The Palladium
Saturday, May 9, 1903
St. Louis, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
THE PALLADIUM.
The Palladium wants 1,000 more subscribers in the next six months. The Palladium wants ads.
A New Rooming House.
Mrs. Mary White has fitted up a new rooming house at 200 South 14th street. It is, indeed, a model in beauty and convenience. She has ten rooms fitted up in the most elegant style from bottom to top. She is now ready to receive guests, both single and married. Don't fail to give her a call. She will give general satisfaction to her many guests. Remember her number—200 South 14th street.
Mr. Hugh B. White has had his window newly fitted up and now it looks very nobby with the plain inscription—Hugh B. White, the Gem.
Mr. E. L. Arnett has also had his saloon newly fitted up in the latest style. Go and look upon Mr. Arnett's newly decorated saloon.
The Death Angel.
Last Saturday the Death Angel entered the aboad of Mrs. Emma O. Greer and bore away that spirit to the God that gave it. She leaves a husband and four children to mourn her loss. She was a cousin of Mrs. J. Hynes, of 1920 Wash street. They lived in Helena, Ark.
The Old Folks' Home.
The managers of the Old Folks' Home are working hard for the success of the same. On the 3d of June the Home will be dedicated by the Masons' State Grand Lodge. Don't fail to help this worthy cause.
Jennie Thornton, a Negress Sentenced for Killing Husband.
Judge Douglas yesterday morning sentenced Jennie Thornton, a negress, to life imprisonment in the Penitentiary for killing her husband, Gilbert Thornton, on January 31. - she was charged with murder in the first degree.
The woman lay in wait for her husband at Second street and Lucas avenue and shot him. She seemed surprised when Judge Douglas pronounced the sentence, evidently expecting leniency from the court.—Republic.
The birthday party given in honor of Mrs. A. S. Morgan of 3018 Cass avenue, was a most enjoyable affair. Quite a large number of quests assembled and passed a pleasant evening. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan, although married but three years, are still the affectionate couple they were when lovers.
The church-going young men of this city have acquired a very distasteful habit of remaining around church after dismissal, seemingly to greet the young ladies as they come out. This is bad taste and we hope that all the young men will discontinue such practices.
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
A young girl standing in a white dress with a flower in her hand.
Miss Winnie Booth. Booth, the loving Mexico, Mo. She is one of the mascots Mrs. Booth of of the Palladium.
Little Miss Winnie Booth, the loving Mexico, Mo. She is one of the mascots daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Booth of the Palladium.
Little Miss Winnie Booth, the loving Mexico, Mo. She is one of the mascots daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Booth of the Palladium.
Vol. XIX. No. 21.
THE PALLADIUM
Notes and News Concerning Our People--Weekly Record of Social Events, Deaths, Marriages and Births--Written Especially for Palladium Readers.
Watch the Mule.
We did not have time to get all the dead-heads together for this week's issue. But the dead-heads and dead-beats will appear next week.
4-11-44.
This game has been virtually stopped and a number of two by four negroes are near crazy, of course. Th-y can not play their money away. That's good.
Death Relieved Him of His Trouble.
M. Eddie Oaton died April 30th.
He was a nephew of Mr. Thomas
Jordan, of 2633 Market street. His
mother, Bettie Oaton, died a few
months ago. Mr. Oaton has not walked
for ten years. He was helpless. His
uncle cared for him since his mother's
death.
Barber-Butcher Nuptials.
One of the noted events of the season is the marriage of Miss Elenora Butcher to Mr. Barber. May their pathway be bright. She received decidedly lovely presents, among the lot a washstand set from Mr. Aaron Russell and a lovely dinner set from Mr. Willis Walton. Hurrah! for the "Bank Porters." We are on the wonder whether their wives are happy and have imported china in their homes —? [D. E. C.]
Married Last Week.
Miss Maggie Townsend, a dashing
Pung king of 4039 Evans avenue, was
quietly married to Mr. Thomas McIn-
trye. We wish them success through
this world of disappointment.
Trouble With Principal.
East St. Louis people are up in arms against Prof. B. F. Bowels, of East St. Louis Lincoln public school. We will look on and see the fur fly. Our advice has always been for the public school teachers to keep out of politices, also the preachers who are in charge of churches and man who gets in the way of another man will sure get jamed. So let our public school teachers and preachers keep in the middle of the road.
SNOOKS.
"Pickett's Headache Powders gve instant relief. 2601 Lawton avenue.
Newly Fitted.
ST. LOUIS, MO., SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1903.
WHY THE NEGROES DID NOT MARCH.
Thought Harry Hawes' Offer to Furnish Uniforms Had Political Aspect.
The failure of the negro division of the civic parade to materialize last Saturday was the subject of much comment, and for half an hour while the parade was forming the aids of Grand Marshal Spencer rode here and there, inquiring for division No. 14, which, it was supposed, had missed its way. But No. 14 was not found.
Several of the largest civic organizations of the colored people of the city had promised to participate, and the colored people generally expected to see the most creditable showing ever made by their race.
They were doomed to disappointment, however, and they have been busying themselves ever since trying to account for the failure of the negro contingent to materialize.
The organizations reported by Division Marshal J. Milton Turner could easily have turned out several thousand men, and intended to do so up to Friday evening, when a sudden halt was called in the preparations by the leaders of the different organizations. This action was due to a report that was given wide circulation last Friday by persons who claimed to be acting under instructions from Marshal Turner that Harry B. Hawes had offered to furnish uniforms, caps and canes for as many colored men as desired to take part in the parade.
This report, in the eyes of the officers of the various negro organizations, gave the whole affair a political aspect, and the colored men, fearing that some political significance would be attached to their appearance in the parade under the leadership of Marshal Turner, who has become conspicuous as a negro Democratic leader, decided not to take any part.
This, at any rate, is the explanation given by one of them yesterday.
Henry T. Mott, adjutant on Grand Marshal Spencer's staff, said he and his aids had been quite unable to account for the failure of the negroes to show up. Mr. Mott said not even Division Marshal Turner was on hand, so far as he could ascertain. —Globe-Democrat.
The Woman's Club.
The St. Louis Woman's Club, with Mrs Susan P. Vashon as president, is a wide-awake, progressive organization. This club is now engaged in raising funds for the establishment and support of a charity ward at the Provident hospital in this city. At one of the meetings called "A Literary Afternoon," held recently, a very enjoyable paper on the subject of "Ideality" was read by Miss Helen Burrell, and was discussed with much profit by the members generally. At the same meeting the following "resolution" was presented and adopted unanimously:
"Whereas, We have learned with great satisfaction of the munificent gift of six thousand dollars, donated through the generosity of Mr. Andrew Carnagie to the work of Booker T. Washington, at Tuskegee; therefore be it
Resolved, That we, the officers and members of the St. Louis Woman's Club, do hereby express our gratification at this noble act and our high appreciation of the metives which prompted it.
Resolved, That we hail with high hope this encouraging evidence of a brighter era in our history, when the hand of the rich man shall be extended in appreciative help to the struggling brothers, and his purse-strings be opened wide in the cause of humanity and progress."
Mrs. W. C. Gordon, wife of the well-known undertaker, has recently returned home from a trip in Florida and other Southern States, where she went for the benefit of health, and her trip accomplished much towards restoring her health.
Mr. Nathaniel Wilson, of Mobile, Ala., is visiting his brother, Mr. Alexander Wilson, and his nephew, Mr. Daniel Hartsfield, of St. Louis. He is a letter carrier of that city and has been for the past 20 years.
Our Mr. Bartholdt.
Go to Miss Teresa's Store, 1308 Olive street, the place to get your natural flowers. The young gentlemen should get their bouquets for young ladies at 1308 Olive street.
Mr. W. W. Brown, Mr Jas. L. Haley and Mr. Emmet Brown made quite an impression during the parade Saturday as commanding officers. They were continually doffing their caps in response to the cheers of their many friends along the line.
Mrs. Lydia Tucker, of Clarksville, Mo., is visiting Mrs. W. D. Elgin, of 1536 Gratiot street. She will remain for several weeks.
Mrs. C. W. Lee, of 456 N. Sarah street, has returned home from a visit to Kansas City, Mo. She is the picture of health. We welcome her back to our old St. Louis.
Mr. Joseph G. Morrison, of Chicago, was the guest of James B. Huston during the dedication period. Mr. Morrison is well-known in St. Louis, having lived here, coming to this city from Washington, D. C., where his relatives now reside. Several social functions were held in the honor of Mr. Morrison and he expressed himself as delighted with his trip.
Miss Mable Rodgers, of Sparta, Ill., was the guest of her cousin, Miss Alice Simms, duning the dedication. The many friends of Miss Rodgers made her visit a very pleasant one during her stay in the city.
Remember the grand opening of James Ray soon will be the crowning event of 22d street. Due and timely notice will be given through the columns of the Palladium.
Miss Nellie B. Horton, the former bookkeeper of A. Russell's Grocery Store, has just returned from a little town in Illinois known as Peoria. She seems in the best of health. A reception in her honor was given last Tuesday night by her many friends in Kirkwood, Mo. She is stopping at 2221 Market street.
Try Pickett's Headache Powders Don't fail to get them. 2601 Lawtor avenue.
We are the leaders, others will follow. GRAND MOONLIGHT EXCURSION
Given by the MADISON CLUB on the Steamer Corwin Spencer, Monday Evening, May 18th, 1903. Admission, 25c.; children, 15c.
Thanksgiving Services.
The 17th of May, 1903, has been named for the thanksgiving services of the Order of U. B. F. and S. M. T. We presume that the Iodges and temples will do their ll duty in this matter as members of a great order. We should obey the edicts of the National Grand Master and State Grand Master.
Notice.
Now the city is crowded with strangers and many sights will be seen, the public should be on their guard for confidence men and women. On leaving your house some one of the family should be left at home to look after the house. The Palladium man has been taken in by a so-called son of Bale Churchill, of Memphis, Tenn. So look out the confidence man is here.
D. R. Francis, the acknowledged leading citizen of the great Exposition. Let the 625,000 people in the city rally to his assistance.
Get ready for the excursion May 18th given by the Madison club.
Notice to our many readers of the Palladium. Please pay to Mr. John W. Wheeler, Jr., our agent.
All who wish to call at our office will find our secretary, Miss B. Ross. She will act for the Palladium man.
Remember the Busy Bee Restaurant at 2837 Market street, has good icecream. Call and taste then guess whoes ice-cream it is.
We call especial attention to the fish stand of Mr. M. Meyer, dealer in fresh fish, oysters, etc., 2704 Franklin avenue. Our race must learn to patronize those who patronize us. So give Mr. Meyer a call.
There is more buying of real estate in St. Louis at present than at any other time in its history. You cannot rent anything now, so why not buy as the time may soon come when there will be nothing to buy. A bargain is good at all times, and a better thing now than it will be after the World's Fair. I have several bargains in houses. Insurance placed in the best companies. HUTCHINS INGE.
Attorney-at-Law and Real Estate Agent,
1107 Clark avenue.
The Palladium wants ads.
If our true friends wish to assist us, they will secure ads., for us.
Don't forget Teresa, the Florist,
1308 Olive street, the best in the city.
Furnished rooms for rent to men; rooms comfortably furnished; second and third floors; with or without board. 2336 Wash street. T. T. Thompson.
A few old, dishonest niggers have done more kicking about that mule in the Palladium than a spotted mule with one oye. But wait for the names under the mule next Saturday, May 16th.
Mrs. Abington, of Clarkville, Mo., visited Mrs. Elgin, of 1536 Gratiot street. She left for home a few days ago well pleased with the military parade.
Mrs. William Taylor, of Keokuk, Ia., visited her aunt, Mrs. Lizzie Leasure, of 1937 St. Charles street.
Mr. W. H. Shaw, of Marshall, Texas, is in our city, stopping at Mrs. White's, 200 South 14th street. He will remain several weeks. He taught school in the State of Texas for many years.
Stop that cough. Pickett's Cough Syrup, 2601 Lawton avenue.
Mrs. Willie A. Lange, of 813 Morgan street, is still confined to her bed.
Mr. William Johnson, of 2307 Papin street, is now resting on his oars or the interest of his money.
$2.00 Per Annum, Single Copy 5 cents.
ix months.
ders, others will follow.
NLIGHT EXCURSION
B on the Steamer Corwin Spencer, Mon-
Admission, 25c.; children, 15c.
NOTICE.
From the 9th of May all who wish to call at the office will find either the Palladium man or or someone who will answer in his place in all matters per to the Palladium.
J. W. WHEELER, Manager.
Church Notices.
Centennial M. E. Church Services.
Preaching, Sunday, 11:30 a.m.
Sunday School, 2:00 p.m.
Preaching, evering, 7:00 p.m.
Tabernacle Baptist Church.
Preaching, Sunday, 11:00 a.m.
Sunday School, 1:00 p.m.
B. Y. P. U.
All church notices must be mailed to this office on or before Wednesday of each week.
Reporters will be sent wherever requested. Only notify this office.
$4 to $8 a day guaranteed to every person sending their name and address to Scott Remedy Co., P. O. Box 570, Louisville, Ky. Write at once.
Wm. P. Dye's Buffet and Saloon,
2801-3 Manchester avenue, has been
newly decorated. He has put an Easter
front on it. Don't forget to give your
call.
A Coal Yard.
Mr. John Fitzhugh, of 2354 Chestnut street, has opened a coal yard. Mr. Fitzhugh's legs were broken at the Century building, May 30, 1902. He has been confined to his home for eleven months. He is able to get about and has opened a coal yard. We trust that the good people will help a worthy at 2354 Chestnut street.
Bruner and Hogan, the 200 Bar, at 1322 Market street, is just the place for you to get a "night-cap."
The Gem Saloon—Hugh B. White, Proprietor, is the place to rest the weary head—1911 Market street.
The Jockey Club, 3924 Sophia avenue. Wm. Dover, Proprietor, is always ready to fill you up.
Remember within P. Dyes' Buffet,
2901 Manchester avenue, is the place
to get an eye- opener.
U. B. F.
April 16.1903.
The Board of Managers of the U. B. F. and S. M. T. of Texas met in Houston at the office of the Grand Treasurer. The full Board consists of W. F. Bledsoe, chairman, Marshall; F. W. Gross, secretary, Victoria; Joseph Nichols, treasurer, Houston. F. W. Gross, the secretary, made the following report for the quarter ending February 28th. Receipts—Widows and orphans' fund, $4,240.80; grand lodge tax fund, $760.39; national grand lodge tax fund, $162.60; sale of supplies, $186.89; interest on U. S. bonds, $10; total receipts for the quarter, $9,360.68. Receipts for the six months ending February were $8,953.47. $7,169.95 of this represents receipts for the benefit of widows and ophans. The Board ordered that $2,500 be paid to widows orphans. Total paid to date $81,210.63. Thus the good work goes on and our sister State — Texas — recognize the value of the columns of the Palladium.
Papin for the We are informed that Miss Isell Cole and Minotte Cole were married a few days ago.
THE PALLADIUM.
J. W, WHEELER, Walkorand Manager,
ST. LOUIS, : +: x MISSOURI
1903 MAY 1903,
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CURRENT COMMENT.
Another one of the horrors of be-
ing a king is that he has to salute all
‘other kings on the cheek. But none
abdicate on this account.
It is the hardest thing in the world
to get mad because Russia has
grabbed Manchuria—almost like tick-
ling yourself to make yourself laugh.
Doubtless, the earl of Yarmouth
would not have married Miss ‘Thaw
without her fortune; but no more
would Miss Thaw have married Yar-
mouth without his title. So far as
the clement of calculation is con-
cerned, it is, to put it plainly, a
clear case of horse and horse.—Kan-
sas City Star.
Japan proposes to be up with the
times. It has recently ordered some
X-ray machines in this country to be
used in the Tokio mint on the em-
ployes whom it suspects of swallow-
ing newly-minted coins and carrying
them away in their stomachs. “The
X-ray will reveal the coins, even
though it may not dselose the spots
cof cullt‘on tha conscience.
An extraordinary decision was ren-
dered by the supreme court of New
York state recently. In effect the
court held that the will of a man
who left $6,000,000 could not be
broken. Here is a state of things,
surely. The idea that an estate may
be disposed of as the testator willed
without legal talent and oratory is
incomprehensible. More than that,
it is irrelevant, impertinent and rey:
olutionary.
Aged pensioners who surrender te
Cupid are making no end of tronble
for the pension office, ‘The pension
commissioner, Eugene Ware, has ree-
ommended that congress enact ® law
which will place some sort of @ limit
on the pensions of widows who
marry sokliers with “one leg in the
graye.” It has been known for years
that designing women sought, matri-
monial alliances with aged pension.
ek:
Mr, Nelson, the most distinguished
of English statisticians, after long
and careful investigations and com-
parisons, ascertained by actual ex-
perience the following astounding
facts: Between the ages of 15 and
20, where 10 total abstainers die, 18
moderate drinkers die; between the
ages of 20 and 30, where 10 total ab-
stainers die, 31 moderate drinkers
die; between the ages of 30 and 40,
where 10 total abstainers die, 40
moderate drinkers die.
Surgeon General O'Reilly says that
ihe prevalence of alcoholism in the
army is much greater in the United
States than in the Philippine islands.
‘The difference is greater at present
owing to the cholera in the islands
than at other times, but there al-
ways has been a difference in favor of
the Philippines. ‘The comparative
immunity of the troops in the Phil-
ippines from the cholera, Dr. O'Reilly
says, ix due to the greater care they
ae et i emeaainos
Somaliland, in eastern Africa, has
Jong been looked upon as a sports-
man’s paradise. AM through the
country are numerous lions, leopards
and hyenas. ‘The lions follow the
herds ‘of the natives in their move-
ments over the plains. As a_protee-
tion against them the Somalis when
encamping construct a zareba, or
thick fence made of prickly bushes.
Within the inclosure the huts are al-
so set up. Hoofed animals are well
represented and inchide some inter-
esting and remarkable forms.
In his first inaugural addvess
Thomas Jefferson felicitated _ his
countrymen on “possessing a chosen
country with room enoagh for our
descendants to the thousandth and
thousandth generation.” On that
day the country’s western border
was the Mississippi. A country a lit-
tle over 3% times as large as the one
Jefferson had in view when he ut-
tered that propheey 102 years ago
has since been fairly well peopled,
although only three of Jefferson's
“thousand and thousand” genera-
‘tions have pacsed.
Canada is looking for a still larger
immigration from the United States
in 1903 than it received in 1902.
‘There is a chance, however, that it
will be disappointed. ‘The immigra-
tion bureaus of the leading western
states are taking more pains to
make the attractions of their locali-
ties known to the world than they
have done in recent years. Then,
too, the Work of national irrigation,
which is beginning in the states
west of the 10cth meridian, will at-
tract to them many immigrants whe
miziit otherwise go to Cannda
MISSOURI STATE NEWS,
Freezing Temperature,
In the central and western sections
of the state the past week was ex-
ceptionally cold, the mean tempera-
ture ranging from 6 to 10 degrees be-
low the normal; in the eastern sec-
tions the temperature averaged
somewhat higher but was below the
normal. Frosts occurred on several
dates and on May 1 the temperature
fell below freezing over the entire
state, except portions of Dunklin and
Pemiscot counties. The following are
some of the lowest temperatires re-
ported: Maryland, 29; Trenton, 22;
Brunswick, 21; Columbia, 30; Mexico,
28; Jefferson City, 28; Arthur (Ver-
non county), 28; Lebanon, 29; Mon-
treal (Camden county), 23; Ironton,
26; Mt. Vernon, 27; Springfield, 22;
Mountaingrove, 28; Sikeston, 31; An-
derson (MeDonald county), 25; and
Protem (Taney county), 28.—From
Weather and Crop Bulletin, May 5.
Unban Seinleiaue Cireumatances,
Andrew F. Freemyer, a wealthy
resident of Worth county, died at
the hospital for insane No. 2, St. Jo-
seph, from injuries supposed to have
been inflicted by an attendant. He
was in ordinary health at night and
the circumstances surrounding _ his
death were so suspiious that Supt.
Woodson asked Coroner Doyle to
make an autopsy. It developed that
nine ribs and the man’s breast bone
were broken, Night Guard Costin,
who had charge of the ward in which
Freemyer was confined, was placed
under arrest pending the verdict of
the coroner.
Didn't Know He Had Arrived.
‘The governor ef Colorado and staff
visited St. Louis to attend the
World's fair exercises, but failed to
notify the proper committee, and his
Presence was not noticed. Of course
the incident was regretted by the
World's fair officials, but a governor is
a very small personage when a presi-
deni, a former president, several
standing presidential candidates, and
big guns and their flunkies are as
numerous as pretty girls in Missouri.
Guikevaton Weslavta Bixth,
All the churches of the St. Louis
district of the M. E. chureh, south,
celebrated the two hundredth anni-
versary of the birth of John Wesley,
at Centenary, St. Louis. ‘The real
anniversary of Wesley's birth is in
June, but because of the presence in
St. Louis of so many distinguished
men of the church attending the an-
‘nual meeting of the college of bish-
ops, it was decided to have the serv:
‘tees, and not wait until June,
‘The Cold Spel.
Snow fell in northwest Missouri
April 30, and in many places snow
covered the ground May 1, The en-
tire state was chilled from the cold
breath of the blizzard that raged over
the Dakotas, Nebraska and portions
of Kansas. On the morning of May
1 there was a severe frost that ex-
tended into southern Missouri, and ice
formed as far south as 75 miles below
St. Louis, Much damage was caused
to small fruits and gardens.
‘Wax Well Known in St. Joxeph.
Dr. A. S. Long, a practicing phy-
sician in St. Joseph for nearly forty
years, died from inflammatory rheu-
matism. He was 63, and was formerly
a member of the city council. He
had also been city and county physi-
cian and superintendent of the coun-
ty farm.
<uhts Giutheae at HK Sawies
Circuit Attorney Joseph W. Folk, of
St. Louis, states that the investigation
of state boodling by the St. Louis
grand jury would continue indefinite-
ly, without reference to the action of
the Cole county grand jury.
Surgeon Allowed a Big Fee.
The probate court of St. Louis
county allowed a doctor $3,000 for a
surgieal operation on a man’s head.
‘The doctor wanted $5,000. ‘The man
is dead; but it was a difficult opera-
tion.
One Hundred and Fifty Funerals.
Fully 150 funerals were held in St.
Louis Sunday, May 3. This was due
to the fact that no funerals were held
in the city from Wednesday, April 29,
on account of dedication ceremonies,
Wants to Clear Hin Name.
After serving four years in the
penitentiary, C. B, Siders, 70, of Kan-
sas City, is seeking to clear his name
of the charge of embezzlement. Ap-
peals to supreme court.
‘Threw Mot Grease and Got a Bullet.
Barney Barnett, a cook in an eat-
ing house, in St. Louis, was shot and
killed, presumably by a man in
whose fuce he threw a skillet-full of
hot grease.
padetod Gailacan Gives Bends
Senator W. P. Sullivan, indicted
for soliziting a bribe, surrendered to
the sheriff of Cole county, arranged
a $3,000 bond and departed from Jef-
terson City.
Provided For His Family.
Frank S. Powell arose from his bed
of death, in St. Louis, went down
town, paid the premium on his life in-
surance policy, and died six hours
later.
Look For Higher Prices on Exe.
Dealers anticipate higher prices on
eggs in St. Louis, because they say
farmers and poultry raisers are say-
ing them for setting purposes.
Early Watermetons.
Watermelons have appeared in the
St. Louis market, and are quoted at
5 to 90 cents. They are about one
‘month earlier than usual.
Refuxed to Ride Horcebacs,
Gor. Dockery refused to ride horse-
back so did not lead the Missouri
rational’ guard in the parade at
World's feir dedication. ‘
Impressive Ceremonies Attending the
Dedication of the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition.
4 BRILLIANT MILITARY SPECTACLE,
A Miniature Army, Comprising All
Arms of the Regular and Citizen
Soldiery in Motion, Lending a
Dignified and Spectacular Effect,
and Forming a Fitting Excort to
the Dedieating Official, the Presi-
dent of the United States.
St. Louis, “April 80.—The second
great step has been made in
the progress of the Louisiana
Purchase exposition, in the ded-
ication of the site and of the build-
ings erected and in course of erection
to the purpose of celebrating, by a
great international exposition the ac-
quisition, by purchase from France,
of the vast territory which has added
so immeasurably to the wealth and
national greatness of the United
deeb
A Fitting Observance.
Fittingly, the dedication occurred
on the centennial anniversary of the
signing of the treaty of cession, and
as one president of the United States
consummated the purchase,so another
performed the duty of dedicating the
great exposition that is to commemo-
rate it, and an ex-president delivered
the oration.
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‘The event had been looked forward
to by not only St. Louisians, but by
the people generally throughout the
states and territories of the Louisiana
Purchase and of those bordering
thereon, thousands of whom came to
witness the ceremony and the attend-
ing pageants.
Dedication day proper (Thursday)
was signalized by the grandest mili-
tary display ever seen west of the
Mississippi river, composed of prac-
tically a full division of the regular
army, comprising all arms of the serv-
ice—infantry, cavalry, artillery, field
and siege, and engineers, supplement-
ed by battalions of seamen and ma-
rines from the great harbor defense
monitor Arkansas, the largest war
craft that ever traversed the inland
waters of the country; also a disivion
“of the national guard made up of con-
tingents from several states besides
Missouri, an entire regiment coming
from the Empire state, together with
the crack cavalry squadron of New
York city as escort to Gov. Odell.
‘These forces were supplemented by a
couple of battalions of cadets, the
whole, upwards of 12,000 men, form-
ing a fitting escort to President
Roosevelt, the dedicating official.
A. Canetalty Plaused Passont.
Under the immediate supervision of
Maj-Gen. Henry C. Corbin, U. S. A.
grand marshal, every detail of the
pageant was carefully planned; and
while the troops were drawn from
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widely separated stations, so accur-
ately did they fit into the positions
assigned them that not a hitch of any
Kind occurred, and the march, from
the starting point to that of disband-
ment, was conducted with the charac-
teristic snap and precision of the
American soldier.
While Maj-Gen. H. C. Corbin acted
as grand marshai of the parade, an of-
ficer of higher rank, Lieut.-Gen. Nel-
son A. Miles, commander of the army,
rode in the parade as a distinguished
guest, his authority being relin-
quished to the officer on special duty.
Gen. J. C. Bates, commander of the
department of the Missouri and the
Jakes, commanded the regular divi
sion of the parade. Gen. Fred D.
Grant commanded the first brigade of
the regular division and Gen. Kobbe
the second brigade.
‘The yolunteer division was com-
manded by Maj-Gen. Roe, of New
York.
‘The Troops Participating.
‘The troops participating in the pa-
rade were the following:
United States Regulars—Fighth cay-
alry, Fourth cavalry, Sixth field’ bat-
tery, Twenty-Fighth’ field artillery,
with mountain battery and full equip-
ment; Sixteenth battalion artillery
(siege battery), First battalion engi-
neers, Third, Sixth Twentieth and
‘Twenty-second infantry. These troops
were drawn from Fort Thomas, Ga.j
Fort Leavenworth, Kas.; Fort Sneri-
dan, Chicago; Columbus Barracks,
Ohio; Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis;
Fart Riley, Kas., and Fort Crook, Neb.
Sailors and marines from the moni-
tor Arkansas.
National Guards—Picked New York
regiment, Fourth Ilinois infantry,
Battery B, Peoria, Ml; Second ship's
crew Illinois naval militia, ‘Thirty-
fourth Iowa infantry, Third, Fourth
and Fifth Missouri infantry and Sixth
battalion, Battery A, St. Louis; Pro-
visicnal regiment from Ohio, battalion
from Oklahoma, battalion from Louis-
iana, battalion from Kentucky, Uni-
versity cadets, Columbia, Mo.
‘The First regiment national guard
of Missouri was detailed for guard
duty.
Not Long, But Long Enough,
‘The line of march, while not a long
one, was of sufficient length to afford
the hundreds of thousands of people
who turned out to see it abundant op-
portunity to be gratified. It passed
westward on Lindell boulevard, one
of the handsomest thoroughfares in
the United States, to the entrance of
Forest park and then wound through
that beautiful sylvan retreat, over a
mi'e or more of shaded driveway and
thence into the Wor'd’s fair site, past
the Liberal Arts bailding, between
two rows of stacely triumphal col-
umns and Venetian masts bedecked
with bunting, and on to the grand
causeway and past the reviewing
stand, without any of the worn and
tired look incident to the usual over-
lengthy marches of public occasions.
‘The various fieh] and dress uniforms
were all in evidence, lending variety
to the pageant, and ihe formation of
the troops, 12 files front, was just
sufficient to give good effect to the
column in motion. The entire route
had been roped off, so that any un-
seemly crowding of spectators on to
the line of march was avoided, and
everyone was enabled to see in all
its grandeur and effectiveness the
passage of @ miniature army.
Distinguished Personages.
Among the distinguished person-
ages in the parade, preceding the mili-
tary, in addition to President Roose-
yelt and ex-President Cleveland, were
Lieut-Gen. Nelson A. Miles, nearly
all the foreign diplomatic corps,
members of the national commission,
the French and other foreign commis-
sioners, governors of states with their
staff's, the whole being led by Maj.
Gen. Corbin, with a brilliant staff of
aids, superbly mounted.
‘The spectacle was one which will
live long in the memory of all who
witnessed it, as it gave an effective
LGR NOD
G ae o>
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Sai:
HON, THOMAS H. CARTER.
illustration of what the army of the
United States is composed and the
reserve force of citizen soldiery to be
drawn upon fi case of\emergency.
At the Reviewing Stand.
The arrival of President Roosevelt
at the reviewing stand was the signal
for the firing of a presidential sa-
Tate.
‘Yhe passage of the troops in re-
view occupied over an hour, at the
close of which the president and in-
yited guests repaired to luncheon.
Meanwhile the doors of the Liberal
Arts building, where the dedication
services were to be held, were thrown
open, and while the great audience
was assembling a grand band concert
was in progress.
Cis Dediantion Goveseisdas
Say | eevee hey room ee eee
ering was called to order by Presi-
dent David R. Francis of the Louisi-
ana Purchase Exposition Co., and an
invocation was pronounced by his
eminence, James, Cardinal Gibbons.
Hon, Thomas H. Carter, president
of the national commission and presi-
dent of the day, was then introduced,
and spoke briefly of the grandeur of
the Louisiana purchase and what had
been accomplished in the first century
of our possession of the territory ac-
quired from France, which at’ the
time was only considered valuable by
many American statesmen because it
secured to us the free navigation of
the Mississippi river. It was fitting,
he said, that the celebration should
be international, as it would be vain
to name a civilized country whose
sons and daughters had not contribut-
ed to the glorious triumphs of peace
recorded within its boundaries. In
the name of the national commission
President Carter extended to all a
cordial welcome to the dedication ex-
ercises, and called upon the grand
festival chorus to render Beethoven's
creation hymn, “The Heavens Pro-
claiming.” At once a wave of inspir-
ing melody swept over the vast struc-
ture, thrilling the audience with the
wel-nigh perfect rendition of the
well worn, but always glorious, num-
ber.
Presentation of the Buildings.
In due form, President Francis
of the Louisiana Purchase Exposi-
Ne ve ies te arian aie Gi eae
various steps takin to bring it to a
successful issue, presented the build-
ings to President Roosevelt, his con-
cluding words being:
f (aoa ,
if =
At So ; i Q
Hi, “omegll
Q i i AP a
Cy
worthy representative you are, be sus-
tained and fostered and promoted by
the uses to which these structures are
devoted. May the happiness of man-
kind be advanced and broadened by
the lofty purpose that inspired this
undertaking, and move our own and
sister countries to unite in its accom-
plishment.”
‘The Dedication Address.
In his address of acceptance and
dedication President Roosevelt struck
a responsive chord among his hearers.
He recalled to their minds that the
soil upon which they stood, before it
was ours was successively the posses-
sion of two mighty empires, Spain and
France, whose sons made a deathless
record of heroism in the early annals
of the new world. “No history of the
western country could be written,” he
said, “without paying heed to the
wonderful part played therein in the
early days by the soldiers, missionar-
ies, explorers, and traders who did
their work for the honor of the proud
banners of France and Castile. While
the settlers of English-speaking stock.
and those of Dutch, German and Sean-
dinavian origin who were associated
with them, were still clinging to the
eastern seaboard, the pioneers of
Spain and France had penetrated
deep into the hitherto unknown wil-
derness of the west and had wandered
far and wide within the boundaries
‘of what is now our mighty country.
‘The very cities themselves—St. Lonis,
New Orleans, Santa Fe, N. M—bear
witness by their titles to the nation-
alities of their founders. It was not
until the revolution had begun that
the English-speaking settlers pushed
west across the Alleghenies, and not
until a century ago that they entered
in to possess the land upon which we
now stand.”
After passing in review the acqui-
sition of the Louisiana territory and
pointing out the inestimable boon
conferred upon the nation by its far-
sighted purchasers, the president eon-
saanas
Se ee
“We meet here to-day to commemo-
rate a great event which marks an
era in statesmanship no less than
in pioneering. It is fitting that we
should pay our homage in words; but
wo must in honor make our words
good by deeds. We have every right
to take a just pride in the great deeds
of our forefathers; but we show our-
selves unworthy to be their descend-
ants if we make what they did an ex-
cuse for our lying supine instead of
an incentive to the effort to show our-
selves by our acts worthy of them, In
the administration of city, state and
nation, in the management of our
home life and the conduct of our
business and social relations we are
bound to show certain high and fine
qualities of character under penalty
of seeing the whole heart of our civil-
ization eaten out while the body still
lives.
“We justly pride ourselves on our
marvelous material prosperity, and
such prosperity must exist in order
to establish a foundation upon which
a higher life can be built; but unless
we do in very fact build this higher
life thereon, the material prosperity
will go for but very little. Now, in
1903, in the altered conditions, we
must meet the changed and changing
problems with the spirit shown by
the men who, in 1803, and in the sub-
sequent years gained, explored, con-
quered, and settled this vast terri-
tory, then a desert, now filled with
thriving and populous states.
‘The Old Days and the New.
“The old days were great because
the men who lived in them had migh-
ty qualities; and we must make the
new days great by showing these
same qualities. We must insist upon
courage and resolution, upon hardi-
hood, tenacity and fertility im re-
source; we must insist upon the
strong, virile virtues; and we must
insist no less upon the virtues of
self-restraint, self-mastery, regard
for the rights of others; we must
show our abhorrence of eruelty, bru-
tality and corruption, in publie and in
private life alike. If we come short
in any of these qualities we shall
measurably fail; and if, as I believe
we surely shall, we develop these
qualities in the future to an even
greater degree than in the past, then
in the century now beginning we
shall make of this republic the freest
and most orderly, the most just and
most mighty nation which has ever
come forth from the womb of time.”
Mr. Cleveland's Address,
The close of the Gedication address
was followed by the selection, “Un-
fold Ye Portals,” by the grant
chorus, and then Hon. Grover Clove.
Jand, ex-president of the Uniti
States, delivered the oration, in ‘he
course of which he traced the f:>.
reaching consequences in the upbviii-
ing of this mighty nation, the haven
for the oppressed of all races, fo!
ing the acquisition of the vast arcs
comprised in the Louisiana Purchase,
He said in part: ~
“The impressiveness of this occa.
sion is greatly enhanced by reason
of an atmosphere of prophecy’s ful.
fillment which surrounds it. The
theught is in our minds that we acs
amid awe-inspiring surroundine:
where we may see and feel thine
foretold a century ago. We are here
in recognition of the one hundred)
anniversary of an event which
doubled the area of the young Amor
ican nation, and dedicated a new and
wide domain to American progr:
and achievement. The treaty whose
completion we to-day commemorate
was itself a prophecy of our yout!
ful nation’s mighty growth and 1
opment. At its birth prophets
waiting joyously foretold the iy
ness which its future promised. |
who was the chief actor for the (
ed States in its negotiation, os
signed the perfected instrument, tins
declared its effect and far-res
consequences:
Prophetic Utterances.
“<The instrument which we hove
just signed will cause no tears to be
shed. It prepares ages of hapvine-s
for innumerable generations of }
an creatures. ‘The Mississipi an
the Missouri will see them siccee
AILEY
ee
Boe
thy
NON
Noe
a
es y-
Pay |g ey
Pies a Brg
mie
j ro
é Re
Bae Se
eee enter ce MUTE
one another—truly worthy of the re-
gard and care of Providence, in the
bosom of equality under juet laws—
freed from the errors of superstition
and the scourges of bad government.’
“He who represented the nation
with whom we negotiated, when he
afterwards gave to the world his ac-
count of the transaction, declared:
“The consequences of the cession
of Louisiana will extend to the most
distant posterity. It interests vast
regions that will become by their
civilization and power the rivals et
Europe before another certury com-
mences;’ and warmed to enthusiasim
by the developments already in view,
and greater ones promised, he added:
‘Who can contemplate without vivid
emotions this spectacle of the happi-
ness of the present generation. and
the certain pledges of the prosperity
of numberless generations that will
follow? At these magnificent pros
pects the heart beats with joy in the
breasts of those who were permitted
to see the dawn of these bright days.
and who are assured that so many
happy presages will be accomplished’
Prophecy’s Falfiliment.
“Thus we may well recall in these
surroundings the wonderful measure
of prophecy’s fulfillment within the
span of a short century, the spirit,
the patriotism, and the civie virtue
of Americans who lived a hundred
years ago, and God’s overruling of the
wrath of man and his devious ways,
for the blessing of our nation.
| “We are all proud of ovr American
citizenship. Let us leave this place
with this feeling stimulated by the
sentiments born of the occasion. Let
us appreciate more keenly than ever
how vitally necessary it is to our
country’s weal that every one within
its citizenship should be clean-minded
in political aim and aspiration, sin:
cere and honest in his conception of
our country’s mission, and aroused '
‘higher and more responsive ‘patzist
‘ism by the reflection that it is « °vl-
emn thing to belong to a people ‘e
| vored of God.”
eee eta Sl
_ “America” was then sung, wit!
band accompaniment; prayer was of
fered by Bishop E. R. Hendricks, «!
the Methodist Episcopal church, 94
the benediction pronounced by !!
‘Rev. Henry C. Potter, Episeo)!
bishop of New York.
‘The closing of the exercises ws
followed by a centennial salute «!
100 guns.
At night the grandest pyrotechnics”
display ever seen in the west %.*
‘given.
| qatar ee Denis or
Milwaukee, April 30.—Mayor Dav‘
S. Rose is suffering from a stroke of
angina pectoris. Physicians say
had a very close call from death. 3°
is now said to be resting com!»:'s
bly at his home.
Beck's Succeasor Appointed.
Washington, April 30.—Attorse™
General Knox has appointed J. (. \!c-
Reynolds, of Tennessee, assistant **~
torney general of the United Sta!’
to succeed James M. Beck, resign:
Strike on Lox Angeles Railway.
Los Angeles, Cal., April 30-1! 65*
union men employed on the Los
-geles railway system were calle!
at eight v'cluck Wednesday nigit-
THE PALLADIUM.
FATHER AND CHILD.
You are so helpless and I so strong,
oh, but the way is so one, so long!
Would I might fare with you thus alway;
Down to the dusk of your latest day;
Wee little wanderer out of the dawn;
Would I might walk with you on and on,
Even as now, in the day's decline,
Holding your frail little hand in mine,
Guiding your steps o'er each rugged mile,
Greeting with kisses your childish smile,
Kissing the tears from your dimpled cheek—
I am so strong and you are so weak!
You are so helpless—am I so strong?
Oh, but the way is so one, so long!
Wool <— I might fare with me thus alway;
Down to the dusk of my latest day;
Brave little waif of the vanished dawn,
Would you might walk with me on and on,
Even as now, in the day's decline,
Still with your warm little hand in mine,
Guiding my steps o'er each rugged mile,
Soothing my fears with your trustful smile;
Kissing the tears from my with'ring cheek—
You are so strong and I am so weak!
E. O. Gaughlin, in Youth's Companion.
THE KIDNAPPED
MILLIONAIRES
A Tale of Wall Street
and the Tropics A
By FREDERICK U. ADAMS
Copyright, 1998, by Lothrop Publishing Company.
All rights reserved.
"All about the Kidnapped Millionaires!! Record Extra! All about the Great Mystery!! Record Extra!" Hundreds of newsboys poured from an alley and dashed into the human currents which surge at the confluence of Nassau street and Park Row. In a moment the air was aflaame with the red headlines of the "Record Extra." It was not necessary to buy a paper. The type was so large that it told the news to the passerby.
For a week the Wall street boom had been the sensation of New York and of the country. The perpetual excitement which reigns within the shadow of Trinity church had permeated office and counting room. It was the whispered topic of conversation among clerks, and the noisy subject of debate in hotel lobby and corridor. The jargon of the Stock Exchange was incorporated into metropolitan English. The tales of fortunes made to the clicking music of the ticker, aroused the cupidity of thousands, who saw in the whirl of speculative frenzy the prospect of wealth without work. Newspapers fed the flame and vied in displaying and narrating the golden exploits of magnate and operator.
On this Tuesday morning headlines and text covered the front page of the New York Record and proclaimed the following story:
KIDNAPPED!!!
Four Multimillionaires Mysteriously Missing!!
Palmer J. Morton, Andrus Carmody,
Simon Pence and R. J. Kent
cannot be found!!
Fears that They have been Kidnapped,
or have met with Foul Play.
Excitation on Wall Street.
"Palmer J. Morton, R. J. Kent, Andrus
Carmody and Simon Pence have mysteriously disappeared. They did not appear at their offices, but by inquiry at their houses discloses the astounding fact that though expected they did not come home last night. Various rumors are in circulation, but at this writing nothing is known, except that these four great capitalists have computed their combined wealth is estimated at $730,000,000."
The street crowds received the news calmly. They did not believe it. But they bought the papers.
The news came by the way of Wall street. Strange rumors had been in circulation all the morning. A sense of impending trouble permeated the crowd of brokers which clustered around the standards on the floor of the Stock Exchange. The curb brokers on Broad street were unasy, as they waited for the hour of ten. The market opened strong and then sagged. It was a few minutes past eleven o'clock when the tickers in a thousand offices stopped in their task of recording quotations.
There was a splutter of dashes on the tape. Customers gathered around the pedestals. There was news coming. They anticipated the announcement of an important failure. It had been rumored that a Consolidated Exchange house was in trouble. The following message spread itself along the tape:
"11:07 a. m.—Palmer J. Morton, R. J. Kent, Andrus Carmody and Simon Pence have not appeared at their offices. They did not return to their residences last night. Relatives are alarmed and have notified the police. They were last seen at a conference held at the office of Palmer J. Morton at four o'clock yesterday afternoon. No trace since. Foul play is feared." The murmur of the Stock Exchange swelled into a roar which reverberated above the rumble of traffic and the unrest on the streets. This was the morning of the third of May, memorable in the records of Wall street.
CHAPTER II.
TWO NAPOLEONS OF JOURNALISM.
Robert Van Horne was the owner and editor of the New York Record.
He was a leading light in a much-anticipated school of journalism. He
was the exemplar of the theory that the modern newspaper should "do things"—to quote the idiomatic expression of Mr. William Chalmers, his managing editor.
Robert Van Horne was the millionaire son of a departed millionaire father. His mother died in his school years, and at the age of 26 he found himself the sole owner of the immense Van Horne estate, roughly estimated as having a value of $20,000,000. His cattle roamed on a thousand hills in New Mexico and Texas. The drills of his mining machinery were boring into the rocks in scores of productive mines in Colorado, the Dakotas and Montana. With the traditional "Van Horne luck" his agents had been among the first to strike it rich in the snow-swept valleys of the Klondike. At an opportune moment he had invested a small fortune in Tennessee iron lands, and before this story opens had smiled at the confusion of those friends who chided him as the purchaser of a "gold brick."
Soon after the death of his father, Van Horne bought the New York Record; a paper which had survived a checkered career in the arena of metropolitan journalism. From the first issue under the Van Horne management the Record was a publication which could not be ignored. Like Minerva it sprang into life fullgrown, and panoplied in new and startling armor. It commanded attention and received it. There was no escape for the public. Unless one were blind, deaf and dumb he could not remain unaware of the fact that the Record was being published.
Mr. William Chalmers, his managing editor, was a tall, smooth-shaven, clear-cut young man, who had passed his 35 summers. He had acquired no gray hairs in the accumulation of a vast and varied fund of experience. He was possessed of an easy confidence; was handsome without knowing it, and had that grasp of every detail of the newspaper business which made him invaluable as an executive. He had traveled in every part of the globe; had interviewed section hands on railroads and emperors in palaces; knew the language of the slums and the graces of a court; could report a murder case or dictate a message for a president.
Mr. Van Horne thoroughly understood the great reading public to which his paper made a bid for support. It wished to be amused. The Record amused it. It wished to be thrilled. The Record thrilled it. It hungered for sensations. The Record had a never-ending supply of sensations. It clamored for pictures. The Record had them. It stood ready to print instantly reproductions of photographs of past, present or future events.
Mr. Walter B. Hestor was a friend of Robert Van Horne. He was a young man with a fortune and a hobby. His hobby was journalism. His fortune was conservatively estimated at $30,000,000, and he was in a position to indulge in any fancy which attracted him. The New York Record under the Van Horne management dazzled him. Its method of handling great news events appealed to Hestor. At one time he contemplated founding a rival paper, and surpassing, if possible, the bewildering strokes of enterprise which were displayed in the pages of that paper. On reflection he decided it meant too much work. He realized that the management of a great newspaper entailed an enormous amount of detail. Though possessed of much energy and persistence, Walter B. Hestor was introspective enough to realize that he was not fitted for the task of supervising a metropolitan newspaper. He therefore abandoned the idea.
He had no difficulty in forming a close acquaintance with Robert Van Horne. They were fellow-members of several clubs, and both were fitted by wealth and education to move in the same social circles. Hestor lost no time in confiding his ambitions to Mr. Van Horne. He wished to make his mark in the world as a journalist. Mr. Van Horne readily perceived that Hestor was a genius in his line of thought and action. The ambitious amateur would listen to no proposition involving pay for his services. All he asked was a chance to plan and execute those journalistic commissions which gave play to his genius as an initiator and to his skill as a writer.
Mr. Van Horne was delighted to accept the volunteer services of the brilliant but erratic Walter B. Hestor. At the time this story begins, Hestor was about 32 years old. He was a member of a New York family which traced its wealth and ancestry to the sixteenth century. His fortune was an independent one; and, though his tastes were expensive, he did not live up to his income.
It would take a volume to recount the journalistic exploits of Walter B. Hestor. He built the splendid steam yacht the "Shark," and employed it in his worldwide search for sensational news. We took 200 passengers from a sinking liner, and was decorated by four governments for bravery. In every war the "Shark" was in the foreground. It was the Hestor yacht that ran the batteries at Havana and escaped from the harbor with valuable news and information. At every signal of trouble Hestor and the "Shark" were sure to be on hand long before the representatives of other papers were aware that news was brewing. At his own expense he established a system of espionage on all the courts of Europe. Hestor was known in every palace of royalty, and in a few years became recognized as the most brilliant newspaper correspondent in the world.
At the time this story opens Mr.
Hestor had returned to New York after a cruise in Philippine waters. He was interviewed by all the newspapers, and his portrait flashed from hundreds of prints in all parts of the country. He was proud and happy of his success. His mind was ever alert for some scheme which would emphasize his fame. He regarded his foreign triumphs as but stepping stones to some great coup which would immortalize his name.
Hestor was disappointed when he learned that Mr. Van Horne had departed recently on a secret mission to Europe. At first he thought of joining him, but finally decided to remain in New York for a time and devote his energies to matters of local interest. Hestor was greeted warmly at the clubs, and found himself a popular hero. He was welcomed at the theaters and some of his newspaper exploits were made the subject of a topical song and rendered with great success at a leading vaudeville hall. For some time he had led a life free from care in company with congenial spirits, who were glad to shine in his reflected fame.
At the office of The Record Mr. Hestor had a luxurious private room, as befitted his rank as the special envoy of the paper. One afternoon he received a message from his old friend Sidney Hammond, stating that he would be in the city for two days, at the end of which time he would be
HESTOR WAS DELIGHTED TO HEAR FROM SIDNEY.
compelled to make a western trip on important business. Hestor was delighted to hear from Sidney Hammond, and at once arranged a theater and supper party in his honor. A party of eight occupied the Hestor box at the opera and thoroughly enjoyed "La Boheme." Walter B. Hestor and Miss Edith Le Roy; Sidney Hammond and Miss Olive, his sister; Mr. Converse and Miss De Neuville; Mr. Blake and Miss Meredith, constituted the merry group, which at the conclusion of the opera, mingled in the fashionable mob, and after the usual delays and annoyances found themselves in carriages speeding toward Fifth avenue.
There was a crush of carriages in front of Delmonico's. It was the night hour when New York attains the height of its feverish activity. The avenue was alive with swift-moving equipages. An army of lackeys was busy receiving the arriving guests. Inside the massive doors, the strains of an orchestra throbbed in an air of heavy perfume. The glare of light from thousands of electric globes was reflected from glass and marble, but subdued by palms and masses of roses.
A table had been reserved for Mr. Hestor and his guests—brave in its array of linen and flowers, and its glitter of cut glass. As Mr. Hestor entered the hall he was recognized by scores of friends and for a few moments held an impromptu reception.
When this social duty was ended, Miss Edith Le Roy took prompt charge of certain details—as was the wont of this vivacious young woman. Mr. Hestor had seated himself next to Sidney Hammond. Miss Le Roy had no idea of consenting to such an arrangement.
"You are the host, Mr. Hestor," she said, "and you must take the head of the table. Miss Meredith will sit at your right, and Mr. Hammond will take his place next to her. I am not going to permit you and Mr. Hammond to monopolize each other's conversation. I can trust you, Miss Meredith, to keep Sidney and Walter from entering into any discussion of their dreary schemes for reconstructing the universe."
The dinner went on merrivily amid a general conversation in which a limitless number of topics were introduced, discussed, and dismissed. Terrapin followed bouillon, and canvas back ducks were served with some rare old Burgundy. The spacious dining halls had in the meantime become crowded, and the orchestra encountered a noisy rival in the laughter and conversation which mingled in harmonious blend from hundreds of tables. Dainty preparations of shell fish gave place to a salad, followed by a glace, which Miss Le Roy pronounced "a dream in old rose." While the ladies discussed bonbons, the gentlemen lit cigars on cigarettes, and wooed the god of Nicotine with all the ardor which follows the enjoyment of so sumptuous a repast.
While Miss Le Roy was energetically defending her favorite French author from an attack unwittingly made by Mr. Blake, her plans so carefully arranged at the opening of the dinner were disrupted by Sidney Hammond, who readily persuaded Miss Meredith to change places with him. Miss Le Roy smiled her scorn when she discovered her duplicity and promptly announced a social boycott against the ungentle Hestor and Hammond, who already were absorbed in a quiet conversation on
topic which seemed of special interest to them.
Sidney Hammond was a college mate of Walter Hester. He was the stroke oar in the famous crew which humbled the pride of the rival university. Unlike many of the athletic heroes of the institutions of learning, Hammond combined the frame of a muscular Apollo with the brain of the scholar. He was even more a hero with the professors than on the campus. The text and reference books prescribed in the curriculum served but to stimulate his thirst for research. Though abundantly able, through the generosity of his father, to enter into all of the pleasures of the gilded class, he performed the rare feat of remaining a studious recluse and retaining his popularity. During the years spent in college he was an intellectual and physical machine, seemingly incapable of mental or bodily fatigue. The few friends who enjoyed the privilege of his apartments found him the best of hosts, with a well-appointed sideboard and the choicest of cigars. Except on rare occasions Hammond did not permit these social relaxatons to intrude on his time, and his friends grew to know just how long Sidney would tolerate their company in preference to his books.
Hestor sipped a glass of wine; knocked the ashes from his cigar, and extended an enameled cigar case to Hammond.
"How long does our famous correspondent intend to remain in New York?" asked Sidney Hammond. "It must seem dull here after what you have been through."
"It seems good to be here," replied Hestor. "I am going to quit roaming around and stay in this country for awhile. I believe there is more big news on the tapis here than anywhere in the world. I believe there is some sensational news about the trusts if it could be obtained and properly handled."
"They are getting big enough and bold enough to attract attention," said Hammond. "There will be plenty of news about them some day."
"How do you like the Record's leading editorial to-day?" he asked.
"The one about the big steel combine, do you mean?"
"Yes."
"Candidly, I cannot say I liked it," said Hammond, after a moment's pause. "I suppose Williams wrote it. It sounded like his stuff. Williams is a good writer, and there is no better man on local issues, but I am afraid the trust problem is beyond his depth. He denounces trusts. He might as well denounce the Galveston disaster. He has treated The Record readers to an entertaining but not novel bit of trust invective. I presume it is what they want, but what good does it do? He proposes no remedy." [To Be Continued.]
CLAY PIPES AS CHARMS
They Used to Be Offered to the Fairies by the Country Folk of England.
In nearly all local museums in England the visitor may see very tiny clay pipes, generally broken off at the stem, that he is told, after inquiry, are "fairy pipes," says Stray Stories.
Often enough, gardeners and people excavating for house foundations turn these piggy pipes up and keep them as curiosities without knowing what they are. Most of these people say: "Our ancestors must have smoked very tiny pipes—pipes that hold only a mere whiff."
In reality these pipes were never meant to be smoked. All the early tobaccoists in this country sold them to satisfy a demand of the superstitious. In country places in particular the friends of any dead man who had been a smoker would fill the small bowl of one of these pipes with tobacco and put it on the coffin as the latter was lowered into the grave, or they would simply throw the pipe on to the grave.
Again, wherever a so-called "fairy ring" appeared on the turf in the country place, the simple folks, to appease the fairies and pigmies who had made the ring during their revels, and to soothe the impish little people, would place fairy pipes full of tobacco on the spot.
The pipes were made small partly because they were intended for pigmies, and partly because in those days the merest pinch of tobacco was a luxury of price to the poor farm laborer or small farmer.
Dewet's Audacity.
A lady of Cape Town, on meeting Dewet for the first time, cried: "Oh! general, I am so pleased to meet you—or should I," she added naively, "address you as ex-general, as the English have it?" "Ex-general will do, madam. You see, I am a Britisher now, and as the English are so fond of prefixes and affixes to their names, I must be one of them. I am ex-general to-day. Who knows, some day I may be excellency!" and Dewet is said to have laughed at his own audacity.—San Francisco Argonaut.
Such a Brave Boy.
"I say, didn't I see you running down the street yesterday, with Bill Bounce after you?"
"Y-e-s."
"What did you run away for?"
"I was only running so as to get him away from his home, so as his mother couldn't see him fightin', but by the time he was out of sight of his house we got in sight of our house, and then, as my mother would see me if I stopped to hit him, I went in so as to be out of temptation." - Shirley Sink
A Compliment.
"I can't understand why a woman of her age should care for the kind of clothes she affects."
"Why, I don't think there's anything radically wrong with her clothes. Of course they might be a little more becoming if she were two or three years younger, but, you know, we can't all be your age, Mrs. Kazamz. Still, I don't blame you for objecting to it when she copies your styles so closely."—Chicago Record-Herald.
A Lucky Fellow.
Young Million (sadly)—My cousin George is a mighty lucky fellow—handsomest chap in town.
Friend—Handsome, yes; but he is as poor as a church mouse.
Young Million (enviously)—That's the beauty of it. He has a new girl every season, and not one of them makes a fuss when he casts her off.
-N. Y. Weekly.
Her Mild Suggestion.
"Charley, dear," said young Mrs Torkins, "will you join our progressive euchre club?"
"Certainly not. I have no time for euchre."
"Well, I won't urge you. But I can't help thinking that if you played the horses as well as I play euchre we'd have a lot of money now."—Washington Star.
His Sensitive Conscience
"Don't you always feel a little mean when a street car conductor overlooks you and you get your ride for nothing?"
"Yes, and I always spend the nickel for a cigar or something just as soon as I can, so as to get rid of the feeling."—Chicago Tribune.
Hard Lines.
"What! Marry you?" snorted the fiery-tempered malden. "Huh! What do you take me for?"
"For better or worse," he replied, promptly. So they were married and lived unhappily ever after for, alas! she was worse than he took her for—Philadelphia Press.
Treats Her Like an Angel.
Ethel—She's sorry enough that she married him, I'll wager.
Mabel—The idea! How can you say that? He thinks her a perfect angel, and treats her—
Ethel—As though she really were one. He doesn't buy her anything to wear.—Tit-Bits.
Both of the Same Mind.
He—Your friend, Miss Peachblow, is very pretty.
She—Well, you must be a mind-reader.
She—That's exactly what she thinks.
—Town Topics.
Not High, Considering.
House Hunter—Isn't $3,500 rather
high for that house?
Agent—High! Confound it, man,
certain friends of mine, when they
heard I was offering that house for
such a low price, have asked me if it
was haunted—Brooklyn Life.
Dislike for Work.
"Yes, leddy," whined the tramp, "I am a victim of heredity."
"Do you mean to say that your dislike for work has been inherited?"
"Sure. Me father once had a perilical job a-workin' fer de city."—Baltimore Herald.
A Chiel's Among Ye.
Winkers—What a tiresome piece of insipidity that girl is!
Binkers—Her parents ought to keep her at home. The first thing they know some modern novelist will take her for a heroine.—N. Y. Weekly.
Careless Troubadour.
"Come to my arms, Nora darling!"
He sang as he stood by the gate;
But she called from the window above him: "My name is Norm. It's Kate!"
—Philadelphia Bulletin.
He—I offered to kiss her tears away. She—Well? He—She cried worse than ever.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Curiosity.
Inquisitiveness often frets
The lives of great andsmall,
But idle curiosity
Is busiest of all.
-Chicago Tribune.
Fell Short.
"Mamma, mamma, Georgie struck
he on the chin!"
"Why did he do that?"
"Cause he couldn't reach my nose."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Sinecure.
Maj. Pompus—I am the guardian of my own honor, sir.
Mr. Roodman—Major, I congratulate you. You have a sinecure.—N. Y. Herald.
Defending a Playwright.
"But he's a plagiarist!"
"True; but such an original plagiarist! He borrows what nobody else ever thought of borrowing."—Brooklyn Life.
In High Life.
Mrs. Gramercy—Has she any child?
Mrs. Park—Why. no. She's rich enough to keep dogs—Town Topics.
YOUTHS' DEPARTMENT
THE TIMID KITTEN.
There was a little kitten once
Who was of dogs afraid;
And being by no means a dune,
His plans he boldly made.
He said: "It's only on the land.
That dogs run after me,
So I will buy a cat-boat, and
I'll sail away to sea.
"Out there from dogs I'll be secure,
And each night, ere I sleep.
To make assurance doubly sure,
A dog-watch I will keep."
He bought a cat-boat, hired a crew,
And one fine summer day
Triumphantly his flag he flew,
And gaily sailed away.
But in mid-ocean one midnight—
"Twas very, very dark—
The pilot screamed in sudden fright;
"I hear a passing bark"
"Oh, what is that?" the kitten said.
The pilot said: "I fear
An ocean greyhound's just ahead,
And drawing very near."
"Alack!" the kitten cried, "alack! This is no paltry pup. I am as well give up on my track— I may as well give up!" —Carolyn Wells, in St. Nicholas.
SAVED BY ELEPHANT.
Little Girl Is Rescued from Embrace of Ugly Bear by a Blow from His Trunk.
A traveling circus and menageria had come to town in the early morning, and the men had set up the tent in a big vacant lot, and were now at work getting things ready for the afternoon performance. A good many men and boys—and some little girls, too—were in the lot nearly all the forenoon, watching what was going on, but they were particularly interested in an elephant and a bear that were chained each to a stake out-
ELEPHANT DEFENDED HER.
side the tent and not very far apart. While they stood about looking at the beasts a girl eight or nine years of age came out of the tent, and, approaching the elephant, began to play with him. She would hold a wisp of straw out to him, and when he thrust his trunk toward it she would jerk it away and jump back out of his reach. Then she would run all around him, and he would try to touch her with his trunk, but always in a gentile way as if he enjoyed the sport as much as she did.
The people who were standing around looked at all this with starring eyes, as if they expected to see the little girl caught up and crushed to death by the great beast, but they found out later on that she was the daughter of one of the managers, who allowed her to play with the elephant whenever she pleased, as it was very fond of her, and seemed never so much delighted as when she was near it.
Meanwhile the big bear was watching them, and soon began to show signs of not liking their play. He was evidently in a bad humor, but the girl was so full of her fun with her friend the elephant that she paid no attention to the bear.
Presently, in jumping back to get out of the way of the elephant's trunk, she got within reach of the bear, and he seized her with his paw and would no doubt have killed her, but the elephant saw him, and struck him a blow with its trunk that laid him on the ground severely injured. Then there was great excitement; men yelled and boys and girls screamed, and a dozen circus men came running to see what was the matter. They found the little girl only slightly hurt, while the old elephant rocked himself to and fro in unmistakable delight over what he had done. D. B. Waggener, in Chicago Record-Herald.
New Definition of Furlough.
The word "furlough" occurred in a reading lesson of a primary grade in one of our public schools. The teacher asked: "Does any little boy or girl know the meaning of the word "furlough?" Whereupon one small hand was raised and shaken vigorously in the eagerness of the little urchin to display his knowledge, and when permitted by the teacher to do so, he arose, and with the greatest assurance said: "Furlough means a mule." Not a whit disturbed at the teacher's "Oh, no, it doesn't," the small boy confidently answered: "I have a book at home that says so." Then the teacher told him he might bring the book to school and show it to her. The next session he came armed with the book, and triumphantly showed her the picture of an American soldier bestride a mule, under which was printed: "Going home on his furlough."
THE PALLADIUM.
Entered at the postoffice at St. Louis Mo. as second-class matter.
Manager and Proprietor.
JOHN W. WHEELER, JR.,
General Collector and Solicitor.
MISS BEATRICE ROSS, Secretary.
2617 Lawton Avenue.
MISS KATE JOHNSON.....Editor.
WILLIAM D. McKOIN.....City Reporter.
MISS ANNA PARRAM.....Society Reporter.
JAMES HUSTON.....Religious Reporter.
J. M. CRAWFORD.....Sporting Reporter.
JAMES HAYES.....Chief Reporter.
Business matters pertaining to the
paper should be addressed to The
Palladium Office.
Communications for publication
must reach us not later than Wed-
nesday.
ADVERTISING RATES.
For one inch, one insertion.....$ 50
For one inch each subsequent insertion.....25
For two inches, three months.....6 00
For two inches, six months.....10 00
For two inches, nine months.....14 00
For two inches, twelve months.....20 00
Standing and transient notices per line.....10
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year.....$2.00
Six months.....1.00
Three months......60
Single copy......05
SEVEN POINTERS FOR THE READING AND ADVERTISING PUBLIC.
(1) THE ST. LOUIS PALLADIUM IS in its 20th year of regular publication.
(2) Never has missed an issue.
(3) No fake subscription list to "catch" honest advertisers.
(4) More bona fine subscribers than any other Negro paper in St. Louis or State.
(5) The ONLY Negro newspaper published in St. Louis as the organ of the Republican party.
(6) Because it is the official organ of Wright Cuney Political Club.
(7) Because it is feierless in denouncing crime regardless of consequences.
The Falladium is sold at the following places:
2617 Lawton avenue.
209 South 15th street.
1208 Wash street.
2652 Lucas avenue.
Charleston, Mo.
West Plains, Mo.
3104 State street, Chicago, Ill.
HOW IS THIS?
For the past two years as the Democrats have thrown out Republicans in the City Hall they are taken care of by the heads of the departments in the federal government. But when a negro man wants something they are told they must pass the civil service examination. The time is near at hand when we must speak out and ask our people to call a halt, and watch and see how the negro has been cast aside by the congressman and heads of the different departments of the federal government. We demand fair play. When we do start on this point we will call names and ask why we are thus treated? Mr. Bartholdt, our Congressman, and Mr. Bermann must answer this question.
The double hanging yesterday ought to be a lesson to the young negro of today. It seems nowdays that a number of negroes are living by their wits, and when wits fail, they resort to crime to get money to live without work.
Good Advice.
If you are troubled with kinky or curly hair use Ozonized Ox Marrow, it will make your hair straight, soft and beautiful. If your hair is falling out, Ozonized Ox Marrow will stop it. If you have dandruff and itching in the head, Ozonized Ox Marrow will give you instant relief, and make the hair grow. Ozonized Ox Marrow is half food that imparts to the hair a healthy life-like appearance so much desired. Sold over 40 years. Never fails. Warranted harmless. Send us 50 cents and we will ship you a bottle expresspaid. Address Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 76 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
Stop that cough. Go and get Pickett's Cough Drops.
Carrie Coffee of North St. Louis, shot Chick Ewing, a jockey, Tuesday.
Mrs. Nellie Furguson of Chicago, Ill., is visiting her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Berry of 4821 Page avenue.
Miss Bessie Moore, of 4209 Papin street, is in the best of health. She will soon step off in the matrimonial world. We know her to be a most worthy young lady.
Mr. Ben. Huston has been married for the past ten years, and last week he wanted another woman, so he married, and now he has two wives. Ben. is a man, but we think the law should look into this matter.
---
M. B.
J. W. WHEELER, Manager of the Palladium.
The manager of the Palladium wishes to thank the public for their general support to the Palladium since the 17th of September, 1898, to this time, May 9th, 1903. We have met with success after success—so much so that we have
We have been so busy this week in changing our paper that we did not have time to pick out the dead-heads, but next week you see them.
Here's what those who neglect the Palladium bills they owe are.
The names of all to whom that term will apply will appear in the space below:
We wish to call special attention to the continued stories which we will have published in our paper. We ask that you read all of them carefully. Let us know the result.
On the Transit street cars as we were going south from Cass avenue, as we got at Morgan street, two cars collided. Car No. 612, of Morgan street, and car No. 691 of Jefferson avenue. As we saw the cars would come together we jumped west from the cars as did several ladies. No damage. But on the Morgan street line one colored lady was thrown from the car. Really, it was a general shake-up and a scare.
If you wish to help the good cause along, go to old friend Jeff Smith, 1201 Morgan street, and get good drinks.
Remember Mr. John W. Wheeler, Jr., is a professional pianist. He plays high-class music and he takes high-class advertisements for the Palladium. When you help us you help a worthy young man, John W. Wheeler, Jr.
Miss Mintie A. Brown of 4309 Garfield avenue, is very siek and has been for several weeks. She wishes her many friends to visit her.
The worst thing in the world is for a man or woman to think that they are the whole show The Palladium man is on just the same.
Mrs. Josephine Goff of 4026 Lucky street, left last Saturday for Covington, Ky., to visit her brother who was reported dying. The brother died Sunday night. She will remain for several days.
Mrs. M. T. Rhodes of Brooklyn, Ill., is visiting Miss Graham of 4125 Fairfax avenue.
---
began the issuing of an 8-page paper—and, with continued success, we hope to be able to issue a daily paper the 1st of May, 1904, during the World's Fair. Yours for the race,
J. W. WHEELER,
Better known as the Palladium man.
Miss Mary Jamison, of Bedalia, Mo., was visiting relatives in this city, stopping a part of the time with her brother and a part of the time with her cousin, Miss Bessie Moore, of 4209 Papin street.
Little Miss Ruth Thomas has been reading the Palladium for several weeks. She was so much pleased with it she got her mother to subscribe for it for her at 1610 Glasgow avenue.
Mr. Louis Huggins, of 2132 Franklin avenue, is doing a good business in the second-hand furniture business. Don't fail to call and examine his goods.
Mrs. Arzella Wat on, of Bloomfield, Ill., spent several days in St. Louis during the dedication. She was accompanied by her little son. We was much surprised to hear of her husband's death.
Miss May Spann, the young daughter of Mrs. Spann, of 2722 Randolph street, will soon go to Denver, Colo., for her health.
Miss Roxie Brooks, of Mexico, Mo., is just from school and stopping with her aunt at 2841 Howard street.
[Name]
A. W. WASHINGTON, Reporter.
First Baptist Church Notes.
St. Louis, Mc., May 5, 1903.
The B. Y. P. U. of the First Baptist Church met on last Sunday, the 3d, in regular weekly meeting at 6 p. m. with Rev. W. H. Price presiding. After the Scripture reading, followed by a discussion, a literary programme was taken up, which was very interesting. Prof. W. H. Lighty, (white) President of the Self-Culture League, gave an interesting address, which was well received. A collection was taken up, Which amounted to $2.20. At 8 p. m. church services began by the choir, then Rev. E. C. Cole began his sermon, which was discussed in its various phases very logically. Mrs. John White, of 1618% Linden street, had her baby christened last Sunday at St. Elizabeth Church at 3 p. m.
A. W. WASHINGTON,
2011A Walnut street.
Order in time and save annoyance.
Reveribe Badges for Lodges, Temples, Royal Houses and Past Masters' Councils at the very low prices—50 cents, 60 cents, 75 cents and upWard, depending upon the quality desired quality is considered. Regalias of all kinds, worth $2 and upward, depending upon quality, Knight's Full Uniform at prices to suit the trade. Swords for Sentinels at $3.50 each. Metal Top Pieces, the most beautiful the order has ever had, and will last for ever at $4 a pair. These top pieces for supporters' staffs are capable of the highest polish and make a splendid display. We have the only first-class beautifully enameled button for U. B. F. and S. M. T. in the world. They are tricolored and in harmony with the ritualistic law. Fo one is ashamed to wear one, all who see them want them.
Rolled Golu Buttons.....75 cents
Solid Gold Buttons.....$1.25
Banners of the very latest design and finished workmanship can be procured by paying from $8 to as high a price as you desire. Banners are very necessary and every organization should have one.
Jewels for anp department of the order at 75 cents each and upward according to quality desired. All kinds of Paraphernalia furnished for initiation in every degree known to the order. Those desiring these requisites must on naming articles defined give sufficient proof that srid applicants are entitled to handle goods ordered. I am in a position to furnish anything desired on short notice.
My connection with the order for 22 years enables me to assist the membership in getting anything wanted. Six years National Grand Secretary and an officer of one kind or another since 1884 are evidences that I am reliable. Order before you need the goods. Send all orders with cash to F. W. GROSS, P. N. G.S., Victoria, Texas, U. S. A. Terms—All transactions absolutely cash or C. O. D. Orders must be accompanied by one-half cash, at least, but it is cheaper to send cash and save return charges. Special terms for large orders.
One of our watch charms would make a pleasing gift. Send for prices.
Buy badges and regalia before you need them.
A fine gold pin or button would be a nice holiday present.
Colored Convention.
The Second Annual Convention of the "Colored National Emigration and Commercial Association," is directed to meet June 24th, 1903, in Montgomery, Ala., and remain in session for three consecutive days. This Association, consisting of members in all parts of the United States, among other things has for its chief object the purchase of a Steamship for Emigration and Commercial purposes. They have already in hand nearly thirty thousand dollars, and propose to raise the balance by selling ship stock, and place the vessel upon the ocean for travel and commerce.
The members and friends of the organixation regard this the greatest project of the Negro since Emancipation, and that it is destined to accomplish more for his character and pocket than anything he has done. Persons not in harmony with the spirit and object of the Convention will not be present, while friends of the movement will be welcomed, and in some instances invited to take part. A dist.nguished United States Senator, whose name we withhold by his own request, will speak before the Convention, and others of national distinction will do the same. This call is made by order of the Executive Committee: Dr. W. H. Heard, President, Georgia. L. Howard Jones, Vice-President, O. N. B. Sterritt, D. D., South Carolina. W. H. Young, LL. D., Tennessee.
J. C. Whitaker, Texas.
Bishop L. H. Holsey, Director Gen.
Robert H. Duncan, Alabama.
Hon.W. A. Pledger, Solicitor.
Bishop H. M. Turner, Chancellor.
L. P. LEMON, Secretary. P. S.—For further information, address Dr. W. H. Heard, 149 Clark street, Atlanta, Ga. All persons attending this convention procure certificate from Railroad Agent which will entitle them to reduced rates. We publish the above article more as a favor than as an indication of approval of the object of the convention. Emigration to Africa by the Negro is only another of the multitudinous schemes in vogue to rid the United States of the ever-disturbing "Negro Question." The poor, deluded leaders have been led to believe that in the colonization of Africa lies the last resource for the saving of the American Negro.
For those whohes ancestors for two or more generations have been born and reared on American soil, to give way to foreigners whose only object in coming to this country is make money to better their condition upon their return to their native land, speaks very poor for the Negroe's perseverance. The settlement upon African soil only means a change of sovereigns—in other words, only becoming subjects to a foreign power. If the Negro cannot pave his way amidst the height of civilization, there is precious small hope for him where civilization is in the embryo.
A. F. and A. M. of Missouri and Its Jurisdiction.
Masonic Lodges.
GRAND LODGE OF MISSOURI.
OFFICERS.
A. R. Chinn, Grand Master, Glasgow, Mo.
E. W. Perkine, Deputy Grand Master, Trenton.
T. P. Mahammitt, Senior Grand
Warden, Omaha, Neb.
Warden, Ohanna, No.
J. C. Cobb, Grand Junior Warden,
Cape Girardeau.
R. T. Coles, Grand Treas., Kansas
City.
J. H. Pelham, Grand Sec'y., Hannibal,
Mo.
Prince Hall Lodge No. 1, St. Louis,
Mo., meets first Monday in each month.
All Masons in good standing are
invited, W. T. Dixon, W. M.; H. W. Lawless, Sec'y.
Lone Star Lodge No. 2, St. Louis,
Mo., meets second Monday in each
month. All Masons in good standing
are invited. R. W. Marshall, W. M.; Joseph A. Smith, Sec'y.
H. McGee Alexander Lodge No. 3.
John Casey, W. M.; Albert Hedgman,
Sec'y.
Onward Lodge No. 17, St. Louis,
Mo., meets the third Monday in each
month. P. Johnson, W. M.; J. W.
Grant, Sec'y.
J. Q. Johnson Lodge No. 30, meets
the first Thursday in each month. J.
L. Henderson, W. M.; J. G. Stevens,
Sec'y. 3948 Fairfax Ave.
Widows' Son Lodge No. 105, meets second Tuesday in each month. James Fleming, W. M.; J. T. Anderson Sec'y.
True Blue Lodge No. 107, meets the first Tuesday in each month. Aug. Barrow, W. M.; J. T. Anderson, Sec'y.
CHURCHES.
St. Paul's, A. M. E., Leffingwell and Lawton; Rev. D. P. Roberts, pastor.
St. Peter's, A. M. E., Elliott and Montgomery; Rev. James Madison pastor.
St. James, A. M. E., Pendleton and Ferdinand; Rev. W. C. Williams pastor.
Quinn's Chapel, A. M. E., Carondelet; Rev. J. A. Christen pastor.
A. M. E. ZION.
Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion, 2625
Morgan; Rev. E. D. W. Jones pastor.
St. John's A. M. E. Zion, 113 Eiler St.; Rev. R. P. Christian pastor.
Colored Methodist, 3066 Fairfax avenue; Rev. O. Heavlow, pastor.
Lexington Ave. A. M. E. Zion, 4214A
Lexington Ave; Rev. Donovan pastor.
M. E
Centennial M. E., Elliot and Washington; Gilliam.
BAPTIST.
Central Baptist, Twenty-third and Morgan Sts.
First Baptist, Fourteenth and Clark Ave.; Rev. E. C. Cole pastor.
Fifth Baptist, 4117 Papin St.
Pilgrim Baptist, Kossuth and Pans St.; S. P. Anderson pastor.
Antioch Baptist, 4223 Kennerly Ave.; Rev. Frank McKinney pastor.
Mt. Pleasant Baptist, foot Doc. St.
Pleasant Green Baptist, 711 N. Eleventh St.
Baptist Church, 110 S. Leonard Ave.; Rev. Perry pastor.
Chambers Street Baptist, Tenth and Chambers; Rev. Cox pastor.
Compton Hill Baptist, LaSalle St.
El Bethel Baptist church, 638 Athlone Ave.
Ruck's Church, Baptist 14th and Morgan; Rev. Rucks pastor.
Bethany, Presbyterian, Nineteenth and Wash Sts.; Rev. Washington, pastor.
All Saints, Episcopalian, 2135 Washington Ave.; C. M. C. Mason pastor.
Missionary Baptist True Reformers; J. Cohen pastor.
U.B.F.ANDS.M.T.
U.B.F.ANDS.M.T.
All hail! The 14th National Grand Session of the National Grand Lodge and 11th National Grand Camp of the United Brothes of Friendship and Sisters of Mysterious Ten will convene in their Triennial Grand Session at St. Louis, Mo., July 20-24, 1903. The Mayor of the city, Hon. Rolla Wells, will deliver the welcome address in behalf of the citizens of St. Louis, Mo., followed by S. T. Pettigrew, Grand Master of the State. Mrs. Katie M. Moore, Grand Princess of the State, will deliver the welcome address of the S. M. T. of the State, followed by Mrs. Jennie Irving, of the S. M. T. Programme—The Grand Banquet will be held Thursday evening, July 23, at Stole's Hall, 13th and Biddle streets. The admission to banquet will be $1.00 per person.
The Picnic and Parade will be held Frida/, July 24, at Ofenstein's Grove. Any car line will take parties to the grove.
Competitive Drill will take place at 2:00 p. m.—Three Prizes—1st, $100; 2d, $50; 3d, $25.
Installation of Officers will take place at night.
J. H. Bell, Grand Marshal of the day.
L. W. Vinegar, Assistant Grand Marshal.
Board, $1.00 per day.
Admission to Park, 25c.; children,
16c.
The Great Western Band has been engaged to discourse their sweet strains.
Transportation reduced on all railroads.
DAVID UBAND, Ch.,
6011 Pennsylvania avenue.
ELLA LANE, Sec.,
1234 Gay street.
Mr. Thomas McIntosh and Miss Maggie Townsend were married a few days ago. They live at 4038 Evans avenue.
Mrs. Jennie Hunter of 2733 Laclede avenue, died Wednesday and was buried Friday. She was a member of Relief Court. G. A. R.
$4 to $8 a day guaranteed to every peron sending their name and address to Scott Remedy Co., P. O. Box 570, Louisville, Ky. Write at once. MRS. L. CLARK'S
Hair Dressing Parlor!
She treats the scalp, stops the hair from falling out. Best of attention is given to all ladies' work.
2115 Lucas Ave., St, Louis, Mo.
"Follow the Flag."
Banner Route
WABASH
To the Great Gateways
Kansas City,
Chicago,
Omaha,
Toledo &
Buffalo.
Through sleepers to New
York and the East. Magnificent Equipment and
Train Service.
Ticket Office,
Eigth and Olive streets.
MISSOURI
PACIFIC
RAILWAY
Farms of
MISSOURI,
The Broad Corn and Wheat Fields and Thriving of
KANSAS,
The Fertile River Valleys, Trade Centers and
Rolling Prairies of
NEBRASKA,
The Grand, Picturesque and Enchanting Scenery,
and t.e. Famous Mining Districts of
COLORADO,
The Agriculture and Timber
Lands, and Famous Hot Springs of
ARKANSAS,
The Sugar Plantations and Immense Rice
Fields of
LOUISIANA,
The Cotton and Grain Fields the Battle Ranges
and Winter Reserves of
TEXAS,
Historical and Scenic
OLD AND NEW MEXICO,
And forms with its Connections the Popular
Winter Route to
CALIFORNIA
For descriptive and illustrated pamphlets of
any of the above States, address Companies'
Agents, or
H. C. TOWNSEND,
General Passenger and Ticket Agent.
ST. LOUIS.
DR. G. H. ANDERSON,
DENTIST,
1407 Market Street,
Hours 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ST. LOUIS.
Phone Kinlock C414, Bell Main 584.
Spring Ave. Car. O'Fallon Park Car.
MR. A. L. LEE,
Representing the
PALACE LAUNDRY,
guarantees satisfaction and
prompt service. The best
Collar and Cuff work in the
city. Please address all communications to 3712 Sullivan avenue.
[Name]
Stationary Firemen.
L. W. VINEGAR, Organizer,
No. 122. I. B. S. Firemen meet every
1st and 4th Thursday in each month at
Tobin's Hall.
Office—806 North 14th Street.
Telephone—Kinloch C-397.
THEO. H. TEMPEL,
Dealer in
Staple and Fancy
GROCERIES,
2601 Market Street,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
California Canned Goods a Specialty.
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OZONO AND CEDROLINE — The new, non-failing and infallible combined treatment for the human Hair, OZONO and CEDROLINE, used by the Hair length, lustre, life, and beauty. One year are the directors of the BOSTON CHEMICAL CO., with the sole purpose and intention to produce an absolutely perfect and reliable treatment for the Hair, appropriated the noted chemists were secured, who, after twelve months of investigation and costly experiments, have successfully formulated a treatment so potent and not toxic that its immediate effect upon the Hair border upon the miraculous. This treatment, with the confidence, as it is certain to produce results most gratifying, causing the Hair to grow long and luxuriant, straight, and of a most delicate and plicable texture, making it easy to dress the Hair in any style desired. It causes the Hair to grow out on all bald spots, scant partings, thin places, and bare temples. It is sure to prevent the Hair from falling, breaking off, and splitting. The noted chemists' treatment is now the most wonderful remedy for the Hair in the whole wide world.
Magnetic Comb and Brushes, Perfumes, Skin Food, Electrical Skin Refiner. The King of All Hair Tonics.
Ball at the office of the Palladium. All goods guaranteed. No more
otitrons. No freezing but the Ozono Comb and Brush does the work.
All and be convinced. Send Postal Card and we will fill your order
Agent for all goods of the Boston Chemical Co.
Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco.
Meat and Vegetable Market.
1119 and 1121 Morgan Street,
St. Louis, Mo.
S. P. PERKINS,
Tennessee Shaving Parlor.
Everything Neat and
Clean and Up-to-date
1326 Morgan Street,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Remember the
OCIAL DEAR C
Richard Kent, General Manager.
Prof. Joe Marshall Musical Direct.
George Kenzie, President.
James Crawford, Pr
Yours in F. C. and B.
SEE
Maurer Meat and Provision
CASH MARKETS:
1402 MARKET ST.EET.
438. Fourteenth Street. Branch: 3204 La
TELEPHONES:
TELEPHON
Mate 2103-A. KINLOCH, D-25 BELL, Lindell 1004-A KI
2606 FRANKLIN AVENUE. KINLOCH C
Remember the
DEAR CLUB!
Agent, General Manager.
Marshall Musical Director.
President.
James Crawford, Proprietor.
Pers in F. C. and B.
SEE
Seat and Provision Co.
FISH MARKETS:
MARKET ST×EET.
Street. Branch: 3204 Laclede Ave.
TELEPHONES:
TOCH, D-25 BELL, Lindell 1004-A KINLOCH D-1022
LIN AVENUE, KINLOCH C 720.
OCIAL DEAR CLUB!
Richard Kent, General Manager. Prof. Joe Marshall Musical Director. George Kenzie, President. James Crawford, Proprietor. Yours in F. C. and B.
Maurer Meat and Provision Co.
CASH MARKETS:
1402 MARKET ST.EET.
358. Fourteenth Street. Branch: 3204 Lacede Ave.
TELEPHONES: TELEPHONES:
Mn. 2103-A KINLOCH, D-25 BELL, Lindell 1004-A KINLOCH D-1022
2606 FRANKLIN AVENUE. KINLOCH C 720.
8 and 10 South Jefferson Ave.
8 and 10 South Jefferson Ave.
American Mutual Aid Assoc.
PERCY STONE, General Manager
724 and 725 Wainwright Bldg., St. L.
used to do business in Missouri, Indiana,
Kentucky and Mississippi.
likely benefits for sickness and acciden
efits for death.
use of surgeon or physician to all
Write for circular.
Mutual Aid Association...
ONE, General Manager.
Wainwright Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.
Press in Missouri, Indiana, Arkansas,
Rocky and Mississippi.
For sickness and accident. Benefits for death.
On or physician to all members.
Write for circular.
American Mutual Aid Associati...
PERCY STONE, General Manager.
724 and 725 Wainwright Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.
used to do business in Missouri, Indiana, Arkansas,
Kentucky and Mississippi.
likely benefits for sickness and accident. Benefits for death.
use of surgeon or physician to all members.
Write for circular.
AGEN
Lawn Sw
Chairs,
Ironing
$5
AGENTS WANTED
Lawn Swings and Settees, Hammock
Chairs, Camp Chairs and Stools,
Ironing Tables, Wash Benches, Etc.
Agents easily make
$5 TO $10 PER DAY.
Will furnish samples at reduced prices to those desiring agency. Exclusive territory given. Address,
STUDY MEDICINE AND PHARMACY
Louisville National Medical
FIFTEENTH YEAR
Recognized by all State Boards. All buildings are
the School, and have been entirely remodeled with
Laboratories and Hospital.
Nearly two yr Graduates in various parts of the count,
them them a lucrative practice.
School of Medicine. Four years of six month
continues throughout the year. Each session is divi-
t of three months each. Attendance upon any two
student to credit for one year's attendance.
Terms: January, April, July and October. Exam
of each term. Students may enter at beginning of any
session to indicate two terms. Two years, six
session is divided into three months each.
For further information address
BODY MEDICINE AND PHARMACY AT THE
Proville National Medical College
FIFTEENTH YEAR.
nized by all State Boards. All buildings are the property of
e.l. and have been entirely remodeled with fully equipped
sites and Hospital.
two Graduates in various parts of the country, every one of
a lucrative practice.
col of Medicine. Four years of six months each. Session
throughout the year. Each session is divided into four
three months each. Attendance upon any two terms entitles
credit for one year's attendance.
as January, April, July and October. Examinations at end
term. Students may enter at beginning of any term.
of Pharmacy. Two years, six months each
divided into two terms of three months each.
rather informative to college address.
STUDY MEDICINE AND PHARMACY AT THE Louisville National Medical College FIFTEENTH YEAR.
Recognized by all State Boards. All buildings are the property of the School, and have been entirely remodeled with fully equipped Laboratories and Hospital. Nearly 100 Graduates in various parts of the country, every one of them enjoying a lucrative practice. School of Medicine, Fouryears of six months each. Session continues until the final session is divided into four terms of three months each. Attendance upon any two terms entitles student to credit for one year's attendance.
W. A. BURNEY, M. D., Dean, Louisville, Ky.
---
GEO. W. F. BULLOCK,
LADY BARBER
AND TONSORIALIST,
20 Franklin Avenue, St. Louis.
WALTER S. FARRINGTON.
Walter S. Farrington is doing a great
inease on Leonard and Channing
inease as a Veterinary Dentist, Clip-
ing, Braking and Styling Horses. He
can expert at his business. Express
Coal business on Channing avenue
between Olive and Locust streets. All
users are promptly attended to. 308
on Leonard avenue.
The most generous offer ever made by any firm on earth. Cut out this advertisement, and send to us, with only $1.50, and immediately upon receipt of same, we will send to you a full and complete treatment, consisting of two extra large boxed sets of Kairi and Kairi Tonics, worth $2.00; also two large boxed sets of BOLINE, the king of All Hair Tonics, worth $2.00; and two large package of our latest discovery, POWDERD EGG SHAMPOO, worth $50; also one bar of our celebrated and renowned PURITY SCALP SOAP, worth $25; and one 1-pair package of ANTI-ODOR, the most wonderful toilet specialty of the day, worth $25. This grand collection, worth in all $5.00, will be sent on request, or on our name and address, with full, plain, and com-mon ordered, together with our beautiful Souvenir Catalogue, justly called the toilet educator of the day.
RESULT OF 5 WEEKS.
NOTE.—To all who have ever bought OZONO we will send this great bargain and where you bought it. This liberal offer is made with the object of securing good agents, who can肩肩 coin money savings our preparations. No matter to-day, Address BOSTON CHEMICAL CO. 340 E. Broad St. Richmond, Va.
CHAS.H.WHITE
Wholesale Deal
Bourbon and Rye
Importer of Fine Wines, Gins, Brandi
Sole Owner Blue W
Kinloch, D-1
2654-56 Frank
HARRY PENN, Night—MIXERS—
Bourbon and Rye Whiskies
Importer of Fine Wines, Gins, Brandies, Kuemmels and Cordials.
Sole Owner Blue Wing Whiskey.
Kinioch, D-162.
2654-56 Franklin Avenue.
HARRY PENN, Night-MIXERS-JOHN H. CLARK, Day.
ROSEBUD BAR
2220-2222 Market Street,
Phone—Kinloch D-855.
St. Louis, Mo.
Pool Room in Connection.
TOM TURPIN, Prop.
he 200 Ba
200 Bar,
The 200
The 200 Bar,
The 200 Bar,
1322 Market St.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars
best of accommodation.
E. J. BRUNER and D. G. HOGAN, Pro
Fine Wines Imported
and Liquors. Domest
Vines, Liquors and Cigars best of accommodation. UNER and D. G. HOGAN, Pro
Liquors and Cigars with the of accommodation. and D. G. HOGAN, Proprietors.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars with the best of accommodation. E. J. BRUNER and D. G. HOGAN, Proprietors.
DYE'S
Buffet and P
WM. P. DYE, Pro
2801-3 Manchester Ave.,
Telephone—Kinloo
THE C
HUGH B. WHITE,
SALOON and BILI
At 1911 Mar
(Opposite Union
Choice Wines, Liquors, Gigars,
Billiard R
Remember the Gem
THE "OWL"
33 South 20th
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigar
Everything Genuine.
Phone, Kinloo
WILLIAM JAMES and MR. R. SAU
CHARLEY HARRIS
Fet and Pool Ro
WM. P. DYE, Proprietor.
Manchester Ave., St. L.
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812.
THE GEMS
THUGH B. WHITE, Proprietor C.
N and BILLIARD
At 1911 Market St
(Opposite Union Station)
Wines, Liquors, Cigars, and the best
Billiard Room.
Remember the Gem, 1911 Market
E "OWL" SALO
33 South 20th Street.
Vines, Liquors, Cigars and Bottle
thing Genuine.
Remember the
Phone, Kinloch C-43.
AMES and MR. R. SAUNDERS,
CHARLEY HARRIS, Proprietor.
and Pool Room,
WM. P. DYE, Proprietor.
Ever Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812.
NE GEM.
R. WHITE, Proprietor of
BILLIARD HALL
1911 Market St.
(Opposite Union Station)
Iquors, Gigars, and the best up-to-date
Billiard Room.
Over the Gem, 1911 Market.
OWL” SALOON,
South 20th Street.
Iquors, Cigars and Bottled Beer
Quine.
Remember the Place.
Phone, Kinloch C-43.
MR. R. SAUNDERS, - - - Managers
ERLEY HARRIS, Proprietor.
Buffet and Pool Room,
WM. P. DYE, Proprietor.
2801-3 Manchester Ave.,
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812.
St. Louis, Mo.
HUGH B. WHITE, Proprietor of
At 1911 Market St. (Opposite Union Station) Choica Wines, Liquors, Gigars, and the best up-to-date. Billiard Room. Remember the Gem, 1911 Market.
THE "OWL" SALOON,
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Bottled Beer. Everything Genuine. Remember the Place.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR MEN ONLY.
BILLIA
EVERYTHING STRICTLY
The Brunswick
G. W. HOLT, P
1925 Market Street
Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco
BILLIARD ROOMS IN C
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
Brunswick Sal
G. W. HOLT, Proprietor.
5 Market Street, (Near Uni
Liquors, Cigars and Tobaccos.
BILLIARD ROOMS IN CONNECTION
HING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
Bunswick Saloon,
. HOLT, Proprietor.
Market Street, (Near Union Station),
Gars and Tobaccos. ST. LOUIS.
BILLIARD ROOMS IN CONNECTION.
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
The Brunswick Saloon,
1925 Market Street, (Near Union Station), Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Tobaccos. ST. LOUIS.
The Greeley Saloon.
Fine Wines, Liquors and
Excursionists give us a call. Headqu
Ask for it, you'll get it
1201 Morgan St.,
Jae. Williamis, MIXERS Cha
H, Propr.
GEO. FOU
Louis Dairy
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Excursionists give us a call. Headquarters for sports.
Ask for it, you'll get it.
1201 Morgan St., ST. LOUIS, MO.
Jae. Williams, MIXERS Chas. St. Clair.
GEO. FOUNTAIN, Mgr.
Excursionists give us a call. Headquarters for sports. Aek for it, you'll get it.
St. Louis Delivers exclusively in Bottle 2008 Pine
St. Louis Dairy Co.
St. Louis Dairy Co.
Delivers exclusively in Bottles to the family trade 2008 Pine Street.
JEFF. SMITH, Propr.
Imported and Domestic Cigars.
3 MONTHS USE
THE HILL SALOON.
James Collins, Proprietor.
2807 Manchester Ave.
CHOICE WINES,
Whiskies,
Tobacco and Cigars.
Williams & Head, Props.
Pink Coat Bar.
Fine Wines, Liquors and
Cigars.
POOL ROOM.
S. E. Cor. 22d and Market Streets,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
THE JOCKEY CLUB.
WM. DOVER, Proprietor.
3924 Sophia Avenue,
Cor. Margaretta, St. Louis.
Choice Wines Liquors and Cigars.
H. L. FRANKLIN
THE
O. K. SALOON
4000 Papin St.
St. Louis, - - - Missouri.
Choice Wines, Liquors,
Cigars and Tobaccos.
$4 to $8 a day guaranteed to every person sending their name and address to Scott Remedy Co., P. O. Box 570, Louisville, Ky. Write at once.
2609 Pine Street.
Millinery.
Up-to-date Hats.
Trimmings and all material in that line.
DR. S. B. BELL,
FIRST-CLASS
Barber Shop and Bath,
In the True Reform Hall.
First-class Barbers.
S. W. Corner Pine Street and Jeffer-son Avenue.
IF YOU BUY
FURNITURE.
AT Thuner's
ITS GOOD.
2122-24-26 South Broadway
Jacob B. Rosenblatt,
Merchant Tailor,
2735 Franklin Ave.,
Sam, the Tailor,
is the place to get your
Spring Suits,
Made to order. One of the Best
204 North 14th Street.
Sexton & Maxwell,
First-class Photographers
1407 Market St.
WM. A. OVERTON,
Plumbing and Gas Fitting
Furnaces, Stoves and Ranges Repaired
and put up. Expressing and Moving.
Phone Kin. D-2137. 1124 N. Sarah St.
FARMER'S HAIR TONIC.
FARMER'S HAIR TONIC.
Warranted to make the hair grow. Stops falling hair.
Farmer's Hair Cream, an indispensable hair dressing. Cures Dandruff.
Mrs. Lulu Farmer,
Manufacturer and Sole Proprietor,
2724 Morgan Street.
Miss Mary Graham.
of 4121 Fairfax avenue, has opened a Hair Dressing Parlor. She will shampoo the hair for 15c and press the hair for 25c. Call and if not write her and she will go to any part of the city.
Louis Huggins
Pays the highest price for all kinds of Household Furnishing Goods, Carpets and Stoves, in large and small lots. Feathers a specialty. Furniture taken in exchange for moving at 2132 Franklin avenue. Kinloch Phone, 1489 D.
THE TRUE REFORMER CAFE.
Short orders and regular meals are served between the hours of 6 a.m. and 11 p. m. We have also in connection with this an Ice Cream Parlor, which will excel any in St. Louis. H. B. Richardson, Manager.
The True Reformer Shaving Parlor and Bath Rooms.
The True Reformer Shaving Parlor is the most complete barber shop and bath house in St. Louis for colored. We have both hot, cold and vapor baths. J. W. Alphson, Mgr.
Miss Anna L. Cohen. Miss Edith Floyd. 2718 Wash Street.
COLONIZATION OF THE SOUTHWEST.
Aid Requested and Inducements Offered by the Iron Mountain Route.
It is the object of the management of the Iron Mountain Route to encourage and aid in every way possible, the development of the agricultural, mineral and industrial resources of the great Southwest. To accomplish this purpose, the assistance and co-operation of every farmer, miner, merchant and professional man in that section is earnestly requested.
An increase in production in your section means a corresponding increase in wealth and a larger distribution of capital in the community. It means increased prosperity to all. The only way to obtain this increased production is to invite homeseekers and homemakers to come and settle in your section. Once lay before them in a clear and intelligent manner the many advantages of the Southwestern States and they will come. Show them United States Government statistics relative to the production of crops and minerals in that section, also statistics relative to the unparalleled climatic conditions which prevail year in and year out, thus insuring uniform crops, and they will be eager to accept your invitations.
Let every one interested send in the names and addresses of prospective settlers and the Iron Mountain Route will attend to them. Descriptive and illustrated literature will be sent them of Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas, and very low rates of transportation offered to them to come and see for themselves.
We are bending every effort to colonize the Southwest with a desirable class of settlers. It is to your interest to co-operate with us.
For further information, call on nearest agent of the company, or address H. C. 10WNSEND.
Gen. Pass. and Ticket Agent,
St. Louis, Mo.
The Rosebud Bar, 2220 Market street,
Tom Turpin, proprietor, can "dress you up" with all that makes a man lively—good beer and whiskey.
We have been looking for it. Holt's Saloon, 1925 Market street. Something new.
Then we see the Pink Coat Bar, Twenty-second and Market streets. Williams and Head will do you up fine.
Passing to Chas. Harris, 33 South Twentieth street. He will attend to you in first-class style. Good beer and whiskey.
A fine place of resort is 1911 Market street, where you can get either an "eye-opener" or a "night-cap." Hugh B. White, Proprietor.
REMOVED.
Mr. Sanford Warfield, who formerly owned a Barber Shop at 803 North Jefferson avenue, is now at 729 Beaumont street. Give him a call. First-class work in the barber line.
WOMAN INDI
HOME
MODERN SOCIETY WOMEN
What Enchantment, Is Often Asked, Is It That Keeps Them Young and Truly Charming?
There were seven wonders of ancient history. There are seven times seven in our own times, but the most wonderful of all is the society woman, ever young, ever beautiful, ever graceful, charming, fascinating, and a marvel to all beholders. She does not grow old, she never dies. She never loses her tact, her grace, her beauty. Like Tennyson's book she may say: "For men may come and men may go, But I go on forever." The doctors throw up their hands. They cannot solve the riddle. The beauty specialists shake their heads in silent wonder. The modern society woman laughs scorn to the ravages of time which lays its fingers so heavily upon all the rest of us more common clay. Ponce de Leon hunted for years for the fountain of youth and died in despair because
MRS. WILLIAM ASTOR.
he could not find it. But the society woman has discovered it.
In every city can be found these beautiful society women who are such a marvel to every one known knows them or even hears of them. In Chicago, with its fresh crop of blushing buds at the beginning of each and every social season and all of its lovely women who have advanced from the debutante state into ripcr and fuller charms, there is no one yet, debutante, young matron, or the belle of many social seasons, who occupies the place held by Mrs. Palmer.
One needs to be told many times that Mrs. Palmer is over 60 to believe that such a thing is true. Mrs. Palmer has yielded to time in only one particular; her hair is snow white. But snow-white hair is becoming to Mrs. Palmer. It goes well with black velvet and point lace. People are not asking themselves when Mrs. Palmer will yield up her place as a social leader. They are wondering, indeed, when she will marry again, for she is a widow. Her beauty is the talk of the Windy City. Only a year or two ago her picture was published in a magazine as one of America's "leading beauties." A "beauty of 60" would be a decided novelty—outside of society pale. Mrs. Palmer knows how to dress as does no other woman in Chicago.
The woman who is the tyrant queen of American society to-day is Mrs. Astor, who is 73 years old. Nobody who has seen her sitting in a box at the opera, straight, lithe, beautiful, glittering, would suspect it. Yet the records say it is true. She is at the zenith of her social reign at this moment. So far is she from gray hairs and caps that her gowns and hats are considered the proper models for all the women of her set, young or old. When she wears a tiara, tiaras become the rage; when she wears green, green is the mode. Her frocks are cat like those of a woman of 27, yet she does not look out of place in them. Her hair is dressed in the modern fashion of pompadour and twist, just as the young matron or the slip of a boarding school girl dresses hers, for there is no age limit in the gowning and grooming of the society woman. Other women must adopt smooth locks and chin bonnets after 50. The society woman would look utterly and furlish in them. The wave and the curl are still hers to command at 100 if she will. In the coal black tresses above Mrs. Astor's brow there is not one thread of gray. The society woman becomes gray only when it is becoming or smart. Mrs. Astor's chief charis is her smile. The youthful light in her eyes is one of her attractions, constantly quoted by society writers. Dare anyone suggest false teeth and spectacles? That would be ridiculous. The society woman flourishes without them. Today Mrs. Astor's life is fuller, more active, gayer than that of the average woman of 25. To be invited to one of her balls is to be socially "made." Her power is fifty times what it was fifty years ago. Her manner, her grace of movement, poise of head; her charities, her fetes, her comings and goings and doings are all the constant subjects of public comment. She is spoken of as "interesting." "charming," "clever;" but the person who might call her "a dear old thing" would be heard with shocked surprise and amusement. Society would scarcely comprehend him.
SCIENCE OF PACXING.
Very Few Women Are Familiar with It, Although It Is a Comparatively Easy Task.
Before commencing the actual packing of a trunk it is a very good plan to collect in one room and in plain view everything that is to be placed in the trunk. You will then see exactly what you have to find accommodation for, and nothing will be forgotten.
Something soft and flat should pave the trunk—a warm petticoat, which you may or may not require, is suitable for this purpose. On this anything flat and heavy should be laid, remembering that only necessaries should be taken if weight is a consideration. The writing case also occupies this layer, and any small spaces can be filled up with rolled stockings and other small objects.
The boots and shoes, each in a holland bag, may come next, and form a layer of their own, which can be shared with the brush and comb and sponge bag.
Then linen and woolen underwear, between which any jewelry you may be taking can be placed; also your hand glass, scent bottles, or anything else of a breakable nature.
The dress skirts come next, and should be folded at the hips, so as to get as much length as they can. Do not turn them inside out. Jackets and capes follow, the former lying flat on their backs, with the sleeves laid across their fronts. Capes should be spread out as much as possible.
The tray is reserved for hats, dress bodices and skirts, and light, small things, such as veils and neckties. The bodices will repay any trouble spent upon them in the way of stuffing with crumpled paper by emerging uncrushed at the end of the journey.
Over all the things in the tray a soft towel should be spread.
Long sash ends, if attached to the bodices, should be rolled up, and bow-loops ought to be stuffed with balls of paper.
Gloves are laid flat.
If the hats are trimmed with upstanding feathers it is better to take them out and let them travel flat.
Veils can be rolled and collars packed inside of hat crowns.
Do not attempt to squeeze your things into a trunk too small for them; but, on the other hand, the trunk should not be too roomy, or the contents will shake about and run great risk of damage.—Chicago American.
MRS. JEFFERSON DAVIS.
Widow of Confederate President Lives in a Modest Way in a New York Family Hotel.
Mrs. Jefferson Davis, the widow of the late leader of the southern confederacy, is living in a little world of her own. She has taken up her residence in New York and for economic reasons will probably spend the remainder of her days there. She has an apartment in the old Hotel Gerard, in West Forty-fourth street, and lives on the fourteenth floor. Her windows overlook the surrounding roofs, and only on few occasions does she ever leave her rooms. She walks with difficulty and does not have to visit, as her friends pay court to her as if she were a royal personage. Mrs. Davis uses a tall cane as people did 100 years ago, and the head is of tortoise shell and gold. She has as a companion a sweet-faced southern woman who is always with her. On Wednesday afternoons the famous woman sits in a
MRS. JEFFERSON DAVIS.
high-backed chair that came from Beauvoir, the Davis homestead, and then she receives the long file of admiring women who call. These are notable gatherings and there are as many northerners as women from south of the Mason and Dixon line.
On these occasions Mrs. Davis wears stiff black silk, with old irate at her throat, and despite her years her white hair is abundant and glistens brilliantly in the afternoon light. The companion serves tea and Mrs. Davis, who is a noted conversationist, holds the attention of everyone without an effort. Her mind is remarkably alert and she keeps abreast of the topics of the day. In her interesting rooms nothing is so engrossing as the portrait of Miss Winnie Davis, her daughter. It is an excellent likeness and the former child of the confederacy is depicted wearing the royal robes of the queen of Mardi Gras. The picture is surrounded by incandescent bulbs, and before this portrait the mother spends much of her time gazing and thinking. In the portrait Miss Davis is smiling and it is the same expression that endeared her to people when she was alive. Mrs. Davis' other daughter, Mrs. J. A. Hays, is in the west, but she visits New York frequently.
EMPHASIZING THE GOOD.
Little Denunciation in the Teaching of Jesus as Recorded in the New Testament.
It is striking to note how little of denunciation there is in the teaching of Jesus, says the Baptist Union. It is true that when occasions demanded it, He did not spare in sharp denunciation; but as a general thing He held up the better side of things, and in their contrast with the devil the good always appeared to better advantage. There are too many teachers dealing in invective; they are ever scolding something or somebody; and the good they do is reduced to the minimum. Some notable missionaries were discussing the question of condemning heathen idolatry; of the habit of some missionaries in seeking the points of disagreement, instead of reaching for a meeting place where the heathen and the missionary could touch hearts. One of the speakers, Bishop Thoburn, said: "My boys have learned to lay emphasis on the love of Christ, and let idol destruction take care of itself." If his "boys" have learned that secret, they have learned the secret of soul winning. And it may be added that that is not a secret for missionaries only, but for those who work among the ungodly in this enlightened land. There must needs be condemnation of sin; one must cry aloud, and spare not; but when denunciation is the staple article of the preacher of the Gospel, he has almost forgotten that his message is the "good tidings" of the Christ who came with a heart full of love for the lost. The point of contact is heart interest, not fierce denunciation, with most people in this unhappy world. Emphasize the good; do not be faithless in condemning sin; but be faithful in telling forth the love of the Christ. Emphasize the good!
WRITE IT ON TEE SKY.
A Pure Life Defies the Attempts of the Blackmailers of Character.
The story is told of a man who sent word to Mr. Spurgeon saying that if he did not hear from him in a tangible way within a few days he would "expose" him, intimating that there were some things in the life of the great preacher which had better be kept under. But the true man sent back this short word: "Write it on the sky." The fact was that he had nothing to fear; his life had been open before men from the beginning, and there was nothing to be concealed. It is needless to say that he never heard of the blackmailer, who expected to catch the preacher unawares, and not only get some money out of him, but also make him confess that there were some things in his life which were not what they should have been. But he got after the wrong man. The truest protection against blackmail is innocence. It was Emerson who said: "If thou wouldst not be known to do anything never do it!" The man who ever walks in the light will not fear the works of darkness. They cannot harm him. It is the man who walks in the night who is liable to be attacked by the dwellers in the night. Keep in the daylight; have nothing to do with "shady" things. The night is not only dark, but it contains foes that one cannot see; yet they creep up behind one and strike—and the daydawn shows not only the work of a demon, but the life of a man who was near enough to the demon to be stricken. One need not always live in the blaze of the public eye; in a real sense his own life is none of the public's business. Yet he need have no fear of the public eye if his private life is lived in the daylight. Here is the strong sense of the philosopher repeated: "If thou wouldst not be known to do anything, never do it!"—Baptist Union.
GEMS OF THOUGHT
Life is but the memories of yesterday, the duties of to-day and the anticipations of to-morrow.
A man who does not know how to learn from his mistakes turns the best school-master out of his life.—Henry Ward Beecher.
We are each of us individual color screens, and our characters are known by what we absorb or eliminate, and by what we receive and reflect.—Elizabeth S. McClure.
The late Maltbie D. Babcock said, "You are not responsible for the disposition you were born with, but you are responsible for the disposition you die with."
Be thankful for the darkness into which you have been led. If the way to the light that never shall go out must lie through darkness, be thankful for the darkness.—Phillips Brooks.
We are not ashamed to go to others for bodily healings; why this reluctance or hesitation to go out of ourselves and beyond ourselves for spiritual healings? No sick man apologizes for going to the physician.—Joseph Parker.
When a man says that life isn't worth living, it is because he himself, has taken all the worth out of it. Life is worth living or not according to how a man lives. The higher ideals one has the more worth while it is to live.—Well Spring.
We believe that true religion speaks in actions more than in words, and manifests itself chiefly in the common temper and life—in giving up the passions to God's authority, in inflexible uprightness and truth, in active and modest charity, in candid judgment, and in patience under trials and difficulties.—Channing.
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Deer Destroying Watermelons.
A remarkable complaint has been nled with the territorial game warden. For two years the shooting of deer has been absolutely prohibited in the territory, and the animals have become very plentiful. Farmers living near Carney, who are raising watermelons, complain that the herds of the deer come every night to their patches and eat all the ripe melons. They are forbidden to shoot or capture them, and demand from the game wardens protection for their crops.—Guthrie (Okla.) Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Wettest Place on Earth.
Cherrapunji, in Assam, northeast of Calcutta, has the reputation of being the wettest place on the earth, the average annual rainfall being 493.15 inches, while it has the record of one month in which 147.17 inches fell. This year it seems to beat all previous records, 267.84 inches of rain having fallen between January 1 and the middle of June, five months and a half, while 73.79 inches, over six feet of water, fell in a single week.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
Extraordinary Forest.
The most extraordinary forest in the world was discovered by Dr. Welwitsch, and occupies a tableland some six miles in width, near the west coast of Africa. The peculiarity of the trees is that, though their trunks are as much as four feet in diameter, they attain the height only of a foot. No tree bears more than two leaves, and these attain a length of six and a breadth of two feet.-Cincinnati Enquirer.
Youthful Dagger Wielders.
The art of self-defense is inculcated early among some of the wilder tribes of the Caucasus, who instruct their children, as soon as they can walk, in the use of the dagger. First, the little ones are taught to stab water without making a splash, and, in the course of time, incessant practice gives them an extraordinary command over the weapon.—N. Y. Sun.
The Cornfed Philosopher.
"My only objections to the chainless wheel and the horseless carriage is their responsibility for such an awful lot of pointless jokes," was the remark of the Cornfed Philosopher at the close of the grocery symposium. — Indianapolis Journal.
A Broken Engagement.
He—The engagement of my friend Jack and his girl is at an end.
She—Oh, what a pity! What was the cause?
"Why, they were married privately yesterday."—Philadelphia North American.
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Spend to earn rather than earn to spend.
-N. Y. Observer.
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received sample of Doan's Pills
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ol Gjrfeans and return at above rate,
inted for return to May 24,with privilege
fPesesion to dune 15, 1808, Asie your
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CONES an aS
SYMPATHY STRIKE,
BY ANNIE HAMILTON DONNELL,
“Not today. OBIS
Ta ae ier saris os par ear uot deka 16 de tomcat
thing a single speck, it helped your cour
age, to put it off
“To-day,” Timothy said, firmly. There
was no hint of relenting in his voice. “J
guess we're not goin’ to wait till Cynthy
sta-arves, are we, ‘Thaddeus Keith? Do
you know what she had for dinner toxlay?”
“Muffins,” murmured little Tad, shame
facedly. “Dry. "Phout any butter on.”
“Lwo,” added ‘imothy, briefly. “Yoc
wouldn't like two dry, "thout-any-butter
muffins for your dinner, would you?”
“No—oh, no!” murmured little ‘Tad,
‘Then there was silence. Both boys were
remembering their own lunch. » Tad
smacked his “mind lips” over the crisp:
brown hermits and the little round saucer
pie—there was almost always a saucer pie
in little Tad’s lunch basket. Timothy had
great, beautiful wedges of pie in his, and
you could see the plums along the edges of
the wedge. Then Timmie's doughnuts!
‘Yad’s mouth—his “mind mouth”—watered
at the thought of them. His doughnuts
were good, but Timmie’s!—Timmie anv he
played swap games at dinner and ate each
other’s lunches sometimes.
“She ate ‘em both up while I was settin’
my table,” whispered little Tad solemnly,
remembering Cynthy’s quick, hungry bites.
He was glad he had slipped two of his her-
mits into her pail when she wasn’t look-
ing, and Timmie had dropped in a dough-
nut, Cynthy had never foumd out yet
where her little “windialls” came from.
She looked upon them with grave thank:
fulness, as manna out of heaven.
‘Timothy had explained a “sympathy
strike” to Tad. “You don’t strike ‘cause
you're abused yourself, you know, but ‘cause
somebody else is, You do it out o° sym-
pithy. Eomebody else don’t get Wages
enough—Cynthy don’t get dinner enough
and you strike till they—till she does.
Then you go to work again same as ever.
‘All the time you're a-strikin’ you're a-sayin’:
‘opisn't us. We have dinner enough in our
dinner baskets. But Cynthy hasn’t—merey,
no! You've got to give Cynthy more din-
ner, with butter on, or else we don’t work
for you. We've struck, me and Tad. Tad
won't bring your mail and I won't bring
Your milk. But just the minute you prom-
ise to put plenty of butter on Cynthy’s din-
ner, and plenty of dinner, then we'll go to
work like evervthing.’ That's all_you'ye
got to do,” explained Timothy, ‘That's a
symp'thy strike.”
Cynthy, was just Cynthy. She may have
had another name, back in her dreary little
past, when she lived in the almshouse, but
not singe she came to live with Mrs. Flint,
She was a grave, unchildish, lean little
thing of ten, but she might have heen 40.
‘All the good times she could remember
were the times when the “manna” had
fallen out of heaven into her dinner pail.
She never romped or laughed, like a little
child, Out of school she always worked.
‘Mrs, Flint lived in an out-of-the-way place,
“half way. between everything,” she com-
plained. She hired little Tad for ten cents
4 week to bring her mail, and Timothy for
4 quarter to. bring her milk and chop her
kindlings, ‘The only reason she did not let
Cynthy do both things and save the 35 cents
a week was because Cynthy was always do-
ing something else. Timothy and Tad were
all the “hired help” she employed.
‘At four o'clock, with a whoop and a whis-
tle, the little Webster district school was
“out.” Timmie and Tad waited behind till
everybody ele had gone home, then they
‘walked slowly down the sun-mottled road
Even ‘Timmie looked a little pale, but his
resolute little jaw was set stiffly. There
was to be no turning back now.
“Keep thinkin’ about those muffins, Tad-
die,” he said, encouragingly. “Keep sayin’
to yourself how dry they looked and how
they didn’t have a speck 0’ butter on. If
you ever ate dry ones, *thout any butter
on, you'll know how to strike a eymp'thy
strike all right.”
“But [never,” murmured little Tad, “no,
I never, Timmie, honest.”
“Well, I have. I ate one a-purpose. I
know how it feels,” Timothy said.
Mrs. Flint was waiting at the door. Her
crisp, sharp voice came down the lane to
meet them,
“You got a letter for me to-day, didn’t
you Thaddeus?” she called, “I’m expecting
one. T wish you'd hurry 4 little faster and
bring it up here to me. I can’t pay little
boys for crawling.”
‘Timothy put his hand on little Tad’s arm
and pushed him along. “Go on amd tell her
you've struck, can’t you!” he whispered.
Then, at sight of the terrified little freckled
face, he took away his hand and stepped
forward himself.
“No'm, he hasn't got any letter. Maybe
there's one, but he hasn’t got it. He's
struck, and’so have I. We've both struck.
We aren’ goin’ to work again till you give
Cynthy more dinner.”
“With butter on,” quavered little Tad
eagerly.
Tne hard face in the doorway reganied
hoth their pale little faces in utter amaze
ment, Somewhere in the background of the
dark little hall Cynthy’s Wondering face ap-
peared as out of a mist.
“You see it's a—a symp'thy strike,” ex-
plained Timothy hurriedly. His knees were
shaking under their frayed little corduroys.
“You know what a ssmp'thy strike is, don’t
you, ma'am? Well, anyway, it’s one you
Mrike out of symp'thy for folks—Cynthy,
you know, when she doesn’t have dinner
enough to eat. We're sorry for Cynthy and
We've struck, "Tisn’t us—we've got. our
wages, We haven’t got much, but we don’t
feel bad enougl to strike "count o” that.
What we want is Cynthy to have sandwiches
and cookies and pieces 0’ pie and—"
“Butter on.”
“Yes, sume as other folke. We'll go to
work again, honest Injun, the minute you
promise to give ‘em to her, ma'am. Tad’l
get your letter all a-flyin’, and I'l chop the
Kindlings. ‘The minute. It's a symp'thy
strike, that’s all.”
Cynthy’s small, pale face disappeared in
the gloom. She’had found out where tie
Heavenly manna came from, and her heart
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
Leason tm the International Series
for May 10, 1903—The Plot
Against Paul.
‘THE LESSON TEXT.
J® And when it was day, certain of the
Jews banded together, and bound them-
Selves under @ curse, saying that they
would neither eat nor drink until they
had kiied Paul,
18 And there were more than 40 which
had made this conspiracy.
U4, And they came to the ebfef priests and
elders, and said, We have bound ourselves
under a great curse, that we will eat noth-
ing until we have slain Paul,
15. Now, therefore, ye with the counell
signify to the chief captain that he bring
him down unto you to-morrow, as though
Ye would inquire something more perfectly
concerning him: and we, or ever he come
Rear, are ready to Kill him,
16,‘And when Paul's sister's son heard ot
their Iying in walt, he went and entered
into the castle, and told Paul.
37, Then Paul called one of the centurions
unto him, and said, Bring this young man
unto the chief captain: for he hath a cer-
tain thing to tell him.
18. So he took him, and brought him to
the chief captain, ard safd, Paul the pris-
oner called me unto him, and prayed me
to bring this young man unto thee, who
hath something to say unto thee,
39, Then the chief captain took him by
the hand, and went with him aside private-
ly, and asked him, What is that thou hast
to tell me?
29, And he sai@: ‘The Jews have agreed to
desire theo that thou wouldest bring down.
Paul to-morrow into the council, as though
they would inquire somewhat af him more
perfectly.
21, But do not thou yield unto them: for
there lie in walt for him of them more than
forty men, which have bound themselves
With an oath, that they will neither eat hor
drink till they have killed him: and now are
they ready,looking for a promise from thee,
22. So the chief captain then let the young
man depart, and charged him, Nee thou
tell no man that thou hast shewed these
Ringe oine.
| GOLDEN TEXT—The Lora stood by
| him, and sald, We of good cheerm
Acts 28:11.
OUTLINE OF SCRIPTURE SECTION.
Paul's Roman citizenship...Acts 12:24-09,
Paul before the Sanhedrin.-Acts 2:20-2:12
‘he plot against Paul......Acts 2812-16
‘The plot discovered.eoecnsssActs 1022
‘The plot deteated.....cess0ncAets 2:25-85.
TIME.—A. D, 58,
PLACE.—Jerusiilem,
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
This lesson follows the last withour
a break. Paul had been arrested, and
at the opening of the lesson is carried
into the castle of Antonia, which
joined the temple court on the north,
to be tortured with the hope of extort-
ing a confession of his supposed guilt
from him.
Paul's speech on the stairs was in
Hebrew. Probably the chief captain
did not understand it, but he thought
there must be something wrong with
Paul to throw the crowd into such a
frenzy of rage, and he determined to
find out by torturing him. Paul's
Roman citizenship was all that saved
him from this ordeal. It was contrary
40 the Roman law to torture a Roman
citizen.
Paul’s ease was evidently too much
for the Roman officer, but he still be-
lieved from the actions of the Jews
that his prisoner must certainly be
guilty of something, and so he called
upon the Sanhedrin, the highest coun-
cil of the Jewish nation, to help him
get at the truth. Paul’s first words to
them were not a boast of a sinless life,
but @ protestation of his loyalty as
a Jew to the God of the Jews—a plea
of “not guilty.” Paul's conduct,
when smitten, is in striking contrast
with that of the Master under similar
circumstances, and yet we cannot feel
that his indignation was unjustifiable.
Remember that this session of the San-
hedrin was informal; that probably
the Roman officer was presiding and
uit tie high sirlest, a5 fu ezulas aoe
sions; and the high priest did not wear
a distinctive dress except when en-
gaged in actual service, and that Paul
had been a stranger at Jerusalem for
many years. It was thus natural that
Paul should not recognize the high
priest in the crowd. When he discov-
| ered what he had done, he apologized.
‘The resurrection of Christ and of
christian occupied a very large place
in Paul’s preaching. He may have
been speaking of this—for Luke only
gives us snatches of what went on be-
fore the Sanhedrin—when he saw the
opportunity to divide the council
against itself and so prevent its tak-
ing any action against him. ‘The chiet
captain, little wiser than before, took
Paul back to the castle.
“The Jews:” Probably a mixture of
the enemies from Asia, the most bit-
ter of the Jerusalem Sadducees, and
the order of the Assassins, spoken of
last week. “Bowed . . underacurse:”
Invoked: a curse upon themselves if
they should fail to keep their oath.
“Came to the chief priests:” those of
the Sadducean party, of whom Ana-
nias was one. They: agreed to aid the
sonspirators (v. 20).
“Paul's sister's son:” How he
learned we do not know. “Told
Paul:” Showing that Paul's friends
had access to him. “Took him by the
hand:" As if he were a mere lad. The
cbief captain seems to have sympa-
thized with Paul. He was probably
onvinced by this time that the action
of the Jews was fanatical and outra-
geous, and that Paul was not guilty.
‘The most dangerous part of ‘the
journey to Caesarea was passed when
the troops reacbed Antipratis in the
moining. ‘The infantry returned to Je-
rusa!em, and only the troop of cavalry
escorted Paul the rest of the way to
Caesarea, where he was to await his
“PE-RU-NA SAVED MY LIFE,”
A YOUNG MOTHER'S LETTER.
Mrs. W, McRoberts, writes to Dr. Hartman from Delano, Miss., the
following:
Delano, Miss.
Doctor S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio:
Dear Sir:---I feel perfectly well of catarrh. Idid as you directed me
toand took Peruna and Manalin. The third of March | gave birth to a
10-pound baby girl and we are both welland happy. 1 am very thankful
to you, and Peruna saved my life. 1 recommend it to everyone and
can't praise it enough.
“‘Isend you my own and my baby’s picture, She is so sweet and
good,—she 3 a Peruna baby. I have such good health now. Ido all my
housework and take care of my baby, and feel so good.
‘There are three or four of my neighbors using Peruna now, since it
did me so much good. They were just run down, and they think it is
fine, Itis so good to give strength.""«-Mrs, W. McRoberts.
Women Made Strong and Happy
Mothers.
Catarrh of the Pelvic Organs is a Fre-
quent Cause of Barrenness.
Pe-ru-na Eradicates Catarrh From the
‘System.
TP thesroman of ancient Israel not
to become a mother was regarded
asthe greatest of earthly calamities.
To become a mother—more especially
the mother of @ strong. healthy boy—
was the height of glory for the faithfal
woman of the good old Bible days.
Even now, when maternity is not es.
teemedas of yore, the mother of health;
children is an object of admiration, and
sometimes envy, by her neighbors. Aé
sompared with’ ancient peoples, the
average American woman has a low ap.
preciation of motherhood. ‘There are
jowever, a great many exceptions tc
this statement.
‘The accompanying letters from grate
fal women who liave been made strong,
healthy and happy mothers need no
added words of ours to make them con-
vincing. Catarrh had weakened and
Impaired their entire systems, Peruana
made them sound and well.
Mrs. L. M. Griffith, Arco, Idaho,
writes:
“Your medicine did me a wonderful
amount of good. Itenred me of barren:
ness. Iam 80 years old and never had
any children; but since beginning your
seeing 2 gare hit toe Ppa
baby girl. She is now six months old
and Weighs25 pounds. My friends were
allsurprised. Some would not believe
it until they came to see me.
“My husband says he never saw such
achange in any one as there was in me
after [had taken three or four bottlesof
Peruna. Iam stronger than I have
been since I was quite young. God
bless you and your medicine forever. I
can not tell you all. My letter is too
long already; but I will say Peruna
cured me. I ‘never saw or heard of
anything half so good. I can never
thank you enough for your kindness.
In cases of la gripe it works like a
charm. It cured my baby when other
medicines failed. She wasreal bad with
la grippe.”—Mrs. L. M. Griffith,
Mrs. E. E. Thomas, Alpha, Mo.
writes:
“I have used your Peruna and Mana-
Wa ee i ete pia
the Yellowstone Park, the nation’s play-
ground, is larger than the State of Delaware
and nearly twice as large av Rhode Island.
As in size it exceecis all other national parks
of the world combined, so in grandeur and
Scenery it is unequaled. Here are located
the eight great geysers ofthe world, Mount
Washburne, one of the peaks in the park,
has an altitude of 10,388 feet. ‘The whole
park is an area of wonders unparalleled, It
is from 1,000 to 5,000 feet above the level of
the sea and is therefore witnin the zone of
two seasons.
But to really know this wonderland you
should take a trip through there. You can-
not spend a vacation season more profitably
gx mere pleasantly. “The Chicago, Mita
kee & St. Paul Hellvey. offers choice of
routes to and from Yellowstone Park. If
you are interested, complete information
About the cost of the trip, choice of routes,
train service and tickets will be furnished
on request. F. A, Miller, General Passenger
Agent, Chicago.
Uncle Reuben says: Memory was given
to humanity dat it might look back an’ think
of all de good things we hev done fur de
world, an’ how little de world has done fur
us in return.—Detroit Free Press.
Dia It Ever Ocour to You
to note the rapid development of East
Texas as a truck and fruit growing coun-
try? No? Then write for the pamphlet
“timely Topies No. 2” and become con-
vinced that the resources of Texas are il
limitable. Address “Katy,” 500 Waim-
wright, St. Louis, Mo.
“I ie always sorry,” said Uncle Eben, “to
see a man hourdin’ bis pennies like a micer
‘an’ equanderin’ his opportunities like a mil-
lionsire,”—Washington. Stary
THE MARKETS.
ee New York, May 8
CATILE—Native Steers... 4105 @¥ 0 0
COTTON Middling “eccse gus @ | 10%
FLOUR—Winter Wheat: 20, @ 4 0
WHEATONO. 2 Redes SIM 8%
CORNGNO. Boren Ee
GRRE Nor SI a ee
PORK Mess Giew H @ 188
St. LOUIS.
COTTON-AMadiINg ses cae @ 10%
BEEVES Steers tc. UW @ 575
Cows and Viciters, 225 @ 480
CALVES (per 100 bs). 4B @ OB
HOGSeraeto Choice. 6B @ 6M
SHEEP Pair to Choice... 40) @ 375
BLOCRPatenta coos 8 @ 365
Giner Grades 2B @ 38.
WHEATSNG, 2 Redeecssccs 1 @ "TM
CORNANO, Boece Me A
GATEONO. ecccsctecccccneee sg @ i
BYENo eee ae 8
POST Siu Washed 0" @
Other Grades @ ti
HAY-Cleat Pimotys225 10 30 15
BCTTER-cholee Dalry. 2 @ 38,
BACON-Clear Riess es @ 1K
EGGS—Fresh cscs co @ 1
LARD—Choice’Sieain: 0. 1. @ 8
PORK-StandaraagessGvew) Il @ 17 62
CHICAGO.
CATTLE-Native Steers... 475 @ 505
HOGS-Fair to Cholce...... 650 @ 6S
SHEEP-Fair to Choice.... 450 @ 575
FLOUR-Winter Patents... 390 @ 20
Spring Patents... 335 @ 3%
WHEAT-No.d Spring... @ "1,
Nog Reds Wie ie
CORN=NG. iecccrsiccccces ee Mi
GATSONO, 2icconcc ne Oe
PORK Mess (ITS @ 18 0
KANSAS City,
CATTLE-Native Steers... 450 @ 65
HOGS—Fair to Chole... 640 @ 6%
WHEAT-No.@ Redness, @ 1
CORN No.2 Mixed 000 “Hi @ 42
SATS No 2 Wake Cin | Me | Sth
NEW ORLEANS,
FLOURCHign Grades... 850 @ 405
GORNONO, Boece ee OS
QARSNO, feces es @ at
HAY Choice 222000 a0 @ 28 00
Bow Standard “Mess!2011 18 25 @ 18 50
BACON=Short kb Sides.:: .... @ 1%
CORTON Midaling ug on @ 0
© LOUISVILLE.
WHEAT-No. 2 Red....c--- 4G 4
CORN-NO. Sacccscccss SO 408
GATSoNG RII Be a
BACON Short Ribs Wwe TN
BOSTON Middiing scccsse es @ 104
oO a 2 “I Do All My House-
EFA, i} work and Take
ay we ret My Boby
)" ty Ee
baa
Le SS yO
CG\\Te + oe }
WES YW) WF IK SSS .
Gah) SUA ‘,
ey ) =: Gea
Bromo-Seltzer
Promptly cures all
Headaches
“Asn Fon > CHOCOLATE
Gel ge Vee
lin. I had been doctoring for severa!
years, but kept getting worse. One day
‘a neighbsr woman Drought me you!
book, the * Iisof Life,” and wanted me
to take your medicine. I told her thai
Thad given up all hope of ever getting
well, I had tried 80 much medicine.
My neighbors thought I was nearly
dead with consumption.
“Pinally I concluded that I would
make a last trial, So my husband got
me a bottle of Peruna and Manalin. 1
commenced taking them according te
directions. That wastwoyears ago. A
year ago last November I gave birth t
& 10-pound baby boy, who is well an
hearty ; and Lam doing my own house
work. ‘I ean never give Perana to
great praise. I think itisthe best med
icine I ever heard of."—Mrs, E. B
‘Thomas.
If you do not derive promptand satis
factory results from the use of Perana
LOOK inYOUR
Whatwould you
Zp give tobe rid of
GP Aap those pimples
f nh end blaccieeas:
GAR fORR that sallow com-
Wali) plesion, those
AV Milli justreless eyes?
iy 1 No doubt you
1M) would give 60
me centstobecured
of constipation,
liver troubles, indigestion and
dyspepsia! Get rid of these
troubles and your complexion
will clear up like an April day
after ashower. Take
.
Dr.Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin
aia ary 0, abe, No, 2 Michigan Ave
uid He taeseee ameetbe ecard
ieleie's berate dae she
Recruabens unsuce mre
Se crepee ed seer Wer patos
Suolceerpeccins stars fen reek
SeingOeer aleeseinat aren wa
Aral ea ceeaete Cavey Nace
Siathens Seenerrete cen eae
Heataris ieegeeenivategin fopises
EATER ever SMU ae aus
SesTanes Fete Le there once
fie mrascel kat hosontenete ts
Ebe parenen eect Cate
Be Re eed ator |
Sinmeneensse
Your Mi Back
It It Don't Banettt You
PEPSIN SYRUP CO.. Monticello. If.
CURE GUARANTEED
for Granuinted Lids. 10
days treatment PRREE si our
‘ee, Writelonday. Dr. Ie. D-
HALEY, 22i7 Warne
Avenue, St. Louls, Me
E at Gnce to De ae eee
Baa aic seat otisome cnemane a ea
ee ee oe cerita
vice gratis,
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartmap Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio.
[SE cee Cue
ge. pied —
Cesar NG 9,
ji LOS KRESS
(Ce / Paces 3))
Ww /Aic. NA)
Seale Es
XK Dita oa FS Os
os wh] re
Ree LSA.
waar CG ©
rads Brose art
sevearsen CLE aioe ne
Wy
“Klean, Kool Kitchen Kind
essecancea cea an eras
Eee ee
cello rem ngee ag
Sree nemaciecioa eee a
|] Brose coaforeand fon lena: Root shen, oid
[maiming re sentient any oor eo
“The Granary of the World.” “The Land ot Sua»
shine.” The Natural Feeding Grounds for Stock..
| ‘Area under crop in 1902. 1,987,330 sccos.
cS a
ors arin eaSep Wat
[pobre | cheek ater
ees habla saoslulaada ta tie
Ga St i Fiabe 82 iN
Siete Tene che au Seah as an
pea Losted dian hn Yor Aaa aod TROT
cher heoionaten os Gacered
Belawyes Ganatay orig te Cnaraso. ie
oth Bt. Kaw ‘Oy a: 40: ¥, Baogay ton, sap.
Siig ae, Sacer sa neaboees ante
| SZLSie giving Fou neabonavallwaj rata, 0.
READERS OF THISPAPER ¥,
Branina 10 uy asvnamea ©...
ADVERTISED IN 178 COLUMNS
] Stoonp insisr uron WAvING
WHAT TARY ASK POR, REFDERG
SEL scnenrorns on bayranior.
aes es
DVERTIONME>
YARN ctnte thet you caw the Advortino>
pee a ee
TAKEN FROM LIKE:
A UNION OR A DEPOT FOR NEGRO
NEWSPAPERS.
To all who are fond of negro newspapers the Palladium office can furnish any of the following papers:
Freedman Journal.
Chicago,Conservator.
Topeka Plaindealer.
Indianapolis Recorder.
The Afro-American.
The Vicksburg Light.
Arkansas Appreciator.
The Dallas World.
The Springfield State Capital.
The Sedalia Times.
Eagle-Herald, Gainsville, Fla.
The Reformer.
The Truth Teller, St. Louis.
Southern Christian Recorder.
Cincinnati Brotherhood.
Star of Zion.
Washington Bee.
Seattle Republic.
Woman's World.
Bluegrass Bugle.
Chicago Broad Ax.
Paducah Bee.
The Parson Weekly Blade.
The City Times, Galveston, Tex.
The Eagle, Kempsville. Ala.
Christion Recorder of the A. M. E. Church.
The Press, Quendo, Kan.
The Light, Vicksburg, Miss.
The Mayor, Hopkinsville, Ky.
Oklahoma Guide, Guthrie, Logan Co.
American Eagle, St. Louis.
The Watchman, Columbus, Ga.
Texas Guide, Victoria, Texas.
The Lancet, Baltimore, Md.
The City Times, Galveston, Texas.
The Sunday School Monitor, Nashville, Teen.
The Business Herald, Donaldsonville, Ala.
The St. Luke Herald, Richmond Va.
The Progress, Omaha, Neb.
Nashville Clarion, Nashville, Tenn.
Missouri State Republican.
The Sylvan Blade, Vicksburg, Miss
The Christian Organizer, Lynchburg,
Virginia.
The Columbia, Louisville, Ky.
Colored Messenger, Kansas, Mo.
Temple of Health and Physical Rev
view.
Savanna Gazette, Savannah, Ga.
Florida Sentinel, Pensacola, Fla.
Voice of Missons, New York.
Searchlight, Wichita, Kan.
Tribune, Pueblo, Colo.
Colored Citizens Press, Chicago, Ill.
Banker, Merchant and Manufacturer
Publisher of Money, New York.
Teche Valley News, Jeanerette, La.
St. Joseph Radical, St. Joseph, Mo.
Etheopian Adulvine, S.
Wisconsin Advocate, Milwaukee;
Wisconsin.
Eagle, Kempsville, Ala.
Chicago Visitor, Chicago, Ill.
Kenacky Reporter, Owensboro, Ky.
Pythian Journal, St. Louis, Mo.
Rising Sun, Kansas, Mo.
Southwestern Advocate, New Orleans,
Louisiana.
Republican Guide, Baltimore, Md.
The Advance Citizen, East St. Louis,
Fergus Sun, Kansas, Mo.
The Albauquerque American, a newspaper published in New Mexico, is on our desk. A paper well edited and quite newsy. We heartily exchange. J. M. Griffin, editor and proprietor.
Any of the above papers can be had at the Palladium office. We will count the list next week.
Mrs. J. W. Wheeler,
MODISTE.
Dressmaking,
Designing,
Cutting,
Fitting,
Purchasing,
2617Chestnut St.
ST. LOUIS, MO
U.B.F.and S.M.T.
Covington, Ky., February 2, 1903. Headquarters of the U. B. F. and S. M. T. 1861—JOINT NATIONAL CALL—1903 United Brothers of Friendship, Sisters of Mysterious Ten and Knights of Friendship To meet in the City of St. Louis, Mo., July 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25, 1903.
For America, Africa and the West Indies.
Members, over half a million.
PROCLAMATION.
Headquarters of United Brothers of Friendship and Sisters of the Mysterious Ten, Covington, Ky.
Know all Brothers and Sisters by these presents, that the Eleventh (11) Triennial Session of the National Grand Lodge will convene in the city of St. Louis, Mo., on the 4th Wednesday in July, 1903, the 22d day, at 8 a. m. Each State Grand Lodge is hereby notified to send three delegates, and each Subordinate Lodge one delegate. Each State Grand Temple is entitled to two female delegates, and each Subordinate Temple to one delegate in the session of the National Grand Temple, which will convene Wednesday, July 22, 1903, at 8 a. m.
The delegates representing State Grand Lodges must have their credentials signed by the Grand Master and Grand Secretary. Each Subordinate Lodge delegate must have their credentials signed by the Master and Secretary.
The order in St. Louis is making extensive preparation to entertain the Grand Bodies of the Order, hence all Camps should lay aside all feeling of the past and adorn their full faith in "Justice and show Mercy and speak the Truth" and be on hand.
Grand Master S. T. Pettigrew, of Missouri, reassures the National Grand Master and the Knight Commander of the further good faith existiag in the State.
The above is the official notice of the National Grand Master, W. A. Gaines. We hope that the committee in St. Louis will lock carefully to the work on hand. The work cannot be accomplished unless we have qualified and determined men and women at the head. First have peace and good will to all and then persevere. Let that be the watchword. We shall endeavor to watch events and keep this matter before the public regardless of expense.
Let each Lodge and Temple send their address to the Palladium so that the National Grand Lodge members may know where to find them.
John A. Logan Lodge No. 139 of the U. B. F. meet at K. of P. Hall the second Wednesday in each month at 8 p.m.
J. W. WHEELER, W. M.
DAVID GORDON, See'y.
FANNIE LEE.
World's Fair artist. Pictures of all kinds called for and delivered. All sizes crayon, pastel, water color and oil paintings, a specialty. Fine frames and high grade work. Terms reasonable. Cash or credit; also lessons given. Call or write to 456 N. Sarah st.
3
The World's Fair.
President D. R. Francisis well-known to the Palladium man. In 1884 the acquaintance of this honorable gentleman, D. R. Francis, was formed, and since that time he has become noted as a most worthy gentleman, with all the push characteristics of a Kentuckian. He is now the talk of the entire civilized world. All hail to the World's Fair President—D. R. Francis!
$4 to $8 a day guaranteed to every person sending their name and address to Scott Remedy Co., P. O. Box 570, Louisville, Ky. Write at once.
Notice.
Sam, the Tailor, will not be responsible for money paid to agents unless those contracts are signed by him at 204 North Fourteenth street.
Electa Temple,
No. 31, of the
S. M. T.
Meets the 4th Friday at 8:00 p. m.
Mrs. Annie D. Hyatt, M. W. P.
Lnlu O. Dell, See'y.
James Barnes,
FIRST-CLASS
BARBER - SHOP,
1433 Morgan, Street.
SOMETHING DOING
AT
DALE'S CAFE,
805 N. 23d Street.
Meals to Order at All Hours.
22
BE NOT DECEIVED
TO THE COLORED PEOPLE OF AMERICA.
King of all Hair Tonics,
"OZONO."
TRADE-MARK.
BEFORE.
AFTER.
BEFORE.
AFTER.
```markdown
```
Recognizing the fact that there are many SO-CALLED hair-growers and hair-straighteners now on the market, and knowing to a certainty that many of these are frauds pure and simple, we wish to make a straight-forward, honest statement to the colored race through this great paper. In the year 1871 our late secretary, Mrs. S. M. Moore, through a fortunate circumstance, acquired the receipt for OZONO. It was not offered for sale or purchase to any extent until 1875, when it was put upon the market and met with marked success. After a thorough test by the colored people of that time it was pronounced an honest, legitimate remedy, true to all that was claimed for it, and worthy in every respect of the confidence of every member of the colored race, because they found it to cause the hair to grow long and straight, soft and fine, and as beautiful as an April morning. Now, whenever a genuine article appears upon the market there are always a number of people who imitate and make capital out of the merits of other people's goods. Seeing our marked success, numerous firms have entered the market, offering hair-growers and hair-straighteners, many of which are worthless, causing the hair to fall out and doing great damage to the hair and scalp, and the colored people are buying these spurious compounds, which are filled with animal fats, and do the hair more harm than good. To these let us sound a warning—be careful what you use on your hair. Do not be deceived by flaring advertisements and big words. Buy the King of all Hair Tonics.
OZONO.
with an iron-clad guarantee to do all that
$0.00. Now, we ask you a plain quest
orifice $0.00 if you are dissatisfied with
true to all we claim for them? We
under this guarantee, and we are glad
Ozono has been satisfied in every respect
are to-day using our preparations, a
Ozono as the King of all Hair Tonics.
Out of Knotty, Kinky, Harsh, Curly,
will make short, harsh hair long and
stitching, worrying scalp diseases. Itch
it live after Ozono has been applied. I
it will restore gray hair to its natural
it.
Let us make a statement. Many
eighten hair, but when they send the
Ozono. Friends, do not use hot irons; and cause it to drop out. Ozono stora-
nce. Nothing but Ozono is necessary.
You can stop the use at any time.
In a day or two after the first application
Ozono is 50c. a bottle—4 boxes do
which is at any time: Cut out
with it the sum of One Dollar, and woe
of Ozono and one large Dollar, and
lock skin bright, rough skin soft and
also removes all facial imperfections.
We will also include one fancy jar of
great beautifier—removes wrinkles, m
demishes; makes the old look young.
include one package of our celebrated
MICALLY PURE, and no soap but a p
DRUG ST
(Franklin A
Also Marcus and East
L. PICKETT
in DRUGS
601 LAWTON AVENUE
Mr. Jefferson and Lawton
Day and Night
Brewer and A. H. How
Proprietors of
REAURANT and DINING
at 2837 Manchester Ave.
-Class Meals
place where you can get the
Give them a call.
years constant and co
in this business has s
d me for the continued
ducting of same.
which is sold with an iron-clad guarantee to do all that is claimed for it, or we will forfeit $50.00. Now, we ask you a plain question—would we absolutely agree to forfeit $50.00 if you are dissatisfied with our preparations, if they were not true to all we claim for them? We have advertised for several years under this guarantee, and we are glad to say that every one who has used Ozone has been satisfied in every respect.
20,000 people are to-day using our preparations, and every purchaser recommends Ozone as the King of all Hair Tonics. Ozone will positively take the Kinks out of Knotty, Kinky, Harsh, Curly, Refractory, Troublesome Hair. It will make short, harsh hair long and straight. It will cure your head of all itching, worrying scalp diseases. Itch, Eczema, Dandruff, and Scurf can not live after Ozone has been applied. It will stop your hair from falling out. It will restore gray hair to its natural color, making the hair long and soft.
Now, right here, let us make a statement. Many firms are advertising remedies to straighten hair, but when they send the preparation they tell you to use hot irons. Friends, do not use hot irons; they will burn up the life of the hair, and cause it to drop out. Ozone straightens without any outside assistance. Nothing but Ozone is necessary, and the hair stays straight forever. You can stop the use at any time. The good effects on the hair are seen in a day or two after the first application.
The price of Ozone is 50c. a bottle—4 boxes do the work. We make this liberal offer, which is good at any time: Cut out this coupon and send to us, enclosing with it the sum of One Dollar, and we will forward to you four large boxes of Ozone and one large bottle of Electrical Skin Refiner, which makes black skin bright, rough skin soft and pliant, and cures all skin diseases. Also removes all facial imperfections, and actually removes small-pox pits. We will also include one fancy jar of our Electrical Skin Food—Nature's great beautifier—removes wrinkles, moth patches, freckles, and all facial blemishes; makes the old look young and the young look younger.
We will also include one package of our celebrated 5calp Soap, which is absolutely CHEMICALALLY PURE, and no soap but a pure soap should ever
BIG DRUG STORES. 2605 1901(Franklin Ave.
Also Marcus and Easton Avenues.
The only place where you can get the very best for your money. Give them a call.
My nearly 10 years constant and consistent experience in this business has specially fitted me for the continued conducting of same.
GORDON, Uni
reet. Phone C 1744.
W. C. GORDON, Undertaker,
be used on the scalp. And, lastly, to prove our liberality, we will put in a pint package of Anti-Odor, a positive cure for Sore Throat or Mouth, all forms of Womb Diseases, Chilblains, Sore and Frosted Feet; also removes all smells and odors arising from the human body, such as feet, arm pits, etc. The actual value of this Grand Aggregation is $4.00, but we let you have it for $1.00, simply to introduce honest goods. In order to protect the public in general from imitations of our goods, and to avoid mistakes, we have placed upon our coupon our Trade-Mark, one head showing Short Hair and the other head Long Hair. The U.S. Government has granted us this trade-mark, and it is registered in the Patent Office at Washington; so if the coupon has this trade-mark on it, you will make no mistake. Use only the coupon having the two heads on it. As to our responsibility, we refer you to the Editor of this paper or to the Metropolitan Bank of Richmond, Va. We have thousands of testimonials we have not space to publish. Here is a sample of one:
Boston Chemical Company:
Dear Sirs, You are at liberty to state in any newspaper that I have used OZONO, and give it my most hearty recommendation. I have been fooled so often, it does me good to recommend honest goods.
other using OZONO a short while only, I am glad to say
body straight and growing finely.
MISS BESSIE POWERS,
383 Missouri street, Toledo, O.
OZONO is absolutely guaranteed to straighten hair and
luxurious growth. If your hair is already straight,
secure a glossy long growth. Buy only the genuine
is $1.00 at once, and the goods will be sent the same
order.
BOSTON CHEMICAL CO.,
310 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
Gentlemen.—After using OZONO a short while only, I am glad to say that my hair is already straight and growing finely.
MISS BESSIE POWERS
888 Missouri street, Toledo, O.
A last word. OZONO is absolutely guaranteed to straighten hair and cause a beautiful and luxurious growth. If your hair is already straight, you can use it to secure a glossy long growth. Buy only the genuine "OZONO." Send us $1.00 at once, and the goods will be sent the same day we receive your order.
Boston Chemical Co.,
Arizona, worth $2.00. 1 Bottle Electrical Skin Refiner,
2 Bottle Electrical Skin Food, worth 50c. 1 Package
Odor, worth 50c. 1 Package Scalp Soap, worth 50c.
House, No.
City.
State.
Is like above, send $3.00. If you have a friend who has
write her name on a piece of paper and pin to coupon
order.
thoroughly experienced and the only pr
competent Colored Undertakers in the city.
A. RUSSELL,
ing and UNDERTAKIN
4 Boxes of Ozono, worth $2.00. 1 Bottle Electrical Skin Refiner, worth 50c. 1 Bottle Electrical Skin Food, worth 50c. 1 Package (1 pint) Anti-Odor, worth 50c. 1 Package Scalp Soap, worth 50c. Total, $4.00.
County.....State.....
If you want 4 lots like above, send $3.00. If you have a friend who has no coupon, let her write her name on a piece of paper and pin to coupon when you send your order.
We are the only thoroughly experienced and the only pr
tically competent Colored Undertakers in the city.
our own conveyances and do all our own work. Carriages furnished for all occasions. ket St., ST. LOUIS, MO. Telephone, C-
2118-20-22 Market St., ST. LOUIS, MO. Telephone, C
CHOP HOUSE
Harrison Cook, Proprietor of a Lunch Room, better known as a Chop House, at 1930 Chestnut Street.
RIDER AGENTS WANT
one in each town to ride and exhibit a sample 1900
bicycle of our manufacture. YOU CAN.MAKE
$50 A WEEK besides having a wheel to ride for you
1902 Models High Grade Guaranteed $9 to
1900 and 1901 Models BEST MAKES $7
500 Second Hand Wheels taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores, all
makes and models, good as ne
We ship any bicycle IN APPROVAL
one without a cent deposit in advance and
10 DAYS FREE TRIAL. You
no risk in ordering from us, as you do to
pay a cent if the bicycle does not suit you
DO NOT BUY a wheel until you have written
Tires, equipment, sandries and sport goods of all
manufactures, prices in our Wide Free sundry catalog
tains a winder of useful information. Write for
WE WANT a reliable person in each town to distribute catalog
exchange for a bicycle. Write today for free catalogue and our sp
J. L. MEAD CYCLE CO., Chicago
Boston Chemical Company :
Dear Sirs—You are at
used OZONO, and give it
fooled so often, it does me g
Here is another:
Gentlemen,—After usin
that my hair is already stra
A last word. OZONO
cause a beautiful and luxur
you can use it to secure
"OZONO." Send us $1.00
day we receive your order.
MAGGIE B. PROCTOR,
Box 114, Fairfield, Texas
310 East Broad Street, RICHMOND, VA.
I enclose you $1.00, for which please send at once
F