General Race News CANADA’S ONLY NEGRO KING’S COUNSEL DEAD Amherstberg, Canada, June 22.— Delos R. Davis, K. C., who died here recently, was the only Negro barrister in Canada ever made a King’s Coun sel. He was also the first, member of his race to be admitted to practice law in Canada. He died at the age of 68. Mr. Davis was the son of a Virginia slave who escaped to Canada by the underground route in 1850. His par ents settled in New Canaan, Colches ter North. He went later to Ypsilanti. Mich., where he taught school and solicited insurance. He was admitted to the Canadian bar in 1887 and prac ticed in Amberstburg until 1909, when he retired. He was madp King’s Counsel by Sir James Whitney in 1908. In 1881 Mr. Davis organized the township of Colchester and held many public offices in the community. He leaves six children, Fred II., Delos R.. Jr., James, Want, Bertha and Dora all living in Amberstburg. OPENING EXERCITES CF THE NEGRO INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Diaz, Ark., June 20.—The opening exercises of the Old Glory Industrial College, a negro institution, were hel i at the Old Glory park Sunday. Prom inent speakers, both white and col ored, were present and delivered ad dresses. The opening speech was made by the Rev. L. W. Heaton, Rector of St. Paul’s •'hurch of Newport., who made a very impressive talk in be half of the Negro race. The school was founded about a year ago and is being promoted by prominent Negroes of Jackson county, and the enter prise has the endorsement of mos* of the business men of this county The college has purchased eighty acres on the north side of the ol:! Sink farm just east of here, and a nice park has already been laid oui and speakers’ and band stand erected The school buildings and dormi tories will be built this fall. The school will be for both girls and boys and various trades will b taught, also scientific farming, while the girls will be instructed in domes tic science, as well as other work. SEGREGATION MIXUP IN LOUISVILLE BLOCK Louisville, Ky„ June 22.—The opin ion of the Kentucky court of appeals holding the segregation law valid has caused an interesting question to come up in this city. A block where in the white residents were slightly in the majority a few weeks ago now has a slight Negro majority, brought about by the moving out of a whlte family. The question is, whether that house shall be rented to Negroes, since they are in the majority in that block, or to white's, since white people last occupied the house. Attaches of the city attorney's office are of the opinion that the property may be rented to either white or colored persons, but if rented to Negroes then it may not be ever rented to whites as long as Negroes are in the majority in that block. NEGRO APPOINTED AS A SPECIAL POLICEMAN Evansville, Ind., June 22.—For the first time in this city a Negro, Ernest Tidrington, has been appointed as a special police officer. The appoint ment was announced on June 17 by Edgar Schmidt, chief of police, and it goes to the Board of Safety for ratification. CHURCH IS PAID FOR CIVIL WAR DAMAGES Fredericksburg, Va., June 22.—A treasury v arrant for $1,200 has been received by the Shiloh Baptist church from the United States government in payment of a claim for damages sus lained by the old church during the war. W. H. SWAZEY WILLED $10,000 TO TUSKEGEE Salem, Mass., June 23.—The will of tile late William If. Swazey of New buryport, filed for probate lierp last Saturday, makes, among other be quests, one of $10,000 to Tuskcgee In stitute. In calling to order the Home and Foreign Mission board of the A. M. E church in the chapel of the American Bible Society, Wednesday morning Bishop Charles Spencer Smith of De troit, Mich., said the European war was a menace to foreign missions, giv ing it at least fifty years’ set-back. “God does not suffer a permanent /acant place in nature,” said Bishop Smith, “and the present war finds on the firing Bne the artists, poets, sculp tors, statesmen and thinkers of the continent, and when the war is ended there will be many vacancies that God will fill from some source, and I be lieve it will come front the darker races.” His Greatest Feat. A correspondent of the New York Sun quotes a remarkable tribute of a Negro preacher to a white preacher j who had consented to occupy the black brother’s pulpit one Sunday. He said: “Dis noted divine is one of dr greatest men of de age. He knows de unknowable, he kin do de undoable and he kin onscrew de onscrutable." —Christian Intelligencer. Justice. A Sunday School teacher had been telling her class of little boys about crowns of glory and heavenly rewards or good people. “Now, tell me,” she said at the close of the lesson, “who will get the biggest crown?” There was silence for a minute or two, then a bright little chap piped out: “Him wot’s got t’ biggeBt ’ead.”— Tit-Bits. Modern Warfare. Uncle Ephriam’s sympathies were all with the Allies. "Man," announced he, “has you heard ’bout them Allies? They’s got a gun what kin hit you if it’s twenty-five miles off.” "Lawsle, that ain’t nothin’,” sneered a colored partisan of the opposite camp. “De Germans, dey kin hit you T dor jess has yo’ ad dress.”—New York Post. Sooner or later we all learn the cost of a lie. (Continued from first page) from their former position of servi tude to that of first-class American citizens, therefore, he it "RESOLVED, That the Mayor be, and is hereby requested to direct the Director of the Department of Public Safety to inaugurate a rigid censor ship of all films in which this race is depicted and to prevent the exhibi tion of such reels as "The Ilirth of a Nation,’ or any similar moving pic ture which tends to bring disgrace, criticism or scorn on the colored peo ple of our city. "Resolution in Council June 15, 1915, read and adopted. (Signed) "ROBERT CLARK, “City Clerk. "Presented by Robert Garland.” Some New Toilet Goods Prices 5<>c Pompeian Massage Cream 29c 25c Iioubiganl’s Rice Powder 17c $l.(K) Listerine, Laml ert’s— 59c 5<>c Malvina Cream for.29c 25c Mermen’s Taicum (4 kinds) eacli . .12c 25c Rogers and Gallet Perfumed Rice Powder for.17c 25c 4711 White Rose Soap-12c 25c Woodbury’s facial Soap.. 17c You “save time and money” by coming to tlie Rexall Stores for toilet goods Sherman & McConnell 1 Drug Co. 4 GOOD ORUG STORES ij The Clothing Center of Omaha j Brandeis Stores Culinary Hints and Recipes BY E. W. PRYOR, Steward Omaha Commercial Club “Dripped Coffee.” Is there anything in the whole range of food substances more en joyed than a delightful cup of dripped coffee at breakfast? How important, then, is the art of making good coffee, entering as It does so largely into the daily life* of the American people. Java and Mocha make the best cof fee. It should be ground neither too fine, for that will make it dreggy; nor too coarse, for that will prevent the escape of the full strength of the coffee juice, but a medium proportion which will not allow the hot water pouring to run through so rapidly, but which will admit the water percolat .ng slowly through and through the grounds, extracting the whole strength and aroma. Four essentials necessary to the making of good coffee are best coffee, perfectly clean coffee "sack” and cof fee pot. and fresh boiling water. Absolute cleanliness is as necessary for the “interior” of the coffee pot as for the glittering “exterior.” So commonly are these overlooked, and yet science teaches us that the chemical action of the coffee upon the tin or agate tends to create a sub stance which collects and clings to every crevice and seam, and as a matter of fact, in course of lime, will affect the flavor of the coffee. In view' of these facts, wash the “inside” of your coffee pot every day, as you do the outside, and you will cease having bitter or muddy coffee. Cup and Spoon Measure. A cup means the common size of white cup generally used and holds one-half pint of liquid. Water—-A pint is a pound; a cup is one-half pint; therefore, a cup of water is eight ounces. Milk—A cup of milk is one-half pint, or eight ounces. Eggs by measure A cup of yolks or whites, or both mixed, is one-half pound, equal in weight to five large eggs. It takes nine whites to fill a cup. It lakes thirteen yolks to fill a cup. Eggs by count—Ten eggs averag • a pound; five eggs fill a cup. Mock Lobster Salad. Select medium sized pineapple. Di vide into four equal parts, leaving the green on, for tinning. Shave away the heart. Divide each quarter length wise, then crosswise, forming dices of about a quarter inch. Into the openings place slices of banana or other fruit. Form small strips'of pimento on the top. At the blunt end place a mari schino cherry with small piece of wa- 1 tercress. Serve on lettuce with French or mayonnaise dressing. The above to he demonstrated at St. Philip’s Guild room Thursdav, July 8. MRS. J. W. WALLACE. War Relief. “My dear, I’ve an idea,” said old Mrs. Goodheart to her caller. “You know we frequently read of the sol lit rs making sorties. Now, why not make up a lot of those sorties and a nd them to the poor fellows at the 1 front?”—Boston Transcript. The Lower Orders. "A man walked right in front of our limousine yesterday and was quite badly hurt.” “Still, don’t you think the pedes trian class is less sensitive to pain than we are?"—Life. “Casey,” said Pat, "how do yez tell th’ age of a tu-u-rkey?" “Oi can always tell by the teeth,” said Casey. "By the teeth!" exclaimed Pat. “But a tu-u-rkey has no teeth.” “No,” admitted Casey, , “hut Oi j have.”—London Opinion. The man who makes a fool of him self because he doesn’t know any bet- ' ter, has a license from nature to do so. The man who makes a fool of himself in trying to fool others, places himself beyond the pale of human pity or sympathy.—Scarhoro.