The National Forum
Saturday, August 20, 1910
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
THE NATIONAL FORUM
Library of Congress
City.
VOL. I. NO. 17.
VANITY FAIR
CONDUCTED BY
The main difference between
savage is—sav
MORE TROUBLES FOR ELKS.
Dr. Mills Issues Manifesto, Denying
Special Session and Union Pro-
ceedings, and Protesting
Everything
Just when all looked serene and every L. B. P. O. E., and his friends, even his sisters, cousins and aunts, were congratulating themselves upon the fact that the two factions of that body had united for good and all, along comes a lengthy manifesto from "Headquarters of the Improved Benevolent Order of Elks of the World, 483 Bute street, Norfolk, Va," in the form of "A Proclamation to Subordinate Lodges." After the customary greeting, Dr. Mills says, "By authority vested in me as Grand Exalted Ruler, I proclaim to all of the state officials that the proposed Special Session of the Grand Lodge that was attempted to be held in Washington, D. C, July 20-29, 1910, failed of accomplishment and after declaring there was and could be no union, the session was adjourned by me."
Dr. Mills then proceeds under seven heads to give his reasons, the essential points of which seem to be that the understanding that Dr. Mills was to be Grand Exalted Ruler after the union was not carried through; that knowledge of the $5,000 legal expense debt was withheld from the Peace Conference in Wilmington last January; that the Els' Home to be built in Richmond, Va., at a cost of $10,000 upon land to which the "Atkins following" possessed no title; that the two propositions above were unfair to that portion of Elks represented by himself; that because it was the evident desire of the "Atkins following" to either "rule or ruin" and inlined to exhibit an unbroken disposition toward the members of my Grand Lodge, I decided that it was better apart; that the fee of $5,000 to Hon Alton B. Parke for consultation to litigation before the success of New York with the White Elks or $2,500 if Judge Ralph this case should be paid by the "Atkins following" and in event of that suit being lost it might result in both bodies being driven out of the State of New York, and believing it "inadvisable to lend aid in a legal fight in New York, to which our Grand Lodge is not a party, and is in no way concerned." These are principally the reasons.
The document concludes with the following appeal:
In view of all the foregoing I now proclaim to all the subordinate lodges of the "Parent Body" or "Regular Order" of Elks that they be and remain steadfast in their duty to operate under the original charter and copyrights handed down to this Grand Lodge by B. F. Howard, Past Grand Exalted Ruler.
I further proclaim, that all lodges desiring to be free from the oppression of the heretofore "Atkins following," may freely unite with the "Regular Elks" by making application to this office on the 15th day of September, D. 1010.
Yours, fraternally.
Grand Exalted Ruler of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World.
What the result of this manifesto may be I cannot guess, but I am certain that the rank and file of both factions desire union and peace and desire it strongly. I talked with delegates and visitors to the convention from every section of the country and each and all of them said one way or another, "I am sick of contention; let us get together." From several members of the two local lodges I secured the following opinions:
Charles D. Freeman, Exalted Ruler, Columbia, 85, was the first one I found and he expressed his opinion thus: "I am sick of contention all settled. I think every member of both lodges is satisfied with the results of the joint session and pleased and satisfied with the officers elected by the delegates and conclude to dwell together in unity. I am surprised that Dr. Mills should prove so narrow, and do not think many Elks will be guided "x, him in this affair."
A general impression prevails that Dr. Mills had publicly accepted the results of the Convention here, and it is rumored that he expressed himself as being involved with the actions and actions thereof. However, we will see what we will see.
"Infantile Paralysis."
This awful disease is making havoc among the children of this city. The cause seems beyond the skill of medical science to discover, though it may be caused almost entirely by improper food and harmful methods of feeding infants. Writing in the New York Journal, Dr. Leclerc, Health Commissioner of New York City, says: "The manner in which the food is given is of the highest importance. Don't get the idea that all you have to do is put the nipple in the baby's mouth and then go away and leave it
to its bottle. This carelessness in feeding often results in dangerous harm, no matter how carefully the food is prepared.
"It is often hard to determine just what causes these sudden attacks of summer complaint, but it is usually bad milk. That is the reason that every mother should be able to taste the baby's food immediately before giving it. Milk can, under certain conditions, spoil in a very few minutes. For instance, a clap of thunder may render the milk unfit to feed to a baby.
"The vomiting, which is usually the first sign of a disturbance in the baby's digestive arrangement, is an effort of nature to get rid of the offending matter in the stomach, and is really good that if you drink it too long.
"The first thing to do, of course, is to send for a doctor. Stop all the milk feeding at a place. In place of the milk, give barley water or plain boiled water. Don't do another thing until the doctor arrives, and then be guided absolutely by what he says."
This is good sound advice, but causes only a small part of the trouble. There is a more important phase to be considered. Dr. Gilfoy, of the New York Health Department says: 'Most of the deaths of babies in hot weather are due chiefly to impure milk. Our infant mortality would be next to nothing if all the babies could be breasted.' And we see no reason why the large majority of infants should not be breasted, being fairly familiar with the arguments advanced in favor of bottle-feeding, and they point to a wrong motive, it seems to me.
The purest cow milk sweetened with cane sugar and warmed or cooked by fire is a poor substitute for the real thing, and I am sure any human baby knows that it is but base imitation, and would not accept it unless forced to do so. Besides, can milk and cane sugar at best are hard to digest when mixed in the customary milk. And that substitute this mixture, heated over a gas jet, or on a stove, for the loving warmth of a mother's heart along with many other divine essences, physical, spiritual, strong and tender which no words of mine can name?
The President and the King.
Referring to the prevailing idea as stated last week that many men look upon the man who governs as a king, so well known a man as Dr. Parkhurst seems to think we are ruled by a king when he writes: "How much and how little is the President empowered to do? Are there any definite limits set to his responsibility and authority? "This question is one that will be settled in part by discussion and in part by the course of events. As originally conceived the Government of the United States is quite in the nature of a limited monarchy—all but the name. "To those who had hrebled against royal authority in England the term 'President' was an unacceptable than 'King' or 'Militant' and to those who were sufficiently monarchical in their belief that control should be exercised by the educated few, a concentration of power in the person of one was more satisfactory than its distribution among the many."
The learned Doctor forgets that the people delegate these powers of rule and restrict their use also to defined limits. The President is not such by "Grace of God," but by votes of citizens, nor can be issue a "roval mandate."
Wicked Motion Pictures.
The puritanical and hypocritical noise made by socalled reformers against display of Johnson-Jeffries fight pictures has done some good. It has brought to notice as a reaction the display of a class of pictures that are vicious, immoral and degrading, which it has been customary to exhibit freely to whoever had a nickel and inclination to attend a picture session. The writer of Leslie's Weekly says, "I visited a regular family moving picture house where men, women and children attend. One picture presented an aged miner shot down and robbed of his gold. The thief was caught and lynched. The next a jealous woman who thought another woman was waiting for her husband in a hotel and jumped on her, beat her, tore half her clothes off and pulled out her hair. The old gentleman who found that his young bride was flirting with her step-son, and committed suicide. Here is meat for sermons and reform talk. Get busy, gentlemen."
"It Pays to Advertise."
It should be the aim of every business man to bring his business to the notice of those who are seeking quality and price in goods and service, customers of judgment, discrimination and taste. These are the customers who buy and pay fair prices promptly and willingly. It is to these people that we make our appeal, and this class that we seek as readers of "The Forum." An advertisement placed with us has the best chance for reaching this class of people.
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL
Mrs. N. G. Robinson, of 38 A O street, N. W. is visiting friends and relatives in Morefield, W. Va. Her husband, the popular torsional artist at the capitol will join her sometime this week and after a short stay at Morefield will take a political trip through the State of W. Virginia.
Imperial Potentate Jacob Wright, of Richmond, Va., was in the city Thursday last and was received by Deputy Imperial Potentate Charles D. Freeman. Mr. Wright is en route to Detroit, Mich., to attend the Imperial Council of Mystic Shriners, August 23rd. Mr. Freeman, the Deputy Imperial Potentate, expects to be present at that meeting.
Prof. Walter Dyson, who is spending some time at Culpeper is expected soon, preparatory to assuming the duties of his department at Howard University.
Mrs. Dr. L. N. Rosa is expected home
WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1910.
this week from Cincinnati where she has been for some time visiting her son and daughter.
The aged father of Mrs. Willie Lewis, of 1142 15th street, N. W., passed away in his home, Columbus, Ga. Mrs. Lewis was at his bedside during his last hours. Her many friends extend to her their heartfelt sympathy.
Mr. Hathaway, the model and clay artist of our city, returned from Baltimore this week with the death mask of Joe Gans, the "Old Master."
The Doctors Convention promises to be the biggest thing of its kind ever held here.
Attorney Taylor, who was so brutally assaulted by a gang of white ruthens some time ago, is able to be out again and is doing nicely.
Mr. M. Bashannon Crusor, architect and builder in East Deanwood, made a flying trip to New York last week on business. Those desiring homes should certainly see Mr. Crusor before investing.
J. P. Bond, proprietor of a men's furnishing store in Birmingham, Ala., was in our city for a few days this week enroute to the Business Men's League at New York. Mr. Bond is an enterprising, hustling chap and reports that the business interests among the colored men of Birmingham are being well taken care of. He advises that the spirit of cooperativeness and mutual aid among the Negroes of that city is responsible for their success in the main.
The colored people of Birmingham have just opened a bank in Alabama named the Presidential Savings Bank. Mr. Bond says the capitalization is $30,000, and quotes this as one of the evidences of progress.
Mrs. David L. Stewart gave an informal musicale and dance at her residence on last Monday night, August 15. It was well attended and a pleasant evening was reported.
NEWS ITEMS
Chas. D. Freeman, E. R. Columbia
Lodge, Writes Letter of Thanks.
Washington, D. C., Aug. 17, 1910.
Editor National Forum:
My dear Sir—I am in receipt of your communication announcing the name of the successful contest in the voting contest inaugurated by your journal, "The National Forum," for the most popular Elk. I am pleased to know that such a progressive and active young man as Dr. R. L. Peyton is to receive the prize. Dr. Peyton is an Elk of good standing and has a host of friends. I desire to take advantage of this opportunity to congratulate the "Forum" on the masterly manner in which it gave the account of the Elk Convention and especially the manner in which it freed the tradehouse. I voice the sentiment of every Elk in the city when I say that your paper has done a great deal to place our order before the public in a very favorable light.
Very respectfully,
CHAS. D. FREEMAN,
Exalted Ruler,
Columbia Lodge, No. 85,
1609 4th St. S. W.
The Famous Glee Club, of Columbia Lodge, No. 85, Open for Engagements.
Those who sing music or perform upon instruments of melody are becoming sadly less. The inventor of the photograph may have added a link to the chain of civilization, but he who "tit to music" was "enemy of mankind." A pleasing reaction from the crowd for canned melody is announced by the Columbia Glee Club, an organization of young men who will study and render choral and glee music. The club is composed of the following:
First tenors — Cary Robinson, I. E. Wilson, Verdi Fisher. Second tenors — Charles Lee, Jesse Madden. First basses — George Pope, C. S. Beale, Thomas McIntosh. Second basses — Wm. A. Clayton, Jeremiah Scott, William Jones. Louis Amber, director. D. E. Self, general manager.
A Popular Caterer.
It is a pleasure to the "Forum" to call the attention of the public to the cafe of Mr. Joshua N. Anderson, who is proprietor of the Tuskegee Lunch Room, at 626 North Capitol street, N. W. Mr. Anderson is meeting a long felt want in this locality by catering to the people, Heretofore it has been most impossible for persons to be properly served in that particular section of the city. As it is now, transients going to and coming from the Union Depot can always secure a first-class up-to-date meal well looked and elegantly presented. It would seize that every embarked man of race pride in the commencement printing office would give his patronage to this establishment and thereby avoid the embarrassment of being "Jin, Crowed" and at the same time get the same fare for less money. Give Uncle Josh a trial.
Oyster Shell Roman Roads
Many people have wondered what becomes of pins and needles and -oyster shells. The Roman settlers seem to have used them to advantage, for the streets of the ancient Verulium, by St. Albans, which is to be further excavated, are paved with oyster shells, which seem to indicate good taste and economy on the part of our predecessors—Westminster Gazette.
To Test Our Courage
Hard things are put in our way not to stop, but to call out our course and our strength—Anon.
In the Rough.
Caddle (to Jones, who has missed
his ball six times consecutively
— "Try it with the bag, sir." —
European Production of Cast
Great Britain produces 1,000.00
tons of salt it year, all Europe le
ter than 5,000.00.
THE TALE OF THE TUB
IN POLITE SOCIETY
WAY NO THERE ARE YOU IN YOUR TUB?
THE SATURDAY NIGHT WATCH
NOTICE AURORA SMITH WORK ORDER
DATAVIRS POPULATION IS ON THE INCREASE
HAVE YOU MEANS TO PROVINE MY DAUGHTER WITH A TUB YOUNG NOW?
MORE OF PROPAGATED STATUE TO PATHER OF ORDINANCE AND
AMOUNT OF PRIVILEGE ROWED SO FAR TO DEFRAY EXPENSE OF ERECTING SAME
EXPOSITION SWEPT BY FIRE
Hundred Thousand People Are Panic Stricken.
FRANTIC EFFORTS TO SCAPE FLAMES
The Loss May Be $100,000,000—Crowd of 100,000 on Grounds When the Flames Sweep Them—Two Dead, Thirty Injured.
Brussels (Special)—The white city of the "World's Fair" as the Belgians call the 1910 exposition, is now a mass of flames and smouldering ruins. A spark falling into inflammable material in the telegraph building burst up in flames, which driven by a high wind, swept rapidly in all directions. Soon the Belgian, English and French sections were destroyed. The firemen and detachments of soldiers, called quickly to the scene, found themselves buffled by the veritable fire, carrying the burning embers to all parts of the grounds.
The loss in the exposition fire is estimated at 500,000,000 francs ($100,000,000).
To the left of the main building arose the picturesque roofs and spires of "Bruexelles Kermesz," a Belgian Coney Island, with water chutes, toobgran slides and scores of side shows. This place was alive with Sunday crowds, and before they could be gotten out with any assurance of crush—the Kermesz was ablaze. The crowds became panic-strike, en, and men, women and children fought mildly to escape. The exits became choked with the struggling masses, and men used their fists to clear the pathway. Many were trumped under foot and badly injured. Soon the enormous facade tumbled in ruins. Considering the rapidity of the conflagration, the small loss of life is mervelous. So far as is known up to a late hour tonight only two are dead. The injured, as officially announced, number 30, but probably many hundreds receive minor hurts.
POLICEMEN MUITNY.
Refuse to Guard Against Strikers in Columbus, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio (Special) — Fifty-three members of the Police Department within 24 hours have rebelled against Mayor Marshall's orders to ride on street cars. The mutineers were increased by 20. All of the 20 were men employed as specialists for strike duty. Unlike the regular officers who mutinied, the 20 specialists were not suspended, but upon their refusal to board cars they were told that by that act they had removed themselves from State troops. Officers of the Fourth Regiment, four companies of which are stationed in Columbus, say they have been told to hold themselves ready for service, but at the adjutant-general's office it is denied that preparations have been made for calling out troops. Mayor Marshall called for 2,000 volunteers for police duty. He took the mantle of chief officer against the situation in which the situation has been handled, but said that if his critics were sincere they would offer to perform police duty.
SNOW-WHITE WATER.
Sea Captain Relates Seeing an Integrable Phenomenon.
Port Townsend, Wash. (Special)—In a report to the United States Hydrograph office here the statement is made of an inexplicable phenomenon that marine interests declare is without precedent. The statement is filed by Captain Samnels, of the American barkentine Aurora, on arrival from Callao, Peru. On June 17, in latitude 11 degrees south, and longitude 80 degrees west, according to the report, the vessel's course brought her into an area of snow-white water. The expanse was so large as to require no notice, and it traversed 12 miles along with the natural ocean water was sharp and distinctly defined in color, creating a mervous scene of marine beauty.
Investigation with every means available failed to show the phenomenon to be due to submarine volcanic eruption or other seismic upheavals.
Losses Money Ends Life
Kenosha. Wis. (Special!)—Trank W. Nohling, 42 years old, president of the Kenosha Mercantile Company and leader among the Social Democrats of Wisconsin, committed suicide in his office. He slashed his throat with a shoe knife, severing the jugular vein, and then taking another knife drove it deep into the wound. Mr. Nohling, which he chose to lose most recently, speculation and had betrayed others who had given him the use of their money.
MANY PEOPLE ARE HOMELESS
A Portion of the Japanese Capital Now Submerged.
Thousands of Homeless and Hundry People Sheltered in the Temples and Schoolhouses—Not Enough Boats to Convey the Sufferers to Places of Shelter—A Hotel Patronized by Foreigners Destroyed—All the Guests, However, Are Safe.
Tokio (Special).—The great floods in this city and vicinity caused by the high water in the River Sumida have caused, so far as reported, 385 deaths and 500 others are missing.
At 6 o'clock A. M. it was announced that the flood was subsiding.
The Honjo and Fukadawa wards of Tokio are submerged.
Tens of thousands of persons are homeless and starving. One of the three more important embankments guarding Tokio gave way and had the second and third dikes broken half the capital would have been submerged. The threatened embankments were guarded by troops.
Thousands of homeless persons are being sheltered in the temples and schoolhouses, at which relief stations the most deplorable sights are witnessed. The victims of the floods are wholly dependent upon public relief. Thousands more have been unable to find shelter, owing to the lack of water to convey them to place in safety, and they are exposed to the rain and hunger. Every available boat is being employed in the work of rescue and to convey food where it is most needed. The question of feeding the stricken people is causing apprehension. The vegetable and fish supplies are failing, and the stock of biscuits already is nearly exhausted. There is no fear, however, for the supply of rice. In the neighborhood of Karizawa destroyed the Mikaza Hotel. Many foreigners were stopping there, but fortunately no fatality has been reported so far.
TO PROSECUTE WARDLAWS.
Death of One of Sisters Will Not Halt Counsel for State.
Newark, N. J. (Special)—The prosecution of Mrs. Caroline B. Martin and Mrs. Snead will not be interfered with in any way by the death of Virginia O. Wardlaw, the third of the sisters indicted in connection with the mysterious death of Ocey W. M. Snead, the East Orange bathtub victim. This statement was made by Louis Hood, special counsel for the State in the Wardlaw case, when his attention was called to reports that Miss Wardlaw's death might cause the prosecution of her two sisters to be dropped. Mr. Hood said that the three sisters were jointly charged with the commission of the crime as well as aiding and abetting it, and he would not connecde that the case against Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Snead had been weakened in any way by the death of Miss Wardlaw.
MANY NEW GOVERNORS.
Washington, D. C. (Special).—At the coming fall elections more States will elect governors than ever before in the history of the Union. For the first time Oregon is to join the list of Commonwealth electing their executives in November. Heretofore the Oregon State election has been held in June.
A total of 36 governors are to be elected this fall. Thirty-two will be voted for at the general elections in November. Three States—Vermont, Maine and Arkansas—will vote for governor next month, and Georgia will elect its executive in October.
The gubernatorial contests in some of the States are of a more than ordinarily interesting character. The elections in others will be of a purely perfunctory character, the election of the Republican candidate as the candidate may be being a foregone conclusion. Socialists and Prohibitionists will have candidates for governor in a majority of the States, and in some of them they are expected to poll a considerable vote.
DREXEL RISES 6,750 FEET
American Aviator Makes a World's Altitude Record.
Lanark, Scotland (Special)—It was officially announced that J. Armstrong Drexel, the American aviator, attained a world's altitude record by rising 7,550 feet.
His barograph will be submitted to the experts of the Kew Observatory at London who will determine the accuracy of the instruments.
Drexel's flight was the sensation of the aviation meeting.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
PEDRO MONTT, PRESIDENT OF CHILI, IS DEAD
Stricken By Heart Failure on Arrival at Bremen.
HE SAW MAYOR GAYNOR SHOT
Senor Montt Had Been a Sufferer From Heart Disease and Was On His Way to German Springs for the Cure—Served Several Terms as President of Chill—a Brave Fighter and a Fine Executive—Many Years An Officer In the Chilean Navy.
London (Special).—President Pedro Montt of Chili arrived at Bremen on the steamship Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse Tuesday morning. His death occurred at 11:50 o'clock P. M. It was due to a recurrence of heart failure, following the recent attack of angina pectoris from which he suffered.
New York (Special) — President Monti left New York just a week ago after one of the most startling experiences in his career. That same morning he had seen Mayor Gaynor shot down on the deck of the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, had witnessed the struggle with James L Gallagher, the would be assassin, and had departed the Kaiser feverishly excited over the occurrences, as were most of the other passengers aboard. A sufferer from heart trouble, it is not improbable that his sudden death may in some measure be attributed to the strain of that occurrence.
Before the vessel departed President Monti gave out an interesting review, describing the shooting as he saw it, and later at sea he flashed a wireless message of sympathy to the Mayor. He arrived on August 3, after a stop in the Panama Canal Zone, where he inspected the work on the canal and pronounced it good. Arriving here he was received with the presidential salute and met by the Federal, State and city officials.
On the following Friday he left for Boston, whence he was taken on the President's yacht Mayflower to Beverly, where he and Mrs. Montt had lunchcone with the President. During his talk with his friend, Ecuador boundary dispenser came up, and asked the Chilian executive to use his influence in urging the two countries to accept the good offices of the United States toward an amicable adjustment. In consequence it is understood that President Montt cabled instruction to Washington. While in this country the ill health of President Montt was apparent. He was easily fatigued, and his old heart trouble bothered him considerably.
New York Republican Committee Recommends Sherman.
New York (Special) —Theodore Roosevelt matched strength with the "old guard" of the Republican party in New York and met decisive defeat. The Republican state committee, in session here, by a vote of 20 to 15, refused to recommend him for temporary chairman of the state convention, which meets at Saratoga on September 27. Instead, Vice-President James S. Sherman was selected. This is Colonel Roosevelt's second defeat at the hands of the "old guard," the first having been the legislator's refusal to pass the Cobb direct primary bill, although Mr. Roosevelt especially indorsed it. With his latest setback plans for harmony within the party in the state received a severe setback; and as soon as Colonel Roosevelt heard the news he issued a statement in which he enrolled himself as a progressive, so far as the New York situation goes. He and his political statement since his return, and those who saw him were convinced that he had determined to begin an open fight on the "old guard."
Woman Had Ubpraided Man for Not Living an Honest Life.
Philadelphia (Special)—In the presence of their two children, aged four and six years, Bartko Bernardskiy shot and instantly out his own brains in a lodging-house on North Franklin street, in this city, the neighbor's house, to the wife uphraiding the husband because he did not lead an honest life.
The couple came from Poland less than a year ago, and resided with Carroll Fabian in Buffalo. Mrs. Bernardskiy left her husband and came three weeks ago with the children and then wrote him, according to the neighbors, that she would again live with him if he had a better life. The husband came here Saturday from the Buffalo with $15,000 and the neighbors say, was essential where he got the money. This led to quarrels, the tragic result. The police know nothing about the man except what they were told by the neighbors.
Where The Forum Can Be Bought
KILLS WIFE AND SELF.
GAYNOR OUT IN TEN DAYS
Secondary Hemmorrhage the Only Contingency.
TO LEAVE THE HOSPITAL IN TEN DAYS.
Removal of the Bullet Does Not Concern the Surgeons at All, as They Say It Can Easily Be Done at Any Time—His Cough Is Still Trouble some.
New York (Special).—The surgeons attending Mayor Gaynor confessed to a fear of just one thing, a secondary hemorrhage that might occur along the path torn by the bullet. A secondary hemorrhage is bleeding 24 or more hours after a wound has been inflicted. In Mayor Gaynor's case it would mean that the bullet has so abrased the wall of some artery that the pulsing blood had broken through. Such a hemorrhage must be checked within a couple of minutes if death is to be averted.
Every other contingency conceivable to the alert surgical mind has been provided for. The Mayor has received injections of antitoxin to ward off tetanus, the bullet has been viewed as it lies embedded in bony tissue in the roof of the pharynx, the wound has been dressed and ascertified and the Mayor's blood tested twice a day for the gerns of septicemia or blood poisoning. Of course, such preconditioning is necessary to guard against a secondary hemorrhage, but wholly to guard against that is impossible.
That is why there is always at least one doctor on duty with the Mayor night and day. If a secondary hemorrhage were to come the doctor in the room would imply have to stanch the flow of blood with his fingers for a moment or two until ligatures could be applied.
It developed Monday that this stanching of a secondary hemorrhage was all that the surgeons had in mind now when speaking of an operation. The bullet is a simple affair with which they are concerning themselves not, at all.
One of the physicians who is attending Mayor Gaynor said that, barring unforeseen and improbable complications, Mayor Gaynor will be able to leave the hospital in two weeks. The police are engaging themselves on a theory that James J. Gallagher, the would-be assassin, may have had an acceptance. This Gallagher denies, but with a police record is under suspicion.
STEAL RAWN PAPERS.
Chicago (Special)—Detectives are in investigating a mysterious robbery at the home of Robert C. Brinkley, son-in-law of "O. G. Rawn, late president of the Monon Railway, in Winnikka. Brinkley, who is now with his family in Virginia, is custodian of Rawn's documents. Official investigation of alleged graft in car repair bills of the Illinois Central Railroad, of which Rawn was formerly a vice-president, is thought to be responsible for the ransacking of the Brinkley residence. Many valuables were passed by the thieves, but desks and drawers where the documents might be placed were ransacked.
MOUSE IN HER RAT.
Actress Badly Shocked, But Will Read
New York (Special).—The first woman to be recorded as having a real mouse in her "rat" is Miss Elizabeth Goodall, an actress. She was rehearsing in the Sewenty-first班. She was going to her app in "We Won't Go Home Till Morning" and in "at one time took off the rat and hid it in a dark corner. When she cut it on again and started to use her hatnin there was a terrible commotion. When she finally got the hat out off popped the mouse with a pin wound in its side. It was said that Miss Goodall is doing well.
Steel Cage for Baby
Bar Harbor (Special)—A steel cage on wheels, cunningly wrought by a skilled craftsman and safeguarded by locks of the most complicated design, for the morning's ride of Vinson McLean, America's $180,000,000 baby, is the latest and most startling novelty which two fond parents have taken to protect this little Crosseus against kilnapping. This steel perforated canopy, followed the intent attempt of burglars to break into the Edward Beale McLean mansion, at Bar Harbor. The McLean baby is now carefully guarded from all save his nurse and Detective Wardens, as if he were a little prisoner held as hostage.
Haunted By Dead Wife
New York (Special).—Walter Schmidt, 50 years old, killed himself by inhaling gas. Just six years ago his wife killed herself in the same manner. Since then Schmidt has been jailed. He was not a co-worker or dependent. He was found in beetly dressed, with the gas escaping from a burner which had been left turned on fully. A letter and a bank book, in which there was a balance of $125 to Schmidt's credit, were found in the room.
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SANCTORUM.
“LEST WE FORGET.”
Vague rumors and veiled hints bave
come to us of the contemplated movement
‘on the part of some of the officials high
up in one of our jnstitutions of learning
to depose certain of the colored profes:
sors, We have not been intelligently ad-
yyised along this line, therefore are not in
fa position to treat the subject by way
‘of any criticism. However, from the view
point of a generalization, it would seem
to be a safl mistake to disturb the even
tenor of the way of those, without just
‘eause, whose feet have trod the burning
sand of difficulty in the days when the
‘ions presented itself almost as « forlorn
hope. ‘These pioneers were the ones, who,
at the cost of time and labor and_per-
sonal means thrust themselves inthe
Drench and saved the day, and made it
possible for others to come after them
and erect upon the foundation they had
s0 well laid to the present. educational
structures, ‘These are the men who stood
out boldly in the thickest of the fray on
the frontier, as it were, and held - on to
the tiny strand of hope while the cause
‘of higher education for Negroes was pass:
fing through its initial and formative pe:
riod, We trust advice along this Tine is
not well foinded. We need men, great
amen, tall men, brond men who ean touch
the pulse of the powers higher up and
inform us of the heart heats toward us
as a people, Let us keep them for the
good they may yet do as well as that
which they have alzeady accomplished, in
the meantime let conservatisin be the
‘watchword, ‘Lest we forget.”
If the analysis of hoky-poky {s cor-
rect we are unable to understand how
(the files that gather upon the cones
manage to stay so long without seez-
ling to be overcome.
A new vein of coal seven miles wide
(and 65 miles tong has been found in
‘Pennsylvania, ‘The coal man will
‘make no reference to {t when he puts
jin your wfater's supply.
Before the Germans begin manufac:
[turing dirigite balloons for war pur.
Iposes, it might be well to develop one
jor two of them so that they will serve
Jtbo tess aimeult purposes of peace
Ten'or fifteen deaths among the
[comparatively few eronauts and avis
tors in the last. few months are not
ly depleting thaff ranks but showing
p alr fights as mighty dangerous
astimine,
In printing the new passenger tick
Jets to be used on airsbi lines. care
jould be taken to have It specified
Ne aecres wiviogee rinr to had
Pp earttcesars witout the aignaare
the conductor,
Gounterfest Duttermilk 1» being sold
lin rome of the drug stores in the east,
jand tae health authorities say tt bs
(very dangerous. Will It never be pos-
faible to get a good thing that the coun-
fRerfeiters can't counterfelt?
‘Sure Enough.
He—This paper says that the sight
jot rats is not atall good.
‘Bhe—Why fs it, then, that they al
Happen to pick out a woman
hen they want to frighten some
iy?
&o There!
Patlence—I see they've got a ham:
gmock now that {t 1s ‘possible to fall
of.
Patrice—Don't believe st! If u per-
cannot fall out of it, {t's not
|
Horse
Fashions
By THURDE RAYLE BRUCE
NDICRUELTY. societies, humane societies and endowed and
| A well-supported institutions for the benefit of our speechless
animal friends are abundant and these have laws galore. Yet
samy in the city of Chicago horses by the hundreds are abused, mu-
(20% A tilated and cruelly tortured on our streets.
"es In the statutes of Illinois, published in the Humane Ad-
SSCA vorate, the fortieth annual report of the Humane society,
Ce there is a clause reading that “whoever cuts the solid part
4 of the tail of any horse in the operation ‘own as docking,
or by any operation performed for the purpose of shorten-
ing the tail, and who shall cause the same to be done or assist in
doing such cutting, unless such is proved to be a benefit to the horse,
shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one
year, or by a fine of not less than $25 nor more than $100.
“Conocerning Cruelty to Animals” another clause reads, “by carry:
ing or driving, or causing to Ve carried or driven or kept, any animal in
an unnecessarily cruel manner,”
Both of these clauses fully cover docked tails, short checkreins and
curb bits, now 60 universally used.
Little attention has been paid to the cruelties of the curb bit, Tt
is an instrument of torture belonging to the dark ages, As it lies neross
the tongue of the horse it cuts cruelly and brings a horse down to heart-
broken submission, ‘The construction on the outside is sufficient to prove
its wicked torture,
‘These bits are largely used by bus drivers and society people, who
sport smart equipages. In order to look smart their horses have tails
cut 80 short: that they stand erect in the air in an atrocious manner,
shamefully disfiguring the horse. As if this was not enough, the curb bit
is used and an extra strap is brought across the nose and then the poor
animal is checked up so short that it is in misery if it moves.
According to the statutes of these societies all
these atrocities could be stopped, the offenders pun-
ished and the fines go into the treasuries of the soci-
ties,
Will some humane, Christian people interest
themselves in our noble friend, the horse, and join
the Humane society and Anticruelty society in such
riumbers that they will fore activities among the
membership,
| CRON pS, AAO TURE Ise as considered the public's needs thor-
oughly. He has done much to make things convenient for you all. You
know how easy it is to run over to the drug store to have your baggage
sent to the station; how very convenient it is to get a money order writ-
ten or cashed there; how extremely convenient it is when you have spent
your evening at home writing a letter to your sweetheart to get a stamp
from the druggist.
‘You aren't even courteous about it, ‘The man who is worn out
must rise from his seat or let his customers wait and drag his aching feet
maybe the whole length of the store to give you a stamp, for which he
receives nothing, not even “Thank you.”
Then if he is u little irritated or gruff you are hurt, but he should
not be hurt over the fact that you have given some one else. the profits
of your purchase and the druggist must live on the profits of a money
order written at 11 o'clock at night, or, worse still, a one-cent stamp!
gers, ‘Thff serves as a warning that Wwe are decades from a safe commer-
cial end of the game, and it will never be half as safe as transportation on
the carth’s surface,
We have witnessed balloon ascensions at amusement grounds and
hye seen the aeronaut descend safely in a emall parachute which would
weigh but « few pounds,
Why don't the aviators supply their planes or dirigibles with life
preservers in the shape of parachutes.
‘hese, however, would not be of much use over water and flights
over channels seem to be a recent diversion.
we should take plenty of good, refreshing sleep, and to be deprived of
thie makes one feel sort of disgrantled and unfits ane in 2 ncosure for
one’s everyday duties, no matte: whe’ ivy are,
‘The writer lives in one of the most desirable parts of Chicago, and
tay uvighbors are all right otherwise, but they will keep chickens,
“1's g0 nice to have a few fresh eggs every day,” they will tell you,
True, it is, We used to indalge in such Iuuries ourselves when we
lived in a country town, When we came to Chicago to live the hannery
"way Jett: tehind,, i
[A
;
mw a
Be
ea
hy
| Long
Hours of
Poorly
Paid Drug
Clerk
By M, HOWELL
Aviation
Accidents
on Rapid
Increase
By ANTHONY WAGNER:
Getting
Rid of
Noisy
Rooster
Laws Galore
to Protect
Dumb Animals
Let me say a word for the man thal
works from 7:00 a, m, to 11:00 p. m. every
day in the year—the druggist.
I think the druggist is the greatest
slave to the public of any business man,
Now, of course, you can’t see why, It is
very easy for a man if he knows his busi-
ness to fill a prescription, sell a patent
medicine, face powder, cold cream,. toilet
water and perfumes, But where his big-
gest trade comes in is the advertising
branch of the newspapers, telephone
checks, water bills, gas and electric light
Bille: ‘snoneyordohs express ana sastebiods
We frequently read of aviation fatali-
ties and recently the Jist of those killed is
incregsing at the rate the sport is growing,
T predict that before man can conquer
the air there will be an appalling sacrifice
not only in the number killed or injured,
but in the terrible deaths some will suffer
What could be more dreadful, while
consciousness lasts, than plunging from a
height of hundreds of feet, knowing that
mangling must result?
Count Zeppelin’s airship was disabled
on its initial passenger trip, it being, I
believe, the first to camry regular pnssen-
ig that We are decades from a safe commer-
ill never be half as safe as transportation on
on ascensions at amusement grounds and
d safely in a emall parachute which would
supply their planes or dirigibles with life
achutes.
ot be of much use over water and flights
cent diversion.
Tt seems to me keeping and raising oi
chickens should not be allowed inside the
city limits. Doubtless some one, will say,
“Oh, you crank!” Call me any old name
you like. That doesn’t disturb me in the
least.
But to be awakened about four o'clock
every morning by a great big speckled
chanticleer a few feet from my window,
with his cockadoodle-do, which proceeds
‘every few minutes until the time when I
inyself should be up, is, to say the least,
anything but enjoyable,
‘Nature as well as physicians tells us
od, refreshing sleep, and to be deprived of
lisgrantled and unfits ane in = sneesure for
#: whet wiwy are,
of the most desirable parts of Chicago, and
herwise, but they will keep chickens.
sw fresh eggs every day,” they will tell you.
indulge in such luxuries ourselves when we
en we came to Chicago to live the hennery
ee
Sa Uh)
PULPITS AND PEWS.
METROPOLITAN A. M. E,
CHURCH,
Dr, I, N, Ross, 1444 Q Street N. W.,
Pastor; E, G, Evans, 1015 Q Street,
N. W., Church Editor.
In assuming the responsibility as edi-
tor of this column for our Chureh, we do
so with full knowledge of its require.
ments and-demands, Our poliey willbe
practically the same-as that we -pursued
the two years served as editor on. one
lof our Bate weeklies for our Alma
‘Mater, and afterwards as editor-in-chief
three. "years of or Alumni Department
‘on. out college paper—a prastical and
‘conservative policy ooking forward for
the betterment of our beloved Clurch and
its institutions always,
——
Of our Sundays sehool workers, Prof,
Williams, of the M Street High School;
‘Miss C, 2, Martin: aid’ Miss Charity are
‘out of the city on yaction,
‘Sister ‘Thomas.oneof our faithful
members, was buried Jast week,
‘The Rev. Dr, Tsriiel Derrick’s funeral
was conducted at thie chureh last week
by several ministers, He was one of the
pioneers of the Baltimore Conference, and
was highly esteemed,
Rey. Dr. Ross was called away to
Galesville, Md., last week. to help’ Rev.
J. 0, Custis with his revival: meeting.
Nine souls were converted to Christ,
Our Sunday school is in an excellent
condition for this season of the year
when so many of our teachers are away;
the Primary’ Department holds up well
‘under the supervision of Mrs, A. E. Wade
leton, The combined class from the two
New Movement Bible Classes is ably
tanght by Mr.-Thompson, of ‘Tennessee,
and who is a clerk in the Census Bureau,
‘Among the several visitors at the Sun-
day school last Sunday were Professor
Honeyetit, formerly of Morris Brown Col
Jege, and Miss Julia Howard, of Atlanta,
Ga, on her way to New York to attend
the’ meeting of the Business League,
‘The morning service was spiritual and
uplifting “as usualy Rev, Di, Wateon
preached an able sermon; 355° members
owed at the communion table: nine per-
sons joined the church. ‘The night serv-
jee Was well attended—many_ strangers
Nery present, “Rev. Dr. Toss preaced
‘un able sermon; subject, “The Common
Salvation.”
On Monday evening of this week, Mr
and Mrs, James C, Bailey, of 2210" 12th
street N. AW, celebrated Heir 20th mar-
riage anniversay, which was of an ex
ceptional high order. They were attend.
fed by the same best man and bridesmaid
‘of tiventy years ayo— Mr. Charles. H.
Brooks and Mrs, Willena 3, Mozee. ‘The
wedding march was artistically played
ty Miss Eva Joinson, ‘The many’ well:
dressed guests were introduced by Miss
Catnerine Waddleton, Rev. 1. X. Ross
and family were special guests, and ex-
pressed themselves as being delighted
{ith their surroundings, » The presents
were muimerons, valuable and beautiful,
and consisted of bina, eut glass and
faney work: among. them was:a hana:
some china set presented by the official
[bourd of Metropolitan A. M, EB. Chureh
[Mr. Bailey is a member of the board,
An. illustrated lecture, “The Life of
St. Paul,” was delivered by Dr, B. B.
Watson last Tuesday ee the 16th
just; at Metropolitan A. M.'E. Church.
He was assistery by MisK- Murtha Ross,
‘Dr, Watson also aig one of Ins noted
solos; Miss Laura Lucas sang “There
Were Ninety and Nine.” ‘The lecture
‘was given to raise funds to beautify. the
Primary’ Department of the” Sunday
school,
Visit the Chase Art Company.
Quadrennially, we elect lay and minis-
terial delegates to our General Confer
ences to make Jaws to govern our pro-
gressive denomination. ‘The election of
our church delegate to the Electoral Col-
lege where the two Tay delegates are to
be elected September 7 took place We
nesday night the 10th inst, The “woods
were full of candidates.” “The first. bal-
loting gave Prof, John T. Layton, 61;
E. G. Evans, 31; Joseph H. Stewart,
Esq. 14; Mr. E, I, Scott, 10; Mr. R.
K. Washington, 7; Prof. John W. Crom:
‘well, 0. Professor Layton was elected
‘on the second hallot after ‘several of the
candidates withdrew in his favor. - Mrs.
Anna E, Waddleton was elected alter:
nate. We hiope the delegate will be elect
ed. We very heartily thank the herofe
1 for their continued loyal support;
we pledge them that we will at. least
visit the General Conference if we have
to “take up our bed and walk.” Kor
several years it has been our contention
that the proportionate mumber of minis
terial and Jay delegates: to our Genera
Conferences isnot justly. nor systemat
ieally made. Our State has thought so
too, and is still thinking so along with
several other states. Upon what hypo-
thesis, or from what logical reasoning
‘ean it be provan that four or six minis
terial delegates should go from every
conference while énly two lay are allowed
to go? In the face of the fact that the
Jnity and the “little pastors’ must. toll
together, by day and by night, to. keep
jour grand old eburch in one harmonious
revolution forward!
Whe Linpouiity ef Opens:
‘There are people who stil! complain
of the unrcality of opera, who cannot
subject. themselves to its {llusion,
And indeed the illusion of opera
breaks down if everything in it {s not
Kept at the same distance from real-
ity, In that world of musical expros-
slon we must never be suddenly low-
ered by any incongruous detail into
the ordinary world of prose. Real-
sm, the attempt to work upon the
emotions by complete illusion of real
{ty, 1s disastrous In opera, . If the
scene Is a railway station we remem-
ber at once that pcople do not sing
when they aré catching trains.
Hardly Ever,
Scene, schoolmaster's study.
Master—"Why were you late: for
carly school, Weight?”
Wright-—"Please, sir, 1 must! have
averwashed myself.”
eel tchmenea: ehtiee:
“Barker has a terrible thirst, It's
Inbertted.”
“Yes, Ml his ancestors were ab-
staincrs P
‘A Warning.
Love's young dream appears to have
met with an interruption somewhere,
judging from the following pathetic
warning “ad.” in the Auckland Herald
ot # recent date: “O, D.—No; father's
jhome—V. R.'-New Zealand Broo
Nee
ISRAEL METROPOLITAN A, M,
E, CHURCH,
Corner First and B Streets, S, W.,
Rev, R. K, Harris, Pastor; Miss A.
| Woods, Church Editress, 1106 0
| Street, NAW. /
CHURCH SERVICES.
| siday: Setool, 080 to 10.55 4, iy
ee ‘fohn Boston, Superintendent; Misa
B, Clifford, Assistant Superintendent,
Preaching, 11 A. M. Night Services,
T45 P.M
Despite the fact that the servives at
Israel A. M. E, Chuirch proceeded in. the
fustial manner, Sunday, August 14, one
could not help but notice how deeply
impressive the serviees were, Tt was th
regular monthly comrmnnton day ana
there were not as many out as are
usually on that day, Still, from the
time “Miss Georgia “Savoy, ‘inher ca:
pacity as organist, finished the opening
‘volwmntary, to which the audience hind lik
ened with rapt attention to the “Amen”
‘of the choir at the close of the blessing
fone was moved instinctively to a feeling
the sense of which could not well be
expressed in words: Rev. R, Kent Har:
ris gave the text, “The 1th verse of the
third chapter of First Timothy,” pausing
jd patiently sepenting the same as i
the usual custom, He began his. dis:
course slowly and with enphaals, and
the purity “and truth of the ‘thonght
grew upon him, he touched so eloquently
Uipon “primitive, impunitive and remu-
nerative justice” that the audience was
thrilled and electrified,
After the uswel penny collection. for
the poor, the Sacrament was adminis
tered, and every one in the congregation
who did not receive the Sacrament must
Ihave felt as they looked npon the simpie
faith of those’ who knelt around th
altar that there is something in the
Christian faith that is Divinely helpful
and uplifting to the soul. After the
Messing, the congregation exchanging
brief neighborly greetings with one an-
other, began {0 disperse, feeling certain
that the day had teen well spent.
‘The efforts to raise a certain sum
|for the improvement of the edifice are
still going on, subscriptions for the same
being received every Stinday, Among
the tmexpected was the eash subseription
of $5 from Mr, Charles) Stewart, of Bal:
timore, Md inst Sunday, which was
very gratefully. recefved,
Our very eficient choir leader has xe.
turned irom Gettysburg, Pa., and is
presence was noted with pleasnre last
Sunday by the members of the choir,
‘The excursion td Washington, Park,
August 10, proved a very: successful. one,
despite the frequent. showers during the
jday, and was attended by a great mum-
ver ‘of congenial members and friends ot
Miss Julian, Taylor, a very. encrgetic
worker in the church, is spending the
summer in Larchmont, N, ¥,
| Choir Rehearsal every Wodnesday
night, ‘The leader desires’ a full attend:
ance,
Kindly send to. the address of the
Church Editress all news items, adver.
tirements social and personal “ws. ol
our, ehureh people from Wednesday.
tg
Visit the Chase Art Company.
i
: GARDEN IN THE ORIENT.
One In Fez Where Is Heard Music
‘That Was Old When the Pyra-
mids Were New.
A garden does not necessarily mean
collection of flowers arranged more
or less symmetrically, with spaces of
lawn, shelter of trees, and paths hith
er and thither. ‘There have been gar-
dens that, beyond a terracotta jar
‘or two holding a rogebush or a flower
ing almond, have had no green thing
within thelr gates. 1 know of an
Oriental garden in Fez where white:
garmented Moors come in the cool of
the evening to sit and listen to ancient
stories that they know by heart, or to
music that was old when the pyramids
were new, or perhaps to look at a
dancing girl or two taking soft steps
while they smoke thelr narghiler; yet
that garden {s nothing more than a
series of arches upholding walls be:
yond. walls, toned a faint, mysterious
yellow that is not yellow, but white,
and yet not white, but rose. In the
middle fs a pool of water, in a stone
basin that looks blue because of the
intense sky overhead, and that shim-
mers with golden xeflectiqus from the
walls, Ina corner stands a mighty
Jar full of strange, scarlet blossoms,
and rugs of deen color and intricate
pattern lic on the sun-warmed flags.
‘There is always the fairy music of
dropping water, and wonderful shad:
ows move among the arches,
‘This place 1s a garden for all that
ft fs co huilded of man, Tke word
court will not do for it, It may be that
fa garden, as has been said of Boston,
fs less a material thing than a state
of mind, The story of the Garden of
Eden seems to,hint at something, of
the sort; and had wo all permission to
create an Eden of our own, doubtless
these would yaty as greatly ac do the
secret desires of every heart, tho in-
ner life of every soul. If, therefore, in
speaking of a garden, one pictures
something that to another may not
appear to conform strictly to the
term, what matter? If the garden
spirit is there, it will incarnate itself
for the true belfever, who is always a
ar Aaa eas
‘The Philosopher of Folly.
“The world owes you a living,” says
the Philosopher of Folly, “but it isn't
running 2 delivery wagon to save you
the trouble of carrying st home.”
wha. Boor Kin:
‘As a general thing the richer 9 man
gots the more he thinks bis kin ought
to be too proud to ask him for any-
thing.
é Never Die,
‘To live in hearta we leave behind
4s not to dle—Campbell.
‘Swarm of Worms to the Acre.
‘There are about 26,800. worms to an
acre of cultivated land. ~
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH.
Rev, J, Milton Waldron, Pastor, 1334
V Street, N, W.; W. H. Scott,
Church Editor, 1503 Pierce Place,
N.W.
ato now being pushed rapidly ahd in the
course of a week or two will be com:
pleted The iron work about the eupalo
i reciving a eont of paint and the brick
york is being changed from red_to bul
with red pencilings, When finished. its
appearance wilt be greatly improved
and beautifted. he work is being paid
for by the men of the church, Tor which
a nally was held last, Sunday,
‘The Adwtt Bible Class of Shiloh ex-
tends a cordial invitation to all men and
jvomen to join its ranks, Dr. J. M,
Waldron, oir pastor, is the teacher, and
Ms, Hiram Ball, assistant texcher, “Both
fare able students of the Bible and we
fave sure you will enjoy being with ys.
‘The class moets at 10 A. M. and is dis-
missed at 10.65. to allow its members
to visit other ehurches if they so desire,
‘he chureh rorive a long and inter
esting letter from the wife of Rev, D. E.
Murif, of Cape Town, South Africa,
Both "are members of’ Shiloh, having
gone to the Dark Continent several years
‘igo to Tabor for the Master, Tho leat
‘of both has been poor for some time, and
they were expecting to return. to Amer-
fea’ for medieal treatment, The follow-
ing is an extract from their letter:
Cape Town, South Africa,
aoly 18, 1910,
Dear Brother Waldron:
T had hoped exe this you would have
had a letter from me, but Tam writing
again because 1 feel’ that we will not
Att home thle year:
We have a Sunday school banner for
your chureh made by one of the girls
of our industrial lass, We had. intend-
ed it as a sumprise for you and your
people on our return home, tut as it
soomis “unlikely that we will be able to
leave this vear, perhaps we had hetter
send it. Tf so, then please let us know.
It is made of royal blue satin, embroid:
ered with gold silk, I hope. you will be
pleased with it, 9 0
Dear brother, it is an answerto prayer
for you to ask us to linve a rest. in
Washington. ‘There is no place in Amer-
fen’ toat I Would Tike so such to spend
Awhile, T have asked: the dear Lord
‘often to make it possible for us to do
‘80, So he lias answered my prayer.
~ Tam glad to tell you that we feel
more reconciled now than we did when
I last wrote yon, Perhaps the dear
Lord did not»want us to come this yenr,
‘and as He put it in the heart of Brother
sTordan to tell us of the great cost. to
‘bring’ us home, we are trying to see it
in that way, For ag muchas we would
ike to come for a little rest and. medi-
al treatment, and to see you all once
more, we do not want to g0 against the
Cordis wilh ta ae
My husband is not) at Cape Town at
present. He is many miles away, at a
place called Ponduland, among the Ponda
tribe of our people. I feel very anxious
abont him, “He is heen gone about a
month, and lias written me but, once,
when he stopped at Brother East's sta-
tion. His teaith ie poor and the mission
‘on which he is now is 40 full of hard:
ship and suffering. But what, must we
ot Onr poor Pondnland brothers must
hear of Jesus, and it Was been’ sneha
long time since they asked him to. try
to come to them. So I can’t say. just
how he is, One thing I do know, that
wherever he is the dear Lard sees and
“cares for him,
Tam glad to tell you that T fect
“better at this writing than T have felt
for long time, ‘Tell the good sisters
and brothers that T ean feel the healing
power of their prayers in my poor run-
own Nody. Give them our love and tell
them to Keep on praying, and by and by
the victory will be won on Target's side
| heard from Brother and Sister Fast
Hast week. ‘They were well and doing
jivell_ in their work,
(After you. read this letter, will_you
please ask the sisters and brothers’ to
[Sing for me that good old. song, “Thus
Far The Lord Has Led Me On.” It is
eM Dut Js ever new to my soul.
Yours for Christ and Africa,
| MRS, MATTIE MURFF.
|: Gheten Stare: Gibson tecenendiig the
| Brother John 8. Brannon, who is so
faithful in his work for the ehureh, wil
soon take a short yacation, Brother
Brannon also assisted as one of the
teachers in the Vacation Bible School,
liaving in charge a /elass of boys.
Miss Gladys Fearing is our organist
uring the absence of Mr. Syphax, and
hier Works is very creditable indeed,
Brother A, D. Powell is enjoying the
cool breezes at Atlantic City, He says
Tis health lias greatly improved. Though
Jabsent he did not forget to ‘send. his
contribution for the Men's Rally.
Sister Rosa Holston, who resides at
ITSL_L street N, W,, has heen quite ill,
‘and. is at present confined to her room.
‘As soon as she is able to travel she wil
eave for Detroit, Mich. Sister Holston
has made herself’ very useful in mission
work about the city and Shiloh will
miss her very much:
Effect of Wall Paper.
‘The- use of wall paper containing
designs tn vertical lines will make
fi room look both larger and higher.
Marrying Age in England.
‘Thirty-elght in every thousand Eng-
iishmen who marry are over Stty
yeors oid.
empGde DAAN Cuma,
It fs eaid that an onion cut up in a
saucer and. placed in a room will ab-
sorb the odor of fresh paint,
Prayer Book in Ostrich's Stomach,
A prayer shook was among the ar.
ticles found in the stomach of an os
ttich dissected in London,
Postman’s Aerial Flight,
In the village of Bonneville, near St,
Etienne, Franice, the local postman,
{who goes bis rounds in a-blouse and
carries an umbrella, was caught by
the gale a few days ago and blown
nearly half a mile, He came safely to
earth again, but he lost all bis letters.
Horse's Hearty’ Appetite,
A healthy horse eats nine thmes ite
weight in food during @ year,
¢. E, NOTES.
Shiloh Baptist C. E, Society is one of
the fow Societies that do not believe it
ood poliey to close down the. Society
during tho summer mionths) so under
the wise leadership of its vonseerated
President, Mr. John A. Miles, who, with
the regularity of the sun, has led the
Society, successfully for the past eight
soars, the splendid work of training the
Young people for Christin service goes
on as Vigorously in summer as in winter,
One. cantiot visit. these meetings. without
feeling lifted up, One other teagon for
the success of Shiloh C. Ey Society is
that they always emphasize the spiritual
side, Below are four objects of prayer
for August,
Mise Agnes Butler will Jead the Bn-
deavor mieoting next Sunday. evenings
subject, “Duly Under Diffleulties.”
Come, You are welcome.
1, Pray for Christian Endeavorere
away from home, that thy may be
faithful in witnessing for Christ. where
ever they are, and in changed sirround=
ings may find new opportunities for
service,
2. Pray for the summer religious ass
semblies, ‘that the power of the Spirit
may be manifested in them, and that
fhrough them grent blessings’ may enme
to the chureh,
3, “Pray for any whose love for the
Saviour may be growing cold, that, they
may he quigkened into reneved. if.
4, Pray that pride and hatred spring:
ing from differences of race may cease,
and that all may realize their ‘oneness
in Christ.
JUST QUESTION OF KNOWING
Monopollst Explains to Plain Citizen
Why He May Stand on Lat-
ter’s Foot.
“You are standing on my ‘foot,”
sald the oltizen to the monopolist,
“Ah, you must mot think of that,”
good-naturedly replied the monopolist.
“Tt 1s sordid and pessimistic, You
should think of the higher things of
lite.”
“Yes, but it hurts,” argues the oltl-
zen,
“phat may be; but remember that It
is only through trie] and tribulation
that we learn to make something of
ourselves, Blessed ure the meek.”
"Yes, but why should you stand on
my foot?”
“[ see you are inclined to think of
yourself; that is wrong,” admonished
the monopolist in a gentie tone, “Rath-
er you should contemplate the gocd f
have done in the world.”
“That may all be true, Dut I thins
T shall have to ask you to get off my,
foot.”
“Being a Christian gentleman,” re-
{ited the monopolist, very gently, ““f
take no umbrage at your unkind, not
to say unreasonable, request. But
what yon ask is unconstitutional, and
I must insist on my constitutional
rights, I have ® franchise to your
foot. That is the legal phase of it.
Tut there is also a mors! side. T have
derome accustomed to that mode of
standing, Far you to try to change tt
‘now would be nothing Yess than un;
patriotic.”
“Notwithstanding all that Pmust ine
sist that you get off my foot.”
"Mm that cnee, my dest sir, 1 shall
have to appeal to the’ courts and get
out an injunction egainst you.”
“Do you deny that it 1s my foot?”
hotly demanded the eftizen,
‘"{ do not deny that; in a sence it Is
your foot," blandly returned the mo:
nopolist, “but I think 1 can show that
L have a controlling interest in {t.”—
FEilis O, Jones in Life.
Reasoning of Domestic Animals,
According to a French investigator
domestic animals have a certaln’
amount of reasoning, and can assocl-
ate ideas from which they draw in-
ferences. Dogs, and still. more ‘0
cats, he says, learn to imitate the
voice and movements of their masters)
or mistresses, He has noticed old:
watchdogs which, when they barked,
had a pecullar intonation, which re-
sembled the vole of thelr master,
Cats try, by the way in which they’
ery, to make their mistresses under-
stand exactly what they want.
AT TE NTION!
Two-Piece
SUIT
FOR ONLY
$162"
sa Gn "Ce
S. Goldheim & Sons
403-405 Seventh St.
} 7
M. Bashon Grusor
wee
Contractor and Builder
anes
| Architectural Plans Prepared.
Materale selected or furnished. All
building details superintended with skill
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oo @
Offices Sist and G St, N. BE
Address R. 3, Box No. 44
EAST DEANWOOD D. 6,
Oe” I ———<—_— ~~
After Fifteen Years
By Clarissa Mackie
Melvin ‘Caylor and Adelia Scott had
lived next door to each other all thelr
lives, yet they had not spoken for
16 years.
Adelia, forty now, with a powder:
ing of white in ber brown halr, was
sitting in the old grape vine swing,
swaying Wily to and fro. Her soft
‘eyes were fixed on the too of her
sinalt shoo as it lightly touched the
green turt,
Overhead the April sky was ctoud:
Jess; around her was growing grass
and young springing flowers.
In her heart was a great yearning
for happiness—a renewal of the joys
that had belonged to her girlhood;
‘the dreams, the ideals that were her:
‘Yefore the awakening,
From the other side) of the dividing
{iliac hedge came the fragrance of to
‘bacco and the sound of men’s voices,
igrowing nearer:
“Women are naturally stubborn”
(Melvin Taylor was saying in a dis
jagreeable tone. “If May has quar
jreled with you, Walter, you might as
|well give her up now and be done
\with it—no matter how deeply you re
{pent What apologies you may offer
however humble yourself, take my
‘assurance she will not forgive you.”
“Rubbish!” retorted Walter Stone
laughing, “May and I have had s
Aisagreement, but 1 know we shall
make {t up--who knows when—per
Thaps today! As for the rest of wom
ankind, they are all like May, I do be
Meve—sweet and forgiving—only some
clumsy brute of a man like you or
me—"
“V've hat my experience,” inter
rupted Taylor brusquely, "I was en
gaged to marry what 1 believe to be
Tf ea
I oO Ap
We pray
CPs
Nia:
WY otitis
Wey, ae,
co
the sweetest girl in the world, We
quarreled a Week before our wedding
ay—I5 years ago. I wrote a note
begging her to forgive me—"
Thetr volces died away as they
passed beyond hearing, and Adelia
still swayed to and fro In the grape
vine. Now her face was white,
So Melvin Taylor had made over-
tures of peace and she had never
Jmown {t. She, too, had written a
“note to him and hidden it in thelr
true lover's postofiice—a cup-like hol
low in the old apple tree that grew
in the Iilac hedge.
Day after day, 15 years ago, she had
gone to the hollow—but there was
never a letter; and her wedding day
had come and gone and she had never
deen a bride, Invitations had been
recalled, presents returned and bridal
garments hidden from sight, while
Adelia picked up the dull threads of
every-day life und learned to meet
Melvin Taylor now and then and greet
him with a cold little inclination of
the head,
With a sudden impulse she left
tlre grape vine swing and sought the
old apple tree, The Illac branches
had grown unproned nti their
smootl green stems av!*9 hid tho-cup-
tke hollow.
Adelia stood on tiptoe and thrust
her little hand into the old letter box.
‘The hollow was empty save for a few
dead and crumpled leaves and a gath-
ering of moss. Just as she withdrew
her hand her fingers were caught tn
a warm, strong grasp,
With a faint cry of alarm, Adelia
trfed to jerk her hand away, but in
vain,
"Who ts it?” demanded Melvin
‘Taylor's volce from the other side of
the hedge.
"Release me at once,” conimanded
Adela angrily.
“Oh!” There was enlightenment in
his tone; but the grasp only tightened
its hold.
German Court Etiquette
Pa Ge OSE Eee Ek
How All Those Whe Wish to Be Pre:| out are placed on ont side, and
sented to Royalty Must other those who have already
Provesd: through the ondent,
— ‘The Indy presented has now
‘A women of position who wishes to fled her wish to be Invited to so
apnent at the German court must find the court entertainments, A cou
fa {rlend who will’ introduce her of-| ®t Berlin ts opened with much
ficially to the Oberhofmeisterin—a | mony. The German .emperor
fort of feminine lord chamberlain | empress enter with thelr suites
who {8 an arbiter of fate with regard |the ambassadresses stand abot
to court presentation, This dignitary | throne in the court circle, The
“holds a reception of her own pre-| perial majesties never dance, bu
vioug to the court, and would-be pre-| verse with their guests {i
sentees must attend, as {t were on|amiable manner. By the way, tt
approval. If all goes well the aspir-| peror lays much stress on good
ant ts in due course bidden fo a court | ing, and will allow no one who
reception, Courts at Berlin begin at | an expert to dance at the palac
nine. Full evening drees must be| court officiat sits in a gallery
worn, with trains, but no veil or feath- | watches the dancers, and should
“ers and black gowns are not permit:| tect any, errors in elther ladies o
ted. At the beginning of the recep | he, later on, communicates wit
tion the feminine element is carefal-| emperor, and the culprit is n
ly-“sor, *”—married women in ong | that he or she must become mor
room and girld and debutantes in an-) ficient before being again Invit
Gthes, and’ dn Chistatter newcomers-| the palace.
[wy
oe It 20H tne tho falntoot tnstincts
of a gentleman,” began Adelin after
a while,
“haven't,” returned Mr. Taylor
coldly,
Adella leaned against the rugged
trunk of the old tree, her white, out-
stretched arm gleaming against the
brown bark, Her eyes were shining
Uke twin stars and her breath came
in little gaeps.
‘“What—what do you want?" she
found courage to ask after another
painful silence,
“Phere was a moment's hesitation
and then: “I placed a note in here
15 years. ago,” he began lamely.
“Well?”
“[ never received a reply,” he sald
gruflly, his bold on her band tight
ening cruelly.
“You are hurting my band,” sho
said with a little ery.
“You hurt my heart 15 years. ago,”
retorted Melvin stubbornly.
After a long silence Adelia's voice
came faintly over the hedge. “I, too,
placed a note there—15 years ago
and—"
“And?” queried Mr, Taylor.
“I never received. reply to my
note."
“The—dickens!” Mr, Taylor _ whis-
tled softly. “I never got tt, Adela!
Do you mean to say you never got a
note from .e the day after—after we
quarreled.”
“I never recelved any word from
you.” Adella’s voice was tremulous
now, as she added: “It you will ro-
lease my hand—"
He relaxed his hold reluctantly, and
Adelia slipped down in a crumpled
heap {ff the soft turt at the foot of
the apple tree. ;
“Go, Adelia,” he said gently, It {8
too late for me to offer you any apol:
ry for my long silence; I wrote you
a letter, asking your forgiveness and
|1 placed it here in the hollow—t be-
| eved you were hard and unforsiving
when I did not recelve any answer
and [ grew more angry with you, in-
stead of seeking an explanation. Your
little note, as well as mine, was prob-
ably taken by some marauding cat-
bird to build his nest in the hedge.
I think I shall go away now—tI have
been such a fool I want to seek the
uttermost ends of the earth to try and
forget my folly!" His. volo regained
its. bitterness.
‘There was a Jong silence after that.
“1 am here, Melvin,” sald Adelia.
“May I come over?” he asked in a
strange voloe.
"Yes," she sald softly, but not 50
softly that his eager ears did not
cateh the longed-for words,
Presently he was bestde her, tho
old boyish stifle on tis lps, the old
loyelight in his eyes, the old bappt
|nead te Batya
{ Adelia flushing rosliy, leaned for
‘support agatnst the apple tree and her
downeast eyes dared not meet bis
questioning ones,
“Will you fe give me, Adella2” he
asked holdin out bis arms,
“If you will forgive me, too,” she
said sweetly, turning a radiant: face
up to him,
‘And then‘she came to him, all her
sorrows stilled, all her happiness re-
stored ten-fold because of the pain she
had endured.
Overhead the April sky was cloud-
ess, underfoot the green grass was
starged with dandelfons; there in the
shade of the beloved old apple tree,
‘Adelia's youth came back to her, with
happiness and love and all the old
ideals,
High-Priced Blberon.
| Ten thousand guineas were given by
(©, Werthelmer, at the sale of the late
Baron Schroeder's collection at: Chris
He's a few days ago, for a sixteenth
century biberon of carved rock crystal
mounted with enameled gold, It 4s
made in imitation of some fabled mon:
ster which {ts designer may have ima-
fined to be a sea serpent, but the body
of which, lost in a series of flutings,
| resembles more closely that of a water
fowl, The crystal neck and body. Is
‘mounted with enameled gold, and Is
‘polsed like a wineglass on a crystal
‘stem, also mounted very beautifully
fii gold and enamel. ‘The Md of the
‘piberon is surmounted by a statuette
‘in enamel of Neptune sitting astride a
‘Triton, and in this, as In every other
portion of the decoration. the work Is
of unsurpassable delicacy. It is thought
to havo come from the hands of Dantel
Mignot of Augsburg, who made tt (Ot
the Emperor Rudolph 11,—London
Graphite.
Only Safe Pian.
Knleker—Would you probibit erect:
ing a statue to a man until be had
been dead 60 years?
Hooker—1'd go further and walt ti
fall the poople who had to look at 1t
Tease acon
out are placed on ont side, and on the
other those who have already gone
through the ordent,
The Indy presented has now noth
fled her wish to be Invited to some ot
the court entertainments. A court ball
at Berlin is opened with much cere-
mony. The German emperor and
empress enter with thelr suites, and
tho ambassadresses stand about the
throne in the court circle, Their im-
perial majesties never dance, but’ con-
verse with their guests’ fn an
amiable manner, By the way, the em-
peror lays much stress on good dane-
ing, and will allow no one who fs not
‘an expert to dance at the palace. A
court official sits Ina gallery and
watches the dancers, and should he de-
tect any errors in either ladies or men
he, later on, communteates with the
emperor, and the culprit 1s notifed
that he or she must become more pro-
flolent before being again Invited to
the pelags, 1
dm]
Only Safe Plan.
low!
“<
Dlowing——®
Piece te >
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Dee Pants ae ¢
Besser nu ono sit nes
epee oy tg Bai: gti, |
Paes a Sm ish Rice ist ye
rea A: es Bais oe waa
og. lara : ae >|
pe ah plana \, ee aa
er ey SSP Aa NE >
al eee ee me
a eras i com om
i ae co arn ae Bear,
fe cal ae
be Ss ae cote my ei
MGS hi a aie, 1
ee BOK. 4 Naar pe ee
Sisal te ae all ne
or 22 ea ai SI €
right-handed to the main part of
the village, including the church
and station, A hedge, just break
Ing into green, skirted the road,
and over its brim we could see a
plowman guiding his team leisurely
up and down a broad, flat fleld, ‘The
tman in ‘his drab corduroys and the
horses, a big brown afd n gray, made
@ picturesque group. They gave one,
too, the pleasant senso of restfuthess
fn idler feols in watching other men
work, In the fuihess of my content
T murmured something silly about the
dignity of Inbor, which roused my
companion from his comfortable st
lence to retort; “That's because you've
never done any.” 1 looked up to
here a smell, dark speck was rapidly
rising in the windy April sky and
flooding the, alr with joyous melody
“Just Usten ‘to that lark singing," I
sald. “Just listen to that signboard
creaking! We shail have it down on
our heads,” retorted my —practteat-
minded friend; not without reson, for
a strong breeze was briskly swinging
the old sign to and fro, and the storm
of the night before had left dangiing
by a single rusty hook. “The Plow
and Anchor!” I muttered, as I eyed it
and warily edged along’ the bench
from under it, "I wonder what came
first at the beginning of things, and
when the Arst furrow was turned?”
“That, will be something for you to
think about ti 1 get back,” sald
Frampton benignly,
“That chap with the plow somehow
takes me back to Algeria,”
My frlena grinned with a good-hu-
mored sarcasm, “Most things seem
to do that,” he sald, “But i you
want to ruminate on, plowing, here's
something for a start that takes one
to the back of beyond.” As he spoke
he detached a coln from his wateh-
hain and tosaod it tome. Next mo:
ment he looked at his watch and
rose hastily to his fect. “Jove!” he
exelalined, “it’s ten to! 1 must run
for it.’ And swinging his coat acrose
his shoulder, he picked up his bag
and disappeared at a trot round the
bend of the road to the station,
Frampton was right, Numberless
fncidents of the most trifling kind suf-
fited to carry my thoughts back to
Algeria, Life in the desert, Ife in tho
towns, life in the Tell, cach had im-
pressed mo vividly with {ts strange
and distinctive attraction, In the lat-
ter district particularly I had studied
the process and progress of farming
carried on there in a way I should
never have thought of doing at home.
‘There was such a glamour over it all;
over even tho poverty atid reckless:
ness of tho fellah and hfs primitive
methods of agriculture. Like 'farm-
ers all the world over, what he did and
what he left undone was the result not
of personal initiative, but of faithful
adherence to precedent, In spite of
the efforts of the French government
to introduce innovations and improve:
ments the native ctltivators of agra
Han land plow, sow and reap as men
ld when the world was young. To
see an Arab steering a yoke of oxen,
one hand pressed upon the single stem
of the plow and the other holding the
long, slim goad, {s to see a living tl
lustration of how Elisha looked and
moved when Eiijah found him plowing
and cast his cloak upon him in signifi
cant symbolism of his destiny. Only
in gome such insignificant details as
the names of the months in the Kabyle
dlalect is the stamp of Rome still vis-
ible, and in the system of hiring labor
in the Tell there survives a custom
belonging to the early days of the Ro-
‘man republic,
‘This 1s what happens. A farmer
finds himself in debt, or he wants a
lump sum of money in order to marry
and settle down. He forthwith bor
rows the required amount of a rfcher
neighbor and signs a contract by which
he practically enslaves himself until
he is able to pay off the loan, His
master must provide him with a plow
and a pair of oxen, the seed for the
crop and the necessaries of life, He
alo receives a fixed allowance of oll,
wheat any barley per month, besides
‘a yearly supply of clothes and foot:
wear, the price of them going to tn-
crease the original debt. In harveat-
time the Khamme’s, as he {s called, 1s
entitled to nn agsistant, bat he often
prefers to take a small indemnity and
set bis wife and children to work in-
stoad, Usually he is free to seek em-
ployment on his own account from
January to April, and thon he hires
himselt out for day labor in the vine:
yards and olive groves of the French
colonists, But in the districts now
given up to olive growing the khammes
are few, as thelr wages soon enable
thom to free themselves; and before
long, it may be safely prophesied,
the Arab will relinquish thts anctent
usage in favor of modern European de-
vices for tiding over bad times. Per-
haps, too, it 1s hard to believe, he
may be gradually induced to secure
himself a richer return for his la:
bor by using tools of modern saape,
and in particular by exchanging his
pleturesque but ineffective wooden
plow for the powerful uptodate ma
chine of stee¥ and tron which the
French have brought into Algeria,
‘Three thousand years and more le
between the two, and in the extraor-
inary slowness of the evolution of
the plow and the fundamental identity
of its first and latest shapes one rec:
ognizes the genius of {ts inventor.
Osiris or Bacchus? ‘Triptotemus oF
Buzyges was it? Wo only know that
the round was tilled with a share
drawn by oxen In the age when every
Kiudred had a god for an ancestor
and the golden myths of Greece were
in the making.
At this polnt fn my meditations I be-
came aware that I still held Framp-
ton's coin in my closed palm, 1 took
it in my fingers and began to examine
jt. My Httle Greek Just enabled me
to decipher its superscription and gath-
‘er that it wos of the coinage of Sice-
otae, or early Greek settlers in Sicily,
Gating from about 600 B.C, On one
side ft bora an almost obliterated head,
of Demeter presumably; on the ob-
verse the figure of a plow drawn by
two serpents, With such a plow the
socred line enelosing Greek and Etrus-
con citfes must have been traced, and
with such a plow did Romulus draw
his circle round Mount Palatine, lift-
ing it from the ground wherever a gate
was tobe, It differed tut slightly
from the erooked hoe held by Osiris,
or from tho hand plow with which
Samgar, judge of Israel, fought the
enemies of his people, being all of one
plece, with plas or plugs inserted in
‘the stem to which the leathern thong
of the yoko might be attached. A
treo trunk with a bent kneo was an
obvious necessity, and, as to this day
in Algerfa, the holm o2it seems to have
Jod, writing 700 years before thn Chris.
dan era, advises a husbandman to
cut down a tree of suitable shapo
wherever he may encounter it and
straightway bear it homé,
ss C. H. T. WOODRURY.
Minnebaha, laughing water—what
prettier name, in sound and tn sense,
could there be? But the saddest
thing about American nomenclature
is the way in which languages have
been crossbred, with deplorable re-
sults, All these Indian “Minnie”
namee are delightful when left alone;
and the white man did well in naming
the state of Minnesota after the river,
which, being interpreted, ts “sky-tint-
ed water.” But then he must go and
contrive “Minneapolis” for its. chiet
town—-a shocking misture of Indian
and Greek. What lovely names they
must have mfssed when they imported
their Jacksonvilles to dispossess the
red man's language!—Lonon Chron-
‘ible.
The 180th anniversary of the battle
of Springfield, which was won by the
Continental soldiers by reason of the
fact that they were able to wad their
guns with hymn books, was celebra:
ted at Springfield the other day, by
the New Jersey Soclety, 8, A. R., with
the dedication of a flagpole in the
Revolutionary burying ground. ‘The
hymn books were used at the behest
of the minister of the old Presbyterian
church which still stands, He was the
Rev, James Caldwell, and when he
saw the tide of battle turning against
the Colonists because they could not
get wadding for their guns he brought
out the books from the church ané
said: "Give ‘em Watts, boys; give
hematin ub.
In) point. of variety and scope. the
forest work done on the Biltmore es:
tate in North Carolina is remarkable,
‘The forests, which cover 130,000 adres,
ar> made profitable by the production
of various forms of material, Four
million feet of lumber, five thousand
cords of tannic acid wood and fuel,
fone thousand cords of tii bark, and
several hundred cords of pulp wood
fare cut every year. At the same time
the forest through wise manegement
4s bettered and is steadily increasing
in value. Workmen employed along
the boundaries of the forest do duty
ag fire guards, ‘Thus fire protection {s
secured throughout. all tho accessible
parts of the tract.—Hay, Flour and
Beea-Tournal,
Lady Wimbourne, who’ worked "hard
and succeeded in seating her son, Maj
Guest, in the house of commons, had
fan opponent of her own. Ludy Al
Mngton’s husband was also a candi.
date and the fate of the two men
ost importance In the minds of those
who witnessed the campaign, so much
more important seemed the battle of
the women. Both women spoke to
the constituency every day and when
the yotes counted in Lady Wim.
dourne’s ron, sho and he paraded the
streets and the victory was regarded
as aolely hers.
“Did you enjoy your travels?”
“L certainly did, and my wife quite
fell in love with the Sphinx.”
“she did?
“Yes, it’s such a fine listener.”
Croec-Pred. Indian Namen
‘“icinne Banks dor Gunwads:
Remarkable Forest Work.
Women Made the Fight.
Doesn’t Talk Back.
FEAR OF NIGHT IS DISEASED
Relics of Queen Mary and Cath-
erine de Medici to Be Sold.
Notable Original Papers Written by
Royal Hands or Bearing on His-
-—torle Matters Will Be Put Up
“at Pubile Avotion,
London.—Royal letters and state
documents, as well as holograph and
autograph letters ‘of various celebri
ties, ranging in date from 1417 to 1904,
will be sold by publfe auction at Sotho:
by’s soon,
‘The collection includes letters trom
Mary Queen of Scots, ax well a8 fron
her cousin and rival, Queen Eltzabetis
and an important treaty, deciding the
future destiny of Mary Queen of Scots
by means of which Mary of Guise, her
mother, Cardinal Beaton and Lord
Lennox rendered void the English
treaty, as also the contract for Mary's
projected marringe with the future
Edward VI. Twenty-seven years later
Mary was.in prison at Chatsworth
and from there addressed an appeal
to her brother-intaw, Charles IX. of
France, {mploring him to intercede
with Ellzaboth. ‘This letter is accom
panied by Elizabeth's original order
for the payment of “the bloo1 money,”
£100, to Sir John Popham, the crown
prosecutor, who conducted the fatal
trial at Fotheringay,
There fs also the only letter remain
ing In private possession written bs
Mary 1. of England; it ts dated 1554
end is a recommendation of Symon
Raynard, Charles V.'s ambassador, and
the principal negotiator of the Span:
ish match, ‘
Documents relating (o the Fietd of
the Cloth of Gold have their place in
this collection, including « mandate
signed “Francois” and dated Septem:
ber 8, 1620, being “an order to. the
ireasurer and receiver ‘general to pay
certain sums for the relmbursement
of expenses incurred in {he month of
June last past during the journey we
made to the town of Andres and its
neighborhood in the matter of the
Visit, meeting, and parliament between
us and our very dear and good brother
and ally, the king of England, and for
the feasts, banquets and other simlar
expenses that we there Incurred,”
‘The catalogue comprises some rare
hologtaph letters from Catherine de
Medic! written to hor davghter Fitza-
beth, queen of Spain, between 1560
and 1570, One of them contalns the
following: “And so my daughter, my
dear, commend yourself to God, for
you have seen me as happy as your.
self, never expecting to have qny
other sorrow, except that of not be-
ing sufficiently loved by the king, your
father (Henry If), who honored me
niore tha T deserved; but I loved him
#0 much that 1 was always afraid, as
| you Know, that he did not love’ me
enough, And God has taken him from
me, and not content with that hes left
me with three little children, and in
& straage kingdom, not haying a soul
English Magistrate Fines Nurse for
Leaving Children Alone In
Dark Unprotected,
| London.—Great public interest_bas
“been aroused by the case of Kate Bell,
Vere ee on who was
fined 40 shillings at Marylebone po-
‘tice court for leaving three young chil
‘dren alone in the house while her
fatate ed inten oad ct nyt
evening,
| Her mistress, Mrs. Hearne, return-
tng home unexpectedly at 8:80 p. m,
[discovered that the nurs and. both
‘servants had gone out, leaving the
three children, age thirteen months,
three years and four years, respective-
ly, entirely unprotected,
In fining ber the magistrate, Paul
‘Taylor, told the nurse that “her con:
duct showed a very inadequate con:
selourness of her duty, She liad been
guilty of a serious moral delingueney.”
The house surgeon of a largo chil
dren's hospital in South London, con:
sidered “moral delinquency” much too
mild a term,
“Tho callous way in which young
children are left alone nowadays,” he
said, “amounts to. positive crime—it
occurs most frequently among the very
oor.
“he eriminality of the proceeding
Mes in this; that, in nine cases out
of ten, leaving children alone means
frightening them into submission with
‘all marner of absurd tales.
"A very frequent Instance of what
T mean oceurs when a married couple
go out for an evening at six o'clock,
say, and tell the infant upstairs that 2
and cat It if it ertes or gets up while
they are ont.
“What that poor mite su‘fers In Its
loneliness passes all description.
“As often as not, too, its nerves be
come permanently affected, and tt suf
fers In youth from a nervous. disease
which Is now classified a5 paver noc:
‘turnus—dread of the night.
SWORDFISH IN FIERCE FIGHT
Had Two Men in Small Roat Thorough.
ly Whipped When Others Come
to Their Rescue.
Boston.—John Henry of the fishing
schooner, Alice Palmer tells of a ‘ight
for life he and his dory mate, Adam
Walters, had with a swordfish off the
Georges Banks the other day. The fish
was sighted In the afternoon and In a
chort time two harpoons were sticking
into his back and he Was racing away
‘with the harpoon buoys, Henry and
Walters manned a dory and started
after the buoys,
Infurtated by tho pain of the tron
barbs, the fish turned on the dory, It
drove {ts powerful sword through one
end of the craft and then the other,
while the two men leaped back and
forth to escape the driving blows,
‘The dory began to fill as the repeat-
fd attacks of the fish opened up holes,
‘ind it looked as If the fishermen would
be left entirely at the mercy of the fish
tn the water, But a second dory trom
‘the schooner swept tip and with har
‘poons settled the fate of the fish and
fercued the two in the sinking dory,
FAMOUS PAINTING REPORTED STOLEN
4 fA, AA
& zee aa 6,
is Yana eS gas PAN LE »
Qe ee ol
a ae ance
Sipe. ae a a SS
Ug e tee ER, ae
pete ig agi reed \\
Poem Sg MUNN. os
Reece a ae oa
DE Nien WS eC ly or cae
sis ina te tM aM Nae
or ee ee. ae
Bs gates. Apna © Rimes hued
as pale ea Bae Oras gc |
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eee aaa | SMe aa |
eee | ee an
dower ne ee ni Tee Ht
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pe yearn aera caer si) rit
Cee UR Oma ei vate iN anak er Series
Pot SE ah ei ere ea
Pop aina gets GE oe * Hey PRR ee: 8
ORE Oh cy PRC ayn aaa er |
Ae bas eae I eae 5
a, ee ae ae
RD Han Aal Pe aie oe
Naat se si Sarda te A
Bart Mi in Se Sie See
Beer, Mes, ares ee
aie aes ne SNe sate etre
Se ee pions
Coe E=Ka
ARI§.—The government officials ctill are silent concerning the report:
ed theft from the Louvre of-the most famous portrait in the world,
Leonard da Vinci's “Mona Lisa.” The story that the pleture has been
stolen and that a copy of It was put in Ste place recelves general cre
tenes, in view of slinilar thefts that have been committed in the Louvre
‘The painting is said to be now in New York in possession of a wealthy
American, In the art world this painting, which sometimes 1s called “Lo
Gloconda," ts considered priceless, The’ most etriking feature of the por
trait 1s the mysterious emile that twks in tho eyes and lips of the subject.
{t took Da Vine! five years to bring ou: this peculiar expression, and at the
nd of that tle he deciared the work unfinished. ‘The task ot painting
“Mona Lica” was difficult and palnstaling in the extreme. Da Vinel found
that his model, a woman, assumed a peeuliar expression only when at
case {na certain posture, and when Ustening to a certdin strain of muste
FARMER DiGS UP $32,000
there whom T can trust who has not
some specie! ax to grind,"
Other letters from Catherine men:
tion the hostility of the Guises after
the death of her eldest son, Francis
I1,, husband of Mary Queen of Scots,
und the intrigues of Admiral Collgny,
and the attempts of the Due de Ne
moure to carry off the Duc d’Orleans
(afterward Henry TH.) and set him up
against his brother, Charles IX, There
is likewise a mass of Huguenot corre:
spondence.
Charles 1,, Charles 11, and James 11,
of Eng’and are well represented In
this collection, and among the state
documents there is the grant to Can-
terbury of a mint and assay office
made by Edward VI, and signed by
“And when the child grows up pavor
noctirnus will turn to St. Vitus’ dance,
or ‘habit spasms,’ or one or other of
the serfous nervous affections with
which the next generation promises to
be rife,
“Pavor nocturnus—the symptoms of
which are constant tears and intense
hervousness—is an illness we dread
ere, because It 1s next to Impossible
to do anything for a child's other com-
plaints until, by long hours, or even
daye, of patient coaxing, its nerves are
restored.
“But if pavor nocturnus gets too
firm a hold any cure we can cifect ts
temporary at best, for the child's nery-
ous system has been ruined for life.”
STEALS $3, RETURNS $300
College Girl, Urged by Remorse, Makes
Penance After Years to Friend
She Rokbed,
Chicago. — Whether .the ancient
Greeks intentionally meant to throw a
slight upon the falrer sex by depict-
{ng thelr cynical offspring, Mr. Diog-
ones, as searching for an honest man,
fs unknown, 3
Should a similar eearch te” inetl
tuted at the present time, diss Rien
‘vedesch, a former coed of Cincinnatl
university, now visiting her sister, Mrs
Paul H, Philipson, of this city, could
give valuable assistance.
“Long ago," asserts Mist Tederch, “I
suffered the loss of a purse contnining
three dollars and rome change, Yeurs
passed and blotted its loss trom my
mind, Yesterday 1 recelved a letter
from home saying I was the recipient
of $800 from an unknown source
“Another letter followed, from whieh
4 learn that a farmer collere frient
was the person who had taken the
‘money years ago. She says that her
parents snd ancestors wore honest Pu:
ritang and that reniorse has worked
hayoo with her. She hopes that now,
by divcharging a penanbe, she WOLAne
Delaware Man Unearths Gold and Sil-
ver Coin While Plowing in His
Scrubby Field.
Lavrel, Del—Ashbury Hammond has
ug $32,000 in cold and silver-coln out
of a grave on his farm, the other day,
and all bis neighbors are busy plow:
ing over their own flelds In the hope
of a simfiar windfall.
‘The locat bank has taken the money
and has glven Hammond full credit for
it, so that there can be no question of
the value of the find. Hammond was
fa serub farmer whose land barely sup-
‘ported him,
‘This sudden acquisition of fortune
came when bis plow solat struck a
‘brick vault in a sandy hill, He got
‘a pick and opened the vault. As soon
‘as he recovered from the horror of
seeing a skeleton there bo went inside,
A bag of coin lay at the skelelon's
head And another a his test. One of
thum contained Spanish and American
gold and silver worth $17,000, and aim-
hin, as well as by Cranmer and
‘Thomas Lovd Seymour, There are also
two of Cromwell's binck letter procin
huations, probibiting horee racing for
rand eight. months respectively
Owing to their heing pasted up these
rocltmations were. soon destrored
bud (he two. present spectnens aro
fonsequestiy. uimort uniaie. "Thers
fee tyeive lttarn Wntten by. Mane
de Mintenoa and. an tuventory--the
original manuseript—of the effects
ieft by Sine. de. Pompadour at her
Neath, Tiere iniuowite e banuberipe
Gated: 72 embocving the "Remem
Draneéa for Orde ad Decency lo bo
ent Ip tho Uprer. Hoare of Parla
ment by the Lords, wica lia Majesty
ia not there.” *
relief from the purgs.urles of an ip
sherettea i
110-YEAR-OLD CATANMR DIES
dHlstorle Tree In Pennsylvania ‘Town
Falls With Crash After: Reaching
Mele ea
Bristol, Pa.—Bristol’s venerable one-
hundred.and-ten-year-oid catalpa tree.
on the Edward Bruden premises, die’
of old age and fell the other day,
while the family were at dinner.
‘The old ivy which clung fast to the
ancient tree way gathered in frag:
ments by hundreds ax relics. A pe-
cullar rewnant of this old catatpa
tree, a gigantle stump, was over tren:
ty-five feet high, and when viewed
from one standpoint looked tke an
elephant standing on Its hind legs.
‘The “old clepiant tree,” as they
call {t, has a history that runs back
hefore the Braden advent, to the days
when the dercendants of Samuel Laun-
ders, en Engiish tory flouitched tn tts
shade, It measured just above the
ground 2114 feet tn etreumference and
near the top of the stump 16 feet
GEM FIELDS PROVE WEALTHY
Germans Discover They Have Bonanzs
in, Southwest Africa—Govern-
ment Ge Halt,
Beriin.—Since the resignation of
Colonial Secretary Deraburg, one line
of hls policy has’ beon justitied by re
markable statisties published concern-
ing the dlamond fletds of Luderita Bay
in Gorman Southwest Africa, In the
current year diamonds worth $5,000,-
000 have been turned out, and halt
of that, according {0 the contract
framed by Herr Dernburg, goes to thy
government of the colony.
All told, those German diamond
fields are provits far more valvable
then was expecied. At first the entire
valve of the fields was eet down at
$50,000,000, but now one claim atone
has Uecn proved to be worth more
than that.
lar contents In the other were worth
|si500n) Tho coln fosked” new. at
though the latest date on any of It
was 1821,
| _Prays Over Horse Deal,
Minneapolis, Stinn.—That he try hia
hand at horse trading is the latest
vequest madv of Maj. Arthur Cass of
the Salyation Army Industrial bome.
He has had marked success ap matri-
monial egent In the two years he has
eon in charge, but has never made a
horse trade. As the request comes
(som a middle aged unmarried woman
in the country he sald be would pray
over it and try bis luek during the
week.
Tea Service Brings $1,259.
London—An old Woreester china
ing, painted with exotic birds and in-
aeeta, Yas aold for $560, and 1 com
plete tea servies sliuilaily decorated
roalized $1,260,
Open All Night
JOSHUA N. ANDERSON, Prop'r
SEE UNCLE JOSH AT THE
TUSKEGEE
Quick Lunch Room
626 North Capitol Street, N.W.,
West Side Union Station, Half Block away
Washington, D.C.
Best Meals At Low Prices
EXCELLENT SERVICE
Good Things To Eat.
ELLIS CAFE
Welcome to the Elks
OUR FOOD IS O' THE BEST.
Police and Prompt service our motto
Prices Reasonable
No. 729 49th St., N. W.
WHERE TO DINE
ATLANTIC CITY
The Bay State Hotel
HARDY & OTTERY, Props.
334 N. TENNESSEE AVE.,
Atlantic City, N. J.
European Plan.
Concert Garden
Special Rates to Parties Taking
Apartments.
BONNIE A WISE DOG
INTUITION TELLS HER MAN WANTED TO WASH HER.
Exciting Day's Work Provided for Man by Wife and Setter—After the Bath Bonnie Seeks the Ash Heap.
"What are you going to do, dear?" the lady asked. The man was emerging from the bath room with a towel and a cake of soap.
"I'm going to wash the dog," said the man sturdily. The lady peered at him keenly.
"Not with my soap!" she said. "The idea of such a thing. With my gilded rose soap!"
"Well, hang it," observed the man; "gimme some soap. This was all there was in the bath room."
"And one of my best towels—a new one!" cried the lady despairingly. The man threw the towel and soap far from him.
"Heaven's and earth!" he said; "this is a fuss over nothing, sure. Gimme some soap and a rag—a blanket—any old thing that you can dry a setter dog with."
When these things had been brought him—or to be exact, a piece nernel yellow kitchen soap and a torn shirt, man went into the back yard, rolling merrily:
"Here Bonnie! Here Bonnie!" But Bonnie was wise. Some under-the-skin intuition told her that the man desired to wash her, and she prudently crawled under the house. This made the man indignant.
"Come out o' there!" he yelled. Then he crawled under and emerged backward, grating his teeth and rubbing his spine, like the teeth of a saw, upon the floor beams. In one hand he held the elastic skin of the dog's neck and the dog fought bitterly each step of the way.
Once outside the man tied a rope about the neck of the dog and procured a washtub. It was the one the washerwoman used on Mondays, but was just as good as any for his purposes.
He dragged Bonnie to this tub and thrust her forefeet in it, while her hind feet struggled frantically outside. When he got the hind feet in the forefeet were pawing the dirt outside desperately. But Bonnie was at last wet and soaped. Then the man stepped back to throw a bucket of water over her; but Bonnie shook herself briskly and in misery and a shower bath of soapy water deluged the man.
"Blame the dog!" he said, rubbing his eyes with hands that smelled of yellow soap and had dog hairs on them.
But Bonnie, refreshed and joyous, preferred the ash heap on which a stovepipe had been newly beaten.
"Do you mean to tell me," said the lady later, "that you washed that dog?"
"Sure I did," said the man, growing red; "that's clean dirt. It'll shake off soon as it gets dry."
Relying on Heredity.
Fred Latham, Mr. Dillingnam's stage manager, had inspected a hundred applicants for positions in the Dillingham choruses. From them he had selected a dozen eligibles for final consideration. They stood in line.
"What is your name?" demanded Latham of the first one.
"Schumann-Heink," was the reply, as a good-looking youngster brought himself to the position of attention with a click of the heels.
"Any relation to Madame Schumann-Heink?"
"Yes, sir; son," replied the young man proudly.
"That's enough," said Latham, and Hans. Schumann-Heink was enrolled to support Elsie Janis in "The Slim Princess."
In Humanity's Concert.
The one thing you have to do is to make a clear voiced little instrument of yourself, which other people can depend upon entirely for the note wanted—Ruskin.
Rabbit furs have doubled in value within the last few years, while some skins have advanced 500 ppr cent.
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Uncle Sam Asks All to Swat the Fly
'Gators and Insects Hunt New Home
No Corsets are Worn at West Point
Dentists Believe They Have a Kick
A
NEW YORK—The whole United States government, with its vast treasury of wealth, its brainy statesmen and insurgents, its army and navy, its immense horde of high-brows, against the poor little house fly! That's the line-up in a bitter war of extermination scheduled to set the nation by the ears and enlist the courageous support of every man, woman and child in this broad land. The final knell of the house fly has been sounded and the battle has just begun. "Catch 'em and kill 'em; show no quarter"—that is the war cry of the army of extermination that is to put forth every effort to rid the land of the Musca Domestica, the polite name by which the house fly should be addressed by strangers.
Until the scientists got busy with their investigations the house fly was considered merely as a pestiferous insect, designed by the Creator of all things merely to take its bath in the sweet cream and maple shrimp, annoy the late morning sleeper, skate about with abandon on the pollished surface of shiny baldheads and practise the Morse telegraph code on the cleanest of windows.
Long suffering housewives since time began were the only really active enemies of the seemingly insignificant little fly, and they alone and unaided applied the imprecations and dish cloths vigorously against the nuisance. But after the scientists got onto the job the fight against the insect began to assume proportions of magnitude.
That little insect which the average citizen was wont to regard merely as a domestic pest is now branded as the most dangerous creature on earth. The house fly has been publicly indicted as a murderer of the human race, the
NEW ORLEANS.—More than 1,000,000 acres of marsh land lying within miles of New Orleans are to be drained, reclaimed—and transformed from a wilderness into gardens, homes, lamlets and towns. The work of reclaiming some 50,000 acres within the corporate limits of New Orleans is now well under way, while contracts have been let for the reclamation of fully 100,000 acres additional in adopting parishes.
This means that within two years the alligator will no longer find aboriginal harborage in the Carnival city, that the breeding grounds of countless billions of mosquitoes will be turned into highly productive farms on which mosquitoes cannot breed, that hundreds of miles of paved roadways will lead from New Orleans north, east and west, and that for the first time in its history New Orleans will possess suburbs.
To the westward the same character of work is being done, and prepara-
WASHINGTON.—"I have often heard a question as to whether West Pointers wore corsets. It is absurd in a way, because should any effeminate youngster resort to such a thing it would be impossible to keep the affair a secret, and once known his school life would become a burden to him on account of the endless amount of criticism he would receive from his fellows. He would be made the laughing-stock of the school and would soon find himself the possessor of any number of effeminate nicknames that would grate upon his ears in any but a pleasant manner.
"It is true," continued the old soldier, who was no other than Col. K. B. Collins, a retired army officer, in a
TREATH YANKED WHILE YOU WAIT
CASH IN ADVANCE
CHICAGO,—"Well, I don't know what under the shining forceps I am going to do, anyway," and a dentist in the Masonic temple sighed a perfect mammoth of a sigh.
"The matter? Hair, just plain hair. No-not plain, either. Now, for instance. A lady came up to my office the other day and wanted her teeth fixed, and finally I took hold of the top of her head with one hand, while I worked with the other. Then I turned away to get an instrument, and my sleeve button caught in her hair and the whole back of it, about fifteen fat, shiny curls, came along with me. She simply froze me up, and she didn't come back to pay her
The Colored Business Men's Social Club No. 1, INC. Will Give Their Annual Family Excursion. To Leonardstown
As this is the only Excursion that will land at Leonardtown this Summer, (resulting from the energetic efforts of a special committee appointed and sent to Leonardtown, who received permission to land, and also to use the hall,) we cordially invite our many friends to attend.
Music by the Monumental Orchestra, Prof. Hamitcn, Director
Boat leaves Seventh Street Wharf at 8 3) a. m., returning in time for cars.
Fare Round Trip. 50 Cents
7th and T
PHONE NORTH
The Theatre For
Grand Opening Mono
"PERFECTED VA
Prices 15-2
Coming Sept. 5th. -
Coming Sept. 5th. - - "The Smart Set."
639 F Street, Northwest, LOC
Best Work and Workmanship
One third deposit requ
Blue Mouse
26th and M
Largest, Handsome
Theatre in Town.
Good Vaudeville and
A Cordial Welcome Exte
H. C. S
IN SOCIETY'
Blue Mouse Theatre
26th and M Sts. N. W.
Largest, Handsomest and Coolest
Theatre in Town. : : : : : :
Good Vaudeville and Motion Pictures.
A Cordial Welcome Extended To Visitors.
H. C. Smith, Manager.
Mr. James O. Bampfield, secretary general of the Masons, of 1633 11th street, N. W., will leave the city on Friday of this week for Detroit, Mich., to attend the Grand Session of the Masons, which will convene in that city next week. After leaving Detroit, he will visit New York city, Philadelphia and other points.
Mr. Carter, of 600 F street, N. W., has returned from a short stay in Baltimore, Md.
Mr. Charles H. Douglas, of this city, is visiting relatives and friends in Brockport and Rochester, N. Y.
Rev, Dr. P. A. Scott, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., preached at the Metropolitan A. M. E. Church Sunday evening. Rev. Scott delivered a discourse which was eloquent as well as divine.
Rev. Dr. I. N. Ross, pastor of Metropolitan A. M. E. Church, Mr. Patton, delegate, and several others left Wednesday morning to attend the District Conference of the Potomac District to convene in Camprole, Md., Wednesday, August 17.
The stereoptician lecture on the Life of St. Paul, given at the Metropolitan A. M. E. Church Tuesday evening was a signal success. The first half of the lecture was delivered by Rev. Dr. B. F. Watson, secretary of the Church Extension Department, and the other half was delivered by Miss Martha Ross, of Cin-
Athletics as an
Athletics as an Aid to Trade
By George Jean Nathan.
N alliance of athletics and con-
through the keenness induce-
mer, is being consummated
and corporations today.
One of the best example
to increase the working val-
that of a large life-insurance-
been equipped with a complete gymnas-
athletic instructor has been retained, and
been mapped out for employees, both r
occupies the eleventh floor, and here, d
after business hours, and on specified
employees are given physical training.
special instructress on Wednesdays. Th
during the winter months. In spring
moved up to the root.
"You-will find, too," says the instru-
following the lack of gymnasium work f
give nearly the impression of alertness
days." The instructor keeps his eyes
clerks not only during gymnasium nours,
department's throughout the day. Thus
vitality and to suggest to the employee
heads of the departments declare that the
the officials has succeeded in doubling
of workers under their immediate charge
N alliance of athletics and commerce, in which the latter profits through the keenness induced and energy infused by the former, is being consummated in many American business firms and corporations today.
One of the best examples of how athletics has been made to increase the working value of a business establishment is that of a large life-insurance company. The office building has been equipped with a complete gymnasium and shower-baths, a competent athletic instructor has been retained, and a schedule of athletic work has been mapped out for employees, both male and female. The gymnasium occupies the eleventh floor, and here, during the luncheon hour, directly after business hours, and on specified evenings during the week, the employees are given physical training. The women are provided with a special instructress on Wednesdays. They are organized basketball teams during the winter months. In spring and summer the gymnasium is moved up to the roof.
"You will find, too," says the instructor, "that on Thursdays, the day following the lack of gymnasium work for the men, the employees do not give nearly the impression of alertness that they evidence on the other days." The instructor keeps his eyes on the physical condition of the clerks not only during gymnasium hours, but also during his rounds of the department's throughout the day. Thus he is enabled to notice sagging vitality and to suggest to the employees so affected the remedy. The heads of the departments declare that the athletic movement perfected by the officials has succeeded in doubling the efficiency of the different staffs of workers under their immediate charge—Harper's Weekly.
The minister was spending the afternoon at the home of one of his members. The father told his little son to bring some apples from the cellar. The child obeyed, and in the kitchen found an especially large red one which had been brought up the day before, so placed it on the dish with the others.
When they were passed this was the apple the minister took, and feeling it so warm, remarked to his host that the cellar must be very warm.
greatest disease propagator and the carrier *a* more menacing and malignant gerns than all other creatures put together.
This little, but potent, messenger of death wanders from the slick room, from the filth of the garbage pail, from the heaps of refuse of all kinds into the peaceful, happq homes of our land, walks upon the butter, the meat, the fruit, the sugar, takes a bath in the milk, leaving everywhere the germs of disease that have gathered upon its furry feet and body.
In experiments conducted by the New York health authorities the scientists found on the body of a single little fly 1,222,570 different bacteria, enough to kill a few thousand human beings. In another experiment a fly was caught in a sterilized not and dropped into a bottle of sterilized water. The bottle was shaken and the germs washed off the insect's body, as would be the case if the fly dropped into a glass of milk for the baby. The previously pure water was then examined and it was discovered that the fly's bath contained no less than 5,000,000 disease germs. About half the deaths from typhoid in New York, according to the health authorities, are attributed directly to the distribution of germs by house files. And worse than that, the figures show that of 7,000 deaths of cooling babies in that city from infantile diseases, more than 5,000 were traced to infection carried by house files.
According to a noted scientist the extermination of the post is comparatively easy. All that is necessary, he says, is a systematic effort on the part of the public. If all the people will practise the utmost cleanliness, it is declared, the house fly will be extinct in this country within a few years, for the house fly cannot exist without flith.
"Cleanliness," then, is the watchword for the American public to put an end to an insect that is not only a terrible nuisance, but a terrible instrument of death to thousands of our population every year.
tions are now being made to reclaim an additional half million acres through the construction of a wide levee along the western shore of Lake Pontchattrain and the southern shore of Lake Maurepas. On the crown of this levee a paved roadway 75 miles in length will connect New Orleans and Baton Rouge and ultimately will be the southern terminus of a Chicago-New Orleans highway.
The nearest town or settlement of any consequence is now 50 miles distant from New Orleans. Within fifty miles of every large city in the country a million or more people reside, and many industries develop business and wealth for the urban population.
This is the end New Orleans is working to and will have reached, in large part, anyway, by the time the Panama canal is opened to the ships of the world.
Meanwhile modern sewerage and drainage within the city proper have practically and wholly solved the city's sanitary problems, and the discovery of a simple method of filtering the waters of the Mississippi river has given the city a pure water service excelled by none in the world. These systems are in operation and are nearly complete. They have cost the city about $25,000,000.
discussion of West Pointers, "that many West Pointers acquire a figure of perfection of symmetry and a carriage the acme of manly grace, but these are due not to any ingenious appliances, but to the systematic drills and exercises that make the cadet, to a certain extent, an athlete. At the outset these young fellows are put through what are called the 'setting up' exercises, their object being to straighten the body and develop the chest. One might suppose that it would require a great amount of such exercise to make any marked showing, but three long hours of such exercise daily will soon produce beneficial results in the most stooped forms.
"The cadet uniform is also a great help in this direction. The dress coat is tight, very tight. The shoulders are heavily padded in order to give them a square effect. The chest is made thick, so that there will be no danger of wrinkling. All this for the sake of looks; comfort has no place in the make-up of a West Pointer; it is discipline and looks."
bill, either. Say, this new fangled hair style is putting me to the bad.
"The worst feature of the whole thing is that the heads, or rather the hair, won't fit into the headrests. I have tried all manner of schemes, and even had a new headrest built along lines that I was sure would fit, but the heads simply won't fit into anything.
"If we do succeed in getting the mass laid out and tucked away carefully where it won't bother us, we get something like this:
"Oh, mercy, doctor, you are muzzling my hair all up. And I am going to a party this afternoon, too."
"But the most usual thing is: 'Oh, doctor, there is a hairpin sticking in my head. Wait a minute. O, dear, it's coming down. Doctor, do stop a minute while I fasten up my braid."
"I do tell you what, the dentists ought to get together and boycott the present style of hairdress, or else insist that all extra hair be taken off before any dental work will be done. That would settle it. all right."
The Howard.
7th and T Streets
PHONE NORTH 762
The Theatre For the People
and Opening Monday, August
"PERFECTED VAUDEVILLE."
Prices 15-25-50c
Sept. 5th. - "The Sn
The Theatre For the People. Grand Opening Monday, August 22nd. "PERFECTED VAUDEVILLE." Prices 15-25-50c
THE CHASE ART COMPANY
High Grade Portraits and Pillow Tops, Novelties and Chemicals
All Goods Made and Sold
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Met, Northwest, Loom 21, Washington
Best Work and Workmanship At Lowest Prices.
A third deposit required on all or
Blue Mouse Theatre
5th and M Sts. N. W.
West, Handsomest and C
tre in Town. : : : :
Vaudeville and Motion H
ordial Welcome Extended To Visi
H. C. Smith, Ma
SOCIETY'S REAL
Best Work and Workmanship At Lowest Prices.
One third deposit required on all orders
IN SOCIETY'S REALM.
(Conducted by Miss Mary Curtis.)
etics as an Aid to
alliance of athletics and commerce, in which the through the keenness induced and energy infusion, is being consummated in many American and corporations today.
One of the best examples of how athletics increase the working value of a business event of a large life-insurance company. The office with a complete gymnasium and shower-bathctor has been retained, and a schedule of athletics out for employees, both male and female. The eleventh floor, and here, during the luncheon hours, and on specified evenings during the given physical training. The women are putress on Wednesday. They are organized by winter months. In spring and summer the roof.
Find, too," says the instructor, "that on Thursday lack of gymnasium work for the men, the can the impression of alertness that they evidence instructor keeps his eyes on the physical activity during gymnasium nours, but also during life throughout the day. Thus he is enabled to so suggest to the employees so affected the departments declare that the athletic movement as succeeded in doubling the efficiency of the order their immediate charge—Harper's Weekly.
N alliance of athletics and commerce, in which the latter profits through the keenness induced and energy infused by the former, is being consummated in many American business firms and corporations today.
One of the best examples of how athletics has been made to increase the working value of a business establishment is that of a large life-insurance company. The office building has
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Unexpected Truth:
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T Streets
NORTH 762
For the People.
Sunday, August 22nd.
VAUDEVILLE."
5-25-50c
- "The Smart Set."
Loom 21, Washington, D. C.
Insignia At Lowest Prices.
Required on all orders
Se Theatre
I Sts. N. W.
Harest and Coolest
and Motion Pictures.
Extended To Visitors.
Smith, Manager.
Y'S REALM.
cinnati, Ohio. The lecture was very practical and interesting, made more so by the interspersion of music.
Mr. John P. Rhines, a successful attorney of Nashville, Tenn., and father of Mr. John T. Rhines, of this city, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. James L. Neill, of 904 T street, N. W.
Miss Emma J. Terry, a teacher of Nashville, Tenn., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. James L. Neill, of 904 T street, N. W.
Mr. Campbell, a tonsorial artist of Montgomery, Ala., paid a short visit to Attorney and Mrs. J. Louis Taylor, en route to the Business League Convention, which convened in New York city.
Mr. H. B. Huchus, of Petersburg, Va., was the guest of Mr. S. W. Rutherford, a few days this week, while en route to New York city.
Drs. R. F. Boyd, of Nashville, Tenn.; A. M. Brown, of Birmingham, Ala.; John B. Hall, of Boston, Mass., and Emmett J. Scott, Esq., will be the guests of Dr. A. M. Curtis, of 13th street, N. W., during the N. M. A., which convenes in this city next week.
On Wednesday evening, August the 10th, Professor John T. Layton was elected, with a large audience, at the Metropolitan Church of the Electoral College, which convenes in Baltimore, Md., September 7, to elect the lay delegates to the General Conference in 1912.
Aid to Trade
commerce, in which the latter profits
inced and energy infused by the for-
ward in many American business firms
triples of how athletics has been made
value of a business establishment is
once company. The office building has
hospital and shower-baths, a competent
and a schedule of athletic work has
with male and female. The gymnasium
during the luncheon hour, directly
and evenings during the week, the em-
ployees are provided with a
they are organized basketball teams
ing and summer the gymnasium is
instructor, "that on Thursdays, the day
kick for the men, the employees do not
meet that they evidence on the other
eyes on the physical condition of the
hours, but also during his rounds of the
thus he is enabled to notice sagging
eyes so affected the remedy. The
at the athletic movement perfected by
the efficiency of the different staffs
merge—Harper's Weekly.
"Did you not bring these apples from the cellar, Ned?"
"Yes, father, all but that one pastor has; it was in the kitchen."
"Why did you not tell me?" asked the pastor.
"Well," with childish frankness. "I didn't think you would take the biggest one on the dish!"—Delineator.
Of all places of importance Sydney, New South Wales is farthest from London as the crow flies—10,420 miles.
609 F St. N. W. Room 203
Sylvester L. McLaurin
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law
609 F ST., N. W.
First Fleer
WISE LITTLE WILLIE
HAD ONLY ONE REQUEST, BUT
THAT WAS IMPORTANT.
Well Aware of the Privileges of Prisoners About to Be Sentenced,
Culprit Established Good
Hard Sense.
"It is my duty to teach you a severe lesson," said Horatio Poppenham, when Willie Poppenham got home, after playing.hookey all"afternoon. "Now, I want you thoroughly to understand the situation. Don't imagine that I am punishing you because it will give any satisfaction to me personally. And I want you to realize thoroughly that I am not doing this in anger. I do it simply as a duty. It is very often necessary for judges in the courts to sentence men to undergo punishment, and the sheriffs and jailers and wardens have to inflict this punishment.
"Do you suppose the judge gets any personal satisfaction out of it when he sentences a man to be hang or to undergo imprisonment? Not at all. Very often the judge's heart is almost broken because it is his duty to impose such sentences. And so it is with the men who have to inflict the punishment. They do not administer it in anger. I suppose they would in most cases prefer to let the offender go free, if they could, just as I would much prefer to let you off now, if I had only my own feelings to consult.
"But there are duties which officers of the law owe to society, and so they are compelled, when a man does wrong, to see that he is properly punished. If people could do wrong without being compelled to suffer for it many of them would be doing wrong all the time, thus not only injuring others, but also injuring themselves. It is the same in your case. If I permitted you to go unpunished I should be doing you a wrong, and I should also be wronging the rest of the family. If you were allowed to do such things as you have done, and suffer no chastisement, you would soon go from bad to worse, breaking your mother's heart, robbing me of happiness and spoiling your own chances for the future.
"You see, the family represents society, on a small scale, and the family, like society, must have its sacred laws. When these laws are broken—the laws of the family—it is just as important that the one who breaks them shall be punished as it is important that the criminal who breaks the laws which society has made for itself shall be punished. In a small way you represent the prisoner who has been found guilty by the jury, while I. occupying the position of judge, am compelled to pronounce sentence upon you, and—"
"Say, father, in court the prisoner is always asked if he has anything to say before the judge sentences him, isn't he?"
"Yes. And I am going to extend that privilege to you. What have you to say?"
"Please let mother be the sheriff."
Miraculous Surgery.
The successful "sewing up" of human hearts is getting to be something of a commonplace nowadays. A Philadelphia doctor took five stitches in a wounded heart (cut out by a dagger) and the man is said to be on the road to recovery. It was the second heart operation of this surgeon within a month or two. His previous patient got well.
There are now on record somewhere near a hundred cases of surgical operations upon the human heart, and the death rate, considering the extreme gravity of the operation, is surprisingly low. When it is remembered that the heart is practically in constant motion, that its complete stoppage means immediate death, and that the delicate surgical manipulations necessary to repairing its wounds have to be performed upon a throbbing and more or less inaccessible piece of tissue, the manual skill and coolness demanded of the heart surgeon will be better appreciated.
Oregon Man'a Insect Catcher.
In the country all sorts of homely devices are used to catch the bugs and kill them, and an Oregon man, who probably had his apple orchard overrun by some destructive species, patented a trap for the pests. A barrel has pieces cut out of the upper portion and is half filled with rotten or bruised apples or some other odoriferous fruit. On top of the barrel is placed a pan partially filled with water, oil or some polysolon liquid. From the apex of a tripod that keeps the basin from falling off the barrel hangs a lantern. In the daytime the insects will be attracted by the odor of the fruit, and in flying up to feast many of them are likely to fly into the water. At night the lantern is lighted and bugs will come from afar to futter against it and their death in the liquid below—Chicago Tribune.
For Ladies and Gentlemen
Newspapers, Periodicals and Magazines
Imported and Domestic Cigars.
Could You Do Better
Than wear a nice tailored, slightly used
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TENNYSON & ELLIS CO.
FINE PAPERHANGERS
and DECORATOR
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Silias Johnson
New Pool and Billiard Parlor
1721 1-2 Seventh Street, N. W.
In Brittany Matrimonial Candidates Are Herded Together and Married in a Bunch.
Over in France they have a way of getting rid of all the undesirable features which in the United States go with getting married. They have the scheme in operation in Brittany. In Brittany they do away with the best man and bridesmaids and ushers and other such impedimenta strewn in the path of the American celebrants of the matrimonial ceremony. Even the dressmaker and the milliner and the florist are given the laugh. Their goods aren't needed. The caterer is the only tradesman who profits.
About the middle of January every year there is a general round up of all the men and women who have been engaged within the twelve-month. They are herded together in one place, and on the appointed morning along comes the priest and marries them in a bunch. No fuss, no feathers, no "Lobengrill" or Robin Hood stuff, no ushers or bridesmaids to carry away your stickpins and your brooches. And everyone wears the national costume, simple in construction though gaudy.
There were 27 couples married at Plougastel January 11, 54 people, 54 count them. Among the 54 were only four names. Everyone married was a Legall, a Jesuquel, a Thomas or a Kazeneuff. Fifteen of the brides were named Marle and three were named Marle Legall.
The caterer got his rake off from the barbecue which followed the ceremony. He served 27 sheep, and six cows at the wedding breakfast.
"Science" Becoming a Nuisance.
"Science" Becoming a Nuisance.
Steadily medical science is closing all avenues of safety. Time was when man might do pretty much as he pleased and live. Now whatever he may do is deadly. The Chicago health department has just issued a warning against country springs; in the peluclid water of these sparks death lurks in all of its hideous forms. Also to quaff a cooling from the "Old Oak Bucket" is dangerous. What to drink was long a matter of price rather than choice. But now it is a matter of neither choice nor price. The millionaire as well as the paaper confronts death whenever he drinks or eats. It is unkind of "science" to point out so many dangers and not to indicate any paths of safety that the ordinary person will be content to travel. Perhaps the most comfortable thing, if not the safest, to do, is to take a chance now and then and refuse to be alarmed. Trusting these few lines, etc.
Women in the Wrong Place
Women in the Wrong Place
The anomaly of this island, the center of the British empire, crowded to overblowing, while millions of acres of the richest land in fine climates he undeveloped, has at last struck the national imagination. We cannot open a paper without seeing articles about the wheat fields of Canada, the fruit farms of British Columbia or Rhodesia, the offers of work for British men and women in Australia, New Zealand, and last but not least, South Africa. But in large movements of every kind it is exceedingly difficult to preserve the regular, even progression of parts. Some portions of the mass will always move slower, others faster, than the rest, thereby causing a distortion and dislocation of the whole. That section of the community known as the better-class woman has lagged behind the rest, and by her scarcity in the one place and her superfutility in the other is creating a danger to society—London Times.
A Word of Advice From Oregon.
A due financial appreciation of a minister's services does not in the least affect the Christianity of the leader of a flock. A well fed and well groomed minister speaks well for a church.—Woodburn Independent.
Avoid Suspicion.
"When you're walking through your neighbor's melon patch, don't tie your shoe."—Atlantic Monthly.
In a State of Partial Employment.
Women write all their articles on how to manage husbands before they get any.—Quincy (Ill.) Herald.