Chicago Defender
Saturday, April 19, 1913
Chicago, Illinois
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D L U M E V III. NUMBER 16.
In looking through the "Report of the State Tax Commission of North Carolina" for the year 1912, I ran across some data and figures relating to—the personal and realy holdings of the race citizens of Greensboro and Guilford county that may be of interest to some of the readers of this paper.
To make a comparative statement, I refer to the year 1900 when, according to the auditor of the state, the total value of property listed by the race citizens of Guilford county amounted to $203,607. According to the State Tax Commission of 1912, the value of property listed by them in this county in 1911 is $553,473. Adding to this at least 10 per cent increase for 1912 according to expert authority we have a grand total of $641,842.30.
The percentage of increase in value of property, therefore, listed by the race citizens in Guilford county between 1900 and 1911 is 53.6, according to the State Commission figures.
Furthermore, when one takes into reckoning stock owned by some members of the race in banks, building and loan associations and a few other corporations in the city and elsewhere, and that the above figures do not include church and school property, the homes of the fraternal organizations and property of benevolent associations, etc., and that the assessed value of property is from one-half to two-thirds of its real value, it may be seen that the real value of the race's holdings in Gullford county will perhaps reach one and a half million dollars.
Another item of no small consequence is that the man of color has caught on to the trick taught him by his "brother in white," namely, not to list all that he really owns. It is safe to say that three-fourths of this one and a half million wealth is here in the city of Greensboro; the balance elsewhere in the county.
Race Population Nearly 15,000.
The total population of both races in 1910 in Gullford county was 60,497. We have not the information at hand, just now, as to the ratio between the two races, but the race population is doubtless near 15,000. In 1900 it was 11,103. The number of acres of land owned by these 15,000 members of the race is about 16,000, not counting town lots.
According to the census of 1900, the population of the citizens of color in Greensboro was 4,089; in 1910, 5,710, showing an increase of 1,624.
The number of town lots in Greensboro credited to the race, according to the commission report, is 688. This means that every eighth member of the race one may meet on the streets of the city, not only owns his own home, but perhaps "some more." The Story of Fifty Years Hence. If one stops to reflect that, when the race was physically emancipated fifty years ago, they practically owned nothing, scarcely the ralment on their backs, and the above figures portray most eloquently the progress being made by them in Greensboro and Guilford county.
A Fearless, HONEST CHAMPION of the People
ATE STREET A BREEDING SPOT FOR EVIL
ATE STREET A BREEDING SPOT FOR EVIL
er Blames Parents for the number of Children Whoightly Crowd State Streets with Short Dresses Stand Entertain on Street Cori—Wendell Phillips Highool Children Make 39th set a "Lovers' Lane"—ere Are the Parents and ere Are the Teachers?
LE SHUN
ASHINGTON PARK
IN THE SUMMER
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Gm Men "Off from Work" and Young Men "Out of Work" Rendezvous There—Watch Out, Says the Writer, as the Alluring Places Will Eventually Lead the Girl or Boy to Destruction—There Is No Place Like Home—"Home, Sweet Home"
By Frank A. Young.
The fall of our young girls must not be laid altogether to their inability to find work at good wages. We admit that her struggle for existence, especially when thrown upon her own resources, is more than one realizes.
But there seems to be something wrong elsewhere. What are the parents doing, towards the welfare of their daughters? The home conditions are not as they should be or the mother is lax in her methods of raising girls, for just last Saturday we found several young girls of tender age entertaining young men on State street, between 30th and 31st streets. The young girls were of neat appearances were above shoe tops had a head of brown hair that he up in braids and fell over poulder. Iked and laughed and someed out of the place of any elder age have acted. The youths were learing against the lamp post. These were somebody's daughters. And the mothers never dreamed of their daughters being in such a locality. Someone either don't care or is too busy to find out what distresses these daughters.
This same scene, with various youthful actors, is played during the week after school hours.
At Wendell Phillips High School at recess some of the girls meet their "sweethearts" for a chat and every now and then they can be seen between the school and Indiana avenue.
During the past few years the conduct of both girls and boys of color at Washington Park has been so very raw at times that some of the best people of the race shun it, especially on Sundays, when the youthful crowd comes out after Sunday school. During the week day it is a rendezvous for young men "off from work" or out of work where it is known that young school girls are bold enough to play "hookie" from school and go boating. These little things are the beginning of their downward path. It is the start which finally ends in disgrace.
You that have girls at this age, watch out. The dance hall, the lax methods, the constant growing desire of the girl for style, silks and satins, because her whims are encouraged by you when your purse-strings can't afford it, is only sending her either to the divorce court or the gutter later on.
Home is the best place and it should, above all places, be where the young girl or woman can entertain her male friend and not be forced to meet him on the street or in public places. It is as much your fault as hers.
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STORK LIMITED VISITS
DR. AND MRS. HALL
Famous Surgeon and Wife Receiving Congratulations Over the Recent Addition to Their Family—Youngster Resembles Mother—Cards Announce Birth.
Wednesday Chicago society folks were delighted over the announcement of the birth of an eight pound baby to Dr. and Mrs. George Cleveland Hall.
This interesting event in the family of our famous surgeon had long been rumored and the confirmation of it brought real joy to their many friends. Mrs. Hall, with the benefit of the best medical attention and nursing, is reported doing nicely. The newcomer, Miss Beatrice Faith Hall, is also in the best of health. Cards announcing the arrival of the little stranger have been sent broadcast throughout the city and country.
The Chicago Defender.
JIM CROW BILL DEFEATED
Ohio Legislature Decides by a Vote of 66 to 32 to Keep All Races Equal in the Buckeye State.
[Special to The Chicago Defender]
Cleveland, Ohio, April 18. At a recent meeting the Round Table Club, which is composed of the officials of the Nickel Plate Railroad, given in honor of Mr. George C. Todd, division superintendent of the road, Mr. Walter B. Wright, chief clerk to President Caniff, was chairman of the evening. Mr. Wright, one of Cleveland's most progressive and influential race men, has served as chief clerk and secretary to the president of the Nickel Plate for a number of years.
Columbus, Ohio, April 18.—Representative Reppert's bill prohibiting the intermarriage of whites and Negroes and whites and Chinese was badly defeated in the house last week Thursday by a vote of 66 to 32. The defeat of the bill was accomplished through the unceasing efforts of Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of the Cleveland Gazette, and ex-member of the state legislature, and many of the prominent members of the race and clubs of the state, particularly the women's clubs.
SOUTHERN CITIZENS INCREASE IN WEALTH
Greensboro and Guilford County, North Carolina, in the Limelight—Tax Commission Report Shows Great Gain in Property Holdings.
RETICENT AS TO ACTUAL WEALTH
Charles H. Moore, in the Greensboro Daily Record.
[Special to The Chicago Defender.]
Greensboro, N. C., April 18.—Last week the Greensboro Daily Record printed the following:
In view of the above showing who can forecast what the story will be fifty years hence, provided they are given a fair and impartial hearing and just consideration by those who have it within their power to do so.
CHICAGO, ELL., SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1913.
APPOMATTOX CLUB KILLS "JIM CROW" BILLS IN THE STATE OF LINCOLN
Statesmen of Character, Urged by the Prominent Members of the Race from Chicago, Defeat Nefarious Measure—The Race in Chicago Demands Everlasting Freedom—Pullman and Street Cars Are Not Built for Any Special Race But for Any Respectable Person That Can Pay the Price—Chicago Delegation Arouses Capital—Distinguished Men in Action.
CHICAGO RACE MEN MAKE HISTORY
Col. John R. Marshall, Frank H. Hamilton, President of the Famous Club; R. S. Abbott, Mrs. Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Adelphus Roberts, J. Gray Lucas and Other Notables on the Firing Line—Full Crew Bill Also Attacked—Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen Will Lose Their Fight to Oust Loyal Race Men—Does Color Interfere with a Switch Key?—Defender Reporter on Scene.
Springfield, IL, April 18—Illinois has redeemed herself. That blot upon her name, the riots here some years ago, was overbalanced Wednesday when the "Jim Crow" car bill was defeated in the legislature.
It was a red-letter day and Springfield has never entertained so many stamouth race leaders as those who came from Chicago to fight against this nefarious measure. The race made such a bold stand and fought so fair and vigorously that the author of the measure to "Jim Crow" the race on street cars and Pullmans declared that he was sorry that he presented the bill and that he never met so many brilliant people of color before.
Appomattox Club's Effective Work.
The defeat of the bill is due to the work of the splendid committee sent down by the Appomattox Club, who under the leadership of their president, Mr. Frank Hamilton, did the most effective work in twenty-four hours that history records. These fighting davocates for equal rights arrived Tuesday night. They did not sleep, but all night and all day they worked to preserve the fair name of Illinois from shame and a struggling race, from discrimination.
The Roll of Honor.
History will never record a list of names like the following:
MRS. IDA B. WELLS-BARNETT.
Col. John R. Marshall.
Attorney R. A. J. Shaw.
Hon. Adelbert H. Roberts.
Hon. Jas. Woodard.
R. S. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Defender.
Dr. D. Herbert Anderson.
Hon. Henry Anderson.
Hon. Frank Hamilton, President of the Appomattox Club.
Col. William Randolph Cowan.
Hon. Paul Herrin.
Hon. D. P. French.
Rev. Thomas on the Firing Line.
The gentlemen listed above were the committee sent down by the famous Appomattox Club of Chicago. But in the thickest of the fight we noticed Rev. J. F. Thomas, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church; Rev. Wm. Gray, Attorney J. Gray Lucas, Adelbert H. Roberts and Attorney John R. Auter. Mrs. Barnett represented the women's clubs of Illinois and was accompanied by many prominent associates.
The name of Mrs. Barnett stands out alone because that constant and fearless champion of equal rights was on the firing-line all the time. Her eloquent pleas in private conferences with the legislators and in open session were eloquent and forcible. Ida B. Wells-Barnett has again endearled herself to the world.
Attorney J. Gray Lucas, Adelbert H. Roberts and Richard T. Greener made up a trio of speakers whose forcible arguments for their race astonished the vast audience.
Mr. Woodard Entertains Committee.
Mr. W. H. Cornwell of Chicago spoke against the measure, declaring "that he lived in the grand old state of Lincoln, in the twentieth century, in the year 1913, and that as long as he had strength to talk he would oppose such infamous measures."
During the day the full crew bill, a measure fostered by the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, came up. This bill is intended to deprive the railroad men of color from holding positions of responsibility, from carrying switch keys, and running in changes of trains. But their contention was weak. Those in authority say that the bill will never leave the committee room.
Wednesday evening Mr. James Woodard, that prince of good fellows, entertained the committee at one of the local theaters, followed by an elaborate supper.
White Newpaper Helps.
An editor of the Evening Post of Chicago added influence in the fight against these bills. His address was listened to with marked attention, and the members of the race rejoiced over the fair-mindedness of one daily newspaper. This speaker praised the work of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
BY DETERMINED STAND.
Hamilton, President of the Famous B. Wells-Barnett, Adelphus Rober Notables on the Firing Line—Brotherhood of Railroad Train to Oust Loyal Race Men—Does witch Key?—Defender Reporter
WESTERN LAND OPEN TO ENTRY.
U. S. Will Allow Settlers to File on North Platte Division of Orest Preserve After Oct. 1.
Washington, D. C., April 13—Beginning Oct. 1, the end of the present grazing season, the North Platte division will be eliminated from the Nebraska national forest. This area will then be open for settlement and entry under whatever conditions the Secretary of the Interior may impose.
The North Platte division, which lies in Grandt and Arthur counties, contains nearly 350,000 acres. The soil experts say that approximately 30 per cent of the area is suitable for farming, in spite of the fact that it is locally known as the sand-hill region.
Hampton, Atlanta, Fisk and Tuskegee University students are urged to go and take up this land. Don't let the ignorant and vicious classes lead, but the intelligent must blaze the way. After they have made good, then the other elements may follow.
COL. RUFFIN IN CONFERENCE WITH PROMINENT BUSINESS MEN.
On Monday morning Col. R. D. Ruffin ended a series of appointments that had been going on since Thursday at the Auditorium Hotel with Prof. Babcock of the State University of North Dakota and president of the Masche Engineering Company of New York. This conference was for the purpose of perfecting plans for using Mr. Ruffin's new invention for removing coal from the mines.
The machine to be used is the most complete of its kind ever devised. It will mine the coal, convey it to the dryers and pulverizers, thence passing through the brinqueting process without the necessity of being handled in the meantime. This machinery has already been purchased, and, barring a few alterations, is ready for shipment to the mine. Its cost is $250,000.
In a few days the Colonel will leave for Kenmare to supervise the placing of this machine for operation. We consider it a great honor not only to the individual but to the entire race to have such an ominent man as Dean Babcock come such a distance to consult with our local financier. Mr. Ruffin is to be complimented for placing himself in a position to demand such honors.
OLD FOLKS ARE THANKFUL.
The Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People wishes to make grateful acknowledgement of the receipt of $250 from the Amateur Minstrel Club, being the net receipts of their Easter entertainment. This magnificent donation is the largest of the many large ones we have received from this noble body of men. It not only shows their added zealousness but the growing interest of an appreciative public to whom the institution belongs. In connection with this permit we to say that, by the kindness of President B. W. Fitts Sunday, April 20, will be Old Folks' Home day at the Bethel library, when the entire collection will be donated to the Home.
We wish everyone to come at 3:30 p. m. and by their presence and their mite aid in the rapidly increasing interest in our struggling home.
The following program will be rendered: Invocation, Rev. D. P. Roberts; music, Bethel choir; introduction of master of ceremonies, Rev. B. W. Fitts; opening remarks, Master of Ceremonies George M. Turner; music, Shiloh Baptist church choir; remarks, Dr. Daniel H. Williams; remarks, Dr. U. G. Dalley; solo, Mrs Jackson; oration, Hon. Edward H. Morris; remarks, Jos. W. Camp; remarks, F. L. Cuffee; music, Bethel choir; remarks, Rev. D. H. Harris; remarks, S. R. Johnson; offertory; benediction, A. C. Brown.; Geo. M. Tuner, Secretary.
A STRANGE IMPEDIMENT.
Our religion is generally in the way unless we are on our death bed.—Waldo Baston.
MILWAUKEE TO HAVE EMANCIPATION CELEBRATION.
Loyal Race Woman Praises Movement in Interesting Letter to The Chicago Defender.
[Special to The Chicago Defender.]
Milwaukee, Wis., April 18.—Edition The Defender: I am pleased to learn that a move has been made by Capt. L. C. Valle and Rev. J. S. Woods for the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Lincoln's immortal proclamation of emancipation.
It please me also that gentlemen have interested Mayor Bading, Wm. Geo. Bruce and Jos. C. Greib, hence making the celebration an honor to Milwaukee as well as a credit to the colored people.
As a colored woman I think the observance of fifty years of freedom is the most important and far-reaching event in the history of the Negro in America. Back of this period the Negro's history on this continent goes backward and forward, then forward. Emancipation was not the result of an impulse but sprang out of many years of agitation, discrimination, knowledge, political movement, religious and social upheaval. And then again not until the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast.
We colored women should fall in the steps in the late Harriet Tubman, Francis Harper and other noted women who before emancipation risked their lives for the freedom of the slaves.
We should not forget the pit we were dug from and should also think more seriously of new conditions confronting us on the rock from which we were hewn. We should listen to the voice of the past as well as the call of the future in the celebration of the emancipation of the Negro in America. We are celebrating the greatest moral event in the history of the nations on earth—Mrs. Laura Duncan, 823 Winnebago street.
WITH THE "BADGERS."
The Latest News From Milwaukee— Oshkosh—Racine and Other Points in Wisconsin.
By Luna M. Scott.
[Special to The Chicago Defender.]
Kalamazoo, Mich., April 18.—Mrs. Anna M. Maxwell, one of the pioneer residents of Kalamazoo, died in the home in which she had lived for 59 years. Her funeral was held Monday afternoon and was largely attended. She had been ill for a long time and bore her illness with great Christian fortitude. She was 76 years of age. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Jessie Porties, and an adopted son to mourn her loss. She resided in a beautiful home at 430 West Dutton street. The Old Time Methodists will hold a cottage prayer meeting with Mrs. E. Hatcher on North Burdick street. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turner have returned from Los Angeles, Cal., where they have been since last November. They will reside in Kalamazoo for the summer as their home in Cheshire is rented out. They are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Russell, 602 Maple street. Mrs. Minnie Simmons of 1602 North Burdick street entertained at a dinner party her guest, Mrs. Antego and her daughter, Miss Ethel Phillips. Her other guests were Miss Cecilia Parker, Mr. William Christian, Mr. James Simmons and Mr. Richard Robbins. The ladies of the Household of Ruth will give a necktie social at the Odd Fellows' hall on the 29th. Mrs. Antego of Marshall, Mich., was the guest of her daughter, Miss Ethel Phillips, for a few days. She was also the guest of Mrs. Minnie Simmons, 1602 North Burdick street.
Mrs. R. Scott of Battle Creek was the guest of Mrs. M. Simmons of North Burdick street. She was en route to Grand Rapids. She is the district noble governor of the H. of R. of this state.
Mrs. Henry Williams of 720 Parker street has been quite ill but is greatly improved at this writing.
The ladies of the north end will meet at the residence of Mrs. Simmons Friday afternoon to discuss the permanent organization of a neighborhood club. Light refreshments will be served.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stewart of Dowagiac, Mich., were the guests over Sunday of Mrs. Anna Phillips, 716 Parker street.
THE AMANDA SMITH HOME.
The Interracial Circle of the Amanda Smith Home is hopeful as to the outlook since the new superintendent, Mrs. Phoebe Jones of Louisville, KY, has taken her place. She comes to us well recommended, having conducted a school of her own fourteen years, and other qualifications. The Circle has taken on new life since the return of the president, Mrs. Ophie Wells. She has brought new encouragement and several benefits will be given soon.
DEFENDER CORRESPONDENT IS ILL—NERVOUS BREAKDOWN.
Mr. D. W. Johnson Compelled to Have the Care of a Physician After a Struggle to Keep at Work.
Following the demise of Mrs. Charity Samuels (The Chicago Defender's "Mildred Miller") newspaper workers were startled this week when they learned of the illness of Mr. D. W. Johnson, another staff correspondent and a writer of considerable fame. Mr. Johnson, a postoffice employee for many years, was taken suddenly ill early this week. He went to work but his condition became so aggrivated that he returned home. His physician diagnosed his case as a nervous breakdown, superinduced by the care of his wife who has been ill with pneumonia at their residence, 6034 South May street, for many weeks.
Mrs. Johnson is convalescing and is able to attend her husband, who is reported better. Mr. Johnson is president of the Englewood Lyceum and of the activities of Hope Presbyterian Church and a member of the Knights of Pythias.
RACE ADVANCEMENT ASSOCIATION TO MEET
Fifth Annual Meeting of the N. C. A. A. P. to Be Held in the "Quaker City"-Bishop Coppin, Hon. Moorfield Storey and Other Noted Men to Preside.
A number of Chicagoans who are interested in the race problem will attend the fifth annual conference, to be held in Philadelphia the last of this month, of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Last year's conference was held in Chicago and drew a large attendance of both white and colored students of the race question. This year's gathering will be held under the auspices of a committee of fifty well known Philadelphiaians, headed by Mayor Blankenburg. The conference will be officially opened by Mayor Blankenburg on the evening of April 23. Moorfield Storey of Boston, national president of the organization, will preside, and addresses will be made by James Bryce, British ambassador to the United States; Oswald Garrison Villard; Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois of New York; Rabbi Joseph Krauskopf and others.
Three Days' Session.
The sessions will last for three days. On April 24 the afternoon session will be devoted to "The Colored Man's Struggle for Land and Property." The speakers will be Henry Wilber, the millionaire philanthropist of Philadelphia, who will tell of the land problem in the south; John Mitchell, president of the Mechanics' Bank of Richmond, Va., the strongest financial institution in the city of Richmond; John Hope, president of the Atlanta Baptist College, who will speak on the recent crisis in northern Georgia; and W. Ashbie Hawkins, a Baltimore attorney.
The subject for discussion at the evening session will be "The Problem of Work and Wages." Bishop L. J. Coppin will preside. The speakers will be Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois, editor of the Crisis, a New York publication devoted to the advancement of the colored people; and Dr. Haynes of Fisk University.
Senator Moses E. Clapp to Speak.
The last day of the conference, April 25, will have three sessions. The morning will be largely taken up with the planning of work for the various branches of the organization, while the afternoon will be given over to speakers who will talk on the "New Southern Attitude." Among these are Mrs. Beverly Munford, Dr. James H. Dillard, F. D. Wetherford, Joseph C. Manning, Dr. M. C. B. Mason and others. Moorfield Storey will preside.
The evening session of the last conference will be utilized for a study of "the new abolition movement." Among the speakers will be Senator Moses E. Clapp, Albert E. Pillshire, Judge Wendell P. Stafford, Rev. John Haynes Holmes, Mrs. W. A. Hunton and others. John E. Mulholland of New York will preside.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People seeks to uplift the colored men and women by securing them equality of opportunity, justice in the courts, and enjoyment of their rights as citizens.
MISS MAUDE TAYLOR ENTERTAINS IN HONOR OF THE MISSES MILLER.
The Misses Jerrine and Laura Miller of Winnepeg, Canada, were the guests of honor at a four-course breakfast last Sunday morning given by Miss Maureen Taylor at her home, 524 East Bowen avenue. The young ladies sat down at eleven and between their enjoyment of the breakfast and the entertaining discourse, the time was whiled away into the early part of the afternoon. The dining room was beautifully decorated and the table presented a picture from an artistic standpoint of beauty that will not soon be forgotten by all who were present. Those were the Misses Jerrine and Laura Miller, Eloise Carey, Bertha Young, Ada Lou Mitchell, Essie Arnold, Vivian Harsh and Maude Taylor.
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PRICE 5 CHES
BISHOP DERRICK, VENERABLE PRELATE, PASSES AWAY
BISHOP DERRICK, VENERABLE PRELATE, PASSES AWAY
End Was Peaceful—Was Foremost Representative of Race in America—Fought in the Civil War and Was a Power in the Days That Followed—Died at the Ripe Old Age of 69 Years—Had Charge of the West Indies, South America and the Island of the Sea for the A. M. E. Church.
HAD TRAVELED
Life Story a Remarkable One—A West Indian by Birth—Began Preaching in 1866, Also Taught School—Preached the 355th Anniversary Sermon in the Church of Martyrs, Canterbury, England—His Home a Unique One—Many Notable Curios—One a Gift from Edward VII.
[Special to The Chicago Defender.]
Flushing, N. Y., April 18—Rt. Rev. William B. Derrick, bishop of the A. M. E. Church, died at his home, Bishop's Court, State Street, Flushing, at 10:45 Tuesday morning, April 15, after an illness of three months.
Bishop Derrick was one of the foremost leaders of the race of his generation. Up to the time of his death he was one of the most active workers in the United States. Although rapidly approaching his seventieth birthday, since his election as bishop of the A. M. E. Church in 1896, his time has been spent continually in traveling around his extensive diocese, which included a large part of the United States and extended into foreign countries. His last act before he was stricken with the illness that resulted in death was to journey in company with his secretary to Panama, where he made arrangements for the erection of churches for the thousands of race workers on the canal. He returned home, and a few days afterwards attended the funeral of a dear friend in Philadelphia.
Contracts Cold at Funeral.
He contracted a heavy cold at the funeral, which led to complications. Arterio Sclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, set in. A few weeks ago Dr. Williams, the well known surgeon from Chicago, was sent for and after a consultation with Dr. Dick of Flushing it was decided that the bishop had only a few weeks of life. A bloodletting operation performed a few days after the consultation by Dr. Dick gave momentary relief but within a few days Bishop Derrick began to sink.
The final relapse came at 9 o'clock Monday night. Dr. Dick was sent for at once, but the venerable sufferer was beyond medical aid.
Throughout the night his condition grew weaker, and Tuesday morning his faithful wife, Dr. Dick and the other watchers at his bedside saw that death was only a matter of a few hours.
Retaining all his faculties to the last, Bishop Derrick passed peacefully at 10:45. In the death chamber were Mrs. Derrick, the Bishop's two daughters, Miss Minnellebelle and Miss Lillian Derrick, and two friends of the family, Mrs. Charles Neal and Miss Emily Mason of Philadelphia. Dr. Dick was also present.
Outside of the death room was Bernard Taylor, gray-baited and stooped, and for fifty-two years a friend of Bishop Derrick. Together they enlisted in the United States Navy from the city of Boston, when President Lincoln sent out his first call for troops, and at the battle of Hampton Roads they stood side by side on the deck of the grounded frigate "Minnesota" when his staunche sided rocked beneath the impact of the iron volleys from the Confederate ironclad "Merrimac." Mr. Taylor is now employed in the general post office in Manhattan.
Rev. Butler Rings Death Bell.
The Rev. William H. H. Butler, pastor of the St. Paul A. M. E. Church, Washington, Pa., a friend of thirty-five years' standing, rang the bell of Bishop Court as the bishop breathed his last. One of the last requests of Bishop Derrick was that he might look upon the face of Dr. Butler before he died.
The story of Bishop Derrick's life is a remarkable one. He was born on the Island of Antigua, British West Indies, in July, 1843. His father was a Scotchman and his mother a West Indian. They belonged to the planter's class of the island and were deeply religious. They early hoped that their son might embrace the ministry. Antigua, on account of its excellent opportunities for education and its compulsory educational law, is known as "the Athens of the West Indies."
enteen his parents sent him to England to finish his education, and he returned at the opening of the Civil War. Attracted by the cause of the North—the freeing of the slaves—Bishop Derrick enlisted in the navy at Boston as officers' steward. He participated in the battles of Hatteras Inlet and Hampton Roads. After twelve months' service he left the navy and began to prepare for the ministry.
Interested in the young enthusiast was Bishop Brown of Baltimore. While pursuing his studies Bishop Derrick worker as a porter in Woods' Business School.
His first assignment was in 1866, as preacher and teacher among the emancipated slaves. Bishop Derrick took an active part in the affairs of Church and State with regard to the freemen.
As a Campaign Speaker.
In the presidential campaign of Greeley and Grant, Bishop Derrick first came into prominence as a campaign speaker, and during the campaign and in later years he came to Reed, Foraker, McKinley, Everett, Despew, Ingersoll, Fred Douglass and Langston.
During his life Bishop Derrick attended several International Church Congresses, and on invitation he preached the three hundred and fifty-fifth anniversary sermon in the Church of the Martyrs, Canterbury, England.
Bishop Derrick had a wide reputation as a traveler. He had visited Italy, France, Switzerland, Scotland, Ireland, Africa, England, South America, Central America and the West Indies.
Bishop Derrick was unanimously elected to the bishopric in 1896 over sixteen other candidates. He received forty-five more than the required number of votes for election. The press of the United States and England commented favorably on his election to the high office.
Bishop Derrick resided in Flushing for the past twenty-six years. Bishop's Court, his home, is a place of great interest. In one of the rooms hangs a gold framed resolution, the gift of the late Edward VII of England, in recognition of a sermon that Bishop Derrick preached in commemoration of his mother, Queen Victoria, several years ago, while traveling in England.
RAILROAD MEN ORGANIZE
Form Permanent Organization After
Banqueting Prominent Official.
Sunday a number of railroad men entertained Mr. J. N. Freeman, who has been employed by the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad for fifty years, at the Appomattox Club.
Those present were Messrs. P. T. Tinsley, J. M. Woodard, Charles S. Smith, Samuel Lee, W. H. Eaves, R. P. Johnson, Frank Hamilton, W. H. Plummer, Frank Derrick, J. M. Lawrence, William Morris, Dr. Simpson, H. S. Anderson and D. P. French.
The gentlemen present went into a permanent organization, to be known as Employees of the C. N. W. Rv., after the dinner.
Mr. P. J. Tinsley was elected president and Mr. W. H. Eaves, secretary and treasurer.
STORK VISITS DE WENDT.
The first baby of Haytian parentage has been born in Chicago. Her name is Elovie Alexandra de Wendt, and she is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. D Wendt, 3629 Prairie avenue. Friday last was the natal day and the proud father is still celebrating the event. Fellow countrymen are sharing his happiness and a bank account of $500 has already been deposited for the new arrival. Mr. De Wendt is the writer on Historical Facts about Hayt in the Chicago Defender. Mrs. De Wendt was formerly Miss Bertha Vezaye of New Orleans.
Man's Personality His Own
"A man's personality." writes J. W. Scott of the University of Glasgow, "is a thing which needs to be made. He does not bring it full-edged into the world with him. Strange as it may seem, personality is a thing which a man absorbs from his environment as a plant absorbs air and light. We are all plagiarians. In the last resort everything we have or know is borrowed."
Didn't Look Good to Her
My five-year old niece went to a restaurant with me, one day. I ordered some hash for both of us. When the waitress set it on the table my little niece kept looking at it. I asked her why she didn't eat and she replied, "Aunty, I don't eat anything that looks like a puzzle to me."—Chicago Tribune.
Hot Corn Bags.
An excellent substitute for the expensive hot water bottle of rubber is made by heating common field corn, shelled) in a pan in the oven. When thoroughly warmed, pour it into cloth bags, such as salt and sugar are packed in. These filled bags are light and pliable, and satisfactorily answer every purpose of the hot water bottle. McCall's Magazine.
Paper Making in England
Paper of an excellent quality is now being made in England from species of splinach of large proportions. The plant grows stems five feet high and supplies a fiber which, it is believed, will prove an important factor in papermaking.
Tactful Mr. Cumrox
"I want to talk to you about becoming your son-in-law," said the young man. "I can't advise you," replied Mr Cumrox, "on the subject of becoming a member of the family. As your son cere personal friend I ought to speak freely, but as a husband and father I am restrained."
e is one right a suffragette
ave—the right, to marry—
News of the Churches
Walters A. M. E. Zion Church.
Our services on last Sunday were well attended all day. Rev. H. E. Stewart, pastor of Wayman chapel, and our pastor exchanged pulpits for the 11 a. m. service last Sunday. Rev. Stewart preached a practical and interesting sermon from Heb. 12:1. At 3 p. m. Rev. J. W. Robinson, pastor of St. Mark's M. E. church, preached an excellent sermon for the benefit of the Sunbeam Club rally. 7:45 p. m. the pastor preached the second sermon of the series of God's Message to Men. Subject, "The Language of the Message," a large and appreciative audience listened with rapt attention. One person joined the church. Collections for the day, $48.80. At 6 p. m. the new officers for the Christian Endeavor were installed by the pastor, the society seems to have taken on new life, 20 new members were added to the roll.
The Millionaire Wedding which took place on the 15th inst., was fairly well attended, the 56 taking part in the bridal party presented a splendid appearance and made the guests feel they were attending a real millionaire wedding. Mrs. Callis and the Board of Stewards desire to publicly thank all those who so kindly assisted and helped to make the affair a success. The services for next Sunday will be as usual. The pastor will preach the third sermon in the series, subject, "The One Purpose of the Message."
St. Mark's M. E. Church.
The weather last Sunday was beautiful and a nice congregation was in attendance. At the morning service our pastor preached. The sermon was a gospel message. At the close of the sermon the Stewards were invited to take the front seat. The rules were read to them and their duties explained.
Rev. Higgins, of St. Mary's A. M. E. church, preached in the evening from the subject "Take Up Thy Bed and Walk."
Our pastor was at St. Mary's. Sunday school continues to be interesting. The lyceum at 4 p. m. was addressed by Mr. D. P. Webster. The Devotional League exercises at 6:45 p. m. were lead by Rev. J. C. Peters, topic: "Money a Touchstone of Christian Experience." Ladies Aid No. 1 met at the church Monday evening and elected their officers for the ensuing year. Mrs. Sarah Peterson was re-elected president.
Don't forget the lecture May 8 by Dr. M. C.'B. Mason.
The Rev. E. R. Lewis was sent to St. Lake's church by the conference which just adjourned in Louisville. His wife has arrived and they are located at 3747 Vincentnes avenue. They will be glad to meet all friends and well wishers at the church and their home. Mrs. Amie Floyd, Mrs. Callie McCray and Mrs. Johnson continue on the sick list. Services next Sunday as usual. The public is invited to worship with us. The pastor and family are pleasantly located in their new home, 4925 Wabash avenue. Call and see them.
With the Palmer House Boys
With the Palmer House Boys.
Mr. Thomas Lucas has been confined to him home for several days because of illness. The absence of Mr. John Coleman caused Mr. Goldie Carter to be promoted. The boys welcomed Mr. William Bell back to his post of duty this week as Mr. Bell is considered the Song Bird of the house. Mr. Hendricks is confined to his residence. 2975 State street, because of illness. Mr. Henry Braine has returned to the city after a long absence. Mr. James Archie, 3563 Prairie avenue, has been seriously ill for several weeks. Mr. R. Fowler has been made captain in the place made vacant by Mr. J. Minnie. Mr. J. Coleman, 3433 Dearborn street, is seriously ill at his residence. Mr. C. Conesly is now convalescing after a serious illness. Mr. H. Coleman is spending his vacation in the city. Mr. C. Caston, of 3522 Rhodes avenue, reported for work this week after a serious illness. Mr. J. E. Worthington is visiting his parents and other relatives in Brocton, Mass. The Palmer House Rise and Fly Club members are becoming more and more skillful each week in their checker games.
MRS. WILLIAM WASHINGTON HOS
TESS TO YOUNG PEOPLE.
One of the most delightful, among the many social functions given in honor of the Misses Jerrine and Laura Miller of Winnepeg, Canada, during their week's visit in our city, was the informal dance given by Mr. and Mrs. William Washington of 530 East Bowen avenue last Friday evening. Their beautiful home was a garden of national rose and human buds with a thorn here and there vieing with each other in the midst of the sweet strains of "If You Love Me Tell Me With Your Eyes" and other dream-like numbers. There was about fifty young persons present and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Craft. The young folks were so highly elated over their evening's enjoyment that a sigh of regret was heard when the first strains of "Home, Sweet Home," were played. Miss Mary Lee was at the piano. Mrs. Washington in her sweet manner proved a charming hostess.
Why He Quit Working
Woman (lecturing tramp)—"You should work, if only to set a good example to others" Tramp—"I did that once, mum, an' the poor feller not took the example worked so hard he died er nervous prostration."
Play With Spirit.
Figg—Shakespeare is immortal. I consider "Hamlet" a play for all time. Fogg—That's so; it will never give up the ghost.
A man will stop drinking for anything except forever.—Waldo Baston.
REAL BEAR STORY SENT FROM OREGON
Thrilling Narrative Told by Two Boys.
BRUIN MAKES ESCAPE
Animal Digs Tunnel Through Snow for Miles — Accidents Befall Youths, and in Melle Bear Makes Escape and Gets Home to Wife.
Ashland, Ore.—The most thrilling bear story that has leaked out in Southern Oregon for some time comes from Jack Bailey and Fred Dodge. It is so remarkable that the boys insist on changing Jack's name to Davy Crockett and Fred's name to Kit Carson.
Jack and Fred heard that a bear was devastating the country over near Gregory and snorting for a fight they went over to see about it. The snow was "nine feet deep on the level" and four feet deep on the dead, so the boys took their snowshoes along—together with guns and axes and chewing tobacco and grub.
They found the bear's trail all right and followed it in the soft snow for eighty rods. Suddenly it disappeared—no bear, no trail, no cave, no hollow log, no nothing. The trail apparently ended in deep snow. Apparently the bear was traveling by alrship or had drowned in the snow and sunk.
Just about that time Fred noticed that there was a hole in the snow where a new trail began. With fear and trembling and both guns at full cock they got down and looked into the hole. It led into a tunnel in the snow that ran back under a lot of bushes which held the heavy layer of snow off the ground.
After a consultation the boys figured that as the trail appeared at both ends of the tunnel the bear probably wasn't in it, and they moved on along the gutter in the snow for another half mile. Here they found another tunnel entrance into which the trail disappeared. They searched for half a day, but found no outlet or other end to this tunnel.
The boys drew straws to see which should crawl into the tunnel and scare the bear out. The lot fell to Fred, and he prepared for the job. Laying off his snowshoes and clinging his trusty bowie knife in his best set of teeth, he entered the tunnel. Jack took up his station on a slight rise of ground beside a small fir tree and kept a sharp lookout for the bear to come
Ran Completely Over Them.
browsing out through the top of the snowdrift, with Fred clinging to his tail.
While he was waiting he lifted one foot to knock the ashes from his pipe and the other foot broke through the snow. He was standing directly on top of the tunnel: As he went down on his free snow shoe caught on a snag of the fir tree and Jack hung suspended head downward in the tunnel with snow all about him. Fred had just about crawled up to the point in the tunnel and heard the comotion. Of course he thought it was the bear and hastened to the fray.
Fred grabbed Jack by what he thought was the bear's tail and Jack of course grabbed Fred in a death grapple, thinking he was the bear. The tunnel was now so full of snow that neither could see and they put up a fight then and there that will go down in history as the gem of the Siskiyous. About that the snag broke and Jack fell into the tunnel. Jack still thought Fred was the bear, and hung on for dear life.
While Fred was trying to spit the snow out of his mouth and introduce himself, the real bear—which had been asleep a mile and a half down the tunnel—heard the commotion and waked up. In its haste to get out of the tunnel and get back home before its wife waked up and missed it, it ran completely over Fred and Jack and knocked two more panels of the tunnel down on their heads. In the mix-up the boys were jarred loose from each other and stood up, but by the time they had clawed the snow off themselves so they were recognizable, it was dusk and the bear was on the home stretch over near the Hungry Creek mines, seventeen miles away.
Kindness Brings a Woman Fortune,
Warrensburg, Mo.—Mrs. Albert
Munkers, wife of a farmer, has fallen
heir to $40,000 through her kindness
to John Rohan, an aged Irishman, who
two years ago went to the Munkers
home seeking shelter. The pair cared
for Rohan until he died a few days
ago. On top of a pile of valuable
papers found among his effects was a
note directing that everything be
given Mrs. Munkers. Rohan had no
known relatives.
Broom for Lion.
Chicago.—Hot irons and a revolver having had no effect, "Mme" Marguerita, a lion tamer, subdued an angry lion with woman's own weapon—a braem.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
It was in 1874, during a famous trip to Boston with Dr. Twitchell, that Mark Twalw saw for the first time what was then a new invention—a typewriter; or it may have been during a subsequent visit, a week or two later. The famous humorist began to practice on the machine, and he wrote two letters—one to William Dean Howells and the other to Orion Clemena. In the latter he says: "I am trying to get the hang of this new-fangled writing machine, but I am not making a shining success of it." However, this is the first attempt I have ever made, and yet I perceive that I shall soon easily acquire a fine facility in its use. I saw the thing in Boston the other day, and was greatly taken with it." He goes on to explain the new wonder, and, on the whole, his first attempt was a very creditable performance. With his usual enthusiasm over an innovation, he believes it is going to be a great help to him, and proclaims its advantages. This is the letter to Howells: "You needn't answer this; I am only practicing to get there; another slip up there; only practicing to get the hang of the things. I notice I miss fire and get in a good many unnecessary letters and punctuation marks. I am simply using you for a target to bang at Blame my cats! but this thing requires genius in order to work it just right."
CITIES MADE TO ORDER.
As compared with the normal process by which towns come into being, their development proceeding spontaneously and by slow stages, it is interesting to note the occasional deliberate construction of large seaports, and other towns, complete and ready for occupancy in a few years' time; the motive being sometimes political and sometimes commercial. There is the remarkable case of Port Sudan, founded a few years ago by the British authorities on the west coast of the Red sea. A similar undertaking, though with different alms, was the building of the German seaport of Tsingtao, China; a city, notable, among other things, for the fact that no American atlas-maker discovered its existence until ten years after its foundation. In contrast to these successful experiments in city-building, we learn that the port of Huengechow, which was laid out in the spring of 1809 on the shore of Yehil bay, 10 miles by water from Macao harbor (China), has by no means realized the hope of its creators that it would speedily become a formidable rival to the neighboring ports of Macao and Hong Kong. It was built on up-to-date lines, with telephones, waterworks, electric light, tramways, etc., but it has not succeeded in attracting trade, and its present population is only 2,000.
FOOD CANAL IN MAMMALS.
A Frenchman who has made an examination of the food canal in mammals has measured the length of it in 280 specimens that belong to 30 species. He has found that the ratio between the length of the canal and the length of the body is smallest in the carnivorous animals, larger in those that are called omnivorous, and largest in the vegetarians. In other words, the length of the food tract seems to vary with the digestibility of the kinds of food that are consumed. The rule holds true in birds as well as in animals. In man the alimentary canal is about 30 feet long,—usually from five to six times the length of the body.
ARSENIC IN NATURE
It has long been known that traces of arsenic are to be found not only in human and animal organisms, but in certain plants, such as the cabbage, turnip and potato, and in wheat. Two members of the French academy of science, Messieurs Jadin and Astruc, have shown that arsenic is also to be found in rice, pea, beans, lettuce, celery, asparagus, parsnips, and in most vegetables used as food by man, as well as in apples, pears, pinnapple, oranges and nuts. Since plants undoubtedly get the element from the soil, arsenic must occur far more widely in nature than was at one time supposed.
WONDER CAVE OF ARIZONA.
One of the most wonderful caves in the world has been found in southern Arizona. Unnamed, unexplored, and almost unknown, it gives evidence of being a rival to the Mammoth cave of Kentucky, whose fame is world-wide. Only a few have dared to enter it to view its grandeur and to study the marvelous handwork of the Almighty in its construction. This cave lies at the foothills of the Huachuca mountains, about 40 miles northeast of Nogales, Santa Cruz county. Exploring parties have entered and spent days inside, but none has ever discovered the end. They report passageways, rooms and chambers innumerable
New England Romanée
From Boston comes the story of a touching phonograph romance. The manager of a store became infatuated with the voice of a young woman whose singing he heard reproduced frequently in the machines, wrote to her for her pictures, and the acquaintance speedily ripened into marriage. The bride, by the way, was intending to study in Paris for grand opera, but has decided to settle down in New England.—San Francisco Argonaut.
Prevention of Mildew
Nothing should be stored in a damp condition on account of mildew, which is a vegetable growth, being a kind of fungus, which quickly spreads, and is very difficult to remove. To remove it from flannel ether is best to use. For mildew on cotton material, damp the part, rub soap thickly on, cover with powdered French chalk and put in the sunshine, and keep repeating the process until the spots disappear.
Hadn't Proposed
proposed.
"No, darling, let me propose to any other woman than you."
"Oh, but you once told me you had been engaged to a widow."
"True, but that was in a leap year."
CHEVIEU ITRICIR
Is a pomade that straightens hair permanently without the use of iron, preferably with nails as it straightens the shortest hair as well as long. Use as directed and it will give entire satisfaction. Price $4.00 per jar. Liberal percentage to agents. Address
MRS. R. A. HATTON
Glencoe, III.
Tel. Harrison 5133 Real Estate and Probate Law a Specialty.
GEO, W. BLACKWELL
Attorney and
Counsellor at Law
Suite 622 Omaha Bldg.,
135 W. Van Buren Street,
CHICAGO
Advertise
IF YOU
Wanta Cook
Want a Clerk
Want a Partner
Want a Situation
Want a Servant Girl
Want to Sell a Piano
Want to Sell a Carriage
Want to Sell TownProperty
Want to Sell Your Groceries
Want to Sell Your Hardware
Want Customers for Anything
Advertise Weekly in This Paper.
Advertising Is the Way to Success
Advertising Brings Customers
Advertising Keeps Customers
Advertising Insures Success
Advertising Shows Energy
Advertising Shows Pluck
Advertising Is "Bir"
Advertise or Bust
Advertise Long
Advertise Well
ADVERTISE
At Once
In This Paper
A
MISS JUANITA TOLIVER.
PORO Hair Grower
50c a Box, 10c extra out of city
. Treatment $1.00
3420 Dearborn St. Chicago.
Dr. Theo. R. Mozee
DENTIST
Office Hours, from 9 a.m. to 5 p. m.; from 7 p.
m. to 9 p. m. Sunday by appointment.
Phones: Oakland 4662. Auto. 73-058.
4715 South State St., CHICAGO. ILL.
Phone Oakland 2459
Madeline R. McFarland
FINE MILLINERY
Feathers Cleaned, Dyed and Curled
HATS BLOCKED
4746 State St. CHICAGO
Lady Solicitors
Neat appearance, to introduce a feminine necessity, no experience necessary. A money maker. Address
Howard, Chandler & Co.
6434 Vincennes Ave.
Douglas 9458
Ida M. Dempcy
Stenographer and Typist
Instruction at Reasonable Rates
3716 Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.
An honest man never picks up our pocketbook when we lose it.—Waldo Baston.
---
J. A. JONES, Prop. - - - European Plan
Worthington's Art Studio
Phone Kenwood 3531
A woman sits at a table in a room with a wall covered in framed paintings. She is holding a paintbrush and appears to be painting a landscape. The table is adorned with various art supplies, including paint tubes, brushes, and canvases.
MISS ETHEL WORTHINGTON, Manager
Lessons given in hand painted China, a specialty in Fruit. Flowers, Landscape and Figured Work. Special attention given beginners. We carry a complete line of China for sale, suitable presents for weddings, birthdays and card parties. Firing a specialty.
5344 Dearborn Street
Chicago, Illin
Lessons given in hand painted Landscape and Figured Work. We carry a complete line of weddings, birthdays and card p.
5344 Dearborn Street
HOME DEW AND GREAT B. F. LIGHT
HOME BAKING
501 E. 36th St., Corr.
36th St. N.
15 W. 36th
Opposite Prec
Daily and W
Cigars and
Ice Cream and C
the C
Mrs. Lulu
Phone Douglas 213
EDWARD ICE CREAM
PHONE
Milk, Cream, Stationery, Newspapers, Bread, Cake
We give Fish and Weber and Sodas. A First-Class
EDWARD FELIX
Mrs. Edw. Felix's
Stands open for all kind
ment, Hair Goods to or
hands and nails. A co
Tel. Douglas 2928
Gener to all
Main hand painted China, a specialty in Hand and Figured Work. Special attention given to complete line of China for sale, suitable holidays and card parties. Firing a specimen onborn Street Chicago.
THE DELICATES AND GROCERY
B. F. LIGGINS, Proprietor
BKING Goods delivered
56th St., Cor. Rhodes Ave., Chicago
St. Notion St.
W. 36th St., Chicago
Composite Provident Hospital
Dealing in Dry and Weekly Papers, cigars and Tobacco
Cream and Candies, special to the Children
Mrs. Lulu B. Taylor
e Douglas 2134 Automatic 7
EDWARD FELIX CREAM PARTY
PHONE DOUGLAS 2928
Cream, Stationery, Confectionery, Tobacco, Paperpapers, Bread, Cakes and Pies. Before buying new Fish and Weber Stamps with Groceries, Ice Cream, Goods. A First-Class Laundry Agency in Connellwood.
FELIX :: :: 52 W.
dw. Felix's Hairdressing is open for all kinds of Hairdressing, Scalp and Hair Goods to order. Special care taken in hair and nails. A complete line of toilet and General Mail Order Business to all parts of the country. 52 W.
HOME DELICATESSEN
36th St. Notion Store
15 W. 36th St., Chicago
Opposite Provident Hospital
Dealing in
Daily and Weekly Papei
Cigars and Tobaccos
Ice Cream and Candies, specialty to
the Children
Mrs. Lulu B. Taylor
Phone Douglas 2134 Automatic 72-993
Milk, Cream, Stationery, Confectionery, Tobacco, Bingars, Newspapers, Bread, Cakes and Pies. Before buying & Me. We eat Fish and Weber Stamps with Groceries, Ice Cream and Sodas. A First-Class Laundry Agency in Connection,
Mrs. Edw. Felix's Hairdressing Parlor
Stands open for all kinds of Hairdressing, Scalp Treatment, Hair Goods to order. Special care taken of the hands and nails. A complete line of toilet articles.
Tel. Douglas 2928 General Mail Order Business to all parts of the country. 52 W.30th St.
Music Students ATTENTION
Pupils are now being enrolled for the classes in the Study of Opera. For further information, inquire at the Studio of MRS. M. B. ANDERSON, Room 14, 3522 South State St., any afternoon.
What You Want
How You Want It
When You Want It
Removal
Mme. Alice H. The noted Hair and Skin moved to 3520 State Room 8. Residence, 3 Tel. Douglas 2458.
For anything in the line of printing come to us and we'll guarantee you satisfactory work at prices that are right
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CHICATESSEN
GOCERY
IS, Proprietor
Goods delivered if desired
Modes Ave., CHICAGO
Motion Store
St., Chicago
Resident Hospital
Being in
Weekly Paper
L Tobaccos
Andies, specialty to
children
B. Taylor
Automatic 72-993
D FELIX
M PARLOR
GLAS 2928
Collectionery, Tobacco, Cigars,
and Pies. Before buying € Me.
Cups with Groceries, Ice Cream
Laundry Agency in Connection:
52 W. 30th ST.
Hairdressing Parlor
Hairdressing, Scalp Treat.
Special care taken of the
state line of toilet articles.
All Order Business
of the country.
52 W. 30th St.
Elevator Boy Wanted
Boy Wanted—About 17 years old to
run private elevator. Must be intelligent
and courteous. O'Connor &
Goldberg, 205 State St. 6th Floor.
READ AND SUBSCRIBE FOR
ThePullmanPortersReview
a magazine brim full of railroad news.
Issued monthly by the Perfection Press,
7509 Ingleside Ave. 15c percept. $6.00
a year. Next edition ready May 15th.
Anywhere good books are sold you'll
find our magazine. Agents wanted
everywhere. Address W.A. Holbert,
Business Mgr., 3630 Dearborn St., Chicago.
Removal Notice
Mime, Alice H. Thomas-Mason, the noted Hair and Skin Specialist, has
moved to 3520 State Ave., Johnson Bldg.
Room 8, Residence, 3748 Calumet Ave.
Tel. Douglas 2458. 12-19-26 M3.
Real Meaning of Phrase.
When a person says "I am terribly misunderstood" it generally means that somebody has become thoroughly wise to him.
Willie's Advice.
"You'd better eat slow," said Will to the clergyman who was dining the family. "Mamn never more'n one piece of
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.
Copyright
GUESS WHO?
Copyright applied for
The doll is who has beat E. J.'s time, ed about his love affairs. Don't be afraid, with W. P. E. L. is correct. Mr. (7), J. P. won't get the best of you.
The doll is who is seen with sweet Panda Doll, even after school. M. Mc. is correct.
The perless dudes are who have got so full of business lately that every time you come to school, you way to club meeting or lodge meeting, the girls keep you out of mischief.
The fair doll is who was seen on Monday evening at 47th and State streets.
The W. P. H. S. doll are who were seen at a 50th street ice cream parlor, or of ice cream, calling for three spoons.
The young dude is who is narrow mind-
Deaths of the Week
Alford, Laurence, 3, 2627 La Sale st.;
April 11.
Brown, Harold, 2, 3606 Wabash av.;
April 12.
Brown, William, 2, 3606 Dearborn st.;
April 13.
Badger, William, 2, 3613 State st.; April 3.
Bradley, Mary, 1, 2007 S. State st.;
Feb. 26.
Fisher, Charles, 46, 3340 Wabash av.;
Grathouse, John, 45, 5419 Ridgewood ct.
Grathouse, Harriet, 53, 4829 Armour av.;
April 10.
Hoskins, Washington, 53, 68, 32d st.;
Luden, Melvine, 54, 2817 State st.;
April 11.
Hoskins, Villa, 25, 90 W. 18th st.; April 9.
Powell, Alice, 50, 3555 Verion av.;
April 11.
Russell, Hugene, 19, 765 Jackson bivd.;
March 23.
Russell, Thomas, 49, 3129 Dearborn st.;
Ross, William, 69, 25 Frederick ct.;
April 12.
Saint Charles, 37, 6501 Rhodes av.;
April 7.
Summers, Jennie, 44, 4903 Dearborn st.;
Steward, Lorain, 3016 La Sale st.;
April 14.
Temple, Paul, 1, 1207 Elizabeth st.;
April 13.
Vaughan, Mary, 59, 6215 Elizabeth st.;
April 11.
Wilson, Elizabeth, 68, 23 W. 17th st.;
Walden, Alvin, 1, 9550 Commercial av.;
Whitfield, Hazel, 1, 5015 Dearborn st.;
April 14.
DEATH OF BABY WHITFIELD.
Hazel Whitfield, the 18-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Whitefield, died at her parents' residence, 5015 Dearborn street, early Monday morning. Funeral services were held on Wednesday. Undertaker Charles Jackson was in charge.
Mr. John Barber of Portland, Ore., died Sunday, April 6. Mr. Barber was the husband of Mrs. Corine White Barber, formerly of Chicago and widow of Mr. Dan White. Mrs. Barber has a host of Chicago friends and relatives who offer sympathy in this second bereavement and who hope that she will return to Chicago.
A CARD OF THANKS
With a heart filled with gratitude to my friends, I wish now to thank them for their thoughtful acts of kindness during the illness and death of my beloved wife. Gratefully yours, Moses P. Samuels.
DOUGHERTY LEAVES FOR A FOR-
EIGN TRIP.
New York, April 18—Romeo L. Dougherty, sporting editor of the Amsterdam News, will leave for a foreign trip on Saturday, April 13, on the steamer "Brazos" of the New York and Porto Rico Steamship Company. Mr. Dougherty plans to be abroad about two months and will return to resume his duties in the office of the News. Arriving in Porto Rico on the 23d he will leave on the 27th for St. Thomas, from which place he will again take ship to Southampton. While in Europe he will visit London, Paris, Berlin and Yenna. Mr. Dougherty is making this trip representing the Danish government to report on the progress being made in the Caribbean islands in anticipation of the opening of the Panama Canal.
Mrs. Luroy B. Hayes, 5015 Dearborn street, has improved from the illness that caused so much anxiety among his relatives and friends early this week.
Mrs. Bessie Newsome returned to her residence at 308 East 22d street from West Baden, where she has been for several weeks for her health. She reports her condition much improved by her trip.
Mrs. Maggie R. Winston, 4015 Cottage Grove avenue, is very much indisposed. She was taken suddenly ill April 10. At this writing she is able to walk around in the house. She is the wife of Mr. John R. Winston, The Defender's railroad correspondent.
Mrs. Clara Anderson, 5013 Dearborn street, reported ill in this column for many weeks, is able to be up and about but is still under the care of her physician.
Mrs. Moseley of 5211 Grove avenue is ill.
Judge Cluer (in Shoreditch county court): "Affidavits are bad enough when they are sworn, but when they are not, well—they are just as good." —London Telegraph.
PUGILISTIC LIKENESS
Before a couple marries each needs a manager; after they marry they need a referee—Waldo Baston.
---
1
Copyright applied for
SICK LIST.
About Affidavits
ed about his love affairs. Don't be afraid, Mr. (7). J. P. won't get the best of you. You should give the club the name "Non-Loach Club." You might know that D. H. suggested that appropriate name. The officers of the Do Right Boys' Club are. The funny doll is. O. G. is correct. The 31st street and Groveland avenue are the worst. Well, E. L. is the living model. The 33d street and Rhodes avenue doll is who says that J. G. isn't on the square. Well, E. L. is the living model. The ex-Do Right boy is who is down behind the sun and says that he certainly does miss State street. J. W. is
OUT IN ENGLEWOOD.
Weekly Letter from This Thriving Section of the City—All the News.
Mr. Wm. Daly is improving and was able to be out of the house.
Little Henry Dupun, of 6147 Ada street, who has been very sick for the last two weeks, is improving. He was able to sit up in bed Sunday.
Mrs. B. Lean, of 1317 West 60th street, is on the sick list.
Mrs. Ellen Cooper, of 6014 Normal boulevard, is reported better and is able to be out.
Mrs. Clara Hutchinson, of 6551 Aberdeen street, who has been confined to her bed for a couple of weeks, is reported better.
Miss Vera Brown, of 6041 Throop street, is a little better.
Please send all notes to Mrs. G.
Jordan. 6043 Loomia street
Shiloh Baptist Church.
Regular services at 11 a.m. and $ 8 p. m. Sunday school at 1 p. m. B. Y. P. U. as 7 p. m. The last Sunday in the month is rally day. All friends and members are asked to come and help toward a new building. A two week's revival is going on and has proved to be a success. Some of the best ministers have been invited to help out. Mrs. Lyons, of 6138 Aberdeen street, entertained the Ideal Woman's Club last Friday. There was a large attendance and Mrs. Henry and Mrs. Johnson were the guests of honor. A fine program was rendered and a delightful luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Brown will be pleased to meet their friends in their new home, 6031 Loomis street. Mrs. F. H. Smith, of 6022 Aberdeen street, is still improving. Mrs. Nellie Stafford is much better.
Little four-year-old was learning to sew. She made some beautiful small stitches and mamma said, "Now make a long row of those tiny baby stitches." After awhile the little fingers became tired and when mamma came to look again, there were some long ones. On being asked why she had not made them all tiny she replied, "Why, the baby stitches needed some mammas."
"I thought that in the fifteen years of my practice of medicine," said a physician. "I had answered almost every possible foolish question, but a new one was sprung on me recently. A young man came in with an inflamed eye, for which I prescribed Inmert—to be dropped into the eye three times a day. He left the surgery, but returned in a few minutes, poked his head in the in the doorway and asked: 'Shall I drop this in the eye before meals or after?'"
Joy of Neighborliness
With the aid of the waves of ether, transmuted or translated into waves of sound for those who have not eyes, or into light for those who have not ears, we may find neighbors where there is greatest need, or where our noblest need is best fulfilled. Mobility, transmissibility, are they not to bring mankind nearer, if not into, the higher kingdom, even as they brought the vegetable to be an animal, to approach, and then to enter its next kingdom?—John H. Finley, in the Atlantic.
One of the most whimsical wills ever made is that of a bachelor of France who left all his property, amounting to a considerable inventory, to three ladies who had refused to marry him. He stated in the document: "These bequests I make to these ladies, for to them I owe all my earthly happiness."
"Do you think Mrs. Muchrich bleaches because she's older than her husband?" "Give it up," answered the hairdresser. "Mine not to reason why, mine but to do and dye."
"Brother Short will now lead us in prayer," said the pastor. "No he cannot, not neither," replied Brother Short, "but he countens that what's you paid for."—Exchange
People who find it hard to make a living generally have a way of living to make it hard.-Waldo Baston.
Needed Mammas
Fine Point.
Most Ungallent.
Brotherly.
THE REASON.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Office Phones. Douglas 8203
Automatic 71-719
DR. F. J. BRAXTON
DENTIST
and loyal
xaggerman
in that
she said
the way
bank. I
love him!
and ten
take his
ing and
d. who
and could
3616 Armour av. $8; basement (coal
office)
5.00
9 Earl st. $ rooms.
20.00
burn.
10.00
3636 Vernon av. cottage.
10.00
3143-5 Groveland av. each $ rooms,
Store
20.00
3129 Cottage Grove av. large and
light
20.00
CHICAGO REALTY & RENTING CO.
Room 803, 69 Washington st.
Randolph 3237
Auto. 43954.
---
BORNE ON THE LIGHT
---
ALL DEEPS AND HAPPENINGS OF
THE UNIVERSE RECORDED.
Wave Flashing Eternally Through Space Forever Continue to Carry the Comparatively Brief Story of Man and Hla Dolonga.
Not the least of the wonders of light is the truth that, through its agency, ordinary deeds and ordinary happenings, as well as all other kinds of affairs in this busy world of ours, are immortalized. We are accustomed to the idea that souls are immortal, that energy cannot be annihilated, that matter cannot be destroyed, but what of this extraordinary immortality of deeds? Simply this: light that is reflected or given off from an object carries an image, a picture of the object, with it on its travels, no matter how long the journey or whither it may tend. When these image-carrying light waves enter the eye, the picture they bear is revealed, whether the waves have been only the infinitesimal fraction of a second in coming from the face of a friend across the street, or whether they reached the eye after jump through space from the flashing flabations of a far-off star. Even as we see the nearest star neighbor not as it is today, we were four years ago, the light that is to this star from our planet carries pictures of the earth as it was 48 months ago, and any person, if at that distance from the earth and equipped with some means of collecting the light waves, would see events and deeds that had transpired on this earth in the year 1908!
Suppose we had such an apparatus and could out-travel light. We could journey to the Pole star, 60 light years from the earth, and behold! we should see the earth as it was in the year 1852! If we journeyed nine years of light waves farther in toward the earth, we would intercept the light pictures showing the firing on Fort Sumter in 1861. Even though every book and every manuscript and every monument should be destroyed, the gallant charge of Longstreet, and the incomparable bravery of our northern and soldiers are written eternally on the earth with its heavens. Long after the earth with its pony and armies has crumbled to cosmic dust, vanished into some other system, the light waves fashing eternally through space will continue to carry the comparatively brief story of man and his deeds.
If we traveled still farther out into space, and caught up with the light waves that left us, say 420 years ago, we would see Columbus discovering America. The waves that left us about 700 years since would give us the picture of Runnymede, with John, surnamed Lackland, signing the Magna Charta. Nearly 2,000 light years from the earth speed the waves that bear the story of Caesar's fame and the glory that was Rome's. Still further out, hurting through the eternity of unending space, is a picture from far back in the dusty corridors of time, a picture of the earth when it was void and without form, ages and ages before that wonderful creature, man, had entered the arena of life.
Soft Fabric From Stone
A manufacturer in the north of Russia claims to be making a fabric from a gray stone of Siberian origin. This stone is susceptible, it seems of being drawn into a fiber, and the cloth woven from it is said to be soft, durable and presentable. One report has it that the peasants of the district are generally wearing clothes made from it. This necessarily calls attention to the glass cloth industry. The fabrics woven from spun glass, however, are more costly than the fine silks they resemble so much. An English manufacturer is doing something more to the point in weaving cloth from old ropes. In the sandwich islands a fabric in common use is made from the mulberry plant. More interesting still, in India and Jamaica the natives understand a process by which banana skins may be reduced to a fiber that may afterward be woven into cloth.
Not Much Out of the Way
Mrs. Rush is a zealous and loyal wife and intends to avoid exaggeration, but has a strong tendency in that direction.
"It's perfectly wonderful," she said to a patient friend, "to see the way Mr. Rush counts bills at the bank. I think they are so lucky to have him! He'll take a great pile of five and ten and twenty dollar bills and make his fingers fly just like lightning and never make a mistake!"
"Never?" asked the friend, who knew Mrs. Rush's weakness and could not forbear the question.
"Well—no—at least," stammered Mrs. Rush. "why, perhaps he might get five or ten cents out of the way, but not any more, ever."
American Control District
Americans Control Pitch Supply. On the beautiful island of Trinidad, chief source of the world's supply of pitch, the article has been put to every possible use by the natives. Formerly the streets of the Port of Spain were lighted by torches of pitch, but the people objected to the odor. Nothing, however was done to develop the pitch and oil industry until recent years. This difference to its value has been credited to the fact that the Trinidadians had so many other resources, such as their cocoa, coffee and sugar, from which to gain an abundant living that they were content to leave Pitch like alone. Americans now control its output.
Old Man Perned at Lovers
Old Man Peped at Lovers.
New York—Using a field glass to water the sitting of young couples in Central park, coat Carl Rogenson, sixty years old, a fine of two dollars.
The young couples complained to a policeman, declaring that holding hands had lost all its pleasures when a man up a tree could watch what was going on with a pair of field glasses.
In Utah.
"Are you the lady of the house?"
"I'm one-seventh of her."
CASSHED ADVERTISING
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT.
3825 CALUMET AV., 20 seconds to 35th st. car line. Nicely furnished rooms, or office spaces, convenient, steam heat, gas, bath, telephone service. Phone Aldine 1478. tf
3745 CALUMET AV.—Nicely furnished rooms; bath, gas, and all other modern conveniences; comfortably heated. Near car line. Phone Douglas 249. 12-58
4440 LANGLEY AV.—Nicely furnished telephone service, and all other necessary modern conveniences. Very convenient to car line. Phone Kenwood 4378. 13-26
3818 LANGLEY AV.—Furnished or un-
furnished rooms, suitable for man and
woman; all modern conveniences.
Telephone Douglas 8552. 19-26
3818 STATE ST. first, large—Flat large
front room, light and air, comfortably
heated; bath, gas, and all other modern
conveniences. Kitchen privileges. 19
3820 VERNON AV.—Nicely furnished
rooms, with all modern conveniences.
Joe free. Gentleman preferred. Phone
Douglas 6149, Automatic 77538. 19-26
3440 VINCENNE AV.—Modern sk-room
flat, steam heat; $25 per month. 19-26
4528 ST. LAWRENCE AV.—Nicely furnished
rooms, with all modern conveniences.
Phone Kenwood 4227; Auto, 78956. 11-9-12-11-9-13
3561 PRRAILE AV., phone Auto, 76343.—Nicely furnished rooms, all modern conveniences.
cur line. 12-19
3627 MORGAN ST.—Two large rooms,
furnished or unfurnished. Suitable for
gentleman or married couple. All con-
veniences. 12-19
3429 STERVILLE AV., second flat—Nicely furnished room; all modern, comfortably
conveniences. steam heat. Tel. Auto. 12-19
Mrs. Gray.
3536 STATE ST. —Nicely furnished rooms, comfortably heated by steam; bath, gas and water connections. Intersection car line. Phone Douglas 2586 or Automatic 71538. 12-10
3626 CALUMET AV. —Very nice, light furnished. Unfurnished; suitable for large private kitchenette; hot and cold water. Terms reasonable. Phone Douglas 3834. 12-19
3716 FOREST AV. —Nice, large ally room, comfortably heated by steam; bath, gas and all other modern conveniences. Near car line. Strictly first class.
Office Hours: 3255 STATE STEET
10 a.m., to 5 p.m.
Saturday, 7 to 9 p.m.
Sundays by Appointment CHICAGA
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Do Your Feat Trouble You?
any ailment of your feet, send
to me at once for my guaranteed remedy, in [25c] packages.
FREE bookleton care of the feet, with each order, Address,
J. H. WALLACE
3209 State Street CHICAGO
THESE HOUSES FOR RENT OR FOR SALE ON EASY TERMS
THESE HOUSES FOR RENT OR FOR SALE ON EASY TERMS
CALL AT OFFICE FOR PRICES.
OR FOR RENT.
Flats.
2115 Groveland ave., 8-room flats, each
$29.00.
1122 Evans ave., 6 rooms, steam heat,
$35.00.
214 E. 31st st., 7 large light rooms over-
looking Grand blvd., $33.00.
4431 Sait e st., 4-5-room
$12.50 to 14.00
4515 Sait e st., 4-5-room
flats, $14.00 to 17.00
2933 Vernon av., 2d and 3d flats,
7 rooms, $20.00
Phone Franklin 2727
Res. 58 East 36th Street
Tel. Douglas 4397
J. GRAY LUCAS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Oxford]Building, Suite 506
118 North La Salle St., Chicago
For Sale
5-room cottage, $1,050, $100 down; 2-flat building and cottage, 2 lots, toilets and gas, all for $2,000, $150 down. For sale: 3 buildings, 2 flats each, prices $2,500, very small cash payment down and $30 per month including interest; 2 flat brick, stone front. Other bargains. Terms to suit buyer. Office:
6142 So. Ada St.
Houses and Flats
FLATS TO RENT.
4411 VERONN AV.-Small flats, steam heat, private baths. For rent-Four rooms, bath, stove heat. Apply, Walter Pergerson, 4411 Vernon av.
6532 CHAMPLAIN AV, 2V. flat-Seven
rooms, steam heat, hot water, gas
range, and shades, for $30. Apply l
flat. 19-20 M. 3-10
BUSINESS CHANCES
FOR SALE—10-ROOM RESIDENCE AND
three flats; steam heat. Rental, $140
per month. Occupancy, month by
C. F. Van Winkle, 4524 Forneck
Phone Kenwood 1914, Automatic 75223.
FOR SALE—SCHOOL SUPPLIES, SODA
a football, cigar and candy cases; also
grocery and groceries. Will sell
cheap. Four living rooms; rent cheap.
L. Smith, 134 Dearborn st.
THE HOME QUESTION
CONFRONTS YOU
That desire you had to buy is right;
don't let your friends and associates
change that good intention.
A few of our many spring bargains:
A solid, stone-front, three-flat building;
modern; east of State st., near car line;
rents for $30 per month. $500 down, $50
per month until paid. Make us an offer.
A solid, stone-front house, 8 rooms,
strictly modern; rents for $40 per month.
$400 down, balance like rent. Price
$2.950. You should see it to appreciate.
Send your proof.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
Mr. R. H. Hardin wishes to inform his many friends that the chirropody firm of Mr. R. H. Hardin has been dissolved, to his entire success, gives the credit to his able attorney, Mr. R. H. Hardin will be at 143 N. Wabash, Suite 300. His daughter, Miss Edith, will be 250 E. 37th st.
ATTENTION!
Choice apartments in beautiful Woodlawn. Stove and steam heat. Prices $20 to $35. E. W. CAVE. Phone Went. 5280, 6432 Vincennes Av.
FOR SALE
4808 LANGLEY AVE.
Residence of 10 large rooms. Two-story and basement. stone front. Exceptionally well built. New Washington Park. To close an estate will sacrifice if taken at once. Easy terms. Inspection invited. Owner occupies. 19
Live Longer Nowadays
Life insurance folk say, says the New York Telegraph, that the expectation of life nowadays is well above seventy, and that persons nowadays are supposed to live at least until they are eighty, and if they reach that age should last until they are ninety, and so on, and about five out of every two hundred persons should walk the earth for a century.
Making Extra Trouble
A traveler in a southern state reached a town one night where the only hotel had a single bathroom. Feeling tired and dusty after his trip the traveler summoned the porter and asked him to make ready the bath. "Laws, massa," exclaimed the negro, "you gemmen gimme lots of wuk. Here it is only Thursday and wanting a bath. Can't you's wait until Sat'day, like the other white folks?"
The Awakening.
"You're looking mighty sour; what's the matter? Honeymon over?" "I guess so." "How'd that happen?" "Oh, we were drifting along down life's enchanted stream, like the poet tells about, and just as I was thinking I should like to drift on and on with her forever, she up and told me that she had got to have some money.—Houston Post.
Surgrised Them.
Turkish General—"Did you surprise the enemy?" Colonel "Yes; they didn't expect to see us run."—Boston Transcript.
"Darling," he murmured, as soon as they had been sent in the high-priced restaurant, "you can have anything you want on the bill of fare. Shall I read it off to you?" "No," replied the dear girl, "just read it to the water."
Purifying the Language
The female red deer is known as a hind and not a doe. The young red deer is also known not as a fawn but as a calf. These trifles are very shocking to sensitive ears.—London Spectator.
Might Well Be Dispensed With.
One of the most useless things in the world is a man who is continually making it necessary for his friends to explain that he means well.
More Likely.
"Now, I want a canary that will sing right away and sing what I like; one that won't get the plop or die the first week." "You don't want a canary, my friend. What you want is a muscle box."
Never Become Widows
Nepal has the earliest marriages in the world. There every girl is married in infancy. But, then, the bridegroom is not very terrible. She is married with elaborate ceremony to a bel fruit, which is then thrown into some sacred stream. The fate of the fruit being always unknown, every girl is thus spared the disgrace of becoming a widow, while at the same time a second husband is allowed her later on.
FINDING YOU OUT.
The world doesn't look up to a man before it looks up his character.— Waldo Baston.
Get Your Hands On A House On Your Own Terms
PRAIRIE AVE., near 35th St. Lot 25x125; a detached 12-room brick house; 2 baths; open plumbing; hardwood floors; furnace heat; in good repair; rental $600. Price... $6,000.
FOREST AVE., near 33rd St. 10-room stone front house; furnace heat; could be remodeled into a 3-flat at small expense; now rented for $510. Price... $4,500.
CALUMET AVE., near 35th St. An elegant 3-story stone front house; 10 rooms; open plumbing; furnace heat; all in fine repair; rental $480. Price... $4,400
CALUMET AVE., near 35th St. Large 10-room brick and stone house; open plumbing; furnace heat; hardwood finish; in good repair; rental $480. Price... $4,500.
GROVELAND AVE., near 31st St. 10-room stone front residence; open plumbing; furnace heat; all in first class repair; rental $420. Price... $4,500.
DEARBORN ST., near 35th St. 2-story stone front; 2 flats of 6 and 7 rooms; bath; gas; stove heat; rental $552. Lot 25x110. Price... $4,500.
EVANS AVE., near 45th St. Lot 25x170, improved with a good 8-room frame house; open plumbing; furnace heat; frame barn; rental $252. Price... $3,250
PRAIRIE AVE., near 35th St. Double frame house; 7 rooms each; open plumbing; bath and gas; rents $45. Price $3,000.
DEARBORN ST., near 31st St. 2-flat frame; 5 rooms each; bath; gas; frame barn; lot 25x110; rental $360. Price $2,700.
DEARBORN ST., near 29th St. Lot 25x110, improved with an 8-room frame cottage; rental $216. Price... $2,250.
Call at our office for further information
W. H. BOWERS & CO.
New Beauty Shop Studio
GEO. W. NEIGHBORS
3636 South State Street
For High Class Photos. Postals finished while you wait—
Day or Night. Enlarging and Retouching our
Specialty. Lady attendant.
MALE HELP WANTED
Prominent Automobile Corporation selling used cars will undertake to teach colored men the automobile business thoroughly (Repairing, Driving, good paying position. Fee $25—Easy Payments accepted. Opportunity to earn $0 weekly. E. G. SEEAM, Room 415, Port Dearborn Building.
Any of these $500.
PRAIRIE AVE., near 35th St. brick house; 2 baths; open nace heat; in good repair; r
FOREST AVE., near 33rd St. nace heat; could be remode now rented for $510. Price
CALUMET AVE., near 35th St. house; 10 rooms; open plum pair; rental $480. Price...
CALUMET AVE., near 35th St. house; open plumbing; fur good repair; rental $480.
GROVELAND AVE., near 31st dence; open plumbing; furn rental $420. Price.....
DEARBORN ST., near 35th St. 6 and 7 rooms; bath; gas 25x110. Price.....
EVANS AVE., near 45th St. D 8-room frame house; open barn; rental $252. Price...
PRAIRIE AVE., near 35th St. each; open plumbing; bath a
DEARBORN ST., near 31st S bath; gas; frame barn; lot 25
DEARBORN ST., near 29th St 8-room frame cottage; rent
Call at our office for
W. H. BOW
Phone Douglas 986
The Guaranteed
GUARANTEED
TRADE MARK
[Name not visible]
Go to
New Beauty
GEO. W. NE.
3636 South
For High Class Photos. Post
Day or Night. Enlarged
Specialty. La
MALE HELP
Prominent Automobile Corporation so-
colored men the automobile busi-
Salesmanship) and will assist to good p
ments accepted. Opportunity to carr
413, Port Dearborn Building.
HIs Patience Exhausted.
A yea-mony squad was drilling, and, being out of practice, most of them were suffering from bruises caused by the unsteadiness of one another's movements. "I believe you have cut my head open," shouted a recruit to *a. nervous comrade*, who had given him a serious knock. "Well," said the distracted sergeant-at-charge, "now is a good time to put something in it!"
The Secret Out
Fried eggs were originally the same as bolled eggs were before they were bolled.-Cassell's Journal.
Philosophy In Rhyme
This world with promise richly stored is like a train of cars, they say. If you don't want to get on board, you mustn't try to block the way.
Multum-in-Parvo Disturbers. As small letters weary the eye most so also the smallest affairs disturb us most.—Montaligne.
Wealth of Knowledge. There is no wealth like unto knowledge, for thieves cannot steal it.—Burmese Proverb.
City's Many Fatal Accidents. More than three thousand five hundred accidental deaths occur every year in New York.
Her Diploma.
"She says she went abroad to finish her education. I wonder if she learned much." "She told me she had six new ways to fix her hair."—Judge:
Each and Every One.
Each new friendship is forever.
Balance like rent
5th St. Lot 25x125; a detached 12-room
bed; open plumbing; hardwood floors; fur-
repair; rental $600. Price.....$6,000.
4rd St. 10-room stone front house; fur-
remodeled into a 3-flat at small expense;
Price.....$4,500.
35th St. An elegant 3-story stone front
open plumbing; furnace heat; all in fine re-
Price.....$4,400
35th St. Large 10-room brick and stone
ing; furnace heat; hardwood finish; in
480. Price.....$4,500.
2nd 31st St. 10-room stone front resi-
g; furnace heat; all in first class repair;
Price.....$4,500.
35th St. 2-story stone front; 2 flats of
bath; gas; stove heat; rental $552. Lot
.....$4,500.
St. Lot 25x170, improved with a good
bed; open plumbing; furnace heat; frame
Price.....$3,250
5th St. Double frame house; 7 rooms
bath and gas; rents $45. Price $3,000.
31st St. 2-flat frame; 5 rooms each;
lot 25x110; rental $360. Price $2,700.
29th St. Lot 25x110; improved with an
acre; rental $216. Price.....$2,250.
Office for further information
BOWERS & CO.
6 East 31st Street
Red Feather Company
Manufacturers of
French Plumes And All Classes of Fancy Feathers
MME. LAMBERT, Prop.
3149 Indiana Avenue CHICAGO
Phone Douglas 7926
Calls promptly answered
R. W. GREEN Funeral Director
3832 STATE STREET
CHICAGO
Phone Douglas 5766
Automatic 71-678.
Go to the
Duty Shop Studio
D. W. NEIGHBORS
South State Street
Postals finished while you wait—
enlarging and Retouching our
city. Lady attendant.
HELP WANTED
ation selling used cars will undertake to teach
the business thoroughly (Repairing, Driving,
to good paying position. Fee $25—Easy Pay-
to earn $30 weekly. E. G. SEEMAN, Room
Look for the Defender wherever newspapers are sold :: :: ::
The readers of the Chicago Defender are requested to ask for the paper at the various news stands throughout the city.
The Chicago Defender is to be on sale everywhere. If you ride on the "L" road ask for it at the news stand. If you can not secure it from your newsdealer call up the
Circulation Department
3159 S. State Street
Tel. Douglas 3239
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U.D.Davidson Co
Hair Dealers
Wigs. Switches Puffs
Transformations Cut
Hair in all lengths &
shades. Ladies in hair
business write in we
will stock you with all
the hair goods you ca
n sell, on so per cent
basis. Goods shipped
the same day ordered
3149 S. State St.
CHICAGO, Ill.
‘+ = Be RES yy kg EN a 1 :
7 a ue .
4
‘The World's Greatest Weekly.
R, S. ABBOTT, LL.B.
Eafe 8827 Butifaner:
Founded May 6, 1005.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN ADVANGE.
ae Penta crenccseccrscerseese er AL
Se eis e nein
Bee mttaasrstaliecsgstorssereeee ae
ies ARR re ee OEE
OFFICE,
3159 State Street
CHICAGO, TLL.
‘TELEPHONE DOUGLAS 3339.
entered as secondzclags matter, Febru.
aber at tee vomtotiey in thicase,
BUY bnder act of Siareh 387%.
RATES OF ADVERTISING.
Birthe. betrothals, marriages and
seth ee abiaary esate
apni Gi SURE Flag
DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS.
ing pact ae Mee neecccsnncses cect MO
Mpc ONO AN oi tas oF ong
Fee nado “advertisements, per Inch 3.00
promt nite advertisements, per inch 3.
Wea Ba hence eccreees 39
Yat modicee er biaetccossitetss
Gates for display advertisements” tur-
nisiiedon application:
Change of adaresa—Pleaso ive, poth
ne Ban nat hlaaaer ca, fp eine
ne Pe or atae be: caretul to. pve
Beatie tab posits Sale
if You SEE IT IN THE DEFENDER,
Tri aS!
SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1913.
COURT GENERAL ROBERT ELLIOTT,
Stor 725s, Anctent Order of Foraaters
Road ent seetna i fourth anony
TIER fn'Gkchesnonth “aeoud’ Fellows
TITY stbr"Stace’ treet
a Lodge Officers,
Chet Ranger BV. Baby, 645 Dear-
oe ShrgetSphione Drexel gol
‘Banciat Seorsinry, 8 WY, Vaslor, St
Gipve Rvenuet’ phone ‘Norma 2032
Presser Punk La cCrittenden, 2314
palgaiurer, Frank te Crittenden
CHURGH DIRECTORY,
Quinn Chapel, 2ith street and Wabash
Gite
tis, ao ang Deareen atest,
Seti 2 anh Pe et ae
Eacitdh 8A Bede aces
eee
SEABED Gs Bieter
x igh Bice! ER cae add Ee
4)lrg 0 Bon, 28 and Dear
ibahecer Baptist, 26th and. Deatbofn
SB map, th and Dearborn
Bethesdia Baptist, 38th street and Wa-
vee
AN coun, sek orn Cash
Hear AR nl
St. ‘Thomas Episcopal, 36th street and
wind eee
Sai FeBSeevan, sim and Deartor
"EE Bont Cathol,860 and Dearborn
‘Mt. Carmel C. M. ©. Church, 624 and
Rea
Gaede nA th SPURS a
ease, age Bees Ss
ELE, evans,
EEE Audie Eom ™ |
SOB SAP ie a!
Set GREG PE Den te
Mt Zion Baptist, 2601 Lake avenue.
inf att ad tu
Sn ape, 4904 and Dearborn
‘Christian Church, 3621 Armour avenue.
Surdonm Baptists Ads pad Lake streets
deesen Sapa sae cae
‘Tabernacle. Baptist, Robey street and
canes
SERPS Enuren, 4m and Deaton
ME a eh tran and Wabash
Hope. Presbyterian Church, Gist street
og hi tt
OER ESI Sil, esa ana ses
Lincoln Memorial Congregational
cals 2 a era a Sanaa
aah Ba Abadia Shard Nl
pan te
SIGNS OF SPRING.
Mebbe now you wouldn’t know
‘Time was passed fer ice an* snow.
*Cept you saw th’ movin’ man
Backin’ up his great big van.
See him drop a lookin’ glass,
Jest as you wus goin’ pas.
Don't need birds to chirp an’ sing
In this town to know it's spring.
Advance reports show that Chicago
is going to be the usual mecea for
summer visitors,
Now that the Democrats are get-
ting used to their positions, perhaps
they will take the relns of govern-
ment Jn real earnest and clean up our
streets and alleys, for instance—and
Because they sadly need it.
Jeanette O. Ferris, an enthusiastic
sulfragette, compared the emotions
derived from thelr victory at the
Polls to falling in love, being cor-
Yerted and coming into’a fortune all
at one time. My, what the poor men
have missed!
Besides the good things to eat at
the Business Men's banquet, there
was an rbundance of brain food, the
speeches were forceful and logical and
will be productive of much good.
Such meetings should be of monthly
occurrence, ‘They tend to stimulate
the growth of business in all lines,
Victoria Clay Haloy, president of
the Associated Negro Women's Clubs
of St. Louis, because of her attend-
ance at tho’ sessions of the Misals-
sippl Valloy Suffrage conference, has
‘een the subject of many newspaper
comments, good and bad, She was
fighting for a cause and won, and
after all it 4s only the result’ that
counts.
Joseph B. Lee, who has held the
office of collector of internal revenue
in Florida, is in a fair way of being
ousted, besides being an active Re-
publican be is colored, hence, there-
fore, etc, ote. The ‘committee in-
cluded other omce holders of color
also in their petition to the executive,
who prom{sed to consider the matter.
‘Will someone Kindly inform us it
there are any colored Democrats in
the state?
Sie !
‘They are still having emancipation
celebrations tn the Southern cities, At
Knoxville, Tenn, they had a very
creditable parade showing in floats
the fraternal and industrial vocations
of the Negro of today and of Atty
years ago, ‘The business and profes-
slonal men took an active part in ar-
ranging thie splendid pageant with a
‘view of showing to tho sceptical and
‘disgruntled white brother as well ag
‘to: thelr friends, the wonderful prog:
Tess the race was making. There ts
nothing like an ocular denionstration
to convince some people, even though
they do not live in Missouri. Our race
Is by-far too modest. If you are doing
anything worthy of being told, tell it;
it inspires confidence, He who tooteth
not his own horn, the same shall not
be tooted.
| Miss Mae Coleman of this elty took
‘the civil service examination for a
stenographer, She passed auccesstul:
ly, was not appointed and took i
again and passed, She was advised
to ask Congressman Madden to hely
her get an appointment. ‘This was
done and now Miss Coleman is em
ployed at the Custom House, It is tc
be hoped that she will be there per
manently. Mr. Oscar De Prist, whose
Business acumen and political dex
terity ts well known did much toward
cuttiiey ‘ite Hilcaas shaced
Women are certainly slaves to
fashion, In the matter of dress they
vacillate from the modest attire of the
Quaker to the positively vulgar cos
tume in vogue today. The draped
skirts are made so tight that It seems
absolutely necessary to have the slit
on the side in order to navigate at
all, and here is where they go to ex
tremes and modesty thrown to: the
winds, ‘The woman who scarcely
raises her skirts when crossing a
muddy street wears without a blush
a skirt with an opening Ike a theater
curtain. It would seem the time has
come for a halt on the freakish cos
fumes. Ob, for the days of our
grandmothers.
AN OUNGE OF PREVENTION.
‘The Southern Woman's Club of Chi
cago, fearing that some servant with
a drop of colored blood in her veins
should apply for membership and
‘thereby throw the dear ladies into 2
conniption fit, changed their by-laws
pertaiuing to membership, which
originally read, “A woinan ot South
em birth” to “A white woman of
Southern birth.” Can anyone imagine
in their wildest dreams a colored
woman applying for membership’ in
any club that starts with the word
Southern? As the comedian Bert
Williams says, “We may be crazy but
We ain't no fool.”
A GREAT MAN tN ISRAEL FALLEN.
; In the death of Bishop Derrick, the
‘A.M. E, Church loses one of the most
forceful and powerful orators of that
connection. He was a great chureh-
Jman and a great preacher. As a par.
Mamentarian he bad but few equals
jin the race, He was loved and ad
mired by all religious connections
and Was one of the foremost cham:
plons the race has had since the death
of the immortal Fred Douglass, Al-
though he has passed into the Great
Beyond, his memory will be to us as
peace to bis ashes, To the family
and church ‘The Defender extends its
deepest sympathy.
YELLOW JOURNALISM.
It would seem to a casual observer
that the Amsterdam News and the
New York Age could find plenty of
ffeal tive news to il their columns
without resorting to mud-throwing
and villitying each other. The pri
‘vate affairs of the families of either
one of the editors does not or should
not concern the general public. And
for two such prominent papers to
[drop into “yellow Journalism’ ts de.
plorable, especially at this time when
‘the eyes of the World are focused on
the race and the dark side of every
‘episode 1s depicted by the white daily
press. At least through our own
channel achievements of our people
for betterment should be brought to
the attention of the public,
‘ ‘Gomkerina
There is a tendency among a great
many to look down upon the domestic
or servant class, and they are often
snubbed and mistreated because they
have to work for their dally bread.
One who has given the matter any
thought can readily understand how
unjust this fs, and how much better
of as a rule these girls are than
many others who work {n stores and
offices, ‘They are in a measure
watched over by their employers;
they have less time to gad the streets,
therefore less time to get into mis-
chief. it is upon their actions largely
that the white people judge us, and
it fg incumbent upon us to make thelr
condition better and put them in the
way of performing more faithful
service. No work is more degrading
than you make it, and each individual
can make or lose many friends for
the race,
Te emeteeee Gee. Crenaerees
‘There seems to be nothing that con
cerns the welfare of the colored clti
zens of Nashville, Tenn, that thei
Board of Trade does not foster anc
encourage. ‘The name Board of Trade
4s a iitle misleading, as we genorall
associate tt with a legal form of gam
bling, but this organization is differ
ent, "Just at present they are co
operationg with the Carnegie Library
commission in the establishment ot
the colored library, the building ot
whlch ts to be begun at once, Another
thing they are interesting themselves
in fs sanitation, A. visiting nurse is
sent to the homes of the poor to teach
cleanliness, how to prevent disease
and to instill the germs of civic pride
into them. Being poor does not
necessitate one being dirty, “Clean
ness is next to Godliness.” ‘The back
‘yard should be as presentable as the
front yard, and perhaps right here
‘might bo a good place to mention the
fiat or houso you rent isn't to be mis-
used or damaged. That is not what
you are’paying rent for, and becatise
people are inconsiderate enough to
damage their landlord's — property,
rents are placed high enough to cover
the repairs, the innocent as usual eut-
fering for what the gullty ones. do.
The Nashville Board of Trade, or in
other words, the philanthropic colored
citizens have set an example that
organizations in other eities would do
well to follow.
amen
|, The’ white ministers’ alllance went
to Springfleld this week to try to
‘have a bill introduced in the logtsla-
ture prohibiting boxing matches, ‘not
Drize fighting, but the manly art of
selt defense which Ss advocated by
the most learned men of the country,
the presidents of the varlous universt
ties. ‘There are so many other more
Important things that these good men
‘might turn their attention to that
would really be of benefit to humanity.
For instance, on the same train rode
‘a delegation of earnest, loyal, unselt-
ish colored citizens, going down ‘to
the same senators to plead for thelr
Goa-given rights, to implore them to
work no more hardships on a race
that was already heavy Jaden. They
were not asking favors but justice,
and when Justice is pictured as blind
the truth of it strikes no one more
forcibly than the colored. man. Look
on one picture and then on the othe
fa decide for yourtelt it God's mld
Isters have not other and more im
wartnnt: were 46 dn
TUSKEGEE IDEAS FOR CHICAGO.
” “Selze upon truth wherever found,”
evidently is Mrs. Ella Plagg Young's
‘motto, for’ she admits that she was
‘deeply Impressed with the Impractibil-
ity and the value of the methods in
vogue at Booker T. Washington's
said, “to look upon, as 1 thought, the
teaching. of an inferior, race, ‘and
found the problem of education has
been settled in a manner more near.
ly Ideal than in any city that T know
of. We may well follow the ex.
ample.” ‘This statement coming from
the head of Chicago's vast school sys
tom is indeed a great tribute. And
yet knowing Mrs. Young to be a wom:
an of Keer judgment and fearless in
her eriticism of persons and things,
We could expect as much. She will
submit the new ideas she gleaned
from her trip-to the schoo! board for
adoption, Just what their pleasure in
the matter will be remains to be seen.
We have g splendid school system
but along educational as well as other
lines there is always room for im
provement.
MISSIONARIES WANTED.
Among other unimportant things
that have happened in the last four
years we note the following: Florida
had forty lynchings, Georgia seventy:
four, Mississippi forty-six, Louisiana
thirty-three, Alabama thirty, Arkansas
twenty-two, Texas forty-five, Tennes.
see twenty-three, Kentucky twenty.
two, South Carolina fifteen, Oklahoma
fourteen and Virginia four. To the
reader who is not well up in geogra
phy We would say, {f our memory
does not fail us, none of these are
Norther states, and if you should ask
how it so happens, we would respect
fully but firmly refer you to a history
of the late Civil War. It is unfor
tunate that same people living below
the Mason and Dixon line haven't
heard that the war is over, and yet
it seems incredible, too, ‘when we
stop to consider that the patent medi
cine manufacturers send their alma.
nas broadcast that contain every
thing from Adam and Eve down to
President Wilson’s election. ‘True
the churches need to sond mission
aries, not to the jungles, but right to
the heathens in thefr own country,
WHAT ARE YOU BOING TO HELP?
Humanity has not only a duty to
Keep children alive, but also to glvo
every child a chance of living a decent
life and becoming a decent citizen,
says General Bramwell Booth,
‘The task of creating a wholesome
environment for the Negro youth is
ours and now. Whence shall come
the help to our future representatives
now standing on the threshold of
manhood? Shall we make citizens or
criminals out of the great abundance
of material at hand?
‘The work of the Y. M. C. A. is mak-
ing men. very boy shaped in the
association in his early life will be
the man and citizen of tomorrow, who
wil do and live the things taught him
today.
‘Two years ago the Negroes of Chi-
cago pledged $67,000 toward the bulld-
ing of a department of the Y. M. C.
A, whose work should be under the
direction of colored men, and for col-
ored men and boys. So far less than
one-third has been paid in. We made
the contracts with the white frlends
and sympathizers of the race to do @
certain thing by a certain time. When
a merchant trusts a man for groceries
or meats, he trusts the qualities of
character; he trusts supposed
veracity, honesty and prudence; it
sometimes happens that he has put
his trust im a thoughtless, ashy,
weal-witted, thoroughly bankrupt na-
ture. It 1s impossible to compute the
great injury this kind of a business
man does to the interest of the com-
munity, jn ruining the credit ot many
enterpriges entirely worthy of sup-
port.
‘The Negroes of Chicago have made
such a contract with the white bust
Hess men of Chicago and the whole
world, ‘They’ have pala their part,
the bullding is near completion—only
waiting for our part to be carried
out. ‘Twenty thousand dollars will
put us in complete from top to bot-
| tom.
There is a racial erlsis here and
now, It calls for Immediate action.
‘The action we take now wil largely
Indicate our trustworthiness to. the
business world — and demonstrates
what we really will do.
Negroes of Chicago! Carefully
search your records and see if you
have pald what you promised to the
building fund. If you have not pald,
will you not, in the name of the race
and in your own honor, do what you
said you would do for your boy, your
friend's boy, your husband or’ your-
ae
Cured of Enthusiasm.
‘A—"You don't seom to have any
life in you. Is there nothing or no-
body over which you can enthuse?”
B—“Nothing at all. I once became
enthusiastic over somebody, and ,s
short time afterwards she became my
wife. That was a sad warning to me
to avold enthusiasm.”
BIN—I see you haye moved again,
Mike—Yes.
Bill—You are something lke a
trdmp. '
‘Mike—How's that?
Bill—You “change your . address
oftener than you do your dress,
Keep Healthy
By Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams
A Weekly Talk on Preventative
Measures, First Aid Remedies,
Hygienics, Sanitation. No Cases
will be Diagnosed and No Pre-
scriptions will be Given in This
Column. .
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER.
ee
ae
ge
DRA. WILBERFORCE
jaan eeer enone OF Sar eaeietie
For the last few weeks the whole
country has been greatly alarmed,
pained and much grieved over the dis-
astrous floods, especially in Ohio and
Indiana. We havo raved over the
Growning of 500 people, more or less,
some several thousands being made
homeless. All of which was mereiful
and kindly in comparison with the
Jong suffering, wasting, painful and
gradual appronet of death in tubercu-
Tosis,
Death from Consumption.
In IMinofs 8,000 died from consump-
tion; 600 every 30 days; 20 every day
in this state; and 4,000 in Chicago in
Chicago aloue. All of this could have
been prevented. If those who died
of it had submitted themselves to an
early examination and diagnosis and
the propor treatment, in all. probabil
Sty they would have been cured and
living today. More people die each
year of consumption (which is a pre-
ventable disease) than from diphthe
ria, typhoid fever, measles, scarlet te-
ver, whooping cough, smallpox and all
the contagious and Infectious diseases
combined,
When to Be Examined,
Don't delay if you have any of the
following symptoms: If you are be
Jow your normal weight or gradually
Josing weight. If you feel tired all
the time or have a gradual loss of
strength (of course some people are
tired all the time). If you have a
slight fever in the afternoon or early
evening. If you have a lasting cojd
or hacking cough, the cough worse in
morning. If you have loss of appetite
—poor digestion. If you have contin.
ued hoarseness or _tickling—night
sweats, If you have spitting of blood.
It you have shortness of breath—
easily fatigued, If there is pain in
chest or pleurisy.
Provident Dispensary.
‘The Provident Tubercular Dispen
sary is located on the south side on
B6th street. If this dispensary is near
you, go there and have an examination
made. if you have no money and are
not able to pay a physician, you can
£0 to this dispensary and receive free
a thorough examination and advice as
to your condition by specialists in
chest and lung diseases. The dispen
sary {8 located at §7 West 36th street
Questions.
Mrs. M, writes: Doctor, I have had
a small hemorrhage, I got wet and
spit blood two or three times and have
a little fever; just 99 to 100, in, the
evening. What would you advise’ me
todo? Should I remain in bed?
Reply: Would advise that you see
your physician and have chest, throat
and teeth examined. Sometimes blood
may come from the teeth, back part
of throat, stomach or lungs, (2) Yes.
You should remain in bed quiet as
long as your fever is about 98.6,
Mrs, B. writes: My little girl Bve
lyn, 6 years old, breathes through her
mouth and sleeps with her mouth
‘open, restless; nose seems stopped up.
What must 1 a6? What do you think
fs the matter with her?
Reply: It may be adénoids, Read
‘Health Hints” of March 29, on ade
noids. Would advise that you take
your little daughter to a nose special:
ist to be examined,
HEALTH NOTES,
Press Service, Department of Health
| How about those fly sereens? Have
‘you looked them over and got them all
‘Teadly to install before the files invade
your home? If not, get busy now.
‘Was your home aired out this morn-
ing? If not, why? Whose fault was
it ‘that this important matter was
/neglested? Why ‘not open the win-
‘dows and let the air and sunshine in?
Do it now.
Before vaccination was discovered
and applied smallpox killed 60,000
people in England, In that country
today there are fewer deaths from
‘smallpox than from any other commu-
nicable disease,
On Monday coming the fitth of Max,
Chicago will have a “Clean Up Day,”
Please don't make it just a streak,
‘But keep it up for all the week;
And why not make the plan a “bum:
mer"
By cleaning up all through the sum-
mer? :
Don’t forget that the approach ot fly
time is also the coming of the plant-
ing season, City gardening Is a
healthful, pleasant and profitable pas-
time, If you have never tried Jt, you
will be surprised and delighted at
the results you will be able to get
from a part even of a small city lot.
‘Try planting some of the old fash-
toned flowers, set out a rose bush oF
two, and if you have the space to
spate, plant a few garden vegetables,
such as radishes, lettuce, onfons, ete.
‘You will enjoy having them fresh
‘on your table, No better disposition
of back yards than to plant them to
flowers and vegetables and thus turn
them into places of use and beauty.
‘One of the ‘amazing things is the
tardiness with which people will put
into practice knowledge that they will
readily admit cannot but be of great
benefit to them. An example of this
is found in a study of the effects of
the preaching and teaching as to tho
value of fresh alr that havo been car-
Hed on for years, not only in this
country, but fa other countries as well.
A ride‘ajong any of Chicago's resi
dence streets, even in mild weather,
will show th careful obseryer that
the windows in most of the dwellings
are closed both top and bottom. Here
and there at-rare intervals a home will
‘De ‘noticed where the windows are
open and in which the inmates are
alive to the importance and value of
a fresh alr supply. ‘The other day a
Tepresentative of the Department of
‘Health noted on certain resident
streets 349 houses and flats; of these
the windows Im 273 were tightly
‘closed; in 76 two or more windows
were noted as being open; and 25 of
these were open ten Inches or more;
80 being raised but a few inches; only
eight windows were open at the top
and bottom,
Not a very good showing, it must be
admitted; especially when on the day
the observations were made the
Weather was mild and the sun shin
ing. It shovld be explained that the
streets on which the notations were
made were all in good resident dis.
tricts, the residences being mostly
two and three fat bulldings, with a
small percentage of houses. The
studles made serve to show pretty
clearly that while Chicago people may
Imow about the value of fresh air as
@ factor in promoting physical health
and vigor, they are still mighty care.
less or indifferent about taking even a
little bit of trouble to admit it into
their homes,
EDUCATING THE AFRICAN.
In the current number of the South-
ern Workman (published by the Hamp.
ton Institute Press) there is an inter.
esting discussion by Dr. George E.
Haynes of the Social Science Depart
ment of Fisk University, of the rea-
sons for the movement’ of Negroes
from the country to the city and a
statement of the methods which are
being employed to better the condi-
tion of those who remain in the city.
It is a far cry from American cities to
the center of Africa, and yet in the
Livingstonia Mission on Lake Nyasa,
described in the same issue, the
methods of instruction used are as up-
‘todate as the most modern American
ones. In fact, this mission, started in
memcry of Livingstone, whose cen-
tenary the world is now celebrating,
is but Hampton Institute in miniature.
‘This number of the Southern Work-
man contains some excellent pictures
illustrating these Hampton methods.
Along the same line is a paper by
Charles M. Buchanan of the Indian
Service on “The Cultural Value of
Vocational Training."
Two folk-lore contributions are in-
teresting and entertaining—"The follc
lore of the Menomini Indians” and
“How the hog got his mule foot.”
‘The editorials treat of educational and
sociological topics and meetings.
| Our Women |
‘The Gaudeamus Club met on April
M4 at Mrs, Plummer’s home. There
was a splendid attendance and plans
were made for an entertainment in
the near future, The members were
Toquested to bring clothing, shoes,
etc., to the next meeting as the club
intends to send a barrel to the flood
sufferers, The next meeting will be
at Mrs, MoBride's home, 24 East 26th
street, on Monday, April 21, at 1 p. m.
For a Careful Child,
In seeking instances of thrift super
Induced-by the exigencies of modern
life, let the soctologist not overlook
this advertisement: “For rent, to a
careful child, by a family going to
Egypt for sfx months, dolls’ house
completely furnished, ‘four dolla. in-
cluded. ‘Terms reasonable,”
+ Hla Recovery.
Firat Surgeon—"Did Jones recover
from that operation you performed on
him?" Second Surgeon—"The jury
gavo bim $50.”
""Hhamneneder
“I understand Anybody's is paying
Seribbler a dollar a word for his sto-
res.” “They were, but he broke the
contract because they refused to count
the punctuation marks as words.””
Liberty Stays Till Laat.
‘When liberty goes out of a place tt
{s not the first to go, nor the second
or third to go; it watts for all the rest
to go; it ts the last—Walt Whitman.
Must Have Wealth.
“Ia he rich?” “I didn’t think so, but
he must be.” “Why?” “I heard him
say tho other night that he lets his
wife have all the money she wants,”
Read
John J. Peterson’s
Story of the
Pullman Car Porters
Beginning in
‘Our Next Issue -
‘ORDER NOW
IN CHICAGO AND ITS SUBURBS
$$$
Our Local Department—Personal Mention—Religious—Social
and other short paragraphs—Read it over carefully, somewhere
you will find @ line or two about yourself or your fremde
arrive in the city Tuesday.
Mrs. Fay Crump, 5202 Wabash, has
returned to the | city after a two
months’ visit with relatives at St.
Louls, Kansas City and Parsons, Kan,
Wednesday, April 9, a surprise
party was given by Mrs. C. W. Pow-
ell, 6822 Rhodes avenue, i honor of
Miss Sarah ‘Tillman, who left Thurs-
day, April 10, for Jacksonville, Ill, to
spend a week. Before her return to
the city she will visit her sister in
‘ Mississippi.
All advertisements for funlshed
rooms or flats must be pald for In ad-
vance. We have no collectors for this
kind of work.
Sunday afternoon last Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. De Moss, 3645 Armour avenue,
entertained ut dinner in honor of Miss
Marle Smith and Miss Lillian Fields
of New York. These charming young
ladies have been Chicago visitors for
the past fortnight and guests of their
cousin, Mrs, McCall, 5942 Michigan
avenue, ‘The diriner was prepared in
the usual hospitable style character-
istic of the De Moss family. Besides
the honorees there were present Mr.
and Mrs, James McCall and Mr. J.
Hockley Smiley.
Mts, Blanch Williams of Knoxville,
‘Tenn., is the guest of her sister, Mrs.
W. W. Hill, 6045 Loomis street. Mra.
Willams is en route to New York,
where she will spend several weeks.
Miss Esther Kiner of Oskaloosa,
Towa, passed through the city Sunday
en route to Cleveland to spend the
‘summer with her relatives, Mr. and
Mrs. T. J. Hicks, :
Mre, Green, mother ot Mr. Frank
Long, 3400 Forest avenue, sustained
severe injuries in a fall down stairs
last week Thursday at their home.
Court General Robert. Elliott No.
7395, Ancient Order of Foresters, will
have their annual sermon preached to
them Sunday, May 4, at Quinn Chapel,
A.M. B. Chureh.
Send In personals of your friends,
It Is free. Drop It on a posteard.
Can't you afford to spend a penny on
your friends?
In writing to this office please ad-
dress all communications to The Chi
cago Defender and not to Mr. R. S,
Abbott. Matter so addressed is like
ly to be left ont, as the office force
does not feel inclined to open mail
addressed to him personally, and Mr.
Abbott is not always in his office,
Miss Ida P, James of Cleveland was
in the elty last week Tuesday en
route to Pasadena, Cal,, to spend the
summer. She was most delightfully
entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
A. Brown, 3827 Wabash avenue, the
few hours while in Chicago. Mr, and
Mrs, (Patti) Brown are well noted for
their exceeding hospitality.
Miss Abbie Mitchell arrived from
New York Wednesday on the Lake
Shore Limited and left Thursday for
Decatur to spend several days.
Mr. Sidney W. Conners and Olive
Branch arrived home Friday after a
stay of two weeks in Hot Springs,
Va. Mr. Connor's new home address
is 9522 Rhodes avenue.
‘Mrs. Bert Williams, after a stay in
our city for several weeks with her
Vnusband, tett Thursday for her bome
in Now York, Mrs, Williams was ac
companted by ter niece, Laura
Shreeves, who will make her home
with her.
Mr. and Mrs. O'Neal of 3424 Forest
avenue gave their little daughter,
Francis, her third birthday party last
Monday. Twelve little tots were pres-
ent. All spent a pleasant time and
she recelved a number of presents.
Julius N. Avendorph will leave the
city Saturday night for St. Paul,
Minn., where he will spend Sunday as
the guest of Mrs. FP. L. McGhee,
When In doubt oF trouble, telephone
to The Chicago Defender, Douglas
9339,
‘The Misses Miller left the city Sun-
day evening for their home in Winni-
peg, Canada, after spending a week in
our clty as the guest of Miss Vivian
Harsh, Their stay was one continu-
ous round of pleasure every minute of
their stay.
Mrs, William Graham, who has been
confined to her home’ for several
months on account of serious fliness,
is now confined at St. Luke's Hos:
pital.
‘Mr. George Thompson, whose name
appeared in the sick colume Jast week,
has recovered and {s again at his post
of duty.
Don’t fall to purchase the Pullman
Review. It is a magazine brim full
of rallroad news. It is to be found
where all good magazines are sold.
‘Mr. and Mrs. Adolphus C. Harris
have issued invitations in celebration
of the twenty-fifth anniversary of
the -Oratorfo Society. Their re-
hearsals are every Tuesday night at 8
grelock at 2830 State street and every
Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock at
Grace Presbyterian Church, 34th and
Dearborn street. Lovers of music will
be benefited by the lessons in sight
reading and will receive a general
broadening of their musical culture if
they join the Oratorio Society. Mr.
James A. Munday is the conductor.
Mr. Nathanlel” Murray and son
passed through the city en route for
Denver, Colo. Mr. Murray is taking
his son to Denver for his health.
Young Murray is a student of the
University of Canada. Mr. Nathaniel
Murray is the father of Mr. Edgar
Murray, expressman at 9153 State
street,
Mr. Maleolm MC. King, a recent
graduate of the Mobarry Medical Col-
lege, Nashville, Tenn., arrived in tho
city last Sunday. Mr. King has been
practicing pharmacy in Nashville.
Mr. Stele, father of Mrs. rank
W. Taylor, 6621 Grove avenue, Mrs.
Belle Driggs of California and George
Steele, Jr., died at his home in Michi-
gan Inst week, Mrs. Frank W. Young
and her sister, Mrs. Belle Driggs, at-
tended the funeral. Mr, Steele was an
old resident of Chicago and one of our
most highly respected citizens.
| Invitations have been received In
Chicago for the forty-fifth anniversary
exer¢ises of the Haiapton Normal and
Agricultural Institute, Hampton, Va.,
to be held fn the gymnasium Friday,
April 25, at 2:80 p.m.
If you want a first-class furnished
room read our classified columns.
Wisconsin Weokly Advocate, Milwau-
Kee, Wis, was in the city this week
after a visit throughont the prominent
cities of the state. Mr. Montgomery
made an address on Sunday and vis-
ited The Chicago Defender office dur-
ing the week.
Mrs. R.A, Hatton, the business
woman, hag left the city and has re-
turned to her home in Glencoe, I.
Mrs. C. V. Lang, the osteopath,
made a visit to Evanston this welt
and was cordially grected by many
old friends,
Hotel Washington Arrivals—R. C.
Stewart and wife, Buxton, Pa.; 8. B.
James, Kansas City, Mo; MW.
White, St. Louis, Mo,
Mrs. Eugenia Davis and daughter
of New Orleans have arrived in’ the
city to remain permanently, They
will reside with her sister, Mrs. B. B.
Davis, 3209 Prairle avenue.
Mrs, Robinson arrived in the clty
‘Thursday morning from New Orleans
to visit her daughter, Mrs. Edna
Smith, 3816 Vernon avenue.
Attorney John R. Auter of Evanston
and Chicago, spent the early part of
the week in Springfield, M1, going
from there to St. Louis, Mo, “He re-
turns to the city today,
At the solfeitation of his many
friends in that vicinity Mr. Domintek
Lettiere, who has conducted a popu-
lar buffet at 4952 State street for
many years, has opened what he calls
“Dominick’s Place No. 2” at 35th and
Wentworth avenue.
‘The committee of cotored citizens,
organized for the benefit of flood sut-
ferers, will publish in The Defender
hext Week a report in full of the mus!-
cal entertainment given at the Sov-
enth Regiment Armory ‘Thursday,
April 10, 1913. Affixed to the report
will be a lst of the names of sub-
seribers to the fund,
‘Subscribers and friends of the Chie
cago Defender will pleace bear In
mind that no advertisements of any
kind whatsoever will be Inserted In
our columns until they are pald,tor
In advance. So please don't telephone.
Mrs. P. L, Harris gave a reception
in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Barbour of
Manitoba, Canada, at the residence of
Mrs. L. J. Dean, 3916 Calumet avenue,
and the home was beautitully decorat-
ed with cut flowers, Mrs, George W.
pas presided at the: piano.
‘Mrs. Wm, H. Washington, 529 Bow-
jen avenue, entertained last Friday
evening in honor of the Misses Jefine
and Laura Miller of Winnipeg, Canada,
‘Those present were Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Craft, Mr. and Mrs, A. Thomp-
son, Mr, and Mrs, C. S, Washington,
‘Misses Estelle Arnold, Corine Wil-
son, Edith Madden, Ethel Murphy,
Helen Jackson, Grace Thompson, Ada
Lou Mitchell, Eloise Carey, Ethel
Mitchell, Elizabeth Clark, Rena Bra-
hanan, Bertha Young, Geraldine
Hodges, Garnetta Tibbs, Maud Taylor,
Luelle Woods, Leila Stubbs, Vivian
Harsh, Hazel Mclutyro, “Drs. Harry
Garnes, U. G. Dailey. Messrs. De Witt
Curtis, Alfred Anderson, Cary B.
Lewis, Arthur Wilson, Le Count Cook,
Gordon Jackson, Ned Chestnut, R.
Brown, Louis ‘Thompson, Walter
Young, Walter Anderson, Ferd Bar-
nett, Louis Easton, Drs. Crosswatt
and Myers and Miss Katie Easton.
| Mrs. George Walker, 522. Bowen
avenue, entertained the Misses Miller
‘with a breakfast on last Sunday morn-
Ing, Those present were: Misses
‘Maud Taylor, Essie Arnold, Bertha
Young, Ada’ Lou Mitchell, Vivien
Harsh and Bloise Carey.
/_ Rev. W. I, Burr, pastor of the
Shiloh Baptist church, Columbus, O.,
is In the'clty in an endeavor to re-
cover his health. He is the guest of
his sister, Mrs. B. F. O, Zimmerman,
5749 Wentworth avenue, 2nd flat, and:
would be glad to see a few of his
many friends, -
e + at $ ah - o oe 4s " sg Seal
City Churches
aera:
At the Bethesda Baptist Church,
6th and Wabash avenue, Rev. E. T.
‘Martin, pastor, has heen engaged in a
series of revival meetings for the past
ten days. He Is belug assisted by
Rey. Crawford of Macon, Ga.
INSTITUTIONAL A. M. E, CHURCH.
No happier idea could have struck
the Methodist ministers of Chicago
than that which rosulted in the tn
terchange of pulplts last Sabbath.
In keeping with the plan, Rev. D.
P. Roberts, M.D, pastor of Bothel
Church, filled tho pulplt of the Inst
tutional Church, witlie Dr. A. J. Carey
went to Bethel
‘The sormon of Dr. Roberts was
deautiful, instructive aud well re
celved. “His theme was, “God in
Everything,” and clearly ' developed
the thought that in art, In literature
in history and in commerce God 4s in
all-and over all,
‘AL the evening service, Dr. J. R
Ramson of Kansas City, Kan,
preached a splendid sermon on the
duties and responsibilities of church
membership. Bishop II. B. Parks
made a stirring appeal and Mr. B. J.
Stovall, 6917 Wabash avenue, and Mr.
, W. Nance of 3808 South Dearborn
strect, united with the chureb, Dr.
A. D.C. Barnes led with a contribu
tion of $5 toward tho relict fund,
which was taken for the flood suffer:
ors.
‘Tomorrow Dr. Carey will preach in
the morning on “The Hidden Treas:
ure” and at evening on “The Friend
at Midnight.”
“The congregation and membership
are steadily increasing and all are en:
Joying the excellent sermons and de-
Ughtful music.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS CENTER.
Sunday afternoon, April 20, at 4
p.m, Mrs. G. L. Cone’s Center music
lass will give a spring festival con:
sisting of aster and other spring
songs. Mrs, John O'Connor will give
fa talk on birds, thelr habits, nativity
‘and other Interesting characteristics.
‘This address has received much
preparation and been given to several
woman's clubs, Ono hundred books
from the public library have been
added to the Center reading room.
GRACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
‘Whe ofcers who were elected at
the annual business meeting were in-
stalled last Sunday at the morning
Zervice. ‘The ruling elders were Mr.
J. Moore and Mr. L. Pope; the trus:
tees, Mr. MeCraig, Professor Lee, Mr.
A. G. Harris and Mfr, Neighbors. Mr.
‘ALC. Harris was also clected treas:
urer and Professor Lee financial sec:
retary.
“The different classes of the Sunday
school and the primary departments
have pledged to raise certain
amounts to be paid toward the clean-
ing of the church and will bo turned
in April 27, at whieh time there will
‘ye a special program, including the
{nstallation of the newly elected of-
ficers. Services tomorrow ary as fol
lows: Morning service, 10:45 a. m.;
Sunday school, 12:80 p. m.; Christian
Endeavor, 6:30 p. m.; Wednesday
evening prayer meeting, § p. ™.; even-
ing service, 7:45° p. m.
\
QUINN CHAPEL, A. M. E. CHURCH.
Last Sunday was a day of delight-
ful service at “Mother Quinn.” it was
the first Sunday after the close of
the protracted meetings, which re-
sulted in three hundred conversions
and accessions.
Dr. Cook, the pastor, preached an
excellent sermon from the text, “The
Lord hath done great things for us
‘whereof we are glad.”
‘The beautiful day and the increased
spiritual life of the church caused
a mammoth congregation to assemble
within old Quinn,
Both the regular choir and the gos-
pel cholr participated in the music,
‘which was very appropriate and well
rendered.
‘Phe gospel choir will remain intact
and do service at tho Wednesday and
Friday night meetings.
‘At theso meetings the new mem:
bers are being trained in the duties
of membership.
At the evening service the pastor
spoke from the text, “There is, there-
fore, now no condemnation to them
that are in Christ Jesus who walk not
after the flesh but after the spirit.”
‘The Sunday school and Endeavor held
‘very Interesting sessions.
‘The members of the Progressive
Club are now busy preparing to be
ready with $1,000 to meet the next
payment on the mortgage, which is
due the last of May. The entire
church Is urged to fall in lino.
‘Mrs, Townsend, Mrs. Lewis and
‘Mrs. Goins are enlisting the members
in the financial campaign.
‘The entire membership is yrged to
subserlbe and be ready." These
Jedies will furnish cards at each serv:
{ce for all members and friends.
‘Should any desire soliciting devices
they can secure them.
God is wonderfully blessing thie
historle old church, All persons arc
welcome, especially strangers who
way be viaitinkg the at.
ST. JOHN A, M. E, CHURCH.
Rey. R. B. Wilson, D. D,, pastor.
Sunday morning service, 10:45 a. m.
Sunday school, 1:15 p. m. Intermedi-
ate. @. B. prayer meeting, 6 p. m.
Senfor C. . prayer meeting, 7 p. m.
Bening sorvico, 8:10 p. m. Prayer
meeting Wednesday, 8 p. ™.
Following the funeral services of
Mrs. Vaughn, one of St. John’s best
women, an excellent stewardess and
most faithful worker, which took place
at the church at 10 o'clock Sunday
merning, tho usual morning service
swe held. On account of the funeral
jRey. Wilson could not fll Rev. Scott’s
pulpit and he his, as had been previ
‘ously arranged, but, will perhaps do so
Sunday, April 17.
‘The-day was well spent in divine
‘worship and gladly were the two ‘ser
‘mong delivered by Dr. Wilson re-
celved.
Many claborate entertainments and
‘concerts are now being planned and
‘given, preparatory to the $1,600 rally,
‘whieh takes place at the church ay
49 and 20, The great coming events
‘whl be given by the following pas
tors: Rev. C. C. Williams, a grand
musical entertanment at the church
‘Tuesday evening, April 22. Presid-
ing Elder Moore of the Des Moines
district gives an entertainment on the
evening of May 8. On the 13th of
May Rev. Geo, Williams and Presid-
ing Elder Frank C. Lowry of the Chi
cago aistelet will, together with the
assistance of Miss Frances ‘Terry and
Lela Simpson, produce two unique lit
tle dramas entitled “The Setting of
the Sun" and “Twilight.”
(On the two nights of the rally will
be held an interesting mock annual
conference.
‘The Allen C. B. League convention
will be held at St. Mary's Church,
52d and Dearborn strects, July 23
and 23.
LINCOLN MEMORIAL’ CONGRE-
GATIONAL.
Last Sabbath brought sadness. to
the members and friends of Lincoln
Memorial. ‘The 11. o'clock. services
were impressive, ‘many new visitors
being. in attendance, a targe propor
tion of whom remained for the funeral
Sorvlees which followed at 1 p.m.
‘The evidence of love and. apprecia
lion for the. worth of the deceased,
Mrs. C. C. Samuels, vas made mant
fest in a most appropriate and pleas
sng manner.
‘Tho ehireh was decorated with
many venitifal and costly Rowers, pre
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sented by individuals, clubs and
Jodges, ‘The ‘imisic was sweet and
comforting. Solos were sume by tho
followings Mrs. Geo. 1, Cono, Mrs,
©. B. Houston, Miss 1. ‘Maud. ‘Brown
and Mrs, S. Yerby. Brief addresses
were given by the Rev. P. W. Yorrow,
assistant superintendent of the Con:
sregational City Missionary Society,
And the pastor, Rev. E. C. Laurence,
By request an extract of the pastor's
address is here given instead of is
rogular morning sermon.
_Pinding his text in Revelations
14:12:13, and naming his subject, "The
Reward’ of the Faithful," he sald. in
Dart, Nery tenuerly and. very touce
ingly:
“Here is the patience of the saints;
here ato they ‘that Keep the com.
mandments of God and the faith of
Jesus, “And I heard a voice from
heaven saying unto me, write, blessed
are the dead that die in the Lord from
henceforth. Yea, saith the Spirit,
they may rest from their labors, and
thelr works do follow them.”
“hy experience like this, some of
our fellow creatures are ‘called to-
ethior daily. Almost every wveek and
sometimes every day we aro called
to witness oceasions of this nature;
yet ‘always with a feeling of louel-
‘ness, loss, deprivation, A loss which
cannot be estimated in dollars and
cents; a loss that is such vital part
of our very boing that when it Is
‘withdrawn, removed, the whole course
of our lives becomes disturbed. it is
‘tke, the ‘effect upon a machine that
is delng propelied by a resultant force
when one of the acting forces i sud.
denly removed, the macbine is thrown
into complete disorder. ‘Well may ve
feel like this when one of our dear
friends or loved ones is taken from
‘our midst, called 0 far as our earthly
experience is concerned, ever” from
four companionship; for when such a
friend be he or she a blood relative
or not, Is by the mysterious “experi.
nce called death removed {rom our
sido or from our ranks, we become
vivialyconselous of the fact that one
of the contributing forces, and some.
‘times the primary one, has been tak-
fen out of ur common life. * + **
Im this experience the millionaire and
the man who {o an object of charity,
‘stand alike, helpless; the scholar ike
the rustic alts and. sobs with bowed
head; the strong man like a helpless
child in distress, cries out for help,
Solace and comfort.
We have mot today to mourn the
loss of a very dear frlend, a wife, a
sister in the Inbors and faith of the
Christian “church, Without her the
home is no more; the husband is at a
loss. Lord, by thy pretence light up
the way. ‘Tho relatives and. friends
whom she loved and with whom her
Ife was so tntimately bound up, and
in whose memory and affections she
will ever live, miss her; they are de
Pressed and ‘saddened beyond. meas.
hire; thelr hearts throb and ache ‘with
2 pentup feeling to which, there ca
be no adequate expression.
‘We scand this moment in the pres
ence of a machine that hat’ been
obbed of ite motor force. We stand
before a ullding delapidated, beaten
by storm and rain and so undermined
the occupant was forced to secle bet:
ter quarters, “Here lies a temple in
ruins, robbed of {ts most precious
Jewel, more delleate. than any. mo
chine, more beautiful and precious
than any dwelling or temple of costly
stone; here lies a human body, the
mechanism of which was wrought by
a divine hand.” ‘The soul which for
years found shelter there has taken
its flight, but not until it bad devel-
oped in beauty and strength. In this
Tuined temple lived a good and true
‘woman; a faithful Christian. She felt
the prossure of the noontide heat, and
the burden of tho day. :
Mra, Samuels had & unique’ place
in the life of our-society. She had
the interest of the work at heart, and
fn @ quiet, unassuming manner went
about her’ daily task of strengthen
ing and enlarging the work of the
church. By her untiring energy, her
persistency in labor, the magnetism
of her personality, and, above all, the
strength and beauty of her character,
‘she won roany friends and workers.
‘She was not loud nor eloquent in
public prayer, but when she prayed
one could not help feeling the earnest.
noss of her petition, She was a faith:
ful wife, a devoted friend, a consistent
Christian. And no more worthy
tribute can be pai to any mortal be
ing, This, therefore, is the reward
of tho faithful: “Here is the patience
of the saints; here are they that keep
the commandments of God and the
faith of Jesus, .And I heard a voice
from Heaven saying unto me, write,
blessed are the dead that die in the
Lord from henceforth; yea, saith the
Spirit, they may rest from their Ia
bors, and their works do follow them.”
It we could now cémmuno with our
departed friend, our devoted sister,
we would say, rest, brave soul, you
have fought a’ good fight. You were
true to friends and faithful to the
divine trust.
Our slater was not sentimental and
‘spasmodic tn her devotion to God, nor
in the valuable service which she ren-
deretl to her fellow creatures. She
‘was strong and constant; we shall do
well if we develop like virtues.
Can such a noble woman be dead?
Has such a character become inactive
fand ineffective? Not if our faith in
the existence and justice of a Supreme
Being 1s well sounded; not if there Is
a corresponding reality to our out-
going hopes of finmortality; not st the
record of the apostle is faithful and
true, in which he said, “T heard a
vole from heaven saying unto me,
write, blessed aro the dead that die
in the Lora from henceforth; yea,
saith the Spirit, they may rest from
their Inbors, and thelr works do fol
low thom.”
During one of my visits to the hos:
pital, Mrs, Samuels related a new ex-
perience that she had had. She said:
“You know that Tam not senth
‘mental, but,” sald she, “I have had a
new cxperionce; it was much lke
some I used to hear the old-time folk
tell, 1 bad been feeling somowhat
discouraged, and, yes, I guess. worry-
ing just a bit, when suddenly my room
shone with a most beautiful ight, and
Theard a voice saying: ‘Fear not; do
not worry, I'l take eare of you!” I
do not know how she looked upon the
experience, whether she thought of it
as a sign that she was to be restored
to her accustomed placo in the home,
the church and the Christian com:
munity, or that God was ready to take
her to himself. I was rather im-
pressed that she had hopes of recov.
ery. But, anyway, I left the hospital
that day’ with a ‘somewhat strange
fecling and wonder—wondering if,
after all, do we get the joy and peace
out of our Christian fellowship and
service that we might have, that we
should have? Is there something
deeper and more comforting growing
out of the new birth that most of us
have not as yet experienced? If, after
all, there is not more truth in’ many
of’ the experiences which our old
mothers and fathers used to tell than
we have been wont to believe? I be-
Heve it will do us all good to raise
these or similar questions and follow
them up until we get an answer,
“That they may Test from their Ia-
ors, and their works do follow them.”
‘What. then should be the character
of our work and the kind of spirit
exhibited in its accomplishment? Up
to this point, would we be content and
happy to have our works follow us?
Not many of us, I fear. Every time
fone is called from our ranks to face
‘an unknown ‘eternity, our conscience
speaks to us with reinforced emphasis,
saying, you ean do yet better, and
you must. And we make this new
Fesolve: I will. But how soon do
we forget and slide back into the
same old rut.
May this experience, as sorrowful
as it is, serve as a means to strengttt
en us in our spiritual fight, quicken
that process of Christian development
which God through bis dear Sox has
degun in us. -
It will be diffcult to All Mrs,
Samuels’ place in the life of our
ae eae
ST. MARY'S A. M. E. CHURCH.
Services, 10:45 a, m. and 6:45 p. m,
Sunday school, 1:45 p, m. Christian
Endeavor at 6:45 p.m. Rev. J. W,
Robinson preached an inspiring ser
mon at St. Mary's last Sunday even
ing. Rey. Higgins preached at St
Mark’,
St. Mary's A. Mf. E. Chureh wil
observe thelr first anniversary Sun
day, at which time each member and
frlend Is asked to bring a liberal of
fering. Monday, April 21, a musical
under the auspices of J. J. Banks
‘Thursday, April 24, the Pastors’ At
, Socfety will give a dinner and concert
‘HOPE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH,
Located at Gist street and Loomis
boulevard. Services at 11 a. m, and
8 p.m. Sabbath school at 12:20 p.
m. C.B, at 7 p.m. Friday evening
lyceum, $ p.m. Rev. C. Lee Jofter
sou, D, D., pastor, preached a soul
stirring sermon on’ the subject, “Con
tentment,” in tho morning, and “The
Victories’ of Faith,” in the evening.
Tho choir rendered special muste
and the ©. B. prayer servieo was led
by Miss Carrie Butler. The teachers
and pupils are fully alive to tho in
creas of the school and take great in
terest in the lessons,
‘The — Bnglewood and Dunbar
Lyceums held a joint debate on the
subject of separate schools, which
‘waa very interesting to the large audi
‘ence present,
In the absence of D. W. Johnson,
the president, who is ill, irs. Buos
Bond, by request, opened the debate
in his stead by ‘reading the paper
‘which he had prepared on the sub
ject.
Mra, James Price suffered a severe
durn in trying to oxtinguish tho fir
caused by a match in the hands o
‘one of her daughters on Sunday morn
ing,
| Mine Maria Jefferson's: music clase
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER.
SATE TTT
‘will give thelr first public recital
in Hope church on Friday evoning
| april 25, 1913.
| Mrs. Bailey, 6227 Loomis boulevard,
Jcoutinues seriously fil. Her many
friends wish her a spgedy recovery
Dr. C, Lee Jefferson was in attend.
ance at the annual meeting of the
Chicago presbytery at Highland Park
on Monday.
BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH.
It was necessary to hold another
overflow service at Bethel last Sun-
day morning. ‘The main congregation
istened to an inopiring sermon by
Rey. Ransom of Kansas City. Rev.
A. J. Casey, who was to have
preached, was’ presont and gave a few
remarks, Twenty-one persons united
with the church at. this service, two
of these were converts. A sacred con:
cert by some of the best talent of the
eity was rendered to an appreciative
audience in the afternoon, Sunday
night the Criterion Club appeared in
the pulpit and rendered a program
Deftting that organization, Dr. Rob:
certs preached Sunday morning at the
Institutional Church, ‘The Sunday
school continues to attract a large
number of young people.
The Allen C. B. League was well
attended. ‘3irs, Irbine led the meet
ing and the C. E. choir enng splon
didly.
Sunday a program will be rendered
by young men. You are invited to at
tend. Plans are being considered por
taining to the cleaning and beautify:
ing of the church, and it is hoped
also to Increase the seating capacity.
THE NEAR
EASTERN QUESTION.
By Elder D. W. Forde.
We have now traced a iine o
prophecy edmprising two hundred ané
eighty-four years of actual histori
facts, Every feature of this. grea
prophecy as outlined bas met its fu!
{iment in the historical issues of the
Eastern Question.
But one point in connection wit
this grave question needs to. be
Drought out, and that is the following
predietion:
“and he (the Turkish governnient)
shall plant the tabernacles of his pal
‘aco between the seas in the glorlous
holy mountain; yet he shall cote te
his end, and nono shall help him!
Dan, 11:45.
‘According to this prediction the tim
will come when the headquarters o
the sultan will be removed from its
preseat location to some other point
in bis dominion, ‘The present capital
of the Turkish empire is at Constan
Gnople, Since therefore he ist
move, then we may expect that the
time ‘will come when the Turk will
have to leave Europe. And where will
he go? “He shall plant the taber
nacles of his palace between the seas
{in the glorious holy mountain.” ‘This
can be no other place than Jerusa
Jet, as the following scripture proves:
“Thus saith the Lord: 1 am re
turned unto Zion, and will dwell in
the midst of Jerusalem: and Jorusa
Jem shall be called a city of truth;
and the mountain of the Lord of hosts
the oly mountain.” “Zach, 8:3
‘Thus Jerusalem is called “the holy
mountain” and as: Dan, 11:43 desig
nates, does stand between the seas,
that is, the Dead Sea and the ated!
terrangan, We may therefore expect
that the ‘time will come when the
sultan will bo forced to take his de
parture from Europe, and will cross
the Bosporus into Asia.
Not only will the Turk sometime in
the future be competied to leave Bur
ope and take up his temporary abode
in Asia, but there “he shall come to
his end, and none shall help him.”
‘The language indicates that the
final dissolution of the Turkish em
pire thas been delayed on account. of
the help St has received trom other
powers, but this help will eventually
be withdrawn, and “then he shall come
to bis end.”
‘The following acts corroborate
the seriptural implleation as to Tur
key being helped:
In tho Franco-Turkish war in 1798
1801 Turkey Was hoiped by England
‘and Rusola. When Egypt. defeated
‘the Turk in the war of 183840, Eng
Jand, Russia, Austria and Prussia in
terposed on ‘behalf of the Turk. Al
the time of the Crimean war in 1853
1856, England, France and. Sardints
appeared to the support of Turkey.
In 1877-1879, Russin was again al
war with Turkey when Great Britain
interfered and checked the plans and
purposes of Russia.
‘Theso illustrations prove that Tur
Xey has been helped in the past. by
the powers of Europe as is implied In
Dan. 11:45, ‘The following quotatior
from an Armenian pamphlet on th
‘Turkish-Armenian question, publishe:
im London, further , illustrates the
point:
“We are responsible for ‘Turkey
Wo saved the Turk twleo at leas
from the doom which he richly mer
ited. The duke of Wellington sixty
years ago lamented that the Russian:
had not entered Constantinople In
1829 and brought the Ottoman empire
to an ond. We have much more rea
son to lament that it was not de
stroyed in 1858 and again in 1878. Or
doth of these oceasions we interfere:
to save ft. But for us, there woul
be no sultan on the Bosporus.”
‘Again { quote an article in the Lon
don Times, 1895, where the duke o
Argyle said:
“Tt {s not too much to say that Eng
land has twlee saved Turkey from
complete subjection since 1853. It i
largely—mainly—due to. our. actior
that sho now exists at alt as an inde
Pendent power. On both of these oc
easions we ragged the powers 0
Europe along with us-in. maintaining
the Ottoman government.”
Lord Salisbury made uso of the fo
lowing words in a speech made in th
Mansion House, November 9, 1895:
Turkey {6 in that remarkable con
dition that it has now stood for hal
a century,-mainly because the grea
powers of the world have resolveé
that for the peace of Christendom It I
necessary that the Ottoman empir
should siand. ‘They came to that con
clusion near}y half 9 century ago,
do not think they tive altered It now
The danger it the Ottoman ompir
fall would not onjy be the danger tha
‘would threaten the territories of which
that empire consists; it would be the
danger that the fire there lit should
spread to other nations, and should
involve all that is most powerful and
civilized in Europe in a dangerous and
calamitous contest, ‘That was a dan-
ger that was present to the minds of
our fathers when they resolved to
make the integrity and independence
of the Ottoman empire a matter of
European treaty, and that ie a danger
which has not passed away.”
It Is not necessary to give further
proof substantiating the evidence that
‘Turkey has received the assistance of
the powers of Europe in tho past, In
the conflicts that confront the sultan
now he may expect that he will have
to fight his own battles almost aingle-
handed, for eventually “he shall come
to his end and none shall help him,"
AT THE Y, M. C, A. HEAD-
QUARTERS.
Teen ee erence fae ee ey
boys were present at the Y. M.C. A.
meeting held in the boys’ department
of the new building on last Sunday
to hear the second lecture by Dr. 8. C.
Dickerson on “Venoreal Poril."” ‘The
lecture waa illustrated with colored
crayons on the blackboard which was
placed before tho assembly. Much
valuable information was given by Dr,
Dickerson from statistics and medical
authorities showing the alarming
morbidity among imen due to the
venereal infection. ‘The _ closing
period of the lectura was used by the
doctor in answering the numerous
questions put by the men, ‘The third
and last lecture of this interesting
series will be given at the meeting
on Sunday, April 20, at 4 p. m. The
subject of the concluding lecture Is
“Practical Eugenics.” Ar. Webb, pro-
prietor of the Webb Studio, 3519 State
street, was present at the meoting
and took a picture of tho men attend.
ing, ‘The meeting is free to men and
boys.
Ar. R. A. Townsend, who bas been
in the assocfation work in New Haven,
Conn., stopped in the elty a few days
Inst week and inspected our new
building. Mr. Townsend has accept:
ed the position of boys’ work director
in the association work at Buxton,
Jowa. Mr, F. B. De Frantz, who has
recently been employed as assistant
physical director of the Washington
association, paid the department a
visit early last week. Mr. Do Frantz
has accepted the position as physical
director at Indianapolis, Ind, Both of
the visitors were very highly pleased
with the association bullding here and
Were of the opinion that Chicago will
lead the country in association work.
‘The employment department has
been successful in placing two men
and one boy in desirable positions dur-
ing the past week. Men and boys
with desirable recommendations are
urged to enroll in this department.
No charges are made by the associa-
ion for this service.
‘The ¥. M. C. A. quartet rondored
several musical numbers in the lobby
of the SearsRoebuck ¥. M. C. A. on
Saturday evening. ‘The quartet also
sang as a prelude to a lecture given
by Dr. George Bradfield, the teacher
of our Bible class, on Thursday last,
at the Park Manor Mothodist Church.
‘Our Sunday meetings are growing
both in interest and attendance. One
hundred and sixty-one mon attended
the meeting held last Sunday. The
praiso service is enjoyed by all, A
new pinno is being used which adds
much to the Ife and spirit of the
songs.
Many of the visitors to our new
building are becoming subscribers to
the fund. Many of the old subserib-
ers, after making an inspection of the
building are leaving some remittances
on thelr pledges. Our collectors will
be glad to call upon the delinquent
subscribers for payments on_ thelr
pledges. ‘The expense of collecting
Could be reduced qui.e materially if
the subscribers would come to the
building with their payments, We
have a telephone Isted as Douglas
8620. We are in need of funds in
order that the work may be opened
up to our men-and boys. We need
the money which Was subscribed in
order that we may purchase furniture
and apparatus for our building, The
uilding is nearing completion, We
have been successful in having the
work done because of the confidence
that the board of trustees has shown
in the subscribers to the fund, We
‘would urge all of our subscribers to
make some fmmediate payment on
their pledges, 7
Read Story of Her Death.
‘When a blacksmith, named Lyon,
declared that the body of a drowned
woman, recently exhumed at Cretl,
Franco, was that of his wife, Julietto,
who deserted him two years ago, a
death certificate wae made out in her
name. Juliette, however, was very
much allvo, and, after reading tho
story in tho Petit Parisien, she wrote
‘an indignant letter to tho authoritles,
demanding to be “officlally resuscl-
tated.”
No Excitement.
‘A young man was compelled by his
father to turn farmer against his will.
Not Iiking the profession, ho went
and hanged himself, leaving this writ-
ten statement: “Farming is a most
‘Fenseless pursuit; a mere laboring in
acircle. You sow that you may reap,
and then you reap that you may sow!
Nothing ever comes of it."—Life.
Inference Obvious.
Reggle (over on a visit)—"Do you
know, old chap, I think that valgab
fellow over there insulted me?" Amer
fean Friend—"You think so? What
ld he sayz” Reggie—"Why, he sug
gested in a very rudo manner that
when I die T bequeath my head to @
collar button factory.”
Close Proximity.
May wo vonture to offer the hint
that the phrase “close proximity,”
“which seems to have acquired a cere
‘tain vogue, is slightly tautological? *
gia
‘The Statue of Liberty is 2 woman—
it ought to be her tongue Waldo
‘Benton,
HEREDITY SEEN IN THE HAIR
Some Views on the Inheritance of the
Color of the Covering of
: ‘ie Batis
| “When examined under the mlero-
scope human hair discloses two
) Kinds of pigment, and only two, a red:
dish yellow and a sepla brown. ‘Thesa
two colors are independent factors in
heredity and may occur separately or
in combination,” writes Gertrude C.
Davenport in the Independent. “The
yellow seems to be a diffuso pigment,
but the brown occurs in granules or
specks. The size und number of the
granules, as well as the intensity of
the pigment, vary in differently col-
ored hair. ‘The intensity of the ycl-
low pigment also varies 8o as to form
different shades of red, while a com:
Dination of red with brown gives some
of the more sober shades of red hair.
When the brown pigment {8 intense
{t forms black, and if red be present
in auch cases it ts completely covered.
“Red hair 8 best seen when brown
{8 absent, and when two bright, red:
hatred people marry ali thelr children
will have red hair, for there will be
no brown pigment to cover it over.
On the other hand, when a black or
very dark brown halred person of wn:
mixed origin marries another with
red lnir, none of the children will
have red hair, but if the dark haired
parent in such a union has red halt
in Bis ancestry, then hnlf of the chit
dren will have red hair. When there
{s red hair In the {mmediate ancestry
of both parents, although both may
have ‘dark hair, then a few of the
children—three-sixteent:s, in the long
run—will have red hatr.”
“In the blond-to-black series we
find that the intensity of the halt
color In the offspring does not exceed
that of the darker parent, Thus two
blond-haired parents have only blond
hatred children. ‘The parents cannot
transmit what they themselves lack
‘When one parent has flaxen har and
the other ght brown, then 50 per
cont of the children will have hair o!
8 lght brown shade. When one par
ent has dark'brown or black hair and
the other lght brown, then about hal
of the children will have dark and
half light brown hair—that Is to say
halt in population of some size. In a
family of only two children It would
be possible to have one dark and one
Nght haired child, but this would be s
very rare chance Indeed. ‘The collec
tion and Interpretation of statistics o
halr color are complicated by the fact
that the hair of the young Is frequent
ly much lighter than in adult life
while the hair of the adult, wher
mixed with gray, Is not tnfrequentls
reported as of a lighter shade than It
really possesses.”
Our Rude Language,
‘There are great differences between
the richness and poorness of words
in the different countries. Japan {9
certainly richer tn Ita worda than Eng
land, Just for example, we have more
than nine words for the word “I.” The
emperor alone calls himselt “Chin,”
and all his subjects call themselves
“Watakushi,” “Wash” “Ore,” “Boku,”
“Sessha,” “Soregushi,” "Ware," "Yo,"
eteotera, according ‘to the ‘circum
stances. The second or third person
changes as much as tho fitst person,
“1” and all tho verbs accordingly.
When I started to learn the English,
firot time, I asked my American teach
er, “What shall I call myselt. before
the emperor?” He sald “I.”
“Then what shall I say before my
parents?"
Te
“What shall I say before my mex
frlende? And before my women
friends?”
a
“I was quite astonished and sald:
“How simple, but how rude 1s the
English language!"—Yosh{o Markino
im the Atlantle Magazine.
‘ad 1abid Galaiaers ea
wuen red bair of the Titian
tint remains at least till middle ago,
correspondent points out that unt
the other day ho lad never seen
or heard of a red-haired old maid,
“L know that real red hair tn
girls and women is extremely rare
nowadays, and anthropological ex:
pérts say that the redalred race
is fast disappearing. A friend to
whom I mentioned my one and only
meeting with a red-haired spinster
there was not an old mald to be found
Whose head was crowned with the
real red halt.”
‘A member of the Royal Anthropo-
logical Institute sala: “I am inellned
to think that few if any girls with the
Titantinted hair tail to get married.
Men like them and they are quickly
married. Nowadays red halr is raro
chiefly because only when both par.
ents have red hair does the hair of
the child take on the same color. And
‘a man and woman with red sar rare
ly marry.”—London Mail,
‘Siakitiiaas: Geese ‘Sais: Wisin
Governor McDowell's new house is
about the homellest looking home in
town. ‘There {6 about the place a sort
of restfulness, an Invitation to come
in and make yourself at home and
stay awhile. It Is a big, rambling,
old fashioned house, with ‘tall pillars
and fat roof, lots of windows and a
cheerful front entrance, all suggestive
of the grand old southern mansion, the
hospitable home. \
‘After all, it Is not a cheap looking
house, for it is made of brick and oth-
or masonry, and finighed substantial.
ly, artistically, and at the same time
without pretenco of gaudiness or hint
at the gingerbread effect—it Is a
homelike place, Just the kind of a
house in which any man would feel
Derfectly at eage.—Anaconda Stand-
ard, t
Gan't Keep a Good Man Down,
‘Tho way for a young man to rise is
to Improve himeolt in every way be
can, ‘never suspecting that anybody
wishes to-hinder him. Allow me to as.
Sure you that suspicion and jealousy
never did help any man in any situa-
tion. There may sometimes bo ungen-
erous attempts to keep a young man
down; and they will succeed, too, {f
he allows his mind to bo diverted from
its true channel to brood over the at-
tempted injury, Cast about, and eee
Ae this falling ‘has not injured every
person you have ever known to fail
into it-—-Abraham Lincoln,
5
TTS
PROVES THEORY OF LAPLACE
Observations by Telescope and Speo-
troscope Give Confirmation of
‘Nebuter. Hypethesis.
Percival Lowell reports that at bis
observatory Jn Flagstaff, Ariz, rened
observations by telescope and spec-
troucope give for the first time con-
firmation of the nebular bypothesls as
set forth by Laplace a century’ and
‘more ago. ‘The subject Is too deeply
Selentific for popular discussion, but
tn general it Is known that the sup-
Position rests upon the evolution of
solar systems out of nebulae which
by some means have been net to ro-
tating, the resultant frletion and the
centripetal forces producing a central
burning sun with (at least in tho case
of our own system) attendant planets
‘evolved out of the same nebulae,
Jn recent years there have been
many very important modifications of
tho theory of Laplace, Kant and
Herschel, although they all rest on
essentially the same basis. But it Is
quite evident that any theory of the
fort! is incapable of proof. All that
‘can be clalined for any of the theorles
49 that they ‘conform (o certain taws
of nature and the phenomena whlch
aro observed, while there is no other
known hypothesis whatever which ean
{n the least explain the present condi:
tion of the untverse.
Such observations as have been
made at Flagstait on the condition of
the nebula surrounding the Pleiades
fare of great interest, but are not con-
elusive and are not pretended to be
40, All that can bo sald is that here
4s an added testimony to the accumu-
lations of more than @ century. In
these days imost astronomers ara
Prone to believd that matter (and
what matter consists of is not. well
Understood) has existed eternally in
more or less its present untversal eon-
@ition, that nebulae and — resulting
‘solar systems aro the result of accl-
dental collisions, which simply repeat
an endless conditfon of affairs.
If, as estimated, there are more than
one hundred millions of burning sun
‘and more than a billion of those
whose light has died out, tho untverso
Includes an incredible aount of ma-
teria! and {e untbinkably vast, though
tho matter in it 18 certainly’ Ilmited.
‘The human mind cannot appreciate
these figures, but it is now, as ever,
striving for a reasonable explanation
of observed phenomena, and the nebi-
lar hypothesis, as modified, comes
nearer fitting the laws of nature and
the things we see about us than any
‘other which has been offered.
Is Sleep Only a Habit?
‘That more than six hours’ sleep in
‘twenty-four is only a habit, and a bad
nabit at that, is the contention-of a
Brooklyn physician who comments on
the alleged experience of an unnamed
Harvard professor In successfully sub-
stituting a sort of trance state for tho
genuine article.
During his professional life of more
than half a century the Brooklyn doc-
tor declares that he has never slept
more than six hours a day, has never
made up for lost sleep, has gone en-
Urely without sleep for two weeke at
‘a time, continuing his labors Just the
same, with only such snatches of
sleep as he could’take while walking
or driving on the road or in the
streets while visiting his patients, He
‘holds that sleep is a function of the
‘ego or the personality rather than of
‘the brain or vody; that as a rule “one
who sleeps the most works the leaat,”
and that “for continuous work the
brain needs nutrition rather than
sleep.”
All of which may be quite true tn
the doctor's case, but bis experience
1g exceptional, if not phenomenal—
‘Boston Globe.
New Treatment for Lockjaw.
One of the most remarkable cures
ever recorded of Jockjaw is announced
by Dr. Adolph H. Urbar, of Brooklyn,
‘who tised a new method never tried
fm this country. It {8 « combination
of the recognized antitetanus serum
with subsequent subcutaneous infec:
tons of carbolic acid.
‘The case reported by Dr. Urban ts
that of a five-year-old boy, Oilver Pink.
ney. He was apparently Infected while
playing in the earth of bis yard, In
‘a silort time he developed convulsions,
‘and finally the rigidity that is usually
‘a precursor of death. Dr. Urban de-
elded to resort to herole measures,
‘The child apparently did not re-
spond for several hours; rigidity and
intense depression continued. Sud
denly, however, he began to show the
effects of the treatment, and the im-
provement was remarkably rapid.
‘The child was attacked in Septem:
ber. Now he is apparently as well as
ever.
ita ths Undead Helens.
Professor Mahaffy, who has written
criticism for more than 60. yeare, ts
fan advacate of the unsigned
Fevlow. “It you have the article siga-
4," he says, "vou Telleve the editor ot
hia responsibility and bo will admit
f bad article signed by ‘a widely
kaown person, whereas better work by
a young and starving weiter apt to
‘be thrown aside.” Ho recalls the old
ays of the Quarterly and the Buia
: burgh with the remark that “what wae
good enough to appear in the Quar.
erly was ool enough for anybody
to read.” ‘Tho drite at present le to.
Ward the signed review. ‘The dln:
burgh, under its new editor, publishss
signed articles, and within a month
the Manchester Guardian has gono
to the extreme of publishing the tat.
tials of the writers of thelr teviows
of the variety theaters, though the re-
views are £0 short that four of thom
make only haifa column.
Liberality.
“Lam not fn the habit of boasting,”
avers the landlady. of the boardicg
Rouse, “but I think you will agree
with me that T always give sou all's
Title mere than you ask for.”
“Yer,” aculesees the Star Boarder,
who always pays a day in advance.
"You are rlght—qulte right, Mrs. Har.
andegge! IPrinstanee, you have given
me 16 chicken necks, 11 backs and six
nearlyfrosh eggs more than T asked
for in the laat two weeks.”
‘Then vgreat gobs of gloom settied
down over the table'while the phono-
raph In the patlor’ began playing
iWalting {or the Robert & Leer"
vote. GRE : A
spy ) « "4
meget, ae cig :
ser te genetic - ayy !
= oe | ~s 4 7
2 nde Ne cs : :
|
f
MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC
“All Passes, Art Alone Endures’’
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America's Foremost Dramatic Soprano.
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DE KOVEN THOMPSON.
Composer of International Fame.
Thompson-Hyram at Bethel. 1 lobe. Will give
An unusual treat is in store for | compositions. a:
the music loving people of Chicago | Burton-Hyram, |
Monday evening. April 21, at Bethel} aucen of the
Chureh, 30th and Dearborn streets, at | twelve number
Which time De Koven Thompson, | with the compo
Whose fame as a composer of high | program will b
class compositions has encircled the! p.m, Admissio
a
JOTTINGS THEATRICAL AND | shows a night ;
OTcwioe {ones a might
At one time Boston was considered
to be the musical center of the United
States, but for the past four or five
years Chicago, with her accustomed
“1 Will,” wrested that honor from her.
Here are to be found artists and com-
posers with reputations world wide.
‘The Negro plays no small part in the
Tausical world today, it being univer-
sally admitted that the only true
American music is that composed by
the Negro. Among the many con:
certs and recitals scheduled for the
near future, none is attracting more
attention or is looked forward to with
Keener delight than the one at Bethel
A.M. E. Church Monday evening,
April 21, at which time De Koyen
‘Thompson, one of our greatest high
class composers, will give the music
loving public an opportunity to hear
an entire program of his own selec-
tions, He will be assisted by Mme.
Marle Burton-Hyram, the acknowl.
edged song queen of the race. This
fs the first time in Chicago that a
composer has given an entire evening
to his own works, and from the enor-
mous advance sale of tickets the
standing room only sign will be an
early feature,
The Grand.
‘There are times when the managers
of that pretty little playhouse, The
Grand, wish they had built a theater
as large as the Auditorinm, and this
‘week happens to be one of them. Two
VIOLIN RECITAL
Given by.
HARRISON EMANUEL
Direction of Prank P. Mandy
TNBODORE TAYLOR, Accompanist
HIMBALL HALL, Wabash Ave, & Jecksoo Bou .
‘Monday Evening, April 21, 1913, a 8:18
ve ADMISSION 25 CENTS
TICKETS ON SALE AT
ania & Waite’ 30m: and Beate street:
‘Panlxener’s News Agency, 31st and State treet,
ae ang
slobe. will give a recital of his own
compositions, assisted by Mme, Marie
Burton-iyram, the acknowledged song
aucen of the’ race, who will sing
twelve numbers by Mr. ‘Thompson,
with the composer at the piano, The
program will begin promptly at $:30
bm, Admission 25 cents.
shows a night are not nearly enough
to accommodate the vast crowds who
nightly gather to see the international
favorites, Matt Marshall and Andrew
Tribble, ‘as comedians they have no
Peer, and the audiences are convulsed
from the moment they appear until
the curtain goes down on their clever
act. “Troubles of Sambo and Dinah”
is the title of their skit, but if those
in the audience had troubles on their
‘minds before they entered they quick:
ly vanished before these inimitable
fun makers. ‘There has been many
schoolroom acts but none with the
freshness and vim of the one present
ed by George Beach and bis admirable
company. Laddie Hale won merited
applause by his playing on the violin,
‘cello and saxaphone, Luckie and
Yoast, in the “Jealous Lovers,” hand:
ed each other a few clever ones and
made us think our own domestic trou
bles were blissful dreams. And as a
fitting finale the wonderful Abdallabs,
six tumbling flends and whirlwind
acrobats, were presented. All in all
it was the best bill that The Grand
has presented in some time.
Wee eee
This popular little playhouse as
usual had a bill that nightly pleased
the large audience. ‘The Patterson
Trio were the headliners and made
good. Mr. Patterson's violin playing
Was excellent. Letepha, a Spanish
maiden, sang “Santiago” and danced
her way into the hearts of the audi
ence. Stafford and Leggett had a
good song and dance act, while George
Richardson, the man with but one
leg, sang and danced cleverly. The
pictures were above the average,
‘The Dixie Chorus.
A rather unusual entertainment is
being presented this week at the Oak-
land Music Hall, 40th street and Cot-
tage Grove avenue, by a company of
high class musicians, entitled “The
Epic of the Negro.” It is intended to
picture the Negro trom the early
ae any hit
stages in Africa to the present time,
songs, costumes, scenery, etc, being
added to heighten the effect. A con-
cert program included such chorus
numbers as “Comrades in Arms,” the
sextet from “Luela,” ete. was ren-
dered to an appreciative’ audience.
Mr. Coleman delivered with telling ef-
fect his famous oration on the race
problem, ‘The engagement will close
Saturday evening. You will miss a
treat if you do not attend.
NOTED TENOR BANQUETED.
(Special to The Chicago Defender.)
Calgary, Alberta, April 17,—Mr
George R. Garner, Jr a noted tenor
soloist of Chicago, U. S. A. was
royally entertained last night by his
manager, Wallace Graham, at Bream
er Lodge. Twenty-five guests assem
bled at the request of Mr. Graham to
celebrate Mr. Garner, Jr's, twenty
first birthday. Among tho guests o
color present from the United States
were Miss Nannfe C, Burden and Mr
Dennys, of Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. C.
Dixon Elmwood, Ohio; Messrs. Shaver
of Weatherford, Texas, and Hann o'
Cineinuati, Ohio, Mr. Garner's sister
Miss Marian B, Garner, his. accom
panist, was 280 present.
Mr. Garner's voice has attracted
much attention here and throughout
the Dominion, and his return here is
looked forward to with keen interest
Mr. Garner, Jr, has toured Canada
under the sole ‘direction of Wallacc
Graham of Winnipeg, and Mr, Graham
says of him: “Really, Mr. Garnet
is one of my best attractions, and
as an artist never fails to please ot
or of the platform.”
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES.
HERE AND THERE.
The Fleur de Lis Art Club met at
the home of Mrs, E. V. Caldwell last
‘Thursday, 3753 Prairie avenue, after
which lunebeon was served. ‘The next
meeting will be at Mrs. H, Fumbank’s,
‘The Volunteer Workers’ Charity
Club met at the home of Mrs. Mary
Webster, 6420 Vincennes avenue, It
was regular sewing day. Each one
seemed to be busy with thimble and
needle. ‘The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs, Fisher, 3540 Prairie
avenue,
THE NONPAREIL CLUB.
‘The Nonpareil Club entertained its
friends at a surprise party given in
honor of one of its members, Mr.
Joseph Jennings, who is leaving the
city for Minneapolis, Thursday even:
ing, April 10, at 3567 Rhodes avenue,
A lively crowd, which filled the house,
was present and everyone left at a
late hour declaring that they had
spent a most enjoyable time. N. Jack-
son, president; B. Dawson, secretary.
THE CHRYSANTHEMUM WHIST
cus,
‘The Chrysanthemum Whist Club
met Thursday afternoon at Mrs. Mary
Jackson's home, 3556 Forest avenue,
from 2 to 6 o'clock. After the meet
ing luncheon was served, ‘The club
adjourned to meet at the home of Mrs
Leona Barner, 3524 Forest avenue,
April 17. ‘The president expects
every member to be present,
THE TYREE CIRCLE.
The Tyree Circle was’ entertained
by Mrs, Hill ‘Thursday evening, April
10, at the residence of Mrs. Agues
Anderson, 3711 Dearborn street. Miss
Willtams ‘was « visitor and expressed
her pleasure in meeting the circle.
The members will meet in their regu-
Jar sewing session April 17, with thelr
president, Mrs. Washington, 3144
Forest avenue.
UNION CHARITY CLUB.
‘The Chicago Union Charity club
met at the home of Miss Clara Brown,
3635 State street, Thursday, Aprit 10.
Owing to the fact of the president
having such a bad cold she was un-
able to meet with the club and Mrs.
Livingston, vice president, presided.
The club was well attended, and an
excellent program was rendered. Po-
tato salad with minced meat sand-
wiches, spiced cake and tea was
served. A rising vote of thanks was
given to the hostess. ‘The next meet-
ing Will be April 24, at the home of
Mrs, Johnson, 5137 ‘Dearborn street.
MRS. 'B. CHANDLER, Pres.
THE PEERLESS CLUB,
| Mr. Raymond C, Green, 4443 Lang-
‘ley avenue, entertained the Peerless
Club at thelr regular meeting Friday
‘evening, April 11, Arrangements
were made for their sixth formal an-
niversary party, which is to be held
Tuesday evening, May 20. President
Ganaway appointed the arrangement
committee, which consists of the fol-
lowing: Mr, Howard. Bazil, chair.
man; Mr. Raymond C, Green and Mr.
Harry Greenlee. ‘The initiation of
Mr. John Jeffrey of the Orchid Whist
Club was also held at this meeting.
‘The next meeting is to be at the rest-
dence of the president, Mr. George
Ganaway, 5818 Lafayette avenue.
PARAGRAPHS WITH
POINTS.
By Waldo L. Batson. *
‘Why is it that Uncle Jerry doesn’t
‘come to church any more?
colt %,,thepreucher preached such
‘good sermons that he couldn't sleep.
| What is your son going to do when
he gets out of college?
He's going to try and get some am-
bition,
Wislaininn the Wislenation..
‘The chemico-physical explanation of
the universe goes but a little way.
‘These are the tools of the creative
process, but they are not that process,
nor its prime cause. Start the flame
of Iife going, and tho rest may be ex-
plained In terms of chemistry; start
the human body developing, and phys:
fological processes explain its growth;
but why it becomes a man and not a
monkey—what explains that?—John
Burroughs, in the Atlantic,
WAPPENINGS IN, 1.
‘NG Cmnnsse
An Unscared Westerner Breaks New York’s Ice
Luekless Youth Gets a Licking for “Oh, Pipe!”
Prosecutor in Automobile, “Tags” Fleeing Near
Girl’s Love Song *on Stage Starts Small Riot
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER:
HAPPEN
TG Cit
An Unscared Westerner
Seep rane
Pee
Flee
IN Gh thin tec Gee coup cies
blew into town not long ago from
the west. His home town fsn't 80 big
that its people have forgotton how to
be kindly and courteous. ‘They're not
too busy to be polite.
“So I'm used to being treated as
though 1 were a white male with no
visible shackles,” sald Mr, Thompson.
“Foolish of mo, of course, but when
one of these five-rooms-and-a-bath New
Yorkers with a forehead so narrow
you could sharpen a lead penell with
it, makes slgus and allusions as
though I were an escaped convict I'm
apt to pass rapidly into hysteria.
For three, weeks he told snippish
‘onice boys ail about bis own private
business. The other day he went to
an office to do a favor for tts manager.
A friend, tar away in Wisconsin, had
‘asked him to do so. He told the office
doy all about It, and gave his name
and his friend's ame, and some of the
particulars of the Kind act he had
planned. ‘Then ho waited, After a
Jong time the buzzer sounded.
“So 1 went to the private office,”
sald James Thompson, free and ub:
seared Westerner. “At a whale of s
LS Aaa Re, Chl Pulles Seige
Rose tried for half an hour the
other morning to get three witnesses
and the defendant in a disturbing-the-
peace case to give him a definition of
the slang expression “Ob, pipe.” Upon
4 possible definition hung the gullt or
tanocence of Ray Perry. He had been
arrested upon the complaint of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Daniels, No. 615 Ceres
avenue, and Miss Viola Robinson was
Subpoenaed as a witness.
“What did Perry say to you that
caused the fight, later, between him
and your husband?” asked the court
of Mrs, Daniels,
“oh, pipe!” indignantly replied the
witness. “He was riding by on his
wheel, and when he saw me seated
upon the porch, he called to 2 chum
across the street, ‘Oh, pipe,” pointing
in my direction.”
"What did he mean by that?” press-
ed tho court,
“L don't koow, sir,” replied the wit-
ness.
Neither did Miss Robinson know.
Daniels was equally ignorant of the
meaning of the expression,
Perry admitted using the slang, add-
ing that he “didn't mean nuthin’
, BBS
eee aN)
ge gon.
— BF
SST BS PRIA
ras RON
eS
So
poetenaporis, soe wana tt
game of "peebawayy" with Ualver
sity aquare for a playground, Prose
eutor Frank P. Baker was “it,” and
Charles Hamilton (colored), twenty-
six years old, 725 Hadley street, did
ls Bert to hep trom belog "tagaed"
Persons who were passing Univer-
sity equare eariy the oiber afternoen
looked with amazement at an sphar
ently demented negro who raced hith-
er and thither, seeming trying to
oop up with ay automobite that ture
ea and roversod and cousterturned
IWcleted around the park. ‘The neero
Was Hamilton, and the man in the au-
Tomobllo was Prosecutor Baten, ta the
role of a policeman,
Dare ccesuasin the epoeanh oe
ford swayed in the spotlight ox
the stage of the Folly theater the
other afternoon end engagingly sang:
“Come and love me, for. it's so good.
No one could ever do like you could
Do I lke it? Well, I should;
For it’s so goody, goody good.”
She expected only the usual applause
Instead there was a small-sized riot,
@ forcible ejection, two flying squad
rons, a police patrol, and a badly
scared singer and chorus.
It all happened because a dashing
youth decided to accept Mise Olllc's
‘smiling invitation, taking it for the
real thing because she had beamed
on him, The young woman fted in ter
ror as be climbed on the stage and
walked towards her. She and the cho
rus girls locked themselves in their
@ressing rooms, while the herole co:
medians faced the bold Lotharlo, Man.
ager Shutt came dasbing in and from
hhis six feet two inches reached down
‘and firmly selzed the intruder. With
out ceremony he dragged him up the
aislo and to the door.
No Trouble at All.
‘The Urbanite (visiting the subur-
banite—A mile and a half to the sta-
ton! Great Caesar! How can you
| make a train after a heavy snow.
storm?
‘The Suburbanite (smilingly)—Eas-
fly, my boy; the train {s sure to be an
hour late!—Puck.
A Great Convenience,
“Miss Wombat is the most popular
suburban belle I know.” ‘
“Sho is only girl in her suburb who
keeps tho car schedules posted in the
parlor."
j |
} wee
Sage a
: eS
agents?
— ——
big desk clean across the room I saw
a Iittle, flabby guy sitting. He never
looked up at all. Just went on looking
down his nose and scratching away
with bis pen. And me thero to do
him a good turn, mind you! After
mebbe two minutes, while I could feel
the steam rising in the guage, he
grunts at me. Never looks up. Just
grunts,
“{ didn’t understand you,’ I said.
““Whadda yuh want?’ says he, real
sharp. ‘Speak quick. I'm very
‘busy. Fe
“And all the‘time he didn't look up.
So I Just hollered a little low holler,
‘and went over there to that flabby,
ttle man and put my hand on the
back of his industrious litle head and
shoved his {ntelligent little nose down
down against the blotter. And then
T wont away. But I didn't get any
eal satisfaction out of it. I know
from the way that sincere little cuss
looked at me as I backed off that he
fe just a regular New Yorker. He
‘didn't know that ho was a doggoned
{mpudent, cold blooded little pup. He
probably ‘thinks that he waa assault-
ed by a dangerous mantac.
“And may be I would bo considered
a manine by the class ot New Yorkers
to which this alleged business man
‘belongs. But how such people man-
age to make a living, and pass them-
selves off as real human beings, 1s
beyond my understanding. In do
know, though, that they would nover
‘get away with that kind of stuff out
west where real red blood flows
| through the veins of the people.”
lk Wee : &
Sagi SX fe
Ree
AEE, SSB)
Nat <0 Gan
— ROSE ) (
RP GaSe y
LFF FALD
by tt. Te wae shown that after Perry
‘had ridden by he was recalled by Dan-
iels, who demanded an apology. There
‘was an argument and then a fight,
during which Perry was struck in the
eye, a monkey-wrench was used on hls
neck, a brick was bounced off his
head, and finally his wheel was thrown
on top of him, after he had been
Knocked down,
“I haven't a dictionary on slang,”
said the court. “I'm at a loss to know
what the expression: ‘Oh, pipe’ means.
Inasmuch a3 none of the witnesses
can throw any light upon its meaning
and a none can show that the de
fendant meant anything disrespectful
by it, I'm forced to acquit the young
‘Tan, especially in view of the rough
treatment he received at the hands of
Daniels."
it Ginally dawned to some of the
Spectators that the man in the ma-
chine was trying to catch the negro,
and they joiued In the chase._ Caught
between a crowd ot 30 men and wom-
en and the anan in the auto, Hamilton
gave up.
“Ah Jes' foun’ a doliah, and ah run
Uke the debbil when two White men
tried to tako ft away from me,” was
the way Hamilton explained his
plight,
Prosecutor Raker was passing Wab:
ash street ou Meridian when Hamill
ton ran out and soine one shouted
“Stop thief.” ‘Trafie OMeer Dan Ha-
ley at Meridian and Ohio streets de-
serted his corner to join in the ebase.
Hamilton soon outdistanced all hls
pursuers except Baker. The prosecu-
tor oneo overtook the fugitive, but as
he was deciding upon what to do with
his prisoner the negro again ran. At
University square the prosecutor was
the winner In the game of . “peel
away.”
Hamilton fs charged with loitering,
and an investigation will be made.
G 5 a,
ey |] ee
hy! tS
ENGR GRTIN
Ce ae \
ae
gallantly at some distance. A crowd
from downstairs joined in, the gal-
lery emptied quickly at the prospect
show was stopped and the curtain
squardon was called, started back
into the theater, only to find the
show was over. Some one said they
oe Se er et Sea ae
Ee cad
“Don't, you think it must be danger-
ous for ‘the people who worship the
sun?"
“How do you mean?”
“I should {magine such a worship
would involve a number of heat pros-
trations. |
Tax eta
“Do you belleve the story now going
the rounds to the effect that a razor
strop foretell the weather?”
“Sure. Always when I used to seo
dad coming with his razor strop I
knew a storm was impending.”
HOTEL DALE“
Located in the heart of the most beautiful seashore resort in the
world with all modern improvements. Send for booklets.
E. W. DALE, Owner.
| Short Orders All Day
| Rogers’ Resturant
Caterers to the Elite
Select Meats.
All Meals 25. Table D'Hote 4 to 8 p. m.
Ala Carte Lunch, 11:30 to 2 p.m.
Breakfast, 7 a.m. to 10a. m.
21E. 33rd Street, near t stetton CHICAGO
Open from 7 a. m, to 10 p. m.
Lincoln State Savings Bank
UNDER STATE SUPERVISION.
6 East 3ist St., N. E. Cor. State St. |
CHICAGO, ILL
‘TELEPHONES: Douslas 986—Auto. 57-220
CAPITAL, $200,000.00 SURPLUS, $20,000.00
Je anomr een es= >, Commercial Banking
ij Watts cams II Savings and Checking
EE i ‘Accounts
: : = te i Poreign Exchange
[i oe fg. | Safety Deposit Vaults
(| ae ae | Mortgages and Bonds,
iP, Palen 3% ‘
ieee) B Interest on Savings —
fel i oO Deposits !
is I = } vie ' Your Patronage Solicited
RS | eet (eee Seg Us
Se eS ee
This. Registering Home Bank FREE poe i coremeaee
toour Savings Bepositors; wil start ent, Continental & Com=
You saving and keep you at it. A mercial National Bank of
avings Account is the first stepto Ay x
wealth. Open one with us. cago, HI. ry
ee RS pr
BUY THE CHICAGO DEFENDER AT ALL “L” STATIONS.
Preachers with Odd Names,
‘At Canterbury a Partridge preach-
ed, at Peterborough a Pheasant, at
Ripon a Swann, at St. Albans a Gos-
Ung, while at Lincoln a Bullock was
Ustened to, no doubt with great at-
tention and profit. At least a few of
the present members of the Anglican
episcopate can not assert that they
are “neither fish, flesh nor fowl,” for
‘We find among our bishops in various
parts of the world a Henn, a Part-
ridge, @ Peacock, a Woodcock, a Pol-
Jock ‘and Roich—Church ‘Family
‘Newspaper.
Artistic Pottery.
English and American pottery show-
ing the silver deposit work is very
pretty. This is newer than the de-
posit on glass, which has lost its pop-
ularity because of ite fragility. An in-
valid would appreciate one of the pot
tery tea sets, which is so ingeniously
fitted together that it takes up only
8 few inches on the tray. The English
were is either black, white or dark
Brown in color, while some of the
American ware is beautifully shaded
in tones of brown,
[a
Loyalty 18 one of the most import
ant essentials to business success.
‘We place this ahead of brains, ability
‘or experience. While these are not
‘only important, but absolutely neces-
sary to secure the greatest success in
‘one’s chosen work, yet without loyalty
of the absolutely dependable kind the
employe’s chance is greatly mini-
mized.
Uncle Snooks Puzzled.
“What puzzles me," said Unclo
Bnooks, as he looked up from a book
‘he was consulting, “is this. If a man
4s standing on the side of a bill or
Mountain, how fs he to settle in his
mind whether he is on an acclivity
or a declivity? According to my dic-
tlonary here, the former is “a slope
up,’ and the latter ‘a slope down.’ I've
never yet seen a slope up that didn’t
slope down.
Hard Work Called For.
One of the popular song demonstra.
tors was making more racket than
usual the other day in one of the bis
stores, his voice reaching far beyond
its usual Imits, “A sales woman in
another department, seeing one of her
customers wince at the terrible vocal
noise, explained: “You see he got here
a little late this morning and has to
sing loud to catch up.”
ea Oa a nlne.
The first umbrella seen in America
was the property of a Baltimore man,
Who made his first appearance in pub-
Ue carrying the article March 5, 1770.
‘The contrivance excited much’ com-
ment and ridicule, and for years tho
use of the umbrella as a protection
against rain was considered offemt
nate.
First American Flag.
‘The first American fag of the pres.
ent stars and stripes pattern was
hoisted over Ft. Schuyler, then a mill
tary post on the site of the present
Village of Rome, Oneida county, New
York. At that time the flag had only
thirteen stars, but the stripes were
‘the same in aurnber as now, thirteen
Removing Stains.
Paint stalns are easily removed
when they are fresh, but they are not
generally discovered until they are
dried. ‘To remove wet paint trom
white fabric-wash it with soap and
water and then boil it with kerosene
in the water. The rub the stain be:
tween the hands with soap and hot
Water. By this time the stain should
be gone. Rinse in several waters,
Feminine Ambition Rebuked,
‘The instinctive masculine attitude
toward feminine ambition is some
times manifest In early years, ‘Three-
yearold Richard was observed In the
barnyard one day, following with g0-
Meitous attention the movements of a
hen who was trying to crow. Finally
he inquired kindly, though with ovl-
dent disapproval: “Is anyfing the mat-
ter wif you?”
Exempted from Taxation.
For reasons of public policy the law
exempts from taxation churches and
church property, cemeteries, schoo}
and college property, bulldings used
for educational, literary, scientific ot
charitable purposes and property own
ed by a city, county, stato or the
United States,
Good Reason, Too.
“Miss Mary," inquired the clergy
man, “havo you seriously considered
the great question of life?” “Well, you
see, sir,” Mary roplicd, _ blushing,
“none of the young men has asked
mo yet.”
Miss Cayenne's Advice,
“What shall'T say if Mr, Binkton
acks mo to marry him?" asked the
young woman. “Don’t bother about
Studying what you will say,” replled
Miss Cayenne. “Rehearso ‘an effort
to look surprised.”
Not for That Reason.
“Why is it that so few people heed
the warning about kissing boing an
unsanitary practice?” “L suppose it
1s because so few people do It fot
thelr health."—Baltimore American.
Appreciation Coming,
“You'll never realize your husband's
true value until he has gone,” coun-
seled Mrs, Goodman. “I leuow ft," ro
plied Mrs. Nagg. “His lite ts ine
sured.""—Cincinnati Enquirer.
bisa saw Raise: cai iia
‘Mrs. Mater—“I wonder what makes
that dog so afraid of me? He always
acts as if he thought I was going to
Kilt him.” Little Daughter—"T dare
say he's seen you spankin’ me.”
Theory.
“How do you supposo Stoggins ever
came to write me such an elaborately
sarcastic letter about so slight a mat-
ter?” “Very possibly,” replicd Miss
Cayenne, “ho has just employed a
new stenographer and is trying to
show off.” :
Modern Isaiahs,
‘There are few twenticth century
Isalahs. Nowadays, when the Lord
asks, “Whom shall 1'send?” men don't
say, “Here am I, send me’—they send
thelr wives.—Woltman.
Church and Other Affairs of Note—
Personal.
By Turner Tandy.
[Special to The Chicago Defender.]
Toledo, Ohio, April 18—The Church Aid Society of the Third Baptist Church served supper at the home of Mrs. Mary Taylor Tuesday evening.
Mr. D. W. Saterfield, who has been employed at the W. L. Milner store for the last seven and a half years, and who has done the checking in the dining room for the last year, was promoted to head stock-keeper in the drug department the first of this month.
Mr. G. D. McCoglin has been recently called to the railway mail service and is at present running from Cleveland to Chicago.
Detective Edward F. Harris was among those detailed by the city officials to flood duty at Dayton, Ohio. It is reported that he, with other police officers and members of the fire department sent from here, saved over one thousand persons.
The Taxi Club will give a dancing party Tuesday evening, April 22, at People's hall, 1309 Washington street.
People's hall, 1929 washington street.
We notice that a good deal has been said about Canton street in the daily papers, it being called the "murder district" here of late, and that a good many houses have been condemned.
We also notice that one of the leading churches has sent a letter to the city council endorsing the plan of condemning property in this district. Now, while we believe in law and order, we believe that the people make a mistake in endorsing such a plan, as it would seem that the worst people in town are among our people, which is not so. Those of the race that make the most trouble are all out-of-town people that come here, the police should drive out of town. Anyone that don't believe this can find out by asking any member of the city police department or any pastor that has had a mission on Canton street. It was stated in a morning newspaper that all of our four leading churches started from Canton street, which is denied by some of the oldest members of the Warren A. M. E. and the Third Baptist churches. To prove that Canton street is not as bad as it is painted to be I will speak of two years' experience on Adams street, where I formerly ran a shoe shining stand, one of the most popular streets in the city. There was a gang of about thirty white men who hung out in a pool room just across from the court house and used dope and from whom I could have bought almost anything I wanted for almost nothing they had of using language to young ladies who passed. They also played craps on the court house lawn. I also wish to speak of the east side Hungarian settlement, where it is nothing for them to shoot or cut each other, but their houses are not condemned and there is very little said about such affairs in the daily papers. I believe if we had a committee of first class citizens to go to the mayor and thank him for his assistance, having Detective Harris promoted from the ranks and ask him, with Director Mooney, who, I understand, helped to have Mr. Harris promoted, to give us one or two policemen of color, respectable men like Mr. King Deskman at Lagrange police station and like Detective Harris, they would do so, as they could keep an eye on the undesirable members of the race who come here better than white officers. While it is only a matter of time until Canton street will be built up with Miss Fanny Anderson and Mrs. Guy and Mrs. Lewis of Detroit were the guests of Mrs. M. E. Author last week. Mrs. Author entertained a number of young people in honor of her sister last Thursday.
SPARKS FROM THE RAIL
Winston's Spicy Gossip of Men and Events in the Railroad World.
Brother Samuel Laforce, 3221 Wabash avenue, is now on cafe parlor car 164 on the southwestern division between Kansas City, Mo., and Minneapolis, Minn., in service of the Chicago Great Western Railroad.
The full crew bill is to come up at Springfield, Ill., April 16. We all wonder if it will pass in the state of Illinois.
Mr. William Dodd of Chicago made his exit April 13 at 11 p. m. for his post on parlor car cafe 160 on the southwestern division in service of the Chicago Great Western Railroad.
The Chicago Defender is $1.50 per year in advance.
Mr. Walter Fraigier is holding a position as train or chair car porter in service of the Chicago and Alton Railroad.
In the last three weeks there have been two changes in train porters on the Chicago Great Western Railroad: Messrs. Samuel Thompson, D. Bonds. Mr. T. M. Smiley succeeds Mr. D. Bonds.
Mr. Pilsay M. Miller, 4718 Dearborn street, is holding a position as train porter in service of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.
Mr. Caswell Reid, 316 West 119th street, New York City, is in the Pullman service over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to Chicago.
Mr. John Chambers is in the service of the Alton R. R. as train or chair car porter.
Mr. Joseph W. Glasgow, 3805 Wabash avenue, our old faithful friend and reader of The Chicago Defender, is still on the job in Pullman service over the Pere Marquette R. R. to Grand Rapids, Mich.
Messrs. Bert Gordon and Lewis Taylor, the faithful servants of the Chicago Great Western R. R., are still on cafer parlor car 163 between Chicago and Dubuque, Iowa, except Sundays.
American View.
"So you don't approve of those London suffragettes?" "I don't know much about them," replied Miss Cayenne; "but I can't help feeling that a woman who can't subduce a few men without the use of dynamite is something of a failure."—Washington Star,
YOUTH WHO KILLED FATHER IS FREED
Coroner's Jury Exonerates Boy
Who Saved Sister.
WAS TROUBLED HOME
Hearing Parent Yell "I'll Kill You," Youngater Grabbed Rifle and Let Fly-Victim Not a Drinking Man; Just Hot Tempered.
Chicago—Charles Scheibler rushed upon his fifteen-year-old daughter the other day with a butcher knife because the girl would not stop laughing. Scheibler's son, Peter, shot and killed his father. Afterward Peter called a policeman and gave himself up.
At the coroner's inquest, held several hours after the tragedy, the boy was exonerated for the shooting.
Witnesses testified the boy's father continually scolded members of the family and found fault with everything they did. Frequently, it was Mrs. Scheibler and the children were forced to flee from their home to escape his wrath.
The Scheibler home is at 8506 South Fairfield avenue. It has been a troubled household of late. The father, a house painter, has been idle. The mother has been intermittently ill—she was in bed when the shooting occurred. Peter has had only a few old jobs. Fifteen-year-old Helma has been the "little mother," doing the housework and caring for nine-year-old Martha and four-year-old Marie. The younger son, Louis, has been working downtown.
Trouble started at breakfast. The cakes that Helma made had not quite the same quality as her mother's.
In a rage Scheibler arose. No witness remembers to have heard just what he shouted. All agree that he snatched a butcher knife from the table. The children ran. Martha and Marle were near the outside door and they went out. Helma ran instinctively to the pantry. Peter instinctively ran after her to shield her. They slammed the door and braced it.
"Then I heard him yell 'Till kill you—I'll kill you!' said Peter. "And somehow I seemed to know he meant it. He was raving at the door, pounding and shoving; we couldn't hold it. I grabbed the rifle and pointed it at him through the crack as it was widening. I thought it would bring him to his senses. But it just made him wilder. He rushed right at the barrel—and I shot."
That was the story. Helma said the same thing. The other children agreed on the facts of the breakfast
A man is running into a door. He is holding a stick and appears to be in a defensive stance. There are three other men standing behind him, looking at him.
"H. Rushed Right at the Barrel—and I Shot."
quarrel, and told of the butcher knife. Mrs. Scheibler told of the words she had heard spoken, of the sudden scraping of chairs, the slamming of the door, the screams of the children.
"My son is telling the truth," said Mrs. Scheibler. "My husband had a terrible temper. He would fly into a rage over the least little thing. He tried to kill me about a year ago—actually shot at me, but missed, and then cooled down. He wasn't a drinking man, just hot tempered. Once he was arrested for cutting a woman with a pair of scissors because she criticized his work."
SCENE WAS TOO REALISTIC
Victim of Hazing on Stage Sues the Playwright—Used Clippers on His Hair.
Columbus, Ind—Too much realism has caused trouble for Roy W. Emig of this city. Bert Kocher, who took the part of the whitecapper in Emig's play, "Scalplock of Stony Lonesome," has sued Emig for $100 damages. In the play, which was produced here, Kocher had the role of a Brown county whitecapper. After a bunch of make-believe Indiana university students had tied his hands and feet they "hazed" him. To make the scene more realistic they used clippers on his hair. Kocher fitted a suit in Justice Kinney's court asking damages. He says the hair cutting gave him a cold, and that he was humiliated in the sight of his friends.
Cow Raises Brood of Pigs
Rouzerville, Pa.—On the Benjamin Shockey farm are three little pigs which some time ago adopted a cow as their foster mother. They were quickly favored by the cow and allowed to draw their sustenance regularly. Now that the pigs have grown up they manifest so much attachment for the cow that the owner is compelled to keep them in separate yards. Whenever the pigs can manage to do so they escape and race for the cow for more nourishment.
CAN IS PLACED ON
THIS CLEVER HOUND
Winsted, Conn.—Friends of Eugene McCaskey have placed the "no attance" bar on his dachund whenever he goes to their homes for an evening at cards, because the canine has been taught to watch the floor and seats about a table while a game is in progress. Not only will he pick up a coin or card which finds its way to the floor and carry it to his master, but the dachund watches players who are in the habit of concealing a card between their legs or on a seat beneath their legs for future playing.
One of Mr. McCaskey's friends was bitten in the leg after concealing a card, hence the edict. The dog has other sporting activities. When his
A
Was Bitten in the Leg.
master goes fishing along the shore of a lake, he will grab up the pole and the hob disappears in the water and run along with it until the fish is on land.
SQUALOR IN BABY FARMS
California County Health Officer Finds Twenty "Homes" Dealing in Nameless Children.
Los Angeles, Cal.—Twenty "baby farms," where profits are coloned out of nameless little lives, have been found operating just outside the city limits of Los Angeles, by Dr. E. O. Sawyer, county health officer, who has demanded immediate action on the part of the board of supervisors.
These institutions, said Dr. Sawyer, are conducted for profit by persons who have no interest in the children, and were removed from the city to escape municipal regulation. They harbor mostly foundlings and the babies of persons who would rather hide their parenthood.
"I found babies kept in the most repulsive squail," said Dr. Sawyer.
"To make profits out of the small sums paid as 'board' some of the proprietors of baby homes kept the children in a half starved and half clothed condition. Insanitary conditions exist in every case."
Each of the "farms" harbors from three to sixty bables. Dr. Sawyer said that a county ordinance providing strict regulations was necessary to protect not only the children in the homes, but also to protect the health of the community.
"OOH, LA, LA, LA," SMACK!!
Judge Glives Prisoner $1 and Freedom and Receives Resounding Kiss From Happy Peddler.
Aurora, ill.—Another blow at the dignity of the bench was dealt the other day.
It was struck when an Aurora justice of the peace, tempering justice with mercy, was kissed in open court by a man he had dismissed. The resounding smack upon the justice's cheek was delivered before anyone could interfere and after that everyone was too startled to do so.
Frank de Cook, arrested for peddling without a license, was the man who introduced the European method of expressing gratitude into an American court. He had gold Police Magistrate Thomas Barlow such an affecting hard luck story that the justice not only dismissed the charges against him, but called him to the bench and gave him one dollar.
Then came the kiss.
The justice refused to say whether he considered it in the light of a bribe.
He'd Behead All Brewers
Philadelphia. You could get complete prohibition if you did the same as the Chinese do in stopping the opium traffic. They behead farmers who persist in growing opium." This was the plan proposed by the Rev. David S. Spencer in an address before a Methodist conference in this city.
Law Affects Divorced Couples.
Chicago — Judge Kavanaugh has ruled that divorced persons could not legally marry again in Illinois within a year, whether the divorce was obtained in Illinois or in another state. The decision may affect the status of a large number of remarried couples.
Duel Over Tin.
Munich — A waitress was instantly killed when two of them fought a revolver duel for the possession of a $2.50 tip left by a hotel guest.
Enterprising Citizens:
Pueblo, Colo.—Enterprising citizens gilded several hundred of the new buffalo nickels and passed them off as five dollars gold pieces.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ICY BOND SAVES 2 FROZEN TOGETHER
Hands Clasped, Men Drift Senseless to Beach
SEEMED TO BE DEAD
C. L. Boecklin and Joseph Frana,
After Being Capsized Mile From
Shore in Lake Pistakeh, Are
Pulled From Water.
Gray's Lake, Ill.-The lives of two
men were saved at Lake Pistakeh
during the last cold spell of the past
winter, because their bodies froze to
together. A mile or more from the
shore of the lake, where they were
duck hunting, the open boat capszed.
Stretching out their arms to
each other across the boat bottom the
men clasped hands.
Then, while they lost consciousness
in the bitter cold, ice formed over their
hands and arms so that they could
not drop from the boat. Thus they
drifted.
One of them was Charles Lawrence
Boecklin of the firm of Boecklin Brothers,
commercial artists, 417 North
Dearborn street, Chicago. The other
was Joseph Frana, whose home is on
the shore of the lake.
Herman Matheson, proprietor of a hotel bearing his name at the lake shore, was walking along the shore with Jacob Larsen, a boat builder. Larson saw the upturned row boat. "That's queer," he said. "There's something fastened to the boat."
In a few minutes the boat came nearer, drifting fast.
"It's a man," exclaimed Larson. "It's two men," said Mathesen.
They ran to a near-by boothouse and set forth in another row boat. It was with difficulty, after the capsized boat had been towed ashore, that the frozen bodies were released from the boat bottom.
"It seemed certain that both men were dead," said Mathesen afterward. "The parts of their body that had not been submerged were covered with ice. Their heads were great cakes of ice that formed from the roots of their hair. The splashing water had frozen almost as it fell on them."
The victims were taken to the
The victims were taken to the Mathesen hotel, where physicians
They Drifted Near the Shores.
worked on them four hours before consciousness was restored. There were no symptoms of drowning. But the men were almost frozen to death.
Becklin and Frana set forth after luncheon to hunt ducks. A sudden squall arose on the lake and the little craft became unmanageable and cap-sized.
GIRL TIED TO HORNS OF COW
Manitoba Farmer Arrested on Cruelty Charge — Victim's Clothing Torn From Body.
Winnipeg, Man.—Manitoba police recently went to Newdale, Man., a farming district seventy miles northwest of here, and arrested Peter G. Hanson of Erickson, eighteen miles out of town, for a case of cruelty almost unheard of. Failing to secure return of his attentions from Maggie Warenski, he caught the girl while she was driving the cows home and tied her to a cow's horns. The animal was stamped at the same time by Hanson, and it dragged the young woman through the woods until it finally shook its burden off. The girl's clothing was torn from her body and she was dangerously injured.
Dead Body Kills Man
Frederickstown, Pa—Charles O. Craft, while waiting for a train near Pittsburgh, was struck by the dead body of an Italian track walker, who met Instant death when hit by a fast express. The Italian's body was hurled through the air with great force and struck Craft in the stomach. He was taken to a hospital, where he died of internal injuries without regaining consciousness.
Lepless Man Cause Riot
Cincinnati. — A one-legged man and a man who had no legs at all fought in a saloon and attracted such a large crowd that it became necessary to turn in a riot call, to which 42 policemen responded. It developed that the fight started when the one-legged man tried to sell to the less fortunate a pair of artificial limbs and the latter balked at the price.
Shipped Whisky In Coffins
Fort Smith, Ark.-The Federal grand jury has returned an indictment against L. S. Billings, an undertaker in Muskogee, Okla., charging that he attempted to ship three coffins filled with whisky into eastern
BRONX GOAT BA-A-ED WAY INTO SUBWAY
BRONX GOAT BA-A-ED WAY INTO SUBWAY
Also Got Mixed Up With a Policeman and Was Finally
Looked Up.
New York—This goat must have heard of the early shopping movement. He lives in the Bronx and started downtown at four o'clock the other morning. He was the regulation "billy ba-a-ah" with the horns of plenty and the whiskers of Kris Kringle. He "ploped" the big windows, browsed on the cans and butted small dogs till he reached the subway entrance at One Hundred and Forty-ninth street. Into the subway he tumbled at Patrolman Heitner of the Tremont avenue station espied him.
The policeman gave a yell and dived after the bleating goat. Bill beat him to the foot of the stairs, landing there.
2014
Ran Under the Table and Holisted it. in a heap. John Murphy, the ticket taker, said shoo to him, but the goat got by him and was about to plunge in front of local train when Murphy grabbed him. Heitner tried to lead the goat out of the subway, but found he had to push him. Billy was playful when the surface was reached and tried to butt the policeman off the curb. There was not a chance to lead him back so Heitner sent in a call for the patrol wagon. Arriving at the Tremont station Billy beaed at Lieutenant Curtin. Curtin made for the intruder with gun and blackjack and Billy beat it into the reserve room, where Policeman Matt Jones, Con Brown and Joe Pickett were having a wee bit. The goat ran under the table and holisted it, throwing hot coffee over Pickett and spreading apple pie over the other two. The goat being a prisoner they couldn't assault him so they had to grin and bear it until Heitner finally led him to the stable.
HOG AND WEASEL FRIENDS
Little Animal | Kills Farmer's Chickens for Big "Affinity"—Also Scratches Pig's Back.
Lawrenceburg, Ind. — John W. Probst, justice of the peace, discovered a queer animal friendship between a large Chester White hog and a big weasel. They had been feasting on chickens for several days from Probst's poultry yard. Probst had missed about fifty of his choice chickens, and after a vigilant watch he discovered the hog catching the chickens and saw the weasel come through a hole under the barn floor. The little animal would cut the throats of the chickens and suck the blood after which the hog would devour the body and then hide the feathers in the mud in the hog pen. After eating three chickens the hog lay down in the sun and the weasel got busy and began scratching the back of the hog, much to the delight of both animals. Armed with a pitchfork Probst killed the weasel, but was attacked by the hog and knocked down. After a hard fight Probst escaped from the pen. After the death of the weasel the hog refused to eat and continued to grunt and squail day and night until Probst had to sell it to a butcher. Probst sold the hog for $18 and the weasel for $2. He valued the chickens these "affinities" destroyed at $50.
FISH STORY FROM ARKANSAS
Fishermen on Maddox Bay Drag In Carload of Fish In Single Haul,
Little Rock, Ark—A party of fishermen made one drag in a deep hole in Maddox bay, on Col. L. G. Murphy's place, near Indiana bay, in Monroe county, and brought out 40,000 pounds of buffalo fish. The fish were taken to Clarendon by boat and by wagons and loaded into a car for northern markets. The car was leased and the fish were piled in loose, filling it up.
The seine used was 900 feet long and thirty-five feet deep. In making the haul one end of the seine was tied to tree, while the rest was laid in folds on a floating platform, which was pulled by men in a skiff. The seine was played out in a wide circle, and the other end was brought back. The men pulled mightily until the tremendous load of fish was landed.
It required three days' work to empty the seine. The fish were what is known as bullheads or lake buffalo.
Smoke Million Cigars Daily.
Chicago.—Chicagoans smoke 1,000,000 cigars a day, which is equal to one and one third cigars a day for each adult male in the city, and exceeds the number smoked in any other city in the Union. Chicagoans spend more than $25,000,000 annually for cigars. Chicago tobaccists have $10,000,000 invested in the industry. These figures were obtained by investigators of the Chicago Association of Commerce.
It had been suggested that birds habitually make use of storms in traveling from one part of their range to another. It is pointed out that if a bird cannot find shelter it must be more comfortable on the wing than on the ground during a storm, because in the fiercest gale it files in a moving medium, like a swimmer in a strongly flowing river—Harper's Weekly.
God's Designs.
I cannot believe that the creator made man to leave him in an endless struggle with the intellectual miseries that surround us. I am ignorant of his designs, but I cannot cease to believe in them because I cannot fathom them, and I had rather mistrust my own capacity than his justice—De Tocqueville.
According to the Scriptures
According to the Scriptures.
Charles Hastings of Ashburnham,
England wrote to the Lord Jesus, with the explanation that
he is the rightful owner of all lands,
according to the Bible, which is the
first book of laws.
Mrs. Youngbride.
"I don't believe the story, do you?" "What story?" "About Mrs. Youngbride. They say she went into a butcher's shop the other day, and seeing a side of spareribs on the counter, she remarked: 'Why, I don't know you kept xylophones here.'"
Hard to Understand
"I don't see what makes my wife play solitaire." "It does seem rather trivial amusement." "Not only that, but it affords her no possible excuse to stop the game and ask 'What's trumps?'"
"I see Portuguese cowboys have been fighting with smugglers." I thought all the cowboys in the world are working for moving picture outfits.
Calm Deliberation.
It isn't well to be too slow about ma-ing friends else they may grow a healthy dislike before their love has been encouraged.
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The Story Always Prompts Great Curiosity
"How in the world a gas range can cook meat, vegetables, potatoes, rolls and a pudding, all at once, with one but fire burning"—many simply can't understand it until they see it with their own eyes.
It just naturally acquired this name because it is really so Compoundal best features in the 0000 ranges we have tested.
Our Testing Laboratory is a very interesting institution. It occupies a large building. In it we test every new appliance—as fast as the Patent Offices here and abroad announce their appearance.
These tests enable us to lift out the things that represent real progress. And thus we can ours to best judges in the world of range quality.
Thus it's easy for us to specify how a perfect range must be built. This we do
The Peoples Gas Lig
Peoples Gas
for us to specify how a your address for catalogue to not be built. This we do Range Department.
The Peoples Gas Light & Coke Company
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Cowboys.
It takes the fairest of the young, and touches each of them with change and loss. The skin, once so soft that even the lover was half fearful in touching it, stiffens its texture, and the transparent veil, through which soft lights and tender colors played, hides impenetrably those hoverings and vanishings of mood. The undulations of the cheek drop with care. All the gracious perfection is reduced. Collier's Weekly.
New Thought Bare
A new thought is a very rare thing, and it would be a magnificent creature to catch. The only things I can think of that one would really call "new thoughts" would be certain celebrated jokes, a certain scientific discoveries and a few less frequent cases of a really original argument used in an old controversy.—G. K. Chesterton.
Not on the Map.
The only place where one can live cheaply is Utopia; and the confounded atlas makers still refuse to put that happy region on the maps.—Providence Journal.
Open the Door, Anyway.
"Many a time when a man thinks opportunity is knocking at his door, it is only the cat, wanting to get in." But he makes a big mistake if, on account of this suspicion, he does not open it.
A New York jokesmith has written a new libretto for one of Verdl's operas. The next we know some surefire sharp from Tinpan Alley will be tinkering up the music.
Some men are just handy enough to take the sting of defeat and fashion it into a spur that drives them on to success.
She's a Bear.
Emily (at prom)—"I wonder if Phil expects me to dance the turkey trot with him?" Dorritt—"I don't see why.
I heard him call you a bear a minute ago."—Wisconsin Sphinx.
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Curiosity
Yet it is true and the process is a simple one—once you understand the workings of the range.
This range—the one that makes this gas come in possible—has become famous here in Chicago under the name we gave it, namely,
e" Gas Range
in ordering our "Composite" Ranges for each succeeding year.
We order them of ten different makers—the ten leading stove manufacturers of the world.
The plan gives us an assignment of over fifty different shapes from which our patrons can make selections.
Every purchaser of a "Composite" gets a thoroughly up-to-date, scientifically constructed cooking appliance—the very best that money will build.
Johnsons Randolph 457, or mail us youraddress for enclosure to Composite Range Department.
at Coke Company
is Building
Historic Sketch of the Island of Hayti
Its People, Customs, Organizations and Government. Hayti is an Indian word meaning "Mountainous Country." Aborigines were copper colored with smooth black hair waved about their shoulders. Spaniards invaded the island shortly after its discovery by Columbus and treated inhabitants cruelly. Try to enslave them. They fought stubbornly but were finally overpowered. Gold was the object.
After marriage a man expects to
Please send all news to Alice Smith, live in a woman, to live well—
217 Sixth avenue, or phone 1012 L. Waldo Bastien
W.G. Dykewer
Third Installment.
The French Republic became uneasy about the power and influence which Toussaint L'Ouverture was welding in the Dominican island. Bonaparte, who was at that time first Counsel of France, sent an expedition of 25,000 men to check and subdue L'Ouverture. The would-be freemen made a desperate and courageous light but after the loss of about 5,000 men they were overpowered by the superior skill and equipment of the French soldiers. Toussaint himself was captured, chained, carried to France and thrown into prison, where he died. This man, though untrained, was a military genius; so successful was he in quieting the Spanish that the French government made him Convention General of brigade and later, chief of the army of San Domingo.
Shortly after Toussaint was made chief of the forces on the island he cleared it of all Spanish and English interference, driving them from the island. His next step was to aim at complete independence. That step was prematurely provoked by the attempt on the part of Bonaparte to re-establish slavery on the island. And although L'Ouverture was defeated by the French, the cause for which he gave his life triumphed.
Before leaving the island, L'Ouverture gave utterance to this prophey: "In overthrowing me they have brought down the trunk of the tree of liberty, but it will spring out again because its roots are deeply planted." After ten months of shameful imprisonment at Fort de Joux in April, 1803, L'Ouverture died.
One year after the utterance of the above mentioned prophecy it was fulfilled. Slavery was re-established, and a revolt followed which resulted in the complete overflow of the French authority upon the island. Jean Jaques Dessalines was made general in chief of the rebel forces. Soon General Le Clerc, the commander of the French forces, died of yellow fever. The French army was so ravished by the epidemic that shortly after they lost Fort Vertiere they evacuated the Haytian territory, leaving the revolutionist in complete control. And op, the first day of Janu-
RIVERSIDE AND LA GRANGE
"What Is What" and "Who Is Who"
In These Progressive Suburbs.
By Edwin H. Green.
Lagrange, Ill., April 13.—There were services at both churches last Sunday and they were well attended. At the Second Baptist church Miss Jessie Tuller, formerly of Terre Haute, Ind., now living in Chicago, gave a short talk, while Miss Elsie Hammons presided at the piano. The Building Fund Club held its regular monthly meeting Friday night at the church, and Mrs. Richard Gainer, the president, made a short talk to the captains on their line of work, in which they are to raise as much money as they can by the second Sunday in October, our next rally day.
We are glad to know that Rev. Cobb is able to be out again.
There was a good attendance at the Sunday Club last Sunday, and a good program rendered.
Rev. Cobb of the M. E. church preached his first missionary sermon
Thursday, April 10, was the date of the mock wedding. It was witnessed by a large audience, and the class of juveniles, instructed by Mrs. Wm. Robert, the mother of the class. The church was beautifully decorated and Miss Elsie Hamman played the wedding march; then entered the maids to have things ready. Miss Marie Currey was the bride, Fred Williams the groom, Leroy Currey best man, and Addie Hammay the matron of honor, Briddesmaids were Lorane Cobb, Mildred Smith, Lillian Crawford, Mattie May Brown. Masters Henry Payne, Waverly Currey, Paul Hunt and Malach Currey as pages. The bride was given away by her father, Mr. Carol Smith. Charlina Sims was the mother. Flower girls were Berdett and Emma Greenhowl, Amella Anderson and Lillian Currey. Ribbons girl, Dorothy Hammond and Magnolia Payne. Preacher, Lindsay Sims; his wife, Dorothy Cobb. Charles Turner, the Sheeervy boys, Herbert Anderson, Lonzo Currey and Bernard Sims, messenger boys. A short program was rendered. The most attractive feature of the evening was the live doll, little Winona McFarland. She was concealed behind the portiers until after the wedding, and then presented to the audience. Pink and white lights were used to add to the beauty of the doll. There were prizes given to those selling the most tickets. Miss Flaura Cousins, first prize; Winona McFarland, second prize; Lorane Cobb, third. Mr. Richard has returned to his home in Hinndale from Mobile, Ala.
Mr. Richard has returned to his home in Hinsdale from Mobile, Ala.
Mr. E. H. Green has accepted a position in Chicago.
Miss Jessie Tealler was visiting her sisters, the Misses Mary and Agnes Hill, last Sunday.
By W. C. DeWendt.
Apple, Customs, Organizations and at Hayti is an Indian word meanaintainin Country." Aborigines are colored with smooth black hair at their shoulders. Spaniards in island shortly after its discovery and treated inhabitants cruelenslave them. They fought stubwere finally overpowered. Gold object.
ary, 1804, the islanders proclaimed their independence. On the same day Dessalines was nominated governor general for life. Six months later he was proclaimed emperor of the Hayti independence. But in October, 1806, he was assassinated on his way to Port Rogue.
Another dry of independence was Henry Dry Christopher. He was nominated President by the assembly at Port au Prince. Christopher declined the nomination for the reason, as he said, the constitution did not offer him enough personal power and authority. The Senate then elected Alexander Petion. Upon this Christopher declared civil war. And after making two unsuccessful attacks upon Port au Prince he withdrew to the northern part of the island. Alexander Petion died in March, 1818.
Jean Pierre Boyer was elected to succeed Petion. Boyer became ruler of the whole island. France then recognized the independence of the Negro Republic by paying an indemnity of ninety million francs, stipulate for the colonist. Boyer manfully guided the ship of state for twenty-five years. Then followed in rapid succession several less conspicuous rulers. One important event took place during the office of Charles Herard; in the year 1843 the eastern section of the island became independent and proclaimed its right to exist as the Republic of Santo Domingo.
After the death of Reich Toulouque was proclaimed Emperor, with the title of Faustin the first, his family line still survives in the island. After the death of Reich in 1857, Fable Jeffrard was elected President. The Republic made considerable gain under his administration. During his term of office, the courses of public instruction were more definitely arranged and successfully carried out; the regulation and development of agriculture, and the industries in general were quite marked.
The family line of Jeffrard continued in office for about a half century before the close of which the Republic experienced many upheavals, civil wars, exiles and assassinations. Tancrede August, present ruler, awaiting his fate.
(To be continued.)
MAYWOOD.
Maywood, Ill., April 18.—The Second Baptist church has formed themselves into clubs, the Men's Club and the Women's Club, to raise money for the church.
The Women's Club will give a New England dinner Thursday afternoon and evening.
Memorial services were held last Sunday afternoon in honor of Mrs. Lizzie Pointer.
Mrs. George Harrison has been visiting in Evanston, but is home now and is much better.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas of Chicago have recently bought a home on 12th avenue.
Rev. James Swanson was visiting last week in Mobile, Ala., and New Orleans, La. He is expected home next week.
THE JOLLY TWELVE.
The Jolly Twelve met for their monthly frolic at the home of Mrs. Connor McKinney, 5117 Grove avenue, Tuesday evening, April 15. The evening was one of birth and merriment. Whist, interspersed with vocal and instrumental selections prevailed. A very humorous letter was received from Mrs. Edward Henderson, which created numerous laughs. An elaborate luncheon was served at the stroke of 12, which was very soothing to the inner man. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. C. McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. S. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Parker, Mr. Robers, Mrs. Chas, Downs, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Luckey, Mrs. Fellx Schaefer, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Foster, and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gordon.
IN THE FOX
RIVER VALLEY.
Aurora, Elgin, Batavia—The News of the Week From These Interesting Suburbs.
Aurora, Ill., April 18.—Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Radford, of Elgin, announce the birth of a little daughter, born April 6. Mrs. Radford was Miss Francis Smith of Oswego.
A number of people from Aurora
in the funeral of Mr. Newsome
in Belfast.
Mr. Sylvester Davis, of Jollet, was in Aurora Sunday.
Mr. Lloyd Hall visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hall, Sunday.
THE DIFFERENCE.
After marriage a man expects to live right; a woman, to live well.—Waldo Baston.
RHEINSOED
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Local Sports
Friday the American Giants defeated the Tacoma nine in a closely contested game by the score of 3 to 2. Dougherty and Pierce worked for the Giants. The score.
Am. Giants defeated the Tacoma nine in a closely contested game by the score of 3 to 2. Dougherty and Pierce worked for the Giants. The score:
F. A. Young.
R.H.E.
Am. Giants ..0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 -3 9 0
Tacoma ..0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 -2 5 2
Portland went down to defeat at the hands of the American Giants in a 10-inning struggle Sunday at Portland, Ore, by the score of 2 to 1.
Modern Roads.
They were spinning along the broad highway, which was lumpy; but by and by they came to a section that was-well oiled, the joy of all autoists. "Well," remarked the sensitive person in the rear seat, "they may say what they please about the perfection of the ancient Roman roads, but I am here to testify that they are not in it with the roads of modern grease."—Judge.
His Secret
The secret of a certain great man's power, it is said, was that if he gave any one his time at all he gave him for the moment the whole of it—all his attention, interest and best thought while the interview lasted. It is that sort of giving of one's whole self to the matter in hand that constitutes power. The divided mind lacks force, the straying thought weakens all mental processes. The habit of concentration is strength.
Irreverent Youth.
The curate was learning to ride a bicycle, and in a misplaced fit of zeal set off on his own. He thought he—could manage by himself, so started downhill in a somewhat wobbly manner. The road was wet and muddy, and it was not long before the machine had skidded and the curate was founderering the mud. A youthful thrill of the Storm choked the catastrophe with evident pleasure. "Here endeth the first lesson," he chorted—London Tit-Bits.
Making It Ample
Joel Chandler Harris, the author of Uncle Remus, was at his desk one night when an old-time reporter looked over and said: "Joe, how do you spell 'graphic'? With one 'f or two?' "Well," said the kindly Uncle Remus, who was too gentle to hurt even a common adjective, "if you are going to use any, Bill, I guess you might as well go the limit."
Hardly What He Wanted
He approached the clerk in a pawn shop and, looking all about him, inquired: "Keep telescopes here?" "Yes, sir," replied the clerk, "want to see some?" The man nodded and the salesman soon returned with a spyglass. "Here's the best one we have in the place." The stranger looked at the glass in disgust a moment and then he blurted: "That's a fine thing to put clothes in, isn't it? Do you take me for a burlesque actress?"
Holds Whitewash to We
Flood Wetness to Wash
The addition of a pint of glue water to four gallons of whitewash will prevent the latter rubbing off a wall
A WAY AT LAST.
The only way to get a woman's correct age is to correct it yourself.— Waldo Baston.
City of Evanston
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER.
Mr. W. W. Bolden of St. Paul, Minn., was a visitor at the Y. M. C. A. office last week.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Berry of 2022 Colfax street entertained a number of friends at tea in their beautiful home Sunday afternoon.
E. H. Ballinger our energetic deputy G. C. of K. of P. is doing good work for the order. He has organized a club in the town of Lake Forest, Ill., which will be set up as a lodge by R. E. Elliot lodge No. 38 of Evanston in the near future, and he expects to muster at least twenty-five members at the christening.
No late news from the politicians, but we expect some soon that will interest Evanstonians.
Mrs. J. F. Pope of 907 Grove street is rapidly recovering from her former illness.
Mrs. Bush of 1025 Emerson street entertained the church Aid Society last Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Cella Webb J. 146 Elmwood avenue, the widow of J. E. Webb, who has been seriously ill and is now rapidly recovering. She wishes to thank her many friends for their kindness to her during her illness.
The speakers at the A. M. E. Church Sunday will be Rev. Nora Taylor and Rev. L. A. Finley.
Mrs. Amelia Conner, 1115 Clark street, entertained the One More EK fort Club Thursday evening.
Rev. Butter from Aurora, Rev. Webb and Mr. and Mrs. Scruggs took dinner at Mrs. William's Sunday.
Mrs. Mary Lyons dined at Mrs. Webb's home Sunday and was entertained by Miss Anderson and Mr. Jones Monday evening.
Mrs. Alice Scruggs entertained Rev. Butler at dinner Sunday evening.
Mrs. Dorsey had as her guest Sunday evening, Mrs. Body, Mrs. R. Miller, Mrs. Riley, Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Malone.
The services at the Ebenazer A. M. E. Church were largely attended both morning and evening. Rev. A. N. Webb, the evangelist of Chicago.
Proof.
"Do you think," said the intellectual young woman, "that there is any truth in the theory that big creatures are better natured than small ones?" "Yes," answered the young man, "I do. Look at the difference between the Jersey mosquito and the Jersey cow."-Life.
YOUR FRIENDS.
Some men would rather be your pall bearer than your creditor.—Waldo Baston.
conference, preached Sunday morning and there were three persons united with the church. Rev. Butler of Aurora, Ill., preached to a large audience in the evening.
We are pleased to note that our beloved pastor, Rev. H. S. Graves, is improving as rapidly as might be expected.
The services at the Mt. Zion Church Sunday were largely attended and full of interest. The pastor preached at 11 a. m. and at 8 p. m. The Bible class at 12 noon was crowded. Mr. W. H. Bolden, a former superintendent of the school, who is here on a visit, had charge, and at the close made a very fine address in connection with the review of the lesson. There was one accession to the church.
A series of revival meetings are being conducted this week. The following brethren preached this week: Bros. Haggard, McCoo, Johnson and Cooper.
The services were splendid last Sunday at the Second Baptist Church. The pastor preached morning and evening to a full house. Sunday morning he begin a series of sermons on "Man." There will be four of the series. The other three will be delivered April 20, and May 4 and 11. "The Fall of Man" is the subject for April 20.
The fourth Sunday, April 27th, will be a special day. Rev. D. D. Crawford, D. D. of Atlanta, Ga., will preach at 11 a. m. Rev. S. L. M. Francis, A. M. Ph. D., will preach at 3 p. m. and the pastor at 8 p. m. All circles and clubs will be required to report. Other churches are invited to worship with us.
Our pastor, Rev. I. A. Thomas, A. M., attended the executive board meeting at Oak Park last Tuesday. Mrs. W. F. Anderson returned from Provident Hospital this week. Mrs. Ia Sherrod is convalescing rapidly at St Luke's Hospital, Chicago.
Mrs. Abner Hall of Dewey avenue and Miss Rosa Blair of Foster street are still numbered among the sick of our membership. Miss Ida Mae Myller and Mesdames Gruggsby, Gordon, and Polindexter of Olivet Baptist Church worshipped with us last Sunday.
Miss Easie Carter of Augusta, Ga., is the city visiting Mr. A. Carter and family, 1827 Jackson avenue. Mrs. J. C. Iyster was hurriedly called to North Carolina on account of the illness of her mother.
The Julia Gaston Woman's Club meet Friday evening at Mrs. Ball's, 1911 Ridge avenue. The club was organized in 1898 and has its meeting every Friday. The club will meet at Mrs. M. C. Craven's, 234 Ashland avenue, at 8 p. m. Friday evening.
The Newsboys Club formed here Monday evening, April 14, by John A. Guy, is doing good work. The object of the club is to get a larger circulation in Evanton and the northern towns for The Chicago Defender. Elmer White is secretary and Horace Graves chairman.
Her Dilemma.
Mrs. Newedw (excitedly) — "Oh, John, dear, please hurry and send off a telegram for me." Newedw—"What's the matter?" Mrs. Newedw—"Why, I'm taking a correspondence course in college. So I made I is running all over the city, telegraph them quick to find out what to do."-Boston Evening Transcript
HOW HE LIVES.
A man's business is more often a success than his life.-Waldo Baston.
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Don't be a victim of a tomorrow habit any longer. Remember that it is possible in your old age to be out of work, or to be sick for a LONG TIME before death. Also that OLD AGE knocks at every door. Is it not better for you to start now and make your rent money buy a home and have FREE RENT FOR OLD AGE.
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Call on our Mr. Thomas, 3542 Vernon Ave., between hours of 2:30 and 4 P. M., or phone Randolph 3751, or Automatic 42562, between hours of 10 and 12 and arrange for special appointment.
FRED'K H. BARTLETT & CO.
Chioage's Largest Real Estate Operators
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Don't buy property until you see my bargains. I have houses and flats of all kinds which I am selling as low as $200 to $500 cash, the balance same as rent, with liberal concessions in case of sickness. Guaranteed title with each price sold.
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