Savannah Tribune
Saturday, February 28, 1914
Savannah, Georgia
Page text (machine-generated)
Prizes For Cleanest Yards
HUNTINGDON CLUB OFFERS PRIZES THROUGH URBAN LEAGUE
Five Prizes to be Awarded—Contest to Run Two Months Baseball League to be Organized Among the Boys by the League
Several weeks ago it was announced that the Civic Committee of the Huntingdon Club conferred with several of the ladiee of the Urban League anent this offering of prizes and the securing of the names of contestants for the keeping of clean yards. This suggestion was approved by the Executive Committee of the Urban League and a number of ladies were appointed to secure the names of contestants. The names of about eighty persons in various parts of the city have been secured as contestants. The contest begins the first of March and will continue until May.
The premises of the contestants will be visited at intervals by the inspectors and a record of its condition will be kept. At the end of the contest, the persons whose yards show the best average for improvement, will be awarded the prizes. The first prize will be $5 00; the second $4 00; the third $3 00; the fourth $2 00, and the fifth $2.00
The contestants have entered with much interest, and great good will be the result.
While this contest is on, it will not be at all amiss for all of our people to take particular pains in seeing that their premises are kept constantly clean. Let the children go under the houses and clean out the old tin cans and rubbish and have no refuse matter left in the yards, especially stagnant water which breeds flies and disease.
The ladies who canvassed for the contestants speak commendably of the many homes and premises of our people that are so well-kept.
OTHER ACTIVITIES OF THE LEAGUE. The Committee on Boys Club met on Tuesday night and decided to organize the boys of at least four of the schools into base ball clubs and will have a well regulated league. After the teams have been selected arrangements will be made to secure the uniforms for the boys. For this purpose a series of entertainments will be given. It is the desire of the committee to have the league commence the early part of the base ball season.
The ladies of the Committee on Adult Meetings or Neighborhood Visits have planned several meetings. The chairman, Mrs. Rachael Moore, spoke in interest of the league's work at St. James A. M. E. Church on last Sunday afternoon. Next Thursday night a meeting will be held at St. Paul Baptist Church, and on the third Sunday one will be held at the Central Baptist Church, Thunderbolt. Several cases were looked after during the week for the Associated charities.
The Committee on Reformatory at the Poor Farm will meet next week. The recent grand jury reported favorably on this phase of the work, and it is left to the committee to continue its efforts. All of the other committees have reported progress.
Reys Singleton preached at the morning and night services.
morning and night services.
Our members must report to their captains for February and and on Sunday March the 8 they must report for March. On last Monday night the George Washington operetta was held and on Wednesday night the Knockers Love Feast took place at the church. The Dramatic club will render the play "The Minister's Hat," Monday night March 2nd. Service tomorrow, prayer meeting 5:30 a.m. preaching, Baptism of children and the right hand of fellowship at 11 a.m. Sunday school 2:45 p.m. communion at 4:00 p.m. A. C. E. League i:00 p.m. Preaching 8:15 p.m.
VOLUME XXIX
St. Philip Church
The
Scott-Price
An exceptionally pretty wedding and one that was of wide interest was that of Miss Rachel Dolores Price and Mr. Duncan Jackson Scott, which was celebrated on Wednesday night of last week at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church.
The church was beautifully decorated with ferns and the wedding ceremony was impressively conducted by the rector, Rev. J. L. Taylor, under an arch of beautiful palms.
A half hour before the time set for the ceremonies to begin the church was packed, both upstairs and down.
A few minutes after nine o'clock, Mendelshon's wedding march, played by Miss Alice Ellis, pealed forth and the wedding procession headed by Mr. Valdore Giles and Mr. John Carr, ushers, entered the church and proceeded up the center aisle to the altar. Following these were Mr. Joseph Greene and Mr. Marion Johnson, also ushers. Next in line came two flower girls, little Misses Rosa Price, sister of the bride, and Susan Pollard.
Mrs. Robert E. Scott, matron of honor, accompanied by her husband, Mr. Robt. E. Scott, brother of the groom, were next in line, followed by Miss Susie Scott, a sister of the groom, and Dr. C. C. Middleton. Miss Hat-Jones and Mr. Matthew Jones followed, and then entered the maid of honor, Miss Edna Price, another sister of the bride. Little Letitia Campfield, as flower girl, was next in line.
Leaning on the arm of her father, the bride looking a picture of exquisite beauty, then entered and proceeded to the altar, where she was met by the groom accompanied by the best man, Mr. Walter S. Scott, his brother, who entered from the vestry room.
The bridal party, a particularly fetching one, assumed a very imposing position around the altar and amid the melodious strains from the organ the impressive ceremony was performed by the rector.
Immediately after the ceremony at the church, the bridal party was driven to the Harris Street hall, where a reception, attended by 300, was held. The entire first and second floors of the hall were at the disposal of the wedding party and their numerous friends, and the music, furnished by a full orchestra, was gleefully enjoyed by the many friends of the happy couple, until the wee hours of the morning. The beautiful decorations of the hall were commented upon all sides.
The bride was charmingly gowned in white charmeuse trimmed with duchess lace and pearls. Her train being from a high waist line, was attached with a butterfly bow and ornamented with a spray of orangege blossoms. Twostrings of pearls encircled the waist terminating at the right side of the train from which hung three strings of pearls. Her yeil was the cap effect with a wreath of orange blossoms encircling the head. Her bouquet was of white sweet peas.
The matron of honor, Mrs. Robt. E. Scott, wore her wedding dress of white crepe meteor trimmed with pearls and crystals. Miss Edna Price, maid of honor, wore white messaline combined with shadow lace with tunic of the lace edged with white marabou tastily draped and caught with pink rose buds. Miss Susie Scott and Miss Hattie Jones, maids, the former wore white messaline with the bodice tastily draped with shadow lace and tunic of the same draped and caught with pink rose buds, while the latter wore crepe de chine daintily draped with tulle. The dainty flower girls carried baskets of pink sweet peas; the other attendants all carrying pink carnations.
Mrs. Geo. 10. Price, mother of the bride, wore black messaline trimmed with jet. Mrs. L. M. Campfield, aunt to the bride, wore black crepe meteor and Mrs. Cyrus Campfield silk and shadow lace.
Mrs. Duncan Samuel Scott, wore gray messaline and lace; Miss Anna E. Scott, white messaline and beaded net; Mrs. C. K. Binford, white crepe de chine
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1914
Odd-Fellows' Celebration Tomorrow
PETER OGDEN DAY AT ST. JOHNS' BAPTIST CHURCH
All Branches of Order to Turn Out—Will Assemble at the Church—Interesting Program
The fourth annual celebration of Peter Ogden, the founder of the order of Negro Odd Fellows in America in the year of 1843, will be held at St. John's Baptist Church, Rev Wm. Gray, pastor, on to morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock.
The order will turn out in full strength, all of its branches taking part in the exercises.
The members of the various branches will assemble at the church at 2 o'clock, and as this is the strongest fraternal organization in the city, it is expected that a tremendous crowd will be present
A.
The program which has been arranged for the afternoon, is a very interesting one. Past Grand Master Daniel Simmons will deliver the principal address. There will also be a representative on the program from the Households and one from the Juveniles. The music for the occasion promises to be very inspiring.
Asbury Church
At Asbury on last Sunday all services were good and well attended. On Wednesday afternoon the funeral service of Bro. J. C. Allen was held, Rev. Stripling officiated, assisted by Rev. W. V. Daughtry. Mr. J. C. Allen was one of the oldest members. On tomorrow evening the communion will be held.
St. Paul Church
Sunday was an interesting day at St.Paul. The pastor, Rev.J.A. Martin, gave two very able and helpful sermons; at 11 a. m.. subject "Daily Efforts for the Best," at night, "An appeal for the activity of the trained, and men of means."
The Sunday school begins its Easter practice Monday March 2nd. The clubs led by Mrs. Irene Carter, n.g'e good reports Sunday night. The choir under chorister W. M. Johnson is taking on new life. Let every member be present at the communion services Sunday.
---
Emanuel Tolbert died Thursday February 26th, 1914. The funeral will take place from St. John Baptist Church, Sunday, March 1st, at 1 o'clock
and crystal trimmings.
The bride is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. O. Price and the groom one of the most successful young Negro business men of this city. He is also a graduate of Fisk University. The many valuable and useful presents received by the couple were seen at their lovely apartment at 531 Park avenue, east, recently erected by the groom.
Prof. Lemon Delivers Brilliant Address
AT LINCOLN EXERCISES AT FIRST CONG'L CHURCH
Holds Up the Great Emancipator as Greatest American of All Times
One of the most brilliant addresses heard in this city for some time was delivered by Prof. J. G. Lemon, of the Georgia State College, on Sunday night February 15th, at the First Congregational Church, at the Lincoln celebration. He said:
"I shall omit the time-consuming detail of Lincoln's early life, his birth at Hudgenville, Ky. in 1809, his humble parentage, his early migration to the Indian frontier where the young Lincoln was to serve as backwoodsman, ferryman, storekeeper, surveyor, and post-office keeper in turn; the subsequent removal of his parents in 1830 to Illinois, where the great master-mind was to have its more generous development and meet the object of its larger associations and conquests. I say I must omit much of the detail of these events in order that I may deal more largely with that part of Lincoln's wonderfully-spectacular career which influenced the world of his time and ours, that period during which the great issues of the war were born, a period which furnished the impulses of modern American ideals, ideals which characterize our National Unity.
"Lincoln has been dead 50 years. During every day and year of that time the Lincoln personality has grown more luminous as history has thrown light upon it and made it better known. The years that have passed have but had the effect of bringing into sharper relief the essential grandeur and magnificence of his character, the unusual quality of his intellect, his almost prophetic vision and his singular genius.
"The American people, slow to appreciate Lincoln then, are now literally hungry to pay reverence to the greatest American of all times. He was an infant while he lived as compared to the tremendous influence of his spirit in American reform, today.
Lincoln was essentially a child of the plain people, the nursling of his people and his time. Many men similarly placed are hopelessly handicapped. Many feel that poverty is an insurmountable obstacle. If there be such persons here tonight listen to what Lincoln wrote on July 4, 1842, when he was 33 years old, and far from the beginning of his great work: "I do not think I can come to Kentucky this season. I am so poor and make so little headway in the world, that I drop back in a month of idleness as much as I gain in a year's sowing."
"Nothin gis so fascinating to a youth with high purpose, with life and energy throbbing in his young red blood, as stories of men and women who have brought great things to pass. Though these themes are as old as the human race, yet they are ever new and more interesting to the young than any fiction. The cry of the youth is for more life: more life.
"No didactic or dogmatic teaching, no academic prescription, however brilliant will capture a twentieth century boy, keyed up to the highest pitch by the pressure of an intense civilization.
"The romance of achievement under difficulties, of obscure beginnings and triumphant ends; examples, which explode excuses, of men who have seized common situations and made them great; of those of average capacity who have succeeded by dint of indomitable will and inflexible purpose. These teach that there are bread and success for every youth under the American flag who has the grit to seize his chance and work his way up to his own loaf; that there are no barriers erected which declare to aspiring youth, "thus far and no farther," that poverty has rocked the cradle of the giants who have wrung civilization from barbarism and have led the world up from savagery
Tribune
Installation of Officers of the Y. L. I. C.
On Wednesday night February 18th, at the residence of Mrs. Marie E. Lockley, 818 Gwinnett street, west, the officers of the Young Ladies' Independent Circle were installed by the Rev. Daniel Wright, as follows: Mrs. Lula Allen, president; Mrs. Ruth Mack, vice president; Miss Mary E. Dunham, secretary; Mrs. Lizzie Timmons, treasurer; Mrs. Marie Lockley, chairlady of finance; Mrs. Leonora Wright, chair of health; Mrs. O. Allen, chaplain; Miss Cora Johnson, clerk. Those present were Miss Holley, Miss Bertha Keil, Mrs. Gertrude Kirkland, Mr. John Williams, Mrs. Robt. L. Lockley Mrs. Mary Gathers, Mrs. Margaret Green Fieming, Mrs. E. R. Dennis and Mrs. Canal.
to the Gladstones, Grants and Lincolnns.
"The world loves a man
Who breaks his birth's invidious bar,
bar,
And grasps the skirts of happy chance,
And breasts the blows of circumstance.
"Where shall we find an illustration more impressive than Abraham Lincoln, whose life and death might be chanted by a Greek chorus, as at once the prelude and epilogue of the most imperial drama of modern time: Born as lowly as the Son of God, in a hovel, reared in penury and squalor; with no gleam of light, no fair surrounding; vexed by weird dreams and visions with scarcely a natural grace, it was reserved for this remarkable character, late in life to be snatched from obscurity, raised to supreme command at a supreme moment and entrusted with the destiny of a nation and given the reins of political power.
"Lincoln was uncommonly courageous: When the illustrated papers everywhere were caricaturing him, when no epithet seemed too harsh to heap upon him, when his methods were criticised by his own party, and the generals in the war were denouncing his foolish confidence in Grant, and delegations were waiting on him to ask for Grant's removal, the great president sat with crossed legs and thought of a story Seward nerved himself up to the point where he could inform the President that certain of his constituents were criticising the president for lack of a definite administrative policy, with the result that Seward was very severely rebuked and told that the president was very sure of and had a very definite administrative policy.
"A delegation from Illinois, tired of a disastrous war and urging him to treat for peace or compromise, was met with this rebuke: "You fellows act like a set of cowards, you've helped make this war' and you've got to help fight it out. You go home and raise them men and don't you dare come down here again blubberin' about what I tell you to do. I won't stand it."
"Lincoln had the pure 'grit,' and he believed in the ultimate triumph of right. He had that rare quality which cares not for ridicule, is not swerved by public clamor, can bear abuse and hatred. Said he, 'Never let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations, nor frightened from it by the menaces of destruction to the government, nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might and in that faith let us dare to do our duty as we understand it.'
There is a mighty force in truth and in the sublime conviction and supreme self-confidence behind it, in the knowledge that truth is mighty and the conviction and confidence that it must prevail. Lincoln had that element of character which enables a man to clutch his aim with an iron grasp and keep the needle of his purpose pointing to the star of his hope. It is the single aim that wins anyway. Men with monopolizing ambitions rarely live in history. They do not focus their powers long enough to burn their names indelibly in the roll of honor. The men who have changed the front of the world have been, like Lincoln, men of single aim.
"In his first address to his fel (Continued on Page Four)
NUMBER,23
Business League's Rousing Meeting
MANY SOUVENIRS RECEIVED BY THE CROWD PRESENT
Rev. Martin's Address Electrifies Crowd—Negro Business Concerns Receive BIGGEST Boost in History of City—League's Attendance Grows
The mass meeting of the Negro Business League at St. Philip A. M. E. church, Charles street, on Friday night of last week was by all means the most energetic boost which business enterprises conducted by our people ever received in the city.
A large and appreciative crowd was present at the meeting and the program rendered was much enjoyed. All of the talks were made in a very optimistic vein and the results of the meeting are already being felt by the Negro business men.
While all the speeches were very commendable yet it was left to Rev. J. A. Martin, pastor of St. Paul C. M. E. church, to electify the crowd with his urgent appeal in behalf of the Negro enterprises. The music rendered was of a high order and the meeting was simply one grand appeal to the Negroes of the city to support the their business enterprises.
Many souvenirs, pencils, cards, calenders and the like were given away by several of the businesses represented at the meeting and the enrollment of the league received quite a boost.
Death
Mr. J. D. Lowe died on Monday of last week. He was buried on Sunday from St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Rev J. L. Taylor, associating. Mr. Lowe has been ill fos some time. He was well known in the city and highly respected by every one. He was a native of the Bahamas, resided in Florida quite a while before coming here. Mr. Lowe is survived by a wife, an only daughter, Mrs. Helen L. Harding of New York, and a brother, Rev. J. I. Lowe, manager of the Christain Recorder, Philadelphia, Pa.
Social Happenings
Or last Wednesday afternoon February 18th, Mrs. F. Dudley entertained at her home, 623 Duffy street, west, a few of her friends with a sewing party in honor of Mrs. James Keller of Newport, R. I., who is visiting her uncle Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bradwell. The rooms were adorned with ferns and lilies. Mrs. Dudley's guests to meet Mrs. Keller were Mrs. Adam Bradwell; Miss I. O. Benjamin of Schnectady, N. Y.; Miss Nancy Barnard, Mrs. Dolly B. Scott, Mrs. Maria Fleming, Mrs. Ellen Mitchell, Mrs. Mamie Scott.
Mrs. Nora Bostick entertained with a luncheon at her residence, 813$^{1}$ 38th street, west, in honor of the Married Ladies Progressive Club. The parlor was dored with ferns, carnations and buttercups. A few games of progressive whist were played. Sweet music was rendered. Those present were Mesdames Lula Richards, Mattie Ponder, Carrie Johnson, Ella Slocum, Donnie Lomack, Millie Lee, Reada Johnson and Nora Bostick.
Evangelical Ministers' Union.
The Evangelical Ministers' Union met with Rev. P. E. Curry, president, presiding. Devotional service was conducted by Rev. J. L. Taylor. After having addressed the throne of grace, the 8th, Psalm was then read. Rev. M. C. Kane of Richmond, Va., was a visitor and made a short talk. Rev. J. P. Prescott read a paper, "The church and its social agencies." After a timely discussion by the union a vote of thanks was tendered the writer. Next Tuesday will be sermonic report.
REE TIGHEN
YSTERS are the most popular and
amoug shellfish the movt exten-
sively enten. They are also the
most Important of all cultivated water
products and with the exception of ihe
sea berriug the most valuable of all
aquatic animals. Some desintble ways
of serving them are given here.
Oysters and Macaron|.—Take boiled
maearonl and raw oysters and plaice
in alternate layers in a buttered bak-
ing pan, sensoulng euch laser with
salt, grated lemon rind and a Lit of red
pepper. Add at small enpful of cream,
corer top with breadcrumbs and bake
in a bot orev. Serve with celery und
thin stices of buttered brown bread,
For Special Occasions,
Chaudfroid of Oysters. — Blanch
twelve large oysters in their own liq-
wor, drain them and remove the beards,
Have ready some aspic mayonnatse,
coat each oyster well with this and tet
them set on the ice on a wire tray.
Stamp out someidot shapes of red pl-
mento, place these in riugs of olives
and set one in the center of each oys-
ter. Mask with a little dissolved asple
and place them on little round croutes
of fried or toasted breud. Serve and
garnish with parsley sauce,
These Are Digestible.
Panned Ossters.—Toast thin slices
of stnle bread, butter and place in a
shallow baking dish. Molsten with
the liquor from the oysters and cover
with raw oysters. Senson with salt.
pepper and small bits of butter. Cover
with a tiebr Id and cook In a hot oven
for seven or elght minutes or until they
swell and the edges curl. They can
also be panned in thelr own julce in a
frying pan, seasoning with butter, pep-
per and salt. Serve on tonst. *
Cooked In Shells.
Oysters and Mushrooms.—Take some
scallop dishes, as many as there are
persons to serve. Put a small plece of
butter Into a bot stewpan. Add the
oysters when the butter melts. with an
equal quantity of chopped mushrooms,
a minced shallot, some chopped pars-
Jey, salt and pepper to taste. Let these
cook over x brit fire for a minute or
two; then Gil the shells with the mlx-
ture. Put bits of butter bere and
there. Sprinkle with powdered cracker
crumbs and brown the top with a red- |
‘hot poker or smail shorel.
Kaunas Hemfpsscra
Ze TIGHEN:
aot
EAT RAISINS OFTEN.
LUNCHEON MENU. |
Liver and Bacon. j
Baked Sweet Potatoes, ;
Johnnycake.
Apples Stuffed With Raisins.
Cookles.
Tea.
IE amount of nourishment in
rasins and their delleate favor
commend then as frequent in-
gredients in desserts. Some helpful
hints along this line are given here.
Nice For Breakfast.
Apples Stuffed With Raisins.—Take
Jarge, perfect Greening apples, pare
and core, making the cavity In corlag
larger than usual. Prepare a stufing
of finely chopped, seeded ralsins that
have been thoroughly washed, a gen-
erous lump of bulter and a little salt
Stuf the apples very compactly and
sprinkle over ail sume suzgr. Tie euch
apple in a clean linen cloth Ike an
English plum pudding and cook two
hours In boiling water. Then serve
immediately, when very bot. with thick
hard sauce or cream sauce.
Raisin Pie.—Remove the seed froma
pound of fine raisins and stew them
until tender in two cupfals of water.
Add to them a cupful of sugar and a
tublespoonfut of molasses, the Julce of
one sweet crinze gnd half {ts grated
rind, the Juice of one lemon and halt
Sts grated rind, two eres beaten to a
froth, a piece of butter the size of an
egg and a generous thickening of well
Gried bread crumbs. Flavor with cin-
namon And salt and bake in one or two
crusts as preferred. When one eruat {s
used, cover the top with meringue.
Wholesome Puddings.
Ralsin Rice Pudding.—Roll the rice
until tender. Then take one and one-
half cupfuls of the coyked rive, one
quart milk, three egzs beaten light,
four tablespoonfuls sugar, one tea-
spoonful runille and one cupful mus-
ins, Put ina baking dish, grate a little
nutmeg on top and bake until brown,
Raisin Bread Pudding.—Take a
tablespoonful of suzar und bait a tea-
spovnful of salt and mix them In a
pint of creamy milk—it is richer to
bare cream—and scald to the boiling
point. Instantly remove from the fire
and pour It over a heaping pint of
bread crumbs. Add butter the size of
an English walnut and set aside In a
corered dish for an heur. Then stir
‘into the niltture a pound of raisins
that have been placed Ip the oven for
seven or eizht minutes and become
puffed and full, four stiffy-beaten exzs,
the juice of half a lemon and a little
nutmeg. Put In a large, well buttered
bowl, cover with a buttered wax pa-
per and then tle Into 2 clean linen pud-
ding cfoth nnd bol! for two hours,
Serve with wine sauce.
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| Of all the designs submitted for the
memorlal in honor of the heroes of the
Titunle wreck. that of Mrs. Harry
Payne Whitney way adjudxed the best
and she was given the coumlssion.
Mrs. Whitney will now proceed with
the work of preparlug the statue. It
ls anticipated thut it will be erected
In Potonme purk, Wiasbington. Con-
| ress Is expected to set aside a plot
of ground there ou which it may be
put up.
. fhe sketch, which was submitted In
an invitation competition with seven
other sculptors, shows the terole
Sxure of a man standing, with arms
antstretched uud head thrown buck, as
though eager for sacritice, “Sacri-
fice” ix In fact, the title thut Airs,
Whitvey gave to the tgure. From a
distance the figure takes the form of
a cross.
| ‘The sim of $1500 has been seenred
throuzh the effurts of the woman's
Titanle memorial committee, whieh In-
eludes hundreds of women prominent
throughont the country.
Mrs. Whitues. who was Mics Ger-
trude Vanderbilt, began ber art work
vers modestly, and xt first never ex-
hibited it under ber name. Little by
Uttle, as ff encouraged by favor.
able criticisms, she became more and
more ambitious. entered public com-
petitions and won prizes at exhibi-
tions.
Last spring in Paris a marble foun-
tain of hers received the bouor of a
special fnstallation In the salun. In
the design three more thin life sized
men held up the brond bowl from
which the water gusbed, and In addl-
tlon to the real water there were palms
and a gravs inclosure to add to the
parklike effect. This fountain was for
a courtyard in a Washington building.
In the Architectural lengue extibl-
ton of 1908 Mr. Whitney. In associa-
tion with Grosvenor Atterbury, archl-
tect, and Hugo Balliu, painter, won
the special prize for a work combin-
lug the three arte. Mrs. Whitues's
contribution to the design was a foun-
tain.
Another plece of work of Mrs. Whit-
ney famillar to New Yorkers Ix the
Ereat sculptural Gmres in the Hotel
Belmont. the carratids ‘that support
the celling in the entravce ball,
She fs also associated prominently fo
the group that Is designing the seulp-
tural embellishments for the San Fran-
cixco fair. Her fountatn, catled “El
Dorado.” Is to stand in the court of
houor at the exposition.
Her studio on West Elzhth street,
New York, year the Mucdougi! alley
studios, Is being enlarzed and improv-
ed in anticipation of ber return to this
country, supposedly about April 1, She
and Ne. Whituey are now abroad.
THE GIRL WHO SUCCEEDS.
She Is the One Who Futs heart and
Conacience Into Per Work.
To be a surcess in business a girl
‘must be willing. An employer ean al-
ways tell when bls workers bave bis
interests at heart. The business girt
nay think that the strict attention
she pays to the bustuess at hand g6és
unnoticed, but it never does, Every
hosiness man can tell which of bis
employees arrives the earliest and
leaves the latest. He knows which
‘oue does the best work and which one
is the most diligent. -
‘The girl who must support berself
should learn at the very sttrt not to go
Into business with the [dea of doing
the feast umount of work possible for
ber salary, but with the determination
to du the work allotted, to ber thor-
vuzhly. no matter how jong It takes,
and to be alwass ready for more.
‘This Is the spirit which wins out In
the end.
Another Ittle word on this subject.
The wore a giet distikes her Ine of
work the more conscieitinns she should
be about doing it theronzhly,
It Is eaey to do work well and to
give overtime to it when the work fs
congenial and enjoyable, but when a
gdrl tongs te shirk at ber business and
finds it unpleasant. that ts Just the
time whell xhe needs to buckle down
to real inhor, The mere exertion “OF
foreing herself to accomplish her da-
thee well and thoroughly will eventual-
ly inake the work more Interesting 233
therefore morg pleayant. ,
hacelate more Deena ac y ;
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SOLICITED ey
{This hatter must pot be reprinted with-
out special permission.)
A Uttle copperas In the drinking wa-
ter serves is a good preventive of dis-
euses to which the poultry flock may
be subject.
A French aviator, Perreyon, recent-
ly broke the record for an altitude
fight In currying two passengers,
reaching a height of 15,480 feet.
If the wren’s nest Is éxposed to the
direct rays of the afternoon sun It Is
a food idea to shield tt with some sort
of cdveririg. This will take but a mo-
ment's time, but will be a service that
the ttle birds wit! much appreciate.
Barring invalids, the folks who com-
plain most nbout the hot weather are
those who have little else to do. The
fellow who is building. ditching or bay-
Ing knows It fg hot, but be 1s too busy
to think very much about it.
A fellow down in Washington has
sured a bad cuse of despepsia by ext-
Ing a teaspoonful of sand once a day.
Tits cure 1s eheap Gnough, but it
would better not be tried excep, «a
the recommendation of a retiable pay-
aiclon.
‘The South American banana crop ts
so large that the United Frult compa
ny finds Itself unable to bundle It. The
cause of the enormous crop ts not only
favorable growing conditions, but free-
dom from storms and other forms of
damarce.
Old potatoes reached a new low rec-
ord mark fn large market centers ear-
ly in June, when they slumped to 16
cents a buskel. In some cities they
were dumped cit and poor people of
the city ailowed (o come and get them
for nothing.
Coal and charcoal are supposed to be
good for hogs—that fs, they like it—be-
cause it not only stimulates the flow of
the digestive Juices. brt because the
sharp cornered pleces are tough on the
worms that sometimes infest the in-
testinal tract.
‘The soll about the bushes and shrubs
should be kept spoded and the suck-
ers cut out. Oftentimes It Is advisable
to give a heavy mulcb of straw ma-
nure. -This not only serves to hold
moisture. but gives the growing bushes
needed fertilizing elements.
Placing a sack containing equal
parts of saltpeter and Gne broken cbar-
coal in a cistern I sald to be an ef-
fective means of clearing the water,
The saitpeter draws the soot to the
sack and the charcoal olds It. This
Process does not injure the water and
Is effective for several months, 2
ee ee ee ee een tee
ess would not preclude the possibility
of contamination by cholera germs sub
sequent to the time of manufucture,
Tiorse thieves and chicken thieves
are vottentire strangers in many rural
communities, but the present season
is the first that many lave heard re-
Ports of tree thieves, In an instance
of the latter kind noted the other day
a hundred fruit trees that had beer
lately planted were found missing
when the owner went to see what
Frowth they were making. In the
same nelghborhoml seventy trees were
taken from another firmer.
Where sand or grarei st decom-
posed Imestone and clay are at hand
there Is no cheaper or better material
for road Improvemem. Where the road
to be improved Im already sandy, the
clay-Hmestone combination Is all that
Is needed. Where the sull Is heary-and
‘elther muck or Ioam, both sand and
the clay and Imestone should be ased.
If the rondway is Joy the roadside
should be drained and the road crovn-
ed with a grader before the surface
materials mentioned gre applied.
Professor Larson of the Sonth Da-
kota Agricultural college strongly nd-
vises the building of the pit silo tn
those semiarid xections of the state
where the farmers nre likely to he
short of money due to crop fatlures
the past few years and where the soil
Js clay or gumbo, so that it will not
cave in as a result of the action of the
Werther or moisture coming from the
silage. He recommends a pt some
eixteen feet deep and from efshteen
to twenty feet In diameter and puts
the cost of St at whatever the vate
would be of. the Inbor requtred to diz
it. He suggests a derrick nnd bucket
for thix parpoxe. the xame outtit alee
being nved to lift out the alluge duriog
the winter season, .
ton ed Mbt Gol et a
SUNDAY SCHOOL,
Lesson 1X.—First Quarter, Fer
March 1, 1914.
THE INTERNATIONAL' SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Luke xii, 13-34.
Memory Verse, 15—Golden Text, Luke
xii, 34—Gommentary Prepared by
Rev. D. M. Stearns, x
In the last verse of the previous les.
son He said, “The Holy Ghost shall
teach you." On the last night that
He wns with them, ere He suffered.
| He said, “I'be Comforter, the Holy
| Ghost. whom the Father will send in
'my name, Te shall teach you all
. things, He will guide you into all
truth, He will show you things to
come, He shall testify of Me (ohn
xiv, 26; x¥, 2U; xvi, 13), and many oth-
er things He suld of the Spirit of
‘Truth. But we are blind und deaf and
so slow to.perceive or bear spiritual
things.
| Well might He say of each of us, “I
have written to him the great things
| of my Inw, but they were counted as a
| strange thing” (Hos. vill, 12). When
He spoke of false teaching even the
| disciples thought He referred to bread
for the body, und now here Ix a man,
one of the company, so little Impress-
ed by the grent truths of our last les-
son and the solemn things of the fu:
ture that be Is more concerped about
a bit of earthly property.
Is it not so still, and are not men.
with rare exceptions, so occupied with
things temporal that they can scarce
find time to rive a thought to. things
eternal? How welghty and heart
searching the Master's words, “A
man's life consisteth not in the aknn-
dunce of the things which be pos-
sesseth” (verse 15), Since “covetous-
nexs {x idolutry" (Col. 111, 5), how much
we need the words, “Having food and
raiment, let us be therewith content,”
“Trust not {n uncertain riches, but in
the Living God, who giveth us richly
all things to enjoy” (I Tim. vi, 68. 17).
How uptly and forcibly our Lord set
forth the truth in the parable of the
rich poor man who could only talk
‘with bimself about the smaliness of
‘his barns and the abundance of his
fruits und bis goods, and if be had
larger barns what an easy, merry time
he might have for many years to come.
He seemed to have no thought of God,
who had caused his ground to bring
forth plentifully, nor of the poor, with
swhom be might share bla goods. There
was no one tv be considered but bim-
self, He knew nothing of the love of
God and therefore had no love for
God nor for his fellow men. “But God
said unto him, Thou fool, this night
thy soul shall be required of thee”
(verse 20).
Now what were barns and fruits
and goods to him? He had to leave
all and went out of the world poor
Indeed, like the rich man of Luke xvi,
19-26. How often we read of one who
died at bis desk in the office or sitting
In his home or taken by an accident,
and the words come to mind, “Thy
soul {x required of thee.” and the great
question Is, Was he saved? and then,
‘Waa he rich toward God? It ts posal-
ble to be suved ax by fire and have no
rewards for service. no crowns to cast
at His feet «I Cor. iil, 11-15; Rev.
fy, 101.
A true bellever may still be so bilnd-
ed by the god of this world as to fail
to see the ndvantage of treasure in
heaven und so tny up treasure for
Limself tn this world which must all
be left behind when be ts called out of
the world. From verse 22 He speaks
to His disciples. truly saved men, all
but Judas txcartot lohn xili, 10, 11),
and teaches them thnt since they are
now children of God there ly no room
for anstetr about food or raiment:
The kingdom fs made sure to them
(verse 32, and If they will row lve
to hasten Its coming by lying only
unto God and winninz souls to Him
He will see that xl) things necessary.
for this life are given to them,
The teaching of verse 31 and Matt.
vi, 33, fs not that of seekips our soubt
salvation, for the words were spoken
to saved men, but It teaches saved
People that as such their first aim In
life should be the toming,f the king-
éom for which we pray when we say
from the heart, “Our Father, who uct
in heaven. * * * Thy kingdom come,
Thy will be done on earth ax in heav-
en.” There Is no use talking of ex-
tending the kingdom, for there is no
Kingdom to extend. ft was at hand
when our Lord was here, in thelr very
midst Iu the person of Himself, the
King. but when they cried “We have
no king but Caesir* and killed their
Messiah they caused thg kingdom to,
be postponed till He shall come again
See carefully Luke six, 11-15; Matt
XSi, 39: Acts Ul, 20. 21. We are tn.
the age between the postponement of
the kingdom and its coming at the sec.
ond coming of Christ, the mystery hid
In God from the beginning of the |
world, but spectilly reveled to Paul
{Eph fii, 9-17: Rom, xvl. 2427. Seeks. |
Ing the kingdom seemx to me to mean
“counting all things bur lows for the
éxcellency of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus our Lord” «Phil, til, 81 and make
dear the iinone Chhees ls a0 chnich
Nd EO
Arrive Effective January 4, 91a ___Leave
310 pm.. ~~ |—__ North and East... _.__.. 13pm
325 am | North and East 12 35 am
7 30 am —____} North and East...-_—___- 8 10 pm
11 00 am ~~]. Columbia and Local —— —. 6 00 am
910 pm —__}_"__ Columbia and Local. —.-- 4 00 pm
1220 am——_._| Jacksonville and Fia-——.— . 3:30am
120 pm—....] Ll dacksonville and Fla-—.—| ~ 315 pm
8 03 pm... |" Montgomery and West _...-- 735 am
12 10 am —___| "Jacksonville ard Local 3 50 por
9 00 am | Montgomery and West 6 00-pm
835 pm |... -- Jacksonville and Fla________ 70 am
Cc. W. SMALL, D, P. A.
TICKET OFFICE
10 BROUHTON STREET WEST: .
) SSeS SERS SSS EY
f SPECIALS &
) Saturdays and Mondays x
" ‘One Dollar Fountain Syringe ~ 75 cents x
Twenty-five cent Talcums 19 cents
Twenty-five cent Box Paper 17 cents x
We have lots of Bargalns, ask about them K
We fill prescriptions just like your Doctor writes them i
4 and cheaper than any whereelse. We soll stamps and
accommodate you in every way we possibly can. Our »
‘y delivery, service isthe best in Georgia. We give the
( little girls a pair of beauty Pins with every purchase and Xf
{ the boys candy,
_— i
Pate’s Drug Store
i HACULand WESE BROAD STD Phones 4710 and 4711 hy
| Sy ROOST STOO st
W ° L e B L U N E
ls —-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL—
Fruit and Commission Merchant =
303 ST. JULIAN WEST AND 23 JEFFERSON ST
‘ou will be groxtly benetitted by stopping in and getting ouy
y free advice on how to take che best care of your shoes
Yhich will cause them to last longer and keep better shape. We
do neat repairing on shoes und vay special attention to ladied and
children shoes, Prompt attention toall work. 7
J.-H WASHINGTON .
WITITAKER STREET
WH DO .
. Test °° lis
a) {ode eis
ee 1 feet | gy
ge red y .
JOB PRINTING
dos 8 UERES yo, ot ies oe
TT Ne ED PT ee
Old Laws. 7
‘There, still exists in London a bylaw
which forbids a cast of beer to be un-
loaded between certain hours, but nc
mention is made of casks containing
any other liquor.
Lesiene bas on {te stntute book a
law which is not enforced It problb-
its’hatg of more than eighteen Inches
in diameter, forbids the use of artif
clal flowers and Imported feathers and
orders that a Icense of seventy-five
cents a year shall be pald for the right
to wear ribbons or silk or gauze.
Making It Last.
A young man was lately leaving his
aunt's house after a visit when, tind-
ing it was beginning to rain, ue caught
up an umbrella that was snugly placed
in a corner and was proceediuy to open
It when the old ludy, who for the Hest
time cbserved his movements, sprang
toward Lim, exclaiming: “No, no; that
you never shull! I've bad that um-
brella twenty-three years, and it has
never been wet yet, and I am sure it
shan't be wetted now!"—London Ex-
press. ‘
ES ee ee ee ee
‘To shave easily and save the blades
of safety razors, leave a pleasant feel
on the face and make all razors take
less stropping, adopt the following
plan:
Lather the face well and wash off
the lather. That gets rid of all dust.
‘Then with a small brush work Into the
‘skin a little vaseline, and without re-
/moring this relather the face well, and
then shave. The first,day or two the
plan does not seem so successful, bat
after that the advantages are very
warked—Londdn Field.
The Real Thing.
Mrs, Knicker—Ie your husband bard
to get along with? Mrs, Bocker—Very.
It I give him a poor dinner he wants a
divorce, and if I give bim a good din-
ner he calls tt tobbying—New York
Times.
The Sleepless Seven.
“There were seven of the twelve,”
sald obe of the discharged jurors tn
epeaking of the matter next morning,
“who didn’t want to sleep themselves
and wouldn't let the rest of us sleep,
Whenever®we droppedNin a doze they
came around and shook us till we were
wide awake again.”
“And you bad to submit, I supposa,
for they constituted the majority?”
“Yes. They were a rousing major
Ity,” said the hollow eyed juror, with
a pensive attempt to be facetious—
Chicago Tribune.
Mexican Hats. |
A hat sueb as fs worn by Bfextcans
may cost anywhere from 5 cents to
$500. The better ones weigh from six
to elght pounds and carry many dol-
lars’ worth of silver and gold trim.
ming,
Is the place where you get
Not Drinks of allkinds. Our
Lunches are the best and a
. temptation for 10 cents.
507 West Broad Street
Sa ra ESS
Protect Ycvt Horses’ F
iOIECT TCel NGISES TEC
fave Them Shod by the
“The Cresceus Horseshoelng and
Clipping Shop
315 JEFFERSON sT, Phone 3509
NELSON A. CUYLBR
‘Tho Expert Horeeshoer,” Prop.
Important—The only Expert
Xhorseshosiug shop in the city op-
erated by a colored man.
f
UEKTTGHEN
"SERVING MUSHROGMS.
USHEKOOMS are a deacacy, yet
a Uebt nutrient. ‘There are but
few persons who do uot relfsli
them, but such fatal mistakes are
mande by atherers that many ure dix:
Ynclined to ent them, or at least do so
‘With more or Jess reluctance. Mush
fous may be bought in the markets.
oF the dried ones are fold In the shops.
Grilled Mushrooms.—Musbrooms for
grilling must be of a turge und even
size. After baying washed them and
cut off the stalks, dip them In olive oll.
senrop with salt and pepper, then grill
over a bright fire, turning them when
@one on one side. Arrunge in a vege-
table dish, the hollow side upward.
then place In the cexter of each musb-
oom a very small pat of maitre d’botel
butter or parsley butter and serve hot,
Mushreoms In Cases.
Wipe and peel elzht cup mustrooms,
cut them Into sinall dice and fry them
with an ounce of butter In a saute pan.
Butter some souille cases, paper or
china, lay a thin slice of lemon in
each, three parts fill with prepared
mushrooms and season to taste.
Spread a layer of potted deviled meat,
mixed with a yolk of egg? over the
mushrooms, brush over with melted
butter and bake for fifteen minutes.
A Dainty Way.
Mushroom Cruutes.—Take slices of
stale white bread, stamp these out into
rounds or oblonzs with a fancy or plain
eutter, fry them In butter to a golden
color and drain. Huve ready the re
quired quantity of larze button mush-
roouns, peeled, minus stalks and fried
th butter; also a misture of finely
ebopped beef and ham, molstened with
@ little rich brown sauce. When quite
bot spread the meat mixture over the
routes, place a mushroom on each:
season with salt, pepper, cayenne and
@ Uttle lemon juice. Put them In a hot
oven for a few minutes. dish up, gar-
nish with fried parsley and serve.
Served on Toast.
Mushroum With Exgs.—Peei and
take the stalks from four or five mush-
rooms, wash and drain them, then cut
them into smai! slices, place them in a
stewpan with two ounces of butter
and season well with salt and pepper
‘and allow them to stew gently for
twenty minutes. Break six eggs intoa
basin and beat them up thoroughly:
add two tablespoonfuls of ‘milk and
pour the misture over the mushrooms
in the stoewpan. Stir them gently witt
@ #poon until the mixture Is set. "
ETC HEN
Comey,
Sue GUPBO:
JUST A FEW TURNIPS.
LUNCHEON MENU.
‘Cheese Fondu.
Baked Potatoes.
Fried Turnips.
is rk
Cheese.
Jam.
URNIPS should be prepared In
T the following ways to make
them pupular in families that
find turnips cooked in the ordinary
ways insipid:.
* Fried Turnips.—Pare and cut turnips
im half inch slices, soak for twenty
ainutes in cold water. Drain and par-
boil them for twenty minutes, draip
again and wipe dry. Salt. pepper and
dip in corn meal or flour and fry in
bacon fat or other shortening.
A Novel Way.
Stewed Sugared Turnips.—Take tur-
nips of equal size, put them into a
saucepan with a lump of butter and
try til! well browned. Sprinkle pow-
dered sugar over them, season with a
Uttle salt, pour In about a teacupful
of stock according to the number of
turnips. Place the cover on the sauce
pan and let it simmer till they are
tender. Serve on a hot dish
Turnips With ‘Tarragon S W-e.—Take
some turnips, scrape, wash und trim
them and boll them. Then serve them
with a sauce made as follows: Prepare
half a cupfol of melted butter sauce.
using milk and no water; season it
add a tenspoonful of finely minced
dried tarragon and bring it to boiling
point. Have ready the yolk of an egg
Deaten up with a large teaspoonful of
lemon juice. stir this quickly into the
gauce and remove it at once from the
stove, and then add half a tablespoon-
fal of fresh butter and pour the sauce
over the turnips.
+ Served With Boiled Meats. «
Tornips and Potatoes.—Take two
good sized turnips, pare and cut into
slices. drop Into an uncovered ‘vessel
of boiling unsalted water and cook just
below the boiling point until transpar-
ent. Have ready boiled the same
bulk of Irish potatoes. Drain the tur-
nip slices in & colander, let the pota-
toes dry off, then ndd them to the tur
nip and press both through into a hot
ary dish. Add bal? a tablespoonful of
butter, balf ao teaszoonfnl of salt, a
Gusting of white pepper and paprika.
Beat until- light, then add two table
spoonfuls of hot milk or four table-
spoonfuls of rebeated cream anuce or
thick cream soup of any kind. Bent
and pile in 2 small bot dish. Send at
ence to the table. Use a dish without
Hess MArmgpiral
HAPPY THOUGHTS.
Make for yourse'ves nests of
pleasant thoughts. None o. us vet
know, for none of us have been
taught in early youth, what fa‘ry pal-
‘| aces we may buld of beauti‘ul |
thoughts, proof against a'l adversi y,
bright fancies, satisfied memories,
noble histoties, fa'thful sayings, treas-
ure houses of precious and restful
thoughts—Ruskin
Not as Sad as It Might Have Been.
“Now that your boys have gone away
to school aud yuur daugliters have gut
married I suppose you fiud it rather
dismal around bome, don't you. Sr
Caderley 2”
“Well, It’s not as bad as it mfEht be.
When I begin carving at dinner now I
always know thnt ft will be my turn to
eat before everything is 80 cold that it
\s tasteless."—Chicazo Record-Herald.
Mand te Mouth.
_ “Are you getting accustomed to New
-York?" asked the talkative grocer.
“Ry .dexrees,” sald ‘the woman, “I
think I like it 9 ttle better than I
did at first. “But bow did you know
that we bad Just moved to town? I
never told you.”
“No, you never told me, but the way
you bought groceries did. You bought
In such larze quantities. This showed
that you had just come from some
place where people Lad plenty of store-
room and so bought groceries by the
‘box and Warrel instead of by the
pound. But I see you are getting used
to keeping house on two kitehen
shelves and are buying In driblets, like
all New Yorvers."—New York Times.
Got Hie Reward.
Years ago a tradesman whose name
is now a household word was employ-
ed’ in a molest capacity in a west
end shop in London. While exhibiting
some delicate ware to the very frst
customer he served he let it fall and
break. The customer, a doctor, good
naturedly took the blame and paid for
the broked article. Years later tue
salesman, now a wealthy man, called
on the doctor, reminded him of the in-
cldent and settled on him $5,000 a year
for life.—London Express.
‘The Wickedest Bit of Sea.
Nine out of ten travelers would tell
Inquirers that the roughest piece ot
water fs that cruel stretch in the Eng.
lish channel, and nine out df ten trav.
elers would say what was not true
As a matter of fact, “the wickedest
bit of sea” is not in the Dover strait or
In yachting, for example, from St. Jean
de Luz up to Pauillac or across the
Mediterranean “race” from Cadiz to
Tangier, nor ts it in rounding Cape
Horn, where there is what sailors cal
8 “true” sea,
‘The “wickedest sea” is encountered
In rounding the Cape of Good Hope for
the eastern portion of Cape Colony.—
London Globe.
Of and On.
“Save when you're young.” $
The speaker, John D. Rockefeller,
‘Ir., was addressing a ¥. M. C. A. meet
ing in Cleveland.
“Save when you're young,” repeat:
ed Mr, Rockefeller, with a smile. “The
years will pass swiftly. Then wher
you find yourself well on you'll alsc
find yourself well off.”
1 ee NOE Tee SeOTHey:
Bt Peter's is certainly the most
‘amazing church yin the world. It is
not beautiful-I am satisfied that nc
‘true artist would grant that—but after
-you have been all over Europe and
‘have seen the various edifices of im.
portance it still sticks in your mind as
astounding—perbaps the most astound:
ing of all—From Theodore Dreiser's
“A Traveler at Forty.”
——
Giving Happiness,
To make some nook of God's crea-
tion a little fruitfuler, better, more
worthy of God, to make some buman
hearts ‘@ little wiser, manfuller, hap-
pier, wore blessed, less accursed—it is
a work for a God.—Carlyle.
¥ Witty Sayings.
W. 8 Gilbert said of Beerbonm
‘Tree's Hamlet that it was “funny with-
out being coarse”
During an Englishman's lecture In
New Haven the usher safd to a late
comer: “Please, sir, take your seat as
quietly as possible. The audience 1s
asleep.”
4 Philadelphia woman sald: “Of
course, there will be no marriage in
heaven. ‘There will be plenty of
women there and a few men, but nond
any one would care to marry.”
DO IT WELL.
‘What is worth doing at all is
worth doing well. Not giving your
whole, undivided attention to the
task in which you have invested
your life and money means that
you are wasting your own precious
time and that of others. Whatever
you do, doit with your whole heart
and mind or get out and try some-
thing else. It takes pretty nearly
all of a man’s time to perfect an
undestaking, provided it be a big
and worthy one to begin with.
-jiiilaay’s
Mirror —
Home Care & the Nails.
ee ee Wee eee ee)
la palr of small, curved, xharp pointed
selssors, a couple of emery toards, a
jHalllruch (wot too xtlf), a slender, Bex-
ible Hle of hurd steel; a box of nuy
gutranteed uall polish. n soft buffer
jaud u suinil bottle uf peroxide of by-
| drogen, with a bit of lemon and a fine
toilet pumice stone. A soxp with olive
ott in ft will be found the best. and a
far of plain cold cream should be pro-
vided,
If the nails have been vegiected and
reer clogzed with dirt and grime fill
them with cold cream, rubbing It io
well; then witb a fiece of fine old ine
remove the dirt from one set with the
nails of the other bund, never with an
tostrument of steel.
A little white vaseline should be on
band also, as it heals and helps to pre-
vent brittleness. After the soaking
rub in the vaseline weil, fien use the
brush and clean suds, warm, but not
hot. The nails are then ready for the
careful looking over to rid them of any
ragged bits of Sesh clinging to the
‘Bides and base. The stick should be.
‘dipped Into the peroxide and passed
‘aground the nails as well as under.
‘This belps to whiten and cleanse them.
If there are callous places use the tol-
let pumice with the soapy water, rins-
ing well afterward.
Stains may require the Juice of a
lemon, but co!d cream should be ap-
plied after to prevent the roughness
that would otherwise be caused by the
acid, and great care must be taken not |
to cut the skin around the base, or it,
will remain ragged, as it is really 2
“selvage.”
Filing Finger Nails.
Before beginning the home maatcur-
ing the file, which should be a thin,
flexible one, should be used. The nails
are then In a condition to stand this,
as after the soaking they will be too
soft,
They should never be allowed to
grow too far beyond the tip of the
finger. Long, pointed nails are entire
ly out of style, if they were ever in
a8 2 woman does not want the talons
of the Chinaman at the ends of her
pretty fingers. .
So, in the filing, rub them down to
pass just a trifle beyond the finger it-
self, rounding them nicely, and do not
file the sides down too closely, as the
natural support is then withdrawn, and
this causes hangnalls.
Often a nail will peratstently break
or abow a flaw In the same place for
years. As the new nail grows the split
or crack seems to come naturally, and
the only cure is to watch that nail.
using the emery board to smooth off
the first sign of the flaw.
° Ridged Nails,
‘The little emery boards should be
used dally to remove any roughened
edges from the nalls, and It !s advis-
able to use these every day instead of
the steel Sle. Where the nails are
sealy and ridged it shows an excess
of acid in the blood. Those afflicted
with rheumatism often find their nails
ridged as they grow and the ends will
break off in fine scales. Some treat-
ment for the disense itself should be
used, and. in addition, 2 ‘small piece
of wash leather. dipped into powdered
pumice stone, will make the nails fair-
ly smooth, but there should also be
used a little thick gelatio. Dip each
naj! In this at night, wrap the fngers
separately in old linen and tet it remain
all night. Dip each into warm water
next morning. This helps greatly in
preventing and curing the scaliness.
Simple Nail Powder.
‘A good nail powder Is made of a!
quarter ounce of talcum powder, boric |
acid and starch, also powdered very |
fine. Add a few drops of curmine tinc-|
ture. Mix the powders and add the:
tincture. Pass the whole through a!
fine sieve three times, forcing out aui|
lumps. Coat the nails with a 7ery
smull bit, rubbing it In well with the!
fingers; then use the buffer Ilghtly.
If too much ts applied It should be|
rinsed off, tho nails carefully wiped!
dry and then the buffer used, finishing |
by fubbing the nails of one band on |
the palm of the other, a natural
polisher. |
Too Much Maniouring.
‘When the finger nails are constantly!
breaking and seem -soft and brittle
there 1s elther something wrong in thei
general health or they are improperly |
cared for. Many women in the effort
to have nice nails scrub and file and.
polish all the health out of them, mak-
Ing them frall and too tBin. Uses |
too much manlenring does the harm,
go it is just as well to tet them atone |
once In awhile, permitting them to
m. , ~, ie im:
{ESRD RECO ARR CORDM ORICA
f PICTURE FRAMES
a We make a specialty of framing diplomas, marriago i
licenses and pictures of all sizes. Work. neatly and
4 +! promptly finished. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices K
chexp. Enlarging pictures a specialty. Orders eall-
i) ed for and delivered. i
xR W. W. HILL / + 507 WEST BRVAD STREET bj
WORE Oe C5 TS CSE CRT aS CST ICRI OST
a
FINEST{IN THE CITY.
Expert Hair Cutting, Eleetric Massage and Shampooing a Specialty. All
Work Done by Experienced Workman. . Courteous attention to all. SHIN-
ING PARLOW ATTACHED, =
P, Rk. Wright ~
ferry kh. Wrig
Proprietor
517 WEST BROAD ST - - - - SAVANNAH GA.
TRY TO BE CHEERFUL.
Cheerfu'ness, like other good
qualities, can be deve'opsd and ia-
created, and Whoever emits its cul-
ture neglects,an important duty to
himself and to society. The fact
that few men can do their best work
or think the'r best thoughts unless
cheerful spirit animates them shoald
be sufficient reason for setting in
motion every cause which produces
such a spirit.
Tiny Geuct,
The republic of Goust is a square
mile in the P:-enees which for the
last tree centties has been recoz-
nized by Spain and France as inde-
pendent.” It 2:~ 2 population of about
150 weavers ‘They are ruled by a
council of eldvr~ and pay no taxes or
duties of any sort. This civic unit
1s eo tly that it ins to go abroad for
its cure of sonts and body, for it has
neither physician nor priest, for these
needs it bas to <o to Laruns, the near-
est French tonn Even the dead must
leave Goust tu find consecrated rround
1 which to liv. the coffins belng slid
downhill and thus out of the smatiest
republic In the world,
A.M. MONROE & COMPANY
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
_* Prompt and courteous attention given all business
entrusted to us.5. 4 Everything of the latest style _
Laresr Sere Sinvex nav ayp Brack Cars n
CARRIAGE FOR HIRE
60 WEST RROAD STREET _ Phone 121
Not Worded the Same.
Just as the tumily was about to sil
down to the evening meal the minlster
unexpectedly dropped in and was ask.
ec to join them. :
‘When the maid set the table she bad
turned the plates bottom side
Written on the bottom was the name
of the manufacturer. .
‘The minister was asked to say grace,
and as he did so he reverently bowed
his head above his plate.
‘When he had finished the little five-
year-old daughter of the house picked
up ber plete, looked at the”manufac
turer's name closely and sald:
“Papa, it doesn't say that on my
plate."—Ladies’ Home Journal.” -
© eae’ . ~
Johnson Undertaking Establishment,
—COMBINED WI1H— .
The Royall Undertak' ng Company
{Incorporsteo) *
| Funeral Directors and Embalmerr
) . .
| Fines. tine of ‘Coffins, Caskets and Robcs. White and black
Buris) cars. Office a1.d warercc ms 305-221 Jeflascn etreet
| LFIELDS and L, M. POKLBRD, Managers, ,
Residence Phone 2032 -
Residence Phone 4241. Livery Stable Attached. Office Phe ne 676
Discovery of Turtle Soup.
According to some authorities, Bris-
tol has a special claim to fame as the
city where turtle soup was invented
by a seventeenth century mayor, who
was also a shipowner. The captain of
one of his ships brought¢bome a live
‘turtie, thinking that his worship would
Uke to have it in hls fshpond. This
Happened just as the mayor was about
to give a civic banquet, and, deeming
that his guests might appreciate a
new dish, he ordered the turtle to be
stewed. The corporation was so de
lighted with the novelty that it re
elected its host to the munteipal chair
ine times ronning.—London Chroni-
a
x a8
VERNON PARK
i
Lies to the Right on Bull street, a’short distrnce Leyerad
| the Granger Tract, where Lots are selling for forty
;}times more than those in Vernon Park. Youcsn
‘| build a nice little home, have hens, fresh eggs, fresh veg-
tables, a,cow and a pig, if you like, ard be ir@cpercent
‘TJustone mile this side of Central Park College
Where you can educate your children for life. I shall be
'glad to take you outand show you these Lots. Terms -
88 00 cash, $3.00 per month, down to {$ (4 cirDiza0 Jt
‘per month, You can pay for one. No Taxes, no Inter
“est. Incase of death we give the lot Free. ‘Icn per
cent off for cash. Will build"you a He me whenyour lo
ae paid for. ‘Call and talk it over with me.
| {Land is the Safest Investment, I Sell Lana/
Restaurant Affiliation.
‘The walter in the light lunch cafe
looked expectantly at the frst of five
men who had just entered.
“Bring me a coffee cake and 9 cup of
coffee,” ordered the frst man.
“Tl take some milk biscuit and a
glass of milk,” sald the second.
“Tea buns and a cup of tea, please,”
remarked the third. a
“A plece of cocoanut ple and a cup of
cocoa,” said the fourth,
The waiter went to the fifth man. “I
know whst you want,” he said. “You
want a slice of chocolate cake and a
cup of chocolate.”
“No; I do not,” protested the fifth
man. “I'want a plate of ice cream and
‘a glass of ice water.”—Judge.
VERNON PARK COMPANY
| Wm.'3. Jackson. Agent, 817 West Brera Street
PHCNE 3713 SAVER NE RCA.
Stevenson Carried His Tall Hat.
E=~ If ft Is For Your Lodge
Gay WE HAVE IT!
\ pS We manufacture Lodge Regalia for every
sare ES \ 2, Fraternal Society. Cash or Installment
ape BYE 4 Plan. Cheapest Badge Housein the Count-
Ga ef i te * ry. Catalogue for your Society FREE.
GE ad EN 4 GENTRAL REGALIA GO.
WY Ey WF 5 Tae Negro Regalia House. JOS. L. JONES, Pres.
oe N.E.Gor.8th& Plum =.
Sacer Gincinnati, Ohio . .
Sir Sidney Colvin, in a lecture on
“Personal Reminiscences of R. L. Ste-
venson,” denied firmly that Stevenson
had_any affectation. .
“R. L. 8," sald Sir Sidney, “did once
possess a frock coat and tall hat, which
he acquired for the purposes of a wed-
ding. Coming to London subsequently,
he made the concession to my respec-
tability’ of donning the coat and hat,
and thus we walked down Piccadilly.
But the hat was in Stevenson's hand,
and as the gates of Burlington Mouse
closed on us, Stevenson was declaim-
ing In vibrant voice and rich Scoteh
accent a chorus from Milton’s ‘Sam—
son Agonistes.’ "—London Globe.
lilusions.
A rude shock greets the idea that the
testimony of eyewitnesses is especial-
ly reliable when one comes to stu
the laws of evidence. The majorit'
persons see what they think
ought to see. If a house is repr.
haunted it is easier to see 2 gl
there than not. Possibly this accoun\
for the widespread bellef that lomi-
nous appearances of one kind or an-
other accompany earthquake shocks.
Sclentific men do not believe: these
stores, and they usually dwindle on
investigation, yet they continue to cir-
culate on both sides of the Atlantic,
says a writer In Cosmos, Paris, trans-
Jated for the Literary Digest.
THE BEST PLACE
7 In Savamah |
FORMEN'S GOOD SHOES
Prices $3.50 up
B. H. Levy, Bro. Co. -
Memory.
Dear as remembered kisses after death.
All our sensations are memory, some
say. It may be. It may not be. But
this we know: The perfume that is the
finest is the perfume of reminiscence.
It may be a vagrant fragrance from
the woods or fn the city’s air. The
song neglected, but remembered, is the
most appealing. The taste acquired
in childhood iy that that tickles niost
our older palate. A friend is a com.
posite of our memories. Sometimes
that part of us that is the bud and
leaf seems the whole tree. But we
would die without the roots. Memory
ja the roots and sap of us—Kansas
City Bter.
Entered at the Post Office at Savannah, Ga., as Second-Class mail matter.
Saturday, February 28, 1914.
To permit a questionable act is bad; to attempt to justify the same after it has been exposed to the public gaze and regarded as an act without the pale of ethical propriety is indeed culpable. On last week, with much reluctance, we gave our opinion, editorially, to a so-called Student Country Fair, but which should be rightly styled a mid way, street corner carnival or the like, recently held at the Georgia State College. Then, we told of the games of chance that were in operation there and were allowed to be indulged in by our boys and girls. In so doing it was not our aim to do the school any intentional injury, far be such from us. Our aim was to give the people the facts as they were concerning this so called Students Country Fair, all padded reports in the daily press concerning the Fair to the contrary notwithstanding. In the face of the facts as presented by us, we had no earthly idea that any of the authorities could have the brazen effrontery to attempt in any way to deny our allegations anent the very questionable games permitted to go on at the "Fair." But such has been the case. Since our editorial concerning the Fair, the school has been in an uproar. Efforts have been put forth to have the students make denials, both oral and written, of any presence of games of chance and this despite the fact, that games with players cards, the raffling of chickens, in the well known Midway or street corner fair style, by the use of paddles, and the like were indulged in by the students. Think of this; Our boys and girls, sent to an institution to be moulded into strong and constructive men and women, men and women who will be able to serve their State and community with credit, being made, as it were, to stultify their consciences in order to serve the man who presides over them, in his distress. Think of a delegation of school boys whose meagre training in the lore of scheming and planning penetrating the guise of innocence which they assumed, to the betrayal of the power behind them, presenting themselves to us and trying to convince us that we were either mistaken in what we said of the Fair or that we held to an ethical code a little too high for general purposes. The question comes to us with great force: Is the Georgia State College living up to its highest efficiency when our boys and girls are influenced and environed as above stated? Is the sool a one man affair at which teachers and students alike must swallow their consciences and cease to be reasonable beings whenever the head wishes to act either offensively or defensively? Are our boys and girls whose time in school rightly belongs to them, to be formed into waiting embassies the purpose of which is to offset well-founded criticism of the management of the institution? How long, we ask ourselves, will such conditions exist at the school and escape the attention of the Commission? That they do not know these things we have no doubt, for with an ingenuity born of a diplomacy of the most subtle sort everything, we are told, is made to appear roseate whenever the authorities appear upon the scene. But, we believe that the veil is going to be lifted. The colored people have the greatest confidence in the penetrating wisdom and ability of Gen. P. W. Meldrim and Supt. Ashmore. Grateful as they are for the useful and unselfish service which these gentlemen have rendered the race through the school, they believe that they will yet be able to see that part of the institution, which is so artfully concealed from them. As our mind reverts to our former visits to the school and the characteristic words of Gen. P. W. Meldrim, "This is your school, make it what you will
and we will help you," come before us, we see light in the distance. For, with the growing unrest among both teachers and students against gag rule and its like, becoming more and more manifest, we believe that the subterfuge so well built at the school, is beginning to see its last days.
Many times when offenses are committed and the interested parties are of opposite races, the member of the darker race is often given the worst end of it by the daily papers, and the member of the other race is shown always to be in the right. This allusion is generally dispelled if an impartial hearing is had as will be shown by the following articles clipped from the Monday and Wednesday editions of the Morning News of this week:
The second accident occurred between 7:30 and 8 o'clock at night, when automobiles driven by H. N. Schwarz ot No. 12 State street, west, and Joe Hall, collided at Liberty and Whitaker streets.
According to passers-by, Mr. Schwarz was driving his machine, a Buick touring car, north on Whitaker street, and Hall was driving a five-seated "E-M-F" east on Liberty. Both reached the corner at the same time. Mr. Schwarz blew his horn to notify the driver of the other machine that he had the right of way and was going to cross without stopping. Hall, it was said, failed to heed the warning and as he crossed Whitaker Mr. Scharz's machine struck his rear wheel
Hall's car was lifted almost clear of the street and thrown across the street car track into the middle of the grass plat, bringing up against a tree and smashing both rear wheels. The other car, with brakes set, swayed in the same direction and landed along side the first car, smashing a front wheel as it struck the curb.
Mr. Schwarz coolly kept his seat and was not injured, but Hall and two other Negroes were thrown out of their car into the street. The two passengers got their feet immediately, unhurt, but Hall lay on the pavement tuned.
Mr. Schwarz said he got out of his car and started across the street to see how badly hurt. Hall was, but before he could reach him Hall jumped to his feet and with his companions disappeared south on Whitaker street
There was no one in the Schwarz car except Mr. Schwarz. The damage to the car consisted of a broken front wheel, a smashed lamp, a broken windshield and a bent and twisted front spring and axle. The damage will probably amount to $200.
Hall's car was badly wrecked as to its rear wheels. The top was torn and broken, the rear portion of the torneau was badly damaged and the front fender and the front and rear mud guards were bent. The damage to this car will amount to probably $.00 or $500.
The accident was reported to the police headquarters and Motorcycle Officer McGinley was sent to the scene. Mr. Schwarz and several witnesses said that the Negro was in fault. They said that Mr. Schwarz had the right of way from the fact that he was proceeding north on Whitaker street. They also declared that Mr. Schwarz blew his horn before attempting to cross the corner.
Officer McGinley searched the neighborhood for Hall and the other two Negroes who were said to have been in th machine at the time of collision, but no trace of them were found. A large crowd was attracted by the collision. Both machines were across the track of the Liberty car line and the cars were blocked for nearly an hour. The case came up before the Recorder on Tuesday, and it resulted as follows: Joe Hall, a driver of an automobile which collided with a car driven by H. N. Schwarz Sunday night, at Whitaker and Liberty streets was arranged before the Recorder yesterday on several charges growing out of the accident, but was dismissed.
Mr. Schwarz admitted that his machine was exceeding the limit of speed allowed and said that he failed to blow his horn as he approached the corner. The testimony showed that Hall was driving his car at a moderate speed. The charges against Hall, who were dismissed, embraced violating the traffic ordinance, exceeding the speed limit, failing to show a rear light and failing to remain on the scene of the accident. None of them was substantiated.
The first account caused the readers of the paper to believe that Joe Hall was a bad neckless fellow, and cowardly too, because he ran. At the time that he was proven to be within the law, did not run, but that the other man was neckless and violated the law.
Other false charges are made against the Negroes. A few weeks ago the people of Chestertown, Md., were started on account of an alleged assault on a white woman by a colored man. Several arrests were made and much bad feeling was engendered. 'The following dispatch proves that the woman in the case concocted the story that came very near causing a poor Negro to fill an untimely grave if one to fit his description was caught:
CHESTERTOWN, Md Feb. 21—Mrs Jeff Hurd, who lives near here, admitted today that the story she told of an attack by a Negro while she was alone with her two children recently was a fiction concocted to keep her husband at nome at night Mrs. Hurd had given a graphic recital of her struggle with her assailant averring that she slashed him with a butcher knife and drove him off. The young woman said she had become so exercised over being left on the farm alone that she killed a chick-
en and smeared its blood about the place to heighten the effect of the story.
(Continued from Page One.)
low citizens, Lincoln said, 'Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether this be true or not, I can say for one that I have no other so great as that of being truly esteemed of my fellowmen by rendering myself worthy of their esteem.' We cannot improve upon that modest expression of ambition.
"Lincoln was modest and his value to his country was vastly increased by that kind of modesty which many lack: recognition of the ability of others. It was of Grant that Lincoln said he would gladly hold his stirrup for him and it was to Grant that he sent the following telegram, which sounds in its modest, diffident tone, as though it came from a subordinate to a superior rather than from the head of a nation to a general under his orders: "I hope it will have no constraint upon you nor do any harm, for me to say I am a little afraid lest Lee sends reinforcements to Early, and thus enables him to turn upon Sheridan"
"Absolute simplicity, freedom from vanity were strong in Lincoln always. When he went to Congress he sent to the compiler of a dictionary of Congress, a statement concerning himself that fills only eight lines, the second of which reads, "Education defective." It takes a big man to do a thing like that. Lincoln's education was defective, but his information was not defective, his sympathies were not defective and his powers were not.
"Life was made easier for Lincoln, fortunately, and the usefulness of spirit was shown to the day of his death, in the humorous view that he took of his troubles and of the charges against him. His wonderfully anlytical mind, his clear seizure of the essential principles involved in a set of facts, as well as his rich natural wit and a ready facility at illustration by analogy, made him a dangerous foe in political or legal combat. In one of his replies to Douglas (in the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates, mention of which I have purposely failed to make).Mr. Lincoln objected to having his ideas turned around by a specious and fantastic arrangement of words by which a man could prove a horse-schestnut to be a chestnut horse. And in describing good naturedly the process of making presidential candidates or presidents out of poor material, a process, by the way, which many think has been going on very energetically in this country for the last few terms, he said: 'A fellow once invented that he had made a discovery by which he could make a new man out of an old one and have enough of the stuff left to make a little yellow dog.'
"Lincoln was free from egotism, although, 'tis said that the average man of great power realizes his power and cannot be free from egotism. Fighting as he was for human liberty, in 1858, when he had been beaten in a contest, he wrote to A. G. Henry of Springfield, 'I am glad I made the late race. It gave me a hearing on the great and durable question of the age, which I could have had in no other way; and though I now sink out of view, and shall be forgotten. I believe I have made some mark which will tell for the cause of civil liberty long after I am gone."
"I there were in Lincoln's mind no freak issues, constitutional or otherwise. His idea was that the power was in the people, could not be taken away from the people, and could be used by the people as they chose. It is interesting to note what he has to say on that subject: 'This country with its institutions belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it, or their revolutionary right of dismembering or overthrowing it.' Here he has clearly foreshadowed the constitutional principle upon which we base our modern doctrine of Initiative, Referendum, and Recall.
"There was no doubt in Lincoln's mind as to the comparative importance of men and money, the rights and value of capital and labor. Said he, 'Lab r is prior to and independent of capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital and deserves much the higher consideration. No men liing are more worthy to be trusted than those who toil up from
poverty; none are less inclined to take aught that they have, not honestly earned.' Such a man as Lincoln would be called a demagogue today by those who worship the fat pocket books; some cannot distinguish between demagoguery and the sense of fair play.
"Lincoln hated slavery, fought it 'tooth and nail,' everywhere, all the time, and I have been astonished, upon reading his utterances how any of his critics could have said he equivocated, compromised. At Springfield in 1888, in one of the famous Douglas debates, he took definite ground, saying, 'A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe the government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved, I do no expect the house to fall, but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or the other.'
"In a letter in 1859, he wrote: 'This is a world of compensation; and he who would be no slave must consent to have no slave. Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves and under a just God, cannot retain it. All honor to Jefferson who, in the concrete pressure of a struggle for National Independence by a single people, had the coolness, forecast and capacity to introduce into a merely revolutionary document an abstract truth, applicable to all men of all times and so to 'embalm it there that today and in all coming days it shall be a rebuke and a stumbling block to the very harbinger of reappearing tyranny and oppression.'
The great Emancipation,-the masterstroke of Abolition, was issued, as you know, in 1863. In a public, address in Philadelphia, Feb. 21, 1863, while the war clouds were hanging low and the scent of burning powder was on the air; he said: "If this country cannot be saved without giving up that principle, (meaning abolition), I was about to say I would rather be assassinated on this spot, than surrender it."
Again in 1864, when the gibbering spectre of untimely martyrdom was hovering about his gaunt figure, he said: "I am naturally anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I cannot remember when I did not so think and feel."
Lincoln hated war, and although he lived to lead his country through a great war, he had that horror at bloodshed that is in the heart of every good and civilized man. Read, if you can, his speech in the House of Representatives Jan. 12, 1848. It was his first speech ever printed in Congress. He speaks of "the exceeding brightness of military glory—that attractive rainbow that rises in the shower of blood." How wonderful a comaprison! How vivid! He denounced war-talk as "the half-insane mumbling of a fever dream." He little knew that he was to be, at once, the hero and the victim of the greatest of modern wars and that his own life-blood was to brighten the war's "attractive rainbow that rises in showers of blood."
"Lincoln was deeply religious, and his kindliness and sympathy passing admirable. On Feb. 11, 1860, upon his departure for Washington, to assume the Presidency, he uttered these memorable sentences: "A duty devolves upon me which is, perhaps
Continued on Page Five)
PRICE STREET SHOE SHOP.
Have your Shoes repaired here.
We pay strict attention to Ladies
and Children Work and make Old
Shoes New. We retan shoes and
dye shoes. All work called for
and delivered promptly.
435 Price Street 3rd door from
Gordon St. Phone 2328
---
Personal Conviction
"The men who succeed best in public life are those who take the risk of standing by their own convictions."—Gurfield
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The Ga Mutual has been and is now, and ever shall be, convicted to the fact, that Nugro insurance companies stand out preeminently as a business medium from standpoint of business, finance and purpose, and is taking the risk of proclaiming itself the modern business missionary and you had better be convicted too, of course by joining the Ga Mutual. Branch Office—509 W. Broad St.
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I SELL
THE EARTH
THE HOUSE
Why not own this pretty Cottage, be Monarch of your own castle? You can pay for it with the monoy you now pay for rent. 4 rooms and hall, plastered throughout, nicely finished and electric lights with beautiful lot Price $1200.00. Terms, Only $100.00 Cash and $10.00 per month
THE STREETS OF THE CITY
Then here are just Seven more of the same kind at the same Price and on the same Terms. These are the Best Bargains on the Easiest Terms that I have been yet able to offer. Remember only EIGHT of them, and you will have to call quick if you want one. They are located on Sixth Street on a high hill. Send me your name and address and I will send a beautiful photo with prices and terms.
My previous offerings in these columns hold good. Automobile service FREE to see anything I have for sale.
G. H. BOWEN
PHONE 4096 457 W. BROAD ST.
FOR RENT—After March 1st, a 2 story dwelling with front lawn and very large yard. French steam range in kitchen, hot and cold water pipes, at 530 Anderson. east. Apply to A. P. Williams, 530 East Anderson street.
GOOD WOOD
OF ALL KIND
Cut Wood $1.00 per Load
Stick Wood $1.25 per Load
Oak Wood $1.35 per Load
Phone 5162 J. M. ZETTLER
Union and West Boundary Sts
Furnished Rooms
Furnished rooms for rent with modern conveniences. Reasonable rates.
Mrs. J. H. Casey, Prop.
511 Henry street, west,
3 doors from West Broad.
Sunday services 11 a. m. and $ p. m. Sunday school, 8:30 p.. m. Class meeting, Tuesdays, 8:30 p. m. Epworth League, Thursdays 8:30 p. m. Rev. J. S. Stripling, pastor.
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
Fem-Apnual Statement for six months ending December 3ist, 1913, of the
Condition of the GUARANTY MUTUAL LIFE & HEALTH INSURANCE COM-
PANY, organized under the Laws of the State of Georgia, pursuant to the
Laws of the said State. Principal office, 504 West Broad St,, Savanuah, Ga,
Balance forward June 30th, 1913 ......-ccesee. cee eeeeeeenes $8191.55
“INCOME ‘
Membership Fees .-..---.--essssceeveeecceae coeeeeeeageeeeenens 1,329.50
(Apnesl Daca sccaiseiesves ssvaveveseeees aasevscteavsccsxeecoes 88,615.21
ABLEPSt snesec6 a. onbidnsdsstsnaivekdenevens Ashioseesonnsseaeiee 143 26
Suadsies sszecpsces so daw seveevvccsinmesssnces es waewcs ose 5.00
Total Income ....eesee. sees seeee 8 45,184.62
. . DISBURSEMENTS . .
Sick and Death Claims Paid ...ccssssessssecesecteeeeeceeeeseeeees = $ 14,311.83
Payments Returned to Members .... ..0..21 cesececeeeeree ageees 24.40
Commissions Paid to Agents ......22 5 sce ceeeeeeceerere ceeeee 9,906.56
S-laries and Expenses of Managers and Agents ........ --. s+ 5,824.83
Medical Examiner's Fee ...220 cece ceeceee seseeseeeeere’ ceeey 1.00
Salaries Officers and Office Exaployees.......--.2-+ seeeeeeeeeeees 4,217,66
Retsand Taxes. 2. csscisee: save. neceessueneancenn enqneenen eee 617.05
Advertising and Printing......-2..c.cscceeesssee eateeetereenaeens 720.41
Pustage, Interest, Olfice Expenses, ete +. -215 eeee02 cerns 848.76
Total Disbursments ... .snseee $ 36472 50
Balance cesses evwecewecaacseise: 8,712.12
INVESTED ASSETS.
Loans on Real Estate (First Lien) ....scs.ssccecsscees serene e+ 8 56500
Cont Value of Houds Owned Absolutely .....--..2200 -2- seseeeee 5,225.00
Gash in Office ..cesceacssdse! icesceeseess ceeecdssienasecce see's 167
Cash Deposited ia Banks... cesses stsneceeemsseesence eeeee cree 908.54
- Agents Balances .... .eseeece gececeeee cecee eee oe eeteeeeeeeeee 89 41
Furniture and Fixtures ...-..-.9se0cccsse cee cose cesceeneeees 1,624 50
Total Net Assets ....0. eeeeeseeeeee $8712 12
Total Due from Members.......20-2 o--- se2e: 8 91,442.98
Less Cost of Collection .....0. 0 cesses cecesees 22,860,73
| Net Amount Due from Members .... -....00sese00- : 68,582.22
Sundries Account ...........0--ceeeceeeeeeesseeeeecesneeeesseees 35 00
i Total Assets ...c.cceceseseeee cose $77,029.04
LIABILITIES = .
Losses Due and Unpaid .. .........ceseeeeeeeeeesesneecesesseeees None
Losses in Process of Adjustment and not Due ........0sssseeeee- None
Losses Resisted by Company. 2. ceceseedee cesses ager None
Advance Payments from Members ....s00cceesecssee ecseeseeeesss $105.55
Total Liabilities .eseesees sees $105.54
Insurance in Force Number 12,225 Amount $344,035.00
Biate of Georgia,
Chatham County §
» Personally appeared before the undersigned, Walter S. Scott, who, be-
ing duly sworn, deposes and says that be is the President-Maaager of the GUAR
ANTY MUIUAL LIFE & HEALTH INSURANCE COMPANY and that the fore
going statement is correct and true. 2
WALTER S. SCOTT
Sworn to und subscribed before me, this 26th day of February, 1914.
WYLLY SMITH,
Notary Public, Chatham County, Georgia
LOCALS .
Marie Gilliard is the name of the lit.
tle stranger who arrived at the home
of Mr, sud Mrs. David W. Moore on the
Z3ra inst.
brs. Helen L_ Harding will return to
New York next Tuesday She was call-
ed here on account of the illness of her
father.
Mrs. Ann Martin of Odessadale,
mother of Rev. J. A. Martin, is spend:
ing a few weeks with them at their
hume05 Maple St. :
Mr. A. W. Bacote was called home on
account of death of his aunt, Mrs. T: G.
Biack, Society Hill, S.C.
Miss Agnes Miller, formerly of Sa-
vannab, Ga., but who has resided io
New York for the past two years, left
on Thursday for this city to visit rela-
tives and friends. “
Rev. E L. Barber of Macon, Ga, will
be in the city this week to take charge
of the pastorate of the Abysinnia B.
ehurch on the first Sunday 1a March.
Mrs. Charles H. Dorsey of Brooklyn,
N.Y. and Mrs. Kate Dickerson, also of
Brooklyn, but formerty of Boston, Mass.
en route north from Jachsouville, are
in the city on a short visit at Mrs.W_ C
MeLester, Dale avenue near Stites
ark.
Mra Florence E. Willams, the hair
culturist, who hes spent several weeks
in Brovklyn, N. Y., returned home on
Saturday of last week. She will reopen
her business at her residence 530 An-
derson street east.
St. Benedict’s Church
During the holy season of Lent,
which opened on last Wednesday
and which will last until Easter
bunday, there will be held in all
the Catholic churehes, special
services, on Sundays, \Wednes-
day and Friday evenings. At St.
Beneiict’s Church every Wed-
nesday evening at 8 p.m.,a
sermon will be preached by a
priest of the Sacred Heart
Church by one of the clergy of
the Cathedral. On Friday even-
ingsat8p.m., the Stations of
the Crass ‘will take place,
The usual morning and evening
eersiees will be held, namely:
Girst mass at Tam 3 second mass
atSa m3 high mass at 10:30.
m ; rosary, sermon ana beneiie-
tion at 8 p.m, The fair has
come to a close and everybody
is enthusiastic over the big re-
sults obtained, .
‘First Congregational Church
The First Oongregational
Church, Rev. WL Cash, pastor
Morning worship at J1 o'clock
and evening worship at 8 o’clock
The pastor will preach at both
services. At the evening wor
ship the Holy Communian will
he administered and new mem-
bers will be received into the
fellowship of the echureh, An
offering will be taken also for
the benefit of Charity Hospital,
You are cordially invited to at-
tend all these services. Stran-
gers and visitors are always
welcome,
In Memoriam.
|
To the memory of
MRS. J A, WICKS.
who departed this 1ife Feb. 28, 1913
When we hear the music ringing
In the bright celestial dome,
When sweet agyet voices singing,
Glealy bid us welcome home
To the laud of aacieut story,
Where the spint knows no ‘care,
In the land cf life and glory—
Shall we know each otuer there?
Ob! ye weary, sad,aad tossed ones,
Droop not, faint not by the way,
Ye shall join the loved and just ones
In that land of perfect rest.
Harp strings touched by angels’ fingers
Murmur iu mv rapturous ear,
Ever more their sWeet song lingers,
We shall each other there.
Gone but nut fo gotten.
Sleep on aad taxe yourrest.
‘A Friend,
Cc. A. F.
In Memory of
et ey OF
See eee ae ee,
Who departed this life Feb. 24, 1912
Oh loved and moaned and loved
through life,
In sorrow but io loving remembrance
‘Tis ours thy departere to deplore,
To linger here and feel thy aid no more.
“We only know that thou hast gone,
And that the same relentless tide,
Which bore thee from us, still glides
on,
And we who mourn thee, with it
glide. *
M. C. Parker.
In loving but sad memory of my dear
+ wate and our loving mother
Mrs, JANE ANN WICKS
Who departed this life Feb 28, 1913.
Mother, one year ago, your’ spirit
departed to God by whom it was'given.
Though one year is gone. we will never
forget your Sweet words of love, we
hearthem yet. We never can forget
the voice that always made our hearts
rejoice We miss you, dear mother,
your place in the home is so yacant,
We know that thou wast mild and love-
ly.
Gently as the. summer breeze
Pleasant as the air of evening
When it floats among the trees,
Whenever we think of you so dear
We feel your angel spirit. near.
Husband, Mr. Edward Wicks
Children, Mrs. E R. Dennis
Mrs. Lula L. Allen’
Mr, Arthur E. Wicks, New York}
Son-in-law, Mr. William Allen’
RF. A.B. Sunday School
The Sunday School 13 rapidly
increasing, On Sunday last
there were one hundred and. six-
one scholars, Advance clags
sewing circle every Wednesday.
We had thirteen new scholars
on Sunday, B ¥. PL U, every
Sunday at 6:20 » me
—————
F. B. B. Church
There was a very lnige attend-
wnee at every service on Sundyy.
At the morning service, Rev.
Mright read forthe Jessen Ps
119. His text was from Ps 119:
27, the subject, “Fine Golu”. The
many beautiful lessuns, the most
striking being that pure gold is
a ways found in the yalleys and
ow places around the mountains
aud a true christian is always
humble and meek not haughty
and boisterous. The choir sang
“ft Jesus goes with me I'll go.”
There was a soul stirring commu-
nion in the sfternoon. At night
Rev. Wright read for the lesson
Psalm 23rd. The honored guests
were the Twilight Reapers Aid
und Social Club and the Imperial
Aid and Social Club. The secre-
taries of both clubs read excellent
histories of their clubs, for which
they were highly commended by
Rev. Wright. His text was from
John 1:4, subject, ‘The Light of
ths World. He preached a beau-
tiful sermon that pleased every
henrer. The choir sang “Jesus
the light of the world.” Rev
Wright led the bymn ‘Amazing
sight the Savior stands.” The
clubs donated liberally to the
church, pastor, choir and sexton.
The Imperial Aid and Social Club
raised a great surprise when quite
A young man arose and in an
excellent speech presented quite a
sum of money to the poor old
members of the clrurch, in behalf
of hisclub. Come at any time.
You are always welcome.-
(Continued from page 5)
4 Cannes = succeed wines sue
same Divine aid which sustained
him, and on the same Almighty
Leing, I place my reliance for
support, and 1 hope you, my
friends, will all pray that I
may receive that divine assistance
without which I cannot succeed,
but with which success is cer-
tain.”
Upon another occasion, he
wrote to Stanton, his secretary of
war: “My dear dirz-A poor wid-
ow, by the name of Baird. has a
sonia the army, that for some
offence hag been sentenced to
serve a long time without pay, or
at most with very little pay. I
do not like the punish-
neit of withholding pay, it falls
so hard upon the poor families.”
“T have in my hand, here. a
reprint copy of the famvis Bixby
letter, which 1 will rend:
Executive Mansion
Washington, Nov. 21, 1864
To Mrs Bixby, Bustoa, Mass.
Dear Madam; |
Thave beep shown on the file cf
the War Department a statement of
tue Adjutant General of Massachusetts
that you are the mother of five sons
who have died gloriously on the field
of battle. Ifeel how week xnd fruit-
less must be any word of mine which |
should attempt to beguile you from
the grief of a loss so overwheming.
But [ cannot refrain from tendering
you the consolation that may be ss
on the thanks of the republic they died
to save. I pray that our Heavenly
Father may assuage the anguish of
your bereavement, und leave you only |
the cherished memory of the loved
aud fost, and the solemn pride that
must be yours to have laid so costly a
sacrifice upon the altar of freedom. _|
Yours very sincerely and Fespect-
fully, -
A. Lincoln.
“Mr. Lincoln was ushered inl
upon the Presidency. at the most
critical period of our eouatry’s
history, after the bitterest and
the must sharply-contested polit.
ival campaign the country has
ever experienced, when the seri-
ous and sickening complication of
a disastrous civil war, couphd
with countless details of regular |
administrative ~outime, made the,
oflice of President, if 1 ever can
be, an undesirable honor, No
president, before nor since, not
even excepting: Washington, has’
borne the burdens Lincoln bore,
hone had the puiguant sorrows,
and pangs of heart, and it 1s
touching that the Great Leader,
thus driven and absorbed, could
so often turn aside to do some acu.
of personal kindness: Ue pardun-
ed cne condemfed deserters, slept
in the nospiti| umong the wound, ;
ed and dying soldiers, weut
through the ranks of the army to!
console und encourage the weal ,!
delivered bis anti-slavery lectures
ard pleaded for the preservatiun
of the union.
“The famous Gettysburg ad-
dress was delivered in Nov., 1863,
in the hour of bts deepest. con: |
secreation the great princ.ples he
sought to — perpebuage. How |
strangely uncaupy was his el-|
quent message! Hlow.ominous and
yet how stringely appropriate
lis appeal! I look to see the me
morable message there delivered, |
sone day, move the public con- |
science to ‘turn the tangie
straight.”
““Lais speech, with his majestic
second inaugural address, takes
ani with the greatest literary
efforts of all times, and enroli>
the name of Lincoln with the
Literary Immortals.
“As we stand upon the seashore
is the tide is coming in, one wave
reaches up the beach higher thu |
he rest, then recedes, and for
some time none that follow come
ap to its mark, after a while the
whole sea is there aud beyond. it!
se a ee ee
there cames a man head and
shoulders above his fellows,show-
ing that nature has not lost her
ideal. .
“*Lincoln was such a man. Mod-
ern deeneracy had not reached
him. He lived ‘above the fog,
in public duty and in private
thinking,’ there.was in him some-
thing that couid create, subvert,
or reform. an understanding, a
spirit, and an eloquence to sum-
mon all mankind to united exer-
tion, or to break the band of
slavery asunder, and to rule the
wilderness of free minds with un-
bounded authority.something that.
could establish, overwhelmn or
preserve an empire, and strike a
blow that would resuiind through
the Ages, No state chicanery,
no narrow system of vicivus
politics, sunk him to the level of
the vulvar great.
| fo bim we owe the high mor-
jal ideals of modern American
statewanship. fis influence
‘runs like a silver thiead through
she great public issues and poli-
cies of the day- His altruism per-
jeades: military and lalor reform.
'He is the moulder of the Ameri-
can motto of ‘Fair Play and
Equal Opportunity:?- He is the
‘Prophet of the New Americanism
the Spirit of ‘Natural Unity,
‘those exalted humanitarian prin-
ciples, which have their fruition
in equal suffrage, the curbing of |
corporate power, the suarantes |
of fair trade competition, muni-
cipal protection of the poor and
oppressed, brotherhood and equal
rights before the law.
“And when the fair esvruteheon
ofstnte emblazoned with the names
of this ‘nation’s illustrious and im-
‘mortel heroes, sliall be :ead_ into
the imperishable record of the|
Great Men of all Ages, the name
of the Great Emuncipator will be
ranked with the stars of First!
Stawritude, with the numes of:
Luther, Garibaldi, Knox, and
Sladstone.
**The lesson is plain: Character
never dies:
“Were a star quenched on high, |
© For ages would its light, |
Still traveling downward from the sky
Shine on our mortal sizht. |
So when a great man dies,
For years beyond our ken,
‘The light he leaves behind him lies
Upon the paths of men,” ~
“Let us, then, whisper a vow
of reyerence and gratitude to the
greatest of all'Americans, Abra-
ham Lincoln, who held the ear of
an unwilling world with that
hurning word, “Freedom”, which
did not cease its vibration, until
it had breathed its sweet secret to
the last slave
Coming Events tn the Social
World. }
NOTICE—Articlesin this Columa Two
Cents Per Word, Payable in Advance.
March 2nd, Monday Entertainment
by Adamant Household of Ruth No.
4096 at Harris street hall. Admission
25 cents.
March 6thMondav. First Spring’en-
tertainment by the Past Worthy Coun-
gellers Union at Masouic Temple. Tic-
kets, 15 cents.
Just completed, cozy mordern ap r
ments of three rooms, kitchen, sinks
front and back porches Seven dollar
aflat. Perry street, east of. Randolph
Rowlandend Rowland <3 Abercorn
Special Notice
The public is hereby notified
that Wm. J. Jackson, formerly
my salesman, is no longer can-
nected with my otlice in finy man-
ner. He has no authority to sell
or collect for lots sold in Central
Park, Cann Park os College
Heights.
_ G.H Bowen, Gen, Agt
DA, HENRY M. COLLIER
MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Residence: 403 W, 34th Street
Office: 623 West Broad Street
‘Office Hours: 8 tolla m.+3to5p m,
8to1l0p m .
(Exone: 1120-L. Savannah, Ga
| —$—$—$—$—$— — —
Will the Roman
| Catholic Church .
| Rule America?
This ‘Question ’ mens much with the
Protestant Clergy. Evangelist J W.
Manns will answer the “Question ¥
The following lectures will be delivered.
at the Seventh-day sdventist Chureh,
36th and Burroughs streets; subjects:
Sunday Night March 1—“The Rise
and Progress of Papicy "*
Sunday March 8th -'The Papacy a
Menace to America’s Liberty ".
Sunday March 154h—“The Roman
Church will rule America ””
Sunday Varch2'nd—“How wllRome
Rule America?”"—Adv. ’
? MARCH ?
F. A.B. Church, Franklin Sq.
“Heavenly Twins"
A Farce in Three Acts
Two College men secure feminine dis-
guises and enter Mics Brown's Select
Srhool for Young Ladies ”
Complications arising are amusing
Pure and “Wholesome
DON’T MISS THIS TREAT
Admission Cent
‘ es ad
oo
Farav a
Garden|
FARM’ MANAGEMENT...
Agriculture Should Be Handled as
the Merchant Handles a Store.
By ANDREW BOSS.
Chief of agronomy and farm management,
| ee ae perereny pe care eae
tion.
Farm management, in its best inter-
Pretation, meaus the application of
progressive, sclentitie and business
principles to the business of farming.
The farm umnuger holds the same
relation to the furm and its business
as dues the business manager of the
| store of other business enterprixe—that
fs, he ix the one responsible for the
success or failure of the enterpriye
from the Gnancial point of view; there-
fore he must know every detail of
erp growth, of cost of production, of
marketing, of openiting and of all
bustuess transuctlons performed in con-
‘beetion with the farm.
| Farming Is a business, and the one
who can grow: the lirgest crups .of
“the best quality and at the same me
produce them at the lowest cost, sell
them at the hizbest price and make the
best Investment $f the money received
should rank as the best manager.
‘While farming has not commonly been
reyurded as a business. the fact re-
mains that the successful financial
operation of a farm presents even a
more cumple problem and involves at
least as much business ability and tact
ag are required In operating a store.
A farmer must bave a knowledge of
the elements of soil fertility. of the
principles of the movement of soil wa-
ter, of soll bacteria and thelr action. of
rag ELIE gat Sten rd
React sy ert cs
Bae Gee, Eg
Pega, FR
POG OO
R25: ig
See pee
Bee
ae i eer
Pere ore
Pee ae a
ae ee
— me OS
pe ef Be
a She i fee ee
pA S867 2 Oe
Teeter ep
ee SEE 6 aE
¥ ai a
PERS, ares ree aca as
se ae ero 5
Fe ieee ion Bae To 5 FP Bae
eet eas
ieelex a Babee ALORS WARE:
plaut growth, of varieties and species
of plants, of the effect of one crop on
the crop following and ofthe care of
the weeds and forage. -He must albo
uuderttund antmats and how to feed
and care for then, and in addition be
must kuuw how to buy and sell to ad-
vuntuge, to muke contracts, plan bis
buildings and farm so ns to econuinize
labor and distribute it to adyuntage.
‘The farw manager who would suc-
cessfully conduct bis business may
Profit by the example of the mercbunt.
The mercbant takes an inventory of
Als atock, cousiders the demand for bis
govds, both present and prospective;
notes the supply and cost of each arti-
cle of coumerce, the labor required to
operate bis business and any other
items of expeuse that may be legit-
mate tu the business, regulating bls
purchases and prices accordingly.
‘The farm manager should likewise
take au faventory of bis capital stock
and equipment. He xhould consider
the fertility of the soll and the de-
tiands thit will be made upon it by
the crops grown, the sources from
Which fertility may be renewed and at
what cost; be most study the markets
and demauds for the various crops and
the possibility of handling thew at a
probt, the cost of productug each of the
crops and the probable net profit that
WHI be returned; the luber supply, the
interest op investment and similar ex-
penditures which must be made that
afet the Gua! result. Large farms
nuty Ukewtse be orgunized tate depart-
wents and accounts kept with the
cows, the pls. the grain crops, the
garden and similar enterprises. The
Lustuess statement at the end of the
Sear will then show which Hues bave
been most profitable and will enable
the manager to drop out those that are
wuprofitable.
TIMELY POULTRY NOTES.
Cabbages. beeta and mangels make
{deal greens for bens durmg the win-
fer. “Swill potatoes ands specked ap-
ples are also relisted. particularly
when the fowls are confined to their
Indour quarters, .
‘To keep the bens healthy provide a
dry floor, plenty of dry itter. plenty
of dry alr and no draft; keep the
house clean, feed well, water regutar-
ly and provide a constant supply of
artificial grit, oyster shells, cracked
hone and charcoul, +
Hens should be dasted with tnsect
Powder occarionally, but the presence
of @ gould dust bath wilt make these
necessary occasions far fewer, Mix
About one pound of powdered snipour
with each bushel of dust for the best
resulta. — A. C. Smith, Poultryman,
University Farm. Rt. Paul.
_
RaQ ae
pale es
re fee
aa
The Wage
Earners
Loan
and
Investment
Company
‘Will pay Interest
in its Savings‘De-
partment at the
rate of _
G Per Cent
on Sums of $100.
00 or more, when
left for the period
of One Year.
| Interest payable
quarterly at the
rate of |
5 Per Cent |
‘on deposits a
able upon de-
mand |
Officers
L E, Williams, Pres and Treas,
W. R. Fields, Vice-President
A.R. Harper, Secretary ~
Directors =
| L.E. Williams,
L. M. Pollard,
W H. Burgess
W. J. Williams
J.G. Garey é
Jno. F. Jones _
W.R. Fields,
HB. Wright
(Sel C. Johnson
P Edward Perry
Wm. Wright .
” RVA. Harper
James M, Ferrebec
>
The Wage Earners Loan
and lovestment Co,
(The Pioneer Negro Savings Bank
‘of Georgia)
468 W, Broad St.
Savannah, Ga.
|
ESE STS
ps ‘1
THE KITCHEN CUPBOARD
SAVORY BREAKFAST VIANDS.
BREAKFAST MENU.
Oranges.
Cereal, of Choice.
Fried Mush With Molasses.
Breaded Kidneys and Bacon.
Coffee or Cocoa.
THERE is probably no meal which counts more to the average person than the first repast of the day. It should be borne in mind that the appetite is usually more fickle in the morning than it would be late in the day. Indeed, the sense of taste is never so keen as at an early hour. On this account the dishes selected for breakfasts should at all times be well seasoned, daintily and attractively served, and yet simple in character. Elaborate dishes should as much as possible be avoided.
Fine Appetizers.
Breaded Kidneys and Bacon.—Take half a pound of beef kidney, a quarter pound of bacon, egg and crumbs. Cut the kidney into slices and season with salt and pepper. Egg and crumb these and fry until nicely browned, place the bacon in rolls on a skewer and toast in front of the fire. Dish dainty with a roll of bacon on each slice of kidney and serve hot.
Broiled Bacon With Bananas.—Cut the required number of rashers of streaky bacon and broil them on both sides over the fire on a grill iron or in a pan. Peel some bananas, cut each in half lengthways, season with salt and very little pepper, dip each in egg and roll in breadcrumbs and fry in bacon fat. Serve with the bacon and place half a banana on each rasher. Garnish with sprigs of parsley and serve hot. If liked the bananas may be simply fried in the bacon fat without being first egged and crumbed.
Minced Foods.
Fried Tripe.—Take some boiled tripe, wash and then boil it one hour, cut into small pieces and dry. In the morning dust with salt, pepper and flour; then dip in egg (an egg beaten with a tablespoonful of grated onion and one tablespoonful of cold milk), then in breadcrumbs. Fry in deep very hot drippings until a nice brown. Serve on hot platter garnished with parsley.
Ham Timbales. — Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add a quarter of a cupful of stale breadcrumbs and two-thirds of a cupful of milk. Add one cupful of chopped cooked ham, two beaten eggs and half a tablespoonful of finely chopped parsley. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Turn into greased molds, filling them two-thirds full. Set in a pan containing hot water, cover with buttered paper and bake about twenty minutes. Remove from molds to hot serving dish and place small sprig of parsley on top of each.
Anna Thompson.
THE KITCHEN
GUPBOARD
CREAMED CODFISH.
CREAMED fish is a palatable dish
when the usual meats have grown
tiresome, says an authority on
cooking. With it corn muffins are
particularly good, while a potato and
endive salad is appetizing.
Cod and Creamed Sauce.-Take two tablespoonfuls of breadcrumbs, one-fourth teaspoonful of chopped parsley, salt and pepper, one-half a lemon rind grated fine, one egg and one ounce of butter. Mix breadcrumbs, parsley and seasoning on the plate. Remove skin from the fish and wash in salt and water. Dry well on a clean cloth, brush it with beaten egg and roll in the mixture. Place in baking pan and bake for about half an hour.
When Fish Is Left Over.
Creamed Codfish and Potato Sandwich.—Take cold mashed potatoes and whip them until light. Put half of the potato into a shallow baking dish, brush with melted butter, spread over it cold creamed codfish, add the remainder of the potatoes, brush with melted butter and place in a brisk oven for ten minutes. Both mashed potatoes and creamed codfish are leftovers.
Creamed Codfish on Toast--Take a cupful each of salt codfish and milk, a tablespoonful each of butter and flour, a dash of paprika and a half teaspoonful of grated onion. Soak the codfish overnight. In the morning pour off the water and cover with cold water. Put it on the stove and bring to the boiling point; then pick into small pieces, mix with the sauce and serve on toast. To make the sauce put the butter and onion into a saucepan, add flour, mix well, add the cold milk slowly, stirring until smooth and creamy, boil three minutes. Dust the creamed codfish with paprika.
Served In Delicious Sauce.
Creamed Codfish With Eggs.—Take two cupfuls each of flaked codfish and milk, two tablespoonfuls of flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and pepper to taste, three hard boiled eggs, a tablespoonful of minced parsley. Boll the codfish till tender; then reheat in a white sauce made of the other ingredients. Chop the eggs coarsely, add to mixture, sprinkle in the parsley and serve either in a border of mashed potatoes or on toast.
Aunna Thompson.
MINARET YELLOW.
Afternoon Gown of This Startling New Shade.
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CHRIC AFTERNOON GOWN.
Minaret yellow is one of the new and popular shades. It is a rather brilliant tone, but combined with lace, as in the case on the gown illustrated, it is quite pleasing. This tunic of princess lace is sloped to give the smart pointed effect in the back. The costume is for afternoon affairs or for restaurant wear in the evening.
The attempt to bring in high collars is as unwelcome as attempts to bring in long sleeves have so far been. In the case of the collars it will probably fall. However, the fact remains that some of the new lingerie waists show high collars and, of course, back closings. The front closing and the low waist are both so comfortable that women will probably cling to them.
THE VALENTINE DANCE
Clever Touches That Will Make It a Social Success.
There are so many novel social affairs that suggest themselves for St. Valentine's day that it is difficult to choose.
Of course the heart is the symbol of the day and is grouped with Dan Cupid. Invitations engraved or written upon heart shaped cards are sent to the guests.
Decorate the room with hearts cut from red cardboard and suspended from ribbons, making a "shower of hearts" to be danced under.
A pretty touch could be given to the affair if the girls would wear white dance frocks and trim them with hearts cut from red crape paper. A flounce or fringe of hearts would be most attractive.
If a cotillion is danced the favors may be heart shaped boxes of candy.
1
PARTY GOWN.
bonquets, wands topped with hearts, Cupid's bow or a quiver filled with arrows. Many suitable favors come in heart shapes.
If not superstitious have the guests come as the thirteen hearts of a pack of cards or add the joker, making fourteen.
If there are more to be invited have two of each kind, with the exception of the king, queen and knave.
The table decorations may be effectively carried out with hearts. Have a fringe of hearts falling from the edge of the table.
A chain of hearts arranged in festoons would be very pretty. Candle shades of hearts and a floral centerpiece of red roses or carnations in a heart design complete the effect.
Cupid's darts could be substituted for the hearts in the decorations. A shower of golden arrows makes a lovely decoration. A dainty gown suitable for a valentine dance or theater party is illustrated here. It is of white embroidered net garlanded with roses.
The KITCHEN CUPBOARD
DINNER MENU.
Baked Stuffed Skirt Steak.
Brown Sauce.
Browned White Potatoes.
Escaloped Tomatoes.
Pineapple Taploca.
Coffee.
PEOPLE who like pineapple and are aware of the wholesome nature of the fruit will appreciate these nice desserts.
USES FOR CANNED Pineapple.
Pineapple With Cream.-Cook one can of grated pineapples with a cupful of sugar ten minutes. Strain through a cloth, pressing out the juice. Add a pint of ice water, a cupful of sugar, one-quarter cupful of lemon juice and freeze as usual. Serve in glasses. Decorate the top of each with a star of whipped cream. The whipped cream is prepared as follows; To a cupful of double cream well chilled add one-quarter teaspoonful of vanilla extract and a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Beat with a whisk until solid. To shape the cream use a pastry bag with star tube attached.
Pineapple Tapioca.-Take a cupful of tapioca and souk it overnight. In the morning drain and put it in a double boiler with one and one-half cupfuls of hot water, one-third teaspoonful of salt, a cupful of sugar, one-half can of shredded pineapple and the juice of a lemon and an orange. Cook until clear, fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs, cook two minutes longer and serve cold with or without cream.
Served With Carnetarch.
Pineapple Blancmange. - Take two and two-thirds cupfuls of milk and scald in a double boiler. Mix one-third cupful of cornstarch with one-third cupful of cold milk and add to the hot milk with three tablespoonfuls of sugar and one-half saltspoonful of salt. Stir until smooth and thick. Cover and cook fifteen minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the stillly beaten whites of two eggs and one cupful of grated pineapple, turn into wet individual molds, chill and serve with cream, either plain or whipped.
Pineapple Sponge.—Take one and one-half cupfuls of grated pineapple, three-fourths cupful sugar and one-half cupful water and let them simmer together for fifteen minutes. Add one-fourth package gelatin soaked in one-fourth cupful cold water and strain through a cheesecloth, pressing the juice from the pulp. Place in a pan of cracked ice and stir constantly till it begins to set. Then add juice of half a lemon and the beaten whites of two eggs and stir till stiff. Turn into a mold and set in a cold place. This may be served with whipped cream.
Anna Thompson.
THE KITCHEN
GUPBOARD
SEASONABLE FRUIT TRIFLES.
WHEN lightness and simplicity are
desired in a dessert a fruit trifle is one of the daintiest sweets
that the housewife can contrive.
Pineapple Trifle.—Take two-thirds of a cupful of sugar and one pint can of grated pineapple and boil until a good stirp is formed. Dissolve one-half package of gelatin in one-half pint of boiling water. Add pineapple stirp, juice' of an orange and let set. When well set add one-half cupful of whipped cream and beat until well mixed. In carrying out a color scheme of red or green a decoration of maraschino cherries could be used. It should be topped with whipped cream.
Handsomely Decorated.
Handomely Decorated.
Bannana Trifle--Take six bananas, six small sponge cakes, one orange, half a lemon, some strawberry jam, half a pint of good custard, half a pint of cream and half an ounce of plistachio nuts. Peel the bananas and cut them into quarters lengthways. Slice the cake thinly and spread each piece with some jam. Peel the orange, cut it into thin slices and then again into small disks. Grate the lemon rind. Put a layer of the cakes into the dish and put on them a spoonful or two of custard. Next put a layer of the bananas and a few of the pieces of orange and lemon rind. Continue this till the dish is nicely filled up. Pour in the remainder of the custard. Whip the cream and heap it all over the top. Shell and shred the plistachio nuts and stick them in rows over the cream.
Two Wholesome Sweets.
Apple Trifle.—Take some apples and pass through a sieve to form a thick layer at the bottom of a dish. Scald them, then add sugar to taste and the finely grated rind of half a lemon. Now mix together half a pint of cream, the same quantity of milk, the yolk of an egg and scald over the fire. Stir well and do not let it boil. Add sugar to taste, and when it is cold pour over the apples. Whipped cream flavored with vanilla should cover the whole. Apricot Trifle.—Spread the underside of some macaroons with apricot jam and pile them all up in a pyramid. Pour over them a tumblerful of sherry and water one-third sherry to two-thirds water. Dip up what flows into the dish and pour it over again. Cover with whipped cream.
Annas Thompson.
INSURANCE GEUGKA-
PHY
When is a man most confused.
When he misses his train.
When are the people most unsafe? When they are not insured with the Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance Company.
Which company pays for all our cases known to medical science?
The Pilgrim.
Which company carries its members the longest before bracing their policies? The Pilgrim.
Will you explain why the Pilgrim does this? Only to aid its policy holders, that's all.
Which company organizes first among Negroes in Georgia, an SECU further to do business along industrial lines? The Pilgrim, of course.
Which company collected the largest amount of money, record to the last report of the INSURANCE DEPARTMENT of the Governor of the State? The answer is in the report. The diagram.
How can this statement be verified? By referring to the report of the INSURAN E DEPARTMENT, of the State of Georgia.
How can a policy be obtained with the Pilgrim, in case its agent训 back before they reach you home? By ringing phone 4129.
Why has the Pilgrim so many satisfied policy holders? By performing its perpetuated motto PR EUTIPIS, BONETY AND JUSTICE.
Why is it so easy to secure new members for the Pilgrim? They have heard of the many blessings it has, and is still bestowing upon its thousands of satisfied policy holders.
How long after the death of a member, before the beneficiary can draw the death benefit? As soon as the death certificate is properly filled by the attending physician.
How many men and women of our race are employed and are well paid by the Pilgrim? SIX HUNDRED TWENTYSEVEN.
Are you being satisfactorily served? If not see the Pilgrim's agents, or ring the office, and your order will be filled, and promptly delivered. Local and long distant phone 4129. Office, 509 West Broad Street, Savannah Georgia J. S. Perry, Sup A. B. Singfield, on s.n. shunt
Ocean Wave Cafe
Meals at all hours. Quick-
lunches served in up-to-
date style. Open day
and night
J. S. Lloyd & Son
42 Habersham St.
The Limit.
Knicker—In he mingy? Bocker—Yes; he'd like the smoke rings he blows to a girl returned—New York Sun. Seeing That He insisted.
"But," she said, "I don't want to promise to be your wife until I can be sure that I love you."
"I forgot 10 mention," he explained, "that my salary has just been raised $10 a week."
"Oh, well, if you insist on having your answer now I suppose I shall have to say yes!"—Chicago Record-Herald.
Barometers Indicate State of Mind.
If you're a business man—watch the barometer.
If you want to sell a big bill of goods—watch the barometer.
Such is the advice of Dr. Colin A. Scott, professor of psychology in the Boston normal school.
The barometer, he says, is as sure an, indicator of persons' minds as it is of the weather. You'll find them active and up and doing with the barometer high; gloomy and irritable with the barometer low.-Boston Post.
Putting Them at Ease.
Precedence is not the only puzzle in official and social circles in any city, but to say the right thing at the right time is equally necessary.
"To make mistakes in speech is suicidal," said a state department official recently. "Let it not be as in the case of Mrs. Brody, who gave a party, and when all the guests were in the parlor she entered with a beaming smile and said:
"Do make yourselves at home, ladies. I'm at home myself, and I wish you all were."—Washington Star.
Said the Owl to the Quail.
A quail, being shot at by a hunter and narrowly escaping with her life, tremblingly took refuge in a thicket. From a tree overhead an owl looked down upon her sardonically. "You are very silly," he remarked, "to allow yourself to be hunted so when you have the means of defense ready at your hand. If you were to stop killing the insects that prey on the wheat and the corn man would speedily perish of starvation." The quail thanked him civilly for his advice. "However, if you don't mind," said she. "I think I prefer to go on doing what is so evidently my duty, let others do as they may."—Farm and Fireside.
SUNDAY SCHOOL.
Lesson X.—First Quarter, For March 8, 1914.
Text of the Lesson, Luke xii, 35-48.
Memory Verses, 47, 48—Golden Text,
Luke xii, 37—Commentary 'Prepared
by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
The secret of deliverance from the
sunres of this present evil age is the
attitude of expecting the return of the
Lord Jesus, according to the teaching
of the epistles, "waiting for the coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ;" "serving
the Living and True God and waiting
for His Son from heaven;" "looking,
for that blessed hope, the glorious
appearing of the great God, even
our Saviour Jesus Christ;" l Cor. 1, 7;
I Thess. 1, 9, 10; Tit. l, 13.
In the gospels, as in the Old Testament, the coming of Christ is generally. If not always, His coming in glory to set up His kingdom; His coming in vengeance upon His enemies and with redemption for Israel, as in Deut. xxxil, 30-33; [sa xxxil, 1; xxxyl, 4; lxill, 1; Matt. xxyl, 30; xxyl, 31. His coming for His church, previous to His coming in glory to judge the nations was specially revealed to Paul, as we saw in our last lesson.
The reference to the return from the wedding in verse 36 makes us think of the order of events in Rev xix, where the coming in glory with His saluts follows the marriage of the Lamb; also in Matt. xxv, 1, in both the Syriac and Vulgate versions, the reading is that the ten virgins wont forth to meet "the bridegroom and the bride" so that the virgins cannot represent the church nor can the "all nations" of Matt. xxv, 32, include the church. The church must be seen with Him as the Bridegroom and with Him when He shall come in His glory (Matt. xxv, 1, 31; Col. Ill, 4). The coming of Christ as the Son of Man is His coming with His saluts to begin His reign of righteousness and peace on earth (Matt. xxv, 64; Dan. vil, 13, 14; Isa. xxxl, 1, 17).
Having considered the interpretation, we must not lose the application to our own hearts as set forth in such words in our lesson as loins girded, lights burning, watching, ready, doing (35, 37, 40, 42, 43). The loins girded takes us back to Ex. xil, 11, and the night of the first passover and on to Eph. vl. 14; I Pet. l, 13; "loins girt about with truth;" "gird up the loins of your mind, be sober and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ."
Watching reminds us of the thrice repeated "watch" of Mark xiii, 33, 35, 37; the reproof in Gethsemane: "Couldest not thou watch one hour? Watch ye and pray lest ye enter into temptation" Mark xiv, 37, 38; the praying and watching of Eph. vi, 18; Col. iv, 2; the "Watch ye: stand fast in the faith" of I Cor. xvl, 13, and the watching to see what He will say Hub. i. 1. The word "ready" reminds us that on His part all things are now ready," but there is a fullness of salvation ready to be revealed in the last time" Luke xiv, 17; I Pet. l. 5).
Bellervers should always be ready to preach the gospel, ready to every good work, ready to be absent from the body or to be caught up to meet the Lord in the air (Rom. 1. 15; Tit. III. 1; Acts xxI, 13; Rev. xix, 7; 1 Thess. iv, 16-18). As to "doing" (verse 43), while there can be no doing on our part to obtain salvation (Rom. iv, 5; Eph. ii, 8, 9), we are saved in order to good works which God has prepared for us to walk in, works which are good and profitable unto men when they are God working in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure (Eph. ii, 10; Tit. III. 18; Phil. ii, 13).
The coming of Christ will not be to His waiting ones as a thief, for we are not in darkness, but children of light and of the day (1 Thess. x, 4.5). We are stewards of the manifold grace of God and of the mysteries of God, and the one thing required of a steward is faithfulness (1 Cor. iv, 1, 2; 1 Pet. iv, 10). All who handle the word of God must be careful to give meat in due season, not only milk for babies, but meat as people are able to bear it (1 Cor. III, 1-3; Heb. v, 12-14; John xvI, 12).
We are stewards in reference to all with which our Lord has intrusted us, whether talents or wealth or the gospel, and we must give an account of our stewardship. Every one of us shall give account of himself to God (Rom. xiv. 12). This will be at the judgment seat of Christ, where only saved ones shall be to be tried for their service since they became believers. We need for all our service such words as these: "That God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ." Not as pleasing men, but God, who trifle our hearts" (I Pet. iv, 11; I Thess. ii, 4; II Tlm. ii, 15).
As Joseph shared the throne with Pharmano, so we are to share the rule with Christ in His kingdom, but whether over few or many cities will depend upon our faithfulness as stewards now (Rev. ill. 21; v. 10; Luke xix. 17, 19). Joseph was ruler over all Egypt: Christ shall rule over all the world (Ps. lxxil. 11).
There are those called servants who are only outwardly servants, like the Pharisees. Such shall find their place with the unbelievers. However they may profess to have known Christ. He will say to them: "I never knew you. Depart from Me ye that work iniquity" (Matt. vii. 21-23).
That there will be different degrees of punishment seems evident from verses 47, 48.
The South Atlantic Barber shop
Headquarters for barber supplies and
shoe polish. A fine line of cigars,
pipes and tobacco. Shoes shined and
repaired.
Dealer in second handed shoes
Clothes cleaned, pressed and repaired
Hot, cold and shower baths.
H. A. MANZO, Gen'l. Mgr
145 West Broad St.
The Up-to-date
BARBER SHOP
Hair Cutting, Staining, Skin pooing
BUMP AND WAIT TREATMENT
WORK GUARANTEED.
W. H. PRINCE, Proprietor
508 W. Gwinnett St. Savil, G a
AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL MAGIC Shaving Powder A wonderful discovery to share the head and face without using sheeps or razor. Will send half pound can by mail, postage. paid, for 25 cents in stamps.
Savannah, Georgia
Contractor and General Builder
Estimates Cheerfully Furnished
ON SHORT NOTICE
Write or Call at
139 Barnard street
Phone 506
The Acme Bicycle Store
Dealer in New and Second Handed Bicycles. Tires and Supplies. Agency on the Monarch Bicycles. K. HALPERN, Proprietor, 463 West Bread St. Phone 1340.
Henry Mears Feed Co HAY & GRAIN
OF ALL KINDS
508 W Jones St.
Come and take a look at
Stock or Phone your
order and it will be
deliveredpromptly.
Phone 3461
Madame Florence Z. Williams
Graduate Prof. Roher's School,
New York.
445 Price Street, near Gordon
Telenhone 2328
Wigs, Switches and Pompascours
Made from Natural hair.
Combings Made Up. Shampooing and
Hair Straightening a Speciality.
Face and Electric Massage, Dyeing
and Matching Hair.
ORIENTAL HAIR GROWER,
An excellent preparation, will pro
duce a beautiful growth of hair. Dl
rections on each box. For sale, price
25 cents per box.
GAREY'S
Variety Bakery
Goods Delivered Fromatly
To any part of the City.
506 West Broab St.;
Phone 1869-J Near Gaston.
Masonic Books
And Regalias
LODGE SEALS
FINANCIAL CARDS
AND BLANKS
Of Every Description.
Publishers and Manufacturers' Prices.
Liberal Discounts Will Be Arranged.
SOL. C. JOHNSON,
-1009 West Broad St., Savannah, Ga
| PEKIN THEATRE |
;
Week of Monday Feb. 23rd
a . Monda.y Tuesday and Wednesday 2
) . 2. “RAILROAD JACK” b
3 7 Drama
3 Thursday. Friday and Saturday a
2 “CHARLIE THE BARBER” ts
; Musical Comedy 5
ESE See ot
; NEW FACES §{
$ Popular Matinee—Mondays and Thursdays a
at 3:30 p. m. &
j Two Shows Nightly, 7:30 to 9:30 E
9:30t0 11:30 © ,
| Moving Pictures |
A Big Feature Photo Play in 3 Parts Every. Day &
ADMISSION 10 CENTS :
Bi en oe a as es Se
Advance Showing
of Spring Millinery
Latest Shapes, Flowersand —
Novelty Effects .
Colored Millinery Store
464 WEST BROAD ST.
—_—K——————___ ——————————————————————————=EEXXX&X£{£[{{""___=_=_=
TUSKEGEB INSTITUTE ,
SUMMER SCHOOL FOR TEACHERS
FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION June 22 to July 17, 1934
Over 400 Teachers Present Last Summer
' DP. FELDMAN
SI5.00 SUIT
Is well worth $20.00 or more,
Don't miss it, - There:
duction is now on. -
509! West Broad Street
Among the Masons
WHY WE ARE MASONS-
Why are you aMasont Not
wecatse you have complied with
the furms and ceremonies of our
ancie:t institution and received
signs ind tokens and words, but
becau:e you have discerned, ac-
cepted and adopted the inner
meanings of the symbols, allego-
ries and legions of the Fraterni-
ty and havesubmitted to the prin-
ciples inculcated in the Masonic
degrees and in the Ancient Con-
stitutions, regulations, and land-
marks. ‘This being true, yuu are
not to allow yourself to be on
Masonic matters, but are to
govern yourselves wholly as a Ma-
sor, in full view of and controlled
by the Masonic lights and teach-
ings. Other institutions may
have forms, regulations teach-
ings, which you can approve, and
which are all right as they use
them, but asa Mason, you are not
to introduce thém into any Ma-
sonic body or association of the
Craft for the sole reason that they
are not in accord with Freemason-
ry. Toillustrate: ‘The beneficia-
ry system of various orders is all
right so far as they are concerned,
but all wrong if attempted by
Masonic bodies. Freemasonry is
on a higher plane, namely that of
faith, hope and love, as taught by
pure and undefiled religion, and
the necessity of the distressed and
the ability of the donor is the
measure of the giving by the in-
dividual, by the lodge and the
Grand Lodge. We are Masons
because we urise to and stand upon
that plane with Gol our Father
and man our brother.—John W.
Brown. .
MECAESS We BPISe LO and stand Upon
that plane with Gol our Father
and man our brother.—John W.
Brown. .
SACHIN,
7 mn g
All Masons have beard the ex-
planation of the pillar of Solo-
mon’s, temple named Jachin, but
many of them do not know tbat
Jachin was a real character, nor
that a family of Jachinites existed
when Moses numberet'the people
-of Israel. Jachin was ason of
Jacob and Leah. Heis named
in Exodus xi., 15 and in Numbers
xxxvi., 12. In First Chronicles
ix., 24, he is called Jarib. Jachin
means ‘God confirms—he that
strengthens and makes _stead-
fast,” and Jarib means ‘‘adversa-
ry—fighting, chiding multiply-
ing, avenging.”
Boaz is triparite; Jachin is dual
—Body and Soul.
One time a young man was
taking his Masonic degrees, says a |
eontemporary. In the ceremonies
he attempted to tiirn around and
retrace his steps. The Senior
Deacon gave his arm a jerk and
whispered, “In Masonry we al-
ways go forward, never back-
ward.” This isa very important
lesson which it would be well for
all Masons to learn. Many Mav
sons seem to think thé attain-
ment of the Master Mason’s de-
gree is the summit of Masonie
progression. Itis however, but
the beginning. To advanca in
Masonry one must be a student of
the institution and strive to learn
something of the fraternity and
what it stands for. The brother
whois making progress in Ma-
sonry is attending tthe meetings
of his lodge, studying the ritual
and trying to be of service to his
fellow men. There is no half
way point. We either advance in
Masonry or retrograde.
THE SAYINGS OF JOHN WESLEY.
I have no time to be in a hurry.
God begins his work in children,
Tha best of all is, God is with us.
I looked upon the world as my
parish.
I dare no more to fret than
curse or swear.
God buries His workmen but
continues His work.
“Isave all Icanand give all I
can; thatis all I have.
Loyalty (to rulers) is with me
an essential branch of religion.
Itisa happy thing if we can
learn obedience by the things
which we suffer.
It is plain God sees it best- for
You frequently to walk in a
‘horny path. ;
When’! devoted to God my ease,
my time, my fortune, my life, I
did not except my reputation.
Be punctual, Whenever I am
to go to a place the first thingI do
isto get ready; then what time
remains is my own.
The principles of Masonry is
nothing untried. It has stood the
test, and we as Masons, need not
hesitate to live its teachings and
preach its doctrine and show our
belief in God, who knows our
hearts and desires to rule them
that we may be true Masons, Let
. us study our principles more and
thus be better fitted for our
special work.—M. E. Raferty.
The man who, taking his de-
grees, declaring that ha is in
ward altogether discontinues his
investigations is like a man who
momentarily is blinded by a
bright light and gropes sbout
thereafter in denser darkness
than ever.—Square and Com-
passes.
Masonry stands unalterably op:
Posed to all] evil in motive or prac-
tice. Toevery form of bigotry
and intolerance. Itstands as the
champion of the largest liberty.
purity and charity of thought
and action. I would emphasize
what another has said: ‘‘The
most hopeless and pitiful condi-
tion in human existence today is
that of the man of splendid
scholarly and intellectual attain-
ments who is bankrupt in the
very essence of true manhood—
anall-inclusive love and charity
for his fellowmen. ‘That one
whose education does not include
possession of the.sweet and tender
virtues of the heart, is possessed
only of that knowledge, that
“wisdom of man which is foolish-
ness with God,”—Leon M. Abbott.
Important News for Investors
Public interest hus been arous-
ed to no small degree by The
New York World’s great finan-
cial page of Wall street news’
In The Morning World complete
stock quotations and news of vital
interest to investors is preserted,
whilein The Sunday World week-
ly reviews of «stocks, bonds and
business conditions in general are
chronicled ip comprehensive fash-
jon. No1erson at all interested
in money matters and investment
activities: ould miss reading 2
sing!e coy’ ‘of the Morning or
Sunday World. Order from
your newsdealer to-day.
rHRATRE “PR
WEST BROAD STREET .JUST SOUTH OF
, GASTON STREET . _
Finest and Largest Theatre in the South
For Colored People Only
a SSFSFSFSSSSSSSSSSSSS
| Important Announcement
Beginning with Mondaay March 2nd,
there will be a change in the character
of the shows given at the af 2
- Star Theatre |
“| Vaudeville and Stock Perfomances
will Le discontinued, and the efforts
of the management will be directed ‘to
| , . sg 8 .
Moving Pictures
of the very highest order. Our pic-
: _| tures will be the best in town.
‘ | Many of.our patrons have requested a
that we make this change, as they de-
. sire tovisit us every night to seeour
pictures but did not care to sit through
- | the same performance that they had | .
. seen the night before ,
REDUCTION IN PRICES
Prices of admission at the Star will be
reducedto Adults 10 cents - '
Children 5 cents :
Continuous Performances
The Star will open daily [Sunday
excepted at 3:30 p, m, and
St. Augustin e Parish.
Sunday services 11 a.m. and 8
p- m. Sundx; school 10 a.m. Wed-
nesday evenitg 8p.m,. Strargers
are cordially ivvited to juin in the
worship anu work of the church.
Rev. M. M. Weston, rector,
Special Notice
The public is hereby notified
that Mr. A. A. Coleman is in
charge of the renting of the Odd-
Fellows Hall, Harris street. He
can be found at the hall in the
morning and afternoon of each
day.
Wanted
Colored farmers, renters, share
farmers and wage hands. Also
good man fer shop; one who can
do general plantation repair work.
Large plantation. Land produces
bale to acre and 30 to 40 bushels
of corn, Write orapply to Es-
tate of
W. O. Wadley,
Rogers, Ga.
Woman's Ways.
Honestly, most women wouldn’t
wam thelr own way if they eould
bayvé it—Chicago News,
| COMFORT
Why certainly! If wintry breezes blow, that is no reason why you should stay
at home and ‘hug the fire. Don’t fear the cold, the Star Theatre is
HEATED BY STEAM
. Don’t Freeze! Come to the Star and be Comfertable : ° —
a
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