Savannah Tribune

Saturday, March 14, 1914

Savannah, Georgia

9 pages

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. “at 2 ora 4 . ate - By : “ £ A Question of Weight - ! Weacher-How many ousces in 4 .goend? Boy—Well, ma mys i éo- ‘gents on where you deal! Gots a Lecture. ‘¥east—Do you bave to ask consent of your wife when you want te go est at xoght? 7 Criresonbeak—Well, if I €o, and ‘st Tonce gives consent, I never get it.— ‘Yonkers Statesman. Her Past Miss Paul—Did they alow ker to bury her past? Miss Pry—Bot enti they keld aninquest—Jndge. > + Hard Luck. “You lock annoyed. What's themat ter?” * Elsie told me a secret the otlur xy, and sow I can’t tell you whet % fc? othe not?” “Pye forgotian it."—Bscharge. Grworsss In England, ‘Biresces are more Gificut te chhatn fm Bagland than ta any ether etyShed commiry. Laois of the Oysters, Beub des huitres (Lepis ef the oys- tax) was the nickname giver fe Reals AZ VIL of Vrance because ke Ived Sm igh izle and espoctally enjoyed a73- tem. In French this xichmame # 0 Milely good ene, as his official mmme was Lexis dir-Dnit (the cightesset3, wie sounds very mech Mke duu Detires.—Mitwankee Souttacl. "Ne, He Waen't. extremely bright men are He—Ob, I don't now. Pm aranscript. Whittieva Applause. : ‘Jn Ris dectining years the poet Wilt- ‘ths was extremely absentminded. Hs attended a church meeting where there were a large number ef persons. As Is presence was known, it was deem. ed fitting by one of the speakers to quote the poet's lines: I know not where his islands lift Their fronded palma tn air; J only know 1 cannot drift Beyond his love and core. reat applause greeted the quota- ton, and Whittier joined in the hand clapping. “I suppose I must have had my mind on something else. I had no reeollection of having written the vere,” he said apologetically whea his attention was called to the authorship ~ Only Figuratively. “There,” said the mermaid, “I’ve Bone and put my foot im my mouth egain!’"—Chicago Record-Herald. Which Is Some Distance. “Yon are a relation te the Rich- Jetghs, aren't you?” “Yes, a distant relation.” “How distant?” “Weil, as distant as they can keep me.”—Bosten Transcript. A Suggestion. + “Good heavens, women, you make we keep my hand alwaye in my pock- er “Then how is it you always forget to mat] the letters of mine I gee you put there?”"—Baltimore Auierican, a. Going the Limit. ~~ * “Won't you v:t some iwore fc6 cream, dear? “I'm ufraid T can't, but I doo’t saind tryin’,"—Life. ‘The ‘Truthful Promoter. “How can you expect me to put taoney into this business’ 1 don't know anything about it” “Well, that was one of the reasons why I expected you to put money into it”—Chicago Record-Herald. SEE LIFE IN FULL. Farsightedness and nearsight- edness are both defects in human eyesight. The same rule obtains ia daily Eving. The man who looks forever into the far future does not sce his nearest duty, and the man who sees only his daily routine close about him cannot advance towerd larger things. To “see life steadily and see it whole” should be each man’s endeavor. ‘The Office and the Man, “The office should seek the man, you know.” “That's all right,” replied the avowed aspirant, “but I gave it a fair chance, and it seemed diffident.”—Philadelphia Ledger. England’s Scriptural Place Names. No other country possesses so many scriptural place names as England, and among these Jericho appears to be the most popular. The name of Jer- icho figures six times on the ordnance maps, Paradise five times and Nine- veb, Mount Zion, Mount Ararat and Mount Ephraim three times each. In Bedfordshire there is n Calvary Wood and in Dorsetshire a Jordan Hill, Hampshire bas 2 Land of Nod, Cam- bridgeshire a Noah's Ark and Worces- tershire 2 Meab's Wash Pot. Other Scriptural names scattered about the country are Hebron, Joppa, Bethlehem, Jernsalem, Gideon and Herod. —Lon- gon Chronicle TEMPTATION. ‘Temptation sa fearful word. indicates the begmning of» posible veces of infos evn Ni the Hgas so slim ball whos though a Lite the madden eternity. sharp cry of “Fire!” under cur win- dows by wight i should soue we to fnstantyneous action and brace touscle to its highest tension. TAS Man INSURANCE GEOGRA- PHY: ‘When is a man most confused! When be misses his train. When are the people most un safo? When they are not isurec With the Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance Company. : Which company pays for all dis- eases known to medical science! |The Pilgrim. Which company carries its mem: bers the longest before lapsing their policies? The Pilgrim. Will you explain why the Pil atina does this! Only to aid its policy holders, that’s all. Which company organiaed firs among Negroes in Georgia, an secur i¢@ebarter to do busines: along. the Industrial lines? The Pilgrim, of couree. Which company colleeted the largest amount of morey, accord- to the Inet report of the INSUE- 4NCE DEPARTENT, to the Governor of the State? The answer isin the report, The Pil- grim. | How ean this statement be veri- fied? By referriag to the report of the INSUBANCE DEPART- MENT, of the Stato of Georgia. How can a policy be obtained with the Pilgrim, in case ite agents tarn back before they reach your home? By ringing phone 4129. Why has the Pilgrim so many satisfied policy holders? By per- forming its perpetuated motto, PE HPTNES\, HONESTY 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 imember, before the beneficiary can draw the death benefit? As soon as the death certificate is properly filled by the attending physician. How mapy men and women of our race are employed and are well paid by the Pilgrim? SIX HUNDEED TWENTY SEV- EN. Are you . being satisfactorily served? Ifnotsee the Pilgrim’s agents, or ring the office, and your order will be filled, and promptly delivered. Local and Jong distant phone 4129. Office, 508 West Broad Street, Savannah Georgia J.S. Perry, Supt A. B. Singfield, Gen’! Supt. —Adv 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 5st. ‘The Limit. Knicker—Is he stingy? Bocker— ‘Yes; he'd like the smoke rings hs blows to a girl returned—New York Sun. Sooing That He Insisted. “Bot,” she sald, “I don't want to Fromise to be your wife until I can be sure that I love you.” “I forgot to mention,” he explained, “that my salary has just been raised $10 a week.” “Oh, well, if you insist on baving your answer now I' suppose I shall have to say yes!"—Chicago Rocord- Herald. Barometers Indicate State of Mind. If you're a business man—wateh the barometer. If you want to sell a big bill of goods—watch the barometer. Buch is the advice of Dr. Colin A. Scott, professor of psychology i the Boston normal school. ‘The barometer, he says, is ag sure an indicator of persons’ minds as it is of the weather. You'll find them ac- tive and up and doling with the barom- eter high; gloomy and irritable with the barometer low.—Boston Post. Putting Them at Ease. Precedence is not the only puzzle in official and soclal circles in any city, but to say the right thing at the right time Is equally necessary. - “To make mistakes in speech is sul- cidal," sald a state department oficial 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 aid: “Do make yourselves at home, la- @tes. I'm &t home myself, end I wish you all were.’ "—Washington Star, Baid the Owl to the Quail. A quail, being shot at by a hunter end narrowly escaping with her life, tremb&ngty took refuge in a thickot, From & tres overhead an owl looked Gown spon her serdozically. “You ate very silly,” he remarked, “to allow yournsif to be hunted so ‘when you hare the means cf defeese ready stvyour band If yeu were to Step killing the ineects thet prey on the wheat*end the com man would Woeedily perish of starvation.” afvins, “However, if you don't mind.” sak eho, “T think I prefer to go oa do po a ga egrereaa aMar = 5 S end tes i mag Pose SUNDAY SCHOOL. Lesson Xia Firet arten, For March 15, 1914, THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of tho Lessen, Luke xitly 10-17; xiv, 1-6—Mamory Veraee, 3-5—Gold- en Text, Mark ii, 27—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. Both of the pertions assigned fer to- xy sre Sabbath é2y ieidenta In the Grst Ho healed @ woman tg the eynacogue whe bad been afiieted eightees roare, and ta the seesad He ‘healed a inen who bad the Gropey in She keuse af ome of the ehtot Phasi- sass. ‘The ruer of the cyaagogze was fs@igmast becasse thy woman tad Beun etled ca te Sabbath Ezy. for fhe axy wan moce to them then the Ear whe gave them the day, and hey had ast lorrasd that the oxe te their midst was the Lerd even ef the Bnitbath day, grester fhaw the tem- pie, and that & wes lawfal to de well @p tho Sabbath Gag (sett xii, a, {2. ‘Wbe Into Dr. Warten cf Csentes ecm! mary mays, tm bis notes en Matthew, feat the immedlats ovarian ef the Gstermination hy the Jewih rulers to put Christ te dsath was His relation t> the Sabbath. Christ etatmed that the Jewish mation were His people; that as Sum of Man He was greater than their greatest king. greater than the temple, greater than the sacrifices, greater than the Sabbath: that ull these were ordained for the sake of redemption, that God might through them show mercy; that Hin object was to give, not te receive, and that neces- sarily the Redeemer was gieater than all the means of redemption. ‘The Jowish Sabbath was the one pe- cnliar and distinctive ordinance of the nation. It wus the Jewish national flag. If the mation is to be deprived of its distinction from other nations, what is tho use of being God's-people? Pride, self righteousness, arrogance, had taken possession of them. Incar- nate love was in their midst doing its mighty works, and they thought -it was Satan. ‘They did not know heaven from hell, sin from holiness, God from the devil. Thelr case was hopeless. The nation wasdoomed. Yet He was slow to cast them off. Ephraim was joined to {dols, Israel would not frame her doings to turn unto her God, yet His cry was, “How shall I give thee up?” (Hos. tv, 17; v, 4; x1, 8) As He said in the parable of the un- fruitful fig tree, “Let it alone this year also till [ @hall dig about it and dung it, and if it bear fruit, well, and, if not, then after that thon shalt cut it down” (Luke xill, 6-9), He is slow to anger and plenteous in mercy, not will- ing that any should perish, but the Gay of the Lord will come (II Peter itt, 9,10). He delights in mercy and lov- ing kindness, and judgmevt is His strange work (Jer. tx, 23, 24; Hos, vi, G; Isa. xxvil!, 21). Sabbuth signifies rest arid a ceasing from our own works (Gen. tl, 13; Heb. iy, 8, 4, 10), but these hypocrites were full of thelr own works, thelr own days, thelr own feasts and their own ways and were so occupied with them and blinded by them that they could not see the light from heaven that was in their midst. The sicknesses which He healed were typical of the spiriteal condition of the nation and of the condition of multitudes today. This woman in the synagogus was like many who are found in our charches. She was tong years bowed down, bound by Satan and utterly unable to lift herself up. Every unsaved person is bound by Satan and unable to loosen or Iift up himself, end! nelther the synagogue nor any mere human agency can do any g00d, for by the deeds of the law can no one be justified, for the law. although holy and just and good, can- not give life (Gal. 1, 16; iH, 10, 11, 21; Rom. vil, 12). * By one word, one touch, from Him who is the end of the law for right- eousness to every one that believeth the infirmity of elghteen years instant- ly disappeared, the bound one was loosed from the bond of Satan, the people rejoiced, and the adversaries of the Lord were ashanied. Thus it was with Saul of ‘Tarsus when he saw the same Lord on the way to Damascus. Thus it will be with Israel as a nation when they shall see the same Jesus coming in His glory. Thus-it has been with multitudes now in glory and mult? tudes stil! on earth, and thus it might be with every one still bound by Satan if they would let the Lord lay His hand upon them and speak pence to them, for the free gift of God is eternal life, and whosoever will may take it (Rom. vi, 23; Rev, xxil, 17). Ia our second portion He did not say, “Which of you shall see,” but “Which of you shall have an ox or an BrertGheebeimt- Milady’s Mirror are See Save Peele eoene es Going up and down stairs preperly fs one of the best physical exercises. It etreugthenes the Leart, expanda the lungs by inducins deep breathing. strengthens muscles of the back, shoul- der and abdomen. Mt promotes elas. tielty of the foot aad leg nruscles and, dove af, brings about poise ef the body. ‘Tho ecxrest, bealtetal wey to mount stata ts en Slows: . Fieut—Pince the kell of-one foot en the otag, Taino the heal ef the other Soot, carrying i twweed so that ft fs in Tne with tho hoi ef the feot {n froet. Beeewt—At the tanie ttmo raise, the kody by tracsfercter the waitt to the bell af the feet etready’en the stair. The relative positiens ef the different parts ef ‘the bedy ste precisely the eamte os f walking ax @ lavet curface — tp, chest ep and ent, arms Ranging fre fram the shoulder blades. | Te Goncend statre the follewing are ‘tho sorreet positions: First—Bedy erect, point the toe downward, bee! taracd inward. Second.—Touch the step, sinking gradually, Hghtly upon the ball of that foot, at the same time carrying the ‘weight to it by raising the heel of the foot om the stair above, awinging the heel iward om the toe am a pivot, as in mousting stairs. Keep the heels in line al! the time. Spreading the fect ia not only awk ward, byt unrefloed. Swaying also 1s awkward and unnecessary. Practice rising on the toes and sinking on the knees, slowing rising again. It will help make the ankle muscles flexible 0 that the little pivot movement can be done freely. A Valuable Cream. One of the most delightful creams te use on the face ts the orange flower cream. It will soften and whiten the skin und fs atso good for massaging. It Is not as greasy 2s most creams. ‘It may be prepared as follows: ‘Take spermacet!, six drams; oil of sweet almonds, four ounces; white wax, six drams; glycerin, one and one- half ounces; borax, two drams; orange flower water, tro ounces; oll of olites, fifteen drops; the oil of neroll, fif- teen drops; ol! of bigarade (orange skin), fifteen drops. Warm the sper- maceti, wax and almond oll in a dow- ble boiler until they become creamy; then add the glycerin to the orange flower water and let the borax dissolve jn this, Pour this mixture into the first one, stirring constantly. Just be- fore the «ream congels pour in the perfumed oils drop by drop. For Oily Skin. Olly skins are often caused by indl. gestion. If your skin fs olly pay strict attention to your diet, eating only the simplest foods at regular hours and absolutely avoiding all greasy foods. A couple of times a day sponge the fol. lowing witch hazel lotion on the face: Take four ounces of distilled witch hazel and one dram of boric acid and mix together. Do not use any cream on the face but protect it as much as possible from atl sudden changes of temperature and any undue frritatien. Build up the general health, paying perticular atten- tion to the circulation. Once the blood is in perfect condition tt will remedy the shriveled skin of which you com- plain. To Reduce Waist Lins. To reduce the size of the waist and hips stand with tho feet eighteen inches apart. Raise arms above head and bend body from walst only until the finger tips touch the floor. Baise the body and repeat. Practice this for five minutes and then put the feet to- gether and go through the same move- ments for another five minutes. At first you will not be able to touch the floor, but the necessary flexibility: will come in time. Repeat the exercise frequently at first. Two Kinds of Powder. If you are up to date in the use of face powder you should have two sorts of powder—one to use in the daytime and one to use in the evening. The evening powder, because of the fact that It will be shown under artificial Ught, is colored slizktly mauve. ‘This sort of powder must be expensive to be delicately and naturally colored and for 2 good quality. The daylight powder has a pinker tinge. To Clean the Face. i Japanese tissue paper fs convenient in cleansing the face. It may bo used instead of a face cloth. It possesses the big advantage that it can be thrown away after it ts used and therefore appeals to the fastidious women as cleaner than any cloth ‘These little sheets of tiseue paper can de used to apply lotions, cold cream or water to the skin. It fg thin, soft and at the mame time firm. - bbe Vast A formule for a hand lotion that has proved to be 2 delightful tofet article is as follows; Take thirty grains of gum tragacanth, sock tn seven ounces of resewater for three days, stirring oceasionally with @ wooden spoon. At the end of shat time strain and add one cance of eiyvesin and ono of alco- ALFALFA. Be —_ ) What makes the landscape look #0 fair: } What blossoms bright perfume the alr: } What plant repays the farmer's toll, } And will enrich the wornout soll? Alfalfa: ) What is the crop that always pays. ) Which may be cut each forty days, | Resisting drought, the frost and heat: } Whore roote reach down full twenty feet? Alfalfat | What grows in loam and clay and sand: | What lifts the mortgage off the sland: : | What crep is cut three times « year, | And ef never = failure do you hear? Alfaltat | What mates the swine pe healthy fea, | Aad never raise a hungry pqucal: | ‘The whelosome food that never tafte Be pet three curls into thetr tafe? Alfalfat What males af other stock look | alee, | Aad brings the kighest maarbot | ‘What Alla the mix petty feats the walt, | Amd mikes the OM cow alseost | taush? Attaita! FLOUR MILL ON FARM. |How One Nerth Daketa Man Qoto Greatest Return From Crepe, A North Daketan realizes the maxt- mum returns from his wheat and rye crops by converting these grains inte four which he sells at $3 a hundred ‘pounds. In bis locality It was practi- cally impossible to obtain good rye, graham or whole wheat flour, so this farmer started growing and grinding his own grain. As he became profi- cient the quality of the Sour improved until finally his neighbors were annu- ally demanding his surplus at band- some prices. This “keen demand for high quality flour increased until he decided that ft would pay him te equip a small mill thoroughly and to embark in the business on a commercial acale. A stream of conalderable velocity flows through his farm and furnishea the power with which to operate his machinery. He equipped his minia- ture mill with a crusher, a grinder, a cleaner and an elevator. The income from his flour business during the first two years paid for his plant and equip- ment and yielded him a good not prefit, This miller eliminates all the charges that usually go to the middie man. He annually raises about eighty acres ef wheat and thirty-five acres of rye. Some of this grain he sells as a cosh crop on account of inadequate bin’ room in which to store it, but more than half of the crop is converted into flour to be used for human food. A gasoline engine is also maintained as @ reserve source of power in case the water power should gtve ont. Tho marketable flour fs neatly sacked and sells for $3 a bundred pounds, An- nually the rye and wheat bave 4 farm value of about 60 and & cents a bushel respectively where they are sold as cash crops. At a slight ex- Rense as reganis time apd labor this shrewd farmer converts his raw wheat and rye—that in the bulk are worth ap- proximately $1.07 and $1.10 a handred pounds—into excellent flour that sells for $3 a hundred pounds. Yearly this progressive farmer is gaining an attractive income from his mallling operations, since he also grinds grain for his neighbors. ‘This labor in nowise Interferea with his farm work, as the greater share of the mill work is done during the period when field work {s relatively slack.—Country Gen- tleman. A Handy Harness Box. ‘The next time a new set of harness is bought take a box and ft it with doors so that it may be closed tight Hang the harnees in this when It Is not in use. It is a surprise how long it will look neat and stay in good shape Pre 2 of ian i} HR aN iN LB: y om i iP \ } ; \ i FANIANY Hy 4 i f if \ AN | LEPTIN H\ | THIS BOX WILL PRESERVE THE HARNESS. when cured for in this manner. A box 2 by 3 by 4 feet high is a good size. Berew barness hooks will make good hangers! A little box may be attached to the inside of the door for holding combs, brush. etc. Plowing In Winten There 1s a diversity of opinion as to the advisability of plowing in winter. It is generally conceded, however, that sod Innds sheuld be plowed in tbe winter scason. The freezing and thav- ing of the soll put it in much better condition than it can be put by the plow and barrow after the spring hes opened. Winter plowing aleo destroys many insects that would damage cropa tf they were aliowod to live. ‘There will be much more moictrre Jaid up tn the soll and eaved for the ‘une of the growing crop the next year 4f the plowing {s done during the win- ter season than there would be if i ‘were left until spring. ‘The capillary connection with the subsoil will bave time to be reaewed if the gicoring bs Gono exriy. The South Atlante Barber shop Headquarters for barber Nes shoe polish. A fine line of sory pipes and tobacco, Shoes shined Tepaired. . Dealer in second handed shoes Clethes cleaned, pressed sad repaieed Hot, cold and shower baths. H. A. MANZO, Gen'l. Mgr M5 West Broad St. The Up-to-date Hair Cutting, Shaving, Shamppo wag + Bumr arp Warr Treareenr Worx Guakamraep. W. H. PREMCE, Propricter SOBW. Gwinnett St Sav’h. @a Mi WARTED MAGIC vil Suaving Powder ee ray te shane jn ce Caen TESST viv tT J.W. SMALLS Contractor and General Builder Estimates Cheerfully.Furnished ON SHORT NOTICE Write or Call at 139 Barnard treet Phone 506 CAR tdi The Acme Bicvcle Stee G/B Gree SS, Dealer in New and Second Hand- ed Bicycles. Tires and Sup- plies. Agency on the Monarch Bieycles. i K. HALPERN, Proprietor, 463 West Broad St. Phone 1340. | OF ALL KINDS 56O8 W Jones St. _ Come and take a look at | Stock or Phone your order and it will'bo deliyeredpromptly- Phone 8461 . Madame Floats 2, Willame Graduate Prof. Rober’s School, New York. 445 Price Street, near Gorden Telephone 2328 Wigs, Switches aud Pompscours Made from Natur’ {air. Combings Made Up. Shampooing and Hair Straigtening a Speciality. Face and Electric Massage, Dyeing and Matching Hair. ORIENTAL HAIR GROWER, An excellent preparation, will’ pep duce a beautiful growth of ‘hair. rections on each box. For sale, prite 25 cents per box. GAREY’S Variety Bakery Goods Delivered rromat3y $To any part of the City. 506 West Broab St.; Phone 1893 + Near Gaston. Masonic Books And Regalias LUOGE BEALS FINANCIAL CARDS AND BLANES Of Every Deseription. Publishora and Manufacturers’ Priges. Liberal Discounts Will Be Arranged. S01. C, JOHNSOR, “00d Went Bread St., Savannah, @a Ree Renee Sa SNe Rin Reel Beea Reem aie et ah i a RES ES mee ge E . * x . : — Re 2 rats * 7 SSNs eee LF, = . - Words and Deeds. ALFA A MONEY MAKER, : : iris asa tena eae cotoa bans 29388 om fort thy ‘net, thy werd, tate BS 7 T ' G ts. ring. working univesce. Skoeees In Assured {f Proper Direc | SHECKED FABRICS. Making the Little = sri somat fore yas thet Corman the ever tring. ever working untrense.| Cas sien Are, Follswed = ee ee een eee | Crue eee aT ae eaee One onte: See pgp a isnt go ee & a a ee (Cddef ef bureau of farm ¢.u,1s. lowa agri- Uitural experiment + ren Buccess does. ner slwas~ come with fret attempts with alfalfa, but that ghouid not be discouragin;; The per tent of failures in securing a stand of Mfalfa is not so reat as with many other crops commonly grown Very simple measures tum failure to suc- cess. For instance, in a number of cases where the sceding of alfalfa fpiled without inoculation, the mere ad- Altion of 300 pounds per acre of soil from an alfalfa field or from a sweet clover patch brought success. After inoculation the soll produced a fine growth of alfalfa. In other sections ‘of the state, particularly in the south- eentral, the application of from 1,500 pounds to 3,000 pounds of lime per acre Brought success when various other trials without lime failed, Perhaps the most important thing In pearing a stand of alfalfa is thé ‘Mberat uso of manure even on soile abore the average in fertility. Its ap- pilcation before plowing has Increased Se a eae pa a a Bee cr Bae hae 34 ke ae ‘ ae ee | ; ; : the yield of alfatta netably, On all fells below the srerace thre use of wanure has been absolately essential f@ securins a satisfactory stand and yield. In buying alfalfa seed, as in buying seed for other crops, the highest priced geed is usually the cheapest. In order that the seed may all be sowed under reper conditions for germination, it ould preferably be put in with an ordinary grain drill, and in average soil covered to a depth of about one inch. To distribute the seed uniformly it Is a ood plan to set the drill so as to sow only about ten pounds per uere and then to go over the land twice—for ex- ample, crossing the field north and south first and then east and west. There has been much discussion re- garding the variety of alfalfa best Suited to Iowa conditions. Since the per cent of winter killing has been comparatively low and seed of the hardier varieties is very high priced and also uncertain as to purity the only variety which can well be recom- mended for general use is that known as the common American. ‘This is grown almost altogether in such states as Kansas and Nebraska. Seed grown on nonirrigated Iand, under conditions so nearly as possible the same asgare found in Iowa. is usually preferable. No hay sould be remored the year that the alfalfa is seeded. Spring soedins may be clipped once or twice when necessary to keep’ down the weeds. bnt a 00d growth should cover the gronud when freezing weather comes on in the fall. Usually the alfalfa should be cut when about one-tenth of the heads are in bloom, which generally is early in Jone, as this is about the time that the new shoots bein to appear at the bottom of the stalk Much has been said regarding the didiculty of handling and curing the first cutting, but reports from those then In Iowa who have the largest acreages state that alfalfa is not more ficult to cure than red clover. A number hare sald that It fs casler to cure. Various methods of curing have been used successfully. In dry, sunny weather alfalfa cut one afternoon may be raked the fol- lowing day, put in bunches and much of it stacked the same day. It 1s important that as few of the Jeaves as posaible be lost. In order to save the leaves many growers rake the alfalfa into windrows ns soon as tt has wilted and before the leaves are dry, bunch the hay with a rake ss soon as dry enough to stack and haul it at once. This method also eliminates the labor of cocking the bay, a feature which has been found desirable by a number of men who handle large acre- ages. ‘Where one has much alfalfa hay to cure a side delivery rake will be found to be of the greatest value. ‘Where the hay Is to be cocked it is cut late in the afternoon or the morn- ing. raked before dinner and put tn cocks in the afternoon, Here it should be left for two or three days. The use of bay covers assures one of little di@eulty in curing even the first cutting and produces a hay of very execllent quality. The Care of Eggs. The perishable nature of an egg too little understood. Dampness, heat above 60 degrees, strong odors, drafts delay fo marketing, are factors whict very quickly destroy freshness and ga0d quality of exes. Pitctink Graal tiece See that the grass is polled away ‘from the base of small trees. Better pnt wire protectors about them so Oe ar rabbits cannot injure them during the winter, CHECKED FABRICS. They Are to De Very Pop- ular For Caring Wear. ang : oeey Coe Wie Goes | ee oe tas Se ‘ eae <i a BSkottavs co os ht Sa CS TT eae a a ae a a ~ | 1 . «a - ¥ 2; Pr. eS eS epee ‘EW BLACK AND WHITE GOWN, ‘The common sense costume shown hero Is a Polret creation. It is intend. ed to be worn under a spring coat, and tts Iines particularly adapt it for youth. fal figures. Black and white checked serge is combined with plain black cleth, It is ornamented with ball but- tons in black and white. The vogue of checks Is foreshadowed in this as in many other spring models, uch attention may be given to but. tons, 28 on all.the well made tailor mades the buttons are a striking note. ‘The lesser precious stones are being used for these trimmings, so we seo buttons in jade, amber, lapns lazull, cornaline, agate, ete. Moreover, it is not an extravagance to pay a goo price for a set of but- tons, as they ean always be used on something if they have intrinsic value, no matter what the fashions. .And just now they have a very obvious value, for it is iu details chiefly that the marks of gdod dressing are to be found ’ NECKWEAR 4 LA MODE. High Collars Are Favored For the Coming Sesson. The neckwear fashions of the pres- ent season are designed to please wom- en who have thin uécks. The high medici and the Mary Stuart collars are favorable to the concealment of gaunt neck lines. AMlustrated here 1s one of the new Plaited neck frills with satin tie to be worn with a simple morning blouse. The buttery bow is used in every conceivable way by" spring fashion designers. A bow in wired black tulle fs also illustrated here At present the lavish display of beautiful neckwear in the shops indi- cates 2 continuance of the styles of ae 7 can . : i ‘ in Y ae J S HT Yaeed fee : a le? |. SYRING NECKWEAR. the midwinter season and the intro- duction of many new norelties. De- algns vary from the small, trim roll back collars to the full, lace edged, quaintly fashioned berthas. The distinguishing feature about these new collars {s their extreme sheerness. Even the Plauen collars are lacier than ever and some very prettiiy designed. These show up par- ticularly well on a dress of dark serge. Collar and cuff sets of dainty em- brofdered batiste are so sheer that they have the appearance of guuze. Making the Little Farm Pay O reader of N this depart- ment need fear that purely theoretical farm- ing is urged at the expense of practi- cal methods. These artis are written for the benefit of estab- lished Jandowners ag well as ama- teurs, and much commendation hag come froin experl- i eS “ibs, ae Bee ens RSS oS EP Sas i IRE? she STIS fe rm aod oS a feasts aes) Beery Feng E STE ce ae Roe realize the shortcomings wt ordinary farming. For fustance, while L urse the advis- ability of growing fruit in lucallttes |which have the advantaxe of sood markets, I should dislike to sce farm- ers in the central states or anywhere else devote themselves te this single industry. That would be about 23 fool- ish as exclusive grain raisins or dairy- Ing. ‘The orchard belengs ia a scheme of mixed farming. tegetser with poul- try and hogs. | Important facta fer frolt growers are that orchard Ixnd may be made te pay double and the fertility of the soil maintained without extraordinary ef- fort. While the trees are coming te mafarity land earas nethtng for Ove er aix years unless there fs a plan of veg- etable raising, whem a return of $100 an acre is easily secured and the soll is benefited by the necessary cultiva- tion, Unless such a system of cropping fg established a nonbearing orchard ts apt to be neglected, and this results in waste of time, Investment and land. ‘The cultivation of vegetables or small fruit in an orchard Is therefore for the purpose of securing immediate profits and keeping up the quality of the sott. It goes further than this, however, for it makes the land return a living in- come even in unfavorable frult sea- sons, when late frosts, lusect pests, or other destructive agencies have spoiled the apples, pears, plums and cherries. Apple and cherry trees should be planted thirty fect apart; plum, pear and peach trees twenty to twenty-five feet apart. The trees need to stand in straight rows to permit the free use of horse cultivator in the vegetable and Derry patches. One vf the most common mistakes in farming is to plant trees too near together. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are necessary for the fertilization of, fruit trees and plants in general, Nie trogen cau be obtained in stable ma- pure, but the principal source is alr, and we may obtain tt by growing Jegumes. Vegetable gardening carried on with the aid of barnyard manure fs an excellent treatment for orchard land. Phosphorus may be obtained by the use of raw rock phosphate or bone- meal. Potassium fs contained in targe amounts in our ordinary soils in a more oF Jess unavailable state. To get more potassium in such a shape that the plants can use {t we can either apply soluble potassium salts or un- lock that which is already present in abundance. Experiments have shown that it does not pay to apply potes-| sium to ordinary soils, provided decay- | ing organle matter In the form of ma- hire or cover crops ts worked into the, soil. The decaying organic matter will liberate the potassium. It may not be generally known that apples xre about as hard on land as wheat or corn, except they do not take from it as much phosphorus. A 425 bushel apple crop will remove from the soit about the same amount of nitro- gen and potassium and half as much phosphorus as fifty bushels of corn or twenty-five bushels of wheat. There- fore a thorough system of gardening not only makes the orchard land do double duty. but restores the soll fer tility. | If for any reagon gardening cannot be carried on in a thorough way In an orchard I should recommend legumes in place of manure as the source of nitrogenous organic matter, It is shown that a cheap way ta sTow legumes is to apply ground limestone and rock phosphite. The cost of this | treatment would not exceed $2 per acre | per year, which should not seriously interfere with this system of fertiliza- | cae POTATO NOTES. ‘To secure an early supply of new po- tatoes next season plant the tubers of any good early variety in pots’ and start them in the honse. Four or five ineh pots can be used, filled only about two-thirds full of soll, fearing room for a top dressing of goll to be supplied as the plants grow, after the manner of hilling up potatoes when grown In the garden. One potato is sutticlent for each pot. ‘Time the planting so the plants will be well started In the pots when they are to be transpfanted In the garden ut the time the tubers are usually planted outdoors. If there is a well ventilated, cool, light place, such as a cold frame or cool greenhouse, in which to grow them Potatoes cun be raised [n pots und tit sized tubers dePeloped very mich ent lier than the first crop from the sar den. . Ten inch pots will be sufficlentiy large. Rub off all the eyes except the strongest for pot culture (HE PIONEER OF NEGRO INSURANCE a The Union Mutual Association OF ATLANTA, GEORGIA tev. T. W. Walker, D. D., Pres. _ {G.S. Norman, See- & Mar Your friend in time of sickness, accident and dead. Controlled od managed by men noted for conservative business methods, grea xecutive ability and wide experience in the insurance field Our presentatives are intelligent, polite and courteous. For further ia- »rmation, see one of them or phone 1470, J. C. LINDSAY. District Manager. 509 West Broad St., Savan- th, Ga., or write the Sec’y’-Mg’r 200 Auburn Ave,. Atlanta, Ga. ~ = 7 Savannan Pharmacy 811 WEST.%ROAD STREET (Lee Cnemtcat Co., Pror) . We are in business for your health. Stop that cough! Use cur Mentholated Cough Syrup. It POSITIVELY relieves a Cough, quicker thun any other remedy. Saturday Specials Beef, Wine and Tron.. .-..2- 20s. 2+ cee weeede - 2.49 cents Tasteless Cordial of Cod Liver Oil....-....2.... 2... 49,” Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil -- ......... cece eee AQ Dyspepsia Remedy ...... 0-02. Pee eee ee Seer 49? Female Regulator .... ao Sssee te Oeeee ee .49 7 25 Compound Cathartic Pills ...-.....-0.0 -.20. we 1207 Toothache Wax te lees, tit csesigedess: degeiccesccsOS 7 Regal Huir Dressing’ *** iG) Seeteenee vee le, 49) Wine of Cardui and Black Draught . ...............1.00 ” 4% Peroxide 15c, Fh wecwste. oeee sere % +0025 If it is in the drug line we hive it. Phone 3570 your order. Quick Delivery. Germany. he one thing that came home to me with great force was that Germany ts nine way loose jointed er Miz, but, on the eontrary, strong. red blooded, avid, imaginative. Germuny is a terrific na- thon, chopefel, courazeons, enthusiastic, orderly, self disciplining, at present anyhow, and If It can keep {ta place without engaging in some vast, self destroying confiict, tt can become in- ternally so powerful that it will al- most stand trresistiblé—From Theo- dore Dreiser's “A ‘Traveler at Forty.” A Famous Old English Chureh. The Church of St. Botolph in Boston, England, is a long, low decorated building, with a high perpendicatar tower surmounted by ay octagonal lantern, locally known as Boston Stump. The tower {s 300 feet high. The Ught and spacious interior bas very lofty arches resting on slender pillars. ‘Ihe chureh fs. eal to have as many doors as days in tho week, as mauy windows a3 weeks in the year, a8 many pillars as mofths In the year and as many steps up to its tower ‘as days in the year. But Ho Didn't Go, Even Then. “[ wish I could read your thoughts,” be said. “So do I,” she replied, with a half stiied yawe. “Its ce unpleasant sometimes to have te say whzt one thinks.”—Galoage Becard-Herald. Dr. L. S. Parks. Sa DENTiIasr Faw 240 Barnard Street. | Specialist in Gold and Bridge Work Sneannan, Joes all kirid of high grade deatal vork of the best quality and workman. hip Gold crowns and bridge work White Porcelain Pivot and Gold Crowns nounted on the natural roots, Gold *illings, Cement Fillings, and Silver or eae Fillings. From nine to_a full ,et of teeth $8.00 and $1090. Broken oistes mended and teeth added. All Gold Crowns Guaranteed 23} K Gold, Bell Phone 1744 Dr. J. W. Jamerson. FIRST-CLASS. ry DENTIST All Work Guaranteed - 623 WEST BROAD STREET Between Charles and Oak St. - PHONE 2098-3. b i 1 . iDr. A. R. Ferebée | Surgeon Dentist | Office Hours; 8a.m., toz p.m | Sundays by Ropeintment Gwinnett and East Broad Sts | (Adjoining Drug Store) Dr. Geo. W. Smith Special attention to Diseases of Women | and Children Night calls will receive prompt at- tention . | OFFICE : 8114 West Broad Street, Phone 1522 RESIDENCE : 695 Oak Street Phone 1439 | SAVANNAH. : GEORGIA | CCS Mildédto | ME.D. Physician & Surgeon 506 Charlton St., East, Office Hours Olam, 24pm, 78 pan, Phone 6 “Words and Deeds. ‘Gent forth thy eet, thy word, iste ‘the ever living. ever working universe. ‘It tna ceed grain that canzot dia Us- snoticed today, it will be found foarich- ing as a banyan grove after a thex- eand-yeom—Carlyte, As She Is Wrote In Enaland. A correspondent sends to the British Weekly a raro bit of English. It was written by a woman in excusing het tardiness in answering an Inquiry that had been addressed to her: “I would have written before, but I have been sick with a dog bite on the arm. The man thak owns the sawmills’ dog bit me in the road.” The excuse was ac cepted as sufficient. Alabama's Iron Ores. ‘The boom which followed tho dis- covery of the” extensive deposits of tron ore in the vicinity of Birmingham, Ala, in 1882, was without precedent in the industrial history of the United States, and the rush to Birmingham was paralleled only by the stampedes which followed much discoveries as the Comstock lode in Nevada and the Alaska gold fields. The tron ores of Alabama, while inferior in quality to those ef Lake Superior, have the ad- vantege of being near deposits of good coking coal and of the limestone reqet- site for fiaxing, so that Birmingham, the Pittsburgh of the south, ean manu- factare pig iron cheaper than any oth- or Mobeict of the world—Argensut. Dye Diviug Work Atlantic and Pacific Coast Tum Dryixe Coysrrucrion Co. Reference: Central Bank & Trust Co. All Work Promptly Attended To J.L MURCHISON Chief Diver 2815 Gravier St. New Urleans, La. R. E. PHARROW, General Contractor NOME OFFICE 202 Odd Fellows Building | ATLANTA. Ga. Builder of the “$250,000 Odd Fellow Block, Atlanta, and St. Philip A. M. E Churcl?, Savan- noah, Ga. Mechanically Compe- tent and fiinancially able to carry outthe Largest Contracts. Estimates furnished free on ap- plication. ~ ———G1VE—-—_ Mme. Hart's Hair Dressing and _ Grower A TRIAL it will make the hair grow long jand silky. Seeond‘tono hair preperation on the market, All who have trie it gladly receom- mend same to others. Agents wanted everywhere, Write for terms a VIOLA E, BART Manufacturer ’ 208 College St. Americus, Ga, | Am Confidential Let me Build Your Homes and save you from worrying nod having extra expense, . Thos H.Anderson, Contractor Carpenter and Builder. Jobbing of all kinds promptly attended to, Estimat cheerfully given. No. 5 West 56th St. P.O Box 48. F. D. Phone 3325 Se Louis Rubin . Cash Grocery DEALER IN Grocaries and Greengroceries Cigars and Tobseco Fruits. Ete. 4, E OORNER | Gwienarr anp Pavisen ~“ts,, Phone 3053 —Why Not Join— ~ The American: Woodmen A Colored Fraternal Sdciety THE CHEAPEST AND GEST —It Pays — SIGK AGG IDEN _ —AND— a Death Benefits } — Stox Benerrr. $3.00 Per Wexx Aoowrnt From $100.00 to $200 Dear Benerrr $500 to $2000 For Information ee E. A. Fields, Clerk, 519 Oak St. S. M. Turner, Asst Clerk 8(9 W. Broad Street or Robert McNichols” 222 Kast Parx Ave. GEORGE GREEN —Frisr-Crase— HORSESHUOELNG Give mea trial 766 ¥ 1 EATON STREET EN EEATON STREBE____ OVER 65 YEARS EXPERIENCE Wa ‘Traps Manne WES Copyniants &e.* TSR LRM ERM MUMS tae Heseciedeanecnia MnO, erat aainade th aieanaeind Scientific Aime: ate, a narsorecip Nisreuta meni parsers ee Abendeey tyaectaisg newt, Tore soltbat cer ore a Eira aes MUNN & Cogs 2a. Row York Mee aoe ret. wasnieae anes T.F. Smith _ ,_ Chas. Molony William J. Ryan. Vulcan Fuel-Co. _ Coal and Wood. Phones 283 and 898. * YOUNG BROS. NEW STORE is the place to get your Groceries, Meats and Confectioneries, Cigars ard Tobaice- Telephone orders promptly, attended to EDW. G. YOUNG, Manager Phone 4291 “ Cor. 36th and Burroughs Sts ~ ADVANTAGES GF aA . Guaranty Peli uaranty Péliey Plaia Contracts Free From All Téchivicalities aes { Death Benetits Increasing From Year'to Year 7 Assets Equal to THREETTIMES the Reserve required by the IiSurance Department. 3 a4 ad Get oneand you are Protected = Guaranty Mutual Life & Heafth Insurdnce Co WALTEE 8. SCOTT ® President and General Manager _ 3594 Wesr Broap Srmeer Phone 2540, JAS. H. BUTLERy Asso. Editor and Manager Published Every Saturday 1009 West Broad Street. Phone 2171. Remittance must be made by Express or Post Office Money Order, or Registered Letter. Advertising rates given on application. Entered at the Post Office at Savannah, Ga., as Second-Class mail matter. That the organization of a first class baseball league among the school children of the city is meeting with favor, is shown by the frequency with which declarations of approval of the plan reach the ears of the promoters. The boys of the city seem to be overjoyed over the prospect of being a part of a first-class baseball organization and there is every indication that the league will be a very great success from its very start. Among the many games that are both amusing and wholesome and at the same time educative, baseball holds an important place. The Sayannah Branch of the National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes, under whose auspices the league will be conducted, in selecting baseball as the common sport of the boys, no doubt gave its endorsement to this fact. And now that the Urban League has turned over the management to its Committee on Athletics and this committee has met with such success thus far, it is only right and proper that each of us see to it that our boys receive encouragement from our hands. The establishment of a league among the city school children is a fine idea. It ought to meet with success. And with the success that may come locally to the venture, we see no reason why neighboring cities cannot take up the idea with a view of establishing a circuit among them. Last Monday, a German scientist, who is visiting all of the larger colored institutions of learning, visited the Georgia State College. In the report given in the Morning News the extension work of the school was given and shown to be the Farmers Conference, State Fair, and the Civic Improvement League. The College Commission should disown connection with extension work of this kind unless same was properly conducted along approved lines. The president of the College claims that his farmers' conference has been held for sixteen years. During these years if the conference was properly conducted every farmer in Chatham and adjoining counties should have been in touch with it and received some benefits, and instead of an attendance of about forty or sixty farmers, there should be not less than five hundred. The personality of the president is the cause of this and not apathy towards the school. The State fair is an incorporated institution. At its organization practical plans were made for its success. It terminated into a family organization. The stockholders know nothing about its affairs. Its management receives continuous criticisms. The president of the College is the cause of it. Much can be said of the management of this institution that will not be of credit. Claim is made that the Negro Civic Improvement League is a part of the extension work of the College. The faculty of the College or those in authority should feel ashame to own it. The league was organized under influence of the Chamber of Commerce and by the colored citizens of Savannah. The president of the College was made president of the league. It started under favorable auspices and plans. for effective work were made. What is the use reiterating, the public is acquainted with its history; the public knows of the action of the president. The public knows that he made several false assertions about the league that he has never been able to this date to verify, and yet he is trying to thrust it upon the public as a part of the extension work of the College. The people of Savannah and the State have about fully understrood President Wright. They are taking whatever he says with much allowance. His days of usefulness at the college ended long ago. It is now too late for him to change about. A large percent of our people here has lost confidence in him as an educator for their children. As is always the case, the latest move on the part of the great educator at Tuskegee in behalf of his people, rings true of the unselfish devotion and service which go to make up the man. For a long time, accommodations on the rail roads in certain parts of the country have presented to us a serious problem. Inadequate space, dirty and insanity coaches, impolite and non obliging conductors have hovered within the range of our vision each time there is a contemplated trip to another town. There is no gain-saying the fact that most, if not all of our people who have had to do any amount of traveling whatever, have suffered indignities one after the other on account of the prevailing conditions on the train. Knowing as no one else does, perhaps, the inner designs and strivings of our people aiment better railroad accommodations, the great Wizard of Tuskegee has spoken out in clarion tones in behalf of them. As we read the replies of various railroad officials to communications dealing with railroad accommodations or rather the lack of these accommodations for our people, sent to them by Dr. Washington, it is need gratifying to note a rather general disposition on the part of these officials to give more attention to their Negro patrons. In bringing to the attention of the officials of high rank, the very unsatisfactory accommodations with which, in most cases, a colored traveling man or woman has to put up, Dr. Washington is rendering the race a great service. Better accommodations seem to be forth coming as a result. It is the sincere wish of the Tribune that when Railroad Day, the day on which Dr. Washington desires all of our people in all parts of our country whenever conditions demand it to speak to the officials of the railroads with a view of cooperating with them in improving conditions for our people, is set aside by him, that our people everywhere will seize the opportunity to do a service to their race through concerted effort which perhaps they could not do otherwise. By all means let us act upon the suggestion of Dr. Washington in this matter. Brazil and the Negro If I were asked to name the one point in which there is complete difference between the Brazilians and ourselves, I should say that it was in the attitude toward the black man. As the Indian becomes civilized he is absorbed into the population, as is the case with us in Oklahoma, and whoever has Indian blood in him is proud of the fact. The President of Brazil is one of these men, and there are a number of others among the leaders whom I met. It is an entire mistake to speak as if the population of Brazil were so mixed as to be wholly unlike that of Europe or the United States. It is mixed only in the sense in which the populations of Italy and Spain are mixed, as the population of southern France is mixed, as the population is mixed in many parts of the United States. As regards the major part of the population the "mixed race" is such only in the sense in which that is also true of the United States, and of most of the advanced nations of mankind. There is one real difference, however. This difference between the United States and Brazil is the tendency of Brazil to absorb the Negro. My observation leads me to believe that in "Absorb" I have used exactly the right expression to describe this process. It is the Negro who is being absorbed and not the Negro who is absorbing the white man. This great majority of the men and women of high social position in Rio are of unmixed white blood as the corresponding class in Paris or Madrid or Rome. The great majority of the political leaders are pure whites with an occasional dash of Indian blood. But any Negro or mulatto who shows himself fit is without question given the place to which his abilities entitle him. I met one or two colored deputies. At one military school I met a Negro professor. At one great laboratory I saw a colored doctor. All of these men were accepted quite simply on their worth, and apparently nobody had any idea of discriminating against them in any official or business relation because of their color. A very great majority of the Negroes, and most of the colored people—that is, the mulattoes and quadrons—do not make their way up to the highest positions, and they are proportionately most plentiful in the lower ranks. Among the working people, for instance, and among the enlisted men of the army and navy, I saw many Negroes, many colored men, working side by side in the same organizations with the whites and apparently without any discrimination being made against them. In Bahia there is a very large Negro element among the working class. In parts of Brazil it is somewhat larger. In Rio it is noticable, but far less so than in most of the cities of the Southern United States WHITE WORKERS NOT PARASITES Brazil is most fortunate in the fact that its white working population has nothing of the parasite about it. The whites do not endeavor to live on the labor of the blacks the inevitable result of which as shown in all other communities, is that ultimately the blacks crowd out of existence those who live on their labor. On the contrary, the bulk of the work, even in Rio, is done by white men. But these white men draw no line against the Negro and in the lower ranks intermarriages are frequent, especially between the Negroes and the most numerous of the immigrant races of Europe. In the middle class these intermarriages are rare, and in the higher class almost unknown so far as concerns men and women in which the black strain is atall evident. But even in the higher ranks there is apparently no prejudice whatever against marrying a mah or girl who is, say, seventh white the remaining quantity of black blood being treated as a negligible element. The men and women with whom I closely associated were in the very great majority of cases pure white save in the comparatively instances where they had a dash of Indian blood. But they naturally and unconcernedly told me the facts as I have above related them. Perhaps the attitude that the Brazilians, including the most intelligent among them, take is best symbolized by a picture we saw in the art museum in Rio. It portrayed a black grandfather, a mulatto son and a white grandchild, the evident intention of the painter being to express both the hope and the belief that the Negro was being absorbed and transformed that he would become a white man. It is idle to prophesy for any remote future, and it is a very doubtful thing to prophesy even about the immediate future, but my impression is that the guiding or ruling classes of Brazil will continue to be almost absolutely white, that in the classes immediately below them there will continue to be a certain small absorption of Negro blood, and that among the ordinary people this absorption will be larger—large enough to make a slight difference in the type. IDEALS DIFFERENT From the above it will be seen that the ideals of the United States and of Brazil as regards the treatment of the Negroes are wholly different. The best men in the United States, not only among the white, but among the blacks also, believe in the complete separation of the races so far as marriage is concerned while they also believe in treating each man of whatever color absolutely on his worth as a man, allowing him full opportunity to achieve the success warranted by his ability and integrity, and giving to him the full measure of respect to which that success entitles him. In Brazil, on the contrary, the idea looked forward to is the disappearance of the Negro question through the disappearance of the Negro himself—that is, through his gradual absorption into the white race. This does not mean that Brazilians are or will become the "mongrel" people that they have been asserted to be by certain writers, not only French and English, but American. The Brazilians are a white people, belonging to, the Mediterranean race, and differing from the northern stocks only as such great and civilized old races as the Spaniards and Italians, with their splendid historic past, differ from these northern stocks. The evident Indian admixture has added a good, and not a bad element. The very large European immigration of itself tends, decade by decade, to make the Negro blood a smaller element of the blood of the whole community. The Brazilian of the future will bein blood more European than in the past, and he will differ in culture only as the American of the North differs. The great majority of the men and women I met, the leaders in world of political and industrial effort and of scientific accomplishment, showed little, if any more trace of Negro blood than would be shown by the like number of similar men in a European capital. Yet not only is there in some classes a considerable infiltration of Negro blood with a corresponding tendency of the pure Negro type to disappear, but this process is regarded with hearty approval by the most thoughtful statesmen of the country. Their view, so different from our own, can perhaps best be expressed in the words of one of these very statesmen, himself of pure white blood, who said to me substantially: "Of course the presence of the Negro is the real problem, and a very serious problem both in your country, the United States, and in mine, Brazil. Slavery was an tolerable method of solving the problem, and had to be abolished. But the problem itself remained in the presence of the Negro. It was not the slave-owner who inherited his slaves who was responsible for the problem. The slave trader who brought slaves into the country was the man who inflicted the ghastly wrong not only upon the blacks but upon the whites. We, like you, have merely inherited the problem. U. 8. METHOD CRITICISED Now comes the necessity to devise some method of dealing with it. You of the United States are keeping the blacks as an entirely separate element, and you are not treating them in a way that fosters their self respect. They will remain a menacing element in your civilization, permanent, and perhaps even after a while a growing element. With us the question tends to disappear because the blacks themselves tend to disappear and become absorbed. You speak of Brazil as having a large Negro population. Well, in a century there will not be any Negroes in Brazil, whereas you will have twenty or thirty million of them. Then for you will be a real and uncomfortable problem, while for us the problem in its most menacing phase will have disappeared. You say that this result will be accomplished only by an adulteration, and therefore a weakening of the pure white blood. I grant that this will have happened as regards a portion, perhaps a third, of our population. I regret this, but it is the least objectionable of the alternatives. We treat the Negro with entire respect, and he responds to the treatment. If a Negro shows capacity and integrity, he receives the same reward that a white man would receive. He has therefore every incentive to rise. In the upper ranks of society there is no intermarriage with the Negro of pure or nearly pure blood; but such intermarriage is frequent in the lower ranks, especially between the Negro and many classes of immigrants. "The pure Negro is constantly growing less and less in numbers, and after two or more crosses of the white blood the Negro blood tends to disappear, so far as the physical, mental and moral traits of the race are concerned. When he has disappeared, his blood will remain as an appreciable, but in no way a dominant, element in perhaps a third of our people, while the remaining two-thirds will be pure white. Granted that this strain will represent a slight weakening in one third of our population, the result will be that in our country two-thirds of the population will have kept its full strength; with the one-third slightly weakened, while the Negro problem will have entirely disappeared. In your country all the white population will have been kept in its original race strength, but the Negro will remain in increased numbers and with an increased and bitter sense of his isolation, so that the problem of his presence will be more menacing than at present. I do not say that ours is a perfect solution, but I regard it as a better solution than yours. We and you have to face two alternatives, neither of them without drawbacks. I believe that the one we Brazilians have chosen will in the long run, from the national standpoint, prove less disadvantageous and dangerous than the one you of the United States have chosen."—Ex-President Roosevelt in The Outlook. White and Negro By natural increase the white population about triples itself in forty years, while the black doubles itself. Hence the latter must form an ever diminishing fraction of the whole population.—New York American. Miraculous Foresight. Englishman- (reading)—"Keep Out—This Means You!" Bah Jove, how did they know I was coming? ```markdown ``` Two of these Cottages have been sold this week and three more are spoken for; so if you want one, you should get busy at once. Remember how easy you can buy one. Terms $100.00 cash and $10.00 per month. A first class little home at a reasonable price The poor man's opportunity to get a home. 承承出告承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承承 Improved and Unimproved Real Estate For Sale by G. H. Bowen Whether you wish to buy, sell or rent, it will pay you to see me first. More to select from; less to pay. 1 Vacant lot on E. Anderson near E. Broad St. 34x115ft $900.00 E Broad St., 34x115ft. $800.00. 554 acres near Pooler, in this County, one half in cultivation, for quick sale, the price is only $1300. One story 3 room dwelling house on West 32 street, $1000.00. 2 story 8 room dwelling on West 32nd street, 23'0.00. 3 room dwelling, a nice little store house and large lot on Bulloch street, in Brownsville $2100.00. Four 4-room houses on Chapman street, West Savannah, near Seaboard Shops. Price $2500.00. One 4-room house, 48 Chapman avenue. Price $800.00 on easy terms. A 2 story ten room double teement, 525 and 527 Gaston east. 2250.00. This will pay you 10 per cent. 5 room dwelling and 1 acre land on Ogeecchee Road, just outside city limits. 800.00 on easy terms. 4 room house and lot on West 4 room house and lot on West 36th, Street. $1200 on easy terms 509 East Charlton St., 6 rooms and attic 21 story dwelling, choice home in good locality; property that will enhance in value. Offered a bargain price for quick sale $1500. 8 City Lots on East Park Ave. and Collins St., for sale as a whole. $3000.00. 10 Acres fronting on the White Bluff Road, and also has a Riverfront, a beautiful tract near Central Park College $1200.00. This a good thing and terms can be had. Lot in the Granger tract on 48th St. 30x100 st., $1100.00; 3 lots near Dale Ave. 2 Story b room house 1128 E. Gwinnett street $1225.00. 221, 224 and 225, 1-story tenement, Barrington street, lot 50x 100. Rents for $15.00. Price $1650.00. rooms: $2100.00. Two 5 room dwellings, good condition, 2006 Bullock street, between 37th and 37th. Rental $16.00. $1600.00. 1 Vacant Lot 30x105 feet, 36th street between Florence and Burroughs streets. $1,000. - Only one or two of these desirable residence lots for sale. 806 Church Street, a good 4 room cottrge and lot 30x90 only $600.00. 3 acres in Emanuel Co., 50 acres in cultivation near Nunez Gai, $10 00 per acre. 930 acres in Appling Co., near Baxley, 60 acres in cultivation; sawnill and turpentine timber, $7220 00. 2000 acres in Pierce County near Blackshear; 500 acres in cultivation. Price $20 per acre. This has plenty saw mill timber. 4000 acres timber land in Tatnall County will cut 8 crops boxes on Railroad near Manassas and Collins, Ga. Price $10,000.00 At Sandfly Station, on the Isle Hope Car line, and immediately adjoining the Haven Home school, one of our room Cottage and corner lot: size of lot 105x105 ft. A good place to live and educate your children, free from the vile influences of city life. 5 cents car fare to the city. Owner needs the money and will sell for $350.00. 752 E. Bolton street, 2 story 8 room dwelling with bath, a good come at a reasonable price, for the quick buyer, or would make a good investment for that idle money, $2100. 4 lots 50x100 feet and 2 story 5 room house in good condition, together with garage and other outbuildings, in Fairview on Williams street and Dale Avenue, and the electric car line. Just out of the city limits. This is a good home at a low price, $2500. Fine business location corner Lovisville and Rothwell Sts. close in $400. Part on time. 2110$Bulloch St, 2 story 6 room dwelling. On easy terms, $1600. On East Broad and 33rd Sts., two small dwellings and a small store. This is a choice investment, paying 13% on the price asked. Part on time. Price $1500.00. 511 W. Henry street. 2 story 8 room dwelling with all modern conveniences, and large lot with servant houses on the lane, convenient to the business part of the city: a magnificent piece or property, and I will make terms $3700 00. 2 tenement houses, 3 room each 2115 Florence street, $1,300 6 room cottage and half acre land, Bonnaventure road near car line, 3 miles from the city. 2 miles from Ga. State College. A nice country home. $1500 00. For Rent For rent two beautiful brand new two story 6 room houses on East 38th and Waters Road. Can arrange the houses into flats. I want your houses to rent. I have demands daily and I guarantee satisfaction. 5 room apartment all modern conveniences, East Park Avenue, between E. Broad and Price. I am now able to offer the prettiest and best apartments in the city for colored people; all modern conveniences, as follows: 6-Room cottage with pavilion attached, and large piece of land suitable for chicken farm or Road House. A bargain for making money. Located on Bonaventure Road and car line near Thunderbolt. Reasonable terms; immediate delivery. One 5-Room second floor apartment corner 40th and Harden streets; only two left. I shall be pleased to show you these or anything on my list. Automobile service free. I have a fine piece of business property for sale on West Broad street; two stores with offices above. Ask me about this quick, as it will not be long on the market —-————-——_________ EINE TEESE Toe nl 5 i Just leted, coz; de = — ETE TOE ITE LOCALS |Thankssiving Proctamation| crust Trust, === _ Sst completed, cozy mordera ap rf eer aaa FOR RENT—Nicely furnished front room in private family for one or twogentiemen, with orwithow Board. 543 East Huntingdon street. FOR RENT—Three room Vint with wath, Apply 218 East” Park Avenuet Mrs. Priscilla McIntosh, after spend- ing several months in the city as the guest of Mrs. Frances Smith, 817 Peul- Sen St., returned to her home in New York city on Tnesday of last, week. She was royally entertained by her many friends and left with many pleas- aat recollections of her visit. With your aid our Negro. regalia house, the Central Regalia Company ef Cincinnati, Ohio, will be the lar- gest regalia house in the Country. Manager G. S Normaa of the Union Mutual Association, of Atlanta, was a visitor’ at our office this week. Miss Lucile Tucker and Mr. Melvin Tucker arrived home last week from Atlanta, where they were atteading Allanta University. Mr. James C. Wright of Jacksonville, Fin, is among the Visitors in the city this week. Friends of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Brails- ford will he proud to know that the fat- ter is recup-rating rapidly from an op- eration which she underwent at Charity Hospital recently. Miss Anna Sanford of Macon Ga., is visiting in the city. Mr. John Henderson of Jersey ‘City, N.J. passed through the city yester: day en route to St. Augustine, Fis. Mrs. S A. Grant, who has been ill, is improving steadily. Mrs W. H_ DesVerney of New York, formerly of this city is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Williams, Duffy street, west. Sacred Concert Tomorrow Atf- ternoon The sacred concert to be given at Beth-Eden Baptist Church, promises to be far above the ordinary. The personal of the program speaks for itself. The mere mention of the names of Mesdames Mungin, Blake, Hook- er, Orner and the Misses Lee and Marshall 1s sufficient to attract the attention of the music loving public. [ne program carries many special features. The star number will be a female quartette’ by Mesdames Hooker, Orner and the Misses Lee, Messrs. Bryant Green, Monroe and Jenkins will render “Lead Kindly Light,” as only they can. These young men possess rare musical ability and it ig always a pleasure to hear them. Be sure to be present at 4 p. m., and enjoy two hours filled with music.— Ady. Cards of Thanks -Miss Ella Menichols and family wish to thank their friends for the sympathy shown them thtough the sad bereavement in the death of Mrs, Nancy MecNichols. ‘The wife and sister of Louis Gardeen wish to express their sin- eere thanks and appreciation for kindness shown by their friends during his recent illness und death, and to the Savannah Vol- unteer Guaid, with which he was Yong identified, for their kind con- sideration, and alsoto Mr JF, Minis for a beautiful laurel wreath. = Nellie Gardeen, 7 Maria Gardeen. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Dela- ware and family wish to extend their gratitude to the members of F. A. B. Charch, U- 5. Grant Branch. J W. Carr Associatiun and friends for the surprise given her mother, (Mrs. Jane Sanders,) en Tuesday March 10th. St. Paul Dots St. Paul held its first quarterly eerference onthe 9th. Rev. G. W. Taylor, presiding elder of the Savannah district, preached toa good crowd at both services Sun- day. Tne class leaders and pres- idents made good reports.. Tney paid the presiding elder out with ease. Mrs. Annie Battle led the clubs in raising highest »mount ef money. We wish to congratu- late all of the presidents and @ass leaders for service render- ed. The pursonaye wus stormed with edibles again on Friday night by the followiny: Mesdames Lela Jolinson, Sarah L Austin, Janie Muriay, Hettie Greene, Elizabeth Murray, Viamie Baney. Cherry Scott and Bros, Clarence Brown and W.H. Johnson St Paul Sunday school has begun. its Easter practice. ‘The members ure highly hope ful for success in their spring rally, while the puster, Rev Martin, is planning big things to the end that the church may be- eomea greaterSt Puul | * Reached Too Far, “Yes.” sald the bankrupt, “I lost my fortune renching for an ideal.” “Vers interesting. And what war your {deal?” “A Diseer fortune than I had."— Philadelphla Ledger. Thanksgiving Proclamation ‘No.3 Office .of Grand Worthy Coun- sellor, Grand Court Order of Calanthe, under .turisdiction of K. of P. of Georgia, of North ‘America, South America, Ev- rope, Asia, Attica and Australia Savanuau, Ga., Feb, 4, 1914. To the Grand Court Officers, Grand Representatives, Mem- bers of the Grand Oourt, Worthy Counsellors, Members of the Courts and Juvenile Courts; Greetings: In compliance with the law and the establishing of the Knights of Pythias and Courts of Calanthe and by the power in me vested us Grand Worthy Counsellor of the State of Geofgia, [call every Court in the State out on Sunday, the 29th day of March, with badges, to a church or hall or wherever the K of P. go. On this day let praises from more than ten thousand five hundred and fifty members in this State be given to Almighty God for continued blessings He has be- stowed upon our Order and that Love and Harmony may reign supremely. Members failing to turn out without a iawful excuse and so accepted by their Court shall be fined $1.00. You can get Court badges from this office at 60 cents each, Juve- nile badges 30 cents each, by ap- plying for them before the 15th of March. All badges must come through this office. Programs from this ‘office or Grand Chancellor’s office $1.50 per hundred. I shall expect every Court in the jurisdiction to comply with the above proclamation to the letter. . Yours in F. H. and L., Mrs. R L. Barnes, G. W.C. Mrs. M.S. Grant, G. R. of D. N. B.—Please order badges at once to avoid the rush, In Memoriam ., In loving but sad memory of WALERIA LUCILLE ANCERSON wno departed this lite Sept. 13, 1913.— Some duys the road seems long, so long, how hard I tried to save you. Prayers‘and tears were all in vain when happy angels came from on high and bore you from this world of toil and pain out in the lonely and silent grave- aid beneath the sod and dew. I havne’t once forgotten you, in sorrow I think of you; a young and beautiful lite is ended. Safe in the arms of Jesus, Safe on Hix gentle breast, There by His love over shadowed Sweetly my soal shall rest ‘Mrs. Margret Anderson, mather Miss Euvenia Grant, friend. ey Naetne tadeioey OE‘oar iti loving memory of aur inmate, SISTER A. J. WHITMIRE, ‘who departed this life Dec 13, 1913 Sister, thou wast mild and lovely Gentle as the summer breeze. Pleasant as the air of evening When it floats among the trees. Peaceful be thy silent slumber, Peaceful in thy grave so low. Thott no more’shall join our number. Thou no more our songs shall know. Yet again we hope to meet thee, When the day ot lift is fled, Then ia Heaven with joy to greet thee, Where no farewell tears are shed. Committee Sister M E Dudiey “* S. Perkins “ L A. Newton, Chairman In loving memory of our inmate. SISTER SUSIE CADE, who deparied this life Dec 6, 1913.— In the midst of life we are in death, said the prophets of old Sister, thou art done gleaning. No more will you join us insongs of praise. We loved you but Jesus loved you best. y His hand the tie was broken Thou hast taken but thine own, Lord of earth and God of Heaven. May Thy will be done. Committee, Sister M. E Dudley, “'S. Perkins, 7 «L.A, Newton, Chairman Before You Visit New York wnite to The World for fal { information regarding | Hotels, Theatres. Aestaurants, Aatlroad Time Tables, Steamship Sailings, “ageage Transfers, Cab Fares, &. keservations Made FREE| | WHEN IN NEW YORK call at any of The World tafor- mation Bureaus. These are maln~ tained for the FREE use of the | puolts, WORLD OFFICES:— Pulitzer Bldg, 6* Park Row, N.W cor. Broadway and 38th St 155 West *7Sth Street. 410 East 149th Street. | 292 Wesi.tngton St. Brooklyn, | NEW YORK WORLD |Patitzer Bidg., New York City] January Harvests. Janvary is the wheat harvesting month of Austraila, New Zealand Chile aud Argentine. Cruel Thrust. He—Our hostess was really the moot beautiful woman ef ill present. Ehbs (whe was not inviiedi—1 dare say. Bhe took good eaiv tu provide for that when she sent out ler invitations. — London Telegraph. Work Differently. ' Adversity brings ont the grit snd prosperity the’coucelt in a man.—New York American. DEFEAT. Defeat is sometimes a really valu- able jexperience. To win all the time does not make for develop- ment of character. The-real test comes in defeat. Then if a man ean come back he shows his tre worth—William Howard Taf. | p A Good Loser. | “Are you a good loser?” “I ought to be—I've had practice enough."—Town ‘Topics. The Vicest Enc}clopedia. The most ancient encyclopedia er- tant is Pliny’s “Natural History.” in | thirty-seven books and 2.493 chapters, treating of cosmography, astronomy, meteorology, gevgrapby, geology, bot- any, medicine. the arts and pretty nearly every other department of hu- man thought known at the time. Pliny, who died 79 A. D., collected his work in his leisure intervals while be- was engaged in public affairs. The work was a very bigh authority in the mid- dle ages. Made It Pout. She—Don't you think I have a pretty mouth? He (abrentinindediy) — Yes, darling. It's simply immense. | Brilliant Idea. Old Roxleigh—Marry my daughter? Why, you are supported by your fa- ther, Suitor—Yes, sir; but my guv’- nor is tired of supporting me, he says, and I thought I'd get {nto anoth- er family.—Boston Transcript. Paint Brushes. Vinegar heated to the bolling point ‘will soften paint brushes that have be- cotue dry and hard. An Unconscious Toast. Lord Clyde one duy after dinner ask- ed a chaplain to one of the regiments in India for a toast, who, after consid~ ering some time; at length exclaimed with great simplicity: “Alas and alack a day! What can 1 give?” “Nothing better,” replied bis tord- ship. “Come, gentlemen: we'll glve a bumper fo the parson’s toast, ‘A lass and a lava day?” A lac means 100,000 rupees, or $25,- 000, which Ie certainly an Income to make one happy.—London Chronicle. Wheels of London. London fs creditea with the greatest variety of means of transportation of any city in the world. . A Got-ricn-quick Plan. “Is there any money in a perpetual motion machine?”’asked the Inventor. “1 guess there is,” sald the man with the red‘tie “I have a little machine in my store that would bring me a mil Hon if 1 could keep it In perpetual mo- ton.” “What Is it?” asked the ottier. “A cash register."—Ladies’ Home | Journal, What Worries Him, A married man says it Isn't the jaws of death that worry him, but the Jaws of life. Not Good at Riddles, A lawyer was questioning a new elient, a widow, the other day about her history. “My history,” she replied, “is simplicity itself. My first was the happiness of my Mfe, my second wan goodnens Itself, my third”— “Excuse me, madam,” interrupted the attorney, “but really we aren't bore to guess charades.” Corrected. sbwedd has certainly bad Tsifled life” “You mean "—Rorton Transcript. Mest Wendorful Creca. ‘The most wenderfal clock ta the Werld is in St Petorsbarg. It bes minety-five faces. It indicates simul. taneously the time ef day at thirty Peiats en the earth's surface, besides the mevement of the earth areund the wun, the phason ef the moon. the cices ef the sodinc, the patoage ever the meridian of mere thea-afty stara of the northern hemisphere, and the date according to the Gregoriam, Greek. Mossulman and Hebrew calendars. It teok two years to put the works to gether. At the Home Plate. Judge—Describe what passed be tween you in the quarrel with your wife. Man en Stand—The plates wero regular dinner size, your honor, and the teapot had a breken spout.—Boston ‘franscript. EXPERIENCE. Experience is never limited, and it is never complete. It is an im- mense sensibility, a kind of huge spider web of the finet~silken threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness and catching every air borne particle in its tissue. It is the very atmosphere of the mind, and when the mind is imaginative— much more when it happens to be that of a genius—it takes to itself the fairest hints of bfe; it converts the very pulsss of the air into rev- elabons—Heary James. . cnaemaite 3S. SPSS Just completed, cozy mordern ap r! ments of three rooms, kitchen, sinks front and back porches. Seven dollar aflat. Perry street, east of Randolph Rowland end Rowland 23}, Abercorn, Special Notice The public is hereby notified that Win. J. Jackson, formerly tuy salesman, is no longer con- nécted with my office in any man- ner. He has no authority to sell or collect for lots sold in Central Park, Cann Park or College Heights. G. H. Bowen, Gen, Agt Coming Bvents in the social Warld. 4 NOTICE—Articlesin this Colusnn Two ‘tents Per Word, Payable in Advance. April 13th, Monday. -Trolley Ride oy G.L.G U.0. of Golden’ Circle ‘Director's Board Tickets 25 cents. “March 16th Monday. 26th Annual ‘Ball by the Friendly Brothers aid and Sucial Club at Harris street Hall. Tic- kets 25 cents. Murch 23:d, Monday. | Spring Dance and Money shower by the Elks at Har- ris St. Hall | Tickets 35 and 0 cents March 25th, Wednesday, Annual Dance by the Y. M. F. A., at Musonic Temple. Tickets 25 and 50 cents March 18th, Wednesday, Annuat Ball by theF. C.A andS.C and Branch at Masonic Temple. Tickets 25 cents March 16th, Monday. © A Cogutry Wegaing at St Philip A.M. E.Ch ot for benefit of lizhts. Tickets 19 ca%'S March 18th, Wedue sday. Minstret and Danie by oavavuzh Amateur Club at Mechatiic Hall Tickets 15 cents. March 23rd, Monday. 8th Annual Dance by the Ocean Progressive Aid and Social Club Ladies Branch at Ma. sonic Temple. Tickets 15 cents. March 27th, Friday. Second Annua Dance by the L. B.S. Club at Masoni Temple. ‘ticket 25cents. March 16th, Monday. Musical wider the-managementol Mesdames M. K Harrell aud M. Moody at Asbury Church, Admission 10 cents. ‘The Sletor States. A curious inquirer wanted to know “What are the sister states?" and thc brilliant country editor answered: “We are not quite sure, but we should Judge that they are Milas Ourt, Ida Ho Mary Land, Callie Fornla, Alle Bama Louisa Anna, Della Ware, Minnte Sot: and Mra. SippL”"—Ladies’ Home Jour pal - een mie ‘The oldest national fag in the worl is tbat of Denmark, which dates from 1210. His Principal Occupation. — « ‘The art photographer had visited th. farm. “I want to make an erhaustir. study of this particular bit of tand scape.” be said, “and would like t have your hired man retain bis pre~ ent position on the fence there. Cai he sit still?” “For days at « time,” re plied the farmer:Cleveland Plait Dealer. ONS CE Pc ES SRP BSEESHSSHBRE @ FBAR NOT - It was Shakespeare whe o = wisely said, **Ourdoubt: “are traitors, and make us less the good, we oft micht win. bv fearinv to attempt.” How frue this is from an insurance standpoint. Jus! think of the yzood we have already won just because a good many of us feared not to join Negro insur ances Then think of the good that yet could be won if a good many more of ws would ‘fear not?’ and do the same thing Now think of the good we have already fost by doubting our own business worth and ability, there- by assisting the other iasurance men winning the very good we might have won but lost, by fear- ‘ing to attempt. Fear Not and joiri the Georgia Mutual. Branch Office—509 W. Broad St. | H. T. Singleton, Supt. ; —A . i ——- SBPSE SPSSBHOESE | East Side Grain | Store - O, T. MITOBRELL, Proprietor 543. LIBERTY STREET, E. Phone 3521-J OR, HEARY Mt. COLLIER MEDICINE AND SURGERY 640 President E. 1 block from Tybee Depot Office Hours: 8to 11 a.m. 3to5 p.m, 8 to 10 p. m. Phone 1120-L Savannah, Ga Will the Roman Catholic Church Rule America? This “Question means much with the Protestant Clergy. Evangelist J. W. Manns will answer the “Question.” The following lectures will bedelivered at the Seventh-day Adventist Church, 36th and Burroughs streets; subjects: ‘Sunday Night March 1—“The Rise and Progress of Papacy °~ Sunday March 8th--“The Papacy 2 Menace to America’s Liberty.” Sunday Merch 154h—“The Roman Church will rule America.”” RSunday March 2:nd—‘How willRome ‘yleAmerica?’—Adv. points for Mothers Care of the Noss and Throat. “Improper conditions of the nose and throat are not only dangy'ous to health, but stunt the physfxl and mental development of the child.” says 2 well known physician. “Colds iri the head, catarrh, adenoids and enlarged tonsils are the most frequent of these improper conditions found in little chil- dren. “Adenoids .are small masses of soft tissue normally found in every child's nasal passages between the back of the nose and the throat, which through catarrh or other causes may become enlarged and block up the alr passages, interfering with breathing through the nose and foreing the child to breathe through the mouth, preventing proper inflation of the lungs and stunting the development of the chest. They keep up a constant catarrhal condition near the ventilating tube leading trom the throat to the ear and in this way im- pair the hearing of the child. “Another common throat disease is enlarged tonsils. The tonsils are small, almond shaped bodies situated on each alde of the throat. They have a cer, tain purpose, and I do not believe in the indiscriminate removal of all en- larged tonsils. In fact, I condemn what I unhesitatingly ‘call the ‘massacre of the tonsils’ so often chosen as the treatment of enlarged tonsils. ‘The cause fs in many cages not in the ton- ails, but in the general condition of the patient. Proper medicine and hy- giente treatment will cure many cases without an operation. Only when the tonstig are enlarged, bard and fibrous, serfously interfering with speech and swallowing, should they be removed. “Prevention {s better thax a care. If a child catches a celd, do not let the cold ‘wear {itself away.’ Treat it at once or it may lay the foundation for -adenolds and enlarged tonsils.” Cover For Babv’s Fect. | Children who-are too small to walk out of doors nearly always suffer from cold feet, but this will never happen if mothera will wrap the plump little Umbs of thelr youngest in a bagicover, which may be made as follows: The size of the cover must vary according to the shape of mail or push cart which baby uses. Take careful measurements and then cut an oblong plece ef cloth, making ft twice the lerigth you require the bag. For lining you will need a plece of satin or sateen cut two inches smaller each way than the cloth and wadded with a thickness of cotton wool. This must be atitched ‘rmly to the cloth. ‘Then double the whole thing and sew up the sldes so as fo form a bag. Cut @ piece ef cloth two and a hale Inches larger all the way round than one alde of the bag, scallop It with all to match the cloth and lay it on the front of the bag, stitching it firm- ly. If you like yeu can also work baby's fnitials in the corner, surrounded by some simple foral decoration. Last of all add a small brass ring to each upper corner, sewing it on very ‘firmly. When baby's lecs are snug between the layers of cotton wool and the rings are allpped over two hooks screwed at the back of the cart you ‘will have good cause to feel satisfied with your handiwork. A Nerve Soother. Fractionsness and restlessness on the baby's part are frequent results of cut- ting back teeth, and often the-child ts given to starting and screaming dur ing the night. Try: the following plan before putting the little one to bed: Get a bath ready with the water deep enough to reach to the child's waist when sitting down. Fasten a shawl or small blanket around the neck to keep the top of the body warm. Neither abaw! ner mands should be wet. Keop .the baby in the water fve minutes. A board may be Mixed across the bath at one end to hold « few toys to amuse the child, The temperature of the wwater shoaki be 10¢ degrees. The Jower port of the little body wf! be quite red when taked oot Give ft a goed brisk rabbing and pop the ehild into a warm bed. “Tt should sleep quietty and soundly til] morning. fRiainprocf Hecd. My chfidren never carry umbrellas, writes a friend. Instead each one is provided with « rainproof bood, which when net needed ts buttoned into an inside pocket of the overcoat. If rain comes en the hood ta button ed on to the buttons sewed under the collar of the coat, When the collar ts turned up and the hood drawn over the head the little one fs as cusy as pos- sible and takes no harm from the rain. ‘The hood ean be quickly dried after ward. 1 Gnd it a far better plan than providing umbrellze, which are always getting damaged. An Appeal to Pride. Though smoking elrarettes is really harmfal for boys. they xmoke not de- cause they are barically ad, but in Imitation of thelr elders. It Is the parents’ duty to prove to the boy that smoking may prevent bis hecoraing an athiete and that It will affect hin chest expansion and minseular development. See to it that he dixtineninhes the real from the ehean sport and desires te imitate the right kind of older fellow. i ec a wi ise 2 Se ‘ The Wage . Earners Loan | and Investment Company Will pay Interest in its Savings De- partment at the rate of 6 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 pay- able upon de- mand ok ° Officers L. E, Williams, Pres and Treas, W. R. Fields, Vice-President A.R. Harper, Secretary Directors e L.E, Williams, L. M, Pollard, Ww Ht Burgess . wean | “The Wage Earners Loan and Investment Co, | (The Pioneer Negro Savings Bank 468 W. Broad St. j Savannah, Ga. pe | Vanity of the Peacock Our favorite and much petted peace cock, says a correspondent of the London Spectator, can be kept happy any length of time looking at his reflection in the window pane or in a looking glass. He comes in daily to tea, making no mistake about the hour, and spends much time en route in gazing at himself as he appears in the glass of the French windows by which he enters the room. If I am sewing and do not speak to him when he comes into the room he will gently put his head quite close, almost touching my ring or needle, for he likes bright things, till I have to give up working and talk to him as with a small child whom one is afraid of pricking. Hannibal After the crushing defeat he received at Zama. Hannibal lived for nineteen years, devoting his great talents to the rehabilitation of his country. Driven from his city by the jealousy of the Romans he fled to the court of Antrachus, king of Syria. After being beaten in the war by the Romans, mainly because he rejected Hannibal's advice, the Syrian monarch was ordered to give up Hannibal, whereupon the great Carthaginian, at the age of sixty-four, ended his life by poison. Moving Picture Films The average life of a film is eight months. If the stock (celluloid) on which it is printed is poor or an incompetent operator mishandles it during projection it may be utterly worthless after four months owing to scratches and bad felts. With careful attention it may be in constant use for twelve mentions - London Globe. The President's Cabinet The president's cabinet is not a part of the executive, strictly speaking. The members of the cabinet cannot, in strictness, even be said to be the president's advisers. He does, as a matter of fact, consult them, and very often, in all probability, their advice has weight with the president, but they possess no constitutional power. That resides, so far as the executive part of the government goes, solely with the president. After hearing the views and opinions of the members of his cabinet the president can, if he chooses, disregard them all. He is the executive, and the whole of it—New York American Ancient Posters. It is probably the general impression that posters and handbills are modern inventions, but it has been discovered that the ancient Romans practiced this method of advertising. In digging at Herculaneum there was brought to light a pillar covered with bills, one on top of another. The paste used to stick them was made of gum arabic. The bills, when separated and examined, were found to be programs and announcements of public meetings and even election proclamations. Useless Noise. Hargis was lying on the couch very ill. The servant in the next room knocked down some dishes with a tremendous clatter. Hargis' nerves were quite unstrung, and he called out in a rage: "I suppose you have broken all the plates?" "No." replied the servant weekly, "there isn't one broken." "Well, then," growled the enraged invalid, "why did you make, all that noise for nothing?" -Everybody's. Origin of Stammering. A new theory as to the origin of stammering is set forth by C. S. Bluemel in a book on that subject. It is usually said that stammering is due to spasm or to incoordination of muscles, but this is no explanation, as it does not tell what causes the spasm or the incoordination. According to Mr. Bluemel, stammering is the result of transient auditory amnesia—forgetfulness of the sound of words—which produces the secondary conditions of mental confusion and fear, these being intensified in some cases by autosuggestion. The initial cause may be slight and limited to early life. It may even lessen and disappear, while the secondary effects remain as acquired habits. Gift For a Missionary "I am sending this package to a missionary friend of mine who is about to sail for India." said the man who got on at Clifton avenue. "You couldn't guess in a thousand years what is in It, so I'll tell you. It's insect powder. I couldn't give a present that a missionary would value more highly. We see the ignorance and superstition and vice that the missionaries have to contend with, and these things are bad enough, but there are other trials still harder to bear that the gospel workers never write home."—Newark News. Barter In Africa. Lecturing on his African experience, H. K. Eustice says he once saw a native sold as a slave for seven goats, which in open market fetched $1.44 apiece. As values go in some parts of Africa the price was high, for within a few hundred miles of the equator wives are transferred for less. Marriage, of course, is by barter, and the indemnity demanded by a father for the loss of a daughter used to be $2.40 from the bridegroom. Today it has risen to about $5, but the scale of values is shown by the fact that a native will gladly give his labor for a week in return for an empty medicine bottle with a metal screw stopper. Cruel Threat He—Our hostess was really the most beautiful woman of all present. She (who was not invited)—I dare say. She took good care to provide for that when she sent out her invitations.—London Telegraph. Work Differently. Adversity brings out the grit and prosperity the concert in a man—New York American. DEFEAT Defeat is sometimes a really valuable experience. To win all the time does not make for development of character. The real test comes in defeat. Then if a man can come back he shows his true worth.—William Howard Taft. A Good Loser. "Are you a good loser?" "I ought to be—I've had practice enough."—Town Topics. The Oldest Encyclopedia. The most ancient encyclopedia entant is Pliny's "Natural History," in thirty-seven books and 2,403 chapters, treating of cosmography, astronomy, meteorology, geography, geology, botany, medicine, the arts and pretty nearly every other department of human thought known at the time. Pliny, who died 79 A.D., collected his work in his leisure intervals while he was engaged in public affairs. The work was a very high authority in the middle ages. Made It Pout. She—Don't you think I have a pretty mouth? He (absentmindedly)—Yes, darling. It's simply immense. Brilliant Idea. Old Boxleigh—Marry my daughter? Why, you are supported by your father. Suitor—Yes, sir; but my guvnor is tired of supporting me, he says, and I thought I'd get into another family.—Boston Transcript. Paint Brushes. Vinegar heated to the boiling point will soften paint brushes that have become dry and hard. An Unconscious Toast. Lord Clyde one day after dinner asked a chaplain to one of the regiments in India for a toast, who, after considering some time, at length exclaimed with great simplicity: "Alas and alack a day! What can I give?" "Nothing better," replied his lordship. "Come, gentlemen; we'll give a bumper to the parson's toast. A lass and a lac a day." A Jac means 100,000 rupees, or $25,000, which is certainly an income to make one happy.-London Chronicle. Wheels of London. London is credited with the greatest variety of means of transportation of any city in the world. A Get-rich-quick Plan. "Is there any money in a perpetual motion machine?" asked the inventor. "I guess there is," said the man with the red tie. "I have a little machine in my store that would bring me a million if I could keep it in perpetual motion." "What is it?" asked the other. "A cash register."—Ladies" Home Journal. What Worries Him. A married man says it isn't the jaws of death that worry him, but the jaws of life. Not Good at Riddles. A lawyer was questioning a new client, a widow, the other day about her history. "My history," she replied, "is simplicity itself. My first was the happiness of my life, my second was goodness itself, my third"— "Excuse me, madam," interrupted the attorney, "but really we aren't here to guess charades." Corrected "Mrs. Muchwed has certainly had a very diversified life." "You mean divorce-filed."—Boston Transcript. Most Wonderful Clock. The most wonderful clock in the world is in St. Petersburg. It has ninety-five faces. It indicates simultaneously the time of day at thirty points on the earth's surface, besides the movement of the earth around the sun, the phases of the moon, the signs of the zodiac, the passage over the meridian of more than fifty stars of the northern hemisphere, and the date according to the Gregorian, Greek, Mussulman and Hebrew calendars. It took two years to put the works together. At the Home Plate. Judge—Describe' what passed between you in the quarrel with your wife. Man on Stand—The plates were regular dinner size, your honor, and the teapot had a broken spout—Boston Transcript. EXPERIENCE Experience is never limited, and it is never complete. It is an immense sensibility, a kind of huge spider web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness and catching every air borne particle in its tissue. It is the very atmosphere of the mind, and when the mind is imaginative much more when it happens to be that of a genius—it takes to itself the fairest hints of life; it converts the very pulses of the air into revelations.—Henry James. "I just adore caviar," said Mrs. Gottit. "Isn't he a swell singer?" answered Mrs. Newwich.-Columbia Jester. ```markdown ``` A miner got killed and a tactful associate was delegated to break the news to the widow. So the tactful fellow called at her house and said: "With your golden hair, blue eyes and pink and white complexion, ma'am, you'd break every heart in town if you wore widow's weeds." The young woman laughed and blushed for pleasure. "Oh, go on." she said. "And you are a widow, too," said the tactful miner quickly, seizing his chance. "Bill's head and legs and arms was just blown off in an explosion. But you're goln' to look good in black, though!" England's Greatest Storm. England's most violent storm was that of 1703. A strong west wind had set in about the middle of November, and it increased in violence until on the morning of the 26th few people ventured out of their houses, and on that night houses were unroofed, buildings torn down and thousands of people were killed. About 2,000 stacks of chimneys were blown down in and around London. In the Thames only four ships remained between London bridge and Limehouse, 500 wherries, 300 ship boats and 100 lighters and barges were entirely lost, and many were badly damaged. The damage in London alone was estimated at $10,000,000. Saw Her Chance. "No man shall ever kiss me except my future husband." said the girl as she was about to leave the gate. "Suppose I agree to be your future"—"Why, then, I'll kiss you," she said eagerly. And she did. Her mother was informed that he had proposed, and the old lady called on him the next day to arrange matters, and before he knew it he was eternally booked. It was a very mean advantage, but a bird in the hand is worth two on the garden gate. Von Hutton's Misery. Very sad was the fate of Ulrich von Hutten, one of the greatest writers Germany has ever produced. Unable to earn a living, he was reduced to tramping through the country, begging food and shelter from the peasants. One bitter winter's night both were refused, and next morning he was found frozen stiff and cold in the drifting snow outside the village. "The only thing he died possessed of besides the rags he wore," says his biographer, Zwingle, "was a pen." Tender Steak. A noted New York architect said of a recent criticism of skyscrapers: "This criticism is not fair. It is prejudiced. Hence it will do more harm than good, like the remark of the waiter. "To a waiter who was under notice to leave, a guest said in a restaurant: "Walter, confound it, this steak isn't tender enough." "Not tender enough? the waiter snarled. 'Ah, what do you expect? Do you want it to jump up and hug and kiss you?'"—Exchange. Driving Men From the Table. Baptista Porta gives six processes for driving hearty eaters from the tables of great men. The most effective was to give them an hour before eating a glass of wine medicated with belladonna, so that attempts to masticate would occasion spasms of the jaw. The most disgusting was to set before the gluttonies vlands sprinkled with dried horses' blood and pieces of cat gut. He says, "If you cut harp strings small and sprinkle them on hot flesh the heat will twist them, and they will move like worms." A Hard Job. "Didn't you say six months ago that if Miss Tipkins wouldn't marry you you would throw yourself into the deepest part of the sea? Now, Miss Tipkins married some one else three months ago and yet you haven't"— "Oh, it's easy to talk, but let me tell you it is not such an easy matter to find the deepest part of the sea." Casualties Expected. During one of Cannon's bitter political fights in his district in Illinois, the opposition resorted to desperate tactics. Among other things friends of Uncle Joe were summarily dismissed from positions they held in the public service. Some of his friends became alarmed at this, and one of them called on the speaker at his residence and said, somewhat excitedly: "Joe, Smith and Jones have just lost their positions in the postoffice. What are we going to do about it?" Uncle Joe took another puff at his cigar and then answered, with a benevolent smile: "Nothing. If you go into battle, you have got to expect to have some dead and wounded." Trinidad. The island of Trinidad is fifty-five miles long and forty miles wide and has an area of approximately 1,800 square miles. A chain of mountains extends throughout its length. the highest point of which is about 3,000 feet above the sea level. The population of the island is estimated at 340,000. A Dear Friend. "I hear yer frien' Tamson's married again." "Aye, so he is. He's been a dear frien' tae me. He's cost me three waddin' presents an' twa wreaths"—Dundee Advertiser Watchful Housekeeper on Guard. The Saleman. This is a splendid health food. I can assure you the children will cry for it. Mrs. Kidmore. Then it won't do in my house. My children cry enough as it is—Living sten Lance. The Autopsy. Payton—After his death an autopsy was performed. Mrs. Malaprop—How swell! By which orchestra?—Life. A Social Necessity. "Why is your daughter taking les sons on the violin? Has she shown a special aptitude for the violin?" "No, but every girl has to take les sons on something, doesn't she?"—Chicago Record-Herald. Misnamed. Why are streams called "she?" we rise to inquire. Don't they sometimes dry up?-Columbia State. Had a Proxy. "All right," she said. "Grandma said she would pay you when she came in tomorrow."-New York Globe. Self Disgraced. In Boston, as every one, knows, the symphony concerts are viewed in the light of sacred ceremonials. In this connection the story is told of two little girls of a certain family who returned from the music hall "in a state of mind." One of them carried an expression of deep scorn, the other an air of great dejection. "What is the matter, girls?" asked some member of the household. "Was the concert fine?" "The concert was all right," responded Eleanor. "The trouble was with Mary. She disgraced herself." "Disgraced herself?" "Yes, she sneezed in the middle of the symphony."—Philadelphia Ledger. For the Boy's Sake. "I want my son to enjoy his boyhood, because he will be a child only once." "That's all well enough, but there's no use in making oneself a slave to one's children." "I don't make myself a slave to my children. I find my greatest enjoyment in giving them pleasure." "Then why did you kick so strenuously when your boy asked you for a dime to pay his way into the picture show?" "Sh-sh! I don't want him to overhear. I know he'd be sorry if he spent the money to see that show. I was there myself this afternoon."—Chicago Record-Herald He Meant the Ashes Hewitt-Gruel uses very appropriate language, don't you think so? Jewett-Well, when I asked him what he thought of the idea of cremation his reply was, "It jars one."—New York, Press Sadder and Wiser. Those who jump at conclusions usually go limping back to the starting point. - Boston Transcript. Escaped a Refusal. "Mary, why didn't you answer the doorbell?" "I was 'trail. Da fortune teller say dat if i go to door today I see my future husband." "What nonsense! Why, here's the man's card! Goodness, it was our minister." "Vell, I'm glad I don't go. He ain't my style." - Cleveland Plain Dealer. Answering the Phones Commenting on the fact that however inaccessible a business man may be to call, he will generally answer the telephone. Electricity says that the explanation is a very simple one. There is an element of mystery about a telephone call. The called party never knows, until he actually responds, whether or not the caller is a person of importance or has something of vital import to communicate. It is just a matter of luck, and how your average business man, no matter how deep he may be in the conduct of his affairs with others actually present, will almost invariably break off the most important personal conversation to answer a telephone call. Canadian "Alligators." The unsophisticated visitor to the lumber districts of Canada may occasionally see what is to him a very remarkable sight, a primitive looking steamboat high and dry on a road, crawling along quite comfortably, apparently just as much at home as in its natural element. These boats are known as "alligators," and are used for towing the rafts of logs down the rivers and lakes to the mills, says the Wide World Magazine. Sometimes it is desired to transfer one of these craft to a new sphere of operations which can only be reached overland, and the boat is then hauled out of the water, placed upon rollers and travels to its destination by means of its own power. Musical. THE HEROIC SPIRIT. In the smallest occasion a man can be governed by the greatest of principles. The littleness of the events and the instruments we are dealing with are forever cheating out of the true grandeur of life. The heroic spirit not only makes life heroic, but finds it so. There still exists in London a bylaw which forbids a cask of beer to be unloaded between certain hours, but no mention is made of casks containing any other liquor: Lucerne has on its statute book a law which is not enforced. It prohibits hats of more than eighteen inches in diameter, forbids the use of artificial flowers and imported feathers and orders that a license of seventy-five cents a year shall be paid for the right to wear ribbons or silk or gauze. A young man was lately leaving his aunt's house after a visit when, finding it was beginning to rain, he caught up an umbrella that was snugly placed in a corner and was proceeding to open it when the old lady, who for the first time observed his movements, sprang toward him, exclaiming: "No, no; that you never shall! I've had that umbrella twenty-three years, and it has never been wet yet, and I am sure it shan't be wetted now!"—London Express. To Make Shaving Easier. 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 removing this relather the face well, and then shave. The first day or two the plan does not seem so successful, but after that the advantages are very marked.—Louden Field. The Real Thing. Mrs. Knicker—Is your husband hard to get along with? Mrs. Becker—Very. If I give him a poor dinner he wants a divorce and I give him a good obeying.—New York ARD AND LIVE RAILROAD Executive January 4, North and East North and East North and East Columbia and Local Columbia and Local Jacksonville and Fl Montgomery and West Montgomery and West Montgomery and West BHTON STREET SPECIAL Pins and Mountain Syring Talcums Int Box Paper of Bargains, a tons just like your any where else. In every way we the best in Geo beauty Pins with Drugs BROAD STS P . BL SALE AND Commission WEST AND 23 benefitted by stop- v to take the b last longer and es and pay speci- attention to all WASHING One Dollar Fountain Syringe 75 cents Twenty-five cent Talcums 19 cents Twenty-five cent Box Paper 17 cents We have lots of Bargains, ask about them? We fill prescriptions just like your Doctor writes them and cheaper than any where else. We sell stamps and accommodate you in every way we possibly can. Our delivery service is the best in Georgia. We give the little girls a pair of beauty Pins with every purchase and the boys candy. You will be greatly benefitted by stopping in and getting our free advice on how to take the best care of your shoes which will cause them to last longer and keep better shape. We do neat repairing on shoes and pay special attention to ladies and children shoes. Prompt attention to all work. PRIN Old Laws. Making It Last. To Make Shaving Easier The Real Thing. "There were seven of the twelve," said one of the discharged jurors in speaking of the matter next morning, "who didn't want to sleep themselves and wouldn't let the rest of us sleep. Whenever we dropped in a doze they came around and shook us till we were wide awake again." "And you had to submit, I suppose, for they constituted the majority?" "Yes. They were a rousing majority," said the hollow eyed juror, with a pensive attempt to be faceless—Chicago Tribune. A hat such as is worn by Mexicans may cost anywhere from 5 cents to $500. The better ones weigh from six to eight pounds and carry many, dollars' worth of silver and gold trimming. YOUNG BROS. Is the place where you get Hot Drinks of all kinds. Our Lunches are the best and a temptation for 10 cents. 507 West Broad Street Protect Your Horses' Feet Have Them Shod by the The Grosseous Horseshoeleg and Clipping Shop 815 JEFFERSON ST. Phone 3509 NELSON A. CUYLER "The Expert Horseshoeer," Prop. Important—The only Expert horseshoeing shop in the city op- erated by a colored man. AIR LINE ALROAD OF THE SOUTH January 4, 1914 Leave East 1 25 pm East 12 35 am East 8 10 pm Local 6 00 am Local 4 00 pm and Fla 3 30 pm and Fla 3 15 pm and West 7 35 am and Local 3 50 pm and West 6 00 pm and Fla 7 00 am L, D, P. A. OFFICE STREET WEST MALS and Mondays Syringe 75 cents Ins 19 cents Paper 17 cents Ins, ask about them! Make your Doctor writes them else. We sell stamps and way we possibly can. Our in Georgia. We give the ins with every purchase and Drug Store Phones 4710 and 4711 BLUNT AND RETAIL Passion Merchant ND 23 JEFFERSON ST By stopping in and getting our the best care of your shoes over and keep better shape. We special attention to ladies and to all work. DO INTINS The Bloops Seven. Mexican Hats. STREET are * - ‘= é ee scott - = 3 ‘ -: STAR OETA Wires: Tam Meroe ats es 7 © 2 . he Recoait fl! mmsapaysncerce pt Bieccaposnsacases Neamt cae Farm ano | G arden | WINTER SPRAYING FOR TREES Bormant Spraying Is the Only Mathed For Destroying Certain Pests, ‘There is long lst of tree pests, ene- tajes of frutt yields and actual destroy- em of the trees, that ebould be vigor gasly fought in winter, says a writer {& Farm Progress. 80 far the enly wpathod discovered for combating them ® ky winter spraying. Late winter is tho flame fer “anesed \puoceloaning” in the erchania, ‘Phe af exemies that ‘con be cheohed er qetteely wiped oat by whiter or de> wend apeaying ts rather lang and ke sledes the Ban Jese scale, anthracuens, ee. weelly aphis, cediar mot, 3 unite, red spider and pewdery xiBerr. : ‘When you spray, spray thoreughly, Wyre sprasine 16 we ecogpaian to the ang the apray matariai sheohd be ze on with farce enongh ts reaeh all Inridag enemies. Thoreagh epray- lag brings up the question ef preper qweipment. Al] the bark must be wet- teh At least 100 pounds ef pressure 3 neceasary, and in some caees I bave fund 150 to 200 pounds of pressure giving the best results. It must be dejren into the bark cracks and crev- tees. ‘Fhe man who is just beginwing to take up the question of winter spray- RAs an es RES Die eee Bet Be Se ee ee pee SS a Pra Bore a4 ae a fees oa ae a Lee sae aca Re ee wae. ni apt Bae AG. Z ee So: ee i aie eas gues age Po a ase a set gaan ee aa Fees A SYRAYING TREES FROM TUL KO4DWAS, Ape goat to be able to distingufsh the ferent kinds of enemfes found on the trees in winter. He ought to buy a good pocket lens, costing about 75 nts, and carefully study all the para- ates, scabs and fungi he can find. In battling with mildew, mites, spiders and moths all infected trees should be pruned and the dead and Gecaying parts removed. All wounds should be cleaned out aud the faking, sealing bark ought to be scraped away from the trunks. Let this werk pre cede the spraying with lime-sutphur. ‘AL rubbish should be burned at once. This will expose all the hibernating pests so the spray will reach them easily. Every part of the tree ought to be bathed in the film of spray even to the tiniest twig. The best time for applying sprays to the pests mentioned fa a short time before the buds show signs of swelling. Bordeaux 6450 is the spray, vsed mest in late winter spraying, when the Amesulphur is deemed inadequate. It is very effective in dealing with an thmenose and incipient cases of peach ‘eat curl. To be really effective the spray should be put an at a dry time. as a fall of rain will wash off much of the spraying material and lessen its ef. fectiveness. ‘The one pest that ought to be fought hardest by the winter sprayer ia the San Jose scale. Look for the-ronnd. grayish and black. button shaped bodies with a pimple-like elevation in the center. This elevation {s about the elze of a pin head and fs often sur- rounded by a red ring. Lime-sutphur solution properly applied will Bill the San Jose scale at any date between the falling of the leaves and the leating ont in spring. There are three rules that I think every man should apply in going about spraying, whether he is doing the work in winter or in summer. They are: When you spray, be sure you are do- ing it ‘at the right time. If you don't know the reason why you are spraying, don’t spray at all. ‘The only way to know the reasons tor spraying is to study up on-every insect or fungus tbat fs causing you treable now or may trouble you in the near future, . Men no longer argue about the vaine of spraying. That has been settled for all time. The seabless, sound ond mmooth skinned frait of the sprayed ercbard bas settled that question All ‘that remains for us to knew is tho ‘when and the how. Barnyerd Manus Barayerd manovre is indispeasable na ® fertilizer on thin and sardy land that is to be farmed. It auppice ho mts 23 weil as nitrogen, end the effect of the hemns is often mere desirable ‘than the increase of plant feed, thoreh Doth are surely useded Mf the kasd be ts HAPPY THOUGHTS. Make for yourselves nests of Pleasant thoughte None of as yet know, for nove of us have been taught in early youth, what fairy pal- aces we may build of beautiful thoughts, proof against all adversity, bright fancies, satisfied memories, noble histoties, faithful sayings, treas- wo houses of precious ond restful theught—Ruskin tot es Sad as it Might Have Been. "How that your beys have gone away to eches! and your Gaughters have got marsied I suppose yew Seed Mt mther @imma! apcard beme, deat yen, Mr Catgestey 7" “Well, Ws not as bod es it might he When I becin encving ot @inuer xow | ahways know that it wili be my taro te opt before evesything ta so ect that $2 te tasteless.” —Citeage Rocond Hora. ran ©) oom. “Ane Jou getting acotatomed to Kap Year?" asked tho tathaitve grocer. “By Gezrece,” sat tho womm. “! tick I Hke ib a Mie better than 1 @4 at Srst. “Bat hew did ‘yeu haw ‘that we had jnct moved te tewn? ] asver told you.” “No, you never tal} mo, but the way you bought groeeries dil. Yew bench! fa such large quantities. ‘Pits chewed that you had just come fram some Place where people had plenty ef stare Foom and so bought groceries by the Box und barrel instead of by the pound. But I see you are getting used fo keeping house on two kitchen shelves and are buying in é@ribkets, like all New Yorvers.”—New York Times. Get Mis Reward, ‘Years ago a tradesman whose name 4a now household werd was employ- ed in a modest capacity in a weal end shop in Londom. While exhibiting some delicate ware to the very first customer he served he let tt fall and break. ‘The customer, a doctor, good naturedly took the blame and paid for the broken article. Yeats later tue salesman, now a wealthy man, called on the doctor, reminded him of the in- eldent snd settled on him $5,000 a year for lfe—Tondon Express. ‘The Wickedest Bit of Sea. ‘Nine out of ten travelers would tell inguirers that the roughest piece of water {s that cruel atretch in the Eng- Usb channel, and nine out of ten tray- 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 Paulllac or across the Mediterranean “race” from Cadiz to Tangier; nor Is it in rounding Cape Horn, where there is what saflors‘call a “true” sea, ‘The “wickedest sea” is encountered in rounding the Cape of Good Hope for the eastern portion of Cape Colony.— London Globe. Off and On, “Save when you're young.” The speaker, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., was addressing a Y. M. C. A. meet- ing in Cleveland. “Save when you're young,” repeat- ed Mr, Rockefeller, with a amile. “The years will pass swiftly. Then wher you find yourself well on you'll also find yourself well off.” St. Peter's In Rome. Bt Peter's is certainly the most amazing church in the world. It is ‘mot beautiful—I am satisfied’ that no true artist would grant that—bnt after you have been all over Europe and have seen the various edifices of im- postance it stil] sticks im your mind as astounding—perhaps the meat astound- ing of all—From Theodore Dreiser's “A Traveler at Forty.” Giving Happiness. To make some nook of God's crea- tion a Uttle fruitfuler, better, more worthy of God, to make some human, hearts a Uttle wiser, manfaller, hap- pler, more blessed, less accursed—it 1s 2 work for a God.—Carlyle, Witty sayings. W. S. Gilbert sald of Beerbohm ‘Tree’s Hamlet that it was “funny with- out being coarse.” During an Englishman’s lecture in New Haven the usher said to a late }comer: “Please, sir, take your seat as qalétly as possible. The audience ts asleep.” | A Philadelphia woman said: “Of ‘course, there will be no marriage in |heaven, ‘There wiN be plenty of | women there and a few men, but none ‘any one would care to marry.” DO IT WELL. What is worth doing at all is worth daing well Not gig your whels, undivided attention to the task in which you bare iavested your Fis and money meam that you ate westing your own precious tien and thet of otha. Whatever you do, doit with your whole eset aed mind or get owt and try some- thing else. It takes pretty neatly all of a man’s time to pecfext an wodastaking, provided it be a big and worthy one to begin with. Wonian’sW orld —— *. i an ae P eo: pS ey ee le mam ae |e > o mean pe Bea : 5 ee Bee . fe Mee ees SS a cs xe eae 2.8) ee eg SMe ee as eee 7 oe En) Seer eo ace ee ‘The Red Cross society, whose werk for humanity bas been £o great, has enlarged Its sphere of usefuinesa lt has established a town and country nursing service through whose iostra Mentality the dwellers in even tsolated communities may be assured of proper care in tines of illness, The object of this {sto eucourae the employment ef visiting uprses In reniote districts where it is d{tieuit to obtain the serv- ees ofa phy dician, It was thrplish Miss Jane A. Delane, chairman (f the uatienal committee on nursinz| survive. that this new do. partment of the work was gatabliched Because of the splendid effétency to which she, has brought the nuraing ‘work of thy Ited Cross the gold medal of merit his teen awarded to Miss De Jano by the president. In presenting hgr with the medal President Wilson said: : “It is due to Miss Delano's devoted and efficient labors that a splendid carps of over 4,000 of the best trained nurses in the country have been en rolled in the Red Cross for active sorv- ice in time of war or disaster. Not only has this large corps been enrolled, but by means of 110 local committees a system has been established that en- ables the Ked Cross to mobilize within & few hours’ time anywhere in the country the number of nurses required for active service.” Miss Delano is oue of the most dis- tinguished w:embers of the nursing pro- fession in America. She bad estab- Ushed 2 high reputation before abe Joined the Ked Cross. Sho 1s a gradu- ate of the Bellevue Training School For Nurses. Her first case is said to have been that of the late Abram 8, Hewitt, then mayor of New York, She distinguished herself by her work ia the yellow fever epidemic in Florida. She has held:{mportant positions in the west, in Philadelphia and in Buffalo. She was superintendent of the New York municipal training school for women nurses and later of Bellevue hospital, where she instituted many needed reforms. CONVENIENT BAGS. New Models Are Compact and Fitted With Useful Accesorios. ‘Mannfacturers of fine leather goods are offering exquisite novelties in trav- ing bags and cases, which are much smaller in alze than the heavy, old fashioned types of bags. The respon- sibility for the change les with the ‘modern taste for motoring. The wo- man of 1914 covers such distances and her belongings must be so mod- erate in aizé“and so easily packed that designers have been at work turning out the most elegant as well as the most convenlent form of toilet ap- Paratus. The party bag is a mere trifle to handle and looks almost like a hand- kerchief in black moire drawn in with a ribbon. It may be concealed in a coat pocket, or there would be space for it in a little hand bag. Within its folds are all the items that go to give 2 woman the finishing touches for the toilet. Just a, Httle frame keeps all the gold, silver gilt or enameled trifies together, and the contents are all that is required. ‘The prevailing taste leans to easily folded or drawn begs, and some novel- ties consist of round models of the finest leather, so soft as to crush into very small space. Inside ss a frame, and into this are fitted the Uttle im- plements of the toilet. A tiny hair brush is set into gold, gilt, enamel or inlaid #rory or tortoise shell. The comb is decorative, and there are small pots for cream, powder, lip salve, tiny bot- tles for perfume, a miniature tooth Brash, diminutive manicure tmple- ments and a, long thin roll of metal maatching the setting of the case that turns ont to be a receptacle for needles, cotton and other trifes to mend a rent. ‘The center of some of these collaps- ible bags is fitted with a waterproof compartment for & nponge. - Color enters inte many of thase fan clful eases, 2 gresn leather bag or case containing red or reco colored fittings, while a yellow bag will have every item in blue enamel or in silver git. Many and varied are these dstaty trifles and devices featuring a eeanen of unncusl luxury ans olegsneco tree re Ee: | A PEP SSENE 8 SOAS ORS DRO ESI | | PICTIIRE FRAMES x We makoas sculty of framing diplomas, marriage — licenses and p tures of all sizes. Wark neatly and ht ‘promptly fini hed. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices cheep. Enlar_iny pictures a specialty. Orders eall- i} ed for and delivered. i ig W. W. HILL 607 WEST BRUAD STREET h j OCS eS ETI ae Ce 0 OTe) IIT el é . FINESTJIN THE CITY. Wark bose uy ererioncea workings, “Bd, Shampecing 2 Spectsiyys AB ING PARLOR ATTACHED. : o* Perry R. Wright Proprietor $ SI) WEST BROADST - - - - SAVANNAH GA a , A.M. MONROE & COMPANY Funeral Directors and Embalmers . Prompt and eocrteons attention givén all bosiness - entrusted to us... i Everything ef the latest style BLarest)Srriz Sitver ear ann Braox.Cans é CARRIAGE FOR HIRE 60 WEST BROAD STREET Phone 1218 ~ re Joknson Undertaking Establishment . = —COMBINED WITH— The Royall Undertak'ng Company - (Incorporatea) Funeral Directors and Embalmers. ae Fines. tine of Coffius, Caskets and Robes. White and black Burial cars. Office a1.d warercoms 325-231 Jefferson street. | LFIELDS and L, M. POKLBRD, Managers. 2 ~ Residence Phone 2032 _ _ Residence Phone 4241.f Livery Stable Attached. ffiee Phene 678 TRY TO BE CHEERFi" Chest oe Seiehe sind qualities, can leveloped and 1 crete nd whoere oni cab ture neglects an importas' duty ' himgell end to tociety. “ihe 1 that Few men can do their Vest werk or think their best thoughts uale:- + \cieetel spirit animates ther: sho: 1 sefficent reasea for ¢ ¢ ng in motion every cause which y.oduc: sash a spirit. eas Tiey Goust. ‘Phe republic ef Goust tb a sguie wile in the Pyrenees which for ti. eat tbtce centuries has been rece. iced by Spain end France 23 tnilr pendent. I¢ has a popalatisa of abou! Ké@ Weivem They are ruled by + exeuctl of elders and pay me tres v1 @aties wf any sort This civic unit ia wo tiny thot $¢ bas te ge bread for tts exre of soaks and bedy, fer ttpbss pekher physician wor priest, fey thera needs it Las to go to Laven, the near est French town. Rvven the dead wnoct leave .Goust to find piécd ground i which w ta ths came Bolen aba @ewrnhill and thes ost ef tks eaeniozi republic in the work, Not Werded the Same. Just, u» the family was about to aif Gown to the evening meal the miaistes unexpectedly dropped in amd wos ast eo to Jein them. ‘When the maid set tho table she bag tarned the plates bottom aide Written on the bottom was the namie of the manufscturer,, ‘The minister was asked to say gree, and as he did so he reverently bowed his head above his plate. ‘When he had finished the little Sve- yearold daughter of the house picked up her plate, looked at the manofac- turer's name closely and said: “Papa, it doesn’t say that on my plate.”—Ladies’ Home Journal. Discovery of Turtle Seup. * According to some authorities, Bris- tal has a special claim to fame as the city where turtle soup was tavested by a seventeenth century mayor, who was also a shipowner. The eaptain‘of one of his ships brought home a live tartie, thinking that his worship would lke to have it in his 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 Mghted with the novelty that it re elected its host to the muniefpal chair nine times ranning.—London Obroni “a 7 | VERNON PARK | ee ereraiaenaenenainanaenaincanmes emaamemmnere rie’ Lies to the Right on Bull street, ashort distance beyond the Granger Tract, where Lots are salling for forty . times more than those ia Wermom Park. Yoncon §. build a nice little home, have hens, fresh eggs, fresh veg- tables, a cow and a piy, if you like, and be independent Justone mile this side of Central Park Celiege | where you can educate your children for life. U{shal¥ be glad,to take you outand show you these Lots. Terms |. $5 00 cash, $3.00 per month, downto $£-(¢ carl iiae 1.6 per month, You can pay forone. No Taxes, no Inter est. In case of death we give the lot Free. Ten per ¢ nt off forcash. Will build you a Home whenyour lo is paid for. Call and talk it over with me. Land is the Safest Investment, I Sell Lama a VERNON: .§PARK COMPANY : Wm.[J. Jackson. Agent,) 817 West Broad Street | — PRONE 2738 SAV/ NNAR,GA. Restaurant Affiliation. ‘The walter in the light Iunch cafe looked expectantly at the first of five ‘men who bad just entered. “Bring me a coffee cake and a enp of coffee,” ordered the first man. “Tl take some milk biscult and a glass of milk,” sald the second. | “Tea buns and a cup of tea, please,” remarked the third. “A piece of cocoanut pie and a cup of cocos,” said the fourth. ‘Phe waiter went to the fifth mon. “I know what you want,” he sald. “You want a stice of chocolate cake and a cup of chocolate.” “No; ¥ do not,” protested the fitth man. “I want a plate of ice cream and a glass‘of ice water.’—Judge. Sir Sidney Colvin, in a lecture on “Personal Reminiscences of R. L. 6to- yenson,” denied firmly that Stevenson had any affectation. “RL 4,” gaid Sir Sidney, “did one possess a frock coat and tall hat, which be acquired for the purposes of a wed- ding. Coming to Landon subsequently, he made the concession to my respec- tabiitty of donning the coat and hat, 4nd thus we walked down Piccadilly. But the bat was In Stevenson's hand, and as the gates of Burlington House closed on us, Stevenson was declaim- ing in vibrant voice and rich Scotch accent a chorus from Milton's ‘Sam~ son Agonistes.’ "—London Globe. as if It Is For Your Lodge Phin WE HAVE IT! A BS | We manufacture Lodge Regalia for*every 4 KY) 4, Fraternal Society. Cash or Installment ees Ui } Plan. Cheapest Badge Honsein the Connt- eee tt @* sy. Catalogue for your Society FREE. he pecs BAYES CENTRAL REGALIA CO. Cs i fj The Negro Regalia House. JOS. L. JONES, Pres. E . ae : N. E. Gor. 8th & Plum "ee > Cincinnati, Ohio Hlusions. A rude shock greets the idea that the testimony of eyewitnesses-Is espectal- ly reliable when one comes to sty the laws of evidence. The majorit persons see what they think ought to see. If a house is reps, ( thaunted it is easier to see a gh. ‘ there than not. Possibly this accounts for the widespread belief that lumi. nous appearances of one kind or an- other accompany earthquake shocks. Selentific men do not believe these stories, and they usually dwindle on investigation, yet they continue to cir- cnlate on both sides of the Atlantic, says a writer in Cosmos, Parts, trans lated for the Literary Digest. THE BEST PLAGE In Savamah FOR MEN’S GOOD SHOES ' Prices $3.50 up ; B. Hl. Levy, Bro. Co. | Memory. Dear ns remembered kisses after death. All onr sensations are meméry, some say. It may be. It may net be. Bot this we lmow: The perfume that is the finest is the perfume of remiaiscenee. It may be a-vagrant fragranes from the woods or in the city’s air, The song neglected, bit remembered, ts the Tost appeling. The taste aeguired 4m childhood is that that tickien most our older palste. A friend ts a com. posite cf our memorien Sometimes that part of us that is the bod and lest peems the whole free. But we “world ato without the rota. Memory Je the reste and sap sf ws—Kansas @ity Bien Among the Masons LEARNING THE RITUALS One of the correspondents writes of a brother who conferred a degree twenty-six days after having been made a Master Mason. Others have done as well or better so far as time is concerned. The real reason for alluding to the subject here is to direct attention to the fact that so few Masons learn more than the catechism as to make the instances of sufficient importance to occasion comment. There are good Masons who have been members of the fraternity many years without ever attempting to take any part in the conferring of degrees, but those Masons who have learned the ritual and transmitted it to others have sustained interest in the institution, and are entitled to most of the credit for the benefits that have resulted. It cannot be denied that some Masons have given attention to ritualism to the exclusion of all else Masonic, for which they are entitled to censure. Masonry demands much more of its followers than perfection in knowledge of its ritual, but a desire to know the ritual must be taken as an evidence of interest in what the institution teaches. Every Master and Past Master rejoices to see newly admitted brethren desirous to assist in the conferring of degrees and is ready to furnish instruction when requested.—Masonic Chronicle. PERSONAL SERVICE Opportunities are always offered to those who are willing to be of service to others. It is immaterial whether position is environed with wealth and social distinction, or circumscribed by the narrowest of limits; opportunities for exercising Masonic duties are offered for doing good. In the life of every brother there are critical times. The call of duty is never hushed; in the busy hours of the day, in the silent hours of the night is always an opportunity to lighten the task of others, to assuage pain and grief, to comfort the distressed. And our solemn obligations as Masons make it obligatory to deal likewise with all of the humankind as we deal with one another. No Mason who appreciates the grandeur of our ancient fraternity, and who is thoroughly grounded in the lessons conveyed by our obligations and teachings can neglect the opportunity of doing good, of being of service to his fellowmen, or decline to be of personal service in the name of Charity and Humanity. But it shall not be overlooked that above all things the duty of a Mason is vested in his family and surroundings, and his fidelity in ever constant recurring duties, however trivial, qualifies him for other duties in broader fields when opportunities are offered to render such honored service. Masonic work is untiring, ceaseless; it is with us and of us at all times.—"By your works shall be ye known."—Square and Compasses. WHO ARE REAL MASONS The startling statement has been advanced by some Masonic writer, that not more than one man in: a thousand who belongs to the Craft is a real Mason. This sound absurd, at first blush, but a little reflection leads one to the conclusion that this writer may not be far wrong. Let's think about the matter a little. The first step is to decide, of course, what really constitutes a Mason. Certainly the Master of a lodge cannot breathe the spirit of Masonry into every candidate and make him a worthy member, a thoughtful, earnest, real member. It is equally true that proficiency in the ritual does not constitute real Masonry. A monkey might be taught to make the signs, and a parrot to repeat the words with more accuracy than some working teams—but the monkey and parrot combination could not constitute Masonry. The real Masons is he who understands the teachings of the order, he who carries its precepts into practice. No Mason is born such. Some men have decidedly more adaptability for Masonry than others. Indeed there are men who from their instinct of social service, their endeavors on behalf of their fellowmen, their understanding of the motives that underlie human actions, may be said to be "involuntary Masons." These are men equipped for Masonry, the men of whom we say, "He would make a splendid Mason." Unless our estimate of him errs, he needs but the influence of the craft to round out his character into real Masonry. Masonry of the real kind is more like the cuticle and less like the cloak, than is generally supposed. This is a complex age, we are living in. The mere task of making a livelihood occupies most of the time of the majority of men. They have little leisure and perhaps less inclination to study Masonry's meaning and practice her precepts. In the olden times the winding of the Masonic horn was the signal for stores to close, and business to cease, while the leaders of community life turned their attention to Masonic activity. In view of the changed conditions, perhaps it is not an exaggeration to say that the number of real Masons has not kept pace, even proportionately, with the number of "members."—Selected. Your brother's welfare should be as dear to you as your own. Masonry stands for brotherhood. A true Mason is a true man, always and everywhere. The many friends through out Georgia, of Past Master R. L. Newsome, will be pained to learn that he is seriously ill at the home of his son, Past Master T. B. Newsome, 946 Parks Ave., Augusta, Ga. He is a member of Bannaker Lodge No. 3, also one of the oldest Masons now living in this state. The prayer of the craft will go up in his behalf and wish him a speedy recovery. The Booster Club of the Hall and Merchantile Association will hold its regular meetings on Monday night March 16th, 1914, at their hall, East Broad and Henry Lane. All of the members of the club and of the Brotherhood are expected to be present at this meeting at 8:30 o'clock. C. L. Davis, president. Mrs. Faunie Davis, Sec'ty. i Hair Culturist and Manicurist Miss Marie V. Tolbert, a graduate of the Wanamaker School of New York in Hair Culture, Manicuring and Massaging, is especially prepared for performing the very highest class of work. Being equipped with the very latest and up-to-date methods, the most satisfactory and lasting effect promised results. Hair dressed for special occasions. Highest efficiency guaranteed on all work. Mrs. M. E. Tolbert is now associated with Miss Marie Tolbert and would be glad to receive a call from her friends. Agents for Madam C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower. Special Notice Mrs. Mamie E. Williamis, the artistic and old reliable hair dresser, has moved to 1111 West Broad street just across from her recent parlors. She will be pleased to have her customers and friends call. Switches made from combings. Manacuring, Massaging, Scalp treatments and Beauty culture. Madam Walker's goods and treatments can be had.—ad Wanted Colored farmers, renters, share farmers and wage hands. Also good man for shop; once who can do general plantation repair work. Large plantation. Land produces bale to acre and 30 to 40 bushels of corn. Write or apply to Estate of W. O. Wadley, Rogers, Ga. St. Augustine Parish Sunday services 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Sunday school 10 a.m. Wednesday and Friday evenings at 8:15 p.m. Strangers are cordially invited to join in the worship and 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. Asbury M.E. Church Sunday services 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. -Sunday school, 3:30 p. m. Class meeting, Tuesdays 8:30 p. m. Epworth League, Thursdays 8:30 p. m. Rev. J. S. Stripling, pastor. 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 O. Wood $1.35 per Load Photo 5162 J. M. ZETTLER Uton and West Boundary Sts PRICE STREET SHOE SHOP. PRICE STREET SHOE SHOP. 110 your Shoes repaired here. We are strict attention to Ladies and Children Work and make Old Shoes New. We retain shoes and oys shoes. All work called for and delivered promptly. 125 Price Street 3rd door from COMING! COMING!! COMING!!! "Fifteen Miles to Happytown" by the Ira Frederick Aldridge Dramatic Club See Later Announcement for Date and Place P. M. THOMPSON, Business Manager A MORNING IN THE ORIENT A Charming Story of Passion Week and the Resurrection is told in this interesting and instructive Cantata. Don't miss this treat EASTER 8:30 P. M. FIRST A. B. CHURCH Franklin Square MISS SADIE E. TYSON Fashionadle Dressmaker At Home 525 E. ANDERSON ST. Phone 3241-J Savannah, Ga. SASH BOWS ON COATS. They Are Used to Embellish Separate Wraps as Well as Gowns. T WORSTED COAT. On wraps as well as gowns butterfly boys are an attractive and up to date decoration. Theater wraps, separate coats, etc., are all thus decorated. The charming spring outfit illustrated here includes a coquettish little coat of one of the new worsted mixtures, with collar and cuffs finished with figured silk in shades of rose, green and terra cotta. A smart feature of the coat is the big butterfly how across the back. Like most ultra coats of the season the skirt of the coat flares considerably below. The coat is worn over a simple little gown of silk poplin. The wide brimmed hat is adorned with velvet ribbon and a cluster of poppies. Many of the new hand bags are in the shape of enlarged and flattened pears, with a tassel hanging from the lower point and a narrow silver mount at the top suspended on a short ribbon, just long enough to sling over the wrist. But newer still are the pockets which are being worn on the hips of the tallor mades. They may be visible or not, as one wishes, and the front and side draperies which are now in the fashion allow of them being used for practical purposes without in any way upsetting the set of the skirt. YOUR BOOK. Books of conscience, books of memory, books of character, we all are writing, making up a library of life that shall surely be for our reading by and by. In the Matter of Living. Two economical persons can easily live as cheaply as one spendthrift—Toledo Blade. THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD'S FINEST ART Photo by American Press Association. A LITTLE SNOW GIRL. We hurry forth From the icy north, A swift and silent band, And ride the blast In numbers vast When the storm king gives command. We flutter down From the mountain's crown And haste o'er the frozen plains, And we dance and leap To the winds that sweep Through the city streets and lanes. Point For Boy Scouts. When visiting my former regiment the other day, says Baden-Powell, I found that several novel ideas were in force in the physical training of the young soldiers. One was tint of teaching them to walk along a plank set up on edge at a height of about five feet above the ground. To walk along this for about fifteen feet was the test of balance, and after a little practice there was not one who could not do it, although at first trial it looked hopeless. It might be thought to be rather a waste of time to instruct soldiers in walking the tight rope, but most curious results have been obtained from it. Not only does a lad become more well balanced, confident and plucky, but it has been found that he also develops very rapidly into a good shot. One old soldier, who was a particularly bad shot, was sent through a course of tight rope walking, and he soon gained thereby the power of controlling his nerves. Making Sieighbells The sleighbells we see are round with an iron "jingle" in them. Now, you know that this little jingle could not have been put through the holes of the bell, so perhaps you would like to know how the bell is made. It is made by a man called an iron founder. First he puts the jingle inside a little ball of mud, which is just the shape and size of the metal ball. Then he makes a mold the shape of the outside of the ball. The ball of mud with the jingle in it is put inside the mold; then hot metal is poured in and fills the space between the ball and the mold. But when the mold is taken off the bell will not ring. As soon as the dirt inside the mold is shaken out the jingle is still in the bell and it will ring now. It took many years to think how to make a sleighbell. Cerberus. In Greek fable Cerberus is the three headed dog that watches outside the entrance to hades. Some writers assert that he has fifty heads, but generally he is said to have three, and three snakes are twined about his neck. His cave is on the farther side of the dark river Styx, where Charon, the ferryman of the dead, lands the shades. Cerberus is supposed to welcome all entering hades, but to seize all those seeking to escape. About Common Spices. The nutmeg tree is a native of the Moluccas. The ginger plant grows from two to three feet high. A preserve is made from young roots of ginger. Ten varieties of plants are known to produce black pepper. The red pepper plant belongs to the deadly nightshade family. Cinnamon is the inner bark of a tree of the laurel family. A Joke on John. "I can't do this example," pouted John. "You can do anything you want to do," replied his pa. "Even water may be carried in a sieve, if you only wait." "How long must I wait?" asked John. "Till it freezes," coolly answered Pa. Ma's Mistake. "Is it wrong to smoke, ma?". "Yes, dear; it is a bad habit." "I know some one that got rich smoking." "Who is it?" "Jim's pa. He smokes ham." PEKIN THEATRE 625 WEST BROAD STREET MONDAY, MARCH 16TH THE GREAT FOSTER PHOTO PLAYS The only Moving Pictures in the world composed entirely of Colored Players DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE Itis Positively the Greatest Novelty Hit of the Season. Come out and see what Colored People can do 1 Week Only Something New Each Day Two Shows Nightly at 7:30 and 9:30 Doors open 7 o'clock. Come Early Advance Showing of Spring Millinery Latest Shapes, Flowersand Novelty Effects Colored Millinery Store TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE SUMMER SCHOOL FOR TEACHERS FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION June 22 to July 17, 1914 Over 400 Teachers Present Last Summer SCOTT BROS. PHONE 2829 NEW SPRING GOODS American Beauty Corsets $1.00 Gauze Vests 10c, 3 for 25c; 15c. 2 for 25c; 25c, also Extra Sizes Black Cat Hosiery, Half Silk 25c and 50e; All Silk $1.00 BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF WAISTINGS White Lawn 5c Yard and up Ribbons and Laces. Ginghams, Bleached and Unbleached Cottons WEST BROAD & GWINNETT STS. Negro Grocery Company Thos. G. Young and George R. Young PROPRIETORS Miss Lottie Grady the'Leading Lady in all the Pictures and Chicago's Favorite Comedienne will entertain you between reels with her latest and Facinating Songs This MISS LOTTIE GRADY has Headlined some of the Largest Shows in this country. She has been Leading Lady in the Cole and Johnson Shows and the Williams and Walker Shows, in fact she is really the highest salarted colored woman in the show business and gee whiz aint she clever. DON'T MISS T It is Positively the Greatest Novelty see what Colored 1 Week Only Some Two Shows Nightly Doors open 7 o'clock PETER B. Advance of Spring Latest Shapes Novelty Colored Mill TUSKEGEE SUMMER SCHOOL FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION Over 400 Teachers P SCOTT PHONE RELIABLE GOODS NEW SPRING American Beauty Gauze Vests 10c, 3 for 25c; 15c. Black Cat Hosiery, Half Sill BEAUTIFUL ASSORTM White Lawn 5 Ribbons and Laces. Ginghams, THE WEEKLY NEWS LOTTIE GRADY IS THIS CHANCE Novelty Hit of the Season. Come out and colored People can do Something New Each Day nightly at 7:30 and 9:30 o'clock. Come Early Let Me Paint That House and Save You Money! Paints insures the outside against decay; saves the inside from germs. Have a pretty home and a sanitary dwelling place at small cost. I Paint, Varnish, Kalsomine, Tint Walls, Do Floors, Stain, Grain, Etc., at living wages Jesse Brinson 907 W. 31st St. Savannah, Ga.