., and a list of prominent speaker will address the meeting. We are out to win! MISS KENTUCKY INTRODUCED TO MR. AND MISS CHICAGO. The Defender reporter was a star guest at the Song Fest Mr. J. Fenton Johnson, 3028 Vernon avenue tendered Moss Alpha B. Coleman and Miss Alfred Slaughter, of Louisville, K., and the other strangers. Friday evening, Aug. 26. There were about one hundred and seventy-five young people present, dressed in costly apparel, and they were briefly entertained a musical and a dance. Those who participated in the musical part of the Song-Fest were Misses Marie Burton, Grayce Clarke, Ruth Boger, Genevieve Wallace, of Gerwine Hart, and Messrs. Junius Sayye, George Gurner, Jr., Frank Woods, Thomas, Misses Thomas, Misses and Maude J. P. Hancock. reception committee, and Miss Lauville J. Pickens presided at the punch table. The strangers introduced womens basketball Alred Slaughter, Sue Hart, and Stewart of Louisville, Pearl Lewis of Washington, D. C., Eda Powell of Watton, Il., Lizzie Brannan of Louisville, Katherine Hattie of Hampshire, Hattie Dixon, Vicksburg, Miss, E. Collina and L. Hammic of Kansas City, Me., Annie Brockway of Prof. S. A. Johnson of Louisville, and Dr. A. B. Terrel of Mass, Mass. Miss Coleman is a recent graduate of the Louisville Normal College, and is one of the most popular young ladies in Louisville. Miss Slaughter is a graduate of the Louisville High School and a sister of Miss Elizabeth Slaughter, 3544 Dearborn street, whom she is visiting. NEGRO BANKS AND WHERE LO CATED. In order to settle an argument which reached its height on Thursday evening by several curbstone corner arguers, the Defender herewith publishes a list of the colored banks in the United States in order that not only these gentlemen may see that there are over ten race banks in the United States, but that the South has them the Chicago being the only Northern city bank and this is due to the fact that Illinois gives the colored man a better show than all the other Northern states; then the average young man here is buying more property in Chicago in New York if it is other Northern city, "good time" if in Boston they try to speak proper and forget about saving. In Philadelphia, well, they say they are too slow for anything. In Washington the race is so busy trying to die and having a big time with those (and maybe) (de) Senators they will never do anything but debauch the race, as the old slave had to do. Alabama—Tuskegee, Tuskegee, Tuskegee bama Penny Savings Bank; Birmingham, The People's Investment & Bank Savings Bank; Selm, Alabama Penny Savings Bank; Mobile, The Safety Bank; Florida—Jacksonville, Capital Trust & Investment Co.; Jacksonville, Na- tional Credit Center; Jacksonville, Afr. American Insurance Co.; Atlanta, Atlanta SAV- ings Bank; Savannah, wage earners Bank; Illinois—Chicago, Josse Binga's Mississippi—Columbus, The Penny Savings Bank; Yazoo City, People's Magic City Bank; Mound Bayou, Bank of Mound Bayou, Vicksburge, Union Savings Bank; Indiana, Delta Penny Savings Bank; Jackson, Bluff City Savings Bank; Jackson, American Trust & Savings Bank; Jackson, The Souther- North Carolina—Winston-Salem, The Forsyth Savings & Trust Co.; Durham, Jefferson Smith's Bank; Newbern, Mutual Aid Banking Co.; Kinston, Holloway, Oklahoma—Boley, Farmers & Merchants Bank & Trust Co.; Boley, Boley Bank & Trust Co. — Nashville, One-Cent Savings Bank; Memphis, Solvent Savings Bank & Trust Co.; Memphis, Nashville, The People's Savings Bank & Trust Co. Fort Worth, Worth, Provident Bank & Trust Co.; Palestine, Farmers and Citizens Savings Bank; Houston, The Penny Savings Bank of Dallas Virginia—Hampton, Galilean Fisher- shire, The Nickel Savings Bank; Riichmond, The Mechanies Savings Bank; Way- ward Savings Bank; The Mechanies Savings Bank; Riichmond, St. Laken Penny Savings Bank; Norfolk, The Gledeon Savings Bank; Riichmond, Savings Bank Grand Point; St. Anton, People's Dime Savings Bank & Trust Association; Newport News, Bank; St. Anton, Savings Bank; Bank; Star of Zion Banking & Loan Association; Newport News, Bank; Star of Zion Banking Savings Bank; Courtland, Amer- ica Home & Missionary Banking Assoca- MEMORIAL SERVICES. Memorial services in honor of Phillip Prosser, deceased, vice-president of the Negro Fellowship League, will be held in room and special Center, 2830 Stute street, Sunday, Sept. 4, at 4 p. m. A special program, including an address by Hon. R. E. Cantwell, under whom he strolled, and an affair with a person named person, has been prepared. Also suitable music has been arranged by Mr. Mundy, and there is no doubt the occasion will be made memorable. It is invited by B. Wells-Burnett, President; Ford S. Black, Secretary. TAFT URGES AID FOR NEGRO. Tells Hampton Institute Trustees Rich Should Help Education. special to the Chicago Defender. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 26.—President Taft this afternoon attended at the home of Mrs. Robert S. Bradley at the Pete's Gaming and Entertainment of the board of trustees of Hampton Institute and delivered an address on Negro education. The President especially pleaded for more liberal financial assistance for schools like Hampton Institute. Mr. Taft began his address by declaring that a man with an income of $5,000,000 or $10,000,000 a year could not make a better investment in the way of getting returns of good to human kind than by putting money into Hampton Institute. "Education is the solution of the race question," said the President later on, "when it is directed toward a belief in the dignity of labor." The necessity of his making valuable member of the board that the white m PRICE 5 $1,000,000 TO TL New Jersey Woman's Was to Booker T. Washingt Gee Institute. The Race Should Not Den as well as A few of Our Friends Still Live. Special to the Chicago Defender. South Orange, N. J., Sep Aug. 25th, by the death of M. L. Dotger, who died at her South Orange, N. J., this at the bulk of her estate, estimate be worth $1,000,000, will go keegee institute, of which Bob Washington is the head. T. mon hospital of Philadelph caves $10,000. Mr. Dotger was the widow. drew T. Dotger, who died Dec. 1905. His estate was then said be worth $94,932, much of it in New York real estate. His will direct that his widow should have a life interest in his estate, of which applied two-thirds should fina Tuskegee. The ex-amount was then estimated at $60,00. Mr. Dotger never visited Tuskegee, although he was always interested in the education of Negroes. He was born in Philadelphia in 1841 and re-entered the school from the New York stock exchange. When the news reached the school last Tuesday evening and was read out in the chapel the students gave a rousing cheer, which ended with, then they rest in peace, and then they left the school, which was written by one of the Tuskegee students in honor of the deceased donor. END CAME SUDDEN TO FORMER SUPERINTENDENT OF WRITING, Special to the Chicago Dealer. Cincinnati, Sept. 2—just as he lifted the table Monday evening, Prof. C. W. Bell, the only colored man who was ever superintendent of writing in the Cincinnati public schools, dropped from the job. Wahun Walhah, Prof. Bell had been asked a couple of days, but it was thought to be nothing serious. He had been down town to consult Dr. W. H. Falls, who had a heart attack came upon him and he had to be taken home in a cab. But he recovered so far that he went down stairs for supper, and was just startling his meal when the fatal wound on his leg occurred in the county cemetery office judge, Charles Charles Weidner, Jr., and Peter W. Durr, but was on a two weeks' vacation when death came. He was active in Republican politics for years, and during the civil war was a member of the famous, "Black Trigade," organized in CinemaN: to help protect the city from the expo attack of the war, and three daughters survive him. Mr. Bell was the father of Mrs. Harry A. Bell of Chicago. AMERICAN CHRISTIANS WORLDDS HYPOCRITES. They Become Discouraged in Flight Film War. Rare Prejudice Their Alm, not Christ. That reputable men and women form a large part of the audiences at the exhibition of the Johnson-Jerries fight pictures in Forest Park is one of the most discouraging features of the exhibition of the films, according to officials of the Chicago and Order League. "I was surprised to see so many ladies there," wrote Miss May McMullen, 125 South Wood street to the league, Miss McMullen, 125 South Wood street, proper place for a person to sit, and found it crowded with what appeared to be respectable men and women. A resolution adopted by the members of Presbyterian Church, Wednesday evening will be sent to Governor Denen to day ask him to stop the exhibition. LABOR DAY MAIL DELIVERIES. It was announced by Postmaster Campbell yesterday that there will be but one delivery of mail, and that in the morning, throughout the outlying part of the city on Labor day. There will be delivery of letters at o'clock and 8:45 o'clock business districts served by the main office and by stations U and Kinzle. MR. WILLIAM H. H. HUFF TAKES SEEING IN AUTOMOBILE SEEING IN AUTOMOBILE Mr. William H. Huff, Chicago junior real estate broker, has quite busy entertaining friends of the Southland during the past week in the North Side evening o week he toured to the North Side Prof. Jesse W. Washington of Texas and his daughter, Miss Lou, Lawyer and Mrs. Thor Maxwell and Mrs. G. D. Trice in Lake Shore Drive, Lincoln Sheridan Wood, and all the sceneries of the park speeded through the park South Side with Miss Susie teacher at the West Broad Industrial School, Athens, Miss Barbee of Fisk Univ. NOTES: The resolutions of church were read by Mr. Myers. Myers was a mer M. T.s. The Rev. A. R. Warden, A. R. Lodge, Luster PERSONALS. issued weekly by Chicago Defender Publishing and Printing Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN ADVANCE. One year ..... $1.50 Six months ..... 1.00 Three months ..... 75 DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS. One inch one time ..... $0.75 Special rates given on large or long standing ads. R. F. Spriggs, Associate Editor. Louis Hoggatt, Cartoonist. Julius N. Avendorph, Society Editor. OFFICE 3159 State Street CHICAGO, ILL. Telephone, Douglas 3339 Entered an second-class matter February 1, 1904, at the Postoffice in Chicago, Ill., under act of March 8, 1879. Larger Circulation than All the Other Weeklies Combined. No. 37. Vol. V. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910. Did you meet the two big T's while in town this week. In order to enjoy this winter be sure to have a Defender and plenty coat on hand, so start saving. The first one to shake hands with Mr. Roosevelt when he arrived on Thursday, was a Defender reporter that going some. PERSONALS Mississippi Bertina and Fannie W. Winston and Master Charles A. Winston and Mrs. Maggie L. Winston arrived in Chicago Sept. 5 over the Pennsylvania railway from Cementville, Indiana. The above mentioned people are the family of A. John in Winston and E. Fortloth street, the railroad news reporter for the Chicago Defender and the general sales agent for the Johnson Investment Company of Muskogee, Oklahoma. When reading a paper like the Chicago Defender you never regret the news and the Chicago Defender is strictly race paper and there should not be a colored family in the United States home. Subscription rates are as follows: One year $1.50; $1.00 for six months, two or three months. R. S. Kearney, 215th St. N. 22nd, nt Jackson's Hall, 250th State St. Mr. Ralph W. McKinley of 3870 Ansonar for the benefit of the old Polksa home for Benton Harbor, Mich. Sunday, Sept. 4th, for a short vacation. Mr. McKinley is a city employee and a resident for Benton Harbor, Mich. Sunday. No loiterer worry about getting work in Muskegon, Oklahoma; no artisan about not having a chance to ply in the city; no loiterer measured by his own efforts and will be great or small in proportion to the energy and ability put into his pastimes are employed in all kinds of work. Carpenters receive from $3.50 to $3.00 per day, eight hours, brick and wood, carpentry, tools, helpers, tool dressers, $2.40 per day, helpers, tool dressers. A four-time ad. in the Chicago Defender brings certain results; try it. Douglas 3333, ask for Mr. Abbott or his address to 3195 State street. And again you may call up Douglas 5222 and ask for Mr. Campbell. They will take your offer description to the Defender's Phone today. There will be an interesting program both evening up the nuances of the Chicago Union Church Club, first night **Club Night!** second, "Church Night!," on June 11, 2014, a fullman running through Enviusville, Indiana, and wife royally en route to a fullman running through schoolmates from Mobile and mourn avenue who are now visiting Chicago on an excursion. They will visit the mourn avenue south next week. The party included Mr. and Mrs. John Likely, Phoebe Muster, Mr. Lester, Mr. French and Mr. George Muster, Mr. C. Muster, not classed as a tight wad, by any means, as each of his above named friends in Chicago, 338 East 40th street, for the Chicago Defender through the reporter of the Railroad Center, Mr. James D. Smith of 3161 Groveland avenue, a popular young business in Chicago, and purchased a lot on Chicago, from his homa, from Mr. John R. Winston, the railroad news reporter for the Chicago office, and the general sales agent for the Johnson Investment Company. Speaking of buying lots in a live, real estate opportunity, this opportunity pass where real estate is on an increase In North Mus. --- Mr. A. J. Johnson, a writer of some eminence has written a very pretty little story entitled, "Why Don't You." But it is most too heavy for light reading. We would suggest that a man of his wit should eat grape nut. It is a great thing to tone ones system. The Chicago Defender is the people's choice; a paper that gives and gets good results, and all business men and women read it. Send in your ad to 3159 State street. MRS. ELIZABETH BOTTS DEAD. Death looked sweet and was welcomed after a 23 years' wait, in pain and of bedridden stripes, but also murmured not, and without stretched hands she clasped that of the angels and was wafted as it were on the wings of the morning to her rest above. Mrs. Botts, mother of Mr. J. I. Rowers, 3440 Wabash and Mr. Cliff Ford Johnson, her foster son, thus parted this life on Sept. 1st, and was buried on Sunday, Sept. 4, from her home, 32nd and Dearborn streets, where a host of friends were on hand to pay their last respects. Mrs. Johnson, who furnished the floral designs seemed to have tried herself in this particular as every one expressed themselves with joy, a seeing such beautiful flowers. The gates ajar, the broken wheel and the anchor, must be specially mentioned as they showed art as well as taste. Rev. Roberts of Bethel officiated who spoke up glown gterms of rls. Botts, great Christian work. She was one of Chicago's old residents, coming here from Xenia. O, over 40 years ago. She was buried in Graceland Cemetery where all the old residence burry. SOLICITORS FOR THE DEFENDER. The Chicago Defender want 10 young ladies to solicit for subscriptions and 2 good ad. solicitors at once. kogee town site addition. Only $10 down cash and $5 per meal; no entry. Winston, 739 East 40th street, Chicago, IL, or phone Douglas 5222. Ask for Mr. Louis Campbell, his assistant. These lots may be sold tomorrow. Mudman Nell Hawkins-Buckner will visit Jackson Hall, benefit of and folks' sure to ntend his hazzar and have a rare treat. DREEDICAL Chi personal. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Jones, 5138 Indiana avenue, entertained the Misses Monk, of Louisville, Ky. Miss Ramon C. D. last Monday evening at one of the most beautiful musicals and dancing in the season. To listen to the Bayon concert, a half a a treat that music lovers can enjoy. They were assisted on the promenade by the Misses Monk, who gave a piano duet, a vocal solo by Mrs. Merrill. Mrs. Smiley Ponder served and those present enjoyed a very pleasant evening. Mr. and Mrs. O. Englehardt of No. 16 King 32nd street, gave a very pretty dinner for the guests. He was passed of their piece, Mrs. North V. Robinson of Jackson, Miss. After soles by Mrs. Grace, returned home from Alton, where they were the guests of Mr. Thompson's mother for several days. and Mrs. Davis and Miss Mackell of Oneonta, the city of Tuesday and are guests of Mrs. Tuesday and are guests of Mrs. Tuesday and daughter, Emma Bell, at the South White House, 3216 Wash Ave. northeast of White House, unlikely if the climate suits their western natures. Already they are well with our city. We return to family have returned from Mendota, where they opened the summer. Spotts Tailoring College opened its regular season last Tuesday. A progressive whit navy was given by Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Tolliver at their residence, 4649 State street, one event where those present were Mrs. Ella Field. Nettle Maxine, Mrs. D. F. Woodward at Lady Poole, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Woodward at Lady Farnes, Mrs. Lincinda Taylor, Mr. J. A. Forst, Mrs. William H. Todd, Mrs. Charles H. William H. Todd, Mrs. Charles H. Virginia Johnson. Miss Grace Sampon, one of Chicago's most known school teachers and a prominent educator, was assigned in marriage to the Rev. M W. Warder of Lexington, Ky. The wedding ceremony were held at the residence of the bride, Mrs. Ind., on September 1, the Rev. Fr. J. Sainian officiating. It is needless to say, select the wedding party was not to meet the number of presents. The couple left on Friday for their home in Lexington. Surprise Club boys gave a surprise birthday party. King Sammibus, Friday evening, Sept Mrs. Thee. E. Jones, who left the city about a month ago to visit in New York, returned to the city on edensess of the east. He was in Washington at the physicians' convention and ran down intoiglia in some of F. W. F. Vale report on the east. He, Howard, late of Chicago, has a big red car and didn't spare gasoline in entertaining him while in Washington. He will report to work on Monday. Mrs. Dalsy Harris. 3120 Wabash avenue, fell from a State street car on the street, broke her leg and seven streets, the motorman having started up before she could get on. She would broken her leg and seven gentlemen acquaint and brook force of the fall. Even for that they could not hold her and she fell with her hand. He asked the reporter for the Defender notified Dr. Martha Thirty-first and State streets, and he accompanied her home, where her wound was dressed. She was in great when seen last night by our reporter. Stop! Listen! The Wallace Home-made Rolls and Bread are the goods that's good. Ask your grocer for them. Buy your school shoes at Gregor's store, 16 East 55th St. See his ind. Remember that a full line of ladies' children and mom's high grade shoes children and mom's high grade shoes 16 East 53th St. near the store. 16 East 53th St. near the station. Have Gregor to make that pair of shoes at 16 East 53th St. He does high grade repairing and conducts one leading repair shops. in the city. Call on us first and examine our line of hair goods, and if our prizes do not appeal to you as fair and reasonable as others, look no further, for no where in Chicago can you do as well. Mme. Wallace, 3247 State street. The Phyllis Wheatley Club held its regular monthly meeting at their club office on Saturday afternoon. An interesting and enthusiastic program was carried out. The club is to be congratulated to have the coming year. As State President for the coming year. The Juvenile Protective League held its first meeting for the year at the Dover High School. The state was arranged for the election of officers for the next meeting the first week, and the excellent work last year. The therents in the district were visited and objectionable features were dispassionate the salamander keeper was present. 25 resident buffets were put out of business; and a multitude of good things were brought to pass by the committee. Boarman's Method teaches the old or young how to play piano, violin, cello and tuba. Also orchestra furnished for all occasions. 3563 Forest avenue. Phone 15 Aldine. Tuesday evening there was a grand mass meeting at the Olivet Baptist church, there being assembled church members, officers and members from the North. The association is associated with Associations to witness the reconciliation meeting which brought to pass the Olivet and Elenzezer burglaries the Olivet and Elenzezer timely service was held where all differences were forever buried. The presence of the Holy Spirit was great. Mrs. H. P. Lee, G. D. R. of Bills, Mrs. Jennie Lacey, and Mrs. Emma Venom, have Sunday to attend the conference of the Lady Elks to be held in Cincinnati. Mr. M. M. Roane and bride returned to the East through the East. Next week he will give us a full account of his visits and a full account of his entertainment. The Green-Lille Millinery Shop, nt 128-30 E. 30'2 street, is making ESKI headway with Miss Elizabeth Slanghton, milliner. Mrs. Corr Holtler returned to her home in Louisville, Ky., today after a delightful visit with friends here of a month's duration. Mrs. ESKI, confidential assistant to Mr. Edgar R. Bradley proprietor of the Hotel Del Prado is in town for an indefinite stay. Mr. Tagley came from Sheepshead Bay and is enroute to Pearl Wilson and Hayes the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hayes. 5015 Dearborn street died Wednesday morning and was buried on Thursday. Wis. Albert E. Johnson of 866 Mrs. D. Mack and daughter Miss D. Mack have qualified for trip through Vermont, Y. and Canada, she also visited Niagara Falls, N. Y. Wis. D. Mack and daughter Miss D. Mack have qualified for dinner last Monday the 5th at their beautiful home 6137 Loomis Boulevard, Johnson of Richmond, N. Y., and Miss Johnson of Richmond, N. Y., and Miss M. Starke of Cincinnati, O. Prominent among the guests was Mr. and Mrs. James, Mr. and Mrs. Tylar, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, and Reverend A. Hardaway. The Ways & Means Society of Grape church, will hold its first fall meeting on Saturday, September 2000 State street, Monday Sept. 12th. Each member is earnestly requested to be present. Election of officiant, M. Leclet, President; M. Hulding, Secretary. Just 30 Days from date 1 promise to make 1 life size picture with each $3,00 per dozen photographs PETER P. JONES 3519 STATE STREET, CHICA00 The Chicago Giants will meet the Rogers Parks at the Red Sox park in Chicago. In spite of the inclement weather the usual crowd of skaters attended the Chicago Rink, but not sold or the weather too bad to skate, so it matters not how bad the weather is can always find the crowd at the Chicago Rink. Visit it tonight and be convinced. The weather is just right for roller skating now. Now is the time to learn. Big attraction at the Chateau Rink. 5324 State street, every Thursday and Saturday. Semi-professional skate race at the Chateau Rink tonight. Don't fall to Mr. J. Q. Utley won the race at the Chateau Rink, last Sunday evening. Napoleon Lee's Orchestra at the Chateau Rink becomes more and more popular. Don't forget big nights at the Chateau Rink, every Tuesday and Sunday, something great. James T. Peterson. Superintendent of Mall Carriers in the Mobile post office, spent several days in the city en route to the convention. The Odd Fellows' Convention. He will visit New York and Boston before returning here, where he will spend several more days at the guest of Mr. Peterson, Dr. R. F. Bavd of Nathanael Tear. Dr. R. F. Boyd of Nashville, Tenn. after a stay of ten days in our city, morning. Wednesday morning, Mrs. H. F. Boyd of Nashville, mother, left Saturday of last week for Marquette, Michigan, where she will spend several weeks. George Bond was suddenly called out of the city Saturday on accounts of his sister, who lives in Cleveland, Ohio. Lorenza Avery, one of Mobile, Alabama's business men, is speaking a call to the Odd Fellows' Montreal, Md., to attend the Odd Fellows Convention. He will stop on his way home for a short stay. Mrs. Joan Norr's Simmons of 2318 Dow Street, St. Louis, inviting for the summer at Patosky and other resorts in Northern Michigan, has returned to the city, it is needless to say her friends who are legions will visited to have her in their midst again. Miss Louise Morris, New Orleans, piece of Mrs. J. H. Riggs, 617 Perry Street, St. Louis, will winter, while in their city she will take a higher course in music. Mr, G. W. Blackwell ?222 Wentworth m. onlined to his bed for over a month. Miss Bessie Wallecut, Louisville, Ky. Miss Martha, Mrs. Blackwell, 722 Wendy Hewitt, 495 One of the prettiest home weddings of the season was that of Miss Anna Ammon, Jill, Cyrus Smith of Chicago, Jill, and Mr. Cyrus Smith of Chicago, Jill, and Mrs. Henry H. McDougall returned home after 10 weeks out of the city after Joe, Mo., and other points she is looking for and reports a very enjoyable trip. Prof. J. Hamilton formally of Chicago, Dayton, O., passed through the city campus to Pontine, IL, to visit relatives. Mr. St. Clair Jones, 3440 Wabash ave. who is sick with rheumatism was because the mail man was a little girl. Mr. Geo. O. Hudson, 3440 Wabash ave. the pride of a avenue blow into the street. Mr. Geo. O. Hudson, 3440 Wabash ave. has a severe attack of rheumatism. See that your lodge meeting nights are placed in the Defender, like the Foresters and Daughter Elks, under Secret Societies. The Umbrian Glee Club will give, a sacred concert Sunday afternoon, Sent. 18th. Program at 3:30, at the Institutional, N.S. Westernborn street. on Saturday at 3:30, at Mary Taylor of 5623 Wabash ave. gave a children's party in honor of the Misses Katherine and Mamie Bessler. Mrs. Arthur Anderson of 3393 Vernon avenue, who has been visiting the mother and sister of Mr. Anderson at Seymour and Indianapolis, Ind. on Saturday at 3:30, at Miss Georgia Patterson, the estimable young lady and clever musician of Seimla, Ala., has been visiting in the city as the guest of Mrs. E. Hudson, the mail man, avenue, and will return home today. Mrs. Walter Carter of 3133 Wahabah avenue, was hostess at a luncheon and last Tuesday at theemon in honor of Miss Tischer, Louis Jackson, and Miss Hunter of Indianapolis, ind. About twenty-five persons were present. Ms. Mickelson Taylor of 3265 Rhodes avenue, will leave the city on Saturday, 10th inst., to attend the biennial convention of the city. Mid. Before returning home they will visit a number of cities, including Washington and New York. At home to their friends at 1253 Rhodes avenue. Mr. Joseph Bett died last Saturday at his home in double pneumonia. He jawn buried from his sister's residence, Mrs. Jones, 25 W. 21st street. W. 25th street. Woodstock, 2000 State street, returned to the city after a delightful stay of two weeks and two days at the mazaoo, Mich., the guest of Mrs. Chin, 25th street. Mrs. Daisy Hill, 2000 State street, is rustling in the mountains of Dendwood, S. D. on the lattice where she will spend the winter. She says she will spend the winter in Dendwood, S. D. on the lattice where she will spend the winter. She says she will spend the winter. She says she has been gone only six weeks. Mrs. Henry Pearman, 3000 State pavilion, has her grandmother, Mrs. May B. Lyles, Mrs. Dorn Conaway, 21 56 place, returned from Detroit, after a four week visit to the University. Sunday, Sept. 18th, the Rutgers Standard Literary, after a long summer's recess, will render the opening of the annual festival of the normal department of Wylie University will render the adoration to Miss Mose Burton will be heard, the first of the normal department of Miss Katherine Williams, Secretary. Married, Sept. 1st, at Grace Presbyterian Church, will be heard, Mr. R. I. Mays, Ceremony witnessed by Dr. U. G. Dalley and Mrs. Melonia Lively, Pastor Jackson office. Dr. J. I. Ford stopped over in the city en route from New York and spent a few days with Mrs. Fulford, Mrs. May B. Lyles, Mrs. May Bibbs-Washington, Penngola, Fla., who was the guest of Mrs. W. B. Lyles, 335 Prairie avenue, cousin left last week for her home. CALDWELL—In loving memory of our dear son and brother Mack, who died Sept. 9th, 1908. I am now your mother. Mother Dear, I am not dead, but sleeping here. As I am now you am shall be. So be prepared to follow me. From loving Mother, Brother and Sister DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. Mrs. Elizabeth Crecroft, oldest living show propetor in the world, was born in a showman's van in Chelsea, England, in 1818 and has never known what it is to live in a house. Marie Wleck, sister-in-law of Robert Schumann, the composer, is still living and recently took part in a concert in Berlin. Though she is seventy-eight, she plays with almost her old time facility. The youngest person ever to take a master of arts degree from the University of Michigan and possibly from any university in the United States is Miss Dorothea Jones of Harrisburg, Pa. She was seventeen years old when she passed the examinations. Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, a lawyer and woman writer, of Washington is the founder and dean of the Washington College of Law. Mrs. Mussey's chief work has been the securing from congress of a bill giving married women the right to control their own earnings and to carry on their own business. Mrs. Catharine Belknap, sole survivor of the Watts wagon train party, which crossed the plains from Iowa to Oregon in 1848, and the oldest pioneer woman in the northwest, recently celebrated the nineteenth anniversary of her birthday in Spokane. She has not experienced a day's sleekness eighty three years. The Man Who Knows No Color, But Stands Pad for High American Ideals To Read the De- fender Will/Not Do Not Seed Him Back Duty If They Do Not Seed Him Back to Congress. PAIR PLAY TO ALL-HIS. A Chicago Young Man Honored by Mr. Foss and Many Other American Crit- ious Whom He Has Found Foss The Man Who Gave Touch of the Government's Lever. CIT. Congressman Geo. Edmund Foss, colored voters of the Tenth Congressional district we are sure will not permit themselves to be labeled or by the fists and half-baked arguments that are being used with an effort to discredit their present represen- tation of the government. That Mr. Foss has always read PRESIDENT to befriend them can be conclusively proved. Mr. Foss years ago age 81, was a Congressman and a senator to the Committee on Naval Affairs, which position he has held continuously ever since. Congressman Wilsons has secured a pension two years ago and has believed Mr. Wilson's claim to be deserving and meritorious, or you all will be deserving and meritorious, or you all will be colored man who could contribute for Recorder of Deaths. We believe the colored voters of the Tenth Congress represent a little "jugging up" occasionally, represented the Tenth Congressional District for over fourteen years. For over ten years he has been chairman of the House of Representatives, which committee has annually appropriated over one hundred millions of dollars for Navy, making an aggregate of one billion dollars appropriated since he has been chairman, and no one has been appointed to the House of Representatives. His honesty and integrity have never been questioned; he has never represented any SPECIAL AGENT, and instead of growing suspiciously and fabulously wealthy, like in some The Royal Box. The king of Sweden is a tremendously hard worker, but he takes relaxation from the cares of state and is an ardent tennis player. Queen Mary of England is an expert needlewoman. She is not only an expert dressmaker, but is wonderfully clever at indecaking. The king of Toro, Africa, has decided to be crowned annually. His father was so fond of the ceremony that he was crowned every month. His unjusty of Toro is probably the only mournach who awaived wears a false beard—made by the way, from the hair of white monkeys. The Home Doctor. To keep the soreness out of a painful soft corn try blinding it up each night with baking soda moistened with a little water. In all cases of poisoning the great thing is to get rid of the poison by vomiting and purging. The antidotes are of secondary importance. In acute fevers and inflammations where the pulse is quick and the skin dry a little aconite administered will prove helpful. When sweating sets in the need of aconite is over. Neuralgia is a disease often helped by aconite. Laundry Lines. Table napkins and tablecloths should never be starched. A spoonful of salt added to starch on windy days will keep the starch from blowing out of the clothes. A bosom board for fine shirts should be very smooth and but thinly covered. Some advise a murble slab. A careful houndress always uses lemon on wash day. She puts half a lemon sliced in the boiler full of white clothes. She maintains that it not only whitens them, but is helpful in removing slight stains. The Cookbook. Whipped cream is the best sauce to serve with shortcake. A dash of curry is believed by some epicures to be an improvement to fried and poached eggs. Free Excursion to Beautiful Mount Glenwood Cemetery Sunday, Sept. 11th, 1910. A great offer of 0.5 g limited number of lots—$2 cash, $2 per month, prepaid, payable to you, you can get it at a low price and on such terms. Price and terms: This free excursion is not for pleasure parties, but for those wishing to train. Train leaves C. & E. I. Station at 31st street at 2 o'clock p. m.; 63d st. at 2:05. Returning leaves the grounds at 5:30. Returned leaves the grounds of the Association, or of our agents at the depot before taking train. LEACHS LEACHS STO Albani and Gye. The story of Mine. Albani's first London engagement is as follows: Colonel Mapleson heard of her singing at a theater at Malta, and, thinking that she would be successful, he made her an offer through an agent of a contract to sing in Her Majesty's theater. She agreed to it and went to London, but on arriving there she told the cabman to drive her to the Italian opera house. He, instead of going to Her Majesty's, took her to Covent Garden, which was also devoted to Italian opera. She was shown up to the manager's office and stated that she had come to sign the contract which Mr. Mapleson had offered her. Mr. Gye, thinking to play a joke on his rival, Mapleson, made out a contract, and Albani signed it. Mr. Gye then told her that he was not Colonel Mapleson, but that he could do much better by her. He offered to gear up the contract if she liked, but told her that Nilsson was singing at Her Majesty's and would brook no rival. Albani decided to let the contract stand and thus became one of the stars of Covent Gardens, eventually marrying the son of Mr. Gye. His Final Plea. A Chicago man appeared at the White House one day during the McKinley administration with a petition containing 7,000 names recommending him for appointment as Brazilian minister. He was a picture framer, and when he was canvassing for orders he took along his petition and asked everybody in the picture frame business to sign it. Almost everybody did. The man was insistent and finally reached the president. Always gentle and considerate, President McKinley explained to the candidate that he would have to consult the Illinois senators and representatives about the matter before. ```markdown ``` b wow. Quite ever I us the hair It is a positive cure for dandru and women. This pomade in and beauty of the hair, it will be only a will be using BOWMAN'S HAIR POMA Only One Size, 50 Cents Sand Address all matters to W. L. B 2959 WABASH AVENUE LEACH'S EXPRES ALL PHONES 2840 a man to the head waiter of a downtown restaurant recently. "Sorry, I began the waiter. "Sorry nothing. I left the umbrella here not five minutes ago, there was no one near our table, and the waiter must have seen it." "If we find it" "Find it? It is found. I tell you, and I'll have it now or you'll never see me here again." The man, dushed with excitement, was walking away when he was halted by a man who had entered by the rear door: "Say, Frank, is this your umbrella? I picked it up when you finished lunch. Glad you were still here." "Here, but not still," the head writer whispered. "The umbrella has been found, but our customer has been lost for a few days. He'll be astounded to come in for a little while."—New York Tribune. Gone For Good Some folks in foreign lands have their own way of determining whether their relatives who have migrated to this land of ours have become hopelessly Americanized. One old lady in Germany reached her conclusion in a way that can be appreciated only by those who know the type of the German butter dish, deep as a b **b** **b** and the German reverence therefew. week her granddaughter in New York received this sad lament: "You will never come back. You are lost to us. Ians (a cousin) arrived here from New York on Monday and reports that you have even given up our deep German butter **b** **b** and are using those shallows Modern Ki "So you love us" MARES) AIR POMADE, FNS = f "tbe, Bowron Hair Poriade ts undoubt- ealy.“ono "pk the. best FAIR GROWERS ‘Sver mandfactures." Anyone who wi use Saly env gar will be thoroughly convinced thaty‘thero never ‘was a preparation. put fegdines that wil ake the, alr grow so rapidly and deautitu. Hundreds ot Taalep are now becoming’ very rauch. tn tereated tn” thle wonderful hair grower. ‘Pho demand in Chicago has become #6 great wo have found tt necessary to place 10m ‘he ‘following drug stores for” the convenlenco of the iadien: DRUG STORRS THAT ARE HANDLING THE BOWMAN HAIR. POMADE. Kingston Phavraacy, 116% 63st ek: Leviton, Pharmacy, 106 W. 47th att John Dict, A446 Stato ot; A. E, Hist, S0ih te; |W. -B.. Wallace, "38th ‘an State: Whaley” Bros. 37th and. State; Rankin & "White, doth and State; H 3. Holtheter, 324 uma states W. Ie. Forayth, Stat ‘ahd’ Stata; Crown |Phasmacy, Sls: and State; BIL Stack, eth and State; Standard Pharmacy, sth and State; Teller Pharmacy, 2701 Siate: J. HL Monigomery, 26th and ‘state: GJ. Say: der, 2469 ‘States W. W. Kelore, 2964 Stato; Bi" vgn fermann, ‘207 atatGeorea Pore fer, 23th and Afmour av.;C.¥. LaBas- fide, "2101" Dearborn. at: S Loser cor, 32a'and Dearborn; Henry ®. Thoma, cor. Zbth"ana’ Dearborn. CENTRAL DRUG CO., Washington and State sts.; THE PUBLIC DRUG CO,, 160 Stato st.; BUCK & RAYNER, State and Madison ‘sts.; CONSUMERS’ DRUG OO. State and Randolph stu; BUCK & RAY. ‘Si Seadiedn aA ‘Lm atin weg Sead me a card Phone, Douglas 2682 Mrs, LH. Coleman Gowns and Sults Made and Remodeled First-Class Work. Pricas Reasonable, ‘3744 RHODES AVENUE ‘CHICAGO ‘Petephone Maid 2017 J. A. TRIBUE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 171 Washington St. Roowtt i Cutcaco Ss] Za " N HN (ES i} Ng pie? D) en EI Ske. oe ki THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINKY OR CURLY HAIR.IT'S USE MAKES ‘STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COMB AND: PUT UPIN ANY STVLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT. WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES: ‘SHORT, KINKY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY, BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE ‘GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25¢AND 50¢ BOTTLES witt CHARLES FORD'S NAME_ON_EVERY., PACKAGE: ‘SOLD BY:DRUGGISTS. TF YOUR DAUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY ‘YOU.WE WILL SEND IT 70 YOU DIRECT ‘AY THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED BOTTLE, 25¢ LARGE SIZED BOTTLESO+: THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO, 216 LAKE ST.DEPT. 29, CHICAGO,ILL. ‘AGENTS WANTED. - PERSONAL. Miss Edna P. Wright and Mrs. N. Mall have returned home from North em Michigan. Mrs. Ritchie Cooper Coles, of Kan: sas City, Mo., is visiting the elty after attending the Eastern Star National Convention at Detroit. Mich. and is stopping with her sister. Mrs. S.C. Brown, 3521 Wabash avenue. Mrs. Coles is somewhat improved in health I henor of Mrs. Gertrude Bowles Townes of Memphis, Tenn. Miss Es telle Williams gave & plente last Sun- day in Lincom Park. ‘The invited guests were largely visitors. Mrs, Ray and daughter, Mrs, Annic Polk, ‘Mrs. Larry and Mrs. Burchett all of Memphis was invited guest to dinner at the beautiful residence of Miss Estelle Williams last Tuesday evening, 2637 Prairle avenue. Many Vlessings for the future were left tc Miss Williams by her friends. Miss Yates, daughter of Professor and Mrs, Yates, of Kansas City, Mo, has spent a part of her vacation In Chicago guest of Mrs. Robert Gray 2436 Dearborn street. Besides being the daughter of such distineuished parents, Miss Yates is aspiring to make for herself a high place in the educational world. She is doing post graduate work with pronounced suc cess, Mts. J, Wesley Hagan 8313 Rhodes avenue Was hostess at a dinner Jas Friday evening given in honor of Afrs Jackson of Minneapolis, Minn. Mr: Alpha EMiott, Mrs, Agnus Anderson and MW. H. Thomas of Pittsburg a. Monday morning, Mr. and Mrs. Wim, H, Brown of 3521 Wabash avenue en tertained at breakfast Chief Grand Master of the Knights of Tabor of Missouri, Prof. Joe B. Herriford and wife, Mrs, Mary F, Herrford Grand Matron of the Order of the Eastern Star of Missourl, also Prof. R. T Coles, Grand Master of Masons of Mis sourt and his wife, Mrs. Ruble Cooper Coles, all of Kansas City, Mo,, whe 45 a sister of Mrs. Brown, Miss Josephine Yates, daughter o Prot. W. W. and Mrs. J. Silone Yate: of Kansas Gity, Mo., is visiting at th residence of Mrs. Martha Gray, 243 Suarbora strect: OLUBS AND SECRET SOCIETIES. ‘Unique Temple, Lady Elks, meets the second and fourth ‘Thursday of each month, ‘Blas Emma, Vannoy, D: R, 2426 ‘Wabash: av.; Mra. Maggie Kendrick, Fin. Secly, 5205 Grove av. ‘Court Genoral Robert Eillott, No. 7895, Anclant Order of Foresters, meets every Second and fourth Monday in each mon ut Odd Follows’ Hall, No. 3337 State street. D. B. Hawley, Chie¢ Ranger! res {dence 6012 Aberdeen’ street, phone Went. 8347; FW. ‘Taylor, Financial Secretary, $422 Dearborn strect, phons Aldine 1810. CHICAGO LODGE, NO. 43, 1. B. P.O. B_ of W.—Mects the ist and sd Friday at Hulett’s Hall, 2712 State st.. H. W. Rhea, Secretary,’ 6430 Vincennes av.; J. JW. Fohnson, .Bxalted Ruler, 2947 Calu- at AV. y \, St. Monica’s Church, er Dear 1d 86th street r. John «pacar Houtdensy Sate Syabaat. °° RSE Boal 2 FRE a. Oa a Fiala aoe aaa [i gum ce PROF. BOABMAN, ‘The best music In the city for balls and concerts will be furnished you by Boarman'sSelect Orchestra; uniformed up to date for all occasions. 3563 Forest avenue. tices = By John H. Arnold. Lex, Mo. Sept. 2.—Some of our large cities’ are "boasting of what good peo- ple havin their elty and towns, Lex Ington, dio. wants. tie world to know thee We ave ood people in ote town also, ue Young people are notall hum hugs. We have young: men and women doling Work. of all Kinds and. are not ashamed to work ana make A honest dots lar, Wo are teaching our boys and iva to use their hands aswell as. thelr Braing and best of all we have 2 col- dred ehurchen, good Christian ministers to preach. the Gospel to us. 2 colored sehbols and 6 ood teachers to teach our boys and girls, 2 barber shops, 1 Kood "restaurant aui_many othor bust: hese houses belonging to. the Negroes Of the town, and everything, to mike Lexineton a first clans town our young hien are not ail whiskey Wrimicers, ete all of ouF young ladies. are not strest Toafers, and nil of our boys and. girls are not Pushing the ean for papa and ama, go you Nee We stand aa men and women to light for tight against wrong and heap Our rice to read. the top of ihe tadder. I eould say ‘many ‘other things about the People of ‘Lexington, Mon hut time und. space will not per: mit’ me to de so-at present, but be i Known that our young men ire ns (ood Ag any In the World, honest, kind heart- ed, ana beloved by ‘alt who. know tren best." Wo have some of the sweetest Youtig Women, boye and girls, that Got ever sput on earthy and We “are proud ‘at thom, and last but not feast we ave fuchting’ for Justice, right, freedom, any ovine” friendship’ tosall “Nearocs ot America, wishing’ them good tuck and Riceess "in all thelr business and ote Muy God "bless and. wateh over us sil; ‘Yours (uly, John i, Omala, What's te matter with our friend M. Tadd, he ts not shining shoes and Going ‘ls work 48 ood as ne used to ae No, tne ie ts Greaming? about nis sweat lithe wife down In Sweetsprings, No. Ont you Melvin, don't bo Ina huey: Fou) Will wet her for a wite some day Te the other fellow, don't steal her ant runaway. a it doves hig. "pumplc T often wonder what makes some people so foolish. they are alway kiek= Ines about the cost of living Welnz so high’ and yee thoy ave a chance to save money by busing. thelr groceries and ete, at wholesale prices and wont ilo Ht, shone fault 49 2 the BO. Pope Co. of St. Louls, Mo. sells thelr woods direct to the people giving them a chance to save many-a dollar this fait and winter by buying their goods at Wholeanie prices, Nowe If yon Swane to wave money tls fail_and winter, why. don't vou see the Ralesman and Tet hit maize out an order for you net leas than $5.00, remeinbor you got 40 Ibs, of sil" Rar if your order amounts to $10.00, Sugar has gone up again, better send in sour order now betore it (goes Up tO $1.80 per 100 Ibs. see our sulesman Mr, Soin Ef. Arnold, Gall Lexington, £10. Mr. Cons fas a many 'swtet hearts he can't hardly ‘tell which one he Joven Hest, Dut we ‘guess he’ stil lnves “Dod she is "ati calling Mini Darling. Ar. H.W. js beating Mr. Le Mevers time with Miss A: Curtis, Dutt Williams and owe famous pitcher Pete has Ming S. Sehaffer on: their hraine, and i. Green is still telling 1, Walker fo look ont those keld will tire a nnder wane, but if Wm, ‘albert. dent stop hiting ‘Mis tongue, Migs W. Brown ot Gmaha, Neb will have to give him a ood spanking. ‘Talhert wants some more Richmond enkes and 'T. Porter 19, still smiling at Ailsa S. Walicer, white sc Arnold fs deling whe, efender io mioat every one Just to” read the Lexington fun. Mr Tames Lindsay, returned home trom. “Excelsior Springs» Wednesday morning and will BO back to Work Thuraday “morning. fe, has. money on his brains and tn getting it too. Mr Aeneid wanes his money for that paper ite delivered. to vou, if you don't pay ifm he is going to’ plek a fight with au, better pay him at once, he wats hin "money. befare the 1st of September Te"you want to laugh and awe some fut dunt read the Lexington News in the’ Ghicago Defender, ifs) the. best colored paper out and Mr. Arnold. is selling them as fast aa he ‘can hand them out, hetter get @ copy. berare they are all wold out, von Wit And Mr, Are noid. on Main “street every, Saturday evening, at 6:10, also Sunday morning from 8:20 a, m. to 9:20 at night. just sayC. Dh. tO. Nitg. and he will give You natin, but be sure you give him Gc. cash Wig hip elia no paper on. creat Simply. cash, The T. 0, Pope Coy of St, Louls, Mo. will have thelr grocéry. catalouges foF September and. October ready to-aisttt= mike September iat, 1810, "60" If you want to save money” this fall and win ter on your grocery bills, ask the salen man for & catalogue, order blanks, ete, these entalonues will be given free of cost to persons who Intend to use them im sending for goods, if you aint going ty send for Goods at wholesale. prices don't asic our saleman for the "cata- logue, ‘see, John Ht Arnold, he. Is the salesman for 1 O- Popes grocery Co. of St, Taouis. Mo. get, the havit of buy- ing sour Roods at wholesale prizes, Rew. 'Seray “Woolrich, ex-pastor, at st yohn af, church was Inoue city afew weeks’ ago, Inia, many “friends came near cating him up, they were 89 Riad to ee him, he nreached & won: erful ‘sermon i the St. Johns M. 1 chureh last Sunday night, he ts one, of (ite best ministers that ‘ever ‘eet his foot on the Texington soll. Mr. Try Shelby hus another candy plé Mist Mn- cle, Woodson wito. {x one of thone charming vollets, she i= a loving youne: fady and we hone Mr. Shelby wilt stick close to her “as she fsa sweet tittle Vollet. F. Porter still says he loves Miss Ie, Walker, one of the sweetect Lillles tliat ever bloomed. Oh! you Tom, you cortatniy have a sweet peach, stick to her and Ue as loving aad kind to her as you can, Mr. John if, Arnold 18a sly old fox: he-has one sweetheart. {n one piace and one in another, but the one at home ta the one he loves best, fer name Witt not bo publistied at pre: gent, but ‘she is one. that. certainly Itnows how. to. male those lovely smiles. Nit, Arnold certainly loves hls honey doar, 1€ you know her name Just Keep it to yourselt, sho is a sweet rove bud that's ‘all ‘Looe here you haven't paid that bin you owe Mr. Arnold for papers. now if'he pases you bY and dont. deliver You a paver it. witt be ecaurn vou haven't patd your bIML “Mr. Arnold “Is now a clairvoyant and’ mind reader, 1f you want to Know your past, prosént, and future happantngs, see hin at 1 Glinton vstreet. or at. Your’ Rome, yon may hide anything you. wish and’ he WHT finds for you, “write a lotter to Your nweethenrt, nent Te up and he wit Read ‘it “without tareine ic open and ste. Adults 60 c, children 28 6, cash. Nothing done na told on credit. so don't Ask Mr Arnold. to. tell, you. something on credit, neces he wont doit, s0 Fou Recd not asie him, tt you havent the Toney snot cash just pass’ on and ‘cook pas nae J, L PARKS, UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER "Phone 3231 Douglas; 3135 State Street. J. L, Parks, undertaker, makes new offer to public. All funerals on South Bide, any depot, complete, with car- riages and hearge, $76.00. From any part of West Side to depot, complate, for $70.00. Mr. Parks is able to sell just as cheap as the trusts, All he wants is a trial. . MISS JUANITA TOLIVER. / ae OES mae | Bea ae By ao eo ef} Noe SENS OM FON a ea pee iV Oc. ee Be tN a ee A Be nes PORO Hair Crower 50c a Box, 0c extra out of city Treatment $1.50 2420 Dearborn St. Chicage, 2420 Dearborn St ____Chieage, IN THE RAILROAD ENTER, $s es Mr. W. A. Basemore, of 4945 Dear- born’ street, a. Pullman’ porter has not Sent in. hid ‘subseription, ‘See me oid Fifty ‘and’ sign’ up for a. Year subscrip: Mr, J, Meredith, of 1224 W. Gtat st. fs Winning to Tor’ Angeles, “Calo. tn servico of the Pullman’ Co. My. Stere: ith I an ex=police oilicer of Ghieato Mr. Smith Jones, of 5548 Je(terson avenive IS in dining service out ot Portland, Ore, as chet cools No better Ume than now to sub- |actibe for the Defender, Ar, CG, Reed, of 4764 Armour ave- nue ts Funhlng t6 Jacksonville, Ploriss in Service of the Dulimun Co, over the Ch hy. Tam loaking after the interest o the Ratirond Men and 1 wish to state fo-all of you men to purchase. a. tot fom me 1h North Muskogee town site Okithoma, Fam. the general agent In Chicago, TH. Lote setting at $100 up, to $200 Gna youvoniy” have, to. pay "$10 jown “and 36 per month. Phone Doug: Ing 6222) ‘aske for Mr. Winston or Camp: bel’or ‘write to Mr, Jonn Te Winston, 730. Bast 40th ‘street, MMe. A. J, Rich 1s running to Buffalo, New York ‘in dining service of the New Yorke Central Ry. Mr, Scott Collins, of 4759. Armour avende better denown “as Bright eves from the Lone gtur state once & welter Weight, prize Aghter In now in the eer= Meo‘ ot "ie Pullman Company’ te 10s Angeles, Cul, Mr, E. R. Booker, of 4428 Prairie ave- nue ig running. t “Boston, Mass. in Service of the Pullman Company over the Nicke) Plate ity. lines. Now is the time to send in your, sub- geription, only $1.50. year Phone Douglas 622%, ask for Afr. Winston, "To investigate your mind and keep in touch of what 49 Going among the col ered” People of “then United “States You’ should” read “and. subseribe. for The “Chicago” “Defender”. the only paper ‘inthe Clty of Chieago that prints ‘the. doings of the Railroad Genter. "Rates “are. as’ “follow: One “year, “$1.80; six months, | #:00; three ‘months, 6c, mailed to any part of the United States or Canada. ‘En- Slose your subscription bya Post Of- fice Money Order to the Chicngo Deten- der Co, #109 State street, Chicago, Lill. nels, or phone “Douglas: $222 or "3339, eal” for Mr. Jotin. Re Winston. or Ar. Rois, Abboit “or "air Ja N. Campbell, either one will take your order, Mr. G. W. Critterton, of New York qity’ Is "running ‘to chicago over the New York Central Co. staying on car El-Capltan when’ in Chicago, 400 and | oot street. Your independence js a home, don't be diseased for gambling such imper- thence, is rudeness and the work houses ‘and jalis and prisons are beings filled every day by such type. of non, While “You” are Working ‘invest. your money in’ property. 1 will do tiny man or woman a favor in this respect Wwin'sell you a Jot where property: 1s Groh oh the lmerease in North Maken Bee, Oklahoma, $10: down and 42 per Month, ‘Phone Dougiag 5222, ask Tor tir, Winston. Mr. A. Boyd, 3931. Artislan avenue, Ig running to New ork. in service of the Pullman Co, over ‘the New York Central Re Miss Lillian Green, of 4442 Michigan avenue Is reported to have accepted of © position as maid ‘on the Laie Shore Exmited train ‘between “Chicago and New Yorke Mr, John Adams, of 10 Beach street, Hackensack, N. Jy Js running to, Ont! eago over the New. Yorke Conteal Wey. lines in service of the Pullman Go. Mr. Adams" is" preparing to. invest "some money 4m Muskogee, Oklahoma —pro= perty: Good for hr. ‘Adams. Mr, Charlie Hobbs, of 4602 Dearborn street Ie running te St. touts, Moe in buitet service for the IMlinols Central Ry Co, Charley is ‘a prince: Owns: his property and his” ‘head. is no. "aways Swelled over It, and he Is no ones fool, ‘Tho scab train conductors has gotten the heads. of two-train. porters. inthe Service of the Chicago” and “Fastern Minois Ry. ‘Co. Me. award Mins. of SLT Deatvorn, atrect “and Joseph Whe llams, of 524 La Salle street, Hach’ and. every porter should sub- gctibe for the Chicago Defender, give in your order today. Phone. Douglas 82220 2380, Mir Fohn WW, Hightower, of a7 West 45th place a train’ porter on. the Fort Dodge run has been’ under the weather for 2 trips past, but he is able to he hp and around the house, but he got up enough steam to-go to 47th. and Dearhorn street. purchase a “copy. of the Chicago Detonder. ‘Sie John Re. Combs keep very busy to be an extra. train porter Inthe ser= Vee of the 1. C, RY. Co. Report reaches ime that ho is now running to Centra= Tha, “Th, It ig “ume now that Combs should “eall up Douglas 6222 and sub: Scribe for the Chieazo Defender. Ask for Mr. doh He Winston, ‘Mr, ‘Thomas Kelley, of 5255, Denr- porn sireet who Js running to St. lou. 3,'Mo, over the @ & i 1 Ry. in Pull- Man Service. "Reporis to me that alt ts Well and he gets a gopy of the Dafen= dor overy week, i'n Tew, of these porters would put ‘a band on “Black dack* may De they bog would have a nickel to buy @ copy of the Chicago Defender to take home %0 thelr wives, this may hurt but the truth Jn detight, ou nre supposed to ve wike from all of your travels, but these Will Hot awatt your return trip and lay. lad hands-on aN of your tp. money “you tell UT have not the Heart, Mtr. witllam Patton ta running to St Louis, Mo. in Tullman service over the Chicako and Eastern Tilinols Railroad Company ines, ie, Haney Montjoy, of 4729 Dear- born ‘streot ig still om the St. Louls linc over the O.'m T. ity, Come through Rontioy: call Up Bousias 6228 and sive in your’ subscription for, a. year are Tyler, Willis’ Southall, George Anderson, get out from behind that tree, Tet the sunshine on, you, T gure sshere in that you are tn the ight Cad) ‘class, on your next. trip. call SP Dousiae bean and Bisa in your stb Beription for one year for the Chicago Defender, GUY L. BROWN ADDIE BROWN The Tore Dining Room ‘The Dent Home Cooking Ia the City Regular 25¢ Mealn Spcctal Sunday Dinner 35 Cents Special Attention Given to Private Partlen S418 Denrhorn Street Facial Masnage Hate Goods Manteurtag’ Made 10 Order ‘Phove Calumet 4221 | MRS. JAMES T, HENRY Electric Scalp Treatment a Specialty Aprons and taney Goods made to order 15 Went 27th St, ‘Chicago. ‘ OAS. T. GLAZEBROOK\ TAILOT, Cleaning, Pressing and Repatring Suits thade to Order. Work Guaraatscd, 2007 STATE ST. s ‘Telephone Dougias 1946 ‘SURRADSE R, pried, CAMERON & 60, GER) Masquerade and Theatrical Ge} Costumes and Fine Clothing BRAIN — Masks. Grease Paints and BR Arnos "sensors Soeacly fl ania alti GRY) asm eestor 3447 South State Street Phone Calumet 084 2MnS. SUSIE NEWTON Batrdrewsing, Shampooing and ‘Manteuring Manufacturer of Wiss, Pompadours, Switches and ‘All Kindy of Hair Goods, 2021 State Street Phone Aldine 407 DR, GEO, W. PRINCE South Side Drag Store 2050 State Street THE WAWA Restaurant and Lumch Room A Place to Eat. ‘he Oniy Place That Serves Coffee Ont South 202z State Street ‘W. M. DORSEY Musto Arranger, Original Composition Arranged tor Pablication Also Band and Orchestra ‘Arraniemente | taste Faraished for All Occastons S150 State Street Chfeago, IIL uns. HATTIE JONES Dresmaking Ladies’ and Children’s Clothes ade 20 Order at Reasonable Prices 44 Weat 351n Street Phone Aldine 1774 ORESCENT MARKET 3, Weinstein, Prop. Fancy Native Meats and Fine Groceries 38 and 40 Went 35th Street Phone Douglas 780 UNION MARKET Fresh and Salt Afeats Poultry and Game ‘All in Senson, 8002 Dearborn Strect Candies Notions B.D. BURTS ‘Deater in ‘Tovaccos and Cigars, AM Kinds of Magazines, Books ‘and Statlonory. AML the Leading Negro Papers and Magazines, 2036 State st. chicago, 1. ‘Pelephone Douglas 1144 L, C. EWING Expressing, Coal, Wood and Ice Baggage ‘Transferred and Checked to AN Depots 26 W. g0m St, Chicago, 11, Phone Dougins 1144 1. MAXWELL adios’ and Gents’ Tailor Cleaning, Dyeing and Repatring 28 W. a0th St. Cnteago, 1. Let A. W, Coles Do Your Electric Repatring, Making a Specialty of Electric Bells, Wiring Your Rest- dence, Fornishing Material and Power for Only $3.60, with Six Per Cent Discount. Please Drop Us a Card. 24 W. Soth St, Chicago, MM, DK. P. J. SCOTT (Graduate Optometrist) Ocular Spectatiat FcpeihenShagmern crags pealieig tie eeaies Electric Muncle Treatment for Sore Eyes and Nervous Headache. Spectacles and Hye-Glasses made to order, and Guaranteed to give Per fect Satisfaction. OMce 2636% State St,, Chicago, X11. SCOTT © STANTON Poot Room and Billiard Hall Clears and ‘Tobacco 8858 Dearborn Street W. @. STOBALL Expressing and Moving ‘Goal and Tee 3812 State Street. Phone Dougtaen sae M, CROWELL HEAUTY STOP Malrarculos, ‘Shamnpoolng. aud Manteurlog Vineation Scalp dentineut a, specialty oi West Sena Bt, Tene State. Fhpas Calomet 1107 Sa TURNER We luakevs specialty of Testes, Beit je taake so Gt, Feaitry, ‘Balter, Brees" atl Fresh Veretanies, Chests and No: Bacto, "Gakee ant Canalen $300" Dearborn Street, HERMAN G. THEILE Groceries snd" Mente Fresh Vexeinbles, "Exes and Dutter Sor Slate Sireet Phone Calumet” 208% SPOTES LADIES TAILORING COLLEGE 3037, State Street, schere sewing in any or all of Ite branches ig’ relentiieanly. and “thoroushly’, taught. en sewing darn’ $5, in whiclr time. Sou can make anytting you desire nod nn much fe the time will permity S6 sewing days fis; full course. $25, Phone Douetnn 1449 WILLIAM. ORE Real Batniey Hentingy, Fire Tonurance ‘notary Public, S558 State Street, Yous Old Hat Which You Ara Ready tc aoe Away ring 1 Around and We Wilt Mateo He eve" ame PEliy HAT GoEANER, Broo. state sire Nat Devt fo Theatre, UNIQUE HAND LAUNDRY, MOE Wentworth aves Cleaners of “Fine tase Work’, Curtatn Slenaed 280 fer ales cRangt ay clthes Dee aon, Bhlete #ngid toe, Collars 2 %."MebONOUGH, Fiop. Gore and Gallouses positively removed by ‘slog GOODWIN's CORN SALVE Yor BUNIONS Xt bas no caual, ricco ie and 250, at your ‘aroreint or direct from ‘an, For tre Ravles on aay foot troublen eall'or write a ‘GOODWIN. FOOT REMEDY CO. co East sist street John HE, Wallnce, Manaker. Telephone Dougian 6990 COAL Donred Bros, Exprensing and Movisg Yan Pursltare aad Piano Moving Baggage Packing and Shipping a specialty. Three Trips dally to aod from all De- Dots, Howin, Freight ud warehouses ‘S144 State Street Phone, Yards 1219 ‘CHAS, W. BURNS Dealer ta Rresh, Salt and Smoked seats Fish, Oysters, Foultey and Gamo tn: Season ‘Chelee, Creamery Balter 180 S0th’ Bireet, cor. Xa Salle, MURRAY. Expressing, Van and Storaze Co, Furaltare and Fiano Moving. Magarce Preking and shonin # ‘specialty Three Tripn Dally “To and From all Depotny Ereight and Warehouses Sisg STATE STREET ‘Tel. catamet 2621 Paints, Oils and Varnlahee hy A BUCHANAN isardware Plambers and sieameniters’ Supplies ‘Gas and Meotrieal Goods Furniture, ‘carppisy, Stover Wooden ‘ware, ‘Emamlederatey ‘Daware, Glass- ‘ware, Chiba ana Oreckery ‘Seas-ay stare S8 DON'T FO! IBAACEON'S Peyote: 22% Dearborn Bi, ... ‘Phone Calumet 4766. ipo of ris da Hae ioe ee Faree intpe Dally'to'Au Depota and Freight 2540 State Street. SO 280 slate treet comet - rnpsoutSe ERE? orome, nrg TRUE exon Bey 1a OE TO ATE aoa Sree esac ere la Scr eer a, | cee one Galamet seu | aa cowi oe sees Paaes i ‘wen AND WOMEN'S TAILORS SB, TOME eanng ei OE Se HaS SAF Hepatns NORE od BeBe Soe See TA bohedko SS WATER, re ee a we a See —_Phone sbi pS ae FE paam TA paisa poe act Sages peer Mya soe Seer sata ate lero SBE fate dd fogerty 0 ay lena heen gem ess Bedale tue Dene EE Sie, me, tee vennn Bets Gene, a, Sonera onsoenT Ap Mee Fahey VOCE AND NORE Bal peabatsreee shearer EE eatborm Bt honest 1 Sma an TAC Ber, Tae tute maa ee tae alle ana cy apne Fey’ tie oot. NY 8 NQROE A OME OF Gos0 TEUORERT Ce cee oF 6000, seDOTtENT agi carbene rmipine ot eh etree org Sarge. Sa Soe eee On a tare ta 2 Wr ebuie ae Ha a ROMA Tato Bed UNION CRE By CLOTHING HOUSE, 52 STATE STREET, 2d FLOOR, is the best place in town to get ° as Clothes for yourself and family Bese ‘ ss] Pay Us $1.00 per week and we will gress you and your family We handle a complete line of Ladies’, - Geuts’, Misses’, Youths’ and Children’s Clothes $1.00 — cuttnis out ana bring it with you = $1.00 This COUPON will entitle you to $1.00 on any purchase made at our store if presented on day of purchase. UNION CREDIT CLOTHING HOUSE 52 STATE STREET | DU iH, ‘6 9 THE QUEEN SOLACE” .: Formerly SOLTEROS CLUB POOL AND BILLIARD PARLOR CIGARS AND TOBACCOS : LAUNDRY OFFICE Cigars Wholesale and Retell Box Trade a Specialty 3205 STATE STREET - - - CHICACO PHONE ALDINE S68 _TERREVOUS L. DOUGLAS, Proprietor ee Phono, Oakland 1014 : RAILROAD MEN’S HEADQUARTERS THE BUDWEISER CAFE ~ 5050 STATE STREET, OVER DUNN & HIGHT . Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars | GOOD MUSIC R. B. WILLIAMS, Manager WERVERE BROTHERS Fancy Groceries and Meats * Telephone Dooglae 3273. 33 West Sint street, GEO, M, PORTER, Ph. G, SATIUEL G, PRENTICE, Ph. Phone Aldine 625 : } PORTER & PRENTICE } Reliable Druggists : Phone us, we deliver to ll parts of the City “~ °-~ | 19 W, 81st Street One Door East of Dearborn GEORGE WHITE'S Newry giumeh and Hestaorant Newly opened. ulck Service. Tablen for 1adten. Everything Eieat Claws, R02 Sintec Street (Near Sine Street.) 1. D. RORINSON Maker and Painter of ‘SIGNS: Of Every Deneriptton ‘Pinta and Artistic, Gold and Silver Work m Specinity, Lowent Prices, 3015 Wabash Avenue MRS, MARGE MARTIN ‘RESTAURANT Moime Cooking | Regulnr Dinner Starts At 12 Mf, | Menin AC AM Hours, Night oF Diiy ye Son State Street ‘Tel. Douglan 4091 COAL & WOOD, Bir BEETS, AR. Davee Tel. Harrison 6558 E, SPEED JEFFRIES, Proprieter | Mowano Monwan, Chat of Franko, Eye hemor ef Atintle Ct. SOUTHERN HASH, SPAGHETTI AND CLUB HOUSE SANDWICHES OUR SPEOIALTY ALL UP-TO-DATE DISHES AND SOFT DRINKS SERVED sSituctitat (26 PLYMOUTH PLAGE, CHICAGO Exggang ew eee eT on anata 9 CHICAGO FLORIST | ‘Wholesale Retail tre. ‘T. 3. Johnson, Prop. 291 West Gist Street (near ‘Ta Salle) Cut lowers, Plants, Designs Weddinge nnd Funerals.” our apectaits. Special reduetion to. lodges, churches aud Parties, “Desens, $1 and wp. Now wil} fave money by xiving us a trial. Alt ‘or dere carefully and. peompty attended to. Phone, Drover 806 Mi. WoL Groceries and Bakery Guida 8562 La Ballo Street We Furnish You Money To Protect YOUR PROPERTY OR BUSINES Mortgage Banking and General Brokerage ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Northern Assets Realization Comp. Office, 3517 State Street Phoue Aldine 253; THE CRANFORD 3600 eo, APARTMENT BUILDING __AVENUE Ss \ Pe Se ss fe - Jo en ge MMM sc hie ce ee eee see He iat ee te Ca eccetenve amr (it penne (LG ie iE oe = a ete ee sy THE FINEST BUILDING 3 & to COLORED TENANTS in C. Heat, Electric Light, Tile Baths, 1, l IW. CASEY, Age : 101 WASHINGTON) STREET TELEPH’ 7 ee, ME, CLARK FANCY. onocenres 4584 Blato Stevet Phone Deogias 3375 Bt. Elmore MATCH & MATCH Jesslo ‘Express and Van, Borage Oiiice 8556 Stato street Warehouse S517. State Street Phone Douslas Szz4 FRITZ PANNIER 2200 8. W, Cor. State and ‘32nd Sta, ine Wines, Liquors and Cigars, ‘Warm Lunch All Day % A. GREET, ‘Home Bakery and Delleatessen’ TT sag SPIT AES EELS RINNE, e recocrenaianeati Ms ae oe ee ae as < R, arneree TERE eR See plone emer Wee eR EE a Even enee —— we HSE ee PCE nee ere Sua ENE haeingee 5! LSE SOLOS) UBER RCRD E NEE oa cs 0 ES eRe eet tre ER Daehn SN SMR Se as Pheer Pa \ cee ey (GRO EIO®. SES SER REEL GES AC Ts Sepentiva tee GMa ete FAS OR TREE g i POSSE Pian, OA SRE SIREN STRAIT See SCAG argo NE cd iMate, Saute OE ane e a eee Sees . \ Saree ag pe EE SOG ae on (RO Fey Ne Te) ye oe i i t . Sones BER OE TE RE ERE NES, 1 RR UP Ae este ot > 4 3 ¢ seni ‘ BRC OM Sa age as SEE Se SVS SE ea Patera ee 8 Se ease z . zi : ‘ te PSPS MAL ES aa) AS tee Sr eae a eee —= Sarat Seas ap wite to. .-]sotored company ponsible, néxt_ seawon, 1S, gee! ; : : piesa eee, SE PS 2) bothyto’appease the public; whoch wot! « J $Someboay’ nas deen ‘awful sick: since {~~~ yet Key ee Sepa ee eT EY aigiewond ialetdts “ara -who| snips wWiltame, and to defeat the sot 4 Conway came around om Resim etree ‘Weigtity ‘Propositions, ~ a Seiroee a rey ead Meaning: up. Siate'Gts an | Rene narpones “Of certain ings’ ot ‘nc- A and wanta ‘him to-go. week on: South | Tho ark was thirty days'out. Sita hts SAG ata een [bee sentawith “one of the: Roll: | ore and Actor | organizations. ” ert V/s Y ta. wtreet, Just Uke a nigger he hates! \«you and your wite ES aS Se, galffinenters. - bf. -M,208 aun | Williams “has-now trodden. upon the tal gee this Fellow. man get along: ‘but your wife must be. privi- é \ E89 Ge ke Baarerthe ones. 0, "you stringer! | slage ‘of: the finest first class theaters What does Bud care for, that, he is go: leged animais,” growled Mr. Hyena, iq 7. eee Agaelintico “Beaneators. weiss fo'~|in “Ameriea tn a - white "production, {ng to ‘stay just where he ts’ at, and it] glaring at Mr. Elephant. “All the reat 010 ce ee estihgited@at-the: Midlothian“giria’ pis-| which means there can ‘he no voxathie he don't Arnold Is going to, swat him ; ad ‘ ad Soe pe istt set ena Mand’ O. J je | gxcuse for his not doing ao hereafter with o, bage ball bal.'so Bug you stay - a bunch are on short rations, but ‘ * 1 ees * ey Eee 03 ‘Bent is Who “sald he| with a company of-his own race to his ° ‘andskin ait ‘of, those | T notice you're still drawing regulation . PERRET Og, (acta FEHR Rood tam time at °} own. “satisfaction mg shout Gate and Mi your pockets full ot $3 3 Stee ee RS 4 Be eis club, party Tank "Nidan o'%C| suver have tandencended to"son Gown sau ana, M Your penkets N)oC,8 8,31 alzed meals, ‘There must be a reason.” The Man That Knows ™*** 4 Bye MSE Sean the how ani| de hale ee ae tae i 7 ee taste pooh cna 1a El There is” renfieh the etenants “a, ; at cea FANE Dnelewoca° pete’ vinn are, | eavor ushies sAtiar 'aseadie "he Win 77 Elo, “AAS! elton Srache stares, For| Meatened to rock the boat if our ll ‘nasiion Pleken Matualnen’ Beaty keke Bont BU, Game aoftte Eate FG ACM RNA ei love me Teales| compan? he avout have pmaied “in 6 G Gernary doy day" aad su gant twin] Meals” ost ang welght!"—Mustrated || Journals, Moribtenle statlgnery: Pine "Candies An" ings af, Cleats | ° pe seen _ = Paina fe we cae ay BREE GR SHS Map asic lae| Sunday Maemo SRO obasigs Sgapere, Shorting Hapere: me ean eet any ih] 7 Bh seasn ana hg either contenainy: Yor iis — Momabote takes tam away, thats aii, ——— : ; : Pe -MUSICALAND DRAMATIC | 3 2S se"oFastets soth By Jack Pot. ser Pou aun kane any about Gade bee Bm nee ae ——— onway you can get your hat and #9) saiting ina cradio sone W Ss M aaa . seogesiiv ce lie weds JACKE JOHNSON'S COLOR. © | Sect Ret glen’ {OF Conway 18 oP MaINY a 'Luttaby Land, Lalaby Land, . . Cc i Bcc i aoe, TOTAL the WEEE oo ag a [RRR Seta aenota and atorgcce | The sandman steors us sale Sune “a : : BR en ie ativan eaewce: a ee ARISE Of ME] LANDS MAKB TRIPLE PLAY. [Saunders ete’ ‘have received thes] With steady hand, with ateady hand. (NIC) . - ae claasical school, gave a plano recital ch Saunders etc. have received thes} W ly hand mente tape PE hse. oa NRL a feet me Le eee oe poe 1 ee i ae a SYLVESTER RUSSELL, Foremost Dramatic Critic. Waitt ERIE: Fe DP heew iene Of Actors, Manngers, £* Plagwelichiy and Compoxcen Untortunately the colored race has hot aa Yet produced any. manaters kt -Tiusteat "comedy win ‘were not seetorm and only" te who take fan’ inc that Eapachty. But Cole and George Watleer ate. exeinpled ae exceptions The col. ored vaudeville, and picture" houses five given ua" several” managers: the frat and best known of there ati Not Raving qualined at vail. intellectually: an educational deficiency. nud tack. ot guicure "whlch 1s always excusanie (Bue in excusing a colored manager who has an“established. theater who” te More" capable except a wie man to do. hte business for him, and if thers vista. colored ‘man. capable: why. "not give him tie job andthe same salaey sthat ‘a. white” man ywould command? That ts a! question, of courses tint eol- ore Managers will have to "ponder over witha usual hesitancy. Baraey Highs!” whot was ther mast aucesaetcl lets Imthaser of his day ‘nd ine euntortunacely im dapan and “Iie “walteThday~is missed in the solving of promens Shut would tae"? beak Soiely within Ms reach, We “observe that white men hs¥e now already bull colored: theaters ahd we. muse anders stand that the word ‘e6lored—means thats such. theatery are. bulit, print ally for colored people in such Yocalt- Hen” where: they hutnber "the. tmekest and in which Houses tiey ‘ate assueed Of all thelr” publte rights “and priv exes, out eneertulis" siter the "same Rdvantaxes to the white Face, provide Ing that they ‘are elvil and orderty. White proprigters. of these ‘houses. in Thany” chance have offered fous tor men Bald. to ‘be colored managers, and’ We hope ‘that’ those men “who have ‘besn Engaged tis season will) nov able te maliy. So if white ‘men whe hutle do: this, we can’ only “expect colored managers to hiro any” maw who qual fog to ieeep ‘the. House rhaning. ove. Seuatuity. But the duty. ot. eolorea Janawers will be to develop, managers - From Supe and stage maniigers wom hey_ employ. there “iste. “in those “name "t Rave ‘overtogked. "tits ‘mets Jesse A" Shippcand he coud sanage any theaier oF atirnetion equal “> aulie AD. Thacloselepmnent sora and comporeie meca noe awele pon, “One thing. is. "sorta Every Retor or componet who ‘ie sel ah to a voung artiste directly in tier gin tine losen grounds ‘The fellow whe Siing out Ia the man with te wuusel® fiohSpivit. “Were T must recat (heal important’ essentials’ ta auccess--tcon omy, temperance, cordiality, tru(hful- heat, morality, reat, exerelsé, Texulat: ty "nd ener ‘care SE the healthy Xs an addition. “ienow thyself" “Retom: ~her “to heedme a great man or woman Tkine profeanion “vou mace Rot io" be an ‘artist. "Fou" have ot tat aude Drnctlce and’ originate “with “a ‘never Scastne devotion to: gain tnt rewar Woh ecomen.to the tev who are ereate be. The greatest: eucater ut at athe fagctnation: for. arinie froite. ani ame Hie Blount ‘an bafoo much “at: torys and:you are-bitadite: vou enone. the corruptiomat reer tBlegs and. the Hat. “the! mtestontoe wamenabe expert ence and | reputatidn up, the stage Shoutd "bextorteakeuneprgeeen yanks women’ who, enter. anes lally’ those be great talent andaieauts, wit ves at citune, “Shy? maturing icttese who Ean lose sight of envy to vio seh nn Herote act to ‘one of her own se<"nel” tlom Tonos tho rewari af ature’ friend: Ship, ‘providing “ahe ‘isles. ta" ooh ex Ow gBie une Fiat Sha. word at Cen foncerning the plavwrights: “rie vont to" become a playwright to a, person Whole "net "on the sage ina” rie Journey. “Stage experience “mist be iiaa, ie siust he gotten trom somewhere, Hatta’ around” fia theaters. Tsou sayy after collexe’ pours, nad ‘steal in ie rehearsala ‘oF get in: chroush tors Afar aequaintancestin. “This ian obew Dleco of advices Te: begin sae heele Ielter Isa good "ways? then " write ghotches” ‘then try none act comease Here 'f"'must advise’ soumes* tuners With Herat: aspirations wot. to"thine Be writing even metodenmma ‘or ans ething serious.” You will havo” te get the “HONEY -bs_writing comedy. It's a ong “Way ta "Atewandes Dumas, But Wwe ole with ‘pride Coday upon Joase Re shiny. His” brain aha sen Sa should "be. a study’ Cor young aeg-who have ‘neon “the Willams. dnd’ Walker Dinyn, “Gniuctey for Shipp, he was not a poet, bit ne is as gat as Dunbar ih "Eneiner tino; wat fhe Swne. peng in ‘thelr ‘mad fusto'see and "write Rhout'a very funny “actos, Yorgot to Hive ‘etedle to “tho” playwrights wita Wrote’ the plays and ‘mage If possmble Tor the ‘nctors to" dlaplay ‘thele werkas tye {Bourth and Inst subject next weeks.) Bert Willtamy In n white show Sinker Bie ie at the’ Colontat - ‘he. ‘Follies of 1910," F. ziextetd acia hong review bnavetis, Siu frame New Yeti, opened on the’ sty nag, for Arun he tne Colonial theater. White tenfold. tas, given "usa" stupendous S2eeRtelproduction for whlch he Ia noted Tig moreikely that he has been made Soe" Aten signing Bert A. Wi- Ma pfentgat an owt wes ‘oe fat ike pubile would Ye 'much ‘seWiltiaine tn fan” posible | Hoports ea chee ila pave th tte afiminated for the Chi= inimreatiy, t9 the. lls: ‘publio. na has aireavs ithe tition: “Williams Meagecene.a Ta Jnck ‘Water epjneay wish i scoaswet wil: apne a ee sa m an folored company. poasible. néxt sergor iota te ‘Sppease’ he bul, whock Wer SEBS QViRisase sie eset a Set Arpone tac eelgiee aah Sa Cantey as rani dines Se APiTatty “SEs ow RE Ubon “h SUES AS DON dee alten taste eee itera ee rr athe adie Liribe Revawelt Toc eeng ee: son betes gesrls Sah She Se Aaa te TAP 4 Stemenz of Mevitinca edt Sor Rae adele ag de POS An's eeiatennce ar 8 oa Bae Oeil oat Ss he ehh Here ator eas, Taste ee a Ae nee cere Mees INS earn peresriceate! as a ahs ee Par AC ee ars Serre ey ier orice ate ms ane rota 6 the peek aig, TURPENES SENS SEES. ot an classical school, gave a plano. recital Suatltl eeey Si Haha Fees Sediee et chee lag aan Sra oat pies Sete shea Seda een RRA ale ais eouemnattlan Magee”, Bese Hoe Sees nD eset PNeeANEL® oils, wait RePeptoualas OnURS eg og ene AUR ors ebttcnce en Woe a aeabttea Sete tah een aha Cane tao ea al HORNAOTS Coane Caan Maaeeiony aoe ite eset Pree cine oe ease paneer note Tie pels SURG OS, REE SRE Pena fener ates, Ft Bula heave taaaing, Meh ae a aaa Race Fait elds AS UE AP caltls treat Cleeitan ie reat Solar panecire oF ace a god oti ve termed a very: skitiful pianist and Fern eon yin cacger ty he eee teeer Pt eae al ima Rane ot ‘he Grand, haa 4 goed bit for this wake oR Mee Sort ee, tet Ghaumre thee Caer ioaien dees reraucanes ng et ea ose Potent nals Se uP aate FER atest caret Se Boe Sil srgtereT age wate esta fet, Sh Marmeete ae rang. Sees nS Taeaebs cele ae Ser aey le Mie Ee, eae aaettnats Paget gk aR tad ers Sonate Gh tow auiemitae ree Bie? abet Sa SIREN eco ob aan the Seta eh SRST Benge PSU Ao, a, Poveras NS QRICTSS, wie WORE Bertin eri i aaiay SP Dee ae ene Bad olay ficel Sigiet oreson es Peg aa aE Neca at ty sls Ha ee oe Simms, and ‘Tompson, tonped th Ae 2s mMeRROON (ORR Baas tee Monee Me mes trace Aye einige fatten het a inated ae dai pa ae tag ttae haan Tia Pee cre eee BENS ada Se endorsed and Theta who sézeit ig tendeieal cna Odie Hie Leet Be tepearea, the sere teat a Shard AUP eb ped ie" Show neta sihery ter, stepped stor, EL Dig, A ron was, tale, storuenhe9 THE FIRST MAX KNOWN ‘To Ores USINESS WAST OF STATE. People often sald Mat business eas: of State street would mot pay, but i Poole seman. trom, Geotn, ta” da th Glek, “The same being Sr, dake TIppes of Barndiridge, Ga a brleklayer anc mason by trade. - He aceummitated smal fortune ai his trade, "but Brow: ing lived of raciat Teetings in the outh Ant Cooling that for his ehildren's cake he should eee freer climen. He chose Chicago and has opened a. fine grocers and ment market at 452 BE. 25u steee Whore people are flocking to patron int, ° Aithough ‘butchers and’ grocers in'the neighborhood have done ail thes could to keep niin from opening he has the patronage of ihe entire nelgnhor- hood”and we urb> aur-readers to. 3\ Mn ripper ane! ce eet “Wis pleas Buttle witty Who always makes Second. call" Imperative. "Look for Mt inrge add whieh appears ‘on. another page of this ‘paper. POLICEMAN J, W. ANDERSON nor DAD, 4... Anderson, 4 pollcoman In pla eqoines for years’ traveling out of Har. flson’ Street Poilee. Station’ dropped dead Jant Monday, Sept. sth, He. wa Well! known down town. fie and, hi Partner who wan ‘nicl named “ts Rigs Wwas the terror to evil doers, 1 icaves a daughter, Claddls,. is." rest Hence wae 338 Dearborn St! "The tun: erat wan held. crom Bethel, ‘Thursday Where hundreds: gathered” to pas res: pects. ‘The police hand tuned’ aut ani Rteroat many police "gz he, was well iced onthe force. “The® body Was shipped to Mutreesborough, ‘Tenn, fo interment’ Sporting Notes. ‘“*? Sporting Notes," * Harvard football candidates report Sept. 19. Newark, N. J., ts to have a junior socker lengue of elit teams. ‘The English Football association am- ateur cup series lias 211 teams. ‘The Toronte Federation of Homing Pigeon Fanciers has just been formed. Memphis will not permit white box- ers to oppose negrocs tn boxing con- tests. Marquette university of Milwaukee, ‘Wis., plans to. embark in all branches of atinlette sport. Lord Lonsdale’s championship belts that are being offered in England as emblematic of the different pugilistic titles can be competed for only by British boxers. A stranger can box for the title, but he does not get the elt it he wins. “rs ae sit “Tales. of. Cities. - New York clty likes peanuts. Its people consume $4,500 worth of them ‘éyery day. cestce on oor ON. Boston now requires its retail milk dealers to sell their product in sealed Ddotties only. St Paul is, it ta said, the second largest buttermaking city in the world, Omaha alone surpasses St. Paul. ‘Thit year the production jn St. Pau! will amount to 12,000,000 pounds. ‘Talhoku, the capital of Formosa, is delng converted by the Japanese into an imposing up to'date city, with selen tif sanitation, wide streets and gov. ernment buildings more imposing than most of those in Tokyo. > His Weak Point. A man who takes a business view of things when recently asked bis opin. fon,of a’ person of quite a poetic tem- peraivent replied: * BlOb he’s. one of: those men who sbavesoscligs, atterjtho infinite. and ‘divings(’atter! the’Ainfathomable, but B never pay. BRS, Loe Spatting SW U A] By Jack Pot, JACK JONSON'S COLOR. LELANDS MAKH TRIPLE PLAY. Colored ‘Team Riguren tn tare Ver~ Tormance iu Defeut of Oklahome . Giants, Ss t0.0, ‘The third iripla’ pills ‘on the local soml-pro. cirast was pull off Sees lerday morning In. the Leland “Ginnts- Oklalioma Glamis” awe ene. Gunther Park, the former wining i t¢ Uy The Unusual slay oreierad th the gurth Inning. When Weane: wae passed nid Donald singted. Caicher Golden shot a Tong fly to bore tailin cemer feta, Who tapped te” ial ana tired. te te thira, Where it wad rolayed to second and-first. deve: Lelands..... 1022000 1 eHE Oklahomas’.......0.00.0.0.0.0 0 00 Tatteries—irosier and Petwar; Webb and oldun. : Chienxe Giants, 1 Went Radeu, 0. West Baden, “ind, Sepr tt She~ olathe Chisago “Ghante. alice. ont the West Bader Sprades, again. mak- ing 36" Ipnings “played he ‘the “Giants without ‘a score batis made agatnst them. The: fattures were. Winscons two. one-hand stabs an. Balls pich= ing of a no nie ware See Chicago’ Giants "1G 7 eee 0 ems Went paden 6608646 ScD LELANDS BRVE GUN'TITERS @ to 4 Colored ‘Team Victor in Lint Game of ‘Seanon With Niexon' "Nine—ttste ear'n Home tun ix Ceature. Leland Glants defeated Gunthers @ to 4 In the game. billed between thoxe Glubs “unis” Season’ at Gunther park. Features were Rugar's home run and a great stop hy Reltz. Score: Leland Giants ..:.0.'102 1-00 1—6 Gunthers e550 0210010 0-4 LONE WOMB KUN WINS 1-0 GAME Williams for Chicago Glnuts Wallon Tall for the Cleealt mad Pink Colin Are Defented. “cyclone Joo™ Williams, piteher of the ‘Chicago “Giants, "won! his own game against the, Fisk ‘Colts. yester- day “morning at. Tortenson park by Watloping out a home run in ‘the sev enth inning. “Willams allowed. the Gelts only fio lite and Canned eleven. Chiles Gants .....0 0000011 Fiske COS eer 152500.0.0.0 0 00 Lelnnd, 10 Meet Stara of Cuba. ‘The “Leland Giants and | Stars _ of Cuba wilt clash at the new White Sox park ina game of ball for the benefit of Camp" Allyn K, Capron Jr, No. 6, Untted States War Veterans, Sathritoy afternoon. r Artominay 25 Oklahoun Giant 1. ‘The Arcesians evened up with ihe Oklahoma Giants ‘for a former defeat yesterday at Artesian ‘park by. trim- ming them’? to lina fast game, fen- tured “by "four double plays by” Me- Gurn's "men. Score: Attestans ......-0 0 20.00 0.0 *—2 Okinhoma Giawis “00700000 0-1 Phil, Giants, 7; Cuban stars, 4, Avante ‘City, 'N. “J. "Sept. 1—Spe- cinl.)—Pearoso of the ‘Cuban ‘Stars was easy for the’ Philadelphia. Giants. in the second game of the colored cham- plonship series. The Quakers pound- ea him’ alt over the lot, winning 7 toa 2 |; = RERINGTON, MO. NEWS,- By John H. Arnold, If Miss Eva M. Hunter don't stoy iinet do Tne ngine singing. sn Ot the: young men will stent fer and fin ow with her tg hear that iti ing. Fou" would’ think {twwas'a° movie ing bite out inthe ‘appie twee, Some 5 the young fools made tun of her becuust thes aint Sefer sotto Nee Beet And never wit ‘be, Eva ia'ine swestes Seung ads” tsich Sag” nt person ined ‘ean ‘Dut her down on singing the holas the’ crown of both ‘black ant frkiues ‘and it there %e "any “one wh Thinies they cun pat eva downey sing ing? Wwe would ihe. to kage Why Wis ME: Afnota' saya ie" he had 42000" he Mout tary (avert (Oates: rhuater 8 the la the Queen ‘ot the town Ob! yo Eva, "vou" ave "wie aiden cron,” a Kegb ie" Hong’ ae ou tices Wee, al Kice you nd sri do, aif we cain to: hel) ou, Gonectanly your trind ate 0H wold ice Maggie W. Jones, Mary Anna aniricion and Stias aiaey tloged went te KG, Mos algo Omaha, Neb Ars dont (ied to" fooh her” husband’ by ell in she was oniy going to te, Gx Ma but-she didn tool him ‘much, "Mrg Jones ig ‘nvenutitas "vous indy: “and ee" ts ho "Sones oral Somebody" sald that AMisseq J. Jones, xo 'nayt Me Mapteston sand ue are Sivethe np aye "whole, “Sha, “Baptist churel siping in the choit ner Ge Chim has one of the Best choirs In the Ghy"and them panitar segonks ertaass cam. sing ‘but, mone “of them ‘Gan ge past that sweet ehiia°srise Ese He: Tent nose’ tering ‘eliNer: ro Arnotd pute Biss ftomter in front all ihe. time (oH uiin'n parton that cn sutton he and hei cortainiy talon to vase Face "thats ae es? Wate’ the na tees with Mise’ niaice ame Prazioe we Hon’ heat the sweet voices any gore they are: extraordinney he "singers Wha the matter with 3s 3. Wat: Ker ahe's all Tighe, Wue can't Weep ati OF Morters ‘a. Avcertain® fellow 18 0 potted up anoue aiiae's, Jones ne eaitt aeelas: on? but het, well ‘he totes his tulle’ dors heehSain' Steg vones"is ant"Hignt sn will do, MreFuny Brown went away to. at- tond'a base bull'gamme and wit (Su Wa alle est newa' when he Yeturisy he fas ‘chicken ‘on hig brains, ‘thats’ the Feason ‘ne attends the base’ balt games Mine Beary" Gampbell came homme trom Omaha, Neb. “to apends a: feu weeks With Nome” folks we tiny se" Brown is trying’ to Inake’ a ‘hie with her, Mr, Raymond Booker and his lttle aweeiheart has felt “out with each Sther just because Hooker, was Walking Sown ‘the ‘rest with Stlse blocks charming ginietrom another towne the Lexington “eitie uot Weare noe to ‘be so jealous. of their beaus, the ram head Bian Bie. "wre “Anthony: is So muck Ts Tove with Miss Af Tnedy he'ean't arive is* grocery. wagon” down the. streets niet hes Tosking ‘atound ctor. her Hehe" incon Mag 3 Maret aoten for thne tweet aittie Lacey girl iam gel soting by Greene Saran patilla the great Blood and nerve tone BetRdverdiaihe prices. Shao" eavtie Fos only adc. have sold 128 bottlee Is. the Tene 2 °ascak, better wat’ otto. bo fore ite'ail soul out, ony have 48° vot es more left for sale by Jolin Yh. Ar: Rola "{Notice). “Ani persons wlan t Uae Whe! Waoningaon, Duc. Sundae Star and Herald News papers sce the agent" at once, these papers ‘ars pubs fished at che Nationa Capiiar of weve: Ington, DG, and contains nevs of al kinds,’ tells’ all about your pensions, Eoverament lands, ang Stay eath" pape! EGniaine from 86" to'82. pages, ‘Sunday Sar°10 “cong, Sunday fetaid se copy, papers wil been hale Sed Tues: Gay" int September. subscribe now. Star 40ve. a. month, Tierald 46 e. a snonth Stak’ ity Ravarider ‘see’ the Covermeert News derler Jona Ik Arnoliy i6 chin: SSE aout te deta ett it Ropers wilt be’ gold for. stticty Vonstt=Noveredit Fivensdon't asic for |sampis‘edpy-az the gavernmane doshn' igive. out ‘samples, imoncy ts what thes vant /‘Arnold'hag. 6066 reeular cust: sage; fOr thehe.” papers ein aimorent ‘"Wijand:bas 48 local agents working Upipouers for: him-and the overt ‘wich Asneia: ke genera aaieAraela She's ifrecsiveareceiars tot aee en “Signi pretty: good tor: tusniesitie Remember “chygubscribe; for. the" pa- echleaslary. suet “Nishedpapers tor titsnevers buy v cakantel sant nice pe sgmeboay. has been ‘awful sick: since ‘Conway came around on Afain street aad wanta ‘him to-go. back on: South Sed street, gust lke w nigger Ne hater to" see hig, fellow man. get along, ‘bul What ‘does Bud care for that, he Is €0- ing to stay just whore he 48’ aty and if Ret don't “Arnold ie going. to, svat nim witha base bal bal, so Bud you, stay bn Main “street “and'skin ail ‘of. thost eats, and Ml your pockets full of $13 3 Sou nave ‘as “much right to. It as anj Sne ole, some people vacte such DIE foots that's the Feason they dont ge along ‘any: Detter, Arnold. stands, for Conway any day and you can't turn he head ‘no other way, for Conway ts fon Main giveet to atay until the Judge from above takes ham away, that's ail and if you dont like what { say about Conway you can get your hat and #0 the ether way, for Conway is on Afain street to slay. Mr, Jackeon, Arnold and Sforacce Saunders ete. have” recelved ihe's goods from the B. 0, Popes Co. of St. Fonte, Moy, and are well pleased with them, If sau don'e (hink ‘these goode are firet clase goads, Just ask: Saunders and ‘Afnold and they both will tell you Suat what they are, better send In your Srdors at onge, sugar in sulll going un, Mr. 0. Conts has been courting Misa Kenney for over 2-years, say fellow If you don't marry her soon you ought to be Kieked over the moun, Mias Ken- hey fa a ‘eharming” young lady and Goats haa better marcy her, Mm Jackson Miller” lett | Monday morning with his horses to attend te colored falr at Higginsvilte. Mr, Mtiter Ty one of the few colored men that be- Hieve in ratsing blooded horses, he has his unbeaten show mare Bird’ sears old pacer, who ean step close to 2:20, 23 Year old troter that can beat 2:90 Suarg time ‘cha tnene The. traek.. then he wilt show his 2 year old saddle horse that no one can beat, everybods Took out for Marie Goodman Ie you don't, “he wil take your job, he {8 a fad Yellow to undermine “other” peo- ples husiness: Jake Hayden was on. the Etreet eating: water melon and he was so hungey he Rte thine ‘ahd all, ues. fon' the short Stop hiping. him, these Wide "eertainiy’ doesn't wet "enough NOTICE. We want 360 Tegular subscribers and custamers in Lexington, Blo, to. take the Chicago Defender "regular. every ‘week, It Is one-of the best -newspapers The Onieed "states publlsted hy ‘our ace, the greatest trouble with our Face Is"they read too many” of the white man's papers and not enough of thelt ‘own, Read the Negro newapapers. and See what our Face. is doing,. helping the race, helps yourself, Our agent Wil doliver vou this paper every week fat ‘only 25 'e ‘month cash In. advance, all the’ best “news “and jokes’ of Lexington wilt appear in this paper every week Detter tro the agent at once and have him @eliver you a copy every. week. Mire R.S. Abbott, dltor Chieago, 1, Jolin’ “ig Arnold, news. reporter’ and agent, 16 Clinton street, Lexington, Mo. ket the habit" of reading. the Ciicage Berender, it beats em ail, 8 6: cops arden month ens tn Sdvanee, Al jersons having news of iniporcance t fublish nee Mr. "Arnold ane wilt be lad to do. you favor, but don't, giv im anycnews that is mot Mk for publi cation, if you do Fou wilt not read It In the ‘paper’ ag Wwe don't cate. to. publish all Kinds of no account. trash. We Wink peed SaUDd ‘eels baw thala alk FURNISHED ROOMS. For Rent. TRRAUTIPUL UNFURNISHED ROOMS —ifot ang cold water year round, s824_ Calumes ve, NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS — To Vent with all modern improvements, hot and. coid. water” the "year round for married couple or two gentlemen, S358" Wabash ‘ave. 10-17. 3885 Vernon avenue, 2 furnished rooms, ‘sinable for man and wite oF siNkie gentleman, 10. mk TWO NEATOY FURNISHED ROOMS. With hot and cold water and steam heat; just. the. thing “for winter for Tan ‘ahd wife or Uwe gentlemen. 342 Forest ave Atdin 138. wai NEATHY FURNISHED ROOMS, MOD- Ser improvements, near cat _tnes and 55th St boulevard. 641038 Dear horn St. ‘phone Drex,” 4826, NEATLY FORNISHED ROOMS WITH modern Improvements, neat "att ear Une: hotvand cold water year Found, "4531" Vernon ave,” "phone 465 ‘Maine. A NICH LARGE furnished room to rent Steam heat, hot water, electric ght and gaa. Man and wite, or two Kentie- men. Ara Win. Rell, 3812 Dratwe ave, WANTED—Large, unfurnished front Foom at once, “Phone 1903 Aldine. NEATLY furnished rooms for rent to Sentieman or married couple, Modern convenience, 3313 Rhodes ave, Phone ‘Mative. 2645: Nentiy furnished rooma for single Gen: tleman or married couple. Steam heat and hot water ‘year round. 9626 Forest. Ave. Phone 16it “Aldine 2027, Furnished rooms to rent to gentleman married’ couple, "modern -conventenee, 343) Vernon Ave. Phone Aldine 1i2=-20-27-8- » FoR RENT—Large bay front alcove room ‘modern convenience, ght. Nousekeeping privilege. 3920 Vernon_Ave—20-27-8-10. BEAUTIFUL, FURNISHED ROOMS—To Ina. ‘ce or genitemen, at 2608 Wabash avenue wear State treet” tthe. LARGE FRONT NEATLY FURNIGHED OOS (or rent: also entire 3rd. Moor, Cor ght house Keeping. Phone 6669 Douglas, 3512. Calumet avenue, Neatly furnished rooms to rent 3525 Calumet avenue. TARGE elegantly furnished front room to Tene to P.O, employee, Be B por sore oe aguple. swith, board (F desired, 3245 ‘State Bt, znd foor front. FOR RENT—Modern room dat, hot ‘water, heat, hot water year round; 6316 Champlain avenue. Apply at S61? Forest Champiain avenue. Apply A first class hard coat heater, the best make in use only one season, at 3813 "Praicig ‘ave. top fate Done pave ean eve. noah 44 tek vabash ave, nea 4th, ind elt, betel bldg, hardwood Hoors, Reve “modern Platabinie GSE rooms, ai "Tignt, stove nent. Price $4,600. Langley ave, near 4éth, 2nd flat, brick 8x6 “roame good. ‘substantia Diniding Price "$4,500. ith ‘Street nent Rhodes avenue, 3 story, 3:flat bldg, now.2 3 room fats and’ 15 room flat, modern, ‘plumblog. ‘Oak tloors, barn in, rear. Price $4.230, ‘Wabash’ avenue “near 60th street fat building, hot water ent, 1arge oi Bulding in good repair, has basemont Taundry, ete, oxtxt rooms. Price $6 500. ELITE FACE GREAM. For Cleaning and Purifying the Skin There Is Nothing Like It Under the Sun, Its great affinity for all soaps and its power for taking up 2nd neutraliz, ing the harmful elements that exist in all soaps are unsurpassed by anything known to the chemical world. The al- kalt 1s, taken up by some of the prop erties of thé cream, forming a new compound called cream sopoleate. ‘This newly formed compound elec trifies and purifies,the skin; removing every trace of J.¢ase, paint, varnish or ‘any foreign elements, leaving the skin in perfect condition, pure and white. This makes possible the arterl al.Gireulation 4vhich brings the de- sired. nutritl the very outer layer of thers. juvenating.the cellular eleitients\'a. “hereby bringing ‘back tisiyouthnil efpoaraice.. “Full: tree tons’ on) Svery@Btile..” Ask. your. arog: gist for, THE rp PACH: C3 and take. no @Ber ties sate a ieee MeN og IR By etre Saves SA07 5 seen, GN '$019°4rmeur a’ ar “Welatity Propositions- h \ = 9. S ‘ 47, Go To McCLURE ? The Man That Knows Fashion Blakes, Sat NO ate te ‘She Tending Colored Fournate,” Boctbalealse Seiignsey. ‘wive” chadtes kine ied aE sees Smoking’ Tobacco, Néwspapies, Sooriine Fuses: He tain" Par ate TN: the ing of Pesiobiculs WOR need? CCR ahs : W. S. McCLURE & CO. - (NIC) : x The Leading Colored House for : Periodicals 2931 State Street Phone 4267 Douglas | ‘The ark was thirty days:out.. “You and your wife must be: privt- leged animais,” growled “Mr. Hyena, glaring at Mr. Blephant. “All the rest of the bunch are on short rations, but Lnotlee you're still drawing regulation sized meals, There must be a reason.” “There 1s.” replied the elephant; “wwe threatened to rock the boat ff our meals” lost any. welght!”—Ilustrated Sunday Magazine. Cradle Song. Salling in a cradle song ‘To Lullaby Land, Lullaby Land, ‘The sandman steers us safo along ‘With stendy hand, with steady hand. Baby fs the first to spy ‘The Lullaby shore, the Lullaby shore, ‘The sandman winks a knowing eye ‘And piles his oar, and piles his ont. Now we've reaghed the Lullaby Land, ‘Where dream trees grow, where dreara ‘trees grow, And shadow people. hand in hand, ‘Come and go, come and 5O~ Bhesh-eht —Philadelphia. North American. Houses to Rent , ie and Money to Loan Pn ‘ and Employment Found te Pay it Back Again by 2 M. Winchester, 3223 State St. Shopping Passion. The new bride was telephoning to the iceman. “How much do you want?” he ask- ed. “Oh,” and she stopped to think, “a plece about ten Inches long and four wide, Just enough to keep thls dear Kittle steak til Arebfe comes home to luneb."—Butfalo Express, | Special Attention To Beginners ) A. C. ELGAR TEACHER OF o VIOLIN and BRASS INSTRUMENTS FRENCH and ENGLISH COURSE of SOLFEGE STUDIO 3159 STATE ST. CHICAGO Te ren eae ‘The ite cares that fretted me, Tost them yesterday . Among the fields sbave the sea, ‘Among the winds at play. ‘“Filzabeth Barrett Browning, ‘That 1 had lost them then. ‘The Ale) was only tlirung, though, ‘Anil they came backe ngain, + Chicago Record-Heratd. A Compromise. “si.” 'began Lord Brokeleigh pomp: ously, “I've enlled to request your daughter's hand fn tartiage.” “That's out of the question, my man,” replied old Rosley. “However, Tot [ant fo sec stogetber uo charitatle, so here's $5 for you."— Catholic Standard and ‘Times. STUDIO OF MUSIC... . MRS. MARTHA BROADUS-ANDERSON TEACHER OF VOCAL AND PIANO FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1ST PHONE NORMAL 3316 RESIDENCE, 6450 CHAMPLAIN AVE,, CHICAGO, ILL, Signs. * Signs in tho heavens— ‘The storm flag's unfurled. ‘Trouble ts coming ‘fo worry the World. Life—such a riddle! But now Is your chanco ‘To hunt up a adie ‘And—who Wants (o dance? Atlanta Comstrutigh. EDWARD FELIX ICE CREAM PARLOR PHONE 2028 DeUCLAS Stati ‘y, Confectionery, Cigars, Tobacce = and "Newspapers, Bread, Gakee and Pigazslo~ " Before Buying C Me:~ Wnomt EDWARD FELIX LAUNDRY *- 308:30th ST, CHICAGO, ILL. A Fair Ratio. e' “We wish to arranze for an exchange of prisoners,” announced the South American dictator, “On what basis?" inquired the lead- er of the other side. “The usual basis—eight generals for & good, husky private." — Louisville Courier-Journal. _ RESTAURANT». We Braw No Line — Our Place and Service Are: Mp. Open From 7 A. M. To 1 P.M. 5 Eplesres ond Connolsseurs 218. 33d STREET Sut e's Dead Now. He painted the woodwork tastlly. For the fair trust magnate's daughter, And he penciled a sketch of the raging sen, Did this artist chap who tavght her, “Bor Lam a hue-er of wood,” sald he, “And eke a drawer of water.” ‘—Cieveland Leader, On the Installment Plan. One day Robert said, “Uncle Will, how mueh do you want for those pups?" “Oh, about $2 aplece.” was the reply. “But, Unele Wil,” said Robert, "what guid T do with a piece of a pup?”—De- Meester, ne PHONE OAKLAND 3902 | MME. BRIDGE’S SCHOOL DRESS CUTTING DRESS MAKING LADIES’ TAILORING AND MILLINERY McDOWELL SYSTEM DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL Night School $1.00 Per Week INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTIONS DIPLOMAS GRANTED : Satlatactlon Quarantesd Serishoraation 8037 STATE STREET, CHICAGO, ILL, | ‘The Old. Old Stary. igi cae Sie eh aie Loving cups may’ be all right, But ‘with a silver spoon, And two tn a hammock beneath a tree= Ab, then Dan Cupid likes to see ‘A go0Ht old loving spoon! “Chicago News, I Good Reason. “He says be has never deceived his wite” | i, “He never has.” “He fs one truthful man." “Not partleularly. He's just got that kind of a wife, that’s ail.”—Houston Post. y G ‘ ~ Calls promptly answered (Mace ©. W. GREEN = | Funeral re : Director -- N ‘ 3832 STATE STREET ee df CHICAGO: Ne Ee A Phone Douglas 5766 The Suffragette, With ter the franchise, we suspect, “it ive her litle cage to slents For ane cant ral to yecoltet Bhei) nave to ave her ago to vote. ‘sfppincates, The Gentle Tip. Mr. Cobirte—Will you tell your sls ter that { will call this evening, ‘Tom- ny? Tommy(-It you like. Bat you're more itkd to find her in if sox come tmexpectejliy.—New York Journal. =~ Timels’ Easy Flight. ‘Time Aes and mocks at man's contro. Just why" te plainly seen ‘Time never has to stop for coal (Gr oll or gasoline Sivashington Star. Finesse. Madge-What {s Dolly so pleased about? Marjorie—Sho has found. a way to avotd telling Charlie the truth without telling bim n falsehood.—Widow. a H.C, Conley Phone Oakland 1462. John T. JENIFER CONLEY & JENIFER | Real Estate, Loans, Renting and Insurance 5111 So. State Street Property Carefully Managed Notary Put * . Get our prices, they are free; Confer with us before you invest your savings In Chicago Real Estate, all business J, ‘trusted with us will receive an honest and confidential reat- ment. TRY US. e ~{\ Order a policy to-day, to-night you may have & oe ay eee PONCY So-cay, to-night you may have i Folly as It Flies, I shot an aero In the alr. Ie fell to earth: I know just where, mauler | Cleveland Plain Dealor. Literary War. “We have just lost the Philippines in ‘the magazine I read.” “Phat doesn’t worry me any. In the magazine I subseribe to we could ek: the world.”—Pittsburg Post. Sn aS VALENTINE'S .. oS ( ‘¥ + Talloring...Day and evening cla \Y A rnng school. only #1, DAF’ wank. Y|\} Glstr aimee My Swe A SS we Wes If He Only Would, He "talks ike a book,” hte Admirers ail say. ‘What a pity he doesn’t Shut up the samo way! —Catholle Standard and Timea, How. to Remove Ink From Carpets. First pour cold water on the spot if itis Afresh one, taking {t up with a spoon, which'ls pressed down into the pile of the carpet:<Lay-acloth around ‘the *spot ‘80 iwehill. not ‘spread. ‘Then ‘apply: ai yean YeoJution ‘of oxalic} actd, sing it up quickly2r¢ the ct ‘alfred apply euimoniay water?” SP anaes im Euan yeuTar + Naber at Night. Porto Ricans have been from earliest infancy since the business man who has returned from that country. He is a curious sight to the American girl to note men and women going to the streets and highways of the land with umbrellas raised over their heads in the lone watches of the night, the more brilliantly the moon is being the greater will be the number people who are thus protecting themselves from her beams. Out in the sequestered rural districts a gay mounted caperler will be met at midnight, his biddle rein in one hand and an upraised umbrella in the other. It looks weird and also ridiculous, but the natives do it for a peculiar reason. They are possessed of the conviction that Luna's full light striking upon mortals is almost sure to make them mentally unsuired—that is to say, lunatics—and that is why they interpose a shield between them and her dazzling brightness. ```markdown ``` "To sleep where the moon couldshine full upon one is, in the view ofa Porto Rican, to tempt fate, and itwould be a daring one who couldbiretired to do it for any consideration."—Baltimore American. STRENUOUS LIVING A Long Day in the Life of an English Lady in 1791. As for industrious idleness, which is held to blame for the wrecking of our nervous systems, it was not unknown to an earlier generation. Mune, to Brun assures us that in her youth pleasure loving people would leave Brussels early in the morning, travel all day to Paris to hear the opera and travel all night home. "That," she observes—as well she may—"was considered being fond of the opera." graph in one of Horace Walpole's letters gives us the record of a day and a night in the life of an English lady—sixteen hours of "strain" which would put New York to the blush. "I heard the Duchess of Gordon's journal of last Monday," he writes to Miss Berry in the spring of 1791. "I rest权 to be numbers bibey; she then clenched chess and went to Hast- ball, after dinner to Lady Lucan's assem- ration. Ranolgh and return- ed to the table; gave a ...D. for no other rea- cessive matter to de- tween the expres- sid London. It is writers that there same spot 1,107 is known that the city there called odesty, lest, and invent one "But I at the beed modesty I in all the ertisement ```markdown ``` almost mud, and there are vast deposits of this material in various parts of the earth. This infusional earth, as it is caligh has been christened diatomite, and it is being used for a variety of purposes under the name klesolguir. It is employed as a vehicle or absorbent for nitroglycerin, and the resultant paste is dynamite. Diatomite is an excellent nonconductor of heat, and in this capacity it is used for filling the hollow interiors of the walls of safes, as a lining for stoves and furnaces and as a covering for steam pipes and boilers. For such purposes as these it has an advantage over asbestos in the matter of price and also of weight. It can be made into bricks or slabs by the addition of a small quantity of lime or clay, and these bricks can be raised to a white heat without showing any signs of fusion. Diatomite occurs in great quantities in the United States, in Prussia, in parts of Scotland, in Canada and to a lesser degree in Western Australia and New Zealand. -Harper's Weekly. BOTH WERE STARTLED. An Astonished Woman and a Still More Astonished Leonard. Kula is a district in the Himalayas consisting of a chain of the most lovely valleys conceivable, with this drawback, among others, that each hill path that runs by the inhabitants' huts more often than not contains a lurking leopard. One day a worthy Kula housewife came out from her cooking and, standing on the edge of rock, emptied a pan of boiling water into the rank herbage growing below. It fell splash on the back of a sleeping leopard, who jumped perpendicularly into the air as high as the roof of the hut. What might have happened next who can say? But the astonished woman dropped the pan with a clang on the rock, and the leopard took one leap downhill. The pan followed, and the leopard's downward teaps became longer and swifter as the pan bounded after it from rock to rock. When last seen that leopard had just achieved a leap of about 350 feet to the very bottom of the ravine, thousands of feet below, and the pan whirled about 500 feet over it on to the opposite side. The leopard would have eaten the old woman with pleasure, but a pan, the contents of which first scaled half the hide off him and then bounded, changing in his wake, from the top of the Himalayas to the plains below was something he could not face. Money Boxes. the most in- e Batetela. In go into the for- Baukutu head hile the men are is guarded by a the surroundings and by a drummer. tu are seen to ap- mer beats the alarm men return to the camp The weapons used are the field, bow and arrow. This earns in the neighborhood of of our money a year, which en- hes him to buy a wife.—Christian ferald. Why She Had Not Wed Spinster-My poor child, I've said I never could wend until I met a man different from all other men and full of courage. Young Bride-Of course you could not. How stupid of me to know! Going Some. The New Hat Tree—And you're a centenarian? By George! Aside from a few cracks in your face, you hold your age might well. What's the secret? The Grandfather's Clock (serenely)—I keep regular hours and always find something for my hands to do.—Puck. Three Conditions. Holliness is an infinite compassion for others. Greatness is to take the common things of life and walk truly among them. Happiness is a great love and much serving. Olive Schrel- is always perched on ladder just above you. HERA OBSCURA. lived Our Modern Pho- Apparatus. is invented by an Ital- tista Porta, though it first used for photographs in reality merely a dark which the light was admi- t a little round hole in one rays of light coming from side of this room entered it a aperture and made a ple- other side of the room he beauty and color of rather indistinct and was contrived by side of the sixteenth oved it later by in the aperture which received elected them the image was --- one end and n ground glass screen at the other. It is, however, often much more complicated in its construction. ROMANCE OF ARCHITECTURE. Origin of the Graceful Cointhian Style of Capital. In the winter a young girl had died in Corinth. Some time afterward her mald gathered together various trinkets and plinkythings which the girl had loved and brought them to the girl's grave. There she placed them in a basket near the monument and put a large square file upon the basket to prevent the wind from overturning it. It happened that under the basket was a root of an acanthus plant. When spring came the acanthus spouted, but its shoots were not able to pierce the basket, and accordingly they grew around it, having the basket in their midst. Such of the long leaves as grew up against the four protruding corners of the tile on the top of the basket curled round under these corners and formed pretty volutes. Kallimachos, the sculptor, walking that way one day, saw this and immediately conceived the notion that the form of the basket with the plaque on top of it and surrounded by the leaves and stalks of acanthus would be a comedy heading for columns in architecture. He from this idea formed the beautiful Corinthian style of capital. Such, at least, is the story as the architect Virruvus told it 1,000 years ago. Stringent French Customs Strigart French Customs. Tourists must not to note the stringency of the French customs as to the smoking materials they may inno-early bring with them. A correspondent is reminded of a significant little scene on the Dieppe landing stage. An English holiday maker who had come down to meet a friend arriving by the boat found himself without a light for his phe and sang out to a friend on board, "Got a match?" The latter was just about to throw his matchbox across the intervening yard or two of water when the man on the stage suddenly remembered and added with hasty pantonime, "No; wait till presently!" And bystanding passengers had to explain to the astonished newcomer that if the box had been thrown under the eyes of the customs officers every match in it might have had to pay a france.-London Chronicle. The Polka. The polka is the natural dance for the feet of the people. Take in evidence its origin. A Bohemian peasant girl was seen dancing "out of her own head," extemporizing from the sheer y of her heart song, time and steps, as she did on a Sunday afternoon in Elbelenhltz, and an artist, one Josef Neruda, who spied her, made a note of all he saw. The people of the town adopted the dance and called it the polka, half step. In 1857 it reached Prague and Vienna in 1840; thence it spread rapidly through Europe. When M. Cellarius introduced it to the Partians we hear that all else gave way before "the all absorbing pursuit, the polka, which embraces in its qualities the intimacy of the waltz with the vitality of the Irish jig."—Cassell's Magazine. It Wouldn't Sound Well. An English north country paper frowns upon the known ambition of the mayor of its town to be made a knight for his distinguished services in receiving royalty and narrates for the benefit of the aspirant this anecdote: When Adam Black, the Edinburgh publisher, was sounded on the subject of receiving knighthood, he said: "Nae, nae; it wadna dee. You see." he added, "if a boy can into me" shop and said, "A 'napeth o' slate pencil, Sir Adam," it wadna sound weel." A Meek Worm. "You miserable worm!" cried an incensed worm. "If you was half a man you'd help me to turn the mangle!" "I may be a worm," replied the spouse weekly, "but I ain't the sort that turns."—London Mail. The Sweet Girl Belle—Nellie, dear, may I introduce you to my fiance. Nellie—Delighted to meet you, sir! All of your predecessors have been such bully fellows.—Cleveland Leader. He that riseth late must trot all day and shall scarcie overtake his business at night.—Franklin. There Was No Other Course. The New England boiled dinner and other dishes like pork and beans, boiled codish and pumpkin pie best appealed to the appetite of Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller. It was said in Washington that the Fuller Saturday night dinner was baked beans and nothing else, and this story is told: "One evening the chief justice, possibly forgetting that it was Saturday, asked a distinguished English jurist home to dinner with him. When the beans came on the Englishman promptly declined them. Mrs. Fuller showed some embarrassment, whereupon the Englishman amiably said: 'Never mind. I'll make it up in the next course.' But, good Lord, exclaimed the chief justice, 'there isn't any other course!' And there wasn't. In addition to being a very small eater the chief justice was a moderate smoker of modestly priced cigars. He was said to smoke the same kind of cigars, as far as they were obtainable, that he smoked when he was struggling hard to establish a living law business in Chicago in the old days. He said he was attached to these cheap cigars by ties of sentiment and tender recollection and that nothing else would taste so good to him.—Springfield Republican. "Pins and Needles." After being for a long time in a constrained attitude a peculiar numbness and prickling are often felt in the arm, leg or foot. This is caused, by some interruption to the circulation and can usually be removed by rubbing or ex- many many returns to the nerve, and as each nerve fiber composing the trunk regains its normal condition of sensibility a prickling sensation is felt, and these successive pricklings from the successive awakenings of the numerous fibers have not inaptly been called "pins and needles." The Prayer That Hurt A member of a certain Massachusetts parish prominent for his thrift and personal consequence was also notorious for his overbearing assumptions and pompous alms. Under the distress and fright of a dangerous illness he "put up notes" on several successive Sundays, and after his recovery, according to usage, he offered a note to be read by the minister expressive of his thanks. The minister was somewhat "large" in this part of his prayer, recalling the dancer and the previous petitions of the "squire" and returning his grateful acknowledgments with the prayer that the experience might be blessed to the spiritual welfare of the restored man. He closed with these words: "And we pray, O Lord, that thy servant may be cured of that ungodly strut, so offensive in the sanctuary." Law and Geography From the half timers' papers written at a recent term examination; "Some of the chief inventions of the last 150 years are having an act so that no person under fourteen years must go into the public house. Another act was so that no person under the age of sixteen years must smoke cigars, pipes and cigarettes, and no person under that age can be served with any. My brother Bill is now all right for this invention. He was sixteen last week." Here is a geography answer: "The river system of Canada is what you might call very good, but sometimes they shoot the rapids, and unless you are a red Indian this is very troublesome at times, especially when you get sucked under like Captain Webb."—Manchester Guardian. The Earliest Cigars The earliest mention of cigars in English occurs in a book dated 1735. A traveler in Spanish America named Cockburn, whose narrative was published in that year, describes how he met three friars at Nicaragua, who, he says, "gave us some seagars to smoke; these are Leaves of Tobacco rolled up in such Manner that they serve both for a Pipe and Tobacco itself; they know no other way here, for there is no such Thing as a Tobacco Pipe throughout New Spain." Sure Sign. "What is the sign when a man parts his hair in the middle?" said the old fellow in the front row of the orchestra to a friend loud enough to be heard by the young man behind them. "It's a sign that he's not baldheaded," replied the young man, leaning forward. -Yonkers Statesman. Hard Luck "Poor man, your life must be full of hardships." "Ow true yer words are, liddy! Only 'tother day I picked up a ticket for a ball, an' couldn't use it cos I hadn't got a evenin' suit."—London Ideas. A Tragic Crisis Cholly had put on his necktie and was looking over his supply of hostery. "I wonder, now," he said, turning pale, "whether the socks have to match the tie or whether the tie has to match the socks."—Chicago Tribune. Her Great Grief Cholly—May I have the next waltz? Widow—Yes, but dance slowly, as I only recently have gone into mourning—Club Fellow. Lots of alleged golden opportunities wouldn't stand the acid test. CARE OF TOILET SOAP. How to Avoid Trouble and Loss by Careful Use. Even when a toilet soap is pure beyond reproach it does not suit all skins. Get soap from a reliable dealer and consult him on which he thinks the pureest one. If he is a competent druggist and not given too much to profit making you will get the truth. If you have a chemist friend he can be asked about the purity of a favored soap; also its effect on dry and oily skins. A glycerin soap, for instance, will clap one skin, will yellow another and make a third soft and smooth. Secure half a dozen different soaps of equal purity, then experiment to find which agrees best with you. There is much carlessness in the use of soap. The presence of soap powders in many public wash rooms has eliminated much of the danger of a common soap cake for travelers. Individual soap wrapped in a sealed case is a boon in hotels where a patron has forgotten her own. The woman who would scorn to use soap in a public wash room thinks nothing of using a family cake. This is not sanitary. Besides the fact of different soaps being needed by different skis, various members of the family may have developed skin troubles that are contagious. If possible each child should have her own cake of soap as much as her toothbrush, comb and towel. If washing arrangements are too cramped to permit this the child should be taught to hold each cake by the tip under scalding water for a minute before using. It may mean the loss of an extra layer of soap, but it may save trouble. A soap manufacturer says that fine toilet soaps need drying and ripening as much as coarser soaps. It is therefore economical to buy a number of cakes at once and let them dry by placing on a shelf. This should be in some room or closet where there is not much dust or soot. Fine soap will last longer if it is drained of a minute before being put back in the soap dish, which should first be carefully wiped out until no moisture is left. A perforated dish or top should be selected. Children should be taught not to let soap lie in water. Besides being wasteful, it is bad for the skin to use too much even of a good soap, and if not used it makes the skin TREATMENT OF HORSES. How to Feed and Water Them In Hot Weather. Extremely hot weather brings more or less suffering to a horse, and if the animal does not receive proper care and attention at this trying period disastrous results are sure to follow. Above all things else, says Country Life in America, do not overwork the farm horse or force the driver for too much speed or make long drives without frequent rests. At this season, when water is usually more or less scarcity and horses apparently have an insatiable thirst, the matter of watering deserves considerable attention. Do not give the horse too much at a time, and it is safest to give none at all while he is very warm. A bran mash twice a week will assist in keeping the system cool, and in case of overfat a dram of pulverized saltpetre added to the mash will be beneficial. On very hot days allow work horses two hours for dinner just ahead of one, and do not feed until they are somewhat cooled off. Also remove the harness at this time; this extra labor is more than offset by the comfort it gives the animals. In a three horse team the middle one is most tangle to heat exhaustion because of the additional heat radiated upon him by the horse on each side. On this account it is advisable to change the horses so that one will not be compelled to be in the middle for more than half a day at a time. The perilicious pestering of files is another matter that cannot be overlooked. The dairy cows and calves, as well as the horses, can be well protected from files by such preparations as are for sale at almost all drug stores or are advertised in the farm papers. These preparations are not expensive and are best applied with a sprayer, although a brush or rag will do if a sprayer is not available. For the work horse a light treatment every morning will afford better protection from files than a net or blanket and is much cooler. According to another writer, it is allowable when a horse is not to let him have three or four swallows of cool water, but no more. The few swallows will help cool him, and another limited drink may be given every few minutes for four or five times, after which he may drink his fill without danger. In careless or inexperienced hands, however, the only safe way is to let the horse stand for half an hour or more with no water until he is fairly cooled off. Salt is necessary to horses, but it should not be given to them in large quantities and irregularly. An excess of salt at one time produces congestion of the stomach and induces excessive thirst. The best plan is to keep rock salt in reach of the horses at all times, so that they can satisfy their appetite by an occasional drink. If you have not followed this practice introduce it gradually by giving the animal a little salt with his regular ration for a week. TEST OF FABRICS. How to Detect Frauds In Silk, Linen or Woolen Goods. Of the goods sold as "all wool" there is not one-tenth that is genuine. Generally the main component is cotton. The test for this is simple. All that is necessary is to pull in a few threads and apply a lighted match. Cotton will go off in a blaze; wool will shrivel up. To distinguish pure linen from counterfeit is even easier. The intended buyer need but wet the finger and apply it to the goods. If they are pure linen the moisture will pass through, the spot touched will be soaked at once, and almost immediately one side will be as wet as the other. Frauds are more numerous in silk than in any other fabric, but here also the material of adulteration is cotton. Its presence can be readily discovered. Draw a few threads out. The piece of cotton will snap off short when pulled, while the silk will stretch and permit a considerable pull before breaking. The boasted silk of our grandmothers that "stood by itself" is not necessarily the best. Modern ingenuity has devised means by giving the poorest articles the best body requisite for this purpose. Shellace and other sticky substances mixed through the fabric will produce as stiff a silk as ever graced the wardrobe of our ancestors. Such stuff is quite worthless, however, as it quickly rots. How to Make Oatmeal Lemonade. Lemon oatmeal is a drink of which invalides rarely tire. Mix a tablespoon- ful of fine oatmeal into a smooth paste with cold water, then pour over it three pints of boiling water, stirring well all the time. Place in a sauce- pan and boil until the quantity is reduced to two pints. Set it aside to cool and then pour the clear gruel away from the sediment. Add to this the juice of a lemon and a small quantity of powdered sugar. This may be served hot or cold, and it is good either way. The world is up in the air nowadays.—Boston Globe. Aviation would be perfectly safe but for gravitation and precipitation.—Albany Journal. Man has again improved on nature by showing his capacity to fly faster than the birds.—New York World. The aviator may beat the carrier pigeon once in awhile, but for steady work it will be safer to depend on the pigeons.—Indianaapolis News; The south China railway system will probably be completed this year. An automatic compiler for air and steam hose on railroad trains has been invented. The Mecca railway has taken the place of thousands of camels formerly used in transporting pilgrims. The pan-Americanization of the Guatemalan railway lines, which is now being proposed, aims also at the inclusion of the same system of the railways in El Salvador. Artificial Mummies. Artificial mummies are made in Italy, Germany and France and the thence shipped to Egypt and then to dealers in antiquities. A real skull is used, but all the rest is ingenious imitation. Umbrella Economy. Umbrellas last much longer if during fine weather they are never kept rolled up. If this is done the silk will soon begin to fray at the folds, and a rent will be the result. When wet an umbrella should be 'opened to its fullest extent on entering and dried with the handle downward. Ivy Bushes. Ivy bushes used to be hung over the doors of taverns as signboards, because the plant was sacred to Bacchus, the Roman god of wine. The Hors of the Sword The uses to which the sword has been put seem to have been almost as varied as its appearance when we recall the anecdote told of Charlemagne, who said as he used the pommel of his sword to put his stamp on treaties, "I sign them with this end, and with the other I will take care that they are kept." Bamboo Pens. Bamboo pens have been used in Indla for over a hundred years. They are made like the ordinary quill pen and for a few hours' writing are said to be very serviceable. Smallest Book The smallest book in the world was made in Italy. It is the text of a letter written by the inventor of the pendulum clock in 1615. Although it is fourteenths of an inch long and a quarter of an inch wide, it contains 208 pages, each with bold lines and from ninety-five to a hundred pages. Alasin's Fisheries Apart from its fur weath the greatest fishing waters in the world are probably those of the Alaska seas and her tidal streams. Dates and Cream Cheese For a date and cream cheese salad wash and examine gait a pound of dates. Remove the pits and stuff the cavities with Philadelphia cream cheese or with Neufchatel. Arrange them on lettuce leaves and serve with mayonnaise dressing. The salad will be at its best if chilled. The Boarded Vulture The largest bird of prey in the old world is the lammergeier, or bearded vulture, which has a wing expanse of nine to ten feet. Whiting. All whildings are made from chalk. The more common preparations sometimes contain considerable gritty matter, which seraches highly polished surfaces. These coarse particles may be removed. In this manner: Mix the whiting with water, to a paste and then add water until it is very thin. Grrain through cheesecloth and let the strained mixture settle. Pour off the water and dry the whiting. Big Chestnuts. The chestnuts in Tahiti grow five or six times as large as in this country. Millet Millet was once the daily food of the masses in Europe, but has gradually been dropped and is eaten now mostly by the Slavs beyond the eastern frontiers of Europe and by the negroes in Africa. An East Indian Custom An odd custom prevails in India. A native visitor never takes his departure of his own accord. Etiquette requires the host to dismiss him, which he does in a polite way, not by saying, "Go," but by saying hospitably: "Pray, come again. The sooner we see your face the better we shall be pleased." Java's Flying Frog The flying frog of Java is usually a beautiful green in color, white underneath, with orange yellow soaring membranes between the fingers, and it changes color like the chameleon. This frog feeds on insects, remains quiet in bushes by day and when disturbed glides away to quite a distance. Broken Celluloid. Broken celluloid articles can be mended by softening the broken edges in other, applying collodion liberally and holding the pieces together under a thoroughly warmed iron weight. The King's English: The origin of the term "the king's English" seems to be a little shady, but there is no doubt as to what it meant and means. It dates back to the days when the king of England came as near to being educated as was anybody in the kingdom, and if he couldn't speak correctly there was no use in anybody trying. The Plantain. The plantain differs from the banana not only in color and flavor, but in the way of growing. The fruit points upward, while that of the banana points downward on the stem. A Remarkable Shower A shower of a remarkable character occurred in Sicily on April 24, 1781. On the morning of that day every exposed place within an extensive district was found covered with a gray water, which being evaporated left a deposit nearly a quarter of an inch in thickness. It was determined that this solid matter must have come from Mount Etna. Diet. If all the world was cake and pie, And all the sea was sweet. And all the woods were starchy foods, What should we have to eat? - Life Valuable. "That stock you want to sell to me is worthless." "It's been worth a lot of money to me," replied the honest promoter.—Philadelphia Ledger. 6657 BOWMAN'S HAIR PGMADE. The Bowman Hair Fomade is unobtrudely one of the best HAIR GROWERS ever manufactured. Anyone who will wear it will be surprised that there never was a preparation suit together that will make the hair grow faster. The hair nowadays is now becoming very much interested in this wonderful hair grower. The demand in Chicago has become as high as it it in the following drug stores for the convenience of the ladies; CENTRAL DRUG CO. Washington and State sts.; THE PUBLIC DRUG CO., also State st.; BUCK & RAYNER, State and Madison sts.; CONSUMERS' DRUG CO. State and Randolph sts.; BUCK & RAY NER, Madison and La Salle sts. Send me a card Phone, Douglas 2682 Mrs. L. H. Coleman Gowns and Suits Made and Remodeled First-Class Work. Prices Reasonable. 3744 RHODES AVENUE CHICAGO Telephone Main: 2017 J. A. TRIBUE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 171 Washington St. Room 706 CHICAGO FORD'S HAIR POMADE THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINNY OR CURLY HAIR. IT'S USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COME AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT, WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ICHING OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. REWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GENIUS, PUT UP IN 25S AND 500 BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY YOU, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED BOTTLE, 25* LARGE SIZED BOTTLE, 50* THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 216 LAKE ST. DEPT. 29, CHICAGO, ILL. AGENTS WANTED. 1820 YOUR PRINTING Providly Executed 1000 Printed Cards $1.50 1000 Printed Bill Heads $1.75 ```markdown ``` High Grade Printing for people in any trade, business or profession, at right price on good quality stock. Fine Lodge and Craft Printing. By-Laws and Constitutions. CHAS. W. STEWART PRINTER Bet. State and Tenbury Sts. W. 33RD ST. PHONE DOUGLAS 3576 IDA M. DEMPCY Stenographer and Typist 3716 Dearborn St. Chicago, Ill. A. PORO Hair Crower 50c a Box, 10c extra out of city Treatment $1.50 3420 Dearborn St. Chicago. TE ps Ey Se a ee es i fe ay A be i ee ee : ! : pay F sre Sena Uae < Vr 1 ate igeiieee hia aguante i ni i Sonege iA eee Buea dee Roe ee AU Slot asthe aie SE sopra Oe geen ee AE ee mee ne g38 5 pS ee ee CG's ts Satways.. nappons oct, tor 38 years in + -yearg in eit preciaat chereuyward this man, D.C. Smith ‘rlthout fever speaking ones of nitca? somo. em (o.think that he tld be:ealled“Siiene Smith". We Hg residence ot lg Drecinet, ater Flocking around tor more then e monn Ge went to -his office, 3128 State street jSand demanded ‘that he. run for com Pcnlttcemanabip, “Hy tattered at, fret me hes = ee = sy) Bf * Ce : _ i ey Bios tom, B. , smith, f ‘but _we demanded that he come over and fight for clean government. We Succeeded nd now you nave a Chis ‘an ‘gentleman with Tasty ‘ideals to ! Als fellow man and race, he owns pro- perty, thereby a tte paver, he olice Seokea\ him out. for ‘the office: “now will you elect him on Thursday, Sept. * 15. We exnect you to come out early And leet him betore'S oretock on that ge <i a A hee (Bates TE eae Sze eed Es sean Gay eae RGB a5 ea ILIAD} UpiPes Tr AWE: AES x Fe PEK jE by sous) a weeTON. roferatos wa Hunton, vena aeieee ty Bialstne tire ron apenented Tir Stee ine a ectiede nh Piavgnsion’ noveninty” tar tie’ nee The Sembee oF ts tice Se IMR Wandelt he eunntie stactoute® ane in the Kertlon a Uke Garter, hog Brown and tis A “Minor: wore sendinge In" thot stimer Hons tor Uo’ Chtengu eteniers us Pu AWeentt” soeacteenn Woleat a td Meas vhione bomen S25 oy ia INE Hiner atoumijes nt tf “Bene. orn street gan ae "nine an ~ hg, oan to Net nauhee Sie! os the ee Rast ahbear ee of tite Tudtme Coord beta eae ee Tage ssehe Nae eae ME Winton Sar dahn We Wiliams oF 82 bene. born” treet rain putter on he i eur pivinisn For" mock fan I: Ga Dar retteneh Ian aa BE: Hie Mich "She whiiame sass he was Stn aD ee aint Sie na that hea hot aan *Solored wnin'he hooked SS ele ; ‘ahi on 147 eneirn palin compas Fete Ln ea o Jan S822 nnd sive in hin sutweription ‘of the railroad men's doings ana T am forgotten when the fleeting charms 0 Hoa fr ape Pesaalt pe, tin Heetonge degen" cat Heres th Settee Pal tt es no taxes; just 310 cash down and § eae Mat a rel ea Fane Be fer ae Pang ayaa hn ceome foam gedaan, going at Ge fe sepatlly the coreeantneny of ne Brod Bn sit gour truest ind Vaaundest a paavcaaenn es ahaa pee rpaeaaer re one can ERs hn R. Winston o ‘Ti9 ‘East 40th street bas charge of the foal estate proposition, and sean. by Feached by ‘phone Douglas 5222." Ask for hte, Winston or air LN Camp: bell. "Mention: the Chicago Defender. Mr. W. A. Soames of 6026 Armour avenue 1a running to ino city of Du: uth, ‘Stinn., aver tte Soo lings ‘in ser- vice’ of the Pullman Co, Sirs Seames is'an'up to @ate porter” and. has sub: Serltied. for the «Chicago, Detenier. for ane. years for hls ,wite to ead" You ean do the same.” ‘Phone Douglas Ses Mr, Scou Collins of 479 Armour yeni who 2 better known as Bright Byer trom tne one’ Star state, anda Nellorwelght prigetighter, ts sunning to'lee Angeles, California, in Pultmat service over the Gy St. & Py railway. Subscribe for the Chicsa Defender goltass “$80 a" year, USKSne Wouptes S8e" or" gage,” Awe: ror, Winaton. Sb: hott oF afr Camptell. "They will Cake your ‘order. Mr. WitHlam Young of 6026 Armour aveniie Hy tuning te Omaha “nthe Herviee of the Ghieazo & Northwestern yw buffet porter abd hatlor car pore ter ‘There seems to be a muss stirred up Jp ithe dist street” blocke™ regarding thiaek Jack." A certain uttinan por ter'ie Urvhig fo “got some one \nto Wroubla,“it'ly vent for this porter: wit feeattemptinie to athe: this’ muss ap ec it drop. t have your dame anda Fenders of the Chicauo, Defender wi have w' chanee’ te Tead note Une (ed gree. Mr. Charles Alison of 60 West seth street ‘han “sesiined. frum “ins aeriee a tie, Chea ree "Wekigen, Co fig & hate ear porter and Young Web: Stor tine his pike. Mr, CG. Reo of $753 Armour ave- nue. Ie rutintng to eeanaviiey thin iy Pollmat wervlee over the Chieayn & Howcern itimoin fe, ines. ste fee AUT to diate porter and elloves Mitctly ‘Sn “the “ition of ‘his hanne Cihus" A tot, Reed.) Mr, John Hoping of £014 Rearhorn aiieci Is running to Buffalo, RY in Bruliiman, secvice over ine New York [Contra unex Mr, John Hammonds of 6007 Der: torn adrect is runnin co. lasw Angeles Calltornin. tn Putiman service over the Rock Held Te Me, William Guess of 508 Armour quent ta rnin toe Law Aneto Cal in “Puliman serve over the Sania Ws ranveaye nal out, ‘Tom Kelley, you are atart- Pig ' SIRES AND SONS. - President ‘Taft ty an original member of the Couserration association, liv Sug jolued when Dr. Chavtes W. Ello ef Harvard was its hod, The oldest active actor In Great Brit ain, James Doughty. an old time clown, now ninety-two years old, re ceived $15 from ihe king as a birth day gict, Lord Strathicana, the igh commis stoner for Catada, celebrated his mine oth birthday by working hinrd in bis office. Te ts In the best of Health and Says that he expects to he In fit cond tion for many years to work In the fo torests of Canada. Professor Luther 0. Bmerson of Hyde Park, Mass, who wrote the mi sie to William Collen Bryant's "We Are Coming, Pather Abraham,” and who bas Just entered on his ninety- first seat, lins declared that he expect: ced to live at least ehirty sears more, Gustay Mahler is itty years old, For thirty years he has been an orchestral conductor, and tony Nikiseh atone contests the first place with him tn the concert hall. Te is under engagement to conduet ihe Phitharmonte concerts §n Carnegie hall, New York, next win- ter. 2. T. Anzus las been chosen to suc- oct thie Inte Sit George A; Dns president of the Yank of Montreal, the Iighest positlon In Canada’s Anatela world. Mr. Angus entered the employ ‘of thw tank in 1837 and has been elosa Jy associated with the institutlon ever Since, thiu:h meh of his time tn re cont soara hnwe heen given to Falleond iuvinagement. Rezent Inventions. For restaurant and hotel use an tn- ‘yentor bas toried out machine whieh will cULA pound of butter into twenty- four equal skeet plvees nn single mo- tion, A new shce salesman’s stool 18 pro- vided with small mirrors on each side of the foot Fest to enable customer to get side views of x shoe he 19 try- fog on and also to afford a degree of privacy. A new pyronieter for measuring bigh temperatures consists of strips of two metals rolled together Into a spiral, As hieat rays strike it the spiral grad- ually unrolls owing to the difference Detiveen the two metals’ coeficlents of expansion, Bank Notes. Canada tas twenty-nine banks, with about £.000 branches, ‘They are. prac- tically controlled by the Bankers as- sociation. legalized institution with certain detinite functions, ‘The governor and two deputy gov- emors of the unk of France are ap- polnted by the chief of state. ‘The gen- eral poliey of the Bank of France 4s directed by the governor of the bank. Refore discounting any paper tho Bank of Englnnd requires at least two ‘good British names, one of whieh must be tle acceptor. Tt seldom holds ‘over $150,000.00 In. bills discounted ‘and securities of all kinds, | English Etchings. Brine springs flow under the town of Norwich, England. ‘They have been there for centuries and were used for the produétion of sult long before the Christian era. ‘The Derby for 1912 tins closed with 3GL_ entries. including venty-seven made in New York. ‘The Oaks for the same year las secured 200 entrants, Including twelve made in New York. A.woman of Carsarronshilre, Bng- and, called “Miriam of the Cave,” has zelebrated ber nincty-second year, thost of which time she lived {na cave By’ the sea, where she ralsed thirteen ehildren. State Lines. New York bas more Indians left than ny other eastern state, ‘Over 4,000 potato diggers are used in the atate of Maine alone to harvest the ferop. If-theso were all hooked together with a team of horses to each it would make a procession fifteen miles in engtt. am ‘The state of Texts alone could give to every man, woman and child in the whole world a bullding lot 20.by 100 eet anid then, allowing for pubite bigh- ways, have over one-third of the area of the state left for the production of toon pametten. ‘Trouble For the Tourists, ‘There Is a story on reeged of three Irisbinen nisiling awuy ffom the rac meeting at Punchestomy to catch traio ack to Dublin. At tho momen a train from u loug distdace putied up at the station, and the three mer Scrambled In, "In the cartlage was seated one other passenger. AS £001 fa they had regained their breath one sald: “Pat, have sou got th" tlekets?" “What tekets? Mve got_me lolte X thought I'd have fost that gettin” tn th’ thrain. Clave sou got ‘em, Molke?" “Ol? Bozorrah. | haven't!” “Oh, we're all done for, thin!” sat the third. They'll ebarge us roight trom th’ other solde of Olretand.” “The old gentleman looked over Di newspaper and sid: “Tou are quite sinfe, eintlemen. Wal till we get to th' dext station.” AB soon as ihe train polled up th ttle gentleman jumped out and came back with (bree fmt elass tlekets, Handing thew to the ustonished stran fers, be sald: “Whist? TU tell you how T dia tt 1 wine along th’ thrain ‘Tickets, plaze: tlekets, plaze! 1 ealled, ‘and these belonis to three Saxon towr Ists In another carriage.” ‘Wishes ae ke Kean: A merchant in a large city allowed is aame to be posted In lls elnb Uiree ‘mes for nonpasment af dues. A few days after the last postlu he applied ‘to his bank for a loan. When the ap: plication came up to the bank's credit Man—tbat uewest of n bank's tmpor- tant officials—be pulled our tho eus- tomier's history eatd. ‘Tue latest entry was one typewritten sentence. “Does tiot pay his club dues; three times delinquent." ‘The loan was refused. The merchint was elther careless, near broke or unappreciative of his credit standing. Any of these Feasons looked bud to the banker. Business, mou do not realize how closely thelr banks wateh them—how much the banks are bound to know About thelr affairs, how much seem. ingly small things in thetr daily tives affect credit. and big things that they sometimes want to conceal too.—Sya- tem Magazine. ‘hii satan. | The smaliest inbabited tsland In the ‘world is that on whieh the Eddsstone lighthouse stands. At low water ft i thirty fect In diameter. At bigh water the lighthonse, whose diameter atthe base is efght and three-fourths. feet completely covers it. It is inhabited by three persons. It ties nine malles off the Cornish cost and fourteen wiles southeast of Plymouth breakwater. Flatholme, ap island In the British channel, is only a mile and a balf Sn cireumferenee, but, consisting mostly of rleh pasture tnnds, supports a farm. house besides the Highthouse. with a revolving light 150 feet above the sea. ‘There are about 100.000 islands. large and small, scattered over the oceans. America alone bas 5.500 around {ts coasts. ‘There are 305 in the bay of Rio Janeiro, 16.000 between Madagas: car and India and some 1.200 off the eastern const of Australia between its mainland und New Guinea. i" Youny ‘ing wdvine rein OO Jenny Lino after sears of. steady practice belleved that the muck covet- ed trill was for her an impossibility. She practiced hours a day. but was unable to necomplis the feat. One day, thoroughly discouraged. she was sitting In her garden when all at once she looked up {nto a tree. Above her a bird was (rilling. She at once went to ber plano aud through some magic ‘or power of Imitation began the trill and from that day never iad any fur- ther dificulty. Losing His Senses. A mischlerous boy. baviag got pos- session of bis gravdfatber's spectacles, privately took out the ginsses. When the old gentleman put them on, finding he could not see, he exclaimed: “Mercy on me! I've lost my sight!” But, think tog the {mpediment to vision might be the dirtiness of the glasses, he took them off to wipe them. when, not feel- ing them, be, still more frightened, cried out: “Why, what's come now’ T've lost my feeling too!"—London dens. ‘An Anclok Meu, | Tbe ancient Romans had a catapult that could burt rocks moro than a tile." “Now 1 understand it!" swwhat?" My fapdlord told.me the house was a stoue's throw from the depot. He must bave had ft on bis bands since the time of the Caesars. - ‘A Complex Rest Cure. “Bliggins 1s a very vociferous per- son “Yes,” replied Miss Cayenne, “but 1 don't blame him. The way a man of his mentality rests bis nerves 1s by talking so loud be can’t bear bimselt think." Washington Star. Genter of Toughness. Inquiring Tourist—Would you cal thts a tough town? Stray Native— ‘Tough? Say, stranger. when we have old bome week here detectives from all over the country come and pick out Just who they want—Puck, Conscience. Conscience Is not an indleator of what fs right. ‘That 8 the province of wisdom bascd on kuowledge. Con: sclenee ts the divine Imperative im- pelling us to do what we belleve to be ight. A whole tot of people never blame the fool for parting from bls money until after it fs all gone.—Phlladelphia Inquirer. hai ciapersrerectnced amnesia ato Among the state papers for the year 4830. may be read a letter from Js Bartelet to Henry VIIl's minister, ‘Thomas Cromwell, stating that in{ ac- cordance with the recent act tt Saityor ‘and aldermen bad choraw-atr. Pryseley to attend tho Englisa parliament as the representative of Calais and, that ho ‘hid made certain arrangements about his passage intd, England, ‘One Thomas Boya was elected ai bis colleague, and Calais ontinied to send ‘M, Pig to Westmipfter untll, in the reign of Mary, weffost the stronghold Wwe bid behk tor dyer two centuries. This is the only,iudtance in Bagland’s history of anytlilng lke colonial rep- resentation at Westmigeter unless in deed wo reckon one oF to exceptional occasions when colonial grievances have been voleed at the bar of the house of commons, a8 they were s0 brilliantly by Beslamla Franti, when Burke said the scene remladed him of *n oyster exambied by a par cel of seboolboys"—London News. | Learn to Laugh. | Laughter ie the best ot all tones ‘Bacllil are’ bummorioss folk’ and. bate ‘the physical constimtion that ts al- wart eibratiog. withthe shocks of fun. This isa trulsm, bit searicendie ‘and likewise worth repeating are the [platitudes on taughter as tbe great Aseptic of tle soul. It is true there jare different kinds of laughter, and some of them need formaldehyde. ‘Tere ts 9 kind, too. that needs biear- Donate of sod as a antidote~an- other that calls for lithia tablets. But the right sort of tnugiter was stolen from the gods by some wiser Prome- thous, and nothing ean prevall agatost Mt. In Amerlen there Is plenty of laughter, good, bad and Inditerent, but mostly good, and much that 1s. very Good. Tt is ove of our greatest nation 41 resourees, Moy we conserve It al- ways, A people that laugh kindly and often ave not much to fear; & Beople that tnugh wlsely, nothing Culeago ‘Privune. ea Fanns, the sister of Charles Dickens, was one of the (rst xmudents entered at the old Royal Aendemy of Muste when it openvi its doors at Tenterden street in INE, and ut tat time the students tived at the meatemy, only going Home for the week ext, “Beery Sunday.” Biekens tat Barston, “1 was At the acidemia M weleck in the Morning tw tot tye «Fanivy and we walked tek eueee tar tion at elt” Abd the Snoday aeest tne 160 spent fm The Marsnaira prism, where thelr father ane dette: men ected, aveing to Mr. Juekens msving “tawed te peo Ditinte tix eretiiors” While her fa- ther wax st in prin Eauy wou a Prize at the seademy. and ihe future Rovellst. thew enzazed an pastiog 1a. bels on blacking pts at 7 shillings a Week, was present to see her receive t—Westinluster Gazette. Sealed 46s Wie Mark Twato once told to a party of frlends the following story on himself: On one aceasion when be started on & trip'down the Mississippi river on a Mazbeat he was advised. never to am swor the questions asked by rivermen on other ‘bonts and never to. bandy Words with them, a8 Ue would be sure always 0 come out second best. Ho followed the advice religiously for a ‘time, but one day he thought he saw a chico to get the better of a river ‘man. who called out: “Hey, thar, what yer loaded with?* “Jackesses. Don't souywant to come avonra?” setied back ‘Twaln. “That's whut I reckoned seein" as how they let ther biggest donkey hev ther run of the deekt™ came back. ‘Twain made a dive below a3 all the Hvermien in tlie nolgherbiood set up a Aerisive laugh ac bis esnenso. “Niggering” Logs. The question was asked me as a na {ise of Maine if | could Gnd out what “alggerios" logs meant in the state ment “We niggered the logs." 1 found that to “nigger” logs waa to save the labor of chopping them into lengths Ly piling them up erossed at point bore it was desired to separate them By buflding Gres under these eressings several logs could be burned fnto see tlons at once, Reeause “a nigger’ was supposed to be inzy this lazy ‘Moan’s way of cutting logs into lengths was. naturally enough, ealled “nig Bering.” Appleton Morgan in New Sbakespearenna. Wie Gemmes ech. Rabie an. Mr. Walter Seymour. who writes “Ups and Downs of a Wandering Life.” had Thorold Rogers for a tutor while at Oxford. Rogers was a9 amusing as be was heterodox. “I re- ‘member asking bim one day. ‘Mr. Rog- ‘rs, what do you consider the origin of the idea of the devia? “Cheapest po- Heeman they could 6nd!" * A Mistake. Applicant For Situation—I'se como ababt that job wot wos advertised. Emploser—Well, can sou do the work? Applicant Gm great alarm—Work! I thought it was a foremay you wanted! =Puneh, Hie Penalty. Geraldine—What did pa say whem ‘you asked bim for my band? Gerald— He said that be wouldn't stand in the way of my unhappiness if | needed the mouey badly.—New York Press. No Eacane. | Bella—I understand your sister mar- fled. straggling young man? Gus— Yes: he struggicd hard, but be couldn't get away from her. ‘There are many religions. but there {a only one morality.—Ktnskin. Drugs and Sickness.“ It 1s not too much to say that the ‘medical profession today no longer be- Haves that any drug (with a few oxcep- tons, ike quiino in malaria, mer cary and the antitosins) will cure a Aisoaso as euch. All that it will do $s 80 to modify conditions as to help the body tn ity ght against disease, ‘We aro no longer content. in tho biting phrase of Voltalre, to “pour Grugs of which we know ttle into bodies of which wo know less." * What vill help one patient will harm another, and what may bv benefelal in the early stage of a disease will be useless or even injurious in a later stage. « Im the language of Captain Cute, the effect of a drug, Itke “the-bearta’ of an obseration.” “depends on the ap- pllcation on It” “It is nelther ratlona) nor safe blindly to swallow down a drug which ts blgbly recommended tn a certain disease and expect ft todo the rest”. ‘There fs no such thing as a universal cure for a disease nor even @ remedy which can be relled upon as a good thing to take” at any and all ataged of {t-—Dr. Woods Hutchinson in Delineator. “-._ Gagadig. Gigadab. ‘There was a quaint old man 1a Man- ‘ebester, Bugiand, who for many years ‘Went by the nolque ouwe of Gugadig Gigadab, His original vame was Job Smith, and for mang. sears he brodded over the possibilities of tnfstaken iden- tity Involved in it. The nme gured frequentis in eriminal records, und he became abaormally appreiiensive lest he might be confused with some of the bad Jobn Smiths. At last what be feared 30 much- actually tappened. One morning the papers reported the arrest of sn accountant in 1 bunk for embezzlement. and thronzh sume blun- der of the reporter the identity of the emberzter was coufised with the sud- Ject of thia article, who was also a dauk accountant. . ‘Then and there ne determined to assume a naine Itke unto no other ever borne by mortal man. And In Gagadi Gladab most Deople wilt ugree tit te succeeded In 80 doing.—New York ‘Tritmue. ice Macken The creditors of the ancient king fbnd become so unplensantiy Insistent that he resolved to put tem wher they couk! trouble tin ne more, So he invited them to a xreat banquet, and when!they had feasted and drunk Of lus prepared wine he Instructed his Servants to conver ther tw tis deepest Aungeons./ And the nest morning When he went down to learn whether bis servants had done his bidding his creditors ratsod their voices sad en- treated to be set free, ut he remon- strated with them. saying: “My friends, you have no just cause for complaint. Are you not etter off in the eye of the law thau ever be- fore? Any lawyer will tell you that a secured credilor has an exceptional cinch." ‘Then be left them aud went op bly gindsome was, happy In the lnowledza ate ould at ist 0 through is dominions without belng dunned.—Chiengo News, indipamecbalics eet. ‘The musiea! doctor stepped into the shop. - His talr stuck out tke stim straws and his fos of life was under bis arm also two buttons om bis waistcoat were undone. So there was no donbt about ils being a geutus, “Aba, abew, abum!" purred the ‘musical doctor. “B string for a violin, please.” ‘The man Vebind the counter looked Gustered. He went to the shelf, 100% of a small packet, osamined it care. fully, examined it again and then bes. ftatingly returned to the customer. “1 beg sour pardon, sir.” he began Aiffidently. “but this ‘appens to be my Grst day In, the shop, and yer might give men Hitle'elp, ‘The fave Is these fere strings took all alike to me, an’ I can't tell the ‘es from the xites!"—Lon: don Glove, Pincacwe a: Remsies As an luatration of bow closely ey- erything 1 wotebied t) Tussin, take its system or registeriug trearms. When a wenpon of any tind ts. pur chased n permit mast i secured from the focal nutborites. ‘The tyie of she man who uuikes the puvetiia,.Qith the number ofthe wen. rec. If the pmreonser ever wants Wo disp of the weapou be must uotlty the do Uhorities aud cause tbe trauster to recorded ou the books of the ffm an We ie Rnahoaaiae: When some celebrated pletures of Adam ‘and Eve wore seen’ on exblbi- on Mr. NeNab was taken to see them, “I thiol no great things of the patoter,” said the gardener, “Why, wan, tempting Adam wl'a plppin of a variety that Wasa known uot about twenty rears ago!" Hindoring the Process. Doctor—Well, Jobn, tiow are sou to- day? Jobn—Verry Usd: verry bad, 1 wiet Providence "ud ‘ave mussy oD me an' take me. : Wife—Ow can you expec’ it to it you woo't tale the doetors phiysie?— Loudon Mall Her Answer. to tueuleating the Wen of frathfa- ness teacher ‘isked.the question, SWhat #4 the best thing 10 the world to-do ang sometimes the hardest?" ‘A it girtyraised er band tmiaty. ell uy child?" Yo get married!” | op ond of Them “tg ne fo of outdoor sports?” “Yes, [es wife complains that he even foxftes them home to dlnner”— ballet pod hay Srv How to Clean Alabaster Ornaments. some time in milk of lime. washing enough sinked lime in water to: give it a milk appearance. A second and ‘ammonia and rinse thoroughly after- os ha genet | Whowe Nar OF ess PRor, ware, — n. Peiitapaulet vine vou Got lind Feet? 1a alt on Prof, White ie remover hard ‘nnd note orms, Duine [iiss ingeowtug nite, cntlouneh ad Mi"kuimendy ‘of the iets 310 State Sty ‘ta ‘Frooe eatenzo ©. 5, TWEETY 5 ‘The Shoe Man +5 Repairing Sof Alle indy dynnid Bowed Worit 9 ‘Speciaity jas Went stmt Street ‘Chicnge GUY. BROWN —_ADDIg BROWN ‘Fhe More Dintug: Hoom ‘he Mest Home Conking Ta the Cy terrain 250 Brea ‘speciat Sunday Dinner 35 Cente special Attentign Given to Private 21S Dearborn. street Facial Masange ‘Hale Good) Manteyrton” Mate to Order Ti Fnone Calamet 481 pms. SaMes T wenny | * Blictric Seni Treatmient w syccialty. Aprons sd taney Goods made to onde: 3B West ats Sty ‘Chicags ~~ GHAS.."7, GLAMEDROOKY x TAMOR, suite made to Order, Work Guaranttee ‘3007 STATE ST. s ‘Telephone Doogias 1946 A SURRADGE R. eng, CAMERON & CO, "aS Masquerade and Theatrica Pah. esnes ta ae Clin PHAIIN © wasis, Grease Paints an oa SER Meer nie Ff Spotaiuy bte: ‘rheatrcs ge RAR) © Nardabeciatsioustoa Se ie Sat aid renteae nae boeen ress 3447 South State Stree Phone Calumet 054 MRS, SUSIE NEWTON Malrdceming — Shampootng ” and Mantouring Manuthoturce of Wer, Pompadours, Switcher and "AI KCtuds of atr Goods, 2021 State Street Fone Atiine 457 Du. Gr. W. erixce South Side Drug Store 2050 State Street aie Wawa Rentanrant and Lunch Room ‘A ince to Eat. ‘The Only Place ‘That Serven Contec Out South 2022 State Street W. 1, DORSEY Musto Arranger. Original Composition Arranged for Pabitentton Ato Unnd ond Orchestra Arrangements Musfe Purniued for Alt Occantone G150 State Street Chieawe, Til SS, HATTIn JONES Drenalin Luidtew’ and Children's Clothes Bade to Order at Rewronuble Prices 44 Went 35th Strect Phone Alaine 1774 chesceNt wanker Hi. Weinstein, Prop. Panoy Native Menty und Fiae Grocerien 38 ana 40 Went 5m Street Phone Dousias 78a UNION SIARKET Fresh and Salt Beate Poultey and Game “AML fa. Seanon 902 Dearborn Street Candies ——~—~S~S*S*~*~SN tome B, D. BURTS ‘Deater tm ‘Tovaccon and Clyare. AM Kinds of Baguzines; Hoole ‘and Stationery. AN the Lending Nesro Papers and Magazines. 2030 Sinte St. ‘chteago, mh. Telephone Dooglan 1144 2, 6. BWING Bxprewing; Conl, Wood and tee Duxiage Transferred and Checked {0 All Depots zo W. 0th st. ‘Ohteago, 1 Phone Douglas 334g Le MAXWELL Unatew’ and Genoe ‘Teor Cleaning, Dyeing and -atebetring y : oe we Both Bee Eten, “Tet A. W. Coles Do Your Electric Repateing, Meling n Speclalty of Electrle Bells, Wiring Your test- dence, Foralshing Afaterial {and Power for Only $3.00, with Si) Per gent Disconnt, —neate, trop B= 7d, 24 We SMMASty Chleazontll: Gerd 24 SM DR. P. J. SCOTT (Graduate Optometrist) Ginter Spesiatint Muccbiihin ance thencimancion anadha Be Spectacles and Eye-Glasses made to otieeant Gunranteed te eive Pe ice taictctons ‘OMice 2636% State St Chicago, Ml. scorn w sTawrow root hom and Bilin alt cheats wna Revacee 3a Dettnors Steet P W. T., STOBALL ieeprenite ted Moving Goat ant ae eta tate sre x, ORE LE UATE gor alae Gespecee el ater Teagan Sea Ty, ae int ghar ent ne Nan linge Gey ar elt Reed arseeade ane is Eesti: Fie Titel he TERR 6, ERE as Si a rein ea, BEA ate! Sear rronecnee i Sorte LARS FANGS SOEoE TE ania See wre sertne oe i ws rae SUR Ss ath ts so ete te Beene pata Be SE Re, Satcl ad t nll SEMI GR cont te Us $16: full course $25. a Sor Dome ae aoe wim, aur nett eae aie ‘Notary, Public, = sana tie =e Be re 28 Hs, ie Tt ts Fee "ame Sad Seine areas eee Nat iti saaF RE LAER? emcee ee oe Fe eee ee Ber Sy. MeDONOUOH, Prod: ror tet, a coop ex Torr ts 1s na og a, wah ict te imieates acest Soba hl at som mite? eestooe Rose ae ae oie farce tpn es Eas, ios Ha me na, On a eer oe -| Three i} Be Bel ‘fark. Fe ee a ae . £ Ke pown\ Foray rsaacso: Pe ef Be RET aes Based a cee a n,n : ‘Phond\ Gatonet, 2 EDRURE 2%, Enpggltrioe wally'to Ha Depots ana Freight eet ‘2540 Statd Street, ra raggonlth De BRS. arene. Bus Zour Drows, Tele "ARC tic, and fy, Sh anne A at baad ng Thee Siac ah sere rears jit Ss HS aN a aise es entsg ane? Oa Sotnat es of ae saa oe RP cE nal beatin "Se BOE seo ee Fis ra eae FRR cas ope ao Ete ihates, seg, iter Pe A i Sate nee ae NN, ag ORS esa, esc nea ee EEE "Denrborn Stes" Phone Calumet 4068: Fang SA, Ian mie fined Ree ee tye Baty det Fe tee soe Ee cinnge or ga ia cheeks "given an all, imgeaser "No. fancy Shea ec a mae Ne hnowNE, "ino ara ‘2838 Dearborn St. ., Phane Calumet 1965, INNS WAND LAUNDRY, at Bate TGtONPRS Birctiy stand ‘Works Suit” Watste ana >, Tnaten clathce a apectaige, SM. 24 Tesla oP wee Has Shecka "elven aa all baceage eS Gantt floes ered Mle pee an tke o> 1. Bi hnowNe, "ap grate "ge: ‘hone Calumet 200% heey Toone Caner 2861 watanited apne 2400 Wabmah Avenue. Kecget gout own i toate, iaena call rere “5° ware, Dentet 18 Cont and. Weed an Ochs fromthe sented to vornitne Siovind Stoner HEprceaay wl” General Teaming 4 A740 Twentoonini Sirk Chicane ‘ a” 4 zoe WheKET eee 20h Semoun Avene rut nine “GF ihe tnd tested Poulter, = > “aiwayg om Mand Grocerten atthe Lea Pee Grocers nd tiorket NoW. Cop, Armony Avenue nmi 22nd Strerk > Teed Voge fn "Somsen 3.1. COLEMAN fee Raatee ant Cerise Varsha ts ‘cous so Scvtons bes Ese stats Mee WS Catt at t . a Monaax's waxrny or suit gd ed, Wee rigytera Ment portence 10 West 8° [Siecet = hone, ‘Yaris 3270 : = Phones 8? Sica xseesasn,“ alee te met on), wood Gageine and on [ an Kn Balle Street © Chic} VWERVERE_ pnovinns <. Freinone Bhasin 3550 si_Weat ist Street | GhORGE sWiinEs 4 sewty SoS MENT TES secre " Prato toner . meeting "an st aoaz stnterpireet streets: on Pinta ae ino at To 3H seme. 7 c a, a “ipoplag Ham dmernme Gs: (pegater Biel bsiarte” ACiag a8 yr Seeir Stat tenes Matt oF bag PR ‘Teh Dongtan 40a Se \eOKU & Wh Be cea ‘Phone; Wards eT Shae, Nie eae is Go" FKOnten! ©) Sy wasting, URES ce NS asi Wet ate Bae viewers weadings 0d Sun sore reduction fo tie, gt fave money” by giving te Se coreRey ana’ prompn ‘Phone, Drover $06. 7 ‘ | ae Fhe . on | io Bore ana haan tn hw Werk Soaureateea ohh oe hoNa ons eee a | ome eatha Excursion! Excursion! Excursion! September 10th, 1910 CHICAGO TO BALTIMORE PENNSYLVANIALINES G. U. O. of O. F. 15th B. M. C. Fare $26.25 for round trip. Tickets on sale September 9th, 10th and 11th, good returning September 21, 1910. Fare $25.50 for round trip Chicago to New York, good returning within 30 days permitting of stopover at Baltimore, Washington, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. For further information address C. L. KIMBALL, A. G. P. A., No. 2 Sherman St., Chicago. The Defender $1.50 A YEAR Little Star Beauty Parlor Line of Human Hair Goods WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Specialty. Growing Hair on Bald Heads. Skin Diseases lively cured. If I fail to cure, money will be refunded. I Whole of Ladies Toilet Articles. Mall Orders promptly Information Free. net 3054. MRS. C. S. BARRY 250S STATE STREET, CHICAGO, IL. North Side White House Mrs. P. Symms, Proprietor First-Class Rooms. With or Without Board By Day or Week The Little Star Beauty Parlor Hair Culture a Specialty. Growing Hair on Bald Heads. Skin Diseases Wills Cure. All hair is curled. It will to cure, money will be refunded. A full list of all kinds of Ladies Toilet Attended promptly attended to. Information Free. MRS. C. S. BARRY. Phone Galumet 3054. 2508 STATE STREET, CHICAGO, IL. First-Class Rooms With or Without Board By Day or Week 18—Sunday Breakfast, 8 to 10; Dinner 4:30 to 6; Days, Breakfast, 10:30 to 12; Supper 5:30 to 8:30 25 Cents and 85 Cents LAKE TIPPER Free Family Grocer One East of State St. Nest Vegetables Obtainable Oysters and Game of all kinds Country Butter. Armour in Our Neat Market. 35th Street, Chicago. JAKE TIPPER Choice Family Grocer One East of State St. Nest Vegetables Obtainable Oysters and Game of all kinds Country Butter. Armour in Our Meat Market. 25th Street, Chicago. HOOL SHOES SHOE STORE Jrade Repairing reet, Near "L" Station Chicago 00.00 Reward Chicago Chicago selling a better grade of we do at 300 per lb. tisfied Customers. One Blend as the best. 30. SALARY o through t, Death Detroit, Mich. ary known accident. ger Aldine 2532 uglas 8256 --- BLIND BOSS THRONE THOUGH 70 Legislation Directed From Chair In Capitol, and Governor Made Nonentity by Barring Revision of the State's Constitution. portion, not a man to be frightened or bluffed. He knows how to tell a good story to mollify an indignant denouncer of his methods, and if the story does not suffice he is an adam at using the sort of language from which the average denouncer shrinks. Perhaps the chief reason of his long success has been his minute knowledge of every nook and corner of his small state, his intimacy with everybody in it and his personal attention to detail. He never has left much to lieutenants. General Bryaton was born seventy years ago at Apponau, R. I., a descendant of the original white settlers in the colony of Roger Williams. His father was a representative in congress. His grandfather and an uncle were both justices of the supreme court of Rhode Island. At the close of the war General Brayton was made postmaster at Hilton Head, S. C., refused a captaincy in the regular army, returned north and in 1854 was made postmaster at Providence. Irregular Accounts No Handicap. He held this office until 1850, when he was removed because of a technical irregularity in his accounts. But that fact he not haplar his political prestige in the least. During political management. From that day to that has been the dominant political factor in the state. Twenty years ago he was called the chief of the Swiss mercenaries of Rhode Island politics. Three Democrats have sat in the executive chair during that time, but never with a friendly assembly at their backs, and they have been unable to effect reforms. The last public office of consequence held by General Brayton was that of chief of the state police, created as a tail to a prohibitory law passed in 1886. The office carried a salary of $3,000. Hitch selling flourished while this law was in effect, and eventually General Brayton resigned his office and worked openly and successfully for the defeat of prohibition. When the new $3,000,000 statehouse was opened, eight years ago, General Brayton established himself in a chair in the corner of the office allotted to the showoff of Providence county, and there, he has stuck in spite of the efforts of a Democratic governor to have him kept out of the statehouse as an undesirable person. From this chair he has directed legislation. In it he has given audiences to seers of favor and passed sentence on those who showed signs of independence. "Rob Roy of Rhode Island." In his letter to the sheriff and to the legislature asking that the boss he kept out of the statehouse, the governor referred to him as "the Rob Roy of Rhode Island, with a shameless disregard for the outer forms of public decency and a moral and political pest." General Brayton makes no bones of the fact that he has made a good living out of his control of the state. Nominally he is an attorney at law. "I am an attorney for certain clients," he explained once, several years after he had become blind, "and look out for their interests before the legislature. I am retained annually by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad company and, as every one knows, I act for the Rhode Island company, which controls the traction interests in this state, and, for the Providence Telephone company. In addition to these I have had connections, not permanent, with various companies desiring charfers and franchises and things of that sort from the legislature. "My power in the legislature comes from my managing the campaign every year, which puts me in a position to be of service to men all over the state. I help them to get elected, and naturally many warm friendships result. Then when they are in a position to repay me they are glad to do it." MONOPLANE HAT NATURAL Stickpins Have Propellers That Revolve in Wind. The latest creation in millinery reported from Paris is the monoplane hat, invented in celebration of Molsant's flight from the French capital to England. Like the Bierlot, it is a monoplane, with two wings, each over a foot long, spread out on each side of the head. But the chief novelty is the hatpins. These have propellers at their ends—not mere imitations, but real miniature propellers with wooden blades. When a breeze blows the blades revolve gaily as the waver walks along. How Hair Injured by Salt Water May Be Restored. First an application of grease and then a most thorough shampooing and massaging are the two agents most beneficial for restoring color and texture to hair that has been injured by salt water. Unfortunately the treatment is not unlike that given when effort is being made to restore color after bleaching, for in both cases the condition is similar. Natural oils of the scalp have been dried, and it is many weeks before they are brought back to normal. When salt water is the cause of injury it becomes necessary before doiny anything else to remove all the stickiness which sea. water makes. Its effect upon the hair is very peculiar, being almost "messy," so gummy do the locks become, and, while it may seem easy to wash this out, it is very difficult. Soap cannot be used. It only makes a bad matter. worse, so there must be repeated rubbings in fresh warm water, changing it frequently so that the salt may not be worked back to the scalp. Hair which is clean has a creaky feeling between the fingers when weft, and the test should be made when trying to remove all salt. The touch to the fingers is not unlike that of silk, and when this is pronounced it is safe to think the locks are clean. Drying should be done both by exposure to sun and by rubbing with soft towels, when the scalp is ready for treatment. Particularly well suited to the condition is a cream made from one and a half ounces of white vaseline, three-quarters of an ounce of cold drawn castor oil, seven-eighths of a dram of gallic acid and fifteen drops of lavender oil. This is made into a smooth paste, and the hair is divided on the scalp, rubbing the application in the line left bare. The finger tips are really best for putting it on. Divisions should be made close together, rubbing well until the whole scalp has been anointed, after which ten or fifteen minutes' massage is to be given. This treatment should be put every night, and if the grease is put on carefully it will not show through the hair. If an oily look begins to appear the ointment may be omitted for a night, but massage and good brushing daily are to be kept up. It is so much easier to prevent injury from salt water than to remove it that effort should be made in the former direction. Treatment for bleached locks is the same, save that quantities of oil must be used daily if any benefits are to be derived. CLEANING WITH GASOLINE. How to Use It In Washing Soiled Garments and Feathers. To clean with gasoline the first thing to do is to obtain gasoline of a suitable grade. A simple experiment will determine this and make you independent of the advice of your dealer. Pour a little on a piece of white writing paper of good quality. If the gasoline leaves no trace of grease on the paper after evaporation you will be safe in using it; otherwise it is useless for your purpose. Second, buy enough gasoline both to wash and rinse your garment. Two gallons are enough for a dress, provided you wash it in a proper receptacle, which retains evaporation by exposing a comparatively small surface to the air. Many women fail of success because they do not realize the necessity of rinsing the garment in plenty of clean gasoline. The gasoline that is left after a garment is washed can be allowed to settle and the clear gasoline at the top used again. It is not advisable, but ever, to use the same gasoline too often. Now as to the method of procedure for garments in general. Soak the garment in gasoline. If it is much soiled twenty-four hours is not too long. Instead, your labor will be lightened and the garment saved much destructive rubbing. Be sure that the vessel in which you place the garment and gasoline has a tight cover. A wash boiler can be used. Cover the opening with two or more Turkish gowns, and over these place the lid and weight it down all around. Procure a small washboard and, putting it into the boiler, rub the garment vigorously, just as if using water. Before wetting the garment it is a good plan to locate all the spots that need particular attention by basting around them with a thread of contrasting color. They are then easy to find when the garment is wet. The under parts of sleeves, the neckbands and the hems of skirts must receive special attention in the matter of rubbing. Do not expect the gasoline to do all the work, for it will disappoint you. Rinse the garment in clear gasoline and hang in the sunshine and air to dry. Finally press it with an iron of suitable temperature to remove the creases and also whatever odor may remain. During the whole process up to the pressing keep your work out of doors. There are a few special ways of using gasoline which it may be well to mention. White ostrich feathers can be cleaned by using gasoline and flour. Sifr in enough flour to make a thin white paste. Thoroughly shake the feather in this. Dry by waving in the sunshine and air. The flour will shake out, leaving your feather white, soft and beautiful. Chiffon ruchings which are soiled, but not crushed, can be rejuvenated by shaking them in clear gasoline and then drying them in sunshine and air. Small articles, such as fancy neckwear in general, which must be treated gently, can be put into a fruit jar nearly filled with gasoline. Using a rubber ring, screw the top on tightly. Let the articles soak for some time and then shake them vigorously. Rinse in the same manner in clear gasoline. Dry in the sunshine and air. Coat collars can often be cleaned by wetting a cloth in gasoline and then rubbing the soiled part. If the fabric will warrant it and is much solled use an old toothbrush for this purpose instead of the cloth. Neckties cannot always be cleaned by the simple rubbing process. If that is so try using a brush dipped in gasoline to scrub the soiled parts. Satin, of course, does not permit of this treatment. Grease spots can be removed by rubbing the spots with a good white soap after the article has been soaked in gasoline. Rub hard and rinse thoroughly. Gasoline in which soap has been used cannot be used a second time—Ethel Dressler in Chicago Tribune. How to Make Oatmeal Gems. To make delicious oatmeal gems mix a cup of oatmeal in a cup of milk, let it soak overnight and then add one teaspoonful of soda, a well beaten egg and half, a cup of sugar, Stir in flour enough to make a batter. MODOCS RETURN LIKE ISRAELITES BACK TO THEIR NATIVE HILLS Thirty-five Per Cent of Number Removed to Indian Territory From Their Oregon Mountains Participate In Biblical Parallel, but Not Captain Jack and His Fighters. Like the children of Israel, who "wandered in the wilderness for forty years until all of that generation which came out of Egypt were dead, and then were allowed to enter into the Promised Land," is the case of the Modoc Indians. For nearly forty years the Modocs pined and wasted far from their promised land of home and liberty. And now—now that all the generation with which Uncle Sam waged war are dead—the Modocs have crept unhindered to their ancient homes. Little has been said about the return of the Modocs. The interior department and the Indian bureau have not blazoned their kindness abroad. A few lines in the official' archives; a few phrases in the report of the department; a few remarks by the agents of Quapaw, Okla., and Klamath, Ore.; a few changes in the tables of Indian population for the year—and that is all. That is the sum of the attention officially paid to the closing chapter of the west. Return to Ancestora' Home. Return to Ancestors Home. Officially all Americans know is that "inasmuch as the original Modoc prisoners transported from Oregon to Indian territory are now dead, and as there seems to be no objection to their return the band of Modocs now at Quapaw agency will be transported as expeditiously as possible to the Klamath agency in Oregon." That is all the government has to say about it, and that is the way in which the chapter is officially sealed. Thirty-seven years of exile in a distant land, thirty-seven years away from the mountains and the lakes, the country where the old trio roved and fought and died as warriors should—thirty-seven years during which the captives taken to the faroff reservation have perished to a man! And now a straagging few, their children go back to the home of their fathers—the country they have never seen. When the white man first swept into southern Oregon and northern California he found the Modocs, never strong in numbers, but of splendid fighting stock, living in the land of lakes and hills that lies upon the border line. They were an offshoot of the conquering Tünnch race that swung down from the frozen fjords 400 years ago. That onrush of polar hunters carried clear to Mexico, leaving the Apache, Navajo and Lipan as farthest outposts. The Klamath, Hupa and Modoc were left along the road of travel. After much fighting between the white men and the Modocs a portion of the tribe agreed in 1804 to be hearded with the Klannath on the latter tribe's reserve. Klamath reservation is an integral part of the old hunting ground, and with its lakes and peaks is even more delightful than the tract the Modocs held. Nevertheless one faction of the Modocs, headed by Kientpoos—known in western lore as "Captain Jack"—objected strongly to the transfer. Modocs Open War Klientpoos and his band, numbering not over 225 people all told, went to their new location under protest and soon made the protest stronger by declaring that they could not live in harmony with the Klamaths. They begged permission to return home, and the government received their prayer with red tape and some more red tape for good measure and variety. Then the Modocs cut the Gordian knot in the Indian way. They jumped back to their former homes and the war was on. The story of the fight Klientpoos made against a nation has been told 10,000 times. We know how the Modocs whipped everything the government could send against them. At last a peace commission was appointed to treat with the tribe, and here the Indians overplayed their hand. They murdered the commission, headed by General Canby, and their doom was scaled. New armies came, and the Modocs, retiring to that inferno known as the lava beds, cheerfully killed the soldiers from the shelter of the rocks. More soldiers came, and also Warm Springs Indians, incited by the white man's pay. The Modocs held their ground among the lava, but hunger did its work, and the tribe surrendered. Kientpoos, and his councillors were duly hanged at Klamath agency, and the tribe, 140 strong, went to Quapaw, Indian Territory. Here they were assigned land and learned the arts of civilization. They became Christians, farmers, hardworking citizens. They gave no trouble, and they faded away one by one, ten after ten. Only forty-nine of the tribe remained—just 35 per cent of the number first kidnapped from their faroff home. The forty-nine packed up their slender baggage, and a forgiving government sent them safely on their way. OILING HARNESS. How to Make It Last Longer by Simple Methods. Proper care of the harness is one department or the stable that is too often neglected, but there is nothing more essential to the life of the harness and the safety of those who use it. One quart of nectarot oil is sufficient for a double harness. Wash the harness well with soap and water and hang in a warm room overnight to dry. Next day it will be in good condition to receive the oil. Add a little lamin black to the oil to color it. Apply with rag or brush, rubbing it well into the leather, and hang in a warm room overnight. Next day, put water with a dry cloth, and it will be ready to use. Barness thus treated is much easier to handle, is far less liable to cause galls on the horses and will wear much longer. How to Prevent Raveling. In cutting out waists of any cloth thatravel overcast each piece as fast as cut and you will have no trouble with the goodsraveling when the fitting is done. Find the armholes after sleeves are sewed in place on all such fabrics that are made up without lining. Use blinding ribbon, as it strengthens the armhole and prevents the raveling and fraying so liable to occur in some goods. LAUNCH THAT CAUSED BIG SUIT NOW IN GLASS CASE. Curious Legal Complications Ended Over Gold Bonanza at Nome. The steamer Mackinaw has sailed from None, Alaska, with the famous launch Eagle aboard. The Engle will be taken to Seattle and put in a glass case, where the public may gaze to its heart's content and Captain E. W. Johnson may gloat over Josh R. McIntyre. The launch was the cause of the long drawn out suit between Johnson and McIntyre for the possession of the famous Copper Guich mine No. S, which Johnson finally won in court. Johnson and McIntyre engaged in the lightering business at None in the days of the gold rush and shipped a launch from Tacoma to do the work. The business did not pay, and the launch was beached. After lying on the beach for a year Johnson took out the engines and placed them in two other boats. In the course of time he traded one of the boats for a supposedly worthless claim. This claim is now the Copper Gulch No. S. which has already produced $1,500,000 and shows no signs of stopping. When the mine turned out to be a bonanza McIntyre sued for a half interest on the strength of his old interest in the launch sent from Taegoma. BREATHING CAVE IN ARIZONA Air Inhaled and Expelled by Crevice In Rock. "A curious freak of nature is the pride of a country neighborhood near Prescott, Ariz.," remarked F. X. Dorgan of El Paso, Tex. "This is called a breathing cave. The cave is in the lava formation on a high tableland near Prescott. In a wall of this cave is a crevice which is probably three inches wide and several feet long. A visitor stands close to this crack. He feels a current of air rushing out of it. This is not so strange. But if he walks long enough he will notice that the direction of the current has changed and the air is being drawn into the crevice. "The people of the neighborhood have many theories to account for the change in the direction of the air current, but I do not believe that any of them would stand the test of a scientist's examination. "A subterranean stream is given as the probable cause. Just how the flow of an underground river could cause the direction of the air current to be reversed I cannot see. However, the crevice is there and the phenomenon exists. I think that some of the people in that neighborhood are just a lift superstitions on the subject of the breathing cave." BURNS MUST PAY FOR SEAT. London Labor Leader, Once Poor, Now Has Big Salary. There is a delicate dispute about John Burus, the British labor leader, at Battersea. The Radicals of Battersea elected Mr. Burus to the house of commons in 1892 and paid him a salary and all election and registration expenses until 1805, when he became president of the local government board at a salary of $10,000 a year. That salary has since been increased to $25,000, and Battersea thinks that Mr. Burus should bear the expenses of registration and the Radical organization, or at least the greater part, which amounts to between $1,500 and $2,000 annually. Hitherto the London Liberal federation has subscribed, but it has now notified the Radicals that it will discontinue its subscription. The Battersea Radical association declares it will dismiss its agent and let the organization, which is one of the best in London, impose entirely unless Mr. Burns accepts its terms. SWAMPS IN SPITZBERGEN. Swedish Geologist Finds Traces Simi lar to *Florida* Coyotes. The same species of swamp cypresses that grows in Florida today once flourished in great profusion on Spitzerberg, says Count de Geer, the leader of a Swedish geological expedition which has just returned from an exploration trip to that bleak and icebound island. The expedition found geological strata which are described by Count de Geer as one colossal herbarium in a fossilized state. They justify the assumption that in early periods the entire north polar region was one vast low lying plain covered with dense forest. Evidences of the early vegetation now present themselves in extensive coal deposits which a newly formed company is beginning to work. It is expected that 50,000 tons of Spitzerberg coal will be shipped next year. Today no plant grows on Spitzerberg taller than an inch or two at the most. Gas Precious In Slam. Coal is so scarce in Slam that gas is not used for illumination, and the only rity using electricity is Bangkok. Venezuela Chauffeure' Eden. Venezuela needs motorboats, marine engines and automobiles, but does not know how to operate them. Ethel had been visiting at a neighbor's. "I hope you didn't take a second piece of cake, Ethel?" said her mother. "Yes, I did, mother," replied the child. "You told me never to contradict, and the indy said, I know you'll have another piece of cake,' so what could I say?'—Yonkers Statesman. Misnamed Children. Russell Sage Montgomery Spain, born in Pennsylvania. Nothing did his assets yield. And he lies in Potter's field. Adela Patti Maher Never sang a single bar. In her judgment you'd rejoice If you ever heard her voice. Waldo Emerson O'Toole Never went to any school. He was plainly marked by fate For the champion welterweight. -Widow. "She Had Tried It. "No," she declared: "I positively will not go out with you in that thing." "Oh, come on!" he pleaded. "Theo isn't a bit of danger. The water is as smooth as glass." "That's all right, but I never have known a man who could manage a canoe with one hand."—Chicago Record-Herald. A Toast. Here's to smile and gladness, Roses wet with dew, Joy for all our sadness— Here's to you! Smiles for all my sorrows, Gray skies turned to blue, Hope for all tomorrows, Just because of you! —Detroit Free Press. An Enlightening Diagram. "How shall I represent this railway that has become noted for erratic dividends?" asked the map maker. "But it down as a short and crooked line," replied the chief—Washington Star. Another Rubaiyat. Think, in this muddy, stein of simple glass Whence you and I have quaffed our drink, Boozer and lush have drunk their sottish fill And trod the path no sober man shall pass! —Spokane Spokesman-Review. Rainy Day Philosophy. "Oheer up," one said to Brother Dicker, "The rain falls allioe on the just and the unjust." "Yes," he said, "but do onje allius got a umbreller, nu de' gits de soakin'."—Atlanta C. The Wise C. He used to dance with Annie— She used to dance with grace; He used to drive with Famille; She had such a pretty face; He used to call on Clara— She always praised his book, But he finally married Mary. For she knew how to cook. —Chicago News. No Mistake. "I see you advertise that you have found a lady's dog. How do you know it belonged to a lady?" "When I was leadin' th' mutt down Encid ar'noo he stopped in front of all th' show windows." - Toledo Blade. Mme. Goose. Mary, Mary, quite contrary. How does your motor go? "With sudden jumps And mighty thumps. And funerals all in a row!" -Boston Herald. Couldn't Flatter Him. Blobs—What did Cynuleus say when you told him you thought he would make a good husband? Shabbs—He simply said he thought he was worthy of a better fate—Philadelphia Record. Blow Freak. The wind plucked up an awful sea, That smoothed it into waves And trade a landscape out of it With little hills and dells. -Buffalo Express. "It itms to me I've seen you some place before." "Then it must have been a good many years ago, when I wasn't particular where I went."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Another Point of View. Woodman,hew that tree! Spare not a single limb! In youth my misery Came from its switches slim. —Lippincott's. Not an improvement. Gerald—People like to walk over me. Geraldine—I don't see why they should. You hardly come under the head o improved pavement—New York Press. The Reckless Voyager. The tourist over is inclined To eat things without question. He steadily improves his mind. But ruins his direction. —Washington Star. Sue—Don't you know, George kissed me at the door last night twice before could stop him! Mae—Gracious! What cheek! Sue—Both—Smart Set. How to Clean Tan Shoes. Tan shoes will not turn dark, but will retain their color and may be kept clean, by washing with cold water and rubbing with a clean cloth. No polish should be used. Economy of Time. I say, one of your clocks is the other's fast. Young Law- I start work by the slow one by the other—Life. ion of speech is more desira- eloquence. ENGLISH ARE TO TEACH SERVANTS Brighton Boarding House Is School of Instruction. Low Rates Made to Boarders Who Act as Tutors to Girls Who as Pupils Do All Housework—Karlrauhe's Experience Shows Good Results and Eventual High Wages. The servant girl problem is beginning to worry our stal and conservative cousins over in England, and in order to help in its solution the city of brighton has embarked upon a new venture. With the approval of the own council of Brighton there will only be opened in that city a school to train girls for domestic positions. A house has been secured as a boarding house, the boarders to be teachers. The entire household work will be performed by the students under the supervision of the teachers. Girls will be sent to the house for certain periods to learn every branch of domestic work thoroughly and practically. ```markdown ``` The institution of this school is the result of the fact that servant girls are so frequently blamed for the way in which they perform their domestic duties, when as a matter of fact the majority of them have never been properly trained. German Model Taken. The Brighton school will be modeled on that at Kursuhrue, in Germany, which is an excellent training school established by the Baden Women's union. At this place several women of limited means are provided with an unfurnished room, coal, light and board and attendance for from $270 a year and up, according to the size of the room. All the work of the house is performed by girls from fifteen to nineteen years of age, who pay about $20 for the privilege. The girls must possess the necessary qualifications of a good character, a satisfactory education, etc. In cases where the girls cannot pay the tuition in full they are given some help. The tuition is not the chief end of the school, but instead it is constantly borne in mind that the school was established to train the girls to be more efficient and more valuable. Boarders Are Mentors. The principal meals are served in a common dining room, though the boarders may have them served in private by paying something extra. The object of the course is to fit the pupils for all round practical service, and no attempt is made to teach them anything superfluous to the sound workable understanding of the duties to be performed. The boarders take a great interest in the students and frequently are able to get them work. The head of the house is a thoroughly practical, motherly housewife, and a pleasant home atmosphere pervades the place. A girl who has taken a course in this school is able to command a considerably higher wage than a "green" girl and also has a better chance to secure a position. "LADY SERVANTS" HAVE CLUB Gives Congenial Society to Londoners in Reduced Conditions. A club for "lady servants" is soon to be opened in London. The main object of the club, according to the secretary, is to give such servants an opportunity of enjoying the social life of which their position often deprives them. People would be astonished, she says, if they knew how many ladies have gone into domestic service in the last few years. Many of them belong to distinguished old families, and others are the daughters of doctors, clergymen and lawyers. The chief hardship in the career of a lady who becomes a servant, it is pointed out, is the lack of congenial society, but she will be lonely no longer. In future she will spend her evenings out at the club. The club rules permit members to invite male friends to dine at the club and enjoy a quiet rubber of bridge. Members will not be encouraged to talk shop. Bridge for small stakes may be indulged in, and country members on a visit to town will find in the club all the luxuries of a London hotel. LAST EDWARD STAMPS RARE. Death of King Caused Destruction of New Design. The scarcest of all British postage stamps is the twopenny stamp of a new design which was ready for issue at the time of King Edward's death. It was not placed on sale, and the postmaster general has decided to destroy the entire stock, with the exception of a few specimens for King George's al- the British museum and the museum at St. Martin'sle. Likes American Autos. B. C. is buying Ameri- biles quite freely, 250 from it 15 of this year against to forty in all of 1900. sold or used JF BEAUTY. Then we went back to Europe for a special course in engineering, forestry and botany. When he returned to the United States he headed for Kansas City, where he announced that he was able to make a boulevard out of a dump heap. That was in 1892. Now Kansas City has thirty-eight miles of boulevards and 500 acres of parks. The cost was $9,000,000, but Kansas City is glad she spent the money. Mr. Kessler is a landscape architect, but his field is that of cities and not that of isolated residences or a once in awhile cemetery. In the beginning he transformed Kansas City from a rugged, hilly, dirty town out in the west to "that pretty Kansas City," a place of boulevards and parks, of playgrounds and breathing spots. There does not appear to be much of the dreamer about Mr. Kessler; but, just the same, he does dream, and those visions have resulted in giving Kansas City one of the best park systems in the country, remodeling the vacant and dirty lots of Memphis into public gardens, beautifying Syracuse, N. Y.; creating a butterfly metamorphosis for Indianapolis and making and restoring the world's fair buildings of St. Louis and then showing the city how to create a boulevard system worthy of the size of the place. That is not all. The natural beauties of Pensacola, Fla., are being added to by him. Fort Worth, Tex., is being converted into a city where a visit would not be complete without a trip over the boulevard system. Kansas City, Kan., the little sister of the larger city on the Missouri side of the state line, is being made to conform with the example of its neighboring municipality. Workmen are busily tearing down the shacks and replacing them with drives, flowers and shrubbery in many other cities, and even tourist entering Denver, which asserts itself as "the Queen City of the West," has realized that parks are necessary JULY 4 DEATHS ARE FEWER. Only 131 Fatalities, but Number of Injuries Was 2.923. Although the list of deaths and accidents due to the celebration of the Fourth of July is appalling, the "sane" observance of the day in 1010 shows a notable improvement in this respect, according to statistics compiled by the Journal of the American Medical Association. The decrease in accidents is most marked in those sections where restrictive legislation has been put in effect. "Two thousand, nine hundred and twenty-three persons were injured July 4 this year, of whom 131 died," the Journal says. "Sixty-seven deaths were due to tetanus, nineteen were killed outright by firearms, eleven by explosions or powder, bombs or torpedoes, six by cannon or similar contrivances, while twenty-six, mostly little girls, were burned to death by fire from fireworks. "Starling as is this showing, it is the best since 1903, when the Journal began keeping its record. In 1903 4,440 persons were injured, of whom 400 lost their lives, 400 of them dying from tetanus. The grand total for eight years shows that 37,526 persons have been injured, of whom 1,602 died." WOMEN CABBIES ARE HUMANE Horses Much Better Kept Than Men's, Paris Finds. The League for the Protection of the Horse, which exists in Paris, slight as may seem the results it obtains, has been making an inquiry into the lot of the Paris cab horse, and its report of the result lays special stress on the superior condition of horses of cabs driven by women as compared with those driven by men. The women cab drivers were found to be uniformly kind to their horses and scarcely ever to use the whip, and were often seen giving them some little delicacy to eat. At one of the largest stables where cabs are let to the driver's league was told of a mare named Rosette which was so vicious and bad tempered that no driver was willing to take her out. One of the women drivers asked for her and treated her so well that she became a tractable and useful animal. $10,000,000 TO AMUSE PARIS Tax Figures Indicate Total Spent During 1909. Parisians spent more than $10,000,000 on public amusements in 1900. The figures are official, being known because of the tax for the poor levied on all public entertainments. This tax is now paid by the public, the managers having raised their prices a year ago sufficiently to cover it. Jersey Schools Bank High Jersey Schools Rank High. New Jersey maintains its high standard of public schools at an average cost of about 20 cents a day per pupil. British Coal Exports Small. Grant Britain exports about one-quarter of the coal it mines. How to Preserve Pineapple In the Sun. Sterilize the jars and utensils. Grate the pineapple. Fill the hot jars with it and pour in enough sirup to fill the jars solidly. Place the jars in the sun for an hour, then fill the jars again with boiling sirup. Wipe and seal. Place the jars on a board and out of a draft of air. If the screw covers are used tighten them after the glass has cooled. How to Blacken a Hot Stove. Take any kind of blackening powder and any kind of oil and mix as thick as cream (hard will do). Apply with a cloth, and the oil burns off and leaves the blackening in the iron, which lasts longer than when blackened the usual way. Do not blacken the sides of the stove in this mixture, as it will not hurt it, for the top board of Anta n of tartar or meat RHODE ISLAND'S SECURE ON General Charles R. Brayton, Dean of Political Czars, Still Absolute, While Platt, Quay, and Croker Are Dead or Out. GENERAL CHARLES R. BRAYTON of Rhode Island, dean of the political bosses of the United States, who has controlled absolutely in his state for twenty years or more, although stone blind for the last seven years, fell recently and broke his hip. But nobody in Rhode Island thinks that this second affliction will cause the aged general to reallaugh his power. When the accident happened the boss was groping for his desk telephone and his chair slid out from under him. He may have been about to call up some state officer, the governor perhaps, to tell him what to do next. On second thought, however, it probably was not the governor, for that digitally the duties are few and clearly defined. He may sign commissions for notaries public, make a speech on governor's day in state fair week, and in real gala years of the past he used to pitch the hall across the home plate at the opening of the baseball season while the hand played "Hail to the Chief!" That the governor of Rhode Island could not veto anything nor appoint anybody to anything was due to General Brayton's annual success in preventing a revision of the constitution. As it was, the veto and appointive power belonged exclusively to him. Keeps Governor Nonentity. Once in a great while the Democrats succeed in electing the governor and lieutenant governor in Rhode Island, but it means nothing, because the legislature always belongs to Brayton. After a recent empty victory of this sort the Democrats indulged in much glloating over what they called the rescue of the state from Brayton and corruption. "Why are they blowing so hard about it?" asked the general good naturelly. "They've only got a governor who can't do anything but sign commissions for notaries and a lieutenant governor who can't do anything." Brayton is the dean of his profession. He was the absolute ruler of all of these United States before Platt and Quay and Croker and all the rest were heard of. He, with no sight and a cripple, is still boss, while they are all dead or in retirement and being rapidly forgotten. All sorts of explanations of the man's continued power have been given, and they are probably all true. He's likable in an old fashioned sort of away that has no place in the new ethical movement in politics, but Rhode Island is full of people who never heard of such a movement. He is honest, also, in an old fashioned political way—that is, he is loyal to his friends and has no taint of hypocrisy, and he has not acquired an immense fortune. So far as that is concerned he is as frank as ex-Senator Plunktin of New York, who made himself famous throughout the country by declaring his belief in "honest graft." Voters Should Be Paid. With equally brutal frankness General Bryton once said that in his opinion the voter should be paid for the time that he takes from his work on election day to go to the polls. As a rule the general thinks that that time is worth about $2. He has been ever since the civil war the idol of the old soldiers who went to that conflict from Rhode Island. That fact alone was sufficient to explain his power for many years until the veterans began to be outnumbered by the younger voters. The boss came by his title of general honestly, and at the suggestion of President Lincoln. He was a sophomore in Brown university when the war began. He left college, organized a company and went to the front as a captain in a heavy artillery organization. At the end of the war he was a colonel and a brevet brigadier. There are still other reasons. General Bryton is more than six feet tall and big boned and big voiced in pro PARIS LIKES MILK COLLARS. Curds of Goats' Product Cheap and Not Shiny, Like Celluloid. Imitation celluloid collars made of goat's milk are used in Paris by artisans, tradesmen, waiters and coachmen. The milk collars are said to be as serviceable as the celluloid and to have less polish, which makes them a great improvement. In preparing the milk for collars the curds are drained off the whey and subjected to high pressure, resulting in a substance that looks very much like celluloid. Milk curds have been used in Europe for some years for the making of billetard balls, combs, imitation bone knife handles and collar buttons. Million For Russian Aviation. Russia has appropriated nearly $1,000,000 for a complete army aeroplane equipment, the largest sum expended for the purpose by any government. REMOVAL OF STAINS. How to Clean Soiled Clothing by Simple Methods. Pretty frocks are apt to pick up soil from grass and stait, from fruit in summer, and, though white may be red, to their origin at conditionable sites. ral stained is rubbed together exactly as one might wash goods. I once stood close to a large pillar that had just been painted a light yellow and transferred most of the paint to a long brown broadcloth wrap. I was in despair, but a man standing by simply rubbed and rubbed until not a trace of stain was evident. No agent beyond the rubbing was used, but the paint must be taken before it is dry. Acid stains will usually respond to an alkali treatment. One part of ammonia, borax or washing soda to twenty parts of water is the proper proportion. A stain caused by an alkali may be neutralized with one part citric acid, vinegar or lemon juice to twenty parts of water. In both cases chloroform will usually restore the original color, supposing colored goods have been treated. One should keep away from the fire during the process. Drops of blood should be treated with soap and warm water first and then be covered with a paste made of raw cornstarch, exposing it to the sun for some hours. It may then be brushed off and the spot washed again. Stains from coffee, tea or chocolate should first be treated with hot water if the goods can stand it. If obligate the stain should be soaked in glycerin. A stain of this kind on silk should be treated with glycerin mixed with cold water. In the case of fruit status on colored fabrics apply equal parts of glycerin and alcohol. Allow the solution to dry and then rinse in warm water. In the case of white goods javelle water is a sure—and if carefully done—n perfectly safe remedy for fruit stains. To make javelle water take one part chloride of lime and ten parts water, then one part of washing soda dissolved in four parts of water. Allow this to settle, then pour off the clear fluid into a jar or bottle, throwing away the sediment. When needed for use, heat well and lay in the goods to be bleached. Rinse in several waters, and if the fabric is very sheer it might be well to rinse finally in a solution of hypoxiphite of soda one part and water ten parts. This is to neutralize the effect of the lime, which, if left in the fabric, might injure its strength. Stains caused by orange or lemon juice will usually respond to an application of one part ammonia to twenty parts of water. This is good in the case of either white or colored fabrics. Grass stains on white goods may be removed by covering them with molluscs, and some people use the same remedy on colors. In my opinion, just keeping the stains wet with alcohol is the better plan, afterward gently sponging with a little warm water and soap. Rust stains on white goods are not difficult to remove. They may safely be steepeed in a solution of citric acid one part and water twenty parts. When the rust marks have disappeared the goods should be washed in warm water—Elizabeth Lee in New York Telegram. RECIPES FOR BLACKING. How to-Make a Liquid and an Oil Paste Variety. A fine liquid blackening is made as follows: Put one gallon of vinegar into a stone jug; add one pound of ivory black, well pulverized; half a pound of loaf sugar, half an ounce of vitriol and one ounce of sweet oil. Mix by stirring. This blackening is highly recommended as producing a fine jet polish and is less injurious to leather than most of the pastes and liquid blackings in common use. A fine oil paste blackening is made thus: Take a quarter of a pound of oil of vitriol, ten ounces of tanner's oil, four ounces of ivory black and ten ounces of molasses. Mix the oil of vitriol and the tanner's oil together and let stand for one day. Then add the ivory black and molasses and the whites of two eggs and stir well together until there is a thick paste. HINTS ON LAUNDERING How to Wash and Iron Fine Pieces at Home. If women would only launder their delicate lingerie waistworks themselves instead of putting them with other clothes to be rubbed to pieces they will be repaid by their wearing three or four times as long. First carefully mend any little rip or tear in the waist, then wash in warm water with pure white soap, rubbing as little and as carefully as possible. Squeezing will take most of the dirt out. Rinse the soap out thoroughly, putting a few drops of bluing in the last water. Make a thin starch by putting one heaping tablespoonful of starch in a flat earthenware crock, adding cold water to make a paste, then turn on slowly one quart of boiling water, stirring all the time, and add a bit of bluing. Dip the waist in this, wring out and if white hang in the sunshine to dry and whiten; if colored, dry indoors. Half an hour before ironing sprinkle and roll in a towel. Be sure your irons are clean and rub a little paraffin over each one and try on paper before using. Remember that pongee should always be ironed when it is perfectly dry and with a warm, not hot, iron. Iron the sleeves first, and by using a small iron you will find it possible to iron them without creasing, even if you do not possess a sleeve board. Then iron the body of the waist, doing the tucks and plain-part first on the right side, leaving the embroidery and lace, which should be ironed on the wrong side, for the last. To iron the tucks nicely start at the shoulder, holding the waist at the bottom of the tucks firmly with the left hand to straighten them, and be careful not to use too hot an iron. The mull ties and jabots look much softer and prettier do starch is used, but the little nips that are intended to hang straight can have just a bit of thin boiled starch in them. The plaited jabots should have the plats firmly basted into place with fine stitches before being washed, and it is better to paste juices bottom edge, so the lines of the jabots were --- rinsing the collars rub them in the starch, fold them in a cloth for about ten minutes, place them on a well padded ironing board, then cover with a cloth and iron on the wrong side until nearly dry, then without the cloth until perfectly dry, finishing the buttonole part on the right side to curve it. Turn over the embroidered part last. INK STAINS. How to Take Them Out of White Materials by Simple Methods. To remove ink stains from white materials before the ink is quite dry sprinkle it with gait and rub with half a lemon or even squeezed rind. Rinse off the acid and wash at once. While the ink stains are wet a good plan is to sprinkle some powdered chalk or starch on the spot and moisten with milk. When ink stains are fresh they may be removed by dipping the stained part into buttermilk or milk that has been boiled. Change the milk frequently and then wash the article well. When ink has been allowed to get dry place the stained part on a saucer containing a little boiled water, moisten the status and cover with oxalic acid. Let it remain a few minutes, then pour boiling water on carefully to prevent the acid from spreading, as it will burn and rot the dry threads. It is advisable for this reason that the article should be well rinsed in warm water. Pour a few drops of chlorinated soda upon dry ink spots. If the first application does not remove the stain try a little more liquid. Wash immediately. The chlorinated soda is cheap, 10 cents' worth being enough to last for some time. This preparation is a poison and should not be left within the reach of children. It is excellent for linen or cotton, but will destroy silk fabrics. Muratic acid is most useful in removing red ink stains. How to Launder Irish Lace. Irish crochet lace may be laundered easily at home. Wash soap and water, rinse thoroughly, then dip in thin cold starch, putting a drop of bluing in the starch, as the lace is apt to turn yellow if none is used. Have several thicknesses of blanket covered by an ironing sheet on the table. Lay the lace right side down on it, cover with a cloth and iron until dry, pressing down hard. Then take your crochet hook and carefully pull out each little pictot, raise all the petals of the flowers, then press the balls into shape with your fingers. Even a large piece like a coat or waist can be done at home just as well as the at cleaner's by following these directions. How to Renew Color of Bricks. When red bricks of a fireplace get discolored with soot or have white spots on them rub with a brick polish, the paste for which can be obtained at a \_brickyard or print shop. If this paste cannot be found rub the bricks well with linseed oil, giving their all they will absorb. This treatment may be repeated several times if the bricks arp much discolored. Where \_brick pavements are discolored with moss or green mold scrub with a strong solution of household ammonia and water or with washing soda and hot water. CANNING SEASON HINTS. How the Vegetables and Cans Should Be Prepared. Absolute sanitary cleanliness and the best materials procurable are the first essentials for success in canning. The vegetables should be as fresh from the garden as possible. They are better picked in the early morning with the dew still on them. As a general rule, young vegetables are superior in flavor and texture to the more mature ones. Corn and beans should be canned as soon as possible after gathering, as sweetness and flavor are absorbed by their pods and husks. If for any reason the canning of spinach or other greens, string beans, asparagus or orkham cannot be attended to at once, put in cold water or a cold, damp place until ready to attend to them. All root vegetables and greens must be thoroughly washed. Have the kitchen well swept and clean before beginning cumming and the towels and aprons of the workers beyond suspicion. Even if the cans to be used were clean when put away sterilize them afresh, together with all the other utensils used in the work. The best way to do this is to put cans and covers, together with any other glass that is to be used, into a kettle of cold water and bring gradually to the boiling point. Then boil fifteen minutes. Leave the cans in this hot bath until ready to use, then take out one at a time and fill. Be sure tops and cans are a perfect fit and that the can rubbers are new. Black rubbers are more durable than the white. Glass is the most satisfactory jar to use in canning. Not only will a good glass can last indefinitely with intelligent care, but th is more or less soluble in the acids or juices of fruits and vegetables. While there are many kinds of glass jars, the one with a glass top and spring clamp proves most satisfactory. In selecting a jar give the preference to those with the wide mouths. -Dellineator For August. How to Avoid Sagging Skirts. How to Avoid Sagging Skirts. Even when properly made a skirt of few gores will sag in the wearing, because the cloth is heavy or is twisted in the launderer. There are too many blas lines to them. To avoid this choose whenever possible a pattern of many gores. The seems give strength, and the lower edges are not wide enough or bias enough to do much if any drooping. 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